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••

pege10 • The O.lly Sentinel
•

Monday, Aprt115, 1 -

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thousands gather·for march against the right
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Fightina wbllthey see IS a rising tide
of conservatism, thousands of
marchers toolc to the streets to support affumative action, women 's
reproductive freedom and gay rights.
" An extremist ultra-right wing has
taken control of one of the two major
centrist political p.rties. They are
racist. !hey are sexist, they are homo-

H~uman

phobic," author Gloria Steinem told
a crowd of about 13,000al Su~y 's
"flight the Right" rally sjJonsored by
the National Organization for
Women.
Marchers - including actor Danny Glover and the Rev. Jesse Jackson
- pr01ested racism. violence against
women and w~t they called a war on
women in poverty. Several carried

signs with slogans such as: "Slop tiie
War on the Poor," and " Oet Your
Rosaries Out of My Ovaries."
·~ we aie a majority," NOW President Patricia Ireland said after the
march. "If 1992 was the year of the
woman and 1994 was the year of the
angry white man, then 1996 is going
to be the year of the majority."
Ireland said attacks on abortion

clinics, arson fires at African-Amer- crowd at about 13,000, NOW said
ican churches and other hate crimes about 40,000 came and went throughwOQ)d not intimidate those fighting out the day.
fpr the cause.
"It's wonderful to lcnow there's so
"They only make us more com- much support out there. You can feel
milled to SWld togelher in unity." Ire- so isolated sometimes when you ' re
land said. "Our lives .re on the line. • bombarded with the bad news from
Our future and our families' futures Washington," said 'Sandra Holland.
are on the line."
32, of Brunswick, Maine.
Though police estimated the

It pays to be at the right place at the right time
NEW YORK (AP) -Take a star Phoenix Suns on Sunday. Afterward, people because of her collapsing
from "Melrose Place" - Heather Johnson acknowledged he will prob- marr~ge and a reputation for aloofness. But her popularity has sbared
.Locklear, for example - add an ord i- ably be suspended.
"I have to accept the responsibil- since her 1992 divorce · from Capt.
nary TV movie script portraying tile
Mark Phillips and her successful
comeback of a victimized woman, ity for what I did." he said.
The
incident
was
out
of
character
marriag to Cmdr. Timothy Laurence.
imd there's a deal .to be made.
With little to distinguish one for the 36-year-old team leader who She also has shown devotion to a
movie from the next,. TV producers chided forward Cedric Ceballos last number of charit~ble causes.
say the only winning ticket is to fea- month for leaving the·team without
ture a hot female star from one of ·permission, and guard Nick Van Exel
LOS ANGELES (API- Christtelevision's hottest shows.
last wee k for a similar referee-bump- ian Slater had to flee through a bed"You can attach any of the gals ing incident.
. room window to escape tlames
from " Beverly Hills 90210" ·Or
. "I want to lie the best e&lt;ample for engulfing the deck of a home where
"Melrose Place" to a blank piece of this team," Johnson said. "I harp on he spent the night.
paper, and you'll wind up with a net- the other players all the time for what
A smoke detector woke the actor
work deal," a producer who asked to they do wrong. and now I do this. I early Sunday morning and flames
remain anonymous says in the April just hope they still hear my voice." prevented him from leaving out a
20 "TV Guide."
bedroom door. He and an unidentiThus. viewers have already witLONDON (AP) - Once the least fied woman esc;oped through a firstnessed such made-for-TV classics as popular of Queen Elizabeth ll's four . floor bedroom window with two
Tori Spelling's "Co-ed Call Girl" and children, Princess Anne is now the dogs, said Fire Chief Rod Wilmot.
Tiffani-Amber Thiessen's "She royal more Britons would like to see
No one was injured and no one
Fought Alone."
as their monarch, .
was in the house, located in a .
Locklear
is
commanding ·- · Those questioned in a new poll else
rustic canyon area about eight miles
$500,000 per TV ·movie. Spelling of chose Anne - eighth in line to the . northwest bf downtown.
'
"90210," and her former castmate throne- from a list of heirs and pubSlater. who co-starred with John
Shannen Doherty are right behind, in lie figl!res. •
Travolta in "Broken Arrow," later
the $400,000 range. Other actresses
She polled 33 percent with heir- walked through the charred deck area
on the two hot shows earn about apparent Charles second, backed by and talked to firefighters. He refused
$250,000 for a starring role.
26 percent of respondents in the Mori to comment to photographers:
poll, commissioned by Independent
The fire was blamed on an elecLOS ANGELES (AP) - When ·Television.
·
trical problem.
his teammates got into trouble this
Only 47 percent thought Charles
season, Magic Johnson was outspo- would make a good king, compared
ken in his criticism. Guess who's in · to 82 percent in a 1991 poll. His rep-·
NASSAU. Bahamas (AP)- O.J.
hot water now?
utation has suffered following his Simpson's golf practice is paying off.
The Los Angeles Laker~ basket- 1992 separation from Princess Diana,
Simpsgp led his team to victory
ball 'star was ejected for bumping a · and subsequent cpnfession of .adul- Sunday illl a celebrity golf tournareferee after he was whistled for a tery.
ment, which raised $43,000 for the
technical foul in the second quarter of
Their _son Prince William. after International Sickle Cell Foundathe Lakcrs' 118-114 victory over the . Charles in the succession, came in tion.
third place with 12 percent. Diana,
He teamed up with his daughter
34, scored 7 percent. but she is not in Arnelle; Detroit Lions cornerback
line for the throne .
.
Ryan McNeil and three others to win
Princess Anne, 45, had for years the 36-hole tournament.
lost her standing among the British

'Primal Fear' ·
still No. 1 at
the box office.

Safler's Inc.

Anter B.ros. Co.

Phont 555-1022
Ellabllllttd , .

Pliant 555-2211
Elllblltlttd 1800

Pltonnss 4431
Eltlblllhttl1903.

80 Years
Acme Rentals

Vircap Services

Phone 555-8782
Established 1915

EllabHihld 1917•

70 Years

67 Years

The Geist

E·Z Motor Service
Phone 555 Udl

Coin &amp; Stamp Center

Bsil Security Bonds

Phones~

P'-5556565
Eltlblllhld 1941

FOR YOU
'
• TO

52 Years
Bail Secu~ty BOnds
Phone 555 95t7
El11blllhed 1M3

'

44 Years

40 Years·

Kramer &amp;Sons

S&amp;M Ll~scalilng

Phone 555-4777
EstiiJIIIIted 1t51

Phone 555 545e
Elllllllalttd 1155

25 .Years

20 Years

.•

JuGGLE

Talk to your independent agent. insist on longterm experience, communitv presence, and
someone who is with vou both before and
.after things happen. Just do this one thing, ,
and leave the juggling Kt to us.

Your lndependelll ..Venu
Semn, Meip County Since '1868

. ~ Gllcls Mil• laser IIIHI1*t
. 111 Second...
Ponlelot
'. 112-3381
~ repruentlng the

W

·

~~c~~ty Group

.

WHEf!E EXTRA EFFORT IS OUR

.

POliC~

30 Years

Med.Care Center Inc. trlskett Party Center
P1lont 555 11155
Eslablllhttl1965

Pltont 555 0287
Ellablllltld 1110

,
..
LORDSTOWN (AP) -Workers
UAW Locallll2 represents about
.. retumed to the job today at a Goner- - 5.500 active workers at the plant,
al Motors Corp. assembly plant after. which assembles Chevrolet'Cavaliers
a one-day walkout to protest the fir- and Pontiac Suofires.
ing of a union official.
On Monday,. first-shift workers
· Limiled production resumed Mon- reported at 6: 18 a.m., b.ut walked out
day _night after second-shift workers, . three hours later.
ordered back lo the
. plant·by the Unit1be union local issued a statement
ed Aulo Workers union, reported for Monday oideri'IS,the·workers to' end
work.
the unauthorized walkout,.known as
II was un~lear if production a wildcat strike.
"This is not an authorized strike
resumed with the today's first shift,
which began a1 6:18 a.m. EDT. Nei- and the membership should return to
!her the union nor the company work immediately," the statement
returned . phone calls seeking com- said. It was signed by Local 1112
ment today, but workers heading into President Tony Zone and by the fired
, ;the plant this morning told WKBN in shop chairman, AI Alii.
: Yount~stown they were planning to
Union officials could not be
:.: get back to work.
reached for further comment today.
.'
OM spokeswoman Linda McGill There was no answer early' today at
·d Monda 'ght lh
"" ..._
·
fli
The h
1 h
w
y ru
at enqu,... wo...- unton o 1ces.
ome te ep one
ers reported for tilt &amp;ec!lfld shift to numbers for Alii and Zone are unpub·resume limited production. She did lished.
,
'd
, ·not have an ~xact number but sa1
A man who identified himself as
:about '1,800 peOple typically work :·t a memher of the local's executive
.each shift.
.board ordered reporters out of the

Crystal Glass :Co:

OU s,lects
new Pf0V0Sf

Pltonesss-~

.

Elllblllltecl1171
.

f'E YOUR BUSINESS LISTED!
The "Honor Roll" ~ appear in the
Friday, May 17th Edition of
The Daily Sentinel.
The Cost Is Only $12

mittee chairmen for the project are
er and hopefully started making
Mike Duhl, quality of life; Dun
some real progress in the future
Poole, infrastructute/transporta. growth of the .county." said Duhl.
tion; Jim Tompkins, economic
The plan will now be used as a
development; John Costanzo, eduresource tool for business and ecocation; and Jon Jacobs, human
nomic development opportunities,
resources and services.
new resi'dents and visitors to the
"Meigs County now has an
county, and for county groups and
oq:anized vision, There is a wealth
agencies, according to Houdashelt.
of untapped resources in this ooun"This plan' extensively involves
ty which have a great j,otential for ·
individuals , and organizations
development. With this plan and
which have a stake in the future of
.... Its
· "deve1~ment, .. Me1gs
· c ounty.· Th'IS WI'II deve1op .
1he 'I'&gt;Wk l()w.,u
lfte eooun\\~ltY'hiiS-wbriieJtiigethpartnerships With'!elated; and even
·
p--_

competing counties, and increase
the possibilities in accomplishing
one or more of the goals recommended," said.Houdashelt.
The completion of 1he county
plan will not conclude the strategic
planning pr~ss for local officials.
"The process is really just
beginning. The co~miuees
Involved in the plan development
will continue to meet bi-monthly in
order to pursue the goals established as a result of their work,"
adlled Houdashelt. ·
•

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Staff
•
County employees will observe a.
moment.of silence Friday morning in
remembrance of 168 l&gt;eople killed in
the April 19, 1995 bombing of the
Alfred W. Murrah Federal Building
in Oklahoma City.
At the request of Sheriff James M.
Soulsby and Common Pleas Coon
Administrator Paul Gemrd,the Meigs
County Board of Commissioners
Monday afternoon adopted a resolution honoring the victims of lhe fatal~~
blast.·
·
'
.At 8:30 a.m .. all county offices
will observe one minute of silence
and the U.S. fl~g at the courthouse
will be lowered to half staff, accotding to the resolution.
In other qtatters, the 'board opehed
bids on a Community Development
Block Grant projeet to replace the
. roof on the Middleport-Fire Station.
The lowest bid of$9,700 was submined by the Hackel! Co. ofColuinbus. Other companies submitting
bids were : Banks Construction.
Pomeroy, $18,500; Home Creek
Enterprises, Pomeroy, $15,498; and
AOK Construction, Cheshire,
$14,385.
Commissioners also opened bids
on asphalt concrete and bituminous
· matena
· I'• •or
' • an d!.AQre&amp;ate pav1ng
the remainder of the month .
·on the recommendation of Coun-

arking. plan in June ~~:::;~~2a~~i~~.~~r:
The issue was first brought to

nade, making parking along the
promenade a permit-only proposition. establishing one-way tmffic in
the parking lot; and enforcing a twohour limit on meter parking,
At that meeting, Blaettnar suggested' a $25 permit.
Bridge wins suppor1
Council also endorsed construetion of a new Ohio River bridge · 3}

council on Nov. 20, 1995 by former
. Mayor John W. Blaettnar in light of
the ongoing grand promenade project. For aesthetic reasons, village
officials are reluctant to reinstall
Parking meters along the. promenade.
Blaennar proposed ' dropping the
price of parking permits, · not
installing meters along the prome-

'

•

ATIIENS (AP) - A dean at a
New York universily has been
appointed provost at Ohio Univer.,. sity.
.
: · . Sharon Ste(lhens Brehm will
.start her new job July 1, OU President Robert Glidden said Monday.
The provost is the head acadeinic
f the ·
•
...,.... 0
umverstty.
Brehm was awarded lhreeyear cootract and will be paid

By EUZABETH NEUS

Gannett New• Service

. . . . .ft

a

"!"

_¥_

technolog~

plant, any walkout could not have the
nator for the Eastern Local ScllooJ~r· : &gt; • ,'
wide-ranging effect of last month's
who wants to hold a technology fair
·•
~trike at rwo Daytdn brake plants.
in the county .to allow Meigs resiThat walkout created parts shortages
dents access to new compyter techat other plants and shut !fown much
nology.
of GM 's North American operations.
Sbe asked for assistance by the
. The 18-day strike by 2,700 workcommission and Economic Developers in a local contract disnute was setment .Director Julia Houd8sheh to
tied March 22.
"
plan the event.
The Tribune Chronicle of Warren
Ken Riggs of Chester indicated his
reported that Alii was fired Saturday
intention to start a company offering
for improperly clocking oul Alii told
local Internet access with a special
the newspiJPCr that he clocked out the
discount for school-aged children.
same way he has for 20 years.
Riggs said he does a lot of business
Deibel said Alii was fired "for
through the Internet.
improper conduct in the plan~ conIn other business, the board:
duc t to
· vto
· 1au·on of au
1
th
'
Met &amp;with
Mi1chel
R. . Strain
of
··~ rues at
Burgess
Niple
En. '"nee
n'ng and
apply to that"
.,.
He refused. to give details or say
h TELLING
h 1 HIS SIDEf ., 1 AI Alii; .Architects of Columbus about further
whether it was related to the clock- s op c a rman o un ted Auto study of the old county landfill on
.
Workers 1112, discussed his fir- Howell Hill Road near Pomeroy.
tng out procedures.
. ing from a General Motors · Strain said the .Ohio EnvironmeitAlii, the union's lead negotiator, assembly plant at the union
Pr
· A
.
has been deadlocked in talks with
ta1 otectJon ·gency requires tWo
office In Lordstown. Union mem- studies before work can be done to
Lordstow~ management over use of bers staged a one-dav walkout
ff f
outside sources for the manufacture Monday 1o protest A~l's firing. treat water runo rom the closed
of rome parts, staffi.ng and health and (AP)
landfill. One study has been comsafety issues.
(Continued on Page 3)

Studies differ over personal cost of health insurance:

WASHINGTON - If you are
keeping score, the tally is now three ·
studies that say health insurance
refonn will.not affect your premium
much if you buy insurance on your
own, and two studies that say iiJWi\1 ..
1be latest study. released Monday,
•YS premiums for people who buy
insurance as individuals and not.
tlirough their jobs 'will go up anywhere · from ·less than I percent to
S'.~he~O:, ~~ of the College about 5.7 percent if the bill sponsored
of Arts and Sciences at the Stale
by Sens. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan .•
University.of N~w York in Bing·
and Ed')Vard Kennedy. D-Mass.•
·
becomes law.
~~ou, ahe repltces David
But because premiums in.the indiStewmo who a1lltO!lnced hla retitevidual market t~enprally rise more
: ment. Iul f.JI.
;
,.
lhfllr lheach year; ."The lon
,dg:ruke-n"
1
1
1
.-~-------'..----...1 ~nee! o ts egu abon wou 11
•'

·
union hall earlier Monday and said
there would be no comment.
1\vo retired UAW workers picketed for a short time Monday alongside a road leading to a plant
entrance. They expected the strike 10
continue until Alii went back 10
..._
'
wo!1oey got rid of AI, they got rid
of everybody," said Tom ()ales, 53, of
Austintown. "Without AI, the place
is nothing."
GM spokesman Ray Deibel said
the union members must return 10
work, but he would not say whether
they will be fired for the walkout. The
company was not ta!ki ng WI'th th e
union about the s••ike.
"I can tell you...the action taken at
Lordstown by UAW Local. 1122
employees who walked off the job is
an illegal work stoppage and violates
the work stoppage and strike a.,...,._
co·ment between General Motors and
the United Auto Workers," Deibel
said.
Since ~rdstown is an assembly

lis, for asphalt concrete, and for
bituminous by Asphalt Materials Inc.
of Marielta and thenJurthered three
bids for aggregate material to Eason
for further review.
Eason explained that the highway
departrnentisapplyingforagrantfor
additional repairs to Roy Jones Road
between Syracuse and Forest Run
Road.
He ~ed the board to commit
$5,000 Jil CDBG funds toward the
$70,000 project, a request commis-

sio~:~~rs~~~~
then mei wit))
Nancy Larkins,
·coordi-

;GM workers return .from one-day walkout

hllbllslttd 1eM

Years

cOUNTY PLAN RELEASED:._ Sybil Haney, left, of the Buckeye Hllls·Hocklng Valley Region·
el Development District, dlecuuea the compilltlon of 1he Meigs County Strategic Plan .Man·
day. With Haney Is Meig1 Economic Development Director Julia Houdashel1. (Sentinjl) photo)

'·
'
'
· By JIM FREEMAN
ing permit. ThoSe parking elsewhere
"I thought !he original suggestio~
· Sentinel Newa Staff
will have to feed parking meters and about permit parking was best,"
Rejecting a plan proposed by be limited to two hours.
Council President John Musser said.
downtown merchants, Pomeroy ViiLast month, the Pomeroy MerMusser said the merchants' prolage Council Monday night look chants Association proposed. free posal would reduce parking revenue
action to resolve a 5-month-old parking on the parking lot coupled byabout$8,000ayear,whichwould
· dilemma over the future of downtown with metered, timed parking on the · costthe village about $2,000 annual: parking.
streets.
ly after deducting wages paid to the
As of.June I, motorists wanting to ·
Both plans eliminate day-long meter maid.
park on the river side of the parking . streetside parking permits and com"It's the only way to create enoltgh
. lot will have tQ purchase a $50 park- • plimentary permits.
money for the meter maid," he said.

61 Years

Phone 555-1245
El1111lllhed 1925

'·

You've got a lot on vour mind. You're building
vour world and vour insurance needs are
. real. But you don't need to add this worrv
to ·v our list.

ByTOMHUNTEfl
focuses available resources on
Sentinel Newt Stllff
shaping emerging opportunities in
Meigs County officials feel they ' a rapidly . changing environment.
have taken another vital step in the This plan will play an imponant
process to attract economic devel- role in receiving future state fundopment to lhe ,area with Monday's
ing for various projects, and will
official unveiling'·of the "Meigs immediately provide us direction
County Strategic Plan for the late in following through on goals the
1990!i'and Beyond."
various committees have set" said
Presentation of the plan at the Houdasbelt.
regular meeting of the Meigs
Committee members are hopeCounty Board of Commissioners fullhat this stnitegic plan of action
. culminated over two years of data will be beneficial iii:
collettion. information gathering,
• Helping Meigs County
planning and organizing by an become an attractive develo)iment
advisory committee of several area of diven;e C~:Onomies which
Meigs County business lllid com- . provide full employment;
•· Encourage area residents 10
munity leaders, according to Eci&gt;'nomic Development Director Julia prom01e their culture and heritage
Houdashelt.
as part of their diversification
The 92-p;!ge plan was compiled efforts;
by Houdashelt's offiCe in coopera:
• Promote the county as an area
lion with the commissioners and offering a high quality of life and
Buckeye Hills/Hocking Valley
multitude of diverse opponuniRegional Development District. · ties, based on its natural resolll'ces.
During the project, advisory Such recognition can only be
committees evaluated the issues of accomplished by providing suffiinfrastructure and transportation, cient public infrastruCiure, educationa!, health, and social services 10
quality of life, economic develop·rnent, human resoun::es and ser- amply support a high quality of
vices, and l!ducation. Objeclives communily life.
"
and strategies were set by the
Houdashelt ~ked the comcommittees to increase grQWih in , missioners and committees for
those areas and make Meigs Coun- their time and dedication toward
ty more marketable for develop- the successful completion of the
ment. .
p\an, and presented copies of the
"Thi
· •L· s 1s
u'!" resu1t of a co11abop1an to all strategic pJaimins par- .
· ' · ·~~pniessthllt l';-"'u'clpaniS'.
. ··~ :-: ---eti nr:· '
·
·
·
·

.

LESS

THING

89

555-1.342
EllabftshM1t23

.flttone 555-8242

A Gonelt Co. lh:MIII'I*

Moment
of silence.:
scheduled
for Friday··;

.Po. .meroy -t o_implement

78

Eatabllslttd 1835

ONE

•

.·~

Fonst Hill Cleaners

35-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, Aprll16,1996

Meigs unveilS
stra-tegic, plan

.'

92 Years

tonight. Low In
301. We n . .dly eunny,
high In mid eo..

•

• -·

60 Years

'

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
Richard Gere courtroom drama "Primal Fear" was the nation's No. 1 film
for a second week with an estimated
weekend box office take of $8.1 million, studio and industry sources
reponed.
The children's animated fantasy
"James and the G·iant Peach" was a
close second, earning about $8 mil·
lion in its debut, followed by "The
Birdcage" with $7.1 million.
Final weekend box office figures
were to be released today.
·
" Fear," starring Mark Wahlberg.
opened in founh place with $6.9 million and the Martin Lawrence film
"A Thin Line Between Love &amp;
Hate" ·was fifth with an estimated
$5.6 million.
The comedy "Kids in the Hall :
Brain Candy" earned $85P,OOO at
163 locations in its debut for an
impressive $5.~15 per location. That
compares to $4,085 per location for
the top film: "Primal Fear."
The Top I0 weekend box office
performers:
J. "Primal Fear," $8. I million.
2. "James ani! the Giant Peach,"
$1! million.
·
· 3. "The Birdcage," $7.1 million.
4. "Fear," $6.9 million.
5. "A Thin Line Between Love &amp;
. Hate," $5.6.million.
· · 6. "Sgt. Bilko,'' $3.8 million.
· 7. "Executive Detision," $3 million (tie).
.
8. "Flirting With Disaster," $3
million (tie). '
.
· 9. "Oliver &amp; Company." $2.4 million.
10. "Fargo," $1.9 million.

Voi.41,NO.Z48

:I ~ICIIono, , . ......

•

100 Years 95 Years

Cln"1.

Buckeye 5:
4-18-23-29-36

•

·---·----.-,.---

---

8814

r

Be A Part Of
The _Daily Sentinel.,s

'

Plck3:
926
Pick·4:

Sporta, Page 4

could be a potential long-term use,"
Cognitive functions did not improve off the idea, saying there is evidence effects of aging.
"it may •!ow down things and that Papadakis said.
significantly and many experienced that the hormone at least ·retards the
side effects.
·
More than three-foUf(hs of the
men complained of swollen ankles.
aching joints and stiff hands. A quarter of the research sul&gt;jects asked that
their dose~ be lowered because of the
physical problems.
"To our disappointment. we found
absolutely no improvement in function," Papadakis said.
One possible reason the studies
yielded different results could be that
Rudman's participants knew they
were getting the hormone and were
expecting to feel better, Papadakis
said .
In contrast, half the men in thehtest study were given shots of the hormone .three times a week and half
received a placebo. ~ut .none of
them - including their doctors knew who was getting the real thing.
I
In addition to the unpleasant side
effects, Papadakis said, the drug is
expensive. The hormone therapy can
cost $12,000 a year.
But she did not completely write

----------

Ohio Lottery

Marathon
tunnerdles
In 1OOth race

San Francisco SupeJVi- Kev'Shelley told the crowd he hoped
never become a "mean-spirited white
male.''
"As one white guy who nevO.
wants to be a narrow-111inded o!jl
white guy. I say to those of yQu he!'!
that you must stand finn for justice.'·'
he said. • ·
' •

growth hormone ·does not ·gr~atly reverse aging process

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - A
Papadaki s sought to duplicate
growth hormone hailed for its poten- Rudman 's study and go further by
tial to reverse the effects of aging comparing the men's strength, stadoes not significantly improve the mina and mental skills before and
lives of elderly men and can cause after taking increased levels of horpainful side effects,' according to a mone.
study published today.
" The bottom line with aging is the
" Thi s is not the fountain of issue of loss of function, not how a
youth." said Dr. Maxine A. person looks," she said.Sunday.
Papadakis, a professor of medicine at
Over six months, 56 men between
the University of California-San . the ages of 70 and 85 were given dosf'rancisco and director of the study on es of somatropin equivalent to levels
the growth hormone somatropin.
in men half their ages.
Her findings, published in the
Higher levels of the hormone are
Annals ofinternal Medicine, contrast naturally found in younger men.
with those of a ballyhoOed 1990 Also, previous stu~ies have found
study by Dr. Daniel Rudman of the that increased levels of growth horMedical College of Wisconsin, which , mone in younger people can improve
found the first evidence suggesting muscle mass and strength.
growth hormone could reduce sympThe Papadakis . study 'found the
toms of aging.
·
older inen's muscle mass increased
In that study, 12 men between the slightly - about 4 percent - and
ages pf 61 and 73 who took growth body fat decreased - about 13 perhormone reported that they felt · cent - but they did not get any
stronger. more active, and their minds stronger.
were sharper. Researchers observed
The men had thicker muscles, but
that six months of treatment appeared it didn't improve their ability to lift
to cancel out I0 to 20 years of some a leg.machine, squeeze a hand grip or
age-related·changes.
• ride an exercise bike, the study said.

.,..

