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                  <text>Page12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Weather

N011UNG RUNS
UKEADEERE"

Today: Sunny
High: 80s; Low: soa

JL

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn
668 Pinecrest Drive

.friday
M•y 21, 1000
Meigs sports banquet, Page 4
Violent sleep patterns, Page 8
Presenting the classes of '99, inside today

Thursday, May 20, 1999

Tomorrow: Cloudy
High: 70s; Low: SOa

Galllpolla

kross flam Galli. Auto Sties on old tie. 35 Wtst

Sports
Jazz - Trailblazers
series even; Knlcks
down Atlanta
-Page 5

106 North Second Ave. •·Middleport, OH

(740) 446-2412

461 South Third Middleport, Ohio

'

992-2825

740 992-2196
•

Meigs County's

'·

,

AliT--tom
2

p.m. • Saturday •

ON THE SCHEDULE
OOfllliU of ttne llpt. wtth • fl'IIOo
datory-plt .... _ ,

WNdJON CUP IEIIID

• Truck Urleo, O'Rallr'o 200

• Wlnoton Cup, Tile Wlnoton
7:30 p.m. • Saturday • TNN
• Buoch Sorln, First Union 200
.1 .p.m. • Sundal • ESPNi

~oy.

C&lt;lnco&lt;d, N.C..

1 . 5-ml~

track, 70 laps (seaments of 30, '
30 and 10),

· 105 miles ·

_,......._,M...

Whln: SaturdliJ)', May 22
Martin

1999 POINTS STANDINGS

QU8IIf)inc,

-·

D P J 4 ulNa: /

Quiii'Jt!C Bill EJHoti wm the

POle in eac:n of the last two ~ars .
The tormatls li'IIQue In mat It

wr.r.: ~70 Speedway, Odeua.

c~

Tim

Qulllf)ll• .....e: Elliott Sidler.
Chlw04et. 129.87 4 ,..,., (Moy 18,
'
.
1997)
RMe reeoM: Chuclc sown.
Ponti8c, 10...172 mph, MIV 11,

.

--.-..-

IUSCIIDRAMINJIIIDIIAL

·

200

-=~. Moy23

,......._ The winner of thl
Winston Open .will Ua'ICO IntO
The Winston. That 50-laD race wtll
be P&lt;eceded b!' a ,.. of 2!1-IIP

1991

ComiftC up: Arst Union 200
~

Naz:ereth (Pe.)
Speedway. 1-rnlle track, 200

was not aiming tlle 'rifle at
for all transactions at gun
By DAN SEWELL
one particular person," Wig·
shows and for anyone seekAsaoclatiMI Prau Writer
ing to reclaim a weapon at a
CONYERS, Ga. (AP)~ The firsl bell hadn't sounded ington said.
After the shooting, Assis·
pa\Yn shop.
yet and the students in the commons area a! Heritage High
Meanwhile, tlle Heritage
School were gabbing and munching on cinnam~n rolls. It tant Principal Cuil Brinkley
followed
the
student
outside
High
Oass of '99 was left
was the last day of class for tlle senion;.
with these indelible mental
Suddenly came a loud, startling " pop," then another, toward the football field and
snapshots:
another and still another. Some figured it was a prank- . asked the suspect to hand
Hundreds of teens, scream·
maybe firecracken; - . until !hey heard shouts of "he's got over the ·handeun, which was
raised at him.
ing, crying, jamming
· a gun!"
through doors to escape.
- "I stepped back a couple
Then came the panic, screams, lean; - and blood. ,
Some yanking up fallen
On the day Heritage High senion; were looking for- of steps_and I turned to him
friends, othen; jumping over
ward to picking up their yearbooks, their suburban com· again and I said, 'Give me
th~m.
munity became the new focus for a nation on edge after the gun,' and I said again,
A girl, lying on the floor,
months of fear and concern about violence in America's 'Give me the gun,'" Brinkley
said today. "I saw him lower
VlcnM -InJured Heritage High screaming " I'm shot! " and
schools.
· Six students were wounded in ·Thursday morning's the barrel of the gun and I School atudant Drake Hoy, 1:7, walla for medical begging fot her mother.
kept getting closer and cl08er au.ntlon In Conyara, Ga. Thuradly after • tenth Another moaning after
attack, rione critically.
to
him. Then I held out my grade .Wdent with two guna. opened flre .t the banging her head diving
The suspect. a 15·year·old sophomore friends said was
hands
and he laid the gun in high Khool. Hoy, one of •lx InJured atudents, under a table.
·
upset over a failed romance, dropped to his knees, pulled ·
my
hands.
WH
ti'Mted
lrtd
releaaecl
.t
a
Mlrby
hoapltlll.
A
teacher
s~epherdthe gun away from his mouth and, witnesses said, surren·
. ."Then he gave me a real big bear hug and he said, 'I'm ing studentS into a closet, and calming th~m by quoting
dered with a tearful: "Oh.my God, I'm sO seated! ~ '
from the Book of Psalms.
The gunman was identified by ,friends as Thomas scared, I'm scared,'' he said. ·
Classes were can~led far today, though students were
oUtside, helicopters, sirens, milling knots of dazed stuSolomon Jr., nicknamed T.J. He was charaed with aggra·
vated assault and other charges were being considered. eKpected to return to Heritaae High on Monday. School dents, panicked parents searching the groups and tearful,
Solomon must appear in juvenile court before he can be officials said graduation would go on as scheduled May hugging reunions.
Many of these same students and parents had watched
charged as an adult, some(hing not.expocted before Mon· 28.
The
attack
was
the
sixth
mass
shooting
at
an
American
television
coverage of the Littleton shooting a month ago.
day.
Rockdale County Sheriff Jeff Wigington said today high school or middle school since October 1997. Presi· That horror lasted for houn;; (he assault here was over in
that the suspect broke into a locked gun cabinet in his dent Ointon received word of Thursday's shooting before minutes.
"You, like, watch it on TV and it's not yout school and
family's basement to get tlle weapons- a .357 Magnum he left for Littleton, Colo., for the one·montll anniversary
it's not like this," said Scottie Sanders, an 11th-grader
and a 'rille. The suspect fired 14 shots, 11 from the rifle of the deaths of 15 people at Columbine High School.
The news "is deeply troubling tp . me, as it is to all strul!&amp;ling to. reconstruct the morning's events. " It was
and three from the revolver, according to a preliminary
.Americans," Ointop said. As he spoke, the U.S. Senate like a blur."
investigation.
Heritage, 20 miles east of Atlanta, is a' mostly white,
"Apparently he was shooting at the hip, basi~ly. He was approving a proposal requiring background checks ,

Cal992·2155

llipt/mllet

the toUtltllpHd tml .

ComlnC up: The WlnstOI'I
WlteM: lowe's Motor

ESPN

page

' Cooolol up: O'Rell~ Auto Ports

Mo .. 0.!143-mlle trod&lt;, 400 laps.
200 miles
·
_ , s.turdoy, Moy 22

DtfiiMIIW . . . .IDR: Tony
Rllntl

Qullfl~ll reoonl: Tony Reines.
Font, 114.269 mjln, Moy 22,
19911
...,. recont: Tony Raines,

Dave Ext. 104·
·Kathy Ext. 1OS
for mare
infarmation

Oodfe, 82.725 mph , May 24.
1997

••••••• ••••••

·to..Tum
Lltlln fii.O•It. ..,n

BI/H/,;
www.at1bJ\ua,COCD

See us for Your StihJPower Tools &amp;
Accessories

Ridenour
Supply
St. Rt. 248

Chester

985-3308

·

Dear NASCAR This Week,
What wis the lui year thllt •
car .other than Ford, Cllevy ..Podtiac ran the cin::uit? Siilce
~ has In)' driv« woo o race
in Ill three em? Is lUI)' driver
other than Ernie lrvan "currently
in a position to do so? · ·
11modty S. Sterhe

TOP TEN

·• weekly ranklnp by NASCAR This week writer Josh Stewart.
Last week's rankin&amp; Is In parentheses.

1. (41 O.le Jarratt
2. (31 Bobby Lollonte
3. (21 Jill Goodon
4. (11 Jill Burton
5. (51 Mark Mortln ·
8 . (71 Ruotr Wolloco
7. (81 Tonr Stewart
8. (81 O.lo brnhardt
9. (91 Word Burton
10. (101 Torry Lobonto

·

Title Just like Ned?
Stayed safe at Richmond
Top Good1ear casualty
Led most laps at Richmond

HUkton,PL

~&gt;!most

pulled WC/BGN double
Another Richmond top-five
CaQ focus on lndi/ChMotte

'

Ntnedijftmltmakuporl/clpalfd In th• 11!111""' 0.,.
sine&lt; 1971. l"M ltut nm.
tNm lh¥ thfft you
mentioned 'omit a met lM2.f in
/99}, ,.,.. Htury Gont dtw.

S.,..

•"''otMr

Flnlslied el&amp;hth at Richmond
Ninth at Richmond
Close to droppln&amp; out

arr Oldsmobif~ to 1'\w) vlclorlu.

Bulci I /.,1 win """ 1111990.
'/'M
time a cloamp/Oilthlp

1999 WINSTON CUP SCHEDULE

F'

·wru lKlll by another~ KW In
1983, wilfn Bobby Aill.ron """
. ill II

Dale Jarrett captured the Wlr:t$10n Cup points lead from Jeff

Button wlth .his wtn at Richmond. Burton led 104 lapi durlrc the
r~. mo(e than any other driver, but ended Up h8YI"' mechanical
trouble and had to @ behind the pit wall foJ 38 laps.
,
Jarrett and the other top.fiVe finishers did a SOOd job of awldlf'1:
wrecks caused by a freak occurrence In which right front tires Were
bllsterln&amp; and breakln&amp; up. As many as 15 drivers experienced
some tire trot.ble dufina the race. The sealer that was put on the
track before R6chmond may have caused the decay of the
Goodyear tires.

NASCARdriva.

.JoirMy A!l•nl maUing ad·
dn.r.r u JOI llDdmont Groen,
vUk, S.C 2961 l. Bom on S&lt;pt.
17. 1934, Allm .m 011t m.ce
oNI thiW poks willie driving In
NASCARfrorn 1955 throug/1
1967. He Q/.ro root the chedem:l flag In tl,t firstmce ~r
""'or Bri.riDI. TtM .. In 1961.
wltlk serving a.ro ,.liefdrl..,.
for .kJd&lt; Smith.

.Mark Martln's victory In the Hardee's 250 was his 37th win In

hlstOf)' or tne series.

CRAmMAN . TRUCK SERIES
Mike wauace t&gt;eat Jack Sprague In the thlrCK:Iosest flnlsn In
Truck Series history. Wallace won by a mere .013 seco!'Kis.

••••••••••••

••••••••••••
Y.llldatlot-

YJitdsNot

• IIOTz Dale Jarrett Is now tne
man to beat In the Winston Cup
points race after winning the

Pontiac Ellckemem 400.

1.

Calto/'un?

·

.

•IIICIIMMTFNICWI

Rory
·

AMIUAL DID: $24.95
wwrli&amp;: Dlsc:ountA on

3. W.DM'\nake or car WH AI Keller drtYitW Mien 1\e won
the first NASCAR road~ In 1954?

'

- · 74Nrt, tapot ...
ADMWI iiWD IV: SNnnon
~I MAIJNI AGDADI: P.O. b
1:1~2. RocK Hill, S.C. 20.731

--

:.IUitOJII:) U l - . '1: 't&lt;elll Ul UIIIV .lo1"'

-1~242·34e

!I•••········
Park tries new look to spark some luck
AROUND THE GARAGE

Lto 1S Cruist.
&amp; tz'ra.fJt.l
740-992-4233

BOG-795-1110
202 W. Second·Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

By Josh Stewart
NASCAR Thia Week

RICHMOND, Va. -The
usually clean~sbaven Ste'fe
Park was sponina some facial
hair wt'len he got to Richmond
International Raceway for last
Saturday'l Po"ntiac Excitement

400.
Park was participating in
Kyle Petty's Moton:yele Ride
Acro11·America. The ride
raised more than half·&amp;·
million dollars rOr charity,'
and Park h~ped the new look

. .

would raise his perfOrmance
my mom would feel about it,"
level.
. Park said . .. She's ·supportive of
"AHcr I cot home (from the it. This' is what you call
motorcycle ride), a lot of pc:o· pull in&amp; out all atring.s to act
pie commented on how they
our luck turned around."'
like the beard," Park said. "'I
Maybe Put should try a
decided to leave it on for
a- noxt time. He finilhed
Richmond. If my luck turns
34th. Satunlay~...., ,..his
·around here, it's going to stay. firsa with Steve Hmielu inter·
If not, I'll be back to that
im .,_chief. Hmiel\ 1111111
clean-cut guy that I was before position is u .tecbnk:al director
th_e motorcycle ride."
for Dale Earnhardt Inc:.
Park did need to get one
X
opinion befor~ deciding not to ,
·
shove.
RACE RECAP: JefTOOrdoo
"I was worried about ho:-y
won the pole for t~e Pontiac

merchln-

dse, hat, membership c.-d. raclrc

.....,..,,

IIUI.: rtckmasteiOCIIJ)rldlt.ne1

Excitement 400 in 1 welther·
postponed ain&amp;IO round or
qualifyina. He lapped the 314·
mile Richmond lnternltional
Racewl)' in. 2L34o4 aecontk
foro opeed of 126:499 mph.
He bn&gt;lte blo own tnck-quoli,
fyini roeord orl2l.l58 mph,
teton June 4, 1998. Michael
Waltrip auhed on hio IOCond
quilifyinalap Saturday after~
noon. AHhouah he received
the 38th stutinJ pot.ition aa a
provisional entry, he wu
fo"'ed to drop 10 the b_,k of ,.. ,
tbe field whea the I'ICO bq:an. ~~~

.

.

.•

math, science and language arts programs to offer
additional college-preparatory course work.
Tyler Oine, Craig Jones, Amanda McKnight,
Casey McKnight, Michelle O'Nail, Marsha. Per·
sons, 'Iia Pratt, Hannah Pratt, Brayden Prat~ Jesse
Price, Krista Roach and Amanda Smrek ·were
approved as students in open enrollment for the
1999-2000 school year.
,
Tina Kelley reported on supplies need for the
elementary school neltl year. Lola Sanden; reported
o~ FEMA payments to replace itei1J5 lost in last
year 's flood, and Sheryl Roush discussed a senior
lrip package and concerns regarding next year's
lrip.
The board also approved rules and regulations
for this year's senior lrip, which begins on Friday.
The board also:
%JApproved_student accident insurance for
1999-2000. with Brogan-Warner Insurance of
Pomeroy;
%JApproved memben;hip in the Ohio High
School Athletic Association for tlle 1999-2000
school year;
.
%JApproved calamity days for tlle 1998-1999
school year;
%JAfiproved a contract with J.A Miller Realty
Co., for the exclusive rights to market the Riverview
property in Reedsville for 120 days.

By AMY GEIER
Auo&lt;:lated.Prau Writer
COLUMBUS (AP) -A small plane tllatlost power and was on fire man·
aged to avoid houses and cars as it crashed on a street in a residential neigh·
borhood. . ·
·
.
The only j:Jeople hurt in the crash near Ohio S~. lloiversity Airport on the
city's northwest side Thursda)"ottight were the two people-in the plane, a twostat 1974 Beechcraft Bonzana.
• The plane la.t electrical power and the pilot called 911 with a cell phoi1e to
gel the telephone.number for tlle airport tower, said Sgl Gary Lewis of the State
Highway Patrol.
The plane then lost contact with the emergency dispatcher and as the dis·
patcher was contacting tlle airport tower, tower officials could see the plane
crashing, Lewis said
·
·
·
The pilot, D. Michael FISCher, 49, of Dublin, was in serious condition at
Ohio Statli Univen;ity Medical Center with an injured right leg, said Ken
Phillips. the hospital administrator.
The passenger, Gilbert F. Holcomb Jr., 45, of Columbus, was in aitical condition today at RJvetside Metllodist Hospitals with a broken back and broken
rib6, said hospital secwity U &lt;luis Verrilli.
Both victims also were burned, Lewis said.
.
The plane was crumpled in the front and the ~kpit and one wing were
charred as it came to rest next to a trash can and a mailbox. Fuel from the plane
leaked down the street and caught fire as the plane crashed, ·but tlle fire was put
out quickly, acoording to autllorities .
Neighbors rushed to tlle scene to hdp the victims.
Tom Lowder, 34, who lives on a street behind where the plane crashed, said
he heard metal scratching againSt the road and then a big booin.
By BRIAN J. REED
.When he got to the plane, the ~kpit door was open, the plane was on fire Sentlllll Nlwa Staff
'
and he heard two men screaming. "Get us ouL Get us ouL.".
The flood hazard mitigation program in RuUand is nearing its end, but an antic· ·
. He said (here also was a fire beneath tlle plane and a trail of fire behind the ipaled exlenSion on the project will allow the village to include residenls who still
plane.
wish to participate.
He walked on·a wing to pull Holcomb out and someone else grabbed f'JS·
The pogl&amp;il was set to end early this summer, but 8IX:OI'IIing to Boyd Ruth,
cher.
· who has adminislered the fEMA.funded program for Buckeye Hillsll;locldng Val,
The m~n were takeri away from the plane and neighbon brought blankets ley Regional ~lopment Dislrict, M extension has been requested and is antic·
and treated them until help arrived, said Slate Ribic, 27,
in an apart- ipaled so that all interested residents can be included.
meilt near whete.the plane crashed,
Thai extension will take the project through the end of tlle summer, Rutll said.
Meanwhile, almalt $600,000 has been spent in elevating homes out of the vii·
taae's flood plain,IU!d in pwdi&amp;Sing homes oulrighl
.
. .
Residents who qualified for the program were given options of elevation, buy, outs, relocation within the village and retrofitting their homes, whicll included ele·
vation of water tanks and other preventative measures. ·'
·
Ruth said that only two homes, including the histotk Harder cabin on Main
Street, have been subject to moving. Preparations are now underway for the reloANOTHER ELEVATION - Tlle
. 111111 home on Main Street la the
cation of that cabin to a site on the RuUand Qvic Center property, and altllough latelt home to be elevated out
of the flood plain through lha Rut·
several pmposels have bcen made for the building, including use as a meeting cen· land A~ Huard Mitigation program. Crawa from .Huaton Broth· ter, no final decision lw bt!en made as to how the cabin will be used.onoe it hl'IS era of Wellaton .,e pictured wortdng under the home on Tllurad•y.
been relocated.
.
,
Ma.t other participlllts in the program have c:ha5en to have their homes ele· . paper. Those properties which are subject to buy-out by the village are turned over
valc;:l'or have opled to sell their homes to the village and move out of town.
to the village for use as "green space." ·
·
The village will be prohibited from building pennanent structures on the land
Ma.t of the work on the project has been performed by Huston Brothers Coo·
Pll•••nger.
struction of Wellston. ·
··
·
acquired lhrough tlle mitigation program, but will be able to use the land as porks
RuUand Mayor JoAnn Eads and some members of the village council have and other ~blic fat.ilities.
·
Bond set at $1 million
ellpt ed concern Over the lllfB" number of residents who chose to mave out of
Eads said tllat b;~Sketball couns, ll:nnis couns, and picnic shelten; arc among the
for accused murderer the commwlity, because of the financial hardships mticipeted with paying sewer improvements which are pennittOO under the prograni; The village has already
' CANTON .(AP) - Pollee say a debt and meetinB other village obligations.
·
transfonned a small plot in the downtown area into a park, and Eads said at last
man in cuslody in the stabbing death
The propam offered a cash incentive for residents who chose to remain resi· week's council meeting:tllat other lands could also be developed for public use.
Debfa Parsons admitted the dents of the villaae.
Sections· 32 Pages
·
Property owners living adjacent to properties pUrchased by the village have .
atti\Ck.
Ruth also rtQicd that none of the particip111ts chose to go With retrofitting.
also been given tlle option of leasing the lands from the village in exchange for · :
"He remembers stabbing her, but
he doesn't remember how many
times and how baclit was,'' said a
Canton pollee detective, Capt. James
Qting the need to equip schools With tools tope· orado high school and Thursday's shooting incident flexible grants would go to schools to help them
Myers.
vent
violence, U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, D· in Conyers, GiL - are making the issue one of the carry out comprehensive programs.
. ·
Bond was set Thursday at s1 mil·
Lucasville, joined his House colleagues Thursday in nation's pressing needs.
• The addition of 20,1KXJ police officers through
"And yet, many school districts in southern Ohio the COPS program, half of which woui'd be placed
lion ·forwith
. David
I charg•KI
killinilL.hbParsons,
wife . 42, introducing the Scooal Anti· Violence Empower- .
ment
(SAVE)
Act.
are
struggling to make ends meet now," he said. in the schools.
said the 37-year-old mother
. • After-school ~ams. The majority of juvenile
four repeatedly was stabbejl The bill provtdos needed funds to school distiicts for "They cannot afford Ill hire prevention counsc:lors or
violence pnlYC!Ition activities, Strickland said.
Jaw ento,cement personnel. The SAVE Act w11l help en me takts place dunng the late afternoon and early
\Vednesday morning in the Republic
Lotteries
"Violence 101ong young people is incredibly di~- ~Is nation~ide_to alford professional assistance . evenin~ houn;. The SAVE Act would provide fundStorage System&amp; parking lot as she
turbing
and dillicult to understand," the Cilllgrr:ss· m v1olence preveniJOn."
.
mg to mcrease the number of after-sChool programs
arrived for her third day on a new job. mm said.
QHIO
"WD need to help our ochool personnel
The four main provisions of tlle SAVE Act like the one recently awarded to Scioto County,
Mrs. Parsons, a residenl of Carroll develop ways to pRVCnl this tragic violenoe,llld we · addressing the needs of school districts are:
Pick 3: xxx.; Pick 4: xxxx
• Model violence prevl'rtrion program clearingCounty,
was granted a civil proiec· need to employ professionlls who can n!C08J1ize
Buckeye 5: xuxx
• Oisis prevention counselors. About half of tlle house. The bill would create a clearinghouse at the
lion order May 12. The order potentially dangerous behavior and help students funds from the bill would go to helping school dis· U.S. Department of Education that would serve as a
w.yA.
I demar1ded that David Parsons keep deal with conOict constructively and non·vlolently." lricts hire SO,IKXJ crisis preventioh counselon; who library of proven anti-violence education programs.
Dally 3: Xl!J(; DaUy 4: xnx
1,000 feet lway from his Str\cklandsaid thll reminders of school safety needs would recognize potentially dangerous situations This would help school districts find existing proII
o 1m Ohio Vllky r.bllohlna eo.
wife.
-:-highlighted by last month '• killing IIJINCII a Col· and counsel students on connict management. Also, grams to use as models for their own. .

.

Good Afternoon

.
~-·
~ .t.999TM Glttoti(N.C.)Guet\1 • Dlltrlluted byUnivet'lll Prut ~·1(8001 :266-e734 • ForrtJI. . wttt&lt;tJfM-r17, 1881 • .,...,1 ~ tnc .. SlriiOtl.~.
·'

trict's tllreefonnerelementaiy school buildings. The
dislrict nened approximately $20,000 from the sale ·
of those items, which inCluded two school b\ISCS,
and Superin(endent Deryl Well said Friday that the
board's action this week will allow tlle district to
establish the fund and to process necessary paper·
work.
The board held a discussion with Eastern High
School Principal Rick Edwards about a need for ·
additional classroom space in the high school, which .
·was fully renovated prior to the beginning of the
current school year.
Edwards suggested that the board consider converting the hiilh school media center, which is in
space fonnerly occupied by three c'assrooms, back
into classroom space.
.
The · media center offen; reference materials,
periodicals ""d computer access to high school stu·
dents, while Jhose students are referred to the elementary school and public library for works of fielion and most other bound materials.
Well said tllat tlle board will only consider the
possibility of converting the space, and will neces·
sarily examine tlle expense involved in restoring the
space for classroom use.
Well said that the need for classroom space has
arisen because of requirements set forth in Senate
Bill 55, which will require tlle district to expand its

Autland mitigation program· may be extended

.Fan Tip&amp;

wno was tile 11111 n10111e to win tile

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2. What ftlm about stock car roclnl started

• NOT: Kenny Wallace hod
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BUSCH ORAND NATIONAL
BGN events, more than anyone else In the

By BRIAN J. REED
·
,$enllnel Hewll Staff
The Eastern local School District Board ofEdu·
cation took action on personnel items and approved
a new scholarship fund when they met in regular
session on Monday.
'lbe board approved the following supplemental
contracts for tlle 1999-2000 school ·year: Saltt
Otristman. head football' ooach; Bryan Durst and.
Danny Thomas, assisla(lt football CQI!Ches; AI
· Green, junior !Ugh football ooach; Howie Caldwell,
boys' head basketball coach; Pam Douthitt, athletic
diiCC!or and head softball co.:h; Arch Rose, head
varsity track coach, senior class advisor and stUdent
council advisor; Don Jackson, head volleyball coach
lind assistant softball coach; and Paul Brannon, head
girls'basketball and assistant volleyball coach.
Brian Bowen, David Hawthorne and Patrick
Newland were approved as volunteer assistant fool·
ball ooaches. Carolyn Ritchie was approved as a bus
driver for Career Camp in June, and the board
approved posting of a bus driver position for tlle
. Summer lnatruction ~·
Professional Growth reimbursement was
approved for two teachers.
.
The board voted to establish a new schol~m~hip
fund derived from ptoceeds from the sale of person·
al property - desks otller contents- from the dis-

Dear NASCAR This Week,
Could I impooe on )OOt
kindness to perhapl 11M ...
tome information on one of the
American driven, o crew chief
10 be exa&lt;~ who tell-drove three
196l Meii'W')' Comet C.lienles
(on the Cape Hom 10 Fairbanks
Durability Run, 1964)1
His nune Will Joluuiy Allen,
It tlw time livin&amp; in Piedmon~
S.C. I was &amp;i,., to W1dentand
l .met him that he \W.

WINSTON CUP lliRIU

suburban school, like Columbine 'High. About 80 percent
of graduates go on to·college.
Even before the massacre in Colorado, Heritage had
video surveillance .cameras in the hallways and an armed
sheriff's deputy on duty during school houn;. On NBC's
"Today" show this morning, Wigington said the attack
happened before (he deputy had arrived.
Chris Dunn, a sophomore, said he had seen " lots of
guns" at the·suspect's home. Solomon was described as
quiet, and several students said his grades had slipped
lately and he had been heard making ambiguous comments about shooting someone. One said he didn't take
Solomon seriously.
A day earlier, someone had brought in a paper bag
· filled with crickets and left them to hop out across Her·
itage High. There were rumon; tllat a possum or another
critter would be (umed loose Thursday. ·
.
"I walked into tlle commons area and heard tlle pops,"
said Michael Mellitto, an 18-year-old junior. "I though~
'Ha, ha, .very funny! • Then these girls come running past
me, crying, saying, '' ! can't believe they shot him!'"
Nathaniel Deeter, 15, a friend of the gunman, said
Solomon was depressed· after a girlfriend broke off their
relationship this week.
He was there as the attack began. ·
"I yelled ·to him, 'Hey, what're you doing?' But he just
kept shooting. And then the kid next to me got shot in the
foot. Then I started to run," Deeter said.
•
Se,venteen-year-old Drake Hoy tried to run, too, but ·
realized. something was wrong with his foot: "I took off ..
my boot and· there w.S blood and stuff everywhere."
He was one of two students who were treated for
minor wounds and releasCd Thursday,
Witnesses said the gunman was shooting at no one in
panicular, firing at students below the waist.

.Eastern board acts on supplemental contracts

Bi.dck. AI best~ CQII

jlgurr. lrvan ls the only driver
cumnlly driving ... make
(l'onr/Qc) after !roving had
vtc1011es in the other tWo.

fROM lAST WEEK

Stngle Copy - 35 Cent s

screams and blood in another American school

'He's got a gun!'.

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TV

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49. Number 249

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.

Commentary

•

: Friday, May 21, 1999

PlgiA2

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

frtdly, Mert1, 1tlt

Death Notices

The Daily Sentinel Clinton prefers·'war room' to·war-:
'E.sta6ftsliea in 1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740.GG2·2158 • F•x: 1102·2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETI
Publisher
•

'

CHARLENE. HOEFLICH
General Manager

DIANE HILL
Controller

f1N Sentinel rwlcom.. ,.,.,..to rh• -.t~nDrl'l'otn,....,. on •~NoM~ ,..,. of top.

a.

Short I.U.r• (300 wotm CH t.u} Nw ft.. beet ~ of N/ng pub/JMN.

•..-tu,.,
•nd Uytlmt pi)On• numb.r. Sp«lfy • d•t• If ,.,._., • ,..,.,.,. to •,..

TyptJd ,.,.,. .,.. pnt.rJYd •nd 1111 m•y ,_«&lt;it.d. &amp;ct, MouHIItJt:lucl. •

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Woue MfJcl• or,,,.,, M•H to: ....,.,.. to tiN tdllor,
Ponwroy, Ohio 451611; or, FAX to 140-1192-2167.

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The Sentinel, ru COUtf St.,

.

·Letters to the editor .
•

:class struggle, modern style
, The impression has always been floated around that we are a free and
open soc1ety.
Treasury Secretary Rubin is resigning. As a good-bye gift he is being promoted to dem1-god status for the way he has controlled the economy.
. When Economic Czar Alan Greenspan takes a deep breath the stock marktt trembles. He control interest rates. This economy is built on stilts. This
economy is not free. Neither is anything else. Every day some new regulalion crops up. If you want to do anythmg find out the regulations first. That
includes death
This country is d1v1ded 1nto two classes, those who have nothing and
those who think they have something. Money management is picked on
because it is the life blood of this ephemeral super-power.
I watched them inventory a major store yesterday. They descended on in
like a plague of locusts, all so taxes could be levied. The enemy of the state
is anyone who hangs back on paymg taxes.
. It is amazing how these pot-licking politicians all behave the same. More
and more we become socialists. The next step 1s socialism, Russian-style, or
worse.
, I wnnder what these demi-gods want in their obituary?
Gayle Price
Portland

Share the gospel
through Christian rock
. For many years there has been a debate m the Christian world about
Christian music which included the use of drums for a beat.
· First the argument against: 'Some Chnstians believe thai God does not
approve of any music which is driven by a distinct drum beat-- even if the
lyrics are straight from the B1ble. This argument is· based on three things.
First of all, it is based on tradition. For hundreds of years most church music
did not include drums. The second reason is experience. During the music
r~volution that began in the '50s and '60s music w.ith a beat was mostly secular and often encouraged sinful lifestyles. From that point forward many
Christians labeled music with a beat as s1nful and of the Devil. The third reason is science. Although I have no documentation, I have been told that there
was one study done on music which is driven by a beat and its affects on its
listeners. The conclusion was that it is the beat of the music that is evil and
that it somehow negatively influenced its hearers.'
The argument for Christ~an rock. Other Christians like myself believe
that God approves of any type or style of music that glorif1es Him by using
Bibltcallyrics. This argument is based on two things. Its foundation is Scripture. In Psalm 150 the writer calls God's children to praise Him with the
sounding of the trumpet, pra1se Him with the harp and lyre, praise Him 'with
tambourine and dancing, pra1se H1m with the strings and flute, praise Him
with the clash pf cymb;ds, praise him with resounding cymbals. Qearly, the
point is that joyful Worship of God with music dnven by the beat of tambourines and cymbals and even dancing is pleasing to God. The second reason is expenence. In I Corinthians 9:19-23 Paul explains that he has become
all things to all people so that some might be saved. Although he never comp(omised the message -- he met people on their level. Since the beginning
of Christian rock thousands of teens have experienced God's uncompromised word and love on their level My love fo'r God was deepened time and
time again by Christian Rock Weekends where God met me and transformed
my ltfe.
I wrote this anicle because I believe thai God has built a bridge between
Jesus and unsaved teens through Christian rock. Most churches mamtain a
style of music that is 200 years old and creates a huge barrier for teens and
young people to learn about or meet God. The Bible tells us thai anything
we do should be tested w1th Scripture and examined fol good fruits. If you
have never heard Christian rock, some great groups are Stephen Curtis
Chapman, Jeoff Moore &amp; The. Distance, D.C. Talk, Petra, News Boys,
Rebecca St. James. It may not be your style but the words are truth thai
changes lives.
Rev. Brian Harknau
Racine

Cemetery should be in better shape .
,
· on Saturday,
visited the Sand
Hilland
Cemetery
at Long
Bottom
where
my wife, May
son, 15,1
granddaughter,
mother
father, and
brother
are
interred.
'
I was very disappointed at the condition of the cemetery. There are many
tombstones that are bent over in the old part of the cemetery.
I feel smce it is so close to Memorial Day the grass should have been
mowed.
, Also the only restroom was li total mess. A big pile of leaves was in front
and alongside of the commode. This is a snake or rat harbor. I feel as close
to Memonal Day as it is the cemetery and the surrounding areajn the cemetery should have had more attention.
: I have heard a rumor that some generous lady bequeathed some money
for the upkeep of the cemetery. If this is so the cemetery should be kept in
better shape.
. Our deceased loved ones deserve to have their final resting places kept in
better shape than they are now.
Denver 0. Curtis
Bidwell

Today In History
By Tha Associated Prtss
, Today is Friday, May 21, the I41st day of 1999. There are 224 days left
in the year.
: Today's Highlight 1n History:
On May 21, 1927, Charles A. Lindbergh landed his Spirit of St. Louis
near Paris, completing the f1rst solo airplane flight across the Atlantic Ocean.
On this date:
In 1.542, Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto died while searching for
gold along the Mississippi River.
·
In 1832, the first Democratic National Convention got under way, in Bal·
timore.
.lr11840, New Zealand was declared a British colony.
·tn 1881, Clara Barton founded the American Red Cross.
In 1924, 14-year-old Bobby Franks was murdered in a "thrill killing"
committed by Nathan Leopold Jr. and Richard Loeb, two students at the
University of Chicago.
In 1956, the United Stales exploded the first airborne hydrogen bomb
over Bikini Atoll in the Pacific.
·
In 1959, the musical "Gypsy," inspired by the life of stripper Gypsy Rose
~e. opened on Broadway.
·In 1968, the nuclear-powered U.S. submarine Scorpion, with 99 men
abOard, was last heard from. The remains were later found on the ocean floor
400 miles southwest of the Azores. ·

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

By Jack AndertOn
end Jen Molltr
In the summer of 1990,
as Iraq's Saddam Hussein
was moving his tanks into
Kuwait City, President
George Bush did something extraordinary: He
played golf.
He also met with advisers and conducted
feverish telephone diplomacy with world leaders,
yet he steadfastly refused to leave his beloved
Kennebunkport, Maine. His message was clear:
The leader of the free world will not have his
annual vacation interrupted by a
tin-pot dictator.
Nme years hence, the United
States is once again taking on a
ruthless dictator bent on regional
hegemony. And once again, the
president refuses to be ruffled. But
where Bush was racing speed boats
and hilling golf balls, Bill Clinton
and AJ Gore are racing around the
country hitting new records for
presidential buck-raking.
By our calculations, Clinton and
Gore have auended an average of
one fund-raiser every three days
since NATO's war in Kosovo was
launched almost two months ago.
Last weekend the president
schmoozed in his favorite setting ·Hollywood -- to the tune of an
expected $15 million for Democratic Pany coffers. It's all pan of an
effort to raise a record $55 million
by the end of this year.
Back in Washington, meanwhile,
Clinton's military advisers were
struggling to explain a war that so
far has been notable mainly for
NATO's inability to hit its intended
targets.
Most of the people we !ijl&lt;lke to
say the fund-raising shouldnQ!._ be
viewed as unseemly. The presidbll!
must be seen as going about business-as-usual,
they argue. To do otherwise might be a sign of
weakness, a suggestion thai Slobodan Milosevic's
defiance is wearing oh Clinton.
We disagree. This is a risky strategy -- not just
politically, but most imponantly for the nation.
At some point, Gore will have to answer the
same question posed to every vice president who
seeks his party's nomination: Where were you
when things got hot? The answer in Gore's case
will be Iowa and New Hampshire, Birmingham
and Seattle and everywhere in between, cozying
up to the big-money donors and influential local
pols whom every candidate covets.
Of course, Gore has also met for photo-op
negotiations with Russian foreign minister Victor
Chernomyrdin. But the overriding image will be
of a vice president glad-handing big givers while
a disastrous war raged in Europe.
A year from now, there is a chance no one will
remember that Gore was on the hustings while

America's troops were at war. The key in nonelection yean, insiders say, is to raise and spend
enough money to scare away all potential competitors. II worked brilliantly in 1995 for Qinton.
After that campaign, While House insiders
famously termed Gore the "solicitor-in-chief" for
his role in ·raising gobs of soft money that helped
lift Qinton's poll ratings.
Y~l it has become embarrassingly clear in
recent weeks that this White House is much more
adept at political warfare than the real thing. In
fact, the blueprint for how 10 conduct this war
may best be found in Lillie Rock, Ark., where the
seeds of the Clinton presidency were sown.

countr~

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Arnold Johnson

AlRWAR:
DlTTO

w. VA.

Sumy Pl. CI¥Y . .Ck&gt;udy

Show«'~

.

