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'
I

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•

Ohio Lottery

SUndly, u.rch 17, 1

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

"wl

..'
'

...

•

Wildcats fall
to Loul.s ville
In NCAA

•'

Super Lotto:
2-4-15-25-30-34
Kicker:
7-5-Q 9 8-6
Pick 3:

Sports, Page 4

8-0-5

I.

Pick 4:
2-4-4-7

Perloda of rain tonight,
Iowa In the mid 401. Rain
Tuesday, hlgha In the so..
I

.I

.t .
I

JASON HOW~

TROY DUNCAN

·

Howard, Duncan State

·.FFA
,.

,

D~gree

honorees

COLUMBUS • Jason Howard

Robaon; AI!P/Gelllpolla District; Sgl Patlicll
McDoneld, Ohio Stlte Hlghwey PetrOl
Henry Thrapp, c; and J Pep11 Dlatrlbutlna; a ·
Chrl1 Myara Cozza, Gallill County Chamber
commerce. Third row (I tp r) ChuCk HamptOn;
Woodland Centlra; Andy Fleher, AEP~vi!J
Plant; .S tave Moore, Bollard MelnOrill Llbreiy,~
Paul Barker; Galllpoll1 Dally Tribune; Bob 8111-f
ley, Gallill County EMS; Matt Coppler, City ot
Galllpoll1; and Ray Roberta, Unlver•lty of R~
Grande.
' :

JOINS. STAFF • WUma
Williamson recently joined
the ataff of Laedingham Real
Eatata aa a fuil-tima realtor.
Sha Ia a graduate of the University of Rio Grande, and
haa worked In real eatata
salea the paaa three yura.
Sha Ia 1 member of the NAR
and OAR boards.

.

skills,andservedaschapterpresldent

lUid Troy Duncan, GaUipolis, and reporter. Howard's 'products

·received State· Future Farmers of included tobacco, market hogs, and
America Degrees in production dur· farm placement.
,rlllg the 1996 Ohio awards program
Duncan, son of C. A. and April
-~ld in Columbus recently.
Duncan, was a, 1995 graduate of Gall
Both were recommended by their lia Acadf;my High School. He w~
teachers of agricultural education as enrolled in agricultural education for
,the· most outstanding members in three years in the Gallipolis FFA
;ll!lrir department. The degree recipi· Chapter and has participated in soil
·eJI~ were selected on an instruction· judging, general livestock, state FFA
a1 wagram basis.
choir and served as chapter student
' · fFA membership was calculated advisor.
(or each of the nine program areas in
Duncan's projects included tobac·
vQ(iationaJ agriculture and two per· co, beef breeding, steers and com.
!~nl were selected in each instruc·
National FFA Week
:tlonal area.'
During the week of Feb. I 7-24,
• This was apptoved by teacher the Gallipolis Chapter celebrated
committees and state Qfficers as a .National FFA Week.
m~ of recognizing areas.· They
Chapter members participated in
were subrnined ·to evaluation meet· , many events ,during school and
inas ·w~ all lecord bo?ks and ' planned events on the weekend,
applications· were evaluated by including a FFA Alumni basketbllll
teacher c.omrninees. This year, 398 game in the GAHS gym. Members
FFA members are in the upper two also wore certain outfits (shirts, bib
percent of the state membership of overalls, official FFA d~ess, hat and
19,900.
boot days) to set themselves aside
Howard is the son of Bob and and be recognized by their fellow
Cindy Howard. A 1995 graduate of GAHS students. On dress day, mem'
daDia Academy High School, he was bers served the GAHS faculty lunch
enrolled in agricultural education for in the ag room.
th'" years in the Gallipolis FFA
The week's activities concluded
Chapter and has participated in trac· .with bowling contests at Skyline
tor ' traubl~ shooting, ag mechanics ·Lanes.

Seedlings available
LUKE, Md, • Westvaco Corpora··
lion will donate a maximum of I00
Loblolly Pine seedlings per member
of an organized yl&gt;uth group for
planiing projects. civic organizations
and schools may obtain a maximum
of 5QO seed,lings . .
Westvaco will also make' these
seedlings avatlable for the spring
1996 planting to landowners in
Cabell, Calhoun, Kanawha, Jackson,
mason, Pleasants, Putnam, Ritchie,
Roane, Wood, and Win counties in
West Virginia, as well as Washington,
Meigs, Gallia, .Morgan, Noble, and
Athens counties in Ohio.
· ·
Seedlings can be obtained for
various fees. Orders will' be accept·
ed through March I or until ~e supply is exhausted.
For additional information or for
order forms , please contact David
Posca, Westvaco Corporation, 100
Westvaco Dr., Washington, WV
26181 , or telephone (304)863-5051.

Farmers· learn to live with 'Killer Bees'

..

• Vol41, NO. 22.4

d

USDA trying to '
improve hearing
of bug detector

';

1\~f

••r

LEO'S CRUISE

' WASHINGTON (A!') ·- Gov- :
ernrnent scientists are trying to
improve the electronic bug . that
iletects the sound of real bugs munching on grain.
The Agricultural R~h Service
developed the system kilown as Alfid
- for "acoustic locating fixing insect
detector." But too often Alfid hears
only the noisiest eaters.
. Scientists
the Agriculture
Departmelll ~gency are testing a
technique developed by Defense
Research Technologies Inc. of
Rockvjlle, Md. It uses compressed air
to arnpnfy sound waves. .

lfRIIEL .

lnvit~

•

Meigs Senior Center
5:00 PM - 7:00 PM
boor Prizes - Refreshments
Grand Prize: 2 Free Airline Tickets
'96 Motorcoach Group Tours
5% Discount Seniors
5% Discount Early ·Boclklna.

from

Watson retires

Leo's Cruise
&amp; Travel

HUNTINGTON ' • William D.
Watsop, local representative in the
Huntington district office of Ameri. CI!JI General Life, has retired from the
firm following a 27-year career.
Watson, a resident of Cheshiro,
began his career with the company as
an ,agent in the Huntington district
office in 1969. ·
·

202 W. Second St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
(614) 992~233
(800) 795-1110

' '

WASHINGTON (AP) - When
t11ose dread . "killer, bees" began
heading northward from .Brazil a
·quarter-century a~o, headlines
buzzed with undocumented tales of
teJTOr.
It's been 5 112 years since the .
~ures ..... ~hnically, Africanized
11qlie~ ~ :- fi~t crossed the Rio
q~ into \he United States, and
thfy, have not lived up to their billing.
•, "Mricajlized honey bees are actu·
lily a -far cry from the image of the
feanorne marauders constantly hunt·
inll fpr human victims that media
hype' has created," Hachiro Shimanuki writes in the March issue of
Agijcultura( Research magazine.
"What is true is that they are more

problems for U.S. farmers. They are
harder to transpOrt to fields aiid
orchards because of their temperament. They don 't store as much hon· '
ey as the more-common European .

defensive and generally will sting
more - with less provocation than the European-descended honey
bees that are common in the United
States."
The hybrids are ·causing some

varieties.

. ONl-Y
s599 Down.·
A Few Of Our Home Standard Features
"11-e . ·, Andenen nit Windows

DreaaCatcllu,

J.ocHoaee·

P.O. Jklll•
a-,011111
·lmiiiiiNollhata011 At. 7
1'141 ....10
Open

T-.. Tlua.

llld Sat. 10 to 4 P.M.
AIIO Open 11'1 Afp I •••L

• Stanley Doon
• lx6 Exterior Walls, 16ln. On Center
• "AI'IIIItrang solarian Floor Tile
• Muellale Cabinets
• 8 FOOl Ceiling
.
• 2xl 0 Floor Joint, 16 ln. On Center
• 5l Gallon Water Heater
• Shaw Carpets .
• Delta Fauc:ets
.
• Muter T·lod Vinyl Siding With Lifetime Wartanty
~ 25 Year Wananty Asphalt Shingles
· • I0 Year Sbuetural Warranty On The Home

Our Prices Are The Lowest In The Area.
'

FAMILY HOMES ll'fC.
Model Home Located at
Intersection or Rts. 7 &amp; 33
Pomeroy, OH 614-992-2478

Arllta .., Dllllr Ffr

.

INDUSTRIES
..

...........
Clltlltiefnll

'

......._

Model Home Viewina Hours I :00.5:00 p.m.
1\le•• Sat. or by appoiplmen~

,', e... ·4 111 a011;

$23957
.

'95 BUICK
CENTURY

v.:e Auto vi/overdrive,

' Power windows,
Cassette, Much'"'"''"

. From

'11,900

'

111 ' 11~

.·~

FDI

.
29

'95 BONNEVI ........~-. 1
We Sold New - Only SAFARI VANS
9,200 Miles, .

•

"The point I made is an obvious
one," Browning said. "If you want to
build something, is it cheaper to build
with cash or with j)orrowed funds?
The answer, of course, is if you have
the money and you don't have to bor·
row it, that's the cheapest way to go."

Was 116,900

Now'13,

'

'• .

Makeshift lab drills

1967

· TRANS SPORT

CHEVROLET
IMPALA

· By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
~tlnel Newa Sid

Almost 30 years oldl
4 Door, G!irage Kept,
only 451()00 miles.
. Colleetors.lt,m ..~~, ,

- Ooe Owner, Low
Mileage, Two Tone, ·
Lo~ded.

"SUPER CLEAN''

'3, s·o.()

·080

.·

Phone
446-2332 .
.
'

'"96 Fashion Focus" will be the
theme of the Pomeroy Merchints
~ssociation's spring style show to be
staged March 29 at 7:30 p.m. in the
Pomeroy Elementary School auditorium.
Final plans for the annual fund· ·
raiser were made when the associa·
tion met last week in the Bank One
conference room.
The four merchants participating
in the style show
Bunons and
Bows with ready-to-wear children's
· ·clothina. Chapman Shoes with
footwear, Clark's Jewelry with jew·
elry, IJid, the Fabric Shop with pr·
ments made by Meigs homemaken. '
Mike Stroth will emcee the pro- ·
gram, with Amie Olapman qlin this
year doina. the narration. Sound is
beins t-Iled by am Quickel, and
~slunents )Viii be served by Bobbie Km and Sarah Fis_!ler.
Entenainnlent '!rill be provided by
the M~ias Jazz: Band, two JI'OUPS of
Nancy·Swartz Dazzling Dolls bllon

are

· Oil Change &amp;.·Filter.

·

.EHS -~ighth graders_
in colhputer -s kills
By TOM HUNTER

Sentinel News Staff
Beginning this week, students in Eastern High School's eighth grade
are getting their annual primer in computer basic skills in Scott Wolfe's
Language Arts classes.
The classes teach computer terminology, which strengthens the stu·
dents' vocabulary, and provides a background knowledge base for students to talk literately about computers.
Additionally, students are learning keyboarding, word processing,
and how to use spreadsheetS. Using the word processor, the students
are going to learn to pre-write •.revise and edit their own work.
Some of the work will involve the construction of paragraphs and
work with Participle, Gerund and Infinitive phrases.
"Because we can cut and paste, a skill students will learn to master, the computer offers a great teaching tool for teaching misplaced
and dangling participles," Wolfe said. "We can construct sentences, then
literally move the phrases to their correct location."
"At first, many students are very cautions, sometimes scared, about'
working on the computers, but most adapt rather quickly. It's surpris·
ing how fast students pick up on things ," he added.
The classes have pooled together eight computers in the school to
formulate a make-shift computer lab. Most of the computers are out·
dated Apple II gs computers, one is an outdated IBM computer of
Wolfe's, and two are new CD-ROM equipped Packard Bell computers.
''The students need a full course on computers, perhaps a year·
long class, however, because most of the computers are outdated and
there is no computer lab, the students get cheated," Wolfe said. "Everything in today's world utilizes a computer. Passage of our levy would
provide the necessary computer room and provide us the equipment.
Until, then we'll just give the students a taste of the technology we
have."
,. .

Pomeroy merchants set theme
for annual spring. style show

~

'

'

COMPUTER CLASSES- Eastern High School eighth grade
atudents received their annual primer In computer baalc akllla
In Scott Wolle's Language Arta claas. The cillasea have pooled
. eight computer~ In lhe school to formulate a maknhlft computer lab. Working on the computers, above, ere Christy Riley
and Leah Well, seated, and standing, Lori Harris, Robin Bar·
ringer, Bobbi Jo Dill and Wendy. Smith. (Sentinel photo)

.

'90 PONTIAC

Minutes or Less

tax.

8 Passenger, Passeite,
Tilt, Cruise, Power
Windows, 29,000 Miles.

Champagne Beige,
Power Windows, lilt,
Cruise, Cassette,
Rear Oefogger.

.

Local One Owner, 48,00o ·
Miles, Lt. Blue t.Aetallic ~
'
· ,Blue Cloth Seats.

was 112,900
''

~.

W~rranty

'92 BUICK
LESABRE

.nll~ets may IJave to raise the gasoline tax to pay for highways.
Voinovich and other Republican
Jeadc:is IWpe to persuade Congress to
return some of lhi: federal gasoline
tax to Ohio, but congressional lead·
ers slid that is unlikely.
· Voinovich said if that fails, he will
ask tile Legisltllure to shift about
$ISO million in state gasoline tax rev·
enues frOm the State Highway Patrol
to ODOT.
1
Highway money has to come ,
from somewhere, said state Rep.
Thomas W. Johnson, a Zanesville· .
area Republican who chairs the
House Finance Comrninee .
"If there's not a desire to increase
the gas tax or license fees, or put it ,
on the ballot to let people vote on it, i
then we'll have to live within the dol·
Iars that we have," Johnson said.
Budget Director R. Gregory
Browning talked about when he tes·
tified last year in favor of raising the

No Money
bown

Bumper TC? Bumper

Now'9;9-oo·

BLIC7·. .

Powell leads list of Dole possibilities

• '"··,. ~~~~:~~~;111:)1\'~
-·
As a result,

·

.

Who will be the veep?

COLUMBUS (AP) - The Ohio
• Depill'trnent of Transportation says it
· needs an el'.tra $100 million for the
· next fiscal year, plus more money lat·
er - and state lawmakers say they
might be forced to raise Ohio's gaso'line tax to g~t it.
· Without the ntra money, ODOT
· said {t will have to eliminate 20"of t1!e
76 projt~=ts scheduled for the nel'.t six
years to fix crumbling roads and
·relieve congested highways.
"No question, the gtiS tax will
·-probljbly be the way we have to tack·
le the highway funding problem in
the long riln," Sen. Roy Ray, RAkron, said Friday. "It's obvious
.there is not enough money to do what
needs to be done in this Stale."
Gov. George Voinovich and the
Legislature decided last fall not to
raise the tax. Instead, voters approved
a Republican-backed $1.2 billion
"credit card" to fix the highways,
which involves selling state-guaran·
teed bonds and paying them back
over a period of time.
The stale needs cash to repair.
bridges, build new highways and
make debt payments. But Voinovich ·
and top legislators said the credit line
will not provide enough money.
I\DDUt28 cents of every dollar the

You To Open House
Marcb22

.

:Highway
.need may
.cause rise ·
~in gas t$x ..

,,•• •;

311 o.ii8
A GllnMII Co. lll•apap ar

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 18,1996

18lctlor.,10PigM

.

twirlers, and two groups, one adult
and the other children, of the Midnight Cloggers. The Stemwheel Festival Queen and her court, ·coordinat·
ed .by Ju4y Williams, will present
.costuming.
The program will open with Jor·
dan Shank singing "My Country 'Tis
of Thee," and the flag pledge led by
Cub Scout Pack 249 under the direc·
lion of Dale Thoene. Numerous
prizes will be awarded during the
show.
Participating merchanis and Bank
One have tickets on sale. Serving on
the sliow committee are Mrs. Chapman, Susan Cark, Vicki Ferrell, Ann.
Lambert and Nancy Thoene.
Ms. Clark, president, thanked
Sarah Fisher for hosting a reception
for those involved in flood cle1111up, .
ani! to Georte Wright, Dale Thoene
and Toney Dingess for removing the
Christrn~ banners fi'OII) downtown.
It was decided to hold the annual
duck derby on Sall!fllay of the Stem·
wheel Festival weekend tliis fall. The
ji'OUJ' wiU also. sponsor the costu~e

judging on Saturday.
Sandee Mills, liaison between the
merchants association and Pomeroy
Village Council, informed members •
that police will begin enforcing park· '
ing regulations downtown. She also ·
said that more cleanup is planned. .
The possibility of hiring a street
sweeper monthly to clean the down·
town and parking lot was discussed
and it was decided that if council
deeides to do monthly sweeping, then
the merchants association will pay for
the first month. •
ausinesses will be encouraged lq.
contribute to cleaning the streets.
Mrs. Mills also reported that the
crosswalks will be painted April I.
Liability insurance for the mini·
park was discussed,and the associ•·
tion voted to pay the villase for the
insurance if the cost is under $100.
Diana Lawson displayed the new
Chrisllilas bulbs which picture the
courthouse, now on sale. She also
reported that work on the revitaJiza.
lion proj~t wDI resuine oilce the
. (Continued on , . I )

By JOHN HANCHETIE
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - Super Tuesday is a memory and Bob Dole seems
to have the Republican presidential
nomination clinched, so the Grand
Quadrennial Guessfest has begun :
Who will be the challenging party's vice presidential candidate?
The media's Great Mentioners
already have suggested everyone
from also-rans to legitimate prospects
to wannabes to never-weres, but
most often discussed is retired Gen .
Colin Powell, former head of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Polls taken by GOP strategists and
media outlets show Poy.'Cil cutting
deeply into President Clinton's current lead as part of a Dole-Powell
" dream" ticket. The latest survey released Monday by nmetCNN gave a Dole-Powell combination a 47
to 45 edge over Clinton-Gore.
Powell said four months ago,
however, he absolutely will nat seek
elective office in 1996. Intimates say
he has not and will not renege on that,
even if Dole offers him No. 2.
Kenneih Duberstein, a Powell
confidant, said Wednesday their
recent conversations indicate no
reversal : "I don't foresee him chang- ·
ing."
Even though Dole's catnp repon·
edly has started talking to Powell's
people, some observers think the aen·
erai'J reluctance augurs well for the
· GOP: - --

,

- - · --

Colin Powell
"Besides, if Powell didn't want to
be president, why would he want to
be vice president? He just doesn't
seem to have the fire in the belly he
needs for the political world."
All this Powell-won't-change talk
shunts speculation to others - govemors specifically - including
Michigan's pro-life conservative
John Engler, Wisconsin's welfare
refonner Tommy Thompson, Ohio's
George Voinovich.
Governors often get mentioned,
said former GOP national chainnan
Frank Fahrenkopf, because "they

-·

already have statewide· organiza-

"AII ihatbero luster has tarnished
a bit five years after the gulf war, "
said Rutgers University law professor
Roger Dennis. "Now some bonks are
saying Powell was one of the folks
responsible for letting Saddam Hussein off the hook. We don't know
how that would play in a political
campaign.

tions."
"But the real reason you're hear·
ing those three mentioned so m4ch, "
said Oklahoma State University political scientist Benil Hanson, "is the
Midwest primaries are corning up in
their states next Tuesday and .Dole
wants votes.
"What Dole and his people are

..

really doing right now is sitting
down and looking at maps of states,
•nd considering which are going to .
be essential in getting a majority of
the electoral college. Colin Powell
may be popular in national polls, but
this election is contested state by state
by state, and Dole already has
McLean, Va., (where Powell lives)
won . What Dole needs now are
swing states."
Most political analysts deem these
to be Michigan, Ohio, Illinois, Penn•
sylvania, California - and New Jersey. The last, which doesn 't have a
lpnrnary until June, ts one reason popIUiar first-term Gov. Christie Todd
!Whitman is touted by many within
the GOP.
"That's because she's a brilliant
politician," said Dennis. "She's been
able to put in a major state income tax
cut without cutting services. She's
settled contracts with state workers
and other unions on a basis favorable
to the state. She's put the first
African-American on the state
supreme coun, and she 's named several women to key jobs.
"She solves Dole's gende,...gap
problem , and she 's developed a
national profile. She's well-spoken
and telegenic, and comes across as
young and vigorous."
The Rutgers professor concedes
Whitman might cause "wailing and
gnashing of teeth" by conservative
pro· life Republicans on abortion but some discount Pat Bucha{lan 's
threat to take his supponers elsewhere unless a pro-lifer is'named.
"Dole's shot is integrjty," said
Hanson. "If he makes an intelligent
pick of an attractive, decent vice presidential candidate, he can chance it in
regard to abortion. One thing he may
do is make his pick early before the
(Continued on Page 3)

GM negotiat~rs eye o.u tsourcing
grievance from striking workers
DAYTON (AP) - Negotiators
worked through the weekend to try to
end a strike that began at two Gen·
eral Motors Corp. brake plants and
has forced a shutdown of GM pro·
duction in the United States, Mexico
and Canada.
,
Representatives of the automaker
and the striking United Auto Work·
ers union were still talking early
today. The latest bargaining session
began at 9:30 a.m. on Sunday and
stretched through the night . .
·A union official said at 5:30a.m.
today that talks wen: continuing.
Both sides had only taken a few shon .
breaks since the session began.
There was no indication how long
the session would last, GM
spokesman Jim Hagedon earlier said.
"Your guess is as good as mine,"
he said .
Both sides declined to discuss the
progress of the talks with reporters. . .
Negotiators met for about I 0
hours on Friday and another 12
hours on Saturday.
The weekend meetings represent·
ed the longest sustained negotiations
since 2,700 workers walked out
March 5. The major issue is the production of parts by outside plants or
companies.
The union says the practice, called
outsourcing, could eliminate GM
jobs. The company says it needs outside production to ensure competitive
contracts that can help reduce oper·
atiog costs.
Because much of OM's overall
production depends on parts made at
the two brake plants, the world's
largest automaker had to shut down
23 of its 29 North American assem,bly plants and 17 parts plants. Productlon at dozens of others was par·
tially affected.
·
, About I 26,000 GM workers in the
United States, Canada and Mexico
had been idled.
Dwina the last five yeus, OM had
encouraged its parts plants to become
more independent and compete for
business. Although it can lower OM

costs, it also provided the risk that the
automaker would take its business
elsewhere.
Union members wen: concerned
that the strategy could lessen OM's
dependence on its parts plantS making it less vulnerable to strikes
and weakening the union's bargaining position.
"GM is really drawing the line in
the sand here and saying, 'We' ve got

to get competitive,"' said David
Cole, director of the Office for the
Study of Automotive Transponation
at the University of Michigan.
GM Vice Chairman Harry Pearce
made the same point last week.
"Guaranteeing contracts to our·
selves that are not competitive is a
flawed strategy if I ever heard one,"
he said.

l

STRIKE DRAGS ON-.Siilldl. UAW LoceliM ~MOod· , : :,
outalde . . GM Delphi ~ .plant In Dlrwton Sunday. ftllioo ~
tllltaraltirtld tllb again SunciQ after -*lngSituidQ for n~Cn '
~n
•
. 13 hoUra. (AP) · . . .
..,·

�~·

Cominenta

i

'

:11he Daily Sentinel Tough winter may bOost Gore's mes88$Je
_______. ~Osfrd in.J!J48

prophetic. He now wears the moniker
as a badae of honor, and even resiS
and llchliel Vlna..ln
WASHINGTON -- II may be his coffee cup on a coaster that says
f!:membered as the day Vice Presi- .. the ozone man.••
dent AI Gore -- a.k.a. "the ozone
man" -• was brought bac~ down to By Jac~ Anderson

111 Caurt St., Pomeroy,.Ohio
814-112-2158 "Fax: H2-2157

£

A Gannett Co.

earth.

