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                  <text>a levee and is visible from Tamiaini Trai l, a two-lane road that cuts ·east-

west through ~he wilderness of the Everglades. .
It consists of 110 colwn ns of 16-'inch concrete block, topped with foursided pyramid shape s. It rests on a 2,450-sq uare -foot triangular platform
that poi nt s·north.toward the area where the DC-9 cras hed.
The column, , each 2 feet I&lt;&gt;~ feel tall, are set in rows divided hy a
center aisle that widens as the slope of the structure rises toward the south.
. "Everyone wanted to have a·spiritual sense 10 the project, and the i10
co lumns were meant to rtprc scnt that " said Fram.: 1lis Domond, 24, one
, of the designers and a rece nt graduate of the University of Miami. "Once

you arc in the center oft he triangle, you (can) meditate . As you leave the
sllc, you gel the _...,cnsc 1ha1 the spirits arc rising toward the heave ns~·
S&lt;lllJe landscaping and a plaque wit h the names of the I 05 passengers
and five c&lt;cw members will be added in coming weeks, Domond said.
Several mcmhcrs of the American In stitute. of Archirccture Students

form ed teams last August and held a two-day brainstonning session at th~
University of Miami to de vise designs for the memori al. The students and
a facult y member consu'ltcd wiih a local contractor and ultimately voted
to refin e and build one, said Dumond.
•
A cargo sh ipment of 144 che mical oxygc n.ge ncrators ignited in the hold
of Flight 592 , sending flames tearing through the fl oor of the passe nger
cabin. Tile plane nu;e ~ di ve d into the murky swa mp at 460 mph, minutes·
after takeoff from Miam i on the day before ~other 's Day.
Among the dead : five Uni versity of Miami students, including one
arc hitecture student.
·
'
Barring holiday s, a crop of volunteers made up of student architects,
mason workers and crafts workers, have spent every Saturday since
-November putting the linaltouches on the design.
"Super Bowl weekend we were out there and one of the f amily (members) of the victi ms on the way to the ·super Bowl slopped in," said Bob
Blanco, president of Bricklayers and Allied Craftworkers Local I. " It
helped us a lot in building this thing to have these people come out and
show us rheir apprcdation "

More than $100,000 in labor, building materials and pennits was donal·
ed by local contractors and suppliers. What wasn't donated was bought
.at cost with fund s from the United Way charity, which donated up to .
$25.000, Blanco sa1d.
"Out of a horrible tragedy co mes good," said Ms . Sawyer, who has
kept relatives of otl\ers kil led in the crash informed of the memori.al 's
progress and take n a bulletin board worth of photos at the site. " I'm lucky
because I get to go out there whenever I want ."

'-------------.. . -----------.....1

By CHUCK BARTELS
Aasoclated Press Writer
HOT SPRINGS, Ark. - Investigators examining the raised wreckage
of a tourist boat said Sunday that an
out-of-place seal and a bilge pump
hose th;lt separated apparently &lt;:oaused
~ Ito sink suddenly. killing 13
· people.
Capt. Glenn Anderson, who heads
the t::oast Guard 's effort to detenninc
how the May I accident occurred,
said a seal on the drive shaft was
pushed forwarll by 3 inches, opening
a hole in the bollom of the boat.
In addition, he said, water that was
filling the hull was not pumped out
of the craft because of the bilge-pump
hose had scpara_ted .
"A lot of details all go wrong
together for a casualty (total) li ke
th iS, " Anderson said.
A Navy salvage team using a
crane rai sed the amphibious craft
Sunday from where. it had rested on
the bouom of Lake Hamilton, 50 10
60 feet below. A formal marine board
inquiry begins Monday, according to
Coast Guard spokeswoman Alli son
van Hagen.
" They' ll have a beuer idea of
what to ask" now that investigators
have had a look at the hull of the
craft, van Hagen said Sunday.
The boat look on water and sank
about seyen min~tes aft er setting out
from shore with 20 tourists and its
driver aboard.
Last week, boat driver Elizabeth
Helmbrecht told officials she had taken the vessel· in for repairs 1\\!0 days
before the accident, .because a seal
around a drive shaft was leaking. The
fatal trip was the fi rst for the boat
si nce that visit to the repair shop, she
said .
Helmbrecht, and the Land and
.Lake' Tours Inc., which operated the
boat, were named as defendant s Fri · day. in a wrongful-death lawsuit

...,. ff,18llll

Weather

Memorial slated Salvage
to be dedicated reveals
for crash victims cause ·
of fatal
sinking

By ALEX VEIGA
Aesoclated Press Writer
EVERGLADES NATIONAL PARK, Fla. - Lee Sawyer returns again
and again lo a spot here in the vast liquid prairie that sy;allo"!ed II 0 peO·
pie in a plane choked with smoke May II , 1996.
Her parents had boarded Valulet Flight 592 en route to Atlanta with
plan~ lO attend their granddaughter's graduation from Emory University.
S1nce November, Ms. Sawyer has watched the slow rise of a monu ment designed and built by volunteers to honor those killed. A dedication
, and memorial ceremony coinciding with the third an niversary oft he crash
will be held Tuesday. ' ·
·
" When I lirsl saw 111 said, 'This is perfect,'" said Ms. Sawyer, a teacher
at an alternat ive public school ir Miami-Dade County. "I think it has .very
differen1 [!leanings."
The nearly completed monument rests on a grassy hill a few yards from

Tuesday

Monday, May 10,199$

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Lady Eagles win sectional charnpions,hip, Page 4

Tod•y:Sunny

Misdiagnosed breast cancer, Page 7
A Hatfield-McCoys family reunion? Page 6

High: 80s; Low: 50s

Tomorrow: P. Cloudy

High: 80s; Low:.50s

Meigs County's

Smgle Copy - 35 Cents

•

A LES$0N IN SHARING - Students at the
Rutland Elem~101ary School were given a lesson In sharing aa pari of an academic unit In
reading and maltlllll -k. Thay colltiCiad 570
· cans of fciod, which were turned over tQ the
Meigs Cooperative Perish Friday for dlstrlbu-

lion to needy families. Linda McManus was In •
charge of the project. Here, the Rev. Keith Rad- · ~
er, who heads up the pariah food program, , .
accapla the gift of food from students Kurlla · •
Allen and Vlnda Ratcliff.

..

Charter bus .plunges from elevated
highway, 23 pass~ngers are killed
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - The ·
ponytailed woman searched the faces
outside ·the golf clubhouse, seeking a
scrap of news about her mother.
"Which was the worst? The back
or the front'" she asked.
On the charter bus .trips with her
casin o club, the mother liked to ride.
up front. Now the daughter sought
reass urance that she might not be
among 23 people killed when the
vlub:s bus ran off a highway Sunday
- Mother's Day..
" If was all the same. They told me
they allllew forward," said a woman
in black checked shorts, waiting to
learn about her own mother.
·Neither had yet seen the news pictures that showed the bus's glass front
cr4mpl cd and facing the ground, the
left .front whe~ls pushed atop the big
compartment below the driver 's seat,
the fl oor shoved within feel of the
roof. The rear two, third s looked
almost in tact.
Terrell Walker, safety director for
Custom Bus Charters,' whi ch chartered
. the bus.. for the trip to Casino

Magic in Bay St. Louis, Miss., said
the driver told him the bus had been
cut off by a car.
The bus, traveling east on Interstate 610, swerved across all three
lanes of the highway and of( the road,
crossing a narrow, paved golf cart
path that emerges froni a tunnel next
to the highway and crashing down
one embankment and up the other. ·
It came to rest on a flat, grassy
area along the highway where it passes through one of the city's biggest
parks.
'·
People flew out of the windows
when the bus finally stop~d alongside a small stand of trees just past the
embankment, said Linda Watkins,
who had been dri ving jus_tbehind the
bright red bus.
•
Federal law does not require seal
belts in excursion buses. Only driver
Frank Bedell , 49, of New Orleans,
was wearing one. He was among 18
people hospitalized laie Sunday, half
of them in critical or guarded condition .
Watkins said she saw a white car

.·

' swerve in front ofthe bus, and the bus
changed lanes. Then the white car,
swerved back in front of the bus, •
·wiJieh ran off the road.
Margaret Messore and her hus-: .
band arrived moments later.
·;
"There were people scauer~td ,:
around the ground and people hanging out the front of the bus that were,
unconscious or dead," she said.
Golfers who had come through the:
path mome nts before the crash and.
Mrs. Messore 's husband broke win-.:.
dows to gel people out before the;
arrival of rescue workers, who had to•
brace the bus wi th timbers and use:
ladders to·reach its windows.
'
It was the -worst traffic accident in:
city history, Mayor Marc Morial.'
said. He none of the dead would be • ·
. identified until relati ves Were noli- •
fie,d.
Walker, of the charter company.
said 46 people were on the bus, but
the list of passengers was lost in the'
wreckage..
.
The trip started in La Place, La.,
26 miles west of New Orleans.

Ely BRIAN J. REED
Acalrdin&amp; to Wise, the blllina practice business at operation could be resolved.
Stntlntl llr.n Staff
General Hartinser P1rk, which is operated as a private · Council approved payment of $694.92 for repairs to
: The villase of Middleport will enfon:e its ordinances business by Mike Larkins, has begun selling concessions the park restrooms which were completed by the Youth
regarding hish arw and weedl on private proper!)' and . which Wise feels is unfair to the youth league, which League,
irash and refuse in yards this summer. .
depends on conc:euion sales ~or ope!'lling expenses. .
Jean Crais. chainnan of the Board of Public Affairs,
Council President Sandy lannarelli, who serves as act·
Al:cording to Iannarelli, the contract between Larkins updated council on the board's recent activities, noting
ing mayor, discussed the issi!C or unsishtly properties and the villaae illows him to ~II conc:euions during cer· that the Gallia County Rural Water District has infonned
puring Middleport Village Council's replar meeting on lain houl'll, and CoUncil member Rae .Gwiazdowski noted her that they are not interested in participating in any
Monday.
,
that supportcl'll of the Youth League would likely patron- arrilngement to provide water for the village.
The BPA has discussed the possibility of seeking arant
: Council held a second reading on a stricter ordinance ize the Youth Leaaue conc:euiona, while batting cage vis·
relating to trash and refuse, which,'~rdin&amp;lo lannarel· itor. should have the opportunity to purchue refresh· and loan funds for either a new water well or a purchasli, specifies items that are considered violations, such u ments there.
·
·
ing arrangement with Gallia County Rural, Leading .
furniture, glw, scrap lumber and other items considered·
Gwiazdowski also oommented'that Larkins should be Creek Conservancy District or the village of Pomeroy.
unsishtly.
·I!C'rmilled to sell concessions if it benefits his business,
Craig also reviewed a contract with Middleport's
· The ordinance makes such an offense a minor misde· 1111d noted that people other than Youth League partici· engineering firm, Floyd Browne Associates, for a Comineanor, punishable by a fine of up to $100, althoush pants frequent the banins cages.
bined Sewer System Operational Plan, which the finn
jllultiple offenses carry hisher fines and possible jail
WISe inquired u to the hirin&amp; procedure for the vii- will compile at a cost of SS,SOO. Craig said that this and
time.
_lage's pool manager, noting that he had recommended an other studies by FBA are required for many arant appli; Iannarelli noted \hat some properties have been sub- applicant, his niece, who wu neither interviewed or con- cations.
Iannarelli 'reminded council meetings that the first
ject to consistent complaints, 1111d that the )lOiit::e depart· , sidered for the position, which wu filled by Oteri John·
!Dent has been advised that the new ordinance, if paSsed son, who huserved in the po1ition in the puL
informa~onal meeting for a Neighborhood Watch proat the May 24 mectins, and the existing ordinance requir· ~ Wise also reqUCIIIcd that speed bumps be placed on aram would be held at the American Legion Annex at 7
ing that arass and weeds be controlled, will be enforced. Art Lewis Street, next to the park, to reduce the risk of p.m. on Tuesday, and urged attendance by council mem·
· : Gene Wise, president of the Middleport Youth Injury to children, and wu told by lannarelli that the bel'll and those interested in participating.
Le_ague, addressed several issues relating to the operation'&gt; speed bumps had been ordered by the village.
Iannarelli, Judy Crooks, Roscoe and Mary Wise and
oflhe village's parks and the relationship between coun•
lannarelli said that she would arranse a meeting with Myron Duffield were appointed to serve on a newly·
C!l; the parks and recreation committee and the Youth' Wise, council members and membel'll of the village reformed Tree Authority Board, to oversee the planting
League. .
r recreation committee so that issues relating·to the park's of ornamental trees in the downtown business district.

· According lei Duffield, president of the Middleport
Community Association, the Ohio Department of Natur·
. al Resources will work closely with the bQard during it&amp;
first year of operation to ensure that appropriate trees are
chosen and cared for.
Council adopted a new set of Rules of Council, which
outline parliamentary procedure guidelines, commiuee
responsibilities and other matters of procedure. The
rules were submitted by lannarelli, who has presided at
council meetings in lhe absence of Mayor Dewey Hor·
ton.
In recommending adoption of the rules, Iannllrelli
said that she hoped they would eliminate "bickering"
and disorder at council meetings.
Councilman Steve Houchins commended the street
department and Superintendent Kenny Madden for the
completion of the road at Riverview Cemetery,. which
. was recently blacktopped.
Council opened its meeting by observing a moment
ofsilence and a prayer, led hy Councilman Roger Man·
ley, in honor of fonner Council,man Bob Gilmore, who
died on· Sunday. Rev. Bob Robinson led the invocation
prior to the meeting.
.
In other action, council approved the mayor 's report
of fines collected in the amount of $4,805.
Present, in addition to .Manley, Houchins, Gwiazdowski, and lannarelli, were Councilman Bob Pooler
and Oerk Bryan Swann.

Transfer will provide additional raise for clerk's staff
charged with her murder
. CLEVELAND (AP)- The cousi~ of a murdered woman grieved with
the family after the killing. Now he has been charged with agaravalcd
murder.
·
. Yezen Dayem, 20, is expected to be amlgned on the charge in connectipn with the death of his cousin, Methal Dayem, who was found shot to
death in January.
''
.
A police spokesman, Sgt. Muk Hutinp, declined to revei) what led to
Yezen Dayem 'sllrCit.
.·
'
t.fethal Dayem'a inother, Alma, said the cllF~ JP.i~~Wt her nephew
compound her quilia.~bouUhe ·killi!la-·
'. '·
•
"I used to pray that they would tl'nd the killer, but today, I just don't
want to know anymore," she told The Plain Dealer. pray to God that
Is illliOCCnt. If he Is guilty, l'lllet lhe police take~ of it."
She said detectives told her little about the investigation. Then she
broke intO tears 111d said, "My mlftd is c:oinpletely ~k."
Methal Dayem, 21, died Jan. 8 after sufferin&amp; gul!lhot wounds in the
back of her neck, the rigllt arm and nyice in the bac~ of her rishtlhigh.
She fell a few feet from her car, a white 1~ Dodge Spirit.
·
She had gotten off work at Allddin's restaurant in suburban lndepen·
dence an hour l!efore she was shot ·
, ·
She still was·wearing her unifonn. ·
,.
.
Yezen Daycm lives in an apartment adj~M:Cnt to his ff~ber's arocery.and
deli near Ocvel.and Hopkins International Airport. He' worked there daily,
relatives said.
. .
.
·
·
He wu arrested Friday at ti bank while depositin~ receipts from the
store, sail! his lawyer, Terry Gilbert.
Police took his fi'lll and questioned
~ini through the, weekend. Gilbert
said Yezen . Da)l1em and Methil
Dayem both attended aevefarid
Today's
State University and he often drove
2 Seedons • 12 Pqea
·her to.CJISS.
I), .
.
Yezen Dayem dropped out of
7
Calend•r
school after the kl)ling so he could
spend more time with his family,
2&amp;10
Cltulllec!t
Gilbert said.
11
Cqmlg
'He's.a nice hlfd;working kid ind
Edlloda!J
he comes from a :very dOIIC fami3
l.oq!
ly " Gilbert said. · . .
4&amp;5
Dayemsaid'her nephew 111d
Sporll
daughter
ahared QOnfidenc:es 1111d
Wptbcr
3
enjoyed each other's.company.
'He used to help her when she hid
Lotteries
troubles, teenage problems," Asma
Dayem said. •
OHIO
' He wu quiet, ~hy.l don't know ·
Plck3: O·S·3; Plck4: 1·9-6-6
they
had some soi1 of problem."
'llllckeye 5: 10-16-23-24·29 ·
Asma
Dayem said ~!fr l)ephew had
W.VA.
visited
ber
several lima since the ·
.Dally 3:. 1-8-I_; 'Daily 4: 8-5~2
killill$·
.'
,.
.·
'He wu crying with me,"she said.

Good Afternoon

Sentinel

A.ma

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentlntl N- Staft'
li transfer of funds' within the budget of Meigs
County aerk of Courts Larry Spencer will allow
him to give $3,000 iri pay raises to six employees
under his supervision. The Meigs County Commi114ione1'11 approved the transfer duririg Monday's
· regulu meeting of the Meigs County Commis·
sionel'll.
Janet Howard, president of the board. said yes··
terday that \X)Unty employees paid from the Meigs
County General Fund, including thoR in
Spencer's offices, were given raises of $500 per
year when the lllftuallppl opliationa were msde in
1111uary. She said the r~ that Spencer intends to
pe bia employees wjll be additional raises above
'aild..beyond -thoie ini:lu~ -~ Spen-Cer-'s-annual
~ptiidbil, and twW the pay increue given all
oehor_courthousc employees in.January.
The commisiloncra met with Spencer in exec·
ialive aesilon yesterday to discuss the transfer,
after meeting with Prollecuting Attorney John
· Lentes. lentes advised the commissioners that
they ·had no cHoice but to approve the transfer in
Spencer.'s budset
·
·
Howard said that'the transfer, of $1,910 from
Spencer's extra help line item to his salaries line
item, would.be a one-time transfer, and that funds
would not tic available from the county general
fund to pay the additional salaries next yelf.
''To approve this transfer for the JIUIP!l'ICOf giv·
ins additiOnal pay raises is apinst my best judg·
mcnt," Howard said yesterday. "When we msde

· this year 's apptopriations to general fund depart· serve the public."
ments, we gave employees what I felt we cauld ·
Susan Oliver, executive director of the Meigs
afford to Jljve them in tenns of a raise." . · · County Council on Aging, reported thai a new
"t thinl we all would like to have given them "Hot'Shot" vehicle, used to deliver home·deliv·
more, but we couldn't'afford to do iL There will be ered meals lo senior citizen clients, was expected
no money from this board .next year for this .ad(!i· · to be delivered yesterday. .
tional raise. It is clear that there is no need for
. The vehicle purchase was funded through the
extra help (hi Spencer's offiCI') and there will be Community Development Block Grant program,
no money appropriated for it next year."
administered by tile commissioners.
Salaries for courthouse employees ·are deter·
Oliver also presented a proclamation for
mined by the officeholdel'll based on appropria- approval by the board, declaring 1999 the lntemalions made by the commissioners at the beginning tiona! Year of Older Persons, May 9-15 as Nationof each year.
al Senior Center Week and May 18 as Senior Cit·
Spenqer, who has , aa:ess to special revenue izens Day.
.
·
'funds collected throush his legil department, said
Trish MCCollough, executive director of Gal·
yesterday that he sees the transfer ·as a routine lia/Meigs Community Action, presented a procla- .
trannction, but noted thai his employees are paid mation declaring May as Community Action
considerably 1. . than some of their counterpans Month.
in other courthouse offices. He said . that some
The commissioners approved lhc purchase of a
courthouse employees are now hired at a hisher four wheel-drive vehicle, a Ford Explorer, for the
salary than some of his employees with many Department of Human Services. The price of the ·
-years of service.
· vehicle is $24,694.35, and will be purchased from
He said that the additional $500 raises for each B.ibbee Molors in Middleport, lhe only vendor
employee would help balance thai inequity.
submitting a bid.
Commissioner Jeffrey Thornton said that he
The commissioners also:
felt the pay increases only reinforce the need for
• Approved the sale of a used EMS squad to
improved.accessibility to court)louse ilffices.Richard Me II of Cheshire, at a price of $613; ·
Thornton said that he felt that ' all courthouse
• Approved a transfer of funds in the amount of
offices should extend their business hours to $778 for the DARE program;
·
·
include Saturday mornings or a week night.
• Approved payment of bills in the amount of
"'111is is taxpayer's ·money that will go into $278,190.57.
·
theSe pay raises,"· Thornton said. "We're using
Also present were Commissioner Mick D~ven· ·
their money, and we need to do what we can to port and Oerk Gloria Kloes.

Racine firefighters to show new home Sunday
1'be Radne \VIunteer Fire Department will introduce its new fire station
with an open house Sunday from 1-4 p.m.
There will be a brief welcoming ceremony followed by an invocation
beginning at I p.m. Immediately followi1111 this, a ribbon-culljng ·ceremony
will be held. There will be equipment displays, pic:tures and scrapbooks to
view. Refreshments will also be served.
The Racine VFD began Feb. 11, 1951, and held its fil'llt meeting Feb. 15
with IS charter membel'll.
The department'• only fire truck was stored in the town hall which was
· located where the Racine Fil'llt Baptist Olurch ·now stands. The fir~ depart·
ment liter moved to the comer of Third and Vine streets where it remained
until construction of the new fire station located at Fifth and Pearl streets,
the department's third home since its inception. The old fire station is local·
_ed within the flood plain 111d was no longer big enough to comfortably hold
!he community's fire fi&amp;htin&amp; equipment
The new buildinf will house the Racine Volunteer f'ire Department which
· serves the village o Racine along with much of Suuon, Lebanon and Letart
10\Ynships:
.
Construction began on the CUJ'l'ent firehouse in September, 1997. The
original cost for tum-key was SJSO,OOO, but the firefishtel'll opted to do most
of the work themselves to·save money. The firefishtel'll have put in approx· ·
imately 6,500 m1111-houl'll to do interior work 'such as wiring. plumbing,
installing drywal~nting.
'
Cost of the new building wu estimated at about $200,000 with $30,000
· being paid by a community development block ifillll throush the Meigs
County Boarll of Commissioners. The remainder will come from a fire
department fund consisting of levy money from !he townships served by the

fire department and through loans.
Dimensions of the new firehouse are 100-feet long by 70-feet wide divid·
ed into a 70-by-704oot bay 'for trucks and a 30-by-60-foot meeting room
1111d kitchen area.

NEW FIRE STAnON - The new Racine Fire Station shown
here, located at the Junction of Pearl end Fifth atniela adjacent
village hall, will be dedicated Suriday. The new alation replaces
one locattd at VIne and Third atreebl.

Land purchased/donated for new Racine Boat Ramp

CALL TODAY FOR
MORE INFORMATION
·(740) 992·2117 or
(800) 992•2608

MEIGS COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF·
HUMAN SERVICES
•

'

-Page4

:Middleport :to·crack down on ·weeds and refuse

';1

EDI
ELIGIBIL
· PROG M

NBAplayoff
roundup

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, OhiO

Volume 49. Number 241

Sports

· By Jill FREEMAN
Sentinel Newe Sbl"
The puichue of 10 acres of land along the
Ohio River in Rllcine, coupled with the donation
of an lddition.l l 11 acres, will allow the Ohio
· Division of Wildlife to pursue. construction of a
new Ohio River boat launching facility. ·
The Division of Wildlife Monday afternoon
announced the purchue of 10 acres of land from
Racine busineSIIIIan Jim Diddle who also donal·
ed 11 adjoining acres to the agency. Funds for
the land purchase caJI)e from division revenue
obtained throuah the aale of filhin&amp; and huntina
licenses.
·
.
.
Tlie division envisions a modem launch facil·
ity within the village's corporation limit where
patrolmen 111d community residents c:an police
SENIOR
. - The
Collrlty
!he new launch.
frey ThorntOn,
llourlrcl lftd Mlok Dllvenport, NMCI I
"This is a very .important acquisition becauic
proclemltlon decllrlng 1M u lntel'lllttloMI Y•r of Older Pw·· .. local acx:cu facilities do not meet the needl .of
10n1, thle week 11 Nlllonll Ienior c.ntw Wllk and May 11 •• fishermen and other recreationil . boaters. We
Senior Cltlzene Day. Aleo plotuNd 11 luMn .Oliver, execulvl c:erlllinly th111k Mr. Diddle for working in coop· ·
diNCior of the ll1lg1 Col!nty Counoll on AQing.
1
eration with us to acquire this property," aaid

•

--.

mation on the river's economic impact to nearby
Division of Wildlife Chief Michael J. Budzik.
The property will provide good access to the communities.
The Ohio River also is a popular destination
excellent fishing in the tailwater areas of the
Racine Dam. ''This new boatcf access will also for many residentS and non-residents which will
complement the recent acquisition and pl1111ned sec increased usage in fulure years; according to
development of the K·H Butler aQ:ess downriv· the Division of Wildlife.
C!Ju nty Commissioner Jeff Thornton first
er in Oallia County," he said.
The 21 -actc: tract of land includes 1,475 feel publicly advocated a boat ramp five years ago in
of river shoreline that will provide fishing access 'the spri ng, 1994; issue of Southeast Ohio maga·
to 1111glers who do not own boats.. The land is zinc while serving !hen as mayor of Racine.
located in the Yellowllush Creek area.
"It's taken five years to happen,» said Thorn· ·
The pl1111ned facility will replace the e.xisting · ton. ''I'm glad the stale made the investment in ~
·
boat ramp located at the Old Ferry Landing Park, southern Ohio."
which remains popular with anglers fishing the · He · also commended Did.dle · for donating
productive tail waters of the Racine Locks and · more than half of th
operty. "Jim told me he
Dam. However it is plagued by a lack of parking wanted to do
elbing for the community, This
s~, a limited approach to the river and by is somel · g we needed: It is going to be great ·
aome deterioration ofthe ramp iliiCif.
.for tour' m, for boaters and for anglers."
· '
The purchiiiiC/donation also brings a five-year _,.....J.J&gt;··~tsion of Wildlife officials, including ·
saga closer to 1111 end. The state's interest in the Dudzik, have vis ited the Racine area to meet
project stems from an Ohio River angler surve
wi.th residents and prof'icrty owners in previous '
conducted in 11192 and 11193 which indic d effons to obtain land for the proposed launch:
srowing interest in the river and provided i
facility.
·

. . . .. ...··---.
·-. ·" ""t"'-------·--------·--------·1
'- - --···o;
•
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�•

.-

Tueiday, May 11, 1999

Commentary

•

P-eeA2

Death Notices

TuMday, May 11, 1M

The Daily Sentinel Will Hill -h elp GOP or hurt·nominee?
I· By Morton Kondraek• .

'Esta6fi.!lid in 1948

but the likelihood is that Democrats will simply
impute far worse intentions to the GOP than the
party's actual ideas would merit.
Polls show that the public favors the kind of
Social Security reforms the GOP favors -· allowing individual workers to invest some of their
own tax money in )lfivate markets.
GOP leadership aides insist that 1999 will not
be a do-nothing year, citing "Ed· Flex" legislation, possible modest tax cuts, reauthorization of
the Elementary and Secondary Education Act and
a "lockbox" fdr 100 percent of Social Security
surpluses as defensible achievements.
They also claim that on-time passage of a bud·
get resolulion and appropriations bills will win
the GOP favor, but the chances are that in Octo·

Republicans might begin moving m~jor legis! alion in April 2000 tailored to the programs of the
prospective nominee, who will be known by
March in the front-loaded primary process. ConifCSS would not be able to pass major legislation
before the election, but could demonstrate solidarity with the nominee and begin preparing the
ground for an issues election at both the presidential and oongressional level.
~
However, others in the party think GOP con·
grcssional leaders are being too passive this year
and should at least be "plowing the ground" with
major tax cut and Social Security reform propos·
als.
"The longer the education process lasts," said
one party activist, " the better it is for us." Any of