...•

said.
"Legislation like the KassebaumKennedy bill moves us in the right
direction, but· we have to remember
there are larger underlying problems
that must be solved lo promote reasonably priced health care for all consumers," said Gail Shearer,' author of
the CU report, "Health Care CheckUp: Consumers at Risk."
The RAND report is the latest in
an ongoing tug-of-war over what tbe
Senate bill will do to insurance premiums. Depending on which report
you read, the bill either will do nothing - or send premiums soaring for
anywhere between ).50,000 and several million people.
/
The studies all focus ·on the same
I0 million peopie -those who buy
insurance on their own. The Senate

ly be undetectable," said the study by exhausted COBRA benefits; is buyRAND. a private research finn spe- ing soon afler thejob loss; and cannot get insurance through a spouse's
cializing in health care issues.
"If you're going to oppose this plan.
.·. The bill would do little to help
.legislation, there are a lot of reasons,
but this (the chalice of higher premi- those who are uninsured because thev
ums) is not one of them," said Jacob · cannot afford the coverage. While
Klennan, author of the repon. · . insurers would have to sell· to most
As the Senate debate on Kasse- ' new customers, the bill does not
baum-Kennedy nears - a vote is require them to make the coverage
expected sometime· ·this' week affordable for everyone.
In fact, Consumers Union Monstudies dissecting its pros and cons
proliferate. The _bill is designed to day issued a .report ·claiming the
help workers whO cannot get insur-. health care marketplace is Jx:coming
ance for pre-existing medical condi- more unfriendly; the number of unfutions. arid those who cannot change spre'&amp; and underinsured (those with
jobs bec•use they will lose wiiatever not enOugh insurance) has risen since
'
covenge they have. . •
national health care refonn efforts
Insurers wolild be required to sell ' failed in 1994, and the number of
to anyone whc:&gt; hai had insurance for people uridet 65 with employerat teas1 12 months II! an old joti; has based COVCfllge has fallen, the report

'

••

•

•

.bill requires that insurers sell ro
those who leav·e employef'-based
· group insurance·and want'to enter the
individual market - a process
known as guaranteed issue.
Premiums for those who buy
insurance through employers - thi!
vast majority of people with insur•
ance - should not than11e much if
the bill passes.
·
The largest estimate comes .ffom
· the Council for Affordable Health·
. Insunince - CAHI - which said
. premiUIJlS 'lllent up imywhere from 25'
.to 80 pertent in seven states with legislation requirin11 insurers to sell to
·anyone. An oft-quoted study from lhe'
·Jieallh Insurance Associadoa of
·America- HIAA- SI!YS ~IIW
lwm rise as !"tich as 30 percent ·

1

�PoNroy • Mldcllport, Ohio

Commentary

Page2
Tuzs dlly, Ap1111t, 1 •

'

'Lstd!Jfisfwf in 19-18
111 Court Sl, P-oy. Ohio
114-tU-2156 • Fu: 192-2157

.2,
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

.,

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

. Gener.llbnegar

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Ohio law-won't let
innocence stand in
Way of sentence
'

By

PAUL SOUH!IADA
Auoclllted Preaa Writer
.
.
COLUMBUS - Americans may be presumed innocent until found
guilty, but innocence won't necessarily get you off Ohio's death row,
Ohio's post-conviction appeals law does not include a direct remedy. for
anyone who can prove they&gt; are innocent of the capital crime they were convicted of unless they also can prove they did not receive a fair trial.
That means they are out of luck if new evidence is uncovered, someone
else confesses to the crime or DNA tests prove their innocence more than
120 days after the trial. After that, under current law, they would first have
11&gt; ~onvince the original judge to.grant them a new trial.
1be Ohio Public Defender Commission wants that to change.
It's shopping around legislation that would make factual innocence a
basis for setting aside convictions.
Commission Chairman James Owen said he believes as many as 10 of the
163 convicts awaiting the death penally in Ohio could be innocent,
But he conceded that the odds of proving it are small.
"The chance's of someone who's in prison, with no resources and no right
of discovery, of proving their innocence is so minuscule, you wonder how
many people are innocent," he added.
Owen said he believes the state's death penalty is stacked against the
accused in other ways. as well.
- The state does not have to tum over infonnation to the defense, as the
two Sides are required to do in any civil case.
-And the state does not provide the right to a lawyer to handle appeals.
The Public Defender Commission's bill would reverse both of those policies.
.
Deputy Attorney General Mark Weaver thinks the system is already
weighted in favor of defendants.
"The chance of an innocent man being executed in the stale of Ohio is
infinitesimal," Weaver said. "There are as many as 24 steps of review buill
into the process to make sure that doesn't happen."
.
.
Ron Huff, director of Ohio State University's Criminal Justice Research
Center, believes the public is bothered by the prospect of executing an innor..:nt person.
That'~ why support for capital pu'iUsliJnent drops off when people sur;eyed are given the option of choosing life in"prison without parole, Huff
raid,
,
"People are troubled they might get the wrong person, but they don't
·.vanl them on the street," he eKplained.
But the proposed legislation may suffer from poor timing.
Public opinion polls regularly show that Ohioans are in favor of the death
penalty, even though no one has been executed in the state since 1963.
Attorney General Betty Montgomery has picked up on that, making
speeding up the death penlllty system a priority of her administration.
Montgomery recently blamed "systemic delays" for keepina murderers
from the electric chair or lethal injections - though fellow Republican,
Chief Justice Thomas Moyer, said the process is working about as well as
. can be expected.
""'

Today iri history

limit~

career options

So they fmlllly c111ght the ha~ some other recomblow .you up."
.
•• Clown.
mclldati011s • to. the
- Special effects pyrotechWhen he'd blow up a fUMy billUlllbomber. Whau relief!
Considerina my atlitllde, I wu • Ulllbomber for possible
nician.
loon animal, it would stay blown up.
starting'to WOtrrf !bat I miaht be the careen.
Helicopters, buses, air--·CEO
Unabomber. I lit the FBI profile: I
Television talk
piii!!Cf and truCks must be · Instead of downsizing a company
live in Northern ·CIIIifomia, am a show host.
explodotl for our maximum by layinc off employees -- blow
white mille in h\s 40s, work lllone,
The Jerry, Springers
cinematic enjoyment. Who them up!
am well-educated, hate flying , and and Opra)ls of the world
better to do this job?
-- Do.wnsized worker.
am bitter and reclusive -- at least are fast running out of
•• Video same designer. '
Laid off? Blow the company up!
when I'm between girlfriends. IVe steam. Wouldn't it be
The Unabomber's cxper-- Stand-up comic.
been pretty absent-minded lately. I · refreshing to have a host
tise could create some interHe'd sive a whole new meaning
co11ld have committed these heinous who would invite Menestirig one-time "Lose" to the phrases, " I killed them" and
Who-Spit-in-Public or By lan Shoal.. options for the hard-core "I bombed."
crimes. lind forgot!
I've lllso been spending a lot of Women-Who-Dressgamer.
·
Clearly, whatever profession the
time in the garage, a lot of time Like-Men-Who-Love-Pit-Bulls 10
-·Professional football player. • UnabQmher chooses it had better be
· draftjng manifestos and muuering his show, and then blow them up?
He may lack athletic ability, but one that leaves him pretty much to
threats ul)der my breath. Fonunate•• Advice columnist.
who would dare tackle him?
his own devices (so to speak). ·(A
"Dear Unabomber: my wife just , -- Chef.
note to my parents: They caught the
ly. I still have all my fingers; this is
His knowledge of chemistry guy, all right? Quit trying to tum me
a good indicator, given my manual ran off with my best friend. Whar
dexterity, that I'm not a mad bomber should I do? CONFUSED." "Dear would stand him in good stead in in.)
,
eco-letTQ.rist, just another crank with CONFUSED: Blow them up."
this f.eld. I doubt if ,any dissatisfied
(To NOIIft • COfiiiii'"-IIIIIY 1M
a prose style.
.. Radio talk show host.
gounnand would dare to send a dish ShMIH -•"""'"'• C811 1 - ••
"Am I on the a~'r?."
back though
DUCK or ....,. Duck'a I_..., 4111
I should have known myself bet- ·
'
·
Broed St.,
City, CAISNII.)
ter. I couldn't possibly live in a log
"Thm your radio down please."
•• Television pundit.
1M lite lin '- a lyn!llc*ld wrtw
cabin and eat parsnips, much less
"Unabomber? I'm a first-time
"I think !'lob Dole's best hope is lor N&amp;Wipaper EnwprtleAiaocllllfon.
to blow up the pollsters."
. (For kll'omlllllon on liowto COINnll-.l
use a manual typewriter (What, and caller?"
give up Microsoft Word 6.0?). And I
"Tum your radio down."
-- Founh of July pyrotechnic ian. ~l:"a~c==•A=·
do have some friends remaining, at
"Thank you for taking my calL"
What a show he'd put on! Don't Online by C81Ung 1-ec»-127-8314, axt. ,
least until the next time I ask to bor8317.)
.
"Tum your radio down or I'll sit too close though.
row some money.
I do feel a pang of envy though.
Some don 't consider the Unabomber
an obsessed hermit at all, but an '
WUTl QUIT.NOW
enigmatic loner, kind of like Gary
A 816 T($4CC0
Cooper with C-4 plastique. Never
mind that the guy is a self-satisfied
homicidal lunatic; a Boston group ·
called UNAPACK (Unabomber
political action committee) wants to
run the Unabomber for president.
Towards that end it has a web site
(http://www.paranoia.com/unapack), and a suggestion for a politi•
•
cal bumper sticker: "Don't Blame
Me -- I Voted for the Unabomber."
•
I'm not sure the World Wide Web
•
is the proper place to adore a technophobic psycho, however. And I'm
not convinced that the Unabomber
should run for president. What
would his platform be? Vote fof\ mc
and I'll kill your television? Even if
he had a .platform, he'd probably
blow it up before we even got a
chance to discuss the issues, much
less his ratings in the polls.
No. the .presidency is out. Since
we are tenuous soul-mates, though, I

The commercial asks if I've ever sent a fax
from the.beach. If I've ever checked my messages
from a mountaintop. If I've ever attended a business meeting in my pajamas.
God, lio.
"YOU WILL!" it booms.
Yipes.
Now, I'm not a technophobe, not most of the
time anyway. Technology, after all, has been a
great boon to the modem family. Modems, e-mail
arid.fax machines have made it possible for mothers and fathers to stay home with the kids and
hold down full-time jobs. Videocassette (!:Corders
and cable television have been a godsend to
homebound parents who aren't big fans of, say,
"Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman." And microwave
dinners may not be right for every meal •• but it's
nice to know you have a freezer full of them.
But the next round of technological innovations don't sound .terribly helpful. During this
year's brutal winter, I often fantasized ahout being
on the beach. These daydreams had many elements •• fruity drinks, cocoa butter, Antonio Banderas -- but not once did a fax machine enter the
picture. Not once.

'By The Aaeocletecl Prwn
.
Today is Tuesday, April 16, the 107th day of 1996. There are 259 days
. left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: .
On April 16, 1789, President-elect Washington left Mount Vernon, Va., · Gennett Newe Service
for his inauguration in New York.
·
WASHINGTON - Just hours after Ron
On this date:
.
.
Brown's wife got word that a plane carrying her
In 1862, a bill ending slavery in the District of.Columbia became law.
husband flew into a Croatian mountainside, Bob
In 1879, St. Bem:lllette, who had described seeing visions of the Virgm Grant -"- New York's highest rated talk radio host
Mary at Lourdes, died in Ne~ers, France.
- worried aloud that the Commerce secretary
In 1889, comedian and movie diroctor Charles Chaplin was born in Lon- might have survived the crash.
don.
Responding to a caller who suggested that
In 1912, Harriet Quimby became the first woman to Hy across the Eng- · Brown was dead, and to early reports that at least
Iish Channel, using a Bleriot monoplane to travel from Dover, England, to one passenger had been pulled alive from the
Hardelot, France.
wreckage, Grant offered up this thought: "My
In 1917. Vladimir llyich Lenin returnc:c! to Russia after years of exile.
hunch is that he (Brown) is the one '\urvivor. I just
In 1935,' the long-running radio comedy program "Fibber McGee and have that hunch. Maybe it's because, at heart, I'm
Molly," starring Jim and Marian Jordan. premiered on the NBC Blue 'Net- . a pessimist."
work. '
And then he laughed.
In 1945, U.S. troops reached Nuremberg, Germany, during the World War an .ugly, vile laugh.
II.
.
.
Like Mickey Mouse
In 1945. in his first speech to Congress. President Truman pledged to and Pocahontas, Bob
carry out the war and peace policies of his predecessor, President Roosevelt. Grant is a big money
In 1947, at least 500 people died in a series of fires and explosions in maker for the Walt'Disney
Texas City, Texas, after a French freighter blew up in the harbor.
·
Company, the CaliforniaIn 1962, Walter Cronkite succeeded Douglas Edwards as anchorman of based entenainment con"The CBS Evening News."
glomerate that owns
-In 1972, Apollo 16 blasted ofT from Cape Kenn~y. Aa., on a voyage to WABC, the radio station
·
from which Grant regular' ,
•he moon.
·
Ten years ago: Dispelling rumors he was dead, Libyan leader Moammar ly emits his noxious
Gadhafi appeared on television to condemn the U.S. rai.d on his country and words. But since Grant
offered his death wish for
10 say that Libyans were " ready to die.. defending their country..
Five years ago: President Bush anqounced that U.S. forces would be sent Brown, Disney ·officials
into northern Iraq to assist Kurdish refugees.
have been tight-lipped
soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev began a visit to 1!'1"'"· Sir Dawd about -their loose-lipped
Lean, director of the movies '.'The Bridge on the River Kwai," "Lawrence talk show host, who over
of Arabia" and "Doctor Zhivago," died in London at age 83.
the years has celebrated
One year ago: In his Easter Sunday message, Pope John Paul II sent a the death of resgae music
message of peace to VICtims of unrest. mcludmg the Palesttnt.ans and Kurds. singer ·Bob Marley and
. . pmed for basketball star
Today's Birthdays: Actor-comedian Spike Milligan is 78.
Actor Barry Nelson is 76.
Magic Johnson, who is HIV-positive, to get full blown AIDS and die.
Actor-director-author Peter Ustinov is 75.
Actress-singer Edie Adams is 67.
Last week. as Brown was being eulogized in
Singer Dusty Springfield is 57.
Washington, John Dreyer, Disney's head of corQueen Marsrethe ILof Denmark is 56.
.
pOrate communications, wouldn't talk to me.
Basketball Hall-of-Fame electee Kareem A~ui-Jilbbar is 49.
Answering 'questions about the prOfit his compaActress Ellen Barkin is 42.
·
.
ny makes from Grant's hateful talk was not someActor-i:OIIIcdian MJrtin 4wrence is 31.
,
,
thing he wanted to do. Instead, through his secre•
ThouJht for Today: "The cri~is yo'u have to wony about J.IIOSI is the ~ tary, he insisted I speak to someone at arms length
you don't see coming." - Mtke Mansfield, fanner Sonate Democrauc from Disney's squeaky-clean reputation.
leader and U.S. ambassador to Japan.
"It was an insensitive thing to say," Julie
(
•

When I'm hiking in
the mountains, I'm not
interested m whether an ·
editor has. called with a
revision request. I'd
rather not know that my
neighbor ~eeds me to
cat-sit, or that my
cousin's step-mother is
having a bridal shower
By Sere Eckel
smack dab in the middle
of next Saturday.
And as for business meetings, it is my solemn
belief that they go better when I am present and
properly dressed,. rather than sip]1ing not cocoa in'
my jammies from afar.
,
The fiction that the promoters of the new communications .technology offer us is that in the
future we will be able to spend more time at the
beach and less at the office. 'Illat our office will
BE the beach, or the mountain cabin or the houseboat.
No doubt a few resourceful souls will be able
to pull this off. But the more likely scenario for
most of us is not that we'll be spending more

•

Hoover,
of
Capital
Cities/ABC, the Disney
,subsidiary that manages
WABC, said of Grant's
remark ahout Brown. Then
she shimmied to his
defense. "Bob Grant is on
the air for thJ:ee or four
hours a day.... When people arc talking' that much.
sometimes they don't
phrase things very well."
Hummmm.

By DeWA'(NE

WICKHAM

Not done, she then
suggested that Grant 's hateful
words had to be considered in
the broader context of the discussion he was having with' a
caller at the time he spoke
them about his dislike for
President Clinton. "One
could argue that he was say·
ing, ·•1 don't want to sec Clinton re-elected and anything
that hurts his chances is all
right · with me,' " she
explained.
As defenses go, that's
a pretty weak one.
A more accurate context might come from knowing that on an earlier broadcast Grant told his listeners:
"I despise R,on Brown. I loath
Knowing this was
enough to move Jesse Jackson and NAACP pres·.
ident Kweisi Mfume to call on Disney to fire
Grant -just as WABC pulled the plug on Alan
Dershowitz's radio show last month after the Harvard Law professor branded Grant a racist and
bigot.
Bob Grant. is a mean,.spirited, hate-filled man
who uses the platfonn ·Disney provides him to
harangiiC blacks, gays, environmentalists and
other enemies of die radical right. And be ·gets
away with it because hate sells. Grant is the high-

'

Tod~y's..live$tock

Moment of silence

.
r--------. ... '

.·The Light.
Toacl)

Hospital news

•.

!
I

And the reputation of the Wall Disney Campa- .• I,
ny is diminished.
.

i

. '·1
'••
••
•'

. ''

.I
~

•
I

•
•
:l

.,

' I
&gt; I

i.

, I
I

•
•
'•
,,

.
I

'

'

•,.
·--.....

:l

,.-t !
I

·,;.

1.•

'j

NINI! OUT OF TEN CRqll DAtiiiRS ,..,~

PREFER WONOERBRA

~

• 1

.

D.aily
I

t

:

'

Rutlallll.

Announcements

.

'

I

•

.

Dave

Actions to end
marriages filed

'•
....
· ..
....
.
:

report

Ectucators to host Carey ,!; .·EMS units log 12 calls
at dinner set: for April 23

·.
: ·,
,

erinch.

..

~

Meigs Local Schools set
kindergarten ,regi~tration ~·

' '•

him."

Iss• I

Search of suspect's cabio
yields wealth of chemicals

.. .

Berry's World

Three-CIIT crash injures four

D.
. r, .clearing skies
wi_fl'bring break from rain ·

J

est rated talk show host in the No. I radio market
in the nation. That ·translates into big profits for
Disney - earnings Disney was after last year
when it purchased Capital CitieslABC for $19
billion.
And now it seems that to recoup its investment
Disney is willing to tolerate all that Grant says
and does. That's a crying shame. But ultimately,
I'm convinced, the entenainment giant's "profiby-any-means" attitude will hun its business.
Bob Grant' is a malignant cancer.
He is a virus of this nation's heart and soul.
·And every time someone in the Walt Disney
Company begs off the question of why tbey put
up with him - and a spokesperson at its Capital
Cities/ABC affiliate tries to explain away the
harm he's doos- Pinocchio's nose grows anoth-

'

Shooting suspect free on bond

work tim~ in th~ great outc!oors, but thill our time.''
in the great outdoors will be spent .working.
,
If that repon .c.an he.filed Just as easily frqm !;t. ,
Croix as .from the home office, then there's really ..no reason why we can't just make a few revisio11s ..
while we're on vacation, our future bosses may
reason. If we've biought the cell phone .on that ,
camping trip anyway, then there's no reason we.
can't immCdiately return Aunt Ed~'s VQice-mail. ;,
And since our country house has a ponable laptop •
with videocorifercncing capabilities, well . ... it ,
looks like we 'II be able to make the big client ;.
meeting after all.
I fear a world where I can nev~r disappear,
where relatives and co-workers have round-the- . ;
clack, immediate access. But what I fear even : !
more is that I will gradually adapt to this new cui- , ,:
ture. That one day it will be me walking down the . r
street with a cell phone in my ear. That one day "
I'll say "You can just beep me" to my hoss. That
one day I'll d~ of faxing from the beach.
,,
s.ra Eckalla a ayndlcawd wrll8r lor Nawapapar • ·.
Entwprlae ~oclldlon.
;
land comoMnta to lila au1h..- In - . . af thla ''
.MWIJIFpel' or. And her e-m•lllrt
. NrHUmaol.com. - ~

