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PorMroy • Mldd'tport, Ohio

•
•

•
I

~.Aprill,1

Ohio Lottery

White
named
newMU
·cage coach

.
700W. Main

Pomeroy

'

Plck3:

860
Pick 4;
I , 4218
Buckeye 5:
13-15-22-24-28

Sports, Page 5

Snow ahowera tonliht.
Low In 20a. Wednesday,
snow showers, high In
401.

••
'

~e~ ·

~'~e · Tys~n

• Holly Farms .

Vol. 46, NO. 240
1 s.ctlon, 10 Paga

Whole Fryers
LB.

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c;.oCJ

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:M iddleport,. -c ounty .t a.rgeted for housing funds
The action by the board followed
'By JIM FREEMAN
the second public hearing·on the proSe~tlnel news 1\llff
The village of Middlepon was tar- .posed CHIH project by·county hous,
geted by the Meigs County Board of ing director Jean Trussell.
Although commissioners said they
.Commissioners Monday afternoon as
the (ecipient of a proposed $600,000 would prefer to. target the entire
·Community Housing Improvement county for the housing rehabilitation
project, Trussell said targeting a speProgram (CHIP) grant.
The grant, if approved by the Ohio . cific community would give the
Department of Deve.lopment, will be county more points toward approval
used for rehabilitation of low-to- of its CHIP and also allow the secmoderate income owner-occupied ondary projects.
The project would be similar to a
homes. The grant could also be used
project
currently underway in Racine.
for secondary projects, possibly
Twenty-three
owner-occupied homes
including new sidewalks. ·