The top contenders for the
GOP presidential nomination all
would pu} a new face on the party.
111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio
.
It certainly needs one.
740.892·2158 • Fax: ~2·2157
Texas Gov. George W. Bush's
"compassionate conservatism,"
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
Elizabeth Dole's soccer-mom
centrism and Sen. John McCain's
ROBERT L WINGETT
(Ariz.) Teddy Rooseveltish indePublisher
pendence all would represent a
I · welcome change from the surly image congrt~~'
DIANE HILL
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
sional Republicans have been projecting since
Controller
General
Manager
199S.
.
The departure of pyrotechnic ex-House Speaker
Newt
Gingrich, R·Ga., and the arrival of even'
The Sentinel twlcom.• ,.,.,.. to tht Nlfor from ruHra on 11H'oM1 ~ of kiptempered
Speaker Dennis Hastert, R~- Short l.tt.ra (300 word• or ,...) h•v. tiN ~bHI oiMnH of IHJni ~h«l.
Ill., has removed an ea,:;y target for
'f'ypfJd Wt.,.. ,,..
tnd •II mty I» «&lt;lt«&lt;. Eloh Mould ln~uft I MIJtMfUN,
~d,..., •nd t:Mytlm. phon• numlHH'. S,.ccty • dill• If,.,.., 1 ,.,,.,o. to • ,._
Democrats to shoot at, but it hasn't
Wow •rtkl• 01' , . , . ,• .,.,, to. urt.,.. to tht edftor, Th• Sentinel, rn Court sr.,
solved
the party's problems.
Pom«oy, Ohio UTe~, or, FAX to 74D-MMf57.
The latest CNN/Gallup/USA
Today poll shows the GOP now is
yiewed favorably by 47 percent of
voters, unfavorably by 44 percent, but
Democrats score 55-37. And on most
issues, the public trusts Dem~rats
more.
The performance of congressional
Republicallt_on Kosovo indicates that
the party 1sstill ridden with hyperpartisanship and obsessive ClintonBy WALTER R. MEARS
phobia ·- to the point that some lead·
AP Special Correspondent
•
AUSTIN, Texas (AP)- A month from h1s debut as a presidential cam- ers have adopted the Rev. Jesse Jack·
paigner, Gov. George W. Bush professes amazement at h1s rankmg atop the son's penchant to blame America first
Repubhcan field in a race he plans to run on his terms and
in the connie! wit~ Serbian President
Slobodan Milosevic.
•: on his l!metable
Granted that President Clinton's
:=: H~ knows what's commg when he takes the road from
bombing-only strategy in Kosovo is
:: · Texas. He stayed put to deal with the business of the state
unlikely to produce victory over
:: : Leg1slature, wh1ch adJourns at the end of the month. So
· · • Republican leaders came to him, 150 or more, to see, hear
Milosevic as McCain argues ··joined
.by Dole and Bush. But still, a full 127
. and endorse the man at the top of the preseason polls for the
•
House Republicans •• more than half
· GOP nommatwn, and for the 2000 presidenl!al election.
••
the conference -- voted last week to
In an interv1ew with The Associated Press, he talks m
withdraw U.S. forces from NATO
: minute detail of state legislation, but he IS purposefully
operations in Kosovo, which would
vague on national issues "I know what I believe, and I
•
know what I will fight for," he sa1d "I will have a tax Gaorge W. Bullh leave Mi.Josevic the clear winner.
•
plan. I'll have plans on various issues which we will Jay out on my
Senate Majority Leader Trent Loll,
timetable
R-Miss., who in 1990 cautioned Jack·-·
"It's a very long and arduous road, as you know, and the temptation's son not to act like a secretary of stale
or negotiate when he went on a hostage-rescue tier at least three major funding bills won 'I be the likely nominees will benefit, he said, if Con·
going to be for people to want to know it immediately.
"What are you go10g to do on this, what are you going to do on that?
mission to Iraq, now is cheering Jac~on's diplo- passed, givin~ Clinton the opportunity to threaten gress warms up the electorate to the ideas of tax
"I'll be spec1f1c 10 some areas and in some areas, I'll hold my fife, so I'll macy in Serbia.
vetoes to get his way.
culs and Medicare reform.
have somethmg to say over the course of the fall and the winter."
And ~o is House Majonty Whip Tom DeLay,
Meanllme, the House may pass cam'paign
Conceivably, too, Congress could exercise its
That will intensify the pressure, the questions, the criticism from other R-Texas, who last weekend blamed U.S. bombing finance reform and minimum wage legislation, oversight or investigative powers to expose flaws
· candidates and from commentators for a deta1led platform from Bush.
for 10stability in the Balkans, refugee flows out of but the prospects are that campaign reform, at in Clinton administration policies beyond Chi·
It wlll come in a rush when Bush begins his active campaign next month. Kosovo and NATO's falling credibility. DeLay least, will be killed in the Senate, leaving the GOP nese espionage, the better to burden the 2000
He's booked to begin with two private fund-raising events on the way to a said he didn't convince anyone on the House floor open to charges it ls ,the party of "special inter· Democratic nominee, especially if it's Vice Presi·
day of campaigning 10 Iowa Of\ June 12. He's to be in New Hampshire on to undercut Clinton's policies, but he admits try- ests."
dent AI Gore.
June 14 and 15. After opemng (n the small slates that hold the initial contests ing. It's hard to imagine he'd do the same if a
The question raised by this ilecidedly mixed
Since the changeover from Gingrich to
congressional performance is: Will it help or hurt Hastert, Republican and congressional poll rat·
, of the 2000 primary season, Bush is booked for a campa1gn tour in the Republican were in the White House.
· biggest, California, in late June.
'
Beyond Kosovo, GOP leaders in both houses the party's 2000 presidential candidate?
ings have improved somewhat, but if tactics don't
Current planning puts him on the campaign road for two weeks in June, are signaling they will not seriously advance
Former Rep. Bill Paxon, R-N. Y., thinks Con· change, congressional Republicans still will be a
two 'weeks in July and 17 days in August. No gradual glide path into the major proposals on Social Security, Medica~e and gress should rack up enough modest achieve- burden on the presidential nominee. It doesn't
campaign for Bush; he beg10s runn10g m a rush, with a med1a crowd certain. taxes this year -- opening the party once again to ments to avoid "do-nothing" charges but leave have to be that way.
"I know there are gomg to be a lot of diversions," Bush says. "There 'II charges of "do·nothingism."
"big picture issues"like Social Security and taxes
(MOrton Kondrackt 11 executive editOr ol
Roll can; the n-epapar of Capitol Hill.)
The GOP leaders' motivation seems to be to for the presidential nominee to define.
be moments of stress, and I know that."
Conceivably, by this logic, congressional Copyrlgh11- NEwSPAPER ENTERPRI8E ASSN.
Make that months of stress. There is no polil1cal role more intense and avoid givingpemocrats fodder for demagoguery,
/
demand10g than runn10g for president, especially for the candidate in front.
• Every public pronouncement is sifted, every slip magnified.
Bush saw it in his father's presidential campaigns, the wmner in 1988,the
· loser in 1992.
And front-runners have fallen before. Gov. George Romney of Michigan By Nat HtntoH
murder, among other crimes, the First versity of Richmond, has been accused 'Hit Man,' it assisted Perry... in the per·
In 1993, James Perry, a contract Amendment wilt be in great peril. All by free-speech experts of betrilying the petration of the brutal triple murders."
led in advance but collapsed as a candidate in 1968. Sen. Edmund ~- Muskie
of Maine was the faraway Democratic favorite in 1972, until he faltered and killer from Detroi~ smothered 8-year- kinds of prin~ film and broadcast First Amendment becauiC he is one of And hereby, "as a matter of law... the
· fa1led 10 the primaries.
old Trevor Horn, a quadriplegic, in his expression will be in the dock along the attorneys for the-victims' families - publisher is civilly liable for aiding and
"My job is to s!ay focused on why people should be for me," says Bush, bed in Silver Spring, Md He also mur- with their disseminators.
• along with Howard Siegel and John abetting James Perry in his trip!~ murwho does not yet call h1s cand1dacy by name. He's still exploring, unde- dered the boy's mother, Mildred Horn,
Among those opposing the law suit Marshall.
der.'"
• clared. That's only liming. He's raised $7 6 m1llion, expects to at least dou- and his nurse, Janice Saunders.
were the ACLU, the Thomas Jefferson
Nonetheless, writing for a unani "This book," the court added,
ble that by midsummer There are about 35 ~eople in his Ausl!n political
The hit man was hired by Lawrence Center for the Protection of Free mous three-judge panel of the Fourth "constitutes the archetypal example of
• headquarters, and they're htring. More than half the 32 Republican gover- Horn, the former husband of Mildred Expression, ABC, America Online, the Circuit in Virginla, Judge Michael Lul- speech which ··because it methodical·
nors are backing him, as are aboutlOO GOP members of Congress. "We've Hom, so he could collect $1.7 million Association of American Publishers, tig reversed the District Court and iCnl Jy and oomprehensively prepares and
got the begi~nings of a good political operatiOn in some of the states," he m a malpractice settlement resulting The New York limes, the Society for the case back for trial.
steels ils audience to specific criminal
says
from his son's brain damage. Perry is Professional Journalists, The WashingLultig's 65-pagc opinion ~ not conduct through exhaustively detailed
All with the candidate at a distance His father became president in 1989 on death row. Also convicted, ton Post and the Reporters Committee diminish the First Amendment any instructions on the planning. commisafter a long apprenticeship in government thai began long before his eight Lawrence Hom is serving a sentence for Freedom of the Press. (I am on the more than Rod Smolla has. It not only sion, and concealment of criminal con• years as v1ce president. The son's campaign standing comes after one term of life without parole.
steering committee of the last group.)
points out h!Jw meticulously the hit duct, find! no preserve in the First
• as governor and landslide re-elec11on 1n 1998
However, the case·· Rice v. Paladin
A federal district judge, Alexander man adhered to the "detailed factual" Amendment."
"Yes, I'm amazed," Bush says." . I know I've got a lot of l\'Ork to do Enteqxises •• is not over. At the trials Williams, agreed that the lawsuit instructions in the book, but it also
This is not mere advocacy of ideas,
·· after the session's over to go to these states where I haven't been .'.. "
of Perry and Horn, the prosecution should not go forward because the focuses on the stipulated admissions of or just expression, however repugnant
At home, he 's studying national policy 1ssues, meeting regularly with a emphasized that Perry had carefully book was protected by the First Paladin's owner.
On May 25, the trial of Paladin
team of advisers with Washington know-how.
followed an instruction book on how Amendment. The case then went to the
"Paladin Press in this ease," the Press and Peter Lund begins in Green"I think that one of the thmgs I'm good at is campaigning - I like peo- to commit a munder. The book, "Hit Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals.
judge says, "has stipulated that it bel~ Md. Judge Alexander Williams
... pie a lot-I hke to shake hands and I like to look people in the eye and say Man: A Technical Manual for IndepenHaving read the court papers and a specifically targeted the market of will again preside. The First Amend·
I'd like for you to hear me and help me out," Bush said
dent Contractors," is published by Pal· forthcoming book, "Deliberate Intent" murderers, would-be murderers, and ment is not in danger. Petcfitund may
That kind of one-on-one campaign is difficul11f not impossible in the era adin Press in Boulder, Colo.
(Oown), by Rod Smolla, I am con- other criminals for sale of ils munder be.
of nonstop television, boom microphones, crowds of reporters, Secret SerThe families of the victims brought vinced that the First Amendment manual." Paladin, the jvdge also said, ' Particular credit is due Mike Walvice security.
suit for civil damages against Paladin establishment reacted to the lawsuit "stipulated both that it had knowledge lace and "60 Minutes" because on
.. "I've got to go shake those hands," Bush sa1d. "It's going to be interest- and its owner, Peter Lund. An impres- out of Pavlovian fear without examin- and that it intended 'Hit Man' would March· 2, 1997, their "Murder by :the
_: · ing to see how we can accomplish that." That's been his strength in Texas sive array of print and broadcast orga- ing the case with as much care as they immediately be used by criminals and Book" was aired on CBS-Tv. It clear;:; campaigns, not the stump speech to the crowd. There wlll have to be more , nizations filed friend-of-the-court require of the journalists in their would-be criminals in the solicitation, ly detailed both sides of the "Hit Man" •
... : of the latter now, and more television campa1gnmg.
briefs on behalf of Paladin.
employ.
planning. and commission of munder case, and by doing that, made Rod
;::. · All to put him to the special tests of the leader. "I know the expectations
.Smolla, a leading First Amendment for hire. ·And Paladin has stipufated Smolla's point that !'freedom of
They believed that if, for the first
~ · are high," Bush says "As my daughter said, 'Dad, you're not nearly as cool 11me, a book can be found liable for scholar and a law )lfOfessor at the Uni- that, through publishing
and selllng speech is not freedom to kill.''
,,
• . as people think.' "
He's about to ~gin finding out.
•
EDITOR'S NC?TE: Walter R. Meara, vice praaldent and special corre·epondent for The Associated Pre1a, has reported on Wallhlngton and By Jack Anderaon
government attempts to
and preserve it for future generations.
national polltlcl for more than 30 yeare.
and Jan Mollar
.
encroach on their land-use
That was too much for some lawmakers to
We didn 'I really believe the Idaho sportsmen privileges.
Although
take. Rep. Helen Chenoweth, R-Idaho, and others
who called our office to complain that their hunt- UNESCO docsn 'I have an
quickly • introduced the American Land Sover-·
ing and fishing privileges were being curtailed by enforcement arm, Nixon's
• By The Aeaoclated Preas
eignty' Protection Act, which seeks to remove lhe
: .. Today is Tuesday, May II, the !31st day of 1999. There are 234 days left the United Nations.
treaty pledges that the
United Nations' influence over domestic land.-use
in lhe year.
The Clinton administration has adopted some United States will care for
decisions. Sources at the world body say the prounpopular land-use policies in the West, but sure· these sites according to
·:
Today's Highlight in History:
posal is ludicrous. For one, they argue, preservaly
the United Nations does not have jurisdiction U.N. guidelines. Very few
:
On May 11, 1946, the flfsl packages from the relief agency CARE (Cooption sites are only designated with the approval of
to do
' eral!ve for Amencan Remittances to Europe) arrived in Europe, at Le Havre, over some of our nation's most treasured natural Westerners appreciate being
affec:ted property owners, plus local and national
and historic sites? Could a bureaucrat at the world group of elected officials from more than
: France.
authorities.
,
·
body really tell the United States what to do with countries around the globe.
On this date.
Sources in Cbenowe'h 's office tell us that sta~
Enter the Clinton administratiOJI, The first and local governments are rarely consulted before
In 1647, Peter Stuyves~nt arrived in New Amsterdam to become gover- Yellowstone Park?
It turns out that the sportsmen were risht : - and family had barely moved into the White HQUsc a historic site is designated, and that such decisiens
nor.
•
wrong. But the issue they raised also cut to the when Clinton angered Western lawmakers by try- are usually made by 1unelecled federal bureaucrats
In 1858, Minnesota became the 32nd state of the Union .
•
heart of the never-ending debate over the care and ing to reform ancient grazing and mining laws at the Department of Interior or higher-up.
•I
•
In 1910, Glacier National Park in Montana was established.
preservation 1,1f still ·uns~iled areas of the great that environmentalisls believe are ludic~ously
·.UNESCO officials would not speak to us :on
In 1944, Allied forces launched a major offens1ve in central Italy.
''
outdated and harmful. Under pressure from Con- the record because the United States is no longer
In 1949, Israel was admitted tp the United Nations as the world body's American West.
The current controversy began in 1973, during gress •• including many Democrats •• Clinton a member state, having pulled out in the early
59th member.
I
the Nixon administration, when the Senate rati- backed off on his most stringent demands. But the · 1990s amid charges of gross mismanagement
In 1949, Siam changed its named to Thailand.
fied
a treaty with the United Nations Educational, mistrust continues to this day.
Officials who s)loke with us without attribution
In 1973, charges against Daniel Ellsberg for his role in the "Pentl'gon
Scientific
and
Cultural
Organization.
Barely
Things
came
to
a
head
in
199S,
when
atgued that the designations are merely ceremoni·
Papers" case were dismissed by Judge William M. Byrne, who cited govnoticed at the time, the treaty gave UNESCO the UNESCO tried to wield its influence over the pro- al, and that the issue of ultirnate jurisdiction is a
ernment misconduct.
In 1985, more than 50 people died when a nash fire swept a jam-packed rjghl 11,1 designate some 67 American sites as his- posed New World Mine near Yellowstone. The red herring because the U.S. government will do
torically important. Sites listed include Yellow· mine was to be located on private property adja. what iI wants on sovereign land.
soccer stadium in Bradford, England.
.
stone
National Park, the Statue of Liberty and tlie cent to the park, but environmenl&amp;lists saw a dan·
It's too early to tell if Chenoweth's bill will
In 1996, an Atlanta-bound ValuJel DC·9 caught fire shortly after takeoff
gerous
precedent
beins
set
and
wanted
desperateUniversity
of
Virginia.
In
all,
more
than
Sl
mil·
even
get a vote in the current Congress. But if it
from Miami and crashed into the Florida Everglades, killing all 110 ~le
ly
to
protect
the
park's
buffer
zone.
UNESCO
lion
acres
of
U.S.
land
fall
under
the
UNESCO
does, eonsider it yet another signal that Clinton's
on board.
.
sided with the environmentalists, and so did the war on the West hu proven to be almost as diffi·
In 1997, the Deep Blue IBM computer demolished an overwhelmed designatiOJI.
This doesn't play too well out in the West, Clinton administration when it ponied up $65 cult as the one being fought in K030Vo.
• Garry Kasparov and won the six-game chess match between man and
where ranchers and hunters are ever-suspicious of million to buy the land from the mining oompany Copyright 1000, United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
machine in New York.
·
I

.

:

Pamela Cheadle
Pamela Cheadle, 47, Albany, d1ed Monday, May 10,' 1999, at King's
Daughter Medical Center, Ashland, Ky.
Arrangements will be announced by B1gony-Jordan Funeral Home 10
Albany.

Wednesday, May 12
for

Mark Edward Haner
Mark Edward Haner, 36, Gallipolis, died Monday, May 10, 1999 10
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born July 17, 1962 in Point Pleasant, W.Va., son of Kenneth E. and
Dowthy Kirk Haner of Gallipolis, he had been the manager of Kenny 's Auto
Rentals for the past nine years.
He was a member of the South Galha Boosters Club and the Galli a County Sheep Assoc1ation.
"'
Surviving in addihon to his parents are his w1fe, Tammy L Shriver
Haner, whom he marned July 31, 1981 in Gallipohs; two daughters, Tanya
L. Haner and Holley A. Haner, both of the home; a son, Zachary E. Haner,
of the home; three sisters, Linda (Mike) Plymale, Deanna K. C1sco and
Anita (David) Smith, all of Gallipolis; and several meces and nephews.
SefV!ces w11J be 1 p.m. Thursday in the Willis Funetal Home, with Pastor Alfred Holley and Denver Hill officiating. Burial will be in the Swan
Creek Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6·9 p.m.
Wednesday.

I

,_t.n«J

.0

Undeclared candidate
w~o leads the pack:
It amazes him, too

WI/A.

-~-·~~,
Showlf1

~ 4e

•

•

.

Could UNE.S CO govern U.S. park lands?

, Today In History

•

I

•

'

'

•

T 1t6m'll

Rain

flumn

Snow

lee

'cdPJ-.

Chance of thunderstorms
to arrive by Wednesday
By The Associated Press
The National Weather Service says skies in Ohio will be partly cloudy
tomghl through much of Wednesday.
Low pressure and its associated fronts will move east toward the area as
the high moves off to the east. Showers and thunderstorms may develop
over weslem Ohio by Wednesday night and spread eastward early Thursday.
With the precipitation moving in, temperatures will cool somewhat, with
lows in the 50s Tuesday and Wednesday nights and h1ghs mostly m the 70s
Wednesday.
The precipitation is ex~ed to end from west to east across Ohio, with
the entire state likely to become dry by the weekend. However, this system
w1ll be slow movmg and coula linger over the state longer than currently
expecte&lt;;i.
• .
Patches of hi~h clouds moved across the state during the mghl, but skies
remained clear in many areas.
Temperatures fell into the 50s across much of the state and the upper 40s
~ 3CI'OSS mland northeast Ohio. The cold spot was Lancaster, where the te
mperature had fallen into the low 40s
The record htgh temperature for this date al the Columbus weather stawas 92 degrees in 1896. The record low temperature was 33 degrees in
1997. Sunset will be at8:35 p.m. Sunrise Wednesday will be at 6:20a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight... Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 50s. Light and variable wind.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy. A chance of thunderstorms m the afternoon.
Highs in the lower and mid 80s. Cllance of rain 30 percent.
Wednesday nighi... Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid and upper 50s.
Extended forecast:
Thursday . Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms,
Highs in the lower 80s.
Fnday... Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the
50s and
near 80.

•

No preserve in the First Amendment

I

Announcements:
Neighborhood Watch
An informational meeting about a community Ne1ghborhood Watch
program in M1ddleport will be held Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the American
Legmn Annex on South Fourth Avenue Middleport res1dents interested in
part1cipa1ing are urged to attend.

Revival
Rev1val w!IJ be held Wednesday through Sunday at the Pomeroy
Cllurch of the Nazarene wuh Rev. and Mrs. Jerry Boggs of South Point
Serv1ces w11l be held nightly at 7 p.m. except Sunday when serv1ces will
be at 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. All welcome.

American Legion
Feeney-Bennett Post 128 of lhe Amencan Legion, M1ddlcport, will
hold a regular meeting Wedn esday, 7 30 p m There w11l be nommations
for efficers.

Square dance slated
Round, square and hne dancing w1ll be held Fnday, 8-11 p.m. at the
Me1gs County Semor Ctllzens Center, Pomeroy. Mus1c by Happy Hollow
Boys, Arthur Conant caller. Bring snacks

Gospel singers to appear
The Toney Brothers w1ll appear May 21, 7 p m al the Syracuse
Nazarene Church.
·

Robert "Bob" Nelson Gilmore

C1999

...

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport; Ohio

Flowery visitor
China
·.• drawing local attention

The Meigs County Extension leaves -up to two-and-a-half-feet
,Service has been fielding calls from wide on some trees. The trees are
area resideots puzzled by purple ·similar to the native Catalpa, but are
flowing trees growing along the not related. Also, Meigs County is
Ohio River near the Pomeroy- about as far north as the trees can
Mason Bridge.
grow and flourish. '
The trees, characterized by
. The pretty trees are fast -growing
lavender blue, trumpet-shaped and can grow from eight-to-10 feet
flowers are called Royal Paulownia, a year once established, Kneen said.
However, don't make plans to
a tree named after Anna Paulowna
who was the princess of the Nether- grow one in your yard, Kneen
· lands from 1795 to 1865, according added. RegiOnally the trees are lim. to Extension Agent Hal Kneen.
ited in range to the immediate Ohio
The trees are native to China and River valley in the Huntington,
are characterized by their upright W.Va.• area and Pomeroy froJ1! the
panacles of fragrant, lavender blue Pomeroy-Mason Bridge to Rickflowers and large, oval-shaped man's Market.
"You won't see them much away
from the river valleys," Kneen said.
And, since the trees have a long tap
root, you won't be able to buy one.
(USPS llJ-!NO)
But the person who has the right
Community Newtplper HoldJPI'f Inc.
location - along the river - can
Published every afternoon, Monday through
grow them by just breaking off a
Fndly, 111 Court St , Pomeroy, Oh1o, by the
branch and sticking it in the ground
Ohio Valley Publishing Company Second dass
du(ing the month of March .
pa!ltlge paid at Pomeroy, Ot11o
Member: Tho Assoc:111ed Press and the Oh10
Kneen said he does not know
Newapaper As.soc&amp;ltlon
why
the trees have only gained
POitmuter: Sertd address correcUoM to The
Dill)' Senhncl, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
attention
this year. "They nower
45769
•
every
year,
but nobody seems to
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By Carrier or Motor Route
have noticed them until this year,"
One Week ......................... J2 00
he said.
One Month........ ........ ......... $8 70

Robert "Bob" Nelson Gilmore, 69, longtime member of Middleport Village Council, died on Sunday, May 9, 1999, at Pleasant Valley Hospital,
Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Mr. G1lmore served on Council for 14 years w1th one term bei ng as president of Council.
Born on Oct. 10, 1929 10 Columbus, he was the son of the late Leo and
Nelhe Butcher Gilmore. He was a retired truck dnver for Ryder Truck Lmes
of Cincinnati and owner of Middleport Trophies and Tees. He was a member of the Middleport Nazarene Church, a United Stales Army veteran of the
Korean Conflict and a hfe member of Feeney-Bennett Post 128.
He is survived by his wife, Emogene "Jean" Manley Gilmore, whom he
married on June 18, 1950; three daughters, Sandy (Remley) Walls, Gahanna; Gail (Dave) Ferry, Anmston, Ala., and Lisa Gilmore, Middleport; a son,
Bill (Katie) G1lmore of Middleport; seven grandchildren; a brother; Leo
(Virginia) Gilmore, Phoenix, Ariz.; a sister, Carol (Bob) Alley, Elsmere, Ky.;
sisters-in-law, Luc11le King and Ruth Smith, Middleport, and a brother·mJaw, Odell (Betty) Manley, Middleport.
He was preceded in death by h1s parents and a brother, Max Gilmore.
Funeral services w11J be held at 1 p.m. on Wednesday at the Middleport
Nazarene Church. The Rev. Robert Stewart and the Rev. Odell Manley will
be officiating. Burial will follow in Grav-'1 Hill Cemetery, Cheshire.
Friends may call today from 5 to 9 p.m. at the Fisher Funeral Home at
Middleport, and one hour prior to the services at the church. Military rites
will be conducted by Feeney-Bennett Post 128.

Dennis Manuel
Dennis H. Manuel, 69, of Broadway St., Racine, died on Monday, May
10, 1999 at the Arbors of Gallipolis.
He was born on September 22, 1929 in Letart Falls, son of the late Harry
and Maggie Hawthorne Manuel. He was retir~d from the U.S. Corps of
Engineers as an operator at the Racine Locks and Dam in Letart Falls. He
was a veteran of the U.S. Marine Corps, a member of the Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American Legion, Middleport, and was a member of the Freedom
Gospel Mission.
Surviving are h1s w1fe, Gertrude Rowe Manuel, whom he married at
Letart Falls on October 27, 1961; a son, Troy Manuel, Racine, and a daugh·
ter, Denise Coffman, Racine; two grandsons and a granddaughter; a sister,
Coralee Cummins, Racine; and several nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by two brothers, Hershel

Obituaries·-,

.-·
-o:.:;.._
·.·

·/

The Daily Sentinel

One Ye,r................................. St&lt;W.OO

Dennis H. Manuel, 69, of Broadway St., Racine, d1ed on Monday, May
10, 1999 at the Arbors of Gallipolis.
He was born on September 22, 1929 in Letart Falls, son of the late
Harry and Maggie Hawthorne Manuel. He was rei! red from the l! .S.
Corps of Engineers as an operator at the Racme Locks and Dam in Letart
Falls. He was a veteran of the U.S. Marine Corps, a member of the
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, Amencan Legion, Middleport, and was a member of the Freedom Gospel M1ssion .
Surviving are his wife, Gertrude Rowe Manuel, whom he mamed al
Letart Falls on Oclober 27, 1961; a son, Troy Manuel, Racme, and a:
daughter, Demse Coffman, Racme; two grandsons, Andrew and Anthony
Coffman, und a granddaughter, Em!ly Manuel; a s1ster, Coralee Cummins,
'
Racine; and several nieces and nephews.
Bes1des h1s parents, he was preceded 1n death by two brothers, Hershel
and Vic Manuel, and two sisters, Pauline Monette and GaJI Hauptin.
Funeral services w1ll be held at 2 p.m. on Wednesday, May 12, 1999,
at Cremeens Funeral Home in Racme with Rev. Roger Wilford off1c1al·1
in g.
Military graves1de services w1ll be conducted at Letart Falls Cemetery
by Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion. Burial will follow
There will be no visitation.

....,_,IL SUBSCRlP110N
ln•ldc Mcfp County
13 Wccb.. .. ..... ....... .... $27.30
26 Wccb ... ... .... ....... .... .$53 82
32 Wccb .......................... $10S S6
Rlln Ouukle Melp County
u Wccu ....................... ...
26 Wccb ..........................$!56.68
32 Wccu ....................... $109 72

m25

Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our m•ln c:oncen I• all stories b to be
•tc:unle. If you knew •f •• error I• •
olory, coli tbe "'"'""""' ol (740) 9922153. We wiA chock your tnro..alloll
•nd m•ke • &lt;»n·tdlon II wai11Uitecl.

Man dies after gas grill fire

New• Departments

Other Sarvlcaa
Ad..rttsln~~o ................................ ExL 1104
Ctrcutodon ................................ ExL 1103
Cloosolfted Ada .......................... ExL UOO

Robert "Bob" Nelson Gilmore, 69, of Middleport, died on Sunday,
May 9, 1999 at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Poml Pleasant, West Vir·
gima.
Born on October 10, 1929 in Columbus, he was the son of the late
Leo and Nellie Butcher Gilmore. He was a rehred truck driver for Ryder
Truck Lines of Cincinnati, and owner of M1ddleporl Trophies and Tees .
He was a member of the Middleport Nazarene Church.
Mr. Gilmore was a United States Army veteran of the Korean Conflict, and a hfe member of Feeney-Bennett Post 128.
He served on Middleport Village Council for 14 years, and also
served a term as President of Council.
He is survived by his wife, Emogene "Jean" Manley G1lmore, whom
he married on June 18, 1950; three daughters, Sandy (Remley) Walls of
Gahanna, Gail (Dave) Ferry of Anniston, Alabama, and L1sa Gilmore of
Middleport; a son, Bill (Katie) Gilmore of Middleport; seyen srandchildren; a brother, Lea (Virginia) Gilmore of Phoenix, Arizona; a sister,
Carol (Bob) Alley of Elsmere, Kentucky; a spec1al aunt, Olive Satter·
f1eld of Middleport; several n1eces and nephews; SISters-in-law, Lucille
King and Ruth Smith of Middleport; and a brother-in-law, Odell (Betty)
·Manley of Middleport.
He was preceded 1n death by his parents and a brother, Max G1lmore.
Services will be held at 1 p.m on Wednesday, May 12, 1999 at the
Middleport Nazarene Church. The Rev. Robert Stewart and The Rev.
Odell Manley will be officiating. Bunal will follow 1n the Gravel Hill
Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends may call on Tuesday, May 11, 1999 from 5
to 9 p.m. at the F1sher Funeral Home in Middleport, and one hour prior
to the services at the church. Military services will be conducted by
Feeney-Bennett Post 128.

Dennis Manuel

SINGLE COP\' PRICE
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Subtaiben not desinng to pay the anler 11\11)'
remit in advant'O darect to The Daily Senunel on
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Robert 'Bob' Nelson Gilmore

1

•

SPRINGFIELD (AP) - A man
was killed when a fire broke out as
he was using a gas grill on an apart·
ment balcony, a police spokesman
said.
James McGuff, 81, of Springfield, was pronounced dead Monday
at· the apartment by a coroner's

off1ce physician, said Police Sgt.
James Hutchins.
The fire broke out about 1:30
p.m. on the second-Jloor balcony,
Hutchms said. A woman saw a ball
of name and heard a scream,,
Hutch10s said, The fire is under
investigation.

MONTH - The Meigs
aloners are pictured signing a proclamation dec:Jarlng May as
Community Action Month. Jeffrey Thornton, Janet Howard and
Mlck Davenport are pictured with Trlsh McCollough, executive
director of the Gallla Meigs CAA, and Clerk Gloria Kloes.

Meigs EMS makes five runs
Units of Meigs Emergency Ser·
v1ces answered five calls for ass1s·
tance on Monday
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:55 a.m., Kingsbury Rd ,. with
Pomeroy unit, Winnie While, Holzer
Medical Center;
1:05 p.m., Riebel Rd., Rachel
ArJX, Pleasant Valley Hospital;

7.21 p.m., Broadway, Middleport,
Charles Young, Veterans Memonal.
RACINE
6:59 p.m., Pearl St., Sherrie
Reedy, treated.
POMEROY
I 57 a.m., Condor St., Lurinda
Hudson, Veterans Memorial Hosp1·
tal

Lawsuit challenges phone fee
DETROIT (AP) - Ameritech
customers paying at least $3.79 each
month for the company's "LIReBacker" repalf serv1ce don't have to
and may be entitled to a share of a
$226 milhon settlement of a classaciJon lawsuit that accused the ser·
v1ce amounts to deceptive b1lling.
Consumers in five states claim
Amentech never told them that they
d1dn 'I have to purchase the repair

Stocks
Am Ele Power ....................... 41 '1.
Akzo ...................................... 45'/o
AmrTech ............................... 64~.
Aeh 011 .................................. 43"1.
AT&amp;T ..................................... 58'•
Bank One .............................. 59'/o
Bob Evans ............:............... 18'1.
Borg-Warner ........................59''•
Broughton ............................. 15'1o
Champion ............................... 8),
Charm Shpa ...............:..........3•,.
City Holding ............................ 27
Federal Mogul ....................... 46~.
Gannett ................................. 70'.1
Kmart ..................................... 18'•
Kroger ........... ,......................... 52

Lands End ...........................37"1•
Ltd ......................................... 47z
Oak Hill Flnl ............................ 18
OVB •••••..••••••••.•••••••••••.•••.••••.•.•. 35

One Valley ............................. 37'1.
Peoples .................................. 27
Pram Flnl ............................... 18'io
Rockwell ............................... &amp;ol.
AD/Shell ............................... 60'1.
Sears .................................... 53 h.
Shoney's ............................. ... 2'1•
FlrstStar ............................... .29'/,
Wendy's ............................... 26~•
Worthington ..........................
14'.1
...

. serv tce - also known as 1'nstde w1re
maintenance or prem1ses wtre main~

tenance. ln I 997, Ameritcch agreed
to a settlement. lhough that 's on hold
m an lllin01s appeals court.
Because the ilt1gation is lakmg
place outs1de M1ch1gan, most
Detro1t-area restdcnts are n't even

aware of it. The only offic1al not1ce:
a phone bJil 1nsen more than a year
ago and full -page ads 10 two January
1998 ed1110ns of USA Today
The Amentech se rvice covers
repa1rs tu w!fes and phone Jacks
ms.de a home or small bus1ness
Consumers who don't buy into the
plan can pay fe es of up to $100 an
hour 1f repairs are rcqulfcd
" '! got 1t because I wanted the

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial.
Monday adm1ss1ons - Lunnda
Hudson, Pomeroy
Monday d1scharges - none.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges May 10 - Conme
Dunbar, John me Oldaker.
(Published with permission)

__._

Stock reports are today's
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�•
Tuelday, May 11, 1089

Kings, Heat, Blazers, Hawks post wins

•'

I

...:...ln~d::_ia_n_s_n_o-tc_h_6--4-.....:======~-.s~·o-:;ft:-:-b-a-;;11-;:E:-a~g~le~s~~::~:

victory over Orioles
by catcher Sandy Alomar for the
By TOM WITHERS
' CLEVELAND (AP) - Roberto final out in the top of the seventh.
" I' m not defending Albert,"
Alomar's first game against hi s forIndians
manager Mike Hargrove
mer team couldn't have gone better
said.
"But
that's a tOugh play ·for a
for the All-Star second baseman.
baserunner.
If that had been one of
Alomar drove home .the go-ahead
my
players.
I wouldn't have been
run with a sacrifice fly in the seventh
inni ng· Monday ni-ght, leading the upset. I would have been unhappy
Cleveland Indians to a 6-4 win-over· .with the outcome, not the effort. But
he's not my player."
the Baltimore Orioles .
David Justice, Richie Sexson and
Alomar left Baltimore last
November following three some- Wil Cordero homered, and Dave
times turbulent s~asons with the Burba (3- 1) pitched seve n solid
Orioles, iacluding the infamous spit- innings for the Indians .
Jeff Conine went 3-for-4 with a
ting incident with umpire John
Hirschbeck in 1996 and last season homer· for the Orioles, who lost for
when he argued with manager Ray JUSt the second time in eight games.
Belle, still a villain in Cleveland,
Miller and distanced himself from
was
making his first appearance at
his teammates ..
However, there didn 't appear to Jacobs Field since leaving the
he any lingering animosity during Chi~ago White· Sox to sign with the
l' rcgame balling practice as Alomar Orioles . He was greeted with the
wal'ii!ly greeted many Orioles, usual taunts of "Jo-ey, Jo-ey," the
middle name he used early in his
exchanging hugs and high-fives.
career
and detests.
And afterward. Alomar didn ' t
With
the score 4-all, Belle walked
gloat about beating his fanner team .
for
the
third
time with one out in the
"It 's .really hard when you play
seventh
and
, after a popout, he
against people you know," he said.
too
far
off first with Coni ne
strolled
" But thi s is a business. You still have
at
the
plate.
Sandy
Alomar blocked
to go out and do your job . They arc
Burba's
pitch
in
the
din and nailed
still my friends."
Belle
with
a,snap
throw
to first .
Alomar's sacrifice fly off Juan
"Sandy
did
a
hell
of
a
job on that
Guzman (1 -4) came shortly after
play,"
Miller
said
.
.
"
It
looked
like the
Albert Belle, representing the potenball
got
away,
but
he
got
ll'
.
It was
tial go-ahead run, got_picked off fi rst
more 'o'f a good play by Sandy than a
bad play hy us."
Morgan, Dolich ·
The play fi red up the crowd and
see
med to energ ize 1he Indians, who
get OK to lead
got a leadoff chec k-swin g double
buyers' group for A's from Kenny Lofton in the bottom
half. Omar Vizquel tnoved Lofton
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - A over with a groundout to first, and
group headed by Hall of Farner Joe Roberto Alomar sliced his sacrifice
Morgan and former Oakland fly into the left-field corner.
Aihletics exc;c uti ve Andy Dolich
"The guys did their jobs and it
received a recofnmendati on from paid off," Hargrove said.
city and county leaders in their bid to
Cordero hit· his fourth homer on
buy the team. The 3-1 vote rejected the lirst Jlitch from reliever Jesse
commi ss ioner Bud Selig's suggesOrosco to open the eighth,
tion that bids from two groups be
· Burba settled down from som.e
forwarded to major league owners.

