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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Indians

·- Pick 3:

lose to

622

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Mariners

5622

Sporta or. P-ve 4
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Buckeye 5:
1·12·16-31-36

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Cle• tonight, low In the
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high near SO.

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WI. 47, NO. 231

Racine
.
TaSk
force
officials
say
announces
.
cleanup money ·nQ.t!the answer
.

to all schOol

p~oblems.

2 SeetioM, 11,...... I I -·
A O.ntit Co. Ilea I 1•

Meigs board
OKs ·contra·cts

.

dates

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, April 9, 1997

~·Ohio.....,~ Cornp.ny

By JIM FREEMAN
Chancey, athletic facilities ·care;
Sentinel News Staff
• Eleanor McKelvey, yearbook; Becky
Personnel mailers dominated busi- · ·Cotterill, high .school newspaper;
. Spring cleanup in the. village of
.
'
ness
at Tuesday night's meeting of the Celia McCoy, dr11ma; Carol Crow
~ine 'will be held May• 14 and 15,
yi llage council decided at its Monday
COLUMBUS ·(AP) - Lawmak·
Meigs Local Board of Education, and Jennie Dorsey, . co-Junior class
night meeting.
ers and state officials who have just
held at the district's central office in advisor; Toney Dingess, band direc·
one year to • solve Ohio's school
the
Pomeroy Municipal Building.
tor; John Arnott, Cliff Kennedy and
.
R
, • csidents were reminded to place funding problems anl agreeing 10 forThe
following
teachers
were
hired
Mike
Wilfong. guidance; Eleanor
lhei[ items for pick up out 81 the curb.
No Qtl, batteries, gas tanks or tires g,et about some of their diffe!'tnces.
on one-year contracts for the 1997-98 Blacttnar. librarian; John Krawsczyn,
will be picked up, it was noted.
. ~v. Geo'rge' Voinovich and six
school y.ear: David Barr, Michelle part,timc assistant high school priq.other members of the Ohio School
Frazier, Janet Hollingsworth, Krista cipal; 'o(ii:ki Haley, head teacher .at
.•. Mayor Scott Hill pre~nted a cer- Task Force met for the first .. .e on
Johnson.
!leth Mayer: Teawana · Harrisonville Elementary; Marsha
t!ficate of.appll:ciation to William Jr.
Heater 'for his participation in the Tuesc;!ay. The group plans I meet
McCaulla. Lisa Miller, Cassandra Radabaugh. head teacher at Middle·
Green Thumb Project The award once a week ·to study solutions in
O'Sullivan, Chris Stout, Laura Stump port Elementary ; Cindy Johnston,
was to be presented last month, but response to the Supreme Court's
and Carin Taylor. ·
head teacher at PoiTJ1'roy Ele!Jientary ;
Heater was out of town due 10 a death ·decision last month that declared the ·
The following teachers were hired Marjorie Fetty, ·head teacher 81 Rut·
in his family.
state's school funding formula unconon three-year . contracts: T(m Curl~ land Elementary; John Arnott, head
stitutional.
man, Judith Gannaway, Sc.ot Gheen. teacher at Meigs Middle School ;
.• • Council opened II bids on an old
"We' vegot real challenges ahead
Mary
Grim. Cheryl Halley, Sam Har- Eleanor Blaett.nar,libmry supervisor.
:Village-owned Ferguson tractor with of us.•" Voinovich said. "We have to·
ris; Sheila. Harris, Melissa Howard
The following wcre·hired on twothe highest bid of $l, 367 being sub· do more to respo11d to ttie court's
FORCE MEETS· Ohio Gov. George Volnovlch,
and
and
Jennifer
Wolfe.
.
.
year
contracts as non-certified
.IJ!itted by Victor Wolfe, Racine. Oth- · mandate. " ·
·
Office of Budget end Manegemer:rt Director Gregory Browning
Teachers
hired
on
,five-year
con-.
employees:
William Capehart. Patti
·~rs submitting bids . were: Chris
·House Demoi:ratic ·leader Ross
confer during Tueaday'slnltlel meeting of the Ohio School Fundtracts
were:
J(arla
s
·
r
own;
Teresa
Johnson
and
Delores Surface, bus driWolfe, Oris Smith, Clarence Frank, Bog',.s, , D-Andover, said the taSk'
lng Teak Force at the Ohio S~ehouse in Columbus; Browning
Carr,
iudy
Crooks,
James
Crow,
Jcnvers;
Robin
Butcher and Edna Will , •
l90 Sayre, Roger Chaney, Dwight
"
r1 ed h 1
f he
kf
(AP)
Porbin, Cecil .Frye. John Riley and f&lt;lrce should loo~ ·at this as an oppor- ' waa. am . c 1 nnan o t tas orce.
.
·
"
nie Dorsey, Ron Drexler, Dale Har· cooks; Mona Frec~er, secretary; Con'on. R. Starkey. Council accepted the tunity. to look at the entire education
,
rison, Janet Hoffman, Elizabeth Sto- nie Halley. aide.
·
funding i~sue, and then recommend agreed
·
tem. ·
. ry and Julia Vaughan. ·
The following non :ccrtified
bjd submi.lted "y
Victor
Wolfe
.
.
The
sys
·
•
.
.
"Thr'
· money· 1o a11 o,. our solutions. to the Legislature. B,oggs
''I'm not here to lt'sten to . talk
·
, owmg
.lowest bid WIIS'"$652. ·
In ~.ddition. Bryan Zirkle was employees. were hired on continuing
. ' Councilman Henry Bentz aSked schools is not the answeno pui prob- said the task forCe sho11ld avoid fin- . about the problem. I'm here to listen hired on a continuing contmct as a contracts: Cynthia McMillin , bus
· ger-poi:nting and blame-shifting.
to solutions,'' said Finan, R,Cincin· teac.hcr.
about the status of the Cross · Mill lems," he said.
driver; Tom Musser, custodian; DonMuseum at Star Mill Park. CouncilThe task force, appointed by
nati. He was one of the early critics
Hired on supplemental contracts na Knapp arid Marsha Russell, assisitJan Dale Hart reported the projei:t is Voinovich, will stUdy the sch6o! _ Senate Presit~tft Richard Finan of the c&lt;!urt's decision.
. for the upcoming year were: Mike tant to the treasurer; Randall Car·
Chancey, liead football ; Rick Blaet. penter, aide.
'
$till alive and that he is in the process
tnar, Mick Childs, Gregg Dee!, Scot
.The following supplemental conGheen and Pete WOods, assistant var- .tracts ,l!(ere not rene)Wed becaqse the
sity l P&lt;?tball;_Scot Gbeen· al)d ;Pete. peoplt are not. under contract as fullWoOds, reserve football; 1\ick Bfaet- time ietlcheril : Carson-Cro.w, seventh
.
~'-'•·Mayor !Jail ad~~ ,t1te , . · 1J; .. ~~~·lllfoi .
.,.;'!&gt;'/(
' , ,
.
.
'.
· · .tnar ~ Mick Child~~; fre$hrnari-foot, and eighth ' g~* . rootbilll L"Uid!i '
bili: ·Don· Dixo». Jesse Vail and Gri11t Wise. bo'yso~ ~inth • grlldC bas:
b08i'd.'IO·Come back,ilf
recessed
• ·• .
~
~ ·.'' .. , ' · ' · 1.-41
•
'
. '·
meeting with the tjgures that they
Flood-related · projects wef!l dis- account ~ahw:es,as fOIIo~s: lJeneral placed a driving record due to such Bryan Zirkle, ·seventh and eighth ketball coach; Travis Abbott. bOys'
w~nt: .
·
cussed atlht: -regular monthly meet- fund, $1 ,108.22; civic center fund, an offense is the detennination of the grade football; Mike kennedy, cross co-seventh J!rndc basltctball .coach ;·
Cguncil also approved the pur·- ~ng of Rutland Villag_e Counc.il qn $2,75Q.34i police fund, -$47.85; law , village. an~ that assignment was country; Jim Sheets, head wrestling; · Darin Lngan, girls' reserve bruikctball
,cllase of several items as requested by Tuesday evening. .
enforcement fund, $487 .33; street modified from six points. to four John Krawsczyn, .golf; Rick Ash: 'oach; Heather Hudson, girls' junior
street commissioner Glenn Rizer and
Joe Balm. pres1dent of the coun- fund, $3,968.03; state highway ful!d ; points, with a $100 fine.
. girls' volleyball; Dale Harrison. girls' high basketball coach; Cindy Fields. •
approved repairing the tran·smission ·cil's flood committee addres~ coun- $4,858.94;
water department,
volleyball assistan~; Ron Logan, girls' high schoql cheerleader advisor;
Council also:
varsity basketball ; John Amon, girls: Stephanie Price, junior ·high cheer?O the village pqlice cruiser. Council ctl_ ~nd ~tScussed the ~tllage s Hazard $7.780.41; · sewer department,
Approved
the
mayor's
report
of
also approved purchasing two bat- MmgaUQ!I Grant proJect. 'f!Je funds, $7,788.21; Sewer debt, $14,619.70;
junior high volleyball and girls' junior leader advisor.
Continued on 11age 3
(eries for a fire truck a!lhe request of wh1ch wtll come from the Federal utility deposits, S10,797.09 and fines collected of $2,397 for March; high volleyball assistant; .Mike
• Approved the purchase of a hot
fire chief John Holman .·
· Emergency Management ~gency, replacement fund, $19,797.77.
.Ifill appointed Bentz to come up . will be us~d I? raise ho.uses out.of'the
Council authorized tbe imple· water tank.for the civic center;
- Authorized the purchase of a fax ·
with a plan and cost of work on the fl?od pla1n ~nd to relocate restdents ' mentation of the Uniform Accounting
machine
for the village offices;
end . of Tyree Boulevard where the · wtthm the vtl,lage out of flood-prone Ne!work through ihe Ohio Auditor of
- Authorized Proffitt to purchase a
,steps were removed ,several years areas. .
.
.
State. The pilot program provides
. :ago. Bentz 'is to report -back to counIt was a':ib repone:&lt;~ · that Clerk software and online support to the portable DU!testing machine.
• Voted to hire a part-time police
ceil so that action can be taken.
Rose!'lary Esllew was tn the process . village clerk a! a c~st , of $7~ per
·
officer
to assist during the summer
: : He ·also reminded &lt;;.ouncil to offilil)g th~ necessarY paperwork for m~nth. and ~sststs With compliance
months.
'r~meinbenhat the roofon the muniC- FEMA rehef for the March .noodmg. ~111:!_ the auditor's accounting proceA Galli a County mari has pleaded · Sowders' sister. "I can't believe we
:ipal building needs painted and 8 :.
Phil Din and the Dozers wiU per· . dures. The sta_te. w1ll prov1de !~stalguilty to voluntary m;mslaughter and have a jury system set up and we're
:ramp in~talled for handicapped peo- fonn m ~utla~d on Apnl 26. T1cke~s lauon and tramtng at no add1uonal
Members present were Herb aggravated robbery in the death of a not using it." .
:pte.
are avatlable through the clerk s cost.
Elliot, Vema Martin, Dick Fetty and Tennessee man .
But Prosecuting Attorney Brent A.
, Hill reported he is still attempting . ~ffice: Proceeds w1ll be. used to con·
Upon the recommendation of Danny Davis, Mayor' Joanne Eads,
Richard· Hubman. 29. Rodney, Saunders said the plea t~ .the charge
·f&lt;HO!ltact National Gas and Oil con- unue tmprovements on the covoc cen-. Police Officer Mark Proffitt, council Clerk Rosemary Eskew, Mark Prof- entered a plea to the charges Tuesday . was acceptable given. circumstai)Ces
ceming •fuel recovery costs. He said· ter.
.. •
. .
adjusted . the number of points fiti of -the Police Department, -and in Galli a .County Common Pleas surrounding the case.
·the vice president of the company had
. C~uncll approved Eskew s Tr~a- asstgned for a reckless operation • maintenance_employees Joe Ander- Court in the 'case of Troy Sowders,
"Based upon circumstances of
i'eturned his call, but he was out of the surer s report -of $54,, 10.42: w11h citation due to speed. The poi~ts , soh and Davtd Davts. ·
this
death and a lack of incriminating
who was rcporrcdly last seen in Gal·
evidence, all law enforcement offilia County in October 1996.
Sowders. 56. was believed to be cials involved believed a plea to vol- .
ttaveling the county fair' circuit and untary· manslaughter was an appro. · In other bustness, councol:
·
.
.
.
.
was residing in Gallia County with priate plea to accept," according to
Hubman and Brct Pelfrey, prior to his · Prose9yting }\.ttomey Brent Saunders.
family
reporting his disappearance.
"In addition. during the course of
share bemg $260.
.
• .
.
. .
. .
.
·several
extensive
searches
Qf
Rae;
this
case. members of the victim's
· -· Declined joining Sam's Club;
JIM FREEMAit
He said members of the chamber ·. In addition, some companies hire
8
Creek
over
.
a
three-month
peri·
'Cocin
family
and Jheir legal counsel agreed •
... :ntt'~essed until its next meeting
y
Staff
of commerce nei:d fO'-'attend the short-term specialistli for spec ill! pro1
od led deputies to lo:icate a body on to accept the plea;" he added.
8
whtch wtll be field at 7_p.o_n. on Apnl . 8!;'~::~t!r happens in Meigs ground breaking Thursday at·l p.m. jects that require outside expertise.
· Although a sentencing date has yet
~I at the f!'umc1pal butl~tng. . .
near Veterans Memorial Hospital to
Temporary agencies arc the largest Fch. 3.
Cqnfirmation of fingerprint to be sCheduled, Hubman will Serve
Atlendmg were H1ll, counc1I Co~t~?~·~omin~n complaint, but not support construction of the building. growing industry in the United States,
records, indicaling that the body was
membelS Robert Beegl~. Bentz, John entirely true these days, according to
Finally he recognized the Apple 'she said. A lot of companies that have that of Sowders, were made through thrcc-to-10 years on the voluntary
manslaughter charge.
DUdding, Dale Han, Henry Lyons
. d
T
E '
'd · 1
· · downsized in recent v_i:ars have real·8ncl La . Wolfe. Also attendin
new Meigs County economac · eve1.·
ree_ states rest enua communlly
'·
the Mansfield Penitentiary.
Saunders indicated that the state
A member of the victim's family · i ask for the maximum sentencing
were
Karen Lyons, Rizer an~ opment director Ron McDade.
· _tha~. ts ~otng up near Tuppers Plao~s. ~z:~c ~~~:~;:.n~~po:~ry f:pt,_ and
.u Jill
.
McDade was introduced Tuesday
ThiS represents an opportumty
said Tuesday she wasn '1 happy with f eight straight 'years.
'.o
dunng the m~nthly Meigs County Cot growth," he~d. addina that theSe
Some advantages of hiring work- the plea, and would have pll:ferrcd
Pelfrey, 2S. also of RodQey, plead.ftnS.•,_.18·
Chamber of Commerce luncheon at projects have the potential to create ers through a temporary agency are that til!: case against Hitbman had ed guilty on a bill of infonnation to
V
&amp;I
I' Cll
Car1eton Sch'oo1 .on
· s· yracuse.· He a 1o t o f JO
· bs.
.
. . · . the reduced cost of payroll adminis- gone to trial .
complicity to ·Jobllcry and WIIS senwas intrOduced by chamber President
He also pointed out progress on . tration and P,aying only a fixed
"IPs just got me dc.v,asta ,. sa.id tenced \o three years · in the Orient · :
Horace Kan'. .
the T\lppers Plains industrial site and amount per hour with no additional Wanda Parker of Rushville, Ohio, Correctional Facility. ·
:
"Things are really happening," he P~eroy's ongoing Downtown Rcyi-- taxes, benefits or payroll.
·•
.
said~
· '
Jjlli~tion Projeci. , ·
·
Chamber Vice-presi~ent Sue Mai• ~RLJNGTON, Va.._(AP) -;- ~ .
McDade, holding a copy of the
"It's good to he Iilia in Meigs son mentioned the April 17 Chamber
$',ICtal ·Secumy Admmtstrauon IS ·· SundayTimes-Sentinelforemphasis, County," said McDade, a Meigs Golf Tournament and reponed that
bemg asked by Senate leaders to shut ·pointed out three items in the news- County native. ·
·
!he ieccntdinner/danee was very sucdown- 81 l~ast temJ!Oranly .- an paper illusu'ating progress in the
He said his plan was to "live with cessful.
·
Groundbreakln' ceremonies to mark the betlnllina of c:on~~~ wd! stte that gtves taxpayers county.
'
.
economic development professionals
She said plans are being made for
structlen on the new Meias County Medical Clinic wW be held at
·&lt;l'!"ventenl access to theu. perSonal
First is the Eastern Local School with the state" and to "take advantage a possible stem wheel cruise with ·a
1 p.m. Thunday in Pomeroy.
· ·
~~iai ·Security Records. .
. , ·District. building project, which is of their contacts".
dinner and dance.
The cereanonles art belna slllged by Holzer Clink: aDd Con·:: ·. l!S~ Today rcpo~s t~ today s scheduled for bid opening Thursday. "When they think of sooitbeastem
Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan
sollclated Health Systems, Inc., parent of lhe Holftr Medical Cen'41110n1 thll Senate Mtnorny ~ader . Next he pointed' out Thursday's Ohio ... they'll think ofMeigs Coun· commended Patty· Pickens for her
ter and Veterans Meinori.i Hospital.
Tom. D~hle, 0-S:D., ~nd Sens. scheduled ground brcakin1 for a pro- ty," he ·sal~.
offer of land for a proposed veteraAs
The publk Is invited to be on hand for the lhort ceremonies
. :f,lilltJI!II Roth, R-Del., Dame! Pillru:'k posed medical arts . building nc~
,
,
liome.
to be held in fi'OIIt of tbe Meip County Jnfirnoary on Mulberry
Moynihan, 0-N.Y., aJid John Chafce, Veterans Menlorial Hospitai tn . · The gueM speaker at the luncbeon
Heiallts in Pomeroy, site of the new dink. ,
·
In addition , P!ckens treated a del!~R.I., sent a _let~~r to the qency say- . ~ineroy.
.
,
was Di,nne Cocke!ham, manager of
RefreshmentJ will be served Ill the conclusion of the program,
IIIJ. the webs1t~ may ~ot a~ord ~ufCharles Adkins Jr., pc-e-'dent and Personnel Temporary Services of ~gation to a tour of the~~ing
Construction of the 12,000 square feet fltdlity Ms been in
_./' ·
Ga~n~ P_TOICCitO!ls ag~nst Vlolauons chief cllecutiye offJCU. of. Holzer Parkersburg, W.Va., 'w"'l explained · a buffet. .
tile plunin1 stages for narly two years while dtldl Wet'ef'OIII·
An A.mericailLeaion liaison said
&lt;!Ctndi~tdual pnV~Y·.
· Medi&lt;:al Center, earlier -stated plans some of the reasons companies hire
pleted oo the deslp aDd IOCIItio• of the - .....,. ftnlctllre.
he had never been tt:eated better any·
~ : U111tl such pnvacy can be ~ured, caU ·for a S LS million, 10,000-lo- temporary help.
The Melp c-ty Commlslionen ...... to-lllllt.e ..nd avaUwhere
than
in
Meias
County,
Vauah·
·: · tile Mnalon said in their letter that · i~.OOO-sqiiiUC ;foot ,buildi.na .which
.BusinesSes ellen hire ternporuy
able for the fl!dJily om 1 year -ao. 'nie t:almiJ owned land has
~ request tlw IICCCII (to the will boule three to seven doctcn and help ror their bltsy .-ons durina an said. ·
betn pun:hase!lfor tile $1,$ IIII!IDioe bulldlaa.
"A veterans home would be a
. ~) via the Internet be suspend· cru&amp;e 18 to 22 new jobS. Dott\)IIIR 1ummer and before holidays or to flH
The new dink wUII!Ollle at least H\'fll dodon ad il ex~tca:
. .
upricted to ute lhe IKitpital facility vacanc:ies durina employee lei~ peat asset, not only for veterans, but .
4fd to provide 20 new Jobs In Melp Couacy. Cl!lllt1'11Cti0a
for their families," he ·lidded. "Patty
will be by Enlmlon ud Aaol:lala
n. -c-:Y set up the web sttc a for testinallld odlcr setvicel iac:lud: and viiCIItions to prevent over!Oidina ,tid
an outstandina job.·
'
• .Ca PI ei • . . . 3
ina in-plliltllllldacutc c:Mt.
Olhe1" employees.

ES
suuid 1o choose

'

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4door models in
srock..Yaious
equipment aod
rolonl .
•Comelofor

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~0 ~re a e _ prOJ,C.. S . Op~~
~. ~f.-~;~~~i~'i~~:n;:::·.·o
··'· •~at:•'l"'a'ln- ~ ~o.ap
·": ·ca··f"'.· m
: ve·' e'' t•lng
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' }'DUI' tat dtiw:

today! · '

.

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Gallia m'an pleads
guilty to charges

Ill.
'

.....

~~;:t~!~~~~-~ot:'!~;_onthe '· Me····g·s .ch· amber

meets new
~h;~i~:~~"!a~:s:~~~:=~ .economic devel,opme-nt ·director ·
de"ik

Ill""

.$:.
·•def.S
·ask SSA to
C. /OSe Web .SJfe

CHEVRel~f..
l • OlDSMOBilE • .J.iKus·• I OYDTA . Mst
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...... .,... , .' -'
sllGIIO.altr~

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Groundbre~king set for new
Meigs County Medical Clinic

~------------------------~
l
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•

ColDmenta
-

-TIIunda,, Aprillq

By

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"

ROuRT

...,_(180_,_,
____ ..,,..,,
a=a.....,_
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GOP can't keep up with
high expectations of '95

cracks tire drug users and people with
medical disorders that make them
unfit for military ~rvice.
These recruits make . it through
what investigaton call an "inade..
quate" screening process, only to be
discharged when· their problems are
discovered during basic · training.
Some recruits are too out-of-shape to
withstand the physical trial!~._of boot
camp. And still others simply lack the·
nece.&lt;Sary motivation, and are discharged when their case appears
hopeless.
By then, however, ta~payers have
already spent $83 to ship the recruit
to basic training . $91 for a medical
exam, $146 per day for salary, food
and housing, and $817 to $99S for
clothing. To add insult to injury, it
costs an additional $83 to ship the
recruit home once he or."she has been
1 discharged. The Navy estimates that
the average recruit who dqesn 'I make
it through basic training costs taxpayers at lea.st $4.700.

By WALTER A. MEARS
AP Special Corre1ponclent
WASHINGTON.- Stay tuned: Congress is back from spring break with
its Republican leaders defending a sluggish pace ·that contrasts starkly with
lhe outburst of action after the GOP takeover two years ago.
Actually, this year's start1s more in keeping with customary congressional
ways ll\an the frenzied House pace that began the last Congress.
.
But the pace in 1995 planted ex~tions - about and wtthm Repubh . can congressional ranks - that can 'l be matched now.
"I mean. everything is backed ue. waiting on thebudget," Senate Majority Leader Trent Lou said Monday, blaming President Clinton for the slowdown in effons to write a plan that would end deficits in 2002 .
Lou said he'd hoped talks between White Hous~ and congressional budget aides would produce something dur'ng the two-week recess, but it didn't happen.
.
" We have run·out of time to wait for leadership from the Whtte House
on the budget issue," Lott said. The White House rcbuual is that Clinton
already has.. provided it, and that Congress should produce· us budg~t. a
Republican aliemative to his.
·
·
' An initial coqgressional budget is due in a week, but the 11metable won 't
be met. It seldom is.
Nor arc there signs of a stepped-up pace on other legislation. First up in
the House is a bill to prohibit the use of federal funds to subsidize or promote assisted suicides. thus banning something that isn't happening. ·
" Some people were so used to the 100 days in ·J99S they thought if we
didn't have a boiled egg in three minutes, you couldn't fix an omelet," House
Speaker Newt Gingrich said.
.
"Our values have not changed," he added.
His situation certainly has, though. Ardent COfiSCrvatives are griping about
his leadership, demanding an agenda that wo~ld inclu~e action soon o~ a
GOP tax cut, which he'd suggested could awau a commttmentto balanctng
the budget. He has yet to pay, or say how he' II pay, a ·$300,000 fine imposed
by the House along with a reprimand for ethics violations. 1
that not only crack down on illegal
"No Human Being is Illegal."
Exactly two years ago, Gingrich was accorded 30 minutes of prime-time
immigr~tion, but also curb some of
"We Wlllit Amnesty No"! "
television to boast of the 94-day burst in which Republicans marked their
the
abus~s in legal immigration.'
So read the placards carrie&lt;! by
House takeover after 40 years in the minority by approving nine of the 10
'Under
the lllrms of. the new law,
demonstrators in Newark, N.J. They
maJor bills in their "Contract With America.'.'
.
. were protesting the new immigration
In the end. little of it became law, ~rid what did was a produ~t of comrcfonn law, which took effect last
Joseph Perkins
promise with Clinton. The more traditional process of legislating took hold
week. Similar rallies ;ook place in
after the theatrical beginning.
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other cities throughout the country. the nation's S million illegal immiTwo J99S GOP centerpieces that didn 't make it through Congress were
These placards reveal the mind-set grants have six .months to get legal:
tried again this year, but both the balanced budget amendmeotto-the Con- · of immigrant advocacy groups. They otherwise they must leave the UnitstiiUtion and the amendment to permit congressional tenn limits were blocked
would have the United States adapt ed States and, thereafter, apply for
again.
.
a de facto "open border" policy. In legal admiuancc. II' they remain illeOverall, the slower start has Democrats, and some Republicans, argutng
other words. once foreigners set foot gal in this COUJ1.\ry after Sept. 30, tltcn
that this 'time, too little is being done.
on U.S. soil -- legally or illegally -- they can be deported and b!J.rred from
Lou satd the pace will pick up. "It.'s not as if we don 't have a plan:· he
they would be entitled to stay forev- returning for at least three years.
The new law also requires that the
er. ,
told a conservative group Monday. "Just be calm: we' II get there."
1
Before the recess, the House had met 27 days this year, compared with
Moreover. they would be entitled U.S . sponsors of legal immigrants
to the same nghts and benefits as . (usually relatives) uphold their sworn
53 during the opening GOP dnvc in 1995, which also included marathon
U.S. citizens. The very day their commitment to economically support
sesstons. The Senat~ has been in session 37 days. .
plane landed in a U.S. airpon, their those immigrants once they arrive in
Urider Democratic control in 1993. the House was in session 39 days.
boat docked in a ,U.S. harbor or (heir this country. Now~ sponsors often
the Senate 45, over the same period.
.
car crossed the U,S. border, they bring family members 10 the United
But days in session don"t fully measure what's happening. In the early
would he eligihlc for food stamps. States. promistng that they will not
going. the real work is done by congressional committees, considering and
Medicare. Supplemc,ntal Security become · a "public charg~ ." then
drafting legislation for action later.
Income and other" government bene- renege on that promise. costing tax·
That process also has been lagging this time, in pan because Republi .
fits. though they 'd paid absolutely no payers hillinns of dollars a year tn
cans lack a clear, consensus agenda.
American
taxes.
hcncftts to nonciti?-cns.
. Major bills seldom pass Congress ~t the start unless the.Y arc leflover'issucs
Well. Congress .did not feel that
Immigrant advocacy groups argue
from the year before, as in the case of the 10 percent atrhne tax renewal that
the Umtcd States should be such a that these and other provisions of the
took effect a month ago.
.
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Actually, the showpjece measures of the last Congress. including the wel- ·benevolent host. So last fall: law- '1mmigration reform law arc Draconfare overhaul and the crime hill. were delivered in its final days, long after makers enqctcd immigration reforms ian: that they will pose a hardship 10
the theatrical stan-up.
_
.
Things tend to stan moving when deadlinCs loom. And probably wtll
again.

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AccuWe11~ f o -

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Woman injured in accident

Nedra S. Johnson
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lManslilld l41•

A Carpenter area woman was transponed to Grant Medical Cen-

ter in Columbus following an !ICCident on state Route 14~ near Car-

Nedra S. (Durst) Johnson, 59, of Mt. Alto W.Va., died Tuesday, AprilS,
I 997, at Pleasanl Valley Hospital.
,
She was a member of the United l)rethren Chun:h in Chester.
Born May 10, 1937 in Point Pleasant, W. Va., she was a daughter of the
late Dcnsel Dale and Cora Inez (Rainey) Durst. In addition to her parents,
. she was also preceded in death by one son, Harold ~t. "Rusty" Johnson; a
daughter, Lucinda L. Jobnson ; two sisters, Irene Reynolds and Garnett Hes..
. son; and a brother, Edward Durst.
.
She is survived by her husband, Harold 0 . Johnson; six sisters, Kathryn
Miller, Margaret Hesson, Sally Smith and Faye Wheatcrilft, all of Point Pleasant, Erma Price of Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va., and Shirley Vance of OalliP?·
lis: a brother, Lewis Paul Durst of Point Pleasant; and several nieces and
nephews.
.
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Graveside service will be held at II a.m. Thursday, April 10, at Kirkland
Memorial Gardens, near Point Pleasant, with Rev. Louis A. Hussell offici·
ating. Burial will follow. .
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There will be no visiting hours. Services are under the direction of the
Crow-Russell Funeral Home in Point Pleasant.

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By The AISocfatecl Pntll

Ohio forecast
· Tonight. ..Ciear or clearing with
retord ot near recori:l lows of 1S to
20.
" Thursday.. .Increasing clouds wit~
llighs mainly in the ·40s.
. · Extended foret:ast
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Thursday iiight. ..A c~ance &lt;,&gt; f ram
or snow. Lo"is 25 10 35. .
Friday..:A chance ?f ram . Wet
snow posstb)f early. Htghs 45 to 50.
. Saturday. :-~chance of ram. Lows
tn the 30s w ~th htghs 45 to 55.
.
·. Sunday... ~ chance of ram ... Posstbly some wet sno~ nort~ and east.
Lows in the. ~Os . Htghs tn the liOs.

