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Ohio Lottery

may save

SWCD's spring tree
sale is "in full bloom

Walkou' proves unions

(Continued from 01)
between the company and its
• ~: . futule. The people you'no letting go
employees. If you do everything
t: don't have them and the people the company asks you to do, aren 't
t: you're adding do.
you entitled to continued employBy CINDY JENKINS •
.
"It's a sad tale, but it's a true
ment?
GALLIPOLIS - · GaiUa Soil and Water Conservation· District is in
~ one. A professional in the comput"My answer would have been
full swing with its spring- tree sale.
· ·
}: er indusll}' has to commit themyes. Today, I don 't feel that way.
This is perfect weather for planting trees, lllld we have some hard;:;. ~elves to retraining." ·
The bottom line is the bouom
woods for sale that every yard should have.
::
Comsharc had I, 12S employees
line."
Still available are the fruit tree packet with two peach trees lUid two
on its worldwide payroll at the end
John Moyle, a fanner director
pl~m trees: the Hardwood packet with two each of pin oak, weeping
• of 1991. Four years and" three
of software development, pushed
w1llow, tuhp tree and sugar maple; also the Flowering "free packet with
: waves later, 700 work there.
hard for a transfer to Com share's
two each of redbud, white dogwood and Rose of Sharon.
.·
~
Comshare's downsizing "was
Austin, Texas, o~rations - even
Y~ m~y also pure~ a p_ack of five black walnut seedli~gs and
; the absolule worst two or three
though he suspected it was in
2 - 3 cutungs of ArnenclUI Bittersweet. Wildflower and crownvetch
' years" of Jim Arthurs 'life. As vice
jeopardy.
combination seed packs may also be purchased.
• president of cusromer quality serThe transfer came in February
. AI_! of the abo~e plllllts and seed material is perfect for attracting
vices, he sat on what he called the
1994. Five months later, afler trimw~ldh~e to your pnvate space. Birds, including the niby throated huml · "g•ving side" of the downsizing .
ming the Austin staff to two from
nungbird, barn swallow, robin, and wren, just to name a few need more
~ desk.
13, he was dismissed and the
are~ for nesting, food source and cover. You can use all ~f the plllllt
~ - "I cut my budget in half," said office closed.
·
spec1es offered to develop a bird lUid wildlife garden that will last for
Arthurs, 48. "When you're a softyears to come.
·
"My wife and I agreed we
. ! wan: tompany, a huge part of your Wllllled to come to Austin any-.
For ord~ring information call Cindy Jenkin~&gt; at ~8687, or stop
; budget i~ in people. As we went
way," said Moyle, 50, now a manby the Galha SWD office at Ill Ja~kson Pilct, Suite 1~69 Gallipolis
; through 11, we ended up with execOhio 45631.
·'
'
ager of software development for
~ utives stacked three deep. We
ETI Inc. in Austin. His pay:
(Cindy Jenklns Is district forester for the Gallia SWCD.)
; , thought it would work out."
$67,500, 24 percent less than his
~ - : It didn't. In July 1994, Arthurs
$89,000 Comshare salary.
1 ~ was. let go after 19 years at
Paul Berne is. took ·seven months
•.: · Comshare:
to find another job - vice presi~
"Because lie new the s1tuat1on,
'
·
dent of software services at Omnex
i il wasn't a total surprise. I cenain- Inc., a tiny Ann Arbor computer
f · Jy understood the need to do it," he finn- which pays 20 percent less
i said. "But when you get down to
than his Com share salary. In .
• the pers9nal pan, that doesn't
between, he built kitchen cabinets
; . help."
and chased pan-time consulting
GALLIPOLIS Wayne L.
work.
Niday, who has spent 40 years in
::
Worse, Arthurs - now operaComshare doesn' 1 know how
banking, is retiring, effective March
:. lions manager of grape VINE Tech., , nolopes LLC in Troy - said he
31.
mlllly of its 400 fanner employees
• !lid little ID prepare for his immilanded new jobs. Most of those
This was announced Friday by ·
nent unemployment, even though
interviewed say they took substanJames L. Dailey, chairman and chief
he discussed the likelihood with
tial pay cuts - often as much as 30
executive officer of Ohio V•lley
.. Wrathall. ·
percent- when they did find new
Bank.
:.
"!couldn't have done anything · work.
Niday, vice president for funds
• to stop it," he said. "ll's human
"It was a scary time," Bemeis
management, has been with OVB
•• natiii'C to hang on as long as you said. "I always thought it was nine years, lllld worked the previous
;.
Wayne L Niday
• CliJI, especially when you're not
31 years at CommerciallUid Savings
going to happen to someone else
dissatisfied."
·
and Star Banks of Gallipolis.
and a directOr for the Galli&amp; County
lllld not me. Your confidence gets
By all accounts, Comshare was
Dailey
said,
"We
_
owe
a
deep
Fair
Board.
shaken. Could it happen again?'
a good place to work. That's why Realistically, in the modern world, amount of gratitude to Wayne for the
Niday is also a past director and
dismissed employees felt anger
job he has done. He has made an treasurer for the Gallia County Area
you know it can."
imponant contribution to the growth Chamber ofCornmercelUid a former
~ · and betrayal when the company
"Vinually everybody who was
;,: they · called home for decades
and success ofOhio Valley Bank."
memller of the Galli a County
let go was a friend," said Linda
r- abruptly tenniliated them.
Niday
is
a
Gallia
County
native
lmprovemen!
Corporation. He is a
Anderson, a senior technical staff
from
Gallia
Academy
member
of
the
Gallipolis Kiwanis
and
graduated
~ , Chuck Lowrie, 48, believed his
member and 16-year veteran .
•• loyalty to Comshare, forged over
High
School.
He
later
attended
Ohio
Club
and
the
First
Presbyterian
"Comshare has a history of
University
and
~ 18 years, would be returned. He
served
in
the
U.S.
Church.
·
longevity because it's a great place
Navy. He just completed 32 years as
Niday and his wife. Alice, live on
expected the. company and its
to work. It's like a death in the famclerk for Gallipolis .Township, and Grape Street in Gallipoljs. He has
{. • employees · would weather the
ily. I went through a long period .o f
'previously
served six years as trea- three daughters, Robin Lane, Lisa
: stormy times together.
mourning. ''
surer for the Gallipolis City School Rumley and BoUdi Boliice; a son,
:
".Then reality struck," said . One widespread ,£of!(:lusion:
Board, and nine years as · treasurer' Jim; lUid seven grandcl!ildren.
• .J.oWrie, fonner director of inforSurvivors were consi~d more
; mation technologies and now manadaptable to emerging technolo~ . aaer. of sales suppon for Southgies, better equipped to .work in
;' ~ field-based Campbell Services Inc.
CINCINNATI (AP)- Representatives of low-income custo1f1Crs are urgteams, lead meetings, communi~ · ·..1 would like to see a world in
ing state regulators to reject Cincinnati Gas &amp; · Electric Co.'s request to
cate with colleagues.
; which there was some loyalty
mcrease rates 11 charges for natural gas and various ot~Jer services.
,. .
The proposal would increase the utility's revenue 8.9 percent, o'r $30.8 .
'million lUinually.

t

i

s'

Niday plans
retirement
fr;om OVB

,,

r

..

(Continued from 01)
Hathaway Inc.
.
For Sale: Tenneco Inc. said it will split off its Newport News Shipbuil!ling division and may do the same to its pipeline business.
·'
Help WlUIIed: Three U.S. senators asked President Clinton to pRssuk .
Japan to settle the trade dispute between Eastman Kodak Co. lllld Fuji Phj&gt;to Film'Co. Kodak has charged that the Japanese government helped FlUi
maintain a monopoly in the Japanese film market. Japan has refuSed-tO begin
fonnal talks about the disagreement.
..

Winnen, losen.- ln between

.
•
Ticker
The Food and Drug Ad~nistration released affidavits that claimed PhiUp
Moms COs. crea~d a ~achme to measure how smokers' brains react to nicpune, The affidavits r&amp;Jsed questions about industry executives' testiiJII)ny!o
Congress that they have not manipulated nicotine content ... McDonal s
Corp. w!ll ~uy an 80-s tore hamburger chain in Italy and thereby become 1· t
c?un~ s b1ggest fast-food company ... Housing stans reached a 14-morilh
h1gh m February, hut some analysts said the increased activity won't hcid
up if mongage rates rise.
.
'

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ROOT AWAKENING" SALE ~
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Give your lawn a *root awakening•
this spring with a Stihl trimmer. Its

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starli~ .power will help you maintain

a healthy, great-looking lawn. Get
one now while it's on sale ..

·

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
St. Rt. 248 Chester
985·3308

Super Lotto:

7-16-23-25-40-41
Kicker:
8-9-2-1-6-7
Plck3:

o-8-1

Sports, Page 4

Pick 4:
9-6-1-3

5

129'5
..,.

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.

Advocates urge rste hikt rejeetion

at
.Vvl. 4e, NO. 229.

,Report finds State paying lip
:service to affirmative action
gram be radically altered by 1998,
and the committee ·suggests !hal
social deprivation and economic need
should replace race as the basis for
awarding the minority set-aside contracts, !he newspaper said .
Buttl&gt;c. problems with the state's
program run deeper than the minority set-aside program, The Plain Dealer said.
The newspaper's analysis of stale
payroll and Board of Regents records
showed that women are" often paid
less than white men to do the same
jobs . .
It ·also found that statc-supponed
universities are not retaining minority students as well as white students,
and 83 percent of the highest-paying
state jobs arc held by white men.
State officials say the pay dispar-

COLI,IMBUS (AP) - Relatively
few people are being served by the
state's affirtnative action program,
The (ClevellUid) Plain Dealer reponed on Sunday.
: : .The program was intended to
spread the state's wealth to minori Ucs, )NOmen and their businesses, but
three-founl\8 of the $225 million the
~tate paid t"o minori1y vendors last
year went to just 5 percent of the eli ~
gible companies, according to an
analysis of·$late contracts by The
Plain Dealer.
"
•
A confidential report from a committee appointed by Gov. George
Voinovich confinned that the state's
16-year-old affinnative action program needs an overhaul, ,the newspape~said..
.;. ~ •, .The report recommends the pro·

ity results from the fact that white
men have been in the state work force
longer than minority-group members
and women. About 12 percent of
Ohioans are members of a minority.
Voinovich said he was "shOcked"
by the findings.
"I must tell you that for the last
several years it's kind of bothered me
that just a few people are panicipating in the (set-aside) program when
it was intended to try lUid provide an
opponunity for a lot more people to
participate," Voinovich said.
Voinovich and others say the
esSential problem with the program is
that big companies stay big, while
small ones remain weak.
Stronger and more experienced
companies probably have a better
opportunity to successfully bid on the

• 200 minutes FREE airtime.

---··:-·.. ·-: ""--.-·

• . ... .

~

514;~800

.1100 E. State St. ·'

ATHENS

·385·5154
61 S. Ma~et St.
LOGAN

loo--..-----------,--------J

laid the path," Sen. Alfonsc D' Amato, R-N.Y., said later on the same prograJ!l.
House and Senate conferees meet
ibis week to work out a common ·plan
to provide Ilion: than $160 billion to
fund the nine Cabinet departments
and numerous other agencies that
lack approved budgets for the fiscal
year tl)at ends Sept. 30 because of differences between the administration
and Congress.
·.The administration has asked for
$8 billion more than lawmakers originally offered spit can restore spending for many education and environmental programs ~o 1995 levels. The
Senate has agreed to more than half
that request, and House leaders have
said they could meet President Clinton halfway. .
Still to be resolved are some
peripheral isslles, s~h as Republican
plans to revamp Clinton's commun1ty-poli&lt;:ina program and provisions to
allow more development of wetlllllds.
~sno."
~ "We are so close. we have really
Failure to~ 011 five of the gov-

•. WASHJNOT0JII (AP) - White
House and Republican congressionofficials say they're close to a deal
to end the cycle of budgetary crises
and fund all fedeiul programs through
the second half of thijs fiscal year.
And in another possible respite
from election-year finger-pointing,
House Budget Committee Chainnan
John Kasich, R,Ohio, says Congress
will pass hc:alth insurance reform this
ytar, even if it means dropping a provision on medical savings accounts
f~vored by many OOP lawmakers.
A new Senate.proposal to provide
a $1.3 billion contingency fund for
federal program~ favored by the
adlllinistratlon.-· as long as there·are .
s)lending offsets ..-. oould be enough
for a 1996 budget agreement, White
flouse chief of staff Leon Panetta said
S'jmday.
· ·"We think that something in that
vicinity is about right, and we are
willing to pay for it," Panetta said on
CNN's "Lale Edition With Frank

al

t,. , Offer Expires March 24th.
\

Hannah Woolard of Middleport, 1 member of the Dazzling
Dolls Baton Corps, and daughter of local Instructor Nln Swartz,
won ~he Mlh St. Patrick's Day title It the NBA competition held
In Wlldsworth. She competed In modeling, twirling and struttlng in the novice 10-12 age division against 11 other girls for
• cqmbjned tollll winning score. She received medallions and
1 illh. (Sentl!'lel photo)

Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Want-to-be,
would-be and maybe candidates
· Ralph Nader. Pat Buchanan and Ross
Perot say their message will be heard
in November, even if it huns a
major-pany candidate. "Both panies
are very scfi ous about not wanting
anybo&lt;ly 16 'disturblhlf sllilus·quo,"
Perot said today.
Buchanan says he Wllllls to support the Republican nominee almost cenainly Sen. Bob Dole but only if the GOP convention in
San Diego this ltlmmer welcomes his
legions of conservative supponers.
And Nader says he doesn't care if
his candidacy hurts President Clinton
in California or elsewhere, because
"he deserves it."
Perot, appearing on the morning
talk shows this morning, blamed
Republicans for not completing their
"Contract With America" and
Democrats for not fulfilling Clinton's
promise to balance the budget.
"I think both panics are very serious about not wanting anybody to
disturb the status quo," Perot said. "II
is human nature to maintain the stalus quo and resist change until after
a crisis occurs."
"' Both panics now are bought and
paid for by !he special interests," Pcrol said . He said Republicans and
Democrats "claim they would bal-'
ance the budget. ... But we don 't even
have a budget for !his year. We have
train wrecks, government shutdowns
and stunts," he said.
''You can't bring lhese folks home
by simply telling them to shut up and
be good soldiers and get on board."
Buchanan said on NBC's "Meet the
Press" on Sunday. If he and his backers are locked out of the convention,
" I don't sec how we beat Bill Clinton."

Buchanan, who has been toying
with the idea of running as an independent, said he hoped to avoid that. .
"If you move in thai direction,
whal you are saying in·effect is goodbye forever to the Republican Party,"
he said. "It is irredeemable and
you'd be working for its defeat. And
I think the heart and soul of the
Republican Party arc solid and
good."

He said he would .fight any Dole
move toward what he call~;.d "Rockefeller Republicanism" by choosing
such moderates as retired Gen. Colin Powell or New Jersey Gov. Chrisline Todd Whitman as his running
mate.
House Speaker New! Gingrich
said that Buchanan will not play a
significant role at the Republican
convention in August.
"It's sort of like asking a laslplace team in the major leagues
whether they approve of the Atlanta
Braves winning !he World Series last

Negotiators ·believe budget crisis-ending deal is near

• Register to win $500
Grand Opening Prize.

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nation lllld nothing m~re.
"The truth is, Ohio's program is
among the worst in the nation.'' said

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A ~o year service agreement is required. Bag phones may be warranteed
remanufact~red models. New activations only. Cannot be combined with ally
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112·7070
'
204 W. Second St.
POMEROY

342-ttot .

. 112·2825

111 N.Mal_,

Ingles Eltctronla
MIDDLEPORT

NEW LEXINGTON .

Michael Carvin, with the Center for
Individual Rights , based in Wlll!hington. D..C~ · _' . :_~: . ~~ ....

4..:; ·''

By JIM ABRAMS

J.&lt;;!'fi'Cd.

• , ,j'

COLUMBUS (AP) - Some 271 employees at the Ohio Dcpanment ofTransponation earned more than $63;000 lasl year. Ninety-live ·
percent of them are white men. .
·
·
Similar examples can be found on the state's payroll, according to
an analysis of stale records between 1990 and 1995 by .The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer.
Statistics reveal that of the 7,664 state employees who earned
$50,000 or more last year, 83 percenl are white. Nine percent are black;
other minority groups account for 3 percent. Five percent had no listed race .
Aboul 12 percent of Ohioans arc members of minority groups.
Melllllie Mitchell, the stale's director of minority affairs, said the
pay disparily is moslly due to longevity - people who have worked
for the state for a number of years make more than new hires. •
For example. a person hired as a secretary could get step pay increases every year, Therefore, aflcr 10 years on the job, such an employee
would make significantly more than someone newly hired.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
DARE Officer Richard Mudd pfeade~ not guilty to one count of rape and
one count of gross $exual imposition
· Friday during an arraignment in Galli aCounty Comnion Pleas Coun. '
Represented by Pomeroy attorney
Charles H. Knight, Mudd waive&lt;!
~eading of the indictment before
posting 10 percent of a $10,000

officer faces
two charges

Allegations of the incident,
involving a 15-ycar-old female, led to
3n investigation by the Ohio Attorney ·
General's Bureau.of Criminallnvcsiigation and Identification, at the
request of Galli~ County Prosecuting
Attorney J)rcnt Saunders and the Gallia County Sheriff's Dcpanmcnt.
' The investigation turned up a second alleged incident of engagement
.i,n sexual conduct between April I
and ~epl. 30, 1991. The incident
involved a 14-year-old female, who
is now 19.
·Mudd reportedly was hired as an
intennittcnt corrections officer in
November 1990. and was promoted
to !he position of DARE officer in
November 1991 .
"I have canceled his commission
·aS of tl\is morning"and served him
with a notice of pre-disiplinary hearing to be held Monday," Sheriff
James D. Taylor said.
. ·A pre-trial hearing has been set fof
Friday, April 19.
:Meigs County DARE . officer
Mony Wood is temporarily filling
~udd's duties, the Daily Sentinel

'

State records reveal
bulk of big salaries
went to white workers

Disillusionment with status
quo fuels third party hopes

1996.

• 50% off Activation.

contracts, according to Melanie
Mitchell, Voinovich's director of
minority affairs. She led the governor's review.
One obstacle that still confronts
some minority finns is the stale's limited demand for their wares.
The state's affinnati ve action program was approved by the legislature
in 1980 and sets aside 15 percent of
goods and services for minority bidders. Unlike many other states, Ohio
did not do a comprehensive disparity study to determine to what extent
members of minority groups had
been discriminated against in the
awarding of contracts and in employment.
The Supreme Coun has ruled that
such studies are required so that laws
are created to remedy past tliscrimi-

"Gannett Co. New1p lpiF

.Gall.ia. DARE

· A Gallia County grand jury
returned the two-count indictment
against'Mudd Thursday.
According to the indictments,
~udd did "have sexual contact and
having purpqsely compelled to submit force or thelpll of force" at a time
between Nov. I, 1995 and Jan. 31,

'

·-

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 25, 1996

1 Secllon, 10 . . . .

~ lle1iiJ:~7

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•

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,

WINNERS ~Boeing Co., on a roll because of big de!JWl(l for its big pi~.
The company said it will be turning out 27 jetliners each month by the second quaner of next year, up from the 18-1/2 it's currently producing. ·:
LOSERS: Britain's beef industry, which saw its overseas market vinually disappear amid fears that the illness known as mad cow disease could atlCft
lUid kill humlllls who eat infected meat.
·
SOMEWHERE IN BETWEEN: Businesses and other supponers of a bill
that would limit damage awards in product liability cases. .The ~ena\C5
approved the legislation and sent it to the House, which last year approvc:d
a more sweeping version. But even if the House OKs this version, ~ideRt
Clinton is threatening a veto unless some ~onsumer-friendly revisions .aie
made.

11

Mississippi
State defeats
·Cincinnati

ernmcnt's 13 annual spending bills
has led to two panial federal shutdowns and II stopgap spending mea;urcs since last fall . The latest last
one-week spending extension expires
on Friday.
" People are gettiJI&amp; sick and tired
of this nonsense, " D' Amato said.
"It's polilics that does n01 inure to the
benefit of either the White House or
Congress. We look silly."
Kasich , " speaking on NBC's
"Mee1 the Press, " said House Republicans want to inclupe medical savings accounls in a bill now taking
shape in Congress, but not at the risk
of stalling a bill that guarantees
workers ' rights to health insurance.
Sens. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan.,
and Edward Kennedy, D-Mass .• are
pushing a narrowly drawn bill to
ensure that people who lose or
change their jobs get health insurance, even if they have pre-existing
conditions.
"We will n01let a medical savings
account destroy the ability to pve
people the portability and eliminate

pre-existing conditions," Kasich said.
The basic bill has bipanisan and
White House suppon, and Kasich
promised that Congress would pass il
this year. The bill is due to come up
for a House vote this week.
But there has been concern that
enactment could be thwaned by
House GOP effons to attach other
provisions, including creation of the
medical savings accounts. Patterned
on individual retirem~nt accounts,
they would provide catastrophic
health care coverage lllld savings for
self-paid routine health expenses.
Supporters say such accounts
would draw young, healthy people
who now don't buy health insurance.
Critics say they wo~ld drive up overall health insurance costs by encouraging healthy people to leave existing risk pools.
On related matters, Kasich said
the GOP-run Congress plans to pne.sent Clinton several bills - including anOther balanced budaet plllll and
welfare-overhaul lepslation - that
coulil prompt presidential v~toes and

become an issue in the election campaign.
If the Republicans send Clinton a
balanced budget bill like the one he
rejected last year because it cut
Medicare spending increases by $270
billion, "then obviously they will
face the same veto," Panetta said.
He again urged Senate Majority
Leader Bob Dole, the cenain Republican presidential nominee, and other GOP leaders to use the "window
of opportunity" before the campaign
gets into full -swing to reach agreement on a balanced budget and oth. er key legislation.
But Kasich said there was little
chance the two sides could find common ground on a balanced bll!lget
that satisfied Republican insistence
on fundamental changes in the way
government operales.
·
"We've got to do this right and
hopefully this November we' II get
the lineup in place so that instead of
having this bill vetoed we'll have it
signed," he said.

..

year: " Gingrich, R-Ga .. said in Orlando, Fla. ·:Bob Dole will be the
Republican nominee ."
And Dole. during a campaign
speech in California, noted that all of·
his other major GOP rivals endorsed
him after dropping oul of the race.
'We're down to two of us and I
would hope that Pat Buchanan would
find"it in his"flcart tojoln foiees and
close ranks and bring this pany
together and reach out to more and
more people," said Dole.
Nader, the longtime champion of
auto safety and other consumer
issues, is running unopposed as the
Green Pany candidate in Tuesday's
Ca)ifomia primary.
Pollsters warn that Nader, by winning just a small percentage of the
California vote in November; could
t1p the balance in that crucial slate
and have a devastating effect on Clinton's re-election bid.
White House Chief of Staff Leon
Panetta told CNN's "U!te Edition"
that Nader's candidacy "basi!:ally ·
banns rather !han helps the issues he
says he cares about."
Nader said there was no ml\ior dif- ·
ferc~ce between the two panics and
that m Chnton 's first three years in
office "he has been consistently on
the side of big business when it has
conflicted with labor and consumers ."
·
·
·
. A Los Angeles Times jloll pub- .
hshcd last week concluded that a
Nader candidacy would draw ib0ut5
percentage points from Clinton in •
California, where the president
has a slrong lead over Dole, Dole ·
would lQsc I percentage point and ·
Perot 3, il found.
..
Perot. who won 19 percent of
vole in the 1992 election, taking votes :
!hal mighl have helped George Bush :
keep his job: has remained coy about :
runnmg agam .

now

the ;

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Pump prices
soar 3.3 cents •
a gallon: report ::,.

LOS ANGELES (AP)- Gasoline prices jumped more thlUI ~
cents a gallon as warm weather ::
pushed up demand at a time offq- •
ging international supply, according to the Lundberg Survey of
~:
stations across the country.
•.
The average pump price, · .:.
including all grades lUid taxes · ' ·
'
was 124.39 cents a gallon Friday.' •·
That was up 3.3 cents from the !''
March 8 survey, the largest price : .
increase so far this year, analyst , .:
Trilby Lundberg said Sunday. . •
Prices have been rising since
November, except for dips in late
January .1\Rd early Febru!~fY. · . '
Lundberg said the hikes are duo .
to three factors: rising in1ema~1
al crude oil prices, the hiahcr costs ' •
of reformulated. clean-air
~:.'
recipes required under (J.S. law .
and warmer weather t1w hel'llda ·
. the high-volume sprina aud 111111,
mer driving seasoas. ·

gas

au

�·eommei"'tary
~he

Monday,'
March 25, .1996
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P8giA2

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Moray, ~Wah~·· 1111

'E.stiii/J.sli.d ill1948

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111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-112·2156 • Fu: 992·2157

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Charles B. Buckley
Charles B. Buckley, 77, of Pomeroy, died Sunday, March 24, 1996 at
his residence.
Born May 7, 1918 in West Columbia, W.Va., he was the son of the late
Garrett and lillie Cochran Buckley. He was retired from Midwest Steel.
He is survived by his wife, Wilma Jean Priddy Buckley; three sons and
one daughter-in:Jaw, Don and Peggy Casto, Sam Buckley and Chuck
Buckley, all of Pomeroy ; three daughters and .one son-in-law, Kim and
Ray Martinez of Shade, Rebecca Roush of Pomeroy, and Rita Casto of
Middleport; eight grandchildren and two great-grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
'
He was also pre,ceded in death by three sisters, Sara Francis Thomas,
Florence Smith, and Virginia Ellis; and one brother, William Buckley.·
" Services will bel p.m. Wednesday in the Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport. with the Rev. Paul Taylor-officiating. Burial will follow in the
Meigs Memory Gardens, Pomeroy. Friends. may call at the funeral home
from 7-9 p.m. Tuesday.

