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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Southern,
,Easternpost wins

Pick 3:
312
Plck4:
0520
Super Lotto:
14-21·29-38 40 45
'Kicker:

Sports on Page 5

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01117, Ohio v.111r P.Ha~og
. Comprny

Pomeroy-Middle~rt. Ohio, "''hursdey, Aprll17,

2 Secltona,11 ....... 3 1 A Gannett eo...... :

1917

Northe-astern states
cha·llenge ~ Voin~vic.h - on

new pollution standards!.
By KATHERINE RizzO
Allocleted Preea Writer
. WASHING'ION - Rep. B~rn~
Sanders showed up at a subeoml)lil. t&lt;ll hearing p~pared for a light, multiple copies of an Ohio newspaper
· column in hand.
,.,
His sights were fixed on Gov.
George Voinovich, who's emerged as
a leading opponent of an Environ·
mental Protection Agency proposal to
make air pollution rules more stringent.
In his prepared testimony Wednesday, Voinovieh proudly told a House
subeommillee that Ohio newspapers
had editorialized on his side, backing
his belief that scie~ce hadn't demonGALLIA, MASON, MEIGS COUNTIES

PAGE EIGHT • DINING EDITION

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. B~TTLE DESCRIBED- The Gloeckner.fam- bettie progre11ed while Sally Gto.ckner, left,
Ily ot Portland, Civil Wllr ~ctor" •.crlbed re~ how the bettie we1 for the lnhebltentl
the
of Butllngton l1lend for thole ettMCI- of old Portland. Mrs. .Giolckiler ducrlbn the

eew.

Ing Mondey'l tour~ the battlefield~~ relet·
ed 11te1. David Gloeckner dllcrl!lecl·.ho" .the

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POINT PLEASANT, WV

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(Jll dinners served vito Garden Salad t:r our cl)oice o·r l)al)ed Potato,
rice or vegetable of toe da~
(\7 egetarian upon request)··

.lJppeti~ers
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fine (jssortmentofWines

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Entertainment Wee1)1~
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Legall)everages
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Reservations lJccepted
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Telepl)one (3o4) ~75-22oo
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t£njoy.9Ln 'E{egant ·'Evening of:Fine· mining!

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By JIM FREEMAN
Sentlilel NeWs Steff
'Approximately 20 1 people,
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Entree's Include: Seafood ~ Pastas ~ Steal)s
cr Our Specialtr;.. Pfime Rtb

moumlng attire worn by the eoupte:• daughter,
Carrie.
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lf~t~tfif:lettJiilii(ipotir;trs~·spons:or·$..
.tour of Buffington Island site .

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$3.7 billion more by uiilitie~.
Sanders again demanded the
nam~s of shuttered companies.
"I'll submiuo you a list of coal
mines in Ohio and names of miners
whO arc 'out of work," Voinovich
responded .
It was one many verbal panics the ·
Republican governor had lo handle'.
Rep. Henry Waxman. 0-Calif.,
told Voinovich his testimony reminded him of trips lo Capitol Hill by his
predecessor, Democratic Gov.
Richard Celeste, who said ''that if we
controlled the pollution that .causes
acid rain what a tremendous cost it
would be to the utilities."

New policy·. amounts to
censorship, ACLU says

APRIL 16, 1997

jfhtt 19ining

strated that the cost of substantially
reducing ultra-tiny particles and
ozone in the air would be justified by
the health benefits.
· .·
He read from one favoring "sci·
ence that stands up to scrutiny:"
Sanders. J. Vt, added to the ofli·
cial record an·op-Cd eolumn.from the
same newspaper accusing Voinovich
of "spreading disinfonnation" on th~
issue.
Then he demanded a list ol' Ohio
businesses forced to close because of
the high cost of complying with clean
air laws.
Voinovich responded with a list of
pollution-control investments - $5
billion by business since 1972, plus

including local and sliitc historical
officials, attended a tour of the
Buffington Island Battlefield at
Ponland and related sites Monday
morning ..
The lour was held as pan of
efforts to save the battlefield from
a proposed gravel mining. opera•
tion. ·
Following introductions at the
Meigs • County · Museum in
Pomeroy, the group-boarded a bus
for a tour of the route taken by
Confederate General John Hunt
Mo'rgan's raiders through Meigs
County.
On July 19. 1863, Morgan and
about 2,000 cavalrymen met a
Union force of about 8,000 soldiers
at Portland resulting in the Battle
of Buffington Island. recogni1.ed as
Ohio's only' Civil War battle. .
In addition, the group viewed
the communities of Syracuse and ·
Racine, and the fanning communities of Letan Falls and Apple
Grove.
Battlefield supponers are trying
to slop ·effons by Richards and
Sons Inc. of Racine io construct the
barge loading facility which l"ill be
located jUst upstream of the com' munily of Ponland.
ThoSe: suppon~rs feel the proposed loading facility and resulting
gravel mining pits would destroy
the peaceful , rural .nature of the
community located in the bean of
1the battlefield .
Even worse, the mining could
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said. "It's not Nonh versus Squlh
disruptlhc graves of CiviLWar soldiers . who. may be ·b'uried in· anymore."
Margaret Parker of Racine,, repunmarked graves on the battlefield,
according·fo Ponland resident and
resenting the Meigs County HisCivil War'reenactor David Gloecktorical Society ani! Buffington
ner, one of the battlelidd's most
Island Preservation Commiuee,
outspoken )!roponents. · ·
said the goal was to try to show
''One thing I can not abide ... the
these people around the state. many
fellows th;ll:lll'c dead up there will · uf whom had neverviewed the batbe road pavement." he said. "That tlefield. what the ·comminee was
is no way to treat the honored dead
trying to preserve,
of either side."
·
Actually seeing the site has
more of an impact than simply
'One )hing I can not reading about it, she said . .
.lhis is preserved it can he
abide... ;lhe feUo.ws that here"Ifforever,"
she said. "If it's. a
are deatf"u.p there wiU be gravel pit, il won't
be here many
years
until
the
gravel
is gone."
road ~vement,' ••
raids recalled
David Gloeckner, Civil · Meigs
During the lour. Keith Ashley of
Pomeroy. of the Ohio J:)cpanment
Warbu.f[
.
of
Sons of the Union Veterans of
Jeffrey Yocst of · Westerville,
the
Civil War. related the story of
representing thc · i{oswell Ripley
Jenkins'
Raid on Racine almost a
·Chapter 1535 of lhe Sons ol' Con- .
federate Veterans. agreed. adding year he fore Morgan's more famous
that his group is very interested in raid.
On Sept. 3. I862. soldiers under
seeing the site preserved,
Confederate
General Albert GalSince arly forgotten graves on
latin
Jenkins.
a fomier western Virthe banlelicl~ would likely contain
the remain. of ConJederate sol· ginia Congressman, captured
diers, the Son.s of Confederate Racine and stole about 12 horses
Ve1erans havc nn ·ohvious·interest hci(Jrc crossing back inlo Vifl!inia.
but not he fore they reponcdly ~hot
in Jlrot~cting the area.
, .
"We've ,(ifiuen tons of letters." a deaf man who could not hear .
.• Yocst said. "Y.e're letting our feel- their commands to halt.
''The raid was a scare taCtic,"
ings he known." ·
·
Ashley
said , "It scared Meigs
Yocst appreciates the irony of
County
so
badly that they pushed
groups such ·a&lt; the Sons of Con-·
the
local
militia
groups to train nnd
federate Veterans and Sons of
Union Veterans cooperating in tlicir be responsive.. "
]'his proved a disadvantage to
· effqrts to protecl the banlelield
Morgan
about a yea(later, Until
'where their ancestors clashed.
Continued on .,Ice 7 ··
"It's kind of a neat thing." he

:Dol~ loans Gingrich money to-pay penaltY.

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WASHINGTON (AP) - House
: Speaker Newt Gingrich announced
: tQday !JC will pay his $300,000ethics
; penalt~ with money loaned to him by
: ~tired Senate majority leader Bob
• Dole.
.
• Docunierlts released by the spellk:
: er's otr~ee . said Dole had ' asreed to
: loan Gangnch the full $300,000 -to
. be repaid with ,to percent total inter: est over eiaht years.
: • In a ~lalemenl, Dole said, "I con: sider th1s !101 only an opportunity IQ
• support a friend but a lona-tenn
: investment in the future of our par: ty."
The doc-11 said die House
: edlica c:anunittec ljlprOYed the loan
: ~pmenl 41 a ''penllla•iblc
: ~ .. far payina the $300,000.
: Oinpictllllll privately with the OOP

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rank and file to inform them of his
decision as aides fielded _questions
from reponers.
The ·speak11t planned to make
. public remarks on the floor of the
House - where he was reprimand·
.ed for violatinl House rules in a hisloric v'!'e in ~anuary.
. .
In hts preP!Ired t:emarks, Otngnch
said it would have been legal to pay
the.sanclion out of campaign funds or
by solic:ilin1 dopllions from political
supponen. He llld he may yet file a
lawsuitl8ainlt la"!'ers who pt'Cfll!fCd
two documetlli lhrt were crucial to
his ethics ~. , .
He aaid hiEMI his wife Marianne

borrow the tnoney and to pay it back.
· 'lbe ta~paycrs will be fully reimbursed. 1lic agrl:cment (with the
ethi~s committee) will be complete·
ly honored. The integrity of lhe
House's ethics process will have
been prole&lt;:led. This is lilY duty as
· speaker, and I will dO it pe110nally."
No c!Ctails were available imme·
diately on h~ Gingrich and Dole
contiiCled one another to amn1e the
loan. ,
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' Their relationship over the years
hu been rocky. B.ul u House speaker, Ginpich w11 rmone Dole's most
decided '' wht'IV~Jthc con~C~p~C~~CCS. vocll aupporten durin&amp; last year'•
we lwl td do whll- bell. what wu praidenlial '*liprign when the former .Krnsu sen&amp;lor ran lpinst Pres·
. riJh&amp;, monlly and ttpiritullly.
ident
Clinton.
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"Tjlerefore. I llave rmnsed lo

COLUMBUS (AP)-lbc stnie's
"lbc resolution approved by the June 30.
decision 10 use filtering software to OPLIN board strikes a balance ·
The dispute began after si~ boys
restrict children's access to Internet hetwccn the ncild to provide acces.~ to were found looking at pornographic
sites at p.ublic lib~aries leans too far these n:soun.-cs and our desire 10 pro- im~gcs while browsing the Internet at
to.w~rd . cen.sorsh1p, the Amencan teet ch1ldre~ . from potentla!~Y . IlarlJl· , · the Medina County District Library.
C1;v1l L1ben1~s Umon ~a1d .
· . ful mal~n~l, .OPLIN exccuiiVG T'?ny
Parents ~:roups rci;plmded by lob·
. ~ d~ClSIOn, 81!,n~~e~ ~~C~F··, ·~!!PkUs, 581d In a !l11,~S, ~e~~~~J" ' '"' '••byi~~·~hc •Le!l:is!ar~.re an~ local,
day, _Is _a rdspt!~se• \0 •torilplalnts
· pic-atciley will rev1ew software hllrilncs lil·.n!'~lrn;l ~hlldrcn's ac.cess
aboulch1ldren us1ng the WorldWide op11ons and ptcsent a recommenda· · to thc:lnlerntt at libraries.
The Medina lillf;ary developed a
· Web lo view pornographic material tiOf! to .Oov. George Voinovich and
~n h~rary compute!". the Oh1o Pub- ~eg1sl~uvc. lenders by May I fvr policy in Fchruary that allows the
he L1brury lnfonnauon Network sa!d. 1~clus1on an the state budget. .
staff to ask patrons to stop looking at
But theAC~U said it would chal- . Such software is designed tnlim- Internet sites if they contain "ihaplen~e the dec1s1on.
11 acc~ss to Internet s1tes that m~y he prnpriatc lnuterial." lfpatrnns refuse.
llopensadoorwchaveheldshut hanntultoch1ldren.
staiT can ask them to leave or call
for 125 years - government censorHowever, critics claim that in rnli&lt;e tn have them cscnned ln"n the ·
ship of public libraries," said Chris- addition to hl01=kiilg access to sites lihrary:
·
tine Link: executive director of featuring women 's hreasls, for . . M,;. Link said the purelits !'"'"'''
ACLU-Oh10. '"They cannot res1stthe instance, the software also blocks had intimidated lihmries intn n:strict. temptation tn cast a wider net."
access to such items as chicken- ing Internet access.
·
OPLIN i~ a slate agency in charge brea~t recipes and infomiation ahout · , "l'hcy' ii: scaring the daylights out
of estabhshmg Internet .hookups at. breast cancer.
ni'Hhrarians," she s~id. ·'Lihraries arc
Ohio's .700 public .· libraries .. The
The ACLU will sue onL-c the bud- the ncighhorh&lt;M&gt;&lt;l government insti,
board approved the flltenng pohcy at get language becomes law. Ms. Link · tution and these peorlc arc turning
11s monthly meeting Fnday.
said. The budget is to he passed hy their wrath toward l.ihrarics. "

Freedom Road -civil suit concludes
criminal ch!IIJ!es relating .In the break&gt;
Freedom .Ruad, ln.: ,. and
ing and entering at the Salvatic•n WorkAmcrica. Inc .. were the suhjcct
· A civil ca&lt;e against assoc.iales of Arn1y ofllces in Pomeroy and the kid- of a state investigation for alleged
Freedom Road Ministries, Inc., and napping oflwo cl~crly women in res- · violations of Ohio's charitable laws.
spccilicidly of the handling of reviL~ non-profit subsidiary, WorkAmcr- · idence there.
An
entry
filed
earlier
this
week
in
enues
from the sale of charitable
ica,Jnc .. has concluded. and,thc orgaMeigs
County
Common
Pleas
Coun
game
tickets
("tips") at II Freedom
ni7.ation's fnnncr board has l)cen dis·
ordefli
Ruhh
and
Scarmack
to
pay
.Road
Resource
Centers across tlic ·
solved.
·
The case wa~ tiled by the Ohio $2,000 to the Attorney Gencrul's · state. One such center operated in,
Attorney General in ·June, 1996, Charitable Foundations sccticin. tn he Pomeroy. offering educational and
joh tmining c.enters, as well us prcpaagainst WorkAmerica,· Inc. and the distributed to charitable causes.
Robli
and
Scann!l"k.
the
only
_ration
li1r the Geneml Equivalency
., company'ssi~ trustees; Dianne Snow.
renmining
,
members
of
_
lhc
hoard
Dirluma
(G.E.D.)
Reba Peck. Monika Bennet. Roger
Prusccuting Attorney John Lcntcs
Reeb nnd Ralph Scarmack. Also were removed tmm the hoard hy
Cmw's
ord~r.
and
the
other
trustees
said
at the time nf tile suit that his
named as defendants in the suit were
·arc
l(~rblclden
from
holding
position
office
had received complaints about
WorkAmerica l(lUnder ·walter J.
within
the
Ofl!ani1.ation
and
orders
the
lhc
quality
of service provided at the
Rnhh and the Ofl!anir.aticm's statuto·Attorney General and the County center.
.
ry agent. James McClain.
Oiminul complaints were lilcd
The attorney general's civil com· Pmscculor to recommend si~ names
against Freedom ~oad Foundation in
plaint. asked Judge Fred W. Crow IIJ as replacement members.
1bc
order
from
Judge
Crow
fol
·
111
least one nthcr county in Ohio.
to lind these trustees personally
lowed
a
hearing
on
April7,
at
which
'However.
the Meigs C&lt;tunty civil suit
accountable fm $2.000 which was
paid from the organit.ation's i:oni:rs · lime only , one of the defendants . addressed only the usc or Freedom
Road funds fur r ayment ol' Rnbin"'' legal fees Jor Brad Rollinson of ' appeared.
snn's legal fees.
Pomeroy. Rohin.son wa&lt; convicted of

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel New• Staff

Proposed regulations could be sticking point
COLUMBUS (APl - lbc House
and Senate must work out language
in a bill to eliminate Ohio's troubled
auto emissions testing program .in
case tougher standards proposed hy
the federal government go into eiTcct,
lawmakers said .
Sen. Gary Suhadolnik, cbainnnn
of the Energy, Natural Resources and
Environment Committee, said
Wednesday that the hill should con·
tain a "self-destruCt" clause should
lbC tougher standards go into effect.
But Rep. Tom Johnson, the Hoo!IC
sponsor, said Ohio could he years
away from needing .to comply with
the new standards and the Legislature
needs to get rid of E·cbcck ·now.
Johnson, R-New Concord, was the
Senrlecommiuee's ftnt willless .. it
considered the billlhrt easily passed
the House last week.
The bill would ~pl~ec E-chec:k
with a more ~k: tailpipe test in

nnnhcastern Ohio and the Cleveland
ateu. Those areas currently arc in
compliance with standards set by the
1990 li:dcrul Clean Air Act .
But Suhudolnik, R-Strongsville.
said the hill should contain language
that would ulluw lawmakers to reconsider their options if the U.S. Envirnnmental Pmtection Agency puts
proposed , tougher standards into
effect this sumliiCr.
Johnson said after the hearing tbal
th~ "self-destruct" languase might
not he' nel:essary.
· "That may be three, four, eight
years from now until they're implcmenled," he said. " People want -a
change from E-check and lthin.k this
is the best bill that could help provide
that ChanJC." •
S~nik also expressed con·
ccms about whrl a l8ll credit the
Houle included for motorists who
pay the estilnrled $20 fcc would do

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to the Ohio treasury.
The credit could cost the state at
least SJ4 million a year. That cost
would increase if testing e~pands
heyond the current 14 counties. Johnson said.
Suhadolnik said theta~ credit ~ay ,
not survive ·in the Senate.
"You reali1.c we can prohahly take
that out," Suhadolnik told Johnson.
·"It's $30 million a year."
Johnson said he wa' conli.denl ihe
House and Senate could reach agree- .
ment on a hilL
1bc E-check program, in which
cars arc tested at v.arious speeds fur
ozone emissions, wa&lt; started in 199S
in response to federal standards ·
imposed under the Clean Air AL1 of
19'Y(l.

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Since the start. m01orists hr~
complained about damaged .:.n,
long line.' at testing centers and hip
repair bills.

'r

�GOP Congress trying
different game plans

NAME?

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Today in history

·Berry's World

1F YOU'RE t\01 6tJ\L1Y OF
ACT\tolG AS "ft\0\lC:,H '(OU

challenging Congress to produce ·a
budget resolution, which neither
house has done.
Besides ideplogy, the authors
following a simple rule: When you're
write,
pressure for compromise is
in power, vilify the deficit; when
reduced
by the fact that deficits repyou're out of power, vilify the other
resent
a
slow-moving
disaster, not an
guy's solution."
Hager and Pianin meticulously immediate crisis. Deficits cause interand graphically reconstruct the pub- est rates to rise, putting a drag on the
he and back room actiOns of every economy, but bankruptcy seems far
'
budget-balancing effon since 1981, off.
If there is good news 10 the Hagerfocusing espec1ally on the donnybrook of 1995-96, when the parties Pianin budget history, It is that half
shut down the government twice by steps have succeeded m reducmg the
Implacably refusing to compromise deficit, even if not to zero
The 1985 Gramm-Rudman·
on Medicare reductions and whether
Hollings
bill, even thou!lh it never
to use congressiOnal or admm1stra·
ach1eved tis deficit targets, put pres·
tion spending estimates.
Into the m1x, the authors write, has sure on Congress and President
been added an angry polarizmg of George Bush to reach the 1995 bud·
get agreement. That was a poh11cal
Congress.
"Budget summitry between the di~asler for Bush because it VIolated
oppos10g clans became increasmgly his "no new taxes" pledge, but it put
impractical because any centrist com· strict hmits on spendmg
Similarly, Clinton has succeeded
promise on taxes, spending, and enll·
in
cutting
the deficit in half with help
dement reform invariably alienated
from cuts imposed by the GOP 104th; ,
the wings of the two part1es.
Congress.
"The result was a hopeless cycle
Still, the nub of the long-term budof revenge . hke some endless gang
get
problem .. inexorable entitlement'
war, the fight was always renewed by
growth
.. has yet to be touched:
some fresh 1nsult."
In the current climate, Repubh· Recently, Clinton again hiked h1s pro-cans dismiss Clinton's budget as l!osed cuts in Med1carc, but Rcpub"phony" because most spendmg cuts lkans came out of meetings saymg It
come after 2000, while Clinton is still wasn't enough.
Republicans also complain tha~
Clinton's bildget contams $23 bllhon.
m net tax increases over a period of
I0 years because he nuses lcV1es on
business and calls for $128 bilhon m
proposed tax cuts to end 10 2002.
Republicans, ol course. want perma·
nenttax cuts.
If the current round of talks fa1ls.
congressional sources say, the next.
step is for a bipart1san group ol Sen·
ate moderates It&gt; propose a new_
altcrnauve budget.
•
The group mdudcs Senate Budget
Chairman Pete Domenic1, R-N.M.,
and Dcmocral~ John Breaux, La , and
Bob Kcrrcy, Ncb., all of whom lend
to favor postponement of tax cuts, ~
CPI fix, and real Mcd1carc rcduc·
lions.
The proposal w1ll prohahly be a
good one. The problem is the chron-.
ic one : Moderates don 't rule the biKI·
get. game, so balance rcmams .

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Ben Wattenberg
uniquely Amencan mstitut1on 1t IS ~
the board of trustees. The trustee system 1s des1gncd to put "ownership"
of co llc~cs and universities in the
hands of citizens. not governmental
mm1sters, a.~ 1s the case in most of the
rest of the world .
There arc about 50,000 trustees
(often called regents) who (in theory) run our 3,500 colleges and uni vcmtics For the most pan, they are
the cream ot Amenca: busmessmen,
religious and pohllcall.eadcrs, sclcnllsls, loyal alumni, minonty watch·
dogs , and academicS. Usually they
serve long hours w1thout pay for one
reason: public serv1ce We have put
our IOSiltUIIOnS of higher learnmg 10 .
thelf trust. Ha.s It become a blirid
trust?
The other day I moderated (or
tmmodcratcd). a panel at the annual
meetmg of the Assoc1atnm ol Govcrnmg Boards of Universities and
Colleges (AGB) The topiC was
·Assc-smg Htgher Education's
Eth1&lt;:s and Values Arc Colleges and
Untvcrsilies Falhng From Grace''"
That IS a tough top1c lor an orga·
OIZallOn to mn1ct upon llscll .
"Falhng from gme , .. IS not often the
qucst1un a prufcssnmal asS&lt;JClallOn

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even us he w:Ls catapulting to v1cto· jokes lly.
Gannett Newa Service
sy in over the weekend, Woods was
"Tcx1, late," he responded.
WASHINGTON- The compar· m the cross hairs of a maga1.mc mtcr·
"I have learned my Jesson, "
1sons between T1gcrWoods and Jack- v1ew he now wishes he'd never giv- Woods said alter the magazmc hit the
Ie Robinson arc mevitable - and en.
newsstands earlier thiS month. "I
mstrucuve.
Four raunchy Jokc.s the 71 -year- have learned it the hard way."
Tiger Woods is to the.game of golf old golfing phenomenon told on his
I hope so.
what Jackie Robinson was to base- way to and dunng a photo shQOt for
More deserving of notice is the
ball; the symbol of 1ts break With a th1s month's GQ magazine cover slo· Importance of Woods' a.o;ccndancy in
rac1st past. Fifty years ago, Robinson ry found their way into pnnl. It wa.• game ol golf. He's forced open the
was the first hlack player to scale barrads humor. Locker-room talk. doors for a new generation of golfers.
baseball's color barrier. Woods, by The kind of salty JOkes that young A decade from now the playing field
outperfprming the seasoned veterans men · overtlowmg with testosterone of professional golf will look more
like ba.wbal~- and less like that of
of golf's white elite to win a runaway and mach1stno often tell.
hockey
Three of them had a racial edge.
victory S~nday in The Masters is,
Thnly year,; agu, Sifford won
The Other targeted homosexuals. .
ironically, the first African-American
golfer to be treated by them as an
All were playful, if msensitive, tQumamcnts that would have gotten
equal.
auempts at humor. For sure his words white golfers into The Ma~ters, only
In this sense, both Woods and were far less orofane than the racist. to d1scovcr that aftcr·the·fatt rule
Rollinson are spons pioneers. But hate-filled tirades White House tape changes were made to keep him out.
heing a trailblazer made them role recorders caught Richard Nixon Neither he, (;alvin Peete, Jim Thor·
models to some - and targets for spewmg forth during his days in the pe nor Lee Elder- the first hl~ek to
Oval Office. But thai didn 'I sJop play m The Masten; - ever rose
others.
Thirty yean after the managers of some people who read the article above the level of playcn whose
The Masten changed the rules to from tryinJtO give them the weilht presenc:c: on the profenionalaolfcrs
tour was defined by their n~ce.
keep bl~ek golfer Charlie Sifford of 1 presidential ullerance.
Amon. lhe fllllcs or the world's
from playin1 in golf's most presti·
"Hey, you can't write this,"
liotl$ tournament. Woods becllllC the Woods is said to have naively caU- best pfen. thly were better " first African American to win it. But l1oned the 0Q writer after letting his avcnae J*fonnen. Elch won POA

Preview planned
A girls softball preview Will be
helil Saturday at the Hartinger Park
in Middleport. Games Will start at 10
a.m. The concession 'stand will be
open.
Board to meet
The Me1gs County EducatiOnal
Serv1ce Center board will meet in
special sess1on on Thursday, Apnl 24
at 6 p m at the board offices m
Pomeroy. The purpose of the meetmg
is to discuss and employ personnel.
Lodge to meet
M1ddleport Lodge ~63, F&amp;AM
will meet Fnday for mspecllon. Work
will be in the MM degree. There Will
be a 6:30 p 111. dinner.

Today's weather forecast

Frost possible tonight .
By The Associated Preu
A high pressure system wiD bring
dner air 10 Ohio tonight. :Out frost is
hkely as temperatures d1p into the 20s
and low 30s under -clearing skies,
forecasters smd.
' Partly cloudy 10 mostly sunny
skies will be the rule for Friday as the
high pressure system continues to
build, the. Natienal Weather Semce
said.
'
· Temperatures will · moderate
shghtly into the low 40s in the nonh·
cast to low 50s m the southwest.

The record·h1gh temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 88 degrees 10 1896 while
the record low was 25 m 1962. Sun·
set tomght will be at 8: I I p.m and
sunrise Fnday at 6.49 a.m.
Across the nation
Rain fellth1s mormng from Penn·
sylvania to Tennessee and. down mto
Texas, wh1le hght snow dusted
northwestern Michigan. It was
cloudy over much of the West.
Mild weather was expected across
the Mississippi Valley

Community Banking Month observed
· April is Community Banking t1on to the local community, wh1ch 1s
Month, and Farmers Bank and Sav- the bas1s for Commumty Banking
mgs Company Will observe the event Month.
"Th1s 1mwrtant month each year
by serving refreshments to its customers on Friday from II a.m. 10 ~ provides us with the ability 10 remmd
the commumty we serve that we conpm.
_
duct
busmess differently than our
According to Paul Kloes, presi·
hirger
· m-county and ·out-of-state
dent of Farmers Bank, Fnday's activIties will confirm the bank's ded1ca· rivals," Kloes satd .

,,

soc1ety IS add1ctcd to gcncrah1.atum
from anecdote. But the plural of anec,,
dote is data. und where there Is Mnoke,
there IS (oltcn) fire.
I thmk there IS indeed scimc sen{
ous falhng-frorn,gr.ace going on; ,
not Wllhstandmg the gr.cat achieve·
ments of American higher educutmn: ·
The on-campus acadcm1c commum·'.
ty. for alllls suhstantiallustcr. IS oltcn
part of the prohlcm not part or the&gt;
soluunn. Particularly, I think there 1&gt;C •
a liberal tims m the classromn,
although mnst nf the other prohlcm,. :
Cited here also deserve scrutmy.
·
1f on-campus. personnel arc part nf
the problem, only oil-campus trustee~ ,
can deal with what's wrong. But so..·
many olthem have been domcslical-, •
ed, told to.makc sound 1deas intp holy.,
writ Trustees have heen .mformcd by· 1
the faculty that their role is to build .
a lirewall around a professor's acad·, ·
ernie freedom .. no matter whether. ,
students get mdoctrinated by an :
imhalanced agenda. They have hecn •
told that thc1r JOb IS to support the. ·
president so that the mstitutron can he
run mst1tuuonally They arc tnld to '
ra1sc money, huild hu1ldings, udv1sc• '
about mvestmcnls .. and hull out.
They should hutt hack in, and go '
frnm scapegoats to heroes.
· '
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow
al the American Enterprise lnsti·· '
tute, is the author of "Values Mat~ 4
ter Most" and is the host of the'
weekly public television program •
:
"Think Tank."

PPHS student faces
five felony cou.n ts
after bomb threat
By MICHELE CARTER.
OVP News Staff
A 15-year-old Pomt Pleasant High
Schon! student faces f1vc felony
counts, mcludmg wanton endanger·
ment. possession uf a dangerous and
deadly wcapo~. possession of a dangerous and deadly weapon on school
grounds, possession of 11 dangerous
and deadly weapon on a school 1\~s
and possession of an c xplosive
dev1cc. after he allegedly placed an
bomb in a locker a1 PPHS Tuesday
afternoon.
·
TFC D A Hutchison. a bomb
expert w1th the West Vu·ginia State
Police. dismantled the device. wh1ch .
consisted of a Kmsteik, liquid paste
and a bla.&lt;ting cap. HutchiSOn said the
commcn;lal two--part explosive found
is stable when it is separate. but

l

The Daily Sentinel
(IJSP8li3-HO}
PubhAhM every afternnon. Monday throug,h

••
f

tournaments dunng tbc1r short, •
careers. But it wasn 't until the aiTival · :
of WmKI.s - who in less than eight , ~
months on pro tour has rcdclincd the : :
mcarung ol greatness - that the · :
game's color baiTicr really hegan to 1
crumble.
In winnmg four tournaments," l
including the vencrahle Ma.&lt;ters, and : '
well over $1 million dollars since I
turning pro in August, Tiger W(~xls •. . ~
hasn 't just Jomed the ranks of pro· 1[
fcssional golf's best players, he's ~ ;
trampling over them. ,
"'
The !tid who a• group &lt;If older '
white children lied to a tree on h1s . •
first day in kindcrganen for being the · t
only black . 10 the neighborhood, is , , !
now brealung the bond~ that have. · '
long relegated African Americans Ill · , :
!ICCond-cla.'l.~ status in golf. It's not :
sand lr8p!i or water holes that thrcM· '
en Woods' studom at this early ~tagc , :
in his career. Given the aWC50111C dts- 1 '
tmcc he hits the ball, a lot of aolf ' :
&lt;XJIII11eS will have to be redestlllllll · 1 i
before these 1117.-ds of the pme l
becotiiC mucl! or a CCMICiUII for him .• !.,

l

!I

I

Friday. Ill •C.o.rt St • Pomeroy. Oh1o. by the
Ohio Valley PubUmins Company/Gnnncn Co.
Pomeroy. Ollio 41769, Ph. 992-2 1!16 S«ond
claAill ~ pcaid at Pomeroy, Ohm.