~ewspaper

ROBERT L, WINGETT
•ublllher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

o.n.r.JM-.r

~~~~,.-I _ , . , _ , _ _ _ IDO_. M _
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..... , . ilrll',.., ........... ~- ... Ill good 7

7

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A bargain at any price
By TOM HUNTER
Voters in the Eastern Local School District will go to the polls Tuesda~.
to make a decision ihal will have a direct impact on the educational and developmental futures of the district, if not the entire county.
·
It's not very often that Meigs County has an opportunity to see some of
it's state tax dollars come back into the county for new projects, whether
they be municipal ventures, highways, or Schools.
.
1be Ohio State Apportionment Board has committed over $7 million dol1m in state money to the Eastern Local School Dlsirict for construction of
a new K-8 elementary school and extensive renovations of the existing high
scbool building.
1be gift by the S!Bte leaves the residents of the Eastern Local School District to pay only 19 percent of the total costs for the $8.75 million schools
project
·
The school district and the Meigs County Library Board have aggressively
worked toaether to incorporate construction of 11 branch of the county Public·Library into the new Eastern Elementary School.
. .
This library facility will be fully equipped, staffed, and leased from the
district by funding from the County Library BOird, and will provide a fintctass library facility for all the residents and students in the di~trictto use
day and night
·
· A new public library and new schools for a cost 10 district residents of
just over $1,000,000, which will be paid over a 23-year period, It all sounds
too g~ to be true! The fact is that it is true, and it could be the last opportunity of its kind.
.
'Jbese arc the reasons why a majority of the residents in the Eastern district have spoken so positively, and given their full support to making the
schOols and library project a reality.
· Meigs' County and the Eastern Local School District is a great place to
grow-up. I know first-hand, because I am an Eastern High School graduate
aild a lifelorlg county resident
Several Oiher county natives and graduates of the couniy's school systems.wani to slay in ~eigs County, and many are. moving back to the county to provide the same quality upbringing for their children. These families
and their children need to have the same educational opportunities as families in other areas have.
Better educational opponunities for the children and adults of the district will provide a great chance for our area to develop and pro~per in the
21st century.
·
For the betterment of our communiti-.s, and for the future of Meigs Coun, ty and ill ahildren, make die right choice by "Voting Yes" for the school bond
issues on Tue· Jay.
· ·
(Editor's aote • The above editorial does not netessarily ~ec:t aw
poildOja_oiTI!e o.tly SentineL)

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Shifting gears

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By MIKE GLOVER

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AaiiOclatacl Preu Writer
BAY CITY, Mich. - Pat Buchl!Jian and his mini-entourage leisurely
munched their burgers for 4.5 minutes in the fast-food parking lot, while
across town about800 backers cooled their heels. Something about a scheduling 8litch. ·
_
·
"~e got our signals crossod,"·a sheepish Buchlllan told his backers when
he arrived.
The.proolem was quickly sol~ed. Within minutes the conservative commeii!Btor, prowling the stage like a restless tiger, had the crowd roaring an4
shouting in approvaL
.
But with the Republican presidential campaign having ground to its curre:d all-b)lt-inevitable stage, the Buchanan Brigade has just as clearly s!lifted to a different gear.
.
No more dashing from event to event, from stale to stale and venue to
venue. Instead, Buchanan ventures intp public a couple of times a day and
spends ·the bulk of his time in search of a television camera or radio microphone willing IO put him on !he air for free.
·
_
· Buchanan has always run a low-budget campaign, depending heavily on
"Cirned" media exposilre instead of paid commercials, but now the balance
has shifted almost entirely. .r- ·
· ·
Whit., his stump S!JC.CChel are just as fiery - if less frequent - there's
little.s,fious llllk within the campaign about winning in the Midwestern round
of primaries Tuesday iii Ollio, Illinois, Michigan and Wisconsin.
· Aides spend their time argujng about the inHuence Buchanan will have
on tJic shape of the can~.,.ign .to come.
Even in his stump speeches, Buchanan spends a bit of time preparing
lltckers fur the inevitable in the midst of all the fire and brimitOne. ·
~. "I know the Qdda and all the rest of it," he told the crowd in Bay City.
" knoW ·we're losing in the delegate count."

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Jtuchananarguesthathi&amp;neWapprOIIChiOthecampaignisJ~~,U&amp;refleC•

=~~=a~':~g lllan an i~evi~~le ~w.lo the changi~g ~haracter of the

The occasion was a meeting with
and
senior advisers at which Gore was
Michael Blnsteln
asked to ~Jete all references to
"ozone" and "global warming" fronl
His pbrsonal crusade to head off
his future speeches on the environment. Gore's top advisers feared that global warming has gained new
such language makes the public's impetus as one of the wont winters
eyes glaze over.
on record draws 10 an official close
The new nomenclature is "public this week and a blizzard of scientifhealth," which some administration ic studies show an ·-irrefutable link
officials believe resonates better with · between the warming climate and a
the general public.
fossil fuel consumption. If unabated,
Gore embraced the ·suggestion the long-tenn impact could range
with a sense of humor. "I know, I from di-se epidemics to mass
know, I know," said Gore; "I'm not extinctions of plants and animals.
allowed to talk about climate change
"The question remains, now that
anymore. I have to say 'public Gore has been vindicated and the sci·
health,"'
' entific consensus is so large, what's
If he accepts the advice, Gore may going to happen?" asks one senilir
sound less nerdish. But it's clear that administration official. "What~ the
four years after being pilloried as the policy changes?"
"ozone man" by former President
For the Clinton administration,
George Bush, Gore is also looking . chlllging the political climate comes

Rig·ht.to ·die.·and .Roe v•.· W$de

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Prize-winning former front-page edi" paled returns on "thG WeStern Hemi- , and tbe Time co~er ~191&gt;' are silliil.;. .
tor of the Wall Street Journal, James sphere's mecca" would pay for to the $28 million wOrth Of off'Jcial
B. Stewart. Tho IK&gt;ok is more than Chelsea's college education.
inve!itigations' that lll!ve' been .eon: t
400page~ loog, and itcomestonothOnly a few lots sold, however, and ducted,l)y the ~!ltiiJD.TrusiCorp.;
the deal turned sOw-. But ltilluy_4i~ the ~ederal Deposit Insurance Corp.; f
Joseph Spear
not Wllltlo let it go.,With ~e ~b . two ,IRdeJ?CR~l5,0'!nselnnd· tine :
demanding intere~ paymeniS ·,and ' ~ongress10nal committees. •This'!
ins.
loans ~oming due, the McPougali mcludes, of course, the Senare pro: l
Nothing obviously criminal, that c~ the Clintons, contributins duction, ~ b)( ~n. , Alfonse I
is. Even Time acknowledges this. over $4 for every $1 they p&amp;ia. ' . "lj:thical AJI' D' Amato; R•N.Y., ucl ~
"Anyone loJkinl! for evidence that
Hillary accepted the Mcpol!ial~' · slarring Lauch Faircloth, R-N£.; ~
miJhl indict Bill Or Hillary, ClinfOII , largess, but treated ihell) li_ke y~.· w~m even D'Amato, ~ordinJ to' ;
will be .~isappointed," the 'preview She resis~ for financial-dis- so:urces•.reg~ ~ a fpol .. . , .
t
no~ say. .
. . ,
closure ~ sta~ments, · which · were' ' ~. in.vestiJIIiQDs shOw ihat Bitt&gt;. ~
~-In the I~ '70s and eart1 required for loan e~~tensioni. At one ,and nillary Clinton were pled)'. '
'895, aci:Oidins to Stewart. Hi~: point, abe hinted-they Wci'C trying to · y~- ~Iy lilie
milllori•. ~
die,l¥&gt;tshot.la!n'er was ~~118 ~ "bl.Ckinail" her. In 1989, aftilioftbelrpeOr.. 'fliey~e8t Hillaty,to;· ~
ble pullili,S tn ~11-~led clieOts. Bill , McDoligll had s""ered the &amp;gQIUC~ be • a selfish, co~ving, shrewd, · ,
show~ hnle tnteral UIII)I!!ICY· They of an eiJht-day biilk ~!rial 8114 obiessivel)l MCre«iYe, oppo.1Unidic ,
~ haviila lrollble .malti111 ends hid been acquitied, Bil! .net ~l!ary ' ~gotlslic: diilemblet.'Bui'li his y'ei't~··-~
~called 10 coiiJI'IIulate him. Whi~ oa be .r,monltflted thal:,a11c,1s~a crook. .II
. IIi 1978, they~ the otferof the phone, the)' ~ and hawed Isn tit time to~ that~lusiOII ~
IWO. frien~ •. ~-·· . and :s - ~-~·$Y3101000to_J,I~.poinlt:f~..~ Wpt on with Amen'ca's busi-7} j
M~PQupiiiO JOin tbem for viitJIIUy .,...~,.., •
If!, ou -o • ...,. r 1~ II ' a •• •'• &gt;l " ••
no ~front, cash u~.ill•real- Whitewater expen- ilid wanted1 . • - r -. '"~'"'"'~" ,,.A i 1111 ~
es_tate . pro,~«t called WJ1i10-:~- Jim to reimburse them.
'
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~llliy talbchboul boW. the ulip,- , ;l'lll_lll6dlerway,ihe~tew.n book . •~~ , -~~· :.....•.: ·{~,

Low pres~ure wi.ll bring
~aclt.'ralnfall on Tuesday ·,.
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be at6:36 a.in.
.
. Weaftler fom:ut:
TonighLPeriods of rain central
and south. Mostly cloudy with a
chance of !Jill north. Lows from the
upper)Os northeast to the mid 40s
south.
'Tuesday... Periods of rain and a
chlllce of thunderstonns. Rain may
be heavy. Highs from the mid 40s
extreme nor1Jlwest to the upper SOs
sou~l , .. ~·.
· ,
Ezuildecf forecast:
Wedo~...A chance o.£ SIJOW.
Lows 30 W' :)5, Highs from the Mid
30s ilonh.tli:\he lower 40s South.
Thursday.;.A
chance
of
spow...Mainly east. Lows 25 to 30
and highs in the 30s.
,
Friday... A chance of snow nOrtheast. DrY elsewhere. Lows in die 20s.
Highs from the mid 30s northeast to
the mid 40s south.

Harold G
Singer
' •
·In lieu of Howers, memorial contributions for Harold Guy Singer, 72, Long
Bottom, who died Friday,·March 1.5, 1996, may be sent to the Meigs County Hospice in care of Susan Bowers, 100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis Ohio4.5631.

Meig~

announcements.

,GeaeiiiOikaJ Sodety
· The Meigs County Genealogical
Society will meet Saturday at the
Meigs County Museum al noon. The
public is invited.to attend.
Leque slgnups
The Tuppen Plains Youth League
will haye signups ThurSday, 7 10 8
p.m.; and Saturday, 10 a.m. to noon.

school )uesday at 4 p.m. Attendance
is mandatory for.those interested.
Open door session set
State Rep. John Carey will hold an
open door session Friday, 3-4 p,m, at
Middleport Village Hall.

..

Dinner set
An Election Day dinner will be
ft
. ,
held
the Portland-Racine Branch
Ag~5-15boys,and.5-18girls; $20 of thebyReorganized
Oturch of Jesus
fee per child, $30, two or more 10 he
Christ, Latter Day Saints. Serving
paid by check at signup. Parents to
·
,; , , . ·
,
.~e §!:~I photo for program lllld will be from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. and the
, _. .., ,. .,..4' . .
.. .., . ··~ _ , birth.cemfiel!II;JD £01\fl{ll:l.age. ,, _ menu will include soup, sandwiches,
oesseris imd drirills:
'
WASHINGTON (AP)- Defying . House and Senate negotiators last
~ promised presidential veto, Con·
week was unacceptable because it Cheerleader tryouts
Girls who want 10 try out for Auxiliary to meet
,.fCSf. i.-ill send to President Clinton .."pnfairly tilts the legal playing field
FOE Auxiliary will meet at 7:30
albilllimed at limiting Iawsuits,.Sen- to the disadvantage of consumers." cheerleader at Meigs High School for
p.m.
Tuesday.
Clinton said he opposed pulling next year are to meet at the high
atc Majority Whip Trent LOu said ·
St.trk:ay. ., :- ' ' \.
. '•' artificiat &lt;;~~ps on punitive damages
"We arc going to give him a thatmay~. awardedinproductliachance to sign product liability," the bility action. The b'in, he added, "dis·
· ·
Mississippi Repui)Iican said on places state )aw only Whel) that law
Units of the Meigs County Emer- pi tal;
NBOs "Meet the Press." "I clnnot' is more beneficial 10 consumen. h
2:24 p.m. Sunday, Enterprise.
gency Medical Service recorded 14
·believe that he won 'I go with ·some . allows. state laws to remain in effect
when that law is mOR_favorable 10 calls for assistance Saturday and Roben Johnson, VMH.
•legal leform...
SYRACUSE
Sunday, including three transfer calls.
• •Clinton:·· in ' a letter to ~:Gngres­ manufacturers and sellers."
6:39 a.m. Saturday, Seventh
Units
responding
included:
The House and the Senate are
sional leaders Saturday. said the
Street, Larry Hendrix, VMH ;
POMEROY
compromise bill worked 'out by expected to vote as early as this week
II : II a.m. Sunday, Rocksprings
.
'
9:41
a.m.
Saturday,
State
Route
7
on the compromise plan, a venioil
Rehabilitation
Center, VMH.
that is far Ie5s ambitious than past at Tuppen Plains, Florence
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Cartwright, O'Bieness Memorial
attempts at litigation reform.
,
,
8:54
a.m.
Saturday,
Callaway
In their "Contract With America." Hospital ;
I :52 p.m. Saturday, Qookman Road, Ethel Brandt, OBMH:
. The followinsland tntbsfers were House Republicans sought to limit
12:04 p.m. Saturday, Mount Olive
filed ~ith the office of Meigs Coun- punitive dalri~e awards in all civil Road. May Jordan, Holzer Medical
Road,
Elizabeth Banoe, CamdenCenter;
·
ty Recorder Emmogane Hamilton:
lawsuits, including medical malpracClark
Memorial
HospitaL
7:5
I
p.m.
Saturday,
East
Main
. Dee4. Bobby Joe Wolfe 10 Home tice. The bill eoming out of Congress
~llional Bank, Sutton;
specifiClilly with faulty-product Street, Donna Adams, Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
oe.i. ·Eimer L.•and Paula Miller deals
lawsuits.
?:26 p.m. Saturday, Village Green
to Dorpthy M. Roach, Middlepon;
''We are going ,to send that lo the
Apartments,
Edith Rose, VMH.
Deed, Kenneth E. and Dana M. president of ~ United States and he
RUTI.AND
Haning to John E. Blake, Middleport; wants to veto it," LOu said. "EveryVetenns Memorial
10:11 a.m. Satu_!llay, Depot Street,
~.John E. Blake and Dana M. body in Anierica knows we need
Saturday admissions - none.
and JCennelh E. H~nins. Middleport legal reform, both in the criminal area Iva Cremeans, VMH;
Saturday discharges - none.
1:03 p.m. Sunday, Swick Road,
lot; :, 1 •."' .~·
Sunday admissions - none.
and in tlie civil area. and yet ~n we
Right of way, Shirley and Dale send good legislation in thlt area to Robert Swick, Pleasant Valley Hos·
Sunday discharges - none.
Roc~kl. Mandie D. and Kevin J.
Holzer Medkal Center
preside11t tie,.vetoes it."
GrueSer, M~isfa D. and Scott£ Ford. theThe
DiscJwles
March 15 - Mrs.
"Common Sense Collsumer
to ~P)U!ftbus, Southern -Power, Liability Act of 1996." is 'the produ~l
Delbert
Peoples
and daughter, James
It was erroneously reported in
Oranae: ..· l "'"i ...,.••
Casto,
Veronica
Barker,
Vema Chamof a 13-yqr stnlggle pitting business Sunday's Times-Sentinel that
~ Mi~ J. 'lrentlo Rebec- interests against consumer groups employees of Veterans Memorial berlain, Charlotte Newell , ~Obert
ca L. Trent, Sutton.
and trial lawyers.
Hospital pay $270,000 annually in Irons, Mn. Terry McNickle and son,
Business groups contend that such income tax to Pomeroy Village. The · Richard Sines, Ernest Handley.
- ' " -· . . .. ..
.........
' Births - Mr. and Mrs. Cole
I legislation is crucial to stop frivolous ' correct figure is $27,000.
Bartrum,
daughter, Gallipolis; M~.
The
.Sentfuel \ -·lawsuits . · r :
and Mn. Terry Kerr, son, Wellston.

' '

. itait•IOn ac.t•IOn
•t 1lm
faces Presl•dentl"al veto
'LaWSUI

EMS un1"ts record 14.calls

J.and transfers .

Hospital news

Correction

-

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(Continued from Page 1)
weather improves.
Mrs. Chapman talked about coordinaJing - evenings and houn that
businesses.s!*Y; &lt;)pen. As it is no~,
she said, .s~ arc open various
hours' on different evenings:

Am lie ~ ••, .......................41\
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No }!¢ ~m~!.-..
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Theme set

stocks

(lJ8P8 ZU-NI)

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52-.-.

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CELEBRATES 40 YEARS - The Skat•A·Way Roller Rln~ , .
Chell'ter, celebreted Ita 40th anniversary Friday, with a party and · •
busy evening of akatlng. The rink, operated by Bob end Marilyn i '
Trussell .and their family, opened on March 15, 1956, with Mrs
Trussell's parents, the late Marion and Dorothy Cowdery, ae co- ··
operetors. •wa are now seeing four generatlona pasa through the 1 ;
rink, and we really enjoy -lng all the familiae who continue
bringing their children skating," nld Mrs. Trusaetl. The rink Ia : '
open.Wednesday, Friday 8nd saturday even ins-, end ilal10 avail- · •
able for partlee.
·
· •·

State mov~s to simplify
teachers' decertification
CLEVELAND (AP) - The state
has' taken several steps to make it easier to remove teachers accused or
convicted of wrongdoing from the
classroom.
The Ohio Department of Education, which issues teacher certificates,
has improved communications with
prosecutors and school districts. The
depanment also has a full-time investigator to review such cases.
Barbara A. Rogers, hired last year
as the department's first profession' al conduct consultant, investigates
cases and brings teachers to hearings
before the State Board of Education.
The number of revocations, suspensions and application denials rose
from 27 in 1992to .52 in 1995.
Infractions ranged from Hirtatious
; notes, comments and improper touch: ing 10 intercourse, rape and stalking.
i The number.of certificate revocations
1
for sexual misconduct with students
rose 2.5.9 percent during the period.
Rogers attributed the increases 10
more aggressive reporting.
Stale schools Superintend.ent John
M. Goff told The Plain Dealer for a
story today that the increases were
due to better communications with
prosecutors as well as growing into!-

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Discharses March 16 - Mn.
Terry Kerr and son, Mrs. Cole
Bartrum and daughter.
Discharges March 17- Pearlie
McComas, Pamehi Toon, Myrtle Varian.
,
(Published with permission)

..

erance by local districts.
The . depanment has joined a.i '
national network that tracks lh(
names and backgrounds of t.he '
nation's certified teachen.
•

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Boating course set .
The Ohio Depanmenl of Natural· ·•
Resource's Division of Watercraft· '·
will sponsl&gt;r an eight-hour Ohio Safe
Boating Course at Meigs High '~
School Saturday and Su~day from ·
noon to 5 p.m.
Topics covered include required · 1
equipment, alcohol and boaters, Ohio~ 1
boating laws, rules of the road, aids · ~
to navigation, commercial traffic and' '
locking through.
.
Instruction will be given by the; ~
Division of Watercraft at c.ost to cov- '
er instructional material only. A cer- •
tificate will be issued upon success-' ·
ful completion of the course and may" '
be honored by insurance agencies for
a discount on boat insurance.
··~
. Anyone interested · in attending
must register by calling the Division
of Watercraft al614-353-7668, MonJ
day through Fr-iday between 8 a·. m.~·
and 5 p.m.

Who will be the veep?

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(Continued from Page 1)
basically not interested.
',
Pete
Wilson:
Governor
of
key
•·.
convention, keeping Buchanan off
· st~ge, and heading him off by mak- state California.
ing&gt;il clear he has no say."
Others as vice presidential material:
Carroll Campbell : Fonner So uti\
Carolina governor whom Dole owes
big for stopping the Kansan's primary skid at the edge of the political cliff ·
March 2.
Phil Gramm.: Texas senator conservative enough to placate
B~hanan. But Gramm spent millions
in tile primaries and still couldn't
draw flies .
John Kasich: Ohio congressman
praised for his work as bead of House
Budget Committee. But contrast in ·
age (he's 43) could underscore Dole 's
72 years.
Kay Bailey Hutchison : Texas senator popular in her home state, but

-·-·

Daily

afcw

I!m

'

. A lpw presSIIfC system gll[hering
strenglh in Texas will move along a
path J(lirec;lly for Ohio·over the next
lwo 4i!ys. The low pressure is expected to bring possibly heavy rains to
OhiQ (or Tuesday and liOIIIe snow far
Wednesday.
.
. • .Tile winds wilt. llegin. to pick up
~onday ,night ·and into Tuesday.
The rains ,cpuld get heavy.as the
day ~O!Itinues on Tuesday. Thunderilorms are • ·possibility for the south~ half of the state on Tuesday.
o ~ Jowt.'~uesday mom inc wi)I
only be iJ)'the upper. 301 to mid-40s.
tfilll ~mpmtures ~ the faini
aft!l·cloud cover on Tuesday will be
between the mid-40s and upper SOs.
r. Tile ~on! high temperature for
this, date at t11e Columbus weather