.-

I,Mansf!cild I ;32o I•

• IColumbus 136o ·I

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ROBERT L WINGETT
Publl1hllr

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MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

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Tu~y.,Men:b 26 .
AccuWeathe... forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures
MIQi. ••

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

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some
tough times
if
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Today lfl ·~istory

I!YThde~- ~..
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• Todfr is ~on,day, Much 25, the 85th day of 1996. There are 281 days
16ft in ·tile.,~: ·
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:•. T!l_daf's HiJhlight in History:
•
.;. on March2~ 1.96$, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. led 25,000 marchers

!~:C~.~ecapl~l'lnMpntgomery,Aia., toprotestthedenialofvotingrights

• Oti thas date: · .. ·
·
; .111 A.D. '7!12, f~ S\Cphen 11 died, only two days after his election.
.~ In 16~. M,atyb;nd _
wal founded by English colonists.sent by the second
~
Balta.
m
~.
,.
·· •;c;,bi I.S65, during .~ Civil·, War. Confederate forces c~q~tured Fort Stedman
, , . ,.,.. ,..

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Weekend wrecks kin 10

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By NAT HENTOFF
During the national firestonn
over the refusal of Mahmoud AbdulRau f to stan d oor
c
h
· 1
I e nataona
anthem, I remembered being in the
fifth grade of the William Ll!)yd
Garttson public school in Boston.
For several weeks before Christmas,

mander of the American Legion in
Colorado characteri'zed this member .
of the Denver Nuggets as having
" Root'mg . ••Or
comma'lied "•-··ft
u~n.
Abdul-Rauf, I agreed with the
Hdmirably lueid statement of Alex '
English of the Players' AssOciation! · ·
"We support Mahmoud Abdul-

tl!e

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some

o

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m11ch. That would be a mere shadow
of freedom. The test of its substance
is the right to differ-as to thlnjs that
t.ouch th e hcart o f !he exas
. t.IRI
order."
..
· During the uproar over. AbdulRauf's exercise of his right to differ,
I wondered if any public school

Abdul-Rauf

i'four or five steps."

finally

up!" l

j

include an "act pf oon1elence"
clause.
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1be

lac says hi

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Washington, the Northeast's highest
, peak, killed two hikers and spared a
third who was able to sidestep the
surging snow as it slid under his feet.
· "He was able to go to his right and
not be carried away,'' said search
coordinator John' Sanden: "He ·was
in the right place at !lie right time."
Fish and Game Maj. Ronald Alie
said the survivor' saved himself by

up

"f!e'

I 9, hometown unknown , when her
car struck a utility pole along a Toledo city street.
WAUSEON - Eric M. Huff, %,
of Wauseon, a pedestrian hit by a
train along Conrail tracks .in
Wauseon.
SATURDAY
CHILLICOTHE - Jammie R.
May, 24, of Waverly, passenger in a
. one-car acc1dent on a Ross County
'Road.
RAVENNA- Dawn Bis_son, 22,
of Kent, dnver, and,j&lt;.ylae ~as son ; I,
of Kertt, passeng~r in a two-car acci dent on Oh10 14 m Portage County.
BATAVIA- Davad Doyle, 16, of
Goshen, passenger, and Timothy
Doyle, 15. o~ Midland, passenger in
one-car accadent on a Clennont
County road.

high mountain when the 250-foot
wide avalanche struck., sweeping
them about 500 feet down the mountain.
It took searchers nearly seven
hours in avalanche-danger conditions to find the bodies of the'two victims, both from Massachusetts,
buried under at least 6 feet of snow.
"The first body was face down
when we dug him up,'' said Tuc
O'Brien, one of the· searchers. "The
' second guy was face up."
,
Names of the victims and the survivor were not imme4.i.11tely released.
.' 'the su'rvivor was blimbing : ·~y
himSelf abOve the victims when the
avalanche struck. Afterwards, he
looked back to find the backpack of
one of ~is companions on top of the
snow and another han·ging in a tree .

I MOUNT WASHINGTON, N.H.
(AP) - .An avalanche on Mount

comprohun't!·
Now, as the anthe,m of libedy rever- ,
berates, he prays, bu} .not to the Stars~ .
a~d Stripes. He used to say he would
not ~ for "any' iialioiialist ideol·'
ogy" or a flag that is "a synibol of~
oppression." HO\I(ever, as Steven •
teacher in the land dared to bring Sh~q~ird, the legal directOr of the :
Justice Jackson into a class discus· American Civil Llbeities Union. :
sion of the controversy - if there notes. this · accommodation shows 1
, "the e~ormous pressure people i
was any class discussion at all.
for l
Justice Jackson also said: "To come under when the)' stand
believe that pa!riotism will . not · their personal beliefs in the face of •
pu~lic opposition." . l .
flourish if patriotic ceremonies are enormous
'
.
I
voluntary and spontaneous instead
Can you illlagine Bill Clinton l
of a compulsory routine is to make supporting Abdul-Raut's act of con- :
an unflattering estimate of the sciencer Moreover, Bob Dole, who 1
IRIB)lpeands'...or our institutions to free . would be presidein of the freest }
COIIRtry in the world, slid before ih
Well, maybe.
was over,
OUJ~i !O stand
Abd~t-rquf's objection• to beinl · But not for has conVJctrons.
.
'
pan of a "compulsory' routine" of
.fo.t l~t. Abduj-Rauf did openly 1
pilriotism was not a Fil'lt Amelld· hold' to his beliefs ·fO{ i while. which ,
ment issue. 'fhll ri.:es only where is inore than I did in the fit)h pide. :
there is action by the 1 ovemmont- This ''Star-Spangled coetcion,'' ' as :
federal, state or· Ideal., But the~ is the New York Times called it in an 1
also, or should be,~ thO spirit of thO editorial, is qui~e a ci)!~S lqsson for
First Amendment - a Nlpect for America's schoolchildren.
the freedom to differ even when the
As Ron Rappopon, National j
rules are impoaod by the piivate
Public
Radi~'s spor11 ~· ~ays:. ~
Nitionat Bukotblll Aaaoclatlon, 1
"A man l,!anda up for hi1 be!aefsl .:
would •118scstlhalln the ne1u con•
tract, the Playen' " ~uool~tlon What'• this country colllins to?''
m;~. although

.

Avalanche Qn Nqrthea·st's
highest peak·leaves 2·dead

Athlete learns .civi.cs lesson by sitting 'do)Vn

of

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By JOSEPH SPEAR
corruption. Thus begat the Progressive move- experiment."
Corporate America is a curious beast .
ment, which begll d)e Roaring Twenties, which
And !hat's the rub, isn't it? rio corporations
It is capable of feeling pleasure, as it obvioWJ- . begll the Gmt Depression, which begat the New · exist simply to make money? Or do they also
ly does during the good times when stock prices Deal, which begat the Republican Revojution, have e social responsibility?
soar and chief executive officers haul their ' which begat .... We have to wait and - what this
The people at United Tecllnologies obviously
begets, but here's a little guess: Wall Street is not think.so. UT just launched a re-education program
stipends to the bank in annored cars.
It is not £&amp;pable of feeling much pain. It has a going to like it.
thai pays people to go back -to school and awards
mechanism for pas'sing distress down the line.
The evolving change in attitude has little to do ' them SO shares of stock when they1finisb.
"Downsizing," they call this thing that !llitigatcs · with reality.
·
Aaron Feuerstein obviously thinks so. He is
travail - i.e., keeps profits elevated - by reducThe economy has been expanding steadily the mill owner in Massachusetts who became a
ing the size of payrolls, candy bars and cans of since 1991. Inflatiop is down. unemployment is at hero two weeks before Clu:istmas when jlis build.
·
ing bUrned down and he vowed to continue paycoffee.
an historic low.
11 is incapable of detecting freight trains on
No, the force that is pushing the pendulum ing his people, give t)lem holiday bonuses, and.
collision courses with limos, and barges bearing through ii.s nadir and upwlll'!l; · to the left, is a rebuild.
down on yachts, and things blowing in the wind. mood. Anxiety and anger.
. Kenneth Iverson obviously thinks so .. He just
That is to say, it is stupid.
.Yes, the 'esonomy is srowing, but the ~wards retired as CEO of Nucor steel after three decadeS
How dense do you have to be not to notice a are being davided between stockholders arid at the helm of what one authority· called "one •of
few of the voices that are currently screaming at CEOs. 1lle,people 'who work 8l the corporations· the most efficient, productive companies in histO:
the beast that it has gotten too ravenous and is - the bedrock upon which these structures are · cy."
foaming at the mouth - presidential candidate boiled - are getting diddly-squat. Indeed, they
He kept the bureaucracy lean. H~ rewarded all
Patrick Buchanan, for example, in tandem with · are being flied. ·
workers with bonuses when profits were up. He
AFL-CIO president John Sweeney. (That combi·'
AT&amp;T announces that '40,000 employees will eschewed fancy offices, company cars - even
nation ought to tell the beast something.) Or Bill ·be laid off, and CEO Robert Allen pockets. salary assi(l!ed parking spaces. And there have been no
Clinton, or Labor Secretary Robe.rt Reich, or the and stock options wonh $5.85 mill Lon. Delta Air- layoffs at Nucor for 20 years.
:
l'ilew York Times or Newsweek. Or the comic lines eliminlles 18,000 jobs, and Ronald Allen
But these are exceptions. Most corpora~e kingpages, for heaven's sake: Is the beast too dumb to takes home $1 .4 million.
pins seem to agree with AI Dunlap: They exist to
read Dilbert?
·
Scott Paper cans I I,ooq workers, and AI Dun- make money, period.
,
Something is happening, and tbe corponite lap depans with $100 million in salary, stock
:rhis is garbage, and the beast i.s rolling in it;
Goliath is not sensing it An epoch 'is ending and profits and Olber bennies. The" he has the chutz- ignorant of its own stink, unaware that it is about
another is beginning. It happened after the ·Civil pllh to tell Newsweek I!Qw tough the job i~. but to get a bath.
War, when an industrial revolution spawned the somebody's gotto do il. "The'job of industry is io
(Joelph . , _ Ia a eollllnnlet fur Neue papal
Gilded Age, with its attendant rapaciousness and become competitive," he said, "not to be a social Enllip.iaa .MeDCIMian.)
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: Two doul!le-fatality accidents co.n•tributed to a total of 10 traffic deaths
tin Ohio over'tbe weekend, the State
!Highway Patrol said today.
The patrol counted .fatalities from
6 p.m. Friday through Sunday.
The ·dead:. .
·
SUNDAY
AnfPNS - Bryan Bell, 23, of
:Guysville, when his car ran off of
Ohio 682 south of The Plains in
Athens County and slammed into a
'building.
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, CLEVELAND - Raymond D.
Kelley Jr., ~2. of Cleveland, driver in
a one-car accident on a city street.
- CLEVELAND - Rodest Black
'Jr., 37, of Lakewood, passenger in
·one-car accident on a city street.
, TOLEDO - Jocelle M. Young,

Anxiety., anger takes aim at corporate beast

FalAI

df'

