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                  <text>Spurs take
Duncan In

Ohio Lottery
· Super Lotto:

•

1-~7-41

Klck8r:

8-G-4 4 3-5
Pick 3:

first draft

lloatly cleer tonight,
with fog developing titter

4-5-4

. Sporta on P1ge 5

Pick 4:

mldnlgtit, Iowa Iii 1M 101.
Frldey, a&amp;n~y, hlgha In V..
mlclao..

1•5-4-7

•·
'
\til, 41, NO. 50
01117, Ohio Yllley Putllllhlng c:omp.ny

.

~

Pomeroy-MI~Ieport,

••

2 Sectlaola, ,. PegM, 311 cenl8
A Glnnelt Co. Nez I . 1

Ohio, Thurlday, June 28, 1997

State budget r . fleets 9°/o increase in spending
By AARON MAASHALL
Sentinel Columbua BWNU
COLUMBUS -A carefully crafte4 $36.1 billion two-year state b~get
providing ·an overall nine· pen:cnt increase ~vcr the next two years crwsed
through"the Ohio House Wednesday.
.
The House vote on the budget bill was a bipaniJ!In 93-4 with high praise
heaped oR majority Republicans who negotiated the prickly differences
between Hoose and Senate versions. The bill now J!loves to the desk of Gov.
George Voinovich only needing his signa.ture to ~m~ l~w. He has the power to strike any items from the budg~t pnor to s1gmng 11 mto law ~fore July
I.

'I

.

.

In a budget that p..-tially reflects the result of a court-ordered reform ~
school funding, $10.3 billion, or nearly 30 percent, is devoted solely to pnmary and secondary education, Faced ~itiJ a schqol building probl~~ esti;
mated at $10 billion in·t990, lawmakers saw fit to prov1de SSSO mllhon ln
school building assistance funding.
·~
·

millioo

A majority·of the SS$p
In achool building assistance will be run- mary and secondary schools, $50 million for textboob and other instrucneled into low-wealth distriets in the state. Allhqush those schools in the low- tional materials and $125 million in additional dollars for school building
est five percent will receive lint crack at the building assistanCe, all achools· assistance. The extra money had come from savings found from a reduction
iri the lowest 2S percent of districts by wealth arc potentially eligible for state in welfare caseloads.
money.
..
•
.
In fact, the additions to the budget were enough to stymie most DemocIn Meiss County, Eastem LoCal School. District ranks low enough in ratic criticisms of the Republican-domtnated budgetprocess. However, Stale
wealth (54th) among Ohio's I district~ to potentially receive a share of the Rep. Dan Brady, 0-Cleveland, rose on the floor to state that he was voting
state building money, according to 1996 Ohio Department of Education sta- against the bill over the business tax breaks for financial institutions includ·
tistics.
·
·
ed in the legislation.
Chair of the House-Senate conference committee on, the budget, State Rep.
Also., included in the 2000 page spending plan is an II percent hike to highTom Johnson, R-NewConcord, said that the "majority of the growth" in the er education funding, an expansion of a constitutionally-ch!!llensed achool
"record time budget" goes towards educati011. ''I' m very proud of the effor1 · voucher program, increased funding for foOd banks across the stale, and a
made on this budgeL"
·
·
··
4.5 percent tax cut for individuals.
·
Yesterday's vote technically approved chang~ made by the House-Sen- ·
Firework safety prclvisions, orginally included In a bill peddled by Stale
ate committee from the House's wrsion of the budset passed in March. The Rep. John Carey, R· Wellston, were also slipp¢ iqto the budget following
House
OK'
d_
committee
dec:isions that last week added $80 million for pri:
__
_
. _....;.."'I'
.
.
(
(COntinued on Page 3)

6'

'

Impact of national
Plott hound . .event
._ ma·de on economy
.

.

~

By JIM FREEMAN
making the coonhunters welcpme,
Sentinel Newa Steff
putting up signs rel!ding "Welcome
The dogs and members of the Nationill Plott Hound Association."
National Plott Hounds Association ·, "We have been encouraging busi·
have slightly changed the face ,of the nesses to put up signs welcoming the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
group," said Meigs County EconomBIIflls and stalls, usually inhabit· ic Development Director Ron
ed.by livestock, seem well suited to McDade.
lodgins m.an's best friend. Replacing
· "This not only gives us a .cltance
the usual moos, baas and oinks, to show off our beauty," he ~d .."It
there is the occasional baying of ~ ~l!!~,!!.~!l'lsly , with revenue·
:··;:;i,l,IJ!!~;t~.:m.
motels and 'restaurants." . .,. ~-- .
~
:nilimiat:- ~ng. from
·· ·we cefialnl)-"'irrl.;....pleiiied1t!il'f ll\ey hosted this year by the Shade River chose M¢igs County for their site," he
&lt;;oonhuil~,91 t-s.sociati~, will ha~e said.·~!' hope its successful and that
little loiJg-'tenn ~ffect. on the . fa•r- they cQH.Ie back."
~u~ds, some ate,~ are al~~y con·
If tlij, ,IP:oup was giving a trophy
s1denng t!Je groupseconom1c 1m~t-: for the ,:Cirthest traveled, the winner
on the SUITilUnding area.
would fuost likely be Linda Mack of
· When up to 400 people J!!Ove into J:&gt;lacerVI!Ie, Calif., who · made the
an area for three days, they ha~e to 2,200 R)dt trip to attend the showeat, and some people moved m as her third.national event.
juat 8 SMSI'I aport," Meek ·
CAUFOANIA COONIIUNTEA- I.Jncll Meek . grot,mda, "11'1
early as SuncJay, according to the host
Mack, who arrived Sunday, haS
IIJid,
lidding
lhlt
Mr
llporl encolll'llgM the Vllof
"-vii..,
Cellf.,la
_ol....,..llusodliid
club's president, Bill Spaun.
.
spent most of her time relaxing and
·UM
of
IIIIUre
and
conllt'VItlon.
Plott hoWid ISSihualeata allsndlstt the fll.?b'"
Meanwhile, Spaun has been busy sightseeing. shci has had Plott hounds
eiP!O!H!ii!I!P.•I!p
ltl?rCosi!tJ'*'
trying
to
find
places
for
people
to
since
19&amp;'6.
·
'
"This ;:s· my first time to Ohio," she . Mai:k said she will spend lbout · · Stevens and Mack hav~ been vis· lies, according to Spaun.
. stay.
While. many people-are camping said.
That is hardly surprising in a
S~ overallattendins the event. see- itinlsites in Meigs County. Stevens
at the fairgroun!fs, all the hotels in
Anticipating that all .of Ohio was ing old friends and making new said he was impressed with the region· that caters to other hunters,
· Meigs and.Athens counties are filled, flat, she was pleasantly surprised to ones.
Meigs County · Courthouse · in where ll'St,aurants open early to serve
he said, in addition to hotels in discover ioutheastem Ohio's rugged•. . Ralph Stevens ofO!arlotte, N.c;:., Pomeroy.
deer hunters in the f.ll.
.
· ·Mason' County, W.Va., and most hilly terTa).n.
.
.
"This is a hunting area/' Spaun
huJ~een raising Plott hounds for 35
11)e Meigs County citizens seem
rooms in Gallia County.
Every.I!bdy likes the country, she years. adding tb_at the Plott hound is receptive to hosting hundreds of .said
Some local businesses have been said.
.:
·
. (Continued . on Page 3)
the North Caroltna state dog.
cdonhounds, tbeir owners and farni-

.....

not

.

·sale of farmlanil develop.m ent rig~ts eyed bytlawmakers
u.s,·

COLUMBUS (AP) - State. and ' The
Senate version of ataxfederal legislators believe they can cut package would reduce estate tax·
preserve farmland by allo"!ing farm- . es on farmland if the developmen~l
ers and their heirs to sell or donate the rights - Of _Fonservation easements
." development1.rights to their land,
-have been donated.
Sen. Grace Drake, R-Solon, said
About ItS-states have similar pr'oshe will introduce a bill that would grams in plaqe, and the program was
·. allow state and local governments to included in the . Ohio Farmland
. pay faimers the difference between . Preservation ·l'a5k Force i'ecommen• . the developmental value and agri- dations mJU!e to Gov. George
cultural value of their farmland. The Voinovich Ia,t month.
. · land would continue to be used for
Ms. Drake, a task force member,
agriculture, and ihe farmer would be told The Columbus Dispatch for a
• able to sell it or pass it on to heirs. · story Wednesda'y that she wil~ push

her legislation separately from a bill gomCry' has said current law prOiiibits
being~ to·cover the task force's siate and local governments from
other reci&gt;mmendations. That would buying developmental rights to farm·
allow quicker passage, which wliuld land, but the Ohio Gonstitution does
help counties considering· develop- allow fodegislation enabling such
ment-rights proarams.
·
programs.
· A similar proposal was withdrawn
from the state budget bill over conThe federal proposal, called the
cern about the J,cnnanence of the ·' American Flum and Ranch Protecpta,!. Ms. Drake said her new plan tionAct,'is to help ranners who inherwould allow the leaSe and sale of it land, boi have to sell some or all of
rights and give counties flexibility it to pay the estate taxes.
and conuol. ·
F11111 adVocates say that farms that
Attilrney General Betty Mont- make little money ofU:n have land

and equipment that exceed the thresh·
old for estate taxes.
The tax cut would reduce estate
taxes.by 40 percent for donated easements and be'limited to land within
2S miles of meuopolitan areas.
"We can live with it as a first step
but would like it to be expanded,"
said Chuck Beretz, federal policy
program manager for the American
Farmland Trust.
.
He.said the trust wants to extend
the policy to development rights that
are sold.
·

Sweeping
reduction
il1taxes
faces vote
WASHINGTON (AP) ~ The
House is poised to pass thi: biggest
..tax cut in 16 years, a sweeping $85
billion package with goodies for
middle class families, investors and
businesses. ·
Passage of the Republican tax cut
plan, .which was going to the House
floor today, was expected, since the
· GOP holds a 22 seat edge over
DemocraL•, not counting the chamber's lone inllependtilit.
The plan was a .high priority of .
House Speaker' NeWt Oin8tifh. ~- ·
Ga., who spent a,l&amp;rge. chunk of his
lime this week at ·campaign-style ·
·media events promoting the tax bill.
"This is one of the most important
votes, I think, in mOdem times, ''Gingrich tol.d a House GOP pep rally
Wednesday. ."It 'provides economic
opportunity for more growth, ·and
more jobs, and more wealth creation.:
· "so more Americans can move•

towards prosperity."
'
The Senate, meanwhile, began
debate Wednesday on its version of
tax relief, and was expected to deliberate through Friday.
The House bill, strbngly opposed
by the White House. proposed S135 .
billion in total tax cuts over five
years. offset by about $50 billion in
new revenues, for a net tax cut of $85
· billion.
Major elements included a $500 ·
. tax credit for children under age 17,
which would cost $71 billion over
five years; education tax breaks a'nd
college savings incentives, costing
$31 billion; and cuts in capital gains
taxes, relief from estate taxes and a
reduction in the altcmative minimum
tax.

•

The bill wa.• insulated from
amendments during today 's House
floor debate, except for a substitute
tax pi~ sponsored by House Democrats that focused on the fairness of the
GOP tax cut plan .

Clinton sides. ·with e·PA on ·clean air standards

:Task force

.

may have

WASHINOTON (AP) - · In ~:lear- quality standards, with the econo- a way that srows the Ameri~an econ- tection.
ing the wa'j for tough new air poilu- mists arguing for ways to soften the omy."
"The punishing new standards ...
lion rules. President Clinton cast rules. Browner, accoflling to adminBy all early accounts, that will be are a noose around the neck o.f
aside concerns from some of his top istration sources. stood firm.
unlikely.
.
··American business," complained
economic advisers aild ignored indusWith a growing number of
Industry groups, which have • Thomas Kunn, president of the Edilry criti~ whO sald'the public would Democrats as Well as Repu,blicans in waged a multimillion-dollar cam- ~ son Electric Institute. which reprepay a high price for JIW'Iinal health Congress voicing opposition lo the paign in Congress, within the admin- , sents more than 200 utilities, many of
-benefits.
· . __
.
EPA proposal, industry lobbyists istration and in state capitals around . whom will be key targets of new
COLUMBUS {AP) ....: Will taxes
Instead, · Clinton aided with the ·recently had begun to express guard· the country to rally opponents to the emission requirements.
be going uiJ to pay.for achools? Th,e
head of the Er)~ l'rolection od optimism tbat the White House ~le, sa!d-t~y plan~d to press the · Brown~r, speaking at the White
answer could be clearer next week.
Agency, Carol ·Browner. who has would overrule Browner.
1ssue w1th sylnpatheuc lawmakers. ·House, s&amp;~d the tougher health stanState • Budget Director Greg ,
'
been
Q
.
l
ll
the
pmjdent
to
IOUJhen
But
on
Wednesday,
the
president
"It's clearly up to Congress to pre- ·dards for smog-causing ozone
: Browning said Wednc;sday Jhat he
HII;AAING
TESTIMONY
the
1970
Clean
Air
Act.
sided
with
his
top
environmental
vent
EPA from innicting this hann- ·soot "represent a major step for. ·
. would give members of the Ohio .
It was a .bitter pill for. induslry, enfotcc:r 11nd left· the agency's pro- ful proposal on the American econo- ward" in curtailinJ unhealthy air that
. School Fuliding·Task Force a list ne111 Gov. George
week with possible solutions to tbe ill he Ulltlolll.. 1 wlb •••..... ·which aot admiUina clef.-"' Slid 't -·• for tou..._ health standards tor my." said Jerry Jasinowski, president makes life more difficult for asthma :
mymgib.,Eo;~·
Ohio~ . nbw ~d lib the blttle Co~ ~
euentillly iniiCL o( the National Association of Man- sufferers and cuts short the .liVe$ of .
•achoot fundiq iss~. ·
The task force; which includes Flindln_ Tllak P0rc:e et 1M ......, ~- , .. ..
. Clinton i!! a speech before ·a-lam· · uf.Cturers.
.
I S,OOO elderly Americans each year.
qdeylnCoiiii'IIIIIIL · · ButoBJ!viron!MntaliltaMd health ily , forum in Nashville, Tenn.,
Sen. Alfonse D'Amato, R-N.Y., · "Thecurrent5tandards ... ~vef.- . ·
:Qov. George Voi~vich aiwi'lelisla· houll
· idvoc:alea ~ . . .ic lbout the ~~:knowlodJed ~ new air pOllution pledged this wee It to fight any . too many Ameri~an~ · at risk, 100
tlve leiders, jslryiilg to ~;ome up with , .
.
iisbter ~ on 'moS"'*-ina rules "will be somewhat 'controver· attempt to delay or weaken the stan- many children at risk," she said.
a solution to the Ohio Supreme up one pen:cnt. "
Voinovk:h
WMD't
willing
to
~k
'
ozooe
lnd IOOllhlt ihe EPA will iuue sial" but sal~ he had concluded they ·dards. At the same time, the U.S.
The new requiremenu, fint pn1. :
. Coiut's order to.4ev~lop a new fund. ·
about the specifiCI included in the . next.IIIOIIdL ·
Were .R II ~ d to ,proteCt the elderly Conterence of Mayors voted at their posed by the EPA last NOVCII)ber, will
in1 sySiem.
·
qationaJ convention to oppose the limit cn:one, an inlfodient of 111101. to
· The coon ruled in Mlln:h that the plan ..~UI he did IJY the final ctew,IJ.· . "'l'hQ in ..... vil:lory," said PiuJ . and children with llthma.
are be1111 wprked out.
'
0. flillinp of the AmerkaD Luna
"I think kids ou""' 10 be healthy," EPA plat\.
0.08 parts 'per million, !llllnplled •
· .stale doel not provide allloroqh and
"Jt's
1oin1
to
cost
a
111(,1'
·
AeiiOCia'ioll,
--adilll
Clinton
Clinia.decllred,~naiiJllliiCIII$
~les
DiBo~a.
presl&lt;!ent
of~
with0. 12parts"'''milliofteurrent~y, :
efficient odlication aylllltll. The l.el·
.illabnlllllll approve the
piiCk· · VOiaovidl Aid. •:J cloll't wu&amp; to blllllldinabyBIO:NI*".,....thiti from'illdullryamup~lhal-health American Petrotcum lnshtute, said IIJid make other clllnpa 10 ~~~ore
apeculllle on how JaiK:b."
. . musiyt lotlby" by indutry 10 1ry to . ~wiD NqUinl COIIIy pall..X. ' the new polllllion C0111101s will threat- accullllely rafloct air qai!IJY owr 1 •
.
....--. .. "Nqt week 1111ie w.k to 1alk
Senile l'reliden&amp; Rich•d Fi. ., kllliiiPA propoul.
iliiHtl.oll llld prtmcle. ~ Jen "thouuftda of Inner city jobs" by Ion..,- lime period.
·
about speclftca," Brawnl111 ~R-Cincianlli,lllid he·• "l*t• plln
For~ Browner llld 1101111 of helkll beneflll.
'·
I::~~nedoutathemoJ-pl~II .. For lho flnt_tltM.
t
1
• · Same llltl olfict.I,have IIJUI'•· will 10 tint to the Sellllle Finance . the I* u deat'IUip ICOIICIISiic idvilm
"'Wolt wiih 111," he uqettllili c:tk·
-H'e 'l'llailltat
rues w1 WI11~IUIIellllc:rDICopic:
plllic:.... ar
- that tho lillie's aalea tilt could 10 Commi~.
llld Nlllod over the ~ new ilr·. . ict.._·~ ·We wiJI find a way to do this In . · not aipificantly improve health pro- soot, lhal are u amall u 2.~ microns.

·solutions ·
next week

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�Co1n1nenta1y
.The_·n~y .Sentinel
'1:.sttlblisfw( in 1.9f8.
111 Cowt lbMt, Pomeloy, Ohio

ISH '182·21118 • Fu 112·2117

...•.

'

A Gannett Co. Nawspa.,er
ROBUIT L. WINGETT
Publ.......
.

'

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Genenll MMaglr

,

MARGARET I SEW
Cunbcl1r

__ ...

Pege2

IJ Janph 8p11r
It'&amp;bec:ominiJiredictablenow:As
the mid-June universary of the
Wllerple burglary approached, I
swore to myself that I would not join
the usual gaule of commentators in
a rehash of the seamy affair. Then I
saw a story about the scandal that gPt
under my skin ud I found myself
revisiting the subject anyway.
Several things got to 111e this year.
One was the AP survey in which
68 percent of the people polled
thought Watergate was just another
Washington scandal, and half of the
respondents couldn't recall any of the
. details.
Another was the way conservalives tried to diminish Nixon's sins by
suggesting that Bill Clinton's
escapades have been worse. Indeed,
Newt Ginsrich doesn't seem to have
beheld a Clinton activity that doesn't

'

ByTOMRAUM

Asncllted Preu Writer

I

I

Letters .to the editor
Cemetery upkeep poor

defeueofN'utM'snotOriousenemies arand jury refused to indict).
Jist: "If anything terrible ever hapGo down to "'K.'' Columnist
peaed to anyone on that list •• other ·Joseph Kraft's telephonC wu ~
than a lost invitatioa to a White by a pair of White House opel'lllives
House Christmu pany •• it has yet to who propped a ladder against his
house and crawled through a window.
Joseph
be diacovered." '
I"
Where to begin with a refutation
On to "S." CBS newsman Danid
of this rubbish7
Schorr was invesligated by.the FBI,
rehabilitated as a talk radio host
How aboutU!atenemics list7Let's at Nixon's personal behest, on the
spealcs openly of "bringing down Bili start with "A." ' ..
ruse that he was being consi!lered fi&gt;r
and Hillary."
· ·
.
Syndicated columnist Jack Ander· a high-level government pbsition.
Another was • column by Patrick son was the first name on that rota,
Nixon instructed his abbet~ to
Buchanan that was c~Jcablock with and 11e and his associates suffered plug information leaks, and thus was
. shameless nonsense about how the plenty. I know because I was· one of born the "plumbers" who bui'J!1ed
media. the "'political establishment" them. Anderson's tax returns were their way to infamy. NiJton wanted to
and the "American left" allegedly audited. Our telephone records for pull pranks on his foes, and the notoconspired to take Dick down. This home and oft"ICC were secretly sub- rious Donald Segretti was hired to do
frtim a man who sat like a hobaoblin pomaed by the FBI. The CIA sur- the job. Nixon approved a plan by an
?n Nixon's s~lder and g?*'ed him veilled us. The Pentagon investigal· aide named Tom Charles Huston that
. mto some of h1s most foohsh. ourra- ed us at least a dozen times. One of called for black bag jobs and wiretaps
aeous and contentiou~ political mis· QUI' gana. Les Whi~n. was airested . on political dissidents.
takes.
. .
If 'by the FBI and charged with "pos·
It could be· fairly ..argued ' that
. I especially liked Buchanan's session of stolen documents." (A Nixon oversaw a criminal presiden·
cy. Al the time of his resignation,
les~ authorities estimated that he or ·
his minions could have been charged
with theft. flight to avoid prosecution
or to ,avoid testifying, distributing
false campaign literature, intercepting
mail, malicious· mischief, extortion.
embezzlement, falsifyins. govern·
ment docu111ents, defrauding the U.S.
government, income tax violations,
blackmail, campaign finance viola·
lions, contempt of Coristess, con·
tempt of coun, perjury, lying to the
FBI, . bribery, arson, wiretapping,
· buggmg and much more.
And finally, the Nixon vs. Clinton .
calumny.
·
You could disassemble Bill Clin·
ton into a thousand pieces and you
woul~n 't find hate. He is politically
amorphous. He is conniving at times.
But he is not evil and he is not malicious.
· Richard Nixon was defined by
hate. It coursed 'like a plasma through
his body and oozed from his ears. It
~bilitated him and ultimately led to
h1s defeat and everlasting disgrace.
Sorry about that, ye ardent
alchemists, but fact is fact
.
Joseph Spear Is a ayndlcated
writer for Newspaper 'Enterprise
·

House GOP --acobins' damage party's appeal
By Murton Kondracke

spending; and reducing gove~nt wJul1!.£nemy flesh is not available, loud, harsh, finger-pointing match
Instead of acting like the winners are all GOP o,bjectives. Clinton has ) hl!fsWt after that of brethren.
with Anney in a Capitol hallway. And
of the f996 elections, House Repub- accepted thef!J;,the ,only question is,
What Ginsrich did to undermine before long, Gingrich may publicly
licans are behaving as if they were how will they be implemented?
former House Minority Leader Bob call out Armey or one of his follow'_
Michel. R-Ill .• Gingrich's No, 2 man, ers and dare him to challenge him for
still the minority.pany. If they keep. _ _ _ _ _ _ _....;...;..._
it up, they could be back in that posi·
Rep. Dick Armey, R-Texas. is doing speaker.
.
Morton
lion soon enough:
·
The conventional wisdom •• probto Gingrich now •• pefllaps even ·
moo: nakedly.
'
·
ably correct .. is that I~ is intrigue is
All historic precedents call for the
Republicans to score big gaiAs in the .
Within that framework.· there is
Usua)ly, in the Michel days, Gin· all inside: lhe·Beltway stuff that the
1998 elections, but if they repeat per· every opponuilicy for the .GOP to · srich was respectful in public toward public cares linle about. On the othformances such as they've turned in push right-~ as it's now doing on Cllll- his leader even as he undercut him er hand, it.bespeaks ~tn extremist cast
over the pilst two weeks, voters may ital gains taxes, funding for the behind the scenes. At a press confer· of mind that the public has repeated·
conc:lude that they don't know .what · National Endowment for the Arts and ence last week, Anney didn't even ly shown it distrusts.
to do with prime time.
Medicare.
hide his contempt, tellins questioners · As a result of 1995 extremism.
. It was mistake enoush for party
There is even room for Republi· to "have a nice day" when they asked Republicans nearly lost control of the
leaders to yield to hard-liners and cans .to pick fights that will serve their if Gingrich could be an effective House in 1996. winnins by only
play politics with disaster relief. To base constituencies or help define dif· leader.
9.700 votes in the closest tO districts
follow that up by pillorying those ·ferences between the panics. ExamGingrich is SCIIfl)'inp; to pretend and 200,000 popular votes nationwho tried to cut GOP losses indicaleS ples are the ban on panial·birth abor· that nothing unusual is going on, just wide out of 87 million cast.
a.zealotry that can only damage the . lions and the balanced budget amend· a "self·f~ l!ledia frenzy," but even
As Mark Gersh of the National
pany's appeal.
menl.
he acknowledged to David Broder of · Commillee for an Effective Congress
House Speaker Newt Gingnch,RWhat Loll and Gingrich realized the Washington Post that "sotne of points out, of 32 seats won by 4 Jx:r·
Ga., along With Senate Majority from the outset, though, was that our ConserVative critiC$ are SO used to cent or less in 1996, 21 are Republi·
Leader Trent Lou, R-Miss., made majority status in Congress brings being on defense that they automati· can and II are. DemocratiC, giving the
exactly the right calculation after the with it a responsibility lo help gov- cally yell; 'Sack the quarterback' Democrats a chance to retake the
1996 elections were over: The pub- ern the counlry.
even when it's their quanerback on .House.
lic is sick of partiSan warfare. It wants
But 'that idea has never sunk in the field:"
·•
Even if that doesn't happen, the
problem-solving action, and there is . among the Jacobins of the pany, who
The fact is that those doing the GOP may well blow the opponunity
no alternative to compromise, given believe in permanent revolution and yelling are in Gingrich's own back· to score· big gains in 1998 as a pre·
the fact that a Democrat sits in the accuse any leader who senles for less field. When the speaker tried to res· lude to a full takeover of the govern·
White House.
than total victory of committing trea· cue his party from the 1p.r. tiouncing menl in 2000.
Moreover, even though former son.
it got from holding up.disaster relief
In fact, the way t!ouse Republi··
Rep. Vin Weber, R·Minn., may overIn a sense, it's poetic justice that to the upper Midwest, he was cans are behaving, if the public
state when he says that President Gingrich is now the victim of revo- o,pliosed by alinosl all of his subor- decides it wants a Republican in the
Clinton is an "Eisenhower Republi· lutionary fervor. He, after all, was the din•te le~rs.
·,
White House in 2000, it may elec:t a
can," the fact is that the playing field Robespierre who first conspired with.'
Armey, moreover, gave aid and Democratic Consress in order to
on which deals are made between in the GOP to challenge . moderate comfon to firebrands who were call- save the counb'y from revolution.
Congress and the White House is · leadership and then led conservatives ing for Gingrich's head, much as the
(Monon Koildracke Is executive
fundamentally Republican territory. to triumph.
Jacobins got 'Robespierre's.
·
editor of Roll CaD, the newspaper
In the process, thougli, he gave his
Balancing the budget. cutting tax·
And Gingrich knows it. Last of Capitol Hill.)
.
es, reforming Medicare, cutting followers such a taste for blood that, week, Gingrich ~aS' observed in ·a

Kondraclce

..

Advent of women's sports,has changed America ~
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H'V testing offered

Wster q1,111//ty Improved

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W.VA.

~

IJliece in state money is appropri'ted for flood mitiptioa and llbetement1n
Gallia. Meigs and Lawrence Counties.
Regionally, Southern Ohio should benefit from $875,000 in state dol~
poured into a Southern Ohio Appalachian Initiative. The futldi'na is broken
into.three segments: $500,000 to create professional development~~
for Appalachian-region teachers and administratorS. $250,000 to establish
benchmark data on Applachian schoOl disuict performance and $1~.000 to
dev'E'J op a peer .review and coaching model for le\!Chers in the reJion.