Umlt4
Please

24 Roll

~~~

Cottage Cheese -

.

.

.

lnterstat• French Fries
BUY J)NE GET ONE

BUY ONE GO ONE

Bath Tissue

oz. asst.

By TOM HUNTER
'·
ed on the plans. .
.
,
After the final revisions are made
Sentinel News Staff
Bids for the construction and in the plans, the firms bidding on the
mechanical work on the renovations project 'flill issue change orders on
project a! the Middleport Pool were · their !;&gt;ids· based on the final plans,
reluctantly tabled Monday night dur- according to ·village grants adminising the regular meeting of Middleport trator Jean Trussell.
Village Council, as village officials
"h is with regret that we recomstillawait state approval on plans for mended the tabling of these bids. I
· ~he project.
.
hope that tbis doesn't delay the pro. \fill age officials have been await- ject past the projected Memorial J:?ay
'ing word on plan approval from the opening date . We will have volunteer
State Department of Commerce crews worjppg at the pool this SatBoard of Building Appeals, after . urday, and we need all the help we
· minor changes were niade in the can get Time is really a critical raeplans concerning the location of ihe tor at this point," said Gilmore.
·ll'!uirejl handicapped access ramp to
In routine financial review ' t\y
the .facility, according to council council, the following village funds
president Bob Gilmore.
·
l;&gt;alances were reported for the end of
Both--· Gilmore and Middleport March by village clerk Dennis HockMayor Dewey Horton wer~ in con- --ITian: general, $38,003.24; revolving
tact with Sharon Myers of the State loan, $~0.010.94; ODNR WatCJ;Vays,
Department of Commerce late Moo- -$766.33: .refuse, $17,999..-16; streN
day afternoon, at which time Myers maintenance,'$778.68: Jaw enforcestated that the plans had still not been ment, $2,804.76: water tank.
given final approval.
$359.55; water, $24,066.42; sewer.
According to Horton, Myers stat- $17,012.25 ;
meter
deposit,
ed thallhe re,vision drawings of the $31 ,358.65; economic development,
relocated ramp and the omitting of $4,608.15; . pool imptovemenls,
load limits on the steel deck supports $51,564.70;
CHIP
program,
in the original drawings were the rea- $1,418.15: fire equipment,
sons for the delay.
$2,574.58; fire truck, .$18,016.10:
Village officials received verbal mini golf, $1,506.79; cemetery,
assurance from Myers and her office $296.02: recreation; $1,598.84;
that the plans would be approved as COPS program (cash flow). soon as possible. "Everyone wants to $4,116,42.
~
get this project off the ground. As
In other maners, courit\1: ·
soon as we can get everyihing togeth• received a new member with the
er, bids will be awarded and work swearing in of Rae Ann Gwiazdowswill begin," Gilmore said.
ki as a member Of council. Gwiaz. Because .the village still does not dowski will fill-the unexpired tenn'
have state approval on the plans, vacated by the resignation of councouncil unanimously approved a cilman Steve Dunfee.
motion to table bids from The Pool
- commended the Middleport Fire
People, Pool · People Construction, . Department for their work in the sueand Banks Construction in their cess of the annual Easter Egg Hunt at
entirety, until state approval is grantContinued on page 3

4

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'Peak Pi.•nto Beans

·99(

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at Foodland.

TRIPLE LIMITED MANUFAOURER'S COUPON CERTIFICATE

12 pk. 12oz. cans

Present ll'lis certificate along With up tp six manuff'cturer's
'
"cents off' COup(!ns 11nd l=oodland Will triple the face vali.Je up
'
t
50¢. (A maximum redemption
of $1.50 per coupon)
LIMIT 6 TRIPLE COUPONS PER CUSTOMER PER VISIT
.
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Valid at Participating Foodland Stores- Wed., 4/10/96 ONLY

Coke-Produds

2

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ood
at

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FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON #136 ·EF FE C TIVE 4 10

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48 Oz. Can Reguljlr or BuHer Flavor

Crisco Shortening

$ 99
1 wltll this coupon.
Good only at Foodland.
Um~

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I0 ll. lOX HICKORY SMOKED

''Sirloin Cut" Pork Chop

Sliced Bacon

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Assorted Vart.tlls

Ha'gan
Ice Cream

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$ 98

Um~ 1 tree wltll.~ls coupon. .

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Springdale Gallon
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Velv•t sat.
$299
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Armour Treet.. ~99
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Mie Sells 'Potato
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·...

EASTERN CONCERT BAND- This group .o f Eastern band students Will be 11.1:\mPiitii\SI -''""' D!Wlllll~loQ~ *1101!.. ~diU• .
dlciltors ·lnvltiitloi'illlrNsttVsl tiTCIUIU.nooga, Ten'nr,~this weekend. Membsra ·of the band are: Row ·one ·- student teacher
Richard Edwards, director Susan Climer, Jull Bailey, Shauna
Elliot, Jenny Mayle, Jodie thle, Usa Statham, Noelle Pickens; Row
1\vo- Nicole White, nttany Hollon, Jesalca Grueser, Stev.e Weeki,
Judy West, Tracl Heines, Meredith Crow, Jennifer Mora; Row
Three· Hesther Welt, Bridget Browning, Melody Lllwrence, Aaron

99

'

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff ,
Students in the irismu:nental music
program at Eastern High School are
completing preparations this week for
a very special performance this weekend, as ·the Eastern Concert Band
departs for Chauanooga. Tenn.
Thursday to compete in the Graitd
Nati'on'al Adjudicators Invitational
competition.
This weekend's performance will
mark Eastern's second appeaiance in
The Grand NAI, one of the most

presttg1ous Concert Band and
Orchestra festivals for the most outstanding secondary performance
·ensembles throughout the nation.
According to director Susan
Climer, the band qualified for .the
competition as a result of the superior perfonnance ratings they have
received in the Ol)io Music Educators
Association district and state band
competitions over ihe last five years.
Approximately 15 bands will
compete in this wee~end'~ event at
Chattanooga's Memonal Aud1tormm

'

before well known composers and
university ·directors: Several parents
• and other supporters, including
Climer's high school band director.
will be making the trip to watch rhr
band compete, Climer said.
The major emphasis of the, com.petition is Concert Band and Orchestra perfonnance, with groups being
evaluated against a national rating
standard of Superior, Excellent, and
Good. Groups will be judged by a
panel of adjudicators who are exceptionally qualified in their fields, \l&gt;ith

· both taped and wriuen evaluations to .
be provided, Climer said.
The band recently received a
superior rating in OMEA District
competition at Ironton, and will compete in the OMEA State fiinals Competition in Columbus; April 27.
"All the kids have been working
really har.d in preparation for bolh the
stale and brand NAI competitions.
We are really exc ited a&amp;oul lhe
opportunity to represents l~c district
on the state level, as well at the
national level," ·said Ciimer.

Officials find
more clues in
su~pect's cabin

HELENA, Mont. (AP) -As the
investigation into the Unabomber's
attacks stretched. across the country,
the tiny wilderness cabin of suspect
Theodore Kaczynski yielded more
clues.
A second Jive bomb that hal,! the
same design as one used in a fatal
Funds needed for modern facilities, ·
Unabomber attack was found in the
isolated cabin near . lincoln, The
c,tpgraded programs, new teachers
New York Times reponed today.
DAYTON (AP) - The state's item .... If we look at the prison budBut ·two federal sources told The
sixth' largest public school system get, it's not a lot of money."
Associated Press that only. one live
Williams said he wants to reverse bomb. along with a partially assem•
needs $430 million in state money to
mndernize buildin~s, hire teachers a downward trend in student test bled one agents had described in an
and upgrade programs; the ·city:s · scores and dropout and suspension arrest warrant, h'ad been found as of
rates. The annual dropout rate is 7 Monday nig,ht ·
school su!)!:rintendent says.
· Providing. the money would be percent to 8 percent, he said.
The names· of . some of the
The district's yearly budget [s Unabomber's victims also were discheaper than long-tenn social repercussi()ns, such as •building jails, about $171 million. It has ~bout covered i~ documents in the cabin,
WINNERS - Tlils team of sclenc;e·atildents
ley Thoene, Joseph McCall, Meghan Avis, and
1,800
teachSuperintendent James Williams said .27,000 pupils and about
The
Washington
Post
reported
today.
from Melg1 High School won the trophy f6r the
Kyle Sm.iddle, and bact Rusty Bookman,
.
.
Monday. He knows. chances of ers.
Quoting unidentifieil· senior Jaw
highest percentage of superior projectll at the
teacher,
Morgan M!lthews, James Stanley,
Williams Sii.id the plan also would enforcement sources, the Post said
receiving the full request are slim~ but
District Science Fair held'Saturda.y at Ohio Unl•
excellents; Marjorie . Halar, good; and Julie
said refusal could prompt a law.suit allow the district to change adminis- ·the names were not in list form but
veralty.' In the group froin. the left
Spaun,excellent.
. - , are
. front,
- . Wes·
":lou ask for what you need," said trators and facully mem.bers at any found in written material that was not .
Williarm', who wants nine new build- school which does not make satis- described.
ings and 420 more teachers. "There's factory progress toward bener student .
The Times said the second bomb
For the founh time in six years, That will be held on April 20 at Ohio to Meghan Avis, 11 superior award
performance..
·
a lot of room.to negotiate and talk."
had the same design as the device the
.- It also would make health and Unabomber used in one of his two Meigs Junior High School science Wesleyan University at Delaware.
winner, for her chemis!JY project.:
Williams said the plan addresses
students
captured
the
trophy
·
for
. K;yle Smiddie, an eighth grader, Joseph Mceall-was alsd a superior:
the city's desegregation court order social servic.e~lable to families most recent fal1tl attacks, in 1994 and
by proposing mote nei'ghborhood lhrough'ltlelrCI\ildren's 'schools and 199.5, · but the unidentified · Jaw achieving the highest percentage of . took first place in the field of chem- award winner for his science project'
·
-schools in the system, which is about would provide three reg10nal famtly enforcement officials wouldn't say superior projects in the Southeastern , istry 'in all entries fifth through 12th on'behavior.
'
District
Science
Day
competi~on
resource
centers
staffed
by
school
and
grade.
He
was
awarded
$100.
.
·
Other
winners
were
,
Morgan:
which one.
. 61 percent black.
·
Wesley Thoene who received Mathews, excellent for a. cbemistry;.
"I'm talking about reconstituting community professionals.
One "official descril&gt;ed the simi· held at Ohio University.
lbe&gt;contcst was held Saturday and superior on his solar energy project, program, James Stanley, excellent for
Williams met last week with John larity as being like two cars of the
our schools," Williams said.
"We're losing students; they're Goff, Ohio's superint~itdent of pub- . same make and model: "It was as if included projects from 175 students was give~ the Governor's Award for a behavior project, and Sarah Jhle ;
dropping out and not finishing lic instruction. There was no imme· once he found the right design, he . in eight Southeastern Ohio counties. Excellence in that category. Another e~cellenl for' underground effect of:
Of. the nine students from Meigs recipient of the Governor's Awards earthquakes; and Marjorie Halar ·
school. The biggest growth industry diate comment Monday from the stuck with it," he told rhe Times.
Ohio
Department
of
Education,
and
"
in this country is building pri~ons. We
. 11w; newspaper also reponed.that Junior High four received superior . for Excellence was Julie Spaun for good, on melting ice.
Rusty Bookman Is iot charge of the;
should look at our priorities ill oilr Rebecca Chapman, a spokeswoman a prelimin!II'Y analysis of eviden«;e ratings, four got excellent ratings, and her project in meteorology which
. .• ·
for Goff, did not return a· telephone malched born b fragments at one a rating o{ good,
received an award of excellent. .
annual science fair at Meigs Junior:
country and in our state. . .
'The
four
with
superior
ratings
will
call
.
'
AU. S. Anny Special Award went High School.
"Four hundred million for schools
Unabomber crime scenes ·with evinow move into stale competition.
(over five years) is not a big ticket
def!ce from Kaczynski's cabin.

Four Meigs science students advance to state contest

LB.

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Eastern band prepares :for national competition

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Will, Jenny Long, Amber Fortney, Melissa O.mpaey; Row fOUf • • Kristen· CM.vallllr4 Nicole Parker, Josh Will, Jamie Drake, 'Kalil
B!llley, Anna Wolf, Eric Hollon; Row Five ~ Matthew Kl119; Kim '
Goodwin, Molly Heines, Hnth Proffitt, Travis Lodwick, Christie
Grossnickle; Back Row - Brian Hoffmah, Seva Cline, Joey Weeks,
Blllee Pooler, Brandon Buckley, Lllmar Lyons. Absent lor the ph~
to were Clnda Clifford, Amber Baker, Jeanie Newell, and Laura
'
Brown.

~

5ll. H/G FROZEN

-

Dayton schools.seek
$430 million from state

IJI..

5ll5 OR MCIRE· WlSftRN ~TYU

1

Irregular Corn·Dogs · • Boneless Chicken
c

Butt Combo Pack

LB.

Style Beef Ribs

LB.

Beef Patties.,

2. $3 .

the Right to Urnlt au.ntlll•• • Prices

95

5 liS. OR MORE· BONELESS liEf

IONB.ESS - 5 liS 01 MORE

BUY ON~ GET ONE

s

88

LB.

5 liS. OR MOREIONEUSS ·

$188

Half Galee 5ftnrn

Chetse·c.rts

c

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rOODLAND SPE CIAL COUPON# 137· ErFEC TIVE •1 10 96 ONLY

.

np Steak

Ground Beef

downtown revitalization project in
the village .
They also met with Jim Davis of
Minersville concerning a proposal
that would require contractors operating in the county to .obtain a.coun•
ty contractor's. license. ·Contractors
would have to pass a test before
receiving a -license.
The license would help ensure
quality contracti,ng work by helping
eliminat~work by small contractors
who ma-Y not do work in-accordance
with accepted safety guidelines, he
Continued on
3

Village f!ti/1 ·awaiti~Jg state's
OK·on plans for renovation

·.' FREE ·

E

ancl two rental units will be renovat- . responses to the proposed home- restroom outside of the Meigs Cqune&lt;l in the village. Also included in the owner payment program for low-to- ty Courthouse which was closed to
allow renovation and expansion of
project was $25,000 in new sidewalk. moderate income families.
·The remainder of the county will
Also auending the hearinj!· was the county recorder's office.
Commissioners said they will conbe targeted fpr associaied homeown- Middleport Councilman Bob
sider
opening the ladies 'lounge in
er down 'payment assistance and Gilmore.
f(onl
of
the courthouse as a restroom
rental rehabilitation . Also included
On the Middleport Bpat Launch
may be rent and utility vouchers for parking lot project, Trussell said the for both se&lt;es, but still expressed
a two-year period.
I
scope of the project is being reduced ,concern that it may. not be able to be
It is important to help the rest of to .include paving and .stiiping only. kept open on evenings and weekends
the county, Commissioner Janet Bids on the project have come in over due to vandals.
Commission President Fred HoffHoward e&lt;plained.
.
·anticipated cost.
The grant applications"are due by ·
Commissioners also heard a com~ man said the village of Pomeroy may •
the end of May, Trussell commented. plaint from Joe Swain, Racine, con- want to consider building a public
She said she has received about 10 cerning the closing of the men's restroom considering the proposed

Pool project ~abled
by Middleport council

s . lag

24 oL asst. Foodlantf

CHARMIN

.

35 ......
A Gannett Co. fll:wapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, April 9, 1996

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•

,·commentary

Page2

••

. TUHctay, April, 1tll

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Tun ay, April I, 1 •

WASHINGTON

'EstliDfisfrd in 1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, ·ohio
614-1112·2.156 • Fax: H2·2157

.!1
'A Gannett Co. Newspaper

/

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publl•her

I

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

not--

L..,.,. 110 fM editor . . ...rcom...

n., ahould be IMa tNn .100 ....W. AN,....,.

bor. No llltO}fned
-ling ill-.

pub/-. " - lltoultl "'

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.,.,"f.=

mwt r. tlgntld Md Inc,_ •dt:h ... lltKI .. ,.p.'roM num. , ,.

When we

were ushered into Commerce Secre-

,

,.,., ,..,.,

Perot might be better·
served to find new
political arguments

tary Ron Brown's office last October, we were e~pecling to ,see a beaten.and bat\ered man.
Brown was trying to ward off IWO
threats to his job. An independent
counsel was 'probing his financif l
dealings, while the Republican Congress was trying to close down his
depamhent altogether.
Yet Brown was decidedly upbeat
on that day. Despite the . attaclcS
against him. he hadn't lost his signature ·slllile or his illlJ)CCcable dressing habits. Decked out in an elegant
suit and a neatly pressed French•cuffed shin. Brown quickly grew
animated as he joked about his gelf
. game.
He pointed to a photo on a ncarby table that had a funny inscription
from President Clinton. The picture,
which ·showed Brown swinging a
golf club, was snap~ during an
overseas trip &lt;that did not end in
tragedy -- unlike the crash in Croatia that killed Brown and 32 others
last week.
.
In November 1994, Clinton and
Brown stopped in Hawaii for a
round of golf with Gov. John Waihee
on their -..;ay back from an econom.ic summit in Indonesia. Clinton and
Waihee stood behind Brown in the
photo, l~ughing hysterically at a terrible shot by the secretary. "I really
sliced that sucker," Brown said,
referring to a shot that had landed in
some trees to the right.
.
Since tlie Republicans had seized
control of Congress a few days
before the golf match, Clinton took
lhe opportunity to tweak .Brown
when inscribing the photo: "Ron -The message" IDf !he electorate about
moving right had nothing to do with .
golf." .
The words were a source of cheer
for Brow~&gt;. The way that he slumped
down into an easy chaif for the inter-·
view -- coupled with the lines that
had developed under his eyes -showed th!lt the baules had taken
their t61L But the words that poured
out of liis mouth revealed his refusal
til give up the fight.

Brown deiighted in
he recounted how his
his on1oing feud wilh
chief tdrmenter w8&amp;
Rep. Dick Chrysler,
duckin11 him. " Every
R-Mich., a freshman
time 1 l!o to a congresRepublican · who was
sional hearing, Chrysler
• put in charge f&gt;f dos·
will make his statement
. ing
Commerce.
and leave," Brown said
Chrysler's plan would
with a wide smile. "Then
actually cost more
I'll make my stalement,
money than it woold
and he's npt there to
save because it would
By J~~ek AndeRon
question me. He comes
simply transfer all of · end Mlclleel B!ntteln back to the hearing after
the agency's func- .
I leave. "
_
lions to other departments.
A man who had climbed all the
• The rookie Republican was no way from the streets of Harlem to
match for the e~perienced Brown, chairman of the Democratic Nationwht&gt; railed against his adversary's al Commiuee had a right to brag.
" knowledge gap. " In one instance, But why was a man wbo had rebuilt
Chrysler said he · wanted to shut the Democratic Party --"and had mil•
down the National Weather Service lions of dollars in the bank from his
because the same information was days a$ a lobbyist -- f'~hting to keep
!IVailable on the Weather Channel. It his jqb at a backwater bureaucracy1 .,
fell to Brown to break the news that
"What I have seen is the global
the Weather Channei actually gets economy," Brown tole! our associate
its data from the Commerce Depart- Ed Henry. ''I'm interested not only
ment.
in competing in· the' global marketBrown's brava&lt;;to showed when place, I'm interested~ in .America

orld

the.

Want~d:

!

ing had changed on the political landscape since 1'992 calls into question.the
Poor England used to have a monarchy; now
authenticity of his commitment to reform.:•
•
·
. . she has only a hollow. glittering royal shell filled
. Perot says all this is the media gangi~g up - again - to stomp o~ ~is with dim gossip fodder. She.used to be a mighty
message and•his followers.
. .
• nation of ruddy-faqed beefeaters who ruled !he
Perot, though, appears to have a vested interest in stomping on any sue- waves solely through the power of jerky. Those
cess by Pemocrats and Republicans in WaShington. 1b Ignore progress on days, too, are. gone.
many fronts since 1992, especially on the budget deficit and lobbying ,
There's no proven connection as yet between
reform - . two concepts he almost singte:haqdedly lirought to tlie fore m . , the so-called "mad cow" disease and the similar
1992 :- is deceptive. To think pe,ople won 't notice suggests he doesn:t human Creutzfeld-Jacpb disease. Some expens
respect the intelligence of the people he insists .are,."the.true owners of th1~ issue reports saying there is, .others issue repons
country."
. '
.
.
. urging us..to disregard those reports. That's how
, . But !hen again, perhaps it's too hite in the game for Pcrotto re1nvent h1m- modem science works.
self beyond the role that gdt him here to.begin with. •- political spoiler. .·
But it doesn't matter. The eating public has had
"· it. British beef sales are plummeting. The European Union has ·imposed a t;an on British beef
••10
exports. In Great Britain, McDonald's now gets
its meat from the good old USA. The crisis co~ld
; -·-• _.. p
•'
· bring John Ma;or down.
ByTheA•......,.r... ~'~~•
. · '
'
'Today is Tuesday, April9, the IO&lt;!th day of 1996. There are 266 days left
The reluctance to eat British beef may be irrain the~ear.
,
.
tiona!, but it comes on the heels of science news
· Hi
·
fi
E 1 d'
rth S · · tj t
tl
11 y's J:lig\llight m story: ·
·
·
rom
ng an s no : Cleo •s s recen Y
On April ~. 1865, wilh the Civil War at a virtual end, &lt;;:onfederilte Gen. .. announced th~t !hey h~ the ability to cl~ne
- Robert E. Lee surrendered his army to' Umon General Ulysses S. Grant at ,, sheep. ln the SOs, we m1ght have been e~c1ted
· Vi · ·
about th1·s. Today, unless that. nets us two sw.eaters
Appomattox Court House 18 ~rgmla.
ror lhe price of one, why should we care? Maybe
~n ~t2~: f:tench e~plorer Robert La Salle reached the Mississippi . there are some things man and woman were not
" River.
.
.
meant to know.
the
firs,
t
talt·
SU
.
pported
public
library
was
founded,
in
PeterborRecently, v.egetarians were bitter abo,u,1 the los. s
In 1833•
OIIP• N.H.
. ·
··
.
or gentle "Babe"to fierce "Braveheart (a movie
In 193'1 black singer Marian 'Anderson perfonned a concen at the Lm- full Jlli ruddy men llquatting around open fires
cmn Mem~al in Washil)gton aft~~ she. w~ de~ied the use of Constitution ·. teariAg at .sid~ Of _roast beef .wilh their Ieeth),
by ·•· Daughters of the Amcncan Revolution.
N,ow;as SCientists dtcl!er .ahout.whet.her m.ad c.ow .
H:r'l
111
u"' Germany invaded Denmark and Norway.
In 1940,
dtsease could cause a maJor ep1denuc or JUSI 1so- ·

•

d ay In
• h Is
• t.0 r. Y.. ·

•

r

briefs~.......

.,

Gar~&amp;ur? n .
JOIICS is lallj!Oiari(y

born

Pomeroy polke probe accidents
Pomea01 police in-"a I d line tninor ~idelu Friday, iu . I
Do citations in the 5et*llle iJoci~CRII,ICCCJidinl to police cttief 0.ald'flpillf .
.
.

~

Patrick C. Clifford

Thursday...Sunny. LOws 25 to 30
east and 30 to 35 west Highs from' 55
to 60 northeast to the mid 60s south- ·
west. .. Except a little cooler at the ·
lakeshore.
· Friday... Fair, Lows in the, 40s.
Highs in the 60s to lower 70s
Except a little cooler at the
lakeShore.
Saluniay...p.ancc of rain. Lows in
the 40s. Hish5 in the mid SOs ,porth
to upper. 60s soUth.
·

Pomeroy 11Ulll cited in accident

brothet:

A 43-year old Pomeroy man was cited for failure to control anc!
driving under the inOueace, following a· Salurday morning ~ident .
which knDI"'ed .out power.to several AEP customers in the l'orncro,
area for nearly three hours, police chief Gerald Rough~ stated.
11le accident occurred at 1:09 a.m.. as Michael J: Trenr wastrav~
eling east on West Main Street wben his 1996 ~vy Truck went off
the road, striking and breaking off an ~p utility {lole at Legion Terrace, Rought said.
According to police reports, Trent told authorities thai another vehicle nn him off the roadway, causing him to strike the pole. Wit~ .
es to the accident told authorities that no other traffic was in the area
a1 the timC of the wreck.
Heavy damage was RConled to Trent's vehicle, and it wu tci~
from the scene. _
·,
·
·-~ ··
.·
.

i'aut Robert "Bob" Houdashett. 61. Pomeroy, died smiday,A¢11, 1996; ·

'

she call IWF for a Fair P~y opponent. "You mean that
front for the Washington conservative establishment?" she said sardonically.)
.
St1ll, the .medJa se~m .desperate to find more fein!nist nay-sayers. Paula Kamen, whose book "Feminist
Fatale" chronicles both the negative and the positive
feelings young women have
· toward feminism, has oft•been
, mistaken for an anti-feminisL
. She recalls the time t!'e producer .of a network morning
news show called her, saying '
she was looking Jrn: "a young wom111 with Camille
,Paglia's point o€view." Kamen couldn't deliver. S.he
was ·also unable to help the ABC news staffer who
needed that per~pective for a panel discussion on
feminism.
"It happens over and over," says Kamen. "Every
time someone does 1a panel O!l !e!Jiif!iSm they fee.l
they have to have an anti-femimst there; you can't
just have a lgt of feminists who disagree with each other. It's like having a
panel on race relations and inviting the Ku KluK Klan."
.
Feminism is about choices. And the women who disagree with feminism
have.a right to do so publicly. But there does .seem to be a proP,&lt;irtion proti·
lem when the 650-member Independent Women's Forum is getting equal
time with the National Organization·for ·Women, which has 260,000 memhers and 600 national chapters.
•
At any rate, I confess to feeling more relieved .than disappointed that the .
bright lights ofTV-dom have eluded me. I'm in no rush to be placed in a cat:'
fight with the anti-feminist du jour. Nor am I particularly excited by the
prospect of explaining for .the eight-zillionth time that feminists are neither
screeching man-haters nor part of'a powerful mafia. ·.
·
Which is pretty much "\'hat a televised debate on a feminist issue looks
like. I admire the )!~Omen who are out there slugging away for feminism. But
I sQre don't envy them,
•
.
'
Sara Eclcella a ayndlcated writer few Newapeper Entarprlae AaaoclaUan. Sand
comments
maol.com. to the author In . . . of IIIIa newapaper or send her •mall ataaraau-

COWS

d E . h · ··
an
ng 1IS . men~

lated painful deaths. Vegans
cowzies (though they are evil), probably will not~
everywhere dress up in th~ir
· endorse turning them into hamburger using highl
cow suits to pi&amp;ket Arb.y 's joyexplosives, whether it's in Cambodia, Bosnia,
fully.
·
Vietnam, Africa or any other no-man ' s-lan~
Maybe we should take
where beef-eating soldiers buried nas!Y devices,
another look at this whole cow
so that unwitting rarmers and.their children could!'
'thing. -A century ago, all we
get their legs Blown off. "
.
· •
had to wotry about was the
Do we have other options? Well, how difficult~
occasional cattle stampede.
is it to gather these mad cattle ?I mean, how mad:
Now that we live longer, we
are they? Do they froth at the mouth? Are t~ey l
know that beef Is bad for us
hiding in the tops of trees to waylay passersby1 U:
(high in fat, cholesterol). So •
they can be gathered, and if they 're harmless until :
mad cow be.ef would be even worse! Besides. that,, eaten, perhaps they can be put to other practical :
we're too overpopulated to indulge ourselves in · uses.
,,
beef-eating any longer. The grains we use to feed
,If you could p4per-train a cow and teach it to :
caiile could feed humans ai a fraction of the cost. fetch, it could provide years of enjoyment OS • :
Caltle's clumsy h.oofs and overgrazing by· ranch- · household pet. lf we could harness the awesome :
ers ruin natural habitats. Cow flatulence is alleged · power of cow flatulenc~. it could lead to new :
d I .
f
b I '
to be a major ractor in the ep euon o the ozone. tee n.o ogtes, ending our reliance on the internal !
layer.
'
combustion engine.
:
· · To my mind, these are all inducemen15 to·
If they are truly nuts, ~e could use them as a •
devour.cows as fast' as we can. We'll shorten our "living fence" between the United States and l
,.,
b .
h
'II 'd the
I~ Me•l'co. Faced wl"th a wall of l·nsane cattle, l'llegal •,
11espan, sure, ut m exc ange we n
wor "
~
of these large troublesoiJie pests.
·
. immigrants might think twice about crossing :
May he that was the·Iogtc
' behind ·•
ro • ...:bodi ·
""' haps England mt,...t
·""' .want to erect a cow ••
uae .....
i,
a · over. "d
Daily's suggestion (according to Re11ter's): "The wall at the Scottish border. Who knows ,when :
English have II million. mad cows •nd c,mbodia some ovine Mel Gibson will paint his face .blue, :
hasroughly the .s8Jlle number of equally mad land and lead the sheep clone tribes ·to freedom? ·Stop •
mines. Surely the solution to Cambodia's mine .them now before they win mon: OScars!
. :
problem is here before our eyes in black and · (To in alve uoiiiiiiiiMI•'*'t lanlh.,.. _...., ~
wltite." ·
.
.
.
·ter, 1111u1-a III-DIICI( or write Duck'ellrWIII, 40e•.~
• I d , kn ho
ti al 1 itt' i Vi
BroH St., rtn•de Cllv. CA Milt.)'- lhot&gt;IM I811J
on t ow w prac c a Pan ts s. eg- , ayncllcallecl .wrlt8r for r.-.npBp~rl!~ .ulocoletarians, who balk at the idea of eating cute little atlon. ·

No one cited after. accident

atlockspriqgs Rdlabilitalion Center in Pomeroy. Born JUDC 4, 1934, in Minersville, son·of the late Walter Houdashelt and Gladys Conant H~lt
Taylor.
He was a gtaduale of Pomeroy High School, a store room clert at the
Phillip Sporn Plant .in New flaven, W.Va., and an Air Force veteran.
He is. sun:ived by his wif~. Marcia Jane Grover Houdas~lt: a son and
daughter-in-law, Robert Brent and Beth Houdashelt of Jo:farion: a son, Bnan Dalton Houdashell of Columbus; a sister and brolher-tn-law, Helen Jane.
add Floyd Brown of Middleport; a brother and sister-in-law, Gene and Peggy Houdashelt of Pomeroy; and his mother-in-law, Myrtle Grover of .
. Pomeroy. ·
He was preceded in death by his rather-in-law, Dalton Grover.
Services will be beld Thursday, I p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport with the Rev. James Keesee officiating. Burial will follow in Rock
Springs.Cemetery in Pomeroy.
·
Friends may call Wednesday, 6-9 p.m. at lhe funeral home.

·

A Pomeroy woman was treated and ~eleased following a one-&lt;*
accident in Salsbury Township Monday.
.
,
