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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Suspension
·handed to
Mike Tyson

Super Lotto:

.

1·20..25-~7-32-47

Kicker:
2·2..0·5·8-7

Pick 3:
7-2-6
Pick 4:
9·2-4-1

Sports on Page 4 .

Mostly clear tonight ,
Iowa In the upper 50s .
· Friday, mostly sunny .
Hlgha In the upper 80s .

•

en tine

I· lid

'

•

Vol. 41, NO. eo
C~ll7, Olllo Yllley Publllhi11Q Company

2 Sectiono, 16

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 10, 1997

C...

35 cents

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy man gets pris.on· term
in drowning-murder of teacher

PLEA ENTERED - Jason Hysell, left, pleadad guilty to a charge
of murder In the Tuesday evening drowning of Todd C. Johnaon,
30, of Pcimeroy. He Ia shown here coneulllng with Meigs County
· Proeecutlng Attorney John lentee. Hyeell refueed representation
by an attomey.

of his injuries, according to Prose- allorney or if he wanted. an attorney.
By JIM FREEMAN
Hy sell waived his rights wanting to
cuting Attorney John R. Lentes.
Sentinel News Staff
Wednesday morning. a regularly proceed with 1he plea agreement.
It was an example of quick justice:
"I want lo enter a plea. sir," Hysell
a 23-year-old Pomeroy man was scheduled grand jury indicted Hysell
sentenced 10 15 years in prison on charges including aggravaled mur- said.
Crow asked: "Do you understand
Wednesday for the Tuesday drowning der, aggravated robbery, assault on an
murder of . a Pomeroy man near emergency official and eS&lt;: ape, this coun is limited to one sentence
charges that were dismissed as part of and one sentence only? That is 15
Langsville.
years to life: I can't make it more and
Jason Hysell pleaded guihy in lhe lhe plea agreement.
Hysell, wilh close-cropped hair I can't make illess?" ·
Meigs Cou·nly Common Pleas.Court
"Yes sir," Hy sell responded.
of Judge Fred W. Ciow 10 a charge of and a golllee, wearing a green jail uni"How do you plead"" Crow asked.
murder lhal carries a mandated I5 fonn and shackles, sal alone al the
defendant's
table,
usually
responding
"Plead guilty," he answered.
years to life senlence.
''Mr. llysell. are you in fact guilty
Early ·Tuesday evening, Hysell eilher "yes sir" or "no sir" to Crow's
of
thi
s charge?" Crow asked .
beat 30-year-old Todd Johnson, a numerous questions.
During
his
lengthy
grilling,
Crow
"Yes, sir," he said.
leach.er at Harrisonville Elementary
School, who slipped or fell inlo repeaiedly asked Hysell if he knew he
Crow also questi oned Lentcs
Leading Creek and drowned as resuh was entitled 10 representation by an about the plea agreement, asking why

you had ti me to invcstiga~c

state arc being served?" he asked.
"We beli eve we kn o·w a t this tim e

fully Mr. Hysell's involve ment in this
case/ ' Lentcs said .
Crow also addressed the victim's

famil y. asking 1f they were sati sfi ed
with the plea agreement. The famil y
(Continued on Page 3)

Business tax .cut under study
in school funding proposal

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel Newe Staff
Programming for the nearly completed amphilhealer and lhe need for
a summer cleanup program 10 make
lhe downtown more auractive were
discussed a1 Wednesday 's meeting of
lhe Pomeroy Merchan~s&lt;Asoociatioo. ·
Mike SlrOthreponed 1ha11he l'lme
has come to ~nsider whal will be
presented i~ lhe amphilheater once il
is ready for use . .
He , stressed the imponance of ~looking at programming now and setling guidelines so as to avoid "some
elemenls getting in there and dominating the thing."
The condition of the downtownhigh weeds along the riverbanks and
paving of the streets - was discussed .
·
It was agreed that lhc village has
a responsibility for such maintenance work and George Wrighl,
Pomeroy Council member serving as
liaison belween council and the Merchants Association, suggested · the
complaints be directed to village
officials .

h:.;.--111«~

CONSTRUCTION CONTINUES - Concrete Wll baing poured
al the Pomeroy levee on Wedneedly· at the etta of the new
amphlthea~r. Llrry Benke of Banke ConelrUctlon Co., Pomeroy,
eeld the project had been a "echedullng nightmare,"' due to rJelng water Ieveii and bid weather. He projecta that moet of the
work will be done by Aug. 1, well in time for Octobar'aaternwheel
feetlval. ,

merchants get together or hire some- eveniS of that gr.oup. ShC said activ-.
one lo clean all the awnings lhi s ilies will include a variety of entersaid Annie Chapman, "and the mer- summer, and then set up a regular tainment.
Bobbi Karr reported that !here was
chants are doing about cveiything schedule where they are cleaned
little
interesl by the merchaniS in the
they can do to make things look bet- twice a year for a small fee .
Projecl
Good START (Small Town
• ter."
Maxine Griffilh announced the
Assessment
and Readiness TechWright said .lhe next meeting of Ohio University Communiversily
niques),
a
community
economic
council will be held July 21 and sug- Band is performing at6:30 1onight on
development
stralegic
planning
inigested that before lhen, a letter be Court Streel, under lhe spoilsorship of
tiative
lhrough
lhe
Cooperation
For
.
Peoples Bank. There will also be "Art
)i~Dllo the mayor detailing the merOhioAppalachian
Development.
in lhe Park" wilh paintings by local
'l!'haniS' concerns.
Gary D, Little, development speAlso discussed was the need for artisls. Lemonade will be served by
cialist,
spoke to the group last month,
having lhe awnings cleaned lo.brighl- the Merchants Association.
The Relay for Life program at the aboul the program.
en up the appearance of the village.
Promotions including summer
Many have been up a year now and · Rock Springs Fairgrounds Saturday
really need to be cleaned. said Susan night was announc&lt;;d. Dottie Mosser sidewalk-sales and fall Christmas layClark, president, who cleaned lhe one noted that proceeds will go to lhc aways were discussed. The loss of
Meigs unit of the American Cancer another relailer in lhc upper business
on her slore earlier lhis week.
It was proposed by Stroth that Sociely, replacing olher fund raising section was noted.
"There are weeds everywhere , "

liT.

"Have

and sec that the best interests of the

'

Merchants
take look
.
at events
planning

'Price lnclilldu

he .was dismissing the most serious
charge of aggravated murder.
Lcntes said the charge. and tlie
charge of robbery. would be diffic ult
to prove beyond a reasonable doubt
and that the agreement would not put
the victim's family through the rigors
of a lengthy lrial.

By PAUL SOUHRADA
Aa1oclated Preee Wrltar
COLUMBUS - While some
lawmakers were struggling to come
up with a way lo convi~ce voters 10
swallow an increase in lhe state sales
tax to improve Ohio·s schools. others
saw an opportunity to cut taxes- at
leasl for bus.inesses.
Sen . Roy Ray, R-Akron. lold
reponers Wednesday lhal Republicans are working on a plan to reduce
the state's tax o!llhvenlotiel - a
move long sought ·bY businesses.
One proposal would reduce the
percentage of invenlory subject to lhe
lax - which generated about $600
million lasl year - by I percent a
year for the next 10 years, eventually reducing lhe assessmenlto 15 percent. Ray, !hough. said he wants to
see the invenloty tax phased out
enlirely over 25 years.
Businesses pay personal property·
taxes on their inventory, machinery,
equipment, office fum ilure and fixtures. School districts receive about
70.percenl oflhis lax money, with the
resl divided among counlies, cilies,
villages and townships.
Ray's comments came as legislators.held a second day of hearings on
a Republican plan to come up with a
school-funding system to replace the
one declared unconstitutional in
March. The proposal, based on higher cigarette taxes and a penny-perdollar increase in the state sales tax.
would raise an extra $1 billion for
Ohio's schools.
Democrats were wary of the idea.
" I don 't think we oughl to buy a
pig in a poke( ' said Sen. Leigh Herington, D-Kenl.
Herington noted lhat Democrals
already feel lhal b11sinesses are nol

tern of taxation is fair game," said
Rep. E.J. Thomas of Cohlmbus.
"I'd like to take a look al whal
they 're talking aboul, but .it's a Senate 1hing at this point," added
Thomas, chairman of the House
Way s &amp; Means Commiuee, which
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio
deals
wilh tax issues.
can fix its schools by using exist-·
Backers
of the reductio n in the
ing revenue and does not need the
~nvcnt ory tax say overall tax receipts
SI billion a year that a proposed
would actually increase under the
sales tax increase would raise;
plan.
treasurer Kenne1~.Biaekwell said.
That's what happene~ la&lt;l.time lhc
. Blilckwell, a Republic.an who
stale
cut its invcn10ry tax. said Donhas said he inlends lo run for govald
Bcrno,
c•cculivc dircclor of the
ernor next year, will outline an edunonpartisan
Ohio Public Expenditure
calion refonn plan later this month.
Council.
but he discussed some of it wilh
When \he Legislature voted in
reporters on Wednesday.
1983 to reduce lho amount of invcnThe plan is being developed
lory subjccllo the lax by I 0 percent
wi,lh lhe National Taxpayers Union
over
10 years, oyerall tax receipts
and the Buckeye lnslilute, two conincreased
every year, Bcrno said .
servative think tanks, and other
And
if
increased economic activ·
groups, he said.
·
ily
does
no1
offset the tax cut in any
Aboul $3.7 billion would
year
•.
the
assessment
would . not be
become available by dipping into
reduced,
Ray
added.
the slate's $800-million-plus surBusiness groups have long argued
plus, · freezing spending al most
that
1hc 1ax puts them at a disadvanstate agencies at last year 's levels.
tage when trying to compete with
and using money the state took in
companies
located in slates but had not anticipated, Blackwell
including
Illinois,
New York and
said. The spending freezes would
Pennsylvania
that
do not tax
save about $2. 1 million over two
invCntories.
·
years.
Blackwell said schoolchildren
But · Tom Han. lobbyi st for the
arc suffering because of inadequate Ohio Manufacturers' Ass ociation.
school funding .
said reducing the inventory tax
accounts for only a part of hi s group's
paying their fair shan; of higher i"nterest in 1he school-fundin g debate,
school taxes.
"Sure we want the. inventory tax
Even a key House Republican cut," Hart said. :· But wilhoul strucwho generally supports lhe idea ques- tural changes in education. you won't
tioned the liming.
improve quality.
.
"f think this is going to be chal"Our people arc doing a whole lot
lenging enough withoul people think- more remedial work in malh and ·
ing this is a free-for-all and thai reading at their plants after the shift s
cverylhing associated wilh our sys- end than anyone can imagine ."

BlackWell: tax
increase is not
a necessity

j

Strickland tabs Cremeans as potential
opponent in next congressional campaign

OPEl
MOI~·FIL

SAt9-6

If lhe nexl congressional election
were held today; incumbent U.S. Rep:
Ted Strickland expects he would be
vying wilh Gallipolis Republican
Frank Cremeans . for the voters'
approval.
But the Lucasville Democrat said
right now he isn't worried aboul
whelher he will confront Cremeans or
Li. Gov. Nancy Hollister in 1998, bul
more inlerested in serving the Sixth
Dimict. .
"It is whiu, nine months before lhe
pnmary?" Strickland,said in an interview with the Alhens Messenger. "I
have no idea who my opponent will
be.
"My responsibility is 10 represent
the district and I'll be ready when lhe
time comes to run for next November. I' II uy to do a good job," he
added.
·
, But Strickland, who unseated lhe
one-term Cremeans fro~ Congress i.n
November 1996, sa1d Cremeans
would be his choice of the moinent
as a likely opponenl because ofCremeans' conservative record an ~
proven fu,nd-raising abilities.
.

..

Hollister, who chose to abandon Lucas, Washington County Commuher long-standong intention of run- nity College teacher Tom Sharpe and
ning for Ohio secretary of stale nexl Slale Rep. George Terwilleger of
·
year. fonnally announced her candi- Maineville.
Of the group, Strickland fell Terdacy for lhe congressional seal July
L Cremeans, declaring himself the .willeger would pose '!.Problem for
"lone conservative" of the bunch, . Cremeans. Terwilleger has pushed for
said Tuesday he would challenge English to become the stale's official
language, and has called for the
Hollister for the nomination.
In his announcement, Cremeans eliminalion of numerous stale agensaid "there are few differences in lhe · cies and Qffices.
That could lead to a potential split
politics of Nancy Hollister or Ted
in
Cremeans' conservative base,
Strickland," referrilfg to Hollister's
Strickland
believes.
apparently moderate GOP stance and
"If
George
Terwilleger entets the
Strickland's record of support for lhe
race,
and
remember
that I am jusl an
Clinton administralion.
observer,
lhen
that
would make it
"I don't know where Mrs. Hollis,very
difficull
for
Frank,"
he said.
ter stands on a lot of lhe issues,"
Whatever
·
the
outcome
of the
Slrickland told lhe Messenger. "I do
Republican
primary,
Strickland
plans
know where Frank stands. He is a
10
ask
his
opponenllo
limit
campaign
. known q~ntily. I don 'I know w~re
spending - a request he made . to
she stands."
.
Cremeans and Hollister also have Cremeans last year.
"I will go as low as they 're willpotential opposition from other
Republicans who have voiced inter- ing to go," Strickland said.
Slrickland had reprcsenled the
est in lhc nomination, including ~i­
•
dislrict
for a single tenn when Crenessman }iike Aizinger, Ohio Uni·
means
defealed
him in 1994.
versity-Ironton faculty member Dave

NO•INJURIES - No lnjurlel were reported Pullins almost totally enguHed on arrival,
following 1 flrl that dlatroyed thla home on according to Racine VFD Capt. Scott Hill. A
Ron Roed near Portland Tueadly evening. cauae has not been dltennined and no ·one
Nineteen .Recine end eight Bllhln )'Oiuntaer · waa home et the time of the lira, he said. (Phoflreflghtara reapondlng to the blaze found the to courtesy Racine Volunteer F.ire Department)
on•etory, wood-frame reeldence of Vicky

..
•

•

•

�Commentary
oom

I am almosl64,
in 1933.lam
amazed when I see !he creepy crawler
on 1'-fars. I un 001 a great student of
it, hut I doubt that as much important
history has ever been crammed into
such a short time. The older stuff is
easier to pigeonhole. We seem IO
know it all, and have locked it into
pIace. (Hence the market for revi·
sionism.) History easily becomes
cliChe. What's hard to understand is
~t history is still happening, with
VIgor, even as we say politics is sooo
boring these days. (Maybe that's
why we need ripe scandals.)
We know that i'l 1933 America
was sunk in its greatest depression.
Most of the world was not any better
off. President · Franklin Roosevelt
came to office and helped re·inspirit
the nation. Progress against economic catastrophe was sluggish. Gcr·
many's Adolf H'tl
.
1 er was eIected m

'EsttJbfis{J in 1948

.

111 Court Stlwt, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fa992·2157

. '·.2,
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publl8her

MARGARET LEHEW

Oenenll~

n.Saollod

Coilbo.,.

=
=
:'
.
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1t1e-.

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_ 11

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m c:oon at, I'DiiiWOJi

Thurldaly, July 10, 1817

·History is still h~ppening: LQok this

The Daily .Sentinel

CHARLENE HOEFUCH

Plge2

OM&gt;

way, Rover·

sarellites broke away. The Berlin Wall
came· down. In 1991, the Soviet
Union disintegrated. The biggest
myslery is why there isn't 8 holiday
for the end of the Cold War.
Ben Wattenberg
But things get fuzzier as they get
closer. It's hard to understand that
global liberty.
what happened ·yeslcrday is very
We know what happened in World much in that same zone of intense
War II. My father was a soldier in historical activity.
World War I. He got angry because I
The clown · show going on in
could never remember which coun· Europe about 8 unified currency
tries were on which side. But kids obscures a great achievement: a
today seem to know more about peaceful Western Europe, which is a
WWII than some of the participants patch of land as blood-soaked as any
do, thanks to old movies and televi- on the planet. And now, Poland, Hunsion documentaries. The good guys ~ary and the Czech Republic are joinwon.
mg NATO. President Clinton will
We now know what happened in parachute into Romania to say he
the Cold War. Communism ended up feels their pain and wait till next time.
on the ash heap of history. (Some day (Will Johnny Huang follow up?) A·
maybe we'll even understand what free and united Europe, expandl'ng'. .
v·
.
. th
I
1~mam meant m e process.) n • formed with our help by the folks
Joseph Slalin ruled with an iron
hand. Expansionist nationalists were
running Japan. The stage was set for
Act One of the great slruggle tor

';· ~~~"':·;""~·F.~U::ID~fl;;;utz.l~~~n~.~·=~=-::-=~::----·--..lr~th=e~s=am=e~y=e=ar~.~ln~th=e~S:o:v:ie~t~U=n:io=n~,~19:89::.,~th:c~U~S~S:R~'~s~E~as~te~rn~E~u:ro~pe~an~~w~h~o~se~g~ran~d~fa~tbe~rs~sl~au~g~h~te~red~e~ac~h
48 1

G0 P Se n 'a tors·

I[p

lament lack of
bl·part•I.S8nSh.lp
ByTOIIRAUM
AsiOCIIIed PreiS Writer

111
. u~\. . :C'!t~':~~;::~~=~c=i:;
JlMn
sharply in Muslim countries, and
.. :.,,~!~...'!::pq. eve~~wJ:re~/,:,~oo~t a ilawki~

WHAT

NEXT?

Israeli government is ·pushing land
for peace. It might even happen.
Meanwhile, the forces of democ·
·racy, dcmilibtrization, markets, trade
and lcchnology seem to be reshaping
the economy of the world into some·
thing far more prosperous than what
has gone before.
Of course, don't forget technology: computers, ·telecom, biolech, email (I love it), let alone the cute lit·
tie guy on Mars. Granted, Rover is in
·an unusual place. But if the creepy
crawler wants to see some really
interesting formations, it should look
this way.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow
at the American Enterprise lnstl:
tute, Is the author of "Values Mat·
ter Most" ud is the host of the
weekly publk teleYision program
~~Think Tank."
.
··

.

. WASHINGTON- The Senate campaign finance hearings are just begin·
~mg, and already Republicans are waxing nostalgic for the Walergate hearmgs.of a quarter century ago- when they were in the minority. then, both
parues pulled together for a common goal, they suggest.
But Democrats on the Senate Governmental Affairs Commiuee which
holds a second day of hearings today, may have redefined the term :'bipar·
tasan."

. To them, it means throwing as much dirt on past Repubiican fund·rais· .
1ng abuses as the Repubhcans can dig up on the While House and Democrats for financial irregularities in the 1996 elections.
It's part of a Democratic stralegy that follows an old rule of politics: When
attacked, attack back. ·
·
"The abuses have been bipartisan and our investigations must ~ bipar·
tisan," Sen. John dtenn ·of Ohio, the panel's senior Democratic member
'
insisted Tuesday.
Olenn clearIy served notice that he wasn't about to work hand-in-hand
with c~mmittee Chairman Fred Thompson, R·Tenn., in the way that, say,
Republican Howard Baker did with .Watergatc Committee ·Chairman Sam
Ervin, a North Carolina Democrat.
. References to the Watergate hearings - an investigation that ·ultimately
led to Richard Nixon's resignation as president- were frequent.
For one thing, the campaign finance laws at the heart of the present inquiry
were enacted after Watergate to curb against campaign tactics of Nixon's
1972 re-election effort.
Furthermore, Thompson got his start in politics when be was hired by
fellow Tennessean Baker to be minority counsel to the Senate Watergate
Committee.
Thompson - and before him Vice President AI Gore - holds the Senate seat that Baker, now a Washington attorney and consultant, held. .
And, in his own opening statement.on Tuesday, Thompson echoed Bak·
er's famous "what did he know and when did he know it" line in vowing
to get to the heart of the "systematic jpf!ux of illegal money" in the 1996
presidential race.
.
"We·will be wanting to know who knew about i~ who should have known
about ~t, and whether or not there was an attempt to cover it up," Thompson SaJd.
.
. Striking back, Glenn and other committee Democrats recited a litany of
past GOP financial discretions.
·
.
These included questionable fund-raising activities by former GOP chief
Haley Barbour; and a $1 million fine in 1996leveled against Bob·Dole's .
former campaign finance vice chairman, Simon Fireman, for campaign·
finance law violations.
.
Former GOP President Bush rnay not have invited contributors to stay
in the Lincoln Bedroom, but he used While House stationaiy to promote a
· meeting and reception he threw in 1992 for three Republican contributor
·
·
.groups, committee Democrats asserted.
Republican members cried foul, suggesting that alleged Democratic mis· ·
deeds were far more serious.
. ·
. " When Sam Ervin, who's been mentioned here today, led the Walergate
investigation, Howard Baker didn 'I try to go find a Democrat scandal so that
he could force equal attention," grumbled Sen. Bob Smith, R·N.H. "He
joined the investigation, Senator Baker did, and the truth about a Republi·
can president was the result."
Glenn wasn't buying inlo that argument.
Not only did he rattle off the list of alleged GOP campaign finance mis·
deeds, but he also came close to upstaging Thompson.
Thompson, a former actor with possible presidential aspirations of his
own, brought drama 10 the first session by asserting that China had plotted
to influence U.S. elections with illegal money and said the secret operation
may still be under way.
Then Glenn's tum for drama came,·with his su..Prise disclos~re that a key
holdout wimess, John Huang, had offered through his attorney to testify under
certain conditions.
Republican pollster Frank Luntz said that, for now, Democrats may have '
been able to blunt the GOP probe.
,
.
"Quite frankly, Americans are not all that interested. But they weren't
q~ite that interested in Watergate until the chips started to fall," he said. And
Luntz suggested Republicans have more vivid examples of Democratic abuses- such as Lincoln Bedroom sleepovers and Gore's fund-raiser at a temple with Buddhist monls and nuns.
James Thurber, an American University political scieniis~ said the Democratic strategy - a little late, after momhs of negative headlines - might
not neutralize the GOP. charges.
Bu~ he said. it will serve to emphasize that "they' re aJ I sinners Qn both
sides. n
EDIToR'S NOTE- Tom Raum coYen politics ud national alfllin

lor The Alsoc:illted Press.

