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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

�•
\)

Tuesday, March 14, 1995

•

Commentar
The Daily Sentinel

Page-2-The Dally_Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, March 14,1995

Wednesday, Man:h.lS
Accu-Wea~JM:r8 forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

MICH.

Orten in the aftermath of clam- their devotion to black ink while They would support a balanced Republicans to eniist Democrats lo
orous congressional debates on shamelessly ignoring their own budget amendment, they said, if the the balanced budget cause. ' 'This is
weighty matters, I am visited with sorry record of fiscal malteasance.
Republicans would agree not to use no place for deal making, for backa pleasurable fantasy.
If a single one or them lamented Social Security surpluses to bal- room huddles," he said.
I imagine that I am given a
ance the budget. Fellow Democrats
Need anyone be reminded that
magic scepter and assigned to
fell
all
over
each
other
as
they,
too,
this
is the same Botiby Byrd who
' Joseph Spear
search out all the charlatans, feathclamored for the Social Security vowed in 1990 that be would direct
erbrains, hypocrites and liars who their support a decade ago for the cover. Oh, gag me with a pocket a billion dollars worth of pork to .
ROBERT L. WINGETI'
participated in the affray. I tap supply-side bunk that dispatched us calculator. For years, lawmakers of his home state before 1995? "I'm
Publisher
them on the shoulders with my to deficit hell in th~ first place, I both parties have been counting. the trying to get the money as fast as
mysterious mace and they are didn't hear it. If a solitary Republi- . trust fund's extra dollars as general the state can keep up with it," he
transformed .inlo waterbugs. I then can explained why th~y voted revenue and ·using them to hide the said. If we had no natural immunity
collect them in a mason jar and against BiU Clinlon's defJCit reduc- true extent of their defiCit spending. against damn f.ool politicians,
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
release them in a glassy pond teem- tion budget in 1993, it escaped me. Indeed, there is no " trust fund" for Bobby Byrd would give us all the
General Manager
Conlroller
ing with voracious bigmouth bass.
If one member of the GOP speci- Social Security. It is fuU of nothing plague. I thoroughly enjoyed the
I reveled in this fantasy fre- fied how they were going to give but Treasury Department IOUs, specter of a bunch of bass fighting
quently during the recent debate on us tax cuts, Star Wars and a bal- and for the Democrats to pretend over the Bobby bug.
LJ!TI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be leu tbao 300
a balanced budget amendment to anced budget· at the same time, I otherwise is hypocrisy of a high
won!J long. All !etten ..., subject to editing IJid mull be oigned with name,
Speaking of demagoguery, the
the Constitution.
addrasllld telepbooe numbe:. No unligned !etten will be publisbed. !.etten
must have been asleep.
order, not to mention sheer dema, president of the United State£ him1bould be in good lUte, odcnsling iss1101, not penonalities.
How satisfying it was to see in
What a pleasure it was also to goguery.
self pulled down the top prize in
my
mind's
eye
the
little
Republican
imagine
the Democratic bugs vanSpeaking of hypocrites, there . that particular category when he
.__ _ _ _..,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __, , bugs disappe3!' with a muted splash
ishing into the jaws of lunkers, was none greater than the Prince or devoted one of bis weekly radio
in a subtle swirl of water. For especially North Dakota's contri· Pork himself, Sen. Robert Byrd of broadcasts to a denunciation of the
weeks they had been stomping butions 1o senatorial skullduggery, West Virginia, who railed against balanced budget amendment as"
around Capitol Hill, proclaiming Kent Conrad and Byron Dorgan. the "sleazy, tawdry" efforts of "extreme fiSCIII policy" that could
jeopardize the economy. "In its
moil exaggerated form, it's what
~--------~·----~,·--------------------helped turn the ·economic slowdown of the 1920s into the Great
Depression of the 1930s."
By WALTERR.MEARS
Oh, so now it was balanced budAP Special Correspondent
gets that created the Depre&amp;sion.
WASHINGTON - Belatedly, President Clinton is trying to re-estab·
What a pleasure it was to dream
lish his claim on the welfare reform issue - calling it part of his own
about Old Bill being swallowed up
contract with America. But con~sional RepubliC!DS have the lead now.
by Old Bigmouth.
They actually got it unopposed, since the administration let_the subject
lapse for a year-long task force study, then proposed a reform bill without .
:So fl.ack we go to the same old
·pushing it, too late for action in 1994 anyhow.
stuff, , with the pols talking about
bow all they·need is a little courage
Clinton said his welfare proposals acrually are tougher than the GOP
plan on some points. But it isn't playing that way politically, It was, effecand spine to attack the deficit, and
tively, new business when the Republicans took over Congress, despite
softheaded editorial writers
the president's 1992 campaign promise to "end welfare as we know it."
applauding the defeat of the
amendment and allowing that now
Now they're saying that he didlit- and they will.
But Clinton argues that the bill House Republicans are readying for
it's time to get serious about the
deficit, and blah blah blah.
action in two weeks or so is unfairly tough on needy children and too
I'd make bugs of them all, and
weak on work requirements. The Democrats are drafting their version, but
won't have the votes to pass it. Clinton said the bill he proposed last year
feed them to the fishes. The counought 1o be the basis for a final reform measure, calling it ''pro-work, protry mi~bt be broke, but the bass
education, pro-responsibility and pro-state flexbility,''
would be fat and happy.
He also said be sees points of agreement and openings for compromise
Joseph Spear is a syndi~ated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
with the Republicans. But the debate is. beaded in the opposite direction.
Association. .
The only consensus is that the current welfare system is a failure and get.(For Information on bow t~ ·
ting worse~
•·
'
Republican National Chairman Jlaley Barbour said the White House is
communicate electronically wlth
misrepresenting tile Republican propbsal, trying to stir an emotional reacthis columnist and others, contion by saying it would take food out of the mouths of children, "sitting
tact America Qnllne by calUng 1on the sidelines, throwing rOcks."
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
. Clinton contends that his welfare ideas are no weaker, just differen~
I
and more workable than the GOP plan.
"I'm glad the Republicans cbose to make welfare reform part of their
'Contract for America' ," the president said. "It's always been part of my
contract with America."
.
Under the influence of some saw the re-release of Sam Peckinthe House Republican bill would cut off cash welfare benefits after
The alarming truth is, wi1d
All I know is this: Psychofive years; they call that the toughest work requirement of all. But fmding strange compulsion, I went to see pah' s masterpiece ; "The Wild bunches of roving train and bank Bradyism is creeping in everyjobs is an open question; they dismiss as makework a Democratic propos- "The Brady Bunch Movie" last Buncb;" about this middle-aged robbers may be a thing or the past, where. Rosa Lopez is Ann B.
al to help the states pay for temporary employment when there :ire no jobs Week. I must admit that the film- guy, facing unemployment, whO but the Brady bunches of the real Davis' evil twin . .11 wouldn't surmakers were very clever. Rather
open. The GOP bill also eliminates job training as an alternative.
world have become more wild. All prise me 1o learn that Marcia Clark
.ll would permit states to count people as working whenever their wel- than set the movie in tbe '70s, ·.
across
America moms and dads are has a younger sister, Jan, who
lanShoales
when the Bradys were just more .
fare benefits are ended. ·
hacking
each other wiih serrated prowls the hallways, muttering,
"Now when people just get CUI off without gonof' to work ... they're banal tidbits in a cultUral sea of tid- decides to shoot up the workspace. utensils, shooting each other over "Marcia. it's always Marcia." .She
. likely to end up ... on your doorstep," Clinton wid the county officials., bittery, they set the movie in the Though this movie does not end child cuslody disputes, and leaping may have a semi-automatic con· '''That's not welfare reform; that' s just shifting the problem from one vicious '90s, making the Bradys happily, there are a number of sim- with their offspring· from tall, hard cealed under her Ofll!lge miniskirt.
seem like str.inge apparitions from ilarities between Bunches Wild and places . .
, place to another."
.
.
·
Hoping to nip a domestic apocaBrady.
The dilemma is that putting people to work, or training them for i~ another planet
:'
It's the Wild West all over lypse in the bud. I called Marcia
The urban landscape of "The
- Both bunches are stuck in a again! This time around, however,
-: would be expensive. There's neither the political mood .nor the money in
Clark to tell her, "Look, don't
world
that is passing them by
Brady
Bunch
Movie"
is
less
sit·
:. Washington to subsidize jobs when there are none otherwise, as House
the
West
bas
been
conquered.
I
freak out. I'll watch the kids for ·
·: Democrats have proposed. Requiring it of the states is the kind of federal com and more "Falling Down," (Mexico, suburbia),
think , therapists would agree, · you . Relax. Prepare a tort. Go buy
"To Live and Die in L.A .," or
- Both bunches are surrounded today's domestic gunslingers are
:: mandate the GOP Congress already has voted to ban.
some outfits."
:Ronald Reagan's welfar~ overhaul of 1988, a progflllll Clinton helped "Blade Runner." The streets are by people who are appalled and slapping leather in a Boot Hill of
I couldn't get through. Probably
': draft when he was a governor of Arkansas, was billed as workfare, but gridlocked; smo~ rules. Kids are puzzled by them, yet want things the mind.
just
as well : One of my all-time
: : didn't live up to the name. It set goals, not mandatory work rules. Only sullen, tattooed, msolent and dan· from .them (guns, sex).
Why are we becoming more favorite lines from the movies is ·
- Both bunches have a patri- lawless and violent? Well, for one
: · about eight percent of the 5 million adults receiving welfare have jobs of gerous. The adults are out of it,
cruel, venal. Everyone snarls but arch keeping the group together thing, we don't have much of a William Holden's "If they move,
::. any kind.
.
kill 'em." Especially. in today's
•
While the political debate is in bold letters, there's a lot of fine print the Bradys. Only the Bradys shine . (Dad Brady, Pike Bishqp).
social strucrure any more. I under- moral climate, this doesn't inspire
- Both bunches have implaca- .stand that even prosecutor Marcia
:• behind it. For example, the two-year limit on benefits without work actu- in t"eir glowing polyesters and
ble enemies (Mapache's army, the Clark asked to delay the O.J. pro- · much confidence in my day-care
·: ally would be phased in over eight years, under a biU·that expires after relentlessly cheerful gtoupthinlc.
abilities.
People around the Bradys are next-door neighbors).
:: ·fjve. By the year 2003 it would eovcr 50 percent of single parent welfare
ceedings last week because she
receive a complimentary
appalled and puzzled by them. And
- Both bunches are held couldn't find a sitter for her kids . Ian(To
: . families and 90 percent of two-parent families. .
.
Shoales
newslelter, call 1·
• · Clinton said be's spent years on the, problem. "Those Of us who work yet the alcoholic housewife next (ogether only by a cheerful, can-do, Despiti beipg a world-class lawyer 800-989-DUCK
or write Duck's
on it know it's a little more Complicated than people who just talk about door, Marcia's best friend, and the let's slick together attitude.
herself, she apparently is involved · Breath, 408 Broad St., Nevada
high school jock all want to have
If I were still in college I could in some kind of awful custody
' i~" be said.
probably
sex
with
some
Brady
or
other.
Sex
make a post-modem the- struggle with her ex, and bas to City, CA 95959.)
That's so, but Republicans have the advantage on the issue in part
Ian Sholes is a syndicated
because the details are so complex and elusive. Welfare cutoffs and the with a Brady sounds like tickling a sis out of this, chock full of words prove that she can convict a writer for Newspaper Enterprise
$50 biUion in savings projected under the GOP plan are the kind of sym- Barbie to me. It could be accom- .like "hegemony" and "heuristic." celebrity, be a celebrity, and raise Association.
plished, in other words, but why? I could earn both tenure and the ber offspring at the same time .
bols that work politically.
(For Information on how to
Welfare is, after all, the most widely unpopular of federal programs. Anyway, everything ends happily, wrath of anti-p.c. conservatives Sounds like simultaneous walking, communicate electronically with
with chipper Bradyness. infecting everywhere. But with everybody chewing gum, juggling and whinThe issue is a campaign fixture, and wiU be again in 1996.
this columnist and others, coneven their blighted urban milieu.
toting guns these days, I'd' better ing to me, but what do !know?
tact
America Onll11e by calUng 1Coincidentally, last week also watch my step. ·
EDITOR'S NOTE.:._ Walter R. Meai:s, vice president and colum· ·
800·827-6364, ext. 8317.)
.
; nisi for The Associated Press, bas reported onWas.bington and
·
·
·
·
: national politics for more.lban 30 years.

111 COurt Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

' IMansfield l1o• I•
IND.

.

~

...

() '

•

&lt;jll ...

'

/. YOUNG SAMSON
~.-~

I

.I

Kara Hultgreen' s name has been
cleared. We now know that the
Navy combat pilot, the first woman
ever assigned to fly an F14-A fighter, was not responsible for the
crash that killed her l~t October.
The anonymous phones calls and
faxes have cease!!; as have the
insinuations that the Navy rushed
Hultgreen through training because
she was a woman. Engine trouble,
not pilot error, was the problem·.
But the controversy over women
in the military is far from over.
When the ban on women in combat
was lifted in April 1993 critics
cried fOUl, saying-that political correctness was taking priority over
national Security.
"The gender police are
patrolling the corridors of the Pentagon," sail\ the Heritage Founda- ·
lion's Kate O'Beirne on an ABC
News special. • 'This is such a ,
bizarre social experimenL' •
0' Beirne and other critics say
the military is crazy for pretending
tbat women can keep up with men
on combat assignments. They point
to the fact that the physical requirement for .women in the armed services is lower than that for men.
Women do fewer push-ups, for
example.
.
The military's defenders
resJXllld that this was simply a test
of bas ic physical fitness, rat.lier
than a requirelllent based on a specific task. As Bobbie Carleton, a
retired Navy public affaifs officer,
}loin ted out in the S~n Diego

Union-Tribune, Navy women have
to meet the 'same flight-training
standards as men. "The women
dori' t get breaks on these. They are

SaraEck~l

Similarly, Shannon Faulkner,
the college student who is still
fighting to become a full -time
cadet at the Citadel military college, doesn't like ·to be called a
feminist. About her court victory
last July she said, "It's not just for
women. It's for everyone- if you
believe in something, go for it."
It's too soon to say whether the
new co-ed mil.itary is going to be a ·
success. Women should not be
punished for the .weaknesses of
men, nor men for the weaknesses
of women. But it seems 1o me, with
a few more women like Hilltgreen
and Faulkner and a few less men
like the pathetic tent-pitchers, we'd
.·have one bell of a military.
Sara Eckel Is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(For Information on how to
-comm11nlcate eleclronlully with
this columnist and otllers, contact Aln!!rica Online by calling 1·
!100·827-6364, ert 8317.)

n_ot told they can do fewer hours
flying, fewer take-offs, less time
treading water or anything else like
that," she said.
,
Nevertheless ; the physicalrequirement argument is a strong
one. A much lamer argument was
th~ sexual tension would harm
troop morale ·and productivity.
Washinglon TIDles colUUUJist Fred
Reed prepares himself to be
"lynched" when he reports anecdotes from a friend of his. According to his source, an officer in the
infantry, the women in his utiit
would walt 3!'0und in T -shirts,
some without bras, while on field
training exercises.
' "l~e guys ended up putting up
female.'' .
"
the tents while the gals watched
and said encouraging things," said
the colonel. "Why? Because each
of those guys in his vile little rat
mind was thinking that if only he
'
were nice enough to Betty Boop, By The Associated Press
maybe she'd crawl in the bushes
~oday is Tuesday, March 14, the 73rd day1&gt;f 1995. There are 292 days
·
with him. Mostly she didn't, but left m the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
· ·
·
she didn't need to."
Mterward Reed tries 1o placate
9" M:vch 14, ·1794, ~iWhi~ ~eived a patent for his cotton gin,
the supposed. angry mobs: "Yes, I an mvenuoo that revoluuomzed Amenca's cotton industry.
·
On
thts
date:
.
'
know .this Is infuriating to those
In 1743, the first recorded town meeting in America· was held at
women who don't usertheir sexual• .· .
.
.
·
'
ity," Jle ~oles. Actually, I think ,Faneull Hall in Boston.

Today in history

-

--t

.,

~'

I

Roger Ira Riebe~ 56, of Long Bottom. died Monday, March 13, 1995
in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born Jan. 26, 1939 In Chester, son of the late Elber and Elizabeth
White Riebel, he was a member of the Professional Bowlers' Association.
He was a member of the Industrial League, the Tue,sday Night Baseball
League, and a former manager of the Wyan Bowling Lanes in Belpre.
He is survived by his wife, Hazilee Cobb Riebel; son and daughter-inlaw, Roger and Robin Riebel of Long Bottom; daughters and sons-in-law,
Beth and Keith Lyncb of Middleport. and Rhonda and Dave Carnahan of
Tuppers Plains; and eight grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by his brother, Leo William Riebel.
_. Services will be 2 p.m. Tbursday in the White Funeral Home,
Coolville, with Tom Buck officiating. Burial will follow in the Chester
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home between 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Wednesday.

ciA

No break in mild weatherare there any objections?

Volunteers quit dragging
for missing tow worker

BREC .wi/1 allow members
to read meters each month
Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative members will getlo read their
own meters again and be able to do
so for an indefmite period, BREC
officials said loday.
The new procedure replaces the
program of every other month
readings instituted last November.
Meter reading will continue to
be studied to see if it can be implemented in the future without major
fluctuations in members' bills,
Member Relations Manager Wayne
King said.
s ·ome monthly statements
mailed to members next week will
include some estimated and adjusted bills as part of the transition in
the meter reading.
Some current meter readings
will still be for a shorter than norI

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213·9601

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Friday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
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Jl

GOP options to trim
programs draw·fire

W.VA.

~-~--~f.8~~-

the Brady bunch

this is far more insulting to those
men who don't dissolve into a
warm blob every time a woman
swishes her hips." Who are these
wimps, an.Yway? THEY'RE supposed to be the great defenders of
oor country?
But portraying men as victims is
fashionable these days - an interesting development since women •s
rigbts activists are so often accused
of being crybabies.
About the only people who
could never be accused of playing
the. victim card are the women
breaking these barriers - the Kara
Hultgreens; the Shannon Faulkners.
Hultgreen's sister, Dagney, says
that her sister was not out to strike
a blow for womankind, only ·to
eliminate an obstacle she couldn't
believe existed. As Hultgreen told
her local television station; "Somebody forgot to tell me when I was
growing u~ there was something
you couldn r do because you were

Youngstown

Free skin testing clinic

Roger I. Riebel

. By ALAN FRAM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - A Senate
Republican package of options for
••
•r .,.
trimming Medicare, Medicaid and
Showefl T-sll&gt;lmS RakJ Flurries Snow
1&lt;8
Sllllly Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
other benefit programs is already
llfiiAMoci-"-GtopllcoN«
011K15Ac&lt;u--1her,lnc.
drawing ftre from advocates for the
elderly and is sure to attract even
more criticism.
Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H., who
headed a•Senate GOP task force
looking for the savings, released
the proposals Monday. They
By The Associated Press .
Sunset lonigbt will be at 6:37 p.m. include a new way to compute the
It looks like the fair and mild . and sunrise Wednesday at 6:44 · inflation rate that would reduce the
weather for Ohio will continue at a.m.
growth of certain benefits and raise
Weather forecast:
least through the work week. But
taxes for many Americans. In addiTonigbt .. .Mostly clear. Lows in . lion,
some scattered showers are possithe Republicans en.vision ·
ble, the National Weather Service . the low to mid 40s.
increasing costs for many elderly
.Wednesday ... Partly cloudy and people on Medicare and cutting the
said.
Tonight will be another good continued warm . A 30 percent growth of Medicaid and welfare.
night for stargazing, forecasters chance of showers toward evening
"We think we can provide betsaid, with mostly clear skies and. northwest. Highs from the upper ter programs with' fewer dollars,"· ,
mild temperalllfeS, Lows will be in 60s northeast to the middle 70s Gregg said.
extreme south. ·
the low to mid-40s.
But that's not what advocates
Extended forecast:
Temperatures will remain warm
for the targeted programs say. MarWednesday nigbt...A chance of tin Corry, chief lobbyist for the
on Wednesday, with a few more
showers.
Lows in the upper 30s to American Association of Retired
clouds and a chance of an afterlower40s.
noon shower northwest. TemperaPersons, noted that seniors already'
Thursday ... Fair. Highs in the pay an average of one-fifth of their
tures will be a bit cooler but still
very mild. Highs will range from middle 50s 1o lower 60s.
incomes for health care, more than
Friday ... Dry. Lows 35 1o 40 and other people.
the upper 60s northeast to the midhighs in the middle· 50s to lower
70s far south.
"This will · add to that to the
60s.
·
The reoord-bigh temperature for
point
it will be 1oo much for
Saturday ...A chance of showers. some where
this date at the Columbus weather
people," he said, adding,
station was 78 degrees in 1990 Lows 35 to 40 and highs 60 lo 65.
"You can expect to see strenuous
while the record low was 8 in 1993.
objections.''
Gregg's suggestions, now under
study by Senate Majority Leader
Bob Dole, R-Kan., provided the
ftrst clues as to what specific steps
Senate Republicans would take to
fire departments, including Gal· attack the deficit.
PO!Nf PLEASANT, W.Va Republicans in ihe House and
Volunteers have given up dragging lipolis, as well as the Gallia and Senate say they will produce plans
the Kanawha River for a Mason sheriff's offiCes, were this spring to balance the budget by
Moundsville, W.Va., man who involved in the dragging operation. 2002. But so far, it is the House
apparently fell from a tugboat Area marine businesses also assist- where most details have emerged.
ed.
Marcb6.
"It's just such a big area to try 1o .Committees there have already
' Searchers used about 10 boats to
voted to trim food stamps, school
drag a five-mile stretch or the river cover," Woods said.
lunches
and welfare, and House
Heavy
fog
on
the
river
hamthroughout the weekend, but were
leaders
are
openly searching for
.
pere!l
the
search
on
the
first
night,
unsuccessful.
major
reductions
in planned spendbut
firefighters
and
others
remained
Brent Yoho, 25, reportedly fell
ing
for
Mediclre
and
Medicaid.
in
the
area.
State
police·
assisted
iq
·
from the boat Mary Claire between
Gregg
estimated
his proposals
Brighton and Ambrosia around the search by helicopter.
would
produce
$475
billion to
The search began when resi8:30p.m. Monday.
$495
billion
in
savings
over five
Point Pleasant Volunteer Fire dents called authorities after hearyears.
His
task
force
was
asked 1o
Department spokesman Jim Woods ing screams from the river.
produce
$385
billion
in
reductions.
Last Wednesday's heavy snowsaid boats will now be used to confall
postponed the search, making Republicans conceded that because
duct bank searches for the missing
conditions too hazardous for rescue of the political sensitivity of cutting.
man.
benefit programs, any savings
Volunteers from &amp;evcral area oj5erations.
adopted are likely to be close to

·....-----------.·Soul searching in the
co-ed
military
.
Berry's World

1¥\.