Acconling to reports filed by the Gallia·Meigs Post of the Highway PaJrol, Michelle D. Folmer, 18, of 34880 Rock Springs Rd., was
southbound on CR 20 at 4 p.m., when she lost control 9f her vehicle
and went off the right side of the roadway lhen back across the roadway befqre stopping in a ditch..
'
. ·
She was tnmspurted til Veteraps Mem00al Hospital by Meigs~
ty EMS. The vehicle she was tntveling in was heavily damaged. 'fbere
was no citation.

: Margaret Either MetCalf, 80, Dayton, Ohio, and a former resident of
kacin'e, Ohio, died at lhe Heartland·of Beave~k Care Center, Beave•~reek, Ohio, Thesday,.April9, 1996.
, She. was born August 14, 1915, at Vinton, Ohio, daughter of the late
j::haun.cey (Chad) E. and Grace A. Piper Welker.
•. She was aretired elementary school teacher, with 34 years service. She
anended Rio Grande College and received a B.S. Education, Ohio State University, 1950. She was a member of the Racine Baptist Church, Racine, and
a SO year plp,s membec of the Vinton Order of Eastern Star, 375.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband,
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaDavid W. Me~alf, in 1945.
Ohio direct hog .prices at selected
-:.: ~ Surviving are a sister, Laura Brown Cozart of ·Dayton; a nephew, Walbuying poiats Tuesday by the u.s.
(Susan) Brown of Springfield; two nieces, Judy (Peter) Shuler of Durham,
1)epartment ,ot.Agii«l"lture Market
· Margaret EsthCi'Mctcalf, 'SU, Dayton: foin\erly of Rltcirie, died Tltesday, News;
nnectiout, and.'Rita (Charles) Pilkington of Daytbn; and 1evetal great
·
.
.
April9, 1996, at the Beavercreek Care Center, Beavercreek.
eces and nephews.
·
' •
Banows and gilts: steady to 50
BomAugustl4. 1915, Vinton, daughter of the lale Chaupcey (Chad) E.
· ~ &gt; Services will be held I p.m. Thursday, at..the McCoy-Moore Fllhmll
cents higher, late sales near steady;
and Grace A. Piper Welker, she was a retired elementary sc~l teacher, _w1th demaiod moderate on a moderate
Home, Vinton, ~ith Rev. Larry Haley officiating. Burial will be in the Vin(Qn Memorial ,Park. Friends may call a1 the funeral home, WedneSday from · 34 years service. She attended Ri~ Grande_ College and Oh10 State Umverrun.
~andM~
.
I
sity. She was a member of the Racme Bapust Church, Ra&lt;;me, and a 50-year
U.S. 1-2. 220-260 lbs. 47.50plus membu 'o f the Vinton Order of Easter Star ~15 .
.
·
.
.so.oo.
few 47.00 and 50.50; plants
In addition to her parents, she was preceded m death by her husband, 49.00-51.00.
Ditvid W. Metcalf, in 1945.
·
Continued from pace 1
ovations to the county dog pound but
SurviviJIIl is a sister, Laura.Brown Cozart of Dayton.
·.
Now Open 1or .,. Spring s&amp;lson
'
~ took rio action on the matter.
Services will be held I p.m. Thursday at the McCoy·Moore Funeral
Complete L.ine' Of Bedding &amp;
~aid..
.: Authorized a contract between Honie, Vinton, with Rev: Larry Haley officiating. Burial will be in the Vin. 'Thedo·re·are a klot of small cor;::: the depei buent of human servil:es and .ton Me"'orial Parle Friends may call .at the funeral home Wednesday from
Vegetable Plants
~ng :wor .. not up to c
• 1 the Gallia-Jackson-Yinton Joint 24 and '7-9 p.m.
Hanging Baskets
Dav1s,explamed. It would help a lot Vocational School District, Adult
(Blooming &amp; Foi(Jige)
Qf people.... you wouldn't have. as. Division, to provide training to DHS
Geraniums
much half-done work."
stalT for ·operation of the JOb Club
Shrubs Trees Azelaas
In other bus1ness, the ~
program for $650.
~yle Q. Showalter,,73. ?rVaaderhoof Road, Coolville, died Monday, April
RoseBushes
-- Approved the rollowmg trans- . . •• Established a debt retirement . 8, 1996 at St. Josephs Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
·
Open Daily 9-5, Soo 1-5
fers: $104,605.07 from the Child rund for the veterans service office
Born in Peewee, W. Va., he was the son of the laic Fred and Ora Buchanan
We honor the
Supt!on Ad111inistragve Fu'l(l to the van and apprOpriated approximately Showalter. He was aU. ~· Army veteran of World War ll, a truck driver for
Goklen
Buckeye Card
~eigs County Department of Hurilan · $5 000 into the fuild.
Refiners Transport, and a member of the Tuppers Plains VFW 905:J, and
Services' Public Assistance Fu~;
'__ ApproVed a resolution autho- the Reedsville Church of the Nazarene.
"$93,616.64 r~om the State Ch~ld rizing advertising for a public depo5"
SUtviving are his wife, Dottie Skeel~ Showalter of Columbus; 011e son,
Welfare Suhs1dy Fund to the Me1gs iiory for county funds.
.Larry Showalter of Gahanna; one grandson and one granddaughtef.
I• County Dep~ment ?f Human Ser!'aid weekly bills of
Besides his parents, he was pn;ceded in death by a brother, Richard
Syracuse, OH 992-5n6
vjces' Pubhc Assistance Fund; $232,824.67 consisting of 200 Showalter.
$1,040.71 rrom the Meigs County entries.
Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m: Thursday at the White Ftlneral
Court Computer Fund to lhe loan
Present were Hoffman, Howard, Home in Coolville. The Rev. John Douglas will officiate and burial will be
account fund.
Commissioner Rciberi Hartenbach · in the Coolville Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home WednesApproved appropnaung and Clerk Gloria Kloes.
.
day, 2 to 4 and 7. to·9 p.m.
.
, $20,000 to the county home fund.
,
-· Approved a proposal from the EMS lo9s 13 calls
Huntin"'on Garage Door Coritpany
· DLEPORT
b'
Wlllt is expected to begin in June accordi"'l to Ohio Department of
of Huntington,
W.Va., to install two MID
• s' th F
h A:
·
Ch
F.
3
p.m.,
ou
ourt,
venue,
on
the ·replacement of two small Transportation spokeswoman Nancy
large doors on t he
este.r 1re Pauline Bow1and, ".eterans Memon·
· l:lridges on state Route 124 near Yoacham. Tom Mayle and Sons ConDepartment for $3,296.
.
H 'tal
struction Company of Bartlett is the
Racine.
- Discussed the possibility or ren- al 05P1 ;
· ..
3:44p.m., state Route 124, Orpha
The two bridges staled for n:place- project contractor, YOIICham said.
Work on the $413,000 project
Rquse, Hoi~ Medical Center; 1 ment are localed near the junction of
9:29 p.m., Middleport Fire · state Route 124 and Portland Road, s~ld be completeci by July 31.
.The Daily Sentinel Department, Billll'rewer, VMH; .
10:16 p.J!I:, l'llge SIRle.l, Mary
lllllrSZ~
Continued rroai . . . . · · ,
'Davis,
HMC.
.l'ltbli- """"! oflcntooa. M-J lllrou&amp;b
POMEROY
Riverview Cemetery. Mayor J;lonon
OenellJI Hartinger Pari&lt;.
~II eo.t S&lt;.• .........,, Ollio. ., ...
Poblillhlnc~eo..
7: 14 a.m., Wotr Pen Road, Paul
• heard from councilman Mick sl*d that cleanup work is scheduled
45769, Ph. 992-2156. · Steinmetz..Hcllzcir Medical Center; Childs on residential complaints on to begin on the cemetery this week.
9:20a.m., Robert Dempsey, South the condition of Soutlt Second .
· - -...... """"""'·Cilia.
Council set their next regular
Third
Avenue,
Pleasant
Valley
Hosmeeting
for Monday April22, 7:30
Avenue. Mayor Horton stated that •
;-~~~·=-=·-od Plat. . . . . Ollio
pital;
.
•. .
.
.
paiCh work will begin on streets wilh- p.lil., in village council chambers.
POS'I'MAS'I'K'I: Se.d lddrw&amp; CUI fi Mi to
12:38 p.m.,state Route.7, William ln the next few weeks,
n.
DoiiJ Sco!iod. Ill Cowl S&lt;.. """"""·
Matlack, VM{l;
· • heard from 'councilman George
Ollio 4578!1.
2: 14 p.m~. Maple Street, Joe Hoffman on residential complaiJits
.
s~II.~'I'D
Gloeckner. VMH;
concemiu the piacement of handi- .
·:'
IIJc.,tiror-- ·
4:03 p.m., volunteer fii'C depart- capped pailting signs at v~ res·
STATE ROUTE 124
o. -............................................noo
'0 . -.............
lO
ment and squad to Rocksprings~. idences. Hoffman also relayed conMINERSVILLE
~ Y-....... _ ................. .,........... $104.00
motor-vehicle accident, Michelle cerns about the condition of .
Folmer, VMH.
·
·
siNGu CJOPY nJCII
tllil)' ............:................ ................. )5 Catot
RACINE
10:15 p.m., VFD and squad to
Bald Knob Mid Blllhln road$, motor·
vehicle accidCnt, Greg Weddle,
refilled
treatment, Buhan · VFD
'
No _ . , . . . tor tllllil pcillllli&gt;d Ia assisted. .

,t

p.m._ • ~ICIP:.t'

No-.. .·

Patrick C. Oifford. 4S, Long Bottom died Sunday~ 7, 1996 at his
residence. .
Born Sept.l6, 1950 iii Pomeroy; he was the son of the laieJames W.
Clifford, Sr., and .Ethel P. U:ifbeit. Hew~ a CMpellll:r for Homecreek Enterptl&amp;es. and an active leader in Boy and Girl Scouting.
.
He was assislant troop leader of Chester Boy Scout Troop 11235. ancf.Otrl
Scout Troopifll15. He was a memberof()rdcrof Arrow Lodgetii4S7. and
a1tendcid the Keno Church of Cmit.
'
•
He i~ survived by his wife, Cathy,Davis Clifford; a son, James Patrick
and
Clifford, a1 home; a dlwghter, Cinda ~ Clifford, al home; a
sister-in-law, James W., Jr. and Faye Clifford, Pomeroy; and several meces
and nephews.
. ·
.. . .
..
•
Services will be held Wednesday, 2 p.m. , at the Ewmg Funeral Home.
Pomeroy, with the Rev. Mike Linger officiating. Burial will follow at Chelller
CemeterY.
· ·
.
.Calling hours for family and friends will be observed today, from 2 to 4
p.m. and 1 to 9 p.m., ·at the funeral home. . .
.
· Iii lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations be made to Chester .
Boy Scout Troop 11235, in care of Cathy Clifford. 47745 SR 248, Long Bottom, 4S743.

Bob Houdashelt
~arg~r(tt E. Metcalf

• 12:40

police said.
,
.
The ICcOnd accidedt oa:umd Friday, • I p.m .• on West Mall Saeet
near the Pomewy-Masoil Bridge. Roger I. Riebel, D. 34, l.oelllaJ·
tom was stopped ll ~ intersection of West Main -Los- ..,._
ument, when he was struck from bdiind by a 199S Jeep WIIJOII. driveo by Richard Wdlillilson, 33, PoniUoy, accordinJ to police.
age was recorded to either vehicle.
"
The third act;ident occumod Friday, at ·9:15 p.m., OD West Maitt
Street near Pomeroy Exxon. Brandi N. Reeves, 17, Chesler '!'U-·
eling alollg West Main Street wl!en her 1988 Olevy Bmaa -lllnllt
by a vehicle driven by Elisha L. Dickeas, 16, Pomeroy, which leaving Pomeroy Exxon, police reponed. Light damage was reconled to both vehicles.

\

Southeatem Ohio

lirstlot. .~';..~'w'';~ Frida
· y,

r-nl ........., . •·
I 9, Pu.nuoy was beckina ....- •
•
ms 'l*f' at the ~~ore, when llie failed to tee a 1981 Olds drivCii 111
Lethia B. B11111p11er, 77, l.ead, W.VL Jeffers' 1993 Ford Trtlo;k IIINI:t
Bumsamcr's car, causing light to moderate damlse tQ the .ellitk.

Friends may call Wednesday, 6-9 p.m. at the funeral home. •
,
In lieu of flowers, doRations may be.made to the Carletoq Church,in cae
of Roger Young, ROUie 2, Pomeroy OH 4S769.

Frtepded forecut .

pri--

JOIICS ~~~ witb him to the position many years of
e, as weD as 14 years of expcri 11=+
as • ODOT COIIIINCiioe l*oject i•'l""'or lllld ptrt· lime hiPNY
mai11~1111ce worbr, liCCOI'ding to ., OOOT press release'
Highway mainlenMce COIIcelliS in Meigs County may be direCied
to Joneu1992-2501 .
·

Cemetery.

Pren

; •I ' •

filli111 the position vw:atcd receDIJy by J -

buildina construction eJ.pei ·

Services will be held Thursday, 11 Lm. at Ewina Fu.Cral Home ;i.
Pomeroy with the Rev. JeffSmithofficilllins. Burial will follow iD Cadelon

Today's weatla.Jr forecast

ntof"l\

ProftUt, who tetiied.

1011 • .

W.VA.

III!Sw• 11 tat 4 ••yp .-. . . . .

superinlelldeldoiMeipCot.ty'aellioDqat

soa-ia-law,.Eva LopiBe -s Lloyd King or Pomeroy; two soas -s dauahtm-in-law, Vqil ..t Judy c.t of Pooiaoy and RodDey aad Sanb Cer1
of llel!n; a 1011, Dwiaht c.t ofPooitioy; 13 jp'Ul(children; 12 grell-pllidchiklml; a sisaer -.d brolbei-io-law, Lo!rile and Olen Harrison of Pomeroy;
and several niece$ lllld ..,."'"·
.
He was peaoded in death by brothen, Leo and Da&amp;e c.t; lillep, Faye
Pratt and Mabel Brickles; • grandson. J.,._y Carl; and by an infllllt ..-s-

: ,Today...Snow showers likely.
' Accumulation an inch or kss. High ·
near 35. NOrthwest wi!ld 5 to I 5 mph.
Cliance of snow 70 percent.
Tonight...Snow showers likely.
AcctllllulatiOn an '.inch cir so, Low
near 25. Northwest wind 5 to IS niph.
Chaace of snow 60 percent.
Wednesday...Moslly &lt;:loudy with
: scattered snpw showen. High near
' 40. Chance of snow 30 percent
'
.
.

'•

Brea~o()lr '

Nov. 12. 1914, in Powcroy,ICin oftbelateJohaOnbello-.ILydiaMco.berc.t. He wu metllbcr oftbeGideoas and •nded the Carlelon Clwn:h.
Survivina is his wife, Sadie JUrriSOA c.t of Pomeroy; a daual\ler . t

are

one feisty . apti~feininist

h
f
d
.
ma~~:=:~:z:e::·:;:~~~:~~~::::::::::i::fo=:::~n~:. ~. h~ p1.1.9 .t 0 ma

-r

•

'

IS

.

compeling and wi1111ing. The · only
way we do that is to have a strong
public-private partnership, and a
Cabinet-level depirtment that stands
shoulder to shoulder wilh American
business."
.
How was the investigation affecting him? " lt's not an enjoya61e
thing," Brown said. " But it hasn't
affected my perfonnance and my
tenft(;ity in being o~tthere everyday.
I'm sun: not holed up in the office
here. I'm out and about the world."
Indeed, Brown was .out and
about, even to the Balkans, where he
died trying to help American industry and tl]e people who had been ravaged by war. We wrapped up the
interview by asking BroWn what h~
planned ' to do afteJ his C~bine!
tenure.
"I' ve .neve~.bowri what the next
thing is -- ever," Brown said .
"When you' ve been secretary of
Commerce and run the Democratic
Party, there
not '!- whole lot of
·options:"

R!!P!g~r:!!l~.~7,1~. ~~~•oy·~

ina and ReJwbilirati&lt;lft CC111er _. Pomei~.
A relired employee of the &lt;&gt;mo ~of High-ys, he -

: By the Auoc11tted

By RICHARD BENEDETTO
USA TODAY
: · If Ross Perot is really serious about .leading a new ·political movement
capable of winning the presidency, why is he repeating the same arguments
voters trielt"llii'l 'btrt&lt;l!ltimately rejected in 19921
.
.
.
. : -One might think that his 19 percent showing and third-place finishes in
49 of 50 states last time around - he finished second in Maine - would
~onvince ·him that he needs a new tactic if he expects to elevate himself
above novelty status this year.
.
· But no.
: Perot is back, 'testing the waters ror a possible rerun with speeches ihat
ire nearly carbon copies or his 1992 line -long on rolksy descripcions of
what's wrong with government and politicians, but thin on detailed propos•
~ls on how to make things better. ,..:.,,----:-~.,....--:--:----.....,
,. "Design i~ engineer it, test it, .
optimize it, debug it, and m~sIt IS lliel. to lie here ..,;th
..r: ....._.. ....._ .......:
Produce it,'" is the magic elixir
)'&lt;IIU, ... . ........, --~
('erot -orfers as a cure-all fpr the
!\OW t can tall yo.J tn1t \VI
nation's ills, from Medicare . to
Df
Refot-rn f'art.v .-nt
Social Security, tax reform to
you to toe our
budget-balancing.
f\-ndidat.~
: "We must (proceed) carefully,
for
thoughtfully and ratiomilly," he
~SI~'f.
adds when· pressed.
1
.: His answer to the race-rela. lions . problem? "L!:t's get over
this idiotic behavior and learn to
live together and love one anoth·
er. We're all stuck with one
another anyhow. Right?"
l just got a call from a television producer. She had read my column on
· tu reform? "Ii's got. to be
the Fair Pay Act, and asked if I would discuss my oeinion on her program. ·
fair, it's got to be pape•!ess, it's
'.' ! need so.fi\Wne with ~CILYyo;ur point o{ view.'.'. she said. "Some- .
got ·to raise money: Tile · g~
one who. believes that 'the market-- and only ,the market- .detenmnes
news is this is numbers. Numbers
wages."' '
'
' ·
are lomcal
and
rational.
Put
them
The
producer
quoted
niy
column
accurately. Unfortunately, that quote did
o•
·
u
. , . NIA.h.
in a computer..... and.nail it." ·
,
not represent my opin·ion. l told .Ibis to the TV
·
Affirmative action? "We need to re-engine.er and redesign it (and) let's · woman, eKplaining that I wrote the above to articuhaye a task force or committee of the besr people in our country who are paid late the viewpoint l planned ·to disprove. .
nothing meet every few months and evaluate its progress. "
_
"But," she said, not willing to give up. "You
Foreign policy? " Exeflise OYr role:~ not .flinch, not waver; not blow wrot~ : 'Yes, schoolteachers SHOULD make more
·with the wind, not see whllt the polls tell us· to do, but do what we need to th1111 baseball players. But that's life. Deal with it. ...•. .
do to keep the world a safe, s~ble place." .
. That's tbe point of view I'm looki.ng for."
Welfare reform? "lf you've got a neighbor in trouble, don't look in the
Again, I explained that I began my defense of
phone ~look to see what federal agency might help, them. Go down the street Fair Pay with the argument against it. l went on to
"and help them."
•
. ·
say that other factors, such as custom and societal
· At first blush, such :perfectly timed and skillfully del.ivered ' One-liners • attitudes, also make their· mark on wages. I did grant
cause listeners to stand up aitd .s~out, "He's right! "·
that we could •riever create a perfect system for
but poll~ show that many who voted fcir ·Perot in '92 are looking else· rewarding contribution,s to society, but I .also said
where thjs time arol'nd. ~nd the support ~e is gelling -1 about 1.6 percent- that we could do .some fine-tuning.
is younger, .poorer 111d less-educated than his former, more middle-cl~ss
The very disappointed producer apologized. Sh.l' was sorry she had taken
base. Much of his following now. is composed of folks who feel most cheat· my time. ·s he wouldn't be needing my services after all. ·
. ed by tl!e political system, ahd thus most likely to buy Perot's pitch that all
But she did still need an·opjlonent of Fair Pay. Did I know anyone? I
politics is comipt and aH politicians are b.ums. One problem: This !!roufis offered a,few suggestions, said good-bye and ~ighel).
·
·
the leaSt likely to vote.
. · .
· ·
·
·
.
,Oh, to be a conservative woman pundit. Oh, to be a successful woman
And where mariy listeners .swooned, when Perot crooned in 1992, he's who Says tbat feminism never did me one lick of good, and indeed a good
now finding audiences a bit tougher.
.
deal of harm. What splendors would await me? Network appearances? Wall
At Texas A&amp;M last month some students were skeptical. When one asked Street Journal op-eds? We1ghty grants from conservative think tanks?
Perot where ·he was last fall when Republicans were trying to pass a baJ: · I can only speculate. But from observing the women whose views are
anced budget and term limits, two pet issues of his movement, Perot's testy desired on the chat shows, I will hazard an educated guess. Camille Paglia
answer was: "We . we~c there. We were at the forefront. Next question,."
made a name for herself several years ago by infonning the world that femWhen 1111other asked why he should vote for l'erot's Reform Party,.Perot inists !jfe a bunch 6( bitter old prudes. Now the Independent Wpmen 's
snapped ba~k. "l don't care whether you 'Vote for our ~~y or ~oL ··: · Forum has turned anti-feminist punditry into a cottage industry. funded in
Meanwhile, th.e largely SIJ!OOih mpdli nde Perot enJoye&lt;j m 92 show- part by the conservative Bradley and Carthage Foundations, the IWF last
ing signs ,of turning bumpy in '96: , .
.
. ' year released a media guide of professional women who will gladly go on.
•A cover story in !he Weekly ·Standard·asked, "Is He Nuts?"
.
your TV show ,and oppose feminist causes ranging from affinnative action
•A Perot editorial in the Richmohd . (Va.) Times-Dispatch was titled· to the Violence Against Women Act. The ·networks and newsweeklies gob"Gong Show." ·
' · .
.
·
.
bled it up. (To hefcredit, the producer I spoke to rejected my suggestion that
•The Philadelphia Inquirer called his perfonnance there "funl)y, catty and
spacey ... with no specific solut_ioils."
' .. ..
· ·

Berry's

....._. . . ..Local

OH IO '.':ca tt ~cr

..tciillg Bll]HtVeteJUklftiUIIMtl

.a fighter
The Daily·Sentinel . Ron. Brown remembered-:as
.
'

•

Poml roy • on: ckl port, Oblo .

Today~s

livestock report

Margaret E. Metcalf

Middleport, county..•
tor.:.

Lyle D. Showalter

Hubbard
Greenhouse

Bridge replacement slated

Pool project..

li::!l:

I.:M::I

.eo&lt;JN1~~&amp;TD~ e~~AMtei

''

.u.s.

2: 3. 230-26o lbs. 4J.s0-'
.•
- .· . '
. Sows: fteady io · ~ CCiii.S lower.~:
u.s. · -3, 30():51)0 .l!Js. .34.00.:
35.50; 500-650 l.bs. ~5.50-40.00 rew
40.50.
.
Boars: 28.00-30.00.
Estimated receipt$: 39,000.
Prkes fi'OIII The Produce,.'
47.00.

Li.oestock~:

··

Cattle: steady io 1.00 lower.

..

Sale planaed
Yard and bake sale will be held ai,
the long Bottom Community buikJ:. .
ing, 9 to J p.m., Thursday and Friday.
Proceeds will go toward. improve-o
ments to the building:

Tbe Light

.,

.

Daft
Gnle'
of
You'd worry less what IKl&lt;lPIEtl
think of you if you knew
seldom they do.
An

***
SOI'I180fl8

executive is

knows his duly, and .has

assistant do it: .

.

** *

One -y to be popular is
lis~ politely to a lot of things I
you already know.

***

Gompany p1'98ident on phone: I
"Go ahead and suet 't fs
your computer's word a~lkls~tl
our COI!Iputar's word.•

***

When a small boy was
we're on this earth to llelt, I
others, he aSked, "What
1he others hent tor?"

J ......... . ... .............. .. .

...

We will be closed ·

-...----·MAJLIC,.,..lfiW

-Motpc:.-

RVTI..AND ·
3:!)4 p.m., Mallooos Run, Darryl
Tholus, HMC;
.
·
II :02 p,n~., ML Union Road. 'fim..
,odly 0.1n~. !rated at die .cene.

SYUCUSJt
2:34 p.m.. Jolla SUeet.
Watton. VMH; ·, ·

Jyr~~n

.....

POMEROY
Nllrl'oiWOf " m IIIIIs

Friday April12 &amp; Saturday April13
There will be no classes on
•
Thursday evening Aprll1·1

We will reopen
Tuesday April16 9:30 a.m.
'

'

'

.' '

.

'

·'

..

*' .•
J

'
.'

-1..-IF......

'

'

741-1211

"•

�•

The Daily

Sen~l

•

•

" It was Jeff's game," Knight Slid.
"Jeff is our closer. I hate to take him
out."
Brantley's first save since returning from foot suraerr was harrowing .
Jeff Branson's two-run homer in the
eighth off Bob MacDonald put the
Reds up 7-4, but Brantley came on

.' '

..
'

'

KICKING UP DUST - Cincinnati's Eric l)svls
klcu up IOITie dust Whlll IINllng third base in
front of New York Met1 third ba111man Jeff K1111t

In the flrlt Inning of Monday nlght'l g1me In
Cincinnati, ·where the Reds won 7~. (AP)

B aseball
I '

AL standings
lill

:WL&amp;L
I

.8.B . . -

2
4

.600
.429

BDIIimore .................S

Tqronto ........ ,.........J
Decroit. .... ,............... 3

I~

'21\
2~

New York ................ 2 . 3 .400
Boston ................... .!
S . 167

4

CtntraiDM....
Minneaota ............... .:J J .500

'

Chicaao ............. ...... 2
KllDW Cily ............ 2

4
4

~

.J l l
.JJJ

I

I

Westtm Divllion
Teua ....................... 6

0

Seau~ ......................4

2 .667

Caliromia. ................J

1.00

2

Oold..d ........... ..... 2

2

.600

.Jn -

4

2~

4

' Mondtl)''s action
Minnesota 111 Boston, ppd .• weather

.

Today 'o·pmes

Kansas City ,(Honey 0.0) at New Yprk
. (Pl!nine 1-0). J:OS p.m.
California (LangJion 0-0) at Toronto
(Hent&amp;en 1.0), I :0~ p.m.
Minnesola CRodriauez 0.0) ul Boston
{0ordon0-1),1:05p.m.
_
Seon~ {Wolcon 0-1) nt Derroit (AIdmi0.1).1 :15p.m.

Oakland (Van Poppet 0.0) Gl MilWau·
k.ee (McDonalcJt0.0),'1:0S_p.m.
Te""" CGross l-Ot :r Olic:tgo &lt;Tapani
().0), 2 :0~ p.m.
CLEVELAND (McDowell 0-1) al Bo.lrimore (Wells 1-0), 7:35p.m.

Wednesd•y's pmts
M\flnesota (Hawkins 0.0) nl BoSion
~okef.. ld I). I), 1 : 0~ p.m.
Scanle (Hunado I· I) 11 Detroit {Oii·
vares 0.0), 1:15 p.m.
·
Calirornia (Boskle 0·0) 0.1 Toronto
(Guz..,nl-0), 7J5p.m

CLEVELAND (Horslliior 0-1) 01 Bol·

timore (Ericboo Q-0), '7:JS p.m.

NLstandings
•

Ita

"We run when we fee! the situa· hefore the comeback ended.
lion's right," Knight said. 'We study
"It's been that way, except for one
the pitchers, their times and what game," Green said. "We •ve been
they're throwing. ll's what I like 'to down every single game. We haven't
do. It's an integral part of our aame scor~ first yet. They (the offense)
plan, like running Jeff Branson."
have battled like heclr. to keep us
Branson, a slow runner, stole a afloat. But we ' ve got to get beuer
base in the fourth with Jones pitch- pitching, smarter pitching."
ing. Four innings later, he hit a twoNotes: The last time the Reds
run homer that gave the Reds' stole seven bases in a game was
bullpen just enough room to hold on. April 18, 1988 against San FrancisPete Schourek (2-0) gave up $ev- co.... The seven bases were one shy
en hits and three runs - two earned of the Mets' record for most allowed
- in 6 213 innings. Knight went so in a gaine. ... Mets pitcher Juan
inanenti~eness .
long with Schourek ori a night with Acevedo took a flight to Norfolk on
Barry Larkin's bases-loaded dou-. temperatures near the freezing inark Monday to join the Triple-A ndes
ble on a 2-0 pitch put Cincinnati because he wanted to stay away from for his rehabilitation from a strained
ahead 5-0 in the fourth and ended his bullpen.
hamstring. ... Reds third baseman
Jones ' perfonnance.
"The way our bullpen struggled Chris Sabo was the only staner on
"We just dido 'I get much from early, I wanted to take him as far as either team to wear short sleeves . ...
the starter," manager Dallas Green I could take him," l&lt;l!ight said.
Pitcher Jose Rijo had surgery MQnThe bullpen has given up 19 runs day to remove a calcium buildup, a
said. "He's obviously going through
a very difficult time·. I still feel he 's in 21 213 innings. Jeff Shaw gave up bone fonnation arid scar !issue from
.going to have a decent year. He's got an RBI single to Vizcaino in the
his ·rebuilt right elbow. He will be
to. But he's going to have to right eighth, when the Mets cut it to 5-4. examined again in two 10 three
himself here."
Then Brantley gave up two more
weeks.
~
Jones worked on holding baserunners during spring training. He did a
.poor job of it Monday because he got ------Sports briefs"""'""--Baseball
was up 5.2 ptn:ent. Last year, allenso wrapped up in just trying to throw
• , NEW YORK (AP) - Baseball dance dropped 20 percent follo~ing
strikes.
fans are slowly starting to come the. strike from a 1994 average of
"That might play a lillie part in
..
back,
judging by attendance figures 31,257.
it," he said. "It's my job as well to
from
the
first
.week
of
the-season.
Baseball
control the running game. I didn'tdo
Despite bad weather that caused
NEW YORk (AP) - · Reacting to
that. I've·got to give the catcher li.me.
seven postponements, attendance the death of John' McSherry, baseball
to throw the runner out"
Overall; the Reds were 7-for-S.on was up 4.5 per&lt;7nl for the first 79 officials gave a leave of absence to
· steal attempts - their best total in dates compared to last year. The first umpire Eric Gregg so he can lose
eight years. Their only failure came · week average through Sunday was weight and get in shape.
Gregg, listed at 3~ .pounds but
when Hundley threw out Eric Davis Z6.579, up from 25,441 for a similar'11umber
of
games
at
the
start
of
visibly.
heavier, has long been an
on a pitchout.
last
season.
r
·example used by critics of over-;_,
The Reds knew Jones' reputation
When compared to last season's weight'umpires.
and exploited it.
· ·
' ••
•••
final
·average
of
25,257,
attendance
•

3
4
4
~

!ill

Toromo .... :...... ....... l9 56 ·

•

•
•

••
•

•

•
•
•

'
••

•
•

. 2~J

:w
•·San Antonio ....... S5

21
25

.724
.671

!ill

J2

~ 573

II ~

43 .427
SO ..142
51 . ..120
VIW:OU\'t.f .......... :.. 12 .62 .162

22'h
29

X·Utah .................... ~J
x-Houston .............. 4J
Denv~r ................... .12
Minnesotn .............. 26
Oallas ..................... 24

PacirK' Di•ision
y-Seunle ................. 60 16 .789
ll·l .A. Laken ........ 47 21 . ~:l!l
· - - Phoenlli. ................ ,J9 ]6 .~20
Poftlilnd ................. J9 :\6 .!'120
Sacramento ..... .... d 4 40 .459
Golden Stale ......... )3 4:\ .4:\4
'L.A. Clippt"ra ..... :... 28 48 .:\68
-'·clinched playoff spot
y-dinched division
z-won conference Iitle

4
4

I
4

Winnipel ar Detroit, 7:30 p.m.
Annhe,im at Colorado, 9 p.m.
Dallas at Edmo111on. 9:30p.m.
Soo Jose ar Los Anleles. 10:10 o.m.

A•llntic DhUion

:W I. I l'la. !if 1£&amp;

Iom

x-Philadelphia .. ..42 24 13 •97
x·N.Y. Rnngers .. 41 24 14 · 96
Floridu ...... .........40 JO 9 89
·Washington ........ JS J0 II 81
New Jer~y ........ :-16 11 12 84
Tampa IIYiy ... .....~6 ~I 12 84
N.Y. lslandeu .... 21 .SO 8 50

.10~

42

271
268
251
226

204 ·

Doston ................ :-18 JO
HonfonL. ......... n 37
Buffalo .............. J042
Ot!DWO ............... 17 S1

1

1

20 1,
25
27

.286

)

•

'

~

2

.429
.429

2

.8.1J
.429

5 . J7~
5 .2R6

226

197

Au!Oradng ·

209 190
232 242

By MARTHA B. HODEL
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)1\tming down an assistant's joh at
UCLA to become head basketball
coach at Marshall wasn't a hard
choice for former Thundering Herd
pOint guard Greg While.
UCLA coach Jim Harrick,
White's mentor, said it was obvious
to him which choice White would
make.
"He wants to be there. He actively sought it," Harrick said. "He's a
West Virginia guy, and he dido 'I go
on1o that campus with negative
thoughts, like 'This isn't good

TORONTO RAPTORS : Placed P

Nf41V,.: Named John Erickson direclor of i~str)' rel:uions.

217 307

Amerbn J...naue

CLEVE~AND

II 87 273 260
9 7~
2S2
7 67 2:-15 · 257
5 39 181 279

tNl)fANS : Signed .

zn

QJI

N•tklnal FootMIIIA••
ARIZONA CARDJNALS: Signed
Boomer Esia'ion. Relea.~~d QB Dnvu

'

-In the NBA,

nis Gauthier.

Hornets edge _Bulls 98-97,to kill
Chicago's home-winning_streak

CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS: Re·
called C Danton Colc •.LW Ethnn Moreuu,
and D Ivan Droppn, from lndiiLnupolis of ~
1he IHL
'
EDMONTON Of~ERS : Sent 0 Greg
' dcVrh.ls, LW Ralph lnlranuovo and G
Fred Brnthwaite In Cape Breton of rhe
AHL.

HARTFORD WHA~ERS : Ri!&lt;allod
D Marek Malik from Springfield or the

Football

Baseball
•

Hockey ·
Nat6onal Hockey Luaue
.
CALGARY fl..AMES: Signed 0 De-

Carlos Rogers on the injure!.~ list.

Ium .

AH~.

125
91
79
78
76

62

Padfk Dlviskln
y-Colorndo ......... 45 24 10 100
Calgary .............. JJ JS II 77
Vancouver ..........11 .1~ I~ 77
Annheim ............ J3 _
,8 8 74
Edmonton ....... ..10 42 8 68
Lo s AngeSc:s ....... 22':l9 IM 62
San Jose ........... .. ~0 53. ·7 47
y·dinched division title
-'·clinched playo!T spot

Tonight's games

.

JIO
263
liS
239
266

m

.112
2J2
273
221
234
242
2.~0

•..

17~

2:\0
2J I
· 278
23!i
294
291
)45

Monday's scores

A SPECIAL SEC'J10N
In The • POINT PLEASANT
REGISTER
.
.
• GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE
•· POM~ROY .DAILY SENTIN~L
.

I

'

MilliN at Owlolle, 7:-'0 p.m.

It works hard
for the money

.

Redwomen win three
of four weekend games

.

Tole thai cart lilt that blade. Willt our GT242lawn and Ganlen .
Tractor, yoo can get a lot done without spending 1!11 awful lot Plus.
dte modem styling and sleek rear.fender ftares are almost as good

looking as lite low monlltly payment

II

' NOTIIING RUNS UKE A PEERE.
Jllllt D11r1 GTZU

$91.25

-Ntw York (laringhausen 0·0) at
Cineinno.ri (Smiley0.0).7:JS p.m. .
San FrondKo (Wat~ I -0) at HousIQI) tl,lmliok 0.0). 8:0S f\ ;o.
· '\llAnla (S_mohz t'lllfatl.os Anseles
....• ~0-1), IO:~p. m.
.
. · . Florida (Leiter 1-0) at SAn D!C!&amp;O
(VaJemuelaO-O). 10:05 p.m

. ADVERTISING
DEADUNE:
'
.
.

THURSDAY, APRIL 18, 1996 - 12 NOON
INSERTION DATE:

· Wednaday's pmes

FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1996

'Mo•trcal (Paniaaun 1-0) at St. Louis
(Alan Benu 0.0). I :3~ p.m.
San Franciaco (FernandeJ. 1·0) at
tfoiiROIP(KiJel).l ), 2:Jlp.m.
Philadclpbfa (On~CC 1-0) AI Pinsburah
{Erich 0-0), .3:05p.m.