MeMber: Thl: AAA«htk:d ltn:u. nnd the Ohio
New~pGper A:tMK:Ialion
POSTMASTBR1 Send add~u corretl•otu lo
The Dally Senti11el, Ill Caurt St • ronlei'"O)'.
Ohio,.S7M.
SUII8CIIPTION RATES

• IIJCorrloror--•

One\Yeet............................. .. .. .. $200
One Momb ................... ............ ...... $8 70
One y-. ............................... $104.00

SINGL&amp; COPY PltCE
DollY ........., .. ·-···-~ . • . .. . ... .. )~c....

10,., ""' ...........,

Silbocriben ""'deoiri!W
remit 1ft Qlh.ncc dirct1 to The Dlil)' Stntlnl1
on utwe. td• Or tl mond'l bMI* Credit will be

p'lft&lt;llriouoch-'-

_.,_&lt;_IIOM&lt;tlo ...nobto.

No aukcriptlorn by mail pcrmiued in

""bll""'.......,.

IIIUJ

'*'

dlo riptto adju"
tlut·
lq die~· poriod S.bl&lt;ripll.. ~ ny bt icnple:uw:MCJd ~ chiRJi"' the
of die Mocrlpl1on.
MAIL..-:JIIntO!IS

t - .... ~

--....

t l -····················· ...............S27.:i0

Sl----· ... ···-······ ............-.....

· - · ····· ····-····-····· ......... ......1105
Ul.l2
56

13 • -

--·-·· ....................~
····-·-···129.25

·--····-··..····-·· .......... - - ..1!6.11

»--·······

·-··-···--··-····-·····•tet.n

explosive when m1xed The dcv1ce
would have needed a power source to
initiate an cxplosum.
Sgt. Gordon Clark of the Point
Pleasant Detachment. smd the dcv1ce
was lound around I Jl m. 10 a student's locker alter two students had
reported to teachers that they had
seen the 15·ycar-old w1th a bomh on
tlic school bus and at school. The
juvenile placed the bomb 1n another
student's locker Around I :30 p m
students and teachers were cvacuat·
ed from the school
The Apple Grove JUVcmlc was
questlon'cd with his parents present
and later released to thc1r custody
pending JUvcmlc petitions being:
signed. Pelltions w1ll be s1gned
Wednesday afternoon and the teen
could face even more charges. Clark
said state troopers know where the
explosives came from and additional arrests could be poss1ble
Sgt. Dale Humphreys and g•lidancc counselor Ron Dowclllound the
dcvtcc m the locker and moved it to
Dowell's office Hutchison dismantled the bomb' and removed it lrom
the school.
Dunng Tue!ld9y's special board of
education meetin{!. Superintendent
Dr Larry Parsons told l)oard mcm·
bers an expulsum heanng would he
conducted for the student. who
allegedly vmlatcd the safe schools
policy.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Wenesday's discharges • Paul
Steinmetz. Sr.

Couples issued
marriage licenses
The following couples . ,we~e

issued marriage licenses recently tn
the office of Meigs County Probate
Courl Judge Robert Buck.
Re.:eivinl hcenses were: Sc~IY
Lynn Oliver, 28, West Columbia,
W.Va., and Rill Kay Haym1111, 3S,
Rutland, and Roger L. Slew.n, 43,
Hartford, W.Va., and V. Marie Petry,
SO. Muon, W.Va.

Trustees set meeting
Letart Townsh1p w1ll meet Monday at 6 p.m at the oflice bu1lcling
Water boil advisory
A bml adv1sory w1ll remam m
effect for all of the village of
Pomeroy
until water tests

Shirley Pyles of Syracuse d1ed Wednesday, Apnl16, 1997, at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis. Arrangements w1ll be announced later by Ewing
Funeral Home, Pomeroy.

Reunion planning set
Southern H1gh School Class of
1977 \VIII have a reumon planning
meetmg Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. in the
high school cafetcna. ·
Rabbit Clinic coming
·A rabb1l chmc will be held Sunday
a1 2 p.m. in M1ddlepon tn the new
warehouse at Vaughan's IGA Saf\dY
Carnahan will be conductmg the
chnic. Owners are tnvited to mk~ rabblls tor hands-on trammg. Questions
may be directed to the Meigs Coun·
ty ExtensiOn Office, 992-6696
Long Bottom smorgasbord
A smorga.•bord dmncr Will be held
April 26, 5 p m at the Long Bottom
Commumly Bu1ldmg. Adults, $5.
children, $2.50. Ham. frtcd and bar·
beque ch1ckcn, scalloped oysters,
entrees, salads, desserts and hevcragcs mcluded.

Charles F. 'Hank' Arnott

Herman·F.. Bletner

Charles F. "Hank" Amott, 63, 28682 Tackcrvlllc Road, Racine, d1cd unexpectedly Wednesday afternoon, Aprir 16, 1997, wh1lc visitmg ncar Pmneruy.
Born March 4, 1934, at Anliqu1ty, Oh1o, he was the son of the late Ot1s
Columbus and Bertha Roush Amott.
He wa• an employee qf the Mc1gs County Highway Department and a
member ~f Local 280 of the Amcncan Federation of State, County and
Municipal Employees.
He IS survived by a special friend , Lizz1c Wood ol Racme: two Sisters ·
and 'b'rothers-in-law, Mac and Ralph Durst ol Orlando. Fla., and Vtolct and
Lawrence Bush of Racine; two hrothers and sisters-m-law, Wilham and Helen
Arnott of Racine and Jess and Mary Kathryn Arnott of Rochester. Pa.; oth·
er special friends survivmg arc Milford and Romaine Fredenck and lamt·
ly; Bill and Pamela McLaughlin and son, Deborah R1zcr and sons; Howard
and Margie Bosuck and family , and Jack and Paul me Bost1ck and f,umly
Numerous mcces and nephews also survive.
He was preceded in death by two Sisters, Wilma R1ggs and Zelia Taylor,
and by four brothers. Arthur Arndtt, John Arnou, Ira Amntt and Clark Arnott.
Funeral services will he held at I p.m. Saturday, Apnl 19, 1997. at the
.Cremeens Funeral Home, Racme The Rev James Smtcrlicld w1ll nflicwtc
Burial will follow in the fam1ly plot m Letart Falls Cemetery
Friends may call at the funeral home frum 2-4 and 7-9 p.m Fnday.
Casket bearers Will be fellow employees of the Meigs County l;hghwuy
Department

Herman F. Bletner, 78, of Leon, W Va., d1cd Thursday, April 17, 1997,
at his home.
Born May 1, I 918 m Ma.son, W. Va, he was a son of the late Herman R
and Carohnc M (Kochensparger) Bletner He was M1llwnght w1th Local
1755 m Parkersburg. W. Va., and a World War II veteran.
In addlllon to h1s parents, he was also preceded m death by three broth·
ers, John E. Blctner, Clarence S Blctncr, and Wilham M Blctncr; and a sister, Ruth P BIetner
Surv1vors mclude h1s former w1fc, Loa Blanche (Wedge) Bletncr of Buffalo, W Va. ; three daughters and sons-m-law, Brenda Sue Mash of Buffalo. Rebecca A. and Bruce Yenan of London. Oh1o and Carolyn M. and John
W Fichtner of Leon; two sisters, Helen L. Bletncr and Mac E. Blctner, both
ol Mason, and seven grandchildren.
Service will be at I :30 p.m. Sunday, Apnl 20. at Foglesong Funeral Home,
Mason. with Pastor Damon Rhodes offiClallng Bunal w1ll follow 10 Knk·
land Memonal Gardens.
Fnends may call at the luncral home Saturday from 6 to 8 p.m.

Ohio University won't
discipline student~ this time GPLA results
ATHENS (AP)- Oh10 Universi- Ahout 70 officers got the street clear

Auct1on results from Wedncsay 's
Galhpohs Producers LIVestock Asso-C13tlon:
HOGS - Butcher hogs. $41-52,
Sows, $27-38, boars. $36-37 .. 50;
Head, $.25 and down.
CATILE· Second Wednesday ol
each month.
COWS Price trend,$2, h1gher ..
Standard. $38-.52 , Ut1hty, $34-37;
Commercial, $30.34.
BULLS: Steady, Butchers,
$42.50-61; Feeder cattle Pnce trend,
steady to $1 lower. Ycarhngs, steers,
$64· 74, Hc1lcrs. $5K-63; Calves.
Steers. $6K-1!2. He1fcrs, $60-68; Back
to the li1rm hahes.$ 145 and d(lwn
Spectul Ieeder cattle and brood
!cow sale Wednesday, Apn I 30, 12
ntKm. 'Monday, graded Ieeder sale
averages s1cers $74 per hundted
we1ght anil hctfcrs $66
hundred

ty students arrested alter an all-cam· an hour later.
pus d1sturhance la.~t month won't be
disciplined
by the school- th1s time.
\
But the southeastern Oh1o school
noufied students on Wednesday that
Ain Ele Power .......................40'7.
Akzo ................................... ~.•68"
any futurc arrests could result m dl&amp;·
AmrTech ...................... ,.......... 59
ciphnary action.
Ashland 011 .•••.•••••••••••••••••.•.•. 44'1.
R1chard Carpmelh, director of
AT&amp;T .....................................33~.
student JUdlCiancs. sa1d a ~w ol
Bank One ..............................41'/,
arrest reports shows that the P.pn I 6
Bob Evans ............................ 13~.
Borg-Warner .........................44~
diSturbance mvolved only nonviOlent.
Champion .............................1
mmor olfcnscs
Charm Shps ...........................5'1•
"I have dcctdcd not to bnng lor·
City
Holding ..........................~2~
mal umvcrsny d1sciphnary action
Federal Mogul.. ..................... 25'·
agamst those students,.. Carpmclh
GanneH ...................................85
said 1n a statement
Goodyear ........,.....................51 :ir
Kmart ..................................... 12'Carpmclh sa1d the 'chon! al«&gt; Will
Lands End ..................•.•...•...... 28
noufy students involved m the dls·
Ltd ........................................... 18
turhancc that a record or their
OVB .........................................39
mvnlvcment in the mctdent will be
One Valleyu ........................... 37''
kept on file and "may he used as the
Peo-ples .....••..........•....•.........•31)).
basts for lulurc d1sc1plinary actiOn
Prem Flnl ...............................14),
Rockwell ...............................81 ~
should there he reports of future
RD·Shell .............................. 17~
arrests in the Athens commumty. "
Shoney's ....••.......................... 4,,
Forty-seven people. mcluding 34
Star Bank ...•....~ ....................... 40
students. were arrested alter dayhght·
Wendy's ................................ 20'1.
!'iavmg umc forced dnwnlnwn hurs to
Worthlngton ............
..:.._._&gt;••••••••••••••• 19
close early Some people Jumped on
Stock reports are the 10:30
cars. and liros were set in trash cans
a.m.
quotas provided by Advast
Rioters threw lwttles. eggs and road
of
Gallipolis
.
narcs at law enforcement olhccrs.

Stocks ,

n.

DAN'S

20°/0off
Knives
Buck Case
Leatherman
The new Buck
Multital
included
Thru Sat 19th
This Plaqe for Work
and Western

(~f1~RT&lt;.;

lOMUHRUW

,~ :-.r~r,·

f UMUHKU W

lhoo ..w- rho,.... •M '"" "''"'

.,...... I'IDMIOCIII"••r.n

I '

1:lO,t :lO OULY

··-

lA~

I SU•• IIlO li]O

SCREAM•

_.

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STAR11NG FRIDAY
HARRISON FORD,

IIRADPmiN

THE DEVIL'S OWN •
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

Lt:E JOfiiF.S tn

VOLCANO ' I

·~y

AND "ICH!LLI

MlQ SCttOCIL aiUIIIIIOR'

April. Is Community Bank Month
'

.

In Observance Of This, AU J Farmers Bank
&amp; Savings Company Locations Are Asking
You Te Join Us Fer Cookies And Punch On
Friday, April 18th from 11 a.m. - J p.m.
YourBankfn~...

~
t:.!J

·Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company

..... 1

164 Upper River Road
llil ... I'IIIC 211 West Second Street 42120 Stale Roula 7
I
P.O. Box 826
P.O. Box 339
- Gallipolis, OH 45631
Tuppers Plains, OH 45783 614/~·2265
Pomeroy. OH 45769
6141887-3181
BANK
81~·2138

•
•

indicate it 1s safe to drink. Mean·
while, water department officials
advise that water for drinking or
cooking he )!oiled for at least a
minute. A notice Will be published
when the adVISOry IS lifted.
Revival serrJces announced
ReviVal services w1ll be held a11he
ZIQn Church of Christ, State Route
I 43 through Sunday Speakers will be
Gene Zopp of Hemlock Grove,
Thursday; AI Hartson of Middleport,
Fnday, 7 p.m.; Carl Snelhng from
F1rst Christian Church of R1o Grande,
Saturday, all a1 7 p m. and Roger Wat·
son, Sunday, I0.30 a m.

Shirley Pyles

•

I

•

Sunday evemng and Wednesday
evening services at Ash Street Free
Will Bapllst Church m M1ddlepon
have been changed to 7 p.m.

Terry Norman, 54, Pomeroy. d1ed on Tuesday, April 15, 1997, at
Charleston Area Medical Center in Charleston, W.Va.
He was born on March 20, 1943, m Phelps, Ky, son of the late Moses
Norman and Opal Thacker Nonnan
He is surv1ved liy hiS w1fe,Anna Norman , Fort Wonh, Texas; three daugh·
ters, Thereasa Sona, Brenda Norman. and Donna Mat1sez, all of Fort Worth,
Texas; a son, Michael Norman, Fort Worth, Texas; two sisters and brothersin-law, Janet and Joe Malec, Ch1cago. and L1sa and Kenneth Roush of
Pomeroy, a Sister, Paula Clark of Gallipolis; a brother, Mark Norman of
Pomeroy; a step-mother, Myrtle Norman of Pomeroy, I 0 grandchildren and
south.
By the Associated Press
several meces and nephews.
Extended forecast
Ohio
Besides h1s parents, he was preceded m death by his brother. Larry NorFriday mght. A chance of rain
Tonight .. Cloudy with a· chance of
man.
snow showers northeast. Mostly west and southwest... Fau elsewhere.
Services' will be held on Saturday at I I a.m. at the Pomeroy Chapel of
cloudy with a chance of snow show· Lows 30to 35
Fisher
Funeral Home, 590 East Mam Street, Pomeroy. Bunal will be m Meigs
Saturday... Fau. H1ghs mid 40s to
ers elsewhere with gradual cleanng
Memory Gardens With Dr James R. Acree, Sr. officiating.
west after midnight Lows 25 to low- m1d 50s
Friends may call at Pomeroy Chapel of F1shcr Funeral Home on Fnday
Sunday.,Fwr. Lows mid JOs to 40
er 30s.
from 7to 9 p m
Fnday. Becoming panly cloudy Highs in the 50s.
The fam1ly has requested th'at flowers be omitted, and that donnll&lt;&gt;ns be
Monday...Achance of rain Low m
east and northeast. Partly to mostly
made
to a charitable organization of choice
sunny elsewhere. Highs lower 40s the upper 30s and lower 40s. Highs
extreme northeast to lower 50s far 10 the 50s.

(Morton Kondrack.e is execu~
live editor of Roll Call, the news·
paper of Capitol Hili.)

asks when publicly pondcrmg 1Ls
problems. The AGB gets an "A" for
analysts.
The Iivc panelists were distinguiShc~. Must of thc1t responses fell
into the realm nf: Yes, there arc isolated mstances of cth1cal wrong·
domg and abuse, but generally the
system 1s sound. Judith Rarnaley,
president of Ponland State University, sa1d that Amenca suffered from a
"culture of example," that is, the
JOumalisttc extrapolation of isolated
misdeeds mto the perception of a
general condition. She also men·
tioned that colleges "cooked the
books" when theyTeported thclf sta·
tus to magazines doing rankings ..
some few colleges did 1t, that is.
Cednc Dempsey, the executive director of the National Collegiate Athlct·
1c Assoctauon, sa1d there were a few
abuses among the top-tier Division I
schools. but the magDIIudc of trans·
gressions wa.• statistically small. (A
comment that chc1ted smckers Irom
trustees in the men's room.) Was
there a liheral bms'/ Well, yes m some
lew schcx&gt;ls, some time. Were tenured
professors gettmg a sweet deal'/ Well,
maybe occasmnally, in ccrta1h sorts
ol schools, and anyway 1t was changmg. Only Mel Ellin, the editor of
U.S. News &amp; World Report's college
guides, made the case that colleges
and umverSitlcs were eth1cally challenged m a serums and structural
way.
Therefore what? Surely, a media

n- cJumae 8DHUDCed

Terry Norman

a

•

•

Charles F. "Hank" Arnott, 63, Racine, died Wednesday, April 16, 1997,
while visiting near Pomeroy.
Born March 4, 1934. at Anuquity, son of the late Otis Columbus and
Bertha Roush Amott, he was an employee of the Metgs County Highway
Department and a member of Loca1280 of the American Federauon of Stm,
County and Municipal Employees.
He is survived by a special friend , Lizzie Wood of Racine; two. s1sters
and brothers-in-law, Mae and Ralph Durst of Orlando, Fla., and Violet and
Lawrence Bush of Racine; two brothers and sisters-in-Jaw, William and Helen
Amott of Racine and Jess and Mary Kathryn Arnott of Rochester, Pa.; and
numerous nieces and nephews also surv1ve
He was preceded m death by two sisters, W1lma R1ggs and Zelia Taylor,
and by four brothers, Arthur Arnott, John Amott, Ira Arnott and Clark Arnott.
Seniices will be h~ld Saturday, I p.m. at the Cremeens Funeral Home,
Racine, with the Rev lames Satterfield offic1ating. Burial will follow m Letart
Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Fnday.

IND.

m~rage .

By OeWAYNE WICKHAM

ARE.

., ........ ci..
--..

'

Woods is to.golf what Robinson was to baseball :.l

St'oP

S/\Mf. 1b

groups; and 6) money.
But 1s there no check and balance
to the peree1ved abuses and the perceived vlllams'! In theory, and a

RACO meelill&amp; Mt
The ' Racine Area Community
Orpnization will meet Tuesday at
Stat Mill Park 816:30 p.m. Plans w111
be finalized for the Flower Fest1val

Charles F. 'Hank' Arnott
.

College grads driving cabs fe~l short-changed

Scapegoat du jour· college
trustees. Potential heroes college
trustees.
American colleges and umversiHes have problems. ll1s alleged that
I ) they lie to the magazmes that pubhsh ratmgs, 2) tenured professors are
undcrworked and overpmd; 3) graduate students teach too many classes;
4) big-time spons dnven by blg·tlmc
money make the wonds "student
athlete" an oxymoron, 5) tUitiOn
costs have gone from very ~igh to
absurd; 6) the humamt1es and soc1al
science departments have become
mg.
.
.
He started the year contnte after hiS eth1cs repnmand and $~.000 penal- havens for polillcally correctmdoc·
ty. then moved to the left. court10g hbcrals and even suggestmg· G~P ~ax trination; 7) Weimar-mOtl(ed grades
hikes could wa1t for a balanced budget. But over the past. week, Gmgnch are meamngless; 8) college gra&lt;luates
re-emerged as a spokesman for conservative causes, promiSing even larger dr~ve cabs and feel short "Changed by
their college degree, 9) sl'!dentloan
tax cuts than env1s10ned by other GOP leaders.
The lack of a unified pos1tion on tax cuts prompted 1996 G~Ppres.lde~ltal indebtedness is suffocating; and I 0)
candtdate Steve Forbes to suggest that GOP leaders were mOtcted w1th the "affirmative action" is two· words
suhsututing for one: "quotas." That's
poht1cal version of mad cow dtsease."
·
the short hst
Who
ls
to
blame?
The popular viiEQITOR'S NOTE- Tom Raum covers politics and national affairs
lams make up another short list · I)
for The Associated Press.
the profcssonat (m the humanities
and social sc1ences), often pcrce1vcd
as an excluSive gu1ld with 1dcologl·
cal lnmus tests; 2) alumni who wont
'
wmning sports teams not excuses; 3)
By The Associated Preas
Today" Thursday. Apnl 17, the 107thday of 1997 There ar~ 25Kdays coaches who either wm or watch their
adjusted-gross income go to live
le ~~~nl ~1[4 v'ifrovanm da Verrazano reached prese~t-day New York harbor
digits from SIK or, seven; 4) collc~c
In 1790. American statesman Benjamm Franklin d1ed 10 Phlladclphm at
presidents who fear the faculty and
accept
the notion that their proper J&lt;&gt;h
age !14~---------,---------,
definition IS to "live in a big white
house and be{'. 5) craven cave-10
politicians who bow to pressure

I

Meigs announcement•

r~,Aprill8
AccuWeat~ fOiecalt for daytime co~itions IIIII

It is "a game of advantage seek·
ing whose goal is to win back. control
of Congress or the White House by

II.

· They're often busy batthng each other.
Democrats observed the passmg of the first I 00 days of the I 05th Congress w1th a news conference outs1de the Capiiol. They brought a large Jar
of molasses as a prop. On 1t was wntten: "I 051h Republican Molasses."
"Th1s Jar of molasses outpaces anything we've done to date," said freshman Rep Robert A. Weygand, D-R 1.. who held up the Jar for photographers.
"Last year, they were chomping atthe bn This year, we can't find them,"
smd House Democnil~e leader D1ck Gephardt_ of Missouri.
Echoed House Democratic Whip David Bonior of Michigan: " It's hard
to play ball when the other team doesn 't show up."
Some key Republicans urged calmness
"I know to be patient," sa1d Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad, cha1rman of the
Republican Governors Association, discouraging a verdict unlll the end of
the SCSSIOn
He prcd 1ctcd the GOP Congress would both cut taxes and balance the
budget, under Gmgnch's leadership.
. •
"I thmk Newt Gmgnch 1s commllted to domg 11 as are the other members of leadership."
•
.
Bu 1 for the t1mc being, Gingrich was st1ll slrugghng to rega10 h1s foot·

The Deily Sentinel • Pill 3

OHIO Wci'ltller

·.

Is a balanced budget a "Mirage"· reached. Many Republicans were
never
lobe achieved? Thai's the IItle more furious about the casual way
'LsttiDllslid in.1948
of an impressive new book that Gingrich unveiled his proposal -· in
seems to be depressingly on target an off-hand comment to The W1Uh·
111 Court Sbeel, l'omeroy, Ohio
this year.
814-1192•2158 • FIX 992·21 S7
The book, by journaliSts George · MoHon Kondracke
'Hager of Congressional Quarterly
and Eric Piamn of The Washington mgton Post .. than by us coments.
Post, vividly recounts 15 years of But the loud bellowing from the right
failed
budget balancmg, with part1· seems tb have forced Gmgnch away
A Gannett Co. Newspafier
sanship
the culprit every 11me.
from the center.
I
'
And here we go again· Despite a
Recently, as part of h1s political
ROBERT L. WINGETT
new round of recent talks between the rehabilitation strategy, he d~lared
Publllller
Republican Congress and the Clinton that he wanted GOP budget propos·
admimstrauon, a balanced budget als to contam not only reductimls in
agreement seems as distant as ever. capttal gams and estate taxes but also
MARGARET LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Flashes of mspirat10n on ways to their elimination •· an 1dea DemocCantroller
GeMI'III Mlnllger
get' to agreement this year ·· adjust rats w1ll never accept.
the Consumer Price Index, postpone
Ideological ngid1ty .. the tenden·
tax cuts •• have heen snuffed out by cy of leaders of both parties to pan·
the chronic fear of leaders of both der to their base ·• is a persistent
part1es that they will stray too far theme in Hager and Pianin's book,
from their poliucal base.
wh1ch covers the period from 1981
Fear of offendmg labor umons and through the 1996 election, not the
liberals caused Clinton to ab~ndon current maneuvering
the 1dea of a cost-of·livmg commis·
The book 1s subtitled " Why Nei·
sion, and now House Speaker Newt ther Democmts Nor Republicans Can
Gimgrich, R-Ga., is trying to appease Balance the Budget, End the Deficit,
rebellious conservatives by insisting and Sat1sfy the Pubhc," a~d the why
on tax cuts this year
1s that "it is all but irresistible for pol·
Gmgrich brought storms of nght· 1cy-makers to score political pomts
By TOM RAUM
wing cnt1cism on his bead prior to the rather than work toward a bipanisan
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON -Th1s year Republican congress10nalleaders aren't cel· April recess by abruptly suggesting plan. The polit1cs of deficit reduction
ebrating their first 100 days With hule to show in the way -of accomphsh· postponement of tax cuts until after has always been more poliucs than
ment, they 're shifting gears and changing plans instead
the budget blllancmg agreement was deficit reduction," the authors write.
"Plan A for. the most pan is exhausted We'll move on now to Plan B,"
Senate MaJOnty Leader Trent Lou observed the other day.
On the House side, Speaker Newt Gmgnch was already into his th1rd game
plan of the year. F1rst he ducked, then took a step to the left, then more recent·
WHAT.S Y~R
ly; a step back to the right
SOCIAL SECURITY
"I spent a coup I~ of months plannmg," Gingrich told CNN's Larry King.
" I thmk I got off message and I quit talking for a wh1le. I sort of h1d."
NUtt!BERAND ·
What a contrast to two years ago, when newly in-charge Republicans
MaTHE~~ AtAit&gt;Efi
turned their explos1ve first -! 00 days into a m1ghty celebratiOn - mciuding
a pnmc-tnne television address by Gingrich.
Today is the l()()th day of the 105th Congress. So far, httle legisla~on of
co nsequence has passed
Several h1gh-profile GOP imt1at1ves- a balanced budget amendment to
the Censutu uon and term limits - have gone down in defeat. Another key
part ol the "Contract W1th Amenca," - line-item ,veto powers- was ruled
unconsutuuonallas! week by a federal Judge.
,
Desp1te b1part1san vows to balance the budget by 2002, scant progress
has been made 10ward such a plan, even though White House and congresSIOnal negotiators are workmg this week to try to come up with one •
Lott sa1d the Plan A he was refernng to was workmg w1th Clinton on a
budget plan, and Plan B was for Congress to go it alone.
" We have plans A. B. C &amp; D." he added, but Without elaborating on C
or D. He also relented and said he'd give Plan A a few more days, smce budget negotiators were sllll at work.
Republicans retamed their majorities in both the House and the Senate
last November. But sometimes, to see and hear them, you wouldn't know

~ONGDO\~G,

Pomeroy • Mlddlepoi'O, Ohio

Chronic partisanship hobbles budget deals

The Daily Sentinel

M't

'Thncllly, Aprtl-17, 1817

••

Cotnmenta1y

•

•

/

I

�•

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

·Sports

~he Daily Sent~S,

..

Southern baseball
crew tallies 15~10
win over_Waterford

'nlllrldlr}',Aprtl 17,1117

Rio .dia,m ondmen drop four
consecutive MOC contests
Tax season is at waysa tough time
of the year, and it was especially
tough for the University of Rio
Grande -baseball squad as the Redmen dropped four consecutive MidOhio Conference games to Malone
College and Mt. Vernon Nazarene
College Monday earlier this week.
Monday's action saw the Red men
drop a pair of 9-7 decisions to Malone (11 - 16. MOC 4-5) in Canton.
Rio Grande took first inning leads in
hoth games, hut couldn't sustain
their advantage.
Sh~wn. Sommer went2-for-4 with
four RBI, in game one at Malone.

Sommer laced u three-run homer in
the seventh inning. Rimdy Kistemaker also went 2-for-4 W(th a pair -of
RBI on the strength of a two-run
· dinger In the first inning.
"
Sommer also homered in ga me
two. He was 2-for-4 with two RBI.
Jeskee Zan(ene took the loss in
game and Tom McGrath suffered the
defeat in game tw().
' .
Tuesday's games a1 Mt. Vernon
Nazarene weren't as closely con tested. The 15th ranked Cougl\fS runruled the Redmen 10-0 in the first
game and then came back with an
Il -l victory in the second half of the

twinhill.
Mike Vance went the distance in
game one and took the loss. Blu
Johnson was saddled with the defeat ,
in the second game. ·
Rio Grande (~·14, MOC 4-6} has
the rest of the week off to prepare for
18th ranked Ohio Dominican College llli the j&gt;anthers visit Stanley L.
E~ans Field Saturday at I p.m. to
battle the Redmen.'
The Redmen have just one more
regular season home game remaini~g. That's on Saturday, April 26
against Walsh at I p.m.

Softball Redwomen sweep
.Malone in doubleheader
The Uni~ersity of Rio Grande attack w·ilh three hits. two stolen
Redwomen were unstoppable · bases and one RBI. MetiS.alSisson
Wednesday as they swept the Lady landed one hit for. three RBI and
Pioneers of Malone College in Mid- stole one base.
· Michele Ulmer, Shellie Weiner
Ohio Conference softball action.
and
Billi McGhee each added two
Leading the league in team batting
average; the Redwomen hit seven hits, with Weiner and McGhee also
triples to contribute to the se t of vic- contriburing one RBI each. Bobhi
McGhee and Robin Cordle also
tories .
Rio Grande ( 16-20, MOC 3-9) knocked in a run each.
Freshman Jenny Murphy (5- 11}
got orr to a slow stan 'in game one;
trailing Malone 7-0 in the fou~th collected rhc victo~y for the Redinning. However. the Redwomcn women.
Game two brought even beuer
fought back to lie the ball game ~t
the end of se ven. lnnmg eight things for the Rcdwomen. us they
brought one run and a I0-9 vic lOry run-ruled Malone (8- 18. MOC 4- 10)
12-4 in six innings.
for Rio Grande.
Sagle again led the Redwomen
Roxanne Sagle le~ the offensive

with three htls, one stolen base and
two RBI. Ulmer had. two hits with
two RBI. Bobhi McGhee added two
hils for one RBI and Billi McGhee
one hit for two RBI.
· Freshman designated hiller Jen
Diederich also had lwo hits while
Cordle added one hit and Sisson one
hit and one stolen base.
Billi M.cGhee (1-1) garnered the
win for Rio Grande. ,
The Redwomen will travel to
Westminster College !Pa.) &lt;Jn Friday
and Grove City (Pa.) on Saturday.
Rio Grande will return home
Wednesday, April 23 to host the Col- ·
lege of Mt. St. J{"-eph. First pitch is
scheduled for 4 p.m.

By D.AVE HARRIS
Sentinel .Correspondent
The Wellston Golden Rockets
used two big innings to rout the
Mer gs Marauders 16-3 in Tri-Valley
Conferen·ce haseball action Wednesday at Wellston.
The loss was the lirsr of the seaso n in · the conference for the
Marauders as they dropped to 7-1 in
rhc Ohio Divi.s,ion and 8-3 overall. ct L:UUSC .
Wellston closed out their scoring
Meigs will play at Trimble on Fri~ay.
Dcspilc the loss Meigs is still in first with a solo run in the fourth inning
place a half game ahead Ill' Wellston and two runs in both the fifth and
in lhe Ohio Division.
sixth innings.
Meigs took an early 2-0 l~ad in
Meigs· added another run in the
rhe first inning. With one out. Brad fifth inning on a walk lO George, rwo
Whi1l111ch singled ~nd Tony Dug,(n _stolen ha.&lt;es and a fielder's choice oil'
followed with a home run •&gt;Ver the the htll'&lt;lf Dugan. Meigs scored their
toft-ce nter field fe nce.
final .run in the sixth innin[~con a sinMeigs rhreatencd in the top ofrhe gle by Ri ck Hoove r a Wellston error
scl'ond inning pulling runners on
and a single hy·Jeremiah Bentley.
fi rst ami second wirh one out, but the
George was the starter and loser
maroon and gold was unable to for Meigs dropping his record to 3'uusc anymore damage.
1 on lhc scttson with re liel'\~clp from
Bur in the horne half of the sec- Cullin Roush. The two comhined to
ond innin~ the wheels fell off the can give up' 14 hits, strike out three. walk

f

solrrttERN Mlll'MHIK STEEL DOOR UNITS

Chafin ' also had the big hat for
Wellston with three .hits including a
home run and two doubles. His
home run was a two run shoi in the
fifth inning. Vickers added a double
and two singles, and Pugh three singles.
. Hoover led Meigs wilh rwo sin'
glcs. Dugan · added his home run.
Brad Whitlatch, Chris Roush, Bent·
ley and R,oben Qualls all added singles.
lnuint: l!!!lb
Meigs
200-0 II 0=4- 7-4
Wellston
056-122-x=l6- 14- l
Scou George (lPJ. Collin Roush
(6) and Jason Mullen
Chulin and Stevci1
WP-Chafin (nht)
LP-Gcorge (3-1)

Population base dispute compels
Taiwan to withdraw from World Series
By MICHAEL RAPHAEL
Alloclated Press Writer
The crowds in Wilhamspon, Pa.,
used to boo when the team from Tai •
wtm took the field for another Lillie
League World Series championship
run.

