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                  <text>:-P•12 • The Dally Sentlnei

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, May 24, 1999

;~----~~~~----------------~~~~~~--------~----~~~~~

.

~Toledo goes to the ,extreme in trying to keep Jeep
.BY JOHN SEEWER
Aaaoclated Pre. . Writer
TOLEDO- The neighborhood where Mary Ebnght played tag and spinthe-bottle, where she got her first job and where she mel her husband and
:raised her two daughters is nearly gone.
: Already gone are her mom 's house and the neighbors on either side. The
·:Only world she knows has been bulldozed to make room for a giant Jeep
:~sembly plant that will make a new line of Cherokees.
:· "I try not looking out the kitchen window anymore because it gets you
:So depressed," she said. "Everything in my lif~ happened here."
.; Within a few months, the Ebrights will ijSC the $122,500 settlement they
"11re getting from the city to move into a new home in an unfamili ar neigh:borhood. The city is spending $35 million to relocate the neighborhood's 83
&lt;families and 16 businesses.
:: It's part of an incentive package worth about $300 million - one of the
·
:-nation's
most lucrative packages ever given to a corporation. State and local
·!ax breaks account for $185 million.
· . DaimlerChrysler AG, Jeep's parent company, is spending $600 million
h
1
d
h $600 ·11 · h
f b" h" ·
· ·
1
. on t e new p ant an anot er . m1 10 on rc ur ts mg Its extstmg pant
·here -tL- oldest operatt"ng auto plant in the United States
·
'"'
·
.. In exchange, the city is putting about $75 million into cleaning contam·
: inared soil at the plant site, installing water and sewer lin es. relocating rail.

Tuesday

road lines. and building a new ruad called Chrysler Drive.
er said the costs will have a minimal impact on the city's budget.
•
There are other incentives including free land and reduced taxes. OrigiTerry Lodge, a.lawy.r who r~prcsented three families forced out by the
nally it was sajd the city's investment would be $20 million. .
Jeep project;'thinks the city went overboard with its financial commitment.
The pay otT. the city says. is the 4.900 jobs that will stay at Jeep and 26,000
" It's abs~. The city could have done much beller," LodJ~e said.
spinoff jobs that will be created by parts suppliers and other companies dealH th. k d
· th
d 1 f'
J
ld
d 1M
ing with the automakcr.
city :pir~n~ to;::•~:~up~~onomy an ayo •S at eep cou sen
~
Overall, the plant will have a $1 billion impact on the northwest Ohio area,
' "If there's trouble in the sport-utility industry, this town 's in for a world
said Mayor Cany Finkbeiner. who was instrumental in securing theleep deal.
f h .. Lod
"d
o urt,
ge sat .
::
··Fifteen years from. now, people will look back. at this and say what an
ConmuctiOII at the plant along Interstate 75 is well under way and on
outstanding bargain this was." Finkbeiner said.
·
schedule. The, highly automated ope~tion is expected to open in Januarji.
Known as "'The Glass Capital of The World ," the city is home to three 200 1.
'•
:
of the nation's largest glass makers - Owens-Illinois Inc., Owens Corning
There are WOITies thata more efficient plant could lead to fewer jobs. Uni _
and Libbcy-Owens-Ford Co.
,
·
.
ed Auto ' Workers Local 12 President Bruce Baumhower thinks overall
Its proudest product. though, is the Jeep, which first rolled off the assem- employment could end up as low. as 4,500 workers _ a cut of 400 jobs. •
bly line here in 194 1. Originally made for the military. nearly all of Jeep's
w
But now the only sense of urgency near the plant construction site is amonv"
1 and Cherokees arc ·built here.
rangers
.
"' Had we lost Jeep. it wo uld be li.kc Detroit losing the Tigers. It would be the neighbors looking for a new home.
like the Yankees leaving New York. " Finkbeiner said. "We don"t. have a major . "There's just a lost, empty feeling ·around here," said Mrs. Ebright.
•
lea•ue spons team. Jeep is a ma1·0 r part of our identity.
Only a few homes remain. Most have been bulldozed. Piles of din anij
c
shallow pits in the ground that once were basements and cellars remain. " Had we lost Jeep, the psychological impact would have been very great."
Vandals have shattered windows in the unoccupied homes that are stilJ
To cover the cost of keeping Jeep, the city borrowed $27 million from standing. The few residents who remain try to protect their property with signs
the fed eral government and sold off land it owns in the.suburbs. But Finkbein·
.
. .
saying "Still occupied'"
·
••

The Makah hunt. oiT Neah Bay.
Wash ., had the consent of the United
States, which has long opposed commercia! whaling but says "subsistcncc whaling" solely for survival is
different.
Whalers see tqe hunt - .the first
U.S. kill outside Alaska si nce a 1986
worldwide ban on commercial whaling - as an admission that growing
whale populations no longer merit
'blanket protection.
· Anti-whaling groups want to keep.
the moratorium, and some arg ue that
whales should never be hunted
because they arc intelligent creat ures
that feel pain.
Both sides agree the ban has
saved many a whale after decades of
indiscrimin ate commercial whaling

- for whale oil and other products
that now have sy nthetic equivalents
~ that raised the spec ter of extiriction.
Humpback wha le populations arc
now growing at 10 percent a year and
number more than 8,000, the commission says. Bowhead populations.
growing at 2 percent a year number
9,200, while gray whales - the type
killed by the Mak.ah, which came off
the endangered list in 1994 - number 22,500; up 3 percent a year.
The most numerous of the great
whales are minke whales, at 1 million, and pilot whales, ai 1.4 million.
"At the meeting this week, the
United States will present a report on
the Makah ·hunt.
Like many tribes, the Makah gave

Tomorrow: P. Cloudy

High: 80s; Low: 40s

Meigs County's

NO RAINCHECKS
I

SUPERIOR~$

.

Com~issioners discuss Hobsa~

Bridge with county engineer

Hot Dogs

c·

SUNBEAM GIANT
SAHDWJOI BREAD
79C 24oL

CAMP'S

Ice Cream
$

.1/2 gal.

39

,

12 oz.

FAMILY PACK .

Limit 4 please

CH:EESE NIPS

c

c

12.5-13.5 oz.
Limit 3 DI811S81

LB.

u.s. #·1

SNYDER'S

Russet Potatoes

Potato Chips
$ 09 ·

c

10 lb.

. Lindt 2 please

Boz.

Ap les
31bs.

.

COCA C:OLA, DIET COCA COLA

c

12 oz cans

-_ Sprite
$· 99

r·

or Borden Skim ·Milk·

$ 89

-.. STOKELY

To·mato Juice
4(1

oz. .

Umlt 2' please

Gallon

69

SUNSHINE

..

4

Dog ·Food
·. Limit 2 Please $
99
298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
..

·V

·'

·-

----- --.---

,,

·-:::--"-:---·-· --·- -.· -- .

By BRIAN J. REED
Senllnlll " - Stall

pu
M)IRJIETlrA (AP) .- The bpdy of a mlll).,who drowned in the ·Ohio
River was found Monday three days after he was last seen clinging to·a log
and calling for help. .
Search teams had been looking all weekend for the victim, thought by
witnesses to be a teen-age boy. The body of Eugene Wright, 20, of Marietta was found about 20 feet off the Ohio bank and was taken to Morgantown, W.Va., for an autopsy Tuesday, said officer Clyde Armstead of the
West Virginia Department of Fnvironmental Resources .
Armstead said the river is considered West Virginia territory for poten·
tial crime investigations.
· It was not clear what Wright WM doing in the river Friday, Armstead
said. It was a warm day with clear skies. The weather w.orsened during the
weekend search, with rainstorms Saturday. By Sunday, swift current and
murky water kept·divers out of the river, but did not halt dragging opera· ·
lions.
·

Judge overrules death recommendation

The Village of Middleport will likely rename the
Middleport Pool after one of its biggest supporters Arnold Johnsori- wllo died last week.
At Monday night's regular meeting of Middleport
Village Council, Jean Craig. a member of the Middleport Board of Publi&lt;;Alfain, read a tribute to Johnson,
who died suddenly on Thursday, and suggested that
village council rename the pool in .loltmon's honor.
Johnson served on Middleport's Parks and Recrc•
ation Board and was a volunteer for the Middleport
Youth League.
·
He alao worked for the Village on a contract basis
~ a building inspector.
Johnson•WIS praised by Oaig. acting mayor Sandy
lannarcl.li and .b)- IXlUIIcil members for his dedication
to the village parks system and the swimming pool,
is managed by his wife, O.Cri.
Craig said that Johmon had spent the day before
his death at the park. painting the swimming pool aitd"
performing other tasks.
Council agreed to contact village attorney Unda
Warner to ensure thcni were no restrictiom on naming
the fllcitity Iller Johnson, and will likely act on the
change next month.
,
. .

spending money on the project until TRAC members
have complied with all requirements of the openmeetings law in their deliberations. Bush is also
barm:l from participating in discussion or votes on
the project.
.
The 12-mlle; $56 million road would have
replaced. existing U.S. 33 from Athens to Darwin;
completing·a long-delayed project first considered in ··
the l9Sn..
"We are ple_ased that ODOT and (the council) .
have agreed to this temporary resolution of some ~f
the issues involved in this case," said CASH
spokesman Todd Acheson.
. TRAC coordinator Michael Cull said transportalion officials expect the·project to proceed as envisioned, although it will be delayed.
. ODOT District 10 spokeswoman Nancy ~edigo
said the agency has stopped work orders to all con-

sultants involved in the projeCt.
· -·
She said the order does not affect the nearby
JUvenswood Connector project from Five Points to
the Ohio River bridge at Ravenswood, W.Va.
ODOT maintains MOnday's actions will not llignificanUy delay the Athens-to-Darwin project, Pedigo said.
. "This is the completion of a stateWide corridor,
we're not going to give up that easy," Pedigo said.
"It's not just about trying to get emnomic clevelorr
menl into Meigs County;_that's just icing on the
cake."

Meanwhile the TRAC has scheduled a special
meeting to hold an executive session to meet with
attorneys concerning disputes involving the TRAC
that are the subject of pending court action. The
meeting will be held Wednesday, 9:30 a.m. at the
ODOT Central Office in Columbus.
·

which

Johnson was also remembered with a milment of pursue these possibilities in the everll that one of the
silence, and aprayer led by Courn:ilman Roger Man· villl!gt wells is shut down or becomes disabled.
.ley.
- .
Shutt said that the EPA seemed satisfied with the
In other business, lannarelli reported that work on progress made during the past few months, because
the pool wa still underway, and thai it was set to open the boanl of public affairs has been able to l5llfC the
_by Memorial Day, or shortly therCaftcr.
EPA that p10g1ess is being made on their mandated
Jay Shutt and Becky Hayes of Aoyd BrowncAsso- Improvements.
ciates and Craig met with council in executive session
Craig annouoocd that the village's new jetter had
to discuss contract negotiations, and later, in open ses- arrived, and was being tested for use. The machine
sion, disaiSsed a meeting on Monday afternoon with will be used to clean the vtllage's storm and sarutary
EPA officials in Logan.
sewer lines. ·
Shull said that the EPA has reviewed the village's . . Courn:il held a final reading on an ordinance outlift station evaluation report and the proposed lining penalties for excess refuse and high w~ on
improvements which have been approved by the private propeny. lannarelli said that enf01cen1ent of
agency, but noted that the village must cootinue to the ordinance will begin immediately.
.
seek funding to oomplcte' the improvements.
It was also noted that the vtllage has 61ed tts first
· The vili9'S Water System was also subject of lawsuit to collect delinquent Water charges.
discussim at ~ EPA inceting. and Shutt said that the
lannarelli ~ that a second meeting about
EPA told village officials at the meeting th~ ~wells the village's Neighlxxhood Watch ~ will .be
will not be approved in the areas where CXIsbng wells held on June 8 al 7 p.m. at the American Lcgwn
are in use, beamse of problems with vt&gt;lalile organic Annex.
compounds and other issues.
.
Plesent at the meeting. in addition to lannarelli and
The boanl of public affairs has been .investigating Manley, w~ Council members Rae Gwiazdowski,
the possibility Of purchasing water from the village of Stcv~ Houchtns and Robert Pooler, and Unda BroderPomeroy and other water systems, and Shutt said last ick, who served as recording seaewy in the abscnoe
night that it is important that the village ~tinue to of Oerk Btyan swa:.
..
.

a

WOOSTER (AP)- A Judge rejected a jury's death-sentence recommendation and instead sentenced a killer to life in prison without chance of
·
·
parole.
Judge Mark K. Wiest sentenced Gregory D. Crawford, 37, in the robbery and bludgeoning of Gene 0. Palmer, SS, at a barn near the victim 'p
. home last luly 23. He died two months later.
In rejeclin&amp; the death sentence for Oawford on Monday, Wiest of Wayne
County Common Pleas Court said he was "not finnly convinced death is the
appropriate punishment"
.·
· · Crawford, an ex-convict who wM living in Valley City at the lime, was
arrested Aug. 11;). Police had received lips that Oawford had been seen walk- '
log near IJ,Ie Palmer home in nearoy Congress Township on J~l~. 23. . ' . .
·
Oawford's fingerpnnts were found
By BRIAN J. REED
craftsmen who were interested in participating.
on Palmer's van, which was found in
SealhNI
Newe
Std
Thornton 1\as stressed that the program will
an Ashland parking lot three days
A
grant
from
the
Appalachian
Regional
focus
on original high--end durable crafts prodafter the robbery.
Commialion
will
help
Meigs
County
artisans
ucts,
such
as woodworking products, which
The jury deliberated two days
form a guild and market their works around the appear to be prolific in Meigs Count)', rather
· before convicting Crawford of aggranation and beyond.
·
than novelty aaft items.
vated murder, aggravated robbery,
1 Section • 10 haa
A
$50,000
grant,
sought
by
Meii$
County
The development of the artisans guild will
burglary and car theft. The same jury
Conuilissioncr
Jelfrcy
Thornton
over
two
yean
help
tho5e participating to share marketing
later recommended the death penalty.
6
felspder
ago. will allow aaftsmen to join together in an · strategies IS well as share in a windfall of pogwllleds
71c8
Ex-student sentenced effort to market their products throush a motional opportunities.
1
UMA (AP) - A former Bluffton. brochure and website, and, llier, a full~lor catComlg
!I
Thornton noted that any crafts to be considCollege
student hiS been sentenced
alog.
·
. ered for the project will be "juried," or deterl
EJ!Itodals ·
to four years in priaon for IICtlin&amp; a
Justin Diddle has been ~ppointed as ooiirdi- mined ippiop late in tenns of quality and mar,
Loyl .
3
fire last year that severely burned her .nator the project, runded through the ARC~s · kct appeal, bj a panel of aaft expens.
·· SPOrfl ·'
415
rooinmllle.
Entrepreneurial, Initiative program, and will
The cumnissioncrs have compiled a list of
Michelle Mattingly, 20, could have
3
Wqtber
work with economic development people and some SO crafters.who have cApt Man interest
been scntenced to 10 years in priaon
the commissioners til ensure that Meii$ Coitn· in joining the guild, and asked that others interfew starting the Sept. 24 fire, which
Lotteries
ty's best aafts are reprc:acnted in the catalog.
esled in participating contact Diddle at the oom· .
she later admitted was a suicide
Diddle his been emplo~ by the cumnis- missioners' office, at 992-2895. They may also
OIQQ
lltempt.
sioncn • a conlrlcl employee, and will likely reach Diddle at the economic development
Mattingly, from the Columbus
Pick 3: 8~·7; Pkk4: 9-8·1·3
work rc.lhC fint year of the two-year prop.m. office, at992•.5005.
·
MEET ARTISANS - Commlulone.-. Ja~
suburb of Whitehall,-wuset:ttcnced
llllckerc 5: 6-4-12-22·32
CommiaiOIICIS 'Thomton and Janet Howled
The program Will be operated through the Ho-rd and Jeffrey Thornton met Monday wlli
Friday by
Ricllud Warren of
WJ'A.
met with a group of inte!Jtlled craftspeople at a economic development and tourism offices lrtlAne lnteruted In partlclpetlng In the llhllla
County
Common
Pleu
Court.
Allen
011117 3: 6-3-S; DaUy 4: H-7-S
mcctina on Monday cvenina. and diiCUIIICid the beca•* of the importance of Appalachian crafts C_o unty'a Entrepreneurial Initiative gr~~nt, whlih
She had pleaded aullty to aaaravat·
project with c:andlcmakcn, qullters. a builder of to the county's efforts in attracti!lg industry and will market locally·I!Mide crab on the lna&amp;tllmi'MI.tt ed 11110n March 12.
musical iMtrurnenll a.peinta and several wood- visitors to the county, Thornton said.
· through a brochure and catalogL
,

Today's Sentinel

PRICES EFFECTIVE MAY 25, 26TH, 1999 ONLY

_,

Lcntes said Priddy earlier served a federal sentence and got out of prison
Sentinel Newe Stllff
in 1994. "We've been trying to track his activities since he got out," Lcntes
Agents participating in a press conference Monday afternoon displtiyed said. Although he suspected Priddy was trafficking in drugs, "knowing it and
more than 150 pounds of marijua~a seized earlier from Fred M. Priddy, Rut- proving il are two different things," he said. "We didn't catch him making
land.
,.
The agents were among those· par"An investigation regarding his cus.ticipating in a press conference held at
tomers is not finished," .Lentes added.
the Meigs County Fairgrounds which
. Tobin described the drug bust arid
also included Prosecuting Attorney
resulting forfeiture IS perhaps the
John R. Lentes, Sheriff James M.
largest in southeastern Ohio.
Souisby, Middleport · Police Chief
He said Priddy was very cooperative
Bruce Swift, and Pat Tobin, head of
with investigators, and presented. ~o
narcotics for the Ohio Bureau ofCrimsides of the 47-year-old Priddy, porinallnvestigation.
!raying him both as a l!rug dealer and
Priddy was sentenced Monday to
as a indulgent family man and grandeight years in prison and lined
father.
"He cut his loses and made the best
$15,000.
deal he could for himseif. Meigs
The agents, who asl\ed not to .be
identified, displayed the drugs which
County is the winner... and Fred Prrd- ·
were stored in plastic trash bags and
dy is the loser here," he said.
A total of 995 junk cars belonging to
black duffle bags.
One BCI agent estimated the drugs,
Priddy are being crushed and sold for
weighing about 163 pounds, were
$45 apiece, l:entes said. The cars will
worth approximately $500,000. A
be crushed within two weeks. Other
small amount of cocaine was also
property seized will be auctioned
shown.
sometime before July 4.
:
Lentes said practically all of the
DISPLAYING DRUGS - An agent of the Ohio BCI displays a Lentes said he was satisfied with the
marij~ana came from Mexico instead brick of compreeaed marlluan!l conflecated from Fred M. Priddy, eight-ye~ prison . te~m Pri~dy
of betng grown locally.
Rutland. The druga were ahown et a preM conterenc• Monday recetved. He got the max:mum pnson
AlthouJ!h southeaste_rn O~i.o is afternoon following a Mntenclng hHrlng In Melga County Com· time; he couldn't have got anything
more," he :wd, refernng to comme'!_ts
somewhat tnfamous for tts manJuana mon PI••• Court
farming, one agent who assisted in the
made during Priddy 's sentencing. - ..
investigation quoted Priddy as saying -there is too much risk involved in
"Eight years is a long time," he added.
.
;•
growing the drugs locally. :
"I think that the important thing the people in the county need to und(r!ie wanted nQ local involvement, the agent said.
stand is that this. is about law enforcement and sending a drug dealer off 10
Tobin said stopping drilgs at the Mexican border is practically impossible. prison," ~e said. "Any financial benefit is secondary to making the commU;
due to the amount of traffic crilssing the border both ways, partially as a result nity and its children safe from peaple like Mr. Priddy."
of business stemming from the North American Free Trade Agreement.
The drugs will ultimately be destroyed, Lentes said.

Good Afternoon

. Reg. or Bite Size

.,

'·

Meigs artists to form Art1san Gu1ld; ARC
grant tQ -fund organization, promotion ·

)i

UNITED VALLEY BELL 2% Milk

By JIM FREEMAN

Middleport Council considers tribute to Johnson
•,

(Asst. Flav)
Reg. $1.79

FRESH MICHIGAN

Law enforcement agents display confiscated drugs

T.

NABISCO 8.PK TOASTETTES

Chicken Drumsticks
UMit 2 pkg.
piHH

.

4/$

. 15 01.

Single Copy- 35 Cents

U.S. 33 project halted one day before final approval

Porll &amp; Beans
.

-Page4

Hometown Newspaper

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel New• Stllff
. Meigs County Engineer Robert Eason discuSsed the status of the
replaiJ!'ment of the Hobson Bridge with the Meigs County Commissioncis when the commissioners met in regular sessi,on on Monday.
The board approved a trims fer of funds within the engineer's budget so
that the county's portion of the project funding cduld be closed out.
According to Eason, the county's highway fund will have spent nearly
$250,000 toward the project.
.
The county's share included engineering work, interim repairs and
contribution of bridge credits, which the county receives when it funds
bridge proje~ts.
·
.
The transfer.for the bridge project was one of several transfers, total·
ing $89,394; approved by the commissioners for the highway department.
The other transfers will enable the highway department to close its Ohio
Public W9rks bridge projects from last year, and to make a final payment
to the Ohio Bureau of Workers Compensation.
County Commissioner Jeff Thornton discussed with Eason the possi·
bility of increasing the amount of Issue II funds requested by the county,
so that townships and villages c:Ould have access to the. money for their
own road projects.
The Issue II program is generally used for hot inix road projects and
other road improvements, and Eason said yesterday that most township
roads are not in adequate condition to apply hot-mix asphalt. and noted
that trustees would likely lack the resources needed to prepare roads for
hot mix or to maintain them.
Commissioner Janet Howard noted that township projects could be
"linked" with county Issue II projects so that improvement funds could b;e
more efficiently used for road i mprovemcnts. .
In other business, the commissioners opened and accepted a bid from
Mobbs Telecom of Coolville in the amount of $24,866 for a new in-house
telephone system at the Dep8rtment of Human Services. The board
approved the bid after review by DHS Director Michael Swisher, who was
present at yesterday's meeting.
· ·. .
·
.
Swisher noted that the systerri now in use at the agency is over 10 years
old, and th11t there have been increasing maintenance problems with the
system. ·
.
·
·
The commi~~Sioners also approved a bid from Rose's Excavating of
Racine for a water line extell5ion on (Jilkey Ridge Road in Bedford Township. The bid, for $30,962, is part of a project funded through the Community Development Block Grant formula program and will involve
With final approval of a neW U.S. Route 33 from
extending water lines from the Tuppers Plai115-Chester Water District to
Athens to Darwin only one day away, the Ohio
serve ho)l~Chol~ on the road who now have no !iCcess to a Jlllblic water
Depeitrne.tt of Transportation "and.an Athens-based
anti•hi&amp;l\way
group agreed Monday to ~te ·~
system.
'
.
Howarc! reported that a new toll-~~lephone number was available · project.
.
' •
l'or areas in the C91Jnty who must make a toll charge in order to contact the
An .agreement between ODOT"s Transportation
courthouse. The ~umber is (8'77) 992-2895, and may be used to access all
Rcview Advisory CoUncil and the Coalition Against
\X)unty offices, Howard said. ·
Superfluous Highways, signed by Judge Dan Hogan
In other action, the commissioners:
of Franklin County Olmmon Pleas Cowl, postpones
%JAppointed Commissioner Mick Davenport to serve as the ·county's
what w.. expected to be the TRAC's final approval
safety coordinator for workers compensation;
of the project ~csday. .
· %JSet next week's regular meeting fcir June I at 3:30p.m., due to the
CASH alleges the TRAC did not comply with
Memorial Day holiday;
'
Ohio's open-meetings law in its·deliberations and
%JApproved payment of bills in the amount of $299,817.88, with 232
fwthcr alleges that TRAC member G. Kenner Bush,
entries.
·
·
former publisher of The Athens Messenger, has a
Also· present was Clerk Gloria Kloes.
conflict of interest since he is a member of a group
that supports the project.
The order bars the council from taking action or

WHILE SUPPLIES
LA T

FESTIVAL ·

Atlanta to advance to
conference finals

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume '19. Number 251

:~

-Prices Good 'uesday, lay 21th i Wednesday, May 21th ely

I

Knlcks sweep

•

up whaling decades ago as stocks said Scott Smullen, a spokesman for among smaller countries, e~pecial~
dwindled and the grueli ng hunt~ · the ' National Marine Fisheries Ser- in the. Caribbean , where it provides
became fruit less. Now ,tribes in Ton- • vice. He said ·the United States will heavy doses of foreign aid- but ,h
ga, Japan and elsewhere want to call for more research into the.effects still doesn't have. the two-thirds
revive traditional whaling.
of global warming on whale food majority needed to scrap the ban. · ·
"The animals are beginning to . supplies.
thrive, that's why it's starting up
Whaling supporters acc use nonAlso at the conference, member
again," said Kathy Happynook of the whaling countries of deliberately stateS will consider vioiations- sucfl
1
World Council of Whalers.
slowi ng ·developmept
of the plan.
as the alleged killing of a lactatin~
Whaling countries led by )apan
Eugene Lapoin)J!, head of lhJ! humpback and her calf by a tradiwill push this week to resume com- Florida-based Worlil Conservation tional whaler in the Caribbean counmercia! whaling under a 1994 plan Trust, said nonwhalers are doing try of St. Vincent and the Grenadine~.
that sets strict catch limits and pro- , "everything possible to stop the The commission allows St. Vin~ent ·
vidcs observers on ships.
completion of the work." . ·
two humpbacks a year, but not suck'
But the United States and its
·A compromise put.forward by Ire- ling calves or females accompanyir(g
allies ·_ Australia, Britain, Ne.w land would ban whaling everywhere them.
•
Zealand and France - say the num - except along coastlines, but most
ber of whales is still too low to·ease. anti-whaling countries say the proJapan takes more than 300 whales
the ban.
posallacks details. '
. a year for scientific research allowed
"We arc adamantly against it, "
Japan has been winning allies by the commission.

Day Sale

Indians fall to White Sox, Page 5
Snooping a sign of mental illness? Page 6
Time Out For Tips, Page 6
..

Todey: Cloudy
High: 70s; Low: 50s

}Commission wrestles with group's ·renewal of wh-a ling
•. ST. GEORGE'S. Grenada (AP)
:·- When a Makah Indian's harpoon
: burst through the hide of a gray whale ·
. off Washington state, it drove home ·
: a question bedeviling international
; officials : Now that some types of
· whales are back in large numbers. do
: they still need to be saved?
. The widely publicized hunt last
· week provided a dramatic prelude to
: the annual meeting of the Interna: tiona! Whaling Commission. starring
:Monday on the Caribbean island of
·Grenada.
· "'The U.S. has 'no integrity now. I
: thi'nk we're on the threshold of a
· major escalation in whaling," said
: Pa~l Watson of the Washington-·
: based Sea Shepherd Conservation
: Soc iety.

Sports

May25, 100D

Weather

~

'

--

.

-·-~·-

'

-

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-.~

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-····

---~

.....

---~--

. -.-...,..

______

�,.

•

Tuelday,May25,1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

,C ommentary

Death Notices
Frances Eleanor Kim

The Daily Sentinel Take· a timeout from technology·
'Esta6fls~tl in 1948

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-182·2158 • Fu: 182·2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH.

