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Pomeroy.-lddleport, Ohio_, WednMd_"",
_,. May 14,1997

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. !: Ohio Coalition goes before task force ·
•
;: .By JOHN SEEWER
.
': :Aaeoclated Prest Writer
: • . COLUMBUS- The group that fought the state's school funding sys:: ,tern mt;t with the Jawm~rs and educators who are trying 10 come up with
:: a new system.
·
:: · But it was obvious that both sides still don't agree·on much. ,
The Ohio Coalition for Equity and Adequacy on Thesday gave the school
:: . funding task force an overview of its remedy to the Ohio Supreme Court's
:: :decision that said the funding system was unconstitutional.
• . Most of the suggestions -including more training for teachers and bet• _ter school buildings - would cost millions. But the Republican leaders on
: . the
force want to keep costs down. ·
William Phillis•.executive director of the coalition, said the bouom line

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is lhat m~ money is needed.
.
"li's wilb money that we fix the buildings, it's with money we train the
teachers.'' Pliillis said after the meeting. "The system can't be fixed with. 011t the niooey."
·
Senate President Richard Finan, R-Cincinnati, noted a magazine anicle
that cited studies showing that the amount of money spent on schools does
not affect education perfOfl!lance in other countries.
·
"Why do other countries succeed and we don't?" Finan asked.
· . Carol Young, superintendent of North-Union Local schools, said you can't
comp~W Ohio's edueaiion system to those In foreign countries, because maity
only teach their best students.
·
"'flley do not educate all of their youngsters," she said.
State schools Superintendent John Goff said there are huge differences

between countries in education. But he admitted that "they do educate their
··
children to a higher lcveltluin ours."
Gov. George Voinovich asked coalition members wl)ether they supported seuing perfonnance goals for sehools and enforcing them.
..
. "I don't see a problem with accountability," said·Carl Berg, sltperintendent of the Miamisburg schools. "Most of us welcome it."
Much of the worlt on the new plan is being.done in closed-door meetings involving the governor's staff and Republican leaders in the Legislature.
.
House Speaker Jo Ann Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg, said that she would
like lo give voters the option of approving the plan. She said voters also could
be asked to vote on whether the ~ew system .is "thorough and efficient."
That would take away the CO\Irt's authority over the plan.
.

-):Head Start's role in area main Chamber topic ·
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; ~ By JIM FREEMAN
:: Sentinel Newa Staff
: . 1bc community role of the Head
:- ,Start program for preschool children
: was the topic-of Tuesday's luncheon
:: ineeting of the Meigs County Cham·
:- ber of Commerce held at the Trinity
:: Oturch in Pomeroy.
.
: Kay Rowe, ~presentin_g Access
:: He~ Star:' wh1ch adm1msters ·the .
.• ·Qa)ba-Melgs Head S~ programs,
~ briefly outlined the history of Head
: ~li!n ~hich began·as a nutrition_pro: • gram rn the l'HiOs as pan of President
;·; .L~ndon B. )ohnson's 'War on Pover. ;.-_ty.
.
. • Jbe 'program rece1ves both feder:: al and state fun!fing. .
:: , Today, _in some are~, Head Stan
. :. serves· children ages b1rth through
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five and their families, she explained.
Now, in the face of greater welfare
reform, preschool programs like
Heaq Stan may play a role in help·
ing people get back to work, Rowe
said.
.
"If ptl9ple are going 1\&gt; work,
some!x&gt;dy is going to have 10 watch
the ki'!"," she said.
.
Me1gs Co~nty h~ a home-based
Head Start m which Head Start
employees visit the child's home and
·work with the child and his or her

tors woiic. on developing socializalion, motor and communication skills
as well as teaching the children to follow directions. ·
· She described the program as a
parent partnership and said parents
play a large role in the program.
"We trY to ~tel parents interested in
their children's learning," she said.
"We encourage l'arents . to get
involved in the schools ... beginning
with Head Stan."
Rowe said Head Start is very
pare~ts.
· much interested in community devel. ·"We ~ ·to . g~! the parents opme~l and is l~king at ways. to be
t~volvec!. she smd. We feel educa~ more mvolved tn the·co'"""'umty. ,
non begms at home w1th the p~Wnts.
. In other business chamber ViceIn 6allia County, children visit the president Sue Maiso'n said plans are
~.,.Stan center for 1\alf a
four being made for the Great Ohio Bicybll\et,a week. At the center, mstruc·. cle Adventure (GOBA) visitto Meigs
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. County on June' 19.

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· Maison said about 3,000 bicyclists
will pass through Meigs County and
stop at the Rutland Civic Center for
lunch.
·
Volunteers are being sought to
assist with the lunch which will be a
fund raising event for the chamber.
"We're pleased and .happy to be
abl~ to host ~ lu~c~on for the~,"
!"fruson smd. ~s Will be an_excllmg day for Me1gs County and Rutland."
_In addition, Maison said plans are
be1ng made for a stet:nwheel boat tour · .
to coincide with the annual reenactmenl l_lf tbe Battle of Buffington
Island m July.
Touri~m committee chainnan
Jud~ Williams said the com~ittee is
hoptng to be able to adverttse soon
for a n~ tounsm dnector.

---~ ~-Meigs· ·Local ·Bba"rd approveS''-person nel'tltaJte·rs &lt;
:: ~ -'IM: FREEMAN .
· retroactive to Aug. 1; 1996. Board
:: Sintlnel Newa Staff ,
member Larry Rupe and .President
•
Personnel matters for !he upcom- John'Hood voted against the action.
·.: ing.school year dominated Thesday- • Cindy Fields and_Stephanie Price
•: night's meeting of the Meigs Local were hired on one-year supplemental
; • Boanl of Education.
.
conltacts as high school clieerleading
-: Thefollowingwerehif!:dOnone- advfsorandjuniorhighsc(Joolcheer:;_year supplemental contracts for .the . ·leading advisor, respectively. Board
' 1997-98 school year: Beth ·Mayer, member Roger Abboll abstained.
:; junior high newspaper advisor; Rita
Tile board accepted the-resigria' :Simmons, head teacher at Salem tion of Ann Webster as a substitute
Elementary; Scot Gheen, bead teae~~r for retirement purposes effec:·teacher at' Bradbury Elementary; tive 'irilmediately.
Hi~ as substillllt cooks for the
· -. ::Celia McCoy, ·senior class !~'~visor. ·
•. Boanl member Randy Humphreys upcoll\mg school year were: Carolyn
:: abstained.
. · Ota~man, Coleen Whaley, Kay Dod·
: • Bob Buck was hired as quiz team s9n, .~Jacqueline 1-!oover; Tammy
:.: ·advisor for tbe 1996-97 school year . Jarv~s, Tana Kennedy, Debbie Riffle
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:_.:_ Crow, Frecker top seniors·

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UNION WORKERS PROTEST. Members of organized labor
atand on the wnt atepa of the Ohio Statahou• In Columbua
Tuaaday to protaat S. 8. 102 which would e11mlnandll! _
ttle prevall· ·
1
lng wage law from public achool conatruct on a repa1ra. (~P)
~

and Diane Hendricks.
Doug Jenkins, Bob Johnson, Anna
Hired as substitute bus drivers for Welsh, Max Wilson, Carroll 1ohnson,
the upcoming school year were : Nancy Barrell, Jack Kitchen, Oliver. ·
Roger Cotterill, Jo Gilmore, Gary Norris, Marvin Roush, Lester Stew··~or
1
McKnight, Kevin Jewell, Oliver Nor- an and Lonnie Taylor.
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ris, Ron Wilson, David Williams,
Hired as substitute secretaries
Carla.Milhoan.BenUptonJr.,Diana were: Kay Hemstey; Julia Sa~re, .
Johnson, Virgil Hartley, Richard Charlene Thomas and Jacqueline ·
·
DeMoss, Janel Hanley.
Justice.
Hired as substitute mechanics
. Hired as substitute teachers for the
were: Dennis Tillis, Gary King .Jr., upcoming school year were: Nancy
.T ·.
Ronald Mullins and Martin Davis.
Aldridge, Debora Ator, Robert By JOHN SEEWER
Hired as substitute aides for the Austin, Deborah Barber,· Jeanne Aeaoclatad Preu Writer
upcoming school year were: Josie ·Bowen, lise Burris~ Christi .Collins,
COLUMBUS - Sining on the.
M!ll1on; Phyllis Witherell, Joleen Sharon Edmonds, Linda Faulk, Statehouse steps, union worker Bob
Rupe and Debbie Cundiff. . .
Michelle Gillilan, Cecilia Harris, Maksim was resigned to the fact that
Hired as substitute custodians for James Hayman, Sandra Holcomb, there was lillie. he could do to stop
the upcoming school year were:
··. Continued on paae 3
lawmakers from eliminating part_of
the state's prevailing-wage rule.
"They're going to do away with
whatever they want," he said. But
5

39th::.graduation ceremo-nies set May 25

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tion, Trade Council, said the state
will not .save any money by. elimi·
nating prevailing wage. ·
"All construction workers will sec
'their paychecks cut and see a ne,.;
tax," Williams said. ·
_But Rep. Roben Corbin, 'R-Dayton, said the bill woutd anow schools
to gel more for their money.

·~:~s~:~~~n.
s~i~e:e~,\t~~~~~-r lead~~~k,~rsth~~~!:i:::r~~~:arr
That's why he joined hundreds of they were trying to gel inlll a rock

:: By BRIAN J. REED
the boys' varsity and reserve basket- Ohio First •Scholal:ship by the Uni- ·Michelle Grossnickle, Bruc~ Ryan con.struction work~rs at the State- concen. Instead, they sat and listened
.: Sentinel Newa Staff
ball teams.
.
versity of Rio Grande and plans to Hawley, Traci Michelle Heines, · house Thesday to protest the bill that to testimony !hat was often dry and
:• Meredith Lynn Crow has been
She played varsity softball • for major in Business Management at the · Alyssa Kay Hoffman, Rickie Lee . would end prevailing-wage require- technical.
:: named valedictorian and Maria Dar- ~~tree years, and reserve sdftball for university.
Hollon, Jr., Cr)rstal Jean Holsinger, ments on school constructiO!J jobs.
Terrence Manin, a 30-year-old
:: lone Frecker the salutatooan of East- o~c. 'She pla~ed varsily vol~eyball
Candidates 'for graduation are . Martha Renee Holter, Jeremy Edwanl
About I SO workers were able to carpenter from Cleveland, said he
-:em High School's Class of 1997.
this year, servmg as ~apwn, and James •Lawrence Adams; Patrick Hupp, Rocky James. Hupp, Bobby get into • House finance commiuee thinks tbe bill is a first auempt to
:• Eastern's 39th Annual Baccalau- · played . reserve volleyball for one Loren Aicker, Keith Allen Arix, Lau- , Lee Keaton,. Eric Sidney Marcinko, .meeting to hear testimony on dt!: bill. eliminate prevailing wage on all
:; reate and Commencement Exercises ·year. She is a three-time recipieot of raAnn Arix, Christopher Eric Bailey, Jr., Sean Adam Maxcy, Adam Luke The others watched on television.
public construction projects .
•: will be .held on Sunday, May 25 at the Th- Valley Conference AII-Acad- David· Allen Baker, Manhew Luke McDaniel, Teresa Dawn McGrath,
The bill, which would also speed
"All it takes is fqr th.em to get
:: 6:30 p.ni. in the school gymnasium. ernie Awanl, given io panicipants,llf Barnhart; Riki Michelle Barringer, Amanda Marie Milhoan, Christina up distribution of school construction . their foot in the door," Man in said .
:• Crqw ·and Fte&lt;:ker will.address their varsity sports who have maintained a Thomas Vernon Basim, Angela Marie Moore, Jeanie· Mae Newelt
money, has created much debate
The committee is expected to
~: fellow graduates during the ceremo- · 35 O,£ higher grade point average. · JeaJIIlne Bissell, Laura Lynn Brown,
Wesley Michael Newell, Carrie . about whether ihe state will benefit vote on the bill ihis week and could
·~ ny.
.
lter other activities include three Candace Lane Bunting, Sherry Lynn .Ranae Newlun, Peter Christopher .by eliminating prevailing wage.
go to the House. The Senate has
~~ : \faledictorian Meredith Lynn year~· participation in tbeOhio Uni- Burke, Jerornee Clifford Calaway, _ Nowak, . Kelly Amber Osborne,
Union leaders have said the bill already approved the bill. which
~· Crow is the daughter of James and versii)I ,Govemor's Scholars Program, Joshua flugene Casto, Angela Dawn Daniel Jacob Ono, Jason Allan Park- could cost some construction ·work- . includes S300 million for school
:~ Pamela Crow _
of Pomeroy.
.
serving ;as a s!Jident.leader in the last Chancy, James Patrick Clifford, cr, Leslie Leish Parker. Mindy Mae ers about $1 ,500 each year. Republi - construction.
~~ · She is the Meigs County recipic;nt year. She was a volunteer at Veterans Catherine JoAnn. Coram, Meredith Sampson, Thomas Earl Schuler. cans said it would save as much as
M&amp;king more money available for ·
~~ of the Fninllli.n B. Walter Awlj,rd, the Memorial Hospital's Extended Care Lynn Crow, Steven Lee Dickens, Eric Shaun Michael Seth, Lisa Marie S 120 million because the state now schools has become a major issue for
:: Easte,m High School r~ipient of the Unit- ft!ld has ·worked as a waitress • Edward Dillard, Timothy Steven Stethem, Jessica Renee Scarberry, pays union-negotiated wages to all -lawmakers who ~ave to come ·up
•; Holzer. Science Award and has · dunng t(:lc S\lmmer. ·
EpliQg, Amber M..-ie Fortney.
. Henry Travis Thomas, David E:"Van- school construction workers.
with a funding plan.within the next
. ~ ; received an Academic Excellence · She _is an active member of the
William Mark Francis, Maria Dar- Inwagen, Alicia Marie Walker,
"It's going to· affect everybody year to comply with .the Ohio
Supreme Court's rulins that found
:: Award from the Tandy Corporati9n, Chesteri' United Methodist Church . lene Frecker, Christopher· Duane Michelle Dawn Westfall, Chad Allen dowri the line,'' Maksim said.
:;denoting ,the top to percent of nomi- and the church cho1r. . . '
Gandara, Ti111j)thy Ivan Gheen, Wheeler, Tracy Marie Wliite, and
David Williams. president of the the state failed to provide a thorough
:; nees nationwi.de. She is a participant
srn: plans to attend Manella Col- Nathan E~gene Goodwin, Christina Anna Christine Wolf.
Ohio State Building and Construe- . and efficient education system.
·
:: in WSAZ-lV's "Be5t of the Class," lege m1 the fall, where ·she has
~ ~ and has received the Academic · received a Dean's Scholarship, and
';sxcellenee Awanl from Meigs Coun- -plans to major in Corporate Com: ;ty Schools all five years that she has munica!fon.
.
.
:;been eligible.
M~a Darlene Frecker, salutaton- ·
;; · She is a two-year member of the an,1s tlledaughterofOtarlesW. and
Donald Mooney, who repreSentS
By JOHN McCARTHY .
•:NIIional Honor Society, and is cur- MarshaJtl. Frecker of Racine.
the
plaintiffs, said he was confident
Asaoclated Pre•• Writer
.:;rcritly serVing as its president. She _ Her ~~;:tivit_ies in big~ school have
·- COLUMBUS - A lawsuit chal- the appeals ruling would stand all the
: •has been a member of the Eastem . mcludos\.servmg as semor class trealenging the state's school voucher way I~ the U.S. .Supreme c;:ourt, if
: :High School Marthing Band and surer .ftd two-ye~ member of
program will stand up on appeal , a necessary.
·~Concert ~and for six years, ierving Nauonal Honor Soc•cty. She_wu an
"You can't do that. You can 't
lawyer for those who filed the suii
:~u section leader and squad leader for • All-~an Scholar and has been .
spend our (lall)lllyers') money for lhat
said .
purpose," Mooney said Tuesday.
i11ne·
yean.
She. will It_ IWO-year f~aturel' in Who's Who Amons . ·
1bc
program
provides
$2'
,
500
in
1
Lawmakers should hold off fund: ~ber of the Pep Band. She hu
American High School Students and ·
wpeyer money for low-income faming
Ohio's school voucher _program
:~ a member of the District XVD . in q.e United Swes Achievement
ilies in Cleveland so they can send
;:Honor Band for two years, the ~gs : Academy..
their children to private schools, until they come up with a new school
~ ~HonorBUid.furoaeyCM,and ·
She ls ta member of St. John
including those affiliated with a reli- spendins plan, a group opposed to the
~ouchers said Tuesday.
gion,
:- Meip County Cooummity BIIFld. l.UijlerU Qturdr. She hu been horJ..
Mooney spoke at a news confer' 3he W11 11em11y of the IOpilolncn ored II ttie Meigs County Acldemic '
The I Oth Ohio District Coun of
Appeals said May I that the proararn ence with members of a coalition
; Jllu lllld • four-year member of the. Banquet her IOflltomole Mel senior
;:'+\laity "13" Club. She had altlld role yean IIIII was awarded the J. Danviolated the required separation of ·called Citizens Against Vouchers,
church and state. It ruled on a chal· which includes several unions, edu~ lhe
and'- aavOcl fcJnb "I Dn You" aWI!d in Ia junior
lenp: IJrouaht by the Ohio Federation cation lfllltps ·and Cleveland-area
:'II .. oftlt:e aide thia ,...,., She Will yell'.
·
ofTeachers and a group of lallpllyers. community groups.
!,.
1 hU lllli"'fi• IIU year for
Mllril! l)as also been awlrded an
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Lawyer confident about
school voucher court case·

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Th·e · Daily .Sentinel
'Est1lDfislid in 15148

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111 Court Slnlet, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-982·2158 • Fax 992·2157

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper
'
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlaher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Gentnl MaMgll'

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467111; or, FAX to 114~167.

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Certain outcome
of' 200«N:ensus:
More controversy

Wedn11U,, 11.y 14,1117

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Wedn11day, May 14; 1"7

WASHINGTON .. The Clinton
administration and people across
Africa cari only hope that Mobutu
Sese Seko has left Zaire for good ..
for the good of the country, that is.
~obutu Is the corrupt embarrassment that was created by the CIA's
version of Dr. Frankenstein,
' Lawrence Devlin. Not even Mobutu's
creator. however, could' have pre: dieted that the dictator would stay in
·. power for mm:e than three decades.
On the other hand, Mobutu could not
have kept such iron-fisted c.ontrol
over the huge central African country,_ wh1chborde~ mne other Afncan
nauons, w1thout s1gmficantAmencan
support. .
.
Before h1s transfonnauon._Jo~ph
Mobutu was an ann-commumst JOUr·
nalist _from ~e Bel~ian Congo wh11
was hvmg m · Parts when Devhn
found him. Here was a man, Devhn
thought, wholt! the C~ could prop
up to ru~e a rruneral-nch co~ntry m
11s post-Independence penod:
.
Mobutu w~ always obhgmg. He
started by_havmg h1s army beat t.o
death P~tnee I;-umu~b~, the ~ongo s
,first nauve pnme mmiSter, m 1961.
In 1965, with CIA help, Mobutu

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Letters to the editor
Pot holes a deep subject

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Clublto_.
The Meigs County Garden Clubs
will meet at the Pomeroy Library
Tuesday, 7 p.m., for the purpose of
planning tile Meigs County Fair
flower show.

came to absolu~ power.
He called his COUlltry Zaire, and

Cecil E. Cook

Mobutu was the CIA's favorite lot of his investments·tied up in real
African Cold Warrior. He spoke up estate. 111ere are his pink marble
gave himself the ~w name ofMobu· for the United States at the United palace in the capital of Kinshasa and
tu Sese Seko Kuku Ngbendu Wa Za Nations. He harbored anti-tommunist other Zairian residences, u well as a
rebels within his borders, including 16th-century castle in valencia,
the Jonas Savimbi-led UNITA, which Spain; a vineyard and horse _ranch in
.
·
sought to topple neighboring ARgo- Portugal; a 32-room mansion in Ltiu:
Ia's Marxist government. For this, the sanne, Switzerland; a town house on
United States helped him fend off all Avenue Foch in Paris; 1!- villa on the
attempts to unseat or assassinate.him French Riviera; and residences in
Senegal and the Ivory Coast.
until this latest rebel uprising.
Even more' telling examples of
Banga, which means "the all-powerBut along the way, Mobutu and
ful warrior who because of his .his cronies looted the D)ineral-rich Mobutu 's personal profligacy and
endurance and inflexible will to win country of billions of dollars in waste abound in interviews our assbwill go from conquest to conquest cobalt, copper, diamonds and cash. ciate Dale Van Alta conducted with
. leaving frre in his wake." He pro- More than hair of the country's earn· fonner CIA agents who served in
claimed himself "president for life." ings simply disappeared into the · Zaire.
.
For instance, there is his propenIt 1tas a tong way to·come for the pockets of its leaders.
son of a hotel maid who. as a boy,
Mobutu himself has been .esti- sity to waste tens of millions of dolwas expelled from secondAry school mated to have personally stolen more lars treating expensive aircraft as if
for truancy. In turn, he became a than SIO billion . from th~ nation's they were taxis. One C-130 aircraft
sergeant major in the colonial armv. coffers. He used a large chunk of that that was virtually given to Mobutu by
then a journalist and Jaierthe chief of to pay off family members, the mil- the United States was later convert· staff to the independent Co.ngolese . itary, tribal chiefs and others in 9rder ed for his priva_te use with such
Anny. He quickly showed an uncan- to keep himself in power.
amenities as bedroom .stlites, a bar
ny instinct to rule, forging a country
But he also used a good deal for ·and an expensive entertainll!ent ~ys ­
with a new name and new identity · himself. Mobutu once bragged in a tem. Another C-130 was ~to ferfrom a population that speaks 400 · 1984 American television interview ry cattle to his ranches.
A government-owned DC-8 was
different languages in a land the size that he was the second richest man in
of the United States east of the Mis- the world. Besides Swiss bank sent to Venezuela by Mobutu 32
sissippi.
·
accounts and the like, Mobutu has a times in 1988 alone to fetch 5,000
sheep for a private ranch, Mobutu
l~nglhened the runway in his natjve
village. Gbadolite, so a chartered
Concorde could land there and take
him to a dentist in France.,
.
Once, at a time when Mobutu's
govermrient was $3.5 rnilli,on behind
in ~payments to the United States, he
spent nearly $2 million i:ln a la",ish
vacation trip to Disney World and
New York with an entourage of 93,
including his wives, children imd
friends.
It was that ·kind of thie~~ry ~nd
profliga9 that has left Zaire's infrastructure and economy in ruins.
•
Mobutu 's legacy to his 44 million
countrymen is a nation in which fe,w
of the children are educated, ,few get
medical treatment, a quarte_r of the
children die by age 5, and all,people
must struggle unller inflation that
. peaked at 24,000 percent in 1:994. the
highest in recorded history.
,:
No wonder Zairians have . been
· welcoming rebel forces, led by Laurebt Kabila, with open arms.
.
Jack Anderson and Jan Moiler ·
are writerS for United Feahn'e
Syndicate, Inc.

By Jack Anders
· on
and
Jan Moller.

'.