T·storms

......
Allin

A\ITI89

Snow

kle

'

uthern Ohio will see
:r ainfall ·fpr this weekend
· By T~• Allocleted Pres•
· .
~
. Matnly cleal",conditions were reponed across Oh'll this morning, with
overnight lows in the 40s and·50s.
' An ar~~' of hig~ pre~ure ~ to .~!&gt;n_tinue movijtg east of the state
today. Wtnds were· to swmg around to -the southwest as Ohio becomes
positioned' lin lhe bac'k side of the high. .
· High temperatures were to be between 75 10 85· degrees today. Mostly to partly sunny skies were expected.
, Overnight low temperatures will be from 55 to 60.
_ A weak low pressure system will approach from the west to give the
slate a threat of showers and thunderstonns by tonight.
, The risk of showers will linger into Saturday afternoon ending earlier in the we~t. Highs Saturday 'Yill pe betwc!_lln 75 and 80 degrees.
, Record htgh for today 92, set in 1941; record low 34 set in 1883.
Sunrise Saturday 6:ll.a.m:,'sunset 8:45p.m.'
~
·

There was even a movie made about the Little Jackson helped free three American Marines held '
Rock "war room," where James Carville and captive by the Serbs. Blagojevich spent several :
George Stephanopoulos and a group of young hours fn conversation with Milosevic, and also ·
acolytes were the generals who defeated Bush by met with Ointon upon his return.
'
Like virtually everyone who meets the presi- :
hammering away on economic issues and label·
ing the president as "out of touch."ll was a ruth- dent, Blagojevich came away impressed with ,
lessly efficient campaign machine, and it set the Ointon 's intelligence and "nuanced" understand·
lone for the presidency to come. It ,featured poll- ing of the Balkan situation. He came away con·
tested themes designed to perfectly complement vinced that the war will only end if Oinlon him~
the public mood, lighting-quick response to crises self gets personally involved.
and a strong network of friends and supporters
Never much interested in foreign policy, Oin•
who could be ·leaned on to bankroll and support ton has nonetheless proved himself a skilled ,
the campaign in tough times.
diplomat when engaged. In Ireland and Israel, his ·
Candidate Clinton immersed himself in every direct intervention made bad situations better. ·
last detail, leaving virtually nothing to chance
Clinton could do 'himself-- and Gore, and the .
when it came to his political future. He's doing world •• a huge favor by getting involved and ;
the same thing today, gleefully' out on the cam- negotiating an end to this unwinnable war ·
paign trail supponing Gore in an election tha!'s (unwinnable unless ground troops are c,ot!,lm\!:~
still almost 18 months away.
ted). liven if it means getting off the hustm~·for;
But that lack of precision and purpose is ·awhile.
'
'~
notably absent in Kosovo. White House officials Copyright 1-, United FMIUre SyndiClltl, Inc.

a5 a "New Democrat,"

someone who keeps faith with the
downtrodden and oppressed but
knows the best of all social programs,
the greatest liberator, is a job.
My pro-Qinton cheering didn't
stop there. When he held his ground
for affirmative action ·in that won·
drous Library of Congress address,
when he stood in respect and empa·
thy before the country's largest gay
rights group, he was a true national
leader.
And there have been other
moments of Ointon pride: when be
signed the Brady Bill, when he joined
with NATO to say "never again" to
European genocide.
I didn't cheer when he and Mrs.
Qinton killed the cause of national
health insurance for a decade by their
heavy-handed, big government 1994

.

Pe~gs ~;;~~

un'!of
getlcy Medical Service recorded
seven calls for assistance Thursday.
Units responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
1:31. a.m., Apple Grove~Dorcas
,(\oad, Racine, Sally Savage, Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
· 5:51 a.m., Nonh Fifth Avenue,
"'iddleport, Arnold Johnson, dead on
arrival;
~
6:59 a.m., Eagle ' Ridge Road,
Chester, motor-vehicle accident,
·Gloria Barrett, , St.
Hospital

call for "universal coverage." Instead and every loyal Democrat in the
of securing the health coverage of country.
.
.
"workins families," they scared the
Like many Qintonites, I had not '
hell out of them. Ignoring the exam- counted on last year's scandal. I
pie of FDR on Social Security and wrote a column on Jan. 8, 1998 praisJFK on Medicare, they turned an ing his economic successes, singin$·
argument about work benefits into a out my high hopes for him:
welfare issue. They broke the No. I
"Bill Qinton this week claimed a
rule of medical care: Do no harm.
place in 20th-century American hisI didn't cheer when he executed .tory. Just as Franklin ·Roosevelt
that mentally retarded guy down in lamed the excesses of capitalism in
Arkansas lo make himself look tough the 1930s, Clinton has spent the
in the '92 primaries.
1990s taming the excesses of governI didn't cheer when he hid behind menl."
,
Janet Reno's skirts after the Waco
There are many in the Democrati~
shooloul, then hid behind the party who disagree with this. They ~
"Democratic National Committee" opposed him on cutting the deficit; ·
when the foreign money scandal hit. opposed him on NAFTA, opposed
I didn't cheer when he hid his his overall push to the cel)ter. They
sleazy cover-up of his dealings with a are called "Qintonites" because they
White House intern behind Hillilry backed his sleazy cover-up of the
and Chelsea and his entire Cabinet past year.

tionalized" and demonstrated a
"lack of integrity."
Another status report indicates
that the bald eagle and river
otter have "recovered, "that the
Marbled Murrelet and the Pa¢f·
ic Herring arc "recovering,.,
that the Harlequin duck is '" not
recovering," while KittlitZ'$
Murrelel's is classified as
. "recovery unknown." The
report is much disputed, because marine ecosystems are always dynamic and in a state of flux.
At the time of the spill I wrote a column about
the situation. Ten years later, I offer it into evidence again:
The imponanttelevision news executive and
his wife entered the nice New York restaurant.
She checked her lynx coaL
"What a day!" said the executive. "That oil
spill we're covering is incredible. It's tragic."The
executive's wife agreed. "It's a catastrophe," she
said, "it just gets worse and worse."
A waiter came Oller and presented menus.
"Let's have the duck," the executive's wife said.
The executive nodded absently. '
"Those poor sea otters," said the executive.
"Just think, scrubbing them with a toothbrush 10
clean off the oil."
His wife said, "It's tragic." She thought: "I
have to get my fur coal cleaned and stored for the
summer."

·

"Just think of those poor lillie ~irds caked with
oil," the executive said as he pulled a leg off the
duck on the table.
"What's so tragic," the executive went on, "is
thai it happened in a pristine area." The woman
concurred: "Terrible," she said. "So pristine.
Hardly anyone lives there: Hardly anyone goes
there."

•

·

helico~r !~~~~~Pome~

via
\1Jlunteer F~~~ Department assisted;
10:14 a.m~ Third Avenue, Marbene Lowery; Holzer Medical Cen·
ter.

MffiDLEPORT

6:35 p.m., , Salem Street, Olivia
Rose Davis, Pleasant Valley Hospital.
RUTlAND
II :37 a.m., Red Hill Road, Freddy'
Nease VMH:. .
9:32 p.m:, ' Bowles Road, Tina
Williams,
Central Dispatch
squad assisted. ,

:YJiW,

Hosp. •ltal NeW S

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITI'ED TiiURSDAYBetty Young, Long Bottom.
DISCHARGED TiiURSDAYRaymorid Lamben.
(Publlthed by permi••Ion)

Arnold P. Johnson, 41, Middlepon, died at his residence on Thursday, May
20, 1999.
•
.
He was born on October 11,1951, in Mason, W.Va., son of Patrick-D. and
Patricia Ann Ball Johnson of Middlepon. He was employed as a carpenter for
Banks Construction Co., and was a building inspector for the Village of Mid·
dlepon.
He was a member of the Middlepon Parks and Recreation Board, a vol·
unteer worker with the Middlepon Youth League, and was a graduate of
Meigs High School.
Surviving, in addition to his parents, are his wife, Cheri Michael Johnson,
Middlepon; two daughters, Katherine "Kathy" and Michelle Johnson, both of
Middlepon; two sisters and brothers-in-Jaw : Penny and Glen Arnold, Bedford, and Debbie and Chris Monon, Laurelville; a brother and sister-in-law,
Raben "Gene" and Carolyn Johnson, Middleport; his mother-in-law and
falher·in·law, Irma and Larry Michael, Scottsbluff, Neb., two brothers-in-law
and sisters-in-law, Larry and Terrie Michael, Brighton, Colo., and James
"Jim" and Valerie Michael, Galion; and several 'nieces, nephews, aunts and
uncles. ·
Services will be held at II a.m. on Monday, May 24, 1999 at Fisher Funeral Home in Middlepon, with Joseph Gwinn officiating. Burial will follow at
Riverview Cemetery in Middlepon.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Sunday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.

By LAURIE KELLMAN
Associated Preea Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - With
Vice President AI Gore casting a tiebreaking vote, the Senate today
approved a Democratic proposal to
slap fresh restrictions on gun transactions at gun shows and pawn shops.
Democrats immediately declared victory over the powerful gun lobby.
"What you just saw is the NRA
losing its grip on the tlmted Stales
Senate, at long last," declared Senate
Democratic leader Tom Daschlc of
South Dakota.
"This is a turning point (or· our
country," Gore said after the vote.
"Finally, this majority is turning the
corner and helping to protect the children and families of this country."
. President Clinton called to congratulate. Gore for his vole and
praised the Senate for "the common·
sense ~pproach" of the provision,
said spokesman Joe lockhan.
The Senate vole came a few hours
after a school shooting in Conyers,
Ga., and as Clinton was flying to Coiorado to talk with survivors of a high
school shooting spree a month earlier.
The National Rifle Association
refused to concede defeat, aceusing
the White House of backing "a cha· rade of lawmaking without law
enforoe~~nl." .
.
. The NRA w.'ll C?nhnue to hold a
m11!0r up to 1~1s d1shonest process
until the Amencan people demand
more mea.ningful and substantive
action from government," the group
said in a statement.
"Everyone knows this won't stop
the crisis in our schools."

(USPS ZIJ·MOl

CDIIImnllf ~ptr HoWinp, l•e.

=I"

Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the

Ollio \IIIley l'ublbhlnJCDmp.tny. ~·ct.,.
plid II ,_roy, OIUo,
eeben Tho Associated Plus 1nd die Oh1o
New~paptr Allocluion.
~ Seftd lddre11 cbmctlons to The
Daily Sentincl 1 111 Court St., POmero)', Ohio

"It's too bad," , said the executive. "Why :
couldn't it have happened on Miami Beach? Why
did it have to happen where it was pristine?" · '
"And those poor fishermen," said the news ,
executive's wife, slicing into the body of the :
duck. "They 're·soing to have a hard lime making ·
a living if the Japanese don't buy Alaskan salmon :
for sushi," said the executive, thinking of Joe, :
Judy, Henry, Mel and Sarah, whom he had just :
fired from the network news depanmenl in a cost· ·
cutting l'rogram.
, :
• "It's all the fault of llxxon," the executive's '
wife said. "Right," said the executive, "they'll :
have to pay those fishermen." "They will," said ·
the executive's wife, "and thai captain ought to :
be hanged."
·.
:
The rouple left the r~lauranl and got into their ·
air-conditioned Mercedes equipped with power :
windows, steering, brakes and seals. "Damn oil .
companies," said the executive as the car purred
off into the night. "We ought to go to solar ,
power."
:
The couple entered their air-conditioned apart• :
menl, turning on the 12-bulb chandelier in thC::
.vestibule. Their dog barked and wagged his tail.'
"What we really need is more energy conservation; we're destroying the eanh; we're eating too'
much," said the executive angrily, feeding ground.
beef 10 the dog. "It's really sad," said the wife as· .:
she took of the pel II of, her once·trapped lynx, :
•• and so cruel."
"It's a sad day," the executive said, which is
what he was thinking later that night, as he fell off;
to sleep readins his treasured, leather-bound copy·
Thoreau.
.
•

SUBSCRintON RATES
IJ C•rrltr or Motor Route

One Woek .................................s~oo

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One MOIIth ................................ $8 70
One Yeu...................... ,..._,, .... S104.00

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,.mit in actvance dircc:t to The Daily Sentinel on
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No .ubKription by m1il pormltled 111 areu
wlton borne camer tervice i• av•il•ble.
P\lblilhet reserves the npt to adjust ntes dur:
Ina 1he 111blaiption period Subtcript1oo nte

dlian., may be iqJiemented by dllngine the
duration of tbD a~blcriptlon .

6:45,7:15,9:35, 10:0

IS IUunfUL (PGt3)

.

Dalt~....................................... 3&gt; C.nu

.......,_

WARS (Sci·FIJ) 1:00 t:30, 3:50, 4:20.

4.5769.

!Qe•u.l\ Rpbpr!p BtJn!pnl

Stocks
Am Ele ·Power ....................... 42~
Akzo ...................................... 43~
AmrTech ...............................65't,.
Ash 011 ....................... ...........43~
AT&amp;T .....................................6QY,
Bank One ............................. 59~.
Bob Evans ............................ 18'1.
Borg-Warner ...............:.......51"1.
Broughton ...............................16
Champion ...............................7'!.
Charm Shps .......................... 4".\o
City Holding .......................... 27'!.
Federal Mogul ....................... 45't.
Gannett ................................73"1.
Kmart ....................................17'!.
Kro.!l"r ..................................53"i.
Lands End ...........................46"1.
Lld ........................................4&amp;"1.
Oak Hill Flnl .......................... 18'!.
OVB .................................. ....... 34
One Valley ..... ......................
37"1.•
.
Peoples ................................ 2Bn
Prem Fln1 ............................... 13'!.
Rockwell ...............................61 '!..
RD/Shell ................................ 5&amp;),

1:00, S:SD

Shoney's ................... ;............ 2't.
FlrstStar ................................ 29'!.
Wendy's ................................ 26'.1
Worthlngton ......................... 13l.

-·-·Stock

repo~ts are today's
10:30 a.m. quotes provided by
Advesl of Gallipolis.

Nfr:!t!etfe HCfnrl!!

O&lt;TOIII SlY (PG) 1:15, 4:05, 7:00, 8:25
..,_J.IokoG;I I la.toC..,..t..Dont

7:00, 8:40 &amp; 12:15 FRI/SAT
7:00 &amp; 8:40 8UN-THURS
MAnNEES SAT/SUN
11:00,1:19&amp;4:20
NO
NIGHT

1111111111 (PGt3)1:15, 4:05, 7:00, 9:45,

Cangemi said the results showe'&lt;t
80 percent of people expect to 1li:
able to conduct transactions ai
ATMs or grocery stores and gas sta,
tions on New Year's Day.
'
"We're excited that consumer
confidence has risen so . high," h~
satd.
·
Government ex pens have lauded
the nation 's financial industry for its
work preparing for the technology
problem, when some . computers
originally programmed to recognize
only the last two digits of a year
could interpret2000 as 1900.
Most financial institutions have
set June 30 as a target date for completing all their Y2K preparations.
Sixty-four percent of those sur·
veyed sa1d they plan to withdraw
extra cash before Jan. I, but 52 percent said the amount won't exceed
what they typically spend for ·a
weekday, weekend or holiday.
··
"Hopefully, these people will fol·
low the ad"ice of numerous govern"
ment and consumer organizations;
recommending that people make
any withdrawals in small increments
well in advance of Dec. 31,"Conge•.
mi said.
'
The telephone survey was con:
dueled April 7-22, with a margin of
error of plus or minus 3 percentage
points.
'

Poll finds GOP women shift dramatically
in support for gun control legislation ·
By WILL LESTER
Aaaoclatld P1'8118 Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Republican women have shifted draniatically m
recent years toward the belief that oon·
trolling gun ownership is more impor·
tanl than the rights of gun owners, a pqll
says.
The poll results were released Thursday as the Senate approved a proposal
to slap fresh restrictions on gun purchases at gun shows and pawn shops, a
move·pushed by Senate Democrats and
opposed by most Republicans.
The pall by the Pew Research Center for the People &amp; the Press was taken
before Thuf!Wy's school shootings in
Conyers, Ga., and was released as President Clinton traveled to Littleton,
Colo., to observe the one-month
annivellilry of the nation 's worst school
shoOiing. That attack claimed 15 Jives.
including the two assailants who oommitted suicide.
Just over half of all Republicans, 53
perten~ said gun control was more
imponan~ while 42 percent said protecting the gun owners' rights took prionty. Stx years ago, 47 percent of
Republicans picked gun control and 45
pen:ent picked prote&lt;.1mg gun owners'
a statistical tie.

Republican women were key to the
shift m overall GOP sentiment in the
poll.
'
Almost three-founhs of GOP
women said in the poll that controlhng
. gun ownership was more important,
about the same percentage as all womeq
who felt that way. In 1993, about half Of
GOP women said oontrolling guns was
more importan~ while just over four-in10 said it was imponant to protect the
rights of gun owners.
·
·
Three-quarters of Democrats in the
poll said gun oontrol is Q10re imponan!
than protecting the nghts 'of gun owners, an increase from the two-thirds who
felt that way six years ago.
·
About two-thirds of all those questioned in the poll thought gun control
was more important. slightly higher
than in a Pew poll in December 199~.
The percentage of people who feel tele;
vision news contains too much violence
also grew.
The poll indicated that almost twO.
thirds of 'Amencans thmk television
news contains too much violence, compared with half who felt that way in
1993. Seven-&lt;&gt;f-10 sa1d 1V entenainment programs have too much v;o:
lence, the same level as the 1993 Pew
and a 1971 Harris
·

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK: Roses. retular $19.99now only $IO.oo each
Jr,e fertilizer, bring your own container,
limit 3 per customer please.

c_,,

u

7:00 &amp;8:20 DAILY
MAnNE!&amp; SAT/SUifri:OO &amp;3:20

Reader Servtces

Fresh line of bedding plants. Italian Large Leaf Basil is ready!
. AU 4" pots 994\' (but does not include perennials or herbs)

CoiTectlo!l Polley

to be

.cc•nll. If yo• bew or •• trnr Ia

I

_,, ..... lilt - - at (740) 99l·
%155. We wiD ....,k JNr lof'tn~llloo
1141 -ke 8 "'mdlol lfW81'1'111ted,

Copyrlghl1- NEWSMPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Othar S•rvlcea
1104

llOJ

uoo

Protect your plants from the locusts~nettlng-$.19 foot

VETERANS •MEMORIAL MEDICAL CLINIC

AU greenhouses open to the public

· FREE Diabetic ScreenintJ
Wedneeday, May 26, 1999
·~:30 A.M.-11:00 A.M.

Bin Wettenbel'g, a Mnlor fellow 11 the
American EnttrpriM lnllltule, Ia the IIUthor of
"YaiUII Milt« Moll" lnd Ia the hOlt Of the '
wMkly publiC ttlevlelon program "ThiFik
Tenk.''

Survey: Most people will
withdraw extra cash for Y2K

Watch for our GRAND OPENING of 1he new Garden Center, June 51h!

t:i Woeb. .................... .,.... $27;30
245 \\lltkl : .......................... .$53.82
lZ Woeu .................... I..:.. .SI05.56
..,_ Oualde Metp
t3 Woeki :......,.....:..............$29.2$
w..u-......................... Jl6.68
'2 v.r.tb ......................... .S109.72

Hrs. Mon•Sat 9:00·6:00 Sun·Hoon~6:00
Bring the kids over to enjoy the petting zoo

(Mi\

---

Remember we moved back to the Racine location. · Follow ·124
Eatt, 4 mile1 qut of Racine, we're on the right.

. ,. Screening Test,
~
Nutrition and Medic~tion Educational Information
'
Call (740) 992-3632 lo Pre-register

•

Phone: 74o-949-2681

''

.

The Southern local Board of Education Will meet Mmiday, 7 p.m. ai
Southern Hig~ School in Racine.

COUNTRY GARDEN CENTER

I..WaMetpC...Iy

Oor ..Uo CVI~ II Ill otorln II

Southern School Board

El

LOST.

.

'--

The d~dication of markers on the Morgan Raid Route across Meigs
County Will be held by the Me1gs County Historical Society, Meigs County. C:Ommission~rs, Ohio Historical Society, Meigs County Genealogical
Soc1ely and Oh1o Travel and Tourism at Bradbury (Bradford Cemetery)
Monday, 11 a.m. and in the Hiland Church area at 11:45 p.m. A receptioq
will . fol~ow at the Meigs County Museum, Pomeroy, 12:30-1:15 p.m,
Ded1cat1on of markers in Penland Park will be at 2 p.m.
•

KAREN'S GREENHOUSE'S

'l!t) . . ftrtOflhN

''

Marker dedication slated

'

MAIL SUBSCRIPTION

.