1(1-

•

~-----------------------------------,--------------~

mee.~s

~

•

•lcotumbusl72"

Republicans have
lead on welfare reform

'The ·Wild Bunch'

--Area Deaths-- Local News in Bri·e f: .

OHIO Weather

If politicians were ·waterbugs

The Dally Set:1tlne~age 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

$385 billion.
"Each of us have .so_me_prob-

'

lems with some parts of it," said
Sen. Jobn Cbafee, R-R.l.
One of the most contentious of
Gregg's proposals would change
the way the government computes
the annual rate of inflation. Federal
Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan
and other experts say the government overstates the Increase in the
cost of living by up 1o 1.5 percentage points a year.
Reducina the inflation measurement would save the government
money because annual increases in
payments for many benefit programs, based on inflation, would be
lower. Since income tax brackets
are adjusted annu!llly for inflation,
too, this idea would force more
people to pay higher tax rates. The
government would save $64 billion
over five years from the proposal,
mostly from smaller boosts in
Social Security benefits and greater
revenue collections.
"Having said they wouldn't
tamper with Social Security, here
they go again," said Corry.
• Greenspan said the current costof-living calculations - while
overstating inflation in general understate the situation faced by
the elderly because of their largerthan-average spending on health
care. He suggested creating a special price index for the elderly.
Another GOP suggestion would
require elderly Medicare recipients
to pay one-fifth of their costs for
home health coverage. They currently pay nothing extra for the
coverage, in an effort to encourage
them to live at borne and not in
costly nursing homes.
Tbe proposal would cost th~ .
average beneficiary $1,200 annually by 2000, and the most heavily
hit would be low-income women
over age 75, Corry said.
Other proposals include:
• Medicare: The current system
.would be preserved, but those
choosing to use it wou1d face higher costs. Higher-income people, for
example, would pay bigger monthly premiums . In addition, a ·new
...Choice Care" system would offer
managed care. Under it, seniors
would receive federal payments for
care, varying by region, and could
keep 75 percent of anything they
dori't spend. Five-year estimated
savings: $100 billion to $120 billion'.

Meigs announcements

mal period due lo earlier changes in
meter reading dates, King said.
Information about the return to · Master Masons Inducted
then, the cemetery caretaker said.
member readings will be included
Pomeroy Masonic Lodge 164,
in BREC's next billing .
,
F&amp;AM, will conduct degree work Flushing to begin
The Racine Water Department
The cooperative will continue to for Robby Wyatt and Rhett Militemize members' biUs 1o show the hoan at II a.m. Saturday at the will begin flushing hydrants this
week, resulting in some discol"monthly minimum" amount sepa- . hall.
oration. The flushing will continue
rate from the energy charge and
over a two-week period, it was
power cost adju stment. Other · Rutland Council set
charges, such as for late payment,
Rutland Village Council will reported.
balances carried forward , credits ·hold its monthly m"e eting at 7 .
Dance to be held
and co:op services or purchases.
tonight at the Civic Center.
A round and square dance will
wiU also continue to be shown sep·
be
held Saturday at the Tuppers
arately.
Scout cookies for sale
Pllt.ins
VFW Post. Happy Hollow
Estimates will continue to be
Girl Scout cookies will be for
Boys
will
provide the music.
based on the average three-month
sale by Pomeroy Junior Troop
usage of a year ago, King said.
1309 at Krogers, Saturday, 10 a.m.
Eagles Auxiliary to meet
to2 p.m.
Many Wood, director of the
DARE
program in Meigs County,
Cemetery cleanup
wiU
speak
at a meeting of the Fra·
Cleanup at the Letan Township
Units of the Meigs County Cemetery ~iU begin on M,arcb 20. ternal Order of the Eagles AuxilEmergency Medic,al Service Anyone WIShing to save flowers iary Tues!llJy at 8 p.m. The busi·
answered five calls for assistance should have them removed before ness meeting will be held at 7:30
Monday including one transfer
p.m.
calls. Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
8:13. p.m ., Pearl Street, Ilene
Searles, Holzer Medical Center.

A free skin testing clinic will be conducted by Connie Karschnik, ·
R.N .. Meigs County ruberculosis nurse, at the Pomeroy Ftre Station
Wednesday, 4:30-6 p.m.
,
All individuals in food service are required to obtain annual skin
tests . Residents are 'encouragcd to take advantage of the the
ev.enings which are beld in various areas of the county each year.
The service is provided from ruberculosis levy funds:

Carey slates open door session
State Rep. John A. Carey Jr., R-Wellston, will conduct an open
door session in t.be Middleport Village Hall on Friday from 9-10
a.m.
Constituents in the 94th House District with quesiions and concerns are encouraged to attend .

Sunday accident injures three
Three people were injured in a two-vehicle accident on U.S. 33
investigated Sunday by the Gallia-Meigs Post of ihe State Highway
Patrol.
Driver Harvey J. Bush ll, 25, Letan. W.Va .. was not treated at
the scene, but two passengers in his 'pickup truck - Joshua W.
Kuhn, 14, Miamisburg, and Tricia M. Richards, 17, 309 Wetzgall
St., Pomeroy -were taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital' by the
MeigsEMS.
'
Kuhn and Richards were later treated and released, a hospital
spokesperson said.
The patrol said Bush was westbound at 7:36 p.m .. when he
attempted to pass another northbound car dnvep by Janette M.
Roacb, 31, 862 E. Main St., Pomeroy, and struck the Roach vehicle.
Roach was attempting to turn left onto County Road 40 (Burlingham) when the crash occurred, according 1o the report.
Damage to Bush's pickup was severe and moderate to Roach's
car, the patrol said. Bush wa• cited for unsafe passing and no seatbelt, and Roach was ticketed for unsafe rum .
.

EHS sports banquets sliaed
The Eastern High School Athletic Department and Athletic
Boosters will host the annual winter sports banquets this week.
Junior high athletes will be honored Friday and the high school
athletes Saturday, both at 6:30 p.m. Each family is asked to bring
either iwo desserts, or a finger food and a d~:&amp;sert. Drinks and table
service will be provided.
.
Also Friday night, an athletic boosters meeting will be held after
the banquet. New officers will be elected. Members arc encouraged
to attend .
.

Man charged with domestic violence

A 24-year-old Racine man faces a felony cbarge of domestic violence after he was arrested MondaY. nigh! by Meigs County sheriffs
deputies.
·
Robert C. Saltsman, Pearl Stree~ is accused of assaulting his 15year-old stepdaughter, said Sheriff James M. Soulsby .
Following the incident, Sal~ttnan was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Racine squad of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service for treatmept of a cut, Soulsby said ..
Saltsman has a prior conviction for domestic violence, making
this a felony incident, Soulsby explained. .

Criminal damaging probed
Meigs sheriffs deputies are investigating a criminal
aging .
incident at Forest Acres Park on New Lima Road near
and.
It was reported Sunday morning that the front
c was pushed .
open. Nothing was reported missing, according t sheriffs report.

Jurors to report Thursday
People called for Meigs County Common Pleas Court jury duty
should report Thursday at 8:45 a.m., instead of Wednesday.
·
The trial scheduled to stan Wednesday was postponed for a day,
said Paul Gerard, court administrator-bailiff.
· Jurors with questions should call the Meigs County Common
Pleas Court at992-6.439.
.

Livestock.report
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct bog prices at s~lected
buying points Tuesday· by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture Market
News:
Barrows and gilts: steady to
mostly 50 cents lower; demand
light 1o moderate for a moderate to
heavy run.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
points 37.00-38.00, a few "36.50;
plants 37.50-39.00.
.
U.S . 2-3, 230-260 lbs., country
points 33.00-37.00.
Sows: ftm1.
U.S. 1-3 300-500 lbs. 28.0032.50; 500-650 lbs. 32.00-37.50.

9:22p.m., State Route 338,
Elizabeth Salser, Veterans Memori·
a1 Hospital;
9:26 p.m. , Racine Fire Depart·
men~ Robert Saltsman, VMH.
TUPPERS PLAINS
6:11 p.m.. Tuppers Plains. Roselyn Taylor, St Joseph's Hospital.

~RANS MEMORIAL

·Monday admissions- none.
Monday discharges - none.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Dlschar11e• ' Mucb 13 Vanessa Lyons, Dale Sheets,
Lucille Danflouf, Ralph Scott,
Betty Boone, Fred Shepherd, Jack
Boyd, Jeffrey Watson, Michael
Miller.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Ferguson, daughter, Jackson.
(PubU.bed with pe~misslon)

.

HIDEftWRY
1Z 10,'Jzl0 DII.ILr .,., 916/U. I : IO,lz:lO 1•1

RDDMMRTU

tao,tz~;-:' ;;·-;:;-~~,~·;~ao.'l
'P:OO,t:OO DIUI.Y IM'. IIIWr/illt.I:OO,lzOO !lei

I THE BRRDY lUNCH MDII[ I
1:10,9:00 tNJ.Y lld'.MT/SM. 1110,lz00 IP0'\.!1
IlzlCI,,ziO HUUYWEtOHTS
I
..n'.M'I'/-. l :lO,l: IO !JCI
I
liLLY MRDIIDN
I
l: ZO, 9:20 DULY lid' , M'l'/-. 1 : lV, l:lO II'C1 Jl
OIUt.l'

Carpenters Local Union 650
103 Years in Pomeroy
March 16, 1892 • 1995

' ~­
Henry C. Peery
Bvsiness Representative
1954·1979, Retired

Stocks

NOTICE

Am Ele Power ........................32 318

We regret that the.Blue Streak Cab Co., will cease operation March 31, 1995.-.·
We have served the Community since July of 1985. We feel we have been an asset
and found. the service being greatly appreciated ·by thi: 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 Slreak Cab Co. was left with no other option than lo close.
We wish lo thank all of our customers for their supporl fndconcem. We also wish to
thank the Village
Middleport for administering the subsidy. Also many thanks to
Fruth's Pharmacy, Senior Citizens Center, Vaughans, C &amp; K Market, and McCullough &amp;
Riffle Drug Store for dispensing tokens. This they did as a service and received no
remuneration.
Any comment~ or concerns should be directed to lhe
Ohio Department of Transportation
•
25 South Front Street
Columbus, Ohio 43216-0899 .·

Akzo .......................................J5 7/8
Alhland 011 .........................o•.ll 718
AT"T .. ,.~'!!'"''"'""''''"''''"" '''.51118
Bank One ................................27 518

Bob Enns ...............................19 718
Champion Ind ......................20 1/4
Cbarmlng Sbop ....................5 318
Clly Holdtna ..:...................... -·.Z7
N ..

Federal M"ll.ul ........................18 318

Hospital news

--·~

CONGRATULATIONS

Meigs EMS runs·

RACINE

DUfllliK
... ,......
.....

1:00 t : lO MIU llft. lld' ... . 1!00 ltlO ~-~

Goodyeor TI&lt;R .....................35 1/4
K·mart .........................:..........11111

Lands End ..............................17 718

Limited lnc............................18 114
Multtniedla In&lt;......................37 3/4
Point Bancorp .............................. 19
Rockwell ............. ,\ .....:..........39 3/4
Robbins &amp; Myen ...~ .....................21
Royal Dutch......................... Ill
Shoney'9lnc ...........................10 1/4
Star Ba(\k ...............................411/2

ll,

_._._

Wendy IBt'l ............................16 Ill
Worthington Jnd..................
. .20 518

Stock reporb are the 10:30 Lm.
quotes provided by Advut of

of

Attn: Mr. Brent Harris

Gallipolis.

•

•

�•
•

Sports

The Daily Sentinel Tuesday; March 14, 1995

Chia&amp;o

WL

. P~L

GB

14

.174

New York... ............ 39 21

2l
23lfl
24 lf2
30lf2
JOln

2j

37

.650
.403

BOlton ................... 24
Miami
.......... 23
Philadelphia ....... 17
WuhiD[ilOD ...... 11

37
31
44
44

.393
.3n
.279
.279

New Jeney............

Vanf:9UV~

-

23
24

31
.SOO
8
31
.3n Ulf2
39 • .371
16

Atid•st Dh-blon

L

Pet. GB

Pittab

Utah
.......... .. 46 16
.742
San Antonio ...... 41 18
.695 3 112
HDLUitOII
......... 37 24
.6rrT 8 1!2
Denver
'"'""" 29 32
.475 16112
llallll!l
.......... 23 36
.399 21112
Mino~ ot.a
.. ..... 17 4~
.274
29
heine Dhision
.......... 46 16
,742
Phoeni1
4
.'683
Seattle
........... 41 19
L.A. Laten
... 38 23
.623 7 In
.550 12
Penland
.......... 33 27
Sacramento , ...... 30 30
.soo 15
. Go ickn State . ..... 19 42 .3Jl 2 lfl
.206 33112
L.A. Clippm ...... 13 50
. l &lt;lincbed playoff berth.
·~ond•J'• Gamrs
,
Wuhin!ltoal06, Olarlotte 103
Houston 97, Atlanta 86
L.A. Lakm 93, lDdillll 91
Dallas 130, Golden Stele 125
TutlldaJ'• G.,..., .
Houston at Atiladelphia, 7:30 p.m.
Cll.icago at" Wuhinaton;7:30 p, rfl:
UtBh at Orlando, 7:30p.m

Sports Tr~~n...:tlons
BJ The As101:l.ted Prn•

BASEBALL
Amwlcan Leapt
CAUFORNIA ANGELS-Reltucd
1tryan Smith, Rh:hard Jioyle and Elvin
Rivera , pitchen. Sent f teve Reate, Jr.,
Ku Valdez and Brian Willard, pUcben:
Kevin Davis, infielder; and Earl Cunning·
ham. ou tfielder , to their minor· league
·
camp ror reas~iailment.
KANS~S CITY ROYALS -Rc·
!cued Sean Colliu, Ramon Hetaudez
and Jim McDooald , iDrieldeu; Bert
Hunter, outfielder; Paul Williaml, catch·
et; and Rene Qulno11e1 and Mite Tidwell,

pll&lt;flen,
SEATTLE MARINERS - Sianed
Craia Farmer, Craig Weimni.nD, Chad
Wei1ner, John Mig;lio, Chuck Stanhope
and Randy Mc;CaDent, pitchen; Craig
Byant, CluiJ Almez aod Selwyu Young,
iofielderl: and Scot Sealy, calcha'.
TEXAS RANGERS - Added Bert
Gethan, pitcher1 to their ma.jor·leaaue roster.

FOOTBALL

N•llona.l Football Ln1ue
DAlLAS COWBOYS-Agreed to
terms with Jay Novilcek, tight end, on a
three-year contract.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS--Sigoed
George Seifert, roach, to a two-year coo-

tract ettensioa lhrouah 1997.

HOCKEY

N•llonaJ Hockey Ltaaue

• ANAHEIM MIGHTY DUCKS- Ao·
aianed David Sacco, left wing, to Sao
Dit:g o of the International Hoc key

League.

CH!CAOO BLACKHAWKS- Ro -

i::alled Steve DebiDik)', center, from l.Ddi·
anapoli• or the Interutiou l Hockey

Lea ill e.

60 68
5.5 72

48

WESTERN CONFERENCE

NEW YORK ISLANDERS- A•·
1igned Gord Dineen. ddensemaJl, to Den ver or the International Hockey LeagUe.
WASHINGTON CAPITALS-Recalled John Slaney, defensemao, from
Portland of lhe American Hocke;y League.

n

Cent...( Dlt'ls6on
.W L TPt1 . GF GA

Detroit

........ 15 6 2

32

87 so

CHARLIE BISSELL

AMBER BLACKWELL

"

CASS CLELAND

Amber Blackwell (Meigs), sr.;
Angie Dillow (Rock Hill), sr.
Honorable mention: Katie
Kostohryz (Athens), Becky Hamlin
(Fairland), Whitney Hastwell and
Meghan Kolcun (Gallia Academy).
Shelly Cook (Logan), Cindy Armstead and Nicole Meade (River
Valley), Stephanie Lowe and
Christi Moore (South Point) and
Heather Hayes (Vinton County).
Division UJ &amp; IV girls
First team: Kelli Smilb (Chesapeake), jr.; Gretchen Linscott (Federal Hocking), so; Jill Shafer (Nelsonville· York). sr.;
Kelly
McCorkle and Jamie Lewis (both
Oak Hill sophomores); Renee Turley (Southern), so.
Second team: Misty Mark.ins
(A.lexander). jr.; Trish Walters
(Goal Grove). so.: Becky Phillips
(Oa k Hill),· fr; Jonna Manuel
(Southern), jr.; Erin Sells (Symmes
Valley). jr.
Honorable mention: Jamie
Andrews (Alexander), jr.; Casey
Smith (Chesapeake), jr.; Natallie
Boothe (Coal Grove), sr.; Jessica •
Karr (Eastern), jr.; Mariah McAfee ;
(Federal Hocking), so.; Sandy Hem
(Miller), sr . Lindsay Shumway
(Nelsonville· York), sr.; Be til
Koon s (Trimble) , jr. ; Mandee
Argabright (Wellston), jr.

ton Sl. Joseph), Bill McGanh
(Miller), Jeremy Hill and Mason
Fisher (Southern), Jason Com and
John Paul Patterson (Synunes Valley) and Jamie Lambert (Wellston).
Among the big-school girls'
teams, Gallia ,Academy' s Min&lt;!y
Pope and Vinton County's Erica
Hayes shared player-of· the-year
honors. GAHS boss Renee Dames,
for her efforts in piloting the Blue
Angels to SEOAL, sectional and
district titles, was named the Division I·ll coach of the year.
Among the smaller-school
squad s, Oak Hill guard Jamie
Lewis, who cracked tbe 1,000point mark only a few weeks
before Division Ill 10urnamem
action began, shared player-of-theYellf honors with Nelsonville-York
guard/forward Jill Sliafer. Oak
Hill's Scott Cayton was named the
Division III-IV coach of the year
Division I &amp; D girls
First team: Kelly Kostohryz
(Athens), sr., Brandi Muon, sr. and
Mindy Pope, jr. (both Gallia
Academy) , Vanessa Compston
(Meigs), sr.; Amber Staton (River
Valley), jr.
Second team: 'Kim Bonham
(Fairland), jr.;Jera Bohlen, so,, and
Tara Rutherford, sr. (both Logan) ;

Strike talks postponed; Reds ·release pair

VANESSA COMPSTON

By BEN WALKER
AP BaselNIII Writer
While players and owners postponed strike talks that could get
regulars back on the field, teams
were busy taking care of their
replacement rosters.
Before · Cincinnati .played
Philadelphia, Reds general manag•
er Jim Bowden released two play-

Reds rally to edge Phillies

mas, Phoenit Sun1 forward, has been
cleared to rHume his p!ayiog career.

N.Y. Raogm .. 13 10 3 l9 74 66
Philadelphia· .... 12 9 3 27 76 69
Wuhiogton ... 9 10 6 24 61 61
Aorida
........ 10 12 3 23 60 69
New Jersey
... 9 II 4 22 65 66
N.Y. hlaad·er, ... 9 12 3 21 58 69
Tampa BBy
" ' 9 l!i 2 20 65 78
N~theut Dtrl&amp;lon
Pittsburgh ..... l8 6 2
38 101 84
' Quebec
...... 17 5 3
37 9561
B01too
....... 12 10 2
26 68 sa
' Buffalo
""'" 9 8 S 23 S1 S1
3 15 4

•

BASKETBALL

WLTPUGFGA

......

Severai club executives co,ntactPHOENIX (AP) - The poten- myself will have a comment"
Sapp and Stewart, also a junior,
tial No. 1 pick in the NFL draft,
Sapp declared himself eligible made themselves eli~ible for the ed by the AP said they did not
Warren Sapp of. Miami, failed drug for the draft after his junior yellf at draft shortly after M1ami lost the think. Sapp' s positive marijuana
tests would hurt him significantly
tests at the league's scouting com- Miami . He was an All-America Orange Bowl to Neb~
in
the draft.
bine last month, sources said.
defensive tackle and won the LornThe New York Times, citing bardi Award as the country's best
unidentified club executives, said lineman. He was sixth in the voting
in today's editions the defensive for the Heisman Trophy and led the
Motorboat Jones hit a three-run
PLANT CITY, Fla. (AP) lineman failed cocaine and mari- Hurricanes in sacks and fumbles
homer
for the Reds. It was bis sec-Dan Barbara hit two of Philadeljuaria· tests in Indiapapolis, the forced.
,
ond
spring
home run. ·
showcase for college talent heading
According to NFL policy, a col- phia's five home runs, but .the
Chris
Vasquez
singled home the
to the NFL.
·
lege player who declares himself Cincinnati Reds rallied to beat the
winning
run
in
the
ninth. Steve
ESPN, citing two league execu- eligible for the draft and subse- Pbillies 8-7 Monday.
Gann
scored
the
deciding
run after
Donald Broacb bomered in the •
tives, said Sapp tested positive for quently tests positive for a banned .
twowalking
following
Broach's
marijuana.
sustance is automatically entered · ninth inning as Cincinnati score.d
run
homer.
A half dozen club and league into the league's drug program three runs to win. The Reds are 6-0
The Re9s announced Monday':s
~xecutives, who asked not to be
once he signs a contract. Testing~ since manager Davey Johnson , '
crowd
as 1,153 people. ··
identified, told The Associated positive, however, ~s not prevent after opening with five straight
Before
the game , the Reds
losses, let assistant manger Ray
Press at the NFL meetings on Mon- . a player from entering the league.
·
released
pitcher
Tony Mosley and
day night tbat Sapp and up to seven
ESPN said Sapp was one of Knight run the team.
signed
right-hander
Allen Collins.
Former major leaguer Todd
players failed marijuana tests.
~even players who tested positive
General
manager
Jim
Bowd.en used
"I really don't have anything to for marijuana. The Times reported Cruz homered for tbe Phillies,
the
occasion
to
comment:
"Now
say until I talk to the league and the that running back James Stewart, along with Alex Ojea and Junior
we
have
gotten
rid
of
all
the
guys
peopl~ surrounding this issue,"
Sapp's teammate at Miami and a Lofton. Barbara, 26, who went to
who
can't
play
basebalL
We
won't
Sapp' s agent, Drew R0senhaus, possible frrst-round pick, failed a Old Dominion and bas no 'JlrO base. ball experience, dcove in three be embarrassed in games any
said. "And once I do Warren and marijuana test
more.··
J:UnS.

