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,..,. 14 • The
Dilly Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery
T~de,

Tularte
post victories
In ~IT play

Kicker:

1-3-0-W-3
Pick 3:
3-9-3
Pick 4:
8-8-2-5

.

S~Page4

STORE HOURS

Super Lotto:
5-7-t-25-30-43

Mlllllay tin S•llllay
a-.JOPM

Scattered enow ehowere tonight, lowe In the
201. Friday, cloudy. Hlghe
In the30e.

291 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
Accepts Credit Carda

WE

THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU MARCH 23, 1996.
•,

· WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

VOl. 48, NO. 227
2Bectloil8, 14 PllgM

DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY • SEE STORE FOR DETAIU

'

.·Village · elig~ble for federal relief funding

7-UP.
FRESH GROUND

.....~.~.. s179

...Sirloin P·atties

$
Llo.
139
Baeon....................... . .
BREADED VEAL OR CHUCK WAGON -~ $· ·
. •. .
lb.
,'
179

': :ay TOM HUNTER

.· 'Sentinel Newe Staff

IRODUCTS
'

2UTER

HICKORY PRIDE SLICED
1 • •

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Patt•es •••••••••••••~········· .
-MORTON
SCHOONER BREADED FISH STICKS OR $ ·
$219
BEEf.~
·'.
129 HOUSE
.
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Steak••••••••••••••••~·•••••••
BONEL~SS .SKINL!SS C~ICKEN

LB.

Breasts Fillets •••••••••••

Squares ................~•••• : ..

STEW

$199

.,

20-0Z.

.

$ 119

.Bologna····!t~·············!! .
GOLDEN ACRE
- .
s119
1i ey Breast............ ·

CHEER
ULTRA
-DETERGENT

LB.

42-4SOZ.

NEW CROP

$ ·139

.

DUNCAN
HINES CAK&amp;
MIX
18-18.50Z.

Yellow Onions ••~.:••••• ·
.10R~~N SKIM .

.

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c

$189

Mtlk •••••••~•••••••::........ . .. "MUSSELMAN .
MOINUTE MAID

.Ulce
. '.........................
. 79(
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9·
9
C
or
46oz.

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IRAFTGRAPE

320L

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•••••••••••••••• •

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r~nge

J•

$ 159' APPLE.SAU(I:
u1ce ••••••••••••• . .
.· ~
64oz.

MO.RTON TV

..:·

.

Dinners.•••••••••••••••••••••
6.75-10 OZ.

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PEP~ERIDGE FARM.

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COffEE

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TISSUE
• ROLL PIG•.

89

1.

I

• R11tland village residents and vii~ :!age council began the process of
.finding solutions to the village's fre-·. quent floading problems during
• :Wednesday night's special town
:·meeting on Oood conlrol.
The meeting, wbich drew nearly
: 30 village reSidents, was an open for. mat discussion of possible solutions,
crituia involved in receiving federal
• · aid, and state/federal agencies that
· could fund such a project.
: federal Emergency Management
Administration official Dean Ogen
· moderated the meeting, along with
!=QUncil member Danny Davis, during
. whic:h several possible solutions were
discussed. · ·
Solutions from the residents
included: dredging Leading Creek
. from the village to the Ohio River;

building foundation liftS on the
homes i!l the village; redirecting the
flow of Leading Creek; a sy,stem of
earthen dams on the creek; improving drainage in the village; a levee or
dike along the creek; clear debris
from the creek which is restricting the
Oow; or do nothing.
·
"I don't have the answers, per se,"
Ogen said. "What I can lend is the
expertise in bringing the community
together to find solutions, or-to walk
· you through a process, in resolving
these. flooding problems. The federal government is not making any
promises fOI' funding, other than that
we will e:tamille every suggestion or
project."
The viUage is in the process of
fanning a Oood control committee,
which will meet at 6 p.m. Monday at·
the civic center to begin examining
the possibilities in sol vi '!I! the Oooc}-

in~ problems jn the village.

Ogen said that he will attend the
meeting to assist in the process.
"First of all, we have to find out
exactly what is causing the Hooding
problems. After we determine the
cause, we can begin to look fpr the
most cost effective and best solutions
to the village Hooding problems,"
said Davis.
·
1be committee and village council will prepare project applications,
which will be submitted around June
I for federal approval.
1be village is eligible for 75-25
federal grant funding under President
Clinton's 13-county emergency dec·
laration that became effective after
the .January Roods that affected the

' GROU.
·B,EEF
101

$ 90
.

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RUTL.AND SOLutioNS - Federal Emer· flooding problems at the RU11and Civic Center
gency Management Agency official Dean Ogen, Wednesday. Listening to Ogan are council
left, enewered a queetlon on creek dredging members Danny Davie, center, and Dick Fetty.
during a epecialtown meeting on the vi~ege'e (Sentinel photo)

account environmental considerations and impact statements; and
must be legal, and not in violation of
any civil or criminals laws, said
Ogen.
area.
"Right now, we're !ooking at
The mandated project criteria for around $1 million in federal disaster
federal funding Sillies that th(: project money that is available in this 13·
must be: ·
effective; take _into_ _county area Once we look at the
· jj

demographics and all the tasks, oth- . "If we don't do anything, 'then we
er federal agency funds can be pur- won't know if we could have been eli·
sued," said Ogen.
gible for project funding. If we at
least submit our project for federal
Ogen explained that if the Ru~and , approval, we stand a chance to end
project does not receive funding dur- our regular flooding problems in the
ing 1996, there is a possibility that village. This will he a very important
funding could he found in the budgets project for the town," said Davis.
of upcoming fiscal years.

·T rucks' usage of townshtp .
.road near SR 7 s.lip prompts
·call for more enforcement

·Chances

·for acc.o rd
~oQ budget
loqkslim

HUNTER
. .
Niooo.aStatf
-"W~tmfOTON (A,p,) ;... R b'
A call 'fi,Yt~ughcr eiil'Oreement
'liC41f ~6ligttsslonal' leaoos liiet;:tlff ·
against
truckers is being heard from
,!!resident ·Clinton , for an hou\
·
·residents
on Orange Township's Old
Wednesday but 'Speaker Newt Gin-' . _·
Seven
Road,
after a Wednesday truck
grich indicated afterwuds he doubt- •
accident
caused
nearly a two-hour
ed agreement was PQAibltton
r .•
·
:outage
for
AEP
customers in the
anced bUdget compromise.
. ;&gt;. .
. Chester area.
"Anything's possilile," Gingricll., ·
A Wisconsin truck driver-was cit·
said shortly after returning to the
ed
by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
·
Capitol, but quickly added, '"i would·
State
Higl\way Patrol after the rig he
_n't want to stake my career on it." .
was
driving
southbound on Old Sev·
Gingrich said the meeting "went
en
snuck
utility
poles at the inter·
swimmingly."
section
of
State
Route
7 and Old Sev·
It was the first meeting between
CHAtkES DIM - Houee Speaker Newi·Gingrlch, right, aNn
en Road (Township Road 294).
Clinaon and the convessional lead1p1111klng to reporblre Wednelday With HouH Majority Leader
The road is being used as a "local
ership since the beginning of the
Dick Ariney, left, and Senate Mljorlty L11der Bob Dole, ..ld he
run-around"
for traffic on ~lip-dam·
presidential campaign primaries- a
doubtect_~~greilmerrt likely betwwn Congreee •nd the White _ aged State Route 7, until repairs are
round of elections that ratified SenHouH dn a balanced budget. (AP)
.
made to the· area 12 miles north of
ate Majority Leader Bob Dole as
Pomeroy,
and is being maintained by
GOP candidate to run· against the
Social
Security
recipients
to
must·
the
Ohio
Department
or Transponarounds of television network news '
IJresident this fall. ·
tion
under
a
working
·
with
Budget aside, Dole, Gingrich and pass debt-limit extension legislation. shows, said today the talks may be
the last chance this year for both parother leaders sai4 they went to the ·
"Hopefully, we can do some busi- ties to reach a budget compromise.
1Wbite House to discuss several leg- ness," said Dole, who Tuesday night
"We have been through the
islative items. They included welfare clinched the GOP presidential nomRepublican
primary season. There is
reform. overhauling immigration ination.
a
small
window
of opportunity to try
laws, a product liability bill' and
The leaders also said they want to to work together for the nation,"
spending for the District of Colum- avoid a new federal shutdown this
White House Chief of Staff Leon
bia.
weekend, when temporary spending Panetta said on Fox morning news.
• · The GOP lawmakers responded to authority for many agencies expires.
"There's a window of opportuni·
an illvitation from Clinton for dis- Congress and the president are uying
ty
here
where we can really get some
cussions just one day after he to complete a compromise bill that
work
done," White House
·unveiled his 1997 budget.
will finance the programs for the spokesman ·Mike McCurry told
; . The GOP leaders said. they also remaining six months of fiscal 1996.
rewrters. "It's not goi~g to be open
wanted to talk to Clinton about po~­
"The three of us will make the very long. It certainly will be c,losed
sibly attaching the line-item veto, case we ought to keep the governif we all begin campaigning by 6
regulatory reform for small business ment open," sa!d Gingrich.
· o'clock tonight, so we hope we don' 1
and higher· benefits for working
White House aides, making the end up in that position.

-.bel-

propeny owners along the road and
the Orange Tow!)!lbiP trustees.
· "nie offic'Jai' state detour for the
slip area is U.S. 50 to U.S. 33 We are
· aware that some trucks are traveling
State Route 681 to Success Road to
avoid the detour. There are not supposed to be any semi-trucks on Old
. Seven Road. We have placed signs
along the route, prohibiting trucks
from using the township road," said
Nancy Yoacham, public information
officer of Ohio Department ofTransportationiDistrict I 0.
Troopers cited Duane R. Ketelboetter, 47, Black Earth, for failure to
. obey a traffic conlrol device and no
HUT stickers on his rig, owned by
' Fuchs Inc. of Sauk City, Wis., following Wednesday's 8:10a.m. accident.
.
"We have had a few complaints
coming in from the residents. We're

...

·In spite of regional· provisions,
Crem-eans dismisses budget
·13Y PAMELA BAOOAN
Gannett Newe Service

,

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er .(akes••••••J~~·,CJ.....
:

150

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ARMOUR STAR

A Glonnott CCI. NewiPitMi'

Rutland, FEMA explore ·
:flood problem solutions

~

BEEF CUBED

35 '*118.

Pomeroy-Middleport, O~lo, Thursday, March 21, 1996

WASHINGTON__; The Huntington area gets more federal funds for
schools and somk college aid, and
funding for Corps of Engineers pw
jects and economic development is
mainlained under President Clinton's
$ 1.64 trillion b\!d~t plan.
But m1ny of the federal prop:ams. inclildins funding for the
Appal!il:bian Regional Commission,
the Economic Development Adminisll'ltion, · and ·educatio11 programs
are likely to be tarpled b}t ·House
· R~bliclllls fOI' sharp reductlons or
elimination.

nation's infrastrUcture and its future,
our children's potential," Rahal! said.
But Rep.' Fl'!lllk Cremeans, ROhio, said Clinton was prop(lsing
another "phQny" budgetto Congress.

"He's not serious about lialancing
the budget," said Cremeans. "This is
just more smoke and mirrors."
.
The qinton budget provides Sl 70
million for the Appalachian Regional Commission, the -~ amou·nl it
received in.l996. The commission is
ch*'led with infrUtructure, econom.ic development, fld.i!Jbtraining in all
' of West Virginia and impoverishCll
areas in 12 other Appalllllhian SillieS.
.
· Last year. the Huntin~oo, ~
"To . _ 110me in the Republican ·recei_v'ed more .thllll $1_ ~llhon 10 .
leadership in Coogress, we wou.ld fundl~g_!l?m !he cpmm1ss1on Qdt of
tllink·A1nerica cannot afford to focus $14.9 mlll10n 1ft 1!f8Dts for 33 prQjccts '
i~ effons on economic development ~~ were eannarlc:ed for .West Vir~ support education fully," said gtnla..
. ,
.
Rep.NickRahaii,O.W.Va., who supC::bnlon also Is requcstmg $333
' potU Clinton's budget, .
lnillion rdr the Economic Develop"I would say to them, America . ' ment Administration, down SS mil':'-lli!lnot afford
not to invest in our lion from the 1996 request.
·'
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About · $60,000 in Economic
Development Administration funding
goes to West Virginia's Region U
Planning and Development Council,
which helps cities such as Huntington obtain federal grants.
Both the two agencies have been
targeted by RepubliCan&amp; for elimination.
Other budget items:
• The Army COIJIS of Engineers is
requesting mo~ than $6 million for .
Oood conlrol programs i'! ihe Hun1ington area, including more than SI
million at Beech Fork Uke and SI.S
million at Bast Lynn Lake in Waylle
County, alld nearly $2.6 million for
the Thg Forie RiVer- in Matc'(lan.
• Dcfyin&amp; Republicans who want
to reduce funding for education,
Clinton requests nearly SIO.S billion
for elementary and secondary educalion, up from $10 billion in 1996.
Clinton also ~ more than $1.4 billion in c:lmplis-based stUdent
aid up from 19961evels of$637 milli~.

· SPRING? WHERE? _- ~nlflakl patrolman Brian Covardale
nlked between etoptlld tr~Ctor-en~lllrl on ·atatl Rout. 30 ae hi
and other off!cen dlrlct trlfflc 1W11J lnlrn.an eccldant WICIMIdiy~ Six inchel of enow fill In the 81'11 ~the tim~ of lpl'lng.

(AP)

.

.

trying to watch it a~ close as we can.
I'm sure that after-our review ·of ibe
.accident, we will look at stepping up
enforcement 10 the area," said Lt.
Wayne McGlone, commander of the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
; Yoacham ssaid that ODOT central
1
offices in Columbus have mailed
invitations to contractors for submit·
ling bids on the slip damages ponion
of State Route 7. The bids will be
1opened by the state on Tuesday.
"We've tried to monitor the area as ·
much as possible. Signs have also
been placell on the county roads to
keep heavy trucks from using those
routes to detour the slip. Any pi~
1
,there is restricted heavy truck traffic·
:we're going to monitor it. It's difficult
:to resolve a situation like this because
·we can't monitor it all the time, but
we will do our best," said Meigs
.County Shenff James M. Soulsby. ·

•·snow~ cold

disrupt first
_spring day
By The Aesoclated Preas '
The first day of spring brought .
snow, h1gh wmds, power outages and
at least three weather-related deaths ·
to Ohio.
.
,
. Snow fell across Ohio on Tuesday
mght and Wednesday, creating
. winter wonderland for students whtj
. had the day off because of the weathJ
er. But snow snarled traffic and lefi
about 48,000 Toledo Edison cus~
· tomers 10 northwestern Ohio without
· power.
Power had been restored to all bui
. about 14.000 of those customers by
. ~ly today, said Janet Galecki, a utilIty spokeswoman.
Dayton received about4 inches of
· snow: Up to 6 inches fell in Toledo
and m northeastern Ohio, and as,
much as 7 inches' was recorded in
· greater Cincinnati. About 2 inches
fell in the Columbus area.
·. . The snow was accompanied by
Wind gusts of up to 40 mph, the
Nattonal Weather Service said.
Hypothennia apparently clilmed
the life of Richard Rhodes, !38, of
· ~~tng 10 suburban Cincinnati. A ·
,Janitor at Mount Notre Dtane .hiafi
: School found him lying wilhoui 1 .' ·
; coat Wednesday morning in a .f~eld •
behill(l the school.
•
• . ·•
Richanl Chandler, SS, of Uibani' ·
· died Wednesday in a two-\rehtCie '
crash on 1ft icy Champaign Couii!Y :
road, sheriff's deputies · Aid. · Nw ;
Wellston in southern Ohio, David ·
Delong, 47, of Oak Hill wu killcdill ·
a two-vehicle crash on a a~v- '·
ercd .road, the State Highway Patrol' ' ',
said.
• ,.,.,_;
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Thuray, ~ 21,1118

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OHIO

.

The Deily Sentinel• PIIQI s

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
.

.Local 'News in Brief:

Weilti1CI

Frtay, Mri 2l

:Syracuse residence gutted by /ire

Accuweamere forecut for daytime conditions and

The ~aily Sentinel ·Dole s·l:lould ·look at Mack as vee·p material
,.

'Estll6fisnd in 1.948

By IIMoiiM'1olllll111n Kondl HI '
• Bucbuwt, who is pRsuming to veto
FIJII!Il Colin Po,;dl.' He's not Powell. But Powell seema to be one
goi111to run for vice pRri-ioet, and of thole qre bin11 who, When be says
supporters of Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., sometbillg, regards it u a miller of
should move on to 'other candidates,
·

111 Court Sl, POIIIII'Oy, Ohio
614-1112·21&amp;8 • Fax: tl:2-2157

lfoctgn

~ ~~t,i~~Ftr,rhaps,

tleground stale wid)· 18 electoral
voleS, has piooeered lhe welfare and
education reforms that congressional Republicans advoeate, and is
Roman Cadiolic.
.

U:.Yo::

sen. Connie
KQOd(SCkl adv~
E=;.::C~!
•
Admittedly, Mack is a dllak horse, honor to stick to it
aumsive in pushing his candidacy
•
Florida
being
a
should-win
stale
for
So,
for
'Dole's
sake,
he
and
his
.and
by injecting himself into budget
•
A ~annett
.
Dole. Yet top Dole advisers consider . supporten ought to quit specul~ng · negotiations this winter with PresiMack the one U.S. senator who · aboul Powell. The mcire they do, the ·dent Clinton, camping out almost
ROBERT L. WINGm
mightmak,eittoDole'sshonlist,and Jlll)retheyirriplythatDolecan'tbeat constantly in the offiee of House
Publl••
r he is in the Jack Kemp mold of President Clinton wilhl&gt;ut him. That ·Speaker Newt GinJrich, R-Ga.
~· growth-oriented optimists.
weakens Dole just at a time when he
On Mahe's lilt, and.among other
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
MARGARET LEHEW
:.
Meantime,
I
talked
to
Powell
on
needs
a
buildup.
·Republicans,
the next-best ·choice
Genel'lll Mal!llger .
Controller
~ · the phone last week. He •
"I
Having speculation about Powell for Dole is former South Carolina
: made a decision lut November and ,rqe from now until the Republican Gov. Curoll Campbell, :Who repre•
l'mstickingto it" The decision, of convention in Au~t, when DoJe sentSibeRepublicanNewSouthand
: cowse, wu that be ~ou~ J191 run for 'picks someone else, won't hQip might help guarantee tbat Bill Clinany el~tive office in 1996: He "also ·Dole's effort to catch ClintOn. ·
ton .and AI Ocn Cll!Y no Southern
bor. No Ulld 'pllod
. . I» pc I"II!Cc'. IAIIfOIO I» lrl fOOd - - .
told The Chicago Sun-'nmes that·be · ·Moreover, as GOP consultant · states except Arkan$88 and ·Ten17 ..........
is "not interested" in beinJ Dole's :Eddie Mahe says, if bole somehow. nessee, if that Campbell's disadvanvice pt'esident.
. ·
did entice Powell O\lto die ticket, the tap is t!Jit be's now a Washington
Even more.unequivocally, Powell media would devote· muciY of the lobbyist
.
politicalll!lviser Ken Duberstein said campaign to probing for dift'en~nces . · Mabe also touts former Defense
.
on CNN that Powell ." hu ~ded he between the two, inhibiting Dole's; Secretary Dick Cheney, who's all but
is not .Oing to be a c:anclid*e; jJeri- ability to get his message across.
disappeared frOID public view sinee
o4-" DuberStein ~d in another inter· · Mabe, along wid) many other . he mistakenly decided not to run for
• Dear Editor
'
view, "The door is slammed shut'·' Republicans, thinks that Dole's best president He's CEO of the Hallibur: We, the .:Csidents of Sumner Road in Meigs County, Ohio are in·need of
It's too bad. Having Colin Powell bet for veep is Michigan Gov. John ton Co., an oil exploration and engi: assjstance.
.u ·a president-in-training would be Engler, whose advantages are'that he neering firtn in Texas.
.
. Due to the unfortunate road closure of Ohio Route 7 north of Eastern High .great for the country. It wll\lkl also be is not a Washington insider, rep~- 1 Other speculators mention Mid• School, we are experiencing a high volume of heavy vehicle traffic.
great to see Dole sock ii to Pat sent$ a key Midwest_!nd~_tria! bat- .west Govs. George Voinovich of
: We have two bridges on Surimer Road which are posted with IG-ton weighi
: lililit si1ns. If in fact, and we have no ~uon to doubt, these bridges m I
: designed for vehicles of ten tons or less, then we, the residents living on Sum: ner Road and Meigs .County officials are facing a serious problem.
With the increasing amount .of traffic crossing SulllJier Road, many of
: which clearly exceed the )O.ton weight limit, Sumner Road hu evidencl\ of.
: a deteriorating condition and wilt continue to deteriorate even mo~.
We have contacted some elected officials and were told these vehicles
: under suspicion could not be weighed by the sheriffs office or the Ohio High- ·
; :way PatroL We have been informed that I~ County Highway Department
will be installins additional signs as an attempt to solve this problem. It is
our contention that the IO.:ton weight limit signs have not deterred the traffic, how will sev.eral more signs help?
·
We have some intelligence, and we believe that a 2S-pound sign will not
·~top a 25-ton truck.·
• If anyone' has a solution to our problem, please advise before any further
'deterioration occurs.
Sincerely,
Lloyd Blac:kwood, Potneroy,
, and 53 other Sunmer 1load resldeau

.2.
Co. Newsptllper
.

...
=Milll:_71»y_bo
___
_...A/I_
....,..,.. . not,.,--,.
............,llltllno---· ··-.. . . .

•.

~ID

~~. ~-- -~------------~- ~~~- ~~~--~-~--~-~---~---------.J

.~ Letters

to the Editor·

: When a. 1d-ton sign isn't enough .

MIOH.