Ralph Macomber

Ralph Macomber, 8L. of Bowles Road in DelC.ter, died on ~~~:~June
25, 1997 at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis, following an
ill·
ness.
·
He was born ·on August 17, 1915 in Vinton, son of the
Macomber and Benha Evans Macomber. .
' •I
· Memorial services for Edith Humphrey Reed, 93, Athens, who died SatHe was.a retired bus driver for the. Meigs Local School
'· ·
. urday; June 21, 1997, at Overbrook Nursing Center in Middleport, will be
ber of the DelC.ter Church of Christ•.a veteran of the U.S. Army
: '·
' Tuesday, 6:30p.m. at the Episcopal Church of the Good Shepherd in Athens. War II, a member of Star Grange No. 778 in Salem Center and
..
Memorial contributio~ may be made to the Episcc;&gt;pal Church of the Good
American Legion Post 161 of Vinton.
·
Shepherd, 64 Ul)iversity Terrace, Athens, Ohio 45701.
Surviving are a son and daughter·in•law, Richard dod Jan,l,te Macomber
of Langsville; a brother and sister-in-law, DOnavin and ·
Macomber
' of Radcliff; two grandsons, Richard "Chip" and
both of
a step-grandson,
Cheshire; a grimddaughter, Stacy Macombe~
tnen4, tylarie Cardwell
Harold V. Rice of 305 Mallard St. , Las Vegas, Nev., formerly of Middle·
Ryan Watson of Point Pleasant, W.Va.; and a
. By The A11oclated Prell
of Vinton.
port, died on Wednesday, June 25, 1997.
The National Weather Service has th~ perfect4'ormula for Ohio on FriBesides his parents, he was
by his wife, Nina N.
He was a career Marine and a combat veteran during the Korean and Viet·
. ·day and the weekend: abundant sunshine and low humidity. .
Macomber, whom he married
and two sisters, Merle
nam conflicts.
·
·
Temperatures.the ne&lt;l fe.w days will range from •the upper 70s in the north·
and Madge Macom~r.
·
He retired as a first sergeant
.
.east to the low -and mid-80s elsewhere.
Services will be held on Friday, J.une 27, 1997 at I p.m. in the Dexter
He was married to theformer Beuy Harrington of Rockford, Ill., who sur·
No rain is in the forecast until last Sunday or Monday.
Church
of Christ, with R11ger Watson of(iciating. Burial will follow in the
vives. Also surviving are a son and daughter-in-law, Jeffrey (Diane) Rice,
... The record-high temperature for this date at th~ Columbus weather sta:
.
·
·
and a daughter, Michelle (Bob) O'Sullivan; l~o brothers, Chester (Sylvia) Standish Cemetery in DelC.tcr.
lion was tOO degrees in 19S2 while the record.low was 48 in 1961. Sunset Rice of Union City, Calif., and Denver (Nora) Rice qf Middleport; at1 aunt;
Friends may call at the Birchfield Funeral Home in Rutland from 2-4 and
.tonight will be at 9:04 p.m. and sunrise Friday at 6:05 a.m.
7-9 p.m. on Thursday, June 26, 1997.
a granddaughter; andseveral nieces, nephews and cousins.
Weather forecast:
Memorial service and Masonic service will be hel!l on Saturday, July I 2,
. Tonight ..Mostly clear with fog developing after midnight. Lows from the
I997 at the First Christian Church in Las Vegas. The eulogy will be given
-upper 50s to the lower 60s. Light north wind.
·
by Dave Diles, a former classmate and lifetime friend.
· Friday...Mostly sunny. Highs in the middle 80s.
Full Marine Corps military rites, will be conducted at lbe cemetery:
Units of the Meigs County Emer· Hospital, Syracuse squad assisted;·
Friday nighi...Ciear. Lows in the lower 60s. .
Memorial contributions may be made to Hospice, 1830 Sahara Avenue,
I :25 p.m., Nye Avenue, Pomeroy.
gency Medical service recorded eight
Extended forecast: '
Suite 102, Las Vegas, Nev. 89104.
Ellenora
Landers, Holzer Medical
calls
for
assistance·Wednesday.
Units
Saturday... Mostly clear. Highs in the mid 80s.
Center;
.
Sunday.. .A chance of showei;S and thunderstorms during the day, citherrespondins included: .
1
9:43
p.m.,
Bullern\lt
Avenue,
V
CENTRAL DISPATCH
·wise mostly clear. Lows in the mid 60s and higl\,s in the mid 80s..
PomefOY,
Nelly
Morris,
VMH,
Monday .. ;A chance of shbwers and thun~erstorms d.uring the day, otherAlben Marion Von ; 66, .Marietta, died Thursday, June 26, 1997 at his
12:31 p.m,, John Street, Syracuse,
Byron Watson, Veterans Memorial Pomeroy squad assisted . . ·
..wise panty clouljy. Lows in the mid 60s and highs in the uppel 80s.
horne. ·
MIDDLEPORT
Born April20, 1931 in Circleville, son of Ethel Thomas Voll of Pomeroy,
Plott' hound
2:37 p.m., Overbrook . Nursing
and the late Alben M. Voll Sr.• he 'Was retired from Karde• and owned and
Center. Chester Hulton, VMH, Rut· .
·
.
· . ..
operated Voll's Cafe in Marietta. Most recently, he was employed by Bank
(Continued from Page 1)
land squad assisted. .
Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan to comply, $60 and costs; Lester Orie.
·
The people here are friendly.
POMEROY
processed 22 cases on Monday.
Stewan, Rutland, spe\ld, $46 and
He was a U.S. Air Force veteran of the Korean Conflict, and a member Mack and Stevens observed, with
8:41a.m., Portland Road, Mildred
Forf~iting bonds wl)re: Patricia costs; Dusty Tobias, Gahana, failure of the American Legion Post 64, Marietta.
·
Mack saying she has been to shows Parsons, 'Pleasant Valley Hospital,
Payne,Mi!ldle~X?n• .spe~..S67; , Erl~ to cpmflly, $60 an&lt;\ costs; Chest~r
In addition to his mother, he is survived by hi~ wife, Sally J. McKe~pa that were disrupted by animal rights Racine squad assisted;
.
Walcutt, vlashintgon; W.Va., stop Green, possession. $113 and costs, Voll, whom he married on April IS, 1962; a son and daughter-in-law, Chri'sto- activists.
2:44' p.m., Syracuse Pool, Krystle
sign violation, $83; Kimberly Roush. public intoxication, $113 and costs; pher and Holly Voll of Cincinnati; a daughter and son-in-law, Allison and
The group's members are panicu- Haag, VMH.
.
'
·
larly impressed with the accommo:Mason, W.Va., assured clear dis· Mark B~lvins, Columbus, operating George Harlow of'Oak Hill; and four grandchildren.
SYRACUSE '
~'tllncc.' $1!3\ ' Cheryl' Jodan, Clifton, under·' suspension, $62 and ·costs;
Memorial sl.rvlfies will be held ala later date at the family's convenience, dations at the Rock Springs Fair·
I :52 p.m., Portland Road, Mildred
'W.Va., expired tags, $83; Patricia underage consumption. $88 and under .the direction of the Mariena Chapel of the Cawley &amp; Peoples Funer· grounds.
.
Parsons, :VMH; .
,
Snyder, Pickerington, speed, $64; costs; Janice Breeding, Columbus, al Home.
•ry• ~
·
·
''The fairgrounds here are the best ·
11;44'p.m.. volunteer fire depart"
Robert lawson, Pomeroy, speed, $65; consuming ,in a !JIOtor vehicle, $83
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Washin~on County Home I've ever been to," Stevens·said, cQin- menl and squad to Syracuse Trailer
Debra Evans, Pomeroy, speed, $64; and costS; Virginia Doerfer, Racine, Nursing Service .and Hospice, 900 Third. St., Marlena, Ohio 45750.
plimenting the county for its fair· . Park, smoke odor.
·'.NicholaS Smith, Racine, speed, $6S; - traffic light violation, $63 and costs.
!
grounds featuring camping sites with
·Justin Young. Long Bottom, speed, seal Beh violation, $25 and costs;
water and electricity.
'$70.
Donald Hendricks, Syracuse, speed,
Shade River Coonhunter AssociFined were: Robert H. Taylor, $25 and costs; James Counts, Syra·
Dorothy A. Woodruff, 65, Athens, died Wednesday, June 25, 1997 at Doc, ation Treasurer Oscar Smith pointed
·Pomeroy, FRA suspension, $65 and elise, child restraint, $100 and costs; tors Hospital North in Columbus.
.
out the different license plates he has
:costs, speed, $47 -and costs: Kelly Troy McDaniels, squealing tires, $63
Born Aug. 10, 1931 i,n Pomeroy, daughter of the ~ate Cecil Frost and Chloe seen atthc fairgrounds as of Wednes·
Winter, Pomeroy, FRA suspension, and costs; Karen Saltsman, Racine, S. Gainer Frost Rinehan, she was a retired nurse's rude, and, a former employ- day afternoon - a day before the
·$100 an'd cosis; David Pierce, driver's view obstructed. $63 and · ee of the Angel of Mercy Nursing Home and ~ussell's Nursing Home in event officially began.
· ·Pomeroy: failure to comply, $63 and costs.
Albany.
Smith and Spaun observed plates
.costs; Raben Flowers, Racine. failure
She is survived by a son, James Virgil McHaffie of Athens; a daughter, . from California, Missouri, North
·
Rebecca Lynne Hudnall of Athens; seven grandchildren:.and two sisters and · Carolina, South Carolina, Iowa, Virbrothers-in-law, Gladys and Lawrence Farley of Londonderry, and Louise ginia and Tennessee.
and Larry Farley of L.ong Bottom.
·
·
.People take their dogs seriously,
She was preceded in death by her husband, .Hollie Woodruff Jr.; and by he said.
·
a daughter, Alice Frances McHaffie. .
·
· .
For its pan, the NPHA is wor~ing
' ,J'
Services will be 1. p.m. Saturday in the Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home m hard to be sood neighbors, Spaun
·'
Albany,
with the Rev. Bud Abbott officiating. Burial will follow in the Rock · said. No alcohol . or firearms arc
to
help
.her
husband
bring
a
fish
he
By The Asaoclated Press
Springs
Cemetery,
Pomeroy. Friends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 . allowed al any events including the
·hail
caughl'on
board
their
boat
w~n
· Storms that swepi through north·
p.m.
Friday.
nights hunts. · which are scored by
a.
high
wave
hit
the
boat,
knockms
"east Ohio blew down some trees and
judges
on a points-only basis.
power lines in at least three counties her overbollrd. Kirby fell overboard
"We
want people to know we
·and led to high waves that knocked trying to help his wife, the Coast
aren't going all over the county
Guard said.
•
IWO Lake Erie boaters overiJOard.
killing things," he said.
The two boaters were rescued
Lodge meytlng
Vacation Bible School will be held
•.Wednesday night by the Coast Guard
Middlepon Lodge 363 F &amp; AM July 7 through II from 6:30 to 9 p.m. ·
11 few miles off Vermilion. Kenneth
will hold its regular meeting Tuesday, at the First Southern Baptist Church
Kirby III and his wife, Judy, from the
Vetera111 Memorial
7:30p.m. at the Middlepon Temple. in Pomeroy.
FRI, SAT, .. ..N
Vennilioo area, were pulled out of the
Wednesda'Y' admissions - Chester Refreshments will be served.
JOEPESCI,
·· water with only min'or cuts and Hutton. Middlepon.
DANNY
GLOVER IN
Boll order lifted
GONE FISHIN ,.
. scrapes after they had spent about
Wednesday discharges - Bonnie
The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
AND
· tllree hours in the lake, the .Coast Walker.
District has lifted a boil advisory for
TlMAUENIN
BUDDY~
Holzer Medical Center
Ouard said.
Pine Grove Road from the Morning
JUNGLE JUNGLE'"
ONE
EVENING
.SHOW 7:30
.. ·Coast guard spokesman Dennis
Discharges June 25 - Patricia Star intersection to Township Road
STARTING FRIDAY
·. Schaefer said Mrs. Kirby was trying Johnson, Bo\1by Spurlock, Stella 19. and Salser Road.
JIM CARREY IN
' ,.
I!Iessing. ·t;'hillip Pickering, Debbie
The results of a sample taken
UARUAA 00"
Coughenour, Vanessa Jacks, Hazel Tuesday ~ .considered safe.
ONE EVENINO SHOW 7:30
Th~
Sentinel Rhodes, Vicki McGuire.
VBS pluuaed
• •
•
(Publlsbec{:irilh
permlssloa)
~" .
(USPS '21~)
·
. Wild Frontier Bible Theme Park

·'

Edith Humphrey Reed

::Low humidity forecast
·. ~thi'.ough state on Friday

Harold V. Rice

Squads respond to calls

·AI be-rt
. M. "oil

ev.ent

.'Po·meroy Mayor's Court

Dorothy. 'A.·w· oo'druff .

'·Stormy condition.s
. send
. two bo.aters overbo·a·rd .

Meigs announcements

Hospital news

.

Daily

fublithed every oftemoon. Monday lbroqb
Nd&amp;Y. Ill CO!In So .. Pomeroy, Ohio. by the'
(lido \IIIIey Pubtllhina c...,.ny/Oaftl!'lll:o..
~. Oltio 4S769, Ph. 992·2 1S6. S&lt;cond·
flau ,..,.,. paid ao Pomeroy, Ohio.
· .....-r1 'l'hl AIIMJCiated Prrt~. and the Ohio
Jlfewlpaper ~uocillli~. ,

f\08'TMASTBR: Send oddreu eorrmion' co

11oo [)gjly Seooinel. Ill coun St .. Pomeroy.
Ohio4l769.

. SVISCtitPTION RATIS .
. 87 Conttrer--

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on a dne. Jl~, or 12 month bQ&amp;is. Credit will~

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No a~pd!MI by ·malt pmilincd Ia .,...
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"multiracial" ,boK. fnger says
checks both the black and Asian boxes.) ·
:
·Many black and Hispanic activis}
groups oppose the "multi" ide.t
.because it could diminish their off'l'
cill ~umbers •• and clout. Moreove~ .
a swnch to multi oould make it diifi•
\cult for scholars and. Policy wonkt
w~ need historical continuity wid!
eather data. ·
,
There are protJ.blysome technical
comp!'l)rnises available that can tel
.both sides get what they want But~
multi idea is important. In the cou"'l
of a PBS "Think Tank" intervie~
with S~n. Daniel P. Moynihan, I sai4 ·
that our sovernment is "nce-crazy. "•
He said, "The gaveniment is race::
crazy.... Every appointment i a ques-.
~on of race, relipon, gendet •• it's;
JUS~ the opposite of the 'American·
,creed. Bthnicity is more auertive:
,(now)than it wu."
..
TJie multi boa is one &amp;OQCI, &amp;VItl• bollc Rlponse to rKe-ci'IZi..... ·
Politicians alld columnists could r.Jk :
about It fcnver without mut:b lml-t. :
But naer Woods put a hv · - : .
f.:e and a winnina penonallty 10
• ·'t'

William Jack Carr, 85, Gallipolis, died Tuesday, June 24, 1991 at his residence.
Born Dec. 25, 1911 in Gallipolis, son of the late William "Pete" Carr and
Lillie Mae Arnold Fields, he was retired from Holzer Medical Center after
42 years of service.
·
.
He was a member of the Paint Creek Baptist Church, Gallipoli$. A manager and member of the Gallian Baseball Team, he was also a SO-year mem·
'ber of the' Ancient York Lodge No. 33 PHFA},J-Past Grand Master.
He was also preceded in death by his wife,tlazel P. Bentley Carr; a broth·
er, Dale Fields; and two sisters, Madge Lyons and Aileen Lewis.
.
. Surviving are three daughters, Jackqucline Jenkins of Col~mbus, Juha
Qualls ofMiddleport, and Alice Trent of Dayton; two sons, Wilham St~rgess
Carr of Pacheco, Calif., and Ronald Carr of Columbus; 10 grandchll~ren,
eight ~-grandchildren, II great·great·grandchildren; a brother, Dana F1eld~
of Chillicothe; and numerous nieces. nephews and cousins.
.
. Services will be 2 p.m. S~turday in the Paint Creek Baptist Church, w1th
the Rev. Dennis Hurt officiating. Burial will be in the Pine Street Cemetery.
Friends may call at Waugh-Halley· Wood Funeral Home, Gallipolis, from 5·
· 9 p.m. Friday.
.
.
The body will
lie
iri
state
one
hour-before
the
funeral
service.
.
.