~!jon was 77 in 1.903. The recon!
~w. \1!-' 7 in 1941. ~unset today will
be al6:42 p.m. Sunnse Tuesday will
!• , .
,•

i

.

Helen L. Miller,·so. formerly of Langsville, died Sunday, March 17, 1996
in the Sastland Care Cenfer in Columbus.
·
Born A\lg. 18, 191.5 in Willcesville, daughter of the late Bearl and Mary
Hawk Steele, she was a relired employee of the Northwest Local School District and attended the D1nville Church of Christ.
She was a member of the Star Grange 778, Dexter, the Pythian Sisters of
Wilkesville apd the Friendly Neighbors Club of Salem Center.
Survivon include a daughter and son·in-law, Carolyn and John Gardener of Wellston; two sons and daughters-in-law, Richard and Phyllis Miller
of Baltimore~ Ohio, a,nd Ronald and Donna ;Miller of Columbus; five fBRd·
children and four great-grandchildren; a sister and brother-in-law, Arlene and
Roger Chavez of Omaha, Neb:; a brother, Bearl Steele of Richmond, Ind.;
' a special friend, C~rmen Ramsdale, also of Richmond; and three nieces and
a nephew.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Marvin Miller.
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in the Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland, with the Rev. David E. Swaggerty officiating. Burial will follow in Vinton Memorial Park, Vinton. Friends may call at the funeral home Tuesday
from 2-4 and 6-11 p.m.
\
·

•

•:

will continue. One state, New-Hiunp- poll 'repo~ that62 perc.epl of thOse Rollinsford, said, "I b,et 1 could go
shire, has already decided against asked were in favor of the bill, as into any nursing home or.hospital ~~C
assisted suicide. This was a surprise were .52 percent of N~w Hamp- copvince five II\' siJt people that they,,.
to opponents of the idea because New shire's.physicians.
would be better off if they passed ,
The opposing forces ~ad scored on."
Nat Hentoff
· only one triumph at this jloint. When
Another argument by thos&lt; ,
the full House started ciChate, an agjlinst the bill was that pain IJWI•·,;
amendment was proposed that would agement.is far prefe111bte to suicide, ,
Hampshire is l~rgely a libertarilll have defined "suffering'.' as "a state And the . New Hampshire Medical. ~
state. ("Live free or die" is its of severe distress, sen~ '.of penonal Society -- making the logical poin~ :;
bristling motto.)
loss, lack of hope, loss of.eontrol, and. that the measure would make doctors
Last Septembef, a subcommittee impaired quality of life."
,
accessqries to 511icjde •• ,
out ,
of the New Hampshire Judiciuy and
By ' voice vole, that :Jiinendment ag!linst the bill.
..
Family Law Committee votC!' 7-to- was kille4, possibly bec~use legislaMe...While, the American Civil."
I 10 recommend a "death with dig- tors feared a considerabl~ decline in Liberties Union of Aorida is spearnity" bill to the full committee. As the state's population if,.~uch exp1n· headins· a lawsuit in
Beach,::
described by the Manchester Union-· sive language became law.
County Circuit C&lt;iu.t to overturn tl\a1 •
Leader, "the measure would have
After the full debate . in January, state's ban on assisted suicide. 'The
allowed anyone 18 years or older-- the House rejected the .~~lain assisted ACLU's argument is thai batTing' '
diagnosed with a tenninal condition suicide bill by a vote of256-to-90, 1n .assisted suicide is an unconstitution~ '•
•• to request a prescription or med- retrospect, it was the persistent, con- a1 invasion of a terrninllly ill patient's
ication !hat would enable .the patient ~~opposition lhrougbo'!' d!e state · rightiO privncy. (n:natural paitnenhip .;
to control the time, place and manner that d~termined the unexpected · with the ACLU in the Aorida suit is
of death."
result
; the Hemlock Society, ·an ardent right' :,
1
To qualify for assisted suicide, the
The Catholic bishop ,of Manches- . to-die cadre.
'
patient had to be free of psychiatric ter, Leo O'Neil, who h;ls been living
The founder of that society, Derek\ '
disorder or clinic:al depression, and be with a fonn of bone cancer for two Humphry, once told me, "The 'llbors
in a state of "severe and unrelenting years, wrote a letter ttUit was widely began to•open for me 1nd my·ideas"''
suffering." Also he or she would be circulated in the
and beyond: · once a wonderful thing happened ••· :,
required to make an infonned dCci- "I know what seriously ill pepple Roe v. Wade."
·• sion both orally and in a notarized need from society is
and assisThere is more to abortion' than r.
affidaviL
tan~e, not the enco~~menllo. lake . abortion. ' :
.
, i';
In October, the full Judiciary and one s bfe so as to no longer be a b~r- .
Nat Hentotr Is a natlon.Oy :r.
FIIQ\ily L,aw Commillee also den .... The h:gal permission 10 die . .renowaecl authority oa the Fin('!'
smoothed the way toward legalized becomes the moral duty to die."
• A-ndment uc1 Ole rest or the' Bill'
assisted suicide. Around the same
During the actual :debate in the . of' Rights.
..
L,
time, a University of New Hampshire House, Rep. Richard Wasson, R.,.
.• ,
•

,

w.

"¥

.

w·he'n the dev1·1·was a fl.r$1 lady

a=
·

Pcilna
.OOJ.
.; . . ·, •

t

"These. folkS arc still snakebilten
from the collapse of the BTU lax,~ ·
says a senior administration official:
"Its a kind of paralysis in•the face of• ·
remarkable things.''
· ' ' ·"
• Ja&amp;:k Aadenoa aad Michael
Blustelu ue ·.wrltcn .for lJ.ue4,
Fa•re .s)'IICikate_.IJlC. • · b .J.:

. 0one arc the days of retaJlpohllcking m hopes of wmmng voters over
"
1 few at a time. he said. 'Jbere are just too many voten by this point. Lack- · By Joseph Spur
iJii front-runner Bob Dole's money and the Senate majority leader's orga- :
As a veteran of Watergate, a forn~ muscle and tieS'Io the dl)P establishment, Buchlllan does the best mer muckraker and a certified curhe CIJI, ,~. .•
.
"
.
.
mudgeon, I am largely immune to
, "IJ is dictated by the size and area you've got to cover," he said.. "You've political posturing and shen!lnig1ns,
sot ~ Use the media...
' .
. .
.
but I have to confess' this Hillary busi,•Aad 'his shift in llll:tic works more often than not, at least in getting his nen.is beginning to tire my mind. I
1
j~'ucl voi" on the·airwaves. On Pliday, he found him~elf with a dozen shudder to think what injury it might
intenieWs on major broadcast outlets in'Diinois and Michig&amp;IL
.
be wreaking upon the spirits of the
,O.ly Buchllllil re!Diins in the flliC agains.t Dole. and thou&amp;h the race is average citizen.
~y IICttled, biB prinwies ll'e aheld.After next we4's round c!o~ CalHillary Rodham Clinton has been
ifGnia'a jltnt prize. . ·
,
. ·
,
front-page news for mOR than four
Wjtb Dole . starting to foeui on · his conpeUionat mpjllllibillties, , yean. She ,has been denounced as a
is often the onl~ ~-for~ and JlhiltoRI. . . . ,IO c:O:!er. liar by a'United ~llleS senator. She
'A"'
columniSt and hOlt Of CNN's "C~sfire,'' he unclenlaadl ill~! llas been hauled before agrandj~.
~ we[l.
•
.. '
, ·
And now she lias bec:n ~with
• . , •
1
, ~poll standinss .¥!fa 1UI81 of pnmiry tosses have demon~. one of Time ~wne s tndemark
~~ 8\'er ·t&amp;uimply'
the caDdidate on the air doesn 'tlfjnlb lii\C!
~-~Ie covers. It portrays her u
~:...a.
.t ,
.; •. . •
!hi! cle,vi!'scQRsort1co~ 10 earth in
" · '!} J!tt''Oaly .thai; .but
ia illl,lfeMinab: doiliinalina the ~otlll,ne'(I'S, wit!'' . . lnimlll form. to l~re ua 1nto. ~allll's
·~ fofCed .!4l tiCC
televilion market tclevisilin nw:ket ill .*' X , s~,, nme II!IP~•es abe, won t
· d 11 1 IIIII DOW ~O.n!'i~uut ~ of market~:
,. ·' ,
. Y1111 tn die ~e. this pale,_ tOothy wild!, ,.
meanse has lltbldliCII
of commi~ bacten. On the-- ' ~d is thus clearly gwhy of he COIIIiauel to draw larlhad endlaii8ldc ca....... IIUpfi. .ll ·lhilll• ',
,.
,
.
• •.to 810!1'..,... COIDDiiued a the odill f!W Jonjer, .'
The~ behindlhecoveriall!*· · "lilll'ane ·b!ia. Pll." ~ 0110 ~ blclrlll ill lay Ciiy. · · ally an ~xcespt 'frqm a. new book
. ''M;youu extrelailt?"am*lty Jri•iliJ Buchiili111hnt ~· \ ~. "8lo¢ ~port," !JY a-Pulltar .

·'.;

Hel.en L. Miller

·I,

ers.

.

Perry D. Curtis
Perry David Curtis, 83, of Reedsville; died Sunday March 17, 1996atthe.
Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center.
Born March 30, 1912 in Long Bottom, he was the son of die late Alban
Henry and Hazel Mae Chambers Curtis. He was a retired machinist at Walker-Parkersburg. He was a member of the White's Chapel Church, Coolville,
and a member of the International Association of Machinist.
He is survived by his wife of .5.5 years, Sylvia Virginia.Seals Curtis; two
sons, Paul Cunis 'of Pomeroy, Clwles Curtis of Springboro; four daughten,
Virginia Reynolds of Parkersburg, W.Va., Carolyn Bissell of Tuppers Plains,
Marilyn Pooler of Miamisburg, and Sandra MacDonald of Fainnonl, W.Va. ;
18 grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren; and one sister, Marjorie
Brewer of Reedsville.
He was also preceded in death by a brother, Percy Curtis; and one grandson, Terry Cunis. ··
·
·
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in the White Funeral Home, Coolville,
with the Rev. Phil R,idenour officiating. Burial will be i~ the Sand Hill Cemetery, Long Bottom. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 .and 7-9
p.m. Tuesday.

rohmcntal and diplomatic chlllienges ·
facing the worJd."
.
. But -it's the political 'challei.gd
that make m@.ll)' adminislliltiol'l officials feel fatalistic. A Gore spokcsper.&lt;
son points to propesJ-~uch as a 1993',
commitment by the United States IO·
reduce its emissions of greeriliouse .
gases to 1990 levels by 2000. Others''
believe the country will fall far short
of that goai.-and note that· there -arc
only modest allocations in the budge( '
for energy conservation.
.'
There is certainly no stomach· in,
the White House for stronger· mea•
sures, such as a revival of the ·STU
energy tax, which was abandoned in
1993 after a congressional uJ)roar'
The tax, which would have indLiced
con~rvation, still haunts policy mal(-.

,

&gt;

.~ -­

... ~ mO$t sltni~ttona.,t~~vi1:

By Nat Hentoff
According to a recent decision by
the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals,
the "constitutional right to die"
includes the right of physicians to
assist in the suicide of tenninally ill,
mentally competent adults. However,
as for mental competence, the decision makes clear that the states are
not required to set any procedural
safeguards against abuses of assisted
suicide.
The ruling also protects helpful
phannacists, health care workers and
"the loved one who opens the bottle
and places the pills in the patient's
hand."
Once he is free of remaining
charges in Michigan, Dr. Jack
Kevorkian plans to go to California,
have his medical license there reinstated. and ply his trade where he will
be welcome and safe. (This fint full
federal coun of appeal~ suppon for
Kevorkian's calling was issued in San
Francisco.)
.
Whether Kevorkian remains safe
· will ultimately depend on the
Supreme Court, which may find this
issue even more difficult to resolve
than abortion -- although the Ninth
Circuit credited the "powerful prece·,
dent" ofthe high coun's abortion
rights rulings as guiding its "right to
die" decision.
Meanwhile, resistance to allowing
docton to be ~omplices 10 killings

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

._,_

befOR policy' chiiJ8es to~ the the summer of - 1988," says this}; ·
physif.lll climate. Gore believes, soun:e.
·
· ,. ·
,;
aecofdins~o one sowce close to him,
Officillls say OCR~.~' deeply;;
that the fll:;ts are so fir ahead of pub- disturbed by recent swoies lha\ link•:
lie 'perception of the crisis that it global wllllling ~the ri~ in in,fec-:;
"poses 111 almost insurmountable tious diseases. During · his weekly::
public policy conundrum."
Thursday~ mbftllng "environme'!tai::
"I think what OCR is saying is we breakfast" with_administtlllion col-..
have not yet won the battle of public IeaauestOOR often raises the subject:;
undentanding," says this same · and discusses the science. Many sci-:i
source. "In the face '!)f the denial in enlists now believe-~ ·griibal W,arm-::
Congress, it is really J9nd of l_lPintlesS ing has contribtdocJ·, to dlo- rille in•:
to try to move policy: What we'm'usl infectious diseases•'such as Ebola,:;
do is devote ourselves intensively to cholera, hantavirus and malaria. Most ·:
get a deeper public: understanding." infectious · diseases,. ~ s~lld ·by :•
1
OCR has new grist for making that mosquit~s or r*.n'!!.thl\l. !i.IQ~e, in :
public case. The extreme weather of wlriDCr climates.
':. ... .
,
this past. winter, which~~ sno~~all •. "We'reseeingde 0p~ver.a.ain :
records 10 several Amenc1n Cities, 10 die U.S .. 1nd we're sct:Joj.Jilllt of :
hasbeenexhibitAduringsomcofhis moSquito , problems in ·~re&amp;S .we.;
discussions With enri~tal offi- haven't seen them befOR," .says.one ;
cials. Extreme weather .,.. hoi and official who has attended the break- ·
cold, 111et and.dry ~)lll!e a ID&amp;ni· :fast meetings, "It I!IJPC.'P ,.!l)at: thl&gt; :
festalion of the £)qbal wA!I!liag trend. , spread of some of .these eli~ ... is
Referri~g .to )low s;ringes 1111d ., climate related!' .:: '· .. •'- • · :. '
. sludgeon~tCoaslbell;hesin 1988
Th~. CJ.inton , ~m~~i.slratip,q ,~ .
•focused political atteDIIon .on Jill: •.·responded·. by. .ratclietlh8~ •P ..tM .
environment, . one Gore intimal~ 1rhetoric. Gote has renewed his lmviJ
regards this past winter as a godsend. roninental efforts while Secretacy of
"This is !he '96 win~r,equivalen,l of ~tate W~n Ch!ist!lPher;has 1 9j~ :
the nationai,secu'rity slikesob)r callinJ
: the buikbups of heat-trapPing JBSC\

ByJICic~

!i•rch 18, 1.-

ENERGY SAVING SEMINAR
'

Presented By:

Columbus Southern Power/Ohio Power
LHrn How You Cana ·
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• Save Money Whit Heatillg Your Watw. .
Save Money On Uglllilg Your House
• ~ve llo•ey By Folowing Useftd HHSihDidllps
Refreshments Will Be Provided .
Mr.

Patrick O'Neal, Carrier Dlatrlbutor
Charleston, W. V, Mr. Rasco Tackett,
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POVIMI'?
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·

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WIIHea S..lor citizens lklt. ·
.· n '•
.
'
· ••orlal Drive, Powlroy, ,._ ·r ~~ • .

--·-e•••r

'

.

ht.- Marcia 19, 1996
Pre......... ,~ ~&amp;00 •·•·

.
'

...

••

'I

�..

...Sports

-~e Daily .S entinel
' ....

•

In NCAA Division I men's tournament action,

.'
. Pe(le4
Monday, March 18, 1996

S·EC teams stay unbeaten; Cincinnati beats Temple
8y TOll wmtERS
AP 8poiU Wt ltw .
.1Wo things can mske you sick in
1
trus year's NCAA tournament: the
t'lu bug and 'SEC schools.
· The fii'St round of this year's tour~ament has had its 11sual share of
madness. There have been upsets and
mismatches, farewells and close
~Is.

It has also been taken ove~ by
Kentucky, ·Mississippi
State,
Arkansas and Georgia of the SEC
and a virus that kept Utah forward
Keith Van Hom in bed and reduced
both Wake Forest all-American center lim Duncan's playing time and
his weight.
·
'
After Kentocky blitzed ·through
the SEC this year, becoming the first
'
. --:

school to go undefeated in the confe~nce in 40 years, the league was
labeled overrated and soft. But 80 against this year's field; the SEC is
having the last laugh.
" We play in a weak league," Mississippi State coach Rich11rd
Williams said sarcastically. "I ,guess
we' ve gotten some lucky bounces
here in this tournament because our
league is so weak. We have Ken. tucky and the II dwBf!s.
"We've said all along that we've
got an outstanding league," he
added. "I think when you have a
team like Kentucky in your league ...
you can't understand how good they

as

are."
J\(ter a successful weekend in
Indianapolis, the Bulldogs (24-7) 11re
headed back to SEC country for the
next round. They'll mee' Connecticut (32-2) on Friday in Lexington,
Ky., where Kentucky fans will surely back tbeir conference brethren.
Cincinnati (27-4) meets Georgia
Tech (24-11) in the regional's other
game. The Bearcats will also get support at Rupp Arena, which is only
about 60 miles from the Bearcats'
own campus.
· Arkansas (20-12) is a surprising
member of this year's round of 16.
The Ratorbacks won the national
championship in 1994 and were
runners-up to UCLA last year. But
they were in the Top 25 just twice
this season, the last time on Nov. 27.
Now they get a shot at topranked
Massachusetts (33-1). in
BLOCKED - VIllanova's Alvin Williams finds his shot attempt
Atlanta.
In Thursday's other East
blocked by Lc&gt;ulsvUie'• DeJuan Wheat during Sunday's NCAA, M!clsemifinal,
Georgetown (28-7) plays
- ' Regional eeconcf.round game In Milwaukee, where the CardiTexas
Tech
(30-1).
nal• won 68-64. (AP)

"I'm surprised we were able to 1111d after a 26-minute delay tO'clean
" If I were an opposing c~h. I
wouldn't want to play the Razor. get to Minneapolis without him," up the glass the Red Raiders reeled '
backs. because they don't play like Utab co,ach Rick Majerus said. .off tO straisht poi11ts and rolled to
anyone else," Arkansas coach Nolan "Everyone dn our team stepped up their 23rd straight win.
Richardson said. "We've lost some without Keith in there. But .it's no
North Carolina (21-11) failed to
ballgames, but we're good enough to secret we're amuch better club when reach the round of 16 for only the
play anyone. And if we play good he can play. We'll have to have him second time in 16 years.
!.
enough on that night, we can beat to beat 'Kentucl\y."
Georaeto- 73
anyQRC."
.
Wake Forest (25-5) defeated
New Mexico 62
Georgia was runner-up to Ken• Te·xas to cam a game against
Allen Iverson shook off early foul
tucky in the Eastern Division of the Louisville (22-11) in the other Mid- trouble and 5corecJ.. 19. of his 25
SEC this season, but .looked like a west 'regional semifinal in Min- 'points. in the second half aS the
champion in dispatching No. I seed neapolis j)espite playing a flu-weak- Hoyas advanced despite malting just
ened Duncan.
Purdue in the West Regional.
I~ of 31 free throws.
Duncan was held to 13 points by
lbe Bulldogs, who start five
Southeast RegloMI
seniors, lost only to Kentucky and the Longhorns' swanning defense
At Orlanclo, na.
Mississippi State in the last tive and his own fatigue. But he played
ClnC:Iunatl 78, Temple 65
weeks of the regular season. Bulky a team-high 38 minutes and also had
Cincinnati solved · temple's
center Terrell Bell will have his II rebounds ·as the Demon Deacons matchup zone for the fifth til\le in
hands full against Syracuse's talent- beat the LOnghorns 65-62. ·
four seasons to earn a trip t~ the
"There were stretches wbere' I round ·of 16.
ed frontline of John WJilace, Otis ·
·
wanted
to
sit
down
for
a
little
just
Hill and Todd Burgan in the regionDamon Flint scored 22 poinls and
while and stop," he ~d. "But! got Darnell BuJ;ton made three ihreeal semifinalsin Denver.
Bell had his best game of the sea- some rest in the timeo11ts and for the pointers during a 19-2 run a5 the
son against Purdue, recording IS most part I got a pretty good break Bearcats (27-4) opened a ~~~oint
points, · seven blocks and eight at times."
second-half lead. Temple finished the
In-Sunday's second-rOillld play: · season 20-13.
rebounds in the 76-69 win.
.
"He's just starting to learn how to Georgetown defeated New Mexico
Geoqla Techl03
73-62
and
Texas
Tech
shocked
North
play offensively, but defensively
. BGetlllt Colleae 89'
Stephan Marbury, thC nation's
he's as good as anyone," said Geor- Carolina 92' 73 in the East; Cincinnati beat Temple 78-65 and Georgia most heralded freshman, scored a
gia coach Tubby Smith. ·
Kansas (28-4) will play Arizona Tech defeated Boston College 103- season-high 29 Points and dazzled
(23-6) in the West' other semifinlll on 89 in the Southeast; Louisville the Eagles with his dribbling and no- •
stopped Villanova 68-64 and Wske look passes. He played all but the:
Friday.
In Minneapolis; Kentucky (30..2) f'orest beat Texas 6S-62; In the final I :20, adding nine assists, four
will face a Utah leai\1 Thursday that West, Arizona took Iowa 87-73 and steals and had no turnovers. He made
JO_of 12.shots, including 6 of7three- ·,
was forced to play most its first two Kansas routed Santa Clara 76-S L
East
Regional
pomters.
·
games without its star player. Van
•
Midwest
Repoal
At Richmond, VL
•
Hom, a second-team all-American,
•
AtMUwll!ukee
Texas Tech 92
didn't even attend the Utes' first- ·
LoulsvWe 68, VIB1100va 64.
Notth Carolinli 73
.round game with Canisius. He
DeJuan Wheat scored 17 ofhis 19
Darvin Ham sbattcied a backwatched the win from his Dallas
(See TOURNEY~ Page 5):
board with a dunk in the first half,
hotel bed.

Scoreboard
(20-12)
Georgetown (28-7) vs. Te11.as Tech
() 0- 1)

Basketball
NBA standings
Ioua

MllntieOMiion
~

Orllftdo .. :.............. 49
New York .............. 37
MiG~mi ................... 32
Wuhinatoo ........... 30
New Jeney ............ ll
Bolton .................... 2S
Plllladelphia ........... IJ

L &amp;1.

17 .742
26 .S87
n .492
3S
)9
40

51