N•tlonal Buketb.lll ~•odatlon
NBA- AniiOUDCed that Richard Du·

' AllanU.: Dlrislon

With Chawansky leading the way,
Avon Lake won the Division II
state title last March.
The second team includes Canfield's Carrie Bender (5-8, Sr., 17.6
points a game). Greenfield
McClain 's Audra Cook (6-2, Jr.,
17.0); Dover's Rikki Cerett (5-7,
Sr .. 14.0); Lima Bath's Sherry
Kahre (5 -9, Jr. , 16.8); Markie
Gillilan of Franklin Heights (5-6,
Sr.. 23.8); Tennille Turner of West
Holmes (5-7. Sr., 16.0); Becky
Alexander Qf Ci·ncinnati McNicholas (5-9, Sr., 25.2); and Kelle .
Saxen of Canton Central Catholic
(5-10, Sr.. 14.2).
Listed on the third team were
Erica Hayes of McArthur Vinton
County, Mindy Pope of Gallipolis,
Ravenna's Andrea Pashall, Teresa
Davis of Bethel-Tate, Olmsted
Falls' Carissa Mahoney, Carrie
Swinford of Carrollton, Misti Halley of Circleville Logan Elm and
Oyde's Kim Lawrence.

Fourteen players from Gallia
Division 1 &amp; 11 boys
County bigh school teams and 10
First team: Terry Qualls (Gallia
from Meigs County clubs were Academy), sr.; Mark White (Ironselected by members of the District ton), jr.; Brad Howe (Jackson), jr;
13 Coaches Association for all-star Kris Begley (Logan), sr.; Brooks
status.
Fry (Rock Hill). jr.
The senior members of the
Second team: Mike Boyd
teams will compete in a all-star (Athens), jr.; Marq Davis (Ironton),
game to be held on Monday, March jr.; Coy Lindsey (Logan), so.;
20, at the University of Rio Doug Lloyd (River Valley), sr.;
Grande.
· Ralph Cox (Rock Hill), jr.
The firSt game will start at 6:30
Honorable mention: Kabieem
p.m. and feature the Division 1 and Maxwell (Athens). Dave Ricker
II girls vs. the Division III and IV .(Gallia Academy), Jarod Wolford
girls. A slam dunk and three-point . (Jackson), 'Chad Zimmerman
shooting contest will be held after (Logan), Cass Cleland (Meigs),
the girls game, followed by the Jamie Graham , Greg James and
Division I and II boys vs. the Divi- Bruce Ward (River Valley), Jerry
so~IIti=~Vw\i?bes. $3 .
Bowling (Rock Hill) and Kevin
Pennington (South Point).
Among the boys, Gallia Acade. Division m ·&amp; IV boys
my's Terry Qualls, one of two Blue
First team: Travi s Rice
Devils honored, was named the (Alexander), sr; Mark Whiting
player of the year in Division I and (Federal Hocking), sr.; Wes
II. Logan mentor Gary Swinehart McCorkle (Oak Hill), sr.; Ryan
was named the coach of the year Williams (Southern): B,rett Fink
for guiding his Chieftains to the (Wellston ), sr.
Southeastern Obio Athletic League
Second team: Charlie Bissell
title.
(Eastern), sr.; Paul Dillon (FairIn Division III and IV, Soutli: - land), jr.; Ryan Merckle (Miller),
em's Ryan Williams, one of two sr.; Jason Gail (Nelsonville-York),
Tornadoes selected, was named the sr · Steve Fink (Wellston) sr
year's.top player. Fairland's Jack_ ·•Honorable mention: Alex Gue
Harris, who bad two of his players and Sean Wilson (Chesapeake),
named,to the teams; was named the Ryan Wilgus (Fairland), Eddie Phiseason s top coach.
labaun and Mark Stuntebeck (Iron-

No. 1 NFL draft pick flunks drug test

Nallona.IIA•ue
CINCINNATI REDS-Signed Jere·
my Herider, inne!der, to a minor·league
contract.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Ottawa

atMontrcal ,7: 30p.m.

Toronto at Saalo~e. 10:30 p.m.

National Boeke}' Le•ue
AIAGianct
BJ n.e A•sod.ted Pre•
AIITimnEST

21
10

COLUMB US, Ohio (AP) West Holmes (23-1), rated ftfth in first team, is a 6-0 senior who averSemeka Randall, a sophomore the final poll, plays No.2 Cincinnati aged 19.2 points a game.
Billiter is a 5-8 senior who averlighming bolt for state poll charnpi- Roger Bacon (26-0) at 4 p.m. The
on Garfield Heights Trinity, drew winners meet for the title at 11 a.m. aged 22.9 points, 6.1 rebounds and
5.2 assists a game. Sbe was a sectop billing on the 1995 Associated · Saturday at St. John Arena.
•
Press Division II girls All-Ohio
Sharing the coach of the year ond-team choice last year. This
high school ba sketball teall! award are two roaches who wUJ be season she sbot 43 percent from the
released today.
in action in Columbus: Elida's field, 41 perw~t on 3-pointers and
A 5-foot-10 point guard who Vicki Mauk and Jack Van Reeth of. 75 percent on free throws. She is
headed for Bowling Green. .
·
was, selected as the outs tanding 'Millersburg West Holmes.
Miars, a 5-9 senior, was good
player in 'Frinity' s state charnpi- · Joining Randall on the first team
onsbip run last season, Randall was were Ashville Teays Valley's for 25.9 points a-game. The South
picked as player of the year in Minc)y Fusetti , Jenny Mueller of Carolina reauit, a firSt-team choice
Division II based on the recom- Cincinnati. Roger Bacon, Elida's last season, also averaged 10
mendations of a statewide media Chrissy Billiter, Nikki Miars of St. rebounds, 5.6 assists and 5.3 steals
panel.
·
•
Marys Memorial and Avon Lake's a game while shooting 54 percent
from the field and 76 percent at the
Randall averaged' 26.1 points a Megan Chawansky. ·
game as the sparkplug of a Trinity
Fusctti, who has slgned to play line. She scored more than 2,000
team that won the regular-season at Ohio State next year, averaged points in ber career.
AP poll title while averaging 91 20.9 points, 15.4 rebounds and 5
Chawansky not only is a
points a game.
blocked shots a game for an 18-2 repeater on the first unit, but also
. Trinity, the defending Division I team . A first-team choice for the was the division's co-player of the
champion, is back to the state tour- second year in a row, the 6-3 senior • yellf last season . The 5-8 senior,
nament this year in Division II. The bit 70.2 percent of ber shots from signed to play at Northwestern,
Trojans (25-0) taclde third-ranked the fJeld, 41 percent of her 3-point averaged 21.2 points, 7 rebounds,
Elida (24-0) at 2 p.m. Thursday w a!ICIIlpts and 69 percent at the line.
5.5 steals and 4.4 assists a game.
.the tournament opener. Millersburg
Mueller, also a repeater on the

phiaatN.Y. RansetJ,7:30p.m.
AAaheimat Calglf)', 9:30p.m.

Denver at New York, 8 p.m.

21

n

2
2
4
2

Phi

Charlotte at Milwaultee. 8:30p.m.
Mionuota at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m.
Detroit at Phoeo.i.t, Iii p .m.
Miami at PonJand. 10 p.m.
Boston al Seattle, 10 p.m
Dallas at Sacramento, 10:30 p.m.
Wednesday'• Games
Orlando at New Jersey. 7:30p.m.
Milwaukee al Indiana, 1: Jl p.m.
Atlanta at Oiicaao , 8: 30 p.m.
.Detroit at L.A. Clippers. 10:30 p.m.
L.A. Laker• 81: Golden State, 10:30 p.m

fbrtford , ... ~ 13 3
. Montreal . ..... 8 II 5

21 80 6S
2J 76
20 5070
20 64 83
20 72 89
14 51 88

l.o1 Aapla 4, Torooto l
Dallu 4, Chieqo 2 ·
Tuud.~y's G.mes
·
N.Y.'II Ianden a1 lbrtford. 1 p.m.
Otuwa at New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
Butralo • Florida, 7:30 p.m.
l.m Anaelea ll Dettriit, 1:30 p.m.
Vaucou\'U at Wlnnlptg, 8:30 p.m.
SL Lou !Ill EdJOOniOil,_9:30p.m. •
Wedfta'sGIInct

WESTERN CONFERENCE

W

8~

Wuhiflaton 3, Tampa Bay 0

w

.6f!7 I ! f2
.574 3 l fl
.SOO
II

26

11
13
11
IS

69

21

I 1

I

!10 62

lO

:Ill 12l9
26 71 7~
24 79 69

MCift•.,·•c.....
·
PitllbtriJb. 4, Montreal 2

.629

31

...

SudOK
...... 9
EdmciDI.OD
... 9
Loa ADaelea ... 1
AAaheirn
6

I

Centra.! Di..Won

Owlotte
., ....... J9
JodiiUla
.... ..... 31
Cleveland
........ JS
AUanta
.......... 31
Chlcago
.......... 31
Detroit
........... 23
Milwau kee
...... 23

1• 9 2

••• 1• 7 I

....... 11 ll 4
.. :..... 10 12 4
Winnipeg
9 12 3
Paellk Dtri"Calpry
••• II 9 S

EASTI! RN CONFE RENCE
Atlande Dtrillon
a..()rlando .............. 41

•••

SL Louw
Toronto
Dallu

24 area cage~s named tc;&gt; District 13
Coaches Association All-Star team

Trinity's.Randall named girls
Division II player of the year

Scoreboard
AI A Glaau
a, Tht
A.Nodatflf " " '
AU11muEST

Pomeroy:--Middleport, Ohio

•

Page-4

N•HOIIIal 8-.ketb.tl .baoc:l•tiOh

TUesday, March 14,1995

'!(·

.

'

ers.
"Now we have gotten rid of all
the guys wbo can't play baseball.
- We won't be embarrassed in games
any mo~," Bowden said.
The Oakland Athletics cut former major league pitcher Joe Kraemer and the Philadelphia Phillies
gave Class A pitcher Bryan Lundberg bis release, then signed him as
a replacement player.
The California Angels released
FBI agent Bryan Smith, trying to
make a comeback as .a pitcher at
age 32 after seven ·years out of the
game. Smith, who works on gang

~

•
MASON FISHER

aime out of the FBI office in Los

Angeles, pitched two hitless
innings in exhibition games, but
didn't show the arm strength that
manager Marcel Lacbemann wanted to see.
"He's a great guy," Angels
general manager Bill Bavasi said.
. "He just came up short."
The Atlanta Braves, meanwhile,
said they had reached agreement
with 40 replacements who said they
would play during the regular season if the strike continues.
·
Whether the replacements will
remain in camp until' opening day
is uncertain.
Owners and players were supposed to resume strike talks either
today or Wednesday outside of
Orlando, Fla., but they've been.
delayed.
·
'Instead, both sides have been
summoned to Washington, where
the National Labor Relations Board
is expected to tell them tOday bow

•
it intends to rule on tile ·Union' s
unfair labor practice charge. Even
management lawyers, though,
expect the NLRB will side with the
players.
The union claims owners illegally got rid of salary arbitration
and individual bargaining last
month, and is asking the NLRB to
seek a preliminary injunction from
a federal judge to restore all the
former work rules.
·
Players say they would end' the
strike if a judge issues an injunction. Owners, however, may then
. lock out players and start the season April 2 with the replacements·.
"Win, lose or draw, we'd like to
resume negotiations as soon as we
can, because we still have to fmd a
way to make a deal," un.ion head
Donald Fehr said. " We hope
they're ready to resume almost
immediately."
.
Crowds in Florida and Arizona
stayed small in some places.

There were 603 fans in Peoria,
Ariz., as the Seattle Mariners be:it
the San Diego Padres 2-1 in 10
inning s. Former major league
knuckleballer Daniel Boone, 41,
struck out seven of the 14 batters
for the Padres.
There were 627 fans in Haines
City, Fla., as Houston defeated
Kan sas City 6-4 .. Astros starter
Craig McMurtry. gave up two runs
in three innings; Ed Jurak. 37, hit
two
doubles for .o,\..
lbe Royals ...,....
~-

At Scottsdale, Ariz:, the crowd
was announced at 2,509 as the
Chicago Cubs beat San Francisco
4-3. Ed Vande Berg, making his
· first appearance in a major league
uniform since 1988, ll!as the losing
p1tcher.
Vande Berg gave up two runs
on two hils and two walks in one
inning. :md also struck out two. He
signed a minor league contract last
week wit,!l the Giants.

Rockets snap road hex; Mavericks triumph
By The Associated Press
The l!Quston Rockets and the
Dallas Mavericks finally found a
remedy for their road woes.
For Houston, it was a trip to The
Omni, where the Atlanta Hawks
had won five in a row. For Dallas, ·
it was a visit to the Oakland Coliseum Arena. where Mavericks rookie
Jason Kidd played college and high
school games.
The Rockets broke their fourgame road losing streak with a 9786 win behind Hakeem Olajuwon's
31 points ·and 11 rebounds, and

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PLAINFIELD, Ind. (AP) Riddick Bowe and Mike Tys.on
spoke to each other at the prison
where Tyson is nearing the end of
bis sentence for a 1992 rape con-

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Obio State has chosen former
M;empbls and Toledo coach Chuck
Stobart to be wide receivers coach
at the Big Ten Conference school.
Stobart, a native of Bradbury,
replaces Mike Stock, wbo left Ohio
State to be special teams coach for
the Kansas City Chiefs, the university said in a news release•Monday.
Stobart compiled a record of 2936-1 at Memphis from 1989-94.
His teams at Toledo went 24-31 -1
from 1977-81 and be was chosen
the Mid·American Conference
CQ3ch of the year in 1979 and 1981 .
From 1982-84, he was bead coach
at Utah, where his teams went 16-.
17-1.
RYAN WILLIAMS
He also was an assistant coach
at Marshall, Cincinnati, Miami of
Ohio, Michigan, Pittsburgh, Arizona and Southern CaL
"I feei very lucky to have Jand.ed a coach with Chuck's knowl edge and background," Buckeyes·
Once Tyson, 28, leaves the Indi- coach John Cooper said. "He bas
ana Youth Center, his home since long been known as an outsanding
he was convicted of rape in 1992, offensive coach and'he has exten·
he plans to return to Cleveland. sive experience in Ohfo."
IP"'-~=~=====
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Bowe, Tyson may fight
in heavyweight bout

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vic¥;::· next time the two meet, it
C'ould be in the ring.
"Hopefully if things go riglit,
I'll get my opportunity," Bowe
said ~onday night following a 45minute meeting with Tyson at the
Indiana Youth Center. "But I want
Mike at tbis point to relax and just
take it easy and hopefully we can
get together.
,
''Mike is the best heavyweight
out there, as far as I'm concerned.
It will be a dream for myself to
face Mike . Not to mention there
will be a wbole lot of money
·involved." ·
Bowe stopped Herbie Hide in
the sixth round Saturday night in a
WBO heavyweight tide bout in Las
Vegas, but be bad to knock down
the much smaller·Briton seven
tiJnes 10. accomplish it

-Y 0 U CAN TRUST

H &amp;R

Mario Elie added 20 points and ·
seven rebounds for Houston, Clyde
Drexler had 10 points and eight
rebounds, and Carl Herrera, returning after missing seven games with
a strained hamstring, had 11
rebounds.
Houston held the Hawks scoreJess for more than half of the
game' s final five minutes until
Steve Smith hit a jumper with 2: 50
left to cut the lead to 90-86. ·
Atlanta. which had won three
straight overall, shot just 36 percent
for the game.
Mookie Blaylock led Allanta
with 25 points and hit five 3-point-.
ers. Smith had 17 points and Ken
Norman had 12 points and II
rebounds.
" We've played three games in
four nights, so it's hard when the
other team has been off and they're
waiting for you," Hawks coach
Lenny Wilkens said.
Mavericks 130, Warriors 125
Dallas had its biggest offensive

Kidd bad a season-high 30 points
and 17 assists in Dallas' 130-124
victory over Golden State.
Dallas' win snapped its sixgame road losing streak.
"I love the Bay Area," Kidd
said. "The people here have. helped
me get to where I am now. The
way I give that back to them is to
come out.and perform the way that
I am capable of performing.''
Meanwhile, Indiana saw its
three-game road streak end at The
Forum on a three-point play by the
Lakers' Lloyd Daniels as the Pac·
ers fell 96-9 I. Washington beat
Charlotte 106-103 in Monday
night's other NBA game. ·
Olajuwon put the Rockets ahead
for good wbenhe bit a jumper from
the comer with 6:54 left. bfel!king
an 81-81 tie and starting a 9·0 run . .
"This is the time of season that
we bave to kick it in gear," Olajuwon said. "We are still in a very
good position going toward the
playoffs."
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�Page 6 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, March 14, 1995

California
flooding
recedes

·Post·card mailing
rate ma}{ rise 1 cent

By CONNJE CASS
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Tbe Postal Service plans a sweeping overhaul of
By DAVID KLIGMAN
its mte schedule to give high-volume mailers more incentive to .sort and
Associated Press Writer
code mail before dropping it off at the post office- and 10 penahu: those
MONTEREY, Calif. - Mowuls
don't.
.
of scw~ ~ e fouled water supplies
But consumers would see only one immediate effect of tbe new plan: a
and lore ell SOillC residents ·to diSiD·
1-ceot increase in.the cost of mailing a postcard.
.
fect their water with bleach as CaliThe posleljrd cate, wbicb just increased to 20 cents m January. would
fornia's ravaging floodwaters
rise to 21 cents under the proposal. The price of a first-class stamp,
began to slowly recede.
. • inaeased to 32 cents this"year, would be unchanged.
.
·
Although a new roWld of storms
Postal officials say cousumers eventually will benefit if·the new rare
brought a few more inches of ram
classifications are approved.
Monday to N'ort.Qem California's
.
,,
"In the long run, the efficiency that this creates will bel!' keep the cost
Napa and Sonoma coonties, the rest
of everyone's mail lower," Loren E. Smith, a Postal Scrv1ce senl!ll' v1ce
of the region was largely spared.
presideD~ said Monday.
.
.
Another inch of rain was ex~
Businesses 3CCOW1t for almost90 percent of tbe nation's mail.
.
'today in the region; skies were
The Postal Service is anxious to bold onto tbe revenue·from busmess
expected to begin clearing by midmail in the face of such competition as computer e-mail and .faxes. At ~
week.
·
same time, it wants to relieve the strain that the 150 billion p1eces of busiThe storms have ltilled 14 peoness mail per year put on the system.
.
.
ple and caused damage estimated at
''This is a do or die proposition,'' said Gene A. Del Pohto, president
$2 billion. About 7,000 people had
of the Advertising Mail Marketing ASsociation, one of many ttade groups
been evacuated since the rain
that helped sbilpe the plan over the past three years.
began Wednesday, and some 1,000
WET GOING - Thornton, Calif., resident
Mailers already get some discounts based on sorting and bar-codi•g of
California cities are belllnnlng tO clean up
"were still out of their homes today.
Tammy Deckert, accompanied by her son
But ·they often are not enough to make the extra work cost-effiletters.
storm damage, other communities have been
Floodwaters mixing with raw·
Andrew, 3, rowed from their mobile borne to
Del
Polito. said.
·
cient.
'battered by rain. (AP) ·
sewage from overwhe.lmed treatneat by bl11ber 11round Monday. While. many
The Postal Service plans to file its proposal with the independent
ment plants inundated vast areas of
Postal Rate Commissien on March 24. The commission bas I 0 months to
the MonterEy Peninsula, about 80
.
decide
whether to recommend tbe changes, clearing the·way for the postal
miles south of San Francisco. or California's most popular tourist crop -laden farmland, leaving a ident of harvest for the Tanimura &amp; governors to enact them.
'·
"Every river in the county should attractions because of its pristine muddy, murky wasteland.
Antle
agricultural
firm.
Tbe
'valPostcards
were
iljcludcd
in
the
reclassification
plan,
postal
officials
be considered polluted," said beaches, cxclusi ve golf courses and
"I'm sure there was flooding ley's annual harvest is usually said, because they ah: used inore often by businesses than individuals.
county health director William celebrity homes.
like this before, but it was prior to worth about $2 billion.
And existing postcard rates don't reflect tbe cost of delivering them, said
The peninsula was cut off by . the time we had the type of agriculWong.
"
It's
going
to
be
days
and
days,
Frank
,Heselton, product finance manager.
Emergency services worker water that overran one of tbe ture we have now," said Monterey weeks probably, getting it off,"
The
new rate sUUc!Ure would be fairer, charging less for mail that is
Maria Olvera said residents without world's richest farming regions, tbe County Agricultural Commissioner Marty Jefferson said of the water less expensive to handle, postal officials said.
electricity "need to add Clorox to Salinas Valley, known as Noeri- · Richard Nuiter. ''In modem agri- covering the 300 acres of lettuce on The
change
should
help
the
Postal
Service
make
more
effiCient
use of
kill bacteria. If the water looks ca's "salad bowl" because it pro- culture times, this was the most his farm near Casttoville.
its
automated
sorting
~uipment.
·
clear you put eight drops per gal- duces more than half the nation's severe.~'
Jefferson said' be was luckier
Businesses that take s!ml! to' make sorting and delivery ~.1lldl as
lon. ll it looks cloudy, you use 10 vegetables.
The river drowned artichoke and than others whose fields were "cut printing a bar code on eacb letter and 11sing only com:ct addresses, ·would
The flooding could mean bigber strawberry fields, and washed away up and chopped up" by the flood.
drops."
qualify for a lower rate than they pay \lOW.
About 100,000 people live on prices at supermarkets nationwide. about half the the area's spring let- "We'll have a hell of an expense
Those that don't do the extra work may end up paying more than they
the 20 or so square miles of the An .80-mile stretch of the Salinas tuce crop, a loss of at least $500 reclaiming this, but at least we'll be do today.
·
hilly, wooded peninsula, long one River spilled over its banks into
million, said Mike Antle, vice pres- · able to reclaim i~" he said.
Smith called it "a watershed change in the way we are pricing mail."

