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Ohio Lottery

D'onov.an.

•

Super Lotto:
8-9-31-37-40-42
.Pick 3:
2-1-7
Pick 4:

new Gators'
cage coach

4-1-4-6

Sports, Page 4

Kicker:
6 4 4..0-8-5

•
Rain tonight, low In 401 •
. Friday, cloudy. High In
60a.

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Vol. 46, NO. 232

35canll
• A Gannett Co. Newap~~.,.f

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 28, 1996

3 Seotlona, 20 Pages

.

.

Bradbury elementary school will remain open
Decision by.Meigs board means· facility will not be closed, at least in the near future
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel news staff
Fifth graders in the Meigs Local School District will
conlinue their elementary school career instead of
attending junior high school this fall .
,
That announcement was made at Wednesday night's
. meeting of the Meigs Local Board of Education at
Salem Center Elementary School. The decision also
means that Bradbury Elementary School will not be
closed, at least in the near future.
Earlier, Superintendent Bill Buckley raised the possibility of closing Bradbury Elementary School and
placing district sixth graders at the Central Building'on

classes were housed in a portion of the building more
than I 00 years old.
That problem has been remedied, Buckley said.
However, plans to begin a middle school type of
program at the junior high for the seventh and eighth
graders are still in effect.
The middle school concept consists of teams of up
to four teachers responsible for the students assigned
to it iiiCiuding instruction in language arts, math, sci,
ence imd social studies.
This is in contrast with the existing junior high
school day which is divided into nine class periods. a

the Meigs Junior High School campus in Middleport.
A project to renovate the Central Building will likely not be completed in time to implemeni the transfer,
Buckley explained. In February, Buckley noted the timing of the proposed changeover would hinge on completion of the renovation project.
The Central Building will be renovated during the
summer with new windows, a heating system and oth·
er additions.
The plan was the result of a complaint filed by the
parent of a special education student at Bradbury stating special education students were not housed in
rooms comparable to those used by other students. The

Jobless ----Work resumes---....,
rate down
in Meigs
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.By staff and wire reporta
The new $100 bills are here.
A new $100 bill with a bigger, offcent~r picture of Benjamin Franklin
:and several innovations to thwart
:counterfeiters has gone into circula·: tion around the world.
·
• These enhancements make U.S .
: currency easier to recognize as gen: uine and.more secure against advanc: ing technologies which could be
: used for counterfeiting.
. The redt;Signed notes incorpofate
. · both famili~ and new features, while
·: remaining ~cognizably American,
.- : according to the Federal Reserve. So
; : far, $80 billion worth has been print,' · ed, equal to about a third of the old

.

COLUMBUS (AP) -A bill to
allow local school boards to set dai·
ly voluntary moments of silence in
· classrooms passed easily in the Ohio
House fo llo wing a debate over
whether this amounted to school
prayer.
The measure approved 81 · I 3 and
sent to the Senate on Wednesday
'vould penn it school boards to estab1, :-1, a ·daily period of classroqm
silt n-: e for reflection on a moral,
philosc· ~hical or patriotic theme.
Spon&gt;&lt;,•ing Rep. Samuel T. Britton, D-Cit.,.,.,,ati, said pupils should
be allowed tu . ·:fleet on a subject of
their choice durin,: the voluntary periods of silence.
"They would have a chance to
think about right or wrong, or how
' they "should · behave ··toward' other
people," Brittop said. "They would
have a chance to think about what 's
important to them - their family,
their friends, their pets, their soccer
games."
Britton pointed out that no pupil

56,

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would be required to participate. 'Se
said the American Civil Libertjes
Union has not endorsed the bill btn
did not find it unconstitutional. :::
" This is not a prayer-in-schOOl
bill, nor is it the precursor of a pray'.l)~­
in-school bill, " he said.
·: ·
Rep. Karen M. Doty, D-Akron, In
. opponent, said the measure wtts
unnecessary. She said nothing ~;
vents a teacher from conductii}$
silent meditation.
•&gt;
"This language will allow any
type of prayer in school that dily
group would want to do, ·•Doty said.
Rep. C.J. Prentiss, D·Cieveland,
complained the proposal woirld
"place a burden on those students
who choose not to panicipate."
Before the bill passed, the House
voted· for an amendment by Rep.
Louis W. Blessing Jr., R-Cincipnati,
seeking to ensure that students would
·not be allowed or encouraged to prAy
aloud or espouse religious beliefs at
inappropriate times during class
hours.

Gallipolis native helps .
free doctor from pris.on

Work resumed earlier thla wHk
promenade project In the Po~t;p_y..~ .
since ~onstructlon on the pro~
due to.lnclemerit weather. The project
sist of a walkway along the inside oft
ing lot wall and two gazebos. The pro

on the
ing Lot
at fall
II conparkenade

will feature benchea, period lighting and elec- trical hookups for apeclal events. Village work·
era are shown preparing a trench for the conduit that will csrry electric lines to the promenade. Eldon Walburn of Middleport is the prl·
mary project contractor.

S100 bills.
"They won't be everywhere right
away. It will only be a trickle at first,"
said Bob Moore, a Federal Reserve
spokesman.
The bills, expected to be widely
available next month, represent the
first significant change in the appear·
ance of U.S: currency since 1929.
Redesign of other denominations
will follow.
All orders from commercial banks
for $100 bills were filled with the
new bills effective Monday, but old
notes will not be recalled or devalued,
according to the Treasury.
The first bills arrived in Pomeroy
Tuesdav afternoon
.

The new bills have the same
green and black color as the old ones,
but one of the new safety features is
a large "1 00" in the lower right-hand
comer. Color-shifting ink makes it
appear -green when- viewed .straight
and black when seen from an angle.
The paper also includes a watermark
of Franklin visible when viewed
against a bright light.
The word "United States of America",are printed in microscopic letters
on Franklin's coat.
Fine tjnes, hard to reproduce even
by computerized technology used in
state-of,the art counterfeiting, appear
behind Franklin's head and above the

picture of Independence Hall in
Philadelphia that covers most of the
reverse side.
Treasury representatives said there
are other security devices. They
declined to talk about them to avoid
giving tips to counterfeiters.
"The (counterfeiting) technology
is expected to continue to improve
into the next century," the Treasury
said, making the new bills essential.
The bills are expected to get more
notice abroad than in the United
States where smaller denominations
rule for all but the biggest cash transactions. Even U.S.-based counter·
feiters tend to favor the $20 bill .
Those abroad prefer the bigger bill.

:jex-pqlice chief bound over on ~ttempted murder charge

: : POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. _
.. Probablecause was found to bound
. a former Henderson police chief
, : over to tl)e circuit ¢ourt, in a prelim~ : lnary hearing in magistrate court
'. w. dnesda
eThe ~ev Delmer Eugene
- : McClanahan,
Rt. 2, Point Pleas·
t was charged last week with con.. :" i~r to •commit murder and
• a~empted murder, according to S'gt
. O.L. €1arlc:; .Point Pleasant petach; ment-West.. Virginia State Police.

schedule referred to as a "mini high school" by prin·
cipal David Gaul.
, ..
In personnel matters, the board hired James Ryal)
Lemley as a substitute teacher and approved Greg Yin;
ing as a volunteer varsity softball coach.
•
Board members also approved a three-year contra?
for Rutland Elementary School principal Anthony Per: :
ry.
Present were Buckley, board president Roger .
Abbott and board members Scott Walton, Randy:
Humphreys, Larry Rupe and John Hood. Absent was;
Treasurer Cindy Rhonemus.
:

Ohio House OKs silent!
prayer in classrooms ..

:New $100 bills trickle into Pomeroy Tuesday

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Meigs and Gallia counties were
among 10 counties with unemployment rates·at or above II percent during February, the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services said.
But February's levels also saw
joblessness decrease or remain stable
in the region compared to the January .data, OBES said.
Meigs' unemployment was down
from the pl'evlous month by I .6 per·
cent at 1'3.2 percent, according to
OBES' figures. Gallia posted a job·less rate of 11.1 percent in February,
down I ~rcent from li!Jluary 's level.
.
.
Vinton .. Counly ·was ·also ··among
the 10 counties with high unemployment, but saw its February rate ~own
two-tenths of a percent at 14.8 percent. Its January jobless level was I5
percent, OBES -said.
Overall, unemployment statewide
was down during February, the
agency reported. In the area, Athens
County's rate remained stable at 8
percent. Jackson was down four·
tenths of a percent from January at.
9.7, and Lawrence was down eighttenths of'a percent at 7.8.
· . Othe'r counties with double-digit
jobless rates last month included
Morgan (19.1), Adams (16.3), Monroe (13.8), Muskingum (13 .4), Pike
and Scioto ( !2.3 each) and Perry (I I).
The lowest level in the state· was 3.1
in Franklin County.
OBES said 12 counties had unemployment rates at or below 4.5 per·
cent in February. In · addition to
Franklin, they ' included Madison
.(3.7), Greene and Hamilton (4.1
. ·each), Holmes and Wood (4.2 each),
;Fairfield and Hancock (4.3 each).
· Delaware and Wayne (4.4 each), and
. :Clinton and Montgomery (4.5 each).
The comparable unemployment
'rate for 'Ohio was 5.5 percent, com:pared to 6 percent nationally. Seasonal adjusbnent put tl)e state's over. . ·all jobless rate at 5 percent and the
·nation's at 5.5 for February.

,.

In a prelimiPary hearing before
Mason County Magistrate Johnny
Reynolds Wednesday, probable cause
was. found to bound the mat,t~~ over
to c~rcu1t court. McClanahan s bound
was -reduced from the $100,000 set
by Lincoln County Magistrate Helen
McConnick, to $60,&lt;X!O, however.
McClanahan remamed m the Mason
County )ail as of this·mominJ! in lieu
of the bond.
If found .guilty of attempted first
degree mutder, McClanahan could
~

•

face orie-to-five years in ~rison: On
Clark s~id McCianah~n allegedly
the consp1tacy to comm1t murder pa1d the mfonnant w1th a .'988
charge, McCianl!han could face one- Chrysler, wh1ch had the t1tle s1gned
to-fiv~ yellfS in prison and/or S10,000 over to the _mfonilant, and a 12-gauge
fine, 1f found gu1lty.
. shotgun wuh shells. He also allegedMcClanahan was arrested at h~s ly gave the mformant gloves, trash
home March 21 by Troopers Edd1e bags and towels to clean up the' mess.
Starcher ~nd Rob Talkington. after
McClanahan's a'!est. 'followed a
McClanahan apparently met wuh an month-long mvesugauon by the
informant, who was wired, to discuss troopers. The Midwestern Drug and
killing Sheldon Durst of State Route Violent &lt;;rime Task Force assisted,the
87.
state pollee.

'.

CLEVELAND (AP) -An Ohio
businessman came to the assistance
of his fonner hear) surgeon who ended up serving only nine months of a
three-year prison tenn for theft con·
victions, The Plain Dealer reported .
Daniel Evans, 59 , chainnan and
chief executive officer of Columbus·
based Bob Evans Fanns Inc .. and a
native of Gallipolis in Gallia Coun·
ty, gave $500,000 to help Dr. Robert
A. Graor pay restitution to Cleveland
Clinic Hospital.
Evans also lobbied the Ohio
Parole Board and a judge forGraor 's
release, the newspaper reported
Wednesday.
Evans told the newspaper that the
surgeon had saved his life.
"As a result, he is a friend and I
have supported him throughout the
difficultume of rebuilding his life,"
Evans said in a statement.
Graor, 46, pleaded guilty in

December 1994 to I0 counts of ~ft.
totaling more than $1 million ofthe
hospital 's research money. He was
paroled from the London Correctional Institution on Oct. 18, roughly nine months after he went in. I :is
medical license was suspended for
five years .
'·
Graor had signed a plea bargi'in.
designed to keep him in prison fol'no
Je ss than three years, the newspaj&gt;er
reported. The agreement prohibited
early release .
About two weeks ago, a Cuyahoga County grand jury indicted
Graor on two coums of theft, totaling ·
about $85,000, from the Clinic, based '
·on infonnation not available in the
1994 theft case.
"Either this guy goes to jail or I
am," said Chief AssistantProsecutor
Cannen Marino .
Graor does not have a published
Continued on page 3

�Thursday, March 28, 1996

Commentary

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The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

.Page2

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Gallia man's arrest boosts
a.rea drug sweep total to 32·.

Thursday, M.reh 21, 16as
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The Daily Sentinel Golden state, .golden ·age_ _ _ ___
'Estllblisnti in 1948
111 Court SL, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

.!lr

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlliher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Genenll~

Perot backers not same
ByTOMRAUM
Aeaoclated Pre11 Writer
COLLEGE STATION, Texas -In 1992's vice presidential debate, Ross
Perot's running mate, James Stockdale, posed a double question that became
one of that year's. more illuminating political utterances: "Who am I and
what am I doing here?"
·
As Perot throws himself into yet another cross-country campaign to prepare the way for a 1996 thind-party run, that same ·question might be asked
not only of the Dallas billionaire, but of his would-be supporters.
For Perot's people now are not entirely the same group that supported
him then, nor are the dynamics of the race the same. Nor is Perot the same
relatively fresh face who burst onto the political stage in 1992, charts in hand.
And he might be off to a rocky start this second time around, judging
from the skeptical reaction he got from students at Texas A&amp;M University
Tuesday night.
· Kicking off a road·trip to promote his new Reform Party, Perot showed
a familiar strain of cantankerousness when several students pressed h\m for
more details on how his proposals differed from those of the major-party
candidates.
Perot erupted when-one student, sophomore Misty Hataway, 20, a political science major, asked him pointblank, "Why should we vote for your:
party?"
· " I don 't care whether you vote for our party or not. I've already made
that clear," Perot retorted. He added that if the whole nation exhibited .the
same cynicism she had spoken of, "We all will fail."
" It would be very easy ... to avoid these headaches. I could totally insulate myself and my fa![lily from all this, I could just insulate myself from
it," he said.
.
.
When another student asked Perot where he was when Republicans narrowly lost efforts pass balanced-budget and term-limitation legislation, Per-il heatedly deni_ed that he had remained on the sidelines.
: ~ He cfe,llited himself with bringing the balanced budget issue to the congressional agenda. "We were there. We were at the forefront .... Next questijln."
:. · P~rot visits Philadelphia today and has three stops in Aorida planned for
Thursday and Friday in the early stages.of a cross-country effort to get his
p8rty on the ballot in all 50 states.
,: The Texan's return to the political arena was greeted dourly by GOP nomi~in-waiting Sen. Bob Dole and GOP party chief Haley Barbour, who both
~ught to persuade Perot to c~ange his mind- suggesting many of his proJ:IOsed reforms were now theirs. · .
• In fact, many of Perot's 1992 ideas have been embraced by Republicans.
And even President Clinton was pressured into agreeing to a seven-year goal
rcir balancing the budget.
: That makes som~ of Perot's criticism le' s valid than it was four years

aAo.

(

:: The convention~! wisdom is that Perot
V:otes away from D e.

:~ B~t

uld help Clinton ·by siphoning
.

~art.

Democratic pollster Peter D.
who completed an extensive poll
earlier this month for the Wall Street Journal and NBC, said any assump. ti~n that Perot's supporters now are the same as those he had in 1992 is erron~ous.

• "Among the people saying they would vote for Ross Perot in 1996, only
two out of five of them were Ross Perot voters in '92," he said. Among regis!ered voters, Perot would take II percent a~ay from the Democratic candidate and 13 percent away from the Republican candtdate, he satd - not
ali overwhelming difference.
: "There are a lot of his people who have left and a lot of new people have
~l3me in. What defines them is thai they're a little more evenly divided
between Clinton and Dole," Hart said.
·
.
:Furthermore, Hart said, those "new" Perot voters- who didn't vote for
hiin in 1992 but say they would now -say they would vote for Clinton by
a 6-to-1 ratio if the choice were just between the president and Dole.
: GOP pollster Frank Luntz, who worked for Perot brieny in 1992, said
thi: '"96 Perot voter is slightly less well educated than in 1992, with a slightly; lower Income, more blue-collar. "
.
· Also ·affecting the 1996 dynamics: Perot had a long-lived animosity for
President Bush in 1992 that made him a magnet for the GOP anti-Bush vote.
Perot docs not harbor an)( such resentment toward Dole. In fact, they share
many of the same views.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Toin Raum covers the Wh.ile House and national polidcs for The Associated Press.

Berry•s World

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t''~'·. GOT \o
GeT' Tl'\E.
"·
LAf~ST POLIC'( SU~VEV .

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ticket.
The Republicans bounced back in
1994, ultimately capturing (very narrow) control of the Sta~ Assembly
from the legendary Democratic
Speaker, Willie Brown. (1be speaker makes appointments to approximately 400 state governmental
boands!) This year the GOP wants to
hold the Assembly, capture control of
the state Senate, and gain congressional seats.
Wilson says he has Dole's commitment that'he will campaign in the
state. But among Dole's strategists
li!'C those who disagree. They ask:
Why fight in California, where Clinton now leads Dole by 15-20 percentage points, when their campaign ·
could spend their time and money in

8MS.

year's key ballot proposition, the California Civil Rights Initiative (CCRI),
which would eliminate that part of
affirmative action that has led to quotas and is now favored 66 percent-22
percent by California voters. Clinion
has cut deeply into defense spending,
which took a huge bite out of California's aerospace industries. (Clinton, on the other hand, will make the
case that ,the catastrophic California
economy of 1992 has now bounced
back, on his watch.)
There are other factors at worlc.
Ralph Nader has accepted the Green
Party presidential nomi11ation in California and is currently draWing 9 percent in the polls, with the majority of
his votes coming from Clinton's line.
Wilson is telling California's GOP
moneymen to use their wallets strategically, to guarantee that the Dole
campaign really does spend quality
time in California. Such an effort, he
believes, would yield a unified message, bigger Republican turnout, and·
an energized party. All that helps
Dole as well as those Republicans_
running at lower spots on the ballot,yielding coattails and tail coats and a
Dole victory, state-wide and nation-·
ally.
·
Where docs that leave Wilson? He
is unlikely to be tapped as Dole's running mate. If he left California, the"
governorship would accede to the
current Democratic lieutenant gover- ·
nor, which was one reason Wilson
didn't gain full homestate support for
his tough-minded but short-lived
1995 presidential campaign.
In an earlier day, Wilson might;
have been expected to run for a thind •
term as governor in 19"8, at age 65,'
or retire. But California's term-limit
law won't permit a re-election bid,,
and a Dole election would do wonders for the spirit and occupational
longevity of senior citizens, including
politicians. If Dole does not seek reelection in the year 2000, Wilson
could run for president, when he .
would be 67. He could also run in the
year 2004, when he would still be
younger than Dole is now.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow :
at the American Enterprise InStitute, il the author of "Values Mat• ·
ter Most," and is the host of the .
weekly publie television program
"Thiok Tank."

Dole's. done for if Pat and Ross run
'

It ·might or might not hurt GOP
candidate Bob Dole if Ross Perot
runs for president. It surely would
hurt if Pat Buchanan mounts an
Independent candidac)'&gt; But what if
they both run? President Clinton
would be a shoo-in.
There aren't any polls on the subject yet, but poll$ter Frank Luntz,
who has worked for both Perot and
Buchanan, thinks that between them
they could collect 25 percent of the
vote in November, by 2-to-1 from
people who would otherwise vote for
. Dole:
The possibility of a four-way race
definitely is . increasing, as Perot
thrusts himself back into the limelight
and Buchanan threatens to bolt the
GOP if he isn't treated royally at the
Republican convention in August.
A new Gallup poll for CNN and
USA Today indicates that right now
Clinton would beat Dole by 12
points, 54 percent to 42 percent, in a
two-man race and by 10 points, 46
percent to 36 percent, in a three-man
race with Perot getting 16 percent.
Clinton loses 8 points to 'Perot and
· Dole, 6 points.
The same poll found that if
Buchanan ran as an Independent,
he'd get 12 percent and Clinton
would top Dole by 15 points, 50 percent to 35 percent, · with Clinton
dropping 4 points to Buchanan and
Dole, 7 points.
Luntz, who has done his own poll
on Buchanan's potential, says that
Buchanan and Perot draw from two
different, though overlapping, pools
of disaffected voters.