Southeast Regional

llll

Saturday'• J«&lt;IKI·round action
Connecticut 95 . Eastern Michignn 81
Mississippi Stote 6:\. Prince1on 41

10~
16~

18h
2:\

.462
.:\91

Sunday's strond-rouJKI actkm
CINCINNATI78, Tcrr.,le6S
Georgia Tech 10:\, Boston College 89

23~1

.38S
.20J

J5

7
24
27
28
29
ll
42
47

At Rupp Anna, Lcxlntf;on, Ky • .

.891

.62.~

17
20
21
22
24h
35'1,

.578
.56J
.547
.~

.333
.~4

Cormecricut (32-2) n . Mississippi
Statt C24-7}
CINCINNATI (27-4) vs. Georgia
. Teeb (24-11 )
Sunday, l\-1ardll4 Ontl
At Rupp Arena

• 40~

Stmifin~ l

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mtdwclt DMsion
:r,ailo
' ~ L r.t.
San Anconio ...........4S J 8 . 714

U•alo ..................... 44 20 .688
HoUIIon .................42
DenV« ................. 27
MinnesotD .............. 21
Dollu ............... :..... 21
Yancou~er ............. I I

23
37
43
44
"

.646
.422
.:\28

.n3

.177

Padfk: DMs&amp;on
•-Seanle ................. 49 14 .n8
LA. taters ............ 40 23 .63.5
PhocniJ. .................. 32 33 .492
·Ponloncl .................J I J4 .4n
OoldeoState .......... l9 36 .446
, Sicnmento ........... 28 J5 .444
!./!· c~ ......... 2J 41 .J59

.·~•~'t'C~
playoff·~
' "
~

, ·, •

Midwest Regional

Saturday's sttond~round action

llll

Utnh 73. 1own Stare 67·
Kenrucky 84, Virsinin Tech 60

11
4
181
24h
2.1

Sunday's second•roaJKI action
Lcuisville 68, Vilinnova64
Wake Foren 6S, TeJtas62

33~

Thursday's scmifln1ls
At The Mdrodomt'

Minneapolis, Minn.
Kentucky 00-2) vs. Utah (27-6)
Wake Forest (2S -S) vs. Louisville
122· 11)

9
18
19
11

Salurda)''s nnal
AI The Mdrodomt
S.:mifinol winners

21

26•

,.

West Regional

Slllllnla:y'osc:ores

Saturda)"s sceond-round adion
Georgia 76, Purdue 69

Ne:w York 94, Philltdelphia 88
Cbico,Jo97, New JetWy 9)
Wubinaton 120, Utah 115 (OT}
' Miami 121, HoultOn 97
.. ' San Antonio 119. Atlantm92
Ooklen StAle ~. Milwaukee 94

Syracuse 69, Droei51S '
Sunday second-round atiiGn
Arizonn 87, Iown 7J
KansllS 76, Santa Cl11t1 ~ I

Sunday'sKores

Friday's seminnals
At McNichob An:na, Dtn~rr. ColO.
G~orgio. (2 1-9) vs. Syracuse (26-8)
K111sas {28-4) vs. Ariz:onn (26-6)

Owarlone 103, Pbocni• 102 "

Detroil 91 . Deaver 81
CLEVELAND II!§, Sacramento 14
Jndianil lOS, Toronro 96
MinACIOia 90, V~mCouver 8S
Bosron 101: Nc:w Jersey 106 (2 OT)
Ponlonclll2, Dallas 86
, ' Orl'""" 98, LA. Loken 97

·

l'

t
.

Sunday, M•rch l4 nnal

At McNichols A~na
Semifinal winners

!Ohio women's
~ollege scores

Tonl&amp;bt'oi&amp;IIIU
Denver ar ToroniO, _?p-.m.
Otie~~oat Phil.tdelilbio.. 7:30p.m.

Utah t1 Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.

Saturday's tournaments

Oolden Stale al Sa• A•tonio, 8:30
I p.m.
.
,'· .. LA. C~ppen at SeotUe. 10 p.m.

I;t
r
,
I

1{&lt;

winners

NA.IA Ol~isiorr I qw.rterfin1ls
SE Oklahoma 91 , Centml St. 61
NCAA Division Ill champioJWhlp
Wis.-OsllkO&amp;h 66, Moun1lJDion 50

Tuaday's 'p ma
Vucouvcr 11 New Ieney, ~:30 p.m.
Dettait • ~ 7::\0 p.m.
lldiana • O.Jotte, 7:30/.m.
Oolden Sate al ~lfon, 1 p.m.
S - o at CJUcaao, 8:30p.m.
CLEVELAND 81 D.Jlu, 8:30p.m.
Mi...,ocaac -Ponland, 10 p.m.
Sooni&lt;MLA. Wers.I0:30p.m.

24
Z7
Z8
Jl
Ruffolo ..............27 3l·
On1wa .............. .1~ ~

4
8
8
7
7,
3

86
74
72
M
61

2l7
1m
229
216
201 214
33 161 146

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Cenlrol ut.illoa

=.....:. . .~1~ ~ ~ ~ 1\t
Cllicqo.............. 36 23 II
51. l.ouil ............ 30 27 11
Toronto ............. ZR 31 12
Winnipoa .......... .29 35 5
o.n...................22 Jl12 ·

Di•llion II

Thunday: Orrville (24-1) .v t . Ktincr-

ins A.lter(IS-10).6p.m.
Cambridge (21-4)

'

~• -

dori (24-1 ), 9 p.m.

Ouawa-Gian-

Di"-111
Thundoy: A~bold (23.()) VI . Bed·
ford Cbanel (24-1 ), II a.m.; Sellman
North Adams (25-0) ••· Miami Eut (18·
7),2 p.m.
·
Sat•rdaJ: ChampioDSbip, II a.m.
Dl¥i1kNIIV
Friday: Dnltoo (~·I) VI. Vnn Wen
Lincolnview «25-0), 6 p.m.; CardinJion
(24-.2) n . Sprinsfield.Calholic (22-l), 9
p.m.
S.tanlaJ: aw.iombip. 8:30p.m.

88 277 201

69 146
67 '1ifl
60 1115
57 · I98
57 213
38111

24l

2116

216
261
163

m

•

\

Dlvlllon II
Garfield Heights Trinily .58, Limo
Barh 55

Di&gt;lsloolll
Cincinna.li Wyoming 3!5, Upper Sandu!ky 29 (OT),

T - Bay llllmtfonl, 7 p.m.
Buffalo at Montreal, 7:30p.m.
SanJo.eaa801ton, 7:30p.m.
St Louia 11'Los AnaeJa, 10:30 p.m.

DIYWon IV
Znncsvilk ROICCilUlS 62

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

Buketball ·

.

NEW YORK YANKEES: Optioned
Mike Figa llld 1.,.. Poudo, catcllen; ·
Roben Eenhoorn and Tate Seefried, infielder•; and Matt Luke, out(ipl4tr, to
Cohambu1 of the lnlerulional Leaaue.
Seru Tim Barter and Mau Howard, infitlldcn. and Andy Croahan and Rafael
Qulrico, ~~~· 10 their minor-ln1ue ·
camp. Rc
. Gerald PelT)'. firal baleman-outfielder.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS: Optioned
Tomu Perez, lnfitlder,1o Syracu.e of the
1Mm1111ionol Laaue; Lonelf Robetu. ou•·
fielder, and Roberto Duran, pi1clter, 10
Knoii.Yillc of the Southern l..ca&amp;ue. Rc-uli$ned Ruben Amaro, outfielder, to lheir
m&gt;nor·leope camp.
.

'-...

Tonight's pmea

South Ch:ulesron Soolheastern 77,

Prn'!BUROH PIRATES: Ani,ned

Mou Ruebel, pilcber, to Calgnry o the •
P~ilic Coar Lcoaue. Senr GR:a Cadiet.
·phehet, and Lou Collier, infielder, to their
minorlcapeeamp.
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: Agreed lo
tenna wilh Luis Alioea. infielder.

MILWAUKEE BREWERS : Op·
tic;lftfd Todd Dunn. oulflt.lder, and HeiV)'
Santoa. phcher. to New Orleans of 1hc
American A11oeialion . AnjJned Geoff
Jenkin1, outfielder, An1one Williamion.
Infielder. and Jeff D'Amico, hmie
McAndrew. Jo1e Merccdc• and Mike
Paaqualicchio. pitcher~. ro their minor·

infielder. to New Ha~en ortbc Ea11cm

OttawaS, T~aa,.o
Wllhi"llon l.llll'- I
Toro•to 4, Vancou~er 2
Cbicaao5, N.Y. Ialanden I
Delroil 4, Calgary 2 e
Florido 3, New Ieney 0
Philadelphia 8, San J... 2
Aftlhelm S, St. Louis I
Col6rDdo 8, Edmolllon I

Division I

Columbus Brookhaven S6, Woo11er

B-ball

American..._..e

Nltlooii'COLORADO ROCKIES: Optioned
Mite DeJean , pitcher, to Colorado
Sprinl' of k Pacific Colli ~Aqbe. AI·
111ned Scott Fredric~aon ancf Jamey
Wri,..., phchen, ond ~fi Pe=. iol',.ld·
er 10 Colorado Spriop iand Todd Helton,

Sunday'siiCOres

Saturday's finals

.

l!OUSTON ASTROS: Seol Chri1
Holt, pitcher, Eric Cltristophenon. Jillllll)'
Gonzalez. oncl R..., Loce, ~heft; ond
Bob Abreu af!d Richudr Hidalso, oat·
fielden. to lheir mlnor-leq\IC Cllft'IP for
aui•anmenl. ,
NEW YORK METS: Traded Luia AI·
m1o o.nd Pele Walker, pirchen, II;) the SAR
Dreao Padres for Roberto Pcl1Jini. fanl
bueman, IUld Sc:ott Adair, pitcher. Oplioned Clvia Nobbolz, ond Derek Wall,..,
pilchera, Dnd Alex ~. oulfielder, lo
Norfolk of the lnteraadonol leaaue al\d
Htttor Ramirez. pitcher, to Bin&amp;homton

NIUonallrie'W Aeprf,MM
CHICAGO BULLS : Acrivoted Bill ·.
Wenninaton. ccntcr, from lhc injured liat.
PIIICed JIISOn Carrey. forward, on the injured li11.
' .
• ,... · .
•

'

Footbllll
_,_._...

.

.

DENVER 'BRONCOS: ST1ned Erik
defenaiw: bact.

Mc:~•llan,

Dear Daily Sentinel Reader,
The Thursday, March 14
Sentinel included a letter to the
editor by John Musser
endorsing my opponent for
County Engineer. Mr. Musser
idenlified himself as my friend
and neighbor. I believe in
fairness to me and ' my '
campaign he should, also,
have . been identified as
treasurer of Bob Eason's 1996
campaign committee (a
po,ltion he, also, held in 1988
and 1992).
Sincerely,
Eugene Triplett
Paid for by Eugene Triplett,

106 Holly Lane, Ponieroy, qJIIO

Tuada:y's pDIH

Hockey
NHL standings

p.m

·Atlantic DiYision
~ I. I fJa.

86
81
81
75
74
74
41

193
200
181
163
110
212
26l

Edmon~on at ~. Y. Ruam, 7:30
OttaWll at floods, 7:10p.m.
Toronro al Detroit, 7:30p.m.

p.m

p.111.

Auhcim II WutinJ!Oil, 7:10p.m.
Colorodoat V~, IO:JOp.m.

Sunday'stournaments

Elect
EUGENE

NCAA. Wat Rqion~l-teeond round

Penn S1 86, Kent S9

I

Ohio H.S. boys'
tournament action

'. men's
- tournament
.•

'

Saturdafs regloual finals
~.

Dlvlllon I
Cia. LaSalle 6.l , Ci11. Oak Hill1 S6
Lakewood St. EdwDrd .S~. Cle.
Olenvillc49
Tol. Sl.lohn"all. 'WAllh Jauit 41
We~terville N. SO, ZaDeiYille o47

-II

Carnmdp 70, Bel loire 63
Kenrrina A"" 68, Col. Whehtooel6
OtTVille 68,
v NSJ 65

ae.

Vote

Re-elect.·

Robert
H.
.
. "Bob"
.

~ 1• ;

Eason ·

Meigs CountY

'r. ENGINEER • ·

BATTER IES

STRUTS

SIIOCKS

TRIPLETT
•
(Republican for Malga County Engineer)
Cnuf..qts ofPo•ror H'wh School
·
and Ohio Univer•ity
·'
l.ifefllflcl and pr0f:licil¥f EnBineer and Surveyor
. ·
~ill l:Wil E~ring
"
25
)'flan of CIVIL ENCINEERINC E•perien.ce
)I
I
'', 7 year• "'"" QDOT, 11 ytl4l'l •tllitla Crown City M~ and
l.
)·
1J yeara of~"'~ e~riftB arad.•urwyin8·
.Republican Central Commineemarafrom Pomeroy Zrid Ward
, ... C~ ofelae MeiB• County Republican Party
.
1
for aile pOll hrlo year•
F~r and me~r oft~ Mew. Ooumy Cellhlry c&amp;ab

"·

PI! lor by

The Dtllly Sentinel• Page 5 ·

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

.

. LAS VEGAS (AP)
Mike
'l)tson paur&gt;ec! on the ring apron imd,
ne11rly bursting with pride, gestured •
, with both hands 11 the green WBC
· heavyweight title belt around his
waist.
Six tumultuous years since he last
: held the heavyweight title and just

.

3S6 days after his release from an
Indiana prison, the most feared fight·
er 'of his time was 1 champion once .
agam.
Thrashing Frank Bruno may have
been easier for Tyson than sorting
out the emotions from the latest
climb on his roller-coaster run
through life.

·"Less than a yw 110 I was in the
cell," Tyson said. "II was~ treat·
·ment. It's really difficult for me to
explain it. Oive me a few days, a
week or two, then maybe I can
explain it."
Tyson captured the title Sat\ll'day
night in his famili11r style of wild, JIJ.
out aggression, never lettins Bruno

11et into the fi!lht before fift4Jiy stopping the British champion SO seconds inro the third round.
It was impressive enough for a
fighter who had 110ne only four
rounds since his release from prison,
but not enduiJh to satisfy Ty$0n's
toughest critic.
"I'm never satisfied with my per· ·
formance," he said Sunday. "I just
want to do better. I'm always searchina for perfectiol)."
With Nation of Islam leader Louis
Farrakhan among the I 6,783 packed
into the MOM Orand Hotel ~rena to
watch his bid for his first title since
being· released from prison, Tyson
fell to his hands and knees after stopping Bruno.
•:1 was just giving praise to Allah
for putting me in position to be a
champion again," said 'l)tson, who
converted to Islam while in prison.
Tyson gneeted Farrakhan with a
raised fist at a press conference Sunday, where he and promoter Don
King kept repotters waiting for 2 .
• ho~. I0 minutes before 5howing up
· to tJik abput Tyson's future plans.
Bruno, meanwhile, was already
.on his way back to England, though
gracious as ever in defeat.
"Tyson is better than I thought,"
Bruno said.
Though a court action on behalf
of former champion Lennox Lewis
could alter his plans, Tyson is tentatively scheduled to fight WBA cham·
weight title bout In La Vega, whel'lly.on need- pion Bruce Seldon next, possibly on
ed .... than 2 112 roundll! to rwclal\1' the chllm- July 13. Then, he would like to take
plon'• bell. (AP)
on the IBF champion, Francois
Bo~ to unify all three titles.

,

I

DETHRONES CHAMPION- Mike Ty1011 (left)

"llrw one of hla jiUnCIIH In the direction of Frink
' Bruno during s.turdtty night'• WBC heavy-

On baseball's 1$pring training seen~,

" We ' ve got .both champions
standing by waitiRJ to fight," King
said. "All three heavyweight champions will be on the next card. Mike
will be fighting one and the other
will be fighting another opponent.
Then the two winners will meet. "
A crowd of curious tourists waited outside the MOM ~rena Sunday
to get a glimpse of Tyson, who
arrived with his large entourage of
bodyguards and followers in several different Mercedes and BMWs.
Tyson's stint in prison seems
only to have magnified his celebrity, as evidenced by the $60 million
he has earned since his release and
the crowds that gather to set him.
Even some of the so-called journalists packed into the press conference in a tent outside the arena
couldn't wail to get on Tyson's
bandwagon.
"Mike, we know no one can beat
you in even roo years, .. began one
questioner.
Certainly, Seldon and Botha don 't
appear capable of beating Tyson,
whose raw power and hand speed
against Bruno more than.made up for
a lack of timing in some of his
exchanges.
Lewis and Riddick Bowe 11re the
logical quality opponents for Tyson,
bul-King made it clear that the object
would be to unify the title before tak·
ing on either of the · two former
champions.
"We will fight all the champions,
then we will fight all the contenders
and pretenders," King blustered.
Though Bruno was the champion

.

thanks 10 bis wln Sept. 2 over Oliv;
er McCall. few gave him much of f.
cilllnce to do any more against Tysoa,
than in their fmt fight seven yearl•
ago. Tyson stopped him in the fifdJ•
round then to retain his undisputed
heavyweight title.
The odds this time ·had been q
hiiJh as 10-1 before drapping before
fight time as money poured in on
Bruno from some of an estimated
S,OOO British fans who traveled bert
for the fight.
By the time a seemingly ·relaxed'
and confident Tyson landed his firs!
good riiJht hand about 43 seconc:U ·
into the fight, th~uiJh, it was clear.
that money put on Bruno was not,
money wisely spent.
:•
Tyson battered Bruno and cut hint:
over the left eye late in the f.nt rouncf:
in a clash of heads. Bruno spent
of the fight uying desperately to hoicl•
on, drawing a penalty from referc4:
Mills Lane in th~ second round. •:
The end came in classic Tyso~;
style shortly into the third JOUn4•
when he ducked under a Bruno hooJS:
and threw a right to the body th~ :
caused Bruno to il~P•;
Rising 11p, Tyson snapped iiJ•
quick succession a short hook to
bead, a hook to Bruno's right eye,
right to his chin and another hook IQ •
the side of his head.
:;
Bruno desperately tried to put.a ;
bearhug on Tyson, who responded •
·by launching a right uppercut to th(:
jaw and another to the side of hi•:
head. A third vicious uppercut fin• :
ished off the eight-punch sequence; :
lifting Bruno off his feet and into th( •
ropes.
•:

the:

a:

..

.

.

.

there with some kind of purp&lt;ise."
By The Asfoclated Preu
pitching coach) pulled me aside and can began the recovery in which
Neagle's statistics last season said, 'Put this one in the memory
Denny Neagle has done nothing
New York scored six runs over the
to dispel the long,held notion that we~n 't show-stopping - 13-9, 3.34 bank.' I ~ill. too. Someday I'll ~ •las' three innings. The rally bailed
left-handed pitchers have a tenden- . ERA. only four victories after the struggling in St. Louis or Philly, and out starter David Cone, who gave up
All-Star game - but for a pitcher I'll remember bow I got people out four runs on eiiJht hits in five innings.
cy to be a bit ftsky.
.
• Nor docs he plan to mske any who had never before finished above in 'spring training even when I didTigen (a) 8
.500, it was a breakthrough year.
changes.
n't have my best stuff."
Blue Jays (ss) 7 (10)
" I thought he was one of the best
. ~ "When I go back home, the best
Bn~ves 12, Dodgen 2 •
At Lakeland, Fla., Tony Oark had
At Vero Beach, Fla., Atlanta hit two homers and three RB!s as
cfJmpliment I get is when one of my pitchers in the league,'-says manag!!1£ents' friends. say, '!just saw little er Jim Leyland. "But the worst five home runs- including a grand Detroit pounded out 18 hits. Mark
J?enny - yes, they still call me lit· thing for him would be to think he~s slam by backup catcher Aldo Peco- Lewis went 3-for-S, including the
rilli - and Greg Maddux held the one-out single .which drove in Jeff
rile Denny - and he's still a goofy, got it made."
Dodgers to one run on three hits in TIM:kett with the winning run off
So far, that hasn't happened.
, wacky kid,"' Neagle says. "Anyway,
.l.y mom would slap me if I ever
Pitching on the fourth anniversary six innings. The four-time Cy Young Tony Castillo in the lOth.
c~anged."
of the 1992 trade for John Smiley award winner struck out seven Tigen(u)9
. I But it was that persona that led that sent him to Pittsburgh, Neagle Mike Piazza three times - and
lndiaDs (11) '
n\any to question if Neagle ever ·gave Up one run on three bits 'OVer walked none.
At
Winter
Haven, Fla., designat1
· Orioles 9, Meta 6
ould be a consistent winner in the live innings Sunday in the Pirates' 5ed hitter Eddie Williams hit two of
ajor leagues. Even the Pittsburgh 1exhibition victory over the Phillies
At Fort Lauderdale, Fla., left~- Detroit's five home runs, and the rest
der Davic;l Wells gave up f®r
e of the Tigers beat a Oeveland split
ales wondered if Neagle was too at Clearwater, Fla.
ghty - even too off-the-wall - to
Backed by Mark Johnson's two- runs in six innings, but still w in squad.
ach the success long predicted for run homer, Neagle became the first his fii'St appearance since March 8
Blue Jays (ss) I
m.
Cardlnals 0 (10)
·'Pittsburgh starter this spring to last for Baltimore. Bobby Btlnilla had
( Then he finally learned to !felax five innings.
four of Baltimore's 15 hits, includAt Dunedin, Fla., Erik Hanson
i!Dd to rely on a changeup thai might
ing
a
homer
and
three
RBis.
Wells
gave up just one hit in seven innings
"It was a lesson for mi. ·because
nbl be Greg Maddux -caliber bUt still I went out there without my good had missed his last scheduled start and the rest of the Blue Jays beat St.
·~· one of the best in the National
stuff and still pitched well," Neag!e · after being hospitJiized fqr a rapid Louis in I0 innings.
..eague.
Rangen 4, 1\rins (11) 2
said. "I didn't have good control and heartbeat earlier this week. He
: "I found out it was true what they I didn't have my real good change- allowed five runs on 10 hits.
At Port Charlotte, Fla., Warren
told me all those years," Neagle sai!f. up, but I had a good sinker.
Yankees 7, White Sox 4
Newson's two-run homer in the sev"This gll1lle can be easy if you relax ,
At
Sarasota,
Fla.,
a
two-run
douenth
inning proved decisive as Texas
"After a while, I felt maybe I was
if. you throw strikes and if you go out fooling peaple, but Ray (Miller, the ble in the seventh by Mariano Dun- beat a Minnesota split squad.

~
~

Labo.n te wios BeUSouth/Opryland USA 320
NASHVH.LE. Tenn. (~P) Bobby La!!onte played a patient
waiting game Supilay, and it paid off
with a victory in the BellSouth/Opryland USA 320 NASCAR Busch
Grand· National stock c11r race at
Nashville Speedway USA.
Labonte, driving a Chevrolet,
started 2Sth and avoided the spins
and accidents that slowed the race
Jitb 17 cautions for 94laps. He took
r lead for the first and only time on'
1 2?2. and he!d it the rest or the
ay in th~ 320-lap race on the .S96ll)ile tract(.
·
I Labonte beat NASCAR Busch
Sfries point leader David Green, also

driving a Chevrolet, by .10 seconds,
and won $21,685. Phil Parsons finishCd third; with Terry Labonte,
Bobbfs older brother, fourth and
&lt;;urtis Markham fifth.
'"It was a race that you just had to
take your time and be patient," said
Labonte, a regular on the NASCAR
Winston Cup Series. "A lot of guys
had problems out there today and
you· had to really be c11reful."
Polesitter Sterling Marlin led the
race on two occasions, but was
eliminated by mechllJlical problems
and finished 22nd. Kenny Wallace,
who l~d 133 laps, fell victim. to a
faulty ignition system and finished
28th.
'

ZRJ, 52.445.
27. (29)CIIuclt8owo. Ponlond. 0.... Ford. 2.58.
$2,435.
,.
.
28. (2) Keamy Wlllo&lt;e. St. Loull. Ford. 2.57 .
ipirioa, $2,4l.S.
29. (19) Mi&lt;lllelWIIIrip,Dwenaboro. Ky., Fonl.

$13,160.
4. I14) 1Crr)' Uboote. Corpu• Clvioti. Te• ..
Cllevn&gt;let, 320, $7 ,5ti.
S. (8) Cunis M.-tham.

FmlericbburJ.

Va.,

Pontile, 320, $9,060.
6. (I 0) Joe Nemeclldt, Lakellttd, Fla., Chevoolet320. S5.185.
7. (21) GleM Alleo, Jr.. Cincinnoll, Otewolet,
]20, S6.93S.
8. (22l Diek Trickle. WiKOnsin Rapid&amp;. Wi1.•
Chevrolet, 320, $3,68.1 .
9 (13)J...,.y Moyfidd. o-.boro. Ky., Ford,

235.30.
·· $1.415.
(4)·Mil:e
MclouPlio, W...,loo, N.Y..
Cllevrolel, 234, -~ SS.64.1.
31. (31) Tonmy HDOUtoo, Hiekoty, N.C.. font.
230, ..,;.. ro~~uno. SZ.lll. •
32. 1271 S-viC . . _ , ...........y. Ind.. Ford.
202, 1Cdde11t, $2.375.
33. (13) Mil:e .WIIloce. St. Louia. Font. 187.
occi-. Sl.l65.
34. (30) lelll'lrnl, Clorlsville, Tenn. Chevrolet, 185,1Cdcleal. S5.6Ctl.
.
35. (12) 1 - Keller, a.-ville, S.C. ClleVIOIet, 174. . - . , . ss.~:
)6. (38) Jolutay RUtllley, Willl!&lt;&gt;o-Salem, N.C.,
ClleV&lt;Oiel, 129,1Cdden~ Sl,570.
37. (40) tleMia Seutt. Newton, N.C.. Ford. 94,
... $3.)10.
38. (lO}.Morlt
Qweruboro, Ky., Chevrolet, 1 9 . - . ·$2.)20.
39. (32) .lmy N-, Dubury, c...... Chevrolet, 19. ICddatt. S2.3:11l
40. (39) Jell 0..0. OWeolboro, KJ,, Chevrolel, 19, - . 13.320.

320,$J,m.

10. (28) _ , Doau, Clliclc•. a.......... 310,
S3.68S.
II . (6) Larry Pe.-son, SplrUnbW'J. S.C.,
Cllenolet. 320, $7,150.
12. (16) Elton Sawyer, Cbtt·pnH Va., Ford.