•

Snear

~~~~~~~~~~--~~------~~~~~~------~~~~~~--~~~~iation.

(Contlnulcl from Pllge1)
controversy over a provision that leplized small, COIIIUIJII[ fircworb ill Ohio.
Abo included in the bill is $2SO,OOO in each fiJul )'llr for a ltunl F'm:
Dep.bnent Revolvin1 Loan Fund that CIRy had JOUibL Locally, SSO.~

William Jack Carr

make Walei'J!ate look like child's
play. Watergate flll:o lllljlremo G.
Gordon Liddy. who spent fow years
i the slammer and has now been

Dear Editor,
Lately we have made severai trips to
This letter is in reference to the his grave also and we always find it
poor upkeep of the Riverview Ceme- . in the very best of condition. The
tery on Middlepon Hill.
·
grass is alwan neacly mowed and we
Since my father passed away last never see a weed.
August, my family and myself have
I think .it is a real shame that we
made many visits to his gravesite and . never find our own city cemetery
we are saddened and uhameCI by looking as nice. I also think it is a dis.
.
,
what we usually find. The srass is grace to our lost loved ones as well
do girls do all !lie time? Now, more glot. Now, is it happens, I no longer
almesl five to six inches high at many · as our families to have'to see the final By Ben Wlllblnberg ·
' 1've !lever been to a counb'y. often than before. I know. They do have any desire to hit small, Sta·
times and in many cases where there . resting pl~~:es of ow family niembers
are smaller headstones the grass and this way. This letter is certainly not where someone doesn't tell you, spons. It cail only be a net plus for tionary and defenseless ball. But
weeds are overtaking them. .
meant JO offend anyone, but maybe "This place is really sports-crazy." humanity that so many more people some people do, . and if Woo$ is
I know the cemetery is a lot to just open some eyes to the ptoble111, Howcome?Jiecausesportsaregreat.
l.tl. u
·
bringipgthemout,' fine. (Panicularmaintain, but if the workers main· and hopefully get something do,ne even, occui~ly, baseball. As much
80 rrllu80 fl(i
ly line because in my pension plan I
Wning it can not keep it properly then about it
· u IICX and politics, sports are n6t only now p11118ke resularly m die,·e or- · have some shares in a company that
.
the.city should hire more help.
Nu Swartz Jlll'l .of the human c~ition, they phin-drenched transcendental high sells aotf equipment.)
My husband's father is buried in
Fa,e W._ shlpe it and reflect it.
offered by competitive sports.
· But nger .._also changed Amer·
Consider, say, the United States Of
I love watching women's sports. I ican politics. Our newest hero c8tts
the GraVel Hill Cemetery in Cheahile. ·
Middleport
America.
·
can imagine myself in their league. I ·himself&amp; "cablinasian," that is, part
This last weekend saw the birth of bet I could return ~ of Steffi C.ucui111, pan bl~k. part (Ameri·
the Women's National Basketball Graf's first serves ••· before she ran can) Indian and part Asian. As it hapAuociation, replete· wit!J network me off~ coun. I cannot imagine pens, Woods' sensational emergence
Dear Editor,
friends llldlor partner.
television,
big-time sponsors and tal· returning Pete' Sap~pras'_ serve. I QCCUJ'I!XI just when Americalis will be
Friday is National HIV Testing · Early detection is vir.J to you and
Day. Planned Parenthood of South- · those you love. To make an lppoiat- ented athletes o(ihe female persua· could im.,ine playina 'leveral min· . ·making Iii im~t symbolic choice
~t Ohio offers l1od) anonymous and ment ~I Pllllned Pare"'hood of sion. The.opener, the New :York Lib- utes of half-court basketball · with abOut race• a re81m in which symconfidential HIV teaU; On Friday, Sout'-1 Ohio at: Athens, ~3-6979: erty vs. the Los Angeles Spuks. was- SOlne of the shoner women .profes· . bolism oan be as important as sub.&lt;
Planned Parenthood of Southeast Chillicothe, 174-2948; Oallipoli1, n'I much of a pme. S.UIIday 's conte.st sional players, althoallh it would : SWICC •• and indeed, ·can become
·
.
Ohio will offer a "two for the pme 446-0166; Jackson, 286-$496; between the Phoenix Men:ury aRd the 1surely lie amusing fci( dien). I cannot substance.
Owtotte Stina wu somewhat better. 1imagine playing. wi~ Micbar:l JorAt issue is the questi~nnaire for
,
.
· of one" test. .We CIICOUI1IIe you to Lopn, 385-3476.
Butuonewho~wtbcillonishing
.dan.Ican'teveounagmereadlingup
the
year 2000 · decenDJal census.
:make an appointment for younelf,
Kay R. 'AdD~,
play
of
the
American
womeil's
basu
·hilh
as
Luc
Lonpy's
nose.
The~~
no~ more t1)an 2 million
.
AIIMM
ketball team during the Atlanta . 'J'!Ielidvelltofwomen:uportshu !Dulbnc.lalchildren,~thenumber
Olympica, let me suaelt tliat die cflanled America, for the better; to.-· 11. JfOW)DJ. The ~ 11 mde .m.t
c:oune of thinenture.will be 'ucen- bOth pldc:n. ..
·
auxed-race AmeriCans sbould not
f.lar Ediror,
danL
•• Tilhbout cha!IPI;..Ainerica. · have to (I) 'chooll their identity
I woulcllite 10 be the fin! to q,n.
AII'Oiden bow, I '-ve PIOblems Tjaer Woods did it twice in the coune bllod on the ~ of one or the other
p•l• the Pomeroy Waw Dlplrtwith ...,ects of the so-cllledreminisl of a couple of weeks nJ1"111811ia hu of their
or (2) dol:I.,. themrevolution. Not about the lpOIIS pan, . brousht an Inn)' of "nger•s Thlops" .elves ' other, u a 1JN1CC alien
~ for the JOOd water we n final.
thoulh. AI a boy, I wondered: What to the links, younpr and more poly- mipl. I~ there oulht 10 be a
ly aettins.
I

State budget reflects

OHIO WcJtllcr

NixOn's Watergate sins a·re unequalled

GOP hits back on
union ads, labor
settles scores
WASHINGTON .- Republicans who rule Consress seem bent on get·
ling even. with organized .labor for those 1996 campaign ads against GOP
candidaleS. Uni!&gt;DS have a few scores to seitle too, and not only with Republicans.
The AfL..CIO's recent inclusion of three dozen generally conservative
Democrats among the I 00 members it is targeti111 in critical ads drew the
ire of House Minority Lcadet: Dick Gephardt of Missouri and other lop congressional Democrats.
It's all part of the lingering Capitol Hill political fallout from the last elec·
lion - and much of it centers·on OI'J!anized labor.
Democratic aides said Gephanlt, an ally of orpnized labor on lrade issues
and an ex~ted 2000 presidential rival to Vice President AI Gore, asked
AFL..CIO President John Sweeney to back off from atlal:king Democrats.
"He made a personal appeal for the AFL·CIO to not run~ apinst
Democrats," spokeswoman Laura Nichols said of Gephardt "He told him
a bener way to b'y to affect policies t~Jo;y care about is to try to get more
Democrats elected."
A key battleground in this year's congressional duel with labor is a bill
that would require unions to get workers' permission before spending their
dues to wage "educational" campaigns that are really unregulated efforts
on behalf of O,mocratic candidates.
·
Labor allies view it ~a chiar attempt by majority-party Republicans to
retaliate against labor, mai~;lly for the $35 111illion the AFL-CIO spent JiSt
year to influence congressional races.
.
"It's fundamentally un-American to compel people to give to causes witb
which they donot agree," said Rep. J.D. Hayworth, R-Ariz., a bill co-spoil'·
sor.
.
.
•
·
A House Education and the Workforce subcommittee is expected to act
on the measure next month.
Sponsors also are finding opposition to the bill from an unlikely ally of
labor: the National Right to Work Committee. The politicBily conservative
organization, which opposes any form .o f mandatory union membership, does
not wain to go on record acknowledging the right of unions to collect dues
1 in the first place.
I Labor forces and Republicans are also in a pitched battle on a 90P bill
to give wage-earners a choice between time off or pay for overtime work.
Democl;'8ts have been using parliamentary maneuvers to block the "camp
I lime" bill from coming to a vote in the Serillle.
I·· President Clinton and most Democrats say they suppon the concept of
compensatory time off in lieu of overtime. But they- and orpnized labor
. -say the bill offers inadequate protection apinst employerdiscrimin~tion
1 against workers who prefer ovenime pay.
.
i The latest chapter in labor's duel came from the Afl.-CIO's decision tile
· last month to tarset more than I 00 members, including at least 3S Democrats, for lobbying pressure leading up to the 1998 election.
'•·
,. The decision is a shift from last year's strategy to target GOP candidates ·
: only;
.
·
:
Recent AR..-CIO ads have criiicized lawmakers of both parties for cut·
, ting funds for school renovation while supporting tax breaks for 1.-je corporations.
•
.
·
i The camp.ilgn reflects a new combativeness on the. part of lhe nation's
largest labor OI'J!anization under Sweeney. It also reflects~ recos.niti~ that
many Democrats have moved-away from labor's agenda m a nugrauon to
the political center.
·
EDITOR'S NOTE- Tom·Rll- covers pcJIIdcs IUid aationallllfaln ..
. for The Associated tress• .·
·

....

Thuflday, June 2t, 1187

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ThUI'8day, June 26, 1897

Sports

Kelly's homer helps Reds .·
lJeat Expos 2-1 in 11 innings
Cincinnati an extra-inning win.
Kelly hit his second homer, a line
"Even if you're not in the lineup, drive shot tha! cleared the left-field
about the sixth or seventh inning you wall, off reliever Anthony Telford (21).
get up and start stretching," said Kel"I don't think there's a guy in the
ly, who entered as a pinch-runner in
the ninth. "You get loose because clubhouse who can hit the ball hard·
you might be pinch-hitting, pinch- er, hit it farther, than Mike Kelly,"
running or going in defensively. Knight said. "The thing that has
We're always ready to go."
. throttled his being an every-day
Lenny Harris enterec! Tuesday's player is his consistency. He's realgame as a pinch-hitter in the ninth ly taken to the role he has now."
and drove in the go-ahead run with
Mike Remlinger (3-3) got the win
a single in the lOth, giving the Reds in relief, working out of a basesa 7-6 win.
loaded jam in the ninth. Jeff Shaw
The coTnebacks helped Cincinnati got three outs for his 14th sa~e .
finish a road trip to Cleveland, St.
Montreal wasted another slrqng
Louis and Montreal at 5-4.
effort from starter Pedro Martinez
"We've played tciugh teams and and lost for the fourth time in six
come out of it 5-4," Knight said. "It games.
game." ·
just shows we're starting to play a.'
. Martinez got a no-decision
Mike Kelly proved Knight's point a team and we're getting output from despite allowing one run and five
Wednesday.
·
hits in nine innings, lowering his
a lot of people.
Kelly hit a two-out homer in the
"The way it is now, the 25 guys major league-leading ERA slightly to
lith inning to give the Reds a 2-1 are contributing," Knight said. 1.58. He wal~ed three and struck out
win over the Montreal Expos, the ·"When we get to a set lineup, it will
II, reaching double figures in strikesecond "lime in as many games a be when the eight out there are play- outs for a fifth straight start.
player came off the bench to give ing better than the 25.''.

By The Auoclated Press
The tinkering could be over for
Gary Gaetti.
. "When you struggle, and I've
struggled most of the season, you do
different things," Qaetti ·said. :·You
tinker with your swing. You try different things in batting practice. You
• try to get things that work in the

·~

-~~
¥:11.-,··~··· ....., .~
•J:, ··
....
~~
. DOWN AND OUT- The Montreal Expot' Mike
Lltnalng takH 1 belly allde In an lttllmpt to acore
on Vladimir Gu-ro'e hit In the elxth Inning of
Wednnday nlght'a Nlllonal Lugue gaine 111

Montreal, but Clnclnnlll~ JO. Oliver puta
the tag on him In time fiir the oUt. Tha Redl-t
on to win 2-1 In 11 lnnlnge. (AP)

Tuesday night when Adams struck just hope you have the last hero." · 26 2-3 innings and had a televised his fourth homer, a shot over the left. In other NL games Wednesday, it dugout confrontation with ·manager field fence off reliever Clint
him out on three straight pitches.
. . Sodowsky (0-1 ).
"He made me look silly last was Aorida 7, Philadelphia 5; Hous- Bill Russell .
Russell was booed when he
Following Bell's go-ahead homer, '
night on three pitches and l got him ton 5, Pittsburgh I; Atlanta .l4, the
New
York
Mets
7;
San
Francisco
14,
removed
·Valdes
after
giving
.
up
a
pinch-hitter
Bill. Spiers hit a one-run
tonight. Sometimes that happens.''
San
Diego
7,
and
Los
Angeles
2.
one-out,
ninth-inning
infield
single.
.
double
and
James
Mouton doubled
Gaetti came close to giving St.
Colorado
o.
Three
more
pitchers
followed,
each
in
two
more
runs
in
Houston's fourLouis the lead in the seventh inning.
Dodgers
2,
Rockies
0
pitching
to
one
batter,
·
before
the
run
eighth.
But he was thrown out by Cubs cenAt Los Angeles, Dodgers pitcher Dodgers got the final out. ·
Marlins 7, Phillies 5
ter fielder Brian McRae when he
Ismael
Valdes
gave
up
four
hils
in
8
Astros
S,
Pirates
1
John
Cangelosi went 4-for-5 with
tried to score on a short fly ball, com1/3
innings
and
retired
19
of
the
first
At
Houston,
Derek
Bell's
homer
.three
RB"is
as Florida moved 15
pleting a double play.
20
batters
he
faced.
snapped
an
eighth-inning
tie
.
and
·
games
over
.500
for the first time in
In the Chicago ninth, John Mabry
Mike Piazza hit a two-run homer Darryl Kile (9-3) pitch¢ eight strong · franchise history.
singled off the Cubs' Bob Patterson
in
the first inning 10 help Valdes (4- innings, striking out seven and walkAlex Fernandez (8-6) recovered
-( 1-3). Adams came on and, on his
8)
improve
his
career
mark
against
ing
two.
after
shaky first inning - four
first pitch, Gaetti ended the game.
Colorado
to
5-0;
The
victory
fol·
Hitless
in
three
previous
at-bats·
,
runs.
three
hits - and held the
"That's why it's the big leagues,"
(See NL on Page 5)
St. Louis. manager Tony La Russa ·lowed a slump in which the right- . Bell broke a 1-1 tic in the eighth with
· said. "You expect to see heroics. You hander suJTendered 19 earned runs in

a

31-51
31-51 : ' 28·54
2H11
17·65 ·

'
in Cleveland on July 8.
.

With Griffey gone, Edgar Mar
including an RBI double in the sevGriffey, who leads the majors tinez led the power display
eat- enth and a two-run homer in the
with 29 home runs and the American tie pounded four home;,. in a 9-4 ninth, his first career home run.
League with 64 runs and 79 RBI, is victory over the Oakland Athletics.
Wolcott (4-4) allowed nine hits
"This was a good win for us, but and struck out ·five.
·
currently the leading vote-getter for
this year's All-Star game. He has . · it could be a. costly one," Piniella
In other ALgames Wednesday, it
missed the last two because · of said. "We'll find out tomorrow."
was Baltimore 9, Milwaukee I; New
injuries. .
·· Martinez homered twice, while York 3, Detl'oit I; Chicago 8, Kansas
He fractured his left wrist crash- Paul SotTento and John Marzano City 7 in. IO innings; Texas 5, Ana. By The Aseocl~tled Preas
. ing into the center field wall on May added homers to complement Bob heiin 4; and Boston i 3, Toronto 12.
For the third consecutive year, - Zli. 1995, and missed 73 games. He Wolcott's 7 . 2/3 innings of strong Minnesota lit Cleveland was postbaseball 's All-Star game could be bro.ke a sn:tall bone in his ljght wrist pitching.
poned by rain.
missing its brightest star.
while battmg on June 19, 199~. and
"We hope Junior won't be out
Orioles II, Brewers 1
Ken Griffey Jr. pulled up lame m1ssed 20 games.
.
long," Martinez said. "But if he is,
AI Milwaukee. Mike Mussina
after · hitting a run-scoring, firstGriffey's condition was to be re- \We have a lot of guys swinging the . _lost ,a no-hitter in the eighth inning
inning double Wednesday night and . eval~ate~ to~ay by th~ Seattle /bat well.''
o 1QJC Valentin's single, and settled
Jason Giambi went O-for-4 end- for a \hree-hitte.r.
could be out for up to three weeks: Manners team phys1c1an, Dr.
."1 saw him limping into second Mitchel Storey. Storey expectsGrif- ing a 25-game hitting stl'eak _' the ' Mussina (9-2) ·struck out a seaand I hoped"it was a cramp," Seanle fey to be out only 3-5 days 1f the longest for any A's player since the son:h•gh 12 and walked one . The
manager Lou Piniella said. "It was- mJury responds, well to treatment, ~ut team moved to Oakland.
right-hander gave up a sacrifice fly
n't a cramp.''
2-3 weeks 1f the. hamstnng 1s st1ff
Oakland's Rafael Boumigal fin- to Dave Nilsson in the ninth.
The All-Star game will be played and swollen.
ished with a career-high four hits,
(See AL 011 Page 5)

American
League
roundup

.

that you sUpped the ring on her Ongermd the most treasUred day of ~ur Ufe began!
Celebrate your anniversary this year with

one of our lllllivenary rings.

ftl.CQf[llSicri09{S

:·

Athens won. the game in the two RB!s.
eighth inning on Jack Pepper's twoPepper led Athens with a double
rundoubletomakeita I0-8contest. · and a single and th~ RB!s. Cecil
A two out bases loaded single by. Pat . Atkinson had two singles and two
Loo!ley made it a 11-10 contest. A RBis.
Meigs error on the play gave Athens
Meigs will travel to Logan for a
the 12- 10 lead.
twinbilfon Saturday.
·
Josh Chapman retired Meigs in lpnlnc t1111111
order in the ninth to get the win. Meigs
410-041-000=10-10-5
George took the loss.
Athens'
016-023·06K=I2·10-7
George led Meigs with a 3-for-5 .
Matt Dill, Scott George (L-6),
effort at the plate that included a Josh Merkle (8) and Dan Metts, Mall
triple. Matt Dill added two singles. Dill (6)
Josh Merkle, .Chad Bunon, Collin
Pat·Looney,JoshChapman(W-7)
Roush, Pete -Sisson and Benji and Jack Pepper
Manuel had a single each. Sisson had

.

1'i?('E J'E/WE.lli('Y

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Corner 2nd at Grape, Galllpolla, Oh 448-2842
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~~) . 10 : 0~

AL standings"
l!aol'l':

2~ ~

32

Botton ............... :.... J~ 40

Toronto ... :.............. :n 39
Deiroit .................... 32 41

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16

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.........

~ Wltllo loa (lloldwio 4-8) 11.
Ml-a"(Hawtl• 1·1). J:Ol p.m.

JO .600

)J . .566

33 .l60
ll Jll

lfoullon ................. 38 39
So. !Auit •••....: ........ !S ~
PittJblrlh .............. lS 41 •
CtNCIIINATI ........ 32 43

2~

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l~ ,

2.4

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6

Chi&lt;ll•············-···29 ·47 .382

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Cokndo ................40 J7 .ll9

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s. Frandoa&gt;w-........•.+! 32 ..179

i

~~

7:0lp.m.
St . lo•i• (Stouleml"' !1· 5) at
CtNCINNATI(Burl!a4-7), Bl p.m.
Phiiadelrhia (Bee&lt;h 0.2) at Atlanta
INeoale If). ). NO p.m.
Hou11on (Hok 7-l) It Chjcaao C•bl
(Cutillo 4-9), a,os p.m.

and SS

FrldaY,I Pllltl

H011~n (lllr.pco. l-6)
Cubi(F....,I-lP::IOp.m.

a1

t..ue.

.........

'·

him 10

.

DI!NVIII

u~- Tr~d

/ J-1
·

C, Colgate
F. MI. Zion Clvistian Acad.
F, Cincinnati
.

"He's always said (he wants Pip'
pen to stay), he wants· to try · for
another championship, but Michael's
a player and doesn't own the team.
So he'll see wha1 the team decides
and make a decision from there,"
Falk said.
Duncan, the consensus college
player of the year in 1996-97 and the
filii player to repeat as a unanimous
first team all-American selection
since Shaquille O'Neal in 1990-91
and 1991-92, averaged 20.8 points
and led the nation in rebounding with
14.7 per game.
·
He became the first "college senior ·
be chosen No. I overall since LarJohnson in 1991.
Van Horn went second, then
acknowledged the upcoming trade to
the Nets.
. "I think it will happen, but nothing's finalized in this league until
something's signed,"" Van Hom said.
"I .visited there (New Jersey),! have
a.great respect for their organization
and their peopl~ and I love coach
Calipari.'' · •
. .
·
With the third pick, Boston selected Billups, who was generally
regarded as the best all-around point
guard available.
The Vancouver Grizzlies, selecting fourth, chose Bowling Green
point guard Antonio Daniels. Tony
Bailie, a junior 6-foot-11 center
from Texas Tech whq was projected
to go as high 1ssecond, went fifth to .
the Nuggets. .•..•
With the sixth pick, Pitino went
with Mercer, who played for him at
Kentucky the past two seasons. The
· Celtics acquired the sixth pick in last
summer's trade with Dallas for Montross.

·The Nets, picking for Philadelphia with the ieventh pick, chose
Tllomas.
The eighth pick .was Golden
State's and the Warriors chose Colgate center Adona! Foyle, the NCAA
career leadef in blocked shots (492).
. Perhaps most surprised .:.... ·and
p~ .:.... by the Warriors • selection
of Foyle was Toronto general manager lsiah Thomas, who was hoping
that Tracy McGrady would drop to
No.9. .
·
The 18-year-old did, and the Raptors made him the fourth high
schooler lo he picked in the fin;t
round in the ·past three years. The
others were · Kevin Garnett, Kobe
Bryant and Jermaine O'Neal.
Milwaukee, picking IOth, chose
Fortson. The selection was curious
- and indicative of ·the trade for
Johnson tliat happened 45 minutes
later- because Milwaukee already
has an established power forward in
All-Star Vin Baker.
Olivier Saint-Jean, a French
· native who attended San Jose State
and left after his junior year, went
lith to Sacramento.
The Indiana Pacers picked Providence forward Austin Croshere at
No. 12 aod C:levcland used the first
of its two fir~t-round picks on Ken·
tucky shooting guard Derek Ander-

F, Utah

G. Colorado
G, Bowling Green

C, TfllUII Tech
F, Kentucky
F, vtll8110'1j,.

10. a·MIIwlukee
11. SlciiiMIIIO
Olivier Sllnt..Jtln F, San Jose St.
12. lndlanl
Au.Un CI'Oihelt F, Providence
13. Clevtlucl
Dtrtk Andtrlon · G, Kentucky
•
14: LA. Cllppare
MIUrlct l'lylor
F, Michigan
15. b·Dall• (110m Minnesota) Kllvln Clto
Iowa State
16..Cleveland (from ,Phcenlx) Brevln Knight
G, Stanford
17. Orlando .
JohnnyTaylor
F. Tenn-Chelt.
18. !&gt;Portland
Chrll Al!ll8y
C, SE Melbourne (Australia)
19. Detroit
Scot Pollard
F. KansaS
20. Mlnntlotl·(from Poittand · Plul Grant
. C, '!'Jiseonsin
thr6ugh Charlolte)
Anthony Parker G, Bradley
21. New Jlllly
(from LA. L.akara)
G. California
Ed Grey
22. Atlanta
Bobby Jldrlon G, Minnesota
23. Sllltle
RodrtekRhodet G. Southern Cal.
24. Hoil~
Johnlhoftlll
F,Minn~
25. NewYork
G. New Mexico
ChlriH Smith
25. Mlal!ll
Jacqua'llughn . G,Kansaa
27. Utah
'
F, Maryland
28. Chicago
Keith Booth
•
&amp;·MilWaukee t~ F Johnny Newman, F-C Joe Wolf and the rights to Danny
Fortson to OetM!f for C Ervin Joh"""",
·
b-Dallas traded the rights 10 Kelvin cato (15th pickl 10 Por1lend lor the rights 10
ChriS Antsey (18111 pick) and an undisclosed amount 01 money.

c.

·Getting Anderson
fits into Cavaliers'
'defensive scheme

contests...

Complete Tune-Up
Includes Plugs;·Air, And Fuel Filters

.

.

..
••••••• • ••

Em•.
PHtLADEuHIA 16ERllt Traded the

.....Cli_ .

...... OJ 0 - Colli• 10 dto Lot "Aa·

..

FORD·

I

4 Cylinder

th

~~··' •
• ...,,.cJ_....._.,~ror
lhi-•OI!rlcWulliIllS AHGEU!S ct.ii'PEIIS, Traded
C Stuley loberu to Mia•sot• for C
~VMILWAUKEE BUCKS : Tradecl F
""'-a. F-C Joe Wolf aoclthe
rill*., lloooJ- to 0.0.. fllf C

Adona! Foyle
lncy McGJ'Ildy
Denny Fortiori

6 Cylinder

lluketbllll

-or~.

C. Wake Forlll

8 cylinder

.

.

lim Duncan
KJith Yin Hciin
Cltluncey Blllupl
Antonio Daniell
Tony 111tt1t
Ron llen:tr
lim Thomla

9. Toronto

a

Nodooioll... 1'1111 A I 1'DALLAS M,t;VERICKS: Tnidocl the
"""' oo Kolvio c.. "' Pottlutl ror ohe
riitMsto a.t1 ADIIe)' ud an uMMacloled

(-7-4'•

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PHILADELPHIA PHILtlES: Acti·
\'lied RHP Mike CiriiCe from lhe Js.day
dillbled liu ud oplioMCI him to S..:nan·
to•·Wilkes-Berrc of the lalarnational

_ , ( l t . u - 3-4) al Flaritk

r..m. ·

Sllud&lt; and

the MOll of the Gull C-

Chicaao
.

7:0!1
. p.m.
N.Y. Mott (MNetd 4-5) M Pfn.-; y
(Sdtmido 2-4~ 7:35
St. Lo•l• (A •• BeHt 7·6) at
CINCINNATI(r-).I~HS_p.JO.
PW....._,..a (SIIfh 1101 :l-3) MAJ.
) - (Maddtd 9-3). 7:&gt;10 p.nt
• Su fruc:loco "(Ruete 4-2) ao Col·
..... o-2-419~'l·'""
Su Ditto &lt;HMniltoo )) • Lot MJOia (Port S-4), IO:Ol p 01.

j_,

·

aetn (Candioni 4-2). 10:0!1 p.m.

Gl

CeolnJDI•W.
·~

Toalpt'l p111t1

. M'"'lmll (Judat 8-21 M Florldo (llaftp

s.n 01eao (Bet...,. 1·2&gt; " t.o• Ao-

llai:Mm Divlllon
Flotilla ...................4l
New York ..............4J
Monu..t ................ 42
Pbiladolphia ...........23

.

at Coiondo (Rebr i-0), 9:0S p.m.

Ila
li J. ll:t.
"'lMtca •.................:&lt;11 28 .6.ll

.. '· Oollootd.

T_.....,, .... .

St. Lou
. Ia 3. 0\k:q:o Cubl I
Los Anaelel 2, COlondD o

Son Fnocioco &lt;Y•Loodin...... 4-S)

NL standings

)~

T•• S, AMhli• -4
M - • CLEVELAND......... ni•
-n.T.....ol2

•

11 Seaule

TeAM (81Htett5-6) at O&amp;ldaDd COquist
&lt;'

(10)

(l!ri&lt;boo t0.2). 7:3, , ...

~·5)

1· 2). IO:J~ p.m.

WediMIUy'•-

-1·2~ 7:0!1p.M.
r..-~11·2&gt;•

(Finle7

(f.,..,. 7-l), 10:05 p.m.

N.Y. Y-!.Doln&gt;ilt
BlltiiWft 9, Mitwlutee I
ChicaJo Whit&amp; So&gt; B, Kalllll City 7

_

(Gordon

(Knrnienicct.i ~~), 7::\$ p.m.
Chicaao White So-. (Navarro .5·6&gt; at
Minne101a (Tcwbbwy 4-6). 8:05 p.m.
Milwauk£e (McDonald 6-4) Qt Kanw
Oti (A,... H), I 'Ol p.m. .

.486
.472
.4l9

WnttmDh'Wan
Sanie •...................+l 32 .l79
Anlll1eim .........•......&gt;10 35 .lll
Teuo ..................... l7 .37 .:100
Ookiand ................. 31 47 .397

Bot~on

CLEVELAND Uknhiser 1·.1) 01 N.Y.
Yankees (Goodrn 2.0), 7:3.5 p.m.
Toronto (Person 2-$) at Baltimore

· ~Dbillon
Ct.EVELAND ....... JB )) .~J~
aue~~o ...................l1 37 .:100

· Milw•uker .., ...........l~ 37
K.... Ci&lt;y ........... J-4 38
Min ...... .............. J-4 &gt;10

Friday's pmes

Detroh (Blair 4-4) 11
~-61. 7'0l r .m.
.

Ltar.:•

Nadonal
NL: 'Su•renlled Phi •delrhia RHP
'Rculc Hanil for liwe Jamcl, pcmJin~; 111'1
appeal, und fined him 11·n uruliaclo11.!d
amounl for inlnlionally ·thtuwlnJ a1 a
bllkr in a Pf!tC 011 J~ 22.
CHICAGO CUBS : Ac~&amp;uirciJ OF
Onid Jdfenon from Rockford of tiM!
Midwe11 Le•aue and assianed him to · ·
Cape F&lt;a- of the SotM Atllnlic Lettp!.
NEW YORK METS: Sianed SS
Keadrick Miller and •uia~~:d him 10
Pillllield ol tllo New York·,... _........

HoUlton 5, Pi.Hshui'J;h I
CINCINNATI 2. Mon!'"al I (II)
Atl111ta 14, N.Y. Mcto 7
san FraDCiKO 14. San Dieao 7

1. Sin AntoniO
3. Bolton
4. Vllnoouv«
5. Dtnvll .
8. Bolton (from DaHas)
7. New Jlllly
I. Golden State ·

Rose gets double
in first AAA game

Bueball

Flotido 7. Phiiadclphial

POS., SCif®IJI'GNIIII\11111

Cy Young winner

TransactiOns

12

Wednetday's scores

Anaheim (Dickson 8·.1) al Seolllt!
(Mn)'Cf6-21. 10:~ p.m.

Di•'-

I:r
....... . ... . . J~
New Yort ..............o

r.m.

6

PLAYER

2. Phllldllphla

reports to prison

Los Anaelts ._ ......... JK 38 .!KIO
S11n OieJo .......... .'....12 44 .-421

PICK, TEAM

n3ti\Jc transferred from Ohio State to
By KEN BERGER
CLEVELAND (AP) -There is Kentucky in 1994, then won a
23-59 '
27-65
so much to like about Derek Ander- national championship· with the
~n.
26-56
17-65
son. He's an explosive dribbler, a Wildcats. Cleveland is just a short
Michigan forward Maurice Tay- great passer with a deadeye shooting drive up Interstate 71 from Colum' 31!51 .. : ·,.'26;58 .·
' +5
lor went at No. 14 to the Los Ange41-41
21-61
. bus. land of the Buckeyes.
·
+20
les Clippers. Iowa State.center Cato touch.
Guess what Cleveland Cavaliers
"It wasn't tough at all," Anderson
+16
·. ·50,32 , ·' 34;48 ·
was the selection of the Mavericks at coach Mike Fratello likes?
said of leaving Ohio Slate. "When I
34-48
20·62
+14
Jolo •.15. ·
"He happens to be one heck of a first played (at Kentucky), I started.
38-4tl' . ', 26-56
'+10
Cleveland, picking again at No. defender," Fratello said after the They knew this guy could play at
. 22-60
18-64
+4
16, chose 5-foot-9 Stanford point
·
Cavaliers selected Anderson with the any level."
guard
Brevin Knight.
NBA
DeGU&amp;ro
.
Anderson was"boocd when Ken13th pick in the NBA draft Wednesday night. ... 1 have to mention that. tucky played Ohio Slate in Cleveland
last December. When the selcetiQn
kind of a lix for me.''
_c_eo_n_tin-ued--:fr:-om-:P;-:-ag_e:-4&gt;--:-:---:-:----:-:-:-~-:--:"""""":-~___:---_;_....__ _ _ __ It'sDefensive-minded
Cleveland was announced, the few thousand
Before Valentin hit Mussina's
Tino Martinez hit a solo home run Mario Valdes in the lOth to reach .sacrifice, .Anaheim manager Terry look a chance on Anderson, Rick fans watching the draft at G~nd Arefirst pitch of the eighth inning to - his third homer in two games .500 for the first time since April 2. Collins had Shigetoshi Hasegawa Pitino's favorite player at Kentucky, na cheered loudly.
·
right field, the Brewers hadn't come for the Yankees, who have won sevChicago has won five straight and intentionally walk two batters before even though he's had two knee
All, apparently, is forgiven .
close to getting a hit off the Orioles en straight at Tiger Stadium.
seven of eight to even its record at McLemore lined his single to center. operations in three years. With the
"This was prohahly one of the
right-hander.
Martinez, who went 8-for-12 with 37-37. The White Sox started the
Eric Gunderson (1-0) got the . 16th pick, the Cavs went with Brevin first years that we did .get cheered,"
Jeffrey Hammonds hit a pair of fotir homers and six RBis in the year 5-14.
win.
Knight of Stanford, a 5-foot-10 point Embry said. "We've been booed in
two-run homers off Cal Eldred that series, led off the ninth with a walk
Alben Belle led off the I Oth with
Red Sox 13, Blue Jays 12
guard from the conference that gaye· the past."
. helped stake Mussina to a 6-P lead and scored when Hayes hit his fifth a single off Jeff Montgomery (0-2),
At Toronto, Nomar Garciaparra them Kevin Johnson and Terrell
Cleveland went with guards a
·. after th~ innings. David DeHucci homerinto the upper deck in right off and Jorge Fabergas sacrificed. homered on Pat Hentgen's first pitch . Brandon.
year aticr picking two big men.
and B.]; Surhoff also homered as Justin Thompson (7-6).
. .
Harold Baines was intentionally · - one of five Boston homers off
"Don't let the size of Brevin Cleveland selected forward Vitaly ,
Baltimore matched its . season high
~ Mike Stanton (4-0) pitched one
walked, and one out later, Valdes him -and the Red Sox outlasted the Knight fool you," said Fratello - · Potapenko and center Zydrunas
with four home rul)s.
· '
inning for the win, and Mariano blooped his single·to shallow center Blile Jays for a wild win to sweep the who is 5-6. .
llgauskas in the first round last sumYankees 3, Tiger$ 1 'lkRivera pitched the ninth for his 25th as Belle scored easily.
three-game series. ·
Anderson and Knight are typical mer. Andcn;on and Knight join Br-.mCharlie Hayes hit a two-run save.
. Harold Baines hit a three-run
Hentgen (8-4) had not given up an Cleveland picks- good fundamen- . don. Bobby Ph ills and Bob Sura as .
homer in· the ninth inning as New
White SI)J&lt; 8, Royals 7
hol)ler in the eighth for Chicago.
earned run in 21 innings before Gar- tals and no character questions.
the rotation in the Cavs' backcourt.
York completed a three-game sweep
At Chicago, the White Sox rallied
Matt Karchner (2-0) got the win ciaparra connected . for his 12th
Guards from the PacCJO are nothThe only knock on Andcn;on
at Detroit and moved II games over for five runs in the·eighth and got a in relief.
homer. Hentgen was charged with was the .health of his knees. Cavs ing new in Cleveland. Brandon,
.500 for the first time this season.
· pinch-hit RBI single from -rookie
Rangers 5, Angels 4