1)1/eigs bqard OKs~.eonttnuedrrompaset

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noncitizens . And since they failed to lie dole, receiving .such benefits
dissuade Congress from passing the SSI and Medicaid, ,are s.ubject IIi
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law, they arc trying to get tile courts immediate cut-off. The H•reality
is that.
to delay implementation of cenain the new immigration rcfonri law is
· provisions. or strike them down.
far from Draconian. The United •
Indeed , earlier thi~ week, lawyers SFmcs ~ill continue to admit a half..
for the American Civil Liberties millinn or so legal immigrant~ a yea"·
Union and the Lawyers' Commiuce more than uny other nati&lt;m on canh.·
for Civil Rights persuaded U.S. District Court Juagc Emmet Sullivan to American Faxpaycrs will continue 1&lt;,&gt;•
spend more than $1 hi Ilion a year .
order a four-day stay in enforcement subsidizing
noncitt1.cns.
of the new reform measures. He was
The
most
dramatic change will he
promptly overturned hy the U.S.
in the government's treatment uf.
Court &lt;if Appeals in Washmgton,
illegal immigrants. No longer will :
D.C.
Now the ACLU and the Lawyers' hundreds of thousands of h&gt;reigo·
Commiuec arc filing another lawsuit nationals he able to steal across the ,
challenging the immigration law's U.S. border every year, with no dun, i
provisions concerning immigrants gcr of punishment 1f apprehended. 1 ,
Now. there will he coQscqucnces
amving in this country 'with false or
no documents, claiming political a.•y- ·to breaking U.S, immigmtio11 laws. !f.,
lum . They warn that refugees will be illegals arc caught. they noi lmly will ,
sent back to their homelands to face he returned t&lt;l the country from..
whence they came. they may also hc '
"jlOssihlc death and persecution."
But this is·just more disinforma- harrcu from· re-entering the Unilcd .
States for u period of years.
•
tion by the foes of immigration
The
point
is
to
send
a
message
tq
;
reform. It's no more true than wild
those
who
would
immigr'ntc
'to
thi~ ,',
claims that the S million illegal country: Come one, come 'ull. But .
immigrants in the country arc in dan- c()mc legally.
:·
ger of immediate depostation. Or that
Joseph Perkins is a 'columnillt:
the several hundred ' thousand legal for the S.m Dlqo Union-Trlbune ,
immigrants
who arc now. on. the puh- and a commentator.for MSNBC. :
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of' the littcst ' mentality is to tJ;tc JUnHe's right. •
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School vouchers -even the Iim- gle.
Puhlic schools have a lot of rrOO: '
ited pmgram that Flake now hacks . ,oormuIa.~ vary, sharply_" ·.
won 't guarantee that all students Iems. Fun d.tng
who meet the eligibility rcq,uirc, frnm stat~ h&gt; staw a.nd of\en from one:, • j
mcnts for this money will he acccpt- school dtstrtcl Wllhtn a state to illlolho- !
.ed into private schools. Even armed cr. Standurds, like the expectations
with vouchers, few kids in special l&lt;x~ many teachers have of their stu• 1
education classes arc likely to win dents, arc disturbingly low. ~ so i~ l
admission to private school. Neither the J~&lt;;rfonnancc of many ~!Jdl:nts; . · a
But for all nf iL~ problems, public
will many of the slow learners and
undcrachicircrs the public schools · education works. Most .pellple wlid ·l
allcnd puhlic schools graduate ind gQ f
refuse to turn away. What seems cenain in this lime of • on ~" live productiye live.~. Sure pri• 1
drastic budget cuttin,g is that a school vale schools have higher IJfaduation. I
voucher program will siphon off fed, rates, but that's because rrecious few
cral funds from alrcl!dy cash-strapped of them accept the challenge of'
public school· systems, making it teaching all studenL• regardless of
harder for the kids who arc left mental ability or Physical handlcllfl.
If enacted, the voucher plin ,tha( :
he hind to get a gOQ&lt;I .education.
An embrace of school vouchers is Floyd Flake baCks rna,- he a boon IO!
a retreat from the proposition that the private school his chlin:h nms, but
every child, regardless of ability, is it will rob most poor schoOkhildn:n , ·
entitled tn a qualii~ education. It is to in his district and aero~• the nation of 1
real chance of' gettina a ilcccni'~ t
public education what the "survival · any
ed
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determine the best course of action
for repairing tpe roof on the Mid41epon Elementaty School.
Mary L. Runion, 71, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Thesday, AprilS, 1997.
In addition, the board agreed to
tn St. Mary's H0 spital, Huntington.
advenise for bids on the Meigs
Born August I, 1925 in Buffalo, W. Va., she was a daughter of the late
.Junior Higll \~chool Fctotball Field
David and Elizabeth (Barber) Gillispie. She was a homemaker and auendLighting Proj~. The district received
ed College Hill Church. •·
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the money ilflt wtll !&gt;&lt; used toward
In addition to her parents. she was preceded in death by two husbands.
the project as .a gift. Board members
Phil Bright and Albert Runion: three sisters ..Ethel Jeffers, Stella Eads: and
remarked :hat the improved lighting
Beuy Gillispie; and two brothers. Melvin and Carl Gillispie.
will be an asset to both the school and
Survivors include two daughters, Albena "Jean" Wooten of Letan, W. Va.,
lhe village of Middleport.
·
and Patricia Woyan of Southside; a son, Gerald Lee Bright of Southside:
·The boart\r;adopted a school cal- three brothers, John Gillispie of Southside. W.Va., Gordon Gillispie of Pliny.
endar for the ) 9974)8 school year and W. Va.; and Gilbert Gillispie of Buffalo; two sisters, Vina Johnson of Hen,· met in" execqllve session to discuss derson, W. Va., and Bessie Estep &lt;,&gt;f Mason, W. Va; 13 grandchildrel); an~
personnel mauers. Following the
seven great-grandchildren. ·
.
· executive session, die board hired
Service will be .friday, April II, at2·p.m. at the Wilcoxen Funeral Home,
Diana ·JQhnson, Virgil Hartley,
Point Pleasant with Rev. Gay Withrow officiating. Burial will follow in HamRichard DeMoss and Janet Hanley as. brick Cemetery, Southside.
substitute bus drivers pending certi Friend's may call at the funeral home Friday from II a.m. until time of
fication.
the service.
Present w~.~ Buckley, board President John Hooo and board members
Scou Waltol,l.•,Roger Abbott, Randy
Humphreys and Larry Rupe.
Units of the Meigs.County Emer~
9:20 p.m., East Main Street,
The next meeting will be held at
gency
M~dical
Service
recorded
six
Pomeroy,
Jenny Cleek, treated at the
7 p.m. on April22 at the central office
scene;
calls
for
assistance
Tuesday.
Units
-in Pof!leroy.
II :49 p.m., L_incoln
Hill.
responding included:
Pomeroy, Natalie Morehead, PVH.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2:55 p.m.• state Route 143, Car- COLUMBIA TWPVFD
6:07 p.m., brush fire on Carpenterpenter, Carolyn Fraley, VMH pendDyes
ville Road, Ron Bosler propering transfer to Grant Medical Center
ty,
no
injuries, Scipio VFD assisted.
Am Ele Power .....~ ............... u40\
via MedFiight helicopter ambulance,
Akzo ........ ~ .............................69~.
Rutland Volunteer Fire Depanment RACINE
AmrTech ••..••.•.....•,.•...•..••....•.•.59
I; 17 p.m ., VFD and squad to Carand
!i&lt;JI!ad and Scipio VFD assisted;
Ashland 011 .•..••.••.•••..•••••••••••• 43\
penter
Road, brush fire at Melissa
7 ;0 I p Iii., Noble Summit Road,.
ATIT ..................................... 34\
Dailey
propeny. no injuries, Bashan
Marsha Capehan, Plcasa'!_t Vall~y
Bank One ..............................41\
VFD assisted .
Hospital. Rutland squad assisted:
Bob Ewana ............................ 13'4
Borg·Warner ......................... 44~.
Champlon·............................. 18't.
Charming Shops.................. 5.,.
City Holc:llng ........................-•• 321_.;
Open Door session ·set
.
day from 3 to 4 P·fl\·
.
Federal Mogul ....................... 25'4
State
Representative
John
Carey
Dinner
10
be
served
.
.
Gannett .................................88'4
will
hold
an
open
door
session
at
the
A
baked
steak
dmner
will
be
Good.v•r .......... ,.....................52
&lt;crvcd at the VFW Auxll1ary Post,
K-mart ...............;................... 12'4 Meigs County Counhouse on MonThppers Plains, Sunday, at noon. Cost
·•
Landa End•••.....••••.•.....:••••••••• 27~
Llmhed •.• ~ .•'.! ............ ;••••••••••••• 17'!..
will be
for adults. and s2.so for
Ohio Valley -Bank .................. 38~.
Veterans Memorial
chtldren.
One Vall8v .•,... ~ ...........;..........35'4
Tuesday
admissions.
-·
Cora
Concert
10 be p~ented
PRpl• .....,...................... ,....29'1.
·
A
free
concert wtll be ~sen ted by
Prem Flni.,..... ,........ ~ ..............14'Gnndley, Pomeroy. .
"Sweet Mountain Sounds" Tuesday at
Aock'Welt .:.............................&amp;2\
Tuchsday dtscharges - Lehmd .' 7 p.m. at the Meigs County Library
RD-Stwtl .............................. 171.,_
Cl0~ .
.
. p
ShOney'S oooouoo ooooo•••••oooooooooo o ooooS~
10 omeroy.
Holzer Medical Center
Star Bank ,••
41 \
.
, Discharges Apdl 8 - Cora Now titkina. appli~tions
Wendy's ...;..........~ .................20~
McManis, Rhonda Mtller, Keith TayThe Metgs Unncd Mcthodtst
Worthlhgton..............,...........18:t
lor. George Clar~. Frederick Rawl- Coopcrattve Pansh wtll he takmg
Stock reJ)ort• 1r1 the 10:30 ings, Sandra Felty.
apphca\IOns fro':" low-mcomc famtIn oiliclr business, thC board authoa.m. quot• provided bv Adveet
Birtb
Mr.
an.
d
Mrs.
Joseph
,
hes for· garden seeds and tomato
rized Sujterintendent Bill Buckley
of Gallipolis.
.
Qualls, daughter, Radcli(f.
.
. plants on Thursday and Fnday. 9 a.m.
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a:id' Treltstirer Ciridy ·Rhonemus to
~ :i· ' .. ~ . ' ~ · '~ . .~ ....
·~
(Published with ~rmission,
to n~~ each day.
••

Meig,~.:~-=·MS

logs 6 calls

Stocks

·Meigs announcements
Hospital news

u

ss

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Today in -.history
Br The AIIOCIMM""'

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Today is Wednesday, April9, the 99lh day or 1997. 111erc are 266 day•" :.
left in the year.
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Today 's HigJtliahl in History:
~
On April9, 186S; Confedeme Gen. Roben E. Lee IWteadelad hi1 ~ · • 'I
to Union Gen. Ulysses S. Grant • AppomMtox Court Hcue ill Vqlllia. ' ~
· On this date:
1
In 1682, the Flelldt explorer Raben La s.Jie I'CIIChetf lhdotiuillippiJliv. :

er.

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Minute ·Men

THE

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Evangeliltie Team
Who I•••• the War
~~ Send lddrat con'eCti01tt 10
1'1le Dollr"-liol, ·tJl c- SJ., - y .
Qlio -45169,.- \I .

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.,..c-r.. -llaOie
S0.SCRII'TION IIATBS

o,e ~ft'"'1''~.,,.........,.....:.:................$2.00

Oioo Mooih :.............................................S8.70

1 !.... :~L ..... !.;.....:. .. l ............ $101.00
Oee Yelr.o:....

o:.::. . :~,~~,~~-~~.~. .35~
t

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5ot'ocrlben notdooill"'IO ,.Y lho ...ncr moy

..,.

ro/JoiJ"In ldv.,.;. diiOCI 01 The Doily Seolllnol
011 I - tix « 5ZbltiL CndiJ wiFille

.

PoiMnly:.

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FIJI&gt;IIIt. _ _ .... ..,. ............

----··--

I. lho -.lpllun period. S llocslpduo..._. -lie hi(IF 1
I to, ch!onttl• doc

I .

_of ... -.lpdoo.
·' if

. .....................................
,_,....c..;:.......
tS MAIL8t/IIICIItrriONS

$27.:10

-~............-.-.............................SS3.12

52-..........- .....,....._,............... $1!15. ~

...- ... c..;

IS - - - ·--.............. .................., 1211.:15
:~~-.....,.....-·-·-··..····--:U6AI

S2 -...•••..::..,.. -......._.................110f."l2

•

ltllldlng, .nd Dr. .
1ft new,
.
•••--• Holplt81 In ·
botlllnllmllll wt1o
do ,_., tN•IIa • ,,,..._ ~ _.,1 Wlll~..fn
I "'F&amp; T1111r ollla11 -·~, ' dIn tlllllllgl MIIIHI Cat~IJIF atljNIIIID •SII:•IS 11111101111
'HG 1 lUI Tile phone nu 11M II Ill 3131.

Dr.

No lllboaipduo ~mill perm!... I . -·

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People needing a~sistance in meet- · Emergency HEAP funding, Proffin
ing their heating energy bills will explained.
have until May 31 to apply for help
Applicants for Regular HEAP
under the Regular Heating Assistance must have household mcomes at or
Energy Program.
below 150 percent of federal poverRegular HEAP, fun,ded by the U.S. ty guidelines. :Maximu,m one-year
Dep~ment of Health and Human incomes allowed for HEAP cligibil- .
Services, help~ low-Income Ohioans- ity ar9, for a one-person household,
with their home heatin(! costs by pay- $11 ,610: two ~rsons, $ t5.540:'threc
ing a portion of their winter heating people, $19,470: fou r people,
bills.
$23,400; five people, $27 ,330; and
"While Ohio has c~perienced rel- six people, $31,260. Jior households
atively mild weather recently, there with more than six people, add
have heen price increases for various $3.930 per member.
forms of energy .that affected con-·
During ·1996, more than 230,000
sumers throughout the heating sea- individuals and fa!llilics in the state
.- son," Gov. ·George Voinovich said.
were served through Regular HEAP.
"HEAP helps to n;duce the ener- Applications for the program arc
gy-related economit burden for qual- available at the CAA main oflicc in
ified households by supplementing a Cheshire, and at CAA Outreach cenportion of winter· heating costs," he ters. in Gallia and Meigs counties,
added. "This allow, panicipants to senior resource centers in both coundevote more of their limited incomes ties and at other locations.
to oiher basic needs."\
Proffitt smd anyone with questions
Emergency HEAP, a one-time can contact CAA for more informapayment that helps low-income pep- tion. • In-person interviews arc
pie faced with loss of a heating .required for Emergency HEAP ~ppli­
source, the threat of disconnection or cations, she added.
a dwindling energy supply, has
alreiidy been extended Fo April 30 in Dance to be held
the· 17 counties - including Gallia
The Belles .and Beaus Western
and Meigs- put under federal dis- ' Square Dance Cluh will have a dance
aster declaration last month .
Saturday from 8 to It p.m. at the
Since the extension for the emcr- Senior Center in Pomeroy. HQmcr
gcncy program, several applications Magnet will be the 'C uller.
have been received by Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency, said
Letha Proffin. Fhc agency's HEAP
coordinator. ·
"But we can help them a second
time," she said . "The only reason it's
being done is because there arc 17
counues in the flood disaster area."
Both Regular HEAP and Emergency HEAP arc normally cui off at
titc end of March.
"Regular HEAP has been extended' for those who have not yet
applied.".·Proffin said.
Applications for Regular HEAP
are' processed by CAA and submitted
to the state Dcpanment of Development's Community Development
Division for approval. But CAA
oversees application and approval of

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Complaints probed.

Regu·lar HEAP extended

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A 23-year-old Rutland m~n was arrested Thesday evening OQ a
Delaware County warrant alleging !w.o.counts of ~onsuppon of dependents.
·
Kenneth Neal will appear ·for a hearing before being released to
Delaware County authorities, Sheriff James M. Spultby said.

Stanley Haws ]ohnson. 72, Racine, died Tuesday, April 8, 1997, at his
home.
.
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He was born Dec. 3, 1924, Son of the late Lee and Margaret Reiber John.•
son and was emplo~ed at Kaiser Aluminum for many years as a computer
o~~ator. He was a World War II Navy veteran and a member of the Feeney
Bennett Posi 128, American Legion, Middlepon.
He is survived by his wife, lleuy Roush Johnson of Racine: daughters
-Meigs County residents v.:hose homes were damage in last nibnth's
and sons-in-law, Linda and Bryan Yonker of Pomeroy and Debbie ~nd John
floods have until May 3 to apply for assistance through the Federal
Powell of Syracuse ; sons, Greg !ohnson and Darrell Johnson o~Racme; four
· Emergency Management Agency.
granilsons; brothers, Carroll Johnson ofMtddle_pon and F~eddte Johnson of
People can apply by calling 1-800-462-9029 •. or 1-801)-462-7585 .'
Delaware: an uncle and aunt, _Bob and Wtlma Retber of Racane; several meces
for the speech or hearing impaired. The numbers are available 8 a.m.
to 6 p.m., seven days a·week.
and nephews.·
. .
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He was preceded in death by two 51 sters, Kathleen McNtckles and BetAs of April 7, 318 Meigs residents have applied for disaster assistance
ty Templeton.
.
·
hwith
ks 243
h of those claiming housing needs. A total of· 182 hous-·
Services will be held Friday, 1 p.m. at the Pomeroy Chapel of Ftsher
mg c ec
ave been approved with a touil of $529,779 tn housing
Funeral Home, 590 East Main Street, Pomeroy, with the Rev. William Stires . ,_g..;r.a.nt•s•a·p-pr·o-vc_d_.___________________,&amp;
officiating. Burial will be in Gilmore Cemetery, Minersville.
Friends ·may call at the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral-Home 1'l;tursday froln 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.

Mary L. Runion

· The following supplemental contracts were not renewed because the
sports are in session and evaluations
are not complete: David Barr, boys'
• head track coach; Mike Chancey,
assistant bigh school track coach;
Rli\:k Blaetlitar; junior high track
coach ; ·Chris Blaeunar, assistant
junior high track coach; Scot Gheen,
llead baseball coach: Pete Woods,
reserve · b·aseball coach; Mike
K:ennedy, girls' head track coach:
Dale Jlarrism\, girls' softball ·coach;
Mary Olim, girls' reserve softball
coach.
The following long-term substitute teacher contracts were not
renewed: Carolyn Robin'son and Pam
Zirkle.
,
The board accepted the resignation of Rick Edwards as athletic
director .~ffeeti've at the end of· the
sbhq&lt;\1 yb'rl.r and the completion of his
•
,
duties. ,
.. David Deem was hired as a pantime assistant ·band director at a
salary of $700 effective July I and
Gloria VanReeth, David Ramey and
Suzy Cmpenter were hired as tut(lrs
for health handicapped students at a
rate of S11 .72 per hour not to exceed
five hours per week.
, The following supplemental contt'acts were·nol renewed: Jeff Skinner,
bays' varsity basketball coach; Rick
Ash, boys' assis!fitl varsity basketball
coach; Rick Edwards, boys' reserve
basketball coach; David Deem, lioys'
eighth grade basketball coach.
· The board· accepted the resignatibn of'tC.icher Elii.abeth 'Gee ~ffec­
ti~e the· end. of the current 'school
year.
· In a'ddition, the board did. not
nlnew the supplemental contracts for
extended service .for the following :'
Kevin ~heppard, vocaljonal agriculture, 60 days; Rick Edwards, OWA,
20 days; David Kucsma. m.arketiog.
20 days; Ron Logan, OWE. 20 days:
Marjorie :81alie, niilfe assistant, 10
. ' .•
S"~" H'.r'J!ITtS,
. I'',,e Sk'll
days;
I S, 10
days; Janet Hollingswonh, home
economics, . 10 days; Kathy Reed,
hlJIII\l; tjf~inic,s, ,.10 d~ys;. Gl~ia
VanRi:eill, h'ome economtcs,.- 10 days.

' 1,.

Man a"ested on charges

Deadline nears for flood.help

.GrophlctNot

Tod,ay's weather for~~ast .

•

penter Tuesday around 2:SS p.m.
A person was apparently removing a tree with a bulldozer when
the tree toppled, striking Carolyn Fraley, age unreported, of 32270 State
Route 143.
She was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy by
the Meigs CO!Inty Emergency Medical Service pending tranfer to Grant
by helicopter ambulA~e. Her condition was not available as qf press
time.

Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs Department investigated two
complaints recently.
Bev Crabtree, state Route 143, Albany, reponed a disconnect box
was taken from her electric pole. ·
Philip Werry, C~ester, reported Sunday that someone had e nte~ed
his cabin on state Route 143 in Letart Tow ~ ship aiid vandalized t l.

Sta·nley H. Johnson

abad idea that won't go away :.:-

By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
lifeline for poor kids who at:e stuck
Gannett New1 Service
in troubled public schools . They'll
WASHINGTON
School .give the parents of these youngsters
vouchers are a bad.idea that won 't go .the same option 10 send their children
away.
. ·, to private schools that the well-to-do
Last year thi.s educational scam now have.·
surfaced in Congress tn a hill'called
That's huncombe. ·
The goal of the school voucher
"Saving Our Children: The American
Communily Renewal Act" that was movement is to. institutionalize the
championed largely by conservative ·idea of public funding for private
Republicans. The legislation would · education - ,including using taxgive some low-income families in . payers dollars to finance people's
selected communities federal funds to decision to , send their chi ldrcn to
help meet. the cos; of sending their church-run schools. Orice done. supchildren to private schools, including porters will push 10 extend the bene·
those run by religious organizations. fits of this raid on the Frcasury to bet- l..al;t month, this _~arped idea ter-oO' parents. Thqt's their real goal.
resurfaced with a ·slightly different ·. n&lt;lt increasing educational choices for
name - but the same had intent.
the poor. .
• Hopes for passage of the "Amcr,What's wrona with this if needy
. iean Community Renewal Act of kids benefit. too?
1997" have risen since Rep. Floyd
Private schools lack . hoth the
Flake, a liberal New York Democrat, capacity ~rid the interest to meet the
siancd on as a co-sponsor. Flake, who cditcational needs of the broad cross
doubles as an African Mcth,odist section of p&lt;lor 'sc~oolchildrcn. They
Episcopal minister, heads a church in don 't seck to educate all students as
Queens that opeflltes a private school do public schools. Many have admisthat stands to benefit from his nip- sion standards that preclude those
flop on the voucher issue.
who are thought to have learning
Like the man said, " all politics is deficiencies - a disproJiortionately
local.'"
.
high percent of whom arc poor
Flake's what's-in-it-for-me con- minorities.
version dQesn't change the f~~:t that • Vouchers; are a "steaJ. from·thelhe school voucher movement threat· poor and aive-to-lbe•rich scheme,"
ens the demise of pitblic ed.ucation, NAACP president Kwcisi Mfunie
and if successful, will ultiiiiiiCiy said Jut week when he announced
make it harder for poor children to that the civil riahts orianization he
get a aood education.
leads will join with People for the
Proponents of these vouchers. American Way ill fillttinathc school
que that they are an educational voucher movement.

for

•

. I

Recruiters -- eager 10 enlill as
many prospective trai~ IS IIIF:Y CM
.. don 'I have the proper tncenttve.to
weed out indiv,idtu1ls unlikely to
make it through basic training.
according to a recent GAO~ on
the sub,;ect. ln an effort to corm:! this
problem, the Navy has sta(led penalizing recruitet:S whose enlistees can't
hack basic training.
,
But overeager recruiters aren't the only ones to blame. The recruiting process itself is full of flaws. It's
fairly easy, for example, for prospective recruits to cover ul' medical
problems that would normally serve
as a red-flag warning that they
shouldn't be auending boOt camp.
"The medical screening forms contain va~ and ambiguous questions,
and may be easy for'applicants to falsify," the GAO writes.
·
Another problem .is drugltestigg,
The Navy and Marine ·Corps don 't
test recruits until lhcy' ve ._ alrcady
arrived at basic training.'Thbusands
of dollars per recruit who's di~­
chargcd for drug u.~e could 1x; savoo
if drug testing were done before tile
enlistee is shipped off.
,
The GAO al~o believes that
recruiters could do a beucr job of leiling potential enlistees know what'.s
in store for them :it basic training.
Many recruits are hadly out of shape
when they show up till" boot camp.
These enlistees believe basic train - .
ing's purpose Is to make ihem slim
and fit. But miliFary training is a~[
substitute for weight walch!:rs. : · .:
Of course, eliminating premature
discharges all together is unrealistic.
Military service is not for everyone,;
and there will always he those who·
don 't realize this until after they'vc,
reported for training. But the GAOl
calculates that if the atmcd servicCii;
can reduce early dischurgcs by just 19•
percent, they 'd save l!txpayers nears,
ly $40 million per year. ·
•1
Maybe that doesn't sound like•
much when the government is $5tril:.
lion in dcht. But every lillie hit helps.,
Jack Anderson and Jan. Moller[
are writers for United Featu"'•
Syndkate, Inc.
.,

Immigration law is fair and firm

SHOW M£TKE
MONEY!

........,..··-Local briefs----.

0111() Wf•attwr

Millions are wasted on washout recruits

EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mars, vke president and columnist
for Tile Auodated Preu,lw reported on Wuhlnaton and national pol·
ilia for more than 38 yean.

The D811y $entlntl • Pege 3

'

WASHINGTON -- There .was .. Hill budget crunchers to chew on:
quite
an uproar when qtillionaire box- The armed services spent approxi'Est4MJslid in 1.948
er Riddick Bowe approached Marine matel:t $390 million in 1996 to
boot camp as if it were supposed to recruit and train individuals who
111 CouriStnll, .--oy, Ohio
be a fun-filled fantasy camp.
11.._.2f51• Fu 1112-2157
Shonly after his arrival at Parris
Island, Bowe decided the rigors of
Jack Anderson
basic training weren't for him. He
•
· and
· was promptly discharged by officials
who realized that the former heavyA Gannett
Co. Newspaper
Jan Moller
'
weight champ wasn 't one of the few
good men they were looking for.
L WINGETT
An embarrassed Bowe -- who held never even made it to their first duty
l'ulllieiiM'
a New York press conference to station.
·
announce he was enlisting in the elite
Some 60 percent of that money Marine reserves-- quickly returned to • $231 .8 million - ~as spent-on enlisMARGARET LEHEW
the lavish suburban Maryland tees who were discharged during
Control. .
lifestyle he's grown accust,omed to in ·their first two months of service. Like
recent years. Bowe's little misadven- Bowe, most of these individuals simFIIt _ _ _ ..,..,._ , _ _ . , . . , _ , . . . . . . , _ . . . .
turewiththe,Marineseosttaxpayers , ply couldn't handle basic training,
l' -... J)Jialllllo
about $5,000.
which lastS"from 6to 12 weeks.
1 ,_
11,•
an
•
P'*""'id
anti""
&amp;c/1~
•
•~·~
But
lost
in
the
hoopla
over
the
investigators
_..,.,_,.,_,....,.,
.... ,,..,..,.,_...... , ..,...
f
G Congressional
I
. Offi
'at thed
~ 10
....., Flit ,.116101. ffl Clullt.. _ . . , Oftlo
Bo.we (iasco is the BGIIhat pampered
enera Accountmg
tee ooun .
...:•:lli:;:
..
::,:•::•:.:MX=..:'"::.;":.::;':•::;:~~n;.;,;.,
______
...;.
____
~_,___.
prize
fighters
aren
't
.
t
he
only
ones
that
recruiters
aren't
careful
enough
L
. wasting the military's time and mon- when screening prospeCtive enlistees.
cy. Here 's something for Capitol Frequently slipping through the

-

w---,, Aprtlt, 1tt7

'

The Daily Sentinel

.. ,Jr'-'t;

•

TIIIV -

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
111 IAIT II'M"P'AL DRIVE

.
I.

"

Helfman, J11l
an4 Fruk Ball!f

Sat•r••Y
-S••••r
~ lo•••Y.April t2 - April tl ·-· April l4
. 6

POMEROY
.

IIH'I04

Left te Rlt•t
· Ellz•••th .

p.m. ft 9 p.m~ ..-

First Baptist Church ,
5th St. Racine, OH Ph. 949-2867

..
•

II

.,

�•

•I•

•

Sports

.

The DailfSenlht~~

... '

·

"·

"

·

Wedn••del· April 1, 1887
,

said after the Mariners' 14-8 victory Dennis Martinez, who pitched for straight game. He also matched a
over the Cleveland Indians.
Weaver in Baltimore from 1976 career-best with four hits and drove
"Sometimes I have my mind . through 1986. "But that's baseball. in four runs.
made up whenl'm going to pull the That's something people see and get
The highlight of the night was
pitcher, I think he bad his mind made excited about."
~iniella's tirade that.brought a smile
.up to pull the. manager."
The Mariners won the way they to the face of Griffey in center.
."It reminded me of what Earl won a club-record 85 games laSt sea·
Cousins tossed Pini~lla for a
Weaver used to do," said Seattle star son- because their offense. 'Their . comment he made while talking to
· '
pitchers gave up 18 hits and walked Martinez with the Indians ahead 5·
five.
.
4.
.
.
Ken Griffey Jr. hit his sixth homer • ,"1 didn't ~Y much, 1really did·r
and drove in fo.ur runs, and Jay Bub- · n't," Piniella said: "Usually. 1
ner broke out of a slump with his fQ'St deserve to get kicked out of ball
homer and four RBis.
games when 1 get kicked out, but in
Cleveland's Sandy Alorrtar tied a this instance here I did very little of
club record by homering in his fifth anything.

of

: ; The University of Rio Grande
. Redwomen were swept · jn two
, games by Urbana University in Mid• Ohio Conference plav Tuesda}' after.
---· -- "

"I looked down ai the grou~d to
make sure I wasn't confrontallonal
with the umpire. Then I &amp;aid,.'Those
pitches .were pretty close.' I g?' run
for that. That's_a first. I d1dn t .use
any profanity until·after I got ruri."
Said Martinez: "I was shocked
myself. They say now they're not
going to take nothing from anyboc!Y·
1 guess they want .to make a pomt
· with us."
.
· Griffey, who leads the Amencan
League in homers, went 3-for-5 and
Buhner was 3-for-4. Griffey hit a
two-run homer, a 434-foot sh~.t into
the third deck 1n nght field 1n the
seventh off Albie Lopez (0-1 ).

..

;

..

..

' .

..