Americ~n-style

America, only the disadvantaged
have to eat the overllow. This is fine,
as long as the surplus' product is
something as tasty and nutritious as

Joseph Spear
potatoes . But what. if there was a
kohlrabi crisis? The American system
is better, I think.
Take the conspiracy to deny our
right to devour ·cows. A children 's
magazine called Muse published a
story with a calf on the cover and the
words, "PleaSe don't eat me!" The
publicatio!i turned out to be affiliated with the Smithsonian Institution,
and our dili2cnt representatives
jumped on this one in a flash.
" Having the Smithsonian lnstitu·
lion, a federally funded . entity,
involved with a publication promoting these contrOversial views, especially for children, is absolutely unacceptable," wrote Rep. Sam Johnson,
R-Texas, to the head of the institute.
Half a dozen other Texans and lawmaker from Nebr&amp;Ska signed the
missive, which produced dramatic
results.
·

a

The publisher of the Smithsonian
magazine apologized and dispatched
a contrite letter to the National Cattlemen's Beef Association. The editor of Muse was reassigned, and subscriptions were extended for all who
were offended, and McDonald's did
not have to get into veggiburgers.
Take the golf cart problem. Did
you knoW that senior citizens are driving these things on neighborhood
streets and that some' of them zip
along at speeds greater than•l5 mph?
But feat not, the National Highway
· Traffic Safety Administrati,on has
already proposed some guidelines. If
a.jitney can't go fasterthan11 5 mph.
it's a golf "cart."lf it can ZOOIJI along
from 15 to 25 mph, it's a gol( "car,"
and it will be required to h~ve seatbelts, windshields, tum signals, head·
lights, · taillights, mirrors, ~!lector~
and parking brakes. And w~tch out
for speed traps in retirement com.munities.
Authorities on the slate .level are
almost as assiduous as the Peds. The
governor of Alabama, for qample.
has vowed· that the Ten CoiJimandments will rel!lain posted on courtroom walls in his stale, de~pite an

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· ACLU suit to have them taken down .
If he.has to bring in state u:oopers and
the National Guard to keep· God' in
the courtrooms, he'll do it, he has
vowed. And if that's not enough muscle, he once said, he'll reiQforce his
army with members of the Aubum
and Alabama college football iearns.
. AI the local level, we have suc'h
attentive problem solvers as the commissioners of Kleberg County, Texas,
who agreed with a county citizen tl)at
"hello" is an inappropriate greeting
because it contains the word "hell."
And so, .in the interest of "peal:f.
rriendship and welcome," the coin·
missioners designated "heaven-o"'as
the official salulation of Kleberg
County, and government employees .
began answering phones with the
phrase.
" Heaven:.O,how c1111 1 heip you?"
.is probably a little awkward, but it's
certainly better than "Inferno, how
can 1 help you?" .
,'
America's civil servants. They're ·
hcck·OA·wheels.
.
Joseph Spear is a . syadict~ted
writer .for Newspaper En~Jrprl$e
Association.
,
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· law's unintended consequences.
Indeed, when President Bush
proudly affixed his signature to the

had speci tied the mental illnesses
covered by the ADA. Many, if not
most, mental health experts can agree
with five .. schizophrenia, manic
depression, severe depression,
obsessive-compulsive disorder
and generalized anxiety disorder. All
are legitimate, diagnosable mental
· disorders that can be treated sufficiently to enable an individual to lead
a p(oductive work life.

tied to watch porn films during th&lt;ii~
coffee breaks. ·
··

The EEOC may dismiss these scenarios as absurd or farfetcjled, but tlie
agency's new rules bring them into
the realm of possibility. Indeed, in its
disabled-rights legislation, he hardly
guidelines, the EEOC says an
could have imagined that of all the
employer may, for instance, have to
discrimination complaints filed under
"provide room dividers, partitions or
the law, most have come not from
other soundproofing or visual barriblind or deaf or wheelchair-bound
ers between work spaces" for work'
·Americans. but from folks claiming
But the EEOC h~ placed no lim- ers who have problems concentrating
' back problems .
itation whats()l:ver on what may be because of a mental condition.
(that's right).
considered a mental disability. A
. worker can, for instance, claim a
It also advises that employers
Nor could he have imagined that "narcissistic personality disorder," should be understanding of workers
the definitian of disability under the the disability from which court mar· who are chronically late, who exer;
law
tialed Anny drill instiuctor Delmar Clse_t~oor judgme!'l or who 4i~play.
("a physical or mental impairment Simpson purportedly suffers. Or ~Y hosllhty to the boss or fellow wotk·
that substanti~lly limi~ 011e or more can claim a "sex addiction, " like ers .because those traits ''may be
of life's activities" ) would be so . Michael Kennedy, who found himself linked to mental irnpainnenu." .
broadly interpreted . as to include una~le to keep his hands off the 14These mandates are nol'reason:
drug and alcohol abu$Cf5,
• · . year-old baby sitter.
able.
They do not merely provide
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workplace equality for oor fellow eft,,;
If a worker can get some shrink or izens with mental disabilities. They 1
That brings me to thC auidellnes
issued by the Ointon Equal Employ~ 8IIOiher to verify that they suffer from aive the mentally diSiblod w~
ment Opportunity Commission one e~otic JIICJ!tal condilion ()I' IIIOih· , riJht.s and entitlelfllmu that are f•
recently that specify how employers er, then employers are requjred under above thOse of not only non:dilllbllil; '
· are to IICCOD11110d&amp;te worbn with the EEOC's dictate to make every workers, but physically dialbled ,
meal.ll disabilltiea. In a fell swoop, effort to accommodate them.
wodt:ers as well.
·:
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the BEOC lw all but au-nteed In
So a worbr with a n~~~:issistic
exploaiOn of diacriminllion laWIIIill
The ADA ii a well·illtelltionecl
penonllity
dilorder could be entitled law !bat'- viekled raultJ dill~
by Wlirlcers clalmiq all 11}111- of
Biab'
menial health problems.
. to a minored ofliee where they can !her eon,_ nor
admire themselves all day. Or a ~vilioned in 19!10. BVOIIIUIJIIOI*I
It would be fi!!C_if the government wodt:er addicted to sex c:oukl be enti- of the law,

Joseph Perkins

Cecil E. Cook, 74, of East Liverpool, foimerly of Syracuse, died Mon·
day, May 12. 1997.
· Son of the late Walter and Emma Capehart Cook. he is survived by his Revival servkes set
wife Esther Cook; sons, Randy Cook of East Liverpool, Harold Cook, Roben
Revival services will be held at the
. Cook and Edward Cook, all of Pennsylvania; two stepsQns, Ernest and Eddie Hysell Run Holiness Church, May
Eastham, hoth of East Liverpool; five sisters and brothers-in-law, Maycie . 19-25, 7:30p.m. each evening. Mark
and Pearl Searls of Tallahassee, Aa., Edna and Clarence Searls of Cheshire, Michaels will sing nightly. Public
Della and -Russell Miller of Tucson, Ariz., Florence and Richard Riebel of invited.
·
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Tucson, Evamae and Ezra Phillips of Syracuse; a brother, Raymond Cook
of Middleport; ~vera! nieces and nephews.
MlssiQDan' service SunJ!ay
. He was preceded in death by two brothers and a sister.
There will be a missionary service ·
Private graveside services will be held in CalcJIIta, Ohio.
at the Wesleyan Bible Holiness
Church, Middleport, May 18, at7 :30
p.m. Ruth Devalt will be the speak·
er, Public .invited.
·
Luella ~aning, 89. of Lancaster, formerly of Athens and forrne(ly of Meigs
County, d1ed on Tuesday, May 13, 1997 at Crestview Manor in Lancaster. Legion to meet
Racine Post 602. American
She was born. ~n August 2; 1907 inAthens County, daughter of the latLegion,
will have a business meeting,
er Peter and Ltzz1e Buck Steinmetz.
6:30
p.m.
Thursday with dinner to
Surviving are two sisters, Minnie Foit of Lancaster, and Mrs. Dave ·.
follow.
(Martha) Hodge, Baltimore, Ohio; a sister-in-hiw. Cora Haning; three brothers-in-law, Morris Haning of Nelsonville, Max Haning of Albany an~ Wilbur
Colburn of Lancaster; and several nieces, nephews and cousins. '
.
She W!IS preceded in death by her hushand, Dana Haning; two brothers,
Anthopy arid Tholl!as; and five sisters, Elsie, Letha, Audrey. Glenna, and
Ada.
.
.
.
Units of the Meigs County Emer·
· Services will be Friday, May 16, 1997 at 1.1 a.m. at Hughes-Blower Funer- gency Medical Service recorded five
al Home in Athens with Dear! Porter officiating. Burial will be in Wells calls for assistance Tuesday. Units
·
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home on Thursday from 3:30 to responding included:
6:30 p.m., and Friday one hour prior to the service.
.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
8:07 a.m., High Street, Pomeroy,
. Memorial contributions may be made to Hospice of Fairfield County, II II
Pearl Williams, treated at the scene;
East Main Street, Lancaster, Ohio 43130.
·
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8:26 a.m.', New Hope Road,
.
.
Chester, Telitha Casto, treated at the

•

New EEOC guidelines are unreasonable
.

I

Meigs announceme-n ts

fMobutu's end has, been IQng in. coming

Problem solving

I

OHIO We&lt;1thcr

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· By WALTER A. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - No matter hqw the government fmally conducts the
count of an estimated 270 million Americans in the 2000 census, there are
sure to be complaints about the outcome, ·and probably court challenges.
The current debate about the use of statistical sampling, akin to pollin!!-o
to account for people who can't be reached directly is itself only a sample
o(rounds to come.
This will be the 21st constitutionally mandatedc~nsus, the IOth-year pop·
ulation count that apportions political representation and detennines the allocation of about $100 billion in federal aid to states and cities.
Pre-census projections indicate that II of the 435 House seats could be
shifted among states to reflect population changes. House districts will be
reapportioned to reflect where the census shows the people are.
The 1990 census was contested in about SO lawsuits filed by cities, states
and interest groups, arguing that the acknowledged undercount, now estimated at about 4 million, was costing them millions of federal dollars. II
also affected congtessional and state election. districts.
Studies since have indicated that at least 1.6 percent of the population
was not counted, with the missing people centered in inner cities and among
minorities.
There were demands, most from Democrats, that the numbers be adjusted to correct the undercount. The.Republican administration decided againsi
it, on grounds that the proposed adjustments weren 't certain enough to warrant amending the "actual enumeration,.. the Constitution requires.
Six years into the dispute, the Supreme Court upheld the census results.
The Clinton administration favored that outcome.
By then, the Census Bureau was a1 work preparing for the 2000 count,
and planing a system in which statistical samJ!.Wlg would acc'ount for households that don 't return mailed census fo~ ~ 't respond to follow-up telephone calls and don 't answer when a ceil'fus-taker goes to the door.
· The National Academy of Sciences recommended 'the changes in a study
ordered by Congress after the 1990 hassle. It reported that with statistical
One thing our governments do
sampling. the numbers would be more accurate next time.
· well is respond to crises.
But this is not just science and statistics; this is politics.
Indeed, it could probably be
. The Census Bureau plan is to have-arteas~ 90 percent,of households in demonstrated by mat~ematical equaeach neighborhood covered by questionnaire, telephone or census vjsit. Cen- tion that authorities in the United
sus workers would visit one in 10 of the remaining households, and the num- Stines react to dilemmas in a more.
bers would be extrapolated from that sampling.
timely and appropriate fashion than
Republicans congressional leaders doli 'tlike the idea. Some party mem- those of other nations.
bers worry that sampling will reduce the count in rural areas and increase
Take the iJotato predicament.
Last year, farmers were swimming
the number of people located ill dense urban areas, shifting seats to Demoin potatoes and the market went bust.
cratic strongholds.
·
. ASenate measure to forbids811)pling was toned down to say that the Cen- 'Fortunittely, they live in America,
.sus.Bureau can 'I make "irreversible plans or preparation", for the use of sam· .which has an Agriculture Department
piing in the 2000 count. That awaits final congressional action. The White that is trained to handle emergencies
of this sort. The bureaucrats rushed in
House has said _President
Clinton
would .veto a ban against
census sampling.
..
. .
.
.
and bought up $2J million worth of
such processed potato productS as
"!lehydrated flakes, granules, rounds,
wedges and slices" and gave them
.
.
away. 11le farmers were saved, and
food banks were flush with spuds.
Compare thiqo Taiwan's garlic
Other than compu.ters· and tech- · we would be speaking with polite troubles.
'
nology associated with making our Brilish accents.
The 1995 harvest on the island
Pizza deliveries are slower with nation was had and prices soared.
lives richer, I can't think of a better
subject than the exciting American pot holes. causing slower deliveries Then farmers overplanted and there
but prevents tongues frqm being was a garlic glut. So what did the
pot hole.
The pot hole is a test of hand and burned by hot cheese.
government do~ It distributed garlic
Some universities teach a course recipes.
eye coordination. It is our yearly senSee the difference? In Taiwan,
sitivity training; both psychological on pot holes, but disguise the two
and sociological. Patience and verbal common words (pot and hole) under everybody has to eat the surpluses. In
respect for automobile passengers are a subject they call "Subterranean
tnie tests of man's sanity · when you . Geolqgical Rim Mass." To call a pot
hole . a pot hole at any university
hit a big deep pot hole.
However, filling pol holes stimu- wouldn't attract students·or provide
lates our economy and prevents acci- professors with deep scientific theo-.
I was on the south lawn of the
dents. The highway department will ries.
White ~ouse in 1990 when George
Yes; I like our yearly pot holes. Bush s1gned the Americans with
receive a big chunk of money to
begin road repairs, damaged by They represent something America Disabilities Act, proclaiming "a new
can heal • unless they·get so deep our era of equality" for
extreme temperature changes,
.
Historically, horses and automo· leaders fall in the 12.500 mile deep
"our fellow citizens with disabilbiles have been slowed down by pot holes, and rescued only if they agree ities." I cheered the new law like
holes. The break-in at tbe Watergate to grant 'China "most favored nation ev~one else:
Hotel wouldn't hav!l happened and status."
Richard Nixon would be vindicated.
Seven years later, I see its maniPot holes almost halted the famous
Roger Reeb, festations.
ride of Paul Revere. If he had fallen,
Racine
Much of the lawn fronting the
t~ood
bllilding · where I work .was paved
ideal of service as a basis of all wor- over to triple the number of handicap
Dear Editor,
parking ~paces, And though the
The United States. Marine .Corps thy enterprises.
spaces
have JICver been cklse to ful5. To create greater understanding
advenises for recruits in this manner:
ly
occupied,
I nonetheless think it
"We need a few good men". RACO, het ween rural and urban people on was a lood thing to do.
the Racine Area Community Organi- the problems of each as well as on
zation, is somewhat like the Marin.e their mutual problems.
The elevator in the building where
Corps in tllat we need a few good . We emphasis besides fellowship I work was · retrofitted n01 so long
and goodwin, aforesai&lt;!. community ago.
men and women,
service.
We have a dinner meeting on
RACO declares the objectives of
Among other things; they lowered
their' organization to be as follows: . the fourth Tuesday of the month. We . the elevator buttons below waist lev:
I. To promote fellowship and have a constitution, by-laws and a el and affixed braille nuR.crals beside
goodwill among its members and the membership application. Any people them. And though 99 ,percent of my
citizens of the community, and, to of good moral character and reputa- co-wlllbrs are ~~either wheelchair
tion, who will work and strive to betinspire each other to higher efforts.
bound nor blind, I think lhlt too WIS
2. To unify the efforts of individ- ter the community are eligible appli· a lood lhinlto do.
' '
u.ls, organizalions and institutions in cants. Please contact Lillian Weese,
the C2JIIrnunity toward making it • n secretary, if you are so inclined.
Bu! ~ven thole of us ·who IIIJIIIOII
ideal pl~ee in which
.
the sptnl of the ADA, who think it is
3. To work with
&amp;Jencics
• aoocl tbina' to ~ leCOIIIdill serve the
and con.
modale ~ spec;~ needs of compeueui directly to i"
tent, qualified disabled Aaiericans
4. To cn(()W'age and
the
have to be troubled by some of~

RACO seeks a few

TIMt Dally Sentinel • P~g~ 3

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Luella Haning

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Craib and pme. offered
Overbrook Center will have a
crafts and games day Saturday noon
to 4 p.m. for the patients, employees
and public. 111ere will be cloggers,
country and western dancing, train
ndes, and other activities during the
afternoon.
Grange to meet
Star Grange .778 and Star Junior
Grange 878 will hold fun night and
a potluck super Saturday. 6:30 p.m.
at the hall , Salem Center. A cartlival '
food theme will be used. Membei-s
will work on ABC quilts. Members
and others invited.
Committee to meet
. The Racine Fourth of July Com- ·
mlltee Will meet Thursday, 6:30p.m.
at the fire department annex. to plan
for the upcoming Independence Day .
celebration. All members of the public are welcome to attend. For more
information contact Marilyn Powell
at949-2676.

Meigs EMS ·logs·5 calls

1.'!

~· Today's weather forecast

9:11 p:m., · East Main Street,
. Pomeroy, Sue Kauff, Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
RUTLAND .
10:37 a.m., Meigs Mine 31 ,
Charles Williams, Holze ~ Medical
Center;
.
8:41 p.m., Mulberry Avenue,
: Pomeroy, Nathan Eskew. HMC.

afternoon showers northeast I..:ows in
the mid to upper 3os. Highs SS to 60
north and 60S south.
• ·
Saturday•. :Fair. Lows 35 to 40
north and 40 to 45 south. Highs in.the
60s. . .
..
scene ~
Sunday.:.Fair. Lows in the 40s.
Highs 65 to 70 north and 70s south.
. . Louise A. Mitzelfeld, 75, of Lexington, S.C. died May 6, 1997 ill LexKieltyka
mgton.
Born on May 17,. 1921 in Detroit, Mich., he was married to the fonner
COLUMBUS (AP) _:_ Indiana- 46.01); 450-~00 lbs. 45 .50-48 .00;
Pauline Clark of Pomer~y. and visited here frequently ·through the years. · Ohio direct hog prices at selected 500-600 lbs. 47.50-52.00, few over
Bes1des h1s Wife; he ts survived by three children, Tom and Jane Anne · buying points Wednesday as provid- 600 lbs. 52.00-53.00.
of Detroit, and Mary Lou of Maumee, nine grandchildren, two brothers Tom
Boars: 40.00-42.50.
ed by the U.S. Department of Agriand Bill Mitzelfeld, a sister-in-law, Jean Coates of Syracuse and ..;vera!
l • ~
· Estimated receipts: 29,000 .
culture Market News:
nieces and nephews.
'
Barrows and gilts: mostly 50 cents
McVeigh had cased the federal buildBy STEVEN K. PAULSON
Burial was in Rochester, Mich.
higher,
some 1.00 higher; demand
ing and decided to park his car in the
' ·Associated Press Wr11er
moderate
to good on a light to mod· · · DENVER - Prosecutors sought alley because he wanted to be shielderate
movement.
·
· 'to retrace Timothy Me Veigh's steps ed from the 'blast.
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country ..
' before the Oklahoma City bombing
LocksmithCharlesEdwardstesti- .
e·
points 58 .50-60.00, few 58.00 and
.
•
' by jntroducing a blurry videotape of fled thar he built car ignition and door
•
60.50;
plants 59.50-61 .00.
1 ·a· truck they said picked him up after
locks based on the Ryder truck's . Fred IJ. "~e" Smith, 84, PomeriJy, died Tuesday, May 13, 1997, at Riverl.J
.S.
2-3, 230-260 lbs. 54.00specifications. Edwards said he later Side Methodist Hospital in Columbus.
'·be ·stru&gt;hed his getaway car.
·
58.00;
210-230
lbs . 49.50-54.00.
· • : They also introduced into evi' tried the key in the lock he built, and
A retired employee of the Meigs County Highway Department he was
Sows: steady to 1.00 higher. .
' dllnce Thesday· a key to the Ryder it worked.
born Apnl 3, 1913, in Sumner, son of the late Asbury and Emma Bate'y.Smith .
U.S. 1_-3 300-450 lbs. 44 .00: 'truck 'they contend held the bomb that
Edwards
was
expected
to
continHe
was
a
member
of
the
Chester
Unit~
Methodist
Church,
the
Meigs
Counripped. apart the Alfred P. Murrah
ue his testimony today.
ty F1sh and Game Club and the Pubhc Employees Retiree Association.
1 Federal Building.
Wrapping
.up
five
hours
of
testiHe is s~rvived by his wife of64ye~, Bertha Fell Smith; t~o daughters
·n. · Prosecutors contend that McVeigh
Veterans Memorial
mony
over
two
days,
Fonier
repeatand
sons-m-law, Kathryn and Vrrgll Wmdon and Barbara and Alvin Tripp,
ran from the building on April 19,
Tuesday
admissions - none .
'•IIJ95,l!ropping the key to the truck. edly rejected defense suggestions all of Pomeroy; nme grandchildren ; II great-grandchildren; a sister, Sibyl
Tuesday discharges - Gerald
• flBI agents later f"und the key jn an that b!f made up the getaway-cartes- Dorst Barr of Pomeroy; several meces and nephews.
Sellers.
~
timony -after seeing news reports
He was preceded in ~th by his parents; sisters Fern, Leta; Blanche and
alley a block from the building.
Holzer
Medical
Center
Michael Fortier, McVeigh's for- about ~cVeigh possibly leaving a car Mary; brothers Josiah, William and Roben; and by an infant son.
DiKharges May 13 .:_ Grace
. . Semces wdl he held Friday, I p.m. a~J;:win~ -Funeral,Home in Pomeroy
mer Anny buddy and the prosecu- near tlie site of the blast.
Russell,
Joann Circle, Nora Hurlow.
with the Rev. Sharon Hausman officiating. Burial will follow in Meigs Memtion's star witness. testified that
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. William
ory Gardens.
·
Zuspan, daughter, Mason, W.Va.
Calling
hours
will
be
.Thursday,
2-4
and
7-9
p.m.
at
the
funeral
home.
F=ormer House Speaker Riffe in hospital
(Published with permission)
, ·. COLUMBUS (AP) - Fonner
Riffe, .71, was admitted to the hos,Ohio House Speaker Vein Riffe Jr. is - pltal May 5. He became ill while on
. , jn the Ohio State University Medical vacation in Tennessee.
.
.
f:.ente~ undergoing tests for an undis·
Riffe, a Democrat of Wheelers: l'losed condition.
·
burg, served 36 years in the Leg islaAm Ele Power .......................40~
', • At hjs request, the hospital has 1ure- a record 20 of t!Jem as speakAkzo ••••..•••• t ...... . ...... ...... ...... ;.68'U
AmrTech
........................:......63':1
.withheld specific information about er -. before retiring in December
Ashland
011
...........................45\
. ~is condition until all tests are co.b- 1994 .. ·'
ATaT .....................................32\
' ·Ohio '•
-~ · _ Tonight... Mostly cloudy. Scattered
,. showers and thunderstonns mainly
,.·west early...Showers and a chance of
.· ·tl\undet'storms east Lows 45 to 50.
:· ~.. Thursday... Mostly cloudy...Cooler
• tl'nd breezy with scattered showers.
Highs in the 50s.
• Extended forecast ·
~ .... F~day ... Partly cloudy. A chance of

·Louise Mitzelfeld

.Today's livestock report ·

~- McVeigh prosecutors focus

:':on. connection to rental truck
j

Fre'd B Ilk. I s.mI"th

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Hospital news

Stocks

Bank One ......................

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u ..... .

,000

43..

Bob Evens ...................,........ 13':1
Borg-Wamar .........................48'i.
Champion .............................16'i.
Charm Shpa ..............................&amp;
Clly Holding ............................31
Federal MogUI ...... ,................28lo

Eastern Local School District

Gennett ~................................ 92~
Goodyear ..:........................... 55~.

Kmart ..................................... 13'·

-F' red B..•l
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Fred B. "Ike" Smith, 84, of West Shade Rbad, Pomeroy, died Tuesday,
May 13, 1997, at. Riverside Methodist Hospiiij_l· i~- C::olumbus.
· A retired employee of the Meigs Coqnty Highway Department, lie was
born April3, 1913, in Sumner, sqn of the lateAlibury and Emma Batey Sm1th.
He was a member of the Chester United Metho!list Church, the Meigs County Fish and Game Club and the Public Employees Retiree Association . .
He is S!lfVived by his wife of64 years, Ben(ia,Fell Smith; two daughters
and 5ons-in-law, Kathryn and Virgil Windon and Barbara and Alvin Tripp,
aU of Pomeroy; grandchildren, Debbie Chevalier, Brian and Wendy Windon, Becky and Jaines Cotterill, -Blaif and_D.iana'Windon, Ro!lney Tnpp and
Todd Tripp. all of Pomeroy; II great-grandchildren; sister. Sibyl Dorst Barr
of Pomeroy; several nieces, nephews and·friends. .
.· He was preceded in death by his parents; sisters Fern, Lela, Blanche and
Mary ; brothers Josiah, William and Robert; and by an infant so,n.
Services will be held Friday, May 16, 1997, at I p.m. at Ewmg Funeral.
~orne ii].Pomeroy with the Rev. Sharon Hausman officiating. Burial will
follow in Meigs Memory Gardens.
·
.
· Calling hours will be Thursday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

a

Meigs Local Board...
, .. C011tlnued from pap\ I
Jennifer Jones, Ryan Lemley, ~ita
Lewis, · Darin Logan, Tanya Meadows; Janice:New, Melinda Nortnan,
Emalene Pratt, David Ramey, Ahgela
Rigsby, Nathan Robinette, Rita
Slavin; Nancy Wachter, Donna Wolf
and Pamela Zirkle.
.
The board hired Melanie Quillen
as. a ieacher at Meigs Middle School
retroactive to April 28, and approved
her for a one-year contract for the
upcoming school year.
- In other business. the board:.
. r-- Eliminated the position of
reacher's aide at Meigs Middle
Schoof'and created the po~ition of
ael:re..Y 111 the lichool effective _the
beginning of the 1997-98 school

year.
•

t

·~

.

· · •• Approved summer school mneclitition and enrichment · programs
aDd the posli111 of positions accordidgl y llilhg grant funds to pay for the
progrlllll.
. , -Approved the list of pduating
is submitted by MlliJI High
~ l'riJICipaJ Fenton 'hylar.
. ·. ··~an ovemiJbt field trip

teldon

County of Meigs, Ohio
School Improvement Bonds
.
Unlimited Tax General Obligation Bonds

Lands End .......................·...•..28\
Ltd......................................... 191'

OVB ~ ......................................30Y.
One Valley .............................38'1.

Peoples ................................... 32
Prem Flnl ......................... :.....16Y,

.

ROCkwell ,,..,,,,,,,noo ooonooooooooooo68%

RD-Shell .............................. 191'1.
Shoney's ................................ 5\

Star Bank ....................:.........42'1.
Wendy's ......................, ........ 23'1.
Worthlngton.............................18

The bonds will be dated May l, 1997 and will mature December
1, 1998-2009 and December l, 2020 ·

-·-·-

Stock reports are· lhe 10:30
a.m ..quotes provided by Advest
or Gallipolis. '
.

• Exempt from Federal and State of Ohio Income Tax
• Non-Rated
• Minimum $5,000 Investment
• Rates to be Determined at Time of Sale

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 21J.!lf0)
Published every afternoon, Monday through
Friday, Ill Coun So.. Pomeroy, Ohio. by lhe
Ohio Volley Publl5hing Comp~yfGanneu Co.,

for vocauonal students to attend a vis. i!&amp;tion program at the University of
~io Grande on May 12-14.
·
...Apprpved a service contract for .
the high school sewage treatment .
plant for fiscal year 1998 at a rate of
$7S per iltspection six liq!es per year.
' .. Approved a contract with the
Educational Media Resource Center
to furnish media .services to the
school district au rate of $2.10per
student ($5,262) for the . 1997-98
school y~ar.
.
.. Approved the renewal of the
self-funded medical benefi!S pro-•.
gram for the period of July .I, 1997,
throUgh Jllne 30, 1998, with Medical ,
Claims Service.
.. ApproVcll changing the second
board meeting in June to J~~ne 26 at
7:30p.m. ·
· The boinl then met in exec;utive
· session to discuss pe~el matters ;
and. negotiations. No action followed. ',
Present were Superintendent Bill
Buckley, '~)usurer Cindy Rhone. ··
mus, ud board memben Hood,
Abbott, Humphreys, Rupe and Scott
Wilton.
·

•

I'

.The bonds will be offered when, as and if issued and received by us, subject to prior .
sale or change In price. This apnouncement is neither an offer to nor a solicitation to
buy these securities. The offer is.made only by the Official Statement.