DIANE HILL
Controller

General Meneger

TM Srntinel wlcom... ,....,.. to , . edltot from rHdMe cwt • bt'oMI,.,. of top.
leo. Short lottoro (30/J _ , . or-} tho eiNinoo of hlltg
ryp.d loff.,.
oltou/G frtcNdo o olfiiNIIUrtl,
addiWI, attd d•~ PIHHI•IUftbr. SpM:Ify a dat•ll ,..,.•• •
p,.
vlou. lrlld•
U.ll to: ._.,.,. ~ 1M Hllor, TIN Sentinel, 111 Coutt St.,
- y . Ohio 45781; or, FAX lo 740-fft.ZIST.

oro,...._ -•II ...,.... -

or,.,.,.,

E-

pu-.

,.,_..,.to •

Toledo bashing
It's nothing personal

Stephan Rechtschaffen, M.D., author of
By S1r1 Eckel
"Timeshifting: Creating More Time to Enjoy
Steplj and I stood on the
Your Life," says that our bodies naturally adjust
street corner, tapping our
to these little accelerations -- a process called
feet and waiting for our
entrainment. "It's the same way that you will
friend Charlie. After 20 minfind that your body's rhythms change if you
utes, Steph whipped out her
move from a small town to a large city. You will
cell phone to call him. f1er
phone was a bright-green litnaturally start walking and talking faster, until it
feels normal to do so," he says. This is also the
tle number -- it looked like
something Fisher-Price could have made.
reason why we don 't linger over coffee after
"That's the only way I could have a cell zapping dinner in the microwave, or leave the
phone," Steph explained. "I have to have one office 1013ner after we act a faster computer. We
that looks like a toy."
simply u.se the time we "saved" to do more
The trouble is, cell phones won't be toys for stuff.
.
much longer. They will soon cross that line
And there's always more stuff to do. Because
between luxury and necessity, and I feel a slight' there is never a time when we can't get it done.
twinge of dread when I think about that day. Remember Sundays?
Because I know I'll cave. I know that I will not
That was the day that all the stores and offices
only own a cell phone, but that 1.' 11 soon be were closed -- ·a day you were pretty much
unable to imagine life' without it. I know that in .forced to relax because there really wasn't much
the not-too-distant future, it will
simply be a given that we .will all
---~·'!E•ECOI''M­
be. able to reach each other any- et"?llil~"
HVl~
time, anywhere.
If you doubt this, think about
other ,forms of communication
technology. Answering machines
were once used only by the very
busy or the very vain. When you
called someone and they weren't
home, you simply tried them
again later. Now it seems outrageous that someone would expect
us to make that kind of effort.
Same with people who don't have
call-waiting -- the sound.of a busy
signal leaves me feeling slightly
surprised and kind of peeved; Do
they really expect me to just keep
calling them back? Who, exactly,
do they think they are?
There are still a . few people
around who don't have e-mail, but
they are now looked on as slightly
pathetic figures -- losers or Ludditcs whom we needn 'I bother
contacting anyway.
I don't want to sound like a
complete technophobe --I like my
answering machine. But I do think
that all these instruments of
instant commu.nication have created a culture of impatience. My friend Cheryl, a else to do. But now we live in an age when we
lawytr, has observed the way that cert4iit stan- can go grocery shopping or transfer funds into
dards have been altered in order to accommodate our bank account at three in the morning any day
speed -- for example, a few years ago her office of the week.
would only work with original, signed docuWe're never really off the hook ..
ments; now faxed signatures are OK. "They
Which is why my friend Rebecca says that
changed the rule because nobody could stand to even in· her downtime she qperates with a lowwait for Federal Express," she says.
grade anxiety. "I feel guilty just sitting around

By JOHN SEEWER
Associated Preas Writer
.
TOLEDO (AP)- Sure, calling the minor-league baseball team 'the Mud
Hens is a bit demeaning.
.
And yes, this is a blue-collar city where coney dogs are the most popular
items on restaurant menus and people follow bowling as a competitive sport
. But is tha! re~n enough to make Toledo a standard punch line for come-·
dians, ad writers and cartOonists?
A recent outbreak of "Toledo bashing" has stirred up this Lake Erie city's
ire even· though ·most of its 300,000 residents have grown accustomed to
being kicked around.
The latest shot came in the May 10 edition of Time magazine.
Political cartoonist Don 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 advertisement for Fannie Mae, the federal mortgage company, that said "Jennifer Cooke's job took her to Cincinnati. Her down payment only.got her.to Toledo."
.
Then Washington, D.C., lawyer Brendan Sullivan Jr. told a judge that
"Toledo, Ohio, is the worst place in the world."
Fannie Mae changed the ad, and .Sullivan later apologized.
It seems the city has long been the tail end of jokes.
"I remember watching old movies and the actors would say "Oh no, we
· gotta play Toledo," said the city's favorite S\)n 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 reputa.tion of being a tough town," Farr said.
· : : No one tried more to change that image than Farr. .
·
: • His love of Tony Packo's Hungarian hot dogs and the Mud Hens brought
. · worldwide fame to 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 th~re says it's a great city."
So what is it about this blue-collar city between Cleveland and Detroit
that makes it such an easy target? ·
"I honestly don't know," Farr said. "It's just a stigma it has."
By WALTER R. MEARS
.
were calling it sluggish and top-heavy with comMayor Carty Finkbeiner h'as a few ideas.·
· peting senior aides, before Clinton ventured his
"I think the old impression of the city was that we were a withering,. . AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON
(AP)At
this
point
in
his
own commentary for the defense.
dying city," Finkbeiner said.
presidential
campaign,
the
thing
AI
Gore
has
As though it were remarkable, media and
Maybe it's just thai Toledo, Ohio, seems to roll off lhe tongue, he added.
most
to
fear
is
fear
itself.
It
can
be
contagious,
campaign
analysts came on the discovery that
"It's got a very musical quality," the mayor said. " It's got the. two o's in
and
turn
headaches
into
hazards.
·
·
former
Sen.
Bill Bradley, Gore's challenger for
Toledo. Then you've got the two a's in Ohio."
The
vice
president
has
his
political
problems.
the
Democratic
nomination; is a real candidate,
And don't forget the phrase " Holy 'Toledo."
"It just comes to people's minds who haven 'I been here," Finkbeiner But he has .a long. lead in the polls of Democrat- one who can raise 'the money and enlist the supic support for the 2000 nomination, an even port to f!1ake a race of it next year.
said.
wider
one in fund raising, endorsements from
Gore contributed his own gaffes, most
Chicago Tribune columnist Bob Greene, a native of suburban Colum)lus
·across
the
party
hierarchy
and
the
advantages
of
notably
his ciaim in a TV interview that in Conand il defender of his home state, advised Toledoans not to take the attacks
\)ffice.
Vice
presidents
seekir!g
to
be
nominated
gress,
he
"took the initiative in creating the
personally.
for
president
seldom
are
denied.
.
Internet,"
which
actually dates from 1969.
. "It's a lot easier to take shots at people you don't know," he s.aid. "A lot
Which
is
not
to
suggest
that
it
is
a
role
with•
There
was
talk
of internal bickering, and that
·of people have never been to where we're from and because of that it's easy
out
difficulties.
Any
vice
president
faces
a
chalthe
candidate-vice
president was miring himself
· to take advantage of the stereotypes."
Unfortunately, he said, Toledo sounds like a punch line even though it lenge in showing himself to be his own man, not in detail work. Gore has just appointed Tony
~·t
.
.
just the supporting player in .the current job Coelho, a former congressman and veteran polit"To a lot of people, Ohio might as well be Iowa or Kansas," Greene ·said. description. Presidents have more often been· ical manager, to head the campaign.' Clinton sugsilent than actively supportive of their No. 2 gested to the Times that "he'll really take a lot
"It's all the same to them."
men.
of the burdens off the vice president."
Not President Clinton. He's an aggressive
Gore has raised more campaign nioney than
Gore campaigner, so determined to promote him any other 2000 candidate, '$8.9 million in the
that he telephoned The New York Times to vol- first three months of the year, more than twice as
unteer that he wasn 'I alarmed ·at the state or the much as Bradley.
campaign,
In the Democratic polls, he runs far ahead of
The Southern Local School District indeed needs continuous improveAnd to volunteer that "it's in a lot better Bradley, both nationally and in the early primament.
'shape
now than it was eight weeks ago."
ry states, although he can't boast about it with1. To gel better school board members that are not related to teachers.
Gore
was
widely
reported
to
be
irked
at
Clinout
undercutting his own argument that polls
2. Get abetter school principal that is not related .to the school board
ton's
intervention
and
awkwardly
public
advice.
·
showing
Texas Gov. George W. Bush or Eliza·members.
"If
he
did
not
advise
me
to
lo6sen
up,
lie
would
beth
Dole
both ahead of him are meaningless
3. Parents we all need to slick up for our kids. Because when your kids
be
the
only
person
in
the
United
States
who
didbecause
it
is
so early.
are calling for help all the teachers do is give detentions and after schools
He's.just begun a series of policy speeches to
·iletentions and Sat~rday school and after 35 detentions they send thept to n't," Gore said in a Newsweek interview.
It
hasn't
been
an
easy
season
for
the
Gore
stait
telling voters what he would do as presi;
.alternative school in Pomeroy.
.
campaign.
·
·
dent,
the first on education. He called his pro: 4. Some of the kids like there better then there school. Because ihey get
There
are
polls
suggesting
slippage.
Congresposals
revolutionary, although they were essen·the help they need there. And it is orderly there and there is no teachers.
sional
Democrats
are
said
to
be
restive
about
his
tially
an
expansion of Clinton administration
yelling at them. So all parents that care about their kids should speak out for
.
ability
to
rally
the
party
behind
a
2000
ticket,
proposals.
·
!hem in the paper and that the school board meeting and by voting. .
with House control within reach. Commentators
That gets to the chronic problem of vice pres.·
·JIInna Gayton
:ponland

·~

-

Wilma Lee Hunter Stover

highs in the 60s
for W~dnesday

us

The Aaaocllted Preu
slow:moving low pressure system over eaftada will continue to pull
air into Ohio tonight .and Wednesday, the National Weather Se.rvice
Skies will be mostly cloudy with lows tonight in the 40s and highs
I.:W,edn•esdlly in the 60s. Showers are possible. ,.
·
More seasonable conditions will return on Thursday with fair skies and
Ikernperah~res around 70 degrees, forecasters said.
record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather stawas 93 desrees in 1975 while the record low was 33 in 1925. Sunset
toniight will be at 8:48 p.m. and sunrise WednC!;day at 6:08 a.m.
Wealher foMCast:
Tonight... Partly cloudy. Lows near SO. West wind S td 10 mph.
·
' Wedncsday...Partly cloudy in the morning, then mostly cloudy with a
chance for a brief shower or sprinkle. Highs in the mid and upper 60s.
P.ance of rain 30 percent.
·
: Wednesday nighi ...Achance of evening sprinkles, otherwise becoming
partly clol!dy. Lows in 'the upper 40s. .
·
.
E~nded forecast:
Thursday... Partly cloudy. Highs in the mid 70s.
. Friday... Partly cloudy. Lows from the upper 40s to the lower 50s and
highs in .the mid and upper 70s.
·
· Satarday...Partly cloudy. Lows io the mid 50s and highs in the lower

those grouchy, anti-social people who d~n 'I
seem to care whether anyone can .reach her or
· not. And who knows·- maybe they'll be right. :
Copyright1999 NEWSPAPER ENTER;
PRISE ASSN.
:.
,
Send comroenls 10 Ut$ ~~~or, i!l~Cf'e of thts
newspaper or send her e-mail at
~ j~

·

·"·~·.-

• ':'

••

I.

:

Administration· readies new
truck, bus safety.measures

•

•

Gore leads Bradley i·n all categories, ~ncluding p~nic

·:Southern Local needs improvement

:roday In

H~story

• Today is Tuesday, May 25, the !45th day of 1999. There are 220 days left in

·!he year.

; 'foday's Highlight in History:
.; On May 25, 1979, 275 people died in America's worst domestic air disaster
an American Airlines DC-10 aashed during takeoff at Chicago's O'Hare

when

lirpo~

.

• On this date:
; In 1787, thC Constitutional Convention was convened in Philadelphia after
enough delegates had shown up for a quorum.
.
~ In 1810,Argcntina began·its revolt against Spain.
: In 1!144, the ,first telegraphed news dispatch, sent from Washington to BaltiIIIOI'C, llppOII'Cd in the Baltimore Patriot.
·
: In 189S,playwrighf0scar Wilde was convicted ofa morals charge in LOndon

ami sentenCed 10 prisoq.

.
.
• In 1935, 8lbe Ruth hit the 714th and final home run of his career, for the
boston Braves, in 1 pme against the Pittsburgh Pirales.
·
: In 1946. Trlnljordan (now Jordan) became a kingdol)les it proclaimed its new
monardl; Kina Abdullah Ibn UI-Hussein.
: 'In 1961, ~elident Kennedy asked the nation 'to work toward putting a man on
Gte moon by the""" of the decade.
• Jn 1963, the Orpnizalion of African Unity was founilcd, in Addis Ababa,

.
.
: lr1 1968, the GaJeway Aldl, part of the J~fferscn National &amp;pansion Memotial in St. t.ouiS, wu dedicated.
·
.
, In 1992. ~ay Leno rnade his debut as full-time halt of NBC's "Tonipt Show,"
~..

·.

iucccedina Jollnny canon.

·
WASHINGTON -- Politics makes strange
bedfellows.
You're a libertarian. You believe that govern- ·
ment should protect "life, liberty and the pursuit
of happiness," but stay out of your business, ·out
of your bedroom, out of your face!
Let me keep singing your song for you. You
.want fewer government agencies nosing into
your affairs, fewer tax collectors digging into
your pockets.
You'd rather run your own business,. live your
own life, be yourself every day of the week
instead of having to devote Monday through Friday trying to
.
pass
muster
with some gov-·
ernment or corporate bureau:
tracy.
"Goodness without
Maybe you
wisdom always have a special
reason
for
accomplishes evil.'' wanting·to celebrate this ideal
- Robart A. Heinlein, American individualism we
American sclenctl- cherish
from
our
country's
ffctlon tiutho
earliest begin (f907-19BB). ninp, this spirit
of "Live Free
By .C hris M1tthewa

·iiY TIM Aeeoelated PreM

.

·

: Ten yean 11110: 1be Cal.p ry Aames won their first Stanley Olp by defcaling

the Montrell Canldleos in pme six of their championship serieil..
Five YCII'BIIIJI: The UN Security Council lifted a1()..year-old ban on weapons
exports from South Africa. scrapping the last of its apartheid-era embargoes.
~
Q

Thoug ht
for To day:

By OLEN JoHNSON,
revieWed the U.S. aviation industry,
Alilaclalli&lt;l " - Wtllfi
. the report is expected.to acknowledge
, ~.W~HI~li!TI?~ - (APl -,- , Th~ ., s!li&gt;rt~X&gt;J1lings and recomm'end more
~.;nnton adnurustrallon has prepared a money and more staff for the office
Package of remedies, including and more direct supervision by the
191Jgher enf&lt;?rcemen! o~ truck and bus lrariiH'Ortation secretary and the head
laws, following a. rash of fatal arei- of the Federal Highway Administradents and complaints about lax over· lion;•
.
sight of large highway V~iclcs. ·
" Jl,ep.Bud Shuster, R·Pa., chairman
• ~ Among step~ Tra1111p01111ion Sec- of the House 'l'ransportation CommitRtlry Rodney Slater was lo announce tee,'.was holding his own news conlbday were increlsed enfon:ement by fmnce today about the Mineta report.
inspector'S, designation of an official Shusle~ was expected to recommend
m.the Office of Motor Carriers to moving the Office of Moior Carriers
:oversee safety and a new safety plan from the Federal Highway Adminislhe agency is putting into effect.
tration to the National Highway Traf. The news conference was a .pre· fie Safety Administration.
lllllplive answer to a hearing schedBoth are Transportation Depart·
uled Wednesday in which Congress ment agencies, but critics say the
wiD receive a report analyzing the OffiCe of Motor Carriers is too cozy
~lveness of the Office of Motor wi!b the truckins industry. Rep. Frank
Carriers, the agency that ovCI!IeCS the Wolf, R-Va., a leading critic, argues
s:afety ~f truclts and buses.
that..tfi!W and buses .would be super. · Wnhen by former Rep. Nonnan vised bett~r by the safety administraMineta, D-Calif., who previously tion, which has made major strides in '
fighting drunken driving and in
increasing use of seat belts.
.
An average of six people die in bus
accidents each year on the nation's
(USPS 2JJ.NG)
C_....,N.......,...HaldiJop,,o&lt;.
highways, but S,300 are killed in
truck-related
crashes - more than
Publ- every oflomaon, Monday d!""'&amp;b
200
people·
every
two weeks.
,Fridoy, Ill C..n St., .........,, Ohio, by lhO
Obio YAlley Publilllins Coinplny. Second d~a
"There is an incremental ·loss of
p&lt;111qe paid II Pomeroy, Ohio.
life, and people lose sight of the terri·
_ . , Tho Allocioled r- ud llle OIUo
'New;papee AllociMioa.
· ble toll it takes," said Kenneth Mead,
PM
1 u "'Seod addreu C.'OI'ft(:ljofts to 1'be
inspector general of the TransportaDaily Sentinel, 111 Court Sl., Pome1oy, Ohio
tion Department and a critic of the
•4j769.
SVISCRJmON RATES
current oversight system.
· ·
ly Corrkr or M- Roott
is
the
No.
I
transportation
"This
One .Woei ................................ .$:1.00
One Monoh ................................$8.70
safety problem," Mead said.

idents" running ·for pro;Dotim\: tiicy 'have to
demonstrate both loyalty and independenc~.
After a term or two of subm.erging themselves;
they have 'to ~merge wit~ their QWII proposllis
and promises.
·
:
Presidents aren't always pelpful. Dwight D,
.Eisenhower said he .couldn't remember a major
idea Richard M. Nixon ~ad contri!IUied to hji
administration, but given a week, might think of
one.
.,
Lyndon B. Johnson wouldn't give Hubert H.
Humphrey running room in 1968; when the hiat
of ·a Vietnam peace gesture might have turned
· the elcction .hc lost:
.•
No president has more actively suppoi'led his
vice president for nomination than · Clinton for
Gore in 2000.
That help comes with special baggage after
the sex-scandal impeachment of Clinton, wiih
Gore devotedly pronouncing him a great presi·
dent anyhow, while condemning his personal
misconduct. ·
·
Leftover scandal fatigue could still be a pro~
!em for Gore.
•
Republicans think so: ·
. .
"One of Mr. Gore'S biggest challenges is thai
he's been head cheerleader at Bill dinton's peP,
rallies, and people are finding that a serious error
in judgment," said Lamar Alexander; running
for the Republican nomination.
:
But cheerleading · goes with the job Gore
holds: His test now is to move beyond it in cam:
paigning fonhe job he wants.
·
;

The Daily Sentinel

1

EDITOR'S NOTE - Walt~r R. Mears, vic~
president and special correspondent for Th~
Associated Press, has reported on ·washington
, and national politics for more than 30 years. : ·

Making the GOP the gpy old

'

I - - le·.- I ~

SCIENCE

Letter to the Editor:

.

• M!Cij,

I:

saraeumaoJ.com.

Frances Eleanor Kim, 75, died at her home in Alpine Texas on May 22
1999 following a short illness.
'
'
Born at Long Bott9m on Feb. 22, 1924, she was the daughter of the late
Roy H. and Ella R1!ey Hannum. She graduated from Chester High School in
1940 and was bapt1zed at the Long Bottom Christian Church.
. Her first husband, Harold Hoffman, preceded her in death. She is surVIved by her husband, Robert Kim of Virginia; two brothers, William Hannum and Roy Hannum, both of Long Bottom; three children, Victoria H.
Cummings of Reading Mass., Robert Hoffman of Staunton, Va., and James
R. Kim of A~stin, T~xas; four grandchildren and one great-grandchild.
A memonal serv1ce was held today at the Geeslan Funeral Chapel in
Austin, Texas.
.
Funeral services will be held at the White Funeral Home in Coolville Friday at I p.m. Viewing will be from noon until time of services. David Hannum, nephew of Mrs. Kini, will officiate and burial wiiii!J' in the Sand Hill
Cemetery at Long Bottom,
·
In lieu of' flowers donations may be made to the Ameri93n Cancer S,ociety.

for

and vcgging," she says. "Even if I'm watching;&amp;
movie on TV, I feel like I should be reading ;a
magazine too. I just can't allow myself to focus
on one thing."
:
Of course, we're not entirely helpless again~!
life's ever-accelerating pace. I once interviewed
a researcher who chronicled how tleople u$e
their time.
:
. He discovered that while most American$
complain that they don't have any leisure timi::,
they also log in three or four hours of televisiqn
a n\ght, After the interview was over, I di$COI;
nected my cahle and enrolled in a yoga .class.
Not only did I find I wes more relaxed, 1· al*&gt;
realized that .life was a lot more fun when I used
"prime time" for something other than watching
TV.
.:
So who knows -- maybe I will ' muster the
nerve to remain cell-phone .free.
::
Maybe people will start to 'see me as one ~f

RockET

11

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

0.. Vear................................... S104.o0

SIIIGLE COPY PRICE

partY

or Die!"
·A gay .Republican is more likely .to. say, ··(
You're gay.
.
don't care what you think about m'e; just leav~
Yes, what I've wrjtten above is the quiet me alone."'
. 1
anthem of a group that's organized itself, with
· One llash pofnt of difference between somd
more than a smidgen of irony, as the "Log Cabin . ~ay ~Pers an~ their De~ocratic cou~terpar~
Republicans."
ts the hate ;cr)mes bill~ til•king thetr way1
HaviJlg spoken to the Log Cabins recently through Slfle leaislatures. " •·
· . !
and having had several of its members on my TV
"We 1re supporting the federal biil,· but eved
program ·"Hardball," r offer them to you today within our organization there's .' a 'great dividc.'1
as a rich, overlooked samplins of Americana.
Tafel explains. "Our oraanization te.nda to be'
· On economic issues, the Log Cabins arc as more libertarian."
1
conservative as Barry Goldwater.
· ~~at turne~ m11,ny , say. Re~~licans . i~
On matters of social tolerance and discrimi· act1v1sts was the speech: Patnfk ~challan galle: .
nation, their hearts beat with. the fervor of a Bar- at the 1992 Republioan l&gt;lational COnvention. Hb
ney.Frank. .
.
.
. mocked Democrllts 'with'rHetorlc about " croas~
But get·this straight: These men have one big · dressing," skewered · Bill" Clinton and AI Gore:
dispute with Democrats who share their sexual for their coronation as "the most pro.-lesbhin arilt•·
orientation but not their party. They, being ideo- pro-gay ticket in history." .
.· :
logical J!,ep~blican~, have no great .faith in govThough dismayed by homuphoblc remarlls:
ernment.
made in the past ~ear by bia·name Republicans,•
"Our people are libertarians in small busi- Rich Tafel 'is hQJicful that200o will. be dlfferen1.:
nesses or presidents of their own companies/' When the party meets next summer in P~ilide!-:
Log C.abin executive. director Rich Tafel · phia, he explcta to. ,have an openly ,py persoit;
expliiins. "They want government out of their preferably a i..o8 cabin !IIOII)ber, lllndlng 'arid: •.
life."
·speaking wbere Pat Buchanan once spoke --:
How do gay Democrats look at things?
from the podium of the Republican National :
"I think you'd find they think government is Convention.
'·
'
the answer,'' argues Tafel, 36, a former Baptist
· (Chris Matthews, chief of the San F{anclsC'O :
minister. "They want government approval. Examiner's Wishinaton Bureau, ia host. of
They ,want to be told they're OK by society. "l:lardball" on CNBC cable channels.)
They sec approval by bureaucracies as almost
Copyright1999 NEWS'PAPER ENTER.therapeutic, a seal of approval.
PRISE ASSN.

Dlil)l.;...................................... 3$

a~..a..m.riaoil!-. "
No ~ by tna11 pomiHed In mu

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'lf •

.,

luvuloblt. .

~.:

Pickup on schedule

:

· - Eve.n though Monday is Memorial Day, the trash pickups in Middle;
port Will occur on the regular schedule, tlie contracted hauler announcetl
today.
;

. RACO meeting location changed

Broughton .........................~ ..... 16

52 V.Cb .......................... .SIO!II-56 .
Rill'!' o.atch M!IP t:-IJ
t3
J29.15

Chahn Shpe.: ....................,..... 4,,
c:r,
Holdlng ..........................
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VFWto meet

· .

··

.

·

A meeting of the VFW Post 9053 will be held Thursday, 7:30 p.nT.
New officers will be installed,
· ·
.
•

Chapter sets meeting

.

. Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter of Beta S1gma Phi Sorority will have a
p1cmc Thursday at 6:30p.m. at the home of Joan Corder:
·
Table service and soft drinks will be furnished . Members are take a
covered dish, lawn chairs and jackets.
,.

Aouse report says China can build
better weapons because of U.S. thefts
membiors of Congress have eompared it to the theft of atomic bomb ·
secrets by Russia in the 1940s. The
fallout could have 'a profound impact
on the operation of U.S. weapons
labs and on U.S.-China relations.
The House and . Senate have
called for in-depth hearings on Chinese espionage and U.S. nuclear ·
security. And Energy Secre(ary Bill
Richardson within days is expected
to announce disciplinary action
against a number of Energy Department and lab employees in connection with anti-espionage lapses.
"These thefts of nuclear secrets ·
from our national weapons laboratories enabled (China). to design;
develop and successfully test modern strategic weapons .sooner than
would otherwise have been possible," the report says.
.With the help of stolen secrets and
other technology gains, China "has
leaped, in a handful of years, from
l950s-era strategic nuclear capabili·
ties ·to the more modern thermonuclear weapons designs" that took the
United States decades to achieve.

The Pomeroy Alumni Association will meet at 6:30p.m. Friday at thl'
Meigs High School cafeteria to decorate for the banquet.
Tickets are $12 and are available at Swisher/Lohse or Francis Florist
or by calling 992-7690 before Thursday.

Hymn sing set

A hymn sirig will be held at the Stivers ville Community Church, 7:30
p.f!!. Satu~ay night. Delivered and Joe McCloud will ~singing.
·7

Barbecue to be held

•

..The.Racine Volunteer Fire Department attd the Auxiliary will stage ·a
chicken barbecue and. serve homemade ice cream. Sunday at the new
firehouse. Serving will begin at 11 a.m.
There is' plenty of parking.

.

(Sci·FI)ii:OO I:JO, 3:50,

. . ioes, 7:1$, ..Js,
Uaw ~ lvwii&lt;Gf... ~hrt­
ISIWITifUL (PGt3)

.Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Monday admissions - Pamela
Richard, Long Bottom.
Monday discharges- none.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges May 24 - Tiffliny
Clonch, Gary Mitchell, Thomas
Walls, Joyc~ Violand, Paull&gt;erroud.
(Published with permission)

.

