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Page-06--Su~day limes-Sentinel

•

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Point Pleasant, wv

• •
pairings
aQnounced

Proper management can
improve Gallia's woodlands
By CINDY JENKINS
GALLIPOLIS • How well do
you .know your woodland.!? What
~1es of trees, shrubs, wildlife, or
msccts are found in your woodlands? Do you have a forest management plan for your property?
Arc you harvesting limber Ill SUS·
tainable balance? Arc wildlife populations living at an sustainable

bal.ance?
These arc questions some of u5

CELEBRATE ANNIVERSARY- Easlllllln's Foodland Company h celebrallng lis 15th
anniversary of service with specials and giveaways. From len, frozen food manager Jamie
Wolfe, meat 11111nager Bob Thompson, assistant .

manager Da&gt;id Sigman, IDIIIl&amp;ger Chuck Bl8ke,
bead cashier Penny Roush and produce manager Karen Gibbs, from the Pomeroy store dbpllly
an anniversary cake at the store Friday morn·
lng.

--Business briefs--WASHINGTON (AP)- Wrap- two companion bills, to an uncer. ping up a sweeping series of rec- tain fate in the Senate.
ommended changes in the nation· s
While House spokesman Milce
legal system, the House passed McCurry said Friday the package
Republ!can legislation that would of bills "doesn't do eni&gt;ugh to promake it easier .for businesses to pre· tect the interesis of the American
vail in product-liability cases and consumer," and consumer groups
harder for consumers to win cenain and tbe nation's trial lawyers
damage awards.
vowed to press for substantial
Final passage on a vote of 265· changes.
16 f sent the mef1Sure, alo!'g witJr:

t.

nevephink about. Yct they are
very Important questions; the
answers affect not only current
owners of a woodlot, but ·whoever
it might be that oWils your woodlands one hundred years from now.
Gallia County is one of the most
heavily foresled counties in South..,__ em Ohio. Yet the lack of proper
woodla.nd management has been
I'CSJIOIISlble for reduced qUality and
quantity of woodland products. .
With proper management practices the quality of the woodland
and potential income can be
increased.
Livestock exclusion and timber
stand improvement arc two ways to
increase the value of your property
and at the some time make your
woods more aesthetically pleasing
~d even increase wildlife populauons.
Don't take your natural
resources for granled. There are
resource personnel available to
help you reach the goals you have
set ,or managing your woodlands.

A great deal of information is
available from your local Soil &amp;:
Water Conscrvalioo District Forest
Technician as well as the Ohio
Deportment of Natural Resources
Service Forester.
Last summer a woodland owners group for Southern Ohio was
started and Gallia is one of the ten
counties that participale. The DCAt
meeting will 6c held at the PikCIIlll
Research and Exlension Cenler at
1864 Shyvillc Road, in Piketon.
. The March 16 meeting will teature Tom Berger, forester with
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources, Division· of Forestry.
:rom wiU be discussing tree plant·
mg. Refreshments arc available at
6:30 p.m. prior to the 7 p.m .. You
need not be a member or become a
member to auend and learn from
forest specialists and other forest
landowners.
.
.
Also, there will be a woodland
owner video conference on May 20
which will be free of charge. It will
cover debates on Ecosyslem Management and how it may affect the
future of forestry oo privale lands.
A field trip with the Southern
Oh10 Forestland Association will
foUow the video conference. More
information cooceming a time and
a place will follow laler..
For more informatioo on any of
these progi3llls call Cindy Jenkins,
District Foresler at the Gallia Soil
&amp;: -Water Cooservation District at
446-8687.

JAMES W. GRUBB

Grubb. honored

· VALERIE'S HOUSE OF STYLE - Valerie Nottingham has
opened a new beauty salon at 271 Union Ave., Pomeroy. The shop
was formerly occupied by Mark Mora's Mark of Distinction. Not·
!Ingham is a graduate of the cosmetology program at Meigs Hlgb
School and worked more than five years in Athens. Hours of operation are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and evenings
and Saturdays. The cosmetologist is 11111rrled to Jeff Nottingham
. and they have a son, Ethan. They resides near Chesler.

GALLIPOLIS • James W.
· Grubb, Ph. D.; a consulting psychologist at Woodland Centers
Inc., ·Gallipolis, has received th~
20th anniversary platinum certificate from the Council for the
· National Regisler of Health Service
. Providers in P~~chology.
The certtficate recognizes
Grubb's inclusion in every edition
of the National Register since it
was established in 1974.
· Grubb, of The Plains, bas been
affiliated with Woodland Centers
Inc., since 1986..
· ·
'
1be register was created 10 identify l!censed flSychologists who
meeltts defimuon of health service
provider, enabling them to more ·
easily qualify for insurance reimbursement and for recognition 8s a
qualified previder by privale insurers and slate and fedeml health care
programs.

'

1

NEW t;HESTER BUSINESS ....:. Te:us Tans lw operated for
the last e1ght months In the old Gaul's Market ill Chester co·
owner Karen Lodwick said. The business has two Wour tan~lng
beds, renls movie videos and video games, and sells Hot Spring
spl!S •. Karen and Jim Lodwic'k operate this business from 9 Lm.-8
p.m. Monday through Saturday. (T photo)
.

-s

Pick 3:

639

Pick 4:
9230
Super Lotio:
13·19-23-37-40-41
Kicker

Sports, Page 4

676862

Dr. Fahmy
receives board
certification ·

Vol. 45, NO. 221

Pomeroy-Mi~dleport,

Copyright 1995

'GALLIPOLIS • Holzer Clinic
announced Friday that Nabil W.
Fahmy, M.D., Ph.D., a general
internist, recently achieved the sta·
tus of Diplomate of the American
Board ofinternal Medicine.
To be eligible for boarding, a
physician must have successfully
compleled a Residency Prpgram in
their area of specialty; 1be physician then undergoes mtensive test·
ing; ·successful completion results
in National Board Certification. ·
Dr. Fabmy received his medical
ed~cation at Cairo University in
Cauo, EgypL He then received a
ph.D. in Endocrinology (branch of
med•cme· dealing with the
endocrine glands, sucb as thyroid,
adrenal and/'.ituitary) from the
University o Alberta in Canada.
From 1991 to 1994, Dr. Fahmy
~cipaled in Mount Carm~il Med·
teal Center's Internal Medicine
Residency Program.
·
His affiliatioo with Holzer Clinic began in October of 1994. Dr.
Fahmy, his wife, Hala, .and their
children, Carol and Michael, reside
in Gallioolis.
·

Ohio, Monday, March 13, 1995

Clinto,n aide laments
CIA nomination flap ·
'
By JIM ABRAMS
AssOc:lated Press Writer
WASHINGTON -:- White
House Chief of Staff Leon Panetta,
exasperated by yet another frustrated nomination, says the Wbite
House did everything right in naming a new CIA director but was still
tripped \IP by the "tabloid atmosphere" _surroll!ll!ing the nomination P,roccss.
' Tbis one really was by tbe
books," Panetta said Sunday about ·
retired Air Force Gen. Michael
P.C. Carns, who withdrew his
name Friday after admitting some
crtors in the hiring of an immigrant
worker.
President Clinton on Saturday
named Deputy Defense Secretary
John DeuiCb as bis new nominee to
bead the intelligence agency.
· Panetta, speaking on CBS' Face
JOHN DEUTCH the Nation, said the administration
got caught in a "Catcb-22" situation where it waniS to move quick· checks, securi~learances; unaniiy to fill vacancies but must wait mously acclaimcil when we nomitwo 10 three months for the FBI to nated·bim for this position, and
complete background checks that then after an FBI check someone
occasionally, as in the Cams case, comes out of the wall with some
reveal information that upsets a · pretty nasty allegations and the
general basically decides be
nomination.
doesn't
want 10 go through hell,
"Here's General Cams, who has
having
to
face those allegalioos.
had a 30-year career, be's a war
"It's
unfortunate,
but we're liv- .
hero, flown 200 missions over
Southeast Asia, gone through ing in kind of a labloid atmosphere
Department of Defense background these days," Panella said.

os. TofFICE
p
u.s.

He denied that the Cams withdrawal reflected badly on tbe
administration or could affect
national security as the CIA struggles to overcome the Aldrich Ames
spy case.

"I think the fact is, !he president
acted quickly here to name John .
Deutch .... He's an outstanding . '(
individual. He's going to bring
tremendous leadership to that posi. lion," Panetta said.
Among other While House
nominees who withdrew their
names or never took office because
of various problems were Zoe
Baird for attorney general, Lani
•
Guinier for the Justice Depart·
ment' s top civil rights post and
Bobby Ray Inman for defense secSHADE SHUTDOWN -The Shade Post Office may be closretary. Tbe nomination of Henry
ing within the next few months. Postal officials said the office's
Foster to be surgeon general is
services could be turned over to a private business. But local
being held up by questions on his
_resident.• said they dol)'t 6elleve anyone will step forwar·d
because tt would cost too much to operate the facility successfu!·
record of perfonning abortions.
.
,
Deutch, who went through" ~- ly. (Sentinel photo)
extens~ve background checks in
being confirmed for his current ''
position, is expected to have a
smooth road 10 confirmation in the
new job.
"I expect to support him," Sen.
Phil Gramm ; R-Texas, said on
By GEORGE ABATE
• NBC's Meet the Press. "!think
Sentinel News Staff
he's a good choice . He probably
If the Sbade p6st office closes. some Meigs countians will have
should have been chosen tlJlbegin
to travel farther and stand in line more, according to a former Shade
with."
postmasler.
.
· Shade's post office on U.S . 33 could be shut down in a few
months by the U.S. Postal Service as a cost-cutting measure. said
Ross Crego, regional post offr,cc review coordinator.
Tbe ,9peration could continue, if a local business would take on
the basil: services, Crego said. The federal government would have
to pay only for wages, not benefits for the employee or maintenance
and operatiog costs would be cut. be added.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Several exist for which no records were geologist with tbe U.S. Interior
"The only change would be who would provide the services,''
stretches of interstate highway in kept, said Douglas Crowell of the Department's Office of Surface
Ctcgq said.
easlem Ohio were built atop aban- Ohio Division of Geological Sur- Mining in Pittsburgh.
Last April, an internal survey was completed, Crego said. Then
doned coal mines lilce the one that vey.
in
June,
a community .meeting was held. A study sbowed the rural
A typical abando!!Cd mine could
"They're out there, and they're have scores of rooms, and mine
post office bad only 18 minutes of reulii transactions in a six-hour
collapsed earlier this month
not going away," Crowell told The complexes often were connected.
beneath Interstale 70.
day.
.
"We see this as something that provides benefits to our cusOil.March 4, part of eastbound Columbus Dispatch in a story pub- As the coal was extracted, pillars of
tomers and the postal service," be said. "At this point we're still in •,
I-70 fell into a 25-foot-deep sink- lished on Sunday. "As time goes coal and rock were left to support
the proposal slage. We've made ho decision yet."
on,
gravity
takes
its
toll."
bole east of Cambridge. Four vebi·
the mine roof.
· Tbc postal commission should have made a decision by the
An abandoned coal mine shaft
cles were damaged. but no serious
When digging in one area of a
beginning
of this month. but nothing bas happened yet, said Mart.in
injuries were reported. That part of collapsed on Friday in a housing mine was compleled, miners often
Dorst,
retired
Shade postmaster who worked there for 20 years.
the interstate will be closed in both development in North Canton, mined parts of coal pillars, which
After
the
1\ecision
is made, an appeal will be filed .and then a
directions for up to three months leaving a bole 21 feet wide and 24 could weaken them.
period
of
120
days
must
pass, Dorst added. So, SCJ'Vicc.~ should not
feet deep in the yard of a home.
while repairs are made.·
In Cambridge, the southeasiern
It is bard to predict when or if a
State transportation officials
change until mid·summer.
.
"lbey want to save a little bit of money," Dorst said. "I'm for
said the collapse resulted from a part of the interchange linking mine roof will collapse, although
saving money, and I also know post offices don't pay for them·
flooded, abandoned mine 60 feel Interstates 70 and 77 is built over seasonal weather changes can make
an abandoned mine complex, collapses more likely, Ehler said.
selves: But how many do pay for themselves?"
below the surface.
The most the postal service could save is about $15,000 since an
"The highway coUapse was not according to Ohio Department of
Public money is used to repair
average postmaster's salary is $24,000: At most. a private company
caused by things we did or didn't Natural Resources maps.
or ·stabilize abandoned surface and
could earn about $8.000 for paying someone $5 an hour for 33
Mucb of Wellston in Ja,kson underground mines. Since 1978,
do, but as more like an act of.
bours a week under a government contract. .
God," said Pieter Wykoff, a County and Byes ville in Guernsey more than $70 million - mostly in
The local company would likely not prosper because the overspokesman for the Ohio Depart- County were buill "over old coal federal funds - has been spent on
bead costs would be too great, be added.
ment of Transportatioo.
mines. The most extensively mined Ohio's abandoned mines.
Dorst retired nearly three years ago and local residents bave been
About 4,100 abandoned coal area in the state is probably beneath ·
Most of the money, $38.2 milin limbo since because a new postmasler was not hired.
mines are known to lie beneath an the eight-mile stretch of 1-70 lion, was used to reclaim stripBut, the Sbade office is the only local postal unit between Athens
estimated 600,000 acres in 28 east· between St. Clairsville and Lans- mined lands, while about $9 milern Ohio counties. Miners bave ing, Crowell said.
lion was spent stabilizing land
and Pomeroy, Dorst said.
·
"I
don't
think
people
want
to
go
to
Athens.
I
know
it's
mighty
materials,
filling
mine
shafts
or
extracted 3.2 billion tons of coal
Before building highways, engifrom the region during nearly 200 neers examine mine maps to deler· capping mine openings. The 'pro·
handy her~:· he added.
,
Many people who also drive to Athens from l&gt;omcroy and Midyears of mining. ·
mine whether the bedrock needs to gram is financed by Utxes on mined
dleport find it more convenient to stop in along the rouic, he added.
Another 2,000 mines probably · be supported, said Bill Ehler, a coal.
(Continued on Page 3)

WASHINGTON (AP) ~ The
Clinton adminislration released $3
billion to support Mexico's economy while lrying to blunt congres·
slana! criticism tbat its rescue
effort was doomed to failure and
was driving down the value of the ·
u.s. dollar.
.
Treasury Secretary Robert .
Rubin said Friday the new money
was being jlrovided in response to a
fiscal auslerity package announCed
Thursday night by the government
of Mexican President Ernesto
Zedillo.

. .

.-.:

Possible post office
closing vexes Shade

."

Q 00.! _.readies repair response

to 'sinking

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344·5947. 422~0156

feeling~

on highways

WWI veteran finally
awarded Purple Heart

• Tilt Steering

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L&lt;&gt;W tonight In the 40s, clear.
Tuesday, sunny. lllghs In 70s.

NABILW. FAHMV, M.D.

Release $3 billion

.

.Ohio Lottery

NCAA

March 12, 1995

Monday • sa,urday: 9 am - 9 pm
Sunday: Noon • 6 pm

.

I·

•.
I .

.

"I am grateful and if I bad to do
By ANNJE SHOOMAN
· it all over again, I would," said the
All!lodated Press Writer
former U.S. Army corporal.
LOS ALAMITOS, Calif. Roberts was wounded in 1918
Snapping out a salute, 99·year-old
Fred Roberts received his Purple as bis unit - Company D. !51st.
Heart- almost eight decades after Machine Gun Battalion, 42nd
be was gassed· in a bloody World Rainbow Division - was advancing from Champagne Feront into
War 1battle.
"I feel great. It's great to be· an the Belleau Woods during the secAmerican," &amp;obcru said Sunday at ond Battle of the Marne in France.
His unit was caught ' in ah
a .ceremony attended by nearly 250
r
artillery
barrage that included musfriends, relatives and soldiers.
tard
gas.
Robert~
wa~
treated
for
.As a band played "Stars and
Stripes Forever," M'aj . Gen. gas inhalation and sbell shock.
He recovered, then spent the rest
· Slepben Bisset, commander qf tiJ1:
RECOGNITION - World
of
his
tour of duty guarding prison63rd U.S. Army Reserve C6tfl.
War
I veteran Fred Roberts, 99,
mand, pinned the prestigious deco- ers of war near Kripp, Germany.
stood
at attention after receiving
President Woodrow Wilson
ratioo to Roberts' cbest.
a
Purple
Heart 77 ye!l'n late at a
"'Congratulations, it's been a awarded Roberts a congratulatory ceremony In Los t\lamlto., Callr~
long time coming," Bisset said. "I ·accolade for wounds in honorable Sunday. (AP)
wantiO see you when you're .105." service after ~is discharge in 1919.
The trim, 5-foot-9 Roberts stood But be neve.r received the 'promised
ing was ever done."
stiffly at attention in his ganison Purple Heart.
.
Roberts kept turning admiring
He lived in Idaho for 56 years
cap and neatly imbed brown suit.
glances
at the medal pinned to bis
· After clicking his heels together until moving in last year with his
smartly and saluting. be sbook Bis- daughter, Barbara Pettit, and her chest as be sat by the podium while
seven other veterans received other
husband in Temple City, 15 miles
set's hand with a proud smile.
decorations.
northeast
of
Los
Angeles.
Tbe ceremony, beld at tbe
AI the end of the ceremony,
"Wbat
my
father
bas
said
is
that
Armed Forces Reserve Center in
Roberts
stood with lbe others to
the
records
mus(
have
been
lost,"
.
this coastal suburb 25 miles south
sbalce
bands
with 17 5 soldiers.
Mrs.
Pettit
said.
"He·
was
asked
at
of Los Angeles, was delayed by
His
daughler,
who is in ber 70s.
if
)le
would
want
the
Purone
point
decades because of a mixup in his
looked
on
proudly.
.
ple Heart. and be said yes; but noth- .
Army [CCDrdS.
.

,,

•

..

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 centa
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Robbery
suspect
released
·from jail
From AP, Staff Reports
A Reedsville woman was
released on bond after being held in
. the Athens County Jail on charges
she aided in a Feb. 28 bank.robbery
at Coolville, according to Athens
County Sheriff's Department
reports.
Patty Lynn Ingram, 45, of Success Road, walked out of the jail
after a relative posted her $50,000
bond Friday.
The BankOne of Coolville bank
teller aliegedly has ooen linked to
the robbery, along with two other
suspects, records show.
The two suspects - who wore
black ski masks when they held up
the bank at the beginning of the
business day - have not been
apprehended or charged, pending
grand jury action ..The pair have
acq·uircd lawyers and have been
cooperating, repohs stated.
Ingram's preliminary bearing on
a rob~ charge is set for II a.m.
March 2 .· . ,
Ingram, a 10-ycar employee of
the bank, originally told authorities
about being ambushed outside the
bank. Tbe robbers fled the scene in
· Ingram's car, which was found the
next day between Coolville and
Athens off U.S. 50.
Athens Sheriff John Hicks said
about 80 percent of the stolen
money has been found. Authorities
would not disclose how much was
taken from the branch's vaults.
None of the money found was
recovered from Ingram's car or ber
·property.
Athens County's Lt. Vern CaStle would not say wberc the money
was found since authorities arc stili
looking for more mpn~y .

PUCOdelays
long-distance
toll decision
A decision on whether the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
will pennit extended toll·frec telephone service from the Pomeroy
c~changc to the Mason and New
Haven, W.Va., exchanges ba' bci:n
postponed until further data can be
compiiCd.
Tbe PUCO will make no determination at this time for extended
area service pending receipt of .
additional information, according
to a release received today. · ·
GTE North Inc. has been a'ked
'to provid&amp;; further cost and revenue
information relative to the extended
area telephone service from the
Pomc·roy exchange to the Mason
exchange of Bell Atlantic· West
Virginia, and the New Haven
(Continued ·o n Page 3)

Surprise O.J. witness .to refute
·Fuhrman's denial of racial slurs
The defense has suggested that
By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
Fuhnnan is a racist ·who planted the
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES - Detective glove. Fuhrman bas denied the alieMark Fubrman insists be never met gation ' during testimciny for the
lbe woman wbo claims he made prosecution.
Cross-examination of Fuhrman
racial slurs, bu ~ - a surprise defense
witness is expected to dispute lbal. was to begin as early as today.
Superior Court Judge Lance Ito
according 10 news reports.
has
given the defense wide latitude
Fubnnan. wbo takes the witness
to
explore
the alleged encounier
stand again today in tile OJ. Simpwith
Bell
,
who
reiterated her alleson double-murder trial, bas testigations
against
Fuhnnan
in a Saturfied that be never met Kathleen
day
interview
with
the
Long
Beach
Bell - the woman who claims he
Press·
Telegram
.
made anti-black slurs to her duril\g
"There arc very few . people in
a conversation at a Marine recruitmy
life that I've been afraid of and
ing center in the 1980s.
he·
s
one of them." she said. · ·
But defense sources said a surBell told the Press-Telegram
prise witness will bolster claims by
Kathleen Bell thllt Fuhrman that Fuhrman made the rematks
denounced inlerracial couples and about blacks IJ!ld interracial couples
said he would like to bum all ''nig· after she toldbim 'her friend. whom
gers," Newsweek and KCAL -TV sbe identified only as Andrea, bad
a crush on black football player
reported.
Fuhrman has testified. that he Marcus Allen .
"At that moment b·e just got
found a bloody glove at Simpson's ·
weird,"
she said.
residence tbe morning afte'r the
Bell
said
she and Andrea later
June 12 murders of Simpson's ex .
met
Fuhrman
at Hennessey's Tavwife Nicole Brown SimpSon and
ern
in
Redondo
Bc,ach in 1986.
her frie!ld Ronald Goldman. SimpK~AL-TV, citing unidentified
son is on trial for the murders.
j

•

sources, reported the same location.

Newsweek, however. said the
restaurant was in Orange County,
south of Redondo Beach .
'-'1 pointed him out to my friend
as the man who had said those horrible things to me ," Bell said of
Fuhrman.
Bell said Andrea spoke briefly
to Fuhnnan and then returned to
the lablc and said " I guess you're
right" about the racist comments,
the Press· Telegram reported Sunday.
According to Newsweek's
March 20 issue, Bell's friend, wbo
wasn 't identified by the maHazine,
told. defense investigators that she
told Fuhnnan she wa' attracted to
athletic men like Allen. That infuriated Fuhrman, who repeated almost
the same epithets he allegedly said
ta Bell, the magazine said.
, Defense lawyer F. Lee Bailey.
dtscloscd the existence of the surprise witness at a news conference
Thursday but did not give any. other
details.
'
The· woman has been subpoenaed to testify, KCAL said .

..

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�•

Commentar

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio
Monday, March 13, 1995

.

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Sbeet
Po~neroy, Ohio

ROBERT L. WINGETT
' Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gtnenl Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Conlroller

l..ETTERS OF OPINION ""' Wek:ome. They sbould be less tban 300
words long. Allletten ""' subject to editing and llllllt be 1igned wilb nome,
addrao and telepbone number. No unsigned letters will be publilbed. Letten
sbould be in good wte, llddnouiug iuues, oot penonolities.