=::Cre:fti!..ou~ J: ~; :~:

vention worse than the one that
might have greeted Powell ..
. Speculators,so fu have virtually
ignored MIIClk, but Dole aides confmn that they shouldn't. His drawbfcks are that he's a senator like Dole
and that be's from Florida, which normalty is an ~y-win state for Re!l'iblicans.
"If Dole can't carry Florida with10UI Made," ~ys one Dole -adViicr,
· "be's soing to lose n0 inatt£r what be
does." Even though Democrats
·habitually see pOssibilities of Cll!Y·
ins Florida because of its Medicare
population, in the last four presidcintial elections they haven'( polled
mo~ than 39 percent of the vote.
On the other hand; Mack isa well·
~ked prO-growth con~r:vative who,
as chainnan of the Joint Economic
:Committee, hu usembled the.OOP
·case on the hot issue of middle-class
insecurity- nimely,that it's caused
by a sub-par national econOmic performance for which Clinton tax

"

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W.VA.

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1

. By The Altoclldecl Preu
More snow is possible for Ohio
·: tonight from an approaching low
pressure system, the National Weath. er Service said.
B'ut accumulations won't come
close to matching those of TueSday
night and.Wednelday. Snow ~pths
ranged from 7-10 inches in west-cen.tral and nonh-central Ohio to S-7
inches in·die SDUthwest and 2-4 inches elsewhere.
The snaw shouldn't be around too
'long, however, with pri:dicti11ns of a
warming trend. Highs will be in the
·30s on Friday and 40s on Saturday..
· The record-high temperature for
:this date at the Columbus weather
, station was 77 degrees in I 948 while
the record low wu 8 in 188S ~Sunset

' an easy manner, and , a youthful
appearance (though be's SS). He's
Catholic, pro-life (but not in favor of a constitutional amendrlient), and
has a record of activism on behalf of
. the American Cancer Society. Both
be and his wife are cancer survivors.
Moreover; Dole likes and feels comfortable with him.
"Asked about veeps, top Dole cam.paign staffers say - comedy- that
the whole subject is premature and
\
I that they WOn't begin setting Up a
veep-vetting procedure until April,
when Dole hu secured a delesate
majority.
Right now, they say, Dole is try·
' ing to wrap up the GOP nominatilln
with a big victory in Califonlia and,
in the process, begin making the case
against Clinton. D9le's polls show
him beating Buchanan 110 percent to
16 percent in California.
Nonetheless, the buzzing about
vice presidents has begun in earnest
Colin Powell could do Dole a big
·favor, by goina on televisio11 and saying: "I meant iL No."
'
&lt;Monaa Koedteclke 11 eS.aliwi
edllor o( Roll CliQ, 11M~
of Caphlll HOI.)
.
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I

WaSh/ngtOn Today:

'
't be on th·e road ·
won
, t ·a·c"' .ss' ca pl·tal.c ··ty
1)

WJ/1/Bm A. Rusher

A t·
h f th
• d
· f th" ,I
I · ·
fJUmp Or «;! WIS Om 0 . e ega .sys.tem

!Y=~~~u':Fo~~~~icllrUute.~ethatcaneuily~.~paign

in-ises to high-profile legislative tests. Much of the battle is ex~ted to ! By Mlciiiii.Girtner
_even though the p and G lawyers . ry, .but the order re'mained ·in effect. . the way the media reported the case. :
~ f~J~I over. ~ '\erms of a balanc~ budset. and the ~lated Issue oft
AMP,S 1 Iowa - There is justi~ · w~ sealing them. ("It ~ms ~the
Finally, the i~ue got to the _appeals "The ~a (ha.'!~) an ediicat dUty to :
· ~· M~•cud, otber.!'W~-cu:e Issues and welfare. ·' . '
.
. . after all.
·
.taches of P and G's public-rellllons panel, and Merntt and Mlrlln were report fmly and without dislllrtion," : .
• 1 ; :. E~en House Speaker Ncwt;GJ~gnch..~ :vow~ !o put his c~s~le_ · . Just when you thought the .world
oft1ce wen~ a tilde dift'en~nt from appalled.
. ·
he said.
·
:
""'l~. ceec~and~ to the ~idehn~s. I m the JUnior panner ~n this~-·. ?f t.aw 8J!d tawy.e n. and c~ and those of its lawyers,"M~tt wrote.) - - B&amp;rr!ng ..the press from pri~tiliJ
illtimately, right prevailed, as it ·
·~P'' '!M' ~1g1a Rlipubhcan wd.
' . , has
· . -. · .. Judses ·wu crazy - after you aaw • In the second odd tw1s1. a lawyer somethmg 1s a "most ext£a91dm.y ~sually does. The in~denJ judi- .,
· (•· ~n\Q.n s.bli;dlel e'ICompasses the key~· !le; so~nded 1~ '!is~-.·, _Q.J. Simpson_a!lliee and F. ~ 'ai- . fro~ Bankers Trust's taw fmn gave ~y '' availa,~e only w~·publi- . ~.like the free preas, is an underr. ~
CIJIIpal8n, a balanced budJetln ·.seven years;
$100 '!"llip~lllt .ley go to Jill, after "MUCI!I Cl.t .. cop1es of the sealed documents to the 'c:atlOII would threaten an mterest tntung of democracy.
)'
·tDCIIIIII; tax cuts, and more spendmg fot education and enVJronmcn-: ·became a People mqazine celebrity · magazine. (''The circle of irony ·more fundamental than the Conatitu- · But this case w . es iall -:
•~~ than the OOP Con~ss wants. .
·
.. ' : and Judp Lance Ito a late-night com- ' . became complete,'' Merritt wrote.)
lion itself," M~n noted, and ·the 'important, for Feikpns~ ;:-'aliei.. ·.
' 1 PIJII,OII.slfDaled he .would ~OIIhllue 10 ~181 GOP efforts to cut bact too; k:'s lllaterial- along come Gil MetIn September, when Buainess ~was lifted.
ly thrown out die sinslo most ellet- :
• ·~Y. ~ the powth m M~ and Med~cald.
·
.
. . ritt and jloyee Millin Jr. to show us Week called Bankers 'lhlst for coin- · Alon1 the, way, the judges had a ished aspect of our free pras - the :
~ IIIII
..whic~h~: ~ ll!.,..,h,~Y wouldpush for thell' own b,'*~ .the wildom of the and the gl!li'Y ment. Bankers Trust and P and G few things to say.
.
ri&amp;ht to publish withoUt rellrainL
l
-r'tiiiDo . 0 . ~~·~tmuc 1n ""'cuts.
· - ' ; of demoeraey.
tried to bllr the mq'u:ine from printZ
In touah languaae, ~ Jl9led that
An initated Mlilin saidihe whole
.JI~~ '~Clinton challonJed !he~ to resolve the ~-bud- . Qij Merritt is chief judge of the · lag the Sloty. Thocompaniel received . ~ "ll no.time~ to real- · thina ''coUld be an addiiional c~gp-· •
~before N~ember; ~~:lucc~ the other ~f ]l!li~BJ. . . \\ 6th f Circuit.~ of ~al~, aqd iaatant approval from ~ Judp ~" ~ 'f"U ~'eng~Q~,_i!a ·~ ~lice rter in Philip K. Howard'• book; 'The..:
.~piblk:n_ ~ eXjledeifto 1llli'Odl1ce a,new balai~Ced-budset proposal : ~ Boy~ Millin 11 an ~late Judp. .JC)hn ~· .
,
. that:.,VIolates~ ~sttll!bon. . · ~De&amp;;tb of Common SeNe: How taw• l
,.' · !If~~ wtthin ~ refloC!i~ ~ they ~ w~n ¥set Ialka ; '' They"~ the ruling majority of: ' On the eve of printing, be faxed , Th,~ then enlllilzod lbo lawy•rs· is Sullocating America'."
:•
;4tf·~· 1•~· ~iol~ .~~ ~ hiscunpu111 p!ane that • : · ~ three-jvd,e panel usigned to an i .·. the tnaaazine~IIJpub~CIIlon. · •and thell' own Cl)(l~. "I Clllll10t
But it won't be. · ,
·!
. ,
-~~etW®Id.~e. ,~aB~,I!olebudaet. .
.
am~l. and blum, c,se.1be: '· · Anyone ·wnh a tnpwl~e 9f ~~~ ~ lophi~ &amp;@II
PorMIIrittllldMIIIIinhaVeruled..: ;
,
. •·~-on.everytlii~s•nCongrelllsJOinstocqmeupBilltltn- ·f!iets; "'
· ·
, peulaw ~an u~in&amp; of hop~fulty .qqaljfied' COU!IIelfailodto
Theysetthereconhtnilht
" I
tO!).w. Bob bole.
" ·( 1 ,.
, !.
. · · · ~'
· In )994, ProcteriJICI GAiiitlte Co. i 'jdemocaxy IQtew the oriJer'.would be reseuchlbe llw pfthisclicui~;•: Ml!r· . They lid the lawyers stra~Jht! ·
:
. :A.lAwll;'~.woawrfc.;theCiin~~:e~tioa~~ lilt · s_ueciBinb11~tCo. forS195lllil- . ;ov~ in' h\lun. .- '
. tin • . "111' tqp if.otf, e~n ~ : They 1111 the couft.i ~&amp;hl
:
ihl ·~!liP l8d dOwii l'eaaiYivatUa Aven~~e, "Much of th11 yeir Iton over~ louay I!IYelltlleDt. .A·. fodBut it wasa•t
. . · ·
qwn Court mmod
. IAIIWIRI of 1ts pn- . They set the prea l(qjJht.
~1
11
lllouJd bil, **lt?venina. pot about~l!l·".the . . . · ~ ·· eral'~mi~ly ~ tl!e.eompt- · · Bll!i •!i'ateiY• !&gt;-~' tactics, bad , : or~nt,,"be~incrili!:Jzinl
And they setthecOuntty nlht :
·J&gt;ukeldl,lbe·• c. ~ l9U Dembaillic p • tlilaoCIQ- · nieuilllillym t Wtheywelidto l ·tawyen and bad Jud~ Up! it in ·histol....-for•mtially!'Pholdlg· ' : (1, dc.rt.rludllortf... , 1

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Wtlak "Ill 111r tlbout lbe cJo-=

111 ,

]thetlli::.'.n;ymfor,iyinathe
-'Miek\Jhi?e!ytoprisltthe.O: 'case in the media, *'I M'cri!kized

•

Aallei(Iciwa)DdyToiL

•&gt; , J
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· Area sch"':'ls wete closed today during the ftrst full day of spring. To
· date, all Me1gs County schools have missed at least I0 days due to snow
·
. or flooding.
• In the Meigs Local School District. all schools have been closed at
: least 13 days, with Salisbury and Pomeroy elementaries being closed
14 and IS 1days, tespectively.
· · In the Eastern Local School District, Tuppers Plains Elementary has
:been cll!'ed 12 days, Eastern High School and Chester Elementary have
·been closed 13-days with Riverview being closed 14 days. .
Students at ~them Local Sc)tools have missed I pdays.

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No injuries reported in accident

No one_w_as ci!ed in a two-c.r accident Wednesday afternoon near :
rs Exxon 111 Pomeroy, according to Pomeroy police chief Gerald :
Rought.
The accident occurred on at 4:S8 p.m. on West Main Street when a ;
199S Ford Explo~r driven by James S. Rees, S7, Racine, was struck •
Ada Bissell, 87, Long Bottom, died today, Thursday, Much 21, 1996 at
from behind by a 1980 Buick driven
Robert L. Cunningham, S4, •
Holzer Medical Center.
Syracuse. ·
.
,
Arrangements will be announced by the White Funeral Home, Coolville.
According to police reJ\01'15, Rees was stopped in traffic on West Main '
Street when Cunningham !lid not see the Rees' vehicle in enough tiiJIC
' · to stop. .
Damage to Rees' Ford was moderate, while damage to Cunningham's ,
Doris A. Peat I, 72, Clifton, W.Va., died Tuesday, Much 19, 1996 at Pleas-·
Buick was heavy.
·
ant Valley Hospital.
,
She was a.homemaker and attended Clifton Tabernacle.
Born Sept. II, 1923, in Cliftpn, daughter of the late Alben Ross Smith
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol cited a Reedsville ,
and Martha V. Blair Smith, she was a homemaker and attended the Clifton
· ·man for left of center in a two-vehic)e collision Tuesday 011 Olive Town· :
Tabernacle.
ship Road 270 {Limberger Ridge).
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Albert P. Pearl, in 1995;
Troopers said Jetemy D. Cline, 21, 39860 SR 7, was SDUthbound, 120
and by two sisters and five brothers.
· ·
f~ north of Township Road IS7 {Pi~ Tree) at I I :35 a.m. when his •
. Survivors include a brother and sister·in-law, Roy A. and Helen Smith of
car went left and crashed head-on with a nonhbound pickup truck dri- .
Manning, S.C.; two sisters and a brother-in-law, Edna J. 111\(1 HiltY C. Roush,
ven by Glen R. Lawson, 61, 402S9 Limberger Ridge, Reedswlle.
Sr. of Mason, w.v._, and Bertha D. Cartwright of Cypress Cove, Texas; and
. . Damage to both vehicles wu mode~.
· .
several nieces and nephews.
Services will be II a.m. Saturday in the Fogleson~ Funeral Home, Mason,
with the Rev. Clyde Perrell officiating. Burial will be in the Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Friday.

:Little ·or no additional Doris A..Pearl.
:s~ow expected tonight

Taiwan's patien·c - may prove rewarding

•I·dency
ce
o.
r
pres
R
.a f

·Weather prompts school closings

:

IJl

Iilcar·Editor,
· Maybe this letter should be addressed io all pmnts in Meigs County. Here
is some fond·for thOught. Your child is seriously injtRd or is very' sick. Where
are you goini to take him or her? .
.
.
. , If minutes ·are the only thing standing between life or death for your child,
where m you going to take your child? Yes, the~ is the EMS, but where
.t)len?
Veterans Memorial Hospit81 is there for you! My daughter was very sick.
Her temperature "spiked" instantly. Her body was starting to shut down. If :
it wasn't for VMS! would not h•ve my daughter with tne today. ·
·· _
/II
1 _ ~· ~
. ·.. No one can "....A
. ;'• t what•will happen in the future butto know that VMH
1...
- - . • ~.,,~ a backup insurance policy ... it's the~ when you need:
...
toJ
. ' ~
' -. .is there is like having
.iL To know that there 1$ a facility thtl!C filled with a wonderfully ltind and
.
.
.
.
caring staff, not to mention well-uaineil, makes it hard for me to understand
why there is so little sU]IIIOrt being given to this well-needed health\:are facilIty. Please help keep VMH-there ... for when you need it!
Kathryn Roberts..Smlth
- ·
Rlrlnl By Wlllllm A. Rusher .
'lion- in the Taiwan Strait and not tainly not mldy to invade Taiwan graveconcern."WbatisPeltingsup1
Tajwan's presidential election on .,far (rpm Taiwan's two main pons.
today, but an economic blockade posed to make ·of that? How can it
Much 23 has brought to a boil a1 • • On Taiwan i~&amp;elf, the Kuomintanl, could ruin Taiwan's economy, and find out what, if anything, that p1nse
whole series of developments that ·which is the governing party. insists selective missile shots could devas-· means. except by atllll:lting?
have been coolting away on the back
"' · tate the island. ·
·'
i No doubt there is something to be
burner for several years.
,
In those circumstances, it would· \said for a bit of tactical ambiguity:
It hu completed, just for One•
-be madness for any Taiwanese gov- abouttheprec:iseniiUreoftheAmer- .
~.1': ;
.
· · .
•
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thing, Taiwan's transition from an
.ernment to provoke Peking by mov- ican rellpllMe, but there is nothing .
'f ·.·u
"
~()
'
authoritariln regime to a full-fledged, :::=n\~v~~i:' ~!: :ing towiud independence nOW. Even ~hatever for leaving Pelting in the
·
1·
democracy..
.
·. the demand for U.N. membership can
i•htest doubt that attacking Taiwan'.
1
· · on Tai•
• be a disaster for Comm.unist,
Comb.med WI·th the achievements democratic - i.e., after the Commu- ·•·ai
,. l. if necessary. .,.
ume IS
ould
By TOM RAUM
of Taiwan's powerful economy, it bas: ,ni!ts are gone. The only open support wliil's side, as ~ aging leaders of
hinL ·
.J
~lit«'Clltld Prell Wrller
attracted the admiring attention of the :for independen~ comes from the China die oft' and the ~pme strug- ~Now Bill qinton can see .11\)W:
: WASHINGTON- President Clinton's new budget hu next-to-nil chance · world- an attention Taiwan's 1~- ichief opposition party, whic~ appu- ·gles to maintain itself amid the ec&lt;&gt;y he blundered when he repudiof being embraced by the Republican Congress in an election year. ·
ers have seiZed on to proJQOte its. endy is ready to rislc a Communist nomil; and political JIRSSure&amp; this will
his ~ campaign pledge •and , ·
. : But as a political ~unient, it defines the battlefield for a presidential con- desire for funher International recog- attack. Listen to thisellusion by Chen · generate. The ~ course for Tai-:
-linbd' '· si.Uid ali • b.- '
#Jt th-', at least for the next few months, won't he waged across the coua- nition, including membership in the, .Shih~mcng, a fanner Secretary Ocn· .wan is wa~llilll'Watling:"''
" · ' arous h~lhtl ·!'ant;:~ our' ·
tty but across town.'
United Nations.
'eral of that patty (the DemocratiC
And what about the United States? 'readiness 10 trade with it Instead ot,
· · Five months before the Democratic National Convention, President ClinThese various developments, in ·Progressives), u quoted in the New Unfortunately, just when it is crucial civilizing Pelting. he has simply ere;,
tun hu aiven himself a full platform to run on, the $1.64 trillion spending tum, .have induced · a humongous York Times:
·
to make Pelting understand that any ated a greedy lobby of American.
dldine be submitted to Congress on Tuesday.
·
squalling fit in Petting. The Chinese
"If China uses military fori:e, we· attack on Taiwan woul(l provoke lnlders with China who will resist illy 1
. •. And S..nate'.Majority Leader Bob Dole, whose latest string of primary vic- Communist regime is jealous of Tai- will counterattack. We could destroy whatever American respon.se was effon to tame Peking's qgressi.ve , •
~es on"J'uesday clinched the Rbpublican ~idential nomination, won.' t wan's prosperity, frightened by the .,their economic zones incredibly fast. necessary to defeat it. we ~ve a pres- ways.
!
hiave to await'a GOP platform in August - pans of which may be written . ;suggestive example of its democracy, We will not win by piu:hing threats ident whose lifelon~ habit hu been
Interestingly, all this pliays right :
b~ vanquished rival P~ Buchanan anyway - for a faiJ campaign document. .and furious at any hint that Taiwan ·against military experts in the Chi- t~ fudge every q~on presented to into the hands of BOb Dole, a foreign , .
' )Jiiteal!, DOie'-ll!inifest9will be inked by the GOP Congress as it responc!s may cease to rellard itsetf as a Chi- -nese leadership, bOt if we use our mil- himS. S
f S Chri
. ,policy.expert and a longtime liiend of"
tQ the Clinton budget with its own proposals and counterproposals.
nese province and see!!. to go. its·own itary capacities to sow feu among the
o ecretary o tate
stopber 'Taiwan's.
:
t "It's unchllted lerritory, not just for us but fot them. The ground is very way as a sovereign nation ofZI mil- . economists, we can divide thai lead- . goes on the Sunday tall\,s~ws and • (William A. Rubedu Dlldafilzzy," said Nor!llan Ornstein, an analyst .at the American Enterprise lnsti- lion people.
ership to triumph."
announces proUdly tbat we have p ... ed Fellow of the ClUemont"
tape. a c.onservative.think tank.
·
•
Hence Pelting's recent military
Nonsense doesn't stop being non- made it. "very cleu" to Pelting that Inidtate tor the StUdy. of St.ta- ..
. •'"Bob Dole wants to show that" he's li 'doer' and that Clinton is a 'talker. ' ex~rcises - featuring surface-to- . .sense merely becailse it's spoken by any attack by China on Taiwan would -nAip ud Polttcal Plllloaoplly,) :
Unfortunately for Dole, much of what he would do to show be is a doer will .surface missiles with live ammuni- the Chinese. Pelting is almost cer- be - what7 - "a matter of ve£)'
,
·
•
~ show Bill Clinton is a doer," Ornstein said.
·
•l
_it .
, Never be(ore haS an incumbent president battled a sitting Senate major•·I

Charles 'R. Birchfield, 7S, St. Catherine's Care Center, Findlay, and formerly of 340 Cherry St.. Findlay, died Wednesday, Much 20, 1996 at St.
Catherine's Care Center.
Born June 3, 1920 in West VIrginia, son of the late Eli and Dora Pitts Birch·
field, be wu retired u a driver for the former United liuclting Co., Deii'Oit,
Mich. A U.S. Army veteran of World Warn, he was a member ofOAV Bud·
dy Chapter 43 and the VFW.
He was also preceded in death in October 1989 by his wife, Marcella Watson Birchfield, whom he married Aug. I, l94S; and a son, William Keith
Birchfield.
Surviving m a son, Marion R. Birchfield of Findlay; a daughter, Mrs.
Jeffrey (Tomma) Fittro of Findlay; five grandchildren and six great-grandchildren; a brother, Larry Birchfield of Vanlue; and two sisters, VIrginia Smith
of Clifton, W.VL, and Opal Biggs of The Plains.
Services will be I :30 p.m. in the Colden-Crates Funeral Home, 20S W.
Sandusky St., Findlay, with the Rev. David Bringman officiating. Burial will
he in the Van Hom Cemetery. Friends may eall ai the funeral home from 2S and 7-9 p.m. today.
The Han,cock County Veterans Memorial Squad will conduct graveside
military rites .

:.