WAITING for the.throw to the plate Is Seattle inning of Tuesday nlghra Ainerlcan League ga111e
pitcher Dennis Martinez (left), who eventually in Seattle. The Mariners won 14'8. (AP)
.
tags out Cleveland's David Justice In the first

~- Chitngo Cubs
At lnnl u 4, Houston 2

Floridu

Pinsburgh 2, S;m Di~go 0

NY . Mer ~

Entem Dhlslon

Ium

.~

. ~71

.J

4

.429

'I 112

. .....l

4

.42\1

I 112
I Ill

Buslon

. . .4

· Detmll .
New York

... 2

fnrun10 .....

2 .667

Today's games

1/2 . '

.1 .400

Ccntnl Division
Milwouket! .· . . .l 2 .600
. CLEVELAND ... .. . 4 J :'i71
Minnesom ................ 4 .\ .:'i71
Kan~as City ............. .\
J .:'iOO
Chicagu , .., ..... ... 2 J .400

· Philadl:lphin (Munoz 0.1 J &lt;11 San Fmn·
(R ut:ter 0-0), :U:'i p .m .
CINCINNATI £Bone~ 0-.0J at Colorado {M.Thompson 1-0), .'i:O.'i p.m.
Houston (KIIe 0-1) at AtiMtu (NeQglc!
0-0~ 7:40p.m..
N.Y. Mets (Miicki O--OJ ar t..os Angele ~ ·
(Pnrk 0- 1). IO:J .'i p.m.
•
Piusburgh (Loai~1 0-0) at San Diel:n
(Worrt"ll 1-0). 10:.15 Jl.rll.

112
I

t

"

•.•

••
•
l l.
•••
_,.

..••

.

'

' Tuesday's scores

Toclay's games
Tnro nro (Clemens 1·0) at Chicago
White So); (Alvarez 0-1 ), 2 :0~ p.m.
Bns1on (Sele 1-0) at Oi:iklat:'d (Kauuy

Ium

. &lt;&gt;0), ) ; I~ p.m.

CLEVELAND (Colon O-Ol at Seanl e

p.m.
,
Tuas (B .Wiu '0-0) at Milwaukn

Wa.~hinr,mn ... ........

(0' Ami..:n 0·0). 7:05p.m.
·
·
Bahifriote (Kamieniccki 0.0) ut Knn~ns
N.Y. Yunlweao (0. Welh D-Ol :1i Ann-

p.m.

Thursday's i!Mmes
.

I -OJ nl Clu~ag11
While Sol (8uldwin O..Ul, 2:0~- p.m.
Bnllimtw-~ tEri~.: ksun J.Q)ut K&lt;ln5as
Cily (Belcher 1 -0). It :O~ p.m.

- ~13

.107 .\4 1,12

Philnlklphin ....... &gt;..21 .'i4
. BoJton.................... IJ 6J

,l.KO )6 lf2
.171
4.'i

I

.

2 .714
4 ·.429
_17~

3 112

Plliladclphin ..............l

5 .3JS

l l/2

~

· Cencni"Oivistun

2 714
CINCINNATI ..........1 4 .429
Plnaburgh .............. .. !' .. 4 ..a29
St Louil ........... .... ,;:\ 6 ·.14l
, Chicnso ........ ....... ,...0

·1

I

-~

•

HOU!iiiOO .................. 5

.000.

2
2

1

.71~

l

.61'

~

.62.

San F'dOCiiCO .......... 4 , 3, .S71

16

4

1n
II~

27
2fl lf2

,..utuh .................. .~!!

11

. 77~

,. -Houston ..... ......... ~2
Minlk!:iota ......... .... .J7
Dallas .....................2J
~nwer .......... :........ 20
San Amonio ........... lO
VallCoover ............. 12

24

.6114

~H

6 1/1

39
~J

l

,.

191'1 •
2M
269
244

22K
290

ll~e

21~

CIIARLOITE HORNIITS: Acri•lled
f ADihon:t Muon from dae injured lilt.
W&amp;ived F Tom Oamben.
, ·

196

· DALLAS MAVERICKS: Activlled G
Erick Strickland from 1be injured lisl .

2.&amp;.1 B.1

210 2211

IS ..
18
ll

FoolbaU

DALLAS COWBOYS; Si~ QBJ•

son Gnmu 10 a 1hreO-year conlract" and ·
QE Oluw~~~epn (MikerOdu.muyiwa. .
.

.

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·

· Sentinel c::orr.epondent

Nalleilll Faolhoii!Aqul

Tuaday's~

24

division dtle

RavenswoodsoftbaU
team downs Southern

LaUdeflllill, a fres!lma~ look die
loss despite 'pitching.a good game
, The Meigs softball tel\m fC\=Cntly scallering just seven hits.
• 1011k three out of four contests. ·
'The story in the other contest was
· Coach Dale Harrison's Marauders Fackler as she fired the no hiller.
are qow 5·1 on. the seaso!l and 4·0 in . ~m_ily gave II.P a 'tun i~ the. fi111t .
the Tri· Valley Conferen~oe.
1nnmg when she wal~ed tlje first bUt.. friday evening ~ · Maraude"' · ter who stole SC\!Onil advanced ihe
, pil:ked !.1~ a 3-4 victory over Feder- -th1rd on an. error arid scored on a
' ai Hocking. Meigs plated two fl!ns in . ground oul. Thai would be.the only
· the first and third innings and' added· ·base run~er that Jackson would get.
. a single.run in the fourth inning. The The SCntOr Struck OUI SIX and
Lancers seared sinJ(e I'UIIS in the walkec! the One baUer. .
..
first third sixth aJK1 seventh innings.
Metgs took the lead m the th~rd
' Mejgs 'only had tllrU hits led by , inni!lg ~~~ four runs and added stn·
.Emily Fackler with a double, 'ICelly ~lc. ru_ns m the fourth .and fifth
Gilkey and Brooke Williams each Jnnmgs: Pack~r led. MeiJS at the:
,had singles.
plate wuh a patr of s1ngl~s. Lauder·
·~ 'The Marauder split a pair of ·milt. Gi.l~ey; Williams and Casey
g&amp;me!O on Saturday with Jackson los- · Sanford all added singles. .
'ing one of the contests 5-2 but pick· .
On Monday •. the _ Mar~ud~rs
ing up a 6-1 win in ,the other game. scored five runs 1n the third mnmg
Tlie highlight of' the win Emily to pull away fr'?m a 2-1 lead and
Fackler fired a no hiiter in leading · coast to a 13-3 wm over Nelsonville·
the Marauders to the victory.
· York.
.
J1ekson spoiled Meigsa 2·0 lead
Laudennilt had .• double, and a
lind came back to post a ·5·2 win : · triple to pace lhe wtnners, Fllt!kler a
MeiJS only had five hits few the con- ·· sinale lf!d ~ble arid G.tnser Darst
leal led by Tanya Miller with a pair and Je~aca !-fcBlroy a II~Jie each.
Metp wall trawl to Miller toda.Y .
of lillllea. fiCklo~ a double
Mel .Julie K1q lltd D 1 """'mik ltld then will holt Ale~ on fri.
· By DAVE HARRiS

Pl~teed F Samaki Walker on tbe injured
lilt.
.

l46 26.t;

·

Eastern softball club.
edges Waterford 10-9

·:::Meigs sc)ftballers ·win
· ·three of last four games

BuketbaU

Nillonalllalk-H A_.o-

2~

0

SENDS fT HOME - Eutern pltCher Valerie Kerr sends ho~ a
pitch during TUMdaY'I Hoclclng-Oivlsion IOftball game agatnst VIsIting Watertord. (Photo by Scott Wolle) .
..

Usa

'

ur

A.meru:un AuU~.:illliOII .

M

L.

were eliminated on a 6-4-3 douhle
play.
Ravenswood .tied in the sixth on
.a Alfreds two-run single 3-3, then, a
By SCOTT WOLFE
Sampson and Aeiker walked before
repeat in the fifth gave RHS a 6-3
Sentinel
Corrupondent
Holter's lly out ended the inning and
lead. The had scored one run earliA Patsy Aeiker two-run double made the score 9-.1! .
er in the frame when Romeo singled
lifted
Eastern to a dramatic 10-9
Ea•tem thrcatcnd in the sixth with
home Philyaw who had doubled to
come
from
behind
victory
over
the
a
Milh11an
single. but could not
make the score 6-3.
Waterford
WildcaL•
Tuesday
night
in
·score.
Tracy
White
made a great play
Southern rallied in the sixth, but
Tri-Valley
Con
terence
softball
play
on
a
Pack
liner
t~at
!ell in center.
. only came up with one run.
at
Easteni,
·
'
..
Then
she
fired
to
ltrst
torthe
out and
Danny Sayre pitched well in givEastern trailed 7-0"at one point. . rallied' the Eagles. .
.
ing up six runs, five hits, fanning
Waterford
went
up
2-0
in
the
first
In
the
bnuom
ol
the
seventh
..
nine, walking ·six, and having SHS
on
a
fielder's
choice
and
single
by
K.
Mayle
led
oil'
with
a
walk
and
stole
commit two errors behind him.
Greene, who went 2-3 on the night . second, White reached on an error
. Adkins picked up the win with Mil·
·
WHS added 3 others· in the secood and Sampson advanced the runners
hoan in relief. The. fanned five,
when Greene walked, Nichols and to second and third. Acikcr then
walked two, made .three errors, and
Bums were hit by pitches and T. r!ppcd the 2" I count. ovr the . left
gave up seven hits.
Huck had a two-run single.
hcldcr's head for the gamc-wtnmng
lpginl tll&amp;lll
·Consecutive doubles by Greene bit.
.
.
. .
Southern
010-20 ho4-7-2
and
Harra
and
a
Jennifer
Nichols
Val
Knrr
p1ckcd
up
the
wm
m
Ravenswood
100-230=6-5-3
sacrifi~e
gave
WHS
a
7-0
lead.
·
going
the_
distance
..
allowing
six
hiL'·
.
LP-Sayre
Eastern
thrreatened
several
times.
lanmng
live,
walkm~
seven
and
hitWP-Adkins, Milhoan
but couldn't get a break. Martie · ting three. East.ern made six errors.
Holter walked. Mereditch Crow sin·
Nichols sullcred the loss With I 0
gled, A!lianda Milhoan and Val Karr walks. ~me strikc~ut and .gave up
reached on a lielder's choice and· · seven hns as WHS made s1x errors;
error r~sp,ettivcly .and Stephanie . Eastern ,hitters were White,
Evans had a bunt single to again load Sampson, Ev~ns. Crow. Dav1s, Milthe. bases. Kim Mayle followed up hoan and Ae1kcr. Wh1te hnd thrcc1
Caldweil with two ~ingles , a liner it with un RBI single and Mindy RBI's and Aeikcr two.
· left and a bunt single; while Amhe1 Sampson singled for 7-4 tally.
· Milner an d Huck had the othc ,
· Thomas al!iO singled,
·
Eastern plated two more in the WHS'hits .
· . J
Southern. now 4-3, hosts Nel· fifth after WHS went up 9-4. Becky
Eastern hosts Alexander ton1ght .:
sonville· York tonight.
Davis had 'a 'pinch-hit single, Mil· lggig~ ~
·
'
hoan ,had a sacrifice . With two out, Waterlord
203.-220-0=9-6-7 \
. Innina~
· Southern
010.000=1·3·6 Evarts kept the rally going w"ith a Eastern
000- 5231 -~= 10-7-6 :
·. ·Ravenswood
250.121=11-10-2 walk.
WP-Karr
·
·
Wji-Mullins .
·
Mayle walked before Tracy
LP-Nichols
LP-Sayre. Manuel 'and Davis.
White slammed a two-run double.

laney.~.

Frillll)'.

LHP lance Painter o1 the 1~-duy dilWb~
lbl. n:trou.clive 10 April .5. Called up C
Dann)' Sheaffer from Louisville
the

93 247 IK~
7 tn 230 23~
II 77 227 237 .
1.1 11 21 1 2lU
ll 66 2B 264

23?

Tolk is .cheap.
So's the beep.

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS ; Plu&lt;ed

20."i 2fll
San Jollie . ,.. '....... 26 45 R 60 20.1 269
~·l: linched di~i.sion Iitle
.. ·
A·dinched plnyoi'J'benh

K

Golden S&lt;o!o .......... 28 48 ,,1611

237

IJ

Divhion
z-Colorutlo ........ ..Jg 22 9 I~
x-A nabc:im ....... J4 ]J 13 '81
x·Edntunton ...... J6 J:'i 8 80
Van.,;ouvcr ......... 3~ 40 7 13
C•I&amp;W)' .............. )2 l9 9 7)
loll Angele~ .... --~ 26 42 II _63

Padfle ttlwWon
);· l.A . l.llk~h ..... -.52 ,.i4 6114

y~linc.:hed

In
1n

racln~

TEXAS RANGERS; PI- OF Warren Newson on the 15-day di~abled list.
retronclivc 10 April ~ - Purt:hused the con.
lract nr INF Dav~t Silvestri from Oklahomu Ci1y of the Ameriam Anocialion.
Nallenat~pe

~
. .... •17 24 K 102 246 IK9

n

"'Jnment.

CINCINNATI REDS: Acquired RHP
SC()If klingenbeck rrom lhe MinfiCIOIU
Twin• fl•r fu1ure ~;onsidcralioni and Ill··
1ignc:d him ICl' lndiD.O:lpolil of the Ameri~an A.ssuciution.
HOUSTON A.STROS: Announced the
resignation of Steve Swisher, rmmualf ol'
New Orlean• of tho. Ameri~:an All'I04:latiun. N:uncd Olive EnJit Interim Manlt(tt!r
of N~:w Orl~:ans un1d fntliy nnd Man
· Gnlant.: manager of New OdeiUls, etr.:c-

.II' I. I etL liE

· z-Dullii.L
x·Oetrui l ... . ....... .\M 24
x-Phueni11 :......... .16
St Louis .......... J3 J~
Chil:llJtl .............J2 34
Torontu .............. 2Y-12

·. -

;447
.408

17.1
204
197
224
240
224

Central Di\'l5lon

!a

.4117 21 1n
..JOJ J~ _ l n
56 .26~ :111 112
~ . 26~ JK 112
66 . 1~4 47 112

~

WF.STERN CONFERENCE

J6 112

WESTERN CONFERENCE

L.A.. Clippt:rs .... ... ...l4 '4"2
Sacrnmenfo ... - ..... ,.31 ·4~

.

Iwa

.II' L l'n.

:w

Nonhea..• Division
l·Bullalo ...... .. 19 2lll2 90 229
x7fittsburgh .... ....1R J .~ II. . IW 277
tAonU\!al ............ :lO ;l~ 14 7+ 24 1·
Hunf'unl .... ....... ,..\1 .\ 7 II 7., 216
Ottnwa ........... 2K .'6 l.'i 71 217
Bo ~ tori ......... ... 2~;-.a~ \1 :\9 ,226
'
.
. ·-:""*~ .

14 112

,;-Seaulc ................ .Sl 24 ,684
•·Ponland ....... ....... 4l JJ .l77
. • ··Pluwnix ............. }1 39 .~7

w...em ()~\'Won

CoiO&lt;lldo ............... ~
t.o. Allaetea ............. ~
s... Di&lt;J• ................~

t4

.

Midwest Divllkln

!ill

Allnnra .................. ...'i
Mon1reaL ................ .1
New York .................~

IIJ

-·-

Iwo

Eulem Division

Ida
.II' "I rn.
Florida .................... 6
.857

..'i

· It!

J7

.II' 1. I etL li.l'

x· Ntw Jcrk!y .....-44 21 14 102 ID
l·Phi lllllelt•hin .....W 2312 · 100 26~
11.-Fiorida ............J~ 2M 19 1'1~ 21.1
x-N.Y. Runl!c:n .. 37 .1~ 10 H4 2~0
•. T.:u1ltm 801y ....... JO .19 10 70 20R
WaJhini!IOn ...... JO 40 9 69 197
N.Y. bla.ndeu: .... 2M
12 6K 2~ 1

Gil,

52

Cenaral Divlsiun
· y-Chh:af.!.o ....... ....... 66 10 .N68
i- Dctroit ......... ........'i l 24 .bBO
l·AII&lt;mta ..'. . ... 51 24 .680
· l•Ciiarlo«c ............ 49 26 .65.\
ClEVELAND ...... J9 J7 .~'o
lndiunu .. , ............. .. J7 JH ,493
· Milwuuk1!1! ...... ....... 29 46 ..187
Toronto ..... ., .......... 28 48 ..lfiH

MimlC!otu (Robenson 0.0) :tt Oetwil
(81ait 1· 1). I :O~p.m.
T~:u s tBurken 0-01 nt Milwuukte •

' NLstandings .

:w

N~w Jer.;e~ ........... 23

p.m.

( Kar1Q-11 . 2~o~run :
•
Tllf00!\1 (Guzman

.II' L l'n.

11-Mmtm .. .
. .. Sll I H 7M
11- New Yurk.. ....... S~ 23 .697
Or landn ................ 4:! 34 . ~S .\

(WO\f.-ot1 0. 1), 6 : 3~

10 : .1~

Iwo

Atlantic Divlsion

.

e

·, i
-1

..

· SHATTLE MARINERS: ·Purcho.llld

Atlantic: Divi!lion

-Baseball Wildcats
~- defeat Eastern 6-2

.Southern played another decent
game, but found another way to lose
late in the game as the'Ravenswood
. Red Devils broke a.3·3 tie in the fifth
·inning and rallied to a 6-~ no~­
league b~seball win over the Tornadoes Tuesday in a non-league diamond match in Ravenswood.
Southern. 2-5. hosts Nelsonville
today.
Ravenswood took a 1-0 lead in
the fir.;! when Philyaw. who singled
·scored on a fielder's choice when
Romeo auerrtpted a steal.
· Southern tied the game in the sec·
ond when Chad Blount scored on an
erro~ after Nate Sisson auempted a
steal.
Southern went up 3-1 in the
fourth when Blount doubled, Sisson
walked, and Matt Dill had a 2-RBI
double. A golden opportunity slipped
by the Tornadoes as prior to the rill·
ly Kirby and Maynard, who singled

two.
&lt;;ollin Roush led Meigs at the
,J,
Scott George fired a three hiller plate with three singles, Bentley and
!' and stnick out 12 bailers to lead the Dugan each added ~ 'double and a
: Meigs Marauders to a 9·2 viciOry single. Mullen chipped in with a
,'! over N'elsonville.York in Tri-Valley double and George and Davenport
i Conference baseball action Monday , each singled. ·
Stephanie Mullins scallered three
: evening.itt Meigs .High School.
On Saturday, the Marauders trav· hits en route to leadins the
, ~ ·The Marauders raised their con-' eled to Jacli!llln to play the lronmen Ravenswood Lady Devils IO an n.
+ ference record to 4-Q and a 4-2 mark . in a non conference double head· · I non-league win over the Southern
' . overall. Meias dropped a non con- er. The twin hill gave Marauder Tor~~.adoes Tuesday nigbt in area
; ference doubleheader to Jackson · coach Scot Gheen chance to play his softHall action in Ravenswood.
~ Saturday. . ·
younger players and expe&lt;iment with
Mullins'fanned 1'0 Southern bat·
• Meigs jumped out to a 2-0 lead some players. playing them in some ters, issued just two walks, and got
against Nei&lt;~Pnville· York ·in the set;- · different poSitions. ..
· a good defensive galliC. a IWQ-error
. . .I ond inning. Dugan reached on a
In the first game Jackson tool&lt; stint from her defense' Meariw~ile.
Buckeye error and advanced on a advantage qf some shoddy Maraud- Southern played po\lrly iii the fiehj
~ passed ball. Jeremiah Bentley sin- er fielding to post a 18-3 wm. The
behind its stalled offense, making si~
: gled to moyer Dugan to third, Chris · lronmen held a ~-3 lead m thesl.~lh errors in the route.
·
"' Roush followed with a sacrifice tly mnmg but took advantagc .ol lour .
Kim Sayre suffered the loss with
· ~· scoring ·Dugan with Bentley moving- Meigs.errors·in the inning io score _IO eight hilS given up, fanning three. and
~to third. Jeremiah then scored on a. runsandblowthe ·gameoP.Cn.Meags walking just one, while giving ·up
-~ passed,ball. .
·.
commented four errors in lite inning eight runs, many of which were
~
The Bui:keyes lied the game in lind ei~ht for the game. . ,
uneatned. Regina Manuel finished
., lhe top of the fourth inning with a
Cbns Roush v.:as the starter for · .with one inning plus, giving up two
·: pair of runs,.but Meigs came back in Me1gs w1th rebel help from Brad hits, three runs, and having two
~~ the bottom of the inning to plate Whitlatch. Brad Whitlatch led Mea~s
walks.
. &lt; three runs and take the lead for good.
at the plate wtlh a double, Chns
The lirst .three Ravenswood bat"} Collin Roush had the big hit in the Roush, Jason Mullen, Robert Qualls· ters got two hits apiece. Rogers.and
·. '1 •.·nning for Meigs with a two run sin· · and Collin Roush all had singles.
Wethrow doubled and singled while .
· gle.
In the night cap Jackson scored a . .Hern ·singled· twice. Titus, Mullin~.
. · In the fifth inning. Meigs plated ; · run in _the bottom 1&gt;f the seventh :Hendricks, and Clay each singled.
· J two more runs. Dugan doubled and inning II&gt; pos.t a. 10-9_win. Collm
A five-run second was .the. big
• Bentley followed with a single to Roush p1tched the enure game lor · inning lor the Devil's.
·:·· score Dugan with Jeremiah moving, .coach ~ot Gheen's Marauders.
Southern hitters were led by ~r:
· ;;,; up on the throw home. After a walk
George led Meigs w·!th a do~ble
~ to Robert Qualls Collin Roush sin·
and a single, Dugan added a pa1r of
~" gled toscore Bentley.
. · .· singles. Rick Hoover slammed his
-.o
Meigs closed out the sconng m · first h9me run ofthe year, Whitlatch
-" '. the sixth inning. Brad Davenport sin· added a double and Chris Roush and
·: '. gled and Moved to second 9n a field- Pat Martin added singles.
.~ ·ers choice. Jason Mullen then douMeigs , will travel to Miller on
· ~- bled to score Davenpc)rt and later We&lt;fnesday. -and will return home on
' "·scored on a passed ball .
Friday to play Alexander.
• :·
George went the. distance to get looiac m&amp;IJI
·
;~, the win siriking OUI 12. giving up Nelsonville-Yar~ ()()().2~0=2·3·2
;~·dhree hits and walking two. Schultz Meigs
020-322-x=9-10·2
·:,, was .the stru'ter and lose~ for Ncl•
Scoti Georse (WP) and Jason
"~· son ville· York with help . from Mulien
.. ;;.Reevt:s- The two combined to give · . S~huhz (LP), Reeves (6) and
'
-~. up 10 hils, strike out seven and, w~lk Carter

th~ r'n nrr:u.: l or RHP De~nili Marlinez .
O~JignDkH RHP Salomon Torrel r(lf w:-

EASTERN CONFERENCE

EASTERN CQNFERENCE

•

·:· Meigs baseball tea~
tbeats Nelsonville-York

ull.eugu~.

NHL standings

NBA standings

t•.hnnootll (Ttwksbury 0-l J 111 Detroit
( Mo.:hit!rO.O).I :O:'i p.m

h!!im (Walwn 0-0).

Hockey

Basketball
.

Amtrinn Le..111:
• DETROIT TIOER~ : Signed 18 Bob
Hamelin to u minor-l~taaue ~oritract .an~
nui~~ him lo ToiNu of the lrnemntlon- .

I•

Host Eastern dropped a 6-2 base- looked good in relief.
~ ball game to Waterford Tuesday in
Eastern hitters were Pat Aieker
~ boys TVC action.
.two singles, and singles by Joe Dilw
Ben Heiner golthe win with two Ion, Steve Durst, and Eric Dillard .
;·, walks. seven strikeouts, and six hits
WHS hillers were Thad Skinner,
v given up for the ·wildcats, · while
Eric Fauss. Greg Greene, Luke
.. Chris Bailey and Stevie Durst com- Lang, HEiner, Wagner, and Nichols.
, , bined in ' the loss for the Eagles
Eastern is now 1-5
- despite good efforts. They fanned looiog m&amp;lll
'' eight and walked nine. Bailey has Waterford ·
' 101·031=6·7·2
Eastern
100-100=2-6-3
.• done an excellent job since undergoing complete reconstructive knee
·LP-Bailey, Durst
·
WP-Heiner ·
.. surgery less than a rea~ a!JO ·_ Dursl

TOTAL DUE AT INCEPTION WAS
·MISPRINTED IN MONDAY'S PAPER;
·IT SHOULD HAVE READ $934.

Baseball

Phncubc 111 Sucmmcmu. 10:311 p.m

•

"

Monlrt!nl ill W;1shing1on. 7 : ~0 r .m.
Pittsburgh at T;tm~ B&gt;ty, 7::10 p.m.
Turunlo -.1St f.:ou•s, ~:.10 p.m. _

Transactions

~

.l

p.m.

Minn~'o1;1 at L.A. Ciippl:Ui. 10:.10
Jl.lll;
Denver ut Gnl~n Stutc. 10:.\0.JUll.

CINCINNATI fMor~o.n D-Ol ut Co l·on,do (Writ:hl 1-0), .'i:O.'i p.n1.
Hotds.t on (Holt {}.0) at 'Atlnmu (Smoltl.
· I-ll. 7·-Wp.m.
··

Toromo 111 Chicugo While Sox. flfld .•
rold w~11thcr
Bos1on 1.\. Oakland 1·
Stmllle 14. CLEVELAND !I
Anaheim 10. N.Y. Ynnk~~ 9 ( 12'

8 :0~

Martinez O-OJ nr St. lnuis

(Mnrri s 0.0). U:'i p.m.
Florida (Fernandez 1· 0) at Chi ~;ilp,ll
Cubs (Cu.slillo 0- 1), 2:20p.m.

Ravenswood nine
beat Southern 6-4

DELIVERS TO PLATE - E11stern hurler
Bailey llrae a pitch
ta th'e plate during Tunday'e -TVC baseball cot'ltHt with vleltlng
Waterford. (Photo by Scott. Wolfe)

:

me

er looked back defeating
Red·
women 10-0 in five innings . .Rio
Grande succeeded in aaioing only
one hit.
.
.
.
Urbana was led by Hess going 2·
for-3 with three runs and Hays
pounding 2-for-2 with three RBI.
Traci Rose captured the win for the
Lady Knights.
Rebecca I!vans (5·2) took the loss
for Rio Grande..
The .Redwoinen will travel to
Cedarville on Thursday to take on
the Lady Yellow Jackets in MOC
ac1ion. The firsi pitch i.s Scheduled
for 4 p.m .
.
•
Rio Grande ret~mshome on Friday to host Walsh University at 3
p.m. The Redwomen will then take
on Mal'one College Saturday at I
p.m. in more MOC action.

..
.

;'

Bull'nlo :u Boslltli. 7:.10 p.m.
N.Y. Ran,ers at Philadelphia. 7:30

Orlando at Toromo. 1 p.m.
Cbicugo ;It New ·Yurk, 7:30p.m.
Milwaukee ril ~w J~rscy, 7:.11,) p.m.
Dctruit oil Miumi. 7::\0 p.m.
Sc:~nlc at Oall1L~ . M
:JOfl.tn.
Vulicu u ~.:r at Hou~;ton, K:JO p.m.
Ponlarn.J at &amp;In Anlooio. K:JO"p.m.

innings. -Roxanne . Saale -ieil-;lhe
offensive attaCk aoing 3-for·' with
an RBI triple. Shelly Rbeinfrank wu
2-for-4 scorina two · runs ' while·
Melisa Sisson scored the remaining
two.
Jennifer Hess, Staci Hays and
Wendy Ntw:e led the Urbana offense
going 3-for-5 each. Hess had one
RBI and scored two runs, Hays
scored two runs and Nance had ooe
RBI and scored a run. Angie Lycans
was 2-for-S wilh one RBI.
· Ut'bana (20-4, MOC 6·2) scored
·. their final two · runs in the ninth
iiming to capture tlie victory. Hess :
wass cr'edited ~¥ilh fhe ·win.
Jenny Murphy (3-8) suffered the
defeat for -Rio Grande.
The Lady Knights came out
strong in the second game and nev-

••
.

Thui-sday's games

Thursday's games

Thursday's games ·
M ontn.'&lt;~ ltP .

.

Atlanta ill Phjladelphia, 7:;\0 p.m.
Boston 111 Cb~~rlone, 7:.10 p.m.
Chi\!.ugo Ill lndimna, 7::10 11.m.n1
LA. Lut.:rt ut U1nh . ~ p.m

·

••

· :Jt Sentinel
By DAVE HARRIS
Correspondent.

$2Q9~~o.

Hqrtl"ortJ u1OtluwtL._7:JOJl.m.
· i · Montreal 111 N.Y. lslilndl!u, 7::\0 p.'m.
New Jer,sey w.Aoridn, 7::\0JI.m,
S1. Louis·at 01icago, K:JO p.m.
Ton.mto ut, Dallas, !DO p.m.
Snn Jose nt Colorudo, 9 p.m.
Oetroil 111 Edmoruun, 9JO p.m .
Phueni" at Vancuuver, 10 11.m.
Los Angelesllll\naheim. IO:.JO p.m.

·

'

1997 FORD ESCORT

Tonight's g'sgames .

· Tonight's games

c t${,;ll

Wt!ittm DiviJion
Oakland .. .. ....... ..4 -' .:'i71
An.ahe•m ........... : .. J
4 .429
s~a ltlc .......... ....... J
4 .429
Te111a!' ..
. ..... 2 j .400

• Ci1y (Rosado 0-0),

5: Los Angeles 3

Philacklphr.a 2. S:m Francisco I

!a

.II' L &amp;1.

Bnl!unon: ........... 4

J

_ .. • ...

•••'

-£0RRE£TION-

.

· ..