.,

.

from

.

Fef;l chairman seeks
-CP index revisions

By JAMES H. RUBIN
ot cnanges m tne cost of living,"
Associated Press Writer
Greenspan said.
W ASJIINGTON - Federal
Greenspan earlier this year sugReserve Chairman Alan Greenspan gested that the index· overstl\tes
stepped up his campaign Monday inflation by between 0.5 and 1.5
to ·get alterations to the govern- · perceniage points.
.
me·m's main price gauge, which be .
While many Republicans have
said would save taxpayers $150 applauded the proposal as a way of
biUion over five years.
reducing tbe budget deficit,
Appearing before the S~nate Democrats have said the plan is ·
Finance Committee, Greed'span merely a back-door way of trim,
pushed his proposal to create a ming benefits by attempting to shift
panel of experts who would have the political blame elsewbere.
authority to make revisions in the
1bc Labor Department's Bureau
Labor Department's Consumer of Labor Statistics bas said the evi·Pricc Index to oiore accurately dence is unclear on bow much tbe
reflect inflation pressures.
CPI may overstate inflation.
Tbe C!'l is used to rnakjl annual
Katharine Abraham, who beads
cost of living adjustments for mil- the bureau, said Monday, "Unforlions of Americans receiving Social tunately, the state of the art in the .
Security and other government area Of price index construc.tion bas
benefits. But Greenspan has insist- not advanced to the point where
ed that the CPI is fundamentally - .anyone knows bow to construct
nawed and is overstating inflation.
U')le cost-of-living measures.''
Republican lawm~ke~s. bave
She said in prepared· testimony,
seized on Greens pans c~llc1sm. "Although many believe that the
House Speaker Newt Gmgncb CPI is biased upward because qualeven went so far as 10 suggest elim- ity improvements are not fully
inating the Labor Department agen- accounted for, there is little direct
cy that bandies the CPI if it did not eVidence to support this view.''
Any upward bias in the CPI may
quickly make the necessary
changes,.
.
be as small as 0.2 percen~ she said,
In b1s testimony, Greenspan adding that the Bureau of Labor
sought to defend the government Statistics is now revamping the
number crunchers.
. . .
gauge to reflect ibe latest changes
Labor Department stat•stJc1ans in Americans • spending habits. ·
''can work 24 ~ours a ~y and douGreenspan said that any changes ·
blc therr staff and sull be unable in the CPI by his proposed expert
to adJUSt the CPHo account f~rre.at pariel should take into account the
changes m .the cost of hvmg, spending habits of retirees.
Greenspan swd.
.
He said it migbt be a mistake to ·
. ''The replacement of a mecban1- · make different calculations for milcal procedur.e by the informed itary pensioners, whose health
Judgment of experts would best ... costs generally are reimbursed, and
insulate taxpayers and (federal) other retirees.
benefit recipients from the effects

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forced to take tuberculosis tests
Aprill2.
Shortly before the melee erupted, Gordon said be met Robb, leader of the white supremacy Aryan
Brotherhood gang, in the recreation
yard at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility and told him of the
plan.
Gordon .testified that Musli111
leader Carlos Sanders and inmate
Stanley Cummings frequently met
in the prison's law library ,to plan
strategy.
Tbey agreed that the uprising
would involve cellblocks K and J
be~ause inmates who lived there
were serving long sentences or
awaiting execution and "bad nothing to lose," Gordon said. "They
wouldn't be afraid to participale."
However, the riot, which · left
nine inmates and tbe one guard
dead, was contain¢ to cellblock L.

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parcels:
Deed, John E. Hale to Keith W.
and Nancy Marlene Barretqtuiland, 1.196 acres;
Deed, Diane and Herman Lynch
to Hazel A. VanCooney, Middle·
port lots;
Right of way. Earneiif Lester to
Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative, Salem;
Right of way, John B. and Claudia Hale to BREC.• Salem;
,
Deed·, Pete, Harlan and H.D.
Quick to Earline Stobart,
LebanmiJLetaJt/Suttoil parcels;

Deed, Goshen Land Exchange
Trust and John K. Kimball to Paul
T. Manza, Lebanon parcels;
Deed, Delbert R. and Maxine
Yost to Delbert R. and Maxine
Yost, Orangc:.parcels;
Deed, S31ll1Dy and Sherry Darst
to Robert A. McMurray, Scipio
parcel;
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William and T. Janie Burke,
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Deed, Leonard B. and Tanya s.
Huffman to Leonard B. imd Tanya
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Joe Morton's 'Under
One Roor stresses the 'family' in family drama
..
SCOTr

By
WILLIAMS \.,1
AP Televilllon Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Joe Morton very patiently, but very fumly,
resists the idea that his new series,
CBS' gentle family drama "Under
One Roof," has only narrow
ground on wbicb to stand.
"Under One Roof," which
debuts tonight on CBS, is about a
bard-working, middle -class,
African-American extended family
living in Seattle.
The argument is this : TV ' s
depiction of black families is a
• spectrum, ranging from farces like
ABC's "Family Matters" to edgy,
realistic drama like HBO' s ·'Laurel
Aven.u e" or the bittersweet comedy of Fox' s "South Central."
Given those extremes, how can
"Under One Roor· rmd a place for
itself, let alone an audience?

Morton, wbo gained stardom in
Jobn Sayles' film "Brother from
Another Planet," says that' s just
not a fair standard.
".The thing everybody bas to
understand is that not all black people do the same things and have the
same prOblems," be said. "We
don't all have the same feather on
the backs of our beads!"
" 'Laurel Avenue' was a very
pow,c:rful .. . beautifully directed
piece of film . It also had to do with
a very particular part of the country, a very particular family and
their particular problems.
"It was also multi-generational,
and almost an 'Under One Roof
situation, but it is not the same
thing!"
Morton insists that "Under One
Roof : is a family drama that is

Judy Laudermilt, with a weight Durst. Virginia Smith, and Ola. St.
loss of over nine pounds, was the Clair, a talk on losing weight and
top loser in February for T6PS OH exercise by Ruth Delong, along
570 Club of Pomeroy. .
. with poems and songs.
New officers have been elected.
Weeldy top losers were Phyllis
McMillan with Nancy Manley, They. are Nancy Manley, leader;
runncrup, Jean Thomas with Phyl- Jeannette McD011ald, co-leader;
lis McMillan and Bonnie Johnston, Linnie Aleshire, se.cretary, and Virand Donna Jacks, runners -up ginia Dean, treasurer.
TOPS; Kevin Vining, best teen
Members participate in the Area
Recognition
Day penny march .
loser; and Julia Hysell, Linnie
AlesblfC, Ola St. Clair and Virginia Julia Hysell read a notice about a
Smith, KOPS best loser.
TOPS retreat. One meeting feaPrograms included· a video on . tured a baggy Clothes parade by
TOPS, success stories by Kathy Ruby Fowler, Peggy Vining and
McDaniel, area captain, Lin!Jie · Linnie Aleshire, anotber a party in
Aleshire, Julia Hysell, Bernice recognition of those having birth-

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days in February.
Tbe craft basket was won by
Jean Thomas, who lost at least one
pound a week during 01e month of
February.
During the month, fruit baskets
were won by Julia Hysell, Ruth
Delong, and Juanita Humphreys,
gadget gifts by Margaret Hender:
son, Janice Curry, and Ola St.
Clair.
Meetings are held on Tuesdays
at the Carpenters Hall, Main Stree~
Pomeroy. Weigh-ins are from 5 to
6 p.m. with meetings from 6 to 7
p.m.

Volunteer animal shelter owner faces eviction
farm to her after her divorce. Then for temporary boarding three years
By NEKESA MUMBI MOODY
ago. Tbe owner never returned.
the eviction notice arrived.
Associated Press Writer
North is one of !\0 dogs at Pets
She won 'i comment on why she
MIDDLETOWN. N.Y. (AP)Alive.
There also are 30 cats, sevFor the aging pony with a broken is being evicted, and says the solueral
horses
and goats, a parrot, a
jaw, the ab:indoned blind dog and tion to )ler quandary is to raise at
pigaild
a
steer
named Andrew.
the cat with seven toes on each least $250,000 to buy the ~roperty.
Whalen
relies
on donations and
paw. Sarah Whalen's farm bas Recent stories on Whalen s plight
her
own
money
to
pay the farm's
have prompted donations totaling
been a savior from euthanasia.
: · Now, after nearly a decade of more than $60,000 from across the expenses of about $4,000 a month.
Vorunteers occasionally pitch in
coilnuj.
_·
.
·
~aring (or unwanlel!l. forgotten and
"It's-breaking my heart. I wish I their labor. .
·
stray animals, Wbalen 1s facmg ·~
Ironically, Whalen grew up in a
eviction from the farm where she.'· could help, and I don't know
runs her volllnteer shelter, !'e'ts how," said John. Contino, an ani- home where no animals ·were
. mal rescue worker in New York allowed : "I never bad an animal
Alive.
"!can't imagine what will hap- City who bas placed several dogs until I was 27 years old," she said.
"My mom loved animals' from afar
pen," said a nervous Whalen, w~o with Whalen.
Pets
Alive
is
considered
the
:the farther the bener."
must appear in Town of Wall~H
only
shelter
in
the
state
that
will
She
credits ber fifllt dog, a goldcourt Thursday to answer an eviCaccept
just
about
any
type
of
anien
retriever,
with saving the life of
tion notice served over the weekmal,
without
regard
to
its
adoptthen-infant
son by finding him
ber
end .
ability,
and
house
it
indefinitely
after
be
bad
wandered
away. After
The judge can order an extentha~ she dedicated her life 10 helpsion or force b.er out within 72 until a suitable borne is found .
That policy has turned Whalen's . ing animals, and worked as an anihours. If Whalen is evicted, her
hundred-odd animals must be farm into a patch of animal heaven mal control officer for almost 30
i.Dt1Uediateiy placed In other s~el­ ·- a sanctuary from almost certain years.
The possibility that Whalen'&amp;
ters or private homes or face bemg death for horses destined for dog
food and dogs declared dangerpus shelter could be closed distresses
put to sleep.
animal rights advocates who don't .
·
Whalen says her now-estranged by the courts.
Most of the animals at Pets think animals should be killed by
husband, Leo, bought the property .
60 miles northwest of New York ·Alive · bave been neglected or shelters.
"People will not have a place to
City in 1986, then stopped paying abused, like the miniature pony
taxes several years ago: A friend, wbo. had bis jaw broken by his bring their animals, ·a no-kill shelwho Whalen won't identify, bought owner. North, a blind golden ter, for adoption," said Dayid
the mortgage and agreed to sell the retriever, was brought to the farm Stein.

-.,.-----Community calendar----POMEROY - Pomeroy Youth
League, signup day, Thursday,
5:30 10 7:30 p.m. at Pomeroy Elementary School. Additional information, 992-3976.

Tbe Community .Calendar Is
published as a freP. service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce me~tlng and special.
evenh. The calen&lt;lar is nol
designed to promote sales or
fund r'aisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.

~ POMEROY

- Rock Springs
Better Health Club will meel at the
home of Frances Gneglein, 1 p.m.
Thursday.

POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
of AA. Thursday, 7 p.m.. at Sacred
Heart Catholic Church . Al-anon
wiU meet also.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
The
Alzheimer's Relaied Disorders
Support Group, 1-3 p.m. March 15
at the Meigs Senior Citizens Center. "Wandering and wanting to go
horne" discussed.
RACINE - Signup for Racine
Youth League, Wednesday and
March 21, 6 to 9 p.m.; Saturday,
March 25, 9 a.m. to noon, kindergarten building in Racine.

RACINE - American Legion
Post 602, lbilrsday, 6:30 p.m. with
dinner.
FRIDAY
EAST MEIGS ..:... Eastern Junior
High School athletic banque~ 6:30
p.m. Friday, followed by AthleticBoosters meeting with officers to
be elected. Eastern High School
athletic banquet, 6:30 p.m. Saturday.
SUNDAY
. RACINE - James and Debra
Davis-, - in ·concert th.e Racine
Church of the Nazarene, Sunday.
Debra bronze medalist of the 1976
· Mont~eal Olympic games, will

RETAIL .

SJ89S

•'coincidentally'' about an AfricanAmerican family, just as the ABC's
late '70s drama " Family" happened 10 be about whites.
•"We've been taught· to expect
something different because it's a
black family: A gun is going 10 be
produced, or drugs, or some fWlda·
mental, political, top,ical statement
is going to be made, ' he said.
"This is simply a black family
driuna that will do all of the above,
just as any good drama should,'' he ·
said.
"Under One Roof" bas an
extraot~~ary cast. It stars James
Earl ~ones as w1dowed patriarch
Neb J.!angston, a police officer who
has raised two children and has a
16-ycar-old foster child, Marcus
(Merlin Santana).
Monon plays Neb's son, Ron, a
Marine Corps retiree starting a new

Laudermilt shed pounds for TOPS honors

LUCKY NUMBER PillE LIST

Oil change, 011 flher end complete
Lubrication Including up 10 5 qu1r11
10W30 Volvollno, 14 Point Vehicle Sillily
Check. Moal U.S. C•r• 811d lmporta.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

THURSDAY
CHESTER - Chester base,... baiUsoftball lea~ue signups, 6:308:30 p.m. Thursilay March 16 and
9 a.m.-noon Saturday 18 at the
Chester Elementary. A birth certificate is needed if child had not ~n
registered in the league before ,
Cost is $20 per child.

Meigs land transfers posted
De"c~ . Geraldine and Larry

DWI.
P205/75115

GOOD/fEAR

P185/75R14 NW ..

Death row inmates' goal.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Muslim
inmates wanted to take over a cellblock Omt housed Ohio's most dangerous prisoners, including those
on Death Row, during the April
1993 Lucasville riot, an inmate testified. I
Prisoner Stacey Gordoh said on
Monday that inmates began planning the riot in January 1993. Gordon testified in Franklin County
Common Pleas Court during the
IJ'iaJ of inmate Jason Robb, who is
charged with kidnapping and
aggravated murder in .the death. of
guard Robert Vallandingham.
. Prosecu10rs have said Robb was
a ringleader in the 11-day siege and
ordered the slayings of Vallandingham and inmate David Sommers.
· Gordon said inmates decided to
takeover th e prison on April II
after learning that they would he

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share her testimony at 9:30a.m.
followed by James, singer-songwriter, performing a blend of contemporary. country and gospel
songs at 10:30 a.m. Public invite!f.

The Light
·Toacl) ·

business. Vanessa Bell Calloway
plays his wife •. Maggie, who is reentering the work force with misgivings for her children, 10-year·old diabetic son Derrick (Ronald
Joshua Scott) and 15 - year -old
daughter Charlie (Essence Atkins).
"Under One Roof" bas something else going for it: The series·
creator and executive producer is
Thomas Carter, who also created
ABC's "Equal Justi ce," Morton's
fu:st series, and won an Emm y for
directing it.
Carter's co-executive producers
are Nigel and Carol Even McKe-

and, longtime wr·iters for ABC' s
•'Family.••

" What we doti' t want to create
js tbe fictitious television family,"
Morton said. " We're not Ozzie and
Harriet. We're not 'Famil y:• We're
not 'E ight Is Eno ugh' eith er,
because the kind .of drama th at is
being wrinen today won' t pefll\it
that. either.
" You WILL sec thin gs th at
have to do with simply being black
and American, but other things that
deal with silnply being married and
American, or being a man and a
woman in America. We're going to

try to deal with it as a universal."

A pesky reporter insisted that
Morton' s series will be judged on
what viewers expect a black famil y
drama to be.
" I hope it' s nul as much of a
pfoblem a• everyone would like !t
to be," he said . " When I talk 10
white interviewers, tl1cy bring it out .
\he way you have. When I talk to
blac k inlervicwcrs, the y bring. it out
in terms of, 'Wili th e show deal
wilh black iss ues? Will thi ~ be a
REAL black family? '
" And you know what? Reall y.
all I'd like it to"'\ is a family."

Be A Part Of The
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100 Years 95 Years
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Established 1903

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Phone 555·51.34
Established 1946

44 Years

40 Years

Kramer &amp;Sons ·

s&amp;M Landscaping

Phone 555·4777
Established 1951

student: ·~ 11 you don't behave, I'II
tell your parents you have

talent."

...

Doctor: ''I'm afraid you're going
to need surgery".
Patient: ''I'd like a sec ond
opinion ."

Doctor: "Certainly. You're also
overweight."

...

The trouble with life In the fast
lane is that you get to the other
end In·a hurry. ·
·

30 Years ·25 Years

Phone 555-5454
Established 1955

20 .Years

Med-Care Center Inc.

Triskett Party Center

Crystal Glass Co.

Phone 555-6655
Established 1965

Phone 555·0267
Established 1970

Phone 555·7734
Established 1975

DAVE YOUR BUSINESS LISTED!
The "Honor RoiP' will appear in the
Friday, March 17th E~ition o ,f ·
· ' ·
Th~ Daily Sentinel.

The Cost Is Only $12

HOOVER SWEEPER upright Model
w/attachlnents (Eftte 700).....-·······-··-·····......... _ ........................
FREE

_.,._
DEUVERY .

CREDfT TERMS
to Dep Simi AI Calb

Will

Clodl

5

239
75HOWROOMS

II WAREHOUSES

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
a.c Rutland Furniture
742·2211 I-8G0-837-8217
" tiJ
7

s........,, MAIN STREET • RUTLAND; OHIO Wart~~ouNo .d

Rt. 124, Rutlattd, Oh.

74H211

~"

•

I

.)

�I

'

8 The Dally Sentinel

.
.
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ann
Lan·derS
. ,..,, , .. _

Tmn

1

s_... ..,.,

"'..,.., "'""""'''
Dear Ann Landen: My daughter
has two children out of wedlock.The
youngest will be 5 soon and is a
handfullllld then some. '"Jbmmy" can
be very sweet, but he is also an
extremely destructive child.
Last week, Thmmy got ahold of a
knife and cut up his mattress and
pillow. The boy throws good food
into the gtubage, and once, he tore
off a doorknob and flushed it down

the toilet. Last night, his ·mother
awakeoed just in time to keep him
from burning the house down. He had
found a cigareue lighter and was
igniting newspapers in the kitchen
sink. 'The cunains were inches away
from the flames.
My daughter is considering putting
Tommy in a foster home. She says
she can't handle him. I li ve too far
away to be of much help. Please give
me some advice to pass on to het -NO NAME, NO TOWN
· DEAR NO NAM E: Has your
daughter taken Tomm y to a
pediatrician for evaluation? If not, she
should do so. There could be 5Qme
medical
reason
for
his
destructiveness . If no medical
reasons an: identified for the hoy's
·

unusua_t behavtOr, he.should be taken
to a chtld psycho'?g•st.
If Tommy's tn school , your
daughter should ask his teaCher for
s?me guid~nce in managing this
dtfficult chtld. I also recommend
parenting classes for your daughtet
I wish her luck. She's going to flCCd
tl
·
Dear Ann Landers: Your
insurance blooper column a while
back re mtilded me of this police
. report, which ran in the Rosebwg,
Ore.. News-Review. I thought it was
prelly funny. I hope you will agree
and share it with your readers.We can
aU use a laugh. -- J.B., KING CITI:
ORE.
DEARJ.B.:I do,andl shall. Thank.
you.

"It is 12:24 p.m. Thursday. The
manager of th e King's Table, 4SO
N.E. Stephens St., RosebWB, notified
police of a no-injury accident
• Accord ing to a police report,
David Oren Bly, 87, ofRosebulg, was
attempting to leave the restaurant's
parking lo t when hi s 1979 Olds
Omega went out of control and struck
a 1989 Dodg e Ram 50 pickup,
pushing it into a 1972 Ford Courier
pickup.
"Biy's car then veered around the
to~ striking a 1985 Mercury 4'nx L
and a 1985 Ford LTD. Bly's carthen
pushed the Ford LTD into a 1988
Cadillac Brougham, which pushed
the Cadillac into a 1985 Ford 3SO
pickup, before finally coming to a
stop.