Ada Bissell

Miliiijij~~~~~~\Mf&amp;~"i~,;.;-~~~~----_;:_--__:_----~ ,increues
areatofamous
blame.baseball··name,
Mack has

:Local.hpspital i~ there for you

_. A two-story frame house neu sY'nlcuse wu gutted in an early mommg fi~ today.
. F'uefighters of the SyracuSe Volunteer F'ue Department respoadaf tQ
· ·the Roy Jones Road residence of Jamie Wolfe llDUnd 1:40 LDL Almost
14,000 gallons of water wu used to extinguish the blaze, which
destroyed the house.
No injuries were reported and a cause of the fi~ has not been determined.
Pomeroy and Racine VFDs assisted with trucks and fm:fighters.

Charles R. Birchfield

Ohio, Jim Edau of Dlinois, and
Tommy Thompson of Wisconsin u
well as Ne"!' Jersey Gov. Christine
Todd Whitman. Whitman presum·ably won't get tapped because she'S

·:

"tonight will be at 6:4S p.m. and sun-·
rise Friday at 6:3I a.m.
.
Weather forecast:
Tonight...Occasional snow northeast to scallered snow showers SDUthwest. Snow accumulations ranging ,
· ~ ooe 10 three inches northeut to
little or none soUth; Lows in the lower to mid 20s.
Friday... Snow showers likely
n~l and mostly cloudy else·'
where wiih scattered flurries. Highs
in the 30s.

Citation issued following accident

Meigs·anno~ncements· ~~

sanu!::.=~-:-:!'the 20s.

Farmers apply for state
Highs in
Ioan. program.
$u~y...Pair. Lows 2S to 30. . re duced
·
.
· Highs mid
to mid

whe~ on April 27. Registration is
Volunteers are needed to assist · from 9 to 9:30 a.m. Lunch will be
with the Middleport pool renovation.· . provided. For more information interthe 40s.
~ Residents interested in helping are · ested persons may call 614-446asked to call Arnold Johnson, who is · 1494 or 446-"9S49.
40s
SOs.
Monilay... A chanee of rain, Lows By AARON MARSHALL
· all qualifications and are properly in charge of the renovation, or Coun! Potneroy youth Iague
in the lower and mid 30s. Highs Gannett News Service
filled out. 1b qualify for the state pro- cilman Bob Gilmo~ at 992·6128.
Pinal sign up for the Pometily
upper 40s to upper SOs.
COLUMBUS - Neuly 2,400 gram, farmers must be headquartered
·
Dances
to
be
held
Youth
League will be held todlly
·
farmers statewide have filed applica- in Ohio, maintain a majority of land
· from S-7:30 p.m. at Pomeroy EleTWo
round
and
square
dances
are
lions for the $100 million Agri-Link or facilities in Ohio and be organized . scheduled for which the Out of the . mentary School. .
reduced rate loan program, according fot profit.
Blue band will play. They are Satur·
to the State Treasurer's office .
•
·day at the Wagnn Wheeler, Jackson. · S r - e youth leatpJe
There were 2,386 applications
ThetowintcreSttoansare~ner.
ally
about
four
pen:enl
lower
than
.
7:30
to
10
p.m.,•
with
Delver
Syrac~
Youth
League
sign
~p
from all88 counties in Ohio mel the similll term . loans available cornRichards, c..ler; and March 30, ilto will be held the next two Saturdays
~~h !~~~,::CO~i~!S!~s
mercialty. The average toan is in the 11 p.m. at the Tuppers Plains VFW, from 10 Lm. to noon at the gralle
school. .
yeat, treasurer's office spokesperson · $70,000 to 75,000 range and provides with Jim Brown, caller.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - .The jury; the !tilling o( their ~· · '..'":
)enny Camper said.
farmers with operating capital for
thai ,ambnicecl.tblf•~ that Erik,
Jurors were to return feW the penalLoan approvals will be announced whalever cub flow needs they have, lnaplra~011 Day set
·, Church meeiiDg •• ·
;.
. and . Lyle · Moiieliilet wtte ~ted: ' ty phase Monday to _dec;ide whether April IS. Out of this yeu's crop of ~amper said. ·
·
· · . · · ' The ladies of the Chapel Hill 1 The Faith Pull dospet Church will
brats who murdered their parents for~ the ba:oiJters, shquld receive lethal . applications, a farmer's chances for
"It helps your family farmer. It's Church of Christ m hosting an · have gucstspeaker Paul Goodman111
the family fonune must now decide, jnjectioll or life 'in prison without a loan is slightly better than 50-SO, as a way 10 help someone who doesn't Inspiration Day for women every- · the 7 p.m. Friday service at the
whether the brothers should get a -~ parole. Until that decision is made, . typically .1,200-1,300 applications have a huge operation but nonethe! church.
;·deaih sentence.
· :
. , jurors - J1!1C1 other .trial puticipants . m appro_ved a year, Camper said.
·less 1·s 1·mportant," Camper su'd.
.. · : · 'VCR ""'t""
l.o'ili-.l from eliscuisms
· the verGrover Cleveland Alexander, a
,• . The fint-depee murder cunYIC·
The criteria for loan approvals is
: lions Wodnesd•y in the llrothers • dicl
based on a farmer ·s credit rating.
member of the Baseball · Hali of
In tl)e, fint trial •. the privileged, Credit ratings are submitted and .
Fame, saw service with the u.s.
: retrial came nearly seven years. after!
: they fired IS shotgun
at Jo.se ; . hl1ldsoaie and self-assured younJ determinedbythe1endinginstitution
Army in France in 1918.
:
•and Kitty Meneitdez as•tl» ,))lrints I · men were reduced to tears as they processing the loan application.
UnitS of the Meigs County Emer. o watched television and ate iee creun : .described their 4S-year-old enter- .
Piled applications are now being . gency Medical Service recorded eight .
tainment executive father as tyranni- reviewed by the Treasurer's office calls for assistance Wednesday, .
'
: in their Beverly Hills nW!sion.
: · Erik, 25, and Lyle, 28, IJIIpeiRd · cal and sexually abusive. Their moth- checlting that those submitted meet including two calls for assistance.
: pale but showed no "emotion u the· er, .47, W.. depicted as an erratic,
,
Units ~sponding included:
·
MIDDLEPORT
: words ~'guilty of murder" were read! deeply troUbled woman who abused
• in the courtroom.
alcohol alid drugs and once locked
The following couples were
5:29p.m., North Second Avenue, !
: ·The defense, which had suffered '. ·her baby ill the closet so She could go issued marriage licenses recently in Amanda Miracle, Veterans Memori- '
' several serious setbacks in J'l!iings ' · shoppins:~
the Meigs County Probate Court of al Hospital.
.
•fJom the judge, had claimed that the
The brotbers admitted killing their . Judge Robert Buck:
POMEROY
I'
; brothers ltil!ed after yem of sexual parents, 11111 said they did so in selfRandal Eric Bolton, 25, Ric~
2:16a.m., Lincoln Heights, Dani abuse.
1 defense, foiring their parents would mond, Ky., and Kimberly Raye
ny Walker, VMH;
EVIIIISViUc,ln.
• 1\vo years 110, the ftrst trial end- . 'ttiJI ·tbe"m rather than risk a scandal White, 31, Shade; Gregory Edwin
4:14 Lm., High Street, Emily
June 8-9, 1996
; ed in mistrial .ncr two juries- one 1 over inc:cat.
Buchanan, 35 , and Elizabeth Ann Sprague, Holzer Medical Center;
·
: for each brother- couldn't decide if ,
.. Bryant, 44,both of Reedsville; Travis
7:40 p.m., Nye Avenue, Steven ·
Escorted By:
; the slayings were premeditated mur- i
Lee Gibbs, 21, Letart, W.Va., and ' James, VM~YRACUSE
Donna Murphy
; ilor or self-defense. One jury helld.;
.
JeMifer t,farie Cart, 18, Buffalo,
. the five-month retrial..
,
,
•
W.Va.
11:24 a.m., Sevenih Avenue, Lar; After four days of deliberations, , Am l!le Power .....................41 •
ry Hendrix, Pl~t Valley Hospital . .
*JCruises
- .
f~ dlat tile brothe
Aklo ........................._ ...,_.......55\
'H
.
I
.
TUPPERS PLAINS
~ · Jury
,
. rs not . ~~~~~ ·91, ........... - ...........,.~
fi
d
·
*2Meals
8:I 3 Lm., volunteef 1~ epart· ·
only coJDJnitted ·multiple murders · ATAT .....................................11.
Veterans Memorial
: but had lain in wait for their victims · Blink One ..............................35'1.
ment and squad, motor vehicle acci• Vegas-StyleSiz.zle
; -findings .tbatarec~ '!spe- · lobE- ............................15'4
Wednesday admissions- Sandra dent on State Route 7, Duane Ketel,
: cial circumslal)eef",subject to a pos- · ""'"Warner .......................:.32\
Wrikeman, Reedsville
boetter, refused treatment.
Call ot s top IJy today'
; sible death selltellql
Califqmla
CMmplon Incl......................17'tt
Wednesday discharges - ·none.
'.
·
Chllrmi:J Shop ....................4\
Holzer Modleal Center
Gallipolie
CO
LONY
THEATRE
I
I
: aw.
;.
DIKharaes Mardi 20 - James
...,.........................23''~
, ; The jury ,cou)d have found the !
Mogul .......................18'1.
TONIOtfT
360 Seecmd A•e. U6.0699
•·brothers guilty of le$ser counts
Gannett ...............................70'1.
Ferguson, Matthew Taylor, Goldie
RUMBLE IN THE BRONX
manslaug~ler in the sll!ying of their
Qood)• TAR ......................SZ'lo
McGowan, Edgar Eberts, Florence
. R
father and ~;dcpee murder ln' K._rt ....,.............................8'1.
Elleessor, Jerry Collislln, Mrs. Doug
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
LMda Encl.............................1s\
Tawney and son, Peggy Caldwell,
STARTING FRIDAY
Lhnlled Inc..............................19
Mahalia Robinson, Jackie Rhea.
·
JOIIIt TRAVOLTA,
,_.Dplee Bancorp...................23
Blrdu - Mr. and Mrs. Edward
CltRISTIM aATER
The
Sentmel One
0111o v~ "-'k.....................
Sevettth J41mual 1)itttte'l 1)aJtce
Valler'.................;........32'1.
Hughes, daughter, Jllllkson; Mr. and
(UWI ZIJ.MIJ
Aocknll .............................110'1. Mrs. David Woods, son, Oak Hill;
BROKEN ARROW
•
..' Ralllllna
..
A
Mwn
..................
32'
1
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Mr.
and
Mrs.
Jack
Griffith,
son,
R
Pu- "FY10.'&amp;a 1 o. MoodaJ .......,
Frtdoy; III "Cooft S.., ~ Olllo, _, dJo .
AopJ Dutoh1She11 .............138'1. Ewin~n; Mr. and Mrs. Steve Shull,
ONE EVENING 1H0W 7:30
~v.u.,-·~to:.
Bh(jney'alnc
..........................
l'l.
son,
Point
Pleuan•
W.Va.
l------~~~~----..J
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.... Blink .....~.......................M'h
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ttl Dill
WIIICIY tnt'1 .......................... 18'1.
(Published wldJ penallllon)
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II
U 't I'IJMtAitaciMidPieu,
i'' .WOrtlll~
·~·
Naa I. I Aeeoc:f"'By Popular Demand...
Stock ,.porta are 1.._10:30
I'OII'I'MAI'I'D s.d . _ ocaswiow eo :~ · Lm• .,_...-..~-.by AdvHI
G~OURPHOTOGRAPHY
of Cllllll. . . . .
' ,_., Dolly - - Ill c-t Sl., - . . , . '
Ol!lo4m9.
IS RETURNING TO ...

..·.Menendez brothers face
•
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..•
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•lty .
·ISSUe$ ver IC 0 _ gu1

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Pool volaateen needed

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Meigs EMS runs

b....,_

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Marriage licenses

CASINO

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osp1•ta news

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CALL FOR APPOINTMENT,

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992-2550

SHEAR ILLUSIONS

$211.25

Mj~dleport,_ Ohio

·293 S. 2nd

.

52 Wiab..-·--··-----·::SIOD.n

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Si..~lt $2o.oo eoupi( $35.oo

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llNQI;i COPY NICI
DoiiJ -"-·~---·;-·-·- .. - .......... ]5 Ooolo

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Satu'ldtllf, /ftatch 23td
6:30 p.m. to /ltidttl~ht

SHEARILLU

- -·--·- -----·-:··--·-·-a2.0D

Olio - --··-..·-·'""-·· --··.............11.10
Old V..o:•-..•rr••r•oT '""""'"-"'""$104.QD

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Tlckell Available At Ferme18 Bank In Pomeloy
Home National Bank In R1c!ne, Bel* One In Pol••oy.
Melga County Chamber Olllce, Or Atrrf Board Ulll'l-lr
!'of More lnfllnllllllon Clll812-5005
~-------·-·

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way, March 21, 1918 I

The Daily. .SenJw.et
.

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Alabama and Tulane win
said Wedneiday night after Alabama
edged the Gamecocks 68-67 to reach
the NIT semifinals. "I've come here
two times before an"ost pretty ba~.
so this is just a great feeling."
In its 'trip to the Carolina Colise. -urn on Jan. 20, -Alabama·was
routed
.
. . ..

8y PETE IACOBEW

' COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) Alabama coul&lt;ln't have been any
·lower after its last trip to South Carolina.
·"We're leaying a lot higher now,"
Crimson Tide gl!!lfd Marvin Orange

~

.

to advance to semifinals

90-67, exposing the Tide as a second-division club in the Southeastern Conference.
"We knew that wasn't the Alabama team ·we wanted to be remembered by," Alabama forward Roy
Rogers said.
This time, Eric . Washington
scored 25 points, including a goahead three-pointer, and Alabama
twice came from four pointS &lt;!own ln
the second half.
"We just. had to make up our
minds after that first game here that
. we were going to come out and play
hard, ~' Washington said.- "That's
what we did."
In the other . NIT quarterfinal
game Wednesday night, Tulane
trounced Dlinois State 83-72.
For Alabama, Rogers had I 0
points, I 3 rebounds ~nd seven
blocks, two off the NIT single-game
~ord that he tied Monday night
· against Missouri.
Washington's fourth three-pointer put the Crimson Tide (19-11) up
6 I -60 with four minutes left, and the
Gamecocks (19-12) couldn't catch
up.
.
Alabama coach David 1Hobbs
said his team was unquestionably
better this time. "We understand our

1.!

roles better. We're a lot tougher men- driving for a basket and, after Brian S11uth Carolina's victory over Vantally, and when things got tough in WilliBJI)s tied it with a jumper, hit the derbilt on Monday. •
the game last time, we kind of go-ahead three-pointer.
He said the Gamecocks knew earcracked a little bit," be said. "But
A free throw. by Watson cut it·to
ly there would be no walkover
this time we didn't do that."
against Alabama·this time.
66-6S. Williuns goi fouled after
And boy, were there opportunities rebounding Watson's miss of the sec"Their overall intensity was up," '
to fold.
Davis said. "Any team with the heart
. and free thro111. and made both foul
South Carolina guard Melvin shots for Alabama's final points.
or spunk their team has is not going
Watson missed a potential tying free
"We couldn't .get the defensive
to allow us to do ·it again."
throw with 54 seconds left. With rebound: that really hl4fl us the last
'IUI1111e 83, IWDols SL 72
South Carolina down 68-67. with 10 2-3 minutes - when we'd fly at
Tulane, playing its first postsea- t
seconds to go, Watson dribbled the their shooters and the shooter would ·son game ever ·at home, shook off I
ehd up getting the ball back,:' South Dlinois State as Jerald Honeycutt '
ball off his left foot out of bounds.
"I didn't slip, I just lost it," Wat- Carolina coach Eddie Fogler said.
scored 18 of his 25 points in the secIt was a hard road to New York ond half.
son said.
' '
Tulane (21-9), whic;h had never 1
BJ t-.1cKie's three:.quarter court for Alabama. The Tide won a firstshot slammed off the backboard.• hit · round game at Dlinois (72-69) before won three postseason games before, ·
inside the front rim and bounced blowing out Missouri (72-49).
was determined to use the NIT to
South Carolina was 16-1 at home show the NCAA tou111ament glee- '
away at the buzzer.
.
Alabama will make its fourth trip before this loss; with only NCAA tion committee that it was wrdng in ·
to New York's Madison Square Gar- tournament favorite Kentucky win- overlooking the Green Wave this I
.
den as an NIT semifinalist, and its ning in Columbia.
year. Tulane beat Auburn and· MiJ1- ·
But Alabama had a streak of its nesota in the first two rounds.
first since 1979. The Crimson Tide
will meet either Rhode Island or St. own at work, never losin·g after leadMaurice Trotter led the Redbirds '
ing at halftime. The Tide, _bc;hind . with 16 points, ~ico HilJ had ·114 and :j
Joseph's next Tuesday.
With Rogers altering shots on the Williams' IS P.Oints, were up '3S-30 Dan Muller 13. LcVeldro Sinimo11s ·
ipside and Washington scoring from at the break.
added 21 points f11r Tui~~J~C.
;
Larry Davis~ Sou.th Carolina's
the outside, Alabama led 35-26 in the
~ G~n Wave outscored llli- I
second half. But South Carolina, lop scorer at 18 points a ga\nc, was nois State 17-6 over' a ·six-mjnute .
helped by a technical on Hobbs and in a funk for his second straight stretch to lead 67-S6 with~:Oit left)
seven of McKie's 17 points, went game. He was I -of- II overall, miss- Dlinois State (22-12) cut Tulane's
ing all six of his three-pointers. lead to 73-68 with 2:50 left, but ..
ahead ~8-54 with 5:47 to go.
Washington look control again, · Davis was 2-of-8 from the floor in could get no closer. ·

The Final 16 has ,no shortage of
coaches who have been further than
that.
"Nobody knows how tough it is
. to get to the Final Four," said coach
Nolan Richardson, whose Arkansas
· team has made it the last two years,
· winning the title in 1994 and reach' ing the final game last year.
Rick Pitino's Kentucky team and
Roy Williams' Kafisas squad were
Final Four participants in 1993, a
year after Bob Huggins took his last
Cincinnati team there.
Lute Olsen had his Arizona Wild-

I

.florjda .. :............ ~7 Z4 9
Phllodelfhia ..... :.l521 1.3
··· - ' - ........32-2711
. Waibi11Jf0!1 ........ 3]29. B
T-Ill)' ........3~ 2110

.

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41
.... .11 53

25
37

Oua.wa ............... ISSI 3

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22

.Hockey .

:lit.£1.: DeCKs:

AN=
A&lt;·
quircd Ken Baumanaer. ~1"1 Wina. from
the Toronto Maple Eceafa ror a I 9%
rourth·round draft c:boiee. Sent David
Sacco. riahl wina. Jim Campbell. center,
and Jeremy Stevcuoa. lefl wina. to Balli·
IYIOI'e or the AHL

iiA
158

Tlli1HII!&gt; -, ............ 21l312 68 215 226
Wi""'pea.- ........2936 ' 63 2l4 2:19
,.Dol. ......... ,.......23 3512. 58 196. 232

22~

--

2'~
37~
41~· ' '

x.COiondo .........41 21 10 92
Cal- ..............Z? lO II M
Vlll!!oover c........ 27 )() IS M
Alliheim ............2136 6 62
. EdmDIIIDD .......... 2617 7 , 59
L&lt;&gt;a ................ Zil7,15 57
Sanlooe ........,... l749"7 , 41

lil
.

I~

sl·

CALGARY FLAMES: Sent Kevi~a
CUI, de(eoaemu, to Slim Joha or lhe
AHl..
CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS: A&lt;·
quirul Ravil Guamanov, left wina, from
the Winnipe.a,Jeu, for aJ996 founh·
roond draft pick. Recalled Edua Morau,
left wioa, !tom 1 - U • or lk OIL.
COLORADO AVALANCHE: Ac·
quired Dave Hunaa, center, from the
Burtalo Sabre• ror a 1996 ai&amp;th·roUnd
~·~'' ··~·--~~"'.•:-::-• Marha. ceater, to

1J6 207
210 208

:149 249
197
202
226
228

217
162
271
316

, x-cllndoed playolhpot •

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351

M""'""' l, lbnfud 2
Qotroil 4. Torooro l (01)
Boo1oo 2. New Ioney I
SlnJoae7, WinRipq I
1.
2
~ Dlll"u 2. St Louis 1
Colondo ' · Loo.A...... 2

81
18
181
21
21

c.._ au.,.,.

.446
.364 . ~~

.,

BUFFALO SABRES: Recalled Brian
Holziaaer, cen~er, from Rocheaer or tbe
AHl..

y-clilldtocl dl"*" IIIIo

19

~~

.44l

. 2.13 •'

Otlcaao .............. l&lt;l2411 83 :141 190
Si.IAuia ............ ll 28 12 74 191 20l

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WASHINotoN ilEDSKINS: Slpt&lt;d

fz&gt;ia Colli« ud Sblr l'ounllnooh, defea·
alve.IICkiN, and HM'iiOtl Hovslon, wide
ROCiver.
·

20B 222
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33 163 ~I

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WFSTERN CONFERltNCE

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218

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Pi•ot&gt;u•&amp;h ..........41 24 ~ 116
Mon0Nil ............ l5 27 8 78
lloi11Ht ............... .l3 21 ' g 7~
HllllfoRI .............30 32 7 67
Butrolo ...............27l&lt;l 7 61

II
17
20

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.......
.
.
NiW liNOLAND tJ;;.RIOTSi
Sappohitclc..
ive lint·
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...SAN'Pio.FRANCISCO
49ERS: Sianed

20l

N,Y." I•Iuden ....204.1 B 48 '199 269

Iii
36

83 232
83 236
75 112
74 196
741206

cats in the Finil FQUr in 1994, Y{hile
Louisville's Denny Crurn is seeking
·his f~rst Final Four benh since 1986.
That was a year after Georgetown's
John Thompson made his last trip,
· finishing as runnerup a year after
·winning the title.
" A IQt of things go into winning
a national championship with a onegame shot," Richardson said. "This
. year there is n(! pressure on us. the
pressure is on Massachusetts to continue to be the No. I team in the
· country."
The NCAA tournament, already
pared from 64 to 16 teams, begins

DSTROIT RED WINOS: Acquired
Kirk Maltby, ri&amp;ht winJ, from .tbe Edrnoo~lcn (cw Daniel Gillis, ~~
1

clack :;' ,:es;~~ 5ec:":;a[h1: Dan6c- .
nault, ri&amp;ht winJ,IO Adirondack.