they played real, hone1t defense," the Atlanta Hawks, who downed the
Utah coach Jerry Sloan said. Detroit Pistons 89-69, and the
NBA playoffs
":rhey're standing up o~er us, and Ponland Trail Blazers, 101-90 win•
when they knocked us down tbey felt ners over the Sacramento Kings.
. It didn 'I take long for the good about it."
Tonight, Game ls will resume
Sacramento Kings 10 make an
Webber didn't limit his impact to . when Philadelphia travels to
impression on the Utah Jazz. Nine the opening moment. He scored 20 Orlando, Minnesota plays at San
seconds, actually.
points and hit consecutive hook shots Antonio, Milwaukee is at 111diana
, Running the give-and-go, a play over Karl Malone in the closing min- and Houston is at the Los Angeles
that has built the Jazz '· into an NBA utes of the Kings' first playoff victo- Lakers. All the home teams, except
powerhouse, Utah 's John Stockton ry.
Orlando, won the opener.
made his usual cut to the basket and
"I wanted the ball late in the
Heat 83, Knkkl 73
ran smack into Chris Webber.
game because my teammates are
In Miami , Alonzo Mourning
. The flagrant foul knocked the · counting on me there," Webber said. scored 26 points and the Heat shot 5I
wind out of Stockton, but it seemed "Those are my shots, and I have to percent to level .their series with New
to breathe new life into the Kings.
hit them or we don '1 win."
York. The , Heat hit a season-low 35
"You have to set a tone. You . Vlade Divac and Jason Williams perceni in .a 20-point loss to New
never want the other team 10 think each scored 18 points for the Kings, York in Game I.
·
they can just run you over," Webber who took the lead late in the 'third
Dan Majerle made two threesaid. "I told John, 'I tried 10 get you, quarter and held off the veteran- pointers, his first baskets of the
but not that hard.' We bad 10 let them laden Jazz down the stretch.
series. to thwan New York's comeknow we 1\'ere going lObe here."
Malone · had 33 points and 10 back hopes in the fourth quarter.
The Kings did just that, defeating rebounds, but his teammates were
Patrick Ewing led the Knicks with
Utah 101 -90 Monday night to le vel just 20-for-56 from the field.
16 points and 15 rebounds, but was
their Western Conference first round
The win was the Webber 's first in hampered by foul trouble. Latrell
series at 1-1. The victory followed "' playoff game. He has been to the Sprewell had IS points and Allan·
the worst playoff loss in the Kings' postseason three times with three dif- Houston 12 as New York shot 39 per51-year history.
ferent teams; but was 0-7 before cent.
Webber 's shoulder takedown of beating the Jazz. .
.
Game 3 is ·Wednesday night in
The
Miami
Heat
also
feveled
their
New
York.
Stockton was the key.
....... .
series 1-1, beating the New York
Trail Blazers 110, Suns 99
· ,..elr players were. excited when Knicks 83-73: Taking 2-0 leads were
Brian Grant scored 22 points,

whip Belpre 9-3, win
Division Ill sectional
'

'

The Eastern Eagles scored early Belpre bows out of further play.
More details of Monday's game
and often as they rolled to a huge 9and
infonnation on the first round of
3 victory in the Division Ill sectional
1
championship softball game at the district ' game will be in
Belpre High School Monday night Wednesday 's 'edition of The Daily
The Eagles are '\{lW 14-.8 overall and Sentinel.
will play in the district tournament
either at Minford or Rio Grande (to
be announced later),
Eastern hitters were Juli Hayman
who had a single, two RBI and a
walk; Becky Davis a·single, Valerie
Karr had a single and two safe runs
to first on errors, Suzy Milhoan had
There will be a mixed three on
two walks and an RBI single; and three tournament thi s · weekend,
Stephanje Evans a-single, and a drag beginning Saturday May 15 at 9 a.m.'
bunt that brought home tw9 runs.
at Southern high school for ages nm~
The win avenged an earlier loss to through adult ·
, Belpre at Belpre early in the season
The event . is sponsored by the
as Eastern hit pitcher Arnie A~ams Southern gi rls' varstty basketball
· GETS DOUBLE PLAY - After retiring the , Baltimore Orioles' hard right from the start. Eastern's team. The tournament is for both·
1
Albert Belle (right), Cleveland shortstop Omar Vlzquel watches hla key hits and hard ~~t balls that result- boys and girl s, men and women.
The entry fee per team is $20. .
throw to llrst that retires Harold Baines for the thlrd·lnnlng double ed in five Belpre errors set the tempo
the
game.
Start times are ages 9-10 at 9 a.m.•
of
play In Monday night's American League game In Cleveland, where
• The Eagles too\ a 1-0 lead early 11 -12 at 10 a.m.; 13-14 at II a.m.;
the Indians won 6-4. (AP)
inthegame,thencameoutwlththree · 15- ,16 at 12 noon ; 17-18 at I p.m.;
early wtldness and allowed four runs,
. Jus_uce hu h1s s 1xt~ homer, and
in the second. Meanwhile, Eastern and 19 and over a 2 p.m.
six hits and six walks. Steve Karsay th1rd m three games, 1n the second pitcher Stephanie ~vans was hurling . T-shirts will be awarded to the
pitched the eighth and Mike Jackson off Guz111an to lie it at 2. Cordero sin- one of her best games of the year, ' tournament ·champs and the second
got three outs for hi s ninth save. He gled wtth one out and Justtce _fol; picking up speed as the night went place teams. For more infonnation
got B.l . Surhoff to line to center for )owed wtth a shot mto the Ind1ans on.
please call 992-5270 or 740-949the final out w1th a runner at second bullpen in center.
Evans had the Golden Eagles off · 7009 or contact coach Alan Crisp at
and Belle on deck.
Guzman allowed five runs and
stride most of ,the night in walking Portland Elementary School.
" I was very proud of the way · seven hits in seven innings. ,
Dave battled on a night when he did"For me personally, 11 was a good two and striking out five . Belpre
· n' t' have his best stuff;'' Hargrove game," Guzman said-. "I felt good, scored three runs in 'the last inning Nfke signs Holdsclaw
said.
kept my team in the game, but·got a after Evans was hit with a ·hard line to five-year contract
drive. She recovered, however, to
Burba who walked four in the co'uple of bad breaks."
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) _ Nike
first thre~ innings, wo1ked through
Notes: Conine is' batting .467 (14- get the final outs with the bases
some early mechanical problems for-30) in hi s last eight games after a loa~~~lern made some great defen - signed the Washington Mystics:
with the help of Indians ·pit;:hing 1-for- 19 stretch .... V1Z&lt;juel ~~back sive plays in the· fleli), especially in Charnique Holdsclaw to a five-year
coach Phil Regan.
m the lineup after m1ssmg SIX games the last inning with tfie bases loaded contract that could be the most ever
" I was lucky in the first three with a thigh injury .... Cal Ripken , on and the game was on the line. paid for a woman athlete.
'
innings that i o~ly .gave up one run the disabled list for the first _t1me m . Belpre had three hits in the last
Holdscfaw, who led the Tennessee
and gave us a chance to come back," his career, began a rehabli1tat1ve stint round, but they were loopers just Volunteers to three national'champi:
he said. "Fonunateiy, I threw a ball at ·the team 's minor-league camp i,n over thc'EHS infield·:
onships in four years, might be the
in the ·din that Sandy dug out and Sarasota, Fla., on Monday and ts
· Evans picked up the win and · top endorsement prospect in this
threw Albert out at first. That's the expected to rejoi n the Orioles by the Adams suffered the loss as Eastern year 's crop of incoming college
story of the ballgame, some lucky end of the week.
·
·
claimed the sectional championship. players, man or woman.

SHS to host
three-on-three
cagefest

•

By R.B. FALLSTROM
half of his postseason output; before
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Once Pavol Monday, he was a team-worst minusI&gt;emitra -became accustomed to the 4;
·
playoff grind , his game took off
In Game 3, he was plus-2 and also
asain.
scored his first points. in a Blues'
• Demitra, the St. Louis Blues' playoff.victory.
·
. leading scorer in the regular season,
"He's worked harder in determicontinued a postseason surge when nation to come up with loose. pucks
he beat Ed Bel four in overtime for a and taRing it to the net more," coach
3-2 'victory over the Dallas Stars on Joel Quenneville said. "And he,'s
Monday night.
getting in place in the high-traffic
_ "I scored almost 90 points and all areas.''
of a sudden, I' m struggling,"
Demitra got to just such an area.
Demitra said. "But I'm back."
outside the crease at the riglit side of
. So are the Blues, who cut their the net, wben he scored the winner at
series deficit against the NHL regu- · 2:43 of ovenime off a feed from
tar-season champions to 2-1 heading Geoff Counnall.
into Game 4 Wednesday night in St.
"Every time I'm on the ice with
Louis.
him, I feel I can score,"' Demitra ·
. "!can't wait," Demitrasaid. "I'm said. "He fed me last year all the
s9 excited, I wish we can play right time."
away. I'mjustsopumpedup.''
The Blues' third goal also was a
The other Western Conference Demitra production. After avoiding a·
. series conti.nues tonight with Detroit check from Richard Matvichuk,
p)aying host Colorado' and holding .a Demitra slipped the puck to rookie
:Z:-0 lead. In ,the East, Toronto visits Jochen Hecht, who slid in a backltanPittsburgh tonight, and Boston is at der for a 2-1 lead at4:5Z of the third.
Buffalo on Wednesday night. Both of
Hecht and Mike Eastwood, who
those series are tied 1-1.
also scored for the Biues, were
Demitra, who was lOth in the unlikely offensive sources. ·Hecht
NHL with 89 points, has three goals had a team-leading 56 points with the
and an assist in the last two games Worcester Icecats of the AHL, but
since making the adjustment to the was~ ' t summoned until Saturday
. tighter checking and close quarte~ of after they were eliminated from the
playoff competition. That represents playoffs. Eastwood, a faceoff spe-

Scoreboard
Baseball

Wednesday's games
Philade lphia &lt;Schilling S-1) at SL Loui 5 (Oii \·cr
2-1). 1:40 p.m.
New York {Reed 2-1) aT Colorado (Thomson 0-

AL standings

4). -':0~ p.m,

Easttrn Di\'ision

ll' L I'J:l.
' ..... 20 10 .667
.. 17- 14 H8
.. 17 16 .m
.. 16 17 .485
.12 19 .387

1iam

New VorL .....

B.oston
Talnpa Day
Toronto
Baltimore .
CLEVELAND
Chi r· ~ ga _ ..
K.an ~ "~ Cay

Central Di,·islon
.22 9

.16 14
ll
ll 17
II 21

... IS

Deuoit .
Minrx: sot~

W~sh~rn
Te~~;as

-O••kland
Se111tle .
An"he1m

.

7t0
.533
.500

Di""ion
17 1\
16 17
14 18
. I :'I 19

.469

.344

Atlan ta {Mil lwj)Od 2-2) a1 San Fralidsco {Broc k
liB.
~ -2 ) , 4:05p.m.
l '\
Milwaukee (Karl 3-1) '" CINCINNATI
(Harnisch 2-3), 1:0S p.m.
41'1
Piusburgh (Schmidt 4-1) at Houston (U ma .'i- 1).
s·~
8', . 8:05p.m.
.·
. Momrcal (Batista 2-1) at Ariz ona (Ston le:myre 41). 10.05 p.m.
·
'
Chicago (Taprmi 2-1 ) at Los Ang~les fDrcifon 45',:
2). 10·.,.'\ pm
·
. Flori till tS pri ng~r 1-4) al San !Jicgo !Clement 0"
6':
7' :
)). 10:35 pIll
11 '·

Tonight's games

Philadelphia at Orlando. 7 p.m.
Minne!ota at San Antonio, 8 p.m.
Mi lwaukee at Indiana. 9:30 p.m.
Houston nt L.A. Lakeu, 10:30 p.m
Atlanta at tktroit. 7 p.m
M1ami at New Y01k. 8 p.m

Transactions

'
NHL conference
semifinals
Tonight's games

Portland at Phoenix, 9:30p.m.
lJ inh at Sacrament o, 10:30 p.m.

_

BOSTON RED SOX : Atltvated RHP Tom
Gordon rrom the 15-day diubled lisT.
Nalionll Ltque .
HOUSTON ASTROS: Placed ltHP pitcher Doug
Henry on the I 5-dlly disabled list. P.llfchased the contract of RHP Jeff McCurr y from ~w Orleans of the
PCL.
ST. LOl!IS CARDINALS: ~lied RHP _Ciim
Sodowsky from l'o1emphi s of the PCL. OpnoRed

St.-louis 3, DaiiM 2-0T, Dallas leads serie:s 2-1

·

Football

!laseball
·Amtriun LUP,J.e

Monday's score

Wednesday's games ·

RHP ~ikt Husby to Memphis.

Dallas at S1. Louis, 7:30p.m. f

Hockey

Toron1o at Pittsburgh, 7:30 p.m.
Colorado ru Detroit. 7:30p.m.

Wednesday's games
Bostoil at Buffalo, 7:30p.m.

Na1lon1l Fooeball Lu1ue
CINCINNATI BENGALSo Sign«&lt; CD C"'&lt;''
Sawyer loa three· year contract
.
MINNESOTA VIKINGS : Signed FB Jo h"
Henry Mills.
NEW YORK GIANTS: Signed LB Jeuic:
Annstead to a seven-year co ritract.

Hockey

.,

.438
-106

'

"

-.,

COLUMBUS. Oh10 (A PJ - •How a state panel·

1':

National League
roundup

,,
'

By BEN WALKER '
AP Baseball Writer
Ken Griffey Jr.; Jeff Bagwell and
Jo:;e .Canseco, sure. Matt Williams,
Raul Mondesi and Manny Ramirez,
absolutely.
But Jay Bell is the big league
home run leader?
Bell .became No. I in the majors
Monday night, hitting his 12th of the
season to lead off the bottom of the
ninth inning, giving the Arizona
Diamondbacks a 7-6 win over the
Montreal Expos.
"I certainly don 't expect to keep
this pace up ," Bell said. "But it's a
lot of fun."
Bell has homered in three straight
games and four of five. Not bad for
someone whose career-high is 2 I, set
in I997 with Kansas City.
Bell _connected against Bobby
Ayala (0-3) to win it at Bank One
Ballpark.
"I was just trying to hit in the gap
and at least get a base hit,'' Bell said.
" Fortunately, I was able to pull it"
S'teve Finley hit a grand slam and
Luis Gonzalez extended his hitting

of conches-rates Ohio high sChool baseball teains in

·''

the. founh regular-season poll for The AsiOCinted
1'.-c~~ . lhy Ohto H1 gh School ~lhlet ic Associ all on
diVISions wuh lint-place votes tn par&lt;mtheses)·

"Monday's sco'res
BosTon 12. Seaule 4
CLEVELAND 6. B~ltimqre 4
Chtcago 5, Tuas 2
Kan stJ.s ~ it y 8, M1nnesma 4

',

Ojvision I

Ium

1 - Ht~mllt on ! 10)

ftL

277
2-Defiance (8 ) 19-0...
. 158
Tonight's games
·' ·Toledu Stan nO) 15-0.
... Z46
-i-Gru\·e C:'i 1y (]\ 20-2
........ 169
Scuule (tvjuycr 1--l ) ;11 Bo'it01l (Wakefield 1-JJ
'\-Man5 M&lt;~dison 1'7 -1
... 157
7 o:; v Ill .
6-Cer;rervdle 20-1
122
Minm:sow ( R;~dkc 1-2 1 ;.~t Tun'1p:r lJ uy I Ru~ 0-0 )
7-Huth t.n 16-6 .
.. ......... , .
.92
1.0.'\ p.m
8-t uy.,.hogn Fall5 121 I S- 0 .
.90
~ 8 nhimorc CPonson 2 - ~) at CLEVELAN[J 1Colnn ' 9- Vnud olia 13~Ticr J6-4 .. .
.71
-'· I). 7:05p.m.
10-Perrysbu rg! IJ2:1-l ,
.. .. . .. ~4
· Uaklflnd jROgi!rS I-2J ou Oetroil (Wet~\'el' .l -2: ).
s~cond tO: II 0 1e )-F:~irfi eld. Stow ·"}.7. 137 :05 p.m.
. Dublin Sc1oto 3.\ 14 (tie)-Tol. St. Fmnds. Cin. St.
Anaheim (Sparks 1-J I ~1 New York (Pcnine 1- 1J. Xav ier 26. 16-Mt . Vernon 20. 17 (li~ )- Dubli n
) :35 p.m.
Coffman. Cin. Moeller 12. 19 (tie )-O n. Elder. N.
Teus (Sele "!--3) m Ch1cago (Baldwin 2-31. ~ 0.'\ CanTon HOO\'t r I I

: ·mi-oronto (EScobar 2- 1) at Kansas Ci1y' (Piusk y 1J). 8:05 f).m .

1 1-:1

Division II
Ium

1-Hamih on Ro55 (19) 18-1
2-Avon Lal e {5) 15-0

ftL

.319
..... 233
Minnesota (Millon ().J) at Tampa Bay IATTOJO 1- -~ -lipp City Tippecanoe {2) 20-2 .
..... 194
'J), 1 2J~ p.m.
, 4-Pcrry (I) \9-2 .......
.. ... .188
Baltimore '(Mu u ina 5-I) at CLEVELAND
~-Lewistown lndia(1 Lalct: (4) 20-1
. 152
(Qoodt:n 1-0), 7:05p.m.
6- H e:~ lcy 16-L
. ,.... 125
Oakland (Heredia 1-2) at Detroit {Th ompson 4- 7-Sandusky Perkins (I) 17-l .
.. ........... 109
-~ J. 7:OS p.m.
.
8- IJovcr 17-3 . .. .. .. .........
.. .... 19
· Sea11le (Suzuki 0-1) at Boston (P. Martinet 6-1 1. 9-Cnrrollton {I ) 19· 3 ...................................... 73
7 :35p.m.
10-Norwood 14 -.~ _. ... .........., ...... , ....................... 57
; : Anaheim (Finley 1-3) at..,New York (Cone 4-0) ,
Second 10: 11 -Brynn 40. 12-Col. DcSalcs 39.
,7,35 p.m.
.
U -Canton Cent Cnt h. 38. 14-LANC. FAIRflELO
, Texas (Clark 2-3) at Chicago (Parque 4-l). 8:05 UNION ]7 . 15 (tie)-Bellefontaine. Cuya. Fall$ Walsh
Je5ui 1 34. J7,Cin. t-.1 cNicholas II 1 32. ISp.mToronto (Carpenter 3-2) at Kansas City {Appier J- Bellefontaine Benjami.n logan 2-'. 19-Kings Mills
}i,8,0Sp.m.
·
Kings 24. 20-Canton Soulb '22.
·

Wednesday's games

·These may look like golf scores-they're·not. They are
'

'

]IJ L standings

Di•ision III

EUt~m Division

,

~

,

I-WHEELERS BURG (16) 19-4 ............. .. ........ 237

.\Y I. f&lt;l.

j\tlanla ...... , .......................... 20
~w YOJk , ........................... 18
Philadelphia ........................ .17
Montreai ............................... IO
florida ..................... ............... 8

II
14
14
20
24

645
.563
.54M

.3J3
.250

Cenlral DMsiOn
Hous10n ............ ................ .:.19 12 .611
St. Louis .............................. .J? 14 .548
)tinsburgh ....... :........... ,......... 16 15 .516
Chh:aao ................................ 14 15 :483
Mllw'aukee ... ,..... .... ,............. 14 16 .467
I=JNCINNATL. ............ .,1 J 16 .448
Western Division
san Franmco ......... ._. ... :...... 20 · 13
Los Angelu . ·........................ 18 14

Arizona ................................. l8
Colorado ........................... 12
~an Dle&amp;o ......... ............... .... 13

2-G n ad . ln~ tan Val. 15·5_. ......... ......... _. ............. 197
3-Gcnoa (2) 1 5-~ ....... .... ... ..
.................... ... 168
4-JO;h n~town-M o nroc: (4) 20-6 .
............ ,...... ISO

liB.

2'·,
]

9'·,
12'-.

2
]

4

4~,

5

5- Bioomda le Elmwood &lt;I ) 14-3 ............... ..... -- - 137
6- WELLSTON (3) 22-4 ................................ .,. 124
?- Plain City JonathiUI Alder m I 3-5 ................. 124
8-Anica Seneca Easl 13-1 ................................. 100
9-Apple Cttek Waynedale {I) 12-2 ... , ...... ... :....... 82
10-M&amp;rion River Val. (2) 18-_1 ............................. 78
Second 10: 11 -Granville 74. 12-Cin. Madt:do
(!) 33. I 3-Heatb (I 120. 14-Spring. Kentqn Ridfe 17.
IS {tie)-Ctlillicothe Uniolo, Ly'ncbburg-Ciay ( ) 15.
17-Cie. VA-St Joesph 14. 18 .(tie}. IRONTON , .
. Doylestown Chippewa I I. 20-Spnrto Hi&amp;hland 10.

.606
.563
.545

sites on the Robert Trent Jones Golf Tralb If it's really
cold outside right now, you pro~bly are,'t on.the Trail.

.'

'

An6-whlle .we can't guarantee the weather..;_

,,

we can promise you a great .t ime • .

..

5',
6

Monday's scoreS
Houilon 6, Piu~burgh 0
St. L.ooi' ~ - Phi lade lph ia 2
Colorado I 0. New York ]
San FrMcisco ~ - Atlanta I
.Ar_izono7 , Montreal 6
Snn Diego 7. Florida 5
Los Angck:s 4. Chicago J

.

Milwaukee (Eldred 1-1) at CIN CINNATI {Avery
7:0' p.m.
·
Pi111burgh (Ritchie 2· 1} at Houiton (lkrgmtm II). 8:()j p.m.
Philadelphia (Byrd ·' ·2) ot $t. LA:Juis (Osborn~ 1.'1 . 8:10 p.m.
.
. New Vork (Jones J-OJ nt Colorado (Jone:~ O.J ).
9:05 p.m.
MonlreaiiTiwrmnn 0- 21 Dt Arizonn IRcynosp 1() . 10:05 p.m.
Aorida (Dempster 0-01 ill San D1cgo ISpencer 0ol) . 10:05 p.m.
·
Atlanta (Perrz 1- 11 at San Francisco !Estes 2-2 ).
10:05 p.m.
. Olkaao (Formworlh 1-01 a1 Los Angeles (Peru

1-Toronto (20) 20-3 ... ...... .....
. ..... 271
2-n pp City Bethel (6) 20-3 ....... ... ,........ ,.... .... ~J9
3-St. Henry (2) 19-2 ............................ ... ..... 216
&gt;I-FRANKLIN FURNACE GREEN 16-2 ...... 177
5-Columbit!lll (I) 16-2 ...
.. ISS
6-Cridem ille Perry 10-1 . .
. .....90
7-Minlttr 18-4.. ........ ... .
.. .. 86
8-Arcanu m IS-3 ........ .
.......... 82
9.W. Libeny Salem 12-2... ....
.. ............. 79
ID-WILLOW WOOD SYMMES VAL. t6-J ,. .... 71
· Second 10: It -Fostoria St. We.ndt:lin (I l 26. 12Mowrys lown ,Whlteool. 2J . IJ-Lt:ip!ic (I) 2 1. 14. Moa:adore. 20. IS·Southin gton Chalker 19. 16·
Bellaire St. John I!II. 17-f:airport Harding 14 ..18 (tie ), Edoo. Ft. Lorami~. Fayetteville-Perry l l ,

1-n

'

'

I.

tiL

Iwn

1'·,
2

MAC to announce
new commissioner

dally temperatures In the Spring at som~:,of the eight

Di&gt;ision IV

IS
16 ' 429
18 419

Tonighi's games

'ftL

Iwa

·,

Basketball
NBA first-round playoffs
Monday's scores
Miami 83, New York 73: ~ems tied J. l
AtlruHa 89. Deuoil 69: Atlamn le:adt. serie! l-0 ,
Socramemo I0 I. Umh 90: series tied 1- I
Penland I !0. Phoeni~ 99: Pordand k:ads series

'·
EIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP SITU IN ALABAMA • 800-949 4444 • www.rttolf.com
IWlPTOI COVE HUNTSVIllE • SILVER LM£S AHIIISTONIGADSOEN • GXIIOIR VAU£Y BIRMINGHAM •
lllniiW. AUBURN/OPELIKA

m•o

CAPITOL Hl1 PRATTVILI.£• CAIIPIU RIDGE GREENVILL~ • HIGIWD 0US DOTHAN •IW.DLIA GROVE ~BILE .

"'

2-0

SURRQUNDED - Atlanta's Steve Smith (8) linda himself aur·,
rounded by the Detroit Pistona' Lindsey Hunter and Jerome
Williams (13) •• Grant Hill (33) watchea during Monday night's NBA.
flrat·round playoff game in Atlanta, where the Hawks' 89-fi9 victory
game-winner in overtime, in Game 2. gave them 1 2-G lead In the beat-of.five aeries. (AP}
·
The Stars may be without center
Jere Lehtinen in Game 4. Lehtinen
injured his right knee in the second
period and is listed as day-to-day.
Sydor forced the overtime with
hi s first goal of the playoffs at 9:08 of
the third. Grant Fuhr got a glove on
NEW YORK (AP) _:_ Darrell averaged career highs in j)oints
Pat' Verbeek's drive from the slot, and Armstrong, the Orla~d o Magic's (1 3..8), assists (6.7), rebounds (3.6i
Grant Marshall got his stick on the spunky point guard, easily won the and steals (2, 16) in about 30 minutes .
NBA. Sixth Man Award today as the a game thi s season. He came off the •
rebound before Sydor tapped it in.
· A four-minute high-sticking league's best 'player off the bench. . bench in 35 of the season's 50 games'
Annstrong, one of the keys to and started in the others toward the
penalty on Blues captain Chris
Pranger, who caught Hatcher in the Orlando's surprising success this end of the season as the, Magic took.
face, helped the Stars get off to a fast season, receive&lt;! 85 out of a possible the No. 3 seed in the playoffs.
Annsirong also shot .904 (161start. Hull scored his second goal of ll8votesfromapanelof spons writthe playoffs, and only Dallas' third in . ers and .hroadcasters.
.for-178) from the free-throw line, ..
33 power-play· opportunities, with a
Rasheed Wallace of the Portland ihird best in the league.
·
shot from the left circle at 3:07.
· Trail Blazers finished second with 16
Others receiving votes for the
The Blues got off only three shots vdtes, ·and Indiana's Antonio Davis Sixth Man Award included, Miami's
.in the first period, but tied it on a and Jalen Rose tied for third with Terry Porter, Milwaukee's Dell.
fluky goal at 2:58 of the second. five votes each.
..
Curry and Toronto's .Dee Brown, all
Ricard Persson flipped the puck endThe 30-year-old Armstrong, with two each; and Uta)l's Howard
over-end toward · the net and it kno'Nn for drinking sweet coffee just · Eisley (one). .
·: ;
deflected' off Eastwood's glove and before games and eating chocolate at
•.
Sergei Zubov's stick before eluding halftime, is a remarkable story of
Belfour. .
·
perseverance in pro basketball. He 's
The Blues otitshot the Stars 24-18 played in the CBA, USBL, Global
in regulation and took the only four Basketball Association and in
shots in oveninie.
Cyprus and Spain.
"We didn't shoot enough," Stars
A former place-kicker at
forward Jamie Langenbrunner said. Fayetteville State who was undrafted
" Instead of putting it on net, we by the NBA, Armstrong originally
passed.''
signed with the Magic only a few
weeks before Orlando went to the
NBA Finals in 1995.
With his limitless energy and
clutch shooting, his role with the
team increased two years ago, but he
missed more than half the 1997-98
Astros loss. .
season with a s~oulder injury. ·He
Rockies 10, Mets 3
signed a five-year, $18 million conHenry Blanco hit his first homer tract in January.
since · 1997, a three-run shot dff AI
The 6-foot-1, 180-pound guard
DARRELL ARMSTRONG
Leiter as Colorado beat New York at
Coors Field.
.
, Football
Dante Bichette homered and
EAST
RtTfHERFORD,
NJ
. (AP) -Jessie Armstead signed with a
tripled · and Todd Helton drove in
seven-year,
$33
million
contract
with the New York.Giants, making him
three runs as tbe Rockies stopped a
one
of
tbe
NFL's
highest
paid
linebackers.
Annstead. who has )cd the
three-game losing streak.
Pedro Astacio won hi s third Giants in tackles the last three years. will receive a $6 million signing
bonus, according to hi s age nt. . ·
straight start.

cialist, has seven goals in 62 career
playoff games and two points in 10
playoff games this season.
"There are a lot of unsung heroes
in the playoffs and we're getting that
right now," Blues right wing Scott
Young said. ''Tha\'s why. we've been
suc.cessful.''
The Siars, the NHL reg~~lar-Season champions with a franchiserecord I 14 points, missed a chance to
put the Blues in a huge hole. Only
two teams have recovered from a 3-0
series deficit, the last the New York
Islanders in 1975 against Pittsburgh.
Dallas' team-record six-game
playoff winning streak also carne to'
an end.
- "We're not going to go 16.0,"
defenseman Derian Hatcher said.
"You expect to lose a game here or
there.''
Brett Hull scored in his first postseason gall)e in St. Louis since Jeaving the Blues after a decade of stardoni last summer, and Darryl Sydor
added his first of the playoffs for
Dallas. A cro.wd of 19,268, the
Blues'. fu-st sellout of the playoffs,
booed when Hull' s . name was
announced.
The Blues largely siletil:ed Joe
Nieuwendyk, who had an assist and
only one shot. Nieuwendyk had two
goals and an assist. including the

Orlando's Armstrong wins .
NBA's.Sixth Man Award ·

B.e ll's 12th HR helps D-backs top E"pos

National Hockey Leapt
1
PHILADELPHIA A..YERS: Signed RW Matt
Rec::chi to • five-year contract.
:

Ohio H.S. poll
.'\3 1
-485

Rasheed Wallace had 21 and Damon
Stoudamire had 22 points and 13
assists as Ponland took a 2-0 lead
over Phoenix in their best·of-5
series .
Isaiah Rider added 17 points for.
the' host Blazers, who shot 71 percent
in the first quaner and 57 percent for
the game.
Reserves George McCloud and
Par Garrity eru;h had 15 points to lead
the Suns, ·who have lost all' five
games to the Blazers this season.
Game 3 is Wednesday night in
Phoenix.
Hawks 89, PIJtons 69
In Atlanta, Dikembe Mutombo
had a playoff-high 28 points and
grabbed 13 rebounds as the Hawks
dominated Detroit for its second
straight 20-poi nt victory.
The Pistons, held to a team playoff low of 70 points in Game I, needed only two days to break the mark.
Atlanta trailed 44-43 at halftime,
'then scored the first 17 points of the
second half.
·
Grant Hill led the Pistons with 15
points.
Game 3 is Wednesday night at the
Palace of Auburn Hills.

Demitra helps Blues top Stars 3-2 in OT

bounces.~·

1-Jl. 10:10 p.m.

The Dally Sentinel• Page&amp;: ·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

....

9

CLEVELAND (AP) - The MidAmerican Conference is planning to
announce its next choice as commis'sioner today, about a week and a half
after the previous choice turned
down the job after initially accepting
it
· The conference gave' no hint who
it has chosen, but a newspaper
reported today that Rick Chryst, an
assistant commissioner of the
Atlantic Coast Conference, will ·be
the new commission'er. 1Wo of
Chryst's colleagues at ACC offices
told the News &amp; Record of
Greensboro, N.C. thai he planned to
take the job.
Tom McElroy, the Big East's
senior associate commissioner, .was
introduced at news conference April
30 as the MAC's leader. AbOut 48
hours after formally accepting the
job, McElroy turned it down for personal reasons.
' Rob Fournier, the MAC's interim
commissioner, also is considered a
candidate.
•
' The conference is seeking , a
replacement for Jerry Ippoliti, who
retired in.February after five years as
cqmmissioner.

streak to · 23 as the Diamondbacks the Cardinals last November, he critbullt an early 5-0 lead for Randy iciz~ manager Tony La Russa in
Johnson .
spring training, making comments
But Johnson gave up a career- that had racial overtones. ·
high ,13 hits in 7 '1/3 innings, and the
Cardinals outfielder J.D. Drew,
Expos tied it at 6 in the· eighth on ~ho did n()t sign with tbe Phillies
two-out triples by Orlando Cabrera after they made him the No. 2 pick in
and James Mouton.
the 1997 drnft, sat out because of a
None of the Montreal hitters in strained fight quadriceps. He h!IS not
the lineup had ever faced the Big yet played against Philadelphia.
Unit.
Dodgers 4, Cubs 3
"I didn 't know if Randy Johnson
Raul Mondesi hit two more home
was heatable because it is the first runs off Steve Trachsel, leading Los
time .we have faced him," Montreal Angeles over Chicago at Dodger
manager Felipe Alou said. "You Stadium.
Mondesi is 12-for-34 (.353) with
can't assume yo~ have a guy figured
out just from watching him on TV." · seven homers against Trachsel, the
In .other'NL games, San Francisco pitcher he's tagged most often in his
stopped Atlanta 4-I, Los Angeles career.
·
beat Chicago 4-3, San Diego defeatMondesi hit a two-run homer in
ed Florida 7-S, Colorado downed the founh and another two-run sliot,
New York 10-3, St. ·Louis beat his lith, in the sixth.
Philadelphia 5-2 and Houston defeatGi1111ll 4, Braves 1
ed Pittsburgl1 6-0.
Ellis Burks hit a wind-aided,
Padres 7,,MIII'IIns 5
three-run homer in the first inning,
Reggie Sanders hit a tiebreaking, . sending San Francisco past Atlanta
two,run ho111er in the eighth inning on a blustery night at Candlestick
and host San Diego survived a scare Point.
·
against Florida.
.
JQhn Smoltz (5· I) had been 9·0 in
Padres center fielder Ruben I0 starts si~ce Sept. 6. He fell to I!&gt;Rivera was carried off the field on a 14 · lifetime against the Giants, the
stretcher in the third. He hun himself only NL team with a winning record
making ll head-first dive on the warn- . against him.
ing . track trying to catch Jorge
Atlanta's Andruw Jones had two
Fabregas' two-run double.
calls go against him on the bases. In
X-rays were negative, and Rivera the fifth, he was ruled out for runwas to spend the night in a hospital. ner's interference while trying to
A team doctor said Rivera was in break up a double play; ·in the sev"excellent condition.''
enth, he was called out for -making a
Braden Looper relieved with one tum toward second base after beating
out in the eighth, and Sanders hit his out an infield single.
founh pitch for a two-run homer.
Astros 6, Pirates 0
CanliDals 5, PhUIIa Z
Mike Hampton pitched his first
Mark McOwire hit his first home shutout in more than a year, holding.
run at BuschStadium since Aprilll, Pittsburgh to five . hits at the
and St. Louis stopped Philadelphia's Astrodome.
·
·
five-game winning streak.
Hampton (4·1) struck .out seven
.McOwire ended a 1-for, I6 slump and walked none in his fifth career
)Yith his seventh homer of the season. shutout and first since April 21,
Phillies outfielder Ron Gant went 1998.
·
O.for-3 and was booed loudly each
Houston has won in Hampton's
time he came to the plate. Traded by last fi&gt;e starts, all coming after an

KVD announces latest race ·winners
Here is the list of winners and
runners-up in Saturday's races at
Kanawha Valley Dragway il)
Southside, W.V•.
1
Competitors are listed by hometown and vehicle driven.
Pro Division: lim South, South
Point, 1985 Camaro, def. Chuck
Sanders, Point Pleasant, W.Va., 1982
Camaro.
· ModUiecl Divblolli Keith Smith,
Bidwell, 1973 Nova, def. Greg
Sauvage, Pomeroy, 1970 Nova.
Pure Street · Dlvblon: Marc

French, Middleport, 1971 Caprice,
def. Brian Potter, Chesapeake, 1978
Mustang.
Junior Dragsler Division: Jason
Claytor, Peebles, 1997 dragster, def.
Charley Betts II, Huntington, W.Va.,
Spitzer.
Quick 8 Street Division: Teddy
Martin. Charleston, W.Va., 1993
Musta 0g, def. Neal Vance, West
Hamlin, W.Va., 1965 Impala.
Hot Street Division: Roger
Jones, Lancaster, Nova, def. Ken
Alloway, Coolville, 1979 Camara.