State seeks limits on
local investment ·options
ByPAULSOUIIRADA
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Anyone looking to lay the blame for multimillion
dollar tosses on high-risk investments across the state can place it right on
the grave of Howard Jarvis.
At least tbat' s what state Treasurer J. Kenoeth Blackwell Jr. ·thinks.
Sort of.
Blackwell believes the quest for ever-higher investment yields by local
public funds managers can be traced to 1978 California, where Jams was
lbe architect of a massive pll!J!erty tax rollback called Proposition 13.
"The cons!allt resistance 10 paying taXeS put a bulden on public funds
managers," Blackwell said.
·
It led them to seek higher earnings to offset tax losSes. And, consequently, to take bigger risks with taxpayers' money.
Or as Blackwell put it: " It led to a shift to legalized gambling with
flllblic funds."
.
The result in Ohio was tbat 34 - and counting - cities, townships,
school dtstncts and other local government entities took a beating on
Impossibly ar~ane investm7nts known as derivatives. So far, the biggest
loser IS Cuyahoga County s Secured Asset Funds Earning - SAFE -· ·
fund that lost $115 million last year.
.
. Blackwell says it's time to rein in the Wall Sl!eet-wannabes. He bas
found sponsors for bills in the Ohio House and Senate tljat 'would do it.
" What these two pieces of legislation do is reel them back in to the
more classical role of public funds managers.·: tu: said. . .
_ _
In other words, the bills would force county treasurers and local
nuance directors. to follow the same invesunent policies the state. does.
That means no use of derivatives - which even sophisticated
Investors have trouble explaining- no investing borrowed money and no
more pooled invesunent funds like SAFE, whose losses hit local government agencies across northeast Ohio.
''h seems to me, that what we have to do is so circumscribe the potentl~l mvesunents and so conl!ol those who arc participating by selling
diose msi!Uments to the subdtviSions that they can't make a mistake "
said Rep. William Batchelder, R:Medina.
'
Batchelder ini!Oduced the bill in the House, where it got its fJrst bear·
log in the FinanciallnstituJipns Committee last week.
The bill also calls foi written investment policies signed by brokers ·
~n~ bankers doing b.u~iness with local governments and a two-year limit
an mvestment matunties.
· The leader. of Senate Democrats thinks it goes too far.
. "It's an improvement, but it inl!udes on the role' of local governments," said Sen. Robert Boggs, D-R.ock Creel&lt;.
Boggs said be'll support tbc bill if it's the only option. but he's also
offered an alternative.
·
· He wants to create a state invesirnent advisory board to screen all brokers wanting to do business in Ohio and the investments they wantto.sell.
All the 3,000 local officials who make investment decisions would have
Ill do is pick"from the menu.
.
But the president of the County Treasurers'· Association of Obi~ said
ltls members don't feel their toes being 'Stepped on.
.
.
"I.don't mind someone looking over my shoulder," said Summit
County Treasurer John Donofrio.
"We've taken a close look at ourselves," be said. "We want it to be
more resbictive. It provides better accountability."
The treasurers would like the maturity limit to be extended to five
years, but beyond that they're not going to quibble witb .lhe details.
Blackwell said it's time to act.
: "There isn'tiJ!UCb reslriction as to what they can buy as far as securities go," be said. "Tbere are still some time bombs outlhere."

'

Gephardt steps up to rally the Democrats
take it back.' '
WASHJNGTON - During a allies awaited his arrival at a local the House.
Frost says some of those
Both men have already descendprivate luncheon recently, House restaurant, they jested that there
Minority Leader Richard GePfrardt, was much to recommend life out- ed on lbe offices of DemocraiS wpo ·"breaks" are coming courtesy of
D-Mo., proposed an early warning • side the House and that serving as were considered possible retirees. Gingrich and his front-page gaffes.
system 10 bead off an expected rash
'
·
Tbey arrived to boost morale and to Noting some recently successful
fund-raisers, he said: "Shall we say
offer
campaign contributions.
~e~W6~~~~=tirements before. By Jack Anderson
"We don't want anyone to we've been mentioning Speaker
Gepbardt raised the issue with
and
retire, Jmd we're trying to talk to Gingrich in our mail, and there' s
members of his kitchen cabinet:
them early to encourage them to been a very strong response to
that." Frost hinted that Gingrich
nearly a dozen former House memMichael Binstein run," ,Gepbardttold us. "In many, might
be inadvertently forestalling
bers and loyahsts who are bemg
m&lt;my cases this has been a success·
tapped for political Jtdvice, fund a Democrat today is akin to spend- ful effort. We want to know about some retirements by his "radical"
raising and candidate recruitment. ing time in a ''POW camp. ••
(retirements) early, if that's the and "outrageous" behavior, which
Those certainly aren't feelings case, and find a candidate in the is belping to ''start the juices flowTbe list includes former Reps: Dening" for some older Democrats.
nis Eckart, D-Ohio, Romano Maz- Gepbardt wants to see fanned. dislrict who can win it."
·
Members of the kitchen cabinet
zoli, D-Ky., and William Ford, 0- Retirements could put l)le goal of
Despite inheriting a DCCC debt
gaining 14 new seats and dethron" of $2.5 million, which means came away from lunch happy after
Mich.
Along with Rep. Martin Frost, ing House Speaker Newt Gingrich . monthly interest and principal pay- bearing Gepbardt discuss negotiaD:Texas, chairman of the Demo- out of reach. Republicans were ments of $170,000, Frost exudes tions that could lead to a unified
cratic Congressional Campaign greatly helped last election by 27 boundless optimism about his task. Democratic alternative on welfare
Committee, Gephardt is concerned seats I'eft open by Democratic A sheaf of DCCC charts and reform. Gepbardt told tb'e group
about the morale of the old bulls in retirements.
graphs purport to show the weak that aU elements of the party were
his olrro caucus. ·
Gepbardt and Frost fret about links in the Republican landslide. on board with the exception of the
Most of these veterans being caught flat-footed by retire- Frost notes that 41 Republicans Hispanic Caucus, which is conincluding some former committee ment announcements. By creating won by less .than I 0 percent. And cerned about the plan's impact on.
chairmen - are strangers to con- what amounts to a tip line on
the last two times Republicans won legal immigrants.
gressional life without the perks Democrats who might be thinking
the House, in 1946 and 1952, they
"The (Democratic) caucus can
and power that come y;ith being in about quitting, Gepbardt and Frost held power only two years.
start
to rebuild itself if it can agree
the majority, and might retire rather hope to convince ' wavering mem"History is on our side," Frost on something
as coniioversial as
than suffer another term under bers not to j11mp ship. The sales says. " This place is basically up
this,''
said
one
source
auending the
Republican rule. While Gephardt's pitch: Give us a chance to win back for grabs. With any breaks we can
lunch. "It will show that
(Gephardt) still )las the leadership
qualities it takes to put very com"
plicated deals together with a
diverse group."
·
~ATS!...
Gephardt also devoted some
time to speculating about the linkage between Republican campaign
donors and the "Contract With '
America." "Gepbardt is almost
ASAIN.
convinced that they are selling the
.floor," said one source who attended the lunch. "He said, 'I'm not
going to tell you they are selling
the floor, but there's an auction
going on."'

u

BLOCK'

GRANTS,

In an interview, Gephardt did
not shy away from the comment,
but did couch his comments more
carefully: .
"If you look at what they're
doing in the contract, most of it
revolves around helping bi~ business - whether it's ton reform, or
getting rid of regulations that businesses don'tlike, or tax cuts for the ·
.privileged ft;w."

•

Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

A cruel contract on prisoners _ _ _._ _

Were I writing a contemporary who 'bad. run away from home even under emergency conditions. worse - with very few prospects
version o(" A Christmas Carol," I overnight was raped by a guard.
Pre ·
·
would have the Ghost of Prison·ers
example,
when
the of relief.
A class-action suit that was filed p vtously,
1 for
· c
·
·
The
Ghost
of
Prisoners
Past l!ansport Henry Hyde, R-111., on behalf of all the children in the
ennsy vanta ommJSStaner of would take Hatch and HydeFuture
to the
and Orrin Hatch, R-Utab, _chairPublic Health found a risk of a
Dislrict
of
Columbia
in
1996.
Two
Nat Hentoff ·
tuberculosis epidemic in lhe prison
.men or the House and Senate Judiyears
before,
a
federal
judge,
June
ciary Committees _ to 1773 in
system- because basic tuberculoGreen
(finding
that
correctional
Fairfield County, Conn. Alexander jail resulted - as 'the National sis conl!ol provisions were not in
officers and olher prison employees
Graham, a "l!ansient person" con- 'Prison Project of the ACLU reports place- a federal court issued a
victed of breaking into a store and - in an agreement by county offi- preliminary injunction ordering have sexually assaulted and
stealing some of ·the goods, was cials not to confine any more chit- officials, then and there, to imple- . harasF£d women prisoners) ordered ··
branded with a capital B on his dren in the jail.
ment the necessary health mea- the jail officials to stop these abuses and prevent their recurrence. But
forehead. And, as Lawrence FriedThe Ghost of Prisoners Present ·sures.
man writes in ·"Crime and Punish- would then tum Hatch and Hyde
In one Pennsylvania prison, under the STOP bill, the court ·
ment in America," be also lost an over to the Ghost of Prisoners over 400 irunates were found to be order will end in 1996, no matter ·
what abuses arc still going on.
ear.
Future. Under a bill recently passed infecHted.
·
Since then, slowly and grudg- by the .House, that consent decree
ere again, the STOP bill
ingly, .our standards of decency in would be ended along with most requires a judge to flist make a forThe lawyer for the women
mal finding that there bas been a Brenda Smith of the Nationai ;
treating prisoners have evolved other voluntary settlements.
somewhat. Often there is still bruConsent decrees - including 'federal violation : In the Interim,
Women's Center, tells Naftali Bentality. And inmates, kept in their pre-existing ones like the relief more prisoners and their families,
david of Legal Times: "The court
issued a 100-page decision, with 59
cells fo&lt; 23 hours a day in certain given child inmates in Ohio - will as well as prison guards, would
supermaximum prisons, are be forbidden unless a court has for- have~ infected while waiting.
pages of findings of fact and a 36- ·
Thts amazmg ptece of.legisla- page remedial order. The notion
"buried alive"- as Charles Dick- mally found a constitutional or
ens put it after visiting an earlier statutory violation. Nearly all con- · lion. as we near the 21st century, that you can implement that in two
American prison where silence and sent decrees now do not have such goes on to :·automatically elld"
years is ridiculous."
·
isolation were the rule.
findings because prison and county any court order or judgment in a
A few local politicians , years
IIy The Associated Press
What has most effectively officials prefer not to get involved prison case after two years -even ago, ~pent some time in jail to see
· Today is Monday, March 13, the 72nd day of 1995. Tbere 'are i93 days brought change is some prisoners' in long, costly lrials. ·
if constitutional violations remain. what tl was hke. Not a bad idea for
len m the year.
.
·
occasional access to the courts,
Rep. Charles Canady, R-Fla ., The history of prison reforms Hatch and Hyde, and many of their
: Today's Highlight in 1-listory:
which remind lhe inmates' l&lt;eepers has joined the paladins of cruel and shows that in many situations. two colleagues. Does the president have
~ On Marc~ 13, 1852, a familiar symbol of the United States, Uncle
that their charges are still sentient unusual punishment by having years is far from enough time to anything to say about these bills?
.,am, made biS debut as a Ql'toon character in the New York Lantern
. human beings. In my "Christmas sponsored the House biD bizarrely make the required changes -and
Nat Hentoff is a nationally
,. On this date:
'
Carol," I would have Hyde and · titled STOP (Slop Tur'ning Out ensure their durability. There is renowned authority 'on the First
In 1639, Harvard University was named for clergyman John Harvard.
Hatch taken to a present-day adult Prisoners). Sen. Kay Bailey throughout this bill the desire to Amendment and the rest of tbe
. In 1781, the ~laoet Uranus w!IS discov~d by Sir William Herschel.
county jail in Ironton, Ohio, wbere Hutchison, R-Texa.s, has brought a make mean-spirited and political Bill of Rights.
. In 1868, the unpeachment trial of Prestdent Andrew Johnson began in hundreds of youngst~rs. many only similar biD to the Senate.
points by sl!ipping prisoners of
(For information on how to
lbc U.S. Senate.
14 and 15, used to be held for such
The STOP bill also all but human, let alone constitutional
communicate electronically with
: In 188'1, Standard Tim~ was adopted throughout the United States. .
dangerous misbehavior as I!UBIJCY removes the power of the courts to rights. Meanwhile, as prisons ar~ this columnist and others, con-·
. In 1901, the 23rd prestdent of the United States Benjamin Harrison · and shopliftmg. A 15-year-old girl grant immediate temporary relief, increasingly overcrowd.e~, STOP tact America Online b callln 111
~icd in lndiailapolis. ·
'
'
.
..
.
. Will ensure that condlllons get 800-827·6364, ext 8Jlj,)

rroday in history

.Berry's World
\H6 Of

'\\-\~

Wl'\t'ff ~l.)$E
STAFF WANT 1i_o...,...,,..._--..
AfOL-061l.f
Fo~

OUR.
LAif$1'"'

SNAfU
RE6/i'.KDI
•••

I Tt\0()6t-\i
t\£ WAS A
!~lEND OF
CH~L.SC.A~

'

America will pay for H~use's rush
Everyone,bas an opi~on on ~e

track m the House of Representalives. But opinions are a dime a
dozen. The Gingrich blitzkrieg in
Hodding
111
the· House bas pu~ premium on
speed. The result ts that few con- them as a part of the original docug~ssmen and even fewer ~verage ment. In the name of "consercmzens have the fhgbtest tdea of vatism," the Republicans now seek
what the Conl.J11':1 s real costs and to alter the nation's fundamental
consequences wtll be. What's. the charter more times in one year lhan
burry?
. at any time since the end of the
. Consider the following observa- Civil War.)
·
uons, ooe offered by a Republtcan
In such an atmosphere the law
and the other by a Democrat.
of unintended consequences would
",I don't.~ind. the long hours; inevitably come into play, even if
that s OK, satd Rep. Marge there were no changes in the ConRoukema, R-N.J. "Bift we may be l!act Speaker Gingrich speaks of a
rushing lhin&amp;s through here that revolution, and while it)ooks more
need more deliberation - welfare like a cotmterrevolution to many of
reform, for instanc~. I think we us •. his description is useful. Revoought to consider taking more ttme luuons usually produce results no
on some of this."
'
one bad in mind.
·
~'There's no deliberation in the
Of course, the Contract is not
Judiciary Committee,'' said Rep. sailing through untouched. The
Jose Serrano, D-N.Y. "I'm on the · Republicans have been tacking on
constitutioJJal subcommittee and amendments and making adjustwe're amending the Constitution ments in response to ·the pleadings
every week. This should not be of vociferous special interests In
happening this way, but they (the areas as diverse as tort reform ~elRepublicans) have a deadline, and fare and food stamps last-~inute
~e bay,e no choice.
changes have been ~ade whose

I
'

•

Carter

a

i'

'

(On th~t last ~in~ it is worth
remembenng that m a little more
than200years, the Constitution has
been amended just 27 times 10 of
'

RCf,ubh~an Contract Wtth Amenca. ~hich reDl3Jns on an express

.

'

'

full impact is understood
the lobb i
b
only by
Farmers~ s~e ~.0 offered them.
tb R k M •dv.:cst, I!IJoers 10
e . oc ~ ou~tam states and
secunbes eaters 10 New York are
among ~ose who bave exl!act~
· c~~cesstons from ~hat was ongtn Y t~uted as an .mvtolable compac{btth, the Amencan people..
~res nothmg new o~. evtl. or .
startlt~g about such legtslauve
ogrolling. 11 has_always been Dart
~wthe co.ngresstonal proces~ and
ays ~I be. Comprouuse •s the
es~nce 0 a ~orkable democracy.
b u:l~mgncb and. Company are
~ 0 e nt on meeun~ thetr selfIDipose~ IOO-day deadline that they
.are ~nou~y weakem~g that corncr\ ~e 0 ~~prese~tative govern~C:.; T': ~uon. What's the
iry e PJ! ems that face the
~un are P and rea}. but they
·. odnot demand o~ernigbt action
:lu:e ng su~uble to overnight
. 00 • urs 15 not_~ time of masst;e un:ploymcnt.and depression, .
0 wor
war ll!'d tmmlt1ent peril. .
~bat n~ foong bas taken years
0 ~c tiS ~urrent state of disre~:~ridv;!atb\s adopted to fix it
tim:. I
a e to stand the test .of

1

..

.
·
·
Constder, however, that in less"
than 10 months there were more :
than I 770 recorded votes in the ·
Houie.' which was four times more ·
than in the same riod in 1993
The House Rules ~ommittcc bad
moved 19 bills toward floor· action
six times :inore than in die flrsttw~
months of the last Congress. The
House Judiciary Committee had
passed 12 bills, including two constitutional amendments
. You know why we'~e sprinting,
Gmgricb and Company reply If we
don't, the liberals and the sj,ccial
interests (ours excepted) and the
bureaucrats will gang up on us and
stop the revolution in its tracks we
either .do everything now ~r it
won't get done.
' ··
That raises the question of
whether legislation intended to do
more than make a partisan · int :
should be passed without at feast ·
some bipartisan consensus
· ·
·
·
. Hoddlng Carter Ill, former :
StaJe Dep•rtment spokesman :
and award-wlnnlnl! reporter, edl- •
tor and publisher, Is president.of :
MalnStreel, • WashlJll!ton, D.C.- ;
television production co~- :

:a-:

Pomero~-Middleport,

Monday, March 13, 1995

The Daily Sentinel-Page

Ohio

--Area Deaths-- Area man's condition
Donald C. 'Pete' Guinther improving: officials l

OHIO Weather
Tuesday, March 14
Actu-Wealhe,.. forecast
MICH. · •

Donald Cole ''Pete" Guinther, 89, Pomeroy, died Saturday, March II,
1995 in Scenic Hills Care Center, Gallipolis.
Born June 22, 1905 in Syracuse. son of the late William and Mary
frances Oliver Guinther. be was a retired coal miner, and a member of the
United Mine Workers of America and the Pomeroy Fraternal Order of the
Eagles.
·
· Surviving are a son, Guy Guinther of Gallipolis; two grandchildren and
five greal-grandcbildten; and two sisters, Fredrika Farris of Pomeroy, and
Carol Cook of Connecticut.
' He .was also preceded in death by live brothers and by a son, Donald E.
Guinther, in 1994.
·
Graveside services will be 3:30 p.m. Thursday in the Letart Falls
Cemetery, with the Rev. David Hogg officiating. Arrangements are by the
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home Wetherbolt Chapel, Gallipolis. There will
be no visitation.
·
·

•
IToledo I 69' I
IND.

I

_ •lcotumbusl73•

Possible office closing
W. VA .

1ce

s:my

Pt

Cloudy Clou:fy

· 01995 Aceu-Wealhar, Inc.

No rain in sight as warm
temperatures continue
By The Assoclaled Press
Little change is seen in Ohio'~
unusually mild weather the rest of
this week. The forecast is for sunny
. and warm with no rain in sight
through Friday. The only change
will be slighdy .cooler temperatures
by the end of the week.
The siring of mostly clear and
mild nights will continue tonight,
with lows in the 40s, the National
Weather Service said.
Temperatures on Tuesday will
again climb into the 70s.
. The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station IYas 78 degrees in 1990

(Continued from Page J) ·
Senior citizens rely on the post office to pick up Sooal Security
cbecks and others rely on it for money order pickups, Dorst said.
Athens' rural Route 4 - which covers the area north of Slate
Route 681 in Bedford Township and parts of Orange and Scipio
townships - would not change if the post office closed.
Eventually, consi!Uction of a oew four-lane between Athens and
Darwin will affect the l!affic through Shade, he added .. But be
didn' I expect business would be burt that much, be said. r
'
Tbe Shade center lias bad fairly high levels of sales, averaging
more than $1,000 a month.
More than 300 people have signed petitions to keep the post
office from closing, Dorst said.
Tbe office is much more than 54 post office boxes, it doubles as
a social center for the community, Dorst said.