, .

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~

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LOS ANGELES KINGS: Acqoired

Jaroslav Modry, dcfen~eman, from the()(.
taw a Senators for Kcvia Brown,· riaht
wina.
NEW JERSEY DEVIl.ll: Senl RiCIId
Penaon, defenaeman, and &amp;eve SulliQn,
cenler, to Albany of the AHL:.
NEW YORK ISLANDERS: T•aded

F1llfl'ICI for Pal Con~ther,left wina. and a
1997 aillh·I'OIInd draft pick.

.

PHILADELPHIA FLYERS: AI·
aianed Palrik Juhlirt, left wina, to Hrnhcy
ofdliC AHL for conditioaina.
PITTSBURGH PENGUINS : A&lt;·
quired Kevin Miller. - · !tom llle SID
Jote Sharks for a 191it6 fiflh·rond draf't
pic:k. Acquired J.J. Dai&amp;ncaull, defeuemlll, from the St. L.oui• -81ues for a 1996
ai.llh-round lhfi pick.

ST. LOUIS BLUES: Acquired Yuri
Kbmylcv, left wiaa. aad a 1996 ei&amp;htb·
rould draf'l: pick from the Buffalo Sabres
for Jean-.Luc: Grand Pierre, defen~em~~~, a
1996 oecond·round draft pick and ol997
third-rouDd draft piet."
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNINGc A&lt;·
gulred laor Ulanov, defen•eman. and
Patrick Poulin. lefl winJ, from lhe Chiea10 Bltckhawkl for Enrico Ciccone, d&amp;
feNCII\I.n,

~

.at
.. .

Bob Sweeney, center, to the Calaary

y"

25"011

i

PPJ,.

SlliCiilCiges

S.pplles

50%0H

Wllll~ol

i

· · ·~

With Purot.. of
• Bird.

se..on,.

rThis
Florida strugled 1
~i~ a yQunl team and one of the ,
4atjon'i ~\lll&amp;l!c!SI ~hedules, losing j
~ght of its last I I gliiRCis to finish 12- .

•

·ire
&amp;cAA
tourney
view.·~ ·

· ;i

YOUR·EASTER BEST

"f

(Continued from Pige 4)
~If a bag of donuts, no matter
'1hat."
.
The fact is, Pitino's Wildcats are
!f:point favorites over Rick
rpjcrus' Utes.
! "If we're setting in a sunio ring,
and I, head-to-head, then he's the
underdog. I'll crush him.'' said
MajeruS, who weighs at Ieast twice
If much as Pitino. "But on the court,
'*'re in trouble."
~ Crum doesn't see how being a
fiSur-point underdog to Wake Forest
itips his team.
~ "I would rather be so good that
··re 10-, IS-, 20"-point favorites,"
hi said. "To me, that's the best place

'I

N.Y. Ia-.II~J:lO,p.m:
I
'
&lt;"" ~ •

Frlday'apliles

Montreal at Buffalo, 7:30p.m.
Hartrord 11 Onawa. 7:30p.m.

.,

C1tiCII&amp;OIINewJeney, 7:li)p.nt
Co~ •llaroi~ 7:30p.m.
Pltllld!Jibla 11 W!-1::10 p.m.
Alllheiot 11 SO. I.Ouia,'S:10 p.m'.
San looell Cllpry, 9::10·p.m.
Dalloo" v-vct: 10::10 p.m.

Tr.-msac lions

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Holiday card. for eW,y Euler wiah. . "
from
Carlron Card..
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i

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·t1
Crum 's players say not being
eapectcd to win motivates them and ,
Dlta pressure on their opponents.
· t. "I like it," Tick Rogets said. "If
yLafur'that a team is the underdog
~~uch; the other team starts think;;, of you as an·underdog."
" Then there's Olsen, who, in a
..-u~ne article. said li!CQue Valighn
+.Kansas was "a fine point aiwd ·
can't shoot" !Inc! augeated that
ttiCJayhawks~ dcpch was sus'*'.
·:That, of coune, was IoRI before •
~ two wqund up as reponal semifilial OJlPOIICIIIS-' ~•.o1- hal put,
a Wfferent spin,on his ilnulb.
; "We both l!tve icOO!II bat~.
Ud Jlcque VIUIIm. ~ them JIO
lite Rcnie OeaJy. llllkes' ua 10,"
aaon ~- "'lbey probably !live .
fiiGI'c depth.thin' 'l!"e have.
·
. "Their lil.c itiiide and tbeir depth
.., . _ whet'c they might hive' the · ·

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Trlffll Eli Frtt. ·

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CARLTON
CARD, S

.

;- Collins, an assistant at Dlinois .
Cince 1983, had iought the job him- :
tiblf and was Henson'schoice. Hen- :
~n. 64, announced his retirement:
~b. 24 after 2I ~ons at Illinois,
i)i which he went 422-223 overall :
~d 213-163 in the Big Ten. His'
cluecr mark is 661-330.
:·
·:: Kruger, 43, led the Gators from :
tiedepthsof~in 1990tothe
1\fCAAFinal Four in 1994, when the.
~ went 29-8, the 'best reCord in
tile school's 76-year basketball his·

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so

anotlicr four-day splurge tonight that
will whittle the field to lhc final four . sissippi State (24-7) and Cincinnati ~·
teams next week in the Meadow- (27-4) against Georgia Tech (24-11 ), &gt;
lands at East Rutherford, NJ.
while the West Regional at Denver ~
Massachusetts (33-1 ), seeking to will send Georgia (21-9) against •
reach the Final Four for the first lime, Syracuse (26-8) and Kansas (25-'5)
will lake the next step tonight when · against Arizona (27-11). Those win-'
it takes on Arkalisas (20-12) in an ners will play Sunday.
· ~
East Regional semifinal in Atlanta.
"Football is the only sport you
Tonight's first game at the Georgia have to worry . about respect, ...~
Dome will pit Georgetown (28-7) Thompson said. "In basketball you•l
against Texas Tech (30-1).
just play. In late March, if you are2
The Midwest Regional semifinals playing, you "are a good basketball ~­
also are on tap tonight il' Min- team. Texas Tech is 30-1. Ob:Yious·
·1
nC4polis, where Kentucky (30-2) ly they are goOd."
plays Utah (27-6) before Wake ForKentucky is a strong favorite to ''
est (25-5) maiChes up with Louisville win everything this year. But Pitino'l
recently suggested his team was· an C
(22-11).
'
·
·. ·
"
The winners at the two regions underdog.
Pitino insists he was only trying
will battle Saturday for trips to East
to imitate Providence coach· Pete ~
Rutherford.
On Friday. night, tile ~theast Gillen, '-' who always considers l!im- ~
•· Regi()(W at Lcxiilltolt, .IftY&gt;&gt;' ' will·
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Dempsey also said he had town team, which Dempsey said Coast hotel-casino, which Gaughan
"John Thompson. will not die 11
"strong concerns llboul the image could be a further invitation to con- . owns.
wealthy man because of thit invest·
statement that 111is makes about the troversy if the team doesn't play well
"He lo~s 'Las Vegas. He comes . ment," Gaughan said. "It's a veey
, sport and abbut him as a coach."
in a big game.
here for recreation," Gaughan said. small business investment and it hll
Thompson wants to own I 0 per"If your team competes and does- "He wanted to know if there was nothing to do with the hotels."
cent of a company controlled by n't play to the caliber that it's capa- s.l)Rielhing he could get involved
Gaughan said Thompson plays
Michael Gaughan that runs the slot · ble of playing, there's going to be the with here."
only slot machines and never gaeL._
machine concession at the Las Vegas question of whether or not the game
McCarran business manager Lar- pear the casino's sports book.
airport. Gaughan is the principle had been fixed," Dempsey said. "It ry Larson-said the slot machine con"John justloves ~o play slots," b:
stockholder in a company that owns just opens up a tremendous suspi- .cession is the' airport's most Iuera- said. 'T ve got {,000 little old ladies
two casinos, but .the slot machine cion, l think, that is not necessary." . tive, bringing in some $20 million to out there who know him by his firsl
concession is separate from the casiGaughan said Tuesday he has airport coffers last year. Gaughan. ' name. They talk slot talk, which
nos.
known lbompson for rs years, and however, said it was a minor busi- one's ready to hit, that kind of thing.
Gaughan's son, Brendan, is a the Georgetown coach is a regular ness compared to the casino busi- He 's an entirely different perso6
senior walk.on guard on the Georgeslot machine player at the Gold ness.
~ere."

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (APl- Unl·
vei-sity of Florida basketball coach
Lon Kruger has decided to leave for
.another job, apparently as Lou Henson's replacement at Dlinqis.
Kruger met with his players
'Wednesday night to infomt .tbem of
his decision.
.
. ''He ~ the decision to
coach somewhere elte. It was Ve.rJ
emotional. Nobody said anything, ·
. and the.re ,wera a lot of tears," said
freshman giard Eddie Shannon.
Kruger, who .was in·Champaign
earlier WedneSday, could not be
reached for comment.
.
Kruger planned a news conference at 2 p.m..ill Illinois, The Palm ·
Beach (Fla.) Post reported today.
School officials said Wednesday that .
no news conference was scheduled. ·
. Illinois officials would not con- .
finn the hiring. But Ulini assistant .
coach Jimmy Collins, who met with .
Illinois athletic director Ron Guenther o,n Wednesday, indicated the job '
was Kruger's.
;
"I have \ to bc:lieve from what·
Guenther told me that Kruger is
going to get the job," Ulllins told,
Tfle F/o..,rido, ntMs·UIIion of Jack~
sonville.
.
. Guenther haq ,,no comment on
er's hirl~g ixat:said he "has a
hake, verbal deal with some-

'·

~I

for Nevada gaming license

taken Illinois
· coa~h's ·po(lt?

"
have Connecticut (32-2) against Mis-

csee PltEvmw

- -- .. __ _

Has Kruger

In resumption of NCAA Division I men's csgefest,
By The Asaoclatecl Preu

•

By TIM DAHLBERG
: license months ago to jom a Las
LAS VEGAS (AP) __;, George· : Vegas casino owner in the company
town bu~l 'coech John ThomP':: that operates a lucrative string of
son, bowing to the wilhes of his uni· 1,000 slot machines at McCarran
vcrsity president, said Wednesday he International Airpon.
will drop l!is application for a NevaNews of his planned entry into
da_aaming liunae.
the gaming industry was greeted iciThompson had planned to operate · ly by both the university and the
slot machines at the Las Vegas air- NCM.
L
·
.
port but wu told by the Rev. Leo
NCAA executive director Cedric
O'Donovan, the university president, _ De'!'psey. said it would be "ill·
that he couldn't do that and remain adv1sed for anyone connecte&lt;l to c&amp;lHoyas,coach. •
'
lege sports to be involved, even
· "Our position is that it is inap- peripherally, with gambling inter·
propriate for an active Georgetown 1 _esl.s'."
-~
University coach to have 'invest. ments in the gaming industry," said
the Rev. Leo O'Donovan, Georgetown's president.
,
Th91f1Psoa; in Atlanta to coach
Georgetown in the NCAA East
regional, said he had reconsidered
after speakina widt O'Donovan.
"He is a person who has been
extremely suppoltivc 'and a person
w!to !love vecy dearly bcl:ausc he's
pentril\ed me tp be me," Thompson
said. "[have decided to drop it."
Thompson, an avid Las Vegas slot l ·
machine player, applied for the r

'

Final Four vets dominating 'Sweet 16'

.

lfhomp$~.n drops. application

·~l~~J.•

.

'r

fter considering Georgetown president's wishes,

~~

Thursday, March-21, 1996

In the N'T quarterfinals,·

•

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~-~astern's Hill among Divisic;&gt;n IV all-state_rs
; . COLUMBUS~ ~hio (AP) -ln. a night
.
Sr., 27.5).
scoring average):
· b1g year for DIVISion IV playen'in
Forthesec:ondyearmarow,ColHeadlining the second team are
t'lnl - · Juoo cam ... Sprinal'~&lt;ld Cod!.
~~ state, Springfield Catholic Cen- lier will lead Catholic CenuaJ to the Lincolnview's Brandon Pardon (6-0 Cat., 7-fool, _Senior. ~.J poinll per- Tom
'"'al'
b'
I
-·--~
..._ state l~ent. sec los I~ F'nd
Ka.y, Crioplo-LiD&lt;OIII, 6-9. St.. 21.4; A.J.
u s •ggesl payer""""' out u"'
1 • Jr., 19.1); Catholic CenuaJ's Jason• . ~.
Fladlly Libeny-Beatoo. 6-9. s... ZL2:
.most.
lay L•~·Benton 70-51 1n last Ronai (5· 10, Sr., 17.6); Dalton's l~llorJ.Dokoo.HSr., ~4; Aod)'Y....,Nn&lt;
•• , Jaso·"
'001
Randy Endsley (6-3, Sr.; 22.0); and· BoQI.
l'lliiL ~ .. c..•.Corh.,6-0,s..,n.o.;a.;,
, .- Coli'1er, a 7·•·.
post. wh0 · year's champ'
. Jon sh'p
I game.
Pootomoulh Eat, 6-l. s.., 27.!.
, can shoot from the pen meter, IS the
Cathohc Central (22·3) plays Cardington-Lincoln's Andy Levering
_, s.... Robinooo, ~ Hh..
· player of the year on the 1996 ~so- Cardington-Lincoln (24-2) at 9 ·p.m. (6-1 Jr. 20.4).
4' '~~enn.J ~~-v:Also,lis!M on the second team s.•S-i:Jr.: zDJJ: Joy ~...,:,Y. a.. M~ 6-6:
:c;iated 'Press Division IV boys All; Friday in the semifinals, riaht after
:Ohio high school team released Dalton (:ZS-1) takes on top-ranked ' were Chad Vohris of West Alexan- ~· 18=:=·se:"~;;:'-·5- 1 0.~.
l.!'edne~y.
.
Van WertbLi~lnvicw (25-0) at 6 dria Twin Valley South (5-7, Jr., Jr..'J9.t;RoodyEado~.Dal1011. 6-l, Sr.~'2.~a,;;
: , CoiiJer, ·already sJgnod to play p.m. 'The wm~en come back to 20.8)· Cincinnati Madeira's J4y o-. ZoaooYIIJe R,_,..., 6-l, Jr., 18.4; Mark
~ne~t~ear at Indiana, averaged 2S.3: decidcthechampionshipat8:30p.m. Newberry (6-6, Sr., 18.8); Chris S«va~ki!:~~':'.t!.:r;i~~k• pomts, 13.4 rebounds, 6.6 blocked Saturday.
Garber or Zanesville Rosecrans (6- "· 6-6. Sr., 16.2; Soot1 Unvufenb, Kolido. 6-4. S..,
Sbots and4.8 assists per game for the
Two players who also will see 5~ Jr. 18.4)· ahd Ironton St. Joseph's ~RI:,~~t~Js/iN::::
' No. 2 team in the final regular-sea- action at St. John Arena join Collier · Mark Stun~beck (6-4, Sr., 21.6).
l'rlllk. Oibtonlrurz, 6-2 .. Sr.. N9; iefi'Min;., Old
• son poll. He shot 62.1 percent from : on !he first team: Tom Kenney of
Evans and Potopsky have both Fort.. 6-2.S&lt;~
..
~! . , Col" s ··-"•'d
.~. fiJe )d ,1ncu
. I d'mg 37 percenton 3• Cardi
( (6-9, Sr., 21.4 weaved magic at their respective Codi.Cart
JW- - yeor. uon
.er. pn..,: u":
. ngton-L'mcon
potnt attempts.- ·
·
· pomts per game) and Dalton's Ryan schools. Potopsky is 68-28 in his
. ~or,.. ,..., o.,. E..... Von Wat
. Collier was also a first-team Berg (6-2, Sr., 25.4).
four years at Dalton, while Evans is LiacoiD....,, ~11""'.!n':o':'·
. selection a year ago.
Rounding !Jill the 6rst team were: 69-24 in his four years at LincolNon CJarn, C..ICfbura: Adom Hegenderftr,
· The coaches of the year were Dal- i AJ. Granger of Liberty-Benton (6nview
Cob. n.. of Ule; Milre K~. Newllllr Codl.;
:· ' Da P
· • ·
.
1Im loupery, Nn. M-.oru -lier; Blld
to~ s , ve otopskY and •L'JDC!I·1 9, .Sr., 2 1.~).; Andy ·Young of Ney,.
Here. s. t,!te 1995-96 Associated Lewi~ Sbodyoide; s.... Gorby, Belloire sr. Jolin:
. nv1ew s Dave ljvans, who w1U .be on Phlladelph1a 1\tscarawas Central Press DiVISIOn IV boys' team, based .Jqlll Coldwell, BeoiiMIIe; Ryoo Miller, w. Akwl.. oppos1-~
• tablem.
. . cathotc
I' (v"0, sr., 27 .o'); and ., onu..,recommen
....
dationsof ·astate ·OiriJ~Hernloctc'M·IJer·
*io'l'wioVol S·RrruOicp MlcldletOW!Ifeowic:k;
... ends or·l...... scorers
N· kl'ati
a Division IV semi6nal game Friday Portsmouth East's Chris Boggs (6-S, L_ media panel (with school, )leighl and ·NewB..IOoGieow~; Dovid ~pr;Q..'~oru....:'~
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') "'ins by Raptors and. Heat tighten _race for last EC playoff slot
By The Auoclatad Presa
from line-point range, aDd ~ a
: . An expansion team threw an key usist in the finil two minutes.
unexpected twist into tile Eastern · Reggie Miller led Indiana with 2S
·:Conference playoff race.
paints; but missed wide open three• : The Toronto Raptors came up pointers with I :04 and SO seconds
· :'!'ith one of their 'best efforts of the left wben the Pacen had a chance to
:season Wednesday night, beating get within two points. Miller finished
;lhe O.arlotte Hornets 107-89.
8-of-22 from the field.
1
· • The loss, combined with Miami's
Patrick Ewing sc"red 31 points
:102-93 victory over Detroit, cut for New York, which won its fourth
oGharlotte's_~elld over Miami to just in' a row under new coach Jeff Van
half-game as the Hornets and Heat Gundy. The victory moved the .
:Uattle for the eighth and final play· Knicks within a game of the Pacers
:o.fJ spot in the East.
for the third seed in the Eastern Con: • "'The Raptors had more zip in ference playoffs.
:t!Jeir game. 'They played faster than
JuzlOO, 76en 84
• '1(5. They played harder than ·usc I
. At Salt Lake City, Karl Malone
· can't think of an area we beat them had 24 points and 10 rebounds as ·
· ·In this game," Charlotte coach Allan Utah ha~ded Philadelphia its fifth
• ·Brlktow said. ·
·
. straight loss.
·
The Hornets, who had their fourThe Sixen' starting backcourt: 'KfUDe winning streak snapped, lost Jerry Stackhouse and Vernon ,
. their fifth consecutive road game. Maxwell - were ejec!M, as was .
Although they were without Glen U~'s Jeff Hornacek.
Rice and Kenny Anderson, Johnson, ·
Sean Higgins led Philadelphia
:who led the Hornets with 19-points, with 18 points, 16 in the fii'St half.
:did1. 't blame the loss on injuries.
KiDp lZl, Bucks 97
. "You've got to find a way to
Brian Grant scored a career-liigh
win," Johnson said. "In the fourth 30 points and Olden Polynice added
quirter, I thought we had a shot. But 20 to power SIICIIIIIIento at Milwauit was a case of not geqing it going." , kee. It was the Bucks' ninth straight
! , Carlos Rogers, who s~ at . defeat and ended the Kings' dne;small forward becau~ of an injury to game losing streak.
.
~nter Sharone Wngllt, scored a
The Bitcks, who have lost 16 of
~r-hiah 24 points as the !UI&gt;tors · their last '~9, .,e two defeats from
~a four-game l01ing streak. · tying ~!onjest losing_ ~ in .
•': bamori Sio'itdanii!il recorded his team hts!OIY.
~~ui-th straiaht double~ouble and
The Buclcs were led by Johnny .
'3j!ncl of the season with 24 points Newman with 19 points.
pad I0 assists. Zan Tabak added 18
Hawks 98, Grizzlla 93
pbints and II rebounds.
_ _Steve Smith scored 19 points ·: In oilier NBA games, it was including five three-pointers - in
Qrlaildo 112, Boston 90; San Anto- the final4:5 l .as Atlanta handed Vanllio 112, Washington IOI;Atlanta 98, couver its 16th s~ght defeat.
'lancouver 93; New York 102,1ndiSmith, who finished with 26
ilta 99; Sacramento 122, Milwaukee points, made four of his three-point117: Utah 107, Philadelphia 84; and ers in a I :SO span.
!he Los Angeles Clippers II 0, MilAdanta, which had lost its previlliaukee 96.
·
ous two games, won its fifth straight
:-;· · Heat 102, Pistons 93
at home.
: · At Miami, reserve forward Chris
Bryant ~ves had 20 points and
· ~ng scoml24 points to lead surg- .II rebounds for Van&lt;:ouver,
i4g Miami past Detroit. The Heat
Spun 112, Bullets 101
~ve won six or their last seven to
At Landover, Md., David Robinrqove within a half-game of Char- son scored 33 points and San Anto.lotte for the final playoff spot in the nio shotl! season-high 60.5 percent
~Eastern Conference.
from the field as the Spurs extended
• : Miami center Alonzo Mourning their winning .streak to II games.
scored " 24 'points, and guard Rex
WashinstiJn's Gheorghe MureC!Japmlll\ adde!l 20. Grant Hill and san !!Cored 30 points in the loss.
Allan Houston each scored 21 points
Charles Smith scored 18 points
flir Detroit.
and Avery Johnson had 19 points and
Knlcb lOl, Pacers 99 '·
10 assi4ts for the Spurs, who have ·
At New .YOrk, John Starks made won six straiaiJt games against the :
two clutch plays in the final 3 112 Bullets, dating to 1992.
·
Malic lll, Celdcs 90
ininutes to help lift the Knicks over
ltldiana.
·
·
Anfemee Hardaway scored 35
·: Starks finished with 19 pOints on poinCs and Shaquille O'Neal had 28
&amp;:.of-8 shooting, including 4-of-6 as Orlando posted its 17th win in 20 .

games.
The Celtics, who had won five of
In Los Angeles, reserve Terry
O'N~ added 14 rebounds and • theirpreviousscvengames,wereled · Debere' scored 23 points to lead the
led the Magic with a career-~ah by David Wesley with 22 points.
Clippers. Rodney Rogers had 20
eight assists. Orlando, 33-0 at home,
·points and Loy Vaught 16 for Los
moved above .SOO on the road with
C~ppers 110
Angeles.
.an 18-17 record.
Tlmberwolves 96
, Isaiah Rider led the nmber-

wolves with 33 points, while Tom
:ougliotta addeil21 for the losers.
' After Minnesota narrowed the
'gap to 75-72 with · I :54 .left in the
;third period, the Clippers went on a
j20-3 nin to seal the victory.