.

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•

�•
Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, May 11, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

·-

Report Cause sought for fatal excursion bus crash
targets .
vehicles
with few
·defects
By DAVID GOODMAN
Associated Press Writer
DETROIT- New Jaguar cars
had the fewest defects and 1999
Kia cars the most, according to a
private repon to automakers by
J.D. Power and Associates.
The company's annual 'Initial
Quality Study is a widely followed
measure of vehicle quality. J.D.
Power publicly relea.&lt;ed limited
data from the repon last Wednes·
day. but not the fun repon.
The Agoura, Cali f.-based company said it based the results On

41.004 owners of 1999-model
ve hicles. They were asked about
problems found m the first90 days
of ownership.

'

The A sociated Press today
obtai ned re ults from a confidential
executive summary of the study
which showed Jaguar Had th·e
fewest defects ph 100 new veh icles- 110.
Michael H. Dale, preSident of
Jaguar ~orth America, called the
·(eport "very sausfying news." He
said it was the payoff for the company's efforts to improve quality.
Buick was· second at I 14·, fol lowed by lnfiniti ( I 18), Acura
(124), BMW (125). Lexus (131},
Toy 0 ta ( I 35), Ho'nda ( 137), Cadillac (139) and Chrysler (148).
The average for all vehicles was
167 defects per 100 vehicles.
At the bottom, Kia had the most
ilefects at 333 per I00 vehicles.
Suzuki had 299, Isuzu 242, Jeep
234, Yol~swagen 223, Daewoo
216, Land Rover 200, Mitsubish•
199, GMC 199 and Hyunda1 194,
according .to the executive summary.
Ford vehicles had a defect rate
of 169, Saturn 171 , Oldsmobile
174, Dodge 175, Mercury and
Pontiac 185, and Chevrolet 192.
According to a story in today 's
USA Today, the J.D. Power survey
also found that several newly
redesigned vehicles had con · er
ably more defects than the models
they replaced.
.
Owners reported that the new
Honda Odyssey minivan had 64
percent more defects than the van
it replaced, the story said . .
The J.eep Grand Cherokee had a
defect increase of 29 percent, the
GMC Sierra pickup had 23 percent
more problems and Chevrolet's
Silverado pickup 22 percent , the
story said.
Among newly redesigned cars,
the Porsche 911 had 41 percent
more derects than its predecessor,

By A~N CLENDENNING
Asaoclllted Praaa Writer
NEW ORLEANS - Marion
Mancuso, at 81 years old, loved taking chartered bus trips to the casinos
along Mississippi's coast with her
retired friends .
They ·never won much, but half
the fun was socializing and playing
bingo during the 90-mlnute bus ride.
This time, there were 43 of them. And
the woman her friends called "Mae"
was one of the most enthusiastic .
"What can you say?" asked
Martha Hymel, a resident ofthe Place
Dubourg retirement home where
Mancuso lived. "She said she was
going to the .casino even if she had to
be rolled in a wheelchair."
On Sund·ay - Mother's Day 'their bus picked them up in a supermarket parking lot. A half-hour later, ·

FBI

motorist who saw the crash said a car
cut the bus off right before the crash.
But investigators said they probably
would not determine the cause for
months.
·
Most of the victims were in their
70s and 80s. TWo were over 90. All
but one were from the towns of
LaPlace, Reserve and E4gard in St.
Johri the Baptist Parish, about 25
miles west of New Orleans.
Juanita Marse, 73, and her husband, Arlo, 74,.made the casino trip
about once a month from Reserve,
said Nancy Desselle, their daughter.
They rarely won more than $10, but
they loved getting together with other people their age.
·
· "They would play games on the
bus," Ms. Desselle said. "They
looked forward to the (fip.as much as
the casino, the friendliness of it."

just as the bingo cards were being
passed out, the bus suddenly lurched
to one side.
Then it veered off Interstate 610,
crashed through a guardrail and nosedived into an embankment. Mae
Mancuso was one of the 22 who died.
Fifteen others were still hospitalized
Monday in what officials .;ailed the
worst motor vehicle accident in New
Orleans history ..
"There's so many questions, the
bows and the whys ," said Rose Gar'
net, whose 82.-year-old mother. Florence Mathie u, another Place
Dubourg resident, al so died. " We ' re
just trying to get past this."
A dozen federal investigators were
at the scene Monday, helping police
intervi~ w potential witnesses and
examining the mangled tour bus.
The bus driver and at least one

take~

hymns with downcast eyes as they
wiped away tears with crumpled tissue paper. At the end of the Mass,
some held hands and hugged as they
prayed together a final time for
friends .
Place Dubourg ' resident Isabel
Dutreix recalled how one of the victims, her friend Dorothy Richard, 74,
used to bring her pudding and ~
newspaper every day.
Mrs. Dutreix poesn't go on casino trips, but she and Miss Richard
often' played bingo together and
would talk about splitting their jackpots 1f either won. Mrs. Dutreix
couldn't wait to see Miss Richard on
Sunday because she had such good
news: She had won at bingo on Friday nighl.
" ! thmight I would see her and I
would share it with her," Mrs.
Dutreix said, her voice trailing off.

Another rider who died, Timothy
Victor, was a 45-year-old bachelor
who worked in construction and had
been going on the trips for about a
year, said his sister, Paulette Victor.
"He'd just go over for fun, play
the slots," she said. "Never won or
lost much, it was just a time to see
people and do something different."
Some friends and relatives of the
victims gathered at ·a memorial ser-

vice in the dining hall of the Place
Dubourg home in LaPlace, which lost
eight residents in the crash. ·
Friends who used walkers or
wheelchairs to get into the dming hall
remembered Ms. Mancuso as the
" lit(le butterny" for the tireless way
she went around the complex . Dolly
Sposito, 60. was remembered for her
doll collection and her love of bingo.
Between prayers, mourners sang

lumps for handling of TWA probe

to disappear from .the hangar where
the plane was being reconstructed.
the officials said.
Some seat covers from the plane
were found in a trash bin and one
trying to suppress that report in what
NTSB official said he walked in to
critics satd was a heavy-handed and
find an FBI agent poundinjl one piece.
of evidence with a hammer.
sometimes bumbling rush to prove
that a bomb or a missile downed the
'They said the NTSB was, by
statute, the lead agency on the crash
piane.
Investigators eventually deterbut the probe became an adversarial
turf war, something Grassley hopes to
mined a mecl)anical malfunction
caused the plane's center fuel tanks
change by clarifying language to·
to' explode, killing all 230 people on
make the roles of the agencies clear'
board .
· ·
er.
A former scientific investigator
ATF officials also said once.they
with the FBI who worked on the
had concluded that mechanical failFlight 800 case describe&lt;\ how James il)vestigatiOn ."
ure downed the plane, they pushed to
Kallstrom , then-director of the FBI's
circulate
their report out of fear that
Officials from the National TransNew York bureau, became enraged ponation Safety Board and the ATF other planes might meet a similar
when the investigator disputed the . maintained that the FBI took over the fate. But the FBI stonewalled, they
bomb theory.
investigation and was.sloppy in col- said. ATF officials were brought in as
"He got about six inches from my lecting evidence .. Only FBI agents expens in explosives.
Grassley presented various handface and proceeded to advise me in were allowed to develop pictures of
scribbled
notes from ATF and NTSB
very graphic terrns . that it was a . the plane and evidence was allowed
Alcohol, Tobacco a"d Fireahns that
concluded just six months after Right
800 went down that mecha~ical fail·
ure was to blame.
The FBI was accused Monday 6f

By SHANNON McCAFFREY
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON -Almost from
the moment TWA Flight 800 plunged
into the ocean off Long Island in July
1996, conspiracy theorists argued
that the FBI did not do enough to
prove .that a bomb or missile downed
the Boeing 747.
On Monday, the bureau came
under fire for what some sam was a
si ngle-minded pursuit of that terrorist theory, even as evidence mounted
that mechanical failure was to blame.
" FBI leadership. in the case of
TWA Flight .800, was a disaster,"
Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, said
at the opening of his Senate subcommittee hearing on the crash
mvestigation. "In fact, it's fairto say
that the FBI hindered the investigation and .. . in my view, the FBI risked
public safety."
The hearing "relied heavily on a
24-page report from · the Bureau of

bomb," said William Tobin, who was
later taken off the TWA 800 case by
Kall.strom. "I ended up wearing several panicles of his saliva from that
presentation.''
Kallstrom, who did not testify
Monday and has since left the FBI,
denied he had suppressed the repon
but said he did not want it released
prematurely.
"We didn't even have all the
pieces off the ocean floor yet, we
hadn't even· built the reconstruction
(of the plane)," Kallstrom said. "It is
not that we were holdi·ng out for a
· bomb or missile. We were holding
out for a thorough comprehensive

offic10ls that he said showed frustralion with the FBI.
•

~~:&gt;:
By
..·-· .....
~

made him so famous inhis iifetime
that he cal)'le under the patronage of
Catherine de Medicis, has been a
·household name in Japan for over
two decades.
·
And he's always been big during
times of crisis.
During .the oil shock of the 1970s,
a Japanese author. penned the bestselling book that first introduced
Nostradamus' prophecies to a mass
·audience in Japan. It sold more than
2 million copies.
Another wave of interest in Nos tradamus broke out during the 1991
Persian Gulf War, which spawned a
cottage im!ustry in World War Ill predictions.
But the. current gloom of Japan 's
recession and jitters about the inter·
national situation - from the war in
Kosovo to missile tests by Nonh
Korea - have created the most virulent Nostradamus boom yet, experts

Dear Ann Landen: I just read
the letter in your column from the
man who said the skin on his wife's
breast resembled an orange peei.
She delayed seeking medical help
until it was too late. Please help educate your readers about a littleknown killer called innammatory
breast cancer.
This type of cancer comes on
suddenly and can exist ·even in the
presence of clear mammograms. . It
spreads rapidly, and if treatment'is
not given immediately, it is almost
always fatal.
l'l~re are the symptoms: The

He said the crash came at a politically volatile time- Ramzi Yousef
was on trial in New York City for
conspiring to blow up 12 U.S. airliners. That, combined with eyewitness
descriptions seemingly consistent
with a missile firing. made a terrorist aual'k .more than a possibility. he
said.

......

214 Eaot Mmn

Pome;..,y
. 992-6687

·Pleasant Valley Plospital
I

.

.

.

Health line
'I

(304)

675~2828
,,

time to celebrate their son's birthday

the next day. .
When I suggested this, they said
it would be too long a drive after
such a hectic day. I pointed out that
my family members would be justifiably upset to see their child at our
wedding when they were not penn itted to bring theirs .. This couple "
totally obsessed with their baby. ·and
they have said, "We take him everywhere."
I am holding my tongue , but
frankly, lam .very angry about being
put in thi s position. Shoutd I shelve

DEAR D.C.: It's your wedding,
and you have the right l() make the
rules. If you allow these friends to
bring their child, your family mem- .
bers with children will most cenainly be upset.
Hold finn to your "no children"
decision, and if it costs you their
friendsh1p, you haven 't lost much.
Lonesome' Take charge of your
life and turn it around. Write for Ann·

Landers' new booklet, "How to
Make Friends and Stop Being Lonely." Send a self addre&gt;sed. long,
busmess si1.e envelope and a check

or money ' order for $4.25 (this
includes postage and handlin~ ) to:
Ffiends, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box
11 562, Chicago, Ill. 6061 1-0562. (In
Canada, ~e nd $5 . t5.) To find out
more about Ann Landers and read

'my anger, make an exception and let

her past columns. vis1t the Creators

the kid come? l need your help on
this one, Ann.-- TORN IN D.C.

Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

-'------.---~-- . Community

sess," she said.

Mrs. Glenn and her hu~band, John,
have been appointed distinguished alumni
professors at the college, which they both
attended,
Baok then, she said, her public life was
limited by severe stuttering that she has
Glenn
since overcome, but she tried to be involved
in her community anyway.
·
"I couldn't imagine speaking tn public, but I could still play the
organ and I played the organ at every chapel on every military base
where we were assigned," Mrs. Glenn said.
Glenn, 77, retired from the U.S. Senate last year after 2'4 years.
In November, he took a trip on the space shuttle and bec.ame the
oldest person to ny in space, 36 years after he became the first
American to orbit the Earth.
'
TRINITY, N.C. (AP)- With a driver like Riclylrd Petty lead'
ing the way, the eight-day motorcycle trip to raise money for .charity was cenain to move pretty quickly.
t
The NASCAR legend, and his son, Kyle Petty, ~oiled into the
family farm in Tnnity on ~unday after picking up at&gt;out $500,000
for children's charities during their cross-country ride.
"It's a charity ball," said Richard Petty, whose Harley Davidson
bore the famous No. 43. "Some have golf tournaments and others
have dinners. We have a ball riding."
In the ride's first four years, more than $1 mil)jon has been
·
raised.
About 250 riders tagged along for this year's ride, which started in Fontana, Calif., near the California Speedway. After it was
over, the sore motorcyclists joined the Pettys in a celebratory concen by Willie Nelson.
The motorcyclists said the trip was mostly smooth, except for
some high winds and sand storms in Texas.
.. By the end of the .trlp, your muscles are sore," said R~IS'n
Moore of Charlotte. •• It was a v·ery smooth ride - it was easier
than I thought it would be."

I~J~V-rost

these people fought and died for what
they believed in, and they were our
family members."
If all goes according to plan, the
McCoys will take on the Hatfields in
a softball tourn, ment.

Ann, our wedding is only two
hours from Ginny and Alan's home.
They can easily drive back after the
reception and be there in plenty of

"To me, public service is much, much
broader. It can encompass vinually any ,
skill, any talent or any ability that you pos-

'

NEW CONCORD. Ohio (AP) - The wife of the oldest person
lo ever ny in space urged graduating students to embrace public
service- whatever it means.
· ''When I say public service, I am not just talking about politics
or government, although they are two top
types of public service," Annie Glenn said
Sunday at the Muskingum College com-

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The price tag for Dennis Hopper's
talk-show tale about fellow actor Rip Tom has been increased to
$950,000.
.
Tom, . who had already been awarded $475,000 for comments
·made about him by Hopper, was awarded another . $475,000 in
punitive' damages on Monday.
.
·1

.

local economic struggle over
resources such as timber, Eller said.
Randolph McCoy lost five sons a:;
a result of the feud and a daughter,
Roseanna, to measles during that
time. In contrast, Hatfield family
P.atriarch "Devil Anse" Hatfield didn'!lose any of his children and went
on to live a prosperous life, Ron
McCoy said.
But Hatfields suffered losses,
including the 1882 death of Ellison
Hatfield on Election Day.
Both McCoys set out on a personal quest to learn about their family's past. Along they way, they '!let
over the Internet and began planmng
the reunion.
"We don't want future generations
to look back at the Hatfield and
McCoy feud and laugh at i~" Bo
McCoy said. "It's a tragedy that
should never have happened, but

.,

mencement. .

star

wrong.

Even Hatfields are invited to the McCoy family reunion

make an exception to accommodate
them.

wrote and drew cartoons for Pl ay- was nominated for an Academy
boy ~agazine in the I 950s. .
Award and a Golden Globe in I 991
Associated Press Writer
MIAMI (AP) - Shel Silverstein
The sardonic humor reappeared as best origi nal song m a moll on p•cbegan ~s a writer and canoonist for in Silverstein's music, which includ- ' ture .
But hi s children's stories were
Playboy magazine. He was an ed "Cover of the Rolling Stone,"
Oscar-nominated composer, creat- recorded by Dr. Hook, and the John- arguably his most popular work. The
bqoks included "The Giving Tree"
ing popular country, pop and folk ny Cash hit "A Boy Named Sue. "
music.
·
The song tells of a man reunited ( 1964), " Falling Up" (1996),
But it was his poetry collection~ in a bar with the father. who named "Where the Sidewalk Ends" ( 1974),
and silly characters that thrilled chil- . and then abandoned him. The result- "A Light in the Attic" ( 1981) and
dren and brought him the most fame. ing fight ends with the father "The Missing Piece" (1976).
"The Giving Tree" celebrates 35
The author of "A Light in the explaining that he named his son
years
'in publication this fall. SilverAttic" and "Where the Sidewalk Sue to make sure the boy grew up
stein won niJ!IIerous awards for his
Ends" was found dead in his apan- strong in his absence.
" I got .all choked up and I threw work, including the Michigan Young
ment Monday in Key West, where
Readers Award for " Where the
he had lived since 1978. He was 66. down my gun
And I called him my pa, and he 'sidewalk Ends."·
Two cleaning women discovered
In the poem "Hug 0' War" from
Silverstein's body in a bedroom of called me his son, .
"Where
the Sidewalk Ends," SilverAnd I come away with a different
his home. An autopsy ·showed he
stein describes hi s favorite game:
died of a massive hean attack, possi- · point of view.
''I'd rather play at hug o' war,
And I think about him, now and
bly as early as Sunday. .
Where eyeryone hugs
Silverstein's
self-illustrated then, ·
Every time I try and every time I
Instead of tugs,
books are packed with colorful charWhere everyone giggles
win,
acters like walruses with braces and
And if I ever have a son, I think
And rolls on the rug, .
camels in brassieres~ His light, irrevWhere everyone kisses ,
erent poetry entenained children and I'm gonna name him ...
Bilf or· George! Anything but ·
And everyone grins,
adults.
And everyone cuddles,
But adults only were his first tar- Sue! I still hate that name!"
Silverstein's song "I'm Checkin'
And everyone wins."
get. He began as a canoonist for the
Survivors mclude his ' IS-year-old
Pacific Stars and Stripes while in the Out," written for the Meryl Streep.
Army in Japan and Korea, and then film "Postcards from the Edge," son, Mathew.

· LOS ANGELES (AP) -A pop-r~ck CD set to hit record stores .
in October features · a greatest hils package by one of the best-selling anists in
history: Chris Gaines. .
So who's Chris Gaines? ·
He's none other than Ganh Brooks. The
country crooner is set to
as the fictional Gaines in a movie chronicling the
end of the 15-year career of a rock idol.
The Capitol Records CD "In the Life of
Chris Gaines" is to be released in October. Nowhere on it is there a mention of
the country superstar.
The idea is to introduce listeners to
Brooks
Gaines so 'they will know the character
and want to see the thriller "The Lamb," which is still in development at Paramount Pictures.
"Chris Gaines exists," Brooks said Monday.
"If you go for the ride, the music seems to fit," Brooks said. "If
you're not buying it, that's the pitfall." .

Lewis Schiljro, the FBI's assistant
director in the New York office , tes-:
tified Monday that claims the FBIhad sat .on the ATF report were:

74i.,.,..,.""'.

Dear Ann Landers : I am
engaged to a wonderful man, and we
are planning a November wedding.
We are paying for it ourselves and
had to cut our guest list in half to
accommodate our budget. I have a
large family, which includes many
ch ildren under the age of 10.
Because money is tight, we chose
·not to include children.
Here 's the problem. When my
boyfriend and I became engaged, we
asked "Ginny," his friend from college, and her husband , "Alan," to be
in our wedding. They have been
good · friends for several years.
Ginny and Alan have a ·1-year-old
whose binhday. is the day after our
wedding. They were shocked when
we to'ld them there would be no children .at the ceremony or reception.
Ginny said it was asking a lot for
them to .be away from their son on
his first birthday and that wnhould

By PATRICIA MALDONADO

·Protect the hnggrtant
.people in your life.

ly happened is fading," Ron McCoy
By KIMBERLY HEFLING
said.
"Pan of our vision here is to'
·Aaaociated Preas Writer
the reality of the feud back into
bring
PIKEVILLE, Ky. - Bo McCoy is
the
forefront.:'
the real McCoY, the great-greatThe feud itself took place during .
grandson of Randoph McCoy, whose
feud with the Hatfields dating ~ to most of 1870s and 1880sand resulted in the deaths of 12 people.
the '1870s made both clans famous.
Like the McCoy cousins, Ro~
Bo is looking to pit the McCoys
Eller,
director of the Appalachian
against the Hatfields again, but this
at the University of Kentucky,
Center
time on the softball diamond.
Bo and second cousin Ron said the feud is widely misunderstood
McCoy are planning a family reunion - primarily because of exaggerated
in June next year in .Pikeville, site of media accounts that many say creat-.
the legendary Appalachian feqd. •ed negative stereotypes of Appalachia
that still exist.
Even the Hatfields are invited.
Rather than being poor hillbillies.
The reunion is called M2K for
" McCoys 2000." · Already, the in reality both the McCoys and the
reunion's Web site has received more Hatfields were prominent families
than 14,000 hits. The McCoys ·are living along the Kentucky-West Virselling T-shirts. About 500 to I ,000 ginia border. And their battle wasn 't
a mere feud arising from a dispute
people are expected to attend.
"The legend and myth of the feud ove.r a pig, as some storytellers have
. is there, but the truth about what real- recalled, but was . instead a severe

dreadful disease that affects thousands of women (and men) every
year. Tragically, treatmept is usually too late, and survival rates are
grim. When it is diagnpsed quickly;
however, there is reason to hope.
The best treatment is chemotherapy
breast becomes red, swollen or first, then surgery, if necessary. ·
Please urge your readers to get
warm; there is bruising or di scolprompt
medical help for any of the ·
oration, itching, a rash or swollen
lymph nodes under the arm or above above symptoms. You could save
the collarbone; the breast deve lops many lives by increasing awareness
an orange-peel or ridged appear- of this dreadful breast cancer. ··
ance, thickness, raised areas or SURVIVING ·IN WASHINGTON,
D.C.
inverted nipples.
DEAR D.C. : You have saved
Often, there . is no detectable
some
lives today by taking the time
tumor,. just a rash and some pain.
trouble to write. Thank
Many of the symplOf!IS match those and
you.
Thank
you. Thank you. Anyone
of mastitis, or breast infection, and
who
wants
more information can
doctors frequently prescribe antibicall
the
Cancer
Information Servic'e
otics. Time is wasted while the conat 1-800-4CANCER (1 -800-422dition gets worse.
.
.
lnnammatory breast cancer is a 623'7). Try for the hearing impaired:
1·800-33286 I 5.

Silverstein: author, composer, cartoonist loved by all ages

Delphi· looks ·for larger role in auto parts ·c onsolidation

·I~~

Page7

Tuesday, May 11, 1999

'

.

" Kallstrom upse t with report,
Locks him into eliminating missilo.
·Refuse s to see report," read one
March 12, 1997, note from Anthony
Vita, the ATF's assistant director of
field operations.

J.D . Power declined to comment on the newspaper story.
By BRIAN S. AKRE
say they expect their business to grow panics are trying to repair their long- cially in the area of high-tech elec- integrated into the design of car and
Despite the auto industry 's comAP
Auto
Wrltar
as other automakers no longer have contentious relationship with the Ironies as COil)pUlers and satellite truck interiors.
puter-design technology, avoiding
telecommunications become more ,
TROY,
Mich.Delphi
Automoto fear working with a supplier umon.
defects'" the first prod~ction modtive Systems Corp. plans to be a big- owned by their biggest competitor.
- Blltlenberg declined to comment
els of a new design "continues to
There's
evidence
that's
already
ger
player
in
the
consolidation
of
the
in
detail on that relationship but said
be a challenge," the story quoted
happening,
even
though
the
spinoff
.
global
auto-pans
industry
·
after
it
he
was in "~rsonal touch" with
the executive summary as saying.
won
't
be
completed
until
May
28.
In
becomes
independent
from
General
UAW
leaders. Though company
J.D. Power also found high levthe
first
q~aner,
Delphi
won
$4
bitMotors
Corp.
later
this
month,
its
say UAW president Stephen
insiders
els of defects in other models that
.
lion
in
new
contracts
with
OM
and
a
chairman
says.
P. Yokich has been Cooperative, pubdid not replace existing models.
J.T Batten berg III said Delphi was surprising $2 billion wonh of non- licly he has criticized the spinoff and
USA Today reported.
in solid financial shape going into the . OM contracts. Delphi stock price urged GM to retain 51 percent of the
'
The Volvo S80 sedan had 40
increased
18
percent
in
its
first
three
company.
May
28
spinoff,
when
the
remaining
percent more defects than the averThe Delphi-UAW talks will coin452.6 million Delphi shares will be months.
, :noW liave the c¢m of protecting your family merrtbern
age for similar vehicles. And the
"The
stock
has
performed
well,"
cide
with
the
union's
triennial
condistributed
to
GM
shareholders.
Mercury Cougar sports coupe had
The world's largest auto-pans said analyst Jonathan Lawrenc;e of tract negotiations with GM, Ford
34 percent more defects than the
a business p:lrtner with
maker no longer !tas any money-los- Bear, Stearns &amp; Co. "They're cer- Motor Co. and the Chrysler unit of
average for such vehiCles, the
'""::·!
ing plants, is getting cooperation tainly winning business, and that's DaimletChrysler AG. The UAW is
newspaper said.
10- or 20-year level tenn life
from its unions tti cut. costs and is picked up since their announcement expected to demand that Delphi's
Honda Odyssey owners reponhourly
workers
get
virtually
the
same
the
spinoff."
of
winning
more
non-OM
business,
ed 220 problems per I 00 vehicles;
Delphi, based in Troy, Mich., and deal as OM's hourly workers .
Batten berg told reponers at a briefing
Porsche 911 , 182 per 100; Jeep
insurance from Auto-Owners
Delphi no longer has any plants
Monday. Though Delphi lost $93 Battenberg will face their first big test
Grand Cherokee, 249 per 100;
million last year because of several come summer when they will work that are unprofitable, in some cases
GMC Sierra, 232 per 100; and
Insurnnce Company. Call us for more
Chevrolet Silverado, 218 per I00, , one-time costs, it earned $284 million out details of a new contract with the . because its unions agreed to relax
in the first quaner this year.
company's largest union, the United restrictive ,work rules, Battenberg
·the story said.
Auto Workers. Talks already are said. In Kokomo, Ind., for example,
emplf&gt;ys·
about
200.000
Delphi
details and a &lt;;OOliJelitive prora;al.
Honda spokesman Art Garner
people
around
the
world,
including
under way with some UAW locals the UAW agreed to work rule
told the newspaper that the new
15,000 at seven plants in the Dayton; and Battenberg .said there has been changes to allow the electronics plant
Odyssey had a rocky start. He said
to operate 24 hours a day, seven days
Ohio, area and 9,000 · in northeast progress.
Honda has corrected the main
a
week ..
Ohio near Warren.
·
UAW hit Delphi with two strikes
problems, which were noisy brak~~
OJIIIIIrJ.IJallell lnlunmt:e
Ballenberg said Delphi plans to
OM is cutting Delphi loose to last summer that shut down OM's
and confusion over how to operate
Life HoJ!te Car .Business
foc;us on its core business: building Nonh American assembly plants and focus on acquiring companies that
l~e sliding side door.
ca~ and trucks. Delphi executives
. cost Delphi $450 million. Both com- can supply future technology, espe-

·

Inflammatory breast cancer is often overlooked and misdiagnosed

And the trend does have its hardcore, believers, and a darker side.
. Many of the beliefs espoused by
Japan 's Aum Shinri Kyo ··supreme
Truth " cult~ which killed 13 people in a 1995 subway gas attackappear to have been inspired by
Nostradamus' writings.
Thecult, which has been increasing in popularity lately even though
most of its leaders have been arrest- ·
ed, is preparing for an Armageddoo
that it claims will come in early September.
Other religious cults in Japan
have borrowed ideas from the Nostradamus prophecies to attract fol·
lowers.
Yoshida, the anthropologist, said
Japan is fertile ground for N'os- ,
tradamus because the occult has a
powerful hold on many aspects of
everyday Japanese life.

say.
.
1999."
"It's e.cessive," said Teigo YoshiNostradamus' prophecies, which
da, a professor of cultural anthropol- were written in verse and colleded in
ogy at Japan's prestigious Tokyo Uni- a book called "Centuries. " are
versity. "In times of social uncer- extremely cryptic and open to a wide
tainty, these .theories gain populari- range of interpretations.
·
ty."
But ·that hasn't prevented NosAs evidence of Nostradamus' pop- lradamus buffs from making &lt;;orne
ularity, two dozen books on him or very precise inferences.
his predictions were published in
In a book published in February,
Japan last. year. Eleven more· have· • author Akio oCho even"j!urports to
been released so far this year.
· · have discovered "through scientific
Timing, of course, has given Nos- research" the precise hour and date of
tradamus a strong boost
the great cataclysm: 5 p.m ., July 24,
"There has been a bi surge in the 1999. · .;. ·
;· ... J
popularity of Nostrada us with the
Few people are serioli"IY preparlast year of the millen ium," · said ing for the end -to most Japanese,
Fumiko Takahashi, a s keswoman the boom is more an entertaining disfor the Japan's Publish s Associa: traction than anything else.
ti·on.
But a recent poll conducted by
Nostradamus predicted millenni- Japan's Kokugakuip University
urn doom, writing that "the great found 20 percent of the people
kmg of terror will fall from the sky responding give some credence to the
in the seventh month of the year . Nostradamus prophecies.

The Bend

•

As century nears end, Nostradamus ·fever grips Japan
By JOJI SAKURAI
Associated Preas Writer
TOKYO- Every week, millions
of Japanese TV viewers tune in to
watch a couple of men building a
bunker for 'the end of the world. It's
a race against time·. They have to finish before July.
As the end of the century nears,
Japan has come under an odd spell -'the apocalyptic preachings of the
16th century soothsayer Nostradamus.
Bookshelves are lined with Nostradamus spinoffs. Celebrities comment' earnestly on his · predictions.
The Internet is awash with thousands
of Japanese Web sites devoted to the
French prophet of doom.
"Will mankind be extinguished in
1999?" one typical Web site says.
"This is not an issue to be taken light1y."
Nostradamus, whose prophecies

The Daily Sentinel

.Criminals shouldn't
:give address when
they order a pizza
FLORENCE, S.C. (AP) - Two.
guys forgot a critical piece of infor. ~ation when they allegedly held up
a pizza delivery man at .gunpoint:
They had already given the address
where the pizza was to be delivered.
Christopher James Kennedy, 38,
and Johnny Allen Poston, 26, were
charged with armed robbery the Flo"
·renee County sheriff's .depanment
said.
Police said the two gave their
·home address out as they ordered a
pizza. When the delivery man couldnlt find their address ·he called and
:lltllnged to meet the two men near:by, the sheriff's depanment said.
· · "The delivery person got out car:ry1ng the pizzas and they put a gun
:to. his face," Lt. Julius Lee said. "So
: th~ delivery person threw the pizzas
.at . them, got back in his car and
:drove off."

~: -·· (I

.

......... -- --~--- ,_.