Meigs announcements

while the record low was 7 in 1996.
Sunset tonight will be at 6:36 p.m.
Mll!lon honored
The Third Wednesday Homeand sunrise Tuesday at 6:45 a.m.
A
60-year-member
·
of
the
makers
Club will meet at 10 a.m.
•Weather forecast:
Masons,
Carl
Ritchie,
will
be
honWednesday
at the Syracuse municiTonight.. .Mostly clear. Lows in
ored
by
the
Shade
River
Lodge
pal
building.
The project is cookie
the40s.
#453
F&amp;AM
tonight
.
Interested
·
exchange
and
recipe . All homeTuesday ... Mostly sunny and
should
meet
at
7
p.m.
makers
invited.
individuals
continued warm. Highs in the
tonight at the Keno Church parking
upper 6tls and lower 70s .
' lot.
·
Rutland Youtb Lea11ue
Extended forecast:
Rutland Youth League wiU hold
Wcdnesday .. :Dry. Lows in the
sign
ups Wednesday and Friday. 6Shade
Lodl!•
meelinl!
40s and highs 60 to 65 .
The
Shade
River
Lodge
#453
8
p.m.
at the Rutland Fire DepartThursday ... Dry. Lows 40 to 45
F&amp;AM
will
meet
at
7:3
0p.m.
ment
with
final sign up Sunday. 2and highs 60 to 65.
Thursday
at
the
lodge
to·
work
on
4
p.m.
Pee
$10 per child. Bring
. Fri~y ... Dry. Lows 35 to 40 and
craft
figurines
.
copy
of
birth
certincate. For addih1ghs m the upper 50s to mtddle
tional
inf«vmation
.call Deidra
60s.
Syracuse lea11ue organizes
Cross at 742-2.209.
The Syracuse. Yputh Baseball
League will bold an organiza.tional ·Youth League sii!"UP
meeting at 7,p.m. Tue~day at SyraLast signup for the Middleport
El.
e
mentary
School.
All
parcuse
•
Youth
League will be held Saturhe l!ansferrcd to the maintenance
day.
I
to 4 p.m. at Middleport
ents
and
coaches
arc
urged
to
department in 1991, according to a
·
Council
chambers. Fee· is $10 per
attend.
,
·
school board spokesman. In the
child,
not
to exceed $25 per family .
maintenance department, he served
Naomi Church bosts
as sewer plant operator.
The Naomi Baptist Church will omce to be closed
The sheriff's department said
The Meigs County Board of
Holley was operating a 1983 host the Rev. Robert Jackson of
Honda motorcycle which collided Ashland, Klf., at II a.m. Sunday at Elections will be closed Friday so
that the office personnel can attend
at about 7 p.m. with a 1987 Dodge the church. Public is invited.
a disbict meeting in Athens. Regupick-up truck, operated by Cecil
lar hours will be resumed Monday.
Absten, 65, of Leon. Both vehicles Homemakers 11roup sets
were listed
total losses and the
accident is still under investigation.
Holley was wearing a helmet,
authorities said .
Prices from Tbe Producers
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaA passenger in Absten's vehicle,
Vivian Absten, was l!ansported to Ohio direct bog prices at selected Livestock Assocliillon:
Cattle: 2.00 lower to 1.00 highPVH. A hospital spokesman said buying points Monday by the U.S.
.she was l!eated and released for Department of Agriculture Market er.
Slaughter steers: choice 54.00News:
minor injuries. ·
74.25;
select58.00-69.00.
Barrows
and
gilts:
steady;
Assisting the sheriffs departSlaughter heifers: choice 64.00. ment at the scene were Point Pleas- demand light to moderate.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country 72.00; sele~t59.00-67.00.
ant Volunteer Fire Department,
37.00-38.50; plants 38.00points
Cows: l.OO lower to 2.00 highPoint Pleasant E.M.S . and Mt.
39.50.
er; all cows 50.00 and down.
Aower Rescue Squad.
U.S . 2-3, 230-260 lbs., country
· Bulls: lower to .2.00 higher; all
Holley's funeral arrangements
bulls 62.50 and down.
are incomplete and will be points 33.00-37.00.
Vcal calves: uneven, lower to
Sows: under 500 lbs. ftnn; over
announced by Crow-Hussell.Funer8.00 higher; choice 170.00 and
SOD lbs . finn to 1.00 bigber
al Home, Point Pleasant.
U.S. 1"3 30~-500 lbs. 27.00- down.
Sheep and lambs: steady to 3.00
32.50; 500-650 lbs. 32.00-37.50.
Estimated receipts: 35,000.
higher; choice wools 65 .00-81.50·

Poijnt Pl.easant man killed .
PO!Nf PLEASANT, W.Va. A Point Pleasant man died and his
young daughter was seriously
injured in a Sunday evening motorcycle/bllck collision at the intersection of state routes 2 and 62 in
Mason County.
The Mason County Sheriff's
Department identified the victim as
Mark Wayne Holley, 32. Holley
was pronounced dead at Pleasant
Valley Hospital where be was
l!ansported by the Point Pleasant
E,M.S. with reported massive internal injuries.
Holley's passenger, his 9 yearold daughter Carley, was transported by HealthNet from Pleasant
Valley Hospital to Cabell-Huntington Hospital, where sbe was undergoing surgery this morning. Hospital officials declined to give a condition report.
The fatality victim bad been an
employee of the Mason County
School Board since 1980. He
served as a custodian at Mason,
Roosevelt, New Haven and Mount
Flower Elementary Schools until

as

Today's liv~stock report

Meigs land transfers posted

The foliQwing land transfers Fisher to Edward M. and Kathem
were recorded recently in the office RcneeTurlcy,Suuon,6.889acres;
Affidavit, Clarence Price,
of Meigs County Recorder Emmadeceased,
to Patricia Jordan, Pattigene Hamilton:
Deed, Robert Allen to Regina E. .· cia Price. Lebanon, 52.03 acres;
Deed, Lisa R. Ashley Turrill
. Wells, Scipio _parcels;
John Turrill to Diana L. Zirkle,
Affidavit, D.A. Smith to Guy aud
Middleport pt. lot; .
· and Geraldine Swadley;
Deed Guy and Geraldine · Deed, William H. Hamcuy to
P. and Charles D. Chase,
Swadley to Paul K. and Lee 0 . Helen
· ·
Sc1p10;
.
Sttauss, Rutland parcel;
Deed, Carl ·Roger and Nancy·L.
.
Deed, June Wickersham 1o Jef- .
to KcnnethR; and Marlfrey C:,: Wickersham, Salisbury par- Hubbard
·
R ·
1
lyn H. McFann, acme parce s;
cel;
Deed, Worley A. and Paula A.
Deed, Effie Lucille Shockey to
Rife
Pau.l M. and Debbie ·S.
Debra E. and David M. Rosier, Kauff,toRudand,
1.103 acres; ·
Bedford parcels;
·
Deed, Donna and Robert Fitch
Deed, Effie Lucille Shockey to
Leonard L. and Debra S. Shockey. to Charles R. Cozart. Lebanon pareel·,
Bedford, 5,096 acres;
. Deed, John Sheets to John Hale,
Deed, Village of Middleport to
Richard
and Ruby Vaughan, MidRudand parcel;
dlepon
lot:
.
.
Deed
John Jt. and Sarah S.
'
Deed, Margaret Burri to Charles ·
E. and Carol s. Payne, Letart

.

The Daily Sentinel
I USPS 213·'1601
l'ubhsht:d cvcry OJftt:rnCM,_m . Monday tht()ugh
rru:iuy. Ill Cour1 St .• Pomeroy. Ohio. by the
Ohio V:~llcy 1\J b li ~hm~ Company/Mtdlimedi n
Inc.. Pomeroy. Oh10 4nM. Ph. 992 -2 1.S6
Sc~ond c h~s pos la~c p01id e~t l't'lf1'l(roy. Ohio.•
Mt'mbtor: 'lllc

A s~ c-.: iatcd l'rc ~~ .

Ncwspupcf AsstiCI~II O O.

and till! Ohi n

-

Po...,TMi\STt:R: Se nd adtlrc~ s

~ orn:cti o n.~ to

The Doli ly St:ntind Ill_ Court St.. Pomeroy.
Ohio 4~769 . •

SUHSCRIP1"10N RATES
U)i C:11rrltr or Motor Routt
01-it! W~,.'i.'k ...... ........ .................................. $ 1 . 7~
One Month .. ...
.................... , .. $7 .60
.One Year ...
.... ~'J I .OO
SINGlF.l'UPV PRIC I-:
D;ul)" .......................... ~. ................... :\~Cent\

Suh.\cri hcl"'i nmllc~iri n~ m p;~y the c;~rrier may
remit m :klvancc d Jrc=c~ to "llle 1l;1ily Sc minc l
on al h n.!C . ~ i ll (lr 12 momh h:1sis. Credit will b.!
j:iwn t.·:urk-r co~eh wt:d ..

N'P

3.

•ub~aip t lon hy moil pcrmiucd in
w~r c homl' e&lt;JrTJl'J ~er.,.k:c i~ available.

an:as

MAlt SUIJSCH:IIII'fiONS

lmkJt Mtigs County
D Wt.'t'b ,.
. ........... .....;....... ,S2l92
26 Week ~ .................... ......................... $47.06
~2 We ek~ .... -- .. . - .... ..... ............... : ...... $92.~6
HatH Oubiide Melp Counly

13 Wt.-ck~ .................................... :............$2~ .6 1
2ll Wt.oek~ ............... ................................. "'9.66

~2 .Week.~ ----·:· · ·· -- · ................... .................S96.20

A Middleport man who was
allegedly robbed, beaten and then
dumped in Pomeroy last Wednesday is slowly improving, officials
stated Monday.
Melvin Durst, 65, was upgraded
from critical to serious condition
Sunday, a St. Mary's Hospital ·
nursing supervisor said.
Durst sustained severe bead and
neck injuries and was found lying
in the snow with a ~lood temperature below 90 degrees in front of
Dr. Brown's ortice.
. Meigs County Prosecutor John
Lentcs said the prosecutor's office.
the Pomeroy Police Department

Squads log weekend calls · ·
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service logged
17 calls for assistance Saturday and
Sunday. Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
2:50 a.m. Saturday, Hudson
Street, Chris Rayburn, refused
I!Cabnent;
10:53 a.m. Siuurday. Zuspan
Hollow Road, Hugh Thompson,
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
12:49 p.m. Sunday, Overbrook
Nursing Center, Charles McElroy,
Pleasant Valley Hospital;
8:13 p.m. Sunday, Page Sl!eet,
Mary Davis, Holzer Medical Center.
POMEROY
i2:29 a.m . Sunday, Condor
Sl!eeL Betty Mankin, VMJ-1;
3:45 p.m. Sunday. volunteer lire
department and squad to Gold
Ridge Road, brush ftre on Roger
Reed property, no injuries;
7:46p.m. Sunday. volunteer fire
department and ~quad, motor-vehicle accident on U.S. 33, Harvey
Bush and Jeanette Mary Roach
refused treaanent, Trisba Richards
and Joshua Kuhn, VMH, Rutland
squad ass~ted.
RACINE
1:14 p.m. Sunday, Manuel
Road, Lucille Lawson, VMH;
9:45 p.m. Sunday, volunteer ftre

Stocks
Am [le Power ....................... .31 Ill
Akzo ......... - ........................... .56 lf8
Ashland 011 ...,....;.................. .315(8
AT&amp;T ...... - ...................:.~ ... .511/4
Bonk One.-............................17 l/4
Bob Ev1ns .....................................l0

Champion Ind..............................20
CharmlnR Shop ...............--...5 Ill
City Holdlng ....................... _.%8 Ill
Federal Mogul ....... ;.... _ ......... 18 Ill
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. :...361/4

department, gas odor, Columbia
Gas lioe.
;:
RUTLAND
II :05 a.m . Saturday , Salem'
Sl!cct, Belly Rupe, HMC;
.
8:58 p.m . Saturday, Salenl
Sl!cc~ Chester Green. PVH;
8:13 a.m. Sunday, Lasher Roac( 1
Mistie Musser, VMII;
10:16 a. D). Sunday, volunteer'
lire department and squad, motor- .
vehicle accident on New Lim~ .
Road, Forest Lee, treated at t~e:
scene;
· 12:43 p.m. Sunday, Crouser'
Road, Rick Price , HMC.
SYRACUSE
2;49 p.m . Saturday, Pomeroy
·Nursing and Rehabilitation Center,"
Aorence Henegar, VMII;
10 p.m. Sunday, Pomeroy' Nurs-'
ing and Rehabilitation Center,
William Kimes, PVIJ. ·•
''
TUPPERS PLAINS
4:28a.m. Saturday, volunteer ·
fire department to Arbaugh Sl!ee!,
Buclab Zumbach residence. smoke:
odor.
•

Now Open
SPRING SEASON
• Pansy •Vida
• Broccoli • Cabbage
• Cauliflower
Cold Weather Plants

PUCO delays ·
(Continued from Page I)
exchange of Citizens Telecommunications of West Virginia. The
information is to be in the hands of
PUCO by April!?.
,.
In considering extended area
service requests, the commission
examines a number of factors,
including calling rates, cost factors,
and customers' ability to meet their
day-to-day calling needs within
their local exchange, the release
said.

KAREN'S
GREENHOUSE
Hours: M·F 9·5
Sat. 9·4 &amp; Sun.' t -4
3 1/2 miles past Southern
High School St. Rt. 124,
Racine, Ohio 614·949·2682

You can make sensible decisions now, free from
pressure and confusion . You 'call also determine choices
and fix costs by the prearranging or preplanning of your
own funeral or that of a loved one. If you are interested .
in the choices of prearranging please contact the:

-

St'lttl~ht - \lucke'l .- 'Rough

*J.utte'lttl_cf{ome
Ravenswood, WV • (304) 273-2152
Preneed • Atneed ·Pod need
Locally Owned &amp; Operated w/Complete Service At 01\!! Location

Dissolutions given

NOTICE

.

We regret that the Blue Streak Cab Co., will cease operation March 31, i995.
We have served .t he Community since July of 1985. We feel we have been an asset
and found the service beirig greatly appreciated.by the seniors, disabled and .the general
public .
·
· ~ . .
'
·
Due to budget cuts by the ODOT our area of operation was drastically reduced.
Guide lines with ADA were also a major issue. Being unable to reach a workable
agreement with ODOT, Blue Streak Cab Co. was lef1 with no other option than to close .
We wish to thank all of our customers for their support and ·concern. We also wish to
thank the Village of Middleport for administering the subsidy. Also many thanks to
F~uth 's Pharmacy, Senio~ Citiz~ns Center, Vau?hans, C ~ K Markel, a[ld McCullough &amp;
R1ffle Drug Store fot dtspensmg tokens. Thts they dtd as a service and received no
remuneration.
Any comment, or concerns should be directed to the
Ohio D.epartment of Transportation

•

K·mart ................................"....11 711

Lands End ...............- ............17 lf8
Limited Int.............................IS Jf8
Multimedia Int ......................38 518
Point Bancorp ..........................--19

Rockwell ................................39 518
Robbins &amp; Myers.........- ........ -~21
Royal Dutch·.......................... 115 5f8
Shoney's Inc.........~ .................10 518
Star Bank ........................ -.... A1111
·wendy lnt'l. ................................. 16
Worthington lnd ..........., ... _,:!O 3/4

_

__,_..

25 South Front Street
Columbus, Ohio 43216-0899
Attn: Mr. Brent Harris

·stock repqrb are the 10:30 ~.m.
quotes provided · by Ad vest of
Gulllpolls.
.I

)

'

...

'
Think about
this. By prearranging, you can make .
arrangements that might be difficult otherwise, and at
the same time avoid I he differences of opinion among
members of your family.
.

PQMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

Dissolutions granted in the
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court or Judge Fred W. Crow Ill
include Dorothy Alma Darst and
Richard Douglas Darst, Feb. 28;
and Jeremy J. Lawrence and Tracy
N. Lawrence, March 6.

.

By nature, we tend to put things off, but, by taking time .
to plan ahead, you can bring peace of mind to your
family at one of their most difficult times.
·

Discharges March fO - Pabicia Gould, Mary Lang, Vytice Sellers, !'lsie Delawder, Edna Logan,
Sharon Newell, Nancy Evans,
Andrew Stump, Brooklyn Moore,
James Connett, Mrs. David Kisor
and son, Alma Wilson, Max Rus-.
U
se Births _ . Mr. and Mrs. Daniel~. 106 Buttemuf.~ve. Ponieroy. OH
Hill, son, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
(614) 992-6454.
Shane Sayre, daughter, Rutland.
(800) 433-6203
par~er~~vit, William Eari Backus,
Dlsch~rges March II - Cardeceased, to Virginia Alberta olyn Berry, Carolenda ~waney,
Backus, Middleport parcels;

'

MOUNT VERNON - Charles j
By The Associated Prea
Four people died in separate L. McKenzie. 80, of Mount Ver- •
accidents across Ohio over the non, in a two-car collision on Ohio '
weekend, the State Highway Patrol 3 in Knox County.
SATURDAY
said today. '
HAMIL
TON - Eddie Miller~
The patrol counted weekend
l!afflc deaths from 6 p.m. Friday 37, of Middletown, .driver in a one-~
vehicle accident on Ohio 744 inthrough Sunday.
CJ
Tbe dead:
~
Butler County.
URBANA- Curtis W. Call.-.
SUNDAY
42,
of Urbana, driver in a one-vebi-:
BUCYRUS -Jeffrey Carter,
cle
accident
on a Champaign Coun12, of Galion, in a single-car accity
road.
•••
dent on a Crawfotd County road.

Michael Huddleston, Carolyn
Delong, Rachel Bryan, Verne
Brown, Mrs. Daniel Hill and son.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. James
Eakins, daughter, Syracuse.
Discharges March 12 - Mrs.
Shane Sayre and daughter, Teresa
Eakins, Nicholas Hatfield .
(Published with permission)
"Say l,ovc With
Aowers From'"

i

Weekend accidents kill 4

Hospital neWS----VETERANS MEMORIAL
F 'd
d · ·
R
d
rt ay a mtsston aymon
Grady, Racine.
.
Friday discharge - Goldie
Reitmire, Racine.
Saturday admissions - none.
Saturday discharges - Harold
H
R .
ager. acme
Sunday admissions - · none.
Sunday discharges- none.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

t
and Meigs County Sheriff's!'
Department are Investigating this
incident.
!
"We believe the motive was~
robbery," l.eqtes said. "There was •
evidence to show be bad a lar$e :
sum of money on him earlier m :
evening, but it was not on him in •
the morning."
;
Durst, a Korean War veteran, •
bas no relatives nearby, Lentes
added . Durst bad no criminal i
recotd.
•
"He bad been at least one bar :
that evening," Lentes ~d. adding :
that no toxicology reports had l&gt;ce11 •
returned.
;

'.
•

.

�•

Tbe Daily S~~!.~fd

Sports
and Stewart
.to meet for first ti·me
·in IU-Mizzou clash_
.
-

-

By DOUG niCKER
'
· KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)Norm Stewan bas coacbed 84 more
games than Bobby Knight - and
lost rbem all
. Now, in one of those inttigulng
subplots that make the NCAA tournament one of the most delettable
entrees on the menu of sport,
Stormin' Norman (659·318) and
Indiana's most famous chairthrower (659-234) will finally
match coaching wits.
Missouri, No.8 seed in the West
. Regional, meets Knight's ninth. seeded Hoosiers at Boise, Idaho, on
Friday.
.
"We've never played, all these
years," said Stewart, the dean of
Big Eight coaches. "Bobby and I
l8llred about it seven or eight years
ago and I thought at one time we
bad it set. Something happened,
and it just never came about."
Elsewhere, it seemed obvious
ihat some schools bave been listening to messages sent by the seleclion committee and some have not.
Several mid-level conferences who
nonnally whine about getting only
their automatic entry did better this
. lime.
·&gt; Extra bids went to the West
the Metro Atlantic and the
: Mid-American conferences, while
·· Jeft out in the cold were such tradi· tional programs from big-time
leagues as Georgia Tech (18-12)
and Iowa (19-11).
"Some of these schools made
an attempt to improve their sdledule," said Bob Frederick, the seleclion comrnitlllll cbairman.
Georgia Tecb, in addition to its .
always-tough ACC slate, scheduled
- Western Carolina, East. Carolina,
Lafayette and Furman - not exactJy a murderers' row.
.
"We've tried to encourage
(schools) to improve their scbedules, ". Frederick said. "There are
some larger schools in some of the
bigger conferences tbat don't neeessarily do tha~ and have been 'burt
by that. But I lhink some of them
got the message."
· When action srarts in fust-round
sites around the country Thursday
. and Friday, chances seem slight
that a No. 16 seed will knock off a
:No. 1 seed for the first time since
: the bracket opanded to 64 teams
: in 1985.
Seeded No. 1 is UCLA in the
:west, Kansas in the Midwest, 'Ken: tucky in the Southeast and, in a bW
·of a surprise, Walce Forest in the
:East. Drawing UCLA (25-2),
:wbicb enters the tourney. ranked
.·No. I .in The Associated ~s poll

::coast.

., ....

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

: NEW YORK (AP) - The pairjogs for rust round games in the
·1995 NIT toUrnament with overall
record, game times 'and television
coverage if any:
Wednesday
, Marquette. (17.·11) at Auburn
(16-12), 7 p.m.
..
· Coppin State (20-9) at S.t.
Joseph's (17-11), 7 p.m.
Seton Hall (16-13) at Canisius
(18·12), 7:30p.m.
Miami, Fla. (15-12) at Penn
State (17-10), 7:30p.m. (ESPN)
DePaul (17-10) at Iowa (19-H),
9:30p.m. (ESPN)
Colorado (15·12) at New Mexico · State (23-9), 10:30 p.m.
(ESPN2)
TeXas Tecb (20-9) at Washington State (16-11),12 a.m. (ESPN)

By RONALD BLUM •
NEW YORK (AP) - Negotia·
tors for baseball owners meet this
afternoon in Lake Buena Vista,
Fla, to prepare a "best offer" that
theY:ll present to players on Tuesday or Wednesday.
Union head Donald Fehr said
Sunday be wasn't sure w~en bargaining would begin, and there was
talk of a possible players' meeting
Tuesday ·night in Tampa, Fla. In
addition, union officials and management lawyers may have to go to
Washington on Tuesday to· meet
wilb Fred Feinstein, the general
counsel of the National Labor
Relations Board.
Tbe NLRB is expected to tell
players and owners this week,
probably Tuesday, bow it will rule
on the union's unfair labor practice

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

nlla

EAST

.

for the fll'St time since John Wood.
en's last national championship
season in 1975, is florida International.
·

9 7':;

··--...

.....

At 11-18, the Golden Panthers
of the Trans America Conference
,..........! - - I II; IU.
lj-MIB
bave the worst record of any tournament team since 1961.
That was dle'S311lll year Oregon,
an at-large entry from the Pac-10,
made its last tournament appear~
_.~
~
ance. Besides Florida International,
tournament first-timers include
Mount Sl. · Mary' s, Colgate,
NII IIONA L
Nicholls State and Gonzaga.
M.I P I ON
CH
Anybody whose team got left
out canoot accuse tbe committee of
rushing things, Frederick declared.
"We bad over 100 teams that
were under consideration,'' said
die committee bead and director of
athletics at Kansas. "During the
course of the process, we took 63 .
secret ballots. We had 60 teams
with 20 or more wins and 20 with
19 wins. We worked very bard ....
"As late as I 0:30 last night we
looked at an additional 24 teams
..,.'IIIWI\ ,, , sa ; - . - - '
and tried to subject them to the
I--_; a 111,
•
same sautiny we subjected the otheiS to. We wanted to make sure we
didn't leave anybody out."
The 16 second-round winners
will drain into regionals at Kansas
City; Birmingham, Ala.; East
-~-Rutherford, N.J., and Oakland,
Calif.
Fi:ederick will crown the NCAA
champion in Seattle the night of
April 3.
He and another member, Ken·
Litke asks,
tucky athletic director C.M. Newton, might be accused of conflict of
interest. While Frederick's Kansas
team was made a .No . I seed
despite losing to -Iowa-State in the By JIM LITKE
His appearances with the Scotts- that meetS my slalldal'ds."
retreat trom the batter's box.
semifinals of the Big Eight tourna- AP Sport.. Writer ·
dale Scorpions kept the Arizona
These same people note that
Considering Jordan's retirement
ment, Newton's Wildcats were
Hard to believe, but the most Fall League in existenCe, producing · track record, not eve!)ibody bougbt labor dispute or not, Jordan might
drawing top seed in the Southeast.
·provocative story in sports at this 80 percent of the crowds in the six- into the statement at face value..
have returned to the White Sox
By commfttee tradi lion, both time last year was whetber Michael team circuit and providing the
One SchQol of thought bad Jor. camp this weekend and played in .
men left the room when their teams Jordan was going to embarrass opportunity for a.who-knows-bow· dan ·bailing out of baseball just minor league spring-training games :
were considered.
baseball. As it turned ou~ baseball many of his cohorts to develop about the time be came to the real· - with lhe union's OK - by the:
Kentucky plays Mount St. proved more than capable of major league skills.
ization be' d never make the majoiS following weekend. According to ·
Mary's of-Maryland (17-12), while embarrassing itself.
But even before last week, Jor- on merit. The thinking goes that that scenario, rather tllan simply
Kansas takes on Colgate (17 -12)
And Mike? He went AW.OL dan was tired of being squeezed by Jordan, already 32 years old, knew admit be stunk, rather than risl\ his :
and Wake Forest, the only No : I from tb$! national pastime last the strike and increasingly wary of be wouldn't Jearn to track a big- reputation, Jordan took the .easy ·
seed without a national cbampi· . week, in plenty of time to find the attention. In his statement, Jor- league curve in time, catch up to a way out and blamed somebody :
onship, plays North Carolina A&amp;T another game to "embarrass" and dan blamed the labor dispute for big-league fastball ever, or face a else.
:
(15·14), all on Thursday.
·
collect a whole new coterie of crit- making it "increasingly difficult to . big-league slider without his back
Although !be finger is pointed in .
.
'
The No. 2 seed in the East went . ics. Surprising, most of the Iieople continue my development at a rate foot tap-tapotapping an involuntary
(See LITKE on Page 5)
to Atlantic 10 champion Mas- he left behind are not among them.
"I give him a lot of credit," act.sacbusetrs (26-4). The second seed
in the Southeast was North Caroli· ing commissioner Sud Selig said ·
nil (24-5), while Arkansas (27-6) over the pbone Sunday night from
·got lhe No. 2 seed in the Midwest. his home in Milwaukee. "Not
Connecticut (26-4), which lost the many people have the courage to
.
Big East title game to Villanova, tty and·do what he did.
"I'm just sorry it didn't work
will travel to the West regional as
out," Selig added. "I thought it
the. No. 2 seed.
was a real tribute to our game that
the greatest basketball player in
history wanted to be a baseball
player."
I
Exactly when, and why, Jordan
Thursday
George Washington (18-13) at quit wanting to be a baseball player
bas become the topic of some
OHIO (23-9), 7l'.m. .
.
debate.
St . Jo!lq's (14-13) at South
It certainly wasn't for want of
Florida (16-11), 7:30p.m.
attention
or ego-stroking. His
College of Charleston (23·5) at ·
games
with
the White Sox' DouProvidence(l6-12), 7:30p.m.
ble·
A
affiliate,
the Birmingham
s'outhem Mississippi (17-12) at
Barons,
accounted
for nearly 40
St. Blinaventure (17-12), 7:30p.m.
percent
of
all
attendance
in the 10· Georgia (18-9) at Nebraska (17team
Southern
League
last
season.
13), 8:05 p.m.
Eastern Michigan (20-9) at
Bradley (19-9), 8:05p.m.
lcdwni.llrml:lll
Illinois State (19-12) at Utah
State (21-7), 9:05p.m.

a..,.....,

-.