1:00,3:50

I:J0. 4ol0, 1&gt;1~ ...

lilliii {PG13)

~-~~-UI-!"¥10-

INTIArMENT (PGU)

1:45, t..SS,7..so, t.SS

7:00 I 8:20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN t:OO I 3:20

I!!.t! [Sf!,!aden

Meigs EMS logs 2 ealls
~nits of the M,eigs County Emergency Medical Service reco!ded two
calls for assistance Monday. Units
responding included:
&lt;;ENTRAL DISPATCH
9:44 a.m., Forest Run Road,
Racine, Mildred Parsons, Pleasant
Valley Hospital, Syr.acuse squad
assisted;
11:46 p.m., Minersville, Don
Ray, Veterans Memorial Hospital.

-d•Wiiiii'

520 W. Main St. • ·
Pomeroy, OH ·
Phone 992·2588
VInton - 388-8603
Gallipolis • 446-0852

Casual Outdoor Furniture .

"The mo.rt comfortable casualfurnitur~ on the market." Our
.exclu1ive "Penila-Wi.cker•" prolfi.de' a natural "'give"' for the total ,
body comfo rl and 11ay• cool even after long hour&amp; in ehe sun.

Champion •••.••.•••••••••••..••..••••••• 7\

--.a ...........................

26~
45'~
Glnnett..........................:.. ~... 73~.
Kmert :..••.......•.....•.,.••.•....•..... 16~•
Kroger .....................~ .••..........sz-t.

26 \Veeb.......................... ..l$6.68

'z-u..........................stoo.n

COrrtctJon Polley

·
.

Linda End ...............................43
Ltci ................:.......................M'Oak Hill Fln1 ........... :................19

ova .......................................34~

Ont Y1Uey ...........................37.,.
Peoplea ................................ 2~.

Prem Fln1 .............. :................ 1~.

RCii!Ckwell ............................... 5H
RD/Shell ...............................

sn..

'N.we Dapattmenta
............ Hl-2155. Deport.

~..-.............................................;I:'ILU02

or Ext. 1116

.

~ ........................................ .Ext.'1104

.c -..................................Ext.1103

48'-

S.r11 ....................................
lhorwy'a ................................ 2\

Fl~"-l•r .................:............. 28'·
W•nclv'a .'............. ;............... ~ .. 27
WOf'l:hlngton .. ~ .......................127'

fj) 6J f!)fiOJ~

Stock report• ara tod1y'1
10:30 a.m. quot11 provided by
ltdv..l of Galllpoll•.

CIIIIIW M&amp;.............................ExL IJOO

'I)

Low Bacl&lt; Chair ·. Sale $99
High Bacl&lt; Chair Sale $1'09
Double Glider Sale $249
. End Table Sale $79

Jumbo Fish Sandwich
Plus Chips

$3.29
992·5829
992·4250

-·-·-

-

Tonight's meeting of the Racine Area Community Organization will
be held at 6:30 at the Legion Hall in Racine instead of at Star Mill Park.
Guests will be scholarship winners and their jlarents.
:

sn

211 w..u ............................$$3.81

Other Strvlcea

A round and square dance will be held Saturday ai the Tuppers Plaini
VFW hall.
'
· Door prizes, games, refreshments. Music at 8 p.m. with the Countrt
Night Hawks. J. B . Wilson, caller.
•

4t•J.

t3 w..u........................... J27.30

. .tu:lnlloal•n: ·
.G ntni Mo...........................Ext. 1111
'•

Dance to be held

.

u •••••••••

' MAIL.SUISCIIP'ftoN

2W. We wll dlo&lt;k yHr lll'e.......,
.. . . WIM 0 COmctln If Wll'l'lllfed,
~

:

The Racine American Legion Post 602 will hold its Memorial Da~
services Monday, 10 a.m. at the Veterans Memorial Parle. in Racine.
:
A public ham dinner will follow at 11 a.m.

AT&amp;T ...........,.~....................... 58~
Bank one .......................~••....
B.ob: Ev1na ............................ 1814
Borg-Wamer ........................&amp;&amp;'·

a~baaiption.

p.~-•..-nlelll-lotobe
act~nte. If , .. of •• error 11 1
•...,., call ... MWWUW II (7~) H2-

.

l

Aah OU •••,..................

Reader Services

-

Racine Memorial Day services

· 'Stocks ,
'

I
;

Alumni to decorate

Carroll Teaford; Main Street, Racine, died·this morning at his residence.
Arrangements will be announced by the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine.

By H. JOSEF HEBERT
Aaaocllled Preas Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - China's
two•decade effort to steal U.S.
weapons technology colltinued well
into the' Clinton administration, positioning Beijing to develop modern
'mobile nuclear warheads as good as
America's,saysabipartisancongressional report.
An "insatiable appetite" for U.S.
technology leaves China ready to
leap from a 1950s nuclear weapons ..
program to sophisticated designs
"on par with our own," concludes
the. repori.
The 700-page report, being
released today by a special House
committee chaired by Rep. Christopher Cox, R-Calif., said that while
Chinese espionage can be traced
back at least to the 1970s, "thefts
·almost certainly continue to the present."
It singled out as panicularly dam·
aging the loss of design material
· from mie of America's most sophisticated warheads in the 1980s.
"China bas never stolen any.other
. countries' secrets, including from the
United States," an official at Defense
Ministry's office in Beijing said
today.' The official refused to give
her name. · ·
Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhu
Bangzao, also in· Beijing, S.id the
allegations were cooked up by people who want to slander China and
declared that "their despicable
attempt is doomed to failure."
The report describes a breadth of
C~inese espionage·. that is so threatening to U.S. interests that some

•

•

AmrT~h ......................~•....... 65~

1-MtfpC..IJ

...

Carroll Teaford ·

A Middlepon resident was cited for failure lo control by the Gallia:
Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol following .a one-car acciden1
Monday on County Road 32 (Eagle Ridge).
·
·;
Troopers said Dana M. Haning, 33, 640 Art Lewis St., was westbound,
five-tenths of a mile east of State Route 7, at 3:24p.m. when .the miriivar!
Haning drove went off the tight edge of the road and struck a ditch.
'
The vehicle was slightly damaged, according to the report.
·'

Am J!!a p -.......................43~
·Akzo ......................~ ••••••••••••••.. 42\

Publllhtr ~W~Vt~~lht riJbll 10 ldjuat rates dur·
·'I" lllo .,bodipllon ptriotl. Suboal.. lon nlo
be impJemented by daaaaiaa tbe

chin,..
...,.
dWacion ot t•

~iddleport.

Driver ticketed In one-vehicle accident

•,

c.ao.

-~ Dqt deolri!ll .. poylho- ..,
"''"'k i o - ~ .,,'l'llt !lilly ~I on
• ,...,, Iii·it IZ .na..lti !&gt;lOlL Credll wUI too .

.-

Wilma Lee Hunter Stover, 49, Cheshire, died Sunday, May 23, 1999, at
Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
· ·
·
.
She w.as born Dec. 18; 1949, in Logan, W.Va., daughter of the late Montie B: and Brooke Martin Hunter. She was employed by the Meigs-Gallia
Community Action of Cheshire. She was a member of the Full Gospel
Lighthouse Church in Pomeroy.
·
She is survived by her husband, Marvin Stover of Cheshire;. two sons, Joe
Gilkey Jr. and James F. Gilkey, both of Cheshire: two brothers, Roger Hunter
of Cheshire and Dallas Hunter of Dutton, Ala.; fout sisters, Goldie Morrow
'and Roberta Temple, both of Columbus; Edna Freeman of 'Chapmanville,
W.Va., and June Stowers of Peeks Mill, W.Va.
She was preceded in death by a brother, Bernard Hunter, and by two sisters, Pearl Smith and Verna Perry.
.
.
Services will be held Thursday, 11 a.m. at the Full Gospel Lighthouse
Church, Pomeroy, with Pastor Roy R. Hunter officiating. Burial will be in
Grave) Hill Ce,metery, Cheshire.
Friends may call Wednesday, 2·4 and 7-9 p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home,

Local briefs:

ST. RT. 7.North

. FURNITURE &amp; APPLIANCE

Pomeroy, Ohio

)

.9L9{'D'E~09{'S
M011•S.t

9!~10

to 5&amp;00

DOWNTOWN POMEROY

1112411

�Sports

The Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, May 25, 1991t

White Sox pound
Indians 1o~a; Texas,
Twins, Blue Jays win
American League
roundup
By The Associated Prell
For the fourth time in eight days,
there was a rout in a ChicagoCleveland game. This time, however,
the White Sox won.
After getting outscored 39-16 in a
three-game sweep in Chicago last
week, the White Sox opened a threegame set in Cleveland with a 10-)
win ove r the Indians on Monday
night.
'This was big coming against a
team that pun ched us to death at
ho)lle last week," White Sox manager Jerry Manuel said. "I think this
was real important for a young ballclub."
. Rookie Chris Singleton and
Brook For~yce each drove in a
career-high four runs, and the White
Silx handed Dwight Gooden his first
loss si nce last July 26.
' Singlctnn, acquired during the
offseason in a l'rade with the New
York Ya11kees, went 3-for-5 with an
RBI gro und out , · run-scorin·g single
and two-run double . Fordyce homered and went 3-fqr-4 as Chicago won
for just the second time in eight
games.
Smgleton said White So" batters
got a pregame boost from hitting
mstructor Von Joshua, who told them
to '' relax and refocus on what we did

Marlins slay.· Cubs
7-5; Milwaukee,
Houston also win

in spring training."
"I think there was a calm about
us ,': Singleton said. "Last week was
tough for us to lose like that. "
·
Gooden (2-1) gave up six runs
and six hits in 4 213 innings to lose
for ttie first time in 19 starts. He was
7-0 during that span, one win shy of
matching the longest winning streak
of his career.
"I didn't know about it until there
were two 6uts in the ninth inning,"
Gooden said of the streak. "It was
brought to my attention. I thought
there were a couple of losses in there
somewhere."
.
Jim Thome homered for the
Jndian·s, who stranded ·10 runners in
the first four · innings and hit into
three double plays. The game, played ·
· in a steady rain, was delayed 32 minutes in the top of the fourth and lasted just under 3 112 hours.
In other AL games, Texas routed
Tampa Bay -12-3, Toronto downed
Detroit 12-~ and Minnesota beat
Seattle 10-5. Boston's game at New
York was postponed by rain .
Rangers 12, Devil Rays 3
Juan Gonzalez . homered twice,
giving him four in his last three
games, and Texas got a rare strong
LAUNCHES SHOT- The New York Knlcks' Patrick Ewing launchouting from a starting pitcher.
.es a shot in front of Atlanta center Dikembe Mutoinbo In the first half
Gonzalez hil'a two-run fiomer off of Game 5 of their NBA Eastern.Conference semifinal sarles In Naw
Rolando Arrojo (2-5) in the third York's Madison Square Garden, where the Knicks' 79-66 victory sent
inning and a three- run shot off Bryan them Into the Eastern Conference finals opposita the Indiana
Rekar in the sixth to finish with five Pacers. (AP)
(See AL on Page 5)'

Knicks beat Hawks
79-66, advance
to conference finals
NBA playoffs

.
.
FIRES TO FIRST - Seconds alter retiring the Cleveland Indians'
~eriny Lofton, Chicago While Sox second baseman Ray Durham
throws to flrat to retire Omar Vlzquel and completa the .s ixth-Inning
dOuble play dulrng Monday night's American League game In
Cleveland, where theWhlte Sox won 1.0-3. (AP)

standings

•
~..

E11stern Oivi§lon

York ..

17
18

ll

13

.. 16

27

-r.mpa Bay .
T•romo ..

22 25

~hm10rC' .

'

I. f&lt;l.

}!:

.. 26
.. lJ

Division
.... ]0 1.1
aEVELAND .
nsas City . ...
......... ll 20
&lt;21icago , ..
...... .. 20 21
Dl:troit ..... ................. 19 25
M i n~sut a .............
.. l/ 27

605
.57 1
.489
.468
.372

lill
I':
5
6
10

C~ntral

.698
.524
.488
.'432
.]86

~

7 '~

Central Division
Hou5ton ...............1 .. .... ,.. 21 16
Chicago
......... 23 19
St. Lpuls .....
.. ...... 23 19
C INCIN~ATI. ................... 21 19
Pittsburgh ................. .......... 22 22
Milwaukee .......
.. ..... 21 22
Wtl1ern DIYision
San FranCisco .
.......... 2S I 9

Arizona .:............
.. ...... .2~
Uls Angelei .. ..·................... 22
Colomd? ...
.. .............. 18
San Diego .. ..... .... .... ............ .17

9

II '·~

O.kland ................. ........... 21 23

.

snule .....

L

.345
.477
.477

.. .. .... ........... 21 23 .477

3
J

,

.548
.525
500
.488

J':
4':
5' ~
6

Tonight
Portland at Ut~h . 8 p.m.
.
Thursday
Utah at Pen land, TBA, if ne cessary
.
Saturday
Portland a1 Ut~lh . TBA. if neCessary

I

.4\9
. .
.395

'' ·
; •.:
' ·,·
7I

about coaching the Knicks:
Checketts' at first denied the contact', then said it occurred through an
intermediary and then admitted that,
yes, he had indeed 'talked to jackson
in person and lied to Van Gundy
about it. For his part, Van Gundy
remained.above 'the fray, insisting he
was concerned only with the next
game.
For the Knicks, that now comes ·
Sunday in Indiana.
The Madison Square Garden fans,
a savvy crowd, gave the embattled
coach a standinj! ovation, an
unprecedented tribute , as the Knicks
finished off the Hawks.
"That was nice of them, but I'm
real happy for. the win for the guys in
the locker room," Van Gundy said in
his usual understated style. ·
And they were happy for hiJh,
"I don ' t think they '.ve ever done
. that for any coach,'' said Patrick
Ewing, who has said he won 't play
for Jackson if the Knicks decide to
GETTING READY - Brandon Ramsburg, Ty Aull and Jeremy · ·
import the ••-Chicago Bulls CO&lt;\Ch.
Roush
are getting ready lor the 1999 Junior Golf league at the Pine
Larry Johnson paid tribute to Van
Hills Golf Course. Play will gal underway on June 2, with reglatra.
tlon at 8:30 a.m. and tee time at 9 a.m.
,
(See KNICKS on PageS)

'·

Frida}'
Dallt~s m Co lorado, 7:JO p.m.
Saturday
Toronto t~tl3uffal o, 7:JQ p.m.

Tonight's games

.. ·

~exas (Glynn 0..0) at Tampa Bay (Will 3-1 ), 7:0$

.

p,icago (PMque ~-3) at -CLEVELAND (Nagy 4p.m.
(Holladay l-2)" De!&lt;o;t (MHcki 1-4),

l),~oOl

?ot' ';".::'•

.
stoo {Ro~ J·..()) at New York (lJabu 1-2), 7:3$
p. .
'
. ule (Halama 2-2) at Minnesot:a (Rath .0-0),

Transactions

Hockey
Baseball
American League
CLEVELAND INDIANS: P111ced lHP Mark
Langston on the IS-d11y disabled list.
KANSAS CITY ROYAL,S: Reca lled RHP Orber
· Moreno from Omaha of the Pacific Cons1 League
MINNESOTA TWINS: Placed LHP Eddie
Guardado on the 15-cL'\Y disabled list. retroactive to
May 22.' Purchased the co mrnct of RHP Rob
Radlosky t'rom Salt Lake of the PCL.
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS : Activated RHP
Julio Santanll from the 15-di!abled list
TORONTO BLUE JAYS: Placed INF Alex
Gonzalez on 1he 1.5-day di'sabled list. retroactive to
May 17 . Acti vate d RHP Joey Hami lton from the IS-

Monday's score
Dallas 4, Colorado 2: series tied 1-1

The future
Tonlgh_l
Buffalo at Toronto, 7 : ~0 p.m.
Wtdnrsday
Dallas m Colorado, 7:30p.m.
ThursdiJ
Toronto at Buffalo, 7:30p.m.

Montreal (HermansOri J-4) at Philadtlphi.a
(Ogea 2-3), 7;05 p.m.
New York (Yoshii 4-3) at Plusburgh (Benson 3·
2), 7:0l p.m.
·
Los Angeles (K. Brown 5-2) at CINCINNATI
(Panis 2-()), 7:0l p.m.
Aorida (Meadows 3-4) at Chicago (frachsel 24), 8:0l p.m.
Atlanta (Maddux 4-3) at Milwaukee (Abbott 0~).8:05p.m.
.
·
· Colorado (Kilc 3-3) at Houston (Hampton 5-1).
8:0l p.m. ·
San Fmnci~~:o (Brock 4-3),at St. Louit (Jimenez
2-4), 8:10p.m.
San Diego {Hitchcock 3-3) at A,ri za na (R.
Johnson 4-2). IO:O.S p.m.

Wednesday's games

8o~p . m .

lilaldrncn (Erick4on 1-5) at Anaheim (Olivares 4J),IIOoOl p.m.
IKansu Ciry (Rosado 3-2) at Oakland (Oquist 4.I), ~IO:Ol p.m. .
·
·

til

·

.\!(

National Basketball Auoda•lon
CHICAGO BULLS : Received a 1999 firstround draft p1ck rrom PhoeniK to complete an eat ller
ttade.
GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS: Named Steve
Smith executive director of ticket sales and services .

National Football Lt&gt;a&amp;ue
' '
CARO LIN A PANTH ERS: Signed OT Chri\,
Terry 10 a four·yenr co nlract. R~signed RB F~
Lane and P Ken Waller.
·
CLEVELI\ND BROWNS : Rele.nsed WR Juslin '
Armour. QB Scott Milano'o'ich and WR Fu:ddir:
SololllQn.
'

Hockey
National Hockey Ltatue
•
MINNESOTA WILD: Named Laura Da)' v1ce
president of C-orporate partnerships
·
NEW YORK RANGERS: Re-s1gned D Brian ,
Leecch to a four-year co n1ract. ·
;
PHOENIX COYOTES: fired Jim Schoenfeld,·
coach. Named Got'dic Roberts director or pl•~er
development.

--~

.591

.556

..5.U

800.949.4444

Monday's scor'e

4·0

1':

2':

'

New York 79. Atlanta 66: New York wins series

lill

The future

Graf, Enqvist, Agassi claim first-round wins in French Open
By JOCELYN NOVECK
PARIS (AP) - After skipping
last year's tournament due to an
injury, Steffi Graf easily advanced to
the second round of the French Open
with a 6-2, 6,0 victory today over
Magdalena Maleeva.
Graf, a live-time champion here,
was making her 16th appearance on
the red clay of Roland Garros, where
she hasn't lost before the quarterfiu~ls in her last 12 tries.
Graf indicated she isn 't quite conyinced she can return to the fiirin that
brought her 21 career Grand Slam
titles .
,
·
" Do.I believe I can do it? ilhink
I can, you know, " she said. "I pro"'
ably just need to believe in it a lillie

www.rtjgolf.com
'

\,

Offrr .,.,lid tlrwugh Stpttmbr, JO, 1999. MilS/ ,,(' I'""'UI-'C'III•y }IIIII' :!7. Htlld 1/ljtl (rut 1/tlf iodmlc,l
'

.

:

.

Open title.
Also in action was Gustavo
Kuerten, the Brazilian who came out
of nowhere to win the title in 1997.
Kuerten , who's been having an
excellent year on clay, faced Galo
Blanco of Spain.
'
In other play, 16th-seeded
Thomas Enqvist of Sweden
advanced, beating Argentina's
Hecto,r Morelli 4-6, 6-0, 6-4, 6-2.
Also, Magnus Larsson scored· a
minor upset over lith-seeded Karol .
Kuce~a of Slovakia, 6-2, 6-3, 6-2.
On Monday, fans were treated to a
trip down memory lane with matcbes
featuring two longtime favorites in
Paris: Andre Agassi and Michael
Chang . .
For a moment during the Agassi
match, it seemed like a decade ago,
when the American was first trying .
to win the French Open.
. It was late on opening day, and
the fans hadn't had much .to be pas-

mt;&gt;re. n

Later today, Pete Sampras was to
start his "quest for glory in Paris
ag_ainsl Costa Rico's Juan Antonio
Marin . Unlike Graf, though,
Sampras has never won a French

·~aly

sio nate about.
Agassi lost the first set to Franco
Squillari of Argentina, then came
back to take the next two. Now, serv·
ing at 5-3 in the fourth, he faltered, .
falling behind 30-40 in the game.
"AndRE,'' the fans started cha.nting. " AndRE." Ace. Then another.
Then another. The match was over.
Agassi pumped his fist and blew a
kiss to the crowd.
It was a strong moment for
Agassi, who believes he can still win
a French Open and complete a career
Grand Slam. But he will need a lot
more than the luck of the draw and
the warrrith 'of the crowd to do it.
As recently as last week, Agassi
wasn't even sure he'd be able to play
the French this year· due to a sore
right shoulder that forced him t&lt;i pull
out of World Tc~m Cup play.
On Monday, he said he wasn 't
greatly bothered by the injury. But he
still showed little in his 3-6, 7-5,7-5.

6-3 victory 10 indicate he could win
seven matches against younger players who specialize on the red clay in
Paris.
Agassi, seeded 13th, was a French
Open linalist twice and a semifinalist
two other times before 1992. He has
117 Grand Slam match victories,
second in this lield only to Sampras,
with 153. He has three Grand Slam
titles, and- like Sampras- would
dearly love to have the French.' .
Agassi hasn't gotten past the
fourth round of a major since 1996.
Still, he was 'Speaking positively on
Monday.
" I h av~ high expectations for
myself here ," Agassi · said. "'I'm
focused. My eagerness is there for
the grinding that's required to tough
out some of these matcbes."
Alluding to his personal life ,
Agas si said there ''was a time in my
life when I was cenainly focused on
a few other things."
·

" But you can't come to this
event, specifically, without being
100 percent prepared," he said.
Then he mixed his metaphors a
bit, but made his point 'There's a
lm of mirrors out there, and the man
in the mirror can't lie in the heat or
· banle out there. It's brutal."
Other matches Monday gave a
sense of what's ahead the next two
weeks: long, close, seesaw matches
that happen frequently on clay.
Both the defending champion,
Carlos Moya, and top-ranked
Yevgeny · Kafelnikov struggled
before prevailing.
Kafelnikov is still trying to show
that he deserves the No. I ranking he
earned three weeks ago.
A French champion in 1996. he 's
had a tough year si nce winning the
Australian Open 'in January, winning
only one tournament since, and losing repeatedly in the lirst round.
" I've had my ups and downs," he

said. " But I feel like my eame is:
comi ng back now."
In a match between former
French Open champions, Kafelmlcov;
edged Chang 6-2, 5· 1, 6-0, 7-6 (10-,
8).

It was yet another valiant attempt-·
by Chang to recapture the magic he
had in Paris in 1989, when, at 17, he
beat Sampras, Ivan Lend! and Stefan_..
Edberg to take the title.
•·•
"My time's not up yet," he said_;:
later.
#'.
Goran Ivanisevic can hanlly ~.
called inconsistent at Roland Garros;::
he hasn't won a match here 'since
1996.
Seeded Jilt&gt;. 15, he became the~,
first seeded player to fall, losing 6-4, •
1-6, 6-3, 6-1 to Hicham Arazi of
Morocco, the. only player to reach :•
the Fre~ch quarters the past two ..
years:

·'
T

steps down as1&gt;rlando ·Magic's head coach

.By MIKE SCHNEIDER
me in coaching. This will co nclude
, ORI,.AII\DO, Fla. (AP) - Tired of my coaching career. "
the relentless schedule and joking
The Magic's playoff elimination
that his age is showing, Chuck Daly by Philadelphia in four games and
quit as coach of the Orlando Magic tensions with star Penny Hardaway
ninc days after the team was upset in didn ' t play a role in his decision , i)e
the first round of the NBA playoffs. said.
. The 68-year-o ld Daly, . whose
Hardaway's future wit~ the team
head coaching career spanned two , is unclear, and he .plans to become a
tlecades and included two NBA titles free agent this summer.
·
in Detroit, was in the final year of·a
Daly said all the travel and games
three-year contract worth $5 million . took a ·toll,- and he decided it was
"It's time. It 's as simple as that ," time to leave coachin g.
Daly said Monday. "The· mind is ·. ''W hat a life. Three or four nights
willing, 'but the flesh is weak."
a week, boppin g around at 2 o'clock
Daly said h.e was would not come in the morning ," Daly said. "It's just
back to &lt;oaching.
time to leave the benclt." .
. "I've had a great run, a great
He will stay as a consultant to
career," he said. "This is a finale for Magic general manager John

Gabriel.
"What that amounts to, I don ' t
know, " he said.
Daly was joined at the news conference by four Magi c players Darrell Armstrong, Nick Anderson,
Horace Grant and Bo Outlaw - whu
praised him for his coach in g and for
the opportunities he gilVe ,them.
"He gave me a different outlook
on basketball and' life," Anderson
said. "He told me 'Just enjoy."'
Orlando missed the playoffs in
Daly's first year, but this seaso n tied
for the second-best record (33- 17) in
the Eastern Conference..
. Despite the first-round playoff
loss, Daly described the lockoutshortened season as one of the most

satisfying of his career.
~ i sion analyst for three years before
His contract included a clause that joining ·the Magic. He began his
gave him the option to continue NBA coaching career with Cleve land
coaching at $5 million a -season , in 1981 -82 and guided the Pistons
accept a position as a club consultant for nine seasons ( 1983-84 to 1991for $200,000 or leave Orlando for 92). Detroit had. five 50-plus victory
another job.
seasons and two NBA champi Daly · coached the 1992 Olympic onships under .Daly.
team to a go ld medal in Barcelona. · Following the Pistons , Daly took
He and Lenny Wilken s are the only over the New Jersey Nets for two
coaches to have won NBA and seasons and led them to the playoffs
Olympic championships.
hoth years .
.
Daly, who led the Pistons to titles
When the M_agic failed to qualify
in 1989 and 1990, was' hired by the -for the postseason in 1998, it the
Magic on June 3. 1997. and had a 74- · marked the first time Daly missed
58 regular-season record in two sea' the playoffs after coaching a full seaCHUCK DALY
so ns.
.
son.
He was inducted into the Hall of
Daly had a career regular-season playoff appearances, hi s teams went .
Fame in 1994 and worked as a tele- record of638-437 in 13 Y.ears. In 12 75-51.

I

~FL

owners discuss franchise issues, .instant replay at

By DAVE GOLDBERG ·
sidewalks that can't be repaired by
ATLANTA (AP) - Los Angeles the city? Give me a break," Los
is'using a little Hollywood .to try to Angeles County Supervisor Zev
keep its hold on the NFL's 32nd Yaroslavsky said.
.
team.
.
· ''I'm against giving any city taxMichael Ovitz, the show business payer money to bring football to L(is
agent who h~ads one . of the two Angeles," Mayor Richard Riordan
.
groups bidding for the new Los ·said.
·. Angeles franchise , has a plan for the
Some state officials agreed.
L~s Angeles Coliseum that includes
"! would want to hear from them
everything from a parking garage why they thought the state should
covered with trees, grass in front of ·bear this cos~" Assembly Speaker
luxury suites and e•en a cooling sys- Antonio Villaraigosa said.
tem that would spray mist on fans in
"Why should a lady in Fresno pay
h.ot weather. ·
for parking spaces for the (Lo~
The plan, first reported Sunday in Angeles)
Coliseum?"
said
The Los Angeles Tilnes, seems to Assemblyman R,oderick Wright of
hive impressed most of the owners Los Angeles.
~ ,
The two-day Atlanta meeting will
wbo have seen it.
. 'fils an exciljng juxtaposition of be ift'Volved primarily with settling
arii:ient architecture with the Los · some of. the NFL's franchise issues,
Angeles scene," said Carmen Policy, although the owners also will get a
p~sident of the new Cleveland look at the way the new replay sysB(owns, who will become the 31st telri will work. Replay, in effect from
team this fall.
1986-91 , was· voted back in last
·: But in today's editions, the 7imes spring in a new form.
ret&gt;orted that local and state lawmakThe . owners are expected to
ers oppose Ovitz's plan as long as it approve the ·sale of the Washington
re~uires using an estimated $225 Redskins to Daniel Snyder for $800
million in taxpayers' money to build million. Snyder was a member of the
fli:irking structures.
group headed by Howard Milstein
"With, 2.5 million uninsured chi!- that withdrew after 11 became appardrtn ·and adults in this county, with en! the owners wouldn '1 approve it.
75,000 children in foster care ... with
They also are expected to discuss

NL
contests...
'

(continued from P1ge 4)

.