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;sy ~ ..:.soelated Prus

our Savior.
n.n'ggh.!,to precisely the action he is takHe was not my savior, but it 1
never occurred to me to ask to be
I had hoped someone .would
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excused. My immigrant parents had bring into play the best definition of
~~~~5; JCi\\1.
o_f Saudi Arabia was shot to death by a nephew ~ho sent rile to public school to be assim- .Americanism I have ever seen =~·· ~
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ol,mentalallnes,s. (The nephew was beheaded the followaqg illled, to become an American. And Justice Robert Jackson's majority
•
T
anyway students had no rights then. . decision in. West Virginia Board of
· ·:h~l99o, 87.~e. most of them Honduran and Dominican immigrants, The Supreme P,urt was otherwise Education v. Barnette {1943). •
V,:.,.)ii~Whea r~ taced·through an·illepl 'social club in New York City. occupied. l
The children of Jehovah's Wit• i • :fiii • · · ',;,9; 181thl\ wl;.;d .day iof a.·cOAfrontatipg. between Liby~
When lyrics •!frOnted my cQn· nesses in . West, Virginia had been
i ' ,,ld'· ~!J:I si SiXti!' ,¥~ t~ &lt;iulf Siili'a, thoUiancls of I:.itiyans · scie*, I i!lserted ..':... mumbling expelled fnim school fQI' refusing to
ilt~-'n.-u.•: SllJRIJIC ~ruled the Air~ co'Utd ban ii!C ~ irreverent Yi~disli substitutes. I ·did- ·salute .the. flq. in-'il:cordance· with
i!!l'
. ij'iif·y~·lly-Jewlsll militaiy petsonnel'in'll!liform, .
•· ·" n't ~ve
~ 19 declare!lilY ,their teligious beliefs. 1lleir parents
. flw ;o.lia Y,: !.:Daa~l ,rfldl 'Yolves" 'won seven Oscars, includlna beit ~ so 11 cOuld lie heard: 1lle were thteatened with prosecution for
~ '!II llle' 63l'lf ~ Aademy Aw.-. M:hbishop }.lin;el Lefebvre, · pnncapal - whO could have posed causinJ delinquency, and the kids
;-.~-vi In ~ ~Catholic CI\Wch, died irt Mwli,ifty. (or an.illlllttllio~ 'in a Ditkenil novel · were threalened with incan:eration
.
· • NC 15.
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· . ., - had a ~ an her o,fface which in reformatories . for criminally
'E'. ·)Mr~· 'fwtJ ~~ "'bMI str.yed J!CIOU ~ kUwaiti bipr , she ilpplied&lt;Vtgot'O\!sly to. die. hands inclined.juveniles.
,.
, ' we1e ~ II! ell!* yem in ~ {hbviever David Dalibeni · of any child who t*ded caviltZing. I
1lle Supreme Cowt sent the chit: '~iff ·
~ 1 1Md by Iraq the follow!'!J J~y~. ~~lOft 'had felt the atinc.and didn't want to dren back to school, and ~~~~:on1
"''us~ 6mJ die fDdillia YQIIIh c;:en~et after ICMRJ ~ yem (OI"tlle returtl.
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.
•
•
_ '!'AnY. other fundatnen~ American
• • njle .Drsl£11 ~r ~ beauty pYeallt cucuwn.
Abdui·Rauf, a Muslu'n, did not liberties
. stated by Justice Jacksoll,
; WJ'• a~ Utthlini ~IIIC!\0· held ~ PlXd is 1(. Fonper • l!ick hii dissetit 'inc!
patriotiC he ejiiJihasized that a ~ aocjety
-...:~ '.Ia A ~aiatluthor :GlOria StojJlijai Ia 62. SitiJtll:'' · · ~wri-. ·liiil ·tAlk·shOw. hcilta means the ~m tQ dilfer. And, he
~~lt' 5J.~~~J~Intia56.Sinpr:AietliiPnatllnia} IOkj hj!D he t:Ould' eitbei love ' tbjs said,~ "~om IQ.differ is .not
.• ~.... Mtld ~ jJ'!It. Sillaer:§Jton .1.~ ~~ 49. .
_:
~ or' fea~e fL The state com'- limited to thinst that do' not matter

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1~ I?IS; frePFt\. Gl&gt;'l'P!'ser Claude Debussy died in. Paris.
::li 'lil~7 .a cdai"J'Ii'i!M' explosion in·. Centralia, 111., claimed Ill lives.
,i; la •'i~s7,~~~· 6fRcime established the Euroll!lan Economic Com-

·

Weather rorecast:
Tonight...Brisk and cold. Mostly
cloudy... A chance of snow showers
possibly mixed with rain early...Especially northeast. Clearing southwest
half. Lows in the lower and mid 20s.
Tuesda~... Panly to mostly cloudy
with scattered snow showers north
and cas!. Partly to mostly sunny west
and south. Highs in the 30s. ·
Extended fOrecast: .
Wednesday... Mostly sunny and
unseasonably cold. Lows 15 to 20.
Highs 35 to 45.
Thursday... Fair. Lows in the 20s.
Highs in the 40s and lower 50s far
south.
Friday... Fair. Lows upper 20s to
upper 30s. Highs upper 40s to the
upper 50s far south.

: A surge of cold, dry air will send
; temperatures plunging to sub-freez: ing levels tonight, forecasters said.
, Following lows in the mid-20s
·,tonight, temperatures probably won't
:Climb beyond the 30s on Tuesday and
!Wednesday, the National Weather
•Service said. •
: Lows ,1;'uesdl!y night could dip into
:the teens, .
: On Thw'sday, the inercury should
-begin clUbbing back to normal levels.
: The rec;ol'\l-high Jemperature for
)his date-.a~ the Colu111bus weather
~tution w~ 8.5 degrees in 1945 .while
~e record low was 5 in 1974. Sunset
1onight will be at 6:49 p.m. and sunlise Tuesday at 6:25 a.m.

~ ,1ft, 189'4, J~'~Jb Sr·~oll:ey ~gan lead_ing an ~y ,of' unemployed from
= n · ~~~flo :-'~ington, D.C., to demand helpf~m the federal gov; 'lQ t9'11 ~ 146' im~iAul·~o.rkers were killed when fire broke out at the all of us had to sing Christmas car- Rauf and we support the American
~..., $Jiiiiw~ Co. ·rn New York.
ols, including those citing Jesus as fl.ag, which syl!lbolizes Mahmoud's

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VIa Assocl~ted Press GraphicsNe t

: By The Auoelated Prea1

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Sunny Pr. C/o::dy Cloudy

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;I!IY JOHN McCARTHY
·MIOCIIIIed Prell Writer
.
: COLUMBUS - President Clinton cannot count on Ross Perot or divi;sions within the Republican Pany to help him win Ohio in November, an
:election analyst said.
; · No Democrat has won re-election or carried Ohio twice since Franklin
Roosevelt's third term. Clinton will ~ pressed to break th8l streak, said
:Alexander Lamis, a political science professor at Case Western Reserve Uni-Yersicy in Cleveland. ·
•
': "Democrats have only been able to carry Ohio in extraordinary circum~s: Carter's post-Watergate election, the threo-way election in '92,"
j.amis, '(lh&lt;i specializes in elections, said last week.
. .
: Clinton last Tuesday won 92 percent of the Democratic vote against con$tanl candidate Lyndon LaRouche. Meanwhile. Bob Dole beat P11 Buchanan
66 perceni to 22 percent in the GOP primary; The victory in Ohio and three
~!her Midwestern states clinched th~ nomination for ,the Senate majority
leader.
·
·
·
: Perot, whose third-pany candidacy won 21 percent'Of the Ohio vote,
drew votes away from George Bush in 1992, but Clinton cannot count on
Perot's help this year should he decide to run, Lamis said.
·: Perot likely will not attract as· many votei'$ this time around, in part
i)ecaus~ ihe Repu~lican Congress has embraced many of his ideas, such as
hills to balance the budget and to limit the influence of lobbyists, Lamis said.
.: "Dole has the further advantage of beigg able to argue that the bulk of the
Perot voters put the Republicans in Congress,'' he said. '"We've been .
!(lymied,' he'll say, by the Clinton veto."
· Tom Whatman, e.xecutive director of the Ohio Republican Party, said he
would prefer that' Perot stay QUI.
.
l
. "I think Ross Perot getting into.the race hurts us in Ohio bec'ause we need
tile Perot voters to win. In nine times out of I 0, we agree with them on the
issues," Whatman said.
.
·
:. David Leland, chainnan of the Ohio Democratic Party. played down ·
l!erot'·s importance.
·
; "Regardless of whether there's three or four or six people running for
JlreSident, we. hive to tell people ab6ut our vision for the future for America
ind. Ohio," Leland said.
·- · · .
; BIIChanan has faded fast as a factor. He won't be able to force his agenda onto the platform that wi'l emerge from the Republican Natit&gt;nal ~on­
Yelltion in August, Lamis said.
.
1
: "Buchanan's getting beat so soundly, llhink he's going to sound more
.qad more shrill as the weeks go Or) and people are going to lose interest,''
l&gt;amis said.
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. However; Buchanan's backers are import!lnt to Dole's chances in the
state, Whatman said.
"I think Pat Buchanan hilS hit on some. key issues that are obviou~ly resonating in the minds of voters, particularly Repujllican voters," he said. "If
.Pat Buchanan wants to defeat Bill Clinton, he needs to help us and support
.
'
Bob Dole."
Clinton isn't about to give up on Ohiorwhich he won with just 40 percent
of the vote in 1992. He already bas sched!lled a trip on Saturday to Cincinnati and Columbus.
·
"We're going to .be definii'B both Clirlto:m and Dole,'' Leland said. "It's a
chance for people to evaluate :both candidlles and what they bring to the
iable."
As.critical as Ohio is to Ciinton, Dole realizes that no Republican has
been elected without Clft')'ing Ohio.
"I think the November election is going to be a close one," Lamis said.

. •n

Ice

.Spring will vanish again
··as cold front rushes in

cattTipaign will ·face

·~'=~==~~-=~
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Allie L. Hoffman

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Jn 0hio, Clinton's

The Deily Sentinel• P

OHIO Weather

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Daily Sent-nel

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Olnet'll .._.,.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

avalanche occurred in ·!he
Gulf of Slides, a remqte gully where
peopJe hike ~~ the t&lt;ii? of a!Jigh, steep
slope, then ski down . .
The v,ictims, carrying skis, were
abquu,4,SOO feet ·up the 6,288-foor-

:TJ;ae

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Daily Sentinel

Stocks~
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(USPS 113-Me)

'PubUohed every aftemooo, M,;,...y lhrou&amp;b

Am Ele Po- ....................... 42'1.

•flidoy, Ill Coon St, Pomeroy, Ohio. by lhe
Cillo Valley ""biiiNna ~/0111net1 Co.,
Pomen&gt;y, Ohio 45769, Ph. 99:1'2156. Secolld
clau ~,...pole!" Pomeroy, O!Uo.

.P4

Akzo ...................................... 56'1.

Ashland 011 ........................... 38~.

AT•T ...................................... 61\
Bank Cine .............................36\..

I~ I I The A~Med PleiJ. .ftd lhe Ohio

~t; 4 . AIIOCi~

,.

fOS'I'MAS'ISRi s.d addrelt oonec:tion• to

Bob Evan1 ....,.......................15\

• .Borg-Warner ......................... ~'-

Champion Ind..................., .•.it~

1be Dolly Woel,
1,11 Coon~'· Ppmeroy,
1
()hlo 45769,

I

' IIATIS
SUISCRirnON

By Conllr or Mollr-

·

Channing Shop .......:.............4 'lo
City Holding ...............:.......... 23\
FecJentl Mogul ................\........20

•

'

Gannett .................................81\
Goodyear T•R......................52\

'g::=;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::i~

'o.e ...._' ......................................
l ...... $104.00
'
..
. .
,

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• Dolly ............ :........ ;..........:.................. )$ CeaiJ

1

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mn11 lo adv!IIICC dift&lt;IIO The Dolly -1101

Ohio Valley Bank ....................40

~eo

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Rockwell .~ .••• ,.................. ~....si'.Robblns I I!Ayen....................33

oiJ, or 1 2 - blliL Qedll wiU be

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·Royal DUictiiShelt ..............140\
Shoney'alrte.~ .................. -.....

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........... c.-, ·

13 - ............................·.....~ ..............$27.30
26 ....................:..........................Ul.n
52 .......... ,..:.........................J .... $105J6 .

13~~..~..!. !.:...~E:: . :•.?.,.m.u

26 ...........;.- ...~.................... i.i,.,,,,,,_.$56.68
5 2 -.......,...... ..... ,., ...,...................$1011.72,

K-mert .....................................9\
Landa E!ld ...,...........................
~lmlltd lnc: ............................ 18•
Pwople8 Benc:orp................. 23~

ar,

,.

Star Bank ......................~:.•••••6-4*'
Wendv lnt'1 ............................ 18~r

-·-·-

Worthlngtoi1 Ind ••••••••••••••••••• 20\
;•

.

stock reports ere the 1o:3o
e.m. quOtee provided by Adve~
of Galllpolle.
.

Allie L. Hoffman, 91, Glen Burnie, Md., formerly ofletan, W.Va., died
Friday. March 22, 1996 in Severna Park, Md.
·
Born Sept. 12, 1904 in Letan, daughter of the late George Taylor and Iva
Genora Fry Adkins, she was a member of the Oak Grove United Methodist
Church ..
Sbe is survived by two daughters, Nora M. Hoffman of Glen Burnie, and
Mildred I. Edwards of Azusa, Calif.; two grandchildren five great-grandchildren and two great-great-grandchildren; a brother, Lester A. Adkins of
Letart; and several nieces and nephews.
She was also preceded in death in 1967 by her husband, John Russell Hoffman; two brothers, Stanley R; and Herman Grant Adkins; and one sister, Ethel
M. Pickens.
.
Services will be II a.m. Tuesday in the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason,
W.Va., with the Rev. Nancy Mayes officiating. Burial will follow in the
Suncres~ Cemetery, Point Pleasan~ W.Va. Friends may call at the funeral home
from 6-9 tonight

Thomas R. Quillen
Thomas R. Quillen, Middleport, died Sunday. March 24, 1996 in Athens.
Arrangements will be announced by the Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport.

Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) ~ JndianaOhio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Friday by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture Market
News:
Barrows and gilts: mostly 50 cents
higher; demand moderate on a mod erate run.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs. 47.0049.50, few 46.50 and 50.00; plants
49.00-50.50.
'•
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 42.0047.00.
Sows: 1.00 to 1.50 higher.
U.S. 1-3, 300-500 lbs. 32.0035.00; 500-600 lbs. 35.00-39.50.
Boars: 28 .00-30.00.
Estimated receipts: 39,000.
Prices from The Producers

Meigs announcements
Eye screenings
The Anwar Cataract Center will
be at the Meigs Senior Citizens Center on Thursday from .JO a.m. to I
p.m. The center will provide free
cataract and glaucoma screenings at
this time. No ~q~pointment is necessary. For more information, contact
Diana Coates at 992-2161. The
screening is sponsored by the Retired
and Senior Volunteer Program.
Sptin1 prognm ·
The Unity Singers under direction
of Martha Sue Matheny will perfann
Sunday, 7 p.m. at The Carleton
Church on Kingsbury Road. Rev. Jeff
Smith welcomes all.
Ceramic class
,
The Ri verbend Arts Council, Middleport, wiO sponsor an Easter ceram-

..

ic class on April I from 6:30 to 9 p.m.
The project will be painting a ceramic basket or two ceramic boxes with
Easter bunny inserts. Cost is $25-$30,
which includes all supplies needed to
complete the project. Sandy Carnahan at Countryside Ceramics, 9922289, is handling registration. The
class is limited to 15 and registration
deadline is Friday.
Observe birthday
Drew Webster Post 39. American
Legion, will celebrate its birthday at
the Senior Citizens Center on Mulberry Ave. ~ p.m . Tuesday.
Sorority to meet
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, will have a luncheon Thursday at I p.m. at the Point
of View.

Water emergency nears
an end.at Steubenville
STiiUBENVILLE (AP)- About
13,000 households and businesses in
the area should have water service
restored today, but the residents still
will have to boil it until officials are
certain it's safe.
Ruth Casey, the city manager's
secretary, said today that water would
be restored to all customers by the
end of the day.
States of emergency were de&lt;;lared
in Steubenville and Wintersville after
two pipes broke late Friday, leaving
the area without running water. The
city's 6-million-gallon reservoir went
dry Saturday as attempts to repair the
pipes failed.
One ~f the pipes was repaired on
Sunday and pumping had resumed in
the downtown area, Casey said. The
water supply was sporadic but should
be up to full force by midaftemoon,
she said. The second line was still
being _repaired.
The w~ter must be pumped into
the plant where it is treated and then
sent out to tanks where it is then sent
to customers, she said.
Customers likely will be under
boil orders for a couple of days, said
Bill Fabian, water and wastewater
superintendent.
.
No injuries or heal!h problems
have been reported.
The city. on Saturday brought in
water from Wheeling, W.Va., across
the Ohio River from the city of
22,000 people. •
.
.
The ieaks affected about 7,000
customers. in Steubenville; 2,000 in
.

.11

Lives-tock Association:
Cattle: steady to 1.00 higher.
Slaughter steers: choi~e 58.0064.50; select 50.00-59.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 57.0064.i5; select 50.00-58.00.
Cows: steady to 2.00 lower; all
cows 42.00 and down.
Bulls: steady to 2.00 lower; all
bulls 49.75 and down.
Veal calves: uneven. lower to
stronger; choice I 70.00 and down.
Sheep and lambs: uneven , 6.50
lower to 25 cents higher; choice
wools 78.00-99.00; choice clips
81.00-94.00; feeder Jambs ·126.00
and down; aged sheep 41.00 and
down.

Winter.;ville; an 4,000 elsewhere in
.Jefferson County.
The pipes, one 20 1 ches wide lllld
another 24 inches, bro e between the
area's pumping statio and wattr
tanks on Friday night a Saturday
morning. Although some ople .. ~ •.tinued to have water on aturday,
m.ost were cut off by late in the afternoon, Case)' said.
The age of the pipes - I 02 years
old and 62 years old - is being
blamed for the breaks, Casey said.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial ·
Saturday admissions - none,
Saturday discharges - none.
Sunday admissions - none.
Sunday discharges - Harriet Sinclair, Syracuse.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges March 22 - Flora
Dailey, Krista Rollins, Mrs. Edward
Hughes and daughter. Harry Hen,
dricks, Cala Ostergren. Ross King,
Iva Richard, Mrs. Jack Griffith and ·
son, Ruth Clonch.
Discharges March 23- Stephen
Hartenbach, Derek Teaford.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. John
Davis, son, Pomeroy.
Discharges March 24- Mrs.
John Davis and son.
Blrlb - Mr. and Mrs. Billy Reffitt. son, Ray.
With permlss. .) .
(Published
.

.

.

OUTSTANDING CHAMBER MEMBER -

'•

Judy Williams; Syra-

CUM, WBI recognized with the David P. Baker Award for balng.OUt·

~
ti

j

j.

1tandlng Chamber Board of Directors Member for 1995 11 the
annual Melge County Chamber of Commerce dinner dllnce jiet;urday evanlng at Royel Ollie Resort. Nearly 10!1 people ane~
the avant, whk:h benefited the chamber. Outgoing board of dlreo,
tors tllamber Patty Plcklln1 was also recognized for her W9flullltta:.
the chamber. Both awerds - • presented by Horace Karr;~~
ldent of the Melg1 County Chambar of Commerce. ·.
• · llf

·Local News ·in Bri·ef! ~~:t.
'-~\:f.

Pomeroy woman cited following accident ~ ''
A Pomeroy woman was cited for reckless operation in a Friday after-. ,.
noon accident on Mulberry Avenue, according to Pomeroy Police. Chief
Gerald Rough!.
.
The accident occurred at 3:04p.m. when Greta S. Trumbull , 19, :
Pomeroy, struck a 1995 Chevrolet truck, driven by John M, Tate, 29, . •
Pomeroy, from behind while traveling on Mulberry.
A passenger in Tate's vehicle; Misty Tate, 19, Pomeroy, was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital by Pomeroy Squad I of the Meigs , ·.
County Emergency Medical Services.
.
Turnbull's 1988 Chevrolet Beretta received heavy damage to the fro~t
end, while Tate's vehicle received light damage to the rear bumper. ,.,.~
Turnbull was cited for reckless operation.
,j;-1 • ., . . . . .'

,. &gt; :

Citation issued in Middlepor.t accident .· .'·'
Separate accidents on the parking lots of two Middlepon businesses . .'
were investigined over the weekend, according to Middlepon Police
l
Chief Sid Little.
The first accident occurred Saturday at 4 p.m. on the Fruth Phannacy lot
Harold L. Sargent, 84, Middleport, was backing his 1991 Oldsmo- :.
bile Cutlass from a parking space, when he stuck a parked 1994 Chevro'- '
let Beretta, owned by Marvin K. Wisecup of Middleport.
Sargent was cited by police for leaving the scene of the accident.
The second accident occurred Sunday at 10:19 on the Super Amcri-.. •.
ca parking lot.
Charles E. Gilmore, 60, was backing his 1992 Chevrolel truck from
a parking space, when he struck a parked I 994 Chevrolet Corsica
owned by Joseph P. Smith, 23, Middleport.
No damage was recorded to Gilmore's vehicle, while moderate dam- · :
age was recorded to Smith's \'ehicle.
· · .. ,\' ·
No citations were issued.

No injuries reported in two-vehicle crash
No injuries were reported following a two-vehicle accident at the
junction of Success Road and State Route ':J near Tuppers Plains early Saturday evening.
Paul E. Brooks, 73, Tuppers Plains, attempted to pull out onto SR 7
and rolled backwards into another stopped vehicle' driven by Bobbi R.
Spurlclck, 24, Long Bottom.
Brooks' 1981 Ford truck sustained no damage wh!le Spurlock's 19%
Ford sustained light damage.

.

•

.

.'

..
EMS
units answer 20 calls ..,
.
.

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded 20
calls for .assistance Saturday and
Sunday, including four traa:asfer calls.
Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
3:26 a.m. Saturday, Page Street,
Stella Smith, Veterans Memorial
Hospital;
12:13 a.m. Sunday, North Second
Avenue, Todd Quillen, Holzer Medical Center;
9:37 p.m. Sunday, Story's Run
Road, William Frazier, HMC.
POMEROY
9: 18 p.m. Saturday. Fern Hooper,
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital ;
9:22 a.m. Sunday. Welchtown
Hill, Charles Buckley, dead upon
arrival ;
9:18 p.m. Saturday, Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center, Fern Hooper,
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital ;
11:11 a.m. Sunday, Rocksprings
Rehabiliiation Center, Bessie Brooks,
VMH.
RACINE
6:50 a.m. Saturday, Main Street,
William Fingkenbinder, VMH. ·
RUTLAND
3:19 p.m. Saturday, Old Dexter
Road, Everett Hutton, HMC;
10:52 p.m. Saturday, Red Hill
Road, Ann Barrell, HMC;
3:~0 a.m. Sunday, Bryant Street,
Janet Miller, VMH;

9:35 a.m.. Sunday, New Lim~
R,oad, Florence Barrett, HMC;
·'
- 12:57 p.m. Sunday, Rutland Fire
Dep8rtment, Charles Barrett m;
HMC;
·.~
· 2:02 p.m. Sunday, Holley Road, .
~
Opal Duff, HMC.
TUPP~I,tS PLAINS .
•·
I :32 • ·)11 · Saturday, Arbau gl\ d
Addition. Ruliy Kelley, C~mden: '
Clark Memorial Hospital :
3:42 p,m. Sunday,,Arbaugh Addi:'*
tion, Shirley I. Whan,
€CMH,
: :
.
'
. ·_-v ,.

Bradbury Elementary School
Informational Meeting on the
. ,. ~ . ...
Proposed Mi~~le·School and .Cl~ID.g ·of. c1
Bradbury Elementary · ··· ·' ··,
Tuesday, March 26, 7:~ in the , ,~ ~
Bradbury Cafetena.
· · ·~
~"· ~a
Mr. Bill Buckley, Mr. DaveG~u) an~. -/
John Arnott will be p~nt ··
.'
''.'
to answ,~r questioJ~;S. . ·
·The-public is.invited
to attend.
.
. .
.

�'

The Daily ·S entinel

-sports

.

Page4
Monday, MarCh 25,1996

By MIKE EMBRY
'LEXINGTON. Ky. (AP) · Cincinnati finally met a team that
wouldn't back down 10 the NCAA
•SoulheUt Regional.
All season long, the Bearcats had
been the bullies on the boards with
'their never-give-an-mch attitude.
·. And they knew how to mix it up on
·the floor with in-your-face defense.
But Misstss1pp1 State gave 11
right back and elimmated Cmcinnatt
' 73-63 in the final Sunday in Rupp
' 'Arena.
"llley were tougher and wanted
•to win the game more than us," satd
Cincinnati guard Damon Flint.
But forward ' Danny Fortson,
:cincinnati's main enforcer, didn't
'believe the Bearcats got pushed
·around.
"It was a fair battle," satd the 6-

the ball they had a hand m our face "
The Bearcats just couldn't find
the basket.
" We JUSt dtdn't score," said
Cincinnati coach Bob Huggins. "It's
hard when you don't score. It's not
lll~e we threw 11 around or something. We just didn't score."
Flint, a 45 percent shooter, made
JUSt one of 12 shots. Burton, another sharpshooter who averages 45 percent, m1ssed 14 of 20 attempts,
"It was JUSt an off day," said
Flint "I had good looks I just wasn't knocking down the shots."
Desptte fa1ling to reach the Final
Four after havmg such h•gh expectations, Cincinnati players were
already talking about next season.
"We've got some great guys
coming back," sa1d Flint. "We'll be
back and make another great run."

Cincinnati loses only three
seniors - center Art Long, forward
Ke1th Gregor and guard Keith
LeGree .
"These are three guys that are
going ,to leave their names in the
record books," Hugg~ns said. "When
you look back at the traditiOn of
Cincinnati, that's a heck of a feat."
But the Bearcats will return the
likes of Fortson, Flint and Burton for
ano.ther run next season.
"We know what has to be done to
have a good team," said Fortson,
who has indicated he won'tjump to
the NBA. "We'll be back and we'll
have a good team next year."
And they can put aside the last
game.
"I'm glad today's over with,"
Fortson said "We can go on and forget about th1s "

·In the NCAA West Regional final,

Syracuse hands Kansas 60-57 loss
By TIM DAHLBERG
DENVER (AP)- The Jim Boeheom bashing Will have, to be put on
hold. The Syracuse Orangemen, to
the surpnse of just about everyone,
are 10 the Fmal Four.
The coach who seldom gets hos
·due and the team no one figured
' would get thos far have a date with
MisSISsippi State m theu fust Fmal
•Four appearance since 1987.
"It feels so good, not only for me,
"but for my team and for our coach
who has taken a lot of slack," Syracuse star John Wallace said. "For
everyone that was down on us, it just
feels good."
: Syracuse used a light zone
defense and a hornble shooting
game by Kansas to beat the Jayhawks 60-57 Sunday and wm the
West Regional final Mostly, though,
they used a game plan put together
by Boehetm to perfectton to get m
~he Final Four.
"They out-coached us." Kansas
coach Roy Wtlllams sa1d. "I consider J1m Boehe1m a fr1end. He does-

play."
go along with the same amount from
Syracuse's defense forced Kansas fellow forward Otis Hill, didn't
to shoot from outside, wnh disas- dommate the game as he d1d agamst
fal~...
Thrashed m the B1g East tourna- trous results. The Jayhawks made Georg1a in the final mmutes.
ment by Connecticut, few ligured only 4 of 25 three-pomt attempts,
But Wallace, w)lo hit only five of
Syracuse would be the only one of often findmg themselves off balance
16 shots, and H1ll combmed to outlive Big East teams m the tourna- or with a hand in their face when try- play Scot Polland and Raef LaFrentz,
mg.
the Kansas btg men who totaled 16
ment to make it to the Final Four.
But a fatrly easy draw that fea"There are a lot of teams m col- pomts between them.
"My mouo has always been to
tured Montana State and Drexel got lege basketball that can't shoot the
the Orangemen m the regional semi- ball real well from the outside or just keep shooting the ball," Wallace
lmals, and a patr of last-gasp shots they rely on one guy," Boeheim said. sa1d. "It 11 doesn't drop, it doesn't
against Georgia got them an under- "And when you get to a regiOnal drop. I kind of got mad at myself and
dog role agamst second-seeded final. I don't care hpw good a shoot- my teammates kept getting me the
er you are, you start thinking about ball in Jl;Crfect scoring opportuniues.
Kansas.
That was all Boeheim and his ll
The good thmg IS that every time we
Kansas still had a chance to ue the made a mtslake, they seemed to
band of overachievers needed, and .
they capitalized on 11 with a defen- game as time expired. but the three- come back and do us a favor "
sove dosplay that was as effect1ve as pomt anempt by Jacque Vaughn, like
For Wallace, the trip to the Final
many others, clanged off the nm, Four os vmdocat1on for hos dec1soon
11 was ugly.
"No one even picked us to get to touchmg off a Syracuse celebration. to remain in school for h1s sen10r
"Meadowlands, baby," screamed year rather than enter the NBA draft.
the reg1onal final." Boehe1m sa1d.
"Everyone talked about Anzona and guard Jason Cipolla, who grew up m
"I'm JUSt happy for these guys,
Kansas beo ng the game to dec1de New York City, just across the Hud- P.articularly John commg back under
who Js gomg to the Final Four These son R1ver from the Meadowlands, • the circumstances, how much he's
meant to our program," Boeheim
k1ds dodn't hsten to that, dodn't wor- sJte of this year's Final Four.
ry about that. They JUSt came out to
Wallace, who scored 15 pomts to satd. "I'm JUSt tremendously happy
for him."
n't get the greatest respect around the
country and I don't know that that's

Ceballos finally returns to Lakers' camp
By BETH HARRIS
og•ze for myself and the act1ons of
INGLEWOOD, Calof (AP) not lettmg my employers at the LakCednc Ceballos finally returned to ers orgamzatJon know th1s," he sa1d.
the Los Angeles Lakers, but Magoc _"It just got to a point where ot was
Johnson and the rest of the team sull JUSt a liule too much for me. I just
want to know why thetr co-captam needed t1me."
ran away
Ceballos showed up about 3 112
Ceballos blamed unspecified fam- hours before Sunday mght's game
ily mailers for his four-day unex- agamst Charlotte, but remained suscused absence, whtch resulted m a pended for the 103-94 Joss He wtll
suspensiOn and the loss of $54,756 come off the suspended list today
and JOin the Lak~s for a six-game
m salary for missing two games.
"I had some very perso;mal and road tnp begmnmg Tuesday at
family problems to deal with. I apol- Orlando

Ceballos d1d not elaborate on the
family matter, nor did he explain
why he failed to telephone the team
or why he went water sk1ing while
dealing with h1s problems dunng a
four-day trip to Arizona. Ceballos,
who 1s single, was accompanied by
family members.
"There was no reason for that at
all," Ceballos sa1d "I should have
let the organozat1on know what was
gomg on and how I was "
The players did not get the
answers they sought smce Ceballos

left the Forum without talking to his
teammates, but he said he thought
they would understand.
"What ts he going to do? Is he
going to commit himself or not?
That's the big question," Johnson
sa1d after sconng 28 pomts in starting h1s second straight game m
place of Ceballos. "I want to welcome h1m back, but let h•m understand we need a commitment from
him."

Johnson said Ceballos should
(See CEBALLOS on Page 5)

NBA standingS'

t-t.lwnu~et:

EASTERN CONFE!l£NCE
~

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412
382
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Milwlnllcee 1• .21

1

TorontQ. . .... .

i7

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60~
374

, 29 .567
Jjl ~59
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269

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Sunday's final
Mtsstutppt State 73. CINCINNATI

PRESSURED- Mlaai1Sippl Stata'a Derry! Wilson 100) Ia pressured
from behind by Cincinnati'• Damon Flint In the flrat hiHof Sunday'•
NCAA Southellt Reglonallllllllln Lexington, Ky., where the Bulldogl
won 73-413 to earn their flrat-r trip to the Final Four. lAP)

Gordon captures
TranSo~th 400 flag
By MIKE HARRIS
DARLINGTON, S C (AP) Jeff Gordon and his Hendrick Motor- .
sports team could have pamcked
when they got off to a diSastrous start
this season.
Instead, they regrouped and have
begun to look JUSt hke the team that '
won the 1995 Winston Cup championship, topping off an •mpress1ve
three-race burst woth a hard-earned
victory in Sunday's TranSouth
Financial 400..
"This sport can humble you real
qu1ck.'' said the 24-year-old Gordon,
referring to his linishes of 42nd and
40th m the first two races of the season- both worse than any result m
31 starts last year.
"We're coming off a champoonshtp season," he added. "You
might thmk thmgs are going to go a
certain way. But I think that (tough)
start m1ght have been a blessmg in
disguise. ,
"I hate for those things to happen
and for us to be 40th in the pomlli
two races m," the youngster added
"But, since then !' ve never seen a
group of guys work closer together
and have beller communJcatton and
be on top of the1r game. Our finishes have proven Jl."

The Final Four

26\
28\

After Gordon crashed early m the
season-opener at Daytona, an
uncharactenstic engine problem
knocked the team out early at Rockmgham. Then came Rtchmond and
a big victory, a solid third-place linish at Atlanta, and now hos second
straoght wm on the treacherous eggshaped Darlington oval.
"This was a real tough place !'or
us when we lirst started racmg," satd
Gordon, who has II career VICtories,
includmg last September's Southern
500 on the I .366-mile Darlington
track. "Wmnmg two m a row at thos
place is pretty unbelievable."
In Sunday's race, series point
Jeade.r Dale Jarrett prov1dmg plenty
ol competition and dmma
With Gordon held up m heavy
trallic, Jarrell took the lead 15 laps
from the end of the 293-lap mcc
"When he first got hy me, my
crew said not to worry bcl:ausc he
had to stop (for gas)," Gordon
explaoned. "I kept askmg them of
they were sure because he sure wasn't dnvmg like a guy who knows he
has to stop."
Then Jarrett, with Gordon loommg m his rearview m1rror. came up
on the slower car of Dave Marc1s as
(See TRANSOUTH on Page S)

~8.

'20~

Sunday's scores

28

s...., ............

Toronto at Calpry, 930 p m
Lol An&amp;elts II VaatOIIYCf, 10 )0

Ardlbold n
pnl

Tuaday'opma
St Louis a1 Piusbur&amp;h. 'J :\0 p m.
Waahlnaton at N 'i. IJiandcn, 7 10
pm.
New Ieney II Tampa Bay, 7·30 p m
Wlllllipeaat Dallu, 8 30p m

Tra nsac ti ons

EASTERN CONFERENCE

. , T -' tllall
At U•lwenlty H.I-. Oartaa""lllr, Va.
tennwee (29-4) vs V1ra.i'ruo {~6),
Spm

· MldWt Regioul

S.O,nlor'·---

V.-tJiM 74, Iowa 63
Coanccoiaot 72, Soo Froncit&lt;O 44

AdonllcDI....
~ I. I !II.

Ia.

NTRanpn

37 21 14 u

New'-r .. .332811 77187171
T - Boy .. 33 28 II 77 213 22.1
Wuhi......... ... 33 29 10 76 201 117
NY. biAodcn .2043 8 48 203 27l
Nefr'

A.•'Vlltdc,.ill
,._...,...,.I
I, IlL
(23· 7) v1 Colncc:dc:ul

__ __ _

Cll-1). 9.30 p m.

.., RecletW
Mid-

lit: lOA

2A9 209
31 25 9 Bl Z.H lQIJ
PhiladetpJHa . 36 22 I 1 8l 2AI I 86

Florida .. ..

'Dl..W.

Pt..... ...... -43 25 4 90

T""""''llnol

Moioonoil .. . .. .36 28 I 80

126 250
237 220

~:Raptors edge Bulls 109-108; Cavs get by Grizzlies 90-85

'1'..._... _

A&amp;,.._C"

" focb
' ....
1'-.
Looollooa
(it-1)
vo. Gcorpa
'

AU&gt;Jned
Joe Hall. outrltlder. Mid Kri1 Gresham,
Cllc:het, to their mh1or· lclnc~
KANSAS CrrY RO\'ALS· AaiJIIII)
Robert Toth, pnche:r. to then minor ..
leque comp. Opd._t Mendy Loper. lltfiefder, to W1cbil1 of tbe Tex• Lequc
DellfU.Ied Jeff OI'Oicwald, tak:hcr, for

R-

WI!STEilN CONJ'Di:NCE
'
~~-

....... ollllo'PCL. ~ lllor1tJobn Wu4in, Todd \llj[U- ud SoeYe
Wolcitcbowlki, pUcMn, 10 B4iooMon.

. .

16 :U7 194

, 191i lJO
61 215 l30
65 2AO :165
59 202 :Itt

upset," said Torres, who pitched for
:By The A..oclated Press
Barry Bonds was playmg for the the Giants from 1993 until last
first lime m a week and wanted to sprmg. "I didn't mean to hit him