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TRACER
.

Aval.lable·sg_;949

$5,000 .................................... 10
$500 ..... :..............................179
$200 ............... ............... ......3n
$100 ................................383
$40 ..... ......................... 13,337

Cash BIIIZ
$5,000.......................... 113

$1,200 ............................ 10
$200 ............. ,........ ;..... 115

$100 ........................ 1,545

lrllll's

$800 •:,....................................31
$88 ......................................784
$4.8 .. ............. .. ;................ 12,952

Luck Dillie lrlsll

$1, 700 ........... .... :.:............:... 103
$100..................................8, 172
$50 ....................................5,620

lnllaniPIJdaY

FORD F150 4X2

XLT, long ~. V-8, auto, air
PS, PB, PN, POL, tilt,
AMJFMcass

.

$1,000 ....................................66
$200 ....................................957
$50 ............ ...................... 38,068

1991 FORD F150 4X2

XLT, long bed, 3()().6 cyl, euto,
cond, AtNFM casar PS, PB,

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$500,000 ........................ :.2
$10,000 .......................... 41

$500 -.......................... 101
$100 .................. ........703

11-8, auto, 1elr cond, PS, PB,

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$200 ................... :................ 2n
$100, .... :...............................702

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Short bed.

aport. 6

cyl,

$50·,,,, ,,,., ,.,,~,,,,,,,.,.,,,,,, ,,.,.,1,356

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'.

�Thursday, March 21, 1996
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

P'9 8 • The Dally SanUnel

.i Eiqe~ly
.

Thur8day, Marett 21, 1996

mother who is unaware will know when she's unloved ~J
•.

Ann
Landers

..

.

:._ __________________
•• By ANN LANDERS

: Dear Ann Landers: My mother is
; in a nursing home with advanced
: Alzheimer's disease. She is very
' confu$ed, butl know it helps her to
:see family. Her face lights up when
walk into the room.
: · My only brother hardly feels the
. need to visit Mother at all. He says
: that it's difficult for him to see her in
:this condition and that she doesn't

:"y

know whether he has visited or not.
My brother's wife has been in the
family f&lt;J almost 30 years, but she
says it upsets her too much to see
Mother so unlike herself, so she
doesn't go either. Mother gets her
grandsons mixed up and thinks they
are other people. They now use this
as an excuse not to visit, which
seems inconsiderate to me.
I'm not complaining, Ann. I will
take care of my mother no matter
what. But it would be very helpful if
other members of the family would
give me a little relief and drop by to
see her once in a while.
Mother . was very good to her
children, the in-laws and the grandchildren. She baby-sat and helped

financially whenever there was a ·warmth and compassion. It is never
crisis. She always put her family wasted. I urge all my readers who
firSt. Now she has been totally aban- have family members or friends who
doned by these people, and it 1xuks ·have been stricken with this crue)est
my bean.
of all diseases not to abandon them
I' m sure this same situation because they believe " it doesn ' t
occurs in llUiny other families '- ~r." Nothing could be further ·
grown children ignoring their elder- from the truth. It does matter -- and
ly parents because they believe the it will matter even more when that
old folks don't know the difference. loved one is gone and you know you
Please ptiblish this letter and express did your best to make him or her feel
your views. -- Every City, World- valued and loved.
wide
Dear Aim Landers: Occasionally;
Dear Worldwide: Those who suf- you print all odd-ball item your
fer from Alzheim~'s may not recog- readers get a kick out of. Here's one
nize individuals who have been very I saw in the paper from Inez, Ky.,
close 111 them for years, but they do about a dog who shot a man. No
know when they are loved.
foolin' .
r
1bese unfonunate ·people sense
It happened on a hunting trip

when a spaniel named Rusty stepped
Oil the trigger of a shotgun and shot
4S-year-old Phillip Smith in both
legs. Smith is recovering, but he
cannot believe this freakish thing
happencd·to him.
It seems Rusty retrieved the bird
that Smith had shot. When Smith
uied to take the bird out of Rusty's
mouth, the dog got.feisty and put up
a fight During the struggle, Rusty
stepped on the nigger, and the next
thing Smith knew, he had been shot
in both legs.
If there's a lesson here, I guess
it's don ' t put your rifle on the
ground where a dog can step on it. -Mr. X
Dear Mr. X: 1bey say when a dog

lLydia Council plans ·
·upcqming projects
Several projects were planned,
during a recent meeting of the Lydia
Council at the Bradford Church of
Christ.
Paula Pickens presided at the
meeting during which.time the "pack
the pantry" project was discussed and
members were advised to take soup,
;'baking needs, church supplies. paper
; jowels and youth supplies are pencils,
: bllby blocks, scotch tape, construe. lion paper and toys for the nursery.
; Sunshine gift baskets for March
: will go to Bob Couch, Tammy Hysell
• and Clara GilkeY..
.: It was reporteil that a revival will
: beheldAprill4through 18at7p.m.
·each evening with Dean Mills t6 be
: the ·speaker. ·The mother-daughte~l
: banquet will be beld May 10 at 6:3Uj
· p.m. Printed napkins and name tags,
: will be taken care of by Diane Bing. .
.·
·

Gerry Lightfoot will 1)!: in charge
of purchasing funeral flowers for the
church. Lydia hostesses for April will
be Janice Fetty and Beeky Amberger.
.
Devotions were given by Cherie
Williamson and Gerry Lightfoot.
Scripture was from Psalms 138 and
Proverbs 18. Titale was the "Great
Waster" and prayer was given by
Gerry Lightfoot.
· Janice Felt)! and Becky Amberger will be hos'{:sses for April.
·
Gerry Lightfoot · and Cherie ·
Williamson served refreshments to ·
. Edie and Addie Hubbard, Charloile ,
Hanning, Kathy and Megan Dyer, ,
Suzie Will, Diane Bing, Carolyn
Nicholson, Kristen Paige an&lt;! Abbey
Cooper, Paula Pickens, Madeline
Painter, Sherry and ijlizabeth Smith,
Kathy Arno_ld__and Nancy Morris. . .
.
•

=~:u~~~i=~ii~~:.lactivitiesand

.

Willis has been a member of the
Racine FFA for three years. This year
will he placed first in the proficiency area landscaping in District 10
competition. He has also been
involved in soil judging, parliamentary procedure and environthon competition. He is also involved in the ·
junior firemen and karate. His 'lllper- ,
vised agriculture experience project;
consisted of .work experience at '
Karen's Greenhouse, Bill Hensler.
and
Sayre Produce. He also raised a'
LARRY WILLIS
garden and two huskies.
Larry Willis,.son of Dale and Bet- ·- . He ·is a junior at Southern aigh
ty Willis of Racine, was recently School and will receive his ~rtificate
selected to receive the state FFA and state degree pin May 4' at ihe
degree which is given to the top two , state FFA convention held at the fairpercent of the FFA membership in the grounds at Columbus. His FFA advistate. Selection is based on grades, sor is Aaron Sayre.

·Methodist women to
make quilts for;babies
The theme of "Holidays and Holy
.Days" was carried out ·at the recent
meeting of the Rock Springs United
MethOdist Women.
. The pu!pOse was read in unison by:
,.' those attending. Betty Wills led in!
singing of hymns including "At Cal-:
vary" and "Love Lifted Me." Plans'
weremadeforaworkdayonAprill5.
at whlth time quilts will be made for
si.ck bBbies. Plans were finalized for
tile Election Day dinner he)d Tuesday.
.
.
,, A repon on sendmg cards was g•v-

en and prayer for the siclc oft.e com-.
munity was b y Mildred Jacobs ..
Dorothy Jeffers gave the devotions
with reading Psalms 121 and recog-·
nizinf'the March holidays and the
holy days with readings ..
Thelma Jeffers had a quiz and thC
St. Patrick's Day legend was read
using the three leaves of the shamrock to explain the Trinity.
Rita Radford closed the meeiing .
with prayer. Refreshments were
served.

Dear Readers: A n;cent , news
flash made me feel old: Micke~
Mouse is eligible for Sociai·Securl'.ty.
'

Send quatlons Co Ann Lan-'

den, CreaCon Syndicate, 5777 W.
Century Blvd., Suite 700, Lol
Angeles, Calif. 90045

Community
·calendar l"
The. Community Calencblr Is
publllbed u a free servlc:e Co noR. profit groups wishing to announC:e
•meetlug ud special events. The
calenclar Is not ciellped Co pi'CIIIIOte
· nles or fund rallen or uy type. '
Items are printed u space penllils
and ta11110t be guaranteed to nan a
specific: number of clays.
THURSDAY
POMEROY -- Meigs Ministerial
Association Lenten services, Grft!:e
Episcopal Church, Rev. Dawn Spaid•
ing, speaker;
·
.DAR CONFERENCE - Participants at thtl
OhloSocletyDaughteraofArnarlceconfarance
·'held recently In Columbualncluded four membarl of thl Return Jonathan Melgt C1'11ptar·
. Fronl, lift to rlghl, are ~ . Mra. Jallll8 H.
Woolaleyer, atate regent; Mra.' Patricia Holtar,
·llaturn Jonathan Melgt Chapter regent; Mra.
·Donald Shattuck Blair, honorary preeldent gen·

era!; Mra. Ronald Reynolda, Southeellt Dlatrlct
dlractot; and bllick. row, Mr1. Joaeph Colburn,
honorary ·atate ~t; Mra. Anna Circle Cialand; Mra. Rudolph J. Seifert, atlltl treeauritr;
Mrs. Pauline Atkins, Return Jonalhlln !~~alga
vice regent; Mra. Gordon Knight; Mrs. Ralph R.
Buah, honorary ltllta regent.

iWil'l.is cho~en to receive . Meigs .DAR
·state FFA degree
· ··
.
.

bites a man it's not news, but wh.:a
a man bites a doa. that's news. ,I
guess it's even bigger news wben a
dog shoots a man. The police sail!
. they weren't· planning to arrest the
dog, and Smith laughingly said be
wasn't going to press charges. He
must have quite 1 sense of humor tosee something funny about this.

members
. _
attend state conference

Four members of Ret urn
Jonathan ·Meigs Chapter, Daughte~ of the American Revolution,
were in Columbus recently for the
Ohio Society's 97th annual state
coilference• held at the Stouffer
Renaissance Dublin Hotel.
Attending an~ represef!!ing the
local Retlli1i Joniiiball Meigs Chapter were Rae Reynollls who also
attended as a state officer;· Patricia
Holter, Pauline Addns, and Anna
C:in:le Cleland. The Conference
wa$ hosted by the Southeast Dis,trict which includc:s Athens, Gallipolis and Pomeroy chapters and
was organized by Rae Reynolds,
Southeast District Director.
~ conference began on Friday
eve!!ing with· a National. Defense
banquet in the Tuller Chapman .
Ballr.ooin. The ~ssion offlags
was led by the W:estland High
School ROTC. The State Board of
Management and distinguished
guests were presentetl. Mrs.
Charles Haugh, DAR National
· Defense Chainnan, was the guest
speaker and spoke about "National Defense Today."
· ·
The fonnal opening of the conference included a concert by the
Aladdin Temple Dixie Land Band.
The conference was called to order
by the State Regent Mrs. James H.
.Woolslayer.
The conference participants
were welcomed to Dublin by Pete~

Zawaly, City Councilman and to
the ~outheast · District by Mrs.
Ronald
Reynolds. Greetings from the Sons .
of the American Revolution were
presented by Bert Sells, president.
·Ohio SAR. The·president general's
.~!SBBC was, &lt;jelivered by Mrs.
DOnaldS. Blair, honorary president
general. Ohio's outstanding junior
member for 1996 was announced
and C.A.R. debutantes were pre- ·
sented and received into the
Daughters of the American Revolution.
Reports of state officers and
state chairmen of committees were
given at the Saturday session prior to the DAR school luncheon.
Reports were given by board members on Kine Duncan Smith
School, Hillside School, CroSsnore
School, Hindman School and
Tamassee DAR School, schools ·
supported by the DAR. Mrs.
Richard 0. Creedon, National
Chairman, DAR Schools, spoke
about "DAR Schools for the Chi!dren."

Presentations of the Outstanding Ohio American History
Teacher, American History Month
Essay Contest Winners, DAR
Good Citizens State Winners and
Ohio DAR Scholarship winners
were made.
·
·A formal banquet was held in
the Tuller Chapman Ballroom at

..

)

::~wins

..

,

Phlns for hosting the spring meet- determined to be about 400 years old order seeds and bulbs. and to rememing of Region II, Ohio Association o~ · was discussed. It was reported that ber that a "bushel of March dust is
Garden Clubs, to be held at Carleton! the white oak is 18 feet in circum- wonh a Icing's ransom."
School in Syracuse ft .pril27 were dis-· ference and has a limb spread of 96
Timing, technique and tools for
. y'ussed at a recent meeting of the feet. The height has not been mea- gardening was the program topic preC::hester Garden Oub held at the sured yet.
sented by Mrs. Bunger.
home of Eleanor Knight.
Plans· were made to tour Bob's
She described gardening as the
' Members were reminded coffee Market and Greenhouses in May with number one pastime in America. She
.:'alces, muffins and donuts are to be Judy Bunger to make the arrange- said that there is nothing that for so
provided for the coffee hour and that ments. It' was noted that several ;little can give.so niuch reward, pointsetup time at the gymnasium for the members had gone on the courthouse .ing out th.l!t a good landscape adds 10
1 pionalmeetingis7p.m.,April26, tour. Plans were made to visit two :percenttothevalueofyourhomeand
· night before the meeting.
. classes at the Chester ·Elementary benefits.the environinent.
1 • ~' A report was given on the recent
School for workshops with · the
, Houseplants should be repotted
. ·' Meigs County Garden Club Associ- juniors. Kathryn Mora and Pat Holter , :and trimmed, s!le said, noting that ·
sunny d.ays, new soil and nutrients·
ation's meeting held at ~ library , are in charge of the project.
where the regipnal plans were forMrs. Miller was cO:hostess for the bring the plants to life. She also sugmplated. Betty Dean and Maurita, .meeting which opened . with fat gested trimming grapevines, fruit
Miller represented Chester club atJ Holter giving devotions, "Secre(J of' :and deciduous . trees, cleaning up
thai 'IOeeting. Announced by Suzy, Gardening."
.
:debris, remulching to hold weeds
~nter, county contact chairmllll, ·
For roll call garden tools were' rd9wn and h61d moisture. She also
at the couniY meWng was a contest. displayed. They included ,a bulb noted thai March is the ideal time 'to
c;lll'}'ing · Ql!t the sunflower. theme. : drill, dandelion we~ diner; a move trees and shrubs because it
Mrs· ..Qe11n and J'anet Boltn were, weasel, and Grandpa's hoe.
'
allows the plant to gel a good root
ninW!Ito aqaqe the con~t.
.
In glirdening hints, members were system. April was recommended as
The~ of' tree located near' reminded that it is •time tO re.JI!Iir the besi time: to fOnilize plants, large
Jbe old ~ cOurihoute building· fences, arbors ancl procn ·fumihft ' trees and shrubi.
•. , . Jlle$111e fmslry_Division has before beginning .,.tna wprt, to· · As for teciu\iques, it was noted

-

Trenton and Tyler Brewer, twin :
"~sons of Mike and Mlsti Brewer, eel• -ebrated their first hirthclays February
• :19'at the home of their grandparents.
: 'A Winnie-The-Pooh theme was car. •'n ed out. Cake and ice cream were :
· :serv~ to guests.
. !" Attending the celebration, in addi- · ,
· ,·'tion to their parents, were Kelly, Matt,
·Jacob and Joshua Shaffer; Claudia
. and Sandy Edwards; Connie Patter•·,son; Paula and Ashley King; Cindy
.,and Brandon King; Dave and Dalton
i Campbell ; great-grandmother Ruby
King; Mandy and MacKepzce Redman; grandmother Joyce Brewer;
"Christy Brewer; great-grandmother,
1llunny Russell; great-grandmothe•
.· , ~na Roush; Vicki and Kyle Russell;
yves, Debbie, Jodi and Ryan Roush;.
great-grandfather Dave Campbell;
Cassandra and Ale~andria Patterson;
\Bill, Kathy, aod Ruth Snyder; Bobl!y and Sjllllantha King; Robin
Campbell, Missy Smith and Zach
Warth.

-

, c:oa10reace ;diedulod at .the

Riol

Gr....
Child ~wlopment teat«
Aprtl20.

•
•• •
•
1
011 ·'11!io~
intludelaselec-l

,. ilon~a'evel&lt;PJ~CR'!IIY ~I

.

.

prosect,~tor.

Annually Chrlat Academy stage• an Around the Wctrld activity program for the atudenta. This year the studlntllltUdltld foods,
games and eonga of Finland, France, India, Gotawana, and
Guatemala. A8 1 pari ot thelr atudles, the atudenla in coatume took
paranta and gueata on armchair tours of several different countrlea. Among thou tald119 pari- theM atudenta who prnented
'Guatemala, from the left, Johnny ·Nuce, Stephanie Hurlow and
Robbll Jamea.
·

Christopher Darden doesn't wear fame comfortably

L

~'iy .GALE HOLLAND
'
' PSA TODAY
_''· LO~ ANGELES- The women
,,who approach Christopher Darden
• just get prettier. A llightclub doorman
, recently waived his $20 cover charge.
And the former prosecutor's new
book, "In Contempt," is getiing
, ,good notices.
' · But Darden stlll ·lives in a small
jaome with a dirty white sofa and a
broken heater in the racially mixed,

,

worki11$-class suburb ofCarsbn. Arid case with.a heavy burden: He was the
he dates only women he knew before only African American prosecuting a
il)e O.J. Simpson trial.
, '
national icon whom many in Dard"I know a woman· who w~s en's community saw as the victim of
offered $10,000 to say she slept with racist cops. ·
me and $25,000 to say sbe was pregHe was called a traitor, an "Uncle
nant," he says. .
.
Tom." He's proud of his book's
To Darden, the trial's aftermath is frank discussion of race, but "I'm
almost as painful as losing the case. having writer's remorse. My discus"Some people .are suited forcelebri- sion of theN-word is not going 'to
ty," he says. "''m not one of them." play well where 1come from. It's not
Darden came onto the Simpson exactly politically correct."

Addressing hints of romance in his -trial to teach trial tactics at Southrelationship with Marcia Clark were western University law school.
nec,l'ssary to maintain the book's Dressed in his school's sweatshirt,
integrity, Darden says. She remains a baggy jeans and dress shoes, he
close friend.
·
appears witty and relaxed amid the
"Marcia Clark is scary. She seems
to be very 11)UCh a woman. but she
can compete with any man on any
level ucept bench-pressing," Darden says. "I've been in love before. I
don't know what to do."
Darden. 39, quit his job after the

Mrs. Richard Dunkelberger. senior state president, Ohio
Society Children of the American
Revolution, presented her state .
board of management. Conference
participants were entenained by the
Richens Academy of Irish Dancers
and by the Ohio Page&gt;!=;honas,
idirected by Ms. Nancy J. Nicholas.
· On Sunday a Memorial Church
Service led by Mrs. Frederick
Mills, state chaplain, w&amp;S held.
Tribute was paid to departed members· during the past year. Mrs.
Reynolds, SoutheaSt District Director; was called on to read the names
of departed members in the Southeast District, including, R9se Stace
Reynolds (Mrs. Clarence) a member of the Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter.
The Waldschmidt Homestead
Luncheon was held with Mrs. Clifford Heer, chairman of the Waldschmidt Board ofTrustees, presiding. The Civil War Museum ,.is
located on the Waldschmidt Homestead. The restoration of the Museum is the State Regent's project;
fund raising plans for the Museum
were outlined at the Sunday morning session.
The National Continental Congress of the Daughters of the
American ltevolution will be' held
on April IS-18, atthe DAR headquarters in Washington, D.C.

.

••

LETAIIT FALLS -- Parent Ad~~
· sory Council meeting at the Le1J9t
Falls Elementary School, 1:~0 p.~
Thursday. Plans for next school yelll"
to be made.
':::
FRIDAY
.
.~
POMEROY -- Youth revival F!J;:
day, Saturday and Sunday, 7 p.l'£
Calvary Pilgrim chapel on 143&gt;;
Pomeroy. Preaching and singing
young men from the Bible lnstillltC
Rev. Victor R?ush is pastor.