Pomeroy, Oldo 4l769, Ph. 992-21l6. Se&lt;ond
clan powlJC: paid nl Pomeroy, Ohto.
~

Mrlllbtr: The A.si'rOCiared Press. and the Ohio
New~~ Assotiallo•:

POSTMASTER: Send addreu torreetiOnl to
The Daily Senp·nel, lll Court"St., Pomeroy,
.Ohio 4S169.

Subject to Optional Redemption.

SUBSCIIIPTJON RATI!S

IIJ Clrrkl'or

M--.

One ........,............ ........................... $2.00
One Mondl ........................................... .....$8.10
One Year................. :: ............................ $t04.00

For more information call Fifth Third Bank
. .
· Investment Officer Brian Seedhouse

SINGLE COPY PRICE,
Doily .................................................... 3l Cenq

Subocri!&gt;on noc desinna to poy lhe ..,;., may
'remit !• ldviiiCI dj~&lt;C~ 10 The Doily S&lt;llllnel
0111 a tine, six or 12 monch buiJ.. Crtdit wiD be
pven&lt;llricrOIOh-'t.

1-800-742-8033

---..moel.-.
-die
"'-'*"'
No

1ubscripti011

by mai I pennhted In

M'lll

rip IDidjusl,_ ..,_
period. Sobocrip&lt;i... ""
c:ltlqeo !Ill)' I!, lnoplonooalld by
11!1!
Pub~

laa lbe
-

•

-ai•

..
_.....,c:_,

oflbe_ipdoi_

•;,

MAIL SIJJ8CIIIP'I'IONS

13-................................................$77.311

:16 52 -

13 -

...............................................153.12'

......................................... $t0l.56

-OoioWo Mollo c.-;

.-....................~ ...................... $29.25

:16 Wjoob..................................,.............S$6.68

Fifth
Third Ba11k
Cincinn~~ti,

Ohio

'

5 2 -........................... ................... $1.119.72

'

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•

�..

..

....

. .. .

•
•
I

I

~' •By SCOTT WOLFE

:aenttnel Corrwpondent

~ :

Despite a couple errors, the
• ' Southern defense came through with
~ some big plays, culminating with
·- ' Regina Manuel's snag of a Meredith
l :Crow line drive with the tying and
·• . winning runs on base, pn:serving .a
~ ' 3-2.Southem victory in the Division
• &lt;III sectional softball championship
: ':fuesday night in Racine.
~ ;
The Tornadoes, 19-4 overall,
~ ~vance to the district tournament
~
Thursday where they will meet the
•• 'winner
of
the White Oak-Lucasville
'
.
~ :valley contest in the first round.
·4 :Game time is tentatively set at 5 p.m;
~ • Eastern scored one run in the first
· :: 'inning when Kim Mayle singled and
· ' advanced on an error in the SHS out-'• .'field. Tracy White new out to cen;i ' ter, the Patsy Aeiker singled home
~t Mayle to give Eastern a 1-0 lead:
-~ ~ Southern.carne right back with a
three;hit first inning. Cynthia Cald. well led off with a single, Renee Tur" ., ley reached on an error, Amber
~ : Thoml\5 doubled home a run, Kim
,:. ; Sayre hit .a sacrifice, and Ashlie
·~ :.Davis singled to make the score 2-

•

it is,., he said.
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) The l;tangers !left 1.3 runners on
Mike Hargrove decided to take his
chances with someone other than base, with Palmer the biggest culprit.
Will Clark, and it paid off with a win.
"I \vouldn'ttalk to me right now
Hargrove ordered intentional if I were you," Palmer said when
walks to Clark twice, one day after · approached by a reporter.
"We had our opportunities but we
the Texas Rangers ' first baseman
homered twice to beat his Cleveland didn ' I cash in on them tonight,"
Rangers manager Johnny Oates said.
Indians.
.)
The man he elected to pitch to,
Some of the credit had to go the
Dean Palmer, stranded a total of 10 the Indians bullpen, which has strugrunners as the Indians cam~ away gled most of the season. Cleveland
dodged a bases-loaded situation_in
; with a 7-3 victory Tuesday night.
"Clark's hitting .367, Palmer's the ninth ·as Alvin Morman earned
hitting .276, pick yourpoiso~ , " said his first major-league save by strik. Hargrove, who received a two-year ing .out Lee Stevens to end the game.
, contract extension prior to Tuesday's Morman came to Cleveland last
· weekend in a trade with Houston and
game. ·
" We decided to pitch to the oth- was making his Indians debut.
"Everybody that came out of the
er guy tonight. Clark took us out
twice last night. We felt we matched bullpen tonight pitched well," Harup better against Palmer. That's not grove said. "Morman came into a
a slam on Palmer, that's just the way
(See INDIANS on Page 5)

Giants beat R'eds
4-1 to take NLWest
lead from Rockies

•

.

Baseball

.

••
.

Eutun D.l.-hllon

.'

.!1: I. &amp;1.

ll.ll

- ~1 9

4
6

Bt~llimore ............... .25
New York .............. 22
Toronlo ................. 19
Delroil .. ............... 16.

II
16
17
21

B().'IIOU ·····

21

15

.694

.'US
4J 2

*1111 Clllllllllll
·*IIMJIMCAU
*IIISTI BAY WWOOWS
*.cTIINI. LIIIITS

9~ 10

417

I ~~

.400

5 ~':

Minnesota .............. /5 24

J85

61:

Tuesday's scores
Seallle 100. Hou lt iOn 94: Houstnn
knds st..'ties .1-2
Chi cago 107 , 'Atlnntn 92 ; Chi~a~~&gt;
win~ ~eri es 4-1

.514

2

. j()()

Wt5ttm Oivillion

Scauk ................ 22
Tu as ............. ·...... 20

I 5 .!i95
15 571
19

5

...... I ~

4:n

J

'Anaheim ........ .. .. 16

24

J R'i

K

'
AREA'S LARGEST SELECTION O~F

Thursday's games

·

Ch i c;~g o Wh ite Sox (Drabek 2'·:\ l nt
Seomle (Fnssero 4-1 ). 6:J~ p.m
Detroit &lt;Oli vares 2- 2) at Kun su5 Cil y
(Appier 4-21. 8·05 p:m_
N.Y. Yomket:s (Rogen 2- 1) nt TextiS
(Aibc:rro 0-0). K : J ~ p.m.
B:~lti m orc fKnmicnie..:ki 2-1) ;u An :~­
. heinl (Dickson ~ - 11. 10 :0~ p.nt.
Milwaukee (Karl 1-5) ;~I Onklnnd (Td)!l~dcr 0-21. 10:0~ p.m.

DhillOn

12
16
16
18

.684

2J

.J78

h:an Allochuion . 01ulnned LHP Tunf'
McGmw to Louilville. Purchnsed !he L-an.
rrnct of OF Mi~.:ah Franklin from
Louis11ille. A~.-1i1101h: d LHP L1nce Pnintl! r
fnlm the IS·d••Y diaubled li11.
.
SAN DIEGO PADRES: Plnced ;\B
Ken Cnmlnih on lh~ I S-do.y dillabled Iilii.
relrOlV.:Iive to May 12. Acti11uted 18 Wnl ly Joyner and INF Craig Shipk:y frnm the
15-day di~oblcd li, t. Optioned 18 ~k
Ltt tu Las VeJns of the P;1cifi c Co ;t.~ l

: ~79 .

. ~41

,!i26

"'"'"'tQhlslon

18 - ~1&lt;4
19 .SI:\

Plrtsbur&amp;h ... :....... ,.. 19
HOO iflll ........ , ....... 10
St. Lquis ............. ,..
Chi~o ......... .... ,.. I
CINc;INNATI ....... I

l6

21

1 •:

San """'':.~2~62Q
Colontdo,....... ::::;:;12 I' -lilj

-;-

FootbaU

,

T"'" pmes

·

·.

f ").
So. lAuiJ (St&lt;XIiomi'Te .·21M rfiiadol·

Cubo (l'raciltel t -4),'2:20

rill""''"'

"li&gt;. ""'""""' l ·l) ..
A11 IS- t&lt;k l·,lttJ~t,m..
~ (IIJie ~-21 MII.V, ~ U""i
J,.l), Ji"!! ,...
..._;,
ITM&lt;jiiOCI

' ~ ·--}1/• ''""!""'! '~!!¥'"

STARTING AT

•12 488

l'

AIR, V6, ALUM WHEELS, STEREO, SUPER ENGINE COO\ifiNC
FOG LAMPS, 8 TO CHOOSE FROM
MSRP BEFORE DISCOUNTS
.
.
$18,035 '
.

.

•

(Continued fiom Page 4)

ns1

Williams is still adjusting to the
American League following his offseason trade ti·om the San Francisco
Giants. Williams was in a 2-for-·16
slump before going 2-for-5 with twoRB Is Tuesday.
"It's a constant adventure for me
up thei-e because I don't know any of
these guys that l'l)'l facing,"
Williams said. "Against guys I don't
know, I have to expect fastballs. My
job i~ to drive in runs. You don't do
it every night but tonight was a good
night."
Juan Gonzalez homered for
Texas, which had its winning streak
halted at four games.
Chad Ogea (3-3) recovered alter
giving up live hits and three walks
in the first three innings to post his
first victory since April II. Ogea had
three losses and two no-decisions ·
·since his last win. The right-hander
allowed six hits. walked six and
struck out six over 6 1/3 innings.

AIR, XLTTRIM, 4:0 ENGINE, 266 TIRES, LIMITED SUP, SAW, ALUM . .
WHEELS, CASS., FLOOR CONSOLE, LON&gt;ED, 10 TO CHOOSE I'RC:IMI

· . MSRP BEFORE DISCOUNTS
A1,840

•17 •788
' ~.

.JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS : Ro-

Hoaey
--.Lelpe

BUFFALO SABRES : Auianed C
Wayne Primeau and D Jny McKee to
Rot::helrer of the Americu Hockey

Le-.
NEW JERSEY DEVILS: A11i1n&lt;d

LW I'Mrik Ellu lo AlloMiy of lhe AHL

.'

•

,.

••

,I

f

I,

ity.

ecome t.o .t e
rea wor •
A wireless phone graduation gift makes the grade. Graduation

is one of

the most important events in any young person's life. Now it's more affordable than ever to
start them off o~· the right loot with wireless phone service from Cellular One . Act now and

re~eive

250 free local off·peak minutes a month for 3 months plus
free- activation (a $20 value). Stop by your nearest Cellular One .location lor o
graduation gift they'll truly appre~iate. Expires June 30, 1997.

CELLULAR

i

.

I

S·.

.

"Bill Mueller hit a ground ball to Bret gave the Giants their third straight
win. Estes (5-2) allowed one run on
' ::Boone at second.
t Boone had not committed an live hits, and erased two runners with
~rror in 48 games, dating to Sept. 9 pickoff throws. Rod Beck pitched
,;-at Los Angeles. But he thre.w wide to the ninth for his 13th save in 14
• : Barry Larkin covering secon!l. One opportunities.
Burba (3-4) allowed seven hits
~ : out later, Barry Bonds was ·inten; : iionally walked, and Kenl ·hit a 3-2 and sirUck out seven in six innings
; · fastball over the left field wall. . . for the Reds, who lost their third
; : "I can'tlay that on·Bret," ~night straight.
"I got beat ·un my best pitch,"
•; said of the errant throw. "I've seen
: · him make · that play \hundreds of Burba said.' "I kind of wanted to
:: time-s .
. throw a ·slider, but I didn't want .to
.; · ''I 'have to think that if Barry's waik him with the bases Joaded. It
; : Uealtby, he catc,hes that ball.l' d give was a Catch-22 situation.
"''ll be thinking'about that for the
; • (r half and half. You can't blame
;; il~t. You can't blame Barry. But we iest of.my life. I heard the crock of
•; should've made the play. ,It seems the bat, and I knew it was gone.
~ : like, when you're struggling, there's There's nothing you can do: Just give
;• a lot of.should'ves and could'ves." me a new baseball., .
The Reds got their run in the•
•; Larkin has had a sore left heel all
eighth
on a walk to Boone. a single
:;seasoi).'He reaggravatechhe injury in
by
Joe
Oliver, and an RBI single by
:'the sixth and left the game.
•t ·''It's embarrassing to see a great Curtis Goodwin off reliever Rich
·
:;player like him struggle," Knight Rodriguez.
Nota:
Hal
Morris,
who left Sun\said. "He doesn't owe the learn any·
day's
game
at
San
Diego
with a ·
. !bing. .He thinks he has to go ~ut
strained
right
shoulder,
is
expected
to
· ~tliere because he's the'team captam.:'We just wanl him to be well and do · be out 7-10 days . ... Tuesday was the
SOth anniversary of Jackie Robin:;what's best for Barry."
son's
first ml\ior .league appearance
: • , With two grand slams alrudy this
· :.C.SOn, Kent could make opposing ; in Cincinnati. ... The Giants are off
· l&gt;itchers think twice about walking to their best start since 1993, when
·~onds to pt to him. But Kenl does- they also opened 22-13. .. , Estes,
'wllo won his firsl four ltarU, got his
11 't think so.
·: "With Barry Bonds the best hit- first win since April 26. ... Pete
.ler in bUetJ.JI, it's a no-brainer that Schourek (2·3) f1lces Osvaldo Fernandei(J-3) in tonlght'slinale o.f the
~ou 're aoin&amp;ID walk hiln when you
~e an open bue, '1 Keat -.K~.
· two-June series.
;., Kent's elJidb oo.r of lhe year

•

o more
•

•

r

siJned OL &lt;ha Hunrina1on.
' ·
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS, Sl1ned
LB Lew Blish ro a four•)'tlfoontract.

!

'

very deep concern: The fans have
been subjected to enough."
Steinbrenner's lawyer, David
Boies, could not immediately be
reached for comment.
"The lawyers for the New York
Yankees and Adidas are studying ·
these actions and ·reserve all comment for now," Yankees spokesman
Howard Rubenstein said.
Baseball's lawyers, according to
a pair of sources familiar with the
council meeting, were said to be
examining Steinbrenner's 1990
agreement with then-commissioner
Fay Vincent in an attempt to find
grounds for a third suspension from •
baseball.
The Yankees and Adidas agreed
in March to a to-year contract worth
about $95 million. While baseball
lawyers concluded there was nothing
s~cific in the deal that violated the
. sp~ri's national licensing agree(See STElNBRENNER on Page 6)

!

SUPERCAB! 4X4

$14 988

I

. · --=-..--~~~--~­
~ :RedS... (Continued from Page~)
,,

•14588

1997 RANGER

..

; ;:tough situation for a guy who just
~ joined a new team in a new league
· ~ ~in a new city...
·
,.; .: The Rangers loaded the bases in
~ 'the ninth with one out off Jose Mesa,
:; ;who struck out Palmer before being
~ :replaced by Monnan.
. . .
~ : Mesa is easing his way back into
~ •the closer's role for a bullpen that
~ •had blown six of its first 14 save .
" opportunities.
.
~
"He struggled tonight," Hargrove
~ said. "We'll assess this situation as
~ · we go. I tho'ught he was putting too
,. much pressure on himself. But the
~ bottom line is he still has to get peo~ _P.Ie out. He has the same stuff that he
; ::tlas last year when he had all those
t .,Saves."
·
.
·
Matt ·Williams hit a tiebreaking
~ -homer'in the sixth inning, his I Oth,
'' helping the Indians complete a
~ ·comeback after trailing 3-0. Tony
Fernandez went3-for-5 with an RBI
for Cleveland.
·

AUTO, A/C, REAR SPOILER, REAR DEFROST AMJi=M CASS
MSRP BEFORE DISCOUNTS .
.
$17,135

Notional FoMt.ll Luaue
INDIANAPOLIS COl'l1: : Named
Pllrick Cor_le di~lor of ....._etiRJ.

·l

'

;• ~ Indians win...

.,

Sal'-Dieao 'Tim Worrell l-4) 0_1 Mbnnal ('uden 31J). I:3 ~ p.m.
Lq, A•'- (M.. inez 3·1) ~ qticaso

J

•

DALLAS M.AVERICKS : Named
Keith Gnmt ·director of Pl•yer personMI.
E~tended !he contrllct of Ron Ekker. di ~·mr of •r:milina. fiM' thrtt: yc.urs.
PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS '
Nnmed Mike Dunleavy L'oill.:h.

I

"

..;

"'""·

~

2. t.oo Ana•!e• 1

p1o1a (,...._,,. ~-.lJ. 711! pm.
\:~orodo (Wriflt&lt; • · 2) II
4-0). 7:0' •m, '