Radio host's words diminish Disney reputation

·•

chase a brick for lhe mao who lllllk .
, (Collllt uacf from Plgl 1)
provided it is built at or near the loca- a SI00,000 donation toward the
• •
Pomeroy police investiaated two auto llttideniS early Monday
tioa ol the uistinJ Pomeroy-Muon ampllilhealer project
MICH.
· Councilwoman Geri Walton DOled :
evenillj. wilh citalioal iuued to one IIIOklrist, accordina to P~
Bridge.
Three rumored sites for a new that&amp; lot of people are bumln&amp; &amp;ruh :
Police Olief ".erald Rought.
bridJe were mentioned -the exist· and brush 11 illegal limes. It wu •
The fmt accident occured at 4:~ p.m., on East Main Street near
in1 location, in Pomeroy at Nyc pointed out that people are not :
H &amp; R Block. A 198S Ford RanJer, drivetrby Rebecca J. Thompson,
Avenue and in Middleport at Mill llllowed to bum any trash in the vii- :
40, Pomeroy, was stopped ia traftic when the vehicle was struck from
M. '
lage.
:
Street.
behind in a chain-reaction collution.
I •
Councilmao Scott Dillon mirrored •
"It's probably better for our downA vehicle driven by Eric J. Hollon, 17, Long Boaom, struCk the rear
'fahon's concerns about open bum- :
town where it is," Musser said.
of another vehicle driven by Teresa D. Simpson, 18, Pomeroy, which
IN).
!
Councilman Bill Young expanded ins in the village.
then struck the Th~pson vehicle from behind. All vehicles involved
Youns said many residents are :
on that thought adding that the exist·
received lisht damaae .
ing site is better for both downtowns. also leaving trash on their pon;hes •
Simpson and her passenger, Suzanna Henderson, Pomeroy, were
"I think it's in our best interest to and keeping unlicensed, junk cars. :
transported to Veterans Memorial flospital, where they w~ treated
keep
it as close as possible to where Residents are not alrowed to have :
and relased, while the others involved were treated at the scene by
Columbus
unlicensed CJn in the village, e~n if :
it is," Musser added.
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.
The endorsement followed an ear- they are on pnvate propeny, Young •
Thompson was cited by police for no driver's license.
lier meeting between Pomeroy May- said.
·
:
The second accident occurred at 7:39 p.m. on Nye Avenue. K.M.
or
Frank
Vaughan
and
Middleport
Rowe, 49, Racine was traveling south on Nyc Avenue when be slowed
Councilman Larry Wehruna blast- :
Mayor Dewey Horton.
for another vehicle making a tum, and was struck from behind by a
ed village workers for their treatment :
Pomc;roy resident Melinda Strong, of a water problem in front of his :
1988 ~driven· by Jlislin M. Fields, 17, Po!lleroy.
the mother of two students at home on Lincoln Heights.
Lig damage damage was recorded to Rowe's 1991 Mercury Sable
,
Pomeroy. Elementary School , met
and. Fi
v.e,hi'cle. No injuries were reported. ,
"They're just ignoring it," he said. :
with council concerning the improve- '"They dug it up but water is still com- :
ment of a parking area across from ing up."
•
the
elementary
school.
Other
eouncU
1elloa
.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. -An Ashton man is free on bond after
Vaughan explained council memIn other business, council:
'
being arrested Monday evening in connection with a weekend shootber
Geqrge
Wright
had
secured
a
• Gave second reading to an ordi~- •
ing pn Palestine Ridge, according to Mason County Sheriff Ernie Wat$200 voucher from the Meigs Local nance approving a proP,Cny lf~sfer....
tersoh.
Board of Education and, using his
• Noted spring cleanup W!ll be;•
Alan Ward Camp, 19, posted $2,500 bond this morning for a malipersonal
truck,
had
placed
crushed
held
starting April 22-26 ib coopera~
cious assault charge against Rodney Mayes, 23, Ona. Camp was
limestone at the site and added that tion with the Meigs County Litter •
arraigned before Magistrate Johnny Reynolds.
·
village employees will
improve
the &lt;;ontrol office. Workers will pick ur :·
Watterson said Mayes was shot when he and two other men alleged.
'
area
later.
•
.
rubbish left at curb side on the fol- •'
1y confronted Camp early Saturday at a Palestine Ridge home.
Strong,
who
has
attended
numerlowing dates: first ward, April 22;
Mayes was taken to St. Mary's Hospital after being shot in the upper
ous
council
and
school
board
meetsecond.•ward,
April 23; third wardt ~
body. He was released ·from the liuntington facility Monday.
ings
on
the
subject;
was
critical
that
By The Aasoclated Pre"
Lows 30 to 35.
April
24;
village-wide,
April 25 and!
The sheriff said details of the incident are still under investigation.
a council member had to do the job 26. Workers will not pick up tires,
Drier air will push into Ohio
Wednesday...Mostly sunny. Hig~s
as opposed to village employees.
tonight, ending the threat Of ra;in and in the 50s nonh tO ll)e mid 60s SPUih.
wood or appliances.
,·:•
Third graders learn · about how
• Approved the minutes of the-''·,
s.now nurrie~ : ,
.'' Exteaded rorecast:
government works, but that is not April I meeting.
Clo~ wdi,\Je~in ,dl;creasing .frdm
. Th~rsdar, ..Dry. Lows m the 40s ·
how it works in Pomeroy, she said.
the west;-and·overnight lows w1ll be · w!lh highs tn the 60s to lower 70s.
• Heard a letter from the Rev: •~
"- about 30.
. Friday ... A chance of showers.
Strong said she frequently sees David DuPianlier from the Grace
· Temperatures will start to rebound Lows i'n the 40s with highs in the 60s.
HELENA, Mont. (AP) - Tile find a fair grand jury anyw~re in the village street department workers Episcopal Church, who is concerned ''driving around or otherwise wasting over a proposal to light the Pomeroy·; ·
as milder air moves in
Si'lurday...A chance of showers mountain shack of Unabomber sus- country.
Weather rorecast·
and thunderstorms. Lows in the 50s pect Theodore Kaczynski resembled
"These deliberate disclosures poi- time, and asked Vaughan who keeps baseball fields. He indicated concern
over' additional noise at nighttime that· ' •
Tonight...Decreasing • clouds. with highs 6S to 70.
a well-stocked high school chemistry soned. the entire population of grand track of'city workers.
Young said Pomeroy does not may result from lighting the fields. ~ · ;
lab with all the ingredients needed to jurors within the United States"
have
a lot of money and has to pri• Received a letter of thanks from' • •
create explosives, chemistry experts against Kaczynski, a defense motion
oritize
its
projects,
with
grant-fundthe
tourism dep'!flment for a $2,000
said. Donahoe attached 10 pages
said.
donation
from the village.
ed
work
receiving
top
priority.
The materials would allow some- filled with examples of leaks 'about
"It's
not
as
easy
..
aving
a
Clerk
Kathy Hysell reponed tho. " ;
one to create blocks of gunpowder the case that the defense contends
wand," he add~d. "We 1&gt; not a big· following balances for March: gen'
laced with a material that creates a carne from federal investigators.
era!, $100.679.70; safety, $3,417 .64; &gt;
city
... the wheels tum slow."
Registration for new kindergarten nizatidn records to registnition. , '
The motion said that if the govhot, violent explosion when confined
st,eet, $4,837 .1 4; state highway,
Later,
Vaughan
conceded
that
vilstudents in tbe Meigs Local School )
Chtidren should have had four in a small package, said Ed Keller, ~ ernment argues it is· not responsible
fire, $23,342.84; ceme$12,917.72;
lage
workers
and
their
supervisors
District will be held April29throug~ , DPT, three ,polio, one MMR and,.j.me 28-year member ofthe University of for the leaks, he intends to• puf
May 3. Children who will be 5 years ' TB skin test before entering sc'!OOI. Montana chemistry depanment.
reporters on·the stand and demand the need to be more accountable for.their tery, $14,373 .90; water, (-$8,632.56); •·
'sewer, $45,842.87; g~ranty meter,-.. "
lime.
old on or before Sept. 30 are eligible . Schqol nurses will be prese.~t a~ reg"He certainly had the stuff that names of sources.
Foot
patrol
activity
$18,924.37; utility, $16,988.05; fire
to Jltend kindergarten during the \stration lo answer any questions ~on- will explode," Keller said , after
During
open
discussion,
Musser
truck, $20,000; perpetual care,. .. .
1996-97 school year.
ceming immunization ~equireift.~n~.
In the listing released by the
reviewing a list of chemicals seized
moved
to
hire
a
street
sweeper
on
a
$1 ,284.55; ce metery endowment,
The kinderganen registration
School personnel Will assess ehil- in a search of Kac,zynski 's home.
judge, the references to San Francistrial
basis
with
the
merchants
associ$38,118.57
;
police 'pension,. ."
schedule is as follows : Pomeroy EJe- dren's hearing, speech, physical and
Besides the chemicals, the FBI co and to corporate executives were
ation
paying
for
one
of
the
cleanings.
$2,280.86;
building
fund, $2,148.50;
men~, April 29 from 9-11 a.m. and
languageJ!bililies. Info~ion ahout found two bombs, the addresses of cryptic and the corporate officials
The
'motion
was
approved.
recreation,
$4,937.89;
permissive tax,'
12:30' 3 p.tn:, ' 992-2710; Har: eachchlld'sperfonnancewillbepro- corporate· executives, maps of San were not identified. The references·
He
also
asked
that
the
police
$2,960.26; law enforcement; '. ·
risonville Elementary, April3.0 from .vided to parents at a later date.
Francisco, bus schedules, guns and a may be significant bec,ause the
9:30-11 :30 a.m. and 1-3:$1) J);.tjt.,
..·In(orma:tion obtained during the bottle of anti-depressant medi~ine, Unabomber, who raged asainst·mod- departm~nt foot patrol begin earlier. $3,167.78; COPS FAST granr.
742-3000; Bradbury Elemeritltry, registra~on and screening process according to a 34-page inventory em technology, targeted executives. due to increased spring and summer $2,680.87: downtown revitalization•: •
· '!Ctivity and suggested the village pur· $87 ,000; total, $463,270.75 .
May 1 from 9-11 a.m. and noon-2 allows school staff members to plan released Monday by a federal judge.
·
p.m., 992-2349; Middlepon Eleme11- activities that will make a child's first
Three
of
the
bombmgs
occurred
in
.· · ~
Also Monday, Kaczynski's attortary, May 2 ft:om · 8:30-11 a.m. and year of school ,uccessfutand enjoy- ~.ey.l&gt;1jc~l J;!onl!hoe. li.l~ a .mo\ion the S.an . F~II!Ci~~o B'y N'C3 and two
nooii-Zpim&lt;I99:Z-c.H8'7; R'iJ!lallll l"lfe-" •··at&gt;IC:··''"
' , ... ' ,, ·
'\""
· m federal court that satd charges in Sacramento. Fivi:' of ibe bombs
1
merl181j. May3 from8 :30-11:30a.m. · Parents are urged _tO call IJleir against his client should be dis- were mailed from northern CaliforCOLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana- 48 .75-50.50, few 50~5.
· ·
and 12:30-2 p.m,, 742-2666. ·
_ s~hbol as soon as posstble and make
missed · because disclosures about nia, in~luding two from Oakland and Ohio direct hog prices at selected . U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 40.50- ·.
Please bring child's birth certifi- an appointtnenlto register their child the case have made it impossible to one from San Francisco.
buying points Tuesday by the U.S. 46.50..
cate, Social Security c~d and immu- for kinderganen.
"f
Department of Agriculture Market
Sows: steady to 50 cents lower. · '·•
News:
U.S . 1-3, 300-500 lbs. 32.00-: ' ·
Barrows and gilts: steady to most- 35.00; 500-650 lbs. 35.00-39.00.
ly
50
cents higher; demand moderate
Boars: 28.00-30.00.
··'
Thompson,
Rebecca
Thompson
and
Units of the Meigs County EmerEstimated
receipts:
40,000.
,
on
moderate
run.
gency Medical Service respo~ded to Janet Simpson refused treatment;
U.S. 1-2, 220-260 lbs. 47.00Prices from The Producers
9:33 p.m., State Route 681,
12 calls for assistance Monday. Units
'
Charles F. Ziegler, treated at the 49.50, few· 46.50 and 50.00;. plants Livestock Association:
State Rep. John A. Carey Jr., R- as assistant to. ·U.S. Rep.' Clarence responding included:
4.00
to
6.00
lower.
Cattle:
scene;
MIDDLEPORT
Wellsior\, wi11 1dlscuss action by the Miller after graduating with a degree
Slaughter steers: choice 48.()().:. "···
II :08 p.m., East Main Street,
1:47
p.m.,
.
Lincoln
Heights,
121st•Asstrribly - · including school in ·political science from Ohio Uni1\().00;
select 44.00-57.00.
. Fredrika Farris, Veterans Memorial Kevin White, treaied at the scene.
{Continued from Page 1)
legislation """'- at ·ll' dinner to be ·held versity.
RUTLAND
·
..
Tuesday, Apri• 23- at 6:30·p.m. at the ,. · In the legislature, be serves on the Hospital;
6:40
a.m.,
Langsville, Maxine pleted.
4:12p.m.,
Village
Manor
Apart·
transportation
and
public
safety,
Salisbw'y ·Eien\entary School.
• Met with architect Geoff Nishi,
Aldridge, HMC.
Hosting· the 'Jbeetin~ will be 'the insurance, family services, and small ments, Josh Pherigo, Holzer Medical
who
explained that CDBG funds can
SYRACUSE
Meigs Cqunt~ " Retired Teachers business and economic development Center;
be
used
for projects for comP.Iiance ,
II ;50 a.m., Fourth Avenue, Ann
II :26 p.m., Beech ·Street, Earl
Association ' ~rid the office of the ·committees. ,He says that he continwith
the
Americans
with Di,sabihties
Mills, VMH;
Meigs, Co.unty Superiptendent of •. ues lo mfke economic development Knight, HMC.
7:41 p.m., Syracuse Municipal Act.
POMEROY .
a priority in his service as state repSchools. ... 1t&gt; h 'l -~ ~~..
• Discussed the closing of ali alley
.
8:08 a.m., Union Avenue, Delbert Building, Ryan Hill, VMH:.
'
Classroom teachers, administra- resentative.
in
Letart
Falls.
8:02
p.m.,
Nye
Avenue,
Justm
Findley, VMH;
tors and mell!.bers pf !ocal boards oJ
By
• Met with Syracuse Mayor
4:57 p.m., volunteer fire depart- Fields and Kay Rowe, refused treateducatiori~· iricl""ine
their
spouses;'
'\ 't"",;.r CI • ,
~ ..._
George Connolly, who asked the
ment and squad, molar vehicle acci- ment.
are encouraged to attend the meebng.
commission for assistance with the
Veterans Memorial
TUPPERS PLAINS
dent on East Main Street, Teresa
Reservation$ may be . made ·bY
Monday ·admissions - Ferrell Simpson and Suzanne Henderson,
I :45 a.m., SR 7, Hazel Barnhill, village's swimming pool, slated to
Grate
calling Superintendent John R1ebel's Day, Rutland.
·
Camden-Clark
Memorial
Hospital.
open
May
31.
of
office.•992-3883 or 992-5592, not lat- · - Monday discharges - Richard VMH. Eric Hollon, Diangelo
• Paid weekly bills of $422,895.26
er than Thursday: Price of the dinner Gress, Middleport; Fred Miller, ·
consisting of 242 entries.
·
is $7.
Present were Commission PresiRacine.
Carey represents the 94tli district
Quartet In concert
Fwniture
dent Fred Hoffman, Vice President
Holzer Medical Center
of Oallia, Jacksop and Meigs counThe
Massillon
Baptist
College
Janet Howard, Commissioner Roben
Discharges AprU 15 - Tonyil
•' ' I
Budge!: an Qrderly system
The following actions to end mar- Quartet will present a concert at tbe
ties and e115tem Lawrence ,Cou.nty.
Hartenbach
and
Clerk
Gloria
Kloes.
Broyles, Brittany Wyatt. ~oyce Mayo,
living beyond your means.
Prior tq being e)e9ted state represen- Neva Nicholson, Aorence Staats, riage were filed recently in the office Victory Baptist Church in Middleport
I .. I
of Meigs County Clerk of Courts Lar- at 7 p.m. Wednesday. Presiding at the
tative, he was ~or of Wellston.
***
. '
Harry Raines, Malori Ochs, Glenna
Freedom must respec~ the ' . '
ry Spencer.
He also workcdfot several years Porter, Dave Hubbard.
service will be Larry McCabe.
Dissolutions asked - Rhonda L.
righls of others. The liberty to
'
lt.'
·•·
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Paul SnyMoon,
Pomeroy,
and
Lyle
V.
Moon,
swing
your arms ends whAr••·l
. . . . . . der, daughter, Jackson.
Board to meet
t . '
' '
Middleport, April II .
The Meigs County Board· of
someone else's nose begins.
. (i'llbllsbed with permission)
'
Divorces asked - Jennifer L. · MRIDD will meet at the Carleton
The
-Sentinel
***
Warth from Charles W. Warth, both School Thursday, 7:30 'p.m.
'
IOU : a paper wait.
.'
(USPS %1:1-961)
,,
of Pomeroy, April ll ; Meliss~ Kay
'
***
Max well, Pomeroy, from Rodney omce to be closed
Pwblished every afternoon, Moftday Woush
•
.
The only thing you can get for
Friday, Ill Conn Gt .. Pomeruy. ONu. u, !.he
Kevin Maxwell, Salt Lake City, April
Am Ele Power ..:........... ;........40"
The
Meigs
County
Board
of
ElecOhio \\l~y Pvbllohing Companyi(Jonnett Co.,
a quarter these days is a dime. "
Akzo ..........................._,,••••.•• 56~
II; Teresa E. Koffel, Racine, from tions will be closed Thursday afterPomeroy, Ohio 45769. Ph. 992-2t56. Second
..
Ashland 011 ...........................4~
Ralph B. Koffel, Reedsville, April to; . noon and Friday. On Friday board
clau PJILII&amp;C plid Ml'omlroy, Obio.
***
ATiT .....................................6.2\
.... , .
I
The reason we make a long
Amy L. Wolfe f~m . Scott D. Wolfe, members will attend .a district meet·
34'e
Momber: The A.,..lilled ""'"' a11i1 d.. Ohio •'' Bank one ..............
story short · is so we can tell ""
both of Racine, April 10; Richard Lee ing.
Nef•papet Auochtllon.
Bob Evans ............................15'another.
Williams, Middlepon, from Barbara
Borg-Wamer ....~ ...................341'.
POSTMA.S'I'BR: Send oddress conecbanJ 10
Lou
Williams,
Hartford.
W.Va.,
April
Champion
Ind
.........................
20
EHS sprillg a.mivlll
ne l)ojly Sentinel, II I Coun St. Pomeroy.
Charming Shop ...................... &amp;~
Ohio 45769.
•
9.
The Eastern High School junior
City Holdlng ..........................23'1.
D1ssolutmns
granted
Lisa
L.
will hold its annual spring carclass
SUBSCRtP'nON RATES
Federel Mogul .........................18
Heaton
and
Kevin
E.
Heaton,
AprilS;
By C.rrltrorMocor I!Gult
nival
Saturday, 6-9 p.m. at the· high
Gannett .................................66\
Wendy
L.
Shuler
and
Stephen
B.
school, to be followed by an auction
Goodyear T6R ......................50'/.
::~::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::::::::::::::::~W
Shuler Jr., April 9; Phillip R. King at 9 p.m.
K-mart .....................................8\
One Yev .................................,............ $104.00
and Tammie R. King,'April II.
Land• End.............................17\
.
StNGLECOPY·PittCI .,.
Limited Inc ....................,......... 19
Daily .......................... ............,;"'"""'" ~5 Cenoi
Peoplea Bllncorp.................23~
Ohio
V•lley Bank ....................40
notdairing '"~'~~IIi con. ...Y
0111 Valley.............................3o-t..
..uitln ....... • - co nollllly S.llllliol
on a ttwee.•ix m 11 mOnda,twiS: ;Credit wjU·~.
RockWell .............................. 56'4
&amp;IW(IIcuricr . . weet. ,. ·
,
' · . ._
Robblne " Mye18 ... 1, ............. 37'/.
•
• •
J , •
"' * I'·.
Royal Dutch/Shell ..............1411\

•I

Cl64iETTES

--

..••

•

Neva••

A day at the beach

Local
. New•. in Brief:

,

roo.- for daytime oonditicns IIIII

~w. • .,-

nabomber's
:The l)aily Sentinel U_
.

Wela1id1y, Aprll17

Pomeroy parking -plan

'

"

Stocks ·

•

-. .
/ ,

.w . .. .. . .. . . . . . .

1.(

-

.~

~

s.-..

----llrvollllok:",'
No oot&gt;ttripdoa by moll

P"]"~Md

bi .,..,

t.'

.

. f
MAIL8tllliiCIIII'1i&lt; "

I
· - Molaf f&lt;-.
13 .......................
;.....'f.'"ir:.......,......,...$17.30
26 - ........................................... .$53.81
S2 Weeb ........... :l......
t. ..~.:;o..r.:.1\I10:U6

-.-L..

.

-

OliiiNofo!olli
&lt;='
~
. S292S'

~ =:::::::::::::::::;::::::::.:'!;.:~::;;:;:;:.,.;.

n ...

H . . . . . . . . . . _ _ _ , , , : ••

, ~\. 'i ~, '••~ ..f '

.

•.

Sh~'alnc .........................1o\
star B•nk ..............................65\
Wendy lnt'1 .......... ~................. 18%
·Worthington Ind. ~...
111'4
M ............

h

'

•

•

•

· ' Stock rep;rl. ;;. tha 10:30

1.m:'quotea pmlded by Aclvtat

or Galllpolla.

•

IT TAKES ACOMMUNITY TO
PROTECT ACHILD

POMEROY

,•

Near Ponlft'oy' ••non Brldgi

912·2181

I

\'

VINTON
0111111 ~~Yard

!.~-~.:.! ..~~.:....~~•~~.12

\o.-1' \~·

•lr, ..,f l

l~ ~ , ; f

. ·.

o

"'~ I

•tt ~

I

Rutland'Furniture ',. ,.
lt.

•••

. '

'• ·• ... t'

•

•
•

,, .

e

,,

·'

""

•

Foster Homes'
are needed for
•
Meigs County Children of all ages.
Call 992·2117
for Information and
"
•o be part o,.the effort.

r.

�'Sports

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentin~l
•

Larkin's .homer gives
Red$' thi·rd straight win

TUIIdly, Aprll18, 1996 ·

Gallipolis' Nehus eams medal

Tanui, Pippig win Boston _Marathon

CHICAGO (AP) - ,Dave Burba
wasn't aware of the cold, his pitch
count or his strikeouts.
" The bnly thing I was keeping
count of was runs." said Burba. who
struck out a career·high I I.
He gave up one too many, but
teammate Barry Larkin got it back,
hitting a one-out home run in the lOth
inning Monday night to lead the
Cincinnati Reds to a 3-2 victory over
the Chicago Cubs.
"BaiTy always does that," Reds

Heartbreak Hill claim$ another victim during 100th run
By JIMMY GOLEN
AP 8portB Writer
BOSTON - A record field of
more than 38,000 waited at the stan·
ing line to begin the IOOth Boston
Marathon. And yet Moses Tanui
knew how few of them would be
around when the real race began.

UTAPIPPIG

MOSESTANUI

Rockies edge Padres;
Cards still in tie for
first
.

: By The Associated Press
· over the center-field wall to give the
The confidence that Don Baylor Rockies a I 0-9 lead.
: gained from his bullpen last yeat' has .
"I tried to get the ball in on his
: carried over into this season.
hands," Blair said . "The ball carne
.
"They are remarkable," Baylor back in across the plate and he hit it
· said Monday night after five Col- out. "
: orado relievers held the San Diego
Andres Galarraga and Vinny
: Padres in check for live innings in the Castilla then hit consecutive doubles
: Rockies 11 -10 win. "They just keep to make it 11 -9. Bichette went4-for. coming in night after .night. Every- 5 with four RB Is for the Rockies,
: body does their job and that's what i~ · who trailed 9-4 in the fourth inning.
: takes for us to win."
"Bichette was hilling tough
The Rockies got only one ·corn- tonight," San Diego manager Bruce
: plete game from their starters last sea- Bochy said. "There wasn't a pitch he
: · son, but it was the bullpen that car- couldn't hit." ·
: ried Colorado to its first playoff
'Tony Gwynn and Andujar Cede• appearance.
no drove in two runs eacli and Wal• Against the ,Padres, the bullpen . ly Joyner collected his 1,500th career
: shined again, limiting the Padres to hit for the Padres.
Gwynn. who got the Padres' only
• two hits' in five innings as the Rock: ies rallied from five runs down.
hit against Atlanta's John Smaltz on
• Baylor was forced to dip into his Sunday, left the game in the seventh
; bullpen early when starter .Bryan inning ll(ith an inflammed left heel.
• Rekar was tagged for 10 hits and nine He is listed as day-to-day.
: runs in only four innings.
Elsewhere in the National League,
:
"We don't normally like to C!lme it was St. Louis 6, Pittsburgh 4, and
: in that early," said Steve Reed, who Cincinnati 3, Chicago 2 in 10 innings.
• pitched I 1-3 imiings without allow- Cardinals 6, Pirates 4
: ing a baserunner. "We follow a pian
At St. Louis, Ron Gant homered,
,: and do what it takes to allow our doubled and drove in four nrns as St.
• offense to get us back into the game." Louis won for the fifth time in six
: Bruce Ruffin (1-0). the foitnh gamc;s.
: Rockies reliever, pitched one inning
Gant had an RBI double in the
: for the win. Curt Leskanic pitched the first inning and hit a three-run horner
• ninth (or his third save.
· in the third, his founh, off John
• While the bullpen held the Padres Ericks (0-2). The homer staked Car: at bay, the Colorado offense pecked dinals rookie staner Alan Benes (2: away and got into position for Dante 0) to a 5- I lead. But.the right-hlmder
• Bichene's two-run horner, in the struggled, allowing four runs and sev: eighth inning, his first this season.
en hits with seven strikeouts in 5 2: "I had come close in my previou~ 3 innings.
: at bat and knew it was coming."
Royce Clayton's RBI single in the
• Bichette said. "He'd thrown me a seventh. off Jason Christiansen gave
: couple of good sliders and I was lhe Cacdinals a 6-4 lead. Rick Hon·
: looking for it and got a slider out over eycun struck out three of th~ last four
: the plate."
batters for his· first National League
•
save since Aug. 20, 1985.
. Bichette hit the first pitch from
Pittsburgh has lost five of its.last
· former teammate
Willie
Blair
(0-2)
seven.
.
.

.•
~White Sox outscore
~ Royals .11-10; A's win
'

Gallipolis dentist Dr. Hany J,
Nehus completed Monday's event
In three hours and J I minutes and
earned a medal ~~&lt;:cording to his
wife Betty via phone Ibis morning.
Mrs. Nebus said her husband,
who qualified for lhe tOOth annu·
a! running of the marathon last
November In ColumbUS, was ei11bt
minutes back from the starting
block. He never stopped once,
Mrs. Nehus said. Dr. Nehus
trained for the event during the
past year. He told his wife that
"Heartbreak HW" was tough, and
after arriving for the event in
Boston, he had · to wait around
lhree hours before his group took
ofT. It was Dr. Nehus' second
marathon. Dr. and Mn. Nehus are
the parents of Gallla Academy
track, field and cross country
standouts .Eddie and Erin Nehus.

Bulls eye
NBA win
mark tonight

. AT&amp;T.may give Cleveland $600 million for domed stadium

er

.

. l ., '
••

and seven of the top eight.
Another Kenyan led the women's
ntCe by 30 seconds at the 24-mile
mark before slowing dramatically.
Meanwhile, Germany 's Uta Pippig
overcame. an upset stomach and
menstrual cramps to win her third
consecutive women's race.
So ill was Pippig that she had to
literally wash herself off in the middle of the race, rest before her victo·
ry press conference and see a doctor
today to figure out wliat was wrong.
. .. I felt not nice. I was thinking
several times to drop out because it
hun so much," she said before nashing the smile that has made her a
local favorite. " But in the end, I'm
QK because I won."
Pippig
finished 85 seconds ahead of
Kenyan Tegla Loroupe, with Japan's
Nobuko Fujimura third.
Jean Driscoll of Champaign, Ill.,
won an unprecedented seventh conse~utive wheelchair race. Only
Clarence DeMar. who won seven
men's races, has won as many titles
in the history of the longest-running
long run in the world.
Heinz Frei of. Switzerland took
the men's wheelchair division, leading the official field of 38,706 four times the previous record across the finish ·Jine.
·
"I think all of us who worked the
stan were ecstatic at the way every!
thing went," technical director
David McGillivray said after getting
the field across the staning line in 28
minutes - one-third the time some
expected.
.
But ai the finish, not everything
went as well.
Swedish runner Humphrey
Siesage had a he an auack just after
the finish line and was taken to
Massachusetts General Hospital. the
race's medical director said.
Siesage, of Stoc~holm, was pronounced dead at 6:06 p.m. He was

Tanui pulled away from three' lirne defending champion Cosmas
Ndeti as they left Heanbreak Hill,
then finished off Ezekiel Bitok three
miles later. Although the breakaway
pack of Kenyans chatted in Swahili
to .encourage each other early on, the
Newton hills signaled the end of the
niceties .
"We feel that was the stan of the
race," said Tanui, who cramped on
the 187-foot- climb last year · and
placed second to Ndeti by one
minute. "We can talk while the race
is still young .... But after (20 miles),
it depends on the individual."
The world record hoider in the
half-marathon, Tanui earned hisfirst ·
marathon victory when he upset
Ndeti to win in 2 hours, 9 minutes, 61.
Three others were takel) to hospi16 seconds. The Kenyans took the
tals for fractu,res and one for a
seizure, race officials said. A total of
I ,300 people were .treated in the
medical tent for more'minor injuries:
Also, computer problems kept
marathon organizers from releasing
official times Monday night.
The problem was computer-related,
MILWAUKEE (AP) -Although
&lt;
they claim they wantWin No. 70 out
of the way of the more imponant
business pf taking the NBA title, the
Chicago Bulls know they're closing
in on something special..
"We have a real feeling of pride,"
Scottie Pippen said. "Seventy will be
a great accomplishment. It will he
well-deserved ... because we've been
so focused for every game."
With a victory against the Milwaukee Bucks tonight, the Bulls can
break the record of 69 wins set by the.
1971-72 Los Angeles Lakers.
· "We're very interested in getting ·
this over with, because it'll give us
three. games to get into a playoff
mode," Bulls coach Phil Jackson said
Monday.
But Jackson admitted, "This
won'tjust be anqther win. I think it's
real important that (the Chicago players) feel like they've done something
significant to basket~all history."
Even if the Bulls don 't defeat Milwaukee, one of the NBA's .worst
teams, they'll have three more shots
at history. They play Detroit.and Indiana at home before finishing the season at Washington.
Nevenheless, the Bulls expect to
dominate the Bucks, just as they have
almost every team in building their
69-9 record.
"It's not like the starting five
wants to be on the coun at the
buzzer." Pippen said. "We want to
take them out early. We want to walk
away and realize that we're now considered one of the greatest learns
ever."
As much talent as the Bulls have
- from Michael Jordan to Pippen to
Dennis Rodman to Toni Kukoc ~
Jackson and Pippen agree.that a total
disdain for losing is what has made
this Chicago team special.
•
''When you play s0 inany games,
you can becorne numb to the pain of
losing. But when you win as many as
we've won, a loss means a significant
amount of pain," Jackson said.
"Guys think about it overnight, come
back the next day and they want to
win, They want that feeling of win-

In the eighth, the Mariners loaded
:By TOM WITHERS
the bases against Mark Eichhorn (0:AP Sports Writer
·. Ozzie Guillen's RBI double in the 1). Rich Amaral walked and stole
;ninth inning allowed 'the Chicago second. Ken Griffey Jr. then walked
•White Sox to avoid the embarrass- and Edgar Maninez hit a fly ball to
: men I of blowing a 10-run lead.
right field that was dropped by Tim
· The White Sox scored five runs in Salmon for an error, allowing Ama:the first and second innings before ral to score.
Norm Charlton ( 1·0), pitching for
:the Royals rallied. Kansas City
:scored six runs in the second and the first time in eight days after drop;eventually tied iti0-10 with twortms ping 12 pounds with the flu, got the
final six outs for the win. ·
·in the eighth.
· · Harold Baines singled to open Blue Jays 8, Tigers l
At Toronto, Juan Guzman pitched
;Chicago's ninth, and one out later,
·Guillen doubled off Mike Magnante. a six-hitter and Charlie O'Brien
:The hit prevented the Royals from matched a career high with four
:completing the largest comeback in RBis.
Guzman (2- 1) lied a career high
;club history. Kansas City rallied
·from an 11-2 deficit to defeat Mil- with II strikeouts and walked two in
his second straight comple(e game.
:waukee on June 15, 1979.
. · Reliever Matt Karchner (2-0), The right-hander, who went 4-14 dur·whose error helped the Royals tie it ipg an injury-plagued 1995 season,
;in the eighth, picked up the win. has allowed five runs in three slarts
:Roberto Hernandez worked the ninth this season.
O'Brien. signed as a free agent in
'for his second save.
· Hipolito Pichardo (1-2) took the the offseason, hit a three-run homer
and added an RBI double as the .Blue
:Joss.
. Frank Thomas homered and hit Jays ended a three-game losing
streak.
·two doubles for the White Sox.
· Elsewhere 'in the American
Melvin Nieves had three of
Detroit's
five hits.
:1-eague, it was Seallle I I, California
:10; Toronto 8, Detroit2; and Oakland
Omar 01 ivares (I -I) took the loss.
Athletics 8, Rangers J
·&amp;,Texas 3.
_ : ~arjpers II, Angels 10
At . Arlington, Texas, Oakland
' ~ Seanle, the Mariners staged the scored five runs with two outs in the
:biggest comeback in club history to seventh inning to hand the Rangers
·defeat the Angels in the first regular- their first home loss this season .
The A's b(Oke open a 3' 3 game as
$eason game between the clubs since
last yellf's one-game AL West play- seven straight batters reached base,
off. ·
live on hits and two via walks all off
: The Mariners trailed 9· 1 after 3 Gil Heredia (0-1).
Mike Mohler (1-0) picked up the
112 innings before rallying to win on
Jay Buhner's RBI single in the · win with 3 2-3 innings of re~ief._ .
ning." ·
eighth.
: CLEVELAND (AP) - AT&amp;T reported Monday night: in exch~ge,
Corp. has offered (o provide $600 the communications company wants
lf)illion for a new domed stadium for stadium naming rights,. th~ telephone
tlie next Cleveland Browns team in contracts for all the bUiidmgs and an
i~change for naming rights and oth- enterprise zone that tncludes tax
concessions from city officials, a abatements and no sales taxes, the
O!levision station reported.
station said.
. ; 'J'he deal would include a domed
The television repon also said the
itpdium, a convention center and a company has offered to give the city
fioici
WEWS· TV in Cleveland and its school board • .percentage of
..

-fi~t five places in the men's race

its profits.
. . .
Negotiations were conunutng, but
no agreement )lad been reached,
WEWS-TV said.
The station said attorney Gary
Eben was representing AT&amp;T in the
negotiations.
.
• Eben told The Associated Pres$
M&lt;:&gt;nday night that he could confirm
a proposal has been made to l~e c1ty

race spokesman Jack Fleming· said.
but not !due to the transminers each
runner tied to his shoes to announce
his arrivJtl to the finish-line computer.
''We 're going through the 18
miles of computer lines and dozens
of computer programs trying to figure out where the problem is, " he
said, sening his sights on today for
·the official results.
Except for a SO{IIetimes stiff
headwind, the conditions were ideal
for the marathon's IOOth edition,
and defendi_ng 'champion Nd'eti was
predicting that he would set a new
course record.