"The driver reponed that when his
car accelerated, he tried 10 slow it
down, butthe accelerator was stuck.
Police checked the car and reported
that the accelerator and the brakes
were in good working condition. Bly
was not issued a citation because the
incident occurred on l!rivaae pmperty
and no traffic laws were violated."
Dear Ann Landen: Knowing you
an: from Iowa. 1 thought you might
enjoy this !etta- to the editor in the
Di:s Moines Register... COLFAX,
IOWA
DEAR COLFAX: Beautiful! I
loved i~ Here it is:
"At the Clive post olfice recently,
1was infonned that I was $3 short in
mailing a package to Japan. ltumed
to go home and get more money
when the man next to me insisted on

By PAUL RAEBURN
AP Science Editor
NEW YORK (AP) - Doctors'
offices have been flooded with
thousands of telephone calls fol- ·
lowing a report that certain blood
pressure drugs might raise the risk
of a bean attack by 60 percent.
Researchers are advising
patients taking the drugs, known as
calcium-channel blockers, to coptinue until they are able to consult
with their cJoctors.
The generic names of the drugs
are nifedipine, diltiazem and verapam it. T.bey are sold under such
brand names as Adalat, Calan,
Cardit.em, Dilacor. lsoptin, Procardia and Verelan.
Dr. Bruce Psaty, the author of
the report on the drugs, said Monday that they pose little risk over
the short term and patients should
not stop taking.them without seeing

their doctors.
"The instantaneous risk· to individuals is exceedingly sman, :'
Psaty said; but "the long-term safety and efficacy of these drugs is an
important question.''
He presented bis fmdings Friday
at the American Heart Associalion' s annual epidemiology meeting. On Monday, the bean associa-'
lion said patients on calcium chan·
nel blockers should "continue their
medication and consult their doc·
tors about possible alterna tives
based on a full evaluation of lbeir
condition.' '
Concern bas .been raised in lbe
past about calcilll11 channel block·
ers, said Dr. Jeffrey A. Cutler of
the National Institutes of Heallb. A
recent analysis of available studies
suggested "the possibility that cal- •
cium channel blockers don ' t pro- ·
long life but actually increase risk"

when given to people who have
already bad a bean attack, be said.
Psaty's study extends that concern to people who haven' t bad a .
heart attack but are being' treated
for bigb blood pressure io help prevent one.
.
·
Psaty explamed the numbers
from his study this way: In the
course of a year, heart attacks
might strike about 10 of every
1,000 ·pe.ople .being treated for
bypenens10n wtth other drugs.
. His ~tudy found th at the risk
mtght ns~ to 16 of e~ery 1.~00
people bemg .treated "::th calc1um
channel blockers. That s a 60 percent increase, although it is still
small.
Nevertheless, be estimated that
6 million, Americans are taking
these drugs, and many are likely to ·
take them for many years.
"If the results of our case-con-

of J?imes, set for 2 p.m. ~unday,
• Apnl 30 at· Harmon Park ~n Pomt
Pleasant, W.Va. Infonnauon may
be ob.tained from Dianna Ellison, .
coordmator, at (304)675-160'1.
ADOPTION PARTY
Courtney Noelle (Rife) Nitz was
honored at an adoption·party Saturday at the home of her aunt, Debi
Brockert, Crew Road; Pomeroy.
A buffet luncheon, along with a
decorated cake and punch, were
served to the guests, who included
Courtney's parents, Jan and Donnie
Nitz, her brother, Jacob, maternal
grandparents, Ellen and Charlie
Rife, paternal grandmother, Nora
Nitz, Amanda Tobin, Beth Kauff,
Joey Rife, Vicki Nelson, Brad,

Danny and Misty Motrison, Rick,
Chris, Jennifer, Mandy, Josh and
Mana Schaefer, Wanda Patterson
Charlotte Hysell, Stacy Hysell:
Dorothy McCloud, Dorothy Meadoi-&lt;iws, Melissa Whaley, Janna Jude,
Debi , and Jonathan and Jason
Bracken.

Resurfaoo Old Ceramic Tile, aod
~ lhower Crockt .. Sags.

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$6.00 PER DAY.

lwo Jima anniversary
observed by veterans

Drivers, Home
OWners And
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings.

IWO JIMA, Japan (AP) - F'tfty years ago they
came ashore to fight. Today they returned to remem~.

Our statistics shOw'th al mature dri·
vers and home owners have fewer and'
less costly losses tha n other age
groups. So it's only fa ir to charge you
less for your insurance. Insure your
home imd car with us and save eve n
mor e with our special mull i·policy ·
discounts.

--

:::: ~. -=s~

. ~-

~T ~

. -.
..

..
'

•
.

..

OGAN
.

....
-I=

~
-,.·

~RNEJ!

;

~~~

::-?

nRurance Se":"'!dce.s

SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) - ·Nine French peace·
. keepers were killed today and four
: others were inj~ after their trail· er truck plunged off a mountain
: road south of Sllllljevo, U.N. offi· cials said.
Tbe vehicle was traveling on
Mount lgtnan road when it went off
the road and toppled 120 feet down
the mountain, officials said. It was
: believed to be the most peacekeep- ·
. ers to die in any single incident in
Bosnia's 3-year-old war.
There were DO other immediate
details. In, Paris, .officials said
Defense Minister Francois Leotard
planned to fly to the Bosnian capi. tal later today,
The top U.N. envoy to
· Yugoslavia left Sarajevo today
: repOrting little progress in bis effort
· to persuade warring Bosnian Serbs
: and the government to honor a tat·
: tered cease-ftre and extend it into
· summer,

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

992-6687
.AuJo-Orlmn7 bmurur«

!!!URGEN7
MEE71NG
THE AMERICAN LitiON HALL.

• J

/

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

j ..

WHEN:
ford. The Legion gave $300 to tbelocal parentteacher organization, $300 to tbe fire department auxiUary for the Easter egg bunt, $200 to
the Rutland Volunteer Fire Department for general expenses and $200 to tbe village for civic
center roof repairs. (Sentinel photo by George
Abate)

RUfLAND GENEROSITY - The Rutland
American Legion Ell Dennison Post 467 recently
donated another $1,000 to various Rutland
groups. Pictured here, the Legion's Mark TitUs
(center) presents a check to from left: Paul
Michael. Mike WOlford, and Kim and Ray WID-

0 .of A district
practice
announced

DAVID

..

M.D.

Sports Injuries • l'ractures • Work Injuries

Trelllng a varlety of Joint 11nd muocle dloordero,
knee and hlp tepiiiCelllentAt.
tractun:a· and .Suit ra::onlbudlve IIIUruerJ

.

It was reported that Alta Ballard
remains ill at home and would
appreciate cards. Penny Elam and
· ber infant are home from the hospital. Betty Denny thanked members
for cards during her illness, and
Enna Cleland reported on the rally
in Cincinnati.
Visiting members were N1than
BiBBS and Betty Biggs, Guioing
Star 124. Ot,bers attending were
j';verell Grant, Faye Kirk.ban, Thelma White, Opal Hollon, Mary
Holter, CbarloW: Grant, Sanoy
White, Elizabeth Hayes, Mary Jo
B.arringer, Ethel Orr, Doris
i (lrueser, Ella Osborne, JoAnn
Baum, Lom Dlimewood and Marcia Keller.

SUKDYKA,

ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

A district practice was
announced for March 25 at the
Olester ball when Chesler Council 323, Daughters of America, met
there recently.
_ Jean Welsh, councilor, presided
at the meeting, which opened with
flag ceremoni es, sc ripture and
p11yi:r.

G.

2907 Jackson Avenue .
Point Pleasant, West Virginia
Of!kc Hou"" 9 Lin. • 5 p.m..

f'londoJ llloough l'rldo¥

l'or appotntmenbl call:

I

(304).675-5971

......-.,.........

IJd PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

IV1 ·The family of professionals
t

'

H20 Vtlly DrMt,

~ f'INMr'lt, WV25M0 ·(304)175o4.)4G

&lt;

BATHTUB

REFINISHING

-

o'i\._u~v,

Chris
•'
o,
Scherlel
614-992-4236 REFINISHING
SYSTEMS

KIN'I IPPLIAIICI
IIRVICI

•Factory Authorized Porto
I Service
•All M•M• ~2 Yet.._

.Poll Rtlllbltl Service
•Washer• " ary.,.. ; R•ngea·
-Refrigerator• -Freezera

•DiahWMher•
•H.W. Heaters

&gt;Microweveo •Dlepoule
•Thonko Molga &amp;
Surrounding Are..

(614) 985-3561 or
992-5335

12ftWn

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN
SHOOTS

538 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 982-2m
Otll.. Hourf: Mon.-Frl:
8:00 l.m.-3:30 p.m.
VInyl a. Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
Replacement,
Wlndowa, Blown
lnlulatlon, Storm
Doora, Storm
Windows, Garagea.

Sunday 1:00 p.m.
12 Gauge Only
Li mited : 740

Backbore, 680 Front

COME AS YOU ARE!! WE NEED YOUR OPINIO" ABOUT
THE DIRECTION OF OUR COMMUNITY AND WHAT DOES
OUR COMMUNITY STAND FOR. YOUR PRESENCE IS
NEEDED!! DON'T BE MISLED - YOUR OPINION DOES
COUNT, 'IF YOU WANT IT.TO!!
SPONSORED BY

THE VISIONQUEST 2005
CITIZENS IN ACTION
.STEERING COMMITTEE
IT JS TIME TO ASK, "NOT WHAT THE COMMUNITY CAN
DO FOR ME, BUT .WHAT CAN ·1 DO FOR .MY COM·
MUNITY??" IT IS TIME FOR CHANGE.
..

Specializing in Custom
Frame Repa ir
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES H .1 0DELS
992-7013- 0R
992-5553 OR
TOLL FREE 1-800·848·007C
DARWIN, OHIO

,,....

Free EatlmatH

2m/9S

(U.st- Lew Riles)

WICKS
HAULING
(Specialize In
driveway epreadlng)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, FIJI Dirt

7131f91 TFN

.......

Repair
Pans &amp; Service on Molt
Make• RliCine Mower

Jft4f1

"In Stock"
Oregon Chain Saw Bars

Public Notice

949-2804

Thomaa E. Fergu•on

Yasusbi Akashi said both sides
accused each other of "bad faith"
in implementing the four-month
truce that took effect Jan. I.
"The situation is very ·Serious
and I would say even critical," be
said after meeting with government
officials in the Bosnian capital. He
said there was even disagreement
on bow and when to meet to talk
about resolving differences:
• Sllllljevo and most other Bosnian front lines were reported quiet
today after a weekend of violence
in the capital that killed six people.
The· truce was meant to lead to
peace talks on a permanent end to
the war. But daily ·truce violations·
are rife and the warring parties are
far apart on the .language of a peace
settlement, meaning violence will
likely escalate when the ceasc-ftre
ends.
A U.N. official, speaking on
condition of anonymity , said
Akashi's talks with Bosnian Serb

~-

.,

I

Linda's
Painting &amp; Co.
"Take the pain out of •
painting · Let us
do it for you"
!nte rior &amp; Exterior
37632 West Sha&lt;le Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Free es timates
Before 6 p.m.-Leave
Message; Alter 6 p.m.
614-985-4180

Emergency Phone 9B!::l· 3·111:j

511619-4 TFN

H&amp;H SAWMILL

Fo~ FJ!:'!!~r:.,dlng

l1H!!n

Burial, Final Expenses, Loans, Business, Family
. Security, College Funds, Emer9ency Funds,
l'leUrement, Estates, Ute Insurance to fit your needs.

December 31, 111114
Choehlro Townehtp,
Portable
County of Gatlla
"Thloto on unoudlted
Bandsaw Mill
Flnonclol Repon•
32124 Happy
SUMMARY OF CASH
&amp;).LANCES, RECEIPTS
Hollow Rd.
AND
EXPENDITURES
Mlddl
Source Ducrlpllon,
eport • Ohi 0 45760
Totate lit Fund Balon..
Danny &amp; Peggy
RECEIPTS:
Brlcklee
Taxee .................. 22,244.48
lnlorgovornmontol
614-742·2193

Sft-1-WAY
MINI STORAGE
NOW RENTING
Comparablt Slm &amp;Prices
NEW HAVEN, WV
30H82·2996 3114/II!MI.·

Rec·elpte................. BT,I08.48

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

614-843-5264
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire
Health • Accident • Annuity • IRA • Mortgage

L-----..!..::!'"~-::·J

lnteroat................. 1,338.76
All Other Rovmuo ............. ,...._ _.;...._ _ _.....
............................ 13,358.68
Total Recelptl .. I I S,M8.40
CHESTER
OISSURSEMENTS
Gt111rat Govtmmonf........
COUNTRY
............................ 27,532.44
Public Salety ..... 17,1Bt.68
CLUB .
Public Worke ..... 58,041 .82

leader Radovan Karadzic were not .
very successful, and the normally
. upbeat envoy aclmowledged disappointment with his mission.
"I go through disappointments
bu.tl refuse to give up our efforts,"
Akasbi said.
One new slicking point was the
Htalth .............. , .... T,361.21
Golf Lessons
MlactlllntDUI ... 22,000.00
Serb closure Sunday of the only
.
Capital
Outlay
......
7
,405.
73
civilian land route in and out of the
Totti Dlaburaementl......... by appointment &amp;
city. The route was opened under
...~ ......................133,522.76 club repair as well
the terfns of the truce, but the
Total
Rocolph
Serbs, wbo can shell it at will, shut Over/(Undor) Dleb................. Call John Teaford at
..........................(14,874.38)
it down after two girls in a SerbChester, Ohio
controUed section of Sarajevo were · Other Sourcoi/Rtcelpta ...
shot to death Saturday.
...
The Bosnian government, which
expresse'd condolences and so:~~·:
a~i·~~·o~~ TREE TR.IMMING
detained a soldier suspected of the
1
57•892 ·17
.............Batonce,
AND REMOVAl .
Fund •C11h
shootings, demanded the route be Jonuery
opened before its representatives oo;•.m::r,3~·~....... 43,3~&amp;~2~
Light Hauling,
would attend talks on th e truce.
The Serbs Insisted that the reopen- Encumbroncoo, Dec. 31 ....... Shrubs Shaped
ing of the route be discusS&amp;! in the
s·~·;;;·;;;-·;·~·;.. ..43 ' 316~2:
•
and Removed
talks.
tndtbtldnou
Oubllondlng, Jan. 1, 11194.
Misc. Jobs.

:r~i·~·i oit.·•~···;;i;;-~~c~:~ ';:::=======~

&lt;u;::k· .

·o~i-li~~·;jj;;-ij;....ii!~~3~

Syria, Israel may reopen
talks on Golan .Heights

.

,_

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned a. portable toilets rented.
Dally, w~kly &amp; monthly rental rates.
Job altel • Camp Sites • Family Reunion• &amp; Partlea
NOW OFFER IN G GENERAL HAULING
Llmeatone, S11nd, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE
'Uce oed &amp; Bonded 20 oo
' le
992·3954

949-2168

11194 .......................... 2,876.79
Fund Coeh Betonco...........

Bill Slack
992·2269

. .----------------.
.
.
BISSELL BUILDERS, U!IC • . .
New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
. Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

614-992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)

L..------......1 '==============:,:":21::'&gt;21l '::!

i~i;i·:r;~·~·
~;y·a:t!·:~!:~~
............~ ............... 43,318.22 . . - - - - - - - - r
Total Batanco ..... 43,318.22
SMITH'S

Kenny's Auto Rental

I corllly the following CONSTRUCTION
report to bo correct ond
truo, to tho boot of my Custom BulldlrtQ &amp; AemodellrtQ
knowledge:
• NEW HOMES
Connlo Key Chapmen • ADDITIONS
31385 SR 143• • NEW GARAGES
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 • REMODELING
(3) 14 ' 1TC
• SIDING
.
, Public Notice
• ROOFING
• PAINTING
Kenny's Auto Center
1
1 _800 _486 _1590
pu:86 ~~f:.~G
FREE ESTIMATES
264 Upper River Rd.
Bus. (614) 446-9971
Melge County Intends to
(614) 992-5535
,....,,
apply to the Ohio De·
(614) 992 ~2753 , .,,M Galli olis, OH. 45631
panment ·o/ Development ~::::::::;;;;:_=!
lo r funding under the r
Community Osvelopment ROBERT BISSELL
One Stop- Complete Auto Body Rep•tr
,Block Grent (COBG) Small
CONSTRUCTION
Clllee Program, a lederallylundad program ol Flacal •New Homes
. Year 1995 COBG funding,
providing tho County meets • Garages
Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
applicable requirements.
•
Complete
Tho flret of two public
Free Estimates
hearings will be hold March Remodeling
Insurance Work Welcome
· 28, 1995 11 7;00 p.m. altho
Stop &amp; Compare
Meigs County Courthouee
~;t
State Rt. 33
_.._
to provide citizens wlth
FREE ESTiMATE$
pertinent Information about
the COBG program In·
Darwin, Ohio
985-4473
cludlng an explanation of

Kenny's is the place to come :
when you need a car rental. ·
We Hare Cars and Vansl

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE :

eligible requlr.emonto.
•GIIvltlu and
program
The

~~~~ ~~~~~~,c~~t~~~t~.:

~=====~'122194
~~ ':tL:;;:::::::::::~==·:..,.:''""::""::=====i

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

1nd program requlrementa,

Including: economic devol·
opment prolecta, •treat,
Wiler oupply, drainage and

sanitary eewer lmpcove·

lin!i,
Servi&lt;et.

Home Sile1, Land

mente; park ecquleltlon and Cleerlnf, Septlc Syotemtt
lmprovomenta, domolltlon
4 Drlveweyo.
'
of
unufe
llructureo,
and
.
"'-·c"'-The
deal
was
the
lirstlnvolving
sources.
HOUSTON (AP) - The Clin·
. rehabilitation of neigh·
ana ....'!! ,
Jim Felder, a Conoco . borhood facllltlea : The
.ton administration was expected to a U.S. oil company and Iran since
1979,
when
the
United
States
spokesman,
said be was not aware acllvltlea mull be deelgned
TopLimestone,
Soil, Fill Dirt
block a U.S. ol! company subsidiary's deal to develop two Per- ' banned commercial trade with Iran of any company request for an to prlmerlly benollt low •
a'nd moderlle-lncome persian Gulf oil fields for Iran, the in the wake of the seizure of the executive order.
aona, aid In the prevention
U.S.
embassy
in
Tehran
by
Islamic
The
sources
declined
to
describe
Houston Chronicle repor1lld today.
or elimination ofolums end
Some administration officials milillints, It came under sharp criti· the scope of the order, so it could blight, .or meet .an urgent
MANLEY'S
,
suggested that Houston-based" cism by the State Department after not be determined if it .would cover need o1 tho community.
HOM E IMPROVEMENT
just investments in Iran or other
Citizen• are encouraged
Roofing, Siding, Room
CoDOCo bad asked"for an executive it W\IS announced ~t week.
The presidential order could · , commercial arrangements such as to attend thle mtotlng on Addit ions, Concrete, etc.
order bloc!dns the deal by one of
P.O. Box 220
its Dutcll subsidiaries to provide a come as soon as today, the newspa- crude oil purchases and the sale of March 28, 1995 to provide
Bidwell, OH 45614
graceful withdrawal, the newspaper per said, citing unidentified other U.S. goods fiicb as oil-field their Input on the County's
CDBG program.
6l4 38S-986S
equipment.
·
said.
.
(3) 14, 21, 2tc ./
'
:'

992·6215

Pomeroy, Ohio

Auditor or State
Flnonclal Ropllrt Of

Clinton expected bo block company's oil deal

IS YOUR COMMO"ITY WORTH
. MfiKifiG BmER? . .
TELL OS flfiD VOTE!!!

mo.

• Room Additions
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTI MATES)
V.C. YOU NG Ill

.MODERN' SANI'rAftON

Howard L, Wrltesel
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

off

S Announcements
SHOOTING MATCH
Middlei&gt;ort American
· Legion Farm
Bailey Run Rd .
March 19th starts
1 p.m. - 1 ~ gauge

HI

• Craftsman Toola
•Toy•
•Guns
Load• of Misc.
Buy·Sell· Trade
992-2060 1 ~1 mo

Mobile Welding
Diesel Injector SVC
Injector Pump SVC
Tune-ups
985-3879

· Clinic

50%

One mile out
143 from At. 7
Tues. • Wild. • Fri. · Sat.

··Convertible Tops
•Carpet&amp;
Seat COIItrl
•Headliners
•Antique Cars
•Boat Seats
41464 Starcher Rd.
Pomeroy, OH.
992-7587

Ma~ies Crockpot
Iifton, WV
Dine-in or Carry -out
773-5612
Brins in ad
for 1 % off.

Heuter

CAI"inER SEWICI

Special This
Month

311&lt;\/1 mo.

Kerosene

YOUNG'S

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

JESS' AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

304·882-3336

614·992·3470

:

JAMES ALARM
.SERVICE
With every new
alarm Installed ~
receive 6 month's
FREE monitoring.

. DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) we need a lot of time to re ach
missing.
· Secretary of State Warren ChristoThe Israel-Syria talks broke ' agreements," Beilin said.
: pber today held back-to-back talks
down in December with Israeli and
The secretary of state spent live
; with Israeli Prime Minister '(itzhak
Syrian military chiefs negotiating hours with Assad on Monday dissecurity arrangements for th e . cussing security arrangements for
· Rabin and Syrian President Hafez
Assad, hoping to announce direct · Golan Heights in the 'expectation the Golan Heights if Israel does
Rabin would agree to at least a pas- · surrender territory.
negotiations betweep the.two counPossible measures include
tries and a narrowing of differences
tial pullback.
There were numerous reports in demilitarized zones, limitations bn
on the future of tbe Golan Heights.
Firs~ in Jerusalem, over breakthe Jsraeli ·media that new talks Israeli and Syrian troop deployfast at Rabin's home, Christopher
between the two countries at the ments in other zones and listening
ambassador
and cbief of staff level posts and an early warning system
reviewed with the Israeli leader
are
likely
as
a result of the latest to signal a surprise attack.
·. syria's latest stand on the kind of
Christopher
shuttle.
·
.The Clinton administration
security measures that would be
In I erusalem, Israel's chief already bas said any settlement
installed if Israel. withdrew Jrom
should be based oq land (or peace.
n~gotiator with. Syria said U.S.·
· the strategic border teriitory.
Israel took that approach in condirected talks with Damascus were
'!ben, Christopher flew here and
"much more serious ·and cover a ciuding peace treatieS with Egypt
met with Assad for two hours.
larger area" than previously. Ita- in 1979 and Jordan last year.
·Reporters were told to expect an
When Israeli and Syrian diplo. mar .Rabinovich, who is al so
announcement
Israel' s ambassador to Washington, mats last talked face to face in
A U.S. official, who spoke on
spoke to reporters after Christo- .Washington the military chiefs of
conditioti of anonymity, said earlier
staff participated. In Damascus on
pher' s meeting with Rabin.
· that Assad was inclined to reopen
lsraeli'Deputy Foreign Minister Monday, Christopher sent his mili·
:the negotiations with Israel that
Yossi Beilin told army radio that tary aide, Gen. Daniel W. Christ:Syria broke off three months ago.
once serious negotiations were man, to the Golan Heights from
1n Jerusalem, Rabin told a,par·
resumed, an agreement could be Damascus for an assessment of the
:1iameilt committee tnday there bad
security situation.
reached
within months.
:been "almost no change " in
U.S. military attaches at the
·
"Botb
sides
know
more
or
less
Israel ' s position rega.rding an
American
Embassy in Syria have
what
the
settlement
is
..
if
they
·agreement with Syria. and the key
made
a
do
zen trip~ there. ·
want peace' with us, I don't think
building blocks for peace were still

MARCH 14TH, 1995.
AT 7:00P.M.