Announcements:

~~~~~~.....~~

llliiiiR)
t:OO, 1:10, 6:45, 9:35
(Sci ·Fil Ke111u Roowa 1Canle·Anno M011

EPISODE 1·
PHANTOM MENACE (PG)

-

By TED BRIDIS
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- Almost
two-thirds of people questioned in a
survey about the Year 2000 computer problem said they expect to set
aside extra cash 1n the days before
New Year's, but most sa1d it won 't
be a large amount.
The Gallup poll of 1,606 adu Its,
released today, also showed that the
The issue now goes to the House, vast majority - nearly 79 percent
where Speaker Dennis Hasten, R- - said they fully expect the Y2K
Ill., and the minority leader, Rep. problem to have "little or no
Dick Gephardt, D-Mo., were work- impact" on their personal finances.
ing out procedures for consideration
The findings reflect a shift in the
of the measure.
nation's mood- from early fears of
The proposal, which would Y2K problems causing widespread
require mandatory background failur~s to more recent views that
checks · for all transactions at gun ' the date rollover will more likely
shows, was tied, 50-50. Gore lhen present scattered inconveniences.
casl his vote. It was the founh time in
the poll, conducted by tetehis more than six years as vice presi-' phone, was commissioned by Star
dent that Gore has cast a tie-breaking Systems Inc., the nation's largest
vote.
electronic banking network, with its
The provision, sponsored by Sen. Honor and Star automated teller
Frank Laut~nberg, D-N.J., also machines, which serve 79 million
would require a mandatory back- customers.
ground check for anyone seeking to
"Clearly, the public is becoming
claim his or her own weapon at a more confident as they learn 'more .
pawn shop. In addition, it wiped out about Y2K preparations, including
a Republican proposal that had testing, that the financial and elecpassed moments earlier that Democ- Ironic funds transfer industries have
rats said would open fresh loopholes been making," said Ronald V. Conin the nation's gun laws.
gemi, Star's president.

Sears ....................................49~

hbllllhed every lftcmoon, Monday throuah
Frkta~. ttl

A Pomeroy woman is in critical condition at a Huntington, W.Va., hospita! with injuries suffered in a one-car accidenl early Thursday on County Road 32 (Eagle Ridge), the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Stale Highway
Patrol reponed.
Gloria A. Bearhs, 34, 36604 Bailey Road, was taken to St. Mary's
Hospital by the MedFiight helicopter following the I a.m. accident,
accordill!l to the patrol. She is in I he hospital's intensive care unit, a palmi
spokesperson said.
Troopers said Bearhs was eastbound, seven-tenths of a mile east of
Chester Township Road 416 (Frecker), when she lost control of the car
she drove, went off the right side of the road and struck a creek bank.
The car then ovenurned several times, ejecllng the driver. The car was
severely damaged, according to the repon.

New gun restrictions
approved by the senate

Daily .Sentinel

.-

I

Weather forecast:

, Tonight ... Increasing cloudiness. 't'ws in the mid and upper 50s. Light
southwest wind.
~
Saturday... Mostly cloudy with scattered showers and thunderstorms.
Highs in the upper 70s. Chance of rain 50 percent.
Saturday night ...ScaJiered showeJS and thunderstorms. Lows in the
mid and upi1Cr 50s.
Extended.forecast:
. Sunday... Partly cloudy. Scattered afternoon or nighttime showers and
thunderstorms. Highs 75 to 80.
M&lt;•!!!la'J:."Biree:ty and coole~ with a chance of showers. Morning lows
lower 70s.
Tuesday, . ~Pa,r!IY cloudy and continued cool. Morning lows in the mid
65 to 70.
·
,,

Wh'a tever happened to Kl•ttll.tz's Mu' rrelet? .

By Ben Wallenberg
Just ten years ago the tanker Exxon Valdez ran
aground in Alaska's remote Prince William
Sound, spilling 10.8 million gallons of crude oil.
This ignited an environmental and media
fireslorm, not quite of O.J. or Monica propor·
tions,' but big stuff in those olden days. It was a
made' for-teievision story: oil-soaked beaches and
oil-drenched birds, young ecologists with toothbrushes scrubbing oil from birds, local fishermen
explaining that their livelihood had been lost
because the salmon wouldn't come again. (II was
the 53rd largest oil spill.)
so· what has happened since then? Ecologists
with toothbrushes were followed by lawyers with
briefcases. A major industry has been created in a
state thai needed one. llxxon has spent $2.1 bil·
lion (with a "b") for clean-up activities. As a
result of a civil suit, llxxon is paying out $900
million additional dollars for restoration and
replacement of natural resQurces. A punillve
award of $5 billion (also with a "b") has been
levied against llxxon, under ttie tenns of which
more than 10,000 fishermen would receive almost
$2 million each. The case is on appeal.
What about the birds and the beaches? The
stale of Alaska and some environmentalists claim
continuing catastrophe. A recent "60 Minutes"
program shQwed vials of deformed pink salmon
fry. An independent academic science study
group composed of eKperls with prior experience
on oil spills has produced peer-reviewed papers
that indicate that the widely believed negative
impacts on fish and wildlife have been largely
"unfounded" and thai examination indicates
"recovery," uresilience" and "no obvious detrj ..
mental effects." (The group's funding comes
from Exxon, with no strings attached.)
Some of the scientists who were inlervie:wed
by "00 Minutes" say the program was "sensa·

....,.n..

I:Jomer "Red" Brickles, 82, Belpre, died Thursday, May 20, 1999, at his
residence.
He ~as born M~y 26, 1916, in Meigs County, son of the late Emmitt and
Franc1e Young Bnckles. He was retired from American Electric Power and
was a member of the Fraternal Order of Eagles, Pomeroy. He was a veteran
of World War II.
He is survived by a sister, Wealthy Stanley of Columbus; a sister-in-law,
Mary Kunzelman o.f Lawrencev~lle, Ga.; several nieces and nephews.
He was preceded m death by h1s w1fe, Helena Brickles, a brother and a sister.
.services willl;te held Sunday, 2 p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
w1th the Rev. Donald Wilcoxen officiating. Burial will follow in Sacred
Hean Cemetery, Pomeroy.
Friends may call Saturday, 6-9 p.m. a! the funeral home.

0

Not anti-C.I inton, just anti-sleaze
By Chrla MllllhiiWI
WASHINGTON - "Fiercely
anti-Clinton." That's the label a
Washington Po~t media · rep&lt;iner
pinned on me Monday. and il slung.
The truth is, my view of Bill Qinton is two-edged. I like what he
promised, and a great deal of what
he's done. My problem lies in who he
is.
When he used his inaugural year
to make war ag~inst the fire-breath~
ing federal defici~ I cheered him as lt
latter-day St. George.
When our young Democratic
president won passage of NAFTA,
signaling an era of trade expansion
and new jobs, I cheered again. II was
a triumph of American optimism that
George Bush tried and failed.
With both those acts, Bill Qinton
made good on liis promise to lead the

I

IND.

....

Pomeroy woman 'critical' following one-car accident

Homer •Red• Brickles

will arauc that the war machine is in good hands :
with Secretary of State Madeleine Albright; ·
National Security Adviser Samuel R. "Sandy"
Berger and Defense Secretary Bill Cohen. ·
Notwithstanding high-profile blunders like :
bombing the Chinese Embassy and striking civil; ·
ian caravans, White House officials maintain that :
NATO will stick to its guns and its goals until ·
Milosevic capitulates.
.
. But moments like this one deserve nothingles~ .
;
than full presidential attention.
Rep. Rod Blagojevich, D-111., brought thfs :
home last week in a conversation about his recenl
rescue. mission, in which he and the Rev. Jesse '

Local briefs:-

'r-

�Frlday,May21;1999

The Daily Sentinel:

Sports

.

.

Page4

!!!

Trail Blazers, Knicks notch victories
raucous Delta Center crowd scream- off records for the fewest combined
ing in his face.
points in a first quaner and tied the
" It doesn 't matter about those record for fewest points in .a first
balloons and those fans," Rider said. half. The teams shot a combined 28
"If ~t didn't look cocky, I'd be smil- jlercent from the field and made 16
ing when I shoot those free throws. turnovers on the way lo Portland's
Thai's my favorite time."
32-31 halftime lead .
, Stockton's three-pointer cut the
The Blazers had a 15-0 thirdlead ru 80-78 with 37 seconds left, quarter ·run, holding Utah scoreless
but the Blazers fQt' I Rider in the for nearly five minutes. In the fourth ,
low post, and he turued and made a Anderson 's three-point play tied the
layup with Hornacek hanging all game at 64-64 with 6:58 to play, but
over him.
Portland made a 9-0 run in the next
"Those are shots we need," said I:45, capped by Wallace's layup with
Rider, who was 4-of-6 on three- ):13 left.
·
pointers. "That was my responsibili."There were whole stretches of
ty, and I just tried not to let the guys . the game when we just turned the
down."
ball over for no particular reason ,"
But the ·Jazz still weren't done. Stockton said.
Game 3 in the srries is Saturday,
Hornacek hit a three-pointer with 12
seconds left, pulling Utah to 82-81. with Game 4 set for Sunday night.
Greg Anthony made one of two free
Grant had 23 points and ni ne
throws, setting the Jazz up for a final rebounds for the Blazers, whi le
Arvydas Sabonis had 10 points and
shot.
Stockton, who has scored most of 14 rebounds. Malone had 23 points
the biggest last-second points in Jazz and 17 rebounds for the Jazz, and
pl ayo ff history, 'was the natural . Hornacek ·added 19 points.
"Two big guys doing battle like
choice to take tbe fina l shot. He
drove the lane and drew contact with that is great to watch_. Karl played
Jim Jackson, but the ball went in and · well. and I think I held my ow n,"
out.
·
Grant said.
..
" ! should have made it," Stockton
But nei ther Grant nor Malone
said. "! had an opportunily to win it, scored in the game 's fi nal 3:46.
and dtdn ' t. ... That was a pr&lt;;:tty darn Malone !'eft without ta lking to
good look at the end of a game. I just reporte,l's .
·
did n' t fini sh it."
The Trail Blazer.s' Game I offen Anthony made another free throw, sive strugg les continued in the first
and Bryon Russell 's fu ll -court he ~ve . half of Game 2 _..;, but thi s time , the
at the buzzer missed .
Jazz were just as bad.
The strange ·game also featu1'ed
The teams combined for 25 points
the lowest-scori ng first half in play- in the lirsl- quarter, the fewe st in the
off history and impressive perfor- first quarter of any playoff game in
mances from two of the game's best NBA history. The previous record
power forwards , Brian Gratit and was 26, set by Detroit and Boston in
Kad Malone.
1988.
" Bot h teams just played. their
Portland led Utah 14-1_1 at the
hearts out," Portland coac h Mike start of the seco nd quarter, when the
Dunleavy said. "We were lucky !O horribl e offensive play conti nued.
come out with it, because both teams Portland led 32-3 1 al halft ime, lying
had a really good shot." .
. the playoff record for fewest comThe game's exciting conclusion bined points in the first half set last
belied an atrocious first half in which week by Philadelphia and Orlando.
Portland and Utah setthe.NBA playIn the night 's other game, the

NBA playoffs
-y c

Beha, J.T. Humphreys, Jeremiah Bentley and
BASEBALL HONOREES - These
Smlddle.
·
·
received various awards for baseball at the Meigs
spring sports banquet. From left to right are Steve

awards in softball at
banquet at Meigs High

Scl~oo1l.

Meigs spring athletes get.
honors at awards banquet
By DAVE HARRIS ·
oiven to Witherell , Hooten.
Sentinel Correspondent
Meadows , Stallley and Rodriguez.
The an nual spri ng sports ha nquct
Reserve soft ball coac h Nathan
fm Meigs High Sc hoo l was held Hanse n prese nted members of hi s
Thursday eveni ng in th e hi gh team that fi ni shed with a 9-4 record .
school's cafeteri a. Jim Soul sby , ath - Tea m members include Ashley
lctic honster president was the mas- Burb'ridge, Tiffa ny Hall, Bobbi
tcr of cere monies. Soulsby opened Burson, Heather Fetty, Shawna
the eve nin g with the invocatio n.
White, Carrie Abbott, Kim Peavley,
Mike Ke nn edy wit h the help from Brandy Smith. Shannon ·Michael ,
assista nt coach Ron Hill introduced Stephanie Kopec ," Crystal Stewart
members of the girls' tmck team. and Tiffany Quails.
Team members include: De lana
Softball coach Darin Logan introEic hin ger, Kara Musser, Mindy duced members or hi s softball team
O'De ll , Mary Sc hultz. Amber thai fi ni shed with a 19-5 record and
Snowden, Ali so n Hays, As hle y won the sec tional championship.
Thomas., Beve rl y· Burdette, Tric ia Teani members include · Tony a
· Davis and Ire na Zaneva.
Miller, Tangy Laudermilt, Brooke
: Kennedy and Hill then prese nted Wi.lli ams, Bethan y Boyles, Amy
n)emhers of the TVC champion boys Hysell, Tawny Jones, Julie Spaun ,
ttjlck team . Team members were: Brandy Tobin, Shannon Price, Abby
Jehn Ac ree. Jim Childers, Jame son Harris and Stephanie Wi gal.
Johnson , Tyson
Lee,
Nick · Selected to the first team aii-TVC
l\l!cLaughlin, Michael Smith, J.P. were Wigal, Harris and Williams.
Vi~rian, John Wil son, John Witherall,
Reserve baseball coac h Dan
Joey Blazer, Brant Dtxon, Adam Thomas introduced members of his
Qrimm , John Haggerty, Josh Hooten. team. ·Players include' Zach Glaze,
Joseph McCall, Zach Meadows, · Derrick Knapp, Josh · Knapper, Josh
Justin Roush, James Stanley, Shawn Lynch, Jacob Smith, Zach Bolin,
V)'orkman, Eric Johnso n·, Ben Crane David Camp, Andy Davis, Skip
and Angelo Rodriguez. Also being Dodson, Derek Johnson, Matt Lewi s,
recognized were manager Adam Justin Robson ; Eric Runyan., William
-ry1omas, and stati sticians Whitney Soul sby, Matt Stewart and Zach
'I:Jlomas and Bea Morgan.
Williams.
· · AII -TVC first team awards were ·

Scot Gheen coach of the vaFSity
· haseball team presented members of
hi s team. The team finished with a
13-10 mark overall and 11 -5 in the
TVC. Players included : Adam
Bullington, Nick Dettwiller, Steve
Beha, Jeff Brown, Odie Karr, Tom
Rou sh, Kyle Smiddie, Aaron
Van!nwagen, Jeremiah Bentley, J.T.
Humphreys, Pal Marti n, Ryan
Ramsb urg, Brie Ri chmond and
Rusty Stewart. Assistant coach was
Jeremy Gri.mm with manager Clay
Russe ll.
Winning first team all-TVC honors were Humphreys and Bendey.
Both wer~ lso selected to play · on
the all district team on Sunday, May
.30 in a doubleheader at Chillicothe.
Girls' athletic director Ron Logan
introd uced members of .the all-TVC
academic teain. They_ included
Beverly Burdetle and Tricia Davis in
TRACK HONOREES - The following received ·Trlcla Davis, tach Meadows and Bevarly Burdelltr; "
girls track , James Stanley in boys
awards
at Thursday evening Meigs High School Behind them are James Stanley, Josh Hooten and
track, Stephanie Wigal and Julie
·
spring
sports
banquet lor trl!ck. In front are (L·R) John Witherell.
Spaun in softball and Steve Beha and
''
Kyle Smiddie in baseball.
Logan then present an award from
the Ohio High School Athletic
Associati on to Bill Spaun for his .
dedication to th'e school during the
past year.
,
.
Soulsby then dosed the evenmg
with the benediction.

National League
roundup
By BEN WALKER
. ~P Baseball Writer .
Rubin Vcnlun..t made a grand
c)llmnce i1110 th e record book .
Ventura hit grand slams in both
I!.Utncs of a doubleheader, the first

· ~ajor leag uer eve r to acl·omp lish the

feat . as the New York Met s swept the
I'VIilwaukec Brewer. on Thursday
ni ght.
·
: "You go up and think thi s can't
l(appcti again ," Ve ntura said. "G rand
siams don' t ha_p pcn that ofte n
because you don' t get that. many siiUations.''

: Ventura co nnected off Jim Abbott
. in an 11 -10 win in the first game at
Shea Stadium, the.n hit another one
off Horacia Estrada to highlight a I0·t victory.
· "It seems like there have been a
ton of grand slams thi s season," Mets
tj,ammate Mike Piazza said. "But
that 's a good week , even a good
month by most-guys' standards."
: Ventura became the first player ·to
twice hit two slams in a day. He had
~o slams for the Chi cago White Sox
i)l' a game against Texas on Sept. 4,
.1995.
• "This tinie w~s a little different

KVD submits
.lates race results
.

'

: Gallia County resident s. claimed
three victories of the four held
Sa turday at Kanawha Valley
Drag way in Southside, W.Va.
• In the Pro Division, John Colley
e f Gallipolis used his dragster to beat
Ken Madden of Middleport and hi·s
1968 Camara.
: In the Modified Division, Keith
~mith of Bidwell took hi s 1973 Nova
to victory over a 1976 Nova dri ven
by Roger Augenstein of Lowell.
In the Pure Street. Di vision,
Matthew Moon of South Point and
hi s Camara knocked off Cherry
Strawther ofWinlield, W.Va. and her
l969 Nova.
• In the Junior Dra2ster Division,
Fraley of Patriot drove his 1996
Spitzer to victory over ,Jeremy
Hamilton of Nitro, W.Va.

iR.

because it affects two games,·· inning.
Ventura said . " The last time th e
There was a rain delay of I hour,
game was out of hand . Here it helped 30 minutes before the first pitch, then
us win twice. It was a good day for a the game took 4 ~ours, II minutes.
doubleheader. "
Brian Giles homered, tripled and
Vctllura' s lirst slam' ClllllC in the had a sacrifice ny for Pimburgh. He
first inning.
also made a di ving catch in center
" As he went up I said 10 (coac h) lield th at preve nted Florida fro m
Bruce Be nedict, 'It is the year of the scorin g the winning run in the ninth.
Cardinals 6, Padres 4
·
gra nd slam, how about us ge tting
one,'" Mets manager Bobby
Mark McGw ire, .Eric Davis and
Valentine said. "Two pitches later; Joe McE wing hii home runs as St.
Robin hit one."
Louis won at Sin Diego.
.
The Padres put runners on second
Estrada made his major league
debut in the second game, and the and third with two outs in the ninth
first batter he faced was Ventu ra with inning, but Ricky Bottalico retired.
the bases loaded . Ventura hit his 12th Tony Gwynn on a routine lly ball.
career slam. .
The previous night, Boualico walked
Venturu became the third player the only three batters he faced, helpthi s season to hi I a pair of slams on ing San Diego rally for a win in the
the same day. FernandoTatis did it in ninth.
o n~ _inning for .St. l.,ouis at Los
Kent· Bottenfield (7- 1) tied Curt
Angeles on April 23 and Nomar ' Schilling and' Jose Lima for the NL
Garciaparra hit two in a game for victory lead:
Boston against Seattle on May 10.
McGwire homered for the second
In qther NL games, Chicago beat time in two games, giving him 10
Atlanta 6-5 in 12 innings, Florida this season.
defeated Piusburgh 4-3 in 14 innings,
Rockies 8, Diamondbacks 4
Kurt Abbott, just 3-for-2 8 ellterHouston topped Los Angeles 4-3 in
10 innings, Co lorado downed ing the game, wetil 3-for-4 with his
Arizona 8-4 and St. Louis stopped first home run as Colorado beat
San Diego 6-4.
Ari zona.
Randy Johnson (4-2), who beal'
Cubs 6, Braves 5
Sammy Sosa hit his fourth home the Rockies . with a complete game
run in four games and Greg Maddux last Saturday, was hit hard in Coors
struggled again as Chicago ·won at Field debut. He allowed seven runs
Atlanta.
and nine hits in six innmgs.
·
Lance Johnson 's sacrifice lly in . Darryl Kile (3-3) won for the first
the 12th inning gave the Cubs their time in fiv e starts, and also threw a
tou~th straight win. Gerald Williams brush back to Johnson. ln. their ·
hit a tying homer in ·the .ninth for matchup. five days earlier, Johnson
Atlanta; which had won four in a flun g a bat toward Kile while striking
ro~
• ·
.
Sosa hit his 13th homer in the first
" If his feelings are hun and he ·
inning, giving him nin e home runs in wants to head hunt, then I throw
15 .games.
·
about 10 mph harder than him;"
Maddux nearly lost -his fourth Johnson said . ., If we match up again
consecutive start, something ·he has and he does it again, then I can assure ·.
not . done since dropping eight ~ that he will go on the DL. " ·.
straight decisio ns in 1990. The fourAsh'CJS 4, Dodgers 3
Derek Bell doubled home the gotime Cy Young winner gave up eight
hits before gellin g an out in the ahead run in the lOth inning and
fourth inning.
, Houston hung on at Dodger Stadium
Maddux, with a 5.02 ERA, has despite closer Billy Wagner giving
allowed a major league-high 88 hits up hi s first two home runs of the seain 57 1/3 innings. Op~onents are-hit - son.
ting .35 1 against him , worst in the
Tripp Cromer hit a · solo ~omer
NL.
· with two 'outs m the Los Angeles
Marlins 4, Pirates 3
ninth, tying it at 2. After the Astros
· Florida ended its 11 -game home scored twice in the lOth, Raul
losing streak when Derrek lee hit an Mondesi hit his NL-Ieading 15th
RBI sin gle with one out in the 14th home run in the bottom half.

·.
•

.. ~ ~

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - One
of the biggest knocks on the Portland
Trail Blazers this season has been
their lack of a consistent scorer who
can get that crucial basket with the
game on the line.
On Thursday night , Isaiah Rider
filled the role nicely - with a little
help from his brothers.
Portland beat the U tab Jazz 84-81
but lhe Blazers couldn't exhale untii
John Stockton's layup With two seconds to play went in and out. Rider
' scored six st raight points in the
game's final I :39 as the Blazers
barely held off a fra ntic Jazz rally
and even~ the second-round playoff
series at 1-1.
The notoriously unstable Rider
has been a steadying force for
Portlan&lt;J during the playoffs. He
averaged a team-high 20 points in
the Blazers' first-round sweep · of
Phoenix, but in Portland's 93-83 loss
in Game I, he, was held to 12.
" My brothers called me and let
me know, 'Hey, that was terrible. All
you ' re doing is shooting 'three-pointers,'" Rider said. "They keep an eye
on how 'I'm playing, and they keep
me focused sometimes. I have good
brothers."
Rider scored 21 of his 27 points in
the second half, beating the Jazz with
hi s out side shot and an array of postup moves against Jeff Hornacek and
Shandon Anderson.
: " They had Hornacek and
Anderson on him, and he's stronger
than both of them," Portland 's
Rasheed ' Waliace said. "We made
· sure he had a chance to score."
• Hornacek's jumper with I :58 to
play cui Portland's lead to 76-73, and
Oil the next three possessions, the
B-lazers went straight to Rider. He
was fouled the first two times, and he
made all four free throws with the

Houston (Bergman 2- 1) at San Francisco
(Girdner 0-4), 10:35 p.m.

Baseball

·

AL standings
Iwn

Easlrrn Division

. n:

Bo11on ..
' NewYork .

.......... 2:\
................. 22

Taptp• Bay

..... ....... 2 1

~

&amp;1.

17 · ..575
17 ..564

• Yortec 4300 V-6 Power
• Autolllltlc
• Air Concl_~onlng

• AMIFM Culllte
• Aluminum Wheele
• Loadedl

Marcus Camby added II points,'
13 rebounds and one reso undi ng
dunk over Dikembe Mutomho .
" Everything is clicktng now.
especially the transition game. We' re
gett ing a lot of easy baskets. and I
haven' t seen that in a New York team
since I've been W&lt;Jiching. Th~ role s
arc definitely changing ." Camby
said.
Sprewe ll provided I0 of New
York 's 23 points in the fina l period,
including a three -point play with
5:45 remaint ng that pushed the lead
to 69-58. The Hawks never got cl os-

.488

Bahimore . ___ .................... 14 26 .3S9

9

Ctnlnd Dlvbion
tO
Kansas Ci ly ......................... 21 18
Chie&amp;J0 .................,.,_"'''"''''' '8 19
Detroit.. ........,............... ..... 17 23
Mltncsola&lt;:.";'; .......!'................. I J 27

.SJ8

8

.486

. 10

.S I-2

Toronto .... ......................... 21 22

.425
.32.5

· Sunday's games
at Philadelphia, 12:30 p m.
at New York., J p.m
San ~ n ton io at L A. L.ak~rs . LlO p.m.
Utah 01 Portland, 8:30p m
·

12'.4
16~

SUnday's games
Chicqo at Adania, I: 10 p.m.
Mil wauk~~ at Momraal. I :35 p.m
.

1':
3

Plans are underway for the ninth
ann ual Memorial Weeke nd Golf
Tournament, hosted tiy the Meigs
Band Boosters.
Tlie scramble will be held on
Saturday, May ·29 at 9 a.m.. at the
Pines Hill s Golf C1 ub (formall y
Meigs County Golf Course).
This year's tournament wtll host

.~ '1

scores

4

NHL conference semifinals
•

Saturday's' game

Sunday's game

. CINC INNATI HENGALS: St¥ned FB Bnan
Mtlne to n one-year comr ac~ WIU\Cd WR Jason
' .
.
She lley.
MIAMI DOLPHINS : Re-signed LB 0 J
Brigance lo :1 one-ye&lt;~r L'Qntract .
'
MfNNESOTA VIKIN'GS : Signed OT Treie lle:
Jenkins and WR Ma,·Arthur John son.
NEW YORK GIANTS: Signed WR Fred Brock:
Baseball
f;!amed Avis Roper assistam director of co mmun icaAmeric•n Leaaue
BOSTON RED SOX: Placed RHP Juan Pe n :~ on uons.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES: Si !! ned G Lnnn1e
the IS-day di nbl~d list. ret.ro:x;tive to M&lt;ly IS.,
Pald e1
R ecal l~d RHP lim H:llikk ala fro m Pawtucket of the
SEATJ'LE SEA HAWKS . Name-J W11l Lc11 1&gt;
lnt~rno ti o n a l l~a!u~ . :Transferred RHP Ramon
,lirector of pro pt::rsonnel
Mnrti~z from the IS-day to the 60-day d isabled Ji st
CHICAGO WHITE SOX : Assiglled OF R•~~ h ttd
Hocke)'
Albert to Jupiter of the' Rorid11 Stnte ~ague
National Hockey Lru~ut
NEW YORK YANKEES: Acti\'a!ed RHP Jeff
VANCOUYER CANUCKS S1gn~·d IJ R) :m
Nelsan front the 15-day diubled· list. lk~ • g n~t ed
LHP Tony FonDs for ass ignment . Recalled RHP Honrti .
Todd Erdos from Co lumbu s of the lnternmtonal
Buffalo at Toronto, 2 p.m.

Transactions

Basketball
NBA conference semifinals
Thursday's scores
New York 17. Atlam::t 70: New' York leads serjes
2-0

P(,lrtland 84, Utah 8 1: mies fied 1-1

1t1· 50.
u·

'

•• ·

• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM CaaHIII
• Sport Suepenalon

.

• CruiHITllt
• Aluminum Wheele
• Nicely Equipped! ·

:W L 1!&lt;1.

.62l
.l6 1
.ll8
.J t6
.293

.641

.m

.l38
Cli'C INNATL ,............... t9 t8 .l t4
Phtsbur&amp;h ............................. 19 21 .47l
Mi-lwaukee ............................ l8 21 .462

''

Appea~ance

'·

Sah Francisco ....................... 23
Arjzona ... ......................... ~ ... 23

!ill
J'h
12

4 •

-6~

7

II .l61
19 .l48

Los Anaeles.. ................... .' ... ,21 19 .525
Colorado ................................ l6 2~ .432
San Dteao ............._. .............. l6 2. ·.410

~

t\

s

6

'

OH: N~w York II . Milwaukee 10: New York 10.
Milwaukee l
St. Louis 6, Sari Diego 4
Florida 4, Piusbursh .1 (14)
Chicago 6, Atlanta 5 (12)
Cplorndo 8. Arizona 4
Houston 4, Los Angeles ~ 00)

·

Tonight's games

.

Mil waukee (Nonlo 1- 1) :ll Montreal (Ptl\'uno 2·
~~ - 7:0S p.m.
·
Phubu'rgh . (Schourek 2·3) nt Fhuid,, fl.
Hcrmmdez 2-41. 7:05 p.m. .
, ·
Philnd~lphin (Luewer l-3) 111 New Yol'k
! Henhi1~r 2--4t 7:10p.m.
.
Chkngo (Fnrnsw.ot1h 2-0) ill At hultniChc n 0·0).
?t~ p.m.
' r
.
, Arizo na (Dnal .\-4) nt Co lorado {Asta~·t o -'·3).
Q :O~ p.m.
CINCINNATI (Tomko 1· 1) at San Diego
(\Villillmt 1-1). IO:OS p.m.
Sl. Loui1 (AcCvedo l - 1) at Los Angclea ( \lalde1
·
4· r ). 10:10 P,.m.

Monday· Saturday_9 am· 9 pm
Sunday 1 pm • 8

,,

•
''

· Air, 5 speed, Indigo Blue

Call
992·2155 and Speak With
. D•ve Harrls...Ext. 104
or Kathy Wllll•mson-Ext. I 05
by June 18.

4x4, Silver Metallic, auto.
WAS$18,155

Only $16,963

1999 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX GT
2 Dr, Black, loaded, #4571
WAS $23,755

N~w Onl;y f2 2,846 ·

Loadad, Sterling Sliver Metallic #4888, Completely
restyled

IN STOCK &amp;

•

FOR

1999 CHEVY CAVALIER
2 Dr, BLACK, 5 SPEcEO:
WAS $13,521 , Now~

.

---··----- --·······-·-

No~

2000.BUICK LESABRE SIDAN

~'1"1!'!!~~1'!"1"'!1~

- -'

Now Onl;y $11 I 28 5

1999 CHEVY TRACKER CONVERTIBLE

A Special Souvenir Edition W'dl Be Included In The
Sentinel In MUI-}uly.
·:Many stories and pliotographs of significant events relating to the
history and development of 'Rutland will be featured in the publication.
If you prefer an alternative to regular advertising capy, perhaps you
migfit consider an historic a,:count and photographs ofyour business.
We will be happy to assist you in designing an ad.

.

Now Onl:v $.11 1900
1999 CHEVY 5.. 10

WAS $14,273

Jlh

~owOnl:v$16,900
Auto , air, stereo, White

I] I~

.._... U• Celeb&amp; ate The zooth
.Ana~Ywury 01 Rutland.

Now Onl)l $161840

1998 PONTIAC GRAND AM SE

2'-1

Thursday's scores

•

.

4 Dr, Low miles, loaded

e

WHhm Di"lsion

'

f.

1998 OLDS 88

WAS$12,995

Dlvltioo

Atlanta ...
........... 25 15
New York _,...
............. .2:\ 18
Philadelphia ..
...·.. ,.....: ... 21 18
MOntreal ..... , ..................... 12 ~6
FtQrida .........
.. . .12 29

Pkg,
• 16" Aluminum Wheell
'I
• Well Equlppedl

..

0

'

"

West VIrginia's 11 Chevy, Plllltlac, Buick, Olds,
And Custom Van Dealer.

WAS$22,900 ·

WAS$18,995

NL standings
JW.

NowOnl:v $19 900
4 Dr, 4x4, auto, ai r, more

e

Sunday's games

*Brand NeY( 1999Chevy.
. XTREME 8-Serles Pickup

.
• XTREME

1998 CHEVY BLAZER

WAS $18,995 .

Toronto a! Boston, I:05 p.m.
Detroit at CLEVELAND , I :05 p.m.
:Anaheim at Tampa Bay, 1:35 p.m.
.New York a! Chicago, 2:05 p.m.
·Oakland at Minnesota, 2:05p.m.
·Seanle a! KanSas City. 2:0.5 p.m.
Je:&lt;BJ at Ballimore, 8:05p. m.

..
Central DlvWon
Houston ......... ,..................... J5 14
ctflcaao ................................21 17
St "l.ouia ........................... ,.',. 21 18

.

NowOnl)l $18,052

WAS$18,995

8:0l p.m.
.
·seanle (Cioude 3-1) at ·Kansas Cily (Fussell 0-1),
8:C!,l p.m.

E.st~rn

.

loaded, V6, Sharp

.New York &lt;Peniue 2-1) at Chica,o (Sirotka 1-3),
7:05p.m.
•
.Oakland &lt;Rogers 1-2) at Minnesota (Radke 4·-'l.

• Vortec 4300 V-6 Power
• Air Conditioning
•AMIFMCaiHUe

V6, auto, air, cass, storm gray

1998 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE .

Anaheim {Sparks 1·4) at Tampa Bay (Alvarez 2-

q5950*
'

.

1

li.:6:JS p.m.

Brand New 1999 Chevy
8-Series LS Extended Cab

Kraw:--.cly n at Meigs H1gh Schoo\ at

992-215R or at home at 992-6394.

Roger's return
regained hi3 form and won consecuNEW YO~ (AP ) - Many tivc American League C) Young
th ought Roger
mens· career as a A'~ ards.
·
dominating swtin pttcher was over
Clemen&gt;. 36. was dealt to the .
ai:ter he compiled a 40-39 record New York Yankees prior to thi &gt; sea-··
during his last four se asons in son. Still a power pitcher with good ·
Bos ton.
·
'
contro l. he got off to a mediocre start '
But after joining tlic Toronto · and has &gt;pent time on 'the disahled ·
Blue Jays in 1997 , Clemens · list.

Saturday's gliitlnes

• Crulae/Tllt
• Vortec 4300 V-6 Power
. •,Remote Keylen Entry
• ZR2 Suspension Pkg.
• Power Windows l Locka • Totally Loaded!

Knight.. 1996 -Rita Slavjn. 1997-':
Preston Gihh,. 199R-Jack Slal'in . "
For more informat-ion regardi ng
lhi s tou rnament contact John

Football

p.rn.

~1,950*

.and honor long · time Meigs County
cduqtor and coach Russ Moore. Past
tournament honorees include 199 1Jame s
Dieh l.
1992 -Nolun
Swackhamer. 1993- James Vcnnari.
1994-Lee McComas. 1995-Howard

'National Football Leag1,1e

Toronto (Carpe nt er J-.'1 at Boston tWakefteld 1-' l. I:OS p.m.
.
Decroit (Weaver 4-.\) at CLEVELAN D (Wright 4l J. l :OS p.m.
'
·Texas (Sele .\ -4) at Baltimore {G111man 1-4). 1:.lS

Brand New 1999
Chevy ZR2 4X4 Pickup.

and nine r o lrw,:

National Leacue
ARIZONA DIAMONOBACKS: Placed RHP
Todd Stotllemyre on the 1.5-day d tsnb l~d li st
Recalled LHP Brian Anderson from Tuc so n of the
Pacifi c Co!lSt Uague.
'
COLORADO ROCKIES: Recalled RHP Da..-id
Lee from Carolina of the Southern League. Optioned
LHP Roberto Rmmirez to Colorado Spri ngs of the
PCL
.
HOUSTON ASTROS: Agreed to tenns with INF
Bill s'pi~n on a one-year cOmract euension.
MILWAUKEE BR EWERS : Optioned LHP
Rafael Roqu~ to Louisville of the International
League". R~ c n ll ~d LHP Horacto Estrada from
l ouisvi lle.

Colorado at Dnllas. 7:30 p.m.

Philadelphia at New York, I:40 p.m.
Arizona at ColoradO, 3m p.m.
Pinsburah at Florida, 4:0.5 p.m.
CINCINNATI it\ Sar~ Di~go. 4:05p.m.
Hooston M San Fiancisco, 4:05-p.m.
StLouis at l.o$ Anseles, 4:10 p.m.

1

Hockey

.

CINCINNATI (Harnisch 3·4) at San Dieao
(Mumy 0-0).· 10:05 p.m.
St Louis (Sodowsky 0-0) at Los Angeles
&lt;preifon 4-2}. 10:10 p.m.

.SSO

Oilklo.nd ........................ ........ 21 20 .512
Seanle ............... ............·....... 19 21 .47!5
Anaheim ...... : ....................... 19 22 . 46~
Th~ursday's

7:10p.m.

Steve Smith. 1hc Hawks' lending

Syroc u .~e.

In dian~~
At l a nt~

4;05 p.rn
.Milwaukee (Karl 5-1) at Montnal (Vazqu'ez 1]), 7:0.5 p.m.
Pillsburgh .(Ritchie 2-3) at Florida (Dtlnps t ~r I'·
1). 7:05p.m. . •
Chicago (T11pani 3-1) at Allanta (Millwood 3-3),

.744

•
Wutcrn Division
Tuas ....................................22 18

N~w York 3, SUlton I
Anah~im 6, Bahi mor~

Saturday's gam.es

SPLITS THE . DEFENSE
Portland's Isaiah Rider breaks the
defense offered by Utah 's Jeff Hornacek (tar left), Greg Ostertag (001
and Thurl Bailey (41) in the last minutes of Game 2 of their Western
Conlerence. semifinal series Thursday night in Salt Lake City.
Rider '.s game-high 27 points helped the Trail Blazers win 84-81 and
tie the series 1-1 , (AP)
:
cr than hvc the re~ t of the way.
. scorer. was held 10 j ol - 16 !-Jhoot mg

Meigs H.S. Band to host.linkfest Saturday:

TORONTO BLUE JAYS: Optioncct INF Kevin
Win to Syracus~ of the ln ternauonal league
Purchased the contract· of OF Pmrick Lennon from

·

Utah at Purtland, .1 p.m.
·
San A.mor~io at l.A . lak~n. S:30 p.m.

Houston (Holt 0-S) at San Francin:o (Grtiz 3-2).

·~
2~
J '~

20

CLEVEL.I.ND ................... 29

Saturday's games

2). 3:M p.m.

!ill

Tonight's games

qa,B5D*

continues. "

Let~gl.e. Opfioncct RHP Jay Te ssmer lo Col umbu s.

Tonight's game

Indiana at Philadelphia, 8 p.m.

Philadelphia (Byrd S- 2) at New York (B .J. Jones
3-2). 1:40 p.m. ,
Arizona (Daal 3-4) at Colorado (B.M.' Jones 1-

· TorontofEscobar ~- l i at Boston fRapp 1-21. 7 : 0.~
p.m.
.Teltms &lt;Helling 4-41 at Baltimore {Ponson .\- .~1.
7:0S p.m.
.Annheim (Hill 1 - ~J at "tampa Bny {Sa unders ,\-h
7:0.5 p.m.
Oerroit (B lair 1-.J J a1 CLEVELAND {Burba -4-1).
7:05p.m.
N~w York.j Cieme ns 2-01 011 Chkngo (S nyder 6, I). 8:0S p.m.
•
OaklnmnH nyn~~ 2-~ ) at Minnesotn (Hawkins 16). 8:05p.m.
Seattle (M oy~ r ~--4) at Kamas City (Witn5itk I·
2). 8:0S p.m.

Brand New 1999 Chevy
.8-Series LS Ext. Cab 4x4

New York Knicks defeated Atlanta
77-70 to take a 2-0 lead over the
'Hawks.
Tonight 's game features the
Philadelphia 76ers returning to their
home court trying to avoid falling
behind 3-0 in their series against
Indiana.
Knicks 77, Hawks 70
Latrell Sprewell scored 31 points
for the second straight game for New
York at Atlanta.
After winning both games at the
Georgia ·Dome, the Knicks are heading home with a chance to sweep the
series. Game 3 is Sund'ay at Madison
Square Garden, with Game 4 the fol lowing night.
. " It 's been great," said Sprewell ,
who was suspended most of last season after choking his fo·rrner coach,
P.J . Carlesimo. "Back then , I didn ' t
think I would be in this position. It 's
nice to win in the playoffs. I've not
expe rienced that hefore. I hope it

Scoreboard

Toronto 7, Detroit 0
~ansas Ci ty / , Oflkland I

Mets sweep Brewers in DH;
.Cubs, Cardinals, Rockies win

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.'

�•
J

.Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, May 21, 1999

Friday, May 21 , 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Report lays. blame for China's weapons gain on espionage
By H. JOSEF HEBERT

Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- Chma has been able to make substantial gams in modermzmg its nuclear weapons program because of U.S secrets obtained in a
pervasive campaign of espionage and misuse of legally obtained technology. a long-awatted congresstonal report says.
The report, according to officials fami liar with it, concl udes that there ts
little question that Chma has obtamed cnucal infonnauon about an array of
U.S. warheads through theft from U S. nuclear weapons labs as well as mettculous scanning of publicly available infonnation.
The 700-page report by a special House commtttee was ready to be
rele'"\ed. posstbly as early as today, after months of negotiations with the Clinton admmistrallon over how much of tt should remain classtlied.
A semor DOE intelhgence ofticer to[d a Senate hearing today of repeated anempt• m early 1997 to bring his concerns about esp10nage and lax security at weapons labs to then-Energy Secretary Fedenco Pena, but said he was
repeatedly thwarted by sentor department offictals.
Notra Trulock, the Energy Department's dtrector of the office of mtelh gence from 1994 into early 1998, said hiS concerns - many of which have
smce been acknowledged - were vtewed wnh skeptiCISm and "outnght
denial " as.the views of a group of "Cold War warnors. "
Ed Curran, the FBI offtctal appomteu to consolidate and lead counterintelligence efforts at the department, acknowledged that in the past there had
been " no accountabthty '.' and inadequate support from top o!Ctctals of the
department to mtelhgence and secunty matters. He satd that has changed and

that he from the start has been given dtrcct access to the energy secretary
Sen. Frank Murkpwskt , R-Aiaska, asked Trulock how he would characterize loss of secrets from Los Alamos , including posstbly weapons codes
and matertaltn the 1980s informatton on a sophisticated warhead "ll;&gt;clteved
and stt ll believe 11 IS on a parallel with the Manhattan project. I would put
11 at the top three or four," Trulock replied. referring to the loss of atomic
bomb secrets in the 1940s
·
Trulock and CutTan appeared before the Senate Energy and Natural
Reso01ccs Committee.
.
Many detail s of the rcpnll. whtclt has heen a year tn the makmg, have
hcen leaked m recent weeks
lis fmmallmdmgs a1c lC Jlatn tu .1dd to the g1owmg turmml overcharges
oflctX..;ccunty at the govcrnment'!-i prcsttg\Ous nuclear weapons research labs.
Under pressure from a stn ng of embarrassi ng revelations in rhe news
mcdta, President Clmton and Energy Secretary Btll RIChardson have said
steps were bcmg taken to improve secunty at the labs And congressiOnal
Rcpubltcans satd they would make sure'tmprovcments took place
Auorney General Janel Reno announced today that she has selected a veteran prosecutor, Randy Bell ows, to head a Jusuce Department team to see
tf Justtce or the FBI made any mtstakes tn in vesugaung spy all egations since
J98Z agatnst Wen Ho Lee, a sete nttst at the Los Alamos National Laboratory Justice spokesman Myron Marlin satd Bellows, 111ho successfully prosecuted FBI agent Earl Pttts for spytn'g for Russ ta; wou ld be a%isted by three
attorneys and four agents

"They will look at anything that's relevant to Wen Ho Lee ... to make sure
any tnt stakes are corrected in the future. " Reno told her .weekly news conference .
Secunty at weapons labs has been the subject of intense scrutiny since
early March when Lee was fired from Los Alamos tn New Mextco after being
suspected since 1996 of having provided Chtna with warhead secrets
Lee, has not been charged wtth a cnme and through hiS lawyer has denied
providing nuclear secrets to China or anyone else. Chinese offictals also have
denied that the country stole secrets
.
The special House commtttee, headed by Rep. Chnstopher Cox, R-Calif.,
heard extensive testimony concerntng the tnvcsugauon surrounding Lee. But
the declassified version of the panel 's report provides little additional information about the Los Alamos invesugauon, said oll tctal.s famthar with the
document..
The report sharply cnttctzes secunty and counterintelligence activities at
three weapons research labs - Los Alamos and Sandt a tn New Mexico, and
Lawrence Livennore in Cahfomta- saymg 11 has led to the loss of sec rets
to Chtna under both Repubhcan and Democrattc admtntStratt ons, spanning
more than two decades.
And the report maintains the sccunty problems persist today and adequate
countenntelhgence measures are unhkely to be m place before 2000. according to offictals who summarized the finding s. They spoke onI&gt; on condition
of not being further identified.
·
Both the Energy Department and Whue House declined com men( late
Wednesday on the report tn advance of tts formal release.

•

VanZandt and Ward Rd.
Pastor· Jamu Milltr
Sunday School - 10·30 a.m.
Evenmg. 7 .30 p.m

Israel's
PM stays
secluded
JERUSALEM (AP) - Pnme
Mtnister BenJamin Netanyahu has
retreated to hts home and family
since his crushing electoral defeat
thiS week, emergtng'only once for
a campaign post mortem, his closest adviser says.
Netanyahu announced his mten tion to retire from public life for a
year wtthm mmutes of televtston
extt poll s forecasttng a landshde
victory by Ehud Barak on Monday
night He stepped down as leader
of the Ltkud party, but dtd not
immediately res ign from parhament

Davtd Bar-IIIan, the outgomg
pnme mimster's closest aide, sai d
Netanyahu has a contract to write
a book but has not satd what It wtll
be about or when he wtll begm
Bar-lllan said It was too early to
dtsmtss the metcun al 49-year-old
leader
. " I'm betttn~ he wtll stay m the
Knesset and rcmam 111 pohtu;s," he
satd m an tntervtew late Thursday
at the pn me mmtster 's offi ce,
whc1c sec lcl a!Jes leafed through

maga11nes on a qutct mornm g.
.. He might go mto pnvate business.
Netanyahu has spent the days
smce the clccl!on at horne with
wtfe, Satah. and then two cluldren,
Bar-lllan satd He emerged only for
a mcettng with Likud leaders to
dtscuss the laded campatgn and
constder the future of the party.
Scntor Likud members have
sa td Netanyahu ts pnmanly to
blame for ht s crushmg defeat and for the Ltkud droppmg from 32
seats tn the Knesset to 19. They
blame a dtvtSive campatgn agamst
Barak, tn which Netanyahu
accused the Labor party leader of
planning to diVIde Jerusalem wtth
the Palesumans
Netanyahu was also seen as too
close to Shas, an ultra-Orthodox
party hugely unpopular with the
sec ular elec torate
Bar-Ill an satd Netanyahu should
bj: remembered for hts contribution
to peace
" He convmced hiS own followers of the need to exchange land fot
peace," he said. "Whether thts was
necessary evil or a good thing, it
doesn 't matter, It was the only way
to go."
Netanyahu gave up far less land
than his Labor party predecessors
ilad planned to concede when they
negotiated the Oslo accords with
the Palestinians, Bar-IIIan satd .

a

"He said he didn't want to have
(Oslo) translated mto land for terrort sm and he msisted pn really
havtng peace as the exchange command."
In the process, he persuaded
most Ltkud followers- once avid
behevers m retammg all of the btblical land of Israel -;- that conces-·
sions were the right path.

nauts spent months m an ag in g craft
prone to breakdown.
And , Kanas sa td , he expects anger
and tensiOn. to be a part of mtsstons
to the InternatiOnal Space Statt on m
on board tensiOn," sar d Kana.s, a the next decade, and agam on the 2speaket at the annual meeung of the to-3-year-long mi ssions to Mais
American Psyc hr atnc Assocmtion .
expected m the next century.
Anger m spa~..·c. by aStro nauts and
" It is hard to live with two or three
l:'osmun~lul s. has ·bce n com m on smce
people m space for months," Kanas
early tn the manned space program said . " If you have a ftght on Earth,
Some Apoll o crews m the 1960s you can go out to a mo vie or someg:nped at Mtss1on Control even dur- thmg and it is all better But in space,
mg short -dur atiOn mr ss rons, On Sky- you can't go anywhere You are
lah mtssHm' that lasted up to 84 days there ''
m the mtd-70s. astronauts regulatl;
Rese arch on the Mtr suggests that
1anted abo ut then workload and mal- highly.professtonal space travelers do
tuncuomn g eqUipment.
well for several . months, workmg
Tempers also Oashed occasiOnal- smoothly and compattbly with ,each
ly abomd Mn,thc Russtan space sta
other, Kanas satd But eventually,
uon where as tron a ut~ and cosmo- emotions tip over and tempers nare.
teach the astronauts how to cope
" We hope to tram the crews
before they go up, so they wtll be
aware of what IS happenmg and can
app ly some se lf-correctton to prevent

. The Russians behe~e it starts after
JUst a few months. Kanas' research
suggests 1t takes up to four months
before emotions bot! to the surface.
What happens, he satd , ' is that
crew compattbthty breaks down,
wtth some members ganging up on
others The dynamics of onboard
leadershtp may change in subtle
ways. And the orew develops a tendency to hlame Mission Control for
all problems
"There's a feehng that thmgs are
tough on board and nobody cares on
the otllstde," Kanas said.
In severe c,tses, the powerful emotton s affected sleep, attentiOn to work
and even ca used physical weakness
Experts arc still searchtng for
.mswers, but Kanas sa1d stud1cs have
e'tahltshed some fundamentals .

Steel crisis ·not over
yet, official declares
By ANICK JESDANUN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - The Clinton
·admmtstratton, eager to appear
responstve to a US steel mdustry
beleaguered by a surge m low-pnccd
tmports, says the next few months
will prove cructal
Steel arrivmg from Japan , Brazil
and other foreign shores dropped by
14 percent in Apnl, the fifth reduction
in SIX months. Nevertheless, Commerce Secretary Wt!liam Daley
r~fused Thursday to declare the U S.
steel mdustry 's woes over.
"Thts is not someihing that we are
lettmg our guard down on m any way,
shape 'or fonn,:· Daley said.
Daley said the trends over " the
next few months wtll be crucial to
determining whether we have pre·
vented a repeat of last year's import
surges." But he did not say what the
admmtstratiOn mtght do tf the reduct,IOns do not cont1 nue
The redu ction and Daley's comments faded to quash calls in Congress to seek quotas · and other
stronger trade sanctions to help an
tndustry that has faced layoffs and
bankruptcies
" What he is doing is not enough
and not fast enough ," satd Rep. Bob
Ney, R-Ohio. " He is,monitormg ft gures I can do that from my laptop "
"Desptte a slt ght decltne from
March, Congress needs to stay vigi lant. The cnsis tsn't over until wp
have a sustained penod of imports at
levels equal to the pre-cnsiS levels,"

said Rep Ralph Reg ula, R-Ohio.
chatrman of the CongressiOnal Stee l
Caucus.
A Japanese steel executive, Htdenon Tazawa of NKK Amenca Inc,
said the drop m shipments "should
stlence cries for trade restncttons
once and for all."
In March, the House passed legtslatwn that would tmpose global
quotas on steel. Sponsors believe support ts butlding for a stmtlar btll '"the
Senate despite the threat of a prcstdential veto
Some lawmakers also have been
pushing for $1 bilhon in federal loan
guarantees to help domestic producers until imports decline further, but
a provision that included the loans
was strtpped from of an emergency
spending btl! last week.
For now, the · admimstratton ts
stickmg by its policy of focu smg on
the domestic mdustry 's fonnal trade
complamts, whtch could lead to tartffs on certain products from certam
countries, instead of global restrictiOns that quotas would bring.
In preliminary ftgure s, the Commerce Department reported Thursday
that steel imports totaled ~ 2 million
metne tons '" Apnl , 14 percent less
than the 2.6 milhon tons tmported in
March Until March, imports had
been dropping smce November after
reachmg record htghs earher tn 1998.
Japan, South Korea, Indonesia,
BraZil and Russta posted declines m
April , although shipments from Chtna and Taiwan went up.

good-bye agam Thur.sday as her famtl y headed 10 Bmse. Idaho.
" I don ' t know what to say I'm too
sad." BeJ tqt sobbed. " How many
t1111es do I have to say good-bye to
my fnends 1"
Arhnda.Gaslu, 19, stood behind a
fence and cncd as she watched her
tn end talk to reporters . They
exchanged a tearful farewell before

.

-

BeJtqt boarded a bus for Newark
I nteFnattonal Atrport.
In Los Angeles, 28 ethnic AI ban tan refugees - all members of the
Vlashi family - arnved to stay with
host families They were greeted by
HaJrush Vlasht and hts wtfe. Renee
The couple worked wuh the Jewtsh
Federation to bring family members
to the United States from Macedonia.

Bearwallow Rldlt Chun:h of Christ
Pastor.Terry Stewart
Sunday Schoo1·9 30 am
ro
Worship· 10:30 am, 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 6.30 p.m.

Pomerol, Harnsonville Rd . (Rt 143)
as tor Roge r Watson
Sunday School - 9:30 a m
Worship- 10.30 a.m, ?.00 p.m
Wednesday Services· 7 p m

Ttippen Plain Chun:h or Christ

Free Will Baptist Church
Ash Street. Middleport
Pastor· Les Hayman
Sunday Serv1cc: - 7 00 p m
Sunday School - 10 a. m.
Wednesday Scrv•ce-7 00 p m.

Instrumental
Pastor: Terry Stewart
Worship Serv1ce- 9 a.m.
Comm union · 10 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:15 a.m
Yo1.1th.- 5.30 pm Sundt
Bible Study Wednesday pm

, Rutland First Baptist Chun:h
Sunday School • 9·30 a.m.
Worstup. 10:45 a.m.
Bapt~t

East Mam St.
Su nday Sdlool - 9.30 a.m.
Worshtp · I 0:30 a.m

Sunday SChool · 9:30 a m
Worship - 10.30 a.m., 7 p.m.

First Southern Dapthtt
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School - 9.30 a.m.
Worship- 10 45 a m , 7.00 p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

Corner of St. Rt 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblm
Yout h Mmtster: Bill Amberger
Sv ndcZ School - 9:30 a m.
Worsh1p -8
a m ,1030am, 7:00pro
Wednesday Serv1ces • 7 00 p m

First Baptist Cbun:b'
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St., Middleport
Su nday School - 9 15 am
Worship- 10 15 am, 7·00 p m
Wednesday Se,rv•ce- 7 00 p m

"

Silver Run Baptist
"'\.j
Pastor: Bill Ltnle
Sunday School · JOa.m.
Wor.sb•p- l la m , 6:30pm
Wednesday Services· 6 30 p m

Zo/d'
Sunday S!'hool · 10: a.m.

Reedsville Church of Christ
· PJstor: Phtllp Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30 a.m.
Worship Service. 10:30 am. ·
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6 30 p m.

Pastpr: Joe N. Sayre ..r
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evening 6·30 p m.
Wednesday Servaces. 6 30p m.
Bethlehem Baptist Church
Great Bend; Route 124, Racme, OH
Pastor · Gene Morns
Sunday School - 9.30 am
Sunday Worship- 10:30 am &amp; 1 p.m.
Wednesday Btble S!udy- 6 00 p.m.

Dexter Churcb or Cbrkt
Pastor: JIJStin campbell
Sunday school9·30 a.m.
Norman W1ll, supenntendent
Sunday worship- J0:30 a.m.

Old Bethel Free Wilt Baptist Churcb
28601 St. Rt. 7,-M iddlcport

Christian Union
Qluistlon Union
lli'nlord, W.Va.

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ML Morlall Churclt or God
Mile Hill Rd , Racme
Pastor: Brice Utt
Sunday School • 9:4.5 a m.
Evc;nmg - 6 p.m
Wednesday Services- 7 p m.

Melp Coopentlve Parish
Northeast Cluster
Allred
Pastor Sharon Hausman
Sur1day School • 9 30 a m.
Worship· ll a.m., 6.30 p.m.

_ Faith Baptist Church
Ratlroad St. , Mason
. Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worsh1p - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p m.

R•tla•d Churtb of God
Pastor,: Ron Heath
Sunday Worship - 10 a.m.• 6 p.m.
Wednesday 'Services -7 p.m

Forest Run Baptist
Pastor · Arius Hurl
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
WorshJp - 11 a. m.

Syracuse Flnt Cburch of God
Apple and Second Sts
Pastor Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a m.
Evening Sei'Vices· 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services-6:30 p.m.

ChHtor
Pasror: Sharon Hausman
Worship • 9 a.m.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Thursday Scrv1ces 7 p m

Sunday School • 9:30 11 m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m .
Sunday Evening· 6 00 p.m

o Flberglua Running Bda.
o Cuatom Alum. Whtela

o Rear Sofa·Bed

•loldldl

Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service:s- 7 p.m.

.........;·~~

CongregatiOnal

First Sunday of Month - 7:30p.m. SC:I'\Itce

Trinity Cbun:b

Tuppon Pl~lno St. Pool

&amp; VCP
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• AMIFM Caassne
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UMYF Sunday6:30p.m.

Pastor. Chad Emrick
Sunday School- 9·4!5 a m
Wor9hlp - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 30 p m.

CommiDIIty Church

Rulland Church of tht Nazarene
Pastor· Rev Samuel W. Basye

Entorprlse

Sunday S;,chool • 9 30 a m
Worship· 10 30 am, 6:301p.m
Wednesday 5erVices- 1 p m

Pastor: Keath Rader ·
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
' Worship - 9 a.m.

Hoi me ss
Pascor: Rev Amos Ttllis
Main S1rcc1, Rutland
Sunday Worship-tO·()() a rn.
Sunday Sel'\/ice-7 p,.m.

C•ester: Churdt of the Nazarene
Pastor. Rev. Herbert Orate
Sunday School • 9:30 ll.m.
Wor! htp- It am., 6 p m.
Wednesday Services -·7 p.m

Ceatral Cluster
Albury (Syntcuso)

Groce Epl,..pol Cbuj\:h

Pomeroy Church ofCbrllt
212 W Main St
Mimster Danny Bills
Sunday School· 9;30 a.m.

Pomeroy Church or the Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. U oyd D. Onmm.Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 am. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvtces • 7 p m •

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School - 9 a m.
Worship · 10 am
Tuesday Services . 7:30 p.rn.

, 326 E. Main St., Pomeroy
Rev. James Bernacki, Rev. Katharin Fosler
Rev. Deborah Ranktn. Cicrgy
Holy Buchanst and
S1.1nday Schoolll.OOa.m
www frognet nell-deanery

Church of Christ

Syncuse Churth orthe Nazarene
Pastor, Robert J. Coc n
Sunday School · 9 30 a m
Worship - J0.30a m , 6p m
.Wednesday Serv1ces • 7 p m
Wednesday Kids for Christ- 7 p m

Portl•nd Flnt Church or the Naqreae
•
Pastor. Mark Matson
Sunday School -1 0.30 a. m.
Morning Worsh ip · 11 : 15 a.m.
Sunday Servtce · 6 p.m.
Wednescla)' Services- 7 p.m.

flllWoodl

Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship' · ll a.m.

Worshtp· 10:30 a:m., 7p.m.

Wednesday S_e_l'\lites -1 p.m.

12 I 5I
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Pomeroy

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992-2121

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evety Friday!

112-1200
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. - R. Actee, Jr.- 01""""'

'Taxes. Tags. Title
Rabotelncluded ~aile pllce ol- vel'ic:le iatel! -.ll)pllcab!e. "On approved Clldlt. On l&lt;lledod modoll.
Prices Good May 2tll thtu May~. Not reeponeiiJe fDI lyjxqlfA1t:ot omn. 'VIIIIde altown wlfl equipment from an tndepeudel! IIUilPIIer.
See lito,.,..,•• ,.,. forlnfonnltton on lllllllonuntt _......

Support your
local
churches

Clean

740-fl92·5t41

580 East Main Stre!tt•l'olntlcoy, OH -45769

Ave.

106

Oyesville Co mmunity C hurch
Sunda) School - 9 30 am
Worsh1p- 10 30 a m , 7 p m

Seventh-Day Adventist

Morst Chapel Church
Sunday school - 10 am
Worsh1p. 11 a rn
Wednesday Serv1ce - 1 p.m.

Sevmth-Da) Adventist
Mulberry Hts Rd, Pomeroy
Pastor· Roy Lawmsky
Saturday Serv1ces.
Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
. Worship - 3 p.m.

United Brethren
Mt. Hennon United Brethren
in Christ Chun:h
Commumty off CR 82
Pastor. Robert Sanders
Sunday School - 9·30 am.
Won hap - 10 30 am , 7.30 p m.
Wednesday Services 7 30 p.m.
Eden United Brethren In Christ
2 1/2 mileji. nort h of Reedsville
on State Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday School- 11 a.m
Sunday Worshtp- 10 00 am &amp; 7 00 p m
WedneSday Serv1ccs · 7 30 p m
Wednesday Youth Scrvtce:- 7 30 p.m

Full Gospel Lighthouse

Suulh Bethel New Testament
S1lver R1dge
Paslor: Robert Barber
Sunday School 9 a m
Sun. Worship · 10:10 am .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serv~cc - 7 p m
Carleton lnlerdrnominational Cllurrh
· Kingsbury Road
Pastor Clyde Henderson
Sundav School - 9 30 a m
Wors hip Se"'1ce 10 30 a.m
No &amp;u nday or Wednesday Ntght Serv•ccs

,,

Freedom Gospel Mission
Buld Knob, on Co Rd 31
Pastor: Rev Rogc:r Willford
Sundll) School · 9 .10 a m
Worsh1p- 7 p m
White's Chapel Wesleyan
Coulvdlc Road
Pastor Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sund&lt;~y School - 9 30 a.m
Worsh1p - l 0 30 a m.
Wednesday Servu;r - 1 p.m
lo~alrview

Bible Ch urch
Le tart, W Va Rt 1
Pastor. Bra an Ma)
SundAy School · 9 :\0 am
Worship · 7 00 p m
Wednesday Dible Study· 7.00 p m
1-'atth t'e!lowshlp Crusade ror Christ
Pastor Rev Franklin Dickens
Servace Frida y, 1 p.m.

Time to clean house? Crow's Family Restaurant Time to clean house?

2114 South Second Ave.•Middlepott, OH 46760

en... R. Fi11w • 01-

Middleport Presbyterlau
Sunday School · 9 a m
Wmshi p- 10 am

33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor Ro) llunter
Sunday School· 10 am
Evening 7 30 p m
Juesday &amp; T hursday • 7 30 p m

ReedsvUie'Fellowshlp
Church or the Nazarene
Pastor Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School · 9 30 a m
Worship· 10:45 a.m., 1 p.m
Wednesday Servtces - 7 p.m.

Roodnme

Episcopal

Sacred Hean Catholic Church
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pastor Rev Walter E Heinz
Sat Con 4 45-5 15p m , Mass- 5:30p.m.
Sutl Con -8:45-9:15 a.m.,
Sun. Mass· 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass· 8:30a.m.

Brand New 1999 Chevy Astro
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Worship - 9.30 a.m.
Sunday School - 10.30 a m

Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor. Rev. Roland W11dman
~unday school and worship 10:25 .

Catholic

Sunday S~ool ·9:30a.m.

Wors htp · 10 30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wed nesday Serv1ces - 7 p.m .

Lo•lllollom

Pastor: P.J. Ch~man
Sunday School - lO a m.
Worship • 11 a.m.
Wednesday Serv1ces • 7 p.m.

Rullond Fm WIU llaptltl

Middleport Church ottlle NIWirene
Pastor· Gregory A. Cundiff

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worshap - 10:30 am

Han1sonv1Jie Presbyterian Church
Worship - 9 a.m
S1.1nday School 9.45 a.m

United Failh Church
Rl. 7 on PomerO) By·Pass
Pastor Rev Robert E Smllh, Sr
Su nday School -9:30a.m.
Wors hip- 10 30 a.m , 7 p. m
Wedilesday Ser\o tce- 1 p.m.

Nazarene

Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Syracuse First United Presbyteria n
Pastor. Rev Knsana Rob1nson
Sundar. School- 10 am
·Worsh•p-11 am

Mt. Olive Community Church
P&lt;1stor Lawrence BuSh
S1.1nday School -9:30am
Evem ng- 7 p.m.
Wedneday Serv1ce- 7 p m

Sunday School- 9·30 a. m.
Worship - 10 30 a.m

Joppa

Presbyterian

Te~as

Co. Rd. 63

... Pastor Bob Randolph
Worship • 9:30 a.m.

Middleport Pentecostal
Th nd A'&gt;Jt:
Pastor Rev Clark. Baker
StHJdi! y School - 10 a m
Evemng - 6 p.m,
Wednesday Serv1ces- 1 00 p m.

Failh Gospel Church
Long Bollom
Sunday School · 9 30 a.m
Worsh ip· 10·45 am , 7 30 p m
Wednesday 7 10 p m

Ton:h Church

w

Chorch or God or PropbO&lt;y
0 J. Whttc Rd: of( St. Rt. 160

Anllqutty Daptkt

.
Vortec
V-8 Power
o 4 Captaln'a Chalra
o

MI. Olive Uotted Methodist

Vlttory Bapllstlndtpendant
525 N 2nd St Middleport
Pastor James E Keesee
Worship- lOam , 7 p m
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

/I

Grand Street
S1.1nday S'chool - 10 a.m.
Worsh1p • II am.
Wednesday·Serv~ces- 8 p m

w

Putecostal Assembly
St Rt 124, Racme
Pastor Wtli1am Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a m
Eve mng - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scmcq • 7 p m

Hazel Community Church
Off Rt 124
Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunda) School - 9·30 a m.
Worsh ip - 10 30 a In, 7.30 p m'

' Hocktngpon Church

Service 7 30 p n'r'

Church of God

Mt. Morlall Baptist
Founh &amp; Mam St., Mtddlepon
Pastor: Rev. Gtlberl Cra1g, Jr.
Sunday School • 9 30 a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m

Brand New 1999 Chevy
Full Size Conversion Van

~"Wednesday

•

Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spares
Sunday School - 9·30 a.m
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services- 7 p.m,

,

o

9

Graum United Methodist
Worship · 9:30am (lst &amp; 2n~ Sun),
7:~0 p.m. (3r&lt;t &amp; 4th Sun)

PIISior.Jim Hughes
Sunday School - 11 a.m.
Worship -9:30a. m•• 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servtc:es - 7:30p.m.

Hillside Baptist Church
St Rf 143 justoffRt 7
Pastor Rev. James R Acrcl:, Sr.
Sunday School - 10 a. m.
Worship- lla.m., 6 p.m
Wednesday Servaces -7 p.m

Bethel Church
Townsh•p Rd, 468C
Sunday School - a m
Worsh1p - 10 a.m.
Wednesday SCrvices- tO a.my

Pentecostal

Sy ra cuse Misston
1411 Bndgeman St., Syracuse
Rc Y. M1ke Thompson,Pastor
Sunday School· \0 am
Evcnmg • 6 p m
Wednesday Serv1ce- 7 p m

~ !'

United Methodist

Hartford Churca. of Chrisl in

Sy_nday School - 10 a m.
Evenmg - 7:30pm
Thursday Servaces - 7· 30

124'850

Corner Sycamore &amp; Second St. Pomeroy
.
Rev. Donald C. Fntz
Sunday School -9:45a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Full Gospel Church or llie UviuK Snlor
Rt 338, Anuqun)
Pastor· Je§Se Morns
Asst Pastors J1m Morns
Serv1ces Saturday 7 30 p m.

Badey Run Road
Pastor Re v Emmett Rawson
Sunda) E\'enmg 7 p.m
Thursday Serv1ce- 7 p m

Coolville United Methodist Parish
Paslor· Helen Klme
Coolville Chun:b
Main &amp; fifth St
Sunday School - 10 a m
Worship - 9 a.m.
Tu,sday Services - 7 p m

St. Paul Ltotheran Churdl

George~

t' ailh Valley Tabtmadt Chun;;h

Racine
Pastor Bnan Harkness
Sunday School . 10 a m
Wor.!ihtp - 1I a m.

Our Saviour. Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry Srs, Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pa.,tor: David Russell
Sunday School- 10:00 a. m.
Worship · 11 am.

Worship - 9:30 a.m., 1 p.m.

New Ure V1ctor-y Ce nter
Creek Road, GalhtK~hs, 011
P~tsto r B•ll Stateo
Sund&lt;tv Sc:rv1ces · 10 am &amp; 7 p m
Wednesday - 7 p m &amp; Youth 7 p m

Middleport Com munity Chun:h
575 Pearl St , Mtdd!eport
Pastor Sam Anderson
Sunday Sc hoo! 10 a.m.
Evemng- 7 30 p.m
Wednesday Scrv1ce. 7 30 p m

East Letart
Pastor Brian Harkness
Sunday School- 10 am
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 7 p m.

St. John Lutheran Church
Pme Grove
Rev. Donald C. Fntz
Worsh!p - 9 00 a m
Sunday School • 10:00 a m

Wedne:iday Serv~ce - 7 p m

1-{arrisonville Community Chu rt h
Pastor Theron Durham
Sunda) - 9 30 am and 7 p m
Wednesday- 7 p m

MorningStar
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School- ll a m
Worship- 10 am

Lutheran

Hemlock Grvve Chun:h
Pastor: Gene

Mt. Union Baptist

*Brand
New 1999 Chevy Full
Size Raised Roof Conv. Van

Lonpvtlle Cbrilllan Cburcb
P11s1or- Tim Ihlc
Sunday School • 9· 30 a m
Worsh1p- 10 30 a.m, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7 30 p m.

Chflon Tabernacle Chun:h
Chfton, W Va.
Sunday School : 10 a.m
Worshtp- 7 p m.

Tht Believers' Fellowship Ministry
New L1me Rd , Rutland
Pastor Rev Margarel J Robmson
Serv1c,es· Wednesday. 7 30 p.m
Sunday, 2.30 p m · .

Carmel-Sutton
Carmel &amp;. Ba!ihan Rds.
Radnc, Ohto
Pastur. Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:4!i am
Bible Stud) Wed. 1 00 p.m

The Church or Jesus
Christ or Latter-Day Saints
St Rt 160, 446·6247 oo 446·7486
Sunday Schooll0:20-ll a.m.
Relief SocietJIPriesthood 11 :05-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking meeting, 1st Thurs. - 7 p.m

Hickory HU11 Churtlb
""""''OfChri1t
Evangelist M1ke Moore
Sunday School · 9 am.
Worship - 10 a.m., 6:30/'"'
Wednesday Serv1ces- p.m.

Racine Flnl Baptist
Pastor R1ck Rule
Sunday School - 9:30 il..m
Worsh1p - 10:40 a.m., 7:00p m.
Wed nesday Services-7:00p.m.

"''m tn shock, " Mrs. V!asht swd
by telephone from Los Angeles lnternatu;:mal Airport "They were very,
very happy to see my husband."
The refugees wtll recetve one
month of cash asSistance, which
av&amp;rages about $300 .a person, and
three months of servtces. The hosts
have been asked to house fanuhes for
as l.ong as two weeks.

Ptlrlland-Racanc Rd
Pastor: Jerry Smger
Sunda}' School - 9:30 a m
Worsh ip - 10:30 am
Wednesday Services- 7 30 p m

Brad lord Chun:h or Cbrisc

Sunday- 7 00 p.m.
Wedne:id.ay-7 .00 P-Ol
Friday-7 00 p m.

Fa1th Fu ll Gosptl Cburch
Long Bottom
Pa.slor Steve Reed
Sunday School · 9 30 a m
Wors,hip- 9 30 am and 7 p m
Wednesda) · 7 p m
Fnday - fell o~sh1p serv1e&lt;: 7 p.m.

Betha•y
Pastor. Dewayne Stut ler
Sunday School • 10 a.m
Worship- 9 am
Wednesday Serv1ces- 10 a.m

or Latter Day Saints

Pastor. Wilham Van Meter

)771

Snowville
Sunday School - 10 a m
Worsh•p - 9 a m

' Reorpnlzed Churd1 of Jesus Christ

Church of JHus C hrist,
Apottolic Faith
1/4 mile past Fon Me•gs on New l tma Rd

Hobson Chrlsllan F~llowship Church
Sunday serv1ce, lO 00 a.m., 7.00 p.m.
You1h FeiiQwShlp Sunday, 7:00p.m .
Wednesda y serv•ce. 7.00 p m

Pa.'~ton Ron f1erce
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Worship- 10:15 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Rutland Churdl or Christ

Wednesday Strv1cu • 7 p m

Christian Ff'llowiihlp Ce ntf'r
Sttlem St, Ru tland
Pastor. Robert E Musse r
Sunday St:hool · 10 a.m.
Worsh 1p -l l 15am , ?p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ce - 7 p m

Saltm Cenl~r

Pastor Charles Sw1gger
Sunday School· 9·30 a m.
Worsh•p - 10:30 a m and 6 p m.
Wednesday Sema: • 7 00 p m !

Sunday School -9 :30a.m.
Worship· 10 30 am

Rutland
Sunday School- 9 30 am
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Serv•cc:s - 7 p m

Laurel Ctllr Free Mdltodtst Chun:h ·

Rdolclng Ufe Church
500 N 2nd Ave ., Middleport
Pastor Lawrence Foreman

Faith Chapel
921 S Thud St , Midd leport
Pa..tor F.rmt Wengerd
Sunday ~rvu:~. 10 am
Wednesday §t:rvice, 7 p m.

Rock SpnnW~
Pastor Ke 1th RaJe r
Sunday &amp; roo! - 9 IS a m
Wo~shm- 10 a.m.
Yo uth Fellowsmp. Sunday - 6 p m

Sunday School - 9 30 am
Worsh1p - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - ?·30 p.m.

Bradbury Church of Christ
Pastor: Tom Runyon
, Sunday School- 9.30 a.m.
Worship- 10·30 am

/\&amp;ape Ule Center

Pomeroy
Pastor· Conme F1ares
Sunday School · -9 15 am.
Worsh1p- 10 30 a m
B1ble Sludy Tuesday · l 0 il.m.

Hysell Rua Holiness Church

Stivenville Word or fallb
Pastor Dav1d Da1lt:y
Sunday School 9 30 am
Evenina- 7 p m

"Full-Gospel Church ·
Pastors John &amp; Pat1y Wade
603 Sctond Ave Mason
773-5017
Serv1cc 11 me Sunda) 10 30 am
Wednesday 7 pm

Pearl Chapel

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
75 Pearl St , Middleport
Pastor Rev Doug Cox
Sunday Worship- 9 JO p m., 7·30 p.m.
Wednesday Semcc- 7&lt;W p m

Worsh•p 10:30 a.m .. 7·30 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 JO p.m.

474)9 Re1bel Rd , Chester
Pastors· Rev Mary and Harold Cook
Sunday Services 10 11,m &amp; 6 p m
Wednt.sday Servkts- 7 p m

Sunday School • 9 am
Worsh1p - lOam

Pine Grvn Bible Hollnts1 Church
1/2 mile off Rt. 32S
Pastor: Rev . O'Dell Manley
Sunday School-9:30a.m
Worship - 10 30 a.m., 7:30pm
Wednesday Serv1cc: • 7 30 p m

Zion Church or Christ

Hope Baptist Church (Southern)
Pa.'~tor J1m Datty
'
570 Grant St., Middleport
Sunday school • 9:30a.m.
Worihip - 11 am and6p m
Wednesc.lay Serv1ce- 7 p.m.

.

hiS children to do is to' go to sc hool
and learn Enghsh.·The ftrst thmg the
Associated Press Writer
SEATTLE - Kosovo refugees 45-year old mec hamc and bus dt ivet
can be found from coast to coast as -.ants to do is find work
" It 's very encouragmg," said host
they settle m with frtend~. relattves 1
and host famihes anxtous to help famtl y member Bruce Kennedy. afte1
them forget about their war-torn the Korqas sat through a news con terence. "Thts means they won't
homeland.
Refugees amved Thursday in· have ttme 9n their hands as they have
Seattle and Los Angeles. The arrival had for the last few month s."
of a seven-member family at SeattleKorqa and hiS famtly have full
Tacoma International Airport marked refugee status, meaning they will be
the latest leg m an odyssey that began able to apply for pennanent residence
when Serbtan police drove them '" the United States and eventually
from their home in Gjtlan, about 40 apply for green cards.
mtles from the Kosovo capt tal, PristtBut Korqa satd they hoped to
na
return home " as soon as peace
'' I thank the American govern- returns to Kosovo "
ment that took the mittattve to save
NATO launched mr stnkes agamst
us from the bloody hands of the Serb Yugoslavta on March 24 after Presiregtme, to save my family and chil- dent Slobodan Milosevic reJected a
dren," Xhavtt Korqa, the father, satd plan to end the fighting with the rebel
through an interpreter.
Kosovo LiberatiOn Anny. Hundreds
The Korqas walked for two days of thousands of ethntc Albanians
through the mountatns before reac h- have ned to netghbonng countries.
tng Macedonia, where they had to
The United States has agreed to
watt for a week at the border The accept up to 20,000 refugees.
famtly spent a month at a border . More than 3,000 refugees have
camp m Macedoma, then two weeks been Oown to Fort Dix this month,
at Fo11 Dtx m New Jersey hetore where they are processed foi relocah~admg for Seattle
tiOn throughout the United States At
Wtth Korqa came his wtfe and the post, Mirsade BeJiqi was saying
children - three girls and two boys, good-bye Thursday.
ages 6 ' to 16 World Reltef, the
She arnved With her parents and
l'efu gee re se tl\ emenl ann ot the three brothers here wtth the first
Nattonal Assoctauon of Evange!tcals . planeload of refugees on May 5. The
ts sponson ng the famtl y m Seattle
20-year-old college student had to say
Korqa satd the hrst thmg he wants

Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
lsi and 3rd Sunday

Maranatha Baptist Church
Burlmgham -742-7606
Palilor John Swanson
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Morning Service 11:00 a.m.
Evemng Service -6:00p.m.
Wedr?esday Service-7:30p.m.

Pomeroy First

Leadmg Creek Rd, Rut fand
, Pastor Rev Dewey King
\ Sunday·school- 9.30 a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p m
Wednesday prayer meelmg- 7 p.m.

· Sunday School- 10:30 om.

Sunday School - 9·30 am

Harvn:1 0u1rt1Ch MlaiS1rlH

Mlntnvillt
Pastor: Chad Emnck
Sunday School - 9a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m .

ROte of Sharon Holiness Church

Pomeroy P•ke, Co Rd

Pa!iWr: Rev Blackwood

Hqth (Middtoport)

Harrisonv1~ Road
Pastor· Rev . ViCtor Roush
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m , 1.30 p.m.
Wednesday Servtce -7·30 p m.

Calvary Blblt Clliurch

Other Churches

Pasror Vernagaye Sullivan
Sunday School- 9·30 a m
Worsh1p · 10 30 a.m

Col••l'f Pll&amp;rlm Chapel

Kroo Churdl or Christ
Worship - 9:30a.m.

Baptist

Kosovo refugees spread out across the U.S.
By LAURENCE CRUZ

Slh and Mam ·
Pastor· AJ Hartson
Youth M1ruSter Bdl Frazier
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worsh1p· 8 IS, 10 30 am., 7 p m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p m.

Liberty Alumbly ol God
P 0 Bo:t 467, Dudding. Lane
Mason, W.Va .
Pastor: Ne1J Tennant
Sunday Serv1ces- 10:00 a.m. alXI 7 p.m.

least one woman "
Studies suggest, he said , that cre w
members who are well traveled ,
sopht sttcated and able to speak different languages "are used to worl&lt;tng wtth other people and will be less
tense and more c:ohes1ve."
• The compattbtllly of crew members can be evaluated m advance
Russtans, the world 's leaders m
long-term space Otght, pay much
attention to how cosmonautS get
along and base crew sclecttOn, in pan,
on com pallbtlity. Crew members
work together for a ·year before
launch, and tf tcnstons develop, they
are broken up
In the Unlled States, crew members are excluded based on "obvious
psychopathology," but selecung 'tor
compatlbthty '' ts not well deve loped," Kanas said

• The number of people tn a crew
as crucull.
"Three ts the most dtfticult number for a crew. With three, somebody
is excluded You have a i'naJOrtlYand
one ts a loner," satd Kanas "Eleven
and mne are .good numbers. Fo r
instance, you mtght have a maJonty
of SIX, but those mthe 'out' group sttll
have somebody to talk to."
• A variety of people may be \Jetter than a crew of one sex, one race
or one nationality.
"There is a school of thought that
dtverstty dunng a long-term space
mission might be a positive, because
it keeps them interested tn each other longer," Kanas sat d. "I would
guess that the first trip to Mars probably wtll be multtcultural, with at
least two languages and include at

3JOS7 State Route 325, Langsvllt
Pastor: Dr. J.D . Young
Sunday school-9:30a.m
Sunday worsh1p- 10·30 am. &amp; 1 p m.
WeQntsday prayer itrvk:e • 1 p m

Mlddtopon Chun:b ol Ch.tll

Assembly of God

Forni Run
Pastor, Chitd Emnck
Sunday School . lOam
Worsh1p - 9 a.m.
Thursday Servn:cs · 6 30 p m

Duvtlto Holl... Church

33226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday School- 11 a.m.
Worsh1p - 10a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p m.

Church or J01u CluUt Apootollc

:Scientists work to help astronauts cope with irritability
By PAUL RECER
AP Science Writer
WASHINGTON - Astronauts
someday may sltp the bonds of Earth
and race across the heavens toward
new planets. but they ' re gomg to take
along the all-too-human emotto ns
that plague everybody else.
A psychiatn st who st udted astt onauts and cosmonaut crews sa1d
Thursday that after a fe-. mont hs of
tt ght confinement tn space, trntabtluy tends to set tn Leadersh ip erodes,
chques develop and everybody gets .
mad at Mi ssiOn Control back on
Earth
Dr Ntck A Kanas of the Umvcr·
slly ofCahforma, San FranCISco, satd ·
outbu rsts of emotton may be
tnevltable m outer space, but he and
other experts are developmg way• to

Pom&lt;roy W-'do Chun:b orCbritt ·

Apostolic

Pomeroy

out your basement
228 W. Ma:in St., Pomeroy or attic w~h t~e help of the
"Featuring Kentucky Fried Ch1pken·

992·5432

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CLASSIFIED SECTION!
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in the .

Meigt~ County j

Olde•t. FlorUt.

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740:.992-6298

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n..o.."" WUII. S/)Hiel Ca rw
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In this space
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�Friday, May 21, 1999 ·

The Daily Sentinel ~;-

By The Bend

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel e Page 9
Yard Sale

70

Page 8 ::

Galllpolla

Friday, May 21,1999

&amp; VIcinity
••

3 Fam1ly Yard Sate ..1t 535 Sec·
ond Avenue . May 21 &amp; 22 Galli-:"

Violent sleep pattern means hubby needs a·sleep disorder specialist:
men" who suppress their anger; act out my dreams with no memory "Bruised" should tell her fiance 10
·.
sleep hecomes their escape valve. of what happened.
seek medical help. -- SOUND
Since I was a child, l have awak- SLEEPER IN A DOUBLE BED
They arc so good when · they arc
DEAR SLEEPER: Thank you
awake, people like me stay with ened \.lw'ith bruises on my ,a nns, legs
them , but it doesn 't work. "Bruised and face and my room in shambles. l for confirming that medication can
in Dallas'' needs to dump that guy often would wake up in a different work wonders. All the bruised
1997, los Angeles Ttm~s Syndicote and
Creators 5 ynd.l cot~.
now. No name , just -- BATTERED room. not remembering how I got spouses who read this will be gratethere. Some mornings, I would wake ful for your comments. -Here 's one
IN DREAMLAND
Dear Ann Landers: Twin beds been hit. kicked. dragged around the.
DEAR BATTERED: Thanks for up more tired than when I had gone ·more on sleep problems :
are not a safe solmion for the woman room and thrown up against a wall your tes timo ny, but l certainly · to bed the night before.
Dear Ann Landers: I've been
whose fiance punched tier while while ' he "rescued " himself from
My physic ian recommended a married for seven months and am
would not recommend dumping a
sleeping.
some nocturnal peri I.
perfectly good husband because. he sleep di sorder specialist, and I final - very happy except 'for one thing -.my
My e•-husband once broke down · This man adored hi s sons. so I has nichtmarcs and a treatable sleep ly was diag nosed al the age of 21. husband's insomnia. "Herb" finds
a from door in hi s·slecp, so scpanuc believed they were safe , bur one disord'Cr. Kee p reading for some My doctor explained that my disor- hirnself awake at 3:30 a.m. and
rooms may not protect her. either. It night. after our 4-year old talked addt tional comments:
der is a f.orm of brain seizure, and I ctaims he cannot sleep unless the TV .
doesn,'t mancr ·who he is mad at. he back to him .during supper, he headDear Ann: l am writing_about have no way of controlling !l.' I am is o~This wakes me up. Even if the
is ·laking hi s aggress ion out on her. ed for the boy 's rpom in his sleep. '' Bru1sed in Dallas," whose fian ce being treated with medication com- sou is off, the light disturbs me.
and it will prohably get wor&lt;e.
Horrified. I grabbed a lamp and hits her while asleep. I am a 29-year- monly used for epileptic ·seizures .
ve told Herb hoW I feel, but he
.,. One night, my e• ripped off my · crashed it ' against the wall , wak ing old man with partial com plex Since 1. began taking it. I sleep with- says if I truly loved him, I would be
nightgown whil~ "saving me fro m hi11J up just . in time. Lord only seizure di sorder. This means my out incident 98 percent of the time, more concerned about his lack of
sna,kes."
knows what he might have donC to brain cannot paralyze my hody for and believe me, my wife is · very sleep. We end up fighting. Last
·Another time, he choked me so the tioy.
night , I threatened to smash the TV
deep REM sleep as it would for the thankful.
hard , he almost killed me. I h ~vc
To some of those "perfect ge ntle· · average perSo n. This ca uses me to ·
Instead of gelling separate beos. -with a hammer. I fea~ I'm becoming

Ann landers

Bas ic Sign language class offered
. The Meigs County Adult Bas ic

In ter net novice .
Navigating the; In te rnet provides a has·il.: introduct io n to net
surfing , includin g browser basics ,
J uma1 11 name$, URLs , and otll'cr
Int ern et' tc nnin o l ogy.

and . Lit~r acy E&lt;..luc;.llinn r&gt;rogram
will offer a class in ·'"s igned Eng ~
lish'' next mvnth ..
The class will meet q n Thurs-

at the Pomeroy ABLE Center at
~31.05

the

Hila nd Road . a lso k nnwn as
Commun it y Action/ JTPA

Buildin g

ulcd on Thursday, May 20( fro m 4
to 6 .. "'' 'r hur,day. May 27. frum I
to 3 p.m.. and on Thursday. Jun e
2-L frum 10 a.m. to noon.

· This is a 12 week l.' nursc. begin ning Jun e 3. and ~~ope n w pcrS(lllS
age 1 g or over. S in ~c space i:&gt; li mited to 12. interested perso n ~ mu ~ t
call to register hy Tuesday. Jun e 1.
This class is free
. The n~·rmhcr tn c all tn r eg isrcr.is ·

any CALC co urse. stop hy the cn lkgc "s _Division of Co ntinuing Edu ~

(740) 992-6247.'

clt i'on. bel wee n 7:30 a.m ·and !f

Free Internet courses uffen:d
. MARIETTA - Area res ide nts
ca rl take a free trip un the informatio n superh ighway thi s . sprin g
th rough 'the Com puter Applica ti ons Learning Cti\ICr (C AI.:C) ar
~ashington State Co mmunit y Co llege.
CALC has schedule three free
se,;.ions of "Nav'igati ng the lnternd' during May and June . The
course is designed for the tru e

America. held at the hall .
1
Erm a C leland was irl chilrgc of
the program with readings bein g
given by Charlotte Grant. Laura
Nice , Ella Oshomc , and Esthe r
Smit h. Marcn:1 K eller was rcl.":og•

To rc gist~r for a free co ur s~. or

p.m ., Monuny to Thursuay. on Fri-

day from 7:30 a:m.-4:30 p.m., or
on Sat urday fro m ~ a.m. to noo n.
For more information on the Com·
puler Applications Learning· CcntCr co urses, residents may ca ll th e
co llege at 740-374-8716. ext. 62K.
Cou'ncil honors mothers at meeting .
A Mother·, Day theme was carried out at the recen t meeting
Che ster Council 323. Daughters of

or

c il \\'ill he observed

fl1

•Paving
•Lots
•Sealing
• Drives
•Striping
•Private
•Patching
' •Business
•New &amp; Resurfacing
•Playgrounds
•Tennis &amp; Basketball Courts
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

CRED.r r ·
No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy·

No Embarrassment ...
You're Treated with Respect!
~~~for .