about owners, acting commissioners
~~~alid union . bosses. Anything that
.. -:detracts from the game should be of

1997 PROBE .

.

Nallonalllullttbllft 4uocl•tMMI
NRA : Fined Chi cngo C Briun
Williams S!i .OOO for makina an obsce~
gesture nfler fouling out of a May lllh

Tupl•y'J SC:OI'fl

N.¥ . Mcii~HouSion 3
Fllwidn II , llulo.}i

.

Basketball

2

·' '

.!ll¥l

P~iiodelphip J, So. J..oui12
~ntreal7. Safl Di,:go J
Sap fmoclt&lt;o ~ . CINCINNATI

. C!ji&lt;aao c

~-:

t·

L!:I&amp;Ut.

7 ,~

.432

25 J06
2~ .Jill

t.ot¥a•t...·..... , .20 t~
Sill Qieto ............. 14 21

~ : said. "The fans are tired of hearing

.'

AUTO, AIR, CRUISE. PW,.PL, REAR DEFROSTER, PWR SEAT, AM/FMII[ I
CASS, 4 DR, SRS SYSTEM, ALUM WHEELS, LOW MILES, SUPER
CLEAN, "10 TO CHOoSE FROM"
SAVE THOUSANDS

"All of us understand the need to

i : focus this game on the field.".Selig

SEVERAL COLORS, PRICES, STYLES, AND OPTIONS IN STOCK

1996 MERCURY MYSTIQUE

'

"very unammous.

•

RHP Darren Dn:ifort un lhe l !i·day di~­
abltd 11 111. RecOIIlcd RHP A.numin OsUim
from AlbwUt~~ of thl: PCL.
NEW \'ORK METS: Opti rmcJ LHP '
Riclltdo Jordan to Nortolk of the lnh:rnatiniUI;l ~agUe .
'
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: Sent RHP
Rich Batchelor to l.oui&amp;ville of the Amer·

lill

I. l!cl.

Phi\O&lt;Ielphi~ ........... l4

~ ~

""'"'

N.donaiiAu...
L.OS ANGELES DOOOERS: Pl:tccd

NJ. standings
Florida ................ ... 22
MOfllrtal ................ l9
New Vurk.. ............ lO

'

Baseball
Amtriam Wlue
CHI C AGO WHITE SOX : Plou; ~d
LHP Tlmy Comill\l llll the 15- tluy disnblcd
li ~ t. R ~~o: nlled RHP Mall K;archne:r frnm
Nashville of l_hc Anll:rh:;m Auv.:iation.
CLEV ELAND INDIANS: Agn:~d it'
tem1s with Mikt Har~row. marutgcr. 011 a
twn-- ye;tr \:Untract cxten ~ iotl .
DETROIT TIGERS : Pun:ha!i'cd the
contract nf RHP Tim Pugh fwm T\1ledu
of the lm crnatiou&lt;tl League. Tf!\n!ifem.'ll
INF Orlniulu Miller frum the I ~ - ~U)I HI
the 00-Liay di snbled list
KANSAS CITY ROYALS· Rt!lcmsdJ
LHP -Mit ch Wilhnm~ : RecOiled LHP
Allen McDtJJ hom Omolbu ,J!· the Anlen·
can Auocmtiot~ .
.
·
NEW YORK YANKEES: Re·c:1lled
OF S..:on Po~ fmm Columb!Js 11f the ln temuliunal League.

'
•kees.

.

Transactions

Today's games

·

00*

Houston at Seallle. TUA

Tor on1 o l l-kut ge n J . J ) at De lf pit
(Mot'hler 1-2). I:05 p.m.
N.Y. Y;wk.e e ~ (Peuine fl- 11 al MinntSOhl (Rodriguez 1-J ), I: 15 p.m.
C LEVELAN D {Nagy ~ ·2 ) nt Te11.ns
(Will 6-0), 7:J5 p.m.
B o~ton (Wukefield J.J ) :n Krmw City
(Rusc h 2-2}, S:05 p.m
Milwauket: (Eldred 4- J) nt Onklun~
{Prieto 2-_2). 10: ~ p m.
Bnllimore· (M. John son 0-0) nl Ana·
heim {Hnsegawa J -2). IO:l5 p.m.
' Chi cag o White So11 (Nr~v rlno J· ll lll ·
Scnlllc &lt;M oyer 2-0). 10:15 p.m.

:ponded George Steinbrenner from its
~executive council, possibly the· first
'step toward another lengthy ban
from control of the New York Yan-

: Upset that Steinbrenner sued
!baseball over his marketing deal with
;1 Adidas, the council voted Tuesday to
2 :"bar the owner and the Yankees from
: ; pljrlicipation in all of the sport's gov,; :.eming committees. It did not bar h1m
• • from running the Yankees - for
'
1 • now.
1~· "This is sad, and it's too bad,"
'• : acting commissioner Bud Selig.said,
·. t' ; emphasizin~ that .~e decision · was

· Th11rsclay's game

2. Milwaukee I
Dnhimore 7, Oakland .l
Oe1roi1 4. Toron10 0
Kan~as C1ty IJ . BosJon 0
N.Y. V a nk~t!:S II ." Minnesula 2
CLEV ELAND 7. Te.\:IK J
Anaheim H. C h l c :~go Wh i l~ SoK 7

:r.r.
.!1:
Adarun ...............-.. 26

*SOFA.BED

New Vorbt Miami. R p.m. .

St:liUI~

E~ttm

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Tonight's game

Tuesday's scOres

·

; ;By RONALD BLUM

! : qncAGO (AP)- Baseball sus-

"STARTING AT ONLY"

$

.

I

· NBA playoffs

Kan511.5 Cit)' .......... 18 -17
CLEVELAND ....... I8 18
Oticagu ...... ........... /4 21

"

·so 111111 WOOD

*4 WIIBlllrn LOCK IIRME
*RBI IIIII BAll
*RAIIIllRS

Basketball

Ctntral Division
Milwoukec ............ .l9 IS .559

Oakland

·~TWJIIASS

,,

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ALL THIS PLUS MUCH MO-RE!!

Snn Diego (Hih:hcock J-.1) or Chic.:a-.
go Cubs (Cu.stillo 1-5), 2:20p.m.
· ColorndQ (B&amp;~iley 4-2) 011 Pinsburgh
(Cordovn 2- Jl. 7:05p.m.
San Francisco tVnnLnndingham 1-2)
at Montrenl (Hermanson J-2), 7:JS p.m.
Los ARgelc5 (Vnldes 1·4) 111 CJNCIN·
NATI ISmiley 3-5), 7:35p.m. .

--

*TITWHEB.
*PUS.IR AIIIIIQ
*lllt111SM ......
*CAPTIIM CIIIIIIS
*GAUIEPI8

*PIMBI VJIIJIIWS
*PIMBI LOCKS
*CIUIE cwrROL

order four straight times. Eastern to.wwd second. Manuel grabbed the but I think 'me key to our win was (Manuel) stepped up with a good
17-4 overall, second to Southern in
hurler Valerie Karr retired the SHS fast sinking liner to preserve the . when Easlem scored int he first, then play at second. I was really proud of
the Tri-Valley Conference Hocking
side iri order three suaight times until Southern win.
we came right back with two runs. our effort."
Division standings. Three of EastSouthern coach Howie' Caldwell That'was very imponant."
the fifth, when Tricia Holman
Sayre picked up the win for
em's four losses came in one run
walked, Cynthia Caldwell doubled, said, ''This was a great win. You have .
'That told me right there that we Southern with seven strike outs and · games to Soutbem. The other loss
Renee Turley walked, and Amber to give Eastern a lot of credit though, weren't going to let this' one get one walk, while pitching a three hit, . came to Meigs,
Thomas had a bases loaded single to · they had a great ball club. It speaks · away. Kim (Sayre) pitched a great ter. Southern made two errors.
louin&amp; .1!111111
highly of our girls too, it takes a lot game and Cynthia (Caldwell) made
make the score 3-1.
Valerie Karr suffered the loss. She
Eastern
1()().()() 1-0=2-3-1
In the sixth inning, Billee Pooler to beat a (!:!1111, 'especially a' good an· important defensive play in the gave up five hits,' walked five and
Southern
20();0
10-x=3-S-2
·fanned but reached on an error, Kim team thRJC times. I thought Eastern outfield to keep Eastern frorit tying fanned two. Eastern made one erro.r.
WP-Sayre
Mayle .had a sacrifice bunt, Tracy made some great defensive plays, on Milhoan's double. Then Regina
.Eastern ended a great season at
LP-Karr
.
· White walked, and Mindy Sampson
grounded . out 6-3 to force home . ·
Pooler to make the score 3-2.
Throughout · the game defenSe
was a key part of the outcome. Eastem's Juli Hayman and ~im Mayle
made a couple big plays in the Eastem infield, while Amber Thomas
and Manuel made a couple outstanding plays for Southern .
In the Eastern seventh, Kelli Bailey reached when the SHS first
baseman .d!'&lt;&gt;Pped a popup. With two
outs following, Amanda Milhoan
laced a double to left center. Cynthia
Caldwell made a great play to keep
the ball in front of her. Had Caldwell
. not made such a super play the ball
could have easily rolled further for
. at least a triple and a tie score. Her
effort, however, held Bailey at third.
Meredith Crow then . li~e ~ll_t _ hard
BALL INSIDE ;.,. Eastern's 'vaterte Klrr (301-• ~· pitch to •n unldan- Dlvl,.lon 111 sectional softball title game at It Souther" High .._... field,
tlllecl Southern hitter go Inside and off the p~ for • IMJII during Tueaday'a where the Tol'llltdoea -n 3·2 to cl..m the title. (Scott Wolfe photo)

:. :Executive· committee·
: 1susp"nds Yankees
·: ~owner Steinbrenner

FORD LUXURY CONVERSION VANS.

Thursday's games

AL standings
Iom

, I

' '

1

6-0l. 7:40p.m.

Kim Sayre retired the side in

•

.•

·~TIC

ball game," Giants manager Dusty
Baker said of the four-run third. "It
was a nice, quick, crisp, clean ballgame."
Reds manager Ray Knight
thought it was more line one pitch .the 3-2 fastball that Dave Burba
served up to Kent,
"But the really big thing was the
failure to make that play at second
base," Knight said. "That led to the
big inning. It changedeverything ."
Burba struggled through the sec- ·
ond, loading the bases but escaping
by striking out Estes. Darryl Hamilton singled to start the third, and then
.
(See REDS on Page 5) ·

t. ·

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Scoreboard

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The Dilly Santlnel ,.· Pege I

~ ~southern gets past Eastern 3-2 . to win Division ·nl crown

Sidestepping Clark
helps Tribe get 7-3
win over Rangers

..

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

":= ·:softball.sectional action continues

Sports

By TERRY KINNEY
·
. CINCINNATI (AP) - The San
Francisco Giants latched onto the
classic formula- great pitching and
timely hitting- to go a half game
ahead of Colorado atop the NL
West.
•
They did it at the expense of the
· • Cincinnati Reds, who sank into a tie
with the Chicago Cubs for last place
: · in the NL Central.
,
· Jeff Kent's second grand slam in
: : two weeks and Shawn Estes' strong
7 113 innings gave San Francisco a
4- f victory over the Reds on Tuesday night.
"The one inning is the whole

•

Wedn111Ny, Mly 14, 1187

Wtdnttdey, lilly 14, 1117

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ptlge 4 • The Deily Sentinel

•

"
·.

Pomeroy 204 West 2nd Street 614/992-7070 Gallipolis 1502 Eastern Avenue 614/441-0547
Athens 1100 East State Street 614/594 -4800 Jackson 384 Main Street 614/286-6073

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WedneedaY, May 14,1117

Pomao oy •Middleport, Ohio

Plge 1 • The Deily Sanllnel

Bulls blast' Hawks •••
107-92 to capture •'
.
4-1 series victory

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Beat
of the
Bend

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PROVING that taking It to the limit It more than /uat alate 11170S eo::9
"· b the Eaglea, the Meigs Mlll'ludars' Mtln ~~ :::.:ntof.:l'"
..:'~~t'a
Rfver V.lley'a J.B. Boeo (center) sprlnls~p osh•:.!mer and Point Pleaa~~~~·=~:.&lt;:' ~~~ri~~~~~~e,:y't~ the hunt dUring the third heat

Marauder boys
~ win three eve·nts
· at four-team me.et
"·

4 x 400-meter relay: Gallia
Academy (Craig, J. Mitchell, Fisco
&amp; Magnussen) 3:55.6
4 x 800-meter relay: Gallia
Academy (Swisher, Sims, Walker &amp;
Nehus) 9:25.9; Meigs 9:57.2; Point
Pleasant I 0:28 . I

· In Tuesday's four-team track and
· ' field meet at Memorial Field in Gallipolis, Gallia Academy's teams
- -swept' both sessions by winning 10
events in the boys' session and taking ll in the girls' session.
.
The Meigs boys' team, wh1ch
took second, won three events.
Girls' session
: River Valley was represented by
Team
scores:
Gallia Academy
, a fraction of its athletes, as the RVHS
\32,
Point
Pleasant
43, River Valley
: senior trip claimed many veterans on
23, Meigs \8
both Raider teams.
Discus: Matura rm 9R-3: A.
• All .athletes will be identified by
: school (G -Gallia Academy, M- Roberts (R) 97-8; Bissell (M) 83-0;
·Meigs P-Point Pleasant and R-Riv- Viall (G) 71 -2; Fallon (R)70-5
'
'
High jump: Oliver (P) 4-10; K.
: er Valley).
Carter (G) 4-10; Milhoan (M) 4-2
~
Boys' session
.
Long jump: K. Carter (G) 15•• Team S(ures: Gallia. Academy
:.00. Meigs 60, Point Pleasant 44, Riv- 2.5; McCoy(~) 14-0; S. Carter (0)
13-5: Wilson (G) 13-4; Johnson (M}
~ er Valley 33
\2- 8
; Discus: Fields (G) 130-6; Polcyn
Shot put: A. Roberts (R) 33-1 ;
: (R) J28-6, Garber(G) 121-8; Roach
Matura
(G)31 -2.5; Saunders (R) 25·
~ (P) \06-1; Dixon (M)94-7
I
I;
Viall
(G) 25-2; Fallon (R) 24, High jump: Magnussen (G ) 5-6;
· Webb (R) 5-4; Peavley (M) 5-4; 8.75 '
100-meter dash: Asbburn (P)
( Pierce (P) 5-2; 'Thomas (P) 5-2
·! Long jump: Craig (G) 19-2; :14.2;.Kuhn (G) :14.5; Whaley (M)
: Higginbotham (P) \8-4.25; Gilmore :14.7; Casey (G) :15.2; Staten (G)
: (R) I 7-6; Meadows (M) I 7-3; Webb :15.4
100-melt.- hurdles: Oliver (P)
;;R) 16-9.25
•
.' Shot pul: Wilson (P) 44-8.25 ; :17.1: K. Carter (G): 17.6; Carter (P)
Polcyn (R) 44-5.5; Saunders (R) 38- : 18.9; Frazee (G): 19.2; Ashburn (P)
; 7; Garber( G) 38-2; beweese (P) 37- ·, \9.5
- · 200-meter dash: Wilson (G)
:·9.5
' 100-meter dash: . Banks (M) :28.2; Morgim (P) :31 .2; C!15ey (G)
:3 1.9; Johnson (M) :32; Beck (G)
:; \1.7; Craig (G) : 11.8; Roush (M)
.. :.12.1; Roach (Pl :12.1; Fife (M) :32.6
300-meter hurdles: Oliver (P)
:12.3
:51.2;
Frazee (G) :55.9; Shoemaker
' 110-meter hurdles: Meadows
(M) : 17.5; Davison (M) :17.6; Pierce . (G) :58.8; Mullins (G) :59.2;. Dunfee
(P) : 17.6; Thomas (Pl : 19.7; B. (P) I :01
400-meter dash: Smith (G)
Mitchell (G) :20
.
1
:09.2;·
Morgan (P) I: 10. I: Viall (G)
200-meter dash: J. Mitchell (G)
:24.4; Higginbotham (P) :24.9; I: 15.4; Ugar (MJ I: I 6.5; Thomas
Roush (M) :25.5; Pierce (P) :25 .7; (M) 1: I 8.4
800-meter run: Henson (G)
Banks (M) :25.9
2:46.4;
Connett (G)'3: 16.7; Drumm
300-meter hurdles: Patrick (P)
:45.6; Walker (0'1 :46. I; Davison (M) 3:27.2
1,600-meter run: Nehus (G)
(M) :46.7; Meadows (M) :47.5; B.
5:35.3;
Henson (G) 6:01.1 ; ShoeMitchell (G) :48.9
maker
(G)
7:03.4; Connett (G)
400-meter dash: Thomas (M)
•·
:56.7; Fisco (G) :56.8; Lundy (R ) 7:35. I
3,200-meter run: Nehus (G)
o56.8; Rayburn (P) :59; Lucio (M)
II :58 .6; Knight (G) 12:58.3; Holes; 59.5
ki
(G ) 16:31.4
.
.
• 800-meter run: Nehus (0 )
4
x
100-meter
relay:
Gallia
·12:11.4; Sims (G) 2: 17.4; Mollohan.
A~ademy (Beck, Blair, S. Carer &amp;
:{R) 2:24.7; Buckle (P) 2:29.8
:- 1,600-meter run: Nehus (G) Wilson) :53.4; River Valley :57;
:4:56.8; Mollohan (R) 5: \4.6; Baker Point Pleasant :57 .4
4 x 200-meter relay: Gallia
:·(G) 5: 19.4; Davis (M} 5:27.9;
Academy
(t. Carter, Blair, S. Carter
·Clemente (P) 5:34
· 3,200-meter run: Swisher (G) · &amp; Wilson) I :52.8; Point Pleasant
: 10:41.9; Well (M ) II :38.9; Baker 2:00.8
4 x 400-meter rel!ly: Gallia
:(G) I I :39.5.; Lucio (M) 12:26.3;
Academy
(Mullins, Frazee. Vernon
·Finney (G) 14:15.2
.
; 4 x 100-meter relay: Gallaa &amp; Smith) 5:10
4 x 800-meter relay: Gallia
:Academy (Bodimer, Mitchell, Bryan
Academy
(Henson, Knight, Vernon
:&amp; Craig) :46.8; River Valley :47.8;
&amp;
Nehus)
II : 10.3
·Point Pleasant :48

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palnllor 1 teat and aflonl- · · ....
palnhl
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quarto.' 588483 ·
ftnllh, 319913
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NfW CRAR COLORS

IN STOICKIJ

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mu.iEST.

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Laclcler

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Morgan Elizabeth Hardy cele- ·
brated her first birthday May 4 with
..a pirty at the home of her mother,
· ard
· Rene H y.
Guests were sei'Yed hmch, cake
a~il ice cream with a Minnie Mouse .
.
theme being used. ·
. . . Attending the party were Scott
and Zachary Barto~. grandmother,
Evelyn Hardy, Jackie Thornton, Jeff,
Sue Ann, Scott and Joshua Dial, Bob
and Pat Barton, Kelly Hager, and
Marcia Atwood. Others presenting
gifts were Caleb and Cody Bland,
great-grandmother, Hilda Hardy,
. Naomi Clark, Betty' Reed and Edith.
Barton
· ..

RACINE -- lipring clean,up in
Racin~. Wednesday and Thursday.
Village workers will piCkup everything excepi tires, batteries, oil and
gas containers.

...... .

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CARWFREE DIET PEPSI,
MOUNTAIN DEw,

Diet Pepsi or
watermelons Pepsi Cola
Whole

Rlbeye steaks
Pound

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24-Paelc 12-ol. Cltl5

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News olicy
p·

In an effort to provide our readership with current news, the Sunday .
Times-Sentinel will not accept weddings after 60 days from the date of
the event.
Weddings submitted after·the 60- .
day d~adline will ~pear during the
week in The Daily Sentinel and the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune .
·All club meetings.and other news
articles in the society section mu1t .
be . submitted within 60 days of
occurrence. .
.
·
All birthdays must be submitted
within 60 days of the occurrence.
All material submitted for publication is subject to editing.

The person responsiblle for coordinating th~ organization's
nondiscrimination compliance efforts Is ~hll.ltp I. Miller, V.P.
AdmJnlatratlve Services. Any Individual, or. specific class .of
'IndividUals, who feels that this organization haS subjected
them to dlacrlmlnation may obtaln further infOrmation about
the statues and regulationS listed above from_and/or file a
Wllltllrl complaint with thla organization; or'the Secretary, u.s.
Department of AQrk:ulture, WashlngtOft, D.C. 20250; or the
Admirdstrator, Rural Utility servtoes, Wlilt*lgton1, D.C. 20250.
Complllnta must be flied within 180 days after the alleged
diWJII;IIniiiOn. ContldeieU "Y will be maintained to the extent

.

gt~on

PNmlum qually houll Paint
... Ull" In.,..,..... and·

celebrated .

BUCKEYE RURAL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE, INC., 4848
State Route 325 South, PO Box 200, Rio Grande, OH 45674
is the recipient ot federal financial assistance from the Rural
Utility Services, an agency of the U.S. 1 Department · of
Agrlcultufe, and Is subject to the provisions of Title VI of the
.Civil. Rights Act of 1964, as amende.d; Section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended; the age.
Discrlmlnatio~ Act' of 1975, as amended; and the rules and
reg!Jiatlons of lhe U.S. Departmellt of Agriculture which
provides that no person in the United· States on the basis of
race, color, national origin, age or handicap shall be S)(Ciuded
from participation In, admission or .access lo, denied the
benefits of, or otherwise be subjecled to discrimination under
any ofthis organization's programs or activities .

•

P1lntlr~g

L*x Plat

Thursday, 4 to 6 p.m. at the Wash- i!lgton County.Schools.
ington County Career Center, State
Route 676, Marietta. Emphasis will SATURDAY
RUTLAND .. Believers are
be on working together for education with .opinions to be shared on Receivers rally,. Rutland Church of
how parents can be invdlved in God, Rutland, Saturday, 7 p.m.;
·
POMEROY -- Rock Sprjngs Bet- . schools and how schools can wel- Sunday, II a.m. and 6 p.m.
come
family
participation.
Child
ter Health Club, Thursday,' I p.m. at
POMEROY -- Calvary . Pilgrim
care available. Refreshments· prodie home .of Phyllis Skinner.
Chapter,
through. Sunday, 7 p.m.
vid!=d. Sponsored by Ohio DepartMARIETIA -- PUblic forum on ment of Education, Office of Family ea&lt;;h ev~ning . Rev. Earl Newton,
school . and family . involvement, and School Partnerships and Wash· evangelist.

high school library, regular session. ·. THURSDAY
RACINE -- Racine Grange 2606
MIDDLEPOij.T -- Middleport will meet Thursday, 7 p.m. HarLiterary C)ub, 2 p.m Wednesday, risonville will visit, inspection will
home of Mrs. Wendell Hoover.
be held . .

.EJrst birthday

STATEMENT OF.NONPISCRIMINAnON

••

~lOti

Sat

All Acrylic

calendar---~-~----~

FRESH

ona.i.F'- ~-...

~Piece

cially along with any of the previous
According to the American HeJrt
symptoms.
.
• AsSO&lt;:iation, high blood pressure ii
"If you uperie~ one or more of one of the risk factors of stroke. The
the warning signs of brain attack, get higher your blood pressure, ·the
medical help immediately," ¢vised greater your risk of stroke. Some
Mansfaeld. "Early intervention can groups are more prone to developing
minimize brain injury, and. preven- high blood pressure than others. In
live care may reduce the risk of this country, African-Ame ricans,
stroke," she said.
· Mexican-Americans, Cuban-AmenMansfield said that about 10 per- cans, Puerto Ricans, and Asiancent of brain attacks are preceded by
Americans often have higher blood
'temporary strokes'," and can occur pressure than other groups. Comdays, weeks or even months before a · pared to .whites, yo ung Africanmajor stroke.
·
Americans hav~ a two-to-three-fold
Temporary strokes. also known greater risk of cerebral infarction,
as transient ischemic attacks or and African-American men and
TIAs, resuk when a blood clot tern- Women are 2.5 times more likely ·to
porarily clogs an artery and part of die of stroke.
the brain doesn't get the supply of
For more information on brain .
attack prevention and Stroke Awareblood it needs, she said.
"The symptoms are like those of ness Month activities r~sidents rnay
a full-fledged brain attack. They call their nearest American Heart·
occur rapidly and last a relatively Association at 614-385-6507 or ).
short time, usually from a few min- 800-AHA-USA-1 qr · go online at
· utes to several hours," Mansfield · http !lwww,amhn.org
said,

MORGAN HARDY

: ,Block Co. from bygone days seems
bit confusing.
.
•· However, Carroll Johnson who
~•
' resides at 325 Page St., in Middte::port reports that the lot where his
l home sits seems to have at one time
!.served as a storage area for. the com~pany. You can't plant a flower with: out digging into a brick, Carroll
: ·says, and the river near the ·home
, contains a lot of bricks. Carroll fe~ls
:thai the plant itself was at one time
: on the Charles Wise property, also
' on Page St.
· James Ward who returned to
·Meigs County to make his home ~.or
a number or years has settled in at
Port Cliarlotte in Florida.
,
The spacious, attractive home
which Ward occupied on Route 7
near Pomeroy · has been purchased
by his nephew, John Vai:ca and wife, ·
Elizabeth.
John holds three degrees and is a
writer. He has had published at least
three books in his field of expertise
which· is space related.
,
The Vaccas sound like interesting
people arid many of us will look forward to getting to know them.
.
· And we're all looking· forward to
warmer weather and sunshine. Funniest spring 1 ever saw. Certainly not
the kind to encourage one to keep
smiling.

··nu:

fi:.&amp;~

The location of ,the Middleport

brain is starved for oxygen and brain
cells begin to die within minutes.
That is why immediate medical
attention is crucial, she said.'
"Much of the genet'lll public is
unfamiliar with the warning signs of
a stroke," said Mansfield, stressing
that stroke must be treated with the
same sense of urgency as a ·heart
attack. In order to receive immediate
treatment, people must be able 1o
recognize the warning signs ·of
stroke, the physician said.
She listed the warning·signs associated with stroke which are:
• Sudden weakness or numbness
of the face, arm or leg on one side of
the body.
·, Sudden dimness of Joss of
vision, particularly in one eye.
• Loss of speech ••or trouble talking or understanding speech.
• Sudden, severe headaches with
no apparent cause. ·
• · Une~plained , dizziness,
unsteadiness or sudden falls, espe-

•· -·· ~

If you're not up 'to cooking on
·Monday, May 26, when Memorial
Day will be observed across the
co11nty, the Burlingham Modern
Woodmen invite you to a smorgasbord from II a.in. to 6 p.m., that day
at their hall.
You can eat in or carry out and
there is no charge. However, a dona.lion will be asked. Money taken in .
will ·he matched by the Modern
Woodmen and given to two families
in which the husbands have been
unable to work for a lengthy time.
, Aod. they're too young for any
'oeial security inc'lme.
. ·
If ;yO!! are unable to attend the
iler-anli''!&lt;'PRtto give a•c~ do!)a:
· I!OD.to the iroject, the Burlingham
I organization would &amp;e delighted.

:;a

Ceiling Brita
White l.atax

The Community Calendar is
published as a free se"ice to non·
profit groups wishing to annouric.e
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not designed to pro·
mote sales or fund ~en or any
type. Items are printed as space
permits and annot be guaranteed
to run a specific n.umber of days. ·
WEDNESDAY
EAST MEIGS -- Eastern Board
of Education, Wednesday,'6:30 p.m.

--------

i

Warning Signs."
Volunteers nationwide are poolins their efforts to conduct awareness campaigns about brain attack·
Qthe leading cause of serious disability in the United States. Stroke
Awarene~s Month is designed to
alert the public about stroke's warning signs, how it might be prevented
and resources available ·through. the
American Heart Association . Dr.
Mansfield said.
~troke killed 154,350 people in
1994 and accounted for ahout one of
every 15 U.S. deaths. It's the third
• largest cause of death, ranking
behind diseases of the heart and cancer, according to the National Center
for Health Statistics.
·
As explained by Mansfield, a
brain attack occurs when the blood
supply to the brain is cut off. Both
brain attack and heart attack are diseases of the circulatory system
·~aused by rupturing or bloi:king of
arteries. Puring a brain attack, the

---:---::___-.----community

' · Ann Boso p&lt;,1ints out that John
' Switzer who writes the daily column
in The Columbus Dispatch and concludes lhe column with a weather
forecast, ·iS .very interested in the
preservation ofBuffington Island.
John has written about the island
·at least three times in the past couple
'of weeks.

"He's always been a hard worker on how lie approached the game,
so I'm sure he'll put that same effort
into coaching."
Bird's first order of business is to
begin assembling a starr:

Primer/Sealer __ .
Stain Killer

If you miss the warning signs ofa
brain attack, you may be puttins
your senses, speech and memory in
danger in a maner of minutes, advises Dr. Wilma Mansfield, president
of the Meigs County Branch of the
American Heart Association (AHA).
Brain attacks, commonly known
as strokes, affect different people in
different ways, said the physician
who explained that when a brain
attack occurs, .evere . injuries in
mental and boo;Iy functionsQeven
deathQcan resuiL
Knowing the warning signs of
stroke and seeking immediate med'ical treatment if you notice any" signals are critical in avoiding the No. 3
killer in the United States, according
to the American Heart Association.
AHA volunteers work yearround, particularly during Stroke
Awareness Month in May, to reduce
tHe incidence of brain atta~k. The
theme for this special month is
"Stroke Is a ·Brain Attack. Know the

Jack and Martha Greenaway have
returned to their Pomeroy area home
-after having "wintered" in Florida.
. Jack 'says they played some bridge.
entertained some friends . and the
·winter was g()ne. You can bet that
·Martha and Jack will be in the swing
' of Meigs.County activities this summef. '

success as a coach will depend on
how well organized he is and how
well he uses his skills to prepare the
Pacers·.
"A lot of coaching comes down