Now, after 12 championships in
23 yca~s and numerous hlowout.viclorics during that span. Taiwan is
quitting Little League baseball over
a rule dispute .
"I thin~ that Taiwan looks l&lt;l it as
a symbol of pride." said David Tsui
nf -the Center for Taiwan , International Relations in Washington.
"Whichever team made it to the
· World Series - it has a lot of pres:
tige for that school or county. This is
a loss. "
Little league officials announced
.. on Wednesday that Taiwan would
not return to defend its title. Ollicials
said Taiwan broke ·league rules hy
drawing its players from an area with
too large a population. even though
they came from a singfe school.
·
. Rcprescnlati vcs from the Chinese
Taipei Ba&gt;ebttll Assqciation, the governing hody in Taiwan, met wit~ Lit; lie League ollicialsAprilll&lt;ldiscuss
other alleged violations. hut ended
up focusing talks on the population ·

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. League rules restrict teams from
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Rain suspends
Meigs-Wellston
softball game
The Meigs softball game with
Wellston was suspended in the lop of
the siKth inning due to rain.
· Meigs was at bat leading 6-4 with
nobody out and two runners on when
the JDRIC&gt; was called.
The game will be nnillhed when
Wellston vi•its Meigs on Wednesday.
April 30. The regularly-scheduled
game will follow.

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• COMPLETES SACRIFICE- Southern's Amber Thom.a (-ring
: llelmet) Ia thrown out at first baae, but not before getting 1aammate
: ·Ranae Turley to third on·a ucrlflce during Wednesday's .Hocking
· Division game against the visiting Waterford Wildcats. Southern
: won 11-5 In nine tnnlnga. (Photo by Scott Wolfa)
·

:softball Tornadoes
.
·;edge ·Wate.r ford .6-5
~in nine.;.inning affair

1 J " '/C'ooJ

J:..r~ 'lllorli • 14 9••9' .Sitrl

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Patience was a gr~at vinue for
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fespecially for sophomore catcher
:Ashlie Davis, who waited · for her
:nfth tum at bat in picking .out the
:right pitch ~nd deli.verihg a game·winning single in .Southern's 6-5
:exira inning win over league foe
:Waterford.
.
; Waterford tied the game in the
·seventh inning. S-S, then the bout
:went three additional frames (the
;honom ol' the ninth) before Davis
:brought honie Am her Thomas, who
•had singled and moved to second on
:Kim Sayre sacrilice burit.
. : Kim Sayre · was the · winning
'hurler of record for Southern, walk:ing just two, giving up si~ hits. fan:ning six and pitching tough in clutch
;situations. Southern made six errors ·
Tammy Huck was the WHS
~'tarter with four hits, nine walks and
:two Ks in four innings of work,
;heforc getting relic!; from' Cassie
•Harra, who suffered the loss in the
:tasl five innings of work despite a

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·HAS TROUBLE- Eastern first sacker Amanda Milhoan (left) has
't rouble .with a popup as Eagle second baseman Slephanle Evans
:COmea in behind Miller's Corrie Cook as Cook sands on first base
'during Wedrieaday'a Hocking Dlvlalon game at Eastern High School.
:The host Eagfas won 4·3.

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Eastern softball club
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Stun: lluur11: Mon.-811. 6:W 1\.111. to 8:1JO r .m.
Su1111Ry II :00 a.ril.

lt. 0:00 Jl.m,

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lOS l'a,ll: N.
.M. . .IMJI't, Obto_ rhnne: Ol4-II21J61
Store IMNn: ...,,.s.t, 7:00 1.m. to !fi:OO p ....
ht. 7:00 1.m. ta 3:00 p.m.

• A Patsy Acikcr liner on' the glove Amand:t Milhoan to rnuke the score
off Miller pitcher Amy "'ughes car- 3-3.
~astern was retired 1-2-3 in the
omed in the gap hetwecn shon and
·
six
th,
the in the seventh Sumpson ·
third, allowing Mindy Sampson to
score and give Eastern a dramatic 4- reached on an crr&lt;)r at third. The hall
3 win over league fllC Waterli1rd caromed into foul territory nnd then
Wednesday ni~ht durin~ softball Stimpson stule sc•·un~. Aciker then
hit her hurd. sinking.hnpr )hal rtcho·
&lt;~ction at Eastern High School.
Eastern keeps in contention .litr chcted off Hughes und into the grass
the Hocking Valley league race :11 6- fur a 4-3 Et!S :win. ·
Samp.son &lt;if EHS and Ltnning
2. two games hehind ·undefeated
llad
the game's lo~c hi I Eastern goes
(league) Southern.
Both pile hers hurled a whale of" to Symmes Valley Thursday. then
gumc ns both carried . one-hitters hosl Vinlitn County Friday.
'into the linn! inning. Winner Valerie loniDilll!llli .
000-300·0=~ - 1-4
Karr fanned four and walked just Mill~r
{K)()-030I=4- 1-6
three·in hurling the one-hit win. East· Eastern
WP-Karr
ern, however, committed six errors .
LP- Hughes
Hughes also hurled a one-hitter,
b.ut found herself on ihe losing end
of the 4-3 score. She fanned eight, -sports brlefs-walked · seven and hit one. Miller
uaaebau
m!Kie four errors, two cosily ones in
SANFORD. Fla. (AP} - With
the final inning.
.
the nation honoring Jackie Robinson
A Lanning two-run double was
as America's tirst -blacli major leathe highlillQl of a three-run Miller
fourth inning in which all the r;uns ,guer. Sanford wanls t~ apologize for
a longstanding "stam ... on our
·were unearned on two errors. EHS
thrcalcned in the third and fourth, t.lt soul."
Mon: than so yc11n1 ago, city officame up emp'iy. Eastern finally
cial¥
forced Robi115011 out of an exhisconld in the fiflli when Tracy White
bition
game between the Brooklyn
walked, and scored on Mindy SampDod,cn.and ils farm team to keep
.!1011'1 triple. Patsy Aciker walked,
him from playing on the same field
Sa~ 1tole home and Aeike
ncored on a millf'loyed ball hit by with white players.

Allh&lt;iugh they 'rc leaning wward ·
a linebacker. they could select a cornerhack if a highly regarded one is
still available. Otherwise, they're
ltKtking fur a linebacker with lhe
speed to fit into leBeau's wne-blitz
dclcnsive philosophy..
Alaha!lla's Dwayne Rudd and
Virginia's James Farrior and Jamie
Sharper arc rated· among ihc hcsr
linchuckers \tvailablc who lit the cri-.
teriu. R~dd is ~xpccted In he gone hy
the till!e the Bcngals ch'""c.
The te:un's lack of depth :tl linebucker was evident hL•t season when
lhvar lure knee ligaments in the 13th
· game. Rookie Tum Tumulty. good at
playing the run hut limited in pass
coverage, became 1hc slartcr.
-The Bcpguls won't know until
troining camp whether Tovar, ·.their
leading tackler in- 1994 and 1995, is
ready to return.
LeBeau is switching the Bcngals
from a thrce-linchackcr to a fourlinehucker alignment, puuing .cven

-Sports briefs-Basketball NEW YORK (AP}- A city cop
who arrested Anthony Mru;on last
·summer was stripped of his gun and
badge while investigators check
charges that he tried to shake down
the Charlolle. Hornets star for
$100,000.
The ollicer, Thomas Fursa, 34, a
probationary sergeant at the time,
helped handcufl' the former New
York )(.nicks' player last July when
the forWard scuffied with about I0
police ollicers after getting a parking
ticket.
Bas!!rtball
VILLANOVA, Pa. (AP) - Tim
Thomas is· ~vin1 Villanova after
only one season lo enter the NBA
draft, a:cordins to published reports .
The forwlrd avcn\icd 16.9 points llli
.a freshman.
'

MISSOULA, Mont. (AP~ - The
University of Montana says lhc
Wyoming Cowboys have canceled
their scheduled Aug . 30 game ut
Laramie aguin.'t the Gri'a tics.
B.ut Wyoming says it isn't a ~one
deal.
more of" premium on the posirion.
"They dropped us." Montana
They also could usc u nose tackle.
coach Mick Dennehy tuld Thr
Last year, the Bengals selected Billings Guzelle. "We now have to
offensive tac~lc Willie Anderson to take a look around and sec what is
improve " chronically weak line. hesl l(~r us.''
They 'll look for more line help
Wyoming is working on nn a[li'CCagain in the later rounds.
nicnt to play at Ohio State, and thul .
The only ~ ignilicant free agent would conflict with the Munlan11
loss in the offseru;on has hecn at run- game. but there is' no lirm commitning back. Garrison Hearst, daimed ment yet, said Tim Harkins, a.'S islam
off waivers during training camp, left sports information directirr for
for the San ·Francisco ·49ers after · Wyoming.
leading the aenguls in, rushing with
"If this happens. we will h:we to
move that (Montana) gumc, hut this
847 yards.
.
Carter. relegated to backup last Ohio State game's not linalizcd ·
seuson a&lt; he ~arne back from knee yet," he said Wednesday.
surgery• .will move intO Hcar~t 's
The game at Ohin State would be
a
henc
lit for the Black Couches
role. The Bcngals could drall u run. nint hack in the later 111unds.
Association.
The Bengals this week signed
Dennehy speculated Wyoming is
fullback Sconie Graham. a free . hedging on the cunccllatiun hecause
ugcnl l(rrmcrly with the Minnesotu ,it hu.• nut yet signed the contract wtth
Vikings.
Ohio Stale .

GOLFING NEWS

'

'

"We've pretty much ·heen tol~
that we need tit I&lt;Klk elsewhere." he
said.
''This screws US.)Ip tcrrihte. This
fs awful lute ,;_ ever~onc hus got
thei r schedules set," Dennehy suid.
'' I'm not sure what we' re going to
llo. ''

Dennehy said hC hopes 1&lt;1 gc.t an
Aug. 30 game scheduled hel'ore
school is nut so his players have an

opponent to prepare

i(tr

und think

ahnut uvcr the summer.

Wyoming, n Division I• A sch&lt;Kll,
linishcd the 1996 sca&lt;oh I0-2und in
first piacc In the Western Athletic
Conference's Pucilic Division.

·

Montana linishcd 14- 1. falling to
Marshall in the NCAA 1-AA nutionul championship game.
Contract terms require Wymnirtg
ln pay Montana if the gumc is cuncellcd .
UM athlcrics director W:tyne
Hogan said he's still hoping 11 gainc ·
with Wyoming. will wprk uut.
"Nothing can huppcn . until
(Wyoming} .tells me we're nut playing." he said.

by Mike Hensen

Small Company's·
New GolfBall Fli~s
Too Far; Could Obsolete
Many Golf Courses
Pro· Hits 400-Yard Tee Shots
during Test Round
Want to Shoot an Eagle or 'IWo ?
YALESVILLE, CT - A small golf company in Connecticut has created a
powerful, new ball that flies like a U-2,
putts .with the steady roll of a cue ball
and bites the green on approach shots
like a dropped cat. But don't look for it
on weekend TV. Long-hitting pros
could·make a joke out of some of golf's
finest courses with it. One pro who
tested the ball drove it 400 yards,
reaching the green on ·all but the
longest par-four's.
Scientific tests by an independent
lab using a hitting machine prove the
ball out-distances ten major brands
dramatically.

virtually locked out of these outlets.
TV advectising is too expensive to
buy on your own, ·at least for us.
"Now, you've seen how far this ball
can fly. Can you imagine a pro usiqg
it on TV and eagle·ing par-four 's'? He
would turn the course into a parthree, and real men don ~ t play
par-three's. This new fly-power forces
us to sell it without relying on pros or
pro-shops. One way is to sell it direct
from our plant. That way we can
keep the name printed on the ball a
secret that only a buyer would know.
There!s more to golf than tournaments, you know." ·

.
I

I

"We keep the name on
the ball a secret"

. The company guarantees a golfer
a prompt refund if the new ball
cut five to ten strokes off
Ball gains altitude quickly, doesn't
his or her average score . Simply
· then sails like a glider
return the balls- new or used- to
the address below.
"No one else would dare do that,"
The ball's extraordinary dist'ance
comes partly from a revolutionary boasted the company's director.
new dimple design that keeps the
If you would like an eagle or two,
here's
your .best chance yet. Write
ball aloft longer. But there's also a
secret change in the core that makes your name and address and "Code
it rise faster off the clubhead . NameS" (the ball's R&amp;D name) on a
.Another change reduces air drag. piece of paper and send it along with
The result is a ball that gains alti- ' a check (or your credit card number
tude quickly, then sails like a glider. and expiration date) to National Golf
None of the changes is noticeable in Center (Dept. SN-1089), 60 Church
Street, Yalesville, CT 06492. Or phone
the ball itself.
·
· Despite this extraordinary perfor- 800-285-3900 anytime. No P.O. boxes.
mance, the company has a problem. A . One dozen ~S" balls cost $24.95, two
to five dozen are only $22.00 each, six
spokesman put it this way:
·"In golf you need endorsements and dozen are only $109.00. You save
TV publicity. This is what gets you in $40.70 ordering six. Shipping and
the pro shops and stores where 95% handling is only $4.50 no matter how
of all golf products are
. Unless lar'e your order. SpecifY white or Hithe pros use your ball on
, you're Visaon yellow.
ollootE-..... 1111 " " ' - • •
'

'

. Wyoming cancels football .
·date with Montana in·search
of appointment with OSl!

Bengals say defense
is focus of selections
in Saturday's draft

good effort. She walked three,
fanned none and gave up only three .
hits. Waterford made just one error.
Southern hitters were Renee Turley witn u· 2-4 night (two singles);
Davis u perfect 1-1 with three walks,
Thomas a single; Cypthiu Caldwell
a single, Regina Manuel a single and · By JOE KAY .
Ashley McKinney a single.
CINCINNATI (AP} - Middle
Waterf(trd hitters were Lori Miller linebacker Steve Tov~r is rehabbing
·who was 3-5, Tiffany Neill a single, · a rebuilt knee. Coordinator Dick
Jennifer Nichols a single and Renee· LeBeau is drawing upa 3-4 defense.
Parks a single.
There's no mystery about the
Th~ win was a big win for coach
Cincinnati Bengals: draft-day plans
Howie Caldwell's troops, who · this season. Their needs are more
remained undefeated at 8-0 in the · del1ncd and their dratling position
Tri-Valley Conference Hocking less appealing tliun in the past five
Division, two games up on the near- years, when they had the first pick in
est competition.
..
·
the draft or somethi_ng close to it.
The Tornadocs .go at it again FriWhen it comes time for the 14th
day in another league game wirh pick Saturday, the Bengals will be
Belpre in Racine. ·
looking at either a linebacker or .a
lnoint: ll!llb
cornerback to help fix their main
Waterford
100-102- 100=5-6-1
problem the last three years: the
Southern.
201-200-00 I =6-7-6 defense.
WP-Sayre
Overlooked in the 7-2 finish
LP-T. Huck
under coach Bruce Coslctlast season
was the defense's continued ineptitude. The Benguls gave up the second-most passing yards in the NFL
· and were ranked 25 out of 30 tea~ns
in yards allowed.
.
Their ollcnse. was one of the
league's 10 .best, hut the defense
negated much of what it accom' was an 8-8 record
.
plishcd. The result
that was the best since 1990, hut still
not good ·enough to make the playoils.
For the first time since 1992, the .
Bengals do not have one of the top
I0 picks. A team that ~rafted Dan
Wilkinson and Ki-Jana Caner as No.
I picks in consecutive years is going
to play more of a waiting game this
time amum.l. . ·
Gcneralnumager Mike Brtlwn is
not inclined lotr~dc up to get a hipher pick. The Bengals most likely will
wuit to sec who 's left when their I urn

..

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• •TT~tmral Sill • 9alr.,.,iurl Slrtl • 'Brir(ruolrl

i\1.\l\l:

Front Wheels

; . •I

INSULATED STEEL ENTRY DOORS .

'

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•OIL CHANGE
FRONT END
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ALIGNMENT

·

3/0RH BR DECO-FAN METAL
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BRASS DECORATIVE GLASS
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D~
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CA.ftADCO' S H,._LL~AftK HJNO&amp;D ..ATIO 000 .. $ . •

n.

oooa IYITawa

DC-33J

1992. high-density nrcas have heen Aukcn . u spokesman for Little
ahle to tic their leagues to school leaauc Baseball.
"They said they would have grctd
populations; one league is permitted
per 1,000 students in grades kinder- difficulty in making that stick," Van
Auken said. "When they left, they
. garten thmugh seventh grade.
said
thCy wanted to go home and
In Taiwan. single l eague~ were
pulling from schools wirh more than' basically think abou1 it."
3,000 chi ldren, said Lance Van

TATE

·A

~·

two whtlc hitting one batter.
Chafin went the route for the
R,ockets giving up seven hits, walking two, hit one halter and strildng
out seven.

Waterford hitters were Skinner
and Jones each 2-4 with singles each
The Southern Tornadoes scored. hy Jeremy Crock, Greene. Heiner,
early and often, nearly needing every Fouss and Huck.
run they manufactured en route to
Southern hitters were Maynard
posting a IS-10 triumph over league who was perfect at 4-4 with a single,
foe Watefford Wednesday night in double and two triples, while also
Raeone.
·
reaching base a til'th time by getting
Southern scored II runs in the hit with a pitch. Maynard had four
first inning and needed every one RBis as did clean-up hitter Joe Kiri .
before Chad Blount settled down to by. who was 2-4 with a single and
·I..
stifle a gallant WHS comeback bid. triple.
I'.
· After a one-out walk to Matt Dill,
Southern pitching gave up ten
,.
Maynard tripled, followed by four runs: nine hits, fanned eight, walked
consecutive ·singles (l(.irby, Nate l"tve and the SHS defense made three
Sisson, Travis Lisle and Pete Sisson). errors. Jesse Maynard started, but
Billy Young· and Corey Williams developed arm problems and had to
walked. ·
exit, while Billy Young stepped .in in
Dill singled, Maynand was hit and relieL He also went one he fore Chad
: l(.irby tripled in his second plate Blount came in to extinguish the
FIRES TO PLATE- SOuthern pitcher Jeaaa MSynard fires • pitch
appearance of the inning. Nate Sis- Wildcat bats after one rough inning
to the pla1a before auffertng an arm Injury during Wednelday'l TVC
son wrapped things up wiih a single of work. Blounl picked up the win · game against Waterford. Maynard, who !lad to quit pitching, want .
and Travis Lisle reached on an error for Southern.
. 4 for 4ln leading the Tornadoes to a 1&amp;-,10 victory. (Photo by~
to make the score Il-l .
Sou.thern hosts Belpre Friday.
Wolfe) ·
·
·
'
Southern needed the ten run pad lonina l!l1llli
as Waterford scored once in the sec- Waterford
118-000-0= 10-9-3
ond and eight times in the third to cut Southern
(11)02-100, 1=15 12 3
the spread· to Il - l 0. Blount got
WP-Biount
warmed up as he went and ·pitched
LP-Skinner
four great innings to claim the win.

By SCOTT WOL'FE
SentiMI Con.apondant

Baseball Marauders fall 16-3
to Wellston for first division loss
lor thp Marauders. Wellston (9-3 &amp;
6-1) took advantage of two singles,
a double a walk and rwo Marauder
errors to plate five runs and take u 53 lead .
It was more of the same in the
third inning as Wellston plated six
more runs 10 blow the game wide
open . Three singles and two doubles
and a walk aided the Golden R&lt;x:k-

The o.lly Sentinel• .,... 5

' .

•

'

I

'

�..
.

,

~•

Thurscllly, Aprll17, 1817

Middleport, Ohio

~. Aprll17, 1817

Pomeroy • MldciiJport, Oblo

·araves pouod Reds 7-1 to collect fifth co~secutive _win
By PAUL rtnraL4RI
ATLANTA (AP) - 0rq Mild·
SO was Chipper
Jones. Still, the Atlanta Braves
l looked healthier than the Cincinnati
' Reds.
With Terrell Wade makina his
, first start of the season in place of
: Maddux and Mike Mordecai fill\ng
' in at third for Jones. Atlanta won its
; fifth in a row Wednesday with a 7-1
: rout of the Reds.
,
The Braves even started Tony
j Oraffanino al second in place of

dux was ailing.

l

Mll'k Lemke and no one could tell
much of a difference in the defend·
ing NL champion.
"Just because it doesn't have
Oreg Maddux or Chipper Jones or
Mark Lemke in lhe ballgame, that
doesn't mean we're just givmg up,"
said Mordecai, who went 2· for-4
with his first triple in the majors.
" We play haro and come get you.
We know what it takes to win."
Wade allowed only three hits and
an unearned run before he came out
after 4 J/3 innings. He struck out SIX

and didn 'I have a ·Walk.
"I thought he threw extremely
well," manager Bobby Cox said.
"To make a spot start like that when
he didn't even know he would be
pitch(ng, he did extremely well."
Wade. who has pitched out of the
bullpen with me )}raves in a fourmao I'Oiation for the early part o( the
season, learned after he got to the
ballpark that he wru; starting in ·place
of Maddux, who has a strained hamstring.
"I was .watching TV," Wade said.

.

"It felt great to know I wu goina to relief. People say that's a problem for
start, but once they told me I had to them. but it hun't been lately."
start f01;using on my game plan and
Jones wu limited ID pillciHiittinl
lookins at the scouting reports." .. because of a strained pain muscle,
Paul Byrd (1-0). Mike Bi~lecki ·but Kenny Lofton went 4-for-5,
and Mark Wohlers held the Reds hit· including his first horner for Atlanta.
less over the final 4 213 innings to and raised his battina average 10
complete the three-hitter, which .406. He also scored two- runs and
improved the Braves record to 8-1 at had a stolen base.
new Turner Field.
.
Jeff Blauser. hitting .429. "'!Cnt 2"Looks like the Braves are right for-2 with a homer andtwoRBis for
at home here," Cincinnati starter the Braves, who are batting .306 as
John Smiley said. "Everything is ,a learn and have won II of 12 since
working for them. Even the middle
'

openin&amp; the season with two losses.
"We're on a roll right now," Tom
Ol~vine said. "We warit to keep it
going. We almost hale to have an off
day tomorrow."
Atlanta. which had an NL-Iow of
83 stolen bases last season. js running wild with Lofton and another
. newcomer, Michael Tucker, at the
top of the order. Thcker also had .a
stolen base. giving tile Bmves.16thls
season. and the other players seem to
be following their lead. '·

Sen. Johnson- hopes .proposed .
legislation will save young live~

,.

'

:~ vaughn's homers help Red Sox get 11-6 win over Tribe · . ..
: By HOWARD ULMAN
; BOSTON (AP) _ The Boston
. ! Red Sox lead the American League
: in home runs and their biggest slug: ger finally is doing his pan.
• Mo Vaughn didn't hit a homer or
; drive in a smgle run in Boston's first
111 games. He broke through with a
: solo homer Monday night, then hit
• two tbree-run homers Wednesday
• night.
.
·.
They were the diflerence m the
Red Sox's fourth straight high-scoring victory, 11-6 over the Cleveland
Indians.
"Thai's what Mo does. He hi!•
the ball hard," shortstop Nomar

Garcmparra said. ''We pick each oth- manager Mike Hargrove said.
er up."
• I "Whe~ Mo gets hot, he's real
Of Boston 's moe batters Wednes- tough.
.
.
day, six are hitting .309 or better. In
Vaugh~ has h1ttwo h~mers 111 a
their last four ga_mes, the Red Sox ga"!e 15 t1mes and t~ree once. Monoutscored opponents 35- 10 and, rn days homer was h1s first _srnce he
two of them, every man in the line- had th~ee last Sept. 24 ·agamst Balup got a hit.
umore s D,av•d Wells.
.
"Everybody's contributmg. It's
. Boston .s Tim N~e~nng and
nola onc-inan show," sa1d Vaughn, Cleveland s Man Wrlhams also
who matched his_ career high of ~ix homered as the Red So~ took the
RBJs. " It was dehmtely a rehel. I ve league .lead With 23, tw~ more th~n
got my feet on the ground now and the lnd~ans. Boston also IS secondm
I can s1ar1 dnving the ball. Thar 's runs wuh 88, one less than Detroit. .
what I'm supposed to do."
W1lhams h11 a two-r~n homer oft
"Mo Vaughn is one of the pre- Stev~ Avery ( 1-1) that t~ed the score
micr hitters m the game," Cleveland 5-5 m the three-run filth m a con-

frontation invo!ving two players in
theu first yea~ m t~e AL.
.. .
It was W11lrams ~':'' homer ~n h1s
new league. after h1tttng 247 ·~· 10
se.asons with the San Franc1sco
Grants.
"It doesn 't matter ·unless you ·
win," Williams said.
It was Avery's nrsl AL VICtory
after leaving Atlanta as a free agent.
He knows he didn't pitch well five runs in live innings - hut docsn't apologize for getting the victory.
"Over the last couple of years I
haven't gotten a lol of wins," Avery
said. "I pitched better than maybe

my win totals show so I'll never take
a wm for granted." .
. .
The Re~ Sox. q~uckly recla1med
the lead alter Wdhams homer w1th
hve runs m t~c Sixth. B_ill Ha~lman
doubled one m and Jell Frye smgled
m anolher before Vaughn's. Imer
a_gamst Stev~ Kl~ne clea~cd the nghtheld lence '" lront ol the Boston
hull pen _lor a 1~5 lead ,
HIS,Iust hom~~.~ude ~he score 52m the lourth agamst Chad Ogca (2I)., .

,

.
.,
.
II Mo s .~tartmg to ~~~~ a little
coml&lt;~~able, Avery smd, 11 can gel

scary.

.

:·ch~~

was up with a .!ot

o~_his

pllche~, Hargrove sa1d. ~c ave

good puchmg, but everyo~e s trymg .
to ma~e the perfect p11ch..and stnke
out everybody they face . ·
But as Boston kepi putting men
on base, Cleveland's piiChers couldn't atlord to issue walks so they had
to keep the hall around lhe plate. And
that made their pitches CaSler 1n hit.
"The liule things aren'r gmog our
way right now." Ogc" smd . allcr
Cleveland's lounh consecuiiVC loss.
··we ·make one little miStake and it
urcns I he llnodgutes."

·Cubs set league mark for worst start after Rockies' 4-0 victory

By The Associated Press
The Chicago Cubs haven 'I won
Ihe World Series smce 1908 and they
haven't won a pennanl since 1945.
Now they can't win at all.
.
The Cubs set the mark for worst
start in National League history,
making three more errors Wednesday
as they extended the1r losing streak
to 12 Yi1th a 4-0 loss to I he Colorado
Rockies.
"That is the worst baseball game
I've seen played at this level m terms
,

of mistakes that were made and
offensively and defensively;" Cubs
manager Jim Riggleman said.
"We're unhappy about the losing
strea'k, bul all of us arc totally
ashamed of the ballgamc today ....
Maybe things have to get as bad as
they can get before they get better.
But today il go1 as had as it can get."
The Cubs have lost26 of their last
28 going back to last season, and
have the founh -worsl stan ever,
trailing the 1'104 Washington Senators and 1'120 Dctrmt T1gers (each 013) and the 1988 Baltimore Orioles
(0-21 ).
Ch1cago, wliich has 21 errors this
season, broke the modern NL record
of 0-10 set by Atlanta in 1988 and
the overall NL record of 0-11 by I he
1884 Detroit Wolverines.
"Today. hopefully we hil rock

bollom and we can move up from
there," said Frank Cas'tillo (0-3).
At Wrigley Field, Roger Bailey
(2-0) p1tched a five-hiller for h1s first
career shutout. Colorado won 1ts
sixth stra1ght road game, tying a
team record set in 1993.
In other NL games, San Francis~
co heat Philadelphia 6-5, San Diego
heat Pillsburgh 7-5, Los Angeles beat
New York 5-2, Florida beat St. Louis
2-1 and Houston IJeat Montreal 10-

2.
Giants 6, Phillies 5
Glenallen Hill homered twice
and drove in four runs, and visitinl!
San Francisco scored twice without
a hit in the lOth inning. The Giants,
who overcame a 4-1 deficit, have
won s1x straight and at 10-3 are off
to their best start since 1987.
Hilrs second homer, a two-ru9

shot otT Ricky Bottahc&lt;i,tied it in the shot In make it6-5 . Trevor Hoffman
ninth. Reggie Harris(~ I) walked the
fur live nuts for his third save.
bases loaded in the lOth, and Hill got.
Steve Cooke ( 1-2) was tagged lo&gt;r
an RBI when third baseman Scott six runs in 4 2/3 innmgs and walked
Rolen made a wide throw lo the plate five .
on his grounder. Bill Mueller hit a
Dodgers 5, Mets 2
sacrifice fly for a 6-4 lead.
Pedro Aslacio (2-0) took a no-hitJim Poole (1 -0) pitched a hitless ter into the eighth before allowmg a
ninth, and Rod Beck got his major leadoff double to Carlos Bacrga, and
league-leading eighth save in eight Brett Butler matched his career high
appearances.
with five hils.
Padres 7, Pirales 5
Darren Drcifort, Mark Guthrie
Fernando Valenzuela ( 1-1) made and Todd Worrell finiShed the comhis second strong start against the . bined .one-hiller at Shea Slad•um,
Pirates in e•ght days, allowing five
with Worrell getting three ouL~ for his
h1ts in seven innings and leaving fourth save :
with a 6-1 lead at P1ttsburgh.
Rookie Wilton Guerrero hit a ·
R.elievcr Darin Veras consecutive two-run homer off Rick Reed (0-1),
homers by Tony Womack and Jcr-- and Eric Karros hit a two-run homer
maine Allensworth to start the off Brian Bohanon.
eighth, and Kevm Elster followed
Marlins 2, Cardinals 1
Kevin Young's single with a two-run
Gary Sheffield's leadoff homer in

the third broke a 1-1 lie. and Pat
Rapp (2-0) and two relievers held
visiting St. Louis lu five hils. Rubh
Ncn pitched a une-h1t ninth for hiS
founh save.
Sheffield, who· has reached base
safely m all 13 !!ames this season,
connected otT Donovan Osborne (02) for h1s second homer this year.
Aslros 10, Expos 2
Shane Reynolds (2-1) pi!chcd a
three-hitter for his second complete
game and added a two-run double in
a six-run lh1rd at the Astrodome.
It was a , big mghl for Expos
reliever Dustin Hennanson. too. The
right-hander hit a two-run homer in
his first at-bat, becoming the lirst
pitcher in five years 10 hit a homer
in his first major-league at-bat.
Marc Valdes (0-2) allowed six
runs and six hils in 2 2/3 innings.