season-high II runs·and 13 hits in president ·wayne Embry said team their No. I choice in 1991 out o(
Mark McLemore's bases-loaded eight innings.
ddctors gave Anderson a thorough Oregon, has blossomed into an AllRBI single with one out in the bOtMike Sian ley hit a three-run evaluation and were satisificd he's Star. They took Johnson, from Calitom of the ninth enabled TeKas to homer off the 1996 AL Cy Young worth the risk.
fornia, with their fjn;t pick in '87.
(Continued fro~ Page 4)
snap a seven-game losing streak.
winner, and Reggie Jefferson, Troy
So is Anden;on.
Knight is in the ·same position
· Phillies to three hits-over the next won for the eighth time in II games.
The Angels lost for the first time O'Leary and Darren Bragg hit two"I feel faster because of the Brandon was a few years ago. Bran: five for ·his third straight win.
run shots.
The 17 hits and 14 runs were both in seven games.
strength thlltl' vc added and the con- don backed up former Cleveland
· It was the hottest day of the sea- season-highs for San FranCisco.
Pinch-hitter Mickey Tettleton
Knuckleballer Tim Wakefield (3- . centration I've put on it," Anderson point guard Mark Price, then nour: son at Veterans Stadium. An hour
Rich Rodriguez (3-3), the thi~d of opened the ninth with a weak 7) gave up six runs, five earned, and said.
ished when the job was his.
: before the "1:05 p.m. EDT st~~rting the Giants' seven pitchers, got four grounder that pitcher Mike Holtz (2- four hits in 5 2/3 innings. ·
In a way, Anden;on i~ going
"I have a chance to learn from
: time, a thennometer on the artificial outs for the win, Andy Ashby (3-4) . 2) fielded, but 'threw away. After a .
home. Again. The. Louisville, Ky.,
(See ANDERSON on P. 6)
• field registered 16S degrees. The took the loss.
: game time air temP.rature was 92," · Tony Gwynn went 2-for-3 with
: and 75 fans were treated for cramps two walks for the Padres to raise his
• or heat eKhaustion.
average to .398.
•
Braves 14, Meta 7
.
.
.
LEWIS RUN, Pa. (AP) - Cy .
: At New York, Chipper Jones
Young Award winner Denny McLain
: homered twi~. includlpg his first
reported to prison to serve a sentence
o;; grand slam in the majors, and Atlanta
for looting pensions from meat pack• battered Bobby Jones in the worst
: start of his career. .
.
.
CINCINNATI (AP)- Pete Rose ers, and he could work in a land•
Tom' Giavine (8-4) stopped the Jr., the son of baseball's career hits , scaping or·snow-shoveling detail.
McLain, ~3. the last major-league
: Mets' six-game whining streak and leader, doubled ln his first game in
pitcher
to win 30 games in season,
: improved to 9-3 against New York. Triple-A.
- He overcame a shaky first inning and
Rose, 27, was 1-for-3 for the lndi· BITi~ed Tuesday at the.Eederal Cor: wound up allowing three runs and anapolis Indians in a 4-3 loss to the rectional Institution at Lewis Run.
: five hits in seven innings.
Iowa Cubs in the American Associ- about 80 milea Sotlth of Buffalo, N.Y.
He is serving an eight-year sen.Jones hit a solo homer in the ation. ·
tence
for scheming with his partner, ·
: fourth that put Atlanta ahead 6-3. He
The Cincinnati Reds promoted
: hit the grand slam an inning later.
Rose on Tuesday to Indianaj)olis. He . Roger Smilliiel, to steal $3 lllillion
~
Jones (12-4), who won nine of his has been having · ~is ~~profession­ from the pension fund of the Peel
· previous I 0 s~. was pounded for . al season at Qouble·A Chananoog• Packing Co .• which had 470 work~
ers iti Chesuing, Mich.
• a career-high I0 runs and II hits in . of the Sou.them League.
· The I 00-year-old company filed
~ 4 1/3 innings.
·
.
The infielder was· batting .324,
Giants 14, fadres 7
with 13 bolne runs, was fourth .in the for U.S. Bankruptcy Court Protection
At San Francisco, J.T. Snow league.with 57 RB!s and was select- from creditors because of the theft.
McLain, who won 31 games for
. matched a career-high with four ed to the Double-A All-Star team.
RBis, and Barry Bonds scored four
Pete Rose. who played most of Detroit on the way to the Tigen'
his career with the Reds and later world series win in 1968, previousumes.
.
' Snow's three-run double in the muaged them, was suspended from ly went to prison for drug and rack: second was a popup that ·driipped baseball in 1989 when an investiga- etcerins convictions. He was the host ·
of a sports talk show in Detroit aftOr
.: between lert fielder ~y Hender- tion cQncluded he bet on football.
• 1m1 and shortstop Chns Gomez, He
'The suspension preYents ROle his sente11ce.
Prison administrator Bob Klark
: ldded u RBI. double durins a six: from puticiplllin&amp; in official buebell .
· ICtivities and made him lnelialble for said McClain will be -igfted to a
: Nil eipch.
~1 3n1 Ave. M~leport, Oh
: Boncls went 3-for-S with a walk the Hall of fame. He said Jut wook job detail payins anywhere from
• _.lllrryUiamiiiOil alia went.3-for- ..._. ~ is 'poriderins applying for pennies to a feW dollll'l • hour after
he is evaluated. · ·
\_
: 5, lllcluding
. ·lllriple• u the OiutJ ~illllatetnent. .

: NL

Scoreboard
Milwaukee (Mercede1 J·2) al Kansas
City IH""'Y Q.2)." K'Ol p.m.
Tuas (Sanumo 3-2} ut O;lkland !Prie10

.. f
+2
+3
. +4
-4
+9
~

5

First-round selections

AL games •.

Remember the day so many years ago

Athens Legionnaires defeat Meigs 12-10
within 5-1.
Meigs pulled ahead to a 9-1 lead
in the fifth inning on three more hits,
three Athens errors and two walks.
After Athen&amp; pulled to within 9-3 in
the bottom of the inning, Meigs
added another run in the top of the
sixth inning to !cad 10-3.
Scott George took over on the
mound for Meigs In the sixth inning
in relief of Matt Dill ancj quickly ran
into trouble. George gave up only a
lead-off double, but his four walks
and two Meigs errors made it a I0- ,
6 Meigs lead.

..29·53

;,·.,. ".{·:5,8
;

Mariners beat A's 9-4, but lose · riffey

Athen.s scored six runs in the
· eighth inning to post a come-frombehind 12-10 victory over Meigs in
Eighth District American Legion
baseball action Tuesday evening at
Athens.
The win gives Athens a 6-5 mark
overall and a 4-3 mark ·in the conference. Meigs drops to.4-8 _overall
and 2-6 in the conference . .
Meigs jumped out on top 4-0 in
the first on three hits, a walk and two
Athens errors and a sacrifice bunt.
Meigs increased the lead to 5-0 in the
second before Athens scored a run in
the bottom of the ir.ning to pull to

announced until a pievance is setCHARLOTI'E; N.C. (AP) - . ded between the 76en and ·Celtics
' 'There were trades that happened, regarding last week's now-dead trade
trades that didn't happen and U'ades of Michael Cage and Clarence
· that haven't officially happened.
Weatherspoon for Dino Radja; who
failed
a physical Thesday night.
·
All in all. the NBAdraft was a big
deal.
In other deals, Milwaukee sent
Five trades involving siK. first- the rights to first-round pick Danny
round picks, eight veterans and three Fortson of Cincinnati, along with
second-round picks turned Wednes- veterans Johnny Newman and Joe ·
day night's draft into anything but Wolf, to the Denver Nuggets for center Ervin Johnson. Portland and Dalthe Tim Duncan Show.
Duncan w~nt first to the San las swapped the rights to picks Chris
Antonio Spurs in what turned out to Antsey and ~elvin Cato, and
be the only predictable moment of Philadelphia, Denver, Portland and
the evening - expect for a rare Orlando made minor deals involving
injection of humor from the ·bland second-round picks.
center from Wake Forest.
Perhaps the biggest news of the
night
was the non-trade of Scottie
"Do you want me to be mean?''
Duncan said after being queried on Pippen from Chicago to Boston.
Boston coach Rick Pitino said the
his niceness. ".I can be mean. r m ·
leaving," he said to a roomful of Bulls wanted too much in a deal that
reportedly also was to include Chicainterviewers.
. Duncan didn't really mean it and · go center Luc Longley.
"'They wanted to really sweeten
stayed for ·a few more moments
while the commissioner was it, and we couldn't do that," Pitino
said after the Celtics selected
announcing the second pick.
It turned out to be Utah forward Chauncey Billups with the third
Keith Van Hom, who was chosen by pick and Ron Mercer sixth.
TNT analyst Brian Burwell
Philadelphia, but will be heading to
reported
that Michael Jordan made a
New Jersey once an eight-player deal
call
to Bulls management
phone
. can be finalized. .
It will send Van Hom, forwards threatening to retire if the Bulls trad·
Don .MacLean and Lucious Harris . ed Pippen.
David .Falk; the agent for Jordan,
· and another player, perhaps Michael
said
he doubted that was true.
· Cage, io New Jersey for ·guard Jim
"I spoke to Jerry (Reinsdorf) and
· Jackson, center Eric Montross and
· draft picks Tim Thomas (No. 7) and · he had not spoken to Michael .. I
would be very, very surprised if
. Anthony Parker (No. 21).
Michael
called Jerry," Falk said.
'The trade cannot be formally

P•

1997
NBADRAFT

. By CHRIS SHERIDAN

MONTREAL (AP) - The
Cincinnati Reds don't have an everyday lineup they can rely on. For the
time being, that's just the way manag!lr Ray Knight likes it.
"Right now, there isn't a player
on this ·team who's got a position
locked up," said Knight, forced to
juggle his lineup due to injuries to
mainstays Barry Larkin and Reggie
Sanders.
· "Without Barry and Reggie,
we've got 10 match up the best we
can every day. We real1y don't have
a regular lineup or set team, but it
seems to keep everybody sharp and
in the the game. They know they better not be napping over on the bench
because the);'re going to get into the

game."
Gaetti apparently fixed whatever
. was broken. He capped a 3-for-4
night with a two-run ho111.er in the
bottom of the ninth inning Wednesday night, giving the St. Louis Cardinals a 3-1 victory over the Chicago Cubs. He also had a run-scoring
single and a double.
"It was a fastball down and .
away," Chicago pitcher Terry Adams
said of the "Pitch Gaetti hit out of the
park. "ll's the pitch I try to throw and
get in front.
·
"I can't say it was a bad pitch,"
Gaetti said of the ball he hirinto the
Cubs' bullpen in right" field for his
·sixth homer. Then he remembered

The Deily SenUnel•

Spurs -take Wake
Forest's Du·ncan
:first in NBA·draft

.t

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

. See

s77 .95
S69.95
. $62.50

ke Bing

* Prices Good For All Ford Products

.

,,

I

.•

'

..
'

"

�Thursday, June It, 1117

Pomeroy • Mkldlepan, Ohio

· All England Club laces prospect of SundBy matchea at Wimbledon

.

~...... 21,1117

·

Bond.with crew chief hints .that Gordon's best Isn't here yet

Rain postpones most of ..rescheduled · first-ro~nd action.

·. 8r mPHI!N WILSON

WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
- Once apin, the busiest man at
.WIDibledoll is ~efcrce Alan Mills.
· ADd, once . aglin, his biggest
heldache is tbat old Wunbledon
nemesis: wet weather. .
With rain causing havoc with the
schedule after the fust thJCe days,
Mills is facing a huge bacldog of
. matches and the possibility of play
on the middle Sut\day for only the
second time in IOIImament history.
Nearly all gf Wednesday's program was washed out, with Monica
. Seles and Jana Novotna winning the
only two matches that were com,

bad next week.
"Then we miaht have 10 llllko~M
players play singles and doublee on
the same day, or play singles every.
day rather than having a rest day
between IDIII:hes."
Mills said he is relui:unt to schedule I1Uik:hes on the middle Sunday a ·break of tradition that oec:uned ·
only once before in the 127-VOII' his-·

and Mary Pierce, Venus Williams; ·
Iva Majoli and Anna Koumikova
among the wotnen.
Mills said he wasn't considering
drastic measures - yet
"The problem will increase if the
weather continues being bad, and the
forecast for the next two 01' three
days is horrendous," he said. "The
· big problem comes if the weather is

lllry ofWnnbledon. Thlt wai in 1991

after the wettest first week ever.
Thill day was dubbed "hople's
Sunday" and was a huge hit with
common fans who got in for. free.
But Wimbledon officials say it

~==-.··t
A TV
sbowt
a teen·aae

would pose huge 1 lolisitical and Philip COllieS, in chatge of the PoliCe
oraanizalional problems to try to opention at WimbledOn... And when
repeat the experiment.
•
it happened in I 991, it cauMCI to
"The club has,.previously said many problems.thai the JI!ICral view
they wouldn't wiiiJ to play· on the was we didn'J w~t to do it.aaaln.''
middle Sunday," said chief inspector ,

COIIIJIIel'Cia1
Gordon playi111 pmes ia

Tysor~

Jeff

tel my boule." Goi.lon loob up and
says brilhtly, "I'll drive."
That'• the thina lbout Gordon,
the 25-year-old driver with the Hoi-

lywood loob lllld c:hoir-boy 111M· Martin.
nen. He's always ready to bclp.
AIOiofthuuocesa *'"'built on
Sure, he's winniaa so much that Gordon's relalionship with crew
some people are atarting to dislike chief llay Evemham, who is always
him. The chorus of boos gets louder there witll advice, wisdom and, When
for eacb pre-race iiltroduction.
needed, a tongue lashing. And it
. But Gordon, it seems, is just get- , teeiJili nobody ia more aware of the
. UIIJ started.
· importance of a good crew than GarSince ~illl Winston Cup rookie don. '
of the year tn 1993, The Kid bas only
·"To .me. what makes us stand out
gonen better-:- and better and bel- so far this year ... is when we need
J1191M111,"helaid.
ForaFittipaldi.~istravel·
ter..
. '·.
.•
thepitcrewtosttpup,tlteystepup,"
I I - the ICCOild serious acc.ident ing at about 200 mph.
His filii WID c:anne Ill OtariOite .. Gordon said of the Hendrick Motorin leas than ,a year for the family. .
· !'-fotor S~way 0~ ~Y 29, 1994, sportJ bunch known as the Rainbow
l!l)lenon sulrmd a broken IICCit a
tn his 42nd ~: Smce lht!n..he has Wlfriors because of their colorful
y~ qo in I c:rasb at the Marlboro
won 25 more m JUSI9'711aiU. Thole dreis and hard-nosed attitude
26
$00 in Micbipn, an . injury .\hat
wins lie him with F~ l.Ore~n
"When I need Ray to step ~P and
could end his celebnlted weer. .
for I8th on the·C:II'Cer vt~tcx;r ltst., make a call, whether it's a 1wo-tire
Christian, thoulh, knew he'd be
Even. when he d~a t wm, he s change or how long to wait for gas,
beck, and the sooner the better. '
usually tn ~hunt. His overall 139 he steps up and makes 1he right cit I.
"I put a 101 of ~ffort into coming
career starts tnclude 64 top-~ves and
."When they need me to step up,
8
beck very quickly," be said.
~ top-lOs.. The wun~rltind has I've been able· to do it." Gordon
He spent a week in the hospital in
fat led to finish only 31 umes.
. \ldded. "You've gOt to rely on every
Australia, where~ insenccl the
. · It ~ms the l995. ~I)St~ Cu_p player.and every person on the team
steel rod. When be wen(bJCk tO the
• Champton ~ ~Cally hit his Stnde this . in order 10 make it happen."
United States, · there was more
~easo~. He s won ~~en of IS 5 ~·
On Sunday, it was a winning
s~. then he ~eturned 10 Sao
tncl~ng Sundays maugural Calt· gamble that gill Gordon to the checkPaulo, Brazil, for rehabilitalion.
foml~ $00, and le~ the season ered nag ahead of .teammate Terry
' Cbrislian's life has always been
CHRISTIAN FITTIPALDI
standtngs by 92 pOints over Mark ·Labonte.thedefendingWinsionCup
active - snowboarding, buef~
·
·
·

champion.
.
Gordon stopped for gas one lap
before Labonte, then went the final
110 miles without atoppina spin. fie
ran 0111 seconds after crossing die finish line.
"That was totally Ray's call,"
Gordori said.
.

By DAVE ALBEE
"Where a guy played is meanFoyle has other ·attributes, too.
Marin Indapendent
ingless," Cai'lesimo said. "What He's worked out .with Bill Walton.
Journel
college and what conference. That's · He already bas played and made an
OAKLAND, Calif. - We know not the most accurate gauge."
impression in the Bay Area. He made
Ac;lon~l Foyle is from the island of
·
·
· · ·Canovin in the Grenadines,.which is
located in the Carribean between the
islands of Grenada, Oatorade and
Hand Gn!nade.
· We know he has the body of
Adonis and the sbo&lt;ititt8 touch of
Madonna. We know he is 6-foot-10,
· 250 pounds and blocked more shots .
· in college than a bartender after last
call.
We don't know if Colgate was
named after the toothpaste or if the
toothpaste was named after Foyle's
· university. We don't know if he
no~s between meals.
What we really don't knoW is can
· he play with the bij boys. He's trying·to make the jump frorlt the PatriotLeague to the .the Pacific Division..
It's one thing to dunk over the best
from Bucknell and St. Bonaventure
twice a year, but he's going to run
into Shaquille O'Neal and Shawn
Kemp every other week.
WeJ·ust don't know how he'll do.
Oh, · we can specula~e. We can
guess Foyle will become the next
Yinka l:iare. Foyle is H ·raw as·he is
. rate and·he was the consensus best
available phiyer lin' the lloard 'when
it came time for the Golden State
Warriors to seleci in the first round
.of Wednesday's draft.
"His game hasn't even crested
· yet," said new Warriors coach P.J. .
.
Carlesimo.
Crest? Colgate? Confused? Don't
fault the Warriors. They did the best
they coitld, unless they went for' IS·
year-old high schooler Tracy
MLDIIII' ....
McGrady, who, 8s it turns out, has
played basketball at least twice as
long in his lifetime as Foyle, who's
.
.·
only been learning the game for six
years after failing miserably at crick·
. . Program Car
et.
.
On~e the Celtics, who need a big
man, passed on Foyle at No. 6. Carlesimo figured the Nets would take
Villanova's lim Thomas at No. 7,

his college debut three years ago on
the same night 7-foot ce~ter :rim
Young made his at Stanford. The
Cardinal won by 12 points

Fittipaldi shows desire to race
again,with G.l. Joe's 200 fi.n.ish

plet~.

Seles downed Rachel McQuillan
6-0. 6-2 in a first-round match held
,; over from Monday, and Novotna
:. beat Wiltrud ProbSt6-4, 4-6, 6-0.
'
More than 30 firSt-round match·
• .es had yet to be played or completed, and several second-round match:• es were also behind schedule.
As a result of the mounting backlog, Mills said play on Centre Coun
and ·Court One would stan two
hours earlier than usual today.
Matches on the outside couns were
brought forward one hour.
That's providing, of course, that
it doesn't rain. The forecast called for
more showers through the weekend.
.
Weather pennitdng, both top
· seeils were set to play second-round
:· matches on Centre Coun today.
: Martina Hingis was up against Olga
: Barabschikova, while Pete Sampras
: was paired against Hendrik Dreek. man.
.
Others scheduled for action
· included defending champion
: Richard Krajicek, qoran Nanisevic
: and Boris Becker among the men,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

.

&amp;,BOBBAUM
PORI'LAND, Ore. (AP) Christian Fittipaldi had one big concern u he lay in an Australian hospital, his rigllt leg broken in three
pi~. J1is left fOOl fractured. How
soon could he drive again?
·
Aliulemorethan two months 1111er, a 14-inch steel rod holdina his leg
together, he slill couldn't walk with- ·
oul . crutches. But he was racing
agatn.
.
After all, he is a Fittipaldi.
. "I WI$ born tO race," he said.
l..asl weekend. II Portland Inter~ation~ Raceway, Fittipaldi didn'l
JUSt dnve, 'he contended. He quali·
fied third, eqtialing his beat stai1 in
thiCe years of lndy-QI' racing.
andHehailtobrakewithhisleftfOOI
couldn't completely take his :was no time to play. .
rigbtfOOiolf'theacc:eleratorbecause
For eight to 10 hours a day, he
his leg wouldn't bend enough. To worked out, mosdy by swimming.
· make matters worse, rain during
"It says a lot about his.desi~e to
Sunday's Budweiscr-G.l. Joe's 200 be here, becatise.he's Worked his rear
maile the nine-turn road course end off," said Lee White, manager of
extremely treacherous.
,
Newman-Haas Racing. "He's just
Still,. Fitti~ldi finished fourth beat himself to death ia therapy and
after betng second going into the . swimmina and all sons of things 10
final .two 1~, when his rain li~CS build himself baCk up. The credit
detenorated tn the drying c!IJM!itions • goes 100 percent to Christian,
and he was passed by Raui-Boeael becanae without his desire and his
and eventual winner Mark Blundell. heart, it wouldn't have happened...
"I was pushins it to the limit
Like all successful drivers Fittibecause I wanted, by all means, to paldi is motivated by an 'overwin the ~·" Fittipal4i said. "I'm whelming desire to win, something
pretty surpnsed that I feel as good as that has yet to happen in three seaI do."
sonsofFOfl1lulaOneandthreemore
. Fittipaldi seems to always have In Indy-cars.
.
.
.
wanted to race.
• ·"I have to believe in myself and
"All our family, you know, we're 1 have to believe I'm better than the
born into motor racing," said his others," he said.
father, Wilson, a successful FonnuIa Onedriver'who raced for 35 years.
"I don't race because I like 10 put
"When Christian was 9years old, he a driver's suit on or because of the
decided·to start to drive go-karts."
money. 1 would rather stay on the
Sinc:e his uncle is the great Emer; farm, raise my cattle, and have a nice
· · expeeled to easy life rather than having to uavson F1'ltl'pald'1, Cbnsttan
succeed.
el a lot and going through a lot of
When he was 17, Christian need- · risk imd nerves and tension...
ed special clearance to drive in his
He races, he said, "because it's
•
·
·.t
Form
1
F'--'
2000
first
1
pl'O•esslon.,..
u a UJu
pan of you."
race. At about thai time,'his father sa:
In his second season with the
him down for a serious talk.
highly successful Newmim-Haas
.....:.,; 't ·
dec'1- team, and with Michsel Andretti as
... ,"'
.•.~'d.,.,..
.,...~ ...,an,t 1s Y.IIUf
· ~ but do ·lt.m
· the n'ght way.· Do
. ·It a teammate, Fittipaldi seems on the
ston,
in a professionGI way,"' Wilson said. brink of that breakthrough victory.
"'"
· a racmg
· car to
.ou don 't· dnve
"The tragedy of this whole thing
show your friends you are a racing was Christian bas knocked on the
driver, because it's very dangerous. door tbi'ce or four times since he's
You take a lot of ris~.' ~ ~id,he _ lleen !Yith lis," White said, "and we
kne~, and that was h•s. dectslon..
obviously felt that once he won that
· . Hts fath.er t~ld. hn':l th,at JUSt race, he would really be on his way.
because be IS a F11t1paldt, he should
"As a driver, he's first class. As
feel no pressure to be a driver.
a person .he's even more than that.
"But he1aid no," Wilson ~emem- It's only~ matter of time for that first
bered. "That's what he likes to do." · one...
Wilson Fittipaldi was 111 the vast
Christian could have the rod
Brazilian ranch where he and his~n removed from his leg next April, but
run 8,000 head ofcaule when Chr1s- thai would mean missing the early
tian'~ Swift I:IOI'd hi' thf: wall 111 .180 pan of the 1998 CART season. He
mph m ~second lap..ofthe SunBelt . said he probably will have the rod
lndyCamlval Australia, which was . removed iJt·the end of next year.
.sho;~vn on TV.
. . .
"There are .lois of people w~o
After I ~w them pull Christian have screws and rods in their leg and
out of the car. uwas really a very bad they live a nonn_allife," hC said.

watersltiingandsquash.Now,the~e w~rr···ors
a

IT'S BACK! - Members of the Wimbledon
ground1ll1aplng llllfl' ltlnd under 111 umbrella u
their fellow llllployftl brave the elament1 while
talking with. them. during a rain delay In the
women'a alng~ match between tha Czech

Rapubllc'l Jana Novotna and Gennany'1 Wlltrud

· Probat Weclneaday. Rain, the 1ournament'1 nema-

lll.'r:la elqMCted to fo~ the All England Club 1o
ICnadul matchea for Sunday for tha eecond
lime In e tournament·~ hl1tory. (AP)

says he can't recall first title bout with 1LIO yfield

By TIM DAHLBERG
know what mistakes he made in the
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Mike first fight and what he would do to
Tyson has only a few hazy memories correct them in Saturday Qight's
of his first fight with Evander Holy- rematch.
field, a tight he thought he had won
"I lost the first fight, that's the
until his handlers told him in :the biggest mistake there is," Tyson said.
dressing room that he was knocked "We'll correct it by winning this
out in the lith round.
· time."
From the middle rounds on, when
Whether Tyson can correct it, of
the two fighters clashed heads, Tyson course, won't be known .until the two
·. says he doesn't remember a thing fighters meet in a scheduled 12- ·
about the upset loss that cost him his round heavyweight title fight that
· WBA heavyweight title.·
will be boxing's richest ever.
.
"I was whacked out," '!yson
.A bigger question might be
· said. "Basically, I didn't know what whether the 34-year-old Holyfield
· was going on in there."
can put together back-to-back big
That might have been why Tyson fights after a lengthy career that has ·
was somewhat less than analytical at seen him take his share of punish- ·
- Wednesday's final prefight press _ !'lent in the ring.
. conference when Sotneone wanted to
"!-look to bring even more to the
,.
table this .time," Holyfield said.
'

"They (Tyson's camp) have found a
The numbers for the rematch; at the biggest sponing events ever." . .years ago. Part o( the appeal of ihe
way to beat that guy they fought least in terms of dollars, are stag·
The first fight between the two rematch is that the career of the
Nov. 9. There will be a different guy, gering.
men grossed Some '$100 million, feared puncher is at a cro$sroad~ at
a better guy, in there June 28."
Holyfield will get some $35 mil- with pay-per-view revenue of close the ageof 30.
· The two .fighters met for the fimil · lion - the. biggest one-night purse to $80 million from 1.6 mi'llion buys.
Tyson didn't appear terribly wortime Wednesday for yet another _for an entenainer or athlete of any Larkin said. This time. he predicted ried about it at the press conference,
·I
lengthy press conference presided kind - while '!yson is said to be 1.8 million buys.
where he feigned boretlom:but also
over by Don King. SubjeciS ranged making $30 'million for his night's
Add in $15 million or sb in for- laughed QCcasionally· and. seemed
the gamut from untimely deaths of · work. · .
·
eign television rights · and another quite relaxed.
the relatives of famous people to
King wiJI.certainly get his cuttoo, $14 mill ion from the li vc gate at the
. 'T m going to do pretty good Sat·
whether Pete Rose should get in as will cable television operators · MGM Grand Hotel, and the numbers ur4ay night,"·Tyson said.
.
baseball's Hall of Fame.
across ·the country who pocket a finally compute.
Holyfield was also relaxed, smil·
After selling out the 16,33 I -scat ing from the minute he ~ntered the
If little was revealed during the good pe!Qlntage, of .each pay-per90-minute King talkathon, ·it did view sale at a ·suggested price of MGM Grand Garden at prices rang, ·1'09111 and' patiently answering quesmanage to put both boxers on a dais $49.95, or $10-more if ordered the ing from $200 to $1,500 a seat, the tions he had heard hundreds of times
together to promote pay-per-view night of the fight.
·hotel put on sale 3,500 closed-circuit before.
sales that could hit rc:cord levels.
"If you believe the projections ·television seats at a price of $75.
"It's not like I'm still gloating on
"I don't know about this being I've read, this fight will gross $130
If Tyson doesn't win, it could be what I diil Ntiv.'9," Holyfield said.
the greatest figbtever, but I know it's million," said Jay Larkin, the man some time again before ht!·sees the "I will have a ~:real victory and I'll
been built up as the greatest fight behind boxing on Showtime and its huge purses he has come to expect win again.
ever," Tyson said.
pay-per-view arm, SET. "It's one of since being released from prison two
H

•

:. Battle over hunting wandering Yellowstone bis~~n begins ·

By PATRICK O'DRISCOLL
bloody · slaughter that caused an . 3,500 animais to (ewer than ·t ,600. b1son management. "Any hunter·
USA TODAY
uproar last winter. More than I.QOO
Letting state-licensed hunters . who believes in fair chase and has
DENVER- A controversial new straying bison were shot by game shoot bison outside the park risks any ethical backbone at all would
plan would let sport hunters shoot wardens or hauled off to slaughter more wrath from those who believe refuse to pariicipaie in this. It was. some of the rellowstone National over fear that they carried brucei- a sporting hunt of the !flassive, slow- n't and can't be a sponing hunt."
Officials in Montana, where most
Park bison that lumber out of the losis, a bovine disease that can·cause moving beasts is impossible. ·
park in search of winter food.
cattle to abort their calves.
"Shooting bison is like shooting of the animals stray, brieny pennit· ·
Another 1,000 bison succumbed · a parked car on your residential ted such hunts in the late I 980s, until
Environmental and wildlife
. groups say the state-federal plan, due to snow and bitter cold in o~e of the street," said D.J. Schuben, a wildlife public outrage en~ed the practice.
: this summer, will only perpetuate the ' most severe Yellowstone wmters on biologist for the Fund for Animals, The state Legislature, which doesn't
··
· record. The park hetd shrank from which is suing over Yellowstone
•

;celtics
.challenge Sixers' voiding Radja trade ·
.
.

' By HOWARD ULMAN
BOSTON (AP) - Dino Radja
played tennis and basketball recelll• ly withol!t any pain that Rick Pitino
; could detect. Somewhere between
:OBoston and Philadelphia, that appar. enily changed.
; Now NBA commissioner David
··Stem must decide whether the
· ; Celtics forward- who balked at his
: trade to Philadelphia- is healthy or
: hobbling and whether the 76ers nul·
· lification of the deal should stand.
· The Celtics say no and have
8JlPC&amp;Ied to Stem. The 76ers say yes,
: tl)at Rlldja, who had arthroscopic
' knee surgery last January, failed his
· physical. The NBA is expected to
hold a he'aring Friday.
"We think he's fit," said Pitino,
· embroiled in conuoversy in his fust
: trade as Celtics coach. "When he left
· ; us. he was in great shape, working
: out. He was not under the influence,.

96 season with an ankle injury and
all but 25 games last season. Bu1 a
clearly irritated Pitino seemed convinced Ra'dja was healthy and said he
was surprised at the number of doctors Radja had seen.
"I know he's seen three or four
doetors. It could be seven or eight. I
don't know," Pitino said. "He was
playing with our assistant coach
one-on-one, and we liked the way he
looked.
·
"I wish we would have known
that he wa5 in the pain he says he

.
·

was in."
.

.

Now the 76ers don't want him.
The Cellics don't either, even tho.ugh
he's signed for three more seasons

meet again until 1999, would have to
·approve the latest proposal.
"A lot of people's notion of 'fair
chase' hunting is the difficult time
you have chasing deer around the
woods," said John Mundinger of the
Montana Department of Fish,
Wildlife and Parks. "(Bison) will
stand there and look at you while vou
blow them away. I'm lJOt .sure how
we're going to meet thil!ldefi!lition."
Such a hunt wouldli't be open
season on . bison, but only to help
maintain YeUowstone~t'llerd at 1.700
to 2,500 animals.
i\-,,.
" '- •
'l}le proposal is
of the. "pre- ..

' environferred alternative" in ·an·
mental impact study for managjng
the park's bison. Representiltives of
Montana and three federal agencies
drafted it in a series of meetings here
last week~
.
The proposal also would allow
capture and quarantine of diseasefree bison for American Indian tribes
to use in buildi~g their own herd~
elsewhere.
,
. Th~ document. •is supp~sed to be
released by July 31· for public COlDment but inay be delayed as the govem111eilt agcneics debate aild refine
~~~ proposal.