to learning how to make decisions
based on the talent you have,"
Cowens said.

:steinbren ner. ,

J

"··

Bird ·expects Pacers
.to emulate
work
ethic
.
.

JRU.I&amp;sr.

j
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'

deadline t.or all ot you kut-'
land High School Alumni to make
your reservations. to at:end this
· ··y~:s reunion is fast approaching.
·· The deadline has been set for
"May 19 and you can purchase tick' 'ciS at the Rutland Department Store
or at Joe's Country Market. If you
' have to go the mail route then send
- your money to the. alumni asSO&lt;:iae lion at Box 125, \tutland. Be sure to
include your name and the year of
"'your graduation as well till your
·• ad~ss. Cost is $10 for alumni with
"guests welcome at the same, price. If
"you can't attend the alumni associalion would appfllCiate a $2 gift for
: dues.
' The Rutland event will be held
" the· evening of May 24 at the Rut' land Civic Center. '

and

'IRU-1&amp;1.

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-

By STEVE HERMAN
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - What
kind of NBA coach will. Larry Bird
be'!
He won't be shooting three•point·
ers, he won 't be diving for loose
balls or feeding his teammates for
easy baskets, all .trademarks of his
13-year career with the Boston
. Celtics.
But he'll use everytiJing he
learned as a player. along with his
first-to-practice work ethic and
enthusiasm, to motivate the Indiana
Pacers ·- whether •hey like it or not.
" I played with·a lpt of players on
my team that weren '·I as dedicated,
didn't work as hard as I did." Bird
said.
players that are going to
play for me ARE going to work hard,
going to do the things that's necessary to win.
"I don't expect these kids to stay
around an ()our and a half, two hours,
after practice and shoot. I do expect
them to work on their weaknesses."
For one thing, he said, forward
Dale Davis, a ·notoriously poor foul
·shooter. will have to practice· 150 or
so free throws every day.
"There's things J will tell these
guys, and I hope they listen. to help
• them become a better basketball
phiyer," Bird said. ':I:ve been there.
I know what it takes, and I'm sure
they'll listen: and.if they see it work. ing, they'll work on ii more on their.
own."
Bird said he.expects the Pac~rs to
be the "best-conditioned team in the
~.-...:&lt;C;:.;o;;;;nti;.;;.;nu;.;.;ed;;..;f.;..;.ro_m_Pa.:;;ge_5.,;,.)- - - r - league.'.'
"I want us to be able to change
'. :;.,ents, they asked· ihe Yankees
.
defenses
and not worry about ·it. I
and kees. He was banned from baseball
:Adidas to clear all joint projects in from Nov . .27, 1974, to March I, want us to slow the ball down when
~dvance.
·
1976, after pleading guilty to. con- it's time to slow down, I want to run
., After ba:;ehall ordered the team to spiring to . ffia~c illegal campa1gn it when it's time to run. You have to
; top sellin.g T-shiris with Adidas · contributions. Steinbrenner was sus- be in great condition to do that."
Bird. who retired in I992 because
logos at Yanl\ee Stadium and told the pended again from Aug. 20, 1990. to
:Yankees to stop outlining their July 24,1992, for dealings with and of..a bad back, was a CeJ\]_cs special
.rounds crew in Adidas gc.ar, the a $40,000 payment to self-described assistant the past five years, mainly
as a scout. He said he started think1eam and the sportswear company gambler Howard Spira.
sued in federal court in Tampa, Fla.
This time. Steinbrenner can ing about returning as a coach a couple of years ago, then gave it serious
j "We consider the·suit to be a blaremain in charge of his team.
tant violation of the Major League
"There was no discussion of sus- consideration when former Pacers
Agreement, to which every club is a pending him from baseball," Selig coach Larry Brown began hinting he
~arty, " Selig said after the council
said. "'He'll Jet each day play itself would not return next season.
He was offered the job after
met. "While we are hopeful the out."
Brown left to become coach of the
;taintiffs will voluntarily dismiss
Under baseball rules, the 10-man Philadelphia 76ers, and the imminent
i)Jeir complaint, we will vigorously
council - eight owners o~ their rephiring of Bird touched off a frenzy
&lt;jefend against the claims."
resentatives
and
the
two
league
pres.
of
interest in his home state~
' The Major League Agreement
runs
.the
sport
in
the
idents
"My job is to win baskeiball
bars teams and owners from suing
absence
of
a
commissioner.
It
took
games,
and I haven't been really
~ball . Steinbrenner angered ownover
following
Fay
Vincent's
forced
reading
much
about what's going on
ers by challenging the sport's 75resignation
on
Sept.
7,
1992.
·
around
here,"
Bird said.
year-old antitrust exemption, which
Selig
played
a
major
part
in
ush"I hear there'sa lot of excite'men~
O.Wne~ have fought to protecr. He .
ering Steinbrenner into a leadership but I just want to win basketball
c~led the span a "cartel" that "illerole. arranging his election to a games. i want tp help the Pacers gee
g~Jiy conspired to divide the profesplaces the,)"ve ne\&gt;er been before."
. s10nal baseball sponsorship mar- four-year council term in I995.
,Steinbrenner
did
not
attend
lUesCharlone coach Dave Cowens, a
keu."
day's
session.
·
former
Cehics cenrer and a Jeammate·
' Steinbfenner
has twice served
•
•
wasn't
invited,"
Selig
said.
"He
of Bird's for one season, said Bird'&amp;
ICII&amp;IhY auspensions from the Yan-

May desi.gnated as Stroke·Aware_
ness Month

·ayBOB
HOEFLICH

By RICK GANO
Chicago's Scottie Pippen, who had
CHICAGO (AP) - It was Den- harshly criticized Rodman after the
nis Rodman unleashed.
Bulls lost Game 2. "We've told him
Free most of the game from the he needs to look to score."
·referees' watchful eye and punishing
Michael Jordan · led the Bulls
whistle, the Chicago Bulls' flam- with 24 points. Pippen and St~v~
boyant forward sparked the defend- Kerr had 15 points ·~ach •. and Bnan
ing l'mA champions into the Eastern Williams had 12 pomts and 10
Conference finals.
rebOunds.
·
Rodman rebounded as usual. he
"Dennis brought a Jot of energy
characieristically bumped and jos- to the game," Jordan said, "and he
tleil. he even bl()(;ked a shot by 7- shot three-pointers better than me
foot-2 Dikembe Mutombo. And sur- and Scottie."
. ..
prisingly, he made four shots from · Christian Laettner's 23 led the
!he perimeter, two ihree-pointers, as Hawks. Mookie Blaylock, whose
the Bulls beat the Atlanta Hawks shooting tailed off dramatically in
107-92.
the final three games, scored 20 for
of the boya' 1~ cllah 1\leadiiY .t u.inorial Flelclln Galllpolla. Only
Shackled by fouls and technicals Atlanta.
tha Mar~udanl' D.J. Blankll and Gallll Acadlmy'a Bert Cl'llg, W!lo l'ln - for most of the series, especially the
Jordan, looking ahead to the next
liar lurMCIIn 11maa faaler ltllln the 12.7-MCOIICI flnlahea racortled by Roush
previous two games, Rodman still round, said he welcomes w.hat · ·
R01ch. (OVP phOto by G. Spencer OabOrne) .
. jawed with officials over perceived promises 10 be another physical and
slights; claiming as he always does grueling series against the Knicks,
·
who were one of two teams to beat
that he is being singled out.
· And finally, almost inevitably, he ·the Bulls at the United Center .durgot his two technicals·fouls after a ing the regular seasen.
skirmish with Mutombo and was
It is Chicago's seventh trip to the
.ejected with 2:4"1 to play.
conference finals in the last nine
"We knew that Dennis was going years.
to have to be bigger than his taunts.
" We feel confident going against
He's going to have to accept the first the Knicks. We feel we can play bet·
blow and play," Bulls coach Phil ter than the last time we played
Jackson said.
here," Jordan said.
·
"He played very intense without.
. "It may have to go to a seventhe urge t"at retaliates and gets him game series, but we feel confident,
in trouble."
· ·
.we can win. We're Jea~ing toward
The techniCals were his I Oth and gearing up for New York until Minlith, but by the. time they came the mi proves us wrong."
outcome had been decided.
1be Knicks 'lead the Heat 3-1 .
"He's sick. He's sick. He was a
Atlanta, like Washington in the
decent player and now he's caught · first round, played the Bulls tough,
up in all thi ~ stuff," Mutombo, who · especially in the first two games. 1be
didn 't score in the fourth quarter as Hawks blew a 16-point lead in the
Chicago wrapped up the series 4-1. opener before losing and then won
Chicago will now play the Knic)\s Game 2. .
or Heat in the conference finals.
But Chicago took control with a
. "The Bulls· can win as long as . sweep last weekend at the Omni. ,
they can control Dennis Rodman. If
''No one gave us a chance to be .
they don't control him he will hurt · here," conch Lenny Wilkens said.
them," Mutombo said. "The guy is "We got eight new people this year.
That's a JOt in this league . We have
just not normal.''
After averaging 17 minutes. one a lot of room for growth. "
·
'point and ·four rebounds in the first
As they had in Game 4, the
.
.
four games of the series, -Rodman Hawks rallied .to ' make the Bulls
LEAPS FOR DISTANCE- The Melga Marauders' Bridget John· finished with 12 points and nine work for the victory. Blayloci\ and
eon takea flight In the girls' long jump during TUesday's four-team rebounds in 33 minutes.
Steve Smith !!it consecutive threetrack and field meet In Gallipolis. Johnson took fifth with a 12-foot,
"Tonight he tried to play through pointers as Atlanta pulled to 84"77
alght·lnch leap. (OVP photo by G, Sparicer Osborne)
everything and gave us what we with early in the final quarter.
.ne!&lt;~~d._tQ win this game," sp.id _., ..
~-=:i:lli:I:S:I:l....:

1

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The Dally Saullnel • P~~ge 7

Pomeroy • Mlddlapor., Ohio

•

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•
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~lillie.

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BrtJCCDil__.__
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·-·

, •••, , •••, , •••

Wl ARE COMMifTED
TOUV.YOU
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�..

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'•••

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;~1~~~~~~~~~~~--~----~~~~~~~----~---~~p~~~m~~~~~Q¥~·~~~~~~~~~!~~~~rt~CM~~~·--~--.-------~~~'--~·.~W!~~~:I~I~~=Y~·~I~II~Y[1~~~1!12~1.~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

fAnn eats crow on critieism of bagging Duffet buns!
Ann
· Laliders
...,.............

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- -·.. eo.1

'

•

•

.lrAM~RS

, . Delr ..Ann

~:

up, dress ~m aiK: take
dlcm down to tbe lobby for that
complimentary bri:akfast. So, either
my husband or I go dowiiSiairs and
get six or seven roDs and·plit them iq
the plastic bag we caiTy whenever
we travel. We aie not .taking anything that does not belong to us and'
n:sent being called ·"tacky." Your
apologies are accepted. --Reston,

!he kids

.

This

IS tn

Va. . '
·
'
~falioo• 10 11M: letter from "N in
.
Dear
Va.:
'Reade{S
frOm·
every: Bellevue, Wub:." who was critical when: climbed all ' over me for
my
: Of the hole! auest who stuffed a plas: response to that '·one. Here's a clob··tic bet with rolls from the buffet ber from man~gement: .
·
'tlble and walbd out. Yoil said it was
'.'lll:ky... I ~·
. : .
; • My husblnd and I often stay at.
. bolels where' a CCJntinental bn:akftist
' ia offered. We have three children
:.~ S. It would not be easy to get
I

•,·

. F~ ~lue Bell, Pa.: J1,1y family
has been in the 'tcstaurant bQsiness
for two generations, so .I have seen
both sides of the dining room. When
food, such as butter and rolls, are left

•

n•

:.·r~ ---------.A/1

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'
•

Pepsi
Cola
Products

POWELL'S

on tbe tab!e, , the· ul~ assumes jt wouldtbea.Jiv~tbeblatoahome- indeedaa~lllltbelawtota!ieuneat- · diniliJ~ins.taM~goes back to the kitchen and into the less . penon on ,the . Sll'eel ~·J will en food front the plateS. "For whll ca. Calif.:
. . . . •
trash .cin, which it should. While never f&lt;qet what it .was like to reason?" he uked. "&amp;cause." he
De.- Miu Linden: ~~ let·
you might think . that's · a waste, al~ays be hunarY," she said. "To was told. "tbe Board of.Hea'kh has a · oven boine is not IICky, u you M1ie
wo\&amp;Id you care to .be served a roll. . waste food is' a sin. I could never do responsibility to protect , people.. indic.led. ·It is sensible. All aodd ·
or anything else; that was. on its third it...
against contaJibus diseases. that can restaurants have plutic-Jined baP
. trip· from the kitchen? The well,
Newark, NJ.: My cousin who . be picked up ft:om eating food that ·for Ibis expraa pulpiiiMI, and we ai,e
dressed lady who took the rolls in a · came from Yugoslavia many years has been contaminated by a person delighted when palrOIIS take the*.
plastic bag was not,tacky. She was ago has a .good job in an upscale who has a vi111s, maybe even oyers·home. Please tell your!aderf .
sensible. You owe her an apology.
restaurant in New York. He Said. it AIDS." Please tell your readers to · -- XXX
·
Los Angeles: The lener 8bout.the 'took him a Ions time-to get accus- beware.
·
Pear XXX:·You did, and I thank .
woman whO took several :rolls from . tomed to seeing large qu,antities of
Dear Newark: Thanks for · the you.
. .
.
.
.: I
the hotel buffet an!! put them in a food whicll ibad been left on plates warning, bijt no one has ever gotten
Otm of the Day: Asking a wnf4r
·. plastic bag to lake 'ho!lle had special ani! serving platters, tossed in' the AIDS froni food. Hepatitis, howev: what ,he thinks about critics is Iii¢ ·
· meaning to me. My gieat-aunt was a garbage. When he' asked his boss if er, is another · storyc (This is why asking a llll,liP post how,.it feels aboqt
n:fugce from Hitler's Getmany who . he could take uneaten portions fronl food ·handlers are required til wear .dogs.
· , '
:
carne to .the United Suites many the plates home, he·was iolci,-''No. gloves:)
· Seadqueltiallltof\BD·I·d
years ago. WJ!epever.we went out to It's.,:ag&amp;inst th~ law." He didn't
And now, dearniader5, hen: is the 'Craton Syacllcate, ~· W. ~
dinner, she would ask the waiter to believe it. Later, he learned from a final clobber .that comes from the ·biry .Blvd., Saite 100; Lol Ana 'el:, ·
put all the leftovers in a bag. She · government inspector that it -was maitre d' of an extremely upscale Calli. 911045
·:

The Dally Sentinel• P~ge 9

STORE HOURS

211ter

Mondaythru
Sunday
8AM-10 PM

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298 SECOND ST.
Accepts Credit Cards

. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
· ·PRICES GOOD THRU MAY 17, 1997.
WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

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DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY- SEE STORE FOR DETAILS

.

in' the .Family----. How to avoid .cl.audi.cati.:on\,

,.
'

Mild forms . usu!llly req~ire no
DEAR DR. · GOTT: ,. What is theraJ)y. The person simply n:sts for
" interminent .claudication, ... , and ·a fc.w moments when the cramps
how can I avoid gelling it?
.
' appear. " In more severe . eases,
DEAR READER: In order to · surgery ·may be necessary·: either
.GoTr, M.D. :
func.tion efficiently, living tissue angioplasty to remove the bloCkage .
'
needs nutrients and oxygen. In the or by-pass surgecy to bridge it,
body, .these necessities an: supplied
· Y~u can . do ~ l.ot to .redu~· the
by the bloQII. When, for one reason . seven!)' of arteno~lerottc bl~"age
. or 8110ther, tissues are deprived of an lllld1 hence, ·Claudication·. Follo:w a ..
adequl\te blood supply, they mal- ·low-fat di~tto keep your biOC14, ·choYours is . nomiat. However,
function.
!estero! level normal (around' 200
pressure of 90I6f,l in. an ·80-year-ol!l:
"Claudication" refers to muscle milligrams per deciliter)~ . ,,.,
cramps that occur in the absence of ·
Avoid being over"weighL.Jij&gt;on't .would be cause for concern becausp·
proper circulation. If, for example, smoke. BX.ercise regularly (beCause it could reflect 11 circulatory distur•·
arteriosclerotic plaque Pllrtially this improves circul~on). ·
· bance or over-trealnli!nt bf llyperten,-'
blocks the arteries to the legs, musFollow yo\ir doc~(s inS.In!Ctioris SIOO.
.It's been said that no oitc dies
cle cramps during exereise (thus if you have claudicaiion or ·aJ'!= at
from
low blood. pressure. This ma)'.
"intermittent") are a prominent risk for it.(because of a family his tobe
an
over-simplification but. in lhe·
symptom. The cramps do not occur ry of severe ilrtcrii&gt;sclerosis). · ..
at rest, because the oxygen demands
DEAR DR. OOTT: I n:ad ,. &amp; lot main, it's true. The bottom line b
of the muscles are far less than dltr- about the dangers of high .~lood ··that blood-pressure values are highly,
ing exercise. .
pressure, but never about the haz- individualized. Low is g&lt;\&lt;Jd, un~
.
·
.lntermittent'claudicati0n strongly ards ,of low blood pressure.
33 you're elderly.
To give you more information, l
suggests arterial blockage in the legs years old' and have a blood pressun:
or pelvis. The diagnosis can be con- of 90160. Should.l be concerned? · am sendi'ng you a copy of my Health
fmned by Doppler ui!Jllsound or by
DEAR 'READER: Low blood Report,"Hype!tension." Other read, .
a special X-ray .test called lin pressure (below 100no ·millimtter:s ers who would ·like a copy, shoul~
angiogram.·
of inercucy) in children, adolescents sen~ $2 plus a long. self-addressed,
To a large degree~ interminent .and young adults is normal. As we stamped envelope to ),&gt;.0. Box 2017,
claudication is a func.tion of the nor- ·age, the blood pressure rises, so.that . Murray Hill Station, New York. NY
. mal aging process, yet no one knows by middle age it is usually in the 10156. Be sure to mention the tide.
Copyright 199'7 NEWSPAPER
why some people develop it rela- 140/80 range. ~fore, the diagno. tively early (in their SOs) or why it is sis of low blood pressure depends ori . ENTERPRISE ASSN.
more severe in some patients.
age.
·

By PE'I'ER H. GQTT, M.l). ·

l

'

SPLITCHIC

··Breast ................ ~~.gge
'·

PIC·O:

By DAVID ZIMMERMAN
UtA TODAY
NASHVILLE - :When Mary
tutntfello.takes the stage, a variety
Of stereotypes f!lll and shaner.
Her songs sound like .classic
country. the Iovin' and leavin' kind
about lying cowboys and a trilsty
pickup truck: But they're punctuated
!Jy her deft, rocking aSsault on her
yellow Telecaster guitar.
As for~ other aspects .that make
her unique -:- well, just don't call
this husky-voiced, Yale-educated
singer-songwriter · " a hC)nky:tonk
Tracy Chapman." She' ll feign a gag.
"If I had a dime ... and most of
that was before tho, dreadlocks grey;
· in."
·· . II ·
·.
Call her· instead a one-of-a-kind
performer who, based on the number
of major n:cord labels now·courting
her, could he music's Next Big

ago on . the Internet after Cutrufello they learned in their .lives. but they
lau~hed a blister,ing attack on 'f!le s~d ·a~ , ~e happy.":.
'I:ractors for wearing . garage- ·' So '.' Cutrufello' h:iiided up her
mechanic garb·to the Country Music truck, -drove to Austin and "threw
Association Awards).
myself into a comprehensive study
For a while, Cutrufello wanted a of an entirely different genre of
- c'Ountry recording deal, "sort of the music.
brassring of my peers." Bl)t overthe
"Hound a few bands with guitar
years, her music has evolved toward players that I really enjoyed and just
· rock: Her showy, guitar-wielding literally sat on the edge of the stage
. stage style has been compared · to · and watched them play all night. " ·
that of her rock hero Bruce SpringShe ·also put tbgether a band
steen. Still, her iyrics continue to called the Havoline Suprell)es, and
tum on what she calls tht; "deep . for the first three years "listened to
moral :crises" th¥t inform traditional nOthing but scratchy ·old countcy
country.
.
records," intrigued, she says, by the
She. grew up in Fairfield, Conn., ·"presupposed moral code that peothe oldest of. two adopted daughters .pie either live by or don't live by, but
of single mother Mildred Cutrufello, all their actions arc in relation to it."
a high school teacher. (Mary n:fers · The research impressed Earie, ·
to her mother and a fell)ale fa~~tily who admires her ''musicologist's
friend who helped raise her as "my approach."
· · ,.
parents," and calls herself "half"She knows country music ch!IPThias. .
,. . . black" : her biological father ~~ ter and verse."
·1
The Connecticut-born, Houston- black, her mother white .)
But when her countrY immersion
bued Cutrufello (CuHa-FEJ,L-ow),
The only thing Cutrufello·'s .ended', Cutrufello says, "the first
.;z6, seems unfazed by the sudden . ptother didn' t tell her early ·ol\ was . thing I listened to was Bruce Spring•
that her biological parents were steen. I realized that both of those
lltention. . ' ·
"I'm .not in a hurry to ,do any- musicians. " It wils her sort of were part of what I was. "
She also relocated to Houston,
. thing that's not right. Heck, I'm nature, vs.,nurture experiment,' ~ .
youns, l Jllllke my living ·playing. Cut111fello says. Her ·mom "freaked . having. become disenchanted with ·
All the .bills get paid and I have out" when "along about kinder- the crowded, close-knit Austin
eaough left over to go to ballgames · garten I started showing an interest ,music scene, when: gigs didn't pay
at the Astrodome."
"
in musical things."
as well and where Springsteen-sized
While n:cord-label .execs usually
Her parents' collections of ainbitions weren't necessarily weiwon't discuss unsigned acts they Broadway cast albums led her to big comed.
.
.
"I have a lot of friends there,"
have their eyes on, in this case the band, jazz and classic rock, and ~I
ieaec's out.
·
least at her high school, she says, . she says. "But playing outside or'
. , "She's extremely talented," says · "being in the band was considered a Austin'is not a goal shared by cvecyColumbia Records' Nanci .Walller, cool thing." She did some scoring body who lives there." ·
·
~ happened upon Cut111fello's for her school's stage band and
. Word began to spread. Texan Dan
P,afonnance ill Nashville's Extrava- played a •variety of instruments, set- Rather sent her a fan letter, and a
Pnza, an annual festival featuring tling on guitar. But country music? producer from his "48, Hours" has ·
lllllipaed Ids.
..
·
·
Well, ','that sort !')f thing didn't hap- · been tagging along on recent gigs
; "hvusoexcitedlranandcalled pen there."
with tentative plans to document
the vice president o( the company at
At Yale, ~he majored in American . Cut111fello's transition to a major
l a.m. and said, 'We ha.ve to sign · Studies and formed a roclt band ·label. CNN also has inquired about
·.thlJ girl."' · ·
. · . . called Cement Shoes ..that played doing a feature.
: ."She's a unique talent, and I campus dances and club giss. It was
While counlt'Y's influence·is evl~ her music will appeal \O a ' 'the only bsrid on campus that could · dent in Cutru(ello's year-old selfof audiences," says Mer- play the whOle four hours evecy Fri.- · prod11,ced CD, "Who to Love and
0..,'1 Steve Greenburg. " It's rock, 'day and eve!'}' Saturday."
·
When Jo Leave" - · th~ ~ng "John~ other thinss. and there's ·
Along the way, she discovered soiiMotel"•isfromthepointofview
c!omttry. Bill t!hat's ~t abOut her albums by country upstarts Steve of the other woman who waits for a
ii thlt lhe really is her .own thing." Earle- now a friend and adviser.maniage to end .....,. the "rock thing"
' Wilker recendy flew Cutntfello ~nd Dwight Yoakani. She was · increasingly dominates.
to, New YO!t. where she met willl impressed by Earle's contempo111ry
"The performance is all rock 'n'
·per~onnitJ'(OI' Columbia execu- tWist on country in songs like ''Gui- rol,l," she says. "Jumpin' up and
dvca. .L41st ~ n was in Los tar\ Town. " "You can't. deny that it down, beatin' on the Telecasier: :
,........ wheri ·(leffen Records rocks, but it's not a rock 'n' roll
Vocal,ly. says Steve' Earle,' the·
1M rtr1 .a perf~ ·at The Mint. . song." And Yoa~ 's album, "Bue- . obvious comparison is Jnan Arma:'lbday (May 13) she's back iri New nas Noches From a Li&gt;ne,ly Rooln," ·. trading. Cutrufello's skills as a.gui-.
Yorlt'IMIIIilll Wilh·Mereucy Records slie says, "sot me back into the 9ld tarist, a singer and a songwriter, plus
tiUCltli-. . ' . . ' .
(oounuy) stuff."
.
.
the' kind ofstage presence it lakes to I
· Alld,.._ Jw"- beea ~ with · By t~ time she graduated from front a lillod. all make her " wten1t1CA, W.net B~W.,' MJverick and Y~Je, Cutrufello had decided to , tially a huge, important artist." '

jill&amp;. 1 . . . , tA tiaie. - and to
Her parents' reactiiln: "'I just ~ys. "I think she' ll stick to her
for ·bow, much," says spent. $100,000 to put my kid guns. And not many artists 1do that,
~···· 11 'let, Holly Olea- throuJh Yale lnd she's going to do ' particularly in lhis town, which is, '
IIIIi, (Oiuron. i former child solf · what?....
nne reason I haven't encouraged her ·•·
1 1..,, ~ h« cllellt three yan
"It 111ns counter to every lesson . 10 m~ve here." ' ·
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Widteedly, May 14, 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

' Page 10 •The Dilly Sentinel

· "'atio~'s
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A cu·ltivate·d taste in tools: Gardeners snap ·up sophisticated tools
By CATHY HAINER
USA TODAY
Haidware-store garden shears
may have worked for your grandfather, but for the modem tiller of the
soil, only the most upscale tools will
do.
Since boomers have made gardening a top leisure activity, a market for gourmet garden gear ~as
sprung up.
·.
"Today, gardening has become
an.extension of the nesting instinct,"
says Deborah Needleman, contribut.ing garden editor at House and Garden magazine. Enthusiasts "want
their work implements and their potting sheds to be as beautiful as their
• homes."
·
;
Specialty hardware stores are
• . booming. Smith and Hawken, for
example, has opened 27 U.S. retail
0
• locations ·in the past three years.
: These stores offer pricey gardening
I gadgets like Felco pruners, which
S Garden Design editor Sarah Gray
0