test his bruised left wrist.
Everybody could sec I was wild."
"I've got to come inside, man,"
He found he could still swmg.
Well enough. in fact, to throw a Torres satd , "IF he can't live with
punch at the opposing catcher.
that, it's lOP bad . Because 1t's part of
Bonds, hit by a pnch from Fonner the game."
teammate Salomon Torres, tnggered
Mall Wolliams, J.R. Phillips and
a bench-cleanng mcident. Sunday Davtd McCarty homered tor the
when he swung at Seaule's John Giants m thCJr 13-3 win .
Indians 3, Braves 2
Marzano in the game between San
At West Palm Beach, Fla , Jack
,Franc1sco and the Manners m ScottsMcDowell potched seven strong
dale, Anz.
Bonds, who had missed s1x mnmgs and Kenny Lofton had three
.games because of the wnsl IDJUry, hots as Cleveland lnd1ans beat
was brushed back by Torres m the Atlanta m a rematch of World Senes
sixth inning On the next pitch, t.cums.
Bonds was hit m the right shoulder.
The Braves. who won the Series
The Gtants star pomted at Torres 4-21ast O&lt;.:tober, and lnd1ans met for
and began walkmg toward the the only lime lhos spnng. A record
mound, and Marzano gave Bonds a stundmg room-only crowd of 8,516
bearhug. After they grappled for a watched at Municipal Stadium.
few seconds, Bonds took a swmg at
Indoans manager M1ke Hargrove
Marzano wtth his left hand.
was eJCctcd m the first onnmg. Lofton
"The ball got away from Solly. was called Out on stnkes to open the
He kept going out there, and I have game, dosputcd the call and dropped
to protect my pitcher," Marzano saJd. hts bat Plate umpore Angel Hernan"I don't care who 11 is, I'm not going dez k1ckcd the bat down the thirdto let him get out there."
base line, and Hargrove wus tossed
• "I was telling /lim to rela~. and he when he argued at the 'end of the
J&lt;.ept pushing and pushmg. And he inning
took a swing at me," Marzano saJd.
McDowell, Signed as a free agent,
"I backed off, he almost got me. It's . tired in the c1ghth and was charged
from living m Philadelphia and wnh b&lt;tlh Braves runs He allowed
watching 'Rocky' all the time."
seven h1ts.
Bonds declined comment on the
Braves starter John Smoltz struck
out SIX m live 10nmgs, govmg up two
inddent.
, "I don't know why he got so runs and four hots.

n:~L
•

D

......,..__..,__

Aul..... Boll Toylor. pi&lt;dler, oolJ Kerwin
M - Mil Alll[y T-11. OUJftTI I 1.

--..--.. ...

SEATTLE MARINERS SIJHd

....

Eda~

second technical foul after he
slammed the ball to the court in
protest with 8:53 remaming in the
thud penod
The loss was the seventh .in 10
games for Indiana, with the only VICtones coming m games against the
ilvo expansiOn teams.
Heat 111, Cddcs 95
At Boston, the Heat improved
thetr record to 11-4 smce Feb. 22
when they made several deals JUSt
before the tradmg deadline.
Alonzo Mournong had 27 pomts
and 16 rebounds, Walt Williams.
Chris Gatling and Rex Chapman
scored 20 ap1ece and T1m Hardaway
had I 4 assJsts
"The guys are now Oowong like
clockwork," Mournmg sa1d "It was
only a matter of time before we were
going to start to Jell as a team."
Suns 103, Clippers 92
Kevm Johnson had 33 pomts and
15 assJsts and the Phoenix Suns
avoided the indtgnoty of being swept
by the Clippers on the season senes.
Charles Barkley added 21 points
and 14 rebounds as the Suns hit the
500 mark (34-34) for the lOth time.
Knicks 85, Mavemks 79

At Dallas, Patnck Ewmg scored ,
17 of h1s 36 pomts m the th1rd quar'er and hit three criti~al shots late in
~he fourth period as New York
; xtended Dallas' losmg streak to 10
~ames

Bullets 92, Nuggets 90
At Landover, Md., Brent Pnce
drove agaonst Dtkembe Mutombo
and htl a dnving, one-handed bank
shot with 0.7 seconds left for the victory.
"We're supposed to (block) that
1010 the thircj row and send the game
into overilll'e," coach Bernie Bickerstaff sa1d.
Cavaliers 90, Grizzlies 85
AI Cleveland, Dannyl'en}&lt; scored
13 fourth-quarter pomts and helped
send the Grizzlies to their ,1 8th consecuuve loss - one short of their
record set earlier this season.
Nets 84, Bucks 80
At Milwaukee, the Bucks 11ed a
franch1se record with their lllh
stra•ght loss, comm1thng two costly
fouls m the final 21.3 seconds that
were converted into the game's final
four pomts by P.J. Brown and Chris
Chtlds

Lofton scored tw1ce, on a double
by Carlos Baerga and a sacrilice fly
by Julio Franco.
Atlanta scored m the e1ghth on
RBI singles by Mark Lemke and
Marquis Grissom.
•
Yukees 8, Asti'Oil 3
At Tampa, Fla., New York Yankees second baseman Tony Fernandez will be sidelined indefinitely
after fracturing his right elbow m a
wm over Houston.
Fernandez hurt himself in the
fourth mnmg while divmg for a
grounder by James Mouton. Surgery
..w111 be required and the Yankees did
not know when he would be able to
return.
Padres 10, Athletics 8
At Peoria, Anz .. Steve Finley's
three-run homer m the e1ghth mnong
capped San Doego's comeback over
Oakland.
Finley, who went 3-for-5 wtth
tour RBis, put the Padres ahead With
h1s homer off Steve Montgomery.
Jason G1ambi, Terry Steinbach and
Pedro Munoz all hll home runs off
San D1ego starter Joey Hamilton.
g1ving the Athletics a 7-2 lead.
Blue Jays 10, Royals 9
At Hames Coty, A a , Juan Samuel
drove in seven runs, going 4-for-5
wtth two homers, oncludmg a grand
slam. as the Toronto Blue Jays beat
Kansas City.
Sa'!'uel, who played for the Royals last season, had 13 total bases,
hilling a double and a triple. He hit

You've got a lot on your mind. You're building
your world and your insurance needs are
real. But you don't nead to add this worry
to ypur nst.

.BY MEL REISNER
~ • PHOENIX (AP) Sometimes
· blity reads like a scnpt.
·: Arie Luyendyk's victory Sunday
in the Dura-Lube 200 was hcartwarmmg for Anzonans, who have
taken the soft-spoken Dutchman to
the1r hearts ~ince he took up residence in Sconsdale.
It also was a blessmg for the Indy
Racmg League, wh•ch has some
prom1sing rook1es but only
Luyendyk's marquee name to trot
out m tts crcdJbJitty battle against

nval CART.
" I thmk it's time to slop talking
about whether the IRL has arrived,"
sa1d Jonathan Byrd, co-owner of
Luyendyk's car. "It's here, 1t's real,
and once we get our cars together,
th" " gomg to be the premier sencs
m auto sports."

CART's prcoccupauon with road
courses - only six of ns 17 races
last year were on ovals - led Indianapolis Motor Speedway presodent
Tony George to form the IRL. and
Phoenox lntematmnal Raceway own-

er Buddy Jobe decided to back him.
It's supposed to help develop young
drivers.
But Luye~dyk. 42, used yearll of
savvy to p1ck up bts fourth Indy-car
title and hos first in nearly fi ve
years.
··The rookoes are pretty good R1ch1e Hearn ran well, and Tony
Stewart ran pretty good," he said
"But you do need expenence on
ovals. If I'd fimshed second or third,
I wouldn't have been happy I'd have
felt a little bit empty. "

who h;td enough gas to get to the
end
"We were prclly much gambhng
l)arrdt) wa.' going to run out, but we
decided we'd put on the heat on as
much.._, we could," Gordon saod
Rclerrmg to hts crew, Gordon
smd "They d1dn 't tell me we needed gas, so I dodn 't worry about II. But
they were probably crossing their
lingers m the p1l,."
l:trrcll nm out of gas two laps
I rum the end, duckmg on for a splash
on tc:unmale Erme lrvan's pn on the
backsuet.:h. NASCAR later penallid hun a lap for gcllmg asstslance
.titer Jhc while !lag from u crew other thun h" own. That dropped him
from eoghth to 15th.
"lt''JUSl a shame that when you
have the best mce car at the end oF

the race that you don 't win," Jarrett
saod. "But some days that happens.
"Wt• were close on fuel and we
dec1ded we came here to wm the
race," he added. "If we stopped, we
weren't gomg to wm."
Gordon, who won $97,310, averaged 124.793 mph. He cross the linIsh line 1.4-seconds - about li\lc
car-lengths - ahead of runner-up
Bobby Labonte.
R1cky Craven, last year's Rookie
of the Year, mat.:hed hJS career best
fimsh wtth a third, followed by
Rusty Wallace and Terry Labonte,
who both coasted across the limsh
line after running out of gas
Dale Earnhardt fmishcd a lap
down m 14th, but rcmaoned second
on the stnndongs, trallong Jarrett by 47
points.

CeballOS. ~c.o_nt_m_ue_d_fr_o•_n_Pn_.~_e..;.:4)--------~---------

Talk to your independent agent. Insist on longterm experience, community presence, and
someone who is with you both before and
thing,
after things happen. .1u1t do this and leave the Juggling Ht to u1.

have asked for 11me off mstead of
disappearing.
"Everybody has problems," he
said. "Maybe the best thing to do
was say, 'I'm going through some
thmgs and Jneed a day to step back.'
Everybody would 've said, 'Cool.'"
"He will learn you simply don't
do things like this, It's s1mply unacceptable," Lakers vice president Jerry West said. "It's nice to hear from
him ihat this was not a basketball

s.,.,,.,. c....., s-.1868
ll••••ce
r- ,..,.,.,..,., ..,.,.,.
\

Qowu•11 °IB1sls• ....

1111• n."'dlt.

1111111
~

W

,.,. • ottnu the

!:u~~~~ty Oroup

mauer"

Ceball"s denied his AWOL jaunt
had anything to do with h1s reduced
playing time si~ Johnson came out
of retirement on Jan. 29.

Mamae1, detialllle4Jalnw. to a

WHfRE EXTRA EFFORT IS OUR POLICY

j

the grand slam off Terry Clark 10 the
fifth.
Samuel, who raised his aver;~ge to
.407. also homered m the seventh
after Felipe Crespo tripled, and doubled in the first off Glendon Rusch.
Rockies 16, Cubs 8
At Tucson', Anz , Andres Gularraga had four hils, includmg his sixth
homer, and drove in five runs as the
Colorado Rock•'T' defeated Chicago.
Larry Walker added two hns and
three RB!s for the Rock1es, who saw
an 8-0 lead cut to two belorc they
pulled away for their first wm 10 five
games agamst Ch1cago this spring.
Rangers 8, Pirales I
At Port Charlotte, Aa., Wtll Clark
had two hits and live Texas Rangers
reloevers combined to beat PIUsburgh.
Roger Pavlik. scheduled to start
for Texas, was scratched because of
t1ghtne~s m hos nght elbow.
M1ke Henn.eman started and
earned the vJctory with one hitless
innmg. Matt Whtteside allowed one
htt and no runs over the next three
inn mg.
After Dcnms Cook tssued one run
m hos two-mnong simi, Danny Patterson and Mark Brandenburg
blanked the P1ratcs m the last three
mnmgs

Dodgers 6, Marlins S
At Vero, Pia.. Greg Gagne smgled
home the go-ahead run m the eoghth
mnmg and Delma DcShtelds went4for-4 as the Los Angeles Dodgers

beaJ Flonda.
Devon White, who was 3-for-4,
and Kurt Abbou homered for the
Marlins
Mets 4, Expos 3
At Port St Luc1e , Fla , Alberto
Castillo homered on the seventh
mnmg and the New York Mets beat
Montreal.
Castollo played because Slarting
catcher Todd Hundley was scratched
before the game because of a tight
right hamstnng.
Mark Grudztelanek homered for
Montreal off Dave Mlicki on the
game's first potch
Cardinals 6, Twins 1
At Fort Myers, Fla., Ozzie Smtih
had three hits and Todd Stottlemyre
allowed one run m 6 113 mnongs as
the St. Louis Cardmals beat Mmnesota
Stottlemyre struck out live. Gary
Gaeth homered for the Cardmals
Tigers 4, Reds 2
At Plant City, Fla., Bobby Hoggmson hot a three-nun homer oil John
Sm1 ley. liftmg the Dctroll Tigers
over Cincinnati.
Outlielder Melvm Noeves and
reliever Bob Scanlan made the1r
spring debuts for the Tigers N1eves,
obtamed from San Otego as part of
a threc-leam trade March 22, had a
s10glc, was hu on the right hand by
a pttch !rom Smoley, walked and
loned out
r
Scanlan. who developed a sore

elbow early m spnng tramong.
pnched one perfect onmng.
White Sox 14, Phillies 7
At Sarasota. Fla . Frank Thomas
went 4-for-6, homered and drove 10
three runs, leadt ng the Chocago
White Sox over Philadelphia.
Thomas is 25-for-51 th1s spnng,
a .490 average
Chris Snopek also collected four
hits and had five RBis for Chicago,
mcludmg a three-run double that
htghloghted an etght-nun siXth mmng.
Orioles 3, Red Sox I
At Fort Lauderdale, Fla . Scott
Enckson outdueled Tom Wakclicld
and Roberto Alomar doubled 10 the
go-ahead run in the SIXth mnmg as
Baltomorc beat Boston
Enckson allowed one run and SIX
h1ts in seven mnmgs, lowcnng h1s

ERA thts spnng to I 61 He struck
out siX and walked one Wakclocld
allowed two runs and lour hns m stx
mnongs
Angels S, Brewers 0
At Tempe, Anz , Scott Sanderson
p1tchcd two-h1t ball lor live mnmgs
and Aaron Ledesma and Dtck
Schofield had two-run smglcs as
Callfomta downed Molwaukce. '
Sanderson , a non·rostcr mvllcc

trying to win a spot m the Angel /
rotatoon in his 18th major league sea-'
son, sHuck out three and walked one
He combmed woth Jason Gnmslcy,
Mark Holzcmer and M1ke James on
a lour-htttcr.

revels in Luyendyk's drought-ending Dura-Lube 200 win

they drove off tum four on lap 2K5
Jarrell found hunself squeezed
mto the wall, bouncing off the concrete us ,he slipped past Marcos
"All. of sudden. boom. opportupity JUst goes mto your mind," Gordon sa1d. "You SC&lt;' somethmg like
that and you think, 'There 111s. Now
take advantage."'
Gordon did, pussing Jarrett on lap
287 and Ieudmg the rest of the way.
Gordon led s1x times for 1891aps
But Jarrett, who started the season
w1th a v1ctory m the Daytona 500
and has led the points smcc, began
closing on the leader in the linal 50
laps.
Most of the lead curs made thetr
final scheduled pit stop on lap 219.
during the last of II caution pcnods.
The trnck then stayed green the rest
of the way. raJSing the question about

ONE
LESS
THING
FOR YOU
• TO
JuGGLE

YANICEES· Optioned
. . -of.she,
utr1 _
Jsm Meoir,
.......Ri10 Columbus
_

OAKLAND ATHLl!TICS: S011
Cilia P - lnfieldor, •• BrJ.

SuperSonics 112, KJnp 110
At Sacramento, Gary Payton
capped a career-high 38-point performance w1th a steal and game-wm~ing layup w11h one second remammg.
.
Payton JUSt mtssed a triple-double
with II rebounds and nine assJ sts
and made up for a missed layup and
foul wtth one mipute left that put the
Kings ahead 110-105.
Payton scored on a drive wuh 54
seconds left, cutting the deficit to
three points. Nate McMillan's steal
led to a three-point play by Hersey
Hawkins for a 110-110 tie with 27
seconds rema10ing.
The K10gs called umeout and set
up a final play for Mitch Richmond ,
who lost control. Payton scooped up
the ball, drove the length of the court
and scored the winning points.
Spurs 100, Pacers 88
At Indianapolis, the Spurs won
theor 13th in a row as Dav1d Robonson lopped the Spurs w•tl122 pomts
and 13 rebounds , his 50th doubledouble of the season, and Chuck Person hit three three-poonlers in a 152 fourth-quarter nun.
Reggie Miller was ejected for his

Braves 3-2; Tigers get 4-2 win over Reds

TranSouth 400. .&lt;~·-m-ton-uc-·d-'r-om_P_ag_e_4_l- - - - - - - - - - - - - -

....,~ORK

. .......... J• Do ..... ...-.
aod ... Qui ... - _ _
Beoavldol,lltitlolrlen,IO_..._
__

37 :It 12
St Louis ......... 3129 13
T........ .. .....2134 12
WJ................30 31 • 5
DoJlaJ ...............23 36 [J

pa~t

s-ball

A-'BALnMORI! DRIOC£s

8011oo .... .. ..34 29 9 t7 2A6 :129
"""""' · ...... 3032 9 69 211 225
Bolrllo ...... ..28 37 7 63 lll ~
onawa ........ "' 15 53 ~ 34 167 251

=...
.. .It~ Hft :1 Rt
•.cltbt• ....

l.ouUlaAo :l'tdlll6, T..., Todl 55
QeorJia 71, Sloplooo F. l\o111n M

(:IM). 7J0p.a

Hlll1fonl II Philaddphl~ 7 30p m

NHL standings

TenllCIJCC 92, 1Cimu171
Vlrpnlo 72, Okl Doiniruo/160

,

Tonfpl'apma
N.Y lslllldenll-.7.30pm
Anaheim 11 Deuo11. 7:30pm

Hockey

East Regional

'r.

Colorado .5, Wlnrupea2
Edmonton 3, Ottawa 2
Decroil2, Sr l....ouis 2 (lit}
Pi"sbur&amp;~ 8, N.Y. Rongen 2

Sptmaf..:kl Cmh. 7S Unc:olnv1ew ~2

NCAA Division I
women's tournament

22'h
22\

Ranam S, Boston 4

............ 2. a...... 2 (be)

ot..-tv

lf:W:I ud U$1Jfted him 10 CbaiiiVIOOill or

lhe Soulhera Leaaue {)pttoncc.l Curlll
Ooodwtn, CKIIfielcler, to fndtanapohl of
&amp;he: Amer1c.n ASSOCNII.Ion

New Jeney ) N Y l1landen 2 (aT'I
Edmonton 6, Montr=l S
Plul.telphia141, Toroato 0
Buffalo ,, Pinsbui'Jh 5
llor1ford 2. Wlllhlnaooo 2 (oe)
Tllm(Nt BAy 4, Aonda 2
Calpry 4. Vancouver 0
Dallu 4. Los Angelet 4 (ne)

ot.w.nm

Mlomi Eu1

nnd Rikkert Ftaneyte, oulfielder, 10 Okla·
homa Ci1y or the Amenau1. Auoc;:tiiiiiOO

Nalioul W...e
CINCINNATI RED'S: Placed Jerr
Brundcy .nnd Jose RIJCI, p11chen. ud Eric
Anthony and Thomu HowArd, oulficld-ers, on the 15-day di1ablcd h1t . Relused
Rtch Rodnguez. pncller Stgned Andre
K1n11. oolfielder, to a rrunor-leaauc: ton·

SaiUrday's scores
NY

S...Uy1 Marcl•31 ftMit
Semifinal WIOnerl, 6 30 p m.

Mondey, April lllrwol
SenunDal wtnotrs, 912 p m

1·1
19

x-c:hnthed pl:~.yoff spot

Dl.tllonll
·Orrv•lle(,4, Ott11wa-Giw.Jorf 61

SltllrdaJ'I semltlnllt
MlJJIUtppl State (26-7) vs Syroc~~~e
(28-8) 142 p m
M:u sathusens ()S- 1) \II , Kentucky
(12-2), JO minutes nlier first &amp;arne

TEXAS RANGERS Opnoned looe
Alberro and Danny Pnuenon, petc:hen,

Leoguc

'

Syrocuk 60 Kans.as ~7

1998 season

y-clmched diVIIIOD mle

DlwWonl
Ctn L..aSalle~9. Tol Sl John',S6

Sunday'slinal

291 216
215 210
21131 IS 71 254 ljS
29 36 7 65 205 220

Sent Rudy Pembcnon, outfielder, Dllln&amp;bt
to OkiBhomil Cily Sent Kr:vm Brown
c:aleber, outrilhl 10 Tulsa of Ihe Texos

Salurday's Dnals

West Regional

rKJRc Diololoo
42 22 10 94
30 31 II 71

Edmonoon .....2838 7 63214274
21 37 16 l8 230 27l
18 49 7 43 230 317

Ohio H.S. boys'
state tournament

Saturday's nnal
Kentucky 83. Wake Forest6l

2

.

Indians slip

Los Angclca
S:ut Jose

Pwhdwes.t champion VI West champi·
on, TBA
•

Midwest Regional

Gil

Vancouver"
Anoltetm

TBA

Southeut Regional
•

Colaltl1'

Frkla,.'ssnnlfinals
At Cqrtollt Coliseum, O.arto«e, N.C.
Eas1 champeon \IS Mnieast champton

Saturday's nnal
MasW~.:huseiiJ 86, Georgetown 62

2119

y-Colorarlo

The Final Four

East Regional

21 111
22
2!1 ~
J8 'h
41 ~

6111
412

Auburn (13-8) vs SIIUlford (28·2),
m1drught

NCAA Division I
men's tournament

wESTERN 'coNFERENCE
. • Ill.._ Dhillon
~ J. I'd.

T.nlpt'sflnll
AI Hec Edmundsen P.a\'llion

a! L A Chppt:n 10 '\0

Seatdc 111 Golden State 10 30 p m

c.:... Dl•Win
I 882

y-~ . , .... &lt;§O r

Satunlly's •mmnal ~Cora
Auburn IS, Penn Stale 69
Stanford 78. Almbama 76 (OT}

pm

A.llanlic DlwiAeri

I.-

West Regional

Vum.:ouver at Demut, 7 30 p m
Boston at Indiana, 7 30 p m
L A l...akers 111 Orlando, 8 p rn
New York 111 Houslon, KJO1) m
Charlotte .11 Den~r 9 r m
Sacramento nl Phoemx. 9 p m

The Dally Sentinel• Page.S

On baseball's spring training scene,

Scoreboard
Basketball

: 'In the NBA,

"They've got some basketball play- 92-90, Cleveland defeated Vancou• AP S.aketball Writer
ers who have played in the league, a ver 90-85 and New Jersey beat Mil:
Those earlier losses to the Sonocs,
couple of All-Stars. ·
waukee 84-80.
: Heat, Pacerll, Knicks , Suns, Nuggets
Still, the Raptors shouldn't have
Hornets 103, Laken 94
•.md Magic, they were understand- even be a threat to a Bulls team that's
Cednc Ceballos relumed after a
• able.
' been so dominating it hasn ' I even four-game absence and got a peek at
' This latest one wasn 't
had a one-point victory this season. the turmOil he has created.
• The Chicago Bulls, playing
Jordan scored Ch1cago's final 14
Ceballos said he took a four-day
; before a crowd of 36,131 - the points, hut the Raptors double- jaunt to Arizona to deal with an
-largest in the NBA lh1s season - had teamed him when he brought the ball unspecified famoly problem. The
: their most inexplicable defeat of the upcourt for a final shot. Jordan Lakers kept h1m on the suspended
;season Sunday as they lost 10 the ~ass~d to Kerr, Kerr passed to Scot- iist agamst the Hornets and started
:Toronto Raptors 109-108.
ue P1ppen and P1ppen passed back to Johnson m his place for the second
"This game meant more to me Kerr, who was standing at least two •straight game.
• than the championship last year," feet behmd the three-point arc. The
"I got so upset today," Magic
; said Tracy Murray, who played for shot mossed, the ball bounced mto Johnson said. "We talked about it so
~ the Houston Rockets last season · the comer and time expired before much instead of prepanng for the
jlefore going to Toronto m the expan- Jordan lired on a basket too late.
game, and you saw what happened."
sion draft. "I'm speechless. It was a
" It was a close game, we stayed
" He abandoned us , you know. At
huge win. The crowd exploded on wuh the best team in the NBA and a ltme like this, at a t1me we have to
that last shot. It was unbelievable."
we pulled it out down the stretch." st1ck together," N•ck Van Exel sa1d.
·Michael Jordan did everything he sa1d Damon Stoudamtre, who had a
Los Angeles also was without
could in the fourth quarter - except career-h1gh 30 p01nts
Vlade Divac (tonsillitis).·
shed defender Alvin Robertson and
In other games, Charlotte beat the
Larry Johnson had 24 points and
, get open for the final shot Instead, Los Angeles Lakers 103-94, Seatlle l 3 rebounds as the visiting Hornets
' Steve Kerr launched a three-point edged Sacramento 112-11 0, San gave Allan Bristow the 200th NBA
attempt from 25 feet away and Antonio defeated Indiana IOQ-88, coachmg victory of hts career. Olen
m1ssed.
M1am1 down!d Boston 111-95, Rice had 21 points and Kenny
"ExpansiOn team'! Once again, Phocnox beattlie Los Angeles Chp- Anderson, after siuing three games
this Js not an expansiOn team," Jor- pers I03-92, New '(ork beat Dallas with a sprained nght ankle, had 19
dan sa1d in a bout woth denial. H5-79, Washington nipped Denver points and 10 assists

State downs UC 73-63.

foot-7 power forward, who had 24
pomts and 13 rebounds. "They just
got some loose balls I wouldn't let
a~yone push me aroun!l. "
Cmcinnati (28-5) had played
superb defeli'se m reachmg the
reg1onnl final, holding three teams to
35 percent shooting from the field.
Mississippo State shot 47 percent.
And Cincinnati shot a season-low
34 percent although Jl came mlo the
gam.e shootmg 47 percent from the
field.
It added up to a disappointing performance.
"We hate losmg," sa1d reserve
guard Darnell Burton. "We hate losing. We went out on a bad note. We
know we could beat th1s team but
they came out playmg hard and we
were very flat. We just couldn't get
anythmg to fall . Every time we shot

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

; ay CHRIS SHERIDAN

.In the NCAA Southeast Regional,

. ;~ississippi

Monday, March 25, 1996

"I've always been happy w1th .;y
role.'' Ceballos sa1d. "You bring a
Hall of. Fame player back, every- •
body's going to adjust. Those adjustmcnts were made and they 're fine
wuh me."
'.
Lakcrs coach Del Harris denied
he has &lt;tny conflicts With Ceballos,
who described himself and Harris as
being. "fairly close."
"We' re not trying to be oppressive or overwhelming or make it an
!-told-you-so thing," Harris said. "I
don't demand that every player
behave as 1f it's military school. I've
given a lot ofleeway to h1m and othcrs."

.,

The Lakers' leading scorer had
been m Anzona smce m1ssmg the
tt;am 's fhght to Seattle on W~dnes­
day, a day after playmg 12 mmutes
and scoring two p01nts, both season
lows, m a 94-71 v1ctory.
" For me to go on, especially in
my life, I understand lhe fines and
suspension were just kind of a s1de
track of what I really wanted to focus
on. and that was trying _to take care
of a family probl.em," Ceballos said.
"It's not completely done, but we 're
going to keep stnving to make it betler and keep going so it can never
occur again."

Luycndyk also benditcd from pitstop mistakes by A J Foyt Racong
teammates Scott Sharp and M1ke
Groff to wm the second event m the
IRL's maugural season
The winner of the 1990 Indianapolis 500, who also won at
Phoenix and Nazareth in 1991, averaged 117 368 mph to beat Sharp by
8 896 seconds. leadmg the last 67
laps on the one-m1le circuit.
"You don't have to wm by II seconds when you can wm by fove,"
satd Luyendyk, who stayed JUSt out
of reach the final one-thud of the
race "I knew I could stretch the lead
anyt1mc I wanted, so I prelly much
JUS! had to bnng 11 home."

Sharp was the only other dnver to
fimsh 200 laps Groff was third, followed by Hearn.
Luyendyk won h1s lirsl pole on
Phoenix Wtlh a record qualifying run
Saturday and led fox 24 laps. Then he
ga ve up the lead for the lirst 11me
because hos Rcynard-Ford Cos wroth
felt loose on ns tires
Adjustments helped, but the fmal
cauuon Oag of the race came out on
the !28th lap. and that hurt
Luycndyk, too. He had chosen the
prcvoous lap to pot for lhe la•tume
But worse thmgs happened to
Sharp and Groff, who were runnmg
1-2.
They ptued. but m1ssed seeing the

Sampras-Agassi rivalry
no longer rules ATP Tour
By STEVEN WINE ·
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP)Although Pete Sampras could meet
Andre Agassi m the final at the Lipton Championships for the thord
consccutove year, the1r nvalry no
longer d'ommates the ATP Tour
Top-ranke~ Thomas Muster, redhot Goran IvanoscvJc and Austrahan
Open champoon Bons Becker have
Joined the spotlight. And that 's line
with Sampras.
"ll's good to see some other guys
get more attention. and not just
Andre and mysell. " Sampras &gt;-atd
"Last year at this tome, it was gelling
a lmlc bu much It seemed I was
tal kong more about Andre than I was
tal kong about my tenms "
At Ltpton, Sampras is always part

of the convcrsallon. He advanced to

the lourth round Sunday by healing
Jakob Hlasck 7-5, 7-6 (7-3)
The tournament champion m
1993 and 1994, Sampras ts trymg to
reach the linal lor the lourth consecutive year
"Cerium places I play well , and
th1s os one ol them," Sampras sa1d
"The Ltpton has a Grand Slam feel.
You' re playmg the best players m the
world, they 're all here . lr's a good
ondocatton ot where you ' rc at in your
game.··
Sampras has 19 VJcloncs m his
past 20 matches at Key Btscayne .
Woth Muster losmg his opening
match Saturday to Nicolas Pcre1ra,
Swnpras call regain the No. I spot by
reachmg the linal and beatmg h•ghranked players along the way.

My family and I would like to thank
all of you who supported me with
your votes on March 19th, and the
many volunteers who worked so
hard to make my campaign a
success .
Mike Canan
Republican Candidate for
Meigs ,County Sheriff
Paid for by the candidate, Mike Calwl,
34047 Ball Roo Rd., l'ornercly, ONo

caullon lights at the head of pu ro~
whtch sognificd the pits were closed.:
Both recetved a one-lap penalty ~
"A.J. called me tn agaon, and tht
lights were bllnkmg," Sharp sa1d. "It
asked if we should come 10 at that,
time, and they said yes, and then we•
get penalized I don't thmk that ' s~
very conststcnt. "

~

Foyt herated USAC offJcJal s,l
clatming other cars should have 1
been black-nagged for vtolaung the:
rule earlier, but finally chalked u up:
10 cxpcncncc
•
''I'm disappomtcd that we dtdn'tl
wm because we got penalized a lap, 1~
bul that's racmg ," he satd. "I think
the boys did a hell of a Job They 're
gcttong some great experience."
,
Meanwhtle, Robboe Buhl, who;
was runmng thud , had a 60-second:
pll stop When the green nag came 1
out for the I 36th lap, only Luyendyk,
Sharp and Buhl , who didn't fm1sh
because of a broken header, were on
the lead lap.
Luyendyk, who led a total of I 22
laps, averaged 129.988 when he
won the CART event m Phoentx five
years ago. BUI the IRL was an altogether new venture.

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'

�M londl!y, March 25, 1886

'

'

.

f

·Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

TM O.Jiy SlndMI• ' • 7

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich

•

~W

YORK (AP) - Even
•
ibouJh his days of lavish parties,
drugs and indiscriminate sex are
011
over, Harold Robbins can still write
Fonner Middleport resident-'a see the doctor was only if things about them.
, .
long while ago--lip Cunningham appeared real serious. People resortRobbins, author of such steamy,
·• who resides in Lima, these days sent . ed to Vicks, onion hearts, patent classics as "The Carpetbaggers" and
along a note in regard to his brother, cough syrup, salt water and vinegar "Never Love a Stranger," turns 80
Paul, whom we discussed recently.
.gargling and various other home . this year. His 22nd book, "The Sial,lip writes that Paul, indeed, d!d remedies. Restroom facilities at the lion," was published last month.
"1 play with the Sammy Kaye Band m time were pretty different too and
In the April I issue of The New
.' the 1930's and that he and his wife, Nora ventures that no one took time Yorke~;., Robbins says l)e has no
:- 'Bettye, do reside in Tulsa, Okla., to read while in the outhouse. ThC choieel&gt;ut to keep writing.
"I haven:t any money. First of all,
.• d\ese days. Paul, who is retired from aunosphere just wasn't that pleasant.
··• North American Rockwell, did play
By the way Bonnie Conde of Mid- . my medical bills were unbelievable.
:,' bass with the Tulsa Symphony dleport tells me that she, too, is an 1ben 1 got divorced," said RobQins,
Orchestra for several years apparent- avid letter writer 'and I'm sure there who suffered a stroke in 1982 and
:· ly lifter his stint with the Kaye band. are others although the telephone eer- also has hip problems. , ·
., · Incidentally, this year \slip's 60th tainly has reduced the number who
Robbins looks back fondly on his
_ Middleport High.School reunion and make that effort these days.
past debauchery - his Los Angeles
he plans to attend the all-school banparties are still the stuff of legends
:·: quet and dance. The event is set for
A reminder.
.
and he says he once took "all kinds
Easter is coming up on Sunday, of drugs."
Saturday, May 25, lip so you and
He's now writing his autobiograMartha start getting ready for one of April 7, and the Women's Auxiliary
at Vetetans Memorial Hospital is phy. If the working title is any indi·,,, those "sentimental journeys".
• waiting anxiously to hear from you. cation, the to'rne will be full of the

•'L----=------------"

::: oneInstill
writes
letters?
I thought
a recent
column,
I asked
if anyeveryone just pjcked up the telephone
- these days !hereby avoiding the pen
and paper but IIPP&amp;rently all of U$
aren't struck with the same stick. 1
_
As a result of the question I did get
'

er season
fundisraiser.
asked
to
The group
doingYou're
its annual
Eastinake i1 $5 contribution to the auxiliary and with that contribution send
along the name of a good friend, co. worker, relative or whatever whom
you would like to honor. That name
·11 be 1 d
t 1 bun y
eof
white trees decorating the hospital for
Easter Auxiliary members are quite
dedicated and do so many good
deeds about the hospital.
,
So , farbtb~e audxiliary hasthpltahced
over 60 ra 1tsan eggs on e ree
trees. You can send your donation and
• name to the "'
honorees
..9men ·s AUlliliary, 115 E. Memorial Drive,
. Pomeroy.
--·----Th s FJ
th
e am anagan . at you saw '
on the Se~IOr Pro Bowhng ~ou~a~ent televised last weekend IS .ongmally from Syrac~se an.d as. you
probabIY noted • he certam1Y IS good
at the gw:ne.
.
Sam IS the son of Mrs. Allee
· Flanagan of Syracuse.

~ ~~,:"~~e~~~n~n~~::n::::: s~rii~: :~Ilea !3~un;n0:

• indeed, was a long letter.
Among the letters I received was
One from Middleport's Nora Rice
who along with other points men: tioned the bygone days of "spring
cleaning". Not that people don't
·. spn'ng clean anymore. It's 1·ust that it's
-. a different ball game as Nora
"' explains.
' Before the days of Stanley
· Steemer and wall-to-wall carpeting,
Nora recalls, people removed all of
'. the big carpets from their homes in
· the spring, hung them on wire lines
and with a wire rug beater "cleaned"
: them . Talk about an exercise pro· gram. Dusl went everywhere m those
·- prior to these environmentally correct
, days. Floors were then scrubbed,
ld
d ft
N
· ora repons, an
en
newspa... pers were used for the padding under
.· the "cle,aned" rugs.
~
It used to be, Nora remembers,
: that when children got sick a trip to

=

provisional that
ti~le:fill "Who
••••
obscenities
his fic.t·the
ion. The
Knows Anything?"
--:J.,OS ANGELES (AI')- "Babe"
producer George Miller says the
plucky little pig is the unlikely soul'
th
f M'll ' h

t

a

-·

MIAMI (AP) - Police are trading fast food for some fast confessions.
· That last Big Mac, turkey sandwich or, especially, one last Whopper
can be a powerful tool in get!ing
crime suspects to tell what they
know, detectives·say.
"We should open an account· at
Burger King," said homicide Detective Kent Han. "Every pme we walk
in, they ask, 'Are you taking confessions tonight?"'
The reason: Suspects get sick just

Their agent, Jennifer Rudolph
Walsh, said they received a $225,000
book advance last month from Avon
Books.

I

•

D'iP'ARniliNT

: : 1 or ttllnt olgnlng
a1cio eholl 111' Hillel ond
morkod •• lid for
lllclclleport Parking Povlng
ond melllcl or dlllvorwcl to:
c 0 u n 1'I
Courthouaa, Pomeroy, Ohio

thr~ =~~ .~~:; vJ:r;or~· ~~ ~ax~c- ~c::~:=uc~~ ~.:.!elonera,
OffiCI o1 Contracla

"I don't see Babe and Mad Max
as very different," Miller told the Los
Angeles limes in an interview published Sunday.
"They're both individual~ w~nderinginunknownlandscapestrymg
to find meaning, overcome a number
of obstacles ... and through courage
effect change in the world they
inhabit. It's essentially the hero story told again."
· "Babe," the tale of a pig who
wants to be a sheep dog, was a surprise hit, earning an Oscar nomin11.u'on 1•or best pl'c'ture.
'
. Miller
gave up his practice as a
physician in the 1970s to difect and
co-write the Mad Max trilogy, which
starred Mel Gibson as a loner roam-

Mallng Dolo 3/1!1M
S.ollcl proponlo will lit
occopted from oil prt•

...

45718.

AHtntlon of bidder• II

g~~~~~ J"~==~ ~c!!'~ :C:~~!m!~11 ~!n.:~.J,~~
111 ollllt Ohio Dlpartmtm thla llldh PIIFCkttcl, 1111 rt1cLu1 ~

) :~community.
calenc;Jar~
...

to

.

Sweet 16
Pooh!
Love,

.

1 11

to I t e tro
• or
st•nclorde Provlolone lnd
Davit Boo
WogH,
vorloua
. on
lneurtnot
raqulrtmtnta,vartouaequal
opportunity provlolono, lind
tho req11lromont lor 1
poyment · llond ond
petlorm..ce bond for 1110%
ol tile conti'lct prlot. .
No bidder moy withdrew
hie bid within lhlrty (30)
cloyultor tile llctuiol data ol
the
oponlngthereof. llolgo
County Commlaatonore
NHI'II• tht right to walvo
any lnlormaHtleo or to rtitet
ony or oil bldo.
Frwcl Hollmon, Praekflm
Melga County
Commllllonara
13) 1t, 11, 21; 3TC
Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO·
DEPARTIIENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

1

::'.:

=~ra:.~r.~~i

operatora tnclucllng toxl
of:B'ore• lor tht provlolon
o tranoportatton Hrvlot to
~~~~:::':..
::llled
Operotodr• who oro
In o 1forlng
1ntor..t•
propo0111 to proyldo
Hrvlco ohould
eontact
llih
Thlloe,
Aaeocl8to
Dlractor
ttlhlllalp,CountyCouncll
on Aging Inc., P.O. lox722,
Pomii'Oy, Ohio 48711 to
obtain lull detallo ol tho
type ol tronoportotlon
Hrvlco tlltt It needed (lllor
to PNPIIrlng 1 prop 1111.
WriHen commtntl or
propo0111
eullmlttlcl withinmuet
30 doyeItt
to
tile aa•ncy ot tho above
oddNH with • copy tho
Ohio Doportment of
Tronoportatlon, Office ol
PubliC Tranaportatlon, 211
south Front Btr11t,
Columbuo, Ohto 432110I I I ;
Allllntlon:
Admln.._or.
(3) 21, 28; 2TC