Cavaliers beat Magic 78-63,to stay in contention for playoff spot
those things?
We4nesday night. "The cnt•c•
By KEN BERGER
"We're going down fighting,"
picked us to win 20 or 30 games anyCLEVELAND (AP) - The
way."
said
Tyrone
Hill,
who
had
19
points
.Cleveland Cavaliers arc not going
By bcatin~ the playoff-bound
away. They 're not g•ving up, nollis- and I0 rebounds as Cleveland stayed
lcmng 10 the critics, nol decidmg·to in·conlention for the eighth and final ' Magic. Cleveland kept alive the
playoff spot in the East with a 78-63 possibility that the final Eastern
he content with a louery pick .
4'ictory_
ov~r the Orlando Magic
Conference berth could come down
When have lhey ever done any of

to· their game Sunday against the
Wa.•hington Bullets.
The Cavs' victory and Washington's 103-'10 win over Indiana elimmatcd the Pacers and kept the Bullets one game ahead of Cleveland
w1th lwo to play. Washington can

clinch Friday if lhey bearthe Mag1c
and if Cleveland loses to Detroit.
If Cleveland and Washington end
up tied. the Cavs hold'' the edge
because they have a better record
against conference playoff teams -

7-20 compared with 6-19 for Washington.
"Now we have Detroit on Friday
night. and we have to play t~c same t
way so it all comes down to Sunday
afternoon." Cavs coach M.ikc Fratcllo said.

Scoreboard
Allmlln 7, CINCINNATI I
loli Angtlt5 :t N Y Me•s 2 ~
Colnmdo 4. Chu.:o1go Cub~ 0
S,Ln DaCtlLI 7. Pinsburgh S
Fl(mdaa 2. St . U1uis I
Snn Ftun.:u~&amp;: n b . Phil:uklphm S (10}
Hnuston 10. Mnntrca\1

Baseball
AL standings
t::a~trm

Ialll

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!ill

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. . IJ

\

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h

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~7 1

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New York .. . . :\

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IJ

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Toniahl's

Toniaht's aames
Seattll! atlknnr. 'I pIll
Gulden Sll1l1: at Ut o•h. 9 p.m
Ptlnl:.nd 111 Vuncouvcr. 1011 m.
S.tcram~:uto 111

••mes

Di•Won
-'

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~
CI.EVf.I.ANI&gt; .. ...:t
Clucaat' . .. .. A

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1'

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Wednesday•s scures
BtlSftHI

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tdilwauk~o~

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,

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Se'dllk 7. IMmu \
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CLEVELAND (I..J.lfll!l. O-n ut Bu:~w n

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Tcu~ tOii\'t!f 0- 1)
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•
Baltintort (Mus:uml I· /) ;~t ( "hu;ai!n
Whir~ So11.1Darwln 0-0) 1 It~ p.m.

Friday's pmes
Ballhnnre (Key l-0) 11f OOllton (Cwr·
LkMI l· ll. fi :O~ l"·nl'
Mt lwbukl!c (McDll DUid 1· 11 111
CLEVELA ND (J . M'"Dowcll 0. I J. 7:0'i
...

Oakland {Ttl~bcdi!'r 0· 11 111 Dt"trllil

N,·Y, YnnkC~:I 4Ml:od1~ 0·1) at Chi~· a.

tt' Whitt St~x (Naviii"''U 1-01. K:O:'i p.n1.

TMttnlo (H~niJen 0· 1) al Tcs.us
(P\Wiik. 1- 1). )! : ~~p. m.

Minec101:1 IF. ROOriJutZ 0..21 Ill
11

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lie (Sanik.-n 0-.\), 10·05 p.m

.: r..
l!ll:
Atbnla ............ II

Lld.

Florida .................... 9

) .7116
4 .691

M~l ................ ~

1

417

10 .1116
10 .1.11 ,
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/ tfoiJtOR , ...............9
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CINCIIiNAn ...: .. .'1

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y-M1.ml1. ...... · ... no 20
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lkriWT ... . ..... 20

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Friday's ~ames

2 1 '~

l~

Bloseball
Amrtltan l.a:•ttue
ut:rworr TIGI:RS. Lk•ittnmcd 01:
Vmn· ('ulcman lnr :l~s•ttnnttnt . A~tiv.an.-.1
INF Phtl N~·,· •n fmm !he I '\-d:..ty lll~itbk.-.1
lisl
MINNhStri'A 'I"'Vw'INS A~•h·aMI OF
- Ruh~w Kelly 1n1m 1\.d,l)'. ~lhl\•d list
Oplltllk.'tl 01' Hl'l.'nt 111\.'dc tu S111t l..•kl· ul
tl~ P:k.'llio.: (\•~ ll.cu~uc
TI~ XAS kAN(il; kS. Alit:! (tnt:l.l tW
Wurn:n New son It) Tuba ltl IIIL' r ciotS
lxill(UI! un lnJUI')' n:h:~billllllltm a~Mgn·
II~Rt

TORONTO DL.UI: Ji\ YS: Aelivah:d
OJ· Ja..:ub BNRlfiCid Irom lhc I !'i•di1y dis·
nb l~"lli~t . Ojltiulll:d Outfit:ltJer Shuanm•
" Slew an WU!I lljlUIJili.!IJ to S)'rlk.'U!K: of Ill\.'
lnti:tnaiKIIUII~;tplt!'

' NIIIonoiLHt..

CINCINNATI REDS Al-11\'llCOO RHP
Jcl'f' Br~n1lc:y rrum the U ~y d{sllbh.-d
1111. St:nt INF-OF Eric Owi!RII anJ RHP
Scutt Strvk."C lu lndian.1•olil ('' t~ Amcr•
il.'lll ASIOI.ialiot~ .

..._

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

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•

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liM. Pl..... (l Cllrll'homls Oft lht lnjund

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WASHINGTON 8Ul.l..£TS· AchY•·

... C '-"-ao WiNi- r..., ,.,. i .....
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CINCINNATI BENOALll: Si1ped
F8 Scotde ~ 10 a
VOitnlct.

·-

•

Tran saction s

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Irllll

ln. The
• POINT PLEASANT REGISTER.
• GALLIPOLIS DAII'X TRIBUNE
•-POMEROY BAITY SENTINEL

St l..c)lll• "' llctnlll, 7·]0 rIll.
l~lnMmltlll "' 1&gt;-.III ;L~ . M1• m.
t'h• ~·aj.!u at Culnr;klu. K·:to )l.m.
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7

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• . . - -···
.... ·····'

'f41hiaht's '·aames

:I&lt;!•·q

Sun 1\ni(lfl\o .......... 20 60
VIMICOU\l-'f .......... 1.1 67

• AL standings

•

score~
S1 Luui ~ 2. lA:tn1it 0
l)alhL" ~. l~hnumun .\
CulnrmJn h. Clu~·•\'-n U
/\lmhdm -'· PhtJCI\111; 2

r\ll•ntlt OM!$iun'

1'1.111.

(8rocu•l 0.1 ). 7:0~ p Rl.

""

Wednesday'•

MLmlr~·.,l

.• ·A SPECIAL SECTION
,

first-round

EASTERN CONFERENCE

x·Orlandu . ..

10 :tO

NHL playoffs

. NBA standings

Oaklalld (Pricln 1-0) at Tnomh'l (Ha•

M)I Ill

Hockey

Cuy 0

Tonichl '• pmes

Wa~hmg11111 .

)l .m

Basketball

· •Mtnnl."'".tlt 4, ~nillk'lm :!

JIUit0.0) . 1 2:~~Jl . Al

'

NY MetqCiurk 0-11. 7.40p .m
, Ati11Pin (Oit~vlnc 2-0) :11 Cillnradn
[Wnp,lu 2·0), IJ.O:t p m ""
H.lll1S11m tHIUIIIltuu 1-21 ut Lu ~ 1\ni!~' ­
lcs tM.trlllk'l 1· 1). Ill 0~ r m
I'ILlftdol (A Lci11.:r 2·1) at S;m Fr:mc:•~­
cntGarU~t~.•r I· IJ. IU05jl.m

rn

Dillla.~ at Hous1on. H .10 p m
I.~- L:tkllr ~ :u L,A Cllp)II:U,

Muntrc,,J (C Pcret 2·0) "' Philadcl-

t..bicattu Wlmc Sox IJ , ll.llllnlltrc .l

Tc•a.• 2,

Orl~ub.lu

11hiil &lt;M.4'itl!f 1-1 ). 7:0:\ p.m.
CINCINNATI (Hurhn 2· f) ut P•n~­
htlf}!.h (Cill'1.lov,1 1· 1). 7 05 p.m
Chk:lf.O Cub5 (Mulhull:md 0-2) :11

.~

Jcn;cy :u Mmnu. 7. ;\0 p m

Turuntu a1 Chnr1t1111:. 7 :m p 111.
CLEVELAND 111 lXU'tltl , 1 lO·r n1
Milw&lt;~uk'-'\": al MimM:liVIn.,l&lt; r m.
IJ!w.k!mx at San Amunio. KJl m.

Friday's games

I

I.

I tl ~0

Friday'o aames

ptna tM:Iduro 0-2). 7:0~ p.m.

Mllw.~t~ki.'C .......6
MIIII)L"'IUiil
.
7

tOikl!n .

lndmn:~

S. J ..nu1~ (StoiiWmyn= 0.1) :11 Hnr1d:t
(K Brvwn 2·0), I :t~ )l.lll.
CINCINNATI tMmj!.:m ().()) 111 Pimhur~h tl..cmi7JI 1-0}. ? ·O"i p.m
~hlllln!ui(Bull•ngcr 0·2 ) .11 Ph•ladd-

c~ntral

Lh

1'-Rl

ADVERTISING DEADLINE:

mURSDAY, APRIL 24, 1997.- 12 NOON
INSERTION DATE:
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 1997
,,

Call 992-:2155
For More Information
Dave Harris - ·E xt. 104 ·
Bob Atwooo - Ext I 05

~·~
.
HISTORIC. SITES VISITED - Moi"tday'e tour

U.S. Army paym81tlr, who wae mortelly
of the Buffington IJiend Betllefleld lncluclecl wounded at the battle. John Switzer, weather
stope st varloue historic eltel Including thle · collimnlst for The Columbus Dispatch, records
mO!'IUmtnt dedicated to Mljor Daniel McCook, the Information contalnec! on the r:nonument

Battlefield supporters sponsor
tour of Buffington Island site
Continued from page 1 ·
they reached Meigs County, with
the local citizenry indignant over
the earlier raid, the ·raiders had not
encountered any resistance. The
locals' op)iosition -- which included the burning of bridges and
shooting at the raiders -- ultimately allowed Union soldiers and,
gunboats to intercept Morgan a\
· p ortan
I d. .
At Portland, Gloeckner, wearing
the uniform of a Union sergeant,
poinJed out where Morgan's men
were hemmed in by Union cavald
ry and infantry, militiamen an
gunboats.
·
The battle was almost unique in
that it included elements of cavalry (horse soldiers), infantry (foot
soldiers) and naval forces (gunboats) in addition to local militia
members.
Gloeckner showed where Morgan's men fonned their first defensive line between the river and a
hill in response 10 the Union threat.
Al firs( it appeared the Confedcrate cavalrymen would prevail in
their goal of escaping into Virginia.
"He held his own and even took
some Union prisoners," Gloeckner
.said,
Then the battle turned into a
rout when Union reinforcements approached from another direction
and gunboats opened up with their
naval cannon, firing round after
round .. including chained rounds
consisting of two cannonballs connccted by shon chains -' into lhe
Confederates.
During the hattie, the u.s.
Army · paymaster, Major Dame I
McCook, was mortally wounded.
McCook was the patriarch of the
Fighting McCooks consisting of
himself. his eight sons, his brother, and his five sons. who foughl
for the Union during the war.
Gloeckner's w1fc. Sally. dressed m
Civil War civilian all ire. described the
battle from the women's point of
view.
The women of old Portland were
forced to prepare a meal for the
invading rebels, she said. Although
they resented the intrusion. they put
away their pride and prepared a

sumptuous feast. she added. '
Their daughter, Carrie. was
dressed in period mourning attire.
Mourning was a very formal affair,
strictly observed in the Victorian era,
Mrs. Gloeckner &amp;aid, adding that
some women wore mourning attire
during the entire conOict.
Meigs County contributed an awesome number of soldiers to the C1vil War with Me1gs Countian~ paniC'-'
ipating in most of the war's maJor
conflicts. While the men were off
fighting, women did the majority of
farm wor\c on the homefront. Mr.
Gloeckner said.
The war claimed a total of SOS

Republican Frank Cremeans spent
more than any Ohioan during the
1996 congressional campaigns, .
according to a government report.
The $1.8 million Cremeans spent
in losing his 6th Congressional District seat in southern Ohio to Dljmocrat Ted Strickland was the 14thhighest amount of.all congressional ·
races. the Federal Election Commis- ·'
sion reponed. Monday.
Four Ohioans were among the top
SO spenders in last year's campaigns.
A record $765 million wa~ spend
by 2,605 House and Senate candidates, a S ~rccnt increase from the
1994 campaign.
Mark R. Warner. a Virginia Dcmocritt, had the country's costliest campaign. He spent S11 .6 million trying
to unseat Republican Sen. Jol!n W.
Warner, who spent $5.6 million.
,Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Georgia, spent nearly $5.6 million, the
most of any House candidate.
The other Ohioans on the list:
· - Rep. John Kasich, a Republican, spent $1.6 .million. 27th in lhe
notion..
.
- Former Rep. Martin Hoke,
Republican, $1.5 million. 35th.
- Rep. John Bochner, Republi·
can, $1.3 mimon, 47th.
Contribulions from political at:tion
committee&amp; -..ere up 12 perccat from
I 994, with incumbeniS rcc:eivin1
$133million 11011 chlllenFtJ pnitiJ
$21 mllliolir. 011 avenp, PAC cootribullonl acc:OIIIIMd for~ petcetll of
the money • c:andidale raised.

•

•

· By The A.aloclated Prau
·
•·
The bill proposed by state Sen. Bruce Johnson, R-Columbus,
would ~

- Prohibit teens from getting a license until they have had their
temporary license for sill months. To allow teens to get their lic:ens.
es when they turn 16, the bill allows temporary licenses to be issQe4 '
at 15 112 years. which is s\x months earlier than permilled now.
- Require a new driver to get 50 hours of exper1ence- mcllJ4· . 1
ing ·10 hours at night - with a parent or guardian, before gettin.g .•
driver's license. Parents would have locenify that the hours were ~n- , ·1
ven.
·
- Prohib1t drivers under the age of 18 from driving between mid- . ,
night and 5 a.m., unless they are heaj)ing home from work or a school
activity, or driving with a parent.
,
.
- Require drivers urider 18 to forfeit their driver's license for a ' '
year if they have more than one accident, speeding ticket or other traffic violation.
· Statistics compiled by the Ohio
Deparlment. of Public Safety show
that drivers 16 to 20 make up 7 percent of all drivers, yet they are
involved in 16 percent of all crashes,
and 15 pcrccnt 'of all drivers in fatal
crashes. The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer reported today.
Systems similarto Johnson's proposed law have been implemented in
at least 16 other states, and accident '
percentages there h~vc droPJl&lt;ld by
double-digit figures, the ncwsJ&gt;aper
said.
Some teen-agers who already
have hcenses applauded the plan.
" lthmk it's a wonderful idea and
sor~.cthing lhal "desperately ~cedcd. sa1d Sara Groves, 17, a scmllf at
Berea High School.
Nathan Jun. 17. a senior .at St.
Ign41ius High School. said .he liked

the curfew provisio;t.' '
"I can speak as a tccn-ag~r thilt
people have a tendency to do thmgs
like speed and not give il a second
thought," Jun said.
BUI Laura Szarek. 14 ,'hrul .mil~
feelings. ·
Sbe worried that teens
trouble would probnhly"
m1dnighl anyway whil~ ~·"~~~~~~~!l
behavmg themselves at -.
hpusc would have to mce ~"JI!C'
"I think thai's kiod or-~untarr1
said ·"But il's probably
kids slay off the road frofl\
Rep. Saln Bateman, chairman
the Transportalmn and Public Saflll.J:
Commillce, said he expects the.biiUf.
be passed nul of comm•llee Within~
month. ahhnug~ there may he some
minor changes.
•
· ·,;

Morgan slept and ate.
"[f Morgan had slept everywhere
they say he slept and ate a meal
everywhere they say he did, he would
have weighed a ton and been asleep
all the time," he said .
Franco Ruffini, assistant director
of the Ohio Historic Preservation
Office, said the gravel company has
hired an archaeological consulting
firm to survey the property.
He said the historical society has
received more than ?.000 letters supporting the preservation of the batthifield.
Risa Varasso, assistant director of
travel and tourism for the Ohio
Department of Development said
she was attending lo the tour to sum
up the.potent~al for additional markers and corridor tours of the Morgan's
COLUMBUS (AP) .....: About 39 a graduation requirement, but begin- passed the writing tesl; KO percent
route through Ohio.
percent of high school seniors passed ning wilh this year's class. scores on pa.•scd the reading section; 58 percc,'11
"This is one ofthe areas they want all five parts ofthe 12th-grade profi· both the 'lth-gradc and 12th-grade passed the math test; 71 percent
to spotlight," she said.
ciency tests, the state department of tests
included in students' tran- pa.•scd the citizenship .Portion;
56
Portland resident Dollie Mees said educatioh reponed today.
·
scripts.
.
' percent pa.~sed the sc1cncc. sccarltiOh - ~
·residents in the area are concerned · That's down slightly from last
"We arc advising businesses and
Ahout93,750 seniors- nc Y 80
about the proposed gravel mine will year's 40 percent, as a drop in the colleges to require a student to pro- j,crcent of the class - took the tests
affect their community. She said she percentage of students passing the vide a linaltmnscripl and to lake scri1 this year.
· ·' . 1
is concerned about dust and traffic math and reading tests offset the . ously the proficiency test results
Abnut35 pcrccol met·honors-levresulting from the ·grovel pits in , slight increa.'c in the number passing reported there," said Stale Board of cl standards.on one or more parts of
addition to how ·the pits will affect the writing, ·citizenship and science · Education President Jcnmfcr Sheets the 1cs1. About I perce)u hit the h&lt;lD·
tourism in tlie area.
portions.
.
in prepared slatcment.
ors level on all live parts. .
.. .
Also attending the tour were:
Seniors who pass I he Ohio ninth"These transcript notations should
State Schools Superintendent Jotl'n
J~son Hurd, Ohio Commander of the grade proliciency test - which is be looked at not only as an ind•cato~ Goff said that about · hair of the
· Military Order Loyal Legion of the required for high schoof gradua11on · of performance. but as an indicator of seniors taking the test met or exceed:
United States (comprised of desccn- - ,by Jan . I are rcqu1rcd by law lo a student's initiative."
cd the tougher standardH that wil.l lie
dants of Union Ci~•l War ollicers) . take the 12th-grade test in Jicbruary.
Nearly 70 percent of students · put in place next year. ·
' }
and Betty B. Moore. representing the . Passing the 12th-grade test is not
. ,
. ,•. •
Dames of the Loyal Legion. both of
~
e.
' '!!
Southln!llon; John Switzer. weather
columniSt for The Columbus DIS,
,

About 39 percent of high school,:
seniors pass 12!h grade tests
arc

a!"'

a

·
. "fy d I•kes
'
Crews wor.k overn
IQ ht to fOrtl

Cremeans heads list of Ohio campaign spenders · ·
By.The A1soclated Press

Teen-age drivers ·
law at .a glance.

Meigs County men. he said.
Gloeckner said that Portland was
probably one of the last nonhero
towns occupied by a southern Anny
during the war.
"This was not a long battle, but it
was not a lillie skirmish," he said,
a(lding that the engagement caused
nearly $1 million in damage, mostly
caused by Union forces.
No permit Issued
To d~~ •. lhe. U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers has not issued the penn it
to install the gravel loading facihty,
Gloeckner said.
He said t~at battlefield supPQners
have met with gravel c()mpany offiGials. !Je indicated the company is not
interes~ in a buy-~ut of the land, but
may be rntcrested tn a Ia~ swap.
"The gravel compa~y rs ~m~.ll a
much better JOb of con~ervauon, he
said. "They ~c work,•,ng harder at
berng good ne1ghbors.
"If we do not preserve thl~ aro.a. I patch; H~rold H. Knecn. Pomeror. By BOB MOEN
10 spread ewer the llatlands like
sec. no _rcas~n .~o h~~c ~ h1stor~cal rcprescntmg the. Meigs County Agn- Associated Press Writer
snilled milk. ,
Extcns•on Serv1ce and the
S dba
,.
socrety m Oh1o. he sard .. '!h•r.e 1s no . cultural
Meigs County Historical Society;
FAROO, N.D. an ggcrs
The Red rose to 39.29 feet at 6
rc~son to save anythmg .•1. we rc nol
Rae Reynolds, Rev. William Mid- worked through the mght, hoping the a.m. Five hours earlier, it surpassed
gomg to save our only C1v1l Wa~ batdlcswanh and Sharon Holter, rcpre- dikes would hold, and police pound- . the city's old record of 39.1 feel, s-et
tlcficld." ·
.
.
.
.
senting the Meigs County Historical ed on the doors of homes in one precisely 100 years ago. Flood stage
Glocck~er sard he ISm la;or ol a
Society
and Buffington Island Bat- neighborhood early today to evacuate is 17 feet.
park showmg all of the areas hlstollcfield Preservation Committee; Ray people in the way of the worst flood
Police got Richard Rix o~t of his
ry: Ctvll War. pronccr and Amcncan
Swick and David Har.ris, hoth of thi$ city has ever seen.
warm bed at3::\0 a.m. and asked him
Indian.
.
.
Across the swollen Red River in to vacate his home. The street wa'
"It's somcthmg all Oh1oans should Parkersburg, W.Va., of the Blennerbe interested in r_rcscrvmg," he s~ 1d. hassell Park Commission ·and Moorhead, Minn., the Ooodwalcrs completely dry, but authorities feared
Gloeckner sa1d plans arc bemg Bl~nncrhas'sett Museum; Meigs gushed like geysers from storm water rising a few hlocks aw~y could
'
· ·
threaten his area. .
made to mark the site and other sites County Recorder Emmogene Hamil- drains..
ton; former U.S. Congress1f1an Frank
"I've .been here 22 years; been ,
Residents were advised to move
concerning the battlc'lield
Cremeans;
and
Sue
Miller
and
Betty
'
through
lots
of
flmlds.
and
we've
valuables
out of basements to upper
We want to he very accurate, scpJean
Thorney
of
Ravenswood,
W.Va.
never
had
an
.evacuation
like
this,"
floors,
just
in case.
.
amtc the facts from ~he legends -- par·
Lt. John Sanderson said as officers
"To be honest, the only thing I
ticularly those concerning where
set out to deliver evacuation orders took up wa.' my golf clubs," Rix said.
under a clear night sky.
.
Crews worked to fnnily d1kcs
A neighborhood of about 40
homes in southwest Fargo was the
- · Rep. Sherrod Brown. Democ- latest to lay in the path of the lloodFour Ohioans were m the commission's compilation of the top 50 rat, SSI I ,000, 42nd.
ing from lhc W1ld Rice and Red
- R~p. Bob Ney. Republican, rivers.
House recipients of PAC contribu$505,000, 45th.
The meltdown from this winter's
·
tions:
Ne1ther of Ohio's senate scats record snowfall ha.' overwhelmed the
- Cremeans, $586,000, 29th.
were up for re-election .last yea~.
rivers south of Fargo. causing them
- Boehner, $562,000~ 31st.

around the neighborh&lt;xKI and cit~
ollicials were calling lor all availabl~
·
·
·,
help sandhaggmg.
,
r
Over m Moorhead, garbage lruckJ
were parked atop steel plates Ja 1~
over .surgmg stonn drams . m . a~
aucmptlo keep them rroll) burst mal
forth.
.
. ,
j
Through rt all, the rrvcrs an&lt;t.
crcc ks aroun d Far•&lt;l
e c·ont1nuc t&lt;l nse~~
"This created a real problem hc':'4
for u~... Dennis _Wal~kcr. Fargo'~
opcrauons manager. sa1d as 14 voil
~ntc~rs str~m~~ w, bag sand a
leellrom h1m. We ~talk• rcc:onl:£
now. We 'rc apPfoachmg ou~ 51~:J-y,ca~
Jluud stage So what you rc sco~in~
here nohody has seen he lore."
•
'

!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~

CoME ON OvER .To Bas's
FoR QuALITY BEDDING

PLANTS
All Yeur Faverlte •••clint Plant• lnelu•l•t:
• S•lfl• • 1•1••1•• • t1s_ty Millet • Mltllll4s • Aeer•t••
• Pttlllls •
• h. Mere
•
Seleetl•• ef Orntlltllftl••• .Sh..e TrHt lnetu•l•g:
FIMrtrlill Cr•• • Mt,ln • WH,III

. • ltllftlrl

c•erry .• Pl1 01b

Pe1r . • Crl•••• IIIII • A•4 M1t1

***Alto

Of Shru

•·• •

:~t~~t...r .....

Ftr All •••r Strl11tl•• Ple•tl•t IH4s
• 1•1• ,.,., 1••4 • Fertlllz1r · .
·
tltfl • Ll•• • Vtpt••l• P11111

,,,.if' •••

•

Muon, WV
Phone (304) 773-5721
'

'

·---·--·--··-··"!-,
I

..,.

. 1/4 Mile North of
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge

I

'

COLUMBUS (AP) - A proposed 'law that would put more
reStrictions on teen-.,e driven may
not please ~;fOliC. but the stue senator sponsorins the legislation
believes it could lave lives . .
"The No. I catise of death in Ohio
for people under the qc of 21 is automObile accidents," said Sen. Bnlee
Johnson, R-Colunibus.
Johnson's proposed law, which
cleared the Senate and is pending in
the House, adds several requirements
for teen-agt drivers;.
Under the bill, teen-agers would
have to have a temporary license for
at least six months before they would
be allowed to get a driver's license .
A new driver also would have to
get SO hours of experience- including 10 hours at night - with a par-ent or guaf!lian·. before getting a
license.
"The issue is experience, not
age," Johnson said.
H~ said the bill would ease youths
into driving and give them experience
before they get out in cars on their
own.
Another . provision in the bill
would prohibit drivers under 18 from
driving between midnight and 5 a.m.,
unless they are heading home from
work or a school activity, or driving
with a·parent.
·
State Highway Patrol Lt. J.P. Allen
said the patrol is officially neutral on
the bill, but docs suppon many of its
requirements. .
"Statistics show the people thai
this bill covers make up a certain perccntage of drivers, yet arc involved in
a mu~h hi~hcr percentage of crashes,
much higher than any other age
group.'' Allen said. "I don'! know if
50 hours is the answer, butlthink the
more involvement parents have is
good."

2400 Eastern Avenue
(Across from KMart)
Gallipolis, OH
Phone (614) 448-1111

�.'

,.......,, Aprll17, 1eW

Ponmoy •llddl1p 1111, Ohio

•

The Dally Slnllnel• Pege I

POmeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Family betrayar when sister favors ex-brother-in-law
Ann
Landers
199j, l.G• Anp:l{..

1lmc1 Syndicllc and C.e·
11011 S)'l'dietw.

•

DESIREE CLEMONS ·

DANIEL OTTO

auto, AJC, tilt, CNIIe,
AIIII:U cui, Ill Pwr ~~to.

URG scholarships aWarded
F. Grover, a senior at Meigs High
Daniel 1. Otto of Pomeroy, son of School, planning to major in com.
Mike Otto, of Uimo, Texas and Ron puter science;
and Joyce Hill, a senior at Eastem . . Desiree Clemons of Shade, .·
High School planning to major in daughter of Mike and Brenda Cox,
education;
pJanning to major in secondary eduLisa Stethem of Pomeroy, daugh- cation at Rio Grande;
Christopher Ball, Syracuse, son ·
ter of Terry M. and Melanie Stethem, a senior at Ea5tem High School, of .Tom and Debbie Ball, senior at
with an undeclared major;
Southern High. School, planning to
.
Casey K. Booth of Middleport, major in comp"uter science.
son of Wetzel E. Booth and Rhonda

Five Meigs Coonty students have
been awarded trustees scholanhips
by the University of Rio Grande. ·
Trustees scholanhips are awarded to students graduating in the top
15 percent of their graduating class.
An ACf composite score of 20 and
a GPA of 3. are the minimum
requirements for consideration.
The trustees scholarships cover
partial tuition.
.
Recipients of the scholarships

1996'FORD
·CONTOUR

1996 FORD ·
. CROWN VICTORIA

·'

By ANN LANDERS
- Dear Ann Landers: My "problem" may not merit space in your
c.olunin, but your opinion would be
~ally appreciated. ·
· A while back, my sister's daugh:
ter was getting married. While I was
~appy for my niece (I like her very
much), my sister and I have hall a
, strained relationship (or years. This
sist~r took it upon herself to plan a
f;unily •reunion the same weekend as

IUI01 llr -copd,
UIJIFII can, cruiM, PS,
PW,More.
$13,Mt

are:

POMEROY·· Rock Springs Bet:ter Health Club, I p,m. Thursday,
:Rock Springs Church, Nancy Mor·ris, hostess. ·
: CARPENTER
Columbia
:Township Trustees, special session,
·Thursday, 7:_30 p.m. at fire station.
:Insurance and appropriation trans-

fers to he considered.
EAST MEIGS -- Eastern Local
Board of Education, 6 p.m. Thursday in high school library.
POMEROY - Middlepon Child
Conservation League, Rock Springs
United Methodist Church, 7 p.m.
Karen Smith to speak on dyslexia.
Brown .bag auction.
CHESTER
Chester
Baseball/Softball
Association,
Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at the fire
house.
·
FRIDAY ·
CHESTER -- Harvest Outreach
Church, three night revival, Friday
through Sunday, 7 p.m. Friday and
Saturday, 6 p.m Sunday. Special
singing.

MELINDA VOSS
LISA STETHEM

SATURDAY
host the gospel group Family HerPOMEROY -- A free trammg itage Saturday at. 7 p.m. For more
cou.rse for prospective hunting edu- information call 992-3924.
cation instructors will be held Satur. day, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Pomeroy
RUTLAND -- Meigs County
Gun. Club on Pomeroy Pike. Divi- Bikers Association, ?.p.m. Saturday,
sion of Wildlife instructor Eric Lane · Rutland American 'Legion. Plans to
will show how to teach the Ohio be finalized for Memorial Day run.
Hunter Education ·Program. For
more information, call Jim Freeman SUNDAY ··
at The Daily Sentinel at 992-2155.
POMEROY •• Big .Bend Sternwheel Festival Committee, Sunday,
DANVILLE -- Danville Church 2.p.m. Carpenters Hall.
. of Christ, special service, 7 p.m Saturday; 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m Sunday. TUESDAY
MASON, W.Va.•• Veterans of
Denver Hill, Foster, W.Va., speaker.
~oreign Wars Post 9926, Mason, .
BURLINGHAM •• Burlingham Tuesday, 7 p.m. meeting and .elecModern Woodmen, SatuRlay,.6 to 7 tion of new officers.
p.m. at McDonald's in Pomeroy due
to electrical problems at halt
·
RACINE -- Southern High
School
class of 1977, reunion ·plan.
' .
-MIDDLEPORT -· The Maddle- ning, Tuc~day, 6:30 p.m in the high
port Church of tl\e !olazarene will · school .cafeteria..