·

He staned on pace to do just that
before slowing between the I$- and
20-mile checkpoints.
" I must say Cosmas took it too
fast . He did noJ calculate his race,"
said Isaiah K.iplagat, the president of
the Kenyan Amateur Athletic Association. "Psychologically, he was
thinking of winning the founh time.

Too much stress, I think."
Unlike the United States, whose
best marathoners are prepariAg for
tJk, Atlanta games elsewhere this
week, Kenya uses Boston as its
Olympic trial. But that doesn't by
itself explain the success Kenyans
have had here. winning the .last six
Boston Marathons.
"We normally look after cattle .
and sheep. We normally run to
school, then to lunch time, then bac k
to school, " said Tanui, who said he·
would skip the marathon at Atlanta
in favor of the 10,000-meter run.
"This is where I began to run ."
Despite falling behind on Heanbreak Hill and losing a chance at an
unprecedented founb consecutive
men's title, Ndeti was not heanbroken.
''I'm not disappointed. Losing is
not a big shock," he said. "I can still
say I am the, best because I hold the
course record and I won hert three
.
.tn a row." ..
t1mes

SEE YOU THURSDAY!

MEIGS RESERVE BASKETBALL TEAM·The
Meigs Marauder reser.ve basketball team h!ld
an outstanding season this paat year. Tlw(
team, under the direction of Coach Rick ·
Edwards, finished the season with a 17-3 mark
overall and a 11·3 record in the Tri-Valley Con-

p.m.

National League
At A Glance
By The Associated Press

Boston (Ciemclll0.2)at Baltimono&lt;W&lt;:IIol-0), 7:35
p.m.
Cle.. land (Hmhi .... 0.2) .. M ; - (Radke l-0).
8:05p.m.
OUcago(Bao~)IIIKansaoOJy(BcldwO.I). 8 :01

AIITimHEDT

NATIONAL LEAGUE
l!oRDlvlolon

,

MontreQI
Atlanta
Phila6elphia

NcwYOI\
Florida
C""rol Dt.lsloa
StLouis
Cincinnati

Cbicaao
Pittsburah

p.m.

w
7
6
5
4
14
w
8
8
6
6

Houston

5

Wat DIYiaion

w

L Pet.
5 j .583

GB

L Pet. Gl

~

:~

i

!

7o3.5 p.m.
34 i9 9
Houston (Reynolds 1-1} at New Yort(lsringhlllisen 1\ort/ord
Buffalo
33 . 42
1
1..0), 7:40p.m.
18 ~9
5
Florida (Brown0-2) at Al1111t11 (AvCJY ().J ). 7:40p.m. Ottawa
WI!STI!RN
CONFJ!RENCE
Pitubui'Jh (Smitlll-0) at St l..oui_. (Andy Benes 1·