th e next

meellll£. The birthday or Ethel Orr
was aJ...;n noted and members were
a~ ked to se nd her a card .
The t.:hartc r was draped in mem ory of Ethel Hart. II was noted th at
Julie Curti s will have eye surgery.
that· Alta Ballard is honie from tbc
hosp iial. and ll1a1 Martha Durst has
had surgery. The death of Roberta
Maiden 's· father-in -law was also
noted. Laura Mae Nice pres id ed at
the meeti ng whi ch opened ih ritu~
ali stic form :
'
Philippine project continued by
missionary society
Bertha M. Say re Missionary
Soc1ety of Rae in c mel recently at
the home of Marjorie. Grimm 10 cut
~uill sq uare s to be sent to the

Brand New 1999
Buick Century Custom

qa,B5D*
• 3800 V-6 Power
• Air Conditioning
~ AMIFM CD System

• Tilt Steering
• Remote Keyless Entry
• Nicely Equlppedl

Brand New 1999
Pontiac Firebird

Middleport First Baptist Church
·mother-daughter banquet held

,.

The Co mmunity Calendar . is
pul)lishcd as a free service io
non-pr ofit groups wrshing to
announce meeti ng s and special
events. The ca lendar is not
de signed 10 promote sales or fund
raise rs of any type. hems are
printed as space permits and cannot be guaranteed to run a spec if·
ic number or day s.

· FRIDAY
POMEROY - Friday's Fun,
Food and Fellowship for teens,
Friday: 6 to I0:30 p.m al God's
Ncighborhoo,d Escape for Teens
in Pom eroy. Non-violent video
games, co mputer programs , po ol
table s a nd cards free in game
room . The cen ter is als'o open
Saturday night .
SYRACUSE
The Tony
Brothers , at th e Syracuse
Nazarene Church, 7 p.m. Friday.
Free will offering will be taken .

• Crulsemlt
• Aluminum WhHis
• Nicely Equlppedl

RACINE - Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medi-

.

~4 '850*
.
• Automatic
• Air Conditioning
• Power Door Locks

Brand New 1999 Pontiac
Grand Am SE.Coupe
• AMIFM Stereo
• Traction Control
~ Nicely Equipped!

Brand New 1999
Pontiac Sunfire SE Coupe
• Air Condlllonlng
• AMIFM Stereo
• 4 WhHI Anti-Lock Brakes

• Dual Alrbags
• Rear Spoiler
• Well Equlppedl

'Taxee, Tt(ll, Title Fees extra. Rebate Included 11 sale price c1 new ..rkle hted where IPilkiJ;e. "On lllllf&lt;Nid cndl On !MIIecled-.
l'ltctl Good Mty 21 It thTU May 231d. No! 109P011lll!le fur lypog!IPiical

'.
: Weal VIrginia's t1 Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olda,
And Cualom Van Dealer.

Jerry L Preec11
Crown Citv. OH 45623

Phone:
74D-258-8147

Bij.SELL BUILDERS,
INC.

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On . ·
Thursdays

New Homes • VInyl
Siding •New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing

wiiiRYIID!!!

cine's Childhood Immunization
Program (CHIP), a mobile health
program, will prqvide free immunizations for all area children
from birth through 18 years of
age on May 21 from 3 to 5 p.m. al
the Rac ine Volunteer Fire Department in Racine.
, The program also 'offers the
Hepatitis B vaccine free of charge
10 all children through age 18.
The vacc ine is a three-shot
series over a minimum of six
months.
The child's pre vious shot
records s~ould be provided. ·
CLIFTON, W.Va . - A hymn
s ing will be held al the Clifton
Tabernacle Friday, 7 .p.m.
SATURDAY

'
POMEROY
Girl Scout
recruitment, Pomeroy parking lot
stage area, Saturday 10 to 2 p.m.
Games, displays, activities. Age
five or entering kindergarten .
POMEROY

-.