••

to Dallas, New Jersey (twice), Mil- games an opponent has made half1ts
waukee, Portland, Orlando and now shots or more; .
.·
··
Cleveland.
·· Brandon also had II assists, and
None were as lopsided as Tu~s- he outscored both of New York's
day night's debacle.
point guards 25-0. Knicks starter
The Cavs had runs of 13-0, 9-0 Chris Childs had no points on 0-forand 9-0 in the secood half to' turn 5 shooting, and backup Charlie
what had been a tight game into a Ward, who hasn.'t scored in 94 minblowout. .
· utes in•a span of six games, missed .
"The thing that should bother us his only shot.
is that when they made-their run, we
Bob·Sura added 12 points for the
put our heads down and di(jn 't make Cavs, who moved into a tic for the
a stand," coach Jeff Van Gundy said. eighth spot with help from Wash- "There was no real spirit."
ington 's loss to Toronto on Tuesday
Terrell Brandon scored 25 points night.
..
.
anq Chris Mills and Danny Ferry had
It was shortly after halftime when
21 each for the Cuv; , who pulled the Cuvs found out the Bullets lost
back into a tic with Washington lor .. to Toronto.
.
'
the eighth playoff spot in the East.
"Somebody mentioned WashingNew York, currently third in the ton had lost. and my cars jumped
Eastern Conference playoff .race,· up," coach Mike Fratello said.
lost for the seventh time in its last 13
The Cavs and Bullets play on the
games. Th~ Knicks also allowed final day of the season, and ClcvoCleveland to ·shoot 50.6 ·percent. land would need a victory to tic the
from the field, the first time in 30 season series.

Pinsburgh 3, Boston I
New Jersey 2, Tanlf!U Buy 2 (lie)
D.!troil .1, Culg41ry 2'&lt;0T)

CLEVELAND9~.

Sr l(lt.li ~ 2. MoiJtreod I

AL standings

.

Miami tJ.a. N~ Jef"S(y 92
N.:w York 7J
Orh~ndo 97, Milwuukee 82
Dnllas H7. Portland R2
San Antonio 96. Denver 90
Phoc=ni11. ll.'i. Minnesota 107
Houston 127. L.A. Clippen; 117
L.l\. Ltlktrs 109, Golden Stutt &amp;.&lt;Ci
Sucrnmento t09, Vnnt:ouver 9.1

Tuesday's scOres

Baseball

-

I

-

Scoreboard

;,r: , __ .....

noon. ,
.
The Redwomen (13·1', MOC ().
4) held 101Jib in lhe first pme but
felliO tile l,ldy Kniahts 5-4 in nine

•

Cavaliers ·pound ·Kn.i cks 93-73 .
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
NEW YORK (AP)- The boos
weren 1 all that loud. when the New
York Knicks sulked off the court.
Then again, there weren'tthat many
fans still around to boo.
The fans headed for the exits in
disgust long before Tuesday night's
20-point loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers was official. Things have
turned sour for a Knicks teain .that
ha~ played poorly at home lately. losing three of four.
Last Friday. they faced an.Orlando team missing three .starters and ·
lost by nm~ . On Tuesday, they lost
by 20 to a Cleveland team missing
its leading reboundcr (fyroQe Hill)
and best defender (Bobby Phills).
In between. the h~rd-to-figure
Knicks had a road victory that
seemed to set them right. Playing in
Atlanta, they became just the fifth
team to win on the Hawks' home
court.
Two bad home losses, ·one great
road win. 'What gives'/
"I don 'tha.ve an explanation for
it," Patrick Ewing said . "Right now
we should be hilling our peak and we
aren't. We' re struggling."
Since beating the Chicago Bulls
one month ago, the Knicks have lost

.

;~Urbana softballers sweep Rio in DH

After Pinlelia'' ejeCtiOn,-Mariners get 14-8 Win over Indians
By JIM COUR
.umpire Derryl Cousins in the second
SEATILE (AP)..:.,. With an 8.16 inning, Piniella engaged in a fiveERA in the first week of the season, minute, djrt-kicking, chalk-raising fit
the Seattle Mariners have given Lou at home plate. The crowd of 24,348
Piniella every excuse to blow a gave the Mariners manager a standfuse.
,
· rng ovation.
It happened Tuesday night.
"I think he had his mind made up
After. being ejected by plate in his walk to the mound," Piniella
· ·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

--•· •-•-""o. c.ooo.-~ ,

,,,

I

'

·- .

,lddod .......

.

.

.

'

-

'

'

. day.

""

.,

~

fro•

OHIO SEED

. ·compa•y

•..,........
.......... ,

l•lkor,_.....

360° Communications

PICKENS
"
HARDWARE

1051 East State Street, Athens, OH
(614) 592-4911

lWCII, W.VA.
773-5513

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�l'omlro¥ • Middleport, Ohio
Ns,lonsl League roundup

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Cardinals top Expos .&amp;· kill liistoric sk1d
By BEN WALKER .
AP Baeib811 Wtlta

1 HEADING TO VICTORY - Meigs dlltance runner Adam Joseph
• Thom81 puts some more pevement behind him during the boya'
: 1100-meter run held during Tuesday's track meet at Alexander High
: School. Thomas' 2:17 finish earned him the victory. (QVP photo by
: G. Spencer Osborne)

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Willie McGee has won two batting titles, so getting hits has never
been !I problem.
· But in 16 seasons in the majors, ·
he had never won a game with a
home run - until Tuesday night..
McGee connected for a pinch-hit,
solo homer with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning, and the St.
Louis Cardinals ended the worst stan
in thei~ 106-year history, beating the
Montreal E,xpos 2- I.
McGee's home run. just the 74th
of his career, gave St. Louis its first
win of the season after six straight
losses. It also put a perfect finish on
the home opener for the NL Central
champions.
'"That was more dramatic than
'The Natural,"' Cardinals 'manager
Tony La Russa said. "And that was
a made-up movie. I don't know how
he did it. "
McGee, 38, was just as surprised
as anyone in the crowd of 47,542to
see him win a game with a home run.
"That's the last thing on my
mind," McGee said. "You dream of
things like that, but I'm not that kind
of a hiller."
Jeff Blauser, meanwhile, ,hasn't
been much of hitter at all in recent
years for Atlanta.
But the Bra'fes shonstop, who
batted .245 last year and .211 in
1995, went 4-for-4 Tuesday nightgiving him hits in eight straight atbats.
"When you haven' t been hiuing

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.. . . . . ..,.,, Aprllt•.

WedrieediY, April I, 1117

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· for two yeus.'eilht hits'ln a row
· feels like 80 in a row," Blauser said
after a 4-2 win over Houston. "What
can I say, I'm having fun and enjoying the game. It's·been a while."
Blauser had two doubles and two ·
singles, making him 13-ror-24 (.542)
this sea5on. The NL record for con. secutive hits is 10, last done by Bip
Robens, and the major league mark
is 12.
The Chicago Cubs, however,
matched the mark for the worst stan ·
in their 122-year history. They
dropped to 0-7 with 'a 5-3 loss to.
Florida. ·
.
,
'· "If we panic in April, it's going
to make for a long season," Cubs
center fielder Brian McRae said. "If
we keep wo~king hard, we can get a
roll going the other way. Nothing's
going right (or·us now."
McGee, who batted .350 as a
pinch-hitter .last year, homered off
Ugueth Urbipa (1-1 ). Urbina escaped
a bases- lqad~d jam in the eighth by
· striking out Gary Gaeui with the
bases loaded.
"I don't looli. at the stats much,
but this afternoon I noticed McGee
was 3-for-4 against him," Expos
manager Felipe Alou said. "Now
he's 4-for-5." .
Mark Petkovsek (1-1) gave up
two hits and struck out three in 'fou•
scoreless inning~ .
In other NL, games, New York
beat Los Angeles 5-3, Piusburgh
stopped San Diego 2-0 and Philadelphia defeated San Francisco 2-l .
Marlins S, Cubs 3

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Oticago matched the(). 7 swt of · innings, struck out three ind walked
the 1962 team, which also lost its one. The left-hander, whose career
first seven in a row. Aorida moved has been interrupted by shoulder
to 6-t, goins five games over .500 troUble, had not won in the niajors
since July 10, 1994.
1
for the first time ever.
Rich
Loiselle
pitched
the
eighth
.
AI Leiter ('2-0) lasiC&lt;I six innings
on al9-degree day at Wrigley Field. 8nd John ErickS worked the ninth for
his third save. •
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outpitching Steve Trachsel (0.2).
. Phillles 2. Giants 1
Charles Johnson '&amp;two-run double
Mark Leiter limited his fotmer
plit the Marlins ahead 4-3 iri tht seventh. The Gold Glove catcbet also team to three hits in seven innings. •
threw out two runners stealing and . and Philadelphia won at .San Fran- ;
cisco.
·
picked another off first base.
With
chilly
~~finds
gusting to 50
· Gary Sheffield hit his first homer
mph,
the
game
drew
just 6,260. It '
of the season and doubled in the
Marlins' first road game. Sammy was the Giants' smallest home crowd '
since Oct. 11991 , wtien6,174turned •
Sosa homered for the Cubs.
·
out to see Houston.
Bl'llves 4, Astros 2
Leiter ~ave up just an unearned
Tom Glavine pitched seven
shutout innings and Atlanta won its run. Ricky Bottalico earned his third
fifth in row. Kenny Lofton and save - he. has preserved ail of the
Chipper Jones each drove in two Philiies' win- by striking out three ·
runs as the Braves improved to 4-0 in, I 113 innings.
Rookie Scott Rolen singled home
at Turner field.
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Glavine (2-0) gave up four hits, the go-ahead run in the seventh.
walked two and struck out four.
Mets 5, Dodgers 3
·.
Mark Wohlers p1tched the ninth for
John Olerud went 4-for-4 and
his third save.
New York won at Dodger ~tadium .'
Houston staner Mike Hampton The game took just two hours, 37
( 1-l ) beat the Braves orl the second minutes and came a night after the'
day ·of the season.
team~ played five hours and 15
Pirates 2, Padres 0
innings.
.
Steve Cooke won his first .game
Bobby Jones (2-0) allowed five!
in nearly three years. combining with hits in e•ght innings . . Grell!
a pair of relievers on a one-hitter for
McMichael, acquired in an offseason!
Pittsburgh.
trade with Atlanta, closed for his firsti
Steve Finley singled in the· first
save.
,
inning for San Diego's qgly hit. Tony .
Bernard Gilkey and Todd Hurrd-:
Womack hit ·a two-out, t~o-run triple
ley each ,drove in two runs for !he\
in the eighth for the visiting Pirate~. . Mcts . Raul Mondcs1 homered fo
Cooke ( 1- 1) pitd'fied seven
Los Angcle~.
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Jury to continue deliberations in Mesa trial !

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By KEN BERGER
sa1d it was impossible to predict what timony from eight pros~_£ ution wit- the police out there."
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CLEVELAND (AP) - The jury the length of deliberatio.ns meant.
nesscs. Messerman rested his case · · ·RaP&lt;: is a felony with a three- !O
m Jose Mesa's rape trial broke off
"I've seen a lot of juries, and my Monday without calling any.one to 10-ycar prison tenn. Gross sexual
deliberations after more than four ·experience is thai time means noth- the stand.
·
iJ,Rposition also is a felony, but each,
hours, choosing to return today to ing," Messerman ·said..
In clqsing statements, Assistant . count carries a penalty of six to 18
decide the case of the star Cleveland
A male juror. became ill and was Prosecutor Mike Nolan characterized months. The misdemeanor count of
pitcher.
replaced by a woman right before the . Mesa as a "depraved",. man who theft carries a maximum sentence of
The jury resumed deliberations at judge gave instructions Tuesday lured the two women to a motel and six months.
9:20a.m. today.
• morning.
forced h1mself 0n them. Messerman
A guilty verdict on any of the ·,
Mesa, one of baseball's top relief
A 26-year-old woman--te$tified said the acc~sers • story was not charges could result in dcpor(ation
pitchers, faces ·a maximum of 13 1/2 that Mesa raped her by forcing his believable and said prosecutors tar- hearings against Mesa, a citizen of·
years in prison if convicted on all hand into her j~ans and underpants geted Mesa because he is a profes- . the Dominican Republic.
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charges. He faces one count of rape, durin~~ ride to a suburban motel ear- sional athlete.
Mesa's former agent. MiJr,e .pow·
two counts of gross sexual imposi- ly on Dec. 22. Her friend, also 26.
The Plain Dealer rejipnel! Tues- •ers, said .in a recent interview .that
tion and one count of theft.
testified that Mesa struck her in the day that a Toronto woman is seeking · Mesa had staned an application for
Cuyahoga County Judge Thomas mouth with a door in the motel, then at least S1 milliop m a civil lawsuit U.S . citizenship but, for some·reason,
Curran instrueted the jury of five fondled both women in the room.
againsl Mesa and former teammate ~ never completed lt. Tom Reich, who .
CLEARS HURDLE- Eastern's Kim Godwin clears the hurdle In
men
and
seven
women
that
it
could
In.
dropping
the
felony
assault
Tony Pena, alleging the players gave · now represents Mesa, did not return·
: ~ · glrla' 300-meter hurdles held during Tuesday's track meet at
consider
the
·lesser
charge
of
gross
charge,
the
judge
.s.Ud
,the
state
did
her a tranquilizer and had sex with t telephone messages left at his pitts- :
; Alexander High School. Godwin took third with a 1:13.7 finish. (OVP ·
sexual impos1tion instead of the rllpe nol·prove Mesa intended t9 hurt the her in Anaheim, Calif., last May.
; !lurgh office Tues(l;y. . . ,1 , 1, ,
: photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
count. The Judge also dropped a woman with t~ d.9q~. ... ..
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No criminal charges have been , . Mesa pitched for the Toronto
felopy assault charge.
A weapons ~~arge against Mesa tiled in that case.
, .
. Blue
and the Baltimore Orioles
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Mesa said, "No comment, no will betried .iat~r.
"There's absolutely nOthing to .; hefore
Clcvelandin.1995and'
comment, " as he left the counroom
The jurors, were considering tesit," Messerman said .. "I spoke with •
as one of baseball's best
with his wife. Mirla. and friends,
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who mcluded the wife of Indians
teammate
Sandy Alomar.
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His lawyer, Gerald Messerman,

)Meigs boys nQtch
iwins in two events
.!.at Alexander meet
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. In Tuesday 's live-school trnck Icy (no times posted) ·
4 x 800-meter relay: Meigs 9:41 ;
•meet at Alexander High School ,
~River Valley's girls' team took firS! Alexander 10: II; Vinton County
:place, while R1ver Valley's boys' 10:44
·team took third.
Girls' session
..: No team scores or resuiLs .IO some ·
Team scores: Not posted
;events were reported in s.omc
Disc:us: A. Roberts (R) III -I;
; 1~stances.
·
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DeGarmo
(R) 95-0; Stidson (A) 86• In ail instances. athletes will be
8; Withem (A) 85-7; Sowers (V) 820 1~entil'ied by school (A-Alexander.
IE, Eastern, M-Me•gs, R-River Valley 4
Hi11h jump:· James (A) 4-8;
land V-'vinton County).
·
Minton
(V) 4-6; Caldwell (E) 4-2.1;
I
Boys' session
Brooks (A) &amp; Hayes (V) tied at 4-2
) Team scores: Not posted
Longjump: James (A) 14-9; Sall OiKus: N. Polcyn (R) 12~-0 ;
;McDaniel (E) 120-0; Hawk (A) isbury (R) 1.4-3; Harold (V) 13-11 :
H07-0; Brammer (RI I 04-0; Man in McCoy (R) 13 ~ 10%; Caldwell (E)
12-0
.
~V&gt; 100-~
j' High · jump: Huff (V) 5-10: · Shot put: A. Roberts (R) 33-K;
!Pitchford (R) Henderson , (V) &amp; DeGarmo (R) 30-6; Soursbv IV\ 7'1~Peavley (M) tied at 5-8; McDaniel 4: Fee (V) 29-8; Withem (A) 26-0
~S) &amp; Hutchinson (A) ued at 5-6
tOO-meter dash: McCoy (R)
. Long jump: Huff' (V) 18-10, : 13.5; Salisbury (R) : 13.9; Palmer
· rradow•&lt;Ml 17-IO; McDaniel &lt;E&gt; '(V) : 14.4; Justice (R): 14.6; Fee (V)
1 )9; Gilman (R) 16-8.5; Lundy (R) -:14.7
100-meter hurdles: 'Salisbury
,I 6.5
' Shot put: N. 'Polcyn (R) 42-0; (R) :16.5; James (A) :17.4: Fee (V)
:20.2; Shaver (A) :20.8; Nichols (E)
A~ams (R) 41 -0; Bayer (V) 38-1;
"1anin (V) 37-5; Saunders (R) 36-6 :23.7
200-meter dash: . McCoy (R)
IOO·meter dash: Blanks (Ml
:29.3;
Jame's (A) ':3.4; Justice (R)
'; 1,1.8: Wells (V) : 11.9; Lundy (R)
Tripfett (R) &amp; Stout (R) t1ed at :31.3; Sowers (V) :32.6
300-meter hurdles: Fee ( V)
I:03; Schoed (A) I: I0.9; Godwin (E)
' 1 110·J11C!Ier hurdles: Huff (V)
: 1~.4; Moiadows (M); 17.7; Davidson . 1:13.7
400·meter dash:" Herald (\1)
f&lt; ¥l: I ~.l: Woodyard (V) : 18.4: Da1·
I: I3; Briggs !Rl l: 14: Shriver. (R)
1 ly (A) :20.2
·
2100
dalh: Wells (V) :25.4; 1:15; Lugar (M) 1:17; Shill (V)
.
Tftplett ( ) :2.5.9; Roush (M) :26.4; I : 17.8
800-meter
run:
Shong (A) 2:29;
JIJanb (M). Fife (M) &amp; Hutchinson
\
Grueser
(M)
2:59;
McKennis (V)
~A) tied at :27.3
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j , 300-1¥ter hurdles: Hutchinson 3:00; Fcnerson (A) 3: 15; Hyde (R)
(A) :47 . ~ ; Cha111pion . (V) :48 .9; 3:24.6
j Pcnvlcy (M) :51 .9; Lucio (M) :52.5; 1.'00-meter run: J. Roberts (R)
6: 19; Grueser (M) 6:40; McKennis
Adilms &lt;It&gt; :~3.3
410-•ter dash: Henderson (V) (V) 6:42; Simmons (V) 6:43; Weid.
:SB.I: Hill (Ml I:00.3; Daily (A) ner(A)7:19 ·
run:
J.
Roberts
(R)
3,200-meter
1:0 I; Wellington (R) I :iJI..8; Manin
14:48.6;
Simmons
(V)
'
16:08.2;
(V) I :02.3
i iJGO.~qeter run: Adam Joseph Rimaldy (A) 17:23.2; Reid (V)
'fhomas (Ml 2: 17; Allen (V) 2:22; 17:58.9
4 x 100-meter relay: River ValLawson (A) 2:26.2; Weicher (A)
ley
:57; Vmton County :57.2;
2:26..5 : C~ndy (V) 2:27
1 1,600--ter run: Reynolds (V) . Alexander 1':02; Meigs I:02.4; East-·
.5:19: Boyles (E) 5:24; White (M) em .1 :09
4 x 200-meter relayi Vinton
.5:26; Moran (Al 5:28; Mollohan (R)
County
2:07; Alexander 2: 12; Meigs
.5:35
2:
14;
Eastern
2:38
J.-.-wr run: Not posted
0
4 x 400-meter rel•y: River Val·
4·x 101--ter rel8y: River Val:48.6; Meigs :47:9; Vinton Coun· ley, Vinton County, Alexander and
Meigs (no times posted)
lty :SO. I; Alexander :52.3
! 4 x • -ler nlay: Alexander, 4 x SOO,mter re1•y: Alexander
'Meip, Vinton County .t: River Val· 12:24; Vinton County 12;35

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Sports deadlines
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
The Daily Senrinel and the Sunday
Times-Sentinel value the 'contributions their readers make to the spans
sections of these papers, and they
will continue to be published.
However, certain deadlines for
submissions will be observed.
The deadline for photos and related articles for football and other fall
spons is the Saturday before the
Super Bowl.
· The deadline for photos and relat·
e(l anicles' for basketball (summer
basketball and related camps fall
under the summer sporis deadline)
an" other winter spons is the last day
of the NBA finals.
The deadline for submissions of
local baseball- and softball-related
photos and related anicles, from Tball to the majors . .as well as other
spring and summer spons, is the day
of the last.game ofthe World Series.
These deadlines are in place to
allow contributors the · time they
need to acquire their photos from the
photography studioldcvelopet·. of
choice and to give the staffs ·the
chance to publish these items in the
appropriate season for ttiose sports. . .

Friends.

SPRING/SUMMER .
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CAR CARE
SPECIAL
EDITION
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A program titled "Try The 'Domino Effect' To Chanae For The Better"
wu presented by Janet Thomas when TOPS IIOH 1383, Cheshire met on
Man:h 24 at Cheshire United Methodist Church.
"Thinking self-improvement'! Weight foss is probably part of your game
plan. After all, losing weight and/or maintaining a healthy weight is one of
· lhe.most sought-after goals today," said Thomas.
"One good way to get off to a roaring making a·change in an unrelated
area," slid Janet Thomas, a representative of TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly).
.
"Such a change helps you look better, feel better. and acquire more selfconfidence, Janet Thomas said. "You're. inspired to keep up with your selfimprovement. Pretty soon ~u·ve got a domino· effect going. One positive ·
chanae sparks another, whic~ sparks a third; and qn and .on."
Thomas listed simple ways·to start a domino effect including going to·a
hair stylist for a make-over, a new cut or styling method to enhance features,
buying an items of clothing with flair and style, taking a workshop or short
course in a new area of interest. .
1UPS best loser of the week was Kathy McDaniel, Long Bottom; with :
Mary Martin, Middlepon; as KOPS best loser. Best losers of the week
receive a certificate of recognition and a gift from the gift.box.
Members worked on program covers ·for Area Recognition Day (ARD)
be held at Lanc~ter High_School: Lancaster on Saturday, April 19. Theme
will be "April Showers Bring May Flowers."
·Kathy McDaniel was TOPS best loser on Marcil 17 with Emogene Johnson, Pt. Pleasant•.WV. Katie Moore, Syracuse; and Janet Thomas, Cheshire
as KOPS best losers.
·
A program called "Trickle Your Stomach" was presented by Janet
Thomas. Quiz was won by Phylis Drehel and Helen Trout.
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TOPS members weigh-in from 8:30 to 9:45a.m, on Mondays.at ,Cheshire
· United ~ethodist Church. Meeting stans at 10 a.m. For more information on
TOPS, residents may call Thomas at 367-0274.

By HOLLIS L ENGLEY
Gar...U Ne- Service

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The Comm11nlty C.leftc!ar is
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· pubi.... IIS • 11ft iernce ton~· mURSDA.'f
prvftt .roups -~-~ to aniiOIIRCe
TUPPERS PLAINS -- Tuppers
.meetinJi •nd special eventS. The " Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars
·CIIIeadllr h nol deslped to pro- Post 9053 mectinl! Thursday. 7:JO
!mote' sales ' or lund nlsen ol •ny p:m. at the post for nomination &lt;&gt;f
·tyj.e. Items are printed liS SpliCe ofliccts. · ·
·
:per'nlits 8l1d c.mtqt be au•rmteecl
\
·to run ••pedfk number of days.
POMEROY -- Preceptor Beta'
WEDNESDAY
•
Beta .~orority meeting Thursday.
: '.Tt!PPEI(S. PLAINS ·- Ladies 6:30p.m. ai the Epi:i!:opalian parish
A'!xiliary,' Post 9053, Tuppers 1\ouse. " Btjn~ items ti1r Serc.nity
Plains, Wednesday. 7:30 p.m at the House.
hall. ~w officers will· be elected. ·

RACINE -- . JEWEL . Home
MIDDLEPORT -- Widows' Pel- 453. X am. hrcakfast followed hy.19
School Supprlrt Group will me~!' at 7 • FRIDAY
. lowship•. potluck at noon Fritlay . am . lodge work in EA dejlrec: ·
EAST . MEIGS -- Eastern Local Middleport Church of Christ .
p.m. on April 10 at the home . of
SATURDAY
Brian and Kim Hupp. Topic will be Board of Education. Friday. 7 p.m ..
LONG BOTTOM '- A hyriui sing
on tcachin~ art. For more informa- at the high school to discus.' antl
LONG BOTTOM -- Faith Full
will
he held at the Mt. Oli~c Comtion resident ~ 949-~11'1.
review bids for new building .
Gospel Church. Long Bottom. Unity
mumty Church. Lung Bottom, Sai. Singers. 7 p.m Friday.
"
urday . . 7 p.m. "Delivered" will' ·bC
RUTLAND
-Return
Jonathan
RUTLAND -- Mci~s Local
CHESTER -- Shade River Lodge featured.
OAPSE. Local 17. rc~ular meeting. Meigs Chapter. DAR, Friday. I p.m.
Thursday. Rutland fire house. 7 p.m. at Rutland ·united Methodist
Church. Prugram:1 on .ecology by
Ot. E.s: Villanueva, M.D. regrets to inform you that
CHESTER-- Shade River .Lodge Oonna We her ,and Rutland fifth
4523. 8 p.m. attbe hull. Work in FC .grade dal\s. 1" ·,-·
effective April 14, 1997, his medical practic~
degree. All Masons welcome.

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~-'~_...,.....------Society scrapbook-____,~--

Divorce

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·· . MASONIC DINNER
A dinncr/rccej!tion· 'honoring
RoY.at Arch Masons Grand Hifh
Priest Wayne S. Dill and his ,wife.
· Kay, of Oak flllrbor, will b held Fridlly, 6':30 p.m. ' at the Wellston .
Masonic Temple.
Hlrold Rice, 12th Capitllllll' Dis·
tri&lt;:t of Royal Arch Masons' District
education officer. lnnounced the
vilit. Dinner will be $8 a penon
p11yable a1 the door. The musical
· aroup, "Horizon" will provide ente~­
lllioment. All erea Masons and their
llciica are invited to •ttcQd.
: PatriOII' graves to be nwlted

SomeotiB lblf KQQIII/Illllt'UIIf. .

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Wtdneldlys 6:~:15 Sltii4-Nov. 27
Clll 9el!-2814 for IIIla Inloonllllkwt.
Clild - ji!IMdld.
AlglalilliOIIla

From.bluebells to baseball, this year's
spring started 4 billion years ago

Family -Medicine

c•workilrs.
p1111p ror people wlio an
sepanted or dhmlecl.
5pa110111d by ....
llldlllljl on Cllnlllll ant,
FlllhiiMIIn