x-0\icaao •
x-Toronto
x·SL Louis
Wi ·pc
~~~~~~ru 8

San Dieao {Betsmnn 1- 1) nt Colorado (F~ I·
I), 1:0.5 p.m.
Los AngeleJ (Park 2.-0) at ~llll Franciseo (M.Leirer '
1-1), 3:3r!:.m.
'
Philodel 11 (Mulholland 1·1) nt Moaueal (Carmicr 6-0), :3S p.m.
Floridn(BuJtettl-l)atAtlnnta(Maddu.ll 1·1}, 7:40
p.m.
Pinsbul)h (Onrwin 1-1) at St. Louis (~borne 0-0),

•-Vancouver
Anaheim
Edmonton
Los Angeles
Smn lose

p.m.
Ameriean League
At A Glance
By The Assoi:lated Press

l!oR t:li"'lon
Balti lllOI'C
New YO&lt;!&lt;
Detroil

Toronto .
Bosron .
Central Dhlskln

Cleweland

Minnesota
Milwaukee
Chicago
Kanw Ci()'
WHI Dlvl.skKI
Seattle

Texns

'Oakland

California

Sunday'• Gama
Seattle 9, Toronto 4
Detroil S, Califomin 4

Dclrolt(Goh'Q.2)'"Tonlnlo(lllln..n 2·1~ 12:35 p.m

..

Midwest Dl•lsloa
y•San Atllonio
x-Utah
x-Houuon

-------

20 55

258 2lO
234 204
238 248
215 202
229 liS

362 284
282 269
265 248
77 231 ' ~9
73 247 262
41 191 291

I'll GF GA
IJI , 325 181
94 213 220

14
12 80
16 80
78
6
14 66
10 104
II
79
79
8 78
8 68
18 66
1
47

.,

EASTERN CONFERENCE •
Atlandr: Dlvllion
y · Or~ndo

x-New York

MianU
WashlnJ;ron
Bo~ton

New Jerxy
Philadelphia
Central Div..lon

z-Oiicago·
't· lndiMll
JI. ·DeU'Oil
•· ~llan~Q..

w·
46
41
39
31
29
16
69
56

50
44

44

39 .:501129 112

S4 .308 "4S
S9 .25349 1n
L Pet
22 .722

21
33
45
S3
54
. 65
17
28
36
39
42
44
50

----

GB

.658 5
.582
II
.430 23
.329 31
.30832 112
.16643.112

.64111 112

19
.468
25
.443 Tl
.367 . 33
.544

.50022 lfl

63 .20240 lfl

9 .885 29 .63319 112
34 .564 25
34 .564 25

•

..
0

'

,,

•

.,

,.

.
'•

•'

.

;.

.,

Portland 121. San Antonio 97

ThndaJ'• Gamn
·
Washington at Orlando, 7:30p.m.
Cleveland Dl AtlanUl, 7:30p.m.
Cliicago at Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
I.A. LWn at Dallas. 8:30p.m.
L.A. Clippers nt Ulah, 9 p.m.
Houston a1 Phoenix, 9 p.m.
San An1onio 111 Vancouver, 10 p.m.

100 Years 95 Years

BA~TIMORE ORJO~ES-Announced dte ~t~igno.
tion of Bob MiK:ik. manqer of Bowfe of· the Eastem Leaaue. Named Moe Drabowsky interim manager of Bowie.
BOSlON RED SOX-Placed JB Tim N~ehring on
the IS-day disobled Ust. Reoallcd INF Jim Tatum fiom
Powtuclcet of lhe lruemalionnl l..cq;ue,
TEXAS RANGER5-Rccalled UJP Darren Oliver
from Pon Charloue ot the Florida Stile league.
Optioned RHP Mntt Whiteside to Oklrlloma City of
chc AmeriCUl Association.
NllllonoJLtopo
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS-ActiVated RF Brian lor
dan and C Tom Pugnoui from the IS-day disabled
liM. Recalled RHP Rich Palehrlor fmm· Looi~ville of
the American Aswciation. Senl RHP Brian 8~,
OF Terry Bradshaw and INF Aaron Holben to
Louisville. Moved JNF Mike Gallego from the 1.5·
to the 60-day di1.11bled list.
BASKETBALL-.
Natlonlll Buketballlt.POcl1lion
NBA-5uspended Los AnJela Laten fOlWard
Magic Jobn!OO tOr lhree JBMC'JI nnd fined him$10,(1X]
fOr bumpins R!fcree Scott Foster. Fined the Miami
HeM $2$.000 for failinJ 10 make pla)cn avllilable
to the media prior to a aame.

92 Years

Forest Hill Cleaners

Safler's Inc.

Anter Bros. Co.

Phone sss.t022
Eatlllllahtd 1895

Phont 555-2211
Eltlblllhtd 1100

Pllont5SHt31
EltiiJIIIIttd 1803 .

80 Years

78·Years

Acme Rentals

Vireap Services

Phone 555-6782.
Eslebllshed 1915

Phone 555-8242
EstabHshtd 1917

70 Years

67 Years

.·61 Years

The Geist

E·Z Motor Service

WoOcllow's Diamonds

75
Co.

Phone 555-446&amp;
Eltlbllahtd 1934

Phone 555-9245
Etllbllahtd 1925

Years. 52 Years

60 Years
Coin &amp;Stamp Center

Bail Security Bonds

Phone 555-9988
Elllbllahed 1935

PhOne 555-6565
Eatlbllthtd 1M1

50

DETROIT RED WING5-Sent 0 Andm Eriksson
to Adirondack of 'lhe AHL.
HARTFORD WHALER$-Sent D Jason McBain
111d D Marek Malik to SPiinaficld of the AHL.

1982

Phone 555-11547
ESIIblllhetl t943

40 Years

Kramer &amp;Sons

S&amp;M LandscaPing

Phont 555-5134·
Esllbnahttl 1946

Pliant 555-4m
Eatabllshtd 1951

Phone 555 5454
Estlbllthetl 1855

.,

30 Years

25 Years

20 Years

'

Med.Care Center Inc. Triskett Party Center

s.;.o victory

Ball $ecurlty Bonds

44 Years

Vaclav Viroda. C Scou Nichol, and RW D:me Jackson to Rochester of lhc AHL.
CHICAGO B~ACKHAWK5-Sent C Donton Cole
and LW &amp;han Moreau to Indianapolis of the IHL.
DALLAS STAR8-Sent F Pacrick Cote and F Jamie .
Lan&amp;enbrunoer to Michigmn of the IHL.

Oma; Vizquel went 6-for-17 and
game sweep.
Leadoff man Kenny Lofton came third baseman Jim Thome snapped
into the series hitting .179 and fin- out ·or an 0-for-19 slump with four
ished 8-for-17 with five stolen bases, hits and .four RBis in the last three
four ~Bis and six runs scored.
games. . ·
·.
Lofton set the tone against.Boston
'fh.lo Indians are stili only hitting
staner Tim Wakefield (0-2) by lead· .241 as a team, but they 're staning to
ing off the gam~ with a single and look like the defending ,AL champistealing second. He .raced to third ons.
when Red Sox catcher Bill Haselman
Meanwhile, the Red Sox remain in
commined a passed ball after Julio a shimp. They are hitting just .226 as
Franco was struck out, but reached a team and have committed 21 errors
first , then scored on second baseman in · 12 games, accounting for I 9
Wil Cordero's error.
unearned runs.
Franco came home on Albert
Boston committed nine errors in
Belle's sacrifice fly and .the Indill/lS the four games against Cleveland,
scored three ·more runs in the second. . leading to eight unearned runs.
The rout was on.
In nddiliQn, the trade for Cordero
The series helped several Indians has not worked out so far. The forlner
bat.ters get bac~ on !rack. S~onstop · Montr~al shonstop is battingjust .l30
and has as many hits as errors, six.

'

·-------------

AtlanJa 99, New Jersey 90
O&gt;•totte 94, Pbilaclelphia 78 .
Wasbinaton 110, Toronto 97
OlicaJO 98. Cle•eland 12
Portland'S!, Vancouver 79
Denver 98, Minnesota 01
L.A. Lllkm 118, Phoenix 114
Milwaukee 114, Orlando 101
Dctroi1 10.5. Boston 96, OT
Smcr:unento 101, LA. Clipptn 96
Golden Stale 93, Ulah 82
Monday'a Camt1
· New York 12.5, Toron1o 19
Miami 110. New Jtf1Cy 90
lncliltno 90. Charloue 87
Seattle 112, ~ouston 106
Sal:rarncl'lto 90, Denver 86

HOCKEY
Nl&amp;lonal Hockty LH&amp;uc
.
NHI.r-Su11pended Oetroil Red Win~ RW Dino C1c
carelli for three ~ and fined him $1_.000 f?r
punthin' OlitaJO Blackhawkl 0 Enrico Ciccone In
L Pd GB Friday mght's game.
22 .718 BUFFALO SABRES-Sen! Q·John Blue, RW

33 .58210 112
.51915 112
39 .500 17
48 .39225 112
50 .36727 112

Of

•

'

BASEB"-LL
Amerbn LuJue

38

9.0\.\.

---

.7~

247 ~2 Wtdnescbiy'a Games
219 248 Toronto at New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
275 291 Miami at Philadelphia. 7:30p.m.
227 280 Bo~ton ot Washinglon, 7:30p.m.
Indiana at Detroit, 8 p.m.
326 240 Golden State Ill Minnesota, 8 p.m.
241 240 POftland at Seattle, 10 p.m.
•
218 218 Phoenix at Sacramen10. IO:lO p.m.
234 247
239 304 Monday's Sports Transactions
256 302
mm By The Associated Press

y-clinched division Iitie
11-c:linched playoff spot
Frid•f'l Gamts
Flori do I, N.Y. Islanders I, tic
Thmpa Bay 3. N.Y. Ran.aen 2
Ot:troit 5, Chicago 3
Winnipeg S, Los Angele~ 3
Calgary 6. Son Jose 0
Anaheim .5, Dalla' 3

Annm~sEDT

w
52
46
l4
26
24
13
62
50
43
39
37
35
29
51

2S

•·clinched playoff opot
y-dinched divis•on
t--won conference tille
Sund•y'•Guan

Indians hike division lead with
·BOSTON (AP) - Last .week. the
Cleveland Indians were strug~ling
just like the Bostoq Red Sox.
.
After Monday's 8-0 victory and
four-game series sweep, Cl~veland .
sits atop the AL Central Dtvtslon,
while Boston has the worst record tn
(he majors.
Jack McDow.ell scauered nine
hits to shut out the Red Sox and bring
the Indians above .500 for the first
time this season . Boston, last year 's
. AL East champions, lost its fifth
straight and fell to 2-10, the team 's .
worst start since 1927.
One of the major problems for the
Indians had been a surprisingly qut·e t offense. Coming into Boston, they
were averaging 3.1 runs per game,
but they scored 32 times in the four-

Call
Bob Atwood or Dave Harris
For More Information
992-2155

x·CoiJPlY

T
1

L

13
28
36
34
40
42
25
37
35
39
44
40

212 . 237

Hartford 2, Boston 0
w L Pet. GB N.Y
. Islnnders S, Montreal .5. tie
9 2 .8.18 - Buffalo
3. Wnshington 2
6 4 .600 2 112 Toronto 6,
3
7 7 .500 3 112 Vancouver Edmonton
.5, Calgary 0
6 .500 3 112 Sund•y'l Gemts
6
2 10 .1677112 &amp;Oilton 6, pjttsburgh S
3, Th111'4 Bay I
w L PtL GB Philadelphia
Florida -5. N.Y. Rangers I
6 5 .545 - St
Loui~: 2. Chicago l, tie
5
6 .455 I Delmit
'
.5, Oallns I
4
6 .400 l 112 LO!i Angeles
S. Colorndo 4, OT
7 .417 11n
5
4. HIWtford I
4 8 .:m 2 112 Buffalo
Ana.htim 5, Winnipeg 2
End R~ul•r Sea10n
w L Pet. GB
4 .692
~
9
National Baskethall Association
4 .667 1n
8
At
A Glance
6
.500
2
112
6
7 .417 3 112 By The Associated Press
5

New YOfk (Key 1-1) at Milwaukee (Karll -1). 1:0!

FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1996

PadRe: Dlvlsl.en
y-Colofodo

w
62
40
34
32
36
26
47
34
32
J5
30
24

GF GA
282 208

Satunby'• G•Nn
Ouawo. .5. New Jersey 2

AII111Dtt EDT

Minnesoua 4, Baltimore I
New York 11. nw.ll'l l
Milwoukee S, Kanus City 2
Oaklnnd 10, llllcOJo 5
Oevel•nd 7, Boston 6, ol I Innings
Monday'• Gama
Cleveland 8, Boston 0
T(Xl)nlo 8, Detroit 2
Chicago II. Kw!!IBS City 10
Oakland 8. nxu l
Seottlc II, Calirornio I 0
1\lelday'• Games

INSERTION DATE:

aural Divlslon
y-Detroit

Los An8elea (Candiocti 1~1) ac San Francisco (FernllDdcz 2-0), 10:05 p.m.
·
WtdnHday'• c ..."
Houston (Kile 0-2) at New York {WiiSOfl 0.0), I:40 _
p.m.
.
Cii)Cinnati (Salkeld' 1-0) ot qticago (Navll!TO 0-2).

8:0~

THURSDAY, APRIL 18, 1996 - 12 . NOON

Press

....

2:20p.m.

ADVERTISING DEADUNE:

Detroit (Liru 1-2) 11 SeaRle (Hilehcock. 3-0). 10:35
p.m.

S .615 8
San Fnlftciseo
7
5 .583 lfl National Hockey League
7
Lo• AnJ!"lea
Colorado
: :
At A Gllince
6
Sunday's Gamn
By
Tbe Associated
Cincinnati .5. Hous1on 3, ht pme
Cincinnati 9. Jiouston 8, 2nd come
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PittsbtnJh S, Mootreal 2
I!ASTERN CONFERENCE
SL Louis 6, Philadelphia S
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Dl•lllon
O.icago 6, San FranciKo 2
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Los Ange1el. 6, Florida I
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Allanm 4, San Oic&amp;o 0
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41 27 141.
96
New York 10, Colorado •
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x-Aorida
41 31 10
Mond•r'• G•ma
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39 l2 II
89
St. Louis 6, Pi.ttsbui'Jh 4
x-Tampu Boy
38 32 12 88
Cincinnati 3, O.icugo 2, 10 Innings
New'Ja&gt;ey
37 33 12 ' 86
Colorado 11. Slllt Dleao 9
N.Y. !&amp;Ianden
22 50 10
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Thetda)"sGamH
Cincinnad (Portupl IH) D\ Oaicago (Trachsel 0-0), Nol1heast Dl•lllon
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2:20p.m.
ll-Boston
40
31
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91
Philadelphia (Grace 2.0) at Montreal (Paniagua I·I). x-Monlrell
40 32 10
90

9:05p.m

•

Oakland (Johns 2-0) at Tex" (Wln 1-0). 8:35p.m.
Catifomlio (Abbott 0.2) llls..ttle (loll""" 2-0). 10:05

:W .564

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O..lotte
40
Milwaukee
24
Toronto
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WI!STI!RN CONFERENCE

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GIMts
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Den vet
7 .462 I lfl W~1'•
New York (Conc:2-0)at Milwaukce(Bonel 0.1). I:IS Minnesam
6 .455 I lfl
Dallal
7 .364 2 112 t~ion (Sele 0-1) ~ Balti~ (Muuina 1.0), 7:35 v.-....
9 .308 3112 p.m.
Paellk: Dlvlllon
ae.e11md (NnBY2·0) 01 Min.....,(R-.on0.3), y-Seattlc
L Pet. GB 8:05p.m.
.
........ La&lt;en
5 .61.5
Clticato (Femandell·l) at !Con,. Oty (Appier I- x-Portllltd
5 .615 I). g,os p.m.
.
•·Phoenix
6 .500 l lfl Ollkland
(Reyes 1-2) at Texas (H•II2-1), 8:15p.m. SIICI'IIJ'ICrlfO
6 .500 I lfl Toron10 (Quanttill
0.2) ot California (Finley 2-l), Golden State
8 .385
3 10:35 p.m.
L.A. Clippen

Smn Diego (Ashby 1.0) at Colorado (Reynoso 1-0),

A SPECIAL SECTION
In The
• POINT .PLEASANT REGISTER
• GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE
• POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL

terence. Pictured In the front row,, left to rlgha
are: Dave Anderson, Steve Rice, Jeremiah
Bentley,. Sean O'Brien, Brad Davenport, and
Robert Quells. Second row: Manager D. J.
Blenks, Collin Roush, Matt Williams, Daniel
Hannan, Mlck Barr and Jason Mullen.

Scoreboard

0). 8:05 p.m.

.

manager Ray Knight said. "That's before the 'homer, "and I'm not on
why he's the best player in our • top right now, not offensively or
league ...
defensively."
Larkin was on top of a 1· 1 pitch
That's true. The onlwround ball
from Bob Patterson ( 1-1), sending it hit to Larkin was in the 'dlnth and he
into the left-field bleachers for his ovcnhrew first base for an error. He
third home run . The reigning Nation- did, however, make up for it in the
al League MVP said he's not feeling lOth.
.
himself yet.
But this night belonged to Burba.
"Sometimes you have to accept
Marcus Moore ( I-I) got the win
that you 're not always going to beat with one inning of relief. Brantley
the top of Y.our game,'' said Larkin, pitched the I Oth for his fifth save,
who had two hits in his last 19 at-bats striking' out Sammy Sosa
'

Be A Part Of
The Daily Sentinel's

NOTICE
Do you want to Save money? Then this is ·
for you! Comfort Air Systems, Inc., and
Orman Hall, Inc. would lil~e to invite you to
attend an Energy Management Seminar at
the American Electric Power Gallipolis
Office Conference Room,· 990 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio at 7:00 p.m. on
Thursday, April18, 1996. .
Mr. Patrick O'Neill, Carrier Distrib1,1tor from
Charleston, W.Va. and American Electric
Power energy experts will be available lo
answer your questions.
Stop in and see a working model of the
Carrier ground ~ource heat pump $nd oth.er
Air to Air Heat Pumps which will be on
display. ·
Please feel free to invite your friends and
neighbors! Refreshments will be served.

The Deily Sentinel• Pege 5

Phont 555-6655
Eatabllahed t965

Phone 55H2&amp;7
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PhOne 555-~
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LISTED!···
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The

.

'

'~Honor

Roll" will appear in the
Friday, May 17th Edition of
The Dally Sentinel.
The Cost Is Only $12

'

�page 6 • The O.lly Sa:itlnel

·.

Ponllrl»J ell~., Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Meigs Local·School pistrict honor roll students.announced
Listings of scudents of the Meigs . Dako1a Smith, Adam Wilson, Jerod Wyant; w
C!Uey, Jonathan Larkins,, -Kenay
Second Grade: Miranda Beha, Carsey, Ashley Halley, David Boyd,
· J_,oc" School District maklng the Wyatt. Christeena YoW1g, 11ffany
'·llonor roll for the third nine-weeks Zornes, Michael Cottrell, Mult Travis Burbridge, Rachael Gardner, Katie Childs, Ryan Frazier, Heidi
-grading period have been announced Cozart, .Ashley DeMoss. Heather Brittany King, Amanda Lenigar,l,.au- Gilmore, Kim Johnson, Kanndies
.tty Supt. Bill Buckley.
Fink, Jessica Fisher, Ashley Russell, ra Marcum, Nichole Mull. Kayleigh Lee, AShley Payne, Erica Poole. John
.. Making a grade of "B" or above in Matthew Salyers, Stephen Will;
Ward,' Joshua Spires, William Taylor; RousiJ, Stefan Stamper. Clay Sone,
. 1111 their subjects were the following
MH: Gene Buckley, Joauana FetThird Grode: Stacey Arnold, Jodi Johh Taylor.
students:
ty, Jessica Gray, Ka~ Kibble, Elby Donohue, Peggy Duff ·
.
Bradbury Elementary
Nye Ill, Ruth Snyder, Crystal South;
Fourth Grade : Kevin Butcher,
Rutland Elementary
Kindeigarten:Valerie SchoeppnSecond Grade: Chelsea Dent, Maegan Dodson, Tiffany Herdman,
First Grade: Ladonna Hawk, Gary
-pr, Michael Evans, Amy Barr, Amanda Jeffers,· Nathan . Jeffers, Courtney Kennedy, Sarah Lee, Bob- Hess, Keilah Jacks, Bethany King,
. Heather Graham, Jared Griggs, Katie Joshua Kennedy, Adam P.elligrino, Iii Sue Napper;
All A's; Andrea Banrum, Alisha
~atterso n, Joseph Schiemann, Joseph Alison Woods, Miranda Young, Wes
Fifth Grade: Benjamen Bookman, 'Compson, Na18Shia Ginther, Adam
Rosier, Eric Wood. Kirk Legar, Edge! Ault, Bryce Avis, Weston Fife, ·Hei' Wesley Call, Ryan King, Jessica Lamben; Amanda Miller, Timmy
'Gobel , Carolyn Davidson, Jllllie di Griffith, Cody Hysell, Jilian Jenk- Preast;
Spires, Joshua Taylor;
Ash, Ben Coppick, Laura Fields, ins, Lacey Kennedy, Jordan Shank,
Second Grade: Valerie Did·
Kaylee Kennedy, Michelle Scar- Abby Stewart, Whitney Thoene. lake
Six.th Qrade: lOI'line Allen, Ashley die, Adam J!umphreys, Sara Dawn
· bfough, Joshua Lewis;
Venoy, Josh Venoy, Jeremy Vincent; Burbridge, Amber Haning, Jennifer JeiTkins, Maggie Rupe, All A's; Josh
: · · Grade Five: Casey Dunfee, Zach
Third Grade: Erin Bauserman, Reeves.
Bolin. Holly Davis, Sarah Eskew,
· Qilkey. Beth Wilfong, Emily Story, Sarah Bush, Alisha Cremeans, James
Carita Gardner, Samantha Gilben,
All A's; Brandy Shea, Sara Casto, Cremeans. Shawn Day, · Justin
Middleport Elementary
Joey Dawn Haning, Brittany Hyseil,
-Abram Sayre, Tashia Stewan. B{ad DeMoss. A.J . Dicke ns, Justine
First Grade: Angela Casci , AJ. Taryn Le11tes, H.L. Pugh;
. Morrison, Carrie Darst, Andy Hysell, Do'wh!r, Eddie Fife, Rochelle Gloeck- Chandler, Cody Davidson, Steven
Third Grade: Adam Snowden,
Lucy Howerton, Hannah Wollard, ner, Jesse Haggy, Amanda Hoyt, Hudson, Beth Hysell , Erinne Renee Bailey, Ashley Baylor, Madi·
Will Kauff, Alison Smith, Stephanie Maggie Molden, Regan Shuler, Zach Kenn edy, Cayla Lee. Joel Lynch, son King. · Sarah Wilkes, All A's;
Schwab, Jimmy Smith, Angel Stone; Shuler, Clare Sisson, Kelli Tatterson, Chal sie Manley, Christy Miller, Justin &lt;;_oleman, Shane Collins, Jar·
Grade Six : Monica Moon, Reboic- Tiffany Timmons, lenni Young, Jilli Danielle Phillips, David Poole, Whit- rid Eskew, . Adam Hicks, Miranda
ca Smith, Tara Wyatt, Ryan Bates; Young, Willie Zahran)Jerri Bentley, ney Smith , Dustin Vanlnwagen, Simpkins; ·
Fourth Grade: Randy Hudson,
Erica Bryan. Heather Fetty. Heather Brittany Cremeans, Jason DeMoss, Michelle Weaver, Cassi Whan, Dylan
Chrissy
Miller, Pamela Rupe, All A's ;
fry, Josh Glaze, Autumn Phillips, Trevor Depoy, Rosanna Dillard. Dailey. Darah Engle, Joey Kimes,
Allison Story :
Brandon Grover, Deidra Strong; •
Matthew Landers, TommyLave nder, Tyler Barnes, Nicole McDaniel, Gary
: LD: Donald Eakins, All A's; Andy
LD: Joey Richard;
Katie Rodehaver, Amanda Schar· Moore, Matt Salser, Miranda Stewan,
Corey Vaughan;
White. Zach Butcher. Richard RamsFourth Grade: Thurien Carter, · tiger, Virginia Williamson;
Fifth Grllde: Brook Bolin, Mallob:Urg, Rnss Stewan;
.
Jaynce Davis, Nicole Harper,
Second Grade: Laura Fields,
.. · DH : Kathy Jones, Greg Kmg, . Michele Imboden, Tamiko Ritfle, Sarah Davis, Michael Durst,' Ashley ry King, All A's; Melissa Cremeans,
Ryan Krautter, Tirzah Dodson, Shan- Xantha Smith, Brandi Thomas, Jor- Engle, Amber Fisher, Erica Haning, Hollie Ferrell, Jessica Justice; .
Sixth Grade: Amber Snowden, All
non Panlow, Troy Brooks,
dan Williams, Tawny Bauserman, Laura !Hollen, Brandon Kimes, Willy
A's;
Brad Baylor, Amber Ellis ,
--~
Candy Bradshaw, Kara Buffington, Landers, Tara Lee, Kayla McCarthy.
Pomeroy Elementary
Brandyn Bumgardner, Alisia Burton, Meghan Leslie, JoBeth Rodehaver, Gabriel Jenkins, Darrick Knapp ,
- Kindergarten: Samantha Acker- Michael Davis, Andrea Fetty, Angela Cory Shea, Eric VanMeter, Tyler' Johnny Lentes, Melissa Richmond,
· '
irian . Michael Ball, Kyle Boggs, Wilson;
Wayland, Melia Whan , Justin Bell, Joey Rupe;
LD
Primary:
Amanda
Maxwell,
J~c o b Bonec utter, Makayla Curtis,
Fifth Grade: Andrea Burdette, Matt Boyd , . Brandon Chandler,
:travis Eblin, Kelsey Fife, Robert .Kayle Davis, Amanda Fetty, Robyn Samantha Cole, Jamie Ellis, Kayla Michael McDonald;
LD Intermediate: Lana Barrett,
Foreman, Rebecca Hanstine, Chelsea Freeman, Sarah Kloes, Brandon . Fetty. Aaron Fife. Anna Harten bach,
l{icks, Stephanie Hysell , Bradley Ramsburg, Jeremy Roush, Jennifer Brittney Jacks, Kathy Johnson, Travis Siders, Carrie Wallij::r;
Jones, Natasha Knapp, Jessica Lilley, Zielinski , Jassiline Caner, Maria• Joshua Kimes, Kylen Kin g, Amber
lQshuaLuns(ord, Lindsay-McKinney, Drenner, Michelle Drenner,.Catidice McKown, Joshua Slater, Bobby