Servlee
•OIL CHANGE. .
. FROID' END .
•LUBE
•FILTER ·· ALIGNMENT
'
· tu • .

$1,.'9 ·ts

Frclatw..Js
Four Whels

*29

95

*3.995

Rczczbok

. ~%&lt;

one of the best," ~ight said. "Soon- · pan in rehab,"

\,)

'

.,

.

8, 999

5

.

;:r~h~:~~&amp;.f~r~~:~the
Carlesimo felt a temptation to

..

f

WAS• .&amp;. YfAI
CLEAN ·. '
.INSIDE

FLUSH

$49~5 '.

WIIIIDMX,.
, ...... Wolltl'll .

•3.9·~:"

b. '

.:bola

==-:.::him,
'*"""'

. , ••-11•-.1'

.

•
'.

1996 OLDS
DELTA 88

,;

•PIIDII

-

:..::'
*
..w.
~

(;

'

··n. Foyle

•

5

.......

&amp;ollll . . . . . . . . . .

v nuu·.

....
..
. . ..

LEt's Gol

._,, ,

"laplot , ..... , .........

1996 BUICK
REGAL

10,999

1996 BUICK
PARK AVENUE

Program Car

1996 CADILLAC
SEDAN DEVILLE

a

draft McGrady, but his team has
cryingneeMoradefensivepresence
pronto.
.".We're Just very confident of
A I i
. what Adopis will bring to the team .
'I
!J11d his future," Carlesimo said .
:;: By MIKI! ORGAN · ;
· of these disputes are settled outside
Look at the bright side: Foyle is
:, •ncl CATHERINE
coun and generally beforo the coach a better alternative than Felton
TREVISON'
leav~s.
.
. Spencer, who save the Warriors
, The TenneuNn
·
DiN~o ~ h1s att~r· h~s 0.69 blocked shots a game last sea:;.. NASHVILLE 'JCnn. _Former btother l.arr)', we~e vacauomng m son, He'll play harder than Clifford
;: fOOl~! cOach ~ DiNardo 11111st _Aiasb ~nd not avai~ble for. com- Rozier.
~ payVanderbilt$281,886forleaving ment.llts n(\1 known If !heY Intend
Look at the dark side: Foyle
.,., the school for Louisiana State in to appeal. , makes less than one foul shot for
',.:. ~~with three years remaining on .
1bey had conte~ed that a two- every. two he takef. He 'passes the
,. his contract.
yeat contract ex~ns1on prese~ted by ball flbout as well as Neil O:Donnell
{, DiNardo had claimed the contract Hoolahan a.nd stg~ ~y DiNardo . in the Super Bowl. Foyle had 14
;:..-- wun 't valid and that Vanderbilt's - was not SU~JCCIIO a. h,utdated dam- turnovers'in a game apjnstthe lndi.:_then-athletic di~ector, Paul Hoola- age clause !n the ortJI~! contracL
ana HoosiCJS lasl season. Whit's he_
~, han, gave him permission 10 talk to.
When DiNardo was h1red II LSU. going to d.o against die Indiana Pttj:- .
::: LSU altQut the jOb.
he was asked about a buyout clause ers?
,
.
;:- . u.s. District c .ourt Judge Roben · in his con~ with Vat1derbilt. It was ·• : Yet he fits a need for the Warriors
• L. rEchols·ritted Wedueaday that the a significant issue hei:~ LS~ had and. first impressions are he ~ight
.: contract is billding and DiNardo offered its foodlall coachmg Job tQ have been made for the Wamors.
i_ muatpay. .
Texas Christian coach Pat Sullivan Tbehighligbts.theyshowedofFoyle
.·w. DiNardo's cl)nlract wjtb Vander- · the week before. ,
' ·
on TNT after he was drafted revealed
r.' bilt, signed tbrouah Ian. 1?98, said
Sullivan act:epted the post .but had . .a lot of empty &amp;eat.\ in the back~
' if he left early, he'd haw to pay the to bll:k out, sayin* he could not JI'OIInd, so Foyle won'l feel out of
.., 110ive11ity ~is , after-tax sa1aiy affOI'd the buyout of his TCU•con- placew~n~playshomegame~for
tf'$91,7111eycar-fOI'there,maini.nk tract..
'· , '
.
.
theWamors.
. . ..
·.
;:; yeara of the oontrac~ court doeu• The day LSU llhletics dtJCCtor
The blocked shots are tmprc:sstve,
• mentl said.
Jae ~ unounced DiN~~ his 'but Chari~ Bukley a~ KaJ:I Mal:
~ , DiNardQ·Ieft Vanderbilt for tstf . ne'lllt ~coach, Deln saJCI. DiNar- one I!Rin t gomg to g1ve hnn the
Dec' 12 1994
ikJ iold him not to worry about l!is ' same pump fakes as 811)'S fr.om
~ on "I
't ~ the luling it's ~8nclerblh con-.
Army and Navy. Whll ha~ns
~
~
·r the• 1
"DiNardo' wit, 'I am a big boy when he meets another branch of the
t ~ly tn the IJUI!I. Butt ru ,; and I'll •
f that. • " Dean titilitary (\ir JOrdan?
· .
1 •n• 11 in our fav~, we're pic~.. ' said.
~0 ·
'.
. •.
~ Slid John Callt-, 'VeJ!derbtiU
DiNardo' ~tyilreuonable, . Thebigdrawbilckeonllnuestobe, .
~ deputy pilml co&lt; In I. "ll's whll COiilplred ·~ ~ Venderbik ·. II! level of competition he played '
~ ~ex~ .and it ~u the' riaht . suffwod.
wroie. nie'tehQol ti..~~L~ Carlcsimo. countered ~~ .
. . thina to dO. •
,
had . 527000 10 recruil a new cnuctam by play1na the. Davtd
1
·
The rulina did J!Oi award Vander·
10 PlY
v'a;.,.~,.~ IIi
"•
. hi Rabiuon caJ'!I. Robinson, before
1t took
, bikanyaccnllllinilnlhlll~~ Since
.
I '~iq 'IIIOiympiullldanNBA
, ey bii: Jtdll tile Unlftl'lilr pa :IICI the
1b1 ~
.AII·SIIr mel MVP, pi~ 14 Navy.
1
t' ..,_,. of lfl!l caea.t jult four ~-.., ~=
He a- I ' d a then· NCAA JCCOrd
:,days.,. DiNlldo pwjped .
-tel ·
5.2 biocbd sbota I pme. foylt
. ... . Tile lllliwull)o dldll.' l .U for ~~..,..:--:::::rn -...thalnic:onll.. _byever- ~
,. , ~'·
tllider
llltni 5.7 per lanill playillj qainst .

s,

~I.

er or later, I'll have a .chance to run
Embry likened the pick to M&gt;'·'the team."
waukee taking Sidney M,oncrief,
Anderson had reconstructive who had SUSJlCCt knees, i.n 1979.
. surgery on his left knee while at Embry was the Bucks' general manOhio State in 1994, then transferred ager at the time.
to Kentutky, where he was pan of
"We felt Sidney Moncrief was
· the Wildcats'l996 national c:hampi· -well worth the risk," Embry said.
onship team.
"And we took him at No. S. We can
He came back strong from the only hope that De~ek Anderson can
first injury 8J1d was leading Ken• have:a similar c:areer."
tucky with 17.7 points per pme last
. Thouab the ·Knight selection
SC8J011, but injuied his riJht knee lpirted questions about whether ·
Ian. 18 and misaed tile ml of the Cleveland was ready to trade Branlellon. Anderson apin JCCovered don, Embry said they were never
quickly, and even Jlllde two lechni- close to makin11 any deal on draft
ea1 he illrows in Kentucky's nalion- day.
al aemifinal vi&lt;:tory over Minnesota.
With the 4Sth pick, Cleveland
"I'm fine," Anderson said: "The selected 6-foot-7 forward Cedric
docton did their part, and I did my . Henderson from Memphis.

1996 CHEVY
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••

J

OPHl
SUilDAY 1 ',

.

.

,

�PonwfY •Mlddlepat1, Ohio

•

By JAMES HANNAH
Associated Press Writer
DAYTON -The Air Force's ver, sion of what happened 50 years ago
at Roswell, N.M .. doesn't hold water
with UFO buffs who live near the f~- .
mer center of the military's ~xtraier­
restrial research.
"Itjust amazes me. Every time the
government opens its mouth. it puts
its foot in it." Jerry Bll!Ck, a UFO
researcher from Blanchester, said
Wednesday.
.
An Air Force report released Tuesday in . Washington suggests ·that
dummies used in parachute tests; not
alien bodies, were what people saw.
The report was meant to close the
book on . rufllors that the Air Force
recovered a flying saucer and
extraterrestrial bodies near Roswell in
July 1947 and then covered it up. But
doubters say the parachute tests
occurred years after the Roswell
accident
" I believe something other than
what the government claims to have Soun:e:M'. happened happened," said Black.
"Realistically; we ·can't prove that
extraterrestrials crashed in Roswell in
The Ohio base was home to Pro1
July of 47." ·
ject Blue B.qok, the Air Force's ·
But he thinks the Air Force's , investigative body for UFOs. In
explanation about test dummies I%9. the Air Force closed Blue Book
makes no sense.
·
by concluding there was no !!vidence
"The time frame doesn't even of extraterrestrial spaceships behind
thousands of UFO sightings.
fit," he said.
Bobbie Mixon, spokesman for
"''m assuming tliey had access to
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in . our historical files," Millon said of
Dayton, said the Roswell report was the Pentason investigatoo.
He declined to comment on~
compiled by the Pentagon, but that
some of the research was done ·at Roswell report or its conclusions.
"I'm skeptical of the Air Force
Wright-Pat .

By AUCE ANN LOVE
Associi!Wd Press Wl'ltlr
' WASHINOTOiii-Seutonvoting to make wealthy senior citizens
pay higher Medicare premiums and
.to raise the eligibility age said they
knew the plan would be unpopular
and.were not ~ounting on the House
to embrace it easily.
·
"Obviously we have a lot of work
to do," said Sen. Phil Gremm, RTeus.
The · Senate's ·bipartisan agreement Wednesday co inch~ the proposals in its balanced
pli;kage
showed there is increasing consensus
on Capitol Hill that drainatic change
to Medicare ultimately will be needed. .
The financial . resoul'l:es ·o f tbe
nation's bCalth~NC 'progiam for the
elderly are .expected Jo be overwhelmed by the retirement of more
than 70 million Baby Boomers ·start, ing in a decade.
' "People h~ve come co realize that
this crisis is going to come.~· Gramm
said.
House Republican leaders, however, continued to hedge on how
much change is warranted this year.
They went about the business of passing their own spending bill Wednesday without caking up the Senate's
AP/Corl Fox .

budaec

ellplanation,'' said Kenny Young, a
reSearcher for Tri-State Atlvoeates for
Sci~ntific Knowledge.
The Cincinnati-based group is
made up of about a dozen UFO hobbyists, researchers and investigators
who track UFO reports and search for
explanations.
Young said the ·crash dummies
might explain accounts of corpses at
Roswell, but the dummies weren't
used until yearS later.

chanps. · .
is ... c.ke away health ins~ce for
"We will hear their IIJIIIlleiiiS" adulllforwhich~iiiiOtns.-.ce
when H011te IIJid Senate ell~"'* markel.lfy6tfre6,_~old,~'.~
are fl!lolved by a conference com- .the marlu:t for health onsuranc:e ·
mjtree in July, said R!!p. Bill Thomas, · Sbalala sat.d.
. .
.
R-Calif., a chief• architect of the . Th~ Clinton -admtrustrahon. also
Hou~ Medicare provisions.
mten.ds to fig~t agatnst htgher
The higher premiums ap~ved by Me~tcare r.rem~ums · for ,wealthy
the Senate would affect the wealthi- semon, Whtte House. offictals, con-.
est S percent of seniors•.Premiums firmed, ,since the chanae ts not neewould begin IQ increase (or elderly essary to balance the federal budget
individuals whose incomes ellcecd by 2002 or 1\eep the progi'!UII anoat
$!10,000 and be fully phased in for for.~e nellt 10 yean . .
those earning $100,000. At that maxWe are concerned that the proill\um income level: an individual's ~sals passed by -the Senate contraannual p~emium would be $2,160 diet the ~aref~lly crafted balan~ m
next year when the changes would the b~d~et_ agreement by eJ&gt;cesst~e­
c.ke effect, instead of $540. Higher lr s~.tfU~k the. burde~ t9 be~fict~­
premiums would begin for couples nes.. S&amp;ld Chris .Jenmn~s, Chnton s
earning $15 000 and·be fully phased- semor health poltcy advtscr.
in at $125 o00
The American Associati~;~n of
· Rep. J~hn Boehner, R·Ohio, said Retired Persons is urging retirees as ·
he altd other members the House well as working-age people to contact
leadership are also prepared co .hear their !"em~rs of Copgress -' soon ·
out those opposed to the Senate's pro- . to be tn the~r home states for the July
posals- particularly the president. Fourth hohday - and !15k that the
"It's a three-way conference," Senate proposals be scrapped.
said Boehner.
The bill also would allow senior
Health and Human Services Sec- citizens co choose from a menu of
retary Donna Shalala said she is new health plans bey~nd the tradiafraid that raising the Medicare eli- !tonal _program, and a hmtted nu':"ber
sibilicy age to 67 from 65 will leave of rettrees, could get !~If ~edteu:e
younger retirees vulnerable.
benefit m cash to combtlle wtth thetr
" What we would not want co do own money in tax-eKempt medical
'
·
savings accounts.

Public health groups find nicotine
~~!t~g 'absolutely ..-nacceptable'.·
By LAURAN NEERGAARD .

Campaign f.M Tobacco-Free Kids.
AIIOClated Press Writer
"What I heard this morning makes
WASHINGTON- Public health me afraid we will drive the industry
groups took. a unanimous stand: an_d i.~ legisla~ive allies away," he
Restrictions on government control . s&amp;ld. I am asking us to all·think realof nicotine that cigarette rriaken istically."
wrote into the tobacco settlement-are
Congress must ratify the dual,
"absolutely unacceptable."
which seeks to settle 40 state lawsuits
Calling that , issue a deal killer . against the industry by seciing nationWednesday, former Food and Drug al tobacco policy.
Administration chief David Kessler
Nicotine control wasn't the only
said" tobacco companies will have to concern of the nation's top public
. compromise on demands that wo.uld health groups, who, 1~ by Kessler
· keep the FDA from quickly making and former Surgeon General C.
cigarettes less addictive.
Everett Koop, are advising President
"Personally,
I
would
like
to
see
a
Clinton
and lawmakers on last week's
souri and Wisconsin. The site had Ohio to drop its association with.the
.
resolution,"
Kessler
said.
But
as
the
proposed
tobacco settlement.
been 1expected to open in 2005, but a conipact. The lawmakers say quessettlement
is
worded
today,
"take-itThey
also
declared that the deal's
I&lt;X;tt!!.on had not been picked.
· lions about the ~ump's costs, location
or-l~ave-.lt'
is'
just
nbc
golng
to•
fly.
If
penalties
if
tolla.;co
companies don't
Now the Midwest Interstate Low- and safety have never been answered. .
cut teen-age smoking are, in Koop's
Level Radioactive Waste Commis"The only common sense. th!lt's the notio~,l~is is dead."
But.
one
negotiator
warned
the
words •. "woefully inadequate."
sion· is reconsidering whether a .tor- approach is to get out of ·the com· .
health•groups
tHin
if'they'_re
too
crit·
The deal "has co be fixed, .it can
age site is needed to handle contam- p&amp;ct." said Rep. Ron Mottl of North
tcal.they could lose the btggest con· be. fixed and we will fix ic;" Koop
inated clothing, test tubes, mac~ Royallon. •
and similar wastes.
·Asito is no loRger. ,J¥:eded.ill part cess~ons th11t ,tobacco compames ha~e satd. Will the.klbacco industry agree?
. The group was ellpected to vote at because disposal sites elsewhere in evet 111ad~'' 1'lie •deal ··ofi'Grs · ~~~ ··' "That's not my problem," he said.
ns annual meetong today on a reso- . the country are still available, says curbs on tobacco ads, a huge pubbc ''Whether Congress will go along is
smoking bat\, and billions of dollars my problem."
. · . .
~utio~ to shelve plans for the dump.
Gregg Larson, executive director of
to
ftghl
tobiic~o use by teens and
Congress
gees
its
first
close look
A~ a news conference before the the St. Paul, Minn.-based commisadults, satd Wtlham Novelli of the at the settlement today, when cobacmeetong, House Democrats urged sion.
'

Nuclear waste site plans could be
shelved by Midwestern commission

USEDC R
8 DC

•

'By' The Bend

I

Medicare proposal faces.
revision by GOP backers

Roswell
account
-doesn't
impress.
UFO buffs

COLUMBUS (AP) - It was 13
years ago that Midwestern states got
together co begin planning . for a
regional dump to handle then lowlevel radioactive wastes.
Congress had provided the cata·
lyst four years earlier. In 1980, it
orden:d states - singly Or in com·
pacts- co uilie· care of disposing of
the wastes from nuclear power plants,
hospitals and research centers.
. Ohio is to be the first hose of adump that also would ~andle wastes
from Indiana, Iowa. Monnesota, Mts-

Thlftday, June 21, 1117

co oj)ponent Sen. oirin Hatch, RUtah, quizzes the chief negotiators at
a . he!lfing. But tobacco legislation
isn't expected to be considered before
fall. . .
.
In a sign of liow hard a congressional tobacco fight may be. the' FDA
lost a battle Wednesday for federal
money to crack down on illegal
tobacco sales to minors.
A House appropriations subcommittee approved $15 million.for the
FDA to divide among the SO states to
conduct stings and take other steps
against stores that sell· tobacco to
teen-agel)!. The FDA had requested
$34 million.
The FDA has published regulations to control ni\:otine like it does
any other drug, and a federal judge in
North Carolina upheld that authority.
But the , tpbaccQ settlemept sets
restraint$. inclu~ipg:
• ' '
• FDA must prove that lowc:ring
nicotine levels would subsiantially
aid health, be technologically feasible and not crel!te a black market.· ·

-

...

!.-

.

.

.

Thursday, June a, 1117 :

'

boyfr~end
r-------------,'

Abusive

,.,.,

ffhe Daily Sentinel:

'lo
·•

J

fails to convince wo·man to-leave
him
..

police station when be 'smacked me . apologized for his behavior. He said
square in the face. I guess I said he wasn't himself because he had
something he didn:t like. "Joe" kept been drinking. I realize that is nc/
Ann
right on walking, and like an idiot, I . excuse, but I'm going to take him
Landers
ran after him. A PQiice officer who back anyway.
.
1~ . LoL Anp:leJ
Will! standing nearby warned me. He .
Please tell your readers not to
1lma Syndalc and Cre!¥lid, "Lady, that guy will hurt yoU. judge me or anyone else in this ~itu­
.a&amp;on Syndln~ .
Oon 't chase him/' Bl!t I did anyway. ation unless they have gone through
Joe .then slowed , down . so I could it.llove Joe and want to be with liim
By ANN LANDERS .
catch up to him, I but apparently, he always," no matter what. -·- Averase
• Dear Ann Landers: As I write this was still angry because he punched Girl in Every City, USA
·letter, I can barely see the paper me in' the mouth,4gain.
.
,Dear Average Girl: You've already
:J1ecauSe the tears are streaming down
Ann, I've ~n women dtscuss told me you want to be with Joe
-'!'Y cheeks. I never thought I would abusive boyfriepds on, talk shows, always - "no matter what." OK.
·be in this situation, but here I ain -- and I've always thought they m11st be That's fine with me. But here is what
stupid to stay with those men. Now you can expect: black eyes, perhaps
·iii an abusive relationship.
• I walked home from the movies. I S.e their side of it. I know I deserve a broken nose, maybe ll busted jaw,
:with my boyfriend last night. We better, but I can1c help myself. The neighbors calling the police, mldni~t
;were right across the street from the . day after Joe hit me, he called and trips tu the emergebc:y room and
,:

Citizens committee on civil
rights and the drug war to 'meet
'

Beat of the ·send ...
by Bob Hoeflich

A citizen's committee on civil lib- the Athens Public Library, •the com- mittee is to gee people in the area atmosphere of constructive dialogue, •
erties · and the drug war will meet mittee worked to identify the issues actively involved in·making the com- where the goal is to increase 811 :
It's been said ths,t God makes the times.
aga_in on Tuesday from 1-4 pm at the under discussion, in order to maintain munity a place to feel good about liv- understanding of different views and : .
load to fit the back. However, someUnited Campus ·Ministry Building; some focus.
ing in. The meeting is free and open · work toward solutions on the points ;
how the load seems to get pretty
You also h!lve probably experi- ,.18 North College s.~t in Atheris.
· The issues ·under discussion are: to the public.
of common ground." said l,orz.
heavy for a J{jc of folks.
• enced the saga of.the keys. You · There is •limited amount of park· search and seizure issues, forfeiture,
"We hope this meeting will conThe Appalachian Peace and Jus- :
I think about Robert and Maria know. You lose them and don't know ing available behind the building. The the possible skewing of priorities tinue to provide a ·forum for local tice Network (APJN) is a non-profit :
Waldnig of the Racine area.
. where io find them--a frustrating citizen study group ~¥111 focus on (law enforcement), iss~ of local people to have a voice in decisions organizations which empowers and - ·.
. Bob h..S been very Ill for the past · experience, so say the least.
t~ dnlg policy, especially concerns discretion, privacy issues, accessibil- that impact their lives,'' said Debbie challenges groups and indi victuals to :
two&lt;and a half years . .TWo•years ago · Mary .Folmer of Racine had better ' raiselhbout the activities of SECO, ity of.officials for fe'l'lback, general Lorz, of the Appalachian Peace and work· for peace and social justice. :
in April, 1994, he underwent surgery luck than a lotlof us.
and its impliCations on citizen's civ· tactics (i.e. hoods, no-kriock, dynam- Justice Network.
APJN educates, provides training, ;
.in the veins of his right leg from the
Her keys--t~e car, the house, and · illiberties. Those who attend will be ic entry searches) and accountability
"We encourage those who have an and builds coitlitions.among local and •
:
ankle to his groin. Doctor$ gave him whatever-·CaJl!" up missing and tty as asked to attend several meetings, and oflaw enforceritcnt (SECO's chain of . interest in the issues to come to· the regional groups and institutions.
meeting. The meetings are dialoguesonly 40 percent chance of saving the she may, Mal')' couldn't find them. work ioward an atmosphere where authority and. protocols).
More information may be :
The object of f~;~rming this com- -not debates. We hope to build an obtained by calling Lorz at 592-2608. :
limb. He got along pretty well until · However; one day she decided to . everyone's views can be beard.
he developed an infected ear in check in the ~ine Post Office to see
At the l'iri;t ~ling on June 16 at
December of that year. There was if anyone had turned in some keys.
•
•
•
- ~ditionalsurgerybutthewounddid Sure enough, the postmaster banded
not heal. In February of 1996, Mary 'her keys. Talk about a sigh of
·
·
IAI
A .
'
another physician found the spot to relief.
be cancerous. A sm,n knot develThe keys had been fou.nd on the
oped
. . into the size of an egg and he street by young Adam Balland Derek
.
.
was sent 10 a cancer specialist in Warden whi\ could have pitched
Members of TOPS IIOH 131J3, · money for the March of Dillies for ··
Morgantown, W. Na. By the time, the them to the wind. However, they had Cheshire, participated in the eighth .the TOPS Ghapter was Catherine ~ik
· cancer had spread to part of the brain, the presence of mind and the thought- annual Tri-County· WalkAmerica de. TOPS presented .her with a tronear, neck and throat. Robert was in fulness co take them to the post office. which was held recently at Harmon p,hy. ·
·
•
surgery for. 13 hours. He then under· Mary was delighted· and thanks the Park, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Businesses sponsoring the memwenc chemotherapy. He went from boys profusely for their thoughtfulWalker;s who participated · were bers were presented certificates .
210 pounds to 130 and is still fight- ness ·and effort.
Janet Thomas, Cheshire: Catherine
This is the first year that TOPS has
ing for his life. His medicine runs at
"There are still a loi of good peo- Little, Cheshire; Emogene Johnson, participated in WalkAmerica. The
least $400 a month and there are pie around", Mary comments.
Pt. Pleasant; Virginia Voight, Pt. local chapter · raised $500. Funds '
•
additional costs tot physicians.
· And yoP, ~·owwhat?- Slie's right. Plcasanl~ll!ld·l'tWIIIJ;~I. Middle- from WalkAmerie~, support the Cam- • , · TH~ TOPS TEAr,t- Pictured II TOPS fOH.l383. ~~.,_, tMm ·
Of·cour.se, -Robert is discouraged · ••.
···~·
. · · ,, . . po.. -all -mbe"' ~··"-" local TOPS paign for. Healthier Babies; a t\aiionmembtrs who Pl~lcl~ In, \he ·1997- ~ Wel~loli ·
·
'"
.,_
•• u,....,
·d ffi
,for the
.· March ofDimee. fhavwerefront, 'llftto•rf'WCIIIIII'Irie
and he dQes need a lift. Perhaps, you
The 200th anniversary of the set-' Club.
.
wt e e ort by the' March of Dimes to
-•
'"""
could encourage him with your tlement of what 1·s now Mt.ddleport 1•5 ·.. · Others whu participating with prevent birth defei:ts and infant morLltlle, ...nat Thomas, Becky Vej~Cieeve, and Phyllis Rtlnldn, with
r
David VanCleave. On ths t•m, not pictured we,e.Phyllls Drehll;
praye..S and a card. The address is being observed chis year. .
TOPS we.re Phyllis Rankin, Cheshire, ta tty.
Emogene Johnson, VIrginia Voight and Jyl Birchfield.
45997 State Route 124, Racine, Ohio
The .Daily Sentinel staff which , Jyl Birchfield, Pt. Pleasant; David
,
,
1
45711.
normally is pretty occupied on a dai- • VimCieave, Bidwell: and Becky
Maria•says the couple tries to keep ly basis ptllting together the daily ·VanQeaye, BidwelL
smiling-,but that isn't easy some- newspaper has been spending its
The individual collecting the most
"spare time" in putting together a special edition to commemorate the
1'
birthday. I think you'lllike the effort
'
which will appear as an insert on July
2. It will probably be one of those
editions that you put away to save for
future reference. '

TOPS Club No. 1383 wilt
' ' + ' '
pa ft"
. ICtpa,e
In vval'L,1'\1"1menca

Early detection .is your ·best weapOn
. in the fight_against·~reast cancer.

J

J

Talk about the wheels of justice
·turning slowly. Frequently these days
we're told about the death sentence
appeals taking as long as · IS to 20 L-::~~~~~,~r::~_j
years. Seems a little much to me ..
But do keep smiling.
To Spy tile Best Buys In

ilie &lt;:lassl leds.

Magic 101

s;;ial fcream

Sat., June 28
1.1 AM· 2

·. .•U•tll DOW, "'1f. Otlhrida ................... 'lillie- I "ki&lt;UNOCIIII~
' • mutclo min~ lor ~~Willa • ? ~font • lnM A.ihotda c.-a jolt 'Of udtrilb
_..,lllf.,m IW b!Jt!o do..lupod. R... Jboullhb lllllllft&amp; product below.