320. $2.900.
13. (9) Doua Heveron, Uverpool, N.Y.. Ford.
319.$4,700.
14. (23) Hermie Sodler, Emporio, Va., Chevrolet, 319,$4,550.
ll. (3) Oood Unle. Spokone, W..h .. Pontioc,
317. $7.02.5.
16. ()5) Ji01 Down. Pon1lttd. Ore.. Otevrolet,
316. $4,2.50.
17. (!4)1qe Beooey, "'*-lb.Me .• CIIevrolet, 316, $4,100.
18. ll6l Kmo ~ She-. Vt.. a......
"'· 314, $3,600.
.
19. (7) R...... Catnlo.l.oi!Qeek. W. ~.­
tile, 313. $3,550.
20. 1371 Mike Dilloo. Wek:ome, N.C.. 0.......
let, 310, $l,82.5.
21. (17) Rudy LaJoie, No.walk, Conn.,
lltmolet, 301. IC&lt;ideo~ $5,750.
22. (l) SlettioJ t.tortio, Colombio, Teno., Poo·
tile. 295, overttelliaa. S3.285.
.
23. (5) Todd Bodine,
N.Y.. Chevrolot, 292, occident, $;!.47l.
24. (16) Jell Fuller, Aullu(o, Mou .• Cltevrolet,
288, 13,465.
2.5. (15) n111 fedewo. Hoi~ Mieb.• Fonl. 116.

·

•

AI Haines City, Fla., Dave Berg'S',
two-out grand slam in the eighth
inning off Dave Fleming lifted Flori.;:
da over a Kansas City split-squad. : •
t:
Astros 7, Reds 2
. At Plant City, Fla., Jerry Goff hit ~
•two of Houston's four solo homers '
and added a two-run double .
:
Indians (ss) 4
l
Marlins (ss) 3
:
At Ponce, Puerto Rico, Julio :
Franco's two-run double hiiJhlighted •
Cleveland's four-run third inning
that hfted the rest of the Indians over ,
the.other Florida squad.

!

Rodman may face suspension
after incident in Nets' game
Thorn said he would review the
NEW YORK (AP) - Dennis
Rodman of the Chicago Bulls Rod- · tapes before making a decision. He
man faced,a certain suspension by did not return a phone call Sunday.
the NBA today after head-butting a
referee, stripping his shirt off, knocking over a water cooler and shouting
obscenities after he was ejected in
Chicago's victory at New Jersey.
If that happens. the loss of Rod·
man will be a further blow to the
Bulls, who are already without Scot·
tie Pippen for the rest of the week
due to a variety of ailments.
The Bulls play tonight at
Philadelphia, but it's likely Rodman
wi II miss that game and perhaps
more . Rodman's tirade Saturday
night was witnessed by NBA vice
·president of operations Rod Thorn,
lhe official who hands out suspensions.
"Obviously, he didn't leave the
court in a timely manner," Thorn
said Saturday night. "If ·anybody
thinks they 're going to disrupt our
game, they've got another thing
coming."
Rodman , who contends the referees around the league treat him
·unfairly, has behaved better this seal son than in years past. But he finalj ly lost his cool against the Nets.

.__
nme: 2:57:27.
MqjoofY!awy: .IOICC&lt;llld.
CautioD Flop: IH .. 94llpl.
Lade-,..: 14-aapdri,...
.
Lop Lcodon: Morlil 1·1, K. Walloce 9· 100,
Morlthom 101, D. 0.... IOl·IOl, Morlin 106-118,
Na•,.cbelt 119-153, K. Wlllo&lt;e 154-l7l, Bodine
176.
177-108, K. Wllllce 209-2211, Bo4i•229,T. c..-231l-236, Hewroo237-2.57, BodiM 2.58·291. B. Llboote 292·310.
Saie. Poi .. StandiiJII: I . D. Oltlll!a, 782; 2. B.
lAboota, 7:13; 3. Morthom. 659:4. T. Llboaoe. 6!18:
618; 1. Coml&gt;a. 581; 8.#1.
5. LaJoie. 62L 6.
l'ltnb, 576: 9. Allen. $64; 10. Mort Martin, 549. tiJ&gt;.

M-

r-.

•

VOTE FOR

EDWARD

w.

DURST
MEIGS COUNTY

TREASURER

M.ary Po~ell 00

.

'
• EXPERIENCE IN FINANCES WITH 26 YEARS
BANKING EXPERIENCE
•
:·
• SAUSBURY TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE FOR PAST i.
'.
•'
SIX YEARS.
i I
'.
• U.S. ARMY VETERAN
•l
• BUSINESS OWNER
•
• MEMBER OF BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHI~IS1rl !·~
•FAMILY MAN

,"i

'Santa Oua's Steve Nuh, went
scoreless in the fii'St half and had just
seven poi~~U on I~f-11 shootiRJ .
after scorins 28 in a first-round win
over Mayland.
,.

Expos 6, Red Sox (ss) 3
At West Palm Beach, Fla., newly
acquired outfielder Sherman Oban- ·
do had three hits to lead Montreal
over a Boston split squad.
Twins (ss) 8
Red Sox (ss) 1
At Fort Myers, Fla.,· Chuck
Knoblauch doubled twice and Rich
Robertson allowed four hits in five
innings as the rest of the Minnesota
players beat the remainder of the Red
Sox.
Marlins (ss) 7
Royals (ss) 3

a.-

Here are the results Sunday of the
BeiiSouth-Opryland
USA 320
(Contil)ued &amp;om Page 4)
NASCAR Busch Grand National
points in the~ half aPd helped
stock car race al .S96-mile Nashville ·
slow down Wildcat aii-Ameiican i Speedw~y USA with startig position
Kerry Kitdes. Kittles finished with : in p~renthcses, driver tilnd home·
20 points, sev~n in the second hJif, ' town, type car; laps completed, rea·
and the Wildcats (26-7) finished their son out. if any, money won and win·
second straight season disappointed. ne,'s average speed in miles per
Chettlo"'.
They were eliminated in the firSt . hour:
·
rqund last year.
I. ill) Bolll&gt;y Llboaoe, Coopoa Chriati, Tu ..
Cltevrolet, 320, S21.68l.,64.487 mph.
West Reponal
j .1(ll) O.vicl~ .O.....boto. Ky. ChevroAt Tempe, Ariz.
let, 3711. $17,610. '
..., eo4. $3.480.
.
Arizona 87,1owa 73
'3. (24) Pbll P - . lletnlil. O.Cm&gt;let, 320.
16. (18) Rud)' Ponlt, a-.ille. S.C.. Fonl.
Arizona Jlllld6 seven three-point· 1
crs in the ftrst 14 112 minu~ and 1
outran Iowa frOm the opening tip. I '
Vote for
Six of the third-soedcd Wildcats .
scored in double figures, led by Ben
DaVis' 17 points,
Chris ·'JGnssbury ·, 16 points led .
Cowa (23-9).
.
Metge County Commlnloner
"·-· 76,. Saata Can 51
i
. Racf LaFrentz hit his fii'St seven
·
on March 19, 1996
shots and scored 19poin" as the Jay- ·
"Praearvatlon, Develqpment, and ProiPillty
haWks TCaChcil the roond of 16 for
the fourth straight year. LaPrentz fin.
for Tomorrow"
ilhed 9-.for-'10 from the tield. Jerod
will.not have tiny other job"
Haase &lt;ldded 12 poinu for the Jay11
hawki. who held Santa Cln,to 2S ·

petcent shooting.

.I

lllOA:

·:...Pirates'.
Ne.
a
g·
l
e
looking
to
build
on
1995
breakthrough
.

NCAA' tourney...

N.Y. lalanders al Philadelphia, 7:30

NCAA East Retioaal-nnt round
OHIO ST. 97. Memphi• 7~
To~o 65, Mis.ciuippi Slt~

"'. t
'.·NCAA Divison I ·

I

:~ysqil d.efeats Bruno in third round to capture WBC title

~

TRIPLETT

Tuesday's pmes

!lE liA

241
227
2)2
181
195
203
1911

Edmnnron 11 N.Y. Ranaat. 7:30p.m.
Ottawa at Floridrt, ·'BO p.m.
Toronto II Detroit, 7:30p.m.
N.Y. hlaftden at Philadelphia, 7:30
Anaheim at: WuhilllfOR. 7:30p.m.
ColorAdo a1 Vancoum, 10:30 p.m.

EASTERN CONFERENCE
N.Y. Rnnaera ..... 36 19 14
Aoridn ............... J6 24 9
Philodelphio ....... J4 21 13
New Ieney ........ 321611
WruhiDJIOn ....... 33 28 . 8
T - Boy ........ 3227 10
N.Y. lllonden .... 20 40 8

187
1119
116
1l2
231

Saturday's ~Cores
Pihabur&amp;h o4. N.Y. lslandcn 2
Hontonll. Buffalo I
PIUIIdelphia 3. Wianipe,; 0
Montml4. N.Y. Ronaen l
EdmonlOD S. Loa Anaeles 2

Ohio H.S. girls'
state tournaments

IwD

2.19
189
'1ifl
2.13
l6 194

PodlkDlvllloa

Colorado .......... .39 21 10
Voncouver ....... :n Z9 15
Coli")' ..............28 30 II
Antheim ............17 36 6
Edmonton .........15 37 7
Lol Angelea .......11 J5 15
Sonlote .......... l649 6
y-clinched divilioh tille
•..cJinched playoff spol

SaturdaJ: Championship, 2 p.m.

46

113
71
68
63

of the Eutcm ~...ntuc:.. Auianed Joe Au•llllio and Rict Reed. pitchers, an4 Knin
Flora, Ja)' P11)1on. and Gary Thurman,
outfieldeR, 10 Norfolk . Released Oar~
Vrio, outfielder. ·

Transactions

308
ZZZ
2:14
200

State tournament
Ac St. John Anna, c.lumbul l
Dhul... l
Frklay: Toledo 51. John '&amp; (2l-J) v&amp;.
Westerville North 09·7), II a.m.
.
'
CinciDilllll La Salle (18·6) vs . Lakewood Sl. Edwonl (21-4). 2 p.m.
SaturdiJ: Olampionship, .S p.m

Friday's seminnals

Cmlnl DIYilion

II.·Chiuao .............. S7
li&gt;dillm .................. 40
Detroil ........ ,.. ,. ...o.. .37
ClEVELAND ....... 36
AtlMta ................... 35
Cllorlone ............. ...n
Mllwauket ..... ,....... 21 •
Toronlo .................. l6

Pi ..burah ........ AI
Mon..al ............ 33
Boslon .......... ..... .32
Hanford ............. 29

Dlvlolonlll
Archbold 69, Genoa~
Olanel 69, Campbell Me-Al 47
Mlnmi E. 60, Venailte. 56
N. Adams 72. Mohern 66

Saturda)''l nnal
A.l The Geor&amp;ia Dome
Semifinal winners

EASTERN CONFERENCE

---

Ottawa-Ginndorf7.S, Col. Easl 57

18, 1188

. ';By TIM DAHLBERG

~

·

rnday, ~~~~

Worfdnr tQ' your Coupty Conunirsioner
Will be my tmlx~ioiJ; ."

.

Pllid tor by Cll'ldldlle, Edwald W.
31340 Noble Summl Rd.; 1"1 ;t'l!ll Oil, Ohio 8112~-l'll

~

Rep;lbllcoa ""f I 1 hktror bJ .., .d1 t t Mlr)o PoweiiBl Riloe&lt; VIew Dr. Pooillo07,

'

'

,,

..

''

�P.omeroy • Middleport, Ohio

JJ~. The

..

••

,

Ben(J

.

1]te.
·
D.~y·
.
S.
~
*t:·:
·e
.
.
.
.
..

.

•

•

•

''

.

)ol,

0

.

.

.,

..'
: · ~,llalrah·

•

.

•

..

•

'

•

•

•

'

'

"

.w ·hen grandparents becom·e parents"

Beat of the Bend ...

... 8y Ed ~;'
~ SecUrity

.. ..

. .. .pUents serving IS P-renu "over !hi! ..child may lhlin bli ablo to qUalify for l~lions to his or her support.

Scores Point

.
IISlClecade.
.
.
benefits if certain conditioonre ,net. .. If the Jllllldchild was born dunng
by Bob Hoeflich
. M...., In APten!a
.Whatever the reason, mom and :· Generally, the bjoloJical parents of · i the one-year period, the J11111C1parent
·
I've ~ently noticec! the reality of •. more grandparents find lhemselve,s . the child must be ·deceUed or dis- · · must have lived with and prqvi!led Ill
, something I was \"e.'!iously ,a,wart of . usumiDg the role uf ,parent$. And . ·abled, or the grandchild must be · least one-half of the chil4's:suppor\
•
. . _ _....._ · only through stabsiicaJiq)OitS··a lot" when• lhil· tl.ppe11s, it's helpful to · legally adopled by the grandp!l!'ent. . for subslal,ltillly ill of the pmod.fronl
; a-ntJy in a column
the of their favOrite oewsmeri and they of grandmas and grandpas are gelling . knoW that ~ Secwity may b,e .: In addition, the 8fllldchild mUll . the ate of birth to ~ month" ~
: qulllion:
felt they knew yoo quite well. . . . a second go-aroond at . pa,cnting .. aiJie to belp with the fillllicial bulden. . have begun living with the grad- srandpalent became entitled to ben·
:. ·"Does anyone write letters ·any·
"I flave •saved every paper i' · young childi"eil. ·
· Ifa ~is deceased ordra,wiag·m. parent before age 18 and received at · efiiS.
·
· . :
received..the goodies I called them. . According to the ·U.S. Census · iliilityorrltiremembenefits;lbechil- ·. ·least one lialf of his or her support · · The eraDdchikhna~ quali~ fo(
• more?"
~ Well, indeed. I did find out that They .w~ the, ones called ~ a . Bure~u,, more !"~II 3 !ftiUion of . dre11111&amp;y que'lity for btriefiiS ~that ' ftom. the pandparcn! for lbe"year .. benefits under these Cii'cuinstinc~s;
:~people dO~ I'll "cit to you !at· VacabOn ; 'Bob s Mad as .Heck', ~ .· · ~men~ a s 7~ lllllbon children now . . ~· eami!IP.~;. If ~ s n01 . ·. before the .mOnth · ~ gtandp~rent even if her or she is i step-JnindChild.''
• • 011 !hal. Risht aow I need to con· ~v~ly Yeste~~·; 'People Persons l •. live wt~ .\hetr ~dl,lii'Cnts.
• ·. the~ :then. SOct_al Secunty may . ~~«:arne _entitl~ to rettremettt or~~- .However, if the grandparents- an;
~
6a Mrs. &lt;:baioac Hoover, 3S ,A Little! Town : ':leva; ~y Never'; · . ~tal workers Jl'Omttb teen preg:. ': ~~~ dle· lflllldpareat as the .; llbj,lity IRIURIICCI IJiilefiiS Of d1ed. already receiving b.enefjts, they
·. =~~~v.e.!!~-rG~~~-~~; who is Blue INIIs and B1g Shitt . Bet even . nan~tes.-~~ and alcohol ~se. and . pueDl . .for benefn purposel. .
.' ~.the naiunl parent(s) of diechild would need to adopt the ~hild for it
,
"""" •••..,.
you have forsotten ·some of these. · ; other soctal.tlp as .the mam R8!;0DS . ,· Whe11 the · grandparent rebm~, mUst not 1be making regular ~ontri- to qualify for benefits.
· ;: · lrl !lpite of the fact that Mrs.
"'Communi~ate and Relate' was · for the-dramatic illcrease in -~ . become~ Qbled, or dies, the grand- .. · ·
· ·
_;,&gt;- .
·
·
,
·lbMriiOI:ItSCimeofhavinglostmy one of my vecy, favorites. l "really · ·
· ·- · . ·
· ·
• . ·.
.. . .· :" : · . . · · .. ' ."
· •·
.
.
.

.

'1.00 off any X-large 18"

..
ptzza

TO!)ch Tone ~hone
Requinld

(61~) 645 8434

..... . . ......"""-.......
•

I

'

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

•

•

-.~

; RemodeUng
: Stop 4t Compare
I FREE ESTIMATES
985-4473 '
·' .

Maintenance
•Odd jobe per requnt
No uwn Too utge
or Too Sm.,/

PAIIIisiuJG NISSAN INC.
tBZ7 MurdodtA¥1.
Pubnbtua, wv 21101

Plan Ahtad, Call Tod•yl
742·2803 - -

Monday ~oup Wednesday
wleoupon

•Newttomee

: •COmplet•

Must be 18yrs.

R. L. HOLLON

949-2512

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

'.

.

U11111tone • Gravel

CHEAPER BATES

Dirt• Sand

WElDING &amp; fiiRICITION

985-4422
Chester, Ohio

$20.00/HI.

7

31111 mo.

..

.

W. VIRGINIA

w._

. Poet's

. .:. :earner
'

~.O.daool!n~I&gt;- .
, . It was lbe middle of the n1ght
, 1 And the UIJC had come
'· · . , I·reached for my flashlight
,i A9d 1 small \OY gun .. ·
~ mooruhOne a scary
. • Milly bl.
'• LiJt:e a ~ght over
. ~ · houie !If doom.
&gt; 'l't·Jflll was ~ld
a«weea my toes
~ the hair on my bead
hilf

&gt;

·-~:" MANLEY'S ,:~,,,
-.,... RECYCLING CENTER -,,,,

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

-~ELECT-­

JOHN

'BLAETTNAR
·
..
Commissioner .
· Meigs County

,rrlllt-,.. •_..a

Mon.·Sat. 11).6

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

_ _ _ _ _ ___.
...

to IJIJcU up

,----------------__,

Sel'\"n"'ltl S.E. Ohio
· Toll Frte1.aoo.a72-5117

Wtll Vlrglnll
441114111

ftl CO. RICYCLIII

:

ATTENTION SPORTS
FANS •
Let your lingers do the
walking to the apona

Announces Customer Appreciation
Days during the Month of March
Do your pert for our tnvlrvnmtnt. Bring ue your
Ilium. cans 111c1 othtr recycablea 1nd regleter to

··

1~~ Notice

.

Not'ICI TO IIDDiRS
STAll Of OHIO
DIIPM'nlllfT OF

Hne. Finance Stocks,
NHL, NBA, NFL, Polnl

lltAIIIPORT~TION

Spreads, Olily .
HOJ"08COil4!.

; · ;Cat'!!!altue, Dlllo

:.,....,...
"lfConlt 111

.·,«:oft NUtnlier ..._
~
.

"1·900-770.0700 ~t

: U ..· ~ COimtACT
• JII'IIIlll~ll

: S.

Ext. 3685

. $2.99 per min. Must.be
16 y..S. Setv·U
11111 645 8434

wiU)It

110cep : from ' all pre·
quallllell. likltlera 11 tile
Otllet: If CoiiiiiCII,· R 111 of,.. ..Oitlo Dep&amp;llll-

.qalt
!~ ·~·
I

••

011141, 1111111 , 11:1111

: - - · h 2 1 , 1. . .

llltproll-·-

lOr
I Altllni;J;aaHI&amp;, In:
Hoolllllfl, ·

Mette,., Monroe, Morgen,
"oltl•• Vlntoa ·end
•w.JI..... CDUIIIIM,Ohlo
tor Ill•·· haprovlng · ot
Motion&amp; .ATH-7-Q.ODO elld

"The dele .eel tor
Colllpltllon · of· .lhl&amp; wort
....... - Mllortllln . .
bidding propo•t. • Pleaa
alld lplclflce*"• are on
ftlt In Ute Depert111Ht of

.

.W,.,W...,

Howard Extavalin

Snn.NJahts
Luckey Ball $..100.00
with 21 players or
more Raises $5.00 ea.
week. Pay IKCOrdlng to
tbe Number of players

Umeetont

949~2044

Bulldozing and
Backhot
Servlc11
.Houu Sites and

UUIIUea

of Earth Work
-All Kinds
992·3838

949-2038

In Memory or
Marvin Little
wbo pes•ed away

SUMEIIIIAGES
IINNIIIG

March 18, 1989
Upright and Just Ia
all of his ways ·
· Faithful and true to
tilt end of:hls days
In Slleac:e he ·
· suffered, In
patience he bore
1111 God caUed him

Howard L WrlteMI

12 Se.lalona For

ROOFIMG
NEW-REPAIR

$20.00

Gutters

' · 18 S.alona For

. $25.00
Open 1:00 to 3:00
4:30 to 10:00 P.M.
Owner~:

Pelt a Dll1111

Hendltcka
PIIOI11: 81~24117

Downa~

Gutter Cleaning
Pllln.tlng
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2188

.

!i11W4TFN

.21!11 mo. pd.

Y(MJNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE.

home to suffer no
JDOre.

..._.. Addition•
-NtwQa ,

Wire

•IIIJ*'Ior a Exterior
Painting
AIIO COIICrtle Warll:
(f.AEE I;STIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG HI
112-t215

'

·-

Pomeroy, Ohio

··-· .. - - ,•

R·
., . Dl
. , •.··~

LINDA'S
.
PAINTING
1m1111-1m11ot

.................
....................
,.,,
...
nn••IO'a.,
FREE ESTIMATES

UVIIDIBICU
614-fll-4110
Ml/1-

Uve Payi:hlcs

· Melga' Cou(lty
·,· C9mm1,etoner ·
...reb ~i .. , . . ,

..--

~ futl tlmt ........~.....

.

Hll~··~llld

'

••

I

, i .J ,. .... - . ·

•••

··"" ~"' "·I ,..,.

'r

1 .

' .

•

....

• ,.. ..... •

'

.

win • hlndc1afltd aolld walnut and Ctdllr llllltd
bllaket chest valued at $800 to be given IIWIY
Mln:h 30th. Trt. Co. Recycling open 7 dllya • week

to ..rva·you.

~

N Mon.•Frl; 9-3 Sat. &amp; aun.

==J

Lcicllttd corner of

=~S~I~.R~t~.1~43~&amp;~7~,~=~~61~4-~992~·~5~11~4~.

1 on 1 •
1·900·255-0300
ext. 5488
$3.99 per min:
.Mll!lt be 1&amp;yn;l.
Touch· tone phone
required.

Serv-U
'(619) 645-8434

STAR
GUITAR
lello•• for
PlaH, Dr•••
&amp;

Galt•

005

Person•!!I

Prince so Video New Sltlpmeritj ltf
Adult Video 's 814~4.4G;~~.O.L
1380 Eaatern Avenue, Galllpa!il,
Open Sunday's Now Noon 1'1ll
P.M.

.30 Announcements
Unda's CustOm Cakea-'birltlde.1!'.
anniversarjas. weddlnil, '&amp;Pt41i1
occasioris, 614--?47...024. . 1

· 40

e··

Giveaway •··

1 Black, 1 Brown, 1 \'ear
Dogs, Garman Shepherd. Hu
Col~e. Had ·Shot' Neild 'Roo

,

Roam. Good With Children . 61*·

«8·0652.

• "" "'I

10 Week Old Mal1 Cocker SPfn,
iel Puppies, No Papers, Go'dff
Home Only, Call An~tlme,. 61-4 -

4-41 · 1415.

.

..
.4

Border Collie To Glveawayrt•
Months Old, 61-4-388-94~,

N

Little
House
Do.g
Piltl
Dachshoundl Chihuahua. Fen)~~

I

lladle l'llaeli Dealer

&amp;altars
&amp; Up
Also lCCIIIOrfes
614 367 0302

• •

·

I

· ears, Rewa.O, 614-742·2118.
..
· Lost- large white dog wilh larM\
. black spots, black ea rs, rna~~
Tanners Run W"icinit~. 814 - 94~
2770.
. '' •l

Lost: Black And Tan Ro twe iler
Male, Answers To Cody, Los!JJ&amp;

The Vicinily 01 Graham Scha~:~l
Road. 61&lt;·367· 7244 After 3•01!
P.M. 0.. 61&lt;t-448-8358
-t·•

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

.

Pomeroy, ·
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

I

Sl!le

Public
and AuctiOn
Boggs Auction Service, 614-44677'5lJ .
Rick Pearson Auc:rion Company

full time auctioneer, Complete
service .
l icensed
'1 88 ,0hio &amp; Watt Virginie, -304773-5785 0.. 304-773-Sol47•
auction

Finders of hard tQ
find auto parte.

(UIIIISiolllloW Rlttl)

WICKS
HAULING

-

fill

. Limestone,

Pldt.., ......

....... ,.., ....lsi
14-992-4025

Gravel, Sand,

Top Soli, Fill Dirt
61~-3470
Need DlniCtlon?
Love
Bualnela
Family Matters

~aw Hom11 • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Raplacem~tnt Windows

Allow Your
Peraonll Psychic to

Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTI.TES

AuletYou
NIOO Ill 8800
I!Xt.1277

814-992-7843
Sunday Calls)
•

Loot· female D~ahound. Swick
Rd., 8 jr~ old, brown wiln black l1ll

FV&amp;VW..

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

..

Lost and Found '

tilrl

,.,., AniWit
"'- (3041 615-TIJSl

Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs. ·
We dig basementa, put In aeptlc
syatems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call949-2512

985-41IMI

60

da~ before lf\.e ad is to r~
Sund8j edidcn · 2 00 p.m Fridl!l;i
Mondaj edllton . 10 00 am s~

Trackhoe, Dozer, Blckhoe, Dump Truck,

.
Free Ellfmlllw
35 Vent Exp.
R1I8IOIIIble R8l88

-~

, . ,._ Wafw
.ltiA....,

Oh. 45771

...UONAB1 1 11AD1

e;t.O

To Good Home : 2 Puppies,
male Brendal In Color Will ~ ­
. Small House Dogs, 6 14-1450~1 .
~

S.W.&amp;Dnil
3 Stnirt

a.

992-2825

Racine,

Redwood Treated F,ence,

ALL Yard Sales Mull Be PatdV•
DEADLINE 2•00 P·ll'

J.D. Dri.lling Company
P.O. Box 587

Mixed Beagle puppy, 6mos. o~
good wlchildren, inside per o ~
304-875-450.
•d

~;:=~~~;;;::;~ . the
'r.

... ~~~ firl.&amp; l

Your favorite artist
on rape or CD
106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

country home, good wtchll!tr~~
304-875-o\571 .
.
'L

70

'79

New At .,.,... lleetronies

James E. Dlddle-

•

Eleqt Republican

"i

Trucking-

In

·T-niil•Po~~

I

Racine American
Leglon#602

•Eitctrlcal
T,himblng
•Rooting
.

'

I.NNO UtJCEr.1 ENTS

4oj6,1075.

Dresses
Levi's

IEJINITTS.

I

: Dl!**lrof~
(I) 11,11; lTC
.

'I

·t'J

has been Fixed, 614·22256.j!'79ii'

Prom

I

b

Mason, WV

614-446-4462

.Time For_
A .Change -

·for III.MIIIII Co.u.mY

FAX 773-5861

Sliver Bridge Plaza

"'

. .·

between 8 a.m.-8 p.m.
Mon. · Sal.

Asbabelle's

"I siio11gly $apport af!dl smk1 Hosp/ltilfor M•igs Cou11ty."

.

Call 992-4025

. ) 11

Male Rottweiler, free to g~f

.,.....,o.iation.

'

"No Job Too Large or Too Small"
Ph. 173-9173

pe,;emant~

Paljl For by the C&amp;ndldate John
Blaatlllal0318 Wright Sl.. Pomeroy, OhiO

Railings, Patio Furniture, Fireplace
items, Plantar hangers, Trellises &amp; lois ol other stuff!!

108 Pomero Street

vartout, lfl varloua Vllegee,
lty epptylng polyee.tar

Public NOtice

· Steps ·Stairs,

We will worlt within your budget

wrtoue, Blla Route 7 &amp;lid

Sentinel Classified•

Pick-up discarded
washers, dryers,
hot water tanks,
furnaces, batteries
and any metal
materials.

Authorized AQA Dlslributor
• Welding Suppilee • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
· Services • Sleel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
. • Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental

'

Jell,.,.,...,.. ...,-,., ...•••

· Police officer kills himself at rock con·cert

ij .• ·'..

FREE .

...a.

' '\

TRUCKING