• Miller describes as "the Armani suit
2 of pruners." They cost $45-$58, as
• oppoSed to $9.99-$17.99 for basic

:

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Sears pruners. Elbow-high garden
gloves go for $_39 a pair and galvanized buckets for as much as $45.
(Use them for gardening chores or
for icing drinks at · your garden
party.)
.
Upscale gardening cataloas like
Gardeners Eden and Langenbach
·offer such goodies as "heirloom
hand tools" (three for $45), "elegant
hose holders" ($58) and bug spray
and hand scrub packaged like
·expensive body-care productS ($10$24). Even Williams-Sonoma, the
catalog for cooks, has recently
moved from the kitchen to the back
yard, selling wheelbarrows, leaf
bags and gardening gloves alongside
its deluxe pots and kitch~n imple·
ments.
The · trend does somewhat
"fetishize the tools," Needleman
says. "Tools are quite important, but
today's gardeners also want them to
be nice looking."
·. .
"There's a pair of Japanese butterfly shears sold in the Gardeners
Eden catalog that are made for cutting flowers but are so gorgeous

you'd ~ant to have them out on the
counter," Miller says. The Koryu
shears will set you beck $21 .
But, Mi11er adds, these tony tools
aren't just about ~talus. ''It's like
buying a designer suit. You look for
quality design, something that will
be in style and work for.you 20 years
' from now."

.

Like fine French wines and
British ales, upscale imported gar·
den tools have a certain cache.
· "There's a mystique about for·
eign tools. The Europeans have continued to have smaller industries thai
have produced these hand-forged
tools. When consumers see some·
thing made in England or France, it
sends a message that the tool is
made well and will last," says Kathy
Tierney,. president of Smith &amp;
·Hawken.
·
·
The upscaling (of garden implements has created niche markets as
well, like UnionTools' new line spe·
cially desig~ed for women. The
pieces run about $15-$20, tl\e mid·
die range of the Columbus, Ohio,
firm 's lines. "In tile past, everyone

used the same tools, man or woman,
youna or old," says the company's
Chuck Manes. "But now markets
arc fragmenting. EveryQne wants a
tool that looks like it was made just
for them."
For sophisticated gardeners,
deluxe implements
an invest·
ment. "It's like buying a Rolex
watth," Miller says. "If you're
soing to buy, get the best. Then
there's a. sense they'll be passed on ·
to your grandkids. ".
When it comes to fine equipment,
often what's old is new again, Tier·
ney says. "With the thirst for quali· .
ty, people are rediscovering histori·
cal tools that have worked forever,
like the bell jar. Sometimes the
things that have been · around for
centuries are the most elegantly
designed, and . they've already
proven their usefulness."
· Another element in the emphasis
on higher-quality tools' is environmentaUsm: "We've · all grown up
with education about the planet, and
it's starting to ta(ce hold,"Tiemey
says. She pOints to gadgets like aer·

are

810r shoes, which you Strip onto
your feet to aerate the soil, or the
Biostack home ·composter. "l'eoplc
givcitasaChristmasgift,'' shcsays.
Miller says it's no coincidence
that the boom in upscale gear has
coincided with boomers' embrace of

Prlcning. "It took this pacralion
to make the impact. Boomcn have
applied their sense of style to .ev[!Y·
~ns; they'~ t~lled.the. fasmon
andustry, the.U11enordes1p andustty,
the music industty. The land is the
only thing they hadn't tackled.",
.

One expert's essential implements:,
USA TODAY
Shovels and shears are as
important to a gardener as pots and
pans are to a chef. Here's· House
at\d Garden contributing garden
editor Debonlh Needleman's list of
must-have garden tools:
- Felco pruners. "The one
most important item. These are a
little more expensl ve than Other
pruners, but they 'lllast forever. All
the parts are remo~able and
replaceable." $45-$58.
·- The Felco collapsible haild
saw. "The pruners are for smaller
things; the hand saw cuts branches
and· limbs up to about 4 ·inches

1

thick." $25.
t - A dand~lion weeder.
recently bought (one), tlnd 11 s
completely changed the quality of
my .life. This .ihows how useful a
tool can be." $19. .
-A compost aerator. "It looks
like a pogo ~tick with two wings
that fold back. This makes the
compost pile lighter, which aids in
the decompositio1_1. And it's much
easier on. yow' back since . you're
not doing such heavy lifting?' $19.
Not all the best tool1 are from ·
·catalogs, Needleman says. "I use a
pizza cuner to edge 'IllY beds. Y11u
can't beat the precision."

.-': I

i• Teacher receives grant

memorial services was held to bonor
Drennen Harding Goldsberry of
Athens a member of Ewings Chapter.
HOME AND GARDEN TOUR
The Mason County Extension
Homemakers will sponsor a Home
and Garden Tour featuring four
homes of historical significance in
ihe Clifton, Mason and Letan area
from I to 5 p.m., Saturday, June 7.
Each home on the tour provides a
glimpse into an earlier way of life in
and a rich heritage of Mason County. Two homes were bui1t in the early
19thcentury, another was one adapted from logs of. an 1870s church
Tickets and a map can be, purchased at the tour homes.

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Sandra, Needs, a teacher at Tup- .
The purpose of the program is to
pers Plains Elementary School, was · teach students .to become more inderecently awarded a Lifetouch . pendent thinkers. Each entry was
Enrichment Grant by Lifetouch judged on originality, creativity and
school studios. Needs submitted an effectiveness for developing creatividea for nurturing creativity in the ity. 200 educatots .were awarded
c.lassroom, the theme for the 1996- grants. A represen1ative selection of
1997· program. The idea was select· the award-winning ideas l!lill be
ed by a panel of independent educa- published in a resource book to be
tion specialists from over 1\,300 distributed nationally this spring .
entries.

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•

.·Bounty_Paper
.Towels
·99

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BUYS•••
FOODLAND SPECIA L COUPON
EFFECTIVE 5 11 TO 5 17

Pre-paid Phone C&amp;rds
FOodland Gift Certificates
c&amp;rpet Cleaner Rantala ·
·
Columbia Gal Paymenta
LGtlllrY ncketa .
(exi:ept Buckeye)
AEP Electric

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788 North Second

Sell Money.Orders

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PLUSnBER

12 Rolllhuadle Paek .

·&gt;

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FREE

FOODLAND

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OET OIIE OF EQUAl OR lESSER VAlUE

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Boneless
EngUsh Roasts

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sbow a young woman transfdmed
from drab I? glamorous and sport_IDII
a Mosty c1garette. B&amp;W requ1res
consumers to sign the beauty book
order form certifying that they are 2\.
The Food and Drug Administralion is lighting in court to ban cigarene giveaways that it says would
apply to the Misty campaign- and
tobacco attorneys have said during
settlement negotiations that they
would agree to those FDA rules
under.any deal_.
. . . .
.
Phohp Moms also dechned to diS·
cuss its Woman Thing music promolion.

FOODLArll! SPECIAL COUPON
FFECTIVE 5 11 TO S 17

Orange. Drea• Bars ·

:l&gt;J''

AS LOW AS •••
• Many U.S. Cars

: ;' . WA~~NGTON (AP) - Sllltisti- .
.:
.. ~ia~s and sociologists, American ·
1
, . Indtans . and Latino~, black~ and
Asaans gathere&lt;J outs1de the Capitol
• · Tuesday to defend the government's
plans for the 2000 census.
: • . The plans to use statistical sam: ·. phn~ to account for·people the cen- 1
os unable to reach have been
• • ~!tacked by conservatives in Con: ~ Fress, who would prefer an old-fash• 10ned head count.
: ; "It's unfortunate that.• at .a time
: •,_hen We have the most sophistical·
• ~ ed means of counting ... we inay, be .
; aenied that opportunity," said Rep. ..
; 2cavier Becerra, D"Cali{., at a news I
; . ~.onference called outside the Capitol.
• ~. Th.e ceqsus plan including sam· ·
: Oiing was developed by the National
: ~cademy of Sciences in an· effort to
• , ltnprove on the .I 99o count, which .
~ •in!sSed 1.6 per~ent ofthe .populatio~.
.• .(ar worse ihan the I percent n~ ·
~ counted, a decade earlier. II is also
' expej;ted to save money, compared
with trying to conlact every person in
the country. •
1
; ·. •. Even though no cen~us has ever i
counted everyone, conservatives are 1
pressing the bureau to stick with tra·
ditional metho~s of mail and personal visits .
· ·"We must physically count each ·
and every American," insiste4 the let- '
· ter tQ Census . Director Martha
· Fams worth Riche from · House
Speaker Newt Gingrich and Majori·
ty Leader Dick Armey, and Senate ·
MajoritY Leader Trent LOtt and Assistant Majority 4ad~r ~n Nickles. ·
"SampliJ1ll in'the census is neces·
sary . to ·overcome · the persislen\
undercount .of poor and minority
communities. and to1lns'ure a fair and .
accurate outcome,'~ said · Becerra,
chairman &lt;if the Congr~ssional Hi~panic·Caucus.
. .,
.
. "Let's take the politics out o( tile
census," said Rep ..Danny K. Davis,
D-Ill. ·"The real issue is how Co get
· the most accurate count. The answer
is sampling." ·
··
.
·
Also joining in .the news conference in. support of sampling were representatives of the Amencan Statisti. ca)Association,AmericanSociolog. ical Association, Japanese: American
Citizens League, .Orgflllization of
Chinese Americans; National League
of Cities, National Copference of
Mayors and National Congress of . ·
American Indi.ans .
.The plan for 2()()() census calls for
contacting 90 percent of the house•
holds in each census tract - an area
of several square bl.ocks. This could
be done by mail ques,tionnaire, tele·
phone call or personal visit .
In areas where at least 90 percent .
of the households reSpoQd to the initial mailing,. census. workers would
.visit ,' one in ·w of :. ihe . remaining
households and estimate the characteris!ics of t.hose not conta~ted .
In-.areas with tower response rates,
~ a larger share of the·. missing would
: · g~t· personal visits. !fonly 60 percent ,
. mailed back the questionnaire, census ..
: workers will call or visit !hree-quar: te~s of the non,responiling homes.

AI

95

••• We'll replace disc brake pads or rear s~oes .
•
: Resurface· drums and rotors. Inspect calipers

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We Use Quality Brake Parts!

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FRONT DISC OR REAR
DRUM BRAKE SERVICE .

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DONATES EQUIPMENT - Bryan Equipment and Stlhl, Inc. have
•• donated
two tWo-inch water pumps to Ridenour Supply to be uled
: for cleanup work following lloode. The equlpment ·hee been placed ·
; at the Chester and Rutland Fire Departmente and are available for ,
: use by any d8pertment In the county.
·

'

tising curbs that indusiry .attorneys
already have offered to abide _by
under a possible deal.
Sut Mrs. Czech asked Minnesota
officials to stop the direct-mail campaign because she feared cosmetic;
obsessed teens like her 16-year-old
granddaughter would be tempted.
"They're boUnd to want to ay it,"
said Mrs. Czech, who asked how
B&amp;W got her address. Although she
smoked briefly about two decades
ago, the Brookland Park woman says
she never bought B&amp;W brands. •
B&amp;W says only past company
customers get the booklets, which

IJ.s.u.A. 01010:

II

When Mary Beth·Pomento chose
O'Bleness Ml!morial Hospital to
give birth to Alex, she chose more
than a hospital perinatal unit. She
chose people who would be there .
not only during the birthing expe·
rience, but people who would Pe
there during her pregnancy and
long after her stay.
You see, motherhpod_is more
than just the moment of birth. It's
· the joy of preparation. It's learning and understanding what w"ill

are beginning to cauti?D attorneys to
~atch for loopholes many concesswns toh;~eco makes.
Cigarette makers in early April.
began negotiating to settle · the
nation's war on tobacco _by paying
some $300 billion and accepting cerlain Food and Drug Administration
curbs on their advertising and mar:
ke.ting. In return, they want protection
from lawsuits.
The! companies won'! comment on
the t~lks. Misty manufacturer Brown
&amp; W1lhamson dec hued to say Tues.· day whether its new ~?eauty makeover
campaign would violate the adver·

EASTMAN'S

. 'us

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back census
! ·:sampling plan

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panics are standing li~ on t~ir set·
tl_ementdeman&lt;l to hmtt l~wsutts that
s1ck smokers can file ag11nst them, a
sticking point still so divisive that
Blumenthal.said no date has yet been
set to formally resume negotiations.
All that adds 'IP ~o dim prospects
for a quick settlement.
"There's really no sense of a
good-faith effort on their part," said
Fran Du Melle of the American
Lung Association, which is monitoring the talks.·
.
Blumel)thal s11d the new campaiRJIS aren't yet explicitly part of
negotiations. But anti-tobacco critics

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. ADOLPH'S
DAIBV VAIJ~EY
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initiatives ha~ _begun even • we
attempt to n~te an end to ~sc
'types of practiceS," S81d CoQilCCUcut
Attorney General Richard Blumenthai, who is helping to lead the negotiations with 29 states sumg the
tobacco industry.
Marketing campaigns aren't the
only new pressure. A group partly
funded by tobaccp giants_Philip ¥_or·
ris and RJ. Reynolds IS spending
$60,000 a week on radio ads bl~ing
federal . le~islation that would olse a
43-cent cagarette tax to buy health
•· peac~ \leal.
insurance for children.
1
''I'
in
extremely
troubled
that
new
At the sarne time, tobacco com1

.Minorities,
, . ~$tatisticians

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W~SHIN~TON (AP) - .IDiidll
•.. the bright J!!nk ~nvolope IIWled to
, ~anet 'Czechs Minnesota home wu .
- ; '. tl)e promise of a glamorous makeovei'' : from Misty eigarettes. Across the
'· · country, Philip Morris .was giving
1
• ' ' away'fOpies of the fii'St CD from its
new teeording label, Woman Thing
- Music, to promote Virginia Slims_
;
• E1v~.n as they 're negotiating a
. : truce ln the tobacco wars, cigarette
i makers are continuing hard-sell tac• tics ~at coul~ skirt the very rules
they re agreemg to follow under a
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_____;__Society scrapbook. ... .WINNER
Deborah Harris was the winner of
a Mother's Day basket used in a fund
raising projects by the Southern
Junior High Boosters.
STATE CONFERENCE
. Jaines Henry Lochary of
Amesville, president of Ewings
Chapter, Sons of the American Revolution, recently attended the 108th
state conference of the SAR held in
Springfield.
.
· While there Ewing Chapters .was
presented with a membership banner
which will be attached to its SAR
flag.
'f!le banner was presented to
GRANT
- Sandra Needs, center, a tHcher at Tupper•
Ewings
Chapters for meeting memPlaine Elementary School, and Doria Well, the school's head
teacher, ·left, were repently presented with il $250 grant from Life- bership quota for 1996.
Also at the state conference a
touch school atudloa. Also pictured le Kerry Grundtlach of the studio.

cigarette makers continue hard sell

I

�:. P•ge12 • The Dally S1ntlnel

The DallySanllnete ,...13

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

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.~: .---~-Band
"

80 wMMdtollur

banquet---

Citan Latta MHII C.1 Ot
Tr"'*'11110 Modell Ot - ·
Sml1h llllck PlniiK 1100 IEIJ~
. . . . . . . , 'jill

O't Aull Porta; ..,, ... Ul·
~-

8ellng,..,..-

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'l'lrlcl of ptlf'..,. high
' coet.labor ......?
; ' Hook-up chargee?
• •' We'll match or belt
''
Myothar

.,,

lift'S

.

competitor's prlca?

33 AUTO CUNIC &amp;
24. HR. TOWING
.

SA 33 Pom11'9y, Oh.

•

992·1330

·.The
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Golf LcssoDJi

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Golf Sale$, Club
Repair, Custom
Orders,.Awards,
Engraving

,

. John·Teaford

,,
ATTEND' CONFERENCE - These four Melga County students recently attended ii Regional Scholars
Conferell!:e at Burr Oak P rk. The conference was sponsored by the Martha Holden Jennings Founda·
tlon, area high ~chool and the Southeastern Ol!lo Spaclel Education Regional Reaourc~ canter In
Athens •. They lir fro Jamie Drake, Eaatarn Local, and back, left, Cryatal Coleman, SOI.ittiern Local,
Lamar Lyons, Eas n Local, and Evan Struble, Southern Local.
·

SENIORS HONORED· ThH8 senior man"'bers of the Meigs High Scbool marching band were
honored at the band's banquet on Tuaaday evening. They are, front, ·left, Jodie Sisson, Erin
Krawaczyn, . Carrie Glaze, Chrissy Wllliama, Whitney Haptonstell, Tars Gruesar, Jamie
Williamson, Michelle Millar, and Megan Swearingen. Back, left, ·Chad Dodaon, Ryan Baker, Paul
Epperson, Datrlck St. Clair, Taryo Doidge, Anna Fink, Beverly Stewart, Adam White and Chad·
·
·
· wick Molden.

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to each aci:
Featured this year -will be the
Perez Family from Mexico present·
ing their flying trapeze act.· The
multi-ialented fainily will execute
pyramids on the high-wire and perform feats of bal,ance on the revolvi~g Wheel.
From South America comes the
Vital Family; they present an unbelievable display of archery as they
become their own uirgets. The
troupe will also showcase their juggling and balancing tal~nts.
Miss Cindi will direct the Kelly-"
Miller six-Horse Liberty Act and
assist with Roy Wells with the ele--

phants acts.
.
The public is invited to watch the
circus set up the morning of ihe
show.
·
-Advance Tickets are $7 f~&gt;r
Adults and $5 for Chilcjren under 12
years of age . .tickets on Circus oBy
are only available at the Circus and
· are $9 for Adults and $6 for Children. Tickets are now on\Sale. nc~­
e!S' are available at all Ohio Valley
Bank locations, Foodland in Gallipoli~ and Bidwell, all Star Bank
locations and at ·w.Va. Electric on
Eastern Ave.
The Circus Midway will open
one hour prior to each show.

GIFTED

.
Howard L Wrltesel

PSYCHICS!!

·ROOFING
Gutters
.
.
Downspouts
GUtter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

LIVElli
1.·900.(484)-1 020 .
Ext. 1482
·$3." per min,
Sarv-U (818) 845 8134

Consider:

New COnstruction &amp;

THE MAPLES

Remodeling
Kitchen Cabinets
VInyl Siding. Rpofs

in Pomeroy, Ohio
Rents are computed according to your
income. l,.ovely apartments featuring
wall-to-wall carpeting, with all
appliances.

following surgery, 70 perc.ent were an cancer this.year. Another 14,200
free of disease after 22 months, will die from it.
By ANITA MANNING
USATODAY
.
Eddie Reed, chief of the Medical
While "we think this new themAn experimental three-drug com- Ovarian Cancer Section at the py is very hopeful and we're pm:ticbination appears to increase the National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, ularly excited about it," Reed said, it
chance
for survival of women with Md., said at a briefing Tuesday. With currently is available only at NCI or
pm11111t.lld to
at the Melfa
ovarian cancer, one of the deadliest standard chemotherapy and surgery, Harvard, and it doubles lhe cost of
School Band Banquet
held at tha school cafeteria. They are, front,
cancers in women, a researcher only an estimated 50 percent are dis- standard treatment.
Krawaczyn, Field Commander award and Arion ~ward; Ryan Baker and Darrick St. Clair, Dl~~~e­
reports.
ease-free after 18 to 19 months, he
Because it's experimental, insurtor's Award; Tare Grueal[lr, putstendlng Musician award; Back, left, W"ltney
and
The
drugs,
cyclophosphamide,.
said.
'
ers
w\)n't cover the added costs, said
Paul Epperson, 110 Perc:ant award; Chad Dodson, Arion Award; Adam .White, Semper Fl Award;
·
paclitaxel
and
cisplatin.
are
all
Ovarian cancer &amp;~'COunts for 4 Joann Schellenbach of the American
and Jodie Sisson, Outet:andlng Muaican award.
·
·
approved cancer treatments but are percent of cancer cases in women. Cancer Society. She calls tile theni·' 1_---~-~-~-~~-~----~------...1 given in high doses and in· combina- Ofthose, only 46 percent survive for . py " very encouraging" but said the
tion.
·
.
live years or longer. The NCI csti- current cost is likely to make it
In
a
clinical
trial
involving
60
mates
26,800 women in th~ United unavailable to most women.
~
NEW YORK (AP) - Buyers ning, art and public policy pro. spent nearly $100 million for a pri- grams.
An unidentified telephone bidder patients who got the "drug cocktail" States .will be diagnosed with ovarivate collection of Impressionist art - - " I'J!! absolutely thrilled," said bought Toulouse-Lautrec's "Seated
·that inspired nostalgia about the past their son, John L Loeb Jr. ·"My par- Dancer in Pink Stockings" ( 1890)
and a bidding war that ents bought these wonderful pictures · for $14.5 million- a record for the
AN ~JO UN CE MENT S
· Public Notice
approached record levels.
.because they truly cared about them. artist The Loebs paid $250,000 for
It took just one hour Monday They were' not truly interested in the painting in 1963.
PUBUC NOTICE .
night for Christie's to auction off 28 what they would some day bring."
The 1nnu11 report Form
Pieces in the collection sold for a
paintings, dra11{ings and sculpt~res
A powerful portrait of Paul
9110 PF for the Kibble
·collected by the late investment total of $92.7 million-.well above Cezanne's wife, "Madame Cezanne
Foiindetlon Bernerd 11.
Fultz, Truetll, Ia IVIIIIbl•
banker John Langeloth Loeb and hi s Christie's estimate of $80 million- Seated in a Yellow Chair, " (I 888for
public lnepectlon 1,t
Racine
Gun
Club
:wife Frances Lehman Loeb, who . and the second highest total for a 1890) brought a high bid of .$23.1
Bement V. Fultz' Lllw Ofltc.,
was New York City's commissioner single-owner sale at auction, The million from Ernst Seyler, n dealer COMMUNITY SKILLS
Sun. May 18 7 am 111 1/2 W. Second StrHt,
I STRUCTORS
for the United N•,tions.
New York Times reported today. ,
living .in Basel, Switzerland. The WANTED: Two live-in. instructors (weekdays/Pomeroy, Ohio 45789.,
-noon
during regular bualn..a
Proceeds from the sale will
The ~ollection of Campbell's Loebs acquired Cezanne's portrait weekendsj' needed to teach community and
Prizes • Giftshoura for a p•rlod of 180
finance a newly organized charity, in soup heir John T. Dorrance Jr, of his wife in a red dress from the personal skills lo one adult with learning
daya
aub11quent to
Food
the couple's name, which will sup- fetched $135.3 million .at a 1989 New York dealers Knoedler &amp; Co.
pubiiCIIIon of thla notice. :
limnations In Meigs County.
port education, health, family plan- auction at Sotheby's.
for $125 ,000 in 1956.
(5) 12, 13, 14, 111, 18,.11, 11,
Members may
(1) 40 hrs/wk: 3 pm Sun. thru 8 am Fri.; sleep20, 21, 22, 23,2512 to
•
bring a guest.
over required; daytime hours off; sick/Vacation/holiday/insurance benefits. .
Public Notice
(2) 32 hrs/Wk: 8 am Sat. thru 8 am Mon.; sleepIn Memory
over required; sick/Vacation benefits. ·
NOTICEOFAVALABULnY
Training provided. Informal setting. High school
FOR PUBUC·INSPECTION
The Carl.ton College
degree, valid driver's license, good driving
Board
orT-. haa ftlld
In
of
record,. three years licensed driving experience,
111 ennuel mum of a prtand adequate automobile insurance coverage
HER~HAL (Cub)
vlte foundation, Form 11110PF,
with th• Internal
required . Salary: $5.50/hr.; to· start., Send
GILKEY
R--.
Service tor celllllresume to: P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640&lt;ler yeer 1181. In lecor0604; ATTN: Cecilia. Deadline for applicants:
dence
wlth
lnterMI '
·Todey would have
5/16/97; please
which position applying
· Rav.nue . Code · Section :
been your birthday.
8t04(b), thll form le -~~ '
for.
able for pubilc tntpiCtlon ;
Another cheeeecake
Accelerate your auto sales; advertise in the newspaper.
It the. hOlM Of ROller( •
at hand. A card and
Wlngltt, Pralklent end
Customers are 7 times more likely ro use ihe newspaper
a phone call from
Prlnclpel Manqer, t 387!
Collage Roacl, ·SyracuN,•
ma. A dream or
than television as their pri~ary ad source.
Ohio, during lhli 180. ~
another year to
BILL FRANCIS
period lllgiMI.. May 15,:
spend.
1.7. '
.
.
(5)
14;
1TC
•
You
probably
The source people rely on most for
would have told a
'•
automobile ads*
'
·'
atory, one from il.ll
( .fm , trndrst~Hfi J!lnll
those memorlta you
.,
HappvAd'
•
Bill Francis. a senior at Eastern '
had. I would have
.
.
•
. 71%
High School, has been awarded a
half-way listened,
U.S. Dailv ~8WSP81&gt;Gt1
trustees scholarship at Marietta Col·
later wlahlng · I'd
lege.
· ·
been all ears. Wa
Weeklv newsp•pero
The award is the highest scholarmlght'va even arguor &amp;hoppers
ship offered by the college, and is
.
ad
a bit, Just to
given only' to students who meet ·
mska-up and laqgh
Morgan Center Christian
GPA and ACT score requ~rements.
Til
19%
together again. In
Francis' ACT score was 31. The'
Holiness Church
$12,000 per-year scholarship is
those years I had
May 14-17, 1997
5%
renewable for three years beyond
Magazines
ll!l.lused
you
for
.a
Preaching By
the freshman level.
7"/o
grandfather
I
wish
I
Rev. James· (Speedy) Arthur
Francis is an honor student at •
could have known
Singing NightlY
Eastern. He received tbe Danforth "I
&amp;IS&lt;: Rrspontknt; who S&lt;krttd n mrdi11m
Just how special you
. ,.
Service Starts 7:30 p.m.
Dare You" Award, the TVC AU-Acawert end how I
Homecoming May 18
demic Award for rwo oonsecuti'le
May 14, lfyo'u
would mill . you
Get more Impact In the n~wepape~. ·
Lunch at Noon
years and is a member of the
when you were
1ee thil _
lmiling
· Natio~al Honor Society. He was the
Services at 1 :00
gone• .
Eastern High Scbool delegate to
Lilele Boy ai
I
Buckeye Boys'. State in 1996, and
I think, Grandpa,
'
I
has been listed in "Who's Who" for
tht• note was Juat to
The
Daily•Sentinel.
The Welcome Medium.
•
. three years. He is considering a
•j
say, that 1 love you
major in chemistry.
and mise you and
aoday, lflilla him •j
Franc:is is die son of BiU and Jo
think about you
a Happy SOIA