(SrllCIALhf,. small company
in cent rill ln. . ~• has developed
·• 5JlCciol cream · that rclicycs
·. arthritis 1tain in minulcs, even
chmnic arthritis pain-de~p i.n
the joints. 11tc product whtch ts
called PAIN pu~·RII, Is o~c
uf the fastcst•acung tltcra(ICI'tle
Nicole Kanawalsky graduated
funnulas. ever dev~luped m lhe
summa cum laude from The Ohio
light agamstlt1hrltls•. ,.
.:
State •. :University June 13. She
.
lrr.nncdiately
u110n
nJlllh~areceived a bachelor of science degree
to worll by IJCnclrlll. from , the College ·of Medicine's · . !ttJIIIII\OCS
1111\ deep tu ; t!tc nrcas IIIO~t
School of Allied Medical Professions
alice led-the JOiltts thcmsclvts,
i.n occupational ~rapy.
.
lnillgillg Cast relief .where rcllcr
She will no~· .complete nine
is 11ceded must. Men and
months of intemsbips. •Nicole will
wnmc11 who ~ have suffered
lllthriti• rnirill..,for years '!'C
spend. th!' summer. .at.the Milwaukee .
'~IIDiting mcr(dlblc results wnh
County · Mental Health . Complex.·
tins
l"ocluct. ·.'.Even n sit1glc
DuriJJa the fall , she will be at Rivern1•1•liratlon
Mletns ln work
side Methodist Hospital in· Cohim,
remnl knbly wcJI in rclievillg
. bus: Slie will remain in Cohnqbus ,
I
during the winter when she interns at
1.\
Franklin County Board of MRIDD's
Early Intervention PrQgrarn.
IEIUUI il$5.95
Nicole is a 1993 graduate of Belpre ,High School and is the daughter
of Caiol and Craig Greening.
NICOLE KAffAW'Ail.I~KY

Kamiwalsky
graduates with
top .honors at osu

·Holzer is committed to the fight •..

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The ABBI* System

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~·

pain and .bringing comfort to
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·
•I'AIN . DUST•RII wns rc~earthed aild rummlatccJ to be
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one-step, small incision procedure
that'targets and removes suspicious
tissue for biopsy. Benefits of the
AB~I* System: ,
·
• Helps ·preserve healthy breast
•
tissue
• Minimal patient discomfort,
anxiety and trauma . .
• Quick return to normal activ·
ties
•

J

·Dtd You Know?
'

•

J

• Each year, breast cancer claims the lives of 46,000 women in the

u.s.

J

•

J

• 75 percent of breast cancer occurs in women 50 and over.
.
. • 90 percent of bre~t canc"r patients will survive if the disease is
detected and treated early.

·The Holzer Medical· Center
Now has the ABBI,.·Systeni, the ONLY one ~ithin a 45 mile radi\ls.
J

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F()T:more information·ca/1 the Holzer Health Hotline at 1·800-462-5215

'•

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lying to your family and friends about of hand.
and candid shots of the guests and put :
the multiple facial bruise~ .'·This seeMr husband, "Michael," and I them in an attractive album. Bring ·
nario js C0D11110n fo(women who stay .both come from big Catholic fami- yOID' videocamera and present the :
·With abusers,
· lies. I have 14 nieces and nephew~. videotape to the newlyweds. If you .
I beg of you, read what I have Michael has 17 -- all between the use your imaginatiOn, you.can save :
written and take it seriously. Your ages of IS and ~9. Within the last two yourself a lot of mooey and give the
only hope is therapy. You need .to · yeafs, six of. my nii!Ces and nephews bridal couple a gift that is unique,
understand why you have so little · and four of Michael 's have gotten
Gem of the Day: People who can- '
self-esteem that you think you married. This year, there are four .not lead and refuse to follow ma.b a :
deserve getting knocked around by .Ji!ore weddings scheduled. Do you dandy , roadblock. Th~y i10pede "
your boyfriend. Please, please go for see a solution? -- Broke in the Big progress·and are bani on the nerves.
counseling. You need help.
Apple
We all know a few who fit this :
Dear Ann Landen: You've printDear Apple: An unusual gift can . description.
ed several letters about how expen- · be far more impressive than 1111 .
sive it is theSe days to attend a wed- expensive one. Use your imagination. . Send qlleldam to Aim IawJen, ·:
ding. We certainly can relate to that. For eumple ·- frame the wedding Creaton Syadlcate, 577'T w. Cai- :
We would like to give a nice gift on invitation and present it to the couple. lury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Anple8, ;
these, occasioiiS, but it is getting out Take photographs of the ceremony Calif. 90045

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· olutlon. The MW offlcerl ere Piullne Atldni, ·
Mary PowH, Anna Cliland, Ellu Young, Abbie
Stratton, end Mary Kay Yoaf. ·Niw offlceii not
pictured . . RH Reynolda and Emtr11 Aahliy.

OFFICERS INSTALLED • Pet Hotter, miring
regent, pictured aecond from left, lnttalled the

offleera for 1997·97 term ore Rtttum Jonathan

Mllga Chapter, Daughters of the American Rev-

spans back to the Ice Age hunters
9,000 years ago. American Indian
tribes Jived on the island almost continuously until white settlers began to
flock into tbe Ohio Valley in the
1780's, it was pqinted out During the
1760's, the guide concluded, the
famous Delaware Indian Nemacolin
made the island his home. In addition, it was visi'ted by many
renowned figures including George
Rogers Clark, King Charles X of
France, Johnny Appleseed, Henry
Clay and Walt Whitman. ·
The guide described Mrs.
Blennerhassett as an outstanding·

frontier social hostess ·having also
grown up in an Irish aristocrat ramily. She entertained many local families, rode her horse across :he Ohio
River and taught students in Ohio and
West Virginia, and was instrumental ,
in providing resources to finance
typhoid fever immunizations to the
general popula:ion, it was note3. ·
Members of Return Jonathan
Meigs enjoyed the chann of the
. island, including the ride through the
hardwood forest, the. long beaches,
and broad fields which· provide the
habita: for a large deer herd and
throngs of water fowl · and other

birds. A very "people friendly" wild
goose visited the DAR group under
the shelter house while a flock of
wild geese could~ seen'nearby. .
Regent Patricia Holier conducted
the. business meeting under the shelter house. She annouricecl' 'that the
Southeast. District meeting, under
the direction of Southeast District
Director Rae Reynolds, will be held . .
at the Radisson Airport Hotel in
Columbus, Ohio on Sept. 20.
. The nex: meeting will be held in
September with a theme of the Con·
stitution of the United States of
America.
.

Royal .'rags' pull in $3.26 million at Christie's

· · NEW YORK {AP) - They
swished past dignitaries in Paris, .
brushed against princes in London,
sashayed with film stars at .the White
House, and came out of the closet for
GALL_
I
POLIS
Holzer
Clinic
career.
Dr.
Roush
has
also
recently
.
charity.
·
1
; announces the addition of Dr. Kelly published a book on taping and
Eighty ofPrincess Diana's gowns
• J. Rqush, chiroprac~c physician, to wrapping lechniques of the extremi- ·and cocktail dresses raised $3.26 mil:
medicine and· rehabilita' ties, primarily focused• on sportS lion for AIDS and cancer charities
lion staff.
ll)edicine and Injury.
·
when Christie's putlhem on the aucDr. Roush is a
.For the past year, Dr. Roush has tion block.
1987 . graduate of been working in the orthopedics and
Dresses in ivory satin, black taffeKyger Creek High physi~al . medical department at ta and forest green seguins ser bid•S'dliool. .
She Holzer €1inic as an athletic trainer. ders • paddles waVIng, bui itooe 'genobtained her bach- Dr. R&lt;iu.sh commented that she is erated Wednesday night fever like the
elors degree in · ·excited at the opportunity to move midnight blue number Diana wore
spor)S
back to ~er hometown and provide a when she danced with John Travolta
DR. ROUSH medicine/athletic
service tci the community through at the Reagan :White House.
. training at the chiropractic sports medicine. Her
The ·elegant, form-fitting velvet
University cif Charleston in 1991.- 'inedi£al 'prac:ice is located at the 'gown was buught by an anonymous
., Desiring to · further her education Holzer Clinic Sycamore facility and American garment executive for
·, and her abiliiy to treat the patient appoinlments can be scheduled by $222,500, making it the highest• population in.s,outheastem Ohio, Dr. call' s ;'
446-5244
priced royal castoff.
: Roush received her doctorate in chi;!~ ycamore, , . . · .
The bid was a record for a cos: ropractic '~medicine · from Palmer
h1ropracuc med1c~.ne IS .a branch ll!me . at auction,- surpassing the·
' College of. Chiropractic in 1996. Her of the hea]1ng arts wht~h deals Will) $145,000 paid in 1995 for the white
: practice interest lies in spor:s injury the. pr~venuon, conecuon and reba- disco suit Travolta wore ip the film
• care. She has been fortunate enough ~lhtatton ?f ~uscular-skeletal dlsor; to work with various Olympic and b earcsk. Chriin)htc headaches, neck pr
' world class· athletes throughout her
. par. can be managed through
!
thts dtsctphne .

; ' Beclcy Baer
another adult if a problem arises?
: ~~County Extension Agent, Does she demonstrate good judg• Famllv and Conaumer
· ment?
Here are some o:her factors you
: SclenceaiCommunlty
:· Development
might .consider: Is your home and
•
Since the end of the school year is neighborhood safe? How long' will
• here, many parents of older children · yourchildbealoneeachday?lsthere
: may be thinking about leaving them an adult nearby that.your child can g9
, home alone while they work. The to for' help? Does your child have
,; tenn "latchkey" is used to describe special medil:al, physical or emo: children who care for themSelves or tional needs? .Is your. family going
: are cared for by another child some-. .through ·a difficult transition period
·
due to a recent move, death, divorce,
· : time during the day.
~
Th~re is po 1Uagic age when chi I- or remarriage? Are there other sib. , · dren 'have · the maturity . and good :lings to consi\l~r? Children caring for
: judgmenl"pei:ded to stay alone·safe- .younger siblings need to be even
: ly. While ,ri)aliy children have these . more mature than other children in
• abilities around age twelve; others self-care.
.
1
: ·!may dev,eiop ll:tem, eit~er e~ier or .
You might also ask yourself: Is
~· lat~r: .Cliil&lt;l. cm f~ilities, though, there a safe plfcc to go in case of a
• :·report that inpst children stop attend- lost key or a fire? Ctin you, a neigh~: ing'ky,ase ·clcve" O!' .twelve.
·.bor or relative·-be reached by phone
:· · ~- u~ssing your child's readi- ' when the child,~ frightened? How far
•! ness fOt self-care, clmsider his ofhc:r is your work place from home? Can
f: phy,si~ir:?menial, social, and emo- . you get there qitiokly in an emer~: ~~~~61111Urity: 'JbC fo!lowingcheck- · ge~y?
.· .
'
.
r: ~:st . will ~olp ·.you evaluate. your · . »tchkey care IS no.t a good 1d~a
. ~- child's·reaCJiness.
1f your neighborhood ts not safe, 1f
.1s.you,l', child· p~):Sically ready to
~hil~ has special ne~s o~ if she
~; ''-Y alone.? ~ Y9W' child able to lock ts adJUSttng to new famtly ctrcum;ilind unloclti the doors and windows of stances:
"'f yQUi: liollllF? C&amp;!!;)oilr,child perfonn Although ~our child may be home
· everydaytaskssuchasfixingasand- alone, you _st1ll..~ ~~be ~Uvely _
'" · ,
·
".' m,volved wtth.ht~ lj;CbVtUes. S1t ~own
. wich?' · •
. Is your child mentally ~)' to wrth ,Y.our chtld; ~ ~ake a_hst of
. stay alone? Does yoUr ch1Jd tell aciiVItiCS that wt11 1be tnteresUng and
: time? Can he understand What . acceptable to do )"'hen you an: not
· "stranaer" aiul "emergency" mean? there. Be sure 19 note important
li Can she recognize danger, and does . "don'ts" as well. ~
·
&gt;she know how 10 ~tay safe? Can your · Parents should vide their chil-: child iolve Slilall ploblcms. on. his clren with the fo owina resoun:es
; own; ~also know when to aethelp?_;. which will mike ;stayinj at home
,Is she ·able to consider how het alone I~ sttes,fiil: a list of emer:actions affect othen? 11 he able to fol- seney phone num~. the name or a
:low directions?
designated penon 10 notify in unusl!· Is yoiD' child soci8Jly ludy to stay a1 situations while assistanCe is need:~one? Does your ,child solve con" .. ed,alistoChouserules,afirstllidkit;
.' fticll with brothers and sillt&amp;ll'l with. · allaililight and poltable radio in c:Ue
. llldll help from adulll? Cllllhe Jallt l· ,of bed weather, and a pet Ot a love
.... u•• to you about what h. rppeaa.at l.:. npte . from you thll mry provide
,._.,,
'-1
? DOes
·
nr1
icbool, and about her r-11111
' emouo
support.
·
he fell confident enouah to COIIIICt

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"Saturday Night Fever,'' according 19 tion hall. The first gown, a wrap- Designed by Christina Stainbolian
Christie's International chairman around white silk chiffon evening and known in Britain as the "Up
Charles Hindlip.
dress by Gina Fratini. sold for Yours" dress, it was sold to an
"We are thrilled.wi:h the results. $85,000. ,
unidentified man in the audience.
... It was more than we expected to
A lilac silk crepe sheath that
Among the charilies that will ben·
raise,'·' Hindlip said. "We were in Diana wore in 1992 in Souih Korea efit from lhe royal closet-cleaning are
new lerritory with this sale and we on her 11\St offteial trip with ihen-hus· Britain's AIDS Crisis Trust, the Roydidn't know how generous the audi- band Prince Charles sold for$51,750. al Marsden hospital , for cancer
ence would
A one-sleeved floor-length silk chif- patients in London and several AmerThe sal~e
ot the princess' pricey fon dress · embroidered with glass ican charities. Christie's planned to
disc~s ·was . e m?SI talked-about bl;ads and crystals brought $75,100. donate all its profits to the AIDS and
celebnty au ton srnce Jacquehne Dtana won: the dress, made by Hachi, · . .cancer charities. ' · ·
.
Kenne~y _
3S!'is' heirlooms went ...Po scv~ra,l occasions, including durThe auction was the first 5uch sale
before brdders in April 1996. The · ing &amp;&lt;Slate visit to Japan; -of royal.~iscards. Vsed dresses usuOnassis auction, sales .of its catalog
11te· 80th and last outfi:. a. white ally are passed on discreetly to upperand two benefit receptions held in · saiin strapless gown complete with crust friends.
·
conjunction wiih the sale raised $5.76 bolero jacket and covered with sprays
The· princess, who is divon:ed
million for charity, Hindlip said.
of faux pearls, went for $90:Soo; from Charles, sued a London weekIt was not immediately clear how Djana wore :he: Frat.ini design to a. ly newspaper that S!lid she wcilald
many buyers actually intended to 1988 sta:c banquet in the Elysee proli: personally from the sale. Her
wear Diana's casloffs. The ~owns Palace 'in ·Paris. II was bought by · 1996 divorce settlement forbids her
were custom-made and have no for- Romance Classics, a new cable chan- to make mon11y from her position
mal sizes, but are roughly equivalent ncl.
. with commercial -deals.
·
to an American size 6 or 8.
·
The s~ort, sexy black number
Dian'a's most celebrated gownBidding proceeded quickly during Diana wore to her firs: high-profile . :he ill-fated white wedding gown
the 2 .112-hour sale, held before an appearance after Charles acknowl- seen· by a global television audil;nce
audience of 1,100 at Christie's auc- edged his infidelity sold for $74,000. in 1981 -remained in the closet.

oo."

!Time out for ti P·S !:c~£~~~~~~~=~~~:~~; ·

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Mennonite .family risks farm:over principl~s

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Chiropractor joins
· ~- Holzer ~Clinic's sports
~medicine department

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18111,

The Dlllly S1nllnel• P1ge 11

DAR officers ~nstalled during Blennerhasset Island visit ·

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ODinlon:
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3. T«!Y ~ (4)

Dear NASCAR lon,
By linin&amp; up lapped CJII on
the inside, NASCAR enables
mmperlllon between the
that are one lap down~ etc.
Even if a car on the inside
takes the .,... flaa ahead of a
""~on. !he outside, II Is nol
really ahead of 1h11 car
beeauoe it Is competing'"' a
different lap.
Furthenno10, the rule enables
a Cll' to •make up its lap" if,
when !he green flag flies, k is
Jbie to ser ahead of the Jead •

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.,

' 614-99~·6520

""II

~---.....,1-QIIII

2131 Karr St.
Syracuse, OH

Con you explail the rationaie
behind !he NASCAR ruie
.which, undCr f;&amp;Ution, allows
thai have been lapped on
!he rnck 10 pull to the inside
llld pus cars they ,..,. unabie
to pus Under raCe cOnditions?
Why 110 they not requir&lt;d IO
SlUt behind the car on the tall
ofthe lap ahead? It ,..ms dley
are alklwed to do under cau~
lion whalthey unable 10
do on the tnock .

ln~urttrlet'

Ollor.- • .,.

Marine Service

Dear NASCAR This Week, ,

for H OI1l('D'.'mcr"&gt;

=~=RrJ
............_._.

"

:Community cale-ndar

•"''ICM ., .............. t•
!

t

Offic:ers o(Jielum JmtP-n Meip '
Olapter O.UsJders of the Americu
•
Revolution for 1997-99 . wen:
installed at the chapter's m:ent meetina on Blennerhusett Isl8nd.
Installed by Patricia Holler, n:tirina . ieaent, were Pauline Atkins,
reaent; Emma .Ashley, vice n:gent;
. Mary Powell, chaplain; Elisa Youq,
com:sponding secretary; Abbit Strat:;.
ton, treasurer; Rae Reynolds, n:gistrar; Ktuen Werry, librarian: Mary
Kay Yost, historian; and Anna Cle"
I
land,
recording secretary.
.
Members and their guesu rode the
I'
Stemwheeler up the Ohio River to
Blennerhassett Island where they
enjoyed
a picnic lunch before touring
SERVICE AWARDS • A total ot 8,000 hour. Of vo1untatr HI'·
the
Blennerhassett
Mansion and
vice W'l rept IMnted In two HI'VICI IWirda Plllll'lieci'I\Jieday
m*um, took a horse'and wagon ride
~the Women'• Auxiliary of Veteran• Memorial Hospital met.
around the island, and visited the
Pictured at the pntMRtatlon from the left sr. ·~ Sbitton, lUX·
crafts
and souvenir shops.
llluy priil~ Scott Lucaa, hoapJt,ladmlnl~; Ubby FllhA
costumed volunteer guided
' .er, I f,OOO hoW' PWird, and ROM o.m, 8 2,00Q'tlour IWiircL Oth·
membeJS of Return Jonathan Meigs
Iii WRing a-.rda to be praalflted later lnch!Cie Mar.bii·Freck·
OAR on a tour of the- mansion,
er, 71000 hour.; F1m Grimm, 500 hour., and EliZabeth Leighton,
10Q hOur..
.
. .
. . .
Blenn~assett's office and the family's summer kitchen. The docent said
that Harman Blennerhassett, a
weahhy Irish iuistocrat, 'settled on the
wilderness island in 1798 and built a
magnificent mansion and estate.
. The COIDIItanlty Calendar Is p.m. at the office.
However, she explained, Blenner• paM~ ualree service to aonPOMEROY
c.
Meigs
Local
Board
hassett
became entangled in a mys: pruflt JI'OUJII wiOhtg to announce
·
of
Education,
Thursday,
7
p.m.
in
the
terious military enterprise with Aaron
: Dlfttiq aad special events. The
: caJenc!er il not designed to promote · district's central office, Pomeroy Bqrr in 1806. As a n:sult, Presiden:
Thomas Jefferson accused both men
· Illes _or fllnd raisers of any type. Municipl\l Building.
of plotting treason in attempting to
:· Items are printed as space penults
TUPPERS
PLAINS
-Tuppers
establish an empire in the Southwest
: aad cannot be fiUIII'Illlleed to nm a
Plains VFW Post 9053 Thursday, Blennerhassett fted the island but was
: spedllc namber of days.
7:30p.m.
•I
captured and •put .into .the Virginia
State Penitentiary.
Although
: THURSDAY
,.
RUTLAND
Meigs·
·County
Burr,
slie
added,
was
tried
and
acquit, MIDDLEPOJ.IT -~ Meigs County
: Family .liftd Childr~~ First Coun~il. Churches of Christ Women's FeI- ted and Blennerhassett released from
lowship. Thursday, 7 p.m. at t!Je Rut- . prison, ·the lives of both men were
1, Thursday; 8!30 a.m. at the Mergs
I·C11unty Department of Human Ser- land CJ:turch.ofCiuist. Catherine Rus- ruined. Most historians, the guide
se~l. missionary to Mexico, speaker. said, now· agree that since Burr had
~ vices.
..
Mtddlepon Church to have devo- set sights on northern Mexico for his
'
dominion, he would not have been
;0
JtUTLAND
-- Leading Creek tions.
guilty of treason.
: Conservancy Board, Thursday, S
'Biennerhassett bland's antiquity
•
'

- I I t&amp;J .... c:hlci: GUll Zlile'l Etilln'

On TV AII_T nM •

•

'

HE WINSTON CUP CIRCUI

IAUM

.• . . . '

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

7

Muffler &amp; Tail Pipe

Gr'lpolil

........

• •

812-2111

IFNicUP

.......... liis'
1av•'s

•: ·Th\ndly, June 2t, 1W7

Ponw;roy • Middleport, Ohio

....

102111

'

..

.-

&lt;4l .

rour

~'

infonnation forms for :heir 375-ac:re truth is dear to tis."
,
dairy and produce farm, a · practi~e
Their farm and produce stand arc
that has. not gone unnoticed by the . run informally, with much bartering
and three generations of. Lapps.
that has been their livelihood for 25 Internal Revenue Service.
Last
year,
the
government
ordered
neighbors and friends pitching in.
years than sign their names to an IRS
the
Lapps
to
open
their
books
from
Work
is varied and sporadic, not at all
tax fonn.
the
years
1991-1995.
They
refused
like
the
9-to-5, job-specific world of
II) not because they object to payand
were
ordered
to
appear
today
in
·
the government with which they _
ing taxes. The Lapps, who arc MenU.S.
District
Cou
on
Buffalo.
about
now clash.
nonites, say they would have to fab45
miles
rt
cas:
of
Cassadaga.
,
"Some would collie to unload hay
ricate information to fill out the
They
say
:hey
won't.
and
gel a watermelon or a half bushel
fomis in a way that would satisfy the
The
'
apps,
activists
who
broke
of
peaches
in return," said Susan
governm~nt.
·
1
from
the
ish
church
in
the
1960s
Lapp, one of Jacob and Barbara's 12
They'd ra:her go to jail than lie .
because
t
y
felt
it
put
its
traditions
children.
While some accept wages,
"I just feel a whole lot better to
above
·
tical
pril!ciples,
say
they
·
ot!lers
swap
labor for rent or milk.
stand linnly,',' said Lapp. ihe 70-year- .
could
n
t
honestly
complete
the
IRS
II
was
impossible
10 keep accurate
old patriarch of a huge extended famforms.
records,
the
Lapps
said,
when :he IRS
·ily. "They can take my .body, they can
I
·
90,
the
Lapps
s:arted
calling
required 'hot only lists of employees
take my property. But my integrity, I
paperwork
"The
Lie."
and
their hours and wages, but other
'the
don't want to part with."
"We
can
't
sign
loa
lie,''
Barbara_
compensation,
suc_h as the daily lunch
Since I990, I he Lapps have
Lapp
said.
"Come
what
may,
the
ihey
are
served,
or the eggs they take
skipped filing all tax and employee

·

Dairy Bam.
holiday hours

,.~ OPENl

The Dairy Barn Southeastern
Ohio Cultural Arts Center in Athens
·will be open on July 4 from II a.m.
to 5 p.m .
. Presently on display at the Dairy
Bam is Quilt, National '97, an inter;.11atlonaljiuied exhibiti!ln of art quilts. ·
The 83 quilts that make up Quilt
National '97.come from all over the
United States as well as Australia,
Austria, Canada, England, France,
Japan, Isiael and New Zealand.
This is the 10th anniversary of
Quilt National which is held every
other · summer at the Dairy Barn.
Quilt National was the first and has
the lonaest . contini!OUS history of
in1emational and national art quilt ,
competitions and exhibitions. It is
considere4 by · many in the qujlt
world to not only set standards of art
quilt exhibits, but to have contributed
significantly to the development of
the art quilt as a respected contein~i~:':;.. '97 will be on display lhrouah Sept. 1· The aaJiery is
open, Thesday throiiJh Sunday from
11 r.m. to 5 p,m. with eyening holirs .
on Thundays until8 p.m.
,,

•

home.
.
.
IRS spokeswoman Kim Rerlskowski said privacy laws pn:venled
her from speaking about the Lapps'
case spccitically. In general, she said,
the courts arc not sympathetic to &amp;a•
offenders.·
"If we can prove they're evading
paying taxes, there's willful intent,
:hey face criminal charges," she said.
Tax evasion carrie.• a prison tenn of
up to live years and lines of up to
$250,000 per offense.
The -Lapps have paid for their
principles before.
Lapp and three family members
served tjme in jail in 1993 for sheltering a teen-ager who ran away from
an insti:ution with :he help of one o(
Lapp's daughters.

.

,I
~

THE BIBBEE MOTOR
~tl
. COMPANY .
.
42945 .SR 7 COOLVILLE, OHIO 45723

ANNOUNCING OUR GRAND OPENING JUNE 27th
and 28th OF OUR New sales &amp; service center!

Aa alway• we carry a run ~e ·oflilte model pre-owned ian and lruclu•
Now we can ofFer our cm10men ONE S'tOP- FULL SERVICE incJudinit

ENGINE REPAIR •AIR CONDITIONING SERVICE ·~SMISSION
SERVICE •BRAKES TuNE-UPS •ExHAUST• 8A'f1'ERIES •TIRES
Stop in for FREE HOT DOGS- PEPSI· DOOR PRIZES
JUNE 27th &amp; JUNE 28th
9-6
CHAND OPENING SERVICE SPECIALComplete 15 minute lube, oll change w/6lter ONLY

•19.95

614-667-3350
L.---~..;._____IJ!IIaJII-~-~~~·-IJ!II--IIJI-----------!-iil.
\~

r•
•

•

�P.age12 •

n. o.uy Sentinel

Thursday, June 26, 1897

Pomeroy • MiddlePort, Ohio
.

. ;Thuradl!y, June 28, 1817

.

110

Recognition- of new legislature
irks dem·ocrats In Hong Kong

SPACE CRASH UPDATE - Frank Culbertaon, Pha"1 Space Shuttti-Mir program mM•' \
agar, 11ft, polntad to a moditl of the Ru11lan \
apaca ~fallon Mit aa aatronaut Jarry Linegar,
right, who apant 132 days on the apace atetlon,
llatenecl during a news conference WednHday

HONO KONO (AP) - Hong
Kong democrats voiced fresh uger
today over decisions by Britain and
the United States to send envoys to
" the swearins-in of the new legislature
set up by China.
. When the British colony reverts to
China ·at the stroke of midnight on
Monday, Hong Kong's elected legis·
lature will be dismantled and
replaced by 1111 unelected provisional
one.
,
LaWIJialcer Emily Lau, an outspoken democrat who is boycotting the
new provisional body, called lastminute decisions this week by y.'ash·
ington and London to send consuls
general to the swearing-in "disgusting and contemptible."
"They have demonstrated them·
selves to be very hypocritical and
very unreliable," she said. "It is really quite disgraceful to see them make
this kind of U-turn just a few days
before the takeover."
Lau, an independent democrat
and former journalist, has been the
biggest vote-geller in two consecu·
at the Johnsan Splice
In Houeton. A cartive legislative elections.
go ahlp cr11hed Into the IJ)Ice atltlon during
U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine
a practice clqcldng Wedneaday, leaking oxygen
Albright and British Prime Minister
Into apace and crippling the etetlon'a power
Tony Blair are skipping the swearingaupply, {AP)
in to convey their disapproval of the

eentJ

new legislature.
Representation at the consular
level, both governments suggested, i$
simply a sbow of counesy to Hong
Kong's new government, which is
being sworn in atlh~ same time.
But editorials in Hong Kong
newspapers disagreed.
·
"London and Washington have
forfeited any right to the moral 'high
ground which they like to claim,"
said the independent English-Janguage South China Morning Post.
"Washington and London's 180-degree about-tum bas taught Hong
Kong a profound lesson: ... We cannot expect foreign governments to
watch out for Hong Kong's interests," said lhe independent Chineselanguage Ming Pao.
In lhe final five days until Hong
Kong's switchover to Chinese sovereignty, the pace of preparations
quickened, from .s¢curity sweeps to
sound checks.
Most of Hong Kong's 27 .~
member police force is being mobilized to guard handover-related
eventS. Police are checking manholes; deployfngbomb-sniffing dogs
and patrolling the. waterfront.
Out on. the fog-shrouded harbor,
workers were setting up barges from

Astronauts cope with crippled station
· JiiY MARCIA DUNN
. AP Aeroapece Writer

Desperate to conserve power, the
three men on Russia's crippled space
station Mir dimmed the lights and
shut down all non-essential equipment after lhe worst orbital collision
ever.
An unmanned cargo ship crashed
into Mir on Wednesday, leaving a
gash about lhe size of a postage
stamp. in the pressurized vessel,
knocking out half the power and raising questions again about how long
the decrepit spacecraft can function
before someone gets killed.
"It's. a serious situation," said ·
astronaut Jerry Linenger, who·
returned from Mir in May after bat·
tling a blaze and other life-threatening problems aboard lhe aging, I I·
year-old outpost "Fire aho&lt;lrd a
spacecraft and decompression are the
two most dangerous things that can
happen on an orbiting vehicle."
It was unclear how much longer
the American and two Russians on
Mir could remain on hoard, but they

1

which to launch a hlftdover-night
fmworks extravaganza. In a sym·
bolic touch, it will be a joint effort
between British and' Chinese fire·
works companies, the first of its kind
in Hong Kong.
Harried organizers of a ceremoni·
al banquet for 4,000 invited digni·
taries including Prince Charles and
Chinese President liang Zemin said
they were fielding queries from
guests wotried that the,rich menu· including champagne, lobster and
. truffle risotto - might cause !hem
allergy problems.
"We can't meet their specific
requests, we can just offer that meriu
or the vegetarian menu," said Adeline
Mann of the handover coordination
office. "It's the best we can do."
·Democrats from the outgoing legislature lJTe saying they want to rnalce
a valedictory speech from lhe batcony of the legislature after lhe mid- •
night handover ceremonies. The new
government has not given the goahead for that.
Democratic Pany leader Manin
Lee said earlierthis week he'd clam· ber up a ladder to the building's second-floor balcony if he was barred
from the building after midnight.