Calendar----'--:--------

erans·Service Office. 117 Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy, 10 a.m. to noon . I
to 3 p.m. Proof of military service

TUESDAY
RACINE -The Southern Junior
High Boosters, Tuescl.ay, 6 p.m. New
officers to be elected. ·

TUPPERS PLAINS ·- Tuppers
Plains VFW Post 9053 meeting for
required.
all officers will be held Thursday.
5:30 p.m. with dinner at 6:30 p.m.
Regular
CHESTER
Shade
River
'
meeting will follow at 7:30
POMEROY - Bedford Township Trustees, Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the · Lodge 453 F&amp;AM regular meeting p.m.
Thursday, 8 p.m. In recognition and
town hall.
in honor of Masonic veterans and
SYRACUSE - Syracuse PTO
PORTLAND - Portland PTO, Armed Forces Day a special dinner meeting Thursday, 7 p.m. Election
Tuesday, 7 p.m. at school. Letan will be held at 6:'30 p.m. Master' of officers will be held.
Elementary parents invited.
Masons and all members invited.
PoMEROY ·~ Chester Town·
ship Trustees, regular meeting,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at town hall.

part in the serv ice.

·To be
published
Friday,
May 28,1999
In
The Dally
Sentinel

'

THURSDAY
. POMEROY - Veterans Administration Medical Center, Chilli·
cothe. health care enrollment at Vet-

Caaale Leigh Nease
Melga High School
· Claaa of 1994

Joan VanMatre Hoffman
Wahama High School
Class of1966

·Special recognition for 50th, 25th &amp; lOth year.
(19491974 1989)
$6.00 per photo or $10/couple.

MODERN WOODMEN OF AMERICA .
. Camr';.~730, Tuppart plains, Ohio
Is -vomring AMatchins Fund
· For fhe Benefit Of ·

.Fill out form below &amp; drop off with payment to:
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

TUPPERS PLAINS VOLUNTEER
. FIRE D~PARTMENT
Sun~af,

Mar 9, 1999
.11:00 A.M. te 4:00 P.M. (Or Until Sold Outfl
Tu pert Plaint Fire Houte
Rote 681 &amp; Main Street
Tuppers Plains, Ohio

.
Name
School
Year

-$s.oo . Per Plate

.

Nickname

B~r&amp;eeued ·~i&amp;t or Chieken, Baked Bem
· Coletfe~, toll '&amp; Coffee or Tea

De1dllne Fri. May 14- 4

pm

Cake &amp; Pie Extra ·

_.._

Singers arc mvi tcd to come and take

your spouse, child,
grandparent, friend, couples,etc.

- Revival Wednes·
day through Sunday at the Pomeroy
Church of ~e Nazarene with Rev.
and Mrs. Jerry Boggs of South
Point. Services nightly at 7 p.m.
except Sunday when services will be
at 10:30 a.m and 6 p.m.

----

SATURDAY
DEXTER - Songfcst at the old
Dexter Chu rch Saturday. 7 r .m.

(erne;mli~er

POMEROY - Point Pleasant
Bible School Choir Wednesday, 7
p.lii. at . Calvary Pilgrim Chapel,
state Route 143, Pomeroy. Rev. Victtir Roush, pastor, invites the public.

f'

rer. hostess. HiJl Kneen wi ll he gucsl

speaker.

A special section. devoted to
your favorite "alumnus"

WEDNESDAY
REEDSVILLE - Olive Township Trustees regular meeting
Wednesday, 7:30p.m. at the town- ·
ship garage on Joppa Road.

•

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta meetmg Thursday, 6:30 p. m.
with Jan e Walton and Clarice KraUI-

Remember When?

POMI"ROY - Meigs County
Genea.logical Society meeting Tuesday, 5 p.m. at the Meigs County
Library. · ·

~OMEROY

SHEL SILVERSTEIN, NOTED

autho'r and composer, dies at the
age of 66.

..... _

l'-.,.-----..,-------~--

_ . ..

------,;-----1

�-

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, May 11, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
Public Notice

Public Notice
.
5.s
OiiiCiolnCI
VIOiitlOno:
be
thinly
iip;;;d
over
!hi
from - • dl•
SEPTAGE REGULATIONS r~~ldue
paul eyettma within Molgo Dofocto or vlolatlona on surface of tha grounll•
FOR MEIGS COUNl'Y
unloao ouch person oarvlco vohlctaa ond/or Pooling o1 aeplllgo will not:
SECTION 1: Gonorol County
equipment may ceu11 aua- be permitted.
Ia
reglaltred
II I IIWOtlt
Provlolono
7.10 Saptogt W I - ohall
eleanor by tho pon81on of tho vehicle rog1.1 Tho Boord of Hoo~h o1 tonk
lat..Uon until tho dlfecll or not be dlopoaod o1 by dillAny
poraon
Department.
tho Melgo County a-81
violations ore corrected, II charge Into or on any ditch,
tMo~ Olotrlct (tho Boord) 11rvlclng their own - •
such
vlolatlone ore conoid- dry run, pond, loko, alrllm,
ayllem and dlaIindo thot It lo In tho public dlopoul
orad a public nulaence or a cave, olnkhoto, mine, grovel
poolng
of
tho
11ptage
on
health lntareot of tho ro81·
pit, or quarry.
·
own property end In a . hoo~ huord.
denio of Molgo County to their
. SECnON 6:
Boptago
7.11 Soptago ahall not be
tho
manner
approved
by
mtnago Ill own health hu·
will not bo OlopooaVLind Application, ·eppllod In aroaa when tho
trda ond public hoolth nul· Department
permanent or temporary
Pormh, and lnopoctlona:
required
to
ba
uncto that mty occur In 3.2 To oblllnreglotored.
water
lllblta ero within
6.1
Gonarol
Slltomont;
No
reglatratlon
tht servlngo of 11ptogo.
poreon thlll opply, permit torty-olghl (48) lnchaa of
to
engage
In
uwago
tonk
1.2 Tho. Botrd dlrecto Ihot
within M'olga or cau11 tho dlapooal of tho aurfaco.
no poroon ohtll lrtnoport, aervlclng
7.12 Tho rata of dlopolll
County,
the
ttwogo tank aeptogo on land In Molgo
alore, uH, or dlapoae of eleanor muatllrot complete County
unloaa
tho ohall not oxcoocl twol~a
aepllge, Mwage solids or · -~ application lor reglllro· Department · hoe loouod a thoueond (12,000) gallono
other realdual matter form tlon and submit It to thla pormlt lor that alto.
por ocre par year. In no
.
thelrellmont of private rea- Department. ·The appllca·
ovent oholl poole o1 waotea
6.2 Application for Silo
ldantlal aowtgo exCtRI lion ohall be iccompanled Approval: To .obtain a ptr· ba allowed to accumuloto.
7.13 No porecin ahall
through tho roqulremanto by 1 lee oallbllahed by tho mit to apply aaptaga to a
of the Malga County Board Boord. Each additional alto In Molgo County an opply, permit, or ceuao tho
of
Hulth
Soptaga vehicle uaed lor 11rvlclng application muat be flied applicaUon of aoptago to
land during odvoreo weathRegulation.
requlraa aoparatoloa ootob- and ohalllncludtlholollow- er
conditione or In uturtt·
lng
minimum
Information
.
llahed by the Board.
1.3 Peroona engaged on . . 3.3 Tho Board may require and any other reooonablo od lleldo.
7.14 No poracin ohall
tho buolnou of aowago the 11wago tank cleaning Information deemed neceo·
apply, pormH, or ceuao tha
tonk cleaning ahall comply compony to obtain a bond ury by tho Department:
application of aeptago to ·
with tho Molga County prior
reglolrotlon ,.. Tho oppllcellon aholl be land
to
aunoet or before au~'
olgnod by tho regloterad
Board of Health · Septage approval.
·
Regulation and · ahall pro3.4 Roglatrotlona laauod eewega tank cluner end by rlao. .
7.15AII ragleterod oeptoge
vide
the
Health under thla regulation ahall tho land ownar whore liphaulero mull obtain wrltlln
Commissioner auch lnfor· be valid lor tha yaor lseued togo Ia to be land applied.
matlon ae may be required and expire at 12:00 mid· B. Tho addrooo or legal pormloalon !rom a waoto
daocrlptlon altho propoaed water treatment facility 1111·
on the forma provided . by night on December 31 at.
lng that th.e waato water
the Malga County Httlth
3.5 Appllcatron lor renewal alto.
Department. All aowago. of reglotratlon ohall be oub- c. Sollo map of tho ·land· treatment facility wlllaccopl
tholr ooptage tor traotrnont
..
cleaners who urvlce mlttod to the Oep•rtmont dlapoul area.
:~ :
VMH SERVICE AWARDS - The Veterans Memorial Hospital employees shown here recalved tank
dlopoaal
during
dlapoaal ayalema lnaldo or . balora the December '31at D. Toot holoo moy bo and
:urvlce awards during a ceremony held Monday morning at the hospital. Shown are, from left: seated outaldo of the Dlatrlct and
required to dalermlne depth advor11 weather conditione
oxplreUon
date.
~:Sally Savage, 30 years; Loraine Venoy, 25 years; Joyce Redman, 20 years; standing -Don Beegle, 15 dlopose of the material
or ahould an emergency
to bedrock or w- tabloa.
SECTION 4 : Servicing:
A copy of thla por·years; Theresa Wolfe and Claudia Thomas, 10 years.
within tho District mualoloo
4.1 Vehicloa, lmplemonto, E. Location of bodloo of occur.
comply with thla regulation. containers, and an other wtltor and wolla within 500 mloolon oholl be submitted
1.4 Sewage tank clean)ng equipment a hall be ·oporat· loot of tho lon-dlapooal to tho Health Department at
tho limo of reglatretlon or
companies al)all submit od In such manner at not to area.
:
monthly Information to the cause a haaith liazard or F. Deicrlptlon o1 tho renawa.l.
method 01 land appllceUon
7:16 The . Department
Meigs County Gen.eral nulaenco. .
.
requlrea Immediate notlll·
Health Olatrlct, outllolng the
4.2 AniJ accldentalaplllogo 'to be uaed.
following: aourca, type, and ahall bo claanod up and tho G. Provide a map or akotch calion of any oplll or omor·
amount at. oaptoge, dlapos· aroo dlolnlacltd ao ao to of 'tho aile ahowlng lloldo to gancy aeptage land appllce·
al area, weather conditions, render tho aplllaga harm· · ba uaed lor 'land applica- tlon made by tho aaptoge
soli condition• and othe ' Ieos to humane and an~ tion, Including: (1) total htuler. II the Health
acreage lor each lleld; (2) Department lo cloaed, noll·
such pertinent Information mala.
deemed noceooary by the
4.3 The property baing dlatancea from homes, · llcatlon muat be made dur·
Board olltealth. Thlo lnlor· 11rvicoa ohall be left In a property llnoo, roodwayo, lng the next bu'olneao day.
bultcllnga, wtlla, oprlnga,
SECTION 8: Varlancoe:
matlon shall be on forma oanltory condition.
B.1 Tho Board may hoar
proscribed by tho Board. · 4.4 Water uaed lor lluoh- cisterna, fence linea,
and appoala and grant lndlvld·
Failure of the aoptaga lng tonka or other aewaga atreama, . ponda,
cleaning company to aub· containers shall be dla· dralnoga dltchoa. (3) Lind ual varlencoe from thla reg·
ulatlon when It Ia dolor·
mit the11 reports may jeop- poaed of .In tho oame mon· uoago (Cropa, etc.)
6.3 Foa: ·Ti\o oppllcotlon mined that no aubatontlal
ardize operating license. ner ae the wastes.
Reports will be aubmltted. 4.5 Dlocharge of waatoo or otiall be ·aubmlttod at loaat hoaHh hazard Ia a likely to
On Friday, May 213. we will publish a special page devoted .to those who are gone but not forgotten.
quarterly with due dates of. lluohlng water Into e lake, thirty dayo p~or to tho date occur therefrom ond unnecThey will be similar to the sample below:
March 1; June 1, September stream, or other SUrface or of Intended ·uoa lor land dla- eoaary h.ardohlp ·might
pooal. A lee may·bo eotabI, and December 1, raepoc· underground
water llahed by the Board to be roault In atrlct compllonco
lively. ·
·
resource ahall be cauoo lor remitted with th,e appllce· with thle regulation. Tho
lmmadlate Suspension of lion. Each eddlllonal oliO requell lor a va~anco ehall
be lllod In writing with the
SECTION 2: Deftnlllone;
registration.
may requlro a 11parato I • · Board and ehall be conoid·
It you wish, select on of the following FREE verses below lo accomp11ny
2.1 Board of Health or
4.6 Altornato or oxperl· aa
oetabll'ohed by tho erod by the Botird at their
your tribute.
·
Board: The Meigs County montol mathoda of dlopoul
Board.
next regularly scheduled
I. Wr;, hold you in our-thoughts and memories forever.
Board of Health appointed will
be
Individually
8.4
Action
by
tho
Health
mtollng.
.
.
2. May God Cradle you in Hi.s 'arms, now and forever.
under provisions of Section ••aened, and ohall meat
Department:
Tho
SECTION
9:
Panaltlea:
13709.021
.
of
the
Qhlo
3
..
Forever
missed,
never
forgotten.
May
God
hold
you
in
the
palm
of
His
Deportment
approval.
Andrewo, David C
Department ahall rovlow tho
9. I Any poraon who vloRevleedCode.
hand.
·
4.7 Non biodegradable Information
July 10, 1961 • May 5, 1900
contained
In
latoa
any provlalon · of t!lla
2.2
.
Deportment
or
Health
4. Thank you fOr the wonderful days we shared together. My prayers will- be
matorlola mull be 11paret·
Department: .The Meigs ed from the aepllgo II lha . tho appllclllon, lnopoct tho regulation shall ba In viol•·
with you until we meet again.
County General Health aoptogo Ia to be land alto In tha praaenca of tho tlon of Section 3707.48 and
5. The days we shared were sweet I long to see you again in God 's
May God's angels
District.
applied. Such moterlala lond o-r and/or tho IIPPII• aubject to the panaHioo proheavenly glory.
2.3
Holding
Tank:
Any
muat be dlepooed o1 In a cant and approve or dlup- vided by 3707.99 of tho
guide you and
6. Your courage and bravery still inspire us all, and the memory of your
facility,
designed
to
be
manner
approved of by tho prove tho alto. II tho alto 11 Ohio Rovloed Code. Each
smile fill5 us with jOy and laughter.
·
not approved, tho. property and ovary violation . aholl
protect you
watertight, which' Ia used Depirtment.
7. Though out of sight, you 'II forever be in my heart and mind.
. owner and tho Jppllcant conatltuto a ooparllo
tho
atoraga
and
decomtor
SECTION
5:
Vohlclo
throughout time.
8. The days may come and go, but the times we shared will always remain.
pcisltlon of human excre- lnapoctlon, IdentificatiOn ahalf be provided roaaonli · otten11.
9. May the light of peace shine on your face ·for eternity.
9.2 The Botrd may au•
ment or other wastes In llq· and
Equipment tor dlllpproval.
tO. May Gcd's angles guide you and protect you throughout time.
11.5 Silo lnopaotlon: Any pond or revoke any reglould
form.
Requlremanta:
Always in our hearts,
11. You were a light in our life that burns forever iil our hearts.
loouod
under
2.4 Nuisance: Any condl·
5,1 lnapoctton: Any por· poraon who haa applied lor tration
12. May GOd's graces shine over you for all time.
Jolui and Mona Andrew• and
lion of aaptage thet Ia aon engaged In oorvlng . and rOCIIved a permit pur· Section 3 · or any permit
13. You are in our thoughts and prayers from morning to night and from
potentially lnjurloua to the ohall pormlt lholr vahlclao ouant to thla Soptago laaued under Section 6 ill ·
Family
ye ar to year.
health, oilety, comfort, or and oqulpmont . to t " Regulllton ahall be daemed this regulation. Before any
L4. We send this message with a lpving kiss for· eternal rest and happiness.
· property ala paraon, or that Inspected upon requ..t at to have glvon conaant to ouch oueponalon or revoc!'pollutea waters o11he alate. any time and place, •• amy reasonable unannounced . lion of a regletratlon or por•
15. May the Lord bless you with His graces·and warm, loving heart.
2.5 Person: Any lndlvld· bo doalgnaltd by tho lnapoctlona of their land by milia modo, the Board ohall
ual, partnership, copartner- Deportment. lnapoctlono of roprooontallvoo of tho give a written notice to t~o
ship; firm, compony, corpo- all vshlcloa uaed for 11rvlng Deportment lor the purpo11 reglatrant not pormlt holder
TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
ration, association, joint may be 1111do at loaat quar- of datarmlnlng complal· that tho Board conlom. ..
stock . · company, trust, terly by tho Deportment ond unco with thla regulation. platea the ouapenalon or
SEND $7.00 PER LISTING • $121FPICTURE INCLUDED
eotate, political . subdlvl· In conjunction with regia• The Department may revocation of the uma and
Fill out the form below and drop otT to
slon, state agency and any trlllon renewal. Vohlcloo lnapoct each poiinltted alto glvo reaooni therefor;.
other legal entity or their which dotormlnod to con· at quarterly. Any permit Such 'n~&gt;t!co ehall appoint 1
The Daily Sentinel
legal repraeentatlvo, ·agents form with . equipment holder who rotuood or Inter· time lor a hearing before
oi assigns.
· requlramonta . of · tho Ioree with tho rooaonablo tht Board and will be IIIII
With Fondest Memories
2.6 Potable Water: Water Department
will
be lnopoctlono 111 forth In thla by cartlllad ond uncertified
which Ia aatlalactory lor . epproved for aarvlng In regulation ahall lorfott tho mall. The raglotrant may
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
drinking, cullnar.y, and Molga County. All vehlclee permit. Furthermore, tho preaont ouch evidence oa
uaod In oervlng may be Department may lmpoao they doalre at the hearing.
purpoeea.
domestic
• ·
DEADLINE: FRIDAY, MAY 21, NOON
2. 7 Privy: Any sanitary, required to have a current more roalrictlve conditione Allor hearing thO ovldonCI,
waterleas
device lor tho col· Ohio Highway Vehicle than thoao cor\llllned In thlo tho Board ohall decide tho
r-----------------~--------------------~---,
regulation lor tha purpo11 mattar In auch m•nner •• H
Please publish my tribute in the special Memorial Day Page on Friday, May 28
· 1
lectlon and storage of lnopoclion Sticker.
of
provontlng or ollmlnaUng appoarajuat an right and In
5.2
Equipment
human excrement but not
Name of deceased
·
I
a
nuloanCI
or ·a health haz- accordance with rogulatlon.
Including commode'o or Req~lremanto; All vohlclee . ·ard.
used
In
,
l
lr·
SECTION 10: Ellect of
and
equipment
other portable roceptocleo.
8.8 Expiration of Permit: ParUal Invalidity
Relationship to me
Number of selected verse_~2.8 Property Owner: vlclng ahall conform to tho
All SHe pormlto loaued oholl
10.1 II ona part, aectlo~,
Person or entity that ollowo following:
Date of birth _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....;__ _ _ Date of passing _ _ _ _ _ __
the application of aoptoge A. Vahlclaa and equipment be valid lor one· year from paragraph, or provlalon of
on property under hlo/hor ahall be designed and main· the data laeued. Upon the thoao regullllonl shall be
Veteran _ _ _ _ _ _ Yes _ _ _ No._ __
ownership or management. tolned In good repair eo •• expiration ol any .permit adJudged by any court co..,_
2.9.- Reglatrant; Any por- not to Crtllo a public nul· under thla ooetlon no fur· patent Iurladlctlon to b•
Rank
Branch of service _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
thor aoptogo ohall bo Invalid; ouch judgement
·aon servicing oewagt dl• oance or 'health hazard.
pcioal eyetoma and holding B. Vehlcloo and equipment applied until 1 new ponnlt ahall not affect, Invalidate,
or nullify tho reminder o1
Print your name here-------~------------------a valid Molgo county rogla- mull be otored In 1 monnar 'for tha olta looued.
6. 7 Suoponalon and · thoao ragulotlona, but ohall
tratlon.
·
that will not ceu11 a nul·
1 Address
Phone number_______
2.10 Aeoldtntlal Sewage aanco end aholl be uoed for Revocation Permit: A per- be confined to that portion
1·
Dlapoeal Syetem: Any llp- no other purpoooa. All mit may be ouoponded or Immediately Involved In
l City
State
Zip, _ __:.,__
· tlc tank, aerobic treatment tanka utilized In tho han· rovoked by tho Board when eald conlroveroy.
dUng of uptogo ahall be II Ia datormlned that tho
S~CTION
11
I
,
. Make Check Payable To Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
.
~.n.':i f;'':r.~:
/:'on~ enectlvoly 11cur~ on each landowner or aoplaga tank Mlacollanoouo . Lowe and
cleaner haa failed to comply .Rogulotlone
truck.
·
.
L-----------~----------------------------·--.J
rlialdentlaldwelllnga.
C. Each tonk on 1 vohlclo with thlo regulotlon.
I
1.1
In
addition
to tho
SE.CTION 7:
Lind requlremonta oil forth
Tr.aatment
Foclllty:Sewage
A prl· ahall be atrong enough lor
In
2.11 Semi-Public
vatoly .owned treatnten.t all .practical conditione of Application ·Auloo lor lhoao regulatlona, all Lind
P
bll
N
tl
Public Notice
u c o ce
Public Notice
Card of Thanks
facility that provides treat· operation, be laakprool, Surface. . Application or Dlopooat Sileo ahall bo
· molntalnad In compliance
mont lor property open and and doolgned to bo ktpl Subsurface Injection:
Beginning at an Iron pin
pp 1108-00198
7.1
S!pllgo
dlapooal
11
LEGAL NOTICE
acceulblo to tho public. tlg"tly cloaod to prevent
with all oxllllng alate and
Legal
Notice
to on tho oouthweet corrior of
TERMS OF SALE: Cannot
Theae lacllltlaa Include, but aplllege or escape of adore not permitted on land uaod local. atatuto'll, ordlnoncta,
Sallabury S.B. Shain's lot formerly be aold lor loll than 2/3rdo
Contractoro;
are not limited to churchea, .while In tranalt or storage.. tor paoturlng llvoatock dur· cod01, and regulaUone. .
Tow.nahlp 11 taking bids on sold 'all the aame tract, of the appralood value.
raatauranta, achoola, parkl, Tanka aholl be CC!natructed lng . tho currant growing
SECTION 12: E;lloctlvo
Hazard Mitigation work. thence In a oouthoaotorly $1,000.00 down on day at
and atoreo.
of oultoblo motorlalo and aaaoon or any cropland Date:
'11it
cliildren,
Project conolot of oloveUoa direction along the public' oale, caah or . certified
2.12 Soptogo: The mixed property mounted on tho UIOd for grq'jNing vegetl•
12.1 Thlo regulation aholl
graudciiildreu, greathighway 160 loot to tho check, balance duo upon
of otructuroa, flood proolbloo Intended lor human be alfectlvo on 4-14-W and
liquid, acum, and oolld con· vahlclo.
1!111 and rotrolltllng. For northwoot wool corner of confirmation of ulo.
graudcliildrtu and grtaltonto of ooptlc tanka, D. Pumpa ohall be adequate conaumptlon during tho oholl replace any provloua ·
mort lnlormllton on bid· William Powell lot; thence In
Property Approlood For:
areatlon unlta, prlvloa, and lor tho required ~arvlc 0 . current crop yoor.
regulotlon governing tho
great-grandcfiildreu of tfie
U Sojllego ahall not be aervlclng of 11ptage adopt·
.ding call (740) 992-6839.
a northaaaterly direction $1 5,000.00.
Othtr typal Of on-tile trtll• Pump lnotallotlon ohall be
late .Cona 'B. Cfievalier
following tho William Powell Jamoo M; Soulaby, Sharllt,
'(5) 7, 10, 11 3TC
mont or holdlrtg ayattma deolgned to prevent back· applied on alopeo greater · od· by tho Molga County
.line lor 166 loat to an Iron Molga County, Ohio
for domeatlc onl! or com- flow
would lilie to lfianli all of
.and
loaklga. than twolvo percent (1 2%).
Boord o1 Haolth . .
7.3 Boptego a hall not be
pin;
thenoe
In
a DENNIS REIMER CO., L.P.A.
Public Notice
mercial
aonltary
wallt~.
Connectlona
ohall
be proUpon • motion made by
our
relatives,
friends
and
S.ptogo aholl not Include vided with watertight 11111. apread on onow covered·or Gano Jeltoro, Praoldonl Of
northwoat.rly direction 224 By: Donnie Rolinar (Reg.
neighbors for all tfie
SHERIFF'S SALE, REAL
watto materlala tor grout E. Dlachargo valvae on lrozan ground whore alopae tho Board of Health and
toot to the place ot 110031109)
.. ESTATE-CASE NUMBER
trapo or lnduot~al waoteo. · · tonka ahall bo watertight exceed two percent (2%)•
beginning, contelnlng four· Adam L. Groaa (Reg.
IICOnded by Jim Clifford,
curds, flowers, food and
7.4 Septage ahall not be Jr., Vlco Proaldont of tho
98-CVo073
2.13 Slpllgo Hauler: Any ond ahall be l®lled end
tonlho of an aero more or 110055382)
words of comfort.
. FIRST INDIANA BANK, Ieat.
poraon who ongagae In tho conalrUcted so •• to ponnit applied within thrH hun- Boord of Health, tho .-.gu._:.
Attornoya lor Plllntilt, 9808
Sptcial
tfianks
to
:MiAt
Plaintiff VI JAMES W.
collection,
tranoportatlon, unobetructad dlacharga dred '(300) "-' of pondo, tlono wo.re . odopl8d lbr
Current Owner: Jamoa Ravenna Road, P.O. Box
' l1kn, atreama, we111, cla- Molgo County •• of Aprtl14,
QOODRICH;- 01 . al., W. Goodrich and Carolyn A. 966, Twlnoburg, Ohio 44087
dlapoul
of tho con- Into tho plact of dlapooal.
and
'l'uhnau ofWiiil&lt;'s
.·
tenia of towage dlopoaal F, Ho~ and piping ohall be terno, or eprlngo.
Defend onto
(330) 425-4201
-Goodrich
.
.
tm. Tho Board reoponded
'Funeral Jlome in
7.5 Sepfogo ohall not be 11 lollowa;
COURT OF COMMON
oyatema.
itorod and aoaled ao ao to
:··
Property at: 47874 S.R. (5) 11, 18,25 3T
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY, 388. Racine. Ohio 45771
2.14 Servicing: T!la clean· prevent loakogo or dripping applied within one hundred . Gano Joffaro, Prealdont;
Cooluille, OJ( for rnaliing
(1 00) !oat of Primary, Boord o1 Hoolth-yOI
'OHIO
lng, removing, hauling, In tranolt.
· ·
tfie arr.mrgements, "Rev.
etoraga, and/or dlopoul of
5.3 Vehicle ldantlllcotlon: Secondary, or unimproved JI11I Cllllorc,, Jr., Vice
In pUroiJanco of an Order !
'IVt~idetl Stutler for
· Prealdont, Boord of Healthoeptago.
Tho ,nan(o and l!ldrell of dirt roede.
of Solo to .ltl• directed from Sh~n
7.6 Stptoge atioll not be yea
aald CouW In tho above .1
.,,.,
"'
2.15 Silt: Contlguouo tho company mual bo
prtsiding otJtr tfie cliurcfi
land In common ownerehlp ohown on each oklo of lilt applied within lilly (50) feet Ann Barrett, Member, Boord
services afld 'Dianne
entitled action, I will expose :
for
which an IIPPIIcotlon for truck. The reglatratlon num- o1 any property Uno. A mini· of Hoalth-yao ·
·
tooeloatpubllcauctlonori '
Jones for playing tfie
tho front llopo o1tho Melga
one aeptago hauler to apply ber loouad . by
tho mum dlotonce of one thou- .Joann Crlop, Member,
County Courthouse on '
11ptago haa boon aubmll· Depo_rtmont lor •each vehl· oond (1 ,000) feat from ony Board of Hoaiihoyeo
. ' .
music. :::fn utra special
ltec:l. .
Frldoy, Juno 18, 1188 at
clo mull also be ehown on reoldontlol dwelling, buol: Ona Boord VOCincY·
tfianlis io tfie women wfio
' 2.18 Subourfoco lnjactlon: both aldoo and tho - r of
10:00 A.M. of Hid day, tho
or: 1rw1 uaad for Jean Joltore, Pr11ldont
lncorporetlon Into tho. soli the vehicle. All 1-r• end rtcredonal purpo~~a.
(pllowlng doocrlbod real
prepared and sm.:d us
Jim Clifford, Jr., Vice
with plow or oqulpment numbort mull ba a mini·
Millo:
7.7 Septoge ahell not be Proaldont
ditmer after tfie serviceJ at
apoclflcolly daalgnod lor mum of lour (4) lnchoo In applied In ar- oubject to Ann Barrett, Member
,. Sltulled In tho Village of
rfie 'Reedsville United
placement of 1 liquid below height and mull~ of.con- lrequsnt lloocllng.
Antiquity, County of Molgo,
Joonn Crlop, Member
.
a ooll ourlaoo.
ond s - o1 Ohio, to-wit;
:Metfiodisi Cliurcli .
lratllng color.
7,1 Soptago ahall not be Jon o. Jacobe, AS, O.puiy
3: Aeglatratlon
· , Situated In town 2,
5.4 Cortlllooto Renewal: applied wlthlil tho water Haahh Commlaoloner
MIIJ' o.d- Y• All ·ofSECTION
Sewage tank Claanot'a:
Sactlon 14, Range 12, one
Each year ·the Department ahed of
pond or lake Margie S. Lawson, DO.$
3.1 No Peroon aholl will loouo registration which torveo aa tho aourca Health Commlooloner
hundrtd ICrt lot 274
·
· remove, tr1n1port, atort, or ronawal cortlllcatao lor otany potable water oupply. (4) 27 lTC
bounded and daecrlbed aa
dlapoll of oaptago or other placement In vohlclaa.
lollowa; ·
7.~ Septaga waoto muat (5) 4, II 2TC

..

Day

We remember those who have passed away
and are .especially ()ear to us.