Ann ·Francis of Reedsville, and is a
.
I
taCh
clay.
I
member of the St. Paul United

ALL PRIMARY UTIUTIES PAID
Must be 62 years of age or handicapped.

ta:t

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BISSELL BUILDERS, IN(~

Eosy Bonk Rnandng
.
Air Conditioners lnstalecP28" omonlh
Heal Pumps Jnslaled 538'1 amonth

•Sm•n.r: 1'1¥ 19!kt Mrlilf E/lfrtiw•tnJ S.rwj t.., C:mnnr Rnr.m:h. lmttviNt by Sthtdm:~n,
·
•nd Bucuv-•lu. l ~e.

Ronc;~,

Blnlul.y

l..oN YOII!
· Your

-

, J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
.. INSULATION

1

',(ARPEJml SERVIa

«ocwn.Addltlona

• oHewGanlgle

r

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IIU218
~QIIIo
.
.

Sayre Trvckitg Co•.
614-742·2138

·-117·

Remodeling

992·2483

Stop &amp; Compare
'·

Eatimalet

7122/lfn

Financing through NOIWllat Financial

HARTWELL
HOUSE

EVENING MEAL

FREE ESTIMATES

D.Gea~'s
Jlod~ Sflop

AT

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR CENTER

Mulbercy Heights, Pomeroy
'Thesdays and Thursdays
·Serving from 4:JO • 5:15
Donation $4.00 for meal ·

NowAu.-0....

Quality Work at
a Fair Pricel
550Pa9a St;
Middleport, Oh. 45780
Home Ph.

rpublic ·is invited

102 E: Mal.n, Pomeroy

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Lilllt llti"&amp;'

•n Worlh ,ltloi
I .
in
lltr CIMM(itJ Stditm I

!

liCK Wlllll
. PAIIITIIIG

Now Opera For Spring
· Season
. • Pansles $6.50 ltal

' '

• All vegetable &amp; bedding.

plants $6.50 ltal · ·
• Blooming &amp; Foliage
Baskets $5.75- $6.75
-41n. Assort. Pots
85¢.$1.25
· *Rubber lr8es &amp; elephant
8818$5.50
oCannas $2.00 ea.
I &gt;Shrubbery
,

:c&amp;~~~

Wtls Y• to AIIIM Ow Ann11allfeall. F*

lltJ 16, 1997~ 11 AlH PM

There wilt bt Free ChOIIatlt'OI. Chaclcl, tte.lng
SOrtanlng, T8 Toting, AduH • Child ln1111UJ1lutton 1 p.m.4 p.lil. and Aeeplretory Ev.Ltatlon.
Door p!tlll will bt gMfl I refreelllntntl wilt bt
• .. ._ 'lllitdll'l _. bt on lib wlttltnllai'IMtlanel

'

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We honor Golden
Buckeye Cards
Open Dally 9-5 Sun 12·5
0/7tln

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,.,

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in Henderson, WV.

,LOST: Oalmarian last seen Rt. 2
near Paul'l Exxon. He answerS
to Pol1jjO. Contact 301-875-5830
A Ulllt boy real!)- misseo hili1.

Home Moot

Woilcl

..

Thur. Friday. aatorday 10-4. A·

semble Product&amp; at Home. Call

Toll Free ·t-800·187·5588 EXT.
12170.

E•periencod Hair Stylllt Naoded

For' Joann's Kut .&amp; Kurl 114~8-

04;8, 614-1~211.

Experienced Roofer• &amp; c.,.,..,.

en 3 Yeara Experience, Muat
Have Hand Tool1 I Transporta-

.Frame on Cora Mill rd. KidSillaby tion, Call Mlka Marcum 614·2150137.
ciolhel. LG, AC, Etc.
.
bperloncod Supormarllol Hllp
Pomeroy,
wantIll
Middleport
Eslablls~ed, Growing, Locally
OWned Company steking enthu.
&amp; VIcinity
slastlc applicant• for variout poAU Yord Salol Muot 8o Poid In sitions.
AdYIInco. Doadltno: 1:OOpnl tho loc:al opportunilitl In all position
d•V before the ·ad Ia to. run,
Management
and
Heado.
Moat ParsonSunday a Monday edition· s~!i~ncr."l,~udi~·"~~~r~' ,l,~op
and Doll Clarka,
I :OOpm Friday.

tunnnd eli"-

ao

·

.

Cashiers and

Huge 5 family yard aale- Saturday, May 1~ ac;rou from Beach
Grove In Rutland. Lot• of misc.
and children's c;lolhes, tons of
boy's clothea, alzo 5 10 18, lurni·

·

Public salt

pooltiona
and Auction
omable, studonll and -citapplicants wslcomo. ·
Lemloy'o Auction Sorvlca, Leslie -~.,.
RosumesiAppllcatlono
Availoble,
Lemle1. Auctioneer. Household,
Eastrran'o Foodtand SUperEotale, Farm Saleo. P~one 611· 11
llllrkoto, an Equal 0Wortuni11
388-9143.
E"1&gt;k~Yar.

QDILIYY

Rick Pearson Aucti on Company,
full ''"'• auc11oneer. complete
au,tlon
aervice. licensed

Roon1a

•lie,O~Io

a W.ot VIrginia,

30~·

773-5785 Or 301-773-5117.

· Free Estimates

Homo Hta11h AI-• noodtd .lor

adull caon In Gaillpolla aroe. Pt
thllts availeble. Pleaat Call: 1·
800-516-2273

-J

lmmedioto home hftllh ••'
Wanted to Buy
oig""""' In Pomeroy area, 20 1a
hoUri 0 ~.
&amp; bentAboolull Top Dollar: All U.S. Sil·
dii1CUIII8d II In- 81 ......
vor And Gold Colno, Pr9oloo11, ,
Criminal beCkground 1-Dlamondo, Antiquo Jtwolry, Gold
.
call Ani• It 1•
Rings, Pro-1830 U.S. Currency,
E.QE, ;
Siorllr\Q, Etc. Acqulolllons J-,
- II.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 ~nd
.......... Ganipoijo, 811-4*~

90

614/992·7274
Roofing· Gutters· ·
Siding

An tl qull, furnl1ure, glaas, china,
coins, to~s. lampa, guns. loola,
tttat11; also eppralaalt, 01~

GOODNITE'S
QUALITY ROOFING

'

'

••

- . 8t4-e82-7441.

304 882-3541
Free Estimates

--

..........

Weekends I

Top Pay &amp; Benallts Good Miles,
Frlondlr Frolght 85% Ho Touch
female, black/ Frol g~t, Some Drop a Hook,
lnbacltofTNT 101K. 1 Year TIT Eap,. COL·A
Req. Call Ken 1·800-385·1045
Weekends !Evenings 1·800-10370
67Q2
.
Yard Sale
DRIVERS-ARE 'IOU THO of
Gallipolis
LONG HOURS a LOW ~Y?
ROEHL 1\aa a Top 10 Per PIC!&lt;·
&amp; VIcinity
age per The Naloratourvay of
Driver W&amp;getbr Sign Rl"- GrMI
.61.1. Yord Solie MU01
Homo Ti.-.. 05% no IIUch. Till&lt;
81 Paid In Ad¥1n ...
to our dliwnl. (8001-487-8345
QfADL 1Nf: 2:00 p.m.
WWW.ROEHL.NET
tho der - .. tlre ad
lo 10 run. Sundoy
Earn $1 ,000 WIOkly Stulllng EnedHtan • 2:00p.m.
velopes
At Home. Start Now. No
Frldoy. Monday triHioA
Experlenca .. Froo Supplies, lnlo.
• to:oo o.m. s.turder.
No Obligation. Stnd LSASE To:
Big Sole 1 lomllift Lola of ..,. ACE. Dept 1351, 6o1 5137, Dla·
rylhlng. 1 t29 SUnset Dr. Off ..,._ rmnd Bar, Cllt. 1117eS.
ond Ave. Thur · Sol810 I
Easy Workl Excellent Pay! AI·

In laorior.

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

Du's

Syracuse · 992·5776 ·

worlcerlcallhler noodod. Mull
ltlyrL Old. Apply II Crawtord'o

HomiEwry

town hou"se. furniture, clorhes, lnl·

·WICKS
HAULING

Hllllllarcls Gree. .te

Appolntmorv,etl~

J.R.

anti clothes, house ware, home

(Lime SlOne·
. Low Rates)

. 614·992·3470

Dara FW Wook. Slrv"ll cu..unor
Ttl.,..,no, Gtnarol Of·
lice S~lllo Needed. Call For An

S.rvlce,

bo

Ave, Toolt, Sweeper, Clothing,
Sltver Certificates, Marbles, Jew·
airy, loll misc.

25260

Customer Service Repre..nta·
tive, Part-T1mt Fte&gt;ible Houro, 2-4

Oell

Lost and Found

Maj18-17; 9:00-5:00. Addison

Don Geary, Owner

-·

Auto, ll'ucll, llaaldenllal,
com-rc111
Mlddltfoolt, OH.,
114-742-37117 .
Ra
-11

-

614-992-3120

992-7696

PaldVacllono, 81~72117.

Friday, Saturday 1071 Second

At. 1; Boic 44-C
Maeon,WV

U,.,. L Bouton, CDPliiA

Random l.engtl614-4411·2478

a month old Germ~n Rouweller
lost on Graham School Rd. lri
Ctntonary. $100. Reward. (811)·
118·4207 Joe. (6141·111·2238

Joe. Wilson
(614) 992-4277

FAMILY DENTISTRY
304-n:J-5822

• Ins. Owlllf: Ronnie Jones

2Q Yra.

800-318-7181111508.

60

Rarey R. Jfowton,-D.D.S.

• Top • Trim • Removal
· • Stump Grinding

Animal Weltar• league, P.O. Box
216, GaiUpollo, OH 15631.

Rull coiord, med. liHd, malo dog.
Mu1t find home due to trucking
job. call (611)~207

~ MASON DENTAL CARE

Remodeling

EARN SIX FIGURE INCOME
Work wilh buain.-u ownet1 re·GiveaWay : 1· Free ·spay_ and 1 quos~"il vlluation ropor•; bo an
Free Net.ner For Cats Or Dogs In intermediary lor buYM-oalltflof
Honor 01 Be Kind To Animal b!lsino...,s.972-880-8414
Week. Good OnlY From U.r 1st ·
CQmputar U~ers Needed. Work
15t~. Sind Namo, Addroll, Tel&amp;own houro. $20k to t50klyr 1·
p~ona Number To: GaiNa County

old,
10

3M/Jitamo.

(614) 367-0266
1-800-950-3359

IIUSfiESS DIRECTOR

Fralt Shepherd ml• pups, nina

-old, cal 811-w.!·l515.

.Cosmoroiogilll NHded Full And
One Lot ol Planed.Oak PliK:eo Pirt-Tima Guaranlaed Wagn

Aeration Motor &lt;Sales &amp; Rapalra
Cleaning Septic Systems
,ort-A.John • Rentals • Serviced Weekly
No Extra Charge for Evenings or Weekends ·
24 Hr. Prompt Service
7 Days A Weak

N

•«;:omplete .·

985·4473

·

'614·992o/7119

•New Homes
•Garages

. FRI;E
• ESTIMATEES

i

POMEROY, OHIO

I •.

I c

Joe N. Sayre

.

,,

.

·JACK'S SEPTIC 8 .
POR.,~A-1011 SERVICE

Licensed • Bonded
Insured

N

' ....... lur • !xtlrlclr

. .:P.Intlng
. .
1
ft8Q Corli:l'd Work
(FREEl ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUIIIO Ill

•

\

Houaa Sitae .

Reasonable Rates

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Electrlcai ·N Plumbing Carpentry
Repairs - Conversion$ Remodels

-Electrical a Plumbing
. •Roofing

•

'·

••.

YOUNG'S

I

Umestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systairia
Trailer &amp;

"Bufl• Your Dream"

ROBERT BISSELL
CONStRUCTION ·

S3j' BRYAN PLACE
'MIDDLEPORT
112·2772
a:oo.a.m.-3:30 p.m.
.• R,-me•t Wlldowt
~hlltl Garages

I

~

BENNETI''S MOBILE HOME .
HEATING &amp; COOLING

•R0011 Atltllllons

AmNTIO!I
REDUCE: Lo1e wolg~t w~lle you Former Outside
Repo. Like
oleep. Tako OPAL tableto and Cable Concepti~"
Or
Kirby,
Vap Diuretic available at.Frut~ TIMER HAVE CHANQEI)t Etc.
Sm.
Pllarmacy.
Satellite Dishes Art Big Seller&amp;
Groat Opponunltj Awalta 'lbu In
40
Giveaway
Sales IManagomonL Coli Ron Toll
Aullrollan Shephard, black &amp; Free 1-888-432-7378. ·
white male, neutered 5-13·87.
Avon $8 ·$18/Hr, No Door ·To.
301-77U181 ,
.
Door, Oulck Cash, Fun &amp; Rola1-·
Black Lab and Coon Pupplao lng, 1-800· 731Hl1118lndlltolroci.
611-111·10511
AVON $8 ·$18/Hr. No ·Door -To
Free klttena. all eolofl, ewks old. ·Door, Quick Cas~l 'BoNIUI' 1·
800-827·4810 lndiSIIIRtp,
301-882-3551 lnvo meo-.

&amp;J

MGA Construction Services

Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WV
· 814-448-9416
1391 Safford School Rd., Gallipolis, OH

. J.,Jfen, . ·
Ex,..U.

• Your loving

'Q-

•Free 5 Year Parts Warranty
•Free Digital Thermostat

•

Methodist Church were be is presi. dent of the youth group.

~

(Paymenta boll8d on approved credltl

·· Windows · ·

Rep.

BIILIII 8
EXCIVIftlll '

Custom Homes

N,iw Homes • VInyl Siding New
·Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
. COMME~CIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

~

· •Stonn Doars &amp;

992·8358 or 301-882-2045, Ind.

·r·;·-;:=:::::==-====~=-~·

(No Sunday Calls)

.

c}Cl'H. / .

Fairgrounds .
Sponsored by
Meigs co. 4-H Horae
eommlttet
For more Into celt p..,
985 4489 or LIN 149-2052
. AuctlonHr:
Ahltl Milhoan

..

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

Francis receives
scholarship

6 ~M
Malg~ Co.

614-992~7643

Bl.}.rn
rubber.

lllj&gt;niJ

(614) 742·3800

Foundations,
DI
r veways,
Sidewalks, Patios,
· Garage a~
Basemant Floors.
·Free 'Estimates.
lnaured
SAYRE CONCRETE
SERVICES

Personals

Able Avon Rapreaentatlvea
--.,=.,.,=--·I needed.
Earn
lor Chrlot·
mao billo at - • t -k. 1-100-

Reasonable Ratea

7 A.. """A
~=======~;;~:1==·~~=-t_~::::::::::::~ ~-.--~~~~;_--~

'Loeb collection brings in nearly 100 million

"

871·25211 Or 513-174-7141.

005

Will haul- just call~

· CONCRETE
SERVICES

·sat., June 7, 1897

Free Estimates

t;)

~

2ND ANNUAL
TACI .AUCTION

614-742·3411

---- . 1·614·992·7022
. ' .,.""1'-· - -

D•by

• Llme$tone
• Gravel
• Refuse • Etc.

113 W. 2ND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
614·992·54

.Dec;ks • Garages

. Must meet HUD eligibility requirements
For .f urther details_call today

..........

·T.K.
HAULING

31171M'TFN

Will Your Utilities Put You
In The Poor House?

Drug trio boosts survival rate ·of ovarian cancer victims

For Ule While Pnimodng Global Harmorw. llocome
An lntemallonal Exchange Coor·
dlnator (IECI Wim EF Foundation
For Foreign Study, A Non-Pront
Hlg~ Sc~ool Foreign E•chango ,
Organization Dodicatod To Fur·
thoring .Cultural AwarO'!ftL Help
To Plac:o Sq,donta From Around
T~a World Wit~ Fomllloo In
Southern And Con~ll Ohio. Work
To place •• atl, call Wit~
E•c~ange Studanto, Hlg~
992-2156 . Schoolo, And Hoot Famlilo. T~lo
Position lo Not Paid, Eaponooo
Aro Rtimbunod, Travel OpportunltiH. For Mont lnlorrnallon CanA NNOUNCEM ENT S
tact Cathy Biuckort AI t ·100· ·
Molie Frlondo

JEFF WARNER INSURANCE

Sunset Horne
Conttruetlon ·

110 · Help wanted
AVON I All Artll 1 Shlrler
~1.30H75-142G.
.
1Q!IPalnbiOI-1

360° Communications

614-742-3324
614-742-3076

949·2168

Muat 111111 yrt.

'

'
Loaftng shade to horsi arenas.
Roof repair and paint to structural repair. ·
st. .l buildings as low as $4.00 sq; ft.
dellve.r ed. Free eatltnates, prompt and
profel•llon~l"rvlca. Call today

' ~14-742-3000

EMPLOYI.11:rll
SERV ICI c,

. ;·

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

. ~EW-REPAIR

S•salfollal Resllts

In Good Condition, Call eto-:UC:
5887• .

Re Le HOLLON
TRUCKING

REPAIR OR NEW
CONSTRUCTION

3351 Happy Hollow Road
Middleport, Ohio 45760 .
New Homes. Addilkins,
Roofing, Siding, Pole
Barns, Decks, Painting,
Garages, Porche8.
Coli 1J1 For A Ftee Elllmate

Wlln!H: Ull8d Hardwood Floortna

992·5583 '

KINGS'

'

~

Stick/MIG Aluminum Yielding

·farm

250 Condor Street ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4576$
A Division on Nichols Metal, INc.
Phone: 6f4: 992-2406
Fax: 304-n3-5861 ·

Wanrtd to buy: uoitd chilrch
pewo; arw conditon. C.A 1·(8141-

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

Ohio

wv

111 381 811011.

New Location: 2 miles off Rt. 7 on Rt. 124

..

Big Bend Fabrication,
. Machine &amp;Weld.._g Shop
. ,· .

1997 Edition of the Kelly
i;~~~~::~~~ will come to Gallipolis
May 22 at 4:30 and
7:30 p.m. at Gallia County Junior
Fairgrounds.
Sponsored by, -the Gallipolis
Jaycees, the new "European. Style"
format debuted in 1995. The new
design of the big-top allows each
patron equal distance seating from
the performance ring. The add~d
height in the tent allows for a wider
variety of aerial acts.
Kelly Miller Circus is one of few
who still carry a live band. The
extensive lighting system that has
been created brings a theatrical flair

110 Court St.

-"1

wanrtd to buy uollll Moblo
Home, cal811-1*0175 01 11487S-!1885
Warud To Buy:
TlrrW
Or'Yacant Proptrtr With n-,

Industrial • Automotive
New Radiators • Re-Cores ·
A/C Condensera/Hoae ASsemblies

."FACToRY
DIRECI'
PRICES"'
.Q uality Window Systems

Monday-Friday· 8:00a.m.- 4:30p.m.
Saturday - 8:00 am. - 12 noon

Chester, Ohio

The ·circus is coming to Gallipolis

•26 Y!Wl81N IIUSINESS

C.impleb! Machine Shop Senke Fabrication .
Steel Sales, Weldiag Supplies, 1Dd1111trial Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Repla~ment

::,. Kountry Klu
:.

. REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

•New Homes
•Decks
•Additions
•Roofing
•Remodeling
•Siding
•Giirades
"Stop putting off those much needed
home improvements." CaU Today! .
992-2753 Free Eattm•te• · 992-5535

.

'I

SOLID VINYL

•

�•
Pomeroy • ,Middleport, Ohio

...-....

The O.lly Sentinel ...... 15

NIA Cro11word Puialt

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

...

diCIOIIng . . ..

PHILLJp

-

1 lllltall

.en

ALDER

13 llunrlle
Aectlole

11 Aulhar.......
1111 ThMtrlcal
_,
20 Not wortclngt

~.

.

,como

polonilal, Coli 1·100·1134343En6-119118.
.

'

• Q8 7
¥ A J 10 4
• 76 4 3
I
• 6

2

..

,

~·~"

WH&amp; .
.. K 2
¥ QI 3
· •J85 . '
.QJ984

• •• 3

• K' 7 6
• K Q .10
• 10 7 5 3

Soulll

-•AJ10965
.. 52

't A 8 2

Ovarbraalli Center, Middleport,
has pori dmo and lull time LPN
posldona aYBilable br 7-3 &amp; 3-11
1111111. Expenonce pnolamld, II Interas~

plaale come in and fill

out application. No phone calls.

ploOio.

.

'

lllla - - w i l l nol
lcnOwlng1y accept
-lorreaJOIIIIO
..t1lch fs In Ylalidon of !he law.
Our.r1Nlderaarel1eroby
lnlonned 111at .. dweiNIQS

&amp;Sin-

Sot.IJp,
1-800·

Solft:ll

"t• '
4•

- i n 1hla nawop8per
lint available on an equal

310 Homes lor Sale

Pleasant Valley Hospital Ia looking br a Buslnos• Olliee Ma,.ger. Must be able 10 direct, eval-

and coordinate

all activities of the bualnesa of-

vlttAT
\

fica. Bualneu A.dmlnistrallon
degree or equtvalent and a mirUmum of three yaara of 1uper·
vision and financial management

YOIJ
S"-1

Polloi Jobo 3 Posillonl Avail·

able, No Experience Nece11ary,
For lnlormadon. Call 1' 818· 784·

!1Cl18 En 6013.
Wonlod: 38 People Loot 18 -25

.. THE BORN LOSER .

WANTED: Aulotanl Director ol
Nursing tor 1315 long term care
unit. Applicants mu1t postea
~chelors Degree O( certiftcatlon
aa gerontological nur1e. Plea..
respond by 5120197 tot Donna
Northup, DON, Lakin Hoopltal ;
304·875·0860, au. 12•. Lakin
Hoaplialla an EEO employer.

tV85 Slraluo 285 Pro/ XLI DC
Baoa Boat 175 HP, EYinrude 814·
«1-D991 .
Boo! Solo Going On NOw -Aqua!·
ron Baart -Cutry Cabtna -Biow
Aidan ·Bau Boats -JohnSon
Outboard Uotars Satta. Service
of all oulboardo, ettdllod mechanIc. Marine Servlcea 1 2131 Karr
atMt, Sywaeuoo, Oftlo,

24 Hour In Home Care for Elder·
ly Or Handicapped, "614·.f41 ·

0000.
ANY ODD JOBS: Ealerior paint·
ing, shrubs 6 weeds trimmed,
landScaping, · sidewalks a~ged.
lawn care, etc. Call Bin 304·675·
7112.

114-1112·8520.
Pro 1l!O 12 FL Ball Boo~ Trallar,
3.1 HP l.totor, Bauary Charger,
Aecoooorlea, Now, NIYer Uaod,
$t,800, 014-448-8325.

Babyaiulng· daycare available In
my home U-F, e-e, lower end ot
Middleport by ballpark. Caring,
trusting mother o.t ana, personal
relarance1 a'llilable, 814·9924490.

760 · Auto Parts &amp;

Accessories

Child care In' my home, referent·
es 8YIIiable, 614-992-8642.

bedroom, ant both, $9500, 614-

.

(lbbr.).

t"

......

•• golf boil)
17 A.c.treck t1onn 21 Cslnllll ZlllddiV
11Compar811W

27...,. .

SEIZED CARS From f115 .
Poroehoo, Codlllaea. Chevya,
BMW's, Corveneo, Aloa J - . •
WD'a, Your Area . Toll Free t 800· 218· 9000 E•t. A-2814 For
Cur,.,. Uadngo.

Services

Heat hump, underpinning, many

199•: 1•X80 Brand)' WJne 3 br., 2
luU balho, 3 10n c:o., laundry ""'m

HARTS MASONARY · o•o•••·IOJ&lt;Inol. (0~4)·«1-0 155
1988 Oakwood Tralltr. U,5001

down and auume pa~mtnta .
Caii304-67S-3538.

tmlll or 10 BIG. WV-0212116

~;_----,----· ItT'S BIG. 1887 4BR, 2BATH
Llvlngoton'o baoomont water- OOUBLEWIOE . f1 , 949 DOWN,
proofing, oil bo.aomont ropalro U181MO. FREE DELIVERY &amp;
dono, fr . . Olllmotoo, llloilmt SETUP ONLY AT OAKWOOD
gu.,.ntM, I07ro on job "pori- HOMES, NITRO, WV. 304- 765.,.._ 30oH75-2t45.
. _ _ Olllt.

Largo ootocdon of ultd homo. 2
., :l.tl d - Sllr1lng ot 13481.

-

Oulck .......,,. Coli 1·100-la7·
Llm~H on.r t IH7

New gaa 11nk1, .1 tOn uuck
wftooto &amp; redlalors. 0 &amp; R Auto,
Ripley, WV. 304-372-3933 or 1800-273-9329.

790

.

1972 Modlll campor 8kt8 , In
Good Condition call 61•·258·

South or Leon, WV. Flnanc:lng
Awilable. 304-4511-1088.

1887 3e• Siarra .Camper and
1962 Chevrolet Subllrl&gt;a'I!Comi&gt;'
or Spacial, Ill hook upo, both ln.
tllc:tllonl eondlllon, 112.500, c:all
814-892-4000.
:

31 .MMtlnl

:

-·
. . ....
CJINI.)

41 ltflbtl am

_..

421Mt0.C.

-t--t--+-t"'

,

4l I'UW.. LL.B.I ." .

.44 -lllllt ol
· IMcomlcl
olllllam'l
1.....

41Wenlby47F_...._
porpoiM
41.1Hob'l
IOfl

50 Sill., •.•.
~1 Hll (II.)

'
CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lule Cempo1

Celetlrity Clf&gt;her cryptovam~•rt: f!:TU\ed from quott~ti&amp;. by famous p80ple, pall and pfea8nt
Each ltnel'ln the cipher 1tandllor ·~'*· T~y~ chw: .t $QWIIf p

TO.. ·

' y Gp

YXKNGPBY . YGOEN

BKAAPBa

oa

YGIIIY

YX

XE

DPOEN

HPPJ

BKAAPBB.'-

IIIDXKY

LX K' U, P

NXY

Ill

OCUOEN .

DPCfOE .

PREVIOUS ·soLUTION : "Love is the child of Illusion and the parent

disillusion."- Miguel de Unamuno.

. •

oi

WOII

lAM I

O four
Rearrange lotloro of
te·rombled words

the

be.

low to form four simple words.

'

GHRANA
·•

.I / I 1° lj I

•

M

...

\

The English teacher told he;
class that the best seller lists
indicate the bobks that we buy
r-.........::--:--:-:--::--:--:::---, not the books that ~· . • • ... ·

'

OWLFLE

'g I. ·I .I 16 .1e.
l
L..o....J._.a...;_._....__,__,

1_

,•'.."· f-'-"=-.-;;.,-,..
PMNU'l'~
..
_ _""'M ,........;_.__ _ _ _.., r'-'---'--'----,

_

_

_

_

_

_

·

c~uckle

Complot: the
quoted
by f111ing in the missing word1

you develop from step No. 3 below;

COME ON, CHARLIE
"ROWN;STRIKE TillS 6U'(
••

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.. :n..- u
,nn
_
·,....,.. Moniano, 29 ft., loadad, aleopo ol•. lull .bath, quHn
lize center bed, lots of storage,
18,000 niloo. below booll, will con·
older trade In or pon100n boat -pr
vtn. Can be ' " " al 38 ·Hudaen
Street, Middleport or call eu-

992..103.

32-·
. . . , . bill"

OUT! VOU CAN DO IT!

_aS«
___......_______

..,... ,
'87 Ford Ranger, new engine,
and -ar
ptiiiUrt ~itt, ilrtl,
814
8
,.
ge, 2500
· •
•

lloocl

· beYM'III
31 Wlndllr
31M*. Foell
• DapriVII of

- ~-~~K.,Rr-._vrE~J--11 :.,'.
_ I~ I j I .

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

Upton Used Cars Rt. 82-3 Mlleo

720 ll'ucks for C!•JI

21--IM

29 Oloely fabric
30 WlyCIII .

.

5677

14K70 3.1Jedroom, Nicely Furnished , On One Acre lot, New
Drilled Woll, $28,000. (814)2586216

--~::--::---:-:::--~-

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.
ale a tina

........,."

11 Ill Ufl

Hloi--

.

Cooeo &amp; Rear Endo, 614· 245·

,.X65 Mobile Homo 82 Oakbrook
:good c:onditon, with e.11tra lru·
nilhlnos. Priced to Mill can after
6:p.m.(614)-256-1169

Prolesslonel

ilf.AL ESTATE

.,.
(2 Will.)

'

Tranlmaniona, Accaaa Tranafer

1!85-4282.

.'

SCRAM-liT$ ANSWIRS
'
.
·Grocer · Legal- Venue • Oblong- BACON
While in the grocery store I heard one woman commimi thai, "Life spans would be longer if green veg- '
etables smelled as good as BACON I"
·

,-1WEDNESDAY

MAY 141

:

1111ruck camper, ic:e bo•, stoft,
furnace, air, Qood for hunting 6
llohlng. 1375 or will trade lOr

OllriOd ealvoo. 304-875-1165.

•

Aloume roan,. no money down-Jtr
qualified buyor. 1906 till DuiCbman, lu(ly oell eontolnod, lo·
cludoo hitch I oloclflc bnokt.
304-875-5522.
•

Business

no job

35

10=

Pass
Pass

Price Transmia·alons,
Siarong 11 $90.00 and Up. Uaod I
Rebull~ Alll)'peo, Over 10,000

Ar•.

185-3581 onor 8j)Opm,

2•
Pass

Bud~at

'82 Commodore, 1-4:1172, three

wv.

.

Pass
Pass

304 Jeep angina. 304-875-5730.

1 .35 Aeroo 2•a85 troller 5br, 2
Sewing In home, windOw treat- ' 14a:70 three bedroom. one bath,
· both, cable, ell)' wollr, OUI bllMdmenta ;and accesaorl11 lor ~II 1895 Skyline, on rented lot, new ingo. 304 -578-2541 . 127,000
rooi'nl, some alterations and re- heat pump, $17,500, 614-992·
OBO.
·
3181 •
. palro, 614-902-3220.
Will care for children In my 1972 Vlndale, with ea:pando and For Sale Or Trade : 40 acres 5
home•.Licenaed by the State or doek. (8141 -448-7558 after Miles Ftom Galllpptis, an ~1&amp;ta
Roult 218. Will Soli All or Porto.
7:oop.m. or ls~Na meuage.
Phone 304-875-27.2.
814-256-8574
Will do prtvate practical nursing 1874 Schultz ubx10 With 1. 52
5 Acre11 mn Rayburn Rd. No lin·
81.-370-2852.
care In your home for elderly .or
wide dwellings. Call 30•·875aic:k. pr•f•r upper Pt Pleasant 1984 14x70 Schultz, two bad- gle
71153.
0 noa. 304-875-4150.
room. stove an~ refrigerator, air,
Attn : Huntera &amp; Fishermen. 15
alklng
$9000, 614-593-6191 .
Will Do: Laildocaplng &amp; Gran
acres roiUng hills WJ2 wooded .,..
Mowing, Vlfy Reasonable. Call 1987 Skyllno Sable 14K72 3br, 2 eas &amp; ·pond. 15min. from Hblz.,.
304-$75-1115.
bath, large living room, island cl01e ta Vinton area. Baaulilul,
.
w;i1 haul junk or trash away. f351 kitchen, heat pump, porch. awn- $18,000. 304-875-7809.
Ing, skirting, c:ancrete steps,
plc:lcup load. 304-875-5035.
10X12 building, axc cond. 304- Prime Acreage ~ 1 acr8 parciats,
. eacelient bui.ldlng oll•o ;n Ma·
675-5043"' ' - me111ge.
FINANCIAL
son. Serious Inquires ·only. 304·
.
1888 cannell 1•xsa, oa, 1terlo 882·3772.
oystam, no palm 1110!, 8,000. 080,
Sov... fl..... porcolo
(814)-388-81120 Atter 5pm •
17,500 ooch
OpportunHy •
1888 Oekwcod 14•70 2b&lt;, 2 belh, remote, . beautirul land: Melg1
ex12 deck, on rented lot. optional Coun~. Sc:lplo Townolip. SR 882
!NOTICE!
10•12 otorago building. 304-675· (jull o~ SR t43). OWner lnondng.
OHIO VAlLEY PUBLISHING CO. 8051 L - messaoo.
c ·all for good map, 1-IU -193recommend• that you do bu a l ~
8545.
,.., wlrh people you know, and 1003 14x70 Vary Allrac tlve, Prl·
NOT to aend money through the vata Rented L.Gr. Uke New, Many
f!ENTALS
mall undl you havelnvoatfgatod E"rU, Will Ta~o Pay 011, 814·
dwollori~
«1.0701 ,

brlc:lc &amp; otona work, 30
pe'lenc:•. reaaonabte

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180 Wanted To Do

230

5 -lle.Davll
• Auld- 8yM
7 Novy.. hlp ..,.,.
I And 10 on .

aullbJ

• Aclllloelgold

.

Sh4, .

Pounds In The Next 30 Days.
Natural, Guaranteed! 1-800.8802295.

1!1 o

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. =fomt)

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33 Romen 1,002

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1
Life ia full of highi and lows. There
mountaineering and sjlelunklng, Dy. ing·lind ICUba diving.,
In bridge it i8 similar. Sometimes
-you play high, IWimetime~~low. In Ibis
:deal, a defender did one of thea.e at
· the exact moment he should have
been doing the other: How should the
tMPPfNS IF YOVIC
pl•ygoinlourapadesafterWestleads ·
the ctubqueen?
FlfTtfN MINUTf$
~~I
Whenyouareinasuitcontract,itis
t&amp;
\II •
a good ldea. t.o check your losers.
OF f Mf (OM., . )
(Count your tricks as well if you can
, 16LlT yi&amp;J~N · ~ . · do it without giving ttie opponenls
r
JW""
..;;
lime to scale Mount Everest - or to
t4~Vf
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visit the Marianas Trench .l Here,
YOV" .· .• . . .Sou~h could see lour potential ·1osr.rs:
1,.
1
: one spade, one heart and two dia.r· ~
monds. But there was a chance to
li
avoid a spade loser if East held the
0
king. And perhaps two heart tricks
=:.o;;.;;:...._.;.;.":.._~"'!'"--_,;.;.,;,o~ 1could be garnerecr, providing a discard
lor a diamond loser.
·
, lmmedialety, South led a low heart
-.
to dummy'a 10..Aller winning with the
y
' king, East·jlwitched to the diamond
'king. Now South guessed well . He
· might have play"~! a heart to dummy's
· ·ace, to take the trump finesse .
'
Instead,.South pliyod a heart to dum·
me wAA
my's jack. Whe.n t.he finesse won, de·I:;,
clarer discarded a diamond loser on ·
the heart ace. Then he tried the trump
~~~c.
~ finesse In an unsuccessful allempl at
~Wt1\
· an overtrick.
"Nicely.done, partrier," said North.
: "Huh!" grunted Easl.
. "What does that. mean?" ·asked
•West.
.
r==::::;r--:--...\i . "Well, if you just play high "to:ith the
heart queen at trick two, we can defeat the contract. Whatever declarer
does next, we have·a riposte, scoring .
all
four of
"
. our
. tricks.··
.