=

to

'

=

re·o elvt'd · tn 'tht Clt.. 't
;..":.:,
lltforo April 10, .1... :111
11:00 o.m. Tht ~o~troy
Counell rtllrvtl till rtg!lt
occtpt or Njict any or 11
blclo.
Kothy..y..., ~
Vllllgotlf!'O"*W
(3) as· (4) 1· 2fC :
,
''PUIIUC
' NOl!CiE
'
·,
llttunlov, Aprll20, , . ,
ot 10:00 a.m. tho Horao
Natlonol llanti· will·011er fllr
HltatpublloiUOtloftonlht
lonk Porklng lot' t't
fOllowing: · · , · ,.; .
&gt;
1183 Chevrotat comalo
Sortol
·· . ""
,
11G1API750DH1411013
:
1 • Ford Tlmp GL s.tel.
1 2FAPP3eXOJii13724i '
1111 Mercury· ·cou r

!;.;

to

·

1111E.8M~
Tho terme ol tile aato

-

--

•·;;ICinoadly,

..

It ·I• proJected that. 70
elderly ond hondlcepptd
,._will UH tile Ml ... ce
I diiYt 1 WMk, 12 _ . .

J&amp;l:INSULATION

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Do your part ro, our tnvlionltllrlt. Bring Ul your
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lllrch 30th. Trl. Co. Recycling open 7 ·c~ay~ a week
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,_'·, ':'Co~ataliltiou · tq·l~dy William~
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an opponun!IY to be heard. ~unher
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EMPLOYM ENT
SERVICES

Legion #602
Bingo

INTIIIOI-EMIIOI

Sun. Nights

... tilt ....... of
palatl... Let n do It

Help Wanted

110

FREE ESTIMATES

,.,,...

Lucky Ball $300.00
with 21 players or more

$-WANTED·$
1o people who need to lose
weight &amp; maQ money, to try new
paten·ted weight- loss product.

SO.· 773-5083 24hr01day.

VIII IWOIIAilE
HAVE IIFIIINCIS
614-915·4110

Raises $50.00 ea.
week. Pay according to
the Number of players
949-2044 or 949-2038

Motors. Cal l Larry

lively. 81 ..38&amp;-9303.

2128/1 mo. pd.

11.000 Weekly Processing Mall
Free Info. Send Self-Addressed
Stamped Envelope: E11press

Dept131, 100 Easl Whitestone
Blvd., Suire 1•&amp;-3-45, Cedar Park
TX 78613.

1/31Mn
Able

SUMMEI IMAGES
TANNING .

Howard hcavatin

PARKERSBURG

TruckingLlm11tone
Bulldozing and
Backhoe
Servlcn .
Houu Sitts and
Utllltln

12 Seaston• For
$20.00

16 Se11lons For
$25.00

Nisaan Headquarter!!

Open 9:00 to 3:00
4:30 to 10:00 P.M.

Lowest Prices

ownere: . ~ete a Dllnt
Hendrlckl
Phone: 614-992-2487

All Kinds of

-

P.AIQISiiUIG NISSAN INC.
18Z1M~Aw.

.

'

Earth

Work

992·3838

l'llb1lblq..WV ZlllOi

311/t mo.

'

Howard L. Wrlteul

·.

WANTED: . COMMU~!TY · SKILL,S
·INSTRUCTORS needed•to teach community
and personal skillS to adoHs In their own home
In M~ County;
·
(1 ),32 ,hrslwt&lt;; 3 pm Fri. thru 3 pm Sun;

. . . ,. . . '

1-900-255:0300
ext 5488
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18yrs.
Touch- tone phone

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

Public Sale
and Auction

ownor, 614·9112·2526.

1 on 1

TRUCKING

80

Riverine ADtiques, Russ Moore,

985 4422
Chester, Ohio

;
'lf1b~'' Ht!P'Win~ t ."
~·~~·~,~~.;=··~~~·~~~··~:.~~·,~~~·

,.., lor li'lnaportatlon to
..1dlcll fllcllt!M, thopplng

R. L. HOLLON

diiJ adillon· 1:OOpm Fncley, Man,
day edillon 10:000.m. Saturday.

. Antiques, collectables, estates.

, Live Psychics

TRI-STATE WATER SYSJEMS, INC.

(No Sunday Calls)

Bualneu·

We will work within your budget
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-5881
108 Pomero Street
Mason, WV

required.

614-992-3470

LOVII ..

"No Job Too Large or Too Smsll"

Dlrt•Sinl

' -. '"BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Need Direction?

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Suppllel• Industrial G - • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
. Steps ·Stairs, RaiHngs, Pallo Furniture, Fireplace
items, Planter hangers, ·Trelllee!s &amp; lots of other stuflll

Distributed by

COMMERCIAL an~ RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

.,

May 16, '1971
Mai'Ch 25, 1990
arch 25, 1990 Six
rs ago toc;iay you
f.EE
' left us Never a
au.
_. ___._ ..
moment' without the ·
r.a-t!p thought ' of · you~ I'PJI~n 1 ..,..,.

·

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

·'I!

Free Eltlmltn
35 V!lf'l Exp.
RenonebleRatel
985-4198

ROOD

J~D~

Drilling Company

• . P.O. Box &amp;a7

...

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

RICine, Oh. ~711

Guttera

Jame• E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer; BackhQt, Dump Truck,

Downapouta
Gutter Cleaning

· Jackhammer, Available 24 Hre.
We dig basements, put In septic
systems, lay linea, und1rground bores.
For Free Mtlm1te call 949-2512

h

Avon Repres8nuuive&amp;
need&amp;d . Earn money for Christmas bills at home/a( work. 1·800-

892·6356 or 30•·882·2645, Ind .

Rep.

.

.

Babysitter needed for seventeen
month okl, p!eltrlbly in lhe Rodo·
springs area. Call 614-992-2292

after6pm,
Development Director For Multi·
county Family Planning Agenr:y.
Requtres Experience In Increasing Major Gift Donalions And

S~illa To 'DOYOiop And Implement

Plan~ Giving And Capital Campaigns. NSFRE Certification De+
airable. Salary In Keeping Wirh
Experience. Send F\asume, 3 .p,Q.
fessional References, And Salary
Expactations .To Kay R. Atktns
Executive Director, Planned Pat:
enthood Of Southeast Ohio 308
Richland AVe ., Athens ' O'H

45701 .

.

·'

. Earn $1000s weekly stu1fing envelopes at home. Be your bou,
Smrt now. No tJCp., tree supplies
info .• no obligation. Send S.A.s.e:
to Prestige Unit ll, I?.CA Box
195609, Winter Springs, Fl

32718.

Education lnslitution Accepllng

Plll'ltlng
Applicalions For A 'Part Tlmi
(2) '23 hriJiwl(; 11 pm - 8 am, Th/Fn; 4 rs as
Busineaa Office Polition. Mini··
FREE EsnMATES
schadliled; .
' . . .
· mum 25 Hours Por WHit AfiPIIC·
ant Must Have Poat·Sec:ondar,y
Mt-2188
(3) '18 hl'il/wk; 10 am- 6 pm, Sat/Sun;
Bualnesa Education, Or 3 Ytara·
S/1MMT1'N
Equivalonl Office e,porlanco,
All' po8ltiOria require all~nee at 2-hour bl·
Typing 50 w,p,m, And ·Fomllfar
BIAIONA•••
LUU
montiJiy staff. m"'lngs or hours as otherwise
. ,.
Wllh Offlco Mochinoa. Ap~ly
Mnde
o y • Fl
r day. a A.M ... ~ P. 1111·.
· schliit!UI84 .1:1101'1 sCh~ ~ree,;valid driver's ·
,,. · '
" .. , . r-....;--~-.., ;p_........_..,_.....,~-'""'!11-~~~~
ArJ rJO ~ rJC[ 1.1 Er' TS
·Ate1 s-s-~a.·~,..
,
, .r
llcen'•· three years llcttnse.q driving· ,.....
.,L..
""""""~~..~
· -.~~~~s~hir~;.;.-""·'l!"i
,
YOUNG'S
' · J. E. DIDDLE, oWNER
· ..
1141'-211.2
\'exocutiYe Sacrolar.y: T~e Ide~!
'
Cindklate Muat Pooaoai Strona
experte~; gQqd driVI~.reoorcl. and adequ~te
· _., .....
CARPENTER SERVICE
,ff ftW'Ioni!ll
·ComJMiter -'f.:ico•on S!&lt;l!a; Atiillautotn.Ob,le lnsurante ~ cove!agll required, ,
t .YCIIII Pldt'
-R®m Adctltlon•
MEET SINGLES NEARBY, No· !ty To Wotk ndepend 0 nuy l,ln~
: Salary: ·S5.0C/hr, .ito. start. Vacation/sick
t -1
.
•Now Goragta
&amp;
tlon'a •1 Oatollne, 1-800·880, Handle MuiUple . TISkl With
111
S7371llt 10110. t2-IMI 1* min. 18 ~ ChofiOing PriO&lt;IIiaal Mu11 Havt
~- Tral~ provided.
..,... '
•Eitctrlcal &amp; Plumbing
+. TTpll, S..V.U. 818 845 843~. .
EXCIII (LON I OK) /Word 1'-rfec:l
, .It' ~..... ..."""' ~ to:
..
' Updlltd Every 16 Min.
•Roofing
Mldlum -To -Advanced Skitla
'' ,!',
.
..,..__,.,
"'"''
·
No wllllllng direct
•Interior &amp; Exterior
.30 AI'VIOUIICIInlntl
·Shorlhand Or • Spt~ilwr~lno· A
•'l&gt;· RO;
.8()4 '';
.
.
I• •
Palirtlng
VInyl Siding· 1 Story Homo, Ptu, lui Good Transorlptlali
.,., J8c:ikaon, Oh, ~;
,
· '1
AIIO Concrete W!lrk
I'
Skills, 50+ WPM · Tr,-811~11 1!
80
12,895: 2 Siory Homo 13,HS, .l!uat.
Wo Ofhlr n xq-llot11
1
ATTN: Ceclll&amp;.
, . , ,
·sxt. 7123
(F.REE ESTIMATES) .
1~Finoncingi114-216-1111M.
B.,.tt1a Pae~~as• Thai tnctu~
Medical, Vlic11 an, Rtl(rtrM
I D~iln• for applicants: 3129196; pleaae
.U.-mln.
.Y.C.;,!OJ..N,.GIIIll
Glvlaway
40

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
MACHINE SHOP, INC.

r..t ,

eox

'

.L

"

'
'

1/

:ooa'

'

..._"';0t

~ wtiiCt\ poei!Qh lpplyirig for. • ' :
: .. ' ,,., . EqUal Qppoltunlty Enlj)IOyer. , · ;
,.·

'

LowRitel) •;

. RemoC:Jetlng
Stop &amp; .Compare

. . BR,ET ALLEN

Di-

.

(UmeStone-

'

•G•rllqes
•Complete·

~ .~Equipment
·

analysis. WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:
' TDS, Mlnerol Hardn101,lron, PH.
PI•••• eall R..i..Soft at 992-4472 or 1'80Go608-3313
tout up your fret wotor enotyal1.

,.._ (liUJ 615-16S1

:co•mumol
'

Water
Treatment

water treatment company cordially invites you to
participate in a free, no obligation, COI11prehenslve water

,..n.w

IOIEIIIISSELL

· 0·· ·-,

2mii1'N

The

rva •

.·"'

In MetitOry ol
our Loving
Husband, Dad &amp;
. Onndpa."
years come and go
we still love and miss .
, you so.
lives ~ DCVF been
thesame. .
since'Ow- 0ear Lord
took you, (our
Beautiful Role) home.
Tell yean .So today.
Wife. Mlry·lt
Olildten.llrad. Victor,
Janice.
VICkie &amp;
Orandebildren

LEGAL N.OTICE

~AIIIIWII

(e14) 1112.15535
e14 192-2753

•New
Homes
' '

992·3894

~,_WIIilr

·Painting
FREE ES.TIIIATES.

"

from March 1 thru 29)
Bring In minimum of 50 lb1. of aluminum cans to
reg14t0r for Bunn eotreemaker to bt glvon away.
Drawing will be held on Mlln:h 29111.

a...,s.m

·R~IIng

742-2803--

503 Mill Slreel
Middleport, Ohio
(Special. Price on Aluminum Cans

lw:! flrl&amp; lalllrl
S.W.&amp;Itr*

··NewHomel .
•Addition•
•Nnv Garogea
•Romodellng
•$1dlng

Nq'Uwr! T&lt;10 Lltpe

•~'' RECYCLING CENTER "''''

TRI·STATE SEWER &amp;
DRAIN CLEANING

SMnH'S
CONSIIUCTIOII

•8hrubbtry

..

IUtiCI • lfiiCI • Ill iCI
•~"~:,,
MANLEY'S ,::t~t,

Announces Cultomer App~latlon
, Qays during th,1Month of March

All Yard Sales Muat Be Paid In
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day before the ad Is to run, Sun ~

!YteJo~ !leta~

44811418

ftiiCI.

Doore, storm
WlncloM, O.I'IJiilt.

,

1-aoo.t72-aee7

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
&amp; VlCinHy

Monday throu@h Wednesday
wleoupon

Str"Msl S.E. Ohio a Wtet VIrginia

.,; W ·BRYAN PLACE
"• IIIDj)lEPORT 11112-2772
Houre~ Mon..,Frl
•·•;.• Ofllce
~I!O· II·m·- 3:30p.m.
,, VInyl a.AI IIIII. Skiing,
VInyl RtpiiCtmtnt,
,.:
' Wiftd-,BI~
~· ',
liiiU~. Storin '
•,

Sunday aGilion · 2:00 p.m. Friday.
!londay edition · 10:00 a.m. Sol·
urday.

pizza

wlfh tiHJ ,.,. • ..mt:. to IHick It up

· •.__._,.v'
ulred;
1'~ ·~

The Public Ulil.ities Commission of
Ohio has set for public hearing Case
No. 9S·102-EL -EFC, to review the
fuel procurement practices ~nd poli·
cies of Colurnbi!S Southern Power
Company, the o~ratlon .ol its Elec·
tric Fuel C!llllponent and relited
·matters. This hea~ng iS' scheduled
to begin at the ComiJiission off~
at 10:00 a.m. on Marth 26, 1996,

the day before the ld is 10 run.

Mobile Henne Heating &amp; Coqllng

~'

Yard Sele

All Yard Solos Muot Bo Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.