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

J&amp;L INSULATION

Nine French peacekeepers killed

YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT
. WHERE·
·

•

.

. The meaning of love was lbe
theme of several· articles read by
.Helen Bodln\er, devotional'"leader
at a recent meting of the B. H. Sanborn Missionary Society held at the
bome of June K!oes. ·
Mrs. K!oes conducted the meeting opening it with prayer.
Tbanlc you notes were read from
those remembered with plates of
cookies at Christmas. The white
cross mission qoota was discussed
and plans were made to complete.
the goal. The bandages have been
rolled and will be mailed out soon,
it was noted .
Mrs. K!oes served refreshments.

-

American soldiers and sailors wbo fought one of
World War II's fiercest battles visited Iwo Jima,
·along with tbe Japanese who defended the island.
Veterans from both countries said they were a bit.
uneasy about attenditlg the joint tribute to the fallen.
But Olester Foulke, 71, of Las Vegas, Nev., said
be bad ' 'no qualm~. " Foulke fought on lwo Jimaas a
demolitions expert in the 5th Marine Division,
"You have good memories and bad memories," .
be said. " You have to deal with them both."
Iwo Jima was a particularly biUer defeat for Japan.
Only 1,083 JapaDese survived - out of a fon:e of
22,000.
For U.S. Marines, it was their bloodiest battle of
the war, with 6,821 dead after 36 days of lighting on
the ground that began Feb. 19, 1945.
Some 880 U.S. veterans of the battle and their
families met 110 Japanese survivors late 'this morning. Together, they sat on folding chairs on the beach
and tistened to speeches that evoked the pain of bat·
tie.
.
·
"Nearly all of my subordinates died;" Kenicbi
Yosbifuku, 77 a former Japanese officer, told the
Kyodo News Service. "I cannot but f~el doubts
abput the joint memorial service bet\Yeen Japan and
the United States, but I decided to ·auend."
"I still feel a little funny," said Charles Lindberg,
71, also a veteran of the 5th Marine Division. "But
those things, well, you have to let go of them. Maybe
meeting them will help."
.
Most of the Americans were in street clothes and
white commemorative baseball · caps. A few bad
medals pinned to their chests.

MISSIONARY SOCIETY

HARRISONVU.LE NEWS
Mrs. Virginia Gibson and Mrs.
Gladys Ctpnings sPc:nt the weekend
with Mrs. Juanita Richards of Dayton. Sue Ferro of Kentucky was the
weekead guest of Mr. and Mrs .
Doug Bishop.
·
Recent
guests
of
Mr.
and Mrs.
SUNDAY CONCERT
Bob
Alkire
were
Mr.
and
Mrs.
James and Debra Davis wiD be
Colum~us,
Mr.
Howard
Gilkey,
in concert at the Racine Church of
and Mrs. Ziba Midli:iff, Pomeroy,
the Nazarene on March 19.
,
1
Debra, •the bronze metal winner and Robert B\izzard, Albany.
Anne Halliday and Charlotte
of the 1976 Montreal Olympic
games, will share her testimony at Erlewine were Thursday dinoer
guests of Pauline Atkins.
9:30a.m., followed by James,
Mrs : Nellie Lowe recently
singer-songwriter, who will perform a blend of contemporary, . underwent surgery at O' Bieness
Hospital, Athens.
country and ' gospel songs at 10:30

.;.....,_.---Legion assistance----

~

a.m. The putilic is invited.

lrnliATESi

1/AIW.Y Ull MIW
Repair ~ Tubo or Sln~s.

----.....;.........----Society scrapbook-------WALKAMERICA RALLY
, A team captain rally for the TriCounty WalkAmerica for the
March of Dimes will be held 4p.m.
Monday, fi'larch 20 at the. Point
Pleasant Moose Lodge.
All businesses, schools and
organizations in the Mason-GalliaMcigs area planning to have a team
in the walk are asked to send a rep'resentati ve to the meeting. Materials needed to stan recruiting team
members and raising money will be
· :available at the rally. The event is
· -being hosted by the Point Pleasant
Moose Club.
: Over 1,500 participants from
. ·Mason, Gallia and Meigs counties
:are expected for this year's tri. :county WalkAmerica for the March

.

~All

CALL OUR OFFICE IT 992·2 55

We Give Mature

trot study are correct, that's a lot of walls. Since muscles need calcium
bean attacks that you would want to squeeze, blocking calcium helps
to prevent," Psaty said.
blood vessels ~elax.
Psaty's study was a statistical · National guideline~ say that two
look at 623 people who bad bad other classes of drugs, beta blockbean attacks and a control group of ers and diuretics, are the preferred
2,032 who hadn't. Such epidemic- alternatives for treatment ?f high
logical studies do not provide blood pressure, Cutl er satd . But
defmitive answe!S, but they do pro- !hose guidelin~ have been .the ~ubvide important clues for further teet of constderable sctentlfte
research.
. debate, be said , an~ not all
Indeed, the government bas researchers agree with !heni.
launched a study to administer
these drugs to randomly chosen
groups of patients in a controlled
way to get a precise estimate of the
risks or benefits.
The results of tha:t study will not
be available until2002. said Cutler,
wbo is directing the study at the
National Institutes of Health.
Calcium channel blockers
reduce the amount of calcium that
can enter muscle cells in the artery ·

BULLETIN BOARD
., .. colu•n Inch weekdays
,,.. colu•n Inch Sunday

paying the $3. He refused 10 11ve '!'e
identification, so I could not pay htm
back.
"When I exclaimed, 'Only in Iowa
could something I ~ thishappen!' the
rest of the people tn the post olfice
applauded.•
Is alcohol rwnin1 Yl?,IU life o~ the
life of a loved one? ,._/coho/ISm:
How w Recognize It , How ro Deal
With /I, How to Conqlli!r It" can turn
thingsarowui.Sendase/f-addlessed,
tbng , business-size envelope and a
checkormoneyorder for$3.75 (this
includes postage and handling) to :
Alcohol, clo Ann Landers, P.O. Box
11562, Chicago , Ill. 6061J-0562 . (In
send $4J5.l
·

Study questions safety of-certain blood pressure·drugs

I

ht Yo•r ••Rie Across
With I Dally Sentinel

~Grandmother needs advice on child's behavior problem · .
.

'

The Dail y S e ntinei-Page-9

• Tuesday, March 14, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

0

.

Tuelday, March 14,1 995
:Page

t

I

.,

~--

-

•Cuttom Made
•Solid vinyl
rep-lacement .
win II.Iowa
•Free Estimates
S
a
• flrting ,.t
*200 lnttllltd
""'SIT OUR

·

..,
SHOWROOM"
110 'Court St., Pom11roy, Ohio
"Look lor the R-" and White Awning"
""
992""
_A
119 AI ~tromm, Owner I·BD0-291 ~5600

I
~

'

�'

.

Page-l

o-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March 14,1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, March 14, 1995

·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

The Daily Sentinei-Page-1J

BRIDG ~[

ACROSS

,
, 13
' 14

39
40
5ecolon of org. · 41
Ae1reso 42
Keaton
Plunge
43
Genetic
4li
material (abbr.) 49
Aclor Flynn
53
Sponsoro'
54

1

meaaeges

1
4

.

9

!
BEA'J'rJE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

Announcements

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

44

'12 OokWoad- Homo. Uko
- · 2 IR, 2 FUll hlh 114-25611110 WMkondl lind oftOf 1:00
p.m. 11-F.

-·
-

10x5l;a·2br., 2 both,

... .... •

•• PC. -

··

Apartment
for Rent

INN~Ico;;1~

~:;;;;;;;;;)

KIT, 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

PHILLIP
ALDER

f

A,~~~
lr--

:~;-;

....
;d;l-=lfl;:
....:otot;...:... ..
CltJ, Fumlohod; 121M1o. Gu I
W.ter Pold, No p..., ,,.__
21100.

]

•·
'fA K 8 7

o A K Q I 0 8. 6

2 br · In - . . , •
lllddlopcll,· - -·

•loiO 7 6

.

11178 :114 Ton
114-441o0110.

1110

C11ooJ

C11ooJ 4

rr VJAs A

f.\OMIO: I
1 COOLDIST
srAt..O UD
fCIR Ct\YS

1117 Ford Dllftp Trucll, T~..\xlo, '
11 A. . . , _ Bod, 114-

liM-IUII.

WD $700

EAST

K 52
Q 52

LAPTOP

good.--··

Employment Services

Wanted .to Do

18

'1
;

AVON I All - · I ShlrloJ
Spoono, 30Wl'J.1421.

YOU CAN FIND THAT SPECIAL AVON 1o buy«=·=~::. if&gt;.
or
SOMEONE NOW: 1o410Q.5112· dopondonl nop.
5500 old . 8140, $2.11i/mln. Mutt 1-800.112-13H.
bo 18 yrs. Procoll Co., I02·i54AcC&lt;!UI11onl, lmoMdiOio Full·
"'20.
Tlmo Pooldan For llollvolod,
loii-Stort•. · R..........blo For
Accourrto
Gononol
4
Giveaway
Lodgt&lt;l '"
I I Flnonclal
Report ng.
counlirla Dognoo
2 pori Chow pupp.... 1 bllck r. Or 14 v,., Related 'Work EJ..
1 brown, to good home. 304o poilonco SMuld lncludo Como
871-2848.
puterlzod Acc:ounllng P . Roplr To: CLA 352, o/o
Australllan Shephard, ferm~le, duGolllpollo Dolly T~buno, 125
opoyod, oppraL 1rr old. 304- Thlnl Avonuo, Golllpollo, OH
882~7.
45131.

c'"blo,

Pupplu. Part Gald•n Rlllrwlvar
• pori block Lob. 304-4.75-2735.

AVON SPRING SALES
Avorogo $8 415 /Hr. At Work
-Hotnoi
.YoiL
Dloc:ounlol
llonofKol No Door /Door, lndop.
Rop. 1..00.1112_.731.

To good hom•, Rottweller. 304- CompLOor uoono noodod. Work
173-!i810.

6

.

Lost &amp; Found

Loat. Multi-Colored Au.trallan
Mal• Shephe.rdh Yellow COllar

With Taga, Nort up Venowtown

Rd. 814-446-8945.

own houra.. l20-50klyr, 24hrl.
714-251·3311 ut1501.

COOKWARE
Wonted: Exporlonc:od
SoiN
Pooplo
In

Cook-•
Homo

ll'--1
a.
HonHt,
Advancement
To
Man~e-m•nl Ponlbte, 304-171-

o.monttrallon.

8111.

Yard Sale

7

101-8117.

1-

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

K • C Pump IMtallltlon, well
Hn'lce, Nl•, Hl"'lcl l ,..,.Ire.
Fnoo oollmot-. 24hr, ...OCo.
30h172.. 388.
Llghl Houllng Wllh 11 A. Fillbod . Trallor
Ex..,_,

RN80f'llble, 114,117-'1U4.

Protaalonal

Trw

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
4 AcrM car- DIPouom Trot
Blo..r

Rood,

114-1124111S.

Addloon

Merchandise

m

s.32 ocroo,
ft rldgo 1op
building olio, 113,150. Roybum
Rd, rea110nabll rwtrlctlona. No
olnglo wldo lnqulroo, p l - . In-

!loWfnl: All Dll"'orol Klndo Of
Fuml-loolii:IA..._
~ QoiMpollo, 114-+163414.

100,000 ITU HI Efllolonor
0.. FumMO- 11101 ......,.,
v.., Roooono!!!r Prictd. Clni
-

formation mallld on reqHII.
304.. 75-5253.

tlmat•l

or IM'Mi-

~~.

............ Stuv-. And Doyoono, AU Roconcll11onod
And Gounonloodl 1100 And Up.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Witl Doliwr.IIWIN441.
Complolo homo lurnlohlnM.
mombonohlp.
Houno: lllon401, w. 114o4fe. llopl . Doko
loll or tnoolo tor
0322, 3 mi... out lulavllle Plko Pooll00"7, Ohio.
of ....., votuo, C.
Fnoo DIIIYOIJ.

41 Houses for Rent .

lhrw bedroom hau .. In Ch...
ltr. Many

updatn. Houalng

retwencee, dtpoett requlrwd,
814-441-1121 ohor lpm.

Uc1nHd Need perMn lo work In privati
166,0hlo &amp; Wnt VIrginia, 304- "''home.,. lnd .nlghte, 114aervlc1.

773-5!85.

112-1023.

.

r.no~:::o.:.:..~~t:r:p:=~
bittore ;,

.

pete, "814-182·2803

-9~-W-a-n-te-d-to_B_u_y--l No Expwloncl Nm-ryl $500
.,..,.--,---:-:--:-:-....,-'--:rl To $100 Wookly """lflllol
c.... Loll
T•""~· 11181' 11oc1o11

er

StnHh ·Buk:k Panlloc
E.ootom AYinUo, Qolllpollo.
Oecontltd ~onewan, Will Itt.
ph&lt;&gt;nn ' old lompo ' old lhor·
momete,., old docU, entlqua
• 1q
Iurnlturt. Rlvlflne ..
nt uet.
R:u••
Moor~. owner. 114-992·
"6
W
b
11
1
2

pm,

Pro
... - - Ro-.
OWn Houno. eon -716-~
Ext. 1311. (24 Houri).

All real estate advertlsing in
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ol 1968 which makes It !Nagai

Nunoo Aldl Trolnii!CI.::=::

to adventse "any preference,

Pom.or Nurwtng A

llmltalion or 11iscrirnlnatlon .
based on race, color, religion,
sex familial status or national

lion Conlw will be ollorlng tralnI~ claM• In thl monlh ot
April. Appllc:otlono o ono , _
belfttl accepted M 31TH Rock~··
Rd., p.,.,.,..,. ~opo.ngo
•
-. : • uy • • ••·
aiZ.t •• llmHid. .ltlrM (3)
Don't Junk ht Sell Ua Your Non- ,.t.rance paptrll an required
Working
lltlor Applloncoo, wllh oppllc:ollon. Apptr In pw·
,
R frt
It
.on MtwHn 101.m. &amp; 3p.m. M·
Tv
1 ger ora, F; Student• thlt eucceufully
Color
· · 1,
F,..gra,
VCR~J WaiMn, compl.tt the TCE ctua wUI be
!loy- Etc . e*2""'1238•
otlglblo lor ornptoroo10111. ,....
J 1 0'1 Aoolo Porto ond lolv..., oofutoly no phone eoUo. EOE.
burl,. wnockoJunk 011100 1 Oak Hill TNCklng CompoiiJ
INCU. Aloo~ - · 3114- Stoking Ovor Tho Rood Drlvoni,
173-5343 or
·
With good drlvl,. record. COL
Old buHono, c:oolumo )oWIIOJ, Aoqullod. .114-112·7773, Or Atold tlgl&gt;loro Iron ololtiolo, oiC- tor 5:110 P.ll. COIIII14~45-1304.

origin, or any inteniiOn to
any such preference;

ma ~e

ttmitatlom or discrimination.•
This ne wspaper will not .

1

knowlingly accept
advenisements for real estate
which Is in vlotatkm of the law.
Our readers are hereby
Informed 1hat all dwellings
advertised in lhls newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis.

tutw, star Wart, ..... . chlna. Plumbw Wllh Alteul I v.ra
tumllurw, tc*t or compltta ...
tot•, O.by Martin, 814-092-JII41. Exparlenc. For New I. ~·J:~'

1

Work In Loc~ ~. I
. _
Wa~ed To Buy: Juftk Autos .3753,
Wllh Or WlthoLA llo4on. COH
POSTAL.JOBS
Lorry Uvooy. 8M-3fl&amp;.ll303.
Sto~ f11.4tn.r.lo.lor oxorn ond