A

r~

quirod. Sond resume lo Bill Bark·
er, 2520 Valley Drive, Pt. Pleaaen\ WV 25550. AMOOE.

Profaaalonal Tree Service, SlUmp
Removal , Free Estimateal In ·
suranc:e. Bidwell, Oh io. 614-3888&amp;48, 614-387-7010.

1 HorM

Ml frOm jll.

I•

AlllmatiYe Action Eflllloyor.

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your loga tQ the miD just calt
304-675-1957.

......_.

.......
: !':.r

.. 27

(all!liiUI~ Al~er

3m

Experienced carpentry and r~­
deling. ln1lde and outside,
decks vinyl oldlng. add-on additions, ' cabinet refacing or newly
rebuilt. " Retarencaa ~F.ree Esti mates. Jim Shull304-8:•5-t272.

.

DOWN
·

. 'Another adage
found wanting.

and applicaiiOnaiMIII·
able at 1he SerWor Reaource Cenla', 1187 SL Rt. 180, lrvm 7j)O 11m.
until
p.m Monday lhlu Friday. Tlia posidoo Ia immedladlly
OYiilable. An Equal Opporruril)'l

relating ro · health ca;e are

unuw

22 In bnuu•n
, 24 Pleno Jldlll*r

37 Ullnt1 1

Deale~ South
fRet Nortll

'

~pdon

~upervlse

57 Chann
5I llrtna up

Opening lead: • Q

_.,ol core aida. MulllaYO
"""'...,_milan
and wiJHng 11
- I n Golla .Ounty. Job de-

uate,

holcllr
5I 1 1 . - 5I C.ir- - dlay

,.,. I~

21

lllnnel

tee CrMm

Vulnerable: North-South

cu"""dy ac:cepllng appllcaiooa
br _...,.,..and/or par&gt;limo

.

M

31 £ncircled

•AK

opportunlly boola.

PEIIIIONAL
CARE AIDES
The Gallia County Couocll oo AgIng (Sorior Rooource CBf1111r) Ia

=lilly
liZ·=

•

14 ChemiCII aulflx 13

J~

HOIII'nl'llll,
PC uooro n o -. f•5,000 In·

41 WNnll CJINI.)

12 :......

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41 Vllnna'l

I Cllllbi I dgl

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SERVICfS

J

410 Houses.• Rent
2 Bedroor:ns, 2 S.th House, On

11

A,,., Local•d At Soward•

Rdrlt Rood,

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

e-n City, Milebla

To l!uy Ju. . 101, tnqulrloo Call

11H56·t561.

homo, $400
pot monft, no ..,..._ be ' " "
!IV fii'POIIiiUIU\ lt4-0Q2-e481. .

4 bedroom counlfy

Smell houoo In Clifton. cltln,
no poto, 8271/mo. UOO

304-773-81112.

Altl'flencoo:

· Rocondltlonod

l

WI..,.,., Dryora; Rongoo, Rlaltl·

oratore, vo Day Ouarantttl
French Clly Mortal, 114·4•87'101.

•.

Two bedroom houoo, nlu

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ten•nce-

-.noirWdepMI.~
refortncae required, t14·182•

carpertiry.

31110.

teo totimoto can Che~ au.QU.

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mobllo home

'

llil23."

dautt-.

lilt&lt;, 2111111. tl718 - " · 82711
month. FrH dell_ , &amp; IIIUp.

Only ., Oakwood - · 111110
WV.30ol-715-.

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s nine

Pick 3:

to

270

Pick 4:
6224
Super Lotto:

play

2-7-17-25-27-45

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Ohio 1111'-v Pullilllllng Compalny

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May.15, 1997

•

~y BRIAN REED

sentinel News Steff
: ·The Eastern Local School Board
aj)proved· personnel for the 19971991tschool year when .it met in regu1u. $eSSion Wednesday night.
: •Apjlroved as classified substitutes
were: Joan Calaway and Diane NelSOli) aides; Jnzy Newell, Joan Cal!1\tay, Ethel Lambert, Geraldine
Holsinger, Heidi Elberfeld, Debra
lt'loni. Barbara Barringer and Helen
Frilnk, cooks: Sheila King, Charles
$argent, Gary Holter, Pat Buchanan,
~'!'hy Sargenr, Florilla Baker, Gladys

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1991
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.A 28-year-old Middleport man
was- sentenced to three-and-a-half
years in prison Wednesday afternoon
on-charges stemming from the March .
.14, 1995, death · of a Middleport
wqman.
· -.. Robert "Fat Boy" Scarberry was
·accused of selling fire to the Middleport home of Theresa Rodarz
Srone on March 14, 1995. He was
·lii'rested March ·1s by Middleport
·Police &lt;;hief Bruce Swift
: Scarberry pleaded guilty to
·ch)lrges of arson, burglary and negligent homicide.
·· .
· Meigs County Prosecuting Allorney John R. L.entes said Scarberry ser
a: fire in rrash outside the resid~nce,

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·Sspd, V6, powa stcaing, 4wheel andJock brakes, As IDw AS.••

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consecutive senrences were
ihough
· tc

-~:E~~t~=~~~i~~~

· ,was related
ro ' · ~
~~~~i~

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of the Middleport
woman was
to tbe ·fire and Scar"
berry's negligence, but there was no
evidence that Scarberry intended to
cause a death, Lentes said.
·Firefighters responding to the
lilazc found Slone's body lyinB crum·
behind a television set in the livini!Tix&gt;m.ll was hiler determined she

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wiJ«Js, ait, AMIFM c:BCtte, As low
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recyclable• Into a pickup truck with as'sistance
from Meigs County Recycling Coordinator
Kenny Wiggins and fellow MHS junior Marquita McClintic, raar.

.

1'

By oi!M,FF.lEE.I/IAN _
Sentinel News Staff

.

.

-wlielf;W'eomes iq"'iiiilipg~rhe ­

who arc accusing us to cmnc and look ·

at the facts ," Mitchell said.
Heath claims St. Vincent ofticials ·
arrested him as part of. a scheme to
money from wcallhy touristS".

c~lorl

s!milar program in Meigs County,
. . Currently McClintic and See are
ihe only two studcnrs liiindling the
program, but 'they plan to recruir
two more studcnls to take over
when they graduate.
"We get help some time," Sec
explained.
Wiggins said the two have col·
lected well over five tons of recyclable material since they started
last September.
Although most of the recyclables consist of paper products,
the lwo said. they c.ollect "pretty
much anything."
They also said that Wiggins has
been' good lo help out.
Meanwhile, Wig~ins said he
admires rhe girls' taking the iniliative to begin the program .
·
"They rook it upon themselves,"
he said.
'
AI SJHS, a similar program has
been staned under the direction of

.teacher· Bill Bacr.
the rccyclahlcs arc picked up in
conjuncti9n with the vi IIage's curbside recycling program.
Two eighth-graders. Matt Warn'
er and Matt Neiglcr. assist in the
recycling efforts. The youngsrers
collect lhc rccyclablcs .. wnsisting
of office mix . cardboard. newspaper. magazines and catalogs .. and
take them to a collection point.
So far. Wiggins said about four
tons of material has hecn collected at the junior high.
"There is a lot of paper that goes
through the schools." Bacr said.

Heath was charged with murdering
his wife, llorrainlll 'iri l)t. \Jinoentlast
year.
Heath alleges he paid $25,000 ro
get his confiscated passport. Mitchell
said the money Hcalh wired to his St.
Vincent lawyers was paymcnl for
their services.
.
· Heath's case never went to trial
because of insufficient evidence ,
Mitchell said.Lnrraine Heath's m'urder.remains unsolved .
:
- " We arc inviting (South African
ol'licials) U&gt; take responsihility of the
investigations into the death nf nne of
their dtizens," Mitchell said. "We
will give them all the· coopermion
they need:" ·

Bacr said the rrogram is "doing

real goOd" and said plans call for
adding 'plastics for the upcoming
school year. in addition. the stu·
dents wllcct aluminum c;ons: with
lhc resulling money being turned
over to the student coundl.
"My hope is that it will carry
over to the home," Bacr said.

Wage bill
'is sent 't o
full House

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By JOHN SEEWER
Associated Pre5s Write~

COLUMBUS - Democrats and
lahor union s have on'c more chanc.:c ,
to keep Ihe stale's prevailing-wage
law intm: t.

.

that the banners to be attached to the
·new period lights will arrive this
Sentinel New• Staff ·
A plan for downtown landscaping week.
Members were requesled to join
was presenred and approval given to
·Pomeroy·
Councilman John Musser
move forward ·on work along the
and
a
work
crew Tuesday at I p.m.
parking lot's center section when the
Pomeroy Merchants Association met to begin a downtown spring cleanup.
do some painring, and install the colWednesday.
orful
nags along ihe rivcrfronl in
Esldie Hupp Landscaping was
prepararion
for Memorial Day.
hired to do the job at a cost of $1 ,545
Among summer activities men' wilh !he pr(/ject ro be completed
before.Memdrial Day. The landscap· tioned were the Great Ohio Bicycle
·ingwiil include deep root plants. like Adventure which will move through
hosta and lilacs; which will withstand · Rutland on June 19. Sue Maison !lf
the Meigs County Chamber of Comrhe flooding Ohio. il was reported .
To be considered later will he merce met with the mcrchimts to ask
·developm,ent of t.hc · s~ctions along the for volunteers to work ala luncheor&gt;
upJl\lr and lower parktng lms. Cost for f&lt;;&gt;r 3,000 bicyclists to take place at
!hose sccrions is $3.500 and $2.504 the Rutland Civic Center and to
respectively. ir was reported.
invite merchandise displays . Maison
Sources for assistance with the . suggested that merchants usc the time
· landScaping cost were Cliscussed.
to showcase the county as individual
' h was mentioned that funding merchanls, a village 'and an associ a·
might be secured from rhc Meigs tion.
County Commissioners who Monday
Diana Lawson announ~cd that
gave $5,000 to Racine for lights on a People's Bank will sponsor a perfor·
ballfield . Bobbi Karr will attend mance of the O.U. Communiversity
, Monday's meeting to discuss a dona- Band on Tuesday, June 24, hopefullion.
·
ly to take place in the new amphithe·
Susan Clark, president, reported atre. She proposed an an show to be

held in conjunction with the musical
event .
·
Dottie Musser asked for partici·
pation in the Relay for Life ol' the

where it touched down jusr northeast
of Wilmington, It also reportedly
rouchcd down along U.S. 22 lind state
Route 3, meteorologist Ryan Sandler
said.
The funnel cloud move,d northeast
into Fayetre County, where it touched
down rwo miles west of Jasper Mills.
The slorm also produced l-inch hail
in Washington Coull House .

'.

But th ey will race an uphill hattie
on Lhc House lloor c.Juring lm.lay 's
vote on a hill th ~at is attempting to

American Cancer Sot:icty to take
place at the Rock Springs · Fair·
grou.nds, July II. She said a m,cmor·

repeal prcvailinJ:l ·Wagc rcquircmcnl s
on M.:hool t:onslrUt.:tion prujccts.
The provision to e liminate part of
the prevailing wage i .~ indudcd in a

ial luminary service ~nd muskal
entertainment will be a part of the
program. Teams consist ·ol' 15 memhcrs each paying $10 with individ u·

hill th at,would speed up dis tribution
of $31XI mi II ion li&gt;r school construction projects' But debate. ahout .the

als also securing sponsors. she

explained .
Musser was named treasurer.
replacing Vicki . Ferrell who is no
longer i·n business in Pomeroy. She
reported $4,839.09 in the ge neral
'fund, not including $455 made on the
fashion show, and a $50 donation on
the cost of the banners from the local
Carpenters union . IL was also noted

that there is $1700 in the Christmas
hulh fund'.
.
Displayed at lhc meeting was a
Pomeroy Fire Department hear. a
limited edirion created hy the Ohio
River Bear Co. in celebration of the
departmcnt:s I50th anniversary. The
bears arc b&lt;;ing sold for $65.

Tornsdo blows through four counties

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crs' freedom stopped after South
Afri~an cltit.en Allan Hcalh made hi s
charges.
St. Vincent ol'fidals deny the allegations.
The Foreign Ministry is asking
South African officials to come to St.
Vincent, Prime Minister Sir James
Mitchell s·aid late Tuesday.
" We arc calling on all the people

Area students help make
world cleaner place to live

"I just can't: get over it," We~­
"Next year, we're g9ing for a ton."
'That, according to P(ll!leroy leiter ersmillcr said. "We can really use this
carrier Jim Pullins, is the goal for !he food. I've already' been able to help
leiter carriers at lhe Pomeroy Posr families wirh rMse donations."
According 10 Pullins, food was
Office. who collected I, 700 poun\ls
of noll· perishable food last wee"end · collecred on routes in Pomeroy,' but
items were also ilbnated by ipdivid~tiring their annual food drive.
uals
throughout rlie county, including
.tlie food collection effort was
·Racine,
Rudand" and olher areas.
heliNn conjuncrion with lhe Narion·
· al • Association of Leiter Carriers' Those items wel!,brQught in to the .
Njlibnal food Drive. Food donared Pomeroy Post O!!).~e.
Local grocers •lso contributed to
bY. ~ral customers was donal~ to
lhC
effort·: Bia B~ FIJO!IIand, Pow- By The AIIOCIIted Prell
theMe~s !Jnited Methodist Cooper· .
A rornado blew through four
ell's Super·Valu and )Crop:.
at!Ve Plrish.
Ohio counties Wedne5·
sourh-central
· ·~1be carriers rMre in town can
• ; 4-t yew's effort' yielded 1,2SO
day
evening,
but never hir a ciry or
only uy a bia '!hank you' to everypollncb of fQOd for local 'Jieedy..
residentill
area.
the National Weath'Ai::corclinJIO Berry Weyersmiller, one who helped," l!ullins Slid.."Onc:e
~
1M ·eciordinaror of the Parish's food aaain, the'pe~ Q(J'omeroy and !he er Service said.
No
injuries
or
strucllltal
damage
baiik;...lhil year's donation· frolll rhe surrounding area haVe dem~red
were
reponed
.
ieu.F·:curien is !he biagest sinsle l.heir generosity. E..-y dOIIIIlon wu
The tornado was first reported
dodillion of food ilems ever received patly apprecialed.l'
about S p.m. in Clinton County,
in .~.puiah's 2S-ycar history.
l

.r

I
I

FOOD RECEIVED • The letter carrier• of P.omaroy collecWd

~~meroy letter carriers
~ollect 1,700 poun~s of
ii)od during recentdrive

....

·f.~

•

~

:oyer 1 700 poullde for the Melaa United Methodist Caoperatlve
iP.Irteh' saturdiY,. Pictured wflh some of thellema donatad are
:.,uer carriers Jim Pulllna and Cerl Carmichael •.and Betty Wey·
?etamlller, coordinator&lt; of tha Cooperative Pariah food bank.

.
,.,

••'

.

on

··.·.

• '••

Studeirts at Melga High School and Southem Julllor High have been participating In recy·
cling project&amp; alnce tha beginning of the current ecl!ool year. MHS junior Amy See loads

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

"

•

Arturo Diaz. has said negotiations _to
pay up to $1 OO,OtXi to huy the Fletch-

.

"

·

One . of the Fletch.,·s' ilttnrneys.

Merchants hire Hupp Landscaping for
downtown
project at a cost of $1,545.

..••' .

•
•

hanged if convicted .

world a•eleaner, place in 1-"hich to .
live, some 'Meigs County students
are unwilling to simply stand on
the sidelines. ·
Meigs County Recycling Direc·
lor Kenriy Wiggins pointed out two
Meigs County schools rhat have
acrive recycling programs: Meigs
· · High School near Pomeroy and
Southern Junior High School in
Raeine.
· MHS juniors Amy See· and
Marquita McClintic began the
.recycling program at tbeir school
with assistance from rhe Meigs
County Recycling Office which
provided the recycling bins and
picks up the recyclable marerials
on a.regular basis.
McClintic said a ·school she
allended in Columbus had a recy· ·
ding program and wanted to sec a ·

.

•

KINGSTOWN, St. Vincent
Denying claims hy a West Virginia
couple and South African citizen that
they .were hribed to get 'out of mur·
der charges . Caribhcan oiTici.als have
invitcJ .South African police to in·VCS·
ligate .
,
James and Pcnella Fletcher of
Huntington arc charged with ·murdcrine water-taxi driver Jerome
.Jose ph. Their trial is scheduled io
start in June and they could he

had died of smoke inhalation.
Following; his arresl, Scarberry
was initially 'charged with aggraval·
ed arson and murder. lffound guilty
of murder, Scarberry could have
received life' fn prison.
Lentes also said Scarberry had a
prior felony convicrion for drug trafficking.
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill accepted
the pleas of gtJiity to each charge and,
. as recommfn'ded by Lentes, senrenced Scarberry 10 the maximum on
each counr: two years for arson, 18
monrhs for bilrglary and ·six monlhs
for negligent homicide, a misdemeanor.
Lentes rold•Crow that rhe maxi-

~;~~~~:;~i~n~.ther~ars~on charge, m~m

.•

By DUGGIE JOSEPH
Associated Press Writer

$carberry sentenced

..

•

Mitchell
invites "
inquiry

..

Barker,' Rosemary Fluharty. Paul
Brannon, Sandra McKay, Maxine
Thomas, Susan Castevens and
Rebecca Bentz, custodians; Duke
Pullins, Gary Holter. Paul Brannon•
' Randy Lee an&lt;l Lester Stewart, main·
tenance; Janet Life and Diana Nelson.
accounts payable: Janet Life. Joan
Calaway, Diana Nelson, Laura Hawley, Janet Hoffman. 1Linda Bentz and
Rebecca Bentz, secretaries; Duke
Pullins, Tom ,, McKay and George
. Basim,. ~echanic's: and Arch Rose, .
Kay Glihlan; ~oe Maste~s, George
Con~ued on page 3

'

2 Sectlono, 12 P119e1, 35 cent.
A'Gannett Co. Newtpeper

~·astern approves
.........---School recycling-----i
personnel contracts .·
.

..

'

Mostly cloudy tonight,
Iowa In the upper 30a.
Friday, partly cloudy, high
near 60.
·
·

Kicker:

It was seen again on the ground

along state Route 13~ ncar Clarksburg in Ross County, Sandler said.
. Abo~t 7 p.m., the twister touched
down again ncar Greenland in north·
em · Ross County, he said . It rhen
skipped alo~g lhe ground toward
· Andersonville before lhc weather
service's spotter lost sight of it.

proposal ha s centered on whether the

state will hcncflt hy getting rid or pre·

·

vailing wage
Mcmhcr!'l of .the Hou se Finance
C0111111ittce Vi&gt;tcd . 1'1· 11 Wednesday

night' to send tlic hill to the Repuhli ·
can-controlled House. if the propos· ·
al passes. Go \i. Gcm!!c VoinuvidJ
would likel y si~n il into

lt~W .

Union· leaders ·have said the hill
could cost some construction work·
c&gt;·s ahout' $·1.500 each year. Repuhll-.
cans have said it would save millions
hccausc the stale now pays union negotiated wages w all sciHJrJ) constructi.ml workers.

An attempl hy Democrats
' Wednesday to take the issue out of
the hill failed . Most thought it should
h~vc been considered in a separate
bill.
Rep . . Vernon Syke.s, D:Akron,
said it was wrong to target construction workers without cutting the
money J&gt;aid to ilrchit~cts, contracrors
and even lawmakers .
" How many of us arc willing to
take a j 0 percent, a 2Q percent, or a
30 percent pay cut '! " Sykes asked .
~ut Rep. E.J. Thomas, R-Colum·
bus, defended the elimination Qrprc·
C011tinued on.Page 3

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• .1

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