THORNTON

As Yot.r hl·tl•e ·com•lssloMr I will" find.
110111ts for Milas
hy seeking applyllt fw
State, Fe.eral f011C1atlo• fu1ds.- have the
·bowleclge and txptrl~•ce as MGytr of R••••· ·~yt
.... very Sll«fssfll.l'vt·travtlecl fr011
D.Ci. ·ro Toro1to,
I how State
RepreseatltiYis, Senators, Co•gress•ea,
gtvtner,Mtt
Vkt·hesWelfof·U.S.
lut
cllltdloa for RCctss Is the Wp I get
..... Gocl.

F.... ~.

LillY'S
LIRCIII

Lowe~~t Priee~~.

ROIE-T BISSELl
CONSTRUmOI
i •GaragH

Ext. 6057
$2.991ler min.

SetV·U

H2·5535

Nissan Headqulltel'l

.

TI'N

1-900-nS-0100

lllomt:,. " "

Wlndclw8, GII'Nifl.

alld eomm&amp;rCial)
•Shrubbery

Danny &amp; f'eggy Brlcldtl •
614-742·2193
.

Give Yourself The
8p9rts Edge Sports
Entertainment llnell

Doon,

FREE ESniiATES

•Trtt Trlmmlnt
-Mowtng (Rnldentllll

.. ... ....... .u-----.....r

.

WindoM, ISlaM\ . ' ~I

lneullllolt. ~

•Painting

PARKERSBURG

Middleport. Ohio 45780

. '

VlnJI

•Rooting

' (614) 367-o266 .

'-lsaw·•

.for Frw .Eetlmatn

.

•Remodtlln(J
•Siding

FN6 Eat/mate•

32124 Happy Hollow. Rd.

A•iiOIIeble
lnow... ·lxjleltenced
CalwaYMNtft

Olllpllloln: -~ ......,
1:00 LID. • 3:30
Ylnyllo Alum.

•Addition•
•NiwGII'Ia.l

PorttMe

Siding, ADOIIng, P.Uoe

537 IIRVJUI ,...,.,.o;
..DDLEPORr IIIIZ-:Z71J

c.-~·--~·
•NiwH~

SAWMILL

f.Jo~~~~~
Addlllona .

me

com
· mu•nI•ty ca1en· d·a

WE HAVE A· l TOP SOIL FOR SALE

H&amp;H

HouM ltapelr ..
Remodeling
Kllchenlo._

112-4405

.'

WIIIDinc:la •

NEFF·ltEMoDiLING
' SERVIa

ry·

VOTE
JEFF.

u.,.

Serv-U (619) 645- 843&lt;4

• )lillie

&lt;¥&gt; -

c.u-..7747
w...
·lllllr . Pill

.

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Years Experience • Insured
Owner: Ronnie Jonea
Chnhlre,Oh

' &amp; Water
Umestone, Sind, Gr8Vel, Coal

....., Plcllne .

TouCh·Tone Phone
. Req.
.

l$t~~~~r::~ :r.::'l~E~~~~~-- Clinton '.may.atm~ost root:· for. ~Mass Thursda.y'-~
·ousJ.t: · . · · .

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING

rriin. Must be fB yrs

*

of IMimor has gone with the . laughing so mu~h !forgot I was feel·
· ·· · ·.- · ·. .: ·
· . · . · · .. ;. . ..
. · , 7 ·•
,
,
.
.
·
·
.
,
,
:•
: ~lid !l,llt as !face the charge, I reaJ. ins bad. Itheit sentaCOj1y-to a friend·· ·. BOSTON (AP) - As if there . cess ~ly - per!lips .too seri·
"It's oae of the · few tangible his 1994 bestseller "Coup1ebood.'' i
:- . "hmmm ..could be". 1 thought .it who had been in an auto accident: it' · w~n't,enoughptessurecoaching the
thinpyou~llo,"Reiser-~ys in the ·
:
..
•
1
. · ~alii! around. 1 know 1 think f!Jn· ..·helped_Her too. .
. ·.
· nabon s top-~b.d baslretball team, .. · ' I,!Mu~ .t;~er loses a pme, he ~arc~ 2~ 1ssue of
Gwde. "It's.
BANGOR, M:aine (AP} - ~
:•J~r-aiJeai lt .iuJr_doesn't come off that . ''T'IIeli. "roit Gotta Ha~e ·Heart' )Was now John Cabpan
. has world pea~ to .· · ~~ .lato tllo.~n,~· It .e~~ ~ hke,, 0~, .I se_e Y~ ~Jem- now. first installment of Sttphen. Ki!ll'~
. "•Y· To be perfectly honest I have just perfect "far Valen!iilc~s Day. r .worry abo~t·
. . . .
. . .... ·~-..IIC'1fi!Y, ~IliOn _111111. ' I y~ re Stlbllg IJlA pi I~ of unwan~ seriali?.ed·novel,"Tile Green ~ile". is
:~recently in conversations that looked vainly for one for Easter but: ·. Cal1p.an, ~oach Dl the Umvers1ty ·. ~·.Ill) almost gom~ to pull for toXIC w~.~-I ·cl!!. come ~~help du~ ·out in. stores this "!o~th. , ·
,· .
.
.. ,
J;very, month, !I new ms)I)J,men(
.•my linea" go unacknowledged as there was none to be found. Then 1. ·. of Massac~. g&lt;_&gt;t a pbone call · .UM~; OD '"lursdaYJUSt. to .~P you,out.
lhuuah they wen~n'tsaid. Friends and . thought well, maybe. yoli wert all . ~ · and some friendly m1nd games ~n- ·something badfromhapp,enmsln the
'When you ft!JIISt ~g to him will follow. King has Slid he ·won't
·fleiabbors have become immune to • decked out in your Sunday Bcst-~d ' : day from President Clinton,. who · · world."
·.
.
~oo doa•qusf'go, 'Oh, ¥OO're beau· ,, · have thl story finis!lecl when thilfiis~
them, heard 'em all too many times, . were just enjoying Easter services- :· Wtshed htm luck when the Mmute·
.
tiful,"' ReiSer says. "You so, 'Who ·installment, :·The .two Dead €llrls,"1
: 1i1f l,'m not spCaking them very dis· or, pedJaps, you and the Easter Bun- men play the ':fniversity of Arkansas . :. ~YORK
Pa~l Reis- is beautiful~ Who's •_beautiful '*!y?' reaches store _shelves.
, ·
"The fcehng was that Stephen]
' illlclly. At aay rate, may I slwe Mrs. ny and .lots of little ~hildren were on J;bursday. m the NCAA touma- e~ ts busy c~llecbng mlllenal,_ and And th1s kid's lookin~ at you ltke.
· Hoover's letter with you? It was writ· busy gathering eggs to put in bright· : menL .
. diapers, for his new boOk on bemg a 'What, is e.verything a quiz?'"
King was probably
only autho~
•ueveralweeksagoduringthe''big ly colored baskets. But 1 ~ly . The Razorbac_ks' No. I fan, call· dad. "
,.
Reiser~entlysignedaSSmillion who could pull tliis kind of ihin~
!IJlzzard". Mrs. Hoover will be 80 missedanEastercolumn.Maybeyou mg_from Wash.tngton, n~ted ~at · The M_adAboutYoo star says dealtownteth_ebook,afollow-upto
Coadnuedon(181e10
~
C!)lne July and following 8fC her corncould bless us with bne this Easter. · White House national secunty advls· eve~ changmg his infant son Ezra can
ineats:
"So, you see, Mr. Bob, yoo were er ~thony Lake, ~ Massac~usetts be lnerary f~er for the, boOk he
.. "Dear Mr. Bob:
helpins people not only in your llfCa, native, takes the Mmutemen s suc- plans to call Parenthood. . .
"I'm writing to complain!!!
but lJCople far away-that you knew
:. "What has hjlppeftC(,i to your WOO· nothing ab_out! I live here in 01\iQ .
r
a.rful sense of humor?
now and sbll read your column f111th, .
,
·
.
.
I'·
.
. ".How can I face every day fully evecy Sunday, even if it isn ~ ·
The Community Calendar is pub· T.HU
• RSDAY
.
"SMILINO","ifyou continue to write funny like it uscid to be.
llprillg liule announcements? I know
"I hope you haven't lost your won· lished as a·free service to non-prof·
. POMEROY .. Meigs Ministerial
tl!eiO are impottant to those you write derful sense of humor and your great it groups wishing to announce meet· Association Lenten services, Grace
For Meigs County
"- and boo bu 5h ks the
"ft 0 f pread' .
ing and special events. The calendar Episcopal Church, Rev. Dawn Spaid,,.
a t- t, uc • Y8fC Jl . ·s
mg JOY around .
Is. not designed to promote sales or
Co,;,awner
jdat no fun ... .I want something to
"I hope you will be inspired again· fund raisers of any type. Items are ing, speaker.
IMILE about I do hope you·are not -and don't be mad 'cause rm com- printed as space permits and cannot
111....
.
plaining...
be
teed
"fi
·, "I'm from that era you-did write
. "DO KEEP SMll.ING AND I'LL
guaran
to run aspect IC numtlbout·-1 mean, age-wise that is! I To TRY!"
her of days.
i~w
show you how much your ~olumns
And, Mrs. .Hoover now that I reaJ.
County
&amp;
COUNTY MAPS
~ apprecia~. my daughter would
ize that I apparently do have a prob:- MONDAY
POMEROY .. Special meeting of
clip them out of your local newspa- lem with the humor, I'll check it out
IN STA'fE BOOK
&amp;
I
A book . coiltalltbtJ aU of Well
. . and send tl\em to me each week. and see if rejuvenation is possible or the Meigs County Publi~ Library
Vlrp'o sa couty mapa II available.
·l lived in Florida then, and I so maybe I can even get a new sense of Board will be held at I p.m. Monday Printod
on lkU btch double ..,....d
looked forward to receiving your humor. After all, some folks say to review plans.(or the Racine branch papo, Mch
COIIDI)' hu a-~~· map.
SMILE colu.,-.ns. And, sometimes I "then:'s nothing money can't buy". I'll library.
Tbe ·book contalu 1 4 4 The lllto"o 34,242 tn11o1 of i'OIIda ore
~- make others smile with your see about that.
·
Ca1ada~
RACINE - MegaSJq11~meeting, ohown iD dotall. TOWDI, diJM and
lqlby news. Pll'licularly if a fr,iend
Hopefully, by Easter 111-bave lite
villa... 11r1 iadu.. and locatod, and
llld a really bad day, or, perhaps, if , situation in hand so that I can produce 7 p.m. Monday, at Southern High th.,..io
t~e
much addilioaaliDIOI'IIIIIIioa. To
~had Ill eapecially sadday.·lhope
that Easter column, but ifldon'ijust School.
or11.•
Vil"liaia eo.u.&amp;7 Map book.
tiMt;Prtsile~t &amp;
fOU don't mind, but I always told remember that I did say I thi.nk
nad 114.86 lPrlco lacludoe clollvvyl.
RACINE .. Southern Local VISA "1"1 Maot.Carilucoplld.
diem who wrote the columas'and that "You're a Honey of.a Bunny". Mean·
•Y . .
Building Committee will answer
Make chec:ka payable to
.,~lived in Ohio. You got to be one ._time, do keep smilinlli·
questions concerning the Southern
62~~.;::.
Local Bond Issue Monday from 7-9
L)'lldo• Stolloa. WI 531144 ,
·
p.m. at the high school. Those with
. ......
,. nit lor
a.....,
; : NBWYORK(AP}-An off-duly
The two were standing behind any questions tan stop by or call . Othor "'""available: AR. FL. IN.
Peldlorbythec.ldldllt, Fllth·Snet. Racine.
P.,lice officer fired a fatal gunshot Gargan wheri he fired the shot; illl
r--~K~Y~.M::I.~N:C.~O=H~,=PA~.~SC:·~a~nd~T~N~.-~~~~~;~~~~~·~=~·~=======~
lato!iiJheld during alood rock-con- three were hit by the same bullet, 949-2.611 or 949·2669.
cilrt lltlliR• also wotindiilg the wives · police said. Anderson w&amp;S hit in the
LETART .. Letart Township
cif 1 band member and the band's stomach and leg. Wormworth was hit Trustees, 6 p.m. Monday, at the KIT 'N' CARLYLE~ by Larry Wrlaht
in the hand.
road maftiler. ··'
'Qffice building.
Poli~e ~ouldn't immediately .say
· ; ,Officer Christopher Gargan was
-..diiiJ a conceit Saturday nijht by what prompted the action by Gargan, TUESDAY
• lrisb·A.meriCJJ~ band Blac;k 47 who attended the ~oncert with anothPOMEROY .. FOE Auxiliary
~ -lie pulled his departme~t-issuc• er off-duty offtcer and tltat offi~er's meeting Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
·
91J1111 pistol from a holster and fired, girlfriend.
"We
do
believe
alcohol
played
a
polic:t said.
' '
' 'QIIpa. 2.2, died about an hour lat· . pan in this, to what extent we are not WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -· Alzheimers and
sure," Deputy Commissioner Tom
« " I hOspital.
.
.
Related
Disorder Support Group will
Kelly
said.
· June Anderson,l43, wife of Black
meet
Wednesday,
I to-3 p.m. adt the
'
Gargan
joined
the
force
in
Febru· 47'1 siager,~guitarist Larry Kirwan,
Senior
Citizens
Center.
Topic WJII-1"1
lad Sharoa Wormworth, 36, wife of , ary 1994 and was transferred Friday
on
keeping
humor
in
c111~_j)!dig.
J!ie bind•• roid manager, were in sta- from a traffic task force to a Man·
hattan precinct:
.
Me conditioa Sunday at a hospital.
' .He flied the gun during a loud . MIDDLEPORT .. Missionary
band encore, "Rockin' the Bronx." service at Wesleyan Bible .Holiness
"It was the end of .the show and Church, 75 Pearl Street, Middleport,
everybody was really up and going Wednesday, March 20, 7:30 p.m.
wild at the time," Kirwan said. "I'd with David and Pam Ferrell who are
r,
,
,
say 95 percent of the people' in there going to Alaska as missionaries.
had no idea a shot had been' fired."
Public in.vited.

POMEROY, OHIO
Truh Fltmovll • Commercii! or RHidlnllal ·
Septic T1nk1 Cllll)ld l PortableTollttl R•,ttd.
D•!ly, Meidy • monthly rtnllll rtttl.

1·9oo-n6..o1 oo
Ext. _7830 $2.99 per

'

JONES' TREE SERVICE

•

Spreads and much
molll.

SIIITI'S
COISIRUCnOI

•

90

wanted to Buy .

Anliquea , collectables, estates
·Riverine Antiques, Run Moore'

· owner. 61+992·2528.

·

Clean late Made{ Cars Or
Trucks, 199~ Models Qr Newer
i Buick Pontiac, 1000 t&lt;aat:
Gallipolis.

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

Monday, llll'ch 18, 1

The Dally S.nlinefe ,_... •

••,•

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

NBA Cro1.word Puzzle.
40 ........ drink
42 ..... In llledrld.
43 ·, ._ol

ACROSS

PHU.LIP

1 Rip

ALDER

5 Unllol-

=.\'"

8 Aetroneut Slayton

IIHd corptl &amp; tilt conlrteto" to

c;w blda on labor. Con-.:1 Terry

Spencer. Laurolan~ Apta., Now

- · WV. 304-882-3151 .
·.
Need Uature Raspon&amp;iblt Baby·

&amp;iner, Must Be t8 Vrs·. Or Olektr,

Must Have Relerencaa. 814-31111-

S473.

•

NEEDED IIIIIEDIATlV
APVT. SECRETARY
ITELEMAI&lt;I(ffiR
,,

rr..

com:

ProfoiiiONit
s.nnco,
ptoto Trot Car•. Bucktt Truck
Strvlet ·50 Ft Rtoch, Slimp Re-

moval. Free E1tlmat.. l In·
..,,.,.., 2-4 Hr. Enw- Sonllco -Call And Savtl No TrH Too
Big Or Too Smalll Biawall, Ohio.
814 381 0818, 814-317· 7010.
Sun Valley Nuroery -~chool .
Chlklcart M·F Bam-5:30pm Agn
2-K, Young School -Ago During
Sum-. 3 Deya per Wttk Mini·
,...m814-+48-3857.

1-----------&amp;.cr.o.ma,
111115 14170 CIIYIOn 3
2 llolho, CA. All Electno. Uncfer,
pinning, ~rllng, EM!ondecl warranty, Other E1traal .18,500, Allor
8 P.ll. 814-~-&amp;115.
'
1885 Skyline, 14x70, three bod·
room. one bath. $ 18,500, 814·

9112-38111 .
Flrll time bupra. E·Z financing . 2
&amp; 2 beclrooma. Around $200/mo.
Call Ru11 Murdock 1· 800· 251 ·

5070.

PI••

211cfrm. 11111 .. total electric. applla-.o ~rnitMd, l.,ndry 10!1111

·630

Appltcadonl avaltoblt 11: Village
Grttn Ap"- M ' or can 814-11112·
3711 . Eotl

:;::.::..:.:.::.:.:.:::---:---- · 1 pure pOIIad Charolals bull,
16m0t. old. 1 llmoutlnt bull. 304-

2br., unfurnlahtd, ntwfy painltd,

,Chii!Oiala Bullo For Salt, Pur:
··bri d, Polll&lt;f, And Rtglaltrtd
. l!l..r· For Calving E111, 614·3711-

937-2123.

••ao

21144. s~.•~.om .

8~198.

Will Pafnl Your Holnt tritttlor Or
EIIOrlor, 114-245-8814. •
Will all wllh ~lcjorly Qr hondi·
cappect, IIOht cleaning, daya a
- . 814-742-2140, Pot

s

FINANCIAL

. Bualneas

210

limited OHerl 1996 doublewide,

pa~mentl

after 4yNra. 304-755·

,OpportuhHy

fod aiMra lor aale, hanging
$1.25lbi.IIH42-2274.

B Room Apartmen~ Troth Paid,
NO PETS, On 5154 Near Porter,
S14-S8S-1100.

llttch St, Mldclltpatt. 2btdloom,
!urnltlltd ,_,..,~ u • • paid.
Oepoalt &amp; relerencea . 304 ~882·

2!181l.

Quarter Horte Hal Betn
. """'""., 814-3~2820.

' rroroughbrod Golding 14 Yoara.
. 1o.2 Hando, Eng. Wool Trail, E,ll·
.porllnced Rklor, 11,000 Or Trade
.'· Fat Smallor ltotlt, 814al-8285.

Mobile Homo
Storm, Eacalltnt
Fifth Avenue, GOod
Chtapi814-378-IIOII , ·

•to a 4 a

18118 314 Ton Dodge Ponti~
311, ,..,., $1,400, 8'1+2!it-8854;
614-251! 8329
•.
18av Nlaoan 414 AMtFM

'

•A 4
tA 8 6

Radl~

•K 6 5

s-·

•

V-e, two door, atandard, air~

At~lfo h'ay, firot cuutno. &amp;quare crulae, suri roOf, loaded, mutt
baiH, neo.ter Wit, Tuppet'l Piai"'· ' "· 814·1148-2481 ~~~~r 5pm ~

81)1'-887-8853;

:II lire.,

NeVer' wet, r.ound b~lia hay for

alt. 304-882~77.

~· balta of

C&amp;rol Klng'a Flnetl StyUng s.ton,

· 81~3553.

SoeiOng IIUainna f'lrlntt. EKCII·
lent Location, Vt'ry Good Butl·
_., ~. 814-387-0612.

000&lt;1 mt..r hay.
' .

. .

TRAN SPORTATION

CClHTRoL"'IUl CASHIISave

br lht•fu"ro or makt mot91or lho
P'tttnll Ca11'7~6-438-22731or'
mot9lrifoll

.

·

'.

StOP .JIISCiiLIN'

.•

Tonjng Bod Bull(ltll For Sate,

TH'DAPBURN
PITCHER BOX!!

,1

'

1ug2'Piymou1h vilyagO,: '77. ·
Mlltl, t1,100, 814·25e·e34 ~14-25&amp;&amp;417. ' ' . 1o. 'J

atking •18,500 814-387.0281

located At Finest Hair... &amp; Tanning

or,

114-1148-2-481 afW3pm.

Salon. ·Call Anytime, 814 -a67·
0612.

ONL'I' TO CATS ...

DOES TilE JUD6E

SUBPOENA, CATS.:

MIND WAVING A
COURTROOM FULL
OF CATS?

[ LOVE TO

Mototcyclea·

740

'77 Harley D1111daon Low Rider
CIUJiomiz~.· chrome, low milea,.
$)0,000. Slrloua !nqulrltt onir,l
814-742·2241. •
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22 1873 Woody

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25 Docton' grp. · 1 D•coreli
21 Actor Denny - 2 Lighten
21 Dutw layer
3 Mm..-lng egenl
33 Derar Rogere
35

Aclor Denny

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36 Parcel out
37 Child
38 Blue dye

'

REAL ESTATE

.

C~ckt -.Jr.;

304-516-2338. ·

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'

RENTALS
The Board 01 TrQtiooo Qf ·Tho

Ullian

·e. Jones Museum Is Seek~

lng A Creative. Self-Mollvatl&lt;f.
Entrgetie And Dependable Perton To Servo Ao A Part·Time Dl· .
r&lt;ICIDr br The MultUII'I.

E8ay Workl Excahnt Pay! AI·
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Toll Free 1·800·487-SSSil HT.
313.

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411 Pierce
47 Wllklntt.

Do you know about the chambermald and cleaning-woman trick? They
push pictures on the wall out of alignment so you think that they have been
wiped. II works fine until you check
the frame and find it covered in dust.
In bridge, there are certain ploys 11..-+-1---l-that wor~ well against naive oppo- , ._....1.-'-..L..nent.s - like the one declarer used in
this deal.
North's one nD-trump showed 15· 17
points in the modern style. South
jumped to three spades in old-fashioned style (no transfer bid). Although
North had' a minimum in point-count
terms, he liked his hand for play in
spades, so he gave South that mesEV I
sage by cue-bidding four clubs. This
persuaded South to take a shot at the
IRFI ' Y
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "The worsllhing about Europe is that you can't go
in the middle of lh enight and get a Slurpee. • - TelliS Frank.

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The only chance now seemed to be
a 3·3 club break. However, South improved his odds slightly ..He played a
club to dummy's jack, cashed the club
ace and called for the club two.
Thinking South was about to ruff, East
discarded a diamond. Happily, South
won with the club king, played a diamond to dummy's king and threw his
heart loser on dummy's club queen
while East wasted his trump Winner.
West was not amused. "Didn't you
see me play high-low in clubs to show
you an even number?"
"I'Jo," admitted East sheepishly.
r
"And
if South -had only two low
'NI\rn 'IW'V£ fV.O ~ MN-lY Of "'
clubs, don't you think he would have
11IE.M. ~ t AAVE., YOO c:AN ~
taken two club fineosea? He must
WOo\ COMJt-~(:,1
have the diamond ace as a hand entry."

Circle Motel, Gtlllpolla, OH 114·
o6411-2501 or 814-387-0812. Etfe.
clone~ Aooma, C&amp;blt, Air. Pflont,
&amp;RolllgoraDr.

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Society gal

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ace and a spade to his king, learning
that he had an unavoidable spade los-

Grove,

Hlgh-tfylng toy

11 Sunrlaa
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41 ¥;;'!~
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the opponent

heart ace, played a spade to dummy's

beauUful 2ac to-.. public. wallr,

4 Sooola

5
6
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9

slam.

Roome tot rent • W'Mik or monll.
Slatting II I 120imo. GaiDa Holll.
814-448-85111.
.

ot length

40 Sp1c1M

1882 Chevy Aatro· Conoorolo
Van, 41,000 mllio. 4.3 v..e. au
loadtcf, 4.caplain _ .. &amp;
MW· lirH1 ga191k!lpt, mual
Olklr)g $10,1100, 114-1148-2A81 I

ttr!lpm&amp;-

5I Similar In kind

18 Agile

Opening lead: • K

S4 Ford F-150 414 XLT, loldtcl,
16,200 mllto, excalltnl concrtllon;

· SC&amp;nlt

EWIIIII

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
Soalll
West Nortb Eut
INT
Pass
a•
Pass 4•
Pass
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Pass

1ggo Dodgo Ram Van 11-250 '
72,000 Milot, .. ,0~0, Can B~
AI: Gllllpofla Dolly Trlbunto
80hlo25. Third Avenue,_ jl,.jflpofli

198\ l'prd EJCPiorat Sport 4X4, 4.~'

INOI'ICEt
OHIO VALlEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommend&amp; ·thai you do buai nell wllh peo~e yo'u know, and
NOT 10 Nnd money lf1rough the
ma~ unUI wou havo· tnvttllgtltcl
lht olforlng. ·
.

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640
&amp; Grain
1gga Ford Ranger Xi.l414, V6,
~,.,.,;.,..:.,;-,.,-.,.--..,....,.J 5apcf, li~ kl~ atking ts, 700. 30&lt;t
882-3518.
(

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1878 GMC 314 IQII414, IU COOICii
tlon, runa, good, aaklng '2500t
·614-982-31i84.
•
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Air, 5 Spttd, E - Conditi~ ·
Team ·e u ue 2323
·
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3br, 2balh. $1798 down. •2751 BEAUTIFUL APo\RTMENTS AT
m.onth. Free ~'l i very &amp; aetup. . BUDGET PRICES AT dACKSON
Only at Oakwopd Homes, Nitro ESTATES, 52 WetiWood Drlvt
wv. 304-156-5885.
. flotn 1244 10 11115.- 10 lf10p
l movlea. Cill 114·4411-2511.
N"" 14•80. 2 or 3bodroom. OniV . E..-IHouolng~
make 2 piymenta 10 move ln. No
5586.

N
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EAST
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utillata furnllhtd, 8375/mo,
depotll, 2217 N Main 51. 304·
Kaywood 10155. two bedroom,
01i-&amp;e5394. '
·
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(eulf.)
SoutMMI wind

..... -...ng 57 Ma. ent:IDIUnt

Want•d Ta Rent: 30
Acree
.Fat PollUte, 614-+48-21 ~

flclllata,-IOICIIoollniiiOfl\

48 F81111nlne

12 Anger
13 own (Scqt.)
41
14 01rec10t K8an 50
15 Worcle ol
54

1bedroom apartment. no peta,
•1751mo.
ualaH &amp; ...,.~~~.
Available March 20. 3CM..e75·
~78-ISpm ,
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"You can get yourself into a
~~~:;::~~=-=~ tight place,· granny lectured, "if
your ·
0 A NMA M