ooptlc:otlon In

coli 2111-7111-

To . Buy: T~o 8301 ext WY548, .. m-stpm,
P.rmanant 0 r
M, Sun-FM.
e14-2 ...11160.
·
~~0:.:.:..:.:,=-':::-:::::;-;= I Rnponolblo lobyo- Port•
~~~~cJn~:
Aaxtble Houra, My Home.
Wanted

Poundag~~,

Coin Shop,
, Galllpolle.

Wonlod To

Bur

Uood

Homo, Coli &amp;M-441-0175.
Wonted: Sllndlng Tlmbor, Colh
Pen:enta~ With A GUII'IInIMII14-37i-2751.

Or

We Buy Junll Cart, 814-311-11062, 114-445-PART.

-=.,
114-2=·
13

Coli After I P.ll.

Insurance

Real Estate
31 Homes tor Sale
HouM And Lat

Low llaooon

Por-t, EUJ T~ 3 Bodo
roomo, 1 Bath,
Old Nnr
Vlnlon /BkiMII Anoo. C.ll1441.e11011.Uk FOIIIon-.

2-tllory ..rogo, bookll Now
Haven Supennarkll, boltom
floor compllt~ Nm: data ct. 2
bop: Ctont boJ 40'128', noor
IN- ...,. 32'x231, 100'&gt;40' lol,
121,1100. 304412·2713.

AIIERICAN
NATIONAL
SURANCE
VICKIE CASTO, AGENl'
HOMEOWNERS &amp; AUTO DIS.
COUNTS '
Uff, &amp; HEALTH
304-.581-4257
•

3

lllcl,_,.,

2 BOiho, HN1

Pump, Gat Furl"'lce, 1 Ac:re.
Garage. AddiHn Area, $62,0001

114-317·7287.

HouM And L.at l..w llaooon
'"'""'"'• E•OJ Tonne, 4 Bodo
roomo, • lllho, Loc:o1od NMr
Rutlond Anoo, •.£1111 UOO 441

171-12111.
=Sct-..,.--=-bo.,.l•_l1_.21__
~
-.
1 0~1z..,..:.oo~,....

T II
p 1o
F
3 •·•
-room r tor 011 tor ur·
nlohod Ll&gt;cotod Appr. 2 IIIIM
hlow Dom, 114-441·1341 After I
· P.ll.

44

Apanment ·
for Rent

~~-:, ~m ::: ::•to~.:~;:~:::

Hun., March 11-1!. COlt betec.. 38 opoclal ...5, Colt Oft~

c:lol Pollco 31 opoclol 1221,
SmKh ond W.ooan 31 · -~~~
1111, llokorov 11-11 cloublo oolion outo 1121, Touruo Bruoh
Nickle 357, 1111, IOfOHI 21 outo
1121, R - otngto ·olx I 112"
.,.,... 22 mognum 1111, 32-aG
n o - . onodoo In 8poln 1121,
O.ve'• Sw1p Shott- Rl - 1113,
Pomeroy; 114-tG-::t*.

10f0, Rio

241-112\

Grinde.

""':4..37-273J.

uc cond. 1100.

Buy or Mil. RI'#Wine Antlqun,

1124 E. lloln lt,..t, on Rt 124,
PomerOJ. Houno: II.T.W. 1G:IIO
• ·m · 1o 1:00
~su~• 1 ~
·
'
· - • :~
to I:!IO p.m. 1
·212f.

54 Miscellaneous
'

DlpMit R•

saoo,

i

1
'
,

•.

...

BORN LOSER

140110. :J04.ill'J.1802.

"UX)(,11\E 50110R

ANDJJ5T
l.JAAT IS SO

PICfl!IECf '~'·.&lt;~.
£kru.D,
£D SfJLUMf!11
UU.YYOO
Dl Dl'l'r fi.ID
UP iJITf\
~lr-'1,01 ..

-·

ganlng oound

c...,.+-f--1

""
East

Pass
Pass

3•

Pass
Pa~s

3

IJ~W I TJ.\

~~.;;,.£D 5H(j)\\Pf\?

/

,

fiE':&gt; (i)T A

~fol£ lAAT'5

ffiBtt£.MD
A. CN?..
. THA.T 1~[1

mansion

33 Neuter
44 Chief arter,
45- Arata!
46 Whirlpool
47 Irritate
48 Nerve part
50 Abominable

Phillip Alder

Yestei'Qay I gave a defensive deal that
most pairs should ge( right Today's
deal would test even the best pairs . But
East found th e winning play. The deal
origin ally appeared in Jeremy Flint's
column in The Times of London . As
Flint didn't name East. I have a feeling
it musl.have been he .
Defending against thr ee n o· trump,
Weslleads !he club three . H ow should
East plan the defense?
·
Perhaps North should bid three dia ·
monds on the third r ound. But he want·
ed to get to three no-trump if his part·
ner had a club sl opper . And although
South didn't, it took very accurate d e·
fen se to.defeat the contrac t.
The dummy contain s eight winn ers.
Somehow the defenders mustn't allow
the declarer to take the heart fine sse or
to r each his hand to cash the spade ace .
{\l on e table. Easl put in the club
queen at trick one. When it held. he con·

snowman

b ri-+--

, +-1-1-l .

114o24J.1032

by L!JIS Campos .

Celebrty C.pher cryptogram ! ere aealed trOm quotalons by famous pe~le , pas! ai\CI preltflf1l
Each lener.nthe ctpher stands lo1 anothor Todsy 'J ctue J equals N

C P 0 A 0 R

'XUNRD

KP K

V MD

N B

CWVRXPA

R NT D

R X P W W

N B

X U D

CWVRXPA

RXVMM.
P'R EVIOUS SOLUTION : "I looked 'in the phone book lor replacement players ...
couldn't lind anything ."- (Oriol e owner) Peter Angelo s.

The lead actor of our story also won
the first Irick with the cl ub que e n .
However, antic!ing his partner mi ght
have no ·sare exit East returned the
club four at Irick t . Wes t won with the
)(in g and r eturn ed a club to his part ·
ner's ace. Now East swi tched to the dia·
mond t hree. Luckily West's diamond
spois were sufficient to keep South ou t
of his hand. West won tricks 12 and 13
with the heart queen and cl~b nine, re·
spectively.
Impress ive stuff.

PhiLlip A!der.' s new book, "Ge t
Smarter at Bridge," i~: available,
autographed upon request , for
$14 .95 from P .O. Box 169, Roslyn
Hts., NY 11 577-0169.

T~:~:~~, S©ttJllA-~£~s~~

::::

Edll•d by CLAY I . ,OILAN - - - - - - -

0 four
Rearrange letter~ of
scrambled words
low to for m four words

I

A .L L F y T

I 1I I I
2

l

THN OC

III

I'

3

.

.

MY P U J
Is
I I
.

.

.

I
1 ~:;:~

.

~

. DJ E G

I always feel
after a
holiday , since I usually go way
off my diet. I've concluded that

a conscience only bothers you

GA
1--..,.:~_::.,.::....:y.....:::....,.....~~
after you 've • •• your •••

I I I I I 1

BIG NATE

0

Complete tk e chudle q~oted
by f,fJ.ng .n the " u!.smg word 1
you develop from •step N o 3 below..

P~INT

NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Duplex · Awash· Vic:ar-LaiJnch -C HANCE

.

My neighbor said she would like to give herboyfriend
the'boot' . "He's a nice guy ," I concluded, "maybe the best
th ing to give him is another CHANCE ."

AKC

RogloiOfod

Cockor

P l - . IOW711o211N.

lllnlltiono

TOJ

Twrlor,

ftlllo,

1042.

.

57

Musical
Instruments

. ... ·-

·-

~• ...-.
~··"" WUDIF

Colbelorelpm
Onbel Plano Exctlllnl ConeD-

cac

a...rat

Homo

llolnlononco ond lloblio Homo
A.,.lr. FOI ' - Olllmo1o Coli
Chll, 114-112oi3H.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

f\on'o TV 8orvlco; -lollzlng
In Zonllll oleo _,ng onoo1
o4hor bnndo. Hou• collo1 • 1·
800·7117-oo15, wv 3114-1711-23...

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

SpacJow; S Btdroome, 2 Beth

:

Aonchi\ Fom. Rm~. Alum 111g~
N.w oof, All ~t~IICtlia,
f!OI'gh- In Addloon 'IWp.
On a-goo c-k lfllr SR 7,

$51;100, Cllll14-441-7111.

I

..

I

I

put your personal 1mpnnt on all you touch
birthday gill . Send lor your Aslro·Graph
today 1S okay , wov1ded you cont ribute
predictions for the year ahead by mailing
wor1hwh1 le . B~ck off when you
something
$2 to Astro·Graph , c/o th1s .new.spaper.
.
don't
P.O . BoM 4495 . New York. NY 10163. Be
LIBRA CSept. 23·0ct . 23) · Mak i ng
sure to state you r zodiac sign.
changes s1mply tor change'S sake could
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) Your suc·
be
your major weakness today. Do not
cess today could depend on how well
d1srupt
S1t uat 1on s with yollf' caree r ''
you adapt to shift-ing conditions. Prepare
they're running smoothly.
to make changes whenever and 'w herev·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Cond1l10ns
· er necessary .
today might be a bit usual . You could be
TAURUS (April 20.May 20) Yield to and
a w1nner . yet lose in the proceSs. Hold
abide by log1c today and try to keep
onto what you gain.- with both hands and
erra11c con d11 10ns under control.
a lighl grip.
Emotional concerns cOuld d1stort the pic·
SAGITIARIUS (Nov . 23-DeC. 21) Your
lure .
'
·
associates might back away from you
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Your m1g ht
toda y if they think you 're unduly constrongly disagree with your mate today
cern ed with your own interests while
about certain issues. Control your temignoring thei(S .
per ; har sh words and uny1elding posiWednesday. March 15, 1995
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22.Jan . 19) Keeping
liqns will make you both look foolish. · ·
'
secrets might not be one of your stronger
II you 'handle dove)opmenls effecliv"/Y in CANCER (June 21.July 22). You should
attributes today. A manipulative individthe year ahead , it should be a fUll one lor do well today it you can delegate assignual
whO recognizes this may take advan·
you socially and a rewarding one for you ments. When you have to rend tor yourlage
of you.
.
materially . Make the most of opportuni· self, however , you might not be as sue'
AQUARIUS
(Jan.
:ZO.Feb. 19) You could
1
. cesstul.
ties in both areas.
·
·
be
your
own
worse
enemy today if you 're
PISCES. (Feb. 20-Merch 20)'You will be LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Share with oth·
In the process of
prone
to
hold
a
grudge.
well received by friends ioday, bul guard· ers today. but keep your generosity withtoying
to
gel
even.
you
might
l)lllk&amp; mat·
against· foo!ish . behavior . Though tless '" prudent bounds. If you 're e~~:cess1ve,
ters
worse.
'
actions could c reat~ shock waves difficult regret w ill set in later.
· to subdue. Pisces/ treat you rself tO a VIRGO (Aug. 23-S~pl. 22) Wan11ng to

ASTRO · GRAPH

1 112 lloty, 5 ond bl1h
downettl,., aluminum tiding. 4
r•r otd root, two porchM (one
oncloMol), UI,OOO,I14-116-3581.

·--

N B

E 0

M P J H· N

VMNFJK .

6

crown Cllr Anoo. C.ll1.aoo.4481110t Aol! For llolthow.
·

--

51 War god
52 Tidy
55 Dawn
goddeaa
56 Saa aagla
57 Faloehood

CELEBRITY CIPHER.

I

Adorobll whho _ , bunnJ
wid 1100
' ...... PertM:t fat
E.oot1r. MO. 30M711-44:11.

colll14.fiHIM.

Uko • - ·
E""lngo.

reciprocally
21 Sleepier
23 Rumor
24 Altoa, e.g.
· 25 Inborn
26 Chlckon
27 Place
28 No man.:.. Island
31 - Mountain•
of Europe
32 O'Hara

8 ANSWER
UNSCRAMBlE FOR

lplnot plono I bench lor Mlo,

2 Ford llotor CompoOJ '"""
End eov... (Brul 1 Flta Th..,.
derblrdAnd1-"--GT

Evana

19 Function

2•

Pass

Cowt~lrt

10 March date

L._.l.-.l.-.l.-..J.L...l.._J,

1101, Aolo Fot - -·
And Lat l..w llaooon
Por-t, EMY Tormo, 3 Bodo
- . 1 ' hlh, .._..... Noor

You Don't Have To Look
,To Spy the Best Buys In
the Clossifieds ..

Pass

9

this tu his nine .

Pets for Sale

lion, 1 1 4 - -·

~. Refer~,

Motorcycles

county

11 Attentlon-

West cashed h is two winners in the suit
-but was endplayed. He exited with a low
diamond. but South courageously ran

drainpipe , _ In otock. - ·
Equlpmertl, 3G4.eJ'5.11421.

BEAUTIFUL APARTIIEHTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTA!~ 12 Wootwvocl ~..
1i1D10 12111. W.l- to Ohoo
I onovtoo. Coli 114_.4fl..2111. E·

c-

T-

qulrtd. 114-444-15'11.
Fumlohod Eftle:-lo::na:..y......,l1"'115111o=:-.
UtiiKIM Pold Shono Both, 507
Socond. Goll{pollo, 114 446 4411
After 7 P.ll.

,Pass

7 Head motion
8 - Dinsmore ·

3 Shlp'o rope
4 Thick
5 Anger
6 Metric measure

1 1944 Invasion
date
2 California

.

Merchandise

o....

c.....

74

garment
37 Flave on

DOWN

38 EdlbiUuber

tinued with the ace and another club.

=.,........,...~,_,=,..,..,,.,....,....

I::;:.:.::=-------:---:Gno..l - . -.plpo
I
56

i. '

OH Cd 114-

· I It,
nout-,
:1011 I.
Fourth
_ , _ f!OO,
, , 114-112·

Fumlohod 2 • 3 Room .t.po11o
mont,
Udllll• Pokl, No

1--------------71 Autos tor Sale

cC!:' Winwln-

3 Room FIWnllhld USO Piuo $8 011 Por Iotito On ._ Nolunl
Dopooft, M . Ll&gt;cuot Ill. 1,.__
F01 Bownor Pooductol !Iorch
1340.
SOlo! Crown Cll)l Ll&gt;c01ion, 114Fumlohod Aportmont, 1 Bod· 211..11111.
room, 101 s.cond Annu.,
1N7, , . , 1111, 1110, , . ,
llpollo, 127&amp;1Mo. UtiiKIIO Pold,
bo-ll-·
mini
eu ue u1e Aft« 7 P.M.
10 mini) oommono I llo!ll 1114
All New 3 ltdi'OOIM Efficiency, to 1tM. 304-8~73 , . , .
Allootmont, 1-71'111.
.

quol Hawing ~UnltJ.

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

Building •
Sl,lpplleS

II,., - · • - · Tonnlutoo,
mlco. fllh Tonfl I Pot ~.
2411
Jeckoan Ave. Polnl

Prlvr• Pari!.·

-Ilion, $1,100, 114-112·2471. -~

2·

1 lodroom Aportmonl Ntc:.lr 53
Antiques
Fumlohod, All UIIHioo Pold. Ex· .:.,::.___;,;,_;;,;;:,;,:;.;;..,....._ _
lng, eM-445-2802.
"'• 1,.1 1 ·•-ltlc ·
2bd""· •rr-·•
' •pptlonc:.. lurnlohod, ilundry
_ , locllh... . - to ochoOI
In 1-n. Appt{c;llono ovollobto
ot: ·VIilloal Q,_ AOio. 141 or
collll14.fl2·371t. EOII.

''

,'
duty, , _ llpMd, ..u,l n. ~
bod w11h.1oot boxoo, noor boon- ,
POf I hitch, 132 11, oxcollonl ;

1177 Bulek Rogal C1o&lt;&gt;!1 Shopo, =~=:-:---:-~---11,800; 1M lfon:ul)l Sobto LS 1187 KXIO, looko I NM - · ·
13,000, 114-441o0147.
oxco!lenl -nlon,
814842-6264 aft., 4 pm.
.
1171 Joop ·CJ7, VI, honlotop,
71,000ml, aood oond., ooklng

llponlolo For Solo Adufto I
Pvpploo, 1144711-2721.

cepe OWn Electric,

·•

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Qolion
Upright, Ron Evone lnten&gt;r~Me.
........... Ohio, 1.-.&amp;SJI.Nzt. .
SUNQUEST WOLFF TANIINO
BEDs. Cam-~ Homo
unno l1'om 1111.110, Lampo.
LoQone. 'ccrr1 riel. P~•
low • UO.IIO. Coil Todo~E

llocll, brlcll, -......
-.llnloto,

OWN A
D06'?

FURNITURE. 12

=:.,u

JESUS EVER

·:

814-112ol407.

1 and 2 Mdroom lf)llrtm•ntl, Morfin 22 outo w/40132 fumlthed and untumlahed, 1121. very good - · 1200
wo..-~or
luH - . .

-urhr olo~ll roqulrod, no
polo, 114·112·2218.
·

1112 Chow. Convonlon Von.
1114 Ford 414. 304~12.
·
1...
.... ChoVJ ano 1"!',_4x4, hooVJ

m-1111.

VI'RA FURNITURE

3-/~

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

1111 Vogo - · 4llnio,
1...-ma,
. _ , o10oro, hol&lt;:h, now
,_ w
tanoo, 7AL boo, - - r - P -Ouodttuclo,4x4j
croeo owr box, - I ptOIM nood JOOinl, 71,000 orfllno
lor omoll or big blccll, $11100, mi .... P500, 114-11112-21107.
.

a 55

LIKE DID

QUE5110NS DON'T
I-lAVE AN ANSWER

lllxod Hor 11.10 /Bolo, 114-3111. 1114 Ford Rongor XLT, 7,500
711111 Qo 114 141 2531.
miiM, AIC, AM.fM ca...ne,
..kllng rear window, bed cowr, · 1
lllxod hoJ. 41 round ....... 304- 11\'1110. DBO. 304-471-1143.

Wotto, 1111444-...
.
s.m-.tlio'eAnnyllutploa,
bya.nctyvlllo_OIIIco,_
FM~un. HIOVJ wlntor
o:lo4hlng.
choOko). -

I Uood
Olivo St., GoiHpolil. lumKuro, I!MtOfO, - won.-..114-4*3111.

=·;_,____

Compt~ny, NMCI babyllftW lor 7mo. okf, In
full time •ucllonHr, compl•l• :m:!r.::hoo::."'::,.,=.:-.:.:.~:.:.:.=::.·:_.,-:..
Rick Pearson Auction

1

SWAIN

Oualllr
Fumnuro
And Appll-. Qnoot - O n
42 Mobile Homes
CUh And CoRJI RENT.Z.QWN
And Layowor Aloo milloblo.
lor Rent
F- Ootf.. ry Wllhfn 211111H.
2 Bedroom Troller No Polo, ~ •-· ......., Color tV
12111/Mo 1200 DoNI; Bulovlllo ""0•-,.- •-·
· ., ·OB
Pike, Truh P•ld, ,...,.388 8000.
Radio, •lcrvwne, Reftiglnltor,
1 21 1231
...
;.;
2 Trallono For Ront On Cloy ; ,..;.;.:;;
Chopot Rood, 114-251.e4G8.
52 Sporting Goods

Public Sale
&amp; Au.ctiDn

auction

AUCTION I

MA'{FJE SOME

..,.hlnti

NEW Color C.telog, 1
11117

on river, L.MIIrt. 304-815-30!3.

:

'7111on1o Corto, $500 DeD, 114- ~;:,::::,::.:::::.:-::....,="'7-::11112::'=_.:-180_;,;_
. -::---::-::--:-:::-""
414, Rod Wlth Gnov ln'Ill Cllev¥ C.vollor. Good Cond~
llolnlolnod And Sortlon
S2100
1114-251l.eiBO
Tlnoo, Am.
WMkondo ond AftOf 1 p.m. 11-F.
, llodllnor, 41,0110

c.--

•

Small houa•, complllll kitchen

'!

1112-2471.

1

ao«;:tja;.' HP -no,

Roci ..
1521, lf4.M

Financial
·auslness
OpportunHy

v.e,

.,.,------=--~--

=- •

Rentals

u

2•

By

AlfiHo SUI ~ 1114 Cllev¥ 8 1 1 - Ext. Cob
lloiH, Jockoan """"· Z7l 011 ~o:: 11\000 ......,
- : :110o1..J'5.11U
Loodod, I
1104.

Uood 21KW ltectrio F......., bolo. Allllt. co- .........,
Corolnol Air Conclft~~- &amp;. 0 ,... -.e",....,.., 1-.ul'
Or 114- 1= - -·--..,...c.m-o:...:.-:...:.· __ _ _
441 1301
· Sauoro ...... of mixed hoy,
11lbolo~ ~11114-247·22BI dop or
Rollo 01 Coi'Ji!!.f'.!!. !!!,o, 614-24 """81 otlor1pm.
I l l - Slloo, ......,...,,...
AFTER I P.ll.

CGmploiO Tnoo lorvlco, Buokol
Truck lorYtc:. -ao Ft Rooch,
Stump Rtmowl, · Frw Ee-

Will
Provide
Protooolonol
Chlldc:oro In IIJ Homo. I HoM
Oblalnod An "-loto Dognoo
In Eo~r Childhood Dovolopn\lnt
From "Rio Grande Community
Collogo. IIJ Homo II .._.tool
on •••• Rl. 1so 1n VInton, Ohkl,
114-388-M07 And Aolo For ...

..

lllxod

TGWMhlp, 114,000, 814-M'Jt.7811.

lnsunne1, 24 Hr. ·
Emorgoncr SorYico .Coli And
s.voriM-381-1143, 114-317·7010. 1110 .... 0-~-.. Ohio
River 2ml dawn Rt 2. 304-171Sun Vonoy _ Nu'"!'J _ Schoct. 5880.
Chlldcoro 11-F 8-:ltlprll AaM
2·K, Young 9cMol All" Durlng·
Summer. J Dap per WHk MinImum 1~41-3657.

11112 Chovoolol fi..IO,

;"!.~............
!"'G -,
• - bod
_ ..
go. ..s,oao
"' ..ld.o.

gateway
61 Llgh1 meal
62 Deep yearning
63 Actor Ed 64 Adherent of
(auH .)

A tough aSsignment

.,..371- .:

::2510~P::,;,;,.'-.-:--::-::--=-~

1•

North
1t

Opening lead: •

$1500, 114-DC-3808.
:
llllod HoJ Ia..,. ...... 11.10, 1113 QIIC 1100 S.LE., oil .... ;
114 411 tat, i1t ue 0110.
. uona,·t..-rt. hlcii.L...whlefs. 11• -·
Good mliid fiii, oqUino looioo, cotlonl Ccinclnion, .,2,500, 114-

s.vtce,

..,.

8

110

West

Pass
Pass

"US" BIZNESS?

1HO Chov. 8-10 4 Cy-r, 5 •

··.........-;
- -..;
114 tel-31113
,.......,..,..,
I

GIT THAT

~' AIC, Good Condition, ' '
t67,00U Ill..., $2.200,

South

3 NT

)

Hay &amp; Grain

row -

Cho-

1111 a_, 8-10 4 Cylinder, 5 .:
Speed, $3.200, .,. 'lSI HSI.
I

miD lb. - - of hoJ; -

01Crgll Portable 8awmi11J.._den,
houl
to 1ho juol
coii:IOW711·1117.

WHAR DO YOU

. . .IIUI-dc, lcadod, looko oiid
rurw . - . 11100, IM-11f2.3711,

Aco Tnoo Borvlco. Comptoto lroo
e~~re. ZOyn,. up. a ln.ured, frM
ootlonotoo. 114-+tl-1111 0&lt;

59 P.O. abbr.

60 Japanese

Vu lnerable: Both
Dealer: West ·

;

Puzzle

unsteadily
58 Before .

•J 5 2'

lllloo, 114-44&amp;-17tt.

1118t

•15 Author
- Rand
16 Wan1s
.
17 French artl~le
18 Hindu myst1cs
20 I.e., In lull
22 More Impudent
26 Dart
29 VIII age
30 Baaeball calls
34 River In France
35 Metal fastener
36 Woman 's fur

Anower lo PnoYioul

AA Q J 6 4
'fJ 10 9
• 9 4

18117 Dodae 112 Ton PU Low
lor this pizza you'll say they've ord·e red."

+A Q 4
SOUTH

1110 Dodge D50 Plck.Up, No '•
Rull, TlfM, Rune . And
~- Q-1 11,400, 114-24&amp;- .
11555, 114-24U701..
•
•

when they I

• 3 2

K 9 8 3

.

1114 Dodgo ono lan, 4 310, auto, utllhy ee. lruck. ell
MW ntdler tlrwe. Nne I drlv•
good, 12,100, 114-112-2471.

4 109873 :
., 6 4 3

• J 7 5

hoW 1on ohoot bod, ,
I Nno •

v... •'.!l!'o n.IC!C!·..._.,

"We'll rush the

1·14·95

12

Paet Teasdale
Kind of molh
On soc. aec.
Now - - me
down to sleep
Marble type
Muoa of _,.,
lndo·European
Fort - . N.J .
Walko

-1

•

vs Wayne

�Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

S~oe stretcher provides snug fit for wide feet

By ANNE B. ADAMS and
after opening I put it in the refrig
NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
eratar immerfutel How !on is iDEAR ANNE AND NAN: I good and is it olto use it Jter i:
have been ttying to fmd a woman's turns cloudy or milky? _ M M
shoe stretcher, without any luck. HELD Harvard, m
·
· ·
Could you please help me? As we
DEAR M.M.: As tbe 'uice a es
get older, tt seems our feet get it begins to separate rro.J the P~P
wtder. -DOT CASS, Ocala, Fla
According 10 the folks at ReaLe~
. DEAR DOT: We fo!!Dd profes- mon, it's fine to use it until the
stonal shoe stretchers for men and expiration date that is printed on
women 1 n a magazine called the c of the bottle
Mature Wisdom, P.O. Box 28. . KirEP HOLIDAY PLANTS
Hanover, PA 17333-0028; tele- . BLOOMING WITII A PINCH OF
phone 1-800-MWI-9222. Tb'e · SALT- Cbrisunas plants boast
stretchers fit right or left shoes and bright, beautiful flowers ... but usu.
ally for just a few short weeks dorarc $6.95 each.
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: 1 ing the season However several
buy Re~emon juice and use it for favorite varieti~s can be c~axed to
many thmgs, but It gets cloudy bloom again next year
·

.
. The Epsom ,;al! lndustty Counctl offers these Ups to help you
keep your flowers blooming longer
lind encoilrage a regrowth next hoiulay s~n._
.
.
Pot~settaa: ';V~tle _the JIIIIJ!I as
bloommg, keeJI 11m bright, mdirect
hght and n~unsb tt ~very three_ or
four days wtth a soluuon consiSting
of 2 teaspoons of Epsom Salt per
gallon of water. When the leaves
begm to yellow, _prune the stems
baclc 10 about6 ~ncbes above the
sot!. Continue thts throughout the
summer. In October, put the plant
m compleU: darkness for 14 hours
every _eve~mg. Buds should form
agam m mtd-December.
Cbrisunas Cactus: Nourish the

Ohio Lottery

Tuesday, March 14,1995

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

blooming plant with a water/Epsom
Salt solution- but only enough to
keep the soil moist. In spring and
summer, water more frequently. At
!be end of October, put the cactus
m 16 hours of complete _darkness,
then etgbt ~ow:s of sunhght each
wec:k, watenng JUSt enough to keep
~~tst: Wbe_n buds appear, start fertilazauon wtth the Epsom Salt solulion once a week . When full
blooms appear,lceep the plant from
direc(sunligbt.
··
Amaryllis: ~ce the bloommg is
complete, nounsb the sot! wtth a
water/Epsom Salt solution wbenever the soil feels dry. W~ep the
leaves tiBll yellow (usually m about
three months), nourish only enough

ASK ANNE •

.
·4
to keep the soil moist. Wben we
leaves die, store the bulb (still in
the pot) on its side in a cool place,
such as Yllur basement Continue to
nourish the bulb sparingly until_ a
new.stem appcan._lben place 11m
a bn&amp;;ht. s~nny wmdow and lceep
the so~ moiSt.
Wnte to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
P.O. Box 240, Hartland; vr 05048.
Questions of general interest will
appear io the column. Due to the
volume of mail, pe"rsonal replies
cannot be provided.

Anne B. Adams and Nancy
Nasb-Cummlngs are ~a-authors
of "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" (Whetstone) and "Dear Anne and Nan:

Rio Grande
eliminated
from tourney

NAN

Page4
Two Prize Problem-Solvers
Sbare Tbelr Secrets" (Bantam).
T
11880 order, ca 11 1•11410•
1220·
_Copyrlabll!I9S NE!Vl!PAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
(For Information on how to
communicate electronically With
this columnist and others, contact America OnUne by calli
_
1
ext.
Ill!
)
800•827•6364'
8317·

mg the gospel_ o~ peace, to tbe promotton Of ctvthty and mutual
respect iiJllOn~ people every--:bere,
to b_eanng wnness to the hv~ng
reahty of our ~ord Jesus Cb~tst,
and to th~ pr~uce.?f hiS teachan¥s
!n our daily hves, Hmclcley satd
10 a rare _appearance before the
news m~a
.
The lifelong church officral wa~

The preaching
By DR. JAMES R. ACREE SR.
I Corinthians 1:18 For the
preaching of the cross is to them
that perish foolishness; but unto us
which are saved it is the power of
God.
There are three things about the
cross Ibm I want to consider today.
I. The preaching of the cross
sweeps away man's notions that a
·. • man can save himself.
2. It sweeps aside all man's
nolions of being good outside of
Jesus Christ. Romans 3:23 and Isaiah 53:6.
.
3. It swecps .aside man's notion
of being saved by works. Epb.
. 2:8.9
You cannot repent too soon!
Because you lcnow not bow soon to
repent. Don't be too late. Preaching
of the cross reveals t/Ie love and
grace of God. The greatest revelation and lhe greatest demonstration