Jil:

:.An PATHFINDER
XE
•

.t:,._

4 door, automatic, all power equipped.
All new from the grouno up.

POMEROY -- Meigs Counst:
Humane Society, general meeting f•
new and old members, 7. p. ~ .• CraG;:
Episcopal Churcb, PomeroY.·· MeiJ&amp;:
County telidenl!l interCstCjl •in till!:
welfare of the county's population
dogs and cats and other cteliiUr~
invited to attend.

Lease For Only
'

MIDDLEPORT
Pomeroy Masonic Lodge
F&amp;AM, annual inspection,' Fritia~;:
6:30p.m. AI master masons i'nvitc£
RACINE -- American Legion
special meeting. Thursday, 6!30
with dinner to follow.
.

I

Spring Air
Best Rest

GALLIPOLIS -- Bold Directiat~
Inc .. Friclay, 10 a.m. to noon,
Carter, Social Security Adrnin~llrat•C:
to speak.

..

'

SUNDAY
VINTON -- Revival
March 31, 7:30p.m. each ev~1~inR
the Morgan Center Cltristian
.ness Church on Morgan Center
·near Vinton. Keith Eblin, pm~ehit"l
Harber Family, singing. '

.

'

Spring Air
Supreme Comfort

$1 9

RACINE -- Southern High
Class of 1966, Kountry Kitc.hen
Racine,.2 p.m. Saturday. . : ~

Twin Ea•.Pc.

Full Ea. Pc•••• $119
Queen Set•••• $299

Twin Ea. Pc.

Full Ea. Pc•••• $169
Queen Set •••• $439

Spring Air

I

that preparation of the soil is the key any·germs. Good shovels with strong review of plans for the the M~:f&amp;j§
to getting good plant results. She cau- ' handles, a mini-tiller, sprayer. fertil- County Fair flower show~ Mts. 'J.
tioned against over-mulching, and izer spreader, edging materials, weed will be preparing the sc)iCdule.
Nexlmeeting will be held .
suggested becoming award of how mats and .a good lawn mower were
at
the
home of Mrs. Bunger
much and how often watering is 1among the items Bunger listed as
program to feat11re hostas. MemiM:~:
!needed for gardening.
needed.
The club remembered Margaret were asked to take plants
Tools need to be checked, she
said, and prunners need to be sharp Bell Weber, a former member, with exchange . .
and occasionally disinfected to kill . the sunshine project. There was brief

Posture
Cushion

Precision

Full Set•••••••• $399
Queen Set•••• $499
King sit ....•. $699

Full Set•••••••• $499
QuHn Set •••• $599
king Set •••••• $749

'

The HealthRider
exercise machine

$499 Retail
Value

OPEN
IMONPAY
NIGHTS

nLI:OO

,.

bare walls of his law school office.
Darden blames everybody but the
prosecution for losing the Simpson
case: The jury was hostile; Johnnie
Cochran Jr. brough.t race into the
case.

·POMEROY -- Pomeroy group of,
Alcoholics Anonymous will hold at!;:
·open discussion Th~trsday, 7 p.m. itt
, the basement of the Sacred . He~
Catholic Church, Pomeroy. . · t;;

1!1i1J., i:hl~ and sc_h ool-ap . ~tivitj~ ,~d i~. ~ ~tocti~ · ~ ('iliaer ~ys,·.d puppets with
tnc:lude Ou,idance lnd DilciplineJor . Unda Hobson m."Developing LiterSchool-Agers" .by ' Vallrla ~ ·' eqy in' Yollng Chilcireu." For infor·kitchen. and. ~ ..._ Willi: lllllion lboul ~ .&amp;d Other eliCiting
,stepbanlf D.lineun Oet Reilly: ~·, w01bhope. .residents may conlletlhe
:Set•.Oo. ·
·'
Child Care Resource Network at 11
Child CIIR providawclli explore . ~S77-2276.

NEW YORK {AP) - HemogloStamler and colleagues ·report
bin, which delivers oxygen to body· their work in today 's issue of the jourtissues.ll!ld removes carbon dioxi~; ' nal Nature.
also distributes nitric oxide, a disThe work suggests that as hemocovery lhat researchers say may lead globin carries o~ygen through the
to new ways to control blood pres- blood, it releases its own NO to
'replace the NO that it destroys. lbat
sure.
Scientists had known that hemo- keeps blood pressure constant and
globin destroys th• niuic oxide, or blood vessels wide open.
As hemoglobin releases its oxyNO. created by the cells lining the
inside of blood vessels. Nitric oude gen 'toad in tissue, researchers
is an invisible, colorless gas that believe, it also releases more of its
TRENTON, TYLER
relaxes blood vessels.
NO, probably to help tissues use the
BREWER
Now ther have ~ound that ~temo­ oxygen more efficiently. The NO
globm carnes a d•ffert;O.Vfb/in of might also regulate blood flow in the
nitric oude and may~Use it to help body's tiny blood vessels, call~
Those unable 10 artend, but sendcarry out its tasks.
capillaries.
ing gifts were Butch, Penny, and
"Hemoglobin uses a spritz of the
Amlllida Brinker; William and Chris
The researchers noted that current
NO it carries to hdlp get oxygen into blood substitutes based on hemogloFolmer; Lorena Oiler and Shannon
Spaun, great-aunt Doris Pearl, Debtissues. And NO helps hemoglobin bin cause a rise in blood pressure.
bie and 'Healther Riffle, Rusty and · carry away the trash of carbon diox- . The new work suggests that the kind
Sharon Roush, Amy Roush and
ide, " Dr. Jonathan Stamler of the . of NO used by hemoglobin could
Aaron Grate. Grandfathers Danny
Duke University Medical Center in . avoid that problem, they said.
King and Mike Brewer were unable
Durham, N.C., said in a statement.
to attend due to work.

O.J. Simps.on

,etr~ud: cA:re p'rdvid~r ·c~nf~~~nc~ ·s9t1eduled
c$1d ~providcn will benefit from i

Scientists uncover new r--Around the World----.
. he·moglobin function

:f,:

whic~

.

"'

mark
first bi.rthday

Chestet Gard~n 'Club to host spring meeting tor state garden association .
'

'

The Dally SeaUnel• P8ge 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

II ..

...,.

erson 's.~~~
..,.,

'

�1
~

Popttroy • Middleport, Ohio

. P11110 • The Dally Sentinel

Thuraday, March 21 , 1

Aobabelfe's
Sliver Bridge Plaza

..,

614 446 4462

.-rom ·
Dresses
Levi's

..
,.
•

Mon.-Sat. 10-6
•

...
.

',.

//1

R

CB23
s

80

EI&amp;SC
s
&amp;FRO 7.

R

A.M. TO II:

)

In Memory Of

ANNAJO
SHOEMAKER

·ROTfiRY MEMBERS
•

JOHN ANDERSON
ROBERT BEEGLE
LLOYD BLACKWOOD
CHARLES BLAKESLEE
ROBERT BUCK
SUSAN CLARK
AL DETIWIL,LER
KRISTI EBUN
HOWARD FRANK
BERNARD FULTZ
MAXINE GASKILL
RANDY HAYS
.

WALTER HEINZ
JOHN HARSCHINK
JULIA HOUDASHELT
HALKNEEN
GREGORY KAYLOR
KARL KEEBLER
JAMES MOURNING
HAROLD NEWELL
SUSAN OLIVER
DICK OWEN
ELDRED PARSONS
JONPERRIN

Valley Lumber &amp;Supply

JOHN RICE
GENE RIGGS
DENNIS SAELENS
JENNIFER SHEETS
ROBBIE SHIELDS
DAVID SNYDER
DAWN SPALDING
GENE TRIPLETT
RICHARD VAUGHAN
JEFF WARNER
JOE YOUNG

ripl~t_t

Pomeroy, Oh.

Clark's Jewelry Store
..

&lt;

Baum.Lumber Co.

•

.

.

Ewing Funeral Home

Middleport, Oh. 992·2121 ·

BEN

1

Quality Print Shop ·

K&amp;C Jewelers

Serving S.E. Ohio

How.d L Wrlttlul
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Outten
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESnMATES

__

· In Memory Of
MARGIE
(Granny)
GRIFFITH

-~•':,, --NLEY'S ~t'/:•eN
-~~- RECYCLING CENTER 11111

Lessoas for
Plaao, Dr~~••
&amp; G•ltar ·

503 Mill Street

Middleport, Ohio
(Special Price on Aluminum Cans
from March 1 thru 29)
Bdng In minimum of 50 lbt. of aluminum cana to
reglller for Bunn Coff..maker to be given IIWIY·
Drawing will be held on March 29th.
992-3894
2oWTI'N

Wtars '79 I u,
llso Accessories

-- . 6'
1.Jf"*""frl
WV

614-367..0302

TRI·STATE SEWER &amp;
DRAIN QEANING

~~

'L-- ~.iur;
~I((~

ln'hlflfl &amp;
S.WW&amp;Dnll
Ch

·,s.m.

"""-w.m

TRI·STITE WATER SYSTEMS, IIIC.

•

The water · tnlatmonl company cordially inllites

1-

WILLMineral
TEST THE
FOLLOWING:
. (1118lysls. WETOS.
Hardn111,
Iron, PH.
Pleue call RaiiiSojlet 1112-4472 or 1-8CJ0.606.3313
to HI up your,... water analylll.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

"The Ohio Gann"

WICKS

~ew

HAULING
.
Umestone,
Gravel, Sand, .
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

"""""ext. 1:.;;
,.,, ,
sue Per Minute

MUit 11118 yra.
Toucii-T- Required

11 8
~~===~~···~ ...._s.rv-u
__1__&gt;___,;;;Ji!;;.;;~~
64 5 84

~~~~troy, Oh.

Fruth Pharmacy
Farmers -Bank

.

".

"Your Bank for Life"
L,

Tippen Plalls-915-3161

Vaughan's.Car~inal
,,2·3471 "

I.

"f

.'

I

.

' Members Eam 10%
· Rebate on all Hubbard
1 Brand Seeds used for
Fair Projects. Be eligible to win $50 &amp;

• $100 Savings BOnds.

r't

•

·.R.tt.Ni,. .

742·2333

Ttie D~ily SJtnlinel·

Middllport, Oh. 992·2155

ATTENTION

Rutland
Room a bollrd for
eenlora a dllebled.
Stltlllcenled.
Lots of nc. Family

WV
' &amp; Ohio 4-H &amp; FFA

Birchfield Fune·ral Homer·
I

..~\···~

SERVING STARTS AT 11 A.M.
AT
FIRE STATION

Home Natienal ~-Bank &lt;.' ·
.

POjiAEROY FIRE DEPT.
CHICKEN &amp; RIBS
BARBECUE
SUNOAY. MARCH 24

players or more
Raises $50.00 ea.
week. Pay according to
lhe Number of players
,__949-2044--or-94_9_
-2038
_ _.

TINNING
12 Seaslona For

'

l

... 1\
'"'

--..
:

$20.00

16 Sesalona For

$25.00
Open 9:00 to 3:00

Hendricks
Phone: 614-992-2487
mo.

~~~~~ :· r-~~~~

Updatwd Efti'Y 15 Min.
No walling direct

menu.

-.......

loi00-77N100

ext.7823

liltuatlt.U

·
1 ft

co. RECYCLIIIII!!
8

Announces Customer Appreciation
Days during the Month of March
Do your part for our environment: Bring us your
alum. cans and other racycablea and raglatar to
win a handcnlfted solid walnut and cedar lined
blanket cheat valued at $600 to be given away
March 30th. Trl. Co. Recycling open 7 clays a week
to 1111rve you.
H Mon.-Frl; 9-3 Sat. &amp; sun. Located comer of
St. Rl 143 A 7, Pomeroy, 614-992·5114.

lladle lhaeli Dealer
106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

ANNOUNCEMENTS
005

Personals
..

MEET SINGLES NEARBY Na-

1 -900~990·

tion'sext
11 1060
Dateline,
3137
..$2.99 per min. 18,

. +, TTph,

Serv-U. 619-645-8434.

,

: 30 Announcen-ients

·

' lin~·s Custom Cakea- birthdays, :
1

ann•v~rsarles , wedding~.

special ,

occa110n s, fl14-247-4024.

40

992·2825

:112111 -

for

you.

HIYIWOIAIU
HID IEFERINCIS
614-915·4110
2/2811 mo. pd.

TruckingUmeatone
Bulldozing and
Backhoe
Services ·
House Sites and
Utilities

RlaiDo'lllbleR....
. _ or.742·1120
.Polly or Ch"\.., ...

THIS 'NTHAT
FEED&amp;SEED
Maion, wv
773-6192

:======:.!;~~~~~~~

Howard Excavatin

home~.

5
IIIW ft..
nwl tw
LY..srict

111 ,....

IITIIIOI·EDEIIOI
FREE ESTIMATES
lalletlle,.lo..tof
,.l.tl... let Ul ... It

4:30 to 10:00 P.M.
Owners; Pete &amp; Diane
31111

------.1

J

LINDA'S
PAINTING

SUMER IMAGES

Middleport~

Sports ht.-tl · 111t

PET FOOD &amp; SUPPUES

949-3321

~

AS!&lt; for details:

NOW SElLING SMALL

'.

.,...-!11

Imprinting
•Shirts •Hats
•Sportswear
•Ball Uniforms
3rd Sl, Racine, Oh.

with 21

Serv·U

o

ester, 31~1\0....

Your favorite artist
on Tape or CD

ADVERTISING
THE HAT MAN

Sun. Nights
Luc ky Ball $300 .00

te19) 1145-8434

Middleport, Oh. Radii

992·6491

,:~· ·'- l-hse .Phar_macy
.

18 yrs.

Miclclltport, Oh.

Pomeroy, Oh. 992·3345

Adolph's Dairy.Valley .

Crows F~mily ·Restaurant

Ch

Any C;] r
Any Dr,ver
DUi &amp; SR 22
,- 01 s :-:)llll\" &gt;
Co1rpe~lf'r Olloir'''
1614) 992 7040

New At Ingles lleetronies

LIE

537 BRYAN PlACE
MIDDLEPORT 882-2m
Office H~: Mon.-Fri. ·
8:00 a.m. · 3:30 p.m.
VInyl &amp;Alum. Siding,
VInyl Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Docn,Storm
Windows, G-ges.
Free Estimates

l n~ur

614-992-7643

Legion #602
Bingo

$2.99 per min. Must be

I. L. HOLLON All Ohio
Easy Pay Auto
TRUCKING
arrce
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Umestone • Gravel
Dirt •Sand
985-4422

..
J&amp;LINSULATION

~===='=1221=~··'-.

I"

r-"=============~

Racine American

Ext. 3685

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Suppli~ • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop j •New Homes
Services • S1eel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding i •Garages
•
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental ' •Complete
Steps -Stairs, Railings, PatiO Fum~ure, Fireplace
· RemoCtellng
~ems, Planter hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other sluff!!
Stop llr Compare
"No Job Too Large or Too Small"
FREE ESTIMATES
. We will work whhin your budget
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-5861
985-4473
108
Streel
·
WV

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

1 -;;::,::::a
~ .....-~_.;,(N_o_s_u_n_da~y_c_a_lls..;.)_--=".;;

Need Direction?

Love
Buslneas
Family Mattera
Allow Your
Peraonel Psychic to
AAIIt You
1 """"-988 81600

you to ·

: participate In a free, no obilgalion, comprehensive water

LowRalel)

614-992-3470

Water
Treatment
Equipment

Dueribueed by

(Umestone-

But without you In
my life I've found
one thing Ia trueThat my IHe haa not
been the aame
without you.
You're In all my
though...
.
..
. We miAand
love you,
Margo, Wayne and

ROBERT BISSELL
· CONSTRUCTION .

10 I ICI • IOftCI • IOftCI

STAR
GUITAR

TV&amp; Vilro
' ;rrtlldullt6't
,._ (31UJ61s-T6S7

tomorrow:

742·2803 3/111 1110.

448 1418

.lilA...,

They .qy that ti!M
Will eaA tHe pain,
The hurt and all the
sorrowThat time will heal
all the wounda
With each bright
and
new

Plan Ahead, Call Tod•yr·

piZZa
Monday tllrouf!h Wednesday
wleoupon

to l»ck (t up
Wilt VIrginia

Toll FIN 1-800-4172-5987

No Lllwn Too Lllrge
or Too Small

•

ATTENTION SPORTS
FANS
Let your fingers do lhe
walking to the sports
fine. Finance.Stock$,
NHL, Nf:!A, NFL, Point
Spreads, Daily
Horoscope.

·.Fisher Funeral" H_ome . .

(614) 992-5535
614 i92-2753

1.00 off any X-large 18"

with,.,.,. "..,-,a
a

,\'

Po11eroy,
._
'
.

20 Years Experience * Insured
Owner: Ronnie Jones
Cheshire, Oh
(614) 367-G266
Free E•tlmatea

Fr. Eati!Mia
IW¥010212

Pomer.Y~ Qla.

Pomeroy, Oh. 992·2432

.•NewHom"
•AddHiona
•New Garagea
•AemodellnQ
•Siding
•Roofing
•Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

•Tree Trimming
•Mowing (Residential
and commerclaQ
•Shrubbery
Maintenance
•Odd jobs per request

1-900-776-0700

'The Shoe Place/Locker 219.

1

. CUl1om Building • Rlmo,al_,

LlftCIII

~owning·Childs·Mullen·"'usser

Chester, Oh. 992·2342

Middleport, Oh~ 985·3301

i

992-3954 or 985-3418 '· nf

SMITH'S
coNsTtumo•

LIRft'l

Pomeroy, Oh. :

992·2054

I

Furniture &amp; Jewelry

But the Lord ..w
you had your
share of pain, ao
He called you
home. We all love
and miA you very
much.
we never got to
aay goodbye, but
you knew- loved
you very much.
Happy Eaatar. AIao, It's your third
one gone.
Sacll.y' mlsaed by:
Mother,
Ruth carpenter;
Dad, Son, Brother,
Hannie, James a.

Proceeds to Support
Meigs County Ser.vices Projects

Middleport, Oh. 992·2194

·992·6611

Anna, , today
makes three yeare
alnce you left U.,
but your memorlea
. are alwaya with ua
and the things we
did together no
one can ever taka
that away from
your Mom.
Daughtar, I have
cried a million
teara since-you.""·
us. You are a
apac:lill daughter to
us, and a spacial
mother to your

Support Middleport·Potnero, Rota, ·

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING
Um11tone, Sand, Gravel, Coal _&amp;Water
WE HAVE A· I TOP SOIL FOR SALE

TFN

In Memory

aon.

Engineering Service

Mlddlepon, OhiO 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brtcldes .
614-742·2193

.,

Children .

.
'

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.

'949-2168

Sponsored By /
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotacy
For Benefit Of Rotary Activities· :..

,

MObile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

.· .. $2'00

~

BIIINisawM

992-4401

$300
Adults

"

Portable

. SERVICE
Hou•Repltlrl
RemodeUng
Kltchen&amp; ..lh
Remodeling ·
Room AddHIOne
, Siding, Rooflng, Petloe
Ruoollltbl&lt;i
·
lneurera • Experienced
Call Weyne Nell

In

Pa_-:'lcakes • Sausage
CoHee • Mllk • Orange Juice

POMEROY, OHIO .
Traah Removal • Commercial or Ruldentlal
septic Tanka Cleaned &amp; Portable Tolleta Rented.
Dally, -illy·&amp; monthly rental retea.

SAWMILL

For Frae Eetlrnet~

•

JONESi TREE SERVICE .

NEFF REMODELING

.

I.

MODEll SUitlftOI

H&amp;H

.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

; ·•RoOm AddiUona
i •NnGar-vea
' •Electrical&amp; Plumbing
l ·Roonng
1 •Interior &amp; Exterior
' . Pai,Ung
Also Concrete Work
:

(FREE. ESnMATES)

l

Pomarvy, Ohio

,
1

V.C. YOUNG Ill

m-121s

·-.

Free Eallmates
'1--'1- - 35 Vera Exp.
R-onable Rates
985-4198

Live Psychics
1 on 1
·1-900-255-0300
ext. 5488
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18yrs.
Touch- tone phone

required.
Serv-U
(619) 645-8434

Pomeroy; ·

Middleport .~ .• .
&amp; VIcinity

285e3 BASHAN RD.
Riclr1e, Ohio 45771
949-3013 Ph949-2018 FAX

'
All Yard Salta Must Ba Paid In
'
Advance . OtadUnt : 1:OOpm·the
day before lha ad io tc run. S..n- '

day &amp;dillon- 1:OOpm £ridor, Monday &amp;dillon 10:000.m. ~·

Bag oale- fill a bog of clo!IWIQ.

li",'

. S1 .00, Friday/ Saturday, Marchl

· 22-23 . Humane Society ~m ""' ···
=:.;:......~ Shop, Middleport
"''

•

,

·

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Senlluel• Page 13

NEA Crosaword Puzzle
PHD..LIP
ALDER

1

Nice Alvacodo GrMn Rofrlgora·
tor, Good Condition, 814·2581201.

allver aequlna and beaded top,

blf?k o New Haven,
and financing avaUable. 30•1-8112· One bedroom ap'anmeflt In Pt.
-2088.
· Pleuant no p&amp;!l, 81ol-802-5858.

AI roal-teadllertlalng In

Antiques, collectables, estates,
Riverine Antlquea, Russ Moore,
""""'· 014-1182-2528.