Buchanan·, base is among lowerincome, less-educated religious conservatives, while Perot's is among
better-off, . business-oriented secular

10 percent of the yote from his 19
percent perfonnance in 1992, he
says.
' "Most people are not predisposed
to waste their vote," Mahe says. "In
Morton Kondraclce 1992, they wanted to send a message.
- - - - - - - - - - It's not as true in 1996. There's still
Independenls who voted over- a lot of alienation, but there's not a
whelmingly Republican in 1994 coli· mood of striking out.
gressional elections.
"I don't see Perot with any
If they ever got together. Perot and momentum. His message is tired.
Buchanan could form a potent, if He's a relic. I !)link Dole can get by
paranoid, America First party based him if he tells people that a vote for
, on protectionism, pativism and hos- Perot is a vote for Clinton."
tility towand Washington politicians.
Both Luntz and Mahe think that if
Thankfully\ Perot's ego and Buchanan runs as an Independent, it
Buchanan's anti-abortion militancy will result in the re-election of Clin,
· makes the match impossible, at least ton.
. this year.
·
But will Buchanan do it? Mahe
Another encouraging fact is tl:tat says, "I've been optimistic that he
the public doesn't trust either of.them. wouldn't. He wouldn't want to carry
The Gallup poll showed that 28 per- the. bunden of electing Clinton."
cent of the public has a favorable That's been the assumption of most
view of Buchanan and 57 percent Buchanan-watchers -- iqclulling me unfavorable, his worst showing ever. • but doubts are growing.
·Perot is better off, with a 44 perBuchanan has always said that he
cent positive, 46 percent negative hal- thinks the GOP (not to mention hisance, but last month's Gallup poll had tory) is gradually heading in his
Perot at 52 percent. negative.
direction on trade, immigration, isoThe poll also indicated that the lationism and soc'1l,conservatism.
public doesn't seem furious abou1 the ·
Clearly, the GOP is a better vehitwo major-party candidates. For the cle for winning the presidency than
first time, a 11\ajority ofvoters (51 to is a third'party ·or Independent can44 percent) said that Clinton deserved · didacy, and there actually is evidence
to be re-elected. By 54 to 39 percent, to support the·idea that Buchananism
voters say that Dole would make a is gaining strength in the Republican
good president. ' Party. .
Such numbers make Republican
Not only did Buchanan actually
consultant Eddie Mahe think that win one primary this year, but votes
· Dole could win the· election if only in Congress indicate rising support
.Perot runs as a third-party candidate. for his ideas. In 1993, 43 of the
"Perot can be marginalized" down to House's 175 Republicans voted

real~y

Cr4atore Syndicate

•

Ben Wattenberg

the battleground Midwestern swing
states where Dole can win the elec·
tion, even if he loses California?
Wilson gives little credence to the
current poll numbers. He says Clinton looks good now, but will be much
weaker as the election plays out. (He
recalls that in 1994 he trailed Kathleen Brown for the governorship by
24 percent -- and won by' IS percent.) ·
Clinton has visited California 23
times since he became president
(more often than Ronald Reagan did
•• and Reagan..Jived there). Many of
Clinton's trips were accompanied by
announcements of grants to flood-,
quake- and fire-ridden California.
Wilson •will explain all that as
Clinton "coming to California to give
us back our own money." M9fCQver,
says Wilson, voters have not yet
focused on SOfl\e major Ointon positions that are unpopular in California.
'Clinton opposed Proposition 187, the
1994 anti-illegal immigration ballot
initiative, which p,assed by 59 percent-41 percent. He opposes this

lfsTHE

By TONY,SNOW

·'

percent, Perot 21 percent.) Wilson
believes that Bush's abandonment of
California was a disaster not only for
Bush, but for the state GOP down-

I'M AFRAID

Do we

To
SEE. WHA\
t 1\'\lNK.
..
,
r 0

0

LOS ANGELES -- Many political
scientists now bel~ve that "coattails
don't count" Not so, says California
Gov. Pete Wilson, who expects to
show this year that coattails do
indeed count, and, in fact, so do tail
coats. To prove his point, he's prepared to threaten a shutdown of California's "auto-teller," the fabled drive-in window where national candidates load up on "soft money" from
the Golden State.
Wilson is worth listening to: He
has done well in California as an
applied political' scientist, serving as
a state legislator; mayor, senator, and
governor, while never losing a general election. M&lt;jreover, his argument ·
has national relevance, ranging from
who will become president to term
limits for politicians, and age limits
for them and the rest of us.
· In 1992 President Bush wrote off
California early on, spending neither
time nor money campaigning there.
He was swamped by Bill Clinton
(Results: Clinton 46 percent, Bush 33

Clara B. Grueser

WASHINGTON -- Republican
Party ~trategists Have agreed upon a
sound strategy for winning the
November elections. They plan to
portray the plebiscite as a choice
between two very different Americas: Bill Clinton's and theirs.
The only problem is, they don't
mean it.
• ·
Witness the effon to pass a healthcare reform bill sponsored by Sens.
~ancy Kassebau!D, ~- Kan., and
Edward Kennedy, D-Mass. ln theory,
. 1&lt;4ssebaum-Kennedy would guarantee insur~ to eve!'}' worker ,who
switches jobs or loses covefi8t'. In .
practice, it wbuld blossom quickly
int() Clill,tOiiCIIfC, with price conttols
on health insurance, higher costs,
. wone ICrvicc and rationed treatment
for 11M! people most in need •• chron·
ically ill and elderly citizc.ns.
The measUR thmtens the entire

health-care .syster' for the sake of a
relatively minor problem. Fewer than
one half of one percent of all Americans even have to contend with the
possibility of losing health insurance
after a change in employment status.
The vast majority of these people still
have access to treatment, and they
spend 99 percent as much as average
Americans on hospital care.
Kassebaum-Kennedy· ignores the
obvious ways of ensuring indepen·
dence for such worlcers .! medical
savings accounts and credit for premiums l,hey have paid to previous
~mployers' health plans ·• in favor of
the president's approach . .
Still, · a number of -Republicans
think the bill will neutralize tlie oftrepeated .Democratic assertion that
conservatives have no hearts. Rep.
Muge Roukema, a leader of the proKassebaum-Kennedy chart~~. even
vows .to oppose medical savings
accounts:'!- and has the tacit approval

of House Budget Committee Chairman John Kasich.
If GOP moderates actually think
they will reap a public-relations
bonanza, they 're inhaling. lm~gjne
what would happen at the bill-signing ceremony.
The president would invite tbe
measure 's sponsors, special, interest
lobbyists and a hand-picked mob of
Hurting People to the Rose Gard!:n.
There, amid the sun-washed blossoms of spring, he would rise ar.:l
say:
"Ladies and Gentlemen, we come
here to celebrate a triumph of bipar:
tisanship. We say to 01,1r poor: We
care. We say to workers: We will not
abandon you. And we say to all .
A~cans: The system can worlc.
"This is an especially gratifying
moment for Hillary and me. We set
out four yean ago to reform our
health-care system-- the ,only·one in
the industrial world that does not rec·

'

'

'

W.VA.

ShoWfHS
VIa Assoclafed Press GraphicsNet

By The AIIOCiated Prell
Southeastern Ohio
Today... Rain. Highs in the upper 40s
to lower 50s ..East wind 5 to 10 mph.
Chance of rain near 100 percent.
Tonight ... Rain ... Tapering off after
midnight. Low in the lower 40s.
Light east wind. Chance of rain near
I00 percent.
Friday ...Cioudy with·a chance of
rain or drizzle in the morning. High
around 60. Chance of precipitation 30

•

percent.
· Extended forecast
Saturday... Dry early with a chance
of afternoon and nighttime showers
and thunderstorms. Lows in the 30s.
Highs mid 50s to mid 60s.
Sunday... Dry. Lows in the 30s.
Highs in the middle 40s north and in
the middle 50s south.
Monday ...Dry. Lows in the 20s.
Highs in the lower 30s north and in
the lower 40s south.

Rain should move
out of Ohio tonight
By The Assocll!ted Preu
Rain clouds should move out of
Ohio tonight after dumping as m'u~h
as half an inch· of precipitation on
part~ of the state.
Clearing skies on Friday should
produce partly to mostly sunny conditions for most of the state, the
National Weather Service said. Highs
will range from the mid-40s tn the far
north to near 60s along the Ohio River in the south. ·
The record-high iemperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station wa• 8l degrees in 19.10 whiie
the record low was•IS·in-1955. Sutr·
set tonight will be at 6:52 p.m. and
sunrise Friday at 6:20 a.m.
Across the nation
An inch of fresh snow blanketed
Butte , Mont., as chilly air and thundcrs''lrtiiS lined up over the Carolinas
before daybreak. It was a balmy 75
degrees in Fort Laudendale, Aa.
A band of cold air clamping down
on the West was expected to produce
p~tchy rain and as much as 8 inches
of snow in the higher elevations of
northeastern Oregon and northern
California and into Wyoming, northwestern Colorado, Utah and Nevada.
New snow also was possible from
Montana and western South Dakota
to northeastern Minnesota, with 3 to
6 inches forecast for southern Mon-

$25,~.

lana, where gusting winds were
expected to produce significant drifting.
Patches of rain were possible
from the southeastern PI ains to the
eastern Great Lakes, the central
Appalachians, the mid-Atlantic
region and the southern East Coast.
L.ight ra,in and sleet were anticipated in New England, and the New
York City area could see several inches of snow after rain turns to sleet
under a blanket of cold air.
Cool~ temperatures were forecast
for Calif9f11ia. with rain s!Jower~- _
sil51e'in tlie soutliern part of the stale.
fleavy rains drenched the Chattanooga, Tenn., area overnight, and
_i~olated thunderstorms could produce
more loc!IIIY heavy rains today in
Tennessee and over Kentucky, southeastern Arkansas.and Aorida.
Temperatures may stay in the 20s
across the extreme northern Plains
today, with readings ranging into the
30s in New England and the Great
Lakes region, the 40s in the Northeast, the 50s in the mid-Atl119iic
· region, Northwest and central P\lins,
the 60s in the West and Southeast, the
70s in the South and deserts Southwest. Readihgs could top 80 southern Florida.
The nation 's hot spot Wednesday
was Imperial, Calif., at 88 degrees.

Arno.ld W. •Red•

~ayes

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reconded 16
calls for ' assistance Wednesday
including_four transfer calls. Units
responding included:
MIDDLEPORT ·
4:47 a.m., South Second Avenue,
Mary Ragcr, Veterans Memorial Hospital ;
.
II :33 a.m., Meigs Junior High
· School, Misty Pugh. VMH;
12:14 p.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, Cecil Teaford, VMH;
6:41 p.m., Powell Street, Carol
Wines, VMH ;
10:54 p.m., Vine Street. · James

(USPS llJ.M)

Published c\'ery afternoon. Monday U\roua.h
Friday, Ill Coun S~,o . Pomeroy, Ohio. by the
Ohio Valley Publishing CompgnyiOannett Co,,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Pit. 992-21l6. second
cla.u potltll&amp;e pnid Ill Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member: The Auocialed Preu. ond t~ Ohio

ognize every person's basic human
right to health care. It seems not only
cruel but unjust that our society •• the
greatest in the history of mankind ••
shied away from the challenge of cari~g for everybody. But some politictans were more concerned about
protecting wealthy·contributor$ than
in helping working mothers like
(insen name here), who suffers'from
a diSabling condition that prevented
her from moving to better jobs.

Nr:wA:papcr Association.

POSTMASTIR1 Send acklras c:onm:ion• to
The Doily stndncl. t II Court St.. Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.
· ·

SUBSCRimON RATBS .
., c.ntor ...'M- - ·
One w..k..................................................SlOO
One ldontii ............................................... S$.70
One

v............................,.....................$101.00
SINGLII cOPY PRICE

Doily .............:::.......... _..................... 35 C...S
Subscriben JKIII delirina 10 pay die Cllrier ...,
mnit in ad~ancc dil'dll ID 1bc: Dilly Scltdncl
.. 0 u...... "' 12 bofl• Qtdll W(Q be
aiven carri« taCh week.
'i
•
"
'
No subacripdon by mail ~ In • •
where horne Cllricr IICI'Vic:e 11 avalllblc.

"Now, thanks to Democrats and
, Republicans in Congress, she can
regain.her dignity and independence,
and nobody can throw her on the
street because of a health problem she
did not ask to suffer, and over which
she has no control. (Applause.)

.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

J.-Motpco.,

llw.eb ...........:................................... $27.30

26 - ................,.. _............................153.81
52 w.eb ..................... ,.......................SI05.l6
-Oololdp MolpCO.,

13 -

.......- .......-...................-....129.25

26 - ....:,,, ............... \""""""""""''"'61

'

!52 Welb.:~..........1 ~·-·-··: •• •••••••••• -r ..... ,.S109.72

.. '

'

'•

Continued from page I

.. Arnold W. "Red" Hayes, 85, of Rt. I , Letart, W. Va.,died Wednesday,
March 27, 1996, at the Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Center,
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
A brakeman and conductor for New York Central and Penn Central Railroad, he was a member of the Brotherhood Railroad Trainmen .
Born Oct. 12. 1910, in Quincy. W. Va., he was a son of the late Frank
and Candia Hayes. He was also preceded in death by his wife, Nettie Mae
Hayes in 1990, daughter-in-law, Carolyn Sue Hayes, brother, ~ra nk W.
Hayes, and half brother, Kenneth Haye~ .
Surviving are four sons, Walter A. Hayes of Letart, Robert A. Hayes of
Syracuse, Charles E. Hayes of Mason, W. Va., William K. Hayes of Rutland; daughter, Helen A. Pauley of St. Albans, W.Va.; brother, William A.
Hayes of Billings, Montana; several grandchildren, great-grandchildren,
great-great-gr\pdchildren, nieces and nephews.
Services will be Friday, I p.m., at the Foglesong Funeral Home in Mason
with the Rev. George Hoschar officiating. Burial will be in the Gravel Hill
Cemetery, Cheshire.
Friends may call at the funeral home Thursday, 6 to 9 p.m.

Julia Ellen Williams
Julia Ellen Williams, 88, Middlepon, died Tuesday: March 26, 1996, at
Heartlan~ Victorian Village in ~olumbus .
·Born Jan. 22, 1908, in Middleport, daughter of the late George and Man
Barnett Dickerson, she was a homemaker and'auended the Mt. Moriah Baptist Church in Middleport, was a member of the American Legion Auxiliary Lewis Manley Post and the Missionary Society of the Mt. Moriah.Baptist Church.
·
She is survived by daughters and sons-in-law, Ellen Garnes of Middleport, Mary and Robert Walburg of Powell, Patricia and William Kendrick
of Columbus and Nancy G. Little of Columbus; eight grandchildren and 12
great-grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Fred Williams; two sisters
and a brother.
Services will be held Saturday, I p.m. at Mt. Moriah Baptist Church with
the Rev. Gilbert Craig officiating. Burial will follow in Beech Grove Cemetery, Pomeroy.
Friends may call Satunday, 12-1 p.m. at the church. Arrangements arc by
Ewing· Funeral 'Home, Pomeroy.

·Clara Follrod
Clara F!)llrod, 94, of Alfred died this morning at the Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center near Pomeroy. Arrangements will be announced later by
the White Funeral Home of Coolville.

telephone number and could not be
reached Wednesday. Graor and his
lawyer, J. Michael Murray, declined
to comment to the newspaper.
Bob Evans Farms spokeswoman
Mary Cusick said Wednesday .that
Daniel Evans would not comment
beyond the statement he had given to
the newspaper.
In a letter to Judge James J.
Sweeney, Evans' wife, Charlene, said
Graor did not bill the family for treatment he gave Evans in 1994. Evans
suffers from blockages in arteries in
his neck.
On March 28, Sweeney wrote. that
he would not object to Graor's release
on shock parole as long as significant
limitations were placed on him.
Sweeney told The Plain Dealer that
a meeting he had with Evans helped
to change his mind.
The hospital dropped opposition
to Graor's release.
"Here was a world-class doctor
who was also one of the giant stars
of the Clinic . He's done some terrible things, but what happened to him
was an enormous human loss," said
lawyer Robert Duvin , who repre-·
sented the hospital.
Duvin said that on Aug. 2, he
received a personal check for
$500,000 from Evans that was spe~if-

DAN EVANS

•,
·,·

ically for Graor 's restitution to the
hospital.
Parole Board Chairwoman Mar- "
garette Ghee said that Duvin's letter "
informing the panel of the payment '
removed the last hurdle to granting
Graor shock parole - a routine dis- ·•
position for first-time, nonvioleni ·
offenders.
The board was not bound by thC
three-vear sentence mandated in the plea bargain, she said.

in a hurry... TRY
CLASSIFIEDS

REAL TI"E
SfiVERS

Stocks
Am Ele Power .......................41'1.
Akzo ..................:...................56'1.
Ashland 011 ...........................3B'!t
AT&amp;T .....................................6t'4
Bank One ..............................36~
Bob Evans ............................ 15\

Clara B. Grueser

Clara B. Grueser, 91 , of Morning Star Road , Racine, died Tuesday, March
26, 1996, at Overbrook Center in.Middleport.
A homemaker, she was born Feb. 18, 1905, at Nease Settlement, Meigs
County, daughter of the late John F. and Blanche Holter Hamm . She attended the St. John Lutheran Church.
Surviving are a daughter-in-law. Janet On Grueser of Logan; four granddaughters, Regina Meyers of Canal Winchester, Lisa McCoy of Kingston,
Susan Foster of Gf9ve City,. Jennifet Grueser of Columbus; three greatgrandchildren, Jenna and Simon Meyers, Canal Winchester, and Jimmy Foster, Grove City; and a brother, Delmar Hamm, South Webster. ,
She was preceded in death by her husband, Oarence Grueser; and a son,
Dr. Roger Grueser.
Brewer, treated at the scene.
Funeral services will be held Monday at I p.m. at the Ewing Funeral
POMEROY
1
Home. Pomeroy. The Rev. Dawn Spalding will officiate and burial will be
4:03 p.m., Oliver Street, Linda ' in Gilmore Cemetery, Minersville. Friends may call at the funeral home SunBuckley, VJ\1H;
·
day, March 31, from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
4:57 p.m., Page Street, Ethel
In lieu of flowers , donations may be made to the St. John Lutheran
Guthrie, Vt.l,li;
Church, Pine Grove Road; Racine, Ohio
9:08 p.m., Page Street, William
· Kimes, Pleasant Valley Hospital.
REEDSVIL"E
8:44a.m., state Route 124, Denver Weber, S\. Joseph's Hospital.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana- 47.50-49.50.
RUTLAND .,
Ohio direct hog prices at selected
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 41.00I :05 a.m., Main Street, Mary Day,
buying points Thursday by the U.S. 45.50.
VMH.
., .
Department of Agriculture Market
Sows: under 500 lbs. steady to
· SYRACUSE
1.00 lower; over 500 lbs. mostly
News:
,4:04 p.m., Glenn Street, Charlie
Barrows and gilts: mostly 50 cents steady.
hiuington, ~eated at the scene. ..
U.S. 1-3, 300-500 lbs. 32.00lower;
demand light to moderate on
TUPJ'ERS Pf,.AINS ,
35.50;
500-650 lbs. 34.50-40.50, few
a
moderate
run.
II :48 p.m., state Route 681, DonU.S.
1-3,
230-260
lbs.
46.0041.00.
na Griffith, Camden-Clark Memori48.00, few 45.50 and 48.50; plants
Boars: 25.00-30.00.
al Hospital.

f

Meigs EMS logs 16 c~lls

The Daily Sentinel

"'

"

Today's weather forecast

·(Morton Kondracke Is execud\'e

=·

.1

'

editor of Roll Call, the newsp~~per
or Capitol HW.)

WritiTaaJ s-, Creatur~s,._ '' · :
. 5"177 Wilt CeDtiuy M.L, : :
dleale,
7~ 1M Mae~-. Calif. '.·

• Robert L. Stewart 34, Hender~·
son, to,yo, felony counts delivery of:
controlled su~stance, $50,000;
.
• Angela Sue Stewart, . 28, Hen.:
derson, felony delivery of controlle4
substance, $'25,0QO; and,
,
• Paula K. Bonecutter, 28, Hen-.
derson, felony conspire to delivery:
controlled substance, $25,000.
In addition, Jeffrey W. Blain, 34,:
Gallipolis Ferry, poSted bond previ-:
ously, but was not listed Wednesday::
He was charged with felony posses-:sion of controlled substance and mi~·
demeanor possession. Bond was:.

Gallipolis native helps...

have -a choice?_
· _ __

' '·

•'

against NAFTA. Earlier this month, ·
178 of the House's 238 Republicans
voted with the National Rifle A~so­
ciation against expanding federal ·
power to crack down on terrorists and .
to delay a ban on armor-piercing bullets.
Recently, 213 Republicans voted
to deny education support to children . ·
()f illegal aliens, 158 Republicans voted to drastically restrict the number.
of legal immigrants entering the
country, and 183 voted to repel~~ the
1993 ban on assault weapons.
'
If Buchanan is patient, if Dole is
·defeated, and if the problems of economic insecurity and social disiO&lt;:ation are not solved over the next four
years, Buchanan might be a formidable candidate in 2000.
Pretty 'Clearly, he wants a prime- ·
lime spot at the San Diego convention to launch his 2000 candidacy.
Dole, who wants San Diego to he
Bob Dole's convention, won't want ·
to give him prime time.
.
Will Buchanan walk? He may,
calculating that he can return to the
GOP fold in 2C)OO. Party regulan
need to tell Buchanan soon that if he
elect.~ Clinton, they'll boot him out of
the GOP for good.
So, what Umc should Buchanan
speak? Luntz recommends midnight
eastern time, but that's prime time in
the West. Mahe favors 3 p.m. in San
Diego, 6 p.m. in the East. That
sounds right.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Another arrest was made in an undercover drug sweep that began Tuesday
Clara B. ~eser, 91 , of Morning Star Road, Racine, died Tuesday, March in Mason County, bringing the total
26, 1996, at Overbrook Center in Middleport.
· number arrested to 32.
A homemaker, she was born Feb. 18, 1905, at Nease Settlement, Meigs
Christopher Berkley of Gallipolis
County, daughter of the late John F. and Blanche Holter Harnm. She attend- was charged with one count of delived the St. John Lutheran Church.
ering a controlled substance. He was
Surviving are a daughter-in-law, Janet On Grueser of Logan; four grand- arraigned by Mason County Magisdaughters; three great-grandchildren, and a brother, Delmar Hamm, South trate Johnny Reynolds, where bond
Webster.
was set at $25,000.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Oarence Grueser, and a son,
Four others previously charged
'Dr. Roger Grueser.
'
and arraigned posted bond, including:
Services will be held Monday at I p.m, at the Ewing Funeral Home,
• Stephanie L. Parsons, 21, Point
Pomeroy. The Rev. Dawn Spalding will officiate and burial will be in Pleasant, felony conspire to deliver
Gilmore Cemetery, Minersville: Friends may call at the funeral home Sun- controlled substance, $25,000;
day from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. ,
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the St. John Lutheran
Church, Pine Grove Road, Racine.

Borg-Warner .........................33'1.
Champion Ind ....................... 16~.
Charming Shop .....................5~.
City Holdlng ..........................23 'h
Federal Mogul... .................... 19l.
Gannett ............ :....................66,-..
Goodyear T&amp;R ......................S1'1.
K-mart .....................................9,..

Lands End ............................. 17'1.
Llmltad lnc ..................:......... 18'!t
Peoples Bancorp ................... 23
Ohio Valley Bank ....................40

One Yalley .............................31~..

Rockwell ..............................57'1.
Robblna &amp; Myers ....................33
Royal Dutch/Shell .............. 141 '!.
Shoney's Inc .............................9
Star Bank ..............................64\

Wendy lnt'1 ............................17't.
Worthington JncL ................. 20'1.

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
of Gallipolis.

Today's livestock report ·

Meigs an.nouncments
Soup supper Friday
Star Grange 778 will hold a soup .
supper and program Friday. Serving
will be from 5td,7p.m. with the program to follow. The' public in invited
to attend. Donations will be accepted for t!le fo\ld.
·
Revival set
Revival servi&lt;;cs at the Believers
Fellowship Ministry, Rutland
, will be held Wednesday Jhrough
Saturday. April6,,with I~ Rev. Ocraid HI!I'ding of c:;:olumbus, speaker.
Th~ Rev. Margaret Robinson, pastor,
invites.the publlc,1 ·
.
.

.

'

Round, iquar:e dince.set
.
The Out of the Blue band will perform at a clogging, round and square
· dance Saturday, 8 to II p.m., at the
'fl1ppers Plains VFW Post Caller will
be Jim Bro~n. ·

.
'

Sltootln1 -kh dated
The Forked Run Sportsman's Club
I

will hold two shooting matches Sunday, I p.m. at the clubhouse on Curtis Hollow Road.
PTO meetin11 ehan1ed
The Letart Falls Elementary PTO
meeting has been changed to April
II, (p.m.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions - Mary
R-ser, Middli:port.
Wednesday discharges - none.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Man:h 27 ..:... Lula
Ric)Jards, Hazel Arnold, Virginia
Cook, Mrs. Roger Seymour and
daughter, Kelly Ours, Evelyn Hand·
esty.
.
Birth
Mr. and Mrs. Mike
·Spillman, daughter. Crown City.
(Published willa permislion)

Robert C•
Dartenbaeh
Your Co•ndssloner
Thanks to the voters of
County who helped in any
to make my campaign a success.
Everything
was
deeply
appreciated.
I

Paid lor by lht c:andidate Robert C. H11111Ubach, o43748 Ruaeell Rd., Pomeroy, OH.