Today in
By The Asaoclaled Prell

hist~ry
·

· Today is Thursday, July 10, tbe 19lst day of 1997. There are 174 days
. left in the year.
Tooay's Highlight in History:
On July 10, 1940, during World WarD, the 114-&lt;lay Banle of Britain began
as Nazi forces began attacking southern England by air. By late October,
Britain managed to repel the Luftwaffe, which suffered heavy losses,
On this date:
.
In 1832, President Andrew Jackson vetoed legislation to re-charlcr the
Seeond Bank of the United Stales.
In .1850, Vice President Millard Fillmore assumed the pRSidency, fol·
lowing the death of President Taylor.
In 1890, Wyoming becJUIIe the 44th Stale.
In 1919, President Wilson personally delivered the Treaty of Versailles
to the Senate and urged its ratifJCalion.
1n 1~, thcolfscial news agency of the Soviet Union, TASS, was estab-

. bed.
.
.
hs In 1943, during World WarD, U.S. and British forces invaded Sicily.

other with glee.
And what about China? Yes, they
swallowed Hong Kong. But it
remains to be seen whether it was a
tiger swallowing a healthy ,man or a
sick man swallowing an antibiotic.
China may be cured by Hong Kong.
One day they may J.oin the good guys
club. (Russia has.)
What happened in Mexico last
weekend should not be underesti·
mated. There are almost 100 million
people there, and they now seem to
have a serious democratic govern·
ment for the first time. In the last 30
years the Mexican fertility rate has
fallen from 6.8 children per woman
to 2.8. They' re ready. Chile will like·
ly join NAFrA, opening up hemi·
spheric trade as ne.ver before. The
Chileans pioneered privatized,Social
Security an
. d the idea is spreading
around the world. It may well make
lots of poor wage slaves into well-to- ·
do stake-holders.
·
There an: almost20wholly or par·
tially democratic countries in Africa
today; many struggling. But theJOe

Clinton proves adept at foreign policy:
As President Clinton heads to the United States, and to expansion of that the Third World faces environ· trade "sucks" jobs out of the couO:.
Europe to preside over expansion of NATO to keep ~ United States mental and political catastrophe try.
NATO, it's hard to remember that this cemented in the post.Cold W11 Euro- while the iJI(Iustrial world prospers;
On NATO expansion, Clinton is
is the same president who made such pean security structure.
(4) The "clash of civilizations" opposed by an odd collection of liba mess offoreigll policy at the outset
theory of Harvard's Samuel Hunt· eral doves and hawk hard. liners,
of his first lerm.
Kondrsc/ce · ington, which anticipates conflict ranging from Rep. Bllri'Jey Frank, OIl's too much to say that Clinton
between Muslims, Christians and Mass., and former arms control chief
has been a great foreign policy presIn both cases; he faces fights in Confucians:
Paul Warnke on the left to former
ident ·· luckily, be's had no wars or Congress to keep the momentum
(S) The "global village" model . Pentagon official Fred lkle, Russia
grave crises to face ·· .but his strate· going - this year on fast-track author· identified by left-wing scholar scholar Richard Pipes, and f!Jrmer
gy and cxe&lt;\ution so far have been ity to negotiale new trade agreements Richard Barnet, in which all the Sen. Gordon Humphrey, R-N.H., oil
very good, setting up the structure for and in 1998 on Senate ratification of world's peoples ·are victimized by the right.
contioued U.S. global leadership in NATO expansion. • ·
supra-national corporations:
The opposition also includes sucll
lhe 21st century.
Butcontrarytotherapthathisfor·
(6) A bipolar world, with the centrists as former Sen. Sam Nun!&gt;,
Clinton's success in this arena is eign policy is driven simply by United States and China as 21st cen· O:Ga., and former Clinton adviser
a surprising development in view of domestic politics, there is a distinct tury rivals; and
Michael Mandelbaum. On the Olhe~
the disasters he endured early in his vision to Clinton's view of the U.S.
(7) The unipolar, one-superpower hand, Foreign Relations Committee
first term, such as the death of U.S. place in the world, if not exactly a world first identifie&lt;) by columnist ranking member Joe Biden, 0-Del.,
troobbps in SomHalia, being inlimidated grand strategy.
,
Charles Krauthammer.
who had been opposed, has declared
Y t· ugs
In
aiti;
and
having
diploOne
scholar
has
identified
seven
Cl1'nto
·
n
1
·
s
ope'rau·ng
under
the
last
·m •oavor of expanSion,
· I hough he says
.. · ·
bl .1
b f'
matiC lnldtlaBuves. un.y re u oed in models for the shape of tbe world's model and trying to make sure that that getting two-thirds of the Senate
Ch ma an osma.
future, and the evidence suggests that the others ·· WI·11 be "a real fight. 'l '
.,. he de · fh'
-~ sliort-c1'rcu•'ted, espe· . to approve 11
oot
spaJro
Jssecretariesof
Clinton
isn't
confused
about
which
c1'allythethree·blocortwo-blocsce0p
·
·
· based on potential
poslllon IS
State and De •oense, a ·mton wasn:t ·one he believes in.
narios. This accounts for his NATO cost, fear of renewed Russian nationinterested in foreign affairs and spent
Clearly, Clinton thinks thai the initiative, efforts to get along with alism, .and . the problem of Central
little time on it. The results showed United States is the world's lone Communist China, and the formation European states left out of the expan;
in repeated humiliations for .the Unit· superpower, the "indispensable of links to other Asian countries.
sion.
ed stateths and thhane aeddministration.
nation" without which nothing useBut there are dangers to the sysSo far, Clinton has met the objec~
8
. ut aida's c g · Besides decid- ful can be achieved. Some Clinton tern Clinton is trying to foster. A tions by seeking European cost-shar:
mg
ngerous not to pay allen· aides. say that, de facto,. the world . 'am1'ne-crazed
North Korea could 1ng,
·
· · assent from Russiali
. II was
,
•·
wmnmg
t1on to ooreign affairs, ·d
Clinton· also lives under a Pax Americana and that launch a desperate attack on South Pres1'dent Bons
· v,e1tsm,
· and perma'
k
F
Pr
I
got · uc Y· ormer es1 ent J1mmy Clinton wants to keep it that way.
. Korea, making Clinton a war presi- nently excluding no democracy from
Carter saved him from disaster in
The
seven
competing
visions
dent. Relau·ons w1'th Ch1'na could eas- mem be rship. He' II make a side trip to
· H · · d Cro ·
Korea an d m
lllb, an
auan mil· identified by Robert Harkavy of ily become adversarial, and Clinton Romania to stress the point.
:
itary
advances
gave
him
a
second
Pennsylvania
State
University
are:
could
be
e
.mbarrassed
by
renewed
w·
h
b
d
han
b 'ld
· B ·
II
u get constraints and t
c ce to U1 peace In osma.
(I) A three-bloc world in wbich · warfare in the Balkans:
advancing lame-duckhood increas:
However, Clinton also deserves Europe· , Asia and America are "geoDangers also 'ace
h1'm 1'n Con'- mg
· 1y 1mpairing
·
•·
his ability to institute
credit for developing a sound overall economic " and perhaps geopolitical gress, where a majority of Democrats · · domestic initiatives, Clinton may
strategy almost from the outsel on rivals; ·
and a growing minority of national- well major in foreign policy for his
two key fronts: world trade and
· (2) 'Ille multipolar, balance-of· istic Republicans oppose the fast- last years in office. He might even gei
Europe.
·
power world . ord.er anticipated by . track. In debate this fall, Clinton will a top grade.
:
He's been dedicated since 1993to ·Henry Kissinger:
be helped, 'though, by the boo111ing
(Morton Kond....,ke is executive
an open trading system, the key to
(3) " Zones of peace/zones of U.S. economy and low unemploy· editor of Roll Call the newspape;
prospenty around the world and 1n chaos." the theory of Roben Kaplan ment, which ~f~te .the idea that free of Capitol Hill.) '

Morton

Capital gains tax.heart of controversy
By TONY SNOW
Creetora Syndicate

WASHINGTON ·· The United
Stales of America, conceived in a hat·
tie over punitive taxation, returns to
its roots this week as Congress
decides whether to adopt tax-cutlcg·
islatiOA passed by both.twuses.
At the heart of the controversy is
the capital-gains tax, which embod·
ies the old Washington command·
ment: No good deed shall go unpunished.
Suppose you decide to help out a
mend who starts a business and the
enterprise giJes belly-up. Under present law, you have to take the hit and
move on. The only people who now
get tax deductions for failure are
gamblers. (This is noi a joke.)
Now, suppose your risk paid off.
· Your friend's company. z~ms to
greatness, creates a baz1lhonJObS and
cures cancer. In that case, you can get
s~~ed ~1th taxes that exc;eed your
ongmal mvestment. the wilder your
success, the .more rou ha~c to giv~ to
Uncle Sam 1n cap1tal-gams taxauon.
If ,~is seems a linle perverse .to
rou, JOin the crowd. No other major
1ndustnal power plac:es heavy taxes

on capital gains.
To make things worse, more than
half of all gains in America are fake .
They reflect inflation. So if you're a
senior citizen with a hefty pension,
· you may not realize it, but the gov.emment thinks you' re' rich •• and it
will tax you as if you were a Rockefeller. (Amend that: as if you were a
Rockefeller who was contributing to
the economy.)
Republicans have taken a tenuuive
step toward righting this wrong.
House Ways and Means Committee
Chairman William Archer has ~
posed cutting the tax rate on capital
~ains to 10 percent for people in the
lowest income bracket and 20 percent
for everybody else .. as compared to
present rates of 15 perce~t and 28
percent.
President Clinton, who in the past
. has professed abhorrence of capital·
gains taxation, doesn 'tlike the An:her
bid, so he suggests letting people
exclude the first 30 percept of their
investment windfalls, and then pay
full taxes on the RSt. The only
exception: the hated "rich," who
would get no relief at all.
This is 11 bad deal for just about

everybody. Compare the plans. than racing from a debate about the'
Archer wants to wring 10 percent out · issues, conservatives ought to ask.
of low-income taxpayers who try to every American to answer a simple·
cash in goodies; the president prefers . question: What values should our
a higher rale, 10.6 percent.
government worship?
:
Archer proposes 20 percent for
Our ta1 code is the most elaborate:
people who have· mid"level incomes monument ever erected on behalf of
after their capital gain; Clinto~ pro- envy. Yet, for some reason, the GOP.
poses 19.6 ··slight edge to Clinton. fears saying something that mos{
An:her also proposes 20 percent for working people now know in tlieir
taxpayers with higher income: the ·
:So-called progressive taxatio"
president wants to whack them with IS eVI.1
.,.
'
.
rales of 27.7 percent.
·On what planet does it count a$
The practjcal effect of the Clinton "progress" when a government lifts:
plan is to m;lintain the status quo ·· half of what most workers earn, doles
and call it a triumph for the middle it outto corporations and government
class. Although his argument is spe- employees _ and calls the transaction:
cious, misleading and dishonest, it a boon to the poor?
.
boasts one major asset It scares the
Our tax .·system· promotes indo-·
bejabbers out of Republicans.
Ience and dependency among the:
There
whispers in Washington downtrodden and hoarding on the:
,that GOP leaders dori't want to take part of the rich. Talk about a recipe:
on the president because they d!&gt;n'i for class war! Yet Bill Clinton's'
'want to confront the old 'taunt that response is 10 add another coat of;
'they care JllOre about the rich than the hypocrisy to an edifice notable main· :
·
huddled masses.
, ly for its complexity and corruption. ; ·
In order to avoid name-calling, the
The tax fight in Washington ·
thinking goes, ~publican l~rs involves a lot of issues, but none is '
.might meet Clinton halfway. Such a more fundamental than the question
compromise would represent a head- of whether we still want to pay
long flight to avoid victory. Rather homage to avarice.
hearts
• .

are

..

The Dally sentinel • Page 3 ,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 10, 1997

Pomeroy man gets• prison

Friday, July

•

(Continued from Page 1)
He also attempted to strike. Stan·
· ·
ley but other people pulled him off
AccuWeather• forecast for
'
. .
gave no obJecOons to the agreement.
J h
· f ·1
be
·d of her, at wh1ch ume he wenl around
MICH.
the truck and continued beating on
o nson s anti y mem rs sa•.
Hysell took from them both a farn1· J h
H sell ulled him oul of the
ly member and best fnend.
o nson . Y P .
.
"'' 1
f· d d
ha
truck and Johnson shpped or fellmto
Todd Christopher Johnson, 30, Pomeroy, died Tuesday, July. 8, 1997 at
l Totedol 84'
v~ ost ~ ~n .. an.d s~n t t ;:n Ihe creek, Lentes said.
•
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
nMever
reJpha
,.
~.aMI
.
IS
mcot
r,
L~ntes
pointed
out
lhe
creek
was
He was born Dec. I 7, 1966, in Prince Georges County, Md., son of Maunson
.
elgs
.~unty
15
feel
deep
in
that
spot
and
that
argaret
o
rice and Margaret Garrard Johnson of Pomeroy. He was a member of Phi
has
los1
an
excellent
educator.
Johnson
was
unable
swim
because
10
Delta Gamma National Graduale Fraternal Organization, he compleled cours-.
!Mansfield
His sister, Lee'a Proffit!, told of Ihe healing.
es at The Inquiry Science Institute, and was certified as a teacher by the UniHysell
to look her in the eye and said, .
A few minutes later, they decided
versity of Hawaii and the Ohio Department of Education.
IND.
"I
can't
believe
you
did
this
lo
my
jump
in and look for him. Anoth·
10
He was a member of the Meigs Local Teachers Associalion, he was 1'1'0
er person, not involved in the inci·
vice presidept at Rutla~d Elementary School, and he was a fourth grade brolher."
"You
took
away
a
father,:·
she
said.
dent came by an&lt;t called emergency
teacher at Harrisonville Elementary School in the Meigs Local School Dis"My
brother
was
my
best
friend
."
medical services.
.
trict
COiumbusl84'
His
brother,
Scott
Johnson
said
"I
When rescue workers arrived,
Surviving in addition 10 his parents are a son, Alex Christopher Johnson ·
wish
I'd
been
there
.
Things
would
Hysell
was in the water and very bel·
of Pomeroy: a brother and sister-in-law, Scott and Karin Johnson of Pomeroy;
have
been
differenl
...
I
hope
you
get
ligerent
to people at t.he scene, he
a sister and brother-in-law, Lce'a and Curtis Proffitt of Hinesville, Ga.; a forthe
sentence
you
bring
on
yourself
in
said.
Stanley
was loud and difficuh
86'
mer wife, Gina Pines of Pomeroy; and several aunts, uncles ~nd co~ins .
prison."
and
was
also
taken
into custody. he
He was preceded in death by paternal grandparents, Elber and ranees
After,wards,
Lentes
explained
lhe
said.
Johnson; and maternal grandparents, Charles A. and Ruby Garrard. '
Despite the speed of the proceedservices will be II a.m. Saturday in the Pomeroy Chapel of the Fisher siiUation leading to the murder.
' W.VA.
He
said
Johnson
had
gone
to
a
resings,
Len1es said Hysell is no stranger
Funeral Home. Burial will be in the Bradford Cemetery, Pomeroy, ~nd Derek
idence
on
Bra.dbury
Road
to
talk
to
a
to
lhe
legal system.
Stump will be officialing. Friends may call al the funeral home from 6-9 p.m.
woman
about
doing
some
·hou
se
"He
has been through the system
Friday.
cleaning
and
that
he
and
other
peobefore.
He knows what the situation
Memorial contributions may be made to the Harrisonville Elementary
pie
there
had
decided
to
go
swimis
and
what
his rights an!," he said,
School Science Lab, in care 9f.Harrisonville Elemenlary School, 35359 S1a1e
ming
at
a
popular
swimming
hole
adding
that
Hysell
was 10 be transRoute 143, Pomer9y Ohi9 45769.
'
.
near
Malloons
Run
and
Dexter
roads
ported
today
10
begin
his sentence.
"
Sunny Pt. Clouc1y Cloudy
Ice
Flutrles
near Langsville.
"He knows that he did it."
John son, Hysell and Hysell's girl·
In addilion to his parents and sibGnophlcsNot
Wilbur K&lt;ienig, 90, of 642 Brownell Ave ., Middleport, died Wednesday. friend , Melinda Stanley, also known lings, Johnson is survi~ed by an 8as Melinda Moore, drove in John· year-old son. Alex Christopher John·
July 9, 1997 at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Born on Oct. 30, 1906, he was the son of the late Val Koenig and Min· son's truck. Lentes said. On the way, son.
Services for Johnson will be Satnie Fick Koenig. He was a conslruction worker and coal miner. a member Hysell look exception with something
Johnson
had
allegedly
said
and
urday
at II a.m. in the Fisher Funerof the United Mine Workers and the Ohio Laborers Union, and belonged to
starttd
beating
on
him
,
ahhough
al
Home
Pomeroy ChapeL Friends
1he Middleport Church of Christ. He was a veteran of World War II.
By The Associated Press
.
.
Hysell
did
not
remember
what
it
was
may
call
from
6-9 p.m. Friday at the
Mr. Koenig is survived by a son, Reed Koenig of Middleport; two broth·
· Temperatures will return to more seasonable levels across Oluo on Fn·
he
said,
he
added.
funeral
home.
ers, Henry Koenig of Cambridge, and Leo Koenig of Canton) and several .
day as a high pressure system pumps w~ southerly breezes mto the ":"ea:
,.·.;'·.
·., .
,, .. ,
.
.
By the weekend, high temperatures will approach 90 degrees, the Nauon . nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by his wife , Alice Koenig, four brothers and
·al Weather Service said.
_
. !.--:&gt;:&lt;~ tl,
.·.
I j
..
, • , .
four sisters.
.
·
_:;~
. c4
·*,WtJ};~&lt;"&gt;i&gt;,\-.\, ~·.:i •... '.
'
,·'·!c1
.
. ·.,.·if: .. ··::~-·\
Graveside services will be Friday at 10 a.m. at the Mound Cemetery, Sum·
Weather forec:ast:
Oblluilrlee .,, · p11ldiJllilounc.emente alrenged by local funeral hom...
.. Tonight .. Ciear. Fog developing after midnight Lows in the upper 50s. ner Road, Chester. Mr. Bill Frazier will officiate. There will be no calling
Obltuarlee ere publl..... 'aa rtqUIIted to accommodate thou dnlrlng ·mo,.
hours.
Light and variable wind.
.
. ..
lnformlllon than 11 prO'rided in jl1e' eccompenylng Death Notlcea. . · ·
Friday... Fog early, then sunny. H1~hs tn tlie upper 80s.
Friday night ... Mostly clear. Lows 1ft the lower 60s. ·
Extended forec:ast:
• . Saturday... Mostly clear. Highs in the mid 80s.
.
.
Todd Christopher Johnson, 30, of Pomeroy, Ohio, died Tuesday, July 8,
Council holds closed-door session
Sunday... Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 60s and h1ghs 1n the upper 80s.
1997at Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
Pomeroy Village Council met in special session on Thursday· morning to
Monday ... Partly cloudy. Lows in 1he mid 60s and highs m the upper 80s.
He was born on December 17, 1966, in Prince Georges County, Mary·
continue interviewing candidates for chief of police. The meeting w~s held land, son of Maurice Johnson and Margaret Garrard Johnson of Pomeroy.
in executive session.
He was a member of Phi Delta Gamma National Graduate Fraternal OrgaNo action was taken .
.
nization, he completed courses at The Inquiry Science Institute, and was cerAttending were Mayor Frank Vaughan, Clerk Kathy Hysell, and Council lified as a 1eacher by the University of Hawaii and the Ohio Department of
will be a picnic at noon .
Date ~orrec:ted
members John Musser, Geri Walton,.Larry Wehrung and B1ll Young.
/ Education. He was a member of the Meigs Local Teachers Association, he
The Meigs County Humane S?Ci·
was PTO Vice President at Rutland Elementary School and he was a fourth
ely will meet on July 19 from 3 to 5 Family night
Crash
on
1241eaves
two
injured
grade teacher at Harrisonville Elementary Schoo lin the Meigs Local School
The
Middleport
United
Pente·
p.m. at the Meigs County Public
Two
drivers
were
injured
in
a
two-car
accidenl
Wednesday
on
Slale
Route
costal
Church
will
have
a
family
District.
Library in Pomeroy. The meeting will
124 near Salem Center, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Palrol
He is survived,by his parents, Maurice and Margaret Garrard Johnson of
night
obse..Vance,
Wednesday,
7:30
focus on gathering community, input
Pomeroy;
a son, Alex Christopher Johnson of Pomeroy; a brother and sis·
p.m
at
tlie
church,
873
S. Third Ave ., reported.
.
for the construction of a cat shelter in
James Grueser, 48,33635 Hysell Run Road, Pomeroy, and Jeffrey T. Cald· ter-in-law, Scott and Karin Jolmson of Pomeroy; a sister and brother-inclaw,
Middleport.
1'he ABI Quartet and
Meigs County. The date of the meet·
well, 27, Jackson, were lransp.orted to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Lce'a and Cunis Proffitt of Hinesville, Georgia; a nephew, Seth Johnson of
ing was reported incorrectly to The puppets will be featured.
Rutland squad of the Meigs EMS following the 4 p.m. accident, the patrol Pomeroy; an ·aunt, Ruth Barnhart of Middleport, Ohio: an uncle and aunt,
Daily Sentinel.
John and Karen Johnson of Charlotte, North Carolina; a former wife, Gina
reported.
·
·
·
·
Car wash
· The Meigs High Flag Corps will
Grueser was treated and released, a hospital spokesperson said, but there Pines of Pomeroy; cousins. Cheryl and Rodney Bailey of Pomeroy; amd sevReunion planned
eral aunts, uncles and cousins.
The Wood family reunion will be hold a car wash Saturday at Wendy's was no record of treatment for Caldwell.
He was preceded in death ·by paternal grandparents, Elber and Frances
Troopers
said
Caldwell
was
westbound
when
he
lost
control
of
his
car
on
from
10
a.m.
10 1 p.t,n. as a fund rais·
held Aug. 9 at the Virgil King Farm.
Johnson: and maternal grandparents, CharlesA. and Rllby Garrard.
wet
pavement
and
slid
left
of
center,
colliding
with
Grueser's
eruabound
car.
er.
Donations
will
be
accepted.
38858 Smith Road, Pomeroy. '~'here
Services will be held at II a.m. on Saturday, July 12, 1997 at the Pomeroy
The crash caused severe damage to bmh cars, and Caldwell was ciled for
Chapel
of the Fisher Funeral Home, 590 East Main Street; Pomeroy. Burial
failure to control, according to the"report. . ·
will be in the Bradford Cemelery, Pomeroy, and Derek Stump will be offiPatrol tickets driver after accident
ciating. Friends m~y call Friday. July 11, 1997 from 6-9 p.m. at the funeral
A Pomeroy woman was cited for failure to control by 1he Gallia-Meigs home.
Post of the State Highway Patrol following a one-car accident Wednesday
Memorial conlributions may be made to the Harrisonville Elementary
gather
at
the
Rock
Spriilj!S
Fair·
on
SR
124
near
Salem
Cenler.
School
Sc.ience Lab and mailed 1o: Harrisonville Elementary School, 35359
Meigs County's first Relay fo~
Troopers said Alyssa K. Hoffman, 18, 37380 Texas Road, was westbound
tife, a fund-raising event for the grounds, where team members will
at 3:55p.m. when she lost control of her car on wet pavement. The car then . Stale Roule 143,Pomeroy Ohio 45769~., . . • • • • • • • • • •
Meigs County Chapter of the Amer· take turns walking around a track.
Those not walking will be able to went off the left ·side of the road and struck a ditch.
ican Cancer Society, will begin at 4
Damage to the car was moderate, troopers said.
p.m. Saturday, and will offer enter- enjoy games. entertainment and food ..
Veterans Memorial
tainment, t'oOd and an opportunity to Even those who do not join a team
Wednesday
admission~
socialilll, exercise and raise funds for are invited 10 spend the·ovening at the
William
R.
Harris,
Mason, W.Va.
event.
· ihe organization.
Wesdnesday
discharges
- none .
A hayride, face painting, balloon
. ..
- · Teams of up ·lo 10 walkers will
Holzer
Medical
Center
menl
and
squad
10
State
Route
124,
animals by John Tillis, drawings for
Units of the Meigs 'County EmerDischarges July 9 - John Tip·
an Ohio River Bear, a sculpture by gency Medical Service recorded eight mmor vehicle accident, Jeffrey Cald·
well,
HMC,
Alyssa
Hoffman,
refused
ton,
Andrew Williams, Thomas Scott,
Daily
local artist Jack Slavin, a fish pond calls for assistance Wednesday. Units
Robert
trea1men1.
James
Grueser,'
VMH,
Miller. April Hart, Dorothy
for children and a scavenger hunt, responding included:
(VSPS Zl3·9601
Central
Dispatch
squad
and
Salem
Davis.
·
. sponsored by The Daily Sentinel
CENTRAL DISP~TCH
Publidled eYery .afternoon. Monday through
Township
VFD
assisted;
·
(Published
with
permission)
team, and a wiener roast are sched·
8:53 a.m. ; Overbrook Nursing
Frid3y. Ill Coun_St., Pomero~. Ohto. by the
6:33 p.m., SR 143, Linda Clark.
uled to take place during the evening. Center, Middleport, Lelah McCall isOhio Valley Publi5hing Compo11yiG~nett Co..
Poftmy. Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Second
HMC.
Nationwide, the Relay for Life is . ter, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
lkes work session
clau po~tage paid 3t Pomeroy, Ohio. ·
the biggest fund:raiser for the Amer·
The Meigs County lkes direttors
2:32p.m., Ash Street, Middleport,
SYRACUSI.
Mnnbtr: The A~MKiated Pre~~ ; and the Ohio
ican Cancer Society, bringing in over Ella Stewart, Holzer Medical center;
meeting
will be held Monday, 6 p.m.
9:43 p.m .. Hogg Hollow . Road,
New~ paper t\ssocillliofl.
S I .4 million last year. .
at
the
farm
on Scout Camp Road. A
9:13p.m., Rocksprings Rehabili- Racine, Fred Miller, VMH.
The regisuation fee 'for the inau· tation Center, Pomeroy, Diane
work session and fish fry will be held
POSTMASTER: Send ;:u:ldre~,; comctions to
11te Daily Sentinel, Ill Caun St .. Pomeroy.
gural Meigs County event has been Copeland, Veterans Memorial Hos·
and all members are welcome.
Ohio4S169.
waived, although team members are pital;
'
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
encouraged to collecl donations for · II :04 p.m., Baldknob-Stiversville
By Carrl!r or MOIOI' Route
the society. Unlike many walking Road, ,Portland, Greg Bailey. VMH,
events, there are no "pledges." Prizes Racine squad assisted.
will be awarded to those collecting
POMEROY
the most donations.
9:54 a.m., . Maples Apartmenls.
SINGLE COPY PaiCE
Onily ·····-.................................. 35 Cents
The schedule for the event is as : Pomeroy, Pauline Kennedy. HMC,
follows:
Middleporl squad assisted.
Su~beB not de~iri11g to pny the carrier may
'
BARGMIIMTINlES SATURDAY/IIJIIIOI,Y
• 4: Kick-off by local mayors
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on nthree. ~ix or 12 month bru:is. Cn!dit will be
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p.m.,
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tire
departgi"cn CDJTicr each week.
• 4:30: Midnight Cloggers
No sub~cription by mail pcrmined in ru~:u
• 5:15: Karaoke and disc jockey
where nome ctll'rier ~rvice i.' availnbte.
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Publisher re~~ the riQht 10 odju~t mtes dtlr• 7: "When Candles Talk" by
ing the ~ubscription period. Subscripti~n rote
Rejoicing Life Church
ch:mge~ may bt: implc:mcnted by chnngmg the
durntion or the :qub~ption .
• 8:30.11 :00: Line dance lessons
and
line dancing featuring Jim and
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lnskle Mtlp Counly
Carla Ryder
• g:30; Big Bend Cloggers
• 10: Luminary service .
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Ratts Outlklt Mtip County
For more information about the
1~ Weelt.!i ................................................. $29.2S
2is Weeks ................................................. $56.68
Relay for Life, teams should contact
l2Weelci ............................................... $109.12
Ferman Moore at992-723 1.