AVON! Wan!H !»rtOn 10 -

II~

..........Wittdow.
..... G.ten
•StnDoors&amp;
Wllldows
' .... Wtt.•.

Ucansed Electrician
Work Guaranteed
Free Eatlmates Prcvldlng
Quallly Raaldenllal
ServiCe New
construction- Total and
partial rewires on older

Comp. lnaul'llnce providing
full ' cove raga balore
•-rdlng bid. Blda will be
dua back at tha aame
location on July 7, 11197 by
4 p.m. Bid• will be aw.-cltd
at 1 later data. Till VIIIIIJI ol
Racine raurvee the right til
- p i or reJect· I!'IY O! Ill
bid• recti\lad.- aileatlont
can bt antwtrad by tht
Pro tel En lnMr II 1114

In Memory

I Tl~o~1gh

her emile Ia

forever,

her hand we can
nollouch
S1111 .we have ao many
mtmorlea
Ollhe 01111 we loved ao
much.
Her memory Ia our
keepaake '
WHh which we'll never

part
God haa her In Hie
keeping

have her In our

· htarta:

$1,500 IEWAIDII
· For Information
leading to the
arrest and
conviction of
anyone Involved
stealing a
property line
fence at:
1927 Cross St.,
Racine, Oh.
I.D. Caller!
Contact:
Ron I'AIIIer

..

SAVE

-~

'992-4025 .

NOW OPEN
'

'

&lt;·
l

••

I .
·'

I I

1111111111 l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l t l l l l l l

111111111111 I 11111111

1 •• 11111111

,

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:~·~·~R~~~~~~n~d,•O•h~--~--------~------------~----~----------------.__.7~~-~~·~11~
•

•

Professional Pet Groc•mll
Boarding - Training-

Supplies

$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.

Heat Pump

Serv·U (619) 645-8434
•

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC'~
New Homes ·VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing '
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

· Dllhll, Clolhll. Etc.
1121111, D-4, DO Magnolia Drive:
Mllltt ll.tiiOrnlty Clolhtl lloiby
l111m1, Cloon, E1collont Quality
Rlln Concollod.

......., .
,...N

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&amp;L- 111111M:2:QO p.m.

_

.
YOUNG'S
'_·(ARPENTEI SERVICE

Cllt!»niOt/ Wostelng Foroman lor

11111 Slrttl, GallipoUa, Ohio. Homo 111 IIHI and poll lrarrio ""lhllng

iliidlr-lhltd
lttorun.Sunaw
oc1111on • :too p.m. ·

(614)
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_..............

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company. Muot hrto layout and
auporvlaory lblllltot. &amp;elorr and
bonua COtM*I.. tlle wllll •-'"
tciCt an~ productlvi'L::.u ••
oponcl t/0 Tho Doly
• P.O.
Bo• 728·43, f!o~t~~~ioy, Ohio
45711D. .
Compulor Uaon Noodocl. Work
own houra. t2Qk lo ·~klyr 1·
11110-341-7188 11501.

CUSTOMER .AIIICI
REPAitENTATIVI .

, .... , llondly odlllon

• 10:011 ...... llluni~Yo

lrnoiUgen~ l.todvalld. Cor.., Ofl.
anted Penon Soug'lll For Full·
Addition•
Tlmo Pollllan In A fill Pocod
..... Garlgaa
Olllco. E•collont Otoanlzallanol
Skill a Ponnorod With Excollont
o£llc:trlcal Plumbing
Corilmunlcallon Skllla A Mull.
•Rooting
011 St. RL 850. ·
Computer Knowlldoa Pto-o
olnl*lor a Exterior
But Not Required. Sand RH,.,.
Clarlge
Salt:
Al178
oPalnllng
011 Of Nolghbathood
· Go To To: P.O. Bo1 DOl, Gllllpottl, Olllo
Allo Coilcl'lll Work
Tho Top or HIA, Clolhlng, Furnl· 45831-oeoe.
IUro, HOUIOWIIII, 8-? 71111, 7/ QQN'I 'F!D JHISI
(FREE ESTIMATES)
7:::f.lrd.::.:_______ Unlan you wanl to loo..
:2nd..:::..:
V.C. YOUNG Ill
Giganllc
Gorogo Salt: 83 Gllllld .Wolghl &amp; Foot Grut CAU. NOW I
~215
Avenue,
Juno 27111. &amp; 281h, Wo f.l0 4l 582-11373.
Pomeroy, Oil to
WII 'Nol Opon Til D:OO A.M. And
DAIVEASWANTEO
Cloolng Al4:00 P.M.
________._., Jusw 2111\, 28tt. 28111, to-? 14 Sy· 500 Mile Radiua • Homo Every
r
.camore Strttt, Gllllipoll.
WHkand, Family lnau- Paid
By Company (Oonlol, Eye, Pr•
Ju .. 27111, 21111, 1-3. 585 Mll£holl acrlplion) •o1KRa1lr......,1 Plan.
Rood, Glllipoll.
Fi-11 In · Flrll OUI DltPIICII. lalo
Model Conv. Tractaro With
· Sllurdoy, D·3, loll Or Nomo Flalbed Trailero Campollllvt Pot
Uc. WV 011030 ·
Brand Clalhlng, Longabargor . Parctnl3ge Of Qmu.
. Baokota, Tor•· Ball)' t1ama,
Roofing, Painting
Hauuhold 1tm1, Honda 3
GRANTTRUCKINO, INC•
Guaranteed
Whootor, Mile, ·~•ao S1a10 Ro54889RH
uto 1GO, Ewlnglan, OH (Approx.
OAKHLl,OHI0415 Mint. Foam ......,_
IIGC)-282-2113

«oom

a

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2nd, &amp; !lnl.
BldwtK IRodnoy Area. Thura, Frl,
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Pomeroy,

Frae Eetlmatea

Earn $1,000 W"kiY SIUIIIng Envtlopes Ar Home. arart Naw. Na
&amp; VIcinity
Experience. Frt• Suppllta, Info.
All Yard Sal• Mutt So Paid In No Obllgallon. Sand LSASE To:
AdVIIICo. .Diodllno: 1:OOpm tho . ACE, Dopl: 1351, Bo• 5137, 011·
diiJ before tho ad lo to run, n-ond Bat; CA 81785. ·
·Sunday a Mondor odlllon• Eaoy Work! Excallonl Pay! AI·
Mlddtepon

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992·1 056,,.io

949·2168

"We Ireal your bell frumd like our be11 friend"

Sf. Rt. 681

· Tuppers Plains, Ohio

~

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Easy Bank Anandng
Air CandHionen lnslalled 12&amp;- amonth
Hllll Pumps lnstaled 13r amanth

•New Homes

•Additions
• Remodeling ·

Custom Home•

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IJ

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Is;::~;:;;;;:-:"':..,~

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1998 Manln Straet
Pomeroy, Ohio

614-992-3410 .

l1lEE

Local Arae
Pick Up DIICI.rdtld
Appll•ncn 6
Many Mltlll.

,, lcllmonL

Loroa Garage Sole Rt 2 Jet 17
on Unit Mill Crook Rd. Juno 27·
28th. Antlqu 0 lurnlluro, 11ono
jar•. old· dlahao, anllquo clock,
lbrory lablo, Homo lntorlor, old
·high chair, plciUrOI, limps, gild,

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Holzer Senior Care Center Haa

An Oponlng For A Patt·Timo RN
Apply In Peroon M-F; I A.M. _.
P.M. 380 Colonial DriYa, llldwel~
-011451114 .

45769

IIIAR"II/11
IEIWieE

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'"' 1111111•1 ,
f..N,FNA

(fonnerlw ol Dean's

.........

N0111 .,.,.,. ,.,.
123 PIIUant.RJc9
Pomeroy,OH

Cell892 9045
for ell your

tranamllllon

neecl•.

LONG'S
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• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room ·Additions
Over 20 years experience
Free Estimates

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·-

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Adut1,_

UY'S
TUNSMISSION
I

chanica. Displaced Homemaker,
lndueuiaf Uaintenance, Nur••
Aide, Practlcol Nuilllno. Cllll lt4245-533•, Adull Sirvlcea. Buck·
eye HUI• Ca,.er Center, E.E.O.

Laroo Mulllplt Farrily: Furn11uro, Rockoprlngl Rahablll18don Cantor
Bodaproodo. Dlahu. ClothlnQ, will be ollattng training clatlll In
Southah~t Cammunuv Ctnttr, lht monlh or July. Appllcatlona
A NN OU~JCEr,lHJTS
Thura, Fri. I A.M. ·4 P.M. 8 MIIH 1r1 now being accepted 11
From Htndenan Beech Hill 3a758 Rockoprlnal Rd., Pl&gt;mo:.,.
Sc:tociot. Rain IShlno.
OH. CIOII lizo limited. TlvM
(3) ralorance papers ore required
5
00
_ _ _-::P=ars::::on:::::
· :::...
_ _.
Public Sate
with appllcallon. Apply In poraan
beiWilln lOam &amp; 3pm.M-F. SIUclATTENilON
.and Auction
Hot YOur Marrlooa Or Rtllllon· t·,· -:---:-.,;:;~~~~":":':~ enta that succelsfully r:omplet•
lhlp Got Up &amp; ,.,.., ~ In Prln- Lemley' a Aucllon Strvico, losllo tilt TCE cla11 will tio ollglblo lot
Vldlo Md -One Of OUr Lomloy Aucllonoar. Hou1ahold, arnplo~mant Aboolulely ra phont
tOO Ntw - 1 Elllle 'Farm S.lea. Phone BH· cala.EOE
·
1310 Eo11ern - . .•• Gallipolis, 1'38!!:18~0~4~43~·---~-­
Ottce ~-ger /RitQipdonllt
OOr~~:!~l1~·~4~4e~~!~~---:---•·
~
Rick Pltaraon Auction Comp1ny,
30 AMOunc:emants
lull limo aucllonoor, complllo 20 /HOUII A W- -Fitllblo
IUCIIon . Mrvlc;:e. Ll~enatd Houra. Thllt Poalllan, In An Alii
t100 - r d !Dr lorgHt chlmlca~ IIII,Ohlo &amp; Wtll Virginia, 30•- Atmosphere, Require• A S.U·
ly ho M..lln paleh, Equlnol Bo- 773-5~50t3tM-773-5447.
MollvaiOd IndiVIdual Willi Trplng.
taricala, G14o742-2548.
~~;.;;.;.;;_;;;..;;;;.;.;~'-'="-- flUng and Organizadonal 111&lt;1111,
Ao Well AI Sting Ablo To Work
;:C:.;oa:.;w:.;lo:..rd-'t-F~Ie-o-:\.r~o-r~ko-I':P~Iu-a-:-,. 90 Wanted to Buy
Willi Tho Pulilc.
Hondaraon, WV. Frtt tpoco In Abaalutt Top Dollar: All U.S. Sll·
Soncl Res...,. To: .
Juno. Call lor dtllila. 304·176· var And Gold Colnt, Proofllll,
P.O. Bo1472,
1404.
Olamandl. Anllqut Jtwolry, Gold
Gailpolio, OH 4583t-IM72
Rlmla, Prt-1830 U.S. Curronc1,
40
Sllr11ng, Etc. Ac:qullillons JOWIIIry OPERATORS DIWIItrlng Co""
2~ e·Old, One Cll- -IH.S. Coin Sngp, 151 See:ond pony Hiring !Training Field o.,.
trtlatt .FO! Filter
Ortdgo,
co TortoiMoholl And Ono Gray -...., Gallpofio,81ll-4411-2842.
Pumps. lmmadlale Oponlnga.
And Whllo, Phone: 814·44G· Andquoi, lurniiUto, glall, china, $8.00 !Hour Mlnlft11m Slot1, Hioh3478.
coins, toya, lampe, guna, toala, or Relt Willi e~.,........_ llonoll11
4 Pupplol To Gl-wor, Part olllllt: otoo approlulo, Olby PeckaQI, Travel Requlrocl. Food I
Peld By Company. Vllld
lhaaa Apao, 3 Malo Kllttno, Alii ;M::Ir1ln::
:'.:·::a.;.14-""111=2--:744_1_·--.::-:::::-:- Lodging
Drlvwttllcanao Roqulrod. Mull
Aotppr7.ox. e WHkl Old, 114-317- An~qutl, lOP prlen i»ld, Rlvor- 8t 21 Yaors 01 Ago. Clll e.17
ino Anllqutl, Pomoray, Ohio, a A.M. -5 P.M. To Schedul•lntor·
Fo:swlt Boaglo, Found At Brown's Run Moore owner, eu-DD2- vlow. !,tolrDpolllln Eft'ileonmonl81
·Morkot, Stoll Routt UO, 11-i- J:25211:.;.;;;.;.·----::-----~ Sorlrlcoa, Inc. 5055 Nlko Orin,
Hllllord, OH _43020 1-800-180·
246-012!5.
Builng Standing Pint, 1 Aero 7371 Or Locally Call 814·771·
Fru Klnona Bomo Willi Flu fly TIICI Orlltgtt, 1.14-25111l031.
1!f81. E.O.E.
Fur,IU 4 !118 1313.
.
Clttn Lalt Modo! Cott Or PART·TillE P081nON8 AVAil•
FrM Kl-., ltoutllul, 814o4&gt;18- Trucka, 1800 l.todtlt Or Nowor, AilE: OUALITY FAflll ANO "
- .Smith Buick Ponlloc. 1goo Elll· FI.IIT, ~UPOUI, 011.

eo

JoeWIIaon
{614 992-4277

HVAC SERVICE TECHNICIAN
Needed... Requlremanla: RSES
Cortincatlon In Rerriooration And
Hoal Pump Sya-., E1porlonco
In HVAC A Muall Knowladgoablo
In Manulaclllred Hauling Hoallng
And Cooling A Ptua. lnllnlowa
By Appolnbnlnt Only: Call: Bon...,, Moblll Homo Hoallno &amp;dg.
.At 814·448·8•18 8 A.r.l. To 5
P.M.
Noodod: Houriy And Subtdlull
lnaeructora For Adult Programs:
Air Condition- H..tino, AuiO M•

Nurae Aide Training Program-

Calle,.,..

•Weed Eateni

Limestone, ·
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

&amp; VIcinity

· Back Yonl Stlo-2510 Jalliroon
•·. Hou" Sit.. .
: AV.. liahlnd Frulh'l Sat 8/28.
Reasonable RllltM
8:00·? Oacllollng tons, loll or
booki-Gootobump-Foottkltl &amp;
· Joe N. Sayre
more. Kid .Omputor, clolhto bo)'·
ijunlor, Super Nlnlondo aylltm·
10 1. Regular Nlnta~do-11. ptt.
1
·
moboy-tapoo, Turbo Grell, 18
614-742·2138
Rom Syotam-tapoo, knick-

114-992-4025

•Chain Saws

... , . ..,.y. .

P1. Pleasant

Septic Syate.

home improvement&amp;." Call Today!
992-2753 Free Eatlmatea 992-5535

•Lawn Mowers

742·2925

E•portoncod AN ftHdtd "' work
Midnights In lha ICU. Full-tlmo
po1lllon. Sand rooumt to Pot·
aonnol, at Plaaaanl Valley Haopllal 2520 Valley Dr., PL Ploaaan~ WV 25550. AAIEOE.

o"

Llmeatont &amp; Gravel

• Decks
• Roofing
• Siding

"Stop putting off those mud• needed

•Small Engine•

2 mi. off Rt. 7
Lledlng Creek Rd.

"""j"

IAULIII •
iXCiflflll :

r

DRIBELI

c1Hnor· . .gazlno al8nd' DP Bo, 'd7."'"" 'mulllgym;
blko;
. p cturu; wh11-no11: dreu, llka
'• achool
now, all otzoa: chlldron'o 10
clollllng; oil bran light;
.1a1t and loll mart!

semble Produc11 11 Harne. CaU

Toll Froa 1-800-487.-55BB EXT.
12110.

HOME TYPISTS,
PC uaoro naadod. •4s,ooo In·
===::==·31:1:711WrFN:;:t. . Yard
ulo, Friday, D-4, Sllvor como polanllal. Caiii·I00-613Rldgo, I SR 7 !rom Eo_.,
High, couch $35, 11blo &amp; chair~ CM:I Ellii-D3B8.
120, oa• grill, 120. color TV willl Hoult..._ 10 cart lot 2 llloht·
.
romo10, •so. ml1c. box" St &amp; ry dlaablad pooplt, 1\111 or part
~::::.._lhlnoo, atW~·42511, limo. 814o388-9805.
.

• Garages

NG
NOW

American Standard ·
Freedom

Ronnie Jones

•Free 5 Year Parts Warranty
•Free Digital Thermoatat

\._

lnltlllatlon

Ext.8789

IJ. K-9 Designs

(Pa,.-......, on~ credit)

1 •••••

. . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . " . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ·. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1

~

•dBeatl'llalpl

l.fiJflflll

.

1.1111111111• . . . . . . . 1 .. ••••

RT. 7 PIZZA
EXPRESS

.....

20 vns: Exp. • Ins. OWner:

WICKS

...

.

Sale• Service

' Painting
S
FREE Es,M ........
. , 10

992·9200

5

..

Don Geary, o-r

·i/27ilt l/2tltl, 10.?1837 ChiU

one b,.11 tetrdrop; v1cuum

i.ow Ratea)

.

-

614-992-3120

319 S. 2nd Ave.
Middleport

Gutter Cleaning

plzaplace.
·C1ll fer 01r S~HIIIt

.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 •• 1

Ohio

Middleport, Ott• .a780 .
Home Ph.

....

,.,._

. ... ..
,_.....--.--._ ____..""1 ·t=1:00pm=::.:F.:.:stei:.:IIJ:::_•:-:-:---:-:-:Howard L. Wrltesel Garage oalt· Frldoy and Sllurday, O:ooam-4:00pm. 2210 Karr
·s~IOI. Syracuao, Cillo. SOmo lurROOFING
nllu,.. d:aporlll. oiUIL
1\iEW·REPAIR Rain or aline. large garage tala,
Quttara
Hve family, Juno 30, July 1. Formarly Jo't Gih Shop, Srt1cuu.
Downapoutl
. TWo coiling llghll· ono glau and