'1.00 off any X-large 18"

--

~

1141·2770.
Lost Whita &amp; Gray Small Mala
Cat, Eastern Avenue Vic inity,

',. *-4405

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLI NE:
~
.
2:00 PM DAY BEFOR E PUBLIC ATION! ~

OFFIQ 992·2259

.,

'

tW¥010212

. ' Colt YI1IYII8 ....

I

,

992-3954 or 985-3418

tm/1-

Lost and Found

Loll· large white dog with larue
black spo11, black ears. male,
Racine wlcinity, ~Sampson · , 61-4·

Free.Eatlmltte

-.

PUIUC NOTicE
The Mllfll County
Council on Aging wlllch Ia •
prlvote
nonprofit
oorporotlon, Intend• to
oubtnlt on oppllcMion for •
oopltol gront under the
provlolono ol 41 USC
8eotlon 11310 o1 tile Federal
Trenalt Act to provide
tnnoportatlon nrvlu lor
the atdorly ond . dlllllltd
wlttlln 'lltlp County. Tht .
irant oppllootlon will
rtqUIII ont (1) till
Plltltnger ttondord mini-

ChHhlre,Oh
(814) 367-o268
FtN E.UmaiN

31111-11181 • .

60

Gllllpolls

"

Public Notice

WE HAVE A·l TOP SOIL FOR SALE

Home. e...-.o7«.
Part l!lb Puppy. 8 Monlhs Old To
Good Home. 814-3811 11304., e1 ..

&amp; VlclnHy

"
"

(3) 21; (4) 1; 2TC

Owner: Ronnie Jones

Nice White Female Car To Good

~~:.~:::

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

Meeting
Tuesday, March·26, 7 pm
PVH Dining room
Low-Fat
DemonstraliQfl
Public '~lleloome

Umeatont, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

Mill BNgle, appro•. amos old.

70

"/ Rooo,ilnllllt
lnluran - IExplrllnCIII

k
ceoh. Ho- Natlonill
81
raoorvoolho right to llld
thl aale and or to ram~
ony or oil ttemo lrom
11 tt ..Ytlm'o.
11
(3) 2J, 28;
(4) 1, 4. I, 11,

Alzllelme1rs &amp; Related Dl&amp;orders
Suppon Group Meeting
Thursday, March 28, 1 pm
. Pleasant Valley Nursing and
Rellablletalion Center
304-675-5236 for in!ormatton

20 Years Experience • Insured

IO good

·304-l82-.

Room Addltlona
Siding, Roofing, Plllol

=toW:/::.~::. A

-------------

uflrr Pilfe&lt;E CONTRACT
llilllni Doti311!1M ·
Staled propoHl• wlllllt
ocetptlcl
from • 11 t prequollfltd bidder•
1 tho
Offici of Contrlctl, Room 1tl of the Ohio Dlpa!tmllnt T 1'11neportatlon,
0 I
.Cotumbuo, Ohlo, u11111 10:00 §
Aprti 10,11ia ;:
lor tmprovomenta In:
Atlleno, G• illI, Guernny,
Hoekt-,
... M'IC•· llonr~•·
p
llorgon, ond
No Waahlngton
te, erry,
VInton
countlu, ·. Ohio lor
l..provlng Hcttolll ATH-33t~:'v=·::.-·~~~=
vlllogee lly opplylng flet
drying ,..,.1111111 merklng.
"Tht dote 10t for
completion ol thlo -rk
ehlll 111 •• HI forth In the
...,
1 • Pll
bl.,..1ng propoeo ·
no
ond Speolllcottone ora on
lilt In the DePIIrtment of
TronaportatlonJERRV
'
DIRECTOR
TRAN8PORTATION

184inlor PlctC.llll82-7747
Wnlrdfyt -lfllr s pm
W.Uncta -anytime

WE OfFER GENERAL HAULING

~. ~~v::.;=.·n.

81H4e 82110.

:.J lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll ll l lllll l ll lllll ':

Columbua, Ohio
Oftleo o1 ~-"
Utili Copy Number IIIH47 .

VIII.

614-742-2193
_!f,N
... .

1

. l'otFN8EIIfmatao

llodgo PoloriL ". . .. . .
All Hlillcl .lllclo 1111111 -.

Serial

oQroupt ofemlly
..ndlwldull

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding

Houaa Repair a
RomocltUng

llld1 lor the •

::..:=,.

I (Enpgllillnta)

JONES' TREE SERVICE

. SERVICE

0

~n~ p~ona~ buo~n•• ~~
~- •n • ocon
Tho llet·l 1 Count,
Council on •glng lnvH••
oommento and propoaalo

oAnn.,._...
·oColipli

32124 Happy .Hollow Rd.
MlddleP,Oit, Ohio 46760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickle$

..On•..Sit. 1o-8

Public Notice
PubUc Notice
Public Notice
Tht
r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t~~~~~~~~~~?.~~i~~~i
doolrao to
N~!,.TOOF:RS
Of'
TRANIPORTATION
Columllue, Ohio

......

· ·'P.rom
lresses
levi's

j~

==I

POMEROY, OHIO
Twh Removal - Commercial or Rnldentlll
Septic T1r1k1 Cleaned &amp; Portable Tollttl Rented.
Dally, wttidy &amp; monthly rentllll'ltll.

,VIfd~

Portable

, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , Loving ahort haired small male

MODEll SUrrA!IOI

,....... a•••, ••,

SAWMILL

Sliver .B ridge PIID
614 446 4462

thinking about jailhouse culiine.
"The name of the game. now s
feed them and schmooze 11\em," s
David · Waksman, a ·oade Coun
prosecutor and former Ne~ rork C .
police officer. .. .
"If you keep a guy in 1'\lSitody
he is hungry and you
you have deprived
and that is illegal."
Police, at the request Qf. prciS~:t!·
tors, routinely wri~ down evc:rytllillR
they feed defendants. sh~·~~=;~
they corroborate it with a pi

....u

H&amp;H -

A~ba&amp;~n~·&amp;

Police trad.e fast 1
food for confessions

''Anthem...

ol
Troneponatton,
Columbuo, Olllo, untll10:00
Lm
Wlclntldoy, April 10,
11111orlmpro•omontotn:
Gtolllo, Hocking, llelga,
Monroe, llorgon, Noble,
VInton ond Withington
ccuntlte, Ohio for
Improving Hctlone GAL-72.205 ond vorloue, State
Route 7 end vorloua, lly
HerblckiiiSprtylng
"The doto l~t lor
completion ol thlo work
ohoU 111 11 Ht forth ln the
bidding ·propoaot.• Pion•
ond Bpecl11cltlono art on
ing the Australian outback after a file In the Dtpartmlnl of
See. Some of us do make it big nuclear holocaust.
Trllneporta11on.
time. Withlhatinmind,dokeepsmil__
JERRYWRAY
ing.
LOS ANGELES (AP) _ Eric
DIRECTOR OF
Roberts
'I the fi 1 h · 1 1 Y
TRANSPORTATION
wasn
ITS c mce o P a
Moroh as, 1111
a warm, sensitive, loving man dying Aprtl1, 1111
of AIDS.
---:-:--:-:-:--:-~· "This character had to be likable,
Public Notice
and I don't remember Eric as .likable
NOTICE TO
in 'Star 80' or 'Runaway 'frain,"' said
~-·-s
.............. '""
The Community Calendar is meeting.
Randal Kleiser, the director an d
a..11c1 PrOP!»&amp;ale for Ill•
··published as a free service to nonscriptwriter for "It's My Party," P.vlng, curll conatructlon,
POMEROY -- TOPS OH570 based on the d!lllth of a .close friend. ;:.r.;:!~.f:.:',"J:!r.:;
profit groups wishi.ng to announce ,
·:meetinl and spec:ial events. The meeting Tuesday, 6 p.m. at !he Car- "But that's because I had never seen P'ro•.ut will lit ractlvtd 11y
calendar is not designed to promote penters Hall with weigh-in at 5 p.m. this side of Eric."
the,...'llelga. County
·sales or lund raisers of any type.
Roberts play.ed a psychotic hus- Commlaelonero ot .their
· Items are printed as space permits "WEDNESDAY
band who killednis wife in 1983's olflco It tho !ll•te• County
MIDDLEPORT-· Feeney Bennett "Star 80" and was nominated for a Courthouot, Pomeroy, Oh!O
'and cannot be guaranteed to run·a
. actor
·
Oscar· for hi s ro Ie as 45788
unti11D:OO
o.m., April
Post
128, American Legion, 6 p.m. supportmg
'specific number of days.
, 1-.
Incl. then at .t :00
1
dinner Wedne~day followed by Post an escaped ~onv1c
·t m
· "Runaway p.m. ot oold olflea opo......
--~
Everlasting services. Auxiliary mem- Train" in 1985.
;;,mlliDAY
ancl rucl aloud.
TUPPERS PLAINS ·• Lebanon bers encouraged to attend.
Roberts said he was typecast durPllno, Speolllottlona, tnd
llld
forme
108'/of•
Ill
.. Township Trustees, Monday, ? ·p.m.
ing a period in his career when he 11 the
office
thoHCured
Mllll•
POMEROY
-Wildwood
Garden
· of 1ucrauve
· but.unsaus·
·in the township building.
too.k ~ senes
County . Comml01lo. ntrt.
Club, 1 p.m. home of Evelyn Hollon fying roles.
Eooh llld muat lie
~· rOMERdY -- Meigs County Vet"But I found that money didn't IOcomponlldllyattMroblcl
·
In on IIIIOUm ol100%
SALEM CENTER-- Meigs Local bring me happiness
;erans'Service Commission, 7:30p.m.
either," he said. bOnd
o1 the bid omount with 1
~onday at : the Veterans Service Board of Education regular meeting "Now that I know real ha1lpi~1ess." l aurtJY Htlolactory
the
WedneSday, 7 p.m. at Salem Center through my family, I want
·office, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
qual- oloroealcl llolge County
Elememary School.
ity films agai~."
Commloolonera ~r by 1
certlfllcl ehiCk, or ltttar ol
.. MI()DLEPORT -- Revival at the
MIDDLEPORT-The
Middleport
erwciH upon • .IIOI'nnt bank
~o~ Baptist Church, Grant St~t •.
In tht amount ol not ltoe
Ceramic
class
offered
Literary
Club,
2
p.m.
Wednesday
at
~Middleport, 7 p.m. each evenmg
thin 10% 'of tile llld omoum
The
RiverbendArtsCouncil,
MidIn fovor ol the IIOrt..ld
'·Mtinday through March· 31. Rev. the home of Mrs. Dewey Horton.
C0 u nt Y
Mrs. Eldred Parsons will review, dleplin, will sponsi&gt;r an Easter ceram- 11 0 111 1
..Charles Stansberry,.evangelist.
Commtulonere.
lid bondo
,.
"The Language of Life, a Festival of icdassonAprill from6:30to9p.m.
oholl
be
accompenltcl
by
· The project will be painting a ceram~ ..RACINE-- Southern Local Board Poets" by Biil Moyers.
Proof
ol
Authority
.of
tht.
ic basket or two ceramic boxes with
"of'Educatioil, 7 p.m. Monday at the
THURSDAY
Easter bllnny inserts. Cost is $25-$30
' high s~hool.
·
CARPENTER·· Revival, Thurs- which includes all supplies needed to
·, Run.AND -- Rutland Garden day, Friday and Saturday, 7 P·'!'· at complete the project. Sandy Carna::club, Miinday, 7:30p.m. at the home the Carpenter Baptist Church, State han at Countrys.ide Ceramics, 992Route 143 with evangelist John 2289 is handing regiStration. The
:0 r Mrs. Pauline Adkins, New L1ma
Elswick.
Singers; Russ and the class is limited to 15 .and registration
.. Road.
Gospel Tones on Thursday, Sunrise deadline is March 29.
":ruESDAY
on Friday and Saturday, and Faith and
.
' · RACINE -- ·RaCine Area Com- · Dan Hayman on Saturday.
Revival services announced
·,rnunity, Orgal\ization meeting Tues· The Rev. Charles Stansberry,
POMEROY -· Lenten services of pastor of the French City Baptist
.-day, •6':30 p.m. at Star M1ll Park.
' ·. .
~)
the Meigs Ministerial Association Church in Gallipolis, and chaplain at
~. . RACINE-· Mc(askjlls workshop, will be held Thursday, 7:30p.m. with the Gallipolis Developmental Center, ·
'1 p.~. Tuesday at Sout~Jern 'Hig_h the Rev, Glen MfCiung to be speak- will be sp~;aker . at. revival services
er. Good Friday services April5 at the Monday through March 31, 7 p.m. at
,;~chQol
,
Sacred Heart Catholic Church, the Hope Baptist Church, Grant
~: cHESTER ., Chester Township Pomeroy. Collections to go to assist Street, Middieport.
··' triJstees, special mectmg, Tuesday, 7 emergency needs of Meigs CounThe minister gradua~d from
tians . ·
'
, at the Chester town hall.
Wellston High School in 1972, from
Rio Grande College in 1983, and
POMEROY -- 'Meigs County attended Southeastern Baptist TheoLibrary Board of Trustees, Thursday, logical Seminary of Wake Forest, N.
1 p.m.
C. He has pastored churches in
Frankfort and Huron. He and his family reside at Bidwell.

° °

•

Others the pair have interviewed George l&gt;{cOovCIJI; and Bt~n ~
include the writers Studs Thrkel and and Jerry Greenf~eld, founders of Ben
Hunter S: Thompson, former . Sen. l &amp; Jerry's Ice ~am.

NEW YORK (AP) - Michael
Stipe hasn't quite figured out what
the American dream is supposed to
be.
"I think it's like canned peas and
corn," said the R.E.M. singer. "And
everything's perfect - Formica
!:Ounters, and Mom dresses like
Mom, and Dad dresses like Dad, and
smokes a pipe, and everybody has
opportunity.
''is that right? Is that pretty
good?" he said in response to a 'question posed by 26-year-old fihnmakers Shainee Gabel and ·Kristin Hahn.
11le two have interviewed 60
Americans for a film and book about
indigenous visionaries called

.;1,,., ' ·

.
..

llult
.. U..1a ••• am

·'-"'

--

•,

I, I

~Ohio

4"

Sfionod Plnlillll Fllh, Mull Ill

Kopt Alono, 814&lt;141-1127.

-

.

Pllnf., E-UIIvt 98Crotioy, ~
Qalllpcih' l!tlly Trtbu.,., CUI I
l'hlld Avonue, golll,.ll'!.

m

• •1.

·~

'

-v

.

,

�•

March25,1•

' Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally 'Sentinel• P • 9
. .

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

...

NEA CrOIIWOrd Puzzle
ACROII

PHU.IJP
ALDER

4ZIIodyof
la\ow'de
42111111

1 Dlllllned
4 l1c

~=

Ford F·:SO, Eddie huer
Ed., :IOQ e'lia., -1~ .000m1., tiC.
cond., ,,7,000 OBO. 304·175!il1l
;

11

\'ll911doy ""·
,_
h H,ating

I

Air Conditioning

345,000 Income potential. Call t 800-513;4343Ext. 8-9388.

.

tK 5
•&amp; 5

4. 1111 .. 4\'ID.
t14-W2-4111 .
LIU Chevy 09!W'Iiii0n ~4 Ton
350. Dual Air. l.iltornailc. Super
Nice, ••.eoo_. P,80,_11•·441 ·

.-. ' !100.

r

,·

,,'d h101hlnk

the· Academy

San lOt C~o Oenle! At B14-446·
500t..Or ,Stop By To F!ll Oui·An.
ApplicaOan.,EOE. ·

•s

tA 4
•A Q 4

lhll--.
......-- ~,

31

INSURANCE ,

A Job And Ap·
;~~kiing~ Careerl Rental
1 The Sell MoFIELD ADJUSTER Good Oppor~
For
tunily F~r Claims Adjuster With '"'"""'co
Fill An OpenAt Laaltt Til lea ¥taro' Experi· I
In Our Local
ance AdjU&amp;dno MuiHina Claims.
. We Offer Good Pay, MedlExcellent'Benefit Package. Send. cal lnturance, Paid Training, Paid
ReSllma,·Wkh Covet Letter, To:
y,catlona, Pratt Sharing, And
401K . You Muat Have A Valid
.,. PERSONNEL .DIRECTOR
Orlvaro Llconao And Ba Able To
'UitiOedQt-Oolnll.t~Oomjlony
Work Full-Time. Apply In Parson
. P.O. Box 111
At Either Loeadon: SOH River PtaBucyrua,' Ohlo~111
za, Or 21e SR #7 N., Silver Bridge
E.Q.E. ·
Plaza,Gallipolia
!ian Mtchanlcelly Inclined, Will·
1.-g To j.8arr .W a•h•r &amp; Dryer
Repair, Muoi Be Ablt To Deliver
ALIO,
CalL
A.M.
114·446·
1'398, 78
Vi"le8al2
Sreet.
Gallpolis,

&amp; Phone Number To P.O. Box

::::::::::=====I
512, Gallipolis. OH •563t .

_

180 Wanted To Do

tO PI!OI'lE
Local Dla(ributOIIhlp Doubling
Work Fot.. l 10 Poaltlona Availablell
'

Brothers Homo lmprovomonts,
Specializing In Vinyl Siding, &amp;t•·
388-IIW 7• Contact: s-.
Eileen's Pe+sonal Care. Speciallzing in Alzheimer's ·care giving.

Chocl&lt; Thole lncentiwal
/ . F~tt Tratr;ng ~ml
Exciting VacaOanal

Call ua - We can help. 304-782254•.
·

Extra Hours Avallablel

General Maintenance, Painting,

$3XIPatWHkWithWrlt!en

Yard Work Windows Washed

Gutters t:leanad light Hauling,
Commerlcal, Residential, Steve:
61~388-0429.

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your' logl to the mill just call

1la $1100 Weekly /Potential Pro· 304-675·1857.
cualng Mortgage Raiunds, OWn
Houra, Call (909) 715·2300, Ext.
t351·, (24

.
Home &amp; office cleaning, ask lor
Ali&lt;:ia, 614n742-3504.
Proleaalonal tree Service. ·com-

1

plete Tree Cere, Buckel Truck

' Service -50 Ft Reach, Stump Removal, Free Eallma:es l Insurance, 24 Hr. EmtlfQancy Sarv.ice -Call And s._ver No TrH Too
Big Or Too .Small I Bidwell, Clt1io.
8)4-388 8841, 614·367-7010.
ence

Sun

gree In

letred. Uust
And PreVIous
Computt:ra And
Processors. Good Interpersonal A(ld

Oral Communlclllon

Skill~ .

Vall~1

Nursery School.

Childcare lloi,·F 11m-5:30pm Aqas
2·'K. Young School Aoe Durtno
Summor, 3 Deya per Week Mini·
""m 61.~·31157. ,

A Trained Equestrian !Certified

Must. Send letter· Or . ln(ere.st Ferrier. Will Train, Givft leaaons,
And Resume Berore Ap"'ril 1. 1 . 1 Board. And Shoe HOrses, For

To Phyllis Muon, PHR. Oirec:or

or Human.~Aesourc:es.

Unlveraity

Of Rio Granda, ()ampua 8oK .F27.
Rio Grande. DH 45874. EEOIAA
E..-or.

opporlunlty ·Uanagament ·And
O.V.Io-nt Oo~ny Currtt'ltiJ
E'pandlng, LCJO!olr!o FOJ M._
ment Trainees, M·S, 10·4, 814·

:J1!7·7110.

,.,

'I

'

MOle lnlormaaon, MaMaw Angel,
8·1(-258-i!IOI .

Wlil Do ln:erlor Or Exlorior Painl·
lng, fleasonable Ratea, Expe'ri·
enced. References, For Free Esti·

motel, 614-245-5755.
Will Mow .Lawns. Dp Odd Jobs,
Sand Reoponoe To; C~ 309, c/o
Gallipolis Oaily Tribuna, 825 Third
A"""e· Gollpollo; OH 45131 .

Patlltlme Cashier nHdad, must
bG 18yrs old. Cr8~d's _Grocery.. Will Pain: Your Ho,.. Interior Or
Henderson, WV. 30«7!»1104.
Exterior, 1.14-245-88111.
'
Poa:al &amp; Goll'l jobs $21 IHr +

4•

Receptionist wanted - medical ol·
fice. OJflce experlenc.a required.

Pteue rtq~~lre at 304-675-5677.

·

mil for Sale

1

for Rent
,oblle
ttomts

• .... of . . .,.

.Yula

=~=41=~·

Arnold14 Use a lltraw

DOWN

::r..·:

·-=--·.....
,;:,,.. .c
1'

I

club

Heighta, equipped kltc:hen, lull
baaement, heat pump. nice lol

ciooe 10 ochool and hospllal, one
car eeraoe with brHzoway, 8 14·
992-311911ter5pm.
Near Rio Grande, 1floor home,

3bedroom, 2bath, Iaroe lamliv

room wlfireplaca, 2car garage,

Addison &amp; Cheahlra, 614·367- 520
7802.
----------2 Bedrooms. 8 Miles Out SR 218, 44 Ruger Redhtwk Maonum Pit-.
$210/Mo., Plus Deposit, Reier· jiOI, SIOiniOII Steel Willi Scope,
ences, 614·••8·8172, 6U-258· 614·-50.

ty. 304-6~

·
Nice
home
In 8acina,
bullding ~ill house
small Iaroe
buslnaaa,
a:ao • one car garage. fenced

:-:-·- : - - - - - - - . . : , - 3 bedroom mobile home outal'de

of Po~TM~roy, 614-892a5039.

·

Two and three bedroom mobile

Re loading &amp; Ft&amp;hlno Suppllla.
Live Bait &amp; Llcanae. Crawlord'a,

Hand«oon,WV.

530

1~~;~;~~E511979

~

Antiques

i

for Sale

--ly.

-----+--

Concrete &amp; Pl~atlc Sapdc Tanka, 1115 M•aaey Ferguson Tractor;
300 Thru 2,000 GaLiano Ron Very Good c,ndltlon. Runt ErEvans Enterprises, Jackl:n, OH celien~ 614n742·2457.
1·800-53NI528.
Ford 3000 dleoll trec:or. 304-

'