o; •llldcllport; Ohio

States in the early 1950s. " My dad 's
family had 8f0Wn tulips for a 'couple
It is April.
. hundred years," he ii&amp;YS· ·"They came
.Fat purple, red, white and yellow blooms fr9m the Netherlands and that's what
make an undulating carpet of the tulip fields of they swted doing."
Washington state's Skagit Valley whi)e the
Fortunately. they chose the Skagit
Skagit Riv~r runs cold with melted snow from Valley of ·Washington, near. Puget
the mountams above. '
Sound, where tulips were already cuhiGeorgia onions stretch green for hundreds of vated and where the Skagit Valley
acres as the spring harvest begins in the fields Tulip Festival runs through April 19
around Vidalia.
(36().428-5959).
Texas bluebells line the highways and climb
'Today, Roozen says, his Washingup and over the hills outside Austin .
ton Bulb company has 400
Humpback whales tum from the warm Pacif- · planted in tulips. In April, the
ic off Maui toward Alaska. new calves swim- arc carpeted with blooms . of
ming with their mothers.
color. ·
Baseball players break tram1ng camp in
"That's one of the beautiful
Aorida and Arizona and play the first of the new of tulips, there are bicolors,
season's 162 games.
tones, shades of every color.
U.S. taxpayers wait until t~ last minute to pink, dark pink, different
mail their income-tax returns to · the Internal yellows,'differ-"""'
Revenue Service.
'·
ent reds,
Scientists say taxes, tulips, and high fly balls purple,
-and any seasonal event anywhere on the plan- lavender.
et - began in the chance meeting of cosmic · You name
dust orbiting the sun 4.56 billion years ago.
it, they're '
·"We think the planet. formed through accre- there.
tion, a bunch of things crashing into each other
.to make a bigger thing," says David Weintraub, -~There's a
an astronomer at Vanderbilt Universit;y in ton of differNashville, Tenn. (Smaller dustballs are still out ent varieties.
there, he says; like Comet Hale-Bopp. now v1si-_ There's
Ohio University
Queen of the
ble in the northern sky. It's brightest April I.
College of Osteopathic Medicine
"Around the sun was a flat. pancake-shaped Night, lie de
disc of gas and dust. Solid, Iitie things. The little France, White
. dust grains smashed into each other to make Dream .. . there
are hundreds. ·
'larger things, then those made larger things."
Awh81eofa
Ncar the end of the process. he says, the
travel story
huge, spinning, rocky mass of the pro)o-earth
Tricia Naessig,
had enough gravity to suck in one last chunk of
senior
researcher
matter.
John C. Wolf, D.O.
It was big, maybe qs ·big as the moon, and at the Pacific
Associate Professor
might
have become a planet itself except for the Whale Foundation
of Family Medicine
eanh's greater gravity. That chunk collided with on Maui, expects
such force that the earth tilted' on its aKis. (Our her friends 'Malama
current moon. in a cosmic balancing act, has yet and Kekoa to leave
Question: My wife has seen an onhopedic surgeon because of a bump on
to escape eanh's gravity and has never suc- Hawaiian waters
her wrist. He diagnosed the condition as a ganglion cyst and wants to operfor Alaska in April.
cumbed to it). ·
ate to remove it. What is a ganglion cyst, and is surgical removal the only
Today, the impact would eKterminate life on Malama and Kekoa
treatment for it?
.
eanh.
But four billion years ago it began the are humpbacked
· Answer: A ganglion cyst is a fluid-filled benign swelling of joint tissue.
process
that has brought us summer, fall, winter whales, females
It can affect either the sheath that cnc~rcles a tendon or the tissues that surFflESH BEGIN·
who
migrated
and spring.
round ll joint that is known as the "joint capsule."
NINGS • Spring Ia
And April and Texas bluebells, animl!l babies 3.500 miles from v.•· r~'~·
I couldn't locate statistics about ihe prevalence of ganglion cysts. but
In the air you can
cold southeastern
at
the
zoo and fiddlehead ferns in Maine.
from my personal experience, I can say that they are quite common~ I see
tell·from the new
That planetary tilt means that the amount of .Alaska to the
patients every week who are concerned about a new "bump" that has
·
addition" to aniof .,....., · ·'
sunlight falling anywhere on eanh varies in the warmth
ma) famillel, top
appeared on their wrist or near other joints. These bumps may he totally
one-year orbit around the sun . When we have Hawaii, probably
clockwla•, tiX•,
painless, or they can be quite uncomfortable. Pain is caused by the pressure
to
give
binh
to
more
sunlight
(summer),
we
are
warmer;
when
fresh vegetable•
these bumps place on nearby sensitive structures, such as the nerves·of the
calves.
we
have
less
(winter).
we
arc
colder.
and blu.tlella.
carpal tunnel in the wrist or the nerves that leave the spinal column in the
"~
lot
of
..From
March
21
'and
through
April
is
when
From
March 21
back.
what
we
have
. •nd .through April .
the Nonhem Hemisphere has more daylight, so
A ganglion cyst occurs because of degenerative changes. That is. they
here
toward
the
it
·gets
warmer,",
Weintraub
says
..
''It's
not
Ia when the Nor:th·
happen as a c9nsequence of wear and tear upon joints or tendons. As a.
.ern .Hemisphere.
tail
end
of
the
.
because
the
eanh
is
closer
to
the
sun.
The
sun
is
response to repeated mild injury, usually 'occuning ·over a number of years,
haa
more daylight, ·
are
seasons
getting
higher
overhead,
and
the
higl\cr
the
sun
the supponive and protective lining of the joint or to the' tendon sheath
so
it
gets warma~, ·
calves
born
is
in
the
sky,
the
·more
heat
we
have."
begins to swell in a ",balloon-like" manner. The neck of the balloon connects
The
heat triggers ·
during
this
The heat triggers change in the planet. From
to the joint capsule or tendon sheath and the body of the balloon stretclles
conga
in the ·
the the Space Shuttle over the United States the season, buildinto the sutTOunding tissue forming a bump like the one on your wife's wrist.
planet.
white ice of winter can be seen bemg pursued ing up a blubber layer feedA ganglion cyst can simply be left !lone, if it is causing no prOblems. On
..
.j
out
of northern slates ,by the greening plants of ing on 100 pounds 'of mom's milk a day." she 17
ihc· other hand, this type of cyst may require treatmenl if its physical size or
(505-326-6571
).
The
festival
is
a
cnmhi1iatiull'
of
says
..
and
oncoming
summer.
spring
)ocation results in pain ot interferes with normal joint function . Spmetimes.
"Toward the end of the season you get the culture and fun; its mime means "Walk in heau·
Onion time In Georala
~hese cysts - if not treated can lead to more; serious problems if they begin to
feeling
of the whales heading out. You suy. 'Hey, ~ ··
·Some of that green would be in Uvalda. Ga..
\
~ut excessive pressure on nerves or blood vessels. This is an especially likcThe
festival.
open
to
the
pul&gt;hc.
happens
in
'
s.:e
you
next
season.'
'.'
I'll
in
Randall
Morris's
100
acres
of
fields
where
7
•ly scepario if. the cyst is in the wrist or spinal area. A ganglion cyst can also
April
because.
''it's
a
time
of
cmnmg
nut
of
winmill.ion onions have been maturing since Diamonds become boys'· and girls'. hest friend
be treated if thl! "bump" is cosmetically una~ceptablc but otherwise.causing
Boys and girl~ arc playing baseball again . It's . tcr and into the. spring." says Anselm Davis.
Novemhcr.
no serious problems.
·
,_. ,
' • ·
more
organized than Roger Kahn remembers principal of Navajo Prep and the son of Navajo •
; On April I, Morris says, it · ~: "just a solid
: Cysts that require treatment can be cared for in several ways. Old time
from
pickup
games in his boyh&lt;x&gt;d Brooklyn. he and Choctaw parents.' "There's an awakening •
green when you look .across the field.
doctors, according to the stories I'Ve heard, would smash a large book.
'".The onions arc probably two weeks away says, but it's still baseball. Kahn wrote "The and in that awakening things grow and arc
preferably-Gray's Anatony, against the cyst hoping to..brcak it. The tl\l:ory
from harvest. The tops arc two feet tall. The Boys of Summer" in 1971 ahout the Dodgers of beginning to. happen. Animals cor.nc out of
\vas that on'ce the cyst was broken it would not refonn. This approach. unforonion
pan is under the ground. They're in the the '40s and '50s. His new baseball liook is hibernation, plants he gin to sproul their leaves'.
tunately, usually produccd .wrist injuries without reiliiY helping treat the cyst.
This is a time we want to refocus on our own ~
"Memories of Summer" (Hypcrion. $23.95).
last stage. which is making the bulb."
:roday, some physicians attempt to drain the .cy~t with a syringe. This is
Kahn says when he was ahoy he played " as language and culture. so there would he a sense ..
. When tit: onion harvest is done in May, Ranusually difficult because the tluid in the cyst is quite thick, and simply draindall Morris still has ahead of him tobacco and soon as the icc began to melt. We waited and of renewal' for our Native American students."
ing ·the cyst usually fails to provide lasting relief. Medication can be inject·
The festival's name comes from an important ·
s&lt;iybeans. cotton. com and peanuts. Just like last ',Waited for the weather to just get wam1 enough
ed into the cyst after an attempt to drain it has been made. This method can
Navajo
ceremonial song. Davis suys. '' It talks '
to
throw
a
ball
arountl.
There
wa'
a
sense
of
year. Just like' next year. ·
be very Sl\Cces~ful, depending upon the size and IOQation of the cyst. the type
about
'beauty
he low me, in front of me . in b~ck ,
rebirth,
excitement,
and.
'
this
year
I'
II
he
a
hct·
It's pan of the defining rhythm of the seaof medication injected inio the cyst, and the skill of the physician. Many
of
me,
above
me
and all around me as I walk .
cysts, however. must he surgically removed, just as the o.rthopedic surgeon . sons, coming from that ancient collision of dust ter ballplayer than I was before.· ..
Therefore
I
walk
in
beauty.'
with dust.
suggested for your wife.
.
·~
.
1
"It's a reminder that in everything that we do,
'Therefore I walk in be11uty'
This rhythm is cvcry\llhcrc on the plancl. It
How does your wife determjne the best lrcattnelll for her ganglion cystJ ,
we
want In &lt;lo it in such a way that we arc eng:
The
stronger
sun
warnlS
the
high
desert
has a slightly ' different face depending on the
She should talk to your family doctor and the orthOpedic surgeon about the
nizant
that we must take care of ourselves and
around
Farmington.
N.M
..
ncar
the
vast'
Navajo
time, latitude and longitude. but in April in pans
benefits and risks of the different methods. Then, once slic is well informed,
our
universe
1f we then arc to truly walk in ·beaureservation straddling the New Mexico-Arizona
·of the nonhern hemisphere, it looks like this:
your wife can make her choice.
·.
. .
_
.
border. The students at Navajo Prepurutory ty and harmony with ourselves and the .'world
April's shower of flowers
· . "Fwly Medicine~· Is • weekly ccilQm"" To IU,bml! questlo~ wri~ to
School
celebrate Hozho Naasha Week April II - around us.''
Leo 'Roozen's parents came to the United
Jobn C. Wolf; D.O., ~lo Unlvenlty CoUeae·of Osleop8tlllc IVIedlelne,
'
Groev.nilr HaD, Athtns. Ohio 4!701.
.
'

Nallhbors.

Tcllthe•lbout Dl~, a

PanJ

Creatin,g a string of
positive
even1s in your life
.

~

special waldy ......,, .... llllflllll

'

·'

The ~aily· ~en~el
992~2155
•

'

..

GRAVE M.UKING

'

,.

•

.

Purchase of a new dishwa~her
CEREMONY
. bcrs and interested citizens arc
was
reported, and arrangements
asked
to
meet
at
the
Meigs
Museum
Grave ~rking ceremonies for
made
to purcha'IC a new deep fryer
144.
Butternut
A\'e
..
Pomeroy,
at
I
Revolutionary War soldier:&lt; will be
and
other
supplies. for the kitchen.
held Saturday afternoon by Ewings ·p.m. on Saturday for the trip.to the
The l'Ced for more members to
·
C!Japter, Sons of the American Rev- ccm~terics.
panicipatc
in project work was dis'
·
·
olution.
cussed
with
an emphasis on building
The graves of the soldiers to. he
. LEGION FUND RAJSER
.
up
funds
to
help boCk with commumarked included David Sayre ~nd
Fund raising projects were disSeth Jones in tbe Letan Falls Ceme· cussed ami plans made for the pur- nity programs.
tcry. Letart Falls: Henry Roush, at chase of som~ equipment when
ALL AI
Plants Cemetery, and Georae Roush, F~y-Bcnnelt Post 128, American
Grant'
Arnold,
a fourth grader at
Weldon Cemetery, Rllcinc:.
Le1i·0n.• .executive committee
and
.
The dedication ceremony will Auxiliary representatives met Salisbury Elementary School. made
include a brief histOIY of each patri- · recently at the hall.
· all A's for the third nine-weeks Jr&amp;dot alon1 with the color gll8rd·and firA fish fry anCI tlca market will be in&amp; period. His nune 'wL~ listed on
ina ~ o( American l.eJion Post held Friday frolt] 10 a.m. to 7 p.m., the school's honor roll but it wu not
liOl Rldlle.
·
and on April 18, the Middlepott indicltted tllat ~ had all A's for the
All Ewinp Chapter SAR lqle~ - Founder's Day dinner will be served. period.

.,

.

located at 505 Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, Ohid\
will be pennanently close;&lt;~. The last office day. will
be April 12, 1997.
i
Requests for transfer o( medical records can be done
any time, during office hours, before April .12th••
Thereafter, requests can. be made by calling hi~)
office or personally conung to office on Thu~ays
between 2:00 - 4:00 PM and· Fridays between 11
- 12:00 AM (992-6633) until May 16, 1997; or by
writing to this address:
E.S. Villanueva, M.D.
505 Mulberry Heights
•
,,
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Dr. Villanueva truly appreciates your patronage.

:01!

.

I

•

v
'

.

t

�••

•The

•

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Slllllnel

1117

'

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23RD

CELEBRATION

PEPSI ·&amp;MT•
DEWPRODUOS

STOlE HOURS

•••••r
t1n S•••ay
.IAM·IOPM

79

Accepts Credit Cards

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU APRIL 12, 1997

7·UP
PRODUCTS.

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

• SEE STORE FOR .

2 LITER

(·

4,.(
Quarters •••••••••~~•••••••• .
$ .2
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CHICKEN .LEG

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CHUNK DOG
FOOD

FRESH PORK BUTT STEAKS OR .

COUNTRY STY~E . .

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KELLOGS.
CORN·FLAKES

14.5

$ .,6..9.
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ONE .

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.$ 1 ·19

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WESSON
OIL .

TISSUE
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$ 71

'

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I

Devan Mariah Sou lsby of
Pomeroy. daughter of Iimmer and
Connie Stout Soulsby recently celebraled her sixth birtl]day with · a
p:yty at h~J,D&lt;!I!!.i·
... ,
,
~A, 101 D.almatian theme was carried out for the party attended by her
panints , her sister, Shannon, her
paternal grandparents, Jim and Susie
Soulsby, her maternal grandparents,
Jim and Dorothy Stout, her .greatgrandparents, Carl· and Hazel B,arnhill, Terti and Pat Soulsby, Casey .
Richard~on, Emily Fields, Aaron
Oliphant, Sara : tfubbard, Lindsey,
Eric and Marcia Buzzard, ·Jessica
Jewell, Carrie Walker,.
: Sending cards and gifts were
Cindy and Joe l'ields. gre~t grand!llOther, Virginia Will, Susie, Roger,
Travis, Grant and Carrie Abbol!,
Ruth Ann, Larry an4 Jon Millhone,
Marcia Houdashelt. Janet Duffy. and
. !]race and Glen Stout. ·

I ·AM· 8 PM
SAT., APRIL 12

•

FOO

·VEGETABLE

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12 ROLl PKG.

14·15 oz.

BATH ·
TISSUE

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•Ohio Valley Bank
"Superbank" Sel'lllces
•Greeting Cirds
•Floral Sales ·
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FOR

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TROPICANA
Season~

umi\2W""

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2

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eChlps Ahoy Coo,kles 15·11 Oz.
•Ritz Crackers 16 oz.
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Hupp marks
first birthday ·

460Z ..

1%

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Thts Week ·
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Value

$500
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policy-

: In an effort-to provide.our reader- ,
ship with current news, the Sunday '
'times-Sentinel will nqt accept weddings after 60 days from the date of
i~e eveni.
.
. · ·
.
· • Weddings submitted after-the 60d&amp;y deadline will appear dt~ring the ·
vi.eek in The Daily Sentinel and the ·
tlallipolis Daily Tribune . .
; All club m~tings and other news
akicles in the. society section must
~ submitlw within 6o .days of
''
occurnmce.
:; ·All birthdliys must he submitted ·
·within 60 da~s of the occurrence.
;.. All maton'al submitted ror publibation
is subject to editing. .
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GILLON

•TOPSOIL
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ePEAT.
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MHdowa.ld

Utllted Valley lell U•lted Valley lell

• ' Bay lee Rian Hupp, daughter of
Bill 'and Tracy fjupp of Racine. eel·
ebrated her first birthday on March
is. She is the· ~randdat~ghter of Dar·
tcill and Jan Norris and Jim and Opal
Hupp.

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S.ixth birthday
celebrated ·

super
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•Cream Style or Whole Kernel Corn
·;sweet Peas •Green Beans •Whole Potatoea
•Mixed Vegetables

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BEL~ .
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2
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PRINGLE
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Potato Chips:~.s.c:••~.......
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Peaches •••••••••••~::••·••••• . · · Pizza~:••~•••••••:::•••••~••• 59

s

99

DEl/AN. SOULSBY

help -- a lot of it. You cannot throw
your pregnant, abused daughter out
on t.he street, but there's no reason
you must house her goo&lt;l-for-nothin•e husband. Ask your family doctor
or lawyer to suggest a good therapist
and go to work on Jenny. Without·
question, her husband must be
banned from the premises . That's for
openers. Good luck. You're going to
need it.
Send questions to Ann Landers,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif: 9(1045

/;/; DON'T FORGET OUR

.

TROPICANA

ically abusive. Both of them arc irresponsible when it comes to money .
and business mauers, and neither
can complete anything. Jenny has
quit every J·ob she ever had.
Recently, Jenny wid us she wanted to get a divorce, so my wife and I
let her move back into our home
whi!e we were away. We gav~ her
· strict orders that her husband was
not welcome. Guess what'/ We just .
learned that he has moved into our
house with Jenny. Now what do we
do? .. Muddled in ~empllis
· Dear Memphis: You need .outside

.

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JUICE

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1.·69 '
otatoes •••••••••••-_....... ·. . .

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Oear Ann Landers: I work for a
irotip of ,attorneys whose specialty
is personal injury and motor vehicle
~~:ccident litigation . I've read and
seen some terrible things in ·this
business, and I am now an extremely cautious driver.
:. Will you plea~e print the
encloseil? I don'i know who wrote
it,: but it certainly 'made an lmpressjon on me. Maybe seeing it will
wake lip some of those speeding,
dl'\lnl&gt; or drugged drivers. -- Legal
· Secret.,Y in Nebraska
"
Dear Nebraska: The essay you ·
sent appeared in my cohHnn se.veral
years ago, bilt I am pl_eased to run it ·
again. People have a tendencs- to for·
get the unpleasant stuff. ·Here it is:
Heaven Can Wail
It takes 7/IOths of a second' to kill
a person in .an automol)ile ' crash.
Studies at Yale and Cornell uni versities provided a dramatic split-second
chronology of what happens when a
car rams into a tiee at 55 mph .
• At 1/IOth of a second, the front
bull)per. and grille collapse..

ing convulsion. the front seat rums
foward, · pinning the driver against
the steering shaft. Blood spurts from
his mouth. Sh&lt;Xk has frozen his
heart. But he doesn 't mind because
he is already dead.
Dear Ann Landers: Our youngest
daughter, "Jenpy," has been a finan cial drain and the source of much
worry. She became pregnant at 15·
and dropped out of high school . At
17, she married a very unstable. guy
and' had a second child. She is now
21, with a third child on the way and
a husband who is verbally and phys-

AEP Electric

.,

~ BATH

By ANN LANDERS

(except Buckeye)

SUPERIOR

.STARKIST
TUNA

,,,,.. s'""''"·

LoU..-y Tickets

24

IPDAHO BAKING

'""'· "'• An'''"

nnk's SyridiCalc aad Cn::·

At 2/IOths or a second, the hood ver's . fcar-fro1.en hands bend the
crumbles, rises and smashes into the steering column into an almost vertiwindshield, and the grillwork disin- cal position. and he is impaled on the
tegrates.
·
steering wheel shaft. Jagged steel
At 3/101.hs of a second, the driver punctures his lungs and arteries.
is sprung upright from his seat, his
At 6/IOths of a second, the
broken knees pressed against the impact rips the shoes off his feet.
dashboard and the steering wheel The chassis hends in the middle , and
bends under his grip.
. the driver's head is slammed into the
At 4/lOths of a second. the front windshield. The car's rear begins its
of his car is destroyed and dead still. downward fall as its spinni.ng wheels
but the rear end is still plunging for- chum into the ground .
ward at 55· mph. l1te half-ton motor
At 7/IOths or a second, the entire
crushes into the tree.
'
body of the car is twisted grotesqueAt ·5/lOths of a second, the dri: ly out of shape. In one final agoniz-

18 LB. BAG

np ste~ks ·~················ '' . . ...·'
9
c:b~dETstea~.....;••~..~~;$2J ·
H Dogs ·······~·····~!:~...

HUDSON .
·cREAM FLOUR

Ann
Landers

$ 129

II. .

The Dally Sentinel• Page I

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

·The ~ruesome - anatomy of a fatal car crash

24 PK 12 OZ. .CANS

.291 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Wedl ndly; April I, 1117

•'

TWIN ·
POPS

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WednliiiiJ t• April t, 1117

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. Wedltlld8y, Apr11 .. 1117
' .

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

. The Dltlly·S111tlnel • Page 11

Pon)eroy • Middleport. Ohio

Southern
·
Local
School
District
honor
rolls
posted
Soutlleria
HIP Sci1oaJ

Ninth Grade •• Jamie Baker, Julie
Nakao, Kyle Norris, Chris Ran·
dolph. and Brandon Wolfe; all A's.
Jessica Alley, Heidi Bumpus, Stacey
Ervin, Courtney Haines, Clinton
· Hatc;her, Kim !hie, Denise Keyes,
Laraine Lawson, Amber Maynard,
. Bobby Scarberry, Jonathan Smith,
Jared Sm.ith, and Stacy Wilson. .
Tenth Grade - Jennifer Carleton,
Christa Circle, J~&gt;Sse Lillie, Jason
' Roush, and Kimberly Sayre; all A's.
Teresa Bush, Justin Caplinger, Ashli
, .Davis, Joshua Ervin, Troy Hoback,
Jenny Howertown. Josi~ Jarrell,
. jeremiah Jol)nson, Bobby Johnson,
. Kara King, Jessica Smith, and Jessica Theiss.
. • Eleventh Gracte -- Cynthia Caldwell, Crystal Coleman, Conny
· Horst, Evan Struble, and Billy
. Young; all-A's. Erica Amott, Chad
Clark, Jonna Fisher, Jennifer Friend,
Eva Glowacka, Nathan ltensler,
, Matt. Hill, Melissa Layne, Nikki
Robinson, Jennifer Roush, Lindsay
Smith, and .Ranetta Wheeler.
Twelfth Gra!Ie-- Emily Duhl,
Hillery Harris, Adam Roush, Lora
Sayre, Jessica Sayre 'and Amber
Thomas; all A's. Chris Ball, Chad

Blount, Keri Caldwell, ARlie Car·
leton, Matt Evans, Danny Fisher,
Nathan Haines, Kristen Hensler,
Brian Kimes, Mark Lewis, Jesse
Maynard, Ryan Norris, . A!IIY
Northup. Briannc Proffitt, Kim
Roush, Billy Sheppard, Renee Turley, and Bobby Writesel.

Soutbera Junior Hlp
Seventh Grade_; Tyler Little, and
Rachael M~~~:shall; all A's. Matt Ash;
Joe Cornell, Sheri Cummins,
Amanda Huddleston, Joe Manuel,
Nathan Martin, T. 1. Moore, Aaron
Ohlinger. Lori Sayre, and Amy Wilson.
Eighth Grade -· Jonathan Evans,
and Shawna Manuel; all A's. Sarah
Ball, Brandi Codner. Kati Cummins,
Clay Eitslen, Macyn Ervin, Jeremy
'Fisher, Chad Hubbard, Josh Larsen,
· Jessica Janey, Garrett Kiser, Fallon
· Rousti, Joey Sands, Brenna Sisson,
and Emily Stivers.

Winebrenner.
Norman, Deana Pullins, Michael
Third Grade·· John Bentz, Derek Roush, and Elizabeth Wamsley.
Roush, Chelsea Smith and Jenny
Sixth Grade --Alan Moore, Tara
Warner; all A's. Ryan Amberger, Pickens, Brandon Smith and Tom
Bradley
Crouch,
Samantha Theiss; all A'( Ike Apperson, Lisa
Edwards , Shyla · Jarrell, Myca Deem, Jamie Norvile. and Stephanie
Michael , Joey Nottingham, Jason Wilson.
Pierce, A.J, Simpson, and Selena
,.I
Spencer.
,
Fourth. Grade -- Ashton Brown,
· Heather Duffy, Tyler Roherts, and
Stacy Synder; all A's. Rachael Cottrill, Holly Duffy, .Josh Harris, Jonas
Hart. Ashlee Hill , Jordan Lidel·, and
Christopher Warden.
.
Fifth Grade -- Bethany Ambetger, Codi Davis, Sarah Hawley and
Katie Sayre; all A's. Jondan Bass,
Tim Cogar, and Amber Mills.
Sixth Grade •• Melinda Chancey
and Crystal Cottrill; all A's. Curt
Crouch, Mariam EI-Dabaja, Jenny
Larsen, and Amy Lee.

Portland E!ementary
Fourth Grade -- Sara Camarata
and Bryan Smith; all A's. Joanna
Syraeuse E!ementary
. Second Grade -; Olivia Dudding, Pickens and Ryan Smith.
Fifth Grade -- Stephanie BradTyler Harkness and Adam Phillips; ·
ford
and Andrea Tedford · all A's.
ail. A's. Nicholas Buck, Joey Eakins,
Samantha Gray, Amber Hill, Mallo- Chelsa Dilcher, Montana Jarrell,
ry HiU,' Adelle Rice, and Darcy Tabitha Jones. B.J. Marnhout, Amy

-------Harrisonville News-.--'--Louise and Buddy Eshelman
attended a surprise birthday party
for her sister in Springfield: She met
nieces.and nephews she had not seen
in 20 years.
Raymond and Dolores Donohue
' visited their daughter, Kenda Armstrong near Chillicothe.
John and Wendy Ohlinger and
daughter, Sieanna, spent Easter at ·
the home of her .sister, Tamra Clark,
Racine. Other guests were Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Clark, Middleport;

.Penny-Bar ker, New Haven , W. Va .,
and Mrs. Wilda Wiseman, Albany.
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Stanley and
children, Norwich were · Easter
weekend visitors of her parents, Mr. ·
and Mrs. David Napper and Mr. and
Mrs. Duane Stanley~
The Zion Church of Christ had an
attendance of 125 for Easter services.
Joe Wright, Phoenix, Ariz. visited
the Eshelman family .•
Mrs. Louise Eshelman has

returned. to her home fro·m the Pleasant Valley Hospital Rehabilitation
Center after suffering a stroke
recently. She is reported to be
. improving although she still requires .
the ·usc of a walker.
·
Ida Murphy entertained all her
children and their families on Easter
Sunday.
·

'

Michael, Kasie Sellers. Erin Wise, .
and Buddy Young.
Fourth Grade •• Chad O.vid,
Brooke Kiser, Crais · Randolph,
Autumn Reed, A~hley Roush, Aaron
Sellers; and Nick11\Jcker.

A SPECIAL SECTION
lnThe

'

.,

Classifieds•••

~ . POINT ·PLEASANT REGI$TER

Real Time
Savers

• GALLIPOLIS DAILY TIUBUNE
•. POMEROY DATI X SENTINEL
..
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i-Il::ut YOJ!.J$-

a.nd Mr. and Mrs. Billy Glaze and
daughter, Erin. Mrs. Kenzil Scranton. Darhi and Arimas and Jordan
and Mr~. Sandy Darst; Deanna
Darst. all of Columbus, and Judy
Wolfe. local; Christy . Jacobs and
friend. .John Henitandcc. Clearwater. Fla. who spent a week with Mrs.
Clifford Jacobs. Darbi Darst sperit'
spring break with the Gilmorcs.

ADVERTISING DEADLINE:

•

INSERTION DATE:
.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 3(),'1997
'

Riverview Garden Club plans litter pickup

Plans for .a litter pickup this
·Thank you notes were received Frances Reed. Gi-ac~ Weber, and
n1orith were made when the from ·Pauline Myers, Fay Johnson, Maxine Whitehead.
Riverview Gandc'n Club met recent- Dora Piece, Hazel Barton, Mildred
ly at the Reedsville Church of Hauber. Louise Pierce, and Lyle
Refreshments were served buffet ·
Christ.
·
Balderson for remembrances from style by ihc hostesses. A small
Nola Young and Nancy Wachter the garden 'club.
. stuffed bunny was given to each one
were hostesses for the meeting. - • Nancy Wachter gave readings anending. In addition 10 those previDelores Frank conducted the mc~t- , "The Resurrection" · and "The ously named other attending were .
ing with members responding to roll thought." Easter favors were made Margaret Grossnickle,. Marilyn l'lan·
call by naming a sign of spring. for patients at the Arcadia Nursing num. T.head · Haskins; Mary AliceDev~tions given by Gladys Thomas
Home. Small bunnies were made by Rise. Pauline Myers, and Ruth Anne
incltldcd readings of "A Light Exits the members and filled with Ea.&lt;tcr Balderson. Guests . were Janet
In Spring" and "Country Chronicle." candy. Tpc project was directed by Spencer and Sarab Wachter.

..

THURSDAY, APRIL 22,1997 - 12 NOON·

l'i9

jp:~ .. •

Call992-2155
.For More Information ·
.Dave
Harris- Ext.
104
.
.
Bob-Atwood .. Ext I 05 "'

Study: Hormones may length$n postmenopausal women's lives
ly KiM PAINTER
vent, especially heart disease, than
UIA TODAY
, 1
from '1/le main diSeQe hormones
All but a few postmenopausal may p~ote,' breast cancer.
women could lengthen their lives by .
"The only aroup whose lives
· using Jonj!-temi boimone therapy, · would . be shOrtened would be
suuests a new analysis of uisling women who have no risk facton for
dlta.
heart disease ... IIICI have two or
The simple reason, ll)'t 'He lilies· more fim-depe relllives (mothers,
c!ay't Joumll of die Americlll Mcd- sistcn, dau1!11en) with breatt can·
icll Assot:illiOII: More women die cer," says Nananda Col, 1 researcher
r.- ailments hotttlotleS help pre· with the New England Medical Cen·

'

ter, Boston.
However, she says, gains WOIJid
vacy widely, from a few days . to
three" yeats, dependin1 on · a
woman's risks f01; heart diseue,
breast cancer and hip fracture.

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·

And Col concedes that ller con·

elusions rely on acceptanCe of exist·
ing data - data widely considered
inconclusive.

~(,,

jl'"•

.,

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EvEN IF THERE ARE No SYMPTOMs·

•

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A mammogram can detect abnormalities long I'Jefore there are any outward signs. We
1

,

recommend that you have your first baseline mammogram at age 40 even if there are
no 9jlmptoms. Between ages 40 to 49, ·

.

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lrn.Pleasant Vcilley··
HoSpital ·

)

I-,,

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IRIP1E¥.e-

(ol)P0NS
~•.• Uftllnllted

mfr's COUPONS.., 10 IIC

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DELl CARflYOIJTS Oil OSCAR M4 YER

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Pun Pack
&amp;unchaiJies
Assorted Sizes

PI.IJMROSE' .

Hamor
rurller
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16«.

.• .

The foilowing land transfers were Chester parcels; '
.
.
econded recently in ·the office of
. Deed, Jack_ a~~ She, Ia Claxton to
eigs County Recorder Emmogene Meigs Acqu1s11ton ' Incorporated,
amilton: .
·
Chester;
.
..
! Deed, Ruby .P.. Rife to Judy K. · Deed, Lavern~. G. and Gml . J.
McClellan, Salisbury parcels;
. Chase lo Taylor Famtly Partnershtp, .
I' Deed. Aivie B. and Anna Mac Bedford p~cels; ·
,
tartlow to Lawrence E. and Patricia
_Deed, .R1cky and Argyle Deeter to
11. Klein, Miners viii~; ,....
· Wilbur VanCooney, Lebanon parcel; .
~--Deed, Valerie J.l.:amond, Valerie . Deed, Glenn E~gene and Lots W.
Harrison and Richand Harri~on to ·Thompson . to Gma ThoJlla~ and
tlancy ·K. Jeffers. Salisbury;
Ctndy . Bum~ard.ne~, Sah~bury .
.
.
• Deed, Jack and Sheila Claxton to · parcels,
l.ieigs Acquisition Incorporated,
Deed. Jackte L. and Ella June
•
·
Stollings to Chester-Shade H1~toncal
'
Association, Chester parcel's;
$yr8CUSe COUrt
Deed, Roblirt L. and Marjorie
The Jpllowing .case$' were settled , Reeves to. Cl\ester-Shade Historical
cit)day night in the Sytac~se May- As$ociation, Chester parcels;
0
C o1
Deed. Sheryl and Bryan Wolfe 111
fM
~·s CoUn
ayor eqrge onn • Wilben J. M~l11.in, Sutton;
1l F , · · · bo d
re Rose
· Died, Harry L. and 'B(lrbara L
. • I
orcetttng
n s .we ;
. Eb!iri to o-ld c~ and Sheila K.
..,we, . R~i!,te. ,$5+. speed; Lonnie Ebiin, Cllester, q S
_3 acres;
.
~ifell'· Jr., Charleiton, W.V1:,
Th
A nd M
, ~:· 'Charles Craig. Racine.
Deed,
11mas · a
ane
s. speed; warren Clemenz. Raven- Authersoo to Fi'utk M. and Pamela S.
$51, ~peed.
.
Co~~~ R~ parceD I; d V"
Fined was CJIIrence . Hayraan.
~. ..arren
. an
IVI&amp;n
• I'
S!Oftr. Sheila and James Hubbard to
nc,~· Oper&amp;ton tcense, cosiS Sheila and James Hubbard, Middleand no license pl!llcs, $40 plus
pon lot. ·.