....

.........

SOUTHEAST

-..,

_,..,

........

By MIKE HARRIS
HAMPTON, Ga. (AP)- The
only mystery for Jeff Gordon in the;
Purolator 500 was where the beck
that dam vibration was coming
from.
Gordon's victory two weeks
earlier at Rocldngbam was almost
as convincing as Sooday's win,' and ·
it too was accompanied by the
mystery vibration.
"It's the kind of vibration we
don't know what it is," Gordon
said. "After Rockingham, the guys
tore the car down looking at every-

WEST

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atl•tk Dl.blon

14

.174

r.cs.

.Gl

New Yort ..............39
New Jersey ............25
Boa1oo ... ,. ............... 24

21
TI
37

.650
.403
.393

I
23
23.5

M;ami ................... 23 38
PI!Hodelpb;a ...........l7 44
Washington ........... .J6 44

.377
.279

24.l
JO.l

.267

31

22
23
26

.639
.617
.S74

30

.SOl

4
8

31 .500
31 .3n
Mllwaulcee ............. 23 39 .371

1.5
t6
16.l

~&gt;e~ro;c .................. :.23

-

"

,-.

.6C&gt;lf94,
0646-6772.
leiiOI'It Elrctronlce

Ccr~OD

1.5

L

r.cs.
.742

.Gl

18

.69S
.600

3.S
9
16.l
22
29

~

Utah .. :. ................... 46 16

San Antonio ...........41
Houston ................. 36
Den,.,. ................... 29
. Dallu ..................... 22
Minnesoca ...... :....-.•. 11"

parties' collective bargain in~
agreement." That case involved
WllF, a radio and television Ita·
lion in Harrisburg, Pa., and the
National Association of Broadcast
Employees and Technicians.
In addition, Marvin Powell's
case against the NFL and Buck
Williams' case against the NBA
Jed to U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals decisions that the terms
and conditions of expired 'labor
agreements remain in effect until
some point after an impasse in bar•
gaining -which hasn' t occurred
yet
..
That means owners must hope
the NLRB agrees both with irs contention that those decisions apply
only to mandatory subjects and tbat
salary arbitration and individual
bargaining aren't mandatory sub'
jects.

steering wheel vibration
.

considered by many NASCAR's win his second race in four stans Schrader's crash brought out that·
Labonte got within abOut three
newest SUJll:ISiar in only his third this season and the fourth of his yellow flag on lap 300 after 147
or four car-lengths with five laps to
full season, bad plenty of time to blossoming career. ''I'd catch consecutive laps of green-flag racgo, but never got any closer.
think about the shake in his steer- myself looking around and thinking ing.
.
ing wheel and .where it was coming about other things and I'd shake
Tbey all pitted for four tires and
"With about three laps to go, 1
my bead and say, 'No, keep focus· the green flag waved again on lap gave it all I could," Labonte said.
from.
After taking the lead from Dale ing!tt
306. Terry Labonte managed to get "We just ran out of momentum."
The challenge from Labonte · past his brother for second place
Earnhardt for the fll'St time on lap
Gordon won the dash to die fin··
63, Gordon led 250 of the last 266 came in the final 23 laps, following two laps later, but the younger ish line by 0.19-seconds, averaging
ttips around the 1.522-mile Atlanta the ftfth and last caution flag of the Labonte, who also finished second 150 . 115 mph as he .earned
Motcr Speedway O¥al.
fast race.
to Gordon two weeks ago at Rock- $104,950.
"For most of the race, the car
Bobby and his older brother ingham, regained the runner·up
Terry Labonte, who won a week
was just on a rail," Gordon said Terry Labonte, as well a~ Earn- spot on lap 314 and set sail in pur- earlier at Richmond, fmished !bird,
'after holding off a surprising late · hardt, were the only other dr.ivers suit of the seemingly uncatcbable followed by Winston Cup point
challenge from Bobby Labonte to on the lead lap by the time Kenny Gordon.
leader Earnhardt.

24
32
36
-4S

.47l
.379
.274

Seoltle ....................41

L.A. Latm ............ 37

19
23
27
30
4t
SO

Portllllld ................. 33
Sacrarneoto ............ 30
O&lt;&gt;lden Slale ..........t9
L.A:Oippen .........13
x-clioched playoff benh ·

.613
.617
.550
.SOO
.317
.206

17. Otlaboma ...............2J-8
18. MissiSsippi St. ........2~7

13
10
9

929
154

14
II

736
700
638

19
12
18

497

16

492·

15
22
306 . 20
248
23
220
24
202
17
194
103 21
~

Soulhwnl Conference
a.. .plonthlp
Teus 107, TelU Tech 104 (01')
Southwellern Alhklle Conlennre

SemlRnllla
Mill. Valley St. 70, Jacbon St. ~8
Tea.u Southern tOO. OramblineSt. 63

Buvetcreek 59, Cia. FJckr !i!i
Cio. Oai Hil1179, Nonhrmot 63
Cle. H~ll 81, Cle. Glenville 81
Dublin 68, Franklin Hll. 49
£\lei id 60, Mentor S6
Ketterina FainwDl 84, Cia. LaSalle 76
Lorain Sr. 43, Latewood 40
Muafleld Sr. 65, Elida !i7
M111i\lon Jacbon SO, Canl.on McK!aley49
Sprioa. North 74, Cin. Sycamcte .58
Tot. St. frucil St. Tol. Clllholic 48
W,adllwMh SS, Mcdlaa43
WarrenHardhaa71, Youna.R•yen66 .
Waterville N. ~.Galloway We~tland
ll
Zanesville S4, Marietta 47

Well:em Alhlelk: Conferenre

_
DlwWon D
Canfield 74, Poland 55
Cle. VA-SI 91, Cle. Bcaedictloe !ill

O.nplonllhlp

U111167, llawaill4

Sunday's

(OT)

--·

Cl~e6l,Norwalkti.l

regular-ieuon ac:Uon

Fl.lfleaa til, Akron Buchtel 61
Ofeenfield 13, Rock Hill.SO
lro11ton 10, New ~ain11ton 73
Olmated Falls 56. Bay 43
Ot.tawa-Giandorf S6, R011ford 46
Twillsbw-a70, Nordonia 61

Indiana II 0, Iawa79
Purdue 73, Mldliaaa 67

ToumamoDII
Allanllc Coat Conrercnee
Ch ...plonohlp
Wake Forcat 12. Nonh Carolina 10

Oh•ulonm
Aurora 64, Olanel 63
Orrville 63, Norwayne .54

(OT)

111 E•t Cml'ereftC'e
Ch .. ,loothljo
VilluoVI 04, Connecticut 71

Dl'fl1lon IV
(OT)

--·

Bla Wal C011rerenee
.
a.-plonthlp
Lona Beach St. 16, Nevada 69 (at')

•

a.-ploollhlp
Louisville 78, Souther&amp; Miu. 64 ~

F•Wal

NCAA DIY. D Gnat Lalcc1 Rcponal
a.-plooohlp
S. Indiana 102, N'. Kentucty 94

UCLA 94, OrctOII. 78
WuhingtOI'I Sl. 92, Cal!lomia 19

ntrdpl~ee

QulllC)' III,Ky.

Tournaments ·

New Hlfi1iohlre Coli. 14. Pbllodelphla
Tex.lile 62

'

Q

Bl1 Eat Coid'erence .
Se•lllaab

Connecticut 18, Oeorectown 11
Villanova 90, Providence 75
Bl1 EIB:ht Conferenn
Semtnn811

Tuesday's games

Iowa St. 80, Kan~a~ 72 (OT)
Otlahoma SL 74, Oklahoma 58

Otlcago at WuhinJtonh, 7:)0 p.m
lJlah at Orludo, 7:30p.m.

Bl1 SkJ Conference

Denver at New Yort. I p.m.
OlarloUe at Mi!wauku, 8:~0 p.m.
Minneaot.a at Sao Antollio, 8:30p.m
Detroit at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
Miani at Portlud,' IO p.m
Bo14111. at Seattle, tO p.m.
Dalla&amp; al Sacranx:nto. 10:30 p.m

Ch . . plonohlp
Weber St. 8-4. Montana 62
Bit W~ Canrennu
Sollftnab

NCAA Di...tllo• D
Noro• Coab'al Realonol-lhlrd ,...,..
Mominplde.,lowa 15, Fort Hlya St., ·
Kan. 82
Great Laktt-lhlrd round
S. lndiana lOl, N. Keotucty·9-4
SGUIIM:ulern Conf'erenc:c

•

a.-plonohlp

'Keoouc:&lt;y 9l. ArWI• 93 (0'0
Southwultrn Atlaktlc Confcrenu
. CharniNolllhlp
.
Teua Southera1!i, Min. Valley St. 6:Z

Ohio B.S. boys' scores
Saturday's tournaments

AI Alhtnl
Carrilridge (14·9) VI. Steubenville (ll-

10), r ....c~o 1 , 6'1 s P·"'
Orecnfield McCiai11 07·6) va. Iro nton
(13-9). Tucoday. 8 p.m.
Championship Friday, 7:30p.m.
AI Akron
Canfield (21-2) vs. Navarre Fairleu
(20-4), Tuesday, 6:IS p.m.
Cleveland Villa Angela-St. J01eph (185) va . Twin1bura; Ch1mberllo (11 -2 ),
Tueada_y, 8~
Champi. .ip Friday, 7:30p.m.

,.
}

AI D•yton

Clocinnati Purce ll -Marian (17-7) VI.
tCincinnaLI McNicholu (13·9), Tuead~:y.
6'1l p.m
Ketterina Alter (14-9) n Columbus
St Ch1rlea (lb-3), Tuesday, 8 p.m.
. Champiooihip Saturday, 5 p.m
Dlvblon ffi·al Athtnl
Lore City Buckeye .Trail (19-5) n .
Minford (22- 1), Wednesday,6:15 p.m
Whce:lel'lbura (20-3) VI , Bloom-Car-

roll (19-4). Wednesday, I p.m.
Championship Saturd1y, 4 p.m

Regional palriDgs
DIYIIIon l·at Bowllna Green
DubliD {11~7) va. Wcllervllle Norlh
(21·3), Tuetdoy, 7 p.m.
Toledo St. Francia (18-S) VI . MIDIfield SeDior (11·,), Wedne&amp;day, 7 p.m.
Champlonlhip Saturday. 7:30p .m.
At Canton
WarreD Hardin&amp; (19·4) VI. Wadlworlh

(20·3), Tuetcloy, 7 p.m.
Zlne.ville (2l-0) va. Mmilloo l.ctSOD·(20-3), Wednmday,7 p.m,
' Champlouhip Saturday, 7:30p .m.
Alc.1enl..ad
LoraiD Senior (17·6) va. Euclid (I !i -7),

Wed,..day,6,1l p.m.
hrma Valley Forae (13·11) 'II. Cleveland llelllhll (22·1). Wedoeocloy , 8 p.m.
Championship S.t\lrday, 7:30p .m.
AI DaJf:on

Cluclaoati ~Hilla (2 1· 2) VI. Sprlnlfield North (22-1), Friday, 6: I~ p.m.
Xenia Beava-creek (10 · 3) vs. Kellerina Fairmont (19-4), Friday. 8 p.m.
Cha.mpiorahip Sahl'day, 8 p.m.
Dl...t•to. D-at Toledo
Sunbury Bl1 Walout (lS.S) VI . Ot·
ti'Na·G iaodorf (14-10), Tue1d1y, 6:30
p.m.
Oll!lllod F~ll (17-6) " · Clyde (19·l).
Tuesday, 8:1S P:m.

Cincianlll North Calleae Hill (22·1)
va. GermiDtown Valley View (19-2),
Wedlielday, 6:15p.m.
Columbu1 Har11ey (19 · ~) va . Ci ncln·
nati Mariemoo'l (17 ·6), Wodne1day, I
p.m.
Championshjp Saturday, 2 p.m
AI C•loo

Newton Fall• (14·9) v1. Orrville (203). WedllCICiay. 6; ll p.m.
. Aurora (22-1) n. Younestown
MooDey (15-8), Wedne~dly, 8 p.m.
Ctwnpionshlp San.-day, 4 p.m
At Toledo

Delta (21·2» va. Medina HiJhland (13· ·

10), Wedne~day , 6 : 30p . m.

Coldwater (I !il-4) VI. Ontario .(19·4),
Wedncsd•r· us p.m.
OlalqJaoDihip Saturday, 4 p.m.
JH.,blon JV.at D•Jf:on
Ruaia (11-6) va. Union City Miu iui·
oawa Valley (18·6), Thursday, 6:15p.m.
Spriosfield Catholic Central (19-4) n
Fon Lorlrnie (19-4). Thuncloy.l p.m.
LbiJJ1li0111hip Saturday, II a.m.

AI Colionbu

PoNmouth BUt (20-3} vs. Centetbilrg

(22-2), 1bundly,6:1Sp .m.
Creal line (ll· II) n , Delpho1 St.
lollu'• (1· 14), Thuitday, I p.m.
OlUQiioDihip SllUiday, noon
AI Toledo
Fayene (20-3) va. ouovlll~ (10 -14),
Thund•y. 6:30p.m.
Holaate (184) v1 . Findlay Liberty·
Benton (l3-0), Th\Dday, 1: IS p.m.
CbiJil)louhJp SIDltday, DOOD
At Oanlon
New Pltiladelphi• TuiCifawu Catholic
(19-S) va. Southioalon 01alk.er (19-4),
Thunday, 6: IS p.m.
Dalton {20-3) va. Columbiana (21 -2).
Thundly, I p.m.
Olllf1)ioDihip Saturday, noon

.

Ohio B.S. girls' scores
Saturday's regional finals
rn.,lllon 1D
AkrOn St.V·SI.M 62 , Brookfield 34

Kenton Ridge 89 . Venaillet 8.5

. Sherwood Fairview 62. Mq•etta )3
Unioto 46, Heath 44

Dl•l.lo,.IV
Allen E. ~4. Ottoville 52
Danville46.BlufRoa40
E. Canlon 63, Za.neaville ROICICIU.a S7
Jack:aon Center S!l, S. Chari eaton
Southeutem 49

State tournament palriDga
DI•IMni-ThundiJ
.
Xenia Beavercreek (26·0) VI . Canloll
McKinley (24·2). 7 p.m.
.
Ul;ewood (ll·O) vo. Pkkerio&amp;IOp (26·
1). 9 p.m.
oo.o.~on

n.,........,,

Elida (24-0) va. Garfield Hta. Trilllty

(26-0), 2 p.m.

MillenburJ W. llolrmt (1~1) v.. Cin.
Bacon (26-0), 4 p.m.

R~aer

Dlwll&lt;iOh lll-frlcby
Sherwood Fairview (26-0) "'· SPina- •
field Kenton Ridae (26·0), 7 p.m.
· Cbillicothe Unloro (22-4) va. Akron St.
Vincent-St. M.-y (2.S- 1), 9 p.m

'

.
Dlwbion IV-Frkl111
Lafayette Atlera East (20-3) ¥1. Eut
Caatoo QS..O),:! p.m.
Danville (2S ·O) va. Jacbon Center
(26 -0), 4 p:m.

Hockey
Tonight' a gamts
Montreal a! Piuabura,h. 7:30p .m.
Wuhln8ton at Tampa Day, 7:)0 p.m.
Loll Anaelea at Toronto , 1:30 p.m
Chicaao at Dallu, 8:30p.m.

LE~AL NOTICE
The P~blic Util ities Commission of
.. Ohio has set for public hearing _Case
No . 94·t01 ·El·EFC, lo reiliew 111e
fuel procurement praCtices and poli·
· cies of Ohio Power Company, 111e operation of hs Electric Fuel Component
and related maners. This healing is
scheduled to begin at 111e Commis·
sion ot11ces at 10:00 a.m. on March
14, 1995.
All in1erested parties wilt be given an
opportunity to be heard. Further in·
formation may be obtained by con·
tacling the Commission at 180 East
Broad Slreet, Columbus . Ohio.
43266·0573.

Lona Beach SL 81, New Me•ico St. 79
Nevada 811. UC Irvine 69

AP Top 25 college poll
The top 2~ !Cam~ in The AsiOCIIted
Prcu' rmal colle~e butelball poll, wilh
rirst-place votu aa parenlhcaea:, record$
through M.-ch 12, total pointa bued 011
25 poinll ror a tint-place vote lhrouah
one point (or a 2.5th-place volt., aod previ·
tNI rallkina:

......
l'!l.lt:Hk

1. UCLA (64) ...:.......... 25·2 I ,624

We~leyaol04

NCAA Dimion D Norlhc•l Rflloh.J
Third round

Amerlt• Welt Conterenee
Chompl .....lp
s. Utah 83, CS N'onhridBC 82

Howton at Philadelphia, 7:30p.m

46
I

Metro Alhlelk Contcrcnee

ArizoaaSt. 103, Amona 98 (2 &lt;JJ)
Orcaoa SL 13, Southern Cal 81 (OT)
SlaDford 74, Wuhington 65

AllU.tk Cout Conl'ttena
Semlllnals
North Carolina 97, Maryland 92 (01)
Wake Foreat 77, Viralnia 68

.

CreatliDe 70, s. Ceattal63
Delpho1 St: John'• ti8, St. Henry 67
F1yctte 45, Edgertoa 41 (OJ')
Hoii!OieliO, Or.aoo Slrioch 57 (01)
Liberty-Benton 16. Old Pon 62
Ottoville Sl, LiDCOlnvtew 51
Portsmouth £ . 60, IM:Iburl Fairfield

Oklahoma St. 6l,lowi St. 53

Ouunpionlh1p Friday, 7:30p.m.

AI D•yton

. Centetbura 84, Worthington Chr. II

Bla fJaht Conference

Illiooil82, Ohio St . 63
Michlpn St. 91, Wllconsla 7l

Tonight's games

.lU

Southlu• Conference
a..,.plonlhlp
Nicholls Sl98, NE Loulilana &amp;7

1,123
1,095
916
912

E•l .
·PenaSL69,MliiDC101160

Sunday's scores

fum

B
6

regular....,uon •ctlon

WashinJI:on atctwlone. 7:30p.m.
· Houitoo at AUanll, 8 p.m.
lndi111111 at L.A. Laken, 10:30 p.m
Dallas 11 Golden State, 10:30 p.m.

COME AS YOU ARE!! WE NEED YOUR OPINION ABOUT
THE.DIRECTION OF OUR COMMUNITY AND WHAT DOES
OUR COMMUNITY STAND FOR. YOUR PRESENCE IS NEEDED!! DONtT BE MISLED "" YOUR OPINION DOES
COUNT, IF YOU WANT IT TO!! .

l.lS6

·

Dl'fhloal

Ch. . plonllhiF

Orlando 110, San Antonio 104
CLEVELAND 92, Philadelphia 72
Denver 109, Milwaukee 93
Atlanta 104, Bmton 98
l'onla!ld t02. Mio""oll II
Utah 96. Mlun186
Sacramento lOS, L.A. Oippcn 93
Seattle 134, Detroit 94 ·
Go,ldea State 124, ~oen ! x 117 (aT)

AT 7:00P.M.

Soulheutern Co.ruence
Stmlnnab
Atlwi.IBI &amp;.1 , Alabama S8
Kentucky 86, Aorida 72

Saturday'•

4
I
12
IS
l6
33.5 ·

Washington 110, New Jcney 102
Charlonel04, MWnl95
Sconle 96, N.W York 14
L.A. Latrn 101, Chicqp lOS
Houlton 109, Dallu 102

MARCH 14TH, 1995

3
7
4
2
l

NCAA Division I
men's scores

Saturday•• seores

'.

1,552
l.·t13
1,3(7
I,:W.
l,lll

Other nul•l•l 'fOtuz Oreaoa 99,
Tnaa 7.5, Stanrord 44, T\llaa 42,
CINCINNATI 36, Memphil 32. IDdiua
22, Aorida 16, Pun 12, 'Gt«aia Tech 10,
SL Louia 10, New Mexico St. 7, XAVIER
(OIUO) 7, Illinoia 6, Ball St. !i, Providence 4, S. Illioola 4, Utah St. 3, Minaeaola 3•. Tulaae 2, Santa Clara 2,
Bri&amp;ham Ywna 1, Coli. or Charleston l,
Lona Beach St. I, Mmhattan 1, Nicholls
SLl.

P•Uie DIYbloa
Phoeaix .................. 46 16 .742

WHEN:

I

· Grul Mldwell. Confennre
Ch.mplon.Wp
Cincinnati 67, St. Lou.ia 65
Metro Alhldk Confereace
S.:intnn~~U

..

Loulavillc &amp;l, Tuhme 80 (0'0
Southern Miu.
N.C. O.~tkltte S6

60:

MJd· Amulcan ConrercACc
Champlonlhlp

We come

·Ball St. 77, E. MLchl&amp;an 70

:Litke...

(Continued from Page 4)
his direction, Selig thinks Jordan ·an anticipauon exceeded perhaps
only by Muhammad Ali's comewas telling the truth.
· "I'm sorry that the labor dispu~e back after a tbree·year absence .
influenced his thinking to go at thts from boxing in the late 1960s. He
j&gt;oint,'.' he said, "but I certainly bas much to live up to.
Incredibly, ''Jordan II" won't
understand it.
.
"He's a guy who's not afraid to be the only major sequel around. In
fail- but that's not the only· !bing a few weeks, Mike Tyson wiU walk
'that makes him special. There are out of an Indiana prison a free man
some people who aren. t afraid to and be a very, very fierce one when
.fail, but they'te usually afraid to be slips between tbe ropes of a
boxing ring a few weeks after that.
:Succeed," Selig said.
Things ¥C going to get interest· • "From what I saw, he was not
ing .
·
. ·
. :afraid of either."
The rest of us should find out
1ometime in the next few weeks.
DOWNING" CHILDS
We know Jordan's s1andards well
.in advance. And judging anyone by
MULLEN MUSSEl
·(bose Jordan especially, suggests
'be h~s mucb more to Jose than
INSUUN(E

SPONSORED BY
r

'·

IT IS TIME TO ASK, "NOT WHAT THE COMMUNITY CAN
DO FOR ME, ·BUT WHAT . CAN I DO fOR MY COM·
MUNITY??n IT IS ·TIME FOR CHANGE.