'

.

.

1996 FORD MUSTANG GT .
SPD, A/C, TILT, CRUISE, CD, KEYLESS
nrn:ov ALL POWER EQUIPMENT.
--~:a;iz-

1995.FORD

1995 FORD

THUNDERBIRD

ASPIRE

1uto,

11r

Uti,

lc',i/I~M/FM ca~

concl,

crulu,
pwr IHt,

4 cyl, 1uto, air concl,

PB, AM/I'M CUI.

ITNilll PCIIWW Incl.
·I"'"''"T . 1,000 r.'!ILES.

'

1994
FORD
. .
)•

CROWN ~ICTORIA

·. 1993 FORD

MUSTANG GT .
'

concl,

PB,

PW,

POL

LOADIEI'\

1993 FORD ..

1993 FORD

TAURUS LX

RANGER
"SPLA$H"

auto, ,·elr cond,
AMJIFM CUii tilt, ~!NIH,
PB,PW,PDL

Branson •
Gatlinburg •.

Hilton Head •
Myrtle Beach •
'
For all the detclils, call us on the·Loan HotUne
Orlando • · or stop by you- nearest PeopleS Bank. office.

.._

.

•

~·,~

•

If you'd like a convenient, low-&lt;:ost way to
·nnance your projects and purchases, take
~other look·at PowerUne. the home equiJ¥ '
·line of credit from The Peoples Bank. We've
la-vered the rate. Pared the closing costs. .
And for a Umitecftlme. Peoples Bank will even
send you ai1d your.family on a ~y. 3-night
vacation when you open a PowerUne of
.SJo.ooo or ~ Choose nom six populai'
vacation destinations.
.
.

•

The.Peoples Bank

•. polntplznant 674-1000

• n Jan 773-5514

• .new haven 88~·21~5

she had a Xsht to a normal life, so
we agreed to have the baby. We were
blessed with a beautiful little girl.
.Two years later, we had a fine .baby
boy. I was 60 when he was born.
That was 28 years ago.
Sirice I was retired and able to
·spend 'all' day with my young chi ldren; ( felt very close t(} them. Now,
at88;I.havespentathirdofacentury with my wonderful son imd
daughter, watching them grow up:
One is a graduate of Stanford University. The other gra~uated from
the Univ~rsity of Southern ~alifornia.
·
·

' wife insisted on giving me Jucb a
priceless gift. I'm sure the chilcftn
have .added years to my life. I'm -- ·
Blessed in California
. Dear Calif.: Those May-~m­
her marriages are often very good or
very bad. I' in happy that yoo~ is in
the first category. Long may yoo ,
IQve.
Gem of the Day (Credit W.C. ·
Fields): I read some very bad news ·
today.· The cost of living has just ·
gone up $2 a quart.
·

•

Sendqueall-toAoml sntzn, .
cre.ton Syndicate, 5777 w. en- .
tury Blvd,, Suite 700, Loo .• 11111,
Calif. 90045
.

When. they come home to visit
us, we have a marvelous lime. I am
filled .with gratitude that my young
'

.'

•loan t~ne 67SAW

5 ·apd, .11r

By MELIND!\ VOSS

cond~

&amp;IIIJI:III . cau, .PS,

PB,

IMOIIIE• .WAS $10,141

TAURUS

w.gon, ve, IUtO;

cond, ll!t. crul.., PS,
P'fl• Pq~; MOR~ , .

'1989 . FORD

CROWN VIC LX
IUio, .., cond, PS,
PW, POL, tilt, cruiM,
j

. ·MILES •

.

.

.

.

'AEROSTAl,

spay/neuter......program .

The Meigs County Humane Society· wili he resuming its spay/neuter pro- ·
gram and will be iliking applications for spay/neuter .requests as of Monday. ·
The program is made pi&gt;ssible through the funds generated by the society'~ thrift shop, small grants, and membership fees and the generous contributions of the staff lit Briarhill Veterinary Clinic and the Meigs Veterinary
Clinic.
'
The application forms will be available. at the Meigs County Humane
Society's thrift shop in Middleport. II is requested thai only those pet own- .
ers in financial need apply. for the program and that fees to the veterinarian ·
be-~~.

.
:
D of A discuss spring rally ··

Final plans for the spring rally to be held Saturday were made at a recent
meeting of Chester Council 323, Daughters of America, held at the hall.
The rally will begin at 9:30a.m. and members were reminded Ill take gifts
for the various tables.
·
Councilor Esther Smith presided at the meeting which opened in ritualistic fonn with with pledges to the American and Christian flags, scripture
from Ecclesiastes, The Lord's Prayer in unison, and the National Anthem.
It was reported that Nancy Bond's mother-in-law died, that Ethel Orr had
eye surgery, Margaret Amberger is ·hospitalized, and Kathryn Baum broke
her foot.
.
·
Erma Cleland reported on a recent rally in Canton and read. "How to Use
Your Time." Esther Smitli .tead "Barnyard Bride .~'
· A letter was read from Allen Levan, state treasurer.
Mter the meeting, refreshments were served by' me committee of Opal'
Hollon and Virginia Lee. Prizes were won by Erma Cleland and Goldie
. Frederick.
. .
·
Present were Deloris Wolf, Opal Eiching~r. Thelma White, Charlotte
Grant, Mary Holter, Esther Smith, Joann Ritchie, Mary Barringer, Marcia.
Keller, Goldie Frederick, Jean Welsh, Laura Nice, Erma Cleland, Opal Holl~n, Virginia Lee, Julie Curtis, Everett Grant and Helen Wolf.

.•

•

.

OOTT

However, many people experience harmless side effects, such ~
•
flushing and headache, from the
•
'
·
medicine. This is normal . You are
PETER
•
not reacting badly. The symptoms
•
· GOTT. ·M.D. show
that the riitro is in the system,
.•,
where it is doing its job. .
•
Nonetheless; your physicians
•
may wish to lower the dose (or prescribe it in another form, such as a
patch ot spray) l'f your symptoms are
QOTT, M.D.
truly
troublesome · or last' for more
DEAR DR. dOTf: My doctors·
than
a
few minutes.
'
: told me that I have coronary artery
Nitroglycerine is an old, siandard
: spasm that causes occasional chest
useful therapy for heart disorand
' discomfort, and they prescribed
ders.
However, the substance is .
: nilrOglyce{ine pills. This is all ":ell somewhat
unstable: It 'will quickly
: and good, but I find that the palls
lose
its
potency
if exposed to air or
, cause me to ·flusb and have a
light.
.
: headache. Am l reaeting badly?'
Therefore,
when
my
patients
who
DEAR READER: Spastn of the
:
.use nitro tell me thai their flushing
: coronaty ·arteries is !'"" of the caus. es of angina, heart muscle cramp arid headaches arc no longer a minor
: ftol!l )ntldeql!lt~ oxygen supply._ problem, I suspect that their pills
have lost potency- and should be
: Nitroglycerine relieves ·the spasm,
n:placed
with a fresh batch.,
· re-estlblillhes bloOd /flow to the carTo give you more information, I
: diac
lllld eliminates chest
. diacomfort.
· ' -.m sending YO\I a copy of my Health
'

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-1e.

.,

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......... ... ......
,

,

~

•

·

•

r

~

•
•
••
•
•
•
•
•
c8r1dle6, fOk art ~~ nX}s, flcXaiG, ••

•• •

•
•
•
•
•

•

•

couectible61 x~'ifliahxes, r108h'8 ark,, . •·

ameriearla, wi~ chimes, piiiOWsJ · eroos :

•

•

sti-tch1 -ft~ p-irltS1 ~ 8)8p6, •
-FP~*Pr_.,.

trees, etc, etc; etcJ etc.J e-tc.J ••
••

10 ..; 5 Tuesday thru Saturday
i11 N.. Second -In Middleport 992·502~
.viSe, me, dlscoYer.

kl)llW8)'

•
••
•
•••

............ ................. .
•~

cloeed SUnday:&amp; Monday. Next door to Ohio River Bear Co.
'

Quality prescription Servjce
at Competjthfe prjces.
KICKING THE HABIT • At the Initial t,..tment, Terrell piiCid .
five ectipreeeure pelletll, above, ..:... Which reMmble tiny 111111 bear•
lnga hlld In piece like pierced nrrlnge - In Andereon'• 11re to
help curb the clealre to 1moke. WM'never ehe feele the nNCI for e
cigarette, Anderlon ruba her ura, ectiVItlng the "vltel energy"
thll fiOWI Within .the body. ·

ry spasm

on or a

preca

tro p s are ·a go

•

I

.

Continued on page 11

lfOW $10,9~9

1992.FORD,· .

.

The Dee Molnel Regleter
,plizabeth Whitmore Terrell did not immediately embrace the; idea
of having needles stuck in her body to' alleviat~ severe asthma.
. ·
As ·someone who grew up in Des Moines, Iowa- not exactly o'n
the cutting edge of. Oriental medicine - she was skeptical about
acupuncture. But after years of being hosp.italized repeatedly and taking !Kitcnt drugs with nasty side effects, she decided to try. '
,
Her family thought she was crazy. But, to her surprise, Terrell found
acupuncture not only tamed lier asthma but also ch11nged her life.
· Six years later, Tertell, 27, is a registered aciapuncturist. She and her
husband, William, · 28, have opened an acupuncture clinic in Des
,
Moines.
She is a rarity in her part 9f the country. Untill993, only Iowa doctors or QSteo~ths could use the ancient Chinese nsecth: treatment. Few
did.
.
.
&lt;
Some 33 stales and thC District of Columbia nOV&gt;' certify or register
acupuncturistS. And .the United States has 33 schools of acupuncture

1992'FORD

$8,949

••

Acupf)ncture heals Iowa woman's asthma·

$"9

~on

!f.'\.

Mol11411 Regl8taf'
. .
· ,
'c ,•
_.,...
What,is acupuneiUre and how does it work?
.'
'I'be goal of acupUnCture is to regulate 'the vital energy
that flows through the body, its (!rgans and the pathways
, extending tlirough.the body. This is known as qi (pronounced chee). There ate more than 300 points along:the
pathways where acupuncture needles t;an be inserted.
When qi flows unimpeded, the body is healthy, When
trauma, disease or mental ~tate interrupts the floW; illness results ani! pain can occur. Acupuncture can remove
·the obst(uction or direct qi to where it is needed.
l&lt;j!!o[§
According lo lhe World Health Organization, L
acupuncture has successfully treated such ailmC{ltS as
colds, bronchitis, arthritis, back pain, tendinitis,
headache, asthma, indigestion, diarrhea, acne, eanl'i!hes,
sinus infection, sore throat, premenslrUal syndrome and
hemorrhoids, among ·other conditions. .
.
In making a diagnosis, the patient's present and past
symptoms, medical and family history, lifestyle, emotional state and relationships arc all taken into account. A
practitioner also feels the pulse and observes the c9j,or of
the tongue and face.
II
Various methods are used to select acupJJncture points
for treating a particular patient. Fourteen major pat~\vays
run through the body from the top of the head to til&amp;tips
of fingetl and toos.
A¢upuncture needles are sterile, stainless steel instruments thrown away after one use. A typical needle has a
!•inch shaft that is as thin as a hair.
· · ·'
Once the ·sile for insertion has been deterniined, the
needle is pushed rapidly, through the skin and adjusted to
an appropriate depih. Needles penetrate from a fraption
of an inch to sevei-al inches, depending on the thi~kness
of the flesh and muscle at the site .
. Many patients sense the arrival
. of qi as itching, numbness, soreness, a swollen feehng, a temperature ch• ge or
a distinct "efectrical': sensation. Sometimes, patien\s feel
qi in areas far from the p9int of insertion.
· · ,'t
.
The acupuncturist may manipulate the needles and
, ~~1,1 themJ~_,up,to about ·45 minutes. More typically, needles ilrc inserted ·for about 20 minuies to a half hour.
''Illere are vinous styles of needle manipulation:.
The number of treattnents depends•on the severity of
the probletn and the extent 10 which living patterns exacerbate thC coiu!ition. Some patients need only one or two
trelitments:Others need weeks or .months.
Western science theoozes th~t acupuncture jams pain
signals in' a complex neurological circuit. S.ome experiments have shown that acupunctpre modifies the translllission of neural impulses between·the spinal cord ana
,
.
the brain.
.
.
NEW.SOLUnONS • EllzabethWhlln....-.•Terrell, ecupuncturlet, completel .dat• ,
Other studies show acupuncture affects circufation, · inent on Linda Andereon, 46, to help cure her two-peck+cley cigarette tltlblt. P.r.heart rhythm, blood pressure and the production of ied vloue ettampte to quit had failed. Frlende IUSNteted 1cupuncture.
.
. ·
and white blood cells.
·
Patients often are urged to take specific herbs IIi well as change their
diet and modify their lifestyle to inclUde 'appropriate ~ounts of exercise.
SOURCE: "Fundamental., of Complemen...., and Alternative
Medicine" edited by Marc Mlcolzl; and "Be~n Heaven and Earth
. - A ,Pulde to Cblnese Medicine" by Harriet .Belnfleld and Eft-em
Komgold.
. ·
.

.

AM.IFM cau, Ult, cruiM,

Take·Another ,. Look.

·.

::-.

$7 949 !:
LX
IUIO, Air··

Atlantic .City •

I

hope, however, that you went to the
celebration, held your head high and
showed off your wonderful husband.
Dear Ann Landen: I'd like to•
comment on the letter from the
woman who married an older 111an
and regretted that they nad had no
children together. ·
,Aftl:r the death of my first wife
when I Wai 47, I married a young
woman of 27. SiQCe I had two adult .
children and several grandchildren, I
felt no urge to go .through the complications of. child rearing again. My
new wife agreed. ·
This workcli out well for eight
years, until nature's maternal
instinct caught up with my wife. She
intentionally got pregnant. I loved
my wife .very much and realized that .
'

Ho,ws, whys and whlerefores .o f acupuncture Humane society resumes

---:----------'--Community calendar. -----__;_-+The Community Calenclar Is
publ~hed as a free service to non· ·
profit groups wisbing 10 llllllOUIICe
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not desi~ to promote sales ur fund raben of any .
type. Items are printed es space
permits and cannot be guaranteed
to run a specific number of days.
THURSDAY
'
GALLIPOLIS •• March of Dimes
WalkAmerica committee members,
Burlile . Oil Co., Gallipolis, Thurs_day, 3:30 p.m.

her daughter's wedding. On my me and to my husband. My sister
invitation, she wrote, "Be aware that has always been very _close to · ~.Y
yoor u-husband and his new wife ex-husband phtlosoplucally, pohh- ·
have been invited to b:oth the wed- cally and spiritually. They consider
: din• and the fan}ily reunion.'; ~n themselves "soul mates." Clearly,
I read.that, I was stunned. I fell as if her friendship with ~im took preceI had beeJ.I sl~ in _the face. '· , dencc over my feelings. I am deeply
'
.
r.ly sister had every right to invite hurt.
Am .J justified in Qaiqking that she
anyone she wisfied to the wedding,
but !believe she was totally out of · betrayedme?-- L..M., Somewherein·
line to invite a sibling's ex-spoose ·Florida
Dear L.M.: 1be Landers Law on
and his new wife to a family
reunion. Wben · a couple divorces, Invitalions is as follows: The host or
especially if there are no children hostess has th~ right to invite anyone
inv61ved, the ' family structure he or she wishes tq a party or family
cha1ges and th.e old ex is definitely celebratioo. The invitee has the right
considered out of the family picture. to accept· the invitation or decline.
lliave remarried and have a won- · ·1 would not characterize what
derful husband. l felt the inclusion your sister did as an act of betrayal,
of my ex-liusband was an insult lo but it was certainly insensitive . .I

Repon "Understanding Heart Disease." Other readers who would like
a copy should send $2 plus a long,
self-addresSt:d, stamped envelope to
P.O. Box 2017, Murray Hill Station,
New York, NY 10156. Be .sure to
mention the title.
DEAR DR. GOTI: During a
recent CT scan for abdominal pain,
my doctor discovered a 2-.inch cyst
in my right kidney. He stated that it
is "nothing" and. ignored it. But ~·m
wonderi.ng what other people do an a

situation like this.
DEAR READER: During mcdical testing, doctors often discover
incidental and harmless abnormaiJ· ties. Kidney cysts are such a finding.
·
In my experience, renal cysts are
. common, pose ·no threat to health
and can be ignored. Wheh patients
are given this information, they usually llladly get on with their lives
and pay no attention to the cysts,
which cause no symptoms anyway. ·

We honor most third party
prescription plans:, Your Swisher
&amp; Lohse Pharmacists, Chuck,
Ken &amp; Ron are here ·to fiil your ·
prescription needs.
Ir------~------------------,
·
COUPON
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Up to $5.00 off any prescription
.I Limit 1 per Customer per prescription I

I Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy!
Expires 11-09~96

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L-------------------------~

Glamour Photography Coming to

Heaqquarters Beauty.Salon
Forest Run Rd .

Tuesday, April 29th
· CaUfor an appointment 992-6311
.

.

'

.-

I

Man. lhru Sat. 8:00a.m. to 9:00p.m:
Sunday tO:OO a.m. to &lt;4:00 p.m. .
·
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 982·2955
E. tMin
s.vto. Pom.. oy, 011.

~

tj

�..

Pomeroy • MlddlepM, Ohio
.

..... 10 • nae Dlllly Sentinel
NO'I1UNG

RUNS.

MUFFLER SHOP

112·2181

· UKE A DEERE"

Thuntdly,Aprll17,1117
ii
'

.

Parts

Contlnu.ctfroln Plfle 9

8M Stew Meadow.

accredited or in lhe proceu of beina accredited.
·
Billh '11errells aradualed from Southwest Acupuncture Collep in Santa

Carmichael's Farm &amp;'Lawn

Starting at $79 95 .

108'Norlh Saco;'ld Ave. • Middleport, OH

o

Guaranteed Service

992·2825

SIIHI:
.....................I

~

See us for Your
Stlhl"
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

Oirlnce'l Steak ...... llxWd ~~bout
IWO miiiiiOUth oiN u.ck on U.S. 220. il
efaYOrite ~or ·raceflnl . n,.~
lint fWIICIIt; ~a LMI MOOil St:lc*
car il'llhe two races ~ IIWallly tor WHic·

--.

Chlllller

Ridenour
Supply

., ......

THIS
St Rt. 248

WEEK

Sl. At 248
Chester 985-3308

On TVAI•n.,.._

985-3301
eNASCAR.Lolo -1~ 125
a p.m. Friday.• - TNN
e NASCAR ~Tour Oooctw"t 2W
2 p.m. Sa""""y • ESPN2

Boats New &amp; Used
·"Professional Sl:lrvice

eBGN~:I:IO

:7_p.m.
Saturaoy • NII!Mio! • nNN
. . . , Cup, GGMy'aiOO

llllwoo..,.

- i t ... rtjlt"'

For Hom eowners
ln s ur ;mce

I)

Call:

JEFF

-................. ==.....
WARNER

-·.._.

1-7oall

, ..,., •• ..,1

I

--

.

~:

1997 POINTS STANDINGS ;~J.

....,...cuo
. I. 0 . JMIIl, I ,154.
23..-...-.1.004.
J.lr ·Go!-~. 180.

1.~1.3S1 .

5. Jet! &amp;tlon, 874.
6. Marll Marin, 1114.
7. Rick)' Rudd 857.
8. Dale Eamlwll. 853.
9. Bll £11101,830.

-~*-·~·

AIIMI•wl.owe.st
PrleaenN-.a .

t:a....A'I'PtU!kl

,... Doylono

I. BuEh Mlllr, 418.
A. .llrSai.W. 431 .
$. Cl'luttl Btown. 430.

WlNSTOfl CUP: .t.tf Gordon
proved hi1 mettle yet again, paUing

Rusty WaW.C. on tha linllllp 10 ..m 1
cralh:litled Food City 600 in 11'01'11 of

11 1;1.900 tan• a1 Bristol Motor SptedGordon "fl.lbbed" his rairlbow&lt;OIOf&amp;d.cnewotet pest Wtllecl's btlit·
imd-whilt Ford in tM 't_lnal lit of tum1.
. The tina! bttllt wet nol justt»twHn
Gorda! and W.llaoe. m.y L.abont•

stood on tv lnchts behind. waiting tor 1
mlstak• up front to ~rwl him thf' vic·
IQ&lt;y.

Aft..- rubbrtg aga!Mt Goldc:l'lall tt.
way lhfOUStllum IIVM, W.ioact Wl'ft·

modem llock car rack'lg hiStory.

BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL: Jen

ct.,i after hit lirlt Cllretr

Winston Cup viCtoly 81 TIIIU Moe«
S!)Hdw1y, added a win In NASCAR'1
aecond-111'ing dlvilkf?. lh1 BuSCh
Gtlnd Nlllonal MriH, II Bristol Motor
Spndway.

~eli u. Ford! I think NASCAR
shuuld g!v~: them WI tiM: 51Rnc
LllltOUI\1 nrltt~wer! It's not
rucing lhc way NASCAR hu.J it
SCI up now! Jell'OOrdun ~been
rucing his bull off trying Ill keep
up with funl,; WKl ht:'r; tM...-en c.luilig
·u prcuy dam gllilkl juh ii·yuu a."k

s-..

•AGE: 38
• SPOUSE: Roneo
• CAR: No. 36 Skltnes Pontiac,

owned by Nelson Bowers.
• HOMETOW"': Born In San
O'ego, Calif., raised In
Spanaway, Walh., lilies in

1111.'.

Huntersvlle. N.C.
•RECORD: 283 lllriJ, 2\Mns,
o poles, Slop fives, 30 top ·
lOS, nearly S4 mltlon In earn-

1. DllleJonell(1)
Six straight in the lop four ·
2. Jell Gordon (2)

I' tn nol writing lu critici:I.C llnYr
on~ und I w1w1·t cvtn tell ytMt wilt•
my fll\'orii~: driver is. What Jtlo
Wnnttn ~y i1 THANKS k1Bill .
Friii'K:e Jr.. the entire ,.;U&amp;fT or

at Riverside, Calif.), pole

career victory No. 21
3. Terry Llbon'- (3)
4. R,..ly Will- (5)
Mar1insvll1e master
5. Jell llurlon {4)
Engine problems

Wtllace

GoodY• soo, Marhviiii."Va.

(Cfeven)

Wmston 500, Talaciltga, Ala.
S.w Mllft300. Soncwnl, C.lil.
The WIMIM, Chartolle
Coal .Cola GOO, Chltlottt
Millt1 ~. DoYtr, 011.
Pocorlo 500, LondPonci," Pa.

May.&amp;
Mly 17

May25

Juno1

..kN22

D. Jlfrttt

Food Ciry 500, Brillol, Tem.

~11120

-·

,

(ll\llofl)

(T l.abonle)

(GoAionl
(Gonkwl)

(Go_,

(Gol'dor1}

(Hamilloql

Mille1 400, Brooklyn, Midi
Cailomia 500, Fonc.n~ , Calli

""',
.....

Pep&amp;l400. DIIJ!I)nl.
JIAy 13 Jiffy lube 300. loudon. N.H.
PIMiyl\lania SOO•.long Pond, Pa.
JIJV20
Brlckylld 400, Jndial\IPOfil
Aug. 10 Bud et the 0'-n, W111kins Olin, N.Y.
Aug. 17 ITWDeYilbiMAOO. ~- Mkh.
GoodY• sao. BAllot. -r.m.
q . 31 .MOI.Intaln De. Soulttrn IWO. Oa~on
Sept. 6 WinstOn Cup 400,- Richmond
Sept. , .. New HnpiNre 300, l-oudon, N.H.
Sept. 21 MBNA !100, Dowr, Del
,....soo.~.-.....
Sepc. 28
Od.5
UAW-GM Quality 500. ~rtotte
Od." ~Jet:ianl 500. T........ Na.

......

...._.
Jefl Burton
Go-

(Woloool
(Millin)
(-)
(M. Wallrip)
(Jarrett)

(Go_,
(Go_I
(R. W.._)

•(Maltin)

(Ctlvtn)
(Martin)

f'tvan)
(Wa..,_)

(Go_I
(J. - )
(Mattin)

1(M....,I

,..-~

....

tl\allaJI.'Af' WIUPMifk pod IOUUI·
tnitnltnl k~1k lh.:m to the win·

ncr'!! cin.:lc. T!ekc uw"y one or
ll~. and llll.!y moay IL"i well furget
it rAmi yc.&lt;~ , I dn ha~ my orin·
i~ms: Sou.: an: diny,sllfl.: un:
faster and su1r.: un: nothittg with·
'XII their crew. hut I'll ke\.1' my

stlll rtylng 'to feel each other

•jGordon)
(Eo-)

NASCAR and all "'" "'""""" r.w
bringing n~ the best ru:ins in the
world.· Ni! tnaltcr who is t'eooins:
withe end of the race, yuu can bel

lot of'ditterent scenariOs. t
think lt'a a m~tter cf u1.finding
what It wanta, We'relu.ning
·to get a '-1 for thai .. We're

On the way back.

lntti'Nte Bitt 500, Fort W'Oittl. Tnu

. April27

...

10. Blft Ellloll (Unnonll8d)

ON THE SCHEDUlE

·

. •YOU'RE DRMNCI FOR A
NEW TEAll. WHAT HAS
BEEN THE BIGGEST
OBSTACLE? 'You can talk aU
you want to talk abou1 the ba!.
ance·of these cars , ~~~ problems ind downfol'ce, but·the

7. u.tc Mllltin (7)
llred of top fives

Rea ~.

April6
l.prit 13

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

Stilling io owe

l.lloblly I Jt D. . (t}
Grandell Prix
·
I. Emil oivon (I)
Taking his lumps

Unflappable

-

I. DIMIEamlltrtll {8)

out a llnte, being a brand-new
team. I think tnare'a enormous
potential with the Pontiac.•
• PONTIAC IIASIIORE REAR
SPOILER THAN EITHER
CHEVY OR FORD. WILL
THAT HELP? "You look alall
the cllanges they've made 10
the Fords and they've taken
away in some otllet' af8as. but .
having e spoiler that is higher
thlll the other makeals not

tlpi~ions

Valley
Lumber&amp;
Supply Co.r.·
555 Park St.
Middleport
992~6611

hc1wecn me and my

hullclics. One thing we can count
01~ i"~" W\.'Ckcnd full uf the great·
e!lt .~.:ur anJ truck r.teing the world
I~ eV\.'f Sl.'CII. Sec ynu thi!l Wl.~-k:
entl! .

always an actvantage. Maybe

the balance of tneir cars will ·
be a tic~ better. We have a blr

(G._,

-)

Bry.,Klng
Bowling Green, Ky.

ol • balance problem wi1h

IJonoOI .

· T.t~ . .;'11'

~~.

(!....,)

•(I . ._..) • •

...

··cfll.:

Dt:arYourTum,

Ings .
•FJIUITS: Slatt·(Nov. 21 , 1982,
Doytona).

.,..,...._
Greenup, on.

(none), win (Feb. 18, 1990, 11

WooldyronldnglbyNASCAR-Wooi&lt;--Oullan. LMtweek's
ranldng il In 1*11111'1 .....

ltl

on p.Mnrs and i~ doing ·t~et:ter lhllll · ·
ldl th.: nthcr C:Wli is benuae I~ dri·

'*

1tiKt hil car bKtl under contrOl exiling
tum four and twld ~ Labonte by ha~ a
ar lengctf. GoKtorl'l m~rvin ol vlclory
was -'99 of a HCOnd.
lM race wa• marred by 131! cau·
tion-fllg taps, the fllrU-~ 101111n '

Burton, sbl

vlng C'hevrokll. If Ford dri\IMI

aR goin&amp; ktc:onlpiWn, why don'l
they ju.'il drive a bentr car insteiKI
of getting I~ Intire hor'!epower''
The only rea.'Wtll&gt;ale Jam:u is tup

b o l l - untl o "-Injury
Olldld hlo plono.ln-. llo
- turned to atock
recing It .
Valdml tWIIh.) SpllllnY
111d "-In 1llo Wlnllori - •

FROM LA ST WEEK ~ ~'

t;k

.

tinocltor o praloalonol - .

a.,..

tO. E. S.... 1,011

I don't think. NASCAR i11 bOng

~-··---llydo

1. .Jinlrny Herot.~ty. •te.
Bill. 413.
9. Ron Hotnay, 403.
10. o.w. Renodel, 401 .

2131 Karr St.
Syracuse, OH
614-992-6520

.Dear Your Tum.

.

winner"t drcll:

e.JKt Spr~J~~M, 41SI,

8. Tm~1.049
·- ~1.014

500-...-

race at OoYII' Oowne, DerriU
~hot boon otnoivllnD to
mum to tho Wlnll!ln c,.

2. AlctiBic:*ll, 48!5.
3. t&lt;.-ny ninJr.. ur.

e.Buctlhot.Jonel. t.t32
1. Ellon s..,.,. 1,071

10. JUfVW.:., 822.

'Marine Service
very fllir .lo 1ht guys that are dri: ·

Sln&lt;e11110,-llowon
'IMICK

2. TOddBoalnt,1.2111.
3. Phi'P..O.., 1,295.
4 . Jell Qfeen, 1,209.
!1. D1C11 Trtct:el, 1,1t7.

' · !Jobtr,ll.libanl. 919.

Guaranteed"

Derrike Co

ASA--:100
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.. 1.'1t111tctl*~lnlhelrdanlliPI!!"5000101 .

I yOLI'W gat. qtJIItkln or I
COIIill,..ilo aotle: NAICAR
Thlodo TIMo

-nn.

oMton-,25011£.

. franldin Btvd.. a.ton&amp;8, N.C.

· ··•· ll)l~fiODonlho~~ •.·· ' '
·. z: WNtWi!~"'·-.N-

~-·

1(8,,_..1 IT.,_..I
1-)
1-1

· · ~':'":~'*'~mMO
'Rodlinil7oof;r? .· . . ..· : . •'
.... ,.

.. ... -~ ..

i. ---:--... ~

tmas,

I

~~liam ~err~ll had been accepted to medical school. but found Oriental
medta~e, wnh tts emphasis .on holistic care, mi.nd-body connections and

prcventlon, better fit has phalosophy of what it moans to be a physician.
· Elizabeth was a certified occupational therapy assistant in Boulder, Colo.,
when she made her career change.
.
The
11errells
moved
to
Io
be
th
·
·
. . · temtory
.
. .
~a
cause e state as vorgon
for
·
acupunct':"e· While ?)lew Mexaco haS about 4QO acupuncturists, Elizabeth
.
.
Terrell S8ld oflowa, "It's not in the culture here."
.
Iowa d~n't make it easy, An acupuncturist cannot. treat a patient without a physactan's referral . Many states, including California, New Mexico.
Colo_llldo and Washmston, allow acupuncturistk to practice as pn'mary care
.F
,
provtders.
.
. Consumer demand' alrea&lt;!y tlas prompted some ·i'nsurers to ·pay· •or
R;t;d;~·~Ii ;ashington slate, inslii'C'rs ire required to. How-

.....,"NAICAR

. lht ....
F-.d Lcnnltn, belt

.

knownforhlttuptr~Pfid-

NASCA A This Week
Arter po11icipulin~ in a hmagc

.._y • ...,....... I dynlmO

or NASCAR-~ponsorcU lt:SIS Ul

______,

1 .-.--..