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appointment today.

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Meigs lan_
d·tra~sters ~posted ·

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it ·should be done every two years and
on an annual basis after that. Make ~n

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·: WASH~QTQN (A!~l ..,.. tto'u~c, - Co~gr(s~ ez~~· a~ the St~ie DepartSpeak.,et ~e:Wt:Gingri,ch· i~·. ilceus_i..~g , .peril 'Seeks.mpromt~"·formula to
Y.Sser :Arafat of wagmg a terronsm reopen Mt
peace talks.
W.ar 'agllinsi...IstJ~~:I and .\he Clinton ·, ·~11 is exlfaondinarily dangerous-to
ailmini~i(aiion ··of u'nderlnining con~se _ the. aggr~ssor and the vicIsrael's security. .
.
ttm, Gmgnch satd '" a sw.ech that
· Speaking Tuesday to a pro-Israel also attacked the news media f~r mis~obby,-.Gingrichsaid the administra·
r:eprescntatibil. "It is extraordinarily
:•tion should adopt "principles that say, dang,crous to confuse the terroriSt and
:.If you're a terrorist, you should not the democracy."
·
·:expect to live very long.... and make.. •And, the speaker added: " It is
}a commitment ·"to pre•e.mptive extraordinarily dangerous to always ,
;strikes when we deem them ap31ro- impose the burden on those who are .
:tpriate. "
your friends because you '_re too.timid
.: · The remarks drew an, angry to tell the truth to those who arc·your
.;rebuke today from Marwan Kanafani, ' enemies."
1
': a spokesman for Arafat.
As Gingrich spoke, the Palestinii. "Mr. Gingrich cannot .improve his ans took their place in the adminis- ·.
.:damaged image at the C"'flCDSC ofthe tration's revolving-door diplomacy.
·;Palestinian people by issuing accu: Two senior. officials met for two
~ations ... in order to satisfy the Israeli .hours with American mediator Dcn-~obby in the U.S.," Kanafani said. .nis B. Ross and said another delega·
'': He should use his position to try to tion would c.ome later.
·
. ·~ush peace forward. which is the only
On Monc!ay. it was Israeli Prime
· way to save ihc lives of Palestinians Minister Benjamin Nctailyahu 's turn
1
tmd Israelis."
to explore ic!eas for renewing nego.
! In the West B~nk today, cla~hes , · tiatic;m~. He mel with Prcsidcn.l.Clin·.
·erupted ·after the luneral_of a Pal~s: to~ and Scc~tary of State Madeleine
linian kille~ Tuc;'day b~ :J.sra~h '. ,-1\lbtig~t. · ;
,
lroops. Bospttal ofhc1als ~a1d at ICIIlfl ; ·,The speaker c,lled on the admin.
~0 peoRle \Yerc injured ~y-· ru,bbCr- · .&gt; isirati~n to.[Prcc Arafat to make a
·• .
' '· choice between "honest mvolvement
toated bullets.
l Gingrich's speech to thi: American. in the peace process or clear hostili. srael Public · Affairs ~onlmitte~ • ty with the United States of Ameri- _
nderscored I~rael's stron~ suppon tn 'to."
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~ingrich a~CU$8S Arafa_t.~.
pf vv.agin.g .terrorism war .

•

50 ways to take a break from doing your taxes
By PASQUALE OIFULCO
· have a garden; "ven a small nower not been worn fnr two or more
Brldgew8ler (N.J.) Courier-New•
pot will do.
. years.
·
·
· With just a few days l.eft hefore
39. Ride a hike.
25. Go see a play.
taxes and tax.forms are due, we wish
38. Cook that dish you' ve always
24. Get a new haircut. ,
io provide some free advice to every enjoyed eating but never tried mak·
23. Get some~hing pierced.
filer who hasn't yet filed - and ing. .
22. Get a tattoo.
even to those who already have:
:n. Once you've eaten that dish,
21. Have a cigar. Make it a good
Get Out! · ,
'
do a few sit-ups and push-ups so that cigar. not one of those plasticThat's right. leave the taxes to a· . you feel so· guilty when you try the · tipped. lillcr-f.illcd ·supcrrnarkct spcprofession.al. get out and enjoy these next suggestion.
Ciais.
.
early spring·days.
36. Eat dessert. Go heavy on the
2tl. Go to a comedy club.
Without further ado, here are 50 whippecj ,cream or chocolate fudge
19. Go fishing.
things Ill do instead of doing your topping. Then repem _the previous
18. Take a daytrip to a neighbortaxes:
suggestion. ·
ing city and do : something. you've
50. ·sec the "Star Wars" trilogy ·
35. You can start that diet now.
never done hefore.
hack-lo-back·to-back. ·
34. Break nut the checkbook and
. 17. Go dancing.
49. Treat yourself to. a · one-hour give a few bucks to charity. Giving
16. Invite some friends over -for a
Swedish massage. For about $50. tc&gt; someone who needs your help game of cards.
you can buy not only peace of mind. will make you lcel just a little bit
15. Visit an an museum.
but peace of body. too.
hettcr ahout ·all that other money
14. Visit 1\ science m!Jseum,
48. Take a walk.
going to Uncle Sam..
13. Visit an aquarium.
~7 .. Take a drive up to a park nr ·
33. Read a good hook.
12. Stan a.journal or diacy. If you
preserve and ponder nature. ·
32 .. Write a leuer to someone already have one, read it.
46. Break out the bi~oculars and other than the editor.
· II . Try eating at an ethnic restau·
go bird-watching .
.
31. If you know hoW; to play an rant you've not familiar with.
45. Break oul the telescope. find instrument. play. If you don 't pick
10. Wa~ poetic. ·
a spot with as little light pollution as one and learn.
9. Wax your surfboard.
possible, and gaze at the heavens.
30. Ii's getting 111 be about .lime
8. Surf the 'Net.
44. Go to a baseball game. After · for spring cleaning. I( the whole
7. Break out ihe Monopoly boand
all, 'tis the season.
house is too much, just do the. win- aod h;wc a marathon.
43. If you have a dog or cat or dows. You'll be amazed how much
6. Join a softball league.
iguana, give it a bath.
,
brighter everything looks.
5. Go for a bo~t ride. (If you have
.42.1fyou don 't h~vc a dog or cat.
29. Buy some 'bubhlc bath and the time and money. take a cruise.)
or iguana, consid.e r gelling. one . scented candles and lang~ish for an
4. Set' a new world's record. Cat(And .consider a shelter adoption .)lf hour.'
·
'
cgories include domino toppling,
that'stbo much of a hasslc ,.get a fish
:28, lntcrvie~ some.of your older · bubble gum blowing, grape catchtank. If that's still too much. get a relatives and learn •uhout your fami- . iRg,-golf ball balancing....and kissing.
tlnlntula: they '·rc real easy 'to care ly history. Ify&lt;iu · rc amonj,! the old·
for. ·
est. make the younger ones-sit down
3. Fly a kite.
41. If you have a backyard. but and listen. And videotape or audiodon't ·have a pond, get one. M~ny tape the conversations. Tomorrow's
2. Finish re:;etling your clocks.
.garden .. shops offer rea~onably jlrandchildren will he all the wiser
priced supplies and free adv1ce.
for it.
·
·I. Complete the following sen·
40. While you're at the garden
27. Plan your summer vacation.
tence: "Th_is w~kend , I'm saying
shop. buy some seeds or nowers.
26. Go through your .closets and ,the heck wuh everything.I'm goina
Yo~ don't need a two-acre p!ot to
donate to charily ev~rything that has to ... "

~,.,_, ,

&lt;AP.) -..Or. Alan :. pursue a career in science only to find ·

.. ort\l of \he IWO men who diS· . ... that the OpPortUnities for US tO have.
l!o•ver1~d lhe Hale-Bopp Comet, says a career in s&lt;\ience are ... abysmal." ·
~o few dreer options arc OP,Cn to sci.The .appeal was posted to the
~ntislS that he wouldn't refommend .' sc1.astro.a~ ~teur newsgrou~ · on
young ~ople pursue such careers. · March 21. . ··
.
_
~· "Unl9ss . there are some prett~
Hale sa1d he was try10g to u~ t~e
drastic changes 10 the way our soc 1•· ~ed1a auenllon focuse~ on htm 10
ely·' approaches· science a~d treats hght of th~. comet . discovery to
those of us who have devoted our mcrease awareness ol the problem.
u:¥es io mailjng spme o( pur own con· . The f!a!c~Bopp Comet, dlscovtributions, there is no way that ~can, ered by Hale.an~ amateur astronomer
, with ·~ clear conscience, encourage Thomas Bo~p 10 July I9~S. can ~
present-day students to J:!Ursue a seen 10 the Nonhero Hemisphere .'"
career in science," Hale said in a pub- the northwe;a corner of the _sky,
lie c.tnailtransmiued on an Internet about 30 degrees ahove the honzon,
Jl,ullelin board.
in the ·evening and 'in the northea~t
:, In '"an oP.,n letter to scientists of sky before d.~wn.
mY · generation," the celebrated
Hale ~~ tli~ d11ector of the Sout~- .
:istroriomer said he "was inspired by west Institute for Spa~e Research '"
' the "ientific discoveries and events Cloudcroft', tj.M ., wh1ch he formed
takin~ place during my childhood to ·in 1993.

Jeff and Peggy Bole spent a day ·
as guests of the Mike Girton family.

- -·-Laurel Cliff happenings. - -,
Mr.. and Mrs. Ernest Vanlnwagen
Easter dinner guests of Mrs. Ann
Mash were Mr. and Mrs. Patrick were Easter guests of their son and
Johns 0 n, Kellx and Samantha, family, Mr. and Mrs. Keith VanlnCharles Mash, Dawn, Lauren and wagen
Mrs. Clifford Jacobs was the
Sande, Reynl)ldsburg; Mr. and Mrs.
~illy Crane and Vanessa and Brette recent birthday dinner guest of Mr.
_
of Loris, S. C. and Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Thor Carsey.
·Easter guests of Mr. and Mrs.
" Wayne Pullins and Jesse,' and Leigh
Mash, and Dwight Cullums, all ' James Gilmore were Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Haggy and daughter. Kim.
local.

Letart Elementary
Due to the multi-age at Letan
Falls Elementary there will be no
honor roll for the first and second
grade.
·
Third Grade •• Dustin Brinager,
Amber Holsinger, Heather Jones,
Steven Lyons, Alisha Maddox; Deke

Middleport; Virginia Kidder, M,iddlepon; David L. Johnson, Coolville;
Randal W. Forbes, Pomeroy; Mattie
M. Teaford, Portland ; Betty Lou Wilson, Pomeroy;
Rodney D. Roush, Pomeroy ;
Crystal Danw Ridgway, Pomeroy;
Robert Daniel Davis, Pomeroy; Gregory Ross Davis, Syracuse; Greg A.
Parker, Reedsville; Penny Lou Klein,
Pomeroy;· Osie Donald Rowland,
Ewington; Tim Matthew Herdman,
Pomeroy; Krist in M. Torres, Middleport; Rita L. Slavin, Syracuse: Julia
Helen Barton, Syracuse ~ . Steven
Clark Bachner, Middleport; Ellen
Cobb Shelburne, Reetlsvillc; Amy
Beth Metzger, P,omeroy; Max 0 .
Davis, Middleport ~ Melissa K. Wise,
Vinlon; Charles Richard Houd:ishelt,
Pomeroy; Angel M. Harmon,
Langsville; Kathryn Suzanne Pullins,
Pomeroy; Dana Eugene Hendrix, .
Pomeroy; Ronald E. ,Coats. Pomeroy;
Kristina Lea Gray,' Racine; Jennifer
Lynn Jackson, Reedsville; Jack
Everett Harless, Racine;· David Scott
Gumpf, Reedsville.

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P~~g~12 • The

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Dally Sentinel ·

• The Dally Sentinel• Page 13
- -

Pomeroy • lllddlepOrt, Ohio
POIMI'Vy • M.ddlepoi'"., Ohio

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'Don Geary,

: • Pubtlc Notice

.

lOLl.

.

Public Notice
ioctlon. EAAC eppealo mull
&lt;;OUNlY: MEIGS
.
be tiled with: "'l!!.drorl3_ . PUBUC,NOTICE
"' c
~no following lppllcetlone mental Review Appoala
.,.dlor verHied complaint• Commloolon, 238 Ellt T wero received end the Street,
Ro.om.. 30G,
fpllowlng drift, propOHd, Columbuo, Ohio 432111. A
or fiMI action• wore leould I ::f~~~ tho eppeel mu .. be
1 1
1 1l•
.011. the director
by 1 ~ Ohio nv ronrnen.1 within 3 de. ye lifter filing thl.
Protection Agency (OEPA)
IPt -k. • Aatlono: Include eppell with the ERAC.
. tha ldoptlon; mocllflcellon,
Fin II loauence of Plrmlt
. or repeal of ordoro (other . ln...~DIII Company
thon emergency order1); k-'~6 !
tile · · · loou.nca, don lei,
lWpa.; OH.
·
laoue Date 03121/W
modlflcetlon or revocation
_ofllcal!••• pormlto, loa111,
Yerlancea, or ce~lflcaleai .
1nd thl epproval or
-dleapproval of pleno and
.Peclflcatlono. "Dreft
~l!lnl.": era ·wrttten alatemente 61 lh• Director of
11,1\vlroriinentll Prote...tlon'a
(Diroctor'o) lntlnt with
ra1pect tO lhl IIIUinCI,
denial, etc. ot a permit,
llcenaa, order, etc. Inter·
eatld pareono may oubmlt
written comment• or
. ...que1t a pubic mea11ng
r~gardlng _drift actlono.
Commenll or public
maatlng requ..to
be
oubmltlecl within 30
of
nbtlce of tho dreft actl•on . .I

'

uo
\

.

-

o-r

'

nESHBIEF

IS.,.

-LI,

.',,,,ouoo

(128-01.) REIULAR LIQUID

CLOROX

Vllllt!I'ABLES

B

"Propoeed
Actlone''
w'riHon
atatemento
of ere
thl
Dlroctor"a Intent with
reopoct to the l..uance,
denial, modification, revocation, . or renewal ·of a
permit, llcenu, or verlenc1.
Willian comment• and
requeetio • for" 1 public
••etlnl regerdlng •
propoold ectlon may . be

.'

Mlbmniltlc:":f~!~ . pr:""poee-J,
30

'

:

· LIMn 1 PLEASE WIIH COUPON IN CIRCULAR .

I Iii
1
2 /a

II..OI.CUI

PEPSI COLI
'

'

24-PACK

..'

...
•

I
I

•
'

'

I .

Monday-Friday· 8:00a.m.· 4:30p.m.
Saturday•• 8:00a.m.· 12 noon

·Guss MISTERS
614-69$-1376 .
Lawn Mowing &amp;
·Landscaping

..

jLiril• Stone· .

olntlrlor •

LowRatn)

·WICKS .
HAULING ·
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470
· Public Notice·
Facility

~&lt; ~

.' .

No: ·01-4135-12
'
· Thlo flnel action 11ot
pracadad by propoied
action ond Ia eppealllbla to
ERAC. Lend epplleltlon of
cemont kiln duaf tor RAF
'COli Compeny e.ctll/1 COli
!llll!lnil olin In all
Soulhe11tern Dlotrlct coun·
tl...
.
(4) 8, 11C

·
·.
MY MOTHtaR
·
She tii~Oht meall•the IOVtllniN
of fi-re, trHI, end blrd1;
She evei ltd me·to 1xpro11 my
. lhoughte In tentle word1.

Remoc!lllng
•Relllilentllll A
Coi'IIIIMH'clal
oGeneral C••oJ161DIIIIitl'by

s.rvtng , . -

hinting .
- .
AI . Concrete Work
(F~E ESTIMATES)
' \I.e. YOUNG HI
892-6215
Pomerciy, Ohio1~
•

a

. Llmettone Grevel
Septic Syeteni1

Trailer"
HQuee Sltee
RNsorlele RatH

Joe N. Seyre

Siyre Trucking Co.
614-742-2138

Wl/Win

FRIDAY FISH FRY
and FLEA MARKET
FRIDAY, APRIL 11,

10AM-7PM

FEENEY BENN~

POST121
AMERICAN LEGION
ANNEX · .

Ml'ti 511'11111, Middleport
Yendln $5 ••• Teb..
• Clll RUI Mozingo

• &lt;

lOT BIPOISIIU Nl PIIIIIIM OITYJIOIUPIICIL IBOISo WI-~~~ OIAIIIIY IIIIlS.

•I

•J ~

' .. ;,

11

•Remocr.llng
-Garages

•Any and All of Your

•Decks

-tall Today for Your

Home Repair Needs

992·5535

992·2753

=~t~:=

. 912·7898
10U.IIIIn

.

Yard

I

April10· 11· 12, ·11:00 am,

s:o£

pm. 2Q02 Eaamrn Ave.: Beds, " ""
liqueo, Glaot. Clo-. Misc.

Thuroday - SaL 9-5. 160 abov
Brown'l Market Ouallly clothWI
lnlont-lldulto. Home ln1trlor, Misc.

•

.~
;

AprU 10·11, 400 Rulland Stroot,• . .
kld'a dolhal. "'11. household., ~

.

parts, stormdoor, truck topper

miiC.

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

• 992-3,671

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

ertan Anderson
-

. -IIW. CIWnl&lt;: - -

Ealimate•

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
537 BRYAN PLACE ·
MIDDLEPORT

REPAIR OR NEW

CONSTRUCnON .

992·2772

8:00 l.m.•3:30 p.m.

Loafing sheds to· horse arenae.
Roof repair and paint to etructurel repair.
Still butldlnge ae low aa $4.00 sq. ft.
delivered. Fret eetlmatea, prompt and
profenloMI eervlce. Cell today

•Repi,ctlllllll Wlllrlows
•Build Garages
•Stann Doors &amp; ·
Windows
aRGOIIAMiflli

-

I•DI&amp;IDD

•

Porch u1e- rWo miles Hysell Runj

Wadnasda~

and Thursday.,
' Houaewares, clothes, mite. 814fi

1192-7513.
'
Robert Barre1rs. Sr. 124, different·
merchandise, mower, exerciser,~
tires, lawn chairs. Thursday, Fri~

~

day.

eo

Farm Buildings

INSULATION

Public sale
and Auction

.SHARPENING
SERVICE
HUPP'S

Ltmloy'o Aucllon Service, LOlli~

Eollte, Film Salea. Call

New Homes • Vll')yl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
,·Room Additions • Roofing .
COMMERCIAL and .RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614:992·7643
(No Suriday Calls)

R. L. HOLLON .

TRUCKING

Rick Pearson Auction Compan~.,A
full lima au.c;tiOneer. complel' '
auc:lion
service.
licensed~ .
18CI,Ohio &amp; West Virginia, 304--',
773-~785 Or 304-773-5447.
. '

60

Wanted to Buy

SERVICE
. Llme1tone • Gravel .

Dirt • Sand
985-4422

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE

H••an1s Gre•••• •••
Syracuse 882-5778
Open For SprilyJ
S~tUon

• Pansies $6.50 ftal
• All vegetable &amp; beddlng
plants $6.50 11at
• Bloomi'lg &amp; Folage
Bukala $5.75- $6.75
o41n. AAorl Pols
·
85e·· $1.25
. of1Wber11M8 &amp; elephant
N/8$5.50 .
-c... $2.00 ... . .
oShrubbely
.
We honor Golden
Buckeye Carda
~ Oily 9-5 Sun 12·5

0171tn

POMEROY, OH.

614-992~5479

Cheater, Ohio

'"""'""'""

111.,_

3601 Communications

113 W;2ND ST.

(HESTER STORAGE
One Unit Now ·
Available
101128, $85 per mo.

992-3961

'· JIRoo

&amp;
H... IIIJIII'O'...t

Abaqlute Top Dollar : All U.S. Sit~.~
var And Gold Coins, Proof11ta;.

1111

H2·7074

Gf'lltfel, LlmeeiOne,
Topeol~ fill Dirt,

a.nd, !Wuae.

-U!=:~~

Currency. ~

chi~

coins,. ro~e. lampa, .ouna, rool•l ·'
talalea; also appralaall, Oab ..

llllnln,l14-992-7441 .

'

Andquas, top prices paid, River~
Ina Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohiojji
Ruaa ·Moore owner, 8,4 · 9~2-5;

2528.

.

Clean Late. Model Cars 0

Trucks, 1QQO Uodels Or Newer, ~
Smllh Buick Pontiac, 1000 East-\)
~

J I D'l Auto Parts, Buying sal ;
va;e. vehldea. Selling parts. 304
773-5033.

Non•,WorkirJQ Wllhtr, Dr~ers,
Stoves, Retrloerators, Freezera, ·
· ) Air Condillonera, Color T.V.·,,,
VCR'&amp;, Aloo JurAl Caro. 81"'256

1238.

Wanled Timber &amp; Or Thriba
land, Profestlonal Serwlces,
Mead Paper Woodlando. 614 ·~ ·

. 772-3631.

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

Bailie, GlOOming,
Kennel Care

. endLoft

Mon., n.., w.d.,
Tllurt., Ffl, 1M;
SaL 1N; Bun. 12-4
271 North 2nd
Mlctlllpalt,Ohlo

.

1)1

Wan'ed to bU~ chip wood. 30•-

773-6060 Days, 614-992·6025
E'18111ngL
.
Wanled To Buy_ Uoed Mobllo
Homaa. Call: BU-448·0115 Or L

304-875-5Q65.

Wonltd To Bur: We Bur Junk ~
cara 114-441l·PI'RT, Or 814-316- ~
' 0012.

.

I'"''

Er,1PLOYt,1ENT
SEHVICES

Free Eetlmataa

388 8879:.

.

J-1r,.:

Sltfllng, Ell:. AcquloiHona
• M.T.S. Coin Shop. .151 Soco"'\.'1
- · GaAI&gt;Oiil, 814-448-2842. ~
Anllquea, lurnllure. glaao.

~lt!etrilf .... ~,....••lllty"

CHRim'S PElS
.WIU.IIIL-

fl'

· om Alionuo. GoWpois.

CELLULAR PHONES

DUMP·TRUCK

61~48" ·

1241, 814·388-9..:1.
::::::.::.:.::::.=::::......,..------',

Dlamondo; Antique Jewelrr. Go"(·

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~

CUSTOM
SHARPENING

::
!:

Lemley, Aui:tlonaet. Houaahold ~ ·

Rings. Pre-1930 U.S.

•

i

All Yard Salel MUll Be. PaiC:
In Advonoo. DEADLINE : 2:0fl
p.m. iht doy bolo,. tho od lot~
run. Sundoy ldlllon • 2:00 p.11111;
Fllday, ·Mander edillon • 10:00'
t.m. Solunlay.
:

Pomeroy,

Eve. Ph;·949-2634

N~

•

sale .

Middleport
a VIcinity

ttMIHr Repairs .
efntenet Sellp Help
. Ph .
Day

:j'

.

&amp;VIcinity

-No Job Too Small

Each dey by filth 8he1Jide 1111 r•m.

. lUllS'

LOST· approximately 300 I~
black holler Willi Whlut - · In ll1e
•lclnlty of Dexler Rd., LangOYIII tj

8D5-3420 ...,;ngo.

•New Homes

.949·2647

742-2094

60 Lost and Found :

rlng·atlll in case, REWARD! 304R

:efatallatloa

1

IAILIIIf
IIG'VIftiR

Fluffy KIIIAina - 1 Cult 5 Week~
Dld. l14-448-4~29
'

LOST: April 7th In -Rite-Aid ""rkl
lng lat. Pt Pltaoant. Sapphlr.

"11nltr New Ownm...,"

tCOIIplfer Tnillllg
tmwa/¥IR't
l-.llpS ..

~~ ,,·~PI'·
:::::;:.• Extettot

,.

ctii11,._742-H03.

Free.Estimates

YOUNG'S
(AilPENTIR SERVIa

882·3438.

Gallipolis

c-...... ohio

Wlllofl II IIIII priD I ~I d llr I

• u"\

COMPUTER
.• ELPf

for

985-4141

I

2 Vaat pld English Satter, vary
goad wlkldl. can afiAir 5pm. 304f

70

over tSJIT&amp;
Mike W. Mlfllum

•RoOm Addltlona

oeocrlptlon:.

W::.:.!:ir. -

Exterior

• lnd IHk the dlltllnt height,
,
FREE
Htlon. A~ IIIJud!cetlon
. Her r-~lant -lrlt, llkl a g...,, . .
h.,mg may be held on•1
...
...
Pick up dlecerdld
· prapoeld action If a haerlng
llhciwn tliroug!l the .d lrknl nlehL
eppiiiiiCel,.baltel:l",
rlqUell or oblecllon II
. So WI Wllk I lhlnlng WIY• .
'
Until- awlftly carne ..
r,ntvecl by II* OEPA within
llllily 1114111116
30 d1y1 of le-nn of thl
lind Whlepend I!Oftly, that aprlng dly
motor blockl.
prop!llld · eetlon. Written
the mullc of her ·
·
. 1114-812
81tn ••
com mente, roqueete f!lr
AI- I •ullibltcl 1ft pain,
PUbliC milling a, and .
IGChdly 1101ftberthlng;
edJudlcetlon heerlng ,..
N-memory, like 1low 1W111 etreln
qUIIII m'•' bl aanl to:
rune thnlugh ·eMIU~gl ling.
•
Hearing CI!Jrk, Ohl.o Envl,
• ......, mflilld
_ IIY chllciJen 1nd temlll11.
-tiO'.el•pron••its
rlinmonlal Protection ••F-~;;;;;;~--·~ ;.,.;...a....,;;;;;;;;;;;;;a;;;;;;;;;;;jl; 3351 Heppy Hollow Roed
Allf!CY,· P.O. Box 1041o.l
Middleport, Ohio 4ll1tO
Colulllblle, Ohio 43211-1041 .
New
lloml8; AlldltloM,
cr-1ep110ne: au Ut 2121).
Rooftllg.
Biding, ·
-"'llnll Aetlone• ere Htlon!ll
Cit tho Dlreowr which ai11
POIIIIIIml, QaGb,
. .W.OIIW \lfiO!'IIUuanoa '1M' a
Pllriung. Olnigll;
•tilted affective ·dele.
-Porch•.
PWeuent to Qhlo RoviMd
CllfllaFGrA Fhie E I ••
&lt;;jde Section 170.04, • ,
814-742 30110
flflll ""lon lillY be ap.
plj(illed to._ Envl1on11woilll
Review" Appeal• c - 1 •
elon (IR.C) formerly
kttOWn It · tho · lnvlron•
llllntllllolnl of

p(Dp"ltl Millin, ...y 1M
epp11l1d to tM lilAC lilY
flint en 11111111 wltllln Iii
liiYI oiiiiUirtCie oltMIIMI

Safranek

. Customers...,_

MARCUM&amp; SON
' BUILDING

GIYIIWIY

..

(614).592·5025
Athens, Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A Division on Nichols Metal, INc.
Phone: 614: 992-2406
Fax: 304-n3·5861

lnulne, denying, modify. . lng, revoldftl, or muaw1t11 I
Mmdt, llaenH, or VI,._

'

~ttorney

250 Condor Street .

Service to New

40

To r.•d liamt, Sma. old btu;
· Mt&lt; • Aullrallan Shoppord mlf.
puppy, male, neutering Ia palil
lor. ~75-7&lt;495 Iller 4:30pm. ·'

C""'ER 7 e CHAPTER I 3

Big Bend Fabrication,
Machine &amp; Welding Shop .

10%0ffAny

I

Puppleo, MoaUy Shtpllord, Mau
Goad Wolch Dog, Muot .Soo To
Apprecltiel 814·387·7705, eu,
317-11143.
: .
•

Rlldlator Repair &amp; Replacement

ATHENS

I

Blllft HOUnd. 304-458-221 ~-

Complete Mechlne.Shop Service Fabrication
Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, Industrial Qas

POMEROY

oleop. Talw OPo\1.. Mllatlle

'"'"' Plwmtcy, MlddloporL

rld,..,hlle malo 112 Boagli, 112

985·3131

37~11.a•r. ·

.,

lOt

REDUCE : Lo.. welghl whllt
oltep. Ttke OPAL tabltlo on

Fret to good home. , Omo. old

7/22/lfn

....._.d1 flnel
CocN
ectlon

,·. 4

• AquatrQn Boats •
Cebins • Bow Riders e Baas
Boats e Sea Ark John Boats
e Johnson OutbQard

eOeKalb
&amp; Pioneer Seeds
.
-small Seeds eCheml~als
•Twin .•Feed •Lime

985-4473

In memory of ALDENA WELSH who _
p'aeeed away one year ago today, April $

..

.

••

. .

.....

l

. 81., Pl-1\YV 25550.

Reducw. lose woldlt wnle you

· efertlllzer (Bag or Bulk)

,.....,....,....,....,~;;;;;ln;;;M;e;m;o;ry~~~~~"lt

.

honea~· affeclionata. one wo"-':1
man, :se:. 45, Write to f)ox G· O:t,
%Pt PIM11111 Aegiller. 200 Mal

fltwlra&lt;y,

r ...r • ..,.,..... ,or...

•New Homes
•Garages

Your
rket

GROU D
CBUCK. . . . .

JCMI WIIIOn
(114) 882-4277

1M8 Martin Street · ,
Pomeroy, OhiO 467et!

CHESTER AGRI SERVICE

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

992-6342 (Diane)
992·7275 (Brenda)

Work, Bulldozing,

LINDA'S

......

.

Qulel, .,.~·~· DtWtF, 38, llkto
qulol Umeo. country llle. - k1no

Vap Diuretic available at Frut ,

FREE

Drlv•way Llmeatone

MHi New Pooplt Tht Fun Way
Todrt i-800· 772-5383 ExL 317~
U .U Min. Muot Bt 18 Strv·U
ete ets 11'34.

."Build Your Dream"

Cleaning Septic Sy1teme
Port.A.John • Rentals • Serviced WHkly
No Extra Charge tor Evenings or Weekende
24 Hr. Prompt Service
7 Deye A WHk

1oiCJ0.211-5800

ESTIMATEES

' Complete HOUII .
end Trailer Site·

. 742-2803
or446-3622

•

Aeration Motor oSalel a Repairs

Pomeroy, Ohio

Call

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

•• ,

c..,. . .