Salem Center Elementary
First Grade: Courtney Barnett,
~,:;e Mowery, Gregory Musser. Cas- Fetty, Katie Jeffers, Michele Runyon, Stone, Morgan Wilson;
~dra ·,.Patterson, Grant Phillips, Ben See;
Third Grade: Brandon Bell, Erin Cain McKinney;- Casey Molihan,
J(qrgan Powell, Zachary Robmson,
Sixth Grade : Carrie Abbott, Cullums,. Nick Diley, Lisa Gheeh," Bran&lt;!y Nottingham, Nikki Parsons,
Tre Rupc, Amorette Salser, Je$sica Delana Eichinger, Jason Miller, Erin Ashley Johnson ~ Michelle Neece, Raymond Reynolds, Brittney Rife.
Sheets,. Molly Smith , Caitlyn Moore Nichole Runyon Sara Moon ,Luke Roush, Kast Smoth, Moke Stew- Jamie Wallace, Terry Light, Anthony
Thomas, Trenton Wilson ;
Mary Schultz.
'
.•• art, M!"gan Tibbetts, Cassi Windsor, Davis, Rene·Edwards;
, , Dl;ll: Kyle Kinnan, Jesse Klein,
·
Natasha Wise, Brandon Carpenter,
Second Grade: Nathan Argabright,
K1lylene Slater, Anessa Wolfe;
Harrisonville Blementa_ry
Clifton Chandler, Eric Cullums. John Foley, Julia Johnson, Kelly
' · First Grade: Zach Arms, Michael
First Grade: Daniel Bookman, Cassie Lee, Daniel Thornton, Donnie Napper, Joey Sears, Zackary Weber,
Rlaeunar,Ashley Browning, Meghan , April Butcher, Charlene .Chilcote, Whan, Anna Sayre, Carrie Michael, Alexandra Mitchell;·
Cleland, Randy Collins, Cecilia Core, Cory Dill, Lucas Fackler, A.J. Han- Jordan Rawson, Katie Reed,
Third Grade: Jeffrey Baughman,
E~an Dunn, Heather Elam, Kayla ,l ng, Doug Herdman, Heather Kerns, Matthew Thomas, Brooke Venoy, · Eric Bumem, zackary Bush, Jason
6rover, Courtney Haggy, Dayton Sara Lantz, Cayla ··Mell, Jennifer Chet Wigal ;
Crisp, Julia Cross, Robert C!"ss,
Jenkins. Dustin Lyons, Scotty Muss- Partlow, Jonathan · Preas!, Chellsie
Fourth Grade: Page Bradbury, Randy Hart. Kayla Icenhower, Aaron
er, Dru Reed, Casey Richardson, Riggs, ·Daniel Steinmetz, Celeste Kindra Snouffer, Ryan 'Stoban, Tyler lhle, Samantha Pierce, Carrie ~fe;
Christopher Runyon. Britnee Sauters, Taylor, Joshua Williams, Constance French, Jamie Chapman, Candace
Fourth Grade: Joanna Bowersock,

Jessica Curfman, Aubrie Kopec, Brittany Powers, Joshua Ray, Jessica
Smith;
•
Fifth Grade: Rachel Argabright,
Lindsay Bolin, Ashley Colwell ,
Austin Cross, Megan Haefner, Kelly
Johnston, Krista! Johnson;
Sixth Grade: Erin Bush, Chelsea
Montgomery, Kristy Puckett, Misty
Puckeu, Jessica Schuler.

&amp;

Gilmore, M~orie Halar. Mindy Hal·
ley, Brooke Han. Billy J~an.
Erick Johnson, Tawny Jones, a.rislopher Krawsczya, Crystal . Leach,
AmlUida Miller, Amber Perkias, Jennifer Shain. Kyle Smiddie, Jeremiah
Smith, Jqshua Sordon, Julie Spaun,
Daisy Spears, Brandy Stevens, Renee
Stewart, Wesley Thoene, Adrianne
Tilley, Brandy Tobin, Ryan Well, •
Marissa Whaley.

At.L 'IMI Slllt Mwll a. Palcl 111

.

•NowH•Addltlona

•NowGor~gea

·Remodtii"O
•Siding
•Roofing
•Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Meigs High School
. . ;
Ninth Grade: Lacy Banks, Tncoa · ·
Davis, Ryan Dill, Jenny Howenon, !.
Becky Johnson, Jessica Johnson , ;
Kristina Kennedy, Kelli Lightfoot, :
Patrick Martin, Ryan Nelson, Tamra •
O'Dell, Stefani Pickens, Franco .
Romuno, Rebekah Smitfl, Georgia ;
sohi
Second Grade: Derek Brickles, Spears, Jeremy Thcmas, Bridget :
Ashton Bush, Travis Butcher, Vaughan.
Mimhew
Meadows,
Brooke
Tenth Grade: David Anderson, :
O'Bryant, Sabrina Oldaker, Becky Melissa Barrell; . Billi B.entley, :
Rader,. Cl)ristopher Trader, Chrislo- Michelle Bissell, Carly Chasleen, •
pher VanReeth, Nicholas White ;
Jerica Clark, Ginger Darst, Robin :
Third Grade: Grant Arnold, April Donohue, Jenny Duncan, Elizabeth !
Coppick, Niki Lewis, Ross Well;
Farley, Chad Folmer, Jeff Fowler, :
Fourth Grade: Nikki Butcher. Ben Emily ' Fowler, Jason Frecker, ;
Collins, Tia Pratt; '
Danielle Grueser, Mochael Krautter, ·
Fifth Grade: Marc Barr, Juley Michael Leifhei!. Candace Miller, ;
Eblin. Ashley Fields , Jon Halar, Amy See, Matt Sellers, Amy Smith, :
Meghan Haynes;
Zinnia Spears, Aaron Justin Vaughan.
· Sixth Grade: Mindy O'Dell, John Matt Williams,' Sandra Young.
Witherell .
·
Eleventh Grade: Adam Barrett, •
Meigs Junior High School
AnitaCollins, James Dean, Taryil
Seventh Grade : Whitney Ashley, . Doidge, Jennifer Garey, Scott 1
Chasidi Biggs, Joey Blazer, Derrick George, Joe Hill, .Robyn Hunt, Lib- ·•
Bolin, Zachary Bolin, Real~ Bush. eny King, Erin Krawsczyn, Timmy '
Dustin Butcher, Sarah Clifford, Jes- Lewis , Joshua Marshall, Jessica ,
sica Chapman, Marianne Carsey, McElrQy, Teresa McGrath. Brandi
Andrew Davis, Gary Davis, Tylan Mcadcws, Jeanie Newell, B.J . •
Gonzalez, Curtis Hanstine, Alison Nicholson, Stacie Reed, Eric Siders, •
Hays, Sarah Houser, Grace Kitchen, Jodie Sisson, Beverly Stewart. ·
'
Brian Klein, Carrie Lightfoot,
•
_Bethany McMillan. Cecil Midkiff,
Twelvth Grade: Candace Barber, :
Beatrice Morgan, Christopher Pick· Amber Bennett, Anne Brown, Chad
ens, Gwendolyn Porter, Bradley Sear· Burton , Megan Clark, Jeanette Cline, ~·
les, Adam Shank, Brooke Smith, Bryan Colwell, Susan Cotterill, Cyn·· :
. Alben Stearns, Patricia Walker.' thia Cotterill, Carrie Counts, Bonita '
Christopher Ward, Stephanie Wigal, . Cremeans, Corey Darst, Darlene :
Connie Willet.
Doerr, Terri Fife, Jake Gannaway. ~
Eighth Grade: Grani Abbott, Alison Gerlach, B'ill Gilmore. Travis '
Steven Beha, Lisa Bias, Jake Birch- Gilmore, Elena Gorbunova, N.icholas :,
field, Amber Blackston, Melanie · Haning, Amy Harrison, Suzanna :
Blevins, Bethany Boyles: William Henderson. Michael Jarvis, Heather , .
Max Bratton, Stacey Brewer, Chad Knight, Dorothy Leifheit, Caroline · .
llrown, Beverly Burdette, Charla Magne, Tanya Phalin, Michelle Pool- · •
Burge, Ashley Burton, Brandon er, Faith Rose, Lori. Russell, Tracy :
Collins, Todd Daniels, Robert Day, Shaffer, Amy Smith, Kelly Spencer,
Billie Joelle Dye, Patrick Erwin, Cynihia Stewart, Jessica Stoban,
Sara Fife. Michelle Fort, Stacy Jo Candice Walker, Donald Yost.

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previous generation gave" io bands,
BY BRUCE HARING
savs Tom Lipsky' of CMC lntemaUSA TODAY·
•
.
LOS ANGELES - The leg· tiona! Recorjls, so the industry tends
endary Rainbow Bar on the Sunset to rename·sub genres to market them
Strip, .one-time home to such bands to a new generation of rock fans.
as Guns N' Roses and Poison, was "But i(s the same heavy-attitude
rocking, The tiny upstairs bar. was . music ' that's been successful for
wall-to-wall big hair and bigger decades."
Adrianne Stone, a Lqs .Angelescleavage.
"It's like a high school reunion," based rock critic for Creem, Daily
said Karen Lindstrom, drinking in the Variety and Circus, agrees. "It was
scene earlier this month. Publicity · bound to return to that. nasty, obnoxdirector for a nearby midsize music ious heavy metal stuff that we all
venue, she saw "people here tonight love. I do miss it, even though some
I haven 't seen in yearS."
ofi!
is. so hokey I couldn 't listen to
.
Rhino Records' celebration of its 11 anymore.
new series "Youth Gone Wild: Heavy
Lipsky and CMC are poised to
Metal Hits of the '80s," was the rea· · take advantage of the revival. Metal
son for the gathering.of missing per- . warhorses like Iron Maiden, Deep
. sons, which included guitarist Don Purple, Overkill, Motorhead, SlaughDokken, Motorhead's Lemmy ter and Warrant - .who once filled
Kilmister, Quiet Riot's Rudy Sarzo arenas and sold millions of albums..:...
and Iron Maiden's Nicko McBrain. all record new material via CMC. a
The Rhino collection recalls an era 2-year-old, North Carolina-based
when such bands as Love/Hate, Bang independent label specializing in
Tango· and· Cinderella walked the bands (hat used to be contenders.
earth, promoting huge guitars and
The ·key to their continued shelf
small tales of love in a large-living life. Lipsky says, is in the fan base.
style that was I00 percent show biz. Because a major record label is lookWhile Rhino revives the past, the ing for a big return to justify its heavy
future may hold more of the same. investl)lent in marketing and promoFor instance, this summer's Lolla· tion, bands that fall under the million·
palooza tour boasts a testosterone-dri- units-sold level often are sacrificed
ven lineup led by Metallica, with on the altar of commerce, no matter
equally loud and frenzied bands from their artistic merit.
Seattle's Soundgar(len to punki!IOP
Iron ~aiden 's latest album sold
pioneers the Ramones. And with only 200,000 copies, not enough to
tours on tap from Ozzy Osbourne and light up the big corporate·ledgers but
AC/OC, it seems heavy metal is back. fine for an indie like CMC, whose
But some people contend that lower overhead is easily met by
metal never went away, that it's sales to loyalists still hungry for new
merely been packaged uoder differ· material from their heroes. CMC's
ent names the past few years . .
formula has proved so successful that
"As every new generation comes . the company will expand the concept
up. they son of resi~t the titl~s that the to countcy music later this year.

"Rock and country fans are very ,
loyal, "),.ipsk~ says. They 're "fans of ~
the artist, whereas with R&amp;B and •
(other genres). they arc fans of the &lt;'
song .... The market has to shift a lit· · ;,
· tic more," but with that fan base and ·; •
. the right song, he says, acts could "
regain their former levels of success . . ,
· · Which means that finding elbow
.room in the upstairs bar at the Rain·
bQw, and places like it, may get a lit'
tic more difficult in the near future.

VARSITY - 1'heH girls led the chears
lor Meigs l'flgh School this past season. Pictured In the front row fron'lleft to right are: Sta,cia Read. Lori Russell,' and Whitney Hapton-

'stall. 5ecorid row: Jennifer Ervin, Teresa Simpson, Cindy, Stewart and Cynthia Sandy. Third
row: Sue Henderson. The advisor this year Is
C!ndy Fields.

-Community calendar-

•
1

The ComJlluniiy Calendar is
published as a free service to non·
profit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not designed to promote
sales or rund raisers of any type.
Items are printed as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.
TUESDAY
RACINE-- Southern Local Building Committee meeting Tuesday,
7:30p.m. at the high school. All dis,
trict 'residents urged to attend.
POMEROY -- Meigs County
Extension presentation on annutil
flowers, what's best, 7 p.m. at Senior
· .
Citizens Center, Pomeroy.

·
RESERVE • Th~ glrl1 - . reserve
chNrleadera for Melga High School for !he
1995-911 y~r. In the front raw from left to right

Ch1atNn, Shannon JeliiJiiili;
Lauren Anderaon. In the second row are Jea.
alee Evan•, Sarah Larklntt and Mellaaa Reeves.

are:

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Limestone,
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RACINE. -- Wildwood Garden
Club, Wednesday, I p.m. at the
R_acine Kountry Kitchen.

THURSDAY
LETART FALLS --Pat'ent AdviMASON -· Stewart-Johnson Post sory Council, Thursday, 1:30 p.m. at
VFW Ladies Au~iliary, Mason, 78 lhe . sebool. All parents urged to
p.m. Thesday. Election of officers. attend.
Potluck after meeting.

'

All Kinds of Earth Work

992·3838

"No Job Too Large or TOo Small"

'32124 Happy Hollow Rd.

Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danriy &amp; Peggy Brictdes

614-742·2193
TFN

1118Mn

LIVE! ·

H c:mcll ca pp e cl

ONE ·ON • ONE!
CALL NOW!

-

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

Middl eport. Oh

Gutters
Do)'VnBpouta
Gutter Cleaning
· Pllntln~
FREE ESTIMATES

992-5042

949-2168

1n Family Care
Hom e

$3.99 per min.
Must be 1e yrs.
Serv·U (6t9) 645-8434
. Public Notice
Proof of Authority of the
official or agent etgnlng tha
bond.
Bide ·ahall bo eeelld end
marhd u
Bid for
Middleport Perking paving
and melltd or dtllvtrld,to:
Melgo
Cou~ty
Commlnlane,., _
Courtho-. Pomeroy, Ohio

ADVERTISING
· THE HAT MAN
lmpfintlng

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

·4117et.

RtsH 1111 &amp; 'a hhlal
Sewer &amp; llrai. .

a..., sm.

DOWHUHDER
CERAMICS
AND GIFTS ·
Green-re Salal
25-S0%0ffl
Also some palnta and
brushes.
Sat., March 30, April 6
Noon·S:OO P.M.
3 mll11 north of Chester
Off fit. 7
Check It ooilu

Live

;

Psychics

..

1 on 1
1-9Q0-255-0300
ext. 5488
$3.99 per min.
·Musl be 18yrs.

892-4405

......

For Free Eailmatea

FREE
Pick.., llscfted
"

ATTENTION SPORTS
FANS
Let y9ur lingers do the
walking to the spans
line. Flnai'lce·StockS,
NHL, NBA, NF~. Point
Spreads, Daily
Horoscope.
1·900-776-0700
Ext. 3685
$2.99 per min. Must .be
18 yrs. Serv-U

........

&amp;1111111y melals

SPARKffiS
ELECTRIC

..•••,.,'
.~

·"

Serving all Your

I •

992-66117.
A.uto-OU&gt;Iaer's.Jra.urance ·
Ufe Home car Bualneas

~..;...!:Tl.!:::~~-J

.

......,

.. ~

li:

ELE~ICAL

For Sale

needs
Phone "

Pea Hen (Fowl) 1 yr. old
. $25.00 each

985·3555

'·

:

.

'

,

.

SfRVICE S
110

$-WANTE!»

patenrod walghr-lou product.
304-773-5083 24hralday.

$1 ,000 Weekly Prouning M8il
Frea lnlo. Sand Self·Adckasaed
Stamped Envelope: EX'pra'n

Dept.131 , 100 Eut Whlleoro~o
Blvd., SUite 148-345, Cedar Park
TX 78613.
'

'ATTN: Point Ploa•nt'
Postal Po,altto,.. Permanent hill·
lime for clarklsorttrl. Full Benefits. For ·aum, application and
salary Into call: 708-284· 1838 Elll.
3870, Bam to llprn.
"

AVON I All Areas I Shirley :
Spears, 304-87S-14211.
•• :
5 Full Time P,olitions Availabkt1a •
A ~o~al Busl~ns E111bM1hnie~ :
Tra1nmg Provtded , No E1perience ,

30381 Roy Jones Rd.,
P.O. Box 539
Syracuse, Ohio 45779

Necessary. Call For Appoint~ ~
Monday And Tuesday g.s. G11t.e •
441 ·1975.
• .. •

_

__;,~-----...:.;
·

I

110.

I ..

I .-- A . ___ _I. _

\

Po; ·
•• •

Assistant Director of Nursing tOr :
138-bed long rerm car&amp; unit. Ap~ •
Oegr~

Pomeroy

I

~

pli cants must possess Bacl'lelotJ... •

or cenification as garo(l.. :

tolog1cal nurse . Please respond ,
by 4/22196 to Donna Northup ... ·

~

Emptoyor. 304·875:
' . ··
~f~[f~~[{'~;~;~ij~~~ '0880.
Do~.EEOIAA
lakin Hospital,

lor

We Deliver
992·6111
I

•• •

ly Sentinel, PO Box 729-23,
.metoy, Ohio 45789.

JUKEBOX PIZZA
I

.

Area

Personals
CLUBV.t.P

I

•

·l
";
A
•1
.
1
J
,

~

Ablp Avon Represtntativi•y :
needed. Earn money feu Chrill:' •
mas billa at horne/at WOI"k. 1·&amp;oo:'
992·8358 or 304·882·2845, lnJi. :

Horae A Tack Sales ·

DATING SERVICE

'

HelpWanted

10 people who neecl to lose ·
·weight a make· money, 10 try neW

Tent,Carsey

(No Sunday Calls)

Sr. 7 &amp; 33

'

EMPLOYMENT

LONE OAK

005

Retirees
I
Safe. lt'a-Funl
KY,MOn ·Frl, 1

I

Cer11tied Home Heaith Aidlr :
1 Needed For Home Health CaPi ·
1

,Call1·800-508·8773 8 A.M. : 4 ·
P.M. On Duty Modica! .
•• '

_._____.__

Cruise ahlp poai,orla. Travel to . .. :

off any X-large 18"

..
pizza

exolic places. $200-$900 ~.· : .

caH 1 day~ 407·875-2022..., • • ·

:

0598C18.

•• '

! cruise Ship Positions, Travel .fer :
I Exotic Places, $200 ;.$900 We8-· .

Monday through Wednesday
w/coupon

' ty, Call 7 Days: 407-875-2022 E11 ' ·

10526C14.

·'"''

JACKSON VINTON
COMMUNITY ACTION, INC.

BIB IOOniG and

JOB POSTING

CONS,IDC!ION

,

.,

35 Yesra Experience

-J.D. Drilling Ccnnpany

(614) 992·2364

P.O.

Box 587

1·100.119·3943

Racine, Oh. 45n1
James E. Diddle

Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig bliaementa, put In septic
systems, lay lines; underground bores.
For Free estimate .call 949-251'2

.RI.UONAB' IJLU'.II

lost: A Small, Male, B rown &amp;
White Long Haired Puppy:- Has
An 10 Tag On Collar, Nama Giz·
mo, Missing From Eureka Area. It
Found Or Seen, ReWard, Vernon
&amp; Ellen Houck , 814- 256 · 1967,
614· ....,.6·983&amp;, Your Help Would

-

Be Much Appreciated!

'

614-992-5048 FREE ESTIMA~S
'
'
4473
., .- Free Estimates . . - ....985
-·'

Lillefl. 814-388-9303. ·

---------1 IDr manaoer,
convenience store looklnt :
send resume
Oai-:. •

Racine American

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete . ·
Rem~allng
Stop I. Compare

Wan10d To Buy: Junl&lt; AuiOa With
Or Without Moton. Call L•rrt

(614) 992-2800

"

Roofing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repalra
Gutters and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling
Decka - Bathrooms - Kitchens - Siding

ROIEIT BISSElL
CONSTRUCTION

Wanted To But: Auto'a &amp; Truck.
Arrf Condilion, 814·-2, ·or
814-4*"ART.
•

Rep.

Residential - Commercial

.

Wanted 10 Buy U1ed Mobile
Homes. Calf: ll~75 I ' .

• Trail Rides
• Training
• Boarding
• Lessons

614·992-7643

742-2803

992-4507

J-.,

FREE ESTIMATES

Plan Ahead, Call Today!

REPAIR

U1~ Uana Levie, t .. I Wrangler Joena a Denim
Nlu
~. 814-4&gt;48-2408.
. '

•Room Addition•
•NewGarag11 ·
•Electrical a. Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Room Additions • Roofing
c·OMMERCIAL and RESIDE~TIAL

No Lawn Too Large or
Too Small

VCR Sick?
Call Quick
COY'S VCR

plecte or complete 1111111, 1110

do appraiaola, Oobj Mardn, 814·
11112·7441 .

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVK£

Jllew Homes • Vlny! $1dlng New
Garages • Replacement Windows

• Tree Trimming
• Mowing (Reslden,tl!tl
and commercial)
• Shrubbery
Maintenance
• Odd jobs per request

with 2t players or more
· . Raises $50:00 ea.
week. Pay according 19
the·Number of players
949·2044 or 949-2038

Uud lurltllura· antlqutl, · ont

Cheater, Ohio

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.·

JAWN«:AIIE

Sun. Nights
Lucky Ball $300.00

Awnuo, Galipolia. 81H*2142. '

985-4422'

992-3954 or 985-3418 ,,

11.00

Legion #602
Bingo

U .T.S. Coir, Shop, 151 .Second

Dirt• Sand

WE HAVE A· l TOP SOIL FOR SALE

I

IARRn

·614-992-4025
I

19~

· Coll.ctibltl, Papa~ghll, Etc.

/l!.;l)

Umaatone, Sand; Gravel, Cool &amp; Water

lllgi Pow11 Wallr
Jet Aralla6Je
rv&amp;VidH
/llflldlot At JW ..
, _ (304J 675-1657

wanted to Buy · .

Top Pri&lt;ot Paid: Old U.S. Colni,
Sll¥tr, Gold, Diamonds, All Old

Llmastone • Graval

OFFER GENERAL HAULING

,__.__

.

5

W~

TRI·STATE SEWER &amp;
DRAIN QEANING

1

11111 1··.

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

POMEROY, OHIO
Trash Ramoval ·Commercial or Residential
S8pCic Tanka C:Ioaned I Portable Tolleta Rented.
· D!llly, weailly &amp; monthly rental rates.

I

J &amp; D's Auta Plirts . Buying 1!11·
•ago vehlcteo. Selling porll. 304·
773-5tm.
.

,!,)

ReL. HOLLON
TRUCKING

.MODEll SANITATION

·'

Cleen Late Model Cara Or
Trucks, UIQQ Uodal1 Or Newer,
Smtih Bwi&lt;k Pontiac. 1aoo eaa1•
em AMn.lt, GallpCih
·
·

c lt

qq:··

Public Sill

90

/\..iif.1

('~ :~H

Su~·

Rick P.orton Auction COf'IIPiril',
full time aucllontlt, complete
auction
aarvlce. UcanHd
HS,Ohlo ' Well Virginia, ~ ·
713-57850r 3110-773-5447.

f' :·lll'l:'y

We will wo.rk w~hln yotir budget
Ph. 773-9173 .
.
FAX 773-5861
108 Pomero Streat
Mason, WV

511619ot 1FN '

Room Addlllona
Siding, Roofing, Polloo
. Reaaonabll
·
lnaurero • E~q~ortenced
Call Wa~ne Neff

-

-.

Howard L. WrlteHI

Care for
Eld erly &lt;:m el

HoUII Repair &amp; .
lle,modallng
.Kitchen &amp; Bath

,.,.
......

f: 1 UI

ihl-~·

· Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • l~ustrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steal Sa)es &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Steps -Stairs, Railings, Pallo Furniture, Fireplace
• Items, Planter hangers, Trellises &amp; lots ol olher stuffll

Bondsaw Mill ··

\'1\'

•

1M

ll'ld Auction

Cn:r'p~.!· ·r U\1 ·I

Trucklrta- ·
Umestono
Bulldozing and
Backhoe
Services
House Sites and
Utilities

Portable

80

/\rl\1 Ur1·.,, ·r

lie. · Ina. ew-: Riel&lt; Jahnoon

SAWMILL

NEFF REMODELING
. SERVICE

·.~

1

)

a. Pat~ In

uilion- 1:OOpm Fnday, ...,.
day -10:00..m. s.......,_

r1~,,J' cllli_.t ·

. Ui:,.

H&amp;H

J&amp;LINSULATION•

~modeling

· Insurance Services
EAST MAIN
POMEROY ·

All Ohio

BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 45771
941-3013 Phone
94t-2018FAX

(619) 645·8434

~::Jlm~ ·~....
' 2M

8clrwlng S.E. Ohio A West Ylrgfnl8
Toll Frao1-800-872-51187
44&amp; 8411

2~

Our statistics show that mature
drivers and home owners have
fewer and less cosUy losses than
other age groups. So it's only lair •
to charge you less for your
insurance. Insure your home and
car with us and save even more
with our special · mu~l·policy
discounts.

.

··~264-63!10~=

1

llull

day ba1oro .,. ad 11 10 Nn,

evenliiiiSDr

949-2512

Saleo

Advance. 0Mctllne: 1:OOpm

Contact Rodney Howery
594-3780 days, 6118-7231

UCINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; lUCHlNI SHOP, IN~.