•

Todd C. Johnson

I

l83' I•

~

•

·~

•I

I

. VOl-,..,
Gradual warming trend
·predicted into weekend

Wilbur Koenig

.
•
.
.
~
. . ,...·:Qq.· b1tua•1es.·

·&amp;~

-Local News in Brief:- Todd Christopher Johnson

Meigs announcements

First 'Relay for Life' set
for Meigs on Saturday

Hospital news

EMS units handle 8 calls

The

Sentinel

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�Thursday, July 10, 1997

Sports

The .Daily Sentinel

Hubbard LL

As the field begins to narrow, anxiety begins to climb among teams
still remaining in the 20th annual Bill
Hubbard Memorial little League
Tournament at Syracuse Municipal
Park where Pomeroy, Point Pleasant
Hardware and New Haven claimed
victories.
All games were first-round games,
except for New Haven who picked
up their second win in the tournament.
In the first game, Point Pleasant
Hardware picked up a dramatic
comeback victory. At a time when a
closer such as a Randy Myers or
Jose Mesa would have come in
bandy, Bidwell II found it just ran
out of steam, after taking· a 5-l lead
into the sixth frame. PPH, however,
came up with five big runs. to wres~
the win from Bidwell.
In the first inning, Bidwell scored
twice when Kemper walked and
Shupe singled, followed by a Jerrod

Officials' decision bites d~eply intQ Tyson's future paydays
his life and how he's going to con- voice vote, also declared Tyson a would shake his opponent's hand. He
"Most boxers only fight one time one of the best heavyweights of all
duct himself."
"discredit to boxing" for biting
was a gentleman," Goodman said.
a year," Holyfield said. "He proba- , time.
Tyson ilpologized on television Holyfield on both ears in their June
"He rem~n~ a ~endeman today and . bly needs a year off to get himself
In February 1992 he was conlast wec;k and asked to be allowed to 28 WB A championship rematch, the retams his dtgmty today."
better anyway. He probably needs victed of raping Desiree Washington
fight again someday, but he did not richest fight in history. Tyson, a forTyson, who has made $140 milthe rest The penalty is probably and served three years in an Indiana
show up at today's hearing before the mer champion, was disqualified after lion in th~ ring in the last two years_, gmng to have to be a little more pri$_ow'
commission; leaving his lawyer to the third round.
was advtsed ~y Goodman not to
extensive than that. " ·
·
tHat prison sentence, though,
plead his case.
Tyson, who had said he was attend the heanng. He new to New
The license revocation will start seems to have affected his boxing
The commission could have sus- · angry over a head butt, took a piece York from Las Vegas early today.
from the day Tyson is fonnally abilities, and an indefinite license
pended Tyson for up to five years, out of Holyfield's right ear with the . "He said, 'I'm sorry.' There 's no
served notice of the decision. Papers · revocation could erode those skills
but state prosecutors argued for a first bite, sending the bloOdied reason~. say it again. ~t more can
were being prepared today.
further at an age when heavyweights ,
stronger punishment. A suspension champ to the hospital for stitches.
he add?. the lawyer S81d.
The ban is the latest in a troubled generally begin to decline .
would have allowed boxing regulaDuring the hearing, Goodman
As the hearing started, commis- career of a
·
tors to fine Tyson a maximum of said Tyson should be allowed to fight sian chairman Elias Ghanem said the
$250,000:
again and portrayed him as a gentle- panel would draw "no negative
"Boxing is unlike any other sport. man who has .apologized.
·
inference" from 'JYson's nonattenThere is a fine line between boxing
"Mr. Tyson spoke to the world · dance. He called this the "most tryand chaos," said deputy attorney after the fight. He told the world he ing time in Nevada boxing history."
general Gordon Fink.
·
was sorry about what had hapHolyfield, now touring South
The very nature of the sport, he pened," he said. "He threw himself Africa, said earlier that a year's ban
said, " needs strict adherence."
on the mercy of this court.
·from boxing wouldn't be enough for
The commission, in a unanimous
"After his boxing losses, he the bites.

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Skyline Speedway near . Stew an
will host the second of Coca-Cola
Classic Outlaw Sptint Car races
paying $3,000 to win Friday night at
the 318 mile clay oval.
Some of the biggest names in
open-wheel super sprint compeition
are expected to be on hand.
Driver inquiries have come from
Indiana, Pennsylvania and Michigan . •
The visiting invaders will challenge
current points leader Mike Bowling
of Sharonville; local native Ronnie
Myers and Ohio's winningest sprint
car driver Jim Nier of Piketon, who
has already taken three wins at Skyline this season.
All-Star driver Todd Kane
claimed the first Coca-Cola Classic
in the series over All-Star leader
Kenny Jacobs a"l! Sarah Fisher.
The'answerio the question, "Are
Late Models Running at Skyline?" is

Our Lille Up:

ONE GOOD BITE DESERVES ANOTHER- Tllat11111y have been the thinking of members 91 the NeVada State Athletic Commission (left-hand photo), shown dellbeiatfng
the late of former heavyweight champion Mike l'yaon (at left _In right-hand photo)

"We.' ve been through hell week
as far as our schedule is concerned
but I also think that in the course of
the season teams ·go through their
ups and downs," New York coach
Nancy Darsch said Wednesday night
after her te81D lost 87-69 to the Char'
lotte Sting.

"Yes".
Skyline runs three classes in addition to the Super Outlaw Sprint Special: Late Models, Street Stocks and
Four Cylinders. West Virginia '"!~".~

"We started off really strongly
and teams have been gunning for
us," Darsch added. "Maybe we've
become a little complacent. maybe it
happened too easy and now we have
to get back our intensity and our
hunger. I'm sure this will do that."
New York's . main problem

~

$299

"
••

'"

..

.WNBA games.••
(Continu:d from Page 4)
"If this g81De was in Houston. we
come out with a loss," Miller said.
"Lack of focus, lack of execution ...
This is what separates the ~oOd
teams from the great teams."
Cynthia Cooper, who paced
Houston with 16 points, missed a
free throw with eight seconds
remaining and a jump ball cost the
Comets a chance to tie the game:
"We showed a lot of character,"
Cooper said. "We definitely got
outplayed in the ftrst half. Phoenix
was really hu.stling."
Bridget Pettis "finished with 12
points despite shooting just 3-of-14
from the field for Phoenix before a
crowd of II ,892 at America West
Arena.
" I shot really well in the wannup. Maybe I shot .them all in the
wann-up," Pettis said. "We ran the
Comets to death in the first half.
' They made an adjusunent on defense
in the second half and we didn't. We
kept on doing the same thing. We
should learn a lot from that.''

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In the last game of the evening, a
Bidwell chanted ·"Katie bar the three fanned the side in the third
door!," but Katie never answered in inning. After a walk in the fourth , he close battle kept the crowd around to
the sixth. That carne after Stepehns again sttuck out the side, making the the finihs as Point Pleasant Home
fanned the side in the Bidwell sixth. cause hopeless for the hapless Point Care fell to the New Haven Reds.
New Haven used three pitchers
Point Pleasant Hardware went to Pleasant team. •
Pomeroy scored early when (Roush, Jones,. R. Mitchell) for a
work as L. Reynolds singled, Higginboth81D singled and then after a Roush helped his cause with a two- combined 12 strikeouts and just
strikeout Hodge and Richardson out. single to ignite a five-run rally. three walks, while allowing just one
walked to bring home a run. Al -3 Musser reached on an error, Hannan hit. Turner suffered the loss despite
groundout scored another run, then singled.. Ramsburg singled and Pick- a good pitching effort himself, fanning 13 and walking none.
B.J. Smith hit a two run double and ens slammed a two-run double.
New Haven's timely hitting just
Pomeroy
plated
two
more
in
the
scored on the ensuing play with the
overcame
Point Pleasant's good
second,
then
ripped
off
eight
runs
in
game-winning run.
overall
effort.
the
third.
·Four
walks
and
three
hit
Stephens posted the win with a
Turner fanned the side in the
combined 10 strikeouts-five walk batters led to the leaking dyke, while
first,
then Roush came in to fan 2-ofPickens
tore
down
the
earthen
walls
effort with Pyles. Edwards and
3
and
retire the side in order for New
with
another
double
to
make
the
Shupe combined in the loss.
Haven.
Just like the pro's, Turner
score 15-0.
challenged
R. Mitchell in a battle of
T.J.
Evans
who
walked
scored
the
The second game was a nopower
and
Mitchell won hitting a
doubter early as Pomeroy erased only Point run in the fifth.
long
home
run
for a New Haven lead
Roush picked up the brilliant
Point Pleasant Deal and Brown earof
1·0.
ly behind a Roush 14-strikeout, no- pitching win with 14 strikeouts and
Turner doubled to lead off the sec;ix walks. Fisher and Wroten sufhit performance, IS-I.
ond
for Point, then after a KO, J.B.
Roush fanned the first six batters fered the loss.
Thompson
and Carr walked and a a
in succession then .afte4r walking

for the Royals, and Tom Poquette, cratic.field boss prone to experiment ·
another fanner Kansas City player. with different lineups.
The Royals gave Boone a conWhite will become third base coach
and Poquette, who has been Kansas . tract extension even though they finCity's roving minor league hitting ished last in the AL Central in 1996
for the first time in club history.
instructor, will coach hitting ..
"Basically it was my decision to
Boone, 49, l?an of a three-generation baseball family, ·had a 2 112- hire Bob," said general manager
year record as Royals manager of Herk Robinson . "Today we have
181 -226. The fanner All-Star catch- reversed that. We are not giving up
er replaced McRae in ·1995 and on this season at all. We are going to
quickly became known as an auto- play the season out in its entirety and
win every game we can."
· The Royals went into the season
with high hopes aftor upgrading
their roster with newcomers Jay
Bell, Jeff King aod Chili Davis.
However, a faulty bullpen contributed to a losing streak that
reached eight games at the All-Star
Wednesday night. "It was very
Break and left the team demoralized.
important to · have an entertaining
game. We certainly did that tonight.
It was a game that will help soccer
grow in this country.''
It certainly shouldn't hurt. Not
with nine goals by nine players, with
Pending a break in her busy bid
a goalie scoring one as a forward .
to land All -Star Circuit of ChampiNot with 55 'shots, including the
pns ' Rook.ie of the Year" Honors,
game-winner in the final two minAsheville's Sarah Fisher, a 16-yearutes by Columbus' Brian McBride.
old Teays Valley sophomore, is
"It was a great display of soccer,"
entered in Friday's $3,000-to-win
Coca-Cola Classic at Skyline SpeedEast coach Bruce Arena of D.C.
United said of the game played
way Friday night and the upcoming
before a soggy crowd of 24,816 at
July 26 Sprint Show at West Virginia
Giants Stadium. "!twas a great day
Motor Speedway..
for soccer in this country and MLS."
When you think of an up-andIt was not much of a night for coming racecar driver, you might
anyone intere~ted in defense. Or to
take for granted that the person has
held a driver's license for more than
be a goalie.in the second half, when
seven goals were scored .
(See ALL-STARS on Page 6)

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-Today's games
Toronto (Hetllgc:n 8-6) nt Boston (Gor-

don

THE MEIGS
~OUNTY FAIR EDITION
.
IS ~OMING AUGUST 7,1997
ADVERTISING DEADLINE IS JULY 30TH
CALL 992·2155 OR PLACE YOUR AD
·. IN THIS YEAR'S EDITION.

I

DONNIE R

EXT. 1OS •·DAVE

EXT. 104

I

'

.~ -1). 7 :0~

p.m.

Dcrroil {Oliver:u 5·5)ar N.Y. Yankee$
(ltnbu 0-0). 7:35p.m.
CLEVELAND (Nngy 9-4) 3t Min·
ncsola (Rndke 10-5). 8:05p.m.
O!icaao While So• (Navano 6-1) at
l&lt;aJ'Iw City {Appitr 6-6). 8:05p.m.
Teus (Hill 5-5) ot Seattle (Moyef 8- •
2). 10:05 p.m.

.

f1LCQV.ISifJI09{S

1

Marshall hires
Simpson to lead
Lady Herd cagers
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) Juliene Simpson, former women's
basketball coach at ,Bucknell University, has been named women's
coach at Marshall .
· "This is a dream co~e true,"
SimpSon, 44, said at a news conference Wednesday at Marshall's Henderson· Center. She said she was
drawn to Marshall by "the love and
the community and t~e winning attitude " of the team.
Simpson has a 272-252 record in
19 years of coaching. She spent the
past six seasons .at Bucknell in
Lewisburg. Pa., where she had a 6598 record ..
She also coached three years at
Whitworth College, an NAIA school
in Spokane, Wash, She was named
coach of the year in the Northwest ·
Conference of Independent Colleges
and was a finalist for NAIA National Coach of the Year in 1990.
Simpson was head coach at Arizona State from 1979 to 1987. In two
years she established an NCAA Top
20 progrnin and led the team to the
Sweet 16 in the 198;2 and 1983
. NCAA tournaments.

NLslate
Today 's games
St. Louis (Alan Benr1 1-7) Ill O.ica-

•

Natiorwl Footblll Lupc
ARIZONA CARDINALS: Re-sigl\ed
S - Mau . Dwby to a

tRi1by 0-2). :u~ p.m.

$299

finished third in his '70 Demon.
Jonathan Clay of West Hamlin
took the win in Junior Dragster with
Mike Chander of St. Albans finishing second.
Rutland's Gary Gilbert placed
first in the Pure Street division in his
'92 Cavalier. J.C. Motes of Logan
linished second in his '97 Dodge.
In the .Quick 16, Ran_dy Hughes
of Oak Hill finished first in his '77
Vega while Jim Smith of South Point
placed second in his '85 Camero.
On Saturday, Crown City's Cole
Bartrum won the Pro division in his
'78 Malibu. Jane Colley of Gallipolis was runner-up in a dragster.
The Modified division was won
by Steve Bowles of Tornado in his
'68 Camara. Ravenswood 's Jim
Stewart took second in a '64 Polara
while Chris Jividen of Fraziers !lottom placed third in a '79 Monzo. ·
West Hamlin's Jonathan Clay
took first place in Junior Dragster
with Chester's Derek Baum placing
second. Middleport's Tyler French
finished third.
·
J.C. Motes of West Hamlin finished first in Pure Street"in his '97
Dodge. Jim Rhodes of Ripley placed
·second in his Corvette.
Ceredo's Ray Perdue captured
first place in the Motorcycle division
on his '77 Kawasaki. Ray Scott of
West Port placed second on his '76
Kawasaki.
Mark Young of Wake Forest,
N.C. took top honors in the Gear
Jammers event in his '69 Mustang.
R.H. Adkins of Ravenswood placed
second in his '69 AMX. Colon
Richardson of North Carolina finisheli third in his '66 Nova.
For more information on the
track and upcoming events, call
675-67fiJ.

Transactions

ALslate
Anaheim (Wmtson 7-!'\) at Oakland

99

"'

couple wild pitches allowed two runs
home. Between the walks to batters
Roush fanned the side to get out of
the inning.
In the third inning Point Pleasant's
Duncan rode a hard shouo center
field, but Adam Mitchell turned it
into a big oul with a super great
catch.
New Haven tied it in the fifth on
a single to A.' Mitchell and an error
to make the score 2-2. Then in the
sixth, Smith and Tullah scored back
to back singles: After two successive
appeared to take some of the steam
from the New Haven sails, R.
Mitchell revived the rally · with a
game winning triple to make the
score 4-2.
Thursday, the Gallipolis Reds take .
on the Middleport Indians at 6:15, ·
Racine takes on Coolville at 7:30 and
Little Hocking Wendy's takes on the
Gallipolis Yankees in the.nightcap at
8:45.

.co Cllbs (FoSler 10-~). 2:20p.m.
· Phillldclptti.a (Beech 0.4) Ill f]orida
(Saunders 2-1), 7:0~ p.m.
Houston (Hoh 7-!H at Pituburah
(Schmidt 4-4). 7:35 p.m.
N.Y. Mett (MUcki 4-7) al Atlanta
(Smoltz8-7), 7:40p.m.

San [);ego (Hamilton .. l)" Colool!lo

. ,os p.m.
San Francisco (RIIder S..J) at l..oJ
AnJ&lt;Iel [Park !1-SJ, IO:OS p.m.
(lbomsoO 2-6~

· Baseball
American Lnaue
DEI'ROITnGERS: A.cti'lt&amp;ted C Man
Wo.lbeck from the IS-do.y dia:r.bled lis!.
Optioned C Brinn Johnson to Toledo of the
lmemnrionnll...t:ague.
KANSAS CITY ROYAU : Fired Bob
8oo11e. m:trlllgcr, Orr&amp; L..uzimli. hilling
irwructc.-. and Mitchell Page, frrst base
coach. Nomed Tony Musu managl"'", Fmnk
White t.~t base coach and Tom Poq~tene 1
binina insuuctor.
·
MINNESOTA lWINS: Si 8ned RHP '
Timo1hy Sturdy.
SEATTLE MARINERS: SiJned RHP
Brandon Parker. RHP Palrick Dunham.
LHP htc:r Otlprcy, C Cipriano G!ll"ciA.
RHP Daniel Delsado, LHP Robert
Olryder nnd SS Hubert Palter. Siarx:d
INF-OF John Donati aDd aui&amp;ncd him to
Umcasrer oft~ California League.
~atlonal.lAtJut:

HOUSTON AS11WS ' Ploocd RHP
Thmmy Greene on the 1.5-dlly disabled list. ,
ACti'IAied RHP ltUJI Springer from the 15day disabled till .
.

Football

BOB BOONE
"I think it's a club that's capable
of playing betterthan .500 baseball,"
Robinson said today at the news con-·

TONYMUSER
ference to introduce Muser.
" How much better, I'm not sure.
But the way 'we played the last two
weeks .was unacceptable."
•

Fisher .to race at Skyline Speedway Friday·

Scoreboard

1/10 d R111. 5199................................ 5
1.2 d ·Ill· S599 ................................

•
•
••

Kanawha Valley Dragway at
Southside, W.Va. celebrat·ld the
Fourth of July with two days of rae· g
·
.On Friday, Kevin Robinson of
Winfield finished first in the Pro
division in his 1977 Monza. Point
Pleasant's Chuck Sanders placed
· second in his '82 Camara while"""
Kevin Venoy of Long Bottom took
third in his '72 Nova.
In the Modified division, Point
Pleasant's Jeff Clark placed first in
his '74 AMX. Runner-up was Olin
Starks of Huntington in an '85 Mustang while Jay Stover of Scott Depot

at Guaranteed

....'· .
.."