Chi,uao (BullmJer 1·0) til Colorado
(Rdow I). I), 3:0l p.m.
New York (WiiiOfl 0-0) Iii Cincinn.ati
. l'orloaol (0.0) . 7:JS p.m.
·

r

'

Arlanta (Avery lJ.O) al Lo1 Anaele•

(Caodlotti0-l~t0,:t5p. "'

. '
florida {Rapp 0-1} ut Snn Dieao
(Tewlilbory I.G). I~Jjp. m.
.

Basketb all

M

,&amp;,
__,

Feel free 10 drop by one oflheae local John Deere dealen loday:

CARMICHAEL'S FARM &amp; LAWN

NBAslandingil
EASTERN CONFERENCE
~~-~~~-

~ ........ . ~~ .Wl ~
....... York ...........44 J1 .!11

'

Call
Bob Atwood or Dave Harris
,For More information
992-2155

IT TAKES ACOMMUNIH TO
PROTECT ACHILD

668 Pinecrest Drive • Gallipolis
Across from Gallia Auto Sales on old Rte. 35 West

(614) 446-2412

.

18
19

t,

••

'

Foster Homes are needed for
Meigs County Children of all ages.
Call "2·2117 for Information and
to be part of the effort.

,,
"

after se~eral other candidates in the
past two weeks dropped Ollt of the
running to replace Donovan .
·
Clemson assistant Larry Shyatt
and VMI head co~ch Bart Bellairs
last weekend withdrew from. consideration. Indiana assistant Dan
Dakich and fonner North Carolina
State coach L.es Robinson earlier
pulled out of the picture.
"Greg, more l)lan anyone else we
talked with, was willing to make that
commitment," Gilley said. ..
Donovan, 30, was hirec;l awav bv
Florida.after.two seasons and a 3520record·.

j

teton then ripped a single be~re
Cynthia Caldwell singled home a
run. Manuel reached on q fiel~r's
choice to load the bases.__T~cn
Thomas walked home the wm~ng
run with her third walk of the gllf"e.
Caldwell and Manuel .were e41Ch
3-4 with a double and trip hi restclively, Si~sqn singled, Lawrence ingled, J. Cummins was 2-3, Lisle ubled and Carleton was 1-1 with a .ingle.
·
:
· Lawrence was the winning pitcher with 10 walks and four strikc&lt;f.ts.
Sheryl Davis suffered the loss
with nine walks and three strikect-'ts.
Inning ~ .
!
Trimble.................. IS().OOI-0=704-0
Southcrn .. :... .. ..... .200·202;~=8- £2-2
WP- Lawrence
:
LP- Davis
i

Southern diamondmen beat Trimble~.
4~2 to .collect season's first victory ;

211
243
244
278
2M

Hanrord 5. Piusburgh 4
Aoridn 5. N.Y. Rttngers J
T;lmpa Bay 4, N.Y. hlanders J
Winnipe~ 2. St. Louis 2 (lie)
Cal~ 3J Edmonton 2
t.___________/ .._ Anaheim 2. VW\couver 0

goal attempts, but made 10 of 14 free
Dallas 104, Golden State 102.
thro.ws to finisH'with 14 points.
AP Sports 'Writer·
Supersonics 108, Knicks 98
Timberwolves US
Maybe the Chicago Bulls' gruel·
Seaule reached 60 victories durRaptors 101
ing schedule finally caught up with ._illg a 6,000-mile, one-day road trip.
At Minneapolis. Isaiah Rider
them. Maybe the Charloue Home.ts
Shawn Kemp, who lost his ternscored
28 points and rookie .Kevin
dido 'I care for. the "SeventySome- pet' after Charles OBlcley b1~ied his
Garneu
had 23 as Minnesota beat
thing" T-shirts ·on sale in the United nose in the third'IJI!iih':{.led 1 e. Soninjury-depleted
Toronto.
Center. Or ma)lbe, the Bulls are tired ics. with 25 points and 13. bounds.
Doug Christie and Tracy Murray
of being on national television,
Detlef Schrempfbad 24 points, eight
scored
21 points apiec~ for the RapWhatever the reason, the Bulls , rebounds and si~assisls for Seallle,
tors,
who
dr~ssed just eight players.
The Southern baseball team singled and Ash walked Deemer
·.had their 44~game regular-season which won for the lOth' time in II
Clippers
102
picked up its first victory of the sea- walked home a run, then Travis Lisle
home wiiming'Streak sdapped Moo- games.
Trail Blazers 89
. son with a 4-2 win over Tri-Valley had a two-run single for a.4-1 tally.
day night. with a 98-97 loss 10 _the
.
AI Los Angeles, Stanley Roberts,
Conference Hocking Division foe Trimble threatened with one run in
Hornets.
·
.
The game was a makeup of a
the finale but came up short
making
just
his
sixth
start
this
seaTrimble Monday night in Racine.
"We lost,:· Dennis R,odn'lan sail'!. · !X&gt;stponment three months ago by a ·
Deemer picked up the win with
son,
scored
six
of
his
season-high
~
Southern (1-3.) fell 0-1 io the first
"Thai's what happened. Now ·we go blizzard.
.
·
eight
strike outs and five walks,
inning when lead-off hiller Zach
for 70."
· · 'i6ers 82, Nets 79
· points in the final five minutes .as
Miller walked and scored on a Spike while Jesse Maynard came in for one
~ ,.,
Playing their. fifth game in seven
Vernon Maxwell scored half of · Los Angeles snapped Portland's seven-galne
winning
streak.
.
Snyder
ground out: SHS came right inning of relief. Mike McClelland
nights against a learn they destroyed Philadelphia's poinis with a season-'
Portland's
loss,
only
their
second
back
to
tie il 1-1 when Michael Ash and J. Snyder combined for six
by 34 points only a few days earli- high 41, and Rex Walters m&amp;4e two
in 12 games, coupled with Golden
tripled and came home on Kevin strikeouts and.four walks for Trim; , 1 er,the Bulls were denied a 67tn vic•
free throws with 10.8 seconds left.
ble.
Deemer's sacrifice fly.
: :-' tory in their drive to become the ·first
Maxwell, who scored 38 points in State's loss I 04-102 to Dallas, leaves
Southern hillers were Ash a triple
the
Blazers
needing
either
one
more
Southern
plated
three
runs
in
the
, , , team to win 70 games in a season.
the Sixers' victory over Atlanta on
and
sjngles by Lisle, Maynard.
win
or
another
loss
by
the
Warriors
founh
inning
when
Shawn
Dailey
.. ,
After beating the Magic in Orlan- Saturday. made seven three-pointers
~cKelvey,
Pork Dill and Sayre. ·
reached
on
an
error,
Danny
Sayre
to clinch a playoff spot for the 14th
: . : do on Sunday, only Charlotte, New in a team-record 17 tries. ,
"He's a streak shooter, and he's ~onseculive season.
Jersey and Philadelphia stood
· Rod Strickland, who has had his
. between the Bulls and 69 wiQs. )I really on a streak right now,"
share
of troubles· this season with
: · :. looked as i'f they would hit 70 in Philadelphia coach Jonn Lucas said.
second-year
coach P.J. Carlesimo,
Cleveland before a nationally .tele- "When he's like that, he's very hard
was benched for the entire first
.: : vised audience on Sunday.
to slop."
'
But the Hornets chang,e&lt;lthat and . Vern Fleming scored 20 points for quarter after mi8sing the learn bus for
Monday's shootaround.
undoubtedly upset a few television visiting New Jersey.
.
.
Mavericks 104
: ,: executives in the process. At the earBullets 111, Heat99
Rio Grande's softball team won er, struck out ihree and gave up six
Warriors 102
. ll.est, the Bulls could win No. 70 in
At Landover, Md., Juwan
three
of the four road games it played hits.
Jason Kidd had 21 points and 12
Milwaukee on Tuesday.
HoWard had 25 points, 12 rebounds
Rio and Malone
against Walsh and Malone, accord. • · The Bulls hadn't lf!SI a regular- and seven assists as the Bullets assists, and his steal with 45 seconds
split dciubleheader
ing to a report released after deadline
remaining led to the go-ahead basket
: . season game at the United Center enhanced their playoff hopes.
doubleheader against
Saturday's
Monday.
for Dallas at Golden State. ·
· - · since March 24, 1995 - Michael
. Brent Price had 21 points lind
Malone
began
with an 8-6 victory ·
Rio
sweeps
twlnbill
:- .-Jordan's fiBrhome game after com- Ledell Eackles · 20 for the Bullets · The loss ·dropped the Warriors
from Walsh
for the Redwomen buill on Hicks'
(36.39), whose fourth straight vic- · two games behind Sacramento in the
: · . ing out of retirement
five RBis and 2-for-4 hitting, which
In
the
first
game
Friday,
Tanya
After Del Curry's free throws put tory moved them within one game of race for the eighth and final playoff
· ·
Hicks'
3-for-3
hitting
and
Heather
included two doubles.
spot _in the Western Conference.
, Charlotte ahead, the Bulls had four ninth-place Miami in ·the EI!Stern
Also contributing offensively
Brining's 2-for-3 hilling helped lite ·
Golden Stale is a half-game ahead of
shots to win. Toni Kukoc missed on Conference.slandings.
wete teammates Rhienfrank (two
Redwomen post a 5-3 victory.
Denver.
a twisting drive, Scollie Pippen . Alonzo Mourning had 28 points
RBis)
and Bi,lli McGhee (one RBI).
Brining,
Hicks,
Billi
McGhee,
Jimmy )ackson had .24 points and
: · missed a lip, Jordan's putback was for the Heal, who lost their fourth
.
Brady
struck out four and gave up
Shelly
Rhienfiank
and
Melisa
Sisson
George McCloud had 22 fur Dallas .
off and Pippen missed another tip straight .
six
hits
to get the win.
each
knocked
in
a
run
to
help
starter
Joe Smith had 26 points anti II
amidSt a swarm of bodies underPacers !17, lfawks 95
got Ill runs in the first
Malone
Brenda Brady, who tossed a five-hitrebounds for the 'Yarriors. ' '
neath.
·
AI Indianapolis, Reggie Miller
·inning en route to a I5-7 win. Rhienllir and struck oul four.
"The ball," Kukoc said, "just'did scorw eig~l of his 24 points In the
The Red women notchcil a 9- I ' frank's 2-for-3 hitting (!his included
not want to go in.".·
finaltwp minutes to hold off Atlanta; -Sports briBfs·-- win in the second game in part fa double) and two.RB!s led Rio: SisKenny Anderson scored 20 points
Atlanta, .which rallied from 14
because of Hicks' 3-for-5 hilling and ~ son had two RBls, while Billi
BasebaiJ
and Matt 'Geiger 14 for the Hornets, points down, pulled within one with
2-for-5 hilling by Bobbi McGhee, . McGhee, Sagle and Shellie Weiner
NEW YORK (AP) - Da~e
who played'most of the SI.'Cond half under a minute left on a basket by
&lt;Roxanne
Sagle and Sisson. In addi - :each knocked in a run. Philpot gave
Hollins, who hit .615 for Minnesota
without top player Larry Johnson. Alan Hendetson, but Miller hit a
tion,
Hicks,
Rhienfrank, Billi :up 16 hits in taking the loss. ·
He hurt his hand early in the third' three,pointer and qdded a free throw . in the opening week is the American
McGhee
and
Sisson
eac~ had two
'The Red women (8-3 overall &amp; SLeague' s first .player of the week.
in the closing seconds .
; : quarter and didn't return.
RBls, while Bobbi McGbee had one 1 in the Mid-Ohio Conference) will
Hollins, the Twins' third baseman,
"We had notfting to lose," AnderRik Smits added 14 points for the
'
RBI. Lori Philpot, the win.ning pitch- travel to Urbana 1\tesday.
was 8-for-13, scored six times and
· son said. "This was a pride game for Pacers, including I 2 in the second
had seven walks.
; , us. ••
half. Mookie Blaylock had 27 points
·
Basketball
: : The Hornets moved I 112 games for ~tlanta.
.
DURHAM,
N.C. (AP). --, Wash• ahead of Miami in the race for tl)e
Spun !11, Jazz 91
.
inglon
Bullets
rookle
Rasheed Wal· ~ final Eastern Conference postseason
At Sah Lake City, Avery Johnson
lace, who-is.sidelined. with a broken
: SJlOI with the win- and the right to hit one of two free throws with 43
left thumb. was arrested over the
: meet Chicago in the first round of the seconds left iiS the Spurs moved four
weekend in ·North Carolina and
: ' playoffs. . ·
·
•
games~ of !he Jazz in the Midcharged
with misdemc8l1or·assault
. : In other NBA games, it was Seat· . w~st Dtvts1on.
•
The
team
!s top draft piclr. was ·
: ' tie 108, New York 98; Philadelphia
DavidBenoitmisfiredonathree: 82. New·Jersey 79; Washington ·II I, pointer-in the final second for Ulllh, 31'rested Sunday and charged after
allegedly failing to obey a restrain• 'Miami 99; Indiana 97. Atlanta 95; which missed 14 of IS three-point.
ing,order filed ag&amp;lnst him by ex.; . San Antonio 92; Utah 91; Minnello- ers. ·
girlfriend Chiquita Bryant, mother of
: '111115, Toronto IOJ;'the Los Ante·
SanAntonioccntcrDavidRobinhis son Ishmiel, according to police.
les CJippm. 102. Portland 89; and aon was limited to just three f~eld-

By TOM WITHERS

NEW YORK RANOERS : Rec•llod
LW Peter F~rr-.ro and C £hri5 ·FcrrirO'
ftoll) Binahannon of 1hc AHL.

, :W I. I l'la. !if 1£&amp;

)'·Delrmr.. ..........!i91J 7
•·Cbicngo .......... J92113
St. Lovis ........... J2JJI5
Toronro .............. JJ..l!i 12
Winnipeg ........... l5 .18 6
o.u................... 24 40 14

Southern made a dramatic sev- Trace singled and Campbelljj~alked. .
enth inning comeback to defeat Trimble led ·6-2.
Trimble 8-7 Monday night at Star
In the fourth, Southern cut the
Mill Park in Racine.
lead in half with two runs. Bea Lisle
Trimble took a I -0 lead in the first walked and Caldwell doubled, fol·when Missy Coffman walked, stole . lowed by a Manuel single, the score
second and third and came home on 6-4. Trimble added another run in the
a fielder's choice hit by Erica Camp· fifth when three walks and a fielder's
belt:The Tornadoes (3-1) came back choice led to a run that put Trimble
to take a 2-0-lead when Cynthia ahead 7-4.
Caldwell walked, Jonna Manuel sin- ·
SHS plugged away with two runs
gled, Amber Thomas walke.d, Sam- in the sixth. Manuel laced a driving
mi Sisson walked and Jennifer Cum- triple, and Thomas walked before
mins singled. Southern took a 2-1' ·· both scored on a Sisson single to
lead, but lost out on a possible big make the score 7-6.
inning as a runner was thrown out at
With their backs against the wall,
the plate to end the frame.
the Tornadoes held Trimble in the
Trimble had a big five-run second top of the seventh, then hoped for
inning. With two out Sherry Davis some offense. Jennifer Cummi~s
singl~d. Coffman singled, Hardy singled to lead off the home half of
~alked, S. Hardy singled, Tonya the frame. Pinch hitting Angie Car-

innounced •• the Thunclertnil Herd'l 111111'1 hlld
balketblll coach at a I18'IVI conference Monday
In Huntington, W.Va. (AP) ·

MARSHALL HIRES WHITE- Greg Whlta (lift)
ahakea handa with Marahall University athlltlc
dlrectqr Lee Moon shortly after Whn. wa1

Refcucd DT Bobb)' Wilson.

enoGgh, I'll be here a couple of
years, and then I' ll gel a real job.'
"I put a lot of credence in that,"
Harrick said.
.
Marshall president J. Wade Gilley
said a commitment to Marshall was
p prime consideration for the search
team looking for a coach to succeed
Billy Donovan.
·
"We.were looking for someone
willing to commit himself to building and maintaining a strong basketball program at Marshall University over a period of at least five
years," Gilley said.
The announcement Monday came

Southern girls get past Tt:imble 8-7

-

PHILADELPHIA EAGLES : Slgnod
WR Mwir. Scoy to a one-y1=nr contr.w.:t.
WASHINGT\)N REI)SKINS: A&lt;·
qalred DE &amp;:an Gilbttt from rhe Stlouis
Rom• for a 1996 first-round draft pic.:k.

Central Dh-iJion

Monday's scores

Tonight'• games

\

Basketball
Nalktrial Baskett.ll Aaodalion

.

R~t:·signcd

'
wamin1 traCk for a two-base error.
Joey Hamilton (2-0) matched his career-high with
eiaht strikeouts in seven innings.
"''Wn 6, Plntes 3 - Sid Fernandez and four
relievers ruined Pittsburgh's best start ill 13 seasoas and
the Pirates' horne opener.
The Phillies led 2-0 before Denny Neagle retinld a ,
batter. Mark Whiten hit a three-run homer in the 1ixth.
and Lenny Dykstra homered in the ninth.
Fernandez (I ~I ) allo:fed three hits in five shutout
innings. Neagle (().I) allowed five runs and five hits
inS 113 innings, but struck out eight
~ 6, Glants2 - Mike Hampton (2·0) allowed
four hits and struck out eight in eight innings~ Hous.ton stopped its three-game losing streak. .
.
William VanLandingham (0-2) walked six in six
-inn.ings for the visiting Giants, allowing four runs and
four hits.
Matt Williams' two-run double put San Francisco
ahead in the first, but James Mouton tied the score' in
the fourth with a two-run double, an,j Orlando Miller
followed with a two-run single.

White named Marshall's new .
head men's basketball coach

WESTERN CONFERENCE

J2

Seaule 108. New Yort. 98
Phllnddphin 82, New Jersey 79
Wallhinglon Ill, Miami 99
Minne-sota ll!i. Toromo 101
Indiana 91. Atlanta 95
Charloue 98, Chicago 97
San 1\n~ni o 92, U1ah 91
L.A. Clippers 102, Portland k9
Dullas 104, Golden St:we 102

Cbicogo 9. Colorado 6
Los Anaeles I, Atlanra 0
SllD Oieao 9, Aorida 2
Philadelphi:1 6, Pit11burgh J
Cincinnati 7. New York 6
Hou"on 6. San Francisco 2
Montrcn14, St . Louis 3 (10)

JW!iool ...!:...:.......... n 38 .m
w.....,.............;.l6 J9 .oliO

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: Optioned
RHP· Mike Busby to Louis11ille of the ·
AmericoR ASS9cintion. RICI.:allcd RHP Bri·
llD B:vbcr from Louisville. ,

Transactions

22.~

Northeut Di,vlllon
)'· PiiiJburgh ..... ..48 27 4 100 3~0 269
Montreal... ,........ 40 31 9 89 258 240

12
20 h

C~EOV:ELAND 31 Orlando. 7:30p.m.

Phihldelphia arNe~ Jersey, 7J0p.m.
Tnt1lpl Bay at Aonda, 7:30p.m.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

4

Bostonat New York, 1JO p.m.
Oe1roi1 nl New Jersey, ;7:30p.m.
L.A. Ukers at Denver. Rp.m.
Toronto at Milwaukee, SJO p.m.
Vancoover at Houston, 8:30p.m.
POftland at Phoenix, 108.m.
Dallas iU SllCramento. I :30 p.m.

Waahlngton at N.Y. Ranaen, 7:l0

. NUL standings.

42'4
47

I. &amp;L

Ottawa ar Buffalo. 7:30p.m.
p.m.

24 ~
27 ~

·~ALLAS COWBOYS:
Ol Otde Hcllcstrne.

. N..._IL&lt;ape
NL: Grrr.nted umpirl.! Ertc Ore&amp;&amp; 11
leave of 11bsence. Named Ed Mon1ague
crew Chief.
COLORADO ROCKIES: Purchll.'led
the contract of ,RHP John Habyan from
Colorado Springs of the Pacific Coaat
League. Placed RHP Roger Baile)' on the·
lj·da)' disabled 'IISI.

N.Y. Islanders at Piusbursb. 7:30
p.m.

Hockey

2J
24'h

Midwest Olwl~ioJ1

I.catu

Mooday's soores

•

S!'iJ
.SB
Jll

19 '~ -

Kric ·,

RHP John Farrtll to n. mlnor·le.a&amp;ue con·
troct and wianed him to Buffalo of the
American AuociDiion.

Wednesd•y's pmes

Sa.crnmenro al Seattle, 10 p.m.

2
2\1,

.3:n

Wtllllfm Dl•l!ikth

•

Allnnta ...... ....... ......42 ]4
ChorloUe ........... ~ ... J9 37
Milwaukee ............2J 51

Tonight's pmt

I~

.500
.429

Cemnl Di•ldon
Chi~aso ................... 5
2 .714
Cincinnali ....... .........4 2 .667
Pinsbur&amp;h ................4 2 .667

San Oieao ................ ~
Silll Fran.:isco ......... J
Los Ange:le~ ........... .. J
Colorado .......( ........ 2

CLEVELAND .......4J )2 .m
Oerroh .... :....... ,... ... AI J3 .S!'i4

'Wuillinslon al BaSion, 7:JO p.m.

2 .714

Housron ................... J
Sr. Louis .................. J

.SRO
.6 18

blew ~Jead. but Servais bit a three-run, tie-break·
in1 hOmer in the seventh off Kevin Ritz (1· 1).
Reliever 1erry Adams ( 1-0) gave the Cubs four solid innings, striking out his last four baiters. Doug Jones
pitched the ninth for his first 4&amp;ve.
Eq1014, CanUa.lt 3 - F.P. SantanaeiO drove in
the go-l!head run with an infield bit in the lOth inning
of Sl Louis' home opener.
Mark Grudzielaru:k singled off Jeff Parrett ( 1-1) to
stan the lOth, look second on Milr.e Lansing's sacrifice
and third on a groundout. After an intentional walk,
Santangelo beat out a dribbler.
Mel Rojas (1-0) pitched two scoreless innings far
the ijxpos, who have won three of four.
Plldns 9, Marlbu 1- Ken Caminiti, Tony Gwynn
and Wally Joyner kept up their torrid hilling as San
Diego won its home opener before 44.470 and extend·
ed its winning streak to five.
Caminiti tied the game at 2 with an RBI double in
the fifth off Chris Hammond {().I), and two more runs .
scored when fanner Padres third baseman Gary
Sheffield dropped Joyner 's fly ball on the right-field

.'

lnJillS m CaiJury, 9:30p.m,

Phoenix at Utah, 8 p.m.

Wednesday's games

Rasttm Dlvblorl
w I. 1'1:1.

Monrrenl ................. 5
PhillldelphiD ............. J
Arlonla .....................1
New Yort .............. .. 2
Florid&amp; ........... ... ..... 2

:\9 ~~

·

hit for in the eighth.
It didn't take Hideo Nomo long to show his 199S'
"I don't think he outpitched me, but he got the
season wasn't a fluke.
results he wanted ani! that's wlllll. CCJIIIIIs," Glavine said.
Nomo ( 1-1) pitched the major leaaues' lint shutout
:'Ultimately I'm not facing Hideo Nomo. I've JOI ·IO
or the season on Monday, a th=-hiner that beat the
get their hitters out and hope it's good enoup."
Atlanta Braves and Tom Glavine 1-0.
Nomo struck out six, walked five and did not allow
"I felt great," Nomo said through an illlapreter.
a runner )IIISt second base until the ninth in a aune
"We got a 1-0 lead in the early innings and I wanted
played before 53,180.
.
to keep it that way."
·
,
Coming off his NL Rookie of the Year season. Nomo
' Raul Mondesi got a run-scoring single in third
lost his first stan, giving up four runs and seven hits
inning, and Nomo made the run stand up fur~ Ange- .
in four innings of a 5-2 loss at Houston.
les, c'!nnng off a 2-~ road. trip.
•:1 was unable to pitch the way I wanted to in the
"This was about as well-pitched on both sides as any
last game," Nomo said. ''Today I was."
game I've been involved in," Dodgers first baseman
In other NL games, Chicago beat Colorado 9-6,
Eric Kartos said. "Nomo threw a great game, Glavine ' Montreal beat St. Louis 4-3 in 10 innings, San Diego
threw a great game."
beat Florida 9-2, Philadelphia beat Pittsburgh 6.3 and
I~ the D?C~~ers' home opener, Nomo allowed only
. Houston beat.Sa'l Francisco 6.2.
.
Dav1d 1usuce s leadoff smgle in the second, Jeff
Cubs 9, Rockies 6 - Scott Servais drove in a
Blauser s two-out 4ouble in the eighth and Fred · career-high five runs with a home run and double; and
McGriff's leadoff single in the ninth.
Mark Grace added three RBis ·in the season opener at
Glavine (I - I) allowed five hits- all singlesCoors Field.
struck out n~ne and walked two before he was pinchThe Cubs, winning their lOth straight road opener,

and &amp;ave up • sinlle. a walk and RBI
sinales 'to Jeff Kent and Todd Hundley with two out
"I wasn't goina to take him out,"
Knight wd.
The final out left the Reds as
much relieved as happy, and gave the
Mets a familiar feeling of frustration
after a night of playing catch-up.
Bobby Jones (().!) lasted just ~
213 innings for the second consecutive stan. He walked four, gave up
five hits and let the Reds steal five
bases in five attempts because of his

Philadelphia at Dc:tJoit, 7:30p.m.

L.A. Lnkcrs a1 Minnesoua. 8 p.m.
Vancouver n1 S411 Amonio, 8:30p.m.

WESTERN CONFERENCE

CLEVELAND ......... z .1 .400
Milwaukee ............... 2 .1 ,400

..

25
26

Ctnlral Dtviston
: -Chicago .............. 66 9
x- lndinno................47 29

EutemDI•Ii:ktn

Illlll

.400
.J87
.211

The Deily Seull,...r • PIJI 5

•

8y The AIIOCMIIId , . . .

Scoreboard
BosiOn .................... ~O 4S
New Jersey ....... ..... 29 46
Ph i l~lph i n .......... 16 60

•

Dodgers, Cubs, Expos, Padres,.Ptlillies and Astros win

Reds edge Mets 7~6; .Brantley records first save of . ~996
imponant game dects1ons so far as- a
first-year manager: DOes he take out
)lis struggling closer? .
Knight made the right choice. He
stuck with Brantley, who got a fly
ball from Jose Vizcaino for the final ·
but io a 7-6 victory Monday night
over the New York Mets.

1-

In othsr NL action,

Tuea~y.~l1,1$98

-, eYJOEKAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - The New
Yorlc Mets were hitting Jeff Brantley
hard, Johnny Ruffin was warmed up
• in the bullpe ~. and Cincinnati Reds
manager Ray Knight was headed to
, the mound.
Knight faced one of his most

T1.111d8y, April I,

•

'.

),

...

!' ··

.,

'

'

.

•
Trimble was led by McClelland
with two singles, Miller a single '"d
Brady Trace a single.
!
Southern will play Wcdnesdal at
Nelsonville.
!
Inning 12llili
, :
Trimblc .. ........... ..... IO().OOO: 1=2-1-3
Southern ............. ..; I00- 300-x'=4-e-2
WP-Deemcr
l
LP - McClelland
•

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;:=·~·:;~~~S~I~I~~ni~I~~~~~~~--~~--~~~~~-.;~~~~·~M~I~d~~~~~p=~~~Oh~~~;::::::::;~;;;;::::::;;;;Tueedly,April~1111

:Racine UMW focus on John 13

• ••
-.:: • • AD 11e God"s Olildree• was the
:j :-. for lhe pocram ~nltld by
i4 :fiua Mae Hillll the MilCh ~..,
lhe Racine United Melhoclist
• :'Mlaltft.
'
:; :::Aworship Cetller WIS C~ by
· ooverin&amp; a t.ble with a colorful cloch
.ct placina and opened Bible in the
,;enter 5UITOUIICicd by several dolls
from around the world. donated
M exlleiiJi~~e doll collcclion owned by
Marcie West.
· The focus scripure was tab:n
from John 13 - "I give yoli a new
commandment, that you love one
Anochcr -- just as I have loved you,
you also shot,tld love one 111101hcr. By
this, everyone will know !hat you are
iny disciples."
·
. The hymn "Many Gifts, OM Spirit-... was sung by the group. A skit was
read by Margie West, Marilyn Bogn , Karen Walker, Opal Diddle arid
Melissa liarl&lt;ness. Closing worship
was read by members and the leader
,a_ve the benediction.

: '4

rrom

Lee Lee pre1' de ~ lllhe "'"i ; 1
.-ina wbicb ~ wilh lhe lpiritllll reading "SpriaJ CleaiiiJ." The
UMW Purpotc
rer - • by .u.
Olris Hill read the secretary's report
aad Oara Mae Sarsent jave.lhe !reasurer's report. A lhanJc you 1101e wa
read from Jackie Wagner.
It W,ll noted that the Election ~
di11ner was a s~ss in spite of ihe
nlin. The penny fund collection was
Liken. Sick calls are still WJcd 1o be
made but just don~ have 10 be !:OWIIed. Easter flowers will be delivered
to the sick and shut ins.
Spring reln:at will be April 19-20
at Camp Asbury, Rio Grande. Deadline for registration is ,t\pril 10.
Those who wish to atll:nd should call
Lee Lee or Clara Mae S8Q!ent.
The bathroom project was discussed but no action was taken. The
mother-daughter banquet, May II
will be catered by Tammy's. Members will sell .tickets for the event.

w•

....---~uess ·the
.

•

VAUGHAN'S

. ~wiDbetervedtolheA!pha
~ha Kappa sorority 011 April 16.
A special bulletin f~~~: UMW St.day will be ordmd. 1'wo tables for
crafts and b¥al goods Will be rteled for the Jtacine Flower Show April

27.

Live Psychics

The Monday morninc UMW
members are worting on a quiJIIO be

on 1
1·900-255-0300
ext. 5488
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18yrs.
Touch-tone phone
required.
Serv-U
(619) 645-8434
1

givea to a l'amiJy wbo rec:cndy lOit
!heir home in a fire. Ally ebun:h lady
il invjled to lllend the Monday 9:30
a.m. session.
Refreshments we~ served .by
ShBI'QII Hall and Nancy Ervin. Get

· well~~si~
AttendinJ were: opal Diddle,
Gladys Shields, Etta Mae Hill:
l'rancc$ Roberts, Malgery Roush,
Cbris HiU. Melissa Harkness, Ruth
st-ns.MIIJie Wcs!. Sally CaldweD,
!Onn Walker, Clara Mae Salgent,
Sharon Hall, Marilyn Bogan!, l'llsy
· Pancake, Alice Wolfe, Nancy Ervin
and Lee Lee.
Next meeting will be April 22.

SPARKLES
ELECTRIC
Serving all Your
ELECTRICAL
needs

weight?---

_..-.

Phone
614-992-5048
Free Estimates

'

Wednesda

ROIEIT IISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•NIW#Homes
i

•Garages
•Complete

•

Remo~ellng
Stop &amp; Compare

FREE ESTIMAT~S

985-4473

(LIIMIIa•
l.owAIIII)

•

JONES' TREE SERVICE

WICKS
HAUliNG
Limestone,

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

614-992·3470

SMUCKERS·GRAPE
JELLY OR JAM
.
..

~

21b.... ....

.

·Trucking •

· ' The n.at department at vaughan's Cardinal
; Supennarlct!l is pk:tuNd on lhe scale at Sugar
: Run Mill Monday aftetliOon, weighing In for a
: goQd Cl'••e Anyone whO can·guess the correct
• weight of the group will win a steak dinner for
: four, with pledges taken by employees on their
• guHIII for the March of DlmH. Pictured are

r~··········~······-~··············~

~

I

·iront left, Deloris Winebrenner, Nancy Beaver,
John Smithson and Alex Vlirian; and t.ck 111ft,
Bient Zirkle of Sugar Run Mill, Richard Hill, AI
Davison, Dick Gaul, Richard V~an and Jeff
Darnell. Reglsllatlcht for the conllat is available
at the Middleport store.
.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

.

:Answers to Social Security questions ·
Q. My worlr.· schedule changes

appointment. We're usually on time,
from week-to-week and month--to- so it's unlikely that you will have to
month. How can I get infonilalion wait.
·
aboul Social Security benefits ifrm ·- . Q. If I need to get a new or
·' Jnable to visit a local offic;e during replacement Social Securily card,
- igular hours?
how long will it lake?
. · A. Social Security has a toll-free
A. If you request one, we will sec
otuinber, 1-800-772-1213, which that it is mailed within five working
oPlrales 24 hours a day and on week- days after receiving all the informaends. If you want to schedule an lion we need. If Y!JU have an urgent
appi&gt;intment or you need to speak to need for the number, we will tell you
a service representative, you should the number wjthin one working day.
caill between the hours of7 a.m. and
Q . When I come into an offi· e to
7 p.m. on business days. Our lines are lake care of my business, will you be
busiest early in the week and early in able to tell me exactly how long it
tJie month, so it's best to call at oth- will take to ~omplete my request?
er times if your business can wait. If
A. We will give ~ou our best estiyou have a touch-tone phone, recoro- mate of the amount ~t the time il wilt'
eci information and services.are avail- lake us to handle your request. .In a
aflle 24 hours a day, mcludmg week- recent survey of new beneficiaries. 90
. ..
.. percent reported that·the actual time
ends and holidays.
We also have a separate TIY
was equallo or less than our estimate.
number for people who are deaf or
Q. If I don't understand the deciIW'd of hearing. The toll-free number sion on my claim, will someone in
is 1-800-325-0778 and opemtes · the locl!l office be able to help me?
between 1 a.m. and 7 p.m. on bus1A. Social Security interviewers
ness days.
will take as much time as necessary
Q. I don't drive. and I have 10 rely to clearly explain how and why we
on a friend or relauve to help me get made our decision. We will also tell
to appointments. Willi have to wait you what steps you need to take if
a . long time in a Social Security you disagree with the decision.
office?
Q. Other than going to an office or
·. A. As part of our Customer Ser- telephoning for infonnation, is lhere
vice Pledge, we promise to serve you another way to get pamphlets and
within 10 minutes of your scheduled Olher Social Security infonnation?

COKE

.
ng
$1
\!}

12 packs

'

Umit 1 with coupon : · :·
and $10.00
I
I
purchase..
,.
I
Add. Purchase
I
$2.59
I
I

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

A. If you have access to the Inter-

HORMEL BLACKLABEL 'BACON

' net, you can get' a great deal of ·information, Many of our iN'ffiphlets are
available on lhe Internet, as well as
the . Social Security HIIJldbook,
newsletters, legislative updates and
press releases. There is also a computer program, ANYPJA, that lets
people estimate their Social Security
benefits. The Internet address is
http_://www.ssa.gov.
Q. Do other coUntries have a
Social Security system like the United States?
A. Yes. More than 165 countries
· around the world have Sociai.Secu.rity systems similar to ilur own, that
provide cash and/or services to
replace earnings lost 4ue lo retire- ·
ment, death, or disability. You can
find out more ahout Social Security
in other countries by requesting the
publication Social Security Programs
Throughout the World. To order, call
202-512-1800, 202-512-2250 (fax),
or write to: Superintendent of Documents, Government Printing Office,
Washington, D.C. 20402-9325. The
stoek number of this publication is
017-070-00468-7 and the cost is $25
($31.25 overseas). The publication is ·
alsa'available on the Internet on the
Social Security.Adminisll'ation's server ·
(http://www.ssa.gov)-select
Research and Statistics.

~- pk ... 99¢

Siit,RFINE HOTDOGS 12 oz. pack .... ,... ;.. 2 for

99¢

JIMMY .DEAN SAUSAGE
................

LIVE!

·

ONE • ON • ONEI
'CALLNOWI

-

1-900-446-1414

11b. roll .........................

99¢

ocuen

or

,.
99

Jolly nme Popcorn
. Microwave
· . Popcorn ,
.,
. 10.5oz.

992-3838

·.

•

1M,..

•
piZza

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling
wlfh

ATTErffiON SPORTS
FANS
Let your lingers do the
walking to the sports
line. Finance Stocks,
NHL, NBA, NFL, Point
Spreads, Daily
Hor&lt;l6COp9..
1-900- n6-0700
Ext. 3685
$2.99 per min. M!Jsl be
18 yrs. Serv-U

Monday through Wednesday
w/coupon

.,.-.,tee to bek" up

Sarvlng S.E. Ohio &amp; WHt Vlrvlnla
Toll Frea

446 9416

c;:;::;:~::::
All Ohio available
alltypeo or
f. ' ,

'I~)

' f

.

,,

~'-''I

I I\' ' "-' '',.

lt 1:,~rr Jrh_:c:

A· l\' Cdr
!\tl,' f):l\i'

i_ll_, I ~

fJ

::, f~ 22

ot. ( 1\ , 1 i 1(;

•

C·-"1:. r:~·r (Jt: . Jtt.-.J
I h 1-~
~Y&lt;") ,:'(J.H)

Help Wanted

p( )f' ]j ' j I l'y'

lrl ••

qvallf11• clerlr/receptlolllst/slcrllary. If
rou are •• llithaslastlc 11111 frlaalllr
pers011 . who meets th1 followl11
ra.,ulrtments, then please co••lller our
avallahle posltlo111
•••• .. .experlenclll .... comfortahle
world•• with cempatlrS ... , ..........
IJPI!il skills. Yoa !IIIISI werk w1ll with the
pvltllc ••II he avallahle for occaslaaal
.
evullll ....,.. .
If rou, are lat~restecl 1111 ct ,.,. . . .II f•ll·
tlma posltlo11, thaa 11hmlt • .coMplete
resume, lncl•lllnl rour mlallilum salarr
, • .,••,....... to the ...,.s. IIIIOW .Hforli
April 30, 1996.

0

tor

I

Cc:m? for
Eld er ly and
Hancli cappe cl
i1 1 Fc:n11ily Care
Home
Midd le port Oh

992-5042

New Homes, Garages,

Addldoas, oattu.
Kltcheni, Decks, Siding,
Root• ete.

No~tolllll~rtolargt.

Contact Rodney Howery
594-37118 days, 698-7231

1.soo.~": :ytlmel
L&amp;E

·ADVERTISING
THE HAT MAN
. · Imprinting
•Shirts •Hats
•Sportswear
•Ball Unlform·s
3rd s~~~~~· Oh.

BISS.ELL BUILDERS, INC •.
.,New Homes • Vlny! Siding New
G
arages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

j

.

.

Public Notice
NOncE TO,Btlli)ERS • . ·
The Meigs County Council
on Aging, Inc., P.O. Box 722,
Pomeroy, OH 45769, will
accept sealed bids for a
1987 eleven (11) pqsenger
Dodge Mulvan with
wheelchair lift until
Weclnetdty, April 17th.
Minimum bid -$4,000.00.
The M•lge County Council
on Aging, Inc. re~trves the
right to IICcept or 'reject any
or all bide. For more
Information, contact Wanda
VIning, 614'992·2161.

Racine American
.

Legion #60'2:
Bingo
Slln. Nights

Lucky Ball $300.00
wllh 21 players or more
·Raises $50.00 ea.
week. Pa}l according to
the Number of players
949·2044

or 949-2038

:L. _ _

...,.__:(:,.,N;;o,..;S;;.;u;..n;.:;d..;;a~y..;C..;a;..lls.;.!)___.,:&gt;~~1-=:~

· Howard L Wrftaael

s~ow

The show is being dedicated 10
the mcmoty of Eddie Burkett who
died lasl May. He was a former
preSident and longtirnr: show chair-

408 ·General Bartlager Pkwy.
Ohio

.

Mcmbem of the non-profit Oh
KaD Coin aub meet the fourth
Monday of eacb month a1 the
!~owning House in 1\oliddleport. .

, .... EatlmaCae
111

ROOFING '
NEW·REPAIR.
' Gutters
Downspouts . •
Guitar Cloantni' ·•
Palfltlng
· ,
FREE ES'nMATES •. • · .

912-4405

lladle lbaeK Dealer
Your favorite artist
on Tape or CD

~

---- - ------·--·

LINDA'S

PAINTING . .

111111101-IITIIIOI · :

614-915-4110

,

a..., sm.

Po'llfi WatJr
Jet AraWie
TV&amp;VIIIto
IIIJII«&lt;IH Ar• I 'r
" - (304J 61S·16ST

H&amp;H ·

4131 mo. pet

614-742-2193

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIa

1

" Well , don't most ol us slow down
as we pass a roadway accident?
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Televi- Probably; that's human nature. Do we
sion just can 't get enough of a bad make aU-tum to view it again? Probthing.
· ·
ably not but that's what TV does
When cameras ·recoroed the col- when it gets its hands on lurids cenes.
lapse of baseball umpire John MeShThe lesser TV news magazines
erry on the field, .it was a cenainty have raised such exploitation to a
that viewers would see- his dyiog high an, playing and replaying.snipmoments 0ver and over.
11CtS of risque.o£ violent footage over
When helicopters taped deputies the COUfl!_e !Jf a program, keeping .
beating two Mexican nationals after, viewers hooked like a savvy dope
a Southern California freeway chase, dealer.
.
il was a given the footage would,
"Day-&amp; Dale" advanced the .tacenjoy 1\Je same hot rotation as a new tic recently. ·
MTV video.
The syndicated show. won a bidLast week was a bonanza for TV,t ~ ding war for a 20-minute tape showwhich reveled' in being the medium" ing John F. Kennedy Jr. in a lover's
that says "You are there" and then quarrel, and tbc'n made the most of it
kept pressing the replay button,.mak• by spreading five-minule segments. .
ing us all ... what? Eyewitnesses to across an entire week.
'
history with bad vision? Or just
Mainsln:am newscasts are pretty
voyeurs•
fair at playing. their own version of
Repetition of the McSherry the Vidcorama Deja Vu g&amp;rl)e.
foolage was nothing but an exercise
When a CNN camera was splalin maca~ tilillation. From the first, tered with blood whjlc filming HailESPN anchor Keith Olberml!'m cau- ian street violence in 1994, the image
tioned vi~wers lhey'd Jll'!)b~bly want was shown repeatedly. CNN turned a
to avert their. eyes. ,
dramatic courtroom shot of O.J ..

•

Um•itone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water ·

WE HAVE A· I TOP SOIL FOR SALE

992-3954 Of 985-3418 ,, · "I'
.. -·
. - ·· .. .. .. .
· · ·~

Simpsop, his eyes meeting -ours
tmough the camera, into a living logo
for its early trial coverage.
Authorized AGA Distributor
Not to ignore across-the-board
•
Welding
Supplies
• Industrial Gases • Machine $hop
ov~ruse of the Rodney King police
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Flibrlcatlon • Repair Welding
beating videotape and, in the riots
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
ihat followed the officers' state
Slaps -Stall$, Ral!lngs, Patio Fumlture, Fireplace
acquittals in the case, a moj:&gt; attack on
a trucker in Los Angeles. ·
items, Planter hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stutlll
And now 1he immigrant beating.
"No·Job Too Large or Too Small"
Of cou111e the footage desi:rves·to
. We will work within your budget
be widely seen and scrutinized, part
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-5861
of an · ongoing dellafe about law
I 08 Pome
!reel ·
Mason; WV
enforcemenl conducl and the volatile
issue of illegal immigration.
. . After a point - af1er we see it in
promo spots and repeauedly within
the space of a single evening -. the
news value is diminished, if not
erased. · .
Instead of being infonned, view- .
ers are pushed to knee-jerk reactions .
of fear or rage or sorrow, again and
again. One caller to a local TV station condemned re-airing's of the
immigrant clip as "inflammatory"
and divisive~
·
·
·fl.!!.!

lil-'_...,...-...;a....,.__.,.._..____......,..,.......,.

005

l'eniOnlll
CWQ,\J,I.P

r

~

DIITING SEFIIIICE '

I

1

.

•NewGaragu
•_EI~trtcal &amp; Plumbing
•Roonng
•Interior &amp; Exterior ·
Painting
Also Cllncrele Work
(FREE ESTIMATE$)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-41215

.

Pomeroy, Ohio
112111n

• Trail Rides
• Training
. • Boarding
.-'Lisaona

LONE OAK

30391 Roy olonits Rd.,

P.O. Box539
Syracuse, Ohio 457711
n.nt carsay
(614) 992-2800
Horse&amp;Tack

LillY'I
J.IWICIII
•Tree Trlminlng .

•Mowing (R_,dantlal
•nd commtrelll)
•Shrubbery
M•lntenence
o()dd JObl per rlqUIII

·No t..wn Too urge
or Too Smll/1

Plan AhHd, 'Call Today!

742·2803....,

............
Fill .

,.

Divorced, Single .0• Wldowod'IMeet Others From Tri-State Area
For Frl1nd1, Companions Or
Dorea, Well Eot Wilh Many
Members 18 And Over. All
Sereened With Photo1. Blue Collar Workers. Professionals And ·
Rerirees Welcome. Confidentia(

Salo. tro Funl.lt Worl&lt;sl Greenup,- .
KY, Man ·Fri. 1 P.M. ·9 P.M.
•

30 Announcements · · •
. '
Wanted; unwanted aluminum
.~ron , scrap metal. tm
. and pop"".

.

40 '

"

Giveaway .

-

"

5 Adorable 7 Week Old l&lt;lttehs ..
· To Good .Home. 814 -388-9680, ...

:,:Aft=er~e=-::P..:::
.M::..:.-~--~·

English S~apherd Full Blooded .
· Doesn't like Cars. 114--379-2542. •
Mixed Beagle, 7mos otd, hou.se,•
pet, oood home only. 304-ets-4850.
Mixed Terrier /Beagle Puppies, 8~

Weeka, Wormed, Male IFemaiK. ..

814-245-511&amp; Aller • P.M.

Older T,.-pe 3M Copier 614 -3tT.._

,0638.

.

•

1

Puppies, Males. "Mi!Ced, 81_4-.298-''

.• ..

. 1558.

Shredded Paper, 11t .Come. lst
Serve! Ba~k ~f Building, Pre•t.-·

room. Galhpolls Oail,.- TribUne 1125
Thtrd Avenue, Gallipolis, Oh~. ' · ·• "

Q)ct!

Siberian Husk~ rnlx, 2 monlhs
614-992-6679,
..'

60

Lost af\d Found

io

·

Found: Young Female Chow Mhr'
Founh A118flue VIcinity, 614·444i:
8101 .

lost: .A Small, Male, Brown , .
While Long Hai'rt:~d Puppy. H"aa'
An 10 Tag On Collar, Name Glt~
ino, Mis~ng From J:ureka Area.,D'•
Found Or Seen, Please Contacr
· lmmedialet.,, Vernon &amp; Etr•n·
t:touck, 814·256· 1987, 614 -448~ ·

8638, Your Help Would Be Much
Apprec:ietodl

70

.

Yard Sale

.

Gllllpolli
'
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yard Satoa Muat Ba Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m&gt;

lhe day before the ad Ia to rufl" ·
Sundly edition • 2:00 p.m. F&lt;idiy- '
Monday ediHon · 10:00 a.m. Sa1! ,
urdoy.
' •

Pomeroy,

'-

' .·

Mll!!!lePQrl
• . 'J'llffclnlty
All Yard Solei Mull Be Pald'n •
AdYancl. Deadline: 1:OOpm ~~•.'
day betor. 1ht ad Ia ID run, Sun·
day edillon- 1:00pm Friday, Monday ldi1lon 10:00a.m. Sarurdtty. • , ;

Yard •1•. Minersville, Elladenw ·
Watton rllidtnce, Thuraday ·C. ~
Friday, At&gt;ri 11 &amp; 12, 9·? •

80

Public Sale

•:

end Aucttoo

· .•

Rld&lt;'"-roon Aocdon Compor1,, '
tun time auctioneer, compl11'"

auction

' .

. ·,

cans. 304-576·2446.

32124 Happy Hoilow Rd.
Middleport. Ohio 45760
oa·nny &amp; Peggy Bnckles

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING

'

s-&amp;"'*

35 Years Experience
.
992·2364
1·100·119·394~

POMEROY, OHIO
.
Trash Removal • Commercial or Residential .
·Septic Tanks Cleaned &amp; Portable Toilets Rented.
Dally, wteilly f, monthly rental rates.

·.

IIVIIIFIUICIS

.'

Plan.Ahead, Call Today!
.
742-?803

,..,,.IIIIi &amp; ......,.,

Com.merclal

r-~~~~~=~~~~~!'!"'=~~-,

VIII IWOIIIIU

r.ke ••• ,.•• out at : :
,.1•11•1· Let •• do It i

No Lawn Too Large or
Too Small

BtllldSIIW Mlil

Thurs. April11, 7 p.m. ·
PVH Downstairs conference .room
Topk: is Hype~ipidemia ·
(high cholesterol tngtycerides)
Public is lnvtted

.. ,...

FREE ESnMATES ;. :

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Roofing - Rub!)er ~ Shingles ~ Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling
Decks ~ Bathrooms ~ Kitchens ~ Siding

(614t

. •

• •

511694 TFN •

992·2825

BIB ROiftll and .
· ClllftiUI:rlll
Residential

.

'

949-2168

For fiH Eatlmatet

• Tree Trimming .
• Mowing (Residential
and commerctaQ
• Shrubbery
Malnlenance
• Odd j()bs per request

New At lqleslleetronfes

106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

o-.,s~wm

NEFF REMODELING
. SERVICE

·Portable

By LYNN ELSER
AP Telllvlslon Writer

"

Wlnclclwil, Blown

lneuiatlon, 8tilrm :
Wlndowl, CJI rtgoe

SAWMILL .

Vide·o Deja Vu: TV guilty
of exploiting lurid footage

.'

537 IRYAN PLACI ~ '
..DDLIPORT lll:l-27'7f
otnce Hours: llon..fri:
1:00 l.m. - 3:30 p.m.
vtn;t a Alum. lldlttlllo
VInyl Replac-'o

lARRY'S
IAB'Nl:ARE

3, 4, 9 3TC

''

32oz.

J&amp;liNSULATION·

1/SMin

•

McCain Crinkle Cut ·
andTasbi
Tatas

3m... nortll
oil Rt. 7
Checlllt Out! I

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

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

614·992•7643

1...,.,..

bNIItM.
8llt., MII'CII30, April
Noon-5:00 P.M.

HouM Rtptlr I
Remodeling
Kitchen I Btlh
Rtmodellng
Room Additions
Sidlng,liioonng, Ptlloa
R..aONible
lnturera • Exp11rlenc:H
Ctll Wayne Neff

.&lt;

·'

r

•

BENNEnS

•1.00 off any.X-large 18"

·-

.•'
'
.,
..•

25-I0%0ftl

Allo-r

EXT. 3694 ·

All Kinds of forth Work

.'

'

1118D. .

912-5535

·•Room Additions

were

items.
During the day, a door prizes of
an Eisenhower silver doll.- wiD be
awarded every hour. AI 4:30 p.m.
a second prize of a $SO bill will be
given away, and the grand prize
a $5 gold piece will be awarded
An auction will be held ud
refresluncnts wiD be scr'Yecl

FREE ESTIMATES ·

Bulldozing and
Backhoe
Services
Housa Sltea and ·
Utllltlaa .

•

lb .

-

367..()266 -1-800-950-3359

·.

son.
source pollution. "We must stay
Representalives from the Meigs
"The conservation movement
well-rooted but it's time to sprud
Soil and Water Conservation Dis·could not have endured for a ~f
our wings and fly," said Chief
trict joined 2700 conservationists
century without strong leadership
Johnson.
nationwide in Las Vegas· to celeand
vision
from
thousands
of
peoKeynote speaker Orion Samuelbrate the 50 year golden anniverple
at
all
lev.
'
!_ls
of
participation,
"
son, farm broadcaster for WGN in
Sary of the National Association of
said
Joe
.
B
olin.
"The
conference
Chicago, spoke of lhC continuing
. Conservation Districts (NACO)
speakers,
workshops
and
town
challenge lo feed a burgeoning
an'd to prepare for leadership chal-.
world populalion whil'e maintainmeetings
designed
lo
shape
: lenges of the 21st Century.
.
ing the nlllion's soil .and waller
and continue thai strongleadersbip
• Joe and Janel Bolin of the
resources.
"In history books," he
.lradition.
Meigs District were amount local,
1 predicted, "farmers an(j . ranchers
NACO
President
Vap
recountll(i
state and fcdeta1 representatives
lhe beginning days of that leader-.. . will mnk as the true soldiers of
that participated in addresses and
peace since peace cannot be
ship as a group of 19 soil~ Waller
discussions headed by the nation's ·
conservation district officials met · achieved il,l a world where millions
.Jop conservation offiCials.
in Chicago in i 946 reiolving to · arc starving."
' Speakers included the U. S.
, NACO council members from
prevenl
lhe nation from ever
Seeretary of Agriculture Dan
all SO slates and lhe U.S. territories
returning to the dust bowl days of
Glickm.u;
USDA · Natural
debated and revised policy plalthe
"Diny
Thirties."
~ Conservalion CbiefPaul .•
fonns on dozens of issues includFrom
diOse
roots
NACO
has
Johnson; NACO President Gc:n1d
ing wetlands, lhe 1995 Farm Bill
broadened
to
tackle
moilem
chalVap, and keyilote speaker and
and federal funding of conservalenges including F!lfDI Bill policy,
radio bJoadcurer ·Orion, Samuel- ·
.ulf&gt;an conscrvatiort
and
nonpoint
tion pro~.
.
:The Oh Kan Coi11 Club wiU
holt its 34lb 1nnual coin l'lub
sfiow Sunday II die Hol~y Inn,
Gallipolis, 9 a.m. to 4:30p.m.
.JI is (roe and open to the public.
from ecrtiSS the tri-st,ate ;·
.-ea wiD •~ on display and for ·
Ule, ,old. silvel', ~ money,
~~ cards and other related

,

Owner: Ronnie Jones

''

MSWCD representativesattend national meet

Oh Kan Coin Club to hosttri-state coin

•

•New Gil,..
•A•moclellftO
•Skiing
•Aoollng
•P•Intlng

Umestone

. P.O. loz 729·ZZ
Pomeroy, o•lo 45769

GROUND BEEF

79¢

•,

•Additions

Treckhoe, Dozer, Bltckhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hra.

Howard Excavatin

····•rrs•••
•••••
c
••••
,
Health Care faciUIJ s11ldn1 a fall·tl••

w.

I

GIIIIIWINSelal

c •NewHolnM
-...... """'-··

We dig banment1, put In aeptlc
1y1tenui; lay llne1, underground bores.
For Frae eatlmaie call949-2512

FrH

CLERIVRECEPTIONIST/SECREIAIY

69¢

RICII'II, Oh. 45771
James E. Diddle

..

20-Yeors Experience • lruured

Sllmi'S
COISTIUmGI

ng Company

P.O. Box 517

· Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding

619 845-8434

110

J.D.

_...,.

t~rvlce.

llcenMd

. IIIB,Ohlo &amp;. Weat Ylrginio, 30•-

71'3-5115 Or 304-773&gt;5.M7,

�..

•
•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
. .
'

PchMror• Mltlapart,Of*'
REA Cro••word Puaale

.. ==
.....
.1--10
....,.....,
.......... -- ,.=.s::.

PHJIJJP

ACROII

ALDER
llllidllndiM
3-4bt.,
lot. - bt~k"'garaoe.
·
Syracuae,
2•11.a

t . . . t - 8141182 5315.

• 81 ~rooms. 2 112 BI!M.

Brick. 3

llllto From Golllpoio, 0.. t4t , In-

Ground Pool, ftt4-...te-oo31, Or

8to4-44t-o564.

TWo bedroom home in Pomeroy,
HUD a~. f300 will1 dopOiit,

,.ge, 8t4-742-1802.

tlt8-7244.

'

,_r Condi- 3 Bodroom. 2 Fu•

Vine SI!Mt GoiNpoii' t-I00-49034VV.

Two bedroom hoult, c:arpeted,

Konrnoro dryar. Kanmoro polflblo

AJ'¥limt W.lhlndl.

.

Hemtoc:to Gr1we Rcl, -

wincii!Wo.
- k -. hell pump.~··­
mlllll, niM &amp;erH, 81~-5015.

rtltrtnc ... cloaa to school. 304-

S~HV I CES

875-2780.

-1..:1..:0---------1

---;:;;;..;r.n:;---J

lo~

Eileen's Petoonol Care. Specializ·
ing in Alzheimo~s care giving.
CaM uo • We can help. 304-7622544.

'

Genanil Maintenance, Painting,

par,nted welghl·loaa product.

Gutter• Cleaned light Hauling,

s~~;.. r.

320 MObile Homes

Yard Work Windows Waahed

1g72 t2x85 Dolphin, ca. covered

304::_·713-:.:;
: · .:...:!10e3:.:.:...:2..:4::.:tnlday..:..:~·- - - I Commeric'al, Residential , Ste'tte:

S1,000 Weekly Proceuing Mall

1979 Baran 1,.110 With 7l14 Ex-

~:;-:iie~il"

4 345
t 8- '

pando 3 llodroomo, t Batn, Total

Gecrgas
sawmm,
haul your Ponable
logs_10 the
mill juatdon'r
call
~4-87~ 1957.
·

Electric With Sukup Gas Heat,
AC &amp; 2 Porches On 3 1t2 Acre

Wooded Lot Cion To Gallipolio
(Will Sell Stptralt) 614-448·

Learning &amp; loving orwironmenl lor

child care aervicea in my home. · 8543.
•ATTN : P9lnt Pleasarr
Close to school&amp;. Have rererenc·
Pap! Positions. Perma'lant full- ·es. Call for information 304-675- t880 Windlor, t4x70, 3 8odroom,
tl~ tor clerklsort8fs. Full Bene· lll53.
2 Batho, Elo&lt;tric Gas. CA. Woil

a

fitlt·For exam, application and

SANDIE'S DAYCARE - reason - Garage, Garden, Pasture,
3870, aam ~ 8pm.
able rates. rererences, playroom, Sreenad-ln Back P.,rch I Builthome environment, Texas Rd., On Sunroom, t--fannan Tra~ EJe..
AVON I All Areas .1 Shirley Chtooer, 6t4·9115 3-408.
mentary, 2 Acres +1-, Very Goad
Speers, ~75-t429.
Condition,
~2.000 No lend ConSun Valley Nursery School. nct8t4-25U813.
Able Avon Representatives Childcare U-F &amp;am-5:30pm Ages
needed. Earn money lor Christ·

2· K, Voung School Age During

mas bllle at hOme/at work. 1..aDO·

Summer. 3 Days per Week Mini-

992·6356 or 304·882-2645, Ind . rrum6t4-448-3e57.
Rop.

Wnl
Babysio
t Child
In Area.
My Home.
Infants
Too. In
Rodney
Ref- ~ . ~~~~~~~~:=~
Rudand 81oa ah8t'noon shlh, call 8t'oncos Available, 6t4-245· 5887 tiilt llfookwood II 14176 3 Bed·
before 211m· 81H42-t033.
Anytime.
·
roomo, 2 Baths, Oiohwloher, C/1,
~•,
Oecl&lt;, 15 FL Above GroUnd P.,oi,
.,.,stiESS DIRECTOR
Ps
Primootar ~......,,. Oioh, New OutWill' Do lntllflor Or Ex18rior int-SIX FIGURE INCOME
IF'
lng, Reaoonabl• R.too, Experi- bulking 0.. tl2 Acre Lot located
Sele1 ••·
,-negemenr 11'18nce
.-.ced, Rehtrenc:ee. For Fr" Eali- 20 Minutes South On SR 7.
Exp. Hoipful. Nalionai Co.
Paved Road, $32,000 090, llo(2t4) 680-84t 4
tnllel, 6 t4-:wi-67S5.
.bile Home Can Ba Sold Soporate-

Babyaitter needed in my home,

live Bait

-

440

530

Apartments
for Rent

Earn $1000&amp; weekly stuffing anvelopes at home. Be your bon.
Starr now, Na &amp;xperianca. Free

nell with peopte you
NOT to &amp;end money
mall unlll .~u have
the offering. •

and

'"'
.......
3br, 2bath, $1799 down, $2751
month. Free delivery &amp; setup.
Only ~Jt Oakwood Homes, Nitro

the

supplies, i~. No obligation. Sand
s A.S E to p ea""'e un·t tL P.O Commercial building fOr rent In
. .95. 09 rw1"" s' 1 ' . F.l center of downtown Middleport.
Box t 6 ' nte&lt; pr nos,
2500 sq. It, 614-992-245V.
32719.

,

WV. 304-755-5885.
New 14118o, 2 or 3bedroom. Only

maka 2 payment&amp; to move ln. No

"FAST FOOD FRANCHISE'

Earn up to $t,OOO weekly stuffing

Food Business For Setal Alford-

envelopes at home. Start now. No
ellperience. Free supplies, lnformation . No obligation. Send dlf
addressed stamped envelope to

able, Low Overhead Operation
With ·E"x:cellent Location And Income Potential. Full Training, On·
going Support &amp; Advenlling Pro-

E•prliss Depl 38, tOO East
Whites tom!~ Blvd., Suite '148·345,
Cedar Park, TX 786t3.

vided." Good Torma. Some Financing Poaalbla. Und,l~ 25K,
Ground Floor ~!Unity To Join

t;:arn up to St,OOO'a w,ekly atutting envelopes at home. Slart Of1t/i.

No erparience. Free oupllfles, in-

formation . No obligation. Send

sell-addrellad &amp;tamped envelope to Bucks Dept t72, 3208-C E.
Colonial Dr., No. 308, Orlando, FL
32803.

Easy Work I Excellent Pay I flo :
&amp;embfe Producll at Home. Call

Toil Free t -800-467-5566 EXT.
t2170.
F1,1ll or part lima positions avail able. Pliny Truck Stop. '304-9372456 or 304-937-2766.
Help Wanted -' lor greenhouse &amp;
farm, at so truck driver, 614-247-

36 44 01 6 t 4. 247 -4304.

•

Livo-in care taker 1ar elderly wooo·. an, 24hra, 5daya. References re"'ired. 30ol-675-485t.
. Need 5 ·P eople To Sell Avon,

614 -"11-3358.

Need aomoono to plOw garden in
. Middleport, 514·992-3815 alter
5pm or anytkre uaahandl.

No Experience N-ouryl $500
To $900 Weekly /Potential Processing Mor1gage Refunds, Own

payment• after 4years. 304-7555566

·

New Bank Repoa. Only 4 lah. Still
iowarranly. 304-75S..7191'.
Price Buster! .New 1o4x:70, 2 or
3br. Only $ii15 down, $t95/monlh.
Free delivery .&amp; setup. Only at

540 Mlscelllneous

2 Bedroom Upstairs Apertment
300 Fourth Avenue, Gallipolis,
UtiitiOI Paid, No Palo. Reference I
Depoolt, 6t4·148-3437

"Loraiio" prom

mwu,.

11 """'""

Sizes &amp; Styles To Choose From.
Also, Close To Gallipolis 2 Miles
Out On Neighborhood Road, 22

to adverttse "any preference,
limltaflOn ordiScrlmnat!On

ll8Md on I8CO, DOlor, reltglon.

""ke any SUCh prafirence,
limitation or ~liOn.'

MEIGS·COUNTY: Beautiful Country Lots • Juat Opened . Near

Thls~Willnol
'lcnowllngly accept
advertisements lor reel-le
which Is In vlotalloo ol tho law.
intonnod tho

n.....,..._

t 1 •n•-.,..·
- I n lhia neuopaper
are available on an equal

opportunitybe81s.

Postal &amp; Gov't Joba $21 /Hr +

Camper &amp; lot: Holiday Hills, Out-

Bonofill, No Exp. Will Train, For
Appl And Info t~•• J08S
POst.~
Start St2.08 /Hr., For E•am And
Application lnlo. Cal! 2t9-780830t Ell OH579, OH58t 9 A.M. •
0 P.M. sun -Fri.
PSYCHOLOGISTS
Now Hiring Licensed Ph.D. Poy-

building, Excellent Condition! AIC,
Sower, Fishing, Boa ling, Et&lt;.
15.900. 6t4-894-310t .

t 112 Story, 3 Bedroom&amp;, Free
Gao, Back 01 Addioon, Ohio, Re·
ducad $37,500, 614-387-7259,
8t4-448-tDel.
2btdroom, In Flaorock, now roof,

chaloglata &amp; Malter Level Pllni-

new porch,

310

Homes for

new

Sale

hal water tank.

Applications available at Village
GrHn Apt1. 149 or call 814·SKa2·
371t. EOH.
1 Bedroom 13 Room Apartment,

BEAUTIFUl APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wesowood Drive

Furnished.
2 Bedroom
Across From
Park, AC,Apertme~
No Pets.

Carpet &amp;
Vinyl Solo:Rllloiiohon
Carpett_
614--«8-7..,...
7 N:
•

Notdtd. No Selling s.nine Appolntmonto, For
Fret prag;am, 8-5, Tap Wago, 1 ·
eoo-823-1711.

'

300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpri111, Jack~on, OH

t

No Psto. Reltrtr~ce, Daposit Ra"'ired, 6t4-446-t519.

ground pool, hell pump, ,_toOl
Th•..aiding,
btdnlain.
bothIn
.. .
and
on 2- ec•••
BradbUrr, $37,500 ~ogotl•bl•· 1148112-at80.

042A.

¥

'

•

Roglotorod Shihozu puppieo.
reM~

Friday, malts, $300, cash,

~"537

~

"528
~ ·

toys

teacup, AKC,

lholl &amp; wormed, 6t4-887..$404.

570

Musical
lnttruments

f'o-1

Electric P.,lo With Breaker Box
$too: 6t4-387-1l219.
Electric
Scootero
And
Wheelchoira, NtwiUiad, Van 1
Car Li~ Installed, Stalrgfidu, u~

CONSOLE PIANO
raopon~ble party Wlln!Od.,
melcaiow monlhly peymonll on

Gas Grill $35, .Large Oreaatr
Wilh Hutch Mirror $35; Shltrl
Edge Machine $.tO; Exerci1a
Bike, Extra large .SH~ $25, Bar-

bell Sot $50, 6t4-3117-0631.

II

''

tUB Dodge Omni , 4 Door, 5 $750, .14-387-0323.
:
SpMd, 2.2 Motor, 02,000 Mlloo,
St ,300, 080, et4-258-t233.
t986 Honda 450 Nigh r Haw~ ,
tlreet bike, ort11 4,000 miioo, ex--o
t888 lleroury Couger Xl, loacltd, callent condition, $1600, 614·742- ~
PS, PB, AC, PW, 302, ,_ tires, 2153.
'

199t Honda XR80R U~ Ntw; i
_M_uot~S.O=I.:.$900=·.:.8.:.14:..:-38:.::.:.7-1l.:.239=·-:

1888 Flrebi;d, automatic, t·topa, _'1883 300 H~nda 4x4, V.G .C.!

t800 Goo Prlzm 18 Valvo, Air,
Automadc, POL. 9t,OOO, Very Dependable, Second aw-. ~.vo5,
8t4-245-t106.

1-4,000 Firm, 8t4-3e7-7577.

'
· '.

II

&amp; Motors
750 DA•ts
......

liiiii'S;,;
·~forSiiiiiS.ioi";;-Fi(.:;.j. •..•.
1983 Searay

PW, sunrool, air, 5 speed, delayed wipers. security alatm tYI· '
tem, 4 door, 80,00Q miles, very •
r;ce, $3400, 8t4- 742·2t2~
1891 Pontiac Firebird V-8, TTops, loaded, Alarm; 44,000

4

dy Cabin, 350
rMnt· InCluded, 6t•l-.,18-t

tor 7 P.M.

t987 Citation Open Bow t8 'Ft.

so.-.

1995 Cadillac Sevilla SLS Diamond White 12,000 Mi._a, E,liCellent Condition, After 5 P.M. 814-

446-6.585.

•

93, excellent condition, 1SO hp. •
Mercury Black Max 08 engine, :

45 lb. lhrultor ~oling moU&gt;r, drive

on trailer, 2 Pfopl, motor 1'111 less ··
then 100 hrl. 'tbu can nt the water on fife for $8,500. Everlings

Or

TraceJ, 4dr, air,

1995'

5&amp;pd, 13,000ml ..
wfgray interior, dam·

·
79

84 car hauler,

Cry~er

Cordova, 45,000 min,

•xcellent condition, factory warranty, 1 SK miles, $11 ,600, 814·

892-271t .

New

a•• tarlka, one ton truck

21

":-:

,

' .

21111fwlGUI

-

Romlin

.

==~:._:
-"·~.

1o

... ::·•

~~=
c.t-

--

.... .
•· '

Do you like· authors who tell you
.t1:=:"or
what they think you should be doing,
tina
••
often with no discussion of the pros
GW.CMatcollo ~
43Ciwcul,._...
and cons of their proposals? If so, ~
44 Spal-.n
might like Matthew Granovetter'a iat- lm+-t41--- ' .
est book, "Bridge Additions 16"
47 Flealdtl
(Granovettier Books; 800-525-4718;
• .Golf page
$15.95 p.p.).
'
110 o.natlc
' .
material
.
This 144-page llook is aimed at seri(abbr.)
. :· :
ous partnerships. It contains many '-...1.-i-...L......L52 !lei-' ... ~
. good ideas, and a few with which I
, don'tarvee at all!
This deal highlights a useful declarer-play principle. West leads his
by Li.lla Clinpos
." .
fourth-highest heart .a wnsl your conc.t.brltr Ophir ayplogtame: . . c,..t.d from~
peope., • • pr.n
E a c l l - i n h - - k l &lt; -. , ......,&lt;M, loqwjo r
tract of three no-trump, East playing
the queen. What is your plBII of camvx
RFAADDK
AVJ
TVJ
'V
paign?
After wil)lllng the firllt trick with th.e
EUPAU
BNM
VJLXUPJH
VWTNRX
heaR-king; you willliave io broach the
diamonds. However, if you lose a diaFJWPTPXDK
UVR
UD
'. '
mond trick, there ia a danger of a
lethal spaoje switch by the defenders. ·
AUVMWDR
D J XU F Jtp V R T.'
'
One Une is to play a club to dummy'&amp;
queen, followed by the diamtind jack.
RAUI!VS . .
Even If that finesse loses to West's
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'I b&lt;ineve in rules. Sure I do. If there weren't any ..
queen, he mighl not be able to attack
rules, how. could you break them?" - Leo Durocher.
spades with effect.
In lhe book, Granovetter says thai
'
the best !hie technicaUy Is to cash the
dillilond ace before playing a diamond
to .dummy's 10. Here, though, if·West
discards a heart on the second diamond, East will switch to spades fo'r
sure. True, West might throw a club aa
be baa the spade ace aa an entey. But '
East might find the spade switch Illyway.
G~novetter recommends playing a
diamond to dummy's 10 immediately,
without cashing the ace first . He
points out lhat it will be harder for
East to find the spade switch as he
won't have seen a signal from hla partner.

THE BORN LOSER
~

,-

..

~

.r

~

.
..

I

rI I

M0 L 8 I

WleiYOO R.A'IW ~ lr-1 · OO'«XJ'ffilt-IK.'100 CO lDSfllL
[),)~~
lt:X»..Y!

I I

•

8

ST E

"A vacant mind and a vacant
lot.· a grade school teacher
~~c_t~~~~·. "will both collect

•

'

PRINT NUMBERED LETIERS
IN THESE SQUARES

I I• I, ·I•

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS' TO
GET ANSWER
.

•

' ~-

SCRU1LETS ANSWER$

t8114 lnnobrooic, fully loaded, lots

Of IXtra~, 11fl. SeriOUI inquiries ~ •

only. 304-875-6803,

Egoism • Sworn ~ Onion - Bodily " DOING NOW
Somewhere down the road you will be sadly wishing
you had done the things you aren't DOING NOW!

In the
.. .CIG1SI(Ied Stcll011.

Sovine• You'll

: '

-----;;-=:::~:::::--- . ·-

one set R.H. Lodioo Square Two
go11 ciubo, 3 otru 9, P.W. and' lady 5t93. .
Hogan grafite shalla drfwr and 3
&amp; 5 waod' 6t4-DD2-6t04.

. . . 11

k! a pOtil

Clmpers &amp;

Uoed Car Dolly Wllh Spece sns.
Totll Bar St-25, 6tol-lloiiH782.

3toe.

•••

27 At no ,.....,

.Wpaaa

Motor Homes
'·
1880 Holldey Rambler Filth Wheal ; ·
$5600, 6t4-M-2902.

/

~

24 Typil or iiiitt ·

8

"·

SE RVICES

'

••

Equipment Uaod Caro. 304-458- -:-:-:::------- ~

720 ll'ucks for Salt

Home

Improvements

• '·

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFtiG

~

i

t948 model Chevy pickup, 5

lifetime guarantee . .....
lurnlahed. Call . ,•

.....

,

Or (6141 237- ·::

windows, very restorable, 1500.

Waterprooling. Es- -.

304-578-3t58.

~

•

t982 iluzu pickup, 4' cyl. 51.-: · - : - - : - : - - - - - - •
apHd, 70,000 mllol, nice, $5500, Appliance Part1 And Service: All ~.
6t4-DD2·2&amp;84 aflllr epm.
Name Branda Over 25 Yeats Ex- : 1
tg88 Chav~ tl2 Ton V-8, PS, PB, perience All Work Guaranteed

Orlando, • Hotel NIQhll Near Dil·
ney, Can) Use Anytime, Valu.,

$300, Sell For *tOO, 814·523Tra.:tor hydraulic fluid S1t.19t
!igei. Sidor'S Equipment 904-675-

Pine Hoedboatd 0 . - Size W.· 742t or t-800-2n-3et7.
. torBed$t00, 8t4-4olll-808t. '
Wanted To Buy: 400 -600 Bulk
· Rainbow sweePer with anach- Milk ,Tank In 9ood Condition,
monta. 304-675-t725.
. •.
6t4:!185-t922.

French City l.taytag, 8t4·448:
Air, ""to, 15,8g5, 8t4-448-4225 7N5.
C.Uitor 4 P.M.
.
C&amp;C

General

Home

Main-

G11C 5-lS. -Pain~ Condidon, Aoilng $3,4a5, 1888 renenc•- Pai~ting, vinyl aiding,
carpen1rf, doOrs, wjndows, balh1,
Regal 2 Door, Cook
8t4- mobile
home .-.pair and mara. For
tlltltl

oi48-0t03.

620 Wlnted to Buy

-1.

Mo-.

~~a~ma~ call Chat, 014-892-

;~­

.•· ..

!
!

-·

I

R1 2 N, 6mileo, Pt Ploaoant, WV.

Send lor your 1\stro-Graph pie- .
dictions
for
the year ahea6..by mailing $2
ASTRO·ORAPH
and SASE lo Astro-Graph, rlo !his newspaper, P.O . Bo• 1758, Munay Hill
Station, New Vorl&lt;, NY 10156. Maki! sure'
to state your zodiac sign.
TAURUS
(April ~-May 20) Consider
BERNICE
progressive me)J!Jlds and techniques .
BEDEOSOL seriously today ·rather than adhering to
comfortable routines that have not produced in\rxeiS&amp;Ive· resuns.
GEMINI (Ml!Y 21-June 20) If you leal
.
'
110meone ia lrying·to cheat· you In a com·
mercial lnvolvemen! todaY, do rt01 hesi·
~ I
' ' tale to 8Jk probi~a queationa. Demand
ellict !acts and figurtt.
CANCER (June 21\July 22) Keep complalnls to yourself ~ay, because your
wadriesday. Aprl ·1o. 11188
aisOc:iat,es will recognl~o whal annoys
Severat unuatlll ~ to improve . you and they will Hek ways to lllleviate
yoilr financial P.Oiillon migl;1t P'1P up from your frustrations.
time to hme In •the ve-r Jlhead. Bringing LEO (July· ~3-Aug. ll2) in career aRueoutaidera into· thli picture could deCr8aS8 , licins today, do not i8ly on otltare to pro- I'
lhltlr tlfecta.
teet your lnteretta arid poaitions. You will
AWl (IIM'oh 21-AprN 11) l!tware o1 have to gUard your own fon.
Pytmic vtdorlel. Examine Y9U" ~ VtFIQO (Aug. 13-a.p!, 12) Your chart
calllfully -....... you will not watttiD .-y ' shows that yqu could have good luck ,
too la'll!t a priCe .to get wljat you lllin~ ,. today, but not neoenarlly in material you wanl. flrlel, treat ytitlrMtf to a bir1h- waya. Your good fortune mar provide

~

410 Houses for Rent

15-1/2 Vine Stree~ Gallipallo, 2
Bedrom Upetaira Duploi ~­
$3351Mo. Water Paid, Deposit, 1
Raltor- et4-441-24t8.

v t.. .
r:.:~

-2 Bedroom Houae, 2 Bedroom.

"'""''

Triilor In GlNipoiA, 814-448-N4g
For lnlonM~t
·

,j( f