I

Ro&lt;&gt;Ottind To Tho ,5-. Member
. Pero~n Will Be Ra·
Adminlatrative Ou- ·
5elllng Up An OfAnd Anladng
flee,
Volunteer
And Do·
caniS And l;tolplng Wllf1 Elhlbi11·
And Special Evonll. Salary fa

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f--r~.:...-rl-:;7 -:..,j.:....;l,;....:.:.·rl--1 0 Compl~to

,

Tho ldoal
Strong Ntgo~al!lt.
.
. Ablft·
•
And Applicants Should Stnd Resume
Wlrh /Cover l8tter To: Board Of Trus·
. ~· Lll!lan E. Jontt MuHUm, 75
BrOadway Street, Jackaon, Ohio
45640 No Later Than April· 15,

1

&gt;ko chuckle qualed
L-.L-.1-.I_.Jj_..J.._J
by lollong '" tho missing words
.vou dovelop trom step No. 3 below.

f9 PRINT
NUMBERED LETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES

Four IIUmllllm afGII, iS.8, 8 lug,
tlrtt, 2S5!76AS, 614 -8g2. '

•

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I G\,1£!6 THAT COlE
l-IlT A LITrLE
CLOSE TQ I-lOME .

1111HI.

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

I

I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Sovlnrs You'll Find In tilt
. ClossJfled SectiOn.

Jejune · Hurry - Bloat · Weeder · LOUDER
A politician is like.a ship in the fog . The thicker the fog
thev wtll both blow their horns LOUDER.

IMONDAY
·. '

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• • Lool&lt;lnQ ~r

AdYanct-

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• Wi1Nr1o TO Enjc&gt;y A Pormtntn~
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Page 10• The Dally Sentinel

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•
Monday, March 18, 19$,8

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

..

Ohio Lottery

SheehY.'S 'rNew Passages"
·:reviewed by literary club

s

~
Gail Sheehy's "New Passages:
• Mapping Your Life Aeross Time"
was reviewed by Mrs. Jeanne Bowen
' when the Middleport Literary Club
. met recemly at the home of Mrs. Roy
,Holter.
Mrs. Bowen introduced the book
' by analyzing "The New Map of
Adult Life" featuring such catchy
, phrases as the Tryout Twenties, Tur-.
. bulent Thirties, flourishing Forties,
•Aaming Fifties, Serene Sixties and ·
, the characteristics the , author has
, identified from her research.
Gail Sheehy, Mrs. Bowen report•ed, was born in 1937 and experienced
, many different interests in her life.
, She was a traveling home economist
forJ.C. Penny from 1958 to 1960 and
. held a fellowship in Columbia Uni' versity School of Journalism in 1970.
She haS been fashion editor and fea. ture writer for the New York Herald
. Tribune and contributed to many,.
popular magazines. She became·
•involved in sociological concerns,,
most recently in rites of passage. The
. success of "Silent Passage", a 1991 '
. study of mid-life, led to the present

volume which contrasts developlife-S148es in the 1950's and
the 1990's.
Over I ,000 interviews were conducted, the reviewer stated, mostly
with educated, middle class women
who are pace-setters. These presented a vivid contrast with the World
War II generation wben only 6.4% of
the population completed college
and women over 50 years of age were
passive with their learning and Uves
almost finished. Individuals of today
often delay parenthood, tend to look
and feel younger than they are, might .
engage in several changes of career.
and the author believes, are more
flexible and show more resilience
than bitterness as they age.
Mrs. Bowen summed up her
review of Sheehy's best seller by stating that while tl)e author uses generalized labels and that those studied
are not typical, the book is highly
organized, well-documented with
various appendices and sprinkled
with anecdotes. In short, it is interesting but not easy reading, she said.

.....

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m~nlal

GOSPEL GROUP COMING - The Jelllaons, a family gospel
. singing and ministry group, will be at the Middleport Pentecostal
Church, 873 South.Thlrd Ave., Friday at 6 p.m. and Saturday, at
• 10 a.m. and 7 p.m. The group has recorded 13 albums of gospel
. mullic In their 20 years of ministry In which they have held pal·
. ·tOni I and evangelistic positions. The Jellison&amp; who.reside In Port·
land, Ind., sing as a trio and use musical accompaniment of
: planO, electronic keyboards, ball and drums. Their singing pro. gram will Include original songs as · well as old time gospel
favorites.
·

Ann urges folks to reactivate
those newsy Christmas letters

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TOP ACHIEVERS- TheM atudlnta who achlimd superior ratIngs In the 12th Annual Scllnce Fair at Meigs Junior High School
will now competa In the dlatrlct contast to be held at Ohio Unl·
verslty, April 6. They are from the left,
ley Tholne, Tawny

w..

· Yol. 41, NO. 225
. 1 Butlon, 10 l'1lgaa

·'

In Meigs junior high science fair contest,.

Superior rated projects advance to .OU district contest
Twelve Meigs Junior High School
students who received superior ratings on their projects in the 12th
Annual Science Day Fair will now
move into district competition, April
6, at Ohio University.
Rusty Bookman, science teacher,
who heads up Science Day, said the
projects of all se•entli' and eighth
graders. about 160, were evaluated by
a team of professionals and/or educators in four areas -- originality and
creativity, clarity of expression, use
of the scientific method, and knowledge achieved.
Bookman said that the emphasis
of Science Day, held in cooperation
with the Ohio Academy of Science is
"to stimulate interest in sciences, to
promote research and scientific
knowledge, and to recognize high
achievement in attaining these objecIn previous years the school has
been awarded the Frederick Krecker
Outstanding Science Department
Award andollookman as an outstanding science teacher by the Ohio
Academy of Science.
The John Mora Memorial Award
which is ttaditionally given to the student with the most outstanding project went to Kyle Smiddie whose project was titled "Chemistry for an
Artist". That award and others were
made at an open house held at Meigs
Junior High where all projects were
exhibited and the awards made.
In addition to Smiddie superior
ratings went to Wesley Thoene,
"Which Color is Most Sunsational?";
Tawny Jones, "How Microwave
Radiation Affects the Germination of
Seeds"; Meghan Avis, "Which Fruits
Contaln the Most Acids?"; Gnnt
Abbott, "Which Insulation Insulates
the Best?"; Julie Ann Spaun, "How
Accurate are Weather Forecasts?";
Morgan Mathews, "Which Detergent Should You Use for Tough
Stains?".
"Joseph McCall, "What Stimuli
Affect Fish Respiration?"; James
Stanley, "Do People Sleep Better
While listening to Music?"; Mwjorie
Halar, "What is the Most Effective
Substance for Melting Ice?"; Sara
!hie, "What Happens Underground
During an Earthquake?" ; and Josh
Sorden, "Is the Density of Certain
Metals Related to the Expansion
Rate?".

.
.
.
; !Iff.~ said spokesman LarrY Hughes

Jacksonisthreateningapro!CStarlhe

. pf Penguan USA. parent company of Acaclemy Awards because bl!ICk4 are
·publisher Signet. ''WIII:n the idea was
,presented to him, he jumped ai it."
· •. : :fhe thriller inet in a Southern ·
in ~19l0s ,a_nd invol~~ a
· : ~: apriSOilUconv•ctedofkilling
two young ·l!rls, and. a mouse that
may )lave supematw;aJ ~wen.
··
, , ~~~~ ~y will receive· SI '
· m~llton for each ailstlllmeat. ·

. :M

LOS ANGELES (~) - ~es~

,virtually non-existent amonj nominees. .
The only black nominee is in the
~~tegory Qfbc$tliveaclion
film.
Jac;kson_plans to meet this week
with several advocacy groups and,
community ICI4en to discuu a pos·
sible prP'iest ~t the Mardi ~
OI!Car presentabons.
.
· Executives' of tl;le ~my of
Motion . Picture Arts and Scie~s

sb?rt

• By JIM FREEMAN

Meigs County Commissioners
t.fonday aftenloon followed up on
. ~•their pledge to support Veterans
:Memorial Hospital by resolving to

'i

denied that "skulldugg~ry" was
behind the dearth of black npminCes.
They poin~ out thaf tl)is . yc:ar's ·
show is beans produced b)' cQuancy
· Jones aDd hosted by Vfh6opi ~ldbeiJ, who are both black.
"But ~·bigger issue here is race
· exclulion and cultural distortion,"
·Jackson .i~istCd (roJn Chicago on .
· . Saturday. "We're talkina aliout the ,
overWhelming cultural power of
movies."

t

make county-owned land available to
Holzer Clinic and Consolidated
Health Services for construction of a
medical arts building.
Approximately I SO people, mostly hospital supporters, attended the

meeting in the Meigs County Common Pleas Courtroom.
Of five building sites considered,
the best location is in front of the
Meigs County Infirmary, explained
Keith Taylor, representing the Mar-

~:r-------------~----~----~--------------------~~~~

...-

UII11HCI COUNTY

MORA AWARD RECIPIENT - Kyle Smiddle was the recipient
or the John More .Memorial AWIIrd for the moat outatandlng ·projact In the Meigs Junior High School science Fair. Hie project wv
"Chemistry for an Artist. •
Kevin Snodgrass, Pam Cade, Barbara McClure, P. J. Erwin. Jerry Clark,
Whittington, Shawn Workman, Erin Roush, Jessica Laudermilt, StaLeeann Dill, Tangy Laudermilt, cy Gilmore, Kim Bush, Jeremy Ross 1
Michael Mahan, Seth Rawson, Jamye Hudson, Tim RobertS, thristo,
Tiffany Halfhill, Ann Kauff, Mindy pher Snouffer, Chris Krawsezyn,
Halley, Christy Phalin, Amanda Kevin Harris. Brandy Tobin, Heather
Miller, Cindy Lewis, Ashley Burton, Ferrell, Jesse Thomas, Amber Black·
Ashley ·Rupe. Jason Miller, Jennifer · slon, Charla Burge, Aaron VaniO:.
Nease, Sara Fife, Ryan Fields, Shane wagon, Jeff Brown, Brandon Morris,
Leach, Amber Perkins, Tod Daniels, Mike McDaniels, Kenny Hatfield,
David Ramsburg.
Heidi Matson. Christopher !mOO:
Joho Kopczinsky. John Hill, Tim den, and Roben Setlock.