Civil

Memonal Day ceremony will be
held at the Civi I War statu.e at the
Meigs County Courthouse, II
a.m . Saturday .

COMMEROAL ond RESIDENTIAL

1..

614·992-7643

Howard L Writesel

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

·-

1-.

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

Rcidne Gun Club
FISHING DERBY
MaJ 23rd, 7• t l 1111 all dtlldr111 up to IS YJS.
Bait supplied
Member may bring

r guest
Prlzea &amp; Money
Food&amp;
· Refruhmenra

.....

985-4473·

.We Deliver
Limes lone, Grave_!,
Sand, Fill Dirt,
Agricultural Lime,
Mulch, Top Soil
(Low Rates)

985-4422
Chester, Ohio
I l'li25IO!Imn

PARTS
All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Part~ ,,
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts '
Dealers.
''

4 miles out SA 143 on Friday&amp; .'
Saturday. 9·4 , tots of misc. ol(t f. ·

740-985·3813

"""

4" thru 48" Plastic Culvert ln Stock
Full Une Of Water Storage TanksSeptic &amp; Cistern Tanks
Sewer Pipe: 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp;
Regulators
OPEN:
9:0D-4:30 Weekdays'
B:OD-12:00 Saturday

1000 St. Rt. 7 South '

Linda's Painting
'lltke the pain out
of painting, and let
me do it for you.
· INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message. Afier 6 pm

740·985-4180
Free Estimates

YOUR

CONCRETE -.

A&amp; DAuto Upholstery • Plus, Inc
Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp;vinyl tops,
Four wbtt:;fr seats, motorcycle seats,
boa~rs, carpets, etc.
Mon- Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40. yrs experience

I

Sunday I Monday edition·
1:O(lpm Friday.

rou CANT E.SC.AIE. rtE. GM..AT

&amp; VIcinity

ANNOUNCEMENTS

BINGO
MON. &amp; WED.

N(Jw

Sunset lome
~1Hi

Rtmodotlng-Kitchen Clblntll
VInyl Sldlng-Roofi.Dtckl-

. Cllrogu
Free E•timale•

St.op In A11d See
An Old Friend
Mike Drehel
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

Bryan Reeve•
Swan Reeve•

STAR BURST

RACINE - RACO , Tuesday,
6 :30p.m. at Star Mill Park .

$1000.00
$50,00 OR MORI

War

Phone (740)

Rul Eatate General

SE

·'
.•••

-•
.'

TV27 .

For Free
Program Guide
CaU 992-2727

•New Homes .
*Ad-ditions ·
• Rem'odeling
Coil today about special
pric'e• jhru July on

Quality Built Hou•~•

Remember
Quality Is Job One
~7SS ~IIOI

'•
••
'••

Power
' Washb•g
·

Homes, Decks
&amp; Mobile Homes

.. Palnllng, Dryw~ll Repair
1Interior &amp; Exterior

,
•

5 fro.

E~rperlcmce

742·1701

SYRACUSE- Walnut Placa Subdlvlalon- An
almost new ranch home ytlth brick .a nd sequoi
siding. Near . the river v,:ith river access. H~s 3
bEidrooms, 2 baths. a pretty kitchen, &amp; a big
llvfng room. Th~ oak ~inet&amp; are beautiful, and
·so is the rest of the hQuee. There's a 2 car
finished garag.e: A mutt IH I!ISBe,ooo

•

AT. 7 PIZZA ·

DOTTIE TURN~R REALTY

Purchase any 18" or t6" Pizza
Get Second t/2 price ·
992-9200 .
. Largest delivery area In town

•

593-6671

HILL'S .
SELF STORAGE
· 29670 Bashan Road
Ra~lne,

Ohio 45n1

74D-949·2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x30'
Hours
7:00'AM • 8 PM

--

.UAUTY WINDOW SYSTEMS
~ORIIURLY OF 110 COURT STIEET, POMEROY
IS NOW LOCATED STATE ROUTE 33
NORTH OF POMEROY AT COUNTY ROAD I I
1"''0 '"'0UR OFFICE/SHOWROOM THERE

Dollie S. TUrner, Broiler
205 North Second Ave.

992-4119 OR 800-291-5600

Middleport, Oh 45760

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS AT
.... FACT'ORY .DIRECI' ~ICES
'

62·2886

Reward! $7~ . 00 tor the arrest at
persons who broke ln&amp;Stole
Toots Property of; Ronald Miller,
261 , P1ckens .Rd . Patri ot, Oh.

, ;= bi111aRP"!"
HaniiM .

J 74D) · 379 ~ 2160

NO

Oues11o ns

Ask!

BuUdo•er &amp; Back/we

Robb ins &amp; Myers, Reti rees. Em-

Seroicea

ployees, Spouses or Guests. who

House &amp; Trailer Sileo
Land Clearing &amp; ·
Grading

Worked wilh each other for thl!l
first tO years. Potluck will be held
In Shetter House Grounds on Bob
McCormick Rd . Ma~ 29, 19991
12 :p.m. to 2:p.m . II Need to know
any de'lalls, Contract Jane Harp·
er; Carol ~erguson Bush (740)-

Sepeic Sy•renu &amp; Vriiirie•

1740)698·9407
17401691·6029

379-2496

TRI·STATE MOBI~E
POWER WISH
Trucks - tractor
Trailers -

.

Giveaway

·

2 Female Calllco Kittens/Twins.

. To GOOd Home. (3041675-254o.
6 month old German Sheppard &amp;

Austrlallan snappard Mixed . Out·

decks .. driveways

Equi!Jment Cleaned &amp; 00greased
JEFF STETHEM
PHONE: (740) 985-4218
EMAIL:
STETHEM@EUREKANET.COM

FREE ESTIMATES
38782 Sumner Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

skle Dog. (D4)675-0860.
Give Away , MIICed Breed Pups
To GOOd Homes\ 740 H6 4412.

Landscape Material,

Topsoil 8! Mushroom
Compost

992·5455

varp,

Sidewalk and Porch Sate. Friday
and Saturday, May 21st &amp; 22nc1.,
10AM·5PM, 100 Chestnut St, '
Henderson , wv. Glassware, •.
New/Old, Lots of Misc. hems.

80

Auction.
··
arid Flea Market · . •

$5.75&amp; Up

•Geraniums, Azaleas
•shrubs &amp; Trees
We Honor Golden
Buckeye Card
Open
9-5 Weekday Sunday t -5

SYRACUSE

992•5776
'TFN

•VInyl Siding I Painting

•Patio I Poroh Declt1
·FrH E•llmllfl

. V.C. YOUNG·Ill .
1112.a215
Pomen~y, Ohio
22 yn. Local . ·

To The Residents
of
Gallia Counlyl

Genera Refuse Service

A local~ owned company wilh over 28 y~

tXII'rience hos now extended our coverage area 1o
lndude all of Gallia Co. and portions of Meigs,
VInton &amp; LawreiKe counties.

CALL TODAY TO BEGIN YOUR
GARBAGE SERVICE IMEDIATELY

1-800~967-4774

La ntern

. 3775.

Hanging .Baskets
Blooming &amp; Foliage

•Room tddlt~l 6 Remodeling
•NtwGtrtgtt
.
•EilctriCII &amp; Plumbing
•Roollng AGutttl'l

Herb . Japanese

Plants, 1304)882·2436.

3002.

Exr:lud,. B.driU'I c.r.nim,.•

HUlBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

al

Mal e half Sheltie Collie to a goOd
home In the country. 304 -675-

·

•••

·

Wedemeyer' s Auction Ser vtc"e: ; ~

Gallipolis, OhiO 740-379·2720.

90

Wanted to Buy , ..,

Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. SU- ,
ver And Gold Coins, Proolsets.
Diamonds . Antique Jewelry. Gold
Rings , Pre-1930 U.S. Currency, ·
Sterling, Etc. Acquisition&amp; Jewelry
- M.T.S. Coin ShOp, 151 Second '·
Awmue. Gallipolis, 740-446·2842.
AntiQues. top prices paid. River~ •~:
lne Antiques , .Pomeroy, Ohl'o.: ,
Russ Moore owner, · 740·99~" •

2526.

••

!.:

.t-o

Of"£:

'

-

For\llu, 740-25fH;989.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

£ ...

Set,.!lf
•

•i&lt;

il
~
.,.
...
...;_ ..
.b

________
Help Wanted

!!'

'
SSSMake MoneylSSS work At
Home - Assemble Product,.-: '~
Easy Work , Excellent Pay. Free ;fll.
Detai ls! Se nd S.A.S.E. To: Nat'l ;.¥
Homeowrker's Association , P.O. ::
BoK 675. Al)ley, WV 25271.
: A
0

Six Week Old Kittens.: (304)682 ·

· All Fiala $8.50

'

Kittens . Whateve r Size or Color AVON! All Areas\ To Buy or Sail. A.
You're Looking For. We Have · Sil..:l..:rle::..Y::..:Spea=IS:::.·:::.~:...::
-67..:5..:
·1..:429::..:
. _. "-

Utlies ol tM Valley, Pennie Roy ·

Complete Une Of

YOUNG'S
CARPEMRR SERVICE

Klttens·Biack and Wh ite to a
good home! Mothe r is a good
Mouser! CAll' (740)·388-80 19 after 5:pm

Only 12 LeM. (~)675- 8832.

3/11/99 TFN

Crown Ci1y. 740·2!i&lt;H;989

110

7841 .

740·742·2138

RIVERSIDE AUCTION BARN•
E'¥ery SaiUrday NJg'ht 7 P.M ..

want To S&amp;n Your SruH? can Rlrf! n
erside Auction And Let Us

Gas ,range · to give. away, 740-992·

Joe N. Sayre

773-5785 01 304·773-5447.

Female Kittens Ready to go end
ot Month. (740)44 1·0932

27SO

Limestone &amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates

Aick Pearson Auc!IOn Company,
lull t ime auctioneer. complete
auction
service.
Licensed
•ee.Ohlo &amp; West Virginia, 304-

Clean Late Model Cars
Trucks. 1990 Models Or Newer• .l4
Smith Buiek Pontiac, 1900 Eaf'-t!
ern Avenue. Galllpolls.
• .. ..,

Full Btcioded Male Rat Terr ier,
Approx 31 12 years old . .To Good
home Tempermentall (740)-446·

Hauling

es. Consignmenl aucrlon.· Ui ll •.
Srreel , Middleport. Thursdays.
Oh io license 117693 . 740·9Q'9-' '
2623.

..:

~·

c
~

Carpet etearterl t1etper·. Mechanic
aptitude he lpfu l. Valid dr ivers II- ~
cense &amp; abill~ to read map. M~st .:
be able to move furniture, Reply ,)lJ a:
PO Box 45~. Pomeroy. Ohio .;:;:

45769 or 740-992-6788 .

Young Rooster. (304)458-1615.
After 5PM .

60 · Lost and Found
2 Labs- 1 Adult , 1 daughter.
Very Friendly! ·Good Home Only!
Phone calls only in Morn in gs!

(740)•256·64 19

•

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
1069 Se'cond Ave . May 20·21 ;
8:00am-5:00pm: Adult &amp; Children
Clothing , Nordic Track . and
Housenold Items. J
· 2 Family Garage Sa te Friday·
SaturMY. 21 ,22,291h, B n:-Ues out
554 from Cheshire just past Out·
back Carryout. Chlldrens clothes,
toys, bikes. Sweepers. Home In·
tartar ..Yard OrnamentJ., and misc .
Household IIams. 8·4pm Rain or

Shlnot

ALJ. Yon! Set.,. Mull

ao Potd In A!MTnco.
DJ:,\DLINE: 2:00p.m.

r

Computer Users Needed . Work

Own HIS. $25K -$80KI Yr. 1·SoJl- ·.476·8653 X 7777, www.1cwp.com ::
~

Easy Work! Excellen t Pay! Ac- "
semble Products at Home . c an '
Toll Free . 1·800-467·5566 E'xt ~

12170

•..,

~~--------=
~
Excellent opportunity to join the

Found : I Beagle , Adult/Male , ·long term nealth care field . Ll·
with collar , in Meadowbrook censed Practical Nu r&amp;es . RotlftDrive area. (304)675-4222, after lng shirts. Intermediate care ceft.
5PM
tar . West VIrginia lleense re•
qulred . Apply at Point Ptnsant
Found : Copper Nos ed Beagle ,
Very Frie ndly. Mate . (7 40)-2 56· CenlerfGenesis Eldercare, State
Route 62 , Route 1, BoiC 32.,
6419
Point Pleasant. WV 25550.,EOE . • ·
Found: Female Dog . Mixed, Solid
Excellent opportunity to join thl .
Brown. Found on Anniston Drive.
long term heallt'l csre field . Dlree:
' 1304)675·3693
to r ot Nursing, Intermediate eatt
Found: Aottwe ller Pup at Elk' s center . Have four !lr more yeafs
of nurs ing e•pertence and pos·
Farm. Took to Animal snBner
sess a valid West VIrginia "Reg·
Lost : 2 Chtnuahua Terriers ar· lstered Nurse li cense. Compre~ens lve benefit packa'g e avail ounct Po int Pleasant Hlon
Scho ol. 1 Light Brown fe male( able. Apply by forwarding resume
answe r s ' to Kitty;· 1 Reddlsn lo Point Pleasant Cenler/Genes46
male/answers
·to
Buddy. Etdercare, State Roule 62, Route
t, Be• 326, Point Pleasa nt. WV
1304)675-3886.
255$0. EOE.
:
Reacued 5117/99 Black Lab Pup,
ApP.rox 2 months fema le. white
E:~~perienced Carpenter WantM.
itol-c110SI, No 10 Tags.
Must Have Own Hand. Tools t.
TransportatiOn. (3'¥)675·2478. •

70

"

Avon Products: Start your own In- ::
Home Business. Work Flulble
Hours, Enjoy Un tlm1tecl Earnings. !:
1·!!88·561-2866

Global Recruiters Needing :. ;
STNA'S &amp; LPN'S tor more infor· ,.
matlon call : (740)·446·4188 or
stop tn 99S Jackson Pike, fl:201 ,

.-.
""'
.,._
~~

t
~

~
·'

!::

.....
...
:;
..
•
:.
•
·~

-.:.,
•..

·.

"-

~

~..

~
::
_.. •
,.

~G-•11~1~-Ii~•-------------- - ~
CI-t Rtc:ov'-o

RN'&amp;FoiDI~~~ngPoIn -rg. Wv. and
~tiona

Jackson, Oh. For mor-e lnforma·
1lon call: (740)-&lt;1&gt;16-&gt;1188 Of Slop
In 995 Jackson Pitte ,t 201. Gall·

polls ·
lotat 'ft:ucklng Coinpany Seeking
OuaHittd Truck Or lvtrs . Good
Pay .,nd Benerlta. Send Reaume
To: Driver. P.O. Box 109 Jack·
son. Onto 45f!i40, Or Call 1· 740286·t463 To Schedule An lnllr·
&gt;low.

1ho !loy boloro !he od
It to run. Sunny

odlllon • 2:00 p.m .

Fr1Cioy. Mondo~ edition

- 1D:OO o.m. So1uldty.

••

•t

,

Beautiful, small , long - hatred.
black cat, to ·good nome. 1 year
old, good mouser. (304 )675-6022.

Free Dog Spayed Mate, Part Ger·
man . lovely. .sweet d lspositont

SAYRE
TRUCKING
.

iAt ..

Saturday, 5/22, 8AM·? 2103
Vernon A'¥enue, a 3 Family
Sale.
.

740·592·1842
Ouall~y clothing and household Bill Moodlspaugh Auctioneering .
l!ems. $1 .00 bag sate every · Complete AuciiOntering Servtc~ ··

FRALEY
EXCAVATING
·

May 20.2 1,22. Household &amp;
Baby Items . Mens/Womena ,
Girls Clothlng(s lzes 1 2mo-6yr'S).~·
Nibert Drive, Gallipolis Ferry.

9 West Stimson; Athens

Vegetable &amp; Bedding'Ptants

••
•

•
•

New To You Ttlrift Shoppe

DRIVEWAY STONE

•

•

playing !he Ohio Oatino Game , I·

BOO·ROMANCE. el&lt;t8llSiDn 9681 .
30 . Announcements

Noll! Open Far
Spri"lf Seaoa11

•

••
•

· Slart OaHng Tonig ht! Have ·lu n

Don't Need A BiB One
CaU A Uttle One

"A Better

Marty's .

• 0

WJOS•

up to 8 ton

IEE'CH GROVE
ROAD

up rou a r Implied prior to aolt c.antoct Sheila •
wor.rentlee given.
. . et 892-2138.
Far further lnforrnotlon, or (5) 11, 20, 21, 26, 27,28 &amp;TC
.lor en appointment to view

1·900-226-5889 Ext2708 , $2.99
P8r. Min. Must be 18 Vrs Old,
Sorv-1!(6191-645-8434

40

Light Hauling

PIIIAMI .

.

Servtcc - Atly

lf, l~l( _l r y' Hrdr;1' Hd I ntH. Hot! c rn. Ol··!u

740-742-3411

POST 467

Mak1~ s

f\ppltancc wr; sn lluse ci applt;ltlcl'

New Conotructlon I

RUTLAND

Qnlity Craftt~euhip
Gut'ruteed'

'
CONSTRUCTION

THE APPLIANCE MAN
985-3561

Pill ts- All

Construction

6:30P.M.

FREE ESTIMATES
1740)667·6992

SMITH'S

f&lt;en Young former ow n er of

HlWUI.SumetHome.Com ,

Personals

t740)-4415·3693

,.I'm Back"

740-742·8608·1

Pt. 'Pleasant

· 111./'TS N M CWSfWS. .

40 742-8888

Quality Drivew•ys.-·
Sidewalks; l'lltlos
Parking Lots ' '
25 yrs experience
FrH Eatlmattl ,.

Ken's Applt:Jt1CP Servtce
i3Q Announcements

Lighi.Commercial &amp;
Residential
New Construction &amp;
Remodeling

.

All Yard Salal Mu1t Be Pald"lft
A.dvanu, Deadllnt : t :OOpm the'
day before the ad 11 to run ,

1 mo.

Rutland, Ohio

Coc&gt;lvl/olo, OH &lt;f5723

CONNECTION

Construction

Call 98S·383I

..

Hou&amp;i! Salel Ma~ 21. 22 receml; ~
moved, must down size. antiques.
antiques Furniture, washer &amp; .dry- ,
er, refrigeralor, air conditioner• .
microwave , Jars, ol d bookJ ·'
clothes, misc . 4 mites out , 4409
Bufavifle Pike.

Tuppers Platna, Ohlo 45783

St. Rt. 7

Thursday. Monday lhru Saturday
9:Q0-5:30.

Points &amp; Chester ·
We Custom-Spray
• Vegetables e Col'n
· ·
•Soybeans

Friday &amp; 5aturday 11/2 miles OUI
Lincoln Pike. Adult , Girls , BQ.Yr Ciott'les , Knick Knacks. Gleie~ ;
ware , Ant ique Oreuer, Lot~ •
1•
Morel
.
I
Fnday·SattJrday 8·2. Infant, Kldl, · :
Adult clothes , Formal Wear ,! .
Toys , Much More .. - 57 Ambya
Lana.
'\
. Vinton

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

John Dean; Owner

·St. Rt. 7 Bewteen Five

. 7

: :

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Phone 740-992·3987 .

.· SERVICE

,,

'

Agricultural Ume,
· Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

Electric &amp; Water and 'or Full (look-Up
Across from Forked Run State P~rk and
close to Fork Run Boat Ramp
Reedsvillo Ohio

H&amp;H

r

TUE~DAY

Produce Workers Needed
740-843-52BO. daytime
740-949•2439 AVArlinne&gt;

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

1701

74D-992-3470

POMEROY - Veterans Ser"ice Commission, 7:30 p.m.
Monday, 117 Memorial Drive, •
Pomeroy.

Tye Brinager &amp;Sons

.....
•·
.
Roush

Lan...-c:r...:~·

ESnMATEES ·'

HfiOLinG InC.

MONDAY

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

$5.50.00 Year
$12.00 Night
$I 0.00 Primitive Camping

TRUCKING

New Hames &amp; Remodeling
Garages; .Pale Buildings, Roofing, Siding
"Specializing In Log Hom.e1"
Commercial &amp; Residential
28 yrs. exp.
Licensed· &amp; Insured

-...clrllllld

WICKS

MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
Chapter 172, OloS, inspection ,
Saturday
night.
Middleport
·Masonic Temple .

:.JIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIL:

Re Le HOLLON

Free Internet Ace&amp;ssl

• La. . Cue .• Dlllp
•.MIIaiiDUCe•Piullag
• llalcblag
• llf•lnlng W.U I ldl:k
. hila Caulractloa

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE

4/2 TfN

r=~P~u~b~llc~N~ot~lc=e==~~~P~u~b~llc~N~o~ti~c=e===l:=~P~u~bl~lc~N~o~t~lc:e:.::r:::~Pu=;bl;lc:N:m:l:c:a:::
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE It her~ by given
that. on Saturday, May 21,
taee, at 10;00 o.m., 1 public
1111 will be held . at 20
Railroad Street. Middleport,
Ohio to 1111 lor cllh tho
following eallotof81:
11114 CAROUNA MOBILE
HQME14XII
CMHRKNC14384
Tho Former• Bonk ond
Uvlnge
Compeny,
Pomeroy, Ohio, f811NII tho
right to bid 111 thlo 1111, and
to withdrew tho obovo
colletorol prior to 111o.
Further, The Ferrnaro Bank
end Sevlnge Camp•ny
r11ervoa lhl right to f811Ct
any or 111 bide aubmlttoct.
Further, tho ebove
collettrol will bo told In tho
condition It It In, with no

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

949-2188

·

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Eastern Loca l Board of Educa- · ·
lion, special meeting , Monday, 5
p.m. at the offi.ce . Purpose to
close out contract with building
contractor.

I -740-667:3083
I -740-667-33 I 6

005

:
:
:

'

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
'
COURT,
PROBA'R; IHVISION,
MEIGS COtlNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATIER OF
SETILEMENT
OF
ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Account• end vouchoro
of , tho fallowing named
llductary hoa. boon lllod In
the Probate Court, Molgo
County, Ohio, lor opprovol
and •ttltmtnt:
ESTATE NO. 21815-.
Twentieth Annuel Account
al Bernerd V. Fultz, Trulltu
ol tho Trutt Croatoct Under
tho· Will ol Andoreon B.
Klbblo,lttm tO.
Unlo.. exception• are
lllod thereto, tald account
will be for httrtng btloro
oold Court an tho 2111 doy '
of Juno,
ot which ttme
.. Jd eccaunt will be
conolderod end continued
. from day fll doy until finally
dlopo... dof.
Any poroan lntor.._tod
may file written exception to
aald account or to matte,.
pertllnlngto the execution·
of the truat, not Ieee thon
live day• prior to the date
, aatlar hearing.
Robert E. Buell, Judge
Common Pleat Court,
Prablla Dlv., Mtlgt County,
OH
. •
•·
(5) 21 tTC

AT8:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomaroy,OH
Paying $80.00
pargama
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Progreaslve top line. ,
Uc. II 00-50 , , _ '

FREE ESTIMATES

------~---------------------------------------------------- ~
----Community
Calendar---___; --

• Air Conditioning
• Power Windows
• Power Locks &amp; Mirrors

Csl/ For Free Estlmstes

/

..

.
Phi lippines.
Mary K. Yost had a program on'
Mother 's Day which included a
.•
Quill pauern hot pads and poued geraniums decorated the table . • :
letter about Anna Jarv is and the ·
for adults at the annual mother-daughter banquet held recently at the
' National Holiday which started in
Middleport
First
Baptist
Church.
1914.
· Sarah Fowler decorated for the banquet and was presented a pink
She al so read "The Thou ght
carnati on corsage for her sewing efforts of hot pad favors . A spec ial
th ar Co unts" and gave a poem, .
tahle for the children was decorated with coloring books and
"Holes in the Floors of' Heaven"
crayons.
A potluck dinner was se rved buffet style from a table covand anoth er "Mother Makes a
ered
with
a nine-patch quill. Juanita Griftllh gave dinnet grace. ·.
Hou ~e a ·Home" hy Helen Steiner
.
buring
the program there was a skit portraying Mary and Martha
Rice. She co ncluded with Proverbs
of
the
Bible.
Vicki Morrow took the role of Mary and Marjorie Wal.~I ahout a virtuou s woman and
burn, Manha. The skit revealed that each person has a bit of both in
close d with prayer.
their female roles of mother, sister and Christian women.
Martha Lou Beegle had the lo ve
Helen Bodimer gave a humorous reading on the antics of mothergift program using "Senior Citi·
hood
by the late Erma Bombeck. Guests were introduced . Two famze ns Speak" as the theme.
ilies
with
four generations were present- Edna Wilson, her daugh, The , love gift was given to
ter,.
Donna
Pullin., her granddaughter, Emily Ash, and her grandKodia_k · Baptist Mission , Carrie' ,
granddaughter,
Emily Ash; and Dorothy McCloud, her daughter-in.Bell Brown, Meigs County Counlaw, Veneda McCloud, her granddaughter-in-law, Candy McC loud,
ciI on Aging;, Veterans Memorial
and her great-granddaughters, McKay Ia McCloud.
Hospital Au•iliary. a sc hol arship
The Lord's Prayer in unison closed the program .
person . God's Net , a youth pro;
Others
attending were Trudy Marshall and her mother, Eileen
gram for Meigs County, ·hot lunchHall
;
Coke
Ambrose and daughter, Vicky Russell ; Valerie, Olivia and
es for a senior citizens, and supCarly ' Carpen!er, gran.ddaughters of Marjorie Walburn; Glenna
port for an Indian girl in Murrow
Riebel and granddaughter, Angela Buckley; Sarah Fowler and
Indiana Children 's Home ,
daughter,
Martha King and granddaughter, .Marsha King ; Vicki MorLunch was serve d to Barbara
row
and
mother,
Ruth Crouch; Kate Wilson and daughter, Sharon
Gheen, Mildred Hart, Lilian HayHawley,
Faye
Wallace;
Juanita Griffith; Lilly· Hubbard, Helen Bodman, Martha Lou Beegle, Mary K.
.
imer,
Sidney
McCloud
and
daughter, Patricia Clark; Angela Young,
Yost , Geraldine Cleland, and
Dorothy Meadows and daughter, Donna Meadows and granddaughNaomi Stobail by the hostess.
ter, Maria Meadows, Ruth Ebersbach, and daughter, Darla Siley.
\

Students wi ll explore popul ar ni1ed ao;; 'the oldl!st mot her, and
'Julie Curti s. as th e yo ungest. Each
site s anJ rCI..'C JVL' in h JI"IllJt!ve h&lt;.uHJouts tn help them cn'ntinue· to usc rn nthcr n.::L·c ivcd a potted tlm\' CL
Mcmhcrs were rem in ded that
thi s nnfw rt ant information tooL
Free cla sses ha ve bee n sc hl! rl- th l! 65th anni versary of the Coun·

day cve nirlgs from 6:30 till H p.m.

4expefe~~£~ ra~¥J~y On~

I~:;========;:::=:=::;::======~======il
r
·•

·Boci'~Jty ScrapborJk

. ' -.. ,,

irrational because I'm not gelling: .
enough rest. I need your help.--::
SLEEPLESS IN MIAMI
,
DEAR MIAMI: If separate bed-• '
rooms are not possible , l recom -'
mend ·earplugs and an eye mask . .lf
that doesn ' t solve the problem, ask
your doctor to recommend a sleep . ,
disorder clinic for treatment. ·
Feeling pressured to have sex? :
How well-informed are you? Write :
for Ann Landers ' booklet "Sex and'
the Teenager." Send a self- ·
addressed, long, business-si~e enveIone and a check or money older for
$3.75 (this includes postage and
handling) to: Teens, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box I 1-562, Chicago, Ill.
60611-0562. (In Canada, send
$4.55.) To find out more -about Ann
Landers and read her past columns,
visit the Creators Syndicate web
page at www.creators.com.

po!Ots.

HENDRIX
CAMPSITE RENTAL
•

'

~

~

...
'I

,,"

�.
•
•

f,rlday, May 21, 1999

I

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 e The Daily Sentinel

.

Friday, May 21, 1990

The Daily Sentinel• Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

AILEYOOP

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle

ALDER

1

c.....p~acenuv

40

ACROSS

PHILLIP

Mlf·Utllfied

MlotrMI

41 Gl't ockl-1

43 ~ie81

7 "He who

dlvlalon
13 Unablct
to--"
be 45 lbka
a cllolce
441 "Encore!"
14 Surge
47 Egyptlon
15 Mtkoe Hrlout
boy·klng
16 Salad gr..,.
441 Comlltlld MOd
17 Chem!QI aufflx 51 Cubln 18 Spike of corn 54 Melodic
20 SfrUII!IIe
55 Flowering
21 Actreao Carter
ohrub
23 52, Roman
56 S..to out
24 Bound
57 Mouu, e.g
25 R""'anovtHie
27 Cowboy gur
DOWN
29 Stag'o mete
31 Mother Tereu, 1 "A Doll'1
e.g
Houae" author
2 Savanna cub
32 " ROll- roM"
3 Tago
33 Droll agcy
4 Toke
odvanllge of
34 Congenllll
5 To bl,ln
37 "-ndary

•...,.,.nded

Carpentry Remodeling AdditionS
Oetks Porches Drywall Pa tnl
1ng 740-44l•I31Ei

~Willllod

Kousekeeper lor Busy HouuhOkl One day Per Week Prefer
ably Friday Send Resume Refer
ences and Hourly wage AeQwra
ments to CLA PO BoJr &lt;174
%GaiiJP'&gt;'is Oa tly Tribune GatltpO
Is, Oh 45631

Ch•ldcare provider DHS certtf!ed
1e years experience h8'118 three
openings M•ddlep ort Rutland
area caH 740 992-6718
Chnstlan Lady w!H babys•t m my
t~ome (weekdays) 12 Years Experience Good Refe rences!
(74Qi 441 -o359

Jewelry Sales Retail Sales and
Computer Expertenoe Required
Acquts rt tons Fme Jewelry 151
Second Ave Ga lltpolt&amp; Apply
Monda'/ ttvu Friday

CNA With 20 Yrs Exp And Exce !l

K1tchen help wan ted- 30 to 40

hours per week , evemng wo rk
4pm to 10 0&lt; 1\pm apply Monday
or Tuesday after 4pm at D&amp;M
Pizzas &amp; Sut1S S~cuse on

740 256 6342 Also Nutritious
Meal Planning And Whee l Chair

Accessible
E &amp; S Lawn Serv1ce Design 1m

Medical Processo r FT /PT No
E~ Nee Will Tra1n PC Req Earn

plementatl on
and Servl ee
Available fo r Sprin g Clean up
fert1hzmg and planllng Free estl·
mates Satisfaction guaranteed
Greg MilhOan 304/675-4628

4()1( CaH800-663-7440

Medica l Processo r FT /PT No
Exp Nee Will 'Train PC Req Earn
~OK

Referen ces Has Pnvate

Room And Full Care In Her Home
Fo r TM Elder ly For More Info

Call 800-663-7440

ElecHic Maintenance Service
Wiring Breaker Boxes. Light Fix
ture Healing S~stems and Re

M•ntal Health Specialist per
manent lu ll ttme positio n wilh
southern Ohio agen cy Minimum
r equirements Include masters
degree but prefer Oh•o licensed
psychologist w1th Ph 0 4 Ei years
related eJ~penence LISW, -LPCC
or LSP Responsibilities Include
evaluations assessments re
ports consultations and all as
peels ol theraoeutl c actn11l1es
working primarily with children
W•ll be working m Jackson and
poSSibly Gall1a co utl tl es Com
petllive salary and benellts TWo
reference from previous emplo~
ers reqUired Call Career Con
nect1ons (?.l0)-594·4941 M F 9·

modeling (740)441 1401
Georges Portable Sawmill don t
haul your logs to the mill just call

304 675 1957
fhggs Contracting Rooting Vmyl
Sidi ng 15 Years Experience
Free Estimates References
Ava l ta~e

Mary s Oaycare tow rates, llexible
hOurs 18 years expenence
Open 24 hours per day 7 days
per week Openings for tuU time or
part time children or if you need a
day evening or mght out CPR
and llfSt a1d cert ified certified
nursing assis tant all meals and
snacks proiJided now accepting
any age children Call 740-742·
0506 any11me

5 EOE!AA
Mu!H Otlice Wor\(er part time
general oll1ce experience com
puter/ ke~board lmowledge, pur
chasing correspondence b1ll1ng
payables receivables cash han
dllng depos its flexible hours
bondable PICk up appUcat10ns at
Middleport Utll1ty Off1ce 237 Race
Street Middleport OH App lication&amp; accepted until 5pm June 4

Need s1tter tor the summer? Day
care w1th a pool Open Monday
thru Fnday ask for Kelly, 740
667 6460 T~pers Plams area
Painting lawn servJCe &amp; pl...nbu'IQ
Low rates Call740-591 9617

EEO Employer

W111

Now Hiring A Full T1me Cake
Decorator Possible 30 35 Hrs
Per Week, Day Shllt Only Cake
Oecoraung Expenence Requ1red
W1lh Resume Call GaiMpoiiS Oauy
Queen 740-446 3276

do

odd

jobs

hauling

(304)675..538
Will Haul Anything ! Clean Up any
thing! Work lor $5 00 hour! (740}
367.0140 Plus Try-ServiCe
Yard work mowing hedges w1nd
ows gurters painting call 740
992 3193 or 740 992 7821 ask
lor Dana or lea~~e a message

Now taking applications for ex
perlenced grill &amp; prep cook Apply
at Harts Kountry Kitchen Racine
Ohio between the hours of 2 4
No phone caMs please

FINANCIAL

Director of Patient .Accountmg
position ava~able at Oak H1ll
Commun.ty Medical Center Qual
lflcatlons three years business
office e~CpE~rlence knowledge of
hospital palientactount•ng and
Bachelor's In accounting re
sponsibllltles directlorVsuper
vision of patient account1ng office
all billing lunc11ons and account
receivable management II Inter
ested please send resume to
Oak Hill Community Medical Center .Attention Brenda McKenz1e
350 Charlotte Avenue Oak H1ll

210

Business
Opportunity

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you 110 business with people you know and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have Investigated
the offering

230

Professional
Services

Carpet and Uphotste ~ y Cleaned
without 'Steam• or Absorbent
Compounds Soapless .Anti Re
so11 Detergents used exclusive
ly Sale for all fabrics Fast dry
ing (1 2 hours) Eliminates over
wetting Guaranteed Work Call
Clearly Clean at (304)675-4040
ror Free Est1matesl

Person with positive anltudes and
excellent work ethic Ability to ap
ply service techniques, telephone
skills and computer skills to work
well with clients 1-on-1 and complete multi-tasks with attention to
detail Complete benefl1s pro·
gram Send Resume CLA- 472 %

Gallipolis Dally Tribune 825 Third
Ave GallipoliS Ot'l 45631

Does Your House Sid1ng Deck
or Dnveway need a cleaning? If
so Pressure Washing 11 the an
swerl Call Clearly Clean at

Postal Jobs to $18 35/Hr Inc
benefits No Experience For
App And Exam Info Call 1-800

(3041675

813 3585 Ext 8826 8AM·9PM
7 Days Ids Inc

40~0

1or a Frea Es

umate

TURNED DOWN ON

Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center
Is now accepting applicatiOns lor
part time housekeepmgllaundry
and dietary aide positions Must

SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We Wlnl
t ·88S·582·3345

wee

WALL·CE1LING CLEANED EX·

kends Appt~ In person to 1111 out
an application or send {esume to
Rocksprings Rehab1hta11on Center, 38759 Rocksprings Ad Pomeroy OH 45769 EOE
Scenic Hills Nursing Center Is
Now Accepting Apphallons For
The Pos1tlon Of Social Serv•ces
Director LSW Please Send Re 1,1
sume And Salary Requirements
To Charles Brown At Scemc Hills
Nursing Center, 311 Buckridge

PERTLY Saves on repainting tn
definitely We use the exclusive
Von Schrader V53 Power Wall
Cleamng System Protects paint
leaves glass retards chalking
Anu Mildew no odor saMizes
Free esllmates Call Clearl~
Cle
t (304)675 '"'"

1

1, ,..••n•a-itiiilii~--iiiiiiiiiiiliijj'

Jload Bklwell, OH
(Member 01 EOEI

~5614

By owner 725 Page Street Mid·
dieporl, house &amp; 3 lots must see
10 apprec11te w•ll sell house w1th

out lots 1or $89 000

7~0

992

2704 740-992 5696
Cheshire Area 1500 Sq ft Ctn
ter Air Gas/Heat 3 Bedroom&amp;

""""n and Dining Room (740)
367-0241
Corner Lot 2605 Garfield Ave ,

P1 P1 $69 900 (304)675 3379

(Weekends Only! Please app~ at
311 Buckridge A&lt;l Bidwell Oh
45614
Seeking Cert•f•ed Nurse A1des
Part Time Rotating Shilts West
Vlrglrlla certlhcatlon requ~red
Apply at Point Pleasant Center/
Genesis Eldercare State Route
62 Route 1. Box 326 Po1nt
Pleasant W)/25550 EOE
Someonl to spend the n1ght w•th
the elderly mldmght Sam, 5 days
per we4k, $10 per day 740 992

5039 or 740.992-4410
Vacancy for Preschool Super
visor Submit letter of Interest. re
sulme, references ana copy of
current certllicate to John Constanza 507 Richland Av8.Que
Suite 108 Athens OH 451'01
Deadline Is Juno 15, 1999
Vacancy lor Special Educat1on
Coordinator Submit letter ol inter
est resume, references and copy
of current certificate to John Con

stanzo. Superln\endenl, A\hens
Metgs Educatlonal Service Center 507 Richland Avenue Suite

REAL ESTATE

:2 Year Old Frame Home, 2 Bed

108 A\~ns OH 45701 Deadhne

rooms Kllchen/LIII!ng Room U111t

iaJune 15 1999

ty Bath Baseboard Heat 112
Area 112 mile from 35 Thurman

..