IS YOOR COMMOHITY WOIUH
MAKIHG BE II ER?
TELL O·S flliD VOTEIII

gain.

.

' Baseball was an expenment.
Basketball is a calculated risk. Our
love for sequels is matched only by
our disappointmC~I when they f:UI
short of the origmal. And wb1le
' there is no good time to put one's
Jegacy on the line, the chance to
see Jordao ·cto so bas lsiven way to

-

-~-t

.:
,

Owners claim their actions were
justified because they say salary
arbitration and individual contract
negotiations aren't mandat&lt;ry subjects of bargaining under tbe
National Labor Relations Act .
Players claim owners illegally
changed the terms and conditions

2. Keotuck)' (l).............~l- 4
J. Wake Foreat ..............2~S
4. North CaroliDB ..........24-S
l . Kansas ......................23-l
6. ArWII• ..................27·6
1. Muaachwelll ........ ., .26-4
8. Canntd:icut. ..............lS-4
. 9. Villaoova ................. .2S-7
10. M~land .. ......... .....24-7
II. M;ctUpa So ............22·S
12. Purdue. ....................24-6
13. Virginia ...................22·1
14. OtlahoiJJO Sl... ........23-9
15. Arizooa ...................2).7
16. Arizona SL ............. .22-8
19. Ull&gt;h ........................27·5
20. Alabamo .................22-9
21. W. Kentucky ...........26-3
22. Georaetown ............ 19-9
23.Miuouri .. :............... l9-8
24.1owa.St. ................ :22·10
2l. SYJIICIIIO ............; .... 19-9

Mldw•l l)t.,Won

fum

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

W. VIRGINIA·

~

WFSTERN CONFERENCE

THE AMERICAN LEGION HALL

THE VISIONQUEST 2005
CITIZENS IN ACTION
STEERING COMMinEE

L

Centrai 'Dk'-'o•

Charlotte ................ 39
locUona ................... 37
CLEVELAND ....... 3S
Atlanla ................... 31
Chlcqo .................. 31

WHERE:

PHll..AOELPHIA (AP) - The "Philadelphia just came out flat.
best way for the Cleveland Cava- We started out by playing really
'Jiers to snap a losiiig-s~~tlllcappelil'S good defense, which-is what we
bad planned. We wanted to contain
to b6 to visit Philadelphia
Dana
Barros (seven points) which
Tbe Cavaliers, wbo bad lost two
we
did,
and we got off to a real
straight and six of their last seven,
good
start."
·
placed six players in double figures
Philadelphia
coach
John
Lucas,
Sunday en route to a 92-72 victory
who saw his team Jose its fourth
over the Philadelphia 76eiS.
Cleveland won its eighth straight and 12th in 15 outings,
straight at the Spectrum and 16th in said: ''Through the course of the
17 meetings with Philadelphia . •jrear, you're going to have games
This was die ninth time this season .'like·this. We finally came back and
.the Cavaliers, the top defensive · did some things late, but basically,
team in the league, held an oppo- we were aw,ful.
nent under 80 points.
''That was probably the best we
have played in a couple of weeks,"
said Cleveland coach Mike FratelCOUNTY MAPS
lo. "They bad a tough time shootSTATE BOOK
.IN
ing the ball and I don't know if it
A book containing aU ol Weot
was extra good defense .or just Virginia 'a ~ county mapa la av..U.ble.
tough luck on their part."
• . Printed on ·16122 inch double apread
· Tbe Cavs jumped out to a 19-10 pag... eaclt county baa a separate mop.
fmt ,quarter Jeoo and built a 49-2,7 The book containa 144 pacu.
The otate'o 34,242 mile• ol roada are
halftime advantage. It was
Philadelphia's lowest-scoring half ahown in detail. Town1, citiea aad
villagu are indued and located, and
of the season.
there ill muclt addilion.al information. To
"We jumped out to a really order
WMt VircinJa County Map book,
· good start, keyed by the defense," send ll4.85 lprice lncludea delivery).
said Danny Ferry, one of three VISA and MuterCard accepted.
CavalieiS with 14 PQiots. ''I think
Make cheeks payable to
CouDty Map•
defense set lhe key fdr us today arid
&amp;21 Putia Plaee
I thought we ,ut together a great
Lyodop Statioo, WI 53944
defensive effort.''
. 16081 666-3331
Tyrone Hill, who bad 12 poinrs
·Other otateo ovailable; AR. FL. IN,
and seven rebOunds, added:
KY, Ml, NC, OH, PA, SC, and TN.
·. - .

.»:

a-Orlando ..............41

X.....

YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT

Cavaliers beat 76ers 92-72

today, but I didn't want to say anything because the car was running
so good," be added. "!·didn't say
anything for about 200 (of the 328)
laps. Tben I said, 'Hey guys, I've
got a little vibration again. Is there
anything I can do about it-? They
said no.'
"But, heck, every time the thing
vibrates we win, so I don't know
whether we need to ftx it or not."
Still, the 23-year-old Gordon,

NBAstand,ings

w .•

Chicago, lli.-A free offer
of special interest to those
who hear but do not understand words has been announced by Beltone. A
non-operating ll!.odel of one
of the smallest canal hearing aids in America today
. will be given absolutely
free to anyone requesting it.
It's yours for the asking,
so send for it now. It is not
a real hearing aid, but ·it
.. will show xou how tiny
hearing help can be.
These models are free, so
cail or write for yours now.
Benefits of hearing aids
vary by type and degree of
hearing loss, noise environment, accuracy of hearing
evaluation and proper fit.
Phone I 800-372-4343 or
send your name, date of
birth, address and phone ·
number today to Department 199.40Beltone Electro]lics, 420 I West Victoria
Street, Chicago, Ulinois

thing that they thought it could be
·and didn•t fmd anything.
"It start¢ up right away again

Ba sketb all

!!!DR·GEI

Friday
Montana (21·8) at Texas-EI
Paso (19-9), 9:35p.m.
Clemson (15-12) at Virginia
Tech (20-10), 7:30p.m.

SlandStill.

befom anJmpasse in .negotiations,
represcntatiY.e of the empil!yee~ to
The Supreme Court discussed meet at reasonable times and con·
aspects of this subject on Dec. 8. fer in good faith with respect to
1971, in Allied Chemical &amp;. Alkali wages, hours and other terms and
Workers of America, Local Union conditions or employment.''
No. 1, vs. Pittsbur~b Plate Glass
In Pittsburgh Plate Glass, the
Co., Chemical Divlston, et al.
court ruled "'a modification' is a
Tbe union claimed the company prohibited unfair labor practice
unilaterally changed the pension only·when it changes a term that is
rules for retired employees. The a mandatory rather than a pennis·
Supreme Court ruled that bargain· sive subject of bargaining."
The Supreme Court gave the
ing for retirees was a permissive,
NLRB
broad discretion to make
not mandatory, subject of bargain·
ing and allowed the company to factual determinations about
. mandatory subjects, saying "the
change lhe rules. ,
For baseball, the key could be Board bas special expertise.''
On April 2, 1993, an administra·
whether the NLRB considers salary
arbitration and individual bargain· live Jaw judge ruled "mandatory
ing mandatory or permissive topics bargaining subjects certainly
of bargaining. Section 8(d) of the include existing terms and condiNLRA says there is a "mutual tions of employment which continobligation of the employer and the ue in effect after expiration of the

Scoreboard

Will MJ be the same after leaving baseball?

Don't Blame
Your Age For
Poor Hearing.

it was prepared to issue a complaint .
that ·owners bargamed in bad faith
by declaring a premature impasse
and !Uegally imposing ihe cap.
On Feb. 6, owners withdrew the
cap but cbanged the contract language to exclude ~ arbitration.
Tbey decided management's Player
Relations Committee would negotiate for all teams and that the PRC
wouldn't negotiate with individual
players - leaving striking q~ajor
leaguers and tbe 28 teams at a

.

a.•_ a••

, •-a••

charges. The strike, which beg!l!l
its eighlh month Sunday, could tum
on a 1971 Supreme Court case
involving retired workers at Pitts·
burgh Plate Glass Co.
Players, seclting a restoration of
the old work rules - inclodi.ng
salary arbitration - . want the
NLRB to seek an injunction that
would return baseball to the eco· nomic system that exjsted Dec. 22,
the day before owners implemented
their salary cap. The union claims
owners unilaterally altered contract
language wh ~n they mailed out
deals to 833 unsigned players last
month.
The key appears to be whether
the NLRB rules salary arbitration
and individual bargaining "vitally
affecrs" the players.
On Feb, 3, die NLRB told teams

Gordon wins Purolator 500 despite - .or because of -

...,_

'

•

Rlt

MIDWEST

:NIT pairings announced
•

aa

I

The Daily Sentinel-Page 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·Baseball owners' negotiators to prepare·new offer to players

Pa e-1

Kn~ght
~~

Monday, March 13, 1995

I

•

111 Second Bt., P~y

P

1eas1nt Valley Hospital Is pleased to wek:Dme John F. \Ylltz, M.D., a pedlatrldan assodated
~TheChlldren:salnk, tolts~l~ Staff. Dr. Wiltz comes to Pleasant Valley from Reynolds Army
Community Hospital, Fort SUI, OK. He did his residency and Internship In pediatrics at the Walter
Reed·Army Medical Center In Washington. DC. A board certtfted member of the Amerk:an Academy of
Pediatrics. Dr. Wiltz Is a member of the American
Medical Association.
As a pedlatrldan, he specializes In
.
.
·the prevention,' dJasnoslS and treatment of disease In children, from birth throug~ adolescence. The
Chlldrel)'s Oink:; located In Suite 215 at Pleasant Valley Hospital In Point Pleasant, Is open Monday • Friday,
9 a.m.· 5 p.m.. For appointments call (304) 675-4107 •

... - .....--

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 116,

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

•llfl The family of professionals

2s2o Valley Drive; Point Pleasant, WV 25550 (304) 675-4340
r~- - ---'-r-"·

_.

'

.
0

�•

.•

By The Bend

The Daily

{ Monday, March 13, 1995
2 :.J IIIII llllllllllllllllllllllllltlll lII llllllllll tll t 11111111 L:

Sent~el
Monday, March 13, 1995
Page

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DONATE TO FOUNDATION- City Ice &amp; Fuel recently presented a donation to tbe Pleasant VaHey Health Foundation for the
Scholars Endowment Fund. Left to right City lc:e &amp; fuel President
: :_Art EUis Hartley, Jr~ presents a check to Charles Lanham, Pleasant Valley Hospital Health Foundation Fundralsing chairperson.
Also on band .ror the ceremony were Greg Hartley, company trea. · surer and Vltus Ray Hartley, vke pn:sidenL

from Mason, Meigs and Gailia
· counties in obtaining the education
. and training they need to become
nurses, dociors, radiology technologists, medical lab technologists
and pharmacists. The awards
totaling nearly $100,000 represent
the interest earned on .the principal
in the trust fund.
"When individuals and -businesses such as City Ice &amp; Fuel con·
tribute to the education of our local
students through the Foundation,
you. are helping to assure that the
quality of health care that the residents of th e Tri-County have come
to ~xpcctQand, indeed, deserveQwill always be available in our ·
community," Lanham says,
For more information on how
you can join in "Educating Today
for a Healthy Tomorrow," or to
learn more about 'the Foundation
Scholars program, call the Pleasant ·
Valley Hospital Health Foundation
at (304) 6754340, Ext. 326.

Forty people attended the recent Don Barkman, Alberta and Dave
sweetheart banquet of the, Victory Hysell, Gary Snouffer, Sharon RusBaptist Church.
sell, Belly Barker, Mollie Johnson,
.
The special speaker for the Phyllis Hudnall , Sarah Fowler,
· evening was Don Barkman whose Shirley Roush, Mabel Hannah,
: topic was ''What Is Love?".
Brandi Hysell, J.D. Keesee, Mar.
Allending were Pastor and garet Nunn, Thurman Smith, Flora
Linda Keesee, Patsy and Bill Cor- Marie Gibson and Myrtle Quillen.
nell, Angela and Charles Hall ,
The church hosted the MassUion
Helen Jane and Floyd Brown, - ·Bible College Alumni meeting on
Tammy and Bob Ball, Sherry and January 27. An all day meeting was
· Ottie Jarvis, Sue and Raymond · held with several guest speakers.
Adkins Lisa and Bob Johnson, The women of the church served a
Wanda' and Dwight Ashley , continenlal breakfast and dinner for
D'Lynn ami James Keesee, Jane the almost 60 people attending.
·and William Snouffer, Verenia and
•

:Meigs County-4-H group

:to sponsor plat book
The Meigs County 4-H Com - Dayton. All conlacts for advertisement will be made by local 4-H
mittee is in the process of secl!ring
committee members or representa. sponsors for the 1995 edition of the
tives.
.
~ Meigs County Plat Book.
Proceeds of the book are used to
Tbe book includes maps of each
township and lists propeny owners. fund special 4-H activities such as
state trips for outstanding memIt is used by a wide variety of busi. nesses and individuals, committee . bers, scholarships, and out of state
officials report. Over 800 copies of opportunities.
For additional information about
the !list Plat Book were sold, it was
the
project or to be included as an
reported.
.
.
•
advertiser, residents may contact
. .As in the past, the 4-H Committhe Extension Office at 992-~6 ·
; tee is working with The Great Mid·
or a 4-H Committee member.
; ·western Publishing Co ..- Inc.; of

-Community calendar--

MONDAY

MIDDLEPORT- The DAY
and Ladies Auxiliary will meet at
the Middleport American Legion
anne~. Monday,. 7 p.m.

•

POMEROY - Meigs County
Board of Elections meeting, 4 p.m.
Monday at office.
·

CHESHIRE- Women Alive, 7
p.m. Monday, Kyger Creek Clubbouse.
·
RACINE - American Red
Cross bloodmobile, Somhern High
School Monday, 10 a.m. to2 p.m.

MIDDLEPORT -Revival services Monday through Sunday, 75
Pearl Stteet, Middleport, Wesleyan
Bjble Holiness Church. Rev. Ben
RACINE - Racine Board of
Watts, evangelist. Rev . John · Public Affairs, 7:30p.m. Monday,
Neville, pastor, invites the public. · Star Mill Park.

.
·
:
:
:

DARWIN - Bedford Town·
·ship Trustee~. 7 p.m. Monday,
town ball, regular monthly meeting.

RACINE - MegaSkills workshop, Monday, 7 to 8 p.m. Southern High School.

MIDDLEPORT - Wesleyan
Bible Holiness Church revival;
Pearl Stteet, at 7:30 p.m. Monday
through Sunday.' Evangelist Rev.
Ben Watts of Alice, Ohio.
'

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
The
Alzheimer's Related Disorders ·
Support Group, 1-3 p.m. March IS
at the Meigs Senior Citizens Center. "Wandering and wanting to go
home" discussed.

POMEROY- Pomeroy Youth
League, sign up days, Monday and
· Thursday, 5:30 to 7:30p.m. at
: Pomeroy Elementary School. Addi: tiona!
. information, '992-3976.
.
p()MEROY. - Big Bend Fanil,
Antique Club, Munday, 7:30p.m..
Meigs High School Ubrary.

4,500 responses received, 75 percent were "glad" to have received
the information. About 40 percent
indicated they would like io receive
· H every ~ear. Younger and
nonlworiting individuals were most
lilcely to bave a negative reactioQ to
the receipt of the irifonnation. ·
Hopefully, as people began to
receive the information on a regular
basis, they will begin to use the
program in the manner for which it
was designed-as a basis of family
income in retiremen~ disability or
death. Knowing what they have
coming from Social Security
should help in that regard.

-

THURSDAY
CHESTER - Chester baseba!Usoftball league signups, 6:308:30 p.m. Thursday March 16 and
9 a.m.-noon Saturday 18 at the
Chester Elementary. A birth certificate is needed if child had not been
registered in the league before.
Cost is $20 perdlild. __

keith G. Harrison, commander- Church on Grant Street.
in-chief of the Sons of Union Vet- · Tbe meeting wiD begin with a 7
erans in the Civil War, will come to p.m. dinner at 7 p.m., the cost of
Middleport Friday to present the · which is $7.50. The· dinner is by
charter to the Brooks-Grant Camp reservation only and to-make reserNo. 7 of the Sons or Union Veter- vations those plarming to attend are
ans of the Civil War.
to call 992-7874 after 5 p.m. for
He will also install the officers reservations no later than Thursof the camp. The meeting will be day.
.
•
held at the annex of Hope Baptist
Henry Casey Camp No. 92 of

=
=
-=
=
-For As Little As
$6.00 Per Inch Per Day
=
=
- t lllllllllllllllll t ltll tl tIIlli ttt tlllltl tllllll till tt ttr.-=
:111111
Public Notice

The Rural Econarnic and Community Deve'lopment Services
(RECDS) office located at 10233
Albany Road, Athens, will be
closed Wednesday. AU employees
of the office will be attending a
training session in Cambridge. This
office will re-open at 7:30 i\.m.

Heart campaign
officials release
February figure~

The "Have a Heart" campaign
of the Meigs County Division of
the American Heart Association in
February brought in alotal of
$1,018, officials reporL
Volunteers distributed paper
hearts to area facilities and for a
one dollar donation, people put
their name on a heart. These hearts
were then displayed making people
aware that February was American
Heart Month and that bean disease
is the number one cause or death in
Meigs County. ·
·
The businesses partici]IBting in
the project were Jimmy s Sports
Bar, ·Crow's Family Restaurant,
· Western Auto, Fruth's Pharmacy,
Blue Tartan, Yaughan's Cardinal
Foo 's. PoweU's Super Valu,_Meigs
Sen iJr Center, and Kroger of
Pomeroy.
In addition, the Kroger
Employee Advisory Comm.ittee of
Pomeroy matched 10 percent of the
donations collected from their
patrons and made special note that
their contributio.n was given in
honor or Carolyn Kom, a resident
of Meigs County who recently
u.nderwent a heart transplant. Ali of
these funds will be used to support
research and educational projects
of the American Heart Association,
according to local Heart Association officials.
For more infonnalion about the .
American Heart Association or
about cardiovascular disease and
prevention, residents may caD call
1-800-AHA-USAI.

Thursday.
.
The employees will be receiving
information and fopnai training to
assist them in implementing program changes and service delivery
improvements. RECDS, formerly
known as Farmers Home Administration,is a major credit agency of

Riverview
Garden Club
meets
The Riverview Garden Club met
recently at the home of Maxine
Whitehead with Margaret Grossnicide and Marlene Putman as co- ,
hostesses.
Ruth Ann BaJderson gave the
secretary's report. For. ro.ll call
members read a valentine verse.
Lilian Pickens was a suesl
Plans for litter cleanup aJong the
highway were discussed along with
· planting a tree for Arbor Day on
the BeUeviUe Locks and Dam Park.
Devotions were given by Grace
Weber and included readings "My
Neighbor" and "I Believe". Mary
AJice Bise coUecled for the flower
fund and also conducted an auction. Fruit trays were prepared for
the sick and elderly in the area.
Pauline Myers received the door
prize. Handmade favors were given
to each member.
'
Refreshments were served and a
social hour was enjoyed by those
named and Betty Boggs, Delores
Frank, Marilyn Hannum, Ella
Osborne, Frances Reed, Nancy
Wachte,, Janice Young, and Nola
Young.

later one from Theodosia to her
f~thcr expressing her great admiration for him. "I had rather not live",
she wrote "than not be the daughter
of such a man". ·
As the reviewer related the story
begins at Richmond Hill, Burr's
beautiful estate on the Hudson
River on Theo's seventeenth birthday. She js well-educated and lives
surrounded by luxury. That day she
met her future husband, a rice
farmer and slave owner from the
South, a man not at aU appealing,
but rich and ,POlitically powerful,
two qualities much needed by the
ambitious Aaron Burr, said Holter.
Two other young men, Washington Irving and later Meriwether
Lewis of Northwest Territory fame
also loved Theodosia but her

ON DEAN'S LIST - Mark
A: Nlcbols, son or John !IDd
Brenda Nichols, VIncent, and
grandson of Wanda Wolf, Middleport, was named to the fall
semester dean's list at Miami
University In Oxford. Nichols is
a junior majoring In psychology. He was a 1~ Warren High
SchOOl graduate.
..

I

(1) Being a pan ol Bean

Alley, and described as a

15' wide and 294' tong wide
' atrlp ol Bean Alley
extending !rom College
Road to College Street with
reference being made to the
recorded plat in Volul)'le 2,
Page 34 ol the Meigs
County Plat Records.
(2) Being a pan ol Peach

father's wishes and fortune always
reigned supreme. Losing the presidential election to Thomas Jefferson by one electoraJ vote, Burr
continued his political manipulations even planning to conquer
Mexico, Holter said.
She described Theodosia's life
as sad especially after losing her
son her only COI(Ifort being long
visits with her .fatl)er .. AJtbouah
there are different theories regarding her death, Mrs. Holter concluded, the author chose _to· depict the
cause as the shipwreck of the Pabiot as Theo was fleeing to her father
one last time. She and Aaron hied
to change ihe stream of history but
the current of surrounding people
and events proved too powerful for
them; Holter said.

Federal M

uJ PPO -

985·4473

3D4-n3-9545 ,.,, _ _

71W9&lt;

'

3 Announcements

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

SHOOTING MATCH
Middleport American
. Legion Farm
Bailey Run Rd.
March 19th starts .
1 p.m. - 12 gauge

Current Owner'e Nef!'le:

Rodney A. Tripp and Stacy
Tripp.
Property Addro .. : 163
Poplar Stroot, Tuppero
Plolno, Ohto 45769.
Appralttd ot: $21,500.00

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

much.