Bartrum &amp; Clark
stand among KVD victors

Saturday with three classes: Late
Models, Modifeds and Street Stocks.
Skyline is located seven miles off
U.S. 50 between Coolville and
Athens.

1/4 ct

1/4 d. llg. 5399 .............................. SJ99

'1

Gilbe~,

Much of Charlotte's clinching run Miller, "a wake-up call" on Wedneswas done with New York star Rebec- day night.
ca Lobo on the bench in foul trouble.
Jennifer Gillam scored 20 points
Lobo also had an off night from the and Phoeni~ survived a late Houston
field, going 4-for-14 for 13 points.
comeback to beat the Comets 69-64
In the only other WNB A contest, in a WNBA game.
,
Phoenix downed Houston 69-64.
Phoenix led 39-20 at halftime and
Mercury 69, Comets 64
. was up by 21 points in the second
·At Phoenix, the Phoenix Mercury half before the Comets went on a 48got their third conSecutive victory
15 run over a 10-minute span.
and, according to coach Cheryl
(See WNBA on Page 5)

DIAMONDS'!

..
•,.;

Wednesday night was Sting guard
Andrea Stinson, who scored 29
Points _;_ tops in the WNBA despite playing the second half with
a stomach virus.
New York took its final lead at
51-SO with 10:49 left before Charlotte went on a I S-0 run to put the
game away. Reserve point guard
Tara Suber made a pair of key threepointers during the spun.

·Superior Quality

•'

..
.,'·

the AL Central.
He is the fourth manager the Royals have hired since 1987 with no
previous major league managerial
experience. The first three :.. John
Wathan, Hal McRae and Boone all were fired .
The Royals also said hitting
instructor Greg Lozinski and first
base coach Mitchell Page were fired .
They are being replaced by Fran~
White, ·a former star second baseman

By BARRY WILNER
does the NHL.
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
And now, Major League Soccer
(AP) ..,- North American All -Star has joined in.
games are friendly matches marked
"The whole purpose is io please
by gaping holes in defenses, little-to- · · the crowd," said Carlos Valderrama.
no contact and lots of scoring. The the MVP for the second straillht year
NBA has that formula down pat. So as the East !&gt;eat the West 5-4

Wednesday In Las Vegas. The NSAC voted to revoke Tyson'• boxing license and line
him $3 mlllll!fllor his biting WBA champion Evander Holyfield's ears In their June 28
title light. (AP)

,·

,.,•

...

··

McBride's tie-breaking goal
helps East all-stars top West 5-4

.98 ct

8
~
c

Swain single to pushed the score to
2-0. All was quiet until the fifth
frame when Bidwell scored three
more times. The Well had put two
runners on in the fourth via walks,
but one was erased on a Benson to
Higginbotham steal attempt and the
other on a fielder's choice, before
Pyles fanned the last batter of the
inning to kill the rally.
Finally, the great defensive-pitching battle between the clubs and their
respective pitchers Pyles and Josh
Edwards, appeared to waiver. Kemper and Griffith singled in succession, then Shupe cleared the bases
with a triple and came home on an
error to make the score S-0.
Point Pleasant chomped away at
Bidwell's stronghold, when with one
o~t in the fifth J. Richardson scored
after he walked, Benson was hit with
a pitch and B.J. Smith walked, then
Stephens hit into a fielder's choice to
score the run. ·

By DOUG TUCKER
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) Bob Boone, given a strong vote of
confidence and a two-year contract
extension just last March, was fired
as manager of the Kansas City Roy. als Wednesday and replaced by
Chicago Cubs hitting coach Tony
Muser.
.Muser, part of the Cubs' staff
since 1993, inherits a team that is ~646, 9 1/2 games behind Cleveland in

'· Skyline Speedway to host Coca-Cola
...
•• Classic Outlaw Sprit:~t Car races Friday

1:
~·
'•'•
~

··

Struggling Royals fire Boone as manager

Sting defeat Liberty B:!-69; Mercury down Comets 69-64
CHARLOITE, N.C. (AP) After starting the season 7-0, the
New York Libeny quickly became
the team to beat in the Women's
National Basketball Ass&lt;iciation.
That was a week ago, or before
the Liberty began a string of five
games in eight days.

Tournairent continues

Pomeroy, Point Pleasant Hardware an·d New .Haven win

Page4
Thursday, July 10, 1997

NSAC fines ex-champion $3 million
By TIM DAHLBERG
LAS VEGAS (AP) - The Bite
tha! left Ev~er Holyfield without .
a ptece of his ear took an even btg'
gen:hunk out of Mike.Tyson's boxmg career and bank account Wednesday.
.
.
In the suffest penalty posstble,
Tyson's license was revoked and he
was fined $3 million, plus administrattve fees.
And there's no guarantee he'll
evet fight agam.
.
Tyson can apply for remstatement
in one year, but officials with the
Nevada State Athletic Commission
saJd he m~ght not get his hcense
back.
"Unless the commission changes
its mind, this would be a permanent
revocation," the commission's legal
adviser Donald Haight said. "Without further action, the license would
not,be restored."
While the ban is in Nevada, other states are required by a new fed eral law . to· honor it. And since
Tyson is still on probation for his
1992 rape conviction, he mighJ ~at
get permission to leave the country
10 fight overseas.
Nonetheless, Tyson's comer was
optimistic about his chances of
returning to the ring.
"When everything's cooled down
and the world is thinking about other things, I feel very, very confident
you'll see Mike Tyson fighting again
within a year," said Oscar Goodman,
the boxer's chief lawyer.
Asked if the ban would last longer
than a year, Goodman said, "Two
years is absolutely unacceptable."
In response to the lawyer's comments, commission member James
.Nave said: "The one person who has
the most influence on how long.this
will last is Mike Tyson himself. He
has to decide how he's going to live

The Dally.Sentlnel• Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

o~·l,_eol'

(;Ontrocl .

Sis reed Ol Chris Dishman.
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS: Agr_eed to
rerml with LB Bm BC"fT)'. Rdr:nsed DB
Eric Allen.
GREEN BAY PACKERS' Siglltd DT
- Jennnine Smith . WllivedG Andrew Peterson and TE Jay Pcnigrew.
NEW YORK JETS: SisnedG lamont
~urns to a two-year eontrocl.

SAN DIEGO CHARGERS: Re-signed

S David Hendrix 10 one-year contrnct .
Wili'lc4 RB A.-on Hayden.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS: Waived K
Ryan l.onJwtll, T Andrew Moore and DT
Corey Swanton.
TENNES~EE OILERS: Ag=d 1o
terms with T Si:olt Sanc&amp;son and LB·DB
Armon Williams on mulli-yeiv COIIne:IS.

Hoc:key
N1tio1111l Hor.cJ Ldlut
NASHVIu.E: Namecl Oa'lid Pcilc:

general ~ger.
PHILADfLPHIA FLYERS: Si8nod 0
lean-Marc Pellelier.
ST. LOUIS BLUES: F"m:l Jim P'ft'ill.
director of prorcasiooal p8ycr pcnonnel.
SAN JOSE SHARKS: Si&amp;r.cd D Bill
Houlder to a four-year conlnd. Sipw:d 0
Richard Drennan and D"ndn:i Zyuain

eight months. But network te.levtsion
viewers from NBC's Today Show.
Weekend Edition saw another picture when they tuned in recently.
Fisher, who drives the Mead Carbonless Papers 119, was featured in
the national spotlight for her skill and
driving abilities. She began locally at
the age of 13 driving the 800-horsepowcr, . I ,200-pound machines and
already has two seconds and two
thirds against veteran male drivers.
Another rookie sensation, 14-

year-old. Jonathan Stevens of Chillicothe, who won a heat last week,
will be on hand for the $3.000 to win
event at Skyline Friday. Skyline
· runs three classes in addition to the

Super Outlaw Sprint Special: Late
Models, Street Stocks and Four
Cylinders. West Virginia runs Saturday with three classes; Late Models.
Modifeds and Street Stocks.
Skyline is located seven miles off
U.S. 50 between Coolville and
Athens.

AT RUTLAND BOTTLE GAS,
WE DON'T CHARGE FOR.SERVICE.

ITS FREEl Our installation includes a lifetime lease on the tank as long as
you remain a customer of Rutland Bottle Gas. And' We Furnish The Tank!
You don't have to buy the tank!
If you buy a 500 gallon tank from our competition at $1,200 and that is
what they charge for the tank, that means you own the tank. If someday a
valve goes bad on that tank, it will cost you several hundred dollars to have
the tank pumped out and a new valve put in. The owner of the tank will
bear these expenses.
.
·
.
If you have a tank leased from Rutland Bottle Gas, these repairs are
free, up to and including replacement of the tank if necessary at no cost to
you, the customer.
.
Call our competition and verify what we say about the tank if you own it.
If you buy propane for one year from our competitor at 59.9¢ and pay
$1,200 to buy the tank (which is required to get the price of 59.9¢) you will
have $1,559.40 in your propane for the first year if you use 600 gallons.
This equals to paying over $2.59 a gallon for your propane instead of 59¢.
If you ·use 900 gallons of propane under the same program, you would
have spent $1,740 which _equals $1.93 per gallon. This means that you
would have paid our competition $660 more than you would have paid ·
Rutland Bottle Gas if we had charged you $1.20 per gallon for the whole
year (which we have never done).
If you were a victim of this plan, and pur~hased a tank from our
competitor, when the 12 months are up, you are not obligated to buy your
propane from them. You can buy your propane from Rutland Bottle Gas or
anyone else that sells propane.
Also, are you willing to pay "tough" winter prices during a mild winter?
·
We've been here almd~t 50 years and we specialize in service. That's
why we are s~ill here .

CALL 1·800·837·8217 TOLL FREE

RUTLAND ·FURNITURE
and .BOTTLE GAS·
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THE PLAINS, OH. ·JACKSON, OH. • GALUPOUS, OH.

(614) 742-2511 .~'Family Owned" 1·800·837·8217

�•

,..• P1ge '6 • The Dilly Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thu...ctay, July 10, 1997

By The Bend

:. Ohio Amateur continues

Curtis shakes driving woes to take lead ·at halfway mark
On the other hand, maybe it
shouldn't.
"I have better rounds when I hit
it in the rough all day," Curtis said,
tongue-in-cheek. . "Call me, 'The
Scrambler."'
The Ostrander native used a quick
start to gain confidence and weather the problems he had off the tee.
Curtis birdied the first three holes
and had five birdies on the front side
in fashioning a 4-under 32 at the
turn. Despite playing the back nine
in l-over 37, he still was able to hang
on for the lead.
·
"It was one of those rounds
where you're kind of struggling but
you get it in the hole," he said.
Nineteen players are within seven shots of the lead.
His closest pursuers included a
quality collegian (the University of

By RUSTY MILLER
ELYRIA. Ohio (AP) - Ben Curtis' fint shot of the day at the 91 st
Ohio Amateur wasn'texactly a thing
of beauty.
The Kent State sophomore jerked
. a 3-wood on the par-4 opening bole,
booking the ball into the heavy
rough that gives wayward golfers
weak knees and high scores.
From there, however, he knocked
the ball on the green and then holed
a 20-foot birdie putt. So much for
accuracy off thi: tee.
'
Despite driving problems, Curtis
nonetheless posted a 5-under-par 67
at Elyria Country Club to take a onestroke lead midway through the
· tournament.

"That 3-wood. every time I hit it
I hooked it," he said. "It might just
stay in my bag the rest of the week."

SO!IIh Carolina's Mark· Catalano) birdies, but had three-putt bogeys at
and one of the tournament's old the 15th and 17th holes.
guard ( 1995 Ohio Amateur champi"If things keep going as they are,
on Alan Fadel).
I could be competitive. Mentally, I'm
Catalano was l-over through four very calm," he said. ·
holes, but then posted birdies at the
Kyle Voska, who will be a senior
fifth, eighth, 12th and 15th holes in · at Miami of Ohio, shot a 73 .that
a 69 that left him a shot back at 7- erased the two-stroke lead provided
under 137.
by his course-record tying 65 in the
The Upper Arlington native said first round. The Cincinnati native
he frequently played with the top dropped two shots off the pace into
collegians in and from Ohio. He also a three-way tie for fourth with Ohio
said that despite playing out of state, State's Andy Montooth and Rick
he wasn't exactly unknown.
Bryson of Aleron.
"If you' re a good player, people
Montooth, who will be a sophoknow about you," he said.
more at Ohio State, spent most of the
Fadel, 42, a former touring pro past season as the sixth man for the
who has regained his amateur status, Buckeyes. His second straight 69
finis~ tied for third a year ago after
included five birdies on his first II
winning it the year before at Cold- holes.
stream Country Club in Cincinnati.
"I'd like to be included with
The Toledo stock broker had six

those guys some day," he said,
referring 10 the leading collegians.
"I'm not now, and I shouldn' t be.
But I'd like to play nw way into that
group."
Bryson, a 40-year-old salesman
of floor-car products, is a former
University of Akron player. He
bogeyed his first hole of the day, but
recovered with five birdies in a 68 on
the 6,681-yard Elyria Country Club
layout.
"This is just short enough of a
course where an old guy has half a
chance," he said.
Voska had six birdies and an eagle
in his career-bes.t 65 in the opening
round, but mustered just one birdie
agamst two bogeys on Wednesday.
"I tried to totally forget about
yesterday's round but it was hard to
0

'

do;" he said.
Former state junior-amateur
champion Noah Lucas of Worthington stood all alone at 4-under 140 for
seventh place after a 71.
Next carne defending champion
Robert Gerwin of Cincinnati, along
with Westerville's Michael Kelley
and Akron native and Indiana University player Don Padgett DJ. All
three had 72s in the openin,ll round
and 69s in the second to fimsh at 3under 141.
Among the 65 players making the
cut of 150 was 10-yearmajor-league
baseball player Chris Sabo, who shot
a 77 after an opening 72.
Missing the cut were two-time
winner Randy Reifers of Dublin and
1993 champion .Robert Fairchild of
Westlake, along with former Ohio
State quarterback Greg Frey.

Alomar's All-Star HR takes place in Indians' new history ·
afound second base," said Pluto, a
columnist for .the Akron BeaconJournal. "I mean, that's the kind of
thing .!hat always happened to this
team.
·
Pluto's · book was a winsome
account an incredible litany of misfortune that all seemed tied to the
trad&lt;; of Colavito from Cleveland to
Detroit for Harvey Kuenn on April
17, 1960.
.
From 1948-59, the Indians finished first, second or 1third nine
times, won two pennants and might
have won more if not for· the New .
York Yankees. From 1960-93, they
had four 100-loss seasons and finished as high as third only once.
For ·years, the whole town was
America's favorite joke, starting
with the flames that rose up from the
Cuyahoga River one night in the mid

By KEN BERGER

CLEVELAND - No rivers
caught fire, there were no riots in the
stands and the weather was just fine.
Cleveland's own Sandy Alomar
·was even the star of the game, hitting
the first All-Star homer by an lndi. ans player since Rocky Colavito.
Does this mean the Cleveland
Curse is buried for good?
It sure seemed that way when
Alomar 's shot took its dramatic
flight into bedlam and baseball history in the AL's 3-1 victory Thesday
night.
"When a guy hits a home run in
the All-Star game at his own ball.park," a flushed, exasperated Jim
Thome proclaimed, "it's magic."
Magic, as opposed 10 the voodoo,
bad luck and miserable destiny that
besieged this city and sports franchise for decades.
"This is another stake in the heart
of bad things of Cleveland's past,"
said Terry PI uto, author of the 1994
book, "The' Curse of Rocky Colav-

pitchers Steve Olin and Tim Crews.
A year later, the Indians moved to
Jacobs Field and were in second
place with a 66-47 record - when
another strike ended the season.
There was no World Series, for
Cleveland or anybody else. .
The curse ·even struck in the
1970 All-Star game when catcher
Ray Fosse was clobbered by Pete
Rose in a collision at home plate.
Fosse was never the same player
after that.
"This guy was really the Indians'
Johnny Bench," Pluto said. "He ended up being just another Indians
catcher."
Then Alomar, an. Indians' catcher, stepped to the plate in the All-Star
game in Cleveland and made people
remember Fosse and all those years
of heartache. A voice proclaimed that
it was the first homer by an Indians
player in the All-Star game since
Colavito in 1959.
"I was laughing so hard going
around the bases," Alomar said. "I
couldn't believe it was happening."
!lome· would argue that the curse
was actually lifted in 1995, when the
lndian.s won their firstAL pennant in

41 years and lost to Atlanta in the
World Series. Pluto quickly wrote a
sequel, "Burying The Curse."
During the 16 months that followed, the cornerstone of that team
disappeared. The popular Carlos
Baerga and Eddie Murray were traded; career home run leader Albert
Belle was lost to free-agency; Kenny Lofton was traded to Atlant'l·
· Belle, ·now with the Chicago
White Sox, returned to Cleveland in

June and- what else'!- heat the
Indians with a home run in his first
game.
"People starred asking me, 'Are
you going to write a book, 'The
Curse of Albert Belle?'" Pluto said.
John Hait, ihe Indians' daring
general manager, was all ·smiles in
the AL clubhouse after Alomar's
.feat . The Indians are in first place
again, and Alomar carries a 30-game
hitting streak into the second half of

the season. With a hit on Thursday
at Minnesota, Alomar can tie Hall of
Farner Nap Lajoie for the longest
streak in club history.
As Alomar talked about his great
night. Hart elapsed hands with him
and gave a congratulatory shake.
••This is a franchi~ on a rise."
Alomar said. "We have everything
here. We have the fans, we have a
contending team, we have a great
city. What more can I have?"
'

Tovar's chronic knee problems force him
to make gradual return to Bengals' lineup

CINCINNATI (AP) - Playing being ready," linebackers coach soreness. He realizes that for a while
through . the pain has worked lor Mark Duffner said.
he may be able to do more on some
Cincinnati Ben gals linebacker Steve
·
Tovar said he e.pects occasional days than others.
Tovar the past four seasons, but the
'70s.
next one may require a different
medicine.
As for the franchise, there was
PUBLIC AUCTION
Despite multiple injuries over the
more than just plain losing. There
years, Tovar recognizes the severity
were the dime beer night riots at
SATURDAY, JULY 12, 1997 AT
of his latest, torn knee ligaments that
Cleveland Stadium in 1974 and the
10:00 A.M. BLESSING ROAD
c~t short his 1996 season.
. delay of the 1981 All-Sar game in
ito."
"I've
learned
.
from
my
pa.•t."
DIRECTIONS:
From Gallipolis, follow 141 .s to Lincoln Pike, turn .
"As an Indian fan you would Cleveland due to a players strike.
Tovar
said.
"I
know
it's
great
to
play
left and follow Lincoln Pike to Northup. Turn left on Blessing Rd and
In 1993,' a boating accident in
expect Sandy Alomar to hit the
with
injuries.
But
an
on
jury
as
severe
·
·
go approx. 2 miles. Watch lor signs.
spring
training
claimed
the
lives
of
home run and pull a muscle going
Owner; Mike Saum
as this and one as vital to my career,
79 MG (B), 78 Ford F 150 4 speed 4W/D VB 302 Lock in &amp;out hubs,
you have to look at the long-term
several partial rolls new &amp; used woven wire, metal fence post,
effects."
tobacco sticks, misc. farm tools, antique hand tools, 12 ft. pipe gate,
Tovar, 27, the starting middle
Parmac Weed Master Electric Fencer, 55 gal. drum 1uel tank w/hand
linebacker, led the team in tackles in
pump (approximately 300 gal), mise lumber rough barn siding,
two of the past three years, and was
shutters, galvanized tin, doors, dog chains, alec. c;abte, vinyl flooring,
second (with. liS) last season despite
Master Mix Feed Sign, 2'x6' Valley Bell sign, cast iron tub (Dam),
::
CINCINNATI (AP)- Cincinnati for today, the newspaper said.
team," Morgan said. "Our main goal
missing the final three games after
4'x9' tilt bed metal frame trailer, horse drawn sled (runners soled 1/2
; Reds pitcher Mike Moigan has apolAfter Morgan and Knight ~ed is to play baseball and win the Cen- his Dec. I injury in Jacksonville.
hickory), wood lawn chairs, Little Tykes toys, metal crossover tool box
~ ogized for. his feud with manager last weekend in Houston •. Morgan
tral Division."
He has had major reconstructive
(full size), childs wood rocker, 10 panel punched lin pie safe, ladder
~ Ray Knight. but the team ~portedsaid Knight had lost the respect of
Knight and Morgan exchanged knee surgery, arthroscopic knee
back
&amp; mise wood chairs, corner cabinet, 4 ft. round oak table, (8
,.. ly is still trying to unload h1m.
Reds players.
words Friday night at the Astrodome surgery, broken both of his hands' and
sided pedestal), 6-T-back oak chairs, vanity bench, sleeper sola &amp;
Q The Cincinnali Enquirer quoted
Morgan issued a written apology after Knight sent pitching coach cracked a tooth in half during his
chair, oak flatwall cupboard, oak Chilfarobe (5 drawer &amp; hat bQx),
~ an unnamed official of the Anaheim _ !ate Wednesday on Reds stationary.
Don Gullett to .talk with Morgan
Bengals career. His latest injury
1930's full size bed, twin &amp; 3/4 size pipe beds, wood office desk &amp;
; Angels i~ today's editions as s~ying
"!-would l!ke to api&gt;logize to my while Morgan had a 1-2 count on required his left knee to be surgicalchair, sewing cabinet, cedar bachelor closet, wpod TV trays, .wood
.. theAmencanLeagueclubwasmter- teammates, Jtm Bowden, and Ray Astros outfielder Derek Bell. Mor- ly reconstructed.
what-knot shelf, quilt rack, jumper cables, camping equipment, mise
ested in acquiring Morgan as a fifth Knight and his family for my com- gan retired ,Bell for the final out of
The Bengals are scheduled for
fishing items &amp; tackle boxes, 3 ft. Craftsman lime spreader, Wizard
starter. Injuries have forced the ments and actions last weekend in the fifth inning to preserve a 3-2 their first training camp practice July
Lawn Mower, grill, propane tanks, new Brawnfels Smoker Grill, boat
Angels to start the second half ofthe · Houston," Morgan said. "I was Reds lead.
anchor, pair saw horses, Durham yard roller (water weight), Homellte
18 in Georgetown, Ky.
season with a four-man rotation, at speaking for myself, and at no time
When Morgan reached the
Tiller, weed eater; Come-A-Long, hand pump sprayer, Gult tire &amp; tube
Tovar said he is eager io take the
1: least untilleft-hander Mark Langston was I speaking on behalf of my dugout. he exchanged angry remarks field again next week, but will he
cabinet, kero heater, barb wire .. fruit sprayer, Coke pop case,
dust/dawn light, golf clubs &amp; bag, Coleman lantern, ~ross country
: returns from the disabled list later in teammates.
with Knight, who sent Scott Sullivan wary.
antelope skis &amp; poles, wheel chair, metal kitchen cab1nets, Tappan
: the month.· ·
"Ray and I have apologized to .out to pitch the sixth. Knight later
"Hopefully I'll work in gradualdouble oven stove, Hot Point fridge, Kenr:nore range hood, 10 gal
'
'Reds general manager lim Bo~- each other, andwe hope we can put · left the bench to confront Morgan, ly," he said. "How much I take
shop
vacuum, food . grinder, Christmas tree, Sears water pump &amp;
~ den and Angels general manager 8111 this· behind us to see what we're
who had just showe~ed .
depends on how it feels."
tank,
mise duct work, window fan, Hedstrom swing set-3 swings,
~ Bavasi scheduled a conference call made of, boih individually arid as a
The Bengals will be employing
glider,
monkey bar, slide, 10 sp bike, toys, wood rocking horse, iron
an extra linebacker because they are
kettle
(dam),
3 legged stand, ca.s t iron church bell from Clay Chapel
(-Co-nt-in-~ed-t-rom-P-ag-e-5)...,.._ _ _ _ __.:__ _ switching to ·a 3-4 defe~sive align- Church, cowbells,
woo.d picnic baskets, corn jobber, cream cans,
ment from the 4-3 set of last year.
sausage grinder, old tube radio, alec motors, furnace fittings, motor
They do not plan to rush Tovar back
But at least Mexican star Iorge brated with a dive along the soggy 2.
belts, plus much more.
as
he enten the second year of a·
Campos could relive his first MLS ground as teammates mobbed him at
OWNER RESERVES LAST BID ON VEHICLES.
The East went ahead on another four-year, $4.8 million contrllfl.
goal - while he was forgetting the the sideline.
Refreshments, Food, And A Porta-polly Will Be Available
At the time of his injury, the Benfour he allowed, includin~. three in
Perhaps Campos should have clear break, this one by Robert
AUCTIONEER: FINIS "IKE" ISAAC
Warzycha of Columbus, who gals had feared that Tovar might not
r seven minutes, af~er replacmg Mark stayed at forward.
be
ready
to
play
until
late
this
sea~ Dodd in the net for the West.
In th~ 58th minute, Campos took sneaked behind the sloppy West
Phone 614-388-9370 or 388-8880
li'
"The goal wasn't important;"
over for Dodd. He robbed Colom- defense and put in a right-footed son. But he spent four to five days a
Licensed and bonded Ohio #3728
~ said Campos, who frequently has
bian star Valderrama in the 62nd blast from 12 yards. It made it 4-2 as week rehabilitating at the team's
Terms: Cash or approved check
' joined attacks for the Los Angeles · minute, deflecting the . ball wide Valderrama got another assist with a Spinney Field complex during the
Not responsible for accidents o~ lost item~
o1 Galaxy- but less frequently for the
after the Tampa BaY. . midfielder superb pass to Williams, who put the off-season.
Statements
made day ol sale has precedence over printed materials.
"Steve
deserves
a
lot
of
credit
for
ball between a sliding Campos'legs
~ Mexican national team. "To win was broke free inside the pen~lty .area.
t important. Even though these games
But Valderrama, who'd beaten in the 70th minute.
~ are for show, you still hate to lose,
Dodd earlier in the second half. set
"Carlos has great vision, his
~ especially the way we did."
up the tying goal in the 63rd minute,
touch
is unbelievable," Williams
" · After Dante Washington of Dal- ·passing to Richie Williams of DC
said.
"Every
time you are in trouble,
~ las made it 1-0, Campos connected United. \Killiams hit Giuseppe
you
give
him
the ball and he gets you
~ in the 44th minute. off a superb pnss
Galderisi ofTanipa Bay in stride and
i by Kansas City's Preki. He cele- he easily beat Campos to make it 2- out of troUble."