C61orado-record three · errors at the
A.modome.
, : The Astros beat Brian Bohanon
(6-2) to improve to 12-2 this season
against left-handed starters. Bohanon
pitched six innings , allowing five
runs-- four earned - and seven
hits.
Harris' three errors helped lead to
tw.o runs and tied Wah WeisS' club
record for errors in a game.
Pirates 7, Mets 4
· At Pittsburgh, Jason Kendall's
three-run homer in the first spoiled
Jason Isringhausen's first st.art in 20 '
months, and Warren Morris and Ed
Sprague also homered.
. Isringhausen (0- 1), back in the
rotation slightly ahead of schedule
because of injuries to AI Leiter and
Bobby Jones, allowed five runs· and
seven hits in si'x innings. ·
·; Jose Silva (2-Z) allowed One run
i~ 3 1/3 innings of relief for the win.
t.!ike · Williams earned his . eighth
save for Ptttsburgh , Which won
d.spite issuing II walks.

~~Is
~s

Our Father's Day Special giyes him ·3 days of unlimited golf for only •99. And
kids under 18 pl;~y FREE with
· dear old Pad.
So, forgetthe ties 'and go for
the tees. He'll love you even
more .. .if that's possible. ·

NBA.conference semifinals

I. . f&lt;l.

Alfnta ............ .'..................... 2,6 18
Ne York ............................. 2.S 20
Ph adelphia .................. .-....... 2) 20

Basketball

Football

.

wants-championship golf.

Basketball

•
Anaheim (Bekher ) .

NL standings
t
· · Eeuern DI~Jston

~

COLORADO ROCKIES : Placed 28 Mike
Lansing on 1he I.S-dny di sab led li st. Recalled OF
Edsnr Clemente from Color:ulo Springs of tbe PCL.
NEW YORK METS : Placed RHP Bobby Jones
on the 15-day di sabled list. Recalled RHP Jason
lsringhaustn from Norfolk of the Interna tiona l
Lrague.
PHILADELPHIA PHI LUEs : Placed ·RHP Jeff
Bramley on the IS-day disabled lis(. Rec11 lled RHP
S1eve- Montgomery ff(lm Scranton-Wilk.es-Bnne of
the International League.

He's paid the mortgage, paid into the college fund and
spent countless hours with the kids at the ball park .
· So, this year for Father's Day, give hi,m what he really

7:Ri.m.

ahimore (Poi'lson 4-])
.I),~ O o.ll p.m.

Natlonal Leaaue
· CIN CINNATI REDS: Placed LHP Denn Y
Neagle on the 15-d ay disabled lin, retroacti ve to

. ORLANDO MAGIC Announced the n:signa·
tmn of Chuck Daly coach

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

,

AlL games.~.

Aorida (Hemandet 3-41 at Chicag6 (Fnrnsworth
2·0). 2:20p.m.
·
Montrc~l (Pa\'ano 2-.S) at Philadelphia (Loe wer
2-4). 7:05 p.m.
.
New York (Hershiser 3-4) at . Pinsburgh
1
Wednesday's games ·
. '(Schourek 2-4), 7:0$ p.m.
. Los Angeles (Park 3-3) at CINCINNATI (Tomko
.stan (Portugal 3-2) at New York(O. Hernandez
1·2). 7:0l p.m.
4-~:0l
p.m.
·
Atlanta (Chen 0-0) at Milwaukee (Nomo I· II.
·
de (Moyer 4.4) at Mirmesota ( H aw~n s 1-15),
8:0l p.m.
1: p.m. ·
Colorado (Astac:io 4-31at Houston (Beraman 2as Cjty (Suppan 3-3) at Oakland (Haynes l1), 8:0.5 p.m.
5), , :OS p.m.
.
San F,rancisco (Rueter 3-21 at St. Louis
tex11 (Helling 4-.S) at Tampa Bay (Saunders 3-3),
(Bottenfield 7-1). .8:10p.m.
San D1ego (Williams 2"2) at Arizona (Anderson
icaso (Sirotb 2-S) at CLI~VELAND (Burba 40-1). 10:0' p.m.
I)~:Ol p.m.
oronco (Eicobar ~-2 ) at Detroit (B lair 1-4), 7:0S
p. .

day disabled list.

·May 20.

NHL conference finals

.l68
.S43
.51 2

Chicago entered the ninth with a'
5-3 lead, but Aguilera (0-1 ), malcin~
his first appearance since being traded from Minnesota on Friday, gave
up singles to Bruce Aven, Luis
By JOSH DUBOW .
Castillo and Cliff Floyd to make it 5AP Sports Writer
4 before Millar's fly.
"'It's not the way I was hoping tO
Kevin Millar made his first career
howe run a memorable one for the start off," Aguilera said, doing little '
Florida Marlins and Rick Aguilera.
to make Cubs fans forget the strugMillar hit a bizarre three-run, gJ'ing Rod Beck, who underwent
inside:the-park homer with two outs elbow surgery last week. "It's a long ',
in the · ninth inning off Chicago's season and I didn't ••peel not to
newest reliever, and the Marlins ral- have a bad day. But I cenainly waS'' ·
lied with four runs to stun Aguilera n't expecting one this soon."
•
and tbe Cubs 7-5 Monday night.
Sosa hit his 15th homer and lllll:
. " I can't say that's the ·way I en vi- in the last 19 games. With a week leA'
sioned ' my first maj or league in May, Sosa already has two rnore ·
homer," Millar said. "To hit an homers than he did in· the first two '
inside-the-park homer in' Wrigley months last season when he finished
·
Field and to win the game, it's unre- with 66.
al. An awesome feeling ."
Matt Mantei (1 - 1) pitched the'
Millar, called up to the majors final' two innings for the wia.
'
four days ago, angered some of his
In other NL games, it was
teammates~ few weeks ago when he Milwaukee 10, Atlanta 7; Houston 5, ·
was quoted in a Calgary newspaper Colorado 2: Piusburgh .1; New York
as say ing that the Triple·A Calgary 4; Philadelphia 5, Montreal 4; and
Cannons woul'd beat the Marlins if Arizona 6, San Diego 5.
they played a seven-game series.
Brewers 10, Braves 7
Millar later apologir.ed and insistAt Milwaukee , Tom Glavine· was
ed the quotes were taken out of con- . rO&lt;;ked for a career-high nine runs in
text. After his game-winning homer, 2 2/3 innin gs as Milwaukee beat .
many of his teammates will forget Atlanta.
I
his transgression.
.
Glavine (3-5). who won his secMillar's fly ball with two outs in and Cy Young Award last season',
' the ninth inning off Aguilera went gave up II hits, including at least
over Sammy Sosa's head, hit the ivy- one to each position player. He'·
covered wall and bounced away. walked three, hit one bauer and·
When the Cubs right fielder couldn't threw one wild pitch.
•'
find the ball, Millar circled the bases
Steve Woodard (4-4) allowed ?
for a homer.
three runs and eight hits in seven •
"I did everything I could," Sosa · innings.
said. "When the balll,Jit, !thought it
Aslros S, Rockies 2
was a home run and it came out the
Shane Reynolds (7-3) pitched a
other way and I never saw the ball. I nine-hiller for his first complete
. jumped and came down and was try- ·game of the season and Houston took ·
ing to find the ball and I never saw advantage of Lenny Harris'
it.'.

Tonight'• games

'

Monday's scores

P·";,

,\ ';

By HAL BOCK
NEW YORK (AP) - All of a
sudden, No. 8 is in the Final Four of
the NBA playoffs. ·
And what's more, the New York
Knicks sud&lt;!enly look like a powerhouse, perhaps energized by a political maelstrom that accompanied their
four-game sweep of . the Atlanta
Hawks.
The Knicks threw a defensive
shroud over the ·outmanned Hawks,
completing the. second-roun·d sweep
with a 79-66 victory Monday night
. that thrust New York into the Eastern
Conference finals against Indiana.
The Knicks are the first eighth-seeded team to make it that far.
It's a tribute to coach Jeff Van
Gundy, whose job teetered in the balance when the Knicks were 21-21
late in the lockout-shortened .season.
It was then that Madison Square
Garden preside nt .Dave Checkeus
fired general manager Ernie
Grunfeld and talked to Phil Jackson

.'

National League
roundup

J

Vexas 12. Tampa Bay 3
~oronto 12. Detroit 6
~oston at New York, ppd., rain
;encago I0, CLEVELAND 3
f"'innesota 10, Sc:attl~ 5

. I

21
23
26

.:..

. ~41l .

Philadelphia 5, Montreal 4
Pittsburgh 7, New York 4 ,
Hounon S, Colorado 2
Milwau kee 10, Atlama}
Florida 7, Chicago 5
Arizona 6, San Diego S

Western Division

· T~as... ............................ 24 20
A,fahetm .... : ............ ......... .. .21 2J

~I

.628

Monday's scores

I J'·:

P~ve4 :

.

Tueaday,
May 25, 1999
,

.

Phillies ,5, Expos 4
Mont~eal pitcher Miguel Batista
(3-2) hit his first career homer,' but
blew a two-run lead as Philadelphia
rallied at home.
Batista, 3-for-56 at the plate in his
career; hit a two-run homer off rookle Joel Bennett in the fifth inning to
give Montreal a 3-2 lead.
Yorkis Perez (I-I) pitched one
scoreless inning for the win, and
Wayne Gomes earned his third save.
DlamondbiW'ks 6,,Padres 5
Steve Finley hurt his old team
again, driving in three runs with a
single and double for Arizona against
visiting San Diego.
Finley, who had two home runs in
his first game for Arizona in San
Diego on April 2,3, hit a two-run sin:
gle In the first inning off Andy Ashby ·
(5-3), then adiled an RBI double in
the third.
Andy Benes (3·5) allowed. four
runs in six innings and added an RBI
single in the third. Gregg Olson got
his fifth save.

(Continued from 'Page 4)

at Tropicana Field. The home
were 'the lith and 12th for
Gonzalez, who llit two in a game for
t~ third time this season.
• Mark Clark (3-3) allowed three
rul.s and eight hits in 6 113 innings to
gclt his first victory in three weeks .
H~ became the first Texas starter to
win · since Rick Helling beat
BJhimore on May 15.
•
Blue Jars 12, Tigers 6
; Carlos Delgado drove in three
rllflS with a homer and double,. and
David Wells snapped his three-game
Ioling streak for Toronto.
·, Delgado .and Patrick Lennon hit
soio homers iA the second before the
Blue Jays blew it open with a 10-run
seventh. It was only the ninth road
wln for Blue Jays, who were swept in
a : three-game ,weekend series in
Bo~ton .
'
,
: Wells (5-4) gave up five runs 'aftd
eitht hits in six-plus innings to win
for the first time since May 3 against

Seattle. Brian Moehler (4-4), in h1s
third start since serving a 10-go¥me
suspension for having sandpaper on
his thumb, gave up six runs and four
hits in six-plus innings.
Twins 10, Mariners 5
At Minneapolis, · Ron Coomer
homered twice and rookie Dan
Perkins got his first major league win
as the Twins won their fourth
straight.
·
Ken Griffey Jr. hit his 17th homer
- a two-run shot · in the ninth off
Bob Wells --,. for the Mariners.
Griffey, who also had an RBI double'
to extend his hitting streak to a
career,high 13 games, is tied with
Thmpa Bay's Jose Canseco for the
most homers in the majors.
Chad Allen - one of Minnesota ·s
II tookies ...:... added a three-run ·
homer · for the Twins, who were
outscored by the Mariners 32-6 in
getting swept in a t~ree-game series
at Seattle las! week.
·

'

the New England· Patriots ' decision
to stay in the Boston area after withdrawing a commitment they made to
Hartford, Conn. Massachusetts Gov.
Paul Cellucci signed legislation
Monday that will provide $70 inil- .
lion to help the Patriots build a new
stadium.
But Los Angeles might be the
most pressing issue. The expansion

and finance commillees inet late
Monday night to hear the presentations from the two groups seeking
franchises - including Ovitz's plan
for the Coliseum.
At the March meetings, the league
tentatively al"arded Los Angeles the
32nd franchise over Houston.
But the NFL told the California
city that it needed to come up with a'

meeting~~.

viable plan by Sept. IS. And there get the franchise, which would ;.
sti ll are two groups vying for the replace the Rams and Raiders, who •:
franchise - one headed by Ovitz defected to St. Louis and Oakland~ :
and the other by real estate moguls after the 1994 season.
:•
Eli Broad and Ed Roski.
"Everyone has the right to plagia- ~ :
Broad argued that hi s proposal rism," Policy said.
,:
was the only practical one because · The Broad-Roski group claims to &gt;
. only his group h.ad relationships with hold a spec ial right to bring the N,FL;:
the area agencies involved.
back to the Coliseum. ·
·~
"I said I don't want to be negaHowever, the group on Monday : .
tive, but I hope you choose a plan waived that two-year exclusivity•:
that is not only dazzling, but is also agreement with . the ·coliseum:•
(Continued from Page 4)
feasible aqd will get built," Broad Commission for renovating the stadi-; ,:
Playing without injured LaPhonso told. the DaiJ); News of Los Angei&lt;s urn and owning a Coliseum team, the:-:
Gundy.·
Ellis
(hernia) and Alan Henderson ,for a story published to\."lay. ·
Daily News reported. .
••
"I think Jeff is the toughness of
(double
vision),
the
Hawks
were
"I
said
what
I.
don't
want
to
see
"
We're
.going
to
get
this
on
the:::.
this team because of everything he
had to cope with and criticism he had short-handed from the stan, and it happen is three months from now or merit or we' re not going to get it," •:
to put up with," be said. "He always showed. At one point in the second six months from now, the league gets · Broad sa1d. "We said let the chips: •
thinks about his team. He thinks half, arm -weary Atlanta missed 15 frustrated by everything that was -fall where they may, and we think •;
about his players first and I think that consecutive shots, sealing the fate of promised that can't happen , and you they ought to fall in our direction." :~ ,
take the whole operation to Houston · If the owners decide on Ovitz's; •
is why we respect him as mu·ch as we the Hawks.
"It's hard to go against the Knicks or another site."
plan, their claim could hurt Los• :
do and understand him and know that
·The NFL already has chosen the Angeles' chance of meeting the:;
he is the coach for this team for now if you don't have but six people,"
coach Lenny Wilkens said. "We &lt;lid- Coliseum, the Roski-Broad site, as deadline set by the owners. . ·
and in the future."
League officials also have said if·~
The Knicks rewarded their side- n't have the bodies to bang with the setting for the new stadium. But
Ovitz's plan might give his group the Los Angeles seemed close to a new: •
line boss with another easy -win, them."
Wilkens, a Hall of Fame coach, edge in ge.ttin·g the franchise .
plan . it might be considered to have::
completing just the second four:
The propo~al , designed by arc hi- met the deadline.
·~
game playoff sweep in their 53-year was swept in a four-game playoff .for
the first time in hi s career. At one teet David Rockwell, is called "The
••
'history and their first since 1969.
D 'd
L'
b •
Allan Houston led all scorers with point, the situation seemed to catch Coliseum at Exposition Park."
· wn· h stevc smn· h, who score d 14 .
" We're talking Central Park here
· avt ·
· tpscom
up
19 points, and Ewing had 17.
"I was frustrated," Smith said. · and a unique recreation envi ronment University of Nashville,
Meanwhiie,. the Hawks set two
records for scoring futility - fewest " We were losing. When you' re ll with the stadium standing as a mon- Tenn., an NAJA power for
points in a four-game series (306) competitor, you don't want to lose . ument in the middle." the Times · several years, is moving its ·•
and lowes.t shooting percentage · for a Yoou don't want to get swept. You quoted an unidentifi ed NFL official athletics into the NCAA's
don 't want to lose that way. But as say ing. ··It just blew ~veryone Division I.
four-gam e series (31.6).
The 306 points .broke the mark of you've got' to be professional about away."
That doesn't guarantee Ovitz will L-----------------------~;
323 set by Cleveland against Indiana it; ca lm down a lillie bit and handle
it.
"
last year, The 31.6 shooting percent~
That sounds like good advice for
age, constructed on 101 field goals in
320 attempts, broke the record of Van Gundy in the soap . opera that
If the 992 Exchange Is a Free Part of·Your
32. 3 set by the Minneapolis Lakcrs · accompanies him into the conference
·
against the Fort Wayne Pistons in finals.
Telephone Service, Then You Can Call

Knicks ..•

&gt;

.

-

19~5.

Holzer Clinic In Gallipolis
Toll Freel

Separated at birth??

DIAL ·

992-7834
....-..~

.

~--

Holzer Clinic ... Keeping the Promiae!

&amp;
Jeff Van Gundy
. Coacb,N. Y. Knlcks

•'

Simon B~trslnister
Antihero of Underdog series

D&amp;H
Garden Center
53560 S. R 338
Portland, Ohio
(740) 843-1252

. GUGGISBERG AMISII CHEESE:
Marble, Farmers, PeJ)per Jack, Swiss, BuUer
Cheese, Colby. Garden Vegetables 1: Swiss
MRS. MILLERS: Noodles, Pie FiWog,JeUy,Jam,
Chunky Salsa, Bar-B~ Sauc~, Pepper, .
Mustard 1: Spaghetti,
OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY, MAY 29

rhts week stop In and sign up for drawings of
Rocky Boots and an AmiSh 2ft. Glider Chair.
(Need not be present to.win)

Protect. the ittlygrtant
people m your life. .

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now have the c¢on &lt;i prorecting your fumily members

a business partner with. low-ro;r ·

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life

insurance fiom.Auto-Owners ·

Insurance ~y. Call LIS fur more

details arv:l a competitive proiJosal. ·

-

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v#uJo.O.,uJI ~
Ufe Home Car Business

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tnmra.no.- Services

214 E....1 Maia • ·
Pomer&lt;&gt;y
992-6687

\

�By The Bend

,.ueaday, May

The Daily .S entinel

25,1999

The Dally Sentinel• Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, May

Loet and Found

110

Page~

Rucuod 5/17/H 8tod&lt; Lab Pup,

Approx 2

25, 1999,

HENDRIX CAMPSITE RENTAL

Dear Ann Landers: My mother
i&gt;.76 years old and has been a widow
for 30 years . She Ji ves alone, drives
.her own car anQ. gels around pretty
. well. She viSits all the family mem1-te r~ on a regu lar basis. which is fine
c&lt;cTpt for one thing. She snoqps
into cvet)' !hing, which makes us feel
., \·iol&lt;ucd .

Mom goes through my mail ,
· ~:ca d s

my pe_rsonal correspondence

and looks at my bills. One morning
after an overnight stay. , I caught her
goin g through ,the trunk of my car
' •hik she was still in her pajamas.

·. !Time Out For Tips I
BY BECKY BAER{'
Meigs County Extension Agent
Family ·
and
Consumer
Sciences/Community Development
Arc you a responsible consumer when
sbopping for cl othes" What do you look
' .
for when purchasing clothing? Do you buy
.
the first thing you see, or do you carefully
· · consider the live factors that help you get the most out of your clothing budget?
I. Is the gam1ent auractive? Does it look good on you? Is the color
appropriate for your ski n tone? If you wish to appear thinner and
taller. you will want to choose a dark one-color outfit. Small prints in
muted colors and soft fabrics can also help minimize fi~ures. Contrasti ng colors make peop le look larger and shorter. Vertical lines can
create the illusion of height, but horizontal stripes can make you
ap pear ·bigger. Be sure to check the fit . Try on the garment to see if it
"comfortable and doesn't bind or wrinkle because of tightness.
· 2. Is the piece of clothing acceptable? Is it suitable for your
lifestyle" 'Is it in style? Fashions change, but classic clottles are in
,I
sty le for a long time. You can get a lot of mileage out of a garment that
is a classic. For instance, a well-co nstructed blazer may be worn with
many different tops and bottoms and with numerous accessories. h
tan be suitable for year-round use and worn for many' years.
3. Does the article of clothing serve a purpose? A winter coat
should he· warm; a rai ncoat should repel water. If clothes don 't meet
basic cr,itcria, then they will not be worn.
.
·. 4. Does the garment (eature quality construction? Are the seams
st itched securely with edges finished" Arc there ample seam
all owanccs?"Do plaids and designs match" Are hems hidden, but deep
e nough to allow alterations? Are buttons and buttonholes securely
,.

sew n" Arc lapels, collar points and pleats even? Do zippers work
properly? Are they well-hidden ? Are· linings, interfacings and interlinings smooth and made so they do not show?
5. How affordable is the outfit? Remember to buy the best quafity
that you can afford. Shop in stores and departments that are in your
' pric&lt;O range. Factory out.lets and dtscount stores 'offer quality mei- .
chancl isc just like spcctalty clothing s ho~ s and department stores, but
at reduced prices. Don't forget to consider th e cost of care. If you find
a qual ity out fi t in your price range, but "it mu st be dry-cleaned freque ntl y. it may be too expensive'to purchase. ,
Arc. you a respon sible shopper? You will be happier with your
clot hi ng purchases if you keep in mind attractive ness, acceptability,
usefu lness, quality and price .when ~hoppin g.

'

,..

:r

mind, add a few more.
Dear Ann Landen: I've been
dating a man ror over two years.
"~alph". is 28 and lives at home. He
has a successful business and makes
good money. The problem is that he
has lived with his divorced mother
since he was 8 years old.
I sometimes get the odd feeling
that their relationship is unhealthy. I
don't have any valid reason for this,
and it could be I'm imagining
things. But recently, .when I was in
his house, curiosity got the better of
me, and ·I snooped in his bureau
drawers and fo und several naked
pictures of him, and he was obviouslyaroused. I also found pomographic magazines with pictures of
women .over 40. .
Should I be worried? Ralph ts a
great guy. and I don 't want to mess
up our relationship for no reason.--

LOUISE IN NEW YORK
DEAR NEW YORK: It could be
that Ralph is having an incestuous
relationship with his mother but
even if he isn't, there is ·definitely
something kinky about the fellow
The nude photos of him are certainly a red flag.
You will have to confess to Ralph
that you snooped.lle open with him
about your feelings of uneasiness,
and listen carefully to what he has to
say. If, after a frank discussion about
your misgivings, y{UJ are still uncer-.
lain , I say dump him.
Dear Readers: My thanks to
Mrs. Malcolm Neuport of Tonawanda, N.Y., for sending in the following "Aphorisms of Our Times" :
Deja Moo: the feeling that you've
heard thi s bull before.
If at first you don' t s ucceed, skydiving is not for you.
\

Comforting law of gravity' for
heavy drinkers: You cannot fall off
the floor.
·
The average woman would rather
have beauty than brains bec,ause
most men can see better than they
can think. ·
Drugs are everywhere. They're
easy to get, easy to use and even casier to get hooked on. If you ·have·
questions about drugs, you need Ann
Landers' booklet, "The Lowdown on
Dope." Send a self addressed, long,
business-size envelope and a check
or tnoney order for $3 .75 (this
includes postage and handling) IP:
Lowdown, c/o Ann Landers, P.O.
Sox 11562, Chicago, Ill. 6061~_­
0562. (In Canada. send $4.55.) To
find · ou. more about Ann Lande;rs
and read her past columns, visit the
Creators Syndicate web page at
www.creators.com.
•

Sons of Un1on Veterans updated on local battlefield·
A report on the Portland battletleld and efforts toward preservation
was given by Keith Ashley, Civil
War sites chairman of the Ohio
Department of the sons of Union
Veterans, at a · recent meeting of
Brooks-Grant Camp No. 7.
Meeting at the annex of Hope
Baptist Church in Middleport,
Myron E. Jones, Jr. camp commander, introduced Ashley who talked
about the Columbus meeting with
the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers,
the Ohio Preservation Office, Shelly
Materials of Thornville, and battlefield preservational supporters.
noted that "preservation groups
were ignored in the agreement
process.
Ashl.ey reported that the preservation ~roups were ignored in the
agreement process: No questions or
comments were asked of them. The
agreement lac ked a promise of the
company to halt any further land
purchases, lacked promises to locate
the graves of the soldiers, lacked a
process 'to pres.erve the acreage to be
used for the loading dock, lacked an

accurate Civil War archeological
study, and lacked any benefits to
Meigs County.
The agreement is now being sent
to the advisory council in Washington, D.C. for review, he rioted.
Ashley announced the possibility
of federal funds to purchase ·the battlefield. The 14 Ohio counties along
the Ohio River have been designated
a National Scenic Waterway.
There is currently $143 million in
funds available for the se counties.
The federal government furnishes
80% of the funding with 20% provided from other sources. Attempts
are being made to get the Ohio Leg.
islature to use some of its current
budget surplus for the 20% matching funds. '
The program for the meeting was ·
provided by members of the Gallia
County Historical Society on Civil
War music mingled with Civil War
era dialogue.
·
Commander Jones rep(&gt;rted that
he and Keith Ashley had auended
the unveiling of a new plaque to
Andrews' ·Raiders at the Ohio Capi-

tol last month. These Ohio soldiers rial Day cere monies held at,the Ci,;il ·
attempted to steal a Confederate War . statue at the Meigs County
train engi ne and escape northward. Courthouse Saturday. The featur~d
They were the first winners of the .speaker was the Rev. James Hanna
Congressional Medal or Honor.
· of Oak Hill. The public is invited lo
John Lavery of Barboursville attend. A canopy tent is available In
brought greetings from the RobertS. case of rain. ·
·
·
Garneu Camp Sons of 'confederate
It was announced that Lester
Veterans. He displayed a chart Howwitz will be speaking at tHe
showing the listing of Union and University of . Rio Grande Meigs
Confederate soldiers buried in Center on· Wednesday evening, Ma,Y
Spring Hill Cemetery at Huntington. 26. He is tbe author of the new book
He further pointed out it. is the only on Morgan 's Raid.
place in the U.S. where a general
The camp asked for volunteers to
from both sides were buried in eye- assis t in the archeological study
sight of one another. H~ invited being done by Heidelberg College
Brooks Grant Camp to participate in on the Buffington Island Battlefield
the Memorial Day ceremonies there beginning later this month . Volunon May 30. ·
leers are urged to call the Meigs
Roliert Barton of Middleport was County Museum to offer their seraccepted as the.camp's newest mem- vtces.
ber based on his Union grandfather,
Members were ur.ged to auen'd
Dr. Thomas Barton of Syracuse. ·Dr. Memorial Day ceremonies and t!Je
Barton wrote a history on his life Ohio Department encampment in
that includes the only history of his Alliance in June. Refreshments were
Uni on infantry unit - · the 4th W.Va. · served · by Alan Holter and Myrdn
Regiment. Dr. Barton was a steward · Jones. Next meeting will be' held qn
in the unit.
July 15.
Plans were completed for Memo-

The Community Calendar is
publis hed as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
a nn o un ~e m ee t ! ~gs an4 spec ial
e vents. The calendar is not
desig ned to promote sales or fund
'raiser s of any type . Items are
printed as space permits and cannot be guaranteed to run a specific number of day s.
TUESDAY "
RACINE - RACO , Tuesday,
6:30p.m . at Star Mill Park.
POMEROY - . Meigs Area
Holiness Assodation , singspirati on, Laurel Cliff Free Methodi st
Church, 7 p.m. Tuesday.