Olftlteman SHidng
olip Rom "-"'""' For Tolko,
Wolkl &amp; Frlondolllp. Sond Rellllllt To: CLA 308, Clo Glllllpoho
Dally Trlllllne, 825 Third Av.nuo•
Qollpolo. 011451131.

61.992·7119

•Complete
Remodeling
. Stop -. Compare

foi'JOU. .

· Plllntlng

(AIIhlelllllll ~

·

..

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

:.UOwlng

'

........
,.....;
.•,....

J/ZIM1 .

~®W CPill.0~~09

POMEROY, OHIO

Quality·W,indow Systems

.

Dtly 6 Evening HR.

.

t

$195.00 INSTALLED

Just olf Bl'lldbury Rd.
(look tor •lan•l
'

Cu.tom Homes

"FACfORY DIRECI'
PRICES"

Gutters

I

-

- - AndiW&lt; .One 01 Our
Aduii-1310Eu._nA. .
- . Wlpollt, Or Celll14·,.._

with Today's .
OPEit 24 ttOORS

,....,.

AIIINTICIII

Old Fashioned
L

r • ·~ 1·'

~

~S

-

Help Wanted

110

Sllirltr ~'

AVON I All Areu I
"'"''· 304-875-1428.
A~• AVon Raprellntarlve:a
hlltelod . Earn !IIOMf tor Chrlllrnaa bll a at honWat work 1-800.
or 304·N2·2t45, Ind.

:;83se

·i

Ahe&lt;nlllvt, Mtlll Bind -king
tUIIIr "'-• only - · Inquire.
(1141317-71110
.
B•IIJalnor nHded In oui home
lor 1yr old, oome daya. aome
ovenlnga, 111 Alta 1111. Mull
have own ttanl!lanollon. 304·

- 1 Cit ~1021 .

' I

t

�.Widnll :'I~. Aprllt, 1117

Pllge14 • The O.lly Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

The o.lly S.1ntlnel• P. . 15 ·

•

NJI:A Cro••word Puaale
,PHJT,T,rp
ALDER

,..,., • ruse' a PUilllt

320 ....... Hamel ..
AVON II -111/Hr. No Door To
Dear, Eaar llat~odo, Quick
c..~, Bonuln 1·10o-827·4t40

........

Circuit Boardi/EiectrofliC Com·
pananta Ar Home. Exp.,ier;tc•
Unn.ceaury, Will Train. lmm•
dia.. Qpon1nga 'lbur L-1 Araa.
Cll1~78a1 EXT. 0 1004
Rill Eatatt SolospoOpla wanted

AT'fENTIOII
Farmer Oullldo 'Saloo Rapt, Like
Cable Concepti Or l&lt;lrDy, Etc.
liliES .NAVE CHANGED I Sm .
Sa...l• Dlthtl Ala Big Sail~
Groat Opportunity Awalll You In

br almoll. avery company in
town. Complato educational requlramtnll In one month. Com·

SIIH 'IYalaglmlfU. Cal
Ftw 1 Ill 432-7371.

ml11lon approved correspandance courte. Complete at your

Ron Toll
·

AVAILAILI • Sllffing Coordlno,. poca, Jack Kalla(a Norlhl111arn
tor • High School Diploma Plua Colleat· of Real Ellalo. Call ~r
Advanced Education ITNinlng Or lreolirocl'"* t-800-78ll.(477.
Equ-1 Exporlonca In · Stole Tailed Nuralng.
I
lng.Pvr-. Saloo 'Or l l a - N - For Pori -Tlmo
mont. Ability To Interact Wllh In For Tho Jackaon /Oak Hill
Cllhero, Quailtr Oral And Wtlnen
If ln1or111ed Call 814· +48·
Communkiodon Skilll. Slrang SoliOr 1-ecJ0:506-8773.
Directed -k Ellie. Raaponllble .J·::.:::::..:::..:..::;:,=.:.:..:=--...,..
For Formula~ And Executing A Town of Now Hoven now ttklng
Full Range 01 .Prolesalonal Re- oppllcadona for Pool Manager l
cruldng Strateai•• And Func~

LUe Guardl for cit~ .swimming

Ilona, Including ldentitylnll And
F.IIIing Sttfflng Headt For P!lrli·
clona And Other lledlcli Prof••·
lioniiL Compo- Solltr SINO·
rure, Excellent 8tnefit1 And Re·
Uramanl Plan. Mall Or Fax Re-

pool. Pleaao· appl)o at Now HoCity Bulkllng bo-n 8am-•pm.
Mf or coH 304-182·3203.
.

sume To Human Relations De ~

partmenl, Holzer Clinic, ao Jack·
aon Pike, Galllpollo, OH 45831 .
Fox Numbirl-8!4-448-5532. ·
Babralttar naadid Mon-Frl.

Children ag11 7 &amp; 1D. Mason
- . My homo Of rGUIL :J04.773t155 aflar 5pn.

IOT'I\.ED WILL POWER! LOSE
up to 30 poundt, 30 DAY MON·
EY BACK GUARANTEE! Nalural,
Doctar Recommended, 814441 ·
1882,Ftaa .......

Truck drlverl needed for local
shipment, April th(ough Juno, 24'
srraight beds, mua1 have COL

with modic;al c:anl, Coil Arthur Hill
Graenhouao,614-207:2884. ·
Wanted: 42 Paoplo Lose 18 ·25
Pounds In Tha Next 30 Daro.
Natural, Guaronteodl 1·100.800·
g295.

Wanted To Carlt For lndlvlduala
With Alzhalmefs Dlaouo Or
ThoH Needing Special Nuroing
Care? Scenic Hilla Nursing Centar Ia Looklno FO&lt; Qualified Stall
Tested NursTng A11iatanta, Full

And Pari·Time, All St&gt;fta. PleaH
Fill Out An Application AI Scenic
Earn $15 -$18 Per Haur ·• Com- Hills, 311 Buckridge Rd., Bidwell,
mllllona. Ex"emolr High CUI· OH, Monday -Frldar 9 A.M. , 4
tamer Demand, No Overnlghr P.M . NO PHONE CALLS
Trovol. lmmodlall Oponlnga. PlEASE.
COndldalal Mull Be Available To
180 wanted To Do
Sllltl'lidTIIiling Pn&gt;pn Npw.
CALL MilL lOLL FREE
Carpentry Work Have Toole
Tl'lintpottatlon AU Phases From

'

Ground Up Quality Work Family
Man, 814-44fl.OV38.

David's lawn mowing and odd
joba. Tuppers Plaint ·area. Fraa

c:.rtlllod DIIIIIY llanagor

Ch!lllenglng ()pporlllridot ).val~

eatimaleo, 61~7-832Sl

lblo for a Cortilitd Dialltr Man- I n Loc:ol Nuralng and Ralia·
bllilllllon

......_.to- .

canter.e--'"

Food Sorvic:e
-ng: 1'\Jrcl'llling, ProdUction,
lrMnlllry Con•ol and Slnllllon
Deliroble. HACCP Gerlllcation a
Plual we ollor CompoliliYe Salary
and Bentllll. Send Reaume to:
1!0 Box ga, The Plain' Ohio,
457110

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul vour logs to the mi" just call

304-675-1957.
I will mow your yard, Pomeroy,
Middleport, N~w Haven, M~aon

aroa. Pri... varr. 304-882·3852.
lawn Mowing, weed eating, and

Computer Users Needed. Wor~

Rag!- Sltmtorllll FOf Slia: 8
llo; Old
lhd Hollar;
I Mo. Old
Mlr:lo Sired lui ; 7
llo; Old Rod lncumbanl Sired Bul
8 14·245· 5030 Before a P.ll.
Plouo.

Yard work. Phone: (814)·379·
2919
.
.

own houra. 120k lo S50klrr 1· lawn Mowing : Free Estimates,
1110-348-71811 X1508.
Senior Citizens Discount e, ...

,.,. real tsllto aclvll1lllng In
lhla noe--la 1llbjact ID
lht Fedt!ll Fair Houolng Ad
Ot 1888 wNc:hllllkii ~ Illegal

to adYerllat "any po-eca.
llmitallon or dlocdllilliollon

Batnad har• . - r weL 304-112·

buld on race·. color, flllglon,
Mx la-lllaluo or national
origin, otllfY !nllnllon to
mllklt any such prolafW'CO,

20n.·

Gardont. l'oople hflplng pooplo.
814-illl2-7440, uk tor Randr.

150 acre form. 1 112 atary r dolod houae, """' garaga, n..,.
collar and outbulklnga, 814-742·
2157.

opportunlly belle,

By Schoolo
o-r Nlee
s BadloomGaillpo·
Cloao~~~~wl~th~down=~po:rmon:
, :· 1~.~304~To
I Downtown,
"' foiii,SOO, 814-11117-31120.
Loil F• Sale: Cor11 Ioiii Rood, 81·
GOV'T FORECLO"SED Homaa 205-5788.
For Pennl81 On $1 OeUnquen1

A Part Time, Fill In Lica:nted
Practical Nurse . .,.uat Be Avail·

I----------

able All Shilts.

~ong

Term Care

Elperienct Preferred. Contact
The A11i1tanr OireciOr Of Nurs-

Ing. Llaa

.

E~

~10 ,

AI 81•·448·7112

.

lneura"nce Plus Agencill Inc. it
· seeking creative and madvatad
individual&amp; 10 join our growing
tum of prote11ionals. we haue a
Mrwork of Jnauranc:e agenc:ies in
Southam Ol)lo and Weal Virginia
with I lot m offar awouivo 188m
You would onior bolh r•
warding profe11ianal oppartunl. dee and an -11/ritr ilr - " '

pl•rar•·

3 Bedroom, 2 t&gt;alht, S425/mo, no

'

Business

Opportunity
!NOtiCEI

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do buai·

r. '=~~~:r~-w:rvr:;

,_ollorlng.

. ria wllh a lol 10 offor oggrooaiw
taam playera. You would tnlor
bOth rewarding profeui~nal op-

porturitiea and an opporturiiy for

growth. We are ueki_n ; axperi~
oncod llconaed Life, Hoolth, Pvr·
sana! and Commerc:ial productra

Syracu••-·three bedroom, one
and 112 baths. LR, DR, famllr
rGOr1l. Olk. lcl~. r- carpe~ tun

basemen1, electric furnatefheat
pump, two·car garage {28Jt32),
one and 114 acres, nice, 814-992...

.

for Salt

WHI mile care die. tti.ck and olderlr 1963 Clayton 14x70 3br, 2 bath,
In lhoir homos. 814·288·6142or elecUic:304-882·21117ahor5pm.
814-288-2620

' Ohio 4571111.
lnauranca Plua Agonclea Inc. Is

saeking creative and madvarad
Individual• to jaln our growing
team of r:ofaltlonala. We hll¥8

1 112

Sectional 3br, 2 full bolha, large 110 Fourth Avonua, Galllpolla,
kltcho.n, large front porch, hoot S275111o., .150 D,posll; Rateron 3 acre a Flaltoclt 304· once a Roquirod, et 4-448-0427.

Wanted To Do : High School 1&amp;70 12x60 2 Bedroom a, All
Student ... kl~g Job llowing Electric, $2,500, OBO 614-448_'l'ard,:...:..:a._CIII='.:.;'e.,t4.:.:.).«_
.- .,,.,
.,.,525
:.:.,__ 8172. 81..:!56-6251.
1
Will Care For Eldarlr or l!ondl· 1974 Grandville 14x70 3 Badcopped Pvroo n In mr home 24 rooms, 1 112 Bath• •. t7,000 Good
Hour Care.iltt441 ,Oi!91
Condition, 61&lt;&amp;·258-106D After 8
P.M.
Will Sit With Eldorlr In Their
Home. Heva Raferanc11, 81&lt;4· 1082 Llberly 14x58 excellent
448-4233,
CDnd. 304· 773-5328.

210

faml-

toi, StoVe Furnished, Located :

bedrooms, great condidon, lnvnaCLE.'NINO
Get Your Spring Cleaning Over diate posttulon, 814·002·5558
With Now I Spend Your Summer or 614-llQl-6542.
In leisure. CAll Naw To G•r Your
Spring FoYer Cleaning Dlaoountl 320 Mobile ~mes

FINANCIAL

Thriving Catering Buslnet"t I
equipment far aale. Priced upon

wllh a production raC:ord. Taka 1 lnapecUon. 304-675-4281 or 304moment ra 111111 your luture 875-2188.
and if rou want a care" with a 230
Pro....,slonal .
waN "'"blilhod expanding Agan,..,
cr. aond rour RESUME to: In·
Sarvlc:ls
auronco Plua Agenclaa Inc., 114
Court Stroot, Pomoror, Ohio HARTS ·IIASQNARV • Block,
brick &amp; atona - k. 30 rtoro ax·
-45-::7811.=------ - - l per~e.
rumnable rateL 3CM·
..._ Counl)' Public LJ1rrorJo has 11115-35111 allor t;OOpm. no job 10
all hOUr, parHimo pooldon- _,ariD BIG. Wl/-021208
allhe Point Plaaaant bulkllng.
llondart and ..,.. Saturdoy. r• Leom a Tr11do or lull RauPilolqulred. Drop olf r-moa or plcl&lt; lhal ugly Chait. Uphoi"*J Cloll·
up appllcallono at tho llaoon oo Slsrlng Soonl lll4}+4t.Om
County Public Llbrlry In Poinl Livinoaton'a bas•m•nt ••••r·
PieaaRL 501 Vllnd
Polnl prooflne. all baHtT~tnl r•palra
PIHtln~ WV 25550. llaoon
Coumy Publk:. l.bwy. Is an . _ , done, rr.. ltrimartl, llfarJrne
guarani... IQrro -on job exporl·
oppor&amp;~nky • • •, • .
-304-875-2145.
.
NIRINQ: Jalla't Bat I Grill
FH AI f ,, fAff
RL 2 I l l -. CaN lor
SOI·%73·1021 AM tor Rhondlo.
llllllbo21 .. - :

s-

ln-

1g94 Commodore 1.. x70, Very
Nice, 2 Bedrooms, Central Air,

Appllancoa, Stil,ooo 614-5072603 Darllmes: 814·688·65U

'

Upllalra Apar)mahl 2V .112 Noll
Avanue, Nowly Rlrnodoled Ball&gt;
room, Some· U~lldoo Paid, SZVOI
llo., a $200 Dapoalt, Call 814448-1128a.

Also trallet space on river. All

hook-upa. Call ,afler 2:00p.m,,
304-773-51151, ...... 'NV.

460 Space far Rent

470 Wanted to Rent

PRIIEITAR
Olgltal Picture &amp; Dlglttl Sound.
No Equipment 10 Bur. Call Nowl
Toll Free t.aaa-531·4321 . Disliib:
TlmeWarnlr Satellite

. 1890 Chevr ·8·10 "Bii:Mr 4WD.
1960 Ch!WY 4x4-U78 Tran-Am oxcellonl condiliorl, aaklng $8500,
.. .
1985 lroc Camiro wlt-topa . 814-992-41548.
304-8B2·3V8e Call "'"' ' 1990 Jeep CherokM Ltrad&lt;i:

u.eoo.

starling II S280.$300, - r . WI·
ler and troth inclUded, 814-DV2·
2187.

llf1JIIule.

, ..... lnd

cAacac,.... Mil or Ill,.

_ . . " - t A l l wO.
,...
....... ~IO..Ialll_,..,,'I
CH41111.
7

1073 Harlor Davldaon Sporllt
very clean, wry loot, t4500 fir
B14-992-41520.
. '· .
1991 Kawaaakl 100 cin ion Road
Original Tlrea, Excellent Cqnalllon, Alklng Saob, 814·31t:280t.

1aelt, Chovr Allro llork Ill ,

1906 Honda 300 4x4 4-wheelor,

. . ,Goode

GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

Washers, dry•rs. refrigerators,
rang••· Skagga APpllancea, 78

Vine

Streo~ Call
1-IOIJ..499.34~.

614·448·7301,

Building

Block, brick, aewer pipes, Wind·

owl, lintels, '&amp;1c:. Claudll Winlera.

AWNtt&gt;~

18

lt,e
Jt.

s.-

Ex

1 Condlllori, S4,7V5, Coqk

2489.

11/m'lburCII.

loeded, axc cond, 7g,ooo mlloa.
se.ooo nov.304-417&amp;-25i3, .

19&amp;0\ Mercu'ry Grand Mai-qui a

For Sale /.Rant: 1VI8 14&gt;80 2
Bedrooma, Very Good 'Shapo, 1
Mila Soull Euroka, 114-258-IOIV,

1991 Goo Slorm, Spaclol Edlllon,
black turvoof. amlfm ca101ae, 5
ap., runa ixcaila~l. wall main·
..... $4.000. 814-M-2317. .

Thr" bodroom mobile homo, OUt·
aide of Pomeroy, 814·992·5038
before llpm.

taOf Honda

11~"

Accord, 82,000
Groat C-llon, 1 owner,

81"jn•• oee•.

.

AKC Rog Ronwolleto, molher I
tVV3 Chellrolol ·~ RS, Rad, 4
fllllor are ••~•moly oonll•o"topo- Cylinder, Air, Aino, Excollanl
clollr wtchllclren. S:IOO' &amp; up naao condition,",4t ,OOO Milot .ee.ooo .
troclo. ~75-54411.
. ·.' .
· Finn81 ......._~127
·

47

--

~fernete

Accnsorles

I'

I

EYRIR

1
. 111

3

1

r. I I I I' ._'I
-rT,;_;;H_C;..,.,;,O-;Nii:--11 ~,'

1.-..1..-'--'--1-.J

~ 0 DR AN
J.-.., ......,.......,,-..,,.-..,..,!i,...-1

I

Starting II $99.00 and Up. Uaodll
ROIIullt, All Trpaa, Over IO,Odo

My

neighbor had this sign
posted O'n the fence, "love your
neighbor but don't pull down
your
7

7

"

•. '

•

G Complete

the chuckle quoted
by Hlling in tho missing -d•
I ·-.L-.Io~.lo-..JL-..J..--17 you develop
lrom stop No. 3 below.

Tranarftl..ions, 'Accest Tranafwr

Caaos ·&amp; Rear ,Endo, 8U· 24f·

.. . · ~1

tnrfls

.I'IINT NUMiflfO
JH!SS iCKJAIIS

I FORGoT

New gas tanks, 1 ton true
- · &amp; radlelort. D &amp; R Auto

TO MENTIOI!
IT,.

Rlplar, WV. 304-372,3033 or 1•
IIJII.27U3211,
'
I ;

I

'

•

~~tt:~~~f_ lUTUS

·,

;

_

• . •

•

•

....

Vainly 'Ebony. Ledge Lounge BELIEVE
As a child I was told anyone could become Presi- '· '
danl Now I'm beginning to .BELIEVE It!.
· . ,, ,
7

.

.

r I~ Ia I' I
I I I I I .,

.,1

IN

SCIAMUTS ANSW11S

.

I

7

7

7725.

113 "(110 Ill"" 2 door hatchblicll,
groll gu mlloogo. 48,000,0 mlloe.
14,000.00. (8141·448·3845/or
"(0)1),8117-1800

1..7141170 :lllr/111211o
1871 Down-$173 llanlll
WOOIIIpter No,_ 372·3400
1VV7 14x70 2 or 3 Bedroom,
IVD5 down, S1951mo. .Onlr 01
Oak-d HomH. Nlvo, WV. 30+ .
755-5885.

Wlnnobago-ITASCA
engine. 27ft. mota{
contained, generator

0110.304:875-4822- ' .

1087 14xl0 3 or 4 Bedroom,
S1 ,35&amp; down, $22Wmo. F'" air,
aklrtlntlo &amp; dollvorr. Oniy •• Dak- .

SU I'Plll S
&amp; LI\IESTOCK

FAt!r.1

wood Homea Nitro,WV. 30-4·755·
5885.

31iailart for ..... ~75-1078,

D'-ot Aollol ,.,..,.,
.Wo havo SIOOO 10 $2000 por

___

Credll Prvbloma? Gauranteod fl· ,
~anclng, 10% Down, Pvrmonll
AI Low At 11110 Pvr llonlh. No
Turn Downal Coil Ruth 8)4·448-

In diaaater rell.t funds

IIIINabia Ia help you f&gt;\lrchaM I
replacement home. Call 1· 800·

488·7871 10 aot ippolntmonl lor

-it.

•

A8TRO·OIIAPB
.
---...;
·· ,

71i1

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Limited Ollarl 11t7 dou~a.
Sill, abath, 11708 jiOWn, $2191
month. FrM dallvarr I •••P·
Onlr II Dakwood Homtt, Nitro
'NV. 304-755-5885.

Garav- tplfor -

In ....., 1br,
bolll, ltllchon, lvlng toom, qylot
alrM~ raleranceo &amp; dopotll

-

HI 30t til • •.

•••u.

- . . . ........ 1100 080.114-

naodod, S278Imo••---

773-5014,

....... 2
va· New 1tt7 14x70..,.. ••• OOffl,
. .. tlxSII In gr~~uni pool, 112 lndudoo I monlll FREE lolllnt
·• • • IlL Cd afw I:OO!tm. Sail· Onlr a111.18 par month wllh
110150 down. Coli 1· -

I

720: 1hiCb tor 9811
'78 F, 10, soo • crlln...,, ou·

:IBA llrtoll rancll. -

1113,

heraldry .
38MHII
'
40 Locate
43::Jinlaw
"
. (al.)

1994 Dodge Intrepid ES. loodad,
62,000 miles, ask lor Bob 304·
875-1812 altar O:OOpm 304-4175-

10ge 1&lt;&amp;x70 with Iota or euru.

,

ous lftqulrll ONLY. :io4·875·

mtalt
'

rogularlr: lllllublthl so· big
screen TV; 814-742·2078. ·

Uploll UMd Carl At. 12-3 MNoa
Soutll II Lao", WV. FlniMine

-· __,,.,r.llltalt..,.

• Note that if East had played the
two at lricll tbree, the contrsct
would have failed:South
OYemJl(
the heart six and ·aeven With Ilia ell!ht
and queen, which eslibllahes West's
heart four as lhe selling trlet. ·

, I

790

31 LaH

32 Dole(~)

'

Budli'et Prlaa TranamllaiDf'l, •

sen

3D !lnug ·oa - ·-

41 Act lllfa.o

heart

'

I

...

whn to look tor -oCt IIIII you'l 1"1
M. The~ U.ld01 • 11 ~
r.-11 wtiiQ!Ielgnl n tilmatlllaally I*"
r.ct tor you, Mill 12.75 to~.
c/o thla nawipapar, P .0, Bol 17111,
MuMy Hll!l*lon, ,.._ Yorlc, NY 101M.
TAUIIUI (Apll. MIJIO) ft Ill ~q~er.-

ao ...... WQn, '*'-·
CAJICU (.luna 11-.luly II) Wlllloul a
~. Aptl10, 1117
ptapat IIIMielllllilellng with oo-worllara
IOGiy, you rnlght anct up w1111 art 1M
In lite 1'151' alleiiCI. llrlve 10 lluiCI upon
I f II lllljl will flllnlll in . . bulinelfl " .-rplmMI ISIIIil. llallhe II"JUIId ruiM
wwtd. ·TMM OilniiCJII could halfl you ...,, .
LIO ( biJ II • • II) ~
.......... ol whloh you'N nOc -

Toke • deep braalll and dive in.
. UIIVI (lept. :a Oct. D) You may llave
to uae the 110ft aeM In pocwiliiling 1 periOOolln•rat )9dly, Olhelt will reMnl It W
ll1ly IMI·fotced 1o comply.
.
ICOR; to (Oct. lit Nov. 22) MocliiV your,
pnonal molilleltodaV ond you wll IUCcwd. Make • point ol iiiiJng Olf1els par·
1ldpMa • Will...
SAQITTAIIIUI ~, 2J.Ciac, 11) Tty not
to ~ loday II a h'UIIfll Illy dll·
plaa- you. An outbur81 of anger will
only moloo m111era ·
I

WIIICOIIN (Del. aw.n. 11) II your

workload opPiara to be heavier than
...,.. llldly, you may diiCJOWr lllat CJIIhetMitlnllletiiPCW-':PI I ololh:

ora,
AQUAIIUI j.1an. •
wlto· la ODI1Itanlly In

Pall. 11) A friend
COI.:UCt with G4ller

fllenlla - tie 001-"d with -p11
OIIIIIIIIIIIDI you II! • I
willa J151'011 llan .......
IOCIIy you've bMn .-u11y -'dllll. Pll CII (fllltl. 'Pi It lit OWe; IN •
...... lllllllafl. .
oarMr da;alap-niiiiiiiY aooelerata
VI I DIAIIIo II I t l Ill M llljiCIM llldly. • you _ , 111nC11 . . hill, dDII,
7

::·-~.....,
••·.,r ... 111111111
11..- 111 •••• ..
coot
af
you .....

I

I lwllllpal.lla ....... llllllll
~INnll ................ ~

ill,

wftan ohoppl"g todoy,111 ba ccin·

"impulllve ~ ·
QI..NI ~ .,..,_ •1 Today you
mlglltllave to deal wtlh -~~~Who
can be lmpaaillll Ia piHH. Knowing
IIIII In ICMnOI glviM you ., •
G411er

a ..... I,_. ..... I JIDOIIY•.In I . .

·1:17·

'

•

~of bolll qually IIIII coot. Avoid My

c:urr:. UUnga.

-

4•

.

POrtico

You have three low trumps. When
IOMeiHtblt
' deCI~r broaches the suit, what dOe8
51 EniOY a book
. . · it•mean if ;yOu play yoilr lllghi!lt trump
112 Llltennan'a
, first?.
·'
, '
rival
.'
54- ;_ . There are two ·traditional answers ·IIR'+-1-+-,..:
.to this question. Moat pairs li'eat it •
156 Flying pNIII
ahowillll the lbiJity 10 take a rul!, With
M Slnalf bronch
il void somewhere; you are hoping
Ill Dlall
partner will wiD an early trump triclt
collection
and give you that ruff. Altematlvely,
CELE.BRITY CIPHER
1' some.play hlgb·low in trumpe 10 show
by Lula Campoa
three. (Note tbal this io lhe oppoaite of
~ Ciphlt( ctypkllgf.,_ Ire crnetd lrom ~llil:ll-.'by lamousl*lf*, p.u1 Met prHin1
tl)e normal lenglh·•howinl signal,
. EKh ~In 1M cipMJ s'lnds for .nothlr. T•y's qlllt: V IQUII.t R
Wliena11 echo, as It Is called, indielites
C I U L
KJ· ARA . '
·an even number of cardl.l
KIVYPA,
H P: D
Against four hearts, West c shed
the ~and ace before swi ng a
ODDK ·N ,
club. After winning with hie
declarer, Frenchman Guy ~
· ~rdt'eci
· the heart king: ace, five
. aat
thought he couldn't loae: He d a
DJ KL
XA
RPN
'ANUXD . VAJNAA
club void, so he could take a ruJJ, and
•
he had three·trumps. But ...
A ·PI I K K" D H . '
RPN
UNEVYN
,
D
.
E
West exited with a spade to dum·
· ·my's ace: Declaier called for the club
DAGIU
HXKWN ,
'
ace and overruffeil East's heart two
PREVIOUS
SOLUTION
:
"Medicine
can't
c~re
t~e
common
b
i
rthda~
." with hio three. Aubard C88he\l hil two
senator),
John
Glenn
,
(Stvanty·lllx-y8!1&lt;-old
·diamond tricks before ruftlng a l(*le
. in the dummy: Next, the club ldng wa8
ruffed by .East's heart six and over·.
ruffed with South's eighl After anoth·
·er spade ruJJ in the dummy, declarer
ca1hed the club jack, With lh!! heart
ljueen still ~o colD~ South bad 10
trlelra: Olle·i!pllde; cme ld&amp;ll beUt, two \" "
diamonds, two clubs, two spade rulfa
NAY C E ~ In the di!JIUIIY *ncltwo club overrutrs ·

Jrou DON'T WMIT To
UlCJI(. , &amp;UT ·'!tiLl NAill.
'lt&gt;! ~ Just TOO
Dlrtr.USTINC:. TO

SEIZED CARS From , 1111.
PorMthas, 'Cidlllica, Chavra.
BIIW'o, Corvanoo; Allo Jaapo, 4
WD;po. Your Area. Toll Fraa 1·
- ; •11·8000 Exl. A· 2814 For

,_Far Oulc- llallt14-HI·

Pass

3o-k

.

In haild,

~KC R.aglaleroCI black ~ab ·pup. , 1913 Pontiac Grand PriX, very
gaod cor\dirion, been sarvic~d
Pill. $100. 304-89&amp;3431.

HUia3. 1&lt;&amp;x70, Oiahwasher, Hut

2•

760 . Auto Parts 1

·

25 Flying
creoture
26 Othello
vllllln
t7 Talum'a dlod

••

.....

lleldeNized

11 Slop
21 Fiber clualrlr
23 Whole

8 FeollngOI

4Capable01

By Plolllip Ald!!r

,

·uar; Firebird; Auto Trans, T· ·114-aHoe5aQ,
To~-~~loy Whoalt l All Optlona

School Dlatrlct $350, 814 ·&amp;28·

1985 Knox. 14x70 2br, 2 bath,
S12,000 OBO. 304 ·882 ·~827
IIIVI message if no an....

Uara~

-,s,..._,Oirio.

Corr. Alumi'!Um On Wood Frame

Portable, 8 Ft. I Inch Jt7 Ft. Door
Wilh Elecrric Opener, Walk l'n
Door Way, 2 Windowa You Move,

MotDr1, 614-444HJ103.

Evenng~

Wlt:INIW,. "&amp;iCJo,rtlfl\'1

l

5141PIIes

S57S O.B.Q. 814·446-3869 Leave
Monoga II No Answer Will Re-

Apartments
for Rent· .

:A~Tl.Wf

!

1aa4 BaJa' 11 Fl. With 4.3
MerccruiMf, 1803

'W~WDO'IOO'ffiiNK ~T~"'

~

·.