180 Wanted To Do

$39,500 00 (740)·682·9032 0 ~
(740)-682-6347

SundayMay·
23lleb,
1999,Show
10 00 lo
3 00 Holltlay·lnn RoU18 71 Route
35, Gallipolis, Curran1, Rauraes
Pillow PaiS and IW: Tltoasures
Starting At $5 00, l'o!1oniMzed
Display Boool, Free AarnloJionll
Flri!TimetnAreaVotyl.argo

2103 Moun1 Vernon Avenue 3BR
1 112BA • Family Room, Garage,
Cenlra!Air, Patio, Porch $77,000
(304}67S.2S33
3 Bedroom Spll1 En1ry, Brick
Homo on Rou1e 2, at M1 Allo

====0::,==-l Built-In
Kitchen Olnlngroom, LR.
3 Balho, FP, Woodburnlng stove.

~Asonmon=-~:::;:,d

Near Moizer Immediate Posses
~on

74Q-44&amp;-96n

0641
For Sale By Owner •eA. 3000
Square Foot House 4 Car Ga rage, 5 .Acres. Very Se cluded

$199,999 (803)366-9436
Great l oc ation!! large Roomy
House 1 78 Acres Private 6929

State Route 588 (7.WI·24!;.!1448
House For Sale 2219 Oak St

Pt Pteasan1 $28 000 (3041895
3082
House For Sale Centrally Locat·
ed 2321 Jellerson Avenue Pt
Pleasant (304 )67 5 1368 or

(304)895-3184
Large 8 Rooms 2112 Baths Well
Equ•pped Kitchen .Appliance&amp;
stay 2 Woodburing Fireplaces
Hot Water &amp; electric Heat AC
1112 mil m city of Gallipolis Ask

Restored VIctorian home situated
on 12 acres VIllage Middleport,
secluded and private appoint
ment call740-992 5696

Spring Valley 2 story lamlly
home 4 Bedroom, 2 112 Baths
L1v1ng Room D1nlng Room Eat•ln
K1tcherT lg Family Room 740·

320 Mobile Homas
for Sale
*' .. Amazing .... 5 Bedrooms 2

112 bathS, over 2 000 sq tt for
less than $400 mo Free Delivery

&amp; Set HOO 948 5678
1985,14x651t 2 Bedrooms CfA
Furnace New Appliances (740)

446-2751
14x70 Fleetwood Trailer 1999, 3
bedroom 2 baths half-lurnlshed,
Please COfltact (740)·379·2726 or

(7401 379 2734
14x70 Oaitwood Mobile Home, 3
bedrooms 2 Baths Like New
Must be moved Includes 2
porches $14 400 or best offer

16x80 Vinyl Shingle , Assume
Loan. 1 800-383-6862
1973 Hillcrest two bedroom mo

(8031388 9436

1 Acre • with 14x70 , 3BR, 1 1/
2BA Trailer with 3 porches
1 Acre Land wanted to build onl
1 Acre Lot left For Sale In Mason,
1 Building Site left oil Route 33
In Mason $15 000 an Acre

(304)882 3772
5 Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;
Lake VIew
Gallla County
$32,000 More Acreage .Available

SACRES
In the ooumy, Only $9 100 00 wl1h
Count')' Water Woods MeadOws
Beautlfullll Double wides are Permtnad
S% down Land Contrat:\ wl\h 1\p·
proved Credit Frea Maps Going
last call Today, 1 (800)-213-8365
6 Miles from Town State Route
141 Road Frontage, Co Water

(7.WI-379·2830 After 5 00 pm
Almost 5 Acres On Blacktopped
Jim H1ll Ad 17500, In Mason
County Septic Tank, City Water
Access Cave On Back Of Prop
erty Must Sell Call 313 294·

2446
BRUNER LAND
74o.441·1Ci2

Gelll1 Co

Hunters!! South Off
SR 218 Williams Hollow Ad 68
Wooded Acres With Stream,
$~5

500 Public Wa\er Friendly
Rklge Ad 15 Acres $14 000 City
SchOO~

Melga Co Rutlanc;l, Whites Hill
Rd 11 Acres $14,000 or 9 Ares

$12,000 PubliC Wa\er Danville
Briar Ridge Rd 7 .Acres S13 000
On SA 325 Nice 5 Acres
$16 000, Pubic Water
Call NOW For Free Maps +
Owner Financing Into Take 10'%
Off Ust Pnce On Cash Buys!
Lot For Sale Suitable lor Mobile
Home or Building Slle Approx
1matel~ One Acre Land Water

Tap (304)675-30301875-3431

500 .Acre&amp;,

We Pay Cash 1·800·213 8365,
An1hony Land Co

RENTALS

oo

from $279 to $358 Walk to shop

&amp; movies Call 7~0·446 2568
Equal Housing Opponunlty

liTWffN MY INGOMi
ANI&gt; MY OUT60,
1 I&gt;ON'T ttAVe
ANY
$1 ANPSTILL.

Christy s Family Living, apart
ments, home &amp; tra!ler rentals,
740 992 4514, apartments avail
ab~

lurniShed &amp; unlurn~hed

First Avenue, One And Two Bed-

rooms From $275 ·$350rMo So
cun\y Depo~t 740-441-o952
Furnished 2 Bedroom Apartment,
Across From F»ark AC No Pets,
References Deposit $325/Mo

740.446 8235 740-448-{)577
Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside .Apartments In Middle

pori From $249·$373 Call 740·

Electric Stove 2 years old Enter·
talnment Center, $350 00 Computer tabla f35 00 Kitchen tables,

$35 00 1740)-446·322~

For one Price, Variety Store
Closeout Items, Showcases, Ta·

bios, Crall Supplies And Mise
(14()) 256-6206
For Sale 15x30 Above-ground
Oval Swimming Pool with pump

&amp;accessories (304)875·1702 or
(304)875-6482 Great Deal!

Modern 2 Bedroom Apartment

For Sale 50" RCA Homo Theatre
Big Screen TV $800 Kenmore
Dryer, $90 Kenmore Counter Top
Otshwasher $100 (304)675·
6693

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apar tments, Includes Water
Sewage Trash, $315fMo 740

446 0008
One bedroom apartment 10 Mid
dleport one bedroom furn ished

house in Galllpols. 7~0.992 9191

TWin Rivers Tower now accepting
applications for tBR HUD sub·
sidized apt for elderly and hand·
!capped. EOH 304·675-8879
Upstairs Three Room Apartment
At 651 Second Avenue, Galllpo·
lis Next To Library $350/Mo
Plus Oeposlt, No Pets, Call Deb

460 Space for Rent

Grubb's Plano tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Ne4!1d Tuned? Call the

30'x40'x8'. Paln\ed 61081 Sld1ng
GaMI\ume Steel Roofing, 15 x8
1rack dOOr, 3' walk door, $6 888
Erectedllron Horse BulldeiS 1·
(8001-352·1045
Used lilt Truck Forks For Sale,

Various Sizes $75 00 · $100 00

1992 GMC, Extended Cab Nelv
Leather Seat Covers..- Tool Box

Burner 740-379 2757

Easy on Gasl (740) 446-4385

Livestock

.630

4 year old kid broke Appaloosa
porr,~ 10 year old mara kid broke,
also riding lessons Ruth Reeves

Health Alder like new, paid $500
asking S100, electric range ask·

uneil For

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired Now &amp; Rebulh In Stock
Coli Ron Evans. 1·800-537-9528
Johnson's Used Furniture fAp·
pllances, 7o40·44e-•o39 740~46·
1004, 5 Miles Out Bulavllle Pike
Kee~r

Road, Blue

large metal wardrobe recliner,

1wo 22 rilles 740.9•9·3228
One two piece Living room Suil
Has Couch and Loveseat Chair
Pfus End Tables Included! Call

(7.W)-446-4274

Fair !'lOs 1or Selel Excoltent Blood

more lnlormation Call

(74~):245·5872

0583j"-

or (740) 367·

For Sale 13 Year Gelding, Tennessee
Walker
$1 000

(3041S78-3259, Alter 8PM
Performance Tested Polled Here
lord J;Julls 1·3 yrs old Above
average EPD's~ an~ guaranteed
to Breed Certified &amp;Accredited

Herlf. (304)675-18881675-3367
Smi9 1. Quarter Mare Sorrel 8

yea!• old $700 001 (7401 367

7221

710 Autos for Sale

'

1233

1997 14x70 Trailer 2 Bedrooms

2 Baths, Must Sell! $19 500
(740)·388.()434
1997 Doublewlde on 2 t/2 Acres

3BR, 2BA Storage Bldg , Direct
TV Sa1elllte. $57 .ooo Will show
between 5PM 8PM (304)458
1033
1997, 14x70 Trailer, 2 Bedrooms,

2 Sa1ha Mus! Sell! Wllh Cleared
Lott"$25,000 (740)-388 0434
Low Interest Rates For 1st Time
Buyers, Limited Time Available,

ooo-383-8862
Good selection ol used hom11
with 2 or 3 bedrooms Starting at

$3995 Quick delivery Call 740
385-9621
Alr. 7~5

5ai'e Central

New 1999 14x70 three bedroom,
Includes 6 months FREE tot rent
Includes washer &amp; Cryer skirting,
deluxe steps and setup Dnfy

$200 74 per monlh wl1h $1150
down Gall-r-tiOQ-837·3238
New Bank repoa only 2 left we
finance ca11304-722-71..S

~

388 0013

510

\~J.J'{'Jo\ 7

.

Up, 4cly, 4sp, am/pm AI Wheels •

33' Tire&amp; 4'1nch lift new Shocks,
Brakes. CB Jolrita ahd llniv8rJM:

BIG NATE

Joints Runs Great! S, 800 OBO

(7401 992 8978 or (7C0)·381·• f
~

730 Vena &amp; 4-WDs
!5 '

1992 Chevy As1ro van (EXT!.

door 881 152 miles blue wUh blue t
Interior GL trim package, air, am/ ~
lm cas.sette olean rear doors

damaged asking $3400 call 740. ,
992· 1506 days or 740 9~9·284ol •
~;

740

••

Motorcycles

1990 Honda Gold Wing s E Trltco '
with a 1998 California Sidecar-:
Sport trike Cover Converston Kit 46,000 mUes Extra Chrome and

1trlng

East
Pass

olternallvo
Civil rlghto ·
loader Porko
28 Reddlth·

26

Pae&amp;
Pass

Pass

brown
30 Food

34 Convoy

36 Cycle leod~n

Typical key clue

38 Small

By Phillip Alder
L1ke !he dog that dtdn ' t bark m the
Sherlock Holmes story, bndge deals
usually contrun a key clue for findmg
the wmnmg approach What ts the
vnal aspectm th1s one1
Although South opened w11h a 16·
18 no-trump, North was opUmJsuc
headmg toward game I would have
passed out one no-trump Thai shows
you what I know, however, as four
spades would surely have made w1th
th1s layout Yet, after North used
Stayman and tnv1ted game m spades,
South offered 1hree no-trump as an
alternative Perhaps p1ctunng hiS
partner WJtll four low spades North
passed
West led the d1amond SIX seven,
ace, four Back came the dmmond
two Th•s suggested !hat the d1a·
moods were sphttmg e11her 4-4 or 6·
2 (If they were 5-3, East would have
returned h1s h1gher remammg d1a·
mond, not h1s bottom one ) So, Sou1h
grabbed the tnck wtth ht s ktng
Declarer conlmued wtth the ace
and another spade, East won wnh the
k1ng and swttched to !he club four
What now1
Clearly, diamonds were 6 2, olh
erw1se, East would have re!Urned the
sun Also, Soulh needed two club
tncks wtthoul lettmg Wesl wm a
tnck In tsolatwn, It IS best ,to JtJ Serl
the Jack, hopmg East has both ht gh
honors However, that couldn ' 1 be the
case here East had already produced
1he spade king and dtamond ace
W1th the club lang-queen as well, he
would have opened 1he b1ddmg
So, Soulh won wtth !he club ace,
bemg rewarded when !he queen
dropped A hean to lhe dummy and
a club toward the Jack established
declarer 's mnth mck

40 Fizzy drlnkl
42 Academy

PEANUTS

I JUST DISCOVERED

I

SOMETHING ..

THE'( HAVE CLASSES !

Houaehold
Goods

5612

39 Humphrey'•

Award
44 Brown
49

partner

50 Su-'allve

•ufft•

52 Conlllnlng

nitrogen

53 Mournful

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity &lt;;:~' cryplogtams ate c1eated

lrom quotations by lamous people pasl and presenl
Eac11 1ettet 1n the Cipher slande lor ano\her Todays due )( squals J

'M

VJRS
J F

M

PTV

M

HPMNS

CRTVR

MRHMUO

SPO

T R

XL H S

GO

S T

KTTC

$6000, 740-742 2301

Don t g&lt;t stung by hig~ pncts r
Shop the closJJ(i&lt;d Sr&lt;l..,

1

• '

'

Bomber Basa Boat 85 HP John- .J
son Till And Trim Trailer Excel· t

...

WOlD

0 Reorrong•
lttfe!r• of
four scrambled words

the

be

low to form four words

PANDEM

AUEST
,~

I

_H_A_W_E--.1,;,~
1 16 1

r --T

I

s
.I

.

•

.

.

.

.

.

.

If all the cars tn the counlry
were placed end to end some
fool would pull out and try to .-

UPSURE
I
1:7:--r,--r,-.-,,-.
,--.
.
.
,
.
.
~
I
.

.

e~~~p;ere'

rhe Chuckle quoled
by Ml.ng 1n the m1 ssm g words
you develop from step No 3 below

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Gravel- Ctgar- Blunt· Jmgle · BIGGER
It's easy to restratn anger 1f the other person 1s BIG·
GER
'

MAY 21

Rent R1 160 Near Nonh GaHia
$400 00/month Deposll $400
No Pets! Reference After 8 aopm
(7.W}-446·8495
Your Home Ia Just A Phone Catl

-ENT •

304·736-7295

420 Mobile Homes

2 Bedroom MobNe Home In Port·
er Area No Pets, You Pay All
Uti!Uea Deposit 1 References

1993 Pontiac Gran,d AM. Teat,
Loaded! $3.900 00 (740) 8408

Required 740-388-9162
Mobile home for rent fn Racine ,

no pe1S. 7.W 992 5858
740-448-1279

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom """"""'"" fur

ntahed and unfumlahed security
deposit required, no pets UO
N~e.

Firat Mon1h

740-4&lt;16·2957
1 Bedroom Apt Unlurnllh'8d
$275 month, utilities paid Viand
Street. Pt
Pleasant
WV

(304)736-5554

1 Room &amp; Bath Rio Grande Area
$200/Mo • All Ullllles Included,
O.poiK ljequlred. Call Toll Froe

1·888-&amp;I(H)e21.

1994 Chevy Beretta, 3 1V, AMIO,
AC PW, POL, 75,000 miles
$5, 300 00 OBO (7.W)-44 H)223
1996 Geo Metro 2 Door, 4 Cylnder Autom
AIC, Canette

53,000 Milta $3 101t.OO, OBQ
740-~7. 740-258-9tl3• •

ASTRO·ORAPH

WATERPIIOOI'ING
UllcOntlltlonalllftl- guaranleo" -

llvlngaton'a Ba&amp;;ment Water'
Proofing, all baaament repair&amp;
dont, free asumatea, tlfetl.mt'
guararnea, 12yra on Job ••Ptrl·

Saturday, May 22, 1999
The year ahead could be a banner
one for you if you live up to your
potential. Capitalize on yoor oppor·
tunides, 10 yoo'll have no rcgrelllater
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) If you
arc out of sync with eve~~tstoday, tt
could severely dllwe your eft"ecdvenea. Be copirant of whit's goillJ on
around you and participtte '" a umely fuhion 'J'rytllJ to patCh up a broken romance? The AltrctOraph
Matcltmaker can help you undentand
what to do to make the .elabonship
work M~l S2.75to Matchmaker, c/o
th11 newspaper, PO. Box 1758, Murray Htll SIIUon, New York, NY

::ance-:-":.(304-:.)8_95-;..388=7.:._____;,..

101'6

Local refertncl&amp; furnllhed Ea·
· ~ 1P75 Cf!l U Hot, 1740)
44tl 087d, 1-800·287·0578 Aog·
eot Wal*q1ooollng •
•

Appllonco Pena And Service All

Name Branda Over 25 Ytlf'l Ex·
perlence All Work Guarantee~.
~ch Clly Moytog, 740·4CI.

1996 Plymouth Breez:e, 150,000

miles,

Trailer For Rent &amp; lot For Rent,

440

540

J

'::~:~:~' S@\\~lA~ t.~s· ,
141tt4 Ky CLAY I. ,OLLAN _;;_______

992-5502

992-2187

R T S

BJGMT

B~autlfut River View Nice Two
Bedroom 1 112 Bathroom Home
On 108 Terrace Street Stove &amp;
Relrtgerator, Basemenr One Car
Garage, Washer !Dryer Hook-Up,
Deposit &amp; References Required
No Pets, Rent Discount can 740

conditioned $26Q-.$300, sewer,
water and trash Included. 740

STT ,

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Carmen McRae learned 1o tnhale a lync and then
brea1he l1fe 1n1o 1he words she exhaled • - (Cnllc} Bun A Folkan

required 614 759-7959

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes air

VPT

VMSPTLS

IFRIDAY

1093

for Rent

B TN

750 Boats &amp; Motora
for Sale

Available secluded farm home
near Dexter, deposit and Ieese

Aw~

ermine
NeHher'a

'

ion! Con~l\lon 52,400, 740·256· •

Free With One Year Lease
$279 00 Per Month, Plus Ulllllkta

WV $499 Down Single Wide,
$999 Down Double Wide 304·
736-3ol09
•

3.
Pass

pemopa
Corgo
Popcorn

250 AlES $1 eoo oo (304)·675· •

, 2650

Rent Buater New 1999 14x7D 2

Oakwood Homes Barboursville,

t r.\1"*\"C r-IO\ l£.'i ltl. ~
r.\UC,I-\ \lmUBlE 1

~

--~---------------88 Toyota 4 Wheel Drive Plch· ~

85 Potarius Trallbass 4-Whnler ;

5 Rooms and Ba1h, luM size Base

1 Bdrm , E111ra

Used SlngleWide, Around $100
po&lt; month Coil HIOQ-IM8-5678

l"'~()f

royoo ~ 141\"'-1 c.ouLO
rl»'l"ffi \f YOU DOO'i Tt:Ll.. \ti.E

I"'
'(E).!\

I

7371

ment, New Carpet! (740) 446·

1-1!88-738-3332

3 Bedfooml 2 Ba1h Rancn House
7 Years Old 28x30 Attached Ga·

Pass

2.

22
24

Evlnrudo w/ SS prop, 12124 Evln·

992·2218

or 3 Bedrooms Only $995 oo

me ~m~. t WN-~rro ~w.ep 1t~.t:

~

1998 GMC Sonoma 39,ooo ;
mites Asking 18.000 00 (740)· •

Llgh1s $15 500 00 (815)·387· '
7~44 Eve Weekends (740) 446· •

No pets References required

Plaast -Help! 3 Bedroom 2
Baths, just taka over Payments!

Down $195 00 per month Fret

~ 'I'OJIUL!ol( '(~!&gt;IOCOf

,...

I

cover tully rigged and garage
kept all In excellent condition

742·2795

~

I

Clean References &amp; Deposit Re
qui red $300 mon1h (304 )675·
19n

1992 14x7D Redman mobile
home 3 bedrooms storm wind ·
ows &amp; heat pump Included, 740-

BORN LOSER

1995 Dodge Dakota SLT, 4 Whl '
Dr 8Ft Bed, V.jj 5 Spd, 147,000,:
Mites $4 200 oo OBO 740 258• •

evenings

TRANSPORTATION

r

•

8461

MERCHANDISE

2 Bedroom House In Gallipolis
304·576-2438

1989 S· 10 4 Wheel Drive, $3500
1988 Chevy Cargo Van, $2.000 ~
(304}458-1050

Per Set, Will Trade For Wood

740-698·3290

lng $50, caU 7.W·940.2.W1

•

Sla!o9e lulldoni Spoct

plano Dr 74().446.4525

Off 35 Right On
House On left

...

looks good, $aiOO 740-949 2246

992·5064 Equal Housing Oppor
tun Illes

(740}-446·0390

Power King tractor, 14 hp, .tte•
deck scraper blade, plow cultivators, potato plow runs and

rude-trofltng motor Stratoa trailer

14X74

materfal

19 Have o cold,

Opening lead· • 6

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Onve

3 Bedroom House In Henderson

Cove,

3NT

North
Pass

Havilland
Part of USSR
SUHing

mate

1991 Stratos ball boat, 120 •

Royal

11
12

rodent

1304)773-5681

1988 Sk~llne Pinecreek 14X70
28edroom 1Ba1h 3 Ton Heat
Pump/Central Air Shingled Roor
Excellent Condlllon (304)675·
7045

8 Sarmon

Toledo

9 Atty 'a degree
10 Actrooo do

35 Loulolana

1978 Schultz 14x60 2 Bedrooms
Very Good Condition! Air Condll
t1oning Underpinning. Extras!

1-w 245 56n

WALKED
ON BY !!

PARSON tt

2.

Pa88
Pass

!NT

HE

COMES TH'

2 BR furnished home In Mason

0583

West
Pass

PAW It HERE

ery and Block Up I $8 950 00
(740)-446-o\75 (304)-675-5965

7~0.367

South

BARNEY

Apartment for rent in Middleport,
no pets, 740-992 5858

740-385..367

2 Bedroom. w/Basement &amp; Ga
rage Deposit &amp; References, No
Pets (3041875-5162

Portuguese

Vulnerable. Both
Dealer. West

663 Third Avenue . Gallipolis 2
Bedrooms $300
Plus Utilities
and one ITIOnth Deposit! (740)
245-9595

ble Or Judy A1740-446-7323

410 Houses for Rent

oubjecl

7 Sponlarde and

lemllles Cai (74Q)-446-o251

446-3481 74Q-44S-o101

We Buy Land 30

Svilao

6 Ford nop

t K 10 4
• A J 7

4 Bedroom Apartments lor Low
Income Fam111es Call for Income
Limits Available now to qualified

No Pe1&amp;1 (740}·643·0122 8 00·
4 00 After 6pm (7.W)-643·2916

1976 14x70 Kirkwood 2 Bed
rooms Plus Den Total Electric
Recondition like new! Free Oellv·

•KQ7

2bdrm apts , tQtal t~lectrlc ap·
pllances furnlahed, laundry room
lac•llties, close to school In town
Applications available at Village
Green Apts 1149 or call 740 992371t EOH

1975· 12x65 Holly Park 2 bed
Block UP! $7,950 00 (740)·448·
01 75 (304)-675-5965

aA854

$250 00 p&lt;~r mon1h plus $1 00 00
depos~ (304)773-5040

Mobile home site available belween Athens and Pomeroy call

room Total Electric Like New
through out! Free Delivery and

South

2 Bedroom Garage Apt In CHflon

7834

Real Estate
Wanted

• K 7 3
• 10 3 2
t A2
1K10542

•Q

Campus. 740-245-5858

Trailer Lot For Rent! {740) 446-

Park (7.W)·441-o150

East

• 8 85 t
tQJ8653

2 Bedroom Apartment Adjacent
To University Of Rio Grande

Tara Townhouse Apartments,
Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms. 2
Floors CA 1 112 Bath Fully Car
paled, Pallo, No Pets Lease Plus
Security Deposit Required, 74Q..

Trailer Lot For RenH State Route
775 one mile from 00 Me Intyre

g 7
9 8 6 3

West
• J 9

FARf,1 SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

oo

740-388 8878

360

•

•

month, $100 deposit 740· 992·
7806

$325
Month Includes Water
and Garbage Deposit Reference

Drywall, Siding, Roola, Add!·
11ons Pa ln11ng e1c (304)67&lt;
4823 or (304}67-«1155

'

Commercial Suildmg m Henderson For Sale or Lease Call

bile home 74() 992 5039

on nearly 5 acrea land (304)895
3881

rage, 12M2• Building Barn I

Business and
Buildings

Call (304)773 9107 or (304}773·
5155

Jlma Dryw•u &amp; Construction
New Construction &amp; Remodel/

Trac10r Shod, 69 1/2 Acres Or
Will Ball House &amp; LoU Meigs Co
740-992 3537

340

lng &amp;189 ooo oat Shown by Ap
pomunents' (740} 446 .. 559
Fam1ly Home, With Pool 2 Car
Gorge/ Apt Albany 7 Milas 0 u
Me1gs Mine 740-698 7150

2 Bedroom Apartment In New He
ven lor rent {304)882·211 9 day·

os 21 99

• Q 10 6 2
• A J 9

Poodlu (Toy), While Raglo
lered ,l,pprox 5 Lbs Full Grown
(7401-379 9081

or $300 mo (740)·367-&lt;!61 1

2 bedroom apartment In Middle
port we pay water, sewer &amp; trash
you pay gas &amp; electric, $200 per

North

warmed!

S5000each (740)-388.0013

Furnished or unfurnished! $300
mo 2 Bedooms all Electrtc Trail

lime (304)882·2328, evening

$15 000 (304)882 3772

For Sale by Owner! $123,000
Brick Nice family neighborhood
3 bedrooms 2112 baths FA LR
gas fneplace Recently remo
deled and updated! (740)·441

Beegle Pupploa, lull Blooded, No
papers, Shots and

1·Bedroom Apt ulllllles lnduded

388-8504

(7.WI245 5882

Delivery and Sal Up Call 1-800·
9ol8·5678

Lawn mowing and Odd Jobol Big
or SrnaUI Col S - ConioV High
School (740) 4&lt;16-2158

26 Acres Mit 6 Stall Horse Bam,
3 Bedroom House Fence 740

EXCELLENT CONDITION 2
Story 3 Bedro oms 2 112 8atl1s

Mobile Home For

310 Homes for Sale

330 Farms for Sale

$22 500 (304)57&amp;2890

Porch $14,000 (304)882·2248

Th1s newspaper w1il not
know1ngiy accept
advertisements for real estate
which Is In violation of lhe
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that all d\velllngs
advertised In th1s newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basiS

Aner 4 Years. 304·736-7295

$39 000 (304)882·3772

2Baths Skylights In Kitchen Is·
land Stove Underpinning &amp;
All real estate advel'llslng In
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 whi ch makes t •liegal
to advertise ~any preference
limitation or diSCrimination
based on race color rellg•on
se~e familial status or national
origin or any Intention to
make any such preference
limitation or dlscnmlnatoo "

Make 2 Payments No Payment

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
Don t Walt To Buy 3 Bed room
Home m New Haven Good COn
d1110n
$32 000 , Appra ised

1990

Scenic Hills Nursing center Is
currently accepting applications
For a Day $hilt Treatment Nurse

..

Lot (304)675-30301675-3431

245-9337

Oh 45656
EOE

be able IO work all ShiftS and

(304)675·2949

Beautllul Country Prope r t~ 4
Bedroom 2 Baths Fam11y &amp; Util·
ltv Room Central Air Half Acre

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

whl• wllh gray lnlerlor, ou-

tomalk:, air, anV!m caueltt. vary

nice, asking $8150. 740 992·
1506 days or 1•0 949 2844
OYIH11nga
1997 Ford Asplro, Aoluat 14000
mlleol Llka ~I $5 400 00 (74Q)256-1417or(740) 258 "??'
1997 Ford Explorer XLT Loaded,
28,000 Miles. Bat Fac1 Warr Ex·
cellenl Condlllon Prlca Redueldtl
7..0:4441-649 1
1997 Honda, Coupe, Sptelll
Edition, 2 Door, Fully Loaded

$14,500 (304)882·2623, Alta;
7PM
1987 Plvmouth Breeze, Loaded
$7 BOO 1998 GR Chorokoo,
$14,995 00 1992 Goo Slorm,
$2,000, 740-25H012
1998 D..p Purple Ch"") Cavell·
"' (304)675-7071

O&amp;C

General Home Main·'
t4!1ntnce- Painting, vinyl ltdlng,'
carpentry, doors, windows, balha.

'

mobile homo repair and ,... For
lrH e111ma1e call Che1 740.992·

8323

•

'

Protenlonal, 2Dyfl experlenCI

wl\h all maaonory, brick, block a
atone Alao room aqdttlons, gaetc Free eatlrriates '

840

and
Refrlger1tlon

R•ldentlai or commercial wiring,

I'IW 11rvlco or repol11 Maolef lJ.
cenaed electrician

Ridenour •

Elec1rlcol, WV000308 30C·675·
1786
•

CANCER (Jtme 21-July 22) Don't
anempt to match wits with someone
you know from past expenence 11 a
poor loser with a bad tempe&lt; Share
your time with those who CRJOY
renecuve dtscuuions.
LEO (July 23·AUJ. 22) By allowIRJ your expe&lt;:tattons to exceed real·
1ty you'.e etiCOUI'qinJ disappomt·
ment, especially when It comes to the

amount of comnensallon or worth of
ajob
r·-VIRGO (AuJ. 23-Sept 22)
Remam calm and unruffled al all
umes today, regardless of what
occurs when mvolved with otheR. If
you lose your cool, it coold make you
look bad mstud of the one who swred II
LIBRA (Sept 23-0cl. 23) Be
helpful to others today, but not to the
point of lakin&amp; on rcsponsibiht~
others should be doinc for them·
selves. It could leove you n:senlful
and spotl your day.
SCORPIO (Ot:t. 24-Nov 22) Be
th1ck slt.mned today IJid do not take
offense too mdlly of another who
distorts a rcm.t or action of yours.
Yoocan iland upforyournJitltwilh
dianil)' lnstud of .....
SAOmARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec.
21) If your soal• do not ha.. the
same importance of priority with
your pals, don't mllinwpret it to
mean they place little wonh II" your
Ideas. It simply means their intenata
are dtlfe.ent
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Ju. 19)
Provtded you do not tty to impooe

your wtll on your compentons today,
.elauonsh1ps should be rather pleasant and enjoyable Thmgs could
rapidly go down htll if you become
demandmg, however
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19)
Should yoo up JUII when your
coat•""' within reach today, all that
coocJ perfOillliiiCe yoo expended pre·
VJOUtly will be for naught Finish IS
strona as you bepn
PISCES (Feb 20-Man:h 20) It
won't matter that much 1f yoo ond
your mate foll to hannonize on all
IIttleS, as long as the lynco you'.e
bumnuna today contain more ••we 's"
than they do "l's."
ARIES (Man:h 21-Apnl 19)
• Don't moan about !he workload
aw11ting you today, mstoad use that
energy IO tacklo !he tasks and Jet
them done The pride of ach~evement
you 'II feel wtll be a tremendous
~eword

TAURUS (April :ZO.May 20) Be
u dlhJOnl in lookin1 out for the con·
cems of oiherna you ore 1n protect·
in1 ~own mteresls today and populan!)' will obound for you, Self·
involvemcnl will produce the opposite

at Allanta

(Lwe) (CC)

I

.

�Friday, May 21, 199~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Wow your walls with texture techniques
·By Bob Hoefl tch
There was music in air near the Sugar Run Mill Tuesday- literall y, and
it shouldn 't have been.
. Brent Zirkle, an associate of the mill , found four pieces of sheet music
lying on the ground close to the mill where it had apparently bl own out of
a ve hicle. Judging from manner in which it was assembled, the mu sic possibly may belong to a teacher.
·
An yone hav ing lost music should co ntact Denna Carr at the central office
of the Meigs Local School District) n Pomeroy and the fi nd wil l be turned
over to the indi vidual upon identification.
Former resident John J. Blake is the subject of a feature in the AEP publicati on, AE P Today, in tribute to hi s community service in Roc kport , Ind.,
where he is empl oyed with the power company.
Blake. producti on services leader at 'the Roc kport Plant, is a scoutmas ter,
c ~urc h leader and youth acti vitie.s director, a member of the chamber of
co mm erc~'s new leadership prog ram, a volunteer worker for South Spencer
Middle Sc hool' s outdoor lab and is helpin g with. an cffo f\t o reconstruct the
cntr·y gate to the city of Roc kport 's Lincoln Pi onee r Village. He al so has
hecn a youth sm;cer coach and a women's softball coac h. ·
John is married to Tammy Snider Blake and they have two children, John
C. Blake and Amand a Blake. He is the su n of John E. Blake and the late
· Sy lvia Blake of Middleport . Hi s . paternal grandparc niS arc Mrs. Venus
Blake and the late John B. Blake and maternal grandparents arc the late Mr.
and )VIr&gt;. And y Bird, all of Cull.oden , W Va.
'

I don't know Gc on.!~ Nn.: hols of Mason. W. V&lt;.1.', hut l admire h1s crcati v·
iLy and gc ncrosit):. ...
·

George wil l be creating a 40 foot by 21 1/2 fool steel sternwheel sculpture for the Pome roy community and hopes to have it completed by October
wh en the annual s.ternwheel festi val is to be staged . The sc ulpture should be
quite effedi ve when outlined'" li ghts and displayed in the community as a
part of the fest ival and hopefull y, can be. used advantageously on a yearround basi s. Nichols will absorb the cost s involved. I understand Nichols
also hopes to complete other stee l sculptures which will carry,out a Chri stmas holiday theme and en visions these lighted pieces to be used both on the
Pomeroy and .the Mason side of th e Ohio River.
l.'m certainl y loo king forward to the completed decorations.

and Wall coverings.
Of course , the cost ri ses with the
purchase of tools, rags and primers.
And, as with any do-it-yoursel f project, there are pitfall s. Entire wee kends have been ruined with projects
that have gone awry .
Here are some tJps:
' Keep it simple: Professionals
combine multiple colors and multi ple techn.iques. But begi nners should
stick with one or two colors and one
techn ique.
Practice makes perfect: Try the
technique on a piece of board before
beginning, and when you start the
technique in the room, po it hchind a
co uch or door.
Think lhe job through. first:
Continuity is important and tbugh l()
main lain in a bi g roo n~ ·· If it seems
like a hig job, start with a small
room first.
Some mi ghl wonde r why anyone
woul d add a new step .10 the process
of paint ing. Paintin g is hard enough
without havi ng '.t o roll a rag up the
wa ll or drag a comb over a perfectly
good com of paint.
Burg understands (he obsession:
" It 's som ething you can do yourself
and look bac k and say, '!did thi s.,.
Just don' t look behind the couch.

dabbed all over the wall to create a easier to work with than paint
slowly, said Tom
mottled effec t. Its popularity led the because they
way for a variety of other tech- Williamson, " paint pro" at Lowe's.
niques: dragging, combing, mask- Glazes also are tran5lucent, so they
ing, marbling, color washing, stamp- allow the base coat to show through ,
ing, smooshin g, crosshatching , even though the glaze may be the
thatching .· There is even a paint same color as the base.
While the &amp;laze is still wet, a
roller with des igns built into the roll .
·
clean
rag is rolled up the wall in verStores · and home- improvement
shows illustrate some methods, but tical lines, each just overlapping the
" the tec hnique is only limited to previous one. Rag- rolling leaves
your imagi nation," said David H. behind a repeating pattern of wavy
Ham berger II , owner of Fine Finish· lines,. although the effect varies
depending on the:. type of rag used.
ing and Decorating.
Ge nny Burg, manager of the Everyday household rags can be
paint. department at Hechinger 's, . · used, if they don'tleave behind lint,
said one customer painted her walls ahhough paint stores se ll rags
white, then handed her kids squirt designed for ragging and rag-rolling.
Ruffin was thrilled with the
gun s loaded with yellow paint and
all owed their creati vity to fini sh off re suli, adding, "It's work. And hard
on your shoulders going up and
the room .
Wanda Ruffin , store manager at down ."
Duron Paint s and Wall co vering.
· Decorative painti ng is cheap and
decided lo sponge the wall s in her unique: Each color blend is an ori g·laundry room. She liked the result , inal that the painter can match with
so she rag-rolled her kilchen walls. the room' s decor. And it's le ss
With rag- rolling, as witb some of the expensive than wallpaper.
The average prjce for wallpaper
other tec hniques, the wall is painted
wi th a hase coat. A sec ond coat of is $13 for a sin gle roll . An average
tcc hniqucs'thcy have see n on televi - paint, diluted with water or glaze,
bedroom takes aboul 16 roll s. That' s
about $200. A gallon of good
sion.
&amp;ncs over the base.
The tre nd started with sponge
Glazes, which arc clear and can eggshell late• paint is $20, said
. paintin g, where a sponge is li teral ly · be rni Ked with an y paint color, are . Karen Yost of Professional Paints

Ray and Me gan Andrews and their family have moved into the Lin c0ln
Hill R0ad , Pomeroy, home of the late A. R. and Evelyn Knight.
·
The large, brick home has been vacant for the past couple of years or so
since A. R. 's death . The Knight residence was through many years the scene
of a lot of aciion so it is refreshing to see the home come alive again as the
Andrews' add their personal tou ch to occupying the residence.
And even ·th ~ugh it's just spring the green , green grass of home is bccom·
rng the; brown, brown grass of home already. Perhaps, Tuesday's tains will
give the1 grass a shot in the roots. Brown graSS JUSt ain't fittin ' . Do keep
•
•
smiling.
'

Pharmacist speaks to retired teachers

By SHEILA CARMODY
YORK, Pa. (AP) - Long, long
ago, be fore home decorating shows
and mega-hardware stores, home
owners painted the interiors of th eir
homes with paintbrushes and rollers.
Bac k and forth, up and down,
along the edges until the walls were
covered.
The alternati ve was wallpaper.
Then the world of home improvement blossomed. Do-it-yourself
shows started showing up on tc lcvisio.n. Stores popped up offcri ng
. everything imaginable - and some
things un imaginable - fo r mak in g
home improvements.
Suddenl y, homeowners became
creativ e, prod ucts became ava ilahlc ·
and a new era in painting Was horn .
These days the one-co lor, twocoat paint job has give n way to dccoralive painting .:.._ with rags ,
co O)bs, sponges. and anything that
creates a repeti tive wall design.
.Phil Quinn, ·assis tant manager of
Sherw in-Wi lli ams Co ., has see n
interest e merge through hi s customers, who have questions ahnut

By LADIES ' HOME JOURNAL
A Meredith Corp; Publication .
For AP Special Features
Tw&lt;! magazines joined fo rce ~
recently to explore the relationship .
between mothers and their teen -age
· daughters . The results of a comprehen sive survey were reported in
Ladies ' Home Journal and Seventeen magazines.
"The world has changed dramatically for women since most of our
readers were teen-agers, and these
changes have had an en ormous
·impact on the lives of o'ur teen-age
daughters·," said Ladies' Home Journal editor-i n-chief Myrna Blyth.
The mother-daughter relat ionship
survey, which appeared last October,

Tammy Gruescr, pharamist ·at ·
· Fruth 's Pharmacy, was guest speak- ·
er when the Meigs County Retired
Teachers met for a luncheon recently at Trinity Church. '
Jean Alkire introduced Gruescr
who explained duties of a pharmacist including the added responsibilities in prescribing for patients in ·
consultation with their doctors. She
discussed medi cations that might

were given by Whitehead who noted
that the local ci)apter received $100
for-a 10 percent increase in membership for the year and a $25 award for
second place m the state '" excel·
lenc,e in organizing a retirement
planning seminar for active teachers.
The awards were presented by the
state organization. Carol Ohlinger
gave the treasurer 's report .
After the business meeting the
interac t and cause problems. includ- &lt;;iolden Bells choir of Trinity
in g some herbal remedies. Reason s Church directed by Dixie Sayre,
for ha ving to wa1t . at a phannacy entertained with a sing-along. Memwere explained as the ,need for the bers were then invi.ted to try playing
many safety checks.
the bells . Other:s attending were
Ma xine Whilehead, pres ident, Nonga Roberts, Martha Vennari , Jim
opened the meeting and introduced a Vennari, Abbie Stratton, Kathleen
gue st. Jaco b Frowine, Di striCt 7. Scull , .Daisy Blakeslee, Charles
director of .the QRTA .. Nelli e Parker Blakeslee , Grace Weber, John
ga ve prayer preceding the dinner, Riebel , Elma Louks , Eileen Buck,
and Rachel Downie had devotions. Bernice Carpenter, Ida Diehl , ·
Highlights of tlic distnct n\eeting Dorothy Woodard , and Helen Maag.

drY

co vered many .topics. The following
is a sampling of results:
Moms and teens share some of
the same stresses:
- Ei ghty-four perceni of moms
who answered the poll work outside
ti)e home. Fifty-six percent said their
daughters hold part-time jobs.
- Forty-six percent said their .
daughters helped with housework.
Money and spending:
- Forty-two percent of teen girls
said they spend most of their cash on
c lothes and makeup; 41 percent·
splurged to go out with friends . ~
- Daughters view their mom s
spending habits as s.ensible and
practical; 95 percent said that if
mom won the lollery, she would sink

.the money into her children's college educati on or use it to pay otT
debts.
The battle zone:
-Moms repon that 54 percent of
the time, fights with their daughters
occur because of the teens' ani tude.
Twenty,one percent fight over
whether she helps around the house.
-Only 7 percent of moms said
they fight with their daughters over
grades.
- Forty-one percent · Of teens
agreed .that their moms are m.ost
likely io gripe about their behavior
rather than about their grades and
friends .
Fears, hopes and dreams:
- Seventy percent of moms c.ited

,

'

h~ppl~ess

as the •one thin g they
wanted most for their daughter: onethird . hoped she would lead a long, ,
heallhy li fe .
- Forty-three percent of '"others
said their greatest fear for thetr
daughters is thal she will be a victim .
of a violent crime; more than 25 percenl worry .that she will die prcma. turely.
The median age of respondents to
the Ladies' Home Journal survey
was 43, and the medi an age of teen·age daughters was 16. Seventy-nine
percent of the respondents arc martied ; 85 percent have two or more
· children ; 80 percent are collcgc-cducated .