SYRACUSE - AA meeting,
Carleton School, Tuesday, 7 p.m.

POMEROY - Wildwooct'GarWEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Free diabetic den Club, I p.m Wednesday,
·
scree ning. Wednesday, 8:30 a.m. · home of Peggy Moore .
to II a.m. Veterans Memorial
Medi cal Clinic . To preregister,
call 992-3632 . Nutrition and THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE - Riverview
medi cation
informati on
also
'Garden c)ub, 8 p.m. Thursday,
available.
home of 'Delores Frank. Program
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport by Ma• ine Whitehead,
Literary Club, ' 12 :30 p.m.
POMEROY - AA mee ting .
Wednesday, Iron Gate Res taurant
· in Point' Pleas~nl. Last me eting also AI-Anon , 7 pm. Sacred Heart
Catholic Church, 161 Mulberry
before summer break.
Ave ., Thursday.

POMEROY - Caring .and sharing suppori group, Thursday, I
p.m. Meigs Senior Center. James .
Soulsby, sheriff, to speak on telephone scams and fraud .
FRIDAY
'
PORTLAND
Lebanon
Township Trustees, 7 a.m. Friday,
township building .

.

.

' PORTLAND - RLDS Churah
located on Portland-Racine Road ,
COfT! muniiy music and praise session .. Public invited , Friday, •7
p.m. Music by The W,hites , .The
Dailey s, and The Carmel Church
Group. Refreshments.
.

"

REGINA JEFFERS
ASHLEY BOYLES
· · ; WINS CONTEST - · Two Meigs · County studente · received
~ rec~gnltlon In the fourth annual "Kick Butts Day" poster contest In
:· Aprtl. The contest was sponsored by the Wellness Block Grant of
... ,~e Meigs County Health Department.
.. . Ashley Boyles, an eighth grader at Eastern Elementary School,
'· and Regina Jeffers, a seventh· grader at Mslgs Middle School
. received $25 gift certHicates fo~ their posters, which depleted clga:
· rette ads designed to show the negative effects of smoking.
'

.

.

.. '
~------~------------;:,company
sampling animal DNA
·i'With hopes to one day clone .pets
· ~ FARMINGTON, Conn. (AP) - Can't live without Fido once Fido's
. ~o n e? Two entrepreneurs may have the answer.
'
: _, For$1,()()(} per pet - plus a $l 00 annual storage fee- Heather Bessoff
and Ro'n Gitlespie will take a genetic sample from a living or dead animal
· lln'd keep it frozen at thei r lao.
,
:. They say the DNA can be stored until science figures out a way to cione
dogs, cats and other lifetime companions whO may n.ot stick around for an
· .bwner 's lifetime.
·
• Bessoff is a veterinarian and Gillespie an agricultural consultant. So far,
· PerPETuate Inc. -run from Bessoff's basement- Has signed up six customers since it began in October.
-:, " The[e could be people whO don't ~g rcc with what w~ ' re doing. We
understand that," Bessoff said. "But we feel there are so many benefits."
· Scientists have so far cloned only mice and farm livestock such as sheep.
Rece ntly, a dog owne.r donated $2.3 million to Texas A&amp;M University to try
· : to clone his beloved Missy.
. ·
.
· Martha Westerfield, who stored a lissue sample of her Maltese dog Lacy,
lvho died of cancer, said: " It's a comfo~"ti ng feeling to 'know that maybe
. someday we can have her back."
·

~·

.. ..... ' '

.
NoUI Open For

i. DEPOYS AG

Spri"'f Season
Complete Une Of
Vegetable &amp; ll«tding Plant~~
All Fl•ll $6.50

PARft

i •

.: All Make a Tractor &amp;
11

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Equipment Parts ·
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.

II

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Hanging Baskets
Blooming &amp; Foliage
$5.75 &amp; Up
•Geraniums, Azaleas

~

•shrubs &amp; Trees

Cooliiiu., OHl 46723

~,~-~·~~~~~-1~-~ld

,
1

•

.

Howard L. Writesel

Gol~n

HUIIIARD'S
IIEEIIOUSE

NEW·REPAIR

I'

992•5776

Downspouts
.~ · Gutter Cleaning
· · . Painting

i•
:

FREE ESTIMATES

'

949·2168

,....------...·
HILL~S
: : SELF STORAGE

,I

,'

: · 29870 B11ehan Road

num .

''

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.. I

..

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TFN

ROIERT·BJSSELl
CONSTRUCnON
•New Homes
•Garagea
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

985-4473·

~

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,to 10' x 30' ·
.Hours

f

''

Trucks • tractor
Trailers - decks - driveways
Equipment Cleaned &amp;[)egressed
JEFF STETHEM
PHONE: (740) 98$-42111
EMAIL: ·

7:00AM·8 PM
3NI0/1mo.

Public Notice

STETHEJI@t:UREKANET.COII

SHERIFF'S SALE, IlEAL
ESTATE..CASE NUMBER

FREE tiSTIMATES
38782 Sumner Road,

HoCV-()73

, FIRST l.NDIANA BANK,
' Plalntlfl
JAMES W.
' GOODRICH, at ,1.,

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

COURT OF CO,MMON
PLEAS,, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
·
In purou•nce ol •n Ordor
• bl S•l• to
dlr..,tecl rrom
, .. Jd Court In th• •bove
entitled action, I will oxpoH
to Hie at public auction an
rlthe front •tope of tho .Molga
·county Cour1houeo an
.'Frldey, June 18, 1199 at
. 10:00 A.M. ol 11ld d•y, tito
Hollowing de•crlbod r.. l

SMITH'S
CONSTR.UCI'IO
· •New

v•_

• tl.fencler\ta

'

'

Home•

m•

' ltllllt:

'

· Sltualed In tho Village of
"Al1tlqulty; County ol Molga,
and Shtta of Ohio, to-wit:
Sltu•t•d In town 2,
• $action 14,.11ange 12, one
hundrod ocr• .tot 274
l!oundad and ducribld 11

•Additions
• R emodeling
CaU today about 1peeiul
price• lhru July on
Qoolhy Buill Hou•••
'

'
I'

'

I
j

Romodtltng-Kll- C.blnoll
Vt.ny! Sldlng-Raafa.Otcki-

Full Une Of Water Storage TankaSeptic &amp; Cistern Tanka
Sewer Pipe: 3" thru 8", Gal Pipe &amp;
· Regulators ·
OPEN:
11:00o4:30 WHkdays
e:oo-12:00 Saturday

GaFree E•timate•
740-742-3411
Bryan Reeves
s...an Reeve•

~~~f{.)~~~~ft~~t'J)
~ .J.D. CONSftUCftON ~

YOUR

CONCRETE

f;j
;,
f;jJ

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garages, ·Pole Build_ings, Roofing, Siding
HSpeciaU:~ins In Log Home• "
Commercial &amp; Residential
28 yrs. exp.
l.loensed &amp; Insured ~
-.
Phone 740.992·3987
11.'!1
· John Dean; Owner

·

CONNECTION
Quality Dri~eways,
Sidewalks, Patios
Parking Lots
25 yrs experience
Free Estimates

ft

. ftftftft~A~ftftftftC .

~
r----::S::::H:-::-AD~E::-:R==I=VE=R~A::-::G:--~
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onstruct on
.SERVICE
Ught Commercial &amp;
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Points &amp; Chester
We Custom Spray

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F·o"'E ESTIM.''T'"'S
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•"'egetahles
•Corn
~·
e s ·o ybeans

SHADE lUVER

,.au 9

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8urut"4 .

7"~::11.&amp;
1 mo.

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11 - · "d w/Tu
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Truck seats, car seats,.headliners, ·
· truck tarps, convertible &amp;vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.

~====~
Linda's Painting

'lllke the pain out
·of painting, and let

"'""ng

•Bulldozer
Co·
Backhoe serulus
'"''"'·' 1Mill' Sil11

Local .
Television
'

· me do it for y.ou.

Huoe two famlly· May 27 thru
June 4 , 9a!11·8pm . Pierce r11i·
dence, one mile north past Portland Park On SR 124. ClottMng,
stone jars. bottles, ICniVII, clglretle lig hters, computers, cook
bOOkS, toys, dishes. ·rNJCh rmre.

80

Auction
and Flea Markat

Bill Moodlspaugn ~ucuoneerlng .
Complete .6.uctioneerlng Servlc·
ss . Consignment auction· MUI
Street , Middleport , Ti'lursdayi .
Ohio license 17693. 740-989·
2623.
Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lull ti me auctioneer. complete
auc tio n
service .
Licensed
t66 ,0hio &amp; West Virginia. 304 n3-578S Or 301·n3·5447.

IHV£ASIDE AUCTION eARN
Every Saturday .Nlght 7 P.M.,
Crown Cl1y, 7&lt;4().251H969
WedtmeyeJ't Auction Ser vice, ·
ClaliXJI!s , 011to 740-379-2720

90

Wanted to Buy

Atlsolute Top Dollar: All u .s . Sll·
ver And Gold Coins. Proofsets .
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Ring1, Pre -1930 U.S. Currency.
Sterling, Etc. AcqulsiUons Jewelry
· M.T.S. C,oln Shop. t51 Second
Avenue , Gallipolis, 740-446·2842.

Antiques, top prices paid, Rive r·
In a Antiques . Pomeroy, Ohio ,
Russ Moore owner, 740-992·
252ti.
Buying SraMing :Timb&amp;r. 740·256·

6172 .

(740)691·9407
(740)691·6029

Free Estimates

"

Wa nted To Bu y: 3 Bedroom
Home, Good Cond ition, On 1
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EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

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CaU 992-2727

. AVON 1 Ail Areas! To Buy or Sell.

Shi1ey StJoars, 304-675- I 429.

40 742·8888 .

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45769 Of 740.992-6788 .
Computer Users Neeaad . work
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Director of Admiss ions; Holzer
· Senior Care Center , a 70 Bed

BIIIJinnlng at en Iron pt.n
on the eouthw..t co,mar of
f .B. Sh•l!la Jot formorly
eold oil the aome troct,
thane~ ln. e' aouthe•.t•rly'
dtr..,tlon .along the public
highwey 100 Ioat to 1111
northwae~ well corner of
.Wlllllllll Powtll Jot; thence In
• north..eterly direction
following the WJJJJ•m Powell
line lor 1M feat to •n Iron
pin; lh8nce In I
north.,...rJy direction 224
feet to the piece · of
JMglnnlng•, c,ontalnlng fourtenth• of en acre more or

LTC , Is looking for a pos1Uo6 ot
. Director of Admiss ions. You .will
marke\ our LTC and will reMw
all applicatiOns lor admlniOns

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

·Personals

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t'·BC»226-5889 Exl2708, $2.99
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40

(304)882·2755.
3 females &amp; t mate, Squk'rel Dog
pupp..s, wormed, first shots, 74G992-671S.
3112 old male pup. , 1/2 Cocker

Spaniol and 1/2 Goldin Rootovor.
ShOts, worme&lt;l. (7-40)--6231

·_. year old bladt and white colllli,
licensed; shOts. apayect: gray cat,
neutered , declawed ; 7-40·9927843.

A localy owned tompony wilh over 28 yn
experilln has now ulentled our toveroge area to

go, (304)875-&lt;1241 '

Free Firewood, You Cut , &amp; vo'u
HolOI, 740-245-5116.

lndudl.all of Galllo Co. ond ptlllions of Meigs,

KiHens and cat

YlniDn &amp;lawr1111:1 !OURtie5.

992-7~5.

CALL TODAY TO IEGIN YOUR
GARUGI SERVICE IIJIIEDIATELY

After 5:00Pm. 7-9305.
Siberian Husky, Full Bl ooded. 4
Months Old, Black Strlpact With
White. 740-146.()580 . .

To good home· heal thy lema11

· Atou .... ....,...,.,
'.

to giveaway, 740.

Molher Cat And 4 Kltltn1 . Call

t-800-967 -4774

VlNYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS AT
FACI'ORY DIRECT PRICES

c;,.._

~~~perlenced Carpenter Wanted
Mull Have Own Hand Tools

Tran1!101i8tton. (304)87H&lt;71l
DIRECTOR OF

I

ADIItSatONS

Holzer Senior Cere Center A 70
Beet LTC Is Looking For F-Osmon
Of Director Of Admissions tou
.Will MaFkt1 Our. LTC And' Will
Review All Applica tions For Ad·
millions And Olrect Famll'f A....
tiona And Social ServiCII Outih,

Positions RtK(uiros A Co ttogo
gru, LSW Preferred But Not

[)e.

Ro·

quhed .· Gooct Communleiuon
Skllla And Knowledge Ot long
Term Care Requlrementa. Apply
ChOice or Free Klttena to good
..:!"Or Send Resume Wllh Cover
home. Varlaty!Mixed • Ready to . Le.tter To Roger Hlnle, NHA, 310

Refuse Service

·.992-4119 OR 800-291-5600 ·

long term health care field . i.l·

cenaed Practica l Nurst~ . Rotating shlf1 a. Intermediate care
ter. west VIrginia llcen•e ft·
qulred . Apply at Point Pleaaant
Center/Gen esis Eldercart, sate
Aoute 62 . Route 1, Bo x 3Re
Point Pleasant. wv 2li550 . EOii. ,

Giveaway · ·

1 Oog House to give away. For
medium si re dog . Insulated .

of
Galla Countyl

VISIT OUR OFFICE/SHOWROOM THERE

OH ~14 0&lt; t.. 740-446-1 346.~

Oualltv clothing and hous,ehold
ExCellent opportunity t'o join the
Items. $1.00 bag sale every · long term health care field. Difec·
J'hursday. Monday th ru Saturday· tor ot Nursing. Intermediate care
9:00.,:30.
center. Have four or more ynrs
ot nursing experience and pos·
sess a valid West Virginia RigReward! $750.00 fOr the a!Ttat of
ls teru Nurse license. Compre ~
persons who b~oke ln&amp; Stole
hen5ive b1neflt pacll:age av&amp;ll·
Tools Property ot; Ronald Miller,
able. Apply by fo rwardk\g resume
261 Pickens ~ d . Patriot, Oh .
to Point Pieasarit Centar!Genesis
(7 40 )- 379-2160 NO Questions
Eldercare. State Route 82, Route
A&amp;kl
·
1. Box 326. Point Pteilaant , wv
25550. EOE.
,

To The Residents

.mEIOVID
FORMERLY QF 110 COURT STIEn, POIIROY
IS NOW LOCATED STAll R.OUIE 33.
6.MIUS NORTH OF POMEROY AT COUNTY ROAD 18

9West Stimson. Atnens
74().592·1842

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

. Pomlloy, Olllo

extenslon9681 .

New To 'roo Thrift Shoppe

Lost hppy

V.C. YOUNG Ill
-ta

1740)992-JIJI

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

800-ROMI\ ~CE,

30 Announcement&amp;

WaDe.l lver
Limestone, Gravel,
Sand, Fill Dirt,
Agricultural Lime,
Mulch , Top Soil

On Flatwooils ltd.,
Lab/Mix, Black, with
White markinlis oit each
paw, tip offail, and
.as:toss chest

,., Ealtti....

rt(lulras a college degree, UJW
Preferred-bul 1101 reQuired .. geod
communicatiOn skills and knQw l·
edge ol long term car e requJrements .. Apply at or send rh"'"t
with cover Iauer to Rog er Hlftl8 ,
NHA 380 Colonial Dr., Bldftll ,
Excellent opportunity to Join the

Start Dating Tonight! Have fun
playing rhe Ohio Dating Gama,. 1-

IIOof'•lll • Clutttn

•VIny! Siding ' Pllntlng
.... 6 Pollllt Decb

and clrect fa mily relat!onl JiM
social services duties. PoatUon

Sorv·U(619)-645-8434

WICKS
HfiOLIHG IHC.

,....

CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
~sa :oo .PER DAY.

1:octpm Fr1cloy.

Want To Sell Your Stuff? Call Riv·
erskle Aucllon Anct Let us SeH It
For Vou, 740-2-969 .

&amp;

Public Notice

YOUR

In

Actvanc:e. DMdllne: 1 :OOpln 1M
day before lh• ad Ia to run,
Sunday I Monday tdlllon ~

740-985-4180

Gra d'mg

~7SJ ~1101

A Special Souvenir Edition W.U Be Included In The
· Sentinel In Mid-July.
:Ma,ny stories and pllotograpfis of si!Jnificant events relating to tlie .
liistory and development of 'Rutland will be featured In tfie publication.
If you prefer an alternative to regular advertising copy, perfiaps you
migfit c~nsider an fiistoric account and pfiotograpfis ofyour business.
We will be liappy to assist you in desifjning an ad.

All Yord

'

•Septic Systems &amp; Utilities

· •Land Clearing

Remtmber
Quality Is Job One

Help u. c.Jeblate The :aeolh
Annlvenary,~ ~......... .

Ponlero;,

Mldclllport
l VIcinity
lloteo lluot lo l'old

Clean Late Mod el Cars Or
Trucks. I 990 Models Or Newer,
Smllh Buick Pontiac, 1900 East. em Avenue, Gali~)()lis .

For Free .
Program Guide

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

-10:001.101..._.

INTERIOR
Befo~e 6 pm leave
message. After 6 pm

T¥27

Rutland, Ohio

7 4()..742-8608

CREDrr ·

WJOS

A&amp; DAuto Upholstery • Plus, Inc

Current· Owner: Jam..
W. Goodrich and Carolyn A.
Goodrich .

Call
·
992·2155 and Speak With
Dave Harris-Ext. 104 ·
or Kathy Wllllamson-lxt.105
June 18.

Now Conotructton • ·

4" thru 48" Plastic Culvert In Stock .

C!

TRI·STATE MOilLE
POWI.WASH

I

'
'

.

'

llla1ntng lhll I llrlcll
Pallo Canllnclla

I · Racln•, Ohio 45771

r· 740'"949-2217
.I Sizes 5' x 10'

·Conmuctlon

740-985-3813

IJc. I~ 11n- ,

(No Sunday Calls)

............. Pll•nH••

,

torlow.;

Plans were made ·for planting
fl owers by the marker ai · the
·Belleville-Reedsvi lle Park when
the Riverview Garden. Club met
recently _at the home of Janice
Young.
The group also set a day for
trash ·pickup.
Ella Osborne and Janet ' Connolly were co-hostesses for the
meeting with devotions including
"S pringtime" and "Then and Now·
Blessings" and closed with a
prayer by Osborne.
Thank you notes were · read
. from the Bice family, Janice
Young and Marlene ·l'utman. An
interesting -progratn on "Backyard Conservation" was presented by Margaret Cauthorn. ·
She ·told of many ways to use
ordinary items to help with gardening.
.
New spapers . make . ·a good
· much and to help keep weeds
dow n · and citru s peelings will
keep cats and dogs away from
flower beds.
Games were co nducted · by
Margaret Gross nickle and Marlene Putman with everyone winning pri zes ,
·
The door prize went to. Margaret Cauthorn . Refres hment s ·
were served to those named and
Frances Reed, Maxine White -·
head, Grace We ber, Mary Alice
Bise , Delores Frank, Ruth Anne
Balderson, Wendi Hannum, Mari lyn Hannum . Nancy Wachter and
Gladys Thomas.
Wendi Hannum read a poem
which , she had written entitled
"S pringtime ."
Each one received, a pac ket of
seeds and candy for favors. Next
·meting will be with Marilyn Han -

3

P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH ·
Paying $80.00
per gallll
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starbum
Progrs..lve top IIIII.

•LinraCan··· 'p

SYRACUSE

·Gutters

"

814-992·7843

Buckeye
We
Honor CarCI
•
Open
9-5 Weekday Sunday 1' 5

Roo FING

..

1-

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY laDUtBo•a
TUppers Plalna, Ohio 45783
St. Rt. 7

ATe:~

,_.,..ltlcHIIIoy-

985 4422

Cheater, Ohio

IDinl!. SumfttHome. co~n

Thuradaya

;

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding ·New Garages
• Replacement Windows 1
· • Room AddHions
• Roofing .
COMMEROAL and RESIDENIIAL
FREE' ESTIMATES . '

!'Merud.• B•d~ Gerwnbutu

1000 St. Rt. 7 South

Pomeroy Eaglea
Club Bin~ On .

BI$.SELL BUILDERS,
INC.

lltDIUII.s-,

- - 2:00p...

AgdcuHural Ume,
U11111tone • Grevel
Dirt • Sand

clo1e to Fork Run Boat Ramp

Phone:
740-258-8147

,.

Of![" •·2:00 p.tn.
ll1e dol'- . . .

SERVICE

..

~

Garden Club to
plant flowers

,,,

.i { .

Jerry L. Prti&amp;Ce
Crown c · OH 45623

.. ...........
au.--Galllpolll
&amp; VIcinity

. DUMPTRUCK

Electric &amp; Watel:' and or ·Full Hook-Up
Aei'OII fl:'om Forked Run State Park and

Call For Frtte Estimates

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Calendar---------------~

LONG BOTTOM - Eden
Puppets, Wednesday, 7 p.m at the
Faith Ful,l Gospel Church.

(740)·

YatdSale

I. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

1-740-667-3083
1-740-667-3316
$550.00 Year
$12.00 Night
$10.00 Primitive Camping

.•Paving
•Lots
•Sealing
• Drives
•Striping
•Private
•Patching
•Business
•New &amp; Resurfacing
•Playgrounds
•Tennis &amp; Basketball C'ourts

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

Community

fematt . whiit

2!tl • .,. .

70

think she could · develop_ some
friendships and be less lonely. Is this
some kind of mental illness? I suspect it might be, but I don't know
what to do about it. When she is in
the house, we follow her around to
make sure she doesn ' t get into anything personal. This can be nerveShe allended church recently with wracking. Can it be that she needs
some family ·members and proceed- psychiatric help? What do you say?
ed to root through my niece's purse -- PERPLEXED FAMILY IN
while the girl was receiving comljlu- LOUISIANA
mon .
DEAR LOUISIANA : This
Mom has entertained many sounds more like nosiness than men- ·
overnight visitors, but none of them tal illness., You might discourage
come back a second time. My guess your mother from poking into your
is they catch her rummaging through things if you stopped trying to
their belongings and decide not to reduce her embarrassment. Let her
visit agai n.
.
know that you are aware of her
Mom has very few friend:&gt; . and . snooping, and tell her outright to
no one inviteS her to come over, I' m stop it because it makes everyone
sure it's because of her nosiness. If uncomfortable. Meanwhile, keep the
we could get her to stop pryin g, I locks on, and to ensure peace

M~lhl

foo1·chot1 . No ttl Tagt.

eat, lrlendly, spa~ &amp; declawtd,
~nl on shots. 740-9Q2.n27.

•

Cotontat on,., Bidwell. OH '45414
Or Fa• 740-446-1348 EOii.

Orl~er-.A.Ittntlon Stert IM.n..
Appllcallane ,..,.
_..., In 2 - . . 0&lt; LtM Long
Hauland·regtonai .Drlvtrs "nelnlng program avail. for COL acttDol

dltttl}'l

gra~uates

Bogy!remtnte:

1

months OTR IKPtr. 23 V..ra .at

age good driving record •plld
Heal1h Insurance ·oentll PI"Avallable "401 K and IUe kl-

suranco 'Obtainable Sor.1y ·~
Productivity Bonu11t Continental
Expro11, ,Inc (lOOI·2t:I-010o
(8001-6115-4473
'

I'

�Tuesday, May 25, 1999.
•
•

.

'

'•

Tu.lday, May 25, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page..:

ALLEYOOP

81UDOK

NEA Croaaword Puzzle

PHU..LIP
ALDER

~ Rocnlilol$ Needing :

iiiOd In w.i Jacl&lt;soo Plkl,l201 ,

10 I!Mind tho night with
tho oldlrly, ml&lt;lnlght·8am, 5 days
per - k. SIO p•r day, 74D-9925039 or7&gt;40-!IV2-4410.

Gafpoh.

Substitute and two(2) Teacher's

SlliA'S I LPN'S tor more lntor·

-cil : (740)~188or

,:

....

ltme amploym,nt with no fringe

Needing :

R- Olroctor of

~

Nulling Po-

Por1&lt;8r1Jurv, WY. end
Oft For more lntorms·
: (740)~188 or Stop
Jaclu;on Plio! ,I 201, !)alll-

In
po+,

He!&gt;Wanlod:

Housekeeper for Busy Houae·
hold , One day Per Wetk, Prefer·
abty Friday Send Reaume. Refer·
ences and Hburty Wage Require·
ments to: CLA P.O. Box 474,

%Gallipolis Dally Tlibuno Galllpo·

us, on 45631

benefits. Hours •re Monday·Frl·
dav. Teacher's Aides -one, from

7:30AM·12.30PM and one, from

11 :304M -5:30PM Substitutes -

houra vary from 7:30AM-5:30PM.
Must be at leaat 18 years old
wllh a HS diploma or GED. EJI·
parlance working with children
preferred. Must ba able to read ,
write, and use correct grammar In
apaaklng and writing. Sand resume to Children's Village, ~a ·
son County Vocallonai· Tach
Centar, Ohio River Road, Pt.
Plaasanl, wv 25550 by Mav 28.

EOE

Jewelry Sales Retail Sales and
Computer Experience ReQuired.
Acquisitions Fine Jewelry. 151

Socond Avo. Gallipolis . Apply
Monday 11\ru Friday.
Local Trucking Company Seeking
Qualified Truck Dtl\ier&amp;. G9od
Pay And Beneflta. Send Resume
To· Driver, P.O Box 109 Jack·

son, Ohio 45640, Or Call H40·

286· 1 483 To Scl'ledule An Inter·

view.

Reliable Person To Live In Wtlh
Elderly Male. Room, Board, Sal·

ary Supplied (304)895-3942

Taking Applications, If you ara a
reliable , clean, hard-working. de·
pendable parson , come join our
team. Melinda's Restaurant, lot·
matly Mllllaa In Point Pleasant .
(304)675-720 1.
Wanted. Summer Route Dr 1vers
Local Routes, Good 0 &amp;y! Please

\.4ecl6cat Processor

11

FTJPT No tppOfience nece&amp;Sary
WIA lnltn PC required. Earn 40K

Call. 1·(800)-1546·44&lt;J
WE NEED DRIVERS
Now Equipment

can IIOD-68:H44o

Good Pay

MMIIcal Processor FT IPT No

No~ taking applications lor ex·
pooe~ grill &amp; prop cook App~
at Hart's Kounlry Kitchen, Racine,
Ot}lo between the hours of 2·•
No Prtone calls please

NtliiSING SUPERVISOR IMDS
NURSE L RN Unit Manager: 1.
MDS AN Coordinator, Holzer
Senior Care Center, 70 Bed LTC.
Is looking For AN's WJth Super·
vlsory, Assessment, And Com·
munlcatlon Skill&amp;. Mu&amp;t Have
Knowledge Of PPS, Infection

Control, And MDS2.0. Ohio ll·
cense Req App~ AI Of 5and At&gt;
1ume With Cover Leiter Attri:
DON. At380 Colonial Or., Bitlwell,

OH 45814 Or Fax 740·448·1346

EOE

74Cl-446-1346.EOE.