(6 14) 441 - 1191

All Yard
c11y

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling
with
a Hl"'lceto Nt:k It up

IlB/I mo.

1·900-446-1414
EX·T.3694

&amp;VIcllllty

.J·-,y fl,JV

1-900 446 1414
Ext.4308
S3.99 por mit:~.
Muat be 18 yre. •
s-u (8181 6.45 .8434

537 BRYAN PLACE ,
MIDDLEPORT 11192·2772
011tco Houre: Mon.-Fri.
8:00a.m. ·3:30p.m.
VInyl I Alum. Siding,
VInyl Rapii~IIIIICII'll,
Wlndowa, Blown
Iniul1tlon, Storm
Doors, Storm
Wlndowt, Gllt'IIIMFreo Estimates

NewH-,G........

lit Jo' to IIIII tr t• ....

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

I

Poi'NroV.

Mlddlepatt

Roofs ete.

tile,...

)

yean nperlence DOW
ov.U.ble for 1111 types ol
Addlll01111, Balbo,
Kltdlens, Docks, SidiDio

IENNEnS.

Free Estimates

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -- Alzheimcrs Disease/Related Disorders support
group, Wednesday, 2 to 3 p.m at the
Meigs Multipurpose Senior Center.
Ann Forbes and Alisha Saunders of
Holzer'Hospice to be the speakers.
MIDDLEPORT -- Middlepon Vi 1lage Council, 5 p.m. Wednesday at
Middleport village hall to award a
contract
. for the swimming pool renovauon.

Air CotitllloMt •• Heel Pumps,
Fun-. Alle:)ulpmont In atocll
for lmmnll•lnstlllstlon.
Frao lEstkMtoo
IWY010z12

367-0266- 1-800-950-3359

Touch- tone phone
required. ·
Serv-U

'

Moll»lle and Manufactured Housing

Owner: Ronnie Jones

IUUTIFUL WOMII
All WIITUIG TO
HEll FROM
YOUIOWIU

.....

Coalnlclor wltll OYtr J1

.Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Years Experience • lruured

Attention of blddera Ia
celled to all of the
raqulremonte conllllned In
aloud.
lhlo bid packet, pertlculerly
Plono, Speclfi..Uone, ond to the Federal Labor
bid formo moy bo eocurod Standard• Provl•lone and
at the office of the Melga Davia Bacon Wag•,
lnauranca
Couo;»l'...-~Commlll. lonera. v:arloue
NOTE~ ProJect conalate of
requlrementa, varloua oquel
only Pllme, Tack, Pave, and opportUnity provlelone, end
painting atrlplng. Each bid the requlrament tor •
mual be accompanied by payment bond end
either a bid bond In an periD,.nce bond for 100%
IIIIOUnl of 100% Of the bid Of tilt ~ntnct price..
amount ,,with • au rely
No bidder may withdraw
Hllafactory to 1111 81oreaald hla bid within thirty (30)
Melga
County dllya after liM actual date of
Comm11110111re ·or by • the oplfllng tlloreof. Mllga
cartlllad chlek, or latta• of County Commlulonera
credit upon • aolwnt bank raaervea the right to ••lv•
In the amount ot not Ieee any lnformillllloa or to ,.Ject
thai110% of the bid omount any or Ill blda.
In favor of the oforeoold
Frld Hollman, Praaldent
Melga
Counly
Molge County
Commlulonara. Bid bOnda
Commlulonen
ahoU be occomponled by (4) 11, 24, 30; 3TC

,.,.,,
.....
.
kf•t ••••

Drlveri, Home
Owners And
Moltlle Home
Owners Special
Savings.

WICKS

.L&amp;E'
P!Abllc Notice
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
Sealed propooalo tor till
paving, end parking
painting of .the Middleport
Boetor Pl rklng Project wiH
be raoolved by tho Mala•
County Comml11lonere at
their office at tht Melga
County Courlhouu,
Pomeroy, Ohio 41711 until
10:00 a.m., May e, 18111, end
thon at 1:00 p.m. at .. ld
oflleo opened end reed

lo offor ttory

........,c.u
992-2158 '

·JONES' TREE SERVICE

Ln~)

PDDI.IIfta

.

..

(Umoato.-

c..- "M og &amp; Atmodotlng

Salisbury Elementary
First Grade: Shauna Clark,
Charles Eblin, Andy Garnes, Bobbi
Lee, Chelsea Manley, Andy MeAngus, James Morrison, Brandon Pearson, Bradley - Ramsburg; Hollie
Richard, Amanda Smith, Jennifer
Smith, Bradley Soulsby. Brook Wat-

Q

Sw..., - ·

~

COIISTRUCTIOII

----,..c!lsketba/1 cheerleaders-- Heavy metal getting hot again
.

.. . .
·- ··IIIlTH'S

AdVance. DEADI.tNE: 2:00 p.m.
1111 day be1ara 1M 0&lt;1 It to run.
2:00 P.tft. Flidlf.
llondly edition • 10:00 a.m. Sat· ·

Lost long-haired white dog with
black lace and rear, curl~ tail,
'Smol&lt;le', 614-985-4235.

N.w At lnales lleetronles

Lost: man·s leather waller, con·
talna Im portant papera, keep

Radle
lllaeK Dealer
,
'

money, Pamlda vicinity, Roban
- n. 814-742-3051.
·-

.

70
Your favorite artist
on Tap~ or CD
.'

Yard Salo
Gallipolis
. &amp; VIcinity

.

106 N. 2nd ~ve., Middleport

992-2825
111111111

Wodnoaday, Friday, From II A.M.
·4 P.U. 55 Garfield Avenue,
Woodburner, Dishes, Racllnara,

Mloc.IMml.

�· Tueedly, Aprll11.1tll

The EMily Senllnel• P... I
I

• NJ:A Croaaword Puaale
ACROII
1 .... _

PHILLIP
ALDER

,\;:,:£...,.

,......

710

EARN $1 ,000 Wool\ly Sluffing Eflo
velopn At Home. Start Now. No
Ell:pt-ritnce. Free Sup,pHet, lnkl.

No Ol&gt;llgaolon. Send SASE To :
Fairway, Depo. 1351 , Bo• 439g ,
Wet1 Covina. CA 91791.

E1rn 110001 weekly atuffif'li envelope• et homt. Be your boll.
Starr now. No experience. Fret
suppli.. lnlo. No obllga lion. Send
S.A.S.Eooo Presolge Unil tL, PO.
Box 115801, Winter Spt~ngs, Fl
32718.
Experienced Medical Receptionist, Apply In Person Medical Plaza, 936 Statt Route 160, Gallio·
plia, Between Monday Thru Frl·

daj.

HlliNG

Pool Lifeguards And Conc11sion
Stand Workers. .A.ppllcalions
Available Parks I. Rec:reation. De·
partment, 518 Second Avenue,
Gallipolis.
Homo Typloll, PC uaero needed.
$45,000 income potential. Call 1·
800·513-43&gt;13 Elll B-9358.
Housekeepers Needed, Male Or
Female, Some Weekend Work,
$4 .75 To Start, Benefits Available
Alter 90 Day a, Stnd Resume To
CLA 380 t10 Gallipolis Oaily Tril&gt;
une, 825 Third AY&amp;nue, Gallipolis,
01145631 .
ln'lmediate Oper1ing Available For
Beautician 2 Days A Week. May
Be Full Time At A Later Da te.
Uust Have A Manager's License.
Equal Opporounloy Employer. Con·
tact Ga~ Hamilton. Pinecrest Care
Ceoter, 170 Pinecrest Drive, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 . 614·446-7112.

MANAGER NEEDED: ..
TELEMARKETING MANAGER
Heeded To Run Telemarketing
Department For A Direct Sales
Organization . Sales Or TelemarMring ExPe1ience A Must!
Interview&amp; By Appointment Only,
Call 814·441 -1975.

Expei-lenct Nece11aryl $500
To $900 Weakly /Potential Processing Mortgage Refunds , Own
Hours, Call (909) 715-2300, Exl.
1351, (24 Hours).
No

NOW HIRING
Wanted Prior Military With leaa
Than 3 Years Broken Service
And Honorable Discharge Coda
Call 814-448-0848 1304-523·
2105.
Postal I Gov'l Jobs $21 IHr +
Benefits, No Exp. Will Train, Far

Will do babyslttinq In my home.

TWo bodroom hou.. In Pomeroy,
tl78 Dille a.cwoom, • ..,.,. &amp; r• HUO approwed, reno arid depotlo,
frive-rator, cap~f wir ing, ur,d.,.. no·~*a, will till on oonno~ 1 14plnninJI, earpoo &amp; woll..!*, 1!198-124C.
11.500. 304-875-5101.
=:~:;:;:;;;-;::;::;::;;:::;:;j'~
Two bed r09m hou ... car
une F.ttivll 1•xro 2
nice and ctetn, depoa1r requrred,
2 1101111, Tooal Eie&lt;:Yie,
I no i nt~ i de pets ; three bedroom
lyNowRomodelod. New
hOuM, depoait requll4td, no inside
Porch, Very Beautiful Setting On pets; &amp;14-SKI2-X&gt;90.
2. 1 Ar;re&amp;, In Bidwell Area ,
$35,000, Wi~ Consider Land Co,. Two bedroom, new carpet, stove,
,.... 814-381H835.
cabl&amp;f1rAII'I ir)cluded , in Wason
near park, conatructi on w'orkera
1979 Baron 14x70 Wilh 7xt4 Ex- wek::ome. Csn 304 ·7 73·576~ to
pando 3 Bedroom•. 1 Bath, Total H t UP appoihtmenL
Eleettic With Qa,kup Gaa Heat.
AC &amp; 2 Porches On 3 112 Aete 420 Mobile Homes
Wooded Lot Cloae To Gallipol1 1
for Rent
(Wi ll Sen ·seperate) 614·446·

304-576-4007.

9543.

Will· Do Interior Of Exterior Painllng, Reaaonable Rates, Experl·
anced. Reklfenc;es, For Free Esli....,., 81"'2~5-5~5.

1980 Windsor, 1~•70, 3 Bedroom.
2 Baths, Electric &amp; Gas. CA. Well
Water &amp; County Water, Building,

Tralroood EquHirion ICertifiod Fwrler. Will train, Give ltuona,
Board, And Shoe Honea. For
More lniDrm~lion, l.loaheW Angel,
814·258-8801
0

Will Babvalt 1 Ctild In My Home.
Infants loo. In Rodney Af81 . Referenr;es Avallabt•. 114-24S-S887
~.

--

Will mow yarda in apare time.
Pleate c111 anytime 304·576·

.

Will stay with e.l derly person,
young Christian woman. 814-9854388.

REAL ESTATE

310

Homes for sale

A\Hiflle, Glllipo~a.
S.lea Rep Far Snap· On Tools,

EOE, eoe42$-8128.

GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

Washtn, dryer&amp;, rtfrlgtra1Dfl,
ranges. Skagga KppUancea , 78
VIne Sortel. Call 114·448 -7398,
1.,...·3418.
HarveJ[ Qo ld
Harvell
ln~h

, Hot1

2 Bedrooms 12xfl5 Mobile Home
On 314 Aore Lol $300/Ma . 814·

2•5-9693 Or 614-863-5566.

PICI&lt;ENSFURNrTURE
Now lUted
304·675-1450
Save Big On Carpet a Vinyl In

~toclc" $5.00 Cash /Carry Mollo·
han Carpeta. R•7N. 814 -.-48·
7444.

VIRA FURNITURE
' 614-446-31511
Ouality HoUsehold Furniaue And
1\ppjianeas. Greel Deals 011
Cash And Carryl RENT-2-0WN
And Layewoy Aloo Allailable.
Free Delivery Wilhln 25 Mites.

520

Sporting

Goods
Turkey, Archery, Guns, Ammo,
Reloading &amp; Fishing Supplies .
L1ve Bait I License. Cra~ford ' s,
Henderson, WV.

530

Antiques

Antique Oak Pedestal Kitchen
Table, S200 Firm, 814·379-2923.

Buv or sell . R1\llerlne Antiques,
1124 E. Main Stree1, on Rt. 124.
Pomerov . Hours : M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. ro 6 :00 p.m., Sunda~ 1 :00 10
6:00p.m. 614-992-25211.

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

'89 utility trailer, 48'•102', excel~~ condllion,

614·985-4420.

2ol82.

10911 tan k &amp;tl up specials. Fish
Tank &amp; ~~Shop, 2413 Jaekson
Ave . Paine Pleasant 304·875 ·

2083.

1983 280ZX Da1111n,

ssp. e qt.,

runs well, S900 080, 814-742·

2258 uk llir Mike or Jim.

Hlt84 Nilltn Sel'ltrl , .- cyl. au·
Dog Obedience Classes The tomacic, 91.000 or iginal miles,
Righi Paw Training Centet, Sherry v.,y gaod transportation, $1350,
Rober ta, C.artilled Tr ainer / In- 814 • 742 " 1 ~ 00 IY:_:u::oto:::_:rCI::.::II;::6.::":.:-4:.:46-:..;1::11S:.:4:_._ __.!1984 Pontiac Fiero, Automalic,
::
AC, Loaded , $1 ,200 , 814-3870182, Afwlr 4 P.M.
Good Home Onl y: 3 Yeat Old
Ma le Black &amp; White Cocker 1g85 Mercury Topaz, $1,200,
Spaniel, AKC Rogisoered, Good 814-258-1831 .
Sire, 614-3?9-272&amp;
1988 Merc:ury CIOIOII' Xi., IOide4,
Monlhl~ flea progfam need rtelp? PS, PB, AC, PW, 302, new tires.
Ask R&amp;G Feed &amp; 'Supply, 8U· automatic, $3500, 81'4·949·2045
092-2184 abouo lho HAPPV or 614-949-2870.
JACK 3-X FLEA COLLAR. Kills
male and female adult rleaa. For 1989 Escort GT, arn·fm casselle,
tilt, cruise, Bir. 12.000. 1987 TD'fO·
dogs &amp; &lt;:alii
oa Camry, loaded, $2,500. 304Manohly Flea Program Need 675-2714 or 304-875-1577.
Help? Ask JD NORTH PRODUCE
814·448-1933 About Tho HAPPY ,989 Grand Am. 4dr, auto. 4cyt,
JACK 3·X FLEA COLLAR. Kills ac , ·ps, pb; am-fm cassette,
Male &amp; Ftmate Adult Flua. For 79,000mi. , good cond.·, $3,800.
304-862·2529.
Dogs &amp; Cats!

570

1990 Dodge Dayoona, $3,000
OBO, or lrade for Fard Ranger or
F150 414,814-742-2373.

Musical
Instruments

Console Piano. Responsible party
wan1ed 10 make low monthly payments on piano. See locally. Call
1 · 800·268 ·6~18.

Kimball Stud)o P1ano : Beautiful
Walnut Finis.h . Looks &amp;, Sounds
lieke New. Must see to Appreci ate. Call 614·446-8022 Leave A
Message Pleeae.
V~maha Ektctronlc Ka~bcard

Ex-

cellen1 Condition, Bench Included, Afwlr 4:30P.M. 614,446-6253..

19g1 Ponuac Flrebird V- 8, T·

Tops. Loaded, Alarm, 44,000
Mtles. $9,000, Neg. 614-3792514.
1992 Pfymoutn Sundance 4 DOor,

11

•s

1883 Hondo
s1 .500. oaa5 c~;.~,;;,,;,
3411. ss.ooo .
boat, runs lltC .
3143.

•J I 7
•tO I I I
•J •. • 7

11

•s s

1994 Yamaha
25, exc. coMt, ,
helmol, oJIIal. $2,200 . 304-57~2..00.
,;
1995 Vamaha Timberwgll 4•~ ­

•K I

f'tonda 2dox 3 ·wheeltr, nee•
anginA wotk. PJO. 3CM·87S-S!?j\

Vulnerable: Botb
Dealer: South

~.700. 614-_3~384.

.... N.nlt

Boats &amp; Moto~
for Sale
n

..._ z•

Pua . INT

12 WDnllof

aCu~~~~aM

Alpua .

Keepthedoorajar

'89 Bayliner and iraile~.
era inboard/outboard,
614·992-3132.

I

By Platulp Alder

1971 1811 Hberglau boiS
•ohp Evinrude motor &amp;
pa.rrs. New ftoor &amp; carpeting,
~r Included. $1 , 750. 304
2683.

Sydney Smltll, tile Enslllh writer

...,+-+-+-+-

and cler&amp;Yme, pointed out that "whell
a man expeeta tO be arreated, every ln-+~f-+­
knQck •t the door Is an •larm. •
Wouldn't It lie nice to bue someone
knocldns on tile doot, or rin8ia8 tile
bell, wben the critical moment had
been reaclleclln a brlqe deal! It ia
usually easier to find tile vital play

1988 Searoy Sev olle,
cruiser, 19:, ope;n bQw. e-c.
11.000. 304-i8t2'715.

·3
,
86-99

rEANUTS

I

lm-+-+-1-+-

the key trlek L.....l-""-..1..""""haa I1Tiwd. Sadly, lhou8b. there ia no
I1IICh tocsin llelns 80IIllded; )"011 are on

1

Farm!Equlpment

l.,.-l--1-+--+---&lt;1--

when )"011 are aware that

.

i

yuw-own• .

J.f·

In today'• deal, the bu-der part is
blddiJtC to the best contract of lix no-

trump. ID the given IIIICIIo11, Sollth, af.
ter openlns with a •troD&amp; artllicill anc~ ·
fordlts two clllbl, rebid four oo-tnunp
to show a

balanced 21-21 points - a

aJi8bt 0\'erbld, of coune. North took a

,_.,,

~hp

outboard motor, l1ke nett
calls only. 3~!
575-541 1 berween &amp;-9M\
at.i

s•oo. Serious

760.

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

, -:1:.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

i ·

New gu tariks , one 1,0n tr.Uc~
wheels, radiators, floor rrats. ett;
0 &amp;,R Auoo, Riplji)O, WV. 304·3 •
3933 or 1-800-273-9329.
.. :

•.
1

790

campers
&amp; ;&lt;' •·I.
,
- MGtor

'

~mes ~;; :

19' dual axle Play More, shmref'

and toilet. $700: '80 00111''
Traf\s ·Van, kitchen, self c!Ml'!
tained. 28". $2800: fi 14-992-3692.-

1:It~~~~~~;~:~

'

r" ' ... , /

...

:()\,~ ...~ .. .:il\€£.51.1 ...SI6H. ..

TNXIIIQHRD

1977 T~rry, 32ft, seir contaUfil:tl.
roof air. $4.000. 304-882-3343. - 1.

. .

.

....1- YI·YII

"\... A.Ve'$

., ........... J,,,~ ·

wlottera.
So South, temporarily ignoring the
ulom of playin&amp; the honor ftom the
shorlllide lint, Willi Irick oDe Ia hand
with tile heart queen l1ld ·led the club
ldng. He continued cluba to drive out
East's ace and Nlmed hla U trlc:U,
setlin&amp; into the duatmy wllli the heart
jack.
playen, alanl1l or DO lluml. A dead

"

L-11/£~ OF' QUI€.T
A"::s!:r-.. ~t-.1101&lt;1 "

battery in tbe smoke-detector
~'t prove fatal-Ibis time.

'

NYILG

PLRTI."

-

YN

8 I R V,

0\'erbid.

Tills deal shouldn't defeat many

.

..-~ ~D, 'M€111 t.U..D

.
•'

y

IR A

apinal either a complete bejpnner or
a relatm!, the defeDCier with the club
ace will hold ii up unW the oecond (or
third) l'OUI1d of the lull. Tlten )"011 will .
need a d'witmy entey to racb the club

r.

I

•lam in the hope that bla
clllb IIIII wuulcl come Ia - aJao a aiiPf

four. But unleas you are playlns

94 car hauler, 16", h,300, &amp;,)'4!&gt;
f.
992-5532.
. .

0 NR

'H

shot at the

SolltllllesJna with elsht top trlcu.
And the clllllllllt can provide the other

1984 2.21.1010~ $1.25: 1987 3.•
Mooor •250 : 1989 2.2 Mooo~
$225; ~ll · l.looors In Good Co~d~
lion, 614·'256-1233.
·:;.::. ~

1 Bedroom /3 Room Apartment,

01 lu

Openlnllud: • .10

1987 Citation Open Bow 1Vrfl.
Lang, Inboard !Outboard Met~r.
, C
180 HP, Good Shape, Pr1ce ,.__
AutomatIc. A1r onditloning, AMf sonable. 614
.'l.&gt;.J-ll '.·
46.
FM Cassette, New Tires, 59,000 ,
.
•
Milea, S4 .600 080, 614-256- 22Ft. Checkmate 250 HP JoiP6169.
·
son LoW Hr&amp;. Showroom Co,O.
~ F d p be
y1
•· •
lion, $10,500', 614-446. 1032,
1••3 or ro , 41: , 46,000ml.. 441 -'l200.
~&lt;I.'
$8,760 ~rm. 304-B75.fl074.

1995 Grand ~rlx Sport Coupe,
auiDmatic, loaded, like new, 9,000
miles, never ~een smoked in,
asking payofl. sn.soo. 61H4:t3142 or 614·992-5817.

, ......

~

MN.Y. . . .

..
l'lu

LXPIQGIKK
PA

TIVTILG
8 HI '

8 H. )' 8

. (XIRIDLG)

W N 8 R. R A

KIIIGZA

..

IROLGKNR.
PREVIOUS SOLunON: '01Ialh and tax• and Chllclblr1hl There's , _ lilY
CCM-*Iitllme lor any of them."- Malgllrel lllilchell.
.

w:::' S~\\.4llA-4£trs·

Will
lAM I

IWioool loy ClAY L PCIIIAII

--.o.
~words
of ""'
0 ,_
ICIVoobltd
be-

I
I 1 1· -1 I I,
I
I~ I I I I~ ..
I I' r I I
low 10 1om lout words.

ORGMAL
1

2

KNDIR

B0 YBH

' !.#..,'

•_

After starting a , diet program my
neighbor announced, 'In Attaining better health usually in-

repairs.

$25,000. 304-675·5076.

. f__,;o;...:;w,...L:..,:.F_L;..:E~~~ volves taking a - - - - -

78 ar;res mil with three bedroom,
two· bath brick home, three ponds,
pole barn building. two car ga ·

1i

wv.

,.,.It -

RENTA LS

f,1ERCHAND ISE

•,

410

Houses for Rent

Polo B.~ SJ)I: :lo-.4SJI9', 1 -i5'•8'
Sliding· Door, 1 ·3·' Man Door,
Painted Soeel Siding, Galvolumo
Soeei Rool: $8,4~4 Ertolod: lrvn
Haru-. 1-8Q0.352-1CM5.

560

1D72 40x70 Covered ·Porch
W&amp;lhef /Dryer, Storage Building
,7,500 Very Good Condlllon,
814-4.S-1440.

Pets tor Sale

Groom Shop ·Pel Grooming.- faa.
turing Hydro Bath . Julio Webb.
Clll814-4411-'l231 .'

\

r. G·

- - - ••

Complere rhe chuckle quoted
filling In the missing wordr
you dovolop from rlep No. 3 below.

. by

SER VIC ES

6;JO

810

qyestock

4-H Club Le~ Far See, Born 21
15 ·3119196 Ideal Size For Gallla,
Meigs, Masofl, lawrence &amp; Jackson Co. Fairs, &amp;14-446·1847.
4-H Pigs, AI slrad Righi Sizes For
Gallia, Meio&amp;~&lt;t.Mason &amp; L'awrance
Countie!l 61•-:?'56·1360.
'

730 vans &amp; 4-WDs

BOars for sa~l\4·9411-2908
Bulls, heifers and steers, 614985-4117 or 6'\4 -985-4126.

1985 F-150 • WD, Good Condition, $3,500, 614'-446--8231 .

Fair pigs , 95 Athens &amp; Meigs
County Grand Champions, salec1
pogs April 20th, 8am la·8pm, Seott
Upoon, 614-378-6102. •

1990 Dodge Ram van B-250,
72,000 Mlleo, S8 ,000 , Can Be
Seen At: Gallipolia Daily. Tribune,
825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis

'•til!

~y · I:

SCIAM lETS ANSWERS

;;

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFII'jG
:
Un~onditional lifetime guararytee~
Local relerences furnished. Cal•
1614) 446-0870 Or (614) 237-:
0488 Roger• Warerproofing.-..1
tablishMt 1975.
t.

feeve messag8.

1g711 vw Bus Blue !Whioe Looks
Good, Runs·Greall $3,200: 6144411-1008.

Sixteen teed&amp;r 'alva&amp;, .weighing
between 500-800 lbs., mixed
breed: live Cllerlay llellars, weighmg between .800-900. 1bs. ; 614742·20116.
'

'

1979 Ford 112ton 4wd . 4spd,
good ohape, $2 ,495 . 304-6755007 or 304·074·4684. it no an1W81

Horne
Improvements

Sovlnp You'II·Fincf Ill !Itt
Cloa&amp;Jfltd StctiOit.

ITUESDAY

I

'·

Appliance Parts And Service:· Afl(
Name Brands Over 25 Years_gpenenc.e All W_ork Guarant..,.,
French City Ma~tag, 614 -44B'·
7795.
·
-

t\'1 1

General Home . M~!
tenenc:e· Painting, vinyl s~d ~:
carpentry, doors. windows,
t
mobile home repair al'ld more. "
free estimate call Chet, 614·ft2J.
6323.
~

C&amp;C

Ohio.

19t' Ford EICI)Iorer Sport ~x•. 4.0
V-6. t¥_i'~ door, ~ llandard, air,
cruise, sun roof. loaded, must
see, fl14·949·2ol81 after Spm &amp;
.~
nee I(intA.

m

lf1

~ ... ,L
~~~
Ul'11 IYI"\L
~
There's A.Reason Irs Called...
11ano. rlnilh, repair.
- · 1'
1992 Chevy Attro Conversion Calllngt 1extured, plaster reik!rl ·
CHAMPION DRIVE
·van,
41,000 m[las, 4.3 V-6, auto, Call Tom 30•H!7S.4111S. 20 ~or
· CLUB PIG SALE
loaded, -4 captain seats &amp; ·bench, ll'parience.
. l/J •
In 1995, Wt Had 40 Class Win.
I
new tires, garage ~ept, mus1 see,
ners That Partic:ipared In Chamaskirlg
S10,900,
114-949·2~81 ol·
~l's
·Home
Improvement-·
(&amp;
pion Drives At 17 County f..air
lor 5pm &amp; weekends.
dating, roofing, siding, Call en -4!
Shows In Qhio And Michigan.
'·
Come To The SOUFICEI II SWII 1993 Ford Aeroatar XLT ·tltend· 9112-3181l
~ .t
AI The C~""plon. Drive Club Plfl ed van. 19e2 Yamaha 950Warri ~ · Patio Oec:kaJ Car pons: Sidi •
Salell
''
.
or. Bolh axe. conc1304-875-2'114;
Free ·E•timare-., Call Steve, e1..-t
Wednesday, April 17. 1998, 7: 30
245-9,579.
'
P.M.
Fayeue County Fairground&amp;;
Washlngm C.H., 0H
Auolloneer: Merlin Woodruff
Selling: ~DO+ Barrow• And Gilts
Farrowed Jahuar,, FtbrUay And
March. Hamp. Yoril, Ouroo, Purebred&amp; And Crotlbrf(ta, AIIO Pie·
train Croan1. Free Buying ServIce Alllllllllt.
t Caeh 1Wrard~ To Champlona
And Rel,t rve Champlona At
820 ° Plumbing&amp;
Counoy And Sa• Falla S .
BuyinD Cerutlcalt Available ToHeating
ward Fint Pto Rtprestnling A
Block, tHick, sewer pipes, wind· · Counoy-Waw Noo Bold To In The
ows, lintel•. etc. Claude Wintera, PilL CoN For l n -.
..
Rio Grande, OH Call 61~ ; 245· Oener·Ginellco Don Black 114·
5121 .
871 -7887, 8 " ' 87&amp;-eee2, Jad;
SWine Ftorm Joe Doe"*'-:h M814Metcil Roofing And Si&amp;lng Gal· 884-4847, ,Ricll Soarr Nlaht: 814vanized. Galvalume And Painted, 998-2515,Dory:e14-IIDI-M47.
.
614·245-5193