,_.,._..., ~~............... .,
whoc*dedll26 of hb
NASCAR wictOH.bythl

_1

, .g.~ 30, hadtiYi wins and

~.....
. ,....
"lhl·'•""·o1"l-"lllo'.:.·,-'5"""~
8., .. ' ..

-

...... " '

trY

..-.....

~"

Doytonu lasl w~~k. T~.-d Mus·
grove hi\!1 .mrnc perspective un
whal riM:itJJ.might be like i111hc
ruturu vn the liU-i:alh:r.J "n;stric·
wr.platl' trnd:s."
Do.yk)na lnll:malional Speed·
WOIY 11114.1 Tulludl:gu SUJ'Iel'lipted·

th~:

way. ~UUiliCS
world's
twupl..ccs
rasle5t
.
dtl.~tl
•. ;m:
wht."f\'
hurst:puwcr hill bcculimhcd in
tfko P'L'~I hy the usc tlf' plates

,;n~IIR!ar SJlHih:r and high
\' :tl~·tM:C up fnml ." !l.aic.l Mu)o•

plw.:L'\1 tu rc,;trjl.:l the lluw nf 01ir
ouul ~\IS hctwccu ihc \:.arhun:tur
und in.tukc 11111111 i"ul4!. ~uur,Win!lklll Cup dri\I~'"Oi WCil.' iu\lit~·d Iii
ll:t~touu In cxpcrinll'iu wilh
· II ~ .
...1
pOICIIIIU y t"'IICf lllel 1lvu!l,
"NASCA"
k'
"' WU.'&gt; 1UU ~~~~ IU liCC

, The Reedsville United Methodist
~omen met at the church wilh Pearl
Osborne as hostess.
:
Nina Boston, .vice presideni,
!Jpened the meeting by reading tbe.
purpose of the U.M.W. AnQ Lacomb
read "I See Thy Glory, Lord" and
:·Promise Of Spring." Sixty-two
~hutin ~ails were reponed and a condolence card was signed for Frances
keed. whose sister recently died. •
: Grace Weber reponed on the candelabra for the church and the mem. bers voted to buy them. Plans were
inade. for the county council meeting
~nd Heritage Sunday to ·be held this
p10nth was discussed '·
.
• A game was played and prizes
given. Gladys Thomas had the closIng prayer. Refreshments were
§Crved 10 those named ·and Bema.
tline Snyder, Emma Durst, Delores
Frank, Nancy Buckley, and Lillian
Pickens. Boston ·received . the door
~rize..
·

i!rav~.: .

"They WUllt hl haw II b&lt;.K:k

spui'IS Wld S)ll•cdway MulUr-

what we euuld t.Ju a.~ far IL~
pulling high duwnfon:e un the
car ••nd upcrung the r.:..trktur

lil.:l.' it u~·U tu ~- with maybe
sruns lirnlll:-hul il scpar.ate
agn:cmelll pr1lhothly
makes
four ur liYe !!li)'S Ill U l!;l'nUp Ulld
~
...
r
.
_.
Ru!,!cr rcnske-" acquuuuvn tl
then l_lw ~~:xllllllf nr five, tm~
· .the 1.017-tnilc R.ucldnstuun,
huvc unhvulu.al rOK:cs ;all arvumJ
N.C .• supcrJOpt.!L.'tiWa)' a flvc~uric
tiN: troi:k. Tlte telit wali just to sec cutu.:'lu,;ion.
whic.:h WI&amp;)' W:l.'\ ~u~:r. wh:a th~ ·
NCMS hnanl1.1hairp.."llillll Ml"l'.

plate
tu putit,enough
puwcr
intu huld
\lr lt:IIW
the n:~ trit:l
plat~: tllone u.mJ make thl.l t.:ars
real light with tlnwnfurtl'. with u

drivers
ti:h.''. IN: The ht.ard (lf
. r ·t:NSKF.'S
dill.'4;turs uf Nnnh Carulim1
Motu~; Spccr.Jway nN:t un Apn1.9

L---===-----==---~~~~~~~~!' (N.c.)

hnc~

Currie
8. lkWill
In
~~a;ptthc
Pcnskc.Uln.'l.-d
niTer. whit:h
wus in~;rctL'led rn~n $14 per
sh.u.: tu ~IK. bl.

a-•_.., un-•-•~(ICIOI21Hni•For.--"'Aprll14

ATTENTION ADVERTISERS!!
Advertise on th.i~ page

Call

992~2155
'

'

.

Dave Harris Ext. 104 or Bob Atwood Ext. ~ 05
For More Information

•ENIIIGB G..uuu!'IT IN&amp;.
Ripley, WV 26271

Bus. Phone {304) 372-3873
1-800-964-FOAD .

Rt. 21 It the Alpley."=llrplaln Exit 1132

Come See Ua For All Your

Parts aild
Service Neede

.Now. executive ~i_rcctor of the .College of Physicians or Philadelphia,
Mtcozzo 1s a ~ysocoan •. epidemiologist and anthropologist tfe has also
·
served as a .senoor onvesugator at the National Cancer Institute.

"I can tell this is working," said Anderson, who had daily treatments for
five days.
leave here I feel a lot bener." ·
·
After the sec:onll, treatment•. Anderson said she smoked only two cigarelies. A few days later, she quot altogether - without the usual irritability
most smokers experience. And "I've got a·buolch of ~nergy, '.' she said.
. . At th.e i.nitial treatment, Terrell placed five acupressure. pellets .,.. which
resemble
tonyhball bearings held in place like pierced earrings .- o'n An-'-r•
""
s~ s ears to elp curb the desire to smoke. Whenever she feels the ~eed for
a ~~~arette, .Anderson rubs her ears, activating the ''vital energy" thai flows
wa!hln the body.
·

"Whei!J

1i

~ugh ~y studies support acupuncture's efficacy, Micozzi said some
stud•es haven t met the hoghest standards for research. lllere's also a lot of
~bale on how it works, he said. "We obviously need more and better stud·
tes:'·

11 1

erre a so suggested that Anderson take a mi)l of abouiiO herbs to reinforce the acupuncture treatment, ~d urged her to con~UilJe fewer dairy product~. to redu~e phlegm and mucus m her lung~:
·
· We beheve

~erbs are a powerful tool to aiding ·a person's health," said ·

1

,

~

He u.rged doctors to be open-minded. "A~upun~ture
has be
. en around· •or
•
•
''
a long u~e, a.nd there are a billion people who swear by it. We think of Chinese cavdozauon as betng pretty sophisticated. If this is the technology 'they
ha,v.e developed, we can operate on the assumption there 's something behind'
ot
.
Elizabeth Terrell carries an i~haler in case of sudden asthma attack. But
since using acupuncture, she hasn't needed it.

1

"With my Western background and training, it's still uhbelievable that

50

.

I

·AT ·

.

UTLA DFUR ITUR

Rock ~prings
~lan upcoming
Spring Retreat
.1 The rei:ent meeting ' of the Rock
Springs · United Methodist Women
opened with the reading of Psalm
121 and prayel'by Dorothy Jeffers,
The. Purpose was read foil _owed by
•smiling llf 'lBlessoli'Assurance" and
'"In the Garden." · '
The treaSurer's report was given,
noting a donation of .$100 by the ·
family of Bcuy Weyersmiller. 1be
'secretary's repon and card report · followed.
· Prayer for the sick was offered by
Sharon Folmer.
..
·
! The spring ictreat and The Plains
was discussed with some of the
members planning to aucnd.
: The group will hold church scr- ·
yices pn April 27 with Marie Wyalt
as ahe speaker.
·
: Plans were made for a ba.ke sale
~t Pamida on May 2. ·
.
• Devoaions, :'The Perfect Gift and
love" were given by Ann Werry in
t-ouisc 'Bcarhs' absence. The program was . offered· by Lenora
Lei lhcil, on the heart.
: Closing prayer was giver~ by
\-eifueit.
• Refreshments were served by
Bcarhs and Leilhcit, (o those named
pandora Collins and Hazel Ball .
.

• Plans arc moving. forward on the
parade which· will kick off the annudl Racine Flower Festival April 26.
: ,cash prizes will lx: awarded in ·
tl!rec places to noats with flowers.
the prizes arc $75 for firs\ , $50 for
~ond, and.$25 for third .to be pre~ntcd al 1100n 'on· the ·Stage at Star
Mill Park. Questions concerning the
P.radc · ~re io :be din;ctcd 'to Marilyn
l!owell , 949-2{i76. , .
·
· o The route . the parade will take .
this year is from the fire SIUiion is
down Third Street. .right at Pearl.
"ght at Fiflh. up (O the l,;egion Hall,
~fl at ~ p.m.. left at Vine. and back
tfl the fire station.
-~
~ . .
.

and e,;t&gt;~Mi~hcd "\:ommjltcc tn
1'\,:\'icw huy-tMJI prupu!ials frnm
the cumpcliug Pcil.'!kc Mvtur-

edotor of Fundamentals of Complementary and Alternative M~ine."

UMW meets

parade plans
tnove forward

MusgraYe gets taste of restrictive future

Bw Monle Dutton

81 MenintYIIe durinQ hilll-

•

AROUND THEGA RAGE

,

~an:h ~ shown acupuncrure can be effec!ive for addictioris, asthma.

anhrius, ~.hroniC pain and many other conditions, said Dr. Man: Micozzi.

.

'

t

··

around."

separates us from
a retaal health food store.
We have the scientlfic's:
back.
1 p,:~ ite~:~i~~puncture points and herbs· really work. l!'s just
;~~::::~~::~~:::::··~~W~ol:h:am::'Il~e:rre~II:
· :\M~e:h:a:~·!!~~n:tt:a:in:e~d~i:n.
~e=xac::tl~y~w~ha~t~th:e~y~d~o=.Th~a~t~
w:h!a~t~~::~~!:1d~l~::d~~::::::::~::~::~::::~~~::

•
I

FROM THEARCHIYES: .

ever, two big Iowa insurers don't include acupuncture in their standard
plans. Nevertheless, some pllients already have found their way· 10 the TerreUs.
·

Fe. N.M. They cmnmed four years of study into 28 monlhs in the ICCelerLinda Anderson, 46, =end~ completed treatments to help cure her twoBled prosr-m -. a blend of Western-based science and Eutem medicallha- pack-H4y casare11e habat. Prevaous auempts to quit had failed. Friends sua~ry and technoques. They spent more than Jlalf their train ina in cliriic:al set- sested acupuooture.
•

Muf.ller &amp; Tail Pipe

668 Pinecrest Drive
Gellipollll
Across from .GaHra Auto Salee .on old Ate. 35 Weet
· New Summar Hours Mon,-Fri. 8-5; Sat. 8-3
(614) 446-2412 orTol.l Free HI00-594-111

The Dally ·Sentinel• P~~ge 11

Acupuncture .. ~·------:-:~------_;__-------~~----

982-2181

'

LUMBER

.Pomeroy • Mlddlepdrt, Ohio

Area· student
named tq
achievement
academy

April Forema~ of Pomeroy _has
been named a Unatcd States Nauonal Award Winner in ' the l1nited
States Achiewment Academy in the
area of science.
' She attends Eastern ,High School
~d' was nominated by Ginser
Siders, a teacher at the school. She
will appear in the acadcl!ly'a official
yearbook. which i5 ·published
nationally.
She is the 'dauahtcr of John and ·
Linda Foreman.
•.

INCLUDES:
LIVING ROOM SUITES
DINING ROOM SUITES .
COFFEE&amp;END TABLES
BEDROOM SUITES
GLIDER ROCKERS
GUN CABINETS
OVER275
TELEVISIONS
AP.,LIANCES
BOOKCASES
AT
RECLINERS
DRASTICALLY
MIRRORS
REDUCED
BEDDING
PRICES.~• ·
CURIOS
LAMPS
DESKS
••• ~ND
.
. ..
. MUCH, MUCI:t MORE!

EVERYTHING
SOLD ''AS-IS"

UTLAND F·U RNITURE CO
•

MAIN SrREET

·RUTLAND, OH.

614-742•2211

1-800-837-8217

•
I

HOURS: 8:30 A.M.-5:00 P.M.
MONDAY· SATURDAY
THURS.. 8:30 A.M. • NOON
l)

''

�'

Your

Publla Halla 1

P\MoNatlu

................
,rotreaalve

.....

eolletlulo

•

4. ... u :Mill: eas•azlor
and no
mual 'mttle oopiM ef
IMn
lteiiiiiiY .(1 ........ ........,
.... be
an- WOtl 1 It Com•. fiNVItletl on
llfll'llnl
lneuranoo
run ....,. ......,. ~ routh
oo-a11 ' IIOfoN awan111111 flllllll-1111 llo-ln. T110 drlllil

,,.,ltllnt

IIICL

' -llapla tree; 1hence S 45
d•gr••• 37" 41" , 12e.se
feet 1long the axlatlng
d,.,_y tO a point IOCited
11 IHI from Ilia old tlllerly
comer· of the former Suale
Foettr realclonce; thence S
2 dogreea 12' 3t" E '151.37
IHI etong ·tho ·1111' line of
two parate dHdecl 10 su•l•
Foeter In D11d Book 148,
P•t• 173, end DHd Book
148, page 1112, to lha place
of beginning, conlelnlng
2.03 acrea, mor. or leaL
Known aa Route 1, Box
41, Longbottom, Ohio 41743
Audllclr'a Perce! No. 0301007.00
Appralaed at SH,700.00
. Ttrml of Selt: To be aold
lor noUuathan two•lhlrda
of the appralaed value.
$2,170.00 caehlara check
only at lima of aal.t . Balanca
o1ahlere ch1ck only within
thirty
doy1
•Iter
conftrmaUon.
JAMES M. SOULSBV.
·
sheriff
KENNETH C. JOHNSON,
Attorney, 114-227·2300
(413, 10, 17, 24; (511; STC

LEAD SCREENING UNDERWAY - Childhood lead poisoning Is one of the moat common and
ventable pediatric health problems in the country. Children, age 6 months to 5 ·yeara are eejpec:lallly
prona to the toxic effect of lead because this Is the age most young children put non-food Items Into
their mouths. It Is estimated that 38 percent of children In Meigs County have high lavale of blood lead.
Wednesday the Meigs County ·Haalth DBPI!rtment Initiated a tasting program. Here four-year-old Nikki
Davis seated on her mother's lap. at Gingerbread Preschool, Ia being given the blood IHt by Becky
Mabach, R.N. Children will alao be teeted at Dee Dee Qualle' Daycare and Carleton School ea wall ae at
the Health Department.

COMEDIES COMING - Meigs High School drama students under the direction of Cella McCoy will
!.resent two short plays on April 25 at 8 p.m . In the Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium at the echool.
Roles In "A Connecticut Yankee In King Arthur's Court", a tske-ott on a Mark Twain story, are tskan
lly from the left, seated, Chrissy Williams, Amber Slaven, Libby King, and Jamie Williamson; and stand- kr-------~
ICig, Michelle -Miller, Morgan Vanaman, ·Caeay. Booth, Erin Kraweczyn, Tim Paavley, Paul Epperaan,
"aron Hockman, Tara Grueaer, Megan Swearingen, Ada(ll White, Sean Fife, J!JBtln Fields, Darrick St.
· &lt;:;lair.
·
.
·
·
The second play, "How Does a Thing Like That Get Started?"' deals with gossip In a small Southern
tpwn. In roles are from the left, Chad Dodson, Darrick St. Clair, Linden Kelly, Ta,Yn Doidge, Laura Dan·
·· Qlro, Josh Witherell, Whitney Hapton11tsll, 4nna Fink, Desiree Clemons, Brian Finkenbinder, Alma Loaiza
· ·Ayon.
·
·

TURKEY SHOOT
SUNDAY,
APRIL 20

Meigs Local
kindergarten
.registration ..
:Scheduled
'

Children who will be fiv e years
pld on or hc li,rc Sept. 30, 1997. arc
·1;1igible In aucnd k indergart~ n dur·
111g the 1997-98 school year.
This year. registration for new
l; indc rg~rtc n swdents will be ,held
. ~ pri l 2ij through May I in lhc Meigs
l-ocal School District.
·
The ki ndergarten registrat ion is
fo ll ows : Middleport Elementary.
. ~pr ii' 28. S::l0-11 and 12-2 p.m ..
\!92 -:l:lK7: Pomeroy Element ary.
.~pr il 29 . . 9· 1·I and 12:30· 3 p.m..
\!92·27 10: Salisbury Elementary.
•lpril ~0 . X:30-ll :30. a.m., 992!t404 : Harri sonville Elementary .
, ~pril 30. 1-3:30 p.m., 742-3000:
l~utl a nd Elementary. May I . 8:30!1:30 a.m.. 742-2666: Salem Ce nter
~ ~l emc n wy. May I. 1-3:30 p.m ..
1142-3 11 1.
.
Parents need. to.bring the ir child's
_ blirth "ct1~1 knlc, Social Security card
· ~~d i mn~un izntion rcc&lt;J~d to rcgistrnt on. Cl)•ldrcn should have had lour
· 1 PT. thr~c polio, one MMR and one
1B sk in test llofnre entering school
~nd a school nu~e will be present at
· ~fg•strau pn tn answer, a~y ques110ns
oonccrn 111g llllll'UnlzatiOn rcqm rc·, ~1c nts .

'I'

.,'I

"

Sons of American

.

. Legion
· At Legion Farin
. 12 Open a.o•e
20 Open Cho•e
For Kids
12:00 P.M.
Everyone Welcome

-

Order Now for

liM total bill. A olilck for till

10" retalnega will be·
llluecl within 10 clayo of tho
ftnt clieck tt no problem•
tie n Io p . with
tha
-•wtor'e work. The
ratalnaa• check will bo
1-cl wtthtn 14 tleya or
problem oorrectlon,' par
·IIPPfOVII ol thllnglnHr.
. 81D DESCRIPTIONS ARE
AS FOLLOWS:
81dltanil1 Foundation:
~~=~;:;_~alhall
thllrInclude
bid:

~

lebor · lor

~~
nooungo.

raba;, ontl
building

2. Concrete, rabl11r, ond
labor lor tho froet well and

column pacllatala Including
1111 halrplna an.d labor to
lnatall provided anchor
bolll.
3. lnaulatlon board and

labor lor tho perimeter
lnaulatlon. ,
4. Sch. 40 ptaatlc • • - •
and labor lor the . wall
P'l nat ra II on 1.
All
maaauramailta ahall be
adharad to within 1/4" or
plan m.. auramanta.
Concrate atnngtli and rabar
alza ahall mHt or excaad
plen
requtramente.
Contractor 1hall obtlln
neaaaaory approval of tho
aliile IMpllllilr: All work
ahlll be completed within 3
liiiHka 01 ICh,dulad atlrl
Clllt.
,
Bid 111m 12 Plumbing:
Contrac.._ ahell Include
thllollowlngln their bid:
1. · Piping, ,llttlnga,
llxturn, 1cceaaorlaa,
her!lware lor tho building
plumbing portion of
oon-lon pill' the plana.
2. Labor to complota the
lnalellatlon of aald lleme
and obtain nacu .. ry
approval by lho alele
lnlplclot. Tht rough·ln
pl•m!llnt ahall be
completed wtlhln one week
otachodulacl Jllrl d..,_ The
llnll!; plumbing aliell be
col!lpl- within
olachldulld atart dett.
Bid ltetn 13 Floor 1nd
Aprau:·
Contractors aholl Include
· thafollowlngln thalr bid:
. 1. Concrete, romoah,
v1por barrier,
1nd
expenalon lor Ilia bulldlnO
11oor and aprona.
2. L•bor to piece and
'llnlah the concrete alibi,

CARL JENNINGS
~ho pa18ed away
Qrte year ago, the

· 17th of April 1998.
There II an empty
chair In our little
home. The one who
sat there Is gone.
God called, and he
an1wered. Now he
alta In a chair In His
Heavenly home.
Greatly mt..ad and
lovingly ramemborad
by wife, Rachel, fllmlly
and friend•.

'lotoerlty Will Afloolo•Uity"
FrtNI Eatlmates
Announcing! 3 New ~enu Items!
•Fiii-A-Busters •Dessert Pizza
•Poppers

5lCQf[JJSifJJ09{S

388-8879

CHESTER

Available al D&amp;M Pizza &amp; Subs

1'19{'£ J'ErJ,J'E.[)J(j' .
Corner Sec. at Grape St, Gallipolis, OH. (Tope's Furniture Buildl446·2842
91 Mill St, Middleport, OH 45760 · 992-6250
Mon. 9:30-6: Tues.-Thurs. 9:30: Fri. 9:30-8; Sat 9:30-5
• FREE PARKING ,
• FREE 90.DAY FINANCING
• FREE GIFT WRAPPING

I

.,

OIIC '

Friday 9 til1 A.M.
. Saturday B:30·12:30A.M. ·

·EMPIRE'S

H

·s ·

842 Second Ave.
Gallipoli$, Ohi

IRS SALE ·
Continues thru
Saturday!

.Empire Furniture Co.
•

: · r-----~--------------------------.

CELLULAR PHONES

.' ''
0

1

"

11~~~;:Al~l~wo~~rk~a:hl:ll~=be
wlllitn.3 W..U or

Bid Ita"- II
lnallllallon:
1 ·
Contractora
ahell ,ncluda
.
thllollowlntln 111111' bkl.
1.
All electrlcot
aqulpmont, . flxturu,
motartete to lnatall In tha
eub).Ct building par lha
plena. Thll lncludao, but' Ia
not limited to, lighting,
ewttcheo, outlata, .aarvlce
panela, tone, HVAC auppty
tci dlaconnectl, all ltoma ·
.run wlrlnjl, ate.
2. Lebor to lnatall aald '
name par National Electric
Coda, OBBC, NFPA, ate. and
obtain naceuary approval
'by tha atoll lnapector. All
work ahall bo complated
wllhln3-kaolechodulacl
mrt date. ·
Bid · Item I I HVAC
1n111.11111on:
Contracton ahlll lncluclo
the following In tholr bid:
1. Al.l HVAC equipment
and malarlala per !lie plan•
Including, but not llmlteclto, .
h111 pumpa w/aervlce
dlaoonnecla, ductwork,
reglatera, !lempera, lie.
, 2, Lllbor to oomplela the
lnatallatlon ol aald .lltme
and .• obtain ·nacanary
approval by the tllle
tnepector. All work ehlll be
complatH within 2 -'&lt;1 or ·
acheduiH lllrt data.
Pllns lor tho project are
ev1lleble 11 the Racine
Muntctpel Building during
till hours oil 1.m.to 4 p.m.
Mondey through, Frld1y.
n,. lll!l.cl!oVIIO al$1 per
drewtng. 8lda Will be dua at
tha aeme loclllan on Apr.
21 , 1997, at4 p.m. ·Bicto wtu
be owerdad the following
wt~ak, II not rejected by tho
vlll•t• council. Queatlon
cen be en1wered by the
project eng.l n"r 11 11...,.....
8630, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
Monday through Frldl!f.
(3120, 27; (413. 10, 17; STC

'

•,'

POMEROY, OH.

•

REPAIR OR NEW
CONSTRUCTI()N

•

Loafing ehede to horae eren11.

Roof repair and paint to atructural repair.
StHI building• a• low ae $4.00 1q • .ft.
delivered. Free eltlmatee, prompt and
proftl81onal eervlce. Call tOday

·

.

POMEROY

'liNENS
IUSS MISTERS

Limestone,

• Top • Trim • Remqval
. • Stump Grinding
20 Y11.
- Ins. Ownar: -Jones
Eeliinale•

'.

KRUPrCY
lJ......

'

,,

-~--·~(HIPIER

·-

"(·• ·CHAniR

·· Attorney
•·

Gravel, Sand, .
To,p Soli, Fill Dirt

w

·.Safranek

• Aquatron Boats • Cutty
Cabins. • Bow
Riders •. Bias
1 .. .
""
Boats ' Sea Ark.John Boats

.a.,.,.,..,
....... .

J..audo~r

,LAWN CARE
-Mowing
~ldllttllll

COiiimtrclll)

•Weadeatli'lg
•Trea Trimming
Shrubbery
,,
M•lntenance
' Ahoacl, Cell-today
'
Plan
· tor trw ea)lmato.
•

aruf Wultl~

a ...,.,...,

,...,.,...

..
''

742-2803
· or 44&amp;.-3622

.1-900-263-2700
EXT. 6925.
$2.99 per min.

'

~le,iir5 ,
efnteraet Setup He~

• Johnson Outboard

Call
992-8342 (Diane)
992•7275 (Brenda)

T.K.
HAULING
"

0

"

• Limestone
'

· Day. Ph. 992-3671

.

• Gravel
• Refuie • Etc.

.

.Will hail# -Jwt Cl/11.
FleiiOnable Rltll

(614)- 742-3800
YOUNG'S
(AIPhiER SIIYIQ

.....,... Adcllllone
.. .... Ginigoe.

..

ofloollng

• ...... lor • Ealarlar
oPalntlng

.

-

COnctel!t.Warl!
· v.c. foUNG 111

(FRII! EtTIMATIS)

•Decka

-

••282111
PoiiiiiDYo Oltlo'

•ROOfing

',

•Siding

· •GII'IQII

"SJop puttU., off thoae • • needed
ltome in,prot1enaenl•." Call TodDy! ~

41111 mo.

........'"......
IINIS'

H11PPY Hollow Road

Middleport, Oltlo 45780

Naw ~AdditioN.
Roofing, lllcllnll,
Para ....... 010118,
Plltntlng, Ganlgu,

Pola-

CIIIISForA,.. b I"*
114-742-3010
.
114-74N324
114-7424078

The
(
Kountry Klub
Golf Lei10n•
Golf Sales, Club
. Repair,·Custom
Orders, Awards,
Engraving
John Teaford
Chester, Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio .

calculator. Rtaponalbllltitl in·

elude: Preparation ol financial
and deparuntnlll Income atate·

949-2168

s~racuse

--

Semon

614-~180

Pansies $6.50 flat
All vegetable &amp; bedding
plants $6.50 flat
Blooming &amp; Foliage
Baskets $5.75- $6.75
t41n. Assort Pots
ears$5.50

oCannas $2.00 ea.
oShrubbaty
We honor Golden ·

••

'.

Personlll

Fltkf~ed.

lJiln4:0CJey

M•'

1AAZ

miaalon apprond corraapon:
dence coUraa. Complete •• your

-:

MHI New Peoplt Tile Fun Way
TodQ 1·100·772-15383 Ext 3e74
U .ll Min, Mull Be 1I Serv·U lhll exempl position, you
118645 81:14.

2 112 month old temolt, while
~- Yellow &amp; whlto m•le caL
75-5510.

will

locllont

•lii*I-

The qu111i1te1 lpi&gt;Jicont will need
10 .... • 11e11111e 5 - 1 dlr - k
-k. tnd lit IVIlllble lor IOmt
old, ... :1104-175-3422.
_,;ngo .men oequulod lir Coi«J go110n natural gu • ., - · IJctlonl ManJgtr, Working
•.-u. f14-IIZ.571141.
knowltriQt of eom• lrillill 'lalm
court
plu11 Ohio Yeller. Blnk
AKC Regllleied brown mol• ' Ollttl a.......
1 lltneftll ,.....
~ !ll'olrpli, I!Q4.77$11i1170.
IQIInGIUiflnll 401(1CI rtfit-~
Couch, Ctoihel 01 All ICindo, opportunllf lor ..,. . aJIVanct:
Oddi &amp; ErMM, .Rout• 7 lelucasn ..-. and lllirll bonut
Bladen Landing &amp; Crown City, u... EJPtrlancecl 11141 quelllltd
peroall(•l Jhould ·oomplell on
114-251-ftll.
aflll[lelllon 11 anr o1 our olllcol

0_. . .

llidtullnit'D Hu.., " - Oapertmorll, CHilo Vellty lank,

llod«J 0 •r ' ' Ohio 41131

IIIII'UWIIL .
-~

•

tram cartified appllcanla far 71h &amp;

81h Grado Foolball Coach, lloyo'
Va11l1y Baoktiball Coach, Boyo

Elfotilve wrlllln tnd orol COIMIU· Aula1ant varsity Basketball
Coach, Boy'o A t -· Booktlblll
nlclllon llkiiiL
Coach, Bor•· Gill Oradl Bolkti·
bel Colch, Boyl'llh Orodo a...
Abllly D - • figurn
k11ball Cooch, lloyo' 71h Grode
l'lople Oritnltd _ . . ,
Botketblll Coach, Boro' He1d
Trock Coach, A11111on1 High
Minimum 1wv (2) ynro priOf ool- Sc~ Teck Catch, Junior Hlth

2 Male CIIJ, 1·1mot Old, 1·2JII

Open Dally 9-5 Sun

\

s.mc. Pro-

IIANICIIO
.
pott. Jack Kallty'o Norilltutarn
Ohio VIIIQ B1nk Ia oHklng on College ol Reel E11111. Coli for
oxpor-tel ond quoiflod lndiYid- lnlebroclllre HID0-71111-4477.
uol 10 Ill ono (II ful amo pooitiOfl
11 • Collocdono Offlclf In flo Fl-· The Melgo Lo~l School Dlllrlcl
nonclal Bonk Group, To quality for ia currentlr eHklng applk:atlona

102!.1111n

'

Soclol

11ructure, ••ceUent btntlita and
great retirement plana. Call, Pax

.....

AN NOU NCEr.1UJTS

Ek.fc!teye Caids

. 992-7898

Adrnlnloltrln;
.,....

gullll playO&lt;, onlr oerlous inquioo. Oolli1 · Moigo CommunitY Al:tlon
(814) 387-71110
'
Agenc:y II An Euqal Employment
Opporllfnit~ IAifirmt~liva Action
Auto Bodr Ropolr Mon Needed, Emploror. Ptlvale Non-Profit Cor·
C1ll For Doitlll. 114·441 ·1 115 porodon.
Doyo; 814-441·1073 Evening~
Rill Eolall Slleopeople wanied
Avon U ·S1 5/Hr. No Minimum by almost every campany In
On*, No o- -To -o-. No In· town. Complete educational reYtniOry, 1·100·731-0118 lndltlll quirement• In one month. Com~

992·5778

Now Open For SprilyJ

Uon Sklllo, A Wllllngne11 To

Travel, Reliable Transportation
And A Valid Driver• Llcenae, ·
Ptovlouo Oe,..no..lod Ablliiy In

Educallan; Degree In Social
Wort&lt;, Public Ot Buolneio - .
latration, Educa tion Or Related

. AUtrnltiva, Melli Band saellling

311 7JI4/IFN

&amp;...,.ler.
Interior
Blfore 8 p.m.
laavem....ge.
Attar 8 p.m•

Qua!lfteat!p\Requlras Exclllenr
Vetbal And ritten Communlca-

lnllirnted PariHIIio May Apply At
Tho Gallla · Melga Community
llono, 80 Jackoon Pike, Galllpo, A01lon AQIIncr Admlnlsllollve Of.
llo, OH •5831·111i112-Phone (814) flceo At 8010 Notlh Stall Route
441·5783·FU 1814) 448·5532· 7. Cheshire, Ohio ·45820'. Appllcaliono Mull Bt RoctiVod No Lllltr
equll OppotiiJni'Y e~.

l.illlt llti~tt.c

1105

- O f OiOOCIOrL

or mall confidential information
to : Holl':tr Clinic, Human Rtla-

NEW-REPAIR
Guttera .
Downspout•
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

parties should call

inents. Financial analysis. QuarltriJ and amual 1Uf'le11. Holzer

Clinic offwfl I compotlilve Ulery

., w.,,,,-Alol
••
llw Cl•uifiri Srdiaw!