Postal Jobs lo $18.35/Hr. Inc
Benefits, No experience. For
App and Exam Info Cell 1-800·

813·3585, Ext. 8812, 8AM·9PM,
7Days lds,lnc.

Responsible Child Care Provider

In My Homa For Two Chlldran M·
F, 8-5, Tara ESiatea Area. Submit
letter Of Interest. References &amp;
Wage Requirements To: CLA 24,
c/o Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 82!5
Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH

45831.
FIN Position, 3 Day&amp; Per Week,

$850 GO Per Week, $1,000 Sign·

I

I

On Bonus Drive to West Jaffer·
son, OH (25 mllas from Columbus) 3 times per week. Work 7P·
7A every Saturday and Sunday
plus one 3·11 P shift each week
and you will receive: *$850.00
per week. •vacation and holiday
pay. *401K. •Medical, dental and
life Insurance ·ongoing tramtng
and CEU opportunltlae. *Oppor·
tunlry for advancement . Arbors
West is a leading provider of
Subacute Care. We are seeking
an organized leader with excel·
lent problem solving Skills lor our
18 bed subacute unit. Previous
experience a plus but would con·
slder an outstanding new gradu·

ate. Call Debbie Long, RN to In·
terv1ew for this opportunity. Ar·
bors Wesl, 375 W. Main Street,
West Jerterson, Ohio 43162

(614)8711-5103.
Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center
Is now accepting applications for
part time housakHplngJ laundry
and dietary aide positions. Must
be able to work all shills and ,..
kends Apply In parson to fill out
an application or send Mume to.
Rocksprings Rehabilitation Can·
ter, 38758 Rocksprlng• Rd., Po·

morov. OH 4~789 EOE

.

Scenic Hills Nursing Center Is
Now Accepting Appllatlons For
The Poeltlon Of Certified Actlvl·
iea Per'IOn, Please Sind Reaume
And Salary Requirements To
Charla Brown At SC!enlc Hills '
Nursing Center, 311 Buckrtdge

-

Info

Call

1-800·813-3585,

Ext 8813, 8AM· 9PM , 1 Days
fds,lnc,

140

Buslne1s
Training

Golllpolto ca-

cot~ogo

(careers Close To Home) Call

Today! 740-446-4367. 1~
214·0452, Reg 190-05-1274B

180 Wanted To Do
Carpentry Remodehng, Ackfltlons,

Nursing Supervlaor/MDS Nurse:
1 RN Unit Manager, t MOS AN
Coordinator. Holzer Senior Care
Center, 70 Bed LTC Is looking
for AN 's with supervisory, asnssment, and communication
skills Must have knowledge of
PPS, Infection Control, and
MOS2 o, onto license Req ap·
ply al or send resume with cover
letter Attn: O.O.N. at 380 Colonial
Dr , Bidwell, OH. 45814 or Fa•

·I

Von Schrader V53 Power Wall-

Decks, Porches, Drywall, Paint·

lng. 74Cl-441·1318
Chlldcara provldar, DHS cenllled.
18 years experience, have three
openings, Middleport· Rutland

area. call 740·992-6718
CNA With 20 Yrs Exp. And Ex·
cell. References Has Private
Room And Full Cera In tter Home
For The Elderly. For More Info
740-256· 6342, Also Nutritious
Meal Planning And Wheel Chair
Accessib~ .

E &amp; S Lawn Service: Dealgn, tm·
ptementallon, and Service .
Available for SpriAg Clean ~p.
fertilizing and planting Free estl·
mates. Satisfaction guaranteed.

Greg Milhoen: 3041675-4628
Electric Maintenance Service
Wiring, Breaker Boxes, Light Fix·
lure , Healing Systems, and Fie·

modoing (740)441·1401 .
Experienced 16 yr old will do
bab)'sltllng In my home Mon·Frl
lor Summer. 740-446-2315.
Georges 'Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the mill just call

304-675-1957.

Anti-Mildew. no odor, sanitizes.

hr---------•:1
Frtt eatlmates. Call Clearly

Clean al (304)&amp;75-&lt;040.

All real estate advertising In
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes~ INogal
to at.tvertise ~any preference,
l im~atlon or discrimination
based on race, color, religion,
se~~; tamll~al status or national
ortgJn, or any IntentiOn to
make any sucl'l preference,

limitation Of dlscrimlnatton "

lions, Painting, etc. (304)874·
4823 Of (304)674-0155

Lawn mowing and Odd Jobst Big

or Small! Con: Steve Conley High
School, (7401 «6-2156
Need slner for the summer? Day·
care with a pool. Open Monday
thru Friday, ask for Kelly, 740·

Informed thai all dwellings
advertised In this 1'18Mipaper
are avatlable on an equal

opportunity basis.
REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale
2103 Mount Vernon Avenue 3BR
1 1/2BA., Family Room, Garage,
CentraiA\r, Patio, Porch, $77,000

(304)675-2533.
3 Bedroom, Split Entry, Brick
Home an Route 2, at Mt. Alto.
Bullt·ln Kitchen, Dlnlngroom, LR,
3 Baths, FP, WOOdburnlng stove,

on nearly 5 acres land. (304)895·
3881
3 Bedrooms, 2 Bath Ronch Houso
Ga·
rage. 12x24 Building , Barn &amp;

1 Years Old, 28x30 Attached

Tractor Shed, 69 1/2 Acres Or

Will Sell Housa &amp; Loll Meigs Co.
741l-992·3537.
3BA House. 2 car garage, 1.6

Acre University Lane (Behind

Armory). (304)875-5375, alter
5.30PM
5 rooms, one bath, hAl basement
with shower, well maintained,
$40,000, 699 Bro8dway Striet,

Mlddiepor\ Ohio, 740-992-7319.
By owner, 725 Page Street. Mid·
dleport, house &amp; 3 lots, must see
to appreciate, will sail house with-

out lots lor $89,000, 740·992·
2704. 740-992-~96
Cute 5 room home, full basement,
Lennox heat pump, central air,
Anderson Ult·ln windows, good lflo
sulatiOn,. vinyl siding, front and
back porchea. nice level lot, good
neighborhood, Mason, wv, call

74D-992·3041 or 74D-992·3557.
Oon't Wall TO Buy, 3 Bedroom
Home In New Ha~en, Good Con·

dillon. $32,000 Appraised
$39,000. (304)882·3m

EXCELLENT CONDITION: 2
Story, 3 Bedrooms. 2 1/2 Balhs,
Near Holzer, Immediate Posses·

Pt. Plaasant. $28.000. (304)895·

3082:

Yard work· mowllg, hedges, windows, gutters, painting, call 1•0·
992·3193 or 740·992·782t ask
for Dana or leave a message.

FINANC IAL

•

Family Home, With. Pool, 2 Car

Garge/ Apt. Albany, 7 Miles o .u
Meigs Mine. 740-698·7150
Restored Victorian home slruated
on 12 acres, Village Middleport,
secluded and private, appoint·
ment. call740-992·589&amp;.
Spring Valley, 2 story family
home. 4 Bedroom, 2 1/2 Baths,

UYing Room, Dining Room. Eot·ln
Kitchen. Lg Family Room. 740·

245-9337

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

flrienCO cell ~ -722-7148

Please

Help! 3 Bedroom, 2
Baths, Just take over Payments!

1·1188-736-3332
Rent Buster. New 1999 14x70 2
or 3 Bedrooms. Only $995 00
Dawn, $195.00 per month. Free

10x40. All Elaclrlc I A.C.
(304)675-1123, attor 8:30PM.

Oakwood Homes Barboursville,

WV $499 Down Single Wide,
S999 Down Double Wide, 304·
736-3409.
28 Acres MIL, G Stall Horst Bam,
3 Bedroom House, Fence, 740·
388-95()4.

Small farm (52 acres) with -lie
home, salt sufficient with natural
springs, :2 ga&amp; producing wells,
some limber, $68,500, 7.0·992·

old 2 story w/10 Rooms. 3 Baths.
2 Stairways, 2 Car Garage,

38'x38' Barn. 28'x40: Metol Bldg ..
20'1166' Shed, 18'x24' Metal Ga·
raga. $155,000 Plus more land
AvaMable.
Willow Wood1 approx. 47 acres,
Factory Built Home-2 years old 7·
Rooms, 2.5 Bath's, Stone Fire·

ooorn. $120.000.

Chesapeake, Approx . 15 Acres
wllhls 81-Level. 7 Rooms; 2 5
bath&amp;, Fireplace/Family Room
Wetbar Satelllte Dish , 32 ;x48 ;
Gare~e/Workshop. Just Minutes
IOtown $159,900.
Chesapeake. Approa: . 4.5 Acres,
1 Story w/8 ROOI11S 6 Bath, Near·
ly New Roof &amp; Window&amp; are 2
years old. tt Absolutely Shines

$85,000.
Wall Realty-Realtors (740)·888·
7069

Commercial Building For Lease.
Sman Business Or Offtce In High
Traffic Area , Across From Wal·
Mart On Corner, 740·441·5118,
Or 304·634·0540 Leave Mas·

sago.
Office suite In high traHk:, visible
location. Two private offices,
batl'lroom and small recaption
area. ADA accessible. Olflce or
commercial building on Jackson
Avenue, 2 rooms plus bath. Vis~

lble wllh porl&lt;lng. (304)875-8774/
874-48811.

350 Lota &amp; Acreage
1 Acre Lot ten For Salt In Mason,

$15,000. (304)882·3m.
3.5 acre tot for sele·

rl~er

view

and out of flood plain. Located on
SR 12• just out of Syracuse. Wa·
ter &amp; sewer available. Can break

In smallar lots, $30,000 740·992·
4581.
5 Acral Blacktop Frontage I
Lake VIew, Gallia County,

$32,000 More Acraage Available,
7&gt;40-388·8678.
&amp;ACRES

In tho county, On~ S9,1 oo.oo with
CountyWater,Wooda, Meadows,

360

Real Estate

Wanted
We Buy Land: 30 ·500 Acres ,

$325.00 Month, Include&amp; Water

2 Bedroom Houaa tn Gallipolis.

304·576-2438.

Pota. (304)875-51112.

Vlrglnll certification required .

Gan•tll Ekttrcara, Stale Route

tlon Con1er, 38751 flaalloprlng&amp;
Road, Pornorar. 01t1o
lifT:
Carol Groontng, liN, II'-' of
Nurolng. Equol ~ lm·

.ea.,..

ployar

'

740·446·3884.
I Bdrm., Eldra Nice, First Month

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

740-446·2857.

Carpet and Upholstery Cleanld
without "Steam• or Absorbent
,Compoundt. Soapteu Anti·Re·
toll Oeterganta used exclu1ive· .
ly. Sift tor all fabrlct. Fa1t dry·
lng (1-2 houro). Ellminall!• OVIIr·
W.rting. Guaranteed Work. Call

1 Bedroom Apartment Overlook·
lng City Park! Lafayelle Mall.

Cloarly Clean 11 (304)875·4040

tor Free E&amp;UfROitSI

Does Your Houaa Siding, Dack,
or Driveway need a cleaning? If
10, PreHure Washing Is the an·
awerl j Call Clearly Clean at

(304)875·4040, lor a Free Eo·
llmall.
TURNED DOWN OH
IOCIAL SECURITY IIIII?
lj9 Feo Unloll Wo Wlnl
1-1188-582-3345 '

ow, Sky Light, ClAir, With Rolrlg
I Range, Very NICOll (304)675·
1105!5.

·

3 Bedroorno, 1 Bell\ In Gallpotlo,
Nice Yard With Fence &amp; 2 Stor·
ago Bulldlngo; C..nlrll Heat &amp; Air,
Losu &amp; Doposlt $5211/Mo., 74D441-5118,

1997 Do-Ida on 2 112 Acreo.
3BR, 2BA 1 Storago Bldg .. Dlrocl
TV Satellllo, $57,000. Will lhoW
botwoon 5PM·8PM. (30414581033.

1800's Model, S950 .00 . (740)·

AKC Sholtle, Female, 5 Months.

258-9309

Nicety Maryd, Shots, Wormed ,

S125 NoChoi:U, 740-«e-111112.

.. 11. Riverine Antiques,
E. Main Streal, on .At. 124,
Pomeroy, Hours. M .T.W. 10:00
a.m to 8:00 p m., Sunday 1·00 10

AKC ' TOY POODLES, ~ad
Sholl Wormed. 7 Weeks Old,
$350,00 Each. 740-379-9081.

8:00 p.m. 740·992·2526. Ru11

YBn lor rant. (3041982·2119, day·
limo; (304)882-2328, 0\18!1lng.

2 bedroom apartment In Mlddlo·
port, WO pay WBIOI', OOWOI &amp; trash,
you pay gaa &amp; electric, $200 per

ttred,-Approx. 5 Lbs When Full

Grown. (740)-379-9081

350 Watt Amplifier witfl built In
Crossover. also Include&amp; Speak·
er box loaded with 1· 12* JL and
4· 10" Jl's two(2). 1" Twnters
atao Included $900 .. 00 OBO

610 Farm Equipment

18 HP Simplicity Lawn Mower. 44'
Deck, Low Hours, Good Condl·

1,000 Sticka, Priced Chaapl Ptua

3430

800 Lba. Base to Rent. Call after
5:00 pm (7Oo)-44 Hl541

Sya~ml·

month frte programming. limited lime offer, call 1·

Farm Tractor MF Furgerson 30.

60D-l79-8194.

$2,800.00 . Oay Ph. (740)·448·
3159; EVIl P,h. (740~256-1552

2 Racing Go-Karts, One 2 Stroke,
St ,OOO One 4 Stroke, $800 1
Set Ladder Racks for Ford Van.

Ford 9.ood,'andom Dump Truck;
63,000 mile&amp;- S38,500 Cat-553
Sheep Foot Roller-S31.000. Cal·
215 Traek Hoe $31.000. 45ft
Parts trallar1St ,800; 16ft Trent

SI00.(304)675-3n3.
Air Conditioner&amp;. Used Dlflerenl
Sizes, Guaranteed! 740·888·

Box $3,000 2,000 Gallon Water
Tank $800.00, 427 Chevy Truck
Motor,$750.00 Mlac · Steel
Beams, Pipe, Vlbrallng Tamp fltt

0047.
mlnlature ' Pinch~

tramely healthy pupple&amp;,

&amp;360

304-na-

·

Allred Angelo wedding drau,

Pounds

. METABOLISM

Eaoy, Quick,

ptosCall740-441·1982.

Seal, Slrolier. (304)&amp;75-11548.

Case Window; Air Conditioner;

7&gt;40-446-2~
C()_OI, DOWN

11- Bull&lt;lars Sptco:

Piarta·&amp;~..-:.o- '

814-7159-7981.

Beaullful River View: Nlc.e Two
j:Jedroom, t 112 Bathroom Home
On toe Ttrrace StrHt. Stove &amp;

Refrigarotor, Btisomont, One Car
Garogo, WUhor IOryar Hook-Up
Dopoelt I Reltronceo Required:
No Poll, Rontllllcoum C..IJ 740·
11112·5502.

$25 .21; 5 Gal Wnlto Root Paint
S57.89; Anchors $5, Doors &amp;

Apartment ror rtnt In Mldd..port,

Grubb's PW.no-· tuning &amp; repairs.

630

Llveatock

nesaee

I. brakes, 6200 miles, like new, •
1992 GMC Sonoma, Ext•nded ~

Walker.

T,.

7371

..·1

-en

01135 Right On 'Koelor Road. Bluo

-

-

..

I

710 ' Autos' for Sale

Loft
Kubota Tractor (DiauiJ Modal
BeOOOE 12.5 H.P Ovorhautld, 5'
Blodt, And 48" Cut Woods 3 PI
Hitch Mower $3,500, OBO 740-1458. ·

eve JoOIII. 740-245-56n.

morel AI Too Hollybrook Form
Graen Housa. (7~0)·24~·9558
(740)-245-8332

73 ,000 miles, Asking $8,500.00
1740)-446-48 19

Pressure Washer North Srar

1989 Ford Mustang LX, $1250.

1988 Chevy
(304)87
3.

Modern :2 Bedroom Apartment,

PM AI
3000 PSI 3 G. . . tor 3 P.M.
740-441-1:358.

Now Taking ' Applications- 35
weat 2 Bedroom Townhoun
Apartments, lncluct111 Water

PAIMESTAR
Froo Dl-llpoclel
Calloow1·80D-ae3-2.e40.
Aolrlgarator- Good! $100,00.

1989 Cadillac
Fleetwood
Broghlm. $4,500.00. 1984 Cadll·
lee hYIIit; now onglno $2,750 00.
1984 Cadillac Coupe DeVIlle, 2
door, 12.000.00 (740)·448-8041
All otcCOiienl Shoj)ol

lWin Rivera Tower now accepting

eppllcatlonotor IBR. HUD aub·

sldlzed apt. for elderly and hand·
lclppld. EOH 304-875-8879.

Upstairs Throo Room Apartment

Mobile home ~tte a~allabla bet·

ween Athens,o~d Pomeroy, call
740-385-1307.,,'

Blower, E..ctrlc StiMr Cleaner,

~::!..,~•;;:)=-..e:;:ro. v~uum

~283eor7"9-8411-2045.

•• .,...... 1

1991 cUuase Clerra, .. door, V·6,
air, 74,000 mile~ $2100, 740..948-

Two profaulonal wont tanning
bods, 740-992-1385altor7pm

Upright trouor, works good,
1125; 25.000 BTU air condition.

1992 Corolca. 13,000. OBO.
(304)578-2749.
'
t99i Oldsmobile Clera. Real
Ntco. S3.895. ~304)773-5186 or
(304)675-1893.
"·
1w3 Dodge Co~. 5 Spood, Good
Condition, 109,000 Miles, 12.300,

*

35 ;

Watorllno Special· 31~ 200 PSI
$21.95 Per 100; 1' 200 PSI
$37.00 Par tOO; All Bran Com·
prsoslon Fhllngo In~

ENTERPRISESl·~OBO~~ro40-~2SS~·~I233.~~~~:

Jactcson.
Ohio, 1-800·537·91128
RON EVANI

550

Building
Suppllu

1993 Ponltac Grand AM, Teal,
loadodl S3.900.oo (740)·8408

Block, brick, sewer pipet, wind·
owe, llntela, etc. Claudt Wlntera.

1894 cavalier, AutO, AC, $3,495;

Rio Grando. OH Call 740-245·
5121.

560

Goods
Applltncee :
Recondllloned
Washefl, Dryers, Ranu-a, Refrl·
gratora,
Day Guarantee!

.eo

French City Maytag, 740·4487795.
Beds Complete full and TWin,

Couctr. Dook, Living Room Suit,
Rolrlgorator and Glrll Blcyclo.
74(H484742.

C.AN

UNDER·
!&gt;TAND MY
MI:&gt;TAKE,
RIGHT,
KEN"

MR. I!.OSA

WAKE UP, RERUN •• TJ.IE
STORV'S OVER ..VOI.I MISSED
TWE 600D PARTS ..

IT

11182 C..vollor, Auto, AC, $2,485;
1984 Dodgo, High Top, Trade·
Cuotom 1/an, COok Motors,

Pete for Sale

20 llefCIIMt

23::caf
- lou -·-

448 8484

5 AKC Boxer pupo, 740·742·
810t.
'
'

7K~Wii:iii"G;-;;;;:;;St;;;;;;;;;:·
~. l
AKC Whlto Gorman

Pupa. Pick. I·Melo and
Lolli (740)-'245-e213.

Floh, Birds, Pond Suppltoo.
Sun. HPM, Mon.·Set. 11 AM·
8PM. Ftoh Tank/Pot Shop, 24'13

1998 CAYaiOr, red. air, an&gt;'lm, ou-

MotorHomea

1984 Chevy 24 Ft. Motor Homo, •

'

Selt.contained, 7o40 U8 8836.

:

. ~ ~ .~

~AD

32~ -~~

341*maya . • •

35 Scandlnavlaii Mtlon
31W1Utdraw

43~1n

Alrlclr

u=:47 ...... ClwiM' • ~

·=l=oad~·~·

... ::...

110 Auaa~M:

r

~· ~~'~

1

53leull-.,. :

54WJih
,. ~
anchor.., or, ; •

..

'DE IT

NFTT

DLYZVEJKE

..

·'

,,...

.,

~ "'

E Z
I H ~

VFHDTEVDAMEF

SFJNI:W

EWJK

:J ' .. '

DE

....

'

DT

EZ

_, _

VFHDTEVDAMEF

ZYYZVEIIKOER.'

,,

' •J

w.

JVEWMV

X J K H F K A FV I
' ::
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'I sing the Star Spa!'VIed Banner so I can get into •. ;
football, -•lbltU and baseball games for free. - John Cullum
.~

..

. ·c

.,

• •I

'4011

.

•o

' "

'

.

.
..

I

I

~ I'E BIBII R1........4/ ..;,'
~.5~IT.:.:H,..;O:..;C;:..::,N
I' I I _

'•

•,

- "''
.'
• '&gt;

.
.

I~ I I I I 1· f

Failure is a part of life. 1 believe those who never fail are
• those who ••••••••.
Comploro th chuckle quorod
by fiWng In tho moiling -do
you develop fr- ot.Q No. 3 below.

..,
'(•

'

··~
·' ;
•I

..

G

. ,,

"
....,,

.

-- .. 2

. "r

. .

•

~·

ICIAM t.m ANSWIU
v,

Valued· Harpy· Mecca • Treaty· PARADE

Don't"'""'' by hifh ptietS!
Shop the clossi(W S«tlon.

Granny to her grandchildren, 'Get in step wilh yourself and you won't have 10 WOtTy about the PARADE. •

.

~\

·-.. .,

MAY25I . .

!TUESDAY

... -"',

&gt;

•

-.., :"'

-1

810

I

j
!

Local rlferanaet turn[thed. El·

19715. Cai 2&lt;1 Hro. (740)
448-oa7o. 1-8oo-28r-osr8. Rou·
ora Waterproofing.
,
•

French City Maytag, 740·44e·

n95

C&amp;C General Hom a Main· .,
tenence· Painting, vinyl siding, '
Clfptntry, doors, windows, bllhl, j
moblfo homo rapo~ Ond mora. fGI"'
frH estimate call Chat 740-tt2-

'

Livlngston'a Basement water ~ ~
Proofing, all basement repair•
done, free 1111matea, lifetime ~
guarant11. 12yra on job experi
8

onco.(304)89e-3987.

,, .

Profl11tonat •. 20yre, expertence : ·

with all maoonory, bride, btOGI&lt; a •
IIOI'It. AIIO room addltlana 1 ga
rages,

etc.

(304)n3-8550.
RHI's

Fr11

tltlmatu.

o;

"-ng a Plow- '

ao y. .,. experlanoe. Free esll· :

1997 Ford Explorer XLT Loaded,

Electrle~~l

lnd
Refrlgerltlon

ctnsecl "'ctrlclan. Rldtriaur

Electrical, Wl/000308, 304·875·'
1788
.

..

·~.

--

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

.' '

' .

1m ·

Wednesday.-May 26.
Plenty of substantial opportunities
will abound around you in the year
ahead, so there should 'not be any
nccesslly to go for long shots. Leove
that kitld of excitement for another

year.

I

GEMINI &lt;May 21,-lune 20) Rely
solely on yourself today and things
should work out rather well for you.
However, if you begin to depend
upon olhers. you could end up sore,
ly •isappointed. Gemini, treat. yourself loa bil)hday gift. Send for your
Astro-Oraph predictions for the year
ahead by mailing $2 and ~~elf·
addressed stamped envelope to AstroGnph, c/o this newspaper. P.O. Box
1,758, Murray Hill Slation, New
York, .NY I0156. Be sure to state
your zodiae sign.
CANCE~ (lfii'C 21·1uly 22) Don't
lei your eagerness and expcclalions
cause you to take bows for .Omething
that you have yet lo accomplish. It
could backfire and leave you quite
emban&amp;!lised.

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) If you
don'l have your moves planned each

t.

...

- '

AITRO·OI,lAPH

, .Name Brandt Over 215 Ylart Ex~ ... ...,.
perlence All Work Quarantttd,

'

.,

I

·Appllenoa Porll And Servico: All

•

.
.

~

1323

_. ... _;

" '

I

Ro&amp;ldontltl or cornrnotclll wiring, ,
now IIMco or ropalr&amp; Malter lJ.

colleOI Condition: Prlet Roducodll
140 u8 ece1 .

.

...... ttom. .•

I

8411

(3\)4)&amp;75·20113.

'

... '

• I

1998 Dodge Stratus, 4 door,
59,000 mites. Price: $9.500
(304)&amp;75·3943. '
28,000 Mllea, Bat Ftet Warr E•·

.. :: .
•.1

'•·

SERVICES

"11101. 740•742·3315. 740.753-3711.

Jackton Avenue/Point Pteaaant.

;

?

2&amp; FiWiua t
tlah
21 Slander

600D PARTS?.

1976 Dodgl motor home, 20', :
good condition, $4000, call 740· •
992-~4.
: j

tomatlc, ,. door, excellent condl·

lion, $7!500, 740-9112·!1807.

1)

2211edd¥t

24Connhra · "J

I

8

1984 Oldomoblle Cullooo SuJ)Nma; Rod, 24,000 Mlleo, (740)·

" ....

11"'-*'- . ,•

SLAVTY

'fES, MA'AM ..IT WAS A
600D STOR'f ..THANK VOU
FORREADIN61T TO .US ..

f".•l

calarld

PEANUTS

.-..;,

campers &amp;

2045.

1 Yoor Old Black lab .. SIOO.
(304)&amp;75-te72, Allor8PM.
Household

$1250.

2NT
4•

. .. ...,

..... _..,e
.' ... '11

,_..

•· BAIEIIENT
WATIIU ltOONtQ
1999 Cougar, high mllos. runs UneOndltlooal
lllollma auorantoo. 1
reat, looks good, V·6, $2100,

Schoolbuo, Pallot Dolly, Snow

MEil CHA NfliSE

510

Van,

2.

-

• 1

5
,
- 6 6 9

(740~256-1851

~::4~1::,o; mlcrowa~e.

til!&gt; SlUff?

1

National

Pua
Pua
Pua

ca
0
libbr.

13 1170 0 . . ......

t Wtlder'l · -

But
Pua
Pua
All pasa

Agamst four hearts, West leads the
diamond king: seven, nme, three.
West continues with the dtamond six
(h1s initial fourth-highesl) . 10, ace,
five . South ruffs the next diamond,
then imtl1edtately leads the club stx.
Should West play high or low?
North had an awkward rebid,
wh1ch he solved wuh an invllational
two no-lrump desplle his lack of a
diamond stopper.
Because Soulh opened one spade
and then bid hearts lwice , he ,must be
at leas1 5-5 in lhe majors . He has produced two diamonds. So, as this club
1s known to be singleton, West must
wm with the club ace and hope his
partner has a maJor-suit trick
Many players lhink it is necessary
lo counl all four suils That is rarely
lrue. You should track the tr~mp suil,
and probablf one other suit Here,
you needed to counl one hand, but
not all four suits around lhe lable.
The book is $22.95 postpa1d from
Baron Barclay Bridge Supplies. Call
(800) 274-2221 to order.