::::;:

~~~~~~~~;;T-~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~i
·rt:H!A:N:xs!

r-=---:-:----.,.:..-----------;
st hom·•

Bu.y.f_.rom·. . · the.·.ass.
Cl ·lfled, s,I:
SAVE TIME AND MONEY
SHOP THE

CLASSIFIEDS!

4

80

Public Notice

Public Notice

o•••,

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

a

" .._

I

Auction
and Flea Marlt:ilt

Rick Pearson Auction Compan••
' full time auctlonttr, complete

Lieennd
auction
service .
t66.0h1o &amp; Wost Vl•glnlo. 30..

A&amp; DAuto Upholstery • Plus, Inc
Rutland, Ohio

~ Garage~~~o~:~~i~dfn;~~~~~i~~~~ Siding ~
~

"Specinli:ing

Log llom.e&amp;"

l11

Commercia l &amp; Hcsidc ntiul

~ 28 yrs. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured ~
~
Phone 740·992·3987
_

Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.· "

~
John Dean; Owner
~
c~~~~~~~~~~tr.r

SELF STORAGE

Wash lug

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio 4Sn1

Homes. Decks
&amp; Mobile Homes
Painting, Drywall Repair
Interior &amp; Exterior
15 Yro. E:rperience

74Q-949-2217
Slzea 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Houra
7:00AM- 8 PM

742·1701

750 East Sijtte Street
Athens, Oh10 45701

Phone

"

Fonner- 'Welvel Hammer"
52954 State Rt. 124

Refuse Service

Racine , Ohio

A ,ID&lt;ally owned company wilh over 28 y~
experience has now exlended our c.overoge area lo
indude oil of Gollio Co. ond portions of Meigs,
Vinlon &amp;lawrence counlies.

-Complete Auto Service-

BANKRUprcy can relieve a
debtor of financial obligaiions and arrange a fair
distribution of. assets. Debtors in bankruptcy may
keep " exempt''.property for his or her personal
use. This may include a car, a house, clothe&amp;, and
household goods.

DRIVEWAY STONE

• •••••hog WaDI Irick

La,ndscape Material,

hUo Coaatractloa

Topsoil &amp; Mushroom

~r•C.un.d

Compost

Laallsc:ral~·
Jeremy .L. Roush

CALL TODAY TO BEGIN YOUR
GARBAGE SERVICE IMMEDIATELY

992·5455

·7 4NI7.al

CONCRETE
CDNNICTIDN

SHADE RIVER
AG

Quauiy

Driveways,

Sidewalks, Patios

R. L. HOLLON QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
TRUCKING I FORMERLY OF 110 COURT STREET, POMEROY
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

, IS NOW LOCATED STATE ROUTE 33
6 MILES NORTH OF POMEROY AT COUNTY ROAD 18

Agricultural Ume,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

VISIT OUR OFFICE/SHOWROOM THERE

992-4119.0R 800-291-5600

985-4422
Cheater, Ohio

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS AT
FACfORY DIRECf PRICES

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

CIJ.ASSOR!EDSI'

Call 985·3831 .

si!RVIa:•

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy

WORvii'tJtGI II

No Embarrassment .. ~
You're Treated with Respectl

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
''PPbMwa9 d'

Ha,.....

Jju/ldoser &amp; Backhoe
Servieet
House &amp; Trailer Site•
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Sy11e"" &amp;

Utiliri..•

(740)992·3131

otTtade
In the ·

Pleasanl Valley Hospiial
is currently accepting
application/resumes ' for
Ihe following position:

for !.!!!1!!!!

Take the pain out
of painting, and .let
me do it for you.
INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message. After 6 pm

. 740-~85·4180

Mason Bowling
·
Lanea ·
773-5~00

.s ummer League
Begins 1st .Week
In May
1\Jesday • No lllp.
Wedoesday ·Men's League
Thursday • Mixed Leaaue
Sft~flot ·nmt 7:10 P.M.

STAFF NURSES

www.Sutuedlollw.com

Sunset lome
·construction
New Consirucllon &amp;

Romodellng·Kit.chon Cabltiota
Vinyl Sldlng·Aoolo·OOCkl·

Garogoo
Free E1tinw.te•
740-742-3411
Bryan Reeve~
SWan Reeve•

SAYRE
TRUCKING
Hauling
Limestone &amp; .Gravel

Reasonable Rates

Joe N. Sayre

740·742·2138
3/11/99TFN

PL,EASANT VALLEY
HOSPITAL
C/0 Personnel
2520 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
Fax (304) 675·6975.

AA/EOE

Howard

ROOFING

NEW· REPAIR
CANDLE· MAKERS
We now have 30 NEW
Candle making
fragranceslll
•Birdhouses • Bear
• Wreaths • Refills

"THE COUNDY
CANDLE SHOP"
Tuee- Friday 10-6
Sat 1().4

Rt. , 124S:~:~IIe, Oh

WICKS
"fiOLIMG IHC.
We Deliver
Limestone, Gravel,
· Sand, Fill Dirt,
Agric ult~ral Lime,

Mulch, Top Soil
. (Low Rates)

. 740-992·3470

HURRY!
Deadline for
The Sentinel
Al.umni Section
is Friday,
May 14th-4 pm
Call for details

L. Writesel

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room ackl~lono &amp; Remodellnll
•NewGaragea .
•Eioctrlcel &amp; Plumbing
•Rooilng &amp; Gutttra
•Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
•PaHo &amp; Perch Doclt1

Pomeroy, Ohio
~2

yro. Locol

Jack's Roofing
&amp; Construction
Roofl11g • Repairs
•Coatings •
Sidings • Painting
• Drywall &amp;
• Plumbing
Free Estimates

Joseph Jacks

740·992·2068

Trucks ~ tr1ctor.

Gutters

Trollars-housH-mobllo
HomH-decltl-drlvewoyo

Downspouts

EquipiTJint Cllll!td &amp; Ollgl'flltd

FREE ESTIMATES

JEFF STETHEM
PHON~: (740) 985-4218
EMAIL:
STETHEM@EUREKANET.COM

949-2168

FREE ESTIMATES

Gutter,Cll!anlng
Painting ·
... lFN

Fm Etllm.tt.e

V.C. YOUNG Ill

MOillE
POWER WASH

TRI·SIATE

ROBERT BISSELl
CONSTRUCTION
·New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare .
FREE

ESTiMATEES

985-4473·
7

Now Open For
Spring Season
Complele Une Of
Ve9olable &amp; Bedding Plants
All Flats $8,50

BlSSELL BUILDE., ,

INC. ·

Hanging Baskets
Blooming &amp; Foflage
$5.75&amp;'Up
•Geraniums, Azaleas
•shrubs &amp; Trees
We Honor Golden
Buckeye Card
Open
9·5 Weekday Sunday 1-5

New Homes • VInyl .
Siding •New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and R~IDEIITIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Senior DbNuntl
Fnel:ltbaatee

HUIIAID'S
GIEEIHOUSE

614-992-7643

Lo"'!bollom, Ohio

SYRACUSE

(No Sunday Calls) .

(740) 985-3677

TREE AND STUMP
REMOVAL

KEITII MYERS
INSUIED OWNER

H:I•S77.
;I/OOTFN

Wanted ,..o Buy: Wedd ing Dre11.
Size 6. $275, 74().441·0432 .

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

HelpWantad

$$$Make Money IS$$ Work .. At
Home · Assemble Produotl.
Easy Work, E~ c ellent Pay. Frwe
De rails! Send S.A.S.E . To : N~t,. l
H omeowr~e r ' s Assoc iation. P.O.
Sox 67 5. Ripley. WI/ 25271 .

PAAT·TtMEYAAD HELP

son

SEE: STORE MANAGER
MAY 12THAU MAY 14
7 A.M.·12 P.M.
&amp; 1 P.M. ·5 P.M.

.-

APPLY AT:

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Personals

Start Oa tl ng Tonlgt111' Have lu n
playi ng the Ohio Da1ing Game. 1·
SOO·ROMANCE, e~ension 9681 .

30 Announcements
Lonely? Can Tonight! 1·900-"!!26·
4862 , Ex t. 1657. $2.99 per. min .
Must be 18 yrs. Serv·U (6.t9)64584.34.

New To You Thr ift Shoppe
9 West Stimson; Athens
740-592· 1842 .
Quality clothing and household
ilems . $1 .00 bag sale eVe ry
Thursday. Monday th ru Satu rday
9:()0.5:30.

40

1 ijla ck Male Cat. Very Fri endly.
Good With Ch ildren , 1 Fema le

Fema le Aonweiler to good home ,
740·985·3362.
Found: cow , Salem Center vicinity, caii74D-698·65&lt;l2.

EMAIL ADDRESS:
•
JOBS084LUMBEA.C9M •
CHECK OUT OUR WEBSITE'
.WWW.84LUMBEA.COM :
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY : .
EMPLOYER Mlf DV
ORUG FREE ENVIRONMEtn:

ApplicaUons For Lila Guard Pclsi·
tl ons At london Pool For Ult

1999 Swimming Season Are Be·
ing Acc epted . Subm il applll~a­
tio ns In Writing, With Tra ln Qlg
And E.xperlence, To Janice Zvtlll·
ing, Clerk ·Treasurer. At The Syr·
acuse Municip al Build ing Or Mall
To PD. so~ 266, Syra cuse. QH 1
45779 .

Purrfe ctly Happy Healthy Black 5
Month Old Kittens, To Good

Homes, 740.245·5104 .

Lost and Found

.

Ava ilable Flelebec:l
Opp0rtun1Uea
Co Dri¥ers &amp; Owner ()peratOft
New Pay Pa~aoe
:
'Starting Pav 31 Cents fMJie ..
"Plus 2 Cents /Mile Bohus

•Trap Pay !Stop And
Lay Over Pay

"
'Direct Deposit
•
'Oua 11 Comm
•
"BGBS Medlcai /Den1al Nlsion"' ·
.

GaraQO 0ooJ. (3041875·6118. ·

60

84 L.UMSEA COMPANY
2200 ACY AVENUE
JACl&lt;SON, OH 4Y40 .

.

Giveaway ·

"4011(

"

·Home Most Weekendi
•Ass.g ned Equipment
EOE M/F
Reedy F&lt;H' A Chongo1
Cardinal Fretght Caniefw
Call Boyd 800-220·2421

•
•
•·
•

Found· black &amp; brown German
Shepherel type pup , 2J3 monttts
old , Hemlock Grove area . 740-

AVON I All Areas • TO Buy or Sell .
Shirley Spears. 304·675--1 429. ~

992-7285.

Compu 1e1 Users Needed . Work
Own Hrs. S25K -SBOK/ Yr. 1·800·
476-8653 X 7777 . 'lt'WW.1Cwp.cor0

Fqund: Chow Chow Golden Re·
UJever Mix, In Basil Road Area,
Has Collar,·74o.441·0370.
Found: Saturday, May ·8th, .near
Baske.tbaU Court in Pt. PL . Arl l·
ol Je.,lry. (304)67H658.

c"

l ost: lemale Siberian' Husil:y. bli.Je
eyes , one bl ind, Tanne r"s Run.
Racine area , child's pe1. 740·9493128.

.

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
AU, Y•fd Sale's Must
Bt Plld In Adv•nee.
QEAQLINE: 2:00p.m.
the day before the ad
Is to run. Sunday

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On

edition · 2:00 p.m.

Frldoy. Mondoy odltlon
• 10:00 o.m. Sotunloy.

Thursdays

Furn iture , Clothing And Ass oned
Items, Teens Run Road, One Mite
Olf Route 7. Starts Monday 51101
99 Thru Saturd~.

..
:.1

Co oks &amp; Waitress. Appl~
. Country Corner Cafe. in Letart. •

Co smetologist N8.eded. Business
Growin g. Guarantee&lt;' Wagts
Plus More. 740·446-7267
•
DRIVING POSITIONS ..
AVAILABLE:
Class A OTR
Single Dr ive,, late Mode l
worths With Reefers. West Coa~t

KM·

Carrier.

..

-·

Class B OTR:
,
•
Team Stra ight Truck, Late MOdel
Frelghtliners W11t1 Sleepers. Must
Ha ve A1r Brake Endorse ments,
BOO Mile Aacliu s. Home Deliver·
ies

Bo!h Positions:
Afleas~ 25 Years Old
Atleast 2 Years Experience
.GoodMVA
Week. Pay
Health .lnsurance Available
Work Well Wilh The Public

May 13th , Thursday, 9- 4 , 1535
SchOol Road , Longaberger Baskets , Name Brand ·
Clo.lhing, Furniture, OthecOdds I
Endsl
·

For Mo re lnlorm afion Call 800·
437·8764, Hrs. 8.30 A.M. ·5 P.M . '

Misce llane ous , Canning Ja rs,
Houehold Items, Exe rcis e Ma·

6212, John Pee~ .

Granam

chine . Tuesday. Wednesday, 9·5.
1 Mil e From Ala Grande. 1488
State Route 325 .

Several Families In Eu reka May
18th ·22ncl . Lots Of StuN! •

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

£•(!11M., B•tUU., G•ranl"""

MYERS TREE
SERVICE

Pay you instead of Dumping Mr

Otl io River Ban~s ~ 2 112 mllt:S
lo~er 7 S. ( 7~) 44~1 127

84 Lumber Is LooKing For An -tn·
dlviduai ·To Work In The Lumber
Yard II You EnJOY Work 1ng C1.ut·
doors And The Ph'fs•cal Work.Of
Bu ilding loads, Unloading Aod
Loading Truc ks This Could 'Be
Th~ Job For You . Apply In f'!H-

38782 Sumner Rl»d,
Pomero ' OhiO 454769

AT6:30 P.M• .
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game ·
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starb~rat
Progreaslve top line.
Uc. II 00-50 11n1"'"

Wanted fill Dirt and Flodl.l Let ""

84 L.UMBER

t062. .

SIGN-ON BONUS
INCLUDED
Various speciahies and
shifts available.
Full-time and part-time
employment.
Ct~mpelitive wages and
· b.enefits.
· Please apply or send
resumes' to:

Wan1 To Sell )'our Stuff? Clll Rr(·
erside Aucpon And Let IJs Self Jt
For You, 74()..256-6989.

Calico Cat Long Haired. 740-446·

CIEDI'

Parking Lots

25yrs experience
Free Esfimotes
740·742-8608

Linda's Painting

· Free Estimates

110 Help Wanted

late Model Cars dr
Trucks.. 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smirl'l Sulek Pontiac, 1900 East·
ftfff'Avenue. Gallipolis.
·

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE
St. Rt. 7 Bewteen Five
Points &amp; Chester
We Custom Spray
• Vegetables e Corn
e Soybeans
·

•

Clean

Slug &amp; Shot
Matches

Aeros8 rrom Forked Run State Park and
dose to Fork Run Boat Ramp
s ' e 0 io

1 mo.

,_

Russ Moors owner, 740·9U·
2526

RUTLAND, OH.
AMERICAN
LEGION
BEECH GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM

1-740-667-3083
1-740-667-3316
$550.00 Year
$12 .00Night
. $10.00 Primitive Camping
Eleetrie &amp; Water and or Full Hook-U p

Wanted to Buy

Ant•ques. top prices paid. AlVei·

For Free
Program Guide
CaU 992-2727

!IENDRIX CAMPSITE RENTAL

90

1ne An tiques. P.omer oy, Onlo,

Local
Television

ourllualn••• Is

William Safranek, Attorney At Law
.(7 40) 592-,5025 Athens, Ohio

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Par~•
Factory Authorized
C u'se-IH Parts
Dealers .
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 46723

Lon

TV 27

For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

DEPOYSII
PIRft

8

WJOS

1-800-967-4774
At

to

Wedemeyer 's Au ction StrViCI.
Galllpplis. Ohio 7-tn-379-2720.
·

Absolute Top Oollar~ AU U S. Sil·
Coins, Proofut4,
D•amonds, Ant• que Jewelry, Gold
Rings , Pre·1930 U.S. Currency,
Stert1ng , Etc Ac(IUISttions Jewtlty
• M.TS Co•n Shop , t51 Secon&amp;
Avenue, Gallipolis, 7.40·&lt;146·2&amp;42. :

Light Hauling
up

RIVERSIDE AUCTION liARH ,
Every Saturda~ Night 7 P.M,,
Cr(')Wn City, 740--25&amp;-6989

~t~er And Gold

Sil l 1 mo.

To The Residents
of
Gallia County!

Dave's Garage

Near the 338 &amp; 124 split in the Great Bend

···-··~·Piaallag
·M..cMng

(740) 593-6671

· MIII~mo. pd.

Phone: 740-843-5572

CaU A Liule One

Stop In And See
An Old Friend
Mike Drehel
Sales R eprese nt a live
Larry Schey ·

'

Pttwer

. . . . . . C..•IIIIp

..,. ....... 949·1 70 I

740 742-8888

HILL'S

Marty's
.

Mon- Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yr8 experience

773-5785 Or 30o4· na-~.•n .

All Y1rd Sallt' MU1t "e P1 ld In
Advt~nc:~.

0.1dllne : 1:OOpm the
diY ·berort 1he ed ~~ to run,
Sundll!)' &amp; Mond1y edltlon1' 00pm Frtdoy.
May ,14·15. turn llrst road' left pest
WMPO from Middleport Hill, fifth
house, lots olltems ..

80

Auction
and Flea Market

Drummer looking lor lead,· basslat
and lemale v6callst with one lo:

s1rumem capability. call 740·699·
Futl·time Truck Driver Needed for
Retail Busmess C all: Carolina
lumbe r &amp; Supply Co. (30 4)675·
1160, or bring resume In at 312
Sil"1h Street. Pt. Pleasant. WV.
Hiring:
...
HEAVY E.QUIP OPERATORS '
AND CARPENTER~
.'
2 Vears 'Experlence

• •·

N_
ecessary. Cali1 ·800-339--6518... .
. Between 8:00A.M. ·5:00P.M.

lVI Equal Opportunl1y E~
Jewe lry· Sates Reta il Salts and

Compute r Experience Ae&lt;fUiredi
Acqujsillqns Fine Jewetry. 15-l
Second Ave . Gallipolis. Appty

"'on&lt;Jay thru FridaY.

.

•

Keebler Co. is now acceptlnQ
resumes for the position or Wee-

kend Merchand tser. Grocery e..
perlence preferred . S.i1d rt&amp;urne
to · Keebler Co., 3959 BIICtl·
·
, Ona, WV 255-45.
,·

Bill Moodlspaugh Auctioneering.
Complete Auc tjoneerlng SerVIC·
e&amp;. Consignment au cti on· Mill
Labors Stan $7
Hour, CerStreet, Middle port , Thursdays . pentry; Aoollng &amp; ¥asonry, FuttOhio llconso 11693. 740·989· . Timt. In Gallipolis Area, 74Q.2M..
2623.
.
1722.

An

~.

�•
~age

Tuesday, May 11, 199ft

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

10 • The Dally Sentinel

t uesday, May 11 , 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

~A~ui,EVY~O~OP~~~----------------------------~~============~~===========================·
NEA Cro..word Puzzle

BIUDOE

"•

PHILLIP

ALDER

ACROSS

40Havtntlllllde•

110

STATETESTED NURSING
ASSISTANT POSITIONS

U nLE CAES ARS Is Now H~rlng

All Poatllons. Drivers . In Store
And Assistant Manager Posl
tlonl!l Available On..,ers Earn
Houri~ Wage • Tips &amp; Comm•s·
sionsl Please Apply At The Gallt·

poNs UtUe Caesars

Live-in Care Giver net~ded for
lady Room/board and wages
Atfrences requtred (304)675·
42011
Local Trucking Company Seektng

Quali fied Truck Drivers Good
Pay And Benehts Send Resume
To Driver, P 0 Box 109 Jack
son. Ohio 45540 Or Cell 1 740
286 1463 To Schedule An Inter

-_

...

Rap•dly expanding clnerna ctrcuit
has immediate openmg If yo u
nave food se rvice or reta1l man-

agement expenences this would
be a natu ral fi t Relocellon to
Pittsburgh Pa req uired Prev1ous
movie theatre menagemant/proj,ctlon booth experiences a big
plus! Excellent starling salary and
benefits package mcluded Relo·
calion fee s will be rei mbu rsed
s ..rt Now! Career growth Is un
limited! Training w111 be prov1dM
Please fax re sume to Joseph 0
Angelolti (9 141559 9802
MediGal Processo r FT /PT No
Exp Nee Will ...ram PC Req Earn
40K Call800-663-7440
Need 7 Ladles To Sell Avon 740
446-3358
NOW HIRING
$170.00 ~R WEEKIPT
(GUARRANTEED SALARY)
Men And Women Needed To Do
Telephone Ope rator WO!'k For
LOCAL RADIO
STATION PROMOTIONS

• Day And Evemng
ShillS Available
• Full And Part Time Ope ning
• No Expenenced Needed·
WeTra1n
• Homemakers Work While
Children Are In SChool
• College and Htgh SchOOl Students Welcome
Pr8'110US A ppl ~ean l s
Need to Reapply
Apply In Person At
17 P1ne Street
Gallipolis OH
Monday, May 10
Tuesday May 11
Wed May 12
300 PM tiii 6 00 PM Only
Ask Fo r Ms Harns
Now Hirm g A Full Time Cake
De co rator Poss ibl e 30 35 Hrs
Per Week Day Shi ft On ly Cake
Deco rating Expe rience Req uired
With Re sume, Call Gall1pol1s Da1ry
Queen, 740·446--3278
Nu rs e AlO e Trammg Cl ass es
Come Join Our Team That Makes
A Difference We Are Olfermg
Nurse Aide Tralmng Cla sses On
Site At Scemc Hills Nursing Cen
ter II You Have Previously Completed An Ap plication Please
Come And Apply Aga in Or Con·
tact Pam Caldwell, 8 30 A M To
4 30 P:M Wed nes day Thru Fri
day Al740 446-71 50
PART TIME LP~ POSITION
Holzer Senior Care Ce nter A
Pro gres sive Long Term Care
Company Is Currently Ta~l n g Ap·
pllcat1ons For Part T1 me LPN Po
sltions The Facility ls Located In
The Southern Reg ion Of Oh1 o
We Are Seeking Individuals Who
Will En sure f he Highe st St an
dard Of Resident Ca re The Ap·
pllclint Must Ha11e An Ohio Nurs
lng license Holzer Sen1or Care
Offers Excel lent Benef1 ts (Pa1 d
Va cation , Paid Hol idays, Et c ) If
Interested In A Challenging Pos•·
lion Apply In Person At 380 Cola·
nl al Orl11e B1dweH Ohio 45614,
EOE
Part lime off ic e work part time
cashier well establis hed bu s1·
ness Send resu me to Th e Da1ly
Sentinel, PO Box 72-975 Pamer
oy, OH 45769
Pos tal J obs to $18 35/Hr Inc
benefits No Exp en ence For
Ap p And Exam Info Call 1 BOO
813 3585 Ex1 8826 8AM 9PM,
7 Days fds Inc
Production Workera
Unite d Pre cast, In c (UPt) Is a
central Oht o prec ast conc rete
co mpany UP! Is see km g to f1 ll
several positions 1n 1ts product1on
area to quahf1ed mdNiduals ThiS
Is constru ction type wor k that re
qui re s heavy hftmg &amp; ove r ttme
ho urs Pay Is $8 00 per hour lo
start Employer patd med1cal ben·
eflts arter 30 days, 401 K program
an d advancement opponunntes
All applicants must pass a phys•·
cal ex am &amp; drug scre en UPI •s
willing to assist with rel&lt;a~ t1on lor
the rig ht person or family Afford
able housmg close to JOb locatiOn
Is avai lable If Interested plea se
ca11 1·800- 36e 8740 Ask lor lisa
REGISTERED NURSE
Jackson General Hosptta l, RIP
ley WV, Needs full time AN lor
CCU ED Med/Surg Current WV
• State License, Rel8\lant Expen·
ence Repty To Jacksoo General
Hospllal PO Box 720 Ripley,
WV 25271 13041372 2731 EXT
313 EOE
RESUMES UNLIMITED Offers
Personalized Re sume s And
Much More l Interview Matenals
To Get You Prepared 74 0·388-

3800
Ro ofer needed, some carpenter
experlenc8 helplul 7M&gt;- 378-6349
Sale s Representative S12 biUmn
company with 100+ years ot so l·
id performance see ks energetic
professional for sat es career m
th e li fe Insurance and fi nancial
services Industry Two-year tra in
lng program , aggressive c om pensation and benefits package,
and tuition assistance tor prales·
slonal development Opportunity
ror promoti on lo sales management For more information, con ·
lacl Linda Dunlap 740 446-0372
EOE
Scenic Hills Nursing Center Is
Now Accepting Appllatlons For
The Position Of Social ~arvlces
Director, LSW Please Send Re·
sume A.nd Salary Requirements
To Charta Brown At Scenic Hill s
Nursing Center, 3 11 Buckrldge
Road , Bidwell, OH 45614
(Member Of EOE)

Help Wanted

Holzer Semor Care Center Is
Currently Taking Applications For
S1a1e Tested Nursing Ass iS tants
Excellent Working Environment
And Benellts No Phone Calls
Please App l y In Person At 330
Co lonial Dri ve , Bidwell Oh io
456 14

230

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

Professional
Sarvlces

WALL-CEILING CLEANED EX·
PERTLY Saves on repa inting In·
use the exclusive
delrmtely
Von Schrader V53 Power Wall·
C!eamng System Protects paint,
1ea11es glass, retards chalking
Anti-Mildew, no odor sanitizes
Free esti mates Call Clear ly
Clean at (304~75-4040

we

Sunset Home Construction· ex·
per•ence a plus lull time position
740·742-34t1

140

Business
Training

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home) Call
Todayl 740·446-4367 1-B002t4-0452, Reg 190·05·1274B

180 Wanted To Do
Approved Master licensed Elect riCia n, WV025956 Free Est1 ·
mateli lor Resi dential Ser v1ces
(304)675-7927
C hn slla n Womil! n Will Prov1d e
Oay ca re in My Home Only
$1 2 00 Day For I Ch ild $20 00
Day Fo r 2 Etc CPR Ce rt ifi ed
EMT Cart Pe nding Re frences
740·245·9562
CNA Wltl'l 20 Yrs Exp And Ex
ceil Referen ces Has Prrva te
Roo m And Full Care In Her Home
For The El derl y For More In fo
740 -256-6342, Also Nutnflo us
Me al Pl anmng And Wheel Chatr
Accessible
Co nn ie's Ch ild Care has open·
tngs, S R 7, Tuppers Pla1ns Cer·
t1f1ed m Meigs and Athens Coun
ues Reasonable rates open 2 4
hours, seven days per week, 740
667· 6329
E &amp; S l awn Service Des ign, lm
plemen tatlon
ana Service
Avai lable to r Spun g Clean up
fer t1hz1ng and planti ng Free estl·
mates Sa tl slac tr on guaran teed
Greg Milhoan 304/675 4628
Elec t nc Ma in te nance Ser~J i ce
Wi rmg, Breaker Boxes, L1ght Ftx·
ture Hea ting Sys tems and Re
modelmg (740)441 1401

Ellm Hom e- care lor elderly or
hand ic a pped Everyt hing fu r
ntshed except doc tor and medt
c1ne call 740·992·3360
George s Po rtable Sawmill don t
haul your togs to the m11t just call
304 675 1957
l nten or &amp; Exterior Pa inting Ex
pe rl enced, References Rea son
able Rates Fo r Fr ee Estimat e
740·368 8041
Mary's Daycare low rates flexible
nours 18 years experi ence call
740-742 0506 anytime
Need sitter for the summer? Day
ca re w1th a pool Open Mo nday
thru Fr ida y as k lor Kel ly 740·
667·6460 Tuppers Plat ns area
Will Care For Eld erly Or HBMI
cap pe d Persons In My Home ,
740 441 -0000
Will Do
Babys1R1ng In my Hamel Any
Age Smoke·Free House hold,
(3041675·6763
Wtll do odd
(3041675-4538

job s

Mullng

W1ll Mow Weedeat Any Size
Yard, Ditches Hillsides, 740 441
0682

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PU8LI S HI~G CO
rec ommends that you do busi ness with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have mvestlg ated
th&amp; offering
I-ALL CASH BIZIII
Collecl $5, $10 + $20 8111sl
Earn $500 $1,000 /Wk Easy!
Free $5 samplel lnv Aeq
1·800-997·9888 24 Hrs

1992 14x70 Oakwood 2 Bod·
rooms, 2 Full Baths, All El ectric
Wtth Heat Pump, 740··44 1-Q959,
740-37&amp;-2796

AJI real estate advertising ln
this newspape r ts subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
It IHegal
to advertise ~any preference,
limitation or discrimination
based on race color, religion,
sex familial status or national
origin or any Intention to
make any sucl'l preference
Umitation or discrimination •
of 1968 which makes

Thrs newspaper w111 not
knowmgly accept
advertrsements for real estate
whlcl'l IS 1n VIOlatiOn of the
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellmgs
actvert1sed In lhrs newspaper
are available on an equal
opportumty basis

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale
2103 Mount Vernon Avenue 3BR
1 1/2BA Famrly Room , Garage
CentraiArr Pa tio Porch, $77,000
(3041675-2533

3 Be droo m Sp lit Entry Bric k
Home on Route 2 at Mt Alto
Bu1lt·in Krtchen Dr ningroom, LA,
3 Baths, FP Woodburnlng stove,
on nearly 5 acres land (304)895
3881
3 Bedrooms, 2 Bath Ranch House
7 Yea rs Old. 28x30 Attached Ga
rage 12x24 Bu il ding Ba rn &amp;
Trac to r Shed 69 1/2 Ac re s Or
Will Sell House &amp; Loti Meigs Co
740·992-3537
By owner, 725 Page Street M1d·
dleport, house &amp; 3 lots, must see
to appreciate, will se ll house wilh·
o ut lo ts for $89 000, 740· 992·
2704. 740 992 5596

Excel lent start-up home Ow ner
pay cl osmg co st 39R w/ Ba sement Electnc Heat/C A $32 000
(3041862 3772
For Sale By Owner 38R 1 1/
2BA , large family room &amp; office,
upstairs totally rem odeled new
roof. guttering, wate r softner &amp;
lot s of extras 29 12 Anniston
Dnve , PI Plea sant (304)67 5·
260 8 Lea11e Mes sa ge on Ma·
chine
For S.!lle By Owner 4BR 300 0
Squar e Foot H6use 4 Car Gara ge 5 Acres , Ve ry Secl uded
$199 999 (603)366-9436
House For Sale 2219 Oak St
PI Pleasanl $28,000 (3041695·
3062

for Free Estimates!

COPPICK LANDSCAPING
50556 SA 124
Racrne Ohio
Free estimates, design planning
complete landscape serv ice, res·
ldentlal and commercial , 1ounlain
and garden display 15 years experience
740-949-31 30
Now serving Gahla end
surrounding areas

Lowered Pncel 87 Clayton, 14r70
Newly Re mod led lnterr or Oak
Cab in et s 3 Bedroo ms 11/2
Balhs $9,000 00 (7401-446-4207

Pl eas e Help! 3 Bedroom, 2
Baths just take over Payments!
1 868·736-3332

Used SingleWide Around $100
per month Cal11·800.948 5678
Oakwood Ho mes Barboursville
WV $499' Down Single Wide
$999 Down bouble Wide. 304·
736 3409

1 wamtna- 42 ·u Wimer
I ldl - a(
Olymplu lltl
Uganda
45 Garden tool
10 T_....
4llodlum
12 linger KniGht
hydroalde

home, self surtlcient with natural
water spnngs, 2 gas wells, some
timber, 20 minutes from Athens ,
10 minutes lrom Pomeroy, lots of
privacy for $68 500, may spilt up,
740·992·3564

340 Business and
Buildings

Commercial Building in Hender·
so n For s'a le or Lease Call
(8031366-9436

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
2 Building Sites left off Route 33

2 Grave lots and Vaults at Ohio
Valley Memory Gardens In
Crr~ly Section (740)·866-6506

Home-Site Mobil Homes Wei ·
co me Lots of Woods ·Plenty of
Rooml &amp;400 00 Down, $145 00
monlh (1401256-1216
Its not a Farmers Farm, its a
Large Beautiful Home In the Mid·
die of Lots ot Acreage Good
Hunllng Fishing Lois ol Prlvacyl
Close 10 Town $175K (7401 256·
1216
LAND
In The Country Meigs County
near Rutland Making deals o'n
Combination Lots, 5 to 15 Acres
of rolling woods, great building
s ites, or use as hunting land
S1er11ng 0 $9.500 Counly wa1er
Double wides are Permitted 5%
down LAnd Contract , Free Maps!
1-(600~213-6365

Shaded Campsite by the RI-ver.
Boallng. Fi shing and Private!
$400 00 Down $73 DO mon•h
(740) 256-1216

Real Estate
Wanted

We Buy Land 30 · 500 Acres,
We Pay Cash 1·800·213·8365,
Anthony Land CO

2 Bedroom House In Gallipoli s
304·576-2438

2 Bedroom, w/Basament &amp; Ga
rage Deposit &amp; Reference&amp; No
PelS (004)675-5162
2 BR furnished home In Mason
No pets References required
(304)773·5861

12x65 Master Craft, two bedroom
one beth, gas hea1, •$4000 negoll·
able, 740-9112·1042

3 Bedrooms, Add lsort Area , De
posit &amp; References Required ,
740·367·0325 After 3 30 ~M

16x80 Vinyl Shingle, Assume
Loan, 1·800-383-8862

3 Bedrooms, Sandets Dri ve,
$4501Mo, Plus Doposll 740·441 ·
1519

1973 Hillcrest two bedroom mo·
bile homo, 740-992·5039

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SBl?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1·886-5112·3345

1980 Troller 12xe5 Good Condl·

1977 Wlndoor, 14x70, 3 bedroom,
1 8 112 baths, prir:e to sell , call
740-992-27631r 740-1192-8313.

lion, New Carpel, CIA, AlrHdy

On

ReniOd Lol, $8,000 , 740 -2561472.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
from $279 to $358 Walk to shOp
&amp; movies Call 740·446·2568
Equal Housing ()pporluni1y
Beautiful Modern 1 Bedroom
Apartment Rent &amp; Utilities, Inter·
view, Relerence1, No Pets, Le&amp;ll,
Deposit Non Smokers, In City,
740-446-3664
Christy &amp; Family Living, apart·
ment a home &amp; trailer rentals,
740-992· 4514, apartments available, furnished &amp; unturnlahed
Gracious litJing 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Riverside Apar tments In Middlepori From $249· $373, call 740·
992-5064 Equal Housing Oppor·
turWtles
New Haven 1 bedroom, furnished
apartment, deposit &amp; references,
740-992.0165.
Nice 2 bedroom apartment In Syr·
acuse, $28 5 a month trash In·
eluded, $200 depoall, 740-667·
3516

Secluded farm house fltlilr Dext·
er, depo sit and lease required •
614·759-7959

l!,

51 o

Household
Gocids

Appliances ·
Reconditioned
Washers, Dr~era , Ranges, Refrigraton , 90 Day Guarantee!
Fren ch Clly Moylag, 740·448·
7796

3/4 HP Hayward Super Soff Prim·
ing Pump &amp; Sand Filler Drop In
Corner Stsps, Solar Blanket For
16 Fl x36 Fl Pool On ly Used 2
Seasons 8 Ft Slide &amp; Dining,
Board Remington Woods Master
742 Oeluxe Model 30 06 Semi
Auto With Bushnell Scope , Ex·
cellenl Condlllon, 740·388·9407
AMer6PM
Air Conditioners Used Different
Size s Guara.nteedl 740-886·
0047.
AMAZING
METABOLISM
Breakthroughlll Lose 10· 200
Pounds Easy, Qu ick , Fast
Dramatic Results, 1OO,.o Natural ,
Doctor Recommended Free Sam
pies Call 740-441 · 1982

P.M 740-446-~398

Comple te Set 91 Encyclopedia
Brlttanlca Including Refere nce
Books, Never Used, $200 OBO,
Mini COndll~n 74~446-7106

CQQLQOWN
Central Air Conditioning Added
To Your Furnace 3 Ton Installed
$1,500,2 1/2 Ton $1 ,350, 2 Ton
$1,2!50, The Above Includes Normal Installation If ~u Don't Call
Us WB Both LOS81740 «8--8308,
' Or 1-800-291'!!098
DIBCOunl Mobile Home
PariB &amp; Supp~
Huge lrMtmory
VInyl Skirting Kilo $299 95, 5 Ga~
ton Aluminum Flbered ~o af Paint
$25 21 , 5 Gal Whllo Roof Palnl
$!57 69, Anchors $5 Doors &amp;
Windows, Gas &amp; Electric Water
Heaters, Plumbing &amp; Electrical
Parts , lntertherm, Miller &amp; Cole·
man Air Conditioners &amp; Heat
Pumps Bennett's Mobile Home
Supply, 740·446·S418 Gallipolis,

Ohio
Eleclrlc Hospllal BOd, Nallress &amp;
Bed Side Table. Wheel Chair Llll
For Van Cell After 6 oo PM 740
256-\141
Free Slandlng Buill In fireplace
Unll Wllh Oulslde Air Duels, And
Triple Wall Pipe lncluda!S Good
Condmon, •100. 740-441·1417
Graco Open Top Baby Swing,
Takas "D" Batteries, GoOd Cond.
Gavo $65 00 Wenl $30 00 740)

2~5074
Gravley Walk Behind with 38'
Mower $~50 00 Also soma ac·
cosaorle&amp; for &amp;ala (740)· 441·
0972 afler 7 pm
Grubb's Plano· tuning &amp; repairs .
Problems? Need Tuned? Call tne

Hoose On Loll

1

Boxer pupa, 740· 7-42·
..Jpaloosa Gelding, 15 yaara
15 2hh, excdent trail horn,/
g t disposition, shown in 4H tor
ears, loads easily, good be·
g ,Q er horse incl.udea 15" sad·
, bridle, blankel, $1400 (llrml
o
rse only $1200. email (daar·
o
acx:ess mountain, net) Phone
76-2126

~

Flili , Birds, Pond Supplroa
Sun HI.PM Mon Sat 11AM·
6PM Fish Tank/PB1 Shop, 2413
Jackson AvenuefPoint Pleasant
(304)675·2063

)

.I

&lt;:H()5e

1995 Neon $4 500 1990 Gran,d"" ,1
AM New Motor $2,200, 1996 Et· ~
COI1 $2,500, 740-446-7'276
'

'

Sou&amp;b

'

11

BARNEY

1998 Buick Century Custom, •f t
Ooors, Loaded 18,000 Miles.
$15,000.00 740-367.()157.

41

THESE 4 O'CLOCK
'

KILLIN'

1998 Pon tiac Trans -Am , Navy
Blue Metallic, 5 7 liter, LS 1 En· ~
glne, ·Lea!her lnlorlor. 1 Speal&lt;er
Monsoon Stereo, 12 Disc CD
Changer Fully Loaded! Witt Take

Used lift Truck Forks For Sale,
Various Slzn 175 00 · S1 00 00,
Per Set Will Trade For Wood
Burner 740-379-2757

630

Livestock'

Reg istered Angus Bulls For
, Bloodline, Touchstone and
740-388-8756
Year Old Red Short Horned Bull
740-446.0161 Or740-245-9192

~4 year old kid broke Appaloosa

Pewter Flgulrlnea, Collectible
Unicorns, Castle Wizard , a~c
Antique Sofa· Tebte Occup Japan Teacups &amp; Saucer Setl1
Fenton MllkglaJS Lamp &amp; Other
Pieces Couch Cushions(Pieu·
ant Valley Oeslgn) Adusson
Wool Rug 7 x5' Flsner Stateo
S~atem, Jenny Lind Babybltd ,
Home Interior, And More
(304)675-7565
!I'
PRio1E8TAR
Free Dl-llpoclol
Cell now 1·800·263-2640, ,,

lnataiiiUion
And
Supply We Soli
Wholesale To Thft Publi c We
Slock Janllrol Hea11ng And Cpol
lng Equipment, Duct W4rk , 'Aeglsters, And Related Materials ' For
You To Install Vouf Own Or We
Con F~rnlsh A Lls1 Of Dealers To
lnslall For You If You Don 1 Call
Us WI Bolh LOlli 5~3 Jatkeon
Pike, 740·446·8308, 800· 291 ·

Good Condition Asking $6,500, .. ,
740-441 •1417
I
1995 Dodg e Ram , ShortBed,· ,
4X4 , 360 , Automat iC, Loaded,'
60,000 mllu Hard Roll Over, '
AlrBags, Radlalor Good. $4.700
(3041895-3080/895 3237
'

1-;~~~~t:=~A:u:lh~Aeov:e:s
4- A.rablan Mares, l·Walklng
Mare, 1· 10 year old Maf~ 1/2
Quater and 1/2 Morgan Dried
Hose Manure $5 00 per bag in·
sta!lment Plan for Horses to Good
Homes ! 25% Down Affordable
ABI89 (7401388o6358
Fair P1gs $65, Cured Pork, USDA
lnspeclod , $2 25 Per Lb 740 ·
245-9557
Fair Pigs for Salel E&gt;&lt;collenl Blood
Lineal For more Information Call
(740)· 245 ·5872 or (7401 387 ·
0583
Pig For Sale, Call Af1or
7403118-11:160

•

'90 Chevy A.$110 van, all wheel
drive PW, PL good condition ,
$5000, 742·2875
-

5 P.M

710 · Auto• lor Sale
'90 Mllzda AX7 black, PSR, 91 K
secur ity aystem, 5 apeed nice
slaroo sys1om, $4500, 740·742·
2303
1110 · 1111GCAR8 FROM~
Police Impounds, And TaJ~;
Ropo's For Llsllnga Call 1· 800·
319·3323 Ex1. «20
1986 Buick Summeraat Air, Aulo,
Good Woo Car, $2,000, 740-367·
0241.
1987 Plymouth Relllilnt Wagon
Very Good Shape, Run Exl Loli
01 Now Perla Asking $1.500
740-441-1178
•
1987 Toyo1a Cellca GT 5 Speed
A/C, Sun Rool PS., PB , Runi
Groal Call740-448 -2107, 740245·9164
1990 Chevy Cavalier, $895 two
door aport coupe, 5 speed, runs
excellent , excellent con ditio n
'
740-742-4510 or 740-388·9693
1990 Chryaler !5th Avenue Very
Good Condition , One Owner
Clean Excellent Ga s Mileage:
87,000 M ilts Alarm Syale m.
ASS $5500 (304)675-7614

'

~~--------~
-~
740 · Motorcycles
;~
1996~ 300
198~· 200

EX Honda with Extraat ,
SX Honda for Parts! .. •r
(740) 367·7210

AY

::

..

·''
~

,,

3237

~

f.JOW WOULD VOU
LIKE TO SU'r' SOME:
J!OMEMADE FUD6E?

M'&lt; MOM,M'r'

6RAMIMAND
M'&lt; SISTER .,

Oor,.1 ,rtt .. ,.,, by lrfh prlcts r

Shop rite di!SII(Ird SKIIM

ITUESDAY

ROBOTMAN

.
'·'~

New Wholesale Windshield 6
Body Parts Available , 740-U&amp;·
7278 740-388·9062

,_...

SERV ICE3

"

"•

.,"

•

Home

~

~---lm~p~ro=v~e=me~n~t~S--. ·J
BASEMENT

WATERPfiOOF1Nil
Unconditional lifetime guarantM
Local reterenr:as furnished
• labilshod 1975 Call 2o4 Hra. (740)
448·0870, 1-800·287·0578. Roo era Walo(l&gt;roollng

·ABTRO·ORAPH

e.. .,

Appliance Parts And Service AH
Name Branda Over 2S Years E•'
perlence All Work Guaranteed
French Clly Maytag , 740·448~
7795
CSC General Home Main·
tenence· Painting, vinyl aldlng
carpentry, doors, wlndowa, baths:
mobile homo repair and mo,. For
eellmal8 call Cllo1, 740-992·

::a

"

Proleaalonal, 20yra experience
wllh all nlasonory, brick. block &amp;
stone Also room addltl9n1 , garages, etc. Free estimates
(304)n3-9550
•'

~esktlnllal or commercial wiring,

"'" nrvlco or repalra Maier u-

23 Slight

....

*"'-

7 Mllnlcurlll of

22M.,.t.-

·'

Intentionally

~

24 New Rochelle

IIICOnd

college
25 Do a
mall room

r'uc~~et

27
28 - -European

28 Piece• (out)
31 Long. deep

CUll

33 Runny
38 Ear: ptefl•

40 Hot brandy
drink

41 V•t period of ,

Ume
,
42 Single
.
43 Exchange lor

_..Ts~....

46~=llltlblrd

46-

47 Circular lint
belng

50 "'WKAPin

Cincinnati"

-.nan

5I! Weir

53 African native

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher Cf)'ptograma art cr.led from quo!litlons by famous peop4e past and present
EliCh fetlef Wllhe Ciphtr Mndl for l nolher Todfy'l dw B equa/6 W

MJ I

'A L G

ZA

BPZM

J L y

NJSMPLGI

NJDSQC

BPZM
K F

GLY

TANT . '

JZANPS

ZMG

XAD

TGE P L

ZMGV

QLEPLGGDI

~ LE

A K Z

CAAR

FJELAC

PREVIOUS SOLUTION ·over lhe weekend another l ounsl QOt robbed
Vorl&lt; Lennox Lew1s • - Jay Leno on IM Lewos ve rsus Holylleld flghl

•n New
'

I
r

PIPZY

1

~u~R=M=o=F:::!~~,'
I I I

t _,

)

One old guy to another.
"Noth1ng IS more responsible
for the good old days than a

s,.....;E_,M,....:.o...,E;:....:L:,.....T~~~ ode~~~~:~ -~.
the
L-~r_.JI_.:rl~..-_l~..--..~..1 you ~y

~

chuck le quooed

__.

loll·ng .n
m..... g ,..,,d.
develop from step No 3 a;elow

•

PR~~~~~~~~slEITUS

I

u~~·~~N~~~E LETTERS

IN

II

I'

I'

I

I

I

r r
I'

I

I

I

,
,

I

J

SCJtAM.I.ETS ANSWHS

Budget Priced Tranamlsalona
and Engtnea All Types, Access , ,
To Over 10,000 Transmissions, '
eve JolniB, 740-245·55'17
"

840 El6ctrlcal 1nd
Refrigeration

Pus

Pus
Pua

I

·:

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Livingston's Basement Water
Proofing, all baaament repatra
dona , free eallmates, lifetime
guarantee 12yrs on Job eMparl·
enco (304)695·3887

12813 RRdepol
18 JIICide'l

·•

Baja 216 , Uke New, Garage
• Kapl , 74~256-1378, Aller 9 00 Pm

810

Eat

.,'•

96 Plorls Jet ,Skl 780 95HP, 2
Seater, 1 Owner, L.ow Hour, Ex·
cellent CondlUon. Include&amp; Trail·
or $3.800 (a041895·3080/895·

A Aulo Ripley, WV (3041372·
3933 or 1-800-273-9329

Nor&amp;ll

31

tlf
PL.AYer&gt; GOLF.

PEANUTS

750 Boats &amp; Motors ~ .:..

New gas tanka &amp; bOdy parts D 6·

Pus
Pus

\r

r

1999 350 Ford Pick -Up. 12.000
Miles. Diesel. 6 Speed, 74~387•
7539

16(J

thing

BIG NATlL

1998 Yamaha Blaster 4 WheeJer,
Low Hours $2 450 (3041675·
1105 Afler6PM

96 Kawasaki 1100 ZXI, 120 hp ,
97 Zieman trailer still under warranty 30 hours, two vasts, $4500
080 74~992-5405

20FICI21 Politi! word

root:,

-

·'

lor Sale

~

BOOkS

.....
-·