ON THE CtJITING •
EDGE AT~ PRICES
ANYONE CAN
AFFORD.

POMEROY
Near Pa-neroy-Maeon Brlclae·l

992-2588
VIN1'0N
Gallla County Dlapla' .' in
151 '11aln8t.
.

388-8803

�Thut.day, March 21,1818

Sports

On bs•ebBII's spring training scene,

.l\ll~rtinez brothers meet a-s foes; Ohio clubs post wins
Sy The Allocl8ted PrM1

In the NBA,

Now the Brothers Martinez have
history behind him.
.
Claiming they'd never opposed
each other - until Wednesday at
Vero Beach, Fla. - nobody won
bragging rights in their first
encounter.
The record will show that both
pitched well, although neither fig.
ured in the decision when Ramon's
Los Angeles Dodgers beat former
teammate Pedro's Montreal Expos 42. But older brother Ramon appeared .
to have the most fun.
He wel!t 2-for-2 at the plate
against Pedro, including a bunt hit.
down the third-base line in the second inning.

Lakers and Pacers
among wJnners
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
~apped one of the best performances
AP Belketbllll Writer
of his comeback with two sky hooks
One of~hese days, either Miami, directly in front of Riley as time was
Charlotte or Washington will break running out.
from the , others and lock up the
"I think I'd be the last coach thai
eighth playoff spot in the East.
was going to get beat' by a sky
All three had a, chance to start hook," said Riley, who coached the
down that road Wednesday nigh~ but great Lakers teams of the 1980s. "I
none took advantage.
thought Kareem (Abdui-Jabbar)
The Heat lost by II at home 10 the retired that thing.'.'
Los Angeles Lakers, the ~omets lost
Nick Van ·Exel added 21 points
by 37 at Seattle ·and the Bulleis for the Lakers, who have won 18 of
dropped a siK-point decision at home their last 24 games.
to Indiana. Each team has 12 or 13
Alonzo Mourning scored 19
games remaining. Miami and Char- points for the Heat but went only 3lotte
tied with 35-34 records and of-13 on -free throws, many of the
Washington is 3 112 games bi!Ck with misses coming at crucial points in
a 32-38 record.
the second half.
"Tonight was just a tough loss for
Sonics 13l, Horaets 95
us," said Juwan Howard of the BulThe Sonics tied · their highest
lets. "This game hurts to Jose offensive output of the season and
because it huns our chances of mak- scored the most points of any Charing the playoffs. But we have 12 lotte opponent.
games to go."
Gary Payton had a career-high 17
Washington has six games left at assists and 19 points and fellow Allhome ' and six on the road, half Star Shawn Kemp had 21 points and
against teams with winning records II rebounds. Detlef Schrempf scored
and half against sub-.500 teams. The 18 points and Hersey Hawkins 17 in
Bullets would need to win nine of the Sanies' 55th victory of the seaihem to finish at ..SOO.
son.
Miami and Charlotte have been
Olen Rice, Charlotte's top scorer
playing well lately, the Heat winning at 22.5 points per game, was limiteight of their last 10 and the Hornets ed to 13 points. The Hornets looked
winning six of nine, bu~ neither gave to put the loss behind them
its best effort Wednesaay night.
"W:hen you get beat this badly, it
Magic Johnson had 27 points, makes a loss that much easier to get
nine rebounds and nine assists in his over," Dell Curry said.
first game against his former coach,
Pacers 99, Bullets 93
Pat Riley, and the Lakers won in ·' Reggie Miller scored IS of his3S
Florida for a second straight night. points in the fourth quarter, includOn 'I;'uesday, they became the first ing I I in the final -3:33.
team to win at Orlando Arena.
"When he staned to get hot, I
"This team is coming on and knew it was going to be tough forus
everybody better be ready," Johnson to pull this one out," Howard said.
said of the Lakers.
Ri.k. Smils had 27 points on 12·
Playing the third game of a five- for-18 shootlng for the Pacers, who .
game road trip. Charlotte had a let- snapped their three-game road losing
down. one night after beating -the streak. Indiana has won eight of its
Denver Nuggets in double-overtime. last nine against Washington.
Seattle .was ahead by 21 after three
"I hope this is it. We've been
periods and added to the blowout by , inconsistent the last couple Of
scoring II consecutive points at the months," ·Smits said. "We need to
stan of t~e founh quarter.
get dose to our peak for playoff
~~
"We can still ha_ve a good trip. We time."
' Spurs !10, Knicks 84
need to leave this one behind us and
At San Antonio, the Spiars won
concentrate on beating Sacramento
·
their'
15th in a roi.V on the one-month
and Vancouver. We can't afford to go
backward, so we can't dwell' on this anniverslll)' of their last loss.
one," Kehny Anderson said. '
Sail 'Antonio trailed ~2; 39 at t~e
In other games, San Antonio beat half as· D~vid R~binson ~cored only
New York 90-84, 'Dallas · edged tw.o Jioin~ on 1-of-8 shOQ!ing, \Jill he
Houston 117-114, •Utah defeated rebo;&gt;unded to lead the Spurs w11h 21
Milwaukee 98-83, Boston downed points, and hisfour.·free throws in Jhe
Minnesota 121-116 and Philadelphia - . last 24. I secon&lt;ls gave San Antonio,
beat Toronto 103-94.
an 89-82 lead. Sean Elliott added 18
Lakers 106, Heat !16
points and Avery Johnson 17.
Miami's four-game winning
The Knicks finished 2-2 on an
streak came to an end as Los Ange· eight-day, four:game road !rip to
les scored 14 of the game's final 20 Chicago, Dallas, Houston and San
points after Miami had pulled to 92- Antonio.
89 with 3 1/2 minutes left.
Pt\averlcks 117, Rockets 111
Johnson twisted his ankle in the
Dallas came back from a 16-point
first half, but shook off concerned deficit in the third quarter to end its
trainers and stayed in the game. He 11-game Iosjng siRak. Injury-depletmade all IS of his free throws and
(See NBA on Page S)

·, Pitino

are

HANDS TO HEAVEN -Indiana's Mark Jackson and AntoniO Davia
(33) aurround Washington canter Gheorghe Mu~eaan (77) In their
q.-st for the rebound during Wednesday night's NBA conteat In Landover, Md., where the Pacers won 99-93. (AP)

Nebraska and St.
Joseph's to play
for NIT title tonight
By JIM O'CONNELL
, ,do and winning erases everx.probNEW YORK (AP)- Danny Nee · · Iem you have."
' ·
believes he and Phil Martelli have to
It did not erase every problem the
be the two happiest guys in New Cornhuskers (2().14) could face,
York. 'Their basketball teams are still how,ever. Nee allowed his team to
playing and will meet tQnight .in \he experience the cily he was ,born and
NIT championship game.
raised in.
Neither Nebraska, Nee's school,
"The post-season should be
or St. Joseph's, Martelli 's employer, .• epjoyable and we've done that here
~as ever won a national !lasketball
for the-kids, taking them to the South
r,h~pionship l
.
Street Seaport, the Statue af Liberty
For Nee, that idea seems panicu- and the Empire State Building," he
.arly far-fetched, considering his said. "I gave them advice about not
team closed the regular season by · buying watches on the street. They
losing 10 of II games. He said this. listened like they did when we were
one season has been made up of on the losing streak a~d they all
three different ones.
bought a watch."
"We started I S-4, lost those
The Hawks ( 19-12) have split six
games and now we're ip the post- overtime games this season, two of
~n. College basketball has its ups •tbem losses to top-ranked Massaand downs," he said- Wednesday. . cnuseus. Martelli, a first-year head
. "J.4sing magnifies ev.ei-ything you
(See PREVlEW on Page 5)

San Anionic. :u l&gt;allas. g p.m.
Van~,;ouvt:r al Ultlh. 9 p.m.
Mllwuukte 111 Ph()(nix. 9 fl.m.
Charlone :11 Sncromemo. IOJO p.m.

Baske tball

NBA standings
Atlllntk ENvision

»:

1. f&lt;l.
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IM

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WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mklwnl DiYlsfon

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Houston ............. ....~2
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Oollas 117, tl"""on 114'
1 Utah 98. Milw•kee 82
Sca111&lt; I.12, Cho&lt;IOne 9l

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.
NEW YORK (AP)- A November loss to Massachusetts forced
Kent~cky to ~ide what .kind of
team II wa~ted to have th1s season.
The deCISIOn the Wildcats made
got them staned on a 27-game winnmg streak, a 32-2 record and, ulti-

· MOVING ON - Billy Donovan speaks to reporters shortly 1ftar
being announced as Florida's new men's basketball coacl) at a news •
conference Wednesday. Donovan left his post at Marshall Universl· ' ·
ty to take the potltlori vacated after Lon Kruger took a similar potl· .
tlon at tha University of llllnoi1. (AP)
·
"
.

Donovan 'hired
as Florida's ·head
basketball coach
By DOUG FERGUSON
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (.:\P)
Anojher Rick Pitino protege.is coming to the Southeastern Conference.
The University of Florida named
Marshall coach Billy Donovan as its
basketball coach today, taking over
for Lon Kruger, who left 13$1 week
to ~ake the head coaching jol);_at IJJinOis.

~&gt; •

Donovan, ~0. played for Pitino on
his Providence team that rcac~ed the
Final Four in 1987, and also w.as an
assistant fpr five years under,,Pitino
at Keqtucky.
, ...
He tltjngs to the Gators t~e . P~i­
no styl~. which was sajd to l!c one.
attribute the school was Jooll;wg for
.in a new head coach.
"I believe in playing an up-tempo, ll!nning and pressing · ~lyle,"
Donovan said. "Having a chance to
work with Ri.:k Pitino ... I feel-very
comfortablc·with that style, and that

..
~·

'

·"

is the sty le we will play."
'"
Updcr Kruger, the Gators played "'
a halfcourt game. Th~y reached the .:
Final Four two years ago, but went
12-16 this year with a young team '.1
and a difficult schedule.
Donovan had a 35-20 record in . •;
two seasons, at Marshall, where he
took over a program that had gone 9- ~
18 before \!c arrived. He was named :n
Southern Conference coach of the ~-,
year in his lirst season.
_,
· _"Billy is one of the top young
.:oachcs in the nation and he is a win· ,,i
ncr," Florida athletic director Jeremy
Foley said. "Every step or the way ' ,
he has attacked his job with trcmcn- '~
dous enthusiasm and with a great .' '
work clhi, ,"

Transactions

NHL standings

Auto racing

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Iaill

Alla~kfli~

{if

Onawa ............... l~~4

.a

'
HI 2~4
241 222
2~2

244

216 2)4
214 230

34 169 262

WESTERN CONFERENCE

'I.Ium

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»: J.

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y-lA!troit .. ..........n 12 5
ll·Chi!.:&lt;IJO ...... ....37 25 12
St. Louis ............:ll 3013
Toronto ............ JO 34 12
Winnipeg ........... .12 J7 ~
Dull:u...... ........ 2.\ 37 I)

!iii li&amp;

119' 291
86 247
7~ 200
72 22~
69 2~1
~9 Z04

163
19!1
21K
234
268
241J ,

Podlk Dl.,...., '
y-Cok&gt;rn&lt;lo .........42 23 10

CltlgUI')' ............. JI 32 II
Vnncou..r .........2932 1I
An ....im ............ 29 )7 7
' Sdmonloo ..........28l!l 8
Los Angoles ....... 21 38 17
Sanl~HC ............ .I849 7
y·clinched di\tisioo fifk •
·"-C:IirK;hed plAyoff lpcM

'

Winato:n C•p .

· DARWALINC.: Numed Je(( Hum-"
monc.l t~am manaacr (or dri~cr Darrell

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Phll .... lpllio ....... JK 22 I) 'K9 248 IMK
Florida ...............3!l16 'il K~ 237 211
Wllshinaton, ..... J~ li.J 10 K9 209 U18
New J~rsey ....... .34 2!l ll 79 liJ:\ .115
Tumpu _Bay , ...... JJ29 11 TJ 217 229
N.Y. blanden .... 204l i 41! 20l 216
NortlotaaDi•.....
Pl1t•bursb ..........44 2~ 4 92
Mon1real .... ,....... 37 29 s 112
Bo~tun ...............J~ 2~ 9 79
Hortford.. ...... ... JO l4 ~ 69
Boffolo ............... 211 JK 7 63

. .

Waltrip.

BasebaD
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.\merinn Leap
TORONTO BLUE JAYS: Auiaaed
Frunk Viola. pit ~:IM:r. to Knoxville or lhc
Sc.luth~rn Ltagut.

5011.

p

..

,

'

SELECT

FootbaU

LARGE

,..

SELECTION OF STYLES

.

National Foatbol t...cAll.ANTA FALCONS: Signod 0""
0wt'n5, defensive lincmun, to a twO•)'t!llf
contrm:t

•,

MIDDLEPORT
.
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ANAHEIM MIGHTY t&gt;UCKS: S&lt;nl
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BRUINS: Recalled Rynn
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"

NEW YORK (AP) -The 1996
NASCAR Winston Cup stock car
racing schedule, 'with · winners in
parentheses and driver point standings: Feb. 18 ....:: Daytona 500 (Dale
11!fl'CII).

Feb. 25 - Goodwrench 400,
Rockingham, N.C. (Dale Earnhlll'9t).
Mar. 3 -, Pontiac B~,citement
400, Richmond, Va. (Jeff'tiordon).
March I0 - Purolator 500,
Hampton, Ga. (Dale ~hardt).
March 24 - TranSouth Financial
400, Darlington, S.C. (Jeff Gordon).
March 31 -Food City 500, Bristol, Tenn.
April 14 - First Union 400,
North Wilkesboro, N.C.
April 21 - Goody's Headache
Powders 500, Martinsville, Va.
April 28 - Winston Select 500,
Talladega, Ala.
May 5 - Save Mart ·supermarkets 300, Sonoma, Calif.
May 26 - Coca-Cola 600, Concord, N.C.
.
June 2- Miller 500. Dover, Del.
June 16- UAW-GM Teamwork
500, Long Pond, Pa.
June 23- Miller 400, Brooklyn~
Mich.

·July 6 - Pepsi 400, Daytona
Beach, Fla.
July 14 -Slick 50 300, Loudon,
N.H.
July 21 - Miller 500, Long
Pond, Pa.
July 28 - DieHard 500, Talladega, Ala.
Aug. 3 - Brickyard 400, Indianapolis
Aug. II - Bud at the Glen,
Watkins Glen, N.Y.
Aug. 18 - GM Goodwrench
Dealers 400, Brooklyn, Mich.
Aug. 24 - Goody's Headache
Powders 500, Bristol, Tenn .
Sept. I - Mountain Dew Southem 500, Darlington, S.C.
Sept. 7 - Miller 400, Richmond, Va.
Sept. IS - MBNA 500, Dover,
Del.
Sept. 22 - Hanes 500, Martinsville, Va.
Sept. 29 - Tyson Holly Farms
400, Nonh Wilkesboro, N.C.
~1. 6-UAW-GM Quality 500,
Concord, N.C.
Oct. 20- AC-Delco 400, Rockingham, N.C.
Oct. 27 - Dura Lube 500,
PhoeniK

.

.-.•

-·-·-

Driver standings
I. Dale Jarrett, 783.
2. Dale Earnhardt, 736.
3. Ricky Rudd. 726.
4. Ricky Craven, 698.
5. Bill Elliott, 667.
6. Terry Labonte, 649.
7. Ted Musgrave, 636.
8. Mark Martin, 61'7.
9. Jeff Gordon , 615 .
I0. Ken Schrader, 60 I.
II. Bobby Hamilton, 589.
12. Sterling Marlin, 587.
13. Jeff Burton, 583.
(tic) Rusty Wallace, 583.
15. Kyle Petty, 566.
16. Jeremy Maylicld, 565.
17. Kenny Walla.:e, 528 . ·
18. Bobby Labonte, 520.
19. Jimmy Spencer, 516.
20. Rick Mast, 486.
21. Michael Waltrip, 471.

Our Prk:a Are 1be Lowest In 1be Area•

Kittens

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:

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...

992·2156

Ciiii~~========::::::::=:==~~:

Homes To Fit Your Lifestyle

.-·.

22. Steve Grissom, 468.
23. Ernie Irvan, 462.
24. Dave Marcis, 456.
25. Lake Speed, 446.
26. Wally Dallenbach, 442.
27. Joe Ncmcchek, 427 .
28. Robert Pressley, 425.
29. Mike Wallace, 424.
30. Ward Burton, 421.
31. Hut Stricklin, 412.
(tie) Brett Bodine, 412.
33. Morgan Shepherd, 404.
34. Darrell Waltrip, 40 I.
35. Johnny Benson, 389.
36. Derrike Cope, 383.
37. John Andrctti, 373.
38. Geoff Bodine, 367.
39. Elton Sawyer, 340.
40. Bobby Hillin Jr., 313.
41. Dick Trickle, 213.
42. Jen· Purvis, 127.
(tic) Mike Skinner, 127.
44. Loy Allen, II 0.
45. Chad Little, 64.
46. Chuck Down, 43.

To place •• ad, call ..•.

'**

•Siamese

•Min Pin
•Chihuahua

Nov. 10- NAPA 500, Hampton.
Ga.

!
*
!

To each of
youwho
voted for
and
:
encouraged
us.
:

!

THANK !
YOU :

*-!

~- ·
: for making · the campaign
: a wonderful experience.
:
We will always remember
: your words of support :
.:
: and friendship.

!

t

*

*

*

:

!

·**

*

·.

*

•

•

•
l&lt;

Patty
Geoglein :
Pickens &amp;
Family

.

l ·_:

*·
:.
:
.***.:;~:'