ROOFING

oflubber trees &amp; elephant

••

aive mulll ~ apeciallty medical
group attica 1 motivated team
member. Succeaaful candidate
will have BS or BA in Account~

accrUal accounting. pt'Oiicltnt

(No Sunday Calls)
Ho-rd L Wrflenl .

lnrereated

S04·171-D.O, Exl. 1CZ or·101.
F01 bid lorm. Lakin Hospital 11 111

· Thi Galllo - Molgo Communllf
Ac;lon Agen~ y It Stoking An
E*"llve Oloector. Thlo .lndlvldu110 Help ..,anted
11 Will Bt Reoponalble For Admlnllltrl"' Couni)', Slallt Or Fed'
AVON I All Areu I Shlrloy eral
Anli~Povtrly ·Program• In
Sptn.:II04-I75-!&lt;1211.
Gollll And Molgo Counlltl. The
Able Avon Rtpteaentatlwa · Succoulul C.ndldalt Will E-AII 'FIICII, Ptrsonnel. And .
nHded. E11n moner far Chrlsl- ute
Admlnlollallvo Pollcloo And- Prorillil blllo at home/tl -k. 1-800- cedure&amp;
Through
892-1358 or 304-182-2845, Ind. Slalt And Eatabiahed
Federal
Requiremonlll
f1op.
'
And AdrnlnlstOftel By Tile Gallll •
ACCOUNTANT·A vorr progrol· llelgl Communliy AOIIon Agonc:y

FlniiiCI, knowlodgti In cooh end

614-992-7643

sse . s1.2s

•

r

'

provider shall a11ume their own
lilbility ror ••rvictl they -render.

EEO E"'llfo'tar.

Er.1PL0Yt,1ENT
SERVICES

FREE ESTIMATES

A good poinl jo&amp; on ·
nnr c:lortity dny,
malte• IJ Item

.•• ·•

992-5535

In Good Condition. Caii814·24S.

5887,

. New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Wlndqws
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

.I..IND.t'S
PAilVI'ING

'ftllf71fn

W.med: UINid - d Flociring

SHARPENING BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~

Pick up discarded
appllances,.battertee,
flllnymelll•&amp;
motOr blocu:
-4025 8am·8

614-742·2138' - -

~~

eoez.

·

3351

ooEIIctriCII • Plumbing

IIIII'S

. (614) 992-3838

....,....,

MOfN31".,......

. FREE

SaJ!e .Trucklag,Co.

U.dicll- Oirecror dude• and be

wlih PC, oompuJer •llwlll ond

'

Eaon $1,000 WHkly Slulllng Ertvolopei'AI Homt.'SIOrl Now. No
Expe~once. FrH SUppA••• lnla.
No Obligation. Sond LSASE To:
.ACE, Dept: 1351, Bo1 5137, Diamond Bor, CA 117115.
Eoty Workl Exctlltni Pori AI· '
Hmble Produ"• il Ho-. Cell
Toll Fr.. 1-800-•87-5518 EXT;
12170.
Needed IIi Lldioo To Soli Avon,
Call1ol- 441 3358

Vlanted To Buy Uotd Mobile' rnponalb'e or ahart •an can•
Homn. Coli: 114-441·0175 Or GOYIIIQII 24 hou11 per clay, 385
.•
deja 1 year.' Tile p1ovldor aha II
provide a minimum ol 10 houra
Wonted To Bur: We Buy Junk per week on ~ al'e •arvices Uon~ ·
Cuo 114-446-PART, Or 114-381- Frl botwH~ 7am and Bpm , The

·Jng, Sualnell Adminiatratian or

CUSTOM
SHARPENING

Dairy Farm Workor Mui; ·Hove
Exporltnce Willi C.. • Fwmna
Equlprillini, Mllkl"' 70 Con In
Flit Sllnchlon a.n No Drinlllri._
Slrlou1 lnqulrl.. Only, 11il-'2tS:
1!047EYinlngL .

care taclllly. Will auume 1ttlng

772-3lrl8.

... ,..,.y_

WY'II02)477

EEO e..,_.

Wanted Timber I Or Timber
Llnd, Proloulonll Slrvlceo, Phyilclon to provide conlfact
Mild Papor WoodiJndJ, 114· urvicaa 10 a 138 bed lang term

1-800o291o560D

HUPP'S

· Joe N. sRyre , .

J • D'1 Aula Par11. lklylng Ul·

;;r=clH,Sellin; por!L 304·

742·2925

110 Court St.

SERVICE

Rusonable RaiH

.... ,.,...,.. Qolpah.

"FACTORY DIRE{;T
PRICES''
· Quality Window· Systems

949·2647

Driveway Llmeatone
Complete Houea '
· and Trailer SHe
Work, Bulldozing,
Beclchoe.• Traclchoe.
Septic Syatama :
lnetalled

Cloen Ltle Model Ctrl Or
Truokl, 18to Modell Or N-r.
Smlih Buick Pontile, 11100 Eool·

·~halnSaws
•WBed Eater•
2 mi. off Rt. 7,
Leading Creek Rd.

2!1 YEARS IN BUSINESS

Llmeetone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systema
' Trailer"
Houl!eSHtl

EXCAVAnNG CO.

2521.

•Lawn Mowers

M'EIGS COUNTY SENIOR C'r&lt;NTIO'D

a

Ruu Moore owner, l14·tD2-

•Small Engines

at

llllldlla
IXUIIftDI

lnl Andqull, Pometor, Ohio,

DIDAI

SOUDVINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS .

HOWARD

AndquH, 1Dp prlcH peld, Rl-·

•Room Adclillans

.,

monih or 11 -tel. lniortlled
~r10n1 contaot S04-171-0UO
Ell 102 or lOt from e:OOam· ·
4:00pm Mon·Frl for 1 bid lorm.
Llkln Hoopftol II 1n EEO Em·
"'"'-==-:
· ~-=:----:-:--:-::
::
Con•ulllng Pharmacy urvlcel
lor 1 1311 bod ICF runlng llolllly.
PhlrmiC)' mull lit COf!1111110tlud
ond lnterflce wllh liM AS,40D
computor lflltm. Wll bill Medl·
core/ Mecltcold · - 3nl petlf
lnourance. lntortlteoll f'IIIOnl .
OOniiGI 31M..~ ElL 102 Of
108 fnlrrii-:ODIJIII lolon-F~
lor bid lorm. LaWn ...,...., II an

AIIJOIUIO Top Dollll: All U.S. Sil,.,... IIJIIII!III'
var And Gold Colno, Proolooto, Pollilon open
-dinlol !\lglenl"Dlomondl, Andquo J.,..ky, Gold mell resume lot
PO. Bo• 123.
Rlng1, Prli1t30 U.S. Currency, Mldd1opor~ OH to:
45no:
·
Slorling, EIO. Acqulolllonl J-rr
• II.T.S. Coin Sliop, 151 St&lt;;on&lt;t Orlvero: Quit 1u71ng Your
Avnle, Gallpcl, Ill 448 2142
Company A Truck Put Tbol
llon•r Toward Your OW• Lat•
AndquH, lurritu,.; glaoa, 'hina, Mode Convenllonolf Poor
colnt, tQVI, 1ampa, oune. toolt, Crodll No Probloml Ho-tllalll: .... -·IIIII, Olby konda . Cl111 •a• CDL. Min 1
lllriln, 1144112-7441,
Yr. OTR. ~u 1~-t11t1.

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT

·-

Call
992·2161

. 911 . Wlnted to Buy

INSULATION

·Brian Anderson

SENIOR CmzENS
CENTER
Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy
Table~ for $10

Rick Patroon Aucdon Componv.
full time IYCtloneer, complete
auction : aervlce. Llcenaed
IIN,Ohlo &amp; Weal Vltllinlo, 304·
71$-571!5 Or 1104-773-5047,

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;

Ev!t. Ph. 94&amp;,2534

'

(619) 645-8434
411'm mo.

I

efi-...L..

~

RUMMAGE SALE
FLEA MARKET
Saturday, May 3
9:00·4:00 '

Eallllo Firm S11eJ. Clll14-4*

1241,114- ...,

992-4514

eC:OR!pt!ter Tninllg
eft•dware/Softw..
Set- .
efiStZtt..

992-4118

results. Call now!

ff'H Ellllllllel

.......·

Pu6fic is inVite/

Electrical - Plumbing - Carpentry
Repairs ~ Conversions - RemoCtela ·

•Remodeling

Don Geary, Owner

614·992-347;0

Lemle(o Auellon a.r.lco, LHIIe
Ltmllf, Aucdo-. Houolhold, .

•Build G.-ages
•Siarm Doors &amp;
Wlntlows

Mulberry Heights; Pomeroy
Tuesdays and Thursdays during
April Serving from 4:30 • 5:15
Donation $4.00 for meal

LARRY'S

.,....
"
....
........

614-992-3120

Public Sail
Mel Auction

80

992·2n2

(614) 592·5025 - ..
Athens,.Ohio

.,

,...,.,.....,

e:oo a.tn.-3:30 p.m.
•Replaclltllllt Winlllws

'

''

MGA Construction.Services ·

•NewHomea
•Addition•

. Quality Work at'
• Fair Prlcel
550 Page St.
Middleport, Oh. 4&amp;780
HQme Ph.
,

HAULING.

(614) 367-0266
1-800·950 -3359

''

8ofi~Shop

AllY""' leiH llull a. Paid In
Ad¥1..... Oeedllnt: 1:0011111 llle
dlf
-•lora
ed I• edition·
to run,
auodor
• the
llonder
1.-..
.
Frldof
·

Chelter, Ohio

COMPUTER
HELP!

D.har»'s

WICKS

I VIcinity

9115-4422

10 ... prolormod twico •

-

=-~===~~=~ ·

Bath•; Grooming,
Kenttel ea..
arid Love .
Mon., Tuel., Wed.,
Thu"~ Fri. 1().6;
Sal. 12-8; Sun. 12-4
271 North 2nd
Middleport, Ohio

Beau-·-- -'

Wind•" ..,

...,

Monday· Frklay ·8:00a.m.· 4:30p.m..
Saturday · 8:00 a.m. • 12 noon

FREE ESniiATES

51111..,

Middleport

CHIISn'S PETS

100 348 7111 111101.

C
~ ............ ~•
OIIIUidn;
13e
bed ICF -tlnl ~_,a
1u lor oorvlco lltoiL lnii&lt;Hted
.CIIIclwn S.P. Shll&lt;lro, WtwtnoiJ, peroono call :1114·171-0110 E1L
Ill' Slla ...W. Dol lal rrioc.
. 102 01 108 UOIIiM:GOprn. Mai\Frldoy 1..,,
IIIIi, Sun- F~ lor bid lorm. Uklii Holflllll lo
cloy 201IL t:OO A.M. lo 1
eeo EIIJIIIDIW.
Drive Qfl Sui•- Ptko, DlohiL Conoultlnfl Oletldltl oorvlcH lor
Etc...
1 13e 1Jt&lt;i ICF f11lllty. Mull be
POIIJIPw
. ,
reglolortdlllcenled dlet1111n.

Limestone • Gravt~l
· · Dirt • Sand

250 Condor Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A Division on Nichols Metal, INc.
Phone: 614: 992·2406
Fax: 304-773·5861 ·

Computer Uaeta N11d1d. Work
~n houro. l20k 10 IIOIIIyr I·

April 20 111: lnllde Silo; 12
o'clocll 1111 5 prn: 170 Drv Rlctgo
Rd, Potrlot: Houoe hold lttmo,
Home lntorlor, Cooklo Joro,

SERVICE

985·3831

'

·10:00 ............,.

DUMP TRUCK

Big Bend Fabrication,
Machine &amp; Welding Shop

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

1110 ""'· - . . . ,

Complete Mac:llille Shop Service F1brlelltloo
Steel Sales, W~ng Supplies; Industrial Gu
Radiator Repah: &amp;: Replacement

814-696·1376
Lawn Mowing&amp;.
·Lanct•caplng
10%0HAny
$ervlce to New
Cuatomers .

B•DaliOBI

Daly Hi»'oscope,
up-to-date soap

. 992·2483
•

'

Cemetery Solei. ""'' llodr
-11, 114-8112·7440.
.

-·2:00p.m.
,....,._.,_

TRUCKING.

7/22/lln

Farm Buildings
•

.FREE

ESTIMATEES

CALLIWoiLlOLLI'MI
1MI 1»71111

file .., -tile tel

R. L. HOLLON

·• Small Seeds • Chemicals
• Twine • Feed • Lime

Remodeling .
Stop &amp; Compare

.~~.~.--­

lil'lld ... -Qf'DM:
;J::CJOp.m.

.....,.

• Fertilizer (Bag or Bulk}
• DeKalb &amp; Pioneer·Seeds

•New Homes

torner Dornontl. No. c.tnlghl
,,..,.., lmmeclla&amp;t ~!:'~~'':':·
CandidatM .... It ' . ; )h, D
Siori PaldT..... Pwom-

--~

\...'--:

Gravel, UmeltOne,
Topeoll, Fill Dirt, ·
Sand, Rlfun.

Your Supplfn Por•••

985-4473

614-992·5479

Licensed • B.onded
Insured

.

.

ROBERT BISSILL
CONSTRUCTION
•Complett

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE

''
'
' · 113 W. 2ND ST;

JoeWlleon
(814) 812-4277

•Garag•s ,

3W Communications

'.

'

'

.,..,, ....__

2 . . 8 u lid In I
kIt
a coaaaorl'' auch ••
gllllln/clawlllp,
lneulallon, watklllru tloore,
OVIIftoacl tiMr Inti window
framing, anc~ balte, trim
end ftaahlnt • rafarreil to
tn the plene.
3. Lllbar to comf.lota Ilia'
lnalallatlan ol ao d ltema
and
nacuaarr
by the lllle

flelign, .etc.

Serv~u

992-2753
I

..._

1t88 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45788

(' .

Available

10·2

2
Moose Lodge 731
The Hit earid: "NOSTALGIA"

____

.

'

a

''

.

' WILLUm.JUft CILI••
992·7074

Aenltlon Motor oSale1 Repalra
·Cleaning Septic Syateme
P.ort· A..John • Rental• • Serviced WMidy
. No Extra Charge for Ev•ntnge or Weekend•
24 Hr. Prompt Service
7
Week

"Build Your o·ream"

NfluiNIMi;ta lor atructural

Must be 18 yrs.

. "RENEGADE"

Sat.

POMEROY, OHiq .

614-992·7119 .

Jull off.Brlldbury Rd.
(look tor elgna)
Middleport, OH
' 814-1192-5378
Day • Evening .-..;.;;
Hra.

'-~- .

-,,

) )

CARPEl

tlale.
.
lid llern H llulkllna Kit:
Contraotorl altall Include
till~ In their bkl: ·
1. The IIUlkllnl ldl which
rnHII tiM general criteria
illl forth In the plana and

Presents

SHOE PLACE.
Middleport •

wHke at ec!ladUIH llart

CAILITVOJall . . . .

'i!/IJt~;
-

•

nM'SCUSTOM

Earn'
" .... ,..,_.cmlulonl. Ea.._tr Hltli cu..

r,:;·' ....

MAJ

50"·75"

•
"
•

eiN lnapactor. AH work
elulll 1M -pl•l•• within 2

One Unit Now
101128, .$65 per mo.

.
rrlie

n•n•••rr .,_. lly tho

ltata

1DM71-7111.

..;;;model:;;;.lng;'l

TIRED OF MEANINGLESS
_
WORK???
MAKE A DIFFERENCE!!! Your
help is nee~ed to Improve the .
quality of lif~ for persons
with MR/DD. Call Ceclll.a at
1..S00-531-2302 for further
information.

H011e Improvement

W e ca11 Customize Your :Mothtr5'1'rrida11t rvitu 'Birtnstorres
&lt;Tue 'Prrfrd 'Way to Sfiow just Jfo•v-:::1-fucu Your :Motuer :Mea Ill!

H
.U
S
P u ·p P 1

:r---~~-.,-1--. l(c:Uu;ator;m;;iHoH;;mea=--~~RR.

IIOlltiM ..... be'-* IIICI
. jiCIUrM ,., the plan tletall.
Colltraotor ahall abteln

m•atlng

-In, ...
_ _,.. value. IIEWARDI

·110 He lpWanted

· JB Roofing &amp;

-

•

1. Contraotor ell all
oonauH wHII the proloot
angln- aa NquiNCI anti
.allan tot •PJII'II'I•I llofore
1M¥1nt lilt Job ello upon
coMpiJUo.--..
.
I . Payment TtrmO: Upon
comptallon ol work anti
aubeaquent engln..r'l
approval, till contrector·
ahall preeant hie bill tor
work •• bklcllclo' tncludlllll
any pre.approvatl extre
work, ta . the prolaol
..,.._, A oholik of
payment will ba. leauad
wltliln 14 daya lor ~ al

.

Business Services

Black Navy Taupe
Bone White

II

In Memory Of

• Mother's Riligs
• Mother's·Pendants
• Mother's Bracelets

Confidence makes the best impression.
Comfortablel Hush ~ppies · shoes fit and
feel like only Hush Puppies shoes can .

I

"

two-·

In Memory

.Mother's Day

",
~ -----·--------------------------------------~------------------~"C

".

•

LOif: 1..12 lncti -

Tracok Coac:h, A11l1tant Jwnlar
HIQII Trock Colch, Hetid BoMbtll

Co1ch, Rnom BoHboll Coach,
Glrll' R - Bolkolbon Coach,
Glrlo' Heed Tracll Cooch, Oklo'
Sollbell Coachl. Glrll' Reoer..
Sohloall Coach, ulrlo' Junior HIQII
811ktilltll Coa~h {2 pooldonol,
Junior High Now-•r Advl101,
High School .Chetr!Hder Advl·
""· .Nnlor
Htali
.......
Ienior
Cllu AdvtiOf, Quiz
Tum Anlaor, and Alhlotlc 01·
rector lor lhl IH7oll achool

c--""

-Ohio· Aptl1loanll
"". hold tnd
• - ""
......... cer1111cota

=~~~IIIIana
IIIUII
·
,...._
. ofOhio
far IIMtrll medklne and CPR.
Par10no lntarelltd ohlluld con·
IICI Bit ...... , ~- ....

MtigJ Local School
Boa 272, PM• or&gt;

DlllriCI, P.O.

a..

I

�.-

~. Aprtl17, 11f7

Pomeroy • llkldleport, Ohio

PHILLIP

Albl tJ tePiS/JLFI ~

ALDBR

~nNIW. .

PC uaora nootfod. •45,000 Inpoltnl'-1. Coli I •IOO·SIS.
CMSEJI.&amp;.-.

I'

·EEK.AMEEK
",..-----..--------~----.

.-lion

t~K .Jtl

.t. • 7 e
Bile&amp;
~KQ-102

1111113.

.• J

"5 l

TIRID OF IIEANINGLEII
WDRKUt IIAKI A Dl·
FERENCEIII Your Help Ia NHd-

ed To . . _ The Quollly Of lill
For Peraona With MR/00. Call
Cecilia At 1·800· 531·2302 For
Fu,....lnlor.....,
TFUCI&lt; Driver • Running E•n Man
Job Optnlng Gallpollo Appro•lmatoly no.ooo ·135..000
VHr Mull Hav1 : 1 Yn~Exptrl ·

once (Minimum) Class A ·COL.
Good IIVR, No DWro Pall Dot
Phyolcol 1 Drug Scrton. Sand
Raoumo to: P.O. Box 789, GoAl·
po11t, DH 45831 .
Wontad: 42 Ptople Looo 18 ·25
Pounda In The Next 30 Daya.
Natural, Guarantoadl 1·800-1190-

22115.
WANTED:
EXPERIENCED
Roollnt Foreman And Roolore
• 5 VII E1porltm In All Phlaoa
01 Raoldenllal Roofing • Mull
Have Rolioblo Transportltion And
Hand Tools. Start lmmodlot•lr.
Call ChrloHan·o Con11ruc11on AI
81.-,4514 Or SIDP In AI 1403
EaS11111 Ava.. Gallpotl' DH.

--forrul-

whlch Ia In ~tlon olllla taw.
O u r - 1181-.n!by
lnlormed 11111 .. dwoiiiQII
ldYerUied In U. nauu J""'tW
.,. ava- on an equal
QllPOrluhlly blsla.

Dealer: South
. Soadl . Weat N!lftll

F..... . . , _

Rl¥0fViow, now vinyl oldlng. now
carpal, now kllchon, ooklne

'MIOO.

24g Norlh Tlilrd, 3 bedroom. 2

...... 1 tiOfy houiO, 5 yro. old, . .

Thlo 11 Tho Ont You've B11n
Looking For. Ono BodiOOIII, Exll'll
Nice. Walhor, Dryer, Stove. Rt·
lrlga,.lDr Included, We I'IY Wo·
tor ·a Garbage. No Ptlt, No
Smokoro
aaoo DapooJt
~···
814
418 ti5B6;81
........2205.

.

Furnished
RoOms

wv.

MERCHANDISE
~0

acr11 5 Mila• From Town, an

SltiO Routo 218. Will Sill All or
510
""''"'
814-~574
Houlehokl
Log house on Salem Slroe~ Ru·
!land· ihtll onl)', nothing lnaldo, Four Loll For Salt, Mound Hill
Goods
181 an IWO so· lot1, lt2,000 'or &lt;;emt!ary, For lnlorma tlon. Phone
houH wllhoul properly, woo, 81tUIMM .
Appllanoao:
Roco~dllloned
WuMfl, Qry'"' Ranges, Rt1rl·
IOU.,... 11. Callt-304-m·S305
altar8pm.
Loll on Mldwa)' Dr. In Now Ho· gralora. eo · Day GUf!ltlnteel
French Cll}' Maylag, 814·448·
von. 304-8112-2804.
Pl. Plauanl-4bt R1nch w11c1r
7785.
oltachod gorago, onlc opoct, Parcel Of Land, .518 Acre Wilt
oaolly accoulbto, lull baoamen1 Sapllc S)'lltm. On 180 North 01 GOOD . USED APPLIANCES
llnllhad, 2..J/2 bllho, 2218 aq II. Vlnron Applllx. 1 Mllea, 814-388- Waahtra, dr)'etl, r•frlgeralore,
ranges. Skaggs Appllancea, 78
largo polio, lira• prlvoui beck- 84111,423-335-7770.
Slroel, Uoll 814•448·73118,
)'trd, mill! 101 to approcloto.
Eo•lto-1'MI belulllul Vlnt
UD048113498.
Low liD'~ 3114-6~112.
Bolh lllr $28,500.
Kllchon C . t 18.50, Solo on AU
Srr•cu••· three bedroom, one
Room tlza ~~ and VInyl Mol·
and 112 baths, LR. DR, famll1
lohon Corpoll814-44&amp;-744o&lt;
100111, oak IUtdlon, corpo\ full remote, baautllul land: Molga
baoomont, ol*ttrlc lurnacOihnt Coun:fj Scipio Townohlp. SR 182 Kitchen Carpet 18.50 )'d. Salt on
pump, two·car garogo (28•32),
SR ••) ~---· •-~
one and 114 acreo, nice, 114:982' Ouot o
1.. . ""''"' ....... ng. a! Carpet Room Sizv ·Ronti 814$1500
por
acre. Call for good 4411·3221
5175.
mop. 814-583-8545.