210

-PEANUTS

Turkey, 'Archery, G!'nl, Ammo,

chrysler LeBaron stauon'
Wagon, New· Banory, Fluno Good;
yard, out of flo1od area, at king sewer, wal8r and lrath included,
Buy or tell. Riverine Antlquea. 6 We.ko Old American Eokimo 71,100 Mileo, $100, 814·U8·
$47,000814n949·211D4.
. 614-992·2t67.
1124 E. Main Str..t on Rt. 124. Spitz Puppiea, Call Alter 5, 8t4· 1036·
·•
Throe bedroom homo in Middle· ~440~--:------- Pomeroy. Hou~o: M,T.W. 10:00 :.245;:,:&amp;.:.03::.:3.:.;_ _ _,;__ _ _ 1e7g Oldomobile Tornado, ao1a,
por:, ~aemant. F.A.N .G, lurnacb
Apartments
a.m.. to 8:00 p.m., Sunday, 1:DO to
1
AKC Reglotered, Shqw Ouallty 1200. 6 14-992-3219.
6:00p.m. 814n992-2!i211.
wothaie,$211,500,814n992-8t54.
for Rent
Malo Cocktr Spaniol Puppy, i884 Niuan s.lttra, dOor, au ·
- - - - - - - - - - · 1 1 and 2 bed100m apartments, lur- 540 Miscellaneous
Good
Bloodline, Ercelltnt Mark· lomailc, oood tlr~· very oood
320 Mobile Homes
niohtd aod uniurniohed, aecurity
lnoa.
lllli:k
IWitl:e &amp; Tan In ColOr,
MerchandiM
DOle Of
Birth: 81311115, Houoebro- tranoportadon, $1 0, 814-742deposit required, no pets, 6U·
400
992·2218.
'
·
1910 Waldoq articuladng loader, . llon,l14-3711-2728.
:=-~~;.;;.;;;:;:....-:--:---::-:-li8H
Dodtt Lancer, 4 Door,
Double Wide Repo·a. Save Thou· 1 Bedroom Super Nlcel Naar • wheel drive, diesel, bucket and
sandsi3Q4..738-72GS.
Holzer's $~68fMo. Plus Utilities, torka, will lifo 40001Do.. waloha Good Home Onlv: 3 Year Old Sport, 4 c~. 5 Speed, PtS. PI
Mole Black &amp; Whlto Cocker B, Air, Tilt. Crulae, Sunroo~ Runt
12x80 mobile home br sale, two lease /Deposit Required, 814· 11000 ~0 $6!00, 814-992a411 1.
Spaniel. AKO Reglotered, Good &amp; Drnm Gteail $1,200, 61•·3711448 29 57
Sire, 614-3711-2728.
bedroom·, air conditioner, good • ...,: -,.._· - - - - - , - - - 20 Place Cookware Brand Niw In =:,.:.;,_:.:.:...:.:.::.:.,~---1
2645.
c:onc:llion. 614-992-5323.
1 Bedroom, Ni~ely Furillshed, 8011. Lifetime Guanlnteel StainRegistered Mlnleturo lb+kies, •
"1e=-ae:-:M"'o_n_te_C:-.,-,-o,-to-.OOO--M-IIn-,
leu
Steel,
Will
Deal!
8141-387:umo Wittd~or, 14,70, 3 Bedroom, Cantril Heal, N:., AI UtiitiH Fur- 7780.
2 -5~~
Pdl., tiL
Wormed, Everythl~ N-,
"erv
.,.Shots,
-1 7105
• • Nice,
2 Batha, Electric &amp; Gao, OA, Wall nlahod Excep: Electric, Private
Vat
814
~~~;;;:-;;~··~~~-~-~~-;tu!;;:l ta.soo, WI Oonlldor Trade-Ins,
Water &amp; County Water, Building, Pafkito
-4-48-21102.
281t. enc:loaed c:ar trliler. 1871
-":-4-:-:2_4_5-.:.5320=·- - : - - - - ,
Garage, Garden; Pasture, 2 Bedroom (Deluxe), Large Llv- P~ymouth Scamp drag car. 188e ~chnauzor pupploo, ·
Grand Sire; also
1887 Chryo 181 Le B•ron, ·0 ooo_,
St.. ned-ln Back Porch &amp; Buill· ingroom, Fully Equipped Kltcha!l, Suzuki 250 4-wheeier. 304-67$- Champion
dill, linlt toy a, AKC. ahots
On Sunroom, Hannan Trace Ela- ornlng Area, Full Bath, Watha/ 3773.
OOndilion,lnaldt &amp; o.:, 120,ooO
-.ned, t14-117-3404.
Mikoe, ,,,50D,I14n3711-2112D.
meniB.ry, 2 Acres +1-, Very Good Dryer Hookup. Garage, AC, 112
Condllion, $32,000 No Land Con- Mile West On SR 588 814·446· 8 Foot Sola And 2 Matchlno
1017 Ford Tempo, motor rt·
Choirs. Green /Gold, Very Good
21102.
.
tnlet814-256al8t3.
plaoed, new clutch. needo lront
Condlllon. S3DD. OBO 114-441 1984 14x70, rwo bedroom, 2 lull 2 beclraom apartment in Pomeroy, 0813.
end-.304n112-3t41 .
570
baths, ee• F.A. furnace, on ranted
e - •-•
io~ S8500, 114·9112o4t35.
no petl, L4-•••~-lirll,
8'Xil' Tilt Gao Trailer Llghll,
:104a
, .•
2bdrm. apta., total electric, ..p- Brakea, Sldeo, $700, 114·448Oonoola
'
1891 Brookwood II .14x78 S1!ed· pliancealurniihtd,loundry rOOm 7140.
Wonto,d
I'Ooms, 2 Baths, Dishwasher,· CA. facilities, close to achool in town.
1988 Chovy Colebrlly, 4 cyl., 4
Deck, 15 Fr. Above Ground Pool, A.pp~cationa available at Village, A iOO·pooe hord bound book, Paymenll on Piano. Sea
door, runs oxcelltn~ $11100; 1987
Primastar Satellite Dilh, New Out· Green Apta. il49 or call 614-992- DUNMORE'S W'-R·1774, II HIOD·2118-e21&amp; Oldsmobile Cuduo Caiola, V-8, 2
available ~om CtcM B. S..tlt Jr.,
building On 112 Ar.re Lo~ Serious 37t 1. EOH.
PO Box 1774, Midlolhlan, VA
inquiries Only' Please, 814·258·
· runt vary good, •1100: 814CONSOLE PIANO
992-2191.
8391 l811V8 Message.
2bedroom, utilities included, sin- 23113 lor $25 plua $2 S &amp; H. The
reaport-partyWI- to
1995 14 x70 Clayton 3 Badrooma. gle or double occupancy. 304- Bailie of Point Pleasant was lite
, _ lOW flll\"ftly peymanll on
IPU Marcury Couoor XL,-·
maln event of thia brief wat The
plar-o,
Calli-800-2118PS, PB, lr., PW, :102, new tlreo,
2 Baths, CA, All Electric, Under• n3-to0ll.
book contains ma~. photos and
8218.
au:omatic, $3500, 814·848·2045
pinning, Skirting, Extended Wfr· 3 Room Apartment, Trash Paid, ....lor ......
or I1•·948-2Jl'11.
ran:y, Other Eltlraal $19,500, After NO PETS, On 554 Near Porter,
Ullrillht Plano For Sail taliO, Call
=8~P.=M~.s~,~·=·~·e~.a.~15~--r-~--l-6_1•_~
___1t_oo_.____________ ~~,::,;,c;;.~~.:a."'o stnllla · A!loi&amp; P.M.I14 Ul 4245.
1891 Oldo 88 3.8 Auio, .PW, PO,
New Tlreo. 61•·388·1304, 6t4lll.56-112 Second Avenue, Gallipo·
Weaver upriQht piano, good _38_1,;t98.:.:,'.:.lia. 2 Bedrooms. AC, Appliances, Baaaball Card Collecllcn Far cond.,ts00.304nii2-21K
$-&lt;00/Mo., Utilidn Paid. $200 De- Sale, 8t4·245-55tll LtiVt Meta
1882 Blue Chevy Luminia, Ga·
po~\ Roloronca~ 814n4o48-2129.
sage.
raoe Kept, Excellent Condli!On,
~AHr,1 ~U f 'H II::S
60,000 Miloo,.$8,500, 614·258·
Furniolfed Apartment 1 Bedroom, Boots By Rodwlno. Chippewa.
8215.
&amp; LIVbTOCK
~..;;,.::"'""":'"":''C"'""':""':--:"....,--IS2951Mo . Utilities Paid, 920 Tony Lam•. Guaranteed loweat
Four1h A~enue, Gslllpolia, 814- Prk:eo At Shoe Cafe, Galllpolll.
1992 convertible, Chryolor Le
...&amp;-3844 Aher 7 P.M.
Baron, axe. cand., fiO,OOO. 304·
Carpel 8. Vinyl Sole: Mollohan
87"787.
ClrPt1.1,81H41la7444Rt.7N.
610 Flrm.Equlpmtnt
homes, star uno at S24D-S3oo.

Bualnesi
Qpportunlty

175-22311.
Oianey area. 5 days, Ill hotel

,
INQTICEI
With Leads Benell:a. ·Apply AI OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
do busiFrench City Prass, 423 S.co"nd recommenda
wltlt
and
""""'"· Gallipo jia.
tho
Socl•l Wolkera, Now Hiring $23 1
Sales. Person Commission Agent

nights, use onytlrlle. Paid $310,
tel SIDD. 304-353-0131.
.
Sc:oatera
And
Wheetchalfl, New IU••d, Van 1
Electric

Oar Li" Lnotelltd, SIO~. Uli
Chalro, Cali For Brochure, 814:
4-48-7283.
Eli0fci11 equipment ..W .. , _
$40. Body D'f Jllte $75. ElorciM
bil&lt;o SIS. Saara Alpine Tracker
304-87S-fl787.

Hf + Benefits, On The Job Tra.i li•

lng To App~ In Your Area, 1·100·
339..150. '
'
'

No:w hnk Repoo.

DnLy 4ltft. .Siill

tn-~ 304-755-7181.

Price Buaterl New 1'4x7D, 2 or
3br. Only $995 down, $195/lnonth.

sea.

Free delivery &amp; setup. Only at

Gthi Round Balert, Mower Con·
dltlonert. Dlac Mowtf&amp;, Disc
Mower Condl:lonert, Forage
Equipment Saleo And Sanilco.
Alllzer Farm Supply, 114·245·
51113.

MA'AM.:TIIIS ISM'&lt;
. NO, I{~ WON'T CAUSE
TROlJSLE..
.

i978 FLH Harley O.viaon Lo:a Ofi
Extru, !full See 112,000, 1141
318-8412.
,
I
1987 Suzuki RMSO ..eood condi-1
lion, with one riding outfi~ S900,1
wilt ttadlt
Ilia..,, 814·'

for.,..,_
7••.-- . ,-

..... ...
..~

~-

.

f

!900 Katana Suzuki Black 75(1,l
$2,500, 814-4411·1~ ,' .-· ·
!
1993 KX 125 In' Quod OOncli~On.l
Si,9DO, 0110, Cd Brion; 614-25&amp;88511.

750

BOats &amp; Motors
tor Sale

14 Ft. V·Bonom Baaa Boat With
Traitor, New Trailing Motor, &amp; l!lat·
tory, All ~c~aooriea, 61~·448·
geso, w, •
'"
·o:
'
,
-..,.....:..,..._,._ _._+ '"".,;
t•ohp inboardloutboofd ·· uFd
.
.
liotl,
oood cond., open
bow, .,..
comploto'..,_, &amp; tlallet $4,000:
aflat 5pm a
:
A981 Ni:ro 110 TF 1883 1Sd
Johnoon Hot Foot, Jack Plalei
Depth Finders E.C. l14a381l
011\3.-.. .'It
.:

- M~GA · .

g

I·

..

THE BORN f:.OSER

..

eo!,

11. '

w.. re:v~ (,(Jo,l) rv..'MoT ,._ .

'100 ~ I'/&lt;\ (il)Kt-.1"- ~WE.. 1\

(:}.)'(I ['() AA.n'..1D AAIJE. ID ~E

Alito -~ •

~

AV£ Oti..OCK.~ ()I MY
CJ.LV~ ?' r-::::o---,

mTI-6

~~~~-1ft

.

BuiidinQ llin .wlth road lrontaee

Hck of N~

Haven. rural water:

and .llnone~ng availablo. :104·882·
28811.

Five acr,a,

aerator, n•ar
Racine,l~e.ooo c:an finance with
11·~9-2025.

'half--

790

Cemptr8 &amp;
Motor-Home'

Cempgrourid Memb81'ahip In·
~ludeo ~II Major Alllllatlona,
Nearly SOD RRortt,, $4.00 INJO~ I
US'- &amp; Ca"''de, Sacr;fico -$~25 ) .

52~

Andnton
.J
53 IINalllntwo
5I Tn:llor
"
570neday-ll:na
·51 Noles

,.
'F K T

AKGJ

AIIEH

TVEPKT

XNGSMVEI

EJJPBJIIIH

F G K K A

AN I B

a

PVJ

XBKSFJ

S K

AVCJ

LKBRJGI?'

WM. S

BKNLF.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'My rnotht: was against me tteing an actress Introduced her to Frank Sinatra."- Anglo Dickinson.

untiW,

.

'

I
I

ACONER
' '

TAVEL

I
''

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

6 UNSCRAMBlE
ABOVE lETtERS
TO GET ANSWER

c. . ..A ... .
!&gt;.

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1-tQ0-231-032&amp; . .

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S~ RVI CFS

The Trrosurr You

the
Sovinrs l'ou'U Find I~ 1111

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ClasSI(Itd Section.

j.

iia,iOo--::-.;;;;;-·"'-._,7J
'

SCUM-LETS ANSWERS
Unsc;ld · Lover - Friar · Bounce- FELONIES
Politicians would rather have their weaknesses and
Imperfections made public than the:r FELONIES .

-1 MONDAY

dioall. Gohl grinder/mixer. OWl·
:anna 7tt haybina, 1211. l!lntpott
dioc, all good cond . :104·2734215.

'"

MARCH 251

(Part 2 oi2)(CC)

(Part 2 ol2) ICCJ
Gracious living: 1 and 2 bedroom
apartment• at Village Manor and
Riverside Apar\fnents in Middle·

630

LIYMtoc:k

I ~~~;~;.;;.;;
HarH, T.nntiM.. 'W.Iti.tr Mare, r

Ona bedrobm l~irtment in Pt.
"'-"~no Pttl. 814-992·5858.

AriTRO·GRAPH

3 Voar Old Reglftertd Ouar:er

·,:uc·: ' '' 814-448-1ee:l.
'·
r~~'"!' -1 Charolalo Bulla For Sale, Pur, ebrtd, Poiltd, And Ragtllored
Bred For CllvlnO Eua, t14·37t2J44.114-448-0f71.
.
'

Twin Rlvora Tbwer, now accepting
applications lor 1br. HUO '"bslda
lzed opt. fer elderly and 1\andicappod. EOH 304-875-18711.

450

~~
. - - ~~~~~can~two
. ~~

Tobacco Ouo• - TOll Ptlct, Bt 4245-$418.
' .'
'

pori. Fro, $232-1355 . Call 614a
981·501!4. Equet Houaino' Opporllnitlea.
( ·

Fumlehld
Rooms

Ratrlowatora,
Washara
Rooms Q rent • wwk or month. And Oryoro, ~II Rtcondltloned
And Up,
. Starting at 11211/mO. Galia Hotel. · And Bau.ranltedl
WI~. I1Uitl141.
114-4-48-tsiiO.
Sleeping room• with Cooking. .' Solofler With Log
Queen Size
Also 1-"ller apac'"e oh rh,.r. .AII Oip hr
hook: upa. c,u oh~r 2:00 p.m .. ltrbad, Mirrored. Ha,dboord, I
.Dr-.. $260. 81 ..11112·54218.
' 304-77s,!le6\........ wv. .
Air
470
Atnt · SPRING SPECIAL : Central2112
'
'
112
Pt!otUre For 2 Horlio, .Gtlllo· Or
M~o• "'"· &amp;14.aae7a02a7, 614·

' DO

NV 10151.

1987 lnlornalional 1900 Serlao
4111 DT, 10 apaed, cobln Cllt!aale,
Hauilno Availabla To And From 102,000 original mlln, ,,4,Soo,
lluoar Creak HorM Sole, SoNr· 81oHII2-3184.
dot """' Itt 814-245-INIID KW.
Tobacco Be.... 1,0118 Pda., Hlt;la
ea:-Bicloler, With Riehl To Rtject
~ny Or AI Bltla. Call By ll110h
a

211t1.11•IIIISD14. ..

,

'· '

..

:Mona

1881 Chaoy C·10 Work

.,

I

I·

I

~ llllfllltllnO jiUIIL!tliil "" ; :nigltlt.lliM you today. • ~ ... qtllitl·
· l __ ,. , liqned, LWPiv with • brill yw or no; do not

(~ 21-Apftl tt) .......at..

1.18RA (llept. 23-0ct. 23) Others wilt not

· reapec~ your.- or suggestions today

It you do not ahow an int.rest in their
opinions . In order 10 be respected, one
mu.t be reopectlul.

I

.

Willi Tool .._ Will Bel For
Olt.114.••• sur
~~

you undersland what to do to ma~e the
relalionshlp work . Mail $2 .75 to
Matchma~er, c/o this newspaper, P.O.
Box 1758, Murray Hill Slation, New York,

TAUIIUI (April._ 20) The poeelblla
BERNICE
1ty ~ gelling away with eomethlng today
BEDE OSOL· ia slim. H you do not do lhlngt: in ..x:ora
dance with your high atandardtl, you w11
not be happr.
GEMINI 1*r 11..June 20) Today, Wyou
move your raeources around and take
too inuch 011t of your budget, you may
lind your firWlcea In a 11a1e o1 dloarray.
. C_ANCER (June 2t•Julr 12) Before
going out on a limb todaY··majce 11ft you
.. Tllll:day, Mcrdl2fll1to8
• • have the tullsuppoll of othal!l- You may
, '·
,
be disappointed It you take 'llielr allea
In the yeaf ahtNid, you might become g11nce lor granllid.
hiYOiiled In -.: IL!illlpt iltl'wlth a fltlnd flit LaO (July 23-Aug, 22) So
who
w11 ~lila bltelc public nesd. Tl!ll.,_ can altiiiUiy IJII OII*S 10 te;t1111 . . -

-

I

..r
48 Clrcua llhelter
51l
.
'

8
&amp; ..... 1'\. ... 1&gt;.
. r,. D "

veniUtl ""'

'

king and lead the heart eight. When
East discards, you do likewise, throw·
ing the club four from your hand."
"Yes, I see," said South. "West wins
the trick but is endplayed. He must either lead a club into my ace--queen or
concede a ruff-andadi6canl, which allows me to ruff in the dummy and discard my club queen. •

BIG NATE

gi:Va1h.

V•

. :.. :~
411 SIMI clllld · •

47 Tllraa/l

(CCJ

.•.•.
'

=~~
~

I

'W.riteclto

'

1101 dill

apr•der, 1400gal. llftdtm axle,

••eo:

;.

from wind

37 . ,...... of

.

11 A~raa MIL, 3 Bedroomo, 2
Bathe, Heat Pu~ RUral \'later, 2
Barna, Pond, Clty 'Schoola, 81•448-0481 , . ' •
.

110, $7,500 each; ~. Private LOti
·~.500 Each · Unrellrlcted,
100x300 Cail614 - 4~8 - 855•. Or
61 . . . . tro,4.

: :.:rt:::c. ._

New aaa tanks. one 1on truck
- .. radiators, ftoorma.,.etc.
0 &amp; R Auto, Ripler, WV. :104-372·
~ill' '1-800-273-113211. .

,7,900. Kaelefo Slrvlca Cent.,,
Sl Rt 87, .Pt PIMoant I Fl~ Rd.
304 9t!i 3174.

SaJ8

&lt;i Lota: 2 Road Frdntage on Rt

....

20c::r

r•

wv 25504. 304-7.11·34qll.

'I o8.5 lt:f111 In M$1 County, Labanon Twp. CaR llordon at l14a
588-2551 .
·•

27--.

Budget Transmiaatona,•Uled JRe.
built; All Types . .Acceaaib" To
Over 10,000 Tranamluion,
114-2•5-5677
'

1993 Ford Ea~orl GT, Bleck,
Sharp, Call Or Leave Me•••o•.
814-25&amp;-12187.
.

International Farmatl 701 w/c:ab,

'-

illlelcl

3•
Paaa
Pass &amp;•
AU pall
Opening lead: • K

drawing the milaing trump and rulllng
the heart three in hand, cash your dia·mond ace, play a diamond to dummy's

..

1895 Pole ria SL 750 2 1,1,. 1/eats,
&amp; Troller. Sllll Under Warranty,

'760

lnllruiMnt
23 ntoughl
,.
24 lelnillll

use of dummy's heart eight. After

1981 Wavarunn 0r, "U'Ima!l&amp;l
150 ~ODD 11.._,17511:,
814n~7518,

22 lsak•

deduct."
"What do you mean?"
"Well, you should have made better

--232!1.

1882 SUndance 33,DOD Mileo, 5
Speed, Air, Atking $4,800, et•·
448-3625.

lnt~tnatlonal 'Farmoll 108 dleael.

~----~­

I

1994 lnnsbrook, fully loaded, iota.
of extras, 18fl. Serious ]nqulrl" ,
oliy. 00,.875-8903.
j

1889 Ford lluatang LX, 2 door,
ttatchbac:ll, vary Low mliH, • i:yt.
automatic, wUI &amp;ell tor to1n, et•·
902-4111 .

l.

COLOR THE
SK'i BLUE

1

•

~~-

'·

I ALWA'iS

I,IE'LL JUST- SIT I-IERE
AND COLOR,TIIE PICTURES
IN lollS COLORING SOOK ..

:

lOci•
201onof-- '

motn 124.900. 301 NH oLurry

Qak Wood Homes, Barboursville,

a50 . Lots'. Acre~e \ .

Eaat
PUll

If Fran Lebowitz hy children, they
must be good bridge playen because
she said, " If you are truly aerious
about preparing your cblld for the future, don 'I teach him to subtract teach him to deduct."
Having read that again, I think she
is making a play oa the word "dedllcl."
Yet if she has just abbreviated "deduction," she is certainly right about
preparing anyone for bridge. And de·
duction begins with the openin&amp; lead.
South was sound asleep during the
bidding and play of this deal.
South took what be thought was a
great line of play. He won the heartking lead with dummy's ace, drew
West's trump with dummy's olher ace,
rulfed the heart three in band, played a
diamond to dummy's king and ruffed
the heart eight hi'h in hand. After
cashing botb his mtnor-suit aces, declarer overtook his spade eight with
dummy's nine and played a club to his
queen. However, West woo with the
ldng and returned his third club so that
the defenders scored two club tricks.
South grumbled of course, but North
said, "You ate your key eight and didn't

11 , _ I*YI'

March ·Sptc:lala. Ford tractor
rnodolllliOS, 78hp, 4Wd, dual

OakWOOd Homoi, Nitro wv. 30.·
755-5885.

.330 Farms
. tor

Nordl

ByPbllllp Alder

2 Bedroom ·Mobile Home For
Ren~ S250JMo., Loci:ted Between

In- 8251

West

10 Cllrua fruit ·.-:
11 Csl 111
•

•ca..
• (:eoMr of

Addition
and deduction

14110 2 BodtOOrnt, Total Eloc.-Jc,
.
No Ptll, 1 Mite Soutn Eurtke
78 acres 11\'1 with three bf&lt;lroom, . Rofwonceo, 114-.256-6089,
'
two balh brick home, .three ponds,
pole barn buildlno, two car oa· 2\ Bedroom Furnlohed, On Clay
raga, 614·742-11102.
Chapel Rood, S250/Mo. S250 Depoll~ 814-258--t718, An. 4 P.M.
Four bedroom houae on Mulbarry

FINANCIAL

Beneli!a, No ~xp. Will Train, For

Appl And lnio 1-800-536,30o10.

0

Taxi Drivers Needed, Sand N!lina ground pool, 1.7ac . .Wotoon Reel-

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY II

No Experience Nacesaaryl $500

.a.

•K Q J 10 8 3 2

Soulb

:;~n~~·p~~s.c'::~·rr••~~ ~~·~·~~~.ID~-~,~I!M~tl ol~,the~ BO -nul tber~-~~-lor~l l'HoiEex81~ ·~-~;·~-~~·-~·~~ 420

Interview By Appo intment Only,

• AI IIIII- c

Vulnerable: Both·
Dealer: Weet

RN'I l LPN'o, WYou ~auld Llko
To Be Part 01 ' Health Care
Team Thai P - QuoU:Y Care
To Rotldenll And Have Long ..

can Monday A\814-441-1969. ·

.::r:·=
...
......,
•:!! (...)
.........
...,

11 .

SOUTH

AVON I All Aroaa t Snirley
~·- 304-875-1429.

AgreementToSranl

s

EAST

Q~a~.

om.

a

7
K Q j 10 t &amp; 2 \07 4
tQJ98732
•J 10 9 2

'

I tiL Jeep

. Ooun~ Furnllure. :tD4-t'IUI2D.
Rl 2 N, tlmiiH, Pt PIMNnt WV.
~--------1 -n..Soto:e. Sun 11·5.
Nice clean 2 bedroom. In Pamer· GOOD' USED APPLIANCES
.o~~ for rent or tease witl'l option to ' w11h111 d
1
biJy, HUD accepted, $300 per
• rwero, " rieeratora.
month wlih •-lit, no PI" 114- rangeo. -Sklogo Appllancol. 71
-·
""""
~
Vine Stree~ Call 814·4411· 73111,
~n.-..
1~ 1003188.

Home Typi111. PC users needed.

:

v.nS' &amp; c:wo.

730

;":§ERVICE MAN. CE~TIF,IEO, w1
••minimum 5yrt tMperlenca. Hao:• 'InC &amp; Air Conditioning INSTALL·
' ·l!AiSERVICE MAN,' !111nimul)1 3yrs
experience. Apply t 317 Ohio St.,
Pt Pioel&amp;'l~ wv.

11
nlltl¥a
n
lsi (zllllr.)
11 , . . . apalln 12 . .
a ._.
G Conud'un

• \OA 8 3

EEK&amp;MEEl.

t:::t

1aiU1"z · 1111

•A t I 54

drea, "'IW btaloft, front ouapenokr!.ll2i00,114-742-18DO.

.

u

I

n.w t1r11. new 'bf.aktt, c!tan.
$4500; S, F-150, 8 ely., 4 op., ,_

i
Apply

.. .......