NEEDED IMMEDfATLY
APPT. SECRETARY
IT'ELEMARKETER

Clean Late · Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 t.lodila Of Newer,

Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 Eallom .......e. GaMipolla,
J I 0'1 Auto Parts. BUying sal·
~clel. Sailing porta. :W.-

local co. Needs • TelemarXetet"a .
To set Appts.. Port-Time a Full' .
Time. Caii814·441 -197S Alk For
Dawn
"N-ee-d:-e-:d-::S:-o-m-eo_n_e-:T:-o-:C::-.Ie_a_n-:M::-y
Houoo, call Kim,

Top Prices Paid: Old U.S.•-:.·:::~, . 1
SIIVII, Gold, Diamonds, All
CoUectlblee, Paperweights,

-

~ Illegal

H - t or dlsCrimlnotlon
baaed on ...:e, OO):&gt;r, rallglon,
oox famlllel tilai\.B or nollonll
· orlgOi, or any lntantlon to
molco any tiUCii praierencl,
llmftation or dloCJfmlnallon."

advertlllmenta-lor roale118te
wtlk:ll181n Ylolallon oltlielaw.
OUr readeri are hereby
lnlomted that alldWe*ng•
atlvariiSBd In this newspaper
are available on an equal

Ustid furniture· ·antiques, ana

.

Five acrea,
aerator, near ·Twin Rlvttl Tower, now accepting
Racino,$18,000 can finance with . appllcetloni for 1bt. HUO oubold•_t.J_r__
-:--'-t,6:-1::-4_8_49_2025=.:.· -:--llztd apt. for elderly and. handl·
-::cal)lltd. EOH 304-875-86111.
Scenic Valley, Apple Grove,
bHuUful 2ac loll, public wator,
Aportmont /" Galtlpolla,
Clyde&amp;-&gt;Jr., 394-571-233&amp;.
Depoolt, Roferencu
814-448 · 7130, 61·-

to advertlle •aroy praleiiiiiCO,

lcnowlfngly lccapt

- · Gallpolll, 6t4-448-2842.

1182-~...,,_

of 11168 -

TNIMWII'apet' wll not

M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second

pl.ce ol' complete estates, also
do oppral181a, Ooby Mardn, 614-

tillS - p e r Ia au1&gt;1«:1 to
tile FedOra! Fair Housing Act

·---

tAKJ974
aA Q 8 7

Prom dre11- 1hort navy blue with

RENTALS

410 HOuses for Rant

;450

Furnished
Rooms

,Rooma for rent - - k or mc~th.
2 Bedroom Houae, 2 Btdroam •Starting at$120/mO. Gallla Hotel.
Trailer In Galllpolio, 814-448·8149 j8t4-446-9580.
For Information.
·
:Sitrtplng roams with cooking.
2 Bedrooms In GallipoliS: 1 Bath,
on river. All
1
~[;.~=.~·.~~:...~ K ~c;':.'.~t l'' ~:J~~:.;~~~~~~~\JJ.2:oo p.m..
2800.
.

IIJI-IAT AIJJAITS

7113.

liJI.lEIV

~

BARNEY"

Soulla

West

North

East

26

••

48

Obi.

Pass

Pass

Pass

18

,_red

20 lloi-a ordarty
22 Alphllbat
1
lattera
; 23 Tur1
124 Open
· 27 Brown ehade
28 - Gun (film)
31 Horae relative
32 Baga
33 Had lunch
34 Roman 1,006
35 Kind

s.t Pleasant

55 Mal (coelct811)
541 Went by car
57 Shark

58 H - latter
59 Han

DOWN

4 Naval petty
officer

1 Dec. holiday
2 Function
~ Church piH'I

5 AmphlbllnS
6 Filbert, e.g.
7 Carry on

I GOT TH' HOOSE
.CLEI,INEO UP AN'
EVEI'THINIS

Opening lead: • 2

EXCEPT FER ONE

LITTL1! ITEM II

ln~nt,

WT AWAY

identical scores

MlHCHANOISE

By Phillip Alder

PEANUTS
TALK ABOUT
6ETTIN6 ME
IN TROUBLE ..

Wanted To Bu~ : Little likes Toys,
.Sand Bo)l, Picnic Table, Play

Hou... B14-245--6887

TilE TEACHER ALMOST
FAINTED WHEN SHE
SAW ME CRAWLING
sv lo!ER DESK I

Wanttd,: Quality Hand Crafted
Items For Seasonal Gilt Shop,

814-444HI588, 61 .. 5118-5511-4

420 Mobile Homes

tor Rent

Er,IP LOY MENT
SUJV ICES

Pets tor S&amp;le
2 Bedroom Moblle Home For
Ron~ S25D/Mo., Locataa Ba'-1
Addlaon &amp; Cheshire, 614-38771102.

encea, 814-446-8172, 614-256-

8251 .

Rent 1It monlh free. 1971 2bed-.
room. $300/mo. + $500 dopoolt.

Avon
needed. Earn money fo~
mas
at home/at WOf'l(,

304-756-RENT.

gg;!-63Se or 30•·882-2845,

homes, arartlng at $240·$300,

The American Contract Bridge
League runs an annual nationwide :l!ilrt--t-t-lnstant Matehpoint Game. It is an unusual pair event in that as soon as you .1~:r+-t-+-­
finish a deal, you look at a scoresheet
to learn your matchpoint score. Your I'
results are not compared with those of ~..1....1-.1...­
the other pairs sitting your way.
1
The 1995 event was even more unHOW D VOU TALK
usual in that the winning East-West
THE PRINCIPAL
and North-South scores were identiINTO TMAT?
CELEBRITY CIPHER
cal: 1796 &lt;or 74.83 percent). The
\· North-South winners were Clara
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipheroyplogl••• .,. c..-..:tfrom qumtiona byfarnol.- peq:it, put anc1 prMent
Rogers and Gopal Tejwani, from
Eech Ml1er i'1 tw ~ llandl for IMiher. Toda~ clw: )( ~ G
: Slidell, La. The East-West victors
· were Joyce Lamm, of Wilson, N.C.,
OGIORH
WYUCXYW
ER
. and Dorothy Corbett, from Greenville, ·, 8
EBZK
. N.C. They~ did well on this deal.
In the given auction, Tejwani msde
I UC G K
WCAZ
wu T C M M I T B
a weak jump overcall of two spades.
· Over four hearts, Rogers happily bid
GBJVK
uz WYV
IV H W
DUOHW . '
four spades. East made a dreadful
double.
(ZVI
RUAFVA)
NCKR
DUGGBZH.
Tejwani ruffed the heart lead in the
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Spring has returned. The earth is like a child
dummy, cashed dummy's top diaknows poems.• - Rainer Maria Alike.
·
monds, discarding a heart from hand,
and ruffed a diamond as East threw a
club. Now came a heart ruff, the club
ace, a diamond ruff and the heart
111TIAI.Y
WOlD
· queen ruffed with dummy's spade
PIIlLII
queen. After the winning dlamondj'ack
was led from the dummy, East
couldn't stop South from collecting liD
overtrick for plus 990 and 94 matchpoints out of 100.
Lamm opened the East band with
two hearts. This was Flannery, showing a minimum opening bid with four
spades and five hearts. South couldn't
risk a bid and Corbett raised to four
,.NO, ~ '100~~~~,~.., hearts. Probably North sho111d have
: doubled, but he bid five diamonds.
~ ~ M l"f,()F{£1
Corbett doubled and East-West col. lected an -800-point penalty for 96
matchpoints.

VIRA FuRNITURE
614-4.411-3158
Houaohold Ftuni&amp;lnl And

Two and three bedroom mobile
aewer, water and trash included,
B14-1182-2t67.

430 Films tor Rent

l

1Ogal lank set up apeclala. Fish

Tank &amp; POt Shop, 2•13 Jackoon
Ave. Point Pleasant, 304-8752063.
CFA tl'lam Persian, 1 ~ moa old,
t99t Mercury Soble GS toadtd,
malt. all ohota. Big tHt utlful flat
90.000 Mlloo. Like Now, Only : ~~~~~~=:...:;.=:
WICOppor oyoa. $250 DBO. '$5.6011.
Must Selll614-2ol5-5582. ·
:W.-li'IS-6223.
MlnnkOtr trolling motor. Iron! end
19.92 Grand Am , au1o, 4dr, IC,
abs, am-tm ca11ene, ti,ll, crulat,

40.000ml·304·875-18oM.
t993 Ford Eocon GT, Block,
Sharp, Call Or Leave llo11age,
61•·258- 126 7.
t993 Ford Muateng LX, 2 door,
hatchback, very low mlln, 4 cyl.
automatic, will a.OI for loon, 61•·

-~-r.::F_Sri--r-N
~ I I _Fr-i~-~~'
I ...
_
_
_
I

''I'm c.~anging my answering
serv1ce, the dentist said. "The
one I have now always manri--:0-:-=E-:N-:-:-A-:R~M-...,1 ages to • ~ ~ ~ ~ _,.

mounl, 28tb. thrust, Stpd . 304·

175-es:n.
760 Auto Plrtl
&amp;
·
Ac:cel8orles

Budget Tranamllllonl, Ulld tAt,
built, All Trpeo, Accoulblo Tq
OVer 10,000 Tranamluion~!
814-2•5-58n
;-- 1

~.... 111 .

New gas tanka, one ron- truck

1994 Cavalier, ps, pi, abo, am-lm
cassette, ac, Sopd·, 36-•2mpg,
exc. oond., $7,000. 30+675-771 S.

r&amp;dla!Drl. noolma-.etc. -,
D &amp; R Auto, Rtploy, WI/. 304-3'12"-38G3 or 1·800-2~ ·
· -

1!ii4 Dodge SltotdoW Rea 11
Speed, Air. 19,700 Miles,
$6,500, 080. 814-256-ll:loiD. 8H256-8467.
199.tt Mercury Cougar ' XA7,
32,00Drt&gt;., loaded, exc. &lt;9nd. :lCU895-3287.
86 Mercury Marqulo LS,

••tr•

good, must
· - · low
·priced
rlgh~ 614-7·2-l!IJOS.

mllel.

• .

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Is I I I

BIG NATE

'

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llator . .nli

1004 lou-..-. rutty loaded, loti- ' ~
of eltrU, 11ft. SeriOUI inquiritt ' J

_:. :

orq. ~

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'e.."'*' &amp; ·

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-"!.'\ll_ Ll. i.1. .iliiJU..
L£f i ~ ...!.!!.!.!:....~.i).l ....

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~ 985 5-tO-King Cab 11.000. 304·

p75-3312.

.
ASTRO·OaAPH

. 1Ill&amp; Ford ~noer pickUp, 4 cyl.,

with tappar &amp; ....... 11,000 .....
• 1,000, • t 4-1148-332••.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

1990 Ford Ranger XLT, •_cyl,
Fumiohaa 1
Second Avenu~.
I
llllro. Utillha ~. No
....... 81.-4oe&amp;-452S.

5lpd, ... "' pb._nico lilfllll!, ""'

miiH. runo ..,_, t4.1100. '304 411
111011ollor 8pm.

Ron's TV Strvtoa, apaclalltlng 111.
Ztnlth aloo oervlcl!tg moat orhtn
brando. Houtt calla, t-41110-797-)·
0015, wv 304-!1111-23118.
•
'

840 Electricll *'cl
RtlrlgtrltiOn

·.&lt;

RSES CERTFEO QEAI.EFI

~1

l.AWII:NCEENTE~ '•1 ·•

HMI Putnp~, Air Co~llanlng, I( " ; :
'lllu lloo~ Call Ua_Wa 8oth l - i!·'' : '
Frtt Eati...lll, 1-800'~1-00tt, , " , ,
1141ti!D,WY002845.
, ... ·, ,

A"id1 ..._, or camtMI-=~~~ ,i ··•
..w-..tooor"""""
1, :
centtd afectrlclan. ~our " ,
Eftelrlcal, WVOOOICNi, 304-171- • • • .
1711. '
.. , .

It' • .

.,
'

standing lhli influences 1hal govem you in ·· to take ·
the year .ahead. Send for your Astro· tHt overwhelmingly succ:esaful.
Graph predictions today by mailing $2 LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You wMI have
and SASE to Astro-Graph, c/o lhis news- the best chance ol achieving a personal
paper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill . goat Wyou wor1&lt; on Prolecls -of lntalliSI to ·
Station, , _ Yor1&lt;, NY 10156. Make sure a family member or relative .
to stale your zodiac sign .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Hov. 22) Today you
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Focus on might have to make an Important declopllmlatlc thoughts today. This wnl enable alon lltal could have far-reaching-you to create opportunities and condi· If you follow through on this matter,
tiona that your competitOrs cannot com- ev"Yfhing ahould go smoothly.
pretwind.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Have
' GEMINI (May 21-·Juna 201 Something faHh In your talents and abllltiea today .
good ci&gt;uld 9(:Cur today In an area that You will not be denied the fruits of your
hu produced benefits previousllf. labor Uyou go tor the gusto.
You may not be. able to anticipale thele : CAPRICORN (Dac. 22·Jan. 11) The
cltanges.
·
; people you meat in social altuatlons :
:. CANCER (.IUM 21--July 22) You will lind · today could prove to have a fortunate
. H euy today to SOlicit aupportlor the new ~ 1nlluance on you in a vartely of waya. Do
i endeavor wl\ich 1tu captured your inter- not pu1 on airs.
.
· eat. Seek peopte who operate on the AQUARIUS (Jan. 2G-Fab. 18) Remain
.. same wa\lleugth.
hopeful In regard to the outcome of
LaO (July ~lllo 221 Ypu can achieve eventa today. You may start off alowly, ·
:. outatandlng reautta tOday H you ••tend but you will croaa the finish line In ftrat
•. yourMI!. lnatead or trying to accomplish a pleoe.
; IVI'IIIar or tsm111 oiJjlcti-. go tor the big -PIICEI (Fall. 2G-IIaroh 20) Do not

Mat'Ch 22 1996
''
.
.
A uniqUe opJ~Drtunlty_ might develop
you In the~~ '88 !he nMIUft Of a
myate_
rloua ..,.._ of events. Try riol _to
~ thll . ~lopment with others In
the M11Y atagea.
.
Afi1U (Miroii11·Aprll 18) A big change
that could conalderably brighten your
11-lltlpoJoi*le may laQ pleoe today. · one.
-youtllopMand expec:tatlot•today.
Thla new twist could mean lncreaaecl ; VIRGO (Aug. ~lapt. 22111 you deal - . _ H yw IUIIer a N¥r ml1101' aetbacb.
-~w~e, ~~ a jumP. on lila by under- w1111 ~ indiVIduall Who aren1 afraid SUCml w11 be montllcely 11t11n flllture.

tor

..,

SCRAM--lETS ANSWERS

.

IJOOOO'

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

18871ntornotlonol11100
486 DT; 10 lpt!ld, cabin
102.~ original mlloa,
614-1182-31114.

Complete lhe chuckle quolod

~

.~:

Equipment Ulllld Cart. 304-4581069. ) •

1986 Chevr Blazer •••·
s7 ,ooo original mlltl. runa ..,~
- ~z.t;;· pb;·ac. ss.qoo firm. ao..

e

~~

is
C::::,. S t..I:!..!:.L~ ·• L.

~

810

..Q...- ;u"'~ c..

r~1.se..

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'

Auto Loana. Dealer will anange fi-

I

16

•
.
by filling in the missing words
..__._..__...........__.__, vou develop f,om step No. 3 below.

nancing even If ~ou have betn
turned down · itt~ewhare. U'Pton

f lrJArJCIAl

thai

....

2 Badraomo. 8 Mlloo OUt SR
S2101Mo., Plue Depoait .. Reier~

I

o13 Coat type
48 Billy Joel song,

18

Lively. 81 4-388-8303.

'I

z

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

Solon.. With Leo Extenolon &amp; 2nd I 3rd cuning, ofiaila oquart
Dip Bar $950; Outen Size Wa- ' balellar
aolo $3. 61H45-9080.
terbed, Mirrored Headboard, 8
Dr--. $250, 014-1182-5428.
Never wet, tound balea h•r for
sale. :lCU-8112·2077.
SPECiiloL : Central Air
2 Ton $1,105: 2 112
$1,285; 3 Ton $1 ,395: 3 112
$1,585: • Ton $1,805: Price•
I · ~•"''! Include Normal lnatallalion. Full 5 Year Warranty, Free
TRANSPORTATION
Eatlmates, 1·B00·291-0D08; 814·

Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos With
Or Without Motors. Call Larry

· auilntu

- Paraaltlan
38 Coolcecl fn oil .
41 From-42 O.den 1001

69 6

-

Abfe

SOUTH
aA 10 8 6 4 2

•Q 9 6 3
16

Nove, 87·70 Camara, 614-441 -

ICJSJ.

aJ4

Kt0532

7 1/2 Ft. Couch, With llatching
LoveHO~ ·Contemporary Lealhe&lt;Style, Cream 'Color, Nice Condl·
11on. S400, 81H•e-7928.

oppor1\lnlty Illata.

Wanted To Buy: 8.2 Ton Bolt PO·
altrack Unit To Fit A 1868 ChOovolle Can Uae Any Of The Following Carriers. S5-70 Chevrolet, ·
84·72 Chevello, 64-72 Chevy II/

eAK1084
t10 3

IU:XJLD STAAT .. ,

·Refrigerators, Stoves, Waahera
And Dryen, All Recondlrioned
And Gourantetdl $100 And Up,
WW Dolivw. 814--1 .

r

EAST
aK J 9 3

W£ PWAIT

worn once, paid $327 aaklng
$125. 81•·002-•s•e or 814·992·

~~':tV,:'

monslilr
- Girt
15 As Willi
50 ObMMII
:us One Day-- 51 Doctrtna
Time
53 Ho Md an lrllh
11 Small aword
ROM

aQ 7 5

PionMi ~iKoiver: BSR turntoblt,
Utah - ' " " '· pold ~ will
tailt $150, il'i4-1182·7207.

Salon, Call AnytiO'le, 8U·3ft7·
De12.

(abbr.)

a Antarctic bird

12 Sulk
13 Belonging
to ua
14 Loch -

Matching Couch &amp; Chair, Good
~I 814-44&amp;-81811.

Ianing Bed Bualneaa For Sale,
Locetaa o\t FIIIHt Hair &amp; Tanning

ACROSS

11
llltdlcal plcttiN
agcy.
, 5 Esp!Mive
31 Football COICh
·

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends rhal you do bUll·
nasa wi\h people )IOU know, and
NOT to Mnd mDMy through the
mall until you nava lnvtttloattd
1t1e offering.

--

Sovlnft You'll find In the
.. Clossified Section.

ITHURSDAY

.•

: '
. -~
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•,~.; .,.~ ..~-··
Paunch· Metal- Happy· Auburn~ HAPPEN
My frien~ says that an economist is an expert who
knows tomorrow why the things he predict!!d yesterday
didn'l HAPPEN!

MARCH21 I

�ThuiWday, March 21, 181JS

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

,Play it safe with
AaAJIDa•AII

•l ly ANNE B. ADAMS Wid
~V NASH-CUIIMINGS
·DEAR ANNE AND NAN: 1have

· a cti,amOnd ring and my son would
•

lib~ the diamond. I'm happy to give
1'1'n him (it was a gift from his father,

• ·ll.t:t:"' former husband), but I'm con·

cenied that his jeweler might switch
the stones. Wbal can 1 do to prevent
this?- No NAME , Ocal a, Aa.
, DEAR NO NAME: Nan called
, VonBarg~~n'sJewelry in Springfield,
Vt They sugested first to go to a
. weler y'ou trusl. Ask him or her to
JC
• llppraise lbe stone: You want to know .
· the four ·~cs" .. the stone's color,
clariry, cut and tarats (the weight),
and its value.
You could also ask the jeweler to
appJaise the stone in your preseace,
· bitt be sure to make an appointment ·
: ahead of time.
.
·
FEEDBACK: We recejved· the
following great recipe from Annette
' Smith of Danby, Vt., who says this is
' the best way to maJie yogurt.

'

val~able

Ohio Lottery

diamond·

BOW TO MAKE YOGURT
them above « behind a WOQ!Istove,
1 gallon milk
in \box with a 25-wllt liabt bulb, In· '
Stainless-steel pot
a tui'ncd-off gas oven that !lu a pilot
light, wrapped in towels with hoc
Cooking thennometer
1 small container of plain yogun water bottles, ot wtllppOd in towels in
Olass jars or plastic tubs
a sunny, warm wincJow. (Lisht
Eg heater
·
destroys the vitamins in milk.)
Measuring cup or pourable bowl
Leave about six boun. '1'1\e loager
Oet yogurt culture out of tefriger· you leave it, the more tart it gets. The
ator so it can warm to room temper· sweetest YOJIIIt sets the shortest
arure. {Buy PLAIN yogun at . the time. Refrigerate.
supermarket Dannon is a very reli·
A soft cheese can be made by,
able culture. Or reuse your culture · straining the yogun through cheese
from the last time you made yogurt.) cloth, tying it up in a bag and lenins
Leave container coveted.
: it drain for a couple hours. The whey
Heat 1 gallon milk to 180de~s' \that drail\5 out is good for plants or
in a stainless-steel pot (not alu· . can be used to make Ricotta cheese.
Write to "Alk Anne &amp; Nan" at
minum). Use a cooking thermomeler
to check temperature. Do not cover P.O. Box 240, Hartland, VT 05048.
pot.
Questions of general interest will
pot
appear in the column. Due to tho v~·
Remove from heat and P I~·
~
in cold water bath to cool milk ume of mail,. petsOnal teplies cannot
rapidly to 110 degtees, uncovered. be pro~~· B. ~ and Nancy
1Stir to speed cooling.
! Fill four 0""-"uart containers 314 · ·Nash-Cummings are co-~thors of
·- ,
"Ask Anne &amp; Nan" (Wbetstone) and
:full with warm milk. Pour the "Dear ARne and Nan: Two Prize
remainingmilkintoapourablecupor Problem-Solvers Share Their
·bowl, and stir in 3 or 4 tablespoons
of yogurt cultute (use about 1 table- Sectets" {Bantam). To (11'der, call I·
spoon yogunculture for each quart of 800-888-1220.
milk). Beat .with ari egg beater until
there is a froth on top. Fill the con·
tainers to the top with the milk·and·
yogun mixture, then stir briefly.
Cover the filled containers.
Put the containers where the tem·
peratute is 90 degtee~. Try placing

Stuqy -finds
'hip surgery
cost -effective

·Utes beaten
by Kentucky
In NCAA play
Sporta, Page 4

Beat·of the Bend ...