Scribes say Reds .sti/1 seeking team
f.. for Morgan after pitcher's apology

t

i MLS

_;
I

A/1-StarS.. .;.,.. -

...sere We Go...

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INGELS

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.

We visit our daughter in Houston a
few times a year, and one of our
Ann
greatest pleasures is to take the
Landers ·. grandchildren shopping for clothes,
1997. l.ol AII!Jdel Timet.
for which we pay. We also occasion·
S)'Mietee 1fld CttiiOI'I
S)'lldic•.
ally buy clothes for pur Florida
grandchildren, but because they live
so
close to us, we tend to spend
Dear Ann Landers: We have three money on them in other ways,
children -- two married daughters
Our son, with whom we have an
and an unmarried son. One daughter
has three young children and lives in excellent relationship, told us
Houston. The other daughter also recently that we were not treating
has three young children. She lives him fairly. He says the clothes and
near us in Florida. Our son lives in birthday gifts to our grandchildren
Detroit. Fortunately, all three of our are actually subsidies to our daughchildren make a good living and ters because we are saving them
money. He say,s to be fair, we should
require no financial help from us.
make it up to him by giving him.the
All of our grandchildren receive amount of money we spend on gifts
birthday gifts from us every ·year. for the grandchildren. Also, he says

that since he is in no position to
~ive a wedding amiivenary gift,
we should give him' something comparable in lieu of an annivenary present every year.
.
Our son is a lawyer and bases his
claim on the common practice of
leaving one's estate at death in equ~l
shares to each child. It has never
QCcurred to us to keep a balance
sheet with respect to gifts 'for our
children. We don't know what to •
make of this, Miss Landers, and
would appreciate some input from
you. No name, please, just --Grandparents in Palm Beach, Fla.
Dear Grandparents: I think your
Detroit son has a geranium in ltis
cranium. The gifts to your grandchildren are just that -- gifts. If he

should marry and have children, I'm
sure· you would do the same for
them.
Melhinks the siblin' rivalry thing
is rearing its ugly head. The message
from me to him is "Grow up,
sonny."
Dear Ann Landen: As an anorney who used .to deal with drivingwhile-intoxicated criminal matters, I
want to say our laws on drunk driven are much too lenient. In many
states, for a first offense, there is
probation, no jail, a fine, restricted
driver's licensel court costs, some
community service and Aicoholics
Anonymous meetings. ,The drunk
driver gets the same for a second
offense. It is only for a third offense
that actual jail time is meted out, and

this can be served on weekends. By
that time, some of these drunks have
killed or maimed someone. They
seldom lc.ill or maim themselves.
Our laws should be like Sweden's. For a first offense -- mandatory jail for one year. No time off for
good behavior. A second offense is
punishable by a three-year mandatory sentence. Sweden's DWI rate has
dropped 95 percent since the above
has been implemented. The other 5
percent receive treatment while in
prison .

Until such laws are in effect in
the United States, we are playing
with people's lives. Most of the dead
and injured on our highways are the
casualties of alcohol and drug
abusers. Apparently, no one has the

Roses, program feature of Rutland Garden Club
A program on roses was featured
at a recent meeting of the Rutland
Garden Club held at the horne of Ann
Webster.
It was noted that June is the
month of roses. The program opened
with a poem, "A Summer Morning",
by Dorothy :Woodard, and devotions
by Websier. ·
A paper entitled "Tick;le Your
Nose with ,an Old.Fashioned Rose"
was given by loy Combs who noted
that antique roses dating hack to 11167
are known for·their fragrance, a trait
which, she said, has been lost by the
hybrids. She described old roses as
"delicate in appearance, but tough as
nails growing with little or no care."
Among those listed were Gallica,
Damask, Allia, Centifolia, China Tea,
Perpetuals and Mass of Portland.
Donna Jenkins presented the top
ten in old fashioned, roses which
included Compassion, Golden Showers. and Symplicity, noting that they
are easy to maintain, resistant to disease, and easy to· grow. She saiil a

combination of the top ten makes ;o
'garden with a wide variety of color,
and that gardeners need to remember
that roses do not look their best until
the third year.
Pauline · Atkins used "Growing
Roses" as her topic, noting that at
least four houn of direct sunlight is
needed, that the plants .prefer a loamy
soil with good drainage, and plenty of
space tb grow. She also said that roses need to be watered at ground level, slowly, and spraying roses · with
wet foliage invites mildew and disease. Mulching helps roses to retain
moisture, sbe said, and discourages
water robbing weeds while contributing to nourishment of the soil.
Dorothy Woodard discussed
perennials and roses grown together
and ones which can be intermingled.
She said that shrub roses contribute
a romantic accent to a garden of
perennials, and that antique.roses are
'best used with clematis, vines,
pe~mies, iris, and fox glove in early

summer.
Gabriel Jenkins and Atkins prior to
Woodard also talkecl about pests the July 4 holiday. Atkins and Marand disease, including the problems jorie Rice reported that they had
of fungi, bacteria, virus, insects, and weeded the flower garden at the
living creatures, and how to cope Masonic Hall in Harrisonville.
For roll call members disphiyed a
with them. Sbe said that Insecticides
are a threat to beneficial bugs that live rose. It was noted tbat Gardeners Day
Out was held June 26 at Chillicothe
in the garden.
Plans were announced for the and that the club was represented by
Ohio Association of Garden Clubs Atkins. The fall flower bulb book is
fall convention to be held July 28-30 available now, it was reponed.
The annual family picnic will
in Cincinnati. Also planned was the
annual open house of lhe Rutland beheld at the Jenkins home July 21.
Club for Aug. '25 at the Rutland 6 p.m. Those attending are to take a .
covered dish and their own table serMethodist Church. 7:30p.m.
BIRTHDAY OBSERVED Fk&gt;wen were planted at the mini- vice. Meat and beverage will fur- The 80th birthday of Agnes
park in Rutland by Donna and nished.
Widner was celebrated on
June 9 at the Tuppel'8 Plains
fire houae. Delores Hawk, .
In 1973, a Vietnam cease-fire was Shannon Moodlsbaugh, and
George Wallace, Alabama goverAnn Barringer hosted tha .
nor and a third-parry candidate in the signed in Paris, and the last American
observance.
A potluck was
troops
left
Vietnam.
Prisoners
of
war
1968 presidential election, was shot
aerved
and
carda
and gifts
were
released
in
Hanoi
while
spo-.
in 1972 by deranged gunman Arthur
were
presented
1o
her
along
radic
fighting
continued
between
Bremer and paralyzed from the waist
with
three
lnacribed
birthday
North
and
South
Vietnam.
down, forcing Wallace to withdraw
cakes. Forty-five friends and
from the 1972 presidential race.
family members attended. The
following day she underwent
,aurgery from which she Is
now recuperating.

-----Community calendar-------Tbe Community Calendar Is
published as a free senice lo nonprofit groups wlsbiD&amp; lo IIIIIIOilDCC
meeting ud special events. The
calendar is not designed to pi'OIIIOfe
Ulla or fuad ralsen of uy type.
Items ate printed as space permits
and cannot be paranteedlo run a
spedflc number of days.
THURSDAY.
TUPPERS PLAINS .-- tuppers
Piains, VFW, Post 9053, Thursday,
7:30.p.m. at the post. Refreshments
at 6:30p.m.
POMEROY -- Eastern High
School sports physicals Thursday. I:
4 p.m. at Veterans Memorial Hospi·
tal in Pomeroy. All students must
have a physical• to panicipate in
sports during the 1997-98 school
year.
CHESTER -- Shade River Lodge
453 F&amp;AM meeting Thursday, 8 p.m.
at the lodge. All Master Masons welcome. Refreshments. ·

as follows: 8-10 a.m., 7-9th grade nity service picnic, Sunday, northgirls; 10 a.m.-noon, 7-9th grade boys; bound park, U.S. Route 33 near Dar1-3 p.m., I0-12th grade girls; 3-5 win. Dinner, 12:30 p.m. Ministers to
p.m., I 0-12th grade boys. Students be lionored for community service.
nee&lt;) a sports physical card, available Public invited, potluck,' take lawn
at
Dr. Hunter's office or through chair.
FRIDAY
CHESTER -- Three night Holy Howie Caldwell at Southern High
Ghost revival Friday t_hrough Sunday School completed and signed by a MONDAY
WILKESVILLE
Revival ,
at the Harvest Outreach Church in parent or legal guardian. Wear shorts
and
T-shirts.
For
more
information,
Wilkesville United Methodist
Chester. Harold Cook will be the
speak~r. Special singing nightly. Ser- call Dr. Hunter's office at 949-2683. Church, July 14-18. 7 p.m. each
night. Rev. Danny Minton, special
vices begin 7 p.m. Friday and SaturPOMEROY -~ Wood family singing by Harber Family, local talday. 6 p.m. on Sunday. All· welcome.
reunion. Saturday, Virgil King Farm, ent, and Headed Home.
·
SALEM CEN'rt:R -- Salem 38858 Smith Road, Pomeroy. picnic
REEDSVILLE-- Olive Township
Township Board of Trustees 1998 at noon .
Trustees, budget' hearing, 7:30 pm.
budget hearing Friday, 9 a.m. at the ·
Monday, business meeting io follow.
POMEROY-- Fall soccer signup,
Salem Township Fire House.
MIDDLEPORT-- DAV and AuxSaturday, I0 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Krogers
iliary,
Monday, at hall. Refreshments
SATURDAY
in Pomeroy.
will be served.
PORTLAND -- VanMeter family
POMEROY -- Vacation 'Bible
reunion Saturday, 4 p.m. at the PortSchool,
Pomeroy, Monday through
land Park. Meat furnished, bring SUNDAY
July
18.
6 to 8:30 p.m. "Circle of
covered dish and table service.
RACINE
Annual Theiss
Friends"
will
be the tbeme. Preregisreunion, Su~day, Star Mill Park,
tration
appreciated,
992-7616.
RACINE ·-- Southern Local ath- Racine, Potluck dinner at 12:45 p.m.
POMEROY
-Big
Bend Farm
letic physical for high school and
Antique
Club,
7:30
p.m.
at Meigs.
junior high sports will be held Sawr- .
BURLINGHAM -- Burlingham
day at Dr. Hunte(s office .in Racine Modern Woodmen, annual commu- High School Library.
• -· .

Fred Goldman
tp try out for radio
tfllk show job
SAN ANTONIO (AP) - Fred
q&lt;&gt;ldman, whose face became familiV to Americans during t~ OJ·
Simpson trials, will take to radio atr" 'aves later this month for a weekl"ng tryout as a talk show host.
Goldman will be on the air July
21-25 as part of "The Great WO,AI
Talk-Off." a contest to determme
who will permanently fill the San
o\ntonio station's I p.m. to 3 p.m.

~IO~;We'll see if Fred likes the stage
a,~d if the stage likes him," Andrew

WOAI operations maqager, said Wednesday.
Goldman was
vacauonmg
~(ednesday and unavailable for comniCnt.
Goldman 's son. Ronald, was
knifed to death with Simpson's ex- ·
wife Nicole in June 1994. Simp~d~ ;
'I"" acquitted of murder but a CIVIl
j11ry found h1m bable for damages

Man convicted of
ttying to sell daug~ter
HARLAN, Ky. (AP) - A 22year-old father lias been convicted of
lr)~ng to sell his year-old daughter for

.

courage to try to change this. Will
you please .speak up. Ann? --Houston Lawyer
Dear Houston; Not only have 1
been " speaking up,'' I've been
5creami'!,S about this problem for
several years. It hasn't helped.

'

As far as I'm concerned.. drunk
drivers who kill innocent people arc
murderers and should be treated a,
such. We could team a lot from the
Swedes.
Send questions to Ann Landen.

Creotors Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif
90045

.

Chester D of A
meets recently
Chester Council 323, DaughteR of
America, met recently at the hall with
Esther Smith, councilor, presiding.
The ritualistic opening included
pledges to the American and Christian flags and scripture from Psalms ..
The death of Roland Stethem, son of
Ruth Stethem was noted during the
meeting. A note from Ethel Hart was
read. She enclosed a poem, "Don't
Quit" which was read at the meeting:
The 53rd anniversary of Kathryn
and Delmar Baum was noted.
The auditing report was read by Jo
Ann Ritchie. The Past Councilors
Club meeting and picnic was .
announced to be held at the Barringer
home. Members were reminded to
take gifts for the games,
Kathryn Baum was pianist for the
meting. Erma Cleland conducted a
game at the closing of the meting and
winners were awarded prizes. Others
attending were Gary Holter, Dolores
Wolfe,' Marcia Keller, Julie Curtis.
Goldie Frederick, Everett Grant, Laura Mac Nice, Mary K. Holter, Doris
Gruescr. Thelma White, Opal Hollon,
and Opal Eichinger.

SYRACUSE -- Meigs County
Republican Committee meeting
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at Carleton
School. All Republicans welcome.

COLD AVALON

NATURAL
SPRING. WATER
Yt Liter

55 C

Rrn·wt v.ae, llolpiMI. sprd·n-tna In obstetlla/gyneaJios,y.
Dr. NcUn rec:eiYed his bllchelor's dqpee In microbiology tom
Calll'omla State. un~ven~~y. Lons lleac:h eanromta (19771: a blchelor's
dqpee • a physlclln rssx• riom the Unl\lerslty cifOidahoma,
Oldahoma Oty. Oklahoma ( 1978) and his medical deglee. also from
the .UnlveriMy ol Oldahoma (1 986).
Prior to coming to PYH. Dr. Nolan has.Served is chief ~eSident ol
obstetalcl and gyneco~o&amp;y at the fllllowlns facilities: HIJhllne Hospital.
Seatt1e WashiJI&amp;tan (1995): 814th Slrlteglc Hospltlll, Betlle Air Force
Base. CJIIomla ( 1990-1991) alld the lllilmlde Regional Medical
Center. Newport News. Ylrglnla(1989-1990).
.
.
Most reoendy, he worked In private praa1ce In Des Molues, Washington (1991-1996) and a
group praa~ce 1n AuiMn. w~ &lt;1996).
.
.
Dr. Nolln'solllcewll be localed InS. Z14 olthe Pleasant Valley Hospital Medical Ollk:e
lkllldlns- For 11101elnbmatlon or to make an appointment with the laftst addition to the ~
medlcll stllf please call, (3041675-3400 or (3041675-1 PVH.

~~po. .
'II be
· Billy Ray Baldwm WI . sentqtCed later thi• month. The JUry that
.Pl.ccepte~
cqnvicted him Tuesday recommendeel he get a year in prison.
.
His wife, Christa, 17, had also /
bllfn charged in the case.but pleaded 1
g~~lty in juvenile court m exch~ge '
fcir probation and community semc~.
The Baldwins were arrested m •
· t.tarch 1996 after baby siuen Denme
)
Cheryl .HalcODib said the Bald- :
w.~ns asked if they wanted to adopt
their daughter Marpe Kala for cash. L-------------------------------------'

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Thursday, July 10, 1997
Page7

Sqn's desire for "fairness" upsetting
to
parents
'

~tshwood,

RUTLAND FURNITURES
DOOR CLOSING SALE!

Sen~inel

The Daily

·

I ~""""'"' McCullough,
R. Ph. Ch..too Rlflto, R. Ph.
ROMtd Hanning, R. Ph.
Mon. lllru s.t. i:OO a.m. to t:oo p.m.
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PH. 11112-2155
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newly found economic partD!lr, South officials said Hwang was about to be
Korea.
purged because of what North KoreIn a carefully contrived diplomat- an leaders believed was his unenthuic gesture designed to mollify siastic 'support for the system.
Pyongyang, China allowed Hwang to
In
his statement, Hwang
fly to tbe Philippines before defect- denounced the North's "medieval
ingtoSeoul.
system," which he said supports a
Hwang, known as the chief archi- one-man dictatorship.
teet of North Korea's guiding phiThe late North Korean leader, Kim
losophy of jucbe, or self-reliance, II Sung, designated his S5-year.-old
headed the prestigious Kim n Sung son, Kim Jong II, as his heir to powuniversity and served three times .as er in communism's first dynastic succhainnan of the parliament.
cession. The elder Kim died three
He defected on his way from a . years ago.
.
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-

JERUSALEM (AP) -Israel and
its Lebanese allies are holding at least
150 Lebanese prisoners without trial, including some who have been
'detained for more than 12 years,
Amnesty International said in a report
'released today.
.
The detainees are being held "as
a bargaining chip" with Islamic
groups for the release of. missing
Israeli servicemen, according to the
"Israel's
Forgotten
report,
Hostages, " issued by the Londo11· based human rights Organization.
• The report quotes fonner Israeli
:Deputy Defense Minister Ori Orr as
saying the detainees will be released
: qnly w!Jen missing Israeli Moan
•-'Ron Arad is returned and infonnation
js received about the fate of other
missing Israeli servicemen.

.

by the South Lebanese Anny, a militia group backed by Israel.
Forty of those prisoners belong to
Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed Shiite
militia fighting to oust Israel from the
snip it occupies in south Lebanon, the
report said.
In August 1989, Israeli commando~ kidnapped Hezbollah l.e ader
Sheik Abdul Karim O~id from his
home; in May 1994, the Israelis kidnapped Mustafa Dirani, another militia leader.
The only woman known to be held
in El-Khiam is Suha Beshara, who
tried to kill SLA commander Gen.
AntoineLahadin 1989,accordingto
the Amnesty report. It said Beshara
hilS never been granted a trial.
Some of the prisoners have been
beld since 1985,'when Israel carved
out the border strip as.it ended its
occupation of the southern half of
Lebanon. The zone was created to ·

shield northern Israel from guerrilla
attacks.
•
Some of the detainees have no
idea why· they were arrested, the
report said. Among them arc Hassan
Hijazi. only 16 when be was take•
from his village in south Lebanon in
1986, and Ghassan al-Dirani, who is
physically and psychologically ill and
has been held without charge for I0
years.
In a related development, Israel
was accused Wednesday of abducting
a Lebanese journalist from his home
in south Lebanon.
The New York-based Committee
to Protect ·Journalists said, Israeli
troops seized Roger Nahra at his
home in Qlaiaa last Thursday and
took him to Israel. Nahra is a reponer
for the Lebanese newspaper AlLiwaa and ..cameraman .f9f Murr
Television, the committee said in a
news release.