BORN LOSER

3.0 1V18. Norna Craft Ba11 ~~
, With 200 HP llor~rr. c~
1iiJa FOrd Tauriis._ etectrlc wii1d· Our New lhrada 1 Aluminum
owi, lit, """.., ~ lood- Ba11 Boats In Stock Nowl J. ~.
ed, ·low mllot. clan, WUI con- Mrme 81H58;8180. , . ·
,
trodo;l%250 0110, 814-992-G824.
87 Ban boa~ '88.11orcury 45 ,tip.
11188 Trai- Am' ~lopa, - ·
fullr equtpptd, claenlruns gre.,
gr81:•1oakl groat, loaded. so•- 13800. 814-742·Zl01." ' .
175-5371.1.
~
\", '
Boot 5alo Going On Now -Aqua~
tlllllf.cMIM 2 Doont, RIS; 1a&amp;ll ron
Beall ·Cullr Cabina -B.C~ 2 Dooar: IVIO .EICOfl LX Ridera · Bill ,80111 -Sea A·r~
Bo~k Price: S3,•oo Soil Price
-Boata ·Johnaon Outboard
S2, l~o : Cook llolora, '814-448· John
llarlna Sorvlcea, Kef ·
llotora.
0103.

in o~ 'kousehold

~195.

3327. .

;;:TH~

tlva

- -Cooodilalot
a .. •••d•a,. Hou•ttare...
·nn•••••oiJ»w---..
,_..,e-.
e;, o1o1o1 11t4s

rnn..

Au ~

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740 · M&lt;ltorcyclea

tomallc:, 814·378· 2720 AFTER 8
P.fll l

crllndor, S \250 OBO, a 14·V4V·
3135,

1:8Q0.537-IJ521l

550

IS A t..ITTI,.f liT · GOVieiT~Y Aftlb
_...A £.1TTLt liT
-...:::~
ltOGIC'N',Ot..t..,
-1
JUT·
MOITI,.Y
MU:ZAIC •.·

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Loaded, Runa" Looks Q,re•tl

:-'f:.rr~~

.....

;

1987 Ford Taurus. ,. Daara,

-ldl/tiiD-wllll

a at ;au. Cone 11 • _ ,

•

I~ ToyoiB Coli co GT. 1 Owner,
5 9pood, AC, Crulto, PB, PS,
po6d Running Condlllon, 814·
•• 5)30,

1 illwlnNumtnAa-

. . . . . _.;fl.

I

1088 Ford .Eacort for tole or "for
Pl')l· 304·578'2458.

Appllanceo:
Rocondlllonod
Waahara, Dryera, Rengao, ,Jle•l·
grators, 80 '• Pay. Guarantul
Fronoh Cilr folarllg, 814·448·

~i~t

·..fU

1996 FO&lt;d F-2511 Pickup •x4, f • .
lr loaded. low mileage. Ex c
~ondltlon. S10,800 . 304·&amp;3 •
co1)11111on. Philna 304·875·303 7. 31!84.
,

I

, ...... -

1991 Chevy Van Fult Sill Sh•t
W
. hoolbue Ono Owner, 7_~
Loaded, ExcoHont Condition, "'"
Ciods, 814-448-1+44.
1

Evans Entarprisas,

MERCHAND ISE

-1!or]r

.I

750 Boats &amp; M9tors
for Sale
,

Garage 11 Ft 8 Inches Jt2ot· Ft.

.440

:

1SI88 Chevw- ·Carsica , 4 door, 8

2 ·Bedroom Very Clean Carport,
Heat Pump. No Pvta, Porter Ar11,
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath a, CA 1 · Or
Large Private Lot In Green

P.M. 814-448-7585.

''FRANK: a: EARNEST

1VB-4 CJidamobile ·Sbtllon wagon,

dagroa proflrrad; prior
e.OIINOkiaelu: ... MeN-

.
.
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..........-.... ·==•,.
... ---..........
-

lailltid

11

Wasting _a vital card
'

cua.tg(n crulaer. aoad running

Seventh Yetr In The Heating &amp;

Rio Grande, OH Call 814-245·
5121 .

·

callent Condition, Call After 4:Jo

1V8l_Grand Prix, 285 V-8, neoda
pain~ S550, 61 ~:992·2541.

ant~&amp;-5738.

SPRING spECIAL: :Ctnlrol Atr
Cond"onara: 2 ·Ton $1, lOS; 2 112
Ton S1,295; 3 Ton S1,3D5; 3 112
Ton St,585; 4 Ton St,895; Prlcea
Above lncfuao Normal lnalalla·
lion. Full 5 Year Warranty. "If You
Qon't Call Ua We Both Lose!"
Free Ellimoleti Add·On Heal
Pumpa Onlr Sllghtr Higher. Call
Ul Todar. 1U7 liThe Twontr

..zer, Walher, Oryir, VCR.
2 bedroom trailer for rent, $200 . f:r
Refrigerator~, Microwave, 114month, ph. 81 UV2·3750.
2511·1238.
614-388-1100,

!'!·

$4,200 No Rauonoble Offer Refulod 114·441-Ge31,

420 Mobile Homes
2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile ~Dmes

!L.

1081 Monli.Corlo $800. Can bo
-. botind Go-liar~ Pl. Pleat·

.._..,.._
-

mtlitl

6

1D Joumallal

M'lod
.
·~
7 laow aoclalty

. 31 Gnfled~ l.n ·

AC&amp;S HAVE
SHOWED UP
ALL NteHT
LON. II

docad,_.11~7128. .... ·~~

-11111.-AHT
I~

lloalll
• ·J 10 B 3 2

dlblllly .

• llack

Ol'l!'ling lead: • A

{9ae· CI)rrvy Full Slzw ~~eri!On
Van, Whilo and Novr .Excellent
Condlllon, ..._ t,lileago, Prlca ,..

red. like new, $4000, 81 .. · 94p·

Erwironmenf U.tilitlas. Stove, R•

for Relit ..

ONLV FOUR

!

vans 1 otoWDs

.Cooling, Bualnossl 81 4·448·6306,
N -: ~ 9-4 Bodioom HOfna, 1-800·291-11096.
CA, Gaillp~a Aroa, Relocollng
Soon, Can va - - 814· Sllr RicJhl .202 Watlf Soltonor WI
827-7210, 14-388:0311, Qr 614- 401L toopor·Pipe. 304-4175-5088.
387·1118a.
TANKS 3,000 Gallon

Room For 3"indvlduals, Homer
frigaroror. CA •. Pr~vldod, StQO
Weir!&lt; Each, 814-4111-2515
.

I

1985 5·10 4X4 V·B, Vary ij •.
pendable Many New Pa~ 1 :
$2,1100080, 814:388oO:Jll .
;

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. ·illlng changlcl
II !deri dwelllr

1, 14112 11110
2 Smallcaln
311ourcoeol

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
SoiiUo
Well Narllo

Twa bedroom aparbnent In Middleport, no ptll,114:41112:5158.

730

Taltlng Appitea..na AI Domlno'a Pizza In tho Galllpolla and
.. PDo••ow - rtdi/ 1tr.

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• 4

+ KQ

AC, Slandortl. 231&lt; llil"' S13,opo
NEG. (614)-446-7380 '
I

Pre-Englneer•d 1tul bulkllngs. Call 30"4·675·3067 or 304·175·
National company awarding 4872.
profit potent!al conatruc:llon or
oalal. 303-7511-32110 •t NOO.

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t . IO V 8 t 3

• . 10 • 7 3

• K Q 8 3

85 FORD RANGER '-'IX4, XbT.

na11 wllh people you know, and Pump, Dock, Glamour Bath, Skr
NOT to aond rnonar lhrough lht light, Walk·in Cloaett. Excellent
mall unlit you lllva lnveotfgaled Location 614-441~701

dallerahlp In opon market High

.,

.

•712

• A J 2

Twin Rlwrt Toww! - at:capling
appllcallona lor lbr. HUO tuba~
lz~':!f'· lar oldorly ond llandl·
co
.EOH~He711,
.

lloblle homt apac" tor ronL up
linished,
2 112
baths,
2218 bt&lt;k·
aq It r~~~~~~~~~F;roo;, m 1Brr80'1, ... par lllllnlll. w&amp;ltr,
largo
patio;
largo
privata
tower and troth Included, 114·
ard, mull sea ·.to appreciate.
[ awiO'a. 304-87H192.
.
2 Or 3 BodrOom Houao Relligala· 11112-2187!·

·-liS

we ara -lng indiViduals wilh a

thorough knoWledge ol Finan.:a
and Loan proooning, Tau ·o moment 10 ...... your future and H
you want a caraar with a well ••
tablleh•d · ••P•nding Agency;
Nnd your RESUME ID: Snsurance
PIUI Att~:::•· lnc:., 1t4 Court

410 HouSIS for Rent

attached garage. a1t1c apace,
eatlly accessible, full basement

614-446-30611.

.P'-·

.,Oil, ,._, 814-1~·,~1 :

,.,....

e--.

lmmtdlall Opening Available For

•AJ4

tiraa, eJChaUII, lookl 0fHI, rura

Tax, Repo•a, REO'o. Your Aroa. Ownet: Finance 2 To 5 Aero Loll 450
Furidlhid
Toll Frae (1) 800·21a-IIOOO Ext On Clar Chapel Rd., Boautllul
Rooms
H-2814 For Current U.ling1:
. Panlallr Wooded, Gallla Water
tATELUIEDISH
o\vall*lll6. Only Fl\ro llllaa To
Houu and. propony, opprox. 4 - Galllpolla, TRAILERS WEL' Klnga llolel Lowaat Ra111 In En)or Your Own .Recelvar And
cre&amp;. Ideal 11arter home. Beech CDMEI Terrna: $200 Down, $150/ Town, Nowlr Remodeled, HBO, Antenna. Choote Programming
Cinemu, Show'tlma &amp; Olaney. ' You like. Dish Syttemt ·Start At
..... 814-808-1081.
SL, Pomorcr Ott 304-li82·2D77.
Weekly Rain, Or llonlhlr RaiOO, t21 g Plur- One Year ProgramConarructlon Workers Welcome ming Coli. TO Ordor Call Toil
HouN on 85 acraa 3 milei Norlh
-~
Free 1·888·153· 7380 Ext 120.
Eliot ol Holler Hospital, Kemper remote, beautiful land; Melgt $14~448-8922, 114-441-5187.
UHF /VHF Antonnoa &amp; Hardware,
Countr. Scipio Township. SR 892
Honow Rd. Call6t+448-ll217
ijull oft SR 143). Owner lnanclng. ·Room lor rlrll· ldaal lbi·conatruc· Arnold T.V. Saloo &amp; SarviQo.
$1500 per acro. Call for good don W!lrkar, 20 mlnuiiO inlm Po·
lovatear &amp; Chair. •Sante
houaa on sarem SlrM~ Ru· mop, 614-511:U545,
moroy, conllct Pvoor 11 81..-. Sola,
Fe"
Stria,
Good Condition, t400,
· ahall only, nolhlng lnalde,
0035.
Washer a Drrer $50 Drror
111 on two 50' loll, $12,000 or
Sleeping rooms with. cooking. N - Brrtl, Call814-448·3908.
houta withoul property•. 14000,
RENTAl S ·

And Reoldertllal StMca, Call For
Syracuse- two atory colonial ,
Froe
814-441-D3ta
great lOcation tor children, three

·HOME TYPISTS,
PC uaora needed. S45,000 In·
como polonlial. Call 1-800·513003 Ellt 8-11368.

• 8 54 .

1&amp;82 Chovy 314 IOn auto. It,,
1VB7 Dodge - r Ram 4l'd,
rull, high
S7,GOO.
waekdara :f04·.87&amp;-78110 anrd

87 Ninon 4x2tiu0k, -~ clutch,

Lots I Acreage

sa'-

1 AC I 2 AC loll for tala In
Sconlc Valley SubdlYiolon.
4 Room House, 4.8 Acroa, Bath Wedge Really, Broker 304·875Room, UiWtr Room. Ofl - n g 2722. .
Ridge .Rd. 81...-.1758 atlor 8:00
pm ,
·
3.55 Acrto on Crabcrtek Rd.

Shafet'a Lawncare Commercial 5175.

Wn&amp;

1904 · Chavr S· IO lS' 4X4 4
5spd, a harp, 34, 7~l',mlloa .
tako over parmonta. &lt;D~4 ·1 7
5319.
.
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.

330 Fanns for Sale

675-27411.

aurance.~ BkiWell, Ohio. 01 .... 388·
Service, t.teig1 MemorY 11848, 614-387-70)0.

Famuw

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.E ut
aKQU

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lhll newspaper will not
kno-Mif9yaCcopt
ldvortl-nto for .... -te
which Ia In vlollllon oi lht law.
Our roodaro aro hereby
lntomled that • dwalkip
advertised In thla ne" IPIPfl'
ora available,Ofl an equal

roo move
afier
Bpm. .it. can 1·304-773-5305
Pt. Pleasanl·4br Ranch w11car

1&amp;78 Dodge Plck· Up "I400,;_~
Boltom Boat !Trailer 1300; , _
Pontiac Bonneville 1600, I~·
448-Snt .

itllhtndl.

llmilllfonot-llon."

310 Homes tor

a A
.. 10. 5

1VV1 GMC Full Sile,·.Ox• 3
Auto; Crulao, Till, &lt;'P. 83,3
liNn S11 ,000 814-448-I!IID

pets, reference• &amp; depo1lt. 304-

No ObligatiOn. Send LSASE To :
ACE, Dept: 1351, Box 5137, Dla- Proteallonol Tree Sorvlee, SlUmp
niond Bat, CA 01785.
Ramcw.a..- FrH Eatlmates.l In,

Hay ' 011111

64Q

Earn 11.000 W"klr Slu"ing En· 388-878V.
velopea At Home. Start Now. No
Experience. Free Supplies, Info.

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Wltlf' IIVIIIabll, OW,., ft.

CABLE"rv ORDER TAKERS

1 Ill 432..7371

far Sell

HELP WANTED llentWomon
Eom $480 Weakly AaHmbllng

you

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I'll hfl!r, yo.a . .
dlfllcult Ia aciiiiWI • you tMy llllnk .

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Ohio Lottery

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·\IIIII. lf1, NO. 2311
.
C111117, Oh!o v.1111y l'ublllhlng Compltnr

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2 SectlOnl, 12 ....... 31 ctntii

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, Aprll10, 1897

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AGanrtittCo. N. .Ip&amp;pr·.

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TPRSD to award bid to .K itts Hill firm Monday

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· By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Newe Stiff
Construction on . the Tuppers
Phiins ·Regional ' Sewer District
should ~gin in ~bout 30 days, now
· m~t ~ pr1mary contractor 1s about to
be ht.red.
.
B1ds for !he general c0ntracung
work were o~ned on Tuesday, after
the bi!l deadline had been extended
by the di~trict's board. .
Lindsey Lyons, .Pres1dent of the

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board, said that

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the ~ bid w.ill .be ·c~st was $,1.98 million. Th~· o~erage

30 days, depending on the· time 'it
takes the engineering firm and Rural
Kitts Hdl, the same gen~ral conlrac- ungency funds, and the d1smct wtll Development's engineers to sign off
tor who installed the s~wer system in theri' request more contin$ency on the.bid.
Rutland. The only· •:ither bid was monies fr~m iis primary funding
"It should be underway in about
rece1vedfrom LA Pipe of Belpre, at source, Oh10 Department of Agncul- 30 d~ys, maybe not quite that long,"
. $2.22 mllhon.
.
lure Rural Develop~nt &lt;formerly Lyons said. "It depends on how long
. Accordmg to Lyo~s. the b1d of Farmers Home Admm1straho~). .
it takes to run through the mill. Tile
. F1e}ds ConstructiOn·was Still over the
Lyons ant1C1pates.lh':' ~e b1d ~·II big approval to begin construction .'
esb'?at~ cqst of the I;lr~JeCt: ~e .be awarded at ~ d1stncts m~etm.g will come from Rural Development,
firms ~·d w~ $~.06 mdhon, w~tle on Monday evemn~. Cons~uon IS because they furnish most of the
'be eng1neers esumate'of the proJect expected to begm m approXImately
·

. a~ard~ to Ftelds C\lftstructton of

'
By BRIAN
J. REED
Sentinel NeWs Sllltf
Cattle running loose in two western Meigs County townships are
making life unple~sant fQr residents,
and those cattle have been ordered
pi~ked up by law enforcement offi:
·
. cials. .
On Wednesday, Meigs County ·
Court Judge Patrick O'Brien ordered
!hat cattle owned by Allan Halliday
of the Dexter area be collected and
contained until th~ disposition of
those caule is determined next week.
. H,alliday is charged in Cot.naty
Court with allowing animals to run
loose, a misdemeanor of tile fourth
degree. The complaint was filed last
month by Jeff Miller, Investigator 'ror
!he Prosec'uting Attorney, ·
Yesterday's hearing inclu&lt;!_ed
swom testimony from the three township trustees in Salem Township an,d

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\ '-1 :
TO BE PURCHASED~· Beautiful blue "Welcome to pomeroy•
banner• like tile one displayed here by Dottle Mueeer, Suun
Clark, ancl .VIcki Ferrell, were approved for purche• by the
Pomeroy · ~hairtl ~eeoclatlon w~; 'the· !Hinnera will .

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downtown Pomeroy

ll·m·i·f t pos ... an e . ·: I.,
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·
. BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
!twas noted !hat the design will be
Sentinel News Stiff
on both sides of the canvas banners
TWo sets of banners to be dis- which will be installed on .slationary
played on the period lamp posts in bnickets attached to tile· light poles.
downtown Pomeroy were approved
Two contributions •were made t&lt;J
for purchase at Wednesday's meeting tile downtown revitaliziltio~ project.
of the Pomeroy Merchants Associa- One was for $424 from the J.O.G.S.
. lion held in .Peoples Bank.conference program at Meigs High School taught
room.
by Melanie Quillen and .!he second
Thirty bright blue "Welcome to was from !he Siemwneel Association
.Pomeroy" banners featuring white for $250:
lettering and a stemwlleel replica will
The group agreed to again this
be ordered immediately so as to be year participate in the Stem wheel
ready for installation once the light- Festival the first weekend in October.
ing is completed. Thirty red banners The merchants ~ill have a duck derwilh a holiday theme will be ordered by at that time and will handle the
once the design has been completed. annual costume pany and provide
Susan '"lark, president, reponed · . pri~es for the event. •.
The fashion sho'w date . ·was
thatCapital City Awning of Columbus which has installed most of the changed 10 May 9 at the Pomeroy
awnings in town as pan of the revi - Elementary School. Door prizes are
talization plan will be making the being collected. it was reponed, and
. banners.' Cost' will be .$17 each. Pur- tickets will go on sale next week. Valchase of'tlle banners will come from . unteers are needed to. help at the.
the Christmas bulb fund which Vick- show. Junior Chamber of Commerce
ie Ferrell, treasurer, reported n.ow has members will assist jn handing out
a balance of $1,771.
Contiauecl .oii'
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for more thari a decade if they sign
and mail in a paper request form .
Qetwccn . l ·million and 4 million

·.accepting electronic mail requests.; .
But regular mail responses ta~e
four to six weeks and cost Social
Security millions of dollars 'in
postage each year. .
.
So, last month, the agency made
it possible for taxpayer's to actually
. retrieve their records online.
·.
Aftcr ·national news reports about
the .service earlier this week, the
number of people using it jumped
from 3.000 a day to about 8,500. '
Critics say that anyone with
. knowledge of another person's
Social Security number.' their molher's maiden . name and the state
where ihey were born could access
' the . records electronically or by
paper request to learn their job history, salary and other information, ·:

Cold.temperatures damage Ohio fruit crop

By The AuoclatiKI Preee
.Ohio fruit farmers sell about $2S
million worth of apples each year and
$4 million apiece in strawberries and
peaches . .
But !his year tlley're scrambling to
protect !heir crops as temperatures hit
• record April lows. .
·
. "This iSthe worst I've ever seen."
said Roger Monnin. who estimateS he
lost 50 percent to 70 percent of the
peach crop on his Monnin Fruit
Fann in Dayton. . ·
.
Reco!d lows wen:: reponed in tile
northern Ohio · cities of Cleveland,
-Akron 1111d YQungsto- and Colum-

bus in central Ohio !his morning. The
overnight readings of 20 degrees. 18
degrees, 17 degrees and 20 degrees
respectively 11rok.c old records on
!hose cities by I degree. Mansfield
tied its old record of 18 degrees.
On Wednesday, !he temperature
dipped to 19 de11roes in Dayton,
breaking the previous marie of 20 for
tile same date in 1957. The Cincin•
nati/Northcm-KCntucky International Airport recorded a I5-dcgroe reading, !he coldest temperature for April .
Tile pn:viqus marie was 17 .degrees in
1964.
Most of the state'~ fruit crop

probably will survive the·cold snap,
said Mike Pullins, executive director
of the Ohio Fruit Growers Society. "We're not in danger of losing the
crop, especially in central Ohio and
north, "lle said.
B~re could be damage to early bloo ing strawhcr,ries. or peach
them Ohio, he said.
trees in
Monnin, who also grows apples,
strawbenies and raspberries at his 35acre farm, was using cold to fight the
cold. ·
He has been running . water over
his strawberries, encasing them in

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Earth didn 't . mar our li~es may be .for nine hours. Pans of !he pOwer grid
..AP 8UIIII!tl8 Writer
. mo.-e luck thll!llechnological savvy. in · the northeastern United States
. . NEW YORK .~ Television sets.
Scientists warri ~re·s a danger in also experienced brief disruptions.
going blank. A city hit by electrical relying too much on sensitive micro. No satellites were damaged by
blackout.
.
electronics; especially thumbnail- . !hat even~. but geomagnetic storms
·Those are the kinds of disruptio.ns ' sized microprocessor chips. to run were blamed forfailure ofa weather
that ea~ result from an unusual everything from computers to cellu- . satellite i.n 1994 and of a telephone
cxtratem:strial event · like ·~nes- , Jar phones.
·
communications sar.:llite last January.
. day's: A wave of eneray from a solar
: 'Our technologies have become
Stin: businesses dependent on .
flare invading thulmosphere, threat- ·more sophisticated,. and we've satellites said Wednesday sai&lt;llhey
ening' satellites and otller high-tech · become more vulnerable over time," weren't overly concerned. The hunequipment.
. said Louis Laiu:erotli, a technology dreds or orbiiins satelli~ !lave built• Scientists ei&lt;plalned .lhat the ener· : dpert for Bell Labs,d!e research ann in safcauards to protect against dam. . gy wa~ was moderate in size, pro- •·o f Lui:ent'lech!loloties. "Tne dani!Cf aae to solar J*!Cis, which galher
duciriJ dramatic 'pictures lllken by 11 1 to the chips is unpredictable."
c-.,. to power the Spl!CCCrafl. OperI)CW llllelli&amp;e but only a small amount
In M~h 1989, fallout from a ·aton also cu turn panels away from
ofp!liiWIIC!icradiationleiiChina!he solar fl~~e , cauMtl !he IIII'JCII aeo- .the sun.
·
p18J!et.
ma1netic storm. in 30 years. It · · Companieulso make routine oonThat !he latest wave to ·hit the knocked out a power pid in Quebec tinJeilcy plans. J'heAssociitCd Press

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our beneficiaries and our workers," fully automated version of the scrCallahan said.
·
vice.
.Tile agency will consider whetller
Sens. William Roth, R-Del ., and
new safeguards are. needed for the Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y.,
Internet service, Including possibly led a bipartisan group of colleagues
giving people personal access codes who wrote to !he agency saying the
or allowing them to request that online service '.' may not afford suffitheir individual records not be .cient protections against violations
· placed in the database.
of individual privacy. "
Sqcial· Security's entire internet
Rep. lim Bunning. R-Ky .. cllairsite will be inaccessible for 'two or mao of the House's subcommittee
three days while the databise is on Social Security. asked for a SCCU·
being disabled, but general informa- rity report tQ l'ti~ panel by April 22,
tion and 'documents · about the and·Rcp. Paul Kanjorski, D-Pa., said
nation's retirement program will be be will .sponsor legislation to ban
back on line soon.
information about individuals' camThen taxpayers will be able to ings, tax records atid Social Security
request information about their per- benefits on the Internet.
sonal records through electronic
The Social Security Admini~!ramail to the agency, but reports will · tion has offered people access to
be sent through rc!gular mail rather !heir earnings and benefits reports

. By DAVID E. KALISH

tl'

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p~~~etn:!':n!hi~:nlh:~ ~~~~:~hiii.::~:~r~f~~~~r.:~~ ::~~~~·:!u~~~~,r~ ~·~:.~r: ~~e~~:s aa~~a~~o ::~n~~d ~:au~ .

.provided individual earnings and
· reti.-ement benefit
. records
and
decided to iil:gin
asking Americans
whether · such
information
Cal..hen
should . be available online and, if so, how much.
"For the next 60·days we will be .
conducting public forums in Washington and across the country on the
issue; ·• said John J. Callahan, acting
commissioner 'of. Social Security
who said • he per5onally will be
involved in the effort.
The Social, Security Administralion on Wednesday ·suspended an
·online service that allowed people to
retrieve their personal Social Sccuri-

.

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. : ty reCOrd$ because: it rai'l ed privacy than via the Internet.
''
j:Oncems.
'
' . Callahan said requests from law·
WASHINGTON ~ :social Secu- · . :·The Internet is • new world and · makers. questions raised by com put·

rily officials

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three inches 'or ice. And lle has

burned 300 gallons of diesel .fuel .in
flame-spewing smudge pots to try'!o
keep his fruit trees warm.·
:
"I don 'tthink I'd. have anythiAg
left if I hadn 't dol\e that," he said.:
Bob MacQueen, owner of Maj:·
Queen·~ Orchard in Toledo. said : it
has ·been too cold for protective
measures to work on the apples ai.d
peaches he · grows at his 250-ac;t'e
orchard. He said up to 9() percent pf
his large apple blooms have been 1061.
"We're not out of business, l:iut
we're injured," he said.
·

Sola&lt;
r .flares sh()w vufnerabiUty of high-tech communications i·

lo .

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By ALI.CE A~N !-OYE ·

. ' lii'oelated Pi'HI Wrltlf·'
'

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O'Brien that 11e was chased by Hall- the cattle was reimbursed to tbe
iday's cattle wllile lle was feeding his county. In the meantime. the cost
own livestock. Edward Ladd told involved in containing !he cattle '!fill
O'Brien that c; le have been on the be calculated is court cost~. aod
front porch ofh1s Dexter Road home. levied upon · the State or Hallid'i!J,
Because ofthese problems, Lentils depending on !he outcome of ihe
requested that O'Brien order the .cat- criminal case against Halliday, :
tie tel be gatlle.-ed and sold, in ordt&lt;r
O'Brien's order also included.:&amp;
to protect citil.ens in tlte area.
restraining order against Hallidlfi
"I know it's an extraordinary forbidding him from interfcri'ng With ,
request," Lentes said in court ycster- the agent's charged with collecting the
day. "However, I think we have a cri- cattle.
.
·. sis situation on our hands."
Halliday was not present in co~rt
Lentes told O'Brien thai at least yesterday, nor was his attorney
. three cattle have been found dead of ~Ieven L. Story of Pomeroy. Sto(y,
malnutrition. and that he fears other -when contacted after !he hearing, said
cattle may be diseased.
that neither lle nor his client had 'been
O'Brien stopped shon of ordering notified of the hearing.
. .
the sale of the cattle, but set a hear"I would be surprised at any such
ing for Monday morning to deter: order, since my client and I were ·not
mine !heir fate. If tile callle arc sold, . notified of a hearing today," Story
· Lentes said, the proceeds of ihc sale said. "Therefore, I would not comwould be returned to Halliday after ment on any 'action that is said 'to
:. ·.,r.~t:f.'":;:::;;;.~;.•:·-.:.:.:.· ;:.::~',~~.;~~~ ~f ~~~~,.~g ~.~nta!ni n.ll , .hliY5;.~~n~~~~ .,1, ., •~"-' .

!
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Iars over th;ll cost estimate. Tile highest bidder's price for constructing the
system was in excess of $3 milliOn/
according 10 Lyons.
• ··
Bids for sub-contractors are still to
be opened, and one of those is ;·.t:
minority set-aside. That process is not
expected to halt construction.~
ing to Lyons. • ·
.
; .·
· ons said that tile decision 9f
where .to begin construction w!ll 'be
determined by the general contractOr:

j

.!

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•

money and they have most of tile reg- .
ulations." ·
·
Bids on the project. were first
opened on March II, but an addendum modifYing the specifications
for the project was ad&lt;le,d, and tile bid
deadline was extended in hopes of
lowering the project cost. A total of
six bids · was received at lh 1
opening, and all bids co siderably
exceeded the' estimated . · sts. Tile .
lowest bid ·was a quarter million dol-

.

.Mpt:iihs#1ts.
tb
· buy·~:· :· ··, ...·~:~~~ R~~~.~·~ . · p~~~.~n~l. rec~r.ds from Internet
·r·tf · n· r.·s· ..#,._,. ,

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.

Columbia Townships, alleging !hat
caule owned by Halliday are creating
a threat to property and personal safe'ty o( residents in the area.
Those witnesses, and ProsCC:uting
Allot:ney John Lentes,· allege that
soq~e 60 head of caule are 'On tile
loose. Tile, cattle, including several
·bulls; are said to be: wandering on private property and public roadways,
chasing people and damaging property.
"We tried to· talk ·to (Halliday),"
Trustee Ceeil Stacy said. "All lle
would do is tell us that he had wire
ordered and lhat lle would build a
fence."
·
That fence, Stacy said, has never
been conslfll!:ted.
One resident of til!: township said
his RiOIIler, who lives near Halliday,
f~ for Iter personal safety, and nm
,Mullins, another · neighbor, told

.;:==~!'!~ !~:'*:~Jifl!rtJ»&gt;!!• •I.~ ~!".:..~PD:I1lc.l.b~l1!};'.~;:.-~~~~~~~.~il~:'~~.' ~~. •~. :.

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Loose cattle ordered picked up

,r'.

\ .., I

~·II be pa1d from the d1smc~ s co~-

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had staff on standby Wednesd~y
night and made silre its satelliic
operators were prepared. If a satellite
went dead, AP's backup plans inctua•
ed switching 19 an unaffected sat&lt;Jlite, or shifting transmissions :!)f
news, photos and graphics to groulklbased systems.
·,
"Because we depend so heav.\Jy
ori satellites, anytime !here's llflythln11
unusual goin·g on will! tllem we
watch it very carefully." said JOHn
Reid, AP's director of communicltion.s and technology.
;·
For scientists, the excitement
that pictures talcen b;y . the s~
aaency's SOI'!O Sltellite det:ec~
the wave moving across the sufl/s
aaseous surface
:

"fu
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