1978 AMC Moledor, 39,000 actu·
al mllel, kept, fully loadod. New Auto Body Parts &amp; Acces· :
sarle&amp;. Transformers Auto Parts. " ._
$5,000 OB0,1&gt;40-949-2293.
(304)&amp;75-3324.
'
~;
11110·1HDCAJI8 FROM 1800
Pollee lmpounda, A.nd Tax l&gt;(ow gos ronks I bodY ~rlo. D &amp; • :
Repo'o. ~or llellngs Call HOO· R Auto, Ripley, WV. (304)372·: ~
3933 or 1-800-273-9329.
.•
319-332~ Ext. ...ZO.

1888 Buick Grand

74Cl-440-0101 .

l

1

with any purchall of 1 10.00 or

r-~~~P~atio~,~N;o;Peii.~~Laar:~so~PI~u~a
Deposit Roqulrod, 740·

"/::~=1

IN N&gt;l~ i'IJ&gt;.-Y Will\

I

, Budget Priced Tranamihlont
and Engines, All Typtt, Accesa ..
To Over 101000 Tranamtutona, ~

Gracious IMng. 1 and 2 bedroom

CA. 1 112 Ball\, Ful~ Car•

F~PL~Y'7

·~

ACc&amp;IIO~

· 111 4 - - .. oo 1
S1 • oo -nn
,;,; Art";,j China .:r;·~·p.n.;

ueome.

Tt'W C1oiN I core

(No.I "'ll&amp;J~;

•

TRMJSPORTAT ION

1004; 5 MIIH Out Bulavllle Pike

Equal Housing Opportunity; 740·
·~8 4839.
. ,

Sewage, Truh. $315/Mo., 740·

,.THE BORN LOSER

Lights. S15,500.00. (8TS)·387- '
7«4 Evo. WHkondo (740)·«1· • :

For rent., dOck •Jte wllh 2 ctment

Nortb

tton.

Spon kli&lt;rr CCMOr. Convaflion Kk. '
•e.ooo miles Extra Chrom• and

1984 Ch~ Camero, 305 ongOie. 790
auto. ull or tredl for small N"""•p
of equal~. 7&gt;40-948-2094:"""

(740) 448 0390.

'•

with a 1898 California Sldlcar

cUr water, call 740·892·
&amp; patio&amp;,
595'8.
years old. $700.001 (740)·387·
7227
760 Auto Parts &amp;
,

Large metal wardrobe; recliner:
Gallla Manor Aparlment, Now Actwo .22 rllleo, 740-948-~.
cepting Application• For t Bed·
room HUD, Sullskllsed Apartment
Memorial Dey Salol May 23,31,
For Elderly And Handlcappedl • 1999 Any Hinging Btiokota,

port. From $24t·S373. Coli 740·
11112·5064. Equal Houolng Opportm!lel.

•

Sm811. auarfer; Mare SOrrel

Family Living, apart· Johnson's used Furniture /Ap·
manit, home &amp; trailer rental1, pllancee, 740-446-4113i, 740-«e-

Riverside Apartments In Middle·

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1990 Ford Lariat F:150, PB, Pw,-i
Pl. AC. amllm. bod liner, ,_ ~ :

$1,000. 15:.00PM.

(304)578'3259, Allor 8PM.

C~rlsl)l'l

apartmanto at Vlllogo ·Manor •nd

·,:

•

!

Problemo? Need Tunod? Call 11\o
448 4525

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS /&lt;T
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
JET
ESTo\TES., 52 Westwood prtvo
AERATION MOTORS
:In SIOc:k.
lrorlt $279 to, $358. WAlk to ahop Repaired. Now &amp; &amp; movloe Call 740·448·2586. Call Ron Evans, 1;80D-537·8528
Equal Housing Opporlunll)'.

Bedroom, FMH4 Subaldlsod
Aporlmonl for EI&lt;Mrty And HandIcapped, Equal Housing Opportunity. 740 446 1839.

-:
1987 qhovy S· tO Blazer. 2.8 va. :
Auto, Fully Loaded, Cold Air, ,
Nlco Cond . $4 ,800. (304)875· •

3 Nice Angus Purebred Sprlngor 85 Polarluo Trallbaoo 4·WhHior
Holler, .form Anju Stock. (740)· 250 RIES. $1,500.00 (304)·875· , 1
«t-1182
58t2
·
•1
. ·1
Feir PIQI tor Solei ExcollonloBiood 750 Boate &amp; Moten
llne~I . For more Information Cal:
• for Sale
o' i
(740)·245-56f2 or (740) 3870583
1-:1 '
J
25 HP Sea lOng Boat - · Runs .
$75.00 740·448·7881 . Alter , •
For Sale: ta' vear Golding. Ton·

planO Dr. 740

Frenchtown Apartments, Now
Acoepting Appllcatlont F,or 1

Wheel Drive (740~388-9183

,

Gatvalume Steel Roofing, 15;x8'
oaCk dOor, 3' walk dOor, $8,988
Erected! tron Harle Builders. 1·
(800~352·1045

Weal

~-

18 Chlrryo

By Phillip Alder
The second book .in my slack is
"Eddie Kantar Teaches Advanced
Brrdge Defense " (Master Point
Press). 11le author assumes either that
you have read the more elementary
book (reviewed yesterday) or that
you know the malerial covered in il.
This work concentrates primarily on
counlmg, planning, and making mferences. Tough stuff, but necessary for
anyone contemplalmg becommg an
accomplished player.
Each of the eight chapters ends
with prac1ice deals and quiz queslions, which allow you to check that
you have got the idea. Here is one of
lhe former from Counting D1stribu·

30'x40'X6', Painted Stool Siding, •• 1t90 HOndo' Goi&lt;I' Wing •S.E. Trlko-

lon Aluminum Flbered Roof Paint

Ohio.

1983 FQrd Short Whlll Baae 4~·

l

Dtscount""""lf/;l!lmo

Street, Gallpolle, 7&gt;40-448-7398.

720 Trucks for Sale

seroo. catt740-992-2!598.

• Doggie cloCa

From Intermediate
to advanced

'

To Your Furnace. Complete Duct
Systmes &amp; Furnaces, Hear
Pumps .Certllled Installer. It You
eon• Call u - a - Lo 1 r••
\
s .,.., gvur sa ....,.
446 6308 1
29 0098
·
• -80().. ~ "

Apartment 1 Bedroom 76 Vine

.

'

Babybed, Playpen, Swing, Car

Windows, Gaa &amp; Electric Water
Heaters, Plumbing &amp; itleclrlcat
Parts, lnterthlrm, Miller I Cole·
man Air Conditioners &amp; Heat
Pumps . Bennett'a Mobile Home
Supply, 740-448·9•t8 Gelllpollt,

gr-.

_____

2 o.poett
3 MOe' group

.,

10~ . · - ·

11

Opening lead: • K

.

Faat

Dramatic Results, 100% Natural,
Doctor Recommended. Free S&amp;m-

•

Oraduatton special- 1994 Pontiac '
Grand AM. teal
4 door, V-6automatlc, air, ,72,000 mllll, '

3824.
;.;.;;...

1 Nanpralll TV

Dealer: South

.

.

•~-•nlmalt
7 Htlpe

DOWN

Vulnerable: Eaat-Weat

miles. $2,800 oo Ltave Message

418 Cat Hot. water Pumpa 1811 ~ab. 26.000 miles, Now Laother ,
Tronl Foot $3,000 00. (7401·1143· Seat ;Tool Box Excel. Condition!
0122 &amp;.OD-4:00. altor S:oo (740)· (740) 448 1385
643-2918 •
1995 Ford Explorer, 4DR,43K Ml, :
Ford new Holland TfiCtor Salt Loaded, Mint Cond., Sand Color ,
3930 4W0,,45PTO HP, 192 Tur· .In &amp; Out Running Boards1 Atr •
bo. Syncho 9X8 Trans F. All4 R. Deflector Front and Rear, Air •
ShUIIIO Lar~ 1;'ump 2 Remotes 4 Frontlflear, Radio Front/Relr, !
oulloll, 2Y[ Full Warronly Cruise. Tilt, Leather Seats, Roof ~
I
$20,800.00 . ~4.830 55PTO HP Rad&lt;. (304)675-8055.
same epees •2.900. 3010 2.WD 1997 Docrgo Dleoel 1 Ton, 4x4 '
42 PTO HP. I Remote Wll Ram 3500. Asking $2MOO. C..H •'
Brake, lnd PTO 13,500.00. 3010 altor 4:00pm (740)-441-o998
4WO Same Specs 18,500.00.
Como Sao :Tt\0 Now TN55, 85, 75 88 Toyota 4 Wheel Drive, PICk· .
•wo models with Super Steer, Up, 4cly, 4sp, amlpm AI Whools will turn shorrar than a 2WO. 33' nrea 4'Jnch tift, new. ShocU,
Keefers Service Center St. Rt. Brakes, CB Joints and Universal • ;
87, PI Pleasant &amp; Rtpt1y Road. JOints. Runo Groot! S1.800. OBO 1
Phone (304)895-3874
(740) 992·6976 or. (740)-388· 1
'
HydroiiC hose making setup with 8481
•'
cutoff uw, hose crimping rna·
•
chine, With Iaroe section at crimp '730 Vana &amp; 4-WDI
I
end &amp; ~ &amp;edaptera. (803)398· 1979 Ford 4 WD, 3110, 5 Speed 1
9438.
33.5" Tires. l'fhlla SllOi&lt;a Whttels:
Large assortment ot bolts a S1.1oo. ceo. r40-382-e&amp;ll2.
bends (803138&amp;9438.
740 • Motorcyclel

era, three males, one. female, ex·

P.M.

oblo, fumilhod I unlurnllhod.

9:2 Mltsublshf Eclipse, GFX Alh ,
Whool Drive I Turt&gt;o, omllm Sterno

S4w.l. 740-742-2357.

4 -.Jdopoell

•AQJ78
• A 10 8 I 7
• 53
• 5

:L~I~~In~A~~~~~~~·----------'•'

,_.

• A 8 4

•Qeass

Sotslll

Runs Good, (304)&amp;75-3838 2213 .

(740)-441.0178 •

• K 8J
• J 10 7
• K J 10 4 2
But
• 10.
• QJ 5

•KQ152
• A 7

t;

84 Ford Escort Statton Wagon,
$700. Has Inspection SUcker.:

1 Row tdbaoco Sitter, 2 presser,

tion. Call alter 5:pm (740)-446·

see.oo. one

s2

• 4 2

no Shelby, Fully ~oa~l 106,000

LNW Mt"ege

Control Air Conditioning Added

740.992·4514, apanmenrt avail·

Changer, Fully Loaded! Will Telts .
~Pay~~~··~
740~~·4~8~·~~·_____ :

Graduation Gift 91 'Do~ge Oayto-;

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

(740)·245·5128 _or · (740)-379·

18" OlrecTV Sltelllte

Welt
•• 5

glne, Luther' tnrerlor, 10 Speaker
Monsoon Stereo, 12 Disc CD-&lt;.

bo. $8,!500 OBO (740) 992-8978- ;
(740)-388-8481
••

2 Bedroom Apartment,

no pall, 740·992-5858.

1898 Porit lac Trans ·Am, Navy· .

Blue MIIOIII&lt;, 5.7 lllor. LS 1 En·

Poodloo (Toy). Whlli. Rogls·

Mlscellaneoua
Merchandise

~7806~~·~~:f~~~~::·l

llmilos Call (740)-446.()251

•

540·

To University Of Rio

883 Third Avenue, Galli polls. 2
Bedrooms, $300 oo Plus Utilities
and one month Oepo1ltl (740)·
245-9595

6 K 4

1998 Deep Purple Ctwtvv CavaU·

or. (304)675-7071 .

$100.00 Each. 740-367·7123.

Works Good! $150, Call After 5

Income Famltl•s Call lor Income
llmlls. Avalla~lo now to qualified

N

CD Tllll and Cruiae, PW, PL'S, . f
Sunroof, 5ap, Exceii. 'OondiHon., ~
New transmissiOn and clutch Tur· \

month. $100 deposit, 740-992-

Campus, 7o40·2~5858.
,
2bdrm. apt1., total electric, liP'"
ptlances furnta~IKI. laundry room
facUIIIeB. close lo school In town.
Applications ~~allable at: Village

$14,500. (304)882· 2623, Allor
7PM.

Blue Point Siamese Kittens,
Wormad A.nd Litter Trained .

sreakthroughlll Loll 10·200

2 BedrOom Apartment in New Ha·

1987 Honda, Coupe, Spt~Jal . '
Edition . 2' Door, Fully Loaded, ~

Moore owner.

mo. 2·Badooms all Electric Trail·

er: S300 mo. (740)-367.Qe11

Available· secluded farm hom11
near Dexter, depoelt and 111"

1997 14x70 Trailer: 2 BedroorM,

2 Baths, Mutt SoUl $18,500 .
(740)-398-0434

stered Lest Year, Burgundy:

AMAZING

460 Space for Rent

~.

Got S200 Each, 74D-256-1084, 1·
1188-;!S6-3514.

VIctorian Style Love S..l, Uphol-

1·Badroom Apt., utilities Included;

3 Bedroom Houoo tn Hondorsori.
Rtfairancea &amp; 0..,0111 A•
qulred. $300 month . (304)875•

Tub, Hutch, M/Wavtll Cab, Walk·
In Cloltl. Rango In lolend, Book·
Cue, T01tl Electric, BayWind·

Puppltl, Ha~e SI'IOII , Ready To

Furnished or unfurnished! $300.

(904)773-!5881 .

1872.

AKC Rogiltorld Gol&lt;lan Rotrlevof

Room and Bath $125.00 Call · olzo 18, $350 OBO; voll, $~0;
(740~448-24n
loarhor Jackel, t8W, $40 ; 740992-9897.

At 6l5' Saeond Avenue, Gatllpo·
II&amp;, Next To Library, $350/Mo.,
Plus OepoaH, NO Pets, Call Olbbie Of Judy Al7lto-«e-7323.

r Clean.

By' ownor-1984 Skyllne/Su·
promo,/14x74, 3BR,2BA.VInyl·
Siding, Shlnglo Root, Garden

$250, 740-!IV2·7~ allor6pm.

Antiques

AKC Registered

Townhouse Apartments,
Spacious, 2 Bedrooms, 2

2 BA rurnlshad 1\"ome In Ml&amp;on.
No pets. References required.

profesaioMI growth. lubmh rt·
suma to; A......,....,..,..._

992·2218.

houoo 01 Galllpofla, 740-992-9191 .

Seeking Ctrllflod Nuroo Aides.
Port Time. Rotating Shllta. Woot

and

1 and :2 bedroom apar1mtnta, fur·
ntshed and unfurnished, security
deposit required, no peta. ?40·

One bedroom apartment In Mid·
dleport: one bedroom furnished

RENTALS

Apply ot POint Ploosant Center/

AKC roglttortd Golden Rotrtovtr
pupplu, excellent family pata,

Hugotnvantory
4 ·Bedroom Apartmenta lor Low VInyl Skirting Kits $299.95; 5 Gal-

Buildings

2 Bedroom, w/Basement &amp; Gl·
rage 0tpo111 &amp; Rtftrences, No

~ntl

Apartment&amp;
for Rent

3711; EOH? :

For 1 Dill' ShiH Treatment Nurse
On~) Please opp~ a1
311 Buckrldgo Rd Bidwell. Oh.
45614

right candl&lt;ltlt (Or

eo Required. 74Cl-446-1104.

Green Apia. t49 or, call 740·992·

340 Buslne1s and

Trailer lot For Renll (740)-446·
7834

(-nels

an excellent opportunity lor 1111

Nice 2 Bedroom;Traller In Small
Trailer Park, Deposit .&amp; Flelerenc--

440 '

530

~

Deposit Required. Also One

14x70 Atlantis Mobile Home, All

Scenic Hilla Nursing cenrer Ia
currently accepting applications

lion, 51110 Cefllllt&gt;e1lon/UOOfl&amp;ro
rogulallo... aooll c:blnll)tHIICIIIon
ll&lt;llls and olfocllve member of
residant coro lttJ!I. Exttltonl
Bonotne 1nc1 .. ...,dDIIII sta". le

no pots, 7&gt;40-992-!i658.

Waterloo, Approx. 43 Acres, 2 yr

and
Garbogo.
DIPOSI4. Roloronco,
No Pelll
(740)-843·01'22
8:00·
4.00. Allor 6l)m (740)-643-2816

ence In attetamtnf, doounwnta·

Mobile home tor rent In Racine,

$375 00 Month. All Utilities Paldl

(740~379-2830 After 5:00pm

· - · OH 45614.
(-OIEOE)

Sklllod Nursing Feclllly _k,,.
axporlencod Clndi(IIIIOI lqr MOS
position. lntenao~d AN Of LrN .
candldatoo oboul&lt;l have oxperl·

3 Bedrooms, 1 bath, 2nd road off
At. 32~. Andrew Ad. Firat Trailer
on Left. $350.00 month, Oeposttl
(740) 418 8345

3564.

We Pay Caoh. 1-800·213·8385,
Anll\ony land Co. •

82, Route 1'. Box 328. Point
P1oosan1o WV 25550. EOE.

ences, $235/Mo , Includes water,

$100 Doposjt, 740-«8-3817.

And Prlvet.e Lease, Plus Utllltle&amp;.

-2751

Sc.nlc Hills Nursing Center Is
Now Accepting Appllatlons For
The Poeltlon Of Social Services
Director, LSW. Please Send Ae·
tume And Salary Requirements
To Charla Brown At Scenic Hill&amp;
Nurslqg Canter, -311 Buckrldge

2 Bedf oom Mobile Home, Refer·

1 Bdrm Garage Apt. , Vary Clean

330 Fanns for
., Sale

8 Miles from Towri St8te Route
141 Road Frontage, co. Water.

· B-. OH 45614.

992·2167.

Used SlngleWide, Around $100
per month. cal t-800-948-5678

1985;14x85 ft. :2 Bedrooms, C/A
Fumace, New Appliances. (740)·

(Mo-r 01 EOE)

2 I ' 3 bedroom -lie homn. air
conditioned, $280·$300, sewer,
water and trash Included, 740·

New Bank repos only 2 left we

• Sol. 1-800-948-5678.

Eloclrlc, 740-245-9833

for Rent

er Area, No Pets, You Par All
Utflllas, Depoall &amp; References
Roquirod. 7&gt;40-388-9162.

Beautlfullll DOUbiO wl&lt;las are Permilled .
5% OOM!land Conlracl with APpr&lt;Md C!edll. Free Mop&amp;. Go1r9
laOI, call Today, H800~21 a-&amp;385

.... Amazing• ... 5 Bedrooms, 2
112 baths, o~er 2,000 SCI. ft., for
lass than $400 mo. Fr" Delivery

420 Mobile HOmM

2 Bedroom Mobile Home In Port·

p~celn Faml~

washert, dryers, rerr1geratofl,

Your Home Is Just A Phone Call

down. Calll-800-837·3238.

Ttaller For Sale : Office Trauer,

advertisements for real estate
whiCh Is In vlolatton Of the
law Our readers are hereby

68H460, Thppora Plains area.
Pointing, lawn sarvk:a &amp; plo.rnbtng.
low rates. Caii7&gt;40-S9f.ll817.

304-736-72116

k.-ongly accopt

House For Sate· 2219 Oak St ,

Jlms Drywall &amp; Construction .
New Construction &amp; Flemodell
Drywall, Siding, Roofs, Addl·

2 Payments No Paymenl

New 1999 14JI70 three bedroom,
Includes 8 months FREE tot rant.
lnctudtt washer &amp; dryer, skirting,
deluxe steps and setup Only
$200 .74 par month with 11150

1

a

lease, $325/Mo., 74Cl-682-9032, rangas. Skaggs Appliances. 78
Vlno Stroot, Coli 740·«8·7398,
7~7 .
1-888-318.0128.

$3995.
doiiVIIry. Call 740·
385-11&amp;21Quick
.

This newspaper wtl1 not

Siding 15 Years Experience
Free Estimates. Rafarencas

74D-388·8041 .

Good aelectlon of u11d homea
with 2 or 3 bedrooms. Starting at

-4. . .

Nice 2 Bedroom liousa For Ront, GOOD UIED APPLIANCES
No Pelt, Application , Deposit

Away, 304-736-7295.

DeiiVItry and Sol Up. Call I-BOO·
948-5878.

&amp;lon, 740-446-9872.

Interior &amp; E11.terlor Painting, Ex·
perlenced, References, Reason·
able Rates For Free Es'tlmate,

BOD-38~ .

Make

1

Higgs Contracting: Roofing, Vinyl
Available. (304)675·2949.

Low tnteresl Ratet For 1tt Time
Buyers, Llmlred Time Available,

Cleaning Syatem. Protects paint.
leaves glass , retarda chalking.

Wildlife Jobs to $21 80/Hr Inc

Benefits Game Wardans,Securl·
ty, Maintenance, Park Rangers
NoExp Needed For App.fExam

2 Baths, Mull SeMI Will\ Cleared
Loll $25,000 (740)-388-&lt;M34

PEATLY :Saves on repainting Indefinitely. We use lht •~clua lvt

KELU TRUCKING, INC.
Call
740-288-0t7t
740-288-02ot

Expo Nee. Will Train PC Req. Earn
40K Caii110D-68:H441l.

I'

WALL·CEILING CLEANED EX•

Aides For Summer Progtam. Part·

OIObll Rter\llttrl

AKC Aogillorld OObormon Puppin, Block &amp; Rull . 1275.
(30&lt;11458•10801458 ·10&lt;14, oHtr
5PII,

House For Ron!. (904)675-f720.
1997, 14•70 Trailer, 2 Bedrooms,

·"

•,

step of lhe way lodoy. ohut&lt;:ea arc
you're not JOins to like the outcome.
Don 'I depetld uron your alilily lo
handle thinas u they occur. It 1'fOR 't.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepc, 22) 'When
in a jolnl venture with 1111other lhll
. requires ntu~ncial input today, moni·
lor your ponner eloitely &lt;oncemina
handline of the funds ,.,. you could
etld up being a 'loser.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 23) When
in an important neaotialion loday,
take nothina for rranted. ~ake sure
oil the i's .,.. dolltl(l atld '1he l's
crossed or the edae upon' which
you' re dependinr could' be whiuled
away.

•

SCORPIO (Oct. 2&lt;1-Nov. 22) If
you take your foot off lhe ocaolenlor today, even for 1 minute, endeavOR where you hod momentum aoina
for you could now sudclenly c:ome' to
o halt
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec,
21 ) Exlravopnl uraes mu•t be kept
under 1otal control tr,xlay. Strona
inolillllions 1o splurae on .-hln1
unneeded and wuteful could blow
your budgel inlo small frasments.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
\&lt;

Don 'llei yoor impatience to achieve

'

an ambitious objective tempt you to
take an unwarranted gamble loday.
Your recklessness could cause you
bla problems . .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Whon doalina with people you want
to impas today, reftlia &amp;om embellishinJ any Information you wut to
Impart or focts about yourself. Your
&lt;tedlbility wiH ao down the tubes.
PISCES (Fe&amp;. 20-Maroh 20)
Don't bank 100 heavily on anythlna
linanc:iollodoy which oannot be aubstanuated or veriOed as reality. It's a
very bad poli&lt;:y .to count your chick·
ens before they're hatched.
ARIES (Mar&lt;:h 2l·April . 19)
Should anyone Jay · Hauery on you
rllher thick today, take it with a ,...in
of salt and be on auord. 1bere's a
chance she or he is dninrso In hopes
of manlpulatinJ you in some manner.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Althouah It is unl,ike you, you oould
Jet someone down today on a commitmenl you prnmised. Only if
you' re sick or have nn emeraency
should you not oomply:·ll'll make
you look very bad.

·~ .
~

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Atlanta Braves at

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__

______._

- ·- - - - -- ·- ··-· ... ----·--·- - - ·- - ----......:.

I

----"---·-

�•
~-

P-ue 10 • The Dally Sentinel

OVAL celebrated it's 26 Birthday
with an annual meeting at Sts. Peter
and Paul Parish Hall in Wellston
Thursday.
-Forty two member litirary
trustees and staff traveled from the
eight-county service area to attend.
The evening was a celebration of the
24 years of service Alden Library al
Ohio University has provided to the
member libraries and citizens of our
region.
Dr. Hwa-Wei Lee, Dean of University Libraries was presented a ·
plaque recognizing his support to
the title and reference service OU
has provided. Karen Williams,
OVAL &amp; Reference Librarian at the
OU Alden Library, who has been
responsible for the operation,
received a similar recognition,
The Board approved the OVAL
Plan of Service to be submitted to
the State · Library for 1999-2001
operations. The Board authorized
Regina Gheari'ng, OVAL Cle rkTreasurer, to distribute the member
contracts for next year on the fund·
ing formula detailed at the. ,April

planning meeting. The Board furth~r
authorized the distribution of affihate member contracts to those institutions currently in that status pending developments in bylaws.
Director Eric S. Anderson noted
the excellent testimony Stephen
Hedges, director of the Nelsonville
Public,Library, provided to the Senate Finance committee.
In other business, the Board
authorized a remodeling contract
with Southern Ohio Construction of
Chillicothe to re-wire the learning
space.
OVAL is a cooperative regional
library system chanered by the State
of Ohio in 1973. Its mission is 10
provide continuing education,
resource sharing and innovative services to and foster cooperative
efforts among libraries in the southern Ohio counties of Athens, Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs, Pike, Ross.
Scioto. and Vinton. ·
Wanda El)lin serves on the, OVAL
Board and is a representative of
Meigs Cou~ty District Public
t.ibtary.