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OPEN
SUNDAY 1·5

1993 FORD
THUNDERBIRD

NEW YORK (AP) - It was a torProsecutors contend that Ms.
Jllented , nearly destitute Autumn Jackson seized the family 's time of
Jackson who appealed to Bill Cosby, grief after .Ennis Cosby 's death to
asking him as her father to rescue her make money. She had issued an
from a "frail, tom and tattered exis- extortion threat o n Jan. 6, they said. .
The letter said she would reject a
tence," her lawyer said. .
Ms. Jackson, 22, was nearly pen- $25,000 tabloid deal to tell her story
niless when she sought a $40 million if there was 8 fair settlement from
!;ettlement from Cosby, who had Cosby. If not, such a deal might be
stopped returning her phone calls and "my only means of survival," th.e letcut off financial support, attorney ter said.
" Autumn Jackson put a price tag
Robert Baum said.
"She felt a father owes a daugh- on Bill Cosby's reputation," said
ier more than money and tough Assistant U.S. Attorney Paul Engellove," Baum said in opening state- mayer. .
!nents Wednesday in Ms. Jackson's
Baum said Cosby met and spoke
extortion trial.
with a pregnant Ms. Upshaw in the
• Ms: Jackson allegedly threatened fall of 1974 and they discussed
to tell tabloids that she is the enter- putting the name.ofher old boyfriend
tainer's out-of-wedlock daughter if he as the father on the child's birth cerrefused to give her the $40 million. tificate.
She is charged with conspiracy,
Ms. Upshaw later told her daughextorlion and violating the interstate . ter that her father . was Cosby· but
· iravel act and could be sentenced to warned, "You must never reveal that
up to 12 years in prison if convicted secret to anyone," Baum said.
!m all counts.
In return for not being named as
Prosecutors contend her motiva- the father, Cosby paid $25,000 to
tion was greed.
cover Ms. Jackson's tuition and Uv- However, Baum introduced into · ing expenses at a community college
e yidenc~ a letter wri\ten by Ms.
Florida.Jw' 15 months ir\-.1.294 and
Jackson and he .Skedjurors to listen IW5, and set'up a ~rtfStfUnd ~pay
to the voice of an anguished woman her mother $75()-a-w~k for life, cvi-.
. desperate for attention from the man dence showed.
her mother said was her father.
The relationship soured after Ms.
' The letter, faxed to CBS President Jackson quit college and · became
Peter Lu'nd on Jan. 16 - the day estranged from her m_'3,ther last
Cosby 's son, Ennis, was shot to December, Baum said. 'file young
death on a Los Angeles freeway - · woman became "virtually · home'pleads for Cosby to rescue Ms. Jai:k- less," he said.
son 's fiom " my frail , torn and tatEngehnayer said·Cosby got fed up
tered existence."
after he sent Ms. Jackson $3,000,
"Before I die, I long to have one which she spent in weeks before
hug and one kiss from" Cosby, Ms. demanding more and issuing more
· Jackson said in the letter.
threats .
Cosby, who has four surviving '
'' Bill Cosby said, 'Enough.
children - all girls- with his wife Enough second chances. Enough
of 33 years, has said he does not threats. Enough extonion," 'the prosbelieve he is Ms. Jackson's father but ecutor said.
Cosby, who was not in the courtconcedes he had an affair with her ,
mother, Shawn Upshaw.
room, was expected to be called as a
" He is as much my father as he is witness.
theirs," Ms. Jackson's letter said. "I
Two others are on trial with Ms.
can't believe what has happened Jackson.
Co-defendant Jose Medina, 51, of
between my father and me. This very
much saddens my heart; puts a black Bethesda, Ohio, was planning to
cloud in my mind and angers me with write about Ms. Jackson 's claims,
its many p&lt;issibilities of the reasons prosecutors said ..Boris Sabas, 42, of
why he hides me. Could it be because Los Angeles, is charged with aiding
I am his half-white daughter and my the alleged extortion by driving Ms.
other sisters are his African-Ameri- Jackson and Medina to the airport.
can daughters?"

negotiating peace with radical Khmer
Rouge guerrillas, importing weapons

it wasn't clear what measures he
would ask the organization to take.

Ranariddh's party won U ·N.In a related development, the for- supervised elections in 1993 . The
eign ministers of the Association of · United Nations hailed it~ operations
. met m
.
'an emer- in Cambodia" as a success. but has
Southeast Nat1ons
gency session in Kuala Lumpur, sinGe been criticized for allowing
Malaysia. and indefinitely postponed Hun Sen's party to bully its way into
Cambodia's entry into the re gional the government, paving the way for
. I he eventual coup.
trade bloo.
At least 37 people, most civillan1.
It was the group's stlongest show ·
of disapproval toward a neighbor in have b~cn killed in the recent fight its history. ASEAN has a policy of ing.
Among the casualties was 23non-interference in other c.ountries'
year-old Michael Senior, shot to
internal affairs .
The group had voted in May to death by looting soldiers in Phnom
admit Cambodia, Burma and Laos as Penh on Tuesday. Senior was evacufull members on July 24. Bunna and ated from Cambodia when he was I
year old and was adopted by a Cana·
Laos will still be admitted.
Hun Sen said it didn 't matter what dian fami ly. Two years ago, he
ASEAN .did regarding Cambodia returned to Cambodia , where he
"because I didn't die by not joining li ved with hi s Cambodian wife and
their 9-nionth-old daughter.
ASEAN before."
Hun Sen has said Phnom Penl1
. The U.N. special representalive to
Cambodia, Ambassador Thomas was back to normal , but reports from
Hamm arberg,
today
strongly the capi tal indicated law lessness was
still prevalent in some areas.
denounced Hun Sen 's takeover.
His Soldier~. some clearly drunk,
Hamm arberg's statement was
released just hours before Ranariddh were roaming the streets, searching
was expected to appeal to the United for Ranariddh loyalisls. ·
and moving troops into the capital.

Nations to save his government, but
.

Amelio steps down as Apple's CEO
By DAVID LIEBERMAN
USA ·TODAY
NEW YORK - Gilbert Amelio
vowed, after he .became CEO of
Apple Computer 'in February 1996,
that he would change the struggling
computer com,Pany's corporate cuiture.
One of the industry's most noted
turnaround artists, he promised to
make Apple more open, focused and
businesslike.
He grabbed people's attention at
free-spirited Apple simply by wearing a suit :.._ which he said "serves
as a reminder that we' ve got Jo get
serious about our business."

And he reassured workers that
" tile troubles that we have are· very
fil&lt;able . I've been · down this road

have predicted from Amelio's en viAmelio's reputation as a revitalizer of moribund companies was
able record of accomplishments.
The New York City-raised execu- solidified after he took charge of
before."
tive earned a doctorate in physics · Nati onal Semiconductor in 1991. At
But on Wednesday Amelio, 54, from Georgia Tech, and served for a the time, the company had only three
and his reputation as a corporate fix- while as a researcher for Bell Labs. days' worth of cash on hand. By
it man, hit a dead end .
Amelio's name is on 16 patents, 1994, though, it had a profit of $264
While he promised to make Apple including one for a key sensor used million.
more open, company insiders portray in virtually every video camcorder.
But he eschewed the concept of
him as incre3singly remote- more
He became known as a corporate himself as a turnaround artist in his
interested in the planes he pilots than · whiz after 1983, when he took charge 1995 book " Profit from Experiin nitty-gritty operating matters. ofa troubled semiconductor division e nce." " It's a Iabell thoroughly disMeanwhile. Apple followers say the at Rockwell lnternatipnal. By 1987, like, a hoi button that launches me
company remains adrift and strug- the unit was profitable and had estab- into a supercharged explanation of
gling with decisions made either too lished itself as a leading manufactur- the difference between turnaround
impulsively or too slowly.
and transfomwion," he wrote.
er of electronics for fax machines.
This was not what. anyone would
This experience made him a big
He particularly rejected the idea

191cllled

Mudslide wipes out more than a
dozen houses in ·southern Japan
TOKYO (AP)- A mudslide triggered by torrential rains swept down
a mountain in southern Japan early
today, lrilling 19 people and wiping
out more than a dozen homes. Two
people were missing and feared dead.
Another dozen people were
injured, two of them seriously, when
the mudslide roared down, crashing
through a 4S-foot-high concrete barrier that was being built to protect the
city of Izumi on the southern island
of Kyushu, local police said.
After three days of unrelenting
rain; a section of mountain gave way
at' about I a.m., releasing an
avalanche of bright red mud, boulders
and trees on the small community
625 miles southwest of Tokyo.
It carried away all or part of 16
houses in the basin below.
"It's unbelievable;" said Gov.
Tetsuro Suga of Kagoshima prefecture (state). "It's the first time we've
seen such a disaster." ·
Izumi was the worst-hit area in
Kyushu, ·where llooding damaged
some 600 houses, set off. about 100
small landslides and covered roads
with mud.
·Some houses were completely
inundated, with their black tile roof
tops protruding froin the mud. Soldiers clad in green fatigues , police
and firefighters searched for the

believer in the value of galvanizing

that an executive might save a com-

a team behind a goal. He called his
plan the "chartreuse strategy" : He
was prepared to paint the buildings
chartreuse if thai would grab everyone's attention to the mission.

pany by ruthlessly slashing costs.
"Layoffs are a sign of management
failure, " he wrote.
Amelio's actions , though, contradieted his words.

missing.

People probed the knee-deep mud
with shovels or their bare hands
among the· splint~red remains of
houses, looking for potentially el&lt;plosive ruptured household gas lines.
The small valley where most of
the damage occured is home to some
80 families .
l'he rains had let up long enough
this morning for rescue workers to
find most of the missing . By early
afternoon, though, the downpour
resumed. Weather forecasters warned
that torrential rains likely would conti~ue into Friday.
Some parts of Kyushu have been
pounded by heavy rains for the ~ast
four days, nooding the area w1th
almost one-third the average yearly
rainfall in less than a week.
The nooding snarled air and land
transport. Jitpan Railways said 166 of
its trains in Kyushu were stopped by
the rains, delaying more than 9,000
passengers.
The mudslide in · Izumi was the
worst to hit the state since 1993,
when 20 people were killed in a mudslide during a typhoon.
Rains also triggered a landslide i~
Minamoto in neighboring Kumamoto prefecture late Wednesday. Nine
people quried in the slide were rescued.

ANNOUNCES RESIGNATION ·Apple Computer Inc. chairman
Gill Amelio left · and former co-founder and former chairman
Steve Jobs 'apprlar together at the MacWorld exposition In Stan
Francisco in this January 7, 1997 file photo. Amelio announced
Wednesday that he Is resigning from Apple Computer, expandIng the role 'o f Steve Jobs In running the company. (AP)

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PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) international community against
'
-In his first public appearance since interfering.
Hun Sen insisted he had not seized
a violent weekend takeover, Cambodian coup leader Hun Sen held a &lt;:;ab- power, noting that a few members of
inet meeting today, declaring himself Ranariddh 's political party were presole master while insisting he still sent at the meeting.
"It's a coup when the constitution
shared power with his rival's politiremains in place?'' he asked : "No
cal party.
Southeast Asia's regional eco- politician has-been arrested. Political
nomic bloc, meanwhile, indefinitely parties remain untouched."
!tun Sen said Ranariddh's party
postponed Cambodia's admittance
would have to chose a new leader, but
because of the upheaval.
Hun Sen controls the capital, it was still part of the government.
However, at least two Ranariddh
Phnom Penh, but his troops were stiU ·
reported to be fighting forc~s of his loyalists have died in the custody of
Hun Sen's men this week. Scores of
ri&gt;~al co-premier, Norodom Ranariddh, in the northwestern provinces . .
others are In hiding, missing, or tryRanariddh ned to France before ing to nee the country.
the violence and has appealed to othOne high-ranking Ranariddh loyer nations to · condemn Hun Sen's alist was executed and another died
actions. Ranariddh was to meet with under mysterious circumstances. Hun
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan . Sen said he was " horrified" and
and the heads of the Security Coun- regretted the deaths. .
cil and the General Assembly later · "We are on a boat which is a legal
today in New York. .
government," Hun Sen said.
Relaxed and joking, Hun Sen " Ranariddh was on the boat. But he's
spoke to reporters in Cambodia's cap- the o nl y one' who jumped overital for the first time since the board."
Hun Sen said Ranariddh was free
takeover.
"No one can dissolve this gov- to return to Cambodia but would have
ernment," he said in a warning to the to stand trial for the "crimes" · Of.

· Rutland Bottle.Gas

1995 CHEVROLET
CAPRICE
1996 CHM CORSICA

'·

ADDRESSES MEDIA - Prince Slsowath SlrJrath, left, the Cam. bodlap ambaa11dor to the United Nations, &amp;ptlllks to members
of the medii after a preas conference at the UN Wednesday. Firat
co-Prlmler Prince Norodom Ranarlddh's government waa ouat·
ed from power last week In a coup In the capital of Phnom Penh,
Cambodia. (AP) .
·

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DEFECTOR HOLDS NEWS CONFERENCE· Hwang Jang Yop,
left, Nqrth ~n hlgh-rlnklng defector, and h11 aide Kim Duk
Hong, right, hold a prna conflrence It the National Security
Agency In Seoul Thursday. (AP) .

-Amnesty criticizes Israeli detention of Lebanese without trial

..

.'

.

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) that North Korea has nuclear
North Korea's most prominent defec- weapons capable of " scorching" all
tor said today the communist coun- of South Korea and part of Japan.
try is prepared to unleash a war
Tile U.S. government has cast
against South Korea despite its deep- doubt on that claim, !lllying North
Korea's nuclear program was frozen
ening economic problems.
Emerging from more than two and monitored under a 1994 agreemonths of interrogation by South ment. Before the freeze, however; the
~ Korean and U.S. intelligence offi- country was believed to have enough
: cials, Hwang lang Yop, 74, said the plutonium to put together a nuclear
' North is "I 00 pe~~:ent" self-sufficient device.
in military arms, and all major miliA fonncr member of Nonh
tary facilities are hidden in tunnels. ·Korea's top decision-making body,
" North Korea's war preparations the Central Committee of the Workare beyond imagination and the entire ers party, Hwang is the country's
country is gripped in a mood of war," highest-l'l!tlking defector since the
~ Hwang told a nationally televised division of Korea in 1945.
news conference.
A former tutor of North Korean
In a report issued . concurrently leader Kim Jong 11, Hwang's defecwith the news conference, South tion dealt a humiliating blow to
Korean intelligence officials said Pyongyang and gave an intelligence
Hwang told them North Korea plans coup to its capitalist rival, Seoul.
call for a surpri~e attack starling with
About 170 North Koreans have
an artillery bombardment of Seoul, defected in the past three years, 60
the capital, and attempts to occupy this year alone. All complained of an
South Korea within a week.
acute food shortage that the United
" War preparations are complete. Nations says could lead to mass starIn a word, the entire land is fortified," vation, and South Korea has 001 been
he said.
shy about publicizing their gricvHwang'scommentsasreported.by ances.
Hwang and an aide, Kim Duk
the Agency for National Security
Planning arc exactly in line with what Hong, 59, arrived in Seoul April 20,
the Seoul government has been say- ending an ordeal that began with their
ing for years about North Korea's escape to South Korea's consulate in
Beijing on Feb. 12.
: ·military intentions.
H wang said he has no evidence to · Their defection created a diplo.:,prove that Pyongyang has nuclear . matic dilemma for China, which
· weapons. But he was quoted as found itself caught between longtime
:.telling South Korean intelligence ideological ally North Korea and
:;
·

•

Sentinel• Page 9

Cambodian coup leader Hun Sen
convenes first Cabinet
meeting .
.

North Korea prepared
to invade South Korea

Lebanon 10 yean ago. Israel has
ll)aintained he is alive and being held
by Iran or Iranian-backed guerrillas.
No group has confinned his fate.
Amnesty's repon also quotes the
Israeli government as saying the
detainees arc terrorists held legally
under Israel's Emergency Powers
'Law.
The Israeli army spokesman and a
senior official at the prime minister's
office in Jerusalem refused to comment on the report.
According to Amnesty, 21 of the
Lebanese were abducted and taken to
Israel. Some were being held without
trial after prison sentences handed
dQwo_by booeli courts el&lt;pired. The
· report did not malte clear who the
abducteeS were or what they had been
sentenced for.
t' Arad wucap~~~~ed.by pro-~ ·!11'• 1'1ilnwport·l¥lat Jeastt30~
Shiite Muslim guerrillas after his jet oners were being held at EI-Khiam
,: fighter was shot down over south priscih in south LebanOn,' which is run

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�Page 1o • The Dally Sentinel

·NO'IliiNG RUNS
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.WHAT BYOUIIIWIUDT
IIECOI.LEtmOII OF fiAC.

rrrt

bid the c:ompasion to
faiWt: a Very important team,
which fuls liko myself usually
don't even notic:e.l woukllike to •
say ilianli you lor brin&amp;io&amp; die

IOflleOIIC

;to

:10
,..

Sta,.llipay 1'111101 into tile
spcillipL
Another p i example is the

Valley
Lumber&amp;
Supply Co.·.

aew advcrtitemenrs usin&amp; lbe dri·
vers with their wives. ·J feel this is
die perled way to prornco: lam·

iJy values in a sport as well as
prujecting a pat imap for the
advtniser.
I do haw- a couple or favorite
drivers: Dale Eamhudt and Dale
Jamu.l feel nO need to,praiiC or
condemn lbeir procra.a; after all,
you can't just tee oae or two
witho.t see~ the Plher 40. Tltey
~ all good or they woukln't be
pan of-CUp.

t. tlorno . . _ C u p _ ___
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•lMv-hMttl-

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.....

NASCAR Thla Week
DAY'IUNABEACH, Fla.-

.

similarsystem· forctw~

wm p111s finilliw

~ Speedway and tex..

. pnmt-lime ,...,.... on netWOrk
when the Pepli 400 Is run al
nipt.
lo allvisll pral conference

- . . Speedway, will bepn
preparation and CXJIIStnK.11on

M"""""'"'

'J:"

held oatside Daytonalntema·
tDIII

Speedway on Friday,

praldettt John Gnham .
announced a $). to SS·mlllion
lilbtinaprojec111tat will allow
•ieltlliOCk cor racoa on die z.s.
mile supenp ~ ~ dwly.

immediately.
CBs signed a COI'Itract to letc.vise the Ptpsi 400, bepnninl in
1998, at tile end of llSI year.
Wilh "Stan antl Stripes fof.
ever" blaring, Gnharn said the
rac&lt;,IO be hekloo July 4, 1998,
bc&amp;innlnl118 p.m. will be die
..tarpa Independence Day-celc~

brltioo in die

1IPIIIIAIIOII"I

.

rI

"""""Y" and "the

patesl oporu opectack of tile.
swnmer."
11le Dayiona 500 will too•
ilnue 10 be held in tile daytime,
· also 011 CBS.

WHAT GIVES1 Jell Oordooi

tw won 17 riCeS in a acuon
and a hall. His twnmate Terry
Llllonte, w1to ""-"'Y hao ·
-..10 the same equipment
and ........., hat -olwice.
Cu OordOII, L11Jonte or the
thlnl Hcndrldt M-.ports dri·
ver, Rldy Craven, explain it?

No.

Docs it bcJther Labonte and
Craven?
"Yes," said Labonte, the W'UI·
..... CUp Series champion .••
hl\lea't riJlftd out why that is...
ACROSS 1HE WAY: Ford
driver Mark Manin, who ICIU·
ally had compi~ 1110111 points
titan Gordon over tile six ,....
entering Daytona. buic:ally
parapluaood ESPN's Dao
Patrick: "Yoo can't 110p Jell
Gordon. \'w can ooly hope 10
c:vntlin him."

Call992·2155
·Dave Harris Ext. 104 or Don Riffle Ext 105
For More Information

in a mike scheduled to run through
Saturday morning.
Abo•t 70 percent of the airline's
flighls out of its main hub al
Heathrow were grounded as the strike

Beauzil was lold Monday night
lhal his nigh! out of Phoenix was still
scheduled, but on Wednesday he
ended up spending hours at the airport, only to learn he would have to
fly out 12 hours earlienhan scheduled,· on another airline.

··Thai's S1up1d," Beauzil said.
''I've lost 1wo days- one day walking through the airpon and tomorrow
we leave
ing."

at 9 o'clock in the morn~

, Despite lrying to put on its bes1
face, British Airways was left grumbling about the legality of the strike
vote taken by the · BASSA union.
which represents 8,500 of the lfight
attendants. The union reiterated its
contention thallhe vote was perfectly leg at, but British Airways held out
the lhreal thai i1 mighl sue for pamFranz Beauzil, a print manager ages.
Another 3,500 night attendants,
from Speyer, Gennany, said he got
the runaround from British Airways represented by a breakaway union,
· on his plahs to relum today from a Cabin Crew 89, have settled a wage
deal with lhe airline
family vacation in lhe States.

,

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1·800-964-FORO
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•
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I

throwing British Airways into chaos

began, .with about 10 percent of lhe
flight s from London's smaller
Gatwick airpon canceled.
Thai came lo 135 flights scheduled to leave London alone. Before
long, lhe airline also was experiencing problems wilh return flights
because dozens of airplanes were not
in place to ny back.
British Airways was unable 10 fly
London-Phoenix on Wednesday, for
example, soil could nol fly PhocnixL,o~don today.
• British Airways executives predicted an enhanced, but slill reduc~d.
lltght schedule today. They said lhe
airline would increase services by
aboul 25 percent over Wednesday's
levels, adding some of the intercontinemal, .European and domestic
nights lhey missed.

ATTENTIONADVERTISERS!!
Advertise on this page

I

LONDON (AP) - British Airways is losing millions of dollars a
day from a flight allendanls' strike
bul said it hoped to fly more airplanes
today. Passengers faced more aggravating delays and cancella1ions.
Jeanne Fry tried to get home 10
suburban Philadelphia from London's Heathrow Airport on Wednesday, putlhe airline could give her no
immediate satisfaction.
"We lold them we' It go anywhere
- Boston, Chicago, New York but so far . we've got nowhere," Fry
said on her way back from her son 's
wedding.
Fry and olher travelers were left in
limbo after the British Airline Stewards and Stewardesses Association
walked -off ihe job in a pay dispute,

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·-------------------------,.-----.. r======----------=:------=====---=NASCAR W _ ..... ..,.. ...... .,..,....., .....,

NATO peacekeeping troops in
Bosnia-Herzegovina. Also, Poland
has been hqldingjoint military exercises with NATO sine" 1994.
Poland has an army of 230,000
· and a history of invasion from Rus·
sia 10 the East and Gennany to lhc
West. The cost of modernizing 1he
atiny, which was likely to be undertaken whether or not NATO beckoned, is es1ima1ed at $200 million.
Clin10n is due lo go on to Romania Friday, where his reception is
likely lobe subdued. He led the fighl
to delay invitations to Romania and
Slovenia at least until 1999, and
defeated a majority led by France that
would have taken them in immediately.

0

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AROUND THE GARAGE j;';

Muoco LiptinJ, die Iowabased company tliat devised a

airborne battalion is serving with

more flights through current strike

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TO SEE WHAT'S LEFTI PRICES ARE AT OR· BELOW WHOLESALE!

tie. N.C. 21014

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., -lttlllo

,AI a news conference, Clinton
said he was going to Warsaw 10 "talk
about the new responsibilities new
members must undertake to keep
NATO the strongest alliance in lhe
world."
Poland already spends about 2.5
percent of ils budget on the military.
Polish officers are already anending
Western military academies. A Polish

ContMI&lt;, N.C.