Save

20% Everyday

MIDDLEPORT
DE PART ME NT STORE

~ft%
m
6Ift. minimum of

.4

ofiiNIII

price

'a llat
•

Middleport Dept. Store
·on t·1c T

·.1:dJicpc· t

'·'&lt; :·1:

ELECT
GARYR.

HOSPITALIZED
-Loyd Lipps of Little Hocking, .
brother-in-law of Leota Birch, Portland, is recuperating from quadruple
heart by-pass surgery performed at
the Charles C.M.S.C. Hospilal on
!March 4. Cards may be sent to him
:at Route 2, Box 325, Lillie Hocking,
45742.

DILL
Republican Candidate
For Meigs

County Commissioner
Paid forb the caildidate Ga

R. 011148190 Rlebel Rd. L

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VMH ADDITION SrrE PLAN-..:... This 1rchltect'a randet'lng dllfllayl the alte plan for the
Mldlcll · Arll Building addition to Veterans

1Ml CDIIIIII11EI 10 PIDVIIIIIG 1111
MD11 flf,ICifiiJ, CDUI1fDUS AIIJ.
TIMElY SfiVICf·PDSSIIIf. •

From AP, Staff Reports
: Voter turnout was steady in
precinct polling places throughout
)l,leigs County this morning. At many
polling places, voters were reported
tQ he waiting up to 10 minutes to step
into the booths to cast their ballots,
according to Board of Elections officials.
The large lurnout is due primarily to the county office races and the
scliool issues on the ballot in the Eastern and Southern districts.
It is · definitely not due to the
weather, as constant rain showers hit
DECISION '96 • Theae two voters _ . among the flrat to cast
the area during lhe morning and eartheir
ballots this morning at tha Pomeroy flret ward polling place
ly afternoon.
In
tha
Pomeroy Village Hafl. County elections officials are expect·.
"Despite the weather. we are
lng
a
large
turnout for today' a primary.
expecting a good turnout today," said
Rita Smith, dirutor of the Meigs
Ohio were headed to the polls today Republican presidential primary.
County Board of Elections. ·
Dole and Pat Buchanan spent last
Early estimates indicate that as to cast their ballots in lhe primary
weell detalling their differences in
many as 7,000 of the county's I5,000 election.
Among races and issues facing Ohio campaign stops. Alan Keyes,
registered voters will cast ballots
Ohioans
were lhe selection of a the only other Republican still runbefore the polls offiCially close at
Republican
presidential candidate, a ning, .made no pre-primary visits to
NO p.m.
·The final number of voters could proposed sales tax increase to help the smte.
easily lop the figure of 6, 793 voters pay for two new sports stadiums in
The names of several candidates
who cast their ballots in the June Cincinnati and an auempt by former who dropped out of the Republican
1992 primary, ranking it as one of the Cleveland Mayor Dennis Kucinich to race - Phil Gramm, Lamar Aluander, Richard Lugar and Steve Forbes
best primary voter turnouts in coun- gain a seat in Congress.
ty' history. .
Bob Dole was expected to easily - also appeaned on the ballot.
: Meanwhile, voters throughout outdistance Pat Buchanan to win the

·'

P,~EASE

VOTE TO HELP .R·E-ELECJ
·"

•·· ~

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A Gannett Co. IMwapapir

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shall Erdman architect firm of Madison, Wis.
Other sites considered included
two connected to the hospila), one
across from the hospilal at a site currently occupied by a medical office
building, and another on a slope north
of the hospital. These sites were
rejected due to cost or location.
Charles Adkins Jr., president and
chief executive officer of Holzer
Medical Center, explained that plans
call for a $1.5 million, IO,OOO-tol2,000-square-foot building which
will house three to seven doctors and
create 18 to 22 new jobs.
Doctors will use the hospital facility for testing and other services,
including in-patient and acute care.
Following the commission's resolution, Adkins said work on the new
DISCUSSES SITES- Architect Keith Taylor, representing the
facility will begin as soon as possiMarshall
Erdman architectural firm, detailed five sites considered
ble.
for
a
new
medical arts building to be located near Veterans MemoCommission President Fred Hoffrial
Hospital.
Taylor shows the approved site locatad in front of
man said the commission will work
the
Meigs
County
Infirmary, above. Meigs County Commission·
on transferring the land "right away."
era
Monday
agreed
to sell or lease property for the new building.
Commission Vice President Janet
(Sentinel
photo}
·
Howard, who made the motion to
make the land available, pointed out
that without Holzer, the hospital
However, Pomeroy attorney Steve missioners and said 'We're broke,
would have closed last July.
Story was critical that . CHS we're going to ha•e to shut the hosCommissioner Robert Hartenbach HMC's parent company - guaran- pital down .' "
teed to operate VMH as an acute care
seconded the motion.
"If it wasn't for Holzer Hospital,
For the most part, comments were hospital for only three years.
we wouldn't have the hospital here
of "If we don't do some of the things today. They-were willing to guaransupportive of the hospital.
Walter Grueser and Joe Struble of we have planned soon, we won't be tee we would have a hospital for three
Pomeroy urged commissioners to there in five years," Adkins said, years," he said.
mak~ the land a•ailable as soon as .addressing the need for quick action.
As far as commitment is conpossiJ!~·- . • _ _
. .. _
"E~one wants a guarantee,"
cerned' ' '$~ 5 millfon is~ pteuy big
"Give them the opportuni!)' to Charlene Hoeflich of Pomeroy said. commitment,'' he added.
help us ... they're not there to beat us "In life, there arc no guarantees."
Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan
In a similar vein, Prosecuting spoke out against selling the properout of anything. They are there to
Attorney John R. Lentes praised ty - preferring a long-term lease
help us," Grueser said. ·
"This is for the betterment of the Holzer for sa•ing the hospital: "The instead, an idea promptly slapped
community," Struble said.
VMH board approached the com(Continued on Page 3}

Pomeroy merchants Forest fails
unveil suggestions
to complete
on parking to council plan's goals .

MARIETTA (AP) - Offlcials
al
lhe
Wayne National Forest said
provided the village has mud
By JIM FREEMAN
they will spend this season catchremoved from the streets first.
Sentinel News Staff
ing
up on the goals outlined m a
Following up on earlier business,
Representatives of the Pomeroy
10-year
operations · plan filed in
Merchants Association made their council agreed 4-1 to donate $2,000
1987.
recommendations to Pomeroy Village to the Meigs County Tourism Office
The plan set priorities for
Council Monday night over the future for promotion of tourism in the counthe forest, harvesting
expanding
ty.
of parking meters in the village.
timber,
hapdling
oil and gas rights
Councilman Larry Wehrung,
Bobbie Karr presented the recand manipulating habitalsto foster
ommendations, which included free declaring that lourism will do noth·
the development of wildlife .
parking in the parking lot, retention ing for Pomeroy, voted no, while
. But none of the goals - acquir~
George · Wright
of stteetside parking meters, enforce- Councilman
mg
more than 100,000 acres , sellment of the. two-hour parking limit abstained.
ing
timber rights and conducting
In other business, council:
for streetside parking, no residential
more
aucuons of 01l and gas rights
parking along Main Street and elim• Met with Melinda Strong, the
- ha•e been met, The Marietta
ination of all-day parking permits.
mother of two Pomeroy Elementary
Times reponed Monday.
Merchants would ask their School students,. about parking near
A ban on land purchases, a fedemployees to park on the river side the elementary schoo.l. Mayor Frank
eral
budgel i_mpasse and budget
of the parking lot to keep parking Vaughan reponed little progress in
cuts
all
contnbuted to the failure
.
near the stores free , she added.
the mallet.
the
newspaper
said.
'
Council took no action on the recHowever, village solicitor Chris
The
forest
will
conduct
its
first
ommendation.
Tenoglia later advised !he village to
Sandee Mills asked for help in proceed with placing limestone on. timber harvest of the 1990s this
summer in the Ironton district. Taxcleaning the river side of the parking areas across from the school for parkes
paid on the timber go to school
lot by April I and other tasks. Coun- ing, noting that "people .._e parked
districts
and communities.
cil President John Musser explained there for years."
Aboqt
200 acres, or about 1.4
that workers will he doing trenching
• Met with a representative from
million
board
feet of timber. were
work there in preparation for work on Modern Woodmen of America Life
scheduled
for
harvesting.
the grand promenade project.
lnsunncC: Agency about life insurForest officials also planned to:
In addition, merchants offered to ance for firefighters. No action fol•
Auction oil and gas rights on
pay for one month of street sweeping
(Contlnulid on Page 3}
a 212-acre tract in Monroe County this month.
• Hold a fishing derby at Leith
Run recreation area later this
spring.
reach an agreement on a balanced disputes.
· • Begin work on. a new 10-year
Clinton's budget today restated his
budget.
management plan this summer.
In his budget message, Clinton "Middle Class Bill of Rights"tax cut
But the forest's plans aren •1
signaled that he would continue to proposals he first outlined in Decemalways welcomed.
resist what he considers GOP effortS ~r 1994 after Republicans captured
· About20 members of an Athens
to cut back too sharply on the growth control of both houses of Congress ~nvironmental group staged a sit•
in Medicare, the buge health care pro- ~ for the first time in 40 years.
1ft at the Lafayette Hotel in Sep- •
gram for the elderly, and Medicaid,
The president would cut taxes by
tember that delayed an auction of ·
the federal-state program that pro- !$100 billion over seven years by
oil and gas drilling rights in the for- :
vi des health services to the poor.
:offering, when fully phased in, a $500 est.
;•
The goal, he said, should be "a tax credit for each child younger than
The auction made $25,000, said
government that is leaner, but not · 13. He also would allow deductions
Danny Thompson: president of.th~ .
meaner."
of up to $10,000 per family for colSoutheastern Ohio Oil I and ·"Gas ,.
Clinton unveiled his spending lege expenses and expand the avail. .
A ssoctallon.
·
· "•
plans as Congress continued slow- ability of Individual Retirement
I.,astyear. ~p, F~~-· ~
moving efforts to complete work on Accounts.
and Sen. Mike DeWine, both R- . •
agency budgets for fiscal 1996. The
His plan does not include the long- Ohio, combined forces to stop ~ ;
budgets for nine , Cabinet depart- cherished Republican goal of cutting
forest from acquiring land in Wash&lt;
ments and scores of other fedenl taxes on capilal gains, profit$ made ington, Monroe and Lawrence
agencies remain mired in partisan from the sale of stocks and other counties.
..
assets.

Clinton
budget .p ropo,al offers modest form of tax ·relief
.

.
, ; WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- dispute that has twice . shut down lies. children and other vuhierable
dent Clinton today sent Congress a major portions of the government. Americans."
$1.64 trillion election-year budget The current fiscal year is half gone
He challenged Republicans to
th!ll would provide modest tax relief without resolution of spending dis- return to the negotiating table and
IC) the middle class while reaffirming putes for many agencies.
quickly complete wOit toward reachhiS cpmmitment to balancing the budRepublicans have already dis- ing a balanced budget by 2002. The
g41t "the right way."
missed the fiscal 1997 proposal as president is scheduled to meet
': The proposed spending in the lis- doing too little to curh the govern- Wednesday with Senate Majority
ell year that hegins Oct. I i~ 4 per- ment's expensive benefit programs Leader Bob Dole and House Speakcent hither thaD the estimated 1.57 such as Medicare and providing too er Newt Gingrich.
trlllion the government will spend little in tax relief.
"In our negotiations with conthis year.'
Clinton signaled that he planned to gressional leaders, we have made
: The president's proposals, out- use his detalled proposals as a major great progress toward reaching an
liaecl'in six volumes tolaling 2, 196 campaign document, hoping to paint agreement," the president said. "We
· P4JC1, provide the first program·l:ly· the Republicans as too ·extteme in have simply come too far to let this
prop.m look at a budget plan he has their proposed government cutbat;ks. opportunity slip away."
In his budget message, Clinton
bcien .pusbins since Janutiry.
·
Dole, Clinton's Republican rival
: The formal submission of the called on Congn~ss to "balance the for the presidency, said on the cambqd~t is aix weeks late this year due budget the rillht way" by cuttinll paign Sllimp Monday in Dlinois ihat
IC) the protncted deadlock with the
unneceswy prosrams while protect: he· and Clinton should do what is
Riopublican-cclntrolled Congress, a . iDB "senior citizens, working funi- right for the American people and
.
).
·..

s

•

Memorial HOepital, tfte tapfc of a public hear~
lng Monday sponsored by tha Meigs County
Commlaalonere.

.Primary vote
brisk at local
polling places

.

11

6

·' r

:Commissioners commit land
for VMH medical arts building
: Sentlriel Hilwa Staff

Randall Wallace took the original
In long-form television awards,
screenplay award for his script of the novelist Michael Crichton won for
13th-century Scottish baule epic writing NBC's "ER" pilot and Chris
"Bravehcart." The lilm was nained Gerolmo won for the HBO movie
best edited film of 1995 on Saturday ''Citizen · X." In TV series awards,
night by the American Cinema Edi- Lance Gentile won for "ER" and Joe
Keenan won for the NBC 'sitcom
tors.
Both Thompson and Wallace are ''Frasier"
nominated for screenwriting Oscars,
Other television winnen; included
handed out March 25. Thompson is the writing teljl11s ofHBO's "Dennis
the first actress to be nominated for Miller Li•e"; "General Hospital" on
writing and starring in the sal'ne ABC; "The Human Quest," PBS;
film; Woody Allen pulled off the dou- "CBS School break Special"; "48
ble feat as an actor-writer in "Annie Hours," CBS, and "The American
Hall."
Experience," PBS.

.

.c:ndnuedfnmpage

..'•

"good" were:

Ross Savage, David Reynolds,
Melanie Blevins, Bill Ashburn,
Renee Stewart, Mike Ramsburg,
Clinton Hom, Francesca Roush,' Levi
Bums, Brian Harold, Tasha Johnson,
Brandy Laudermilt, Billy Jernagan,
Nathan Eskew, Andy Doczi, Stephen
Hysell, Tommy Roush. Art Tobin,
Missy Cremeans, Jimmy Yeauger,
Tiffany Richmond, Kimberly Pierce,
Mikka Jude, Jessica Monroe, Ian
Hindy.
· Brandy Collerill, Sherry Jacks, Joe
Davis, Lisa Bias, Sean Fahner, Jennifer Shain, Paul Williams, Crystal
Leach, Levi Searles, Scott Johnson,
Mall Milhoan, Denise Cotterill, C. D.
Ellis, Natasha Spencer, Johnathan
De Iavaiie, Sue McGee, Josh Hooten,
Chuck Murray, Jeromy' McNeilan,
Jillian Wilt, Justin Roush, Marissa
Whaley, Cory Stewart, Hollie Welch.
Adam Walker, Michele Kennedy,

35canta

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 19,1996

.•

Special recogmuon awards for
students receiving superior ratings
were provided by Meigs Local
Teachers/ Association. American
Electric Power Meigs Litter Control.,
Meigs Local OAPSE, Veterans
Memorial Hpspilal, Southern Ohio
Coal Company, King's Servistar
Hardware, Vaughan's Cardinal Market, McDonald's of Pomeroy, Dr.
James Schmoll, and the Meigs Junior
High Science Club.
Students receiving ratings of
"excellent" on their projects were:
Raina Benneu, Tiffany Harder,
Jll!lon Quivey, Shawn White, Scott ·
Colwell, Brandon Collins, Andrea
Neutzling, Whitney Thomas, Becky
Karr. April Blankenship, Erik
Metheney, Jake Birchfield, Brandy
Stevens, Misty Musser, Kim Peavley,
Amber Huddleston, Marcus Bratton,
.Bridget Johnson. Laura Payne, Kristy
Six, Amher Giordano, Chris Gil~ey,
Bethany Boyles, Daniel Young, Ashley Vaughan.
Adrianne Tilley, Orion Barrell,
Adam Grim, Beverly Burdette, Adam
Thomas, Brant Dixon, Billie Dye,
Stacey B_rewer, Zach Meadows, Amy
Hysell, Michele King, Michele Fon,
Nicholas
Jennifer Shrimplin,
Michael, Stephanie Kopec, Melissa
Davis, Anna Story, Brooke Williams,
Jeremiah Smith, Joshua Sorden, Ryan
Pratt, Steve Beha, Les Hale, Tara
Gray, and Ryan Well.
Students receiving ratings of

'

Clinton may root tor.

. ..

Jones, ~han Avis, Grant Abbott, Julie Ann Spaun, Morgan
Matthawe, Joaeph McCall, James Stanley, ·ft4arjorle Halar, Kyle
Smlddle, Sara lhle, and Josh Borden •

-Society scrapbook-

~

Rain tonight, switching
to enow. Low In 30a.
Wednesday, cloudy, mora
snow. High In mld·30a.
Windy •

•

and Sensibility,' ~araveheart' earn writing awards

.

SPQ118, Page 4

•

about your cocker spaniel's litter, and
By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: When we _if you have a photo of your daughter
moved to Canada from the States 10 iri her ballet costume, send it along
years ago, we knew it would be dif- with a copy of the letter from your
ficult to keep up with all our friends, alderman thanking you for helping
but we ,were certain we'd hear from him gel re-elected.
I apologize for discouraging folks
~veryone at Christmas. Those wonderful newsletters and pictures of from sending those newsy chronicles
their kids were a great way to stay in loaded with Iiersonal detalls. Please
reactivate the tradition. Obviously,
touch.
Now, thanks to your column about I'm out of the loop.
what a bore annual newsletters are,
Dear Ann Landers: I have been
we didn't -receive even one this past married for 12 years to "Rosetta."
season. The year before, we received We get along OK. Before we mel, she
was literally left at the altar when
10.
Obviously; our friends read your "Tom" decided at the last minute that
column and take it seriously. They he didn 'I want to marry her.
didn't want to come off as bores or
Rosetta and I have only one major
braggarts, so they didn't tell us how prdblem. It's a red heart-shaped box ~sense
their daughter's graduation went, if on our bedroom closet s.helf that conBEVERLY Hll..LS, Calif. (AP)they ha.d fun on their trip to the Ori- tains Tom's love letters and a photo
ent or anything personal. With all the album of their two-year romance, Actress Emma Thompson won the
employment problems these days, plus newspaper articles about Tom, top award from the Writers Guild of
we 'd like to be assured that our some rather recent, mailed to Roset- America on Sunday for her adaptation of the Jane Austen romance novta by old friends.
friends are still working.
el
"Sense and Sensibility."
A signature on a holid)ly greeting
I understand I was not her first
The award for Thompson's first·
card doesn't tell us much, although choice, but I don ' tlike to he remindwe did get some lovely cards from ed of it whenever I go into the clos- screenwriling effort made her the
our insurance agent, our dentist, our et. I have discussed my feelin~ open- favorite to repeat at the Academy
financial consultant and a number of ly, and Rosetta thinks I am 'overly Awards.
Thompson, who also co-stars in
business associates. We really miss sensitive. She also believes thar most ·
the
film, won the screenwriter union's
those ~eat newsletters from our married women have a special love
in their past that they will never for- 48th annual prize for the best screenfriends.
Thanks, Ann, for making last get and that the letters are nothing play -based on previously published
material.
Christmas a little less cheery and a lot more than harmless reminders.
more remote. You really did a numAnn, is Rosetta .right? If you say
ber dn St. Nick .. -- Bah, Humbu~! in so, I' II accept your word. I am -Uncertain But Hurt .in Chicago
Edmonton
. Dear Ed.: Here it is March, and
Dear Uncertain But Hurt: Rosetta
I'm still getting blistering letters for may be right about some women havGARDEN CLUB
putting the kibosh on Christmas ing a soft spot in their he~ for a past
HOSTESSES
newsletters. Yours was one of sever- love, but that doesn'tjustify keeping
Hostesses for the' recent meeting
at. So -- let it be known to one and the old letters on the closet shelf of the Meigs County Garden Clubs
611 that I take it back. Start now to where the husband can see them Association were Evelyn Hollon,
&amp;ather facts for your 1996 Chrisbllas every day of his life. Surely she can Peggy Moore, Juanita Will and Janet
find another place for them. I strong- Theiss of Wildwood Garden Club,
newsletter.
: Don 'I leave out anything. People ly recommend it.
· and Maurita Miller of Chester Garden
O:atly do want detalls of your face lift
Club.
Send questiolu lo'Ann Landen,
~ tummy tuck, your daughter-inSuzy Carpenter had a display at
Creaton Syadkate, 5777 W. Cen- the meeting, not Bernice Carpenter as
lew'~!, tubal ligatipn and-. your husliand's hair transplant. Tell them tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Anaeles, · was reported earlier. The program
chairman was Pauline Atkins.
Calif. 9004.5
.

..

Pick 3:
945
Pick 4:
5144
Buckeye 5:
11-14-18-24-36

4

tives.•• ·

•

Division 13
All-Star cage
results

.

.."

.j

...

I

,

' - - - - - - - - . . J·,

�</text>
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