~~~~ F~~~:·~:~t A:~~~~~;~::~:J

old mare. kkl broke

,.
Pacl&lt;ard Bell 83 Pentium, 561 ful
modem, 36X CD Rom 8MB Ram,
1 GB hard driVe, mon110r Included,
$500, 74~992-!1&lt;135 , esk lOr J ..h
after 4pm

,

1988 GMC 112 Ton , Full Size •• •
Pickup Truck tor sale Auto Low~~
Mllea, (304)675-8980
,.

1995 Ford F- 15Q XL S Speed,
AM/ FM Radio Air Condlllonor,
300 8 Cylinder. 9 500 Miles, 740·
446-9637 Call After 5 PM

Wee&amp;

Arthur Symons, a Bnush poet and
cnttc, wrote, "He knew thai the
whole mystery of beauty can never be
comprehended
by the crowd, and !hat
FRANK &amp; EARNEST
while clearness 1s a v1rtue of style,
perfect explicitness ISnot a necessary
ttt!VIIIlffJiUIAY'S
VIrtue."
f
'~GilOSS Tt4EThe late Terence Reese, arguably
the
best bndge wnter ever, was a finn
tMII'IGyl
~IVfJ ANO UNl&gt;f(l.
believer
in economy of style. Thts
GfNTE-NNIAL
r~e r~ef6'1 '•
had both the drawback and the advantage of making the reader work some
...........
things out for h1mself.
NO • .I l&gt;lr&gt;N'T
In these columns, we stnve to
E-VfN J.I'IOvl
make thmgs as clear and comprehensible as poss1ble Sull, occasion• •
I •
ally !he deals are mystenous. For
example, m thiS one, how d1d South
BORN LOSER
make four spades after West led the
club
queen?
1\ (,()()() ltoi()IC"\1~
1be deal occurred durmg a team
Tl\~1 '(COlt 0\ILP~
match and was reported a few years
WI\IU\11&gt;\C&gt; 100 m..tl
ago by Reese m the London Evemng
-1-if'it.l. '{().) ,.::,r..,
Standard.
The first declarer won tnck one
\o.IMI~
with h1s club ace, drew two rounds of
fit~ .
trumps endmg m the dummy, and
called for the d1amond Jack. East rose
wnh his ace and switched to the heart
SIX . The defenders took two tr1cks
there, then sat back to awa1t a dub
.
trick: one down
The other South found a clever
ruse:
He ducked the firsllnck. When
TH"T
WELL, WKY
SPE"I'.INC.
I 'M 1'H INI&lt;.IN&lt;!&gt;
HOW
SOUNDS NOT! HE~S
West conlinued with the dub Jack,
OF "NSWE~,
HEll. ,..,-,.:jl THE "TI'INC.
OF' 5UINC:.
DOES
LIKE
EXHI61T A J
South won w1th h1s ace, drew lrumps,
$HE
GODFR.E.Y
SerlE· SHE 61WE
!:"{NASTY'
COURT "MD G-ET
THING. 11E A 1)KNOW! and finessed hiS dub nine: Over to
DID NOT
50t1E AICSW!.RS!
dummy w1th a trump, South discardYOU'I&gt; ON THIS L.-.sT
INVOLVE WM&gt; SIIE
1Xl
TEST! IT~
ACTU"-L
ed
a heart loser on the club king .
THERE?
"T"-NI':.:
TOT"LLY
Finally, a diamond toward the king
Ulo4FAIR 1
brought home the contract
N1cely done, but perhaps South
should have unblocked the club nme
at tnck one. Then, 1f West contmues
IIIi~ wilh a h1gh club, declarer gets home
more easily by ev~ntually finessmg
dummy's club eight.

E-,NfST ..

94 Grand Cherokee Laredo 4r4, "'t
autpmaUc 72,000 miles, CO. loadad, excellent condition, $13,000,
home· 740 367, 0119 evenings,
work · 740· 992·6677 weekdays ,
ask lor Stephania

oo

t Will St. lnat.
11 Editor'• note

By Phillip Aldw

"

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

Ford new Holland Tracto r Sale
3930 4WD, 45PTO HP, ! 92 Tur·
bo, Syncho 8X8 Trans F And R
ShUttle Large Pump 2 Remotes 4
outlets, 2yr Full Warranty
$~0 . 900 00 4630 55PTO HP
sanle specs 22,900 30 10 2WD
42 PTO HP, 1 Remote Wet
Brake, lnd PTO 13,500 00 3010
4WD same Specs 16 500
COme
The New TN55, 65, 7!5
4WD models with Super Steer,
will turn shorter than a 2WO
Klltfers Service Center St At
8~1 PI Pleasanl &amp; Ripley Road .
P,.110ne(304)695-3874

Kan1. neighbor

e The whole

do that?

Ton, W11h .Sioel Dump Bed, GOOf! '
Condit ion , Asking $6 ,500, 740· ~

580

610 Farm Equipment

4 Yllle

5

How did he

ME!!

1995 GMC 'Jimmy Lois Of EX1ra11
Ask ing $15 ooo Shop Around
And Compare Thi s Is An Excel•
lent Vehi cle At An Ercellent
Prlce1 740-·7289

FARM SUPPLI ES
&amp; LIVE STOC K

2 Poetic loot
3TMHII

Opening lead: • Q

SANDWICHES,
MAW II '

FEEDIN'S ARE

,

One year old full blooded German
shepherd. papers. all shots dog
taga , Inquire within 740·99 2~
3321 , leave name and number If
not home

Tomatgn lor aale, Aaron Wolfe,
740-247·3638.

c.-

1 Cut

Dealer: South

::::..:::::....:::.:.:::::..:.:.:::::__ &lt; •

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

30 ClrciM of r~
32 FODibllll COHh
WMII 34F..H
311 Mock
31 c.rtobad

Vulnerable: East-West

good "~

oo

DOWN

:r7 - Paulo
311 Farm bulkllngl 8 Hollon

6 A 9 3

sha ~. also need motor for 1987 ·•

1998 Cavalier Z24, PW, PL, PS,
Keyless Enlry CD Player, Au1om ,
14,60 P M iles $9 ,995
740
256-1011

a8

t K 7 8

1997 Plymouth Breeze Loaded
$7 800, 1992 Geo Slorm, $2,000, '
J
·:7:
40:.,::256-::.,:60
::.:;
12:;__ _ _ _ _ • •;

Astro Van. 740-742·2279

aa

•• 5

• Q5

•'•

m,....

• A 10
t A 10 8 5 3

Sou&amp;h
6 K Q 10

1997 Ford Explorer XLT Loaded, "
28 000 Mllea Bal Fact Warr Ex·
•
cellent Condition, 74(4.46-6491

1987 Ch rysler New Yorker,

Baa&amp;
• 52

• 74
• KJ 4
• Q. 4 2
• Q J 10 7

+f~:-f:4-7~1 :.

5I C'(:C.n)
57 Th__,.d -

28 - de France
Z7 llapeticll

6 K 8 4 2

Wet&amp;

.0\lo:&amp;..l.

,,

Full Blooded Himalayan Kittens
$100 Each, 7 49-255-6995

see

:=

• J

199.5 Buick Le Sabre Custo m 4 '
Doors, Blu e Load ed, 740·682· ;
7512
·u

441-1417

'

11 NonptOIII TV
17 Delay
,. ONek-

6 A J I 3
• • 7 3 2

EEK&amp;MEEK

·:
1983 Ford 350 Dump Truck, 1.. •,

TRANSPORTATION

0096

•

1993 Dodge COil, 5 Speed, Good
Condition, 109,000 M1lea, $2,900,
080740-256-1233
••

'72 Mack truck day cab, 237 etl&amp; ' !W'
gine runs good , good tl re a,.
12000 , 1960 C hevy 2 IQn dump ~
truck with Tralleze trl axle heavy ....,
equlpmen1 !railer $8000 740· '
742·2675

4pm

~~~~~~:~:111

••

o

2 walk behind Gravely&amp; - one
runs excellent condition. o ne tor
paris $400, 740·742·2373 after

Lincoln Rapger 8 Portlbla Weld·
er, Has own Engine, Used 128
Hours Asking $2,200, 740·387·
0260

MERCHANDI SE

Block, brlck , sew'er pipes, wind·
ows, lintels, etc Claude Winters,
Rio Grande , OH Cai1 740· 245·
51 21

· 740-742·2603

720 Trucks lor Sale .

One bedroom apartmenl In Mid·
dleport: one bedroom furnished
haute In GallipoliS, 740-992·9191

6908

Building
Supplies

Merchandise

Kenmore washer J
dlor Car Bed All In Good
llonl (7401-440-3849

New Mobile HOme Park at Galli·
polls Ferry Now accepting appll·
cauona for Iota on alta (304)575·

,550

-

Pa; Off. 740-446-4548

One Bectroom Apartment In Pt
Pleasant Furnished. Vary Nice
and Clean No Peta Phone
(304)675-1388

460 Space lor Rent

4336

540 Miscellaneous

Jo hnson's Used Furniture /Ap ·
pllances 740-446·ol039 740-446·
1004, !5 Miles Out Bulavllle Pike
Off 35 Righi On Keeler Road, Blue

Upstairs Thr~e Room Apartment
41 651 Second Avenue, GaiUpo·
lis, NOMI To Library, 1350/Mo
Pius Deposit, No Pets, Call Debbie Or Judy Al74~«8-7323.

WHITE' S METAL DETECTORS
Ron Allison , 121 0 Second Ave ~
nue Galilpol la, Ohio 740·446·

Buy or se ll Riverine Anllques ,
1124 E Majn Street, on AI 124,
Po meroy t-to urs M T W 10 00
a m to 6:00. p m , Sunday 1 00 to
6 00 p m 7,40· 992·2528, Ru11
Moore owner

Now Taking Applicat ions- 35
Wast 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments , Includes Wa ter
Sewage, Trash $31 5/Mo , 7~0 446-0008

Tara Townhouse .l.parlmenta,
Very Spacious , 2 Bedrooms, :i!
FloorS, CA. 1 112 Ball1, Fully car
peted, Patio, No Pels, Lease Plus
Security Deposit Required 740·
446-3481 740-446-0101

Wa1orll no Special 314 200 PSI
$2 1 95 Per 100 , 1" 2 00 PSI
$37 00 Per 100. All Brass Compression F1111ngs In Sllldl
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson, Oho, l·ll00-537-9528

- -Antiques
- - - - --.1
530

North 3rd Ave , Middleport , 2
bedroom unlurn1shed apartment,
deposit &amp; reterencea, 740· 992·
0161i

site available
ween Athens and Pomeroy,
74~385 4367.

Nice Small 2 Bedroom , 5 Room
Houae , Near Centerville fThurman, Gama Schools County Wa·
tar Included , Plan t A Garden ,
$325/Mo • Plus Deposit, No In·
side Pe1sl740-882- 9032

270 C aliber $1511.00
Wincheatar Mod 70
versa ry 30 0 Magnum Catl b'" ~l
$1 000 00 . Smith&amp; Wesaon Mod
1500 270 Caliber $350 00 For
More lnlormatlon 740-379·2601
~

plano Or 7-40-446-4525
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stoctc.
Call Ron Evan&amp;, 1-1100-537-9528

Twin Rivers Tower now accepting
app lic ations lor 1BR HUO sub·
sidized apt lor eklerly and hand·
lcapped EOH 304-875-8679

RENTALS

Sporting
Goods

Commercial culver!, 20' long 12
gauge call740-992 5823

Apartment, Gallipolis Ferry, Oeposlt
Required
No
Pets
(3041675 2546

Ty Beanies xmas bear and oth·
ers WUI self c hea p, 080
(304)675-1 31 1

-&lt;

2 Bedroom Apartme nt , Rio
Grande Area , Close To College,
$350/Mo Includes All Ulllllles.
Deposit Req uired , 1 888 840·
0521

2bdr m apts , total electnc, applian ces furnished laundry rpom
lacllltles, close to school In town
Applications avaHable at VIllage
Green Apts t49 or CAll 740·992·
3711 EOH '

Two place metal porch furniture,
glider /recliner for two, wheelchair,
12&gt;&lt;15 rug, 740-992 1096

_ __ _ _ _ _ ___'_:·

Case Window . Air Conditioner ,
Works Good! $150, Call Aller 5

Apartment lor rent In Middleport,
no pem 74o·992·5858

Ch risty s Family li11lng · property
for sale 202 204 N Second Ave·
nue, Middleport Four 2 bedroom
apartments, two commercial units,
39 5x11 6', bri ck old Firestone
b uilding Asking proce $69 ,500,
ma)l;e offer, Income $1620 month,
call 740·992·4514, ask for Chris
Martin

Washer S95 Oryar $95 Etecttlc
Range $95, Frost Free Refrigera·
tor $150, Freezer $150 Washer
$205 1 Yea r Warra nty, D ryer
$205 1 Year Wa rranty, Air Condt·
Uoner 14,000 BTU 1 220 $250 1
Skaggs Appli ances, 76 Vine
Street Gallipolis, 74()...US-7398

520

....

••'
·'
·'

41 Sewing
lnetrument
51 HNful
54 Omltlllrom
5li ~,.~

11 Molt llf'ICIInl

1992 Nissen Stanza, 4 doot,_.

For Sa~ 50" RCA Home Theaue
Big Screen TV, $600 Kenmore
Dryer $80 Kenmore Counter Top
Dishwasher, $100 (3041675·
6693 -

GOOD USED A PPLIAN CE6
Washers , dryers relrlgerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances , 76
VIne Street, Call 740·446·739 8
1.aee-818.0128

2 Bedroom Apartment, Adjacent
To Un iversity Ot Ala Grande
Campus 740 24!&gt;-5858

2 Bedrooms 10 Mtnuta:s From
Holzer S350/Mo. 740-441 -1519

10x50 trailer, SOuth Second Ave·
nue Middleport, r1nllhed building
large lot with goldfish ponds,
$22,000 , ronlal unl1 , 740.992·
4514 ask for Chris Martin

Does You r House Siding De ck ,
or Driveway need a cleaning? If
so Pressure Washing Is the an·
awart Ca ll Cle a rly Clea n at
(3 04)67 5·404 0, lor a Free Es·
llmale

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur·
nlshed and unfurnished, sactmty
dep osit re(l ulred no pets, 740·
992 2216

7806

410 Houses lor Rent

.. .. Amazing··-- 5 Bedrooma 2
112 baths, over 2,000 SQ . ft , for
less than $400 mo Free Delivery
&amp; Sol 1-800-948-5678

Apartments
for Rent

2 bedroo m apartment In Middle·
port, we pay water, sewer &amp; trash,
you pay gas &amp; ele ctric, $200 per
monlh, $100 depos ll, 740 992·

Re nt Buster N e~ 1999 f4x70 2
or 3 Bedroo ms Only $995 00
Down, $195 00 per month Free
Delivery and Set Up Call 1-800·
946 5678

5 Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;
Lake View, Gallla County,
$32 000 More Acreage Available,
740·388·9679

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

2 Bedroom Mobile Home In Port·
er Are a, No Pets , You Pay A ll
UHitles. Dep o sit &amp; References
Required 74~388-91112

Apt lor Rent, Water A.nd Trash
Paid, No Pets In Galllpohs 740·
388·1100

Large family home for sate on ten
lo11e1y acres Four bedrooms , two
and one hall baths. two llreplaces,
for mat hvmg room and fam ily
room , lour car garage an d two
stora ge bu ildi ngs Two aparr me nts which are completely lu r·
n1she d Please call 740· 992 ·
2292

Three bedroom home wilh Iota ol
closet space, close to school, on
corner tot, storage building one
bedroom rental home included,
740·992-6154

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobt le homes, ilr
cond itioned, $260 -$300 ~tewe r,
wate r and trash Included, 740
992 2167

1 Room &amp; Bath Rio Grande Area,
$200/Mo All Ullitles Included,
Deposit Requ ired Call Toll Free,
1·888·640-0521

New Ban k rep os o nly 2 lel1 we
f1nance ca11304-722·7t48

360

14x70 trailer, three bedrooms, total electric, $300 per month plus
$150 deposit, no pet s, 12x6 0
tra iler, twa bed r oo m, $250 per
month, total electr1C plus $1 50 de
posll. no peiB, 740-742·2714

1 Bedr oom Apt Unfurnished
$275 month, utilities paid Viand
Street , Pt
Pleasant , WV
(3041736·5554

New 1999 f4 K70 three bedroom
Includes 6 months FREE lot rent
Includes washer &amp; dryer sk irting
delu xft steps a nd setup Only
$200 74 per month w1th Sf 150
down Call 1 800-837·3238

In Mason $15,000 an Acre
(304)882-3772

PQmeroy one bedroom home,
neecs cosmetic repairs, $12 000,
make offer , Syracuse • double
w1de, 4 bedrooms, block 1ounda·
tlon, newly rem odeled, carpet
$52.000 beauti fu l 50x201 lot, all
appl iances &amp; dishwAs her lnclud·
ed 740-992 4514 ask lor Chris
Martin

420 Mobile Homes
lor Rent

1 Bdrm . Extra Nice First Month
Fre• With One Year L.ea se
$279 00 Per Month, Plus Ut11111es
740-446·2957

Ho use In Maso n, WV· Adams
Street , li ke new, one and 1/2
blo cks from grade sc hool. 7
rooms and bath cal l Su e Ha ll
304· 675-0860 or 740·742·2022
after 5pm -

Nice two t:ledroom ho me with
basement Mulbeny Height&amp; Po·
meroy $50 000 firm , 740·992·
2186

Your Home Is Just A Phone Call
Away, 304-736-7295

440

Good selectio n ol used home s
with 2 or 3 bedrooms Starting at
$399 5 Quick delivery Call 740·
385·9621

Small farm (52 acres) with mobile

Spri ng Val ley 2 sto ry familY
ho me 4 Bedroom, 2 112 .B ath s,
living Room, Olnlf19 Room, Eat·m
Kitche n Lg Family Room 740!
245 9337

~~~!~~~ c~~:~a;tt~~~4~~~-4~:~

81)1). ~62

EXCELLENT CONDITION 2
Story, 3 Bedroom s 2 112 Baths,
Near Holzer, lmmedtate PossesSion, 740-446-9672

Three bedroom home fn Mi ddl e·
por t, $350 mont h p lu s deposit
740 992·3194

Mob ile home for rent In Ra cine,
no pels, 740-99?·5658

Low Interest Rate s For 1st Time
Buyers Limited T1me Ava ilab le

330 Farms lor Sale

VENDING: La zy Persons Dream
Few Ho urs "' Good $ Priced To
Sell Free Bro chure 800- 820·
4353

Carpet and UphOlster y Cleaned
w1thout "S team · or Ab sorbent
Co mpou nds Soaples s Ant i·Resoll Deter gents used e}c lu sive
ly Safe for all fab rics Fast dry
lng ( 1 2 hours) Eliminates over-

1995 Dutch Mobile Home 14x70
Vinyl Siding, Shingle Aool, Steel
1 Doors, 2x6 Walls . Thermopayne
Wi ndows, Deck , $ t 9,0 00, 74 0·
255·6960

Cor ner Lot 260 5 Garlleld Ave ,
PI PI , $69,900 (3041675-3379

Restored Vlctonan home situated
on 12 acres. Village Middleport ,
se cluded and private appoint·
monl, call740-992·5596

Professional
Services

1994 1h80 Sun sh ine Mobile
Home Three Bedrooms Two
Bathrooms, WAlk-I n Closets, Utili·
'ty Room, Electric Heal Pump, A•
fr lgerator And Stove Included,
Ca11After4PM 740-245- 1302.

Make 2 Paymen ts No Payment
Aher 4 Ye.,., 304·736-7295

AREA PEPSI /COKE ROUTE
30 New Machines With High
Prol1t Loc etlonsl Earn 100K Year·
ly 1-ll00-387·9418

230

1988 Danville, 14x70 W1th Ex·
panda, 3 Bedrooms 2 Saths,
$1 1,500, OBO MuSI Move I 740
388 9567

1991 1411X7211 Shingle Aool, VInyl
Siding , Exc e ll ent Co ndition
$16,50000 (740) 440-81 13

The Town of New Haven IS ac·
ceptlng appllcat1ons for the posr·
l ions ol poo l manager and l1fe·
guards ft;H the summer Appllca·
!Ions may be obtained at the
Town Hall 218 Filltl Street
Were Growing Agaml Comfort Air
Systems of Gallrpohs IS look1ng lor
Service Techs and q ualified In
stallers Must be csrt1fied and wll
ing to learn new as pects ol
H VAC Top pa'( Insurance Unl
forms an d Adva ncements Must
be neat In appea rance Apply
between 9am and 12 noon at 407
Third Avenue Gallipolis Oh

1985 Naueha, Ux70 with 81120
Expando, 2 Bedrooms, 2 lull
baths, Fireplace New Carpe t
(740)446-3493

State Route 141 , 2 -3 Bedroom•
Eat-In Krtchen , Living Room, Bath
2 Car Garage Porches, Storage
Bu11dlngs ,..25/Uo., Plus Oepos1t,
Pilone Aner 5 ~~~ 74Q-446 4254.
Fax
740-446·1177
EMail
JAWOEUAEKANE"rCOM,

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Household
Goods

510

Anawlr to PiI •1Qt'lil Puzzle

will

14 Drlnk

:
•

cenaed electrician Ridenour ·~
Eleclrlcal, WV000306, 304·175·
1786

Wednesday, May 12, 1999
Othen will be more incUned In tho
year lhead to do more with you llld
for you with a lot less slrin1s
altached. This will malte it eu1er for
you to aa:ompllah milCh more.
TAURUS (April 2D-May 20)
Beina helped never hurt your i101p,
10 don't be SO Iliff· nee: ked about
II&lt;Ceplina usiatm&lt;;e from II10iher
who hal tho lbi6ty to do for you what
you t111't do "for younelr. Taurus,
!rest yourself to • birthday lift. Send
the Rquiled n:fund form lind for your
Altro-Oroph predictions for tho year
ahead by mailinJ $2 and self·
addressed stamped en&gt;eiclpe toAotroOraph, c/o lhls newsp!!per, P.O Box
1758, Murray Hill Station, New
Yorlc, NY 101". Be sure 19 IWe
yow Zodiac siJn.
GEMINI (May 21 -Julie 20) When
it camel to Jdlinl • JtOUP of diverse
individuals 10 blend well today.
you'n: the one who can do lhe best
JOb. Your wlnnin1, philosophical
ways can 1111 everyone to work
lo. .lher.