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2. _.,.._e.tlrllNASCAR w :A NJd

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Las1 year, Czech troops wilh lhe
peace force confronted Drljaca in Prijedor, 25 miles northwest of Banja
Luka in northwest Bosnia . .The
Czechs demanded he hand over a
submachine gun prohibited under'
lhe Dayton peace accord. Drljaca
refused, and fired a warning shot after
indictments.
. lhe Czechs fired 1wice in the air.
Bosnian Serb police, also armed
Cook said a British soldier was
wilh
banned rifles, surrounded the
shol in the leg in 1he ·operation bul
outnumbered
Czechs, pulling back
"there is no risk to his life ."
when
ordered
by Drljaca.
only
Asked whether this meant NATO

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"These 1wo men were within the
British sector of Bosnia. They were
known 10 our forces and lhat is why
they were apprehended," Cook told
Sky Television.
Reports in Sarajevo initially had
suggested a second operation was
under way between Pale, the headquarters of the Bosnian Serb wartime
leader Radovan Karadzic, and Han
Pijesak, the headquarters of lhe former Bosnian Serb military leader
Gen. Ratko Mladic.
The Bosnian Serb sources denied
I hat
Neither Drljaca nor Kovacevic
had been openly indicted by the international war crimes tribunal in .The
Hague, Netherlands. The tribunal
does keep some indictments secret,
and one international source in Sarajevo said lhe operation lo capture
them came as a result of secrel

forces would now seek 10 arrest
Karadzic and Mladic, Cook said he
could not answer that question .
"Nobody knew of this operation
before it look place and nobody will
know Of any future operations," he
said.
Drlj.aca was Prijedor police chief
at the slart of the Bosnian war in
1992, when the town was the site of
some of the worst Serb prison camps.
He ·was replaced last year.
His name came up· in testimony
during the trial of Bosnian Serb
Ousan Tactic, who was convicted by
the tribunal.
Linl~ was known about Kovace·

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-

By BARRY SCHWEID
When word reached Warsaw
Tuesd~y from Madrid thai Poland,
AP Diplomatic Wrher
WARSAW, Poland - President along, wilh the Czech Republic and
:Clinton was given a red-carpel weiHungary, could join NATO in 1999,
;come today as he opened a day of eel· President Aleksander Kwasniewski
-ebration heralding NATO's decision declared: "This is an extraordinary
:to expand eastward and the promise event"
;of closer military and economic lies
Clinton is dramatizing the turn in
· ~ilh Poland and other Cold War
Poland 's often-troubled history by
:adversaries.
calling on lhe president and address:: Two dozen Polish military officers ing lhe people from Castle Square.
·~NATO is opening up and il is
;from the · army, air force and navy
·Oned the tarmac at Warsaw's Okecie pulling an end lo Yalta divisions , thus
:~ilitary airport as president and Seccreating a chance for building a
:oetary of Stale Madeleine Albright security system in Europe as it has
'ilepped off Air Force One onlo a never had before," Kwasniewski said
:$Carle! red carpel.
· . Tuesday.
·
: ~ tlalloons and a band.playing "The
. On Wednesday, Clinton made il
·~tar Spangled Banner" rounded out
clear !here were costs involved in
: .(he celebration.
modernizing ,lhe new members'
: • To the Poles, NATO's invitation armies and meshing their commun·i- ·
;lor membership means taking a· final cations and other operations wilh
•Step away from Russian control, a NATO.
~!&gt;ledge that the West will defend their
He said he hoped the costs would
: eountry if it is auacked and a boos! be modest " We're not talking about
an economy that has rebounded getting into an arms race or bank•lrom a post-communist low in 1992 rupting their budgets," he said of
nearly double its outpulto more Poland, Hungary and the Czech
t~an $13!1 bitlion a year.
Republic.

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.

today during his visit ID Warsaw. Cilnton
arrived In Poland aarly 1oday for a 24-hour visit after the Madrid NATO summit. (AP)

apprehend war criminals wflom !hey

Poland gives Clinton red-carpet treatment Hard-hit British Airways promises

Boats New &amp; Used

you - d roby a message 10 tile
NASCAR - • wDUklllko to
know if you could tell them and
t h e i r - thinks for their
auto(Jrlpb donalions.
My name Is Richard Ward and
I' m in tll[e holpltal waiting on a
llean nnoplanL l'YI been ilere
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10~.

For HomeO\'vllCr s

'l'CHH

AWAIT CLINTON'S VISIT • People wah lor e ·
bus at 1 bus stop beside a blllboerd Inviting
them to President Clinton's open a.lr epeech

8 p.m. • s.turdly • TNN

·-Cup.lltlyUMIIO

SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP)- NATO-led forces arrest·
ed two Bosnian Serbs early today in
an operation that reflected a new,
tougher attitude toward war crimes
suspects. A Bosnian police chief was
killed in lhe process, a British official
said.
Bosnian Serbs and interna1ional
sources in Sarajevo identified the two
men as Simo Drljaca, former police
· chief of the. northwest Bosnian 1own
of Prijedor, and Prijedor hospital
chief Mico Kovacevic.
Sources said ·orljaca had been
. seriously wounded in ihe operation in
northwest Bosnia, while official
Bosnian Serb radio and "TV said he
was killed.
NATO-led forces arrested two
men in Bosnia today and-a Bosnian
police chief was killed in the operation, British Foreign Secre1ary Robin
Cook ·said in London.
police
chief was one of lhe two men who
were arrested, lhe Foreign. Office
-said.
Cook said it had always been part
of the peacekeeping mandate that
"lroops not only can but should

The

Ridenour
Supply .

.

··.·..,;.._ _,

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

NATO-I.ed forces are cracking
down on war crime suspects

Yau'w Qat QuI 111M .. W.'ve Clot A:WidlrL

5d

4t110UlK-

Muffler &amp; Tail Pipe

Gallipolis

-ptul'lday, July 10, 1997

992-2196

Set'VIcea

See Steve MaldGwa

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn
668 Pinecrest Drive

Thuraday, July 10, 1117

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-.

-·,..:
_'

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"DON'T Ml55 OUT.,, ONE TIME ONLY"
RUTUND, OHIO

•

742·2.211

�Page

12 • The Dally sentinel

Thursday, July 10, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ohio News in Brief:·--.
Toledo psper, state reach accord

,.

Sinith was fired by the trustees.
•Smith had replaced Anhur Thomas.
who resigned in 1995 after Gov.
George Voinovich .and state lawmakers demanded new leadership.
Central State was $8.6 million in
debt, and many feared the school
would have to close.
·
Ransier said Garland is the right ,
choice for Central State "at this
lime."

"I think there's the kind of com·
mitment it's going to take to pull this
through," he said. "He's maintained
an interest. He's done his research.
He never wavered -i-n his commit·
ment.

The board also considered Graha:n Matthews, vice pres:dent for
institutional research at Dillanl University in New Orleans. Matthews
also graduated from Central State.

High court rule~ in favor of college newspaper

COLUMBUS- A law professor is expected to decide in about two
months whether to. recommend that discrimination charges be pursued
agamst a Cmcmnab-based convemence store chain.
·
Six complaints accuse United Dairy Fanners employees of using racial
slllfS and discriminating against black employees and customers. The company denies wrongdoing.
Floyd Weatherspoon, a hearing officer and a professor at Capital University, sa1d he w1ll recommend whether the Columbus Community Relations Commission should ask the city attorney's office to file charges
against UDF.
·
The discriminlllion allegedly occurred in late 1996 and early this year.
Fonner UDF employee Patnc1a Munyan testified at a hearing last
month that B1ll Bales, who used to supervise the chain's Columbus-area
stores. used racial slurs and said he didn 'tlike to hire blacks because "they
always steal." ,
·
Bales denied the claims and said he .once had to fire a white employee who refused to work under blacks at one store.
-The Associated Press

.

'

~ - Cases

Tile following cases were settled - )llus costs; Rebecca M. Moore, Syra' . last week in the Meigs County Coun cuse, seat belt, $15 plus costs; ·Gina
of Judge Patric.k H. O'Brien.
Fined were: Mark A. White, New
Plymouth, left of center, $30 plus
costs; Cheryl A. Ahrendt, Westerville,
speed, $30 plus costs; Tammy
Schlernitzauer, Heath, speed, $30
plus costs: Albert R. Sagman, Zeeland, MiCh., Rick L. Edwards, Minerva, seat belt, $25 plus costs; Carole
A. McCoy, Ch:.rleston, W.Va., $30
plus costs; Richard D. Skinner, Marietta, speed, $30 plus costs; seat belt,
$25 plus costs; Ronald E. Snyder.
Pomeroy. reckless ope,ration, $100·
plus costs; speed, costs only; Mark
Salser, ~acine, domestic violence,
costs only; Oavid Shamblen, Ponland, driving under the influence, 10
days jail suspended to three days,
$850 fine with $550 suspended upon
completion of residential tre~tment
program, 90-day operator's hccnse
suspension. one-year probation,
• Carlctta L. Buckley, Middleport,
failure to control, $20 plus costs;
Dorthea L, Scarberry. Middleport,
speed, $30 plus costs; Howard R.
Ervin Sr., Racine, seat belt, $25 plus
costs; Timothy I. Gheen, Long Bottom, seat belt, $25 plus costs;_Martm
L. Spangler. Rutland, seat belt, $15

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COLUMBUS (AP) - Students'
disciplinary records are not protected by privacy laws and must be
released to a Miami University newspaper, although the school can delete
certain information, the Ohio
Supreme Court has ruled.
The court, in a 5-2 ruling Wednesday, said the disciplinary records are
not "education records" that are protected by the Family Educational '
Rights and Privacy Act.
1
Last year, The Miami Student
newspaper asked the university fot
the records of student disciplinary
proceedings, but the school refused to
·release them.
.
The newspaper's editor, Jennifer ·
, Markiewicz, then made a written
request under the Ohio Public

Records Act. The university released
the records but deleted the students'
names, ages and sex, plus the dates,
times and locations of the matters
under review. The newspaper had not·
asked for tpe students' names.
' The untversity said it could not
provide the information without the
iamilies' permission.
The court said the university must
release the locations, ages and sex,
plus the type of offense and penalty.
The school may delete the names and
S~ial Security and student iden(ificauon ~umbers, the coun said.
Jusuce Francis Sweeney in the
majority . opinion said disciplinary
records do not contain educationrelated information, such as grades,
so they are not protected. . .

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resolved in county court session

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M. Knotts, Racine, alluwing underage consumption, three days jail suspe11ded, one-year probation, $100
forfeiture to Meigs County DARE
program, costs;· Danny J. Dalton, Rutland, seat bel~ $25 plus costs; Seth R.
· Cremeans, Middlepon, unauthorized
use of plates, $30; driving under
financial responsibility action suspension, I 0 days jail suspended to
two days, one-year probation, $250
plus costs, 90-day vehicle immobilization; ·
Roger L. Johnson, Cheshire, no
OL, three days jail sW.pended, $150
·suspended to $75 plus costs; Shelly
A. Edwards, Parkersburg, W.Va.,
speed, $26 plus costs; Raena L.
Eblin, Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 plus
costs; Warren B. Rayburn Jr., Ash·
land, Ky., speed, $30 plus costs;
Maurice W. Caudill, Whitesburg,
Ky., speed, $30 plus costs; Chad E.
Ingles, Pataskala, speed, $30 plus
.costs; Carjos X. Ramirez, Hurricane,
W.Va., sell belt, $25 plus costs; John
H. Harkins Jr., Thurman, seat belt,
$25 plus costs; Thomas H. Grubbs
Ill, Parkersburg, W.Va., speed, $30
plus costs; Kevin Wayne Clark, Huntington, W, Va., speed. $30 plus costs;

Carl Steve Thacker, Point Pleasant,
W.Va., seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Cynthia Klein, Pomeroy, passing bad
checks, six days ]ail suspended, two
years probation plus costs; Gerra M.
Sexton, McArthur. no child restraint,
$15 plus costs; seat belt, $10 plus
costs; Rick L. Yost, Rutland, seat belt,
$25 plus costs;.
.
Samuel J. Rush, Racine, underage
consumption, three days jail suspended, $200 ·forfeiture to Meigs
County DARE program, probation
until August. 2000. costs; Amanda J.
Adkins, Long Bottom, underage consumption, three days jail suspended,
$200 forfeiture to Meigs, County
DARE program, probation until June.
2000, costs; Stephanie L. Jones,
Racine, underage consumption, thtee
days jail suspended, $200 forfeiture
to Meigs County DARE program,
probation until January, 2000, costs;
Scott D. Carsey, Syracuse, underage.
consumption, I0 days jail suspended,
$200 forfeiture to Meigs County
DARE program. 20 days house
arrest, probation until O!;tober, 1998,
costs;
Bennett D. Roush, Middleport,
expired OL, $100 fine with $50 suspepded if valid OL presented within
60 days. costs; no slow moving vehi-

cle sign, costs only; Kenneth W.
Stephenson, Durham, N.C., seal belt,
$25 plus costs; Dennis J. Hoschar,
seat belt, Pomeroy, $15 plus costs;
Terrence D. Conlin, Pomeroy, speed,
$30 plus costs.

The court also ordered the uni versity to pay the plaintiffs' legal
fees.
·
In a separate ruling, the coun said
the Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency does not have to pay the legal
bill of an employee who sued over
access to his personnel records.

The court, in a 4-3 decision, said
Thomas Olander's law~uil was a
"personal battle" that did not benefit the public. Ohio law says legal
fees in public records cases should be
paid by the loser.
Olander sued after the EPA
refused to release the records.

r--------'::========:-'----'----,
110

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The Daily Sentinel
has·a supply of the
commemorative edition.
for Middleport's

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The Above Information Will Be Used In Ad
· Submitted By:

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Sa.B• B-•.,.on
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Pomeroy, Ohio

60 LOSt an d Foun d

Yard Sale 2517 Jefferaon Awt .

Found: Ualt Huaky, 014· 388·

cl'llldrtn's inlarn thru •T. teens,
mens &amp; women' a clathtl, baby
bed, play pen, stroller, car , ..,,,
Infant cJ rrlers, little Tyk.t toya,
small table wtextra l eal I 2
c'hairs, dishe,, &amp; misc.

Solurday July 12. a-? Clolnlnv,

89ei2laave M8asage.
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A Miniature Collie Near
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Famil~ Pet. Reward! Pleaat~ Call

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'

Lolt: aduU lemale Weimaraner,

Yard Sa le -11 Miles out Sandhill
Rd . 5 Families. Clothing, no~o~sa11
0

~~~:::;::;:7~~sboryr I ;~:::;: ~,:;:;~ : l.~.:mi. ;•:;.~; ;.d_m__'_·F-r-id-•y_&amp;

LOST: Dog black w/gray muzzle, 80
PubliC S&amp;le
answers 10 ·sparky" In Poplar
and Auction
Hel!;\11 •eo. 304-t75-~5.
I:::-:-:,.....::,.....:-:-~-::-:-=-::::
Rick Pearson Auelion Company.
Rewardlla•ge Collie, While &amp; lull lime auCiionee!. complelt
Brown, In Tne Aroa

or Georges

auction

service.

Li~ensed
304
•

FAMILY DENTISTRY
~~~.~Jo~~·· ' ......... ~:g~~~:~;~~!~la.
304-n3-5822 Rt. 1, Box 44-C Reward l re1urn zippered portfolio. 90 wanted to Buy
us

U..... L Rousten, C:DPMA

Mason, WV
25260

7

Sil
loll be1Ween Kroger, Gallipolis Absolute Top 0 ollar: AI1 , , .
and Tabaeca King, P1 Pleasant ver And Gold Coins, Prooloell,
Connrned moSIIy aboul docu· Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold

..JL
'
.
.. "
~

K• 9

o...,.·gn"'
""'""
""

Professional Pet Groom ng

• Room Additions
Over 20 years experience

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

upplies
"We treat your be.t frumd like our. be" friend"

Free EstJma es

614-992-7643

.

t

Call 614•843•5426

Boardl'ng • Tra1'n1'ng-

S

St. Rt. 681

,,,fltJIIIIM.

-·-

Easy Bank Finandng

Air Conditioners Installed 12800 a month
Heat Pumps Installed 138111 a month
(Pa~nts based on

approved credit) •

\W010212

Serving Southeastern OH &amp; 1/W
614-446-9416
t -800-872-5967 1391 Safford School Ad , Gallipolis, OH
(Lime StoneLow Rates)

WICKS
HAULING
Limestone,
· Gravel, Sand,

Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

Top Soil,

Residential Haatlng
&amp; Cooling
Auto Air Conditioning
Installation and
Service
American ; Stan~ard,
Janltrol &amp; Heating &amp;
Cooling Equipment
R.S.E.S. Certified •
Arl Certified
Don Smith
37814 Peach Fork Rd.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
Phone 614-992-2735

KINGS'

For information
leading to the arrest
aild mnviction of lhe
persons who broke
into the A·frcime oH
681 in Reedsville.
Call Meigs SheriH

HOMI IMpFOWIMSiils

992-3371 .
.'201971 - -

3351 Happy Hollow Road
Middiepon, Ohio 45769
New Homes, Additions,
Rgofing , Siding, Pole
Barns, Decks. Painting

Carr Us For A Free Esrimale

614·742·3090
6t4·742·3324
614·742·30764 I

Buying Slanding Pint, I Aer•
~:u~~i~:~n~~~J.~~~~~;.~:. Tract Or Larger, 6l 4 ·256-15038.

Tuppers Plains, Ohio

Girls &amp; Women• Clothi"ng, Avon,
Nursing Unilorml, Garlero &amp; Lin·

Clean late Model Cafl Or ~
l&lt;UCKS, t990 Models Or Newer,

Wrought Iron Table With Chairs;
Jewelry, Juhior Size Clothes.

J &amp; D' s Auto Parts. Buying tal·

4 Family : July 11th, 12th, 9·4 ,

1.:.:::.::=------

.Psychic
1-900-868-4900
Ext. 1817
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yr1.
Ser-u (~19)

WILL HAUL• .
JUST CALL.
992-7074
· Gravel, Limestone,
Topsoil, Fill Dirt,
Sand. No Minimum.

.....

).

John Williams- Owner
Licensed Electrician
Work Guaranteed
Free Estimates Providing
Quality Residential
Service New
constiuction- Total and
partial rewires on older
homes ·
24 Hr Emer
Senice

SIDING &amp;
INSULATION
537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT
992-2n2

8:00 o.m.-3:30 ~.m.

•Replacement YftliloWi
•Build Garagis

Presents "BAD HABIT'

•Storm Doors &amp;

Live Sat., July 12th ·

Windows
•Room Additions

CROSSOVER
Appearing Friday B:00-12:00
POMEROY
EAGLES CLUB
and Guestlnv~ed
MOOSE LODGE #731

Fri. &amp; Sat.
9·1

Nights

Music ~y "RENEGADE"

55488 4111 Avenue

Rlldavtllo, OH 45172

m1o: 1TC

Ciolhes, Powe&lt; G)ide&lt;.

6402.

All Week, 8 To 8 , 205 Blosser
School Road. !Off Bulavitle Pike),
Clothes, Furniture.

Wanted To Buy: Cann1ng Jars Or

ROOFING

B • Paid In Advanc..
orApL!NE: 2:00p.m.

. 949-2168
3111/9-4/TFN

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room AdditiOns
•New Garages ,
•Electrical .&amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
.
992~215
Pomeroy, Ohio

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
I
ESTIMATEES

985-4473
7/22rttn'

ELIM
HOME CARE
For Handicapped
&amp; Elderly.
Daily - Weekly Contract
Family Atmosphere
209 S. 4th Street
Middleport
992-5042

DREHELS
· ·Small Engines
•Lawn Mowers
•Chain Saws
•Weed Eaters
2 mi. off Rt. 7
Leading Creek Rd. ·

FREE ESTIMATES

D. Gea17's

742-2925

Jod~Shop

"We5awY-

Quality Work at
s Fair Prlcel
550 Page St.
Middleport, Oh. 45760

lllo...,"

f40fl71 mo.

SHARPfNING

Home Ph.

SERVICE
25~ Discount
to 4·H &amp; IFA

614·992-3120

.,....

Don Geary, Owner

.....,.,

SCUIACWSES
NOW FORMING
Scott Welton, Open Water
ScuiMI tnatruetor
614-992-3314
•Open Wotor
•Advance Open Water
·Roocuo Dive
•Dive Maefir
•Medic Flr.t Aid
•LIIeguerd Training

HUPP'S cusroM
SHARPENING
949-2647
I'BEE
LocetArea .
Pick Up Dllcilrded
Appliances &amp;
Meny Matlll1.
814-9112-4025
Calli em-8 PJft .,,., •

?~i)l

T/'311 mo.

Public Notice
_

m

$1 ,500 REWARD!!
For inforJ»ation ·
leading to the
arrest and
conviction of
anyone involved
stealing a
property line
fence at:
~ 927 Cross St.,
Racine, Oh.
I.D. Caller!
Contact:
Ron Miller

Wanted: Used Harctltood FloorinG.
In Good Condi1ion, Call 014-24S..

5687

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

.,_

l

w•

-

o

• - -

,

~-•

.BAULIIGI
'IXCIVI'I'III
llmastone &amp; GI"'Yel
Septic Systenta
. · Trailer &amp; 1 ·
•·. House Sites.
R&amp;BIIonable Rates
JoeN. S&amp;yre

(o,
Sayr.8 '1'--..l."mg
lllml
1

Christ United Methodist Chu rch ,
9688 State Route 7 South. Friday,
SBtu«iay, July 11 Ill. 1_2lh, 9·6.

ANNOUNCEMENTS
005 '

110

Personals
ATTENTION GUYStll
Feeling Alone?
Call Someone Who
Caras And Will Listen

1-900·255-0700
Exltnsion 8626
$3.99 Per Minute
Must Be 18Years

SGrv·U
81g·845-8434.

Help Wanted

AVON I All Areas I Shirley;

Friday 7111th, Saturday 7112th, 9 ·
5 :30, Behind McC \uros Restau·
rant Men, Women, And Children
ClothH""g, HouseOOid Items.

992·4025

612019712 mot.

10/25196mn

Tho 1888 Sutton
Townahlp budget propoool
will IMI available on Sat.,
July 121h at 10 a.m. at
Syracuaa
Municipal
Building. Kenny Wlgglna
Clerk
101 to

·

- 10:00 a.m. Saturday.

SERVICE
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio

•

Someone Wanting To Giveaway
Jars, 614-245-0406.

the da~ before 1111 id
Is to Nn. Sunday
edition· 2 :00 p.m.
Friday. Monday t,dltlon

DUMP TRUCK

Public Notice .
PUBUC NOTICE
Tho Olivo Townahtp
Budget will be open lor
lnapectlon at tho home of
thi clerk, from July 9
through July 18, botw11n
th• hour. of 10:00 a.m. and
12:00 noon. A public
hearing witt be July 14 at
7:30 p.m. .a t tha Twp.
Gar.go.
Marthe CUret, Ctllrk

Clothes, Furniture, Ladies, Mens

ALL Yard Salts Must

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

773·5033.