-.i'bt '·

Olympic gold medal diver
-;~~~:/
~~~~~~:~.movie
deal Sunday night at a ceremouy
. ---:Congressman Gerry Studds Visibili·ty Award ~~m Studds, D-Mass .• the fmt openly gay
member of Congress. The award honors gay men for
leadership.
"Secrets hold you prisoner, and now I am free,"
Louganis told 600 people at the award dinner, which
raised money for a Bosto11 health center serving gays
and lesbians. Louganis recently announced be bas
AIDS.
.
His autobiogiapby, '-'Breaking the Swface," is on
the bestseller lists.
LONDON (AP) - People with AIDS should bC
embraced - literally - not rejected as lepers once
were, says Bishop Desmond Tutu. ,
· "Let us go forth to embrace and love and care for
those who some want to tw:n into lepers, people living with AIDS," the No\Jel peafC prize laiJ!ealC told
worshipers Sunday at London s St. Martm-m-theFields ehurch.
Jesus touched lepers to make a point, and so
should modem-day Christians embrace AIDS s~ffcr­
ers, Tutu said.
Tutu, who was awarded the Nobel Prize for his
peaceful struggle against apartheid in South Africa, is
the Anglican Bishop of Capetown.
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clinton was .
congratulated for rejecting the enticement of "fair·
way prayer" and "silndtrap repenlance" when he
chose to go to church instead of playing golf.
Dr. Gardner Taylor, a ·guest preacher Sunday at
'Howard University's Andrew Rankin Memorial
Chapel also touched on another favorite topic·of the
presid~nt's: the Republican p;uly' s "Contract With
America.' '

· Taylor caUed the contract a "new and untoward
movement" that works against efforts to ensure
human rights for aU.
. .
Clinton and his .wife, Hillary Rodbam Chnton,
visited the church as a guest of their friend Vernon
. Jordan.

, FamiUJS &amp; Abbeimer's
.
.
~
Sll.VER SPRINGS, Md. (AP) -.Without~~­
' ing it, adults caring for a ~arent _with Alzheimer .s
: disease may overlook the d1stressmg ~ff~t on the!! ·
~ children of watching their ·gran~parent s diffen;nt
I behavior.
t· Children also can feel negl':Cted, as p~nts spe~d
• extra time caring for the Alzhelffier s pauent. What s
; ibe answer? The foUowing advice comes from M~or
, : Health-Care Corp.• a care provider for those w1th
: Alzheimer's disease:
.
.
.
• _ Include children in fam1ly d1scussmns about
: Alzheimer's, and give them whatever information
: they need to ease tbeu fears . .
• _ Emphasize the strengths of the person with
Alzbei.qJer's instead of focusing on their deteriora-

!

~

; lion~ Let children express their feelings; 311d tell
• them it's OK to feel anger or be upset.
•f
_ Spend -time alone with your children, and
schedule family activities with and ·w1tbout the
~-grandparenL ,
·
·
-

'

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
Cus1om Building &amp; Remodeling

•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• - NEW GARAGES
• REMODELING
• SIDING
• ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992·5535
(61 4) 992-2753 ~· ~

JoilfE

Come Tan With

MeAt.

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN
StfOOTS
Sunday 1:00 p.m.
12 Gauge Only
Limiled: 740
Backbore, 680 Fronl

J&amp;L INSULATION

. 'NlRWI ,y UKI MEW
Ropalr in Tubs or Sin~s.

OHice.Houra: Mon.-Fri.

Resurtace Old Ceramic Tile, a'ld

Fl&gt;e~ss shower C'•ck:: or S•gs.

BATHTUB

REFINISHING

MODERN SANrrA,..ON
POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tank&amp; cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rain.
.
Job sites• Camp Sites • Family Reunion• &amp; Parties
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE
20

Ern('rgency Phone 985 -3·118

15 Sessions s15°

L.

0

All Lotions ~ Off
949·2823
1/3111 mo.

Term• of Sale: caahler'a

chock/10% ol approlood

'

''"

-539 BRYAN PLACE .
MIDDLEPORT 992-2m
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
· Roofing, VInyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.
Free Estimates

H1WHn

GRAY'S

Burial, Final E~penses, Loans, Business, Family ·
Security, College Funds, Emergency Funds ,
Retirement, Estates, Life Insurance to Ill your needs.

CALIFORNIA TANS
34110 Sugar Run Rd.
Long Bottom, OH. 45763

' rlence

992-3954

'/j281'l5

· Em..lTESl

Chris
Scherfel
614-992-4236

Bill Slack
992·2269 .

ROCKY R. HUPP
American General Life &amp; Accident Ins . Co.
P.O. Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Mobile Welding
Diesel Injector SVC
Injector Pump SVC
Tune-ups

614-843-5264
Lile • Medicare • Cancer • Fire
Health • Accide nt • Annuity • IRA • Mortgage

985-3879

velue.

Jamet M. Soutoby, Sheri"
Mtlgo County, Ohio
(2) 27; (3) 6, 13

Howard L. Writesel
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspputs
Gutter Cleaning
Painting·
FREE ESTIMATES

Public Notice

NOnCE OF SALE 9F,
EQUIPMENT
Notlco to hereby given
va.
thet the Board ol Townthlp
Rodney A. Tripp, et at.,
Truototo ol Rutland
Court of Common Pleea,
Townohlp will olltr tor aolo
Molgt County, Ohio
In purauance ol on Order ono 1982 tntornallonal 1700
ol Solo to me directed !rom .. rloo dump truck with
oatd Coun In the above anow plow •nd epreeder
ontllled action, l will oxpooo box.
Bldo will be received by
to tole at public auction at
on 29th March, 1995, at Rutland Townthlp Truttoet
10:00 a.m. ol told dey, tho until April 6, I 995 at 6:30
p.m. and opened at tho!
following real ..tota:

BOSTON. (AP) - Greg Louganis says be won't
play 'himself in the movie be's agreed to make about
his recently released autobiography - but be would
lilce to step in for the diving ·scenes, thank you very

program . Entertainment will be
provided by the Wabama Choir.
All classes will be recognized
with the reunion years ending in 5
and the class of 1945 will be special guests. Ali dues collected will
go into the Alumni Scholarship
fund. Two scbplarships will be
awarded to ·graduating seniors.
Reservations must be made by
May 20. Any alumni. with class
lists showing names and addresses
are asked to return them to Sonya
Roush, Rt.#2 Box 296, Letart, W.
Va., 25253. Next planning session
was set f!!l' March 20 at 7 p.m. at
the home of Phyllis and Jerry Scott.

"

614-742-3090

949-2168
51161'94 TFN

CHESTER .
COUNTRY

tntpec! may be made by
calling 114·742·2955. On.ly
SEALED BIOS will bo

CLUB

Golf Lessons

accepted, and you .muet

1966.
Sbe along with tbe other 13 girls
on her squad, will ·be traveling to
Williamsburg, Va. on March 18 to
compete in the ECA Nationals for
the national title. The squad has ·
received seven rust place honors at
competitions this season.
In addition to her parents, she
will be accompanied to Williamsburg by her grandmother, Mrs .
Wolf.

1954·1979,Jttired

six (6) consecutive weeks

Names in the news

Henry C. Peery
Business Representative
.·I

. Home Improvements
33151 Happy Hollow Road
Mlddlepon, Ohio 45760
•New Homes
•Additions •Siding
•Roofing .Painting
-Garages •Porches
•Pole Barns
Free Eorlm11es

time, 11 their regular
_:,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.L,_ _..,-------j r.,eetlng. Appointment to

Carpenters_Local Union 650
103' Years in Pomeroy
March 16, 1892 • 1995.

£all 304-875·1244 for Appt. or Information

or 1\etna PPO ·A

follows:

CONGRATULATIONS

Suite 112 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant., WV.
,

Ohio

1--------

plan for annual banquet

John A. Wad~, M.D.
Member

u.S.

the
Department of Agriculture. Their programs and services
include various grants and loans,
which benefit rural individuals and
communities.
· Emergency calls may be directed to the RECDS State Office in
Columbus, (614) 469-5606.

Wahama alumni officers
MASON, W. Va. - The annual
Wabama alumni banquet will be
held Saturday, May 27, at Wahama
High Scbool.
The baked steak dinner will oo,
served by the Athletic Boosters at
5:30p.m. II was announced that the
price of banquet and dues for one
alumnus will be $14that the banquet and dues for one alumnus and
guest wiD be $23, the banquet and
dues for two alumnus will be $28,
and dues only for 1995-96 will be
$5.
A renew acquaintance time will
be held following the dinner and

Court

Houee, Pomeroy,

Alley, and described as a

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

15' wide and 305' long strip ·
ol Peach Alley extendl~g
!rom College Street to Sixth
Street wnh reference being
made to the recorded plat In
Volume .2. Page 34 ol the
Meigs County Plat Records. . ·-· - - - - - - - (3) Being a pan ol Cherry
Public Notice
Street, and described as a
50' wide strip· extending
Sltuotod In the VIllage ol.
from the southernmQst
point ol lhe Intersection ol Tupper Pl•lna, County of
Cherry Street and Water Molgt and State ol Ohlo:
Botng Lot Number Seven
Street in a so'utherly
direction to· the low water (7) ol tho THlRO ARBAUGH
mark ol the Ohio River SUBOtVISION In Tupport
which same Is located in Plalno, Molgo County, Ohio.
Porcol No: 09-01140
100 acre Lot 295 In the
Prior
lnatrument
Village ol Syracuse.
This notice shall be Rolorence:. Deed Book 324,
published once a week lor page131.

with the last publication
being on April 17, 1995.
Action· hereon shall be
completed within three (3)
months alter publication ol
Commlaalon•r• the last notice herein.
(3) I, 13; 2TC
VIllage ol Syracuse by Its
·Clerk
Janice Lawson Zuilling
Public Notice
(3) 13, 20,27 (4) 3, 10, 17
Nonce OF INTENT TO
VACATE
.
Piease take notice that
Public Notice
the VIllage or Syracuse, 1---'------purouont to Chapter 723 .or
SHERlFF:S SALE, REAL
the Ohio Revised Code,
ESTATE
Intends to vacate three . CASE NUMBER 94-CV-181
atreeta/atteys descrltK.d as Ftratlnveotmant Company

MEGAN NICHOLS

Complete Medical/Surgical.Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; Throat Including

.

Washington Courthouse under the
leadership of Robert E. Grim, Ohio
Department commander, will be
present to conduct the initiation
ceremonies. All members are
requested to be present.· Those
wishing to wear Union uniforms
may do so, said Keith D. Ashley,
commander of Brooks-Grant
Camp.

Megan Nichols competes
for cheerleading honors
Megan Nichols, daughter of
.Jpbn and Brenda Nichols of .Vincent and granddaughter of Wanda
Wolfe of Middleport, recently
competed for cheerleading honors
against 54 girls in grades 9 through
II in a contest held at Teays Valley
High Scbool in Ashville.
Nichols took home first place
honors along with being selected to
cheer at the Aloba Bowl to be beld
in Honolulu, Hawaii in January,

Commlaalonera,

457111 unltl 10 a.m. on
llorch 24, 1115 ond tho bldo
wttl be opened end read
aloud a1 2:00 p.m. on tho
24th day ol March, 11195 lor
tho furnlahlng ol vorlouo
grodoo ol Atphott Concrot.
lor tho M•lgo County
Highway Department.
Proproooto oro to be
returned on bid lormo
aupptlect by the vendor. The
bld price lhall be llrm and
In effect during tho 11~5
paving aauon !rom May
t~rough Novomber 1995.
SpocHtcatlon Shoot may bt
picked up at tho Olllce ol
The llolgo County EnglnHr.
Gloria Kloeo, Clark
Board ol Molgo County

'My Theodosia' reviewed at Literary Club
Mrs. Roy Holter reviewed Anya
Seton's biographical novel, My
Theodosia, at Wednesday's meeting of the Middleport Literary
Club.
This American author born in
1916 in New York City bas been
historically correct in her research
and interpretation of characters and
actual events in the life of the infamous Aaron Burr and his beloved
daughter, Theodosia, the reviewer
said.
According 'to Seton, the au then. tic and vivid reconstruction of the
past was a joy - she did not-distort
facts to enhance her fiction. Mrs.
Holler began by reading excerpts
from two letters, one from Burr to
his daughter on the eve of his duel
with Alexander Hamilton and a

Public Notice

Nonce TO ASPHALT
CONCRETE VENDORS:
Seated bide wlll be
rocotvotl by tho Board ol
Molgo
c;ounty

RECDS office to be closed Wednesday

KEITH G. HARRISON

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!
.;.;,.,:l:\
.. :e:} ;:;;r ; '.,. __ _
.. ~.-..... .Dr~"--""-·- ..~---

KINGS'

--

Your Message Can
Be Seen Here!

SUV will receive charter

Congregation attends
sweetheart banquet

The Community Calendar is
· published as a free service to
; non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
' events. The calendar Is nol
·: _·designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type." Items
are printed as space permits and
canno~ b~ g!!annteed to run a
speclftc number of days.

Since PEBES first became
available, more than '18 million
statements have been mailed to
people who requested them. This
"on request" service is sliD available to workers of all ages . In
February, Social Security will
begin mailing the statements to
workers 60 and over and by 1999,
wiD be sending them to aU workers
25 andover.
Although the importance of the
statements are.obvious, to test poblic reaction to the receipt of the
unsolicited information, they were
sent to a sample of 13,295 individuals between 18 and 64 last spring
along with a questionnaire. Of the

Brooks-Grant Camp No. 7

City Ice &amp; Fuel, Bank One
donate to PVH foundation
City Ice &amp; Fuel Company and
Bank One of Point Pleasant have
joined the Foundation Roundtable
contributors in the Chairman's Circle of the Pleasant Valley Hospital
Heallh Foundation's Endowment
Fund.
The joint donation was presented in honor of City Ice and Fuel
Directors Art E. Hartley Sr. and
Harley H. Hartley and corporation
officers Art Ellis Hartley, Jr., Vitus
Ray Hartley. and Gregory K. Hartley.
·
.
The Pleasant Valley Hospital
Hcallh Fo'undation, a non -p[ofit
corporation, established the Pleasant Valley Scholars Endowment
Fund in !988 acknowledging the
shortage of healthcare professionals and the increasing costs of higher education that exists throughout
the nation.
According to Fundraising ChairmaJL.Charlcs C. Lanham, the FOundation has assisted 45 students

fro:n Social Security in benefits, or
even how much earnings they bave
credit for. This in an age when
financial planning is recognized as
the only way to successfuUy negotiate the uncertainties of the future.
Since 1988 Social Security bas
been providing a "Personal Earn·
ings and Benefit Estimate State·
ment" (PEBES) to people who
req~est it. The statement provides
an estimate of retiremen~ survivors
and disability benefits a worker
(and family) may ~ eligible for
now and in the future. It also gives
a year-by-year display of.eamings
credited to tbe account so errors
can be identified and CO!fCCted.

-

.

Pebes as a financial planning tool
BY Ed Peterson
Social Security
Manager in Athens
If you think of Social Security
as something for the future, you are
probably overlooking the substantial role it plays in your !if~ today.
Your Social Security survivors
insurance coverage is probably
worth more than the commercial
life insurance you have. And Social
Security disability insurance is
likely to be tbe only disability
insurance coverage you have. The
two programs represent a crucial .
safety net for your family.
ADd yet, few people are aware
have coming

The Daily Sentinel-Page-7

Pbmeroy-Middleport, Ohio

write "TRUCK BID" on the
outtlda ol tho bid envelope.
Bldo may be mailed .to
Ruttend Townthlp Truotoeo,
P.O. Box 328 Rutland, OH
45n5.
Truateea reserve the right

to reject ony or all bide.
(3) S, 13, 20; 3TC

by appointmenl &amp;
club repair as well
Call John Teaford al
Chester, Ohio
2

NOTICE TO BITUMINOUS
VENDORS
Sooled bldo wlll be
received by the Board ol
Melgo
County
Commloolonero, Court
Pomeroy,

•Factory Aulhorlzed Parts
"&amp;service
.
•All Makee ~2 Years\
•Fast Reliable Service
•Washei'JI • Dryera • Rangee
•Refrigeretora •Freezers
•Diahwaahara
•H.W. Halters
-Microwaves •Dispoula
•Thanks Meigs &amp;
Surrounding Area•

(614)985-3561 or
992-5335 '"'"""

H&amp;H SAWMILL

Ohio

45769, until 10 a.m. on
Mirch 24, 1ii5. Tho bldo
will then be opened and
rood aloud at 1:30 p.m. on
tho 24th day ol March, 1995
end e1ch inonth thereefter

tho bid quote wtll , be

received end opened on the

loti Friday ol oach month at
I :30 p.m. lor the lurnlthlng
ol bllumtnout moterlalo lor
the Molgo County Highway
Department.
Etllmotod quantltltt ol
liquid aopholt . requlrad,
approxlmotoly 500,000
gallon• lor lhe year.
Propo1111 ere to · tlv
returned on bid forma

ouppllod by the Meigs

County Engineer 1nd, mey
be obtained through the

Englnoer't Olllce. The
Mtlga
County

Commllllontrli reaerve the
right to 1ccept or rejec!_e_nv

or all tildt, or ony . port
thorool and will accept the
liJe't bjd far the Intended

purpot'f.

Gloria Kloeo, Cter~
Board or Meigs County
Comml111onera

(3) 6, 13; 2TC

.

Public Notice
NOTICE TO AGGREGATE
' VENDORS
Sooltd blda will be
rocolvod by the Boarcl ol
Mtlgt
Coun11
Comml1alonere, Court
Hou•'· Pomeroy, Ohio
45719 until 10 1.m. on

3/24/95. The bldo will then

be opened 1nd reed 1loud

at 1:45 p.m. on the 24th day
ol More~. 1i85 lor tho
lurnlohlng ol all klndo ol
ilzto ol aggregate that may
bt roqulrod by tho Melga
County
Hlghwoy
Ooportmtnt. Propooato oro
to be returned on bid form•

ouppllod by lht vtn~or, and
wttt be opanad on tho dolt
end placa ~pecllted.
Spoclllcttlon lor bidding
moy bo obtained through
tho Englnttr'o Office, Rock
Sprlngt Rood • Routt 2
Pomeroy, Ohio 45719.
Gloria Klatt, .Clerk
Boord ol Molgo County
I
.commlulonaro
' (3) ti, 13; 2TC
.

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS
992-7013 OR
992-5553 OR
TOLL FREE 1·800·848-00'0
DARWIN, OHIO

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • R,eplacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

and RESIDENTIAl.
.COMMERCIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

(LillleSIIIINI Law

Rates)

32124 Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brlckles

(Specialize in
driveway spreading)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

614-992-3470.,,,...

.

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)

2J 12192/ltn

"

Portable
Bandsaw Mill

614·742·2193

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

7/31f91 TFN

WICKS
HAULING

:UZ111 mo.

Kenny's Auto Rental
Kenny's is the place to come
.when you need a car rental.
We Have Cars and Vansl
Kenny's Auto Center
1-800-486-1590
264 Upper River Rd. . Bus. (614) 446-9971
Gallipolis, OH ..45631
·
·
'""'"

In Memory

Public Notice

HOUII,

ICEN'IIPPLIINCB .
IUVICB

In memory of.
Sharon Pooler who
God took from us
this day of March.
We should never
ask why these
things have to
happen to the good
people in the world,
For God knows
best.
I love you Sharon
&amp; miss you so
much.
Your Step-daughter,
Debbie Putman &amp;
Elaine Putmah

MANLEY 'S
HOME IMPROVEM ENT
Roofing, Siding, Room

Addilions, Concrete, etc.

PO. Box220
Bidwell, OH 45614
(614)388-9865 .

Maggies Crockpot
Clifton, WV
Dine-in or Carry•out
773-5612 .
· Bring in ad
for 10% off.

One Stop Complete Auto Body

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
Chuck StQtts
614-992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome
Stale Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

Real Estate General

10121fMfi:Jn

-Kerosene

Linda's
Painting &amp; Co.

Heater
Repair

"Take the pain oul of
painling · Let us .
·
do it for you"
Interior &amp; Exterior
37632 Wesl Shade Road

Parts &amp; Service on Most
Makes Racine Mower

Clinic

In Loving Memory
of Gladys Wines,
who passed away
Mar. 25, 1984 and
Clyde Wines, Sr.
who passed away
March2, 1985.
If I could write two
words of gqld and
never wrile no others
I'd write just !his
and only I his
The · preciou~
name s of Dad and
Mom .
If I could s ing i
song of prai se
and never s mg
anolher.
•
The only song that
I would 'sing would
be a song of Dad and
Mom.
There's two words
that's dearer far
To me than any
oth er
· They hallow every
swc;,ete ning thought
and those two words
are Dad and Mom .
Sadly missed
by daughters
and their fa'm · ·

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

50% off
949-2804

· Free estimales
Before 6 p.m.-Leave
Message; Alter 6 p.rr1.
614·985-4180

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

"In Stock".

OFFICE 992-2259

OreQon Chain Saw Bars

POMEROY · PRICE REDUCED · MUST SEEl ·

bedroom home on SR 7 - conviently . lo~ated! L~:uge

porch newer lurnace large

outb~:_u
. ldmg ,

Repal~

some

3
front

n~wer

remodeling· completed.' t +acre. ol ground. WAS $29,000
NOW ONLY $22,000.00
•
JUST OUT OF RACINE - NICE SUBDIVISION I 1+
acre ol· ground With a 3 bedroom 2 full baths and 2 1/2
bath modular. Honie has been . r8f!10deled wa_t~ newer

carpet and walls. Family room w1lh !~replace, uhhty room,
large open kitchen with pl_enly of cab1net space and all
appliances . also a complete_ly_remodeled master bath,
large formal living room and d1n1ng area Wllh Atnm doors.
Large 3 bay pole barn, garden area and 2 add1t1ons built
on Healpump and many other modern fealures. COME
SEE! OWNERS WANT TO SELL! ASKING $64,900.00
CfleW RD.. Nice split Ioyer tlome with A bedrooms,_ 2
full baths equipped kitchen, mce large lam1ly room w1th

woodburner hook-up, dining room . efec. B.B. heal, back
porch . All on approximately 1.26+ acres . N1ce
heighborhoodl REDUCED TO $51,500.00
POMEROY - 2 story frame 'home located on Mult)erry

Ave . Thi s untgue home includes 3 bedro~ms a~d full
bath upstairs, hving room, CU n ing room , equ~pped .k•~chen
and foyer on the . main lever. The partlBiiy fm1 shed

basement has a fi nls~ed family rOom and summer
kitchen and also a·ulility area . The lower level basement
has access 1o the pack yard. Central .a1r, fife place and .
·some home furnishings is included 1n· the pnce. YOU
CAN HAVE All THIS PLUS WALKING DISTANCE
TO TOWN FOR $37,500.00
MIDDLEPORT . This nice one floor frame home lealures
2 bedrooms·, 1 bath, ut ility room, 2 fireplaces, newer
F.A.N .G. lurnace, perma-payne windows , mce front
sitting porch.,; PRICE REDUCED TO ~29,000. 00
Buyers Are Seeking Property In meigs County...
They're Looking Here First I If you Want To Sell · Now