CANCER (Jpne 21-July 22) You

"' I

wiii1CComplilh your lima IIIII ob~­
uvcs more efforde11ly lodoy bei:ause
your profiCieney llld IHICil)r work In
llndem, upoc:lllly If they pertain to
finiiiCeS or your statua.
LEO (July 23-AuJ. 22) Use your
lmtailllllion today to find IOiutlonato
oitullions lhlt leave others belllCd.
By doin1 lhio. yoo can expand your
ab11ity to see other facets lhlt could
lafefine your objectiVIROO (Au&amp; 23-Sept. 22) Provided you swe yoor caae loaiclily
and your opproadl and

poae~~1allon

,... well 1lmod, lh9se you, need to
lmpreu will look fovonbly on your
Rqitests. P1111 well.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0.:t. 23) When
yoo ally younelf with thole whole
lima llld lllleruts 1n in hlnnony
wilh youn, you can achieve' 11101e ill
piiiMnhlp llniiPD"fttl. filld tho
riJI!t cohorts.
SCORPIO (O.:t 24-N~v. 22)
Sean:h for favonble c~ ioday ,
that you could briq 11110 fll which
would 10me of
llrllno
you' .. beea npedenciq wldl your
work.
.
SAOmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.

21) 'like lime oot today to stop llld
smell tho 101e1 in life. Thi1 type of
lnlllnllpli011 in your aft'lin of plea·
surable 1,10nuits can actUIIIy erase
any feehnp of fnutnti011 you've
been suffori.,.
CAPRICORN (Deo. 22-Jan. 19)
Check Ill your IOIII'CCI today for
unuaual borpiu or , ..inp you can
malte when shoppin1 for household
items. You 0111 -lly .., extra
mlleqe 0111 of tho budaeL
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Don 'tiel any opporruruues slip JIISI
yoo today to pnloe thole who ,...
deservinJ. It"s hnponalll to lei othen
wilh whom yoo're involved know
youlhlnl&lt; well or them.
•
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mirch 20) Con·
dldono in ..nnl .. better today
thin they may appear on the surface.
etpoc:illly wilh thai iavolve
n - a-.., yoo·n be ptt1111
1110re lhan you"ll expect
ARII!S (March 21 ·April 19)
Yoo'U oee ac:ollecti..: purpose today,
lnsteld of only pooblems, so you' II be
tho - who everyone turns to t~y
for leadership llld direction.

Unborn - Vomtt - Hunch - Elated - TRUE BL OND
Quote from a well known s1nger "I'm not offended
by Jokes that Indicate that blonds are dumb I know I'm

••

not a TRUE BLOND "

MAY 11

I

�By The Associated Press
These Maryland Crab Cakes are a treat - especially si nce the
recipe is a low-fat version wilh nothing to weigh on the t onscience
and spoil the pleasure. A Mesclun, Orange and Walnut Salad is a
nice accompanimenl .
The recipes are from "Weight Watchers New Complete Cookhook" (Macmillan, $25). This is a revised and updated version of
an earlier cookbook from the organization which describes its program as ·:a diet thai's high in complex ~arbohydr~tes, moderate in
protein and low in fat. "
This volume, in practical ring-binder format with well-designed
layout, is packed with information that includes general cooki ng
advice as well as tips for weight watchers: And there are about 500
recipes, each tagged with a " points" reference for people who want
to follllw the program 's weight-loss plan .
··..
· ·
· Chapters range conventionally from appetizers to desserts. But
. varied se lections lie within those chapters: ihe general index runs
from Almond-Fudge Truffles through Zucchini Ri sollo: And an
i"nteresting level of sophistication shows up under the New American Cooki ng heading, in such dis~es as. Vietnamese Turkey -in Lettuce Wraps and Scallops with Parsley-Brandy Pesto.
Lump crab meat called for in the crab cakes is justifiably expensive, a recipe editor 's note points out - taking apart a crab is a
· picky business. "To save money, you can use surimi , a processed
ti sh product with a texture similar to crab meat. -But shop around
first: some brands are much lastier than others. " .

Maryland Crab Cakes
I pound cooked crab meat, picked through for shell and cartilage
3/4 cup bread crumbs
6 scall ions, minced ·
1/4 cup iow-fat (I percent) milk
3 tablespoons reduced.calorie mayonnaise
2 tablespoons minced parsley
.
112 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon·ground white pepper
3 tablespoons all-purpose Hour
I tablespoon.reduced-calorie margarine
2 112 cups mixed green lettuce leaves
In a large bowl ~ combine the crab meal, bread crumbs,.scallions,
milk, mayonnaise, parsley, salt and pepper. With moistened hands,
form into 8 small round cakes; cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate I hour.
Place the Hour on a sheet of wax paper; lightly coat each cake on
both sides. In a large nonstick skillet, melt the margarine. Cook the
crab cakes until golden brown and crispy, 4 to 5 minutes on each
side. Line a pl~ller with the greens; top with the crab cakes.
Makes 4 servings.
.
. .
Nutrition racts per serving: 260 cal., 8 g total fat, I g saturated
fat, 114 mg chol :, 849 mg sodium, 18 g total carbo., 2 g dietary fiber,
26 g pro.
.
·
Mesclun, Orange and Wafnut Salad
2 tablespoons orange juice
·· ·
2 teaspoons walnut oi l
1/4 teaspoon salt
Pinch cayenne pepper
6 cups mesclun (see note)
.
I navel orange, peeled and sectioned
l/2"red onion, thinly sliced
1/4 cup walnuts, chopped and toasted
.
To prepare the dressing, in a small bowl whisk the orange juice,
· oil, ·salt and cayenne. In a large salad bowl, combnle the mesclun,
orange, onion and walnuts. Drizzle with the dressing; toss to coat.
Serve at. once.
Makes 4 servings.

·

.
.
. Note: Mcsclun is a mixture of small, tender young letiuce leaves
and gree ns: it may,include varieties such as Bib, red and green oak
leaf lettuce, as well as curly endive, lamb's lettuce, arugula a~d
radicchi o.
Nutrition racts per serving: 109 cal. , 7 g total fat, I g saturated
fat. 0 mg enol., 144 mg sodium, II g total carbo., 2 g dietary fiber,
3 g pro.
·

.

Survey shows Jump 1n women
with no health insurance; high
percentage of assaults reported
WASHINGTON (AP) _:_ Nearly
two out of every five women in the
United.States have been physically or
sexually assaulted during their life, times, according to a national survey
on women 's health care.
The survey, released today, also
reported a jump in the number of
working wonien without health
insurance.
Ov~rall, the 1998 Commonwealth
· Fund Survey of Women's Health
reported increased aitention to
· women 's health issues since its ·Jast
survey in 1993. Government health
agencies now dedicate offices to such
concerns and !he issue has been a
focus of major medical projects by
the National Institutes of Health.
However, the report describe.d
progress in the field as spotty and
uneven.
According to !he report, the number of women who were raped or
physically abused eitber as. children
or adults remains "disturbingly
high." A total of 39 percent said !hey
had been victims of abuse or violence
in their lifetimes, including rape, sexual assault, or other physical assault.
Reports of abuse crossed income,
ethnic and demographic lines,
although poor women were at somewhat •higher risk. ·Women who had
. experienced violent or abusive acts
were significantly more likely to
experience physical health problems,
and nearly twice a5 likely to show
· signs of depression or anxiety.
The report found an increase in
· the uninsured, particularly among
working women with low to modest
inw me levels. Last year, 35 percent
of women under age 65 with incomes
of $16,000 or less were uninsured,
compared with 29 percent witlmut
insurance in 1993. For women with
incomes from $16,001 to $3S,OOO,
• the uninsured rate increased from 15
percent to 21 percent in the same
period.
.
Other findings in !he report
include:

'

'

Wednesday

Flavored cigarettes the rage ari:long young. smokers

Maryland Crab Cakes
low in fat~ but a real taste
treat to please everyone

•

Tuesday, May 11, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Weather
Today: P. Cloudy
High: 80s; Low: 50s

little brown cigarette that smells
By LORI JOHNSTON
like strawberry."
Assodated Press Writer
Federal health officials and
ATLANTA (AP) - The smoke
anti-smoking
activists say many
wafting through . some of the
nation's hippest teen hangouts youngsters don't realize that unfildoesn' t always smell like Marl- tered bidis are eve n more dangerbores or Camels anymore. And, ous than regular cigareltes.
Despite contai ning less tobacco
although the cigarettes are thi n and
hand:rolled, it doesn't smell like than a .U.S . cigarene, an unfiltered
bidi "rele ases at least two to three
marijuana either.
This scent is sweeter. exhala- times more tar and nicotine," says
tions of strawberries, chocolate · Sam ira As rna, · an epidemiologist
with the Atlanta-based Centers for
and .vanilla. · ·
. From Atlanta 's Little Five Disease Control and Prevention.
Bidis have been made for cenPoints to New York 's East Village
to San Francisco.'s Haight-Ash- turies in India, where they are
bury, hippie wannabes are lighting known as the " poor man 's ciga-.
up bidis - flavored cigarettes rette."
Darryl Jayson, spokesman for
imported from India. .
''They're dessert with a ciga- the Tobacco Merchants Associarette ," says Leah Parrish, 19, tion , an industry trade group, said
standing outside a tobacco store in it 's diffi.cult to determine how
· many bid is are imported because
Little. Five Points .
Bidi s some times call ed they are counted under different
beedies and about half the size of tariff codes.
And even with the growing
.·regular cigarelles - are filled with
tobacco Hakes. hand-rolled with a popul arit y of bidis , all imported
. greenish-brown l ~af, tapered at cigarettes make .up less than I perboth end~ and tied with a tiny, col- cent of the U.S . tobacco market,
according to the Specialty Tobacco
ored thread .
. Bid is cost less than reg utar cig- Counsel, based in North Carolina .
Three maj or importers, Kretek
arettes, averaging $2 for a pack of
20.
.
International
of
California,
USA
Inc.
of
Colorado
and
Quintin
And they're drawing youngsters
Smokers
Choice
of
California,
to smoking even better than Joe
Camel, some health officials say. who also sell bidis on the Internet,
Teens say they ' re cute, tre.ndy, less refused to comment on their sales.
biller and more natural than
According to stores, the most
.SMALL, COLqRFUL AND FLAVORD • These new flavored clgadomestic smokes.
popular flavors are vanilla, black ntttH may be popular with younger smokers, but they are more
A survey last year found that 58 licorice, strawberry, dewberry, dangerous thai) tigular cigarettes.
·
percent of students at four San clove and cinnamon . The different
"It's just unfortunate that they 're
Francisco high schools had tried Havors are a pleasant change from ·says.
the
regular
fare
,
smokers
say.
;
The
pop\llarity
yf
bidis
doesn't
·
findin
g their way in the hands of
bidis.
"ll's
not
like
picking
up
a
Marl-.
,
'
urp'
r
ise
anti-s
moking
activists,
.
children."
Sold in specialty tobacco and
I who say the Indian cigarelles
It's just another gimmick, says
cigarelle stores . for several years, , bora, " Ms. Falconesays.
Ashley Woodall, a 22-year-old should be more c(p·sely regulated John F. Banzhaf JII , executive
bidis now are popping up in gas
Atlanta
restaurant employee, says and should cost mofe to keep them director of Action on Smoking and
stations, convenience marts and
Health, a Washington-based antistrawberry
bidis are her favorite.
out of the hands of teen-agers.
grocery stores .
Bree
Strahan,
a
high
school
t
The
Federal
Trade
Commission
smoking
group. ·
' Anna Falcone. tobacco buyer at
i
senior
in
suburban
Allanta,
~ays
is
investigating
rep,prts
that
many
.
·''Everybody's
looking for some
Junkman's Daughter, a clothing
and gift shop in Atlanta, said bidis she like bidis, but they're not bidis are sold withobtthe required way to make a new cigarelte and
gin a niche market," he said.
are a top seller, outpaced only, by strong enough for her. And it's' . Warning labels.
sometimes
tough
to·
keep
them
lit.
·
·"They're
hol'rib)c,"
says
lton
"They'll put chocolate .in it,
clove cigaretles.
.
"
!
coulp
never
smoke
them
Todd,
director
of
lo~acco
control
they
' ll put vanilla in it."
. "It's just a little bit moie exotic," she says. "They're smoking a instead of a regular cigarette," she for the American Cancer Society.

Tomorrow: Showers
High: 70s; Low: 50s

- No major improvements in preventative care among women, despite
increased altenl\on to the importance
of breast and cervical cancer screenings. Overall, 64 percent of those surveyed had received a pap test and 66
percent received a clinical breast
exam· - rates vinually unchanged
since the 1993 survey. Mammography rates for women age 50 and
.older, however, increased from 55 to
61 percent.
-About three out of four insured
women, 76 percent, were enrolled in
a managed health care plan, such as a
health maintenance organization. The
managed care plans wc:re usually
·more successful than traditional feefor-service plans in making sure
women received regular preventative
care.
-Women reported improved
· knowledge about certain health conditions and behaviors. Many were
familiar wilh osteoporosis and more
· reported getting mote calcium, such
as by drinking more milk or taking
calcium supplements.
·
- One of three women in
menopause uSed hormone replacement therapy. In 1993, !he figure was
one in four. The women most likely
to use hormone replacement therapy ·
we~e college-educated and had higher mcomes.
- Women were more likely than
men to take care ·of.a sick or disabled
relative, in addition to fulfilling work
and childcare responsi.bilities.

. Meigs Countfs

.

I

·
"We thought of th,e Cincinnati ners are ex pec ted .
" This is a person who often
Marathon, but how do we distin guish that from "the Columbus . runs for chari ty or just for their
Marathon? And we thought about own personal reasons. They just
calling it the . Queen City want to run to run , or to do it for
Marathon. All of our name s were fun;" Cough Iin said.
On Sunday, runners will get a
kind of boring ."
There' s a ·sense of fun to the close-up look at "the H~.ing pigs
name, Coughlin said . The new that in spired the protests a decade .
race isn ' t targeted to the seriou s ago . The marathon route passes
runner but more of the "mid-pack the gateway sc ulpture twice.
marathoner." · About 6, I 00 run -

~

-

.. ·•·.· -··

NTSB official: Jump plane crash
h1vestlgat1Qn ·could take months

t

MO,N11llZlOOqAP)- A sky-diving plane that Cl'Mhed, killiag six peoaoo:ar to be overloaded, transportation officials said Thesday. 1
Brian Rayner, an air safety investigator with !he National1l"ansportation
Safety Board, said that lhe plane was
near
its Clp&amp;City but was not exceed~e11tt1
ing its limit when .it ct'Mhed Sunday
2 ~tiona· U Paps
about 2S miles southwest of Uma.

Today's

~

~~~~~~~~;~

was Oying at ?00 to 1,000 feet when
WitnesSes
told Rayner
that!he
the.
plane
the
engine sputtened
before
singleengine Cessna went down in a farm
field. The pilot and five sky divers
werekiUed.

IXlllfetenoe
with appeared
officials atfrom
the
~=~~===3~3
Rayner, who
a news
. Wapakoneta post of the Slate Hlglt:

.. Organizations
who. would like to have
aii
l
'
.
'
advertisemeD.t in this special edition please

.. I

'

Because ·o f·c01icems over the loss of farmland and the abandonment
urban real estate, ·then-Gov. George Voinovich made
brownfields redevelopment one of his signature issues.
Voi.novich has repeatedly complained thai his program was-not as suc·
cessful as it could have been because businesses did not take advantage of
it, worried that they could still find themselves subject to expensive action
ordered by the federal government.
,
·
The stale program offers businesses that clean up old contamination the
promise lliat there will be no liability lawsuit making them responsible for
a previous owner's pollution.
Other states that have similar liability ·provisions have gotten the lia·
bility protection extended lo the federal level, but not Ohio.
Ohio's program fails to pass federal muster in part because it d&lt;iesn'l
allow the kind of government oversight the EPA requires.
Earlier this month, The COlumbus Dispatch examined state agency
documents and concluded that the stale program had larj!ely been used to
redevelop propenies with smaller amounts of contamination; only 12
the program's 70 applicants were for projects on Ohio's list of known or
suspected contamination sites.

lotteries

Call 992-2155
. . ..
Da:ve Harris Ext. 104.
Kath Williamson Ext. l 05

QIQO
Pkk 3: 1-8-2; Pkk 4: 7-1·3-8 .
Buckeye 5: 1;27-31-32-35

I

w.yA.

I

..

Bl'own said Ohio had lost an average of Tl acres of farm land per day
from 1982 to .1992, and said the Ointon administration-blessed brown·
fields bill was !he way to comballhe loss of ."greenfields."
Encouraging new development on land that once was a factory, gas station or dry cleaning shop would bring about "more urban jobs, better tax
bases, be~r schools, " he said.
The legislation is similar to a bill that failed in the last session of COnbecause majority Republicans did not want to sever brown fields
I cleariUp from the larger task of wiiting a new Superfund law.
Another complication is Republican dissatisfaction with a Clinton
administration brownfields pilot program.
A General Accounting Office report concluded the administration
failed to adequately track the results of its spending on brownfields grants.
"I am concerned that, while the administ,ation spent virtually every
dollar it had pledged, it canna( tell us if these broilrnfield programs are
meeting the aclministration's own goals," said Rep. Tom Bliley, R-Vil.,
who commissioned the GAO report.
Rep. John Dingell, 0-Mich., defended the administration's performance, waving aside the GAO criticisms, saying the auditors "took a slice
of the picture and typically reported only on thai slice that they exam-

I ontce-productive

Any Professio~al, Business, Individual or Civic

Holser Clinie ... Keepin6 the Promille!

By KATHERINE RIZZO
Auoclllld PI'IIIS Writer
WASHINGTON (AI')- House Democrats are making a
push for
a Ointon administration-endorsed package of incentives for
abandoned faetory land.
.
. .
Ohio Reps. Ted Strickland and Sherrod Brown were featured prominently on Tuesday as the "brownfields" package was unveiled at a Capitol Hill news conference.
"I have seen the positive results.or cleaning ilp and reusing a brownsite," Stricklaml.said. "If !he leadership of this Congress wants to
.
::~~ a do-n~(11g label, no ·ece of le.~s~tion ought 'to be more attrac-

ined."

*************************
'
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.

By BRIAN J . REED.
Sentinel New• Staff
The development of a new park in Rutland, to celebrate the community's
Bicentennial, ·was discussed when Rutland Village Council met in regular
monthly session _on.Monday evening_
.
Councilman Jay Dewhurst discussed plans for the park, which will likely be called "Bicentennial Park," and distributed a drawing of the proposed
area.
The park will be located on property cleared as a part ,of the village's
Hood hazard mitigation program, located near the Rutland Post Office just
off the bridge on State Route 124.
Dewhurst said that local businesses have agreed to donate trees, shrubbery and other plants, as well as lumber for picnic tables, and community
members are being asked to help in !he development of the area.
.
The property involves four lots, p!lfl of which are .owned by the village
through !he hazard mitigation process, and part of which are privatelyowned. Dewhurst said tlial David Grate and James Birchfield, who own pan
of the property, have agreed to allow the propeny to be used as a park.
Council agreed to set aside $800 for development of the park.
Those interested in helping with the project are asked to meet at the park
area on Monday at !i a.m., so !hat planting and other iandscaping work can
begin. Dewhurst said that the work session will be postponed until Tuesday
in the event of rain.
In other action, discussion was held on the progress of the Hood hazard
mitigation p!"\)gram. Council members agreed thai portions of the program,

ocrats join push
for new redevelopment law

High School pffice,to Be Included In This
Special Edition, At No Charge.
(Attach Your Name and High Sch9ol to Photo)

.

Dally 3: 9-8-5; Dally 4: 3-7-1-7 .

\'

Hometown Ne'Wspaper
Single Copy - 35 Cents

.

.

PLAN PARK ~ Rutland VIllage Council members Vema Marlin, · Martin Andrew, Dick Fetty, Tammy Searle• and Jay
Dlwhurat, along with MIYor Jo Ann Eada, are pictured reviewIng plane for a new Bicentennial Perk to be developed on Main
S~eet

.

namely the acquisition of property after notices of intent are .obtained, and
the moving of houses, have been subject to excessive delays.
Dewhurst suggested that council com~ittees whose work relate to the

mitigation program begin closely monitoring the project. and that those
· Committees take action in emergency situations, rather than wait for regular ·
council meetings.
,
.
During the discussion, council took aciion prohibiting the salvagina of
contents from ·houses involved in the project. It was noted that some resi·
dents who participated in the program wer~ offered contents of their homes·
for a price of $1,000, and council objected to the agreements. noting that the ,, .
homes are to be sold with contents included.
•.
Dewhurst Commended village workers for their cooperation in Carrying
out the program, and suggested that the· village bill the grant program for the
staff time and equipment use provided by the village to date. Dewhlll$t said
that such reimbursement is ~llowed under the grant's guidelines.
•_
Mayor Jo Ann Eads announced !hat the first meeting of the R~tland
Bicentennial Commillee would be held at 7 p.m. on Friday at the civic center, and asked that all those interested in participating to attend the meetina. •
Marcia Elliott of the Civic CCnter Committee noted that the community
yard sale in Rutland would be held on June 5, and asked for widespread ::
community support.
·
:
Councilman Dick Fetty commended village police officer floyd Hick· . ~
man for his work.
.Council also approved the mayor's report of fines collected in May in the
amount of $2,786.
Present. in addition to Eads, Dewhurst and Felly, were Council membera •
Tammy Searles, Martin Andrew and Vema Martin, Oerk!rreasurer ROse·
mary Snowden-Eskew, and David Davis of !he street department.

Ohio Works website reviewed at chamber luncheon

· On ~riday, May 21st, The Daily Sentinel
·Will have a special edition with photographs
of high school seniors graduating this year.
Now through Friday, May 14th, .Drop .Y our
Photo Off at The ·Daily Sentinel or At Your

.··

-Pege4

Rutland Council announces plans for Bicentennial Park .·

AREA HIGH SCHOOL
GRADUATES OF 1999

DIAL ·
992-7834

Reds whip the
Milwaukee
Brewers 9-1

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number 242

ATTENTION!

If the 992 Exchange Is a Free Part of Your
Telephone Service, Then You Can Call
Holzer Clinic In Galllp~lls
Toll Freel ·

Southern wins sectional title, Page 4
Weird uses for kitchen utensils, Page 7
Bus crash probe continues, Page 6

•

Once scorned mascot, flying pig now em9raced in Queen City
CINCINNATI (AP) Is Paycor and founder of the Flying
Cincinnati ready to embrace its · Pig Marathon.
But he said .he wasn ' t aware of
flying pigs?
Apparim.tly so. There'-s been no the 1988 controversy when the
uproar over Sunday 's inaugural ·marathon was named.
" One of our ideas was to call
flying Pig Marathon , a name that
Ohio River Marathon, and
it
the
would have drawn loud protests a
we considered calling it the River
decade ago.
In 1988, when a riverfront Hills Marathon, but we didn 't
park. was being built to celebrate want to promote the idea of runthe city ' s bicentennial , artist ning up all these hills, so that was
Andrew Leicester designed a out." he said.
$300,000 gateway sculpture that
featured 18 historical symbol s.
Four of them were winged pigs
atop steamboat stacks, alluding to
Cincinnati's status as a 19th-century Ohio River port and hog butchering center.
.
Some people complained to
City Council that .the pigs were
undignified and an embarrass ing
reminder of the city's former
nickname, Porkopolis.
But the pigs . stayed and the
furordied down. Now Flying Pig
Marathon posters, caps, T-shirts
and equipment bags are everywhere.
"They love the pigs ," said
Ljnda Furnish. who works at Bob
Roncker's Running Spot. "People have just gone crazy over _the
·pigs."
There was a time when Cincinnati was the largest supplier of
pork in the. world, said Dan Hurley, Cincinnati .historian and
author of the 1982 book,
"Cincinnati, the Queen City. "
Starting about 1810, slaughterhouses were abundant. Pigs ruled
the . city because of the farmers
who grew corn, said Gary Pill&lt;- ·
ington, director of the. historical
exhibit programs at the ,Cincinnati Museum Center.
Because it was expensive for
Indiana and Ohio farmers to
transport their corn to Cincinnati,
they fed it to their pigs and
walked the animals to tnarket
instead. By the 1840s, quite an
economy had been created.
That historical note wasn 'I lost
on Bob Coughlin, president of

Sports

MIY 12, 1000

·-

•

way Patrol, said the investigation
could take months.
·
. Killed in the aash were pilot Pre·
stan Parrish II, 30, of 'lipp Oty, ·and
puaenp Jack Haenichen, 31,
Ottawa, Ohio; John Hoover, 43,
Michelle Korsen, 43, and Arrop
Schroeder, 30, of Fort Wa~lnd.;
and Keith .Edwards, 40, of arion,
Ind. .

J3y BRIAN J. REED
state leaders to consider another Darwin. Story also said that CASH is reported to
Sentinel NIWI Staff
honie in Southern Ohio. .
· be considering a coun challenge of ODOT's plans
A site in Brown County, near to build the highway.
A new internet job service from
the state was discussed when the
Cincinnati, was ultimately sel.ected
Economic Development Director Perry VarnaMeigs C,Ounty Chamber of Comas the site for !he home, and Pick- doe announced · plans for a retail retention and
merce held its monthly membership
ens said that she felt t~at Southeast- expaosion survey, which will examine which busiluncheon o'l Tuesday.
em Ohio still needed such a facili- nesses are most needed in the downtown-commuOhio Works is an internet web site ·
ty..
nities.
developed for those seeking employ·
' Chamber Treasurer Mike Kloes
Tourism Director Karin Johnson updated
ment and those seeking employees.
discussed the Log Jam Festival, a chamber members on tourism activities, including
It also provides job seekers, employ·
country music concen to be held in several. tour groups who have visited the county.
ers and workforce development proPortland on June 18. ~ingers David
She said that boat lours will begin · visiting
fessionals with up-to·date informa·
Lee Murphy, Toby Keith and Pomeroy again, beginning on Tuesday evening. ·
lion by community.
Kenny Chesney will perform at the
Johnson also announced that aS 1,000 grant has
Ushma V. .Parikh of Ohio Works
PICKENS COMMEND- conce~nd the chamber bas been received from the Ohio Arts Council to help
~esented a video and slide presenla- ED _
Patty Goegleln e~clusi rights to !-shirt conces- develop a promotional brochure for the
lion about the )ll'Ogram, and encour- Plckena- honored by stons at e event.
Chester/Shade Historical Association and the ;
·a~ed cham~r membe_rs ·to use th~· the Mila- County Cham~lor~; ·chairman of. the cham- newly-restored Cliester Courthot~S~;.
•
Site found at 'www ohaoworkLcom ...._ o1 0111
-. ..__ ber s ha way comm111ee noted · Gina Pellegrino-Pines. director of th~ Univeni· ·
wh~n looking for q~alified workers; • 1111'Y't.!a•toce~'"; that !he Transportation Revlew and ty of Rio Grande's Meigs Center reported that two
The program also features an on- vvllnlna home ~n Mllge Advisory Commillee will hold a town meetings will ~ held at the center in Mid- ~
line resume service, which allows Cou~
working meeting on May 26, and dleport on May ·18. The meetings, set for 2 p.m. ;
job seekers to create a professional
· •
that the Southeastern Ohio Region- and 5 p.m., will aUow residents to contribute to a·
resume from the website:
al Council's Highway Users Committee planned discussion about poS.ible degree programs at the ·
Patty Goeghlein Pickens., who offened real to send delegates to the meeting, although no tes- center.
Pines also announced that 16 graduates from
estate and worked toward attracting a veterans timony will be h~ard.
home in Meigs County was honored with a com- ' · Story said !hat members of CASH (Coalition . the center will be recognized at services &amp;I the
mendation from the Chamber for her efforts.
Against Superfluous Highways) would likely send Family Life Center in Middleport.
Pickens said that she would continue to follow a delegation of their own members in opposition
The meeting was held at the Carleton School in
the veterans home issue, and would encourage to the expaosion o.f U.S. Route 33 from Athens to Syracuse.
.

Plans move'forward for establishing Neighborhood Watch
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
s.ntlnel N - Statr ·
.
About 20 Middlepon residents gathened in the
American Legion hall Tuesday night to hear about
N~ighborhood Watch· programs and how they can
benefit a community.
II was a first step toward establishing a program of neighbors looking out for neighbors and
thereby creating a greater sense of security in !he ·
community. ,
.
Chief of Police Bruce Swift was joined by
Chad Wallace, a Gallia County sheriff's deputy, to
explain how. the program works to deter crime.
•:u·s a community watch pro~;· said Swift,
who described it as really just "common sense
stuff where neighbors watch out for each other."
Swift shared statistics which showed thai in
neighborhoods where watch pro~s are in
effect, criminals move out. He said that such programs in Middleport wouiCI be a help to his ~part·
meilt because there would be people in the neighborhoods who could notify police when !hey see
something out of place, an unusual happening or

WATCH
of
Pollee Bruce Swift dleplllyl a Neighborhood Witch elgn to Judy Clifford It 1\Jeeday'e night mHtlng at the American
Legion hall. ·
some unfamiliar people hanging around.
The police chief described the program as a
way of bringing communities together and of getling people involved willi their neighbors in a very

posliive way. He said it also provides ari avenue ·
far reporting potential criminal activities to police ,
without feeling that they are becoming involved in
somebody else's business.
Other facets of the program besides watching
out for one another, said Swift, are organizing
walking patrols and creating safe houses for chi!·
dren in neighborhoods. He said that just putting up
Neighborhood Watch signs is a deterrent to crime
in a community. ,
Gallia County, aCcording to Wallace, has seven
programs in place at this time. He talked about two
"township watches in which he is active, noting lhal ·
each has assigned patrol .areas, and use cellular
phones to keep in touch with the sheriff's office.
He said that since the watches went into effect,
there has been a remarkable decrease in the crime
rate.
.
Literature on the program was distributed to
those auendirig last night's meeting and !hey were
encouraged to take information bacl!: to their communities. Another meeting was set for June 8 at
the Legion hall.
·
.
.

Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin to resign (

·By RON· FOURNIER
cussed his decision with Clinton
Rubin had considered leaving sooner, but did i
A180Cllted Preea Wrltar
" within the past week" and said not want to leave the administration during the ~. WASHINGTON (Al')- Tressury
Rubin's decision was fueled solely Monica Lewinsky scandal, said one official :·
Secretary Robert' Rubin, credited with
by his desire to return to private life familiar with his thinking.
•.
many of lhe policies that have spurred
after working for Clinton since the
Before join ing the Clinton administration, ··
a lasting boom in the U.S. economy, is
start of his administration.
Rubin had spent nearly his entire career inside ••
stepping .down·and will be suc=ded
"He just decided it was lime to one of Wall Street's most powerful money. ;
by his deputy, 4wrence Summon.
get. back to private life," one official machines; the prestigious investment firm of :
said," speaking on condition of Goldman, Sachs &amp; Co.
•
President Clinton was to announCe
the long-rumoted change . at a Reise
anonymity. The official said Rubin is
He joined the company in 1966, and beCame a !
Garden ceremony later today, the
~xpected to stay at Treasury through young star in risk arbitrage - speculating on the :·
White House said.
.
Robert Rubin
July.
stocks of companies subject to takeover auemptS. •
"Secretary Rubin )Viii be leaving
Before .being named treasury He later ran the firm 's stock and borid trading : ;
after playing an extraordinarily central role in this secretary, Rubin headed Clinton's National Eco- departments, and revive!~ its commodities sub- ;•
administration as far as our outstanding reoord of nomic Council with the task of creating harmony sidiary. He bocame co-chairman of the eompany •
. fiscal discipline and turning . the economy among more · than a dozen turf-conscious agen- in 1990.
:
around," said presidential spokesman Joe Lock- cies.
Even with his strong businesS ties, Rubin !
"bart.
Since becoming treasury secretary, Rubin has proudly proclaims his Democratic heritage. He •;
"The president in the '92 campaign talked been widely credited for steering Clinton's eco- said it com.es from his grandfather, a leader in a ::
about focusing on the economy like a laser," nomic policies, including the budget cuts early in macpine-style Brooklyn political ~iub.
:·
Lockhart added. "The.man he entrusted to guide the.Ointon administration that eventually helped
Rubin has described himself as a centrist. par- ..;
the efforts were Bob Rubin."
set the nation on course for its first balanced bud- ticularly on eoonomic ·issues, while slaking out :!
. The Dow Janca industrial average dropped get in docaclea.
more liberal positions on social and urban issues. ·~
·more than 200 points when news of the resign•·
Rubin has long been viewed as a J&gt;05'ible top · He hss pushed hard for private investment in ceo- ••.
tion first wu reponed but quic'l!y recovered most candidate for the chairmanship of the Federal nomically depressed inner city neighborhooda. ! .
of that ground.
Reserve if .Chairman Alan Greenspan should
Rubin was born in New York City in 1938
Rubin's dcpanure wu not unexpected. It has choose to retire.
grew liP in Miami Beach, the son of a lawyer. He !
long been rumored !hat Rubin, who made $26
The·senior·offiCial said Clinton plans to nomi- graduated from HIUVard College with higheat :•
million in private life as an investment banker the . · nate Summers, who ran many ofthe administra- honors in economics . and quit Harvard Law .:
year before joining the administration in 1993, lion's efforts to stem the Asian finanCial crisis, as Sehool after three days to see !he world. ·
:•
wanted to return to the private sector..His wife has his third treasury secretary. Stuart Eizenstal, an
He later studied atllie London Sehool of
never moved to"Washington, living in New York undersecretary at the Stale Department, is Oin- nomics and received a law degree from Yale. He •,
City throughout his term in office.
ton's choice lei rep_! ace Summers as second in spent two years at a New York law firm befonl • ·
Administration ·officials said Rubin; 60, dis- command at Treasury.
·
switch ing careers.
'
··
•~

and::

Eco-:

,

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,,

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