va~a~ra~E~xp~o=r~lo:-nc_•_•~c~a~n:-:·-R,..o":'n"·~
320
eaes.
!Will
Do Any Typo 01 Houio-

~~~~~~---;:-IIAiae...,....

Non·Workltip Waaher, Dryera,

Stovtt. Refrtgeratorl, FrMzera,

RENTALS

Air Condlllonero, Color T.V.'o,
VCR'o,. Also Junk Cars, 814·251·

410 Houses for Rent

Mobile Ho_;...
.. ....
for sale

IZIS.

Refrigerator. Kenmore 18 Like

2 Boctroom Houot At 1011 Third Naw 814-446-41142.
Av8f1Ua, Gllllpolli, $235/llo., Do·
pDIII, RtftrtnCOI, 814·441·7130,
:-.q.:::.;:;:..:.81_4-_441~.0.0-114:-.-:-""=-:::-l 14'l70' Moblla Homo Folrmonl 614'-441-2131.
Will Do Lawn Sorvlco In Golllo T.-1hou10 3 Bodroomo, 2 Boltlo, ADam For 3 lndvlduala, Homey
eou-814-441-2781 .
Hoot Pump, Copper Plumbing,
Envlronmanl UUIIHaa, Stove, Ra.;..._.._,_•-:--:-:--:-:-.--::-=~ 1 Built-In Microwave &amp; Slereo Call lrlgemor,
CA, Provldod, $100
Wilt core tor 11\e elderly In J"ur 814-441-QI83Ahtr4:00 P.M.
Each, 814-441-2515
· Day Shih Onlyl Goo .,. 1170 12•80 2 Bodroomo, All
patlonco and roforancao. 304· Elaclrlc, 12,500, 0,80 8 14·448· Nice 2~3 bedroom houae. larg1
yard, good parking, no lnold•
=~=54=13.c....,._~-:-:::"7~'7'1 8172, 814·251-8251.
pets, ·1-40Q wllh Hapooit end good
Will Sll Wllh Sick I Elderly .In
Their Homo. Havo Rolorencao, ·,g71 Buddy 12150 mobile homo reference~. May ull on land con- 520
Sponlng
233
2 bodroom, very good cof)dltlon. nct814.e98-7244.
81
Goods
~ ·
U ,300. Call 304·885·3807 or
Nice 3br, (eferencet .&amp; deposit,
304-·31147.
18 Gouge LC Smith field .grade
FINANCIAL
NO pato. 304-e75-St82.
double. low aerial numb11, cal·
1g71 Champion 12•85 2 Iorge
bedroomt, balh, living room &amp; Small houae in Clifton, no peta. ....... grada Vlf'Y good to ..cel210 · Bus1ne11
kllchen, lyr old lurnaco, very 1275/mo. 1200 dopolil. 304·7'13- lont at,OOD Sorlouo lnqulrtl
orly. 3114-6715-5852.
portunlty
good
condition, mu*' move trom 1192.
.
Op
-..--~:0:=:------1 lol now. Lora ol cabinets, big Three Bldroama, · Rt. 35 RIO 530
Antlquel
.
INOTJCEI
clottll. Price 13950. 304·875· G,.nda, Rtlortncoo and Dopoilll
otiiO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. ,14lt.
Required, For more information Buy or 1111. Riverine Antiques,
1124 E. Main Stroot on Rt. 124,
recommend• that ~ou do buti~ 1875 Concord 14JC70 on rented cal 3114-6!15-2250,
Pomeroy. Houra: II.T.W. 10:00
""'
wilt
pooplo
IOU
know,
and
1o•
ntar
Sholl
plant.
For
more
ln.
NOT ., .111111 rnonay through tho
•
Two bedroom houae. nice 1nd Lm. 1o 8:00 p.m., SUnctar
maM unlll rou heve lnvoallgaltH lormallon. col 30+57e·2B31.
ctoen, no lnlldo poll, dapoolt end 8:00 p.ni. ~14·ggz.2528,
... oftorlng.
refar~ncea requited, 114-882:.:.:::~;.o.-:--:-:--:---11986 Schula 14x70 Single Wklo 3080.
230 Profl811onal
Homo Foa1urao VInyl Siding,
Mlscellaneoui
Services
Shingle Rool, 3 Bodroomo, 2 420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
==~=~~::--::::::;:~1 Batht 2 Covered Docka, On Ptl·
HARTS IIASONAAY • Block, voto Romad Lo~ Wll Tol&lt;t Pa)'D",
12 Ft. Soaro .Y Hull Aluminum
3badroom trailer In Maaon. No Flohlng Boa! /New TrallnglloiOI/
brick I - WOrk. 3D YMrl o•· -Cd814'446-11140.
perilnce. reatonabft rataa. 304.
--304-773-5751 .
Bantry 1350; Club 21111 Compu.,
•s-3881.altar e:oopm, no jOb 1o 11117 tU.70 2 or 3 Bedroom,
Now Keyboard StOO:
-ortoiiiQ. WV-021208
188&amp; down, $1,5/mo. Onl)' ot ,..., Btdroori1 Homo Wllh Storagt lllonl,or
Aluminum
Toppar To Fll Long
Building,
5
Milos
on
Stato
;;;;.;=....,...;._~-::--.:::::::-1 Do- Homoa, Nitro, WV. 304Btd
Chav1
1811 And Up JISO
218. Call814-2~-81120
Laom a T - ,. juar ~phol11tr 7515-5885.
Mlru CDndlllon, &amp;14-37Q.2101.
..., up, Chi~. UpholtiOf'Y Claoo- 1817 14180 3 or 4 Bedroom, 440 · Apartments
11X24 Abo.. Gllllfnd Pool Com·
. oo Staring Soon! (814I·4•11.0n!
11,358 down, 1221/mo. Frtt air,
p1rt10, S!iDO Cal814-387.01110.
for Rent
Llvlngoton'• baoomtnt water· tklrHng, I delivery. onr•t Oak·
proofing all baumont rapalra wood Homao Nllro, WV. 304· 755- 1 and 2 -&amp;&gt;m aper1mlr1ll, fur·
27 FL o;.,.. 'Pool 4 fttl 0ttp,
dono, frto tollmatoo. llfotlmt 5885.
nlohacl and unfurnlahad, iicuilty. Wllh Loddtr ll:lick, 814·448·
guarenttt. 1~,. on job exporl· 2or3 -.om.
on 112 depoalt requlrad, no poto, 814·
.
. - :IOW115- l45.
aero lol, clou 10 !own, quill -2211.
:::::.;;::.:.::.=-::--=:::-=::::-;-;=
Jze &lt;lolllfn Aquarium With All Ac•
Docko
neighborhood
.
$41,100.
HlAI lSlATl
and outbulldlngolncludad. 304- 1 Bodroom Aptrlmtnl On First ct-rloo 1 Ellratl 1100 080
Avtfljt, 814-4411-10711.
Coli 304·875-5227 Altar 5 P.M.
875-5622.
tbr aper-.L .t.ppll• ICOI, wolor TU P.ll.
..... 304-il7s-to71. ' p.bogo lurriohed. azHimo.,
ptu1 dopeolt 304·875-4171 3 Pc. Llvlr\,'!:,m Sulto 2 MDI.
Old &amp;
814-4412br llllvH. Atc!ucod lo ai,IOO Wa .::':;~:r:= por Mning&amp;
4705 Boba 3 P.ll.
OIO.A,..bur-311'14715-2722.
homt 1n dltalltr rtlltl lundo
••
"""' -ruea!OOI pipe, tODft
_......., htlll rou purchltt •
Hoi
ral, azug, PMtT PLUS HAAO·
3 ar 4 B I 011111 _,_ 01.,..1 homt. Call 1·800·
WME.3114oe71-4014.
-In~ ........d..... ~"r.~-71 ..... ........
=",..,Quick Soli 114-258· -

~~--·

Men:hancnse

At!•••

dou-

--

•

;31tiiio:HHot;;;;m;es;;irori«isa~·~le;--1 n..-~or

•soo.

·--·for

IIR ranc11,
. . - --go.
·· 2
lllelhl;..........
11152 In _.a poo~ 11.1!
tat Call aflor 1:00pm. Sonouo t~utm ONLY. $04·875·

ua '"'

· . FIICTOA'f
DIRECT.
IIOIIIlOLEIIAN.
SAVE ....
I •·
Oakwood Homta • .. ~
dtalor In ... lr!·ltalt trM
bullda and .... !lltlr own
Forllcllf'Y .,.., pr'-,
OAKWOOD HOliES, NJ.
WIUD4-. . . . '

w:r

1. . . C~N~Nnadara14170,

~

Nloo, 1 Bodrooma, Conlrll Air,
AHIIInctl, .IO.DDO 814·587·
2iOll oa,dmea: tt4·8.,-118S
E.......

•wwn-

.• Aecantly

I ConiUIM
IOidJ (2 well.)

~

7 Play OUIIIM

21

Pan
Pan

s•

4•

Pass

&amp; E.4.RNEST

HOT ON&amp;..Y 001:-$ .
Ttft IVGK ~TOP
tftn!, IT'S wtf• ~
. T~E fL.OW Gt4A'T
:IAGK6 IJP

Ralnbqw .weaper wtatw:hmentL

304-eiS-1725.
-uood, oil · ,. I'· good
old, hardy
auachmonta,
condition, jl&amp;ld lt50o, a 0klng aeoo,
814-742-1000.
Riding Mower· Qrau Cal~h••· ·
Wd Huger Racllhor· Grttn, Flrl Place Sot Brau. 814·441 ·
0411

·roo.

SATEWTE 01!111
Enjoy Your OWn Receiver And
Anttnna. Chooao Programming
You Like. Dlah Syolamo Star! At
$219 Plu1 One Year Program.
mlng Coot. To Ordor Call Toll
Free 1·888·853· 7380 Ext 120.
UHF NHF AniOMao I Hal&lt;lwaro,
Arnold T.V. Solao &amp; Sorvlce.

.THE
r

.1

Wf~P..I:'.S W~ WITJ.I}()(J ?'

~

,..

.

I

~

.

l Wft9 001~ ~IHIPS. ;. t
AAVt. ~A. sro~~

~~

SPRING SPECIAL: Ctnlrol Air
Condl-o: 2 Ton St,tG5; 2 112
Ton 11,285; 3 Ton 11,385; 3 1/2
Ton at;5115; 4 Ton $1,8115; Prieta
Above Include Normal .lnatallo·
.lion. Full 5 Yoor W.rranly. "II You
Don'! Call Y• Wo Both Loatl"
F - lotlrrioloat Add-On Heal
Pumpa Onll SNghty Hlghot. Call
Uo Today. 11g7 It Tho Twont)'
Sovenlh Year In Tho Healing &amp;
'Cooling B&lt;lolnaool 114-441-83011,
t-80().2111.QQ88.
STORAGE TANKS 3,0bo Gallon
Up(lght, Ron Evano Enlarprlaoo,
.tackton, Ohio, 1-«J0.537-115211.

t'l!l

.Jti$T

Sl~ OF·

BEING PRA.Cl'ICAL.LV
THE ONLV

Summer Spacial N"" ]el aoretlon
""""'' tor oopllc lanka t3119 pluo
1u. lnatallatlon 135. · 814· 448·
4782

~

C.UV

IN

WITHOOTA
GIRLFitiENI&gt;,
THAT'$ 1\LL ·1•

Pue

~

.......
of,.. .

'

790

Old Female, 5 Year Old Male,
$260 Both, Mull Hove l.lurol
Homo, 114-2411-5181.

Campers l
Motor .Homes

1985 Torry 3011. 304-1182·2904.

~

121=........ .,..

,,

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

by L~la Campoa ·

.

.

CMbrity Ciphef ~ ar• crtaled lnlm quotillona by IIU'I'IOU&amp; peoptt, paat ln&lt;l p;eynt
Etch . . .r in the clphtf llandl: for anolhet. Tor:1.y'l clw: F 1HJtH P
~

'FGH ' M

MG I •

L S II

FGU

BYYE

LPIH

Gl

Z G T,

.

l

K G L. l I Z

IISIFSIF.'

••

APM

X G U L YD. ,

J .PIIL'II

...

-l

UYYIPFYD.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Children who are treated as if lhey are unaducabla
.: •
almoallnvariably become unaducable."- Kenneth B. Clark.

..
..._

...

.

,
..'

~

.

I
I: I' 1~ I I

'

NYCAF
.

,

;

L EH

0

MISTAKES."

ITHURSDAY

.'

.

Ie

Complete . tho chuckle quoted
by· filling in the missing words

vou develop ltom -

No. 3 below. ,..

II

~o~

1

I I I I

I

.

t

·J

• ,, (1 .

Km.n - Swish· Pants ~Umber· MISTAKES
. "I ·need more experience.~ lh~ young man told If!~
boss. 'Experience." be said, "is what people calllheiF

l

...

(_,,

nr-1-+--t--1 , 4t Sub-

.

·..

•v
..
i

.I

•

APRIL 171 ~

bollorlet. ullod vary lido,~
llko now, ..... uooo, can 814-,
11112VOOS.
. •
1114 Tioga Monrara, cla11 C,••
18,000 mllat, COIII14-1112·4103 '
Of con be _ , at 38 Hudlon SL, :
II...._.
,
1
lng. -

AKC Dalmallan pupa. $100·
Ptlona 304-8 75-37311.

AKC Pomeranl1n1. one crnm
male, one blue graw malt, the
w.ek1, vtt c;hecked, lhot1 and
!'lf)flnld, 1300, 814-188·1085.

21 fl. ·camper (Trophy) Fully !
Equipped, AC, E1collont COndl· 1
llonl t-4.500, 814-3117·7401.
j

.

Swloo llborglalo 1oppir lito
1872 llomo Carlo 402 big block, Dod go Dakota. oliding glaoo
alt, 400 AT. 355 Ashley 12 vall windowa w/acreen,. very good
poooa, now poin~ corvent rallyo. . cond. $350. :J04-e82.3Zl8.
n.ooo 0110. 114·742·1003 afior 730 Vans &amp; .4·WDS

(
I

d

,.

I'

••
:•.
810----~k;;;-----810
~
SERVICE.::,

...

,,&lt;

.•

.

lm"""¥111111'11
•
AKC Roglatortd Entllllh Springer
::::;::~·..;......•_
Spaniol , 8 llonlht Old, F-lea.
BASEMENT
. 5:30pm.
Tolo Cu~
WATERPROOFING
Exctllont Hunlor Or Pel. $175.
1i8i Dodge Corovon SE V·l, Unconditional HftHma guarontM.
814-387.0558. .
1877 Caprice PW, PL, Aulo, Tilt Fully Equipped, Good Running Local
rater en- lurnlahad. Eo- _
350 HP 350, 2&amp;00 IIIIo On Rod' io at• 441 0845 I 14
• tobtlohed 1g75, Call (81j!.;~
••
•
AKC Rtglattrod Shtllle, 11 '"lid, Now Palnl. ,4 ,000 OBO. ~7"ol:,o~··,
0870 Or , -eoo.lii7,0Slll.
Monlh Old Fomalo. Stblo and eH ue •a
Willotpawq.
'Whlto. Hao ..
-mod.
Dtwclowo romovod. Lovo1 kldL
Mull toll IHO ftrm. Call 114--·
Appliance Porto And Strvlce: All
7.175 altar 5:00 p.m.
Nama lkanda Ovot H V..ro El·
porltnce All Work Guarontaod,
AKC Stieltit , tamale , olbto and
French City Mo)'tag, .1 14· 448·
whitt, vet chtckod, 3 lhots, clawa reiMVod, baoulllul, $350,
.
.
.......,015.
CIC Gtntral Homlt lloln·;
tonenct· Painting, vinyl oldlng,
_,.., llry, doora, win da a. bah.
-,... ...'(Ill
-.....
.......(;hoi.
Mt14-H2·
l - For

-and

•-o.

SCIAM LITS ANSW111S

1980 28' Dulchmon campar, ......•

;.. Groom Shop -Par Grooming.
Footurlng H)'dro Balh . Don
ShiOII. 373 Gtorgtt CrHk Rd.
814-440231 .

Ooc.._--.

l..,worth ·

47 Mciol,
48 Cl;; aallri Ill

e ~~~:-uoal

l

J

SINfeltnd • I

• m~i.~v~s:~~~RES r r r.·1 r r I'_I'

••

J.

. movie ' ~ . ·'
43 COI1Ibint • ' I
44 Unlq•
"
!*80ft
41 A. t ••

.

TRANSPORTATION

..

42~ . ' '

4

WE ijEED TO LEARN
THE NAMES OF THE
TREES, 'THE MOUNTAINS,
LAKES, TilE $1RDS ..

I

ill

41 PWd '*'
-~
··

L--.l.......I--...1..---".1--L.--1

. NATURE ~liKES ARE
IMPORTANT.. .··

l

I

31111lall• ar

...,_,~-.,~r--~ner-rl-'tl':'.-1

2 Regiatefed Oalmationa: 3 Year

UOO, 1WD fomofto, U50roo,.
IMCir .. go. 81&lt;'-IQ2·7823.

.

· Mioult

L -~~
·
I
I
I
~~~
I

560.. Pels fQ~ S8le

AKC Regi111red Ba110n 1errier
pupp1ao. six - · old, ono ·maJ.t.

3Go-

I

32M8ld!llllwell 1

I

·Block, brick, aewor pipes, wind·
owa, llnlelo, ttc. Cleudt Wlnlera,
Rio Grondla, OH Call 614·245·
5121.

1318.

.

1ittended a civic meeting
and I concluded lhat it takes
;::~~~~~~"'~ longer to tell what you think
.7
R0 K RE W
than- • .- you--.-.
.

Building
Supplies

1 Year Old Rabbill S5 Each,
Groat For 4·H Pro)acrl 614·258·

.....

21 lt8n'OW'I riVal,

~.

Wolfe Sunquaot Tanning Bed
Llkt Naw, $1,000 Cal&lt;lloglidt E•·
· - · ~. 814-441-1835.

.;

r1 co ... allan

Pus

Wedding Gown And Veil 1850
Now Will Son For ·l200 Sfza. 14,
814-441.0701.

550

J4AII- .

·21Mb

Paaa

Tlllor 5 HP Rear ·n ne 814·37g.
2445.

•

00110~11

.=::. ;

En&amp;

•
We all know the fate of the Lighl ·
Brigade. What made the charge inde·
fensible, of course, was that the caval·
ry stood no.chance of success. ·
There is a bridge analogy: To keep
pluaJnll away at a auit When a switch
is necespry. Yet someUmea II will be
best to keep leading the same sull.
Wliich is it in today's deal?
··
Sitting West. how would you plan
the defense against lour hearts?
The bidding wu aggressive, espe·
• cially South's raiae to game. He hoped
. to end the evenmc on • hi&amp;h note.
West led a top spade, of course. He
cashed a ·second spade . Then he ·
· paused for thought Uuckily, not one
trick too latel. II East had the club
king, that would be the lethal s":'tch.
But it was unlikely. UEast h•d netlher
the club king ncir the diamond queen,
the. eontract would cruise home. So.
· West decided to play East.for the dia·
·, monil gueen. At trick tbret!. he contm· ·
,..
·
··
'"I
iled.wilh his third top spade.
'(()Jt~INI(. 11\E:IE,m: ""'OOP
success! South bad to rutf In the
1~ T\¥-.T SlOII&gt;WI if
dummy but now couldh't establish I he
d~onds , draw tn1mps, ancl return to
dummy to run t!le ·dilmooda. Instead.
he played East for the club ace and
lost four lri~ks: two spades and two
clubs.
·
.
Note that if West switches at IriCk
' three, ""' -&amp;rKt.1Jii&amp;ht IIlii!-· South
·. can play tht~e rounds· of d1amonds,
ruffing the. last in hand. Then, he
draws three roUIIds of (rumps ending
in ihe dummy. Finally, South'a spade
..id club losen disappear on the Win·
ning diamoncla.
·
· .
Wben dummy baa a long, s~ su!t
that Isn't established and no alde·sutt
entry outside trumps, try to ""duce.
tl!atlrump length. ·

1•

211111d

21CoaAII~

Into the Valley of Ufe

.... ,. ... ~ rt:
311 " ' - St., 3 btdoaom, 2 ......

114-258

1D Willie .
11 1n1.Jtfst non
,1 1-fMI

2~

Opening lead: • A

Stooping roomo wllh cooking.
Alao tralltr apace on river. All
hook-upo. Call alter 2:00 p.m.,
304-m-l!e&amp;l,lluon

'*""'

••

2•

310 Homes for sale

Wllh a Spend Your summor
In Lalouro. Call Now To Gal Your
m-tng F-r Claanlng Dlocountl
..,.
_
·et4-U8 - ·
.
Wontod ro Do: High Scliool
Sludanl anklng Job Mowing
Cd: (8141-411·1525
Syracuse· IWD IIDr)' colonial,
great k)calion lor children, lhrH
Wm Do All Homo lmpt,_ll, bedroomo, gi'81ll condition, lmmtDoaka, Porchoa, All Related dlale poaoanion, 814·gG2·5551
Bervlcet . frH E11imate11 1G or814-082-8542.

I.

I

a

Vulnerable: Norti!,·Soutb

450

o.,8 ,

....

I Cflllll .., '

(2 well.)

I fled Bee .

'hMI

3 Vld•o game

• KQ2

Two bodrilom apatlmeruln Mid·
dltpot~ no poll. B14-il82-5858

ProfaUIDnol Troo Sarvlce, Slimp
Removal, Free Estlmatea I In·
auranca, llldwotl, Ohio. 814-388lllol8.114-387-7010.
Shafer's Lawncara Commercial
And Rtoldtntial Sarvlco, Call For
FrME-111, 81 4-44HI3I8.

1 lnfam

•• 3

lalOWIItogl)'acoepl .

lWin T-. , _ aa:opdng
..,ur.c~~~!l oppllcetiono lor 1br. HUD aubold·
-:..·
~~··E0113114oe
lllr tldarjl :end handl·
lt.

"KKm".;.::;;...:'...:1 4-211.:..:.~118
'-=5.:--:--=_,- l

• Q 10.
'flo 10 .8 4 .3-.
• 9 73
• AKJ91

Thll "' ..,...,... will not .

t48,1100.

Nice Pial Area, Then Call lit

as

7 ••

Soa&amp;ll

rooma, atorage thad, atklng

II Your LoOking For A Babyliltar
Who -Love• Kld1, And Haa A

•

75 2
A J 5

obelamont Ill ramodoled, largo

Situations
wanted

Get Your
Spring
Cleanl.n g
SPRING
ClEANING

s

. • Q ••

...... .

Earn 11tra Income 11Hing and
dla~l""ting our product No ••·
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�Ohio Lottery
Reds drop
3-2 battle to
Pirates

Pick 3:
386
Pick 4:
4329
BuckeyeS: ·

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ELEMENTARY HONOREES - Elementary . John Bantz, Chel... Smith, Ryan Amberger
school atudenta from the Southern Local and Jenny Warner; third row- Aahton Brown,
School Dlatrlct recognized It Thuradly nlghfe Stacy Snyder, Bethany' Alilblrger, Codl Davia, .
ICidemlc awarda banqult ware, from lett:'flrtt Sarah: HIWiey, Katie Sayre, Melli1da Chancey
row - Cameron Brlnager, Chance Collins, · ind Crylt'al Cottrill; fourth row - Sara CamChrlatl_na Johniton, Wyatt M_u sur, Duatln marata, ,Bryan Smith, Ry'" Smhh, Amy ~- •
Brl"ager, Ambe~ .Holsinger, Heather Jonea, man, MlchHI Rouah, Stephanie Bradford,
Brooke Klur ai1d Autumn· Reed; ucond row- ·Andrea ~Q..d, Tara Plckena and Brai1don
- Nlcholu Buck, Tyler Harkrien. Adlm Phillips, Smith.- ...

JUNIOR ..QHIHIQH SCHOOL HONOREES • !(ing, Jesu Little, Kim Sayre, Jamie Baker, Kyle
The following · So~hern High School and Norris and Chris Randolph; third row :- high
; Junior High khoolatudenta _,. recognized school junlora.Cynthla Caldwell, Crystal Col•
Thursdly night for ICedemlc ·achievement. man, Evan Struble, Nikki Roblnaon, · BillY
HotiOrad were, from lett: front row -junior high Young, Jenny Friend and "'•natta Wheeler;
atudenta Macyn · Ervin, Shauna Manuel, . fourth row - high school sinlore Jeillca
JO!IIthan Evana, Tyler Little, ·Amanda Huddl• Sayre, Amber Thomaa, Mark Lewis, Brian
aton, Rachel MarahaU and Lori Sayre; aiCond Allan, Greg McKinney, Hillery Harrla, ·Emily J.
Duhl and Trudy Juatlil.
.
row :- high IChoolltudanta Chriata Circle, Kere

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·Southe·rn scholars recognized at awards
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Junior High School, Letan Falls, .ronmentto l~pm, meaning facilities,
Portland and Syrw;~se. eleTI)e~tary · textliobks and other resources; she
schools.
,
,,
Siid
--~!d Th~rf~~l.eVeft~Rt it;i'P.ckCd· ·· ShCet~ said cKildren require three ' , .O.nlhl\1..··-~rej5cd·thc rcc;cnt .
tbq stD,dep~~.nee~'&amp;;IJ~· ~l!lio~r $o~· H1gh School ill Raci~ 1' • · ·lltinJ&amp;·Io:J!III'I~~.~ir•~~~ 1iJi'l , OhioSilpremc·courpulill~ ~~~ng
al enVJronmenl 1to· achieVe' acadeli11c
"How Does Your Garden Grow?" 'den. ' ·
·····
· · Ohio's •school ·,fun~ing ··system as
;success. ·• ·
was the theme of t~e event, 'which •. · First is a healthy environment, she unconstitutional.
·'
. That was 'the message delivered recognized 63 students attending said.
SHe 'said the systcin inu~l undCfliO
Our children need a good cnvi- a complete systematic ovc'rhnul, but
'by Peime~oy auomey Jennifer Sheets,_ Southern High School, Southern

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pr:e_&amp;idcnt of the Ohio Board of Ed'!catmn, .a1 Jbe · lOth. annual Sou~m
Local" A~l)\lcimjl; Awards ·lla!;14~t

&lt;.,. " ., · . , -' , ,

cautioned that people will not likely
se~ a reduction in their local property taxes. .
·
.
She saill poor districts willllk~_l~TCC9iYc',n!orp;,ta'~ \1\9~1-J!~Oney that
Will Mvc to ·~ome!from ·somewi)ere.
"It will not happen quickly," she
said·.
Second, children require dcdical-

cd 'gardeners'-- support from teachcrs and family members.
· . She noted that Ohio'sTeacher of
tltc Year, Sh;iroo. Drajx:~. was ~cnt;
ly named lh ;ll!~j!J~ali'Tt'll\licr pt"·t~ '·
Year.
, I • · ~ ... ; · ·
"Pay' close aucntion to whiu your
children nrc doing," sF said.
Continued on page 3

:R eport recommends _ Eastern board -OKs contracts for 1997-98 ·
raising ;sa·les, income
·i.taxes to ·help schools .

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:ay ~IM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Staff
· •· (.ike, a ,gan;len needs ,a heal\'JY
: •~,.itmlm:enJ!ilt.Wbi~IJ..Jo.. lJlrjxe.• so

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- levy a 33 percent income tax
: By The Aasoclated Preas
surtax;
: : Ohio should ·increase sales and
-provide tax relief for business: inGome · t~es and lt61ruclllre business
:taxes 10 raise an additional $3,5 bil- es and homeowners:
- "require all:day ' kindcrgailen .
' lion annually for public .schools,
and
more year-round schools;
: ,llcaording to a statewide panel.
- mandate smaller class sizes in
: The tax changes arc outlined in a
grades; and
· : draft report by Ohio's BEST, a pub: early
.
' teacher slan· - impose tougher
· lie-private association of about 80
· business. civic and education organi- dards and more rigorous studen\
.. zations working toward the improve- . graduation tests.
· The plan would repeal property
mcnt of Ohio's schools.
_ 'Ole draft was obtained by :fhc taxes on business inventories, rephiC'
Cincinnati EMuircr and the Akron ing them with incrca.'iCs in commer· Beacon Journal. "Both newspapers cial and industrial property taxes.
· rep9ncd on tlie proposal in today.'s Those tax changes would generate an
additional $12S million for schools.
. editions.
:
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: : · Tiw plan- which w.ould increase. the ~"~!port said.
The group ~nils for spending $525
spen'din)l on public education from
' local, 'state and federal so:urc,es.by 29 -million ·annually io repair Ohio 's
· percent to an estimated $1 ~ . 6 billion crumbling school buildings,cited by
per year - is meant to satisfy last federal oflicials as the worsl in the
month'~ Ohio Supre,me Court ruling nation. A 25,L-cnl increase in cigarcue
that struck down the way the state laxes and corporate ifronchise surtaxes would"pay for loans for the estipays for public schools:
" It is an ambitious pian dc6igncd mated $10.3 billion needed 10 repair
to ·generate substantial increases in the buildings und build new ones.
While the plan puts a price lag on
graduation rates and proficiency test
"
the
tax changes. jt d~s not detail how
scores,'" said Roben Wehling, senior
the
state should P!IY for programs
.vice president for -Procter &amp; Gamble
such
ns · nil-day kindergarten and
. Co. and the group's co-chair. ·
·
Mille Dawson, spokesman for smaller class sizes, Wehling. lhough.
Oov. (leorge Voinovich, said he was s11id improving early childhood cdu- ·
not aware of the proposal. But, J1e1 4ation would add al'least .another $1
said .any plan lhat puts ligures with billion lblhe plan ·~ · cost.
· Earlier thi$ week the coalition of
proposals and offers accountability
would be of interest lo a gubernato- · SSO school districts ttiat won the lawrialll\5k forcG charged with finding a · suit againsi the stalec tcleascd its own .
refonn plan. But thAt proposal, was
oew funding formula.
immediately critic!~ because ' it
• The plan would:
· ,
; -increase the stale sales tax from -combined a Ions list of goals with
few details on how to pay for them.
S pe~eent ib 6 per&lt;:enl;

Contracts for school staff were
approved when the Eastern Local
School_Board mel in regular session
on Thursday evening.
·
Following an executive session,
Susan Climer, Bill Blaine, Lea Ann
King were approved for continuing
contracts. Contracts were also award·
cd to the following staff: Nancy Circle, five · years; Bryan Durst, two
years; Susan Parsons, two years;
Jayne Collins, two )'CarS; Tina Kelley,
two years; Angela Houck, two years:
Kirk Reed, two years; Todd Trace,
two years; John Redoviah,two years;
Sheila Spencer, iwo years; and Charlotte Spencer, three years.
Supplemental contracts were
awarded to Jim Huff, state and federal program coordinator; Mary
Price. special education coordinator.
Arch Rose. transportation supervisor and coordinator, and Carolyn Ritchie.

Todd Trace, 7th grade boys ha,,kclhnll
foOd service coonllnator.
Casey Coffey, -athletic director.
· Orie-year contracts were approved
Danny Thomas, assistant foolhall coach; Roy W. Johnson, lith grade
for Doris Well and Cynthia Chadwell coach and head baseball coach; boys basketball coach (volunteer);
a.• head teacher at Tuppers Plains Ele- Richard Rupe, volunteer golf coach; Larry Heines. volunteer reserve soflmentary and Riverview Elementary, Scott Wolfe, head girls basketball hall coach: Mandi Sheels, volunteer
-respectively.
coach; Arch Rose, head track coach; varsity cheerleader advisor: Bryan
The following contracts were non- Belinda Marcinko, junior-high cheer· Durst. junior varsity baseball coach
renewed, effective the end of the cur- · leading advi"sor: Tony Deem. junior and Kirk Reed, vnlunlccr assistant
rent school year: Pam Douthitt, head high volleyball coach; Jim Huff. vol- track coach.
girls softball _coach; Don Jackson, unteer interim senior class advisor;
These non-renewals arc an annu·assistant girls softball coach; Ron Ron Hill, drug free grant coordinator; al procedure. Postings arc available in
Hili. l!SSistanl football coach; Bryan Sheryl Roush. sophomore class adv.i- each building for applications for the •
Durst, assistant football coach; Casey. . sor; John Taylor, junior class advisor; new school yc&lt;lr. Supplcmcnt&lt;ll conCoffey, head football coach; Joe Bai- Joe Bailey, senior class advisor; Arch tracls will he considered ;II 11 later
ley, assistant basketball coach; Caris- Rose, student council advisor; Sheryl dale.
. sa Bailey. varsity cheerleader advisor; Roush, National Honor Society ad vi:
The hoard apprnvcd Linda Bentz
Tony Deem, head basketball coach, sor; Casey Coffey, freshman class as a suhstitule secretary and accounts
Susan Climer, marching band direc- advisor; Suzie Francis, play director; clerk lor the remainder of the sch&lt;Mll
tor; Susan Parson, flag corps advisor; Susan Parsons , elementary choir; ·year on un as-needed hasis only.
Paul Brannon, ·assistant girls' basket- . Lauren Wolfe-Rime, junior high girls · Rchccca Bcnl1. was approved as a
ball and volleyball coach; Don·Jack- baskclhall coach: Scot~ Wolfe, year- suhstitute custodian. secretary and
son; head volleyball coach; Chris hook advisor; Larry Wolfe. volunteer cook l()r tlw remaind.er of the year on
Stout, assistant basketball coach: girls junior high basketball coach :
Continued on page 3

No .more ex,p losive devices found in PPHS building
By MICHELE CARTER
OVPNewaStaff
A sweep of Point Pleasant High
Scflool Thursday night by a bomb
dog foufl!l I he schoOl to he free'of any
c•plosivc materials.
The sweep came after a request
was made by Supt. Dr. Larry Parsons
thro11gh PPHS Principal Rick
Northup to the State Police, accord·
ing to Sgt. "Gordon Clark.
Northup said the si:arch was held
dispel r,umors and to seulc the fears
of parents and students on ·the
scbool's safety since a 15-year-old
•"5tudent faces five fciOfl¥ charges"for
bringing an eKplosivc de~ icc to the
school Tuesday. Another PPHS offi·
cial stated a rumor circulated in the
school Thursday thai another bomb
would be brmight in Friday in n:tal- .

iati()n.
South Charlcslon Policeman Steve
Thomas and his live-year-old Ocrmac&gt; Shepherd. Baro. conducted_a
search of the cn1ire scH&lt;K)I in approx,
imatcly one and a half-hours. Clark
said . During \he search, memhers of
the media were denied access In the
school.
_According 1u Thomas, Barn is
trained to detect 14types or explosive
materials. 'Jlui!JIUS said the do~ is
very accurate with'dclecling nitrate.
which· is contained in most explosive
devices.
Juvenile 'petitions l'nr wanton
endangerment, possession of a dangerous and deodly weapon. possession of 11 ~angcrous and deadly
weapon on school groqnds,' possession or a deadly and 'dangerous

·L ocal :.c ontractors among low bidd~rs
'

II

By BRIAN J. REED ' ' · ·
&amp;entlnal NeWa Staff
~ 1\vo local contractors~ apparent
J9w bidders,in two~ of the mul·
timillion dollar buildinl propam in
the Easte{ll Local School District
: We 51111 Construction of Cbes~ris
t}te IJIParenl tow bidder for lhe pn·
ersl contracting phase and D.V,.
WeberConlllriiCtion ofRMsville
the sewqell'eamteni projec1.
• Bids on the project wtrc opened
cin Thundsy afternoon, followed by

for

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the Eas~m Local SchOol lloard's regular meetinc on Thunday evening.
Besides ,eneral contracting and
sewqe treatment construction, bids
.were submitll!d for plumbins and
mechlnical phuft of the project,
which will
the extensive renovo·
lion of Eutctit Hilh l)chool and the
Clllllliuction of a new cOnsolidated
elementary ~ehOol buhdina on the
high tiehool campus.
We51111 Cans!nle:tion's bale bid for
the ........ cona:t~ttinl on the project

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weapon on u school hu~. posses.,ic&gt;n
of an explosive device have hccn
signed on the Apple Grove teen,
Clark said." Additional charges ·arc
pending. '
.
The iuvenilc has hcen sus)lCndcd
from school;tnd faces an c•pulsion
hearing Tuesday night when the
Mason County Board or Education
meets for violating the safe sc hools
net.
Mason County Prosecuting AUorncy Diana Johnson said Friday morn·
ing the petitions will be filed with the
court system 'when the investigation
is complete. According to Johnson.
the possibility e•ists that the juvenile
cuuld he tried as an adult on the
charges. I( he is tried a.' a juvenile, he
could he sent to a juvenile detention
center until age 21. If tried as an

nduh, he could race two- to -50 years
&gt;n the slate penilentiary. Johnson said
the determination will he made· in
hearings after lhc peti\ions arc liled.
State police were at PPHS Thursday questioning students ahnut Tucs•
day's incident and Northup stated this
presence may have stirred rear in other students. Al'ler the dog seurch, Lt.
Danny Pearson or the Mason Cnun· ·
ty Sherifl's Dcparuncnt s&lt;ayed at the
school from II p.m. tn 7 a.m. as an
additional sccurily measure .
Troopers arc still interviewing
possible witnesses and an investigation ccintinucs into how the teen
obtained the explosive device. Clark
said. More arrests arc pos.,ible in the
case.

-on Eastern project

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was $5,149',000, General contracting -slructlon were; Pioneer Pipe, Inc.. Temp. of Canal Winchester, with a cation's Building Assistance ·Probids were also received from 1Cola- Maricllo, $1.31,924; Stateline Pipe - ba,c bid of $895 ,000. Other hidders gran\ , .Superintcndcnl Dcryl . Well
illlni of Dillonvale, with a base. bid Coq&gt;Oration of Belpre, $11 ~.760; we_re Columbus Heating 1111d Venti- said Thursday evening that the
of$5.2 million; Jolm James Estes an&lt;l and L.T: Mandeville Plumbtng of latoon, Sl.026,000: Gcoger Brothers rev,icw process could be completed
Associates of Columbus. base bid of Columbus at $158.000.
of Logan. $1,016.200; LT. Mandev- by Monday.
$5.7 million; King Confr&amp;Ciing of
The Mandeville firm was the illc Plumbing, $1,020,000 and State.A bid from Kleen All of America,
Jackson. base bid pf$!1.9 million; and apparent low bldderfor the plumbing liiJC Pipe of Belpre, $1,1_51 ,870.
Inc., of '!lc~shaw, Pa..was accepted
Pioneer Pipe of Marietta, base bid of . conlriCt with 1 base bid of $537,989.
The board took no actoon to accept for the dostnct's asbestos abatement
$5,8 million.
J."E. Ragland Consuuction of Jackson the bids at their meeting. The bids project, which will ~et underway this
D.V. Weber Construction's bllliC bid at $57&amp;,911. ,
. mus~ he rcv1ewc:" by the proJect summer ·&amp;t the hogh school. The .
.bid for the conslriiCiion of the ICW&amp;,e , The apparent low bidder for the archotectural fi~. Vargo, &lt;;assady. . asbe~tos removali;Xocess is tht: first
treatment facility was $114.835. Oth· mechanical contract was General , Ingham and &lt;:Jibbs of Mar1etta. as step m the renovauon ofthc 40 yearer bids received on dlis phase of con·
well as the Qh10 Department of Edu- old high school building.
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