.

·~ .
WALJ(AMERICA AMBASSADORS • Ambl•
aadan fortt.18111 Tri-County WllkAmlrfc81or
Mil ol\ of Dime~-. choeln -~~~~. Pictured
.,., IMI, Dllln1111 Eade, Ollila County Ambl•
llldor; blen1111 EliiiOII, WllkAmlrlce ·chairmen;
and Mitchell Herbrecht, 1111011 County Ambl•
aador. An . -••ador fn1!n ~ County 11

.

'

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lllo bllngiiOUght. Eacls, a fourth glllder lit ~~ :
Well-Porter El1111111tary, II thl dauallf!W of Br!" &gt;
.lfland Sand111 Blake of Bidwell. 11118 te
..0: ,
ond year u ambauador. HarbiiCht 11 ·the iol:!•
of Kim Harlncht oi'Niw Hav1n, W.Va. and ./Iff ~
. Hiut1111cht of Point P ...llnt, W.V.. He Ia a flm
· 9111dlr It North PolntEiameu• !I· ·
. _.-:.

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Vol, 46,1110. 228
2 Seotlona, 12 ......

By MICHELLE HEALY
USA TODAY
Tuition vouchers, school choice
and charter schools may grab head·
lines, ~ut they aren't today's most
ptessing education issues, say some
'school principals.
A survey out Friday of 802 ele·
mentary and middle ~I principals

Public Notice

By CASSANDRA BURRELL

finds motivating students (97 per· panics (32 percent), sharing a!l'hOii·
cent), involving parents (94 percent), ty with parents and commumty (.SO
serving growing numbers of special 'percent) and handling demands· for
.education students (93 percent) and .school choice, tuition vouchers, and
.keeping up with technology (93 per· .charter schools (49 percent).
.
.cent) at,the top of school leaders! con·
"The kinds of issues that get 11lot
~ cems ~
·of press have very little to do with tpe
By contrast, priacipals worry least learning of an individual chjld," says
with for-profit com· Samll(ll Sava.
·

Public NotJc.

!

WASHINGTON - The House,
echoing the sentiment behind Cali·
. fornia's Proposition 187, passed overwhelmingly a bill aimed at over·
hauling America's "out of whack"
system of combating illegal immigration.
Foremost among !he provisions of
the measure- the first of its kind to
emerge from the House or Senate in
a decade -was one that would dou·
ble the size of the U.S. Border Patrol
by adding 5,000 agents.
B~t the House also, in the process,
voted to delete from lbe bill most pro•isions that would have restricted
legal immigration. The mammoth bill
passed on a 333-87 vote.
" II will help secure our borders,
reduce crime and protect jobs for
American citizens," said'Rep. Lamar
Smith, R-Texas, the bill's chief

~

t ·Mum44• 15' aaet tal. t fMI
W•-m
point In 1M centfl ol

By JAMES HAN~H
A&amp;IIOClllted Prtill Wrltlr
DAYTON- If history is any indication, an 18-day strike that vinually
shut down Geqeral Motors Corp.'s assembly operations in North America
·and idled 177.375 GM workers will likely end today.
Members of United Auto Workers Local 696 were to vote on w)lether to
. l'-!ify.a,tep'-live a~ment rt:ached Thursday:b}i OM.I""i uniOn 11egotiators.
' Union le84ers had n\it .released.dFtails'lif the accord"but said the,~ll rec.,
ornmend that members approve it.
.
.
, •
When !lie ~nion went' on a three-d•y strike two years ago ovtr tlmilar
issues, 97 percent of !he membershiP.. hiler approved the agreement.
.
Harley Shaiken. a labor professor at
University ofC~Iifornia at Berke. ley who closely follows the auto industry, saiil the union probably will ratify the pact.
·~My sense is. in this local there is a lot of confidence in the leadership,"
Shaiken said. "If the leadership thinks it's a good agreement- after 17 days
on the picket line and after shutting OM down nationally o•er these issues
- wc'te likely to see a ratification."
The strike at two Da)lton-area brake plants forced OM to shut down 26
of its 29 assembly plants apd I!! parts plants in the United States, Canada
and Mexico and halted ·work at many independent suppliers.
·
GM also declined to discuss te£1!1s of the ag.eement or say whether it
addressed the main point of contention between the two sides: outsourcing.
The practice of-bl,lying parts from outside manufacturers to reduce labor and
production costs is a job-killer, the union says. But GM maintains that it
allows the company to stay competitive, which saves jobs.
The New York Times in today 's editions, citing a peijlon close to the negotiations, said the pact would give GM . some flexibility in giving work to OUt·
side manufacturers, but did not provide the automaker with standard rules
· on when it could buy parts from outside the company.
The seulement also allows for some additional hiring at the brak~: plants,
according to the Times and the Dayton Daily News. The Dayton paper also
reported that OM's parts-buying deal was a key concession, and that union
sources said the coniract provided improvements in worker safety and health.
The UAW will be assured of jobs as GM develops a future brake system
to replace a system now buill at Dayton, the Detroit Free Pn:ss reported in
Friday's editions.
But GM will proceed with plans to buy brakes for its 1998 Chevrolet
Camaro and Pontiac Firebird from Roben Bosch 9orp., a nonunion suppli·
er in South Carolina. the newspaper said. The strike was triggered by OM's
decision to stop buying Camaro and Firebird brakes made at the Dayton
plants.
.
GM also will award future contracts on certain key ·componcnts to more
than one manufacturer- including at least one outside GM itself, the Free
Press said. Thai could k~p parts moving to assem~ly plants in case of local
lal?or problems at a OM-owned supplier.
GM assured the UAW it would add at least 300 jobs at the Dayton plants

LEGAL NOnCE
The Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio has set for public hearing Case
No. 95·102-El·EFC, to review the
fuel procurement practices and poli·
cies of Columbus Southern Po~er
Company, the operation of its Elec·
tric Fuel Component.and related
matters. This hearing is scheduled
to begin at the Commission offices
all O:QO a.m. on March 26, 1996.
All interested parties will be given
an opportunity to be heard.' Further
information may be obtained by
contacting the Commission at180
East Br,oad Street, Columbus, Ohio
43266-()573

o·ue to . the fact that p.eople are still calling
dropping off order forms for~personalized bricks
the chamber has decided to .purchase 100 final
bricks to. be plaeed on the amphitheatre's
walkway.
This will be your last chance to become a part of
Meigs County History! So hurry up &amp; buy a bdck
while they last.

\.J~st
for you.
.
.

Become a Plirt of Meigs County's History.!

lo {

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And
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STILLATrr·.._ AIIM!bllcln Pfllldentlal hopafUI Ptlt 'IJucllanan, ·
loched out of the nomination b!l primary Ylctorlea ICcnd b!l ~· '
Boll Qoll or
nlmlllned on tt. campaign 111111 111UI'Idly
by elgnlng eutograpba at a rallyin Burbank, C.llf. (Aft)

Kan...,

'

'

__

...........
•

38-

-.p.per

substantial maj ority of DemocraUi ."
California· s Proposition 187,
which sought lo deny welfare benefits and free sc hooling to illegal
immigrants, helped win support for
the bill, Smith said. A federal court
has temporarily blocked implementation of the California measure.
Propos ilion 187 "was the lidal
wave that washed up on the shores of
the Capitol, " said Smith, ,who chairs
the House Judiciary Committee 's
immigration panel.
·
Besides doubling the number of
· border agents at U.S. borders at
Canada and Mexico to 10,000 over
five years, the bill would increase
penalties for alien smuggling and
d~ument fraud . It would give the
sta(es the option of barring children
who are illegal aliens from public
schools, an idea White House
spokesman
Mike
McCurry
denounced as " nutty."

DISCUSSES BILL- Sen. Alan
Simpson, R·Wyo., partlclpalld In
a Thursday hearlflg of the Senate
Judiciary Committee to dlacues
Illegal Immigration. The HouM .
vollcl on the moet elgnlflcant
lmmigl'lltion bill in a decide lat·
er in the day. (AP)

A Middleport man is free on bond from the Meigs County Jail after he
was arrested late Wednesday for allegedly carrying a co.ncealed weapon at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Brian 0 . Mullen, 40, was taken into custody after hospital officials learned
he was carrying a .22-caliber. pistol while seeking medical treatment at the
facility around II :30 p.m., Sheriff James M. Soulsby said.
.
According to police reports. J'.{ullen went 10 the hospital and sought treatment from a physician who practices at Holzer Medical Center. 1\fter hospital officials.toUJ:Mullen the phy~ician could norbe'cotitaaed;:Miinei'fsi'OOit'
up and was bCiievclJ to have a weapon.
·
Mullen did not allempt to brandish the weapon, but was restrained by a
relative and hospital officials after they realized he was carrying a pistol. He
was kept under restraint until law enforcement officials arri•ed, and placed
him into custody.
Officials at VMH declined 10 issue a statement on the incident when contacted this morning.
A preliminary hearing was held Thursday, at which time Mullen was
charged with carrying a concealed weapon, a felony of the fourth degree. '
Following the hearing. Mullen posted $1 ,000 ORC bond and was released
from the Meigs County Jail.
A hearing has been set for April 3 in the case. If convicted, Mullen could
face a maximum of six to 18 months in jail, and a $2,500 fine.

CALL FOR SUPPORT - Larry Barton waved at paaslng
motorists honking their suppprt tor striking United Auto Work·
era outside the Delphi Cha11l1 brake plant In Dayton Thursday.
The union and Ganeral Motor&amp; reached lentlltive egre~ment and
a vote Ia scheclulttd tOday. (AP)

.

.

.

over the next five to seven years, a company source told The Detroit News.
But work force attrition during that period likely will reduce the net gain in
jobs to fewer than 50, the newspaper said.
Striking worker Ken Craycraft, 49, of Franklin said he was eager to hear
the details of the agreement. He said the strike had no! hurt him as much as
some of his colleagues because his wife works.
"But I feel bad if one person: is out of work," Craycraft said.
If the deal is ratified, the Dayton plants could resume production today.
The six OM assembly plants in Michigan were expected to resume production Monday, The Detroit News reponed today.
"We have a start-up plan 10 flow product to the most critical plants as
soon as possible, " said Dan Warrell, manager of the striking Delphi Chas·
sis brake plants. "And we'll he doing that."
·
GM spokesman Thomas Klipstine said most plants could be back in busi·
ness a week after parts shipments from Dayton resume.
The agreement came one day after the Clinton administration started talk·
ing about getting involved. Labor Secretary Robert Reich had offered to send
federal mediators to help end the walkout.
· ·

Legislation allows customer
to cho~se electric supplier
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohioans
would be able to choose their elec·
tricity supplier beginning in 1998
under a bill introduced in the House
Thursday.
"Technological advances have
lowered the cosl of adding electric
power generation, provided customers with new possi bilities 10
obtain power from alternative sources
.. . and improved the communication
systems that are needed to give all
electricity customers the opportunity
to select the supplier that provides the
best service at the lowest price," state
Rep. Ron Amstutz, R· Wooster. said
at a news conference.
Amstutz conceded that such a
complicated bill introduced so close
to the end of the legislative session
has no chance of passing this year.
but he said il is important to begin
educating the public now so that it

can be voted on early next year.
Backe rs of deregulation sal
Ohio's current monopoly system ha!
resulted in widely divergent electric
rates across the state and hurt Ohio's
economic competitiveness.
Amstutz's bill, which is co-sp.on·
sored by Republicans and Democrats,
is backed by Ohio manufacturers,
steel producers and other large ener..
gy users.
Detractors, though, say the interests of consumers and the environment are not properly reprosented in
the bill .
"II is unacceptable that this bill
has been shaped by only large industrial users with the goal of lowering
just their prices," said Brady Bancroft, energy policy analyst for Campaign for an Energy Efficient Ohio,
a coalition of environmental groups.

Buchanan dodges questions over running
for presidency as indep~ndent candidate .~

•

. Buy .a personaliz~~ bricj( for Y.our family or
busille&amp;$. to be used in the revitalization projeet
happening in our co~nty seat of Pomeroy. Your
brick can have a personlill message you wanJ
inscribed on four brick, and receive pe.rmanent
·
o your communitY support, that will
last a
·
A
·certifi'c~te, that states your
.00 bfi(ik m:trnb•r ·i.s available upon
...lln,jp.~,,•u· · :r~e Melg• ·~ounty 1'ourtsm. Board and
. COunty Chaml;ler of Qommerce tn«lrlk
order._ If, you would Uki to .
of a briCk ple.ase cell (fJ1'4) 992"'

A Gannett Co.

Middleport man· cited .
for allegedly carrying
weapon into hosp,ital

me

I

ariiemonal

provisions would have reduced the
number of foreigners admiued to the
country by at least I9 percent over
five years from the 800,000 who
entered in 1994. However, opponents
said the cuts probably would have
been as high as 30 percent to 40 per·
cent.
The Clinton administration, which
has called for more modest immi·
gration reducti ons, had criticized
Smith's cuts as too extreme, and
Smith said he thought telephone
calls from the White House persuaded many Democrats to vote against
the plan.
,.
'
He said he was delighted, howev·
er, with the overwhelming support h~
received for measures that get
tougher with illegal aliens.
"Obviously I'm very pleased with
the final result," he told reporters.
"We not only had the overwhelming
support of Republicans but also a

. : walkout . tod~y

can't take it

us create

hard-working taxpay~r."
The presidential primary campaign gave a high-profile boost to the
drive to shut down illegal immigration. Both California Gov. Pete Wil son, before he dropped out of the
GOP race, and commentator Pal
Buchanan made it integral parts of
their campaigns.
The Senate Judiciary Commillee
is scheduled to begin work next
week on its own plan to cut legal
immigration. and Smith expressed
some hope that a Senate plan wo)lld
be adopted by the House.
Smith said something must be
done soon to n;dute a backlog of 2. 7
million foreigners waiting to join
family members in the United States,
stop excessive immigration from
depressing wages and taking away
jobs from Americans, and reduce the
number of immigrants on welfare.
Smith said his legal immigra!ion

:UAW vote could
·.end .automaker

Who says you
with you?

author.
Sponsors of the bill were unable to
·preserve a second lnajor objective a plan to roll back significantly on the
number of immigrants allowed to
come into the United States legally.
"It is fundamentally wrong to take
the justifiable anger about our failure
to deal with the issue of illegal
immigration and piggyback on top of
that anger a drastic ... cut in perma·
nent legal immigration, a cause and
a force that has been goo&lt;!" for this
country," said Rep. H9w8rd Berman,
D-Calif., who cosponsored the House
amendment deleting the legal itpmi·
gration limits.
Even without many of the legal
immigration provisions he had
pushed, Smith said the bill "will
encournge legal immigrants to be
productive members of our commu·
nities and _ease the burden on the

AsiOCiated Press WrHer

Public Notice . ,
of aald-.olld;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 22, 1996

•

Immigration law overhaul passes House

Inspiring kids is ·principals' top . c.oncern:

by Bob H~flich
. Paul Sayre, youngest son of Mrs. does have four other children in addi, Karl (Eleanor) Kloes, Syracuse, is tioit to Paulll!ld• of course, is proud
doing exl:l'elllely well in his musical · of all of them.
studjes at Eastern Michigan UniverPresently Paul is a teacher,assis·
sity in Ypsil!lnli, wbere he is a grad- tant in addition to being a graduate
uate student.
student at Eastern Michigan He
AcomjlositionofPaul was recent· received his bachelor of science
ly selected from among seven sub- degree from Ohio State University in .
mitted in national competition as the piano performance and composition ,
best. 1be composition is ·for piano, ·and will soon get his Master's from ·
violin and clarfnet and was per· Eastern Michigan. What next? Well
• fomled at Washington and Lee Uni- right now Paul is planning to contin·
versity in Lexington, Va.
ue.his education working towards his
Paul was presented a five day Doctorate of Music Arts degree.
expense paid trip to the university in 1 . Obviously, he's Off to an eltcellent
· Lexington where he attended nwner· ' stan in the field of music.
ous concerts, symposiums al)d simi.!
Apparently we shall have music in
• lar activities as well as attending the;
· concert at which his coitqlosilion was I the Big Bend area this s~er.
.The Ohio River Border Initiative,
presented. He teeeived a tape of his!
composition as performed by Joel; a joint project of the Ohio Arts
Sarla. pianist and director of the Juil· Council and the West Varginia Com·
liard Contemporary Chamber mission on the Arts, bas given the
Orchestra; Renee Jallies, violinist. Riverbend Arts Council a $2,000
and David Gresham: a staff member j1'8111 for the establishment of a com·
munity band.
at Juilliard.
.
As I understand it, Toney Dingess,
Also last flill·P!IUI was pleasantly
surprised when he rec::eived a phone. Meigs High Band director, will be
call from the ~iarihelist of the Phillips · organizing and directing the musical
Concert Series; Phillip Oallery, of; organization..there was a similar
Washington, D.C.. asking permission ! group last year. Instrumentalists will
to perform a piece Paul had .written: come from both Meigs County and
while he was a student at Ohio State from Mason County across the river.
UniVersity. Paul had'shated this com·. Last year's group presented ri most
position with friends and somehow ~ pleasant concert in front of the Meigs
Gallcry·had gotten a copy. Paul was j County Libi-ary in Pomeroy under the
invited to Washington to coach the j direction of Dingess.
presentation and attend the concen. i · I'm sure you'll be hearing more
Learning of the opportunity for Paul, : ·about the group and like me, you
the staff at Eastern Michigim sent him . probably look forward to hearing the
to Washington for the event
~ band !his summer.
Eleanoi's eldest daughter, Angela i
Cold, cold rain poured down on
Richards of Gallipolis, lOOk Eleanor
lllld. Jessica Dickens; a grat1ddaush· Meigs County voters Tuesday. Oni
ter of Eleanor, to Lexington, Va., i Wednesday, the ftrst day of spring,!
.where they were privileged to attend . .Mother Nature clearly demonstrate4i
the taping and concert of Paul's work she had not run ·OUt of snow. Wow! J
perfomied at Washi(lgton ~ ~ 1 'What a dainty dish to set before the,
University. Eleanor teally enjoyed 1 king, huh,?This, too, shall pass so dol
'
.
being on hand for the occasion.. a · keep smiling.
'proud moment. By the way, Eleanor

Iowa
In the teens ,
rday,
partly to mostly sunny.
Hlghe In the 40&amp;.

'•

rOad; th•nc• waet
211.4 fHI lo the plac• of
lleglnnlng, contelnlng , 41

I

Pick 3:
8-5-5
Pick 4:
6-4-6-4
Buckeye 5:
5-11-21-28-35

..

,..

•
f:

By SCOn LINDLAW
Aaeoclatecl Pntas Wrher
SANTA ANA, Calif. - Pat
Buchanan; who has made a living
delivering $traighl answers, is stumbling when it comes to ·reports he is
considering a third-party run, for
president.
The cdnservative commentator
rejleatedly dodged questiQns about
his intentions as he stumped for next
Tuesday's Califdmia primary, saying
only that he'll meet with supporters
in Virginia.next week and "listen to
all the options."
"We want to hear from them on
· how we best advance the causes in
which we believe and for which we
all fou&amp;ht,".he told reporters 1'1\ursday after touring an English.only ele·
menlat')' school.
He also insisted h~ will be at the
RepUblican National Convention in
August.
·
Asked 'f he .":as warming !.O. the

idea of a third-party candidacy,
Buchanan responded : "As I told
you, we're going straight ahead."
He segued into an attack on Sen·
ale Majority Leader Bob Dole, who
has clinched !he GOP nomination, for
conducting "business as.usual in the
U.S. Senate."
Asked if he could rule out such a
run, he replied: "What we've said is,
we want to go to the Republican convention, bring all our folks into the
Republican Party, reshape, remake
that party into the traditionalist, con·
servative party that represents a new
conservatism of,the heart."
. Some of Buchanan's ad'viser;s are
encouraging him 10 make an inde·
pendent run for president.
One aide, speaking on condition
of anonymity, said four of
Buchanan's top advisers, including
his sister and campaign manager
Bay, are "foursquare behind the
idea."

. Finance Chairman Scott McKen·
"I didn 't know this week that
zie also favors the idea, but is con- you're going to hear Ross Perot .
cemed about whether the campaign announce he's going to 'l!et in the;
could raise enough money for the race," Buchanan said. "Lots of things
effort, another Buchanan aide said. can happen between now and
Bay Buchanan had a "preliminary November. You've got all sorts ol
discussion" over lunch last week things happening. You hear this U.S
about a third-party bid with Howard Tupayer's Party is lining up."
Phillips, a member of the U.S Tax· .
The taxpayer's party on Wednesj ·'
payers Party's eltecutive committee, day announced it would try to pu
a third aide said.
Buchinan on the November ballo
But ·Buchanan
campaign around the country, !Jay Buchan&amp;l ::
spokesman Greg Mueller said some ·said then her brother was commi~ ~
aides favor staying with the Rej&gt;ub- to running as Republican througll'thC
lican Party and trying for the No. 2 convention but no decision 1:111!1 beeq
· spot on the GOP ticket.
made on the offer. .. · • · ·'· ·' !•'
. "There are a couple of senior
It's ioo late for a'~Jiinllf'party
aides that think )VO ought to give seri· qualify for the California ballot, ~d.
ous consideratioq to a third party Alfie Charles, a spokesman for· the
while o!hers think it's important to 'secretary of state's office. The min, .,.
stay ·within the itopublican Party, deadline was in October. .
:.
vying for the vice presidential slot,
But Buchanan could run as aa :
looking toward .the future and mak· independent or under an cxistine pr- •ing it more of a Buchanan party," said ty's banner if that party permitted it, • •
Ch ares
I sm.
'd
. MueIIcr.
. • ,' '

td

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