''

.

• •

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•

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• •
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•
•

• • .,. • •
• t • • ' o

' ~"~ ~.

,-,

...

"'~·' ':' . - . · ;

'

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..

•

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTER THE SALE

)ERRY BIBBEE
:It,s the ·Dealer Behln,J T.IJe Deal

That Malres The BEAL Dllrerenee/

Toledo bashing - it's nothing personal
TOLEDO. Ohi o (AP) - Sure,
calling the minor-league baseball
team the Mud Hens is a bit demean ing.
And yes, thrs is a blue-collar crty
wherc coney dogs arc the mosl popular rtems on restaurant menus and
people foll ow bowling as a compel·
itive sport.
But is .that rea son enough to make
Toledo a standard punch line for
comedians, ad "{riters and cartoonists?
A recent outbreak of "Toledo
bashing" has stirred up this Lake
l3rie city's ire even though most of
its 300;000 residents are accustomed
to being kicked around. The . latest
shot came in the May 10 edition of
Time magazine.
·
. Politicai
cartoonist
Do~
Asmussen drew a newspaper headline reading , " Smart. bombs hit
Montenegro as. planned, Toledo,
Ohio, by mistake." That was follOwed by " President apologizes,
says , Hey, at least it was Toledo."
Before that there was a newspaper adverti sement for Fannie Mac,
the federal mortgage company, that
said " Jennifer Cooke 's job took her
to Cincinnati. Her down payment
o.nly got her 10 Toledo."
Then Washington, D.C., lawyer
Brendan Sullivan Jr. told a judge
J hat "Toledo, Ohio, is the worst
place in the wqrld. "
Fannie Mae changed the ad, and
Sullivan later apol ogized.
. It seems the city has long been
th e tail end of JOkes.
·· ( remember watching old
movies and the actors would say

"Oh no, we goua play Toledo," said
the city's favorite son Jamie Farr,
who made Toledo famous in his role
as the cross-dressing Cpl. Klinger on
the popular television series " M-A. S-H."
·
" It had the reputation of being a
tough town ," Farr said Wednesday.
No one tried more to change that
image than Fatr.
His love of Tony Packo's Hungarian hot dogs and the Mud Hens
brought worldwide fame 10 the city.
He still returns every year to host the
Jamie Farr Classic , a women 's pro
golf tournament.
"You can't sell me short on the
city," Farr said from his home near
Los Angeles. " Everybody who's
ever been ·there says it's a great
city."
So what is it about .this blue-col Jar city between Cleveland and
Detroit that makes it such an easy
tar!!,et?
.
'I honestly don't know," Farr
said.' " It's just a stigma it has ."
Mayor Carty Finkbeiner has a
few ideas: "I think the old impression of the city was that we were a
withering, dying city."
Chicago Tribune columnist Bob
Greene , a native of suburl)an
Columbus and a defender of · his
home state, advised Toledoans not to
take the attacks personally.
" It 's a lot easier to take shots at
people you don't know," he snid. "A
lot ·of people have never been to
where we ' re from and because of
that it's· easy to take ad vantage of the ,
stereotypes."

'Star Wars' breaks records with $28.5 million opening ·
· LOS ANGELES (AP) - The' , playing the movie r·ound~ thc- clock
new " Stars Wars" movie made since 12:01 a.m. Wednesday.
$28.5 million on opening day, shat- · The 24-hour receipts totaling
tering reconds set in 1997 by "The $28,542,349 beat the one-day record
Lost World: Jurassic Park." And that · of $26. 1 million set by " Lost
W&lt;ts on a school' night.
World " on a ·Sunday of Memorial
"Star Wars: Episode I - The Day weekend in 1997, bOX office
llhantom Menace" opened at 2,970 tracker Exhibitor Relations Co. smd
lbcations, some of wltich have been Thursday.

1999 TAURUS SHO

1999 FORD EXPLORER AWD
Eddie Bauer, V-8, Autp, All Power, Moon roof, Side Air Bags,

.

CD, Etc.

1.9 API

1997 FORD EXPEDITION

1997 FORD EXPLORER 4X4

414

XLT, v'~. Auto, Front &amp; Rear A/C, Till, Cruise, All Power,
3rdRowSeat

-----....-

2 DR Spprt, Premium Pkg., V-6, Auto, A/C, Tilt, Cruise,
All Power CD, Lo~ Miles

$19 900

·$2 990

•

1997 FORD F·150
Supercab, 3rd Door, Tilt, Cruise, A/C, AM/FM Cass,,

Avallallle

1998 FORD MUSTANG

V6, auto, air cond, AM/FM cass,CD, Tilt, Cruise,
·,
·
Pwr. Seat, Etc.
$

$

Graduation '99

Eastern, Meigs and Southern
·
High Schools

RRY

Supplement to:

Phone
740-992-2196

461 S. Third
Ave.
Middleport

·-.

·- -

------- ---

The Daily Sentinel
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                  <text>Friday, May 21, 199~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Wow your walls with texture techniques
·By Bob Hoefl tch
There was music in air near the Sugar Run Mill Tuesday- literall y, and
it shouldn 't have been.
. Brent Zirkle, an associate of the mill , found four pieces of sheet music
lying on the ground close to the mill where it had apparently bl own out of
a ve hicle. Judging from manner in which it was assembled, the mu sic possibly may belong to a teacher.
·
An yone hav ing lost music should co ntact Denna Carr at the central office
of the Meigs Local School District) n Pomeroy and the fi nd wil l be turned
over to the indi vidual upon identification.
Former resident John J. Blake is the subject of a feature in the AEP publicati on, AE P Today, in tribute to hi s community service in Roc kport , Ind.,
where he is empl oyed with the power company.
Blake. producti on services leader at 'the Roc kport Plant, is a scoutmas ter,
c ~urc h leader and youth acti vitie.s director, a member of the chamber of
co mm erc~'s new leadership prog ram, a volunteer worker for South Spencer
Middle Sc hool' s outdoor lab and is helpin g with. an cffo f\t o reconstruct the
cntr·y gate to the city of Roc kport 's Lincoln Pi onee r Village. He al so has
hecn a youth sm;cer coach and a women's softball coac h. ·
John is married to Tammy Snider Blake and they have two children, John
C. Blake and Amand a Blake. He is the su n of John E. Blake and the late
· Sy lvia Blake of Middleport . Hi s . paternal grandparc niS arc Mrs. Venus
Blake and the late John B. Blake and maternal grandparents arc the late Mr.
and )VIr&gt;. And y Bird, all of Cull.oden , W Va.
'

I don't know Gc on.!~ Nn.: hols of Mason. W. V&lt;.1.', hut l admire h1s crcati v·
iLy and gc ncrosit):. ...
·

George wil l be creating a 40 foot by 21 1/2 fool steel sternwheel sculpture for the Pome roy community and hopes to have it completed by October
wh en the annual s.ternwheel festi val is to be staged . The sc ulpture should be
quite effedi ve when outlined'" li ghts and displayed in the community as a
part of the fest ival and hopefull y, can be. used advantageously on a yearround basi s. Nichols will absorb the cost s involved. I understand Nichols
also hopes to complete other stee l sculptures which will carry,out a Chri stmas holiday theme and en visions these lighted pieces to be used both on the
Pomeroy and .the Mason side of th e Ohio River.
l.'m certainl y loo king forward to the completed decorations.

and Wall coverings.
Of course , the cost ri ses with the
purchase of tools, rags and primers.
And, as with any do-it-yoursel f project, there are pitfall s. Entire wee kends have been ruined with projects
that have gone awry .
Here are some tJps:
' Keep it simple: Professionals
combine multiple colors and multi ple techn.iques. But begi nners should
stick with one or two colors and one
techn ique.
Practice makes perfect: Try the
technique on a piece of board before
beginning, and when you start the
technique in the room, po it hchind a
co uch or door.
Think lhe job through. first:
Continuity is important and tbugh l()
main lain in a bi g roo n~ ·· If it seems
like a hig job, start with a small
room first.
Some mi ghl wonde r why anyone
woul d add a new step .10 the process
of paint ing. Paintin g is hard enough
without havi ng '.t o roll a rag up the
wa ll or drag a comb over a perfectly
good com of paint.
Burg understands (he obsession:
" It 's som ething you can do yourself
and look bac k and say, '!did thi s.,.
Just don' t look behind the couch.

dabbed all over the wall to create a easier to work with than paint
slowly, said Tom
mottled effec t. Its popularity led the because they
way for a variety of other tech- Williamson, " paint pro" at Lowe's.
niques: dragging, combing, mask- Glazes also are tran5lucent, so they
ing, marbling, color washing, stamp- allow the base coat to show through ,
ing, smooshin g, crosshatching , even though the glaze may be the
thatching .· There is even a paint same color as the base.
While the &amp;laze is still wet, a
roller with des igns built into the roll .
·
clean
rag is rolled up the wall in verStores · and home- improvement
shows illustrate some methods, but tical lines, each just overlapping the
" the tec hnique is only limited to previous one. Rag- rolling leaves
your imagi nation," said David H. behind a repeating pattern of wavy
Ham berger II , owner of Fine Finish· lines,. although the effect varies
depending on the:. type of rag used.
ing and Decorating.
Ge nny Burg, manager of the Everyday household rags can be
paint. department at Hechinger 's, . · used, if they don'tleave behind lint,
said one customer painted her walls ahhough paint stores se ll rags
white, then handed her kids squirt designed for ragging and rag-rolling.
Ruffin was thrilled with the
gun s loaded with yellow paint and
all owed their creati vity to fini sh off re suli, adding, "It's work. And hard
on your shoulders going up and
the room .
Wanda Ruffin , store manager at down ."
Duron Paint s and Wall co vering.
· Decorative painti ng is cheap and
decided lo sponge the wall s in her unique: Each color blend is an ori g·laundry room. She liked the result , inal that the painter can match with
so she rag-rolled her kilchen walls. the room' s decor. And it's le ss
With rag- rolling, as witb some of the expensive than wallpaper.
The average prjce for wallpaper
other tec hniques, the wall is painted
wi th a hase coat. A sec ond coat of is $13 for a sin gle roll . An average
tcc hniqucs'thcy have see n on televi - paint, diluted with water or glaze,
bedroom takes aboul 16 roll s. That' s
about $200. A gallon of good
sion.
&amp;ncs over the base.
The tre nd started with sponge
Glazes, which arc clear and can eggshell late• paint is $20, said
. paintin g, where a sponge is li teral ly · be rni Ked with an y paint color, are . Karen Yost of Professional Paints

Ray and Me gan Andrews and their family have moved into the Lin c0ln
Hill R0ad , Pomeroy, home of the late A. R. and Evelyn Knight.
·
The large, brick home has been vacant for the past couple of years or so
since A. R. 's death . The Knight residence was through many years the scene
of a lot of aciion so it is refreshing to see the home come alive again as the
Andrews' add their personal tou ch to occupying the residence.
And even ·th ~ugh it's just spring the green , green grass of home is bccom·
rng the; brown, brown grass of home already. Perhaps, Tuesday's tains will
give the1 grass a shot in the roots. Brown graSS JUSt ain't fittin ' . Do keep
•
•
smiling.
'

Pharmacist speaks to retired teachers

By SHEILA CARMODY
YORK, Pa. (AP) - Long, long
ago, be fore home decorating shows
and mega-hardware stores, home
owners painted the interiors of th eir
homes with paintbrushes and rollers.
Bac k and forth, up and down,
along the edges until the walls were
covered.
The alternati ve was wallpaper.
Then the world of home improvement blossomed. Do-it-yourself
shows started showing up on tc lcvisio.n. Stores popped up offcri ng
. everything imaginable - and some
things un imaginable - fo r mak in g
home improvements.
Suddenl y, homeowners became
creativ e, prod ucts became ava ilahlc ·
and a new era in painting Was horn .
These days the one-co lor, twocoat paint job has give n way to dccoralive painting .:.._ with rags ,
co O)bs, sponges. and anything that
creates a repeti tive wall design.
.Phil Quinn, ·assis tant manager of
Sherw in-Wi lli ams Co ., has see n
interest e merge through hi s customers, who have questions ahnut

By LADIES ' HOME JOURNAL
A Meredith Corp; Publication .
For AP Special Features
Tw&lt;! magazines joined fo rce ~
recently to explore the relationship .
between mothers and their teen -age
· daughters . The results of a comprehen sive survey were reported in
Ladies ' Home Journal and Seventeen magazines.
"The world has changed dramatically for women since most of our
readers were teen-agers, and these
changes have had an en ormous
·impact on the lives of o'ur teen-age
daughters·," said Ladies' Home Journal editor-i n-chief Myrna Blyth.
The mother-daughter relat ionship
survey, which appeared last October,

Tammy Gruescr, pharamist ·at ·
· Fruth 's Pharmacy, was guest speak- ·
er when the Meigs County Retired
Teachers met for a luncheon recently at Trinity Church. '
Jean Alkire introduced Gruescr
who explained duties of a pharmacist including the added responsibilities in prescribing for patients in ·
consultation with their doctors. She
discussed medi cations that might

were given by Whitehead who noted
that the local ci)apter received $100
for-a 10 percent increase in membership for the year and a $25 award for
second place m the state '" excel·
lenc,e in organizing a retirement
planning seminar for active teachers.
The awards were presented by the
state organization. Carol Ohlinger
gave the treasurer 's report .
After the business meeting the
interac t and cause problems. includ- &lt;;iolden Bells choir of Trinity
in g some herbal remedies. Reason s Church directed by Dixie Sayre,
for ha ving to wa1t . at a phannacy entertained with a sing-along. Memwere explained as the ,need for the bers were then invi.ted to try playing
many safety checks.
the bells . Other:s attending were
Ma xine Whilehead, pres ident, Nonga Roberts, Martha Vennari , Jim
opened the meeting and introduced a Vennari, Abbie Stratton, Kathleen
gue st. Jaco b Frowine, Di striCt 7. Scull , .Daisy Blakeslee, Charles
director of .the QRTA .. Nelli e Parker Blakeslee , Grace Weber, John
ga ve prayer preceding the dinner, Riebel , Elma Louks , Eileen Buck,
and Rachel Downie had devotions. Bernice Carpenter, Ida Diehl , ·
Highlights of tlic distnct n\eeting Dorothy Woodard , and Helen Maag.

drY

co vered many .topics. The following
is a sampling of results:
Moms and teens share some of
the same stresses:
- Ei ghty-four perceni of moms
who answered the poll work outside
ti)e home. Fifty-six percent said their
daughters hold part-time jobs.
- Forty-six percent said their .
daughters helped with housework.
Money and spending:
- Forty-two percent of teen girls
said they spend most of their cash on
c lothes and makeup; 41 percent·
splurged to go out with friends . ~
- Daughters view their mom s
spending habits as s.ensible and
practical; 95 percent said that if
mom won the lollery, she would sink

.the money into her children's college educati on or use it to pay otT
debts.
The battle zone:
-Moms repon that 54 percent of
the time, fights with their daughters
occur because of the teens' ani tude.
Twenty,one percent fight over
whether she helps around the house.
-Only 7 percent of moms said
they fight with their daughters over
grades.
- Forty-one percent · Of teens
agreed .that their moms are m.ost
likely io gripe about their behavior
rather than about their grades and
friends .
Fears, hopes and dreams:
- Seventy percent of moms c.ited

,

'

h~ppl~ess

as the •one thin g they
wanted most for their daughter: onethird . hoped she would lead a long, ,
heallhy li fe .
- Forty-three percent of '"others
said their greatest fear for thetr
daughters is thal she will be a victim .
of a violent crime; more than 25 percenl worry .that she will die prcma. turely.
The median age of respondents to
the Ladies' Home Journal survey
was 43, and the medi an age of teen·age daughters was 16. Seventy-nine
percent of the respondents arc martied ; 85 percent have two or more
· children ; 80 percent are collcgc-cducated .

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FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTER THE SALE

)ERRY BIBBEE
:It,s the ·Dealer Behln,J T.IJe Deal

That Malres The BEAL Dllrerenee/

Toledo bashing - it's nothing personal
TOLEDO. Ohi o (AP) - Sure,
calling the minor-league baseball
team the Mud Hens is a bit demean ing.
And yes, thrs is a blue-collar crty
wherc coney dogs arc the mosl popular rtems on restaurant menus and
people foll ow bowling as a compel·
itive sport.
But is .that rea son enough to make
Toledo a standard punch line for
comedians, ad "{riters and cartoonists?
A recent outbreak of "Toledo
bashing" has stirred up this Lake
l3rie city's ire even though most of
its 300;000 residents are accustomed
to being kicked around. The . latest
shot came in the May 10 edition of
Time magazine.
·
. Politicai
cartoonist
Do~
Asmussen drew a newspaper headline reading , " Smart. bombs hit
Montenegro as. planned, Toledo,
Ohio, by mistake." That was follOwed by " President apologizes,
says , Hey, at least it was Toledo."
Before that there was a newspaper adverti sement for Fannie Mac,
the federal mortgage company, that
said " Jennifer Cooke 's job took her
to Cincinnati. Her down payment
o.nly got her 10 Toledo."
Then Washington, D.C., lawyer
Brendan Sullivan Jr. told a judge
J hat "Toledo, Ohio, is the worst
place in the wqrld. "
Fannie Mae changed the ad, and
Sullivan later apol ogized.
. It seems the city has long been
th e tail end of JOkes.
·· ( remember watching old
movies and the actors would say

"Oh no, we goua play Toledo," said
the city's favorite son Jamie Farr,
who made Toledo famous in his role
as the cross-dressing Cpl. Klinger on
the popular television series " M-A. S-H."
·
" It had the reputation of being a
tough town ," Farr said Wednesday.
No one tried more to change that
image than Fatr.
His love of Tony Packo's Hungarian hot dogs and the Mud Hens
brought worldwide fame 10 the city.
He still returns every year to host the
Jamie Farr Classic , a women 's pro
golf tournament.
"You can't sell me short on the
city," Farr said from his home near
Los Angeles. " Everybody who's
ever been ·there says it's a great
city."
So what is it about .this blue-col Jar city between Cleveland and
Detroit that makes it such an easy
tar!!,et?
.
'I honestly don't know," Farr
said.' " It's just a stigma it has ."
Mayor Carty Finkbeiner has a
few ideas: "I think the old impression of the city was that we were a
withering, dying city."
Chicago Tribune columnist Bob
Greene , a native of suburl)an
Columbus and a defender of · his
home state, advised Toledoans not to
take the attacks personally.
" It 's a lot easier to take shots at
people you don't know," he snid. "A
lot ·of people have never been to
where we ' re from and because of
that it's· easy to take ad vantage of the ,
stereotypes."

'Star Wars' breaks records with $28.5 million opening ·
· LOS ANGELES (AP) - The' , playing the movie r·ound~ thc- clock
new " Stars Wars" movie made since 12:01 a.m. Wednesday.
$28.5 million on opening day, shat- · The 24-hour receipts totaling
tering reconds set in 1997 by "The $28,542,349 beat the one-day record
Lost World: Jurassic Park." And that · of $26. 1 million set by " Lost
W&lt;ts on a school' night.
World " on a ·Sunday of Memorial
"Star Wars: Episode I - The Day weekend in 1997, bOX office
llhantom Menace" opened at 2,970 tracker Exhibitor Relations Co. smd
lbcations, some of wltich have been Thursday.

1999 TAURUS SHO

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Eddie Bauer, V-8, Autp, All Power, Moon roof, Side Air Bags,

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1998 FORD MUSTANG

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Graduation '99

Eastern, Meigs and Southern
·
High Schools

RRY

Supplement to:

Phone
740-992-2196

461 S. Third
Ave.
Middleport

·-.

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· · · 'Th• DaHy Sentinel 1999 Graduation EditiOn - Page Three

Page Twcr- 'The Dally Sentlrf~l 199! Graduation Edition

Meigs High School to graduate 149 seniors Sunday
The 149 members of the Meigs
Hi gh Sc hool grad uatin g class of
1\19!} will receive their diplomas in
the ) Ist Annual Baccalaureate and
Co mm ~ nccmcnt program to be
he ld at 4:30 p.m. Sunday in the
Larry R. Morrison Gymn as ium .
Foll ow mg the processional and
National Anthem by the Meigs
Maritudcr Band , Jason Andrew
Harri, will give the in vocation ,
Bridget Vaughan, pres ident of the
senior class. wi ll cx tcnp the wel come. and Jennifer Melissa Lambert. class treasurer. will make the
introduction s.
Selections by. the band, directed by Toney Dingess, will inclu.dc
"In the Shining of the Stars" by
Robert Sheldon · and the alm a
mater. "Maroon and Gold ." The
Meigs Hi gh Sc hoo l chorus will
sin g "I'll Take You There ."
Speakers for the commencement progt·am will he Bridget
Mari e Vltughan. daughter of Roy
and Li nda Vau ghan , v;tlcd ictorian :
and Tri cia Kay Davis. daughter of
Greg and Jan Davis. salutatorian .
Cia's honorarians to he. recognitcd arc Lacy Marie Banks.
. Kristin Nico le Brown, Mcliss ~t
Darnell.. Melissa Ann Holman. Jessica John:wn. Rebecca Mac Joh nson. Kri stin'a Marie Kennedy, Tamra Lee O'Dell . Stefani LaDonna
Pickens . Franco Daniel Romuno
and Rebekah Ly nn Smith.
The class will presented hy
Dc nni ' Eichinger. pri ncipal, to
John Hood, president of !he Mei gs
Local Board of Educati on. ' wh'o
will present diplomas to the graduates. The class roll will be read liv
Stefani LaDonna Pickens, secretary, and Alyson Nicole Patterson,
vice president, will give the symbol of graduation. Tomas Joshua
Ly nch will give· the ·benediction
before the recessional played by

the hand .
Members of the 'graduating
class arc Jennifer Rose Arthur, ·
Lacy Marie Bat)ks, Candy Renee ·
Barnell, Jami e Barrett, Keith Lee
Barrell , Jeremiah Lee Bentley,
David Michael Bottomley, Cinda
Brallon , Tabitha May BrooksOhler, Kristin Nicole Brown.
Thomas Wesley Burson, Elizabeth
Ann Call. Donald P. Carnahan,
Austin Paul Carr, Jimmy Joe
Caruthers.
·
Sara Melian Castellano, Tracy
Shalene Coffey, Timothy Eugene
. Colcma'1, . Rebecca Lea Collins,
Kell y Michelle Connolly, Denise '
Ann Collerill , Benjamin Paul
Cra ne, Melissa Darnell , John
Micliac l Davidson . Trici-a Kay
Davis, Stoney R. Day, Sarah Beth
Dean, Ryan E. Dill , Paul J. Dilly,
Megan C. Drummer, Cha rl es

50 Southern ·graduates to be awarded diplomas
The Southern High School
Class of 1999 will receive diplomas during a combined baccalaureate and commencement exercise
to be held Sunday, May 23 at 8
p.m. in the Charles W. Hayman
Gymnasium.
The Rev. Rick Rule, pastor of
the Racine First Baptist Church,
will give the baccalaureate address
following the processional and
musical selections by the choir
under the direction of Greg Vance;
choir director. ,

Kara Ruth King, dimghter of
Mrs. Diane Carpenter, will give the
salutatorian address. Jesse Clayton
Little, son of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Little, will give the valedictorian ·

Michelle Evans, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. R611ie Stewart: Virginia
Marie Howerton, daughter of Mrs.
Phyllis Howerton ; J~ remi ah Ryan
Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Johnson; Jason Paul Roush, son of
Mr. Daniel Roush; Kimberly Lynn
Sayr,e, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Pete Sayre; and Tara . Mi chell e
Norman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Daniel Norman.
Other members of the schoo l's
class of 1999 include: Jaso n
Thomas · Allen, Leona Thi Anne
Belcher, Timothy Scott Brinager,
Robert Thomas Card, Rebeccah

a~dress.

Honorarians .are Teresa. Dawn
Bush, daughter of Mrs. Carole
Bush; Jennifer Lynn Carleton,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Carleton; Christa Ni chole Circle,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Circlc; Joshua Craig Ervin, son of Mr.
and M~s . Herbert Ervin; Suzanne

Nicole Congo, Bridget Renea
Cross, Ashli Cecile Davis, Sara
Beth Etvin, Tiffany Jeanette Gal lagher, Woodrow Wilson Hall Ill,
Julia Danielle Hensler, Harmony .
Jane Hill, David Troy Hoback,
Jody Raye Hupp, Josie Elizabeth .
Jarrell, Michael David Johnson,
Robert Lee Johnson, Patricia Jane
Lawrence, Jerry John .Lew is,
Michael Brent Manley, Benjamin
Ryan Manuel , Regina Jo Manuel,
Lisa Ann McGhee, Jerrod Ray
Mills, Jennifer Kay Morris, David
Richard Nance, Ch'ristopber Allen

Reitmire, Sarah Belinda . Roels,
Billie Jo Sellers, Jessica Renee
Smith, Travis Richard Smith, April
Michelle Snider, ·Jessica Michelle
Theiss. Mitchell Allen Walker,
Trisha Irene Warner, Adam Charles
Williams, Matthew. Chri stopher
Wilson and Rebecca Sue Wolfe.
As part of the comme!)cement.
special. recognitions wi ll be made
by Gordon Fisher, principal. Mr.
James Lawrence, superintendent.
wi II present the class to Douglas
Little. Southern Local Board 'of
Ed ucation member; who wi ll
award the graduates their diplomas.

Egger~.

Phillip Lee Erw in, Jr., Jessica
Susan Eva ns, Benjamin Jam es
TOP OF THE CLASS- SPf:cial recognition will go to these.top achievers of the Meigs High
Fowler. Brandy Lynn Gangwer.
School Class of 1999. Down in front, from left, are Rebecca Smith, Stefani Pickens and MelisJcrod Daniel Gilmore. Randy Dale
sa Darnell; standing, Kristin Brown, Me!issa Holman, Lacy Banks, Kristina Kennedy, Bridget
Haning, Daniel J. Hannan . Jason
Vaughan, valedictorian, Becky Johnson and Jessica Johnson. to~ot available for photo were
Andrew Harris. Edson David Hai·t,
salutatorian Trlsha Davis and honorarlans Tamra Lee O'Dell and Franco Daniel Rumuno.
Rohcrt.M. Hart. Tara Lynn Hawley,
J ~ nnifc r Elaine Heck, Clinton Bill
~essica Arlene Laudcnmill. Kelli
Jason Prcast, Trenton Qualls, Ryan Stanley, Bella Stegall, Bobbi Jo
Hendricks, Jessi!.:a Renee Herd- Dawn Lightfoot, Lester Carl Low- Ray Ramsburg, Josiah Tyler Rawman, Chasi ty Renee Hess, Melis- ery, Tomas Joshua Lynch , son, Rachel Renac Rec.vcs, Stewart. Russell William Stewart.
Allision Nicole Su'ectman, Julian
sa Ann Holman, Steven Ray .Stephanie-Angeline Roberts-Lyons, Bethany LeeAnn Rey nolds.
Hiroshi Swann, Melisha Diana
Hoover, J,r. , Clinton Lee Horn. Dwight Thomas Madison, Patrick
Leslie Renee Richard , Eric Swisher, Adam M. Taylor, Lisa
·Am her D.· Huddleston .
Eugene Martin, Heidi Eli zabeth Shane Richmond . Tiffany Dale Taylor.
Jonathan Tyler Humphrqys, Matson, Jessica Sue Matson .
Richmond. Kimberl y Rillerhcck,
Jeremy Adam Thomso n.
Dw.ight W. Icenhower, Justin Gray
Stacy L. McKni ght , Tanya Ange lo J. Rodriguet.. . Franco
Stephen
R. Thornton, Shawn KeeJeffe rs. Erick John son, Jess ica Michelle Lew Miller, Amos Alan Daniel Romuno, Michelle Nicole
gan
Tibbetts,
Crystal Rae Tippie,
John son. Rebecc;a Mae Johnson, Mills, Benjamin L. Molden, Adam Rou sh, Jeremy Jay Rowe. Tiffany
Clayton
Tromm,
Clark A. VanMaMarc A. Jones, Stephani e Irene F. Moodi spaugh, Vktor J. Morris, Mari e Savage, Cortncy Justin Scartre,
Bridget
Marie
Vaughan .
Jones, Matthew Alan Justice, Jr. II, Penny Marie Napper, Tamra berry, Chad E. Schul er, Jason E.
Rebekah Daw n Karr, Kristina Lee O'Dell , Clay ton Ohlinger, Scars, Jerald David Shuler, Bonne' Frances Lorraine Walker, Kimberly Dawn Wells, Melissa D. Werry,
Marie Kennedy, Timothy Justice Alyson Nicole Pallerson, Kenneth Joyce Smith.
Barbara Whittington , Adam D.
King , Charles Andrew Kitchen , Mallhcw Pavich, Rochelle Suz· Rebekah Lyn n Smi tjl. Rohby
Williams,
Kasey
Michell e
Thomas Kopczinsky.
zan ne Pavich, Stefani· LaDonn a Am:on Sm ith, Shannon Eugene
Carrie MicHelle Lambert, Jen- Pickens, Macic Renee Pierce, Jodie Sm1th, Brandy Snider, Adam Sor- Williams, Sara Jane Williams.
nifer Melissa Lanbert, Robert Kei- Melissa Pooler, Michael Edison rell. Dais y May Spears. David Jared Woods, Shari Renee Wright.
Jonathan David Wyatt, Jason R.
th Landers,
Sarah
.
. Beth Larkins, Pooler, Jr., John W. Post, Jr.. Roger Anthony Staats. Brandy Leigh Young, and Irena Emilova Zaneva.

LEADING GRADU.ATION - Kara Ruth King, left, will be salu·
tatorian, and Jessie Clayton Little, right, will be the valedictori·
an for graduation exercises at Southern High School this Sunday at 8 p-.m.

·. Throughout hi s career at Eastern, Proffitt has been active in Conccrt Band, Marching Hand and
Varsity Track.
·
He has also received many academic and Fine Arts honors,
including the 1997 District XVII
Honor Band , 1999 Ohio University Honor. Band, the 'International·
Foreign Language Award, the
National Engli sh Merit Award, the·
National History and Government
Award, the National Science and
Mathematics Award and the 1998
Governor's Scholar Award, among
others.
·
He also participated ill the 1995
Free Enterprise and Leadership
Conference, 1995 Kent State
Trombone Choir, the. 1996 Ohio
University Trombone Choir and ·
the 1999 Ohio-University Trombone Choir, and the Capital ~egiment Drum and Bugle Corps.
Proffitt plans to attend the College of Engineering afOhio University, and also plans to try out for
the Marching llO;thc Ohio Universitv Marching Band.

. _._.,.t.'-'... ..

Members of the graduatin g
class are: Erron Cain Aldridge,
Beau Jarrod Bailey, Jessica Katherinc Elaine Brannon, Michelle·
Dawn Buckley, Lacey Nicole
Bunting, Jessica Jane Burchard,
Gregory Wayne Burkey, Jeremy c.
Casto, Jeremy Ralph Coleman,
George Thomas Coram II, Joseph
.Bradley Dillon , Stephanie Ann
Evans, Radley Chari in Faulk, Jcssica Lynn Grindstaff, JoshuaAaron
Hager, Juliana Michelle Hayman,
Dustin Taber Huffman, Angela C.
Johnson, Valerie S. Kar:r, Wesley
Tyler Karr, Robert Kauff, Matthew
Lee King, Jason Lee Landes,
Melody Lorraine Lawrence
Shawn Amos Marcinko, Jessie~
Chantee Marcum.
·
Jason E. McCartney, Suzanne
Jane Milhoan, Jason Nathaniel
Mora, Jaymie M.. Osborne, Sari
Elizabeth Colleen Putman, John
Heath . Daniel Proffitt, David
~ichacl Pu~man ,' Leslie Renee
Rachard , ~·k~a Jean Roberts,
Heather Nacole Rockhold, Adam
Bryant Sanders, Wallaam A.

SHS PROM CANDitlATES - From left, Christa Circle, Bridget Gross, Ashli Davis, Janey Hill,
Sara Roels and Kim Sayre, were selected as queen candidates for the 1999 Southern High
School prom. They were shown with their escorts, Travis Smith, Benji Manuel, Scott Brinager, Jerrod Mills, Jason Allen 'and Mitchell Walker.