*
•'
~~~-------~~~~~~)*********************** _
;

•' '

••

At Kissimmee, Fla., Pete
Schourek tuned up for his opening- :
day assignment by allowing three ~
hits in six scoreless innings. ·
:
•
••

and I thought if they learned their
"You can't really say Mississiproles and accepted their roles, that pi State is a surprise the way they
we could be a good team," Williams handled Kentucky and Georgia in lbe :
said. "It didn't happen.~ll at once. It SEC tournament,': Syracuse coach :
was ~ gradual process. _ _ _
Jim Boeheim said. The Orangemen :,
W1lhams sa1d he d1stmgu1shes needed last-second shots in regula- ::
between the kind of confidence his · tion and ovenime to defeat Georgia ·:
team has now and the confidence in the NCAA.
·•
some teams put on for appearance
::
sake.
Syracuse's 1991 loss as a No. 2 :·
"With kids this age, confidence seed to 15th-seeded Richmond was :
can sometimes be false ," he said. one of the biggest upsets in recent :"They see it as a sign of weakness NCAA tournament history. But this ::
if you don't show con~dcnce, even year the Orangemen were given just ::
if it isn't real. But as you win a marginal chans e to even make the ':
games, confidence increases. As you field .
:;
win games against quality teams,
··
"At the beginning of the season, ••·
con fid
1 ence beeames more rea1"
.
The run of upsets by Mississippi I was worried,'' Boeheim said. "I •
State (26-7) has made the Bulldogs thought we could win 18 games, but : :
the favorite in Saturday's semifinal I raised my expectations because we "
against Syracuse (28-8), which is played welL I knew it would be a
making its first Final Four appear- long, long shot (to make the Final
ancc since 1987. when the Orange- Four). But the tournament usually ·..
men lost the final game to Indiana on goes that way. There always seems . ~
a last-second basket by Keith Smart. to be a surprise team that sneaks in.··

_. :

1\le. • $&amp; orM appolllllllllll.

a.

.•

Reds 6, Astros Z

-

Model Home

,.. Pi.. 51. ..

At Fort Myers, Fla., Kirby Puckett's sixth-inning single proved decisive as Minnesota beat Atlanta in a
matchup bet.:.een four-lime Cy
Young winner Greg Maddux and
Twins opening-day starter Brad Radke. Maddux gave up two hits and a
run in four innings. Radke pitched
six innings, allowing a hoiner to Ed
Giovanola on the first pitch of the
game.
Cardlnab 8, Pirates 5
At Bradenton, Fla., Brian Jordan
and Ron Ganl hit I Oth-inning home
ruQs off Pittsburgh closer Dan Miceli
as St. Louis won a longball contest.
Jordan led off the lOth with a shot

over the left-field wall to snap a 5-S : .
tie. Later, Gant added a two-run;
· homer. Jose Oliva and Gary Gaetti also homered for the Cardinals,:
while AI Martin and Midre Culll-':
mings connected'for Pittsburgh.
Pblllles 6, White Sox 4
.
At Clearwater, Fla., Lenny Dyk- •
stra's two-run single in the sixth
inning made the difference as :
Philadelphia rallied to win. Dykstra's •
single off reliever Larry Thomas:
knocked in Mark Whiten and Mike:
Lieberlhal, giving the Phillies a 5-4:
lekd.

Winston Cup slate and standings posted

181AL
=•

••
••

Pld lip " New heo • Goes directly over exilling roof.
• Helps save mvironmcnt• No dompin&amp; of old
non·biOdepadable roofing. · ·
,
. • S~ve$ money· No landfill diipq.al cbarJes.
Cuts llme and labor costs in hi!f.
• Looks ~ 01\ any home.•

Twins 2, Braves 1

•

•Guineas

. .11l:

0 RIP-OFF.
• ~:~4l~lillll='ted warranty.

"With II talentedplayersofthiscal- Massachusells by a selection comiber, it ¢ould either be very difficult miuee that included Pitino, a UMass
for all of us, or we could look at the _alumnus, said he has tried to incorLarry Bird and Magic Johnson phiporate Pitino's philosophy of meshlosophy to care only about the team. mg many talented players.
If we take the other road, we can
"We have a s1gn that says, 'It's
reach our goals. And they chose the amazing what can get done when no
latter."
.
one cares who gets the credit,"' CaliBefore losing to Mississippi State pari said. "Only a great coach can
in the Southeastern Conference tour- get great players to sacrifice for the
nament, Kentucky won every game team. It's difficult for people to
by double-digit margins, most of understand how hard it is to get playthem by considerably more than 10. ers to do that."
In the NCAA tournament, the WildMississippi State, which faces
.cats have won all four games by at Syracuse in Saturday's other semifinul, followed through with impresleast 20.
But Pitino hasn't · forgotten 'sive victories over the Southeast
· Novem ber v1c·
·
Reg1ona
· I' s top seeds, Connecticut
UMass' impress1ve
tory.
.
· and Cincinnati, to reach the Final
"I'm enjoying the Final Four Four for the first time.
experience very much, eKcept that
All of that convinced Mississipwatching UMass on tape is not pi State and coach Richard Williams
enjoyable,'' he said. "It makes me t_hat. the Shlfkville, Miss., school
sick. So 10 percent of the lime, I'm belongs right where it is despite
sick. 'The other 90 percent I'm hav- being the firs\ fifth-seeded team to
ing a heck of a time."
•
reach the Final Four since 1982.
John Calipari, who was hired at
"I knew we had talented players,

• A,._ 1111 Windows
• Stuley Doon
• lx6 Exterior Walls, 16 In. 011 Center
• Arnlllnlnl solllri111 Floor 111e '
• Marilllle Cabinets
• BFoot CciHaa
• 2•10 Floor Jollll, 161n. Pn Cenler
• Sl (]Ilion w.ter H~
• Shaw Carpets .
aan ASSlRED• Delli PIIICdS
·• Mllllcr T-loct. Vinyl Sidin&amp; Wkh Lifetime W~ .
• 2S Yclr WIITIIIIY Aspball Sllinalca
• 10 Ye1r SIIUCIUnl w.mnty On The Home

Y4 2!12 219

73
73
6.1
64
l9
41

RB!s.

'

coach, has been able to handle all the always been a school trademark,
close losses with his reputation- starting with the mascot, a student in
gaining sense of humor.
costume who naps his arms continHc talked of Nee's theory about uously the whole game, timeouts and
three seasons in one.
halftime included .
"'There ha~e always been three '
"We had I,000 students make the
seasons at Nebraska,'' Martelli said, trip here for the semifinals and they
"fall football, winter football and probably went back and shamed the
spring football.''
other I,300 to coming back with
Martelli then talked about what them for lhe finals," Martelli said.
made the Hnwks a hot topic of dis- "St. Joseph's basketball is emotion
cuS.ion ·this season: the gan\e with in the purest form of love. The stu·
Arizona that was canceled whoo the dents love this team and the team
Wild.:ats refused to travel to loves the students."
Philadelphia because of anticipated
Nee knows those students will be
bad weather conditions that never abig help to the Hawks.
materialized. ·
"It will probably be like a home
When asked if he was impressed game for them.'' he said.
with Nee's team leaving Lincoln in
St. Joseph's got to the final with
bad weather forthe trip to New York, a 74-69 overtime victory over
he said: "It's the· greatest story in Alabama; Nebraska advanced with a
basketball today. He new through a 90-78 win over Tulane.
snowstorm to get here. He's a real
Alabama and Tulane will play a
New Yorker."
third~place game to open tonight's
The zeal of St. Joseph's fans has doubleheader.

" I'

HOUSTON ROCKETS: Sitn&lt;d
Melvin Booker. &amp;UPnl. for the n!St of t~
1996 season.
·
WASHINOTO~ BULLETS: Al:ti'"'·
ed Rubert Pack 1 JUIW"d, fwm the injun.'l..l
list
·

N•tlontll...NPt
COLORADO ROCKIES: Anianet.l
Juha Habyan, pitcher, to tb.:ir minor lc-ugu~: cmnp.
·
FLORIDA MARLINS : N;~Rl(d Jim
Ron vil-~ prc=siOent of su l~s tutd marketing.
HOUSTON ASTROS: Optioned Jim
Dougherty ilnJ Donn.: Wall, pitchers. lo
Tucson of !he Pacific Coa.~1 LeUaue. As- 1
slaned Mike Drumk:y, infidckr. and ltrry
Goff, catcher, lo th&amp;lir m.inor-h=ogue c:wnp.
Waived Ray Holbtn, inliclder.
MONTREAL EXPOS : Oplioned
Derek Au~.--oin. pitcher, 11nd Cliff Floyd
aad Roy McDavu:l, outfteldcn, to Qnawn
of the International Leaaue. Sen1 Ben
Riv~m. pitcher: Fmn'ci~eo Matos, infield·
•: and Gi!Hno Reyel., &lt;:atcher, to Ot-

Milwaukee lost its 13th in a row,
Celtics 121
'nmberwolves 116
AI Min~lis, Dee Brown and
David Wesley hit five three-pointers
'in a three-minute span of the second
half and Boston overcame Kevin
Garnett's career-high '33 points.
Rick Fox had 26 points to lead the
Celtics, Wesley added 20 and Brown
17. '
. 1~n 103, Raptors 94
At Philadelphia, the Sixers broke
their eight-game losing streak behind
Clarence Weathei'Spcion 's 28 points.
Toronto
rookie
Damon
Stoudamire missed the gaine due to
knee tendinitis.

move for a better situation with more
tournament.
Both use Pitino's style of play- money and stuff like thai ... We as a
a pressing defense, and a transition team understand it's a business." '
"He saw an opportunity 'and we
offense that Features the three-pointer. It was called "Billyball" at Mar- can't blame l)im," said guard Keith
Veney, who transfermlto Marshall
shall.
to
play in DonOvan's up-tempo sysPitino has said Donovlll) is "ready
tem
this season.
'
for any coaching job in the country.''
Donovan will reportedly sign a
"Billy Donovan was a great player, a great person and a great asso- five-year contract at Florida. He had
ciate for me," Pitino said. "He will two guaranteed years left on a
nat-out be a great head coach at the rollover contract at Marshall, where
iniversity of Florida for years to he was paid a lillie more than
·$100,000 per year, according to
come.
"It was tough enough having reports in The Orlando Sentind,
The
Tubby Smith at Georgia. Now with Florida . Times- Union;
the Billy in the league, I'm definite- Gaines•illt Sun and the Tampa Tribune.
ly leaving."
Financial terms of Donovan's
Donovan told his player~ at Mardeal
with Florida are being finalized,
shall about his decision Tuesday
night after returning from but the package is reportedly worth
about $400,000 annujlll y.
Gaines vi lie.
Donovan will..,lfring assistant
Flirward John Br0 wn said his
coaches
Anthony Grant. Donnie
teammates understood Donovan's
Jones
and
former Kentucky player
decision but will miss him and were
John
Rclphrey,
the Gainesville Sun
upset about the announcement.
reponedc
"It 's something a~ybody would
Donovan reportedly turned down
do," Brown said. "If I had the
chance and if I was the head coach the head coaching job at the Uniof a Southern Confcn\ncc team, my versity of South Florida in Tampa
goal would be the Final Four and u last week.
beller conference. I'd make the same

Another fonmer Pitino assistant, "~'
Tubby Smilh, was named coach at
Georgia last year and Jed the Bull- ,','
dogs into the final 16 of the NCAA .. :;
(See DONOVAN on Page 5)
. ,.

when Mike Piazza homered off Barry Manuel, and took a 2-1 lead in lhe
seventh on an RBI single by Carlos
Hernandez.
Dave Silvestri homered off winner Joey Eischen in the lOP of the
eighth to make it 2-2.
Antonio Osuna blanked the
Expos in the ninth to earn a save.
lndiam 13, Blue Jays 0
At Winter Haven, Fla., Manny
Ramirez had two home runs and five
RB!s to lead a 19-hit attack by
Cleveland. Ramirez twice victimized
Erik Hanson, connecting for a tworun homer in the second inning and
added a three-run shot in the third.
For the spring, Ramirez is hitting
.358, with seven home runs and I 8

·NIT preview... &lt;.;.C;;.;on"'tin;.;;;u;.;;.ed;;..~;.;.ro;...m_P...;ilg::.c_4-'-)--~----

BukotlloiA_,.,Ion
All.ANTA HAWKS: Signed Roog 1 ~
Jcrdun, a:uard, for the rest ofthl: 19% ~••-

.

mately, a place in the Final Four
against UMass in Saturday's semifinals.
"We had a meeting after the
UMass loss, and I told the players
there were two ways we could go,"
Pitino said Wednesday during a conference call for Final Four coaches.

Donovan; ..&lt;Continued from Page 4)

I•

n't stop laughing."
Ramon, who will pitch on opening day for the Dodgers at f!ouston
on Monday, allowed two hits and
one run in six innings. He held the
Expos hitless after the first, when
F.P. Santangelo doubled, moved to
third on an infield single by Randell
White and scored as Henry
Rodriguez grounded out.
Pedro was just as effective, scat:
tering six hits in five shutout innings.
Garry Ingram singled home the
go-ahead run in the eighth.
Ingram's . two-out hit drove in
Juan Castro to snap a· 2·2 tie, and
Wilton Guerrero also S&lt;:Ored when
left fielder Rodriguez made an eiTOr.
The Dodgers tied it in the sixth

Kentucky's loss to UMass as lesson for next time

games.!~_on-tin_u_ed_fr_om__.Pas_e_4_l_ _ _ _ __

ed Houston dropped its sixth in a
row.
Jason Kidd had 22 points and II
assists and made two clutch free
throws with I 2. I seconds left. Houston had a chance to tic li, but Melvin
Booker and Sam Mac!\ missed threepoint attempts in the final seconds.
Jim Jackson scored 21 points,
Lucious Harris had 18 and Tony
Dumas scored 13 of his 15 points in
the tourth, quarter. ·
Jaz 98, Bucka 82
At Salt Lake City, the Jazz
jumped out to an 18-2 lcild and
coasted to its 18th straight home vic,tory. JeR' Hornacek led the Jazz with
24 points and David Benoit had 20.

.".

Before bunting, Ramon pointed
his bat toward the Holman Stadium
wall. He said he was inspired by the
movie "Major League," where
imagin'ary Cleveland Indian Jake
Taylor calls his shot, then lays down
a bunt during a key moment in the
team's unlikely pennant drive.
"I wanted it to. be like that movie,
'and I was going to call my shot, then
try to bun~" Ramon said. "It worked
· bot perfect because that was the best
bunt I ever had."
It needn't have .been, however.
Pedro was in no condition to do anything about it.
·
"I was real surprised," he said.
"He was pretending like he was .
goin_g to hit a home run, and I could-

~sing

By BILL BARNARD

.NBA

111wa. Returned Trey Witte, pitcher, to the
ScatHe Marinen. Traded Chris Howard,
cutcher, to the New York Mets for a player to be named.
.
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES ' An- .
nounced 1he retirement of Jrue Oquendo.
· infielder.
PI1TSBUROH PIRATES, Op•ioned
Esteban Looizo. pitcher. IU'Id Midre Cum- .
minga, outf~elller, 10 Calsary or the Pu&amp;.:ifh: Coast Lcoaue. AssiJilcd Tony Wum·
uck, inftthkr, 10 their minor-leaMIJIJ cwnp.
,SAN Dl(lCJp PADRES' Woi"" Roi&gt;
Dter, uutfM!Icie(, for the purpust of &amp;i~ihJ
j1im his urw;onditional '~leuse.
'

Qn:awa AI WMhington, 8 p.m.
Uls Anscles at Calgary. 9:30p.m.
WinnipeJIU Edmonton. 9:JOp.m.
Chicaso n1 Vanc:ou~tr, IO:la p.m.

Hockey

EASTERN CONFERENCE

rum

I: /

Scoreboard

.

..

The Dally Sentinel• P~~ge'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1. .

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'

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.. -.

*
•

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Pllldbbytt.'PGP-r..m:

38215T•-RII··~·Oh.411781
.. ; ·-

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�•
~

Pqe 6. The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Mldd Iepo rt , Ohl o

Thllraday, March 28, 1991
.,

SoIuti on .l?.oo~~~.J~ r~~-~.~.~~~ ..T.~.Y.. .~~-,~~~~~~~~:gr ·m~P~L
Ann
Lan ders

,..,, ...; A•""'

""" s,..,k...... o..
...., .,._..

.,;;;;;;;;;;;;~--------

..

,ay ANN LANDERS

.

' Dear Ann · Landc!ts: I am a 22~ear-old female .. "Jim" and I have
been dating for two years. Two
I!)Onths ago, I decided he was the
man I wanted to spend the rest of my
life with, He is kind, considerate,
·Warm, outgoing, athletic, sensitive,
;1\llndsome ~- every woman's dream.
:W.e are very much in love and are

believe we have the perfect relationship except for one thmg -- sex. I
don't enjoy it.
Jim is my first partner, so I have
no one to compare him with. He
blames himself ahd thinks he is not
· enough or that I am not
attractive
really in love with him. No matter
how much I try to reassure him, he
still has doubts, which is upsetting.
I've heard "practice makes perfeet, " so I've been wearing the poor
guy 'out Meanwhile it still doesn 't
get any. better. Can •you suggest a
solution to this weird problem? I feel
like a freak. -- No Name, No State
Dear No Name: You need to see a

~hing in that dep~ment i~ m work- ~ur ~e~ponses
mg order. Sometimes, a s•mple sur-

gical procedure can make a world of
difference. Tell hid~ (or her) what
you've told me and don 't. be shy
about asking questions. If there is no
· 1 pro blem 1 sugges· t that
anatom1ca
you consider a few sessions with a
sex therap1st.
Dear Ann Landers: Many of ylo~r
readers have wntten to comp am
that pri•oners are being treated too
leniently and demand that they be
made to suffer more severely to
atone for their crimes.
This is' a . very understandable
reaction, · especially on the part of

10

~nme ~ho~~~ ~ ~:ease

very much like .to hear sonie plau~t-·
ble suggestions on how we cpjl,
'
v it
••
an~tdom':vco==~f~ ~;!~~;uming lm~~; of the Day: A distinguished,
• . . .
· h' h · d· woman approach~il
11
good folr edv•l IS nbott onlyndexcpe belnct ~og'~eBe:e on a warm afternoon ih
sp1ntua
••
.
r
·a v1ce,
L uf sou
tte H'llu p 1 Florida
"Good mornmg
Mt..
11
po~asr:;aye·t;e · ~:; your'~or:~ Berra.',-she said. " You look ~ig)¢$r
·
.
. ·
1 od " y i Berra repli~
0
1
1
~gfre:·~~~e~~~~~;dN:~n~y~~s ~-~a~k y":~ rna·!..
You don't~~~
. I . I
h
• If"
n~
your th~!'Y make g
soc1o ogtca so ot yourse .;:·
sense, . II IS fiscally sound. Do you
S~d questions to Ann Lande~'.
kno~ II cost~ ~ much to keep a man Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Ce"Jh.
'" pnson as II does to_send a ~tudent tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Aqe..-:.
to Harvard? .
,
,.
The cnmmal
•I.
':'napro'l,er" help imd guidance afterward these prisoners can
.
'
.'

ase l~ss on emotmn an m
ratlona lly._ '
Pns?n hfe ~~-:ebes\wretc~~d and
degradmg. De 1 rate Y rna mg 11
more so may help to assuage puhbhlc
outrage • but it does noth1ng
to . e p
.
the vict~ms, nor does'' det~ cn~e.
· In fact, II may be counterpr ucuve.
We ~ust remember~~~~ mos~ of~~
peop e '" pnson WI one ay
released. The worse they are treated
whtle they are m, the more angry
they will be when they get out.
Prison does not make people ~tter, 1t m~kes them wor~e. But _while
some pnsoners are admittedly mcor-

Thursday, March 28, 1...-

The DallY Sentinel•

Rep()ns' on .the building fund, bara Booth.
-activities at the Thrift Shoppe and staWaitt reported that Dorothea Fishtus of the Durham lawsuit, were gi v- er, president, had· raised more than
.en at the recent meeting of the Meigs $700 on a special project which had
County Humane Society held in been placed in the special bUilding
. 'Pomeroy.
fund account. Plans were made to
Alden Waitt, acting president, meet with J~ Lentes about the doc· :conducted the meeting during which· uments associated with the building
:' time it was noted that the MCHS has fund monies.
about $17,000 in all funds following · Dorothy Davis reported on the
.the payinent of $3,000 claim to Bar- Thrift Shoppe's activities noting that

'

donations were down but that additional volunteers to assist iJt-..lhe
four-day-a-week operation are up.
The group has assisted with the
cost of having 51 animals spayed or
neutered. Financial eligibility was
discussed along with ways of securing that data so that assessment can
be made as to who should be granted vouchers.
The group passed a resolution

naming Sharon McLead, the CJUelty
investigator, . and Rita Lewis and
Fisher, board members, the authority to work with MCHS attorney, lennifer Sheets, on the Sharon Durham
case. lawsuit Mn. Sheets will be
invited to meet with the group at the
April 19 meeting at Grace Episcopal
_Churoh, · Pomeroy, to discuss the
case.
A discussion was held on electing

officers, since two are now vacant
· and the group cannQt continue as a
viable organization unless all offices
are filled. Several proposals were
made.
Bill Dye, Meigs County Dog warden, spoke at the meeting on his willingness to work with the MCHS, as
long as investigatory actions are carried out "by the book." The MCHS
members 'and Dye talked about the

Society
scrapbook

CLOGGING CLA,SS
Paulette Har,rison of Pomeroy will
, 1te instructor for a six week course in ·
· · ciogging at the Rlo Grande Commu'
nity College ' through !he Office of
Adult and Continuing Education.
. The cost is $50. Classes will be .
held on Wednesday, April 24 through
May 29 from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Registration deadline is April 19.
· All age groups are being accepted, according to the.announcement.
;ro obtain more information or to register, residents may contact the Office
of Adult and Continuing Education,
lil4-245-7325 or 1-800-282-7201 ,
· Ext. 7325.
: ' APPRECIATION DINNER
. . An ·appreciation dinner honoring.
ihose who helped others during th~
· Mother's Day flood last year will be
' held at the . Pomeroy United
Methodist Church on Sunday.
.• , The dinner will be held immedi. , alely following the 10:30 a.m. W?£·
· : •!)ip !!Crvice .•in the c!lurch socJIII
(oOm. Invitations have been sent to
, 14!\leral organizations who gave special assistance. 01\lers who helped are
inviiiM to attend.
for the appreciation .
.be sent . o tge_Rev.
Zli'MUI~,Ave., ·
or 111ax be telephoned to
9'J:i!-:Jjf8lS, 1be administrative counAilice . Wamsley, chairman, is
jP,ci!ISCJf'jng the ever~· '

,,_·_ ...........-,-.. rl?';

lack of public concern for animals,
the difficulty of prollloting, spaying/neutering, and the poor condition.
of the dog pound.
:
Dye outlined duties· of the job. A
resolution was passed that McLead
provide a monthly report on her
inves\igation activities.
• Kodak Introduced the
BroWnie camera In 1900.

OT VISIT CLARK'

'

Wf ~A~~ All
~omsr fAS~Io~
Sff~ ON lV, O~R 14~
ARf AtAIW~ I~

~arA~
· \ bratelhe
Corne C~ e Of Our
open1119

EASTER
IS APRIL 7TH
.,.

'··

,

16TH fit
AlnUVERSARY
SALE

OVER 200 DRESSES
II STOCIII
,.

. , i .· . •'r Ana Morel'
.
l•
.
~- ~pl•'1"'!'".~ ~ lldlf (W-~~~- fWuiiWII'MII ~ ,.....,. "'•MIIf.)
•

1

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;r

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•

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... BOYS SUITS &amp;.
DRESS

WE.. ,.'·.

I

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To Wlnl

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• Boys Sizes
P~eemleto 14

ON

SPECIAL
ONLY
(RENTALS)

Year .la.st4lr Heaquartns ·
Por Theu Utt.. Ones

POMEROY

ANDERSON'S

Spring Savings
-Gun Cabinets On Sale
eGider Rockers .On Sale
•Berkline Recliners.On Sale
•Carpet On Sa,e·- __
•Mattresses On Sale
~•Bedroont Suites On Sale .
.
•WhiriP.,QI Appliances:on Sale

POMEROY

·aLL MASTERS
TUXEDOS

We Have
...,.,. ~ Bey"
66
lt"'l ~ Glrb" Bubble Gu• Cigars for the
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STOREWIDE

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BELLA CREMA CAPPUCCINO,
COCOA AMORE, AND BREW·A·CUP
COFFEE ON SALE
BUY 3 OF ANY ONE KIND,

.

· FrJday. &amp;,Saturct.,t March 19 &amp; 30~

~~~~,

102 EAST MAIN

'

•

Girls Sizes
Pr•••l• to 14

'Y'~f~KlA~fS
SfARfl~G Af ~49.9~

HARTWELL HOUSE

12 mos. tQ;7' ·

171e.Came~.

M

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BUTTONS &amp; BOWS
I

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IN IUSTORIC DOWNTOWN POMEROY

SPRING IS IN THE AIR AT. .•

tufa.Kit ,_ :.

.7·

Mei9s COunty Humane Society reports activities, building fund, lawsuit

.Students
recognized
ln scholars
program
Five bend area students were
a}llong those selected to receive
recognition from the Tandy Technology Scholars program. ·
:. Awarded a certificate for out.standing math, science and computor science achievement was Bmtany
(ynn Roush of Wahama High
School. She along with four others .
iihophked in the top two percent of
llle academic nominees, all of whom
Yiere presented certificates were Ali. ~Rae Gerlach, Adam J. Sheets, and
{iynthia D. Stewart, Meigs High
~hool ; and Ryan Ray Keller,
Wahama High School.
·
• · "Even as students are judged by
their citizenship as well as their academic achievements, American businesses may be judged by their cor£0rate citizenship as well as· their
financial successes," said Tandy Cor• )ioration Chairman and CEO 1ohn V.
Roach, in making the announcement
• "That is why we are proud to
announce the 1996 prize and certificate recipients for the Tandy Technology Scholars program."
. . . Each year, Tandy Corporation and
RadioShack seeli: out and reward 200
of. the brightest, most industrious
ininds in America's classrooms.
' · A total of$350,000, in awards and
· ~holarships, is presented to teachers
arid students who have achieved
excellence in the areas of science,"
computer science and mathematics.
One hundred teachers receive $2,500
each and 100 students receive cash
scholarships of $1,000 each.
"As a corporate citizen, we believe
it is our responsibility to contribute to
it stronger, smarter future for our
. nation and our children," said Roach.
Now in its seventh year, Tandy
Technology Scholars has a~arded
$2.5 million and 211,000 certificates
Of academic excellence.
• Nearly 77 percent of all sec~ndary schools in the United States
are enrolled in this prestigious edu. cation initiative. Funded by Tandy
' Corporation and administered by ·
· Texas Christian University, the pro:Sram is open to accredited high
schools across the nation. Tandy
:prize recipients were selected by a
. panel of edu.cators and approved by
; t!Je National Advisory Council.
' .

P•
.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

THE

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Store Hours 9-5

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Mon. thru Sat.
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TUESDAY,
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�•

P8ge 8 • The O.lly Sentinel

,..........---~Eastern

Easter

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, Mar9h 28,1198

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Scientists reveal rare dinosaur skin
fossil
.

30A~.

'

By MARTHA MENDOZA
Aaaoclatecl Praaa WrJt,r
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP)For years, it was just another pockmarked rock. Now scientists say an
extraordinary dinosaur skin fossil is
letting them reach biiCk 70 million
years.
The fossilized skin of a duckbilled dinosaur was discovered five
years ago by a graduate student whO
·was .,tudying rocks near Deming in
southern New Mexico.
It was only last year, however, that

researchers began to susJiect the 10foot-long, 2-foot-wide textured rock
was not just fossilized tree bark. •
" It's so weiid that as a trained
paleontologist I didn't know what the
hell it was for five years," siid
Spencer· Lucas, who works at the
New Mexico Museum of Natural
History and Science, which
announced the discovery Wednesday.
The fossil allows scientists to
examine, and even touch, an impression of the skin of one of ihe massive
beasts.