!bat God could ever give to man,
was letting His Son die upon the
cross for our sins.
God always gives his best to
those who leave the choice with. .
Him. For God so loved the world,
that He gave his only begotten Son,
that whosoever believelb in Him
should not perish, but have everlasting life. (John 3:16). The notion
that man can save himself was
taken away when Jesus died upon
Ute cross.
Faith is not believing !bat God
c;m but that God will. At the cross
man' s crimes are seen and God's
compassion is seen. Man·s ruiri and
God's redemption is seen at the
cross. It l~so reveals that Jesus did
not die for good people but He died

PETER
GOTT, M.D.

By PETER H. GOl'f, M.D.
DEAR DR . GOTT: I have a
child who bas tested allergic to
dogs, but who desperately wants
one. I' ve been told that some
breeds of dogs can be tolerated by
allergic people because of the difference in shedding and dander. On
the other hand, I' vc also beard that
saliva and urine make much more
of a difference because componentS
of the saliva and urine arc equally
important m allergic reactions. Can
you settle this once and for all?
DEAR READER: As a gcnc'ral
rule, most people who arc allergic
19 anunal s react to dander, the tiny
flakes and scale that tlte creatures
constantly shed from their skin s.
How severe the allergic reaction is
usually difficult to tell untillhc person is in direct contact with an animal. Lab tests may indicate an
. allergy but the reaction may, in
fact , be a minor one. .
Although I am a great belieyer
in child/dog bonding and doubt that
saliva 'and urine play much of a
role in allergies, you may, want to
investigate further before purchasing a pet. Specifically, does your
son develop nasal congestion, rash ,
wheezing , runny eyes, or other
symptoms of allergy when exposed
to otherpeople's dogs7
If you can't answer this question, let your child spend an afternoon with a neighbor' s pet. If no
reactio n is forthcoming (or it is
mild). J:d go ahead and buy a dog
·...,. the heclt: wilb the allergy tests.
On the other band, if your child

•

1

•

--- o· -yi

est presidency in the history of the a counselor to three church presi·
9 million-meoiber church.
dents since 1981 and bas been an
Tbe ord.ination of Mormon pres- apostle since: 1961.
.
idents is private, with the faiths ]4
Tbe news conference was the
apostles in attendance in the Salt . first time in at least 20 yean that a
Lake Temple.
.
new Mormon president answered
Hinckley, 84, is said to be in questions in such a fo(um. For
excellent health and bas no history more than a balf-bour, Hinckley
of serious aihnent. The grandson of responded candidly on a variety of
Mormon pioneers, be bas served as subjects, sometimes exhibiting the

for sinners (Romans 5:8) . The
preaching of the cross shows the
way of salvation. Salvation was
given to man that he ·might be
saved through the shed blood of
Jesus Christ. It shows the way of
forgiveness, (Col. 2: 13); the way to
God, (Acts 4: 12), the way to heav-,
en. (John
5 14: 15). the way to peace.

~~8~~ ;:~~:i:;~: h~:~ ~::~~

Vol. 45, NO.~
Copyrtght1995

I

sense of humor for wbacb be as
lcnown.
He said be bad-spent only one
night in his life as a hospital
patient. "That doesn't mean I'm
ready to run a 100-yard dash," be
said. ·
Asked wLat the church would
tell women forced to worlc outside
the home for
· reasons, he

Meigs board opposes vouchers, mandates
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel neWllstalf
Tbe Meigs Local Board of Educalion Tuesday rtigbt adopted reso- ·
lotions opposing unfunded mandates on school districts and a
school voucher program that will
use public school funds to subsidize private educalion.
In addition, the board stated its
opposition to a proposed governorappointed state board of education
.and a proposed professional prac-

..

divides the world into two groups
the saved side and the condemned
side. On the saved side .was the
lbief who said "Lord remember me
when thou earnest in thy kingdom"
(Luke 23:42). The man on the
saved side went to heaven. On lhe
condemned side was the thief who
cried, "If thou be Christ save thyself and us" (Luke 23:39). The man
on the condemned side was lbst,
and went to hell. (John 3:18). "He
that believetb on Him is not"condemned but; he that believeth not is
condemned already, because ·be ·
hath not believed in the naine of
the only begotten Son of God.
When we ask, Jesus Christ will
come in our bean and forgive us of
our sins Anytime we step away
from the cross and the preaching·of
·the cross; we start giVing man !be
opportunity to save himself. We
know that outside of the cross tlterc
is no hope. No hope without the
shed blood of Jesus Christ. There is
no way a man can get into heaven
except through tbe blood, and
going through the love of God. The
love of God is spread abroad in our
hearts. When we know the Lord.
"There is ·no hope, no. way, no
future, outside of Jesus Christ."

reacts violently, you may bave to
settle on purchasing a snake.
In my view, tbe saliva-urine
issue isn't as .important as your
child's actual experienc~ "in the
field," as it were.
Keep in mind that most children
are more .tban willing to put up
with minor symptoms of allergy
(such a8 sneezing) for the privilege
of having their own pets.
I recaU my brother as a child,
with severe eczema on one band
that was directly related to his
fondness for a pet cat. Would be
give up the cat? Not on your life.
He eagerly accepted the trade-off.
So, try the experiment I mentioned.
It would actually be mstructive.
DEAR DR. GOTT: For over a
year I've bad' a keloid just below
my Adam's apple. It's a bonible
sight. Is there something I can rub
on it to remove it or to belp·malce it
look better?
s.. DEAR READER: Ketoids are
exaggerated scar tissue. No one
knows wby some people develop
them, while others do not. These
scars, although harmless, crui be
cosmetic nuisances.
There is nothing you can do to
shrink your keloid. Rather, you
should be e:iamined by a plastic
surgeon, who may be able to
remove the scar wilbout causing
.
another keloid to grow.
· To give you more information, I
am sending you a free copy of my
Health . Report "An Informed
Approach to Surgery." Other readers wbo would like a copy should
send $2 plus a long, self-addressed,
stamped envelope to P.O. Box
2433, New York, NY 10163. Be
sure to mention the title.
"'Copyright 1995 1'4!:WSPA·
PER ENTERPRISE ASS~
(For lnformalion on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, con·
tact·America OnUne by calUng 1·
800"827·6~ ext. 8317:)

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Tbe success of "VisionQuest
2005 - Citizens in Action"
depends on volunteers and the
extent of their involvement and
dedication to IDalcing things better,
said Dr. Nick Robinson, at Tuesday
night's Middleport town meeting
beld at the American Legion annex.
Attended by about 30 residents,
the meeting was conducted by
Robinson, a Middleport councilman, and Dennis Hoclcman, president of the Middleport Community
Association. The two have led
·community officials and leaders
through a series of "take charge"
sessions where goals and objectives
have been prioritized and put into a
strategic plan for the development

GUARANTEvD
BEST
BU
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.. · . ·
YIN AMERICA
..

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I ''Jrj,;~~
; !~!;:::::Zi!C:Z:=!:::::Z::::EEE!l!
~S:i~
'"' :,.

1995 ASPIRE

THUNDERBIRD LX

7820°

Stock #95308

0

lice board to ceitlfy professionil.l
educators instead of the State
• Board of Educatioo.
The' county lioard of education.
approved similar resolutions at its
March 7 meeting.
In persoonel matters, the board
granted a medical leave of absence
to Celesta Coates effective Feb. 23
and accepted the resignation of
Mae Young, Susan Metts and
Jenifer Eubanks as substitute teacher, bigh school cheerleader advisor

and assistant band director, respec- .
lively.
The board hired Carissa Bailey
as a substitute teacher and Brady
Sayre as a substitute bus driver far
the remainder of the school year to
be used on an as-needed basis.
Meigs High School seniors will
graduate May 21 at4:30 p.m. after
. the board approved that date ·and
time for graduation. Also, the
board set April 17 and May 26 as
make-up daY,s for H;urisonville

Elementary _ School. Students
missed two days earlier this year
due to water problems at the
school.
The board also approved a
1995-96 school calendar. School
will start. August 28 for students
and August 25 for -teachers. May
23, 1996, wiU be the last day of the
school year for students.
•
In other matters, the board:
- Granted the DECA chapter
permission to attend a conference

*

15 949°0 *

~

•Air Conditioning
•nn!ed Windows
•Deluxe Wheel Covers
•3.8L SEFI Engine
•4 Spe!!d Auto 0/0
•Floor Mats
·Cruise/Tilt
·Stereo/Ciock/Cass..

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News StafT
Rutland's water problems seem
to be resolved, said Dale Hart, vii. !age maintenance supervisor.
"Hopefully we've got 99 percent, if not all of the leaks," Han
told council during its regular
meeting last night.
Tbe village bad beeil losing
thousands of dollars each month
because the old leaking I.ines bad a
discrepancy between what Leading
Creek was charging.
In the.next few months, the village crews will bore out around
. another line beneath Salem Street,
Hart added.
In other water news, council
approved an ordinance that will
protect certain lines from contaminating the village .water supply.
The "cross connection control"
ordinance was passed on an emer· gency basis.
"The or~inance states that if any
business or residence contaminates
the water you can cause them to be
blocked off," Hart said. "We're
coming into compliance with EPA

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ONLY

Stock #95304

35 *
$18I 144
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Chrysler Mini·Van Owners.
NO TRADE NECESSARY!
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.1t95 CONTOUR GL

1995 ESCORT LX

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1 0,535 20*

Stock 195433

5 MUSTANG

Stock 195339

1995 PROBE

20 *

oo·
95 F150 4X2

WASHINGTON (AP)
Wboles.a.lc pri~es ros~ O.;l per~ent
last month, reflecting higher costs
for food, prescription drugs and the
largest increaSe in home-heating oil
m 12 months.
The February increase in the
Labor Department's Producer Price
Index was slightly higher thad bad
been expected.
Financial markets are closely
watching a batch of economic
reports this week to see whether
they will conf111ll market hopes that
overall economic growth is slowing
enough to keep inflation .in cbeclc. .
·Such a slowdown would be seen
as an indication that the Federal
Reserve may have accomplished its
goal and will not be forced to
increase rates again.

..

- Approved purchase of a bond
for interim Treasurer Richard
Kolcer for $160 and approved a
budget revision for !be Salem Center Elementary Principal's Fund to
allow the purchase of equipment;
- Met in executive session to
discuss negotiations.

pla~_911

meeting

SELECTING DESIRABLE INDUSTRIES
- From left, Judy Well, Betty Pooler, Merrl
Aollibary, and Kenneth King, were among those
attending Mon~ay nlgbt's Middleport town

Meigs County officials have
scheduled a public meeting to con· ·
sider the possibility of establishing
a 911 planning commillcc.
911 is a telephone system
designed io facilitate response by
emergency and law enforcement
personnel in lhc·cvent or aJ) emergency. Meigs County is one of
seven in the state without 911 or
currently making plans to install a
911 system, according to information from Robert E. Bycr, cmergen·
cy services director.
Tbe meeting will be held March
29, 7:30p.m . in the multipurpose
room at Meigs County Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
In January, Meigs County Board
·of Commissioners President f'red
Hofflflan instructed Emergency
Services Director Robert E. Dyer to
set up the meeting "to obtain public
input and then consider the possibility of establishing a 911 plan- .1
ning conunittcc."
"The meeting is being held to
inform the public and officials
about what 911 is and what it will
do for the county," said Hoffman.
"Establishing a 911 planning
committee is the f1tst step," added
' Hoffman.
"If there is enough interest.
we'll pursue it," Hoffman said. "If
· no~ we'll just leave it·alone." ·
Byer said a representative from
Emergi Tech. Inc. of Reynoldsburg
may be ·at the meeting to help
answer questions about 911 systems. ·

meeting. Types of businesses and industries they
proposed for Middleport included a dry cleaners, a movie the,ter, a retirement center, plastks
industries, and nice restaurants.

Fire claims
Middleport
.woman's life
(Sentinel StafT report)

Cnunpled up behind her televi·
sion se~ a Middleport woman wa5
found dead after ftre engulfed her
home Tuesday night, accordmg to
Meigs County Coroner Doug
Hunter.
.Tbe cause of death for 36-ycarold Teresa Radatz bas not been
determined, Hunter said.
Radatz died in her 567 North
Front Street home after flames consumed the two-story wood struciure, according to a state ftre marshal official.
The fire marshal would not ·
srx;cify the cause .of the. ftre. The
state fare marshal and local authorities· are investigating the fire !bat
broke out around 10:59 p.m. Tuesday.
.
.
Radatz's boyfriend was charged
witb domestic violence Monday
night after the two fought, said Sid
Little, Middleport Police Chief.
The responding officer saw n.o
bruises on Radatz, Little said.
·
The boyfriend was in the Middlepon Jail when the fare broke out
last ni!\111. He was ~eleased this
morning after learning of the
tragedy, Little said.
"They're running an autopsy,"
Little said. "I can't speculate a
So far this year, wholesale whole lot."
·
prices have been rising at an armual
Radatz's two children were
-rate of 3 .9 percent. That was "staying witll relatives on Rose Hill
sharply high~tban the 1.7 percent at the lime of the fare, Meigs Counincrease turned in for all of 1994.
ty Sheriff James Souls by said. .
Analysts noted that 1994 began
with a spurt in price pressures as ·
well before settling down to a more
moderate pare.
The 0.3 percent increase in .. The Meigs County Cbamber of
February matched tbe January Commerce remembered one of its
increase and was slightly higher founding members· David Balcer ·
than the 0.2 percent boost many at its regular monthly meeting
economists bad been expecting.
Monday.
·
The February advance was led
Baker, a Southern Ohio Coal
b~ a 0.3 percent rfse in food cos~.
Co. employee, died recently. Balcer
which marlced a sham turnaround played a key role in the founding of
from January when food costs bad
the county-wide chamber, said
actually dropped by 0.6 ·percent.
Chuck Kitchen, cbatrtber president.
"He went above and beyond the
After having fallen in January,
prices turne&lt;l up for dairy products,
call of duty," Kitchen said. "If it
eggs, coffee and rice.
hadn't been for him we'd be at

Wholesale prices up
0.3 percent in February ·

Stock 195129

Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District to relocate water lines at
Meigs High School;

Meigs
officials

of the village.
At last night's meeting those
attending were repeatedly told that
"volunteers make the difference,
that individual efforts lead to a better" community, that good things
happening in one community benefits other communities".
"VisionQuest 2005" was
des.c ribed by Robinson as an
"actio~! plan witb achievable
goals". He said that its purpose is
to give direction and leadership to
village government through
defined goals and objectives outlined in the strategic plan. He discussed the capacity, or .ability, of
the village to carry out the plan,
and then appealed to those attending to become a pan of the process.
Continued on page 3

- accepted two benches mkde
of recycled milk cartons from the
Meigs County Litter Control.
- tabled a vote. on the 2-mill
renewal levy, which is set to appear
on the ballot this N,ovember. This
levy currently is the only local tax
money supporting the village.
Aug. 24 is the ftnal deadline to
get this issue on the fall ballot. The
. last time it was passed was four
years ago. The levy expires Dec.
31, 1996 . .
T learned a stop sign bas been
placed next to the Rutland Furniture Store. "Stop" will be painted
on the road at the intersection.
- ordered the VanMeter sidewalk be repaired at the propeny
owner's expense since it's a safety
hazard.
- urged all residents to sweep
up the dirt in front of their homes
for spring.
- announced the Phil Din and
Tbe Dozers Concert wiU be held at .
8 p.m. April 22.
- stated on June 3, a village·
wide yard sale wiU be beld.
The 'balances for this month's
requirements ~··
treasurer's ·report ·included: ·cash
Han added that be bas respond- journal, $22,872.05; general fund
ed to the Ohio Environmental Pro- total, $901.51; general fund, •
tection Agency letter demanding $681.75: civic center. $755.65;
the village bave an emergency con- police fund, $-940.89; bigb school
tingency plan.
property, $405; law enforcement
In other business, no court fund, $187 .33; street fund,
developments bavc .occurred with $285.62; state highway fund,
the David Wilkes property, Mayor $2,854.55; water fund, $1,368.23;
JoAnn Eads said. Wilkes and the water debt fund, $850; sewer fund, '
village have disputed a drainage $2,506 .36; sewer debt fund,
ditch on the edge of his property $7,065. 18; utilities deposit fund,
for more than a year.
$7, 123.26; replacement fund,
In other action, council:
$17,600.89:

TOTAL BEFORE
DISCOUNTS

1994· RANGER 4X2

.. -4

Rutland's water
,problems may be solve~

·7 Passenger

14,816

- Approved the job description
of the electronic management
information systems/tccbnolog"y
coordinator;
-Granted a right-of-way to the

H~rt ~ays

Stock 195035

1995 WINDSTAR GL

Stock #95369

.in Columbus on March 17 and 18;
- OK'd use of the high school
baseball field by tbe Meigs American Legion Baseball Committee for
tbe summer baseball program provided it is compatible with the local
pony league;

'

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Additional $750.00 Rebate to

2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 15, 1995 .

Group told 'volunteers
make the difference'

I]

Highs In 70s.

a1

the cross

Boy's allergy is a shame
DR.GOTT

ordained the faith's 15th president
on Sunday.
The Church of Jes~ts Christ of
Latter-day Saints operates under a
system of apostolic succession in
which the senior apostle becomes
president after his predecessor dies.
Howard ·W. Hunter, 87, died
March 3 of prostate cancer, having
served just nine months, the shan-

low tonicbtln the 40s, cl.. r.
Tbunday, sunny.

•

Mormon ch~rch president Gordon B. Hinckley promises continui~y .

By ~RN ANDERSON
Assoctated Press Writer
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) .Gordon B. Hmclcley; the most vagorous man to become_ prestdent of
the Mormon Church an more _than
20 years, satd toda.Y that he dtd n~t
expect any dramauc changes m btS
leadership of the mmistry.
"We are dedtcated ... to teach-

Pick 3:.
438
Pick 4:
2516
Buckeye 5:
6-8-25-31·35

House
group OKs

tax cut

.

FATAL FIRE- A fire killed a Middleport womaD&lt;In he~
North Front Street home Tuesday night, according to reports .. The
cause .of the ftre h unknown, but the names gutted this two-story
wood structure last nlgbt. Tbe state tire marshal and other authorIties are Investigating this blaze. (Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
biggest tax cut legislation in more
than a decade is moving swiftly
toward the House noor after Ways
and Means Committee Democrats
abruptly gave up offering amend- ·
mcnts to a bill they said would
bankrupt the nation.
The Republican tax plan,
including a $500-a-child L1x credit
and a capital gains taX reduction.
was approved by the . commiuce by ,·
a party-line 21-14 vote Tuesday. /
"IJ•c vote carne artcr Democrats,
beaten on one amendment to limi't
the tax cuts to fi.ve years, withdrew
all further efforts to change what
· tbey said wa s an intrinsically
defective bill.
'

Radatz was found on her side;· to reports.
Middlcpon and Pomeroy voluncrumpled up behind the farst floor
television, according to the sheriff. teer fire deparunenL~ responded to
Her body was taken to Columbus the scene. Middleport fue officials
could not be reached for coounent
for an autopsy.
The two-story wood· structure Wednesday morning despite
was gutted on the inside, according numerous calls.

Debate, which bad been expected to go on for three days ant.!
nights, ended after six bours.
Committee Chairman Bill
Archer. R-Texas. welcomed the
quick vote as yet another triumph
for the House GOP's "Contract
With America."
But the Democratic re sistance
signaled tlie tough road ahead for
and disability insurance to about Ute bill, which has engendered little
enthusiasm in the Senate and is
35,000 people.
MCS is a third pany administra- likely to face ' a presidential veto if
tor for businesses' insurance poll- it passes Congress in its present
cies, the Portland resident said. The form .
The bill goes to the Rules Comfirm fine tunes benefit pliins for
mittee,
which will decide if a
companies that usually have more .
Democratic
plan will also he conthan 50 employees.
Tbe firm's largest client has sidered on the House floor. Boih
1,200 employees, Johnson said. President Clinton and House
Other clients include' hospitals, Minority Leader Dick Gcphard~ D·
zoos, schools, restaurants and law Mo., have offered more modest
.proposals.
·
Continued on pae 3 ·

Chamber honors founding member
least a year behind where we are
now."
Baker traveled to chambers in
Jackson, Monroe and Athens connties during the formative stages of
the group. He also lent his computer expertise to tl)e chamber.
In other business, vice president
Shirley Johnson talked about her
Ravenswood. W.Va., company -:Medical ClaimS Service Inc.
Based in Boston, Mass., MCS
provides medical, dental, vision

I

·-

1-

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          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="30446">
              <text>March 14, 1995</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
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  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="303">
      <name>riebel</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