·~--11' •s:Mii
~~~
'?lid ......
Dlile Ill ......

81 ,Dqdof palot,J!a.Vae, topper,
~"'ulred .

••

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AIMne....... • c.

· 14...

~••s

......

Al.-r Ill Pi&amp;iiiiUI fiUIIIt

44 ~~oe~....,
.., Aoiii&amp;IIIIID

..... lwd

iKI't 'N' CARLYLE. by Llrry Wrtp'

...-

........

- .

wll ~ Y\111 on your ~IIIDr llllllr· I VIRGO (Aug, 23 11114 22) 11u11o*1 and
Y1111 aat ""'"" - .~ and ct:illy the piHsu,. :nlghl not mbt well today, ee H
M_!ll, Y9U ~·1 llta your NI!Ofl oanl. you',.lnvOivad with i client, mal\8 Ma1 o1
TfYNigto pilch up IIINOI:en ~? one or' a1 of the 011111'. Di1 nqt c:ombi:" .

/

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) Remain
flexible and keep an open mind today
inalead of saddling yourseH with fixed
opinions. You could loam somelhlng con·

structlv!llrl&gt;m your -rtae.
SAGITTARiuS-(Nov. 23:0oc. 21) Have
fun and enjoy yoursell when playing
garnea,today. Vou may spoil the aclivlty
lor -rona wyou int:rNM the lntenai1y

level.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. Ill Oio·
eretlon will be eaeenllal today If you
a:gue with your mall. H the '"saQOeenno~
Ia !liNd In public, you may oay t:Omlllhlng

that wll damage your Image.
AGI'MIUI (.ll:n. _ , . 111 Strive lor
quality ralhar 111M quanlily In ieganl 10
the jln)jac:ta you MW1t on IOday. Try to do

..... ~do .....

PIICU {fell. IOIIciaiiiD) Thil w11 no1
be a gooCI daY 1o tahe rlllta, tlplt I I'; M
lunda eat'1'llliiMd 1ar een :tlzllllml have
10 be UMd 10 baclt up h Wllglf.

-..,

�•
•

By The Bend

The Daily Sentine
'

'

'

Ohio Lottery

Pege10

Spurs wi.n
14th straight
NBA contest

.

Mond8y, llllrch 25, 1996
'

Jackson calls for nationwide picket

Racism .protests ·1oom over Hollywood's biggest night

BuckeyeS:

6-23-26-32-35
Plck3:
2·HI
Pick 4:
3-7-8-4

'

Sporta, Page 4 ·

By JOHN HORN
AP Entertalmnent Writer

cities, including New York, San Fran- sympathetic to Jackson's effons and want to favor one over the other."
cisco and Chicago, to gather their said he hoped all those attending
Inside the Dorothy Chandler
LOS ANGELES - While the Docks and man:h on their local ABC would wciar rainbow-colored rib- Pavilion, stars and technicians went
stars give their formal wear a last- stations.
. bons, as Jackson has urged.
through a final rehearsal Sunday.
minute pressing for tonight's Oscais,
"The cause I believe in very
Alicia Silverstone, dressed casuOn the eve of show, while John
they may also want to get their Trav'!lta, Richard· Dreyfuss, Nicole much," said Jones, noting that despite ally in frayed jeans, struggled a bit as
answers ready for the question of the Kidman, Kurt Russell and Goldie gains minorities continue to struggle did Hawn and Kidman; introducing
evening: Is Hollywood racist?
Hawn busily rehearsed their awards finding work in Hollywood. "It's the best picture nominee "Babe." DreyJesse Jackson is calling for a presentations, producer David Salz- best of times and the worst of times fus s, summarizing the technical
nationwide picket of ABC affiliates man, co-producer Quincy Jones and in every sense."
Oscars, was Oawless, as was a verybroadcasting the awards ceremony, Academy ~sident Arthur Hiller
Nevertheless, Jones and Hiller tan Emma Thompson, the presenter
contending the dearth of black Oscar were bombarded with queries about said Jackson erred by targeting the of the art direction Oscar and a nomnominees - just one out of 166- Jackson's complaints.
Academy, since it does not control inee for adapted screenplay.
proves Hollywood's institutional
After 20 minutes of such ques- Hollywood hirfng. After all, the
Jones said this year's show will be
racism.
tions, Soilzman coolly but curtly show's host, Whoopi Goldberg, is particularly lively. He called anention
"There is this cultural bias and called off a news conference, telling black.
to the musical group Stomp, whose ·
cultural lockout," Jackson said Sun- reporters it was too bad they didn't
· Hiller, who, unlike Jones, appears performance will highlight the job of,
day. "We're really trying to raise con- ask any questions about surprises, in the ceremony, said he would go foley artists, who supply footstep ·
sciousness. ·... At a certain point you special appearances and " the great- ribbon-less.
sounds for the movies.
have lb organize and fight back."
" I don't wear ribbons," Hiller
est of horse races in the key cate" If there's any theme we would '
Jackson said he has received com- gQries."
said. "There are half a dozen ribbons, take on,:' Jones said, " it's surprise,
mitments from ministers in 25 majll{
' Jones, who is black•. said he was and as Academy president I don 't surprise, surprise.'

Hyakutake
Comet called
'Spectacular'
EARLY ARRIVALS • Movie fans park thamaelves along the
aldewalk outside the Los Angelaa Music Center Sunday waiting
for a ·spot In the Oscar arrivals public viewing bleachara In LA.
The 68th Academy Awards will be preaented tonight (AP)

~showgirls'

worst
m·ovie of 1995
• LOS ANGELES (AP) - "Shqw~lrls" may be the worst movie in the
history of an award that honors the
worst movies.
. The striptease drama on Sunday
took a record seven Golden Raspberry Awards, including worst picture, worst actress (Elizabeth
Berkley), worst screenplay (Joe
Eszterhas) and worst director (Paul
Verhoeven). Berkley was also selected as 1995's worst new star.
Rounding out the so-called Razzies for "Showgirls," was worst original song, "Walk Into the Wind," and
worst Screen couple, awarded for. any
combination of two people in the

film .
1he record was held by Pia Zadora's "The Lonely Lady," which won
six Razzies in 1984.
"Four Rooms," "Jury Duty,"

"The Scarlet Letter " and "Waterworld" each won one Razzie apiece.
Pauly Shore, a previous Raztie
winner, was named worst actor for
"Jury Duty." "lhe Scarlet Leuer"
was dishonored as the worst remake
or sequel.
. The 16th annual Razzies were
determined by 400 film professionals,
journalists and movie fans surveyed
by the Golden Raspberry Award
Foundation.

'The Birdcage' remains
atop nation's box office
LOS ANGELES (AP) - "The
Birdcage" was the nation 's most
popular movie for a third straight
weekend, followed again by "Executive ~cision , " industry sources
said.
"The Birdcage," a remake ofthe
French comedy classic "La Cage aux
Foll~s." grossed an estimated $13.7
million , while the hijack thriller
"Executive Decision" earned an estimated $9.8 million in its second
weekend.
Two debuts made the Top I 0:
"Diaboliquc," a murder suspense
statring"Sharon Stone, which earned
$5.7 million for third place and Spike
ice's "Girl 6," which tied for sixth
witll $2.9 million.
. Of the films nominated in
tonight's Academy Awards, " Mr.
Holland's. Opus," released late last
¥ear, earned $2 l"illion for the No. 8
lpOt- Others movies with nominations included "Dead Man Walking."

which grossed $1.3 million; "Sense
and Sensibility," $1.1 million; "Ttte
Postman (II Postino)" $807,500;
"Leaving Las Vegas," $550,000; and ·
"Braveheatr," $200,000.
The preliminary estimates by
industry sources are based on ticket
sales Friday through Sunday. Final
figures were due today.
I . "The Birdcage," $13.7 million.
2. " Executive Decision," $9.8
million .
3. " Diabolique," $5.7 !Jlillion.
4. (tied) "Up Close and Personal,"
$4.4 million.
5. (tied) "Homeward Bound II:
Lost in San Francisco," $4.4 million.
6. (tied) "Fargo," $2.9 million.
7. (tied) "Girl6," $2.9 million.
By DAVID JOYNER
8. " Mr. Holland's Opus," $2 milGannett News Service
lion.
Imagine youi-selr'hunkered down
9. "Down P~riscope," $1.8 mil- beside a prairie campfire with the best
lion. .
. .
storytellers in Texas. One of them
I 0. "Broken Arrow," $1.5 million.
begins a yarn and spins together the
strands of a romantic tale. 1he next
one takes over and adds an element
of suspense. lhen the third one picks
it up and gives the main character .. .
a psychosis?
"Tell me, did I torpedo the story?"
asks Kinky Friedman from his Ker-

Texa~

•
'Southern eyes cuts in wake of ballot defeat
By JIM FREEMAN
.~entlnel News Staff
What next?
That was the question addressed
by the Southern Local Board of Edu_cation at a not-so-regular meeting
Monday night.
· 1he defeat last Tuesday of a proposed K-8 elementary school may
force the school board to re-examine
. the dislric(s priorities in an effort to
reduce operational expenses while
addressing the need for a safer learn·
ing environment for dislrict pupils · problems school officials felt a new
· district-wide elementary school
;' would solve.
Board member Dave Kucsma

Ala., Saturday. The baby giraffe was born
around 9:30 a.m. (AP)

magazine ropes together on-line novel
rville, Texas home. The off-beat the brink, somebody has pulled it benefit the Texas Literacy Council.- ;'
mystery writer and former country back·."
Thompson says.
.
·
singer is one of 30 authors conThe novel, so far, is.a sus.,ense_ful
Time has not made Thompson's ·
lributing to Texas Monthly Maga- romance about Walker ~oczmsk1 , a job easy. Each writer is pressed to add ..
zine's on-line novel during March. cowboy computer repatrman torn · 500 words to the story · within 24 ;
Each day, the publication posts a new betw_een two women.
hours. And not everyone has access •
chapter by a different author on its
L1ke tales told around the camp- to the Internet, or even a fax machine. •
World
Wide
Web
site fire , the story is constructed when
Thompson, a 14-year Texas :
(http://www.texasmonthly.com).
each author_adds to the ~ork and Monihly veteran, laughs almost hys- .~
"It really has spun out of control words of thetr contemporartes. At the terically when talkinll a!K&gt;ut the busy '
a couple of times," says Helen end of the month, the story wtll be set schedules and remote locations of the ,
Thompson, th~ magazine's Internet to audio cassette and proceeds will people she works with.
·'
editor. "Every time it has gotten to
•

Free publications reflect latest changes in Social Security ;
.

By Ed Pateraan,

manger

loclel Security Office, Athena

Social . Security publications are
free anc), despite budgetary constraints and the (urloughs, have been
updated for the year and reHect the
latest.changes in the Social Security
law. There has been an increase in the
number of ads promoting ·Social
SecuritY information for a fee. Some
ads offer to sell books on Social
Security that will show people how
to set benefits,' while others promoie
• semce dill will provide such information fll{ a fee.
Tbe best, iDOSt IICCUI'IIe and up-(()dlle information y01i can act is avail- ,
able fiee of c~ from your Scl\:ial
SecuritY office. You've alteac!)' J*d
"' • ••
.
, .
,. .
..
for it as Wlpaycn. You ~hould not
~ •Ri'cewES A~D _Rutland ,.,.~ Hirold Rice,.,.,..,,
have to ~Y fof' .il agaill. Available
,. anlc DIStrict lducallon officer, was Pl'r.l lnt,td tiMI SoU- · publicllioc!s cov~ various ~ubj~
'a
· · : : : ;s AWird fonlltlnllve .travel within the Malonic ~I 1 let- . related to~ Soctal ~un~ ~ rellte·
•
A-·-'"~ - - . t hlfth ...,.... of...._,.Arcti 'Ill OM~
IIICII!, lurYIVOI'I, and diaabibly pro~
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income or things of value. Publica- publication shows you how to apply I1 resentative between 1 a.m. and 7 p.m. ;
tions are ,also available... explaining for disability benefits and how you during the week, If you call at other l
,times, yoll'll gel recorded in forma- I
Medicare hospital insurance (Part A) can speed up your application.
This information is valuable to 'lion.
and supplementary medical insurance
~
(Part B).
people who need it, and that's why
In a4dition, there are publicatiotfs there are those who would sell it. to
1;
and fact sheets that focus on various them. But if you have questions about
aSpects of the program. A fact sh~et your Social Security benefit$ or covdiscusses what to do when an older erage, just ask Social Security. Call
relative is unable handle his/her our toll-free number, 1 -800-77~-2213
Social SecuritY benefiis. Another 24 hours a day, You can talk to a rep-

By SANDRA SOBIERAJ
Associated Preas Writer
With the presidential nominado~ decided, Sen . Bob Dole was·
t : c:ounti•1g on a Republican show of
force
California today to help
fend
Ross Perot and serve as a
curtain-raiser to the contest in
.No~e~. "~n ,President Clinton
~s· !l61M~"fflvqre'd to Win 'the state.-!
O'lf a weekend swing through
CalifO(IIia and Washington, which
~llo votes today, Dole all but
•gllor:ed his faded Republican challenger, ' commentator
Pat ·Buchanan, focusing instead on the
greater, long-range threats posed
by Ross Perot and President Clinton.
"It is my deepest fear that this
administration is squandering an
inheritance it does not ~alue undermining ~alues it does not
understand," Dole said Monday,
wrapping up his Western trip with
an emotional homecoming toRussell, Kan.
At an earlier appearance at the
Richard . M. Nixon Library and
Birthplace in California, Dole
urged Buchanan to "join forces
and close ranks." But his lengthy
appeal to Perot was more pointed.
"Let's not get into the race to
make it more difficult for Republicans. Let's make it easier fll{ the
Republicans to send Bill Clinton
back to Little Rock,'' Dole said,
claiming synchronicity with Perot's agenda for balanced budgets

agreed that something needs to be
"We have a lot of internal probdone, not as a scare tactic, but as lems in this district ... but we're still
legitimate cost-cutting measures.
•the best school district in southeast
"We have to get out of the loan Ohio, " commented Carla Shuler, a
fund. We have to make cuts - not as high school mathematics teacher.
a scare tactic ... it may have to be
"Effective tomorrow, we have to
done."
make changes and stick to them. We
Fellow board member Bob Collins need lo make cuts," she added.
agreed: "The communit}l had an . Cuts she proposed included: no
opportunity to do that ... now it's in extracurricular activities (including
our hands."
sports), no summer activities, impleLikely cuts could consist of non- mentation of split sessions to get stuacademic~ extracurricular activities.' dents oul of the older Quildings and
Collins said he would hate for the halting secoddary busing. .
·
district to have to cut spons. but
"People need a taste of what it
added if the dislrict cannot cut its would be like to not have a school in
costs there will likely be no athletics . our community.
- and no school district.
' "We're the best, but we have the

potential to be better. We need buildings that don't cave in on our children , lights that work when you Oip
the switch and more than two receptacles in a room.
"And it needs· to be done now,"
she added.
Board members approved removing loose plaster on the junior high
ceiling after a chunk fell in the gymnasium last Tuesday. No students
were injured in the incident.
The board will meet in special session Monday, April I at 7 p.m. at the
high school to consider cost-cutting
proposals and changes to the school
calendar.
Now board members are consid-

.

'
t

''i

NEARING VICTORY- Republican pre1ldenttal hopeful Sen. Bob Dole anended a relly with
hie wife Eliza~ In Washington aa the front-runner looka to a victory it) today's California
prlmai'Yl "The fall.campaign Is underway," Dole said fast week after winning primaries In the
Mldwe~ (AP)
.
and political' reform.
Dole was expected to squash
Buchanan in Califotnia - he led
Buchanan by 63 percent to 8 percent in the most recent statewide
poll.
The Republican primaries today
in California, Washington and
Nevada were parceling out a total
of 197 convention delegates. California's Democratic primary,
where Clinton was running virtually unopposed, awards 423 dele-

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Role
And clearly, inexperience was no
reversal was the rule at the Academy ·hindrance.
"&lt;
Awards, where an actor. Mel Gibson,
Nicolas Cage took the best actor
won ·for directing, an actress, Emma · award for his role as a suicidal alecThompson, triumphed for screen- holic in "Leaving Las Vegas," his
writing·and rookies looked like pros. first appearance in the category. Mira
Gibson's " Btaveheart" won a Sorvino ("Mighty Aphrodite") and
leading five Oscarson Monday night, Kevin Spacey · ("The Usual Susincluding best picture and director. pects") collected Oscars for supGibson also starred in the epic about porting actress and supporting actor
ll 13th-century Scottish patriot.
in their first nominations.
Gibson, a plaid vest Dashing from
Sorvino thanked her father as the
I;!Ctween the lapels of his tuxedo, veteran actor openly sobbed in the
thanked writer Randall Wallace and au.diencc. "When you give me this
producer Alan Ladd Jr. for bringi~g award you honor my father, Pa.ul
the script to a "fiscal imbecile."
Soivino, who taught me everything I
! " Now that I'm a bona fide direc- know about acting." she said.
tO{ with a golden boy," Gibson said
. Spacey thanked his mother for driiluring his acceptance speech, "I ving him to acting classes when he
suppos~ what I really want to do is was 16: "I told you it woula pay off,
ict."
.
and here's the pudding."
· Cage breezed to the podium and
' "Bravoheatr" was only Gibson's
outing as a director, the first marveled that "Leaving Las Vegas"
· \ICing "Tbe Man Without a Face" in could he made for $3.5 !Jlillion, and
1.993. kc'folloiws a Ifne of Oscar-win- on 16mm film stock when most
iling actors-turned-directors: Roben movies are made on 35mm or 70mm
ledford, Warren Beatty, . Woody film.
·Allen, Kevin Costner.
" I know it's not hip to say it but!
~ Thompson, an on -scree~ actina just love acting an~ I hope that there
force from " Howards End" 1\Jld will be more encouragement for
t·~ Rei'Riins of the Day," won for altehtllive movies where we can
I'iir tlc:reCflplay adaptation of the Jane experiment and fast-forward into the
Auaten novel "Sen&amp;e and Sensibili- future of actins," ~ said.
~-... - her fii'SI produced mov.ie - . Nominllion veteran Susan Sarariscnpt.
don won for best actress for "Dead
•

The ne•t date a special election
ering the possibility of holding a special election in a last-ditch auemp1to could be held would be Aug. 6,
take advantage of state building according to the Meig_s County Board
assistance money which has been of Elections. The filing deadline
committed to the district.
would be May 23.
However, Superintendent James
Meanwhile, Collins has filed a
Lawrence quoted Jack Hunter. super- protest with the county prosecutor's
visor of the state building assistance office requesting a hearing with the
program, as saying the state probably state board of elections .
cannot hold onto the promi sed
He claims many residents did not
$3,190,800 until November.
sec the bond issue during the prima·
"We're in a serious situation ," ry election because it was at the very
Lawrence said. '"You aren't willing to end of the election hooklet, behind a
help yourself is what the state says. separate page. and was of a different
'You've had three cllanccs (1985 , color than the rest of the booklet.
1992 and 1996)'."
Lawrence acknowledged the bal"The philosophy is three tries and lot was done in accordance with the
you're out," Lawrence said.
(Continued ·on Page 3)

Middleport pool repair
in need of volunteers

gates.
His victories in four Midwestern primaries last week gave Dole
more than enough delegates to
clinch the GOP nomination,
although he resisted claiming that
crown until today in a vain auempt
to. make the California .contest
more climactic .
But state election officials were
forecasting a turnout of only 42
percent of the state's 14.5 million
voters. the lowest in 80 years of

presidential primaries in California.
Dole needs momentum in the
state, which can be crucial to an
electoral victory in November, but
where polls put him solidly behind
Clinton - by as much as 20 percentage points.
"Clearly the California primary is academic," admit!ed Marty
Wilson, Dole 's California cam•
paign manager. He called Dole's
weekend visit 10 the state a "curtain-raiser."

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
Middleport Village Council was
updated on work in progress at the
General Hartinger Park pool during
Monday's regular meeting , with
council and the village recreation
department remaining optimistic that
the pool equid open on Memorial
Day w~ekend .
Arnold Joh'nson of the village
Recreation Department said that volunteer labor and materials are still
desperately needed in order for the
work to be complete by May 27.
..... - -1\vo, .'jets ..of., ~oode~ stairs, · and
most of the old fihration system. have
been removed from the 42-year-old,
above-ground pool. Block work 'that
will be used to reinforce deck supports is also ncar completion, Johnson said.
The pool has been closed since
spring 1994, due to repair demands to
the aging structure. Preliminary estimates on repairs to the pool were set
at over $80,000, with well over half
of the repair costs to be paid with
nearly $50,000 in donations, labor
and supplies given by village residents and businesses during the last
18 months.
Cost for a construction of a new
pool would have cost the village an
estimated $350,000.
"This pool is not just for the residents of the village of Middleport,"
Johnson said. " It is for usc by albJf
the residents in this part of Meigs
County. We need as many volunteers
as possible, in order for us to keep the
construction costs down."
Contractor bi&lt;!s for the project will
be opened April I at Middleport Village Hall , according to Mayor Dewey
'Horton·. Horton also noted that any
money not spent on the pool project .

will go directly into a pool maintenance fund.
"The money raised by the community for the pool will go only
toward upkeep of the pool," Horton
said . "We arc really pleased with the
response the community gave to this
project. We hope now that the
response will be just as great for volunteers to work on the project. Without the volunteer labor, we might not
be ready to open by Memorial Day."
Council President Bob Gilmore
echoed Horton's comments in stressing the importance of communit}l and
area mvol.t;C!Jll;ll ~..\1'-lhe I?OQI.proP.;t..
"Everyone needs to get involved
in thi s project. We apprei:iate all the
financial support the village has
received for the pool. We just really
need folks to come out and lend a
hand. in any way they can, for this
project to come to fruition ," said
Gi lmore. ,
Volunteers interested in workins
on the project can contact Johnson at
992-6589.
In other mailers. council:
• approved a motion to name Rae
Gwiazdowski to the council seat
vacated by the resignation of Steve
Dunfee. Owiazdowski will be swornin a&lt; a council member at the April 8
meeting.
• approved the hiring of Brent
Manley to the full-time village maintenance position that will be vacated
· March 29, due to the retirement of
long-time village maintenance
employee Claude Fitch.
• learned from council member
Beth Stivers that the Middleport Volunteer Fire Department will he donating $1,000 and the usc of its squad,
engme truck and manpower for the
July 4th fireworks display in Dave
(Continued on Page 3)

By JIM FREEMAN
"The county home, or infirmary, is
Sentinel News Staff
not part of · the current proposal,"
The Meigs County Board of Com- Commission President Fred Hoffman
missioners Monday once again explained. "Maybe in years to come,"
addressed .a $1 .5 million proposed he added, referring to the age of the
medical aris building to complement ·. county home building.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Committee member Jean Grucscr
This
time, commissioners wanted assurance that the county
answered questions posed by sup- home won't be involved in the future
porters of the Meigs County Homt, - an assurance commissioners were
or infirmary, which will be located not willing to make.
behind the medil;al arts building.
"I just want to protect the home Members of the Concerned Citi- want it in writing." she said.
zens Commiuee, a group that chamProsecuting Auorney John R.
pions the county home, were con- Lentes said the agreement with Con,
cerned over a drawing of the build- solidatcd Health Systems, comprised
ing that showed the county home as of Holzer Clinic, Holzer Medical
a site for potential hospital or clinic Center and Veterans Memorial Hosexpansioh.
pita! , would limit construction tO'the

proposed building site.
"The county home has nothing to
do with the property." he added.
Commissioners later explained ,
reasons they could not guarantee the ·
county home would never be considered as a possible site for hospital . ~
expansiOn .
Future commissioners would not ,
be bound by any commitment the
present commission would make. ' '
Also, if the board did commit to guarantee the existence of the county ,
home, the county could be stuck with the tab of repairing the building or
bringing it up to state standards in the
near future.
Currently, the county home does
(Continued on Page 3)

Bidwell man dies in early morning crash
Man Walking," her first win in five
lries.
In a three-hour, 36-minute show
with Whoopi Goldberg as host, political commen!S and discussion of
national Oscar pickets were kept to a
minimum.
Goldberg quickly moved to defuse
the Rev. Jesse Jackson.'s call to
protest the show because there was ..
only ·one black person out of 166 ~';
nominees.

A Bidwell man was killed and his tion late this morning, a hospi;aJ not wearing a seatbelt and was eject- .
wife injured early today in a one- spokesperson said.
ed from the vebicJe. His wife W!IS .
vehicle crash on Cheshire Township.
·Troopers said Ricky Cremeans wearing her ·seatbeh, he added.
Road 633 (Story's Run) near the Gal- was westbound. 1.1 miles west of
The pickup was severely diiiJI&amp;&amp;ed
lia-Meigs county line, the State High- State Route '7, aiound 4 a.m. when he and'the accident remains under inve&amp;way Patrol said.
lost control of the pickup truck he ligation, Dodd said.
Ri cky L. Cremeans, 32, 10~4 drove due to excessivupeed.
The patrol was notified· of . the :·
Ward Road. was declared dead at the
The pickup went off tie left side wreck at 5:30a.m. and respo~ ,IO i
"SCene by officials.
. of the road and s~ 11 tree, said Sgt. .. the !ICCne alona with the BMSw the -,,
His wife, Teresa L. Cremeans, 29, Skip Dodd of the patrol's Gallipolis Gallia County Sheriff's ~.;·,•
was transported by the Gallia Co~n- Post, who investigated the li!Xident.
The accide~t,marks the fii'SI falal, .. ·•
iy EMS to Holzer Medical Center,
Dodd said kiCky Creineans was ity oftl)e y,ear •IICM!Iiaeo.,.nty in• ,,..
where she was admitted for observaligated, by the PtlrOJ.
'
r

•

.

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..._

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..

Committee requests guarantee.,
on future of county infirmary ·

veheart' wins five
Oscars from ac~,demy

ieconct

I want to thank everyone
wtio supported JOe, and all
those who worked
for me.
'
It was greatly appreciated;
1banks
GaryR. Dill

..

"Gannett eo. N.,. P•F ir

:--------------------------------------------~----------~~

Dole looks
to squash
Buchanan
in primary

''Twlga'~ a four·yllr-old giraffe, takas care of
her newly born baby at Zootand In Gulf Shoree,

35~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 26, 1996

...-------Baby giraffe... -----.

By NED KILKELLY
Associated PI'HI Writer
Swgazers across . the country,
some lugging telescopes as big as
cannons; gathered under open skies in
parks, fields and parking lots in
hopes of seeing Hyakutake, the
brightest comet to pass the Earth in
20 years. ·
For most, the once-in-a-lifetime
chance paid off.
'
.
"It was so long, so clear and beautiful," Sharon Grant, one of dozens
who waited four chilly hours in the
Florida Everglades before spotting
Hyakutake 's brilliant tail Sunday
night. "Simply spectacular!"
"It hits you right between the
eyes," said Bill Jjorsheim, who
viewed Hyakulake (pronounced hyakoo-TAH-kay) through a.telescope in
a Safeway _parking lot in Everett,
Wash.
The comet is visible to the naked
eye and is just below the Big Dipper.
Some have described it as looking
like a fuzzy snowball, an auto headlamp shining through the fog, or a
candle in mist to those -1'1ith binoculars - 1'1hich is how Yujl Hyakutake,
a Japanese amateur astronomer, discovered it in' January.
Expens believe it is the biggest
comet to pass so close to the earth
since the Great Comet of 1556.
There has· neil been a bright comet
near Eatrh since Comet West in
1976.
A bundle of dust, ice crystals and
gases, perhaps 10 miles across, ·
Hyakutake is traveling about 198,000
miles an hour as it rounds the sun in
an orbit that should bring it back this
way. in 10,000 to 20,000 years.
By comparison, the orbit of Halley's Comet brings it back every 76
years.
At Hyakutake's nearest point to
Eatrh - 9.5 million miles away
today- sky-watchers said it had the
brightness of Sirius. the brightest sw
in the northern sky. Its tail is estimated to measure 62,000 miles.

Clear tonight, low In
20s. Wednesday, sunny.
High In mld-50..

'· ""'

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