~~~~r~~~~~~
No
Dopooil

1.

In Galilpollo, ·t Bath.

·:;u

p n~

&amp;

it~

S311!5/Mo. 8t4-4oOe-

·~'·/

2100.

...- ~~.
~'\l .\ •

,.
I

20 lllalnt

But

'

RE NTA l S

~ta.

....... ...

tllntc:tfon

10Archtt.c:t s-Jnen

Complete the chuckle quoted
~V filling in the miuing words
L--.J-.Jl.--L...-L......J.--1
you develop lrom stop No. 3 below.

motor. B,asement storm Wlndowa
wlscreens: Two 42 a: 30 114 wide.
Three 34 112 x 17 wide. 30+882·

Good Condition, $175, 8t4-3792720 AFTER 6 P.M.

12111emt131n . . . . . . "
11~
' ',

' 161.--.-.~~:.;F,...:-~;....:1....=~---l1G)

Two Upstairs Apanmenta: 1 Furniahed, 1 Unfurnlahed, Private
Entrance1, No Peta, References t

Geht Round· Balers, Mower Con ditioners; Disc Mowers, Disc
Mower Conditionert, Forage
Equipmenl Sales And Servjce.
Altizer farm Supply, 814 ·245·

Paaa

Nortao
3NT

wheell, radamrs, floor mats, etc. ~
0 &amp; R AuiO, Ripley, WV. 304-372- •
31133 or t-800-273-9:129.
•.

3.t' camper, shower and tub

94 Muotang, V-8, auoo, all power,

.

West

K .A

810

Wanted to 'buy· Z·5 acres, call

'*'

*eM's
Arclllllald
I Prtnter'a

21 Ctw' 1
•••
23 ~ .lullli! •:.

1e·. $1,300, 1514·

toet.

Etectr(c Crahmatic FuH Size Bed,

I

6 Shrll•ncl
piping
7 AulharLivln

t..

300 lnterna1ional tractor wtplow1,
diiCI, grater blade &amp; bush hog.

btautlful 2ac 011. public water,
Ctydo Bowen Jr., 304-578-23311.

Nonnan-

Accessories

Lawn mower 1yr old, 22• ·cut

~-

sc.rtat '

s w- 11111e

f
~·--,r.A_R-.:-R-r-U_L-r--i/
__,~t,__,~.F---"1'--.a.l---" ~ ·

plus utilities. 814-867-6205.

Appliances:
Reconditioned
Washer&amp;, Oryer1, Rangel, Retrlgratora, 90 Oa~ Guarantee!
French City Maytag, 614· 4o46·.

3~.

4

33 Parcltld
:u c··rndllr abbr.
311 Greelo latllr

Auto Parts &amp;

right Iron~ good title,
'790
304-6 75-30 73 altar epm.

8048.

$4,800. 304-576-3t58.

-

1

Aui'toano. Dealer will lln'ange fi.
nanclng even if you have been
turned down elaewhtre. Upton

Five acrea,
aerator, near
Raclne,I18,000 can finance with

2:1.

31 Lcokadat
32 TV pro611 c•

1995 Ford Eacort LX Automatic, weekends 304-812-3529, weak- .
At:., Silver /Blue lntBfior, Cu&amp;el.te clays 6t4-iil2-23tO ask lor Greg. '
After 4P.II. 8t4-44Hltl9.

mint condition, $15PO ~ 614 ~892·

mulcher, 5hp Brlggo &amp; Stratton

¥re oJQeR7

long, Inboard /Outboard Motor,

Miles, $9,000, Neg . 6t4-379- teo HP, Good Shape, Price Roe••
2514.
8H 31! 118&lt;11.
tm-i!'OIG Piobit, 45,000mi., auto, 1093 StrUIDI 8811 8o11. 120.HP ~~
4Cyi, $8,1174. 304-675-e07• .
Motor 1"994, Many Ex:trail _ ~
:•::.:t0:;.,500::.:::-:·
e::t..:4-..:446:=.,-611=3=3·_ ·_ _
t994 lluotang GT, Rad, 5 Spaad, ;
•'
17• Tires, Premiu"l. Sound Sya· Bejo t T Poi Slylo bell boal, 19 -"'
10m With CO ICaosene. 6-14-368- model, purchaaad new in August ~·

9445.

'

t40¥1 MIJGt4 GAN

MONtY
-Oill&gt;ti5

..,.

Hey llolor, Wheal Hey Rallo. John
Oooro t2 Ft, Tandem Oioc, Price
R-nebltl814386 iiloOe.

GOOds

:£:-'
30-.....,.

by,......

l

-- r . St,500, 304-675-tao01.

1988 Ply. Horizon Auto, Sunroof,
Tinted Windows, Great Gas MI.,
.Nice Car, Sharp! $1,200, 614•

Ua11ey Ferguon lt2 ·square

Household

1 Fnt.,..(2

CELEBRITY C(IPHER

1987 Honda 125, 4 trax:, 2wd 4· \

IUIOm&amp;liC, $3500, 814-949·2045
or 6!&lt;,0411-2870.

JET

MERCHAN DISE

DOWN

By Phillip Alder

1Q80 Suzu~i GS750l, new bat·.'
tery, ' ma~ wheel a, carbureq,ra•·
have ·t.een jetted out, runt greatl- t

. AERATK&gt;N UOTORS
Rapairtd, New &amp; Rab!IKt In Stock.
Call Ron Evano, t-SD0-53Z·i5'28.

, 87118.

ur:r.... .

40Actrea

8t4·892-387e.

Tiro&amp;, 28 ·MPG, looka And Runs
Grntl $800 080, 8t4-379-2845.

'8 2tl.