Is The lime To List! We Want To Work For You! .
HENR¥ E. CLELAND .... ...... . .... .. ............. W2·6t91
TRACY L. BRINAGER ... ., .................................... 949-243~
SHEAR! L. HART.................,.............................. -,742·235
HENRY E 'CLELAND 111 ................ ....................... ,992-6191
KATHLEEN M. CLELAND....... .!..............:............ 992-6t91
OFFICE ............. ,.... ..................................... .......... 992,2259

• Room Addiliqns
One mile out
• New Garages
143 from Rt. 7
~ Eleclrical &amp; Plumbing·
Tues.- Wed. - Fri..· Sat. .· • Roofing
1-6

• Interior &amp; Exterior

• Craftsman Tools
•Toys
•Guns
Loads ol Misc.
Buy-Sell-Trade
992-2060

Painting
Also Concrele Work ·
(FREE ESTIMAT ES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

-QUALITY·WINDOW SYSTEMS
•

10/511mo

.

-·

1/211fh

•Custom Made.
•Solid vinyl
repluement ·
windows
• Free Estimates
•Starting At
1200

.

lnlfalled
•'

" VISIT OUR SHOWROOM"
110 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
"Look lor the Red and White Awning"

992-4119

Atlr!lm.l!!r

Owner 1·800·291-5600

I

�•

Monday, March 13, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily

ALLEYOOP

, ACROSS
1

4
8

PHILLIP
ALDER
Announcements

BEA TilE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie
3 13 95

•J 8 7 ~
• I0 4 3
+ 10765 2

IHt ~VJ ~')') ~

6H5 ut::e: YaJ 1D 00 a:Jr

AID GSr AJre

·

l
I&lt;WA).

em t&gt;U- r

• 7

SO l'M

t&lt;:f,X)()J l.l{)IAJ

1HI~to::Jf,.X;

WEST

a'

•Q

RWI-JI~ fOR Cot-.lSRESS

1V C:0 IS TALl&lt;- A l.OT
AfJD AS~:: F'EOfU F~

MtJI.X'&lt; ..

EAST

~ 5 2

• 6 4

•K Q 9 5
•QJ 9 4

9 A8762

•J

... 9 8 2

+K

8 3

SOUTH

12
13
14
15
16
17
18
20
21
22
23
26
30
31
33
34

35
36
37
39

• A K 10
• J

40 - - Cieor Day
41 Gravel ridge
Japoneoe oash 43 Hen
Heroic
46 South
Hair style
American
Lubricate
country
Mo. Hayworth SO Plaintiff
Feline sound
51 Citrus fruit
Gun grp.
52 Nevi (prot.)
Again
53 Belween Ky.
VP'o superior
. and Mlas.
Muotard plant 54 Conspiracy
San-, Calif . 55 Rocky hill
Sergeant's
56 Exam
ohoul
57 Auld Lang Speck
58 Dollar bill
- -daisy
Ship's rope
DOWN
Profit
Dlrecl
t Eugene
French yes
O'Neill's
Actress
daughter
Susan 2 Revol ve (a
Americans (IL) ·
float ing log)
Anala 3 Now - - me
Producing an
down to sleep
ellecl
~ Use a pencil
Relative of
. end
bingo
5 Certain

Sentinei-Pag~

Answer to PrevJoua Puzzle

II
·1
A

•'

6
7
8
9
10

calendar photo
Article
Crow's sound
Snobbish
Unadulterated
Residue

+A
• AKQt06543
Vuln erable : Neither
Deal er : South

IT WAS

RAININ',
JEDGE!!

I JEST STUCK HER

West

North

East

Pass
Pass
Pass

2

t

Pass

5•

Pass
Pass

Pas s

Opening l ead : •

UNOER MY HAT
SO'S SHE WOULDN'T
GIT WET!!

K

It is easier

ex post facto
By Phillip Al der
There are many playe"' who find the
winning play or defense a few seconds
after trick 13 has been completed. T he
real expert produ ces th e key move a t
thc.righ.l momcnl.Jl!ll when it i:; too late.
So m e time s. thou g h . a ·de fe nd e r
need s he lp from his partner. Wh e n
faced with a critical discard, not kn ow ·
ing which suit l o keep and which lo un ·
guard , he must hop€ his partner plays

· .PEANUTS
SEE TJ.IAT HOUSE WE'RE
COMING TO? THE'f 5Av
· IT'S A 1-lAUNTED HOLISE ..

l DON'T
BELIEIIE IN
IJALINTED

1

E!UT I LL
WALK ON

I J..~I---+-1--

inrormative cards.

THIS

(n today's deal. six clubs looks hope ·

SIDE 0~
'(OLI.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

less . Yet in a major eve nt one dec larer
made it. because East didn 't help Wes t.

Two clubs was strong. artificia l and

by Luis Campos
Celebnly C•pher cryptograms au}

Each lel1e.r

forcin g. The jump to four clubs showed

a sol.id suit and set trumps. Five clubs
denied an ace or kln g. but South understa ndably bid t h e s lam . Maybe the
dummy would have the spade queen.
Wesl l e~ I he heart kln g and switch ed
to the diamond qu een . Dec larer won

FRANK &amp; ERNEST
7

You, ·ell..£.. PO YOll
TttiNIC YOV C.OULP FINl&gt;

Financial
Buslnen
OpportunHy
.OHIO YALLi~".llJ~'BsHING CO.

eomm...~o~ ·blllldlng. Slorogo •

offlc•
...ce.
-,_
land
W'-Urltv Will 1011, INM
or ..m. bwnor financing. 3048711-3030 or :IOH75-:M31.
Yondlng: .Won, Got Rich OulciL
Will Got A Blood! CUh}ncomo.
Prlood lO llell. 1--.e112.

m1111ge

No Exportonoo Nee

J &amp; D'o Auto Porta ond Soh"'l'!,
bilytng -~nk outoo &amp;
truCiui. Aloo
"" ..... 773-5343 or

5033.

Old bultono, c:ootUIM lowolly,
okl tlgllton, Iron oldlloio, oletu,.., Star Wan, gl.... chlri.;
fumltur., tOOII Of compl... -t.t .., Osby lbrtln, &amp;14-0in-'M41.

Wonlocl To Buy: Junk Autoo
Wllh Or Wll._ llotoro. Coli
Lorry Uvoly. 814-38S-8303.

o-yl t500

To HOO - . y ,..,.ontllll
Pr:au11lng llortpg~~ R•funda.
Own Houro. CoD -.715-2300
Ext. 1351. (ill Houro~

Nu- Aldl Training ProgramPomoror Nu!Wing &amp; RohobiiHo·
lion Cont0&lt; will bil ollortng trolnlng . - In t.. IIICIIIth of
APril Appllc:otlono ... , _
bolng -plod o1 38TH Rock·
...,.ngo Rd., P - . Clooo
olzo lo
Th- (3)

n.......

. - - ... -·rec~

with oppllootlort. Apply In poroon botwoot1 tOO.m. l 3p.m. II·
F. Student1 thlt I' ccan fully
Wonlocl To Bur: T - oomoloto tho TCE wiN bio
Poundego, Pormonont Or~ ollglblo lor -ploy.-~. Al&gt;114-ze:ttiO-

oofutoly no ploono cot•. EOE.

s••-

Top , _ Pold: All Did U.l.
CGino, Dold Ringo
Colno,
Gokl Colno. II.T.S. Coin Shop.
151 &amp;oooncl Avonuo, Oollloollo.

Wlnlod To Buy Uoocl llobllo
Homo, Coli 814-44&amp;-0175.
.
Wonted: tNO Oolllo County Ht.
toty To D. Gum, :1212

Peach, MI.-Vernon, IL ~.
Wonted: Stondlng Tlmbor, CUh

0111 Hill Trucklna Componr

lleoklng Ovor Tho lfoocl llrlvo&lt;o,
Wllh aood driving record. CDL
Roqu1iod. .ltW82·7773, Or A~
tor S:OO P.ll. Colll14;!45-1304.

Plumbor Wllh Atlout I Yoon
Exporlonoo For Now l ~o:J'
Worll In Locol · I

1

3713.

POSTAL .lOSS
Slort 111.41/hr., tor Hom ond

·or Por&lt;:ontogo With A o...,.n- . oppllcotlon ln10. coli 2111'?811tMI 814-379-2758.
8301 · oil. WYI48,
Wo Bur Junk Con, 114-:JII, SUn-Frl.
1082, 81t 118 PA.RT.
BobyoRorlblo HeMin, Mr Homo,
rnoltor, Coli Aftor I P.ll.
Employment Services 114-:1*-1481.
.

-llpm.

Rooponolblo
l:"..&amp;

11

13

Help wanted

AVON I All Arooo I
........ :J04.4?8-t4211.

..------lllllillll
All real estate advertising In
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ol1968 which makes It illegal
to advertise •any preference,
limitatiOn o(discrlrilinatlon

based on.race, color, reiiQion,
sex familial status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such preference,
limitation or discrimination.•
This new~pape r will not
know11ngty accept
advertisements for real estate
which Is in violation of the law.
Our readers are hereby
Informed thAI atl dwellings
advertised in this newspaper
· are available on an equal
· opp6rtunlty basis.

-tlrM. 1480.
200ml
on - •
304-llB-11112.

'

an he full deal. one can easily see th at
West must keep three spades. But what
if South 's spades and diamonds wer e
the other way round'' Then West must
hold his diamonds. How does he know
which ? Well . Easl should immediately
disca rd his two remaining diamonds .
But he unh elpfully threw nothing but
heart s. Altrick nine. West misguessed .
Still holding Q·9-5 .of spades and J -9 of
diamond s. he disca rded a seco nd
spade.
In this type or si tuation. the "irrele·
vanl " defender should help his partner
by throwing all his cards from an " un ·

P WE

Phillip Alder's new book , "Get
Smarter at, Bridge ," is available ,
autographed upon request . for
$14 .95 from P 0 Box 169, Roslyn
Hts .. NY 11 517-0169.

(WEJWNL

4 Bldrooml, 1· 112 BalM,
1325/Mo. Dopwlt, In Eu..U,
51l-1122-02M.

Porto

1111• Scoulh 01011111101.. AI Juo.,

_u,.,

....

_.

on rtver, Utlrt. 304-811-3053.

.-n

STRIKE lo BLOW IN THE v.AR ON
HIGH PRICES. SHOP THE CLASSIFIEDS.

Truck bodo. Chov., Ford, Dodao,ond S-10, • long. 304-1175.

eaae.

42 Mobile Homes
tor Rent

79

Musical
Instruments

2 Bedroom Tnlor No Polo,

1285/llo I20a Do-'~ Bullvlllo
Pike. Truh Paid, aMx30B 1000.
2 Trallo,. For Ront Oro Cloy
Rood, 814---.

I MONDAY

ROBOTMAN

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

~OWM~~s

NGSCll&gt;Y
PteKS.UP
l'tN!&lt;ItS 1

11117 11" SlopOvor, good ohopo, ·
114-1112-227?:
:

Chopol

i!fr···

1m Rockwood .ato, pop-up :
camper. $800. ~-ane:

3 bodroono mobil homo locoled
In Buotlnahof!!._Hud -""'!,
no polo, 114--2103 boloro. •
pm.

~.

18117 P - ~I 27.8 Ft Fifth,:
W~wnlng,

Roof, AJr, 114--,

24H&gt;... 814-~41-1021.

3 Bodroorn Trollor Portlolly Fur·
nlohocl Locotocl -.-.
Below Dem, 114-441-1341 All• 5
P.ll.

a uu ..

&amp; Ltv es to c k

.

---r--.,--·
··
81
Home
.~
-

lolllu Bport, Automotlc,
Q- Goo
MH-, Nl.,. Cor, t\200, 11437tlo25M.

Door, Now

Apartment
tcir Rent

..
·'

Services

Farm Supp li eS

nroo.

_...;;;lm;;:p:::ro~v:;em;:;:;e;:.nt::•:.·_ .:
BASEMENT
WATERPROOfiNG
u.-odltloroot lllo41me guonon-

tM. Locol -110M fumlohocl.
Coli t-.al7-05?8 Or 114-I:IJ.

IN-

= h Fury Y-1, Auto, 4
Door, - - t ' l r, ~ ConcR- 0488 ROQM'II Weterproo••·
tloni#M-441....._

All Now I Bod -no Elllclonoy,
Aportmont, 114-1111-ml.

e.
'=~==-~~''=~m~·--------~·
·-. C&amp;~
Gonorol
Homo

,... Covollor 4 CVIImor, 1
Speed, 12,100. 114'4tHIU.
... ,,.._ _ """ llobllo Homo
Ford Touruo, leta Oron A-Ir. For lroo Mil-o col
- L£, 1111111 01doo Claoo, , . . Chol, 114-VII2-4323.
01111 -. 1111 , . . , _ a....
Rqn'o TV Sorvl..,
- . , _ Fonl
In Z:.nHh ol8o llnllclng mooii
tttt Ford f1110.-.. -por other brllndl. oollo. t·
.... tlcolty'o Uoocl Cora. - . IJ00.1'17o0015, wv 30W71-23ia. 1111!.

'UFE~LTH
304--.c257

-·Yon.

.'

-'"'121na

112-37112.

3 Bodroorno, 2 Botho, Hoat
Pump, Gae Furn1ce, 1 Acra,
Ooro!lo. Add'-' - . ~.ooo,

·Plumbing &amp;
Heating

1'14-317-m?.

F,_n:tan'l HMI. . And Caala
lnololotlon And Sorvlco. E ...~­
Certlhd. R11ldant111, eonwu*•
cloli1Wllll-11tt.
.

72 Trucka lor Sale

84

-· """"" -.. .... -.
Du!'llr,

'87 Ford f . 1M
....- . . olr, llroe, -

.............. ....,.,, •~C~tlonl ......... to _
.....
,....., ...... tt+JII2-3802.

Electrical &amp;

laWIWIOI

Ent•PI'I••

T.W.

Liwrence, IK GU FUI'MCH
L.P ' Noo. HMt Pumpo i
EIICII!c cFurnoC... FrM lEa- '

tlmotoo. H You Don1 Coli Uo Wo ~

,m DIIIUft p1c1wp, now motor. -..wvGOaMa.
Runoo l aood. Aoldng

•

Both '-1 IM-44a-&amp;301, 1 - . "

IIIII MW.
1MI- BMW· ·
1211,
Hondo
EW•171
· -610
• R ......... Punlind
. »14?8.1UI.

~

a=a: ' Hoi-, R~ Block,

...... . -·- --

I .

--.~

MOO. 304471-Mtf.
11?7 Fonllklnop Tl'uck. Trl-Ax•,
11 Fl. 2111'2'

- -

loci, ....
.

R.-.ntill

or

a "'11..:::-

.

:r.=·

commerelal

~

Ridenour Eloctrlcol, W¥000308, I

304-llB-1711.

re sou rc es . Know where to look for on paper . lhen rea d 11very ca refully~
10mance
and you 'll l ind ol The Aslro· VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. ~2) Allhough you
ASTRO-GRAPH
Gr aph Ma t c hmake r 1nstantly reveals are usually very th oughtful wtth others.
wh tch stgns are romanttcally perfect tor you m1ght be so anxtous to make your
you . Marl $-2.50 to M atchma~e ,- . clo th1s poi.nts taday .lhat you wan··, lei them vorce
newspaper. P 0 Box 4465. New York . thetr op1n1ons
BERNICE
NY 10163.
'
LIBRA· (Se.pt: .23-0c l . 23)11 would be
.. ARIES (March 21 -April 19) Do not la l~ wt se today Ia temporarily se t asrde
BEDE OSOL
Cf·lltcally about a co-worker wtth another assrgnments !hat requtre an aptnes.s for
co - worker. H e/ she m tg ht pretend to defat!. You mtght not b.e equipped to deal
ag ree wtth you. but actL,~ally take offense wllh small factors .
at what you say
SCORPIO (Oct 24 -Nov . 22) You could
TAURUS (April 20 - May 20) Wh en do welltn busmess tnvolvements tOday.
supervtS1ng others today . ·take caie not to but yo'u mtght not score too many potnts
. your soc1al hfe . Try to be
' equall y allen lay down t oo many ru les If yo u do. tn
there 's a very good chance they mtghl live to both .
del1bera1e1y 1gnore I hem all.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23 -Dec . 211
GEMINI (May 21-J~ne 20) II you 1ry 10 Fnends like and apprec1ate you lor what
tmpress ottters tod_aY by pretendtng to you are. so there ts no need
put on
.Tuesday, March 14 _1995
know al l a'bout somet hing that you've .'a ir s Afl ec tal to ns ·could t ar m ~ h you r
tn th e year ah ead , it will be to your . never ac: tualty studied, you're liable to fall · 1mage rnstead of enhancrng 11
advanlag'e 10 updale your knowledge ol llal on ·youlla ce
CAP.RICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today
your chosen field at endeavor . B1g oppor- . CANCER (June 21·July 22) Thts 1s nor a you mtght rmput stvety repeat .an old m 1s·1Untttes loo m on the h orrzori . but you good day to talk to a pesstmiSitc lnend take . Try counltng to ten belor_e reac t1ng
must qualify !or what th~y offer.
about so.m elh.tng you 're ent husta sttcalty to any given S1t'Uat1on .
~
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) You1 mob~ i· : planning . Thi s ind1V1d1ia l cou ld plant AQUARIUS (Jan . 20- Feb .. · 19)
ty and tndependence will be 1mponant to seeds of doubt.
Acknow ledge the favors tha t others do
you today, so steer clear of dominant LEO (July 23- Aug. 22) Exerctse ell'treme tor you today. 11 you o\lertook someone.
personahltes who mtght try to te ll you Caution today tl you have to
bu srness he/she won·t be anXtou s 10 help yo u
how you all oc ate your ti me and wtth stran gers. Ask th em to put t~e1r offer again tn the fut ure , j

io

,.

Refrigeration

INUVL EZ •..

UTVHDJTB . '

I L H L E

UTBLNWZ .

r::~:~:~' S©RJJ~-~£~s~~
ldifed by CLAY I . ,OUAN

IS

!he man

WOlD

G&amp;MI

Q Rearrange

lerre rs of the
four Krombled words be·
Lw ro form four words

I·- -------.
LU X PED

l I I PI

~.--.,r-C-,R/.,.3.-A'T/"_V~·II~~~
...

n;iiJ:bh~rs~~dy~r~:n~o~~

likeMfo
.L ...J.-.:l__J.__L___J. ... . 'boo!' "He's a nice guy ," 1co n'
r---:----'-----. eluded , "maybe the best thing
A NH U L C
to gove hom os anoth er •• - - __ "
•

.

''er

s

16

•

•

I
I

0

•

.

the chud:- le q uoted.
by fdlu'g rn the tTIIUrng wo rds ·
)'Ou develop from step No. 3 below
Co m p Ietc

d

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARE S
•

.

.-

TronomlooionO. Uood,
111 ·
lnoPICiod, guorantood. iM:al'IIO~
4150. Ablo to - k - - ·

SmoH houn, oomplolo kHchon

owwc

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWE R

tlon At. 7 l At. 2111 NEW ·
PH.ONE NUMBER: 114-4Co-3711l

rc'::..

P J T A

I 0 W T L

a

e

Plck.Up
Bodo;•
Cobo, Dooro, F. . .,. l lloro.
Aloo, 4•4 Drtvo Troln Porta. 3'

Nlco bodroom, CIA, 2 cor
gorogo, In country, $3110/monlh
cJoPooll, ·~lii2-

H0 l

PREV IOUS SOLUTION : "II hllle knowledge IS dangerou s. where
who has so much as Ia be out of danger?" - Thom as Hu xtP.y

_

lout-

T

WGTLE)

II I I

2brhouMin -Hovon. 304882-37112.

Coltogo lor - I n Pt. PtoiOint,
814-H:I-51118.
.

J

ELINUSLXLTH

SWRNAT ' H

known" suit. The hea rt po sition was

41 Houses for Reilt

. -,

NWWCLA

cle ar a t trick one . That's w hy Ea st
must let go of his diamonds.

Rentals

44

HOMEOWNERS &amp; AUTO. DIS-

a

814-1112·2157.

Real Estate

VICKIEsg::~c:'AGENT

\..10-.:LD e£
GQ.DU\ N:O\(':&gt;
CNER YOJR.
OC:'&gt;KI

e£ MMJ(£TE:C&gt;
UK£
11~~..

one ac,.. lot,
home, countr
..ter, ....,, electric, $12,500,

Port-1•11111!'-------.1

NATIONAL

IF 5\UP\ DITY UJv~ 1

4 AM Gonorol LT 245175 Rtl :
llllrS tlfoo on . Chevy t lug ·

Nlco I bod"""" - · cenlrol
olr, 2 oor gorogo, $3!10 monthly
pluo -urlly ~. 114-lll:t·
2400 oftor I pm.

Insurance

AMERICAN
Sloi~Of

Wonl To lie Your Own - ? Trr
Booth Rorrtol At Tho Now
Whloporo Holr Bolon On Sloto
Rto : : . In Oollloollo, Coli 814441Tu. -to~ I A.M. ·.5
P.M. Allo, Noocl A Fuii-Timo Holr
Blytlol.

BORN LOSER

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

76

............... thot you do bllllwfth people '"" k.-, and
NOT to Nnd _,.,through tho
.,.II until you how ln-tgOtocl
tho ollorlng.

,, -

-'

1112·Jet Ski, l-1-o7:11.

~

!!.

OUT If Tttt~~
l.f ANY w~Y
.I COULl&gt;
G~T OUT OF
PAYING IT1

',.

75 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

'J '

created !rom quotnhons by l amous ptmplc ftt~\1 ilnd presl!n l
Mo thyr f!XM\' .~_ clw~ v f'qu ri/s y

•n the ' c•phef stan ds lor

and ran hi s eight club·winners. Looking

.I GOT

Yard Sale

11 Approximately
(2 wds .)
19 Timid
20 Slupld ones
22 Humid
23 Take apart
24 Chirp
25 Eyelid
swe!Ung
26 Search
27 First-rate
(2 wds.)
28 Oevaatate
29 Oean Martin 's
nickname
31 A rose - other name
32 Actress
Turner
38 Ral, e.g.
39 Small barrel
41 Modern fabric42 Hotel Unit
·
43 Clgareile (sl.) :
44 Two word s
of understan ding
45 lairs •
46 Un sightly
47 Preposi ti on
48 Vast peri od
of rime
49 01 - (long
ago)
5 1 - and down s

' .

do

. i
'

,_

'

.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
.
Helmet - Yokel - Drift - Arouse - YOU 'RE on TIME
. I enJOY the opera , but since my husband doesn 't like
ol we are always late . He says if you arrive before it's over
then YOU 'RE on TIME.

MARCH13J

''

�•

Page-10-The Daily !)entinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Monday; March 13, 1995

Plan to bolster GM pe~sion plan goes into effect
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
plan where by General Motors will
spend the equivalent of $10 billion
w bolster its underfpnded main
pension plan goes into effect today.
the U.S. Labor Department sald.
The plan will protect the benefits of 600,000 hourly workers and
re tirees of GM, tbe government
said .
" In allowing this contribution,
the largest ever made to a pension
plan, we are asserting broad protcc-

tions for workers ,as we improve
the funding of their pensions,"
Labor Secretary Robert Reich said
unday.
But a GM spokeswoman said on
Sunday that the Labor Department
announcement seemed "a bit premature" since the company and the
govenunenthad not yet con e~
on aU final details of the plan.
Under the plan. the Labor
Department's Pension and Welfare
Benefits Administration will grant

an exemption today allowing GM
to contribute more than $6 billion
in stock to its pension plan.
M a condition of tbe exemption,
GM bas·agreed to add $4 billion in
casb 10 tbe pension program.
GM spokeswoman Toni Simonetti in New York said the special
$4 billion contribution was made
last year, along with $3.7 billion in
othet contributions.
But the ·automaker bas not yet
made the stock contribution envi-

sioned in the plan, which was pro- or about 520 biiUon. tbe largest in
posed by GM, she said.
the nation. Ms. Simonetti said that
" We have not even bad an fell to $12.6 billion in 1994.
o pportu nity to review the exempThe Labor Department exemption," Simonetti said. "II seems tion was needed because federal
inappropriate to ass ume that the pension law prohibits a pension
conllibution is a foregone conclu- plan from holding more than 10
sion, but we wiU proceed Ill try to percent of its assets in employer
consummate this funding plan.'
stock. The contributed stock will
The tentative deal was worked constitute approximately 21 perout last May in response to figures cent of the plan's total assets.
showing that GM finished 1993
Reich stressed that GM' s agreewitb an unfunded pension liability ment with tbe Pension Benefit

SPA CE CENTER. Houston
(AP) - It turns out the most difficult target for Endeavour's ultraviolctteleSCQpes isn' t a quasar some
10 billion Ught years. away, it's our
very own moon:
One of the orbiting instruments
snapped the fir st ultraviolet pictures of the moon Sunday, a feat
similar to photographing a road
sign while passing it in a speeding
car.
.Astronomer Randy Gladstone of
the Southwes t Research Institute
said our nearest celestial neighbor
was by far the toughest target of
Endeavour' s planned 15 1/2-day

flight.
He won't know bow the 70-nlilEndeavour' s telescopes can limeter pictures twn out until after
zoom in on stars at the edge of the the shuttle and its crew of seven
known universe with ease, but they return Friday, but be was optistruggle to focus. on tbe moon - a · mistic.
mere1 250,000 miles aw ay .. All our exposures went
as
because it and the shuttle.move so planned and we think wc.'ll really
quickly around the Earth.
·get some good images,'' be said.
To make things even more diffiThey would be the frrst ultravio~ult, the moon is so bright that it
let photographs ever taken of the
can throw off the telescopes' align- moon. Sucb pictures can't be made .
ment syste111.
from Earth because the atmosphere
But Gladstone, with help from screens ultraviolet light.
other scientists on the ground and
Apollo astronauts used spectrothe astrophysicists aboard Endeav- scopes to study sunlight reflecting
our, was able to collect 12 images off the moon's surface more than
of the waxing moon.
20 years ago. but they didn't take

off

protection increasingly is jeopar- resources," said Jeff Nedelman of
dized. Less than a quarter of the the Grocery Manufacturers AssocifDA's budget- $208 million e- . ation. "The answer ... is for FDA
mus! cover every. aspect of food. to C\lDCentrate just on the problem
The on Iy exceptions are meat and areas."
.
poultry , which the Agriculture
What's a problem area? FDA
Department regulates.
inspectors were surprised to catch
fDA food programs haven't bad saimonella - that scourge of raw
a raise in four years and cut 145 egg s - in black pepper from
employees last year, even as more Braz il. Listeria crops up everyfoods bit the shelves. Critics say where from crab meat to brie.
· that means the FDA samples Jess Tbink coffee's easy? Well, there
food, inspects some plants only was the stowaway's body decomonce every five years and takes at posing in the coffee beans shipped
least four years to approve new to Baltimore. And a Philadelphia
ingredients - more than twice ~e warehouse was so badly infested
time for drugs. The fDA bas spent that swarming bugs looked like a