VIN'II. SI)INQ

The texture resembles a mountain
bike tire - rough, thick and bumpy,
with somewhat symmetrical clumps
of linle crimped-edged knobs.
It is one of only about a dozen
duck-billed dinosaur skin impressions discovered worldwide, said
geologist Brian Anderson of Phoenix,
a renowned dinosaur skin' expert.
Scientists haven't yet tried to dig
deeper at.the site to see if any more
of the fossil is there, but hope the site
will give them clues to how tissue
such as skin can be fossili zed.

ANI' 1 STOR\'HOME, ta,IM; '

Ing tor their saturday parforman~a of the tropIcal two-act comedy 'Lagoonad," at Eattern
High School. The play depicts the funny tala of
a marooned cruise ship and ltl craw. Pictured

Brandl Raavas (Mrs. Withers), Rat~ec­
are,
ca Evana (ArleM), Michael Barnatt(Capt. But·
tarworth), and Melisse Dempsey (Amalia). The
performance Ia sat for 8 p.m., with all procaadl
to banaflt the Senior class trip.

Estate plannina as a means of ·
charitable giving is gaining in pOpularity ainong persons and families of
moderate means. Financial instruments now allow "planned giving" to
provide for both protection of farni,.
ly assets from' excessive taXation and
a means of supPon to imp6rtant charitable wod~ in the cOmmunity.
Public Notice ·

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~11C~o~u~n~ty~C~o~m~m~l~•:•l~o:n~er~•·
Public Notice

Public Notice

Publlc .No..ca
·u

PUBLIC NOTICE
Excepting the coal and
NOTICE Ia hereby given other mineral• heretofore
t1t11 on Seturcllly. March 30, reHrvecl by V.B. Horton In
Fund
1881.1110:00 a.m., 1 public dlecll-.ledln \loiUIIII II,
Mia will be hekl II 211 Weat Pege 245, Melge County January 1,
Fund C1111'
second StrHt, Pomeroy, Diad IIRordl.
Reference le made to Dtcamllar 31, 11111 ...............
Ohio, lo aell for Ol!•h the
.......-...................26,171.01
dead recorded In Volume
followlnl colllltllrll:
Fund Cult ....no• ..........
251, P• 541, and Volqme
· 19112 FORD RANGER
............................21,172.01
2fn, P-at 13, Melp County
. 1FTCR14U6NTA325Z7
.
Depolbory Bllllnce..........
The Fermere Bank and Diad Recorda.
·...............................23,1'72.01
RI;FI;RENCE DEEDS:
Sevlnga • Compeny,
lnvteb111nta.........a,ooo.oo
Pomeloy, Ohio, re..rvea Volume 215, Page 213;
Totlll Truaury Bllence ....
1M right to bid at IIIIi ule, Volume 254, Page 35, 111111
-~..................... .21,87'2.01
Deed RecordL
end to withdraw the ebove
TOTAL IIALANCE .............
Pereel No. 11collateral prier to ·aale.
............................ 2t,8'7r2.01
and 1.-cl1318.000
F!lrther, The Farmers Bank
Said r..l ••tate waa Summary of lneleci*end Savlnga Company
Outmndlng Jan. 1, IIIII.
tha right to reject appra!NCIII 3,800.00.
•.........:................. 11,230.00
Sale of llld reel •1111• to
any or ell bide aubmlttecl.
Rallrec1 ................. 8,410.00
:Further, the above be for not Ill•• than twoOutatendlng, Dec. 31 ,
ootlallnil will be IOiclln the third• (2/3) the aforeaald
condition It Ia In, with no apprelaed value, Caah In , .......................... 12,120.00
I cartlfy the following
axprtll or Implied hand on date of HIL
Said Hie le eubJect to report to be correct and
-111111 given.
For further Information, ~pproval by the Common true, lo the blat of my
con•ot Dlalree1119112-2138. Pleaa Court, Melga County, lcnowtedge:
Karen R. Smith, Clark
Ohio.
j3) 27,21, 28 3TC
P.O.Box48
JllmM II. Soulally, Sherllf
Chutar,
Ohio 45720
llelga
County,
Ohio
Public Notice
13)21; 1TC
13)21, 21, (41..4; 3TC
PUIUC NOTICE
Public Notice
Public Noilca
Till Mtlge County
COuncil on Aging whiCh II e
FINANCIAl. REPORT OF
FINANeiAL REPORT OF
private
nonprofit
TOWNSHIP
TOWNSHIP
corporation, Intend• to
For
Flecll
YMr Endlllf
For FIIOII YHr Ending
aullmM en IIPJIIIclllon for e
Deeemblr 31, 11111
Dtcamblr
31,
11111
cepllll grant under thL
Olive Townahlp,
ChMIIr Townahlp,
County of Melge
=~=~one of 41 USC
1310 or the Feclenl
SUMMARY OF CASH
Tranalt Acl to provide
IIALANCES,
RECEPTS
~.c:feci~
tranaportatton Hrvlee for
AND
EXPENDITURES
'AND EliPENDITURES
the elderly end dlaabled
TOTALS FUND BALANCE
TOTALS
I'\IND IIALANCE
within Melg• Co!lnty. Tilt
Totllll
Soun:e Daacrfptlon
grant application will Aecalpll:
Recalpta:
raqutlt one (1) 1lx
T -.................. 32,212.91
T-...................54,431.48
paaMnger atandard mini·
Llcene.., Permlta end
Ucenaia, Permlll end

·=r-·

VIII,

,...,......~•••••••••••••..•• 1,700.00

11 Ia proJected that TO
lnttrgovamftlll!lal
alderly and handicapped RIOIIpta
................ l1,. ..41
. . . - Wllluaa the Mrvlca
lntereet. ...................l78.ot
5 dlyti • .,., 112 - " •
All Other R.,.nue .......,....
yur lor trlneportlllon to
...............................3,145.11
lllecllcll fHIIItlll, ehopplng
TOTAL
RECEIPTS ............
encl paraonal buelnaaa in
,_...................... 151,181.112
Melga and adJacent
l!lCPI!NDm.IRE
countleL
DISIUASEMENTS
Th• M•'S county
o-ral Gov.,..ll*ll ........
Council on
lng ln~a
............................40,710.94
commenta en propoaala
Public laflty ..... 1T,723.71
frOm all lntare·alecl public,
Public Worke .....71,124.1t
private end paralranalt
Health.................12,...40
oparetore InclUding •••I
c.pHal Outlay ..... 1,410.00
..,.,.._ for the p!'O'Io111on
TOTAL DISBURSEMENTS..•.
of lnlneportltlon urvlca to
.......................... 153.......
the elderly and diMblad
Total
Reotlph
within o'ur ..-viCe aree.
OWr/(Under) Dlab (2,219.17)
Operator• who are
OTHER FINANCING
lnter..ted In offering SOURCES
(USES)
propoaala ,to · ptovlda
Other SourCn/R-Iptt.•.
....vtcalhould contact Bath

Till"''
Aaaoollle Director
at thlllllal County Council

F -.............................. 37..50

lntergovemmental
R-lpta ................ l2,1111.12
lme-t................. 1,057.72
All Other R -............
..............................'7,114.55

TOTAL RECEIPTS ......~ ....

ou oooooooaooo ..oooou ... oo134,0IIJSO

EXPENDITURE
DISBURIEIIIENTS

Generel Govemll)elll ........
......................... ,_%7,115..33

Public 8afltJ .....1o,uue
Public Worka .....73,111.12
Health .........._ ......8,711.113
eap!tll Outlay ... 18,121.34
TOTAL DISIURSEIIENTS....
..............:........... 135,01

a:aa

Total
Recelpte
Ovar/(llndlrl Dlab .•. (930.38)
OTHER FINANCING
SOURCES (USES)
Fund Caah 881anct,
JIIIU8JY 1, 1.......&lt;10,fii4M

.................................711.'17
,und Caah lelance,
Totel Other Flnenclng
Decamber31,
11111 ...............
&amp;ourcea cu-1 .......... 711.17
on AQing fnc., P.O. lOx
............................
31,017.ol
Dleburt~mente • Other
Pomeloy, Ohio 45711
Fund
C8ah
111-.........
u-...................... (1 ..20) .............~············31.017.GI.
obllln tun detalla of
Fund CaeJI Balance,
TDUII 1'rMeury ..........
type . of trenaportetlon Jllnulty
1, ........25,101.21
... ,... thel ·le nudecl prior
.......................- ..39,057.ot
Fund Ceah lelance,

.m

to,..., ..... pi'Opolll.

WriH,;n comment• or
propoaale muel be
lltllilllltled within 30 d'Yl! to
the 11inoy at the above
•d*••• with a copy to thl
Ohio 'Depertment or
TreniP!Irtellon, Office of
Publ.lei Tranaportatlon, 25
South ,ron! Street, ·
Columbue, Ohio 43211·
,Attention:
0 !t'9 t ;
Admi1118bll01'.
Cl) 21, 21; 2TC

•

.'

Public Notice

Dtolmber 31, 1111 ...............

. ••••••••••••••••••••••••.•• .23,172..01

!Me Outllalldlng Checka
.........._ ..................7,388.11

IALA.NCE .............
Non-Expendable TJUII . TOTAL
.............
_ ............31,811.13
Fund a
Summary
of lndeclteclneea
Operating Recalpll
Outatandlng
Jan. 1, tiHI&amp;.
Rtoalpte:
..............................
1,21110
lntemt...................304.11
N"'
1Muea
......
131,01UI
TOTAL RECEIPTS ...........
~11
R.UNd ............. 127,112.92
. OPiRAliNQ'''''"T"'~·~
Out•tandlng, Dec. 31,
DISBURSEMENTS
1IHI&amp; ......................... 7,3M.II
...a• Ma~
...
,
I certifyb the following
au pp1..
...
-a.......
.................................lit.t3 report to h • :orrect •nd
:FOTAI.-DISIURSEMENTS... tlurue, • tdo I it ••t o1 lilY
·.................................
.
•113
IDMIII:
•
IIMttl• Dllrat. Clerk
Total
Rectlpta
t41Caolvllellolld
OWr/(Undlr) Dleb ... (181.t7)
R41 d Nu
Dllllurearnenta • Oth• .
u IY ,., Ohio 41172

u-..- ...........~....... (SII.I7)

Totale
R-lpla:

. '.

Public Notice

Dresses
Levi's
Mon.-Sat.10-6

H&amp;H.
SAWMILL
Portable

1

TFN

Pick.......

HouH Ripelr •

Remodlllng
Kltc:hen•lhlh
ReiiiOdtiiM.
Room Adcllflone
Siding, Aoollng, Patloa
Rte10111ble
lnaurera • E•perlenced
Cell Wayne Nell
992-4405 '
For Free Elllmatea

laPPI'-'s &amp; - , •

Cell 1192-7747

614·9924025
1••·1

W•kenda- anyt11111

wm-

SMITH'S

J&amp;L INSULAnON

CONSIRUC~IOfl

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT .. 892-2772
Office Hours: Mon.-Fri.
8:00 a.m. • 3:30 p.m.
Vinyl a Alum. Siding,
VInyl Rep'-nt.
WindOWS. Blown
lnaulatlon, Storm

•New Hom••. ·
•Addltlone ·
•New Garegc11.
•Remodeling·'
•Siding
·
•Roofing · "
•Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
(814) 992-5535
614 892-27&amp;3

Doors; Sfoim

. Wlndbwa; Ga111gas.
FraaEIIImllee

a...,s.m
""'hi,._
A....,.w.,.,

.......................... Glass SheM!s
• Frost-Free

• Flelcible Storage
• Sure-Lode• Shelves
•10 Year Parts and labor
Warranty on Sealed Syslllm

Now Only

RTTI~

Electric Range
• Standanl Clean OVen
• Eleclronic Clodt and
· Timer

• Large SIOrage Drawer
• Oven Window
•

Now Only

$479

$699

·~Siolage

Basket
• Dellolt Drail
·l.odc~Key

• TexiUrad Steel
· C811inet&amp;Lid
• Power Cord Retailer

Now Only

~GFCOIIII3AD~ $329.
30" Gas

·---......-

WICIS

·-

aumers
• Black Glasa Doot-

::
;:

• Sealed

wllli 'NltiG:Iw '
1
' White or Almond

Now.Only

31111 mo.

Hatp

------

- --

~

..-..
-

-.

Umestone,
.Gravel, Sand;
Top Soil,:Fill Dirt

614·992-3470
Need Dlractlon?l
Love
Bualneaa
Family Matters
AllowY®r
Personal Psychic to
AaalatYou

1·9CJ0.988 8800
Ext.1277
S3.91 Per Minute
Mual 11818 yre,
Toueh-Tone Required
Sarv-u (8111) 545 8434
'

2i22lrFN

Water
~.:uf. ~.Jf:- Treatnaent
~~~ ~ Equlpnaent

6

"&gt;

....

ATTENTION SPORTS
FANS
Lei your fingeiS do the
walking to lha sports
line. Finance Stocks,
NHL, NBA, NFL, Point
Spreads, Daily
Horoscope.
1-900-ne-o1oo

Ext. 3685
$2.99 per min. Musl be
, 16 yrs. SeiY·U
619 645-8434

near Old Town Creek. call to
10.614-20-3125

r

-----------------"1

614-992-7643

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE :
2:00PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION !

.;WITH .SOUND SYSTEM
SATURDAY, MARCH 30TH

Pi.l~ic ~

~-.
w\

PUauC NOTICE .
Satun:IIY, April 20, , ...,
. a 10:00 a.m. lhe Home
,.tlolllil Benk ·111111 otrar for
atr• tA ll'!bllli! llliOtiOII qil thl
lank 1"1rkl.'l.J lot the
ng·
·
113 ,:_..~)ri'Qiif Ca."'.ira

t

,.,.., •

•

'

1111..Mercury COUIIIf
S.rlll
1111EIIHIMIJIIRIIW
The terma ~ the ·ule are
cull. Home Nltlonll lank
,...,.. till rlfht to ~ 11
the Nil and ·or 'ID remove
any or ell !lema trOtn .1111
. . . ..!llfty lime.

.

,~~a~~~~ · =~. -=: ,_,, .~- i1c

•:w.mex

'

New five Sr. ·
LVagasPkk

Sports Ellftrtal-.t
Updated Every 15 Min.
No waning direct ·

manu.
1-80D-77&amp;0100
lilt. 7123
12.88 Jill' min.
Mutt be 18 yre.
S.IH19tt6 1114
H711

lost: White !Gray Small Male Cal
Eastern Avenue Vicinity, Cl'lild'~
Pet! 614-446-8280Til15 P.M.
~osr: woman's brown purse, viciri-lty of Foodland, ca ll 614 · 742--

"No Job Too Large or Too Small"

2639.

We will work within your budget
Ph. n3-917~
FAX n3-SS61
108 Pomeroy Street
Mason, WV

Re L. HOLLON

Live Psychics
1 on 1

TRUCKING

1-900-255-0300
ext. 5488
$3.99 per min.

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Umestone • Gravel .
Dirt • Sand

985-4422
Chester, Ohio
3'111

70

Imprinting
•Shirts •Hats
•Sportswear
•Ball Uniforms
3rd St., Racine, Oh.
1149-3321 312tr1 ....

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

12 Seealone.For

$20.00
16 Seaalons For

$25.00
Open 9:00 to 3:110

4:30 to 10:00 P.M.
Ownera: Pate &amp; Diana
Handrlcb
.
Phone: 614-1192-2487
:11111

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

•

..•

Every Thursday, Frldav, Saturday
1699 McCormick Road, Betwee~

160 And 588, Open 9:30 A.M..
5:00PM. Big Variety.
Large Garage Sale: To Settte Es: ...
tate, 2 Homelite Chainsaws. Seta! ~
lene Welding Outfit, Hom elite·...
Weedeater, lawnmower, 2 Motor"•
Bikes, Two 5 Speed Bicycles, 30. ..
Boxes Of Work Clothes, Will Selt f'
1 Box Or Ali i Many Other Items~ ...
4f1 , 412, 413/96 , 76 V1ne S treet~
Gallipohs.
,

STAR
GUITAR

..

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Leuo•s for
Pla•o, Dru•s
&amp; &amp;altar
Guitars t79 &amp; Up
~~.. Accessories
614·367·0302

All Yard Sal es Mu st Be Paid ln.~
Advance . Oeadhne: 1:OOpm the ·•
day before the ad is to run Sun day ed ition- 1:OOpm Friday.' Mon ~· ..
day editjon 1O:OOa.m. Saturday.
• ·:
Garage sale, Friday 29th &amp; Monday April 1, formally was Joes' Giti •
Shop, 3202. Syracu.se, ~ fami ly ~·
sale. very mce clort·ung all siies," ..
4 good tires, TV, what -k nots ....

311ft mo.

992·2825

Racine American

LINDA'S

Legion #602
Bingo

PAINTING

Sun. Night~
Lucky Ball $300.00
with 21 players or more
Raises $50.00 ea.
wel!k. Pay according to
lhe Number of players
949-2044 or 949·2038

FREE ESTIMATES
Take ••• p1la o.l of

palati11g. let ut .. It
for yau.

. 1111 IEASOIIAILI
HAVE IEFEIEIICES
614·915·4110
2/2811 mo. pa.

Care fm
Elcle r!y c1ncl
H,!tiCi Cilpp e c!
111 F&lt;llllil y Celie
Home
rv11dcJi cport . Oh

992-504 2

'

Public Sale
and Auction

Boggs Aucnon Serv1ce. 614 -446 _. •
77fJJ.
'
•

1

Mt Alto Auction . Every Friday :

IIITEIIOI·EmRIOI

7pm. Every Saturday 6pm. Rt 2-33 ·crossroads·. Groceries, new:
mE!fchandise. Ed Fraz1er 930.

•

Rick _Pearson ~u ction Company,
lull 11 mc auctioneer. complete.
auct1 on
service.
Ucensecto
1166,0hio &amp; West Virginia, 304- :

7735785 0&lt;304-773-5447.

90

:.

.

Wanted to Buy

Antiques, collectables. estates ~
Riverin e Ant iques, Ru ss Moore: •
owner, 614-992-2526.
•

..

1/S1Mn

SUMMER IMAGES
TANNING

-"

All Yard Sales Mu st Be Paid to
Ad11ance. DEADliNE : 2:00 p.m."
the day before the ad 1s to run
Sunday edi~i~n - 2:00 p.m. Fnda·/ ~
Monday ed1110n - 10:00 a.m. Sat -···
urday.

mo. Dd.

ADVERIISIIIG
IHE HAT MAll

Yard Sale

7578 Bula\lille Pike, Ar 7 112 Mile
Marker Thursday, Friday, g.? Ur~ ..
. lle B•t Of Everyit;'!l!
·-

Must be 18yrs.
Touch- tone phone
required.
Serv-U
(619) 645-8434

L&amp;E

.. :

80

llatlle lllaeli Dealer

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

Howard Excavatin
TruckingUmestone
Bulldozing and
Backhoe
Services
House Sites and
Utilities

•

985-4473

-

All Kinds of Earlh Wark

992·3838

rna. pel.

J.D. Drilling Company
Racine, Oh. 45n1
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put In septic
systems, lay llnaa, underground bores. ·
P.O. Box 587

P.O. Box 538
Syncuaa, Ohio 45771
Tent Clreay
(814)9112-2800
HoJM .. Tick Salas

--

-COURT STREET GRILL

lost one year old female Gold&amp;f\
Retriever, green collar, "Canr" ~
SA 338/Apple Grove viciniiY. 6t(-:
247-4035.
' .

brass &amp; jeans.

New At lttfles lleetronies

----- • Trail Rldea
_• Training
-·--..•Boarctlrtll
::
• Leaaona ·
--;::
OAK FARM
--- ·10111
30391 Roy Jonaa Rd.,
=

,.,.

bla~k spots,
ears , male
Racine
vicinity,black
·sampsonM
81 '\:
9-49-2770,
'
.,

(No Sunday Calls)

e

~

Lost- large white dog with large

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welclng Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
SeiYices • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool DreSsing • Omamenlal
Steps -Stairs, Railings, Pallo Furniture, Fireplace
Hems, Planter hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuff! I

The water treatment company cordially invites you to
participate in a free. no obligation, ccmprehensive water
analySis. WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:
'TDS,IIinerll Hardneaa, lron, PH.
Pl1111 call R..i..S.oft II 892-4472 or 1-800-606-3313
to Ill up your fru water enaiyele.
1I!IS/Ifn

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

Lost and Found - •

~.

·•

-·

$67

992-3894

.

HAULING

·-

..·--..·......-

• Sell Clainng I;Mn
• Slolage Dnlwel'
• Cloc:lt will T1mer

•Waist.fiiJ! 'llnliir

'

503 Mill Street
Middleport, Ohio
(Spacial Price on Aluminum Cans
from March 1 thru 29)
Bring In minimum of 50 lba. or aluminum cans to
1119111er for Bunn Coffaamaker to be given away.
Drewlng will be held on March 29111.

"BISSELL
BUILDERS,
INC.
·'"

LowRalal)

:J II--Itt II IIIll.. t II I I t 1111111
II- 111111
t II II1111- IIlilt
II- Itil:
---- I1111111
-------

..---

.,_-t:"
MANLEY'S ,:A•tlt
•"'" RECYCLING CENTER ,,,,

TRI·STATE WATER SYSTEMS, IIIC.

' (UI!If·Siona-

RECEPTIONIST/SECRETARY
we·are an established and buSy Meigs County health
professional's office see~lng a full time quaiHied
receptlonlslfsacretary. If you are an energetic and
friendly "people person' who meets the lollowing
requirements, than please taka tinia lo consider
avallable position.
Requiremenls:
1. Minimum 1 year experience as secretary·
receptiOnist or 1 year post-high school education.
2. Dedlcated and take pride in your work.
3. Experienced and comlortabla worldng with
computers and muHi-line telephone.
4. Take aitention to detail.
We can offer you the opportunity .to belong to,~ our
friendly and caring heaHh care team. Benefits InClude
two weeks peld · vacation and free in office
professional seNices. Health Insurance Is ''not
provided. If you are interested In this opportuniti for
permanel)l employment of 32 to 42 hours/week, then
please submH a complete resume, including your
minimum salary requlremenl, to the address below.
This opening is to be lilled immedlately.
Sand RHUntll to: P.O. B.ox 7ZS:21
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

8.8Cu. Ft.
Chest Freezer

lftiCI • IO'riCI • IIWICI

Distributed by

TV&amp; VW..
lly~ellol AI..,
" - (3HJ 615-1651

Of' Too Smll/1

17 Cu. Ft.
Refrigerator

-----w/eoupon

S.W.&amp;Drail

Plan Aheid, Call Today!

sagg

Monday throop Wednesday

I• :1 IIIII &amp; ,.;hill

,;
.
o()dd JObe par '*!ualll
, No~- Toil urg•

.

Fou.nd - Golden Retrivar, on Sr.-

pizza

DRAIN QEANING

· Melnt~e

614-742-2754.

Three adorable pups to goocf.
home, one Collie type female, one.
male, 614-992-4252.

TRI-STATE SEWER &amp;

•llirubblty"

HO

PuppjOS· pari Shepherd and Bo~-·
Of,

""*

~Building a R.m.ing

1!1'111 comrnarcllll)

bid forma may be MOUNd
at the office of the llllga

.... .,

FREE

YWICIRI

Plana,~e.•nd

· AIHLYN LOR.AINE
WOLFE
, cittai'IH and Eliza·
belli : Wolfe Jr. of
Rjlolne -ukl 1111a to
- t h e birth of
tllelr flrat chlid, 1
diUQitter.
sh•
•111!*17 .... 1
and • • 21 lnohM
long, born on Dec. 12,
tiN. .
Clrlndpa,.,nts are
Hilrry and
jjiWidmolher, Ruby
Lyo~~~a 'tind t.,e late
. Wlilldf1 Lyone of
.... lill,'and .. . .mal
granflpat(lnts are
Ctiillle ind LA*-Wol

NEFF REMODEUNG
. SERVICE

•Trw Trlmmlne
•Mowing (RHidlntlal

(3) 28 (4) 4 2TC

CASH RECONCIUATION AS
OF DECEM81!1131, 1 . ·
To,tal
.

Serving S.E. Ohio I Wast VlrglnltJ
Toll Fraa 1-80()o872-5867
441 1411

Waekcllye - alter s prn

lJIIraf'owerN Wash
System
• Solid Food Disposer ·
• Continuous F111e-Mesh
Sell-cleaning Filtered
Wash System
• 5 Wash Cydes
• Clean and Quiet Promise
• Oulable &amp; Easy Loading.

" ·tl

60

111ft,_.,. a ..mea to IH!r:k It up

Occt~sf•'ltl

t

992-3954 or 985-3418

'LOO off any X-large 18"

LillY'S

Commla~

HEALTH DISTRICT

. with

•WI!kllngaiReeaptkine ·
•AnnlverUrlea
oCouplee (Engegemente)
tGroupe &gt;Family
elndlvldual
-senior Picture&amp; .

742·2803

WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

IIMtll
......., ...... for
YowSiechll

,

· Umaatone, Sind, Gravel, Coal l W1tar

Three outside dogs to goo~
home, 614-843-5490.
:

·BE

614-742·2193 .

:

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING

1

Furnacaa. All equipment In stock
lor lmmadllltalnatallatlon.
rn · ,.,-. . . .
f:fW Estlmatn
~- .~.
..
'
. .
'•
•' .IW¥010212

1/1Mtn

CONCRETE VENDORS .
Silled bldi will ba
received by thp Board of
Meige
County
Commlaalonere, Court
Houeit, Pomeroy, Ohio
41789 until 10:00 e.m. on
Aprll15, 1IHI&amp;. The bkltl will
th'n be opened and r"d
aloud at 1:to p.m. on thl
15th day of April, ~ IHIII for
the rurnlehlng of varloue
g111dH of Aephalt Concrete
for the Melge County
Highway Department.
Propoiala are 10 be
returned on bid forma
auppllecl · by the vendor.
The bid price ahlll be ftrm
end In tlfeet during the
1IHIII paving aeaaon from
lley through November
1898. A Specification a
Shell may 1:11 picked up II
1111 Office of tha· llalge
COunty En~.
Gloria Kloaa, Clerk
Boatel of 1111.. County

4850.

Air Condltlonars, Heat Pumps,

Middleport, Ohio 45760 .
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles

~~~~

•
:

Smo. old Iliaci\ Lab. good wtch!Jd.•
•en, 10 good home ~ly. 30&gt;4-87!&gt;-•

Moi!)Jie and Manufactured Housing

32 t 24 Happy Hollow Rd.

Public Notice
ROBERT H. EASON,

Public Hollca

POMEROY, OHIO
Trath Removal - Comlltll'clal or RHidentlel
Sepllc Tanks Cleaned &amp; Portlble Tolllll Rented.
Dilly, WMidy &amp; monthly rtntll rates.

~ INre&amp;lliiiM.

Bandsaw MHI .

·Public Notice
ROBEJIT H. EASON,
P,E,, P.S.

(I) 21; 1TC

Do your part tor our anvlronmant Bring ua YCIIW
alum. cans and oilier raeycalllal and raglalar to
will !I handc~ ;tolld w1lnut and cadllr lined
blanket chill vslued It $800 to be given IIWIY
March 30th. Trl. Co. Recycling open 7 dayll• WMk
to serve you.
H Mon.·Frl; 11-3 Sat. &amp; sun. Located corner of ·
SLAt. 143 l 7, Pomeroy, 814-892·5114.

Prom

w..-.

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
Slllld propoMII for the
Middleport Volunteer Fire
Dtpartment Renovatlona,
1895 wHI be recelvacl by the
Malge
Courlty
Comml.. loner• at their
office,
CourlhOUHl
Pomel oy, Ohio 45768 until
10:00 A.M., April 15,1IHIII•
and then at· 1:00 P.M., AllrH
15, 1986 11 •aid office
opened and reed aloud.

Announces c·ustomer Apprecl.lon
Days during t"-e Month of March

Sliver Bridge Plaza
614 446 4462

ident of the Allohak Council.
1bere is no charge for the seminar
to be held at 56 Longview Heights
Road, Athens, 7 p:m., April 9. A limited num~r of reservations are available. To hold a place, call Planned
Parenthood at 614-593-3375 between
8:30 a.m. and 5 p.m.

•

ftl CD.IICYCLIII

Asbab~JJe's

41718, unll110 a.m. on~
P.E., ti.S.
lneurenc
Notice
Ctlurthouu, Pomeroy, varloue
niiUirelllllltl, vartouetqu.~
Cllllo.
oppoi1UnltY provlelona, and ... ••• The blcll wiU tliln MEI08 COUNTY ENOINEEA ,
l!eoh bid muet be the requirement for 1 be opened and -d aloud
............................ 3,417.00 .,DDIIIPIInlldbylllli*ebld peyment · bond and It 1:JCI p.m. on the 15th dey NqTICEv:=:EGATE
of April, 19H end uoh ·
Food Servlca Fund~..·-·" bond In an emount with • performanol balld for 100'11. month tharellfter the bid
8Nied blda will be
......................- 1-ts,m.oo eumy alllefeotory· to 1111 of thl OCIIItniDt prloa.
,_lvad
by tha Board of
1-1-415
'. afor~ld Melge County
No bidder may wlthclnw quoll wUI be received and Melge
· County
I
P,
I
ned
on
thlllllt
Frlclly
of
Reoelpta ............... 7,m.oo Comml11lonera or by hie bid wllllln thirty (30)
Commlealonere,
Court
Total....................21,110.00 certlfted oheok, Ollhlera deya after dele of ,.,. eaoh IIIOnlh II 1:30 p.m. for Houae, Pomeroy, Ohio
the
furnlehlng
o(
Expandltu-..... 12,056.00 ohec;k, or liner of iiriiiiir-1 opening thereof. Illig•
41781 until 10:00 a.m. on
Bllllnce • of 12-31-86 ..... upon • eoMint bank
County Commlaalonera bltumlnoua ,_....for the 411SI'I6. The bide wll then
........................... $ 8,014.00 aino1unt of not 1111 than l'eiii'VM thl right to waMI Melge County Highway Ill' opened end reed eloud
8tldl Fund8 .......................
the bid amount In any lnformllltlll or to Nject Dap art1111nt.
lati!RIIed quentltlee of at 1:15 p.m. on the 15th dey
u
...
,_
•"
'"-lfonl•ld
Mllga any or IN Ill*.
.......................... 86.475.00
liquid
eaphelt required, of April, 1991 lor the
Ic;;,;irtJ CommiMIOMIW. lld
FNd ttottman. Prllllllnt
1-1-115
fumlehlng of all klnda 1nd
ahall
ba
MllgliCounty lpproxllilately 100,1100 alzn of •IIII'WII* lhet may
Reoelpta •••••• ~•••• 289.015.00
gellone
for
lhe
yeer.
CCimmllll- ·
Aclvlllcealn ....... 11,A02.00 accompanied by Pl'oof or
Propclaale ere to be be required by tha Melga
(3)38;(4)1, 10;3TC '
·Totll..................381.812.00 : Authority or thl offlc...
Highway
returniMI on bid forme County
Expandltu-... 310,589.00 i IQtiiOY elgnlngthl bond.
DIPartmant.
Pl'opoaala
are
--:-':"'::....._____ •upplled by the Malge to be returned on bid lorma
Silence • of 12-31-416 ..... · Billa ehall be Hilled and
1County Engl1111r and may eupplled by thl vendor, and ·
....................~ ..... 86,363.00 marked u
Bid • lor _,;.Pu=bl;;:lc:..:.:Not:=l:::ca:,__,
be oblllned through tha will be opened on the dille
TDUII Ill Fundi
' Middleport Volunt- Fire 1
EnglnNr'l Office. The
Bllancea .. of 1·1-86 ....... Depertment Renovatlone,
llalge
County and piece apeclfled.
11196
and
mailed
or
.............. --··· 1151,551.00
CommluiORII'I I'MII'VI the llpeclftcetlon for bidding
ROBERT H. EASON,
RtiCIIpta••••••••••• 573,088.00 dlllvlred to: 111111 County
right
to acoept or Nject 1ny mey be oblllnecl through
P.E.IP.S.
Advancaln ...... 11,402.00 Commlul-.
or
all
bide, or any p•n· thl Eng'-'• Olllot, 34110
llllgaCOun1YE=
.
Total....... :.........736,042.00 CoUithouM, P"'OIII"'III'. "II"'
" Y• Ohio
Roed,
thereof and will loeapt thl Fairground•
NOTICE TO BITU
S
Expendltu-... 600,894.00 45768.
Pomeroy, Ohio 41788.
belli.
bid
for
the
·Intended
VENDORS
Advanca out. .... 11,402.00
Attention or blddlra 11
Gloria KloM, Clerk
Seeled blda will be ~TOTAL ALL BALANCES ullad to all of the
t
Booua of llllgl County
Gloria
KloM,
Clerk
AS OF ................1123.646.00 requlremante contained In received by .the Board of
Comm'tllo,..
County BOI!rd of llllga County
DECEMBER 31,11195
IIIII bid paotiM, pertlcularly llelga
(3) 28 (4) 4 ZTC
Jcin D Jllcoba, R.S. to 1111 .Faderel Labor Commlaaionera, Court Commla~ ·
Dlputy Helilth Stenderda Provlelona and Houae, Pomeroy, Ohio (3) 21 (4) 4 ZTC
eommt..loner Davle -Baqon
(3) 211; lTC

Fund Caah lelance,
J11r1u1rY 1·, , .........3.181.17 •. _..,...;Pu...;;;;bl..;.;lc.;..;.;No;.;;.ll;;,ca;;;.._
Fun'cl Caah .4Selance, • ·
December 31, 11111.............. MEIGS COUNTY GENERAL
...........;., ••••••••••••..••. 3,000.00

'

"Planning Your Estate to Benefit
Your Family N01 the IRS" or "Scouting .for a Better Estate Plan" is cosponsored by Planned Parenthood of
Southeast Ohio and the Allohak
Council of the Boy ScoutS of Atner~ca. The presenter ·will be Bob
McCloy, Financial Plan 'I~· Met Life
reprcsentstive, attorney and past pres-

·I,

ANV 2 srORV HOllE ts.tM.
10011. FIN-'"CINGt
PHONETODAYS14-215-7880.

Planned Parenthood, -Boys Scouts sponsor seminar

1'htle Eastern Seniors are shown rehears-

TIM Dally Sentinel• Pagel

For Free estimate call

949·2512

JlB.UOHAIII JIADI

Howard L. Wrltesal

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downepoute
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
· FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168
511&amp;'94 TFN

-

Clean Late Mode l Ca rs Or~ r
Truck&amp; , 1990 Mode ls Or Newer ,
Smittl Bu 1ck Pontiac, 1900 East:
ern Avenue, Gallipolis.

Fu ll blooded Persian killen . 304-• _,.
675--4~54 .
•.

'.

J &amp; D's Auto Pans. Buring sal -•.._.
. vage vehicles. Se lling parts . 304- '
~77.:.3·.:::503::3::.._ _ _ _ _ _·• ' .
·Top Pr1ces Pai d: Old U.S. Coins· :..
Silver. Gold, Diamon ds , All
Collectibles, Paperweig hts, Etc. • ,
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Secondl.~

Old-. : '

·-

A_~_n_u•~·-Ga_ll.:.;~_t''~·.:."'.:.•·-•·~~~~~2._•

Used furnitu re- antiques, one--:p1ece or complete estates , also
do appraisals, Osby Uartin 614· - •
992-7441 .
• .
.,

Wanted to Buy Usecl Mobile
Homes. Call: 6 1~ -446 - 0175

' wanted

To Buy : 8.2 Ten Bolt Positrack Unit To Fit A 1968 Chevelle Can Use Any Of The Fol lowing Carriers, 65 -70 Chevrolet · ~
64-72 Che.ve lle, 64 -72 CheVy II j
Nova. 67-70 Camara, 614 · 4~1 -

1053.
Wanted To Buy : Junk Autos With , ;
Or Without Motor s. Cal l Larry
LIVely 61 4-388 -9300.

_::.___.:.c..:.c:.:=._ _ _ •.

Wanted To Bur l )ttle Tikea Toys, : .- '
Sa nd 'BOX, PICnic Table, Play,' .House, 614·245-5887
1 ~·

.•.

Wanted : Himalayan Cat Ot Maine o. "•
Coons Cat, Prefer You To Giveil- ,, •

W2'J, 614-446·221. .

J

~~=~~=---.:.·- .·~.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER·SERVIa

•Room Addftlona
•NewG!IraO"
•Electrical &amp; Plumbli111
•Rooftng
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrltl Work
(FREE ESnMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
892-a1S
Pomeroy, Ohio

1-

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

9411-2512

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

AtJN OU N CE M ENTS

,005 .

Wanted: Quality Hand Crafted
Item s Fo r Seasonal Gift Shop,; .,..

614·4&lt;6-05e8, 614-596-5594

r ~·

EM PLOYME NT
SERVICES

•
-.o

Personlla

To person who took red jacket

:;;;======== ..,.

~om
pickup """" In Iron! o ·Main 1
St Bap11s1 Church Tueoday r·

evening, keep jocket, please re·
turn papets 10 church office, no

~salllad.

281583 BASHAN RD.
Recine, 01110 45771
141-3013POOIII
MN01BFAX

30. AMC!uncetnlntl
Sporll IIAf· find OUI

now up· to·

.....

110

tr'-

• ~I'"

Help Wanted

1---:0::::-::-::;,;:..::...._
.,11,
$-WANTED..
•''
10 people who need tc lose •.;
woighl &amp; makt 100nay, Ill tty ;..
palented weighl ·l ou product.

304-773·5083 24hrSiday. '

·

i

·• .

date •coreallpreldl ~tnd much
"l •
more. 1-IIOO·nS-0700 ilcl. 8301, AVON I All ·A rou I Shirley'_.
f2.118
fi'UII 11118 yrs. · Speots, 304-875-1429.
.~

per-·

,

•

�~.IIMch

---

21, 1_...

•
'

.

'

Pomeroy • Mkklllporl, Ohio

.

.

The Dally Sentinel• Pllgl 11

•

"•
•

NEA CrDIIIWOrd Puzzle
'

PHILLIP

ALDER
.

"

·a1,000 Weekly Proc.uina M~l
FNe Info, Send Seii-AddrtUM
Slamped. Envelops: EXI&gt;'III
DI!II.ISI. 100 Eaat Whltoatono
lllv&lt;l., SUita 141-345, Cocllt Pot1c
' Tl( 711113.
:#obit Avon Rtpre llntltlvto
.......... Eer=-1 money tor Chriat11\U blla at ho.,..., - I t 1-800HZ.-358 or 304·182·2845, Ind.

.,...

-Hr +a-till.
·On
- ThoHlriOQ
1231 ~.- •· 31oiAcrt to~ ~···
·~
Job' Train·
lna .To ~In V.Ur ANI, 1.ft00. lrom' IOWII. ~Ad. quiet noiQhW:..tSO.
.128.!100. 304-e7S..1185.