610 F1nn Equipment

FER IT

on complete restoration, $11,900, :

1885 Ford E1C0r1 l, 4 Door, Au·
tomaric, AMfFM Ca11ane, New

piano.ooolocai~. Callt -800-2S8-

FA RM SUPP LI ES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

PAID .

·,.

aoklng peyoff, Sf7,500, 6t4-742· 1182-5632.
3142 ... 814-iVZ-51117.

Chairl, Call For Brochure, 61.t·

446-7283.

eope,lltt I g I R

Telling you .
what he thinks

BUTTER AN'
.EGG MONEY

t977 H.D., 3110 mllea, on cornpleiO • '
198• Nlllln Stntra, 4 C)'i. IU · restoration, $11,900, 814-982- " ·
tomatic, 91 ,000 original miles ,
very good transmi11lon, 11350, -36_7_8·- - - - - - - : - ~t877 Harley Davidaon. 380 milei' J ·
~1--742-1400.

1995 Grand Prix Sport Coupe,
auiDn'ltic, loaded. ilea ,_, 9,000
milta, ntver been amoked in,

Droll Maker Sowing /Cabinet Paymonto nn 'io;.,.fn
Witl1 Attachmtn\1, 6t4-3711-2tt8.
-- t -~~s-~t.e.

THUNDER
FER?

.,

Motorcydes .

760

Dining Room Table Witl1 6 Chalra,
1 Leaf,
Very
:;::~
can,
$350,
814Good
o448 Condlolon,
8021.

Twin Rivera Tower, now accepting
appllcalions for 1br. HUO subsid·
ized apt. for elderlY and handicapped. EOH 314-675-8879.

Tues-Sat 9..$, Sun 11 -5.

Telemsr~ltlng

Puppy Palace Kanntll, Boarding,

~-~no~cl1~~,.~c~f:"'~·col~it~t~4-~99t2-:280~=7,~~
mlnl•turaa,
Concrete &amp; Plaatic; Sap~c Tanka,
'"""N "".••·· aleo Poo-