six years tes.ting one eagerly llwait- snowstorm.
edproduct, Procter &amp; Gamble's fat
At the Baltimore lab, Lori Law- .
s·ubstitute Olestra, and,still hasn't less readies ber sensitive nose for a
decided.
seafood check - she is certified to
"How much analytical chem- sniff fish for freshness before the
istry should it take us to put a fillets undergo nlicrobial testing .
doughnut on the shelf?" asked
Because of seafood's potential
Rep. Thomas Bliley, R-Va., who risks, the fDA 111311dates sllingent
oversees the FDA as chairman of rules to ensure it's properly handled from boat to dinner plate. Now
the House Commerce Commiuee.'
"The 'f' of FDA has been the fDA is customizing those rules
stripped of manpower . and for all foods.

Pick 3:
231
Pick 4:
7958
Buckeye 5:
1-14-15-16-24

PageS

...

.. ' :'#&gt;«
-· • L

Vol. 45, NO. 222
Copyrlght1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 14, 1995

Voter quest
Board weighs reinstituting
Olive Township precincts
'

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
voting at Long Bottom, and North
Sentinel News Starr
Olive votl.ng at Tuppers Plains.
A decision on a request for
Snlith, spokesman for the dele. restoration of the Reedsville voting gatioo, said that 30 voters allended
precinct made by an Olive Town- a recent town meeting where it was
ship delegation to the Meigs Coon- decided to again approacb tbe .
ty Board of Elections will be Bol,ltd of Elections about getting a
announced later this week, Board voting ~inct back in Reedsville.
President Henry Hunter said Moo"There are a lot of unhapp~ peoda~;We discussed 1_t and a deCISI
' 'on P.le, man&gt;' of them old,'' said lilith,
'and we d like 10 have our precinct
will be forthcoming," said Hunter.
back."
He said, that a "letter is being
He said tbe fire statton in
put together so that the situation Reedsville, wbicb served as tbe
can be explained" and that "every- voting place, bas t1een upgraded, is
thing should be raken care of with- now handicapped accessible, bas a
in the next two or three days."
new furnace and telephones. He
The delegation - Dale Smith, said that on election days the trucks
representing t4e Reedsville com- could be moved from the station so
munil'y, Olive Township Trustees as not to interfere with the voting
Bill Osborne, Randy Boston and process.
•
Ernest Barringer, and Clerk Martha
Boston described Reedsville as
Durst - -m~t with the board at its a center point. within easy driving
regular meeUng Mom!ay afternoon. _ for -.:oters. Many complain about ·
They renewec_J earher 11:9uests to having to go the extra distance to
return a . votmg precmct to Long Bottom to vote be said.
Reedsville. That precinct was one
Smith said that 20 known fami. ~ of several small precincts dissolved - Hes are not voting because tbe
.and/or combined with others in :· precinct was changed.
1989.
H
'd b
' ·
The delegation asked for a
· . e sa1 t e communu~ 1s
. return to tbe three original pulling .together to ~!lake thmgs
precincts in Olive Township happe.n m the Reeds.vllle area and
Reedsville, . Long Bottom and m~nuoned new lbmgs that are
Olivedale -now South Olive with ~mng o~ at Folli:ed Run State Park,
m toutJsm, and other planned

ASTRONAUTS AT WORK .- Astronaut Tamara Jernigan,
left, speaks with ground controllers on Earth as Samuel Durram:e
works In the aft Oight'deck of the space shuttle Endeavour Sunday.
(AP)
.·
.

Cindy Crawford named
world's top paid model
NEW YORK (AP) - Cindy products that range from soda pop
Crawford, the 28-year-old Ameri- to jewelry to panty bose.
.
can glamour girl whose business
"Like professional athletes ,
zeal bas earned her the nickname they're capitalizing on tbis mass
Cindy Inc., made about $6.5 mil- recognition value by creating their
lion in 1994, making her tbe own product lines and lending their
world's top-paid model, Forbes names, faces and figures to manureports.
facturers for fees that earlier generTbe twice-monthly business ations of models could only dream
magazine, famed for rankings of of,' ' the magazine said.
·
the richest Americans, ~igbest-paid
Crawford, through her company
entertainers and bigbest-paid alb- Crawdaddy Inc., makes most of ber
letes, ·pronounced Crawford the top money from Pepsi commercials ,
eari!c!r in its latest ranking concoc- her MTV show "House of Style,"
lion, "Forbes Perfect 10," appear- · and seven-figure endorsement coning in the March 27 issue.
. tracts with Kay Jewelers and ·
Forbes attributed Crawford' s Rcvlon, Forbes said. Sbe made
affluence panly to a mass-market- about as much last year as Swedish
ing trend in women's modeling that tennis pro Stefan Edberg, wbo
has linked tbe names of fashion ranked 23rd in the most recent .
celebrities with endorsements of Forbes top-40 athletes ranking.

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r
'

'

BrGEORGEABATE
Sentinel New. Starr
Wbile about $16,000 bas been
pledged for the Middleport dock-launching facility, anptber $10,000
needs to he raised for the village's
match, said Middleport Village
Council President Bob Gilmore.
Pan of Middlepon's match will
be paid for through village labor,
Gilmore added.
"AU the pledges are not actually
in," be said. "Pledges are like a
flighty bird - you don't always
get in your bari4."
Any extra donations would be
appreciated and would help expedite tbe project. be added.
"There was a tenific amount of

Monday · ·saturday: 9 all'l - 9 pm
Sunday: Noon - 6 pm

•

beat generated .with the tbougbt
that we were going to drop it,"
Gilmore said. "It leaves us a Jot
· less to worry about than what we
bad. I reaUy appreciate the way that
various I people rolled up their
sleeves .and did not let It die. I'm
certainly grateful for it."
Those individuals, businesses
and groups have shown their concern for the community, be added.
"It"s a very noble gesture.
They'll not just talk, they'll do
wbat it takes," Gilmore said.
Donors belping the villl!ge reach
iis match include:
• county commissioners,
$10,000.
• stemwbeel association, $2,000.
• regional planning commission,

Retail sales

dip for first
time in a year

the nighttime shOoting of deer. The
vehicle pursuit ended when Barker's car struck a deer and ran into a
ditch.
Barker allegedly fled on fool .
and attem·pted to wrest Wood's
handgun from the officer during a
struggle which ended after Wood's·
partner, special deputy Dana
Aldridge, struck Barker with a
flashlight.
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Department and a Division of
Wildlife airplane assisted in the
pursuit and arrest
In addition to the two felony
charges, Barli'er also faces about
two dozen misdemean9r wildlife

Famed attorney tackles witness

Retail

salis.

WASHINGTON (AP) - In the
latest sign the economy may be
slowing down, retail sales fell 0.5
percent in February for ~the first ·
~
decline in nearly a year.
185
The Commerce Department also·
said today that sales advanced 0.6
percent in January, revised upward
from an earlier estimate of up 0.2
percent.
Tbe last time sales decreased
was in April, wben they slipped 1
percent.
Auto sales fell I percent last
oiCom- .
""
month· after dropping 0.2 percent centage point. was on Feb. 1.
the previous month - tbe first
Today's drop in sales was unexback-to-back drop since May . pected. Analysts bad predicted a
Excluding car sales, a volatile com- modest gain for February.
ponent, retail sales were down 0.4
Tbe Commerce Department said
percent in February after climbing sales totaled a seasonally adjusted
0.8 percent the previous month.
$192.8 billion, down from $193.9
Analysts bave been expecting billion in January.
slower -economic growth as the
Sales of durable goods were
Federal Reserve bas raised 'interest down 0.6 percent in February after
rates seven times in tlle last year. · re!llainlng unchanged the .previous
~o:t rt'cenl boost a half-per- month.
1

-: l?t.:

,•.t; .

/The

.

'

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Stall
Middleport will soon hire two
part-time police officers through a
· grant from the .federal anti-crime
bill, officials announced at MondaY's village council meeting.
..
On a 4-0 vote, council agreed to
spend $3,091.43 each year for three
years as part of the local match for
this grant. The federal portion of
.1be grant totals $39,314, Police
REQUEST RENEWED - A request to have
Dale Smith, representing the Committee to
Chief Sid Little said . ·
Restore the Reedsville Precinct, and Olive
~he Reedsville voting precinct restored was
These officers could work. at
renewed Monday afternoon. Meeting with the · Trustees· Bill Osborne, Randy Boston and
night, on foot patrol and at the park
Meigs County Board of Elections were Olive
Ernest Barringer. (Sentinel photo)
for ball games, Little said.
Township Clerk Martha Durst, and from left,.
Since the department can't
afford any overtime, the extra offiimprovements.
opposing the action were" filed by turning the board·s original 1989 cers ~ill ease the strain during
· "We've got two gas stations, a the Committee to Restore the action. The latest ruling was made mvesugauons, he added.
post office, a fii'C station, and a gro- Reedsville Voting Precinct. Both . by Taft on Dec. 27, 1991.
"It also helps cut oveniine dureery store, and not having a voting times the vote result was two in
Tbe reasons cited by the board ing vacation times," Little said .
precinct makes our people feel left favor: and two against restoring the : for combining the smlj!ler precincts
Both officers will be part-time
out," said Smith.
precmct. Tbe vo,tes were along included cost savings, accessibility employees, meaning the village
There are a total of 1048 regis- party hoes.
and safety, and convenience of the will not have to pay benefits,
tered. voters in the NMtb and South
As. provided by state law, in voting poblic. That original action · Mayor Dewey Horton said.
Olive precilicts. A total of 547. both mstances because of the lie wl)s by a unanimous vote of the
"This would help to give better
voted in the township in November vote, the matter went to the office board.
investigation of drugs, too," Horton
1994, Hunter said.
of the secretary of st,ate. Both tiines
Besides Hunter. other members added.
Twice after the Reedsville the secretary, at fu st Democrat of the board arc Democrat John
precinct w~ dissolved, tbe' J;tllltter Sherrod Brown and then Republi- lble and Republicans Henry Wells
Tbe pohce department is and
was reconsidered after pet1t1ons can Bob Taft, voted against over- and Bernard Gilkey.
bas been undcrstaffcxl, said Council
President Bob Gilmore.
"We certainly need to keep our·
priorities straight," Gilmore said.
In other business, council 'agreed
Tbe
p{oject
is
slated
at
about
$1,000:
to
discuss the village's financial
$142,800.
With
village
labor,
the
• BankOne of Pomeroy, $500.
situation
at the n'ext Middleport
project
could
be
reduced
to
about
• lzaak Walton League, $250.
Community Association meeting.
$120,000.
Mayor
Dewey
Horton
• rirtles Bank, $200.
"A group of people arc asking
said.
•
•
• pledged $500.
bow
the village got into its shape,"
It must be completed by this
•. county conservation groups,
said
Dennis Hockman. Som e
July, said Jean Tru ssell, village
pledged $1 ,000.
rumors
of embezzlement are circu• Pat O'Brien, will bold tourna- grants coordinator.
lating,
he
added. ·
·
The venture includes a floating
ment golf outings.
.
"S
everal
bu
siness
owners
arc
• Tom Barnhart, Marine Ser- dock, a wider ramp and a new
blaming
the
village
for
their
lack
of
vices.
boater P,arking lot. Trussell said.
business
because
of
the
village'
s
The county commissioners had Between eight and 10 parking
lack
of
solving
problems,"
Hockpreviously committed $26,800 in spaces for boaters will be added
man adi:Jed.
state grants, said Commission Pres- between Walnut and Rutland
Horton said that through two
streets on Front Street.
ident Fred Hoffman.
state
audits no embe1.zlemen1 findAvailable for use y~ar-rouod,
Tbe county's grant process,,
ings
have
occurred.
could bave been jeopardized if the" the aluminum dock will be 30 feet
"The one big cause that we're in
$94 ,000 in state grants was long and 10 fe el wide, Trussell
this
condition is unfunded federal
.
addetl.
returned, Hoffman said.
mandates," Horton said. "Some
businesses have left. We're trying
to skinny down our spending ."
Councilman Steve Dunfee suggested a tas k for ce develop a
chronology of events to explain
Officials declined to accepi a
charges.
bow the village got in its current
plea
bargain
on
Barker.
_rJ.~o:i.ii
~
Officials earlier agreed to drop
financiat
straits.
"Keith
(Wood)
could
bave
been
felony charges against two other
In
other
action. council :
men with Barker that night in · burt very bad," explained Meigs
•
accepted
the dissolution of the
exchange for their testimony. How- Prosecuting Attorney John R.
Middl
eport
Arts
Council. The
ever, tbe two entered pleas to sev- Lentes. "We've got to show you
group
bas
existed
for
the past five
THINKING · SPRING eral nlisdemeanor wildlife offenses. can't ,do·lbat."
years,
with
village
funding
and priRickie D. Gobert of Hurricane, . The arrests were the result of a Pomeroy's John Weeks mowed
W.Va., pleaded guilty 10 six counts collaborative effort between Obio his lawn for the first time Ibis vate donation s. Tbe village
of spotlighting, five counts of rak- and West Virginia game officials to year Monday afternoon. "People dropped funding this year. A new
ing a deer with a gun during closed combat spotlighJing, officials said think I'm crazy. One guy drove independent group will likely be
by pointed at me and laughed," formed.
season and one count of iinproper at the time.
\
Blood and deer parts, along with Weeks said. "It's much better
transportation of a firearm, while
• dissolved tb e Middleport
Warren M. Shirkey of South a spotlight and a .22-250-caliber than shoveling •now." Earlier Housing Corporation since the vilCharleston, W.Va .. pleaded no con- rifle were found in the suspects' car Monday, he weeded his raspber- lage no longer owns homes . The
test with a finding of guilt to a and confiscated . The car, a 1992 ry patch. Hl&lt; Irises and Ulle• are $4,600 in the fund was transferred
charge of spotlighting.
Chevrolet Lumina, was impound- preparing to bloom, he added .. to the general fund. ·
(Sentinel photo)
• had an Ohio Depar tment of
ed.
Natural Resources grant applica. ti on for the village pool turned
down. Officials should Jearn ahout
anbtber pool grant in April.
"
LOS ANGELES (AP) - It was spent much of the early part of his
Fubrnian returns to court today
• passed the first reading of an
the moment that F. Lee Bailey bad cross-examination poking here, for a fourth day on the stand.
ordinance
that will chan ge the zoo-'
been building up to all day in bis prodding there, but not trying to
The defen se contends that
ing
nc!lf
General
Hartinger Parkcross-examination of Detective wipe Fuhrman out - yet.
Fuhrman is a racist who was motiway
and
Grant
Street
to make way .
MarkFubrman.
Legal analysts said Bailey was - vated by hatred for blacks and a
'
.
:for
a
Nazarene
church.
The follow•'Did you wipe a glove in that far from finished , and that mu~ h lust for personal glory to take one
!
ing
propert
y
will
change
from
Bfonco?" Bailey asked in bis still depends on how well Fuhrman of two ~gloves found near the bodies
industrial
to
residential-three
.
'f.bc
booming voice, clearly implying holds up and on the testimony of and plant it inside Simpson' s fence.
plot
numbers
include
193-197
and
that Fuhrman not only tried to defense witnesses wbo may contraBailey .spent much time testing
frame O.J. Simpson by planting a· · dict bim.
Fuhrman on his statement that be 200-202.
glove on bis estate the morning
Law professor Elwin Chemerin- never met Kathleen Bell, a woman • • beard the that fire department
after the killings, but rubbed it sky of 'the University of Southern whose allegations form the heart of will sponsor an Easter egg hunt at
inside Simpson ' s .Btonco to add California said the beginning of the the defense's frame-up theory. Bell General Hartinger Park. Donations
even more bloody, incriminating cross-examination dldn' t bode well contends that about I 0 years ago, of dollar bills and coins are needed
evidence.
for Simpson.
·
when she met Fuhrman at a Marine for the I ,800 eggs.
Fuhrman didn't snap. He·didn't
"The defense bas sucb a heavy Corps recruiting station , be
get angry. He didn't lash back.
• will help sponsor a town meetburden to meet to sb.ow that it' s denounced interracial couples and
Instead, be cracked a grin and even plausible that Fuhrman plant- said he would like ui burn alt" nig- ing at 7 tonight at the Legion annex
answered, ''No.' '
for "Vision Quest 2005 ."
ed the glove," Cbemerinsky said. gers."
.
• received $2 ,143 throu gh the
Tbe most critical witness to date " So far, 8rter almost a full day of
. Fuhrman empb ati ~ ally mainfor both sides kept it short and sim- cross, Bailey bas really done little tained that be never met Bell. But • mayor's report. ple Monday, answering only what to establish that. A lot of what Bai- under Bailey ' s questioning, the
• learned the Middleport Volunbe bad to and conceding very little. ley was getting at dido' t go any- detective acknowledged not paying Leer Fire Department answered 73 '•
Bailey appeared to be holding Where.''
attention.to a woman who once was calls in February, with 15 fire and
back, calmly and methodically
58 resc ue ·runs. The department
"All in all," said Loyola Uni- at the reeruiting station.
stalkipg his prey, showing little of versity law professor Laurie LevenAsked if be was sure th at ·.spent 33 hours on fire,· EMS. and
the bOmbast and bluster be unload.- son; "Bailey bas thrown out a lot woman and Bell were not the same resc ue training, while members
ed on a far less important police of innuendo but basn'·t es tablished person, Fuhrman 'answered, " I'm logg ed -99 hours on equipment
witness, Sgt. David RO!!si. Bailey muc~ wilb the wibless."
·maintenance .
/
not sure .

Alleged spotlighter ·faces trial for assault
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
A man accused of assaulting an
Ohio wildlife ofticer is scheduled
to face Ilia! Thursday morning in
the Meigs County Court of Common Pleas ..
Michael R. Barker, 49,
Charleston, W.Va., is charged with
felony Oeeing and felonious assault
of Meigs Coun!y Wildlife Officer
Keith 0. Wood on the morning of
Nov. 11, 1994.
He is accused of leading W&lt;iod
and law enforcement officers oo .a
15-mile cbase tbrougb western
Meigs County after Wood attempted to arrest Barker for spotlighting,

2 Sections , 12 Pages 35 cent.

Village
to hire 2
part-time
officers

'1\IUddleport continues hunt for donati-o ns

'

L..., tonlgbtiD tiM 401, dear.

Wednesday, ounny. Hlahlln 70&amp;.

GM will bave limited access to
credit balances from the conllibution until 2003, and United States
Trust Company of New York will
act as an independent trustee; in
charge of managing the stock.

pictures in the invisible far ultraviolet.
The images from this flight will
be used to test a theory that the
ultraviolet surface brightness of a
celestial object without an atmosphere can reveal bow long that
object bas been exposed to space.
For example, a newer moon
crater should theoretically reflect
more ultraviolet light than the surrounding area because dirt there
was more recently exposed. The
method could be .used to study
other planetary objects from afar.
The shuttle telescopes have also
been studying Mars and Jupiter.

FDA fights for food safety amid critics clamor
BALTIMORE, Md . (AP) medicine to mascara to froz en
Entomologists sift rat hairs from
pizza. It is under harsh attack by
pasta as bugs scurry in a jar of critics who contend the fDA overbasil.' Scientists ·sniff out decaying
regulates medicine to the detriment
ftsb and spot killer bacteria. Workof patients and drug makers.
ers grind bananas in huge blenders,
Largely ignored is the FDA's
turning them into brownish muck
food side, .where workers test new
and then filtering out bidden pestiingredients for aUergens and nullicides.
tional value alid quietly sample the
This is how 900 Food and Drug nation's food supply for contamination.
Administration scientists keep contaminated food from Amerfca' s
Anything can get .a spot check:
dinner tables. It' s th e FDA's At the fDA's Baltimore laboratory,
biggest job, done with a sliver of its a microbiologi st swabs a deli 's
budget - but one lost in the grow- macaroni salad on microscope
ing clamor to revamp the nation's slides to check for the distinctive
oldest consumer protection agency. blue fuzz of deadly listeria bacteria,
"Sometimes you go into food while emomologist Michael Zimplants and you tbjnk, 'Ob my God, merman. pieces together bug body
I'll never eat Uiis .stuff again, " ' parts he sifts from food. '
. said Kenneth SbeUn, a veteran food
"People ask, 'Wby do you do
inspector who now beads the this? Insects ·are edible,"' ZimmerfDA's Baltimore fiel(l office. "We . man said. " If it' s a bug from the
keep _consumers from seeing that field, there's some tolerance .. Then
side. So when the criticism comes · we identify bugs we know live in
... you just keep your bead down corpses, excretia or open wounds
and keep on working."
- and people say. 'My God. this
The FDA regulates 92,000 com- was in my food!'"
panies that make everything fr\)m
But consumer groups say such

American
Legion
assistance

Guaranty Corporation will be
closely m® itored. " We must
assure that these funds are prudently managed to provide continued
protection for GM' s workers," be
said.

•

Farsighted shuttle telescope zooms in on moon

Ohio Lottery

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