Francis
hosted a ,.recent meeting of the Reedsville United Methodist
Women at her home.
Officers' reports were given and Debbie Pickens gave devotions, ''My
Mother's Easter Bonnet". There was prayer by Grace Weber. 'It was noted
that 73 sick calls had been made and that cards had been sent to several
friends.
'
A discussion was held on the poor quality of television viewing for chilcs, which they argue violate feder- dren . Delores Frank, Diana and Debbie Weber were named to the nominal· .
a l anti.-discrimination laws. They ing committee. Others 'atiending were Pearl Osborne, Ann LaComb, Rosesaid they were pleased with Mon- mary Vance, Nina Boston, Nancy Buckley, and Regina Reed. Guests were ·
Wanda Kimes, Debbie Pickens, Dessie Walls, Julia LaComb, and Lauren,
day 's ruling.
" h seemed to be the logical Haley and Sydney Hunter. Gladys Thomas will host the next meeting .
course of action to take, given that
(Da ly's) stated preference not to Visits friends
Visiting Larry and Sally Ebersbach of Syracuse while here for the funerteach men is so clearly in violation
of federal law," said Jack Dunn, a al services. of 'Ruth Ann Allen were Warren .and Charlotte McGowan of
Florissant, Mo.; Nancy White of Baynton Beach, Fla.; Jim Williams of
college spokesman .
Daly said she believes she is not Rochester, N. Y.; Tom Williams of Augusta, Maine; Tom and Phyllis Ebers,
vto lati ng the law known as Title IX bach of Orchard Lake, Mlch:; and Sam and Paula Ebersbach of Newark.
of the Education Amendments of
1972. The law was designed to Fund raiser planned
Two local organizations will benefit from tfie annual smorgasbord dinner,
im prove the situation of womenbake,
flower and plant sale to be held Monday from I I ;30 a.m .. to 6:30 p.m.
which, she said, is what she's
at
the
Burlingham Modern Woodmen Hall arBurlingham.
doing.
There ·will be a variety ·o f meats, desserts and other dishes at the smorGretchen ' Van Ness, Daly 's
gasbord
dinner. Freewill donations will be accepted.
·
· al!orne y, said the college has used ·
Money
raised
from
the
project
will
be
matched
by
the
home of office of
" backdoor tactics" to fire a
Modern
Woodmen
of
America
up
to
$2,500.
It
will
.be
donated
to the Meigs
!· t&lt;;n ured professor because she disEmergency
Medical
Service
for
an
automatic
detibulator
and
the Chester
agreed with them. She also ,warned
Fire
Department
for
needed
equipment.
that the case could have sweeping
ramifications for academic freedum.

Judge: College has grounds to dismiss feminist professor

::

Soon ·after, Daly said, she fou nd
By ~ODIN ESTRIN
Associated Press Writer
, that men and women in fe1i1inist
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) courses didn ' t mix . So she barred
A Boston College professor who men from her seminars, although
barred male student s from her she said she has taught so me two
classes on feminism remains out of dozen men in one-on-one semi nars .
When men arc in a class with
a job following a judge's ruling.
At issue in a Middlesex Superi· women. she said Mond~y before
or Court hearing Monday was her court hearing began , " th e
whether Mary Daly's classes dynamic is totally interrupted ."
The litigation O( iginated last
should be listed in next semester's
course roster. College officials had fall, when seniot Duane Naquin
refused to include them - citing a accused the school of discriminaschool policy of keeping all cours- tion after being kept out of Daly-'s
es open to bot~ men and women - . course on introduct.ory fcminisl
and the judge said the school was ethics.
School officials ·demanded that
·
within its rights.
." A professor's defiance' of that Daly admit Naquin to her spring
policy - in this case, a vehement course. Daly said she refused and
and very public defiance - would took a leave of absence instead..
give the school ample grounds for The college insists that Daly
·
her termination ," Judge Martha agreed to retire.
School officials say they ca n't
Sosman wrote in her decision .
Daly, 70, known for works allow her to -continue teac hin g
including "Gyn/Ecology: The under ''separate but equal" cours·
Metaethics of Radical Feminism"
and " Outerco urse, " claim s the
Jesuit-run school pushed her out .
when threatened with a lawsuit by
a male &amp;l udent. The school says she
retired when she was ordered to
teach men.
When she firsi arrived at Boston
College in 1966, Daly taught only
men . The school of arts and sciences. didn't admi t women until
1'970 .

\

JASON MORA
RECEIVES SCHOLARSHIP •
Jason Mora of Pomeroy has
received the Robert S. Wood
Scholarship from the University
of Rio 'Grande. A senior at Eastern High School, Mora Is the son
of Richerd. and Denise Mora of
Pomeroy.
The scholarship was esteb·llshed to support deserving stu:ctents . from Canal Winchester
)Ugh School and rural south:eastern Ohio who wish to attend
the University of Rio Grande.
:Yhe Wood Scholarship covers
;up to half of the cost of tuition
:for eligible students.
•

The old wisdom about the impor:~ance of a good breakfast still ho.lds
-•rue. Amid the pressures of busy
:r outines, making sure you get that
::first meal can give you. a real head
);tart.
Beat the time crunch and keep
,faith with the old wisdom by plan·
ning breakfasts based on combina'!ions of low-fat grains, fruit s and
dairy foods ..
.
: This easy Almond . Breakfast
Jlread is something around which to
build a nutritious breakfast. You can
make it the traditional way, but the
:recipe also includes directions for
Jnaking it with a bread machine.
· Almond Breakfa•t Bread
· Traditional -Recipe: ·
I 1'/4 cups fat-free milk
• 1/4 cup cold water
4 cups bread floQr, divided in half
2 tablespoons granulated sugar
I package (2 1/4 teaspoons) fast.rising yeast
1/4 cup almond paste (not marzipan) cut into small pieces
• 2 tablespoons margarine
•. I tablespoon almond extract
• I 314 teaspoons salt
Nonstick cooking spray
, Optional glaze (recipe follows)
Sliced or toasted almonds fQr garnish, as desired
' Heat milk until steaming hot (180
and add cold ~ater. Cool liquids
io 130F.In a large bowl, mix togeth~r 2 cups bread Hour, ·sugar and fast ,£ising yeast. Stir in the milk and
·~&gt;Vater mixture and beat by hand or
)&gt;lith an electric mixer for 3 minutes.
.. ~dd almond paste, margari ne,
almond extract, salt and I 112 cups
bread flour. Continue mixing until
Jhe dough forms a ball. The lumps of
.ilmond paste will work into the
~ough as it is, kneaded.
of Knead by hand or with dough
'hooks, adding the last I12 cup bread
ilour as you knead. Knead for 5 to 8
tninutes. Place dough in a greased
~owl or plastic bag sprayed with
nonstick cooking spray, turning
ilough tq grease surface. Seal or
~over and Jet rest 10 minutes, Punch
and knead into a smooth ball . Let
dough rest 5 111inutes.
Grease or spray-treat one large

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'

Cincinnati gets past Dodgers 3-2, Page 4
Internet addiction, Page 7
Officer pleads guilty, Page 6

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 70s; Lbw: 50s

e
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a1

en 1ne

.... •.

Hometown.Newspaper

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-gra

team; academic goalS set and strived toward; strict disci·
pline; students are sholvn how to assume responsibility
for their own actions; at-risk students receive intervenlion in addition to regulir classwork and district finances
ano supplemented by building funds to provide' materials
and personnel needed to reach our gOals."
• While some parents have been critical of the school's
reputation for discipline, she said the school has strict
discipline arid that the rules are strictly fallowed.
"Students come to us with base knowledge. We work
to fine tune it," she said.
In other buainess, the board discussed security at the
schools and appointed Syracuse Elementary School Prin·
cipal Robert Beegle to chair a committee to form a secu·
rity plan.
One problem is the district's schools were designed
and built long before anyone imagined the necessity of
having students walk through metal detectors, it was
noted.
..
School board·members and teachers discussed limit·
ing access to the schools by retrofitting .doorS to open
only from the inside, or by installing a fence around the
Southern campus following completion of the new K-8
building.
Board members also urged Superintendent James '
Lawrence to contact designers of the new building in an

effort to hurry along site preparation work on the project.
Board members briefly discussed holding a groundbreaking ceremony on the project as soon as si'te prepa·
ration can begin.
In personnel matters; the board:
- Approved Carla Shuler and Donald Dudding as
teachers for the.1999 Summer School Program a\ SHS;
-Approved the following as substitute teachers for
1thc 1999-2000 school year: Michael AtlonS!Jn, RDbert
Austin, John Barcus, Dorothy Bentz, Christopher Byron,
Rhonda Facemire, Kenneth Farmer, John Fleming,
Michelle Gillian, Kathleen Goins, Lucille Haggerty,
Melinda Hayman, Mary Hill, Stephanie Hysmith, Ran·
dall Kempton, Marsha King. Fann.ie Lee, Vinas Lee, Jan'
ice New, Kim Oliphant, Gay Perrin, Wanda' Ray, Herbert
Redman, Nathan Robinette, Heath Savage, Aaron Schet·
ter, Charlene Smith, Abbie Stratton, Teresa Vasco, Mary
Wltan and Delores Wolfe;
~
-Approved the following classified substitutes: custodians • Linda Adkins, Jeff Beaver, Charlene Black,
. Becky Bradford, Elaine Congo, Larry Ebersbach, Barbara Lane, Ruby Nakao, Stacy Teaford, Chuck Williams
and Lois. Wolfe; cooks • Unda Adkins, Beverly Allen,
Becky Bradford, Elaine Congo, Becky Dudding; lina
Gray, Jennie Hayman, Janet Manuel, Redenith Mills and
Ruby Nakao; bus drivers • William Downie, Bob Dud·

f.

J~ac~y~, ~YMilhoan, 0~

Max Hill
Sellers, Dan Smith and Tom Theiss; aides - Jeanie AJ(eri;
Becky Ball, Connie Chevalier, Bev Collins, Juanila F~­
erick, Frances Reiber and Ruth Shain;
·'
- Approved the following as coaches: Tom Smitll;.
junior high football; Roma Sayre, high school reic(ve
volleyball; Becky Winebrenner, junior high volleyball;
Jonathari Rees, high school resen~e boys basketbalr;
Tammy Chapman, high school reserve girls biSketball;
Kyle Wickline, junior ~igh boys 8th grade basketball;
Pete Sayre, junior high girls 8th grade basketball; An(la
Callicoa~ junior high cheerleader advisor; Pete Sayre,
high school reserve softball.
In other business, the board:
· - Discussed the purchase of two used wrestling for $15,000;
·
·
" ·
- Tentatively approved a medical insurance package
with Central Benefits;
-Approved membership into the Ohio High Schbol
Athletic Association;
· .
- Approv~ a field trip for sixth gnt!le TAG studenbi
to Washington, D.C. in June.
'.
Present were Superintendent James Lawretice, TM .
surer Dennie Hill, Board President Bob Collins and
board members Many Morarity, Doug Uttle, Ron Cammarata and David Kucsma.

Area gas· prices show moderate decline
. by color guard
THOMAS ~•. ·SIHEIEFU~N

'

Aeeoclltld Preae Wrner
MASSILLON (AP) - A military color guard of veterans from KOrea,
Vietnam and other combat anoas came to bonor a victim of the nation's newest
baUlearound. the Balkan peninsula.
"I feel we owe it to him,,.said Eugene Phillip;, 73, of Massillon, a Marine
Corps veteran who served in the Aleutian Islands.
.
.,.illiJB and comrades from American Legion Post 221 carried the U.S.
01g into the Epworth United Methodist Church
memdri·
al service for Army Chief Wamani Oflicer 3 David
~.Bil,&lt; ' '
lOlk;t; • \.,d~.l'-. ~. ';, ~ J .'l' -

mission in
who
. military medals and two fnmed
of pel'lllllal photos were
displayed in the front of the church, ali:lng
a folded Amcrii:an Oag
between red and white carnations tied with red, white and blue ribbcina. · ·
The Rev. Lee Peters, pasta, 11J1Dke on the q~on "Ood: Why did this
hav~ to happen?" She said arJeving family mem~ and friends must rely on
Ood's love and eoils6lation.
..
A childhood playmate of Gibbs, Allison Turkal f:IJCher, tearfully recalled
caretrcc summer evenings playing hide-and-seek 1irKJ kickball. She said her
family is aafer because of the saaifices of people II~ Gibbs.
·
Color guard member Jim Scalia, 63, pf MassillOii; a retired Army veteran
of Korea and Vietll&amp;tn, said Gibbs tt:pJ-nted the nition's best. "He did the
ultimate. He gaw his life for his country," Scalia
Gibbs and Kevin L. Reichert, 28, of Chetek, Wis, were killed .MayS in an
Apache helicopter crash durin&amp; a trainina miasion. ~ deaths were NATO'a
6rst fatalities in its air campaign against Yuplavia. · ~
Gibbs was born in Massillon and played footbllt at \\Uhington High
,
·
Scbool, whe!l,he graduated i.n 1980.
He served a sdnt in the Marine Corps
before enlisliila in the Army so he

loaf pan or two 8 1/2-inch loaf pans.
Shape dough and place in pan or
pans.
Cover with plastic wrap treated
with nonstick spray. Let rise in a
warm ( 100 F) place until doubled in
size. Bake at350 F 25 to 30 minutes
for small loaves, 35 to 40 minutes
for a large loaf, or until golden
brown. Remove from pan or pans
and cool before glazing or slicing.
Note: You may also bake one
large round loaf or two small round
loaves on a large greased or spraytreated baking sheet.
Allow plenty of room for the
dough to double in size. Before baking, use a small serrated knife to cut
a small X in the top of each round
loaf.
Glaze:
I cup powdered sugar
2 to 3 tablespoons milk
112 teaspoon almond extract
Sliced or toasted almonds for gar·
nish, as desired
In a medium bowl, ll)ix powdered
sugar, milk and almond extract.
Drizzle or spread over loaf. Top with
sliced or toasted almonds.
Makes I large ,loaf .or 2 small
loaves, about I 8 slices.

Trail Blazers
-Page4-

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By'JIM FREEMAN ·
Sentinel Newa Stefl ,
The bulk ·o f next year's fr~l.man class at Southem
High School will start their high school years with a big '
head start.
·
1'ha:t's because 67 percent of them - as eighth
graders- have already passed all five portions of their
ninth' grade proficiency test, ·a requirement for high
school graduation. Only one regular education student
did nat pass the reading portion af the lest
Southern Junior High School Principal Michaela Kucsma presented the .class' ninth-grade proficiency test ·
results Monday night to the Southern l.Qcal Board. of
Education which was meeting in regular session.
'·
Regular education students are required to pass ·all ·
five portions of the test- writing, reading. mathematics,
citizenship and science- before they can graduate from
·high school. This now means most of the class can ~icati: more time to its studies; instead of concentratinJ on ·
~assing the proficiency test, Kucsma said. Special educa·
lion students do not have to pass the tesl
"l'm very proud of the results, this was an outstanding ·
class," she said. "A lot of till)es the (school) board dOes·
n'_t hear good things."
·
She cited several reasons why the class has pet formed
so well: "A dedicated veteran. teaching staff working' is a

with win over the

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Meigs County's

iliCIBtilkana.
. l'.i~-,~ll~•·~and~~·~~~iwcre~~Jd~·~;w~in"1~·5i! ~=·th·
~,~~~

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May20,1M

4

_A lmond bread can help build a good breakfast

:1he Associated l&gt;ress

- .... -

Wednesday

OVAL celebrates 26th birthday

. TOURS PLANT- Tllese Eastern fourth graders toured the AEP
Sporn plant in New Haven, W. Va. recently. They are pictured with
their tour guide, Terry Benson, control technician at Sporn.

-

Tuesday, May 25,1999

Pomeroy • Middlepo_
rt, Ohio

ATTENDS SEMINAR - Meigs County Treasurer Howard Frank,
center, attended a continuing financial education seminar held In
Newark Thursday. He's pictured here with the keynote speakers,
Ohio Treasurer of State Joe Deters and U. S. Treasurer (former Ohio
Treasurer) Mary Ellen Withrow.
Withrow arid Deters were the keynote speakers last week at the
Ohio County Treasurers Association spring conference.
More than 130 public finance officials from all 88 county treasuries assembled to complete. state-required continuing financial
education at the daylong series of classes.
.
Approximately 3,500 public funds managers In Ohio must attend
at least one of the treasury's fifteen statewide, day-long conferences lo satisfy their state continuing education requirements. hi
place !Iince 1997, the requirements stem from legislation prompted
by the collapse of Cuyahoga County's SAFE Investment pool In
1995 and the resulting loss of more than $120 million In taxpayer
dollars.
The Center for Public Investment Management, a national awardwinning division of the Ohio Treasury, administers the continuing
education series.
·

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said.

Good Afternoon

Today's ·
.. 2 Seetlons - 12 Pages .

Lotteries
t)o

Ht

Pkk 3: 9-6-0; Pkk 4: 3+8·1
. Bucke7e 5: 6-16-17-18-32· . "
W,yA.
DliiJy 3: ().6-8; DII!IY 4: 3-0-9.6

o 1999 Ohio Wtor -~.. Co.

T:~cir:. after
baseball Injury

COLUMB4S {AP) ~ A 13·
year-old boy died after being hit on
the chest with a pitch in a bueball
game in a nprtheaat Columbus
field, ·authorities said.
Battalion duef Don Blakely of
the nesrby Weacerville Fire Department said the boy went into.Clrdlac
arrest after the biseball hit his chest
· above the heart1i
A registered !IIII'IC who had been
watching the game performed cardiopulmonary reauacitation until
fire department ll)~ics irtived.
The paramedics managed to get
a weak heartbeat, Blakely said, but
the boy was (11'9nounced dead on
arriv.al at Columbus Children's
Hospital.
·

By .BRIAN J. REED ·
Sentlnil N - Steff
Gasoline ~ces have fluctuated significantly
over the paat several weeks in Meigs County from $1.03 to $1.17 and higher per gallon. Now,
prices are baclc down again.
In the Pomeroy amf Middleport area, · gas
prices average $1.10 for self-service unleaded. . ·
For local motorists, this is good news, but with
the summer travel season ahead, those who monitor gu prices say that the lower prices will most
likely not be a common occurrence.
Fuel economy is a must for those watching
their fuel budgets, especially if gas prices incrCase
drarnatically again. AAA recendy prpvided a list
of "tried-illld·true" techniques for improvi~ fuel
eConomy. • • ' ·
. ~... .....
.'
. ,,F,~,.a, vch.icle must be'-~ iri top ruhillng
condiiiiJII if fuel efficiencx is a priority. An out-oftttM'I/eldclt'millt w&lt;!rli'hlidel, \ising more fuel,
and prematurely wearing out the engine and other
components.
·
·
. According to the au19 club, sudden accelera-

Adequate transmission fluid · in an automatit
transmission is also vital ta gas mileage. Too litUe
oil will make the engine work harder, leading to
premature wear and a reduction in gas mileage.
The car's air filter should also be checked ac;h
time that the oil is changed. A dirty air filter wiU
increase fuel consumption.
Those who plan car trips during the summer
vacation season should also take special steps to
reduce fuel use. Vacationers should avoid overheW tlucluated
• packing the car. Heavier loads reduce gas
14 cent raJige ovw the lest -1111 wnlta, mileage, as do items tied to a roof rack, whi~
priclll now back In • downiWing.
create a drag on the car.
·
lion, or "jackrabbit" starts, speeding, extended
Vacation meal stops-'- and meal stops in gcnidling to WI!J11l the car and frequent use of the era!- should be planned during COI!Imuting pericar's air conditioner are all drains Ol\ fuel.
ods so that traffic can be avoided.
AAA also advises driven to plan driving trips
AAA. which monitors gasoline prices and
so llrat-CI'rall~..~ ~ ~biAeQ. T!Us ~ill·~ trends, as well as dmer p!iblic isiues affecti~
driVing and the use of fuel.
motorists and travelers, also advised that thrifty
TII'CS shOuld lie checked once a week fo'r .cl:ll- travelers will visit self-serviee Dud~ ratlter tl\an
rate tire pressure. Oil should be changed regular- full service, noting that the average price differ·
'iy as recommended by the manufacturer, and ence between the two is often as much as 2S.cents
sbould always_be maintained at the "safe" range. on the gallon.

wf!h

Patrol asks for public's he'l p in reducing holiday weekend crashes
Ohi~'s primary ro~tes will be targeted by .the
State Htghway Patrol tn an effort to reduce traffic
crash fatalities this Memorial Day holiday week· .'
end, and troopers are asking for the public's help
in reducing aafety threats an state roads. ·
Public participation in aafety effarts will be
key in reduclng the number of deaths that historically occur on Ohio roads during the holiday
weekend.,
"Neighborhood block watches have been sue~ful in enlisting public participation in community aafety efforts," said Col. Kenneth B. Marshall; the patrol superintendent. "In order for us to
re&lt;Suce these very preventable deaths which are
occurri~ on our roadways, we need a similar
· level of P!Jblic participation."
Troopers will focus their patrols on Ohio's primary travel routes: interstate, U.S. and state highways. Fifteen people were killed in 13 fatal crashes over the 1998 Memorial Day weekend and five
of those crashes occurred on the state's primary
routes, ICCOrding to patrol statistics. Of the IS

' REMINDER FOR THE WEEKEND - The
Stele Highway Patrol Ia promoting the UN
of ltli ._help line for motorlata, eeen ablve
In the llgn poatec1 on lhe weslbouild 11111 of
.U.S. 38 near Galllpolla, ea It gee,.. for
enfoi'CII!MIIIt during the nrat maJor.holiday
-kend of the year leading up to Memorial
Day on May .31. The patrol Ia seeldng the
public's aeeletance In stemming Injury end
fltlllly cruiMe over the

-"end·

killed during the four-day period, 12 had safety
belts available, but only four had used them.
Safety belts afford the best protection when in
a vehicle, said Lt. Richard .E. Grau, commander of
the patrol's Gallia-Meigs Post.
·' .
"Buckling up before you start your vehicle w;u
become a habit that may save your life or reducl,
your chances of serious injury," Grau said.
·.
. Patrol officials said obeying the speed limit,
and not drinking and driving, are also critical
components far safe highways.
·
"We must increase citizen participation in our
ove.rall safety efforts," Grau said. ·~ need pe'O,pie to report stranded motorists, dangerous drfvetS and other' potential hazardous situations."
In Ohio, motorists can reach the patrol using·
the new toll-free help line, 1-877-7-PATROL,
which can be programme&lt;! for cellular speed dial-.
in g.
.
·
The Memorial Day_weekend reporting period
begins at 12:01 a.ll). Friday and ends at midnight
Monday, May 31.

Markers dedicated to commemorate Morgan's Raid
BY CHARL.!NE HOEFUCH
route through Meigs County will become .0llllllleiNtwa Still
anraction for tOurists once all 13 markers are ill .
FoUr markers commemorating Morgan's
place.
.
~ across Meip Olunty and the ensuing
The Bradford Cemetery marker w. ~catcd to
battle at Bufllngton lsl.and -the only Ovil
Dr. HL.Kbon and Holliday l-lyscll, two civililns .
War batllc fought on Ohio soil -were dedkilllod by Morgan's raiders.
·
icaled Monday.
.
Attending the dedication """re several ~The markers are located in the BradfoJd •
dants of Holliday Hysell wbo laid a wtWh • the•.
Ccinetay, just off Route 124, in the Hiland
. base of tbe marker. They included Rae Reynolds;.
Road na near Route 7, and at Portland
a great-great-granddaughter; Richard Bliley and ,
where markers honor the axnponies of men,
Guy Hysell, great·great·grtat·graru!lons, Mel
Conmlcratc and Union, who fought in -the
o-k and Amanda Roush, ,chikhn of Bill ~
BattleofBufllnaton Island on July ~9, 1863.
Sheryl Roush, Syracuse. and Tanner Roush,- bf
Mqaret JWk«, president of the Meia\1
Bob and Kim Roush of Raqne, the fifth
County Histaical Soi:iety, annbunceil that
tion of great-grandchildren of Holiday Hysell.- ~
Iller this year the final mar~ on theM~'
DEDICATED. - A MOillln'e
rout. marker Among others atte~ng were Com~ .
pn~ ~ J'OIIIe ~ Metgs County wtll pieced In the Brldford Cemetery Wle dedicated Mon- Je~ Thoritton and Mtck OaYenport, who pw
be dedicated She said that when the ~ark- dey. The marker honore Or. Hudson and Holliday brief~ Dale Col~ who IXllllmeutecl_on
ers IJ'C IXllllplcled, a total o_f 13, they will ~I Hysell, two civillana killed when the reldera came the deciSion to al~ow mt_rung on the Portllrtd 111e,
the IIIOiy of Morpn's Raid through Metgs lhrough Melge County. Among thoeallltendlng wera, ~ the.Rev. Wilh~ Middleswarth who pwo the
County IIIII the Billie of Buffington laland. from the left, Ale Fleynoldl Ferman Moore J 0 Brit- tnvocanon at each stte. .
.
.
1
The only . m..- thlt ":vil mlrk any ton, Olllo HletoriOIII SocJetY, Margal'll Parkw, Melge The Hiland Road mark~, located on a Site owneil,
IVItlta followi~ the battle will be the one .11 County Hlatorlcal Soclely, end Guy Hyeell. Reynolds by ~orne .oeek F.nte~s:" I~, tells of the Moe:~ which.will commcrnoratc the sldr- end HyMII .,. deacenclantl of Holliday Hyeall.
gan s Raid .R~tc, ·the contln~ ~&amp;hi" near·
milh thai took piiClC there as Con(edcrate
·Pomeroy. Jot rung Parker and Britton •n remarlcs
1r0oF1 Jled the bailie scene, &amp;lllDI'ding to
LAYING WREATH was Keith Ashley, Qvil War Sites Chairman, Ohio
l'lrker.
-A memorial W!Mih Department Sons of Union \ol:leia&amp; of the Gvli ,·
Site IIIIo noted lhal aometime In the
wee placed II the \\llr.
·
futule whc!t money beoontes avlillble, the
beee of the Morgan'e At the marker dedications at i&gt;mland, site of the
Nlll of the 101M followed by Motpn as he
Alkll'Oute marker II only Ovil War battle fought on Ohio aojl nearly
beadod north, then west, itoutheast to the
the a..cHord c.m. 136 years ago, Parker commented lhal "whliMpri- . - O!ettltirc, and finally back north,
tlry Monday by fifth pened here on that hot July day dcllined this lind·
wiD be mar1aec1.
·
generation
llrMt· to be forever 'hallOwed ground.•
·
J. D. Britton, director, of the Ohio Histor·
fll'lndctllldren of ~ "It is here. beneath the IOil of dtele Ohio RivW
kal ' Society, spolrc brietly atlldt of the
lklly Hyeell, o.r.k. bottom lands, some of thole aoldiers yet mnain in
..... clldiailionl. He conptuJ '! ~ the
'nlnner lnd Amanda their fin~! resti~ place,n she conc:lucled.
• .
Mcip County Hist11ricaJ Society for dili·
Aouett. With them Ia The role ofOhio Travel and 'lburism, the Ohio·
Aile Reynolds, left, Historical Society, the Meip County Geneaioli· ~in r=n '. rchi• and dedication to mark· .
1111 the !OJie of .Confedeutlle Oenenl John
the
. III'Mt-great-. cal Society, the Meigs County Otrnntiasicnn,
Hunt Mc:w... lltrouF Meip Olunty.
gr1nd.d 1ught1r
of and others who assisted with rcmrcto, fundina,
Britlon pedUad thai ~ M01p11's
Hyfell.
and site localions was aclmowJcd&amp;ed by l'lrla.

aaaa-

Almond Breakfast Bread
Bread Machine Recipe:
I 1/2 cups fat-free milk
4 cups bread flour
1/4 cup almond paste (not. marzi·
pan) cur into small pieces (see note)
· 2 tablespoons granulated sugar
I 3/4 teaspoons salt
2 tablespoons margarine
I tablespoon almond extract
2 teaspoons active dry yeast
Place all ingredients into bread -~~~:~~~~:)"~
pan in listed order. Folfow bread t
machine instructions for baking a
loaf of yeast bread . Let cool, then
glaze as above, if desired',
Makes one 2-pound loaf, about
18 slices.
'
Nutrition facts pe{ serving (I
sUce gJIIZed with almond slices):
170 cal., 29 g oarbo .. 4 g fat; 5 g
p~o ., I .S g fiber, 230 mg sodium.)
Recipes from: Wheat Foods
Council

f
(

y

I

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·•

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�</text>
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