Furnilhed 3 Rooms &amp; Bath, Up·
stairs, Utilities Furnlahed, Clean,

Scenic Valier,, Apple Grove,

lluweil Ave., 3bodroom. LR; DR.
large family room, doublit gsrlge,
~yrs old, $t07,000. 304-6764046
'
~~~~~~-----1 Nlco homo in Racine, ""go buid·
~
ing will houoo small bUointll,
Teltmsrketlng N-d. No Sell· also a one car garage, fenced
ing, Setting Appolntmontl, For yard, out of flood area. aaklng
FrH Prognom 8-5, Top Wage, I· 1-47.000 814-9411-211Do0.
SQ0-823-t711.

~~ ~::1~':: J::-:::=::-=::=~-:-'7-:--~

[Pricoo At ShooCale, Galllpoifa. ·

510

2 Acre•

excellonl oondi· ~~:[.~ole Adult Fleu. For,

Tony Lama. Guaranteed Lowa1t

Raferencea, Oeposll, S350fMo.,
814~8235. 814-446-0577.

892-~.

til110 GlS Hundi, ·amnm cesseno,

44 1

7t74.

$t,900 mostly. Contact Roy Lee
SM. 304-578-2152.

814-9411-2883.

,.~+~gs~A~ca~ts~I~J!:ioE~~~.

For Laue: 2 Bedroom Apartment
"" 65811 lion-Set
Partially Furnlohed Or You FumPurebred Mini Oochohund Pupish YourHII, Very Nice Rooms In
pitl, 1125, Hao tat Shoto &amp;
N~e Area, Gallipollo, .Contnll Air, 1BooJa By Redwlng, Chippewa, Worm,6t4-388·9t94.
Fan In Every Room, 814-886-

740

t980 Chavy Camero, $tOOO, 6t4-

llontl&gt;ly ftoa program need help?

mate and r.ma1a adult fleas. Far

THEIR

WI:IAT IN

LAMP!!

..

Alk R&amp;G Faect &amp; Supply, 1814·
DG2·2184 about the HAf'PY

l\mittd ticketl. 1·

114ktdl~

Opening lead: • 4

'·

air, new tlrea, Interior &amp; ext.rlor
good cond., 1700. t983 Honda
Magno V-•5. tO,OOOml., now tirtt
&amp; battery, Iota of ••tral, aaklng

JACK 3-X FLEA COLLAR. Killo

2NT

I SHOWED TH' C:OW
AN' C:HCCKINS
---'·M'I NEW

1090 Cou~ar LS. eo,OOOmi., luliy tiil4 Suzuki GSX 750R, t500mi.,
loaded, $8,000 .11rm. 304-875• - - 30ol-773-6tB6,
31158.

2111.

Soatll

BARNEY

- . 13500. 6t4-742-2357.

car,

IS ktclkiMI

Dealer: Sooth

245-5320 Anytime.

LabradOr Retriever wlpapera,

Stud
Puppiee,AllGrvomlng,
Buy, Service
Sell &amp; Tredio,
Breedo.
Mull Soli I Paymonto Wol,...mo, 814,388-

RtKepdonilt with typing, comput· 3 &lt;Bedrooms. 2 Baths, Porter
er-orianred akilll and boOkkeep· Road, Stare Route 180 Area,
ing, pick up applicatlo'! a1 Royal
Living Room, Fir~=·

K~;!';~·B,~~~F;;,:,•~:'.
100
S
i i
CeiJar,

Sire,IS1.t-311-2728. ·

~~t~-~~~~~~~E
s dayl/4

from
$244 ooCall
S3t5.
Walk oo shop
&amp;
movies.
8t4·4&lt;6-2588.
~quot! H!'\Jiing!lpportunlty.

Country P'urnltura. 304·875-8820.'

Racine. 814-992-84118.

'*-

2 48

•J.

z

aA K 4 3

cllotloltito color, female, tllmor.
good. wlchlidron, $200. 304-578-

~~;t

lor For Sale: 2 Acres, 2 Trailer
Hook-Upo, Be-n Bidwell, Porter &amp; Cha!:h!rc, 614-3C7· 70~0.

n

2083.

1:~t4-~;-1l;tB6~.f;;~:iJ
110ve, oven, 3

furnished, utililiel
pail:l. Deposit &amp;
relerences.
:ll4·882-2566.

.

aQ a 7
•A K 5
•A 7 3

Ton Rhoem Heat Pump, 1·800267-6308, 6t4-448-11308, t-800291-0091
.
t979 Pondac Bonnovlila, cruiH,

6

High Setlotactlon, Sallott Hours, · 3 Bedroom, 2 llalh Ranch, 2 Cor
Send Reaume To: CC. te84 lied- Garage, t 00 ,Joy Drive Allor 5:00
i~ SUite t06, lied,., OH 442511.
P."- 8t4-~41!-7!MO.

Room, Mud Room,

tank att up specials. Fish

I Pat Shop, 24t3 Jackson
Paint Pltaunt, 304·875·

ties Paid, Good Quiet Neighbor-.
hood, No Pels, Reference /De-1 $2,300 . 2 rocker glidtrl, alking
po&amp;l\ 6.14-448-t370.
$t50ea. Two tSgal. floh ltnl!l w1
Beach St, Middleport, 2bedroom, stand, aft exC. lnctudlng lllh $200.

haN down, 6t4-9411-2025.

oo -~ 33429 Fia-• Rd.,

p.m., S&amp;m*l 1:00 D

nace, 180,000 BTU' I, Upflow
S250; 3 U1ed Electric Furnace&amp;
15KW, 20KW, 251(W, 1 U11d 3

cians In Gotllpolio &amp; Vlcinsity For $40,000. 304-675-2327.
trail,

1942.

I Uotd Colomon DoWn Flow Gas Good Homo On]y : 3 Veer Old
Fumaco, 70,000 BTU'o, Comp1oto Male Black &amp; 'While Cocklii
$250: t Uud Johnaon G11 Fur- Spaniel, AKC Roglatorod, Good

2bdrm. ·apis., total electric, applianceo lurniohed, laundry room
facilities. close to school in town.

qraek side camp sires and lola,
112 acre, road. water, electric.

.

Ptdlgrooo Available, 8t4-448-

.-d, fuM slclrt, For ~ale Or Trade: Bloc~ 1 T•n
oize L, coot S300, ooklng $t50. UKC Pupo, Out 01 Smokey II,
304-675-88VII.
8t4-3811-t6t4.

Dyesvlila, 7 t/2 Acres With
Stream $6,500. tt Acres $6,500. Very Secuiudtd Building llopooit Required, 8t•·o148-1l284.
Si111 I Good Hunling Proparty.
Furnished
So Many Great lots You Need 450
To Call For AMap.
. Rooms
::---:-----.,.---.-II
OWner Financing. tO% Off Caoh
Purcheliea. Exampln Baaed On
tO Year Contracos with 4 Year
BaMoon Payment

our readers are hereby

Shepherd

Puppte1, From GtrrMn Imports,

Mei'Chlndlse .

Acres • $26,000 ONLY $t ,900
Down • $318.50 A Monti&gt;. 6 Acre~ ~ 2,00~ -,9~res • $14,500 . Two bedroom apartment in Po1 res - 1.,. ·
meroy, HUQ approved, $250/mo.

S81lamllloi slttUB or.nalional
origin, or any Intention 10

Hours, Call (909) 715-~0. E1t.
t35t, (24 Hours).

· GerNtrtc Pvpulalion, law

D 8;00

Oakwood Homes, Nitro WV. 30&lt;- Furnished efficiency, Pt Pleaaant,
all utilities paid. Parking. Oepaait
Hunting10n Baaed Company Wilh 755- 5885 ·
rt(juirtd $t9S'mo. ~75-n63.
18 Franchini In WV, KY, OH &amp; New Bank ~epos Only 3 LeftJ
·Furniohed Elllcleni:y 2 Rooms, .
VA, t-8Q0.3n-11260.
304-738-7295.
Share Bath, $195/llo: Utilltioo
350 Lots ·&amp; Acreage
Paid, 607 Second Avenue, Galli·pono.
8t4-446o4olt8_Ahar 7 P.M.
I!RJNER LAND
Gracious living. t and 2 bedraorn
·6t4''ns.8173
apartmenta at Village Manor and
GALLIA COUNlY: Eurekol Three Riverside Apartmentaln Mkldl&amp;Miles Out On Teena Run Road &amp; port. From $232-$355 . Call 6t4Chambers Road. County Water t 992-50114. Equal Houting OpporAilreolaolltteacMirtlslngln
5 112 Acroo • $9,500, ONlY tunilltt.
$t,900 Down t $t00.44 A llonlh.
this new~paper is subied to
10 Acres With Pond $14,000. 11 One bedroom apartment in Pt.
, 1tletF~11chFa~~s1 ~~~
Acres With Barn $t3,900. Many l'ltaoan\ no ptto, 6t4-992-5858.

01 968 '"'

AKC Shutzund Gormon

2 badroom apartment In ""-•or.
no pat&amp;, 5t4-992-5858..

Yards: FrH Eat1ma1e11 20 Years

-,.

Antiques

s:oo p.m. 814-1182-25211.

1995 14x70 Claylon 3 Bec:lrooma,
2 Balhs, CA, All Electric, Underpinning, Slclrting, EJ(tended War-

For Interview.

Drllo 01 Birth: 8131/V5, ljouHbrokon, 8t4-37Q.272&amp;

.

1182-22t8. .

892·5861.

Why Rent 1006 2 or 3' Bedroom
Mobile Home's Payment Aa Low
Ao $t80/llo. Only AI Oak Wood
· INOTICEt
llobilo H-. Barboumlio, WV,
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. 3 0 4 - recommer-ds thai you do bull- Limited 0118t'l 19,... doubl-..ide,

rd'o,

Pomeroy. Houra : M.T.W. 10:00

anteed Wagea, Paid Vacations,
Parr -lim&amp; Positions 814Full

Business
Opportunity

AKC Roglltered, Show Quality
Malo Cocker Spaniel Puppy,
Good Bloodline, Excellent Marklngo, lllactt /White 'a Ton In Color,

Buy or soli. Riverine Antiquoo,
tl24 E. Main Sir~ on R1. t24,

t and 2 bedrocm apartments, tur-

Cosmqto'logisl Wanted, Guar-

Maka Two Paym,enta, llovo In, 4
\loor0..Noto,304-73e·7295.

llconH. C

.... wv.

niahed and unfurnished, securily
dtpo1it required, no petl, eu-

Air Conditioner, Diohwasher, Utili-:

ly, CaH 7 Days, &gt;107-875-2022 Ext
05:!6CR

8oalll

Soltfl. .

Two and three bed;oom mobile Turkey, Arcflery, Gunt, Am'mo,
hamel, starting at 1240-1300. . Raloadln\4 Fiohing ~.::!'~101.

3 Rooms, Bath, Washer /Dryer,

New 14x80 2 Or 3 Bedrooms.

Sporting

Goods

sewer, water and trash Included,

•Q 10
•Q ••

1 2

unc OOWir

Vulnerable: Both

IIHutifUI Rlwr VIew, 2 llodroomo
In Ka,.uge, No Pet&amp;, Raioronces,

614·992·2187.

aKJIS3

PitS for Sale

AKC .RagiotorOd SIIO!Iieo, black &amp;
white, lemalo , $300 . 304-875-

614-256-639t Leave lleosage.

210

560

304-895-3243

520

aA 10 2

•J 9 7 4 I

Metal Roofing And Siding Gal -·
..nlltd. GolYIJumo And Palnted,
lt4-245-51119.

ami ..out Sandhill Rd . $350/mo.

Depoait, Foster's Mobile Homes,
IS14-.W1 -0181.

·
Eu&amp;

CJWI, linllla,

OFA Cordlled, $250, 8t4·2450ol33.

Will mow graoa and trim, 8t 4-

Dental Hyglono Po-.jlion o!lvail·
able. PSR; STM p,.ctice. Plana
Send Reoumo To: CLA 370 c/o
Gollipoilo Dolly lrib\!no, aze Third
Avenue, GatiljiO!i.ol, OH 4553t ,

Block, brick, plpoo, windate. Claude Wintara,
Rio Grande, OH Cell 814·245St2t.

e5

.

51

20n-.u.t

Weat

•• a
•to

..plea; Champion Bloodline, Sire

RM. 0.. Duty Medico!.

Cruiie Ship Posiliona, Tra~el To
Exotic Places, $200 -$900 Week-

Building

AKC Rogiotorod Rott W&lt;tilor Pup-

Traoh ·Paid, NO PETS, On 554
Near l'orltf, 8t4-388-tt00.

ranty, Other Eltntll St9,500, Ahar
6 P.M. 6t,__t5.

•Q

t-IJ00.842·1305.

SUppl...

$325/mo. 304-773-5t65.

ly, But Must Be Moved For
$1 7,000 Firm, · No tand Contract
Serious Inquiries Only Pleaae,

In Yord Worlc, Mow, Edgo, Weedta~ Etc. 614-4olll-701..

•KJI054

GraCIIII ShoP ~t GroominQ. F•luring Hydro Both. Julio Wobb.
Cal 8tU411-023t.
.

Will Do Sewing &amp; Alterallona In
U~ Home, Pteaae can 814-2450341.

448.72117_

550

1•ll70 atl electric, ~bedroom ,
2bathl furnished , in Melga. No
pets. Rtfertnc81 required . $100

Certified Home Health ANea
Need.e d For Home Health Care
Call 1-800· 506· 8773 8 A.M. -4

a

'

for Rent

Water &amp; County Water, Building,

salary inb cal: 708-284-tl39 Ext

C.I~Y

Solao, Love-tt. Chaira, Raclno
lng Sola Wllh Mall:hing I
Roell nor Corbin 1 Snyder 814-tt7t.

420 ~lie Homes

•• 6 3

•

low monl'ly ,.,..... ~~~.
FREE color .-Jog.

2btdroom, cia, Coul'!try aettlng,

porch, unMr pinning, exc. cond.,
$6,500 lirm 304-e75-773e.

6t4-3e8-0o029.

StDD.oo.

•

•Lee! mo.
•&amp;our. . . mllt

171110wd,..an 115 Edgior - Poe
......b...llaof

a&amp; 4

ComniOidol/ Homo '"*"11om

teoo, 8 t 4-44t o08IIII.

welcome. Coli 304· 773-57U to
011 up appolnornont.

F

5512.

WI/11HOME
Buy DHCT and SAVEl

clines On Both Ends M'lching
Recliner Excellent Condlllon,

ln~luded, in Ma1on
near park, conatruction work.,,

13 . . . . llulllllv
14,..._•• .....1111ortOtdll1r
11 " " ' -'•

t888 T*• Von' ~~I Runo '
Good St ,600. OBO, 8t4-245"

AutOs tor Sale

710

WOI.IFTAHNING BEDS

l ight Blue Sacti&lt;!n•l ·Couch Re-

TWo bedroom, , _ corpo~ otoYO,

dtpooi~

for Sale

oa:z.sas.

nlcoltnd - n. depoolt required, waal'\er &amp; dr~tr. Whirlpool
no inalde pelt: lhree bedroom Wlloher.
P.,rtablo GE dryOf.
hOuee, dopooil roqul.-d, no inoldo able Sanyo
wuher. 304-075·
peii;814-DD2-30VO.
t367.

rivet

3 - . . . ,.. $35,000, 814-iii2-

SSI2.

.

10 people who need to
weight &amp; make money, 10 try

Free
Info. ~~,;::~~::~::~~m
Stamped
I
Dept. 131, 1!)0 East

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Hauee on Railroad

no- willllf on oontr10t 8t4-

cebteltraah

Ftve bedroom. thr" bath home,
able ratea, tlewlble hours, have

2bedroom,

battfMnt. Rtferences.. Deposit

Wuhar Ukt New, 1 Year Warranty $205: Caloric 30 inch Eioclric Range Alrrond, $150: Skoggo
Appllanc... 5t4-448-73g8, 78

Balho , 24'' t8' LR, PR. Kitchen,
Septrate Utility Room, All In E•ctllent Condition 0.. 113 Aero Located In Green Township. Ovtroized Garage, 1'120' P.,rch, Sa!Oiito Sy01om Included, $52,000
Call 81ol-oloit -tD08 Alter 4 P.M. 0.

Er&gt;1PLOYMENT

Newly dtcor&amp;1ed

Gold US : Mogle Chef 30 Inch
Gu Ron~, Almond Ste5, Hotpoint Ralr~ S150: Whi~

:a.-10~

11 .....

~ng · siN t2, poarlo
lind -lne. 21 bunone on ""'*.
paid s.&amp;o. Uk1nD St50 firm, et+
lilt ...1Joo.
.

Hotpoinl Wuhar Harvoot'Gold

1S.S; Kenmore Dr_ytr Ha~tll

304-875-3t00.
No- »H75-6te2.

78 ICJW m'l with thrae blldraam.
""' 111111 bric:t&lt; I'M&gt;mo, fvH ponda,
polo born building, twa car ga-

Babwalnlng In mr homo, roaaon-

31:1Jd;OOfll, niW, In twllord. $3501
mo. • ulllld... 30.t-112· 201e or

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~~~;:!;:~:IIL..J.:..::~~~'
LlmiRA (BepL 23-0ct. 23) Today it will
not be wise lo begin projec:ls you sense
you may not have «me to complete. It will
b-e betler to wall unlil your productive
urges are more dYnamic.
SCORPIO (OCt, 24-Nov. 22) II you discusa.a confldentia~maner with a pal who
can1 keep aecrets today, he or she might
tall the one pareon who should rtOI hear
this information.
.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Your ,
financial allaira might b8come more comptlcated lhalt utual tOday, btit Wyou manage mlttere shrewdly, you can survive
the onslaught.
.CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jitn. 11) Make
IUI8 tltat you lltd your mete are in oomp1e1e IICICOid today reg.lloog crucilil dtlciIlona.
not 10 step on eliCit oiher'a toes.
AQUARIUS(...,, 211-feb. 11) Today you
might hitv8 to deal with • person who
lingered you In the peat. The - r will
not 1141 re101ved auecelllfully Myou atill
hold 8 grudge.
Pll 01!1 (M. 10 lillnlh 10) Title Will not
be good day to fllllnvGived In f!tertda'
dllnl. Do not Ill them poke their - '· ·
!No Y9U" .,...,_, eflhll'.
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�PorMroy • Middleport, Ohio

H.onesty is best policy wheh wa·nting to be 'just friends'
Ann
Landers

s,.._

I,.,, L0J A11,eln

1't.l.a
...t Cte·
MDn S)'Jidicl-=.

Dear Ann Landers: I am a 76year-old widow. For 20 years, I've
been sharing my home with a dear
friend who would like to marry me.
but I don'tlove him. "Stanley" has

been· good to me,' and I appruiate
everything he's done.
TWo years ago. 1· went to a
. reunion and met · the man I was
engaged to when I was 18. He has
been a widower for 10 years. It was
love again at first sir,bt. Since then,
"Leopold"· has been taking me out
to dinner and lunch every couple of
weeks. This has caused many arguments with Stanley.
I' ve told Stanley that Leopold is
just a friend, but the love affair is

-Community
The Community Calendar is
published as a free service t~ non· ·
profit croups wishing to announce·
meedftl aud special events. The
calendar is not designed lo promote
sales or
raiserS of any type..
Items are printed as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of ~ays.
·
tUESDAY
ROCKSPRINGS •• Meigs County Chamber of Commere'e luncheon
Tuesday, noon at the Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center. Special speakers will be Meigs County DARE offi.cer Many Wood and canine officer
•Steve : 'eater and dog Calypso.

IU""

. LETART FALI.-S -- Karen Smith,
·parent mentor, will be at Letart Falls
·Elementary School Tuesday from
8:3()..11 :30 a.m. to meet with parents
about the new policies and procedures for special education. . .

calend:~r-

Center, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy,
Tuesday.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT .. Middleport Literary Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. James Diehl. Reviews
by Mrs. Roy Holter and Mrs. Richard
Owen.
RACINE -- Karen Smith, parent
mentor, will be at Southern High
School Wednesday from 8:30-11 :30
a.m. to meet with parents about the
new policies and procedures for special education.
POMEROY .. Parent meeting at
Meigs High School Wednesday at
6:30p.m. to discuss new policies and
procedures for special education.
Childcare will be available. Refreshments will be served.

THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS ... Tuppers
CHESTER .. Chester Township Plains VFW 9053, Thursday 7:30
Trustees meeting, Tuesday, 7 p.m. · p.m. Refreshments at 6:30p.m. Nom- .
town hall.
ination of officers.
POMEROY -- Meigs County
Board of Elections 9 am. Tuesday
board meeting and official count of
ballots from March primary.

POMEROY -- Meigs County
·Extension Services presentation,
"Creating a Perennial Border", 7
p.m. Meigs County Senior Citizens

LETART FALLS .. Letart Falls
Elementary PTO., 7 p.m. Thursday.
SATURDAY
POMEROY .. Burlingham Modern Woodmen, annual potluck Easter dinner, Friday, 6:30 p.m. Friday.
Camp to furnish ham, eggs, salad,
rolls and beverages.

-Society·scrapbook---EGG HUNT
A·bout 80 area children took part
Sunday in the 'annual Easter egg
· h'unt at the Rutland Firemen's Park.
The hunt was sponsored by the
· Rutland Fire Department and its
Auxiliary, American Legion, Post
467, and the Rutland EMS.
About 800 plastic eggs, all con. taining· cash prizes, we~ used in
the hunt.
· ·
The four children finding . the'
golden eggs won $50 savings
bonds. They were Brinany Parsons, Tabetha Withrow, Bryan
Priddy, and Jacob Barnes.
. Kimberly Willford was general
:hairman for the community event.
. EXTENDED
: The Racine Area Community
Organization (RACO) has extend. ed the application deadline for
two $400 scholarships to be awarded to Southern High School graduates.
.
The deadline has been extended to April 15. Applications are
available at Southern High School.
The guidance counselor has the
jnformation, it was announced.
FLOWER FESTIVAL
Plans for the annual Racine
Area Community Organization's
third annual flower festival are
moving forward.
. Applications · _forms
for
exhibitors are available at the
Racine Home Bank and the office
of Dr. ·Melanie Weese. There is a
$10 fee•to reserve a space. Dead. line is Monday and those mterest. ed are asked to contact Delores
Cleland, 949-2071. ·

MILITARY NEWS
Richard A. White, the son of
Richard A. and Charlotte L. White of
Cheshire, has joined the United States
Army under the Delayed Enlistment
Program at the U.S. Army Recruiting
Station, Gallipolis.
White reported to Fort Knox,
Kentucky for military basic training
March 14,1996.
·
PERFECT QUARTERS .
. . Heather Hill, a graduate of Southem High School, has maintained
,grade point average of 4.0 for the
past two quarters at Hot king Technical College. She is majoring in med·
ical assisting and will complete her
program there at the end of the summer.
LAUREL CLIFF NEWS .
Mr. and Mrs. James Gilmore were
recent guests of their daughter, Mrs.
Sandy .Gilmore, at· her residence in
Hilliard.
·A birthday dinner was given in
honor of Mrs. Ann Mash March 31.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Pullins and Jesse; Dwight Cullins:
Mrs. Charlene Johnson, Kellie and
Samantha, of Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Eblin recent·
ly were guesis at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Woodrow Mora.
Mrs. Joan Conant spent the afternoonApri13 allhe residence of Mrs.
Clifford Jacobs.
·ALFRED NEWS NOTES
Recent guests of Marguerite and
Delbert Steams were their daughter.
April Neely, and grandson, Jeff
Noble, Fairborn.

Female. doctors give better
·breast exams, study says
•

By KIM PAINTER
had physical breast exams by their
USA TODAY
primary· doctors in the year before or
· Women with male doctors are less· 18 months after the mammogram.
likely than those with female doctors But 95 percent of those with a female
10 get a physical breast exam along · doctor had a complete exam; 6':/ perwith a mammogram, a study sug- cent with male doctors did.
"Women may be more comfortgests.
··
· ··
.
·
· · 1b
am• "
The study, in Monday's "Archives· - abl~, doing c1m1ca reast ex •· .
~f Internal Medicine," joins sev~ral Freuild.says.
.
other re~ent reports suggesting
Bette'nraining could make male
womeri get more complete cancer doctors just as comfortable, she says.
'
· gs •rom other. women ·
Other studies have found fewer
~creemn · "
· And it adds to evidence that the Pap smears and mammograms
breast exam, in which a doctor ca~e- among patients of male doctors,
fully looks a! and feels each breast, prompting similar calls.
is' often omitted . when women get
Joann Shellenbach, a spokesmammograms - b~east X-rays. . woman for the American Cancer
"Unfortunately, mammography IS Society, says mammograms, physi~;~ot foolproof," says Dr.Karen Fre- cian exams and self-exams all are
und of Boston Umvers1ty Med1cal important for detecting breast cancer
Ceiuer Hospital. Studies suggest c.an- early.
i:er deteetion increases by about 10
And she says too many doctors.
percent when ·a physical exam is either skip the physical exam or
• added 10 the mammogram,.she say~. skimp on it. Ideally, the exam should
: Freund, Dt. Risa Burns and t~Ir ·take several minutes, with a.woman
,olleagues looked at the med1cal sitting, lying down and holding her·
n:cords of 100 women over age 50 arms in several different positions,
who had mammograms ordered by Shellenbach says. "If it's taking 30
doctorS a.tthe Boston center.
seconds, you're probably not getting
. They found 76 of the wl)men also : a good exaro."

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hard to disauise. LeopOld and I want and not hurt either of these kin4
to get married but have decided we men? .. California Dilemma . ~
spould do it secretly so I don't hurt
Dear C.D.: Level with Stanley.
~tanley's feelings. Stanley has no The sooner the better. Marry
family or close friends and no place Leopold, and ask that Stanley be
to go. I haven't the heart to ask him permitted to remain in the house
to ·move out.
with the two of you for lhe time
Is it possible for Leopold and me being. There must be some widows
to marry and not live together? That in your circle who would like Stanway, I would be able to collect his ley. A widow with a nice home
pension, which he says will help me would be ideal. Get moving.
later in lifo.
Dear Ann Landers: A reader
How can I solve this dilemma recently asked about the food that is·
.
.
.

wasted on TV. You said you thought
most of the food was fake.
I work in the film industry in
Texas. Commercials advertising
food products mostly use real food,
When you think you are vjewing
ice cream, it is probably a mixture of
lard, powdered sugar and food coloring. Most of tbe additives used
make the food unfit for human con~umption. It is dumped into the .trash
when the film shoris completed. For
each plate of food Y!lU see.in a com-

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mercia!, there probably lqlve be
20 plates used.
The .U. food featured in conf..
mercials that does not requili
"styling" is given away.
.. It's a Wrap in Texas
Dear Texas: Thanks for givin&amp;
my readers the inside skinny. From
now on when 1 see a bowl of chaco.
late ice' cream on a TV commercial:
I'm going to think, "That's a bowl
of 'brown-colored lard topped w1tb
'¥hipped cream."
~

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Plck4:
9864
Buckeye 5:
1-2-3-12-22

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, April10, 1996

A G8nnen Co. Newspeper

$8.5 million awarded connector project
ODOT commits $13.5 million for Meigs and LaVfrence County highway construction ·work

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Vol. 48, NO. 241
2 s.ctlone, 12 Pages

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Clear and .c old tonlaht.
Low In 20s. Thurscfay,
sunny, high In 70s.

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By TOM HUNTER
. announcement that $13.5 million in
.
_.CO!llmitted transportation funds
Sentinel News Staff.
Me1gs County offic1als recetvcd • would go to Me1gs and Lawrence
good news Tuesday, w1th The Oh10 counlles for planmng and h1ghway
Department of Transportation's construction.

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s rn ,·n
Ullo
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ODOT will commit $8.S million
for construction work on Phase 'J\vo
of the Ravens":Ood·1:771US 33 connectar project: a secllon of Super-!!,
two lane highway connecting existmg state Route 124 near Great Bend
to the Ravenswood Bridge.
.
. . The dep.artment alsb will fund $5.
m1lhon for des1gn work on th;, state
Ro,ute 7 Chesapeake ~ypass tllbject,
accor~mg to 94th Oh1o House reptesentat1ve John Carey (R-:Wellston).
. "ODOT recognizes that transportat1on equ~ls . better access ~d
JObs for all Ohioans. These funds Will

.

allow Southeast Ohio to make the
necessary transportation improvements that will draw economic development to this area," said Carey.
. The $8.5 million commitment to
the Ravenswood Connector will be
geared specifically toward construetion costs, while federal highway
funding allocated by fanner U.S.
House Representative. Ted. Strickland will cover costs associated with
design work on the project, according 10 ODOT District 10 public
information officer Nancy Yoacham.
The remainder of the Ravenswood

Connector project, phases II and III,
rated favorably at number 34, on the
new· project criteria listings .released
by state officials in February. ·
Yoacham stated that Tuesday's .
announcement of the release of state
funding will move the scheduled conSlruction date on Phase II of the project from 2003 to 2000.
State officials are remaining hopeful that environmental studies will be
completed on Phase II during this
year, so the prOJect can move. \him
mto the des•.gn·phase, ODOT D1str1c1
I 0 deputy d~rector John Dowler stat-

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This announcement points out
that five years of effort by the regional highways committee has not gone
to waste. The priority of most evcryone involved on the state and local
levels is to get this project completed," said Pomeroy attorney Steve .
Story, co-chairman llf the Route 33;
commiJtee of the Southeast OhiO: ·
Regional Council.
.
Story stated .that the Phase II construction will likely "uncork the bot-·
tie" on the Ravenswood end of the
Continued on page 3

Meigs Local Board OKs .technology plan

HIT A HOME tlUN WITH
ENTERPRISE • .NAGLE ' ~ .

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Pick 3:
203 .

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"They are there . rain or shine,

Heat Pump Sold
Donated to Youth
Baseball League

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Sport., Page 5

even · when it's snowing," said
SAMARITAN SHEARS. Eugene ~arker a soft-spoken barber spends one day a week giving free
Parker, pausing only long enough haircuts to people 65 and older. Parker has been giving free haircut11 every Thursday since June
in his cutting to call out the number 1994 In the shop he o~ed 29 v.ears ago. He normally charges $9 a head. He 'works six days a week
of the next customer - the 25th in the small live-chair inner-city shop, taking Sundays off. One of the four other barbers In his shop
that morning. "I usually do haircuts usually volunteers to help him on Thursdays.
·
on 40 to 50 heads on Thursdays."
,
barber's chair for a trim . Kelley, who paid for his twice-a-month trim for
The turnout wasn't do good the first few weeks he offered the free cuts. years until Parker started his Thursday sessions, wishes more people
"People didn't believe they were getting them for free. They thought would follow Parlrer's lead.
there was some·... catch to it. I bet I didn 't cut 20 heads altogether in the
"I don't think so.ciety does enough for old people. Things have got so
first few weeks. " ·
twisted up in the last 20 years or so," said Kelley. "Seems like everyone
Parker distributes fliers around town. but his customers are his best has Jess respect for older citizens. but not Eugene. He's the only one I
advertisers.
know that provides something free for us older folks."
Wiley Anthony Pilgh, 72, of Cle•eland,
Others have recognized Parker 's contribution:, ""'·
said he wouldn't think of going anywhere
"People didn't believe they were gettlf)g City Council last year adopted a resolution hon•
else for a haircut- notjust because it's free. them for free. They tho.ught there was some oring him , and U.S: Rep. Louis Stokes praised
"Mr. Parker is just a wonderful man , truly ... catch to it. 1bet 1didn't cut 20 heads alto- Parker on the noor of Congress in October.
wonderful," said Pugh. ·
gether In .the first few weeks," said Eugene
."His type of individ~al charity is the type of
But the price is righl, the retired tailor Parker
contribution with the potential to resuscitate driftadmitted.
·
ing communities of our country.:• said Stokes, D"My money gets low with only my penOhio.
·
sion and social security," he said. "This way, I have a little left over."
Edwin Jeffers, chairman of the Ohio Barber Board and chief cxec~tive
That's exactly what Parker planned . He knows how tight ·money can. officer of the National Association of Barber .Boards, [aid Parker should
get.
be commended.
The Homewood, Ala .. native and his wife raised nine children and now
"I think it's great, and I don 't know of anyone who else who is doing
have 2i grandchildren and three grcat:grandchildren.
something like this," said 1cffers.
"I know money doesn't go very far these days, and when the older
Parker, who is only nine years shy of qualifying for one .of his own fr~e
folks try to pay me or tip me , I tell 'em just to keep it and use it to buy haircuts, downplays the prqise and Says the ~xtra effort keeps him young.
food or something."
.
"I get a lot offun out of this, and I plan to just keep on doing it as long
"Eugene's a good boy,'' said Willie Kelley, 74, as he settled into the as the good (.ord lets me."

$10.00 Out of Every

Meigs··nine
tops RVHS
by 10-6 tally

Barber does his part for elderly
By LISA CORNWELL
Associated Press WrHer
. CLEVELAND (AP) - Selfish
isn' t a ~rd those who know
Eugene Parker would use to
describe the soft-spoken·barber who
spends one day a week giving free
haircuts to people 65'and older.
·
~ut Parker says there is a lot of
se lfishne~ in what he does.
"You know, I get so·much more
out of doing tbis for the older folks.
than I could ever give them," he
said. "I learn so much from these
folks ·who worked and suffered to
get me to where I am today. And, it
really makes me feel good to know
I can pay them back even a little."
Parker has been giving free hair·
cuts every Thursday since June
1994 in the shop he opened 29 years
ago. He normally charges $9 a head.
"I could loo.k around me and see
how little · is dene for the older
folks," said Parker. " I wanted to do
something, and giving haircuts is
what I know best. " ·
Parker, 56, works six days a'
week in the small five-chair innercity shop, taking Sundays off. One
of the four other barbers in his shop
usually volunteers to help him on
Thutsdays.
.
Most Thursdays, patrons are
already lined up when he arrives.

Ohio Lottery

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$1 00.00 CASH BACK

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BUY ANY COOLING SYSTEM FROM
ENTERPRISE-NAGLE
And Receive
.
Absolutely FREE An Overnight Accommodation
In Cincinnati With ·2 FREE Tickets To~A~
Clncinnati Reds Baseball Game!
.

GRAND OPENING APRIL 12TH -13T8

~.19

s.

MIDDLEPOR

~NAGLE ·

of 19fi7. That was the year Kaczyn·
ski began teaching in that department,
although he didn't teach Scrutton 's ·
course.

The 'Meigs County Strategic Plan including economic development, In Oklahoma bombing hearing,
will be debuted Monday, I p.m. in the enVironmental issues·, touri sm,
f\1eigs County Common Pleas Cour.t- wildlife and quality of life. infra- ·
room in Pomeroy as part &lt;if the reg- structure, education, human resources
ular weellly meeting of lhe Meigs and services, health care, housing,.
· Jones said if that is true, it's
DENVER (AP)- Prosecutors in lee ted intelligence data on neo-Nazis
elderly and child care.
County B'oard of Commissioners ...
in
Britain
and
Germany;
.
terrorist
because
intelligence agencies quit
the
Oklahoma
City
bombing
caS«;
·
Discussed in the plan are objecCounty economic development
groups
in
Su~an,
Iraq,
Iran
and
searching
after McVeigh's arrest
director Julia Houdashelt will present . tives. strengths and weaknesses and . rejecied defense theories of an interNorthern
Ireland:
and
the
Ku
Klux
Meanwhile,
lawyers for Nichols
national tonspiracy, saying foreign
the plan to commissioners Robert long- and short~term strategies.
The document was compiled by culprits were quickly ruled out Klan, the Aryan Nation, The Order and McVeigh said they would seek
Hartenbach, Fred Hoffman and Janet
the Meigs Cqunty Economic Devel-' because all the evidence pointed to and other white supremacist groups. separate trials because the defense
Howard.
.
But Prosecutor Beth Wilkinson . strategy for the two men .would be
.
·The strategic plan, entitled "Meigs, opmenl Office in cooperation with tbe defendanls.
·
said
that within two days of the attack different
County: A Strategic Plan for !beLate___ the_Meigs County Commission(lrs · At tbe first hearing in Denver
U.S . Distr.ict Judge Richard
1990s and Beyond"• was developed and Buckeye ·Hills-Hbcking Valley· since the case was moved from Okla· that killed 168 people and injured
more
than
SOO
Others,
investigatots
-M~tsch
said that he, too, was ·disnoma,
Stephen
Jones,
·
Timothy
by local community leaders and Regional Development District.
had
determined
"'the
bo~ing
had
turbed
that
both men could be tried
McVeigh's
lawyer,
argued
Tuesday
includes information '. on 1 topics
for access to classified information been carried out by•aU,s •. citizen:" togeiher. He set-a hearing on lhe matShe added. that' all the .evidence ter for Aug. 27.
from the CIA and other government
.·points to McVeigh and co•defendant
A convoy· of police motorey.cles
intelligence agencies.
·
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Jones said that immediately after Terry Nichols as "the masterminds of barreled into the courtJiouse base.the bombing, the government col- this bombing."
•
ment before dawn Tuesday, sur-

rounding the van tbat tr:insporte~· :
McVeigh and Nichols from a federal ·
prison.
· ·
Me,Veigh wore a long-sleeve :
green sh1rt and baggy khaki pants, :
and laughed and joked .with his ·
. lawyers, barely looking at Nichols. ·
Nichols, who wore a blue suit and ·
chatted sombe;ly with his auomey, ·
exchanged glances with his brother, :
James, and his father, .who were seat- .
ed in the fourth row behind the
defense.
The defendants could get the
death penalty if convicted of murder
lind conspiracy · ·

AIR IS 1.5 TON WITH INST~LLATION
...

MICHAEL DONAHOE
'(Suspect's lawyer)

P.rosecutors. reJ· ec.t defen.se claim
. s o.f for.eign conspiracy.·

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1·800·516·2932
,

Suspect had indirect contact with some victims ·~
WASHINGTON
(AP) ·
letters handwritten in Spanish,
These arc the possible contacts:
Tlieodore Kaczynski may, have Kaczynski told Sanchez he was so
-Pat Fisher, a Vanderbilt Uni·crossed palhs with four of the poor, he staved off hunger by hunt· versity compuler sc ience professor
Unabomber's victims, investigatorlit ing rabbits and trealed a cut fool with- wounded by a 1982 mail bomb, said
believe, and they are searching to s&amp;: 'r out gqing to the doctor..
he aftended .the Massachusetts Instiif lie had contact with others. .
Kaczynski began writing Sanchez tute of Technology when Kaczynski
Handwritten notebooks and some after his brother, David Kaczynski , · was at Harvard University, and said
printed material found in Kaczyn- met the farm worker in the early he .look a class at Harvard. Both
sky's remote cabin near Lincoln, 1980s while buying pro~rty in the schools are in Cambridge, Mass.
Mont., mention some of the victims Chalk Mountains of West Texas.
'"We could have been in the same
but also include references to many
The suspect, a 53-year-old former class," Fisher said. "I think he knew
other indiyiduals and organizations, university mathematics professor who I was."
said a federal law enforcement offi · who began living a hermit's life a
The connection continued when
cia! who spoke on condition of quarter-century ago, was 1aken into Kaczynski went to graduate school at
anonymity.
custody last Wednesday as FBI and· the University of Michigan's math~ ­
None of the references specifical- Bureau of Alcohol. Tobacco and matics departf1Jent. .Fishl!r (requently
ly mentions Unabomber victims as Firearms agents searched his cabin. visited his father, who worked in that
targets, the official said. "The idea He has been charged with possessing department.
that there is a list of victims or lllrgets bomb components but not with .any
-James McConnell, injured in a
is not correct." .
of the l6 Unabomber attacks.
1985 Unabomber attack, was a Uni·
Three people were killed and 2~
versity of Michigan psychology pro. others injured in bombings auributed
Federal agents sco uring the fesoor in the mid- 1960s, when
to the Unabomber, starting in 1978. Unabomber's suspected haunts and Kaczynski was there.
The New York Times reported target sites nationwide have turned up
- Hugh Scruttoo, killed in 1985
today that Kaczynski carried on a evidence that Kaczynski may have by a bomb at the computer store he
seven-year correspondence with a had casual contact with four owned in Sacramento, Calif., took
Mexican farmhand, Juan Sanchez, Unabomber viCtims, another federal math classes at the University of Calwhom he had never met. In aboul 50 Jaw enforcement source said.
ifornia, Berkeley, during the summer

There were no changes in outcome of races in the March primary
ele'ciimi following the official count
. by the Meigs County Board of Elections Tuesday.

H.

batd, Todd Jqhnson, Deborah Low·
ery, Eleanor McKelvey, Marsha Railabaugh, Julie Randolph, Linda Stan·
ley, Shirley Van Meter and Sandra
·Walker. Board member Scott WaltQn
voted ''no".
· P'?llowing an execli~ive session,
the following were hired on supple- .
mental one-year contracts were; Mike
Chancey, head football ; Rick Blaet- ·
lnar, Mick Childs, Gregg Deel, Scol
Gl)ecn and P.l Woods, assistant var• .
sity football: Scot Gheen and P.J:
Woods, reserve football ; Rick Blaet:
tnar and Mick Childs, freshman fooF
ball; Don Dixon, Keith Eubanks and
Bryan Zirkle, seventh and eighth
grade football: Rick Ash, boys' assis: . . ,
tant varsity bask~tball ; RiCk Edwards;
boys' reserve baskelball; Mike
Kennedy, cross country and boys'·
head track;
·•
Kcit'h Eubanks. assistant high_
school track; Rick Blaettnai, junior
Continued on page 3

..

Official vote count released
by ·Meigs Boarcl of Elections

992·448
VALID APRIL 1ST THRU MAV 31ST

· By TOM·HUNTER
"If the village was not going to
Sentinel News Staff
enforce the ordinance, there was no
The village of Rutland will begin -sense in us trying to obtain federal
enforcing a building ordinance money for a project. We are going to
passed nearly six years ago, requiring start enforcing the ordinance, with
all new construction in the village io residents required to have a permit
meet the village permit .requirement before building in the village," said
that all structures must be built one Davis.
foot above the One Hundred Year
Tlie ·ordinance states that all stnictiood plain.
tures must be built one foot above the
Council made the announcement 578 foot level , which is the One HunbeforJ: canceling Tuesday's regular dred Year flood level for the village.
mepting due to lack of a quor4m. In
Federal officials Dean Ogen and
attendance at the meeting were coun- · Rusty Rican commented on the parcil members Danny Davis, Dick Fet- ticipation of village residents in the
ty, Rose Mary Snowden Eskew, and National Flood Insurance Program.
Mayor JoAnn E11ds. Also attending "The village has good participation in
the meeting v;ere Dean Ogen and NFIP, with over 20 residents curRusty Rican of the Fedeml Emer- rently in the program. Those numbers
gency Management Administration. are very good for a village of this
The announcement by council to size," said Ogen.
'
begin enforcement of the ordinance
Council ha; scheduled a special
coincides with efforts to obtain fed- meeting to discuss personnel for
eral monies for a nood control pro- • tonight, 7 p.m., at the Rutland Civic
ject in the community, according to Center. The regular ll)eeting of councouncil member Danny Davis.
cil has been rescheduled for next
Tuesday, 7 p.m., at the Civic Center.

Development Director. Houdashelt
will unveil slate to commissioners

L_!'l..!'!!!~'!~,!&gt;!.A...~~·!!,D_!l!,•.!.'!~~.!!!!~&lt;:2!!!1!~-J

ENTE·RPRIS

ViUa·ge of Rutlan'd
will start en,orc~ng
buildi nst.O·rdinance·· ·

County's strategic plan
to be presented Mond·a y

! BASEBALL , RIP .l
l

· Rae Ann Gwlazdowskl was swam In as the neweat Middleport
Council member at Monday's regular council meeting. Admlnls·
terlng the oath of office Is Middleport Mayor Dewey Horton. ·
Gwlazdowskl wlllllll the unexpired council term vacated by the
resigr)atlon of Steve Dunfee. (Tom Hunter/Sentinel Photo)

By JIM FREEMAN
Gardner explained. He suggeste_d
Teachers hired on one-year con·
Sentinel news .staff
applying for School Net funding this tracts were: Diana Bauserman, Tim
The Meigs Local Board of Edu- summer and wiring the high school, Curfman, Jenifer Eubanks, Judith
cation took the first steps towru:~ junior high school and Pomeroy and Gan)laway, Elizabeth Gee, Scot ·
implementing a comprehensive tech- ~ , Middleport elementaries. Other Gheen, Mary Grim, Cheryl Halley,
nology program at its regular meet- bmldmgs co~ld be targeted later 1f Sara Harris, Sheila Harris, Melissa
ing Tuesday night.
the1r electrical 'ol/mng IS, ~pgraded.
Howard, Krista Johnson, Teawana
Followjng. a program by Todd
School Net Plus Will prov1de . McCaulla, Lisa Miller, Amy Riker,
Gardner, district technology ooordi- · funds fo~ comput~rs ~rades K:4 With Chris Stout and Jennifer Wolfe.
nator the board apprbved a district money g1ven to d1stncts for comput·
Teachers hired on three-year contech~ology plan.
ers, software and training. Gardner tracts were: Jeff Baker, David ChadUnder the plan, the district will S31d.
,
well, Mike C~ancey, Deborah Davis,
build on existing P.rojects and .techIn related business , ,the board· David Deem, Tim Lawson, Judy
nology, move toward standardization ~pproved a technology re~ ponSiblh· . McCarthy, Susan Metts, Amy Perrin,
of equipment, providing profession- ues pohcy for mcluwn m student Jeff Skinrycr, Ralph Werry. Betty
al development for staff and promot- handbooks and an Internet user and Ann Wolfe, P.J. Woods" and Tara
ing community development and tak- information and appli.cation packet. Woods.
ing further advantage of state fund· The policies will outline how stu·
Teachers hired on five-year con:
ing programs.
, dents and staff may use. the new tech- .tracts were: Tammy Chapman, Ken6ardner··outlinechwo~Stafe'fllnd-•.~,Jilol~)y"tlm will'bec-ome-av!iilabre-in-: rieih El\lin, Ri ck Edward:;, Joni Jefing programs w~ich may assist the the schools.
.
fe(S, Barb Mathews Crow, George
district: School Net and School Net'.
Contracts·approved
Nagielski, Kevin Sheppard, Linda
Plus.
In personnel matters, the board Smit.h and Becky Trent.
School Net will distribute $95 mil- ·renewed teaching and non-certified
· Teachers hired on continuing con.lion . for wiring in every district, contracts.
'
tracts were: Kathy Hal ey, Julie Hub-

However, Director Rita Smith
reported there were some minor final
figure changes.
•
.. The total number of ballots cast
-WII$. 7.298, with ·2,286 being Democratic, 4,975·, R,epublicap, and 37
· llon,~Jartisan, bringing the .total per-

·Ceniage of the 15,057 registered voters who came out to vote at 48.47
.
.
percent.
MOUNDSVILLE, W.Va. (AP)- sions at Kammer 11nd install controls
The government alleged Kammer,
On the issues the total number of
voters who voted for tile Southern The Justice Department has pro. on nitrogen oxide emissions at its one of Ohio Power's oldest plants,
. Local School District bond issue for posed a consen.t ~ecree to resolve plant in New Haven, Mason CountY.: exceeded the 1972 Clean Air Act's
construction and improvements was charges of air pollution violations IU . The ag~ement " brings a maJor emission limits, resulting in excess
820 while those who voted against it Ohio Power Co.'s Kammer Power source of sulfur dioxide emissions emissions estimated at 80,000 tons
Plant including fining lhe company ·into compliance with the Clean Air per year1
.
was 931 in 1he official count.
$200,000.
'.
.
Act,"
said
W,
Michael
McCabe,
U~det
the
agreement,
,the fed.eral
In !he Eastern Local School Disconsent order, if approved by . regional admlnistra~or for the En~i- , government agreed to extend the
trict, .the number Of VOles for the bond
levy was 811 while 770 voted against .a federal judge, also will reqyire Ohio ro~mental. Protection Agency m deadline for compliance until NoY. I,
it..
•
.
Pow~rt() reduce sulfur di.oxide emi~ · Phil~delp~1p.
'
1998..

Moundsville Power Plant fined $200/000 tor air pollution:::... :

The

,.

As part of the settlement, Ohi~:: ·
Power also agreed to reduce emis; ·:
sions of nitrogen oxide at its Philip :: .
. Sporn facility in New Haven. The :·
company wil.l install low nitrogen :: .
·oxide burners at two of the plant's '
·facilities starting Jan. I, 1998.
'
Officials of Ohio Power were not ·
immediately available to comrne~tt ·.'
Tuesdapftemoon. ' · .
.. • :

I

,•

·•

I

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