CONGRATULATIONS 1999 GRADUATES
No matter your needs, we at the FARMERS BANK
and SAVINGS COMPANY can help make the' ·
sometimes confusing world of nnance available and
understandable. We're dedicated to the advancement
of our community, and would like to start with the
GRADUATING CLASS OF 1999. After all, who .
better to help you plan YOUR future than your Bank
For Life?

· An exciting thing is about to happen in · your
community- The children of the future are about to
make their mark. We at the FARMERS BANK care
about the future. And we care about the youth and
growth of the community. Not only do we otTer
student loans and.free checking accounts to full-time
students, we are willing to discuss any of the ilnancfal
needs or answer any questions of the younger
generation.

Graduation exercises slated at Eastern on Ma.y 30
Members of the Eastern High
School Class of .l999 will receive
their diplomas in combi ned baccaalaureate and commecement
exercises in the hi gh school gy_mnasium on May 30. .
·
Valedictorian Stephanie Evans
and Salutatorian Heath Proffitt will
address their 48 classmates duri~g
the ce~e mony .
Evans is a me.mber of the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church in
Pomeroy, and has been active in
both school and the community.
She is· the president of the National Honor Society and secretary of
the National Art Honor Society.
She is also a member of the
French·Club, the Varsity "E" Club
and has been named in Who's Who
Among American High School
Students.
She is employed at the Arcadia
Nursing and Rebabilitation Center
in Coolville, where she has been
working for a year and a half. She
plans to attend Ohio University this
fall , where she will pursue a caree~
in physical therapy.

•

Stop by the Farmers Bank· no matter what your n~eds, let us be your BANK FOR LIFE!

·You•·
Farnters
Bank
.· &amp; Sa.vlngs Company
Schultz, Jr., Jennifer Rose Starcher,
Mary L. Styer. Angelia Dawn Taylor, Scott M. Tuttle, Heather Dawn
Westfall , Ann Mafic Wiggins
Jamie Nichole White, Joh~
Thomas White, Lynette Renee
White, Steve Michael Wh. I ·k
11 OC •
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West
-.avLNa
...................
a P.O.Box 128

Marie Wolfe.

211

In keeping with tradition, the
names of the Top 10 scholars of~
Eastern graduating class, includang
Evans and Proffitt, will be
announced at the ·school's senior
awards
ceremony
. ..._ ____
___ .........on. May 28 .

--

Second Slrtlt 42120 Stitt Routt 7

P.O.Box 339

Gllllpolll, OH 45831 .
Tuppers Plllne, OH 45783 740144W215

Pomeroy, OH 45789
Mef1'1ber F.D.I.C. 740188M131
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7401867-3181
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The Dally Sentinel 1999 Graduation Edltlo~· Page Five

.

Pege Four The Dally Sentinel 1M G~eCIUirilon'Edlilon '
,

r ,( .

Proposition failure means kids still go .to school early
CROSS RIVER, N.Y. (AP) Taxpayers voted down a proposition that would have allowed high
schoolers to get 40 extra minutes of
sleep each morning.
By 2, 142 to I ,898, voters in the
Katonah-Lewisboro school district
in northern Westchester refused
this week to spend $1.33 million
for , new buses that would have
enabled the high sch09lto delay its
starting time from 7:15a.m. to 7:55

a.m.
Some sleep experts said forcing
adolescents to get up ;lt about 5:30
a.m. ignores their natural body
rhythms and hurts .their perfor- ·
mance. Several school districts
around ihe country have moved.
away from early stan times.
Many parents also objected to
having their children wait for buses in. the cold and dark on winter

schOol days.
"It's just common sense," said
Sharon Ballen, also of Katonah.
"Children shouldn't be, standing
with flashlights at bus stops."
Since 1992, when state aid was
cut back and some buses were sold
off, students have been crawling
out of bed at 5:30a.m. to wait for
buses that serve first the high
school, then elementary and mill-

die school s. At John Jay School
some students have to eat lunch
·shortly ·after 9 a.m. .
"They 're sitting in calculus or
advanced-placement bio at 7: 15 in

Point
Pleasant
High School

•. .;

'

1
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the morning," :said Superintend~nt
Karen McCarthy. "At 9:30 they 're
eating spaghetti or pizza, God help
us.''

Ohio Valley
Christian
School

..

Jessica Nicole Cale

EASTERN PROM CANDIDATES - These Eastern High School seniors were candidates for
1999 prom king and queen. They were, from left, Joe Dillon, son of Tim and Paula Dillon of
Racine; Beau Bailey, son of Joe and Kay Bailey of Chester; Jeremy Casto, son of Keith and
Marcella Weber of Chester; Lacey Bunting, daught~r of Willie and Jane Burke of Tuppers Plains;
Jull Hayman, daughter of Pat Hayman of Reedsvtlle, and Greg Hayman of Long Bottom; and
Valerie Karr, daughter of Roger and Susie Karr of Chester.
·

WITH OUR HIGHEST
R-EGARDS

Brynn Mitchell Mou

'

.

.. .

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s~Lools!

INSURANCE
111 S. 2nd

Pomerov .

The Sky's The
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Your hard work and
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your dreams come true. .
Good going!
..

3rd ST. .

.. .. . . . . .. ... . .. ... ..... .'~~-:~~'-~ - . - . -. - .. .. -·'

992-3381

RACINE

Pomeroy ·

Congratulations!
Class

of

~99

• •• • • • • • •

ROSE'S EXCAVATING
'

HigL

DOWNING CHILDS MULLEN MUSSER

ers

...

We Salute
Ea.s lern
Meigs
And SoutLern

We'd like to rise to. the
occasion to say,
"congratulations on making an
educated choice"f May it serve
you well in the years ahead . .

~

••

.'

Pleasant Va11ey Hospital
141 0 JtffiHOII

. llvd. .
Pt. Plea.. l-100-766;.oss3
... . . .... . ...........

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�EASTERN HIGH

Lacey Nicole Bunting

SCHOO~L

Juliana Michelle Hayman

Beau Jarrod Baaley

CONGRA
CLAS
. 33105 Hiland Rd.

Insurance ·

992-2318

WELL DONE .
CLASS OF ·
'99
'

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CONGRATULA'DONS
,..
CLASS OF '09 .
GOOd Luck
Future

106 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992-2635
'

'

I

'

. Mary Styer

William Aaron Will

'

Congratulations Graduates

GOOD LOCK.
GRfiDOfiTES
. ~nme

~

In The

INGELS FURNITURE
JEWELRY and RADIO SHACK ·

I.

Jessica ChantM' Marcum

00

We're Prou·d to Honor
You 1999 Grads! .

Jlfislftr .Jtfuntral

·

'

Angella .Dawn Taylor

· • Meigs High Sch~l
• Soathern High School
.• Eas~rn High School

1·, · .

Pomeroy, Ohio

· Nationwide Mutual Insurance ·
and affiliated Companies ·
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Columbus, OH 43215
Nationwide® Is a registered federal service mark of Nationwide's Mutual insurance Company

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Congratulations Graduates ·

Jim Roger's

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL. 1999 GRADUATES

1999 GRADUATES

RIDENOUR TV
APPLIANCE AND GAS
. SERVICE .
Chester

264 S. ~nd
.-

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'

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Jnmtrnu C1Iquptl
590 East Main ·
. 992-5444 '
. JlmH R. AcrM, Jr.
Director

·

Pomeroy
Bruce R. Fllher
Director

~.

.

'

·Valley Lumber ·
&amp; Supply Co.
. 992·6611
555 Park · ·

'

Middleport, Ohio

�~~---

' Page' EIGht'-·Tfle·oany -~ 1911 G1'86u8tlon !Clition

• •··ifhe.Oally Sentlnet 1999 Graduatlon!dltlon !-'PegrNine

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL 1999 GRADUATES •
'

Jaymle Osborne

.

·.

'

I

.•

'

· WeAre Proud Of You

.

Swisher &amp; LOhse · ·
· PharmQ,cy , .

1.12 East Main

992_7606

.. Pomeroy, OH

..

THE

. .

Cougratulatious
· Class Of ·.
1999

· Best Of Luck!

, · · .LIEIRY AYE.

-POMEROY

Congratulations
Class Of
1999 .

Best
Wishes
Class of

We Are Proud Of You

1999
.

.

Class of 1999

221 WEST MAIN

.

PO.IOY, OHIO
992-5432

CHESTER

f

•• • ~~...........-.......~~..............~;.;,;,;,;.;,;,.~........~~
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.

·BlUM LUMBER

.·Crow'·s family Restaurant
OHIO

.Congratulations ·

SUGAR RUN MILLS .

MIDDLEPORT

.

.

·. ' " 992-2121.

.

·. · SHOE PLACE/

Established 1913

·EWING
UNERAL HOME ··

Adam Williams

CONGRATULATIONS
GRADUATES ·
BEST WISHES!

Graduates

.

EROY ··

•

Congr:a tulations Graduate$

Graduates ·
f; ongratulations

·aest
·Wishes
Class
of
'99

.

•

Julia Daolelle Hensler

Congratulatio~s

.

•

,..

~

Matthew King

'

··-

I

'-•

985-3308

.

CHESTER -

'

�---

•

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~·.-.-·-···~

----------~ ..........

_,. ...

--···· The Dally Sent1MI1111 Grllduetlon Edition • P~~ge Elevwl

.

ratu ations
rea
ra uates
....

.

.

.

·&lt;

l

'

· Congratulations Gl'aduates

your

Congratulations
· Graduates
..-"

'

BEST OF LUCK. .
. IN mE FUTURE

'

~

.

.

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....

.·

,.

•

the future.
e

•

81

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5tcquisitions

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.

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I

.

!

. I

l

Best Wishes ·..
Class ·of 1·999 .
eale~lllellen • ~· r .Beal' Company ·
The .Ohio .Rrv~ . 253 N. Second Avenue
Middleport, OH 45760
· ~:·: ·:·~·:·~··:~~ :~~~~':' ·.· · . ·:'.·~·.·. ,•, .. ;......... .... ' .. .......... 7A0/992~.......

We Ate Proud Of You
BROG'II w·a·R.IIE.I IIISU. UIICE
2141111 . . .,

.

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:- ~:-:· ·&gt;

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· • -Page" Twelve - n1• Oaily•SaRti~k1999o Graduation Edition

_,

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL 1999 GRADUATES

SOUTH.ERN HIGH ·s cHOOL 1999 GRADUATES

Jason Roush

. Travis Smith

David ''Tr&lt;ly" Hoback

Clin~on

'
Sara Ervin

Benjamin Ryan Manual

Jason Allen

Woodrow Hall

Crista Nichola Circle

Scott Brlnager

-I

·Tara M. Norman

Jen~IHowerton

.· Jerrod Ray Mills

Trlsh Warner

Josle Jarrell

_Leona Belcher

seeks new·requirements· on·school spending .

WASHINGTON (AP)- President Clinton this week urged Con·
gtess to impose strict new requirements on school spending, saying
"We do not have the luxury of
waiting and continuing to subsidize
faii!Jre."
'
Clinton's legislation ·: _ already
under fire from Republicans .would require schools that receive
federal money to phase out the u~e
of teachers who are not certified for
the subjects they are teaching.
The .administration's education ·
proposal also would require school
districts to reduce class size, set
rigorous academic standards, bolster teac~er training programs,

broaden after-school and summer . anti-violence programs, intervene · Education Act, which provides, on participating school districts do
programs and work to make with trou)lled youth, establish secu- average, about 7 percent of states' ·away with the practice of "emersc.hools drug-free.
rity procedures for schools and education spending.
gency certification," . through
"We have to do a far, far better give parents an annual seport of
Rep. Bill Goodling, R-Pa., which teacherS instruct subjects
job of spending the $15 billion in drug and violent incidents at their chairman of the House Committee such as.math or English when they
federal aid we send to our schools children 's schools."
on Education and the Workforce, have not been certified by the state
every year," the president said.
Sen.. Geerge Voinovich, R- said he agreed with the goals of the to do so.
Clinton said schools that accept Ohio, immediately issued a news . administration's plan but not \\lith
federal aid " must take responsi- release criticizing what he viewed its methods.
A recent Education Department
survey
bility for turning around failing as encroachment on what should
found that a third of the
"The administration's proposals
schools or shutting them down." properly remain locally controlled, trample ori our nation 's long and nation 's teachers said they either
He said his measure would provide saying "President Clinton is pres- proven traditions of' local control -of lack degrees in the subjects they
children with safe learning envi- ident of the United States, not the education," Goodling· said in a teach or did not spend enough time
ronments.
. .
national school board president." · statement. "They would impose training in them. .
"For the first time," Clinton
Diane
Shust,
a
lobbyist
for
the
Clinton already outlined most of Washington solutions to local probsaid, "it will require schools to the plan last Januaty in his State of lems."
National Education ·Association.
adopt comprehensive school safe- the Union speech. It would renew
Under Clinton's proposal, one said the teachers union's members
ty plans, use proven anti-drug and the Elementary and Secondary . new part of the act would make back the proposal.

Congratulations

-·

Class
Of
1999

Suzanne Michelle Evans

I
ANDERSON'S

Cong·tatulations

...•

FURNITURE, APPLIANCES, TV'S, FLO OR COVERING
992·367 1
DOWNTOWN POMEROY, OHIO

CONGRATUIAT!ONS ClASS OF "99'~

...

KING HARDWARE
992·5020
405 NORTH SECOND AVE.
'
'

.

Grado~tes ·

'

WE ARE 'PROUD OF

YOU!

Best Wishes Class of '99'
SYUCUSE, OHIO
.,

We Salute the Grads of 1999 ·

BANKS CONSTRUCTION
POMEROY, OliO

12 4 WEST MAIN
992-5009

•

•

POIIIIOYPIII

POMIIOY, OHIO

ttJ.M51

McClure's
ant

Middleport, Ohio
General Hartinger

Pkwy.

Good Luck In The Future!

(HINCEY'S FOOD MART

•

-992·5248
Pomeroy, Ohio
358 East Maio
Street
992-6292

·Gallipolis, Ohio
820 jackson Pike
446-3837

All Three ·
Sto.res .Have

Bags Of Ice
For . 89~ .
Per·Bag

�MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL _l999 GRADUATES

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL 1999 GRADUATES

Mellsha Swisher .
'

Andrew KHc.hen

. Melissa A. Holman

Stefani LaDonna Plckana

Jennifer Heck

....

Melissa Darnell

Rebekah Voat

Dwight Wayne Icenhower

COIGUfUUriOIIS·CWS 01 "99"

GOOD WCK fiSHLI ·

&amp;G FEED.&amp; SUPPLY
399 W. Main

992·2164

.

.

..

INSURANCE
.__
.... .,..

JEFF WAINER
INSUUICI AIINCY
113 W. 2nd lt., Pomeroy; OH 41711
• : . •.. ..Ofrls:f:. ,1.4:W:I471 Fu~l14 112-1111

(

Stephanie Jonas

.Kristina Kennedy

Alllslon Streetman

· Adam D. Williams

Paul DHty

Tonya Miller

I

c,,,,,,

~··· ,, '99 .

11

et

· Pomeroy, _Ohlo ·

tMUONADa

Alyson Nicole Patterson

J...lce Rena Johnaon

J...lce Susan Evans

Congratulations Graduates

I

Rebekah Lynn Smith

Ryan Dill ·

Clinton Hom

Jonathan David Wyitt

Kimberly Rltter~k

· Brandy Stanley

·Well ·Done Class of '99

Francis Florist
352 E. Main St. Pomeroy,
.. Ohio
'

Daniel Hannan

Tomas Joshua Lynch

�Page.Sixteen
. • The Dally
. Sentlnel1 i99 Graduation Edition ..

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r •• '

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, •

,

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attons
Lacy Marie Banks

•

Amos Mills
•

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Cortney Justin Scarberry

,

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T. J. King .

~-·

. Trenton Qale Quails

·-··-

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-To All Our Local·Graduates;..
Here's to all the young men c;tnd
Women who have .worked so··hard
towards . ~ommencement day.
Seiz~ the day and may all your
dreams cotne true .
'

PROM ROYALTY - Becky Johnson and Dwight Icenhower, center c~ple, were the 1999
Meigs High School prom king and quee11. Other-members of the court Mre ftom the left, Alyson
Patterson, Shari Wright, Johnson, Bridget Vaughan and B.J. Smith, and back, Ryan Ramsburg,
Jeremiah Bentley, Icenhower, J.T. Humphreys and Qanlel Hannan. Theme of the prom was "Only
for One Night."
·

.'

.

•

.

•

Co ,gratulations '99 · _...

FABRIC ·SHOP
110 WEST MAIN

992·2284

MILLIES RESTAUUNT
39239 Bridbury Rd., Middleport, OH

992·7713

·.'Wag 'To (jo,

·· .

' Cftus Of~99
443 ·GENERAL
HlRIINGER PARKWAY

Pomeroy, Ohio

9reat Job Class of (99
.,

.

'

..

J

992·6545

Best Wishes o The Class of 1999

Aaclna, Ohio 4Sn1
Phone {l40) 949-2210

Syracuu, Ohio 45779
Phone (740) 992-6333

.BUCKEYE FARM MARKET
..

Rutland, Ohio

. '
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Page Elght"n. The Dally Stntlnel1999 Graduation Edition

I

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL 1999 GRADUATES

&gt; . t .. ,

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·The Dally Stntlntl1999 Graduation Edition- Page Nineteen .

•

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MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL 1999 -GRADUATES

)

Kasey Michelle Williams

Clark Andrew VllnMatre
'

Becky Johnson

Sara Mellen .

Carrie Lambert

Sarah Latklns

Sara Williams

Rebecca LH Collins

CongratulatiOns Graduates
Best WIShes Class_ol I

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992·2259
608JAST MAIN

PO,_OY,OHIO

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DataProomJnj

Candy Barnett

Tracy COffey

N·umber of langu·age teachers fails:to meet demand
PAXTON, 111. (AP) _ Kyle
Merkle and Chris N~lson's cheery
" Bonjour, Madame" doesn't get
much of a response in French class.
. After all, the (eens have to push
a button to hear their u:acher.
Since their school was unable to
hire a French instru~tor this year,
Merkle and Nt;lson ·are taking the
class by correspondence -listenmg to audio tapes and. filling out
workbooks that get mililed off to be
graded.
"We didn't have a teacher 10
say, 'When this; then this' or
explain how 10 conjupte a veltl,"
Merkle said. Added 1 liUJhina
Nelson: .. ~ , rewind button is
probably broken on that tape
recorder...
Schools across the country are
havins trouble as the number of
. ~ualifted foreip 1anJU1P teachen
ISn't kcepina · up with student
demand.

Ed Seebold, executive director of guages, said Tom Hernandez, . trating. You have some tense.
the American Council on the spokesman for the state Board of moments because you don't know
Teaching of Foreign Languages. Education.
what you ' re going to do.· ·
. '' A qualified foreign language
The shonage is most prominent
Some schools have learned to
.teacher can probably walk next in rural or smaller higll schools. adapt. In· elementary schools in
door and ·get -hired."
They often pay less than city or Iowa and Nebraska, a teacher who
A recent U.S. Dcpanmenl of suburban schools, and often don't doesn 't speak a foreign language is
Education survey found almost 25 have enough classes to suppon two teamed with a native speaker. Both
percent·\lf school districts had dif- foreign language teachers. .
teach the class.
ficulty hiring a fore1gn language
Th;u:s what happened thts year
For schools that can't find a forteacher -compared with just 3 per- at Watseka High School, 75 miles eign language teacher. technology
. Ben Crane
cent for an English teacher.
south of Chicago.
offers other options. '·'Distance
The problem isn't confined to
Principal Mark Doan already learning" allows a teacher located
foreign languages. The Educai!on had on!\ full-time Spanish teacher. in one place to interact via satellite, .dropped the class.
Depanment estim!ltes 2.2 m1lhon To meet demand, he needed anoth- audio tape or Internet with students
Interest in Freru;h for next fall
new teachers will be needed m the .er teacher who could teach Span- in another.
has dropped, while 30 more stunext decade.
.
ish half the day and another subject
"You have no choice but to ao dents have signed up for Spanish.
One reason for the shonage is tbe other half. ·
to technology m some of these · French is being phased out, though
that the number of college students
It proved so difficult a task that .. mstances and then try to provide students in the eastern IUinois dis· who want to teach has remained the sole Spanish teacher added an the assistance to the teacher who is trict who wish to continue can use
stable while a large number of early-morning class; SO to 60. stu- using it," Seebold said.
_the audio tapes.
working. teachers are reaching dents we~ turned ~way, told to
Sometimes the dperiment wilh
Nelson won't be one of them.
retirement age.
. tak~. Sp~ntsh next ~ear. . .
technoloay doesn 'I work.
The junior said the tapes were
Illinois is bracing for a major
We re competing With bigger .
At Paxton-Buckley-Loda High scratchy, sometimes boring, and
teacher shortage - most likely in schools that pay bett~r. You can't . School, Principal Jim Flaherty said unhelpful when it came to actual!!iP,-,ki~elm,lh,~~~O'OC.cl¥J-, • , b_l~n;t~ople ~or
for large~ four of..the IS students. who stan-' ly learn ina how to speak Frq~ch or
cd•wau-.-4 -laa- ~ ~IW'...V~Wt~td • D.llt.J!l&amp;ell..fn!l __ ed-&amp;akillt!- Flelleh -.n ..aa- the -fall &lt; gcui"t-~r-llllll:k.--· - -- ~

..':~i~~~j~~~tij~~~~~m: ..";-*'w

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ofwHktJnd
baseball

.....,

of cemltiiJ
FMIUred on Pliil- C1

HI: 701
Low: 50s

Details on

w~~3u page A2

•

tmes-·
-"'

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

''rl

Vol. 34, No. 14 ~

Gallipolis • Middleport· Pomeroy· Pt. Pleasant· May 23, 1999

Group files suit to stop U.S. 33 project approval
By .JIM FREEMAN
that oue counc:il member, G. Kenner Bush, Athens. bas a Sl:.ORC Route 33 Committee, called the suit "a last desllmn-Sentlnel Stiff ·
conflict of interest due to hi~ membership in the South- perate effort" by CASH to stop the project.
COLUMBUS- OroujlS opposed to the relocation of eastern Ohio Regional Council. a group that supports the
"It .shows they have given up on trying to win the batU.S. 33 from .Athens to 'Darwin have filed suit in 'project.
tie for hearts and minds in this area," he said.
Columb~ seeking to halt final approval of the project.
The group is seeking a preliminary and permanent
Columbus attorney Fred Gittes, who represents the
The SUit, filed by the Athens-based Coalition Against injunction stopping the project. Judge Dan Hogan could coalition said its aiguments are valid. 'There's nothing
Superflu(jua Highways in Franklin County Common rule Monday. on a request for a temporary restraining technical about the Open t,ieetings Act," he said. "You
· can't organize a highway boondoggle behind closed
Pleas _Court, comes as tbe Ohio Department of Trans- order sought by TRAC.
portalion's Tr~rtation and Rev.iew Advisory Counc:il
The 12-mile, $56 million project would complete a doors."
.
prepares to constder final approval of the project long-delayed effort to stflighten and widen U.S. 33 from
TRAC coordinator Michael Cull disputed that the
Wednesday.
·
··
Athens to Darwin. The suit does not include the nearby open meetings law has beeq violated, noting that meetCASH alleges that TRAC violated Ohio's open meet- Ravenswood CoMector project.
ing notices were sent to media and that mass mailinp
ings laws in its deliberations and furtllennore alleges
Pomeroy attorney Steve Story, co-chairman of the were done of hearing notices. He added that he has been

Regents' chancellor
.to address R!o grads

.
.
P~~gelWenty ·The Dilly Sentlnel11111t Grllduatlon Edlllon

~.

RIO GRANDERoderick · G.W. Chu,
chanoellor of the Ohio
Boud of Regents, will
be the featured speaker
at the 123rd commencement exercise for
the University of Rio
Grande/Rio Grande
Community College on the college
green Sunday, June 13.
Commencement for Rio Grande's
380 graduates begins at 2 p.m.
Chu bas been chancellor since
1998 and advises the governor and.
the legislature on higher education
policy. Additionally, he coordinates
academic programs at Ohio's 179
public and private c011eges, and
requests and manages state appropriations for the state's 61 public
colleges. ' ·
A New York City IUIIive, aiu
said be is concenttatintr q'n making
educitlon "relevant» to more
Ohioans, and believes the state's
economy will suffer if t~e collegegoing rate doesn 'I i11,1prove. His
goal, he sAid,-il to turn higher oducation into a household topic.
"If you keep doing what you ~
always done, you're going to keep aet•.
'ling what you always go1,N Olu lllid.
Chu received his ba~llll~
degree from the University o~
Michigan and a master's of bl!sineis
administration from Cornell Univer- .
slty. He has served on the State University of New York Boarll of
Trustees and on several advisory
counc:ils at Comell, including one
for illl Johni!On Graduate School of I
Manaaement.
·. Chu has received . numerous
awarda, including one offour "Out- ·
standing Chinese Entrepreneurs in
the World" in 1991. He was one of
40 guests invited to discuss Vice.
President Gore's "Reinventing Government" summit in 1993, and hiS
been a consultant to many national .
goverqrnents, including Russia; Singapore, the ·united Kingdom and
Canada.

..

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.

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;i Wi-h~s ~tol!C!ong~ratafrite·9t!l~~~rallll•tes·

'..

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•:

(

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B. J. Smith
Mlllll High 8choot "

' .

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( ;ood Momi11q

~···---~
~4 Seetlons • 12 r.a
tbtal

m=

= 7-~
Rivet

.Amanda Flelda

Jennlt.r Comellu1
River V!!ll'f High School

. Plul Dltly
Meigs High School

Obltu1rtar-

Wahama l'llgh School

.

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At The Corner of Gen. Hartinger

...... .l~~~~~~~~~~--~P:~::·~a:n:d:Pe:a:ri~.S:t.~·:M:id:d:le:po:rt~· ~.J~~~~WI~~~~

Prosecutor shows
items forfeited
in drug case

Anti-school ·violence
group will continue
pressing its goals
By KEVIN KELLY
Tlrnee-Semlnel Stiff

BIDwELL - The school year is coming to an end, but a parental organization trying to stem violent behavior in local classrooill$ doesn't
to
take any breaks this sumBy JIM FREEMAN
mer.
· Tlmn'Sentlnel 81afl
Instead,
Schools
RUTLAND - Although the list of
Against Violence in FAuitems seized in a recent Meip County
cation (SAVE) is working
drug case added up to an inch-thick stack
.
on keeping its momentum
of paper, the haul doesn't represent the
going with meetinp and
windfall many area residents believe.
events designed to raise
That's according to Meigs County
awareness about what can
Prosecuting Attorney John ,R. Lentes, who
be done to defuse ~ten­
showed the seized property to the Ohio
tially violent 'behavior by
Valley PubI ishing Company Thursday
studenlll.
morning.
The group, based at
The property formerly belonged to
Bidwell-Porter
ElemenFre&lt;! M. Priddy, 47, Rutland, who pleaded
tary
School,
also
wants
guilty last week to a
charge of pos·
parc~nts, Sludents and staff
, ~n
of marijuana.
• if!!Jtlscll1hed,uqr: t~od~'~r
"f-.- -.Jfi:Oil1 other hl&amp;ildi1185 II\
be ~teiiceif.
Ml:!iiiSiy •
the Gallia County Local
MdiJII County Common Court of
Schools
to join them in
mon Pleas. As part of the plea asreemeiili
Priddy forfeited most of-his belongings to
finding
solutions, ~:~OF~--=~
explained SAVE Presi· .
-C......,..Hamphll ·
the law enforcerileni agencies involved in
~dent Derek Oibson.
I'Wiry of Schaal• Aadnel VIall- In ed.the c;aae.
"We ~6 . any tlon, made 110M u the 01 . . I lhn.. ,....._
He wu arrested last month following
1'1'0
or parent from any •Cient. Derlk Glbeon, IIIIIMCI to dll~illlon
' an inveatiaation by several atea law
county
school to attend, • alloul-• group•• future ICIIIitllll durlnt a·
enforcement agencies including the Meigs
'Gibson said. "'they'll m.tlng lilt WMk-' Bldwllt-PoiWI' Elelillflfind out thinp they don't tary SChool,
eountyForce
sheriffs
omce, the by
Major
PraaMUIInO
Tl!lk
(administered
the cnmes
Meip ~~s~~§~Qj~o]-oo•
, eumlnw ~- 11 tl)e Rack
·~·AllOr·
Fair·
have a clue about. With the litde group we have, we ha,ve learned more thaa
County Prosecuting Attorney's Office),
lrom FNCI 11. Ptlddy, Rullllnd. The ·n.me,
we ever knew was possible.•
••
the Middleport Police Department and
with drUg 11101..,, were lorflbd' to lew
SAVE
has
absorbed
piles
of
information
and
initiated
nWDerous
discuS·
other agencies including departments in
sions since its fonnition in the wake of an inc:ident at B-PI. . month. A 15- ·
Mason County, W.Va. At that tilne, moat
"If this was along the river it would .be, wonn a lot
year-old male student brought a loaded handgun into the building. wu disof Priddy's Meip County property and brltl!'«&lt;np of money." Lentes said.
armed
by teachers and later pled guilty in Gallia County Juvenile Court tG a.
The second hOUIC, ·,which
were seizod.by officeri.
.
was under construction, ·charge of conveyance of a w.eapon onto school property.
Lentea, drivina a seized pickup
Last week, the boy was sentenced to an indefinite period of time to the
stands nearby with a second
truck, displayed the items Thursday_ at
Hocking Valley Commul)iiy Residential Center for felony offenders. · :.
floor doorway leading to a
locations near Rutland and at the
The inc:ident mobilized. parents, concerned over outbreaks of violence in
non-existent patio oveliuokRock Springs Fairground.
the
nation's schools that reached a crescendo with the April 20 mass killings
ing a sea of junk cars.' .
Near Rutland, Lentes show~ a
at
Columbine
High School in Colorado and last week's non-fatal shootinp
. "f-Ie had all this money but
field of junk cars ~ other old vebl- ·
at
a
school
in
Conyers,
Ga.
.
cles kept nearby, totaling almosl700
didn't know what to spend It
The concerns led to the formation of SAVE, which Gibson said is just iS
on," Lentes said. "He bought
vehicles, which will be crushed and
a iot of junk."
· . · concerned with safety in all of the Gallia County Local Schools' classrooms
sold for about $45 apie&lt;:c:.
as it is at 8-P.
.
. At tht fairgrounds, the midway
The bulk of the goods,
"We're
not
just
here
for
Bidwell, but for the whole system, he said.
area is p'&amp;cked full of cara, trucks,
including numerous firearms
"We're
not
going
to
let
it
diewe want to keep up the activity."
farm equipment and other item
which are being kepi at a sep·
SAVE
has
since
met
once
every
~eek for ,over a month, and whi)e it plans
arate location, will be sold at
includin4 bulldozers and·trailen. Two
to
cut
back
its
meetings
to
once
monthly
during the summer, the-aroup also
an auction to be held later
buildint'• contain motorcyclea, cars•.
wants
to
schedule
activities
for
all
in
the
county to e•perience, perhaps
. tools, cal\ parts and other miscellane•t month.
shortly
after
classes
end
for
the
year
on
June
I.
neousiteiila.
'
Sl!erift James M. Soul~
"We want to get the point ,.:ross that we want other schools involved,"
slid t,bere are approxirnately
PerhaM the ")OS' valuable r&lt;misaid
Judy Eggleton, SAVE's tieasureL
·
'200 firearms includins long
ture '• a Dlrcel of land near Rutland
The
group
envisions
discussions
by)aw
enforcemenl,
a.joint presentation
which in&amp;des
a prage,
and handguns. He said
of
crisis
management
plans
by
the
Gallla
County
Local
and
Gallipolis Ciiy
an1h
a herd of catmany of the handguns are
schools,
and
counseling
information.
·
·
tle.
alt n~ the 10p of ·
long 011.1111 to high
quality
firearms
In the interim, SAVE has discussed the ]IOSSibility of raising funds eiiher
bill
Rull-"!1 II the end of
Hlzld during tile equipped with telescopic
locally or through Bl'lilts to install security.eq11ipment, increase awarenaa ofof FNCI M. Priddy, Aut· hunlill&amp;. iighlll.
. a lop&amp;,
dri~P.Ihod .bY,}unthe
symptoms shown byf troubled children .•and plan programs for ojher
...
._.
II.
Soultby
II
·
Not
all
of
the
Items
seizod
dreda
automo~lles. ·
·
schools.
Using resources as diverse as the Internet and MTV, the group·has
One
bouaes features i: beluout • piMilci tub are bein1 'forfeited, Lentes
obtained
a multitude of information it is distri~ting tci JIB"'nts. .
.·
expllinecl- Personll belongtiful
and il!teriot~~pi~In
my
case, it was a matter of doing what I could to see that this doesn't
ral
floor belyinl' the faa .therw
lop and· aiM: residf:nce, in somoono else's name, two
happen,",
said
Charlene Hemphill, a B-P parent and SAVE's secretary, In
water
on the site.
eontlilued on _ .. "..
describing her commitment to the organization's goals.
.

1

_. . . eou""

N

auns

Trade magazine points to cQnstructlon .
of new Wai-Mart store In Mason, W.Va. ·

JQbless rate h1
m9st area counties
· down·slightly In April ,

.

A Family Owned.and
operated Supermarket
offering the best of Service,
Quality and Price, to the
Pe()ple of Our Community

.y
lll·i

-.

WE'RE PROUD OF YO-U.!
'

DJ.7

~DOrts /.
o 1.m o•1o Volley MIIIWna eo.

Congratulations to an·-graduates .from Meigs, ·S()nthern.,
Eastern, _Waha._.a and River Valley High Schools.
'

,Cl&amp;7

Property seizure:

in -leekly contact with Todd Acheson, spokesman for
CASH.
Story said the fact that Bush is interested in better ·
highways for the region does not represent a conflict of
interest.
'Everyone has in interest in good transportaliori!
Story said.
·
·
·
In addition, he said ihat by waiting until now lb
address their concerns indicates this is a NIMBY (notin-my-backyard) issue. The complaint states two of the
plaintiffs live along the route of the proposed highway.
"It seems rather late in the day to be raising those
issues now,' Story said ..

By MINDY KEARNS
.OVPNaweSWI ·

MASON, W.Va. - The first concrete evidence that Wai-Mart is QOming
/ O'ALLIPOLIS - While the jobleu rate
to Muon hu surfaced in a magazine published for the construction trade.
incielapd modellly ~ the slllte in April, ·
Rumorsllave been flying in the Bend Area fc:ir months of the possibility .
of
Wai-Mart
kJc:ating at the foot of the Pomeroy-Maso~ Bridge, Surveying ,
I unemploylftelit ~!ned in most southeutern 1---.,-t
Ohio oountioa, agoordlna to ihformation released
crews have t1een seen regularly at the site, which ·is owned by M1000, LTD,
Friday by the Ohio Dept.rtment of Employment
an Ohio Umited Uability Company. Wai-Mart corporate headqutrtm offi·
Servic:es.
·
·
cials In ArklnSas would not oonfirm the store and numerous calla were not
returned.
·
·
. OBES figures show ail empioyment incre.c
of 0.6 percent in Gallla County- from 9.0 to 9.6
But in F. W. Dodge COIIJiruction N~ W"".tly published May 17, a pie•
percent- between and Man:h and April.
bidding noiice was ·listed for thole in the conatruction trade. Pllilli call for' a.
In Meigs County, the unemployment rate fell
•.. ·
structural steel facility with 109,450 total ~quare fee.l
by 1.3 percent- from 13to ll.7 percent- dur·
The maaazine said final pl11111 are in piOIJCSII for the Wai•Mart Supering the period.
,
center Store No. 2849, and the owner could advertise for bids (by iOYilalion
Olher regional April unemployment rates
The rate has been it ~Jiow,er than 4.S percent cent, and eight were it or higher than percent.
only) within 30 to 60 days. The target start date is July 1999, wilh a com· .
(Marc:h rates in parepthesil) were: Athens: 4.4 ' the 1111 nine months,
Mermis, adminiitraAbout S..6 million Ohioans had jobs last
pletion date of February 2000 scheduled.
·
•
(S.2) percent; Jackson: 8.2 (7.8) percent; tor of the. OBES,
last month's month, up 8,000 from March. About 248,000
Boice Raidl Rhea Architects of Merriam, KS, are listed Ill! an:hitecll fOr
Lawrence:. 5.8 (6.1) percent; Sc:ioto:. 8.S · (\).3) lncreue, the rata
said.
workers were unemployed, compared with
the project.
percent; Vinton: 11 .S (13) percent; and, WashingAmong Ohio's
the ra~ ran&amp;ed · 227,000 the month before.
Wai-Mart had 2,435 stores as of Mareh 4, includin1 565 aupe~
ton: 6.1 (6.8) percent.
from a low of2.f
· Delaware and Madi·
The state's rate in April1998 .was 4.1 percent.
The first store opened in 1962 in Rogers, Arkansas. Wai-Mirl now ..W. ·
The jobless rate l!(&amp;a 4.~ percent In Ohio in 1011 countiea to a
13.4 pcn:ent in MJll'8&amp;n Over the year, ihe number of Ohioans working
more than 90 million customers weekly in SO atates, Puerto Rico, Onldl
April, ilp from ~.9 perCent the month before.;
County. Blev"'
bad rata IIIII than 3.per- inmalod by 187,000.
·
. China, Mexico, Brazil, Germany, Argentina and South Korea,
• 1,

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