t and 2 badraom - - fur.
nillltd and untvrnllhM, otcYrity

dtpoalt 'roqulrod, no poll, 814·
The Beard Of Truottto 01 Tho Houoo In Contonary Behind VII· 9112-21!1"
U1ion E. Jo- 11u..... Ia SMk· logo Quick, Shop, l38,000 8t 4- 1 Bedroom Super Nlcel Naar
ln8 II. Crtallvt, Stlf-llotivattd, 4411 3085.
•
Holzor'a $200/Mo. Pluo Udlldto,
Entfgodo And Depondabfo Por· Moving out of lha .,.._ muat aell L•••• IQepoolt Aoqulrod, 814·
aon To 56,.. ll.a A Pltt·Timt pi· 2 otary, 3bedroom, I 112balho. 441-a57.
~ forlht Mu-. •
$25,000. ~75-31188.
1 Bedroom , Nicely Furnished~
RlpotMng To The sewn Membtt Near Rio Grande, 1floor home, Control Hoet. 1C., AI.Utltiee Fur·
Board; Thlo ,Poroon Will Bt Rt· 3bedroom, 2bath, largo family nlohod Except Electric,. Privett
opontlblt For Admlnlol(ativo Du- room wllrtploca, 2car gorage, In· P«rJii\IG.81 1!-441-2802.
~~~.InCluding Slitting Up An Of· grQ!Jnd.pool, 1.7oc. Waraon Roo•
2 bedroom.opartmont In' Po,.,.Y,
\lea, Co-orcllltati!lil And Aooltll!lil ty. :io4Ji7!HI433.
no """- 81.1-0112-5858..
Volunteer CommhtHI And Do·
canto And HofpiOQ With Exhlblla Nice l)omo tn Racine, large bullq· 2 Bedroom Apartment On Firat
Md Spacial ~vents. Salary 11 ing will house . small buslneu,
Nlgolilble.
1110 a one' car garage, tenctd Moue, GaHipolle, 8t4-448-6221 '
yard, Out or fiQ.Od
liking 2bdrni. ~p&amp;a., ·total electric, ~P·
Appllcanto Should Stnd Reaume 1-47,000 6to4-~2804. ·
pllancot fumlohod, laundry room
/Cover Ltttei To : Boord Of TrUa·
'
taclliUot, cloae to achoOI In IIWn.
1at1. Ulilorl E. JoMo Muaaum, 76 FOR SALE: Rental P'!S'porty, Appllcatlono ava~abfe Jt: VIllage
Broo-y
Jackoon, Ohio Houoo Wllh 2 Apattmento Local· Green Apts. 148 or coil 814·182·
451.40 No Lotor Than April t 5, od At 517 Fourth Avonuo, Galli· 3711 . EOH.
.
polio, Bit tt8 31183.
tlllll.
3 Floom Apartment Traah Pat~.
Wocktnhut Security to Now AcMobile Homes
NO ·PETS, On 554 Near Porter,
ctpllr:ippllcationo For Employ·
for Sale
6t4-388-1100.
'
mont
Ire At Tho Main Gaurcl
Houao. avln Power Plant, Sot Double l'ilcto RtpO'o, Save Thou· 458·112,lifcond Auenuo, Qatllpo·
Clplaln Mil!t Rl~ 7 A.M. · 3 -130o4-738-'1285.
lla, 2 l!edroomo, AC, Appliances,
P.M. ~on • Frl, 814·307·71131,
·1400/Mo., UUidoo PAid, $200 [)o..
Ext 3341, EOE, IM'.WV.
. t885 tbx50 l(b0rty., 2, bedroom, PD~I Roforancoo, ~1+448·2t2Q.
Ill
atoYe, refrigerator, copper wiring.
Wliftt84·To Qo
underPinning, Olicil(lont condition, Furniahad Apartment
S2il51Mo. Ulilltios
i .
742
614 742
24 Hour Care For Elderly Or 814 ' ·3G,lll' or
' ~·
Fourth AvenUe, Gallipolis,
Handlcappod Poraon In Privati t 968 t 2X60 wi14X14 aOdillon . 448·3844 Aftor 7 P.M.
Homo, 614-441-ooDO.
$1 ,800. 3o4-67S.75Q1 afllr 4pm.

Rod- Magnum Pit·
otal, Sflintell Stili Wllh Scops,
81..-50.
44 Rugat

WNto tuiiUftr atatl bUnl&lt;

550

AnliqiiH

Buy or 1111. R[vorlne Antlquu.,
tl :14 E. Main Sutt~ on RL 124,
Pomeroy. Houra : II . T.~. , 0:00
a.m. 10 8:00 p.m., I!Uftdiy 1:Oo 11
8:00p.m. 01+9112·2528.

sao

1Ox85 Mobile Home Great For
·

-

Storage, Shop, Of Offlct, II ,800,

81 4--2058.

·

,eo·

=·

::-'---:---:-::---:--:-:--1

zo·Piooo
Bnond Nawtn
Box, lifetime GuarantHI Stain·
lou Stool, Will Dealt 814·387.;
77110,

197" Richardson 12x65, very

11180 Waldon artlculadna load,tr,
4 whtil drive, dleoot, bUcket and
will lift 40001ba., wolgho
lb&amp;,'ll8500,614-8112-4111.

c-.

Baath St, Middleport, 2btdroom,
304·875· furniahtd, utilitioa peld. Depoalt &amp;
4S811. ·
· · roloroncos. 304·182·2586.
28ft. enclosed car trailer. 1971
'Plymouth Scamp drag car. ·t988
1Q80 Wlndoor, t4x70, 3 Bedroom, BEAUTIFUL AP.ARTMENTS AT Suzuki 250 4·whftltr. 304-6'7!;2 Btlhs, Electric &amp; Gu, CA, Well BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON 3773.
Water &amp; County. Wattf, Building, ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
Garage, Qar~on ,
Pasture. from S244 to $315. Walk
7 FL Unloon Sattlllla ilion, With
President PS 1,000' ReceiVer, 1
Earn up 11 11,000 wH!dy otufftna Comnierlcal,
Realdentlal,
Stove:
Sreontd·ln
Back
Porch
&amp;
On Sunroom,' Hannan Troce Ell· . Equal
Yotr Old LNB, ...00. 080, 614· .
.,..rc,_ at home1 Stair .....,. No 81-4-388-0428.
mentarr•.2 Acres +1·,
Oood
- 5.
.
exptflt,... Fr.. ouppllta, lnfor· G119rgoo POrtable St~V"~III, don't Condition, $32,000 No Land Con·
~don. No o~gal_ion. Send self, liaul your loge to tho mill jull call tract 81-4-258-6813.
I"
addr....d atamped. envelope to
Expren Dept 38,, 1.00 Eaat
i984 Schultz 3 Bedroomo, Gao
304-67S.t957.
Whltea..,. IJvd., Sulta 148·345, . Home
&amp; oftic8 cleaning, ask for Heat, Underpinning, 1 Blocks,
C..l'«rt&lt;. TX,186t3.
Allcta. 8t4-742-3504.
8t4-388-1107S:
Furnished 2 Bedroom Apartment,
Earn up 10 S1,000;1 weekly stuff· Prafeatlonal Tree Service, Com· 1989 Clayton Newport Mobile Acraaa From Park, AC, No Pett,
~ etll'lklpel at home. Start now.
plate -Tree Care, Buckel Truck Home 14x83 Two Bedroom, EJI- References, Depoait, $350/Mo.,
No exporienee. Free auppllee, In- Setvice ·50 Ft Reech. Stump flo. collent Condition, $13,000 8t4· 814-«&amp;8Zl5,814-446-ll577.
formation·. No ob~gatlon . Send moval,· Free Estimates! ln- 258-6t47, .. I
I;.;.;_;,..;;.;~;;.;..;_;,..;;.;:..:....;_;,_
aelf·addreaaed stamped anvel- . au ranee, 2• Hr. Emergency Serv·
Furnished 2 Rooms &amp; Bath,
opoiO BuCI&lt;a Dept172. 3208-C. E. ' ice ·Call And Savel No Tree ,Too 19.96 Clayton 14M70, appliances. Downstairs, Ulilllies Furnished,
Colonial 0.., No. 308, Orlando, FL Big Or Too Small! Bldwoll, Ohio. central air, exc. cOnd., aaklng Clean. No Pets, Reference. De32803..
814·388·-· 614·387-70t0.
St5,500.304-aQS.S243 afllr8pm.
po~t Required, 814-4&lt;6-15tg,
Baby bed, car IM~ awing, stroll·
Education Institution· Acc~pting Sun Valley Nursery School. t99t Bro~ II 14M78 3 Bed·
... &amp; Wilker. ~75-4548. .
rooma,
2
ha
Diahwalher,
CA,
·
Appllcatlona For A Part 'Timo Chlldcare M·F !!am-5:30pm Avn
Furnished Apartment, 1 Bedroom,
YO Ground Pool,
Buaine•• Olllce POsition. Mink 2·K, Young School Age Ounng DOCk. t5 FL
12251Mo., · Ut&lt;litlos Paid, 701 Btoeball Car~ Colltcllon For
mum 25 Houra Por Week. Applic· SUmmer. 3 Oaya par Week Mini· Prlmastar Sttoflite Dlth, Now Out· Fourth Avo., Gallipolis, Share Slite, 8t4·245·5588 lttvo Moo·
buildjna On 112 Acre Lot. Serious Beth, 614-448-3844 After 7 P.M.
ant MUll Have Poat·Secondary room 614-446-3857.
Buol!liOu Ed)Jcotion, Or 3 Years·
lnqUIIIOI Only PIOIII, 8t4·258·
Equlvl!ltnl Office E~porience. Will Do Interior Or Exterior Paint· f13!1t Loave Meauge.
Furnlah&amp;d Efficiency 2 Rooma, Booto By Rodwln9, Chlppm,
Typing 50 w.p.m . 4nd Familiar in9. Roaaonabla Raile, Expari·
Share Bath, St951Mo. Ulllltiaa .Tony lama. Guaranteed Lowest
With Office Machines. Appl1 anced, Reftrences, For Free Estl· t992 t4xl0 Oakwood 2 Bodroom Paid, 807 Socond A~onuo, Galli· Prlcil At &amp;hot Calo, Galipo!la.
2 Full Baths, Great Starter Home! poll!, 61 ..448·4416 Aftor 7 P.M.
Monday · Friday, 8 A.M. · &lt; P.M. mates, 81 .. 245-5755.
Carpot &amp; Vinyl Sale: Mollohan
Located Rt.2 WV, 8t4-256·6980 .
At i11 Stele Stroot, Golipolis.
Will Mow Lawns, Do Odd Jobs, 4fter SP.M.
· Furnlahad Elftcloncy All Utllllleo Corpoto, 61 ..448·7444 RL 7 H.Executive Secretary: The Ideal Send Response To: CLA 309, Cio
Poid, Snore Bath, St451Mo., 9t9
Candidate Mull PosHII Streng Gallipolis Dolly Tribune, 825 Third 1995 14x70 Clayton 3 Bedrooms, Second Avenue. Gallipolis, 81~· Champion Fora. Blower &amp; 250f
Anvil, 614-&lt;41-38815.
2 Baths. CA. All Elactric. Under- 446·3945.
Comporor Application S)dlla. Abi~· ~nua, Gallpoi' OH 451131 .
pinning,
Skirting,
Exlended
WarT
ty To Work'lndfpendtntly And
ronty, Olhtr·Extrrial$19.500, Af10r Gracioua living. 1 and 2 bedroom 'Concrete &amp; Plasric-Septic Tanks,
Handle Mulliple Tatko Wllh
FINANCIAL
&amp; RM.8t4-448-6415.
apartmems at Village Manor and 300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Chonfi"G Prlorltleol ll~st Have
Evana Enterpri111, Jackson, OH
Riverside Apartments in Midclle- 1.ft00.537-0528:
Excel (lotuo OK) /Word Perfect
port.
From
S232·S355
.
Call
8
t.lMedium ·lo ·Advanced .Sklila,
992·5064. Equal Housing Oppor· Couch And Chair Good Condl·
Shorthand Or Speedwnling A
wniQ&amp;s.
Plus, But Good Transcription
.....t00,814&lt;387&lt;03t8.
Skills, 50+
Typlna Skilla A
Modern 2
Apartme!"lt, Diarno(IG olumlnum truck toolbox, ·
Muat. We
An Excellent
$t25, 8tH~5t3.
Btntflto
I
M,dlcal,
1 ,
•
Electric
Scooter&amp;
' And
Plant ..E•ecutlve
Wheelchalro. Ntw IUaod, Van I
Gallpoiil Dally Trlbuno;
Car Lift lnofliiM, Slalrglldeo, Lift
825 Third. 4venue, Gallipolis,
Chairs, Call For Bro~~ure, 8t4·
CJ!11o 45il3t .

good cond.,

1~.800.

v.rr

1·&amp;7ii Honda Clv!o, good cond.,
~~mull atll,.'400.

o Weok1 Old American Eaklmri

1981 Plymouth Reliant Station
Wago11,· 4 Speed Sta~dard
Tran,mloolon 4 Cytindor, Good
Tlroa; Run• Good
814·258-

AKC Registered, Show Quality
Male Cocker Spaniel Puppy,
Good Bloodline, Excellent Mark·
iOQ&amp;, Block./White &amp; Tan In Color,
Date 01 Birth: 8131195, Houaobro·
ken, 814-3711·2728.
1..:;:=-,.;_n;.;.k~o.:e;..t=up_o_.,.c_i-al-o.-F-Ia-h
&amp; Pot Shop, 24t3 Jackson
Avo. Polnl Plaasant. 304·815·
2083 .

a,

1990 Dodge' Ram Van B-250 ,
72,000 Milot, 16.000, Can
Seen At: Ga!IIP9flo Dally Trlbu,._
825 Third Avenu(f', Gallipolil
c:JlkJ.
I

388-8304 Evtninga.

e824..,

tJ 8 2
•Q 3 2

·

1881 F0111 Exploror Sport 4x4, 4.0

mu~

cr.ulae, aun roof, lo.aded.

8 14 ~949 · 2481 -alter Spm I

1982 Monte Carlo 11,000. 304·

182·2804.

BARNEY

1082 -Oida Omega 4 CyindOr, Au·
IDmiltk:p lookl Good, 'ALina Gbod,
$1 ;l!Qili~1+387-'IIQ t .
'

'

··-·

2•
a•
••
8•

-·

·

Co
. nsole

Piano, Raaponslblo
Wanted To M~tke Low Morrthlv
Payments on .Piano. Soo

1-600·281-e218.'

·

CON5ot..E PIANO

~Pif!Y-tediD

makalowmonlhlyjlrlymontaon
piano, 111 _ . ,, Gai 1-8Q0-21188218. . ,
Export Series PtHrl 'f'ru~ ·.
$550,61+742-3513, : '
'
;

I )J 1'1&lt;-

Weavor .upright plano, good
conci., ·130Q.~aoo.

FAR~1

SU PPLIE S

&amp; LIVESTOCK

~7283.

61 0 Fer:m Eq111pment

Healing &amp;, Air Conditioning
SERVICE MAN, CERTIFIED, wl
minimum sYra experience. Heat·
1!\il &amp; Air Conditioning INST4LL·
ERISERVICE M4N, minimum 3yra
oxporlence. Apply 1317 Ohio St,
Pt Ploalant.

wv.

Floor modal CJpohart olllfeo, am·
1m radio, 8 track, phonorraph S!iO. 1885 Moue, Forguaon Tractor,
20• girl&amp; 3apd bike S40. 4 country Very Good Coftdltlon, Runs ExCO's S50. ;104-675-747t .
co1ont, 81+742-245?.

Home T~plsts, PC users needed.
145,000 Income potential. Call 1ft00.513-il343 Ext B-9388.

'
tmm-.lllte Openirg For

'

PEANUTS

,

f'«rwonnnl Department
Qak Hill Co(IIIIUnitv

'

.

, lrii!II&lt;OI c:.nter

' .

~ Chritta Nlo. '

Ook Hill, Ohio 458511

EOE

1

"

AU nat! ealate adYintolng In
lhl8 nawspap.r 18 aufljeCt to
'the Federal Fair Houalng ACI
ol1988 whiCh ma~ea ~ llltglll
to adYOillse •any praterence:
llmlt8tlort or dlocrlmlnollon
baSed
race. COlor, rollgiOn,
sex famllla!SIOIUS ornelfOnel
origin, or ilny Intention to
make IIYf ouch preference,
limitation or alacnmtnotion.'

on

lltls_,r..wnot
ICnOWIIngt,o accept
adY8rtlleme[11s for reel otitare
WhiCh 18 'In vlotat10n ol tho law.
our reeders ara l1oraby
lnformod lflat all ~HI)gl..
adverttaed irttt\11 nt¥11pop8f
are a~III:Me on an equal
opportunity bulo.

Hoovor Upright ·swoapor OOod
Condition, Picnic Table With 1M•ow•or
i
Blnchn, 25• T.V. Cabinet Needa Equipment Sales
Service.
Worl&lt;,61+441-2857.
Altizer Farm Supply, 814·245·

_si~93_·----~----~~

Ja

. .

BROWN .. •

I
I

1995 Pol&amp;ril SL 750 2 Lira Veato,&amp; 'frailer, Still Und" Warranty;
Gt4-448-15l6.
_

t991 Gran"Pnx, $7,100. 304-675·
5375.

760

t 991 Mu_.'l'ng GT with sunroof.
Tlllnum ll&lt;iot. wilh bloel&lt; Interior, 5
spoad, P8, PW; PS, PM, POl, air,
lots ol exv;s, 58.000 milea, excel·
lent condition, $9800; 8t4·949 ·
221 ~me. .
·
1991 Old• Cullao! Caiola,
l
t28,00pmi., 5al!&lt;f, 4cyl, ounroof.
air, am-t¥.UUe, 14,000.. 30487!i-¥~5:30.
.
t992' ' * - · ExcofllfU Coitrtillon,
MiiHgt Hiah: Aaklng h. 100 Call
·Unrqt:l14·258 0858 ..,.,..... !
t992

surljj1J11~ 33.000 llltoo, 5

~

•. .

I

Accessories

l

'.

Swopt :

t993 Ford Eacort GT, Bile~.
Sharp, c;an Or leave Maeu9e,
81•·258-1?87- r
,
,

992--411 .

1

I

Uotd Auto P«rlii:·Don't Be
~ By High ~ricea, Call Dray'"'
~. 014-4411-1824• . '
i

~;:2t. ~Aoklng t'\_,800, 614·

t993. f~~~:,M.ulllng LX, 2- ~r•.
hatr:hbarii«, very low miles: 4 cyl.
automa
·n iall for loan, '814-

Auto Pa ns •

New gaa tan~ a•..one ton truck •
-··radiator&amp;, lloor irllts, Ole. I
o &amp; R AulD. Ripley, WV: :!04·3n. •
m:lor HI00·213-9329·
{
.
1
Throttle body &amp; diotributor foro
t967 Z24 Ninon engine. 304· •
882-3328.
.-:
.Trensmlasion Wili Fit 1981 ·1987 :
Oldsmobile, Pontiac, Or Buick. •
8f( ......:!78t .
.
!

790. · ·Campers &amp;

..

r
~
.mT t.OCJK.i'.TTI\Po.i ~. IJI(.l ~ .
BIWTlr.&gt; "!

MotorHo~s

~

~

501tTC*' ~ '100 Rl;l-~

~ ltel(,loUfleJ..t.IT,IX:E!tli IT'?

~

~

.KTUALLY, 1 F.Ef.L 'ffi.l..i Wr..Y II«JT
~WE.. TIN£ ,l.N'r'lrJP.'( !

Punic war against ijannibal.

Building sites wilh road

fron.Jage,

back of Naw Haven, rural water,
and. financing available. 304·882·
26811.
Five ac'res,
aerator, near
Racine,S16,000 can finance with
half-.. 8t4·94fl.2025.
Scenic Valley, Apple Grove,
beautiful 2ac Iota, public water,
Clyde Bowen Jr., 304·578·23311.

'

RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent

Town &amp; Counrt ~I Eo1110.

450

Furnished

Rooms
Roomt for rent - -

or monlh.

Slarting at S~201mo. Gallia Hotel.

814-.a580.
Sleeping rooma_with ·cooking.
Alao trailer tpace on river. All
hoo~-upo . Call alto! 2:00 p.m.,
~773-~5t , ~WV. ·
•

310

CELEBRITY CIPHER
·
·
by Luis Campoi
Cellbrlly ~ ClfllkV••• n CtiiMid fnlm qow t' : • bV r.mou. peop~~, put Met~
.Eodl-ln . . - -.. -

'UY ·AKHSA

YD

FHKGDDZE

1995 Grand Am, V6, aUto, 2dt,
r~ wfgra~ interior, ac, til~ cruise,
pw, pi, linrfm cenette, $1~,000

oeo.30:F73-50711.

82 Fojd\ Granada, motOr run.a
gr.eat, tranSminion ia ok, new

Lowe's Riding lawn Uower, 14.5
HP 42 Inch Cut, 3 Montha Old,
Moved Bock Into li&gt;wn. No Long·
If Ntedtd, W&amp;rrlnly, S800. 61.1-

Aulo Loans. Dealer will ai'rango fl.
nanc!ng even·u you have been
1urr1e~ down el,eWhere .·Upton
EqUipment Uaed Car• . 304-458·
1069.

3MlfSheia

,,

G

YE

AKZ

OZBZ

,

·'

YIGKOE .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I'm ead for ua, happy for heaven: -Shirley · '
Maclalne, on Gene Kelly's paaainQ.
:.

..

I
I I PI I E

'

.

--

ARFINU

SYRUO I''
I1 I I I t .
1--r-0_cr.-P-r-U
' I_ _Hr--11
I. ..~,
_
_
1 r I

e

Travel Trailer Uaed Once,

od, Serious Inquiries Dilly,
P.W. 614 ~1'-1358.
I
----------~----~_,.1
1994 lnnsbr~~. fUil'y loaded, lots1
of aJCtras, 18ft. Serious inquiries1 ~
only. 304-675-ftG03.
'

I SELEC.T THE
COMEC.1' ANSWER,

1-81)0.231-0328,

.

810

Sovlnp Yov'H Find In tilt
. ClossJ(Ied Stctlall.

II

"I can't understand,• my friend sighed, "how a
pol~ician can toss his hat into the ring and still talk
THROUGH it!"

\

.'

'

I

Hungry- Graph - Nobly- Trench- THROUGH

\

'

;

.

SCIIAMolETS ANSWUS

LETTER.

·

Home
l~ements

UNSCRAM8LE LETTERS

COR RESI'ONDIN6

~

SERV ICES

PRINT NUM8EREO
lETTERS IN' SQUARES

6 FOR ANSWER

THEN Wll.ITE
DOWN THE

Campground Uembeiship In· ' '
eludes · All Major Attiliations ..~
Nnrly 500 Resorts, $.4.00 !Night, •
USA &amp; Canada. Slicrifico, $425;:!:

Complete the chuckle quoted
by filling in the missing words
you develop from llep No. 3 below.

lTHURSDAY

.'

~

T

BASEMENT
' ;
WATEAPR00€1NG
"'
Unconditional lifetime guarantee.
local references turnl1hed .,Call
(614) 446 ·0870 Or (814) 237·
0488 Rogers Wottfprootlng. Eo· 1
toblrlhed t975.
.' ,
"

MARCH 281

ROQOTMAN

l

4spd , V8. rupa

080. 304·875·2352

I

!·

And StfvJce: Allii
25 V..,rs Ex., I

614·448·' . 't
~ :~!~~n;~~~·~·;=~~:.'G;~uafanteed.

1 •·

I

4 Bedroom Older House In Galli·
polis $350tMo., Deposit, References Required, 814·446-7538 :
Avaible April 2nd.

. I

Pomeroy, IWo btd,room. largo LA
and kitcl)on, WID hookup, J300/
mQ. rent, coil 6t4·992·888B afltr
5:30pm,

for 'IfNI/

ASTRO-ORAPB

B~RNICE

BEDEOSOL

IlOna ~by mailing S2 and SASE 1o
Aalro·Gri!Ph, c/o thla newapaper, P.O.
Boll 1758, Murgy 1;111 SJtton, New YOlk,
NY 10156. Mike IUfW tO alate your zodl.: llgri. '
TAUIIUII(Aprl - . . . , 211) Thill wt1 be
an unueual day becaUM IIPPftr-

wilt nolliWiyl match rMIIty. Even dllrtc

lnd' ~ futile
.... •II!Mr li*lg.

poMictiona could

.
.
- - - - - - - Olllll~21 ...... 10)11yourhunCII" ~ you to get 1n touc11 with • ape-

..

840 Eltetrtal encf

.~~~§§~~~~:· I ·

~!~~~~~~~~~ i~~~~~~~~~:~

Refl'lg4il'ltlon

0
LAWRENCE
ENTEfiPRISES
.
\4Y
•·
RSES eEFITtFIEODEALER '
Heat P!t!"!!': ~r C~ndilionlng; H ;.lJ.
'lo\l Don) CaR Uo W. Bofl l,.llaof )71

8\ 4-4&lt;41HI:Ifl8, WV 1Jo214S:

'

FrH ,Ettll!llltel, 1·e00,2tt·OOGt, '"I'

youtletr.
I,IIAA (Sept. 23-0cl. 231 You will
IChiew aulXl&amp;as tod&amp;y Ryou-'&lt; -.y
with lrlertcle. PUI your faith In your btJddies and not In individuals you've juat

met.
SCORPIO (Del. 24-Nov. 221 Put your
moat ambltloua objective et the top of
agenda today. "" the ground run·
nlng and don't quit unlit you have the
reaultll you deeife.

your

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. D-Ote. 211 Acll·
vitiea whiCh present both a ntei'QI and a

, cilj·f*IOI1 .todly, 11M.,_,, Soi!OIIIIIIO phylical ctaihnge will be the- enjoybenellciaf could rMUII from an open line IIIIa today. I toMttar, do not take youiMif
ol COII'II1Ut1icld. .
too aerioualy.
C"NCI!R (June 21-.luly 121 You will be CAPRICORN (O.C. 12..,.,, 11111 you
on a rol fl!•rclltllf. 11 you do not uaner·
- lllltby Clllnglrtg PMihlnQ. you can
Friday, Mlrdl211; 181111
... u,. kind ol 'rwtum you hid ltilfelpllld, blnlll your Wnlly, todly .... be • bettlf '
You wtl have an oppoi!U!IIIY 10 ~ lryllglin. Thnllprollttnyourlulule.
~IO 'dol"lhMifllerlntheMIIt.
your mantiQIIilllllilll In lite 'fNIIIhlid. . UO (July U.Alli- 121 Sonlllllmfi R II . AGUAfiiUa (.Jail......... 111 Thll wtll
You 'may.diNd lfl-?'lglmliC.... urtWIH to ll!iJt-- wtlll piMiln, 11ut be I gbad'clly 10 ,......... I CIOIItjAk;alld
ODUid rMUII In IIIIWtunrp&lt;,pnlllt' · , ~ ba,llloiM!t1 be tNt Iii your,_ todly, · .. Cllilllf!lio ft t h e - Mlllr to both pll· ·
AliiU c-att 21·Apdi1i) You .,.In You may ~IR from lllklng 1hop In' tlla,the~g~M~t,.Cwilllllndblllaown.
an appealing popl!lll1ty cycle IIIII you IIOCIIIIIIuallana.
· PllcP .... 10 lillrlll 10) You ODUid
c.~ w1n • ~ o1 ,_ fltendt or ....... 'YfRGd IAui. n t1pt nJ ·~ be CGntp~t ' 1 ~ 1or 11te - " or MMc~
• bo not liltll ~ II · ,ltllno PIII!Oflll. Jhllt OOUkl """ you to ·a ugment your you perfonn 10411y; Wl*iPII
ty. Ott • jull9 on . . by undallllfldltl(l ~~'COI*i -~~om.,"',. peeled do nalbllllve e.t your aflolll' 1 "•
~thai~ YI!U In lha~Jff! \r,"~· t"·~ !!.'! ...., you ~ 10 itoOQ!tlllcMt.
......

i

BZZN

UY DN •

1

W RCHANniSI

Tilbfito"l

-C

WIGLAEOGOEKYX ,

YDEXYIGAYHD
I!KGIZO

· Tocloy'I-·W

r e

1iDct1 Rotai!' Stoll Neede FuiHime 2 bedroom home, 5 acrft, 2 car

2 homoo in Middleport, llvo in
ono, coller:t 2 renfllo olt lhl other,
140,000 obo, oal Ron Cucl, 6t4·
992·;!290. '
. Garage.
Deck,
Green

''

1L-1.-~-..L-.J-..JL..o....J.
I' I I I 1

ttomn fOI: ~le

Saltsporson, Send Rnume To: garage with apartment, other
•P.O. Box 141, Galli poll!, OH bulldinga, Home Natlonol Btnk.
Raclna, Oh. 81-4-848·2210.
45e31 .
'

j._.-......._

"If you fail the first time, try
again." gramps says. "If you fail
again, quit. There's no sense
,._E_A_c_L_s_u_.., making a fool of---.-- - _,.

1993 Nlooan 24PSX, ,34;000ml.,.
tt3,000. 304-875;2219. .

lriternallon~l Farmall 808 dleoal.
International Farmall 706 w/cab, tires, neW "'uffl!!lf system, aaking
dioaol. Gohl grln.derlmlxor. OW!!· 1:100, 61.1-992-5041 .
tonna 7ft. hayblr\e, 12ft tnonaport
GeO Storn\ lUID, 'iir, arrvtm, air
~~~. all good cond. 304·213·. . 82
btga,. llf,OOO mil01, $7;oop, 814·

441~JIMI.