More thlln}us.t •

Zelilh 32 Portable c:olor TV, .fuly loaclecl•••• ~ ..............................................................,......_. _~-·--~
('
fulyi--.L...Ifl
'
.
.
'
.·
$
.Mcilnavax 60• TY,.
.vuu.u, oor:lt• .............~··················"................................................~.......................;............ 53,~99 .............~.. 14U .
.
.LIe Rec
· I ning Sof
·
.
l ..........................................................
·
. s1699 .............~.....s650
La-Z-Ioy
Do1au
. a...........................................................
~
~ .............
PaclgeH Spc hllg r...
- _. suile .........~·,,,,,,,,,,,...,...............,,,,,,,,,,.....,,,,,,,,~...........,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,' ......~........,..,,,,,,,. ~799..........-....... SCJSO
Broylll CoH11 &amp; End Tables 3 pc~...~..................:.........~..................~.·................... ~.~ ................................................. '1049.-................ 5290
5
5
Rlv•sWe Eltwt*••~t C•t~ .....~........................................................·................... ~ .......~ ......
. ~~ ............ ~ .............,.. ~.~
. ..:.... 749 ................... 250
5425
Maytag Super ~If Wasller, 8 cycles·.......·........-............................... ,.
1·~····
11111111111111~· 1··~1 s719.......
D.C. F...,., 3.Pc. Petistalbilene .................. ~ ......... ~ ................................. ~~· .. ~········ ......... ~ .. ~.~~~··~·~~· ........,·................~..... ~99............ 5193
.
'
.
. .
$
$199
Atllels Six Gil Calilet..
~ ;1.11111~
~~~111111111111111111
.
. .
.
5
,.,. 5 pc.lldrOOIISIItlauan~llllll. llllllllll~lllll;llllll lllllllllllllliiiiiiiii~IIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIII~
.... i ................
. ·.... ·.. ~~.;. '17M.~ .............·... 790·
.
11111111 ._.111.111.

Athens,

112&amp;'rP'1mo.

Delivery or Dlne·.ln.

..............
639 :....,.......... ~..:399·
7
__L .................. 1499 ................... 630

.

Attorney At WlW
(614) 592-5025

{Lime Slorte-

WAS .

.

Maytag ~
- Dryer ·...- -.........................-~~-..---~·~··-·· .....................:..::·:::·:·::·::=~"='r""'

'

(

Attorney William Safranek

Wagner Lana
Pomeroy

TilE SAJ.E IS WINDING DOWN. TIME IS RUNNING OUT•••BELOW IS A SAMPLE OS SUPER SAVINGS•••
I

can ralieve a debtor of
financial obligations . and arrange a fair
distribution of assets. Debtors in bankruptcy may
keep "exempr property for their personal use.
This may include a car, ey house, clothes, and
household goods. ·
·
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

For lnfonnotlon
lleidlng to tH anest
illd coiv'.ctlol of tile
pt~rsons who brake
Into the A·frCIIIIe off
681 In Re1dsvdle.
Cal Meigs Sheriff
992·3371 .

992-5042

50 to 75% o.f f Retail.
_,

BANKRUPTCY

a Fair '=rlcel
550 PagaSt.

$200 REWARD

s.

UAY~JJ

'

wv 1023477

QUality Work at

- · Ult &amp; C.oudW Con'claYanl Solo: Clllldran, ..,. CJ:owlng ltftilr IIMIIII - .
11- Md Adult Clofllno, Mioc. doydrM -k. Ieoda, field l..an~=i ~~.:.=
c111 304-303-00111. Aft E~"
On StaiO RouiO 325 Norlll (lloit· Opportunity Company M!F I.
ween Rio Grandt And Vlnlon) 1:RA;;.:80150
::::..
· -:-:--:----::----:
Frldly ' . ..,....
c.rotakoriHandYfNI• •• '"" rent
!roo In mobllo home vilfo! In ox3 Ftmlly: Junt 27111, 28ft. 2 MilOt chi... lor worklorrandt. T-OUt Utdt Kyfll'.
portallon a mull. Send rtaumo
'
llld
rtfotanctl
"' Paint
B Family Garago Sato: Thull
Rogllltr
Bo• G-24
200 Ploa-1
Main 11.
· Ftt, 822 Jerrlcho Rood, C.......rt. FolniPitulnl. WV 2SMO.
-llll_l!nOt 111ft
1;.;.==~-.;....___
a Family

MOIIISOII'S HElliNG
&amp;COOliNG

JEFF WARNER INSURANCE

· ForHandlcllppad
&amp; Elderly.
Dally - Weekly Contract
Family Atmoaphere
209 4th Street
Mlddlepon

The Warehouses are empty...our 4 Showroo
are bul n with furniture

'

192-4110

Pomerily, Ohio
1-1100-2111-HOD

ELIM
HOME CARE

OF RUTLAND
FURNITURE'S LIQUIDATIO.N SALE

.'

110 Court St.

lkHI3JShOp

~&amp;o• Communications

'

·•

"FACTORY
DIBECI'
PRICES''
Quality Window Systems ·.

r-~~----~ · ~---~----~-~-~·--~·----·-"···-·-·-----~

ARE BLOWI G EROOF
KDO
OFF
OURFI
BEFORE ,.BE WALLS
I '•
Don't Have Bu
First Come First Served
" INAL

Senkt

D.O.a~'s

AVON" ·t11/Hr. No Door To
Door, Quick Caanl •aonutta•
Funll-800-1121.....-o lnciiSIIIRop.

I VIcinity

•Large Joba

UP-TO-DATE
SPORTS
FINANCE
STOCKS
AND MOREll
1·900-658-2700

1~,.....~~...
~~1~...~~:-:-:-:--:--=-

Ylrd 8lle
Gllllpolll

Aeaaonable Ratea

FREE ESllMATI!S

...,_301112:111 1
Loot: ...... 11:1 pot-OIIleelllll.
.
lloll Ad., ........ vleiNIJ, 114- kit non-p:olt .....,.,.._ . . . .
.M
,
iniOf..le:lln wastelng 11w ....,
during llle Mtlgo Coun~r tak,

70

RuUend, Ott
. •Small
Jobl

3()4..773-5822

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

985-4422

1114-14&amp;.40110
Jolin WOUam•· Owner

FAMILY DENTISTRY

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

..~--~~"·r·~·~~~~
:~~~~~~~~~li;"'!'~";·~w~·~
;.

McCumber Rd.

. -1 -

Dirt• Sand

Dalley Ad- Racine

PlllftiiLI
WILIIII

Experlenead

Llmeatone • Gravil

·-

-1
.'1

•aoo
(61 ••) 7•2
• ••

· .-.DUMPTRUCK
SERVICE

.. CORPORAL ELECTRIC

11arrJ B.llnston, D.D.S.

Donation $4.00 for meal

R. L. HOLlON
TRUCKING

24Hr.

.

Mulberry Bei&amp;Jats, Pomeroy.
Tueldays and 1bursda:ys
Serving from 5:00 • 5:45 ·

.. 012·2772
,. 1:00 a.m.o3:3D p.m.

'"' 211, 3 tc

ARnE MAE (SIS).
. BUSKif'K .

AT

MEIGS CoUNTY SENIOR CENTER

Chester, Ohio

DEITIL CARE

EVENING MEAL

. U7 MVAN JI\.ACI!
MIDOLEPORT

homes

...uon contriCtOla may

pick up 1 Bid PUke! It tM
Racine Munlclpel Building
during the holn oil a.m. to
4 p.m. Monday through
Friday. TIM~ Ia 1 charge ol
$1 per d~wtng..Contractora
may bid on any portion ol
the proJect or the entire
proJect. PlaM are available
and · ahall be uaed u the
baala lor bidding 11
ducrlbed
by
_the
epeclllcatlona you NCtlwd.
Contrilctora muat alao
provide copln of liability (1
million dolla~) and Workera

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

I&amp;L SIDIII &amp;
INSULATION

LEGAL NOTICE
BID 80UcrTAnON FOR
CONTRACTORS
Th• VIllage ol Rulne
Wlthtl to conetruct a new

Help Th..tlld

AVON I All ArMI I !IIWMr
...... IIIW71-1&gt;1a.

,_

were said to be in no immediate dan- minate lhe mission."
ger. Mir has an attached Soyuz capEven before the latest accident,
sule that can bring the crewmen home sonui experts and Washington omin an emergency.
• · cials had argued that Mir was too old
The men were forced to work in to fly safely.
darkness wilh much of their equipIn February, a defective oxygen
men! tur~ed off to save energy. generator sparked a 14-minute fire
Unless more power is restored soon that sent chunks of molten metal fly-howso"n,NASAcouldn'tsay- ,ing. In the weeks aft.ei'Ward, the
they may not be able to operate their cooling system leaked, oxygen gen·
life-suppon sy.stems, such as the pri- erators fai.led and the carbon dioxide
mary oxygen generators and the car- removal system broke down.
bon dioxide removal system.
The collision happened as the
They also were urged to move Russian cosmonauts practiced dockslowly to conserve oxygen. .
·ing the Progress supply ship by
While still trying to determine the remote control. Commander .Vasily
extent of the damage, NASA said it Tsibliyev could not slow lhe ship, and
will rethink its program of sending it slammed into Spektr, a Mir !aboastronauts to Mir.
ratory module, Culbertson said.
"Once we get the situation stabiThe supply ship bumped irito a
lized and understand what the long- solar panel which juts out from Spekterm potential for operation on the tr, then struck the laboratory module.
Mir is and what it's capabilities · . The coU1s1on put an estimated J.
remaining are, then we wjll evaluate mch gash m Spektr. When the crew
with· the · Russians where we go heard the h1ssmg of oxygen seepmg
next " said Frank Culbertson direc- through the hole and felt pressure
tor ~f NASA's shullle-Mir pr~gram. d~opping throughout Mir, they imme"We might ~t some point want toter- d11tely shut !he hatch.

The Dally Sentinel• Page 13

. Pomeroy •llhid~., Ohio

,.,,c.m,
.,,.,
,.,..,

H,_IH1

- ···- - · .

Ta.UveToA
• Real Gifted
rsydic
1·90G-168-4900 .
Ext. 1817

Pr"'·

::-:---=::-:--:---:--:--::-

Hou.. on 2112 Lincoln Avt. To
- - lot lumbot, dDora, 010.
SUI per mtn:.
to4-171-13al.
Muat be 11 yrS.
Killona To Goad Ham11, 114·
411 11311!5.
(111) 145 ••~....
.
.fa Good Homo: 1 lllacll 1 While
KiltOn, Femalo, 1 w.tta Old,
au 111 2311AIIIriP.M.

aar-u

·-

1111 Nonut, GollpoliL

J &amp; D'a Aulo Porta. Burino oatVIQO volllcltL SOiling pttiL atl4o
'173-1033.
.
Non-Working Woahor, Dryttt,
SIDVot, Relrlgortlotl, FtMzort,
Alr Condlllonett, Color T.V.'a,
VCR'a. A1aa Junk Clltll. 814-2511231.
..
.
!~-, - . _ , . I Aoie, 114· wanted 10 ""Y ulod MObile
Homo, calll 4 -441-0 1 ~ 1 or 1111410 LOit .and fOII'Id
171-1115
·~ u-d
d
f&lt;Mind: FtMt..t KIIWI On lllvw .,_..., .5117. c.lllllon, Calll1""1
llrldpl'laal.lll,llll41.7.
"Good

...

=

Nmbcndi"Jlltrk· R-nllblo
FOr PtoclH:I Aili11, Pr1ot Cltong-

01, Buybld&lt;o, Elt. 20 t Htt Ptr
WMk Wllh Futuro Potenllol E•·
pariiMI PNIMM ·

J1QIIprtollllaln~RIIPDCl-

:ol!&gt;lo For Flooi ~
Janitorial Dullea.
• Ht1 p.,
Wttlt-No Elpaelenao"ill II&amp;
tnquiro With Manag•mont For

FuUoeDm1pillln&amp;

Polloi Joba 3 Palltlont AYIIJ·
lblt, No Elperi4tnce NIDUtiiY,

For lnlotmadon, call 111-717·
._...;.
_ _ _ _ _ __
3141,Ellll1tt.

�..

.•.;c.,........
_

'M*III
,

'41

DNr

ana•a'
... •
•err
.....

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

12lllap!lt . . . .
11011.......
.

All or LPN Wit1 TTT (ONolll4e Trainer) Ia teach clan at
IOIIe term flciHty. Houro and
achNula lor cluaao ftoxlblo to
'IOUil- Part dma pooldon.
c-• Rockoprtnao Ronablllta.., c... Roclloprinal Rd., PD. ,.,.,, Ohio 451e8; 814·182·
-carol Groll*lg, DOH.
RH, LPN Or RT. Rllponllbll For
Sllll"'l Up lnflnl Apnea llonilar
In Homao And Doing llonlhly
Homo VIIIIL Tllll II A Plrl•
Conuacl' Polldon. ~ ROou.mo
Or Plcii·UP Appllcatlan At: Bo•
· man'o Homacaro, 70 Pine SlrM~
Gallipolll, OH 45831, Anon don:
l.lwiL

nmt

u

• It Q 1' 7
• .K Q 5
• 53
6 K q75

loll.--·

In
tNI nl SpspN-Ising
Ia subtect 10

IIIII~"''~~;:;;;:;;;;::;;;;;;:;;--

, -

~."='~

Fill and part lime Ucanlld Phyo-

lhl F - Fair Housing Act
or tillS whk:h mo1&lt;eo nlflogoJ
to aMitlso 'ony prulnnce,·

Con1a&lt;1: CllrloiOn Schocil
P.O. Bol307
'
1310 Corlotan-

A Q 10 7 2
A 10 I

.....

Attn. Parenti 01 K·l Children:
llullc Cllaa AI Tilt Uncv.tllty Of
Rio Granda lrwllel Yount Child·
ren To Partlclpalo Every Week·
day From Juno 30111 To July 18111
• 1:00 ·2:30 P.M. On Campuo.
Thla Ia FrM To Children And Will

- · onyorsuclt
i)leferanc8,•
lfmiratiOn
dllcttmlnatiOn.

knowingly eccept

- f o r real estate

........ SVntcuoo.ON045m

11 Required. To Regltttr

are aYOIIable on an equal

Barn, Maintenance Frte, local·

ed: Addison Townahlp, 61•·••e4N2.

814-11112-

EEO

IT'S BIG . 1887 4BR. 2BATH
DOUBLEWIDE . $1,949 DOWN,
$31'91110. FREE .DELIVERY a
SETUP ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOliES, NITRO, WV. 304· 755~· Urr01ad Ollar.
Large Hlection of uaed home. 2

or 3 btd,.mo. Stalling 01 $34g5,
Oulck delivery. Call 1·800·837·
3238.

.

Llmlced Ollerl 1997 doublawlde,
3br, 2bllh, $17U down, •2711
month. ·Free delivert &amp; aetup.
Only 11 Oakwood Homee, Nitro
wv 304·755-5885.

AKC Regla,.rld Alre.ie 7 W..k
Old Pupplea, Worinod, 111 Sholl,
1200 ·1250, 814-2!4-11113. ·

•

X-RAY TECH To Work Ptn-Tlrno:

day And S.rurday 8:00 A.ll . •
Noon. Atlponalbilltlal Include

Ptrformlno Radiologic Tochnolo·
gy Proctduroa, DO¥oloprnonl Of
Filma, And Croll· Train To Ptr·
farm Olhtr Dullol Aa Anlgnad
By Monagar. Rtqulromo1111: Mull
Havo Compltltd A 2 Year Ra ·
dialogic TtchrDiogy Training Pro. gram At An AliA . ·Approved
Schoof And Bt Ctrtlfltd !Eligible
BwThtARRT.

One Btdroom Apartmon~ Udlldft
Paid, Rtferoncoo And Depaoli,
814-448-1370.

Yo~r

Smell lurnilhtd olllency, all utili·
tier paid. Pt PleaAnt area, da·
pooil-irod. 304-675- naa

450·

FumiShecl
Rooms

Mol Your Conlldonbal Information

For Salt by Owner: 3BR; tbolh,
~antral

alrlheat. 10mllea N of

OH 41i1131·1582 Or Fu To 814·
AIIO 3 llory blocll oul
448-5532. Equal ()pporiUnlly Em- Buffalo.
112~~:_
building, aoklng $50,000. 304· I·
ployor.
588-9714.
.
For aale, 1 bedrooin home In Po-

______

Klngo llolel Lowell Ra111 .In
Town, Newly Remodeled, HBO,
Clnamax, Showtlmo &amp; Dlenoy.
Wttkly Ralll, Or Monthly Ralll,
Conauuctlon Workero Wtlcomo
814-448-61122,814-441-5187. ,
Sleeping rooina ·wllh cooking.
Aloo trallor epaco cin rlvor. All
hook-upo. Call altar 2:00 p.m.,
304-773-lill51, - · wv.

meroy, will Hll on land conu:act,
81~·.5858.

460 SpiiCtl for Renl
liOxSO bulldl"'l I 20'120' building
on one acre lot on Sr 7, waltr,
phono 6 utili lito on premloeo,
$400/mo, will conolder poaalble
'""'· 81ol-11112·2001 .

490

·For LeaH

61-2·4148.

Concreto &amp; Plude Stpdc Tankl,
300 Thru 2,000 Galiano Ron
Evan• Entorprl111, Jeclcoon, OH
1 '100·537-9528. ·
Emereon Oultt Kool '-/C, 18goo
BTU, 1300; 4 drawer chtll, t25:
can anyllmo 814·992·5847, 11 nc
I ;"":;.:...;;•":.....:.'-;;;'.;.'".,.m;;.•lll:.::;lll:.::;..
· -'·' - - ExcrO Nlca Sofa Chair, Dran·
oro, Chest Of Drawera, EndTa·
blel, King Slit Compltl• Wa·
ttrbtd, Swivel Rocker, Nlco Ill·
crowavo Table, 814·378-2720
AFTERIII!M.
·
For Sale: Ridl"'l Lawnmo-. Bl·
cydo, &amp; £grciH Bike. 814·448·

FRONT ROWU

.. ,.

a

731111.

Glen Dlnollt Table 8 Wicker
Chalrl, BI4-448-7020.
Grubb'a Plano- tuning 1 rapt;lra~
Problema? Notd Tunod'l Call tho
p1ono Or.e1.,;4411-4525
High chair $30. Playpen $35.
Baby .owing US. Walker ·$10.
Slrollor $15. Twin ma11r111 6 bo•
eprlnge $50. Exc. cond: 304·6758158.

StraWbtrrioa, Pick Your Own, Call
CltudaWinl"''.814·24S.5121.

1888 Lincoln Towne Car ovary
option, fleauciful t.mlly car, new
liroo, perlacl condldon, 5.0, V-8,
$4800, 81,..gg2·8718.',.
1988 Toyolii C"'llry, !We, PS, PB,
.,cellon! condition lnBidt and ou~

1;:;.:;._ _ _ _ _ _ __
1888 Kawasaki KXSOO Looks,
Runt, Ridoo (\rnl. E&gt;colltnl
Shape, $975 Flrm..~t4-379·28t2
Leavelole110go.
,

I;::;..:.:;..:.:.::;:.::;.._;;_._ __

1989 FLTC,. Ul1ra

~rloy

David·

1on with all1he extra•. 1tereo,

, ..,,.,.;.caatetlt radio, inlercom

1811 Dodge· Conv4ti•lan Van, • •

1

cruiM contiol, CB radio,

Good Condlllon, Original II Ilea, 1~~~cal~f·B~I!4·~74~2~-3~1!;81!:_·_ _:_
814-21i11·8808.
I·

610 Farm Equipment
1O'llo OFF all t.rm tracror parco.
Sider'• Equipment. 304-875·
7421 .
487 N.H. haybint.

t21100;

. jET
AERATION MOTORS
Rapalrtd, &amp;Roqoih In SIOck.

Call Ron Evano. 1-800·537·11528. ·

MER CHAND ISE

~

LarliJ• tMack entertainment center
1 g1111 cloar, 2 lido doorL 1200.
304-671&gt;6822.

Loculi ronco poll $3ea. 304-578:it 50 or 30o4-s78·S332.
MCNINA·

s

IOUftdl
Dt.llflacl

By Phillip Alder

"''

Strawticorro.o; You Plcll, Wt Pick,
Opened: 8-8 Mon. Wed, Frl : Sal
8·Noon, Closed Sunday·•.
Taylofe Barry Ptlch, Kerr Road, $1QIS, 814-a92-882•.
81ol-245-gQ47,
:...:.:::.:..:..:..:.:;:..::::.:.:-,..--FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIV ESTOCK

. autaclaiO

In my bridge · classes, I stress
thinking in straight lines. Easier said
than done, of course, but if you can·
not think straight; you will never play
this ga!IIC well.
.
· · W~st cenainly d!dn'i think logi·
cally on this deal. If you believe you
would have done betier, cover the
East,l!lld SQuth hands. Against 'fqur
heW, yoo lclld the trump tluee: five,
seven, nine. Declarer continues with
the club four. How do you defend?
Sou1h opened with a wcalc two·
bid, showins a decent si~-&lt;:ard suit
11nd some 6-10 high-card points.
West's thrce·diamond ov,erc:all is
debatable •• a · takeout double is
preferable.
, .
You need four tricks to defeat the
contract. Presumably, your three aces
are all winners. But where is nwnber
four? If Soulfi has the diamond king
DOI'T ~. ffiiU',
&lt;.nd panner can gain the lead,:a dia·
mond switch will do the nci:essary.
['~ .).}:)\ I'P\CI~
Yet if Sou!h has !he diamOJid .king,
f#\'(~l..F I
where is East's cnlry? He cannot have
·a winner. So; West mllsl assume that .
East has the diamond king.- After
winning Irick two with the club ace,
cash the diamond ace and .spade ace
before playing a second diamond.
Here the contract is quickly one
down:
. , t. , . _.
.
· At lhc table, West ducked ihe club
ace at nick two. After w'inl!ing' with
dummy's queen, declarer played a
I . I&gt;IDN"T WAKr '1t&gt;
spade 19 ·her jack and West's ace.
foiUin' HE~ FEEUI'IG.S,
Back came another trump. Deciii'Cr .
8UT THAT's THE
soon
claimed 10 tricks: two spaclp,
LAI1E!&gt;T SI'IIL£Y FKE
I'VE Ev~ SEEN. . six hearts, one club and one diamond
-uruff in the dummy. Wai West a
0·
beginner? flU' from it. This deal
0
'occurred
during the final'.of a nation·
,.
alteam championship. ·
" .. Sean:h· for a lie of the cards that
.will allow you to defeat the contract.
\

Musical
. lnst111menta

Fl1llfl &amp;
Vagelables

. , Prlllnta ....

BC-NEABRIDGE
'l'hursclay, June 26, 1997

Fernandea 4 siring ban guitar.
Perk tt 2 ball amp. Fornandoa
hard caao &amp; alan d. like new,
taoo. 304·075-731111.

580

DOWN

,Is this so difficult?

-••u••u••··~··---

570

12wdLI

It Ia not MII
:12 Dlllloul
. 1 8nlllll ftllll
:12 1om
2 Hlllh _..
31 Grid diiW' Ofll. 3 l5lilhualaa- ·
31 Doa
' tloallr
. . . . . Cronyn. 4 Heelflll1ln

Opening lead: • 3

OUGHT TO
Me RIGHT
ON TH'

Chlld'a molal wagoll, $8.50; glrfe
to• Barblt bicycle, $14.50; 5
ltrlno banjo with hard ohtl ""'·
$89; crou boW wilh arrow1, 150
lb. pull, $211.95; olr conditioner,
$89.50; 81rl'o 15 IPIId lolounllin
bike,.$28.50; Yamaha keyboard,
"
1qD IOUndl and 100 rhylfvnll wilh
atand, $39.50; 200 chonhtl pal~o Trni 'Hoi Spoil. • Kill Fleas,
IC8nntr, $95: old Lionel train; Ya· Tlcko, Mooqultoo I Flln On
maha ftal lap gullar, $1351AIYar· Concact. WlthOUI lnlernal Polez mandolin with cut: RamlngiDtl 10n1. Aok J D NORTH PRO·
18 gauge 870 Wlngmaocer aha!· .· DUCE 814·448· 1933 Aboul
gun , 1239: Ruger MK·II plotol, IHA:,::::PP::Y:JACK=:K:ENN=~=DI=P·::.._
I13D. Oave'a ·Swap Shop, Jour
mlloo north of l'arntnly an SR 7,

••

=::::.

s•

--...·--·.....

4:00 P.M. :.S:OO P.M. Monday ·fri·

•JIIII

or,.,..

Vulnenble: Norib-Sotlth
Dealer: SOuth
aa.tll Wn&amp; Nri ll:a* .
3t
••
ADpua

.........

ployor.

Do

t3llOoo. 304475-n«&lt;, ·· · .

Children, Call Tho Rio Granda · Rabblll For Silo $7 Each, 814School Of Fino Arlo - 814·245· ~2fill=-·':.:1::25.:__ _ _ _: - _
Down-n Galli polle: Modorn 1 7384 ·
Fuii·Bioodtd Oalmadon Pupploo;
lledraorn, All Electric, CarpaiOd,
Baby bed, high ~;hair, a1toUer, car Wormed, $75 Each, 8U· 388·
COmplete Kilchtn, Elaclric Htal 1
aoa~ IIM1'9 . 304-675-&lt;1548. .
. ::;8022=·: ..._-------:----:Air CondNo'*'g, 814-4411-0138. ·
B.aroom
Sullo,
Bid
Flame
Wllh
Golden RttriOYor pupploo, full
FurnlehacU Roomo a Balh, No
Poll, Ralortnca And Oapolil Ro- Headboard, Cheat 01 Drawers blooded, firot oholl &amp; wormed,
And Dresser ISO: Girls 20• Blcy- $100, 81,..gg2-mt.
qlilld, 814-448-151i.
11114 Fleto Rod, 4 .Spoad, Runol
cit $25, Porch Swing {4 Feel) ,Jack Ruuell· Ba!TIIIrl• puool•
Fumllhod Aparlmon~ 1 ~• $25: Call B01ween 9 · 5, lion • Bwko old, s1 sea. 30 4·B75-7g48 · Looluo Good, Short Block, Chromo
w-. 11,100 8,14·387-o333
$2g5floto., Udi!IH Ptld, 83~ Stc- Thurs. 814·258· 1~
botoregpm.
Av...,.o, Galllpolle, 814-44ctBoo11 By Rtdwlng, Chippewa,
-7P.M.
Rocky, Tony Lama. Guaranlttd
Lowest Pricas AI Sitae Cafe, Gal·
llpollo.

WANTED: Ctrrlfttd 'Nuralng AI·
ailta.nta, full· and part-dme poaidonl tvallabll, all ahllto, contad
Sandra Raltmlro, RN, Acllng
DON, Lakin Hoople.!, Lakin. WV.
304-87~01180 Ell 128 Mon·Fri.
8am-4pm. Lakin lo an EEO om·

-To: Holzer Clinic, Human RaladoM; 90 Jackton Plko: Galllpolio.

AKC Rag Weimaraner puppln

Ilea Aa Ullonlng And Movlno To Dalmallan puppl"' bolh parenll
lluolc, Playl"'l lnicrumonco And on prarr01l1, $50 ooch, 814·742·
Slnolng. No Mullcol Background l::21i11=1·_ _ _ _ _ _ __

Informed lhalaM dWellings
ad\fertlsed in this newspaper

••r
• It.

• ·J 2
• "A10tl41
• J. i 4

,nclude Such E.nrlchmant Actlvl~

.law.
wnlcl&gt;
1s In vtotauon ot !he
OUr readei's are hereby

3 Bedroom Homo With Gnvo &amp;

618141

a. .

J

limbtlOn or cllcitmlnation
baled on raoe, COlOr, religion.
sex familial SlltUI or natbnal
origin, or ony .ln!enllon to

fcol
Thoraplo~ Occupaclonall~~~opportu~~nity~bas~
· ~~·~·~~
Thoraplo~ P.T.A. and C.O.T.A.
netdtd 10 dlagnooa and provide
dlrtcl ........ far. children and 31 0 Homes for sale
..,Ill at Jho Molaa County - . t
of Monell RotardotlonillO¥tlop. 12 Roomo Ranch Scylo Home·
Dloalilldal. Palldont ...,. 3Bedroom, 2 112 balhl, lar~e
Include comprihonolvo bonof t kitchen I dining room 1 lam11y
paciUif•· Schodu,. to loiiOJI tho rooms, 2 porchllfiCtaaned, 2 car
ochoo calendor. ljubmh roeumo garage, 8/10 mile out Sandhill
., July 15, 111117.
Rd ond loll ..... 304-675-4571 .

....

All

Tllla MW~p~PBr wiD not

Stare cl•klcaohlar, ••r,orllltco
-Ired. coli for In- ow. 304·

11 ,..... bill.
• lllllnd
11 ...._ Dial! 1nar 1D 111111 01111
11 ~ 1\tnw
Altllll
17 .,...,.. ....
u .... (Jnf.) .
11 JPI( llgllt
fl4 - -ln • poloa
11 'llno~a court. 11 T~ aa1
dhrlder
.
20
II Olo Dllllf:12
. 57 o.deMr'a
:MC.mt 1 pt. ·
..• CWtlelcle
.. Layer"' . . . .
D Lw. jlclr8t
.

i

~

••

..'
~

: II T .C. . . K V 0 D C W
HXSS

K AM

UA . KA, II

"p A .

HNKM

AI

,.

..•
.. ,.

VKSXOXMCU . ' -

ECAESC

N'

·•" .

HTA

'!·

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OTAH · . MTCL

0 c.c

tl

X .o

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~

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AOZNW

~

TN. OOCWOMCXK,
XX.
PREVIOUS SOLUTIQN: "Gentleman pefer bonds.• - Andrew Mellon.
'Where there 181110118Y, there II lighting."- Marilin Andarson.

lj

WOII
lAM I

·~

.!

..

~

!I

,!
.4/

.I I I r I I I
r I I ·I I
·L V S MU C

,.

cl

e

T H0 CN

-~

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i-

:t

f .

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lilt

:, • • I!

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,

,.;,
r

...

i ,,..

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t'

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"
~

OHE ptW 'f'OU TELL I-IlM
WE'RE NOT1}UNKIN6 OF'
j:jiM"..TioiEJIEXT.OA'f "(OU
·TELL I-IlM·ws MISS.I-IlM ••

Baby Crib, 2· Roclinere, ·ExorciH
BUce, Am,ana Srove, Zero1 Per..,., Copier, 81'4·245-5tt4.

'

.

.

Plano, refrigerator, picnic •ble,
2.0 Chevy head, 814-885-3838.

..

ANSWIIS ·

Color TV floor model,
251n. cable ready. $100 Firm, tl·

Quasar

.Uncoil· Radar·,Impel· Marvel· ADVICE
Before gelling married I received many supposedly
. . helpful hlnll to a happy union. I think the only free thing
in life Is AOVIeE.

cellent shape. Call anytime 904·

675-58115.
Queen Size W&amp;lerbed Wilh Rails,
Excollenc Condllion, $2.50, 8 Fl.
Satelllla Dish $125, 814 ·440·
87og.

'

&lt;;

"

.~

·'

!

Full 1lze truch tapper S46; new

portable phone, will 1011 11 112
P"IC8, $25: 814-1149·2045.
Sharp Mlcrowavt, 5 Drawer

~ood Chose, 416 Wood Enter·
ttlnmonl, 9mm Modal 59 Bryco
,Arms, Smell An)lquo Glue Shoa
Cast, 814·245-5228.

Sot. l Chair, 'Now Amorlcan
Hun!Cir $750: Sllallllll Dllh ttOO.
a't4·24S.5888.
.

f lrJAN CIA L

. es. w11~

· , Mus! Sell

.

to·staie yoilr ~i!ic

a

!A
'

h~rrill, : lufnl·
~omputer1 etc.

SERVI , · ,

Available your
1· 800·513·4343

.

I,;,EO (Jul)' 23-Aua. . 'T'hCre an:· and
il nr you could gel
8 ·number of usiJIIIII!'I!i¥'lli!i(milhl · caught ,in a revolving f.I&lt;Kir.
,,. ·
require your' 1ucriiion ioday, but ~~ · · AQuARIUS (Jan. 20.Fch. 19) Be
)'O!n' hean isn'tin y011r ~11'1C1; ,OU cxlrilmcly sc,lcctivc tnday n:sanliA¥
,
coulclerid)\jp
~it; ~R!,kCri nai~•· ,
to.whom yOII go to for llllvicc. YciUr
BEmi_CE·.
r' VIRGO (,.(i~J. 2'..SCpi. 22) Lody
cban indicalcs your C!llinKCior nlay
BEDB·OSOL fuck
CO!IIil be a bit rkikllltoday, !Kl know less about the: issue• than Y'*
~ •• It's bcit ~ buk·~ )'~COII\III!)II do. ,, •
·
.,
....__. . . .., . . sense
. andli!Ot..~y•lllllll of fiiiQ. , PISCES (Fell. 20-~arch 20)
•
· \ Play yfNi Cinli -io'IIIY 1itd realis· Avoid IP'Otips today who make Y&lt;*
friday, June , 1997,
. liqlly. :' • . • , "'- . .
feel uncomfortable. Why ·•ub}lict
. Afivor-.ble chlnp ill yotlf li~-; . ~• · LIB~(~ ~3-M;~ 23) Librans younclf to fccling uneasy wltc~ you
ciil IWcliln: is 1 &amp;IIOIIJ ploblbd1ty are ktlown .tCl" thetr gracJOulness .ad · can be around pals who make you
fo( the ye. alJelid, ~ven !hough Jni-. ,holpilall.Y. liUt today you ml&amp;ht not . fcclaoOd?
·· ·
iiallyyotlmayfeellibyou'twmerk· be In the· mood for JUCSIS•· You
·ARIES(Man:h21-Apriii9)Your
'iag·liJne·inateld Of JOini fDIWMiL. : lholild be bilek19~lflqlilqrrow. mode of behavior will be sc:Minized
CANCEl '(lwe 21-July 22), 1t ~ SCOIUIIO (Oct• •·24-Nov. 2"2) by your peen today..'J1i.llle who will
could prove very .unwjse. today to E""1oae ~ ....... on
~ observin,l ~Y be 'waill•l.t,o'see
~peiO 10111111\inallefon: you~ lkiJI;.And.~ .~ no~. lfy~ •f you lack socaaJ pace.
all tbat ia ._md. of )'oil. Once mtoday,don tcover.up.Noili!CwtH
,TAIJRUS(Aprii2G-May•20)\)111you•re'Jocbci {!'tit Woll't be-&gt;: 10 ' dliek lela of you ;for ~f.UIJia...
, ally your ,plana are t'eiiOIUibly well
break out &lt;let e jump 01 li(e II)'
SAOI'JTAIUUS (l!lov. 23-Dec. lhoiJ&amp;ht-out, but today y011 miaJ)I
, udenWI.. lbe ~ di'At 21) Today )'OU may. be 1 bit ,more Jive 111m jlllt i lick and 1 pl'(lllliiO,
. pwn )'OU illlbt ,wlilllad. Seacl CIUietil 111111 ...... II lbe ........ ·•anJIJeMthemY~~U~IIIfllwhlive.
farJOWA.aD 0 r"flr•IIICiiolllfor 1llilli of your ftiiOIII'Cel. o.'t;t~l
OEMJNI(May21..-20)'nJdey
die ,_ alllid ~ lllilllll S2 Md · hmlal all'llrl ill I lr In u~
Jillaht move your fulldiii'OUICI
SASII•~ olo tflilwWI- ..._,
.
way~lhat could rob Peeer .to pay
Pll*'• p,0; .0. I 751. M.-, HID
CAPIUCOitl'f (Dec. 22-Jaa. 19) .Paul. Do not lcld younelf into beiJov•
llldOI, New YC!It. NY 10156. Be You miJbt be quite ll"hcllive today. lint.you're bllllldDJ your hrllll

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