.000..----------1

General Maihlenance, Painting.

I• I I I

L-.J.I.....J.._J__.J_I......l,__J

Older 24 Ft . Self·Contai 1
Camper, Good Shape-, $1 ,66D,
814-245-9448,
'"

~~~~~~~;;;.

'i Olvner: 7 Rooms &amp; Ba!h, Front
Porch, Screened Baek Porch, Pa- 330 Farms for sale
\el
~
'
r · a.
· cio Screen Car Port, 3 lots In 2~+ acres. three bedroom hbme,
So&lt;:ial Worillfl, Now Hiring S23 I Vinoon, $28,500, 614-388-9973 72 garage, partly furnished bueJET
.. Ht + Benefits. On Tha Job Train· So. Main Street, Vinron.
ment. out-buildinga,. barn, basket·
AERATION MOTORS
1"G To Apply In Your Araa, _1·800Repaired, N"" &amp; Rebuih In Slack.
Green Bottom W.VA. Rl. 2, Con· ball court lnd gas well . Call Bill
Williamson , 614-742 ·2007. NO 1...;., • •,,.
Call Ran Evans, 1-800.S37-9528.
339-1 150.
veniant To Shell, Akzo, 13 Miles
land contracts.
Telemarketing Needed, No
1 From Huntington. Plus 2 Adj. Lots,
2 bedroom
ing, seuing Appplnomenll.
2 large Bedrooms, 1 112 Baohs, 350 Lots &amp; Acreage .
like new electric range, 2 refrigMaoor and
Free Program 9-5, Top Wage, 1- Screened Porch, Patio, Full Baseerators, 2 automatic Wl!lShers, aU
in
Middle800-323-1718.
ment, Garage. New Ctupet, Wind· 1 318 A~res Suitable For Building
. Caii814- in good condition, 614-949-2190.
ows, Plastered Walls . Cathedral Or Mobile Home 300 Fl. Rolld 1 _ ) 64 .
992
51
Housing
OpporTelemarketing Nt&amp;ded, No Sell· Ceilings, Heat Pump, AC, Add-On Fronlage$5,500, 614-441 -0928.
long prom dres11es, sizes 5-8, 7Jng, Setting Appoinlmenta, For Wood Furnace, $89.500, 304 ·
1..:.:000:.:.::.,_ _ _ _ _ _ __
8,13-14. 1 white, 1 pink, 1 peach.
Free Program, 9·5, Top wage, 1-5·:_25-:..:5:..1.:.85;..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1 Acre Water, Sewer, Garage; Nice 2 or 3 bedroom apartment in ·Worn once. 304-875-7858.
800-323-1718.
Footers. On Blacklop Road, Addi· Middleport, no pelS, 614 _992 •
Hause for sale or rent In Portland son Area, 814-388-8978.
Morris Garage Door Co. IS Hav ·
Truck driVers needed, April, May area· 4 bedroom, full bath, livirlgt
1-58::.:58.;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
ing a Dent &amp; s,ratc:h Sale! Over
&amp; June, short dailv trips, straight dining rooms, complete kitchen, 6 acres wllh 3 bedroom house One bedroom apartment in Pl.
Stocked On Vanous Sizes Ga ·
truck, COllictnH, medical card, wall·to-wall carpeting, central air. trailer, on Ann St.. Pomeroy, Oh.. Pleasant, no pelS, 814•992•5858.
rage Doors, Call And Save! 614·
olean drivi"g record, 61•·247· · ~overedlcarpetec porch on shad · · 614·756-4564.
446·451 4.
2664.
ed half acre lot. Located just off
Riverbend
Apartmenrs.
Relrigerators, Stoves, Washers
·.sR 124, 8 miles from RavenSWO:OO Camper &amp; Lot Holiday Hills, O.ut- New Haven, WV now accepting
WANTEO.IUUEOIATELV
bridge. Avalla~le for occupancy building, E-cellent Condiltonl AJC, applicatiOns lOr 1 bedroom HUO
And Dryers, All Reconditioned
sec n~•~IOFFICE
May 1, oa 116 14 ·843 - 5180 a11 er Sewer, Fishing, Boating , Etc. Subsidized aparomemaiDr elderly
And Gauranteed! $100 And Up,
n&lt;•~·
Will Oetiver. 614-66~6441 .
MANAGER
7pm.
$5•900• 61•·894 ·310 'and handtcapped. EOH. 304-882.
.
House lor Sate: Excellentloca· F 1ve
acres,
aera 1or, near 3121 .
Locai .Oirect Salta Organizatio~
SPRING SPECIAL : Cen1ra1 Atr
Need RELIABLE Secretary. Mual tion . 128 Baslian Of. Gallipolis, Racine,$16,000 can finance with Twin Riwrs Tower, now acc:8p~ng
Conditioners 2 Ton $1, 195; 2 112
· Have Experience In Salea Fi - Oh, $55,000.00. Phone 614-"6· hall down, 614 "949 ·2025·
Tan $1,295: 3 Ton $1,395 : 3 112
applications for 1br. HUO subaidnancing, Inventory Conrrol, Com- :054:...:.7_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1Lots . ~n Midway Or. in New Ha. ized apt. for elderty afld handi·
Ton $1,595; • Ton ,1,695; Pri,es
puters &amp; PubUc Relations. Par
Above Include Normal tnstalla capped. EOH 304-675-6879.
Negotflbtt According To Experi- House on Railroad Streer, river ven. 304 ·882·2904.
Uori . Full 5 Year Warranty, Free
ence. lnterviewl B~ Appt. Only. lot, 3 bedroom, 135,000. 614·992· Parcel&amp; available for new home Ver~ clean one b'edroom furElltimates, 1 ~800-291 ·0098; 614·
Call614-ol41-1975 Man - Frj.
446·6308.
5532.
construction on Rayburn Road. 5 n1sheCl apartment in Middleport,
parr;els ranging from 1'.8.-ac to cal! 614·446-3091 preferabty be·
'· WELDER
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
In Syracuse, 3 bedrooms. base· 5.32ac. Paved road, counry water, toreo 10:30am or aher • :OOpm.
Experienc.ed Welder, Fabricator menr. garage, new deck, new
Upright, Ron Evans Enterpnses,
bl
·· ·
•a
d
. do
&amp;
reasana e resu•cnons. Map an
F·'rnlshed
Needed In Jac::kaon Area . M ini- · w1n
Jackson, Ohio, 1-800-537·9528.
ws, 8 1mosr tll¥0 acres 1or info available on request. No -sin· 450
u
mum 5 Years Industrial ExP.efl· :~:.nd::·.:.6.:.14-.:..::99::2:.-e::'.:.:16::.·_ _ _ _ _ gle wide inquiries please. 304Rooms
WOlFF TANNING BEDS
enee Wllh Aro, MIG And ljpad- Ma•well Ave.. 3bedraom. LR, DR, 1 675·5253. ·
, _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,;,._ __
TAN AT HOME
lng Blueprinil. Send Resume To:
&amp;y DIRECT'and SAVE!
CLA 384, clp Galipolia Oeily Trib- large famil~ room, d~uble garage. Scen"ic Va lley, Apple Grove, Rooms for rtm • ,... or month.
Commercial.! Home units from
une, 825 Thwd Ave~ue, Gallipolis. 8yrs old, $,107,000 . 30 4·6 75· beautiful 2ac Iota, public water, Star~ng at 1120/mo. Gallia Hotel.
$199.00.
8
1'·446-95110.
OH 45631 . '
,.404:...;.8·- - - - ' - - - - - -· 1 Clyde Bowen Jr., 304·576·2336.
low monttiy ps~ments.
N1c8 home in Racine, large build·
. WANTED TO BUY
Sleeping room• with cook1ng .
FREE oolor caoalog.
. 180 Wanted To Do
CaHTODAV 1·800·842· 1305.
ing will house small business. 1-S acres in Meigs County, 614- Alto 1raller apact ~n riVer. All
Babrsining'"lf'l m~ hOrrie, reason- also a one car garage, fenced 949 2883
!'took-ups. Call attar 2;00 p.m.,
X· Training System, Weight Ma ·
able ratea. flexible h.ours, have yard, .our of flood area, asking
·
·
304-773-5851. Muon
chine /Stajr Srepper, Parallel
-2804
__
. _ _ _ 360
Real Estate
references. clo .. oo school. 30~- . .:.••_7;..,000_8_1_4-_949_
1
· Bars, Electric Read OU1, E.tectrlc
460 Space tor Rent
875-278-tl.
Prico reduoed. 3bodroam. lull
Wanted
Tread Miii ·Wirh Read Out, 814 ·
~lleen's Peraonal Care. Specializ· basement, Gacres, nice property,
TroWer lo~ ir1 c101norr. Trash pick· 4~6-9442. .
to Duy up,.olly waW,.. &amp; o:ablo available.
tng in Alzheimer's car~ giving. Leon aiea. Call SOmerville Realty
canrract. 6 I'OOms &amp; bath. Ohio Ri¥« ICCHS. $100 plus de- . 550
Clll us . We oan help. 304 -762- 304.fl75-0030or304-675-3431 .
Building
....... 7&lt;.7512.
304-57&amp;-2@l
Supplies
2544.
Three bedroom home in co~mtry,
Whites Hill Rd ., Rutland, one balh,
in-!'aund pool, 614-992-5067.
Thfee bedroom. rwo balhs, a.bovti
ground pool, heat pump, new roof.
and siding, on 2 acres in Brad bury, $37,500 nevotiable, et•·
992-6190.
:J04.675-H~57.
Two bedroom in house in PomerGive piano Ieaton• in l'flY home, oy, on land contract With good ref·
lo ail age group1, al1a teach erences. 61•698-7244. .
chOrding &amp; transposing, if Inter- 320 MObile Homes
- - .,.. 814-1192-5403.
tor sa1e

.........

• c.tllnlrl

10,..111

./

3.6 acres on StAT 2 N , l i~ab le

l'ard Work Windows Wuhed
Guuera Cleaned· light Hauling,
commeric:,l, Residential, Steve:
114-388.()ot2lil.
.
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logo 10 lhe mill iual oall

IIUIII-

•A 71 Z
llei1Cit
•A K S
•A X Q t
tA K 4 I

Deck, City School District. CA.,

needs

.....__

•Q 10

6
__
.._-446_·_1_828_.---~-­
3bedroom ,

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

.. 5 s
•Q J II t 4
But
•Q 10 • •
•7 52

...

·

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

• /It/til« . . .

42

us

11193
plallic,

750

,. .........

11k'tt

04-1...

3 ·Bedroom Full Base'!Jenl Large

Fo Chl'i

•

14=!-:~:
,..,.,,
.....

ottt.

FARM SUPPLI ES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

610

199f Moreury Sablo V-8, Loeded,
like New, $4,900 080, 814-2455592.

rage, 614-742· 1902.

Scre.&amp;n Prlnrer, E1perience Net•••ary. Serious Inquiries Only,
•~ 2388 Alk

1VIO Cadillac Sedan Oe'lllle, 4
door, 07,000 actual milts, good
s,.pe, muso be seen , 12400:
1813 Buick LeS.bre, 4 deor,
58,000 on ....,, -paint
good shape, •1500 ; 114·1822413.

Double wide, new, $27,900. 2 left
at this priCe. Call 1·000-691 -6n7.

Only304-755·5885.
at Oakwood Homes, Nitro
wv.
.

Sales Per10n commission Agent
Wl1h leadtBenefila, Apply At
Fre·nch CUy Press, 423 Second

AKC Regla'"red BloeM Lobra~or
Pupa, Cllemplon BIDod ·
line. ShOtl\ Wormed, e14'·698 ·
Re•~

tt~

Trash Paid, NO PETS, On ~~4
Why Rent 1996 2 or 3'Bedroom NearPot-181',814-388-1100.
Mobile Home's Payment As low
As $189/Mo. Only AI Oak Wood
Mobile Haines, Barbousville, WV,
304-736·3409
.

Limited Offer! 1996 ·doublewide.
3br. 2bath, $1799 down. $2751
month. Free delivery a setup.

Red Hoi Fat lOll
mic Marketlno Plan, lose
&amp; Make Money! 814-448·1
614-441.()187.

7785.

2 bedroom trailer in Middleport,
e•cellent condition, ctU 814-992·
8060 &amp; leave mesNge,

1.981 Governor 14l70 With TipOul , 2 Bedrooma, 1 112 Baths,

Year On Note, 304-738· 7~5.

opporturity basis\

AKC BIIOk Lib .puppllO, now
ready 11 home. Bom _
..
on premrtea. Exc. rem1 ly doos.
&amp; sl'oll. 304-372-2285.

RtcondiUoned
• Oryt ro, Reno*•. Rafngratort, tO Day Guarantee!
French City Mayrag, eu-4.-&amp;·

2 Bedroom On Addison Pikt,
S2201Mo. Plus Deposit, No Pets.
814-44&amp;3437.

S,outitul Rivit.Vlow. 2 Bedfoorns
Firepaoe, 614-367-7524 .
In Ka"""oe· No Ptoa. Ra..,.,.,.,
FINAN C IAL
Oepoait, Foateft Mobile Homet,
1985 Schu lt 14• 70, 2bedroom, 81.4-44H)181.
1bath, large kitchen, v1nyl skir ~ng .
axe . cond., $13,500 . 304 · 773· Two and three bedroom mDblle
210
Business
6062.
home.•, starling at $240-$300,
Opportun lty
sewer, water and "traah included,
1987 Redman 14X70, 3bedroom, 61 4 ·992-2187.
!NOTICE I
2bath , new ~arpet , ·heat pump.
OHIO VALlEV PUBLIS)JING CO. 304-87S...S137or 304-675-381&amp;
Two bedroom trailer on Condor
recommends that you do busiStreet In Pomeroy. $125 deposit,
ness with people you know, and 1988 14x70, 2bedroom , electric $250 month, no lntlde pall, 814heat, 12x28 porch. IOCB1ed on
667·3083 afttf Spm.
NOT to send money through
mall until you have investigated Mile Creek. 304·453-2244.
lhe allerir&gt;;j.
"'19""'9:..0:..8.;.r:_eo"'z.:.e-wo:.o.:.d.:.b:.y:..:R:_e_d_m_a_n_. 1 440
ApartmentS
3bedroom, 1balh, garden oub.
for Rent
central air/heat, covered lroni 11------...;__;__,__
porch &amp; sun porch, Iota of extras. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furGood cond. , Asking $16,000 nished and unfurniahed, nc:urily
OBO. 30•·675-5428 aher 6pm.
deposit required, no pets, 61•·
992-2218,
1991 Brookwood II t4x 1~ 3 Bed·
rooms, 2 Baths, Dishwasher, CA, 1 Bedroom New Extra Nlcel ·
Deck, 15 FL Above Ground .Poot. · Range, Refrigerator Furnlahed,
Ptimestar Satel!i!e Dish, New Our- Gas Heat. S26111Ma.. Plus Utilirles.,
AI real oslale advenlslng In
building On 112 Acre Lor, Located Deposit Required, 614-..._,2957.
this newspaper Is subjec:llo
20 MinuteS South On SR 7,
lhe Federal Fair HouSir&gt;;j Acl
Paved Road, $3~ , 000 080, Me- 19 112 Pine S11ee1. Gorqt Aperobile Home Can Be Sold Seperate· , ment· 2 Bedroom, Rerrigerator,
ol1968 whk:h makes II Illegal
1~. But Must Be Moved For Stove, Washer, Or~tr. Hook-Up
to advertise "any preference,
s 17,000 Firm, No land Contract NO Pets. Referencea, Deposit,
llmilallon or dsorlmlnellon
14:.,·446-:..:..:.2.:.
143.::::.
Sertous Inquiries Only Please, 1::6.;.
.-----based on raoe, c:olor, nolglon,
614-256·6391 Lea&gt;Je Message.
2 bedroom apartment In Ppmeroy,
sex familial status or nattonal
ortgln. or any Intention to
1995 1-4x70 Cla~ton 3 Bedrooms, no pets, 814-992·5858 ..
make any such preference,
2 Baths, CA, All Electric, Undet· 2 Bedroom Upataira Apartment
llmRallon or discrlmlnellon."
pinning, Skirting, E)ltendad War - 300 Fourth Avenue, Gallipolis,
rani)', Ooher Ellrasl $19,500, A•er Utilities Paid. No Pels, Ralenlnce 1
6 P.M. 614-44IHI415.
DepaOli~ 614-446-3&gt;137.
This ne¥dPBP8r will not
kno..tr&gt;;jly accepl
2 Bedrooms. 121165 Mobile Home, 2bdrm. apia .. lotal eler;uic. apadvertisements for real eljtate
S~.SQ.O. Move It Or Rent Existing pliances furnished. laundr~ room
wtolc!11s In vk&gt;allon ollhe law.
314 Acre Lot 614 - 245· 9893 Or lac:ili1ies, close to St;hool in town.
Our readers are hereby
614-863-5Se'6.
Appllcations .avallable at: Village
irlformed thai all dwellings
New uxeo 2 Or 3 Bedrooms, Green Apts. 141 or r;all 814·992advertised In this newspaper
.------Maka ~1WO Payments, ..
,.,.o"!e In, 4 11 •3:.:7:..:1.;.1..:.E:.:OHOOO::.
are available on an equal

Awl And, Info 1-800-~.

POSTAl. JOBS
Soart $12.08 IHr .• For Eqm And
Applicallon Info. Call 219-7898301 En OH579, OH581 9 A.M. 9 P.M. Sun -Fri.

Gara'ge, Garden,
Pasture,
Sreentd·ln Bar;k Porch &amp; Built·
on Suhroom, Hannan Trace Elemef111ry, 2 Acres +I·, Very Good
Condition, $32,000 No Land Conttact814-2SB-8813.

=:::u:

'

4

l RAI; SPORTATIOr&lt;

_710_.'___
....;:,.;;::===
1.~~~:-=:.::_:::: I
Autos
Slit
1
tor

11177 lfll'ioy Dlvid'!O", 380 miles

'1111 Thun(lt!blrd
SC, two.door, PS,
3.1
Iiiio,
V·rJ,. 'ollie modellurbo,
PB, AO, ·5 sp•ed, poWer seata
ond lock~. "Great. Car; U200
814 - 982-7~78 or 814-114g.
•·

I

on complall
•1~-2
••'""rumrali0(1,
' $11,100,1
• • ._ -ro.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

I

i

RSESCERTFIED DEALER; Ut
.I I,AWRENCE !i/lTERPRIBES ' "'
Htioo Pumps, All Condllloninsi!'1f"G.
'lbu Don1 Clll us
8oth L«JJIrr!'
Fr.. E,n. .tes, 1-eoo-2t1-0CIIIIlo.

w.

F8k14;"';;41~·';301
;-;;~WV;;002046.;;~~iri"~-~la.•

or tonorntrciol -'rl_.,.,,
.,.. •..,..,
19S1 HoM• XSOR Rilns Good,
...Ice 01 ,rlplira. Mhltr........
LooU
080. Cllll\ Oi cenaecl tlectrlciln. Rldtnlllll ElecoriCll, WV000308~ 304·81!'.'""
Trode, 8H HUIII1,
17118.
' ... ~I&gt; .

Good-.

0

Feline • Jumpy- Exist - Weasel- EXPENSE
Overheard in collage Frat House: "A big deterrent to
a budding romance is the blooming EXPENSE."

APRIL 161

�Page 10 • n. Daily S1 1Unel

Bulls.set
newNBAwln
mark
. . 86-80

.lm.provements are seen immediately after snuffing out last cigarett~

l

Ann
Landers
'"'· IAII A....

,..s~_.c.

-s..-..

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: Last fall, my
47-year-old brother was diagnosed
with lung cancer. Years of smoking
had finally caught up with him.
After months of medical attention.
the doctors have told us that my
orother has maybe one or two years
1eft before the cancer kills him.

My heart is broken. I 1m 1101
ready 10 say aoodbye 10 my brolher.
Please. Ann, pt the messaae OUt
!hal all !hose smoken who think
they are huiting only themselves are
s.dly mis!Uen.
I am enclosina an article I read
recently. If you would print it in
your column, it just might inspire
some smokers to quit. It could spare
their children, parents, brothers, sis·
ters and friends the great sorrow I
am experiencing today. -- Saddened
in San Jose
Dear San Jose: As a life lnlstee
on the board of lhe American Canc;er
Society, I 1m delighted to print the
article. You might think it's too late

to quit smoking, but here is some

good news from the Amerielll Cancer Society:
"As soon as you sn.uff out that
last cigarette, your body will begin a
series of physioloaical chuJes.
"Within 20 minutes: Blood P"!lsure, body temperature and pulse
rate will drop to normal.
·
"Within eight hours: Smoker's
breath disappears. Carbon monoxide
level· in blood drops. and oxygen
level rises to normal.
"Within 24 hours: Chance of
heart attack decreases.
"Within 48 hours: Nerve endings
slart to regroup. Ability to taste and
smell improves.
'

•

"Within tine clays: Bteadtiaa is
eqier.

.

" Within two to three months:
Circulation improves. Walkina
becomes euler. Lun1 capacity
iticreues up to 30 percent.
"Within one to nine months:
Sinus cotiJellion and shortness or
breath .: ~. Cilia that sweep
debris from your lungs grows beck.
Energy increases.
"Within one year: Excess risk of
coronary heart disease is half !hal of
a person who sm~es.
"Within two YC8f'!l: Heart attack
risk drops 10 near normal.
"Within five years: Lung cancer
death rate for average former pack-

a-day smobr decreases by almost
llalf. Stroke ri1J1 is reduee4, Risk of
moudl, throllllld esophageal cancer
is ~f ~of asmoker.
Within 10 yean: Lung cancer
delth ra&amp;e is similar to !hal of a per•son who doe$ 1101 smoke. The precancerous cells are replaced.
"Within 15 yean: Risk of corepary heart disease is the same as a
.'person who has never smoked."
Dear Ann Landers: My nephew's
family lost a beloved pet, and it
· ~~ever should have happened. A dish
of chocolate candy was left on. lhe
coffee table, and !heir 2-year-old
-.,nngcr spaniel ale it all. He died
.rter two clays of suffering. The vet's

bill - eJIOI'IIIOUS. The flllliiy wp
devuta'd by pilt ~ grief.
!
Chocola&amp;e is poisonous to ~A lot of pe.ople don't U.w ~Dogs love chocolate. but a ~
· small amount can make 1 &lt;los sic:k.
A large amount can be fa~. Ple.Ue
· •
m.onn
your --•~rs. An n. - J .K. .
in Seattle
'

w

Ohio Lottery
Plck3:

879

Plck4:
8993
Buckeye 5: .
2-6-8-18-23

.. '

·•

Dear J.K.W.: You did, and
thank you.

;1

Sead queltloal 10 Ann Lan·
den, Creaton Syndk8te, sm W.
Centvl'y Blvd., Suite ~00, Los
Angeles, Calli. !10045

It's time ·for breakfast:
Post Cereal cuts prices

......,

...·•. .
•
-..
...
~ 41,

NO. 241
.
·02 8ectlone, 12 .....

..

--*53---- Birchfield, Martin appointed to fill

~·joooiiooooo

'

MY exactly when the new coupons
By J.L. HAZELTON
&lt;A:ill appear.
AP Bualneea Wrltar
NEW YORK (AP) - Post Cere- " The price changes !U'C cxpei:ted to
al is cutting prices for brands such as reach stores in two or.three weeks.
' Some of Post's bigsest competiSpoon Size Shredded Wheat and
Raisin Bran an average of 20 percent
said they had already cut prices
and making its coupons good for any iit recent years and Post was simply
Post cereal.
catching up.
. Past is betting that lhe price cuts
· Kellogg spokesman Anthony
.
..,...
will give a boost to the cereal busi- Hebron said his company would set
14.5 ~- iicli1 .
ness, which shrank slightly last year !~!ices on a product-by-product basis,
-~
and has been flat so far this year. aM that it hail cut the price of its verNew price
Post's own cereal sales have been sion of Raisin Bran by nearly 16 per$2.99
declining, analysts said.
cent recently. At General· Mills,
The company is taking ail)l at high spokesman Austin Sullivan said no
:g~· Nuta
~~lm ,
prices and the frustration of cruising changes were planned.
·
Clllf8lrt price
New price
the crowded cereal aisle comparing a
The cut brings Post's suggested
$3.89
$2.99
clutch of coupons to the more than retail price for a 17.2 oz. box of
... ,,
~.
~·ol'l'
·~I
200 brands in a typical grocery store. Spoon Size Shredded Wheat down to
' $Pixln.Siza ~Whlit..
"We expect this will reignite $2.99 from $3.88; while 20 oz. of
•'
.
17.2oz.boll,
.
growth in the ready-to-eat cereal Premium Raisin .Bran will cost $2.99 .
Clllf8lrt price · New price
market," said Mark Leckie, executive .instead of $4.13. Actual retail prices
$3.88
$2.99
vice president and general manager are determined by individual stores.
of the Post Cereal division of Kraft
For Irene Cotton of McCook,
Honey Bunch11 of 01t1
Foods, Inc.
.Neb., 20 percent isn't good enough.
.i
16 oz. box,
Doing away with coupons that
"At times you can get a box of
CII'NIII price
New price
apply to only one cereal and perhaps Post Toasties for 99 cents, and we' II
$3.8.5
$2.99
even just one size box will lower buy that, but when they get up above ·
Post's costs and, the company fig- that the best thing to do is just let '=Scu
_ rce
_:-=P-ost-:-Cerea::-'--,------....J
AP
ures, retailers'. The company won't them sit on the shelf." she said.
•

.vacant chairs on -Rutland Council

.t9rs

.
~-'

,,

\,

!

'

;

, ; . " ' '" ....

'.

Examining personality traits of a loner:·.

BY KAREN S. PETERSON
psychiatrist Dan McAdams, a spe- study for an exam with equanimity,"
USA TODAY
cialist il) adult penonality.develop- Oldham writes.
·
In the rush to understllnd ment at Northwestern University,
Loners' ability to "observe and
Theodore Kaczynski, !he Unabomber Evanston, Ill. "There is just very lit- collect information serves them
suspect, much has been made of the tle evidence for that. Some introverts well," Oldham says. "They can be
fact he is a "loner."
are very intellectual! and some are not sent far away- to repair an offshore
But he's a far cry from lhe solitary ' at all."
oil rig, to man a remote ,lighthouse.
types we know in everyday life. The
The solitary person is often more to watc;h for fires deep in a forest, IQ.
word loner hardly represents the successful at work than in relation- dig in the.desert for ancient artifactS'
degree to which this man wants to be ships. He can "fix a car, write poet- - without feeling lonely, bored or
' by himself, experts caution.
ry, deliver mail, design a bridge or isolated."
..
"I don't want people to think that
just because somebody is a loner, that
implies some kind of pathology," ·
says Dr. John M. Oldham, director of
lhe New York State Psychiatric lnsti- .·
USA TODAY
· Making bombs in an isolated, one-room shack in remote Montana with
tute and co-author of "The New.Perno·plumbing or electricity is not lite behavior of a normal "solitary" or
sonality Stlf-Portrait" (Bantam,
loner personality, say' Dr. John M. Oldham, chief medical officer of the
$12.95). The loner is not emotionalNew York State Office of Mental Health. Indeed, the behavior ofTheodore ,
ly damaged goods. "We want to be
Kaczynski, the Unabomber suspect, "is way beyond normal." ·
very cautious;" Oldham says.
Being solitary, or introverted, "is
Using "100 percent speculation- just guesswork," Oldham muses
. a normal variation of the human perKaczynski might he a mix of at least two personality styles gone amok.
. Kaczynski might display a "sOlitary," or loiter style that went over the ~
sonality,': says Paul Costa Jr., an
expen on personality at the National
e~e to become a schizoid pers6~ahty disorder: And he might have a "vigInstil~ &lt;;&gt;n Aging. "Society already
ill'"t" style gone to tl!e extreme of paranoia:
penaliZes the many artistic, creative
According to Oldham's book, "The New Personality Self·Porttait:."
people who want to he alone. I
people with schizoid personality disorder "live in a walled city deep withwould hate to see the word loner
in themselves, far away from other people. They· are not antisocial; they
associated with this guy, should he 6e
~ asocial-lhey want nothing to do with you."
the Unabomber."
Even "mildly schizoid men and women who on the surface seem someSo just what is normal for the garwhat sociable prove flat, empty, passive, unresponsive or just indifferent
den variety loner who does not go
when you try to get to know them."
over the edge; lhe person the experts
Paranoid people, Oldham says, "expect the worst of others. They're
want to protect? He or she c!luld be
apprehensive, suspicious, uncompromising ·and argumentatiye, and
your neighbor or your relative.
they're convinced of !heir rightness beyond the shadow of a doubt. "IndiMost people are a mix of basic
viduals with paranoid personality disorder are on guard against a hostile
personality styles, Oldham says. He
universe where bad things happen or are always about to happen to them
describes 14, all of them normal.
at the hands of other people." They "must not let down their guard and
Adapted from his book, these traits
give way to trust and intimacy, lest the other person take advantage of
!heir weakness."
.
define the Ieiner's style: .
.
- Solitude. Most comfottable
alone.
··························~·······························
······· · ····· · ···· · ·· · ·····~····· · ·····~···~··············
Independence. "Self-contained" and dCJ!'sn't require others to
enjoy life.
-Calm. Even-tempered, dispassionate, unsentimental and unflappable.
- Stoicism. Indifferent to pain
and pleasure.
-Sexual composure. Enjoys sex
but doesn't suffer without it
• - Unflappable. Unswayed by
either praise or criticism .
Loners are often thought to be
New Location
St.
Rt. 338 at VIne
'
r
highly intelligent. It is correct that
(Old Boat Works Bldg)
' "really outstanding geniuses and creative individuals tend to have loner
. .
personalities," says Dean Simonton,
a psychologist at the University of
Authorized Dealer and warranty: ·
California, Davis.
~ But not all loners are inordinateBriggs &amp; Stratton • Currently this area's only
ly bright. "It is a stereotype that all
Master Service Technician for Briggs
intellectuals are introverts," says

'l;lnabomber' suspect not normal loner

CCL OFFICERS WELCOMED - Linda Brod• erick, left front, and Kitty Darat, right front, copraaldante of the Middleport Child Conaarv•
tlon lalgua, welcome atAtlllld dlatrlc:t offlcara
at Saturclay'a aprlng conference of the South'
Centnl Dlatrlct, Jean Gillaspie, Galllpolla, dl•
trlct pnialdant, and Jean Salter, Gallon, atete

praeldant. Other district and etete oftlcara
attending were VIrginia Crandall, Ttwmvllla,
South East District prealdailt; Doria Studer,
Chatfield, 8tete hlltorlan and publicist; Deanna Buah, Thornville, state achlave""!rrt chair·
man; Lindy Wolf, Dayloli, South Wast District
praeldant; and Rita Hannawan, Westerville, peat
state praeldanL

Child ·conservation league
_marks 50th anniversary ·

•

''

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel news steff.
The 50th anniversary of the
Middlepon Child Conservation
League was celebrated in con·
junction with the annual South
Central District CCL spring con·
ference held Saturday at the Rock
Springs United Methodist Church.
Theme was "The Golden Ye.ars"
and a feature of the program was
the recognition of honor!ifY mem·
bers, Peggy Houdashell, Clarice
Kitchen, Ann Colburn, and Barbafa
Stonesypher. They were presented
with trinket boxes in appreciation
of their many years of active membership.
Jean Gillespie, Gallipolis, district president, assisted by linda
Broderick and Kitty Darst, co-presidents of the host unit, presided at
· the meeting. Nancy Morris gave
the invocation. Peggy Harris, the
welcome, and Cathy Atkins of the
First Step Mothers Club of Gallipolis, the response.
Gillispie introduced the visiting
dignitaries, Jean Seiter of Galion.
president of the Ohio 'Child Con-

\

'

By KAREN S. PETERSON
USA Tpi)AY
·
Most people can relate to what
happen~ to Greg Norman at the
Masters golf tournament Sunday:
pverybody "chokes". or buckles
under pressure at one ume or anothexperts .agree.
• · 'Everyboc!y can identify with NorJrian," says Shane Murphy, a sports
psychologist in Monroe, Conn. '"Oh,
l~at was me on my high school
pltysics exam. or taktng my IJIW
jloards, or· making a speech.' It's
Ylhen you want something so badly

•

er,

.
•.

.

"

I.

Presenting· the program were
Mony Wood, Drug·Abuse Resistance Education officer for Meigs
and Gallia Counties. He talked
about his role with you!h. the need
for one-on-one meetings, and tech;
niques for avoiding trouble. He discussed the 17 lessons he teaches
and the responses from the youngsters with whom works.
Local qui Iter Bunny Kuhl gave
a demonstration on quilt care,
cleaning and repair.
Following a luncheon, Denver
Rice presented a program of m~sic
of yesteryear.
Announced was the 76th state
convention, "Sharing Precious
Moments" to be held at the
Zanesville Holiday Inn, Oct. II
and 12. Dr. Gail Keueldraim who
is with the Nonhero Virginia Community College will be lhe, speaker. Also speaking will be Dr. James
Burson, a professor at the Musk·
ingham College.
The South Central District conference in 1997 will be held on
April 18 in Gallipolis with Toddlers to Tassells League to be
host.·
•·

servation League. Rita Hanawalt,
.past state president; Deanna Bush,
state achievement chairman; Seiter, state historian and publicity; ·
Virginia Crandell, South Eastern
District president; Lindy Wolf,
South Central District president.
Past district presidents attending
and recognized were Cathy Bostic,
Carole Rupe, Patti Bodimer, and
Stonecypher.
c fandell reponed that 92 loans
were gran1ed from the scholarship
loan fund, including one to the
daughter. of Cathy Atkins of First
Step, Gallipolis. Keith Darst, son
of the local co-resident, received a
renewal grunt.
Membership was discussed and
members were reminded that they
need to invite others to become a
pan of the CCL. ·
Following a repon by Pauy'
Bodimer, nominating committee,
Gillespie was elected district pres·
ident for I~7. Achievement Ten
Awards were presented to the Toddlers to Thssels, 37 years; rust Step
Mothers Club and Middleport
CCL, 50 years.
·

The choking matter of

By TOM HUNTER
for residents in lhe village of Rutland.
sentinel Newa Staff
as enforcement df the village's litter
Rutland Village Council will be and dumping ordinances will be
back to a full six-member group, with increased by the town marshal,
the unanimou~ly approved appoint- according to Mayor JoAnn Eads.
ments of Marie Birchfield and Vera
The stepped up enforcement of the
Martin to two vacant council posi- ordinance, noted at Thesday's regular
tions at Thesday's regular meeting.
meeting of council, will induck all
Birchfield will fill the unexpired dumping and littering.of any type in ·
teim of council member Duane village. Also included is the disposWeber, who resigned in November. al of grass clippings on village streets.
Martin wi'l fill the unexpired four
"When we get spring and summer
year term of Rosemary Snowden rains, ~e grass clippings that are on
Eskew, who resigned at a special lhe streets get washed down the
meeting last week.
·
sewer lines. The state just replaced
Eskew has been appointed village lhe lines last WI. These clippings will
clerk/treasurer, filling the term vacat- clog 'the lines and cause us problems,
ed by the resignation of clerk/trea- if we don't enforce the ordinance and
surer-elect Kathy Stewart.
keep those clippings off the street,"
Spring cleaning well be in order said Eads.

.

HONORARY MEMBERS HONORED - Hon- ofllqer. In the group wera from the left, Clarice
orary members of the Middleport Child Con· Kitchen, Pomeroy; Barbara Stonecypher,
aervatlon League cal abc all11g Its 50ih annlver· .Columbus; Peggy HoudaaheH and Ann Colaery were praaantecl glftl ~Peggy Hllrrla, leal · burn, both of Pomeroy.

Norman~s

the tremenclous pressure to wi~. that
N:orman did."

that panic starts taking over, and you
· lose your focus and don't know how
to gel it back."
..
Norman's brilliant game impleded during the final round of The Masters, .held 'in Augusta, Ga. Norman
went from six shots ahead to five
shots behind the winner, Nick Faldo.
· Anyone can choke "in limited
· ways, depending on die level of pressure," says Steven Hendlin, a spirtS
psychologist in lrviJIC1. Calif. "We all
feel pressure to varying degrees,
(though) most of us do not have such
.high expectations from e'!eryone,

•

non-conquest

The "choke" ·phenomenon is
physicaland mental. Experts refer to
the "catas(l'ophe lheory." Every per·
son has a tevel of tension he or she
is comfonable with, Murphy says. "If
you get out of that zone of optimal
functioning, you go into a panic state
with its negative thinking. It is very
hard to recover.''
·

...

The "catastrophic expeCtations
become self-fulfilling," Hendlin says.
•

MOVED

UCINE
CLINIC

R

SERVICE &amp; PARTS
.

Now Open for the Spring Sealon
Complete Une or Bedding &amp;
Vegetable Plants

Hanging Buke!!!
(Blooming &amp; Foliage)

Gerantuma
Shrubs Trees Azeleaa

RoeeBuahas
Open Dally 9-5, Sun 1·5
Wehonorlha
Golden Bucklya Cerd

·Hubbard .
.Greenhouse
Syracuse, OH

992-sne

MTD • Products, Ranch King, Yard Man, others
Murray Products
Noma - Eagle Star Dynamark &amp; Others-AYP Roper- Rally ·
McCollougll-EchO:Oregon Saw Products
.

Pick Up Service

949-2804

3SOIIM
A Gannett Co. Newapapar

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, Aprll17, 1996

'

•

;{f

" '/

f " ·

t

. Wlrala18 One cellular phone cuatoniera can now call the Meigs
County Shariff' a Department toll-frail by dialing *53 on thelr cal.lular phones anywhara In the Wlralal1 One calling area,...'lt will
be a great help 8!'1d an asset for people with Wlralale One eer·
vice to report accldante or other emargenclea," 181d Shariff
Jamea M. Soulaby, shown aboVe testing the dialing option along
With Wlralell One f8!11'81entetlve Derek Fauber.

Council and Mayor Eatls com- of the village maintenance depart-.
mended the work of new town mar- · ment. Davis stated that · water has
shal William Gilkey, who reported 36 been turned on at the baseball fields,
traffic citations were issued during and noted that Howard Sanitation
removed three loads of refuse from
the month of March.
the village trash traps.
·
In other matters, council:
- approved paying $50 bonding
- approved a motion to purchase a
new trim mower for the village main- fee for the new village clerk/treasur-'
er, and approved salary for the positenance department.
- discussed ongoing ·ticket sales tion at $500 per month.
- Mayor Eads announced the
and preparations for theApril27 Phil
Dirt and the Dozers concert at the annual community yard sale will be
held Saturday, June I at lhe civic cen-·
Rutland Civic Center.
ter,
fr9m 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
-approved preapplication for par- approved the mayor's repon of
ticipation in a statewide villages
$999 for the month of March.
,
computer network and.program.
Present were council members
-approved a motion for purchase
of a section of culvert pipe for culvert l)ick felly, Danny Davis, Gladys
Barker, Judy Denney, mayor JoAnn:
replacement in the viilage.
· - heard a report from Dave Davis Eads, and clerk/treasurer Rose Macy
Snowden Eskew.
.

Senate OKs bill to make repeat DUI a felony
•

0

:$outhern committee
·w illplace ·levy back
Of' baflot August 6

COLUMBUS (AP)- The num- House and Senate resumed voting the Senate.
felony tag to apply to any fourth or
ber ohlcohol-related traffic fatalities sessions after a two-week
-The Senate sent to Gov. Geol'lte subsequent drunken dri_ving offenses,
· in Ohio went up last year for the first Easter/Passover break.
Voinovich a bill to implement a bal- ·whether they occurred within ljve
time since 19ti6. Sen. Bruce Johnson
In olher action 1\Jesday:
lot issue voters approved in Novem-· years or over a longer period.
said that shows a tougher penalty is
- Representatives voted 89-4 for ber to provideS 1.2 billio.n.in state aid
But that would have s~nl an estineeded. ·
·
a non,binding resolution that would for local public works projects. It also mated 4,()()0 people to prison at acost
Johnson, R-Westerville, won urge Congress to give Ohio and oth- doubled, to $1.2 billion, the amount to the Ohio Department of Rehabiliapproval on Tuesday of a bill that er states conli'ol over the fuel taxes of money the Ohio Department of tation and Correction of $24 million.
would make a fourth drunken driving they send to Washington.·
The revised bill that now goes to
Transpottation can horro"" to build
receives
only
two-thirds
of
the
House 'would affect an estimated
"Ohio
'By JIM FREEMAN
of the district should the iuue fail conviction within a five-year period
new highways.
the fuel taxes generated back in
Sentinel newa staff
again: "Every time we lose a student a felony instead of a misdemeanor.
- Senators OK'd a House-passed 1,900 people: 900 fourth-time offend·
After evaluating the failure o{ a we lose $3,40Q ~o $3,500. We may
:·~re is ,a co~t to the state or highway funds," said Rep. Pat Tiberi, bill to classify as public records, ers who )Nould go to local jails, and :
construction levy on the ·March 19 lo";C ~?.I!I..C..!!U\!,ents. ·:
. • . ':''~~~ ,•... . Ohtdr J~hnson. sat,d •. - - . · . • . R.:~o)umii»J!, •.Jbil,;;lpQASOf., ·'t:Jibe. available -::for-cinspeetion, . financial ·..J,i)oQ.flfttf.tirne offenders whowoitlct ·
·
ballot, the Southern Local Building
"Ii's· a saa end to a school dtstnct
The ball, whtch now goes to the state's hlghways wili not be able to disclosure statements that presidents face state prison.
survive
under
these
conditions."
Johnson said current law classified :
';ommittee resolved Thesday night to that has been top notch."
Hou~. would s~nd an estimated
of public colleges and universities file
-The House voted 88-2 for a bill with the Ohio Ethics Commission.
all .drunken driving convictions as .
put the' issue before voters again .on
Thesday night's gathering was 1.000 people to pnson at !l".mcreased
to require that the Ohio Peace Offi·Aug. 6.
·
.-substantially larger than those held co~t to the state of $9 mtllton.
The Ohio Department of Public misdemeanors regaldless of the num- Twenty-seven people attended the before· the levy's failure, a fact
"Bal~cing that,however, would cer Training Council conduct a crim- Safety said the number of alcohol- ber.
~ommittee meeting, the first meeting Spencer observed.
be a savmgs to local governm~nts inal history records check on appii- related traffic acciden1s increased to
His bill would elevate a fourth
lield voters rejected a proposed 6.1
"I felt like we sat in a cage and who would no longer be responstble cants for training certificates. Felons. 366 last year, compared with 330 in drunken driving conviction within
rnill bond levy issue to fund con- pounded our heads on a wall and for the incarce~~tion of dr~atic are prohibited from attending police 1994. The 366 fatal crashes repre- five years from the current first
courses, but no background cbecks sented ~9 percent of total traffic afa- degree misdemeanor to a founh · ·
· I{Uction of a new, district-wide K-8 nobody came on board," he said repeat offenders., Jo~nson satd.
degree felony, imposing a mandata- •
elementary school and additions and referring t\1 the earlier meetings, usuApproval of the btll carne as lhe are mandated. The bill now goes to talities statewide.
r~novations to the existing high ally attended by only a handful of
Johnson originally wanted the ry 60-day prison term.
school.
·
supporters.
Official results from the Meigs
The Southern Local Board of
County Boaril of Elections indicate Education e~rlier this month
the issue failed 931-820, or by Ill · expressed interest in attempting the COLUMBUS (AP) Shelby filed a $100 million lien against his to file lawsuits against anyone guilty cially a judge- who has committed
vqtes. A similar issue in the Eastern bond issue again. To do so, the board . Municipal Coun Judge Jon ~chaefer property.
· of intimidation.
treason for abrogating his oath?" he
Local School District passed 811- will have to pass a resolution by May says he can't. get a second mortgage
Filing the liens is a common tacSchuck sa.id the bill may come up said.
710.
. 21.
tic by common law court adherents, for .a vote by the full House by the
on his home.
Committee Chairman James
"We di4n't get the job done," said
Board member . David Kucsma
Franklin County Common Pleas who say it is their only · recourse end of the month.
Mason, R-Beitley, accused Ellwood
committee chairman Dave Spencer. said he has received numerous Judge Patrick McGrath has been against a judicial system that has sysA leader of Ohio's common law and other common law activists of •
•:1 was extremely disappointed."
requests to run the levy again.
accused of treason.
tematically usurped the J&gt;!lWer of the movement warned that lawmakers operating under a ".cafeteria" legal ·
."Eastern passed their levy and will
"People want to tak.e another look
Both told a House committee . individual and undercut the Consti· also might be guilty of treason if they system -piCking and choosing bits .
have a new facility ... we're really hap- at this," he said. '
Thesday that public officials need tution.
of law here and there to suit their own ·
pass the bill.
py· for lhe children in that district,"
Due to the levy's narrow defeat, protection from "common law"
"What's going on here is an
"The penalty for treason in our convenience.
.Spencer commented. "That district the state seems willing to hold the activists who have set up a.separate attempt to mess up the entire legiti- court used to be death by hanging,"
State Attorney General Betty :
,-ill grow, will prosper, while may building fund money until August, court system they claim is rooted in mate legal system," said McGrath, said Bill Ellwood of Columbus, who Montgomery testified that the com- :
lose our district.''
according to Superintendent James biblical and constitutional law.
· who also was threatened with a $100 identified. himself as chief justice of mon law movement appears to be ·
~ ·He painted a bleak future portrait
Continued on page 3
"It is their intention to intitrii- million lien while hearing a lawsuit Our One Supreme Court in the well organized and 'growing in Ohio. :
date," Schaefer told the House Select involving a comnlon law activist.
But Rep. Lynn Wachtmann, R- :
Republic of Ohio.
The committee heard from oppo- · Ellwood said later that he did not Napoleon, questioned whether the :
Committee on Filing of Liens.
His run-in with the common law nents and !lackers of a bill in!foduced expect any members of ~is group to bill was necessary. .
coun came just before Christmas by Rep. William Schuck, R-Colum- attempt to carry out a sentence, but
"Is this really a crisis?." Wachtwhen he found one of its adherents bus, that would grant immunity to urged the committee to defeat the bill. mann asked. "I guess I have a little
The Pentagon says it has no evi- guilty of driving under a suspended county recorders who refuse to accept
By LAURAN NEERGAARD
"Tell t~~e where I go to seek problem in my own mind that we are
the
liens
and
permit
public
officials
driyer's
license
!llanaged
and
the
man
dence of a new mystery disease
A11oclatad Preas Writer
redress against an official - espe- so quick to protect government." ·
~ WASHINGTON - A pill Gulf causing the headaches, fatigue, mem'
War soldiers took to protect them- ory loss and other symptoms reportselves from nerve-gas 'attacks can ed by thousands of veterans of the
. .
1991 U.S.-Iraqi conflict. It attributes
~urtthe body's a~ility to nullify two
most symptoms to known illnesses.
~mmon insect repellents before they
Still, the Pentagon already .has
infiltrate
the
brain,
new
animal
stud'
.ies·.suggest ,
CANTON (AP) - Aggression by the fedenl govel'llment
begun funding some similar chemiMillionaire publisher and fonner Dole and Pat Buchanan in the polls ·
apinst
the
Montana
Freeinen
would
be'
viewed
as
u
act
of
war
.
: .The findings in chickens. do not cal studies.
·Republican presidential candidate before leaving the race March 14, :
by an Ohio MUitla group, the aroup's leader said.
.
"We haven't ruled in or ruled out
Malcolm "Steve" Forbes has agreed after netting 90 l,OOO votes and :
· pr6ve this che111!cal cocktai I caused
Don Vas, the bripdler geoenl of tbe Columbiaua County
the. so-called Gulf War. syndrome in the possibility that combinations of
IP deliver the commencement spending more than $25 million of :
Unorganized MUIIIa, is In Montana to naonltor thie.st.ndolr that
address at the University of Rio his personal fortune on the cam- ~
sQidiers, but ~eterans sajd the gov- chemicals could indeed explain some
began
March
2S
between
fedenol
agents
and
the
armed
and-govof
the
illnesses
of
Persian
Gulf
vetGrande and Rio paign.
i:niment should immediately follow
.
ernment activists.'
·
Grande Commuup:on the Duke University research. erans, ". said Veterans Affairs
Forbes
has
since
thrown
his
sup:
· The standoff near Jordan,' MonL, bepn after fedenl qents
.. ;"We think it's good· &lt;lata," said spokesman Terry .Jemison .
nity College on port to the Dole campaign, but his ·
arrested Freemen leaden LeRoy Schweitzer, 57, and .Daniel
But he declined to comment on
June 9. ·
ve1erans' spokesman Phil BUdahn or
bid for the GOP nomination thrust :
Petef$ell,
53,
on
a
.variety
of
ebarges.
Three
other
Freemen
have
Dr.·
Mohamed
Abou-Donia's
findtlte American Legion. "This' is 'not
Forbes
will him into national prominence .and .
since
thea.
·
surreadered
give the address merited a stint as guest host of
lh'rpwing money into the wind. This ings, saying VA officials wanted to
About tO mo~ of the Freemen In the .eoinpouncl are wanted
is. following up on good science·that thoroughly review his research when
during a two-day NBC's "Saturday Night Live" last '
on st.te and fedenl dtartea rimlinc frc1111 writing bllcl cb~ and
(Vtay have) the answers to questions ·it is published in next month's Jourvisit to Ohio on weekend.
·
lmpenonatlq
public
OlllclaiJ
to
~IeDin&amp; to lllclup and mur·
that have been bedeviling us for more nal or Toxicology and Environmenbehalf of U.S.
der a federal judae,
Cremeans, serving his first term ;
than five years."
Rep. Frank A.
tal Health.
Eariler this mouth, Vossent le~n to mDitla memben acl'OIIIi
in
Congress representing the Sixth ..
Cremeans. R-Galthe counuy, asklnl them to 10 to Montana.
·•
Congressional
District, was the first ·
Stew ForbH lipolis, the Cre"I believe that lftbey kll these people In M911tana that it defennational legislator to announce his ·
means campaign announced.
sive aclion Is called for," Vos told 'l:be Repository by teleplaone for
support
for Forbes' presidential run. :
·"I Bill delighted that my friend
(
.
'
Thesday's Mltlonl. "Tblrteen ltates have qreed that It wiD be the
Like
Forbes,
he has also announced :
will be able to deliver the address at
~ELPRE(AP)'-A minor solvent fife that killed'tltn!e. workers in May
federaliOVel'llllleJil dedaritta WI.·· on dae people, iDd at thiat point
backing
for
Dole,
the likely Repub- :
Rio Grande," Cremeans said. "It is
leak at the Shell Chemical Compa- 19.94. flundreds of reSidents were
we wUI ~e out the fedenlaovel'llluent."
• . -lic)lll
nominee.
.
·
·
very important that young people
ny's poi)'JDCI'.plant was caused by a evacuated during that fire.·
He wciulcl POt lclentlly the ltalel.
.
·
'
across the country hear his message
· Cremeans is seeking a second :
White said, five employees were ·
gasket problem on a valve, a
He allo woulcl110t ay bow maoy oeber mUitla -ben showed
of hope, growth and opportunity."
term on Capitol Hill this fall and is a ·
• evacuared Thesday as a precaution
spqkesman said.
up, hut tepwlen llave .c seea aoy near.tile Free- to~~~pouad.
is
editor-in-chief
of
Forbes
1966 graduate of Rio Grande.
·
Spokesman Mike White said but !here was no threat to ihe comVos S8ld he and odtCr -"en are stayinc about 50 tnila frvm
Forbes
Masazine
and
the
president
. Tuesday the company was inves.ti• munity.
.
Commencement activities at Rio ·
the 1lte, at ai'IIICb OWIIed by a Frte!IWI not Involved In the stand·
of Forbes Publishing. A proponent Grande will begin at 2 p.m. The .
gating Why the gasket failed.
The plant produces Kraton poly011'.
of the ftat tax concept, Forbes ran in remainder of Forbes' schedule while ..
~ut five to 10 sallons of a sol- men, which are used as performance
David Llnl, uoeber repnunl,!1i'ft of the Columbiana Ceunlhe GOP presidential primaries and in Ohio is still tentative ~d will be ;
vent used to make adhesives leaked enhancers in food packaging, toys,
ty mDida, ...-1 there wOIIId hie ,del.-1"11 act1oa II t1te Free.ea
won in Ariwna and Delaware. ·
in the newly rebtiilt K-1 unit The unit . sponing goods, adhesives and lubriannounced later, the Cremeans cam- . were Rred oa but woulcl MC •Y w . .t It wwld be.
He briefly led front-runners Bob paign announced.
. wu destroyed in an explosion and cants.
·

Group told judges were targeted by common law courts

findings offer potential clue
~o cause of Gulf.War illness

Ohio militia leader issues
warning to U. S. government
.

Steve Forbes to add~ess ,
'96 URG graduates June 9

Small leak at Shell Plant in Belpre
believed caused by gasket problem
'

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