.......,

Ill

.

F1EA L ESTATE

for lnfor"JIIion

l-IE'S '(OUR
D06, CI-IARUE

tlil7&lt;&amp; 16' Monarch baa~ boat: 35:
hp. EvlnruGo· motor with tr'aller, t
St500: 304-882·3802.
:
t989 Criu Craft Cuddl Cabin.
t9'. 305 V·8, 200hp, outboard, I
oharp;$7900 obo, call Ron Caacl:
6t4-992-~.
.•
I

1989 F=d, T-tops, V-e, auto,
5• St" 742' 2357·
loaded, ,
t989 Ford Eacort 5 Sptad, Air,
Rod, Looko Good, Runo Good,
St,500, 81 &lt;4-R92:s284:
1990 Do.ge Daytona AC, 5
Speod, Trlf S-"'1!. $2,950, OBO
81-4-258-6\89,
'

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In SIDCk.
Coli Ron.Evana. 1·800·537·9528.
Lona Pink !Black Sequence Prom
DreiS, et 4•448•3099 After 5 P.M.
0.81 ..448-3278.

1

UlogUirdl Wlt11~ tlr tho.mM1 of
l'itw Hal(lln. Call 304·8B2·312t

'

Knowledge or Latin bas to inereaae
one's English vocabulary. Maybe you
know what "cunctator" means. The
word was given as a nickname to
Quintus Fabius r.laximus Verrucosus,
so if you know about him, you will
have no trouble with today's deal.
West leads the heart king against
six spades. How would you plan the
play?
The auction is difficult, with South
· effectively bidding six spades all on
his own. Yet the final contract is rea·
aonable.
· Most players would win the firlt
trick In the dummy, dlecarding the
club ~even from band, and tate the
club finesse. They would get home if
either the club finesse worked or the
trumps brolre 2·2. Reasonable, but unsuceesaful with this layout.
Strange as it seems at fintt glance,
It ill ript to win ilie lint trick by rulfing in hand, U the trumps are 2·2, you
are laydown. Yet when the trumps
split 3·1, you have another chance.
Just unblock the diamond ace before
Ultlng in trumps.
At the .worst, East has the three
lrumpt1 and exits with a club. But then
you tate the flnea8e, retaining the
same chance as you bad by winning
the first trick in the dummy. Here,
though, West wins the spade trick and
is endplayed. If be leads a red-suit
card, you diac:ard your club losers on
dummy's heart ace and diamond tlng.
And if he leads a club, be takes the II·
neneforyou.
A cunctator is someone who procrastinates. Quintus Fabius became
known as ·The Cunctator tor his suc·
ceuful delaying tactics in the Second

1-----,-,..-.,.,...--

3Q4,~7S.7115t.

4 Full·
Time Medl~al Social Worker In
The Home Health
Rtaponolbllltlos

SandAtaum.To:

Pass
Pus
Pus
Pus

Gatling roody for llil Big Wedding 230 Muley F-&lt;1rg~ocn, 814·1i92·
Day? Call Aiver Front Photogra· 7~51 .
Phi' for tho bell quality &amp; priceo. I---,---~---304-571-St81 .
·
Ha1blno, &lt;;ood 10 Mo.
Llmousip Bull, 814--682·
Gun cabino~ trioldo •8 guna, S50.

.

.litQ ~donts ;ro
taln their Social,
Phyolcal Heallh.
Vlllll• Portlclpatoo rn
opmonr 01 The Poli.ento
ea.. Provldoo CounllfiOQ ..
Ouiutlc:afians Include; Uasters I
LISW Degree, Ohio Llcanse Re·
quirtd. Prevlouo Health Care Ex·
por1once Pntftrhld. Alao, Opening
For Home Htallh Hurling Aosls·
tant. Mull Be Certlfltd With Do·
pendabft Transportation . Must
·Succooolully Complete Compat·
ency ExaJ11 And Skllla Damon·
otra(on.

East

By P.llllp Alder

TWEM TilAT!

Black .Ibanez RG550 wiFioyd
Roae tremolo. $250. 30&lt;·675·
5027

Nortll

2NT
aNT
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Pus

1984 ~enault Allla~.o runo good

$400, 814-882-6133. '

ll~~~~~~~~~~

MusiCal
. ·1nsttumenta

West
Pus .
Pus
Pus
Pus

Now or later?

I DIDN'T COLOR
AN'( PICTUReS !!
I KEEP TEt.t.IN6 ·

570

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Opel)ing lead: • K

Eatter rabbits, all colors, 814·
949·3148.
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tra"oportatlon, S\500, 8t4·7421.00. .
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AKC Rog'iotortd, t Year Old. All
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Cnomplon Grand Sire : also Poo·
dies, little toys, AKC, sho11 &amp;
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Dealer: South

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Black labr,dor 'Rtn~ie:v-er Male,

Sqhnauzer puppies, mihiatures,

1 ........ veto
wwd
2 wt.lnln
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Vulnerable: East-West

Black Female Chow 10) (1oeks
Old, Alao t Femole Golden Re·
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81 4-387·1043. .. ,
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Van, ot1 ,000 mllu, 4.3 V-/1, au10
lotdM, 4 capflln aoato &amp; bench
new tires, garago ktpt, muot IOOj
liking $10,900, 8t4-84fl.2481 aftar5pml-. .

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Peta for Slle

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volo~Wt at home. Be your .booa.
Call ua · Wo can holp. 304· 702·
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tO Pr11Ugt .Unit •L. P.O. Box General ,Maintenance, Pointing,
115808, Wlntor Sprlngo, Fl Yard Work Windows Weahed
S2718.
Guttero Cleaned Light Hauling,

BUilding '
Supplies

1Q5JCFord cuotom, 4 door, V·l ,
auto, 70,000 actual miles, dillly
Block , brick, sewer pipes, wlnd- clrlvor, looko &amp; .... good, II ,885,
Dwt, lintels. etc. Claude Wlnllra. 6to4-:U7-4292.
Rio Grandt, OH Call 61o!·245·
5121 .
1085 ~WI' lmpa,, 14,000 OBO.
~7S.21!illaftlr 5pm.
Metal Roofing And Sldi OQ Galv•nized, Gal.valume And PainMid, 1911-'J:amaro, nice ah.P,, 327 2
8t4·245-5111G.
ap. t'!naml.-!on. QIJ&amp;Qed last 12
~1!i 4-7,2-3190 . or 814-742-

area,

· .Expoct,tlono
ifJroru&gt;od
ExacutiYa Director, •
onihOod Of s.l.lheaar Ohio,
Richland Avo., Athona,
.e!i"iot .
.

- . .,,,

&amp; twin, bought at lngolo. 1275,
8t..eti2-S833.

Turkey, A.rch•ry, Guna, Ammo,
Rotoadlng &amp; Flthl!lil Supplloo.
Lillo Bak &amp; Uconoo. c,.wforcl'o,
llaurtaraoo, WV.

530

•
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•

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-

-

Tho Seriss

.

�,...,2 • The Deily Sentinel

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.I

:Denison ·offers h_igh school stude.nts.summer programs~
.

I

In addition to participation in varalive writing program. The University has offered specialized study in ious research labs. field trips and spewriting arts for more than 40 years cia! evening sessions on topics such
and nunl~rous Denison students and as archaeology and astronomy, the
alumni have garnered national recog- students will engage in scientific
nition in competitions, literary jour- research demonstrations, related
nals and publications, and highly . computer activities and discussions.
ranked graduate-level writing pro- The University's athletic .facilities
also will be available for supervised
grams .
Many activities for participants, recreational activities. Visits to
such as one-on-one conferences with Columbus' Center of Science and
professors and students as well as Industry and. the Dawes Arboretum
workshops on poetry, fictio~. play, near Newask also are planned.
expository writing and crosswriting
Deadline for applying to the Deniare scheduled for the 10-day pro- son program is April 19. The cost is
gram. Time is set aside for journal $350 and limited financial aid is
writing, ·recreation, readings, free available. (Contact Hassebrock clo
time and other social activities.
Department of Psychology, Denison
The faculty at this year's workshop University, Granville,.Ohio 43023 ; or
includes David Baker, an associate call him at (614) 587-6677. His Eprofessor of English ; Matthew Mail
address
is
Chacko, an assistant professor of HASSEBROCK(aCC.DENISON.E
English; Townsend; and visiting DU)
guest poets, fiction ·writers and playIn addition to spending time in
wrights, along with three Deni90n Denison's new· F.W. Olin Science
University students.
Hall exploring the Worldwide Web
The science research experience is and the latest multimedia educationopen to juniors who will gradyate in al technology, students will be able to
1997. The summer opportunity is to choose. two from the following
do hands-on , college-level research research labs :
with faculty from biology, chemistry,
•"Explorations in Micro)liology"
geology, mathematics, psychology, (Biology I), a workshop where teams
and physics and astronomy.
identify environments to be sampled ,
Between 30-40 students will be design and perform experiments, and
seleGted to participate in the ninth analyze results and present findings
annual "Investigations in the Sci- 10 a paper.
ences" program that runs from Sun•"Adaptation and · Behavioral
day, June 16, to Friday, June 21, notes Ecology" (Biology II) students test
director Frank Hassebrock, chair of hypotheses about insects' behaviors
Denison's psychology department.
while conducting field studies in and

A

writing workshop for high
• school students and a high school
• college research experience for high
school juniors will be offered this
summer at Denison ·University in
Granville.
The university will hold its second
Jonathan R. Reynolds Young Writers
Workshop June 16-25.
"The Young Writers Workshop is
one of only three or four workshops
'in
country specifically geared
· • toward high school-age writers," says
, Ann Townsend, an assistant professor
. : ·of English, at J?enison. "It is an. excel. • lent op(!Ortumty for young wnters to
come and explore fiction, poetry and
drama," she continued.
A 1965 Denison University graduate, Reynold's success as a professional writer and his interest in help• . ing young writers develop their talents led to the creation of the workshop, offered last year for the first
time. The endowment also created a
Distinguished Professorship and a
Playwright-in-Residence program.
Reynolds, a successful play. wright, author a.nd screenwriter,
earned a bachelor of fine arts degree
from Denison and studied at the Lon'
: ·don Academy of Music and Fine
; Arts. ·His screenwriting credits
include the Dudley Moore comedy
Micki and Maude, Switching Channels and My Stepmother is an Alien.
Unusual in that it is a program
aimed at discovering and improving
creative talent, the workshops are
directed by faculty in Lenison's ere-

me

work in tbe hum
brain to aiter
behavior.
All plltlcipants Will be housed in
Denison residence halls and eat in
University dining halls. Participants
also will have access to Denison's
tennis courts, indoor and outdoor
tracks, basketball courts a¢ sand

, .. ,

t.•

near Denison's 350-acre Biolopcal
Reserve and new Polly. Anderson
Field Station.
•"The Chemistry of Color"
(Chemistry) selection provides experience in spectioscopy techniques ill
studying reasons for molecular color,
electronic energies and how lhey are
affected by environment as meas~
by pH and .taction progress .
•"Cryptology" (Mathematics I)
students learn about lhe history of
encryption and how to use Denison's
computer network and programs to
"break" mathematical codes.
•"Problem Solving Workshop"
(Mathematics 11) participants will
study famous problems in m~the­
matics to gain insights and problemsolving skills, using arithmetic, algeONLY
bra, geometry, trigonometry, number
theory and recreational malhematics. ·
1994PlY~ '
•"Cognitive and Social Psychol!JGRAND VOYAGER
gy Laboratory" (Psychology I)
e~plores human attitudes and social
behavior as students discuss such
'9995
:
questions as: "How can we:: tell when
ONLY
~
another person is lying?" or "Do the
19931UICK
ways women and men are portrayed
in the media-from news programs to
CENTURY WAGON
soap operas to MTV-have conseoiJto, olr1 all ""'""'. lr.!W 4 dr, al&lt;, caoa, lit, crulle,
1, , miles. factory warr~.
quences for our own lives?" and "Do 1 m,u.,., 1-owner.
we pay more attention to negative
"9 995 :
ONLY
ONLY
information about others than to positive information?"
1990 FORD -~
•,""~ FORD
•Behavioral Pharmacology and
.
flSTIVA .
1
Psychobiology " (Psychology 11)
door, 5 speed, AloiJFM
offeri' students an opportunity to lpolilitr, c!UIM. iii &gt;dl, Iori., ·-. . ,.2....,
view the effects of drugs on behavONLY
ONLY
ior in laboratory rats, and how drugs

-----

F·150

----Silver Medal winners---

Spring in
·the animal
kingdom

•,f

volleyball co~. l Y
:0:
Applications have been sent :!!.
high school counselors and sc~e
departiJICnts anQ . may !II SO
.
obtained by contacting: Dr.
Hassebi'QCk, Department of Psych
ogy, Denison University, Granvii!J;:
Ohio 43023 (Phone: 614-587-66~

1994 DODGE
INTREPID

19171SUZU
TROOPER

5 spd. s1erao. very cteen. ve. power ioct&lt;s, .
mill.
. ; worranly.

ONLY

ONLY

1992 PlYMOUTH
GRAND VOYAG~R U

1 ~9_9~

199401M
CORSICA

ONLY

. By ALDEN WAm
· Melge County Humane Society

For those of us lucky enough to
· · live in rural southeastern Ohio at this
time of the year, Appalachian spring: -honored in poetry, novels, and
: :music--is indeed glorious.
~'
The emergence of irises, the slow,
::· gradual greening of the delicate
• :·. leaves, and the special scent and
· · warmth of the late March breezes stir
' ·all of us, particularly after such a difficult winter.
.
·
Spring, however, 'is marred for
many of us by the increasing number
"ay Midkiff, Catherina Shenefield, Bernice
Ster Grange 778 received a silver medal
of animals deaths--random and needMidkiff, Connie White, Rex Sh-'leld, Larry
· less--which we see evidence of as the
when they participated In the Any Age Second
Montgomery, Wald Nicholson, and Bob Fatty;
, weather grows warmer. The sight of
Degree Contest at the state ritualistic contest
and third row, Maxine Dyer, Rick Macomber,
.. wild animals hit by cars and trucks is .. held at Friendly Hilla Grange Camp near
Eldon Barrows, Wanda Fetty, Charlotte
:. saddening, of course, but far touch- · Zaneavllle. Taking part, left to right, front were
Erlawine, Martha Bartley, Rose Barrows and
ing to me at least is the sight of a
VIcki Smith, Linda Montgomery, Peggy Smith,
Tam Bartley.
'.co II ared d.og or ca
' t, undou btedl y
Rachel Ashley, Jan Macomber; second row,
·
. '()nee owned, probably missed, dead
or dying at the side of the road .
." Spring is the time when cats' and
: dogs' biological clocks tell them it is
Five livestock conferences for Ohio Livestock Reform Act.
gerty, Meigs County 4-H Extension
time to seck a mate--they are oblivi- Ohio youth will be held in June at the
Applicalions are due by April 30, Agent, 61.4-992.6696.
.ous to the population explosion · Ohio State University.
1996.
among their kind and are only folThe purpose is to enhance opporOnly 4' H and FFA members who
lowing their instincts. But as domes- tuniti&lt;ls · and knowledge of the beef, have completed their freshman,
• ticated creatures, they live far longer dairy, poultry, sheep and swine indus- sophomore, junior or senior year of
· than they would in lhc wild because tries for outstanding youth in Ohio . high school as of June I 5 are eligiII
· they can count on us for their f()(}d All of the conferences will be held ble to apply.
:·source. and arc (if lhey are fonunate) simultaneously on June 25, 26 and
The conferences are sponsored by
· taken to the veterinarian for shots and 27.
The Ohio State University Extension,
worming as well as for .emergencies.
Twenty-five youth will he select- Ohio State's.Animal Sciences Depart. :They need not reproduce themselves. ed to attend each conference. These ment, the Ohio Beef Council, the .
~ ·So w!)y do their owners not have their
conferences will ioclude topics suc h Ohio Pork Producers Council, the
I
; animals neutered? If they hope the as careers, meal evaluation. perfor- Ohio Sheep Improvement Associa.
• pets will remain with them for many mance records, li ve animal evalua- tion , The Ohio Sheep and Wool Mar. years and want to insure a healthy life tio~ . commercial producer tours, keting Board, The Ohio 4-H Foun•
· for the animal. just what is the prob- leadership, use of computers nutri- dation, Milk Marketing, Inc.,
tion, genetics, research, anificial COBA/Select Sires, Ohio Holstein
·· lem?
Neutered animals of either sex insemination, how to groom a nd Association and United Dairy.
Meigs County youth interested in
' :: wander from home less frequently show your project · animal, how to
applying
should contact' Chip Hag:-because they lose ·their interest (and prepare for skillathons at The Ohi o
; capacity) for breeding once they arc State Fair and underslanding of the
• neutered. In addition, they live far
~. .:too)
longerdobecause
females (and males,
not develop tumors of the
··· reproductive track, and females do .
' not become debilitated through
The Community Calendar is sider cost-cutting prop~sal s and
· repeated breeding.
published as a free service to non- changes to sc hool calendar.
·• • ·Think back to the battered tom cat
' : you know who always showed. up in profit groups wishing to announce
•
meeting and special events. The
RUTLAND -- Meigs Local
. • ·the . spring to initiate or certainly calendar is not designed to promote OAPSE Local #17' meeting, 7 p.m.,
.. 1~engage in the fights male cats are sales or fund raisers of any type. Rulland Fire Department.
:.': prone to ai that time of year. And Itemsareprinledasspacepermits.
' What of the neighbor's beagle who and cannot be guaranteed to run a
POMEROY -- Meigs County
• · ~ died when she was barely six,
Churches
of Christ, Thursday, 7:30
. ~ 'e~hausted by· yearly liners? Her own- specific number of days.
e
THURSDAY
p.m. at Pomeroy Church of Christ.
~ ers' thought the pups· were adorable '
CARPENTER-- Revival , Thurs- Rutland church to have devotions .
·
e
•.(though they admit they didn't place day, Friday and Saturday, 7 p.m. at
· all of them in homes); and for some
TIJPPERS PLAINS -- VFW, Post
,. reason . they felt they would be the Carpenter Baptist Church, State
9053,
7:30p.m. Thursday ~t the hall .
• ; "depriving" Misty of the chance to ,Route 143 with evangelist John
·e
..t become il mother--many times over- Elswick. Singers, Russ and' the
, , -if they had her spayed.
·
Gospel To.nes on Thursday, Sunrise FRIDAY
.
on Friday and Saturday, and Faith and
BRA u
{ ' Simple mathematics will tell you Dan Hnym
S t rd
DB RY -- Revival services
· ~ 'what one cat, breeding twice a year,
an on au ay.
at the Bradbury Church of Christ Fri~ ·with a minimum of five kittens per
POMEROY Le 1
.
f day and Saturday, 7:30p.m. and Sun- .
.. '
. fi·1ve years. Do he M .
day, 10:30 a.m. L'1g ht reo' res h ments
"''latter,
can produce lh
M' --. n. 1enAservices
. . .o
f
honestly thin,k those',.fifty' cais I . . elgs
IDIStena
SSOCilh~n following the Friday evening service;
I!P ~ forJ.\Vhll ~rcent- c. wtll 1111 held Thursday; 7:30 p.m. With potluck dinner after Sunday morning
&lt;.;",!1\.lr·:~~. , d llalf-wild~o~batii.cats." ' would 'the_Rev~Ol_en MCCI~ng 10 be~~- services. Dave Lucas, evangelist.
· liP L
'f ,__,
.bo' , . nd er. Good Friday serv1ces April S at the
, lb~ names • b~y ~me w oou
Sacr~·- Heart Catholic Chureh,
~~~
to a shelter· In most cases Pomeroy. Collections to go to assist SATURDAY
, '! (~I thmk we all ~ lhts ~some cniergci!CY ·needs of Meigs CounPOMEROY -' Retired Teachers
',.. &gt;~ level), shd~rs can find home r~ l~s tians.
· •
·
Association, Saturday, noon, lun· '•"'J!...,f·~.• 10 ~~of
those .ahandoned , '
r -r ·- .-p~t
cheon and meeting at Trinity Church.
· . l)·or gtv~-up pes.
·
.
PQMEROY
Meigs County John Milhoan, district director,
· ·~ The problem of cat' ai1d dog over· ·Library
Board ofTrust~. Thursday, speaker. .
' : pqpulation and lhe ~th of your aniI p.m.
;: mats
be iOIYed -il)'-·81 .ix
LETART
Letart Township
'
~· mOIIIIu, llld eWII )'ounpt.... for lc:U
'RACINE -· Soulheril LoO,I Board Trustees, 7 p.m. Monday, at the
' ;_m,oney thal,l yo. would 11Jink. Why of Education, special session, Mon- office buildins.
,. . 'IOl,conlult with a':veteti~ today?
day, 7 p.m: atlhe hish sehoolto conIf- ... -·!'
..
.

1992 PLYMOUTH
VOYAGER
V·&amp;, aulo, air, lift, cruise. P.
loci&lt;, doll&lt; glass ..,
IBUICl, an,

ONLY

----

' 79 9 5

'96 Fashion Focus

"

1995 DODGE GRAND
CARAVANSE

l;.;;m;,jy: ve. 7 pua, focloov 14·-do&lt;H.
ONLY

----

' 16995

:

1995 NISSAN 414
KINGWXE

Ohio livestock youth conferences to be·held

,.

'

-CommunI. ty ca Ie·ndar-

Let Bob's Market Help you with all your
1't1
SPRING PLANTING NEEDS!

NOW AVAILABLE:

Onion Sets,(Red, Yellow, ~lte and Dutch Varieties)
Bulk Garden Seed (Best Selection In Town)
• Seed potatoes (Five varieties) e Fertilizer
Lime • Garden Sprays and D~st e Holland Spring B~'bs
Large selection.of. potting soils, mulches and .morel .
'

. t..'m lllld

war

#

i,

can

,'(\~

..
'""""'.....
-~.l:ak......

..

.

..,;

'

.

1996 Spring Fashion Show
Friday, Marc~ 29, 7:30 p.m •.
..Pomeroy Elementary School

..

And Remember Bob's •••

For ~t-e fresh quality produce
you'v~ come to $xpectl ·
CONVENIBNT LOCATIONS

Sponsf)red by
'

'

The Pomeroy Merchants Association

••

,suP.,I~f~~ to The Daily Sentinel

, , , ·r·

-Pomeroy-Mtdclleport, Oblo ~~
TbiP'Sda

,~March 28

1996 '

' .

..

~ '

I

• 'r l

• 1

I

...
.I

....
'

'

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