Shephard logging Buw-er Of Stan·
ing Timber And Land, Pme. Pulp- ...
wood, And Saw Timber, 814-682-

Howard l. Wrltesel

.

vage vehicles. Sell ing pana. 304· ,.

Brown House On Corner, Baby

R.l. HOLLON
TRUCKING

614-94~

· WAYNE~S PLACE

Cheshire, At. 554, Lett At light,

1/&amp;lltn

Talk Live To A
Real Gifted

arsForlongoborgerBasilom.
Sm ilh Buick Pon1iac, 1900 Eall·
em Avenue, Gallipoh.
35 Grope Slreel, Thurs. F&lt;l, Set, 1--'-:....:_.:..:.;_.::.:_;__ __

first!

71

Marti~ ., .. 992-7441 .
Antiques. 1op prices paid. River·
ine Anliques, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Russ Moore owner, 614·982·
2526.

lhingl

Shop the
Want Ads

8127/1 mo.

$200 REWARD

estates: also appraisals, Osby

&amp; vtclnhy
2 Families: July 141h. 151h, 6·6,
6837 SIBil Rou1e 58B, Trailer In
Rodney, Clolhes, llishes, Glass·
es, Odds In's, A linle Bil Every -

Calls)

Meigs
Refrigeration

Amlques,
coins,
10ys,lurnilure,
lamps, glall,
guns. china,
1ool1,

GallipoliS

'·

MaiiUe Rome llr Caadlllaaar
Md Beat Pumps

Su~trling, Etc. Acquisition• Jewel(y
· M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second

5095 or 304-H75·5t35.

New Homes • VInyl Sldlng New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions·· Roofing

10:00- 2:00

I
I
I

.

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

CORPORAL ELECTRIC
Dailey Ad- Racine

r---------~Q~~2!1~~!~~!~~~Q~~---~---,

,

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes . • Pole Buildings

$2.99 per min .
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv·U (61 9) 645·8434

The Daily Sentinel
"BABY SENTINEL"
!CHILDS NAME(S) &amp; AGE(S):
I
!pARENTS' NAME:'
&amp; STATE
I

REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

3127/TFII

MASON DENIlL CARE

P-----------~·
-·-··~-- ·~ ~
SOLID VINYL
·- -----~
"F'Aillr'TOR"
11l'-'
.•
DIRECT
PRICES''
•
dow.
Sy'"te
· ID'""'
Quality Wm
c

POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479

BISSELL BUILDERS-, IN

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTION
.

Ext. 8789

Send To:

en' a)Shoea, Wrtatling S lnQitl,
Wedding Gown, Fut C011, Ni,.,_
do, Roller Blades, Blkt, Towa.
i)olla•. •cotleCIOr" Barblt. FlOWers.

j:N.::INI::.:C:.:hr::i!IIIT8=':.:il:::llllll.=---

, also 1tveec:ata, 014--992._.180.

o:~

AND MOREl!
1-900-656-2700

The Daily Sentinel BABY Sentinel is a
Special Edition filled w~h photographs of
local kids· ages newborn to four years old.
The BABY Sentinel will appear in the July
29th issue. Be SIJre your child, grandchild
or relative is included.
j(omplete th.e form below
and enclose a snapshot or
wallet size picture plus a
$5.00 charge lor each
photograph. If more than
one child is In picture
Pl~r~must
enclose an additional
be In by
$2 per child.
Tuesday,
(ENCLOSE
July 22th,
PAYMENT
1997
WITH
Pictures can
PICTURE)
be picked up
after August 4

theta.

:f~~·~;··~~~··~~~-2~;~~~~F~~··~~~~-7~~~~~1~~.;~~~2~~1~1~~~~~~~~~~~~1~~~~2~~~~~e~~~~~~A~n~a~~~;g;th~ro~~~h~N~o~~~~~t~A~na~n~c~~~l~~~~~~;~m~~Noq~s~nL3D4-B7~
ru~s.
P~·19H~&amp;cw~~
70
Yard Sale
Allenue. GallipoliS, 614-4&lt;11·2842.

SPORTS
FINANCE
STOCKS

.,he
Sentinel
BABY Sentinel

113 W. 2ND ST.

Joe Wilson
(614) 992-4277

~

pup, all

Three ki1ttna, two monlhl cld,

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE ·

"Build Your Dream"

110 Court S1.

Small black malt

~7S.2e87.

360° Communications

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy,' Ohio 45769

alan Bocks, Paper Backa. An·
1ique Books, Picrurea. Many
Crall Items. Sht&amp;ll, Clolhea
~ Baby 10 X Large,Men I Wom·

Sla week old puppies, 4 main
and two t.maiH, Collie!lab mix,
814-Q85-43QI.

CELLULAR PHONES
,

'

"Stop putting off those much needed
home improvements." Call Today!
992-2753 Free Estimates · 992-5535

:

Remodeling

M&amp;J.

•Additions

UP-TO-DATE

!
EX!BA.
COMING 7UESDAY, JULY lftl, 1887

Pl. Plus.rt

,,._.48-

BENNETT'S MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING

-

Glveawey

PuPiiJOs, moihOi goldon rolrlei8f,
&amp; VlclnHy
5 WHkl old. 2 oJ•. 2 loma lo. I,--::-..,-.,.::.,..:,:.:,:.:.~~=
814-11112·7472.
7 Family Vaod Sai•·24D1 Jailer·
son Avo. Pl. Pleuaru (Old 'ial·
Six I Week 01 Mixed B11glt tey Bell Buildmg) . Thura. &amp; FriPuP., Alreedf Wormod,
day Ju ly 11112. 8 Jill&amp;. Fuml·
73110.
'
turo, Home tnL Child Crall, CM•

•Free 5 Year Parts Warranty
•Free Digital Thermostat
•Free Estima s

Overbrook Center has Immediate
openings for full time or part time
RN's, LPN's and STNA's, all shifts. A
variety of benefits are available.
Submit your application at:
Overbrook Center
333 Page Street
Middleport, OH. 45760 or
Call 614-992-6472 for
immediate cc(lslderation.
E.O.E.

The Dally Sentinel• Page13

40

ance department for six years,
Strussion, who runs Strussion
resigned in May to become senior Consulting Services, represents
vice president of Emerald Health clients in the health-care · industry,
Network in Cleveland. including Emerald.
Randall and Strussion worked for
Last year, Strussion Consulting
former Republican state Sen. Bob pleaded no contest for failing to disNey of St. Clairsville.
close honoraria payments to legisla"Randall and Strussion go way tors. The corporation was fined the
back. We're looking into their rela= · maximum $5,000.
tionship," said Ward, who refused to
Fox accepted airfare and lodging
elaborate or identify other people he last year from Strussion when he
is investigating.
stayed two nights at a home Suussion
Randall referred questions to his owns in Scottsdale, Ariz.
attorney, Karl H. Schneider of
State ethics laws prohibitlegislaColumbus, who said Randall had not tors from accepting "any expenses
done anything unethical or illegal.
for travel or lodging," except under
"This all stems from a number of limited circumstances.
rumor~ dealing with legislators,"
Fox said he incorrectly thought he
Schne1der sa1d Wednesday. "Once had reimbursed Strussion .soon after
the rumors are investigated, I think he received a $406 . pl~ne ticket in
:"~,'II find they don 't have any merJanuary 1996 but did not do so until
11.
this May.

Central State makes 'right choice' for presidency

·,

Pomeroy .• Middleport, Ohio

Investigators ad.ded to ethics
probe into lawma·ker's ·activity

lOLEDO -The National TQIIISportation and Safety Boanl and the
stare of Michigan have agJ'CCd to a financial settlement of a l~wsuit brought
by The Blade over the seizure of a photographer's camera and film .
The scttlemen\ included an apology by the NTSB to the newspaper and
photographer Herral Long over its actions against Long on Jan. I 5 while
COLUMBUS (AP) - Two for- Ward said: "We're combining our
he was covering a colll(Duter plane crash in southern Michigan.
mer
highway patrol investigators investigation."
. The NTSB and Michigan agreed to pay The Blade and Michigan a total
have
been
hired to help with an ethics
The investigation led to punishof $26,000, the newspaper reported today.
investigation
of
a
lobbyist's
ties
to
ment
for state Rep. Michael Fox, RPeter Goelz, the NTSB 's director of government and public affairs,
state
lawmakers
and
employees,
the
Hamilton,
who illegally accepted an ·
ackn~wledged in the apology that the federal agency "compromised the
state
inspector
general
said.
airline
ticket
and lodging from Strus·
consutuuonal nghts of Mr. Long and The Blade" in the January incident
I
Richanl
Ward,
who
investigates
ston.
at the Monroe, Mich., airport.
·
Fox was stripped of the influential
Lon!!, covering the aftenn~th of the Jan. 9 crash of ComairAight 3272, , allegations of wrongdoing in state
agencies
and
universiiies,
said
·chainnanship
of the House Education
was taking photographs outside a temporary morgue set up at the airport
Committee,
which cost him the
Wednf
sday
·that
he
and
Thomas
when he was detained and ordered to relinquish his film. The crash of the
•
Charles,
legislative
inspector
gener$5,000-a-year
extra a chairman
twin-engine commuter aircraft near Ida killed all 29'people aboard.
·
receives.
al,
hi~ former State Highway Patrol
On Jan. 21 , The Blade filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Detroit,
Lts. ,Joseph Hopkins and Ted
Strus'sion has denied any wrongcontending the acti?,ns of authorities at the morgue were " an impermisVanScoy.
doing:
A message seeking comment
Sible pnor restnunl of the newspaper's free speech and .freedom of the
·
Ward
said
the
investigation
focus·
was left at his office Wednesday.
press rights.
es on the relationships among lobby,
Ward said he is currently investi.• The lawsuit also contended that the authorities violated Long's right
ist
Thomas
Strussion,
some
legislagating a former deputy director of the
'· to be "free from unreasonable searches and seizures."
tors and some past and present state Ohio Depanrnent of Insurance, David
Under the settlement, the NTSB agreed to pay The Blade and Long
employees.
Randall. Ward said he has issued
$18,000, the ~ewspaper said. The state of Michigan agreed to pay $8,000.
"Tom
is
looking
at
Strussion
from
subpoenas
to review several depanJohn Robmson Block, co-publisher and editor-in-chief of The Blade,
the
legislative
side
and
I'm
looking
ment
records.
said that since the $26,000 setUement is taxpayers • money, it will not be
at him from the executive side,"
Randall. who worked at the insurused to pay the newspaper's legal fees.
·
He said half the settlement will go to the photographer, " who was
h811!Ssed by the state and federal officials." The other'$13,000 will be
donated by The Blade to the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the
Press. Block said.
COLUMBUS (AP)- John GarGarland, an associate provost at
The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press. based in Arlingland
is
tough
and
committed
-just
the
University of Virginia, is a former
ton, Va., is devoted to protecting journalists' First Amendment and free·
the
kind
of
president
Central
State
Central
State classmate of Chairman
dam-of-information rights. The committee has participated in several
University
needs,
the
chairman
of
the
Fred
Ransier
and a 1971 graduate. He
major lawsuits involving the First Amendment.
school's
trustees
said.
has
not
formally
accepted the posi·
· According to the lawsuit, Long was taking photographs on airpon propThe
trustees,
without
opposition,
lion
but
will
negotiate
a conttact by
erty when a Michigan State Police trooper ordered him to turn over his
selected
Garland
on
Wednesday
to
.the
opening
of
school
this
fall, Ranfilm, saying he would be detained until he did .
take
over
Ohio's
only
historically
sier
said.
,
The Blade didn't get the pictures back until Feb. 6, after filing a motion
black, public university. They voted
The school has been run by an
in federal coun demanding their return .
·
,
emergency
management team since
after
meeting
privately
for
about
two
. Mary Rigdon, the assistant U.S. attorney representing the NTSB,
last
summer,
when President Herman
ho"rs .
declined to comment on the senlemenl, The Blade said.
Lt. Col. Jim Bolger of the Michigan State Police said the trooper was
merely following the orders of NTSB officials in stopping Long and seiz.
ing his film.
·

Law professor eyes complaints

. Thursday, July 10, 1997

Spears, 304-675-1&lt;29.

AVON! Wanted person 10 take
over establ ished business. Uarr·
Friday. Salu rday. 9 :00 Till ? 86 . lyr Weaver304-882·264S.
Pine Street
As per Article 9, Dan;lfun and ·
Vacancies
Secrion B, fzJiag. or
Garage $.ale: Saturday, ~06 Amby
lana, Vinton. 6:00 -Dark. No Sale the Negotiated Agreement bet
ween the MLTA and the Board of•
Before 8 :00A.M. Tum Less Tnan Education, the Meigs Local
1!2 Milo After 554 Crossroads.
School District is po-stinglhe fOI ~
Gci.rage Sale: 9-6 P.M. July 11th, lqwing vacancies for ita regula•
12th , Womcns Plus Sizes. leaching staff ; Kinderganerf
Housot101d lwms. HcmC! ln1erior. Teacher at Pomeroy Elemantar_.,
llaby Sluff. lots More. 10 Old Fcrl Soc1al. ~tudies Teacher at Meiga
Trai l 1st Drlvowoy On Lolt Past Middlo School. Spcciai .Educa.tio""
Ra.:l10 Sta1 10n On 141, Rn1n I Teacher at Pomeroy Elementary
and Spec1al Education Teacher at
Shine.
Harrisonville ElemenlBry.
Moumg Sale : Mui11 -Fam11y July
1Hh. 12th , 9-5, 301 Ma~J I C Grovu AVON - S8 -$18 !Hr. No Door To
Door. 'Bonuses· Quick Cashll 1w
~oad , App rolum \l te ly 10 Miles
Out Route 141 ! Furntturc, Ctotn · 800-827-4640 ndfsiSirep.
1ng, Baby 11oms, Books, Crnlts.
Computer Usets Needed. Worl
Much Morel
own hours. $20k JO $50klvr 1·
'
Mov1ng Sale: Plyrnalos "5797 800-348-7186 xt508 .·
State Route 588, Saturdav. July
Cooks Some Experienct Neces.,
121h.
sary, Apply At The Reel Rooster,
218 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.
No Clothes Over A Dollar! Route
u 1. Front 01 Green Schools, Customer Servicl Repreaanta1Olh Thru 15th, 9-5.
live, Part- Time fle•ibla Hours, 2-4
Saturday. July 12th, 31e Bulavme Days Per Week, Strong Customei
Pike. 9· ? Bedroom Furniture, Service, Telephone, General Of,.
....,
lice' Skills Needed. Call For An
Home Interior, Odds ~~~s
Appointment, 814--f-4&amp;-2284
•
Thursday, &amp; Friday, 9·5, 6 MileS
DIRECTOR OF
Route 7 South From Gallipolis,
SOCIAL SERVICES
Lots Of Heme Inter ior, Wood

•TTR'-NE
'NDLOOKI,......
,..
~
FOR FUNUI
1.fii0.2M-01174 EXT. 4582
$2.119lollllll81111+
5erv·U1619) 64~

,..

Gentleman Seeking Compansionahip From Nice Female For Talks,_
Walkl &amp; "Frllndship. Send Re·
plies To : ClA 309, clo Ga l~palia
Daily Tr lbuOHne, 825 Third Avenue,

Galllpoli' &lt;5631.,
40
Giveaway

1 Year Old Call~o Cat &amp; 8 Week
Old Kittens, 1 Uale, 1 Female,

Crafts,

Glassware, Clolhino.
Pomeroy
'
Middleport
&amp; Vlclnhy

. We Are Seakin9 A Director Far .

All Yard Salet Must 8t Paid In
Advanco. Deadlln•: 1:00pm the
day before the •d Is to run,
Sund•y &amp; Mondav edition·
1:00pm Frtday.

Oualilicationa Include: W.S.W.
From An Approved School, Plut
L.S.W. Dut!as Will Include Home
Health Evaluations And S.wicl\
M.O.S. lnilial Aftd Follow-Up for
Long Term Care, And Supervit·

Friday and Saturday, 9am-4pm,

CompetiliVt Salary And a.nefita.

boy's 10, women's 12· 14, canning

Community Medical Cenlar, At;
tention : Branda McKenzie, 350
Charlol\e Avenue, Oak Hill, OH

i"11 01 The Hospilal'a Deporlmon(
36780 Rocksprings Rd .. clolhes· Please Sar1d R...,mo To: Oak Hil

jars, oauich egg!l: klr cralts.

614~446-4070.

Friday, Saturday, Sunday- 1834
Lincoln Heights. Crocka, Donles,
1 Year old female, part German jars. and co11ectible9, some an·
Shaphard!Chow milled, good with tiques, arrowheads, Pomeroy bOI·
klds, need• room to run. 30-4·895-· ties, books &amp; ·magaz •nea. 9am·

9pm

3659.

2-3"'
, · old ••11
- • 1•male• 1· lamalo'

our Social ServH:n Depanmonr
Rtoponsibiliti80 Include lnpotienl
Hospital, long Tarm Care Unl11
And· Home Healln Sarvlea"

'

456 58-

J.e:.;oe.;.__ _ _~--OONl RfAQIHI5!
Unlesa you want 10 loae Welghl
&amp; ·Feel G~al. CALl NOW I (304)

gray/white, both liMed &amp; de·
clawed. Inside ca1s . 304·882·

Garage sale,
E July
sl 10·11, Baum 1582=.·=03:;.73.::;__ _ _ _ __

:::::.:·--------1

Garage salt· Delong~• on SR
143 In Pomeroy. Friday and Sal·
urday, Sam-Spm . 1g9e Happy
Hol iday Barbie NRFB, gas l,u r·
nace, exterior door, storm aaor,
air condidoner and clolhe'

3477

3 large boxas of acrap pint &amp;
poplar. graat kinlin . 304·675·
3097
·
8 Kittens 8 Weeki Old, To Good

Home. 614-387-7490.
8 month old -nlala Norwegian Elk·
houndf Colli• mix puppy, house·
broke, good with children. 614·
992-8758.
·
Four

Addition., blin re denee.

Garage s,ale- Friday, July 11,
10:00·7:00, Satuiday~ July ,2,
10:00·4:00. Fry reaidance next to
Salisbury Elementary. R•ln or

shinl.

·

a week old kiuens, litter ..lily 10.11, turn firat road left pest

ninad, 81-4-387.Q639.
Frte firewood . Muat cut yourself.
Can pun trvcka ~ght up to wood.

304·675-&lt;1269 or :j04·67s.2669.

Free kittens to give away. 304-·
862·3557.

WMPO rrom Middleport hill, lilth

house.
July 11 · 13, T·F·S, 9am-2pm. Be·
side lire station in Chester, Oh.
Bunkbedl, Nord ic Trac, Levi1,

....

Large Yard Sale : J~o~ly 111h &amp;
Fraa puppfia. Golden retrie&gt;.Jer/ 12th, From 10:00 Till 5;00 3 Miles
Border coiUe n'ix, to good homes, Soulh, Middleport On Route 7.

et4-V49·2313.

~::::::::::.:::..-----1
Free to good home, 2 puppies,
ChowiCollie , shOts S wormed .
304-773-5415atterepm.

Moving aala- 2232 Shllh Street,
Syracuse.

C:...----::-:--:-::-:--::--:Satur.day, July 12th· 6 Oak Street,
Monkey Run, Pomeroy. Heavy
rain ~ancels.

1•

Driver~ Local Delivarw-. Good Pay
&amp; Banalits, Clua·B COL Helplul,
Bu1 Not Required, Pita.. Call

Home_City lea, 1.8Q0.&amp;45-442l
Eastern Local Sctlool Ollltlct,
t 997 ·~8 Supplemental Vacan·
t iel- Pos1ed as of: July I , 1CII7.
Junior High Football Coach, JV
Boy'a Baaketball Coach, Oth
Grade Basketball Coach, 8th
Grade BOy'l Basketball Coach,
Jumor High Cheerleader A.dvleor,
Band Dire.ctor, Flag Advisor,
Hlad Varsity Glrl'l Blllcttball
Coaen, JV Girl' e Baaketball
Coach, 8th Grade Girl's Baakal~
ball Coach, JV Vclleybell Coach,
Junior High Volleyball Coach,
Head Baseball CoaCh, Assistant
Varsity Bastball Coach, Htad

Golf coach, 7th Gr1de Boy'e 81.1·
ketbell Coach, 7th Gr•dt Glrl't
Basketball Coach, Alit. Junior
HiCin Football Coach, 8th Grade
Class AcNiSor, 10th Grade Cla,u
Advisor. Yearbook Advltor, P1ay
Director, ElemantafJ Choir, High
School Choir, 7th Gr•da Clau
Ad&gt;.Jisor, 81h Grade Cl111 Advl·
aar.

Biack lab IBenjla Typa Mi•. 2

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

Froo uprlgh1 plano, yo.u haul

=:.::.!:.:=:::.::.::::::.:.=:7=:-

Free To Good Home: Puppies,

~ .Males, 2Females.ll14-3ti7-7029.

away, 11-4-7-42·215e.

Syracuse Park, Saturday~ Sun·
day. Top name I'TIO'(III and more.

Yard sale· Friday and Saturday,
Silver Ridge Rd. across from
Easlern High off SR 7. Che111
lreezer, 130; stereo, $15 : couch,

Klnons 10 glvooway, moody gray
i :and:=.:whl::::la:..:,8:.;.14-.:.;9: 85-:.:&gt;1211::.1: .,- $30; organ, S3D: old cheat. 135:
814-74~·2138
•. lolo1hor cat &amp; Hwk aid klnons, lois
of old thing• ; till 1 bag ror
$1.00 and more.
J..-----.::m;;.;mlotln~· I """ 1111e 111. 304-882-3238.

Easy Workl E•collonl Pari At·

semble Producta at Homt. Call
Toll Free 1-800-467-5581 EXT.

12170,
!==------f.•perienced
conetrucrlon woril.er,
roofing, elecuicel, auperv;:;;z
sk~la helpful. Send to: oaa,
po B
·~ 45 Po
nal , · · 01 •n· •
mttoy,

Ohio 457811,

•.::~=:;_

_____

�I.

lhuraday, July 10, 1997

f

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 1&amp;

OOP

I

.

BRIDGE ·

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP

ALDER

3 Bedroom Home With G•raO• &amp;
Barn, Mainlenanca Fr... Located: Add1aon To'wnshlp, 014· 44 ..•
4192.
6.8 Acres, 2 year old aactianll

3br. 2 baths, central air. NICE I
Somerville Realty. 304·175-3030

'"304-1175-3-431 Jeen CaiiO.

Mobile Homes
for Slit

-·
1i8e Chevy full-size van, good
cord. . 30H75'6153.

FACTOR\': DIRECT.
liD MIODI.£ WAN.
SAVE-.

Shocks, Exhaust, Etc. Lots Of E~ ·

Oakwood Homes It thl only
dHIIr in 1M trl•llate area !hit
builds and 11111 their own
hcnn• For fac&amp;ory direct prlc11,

tras l 77.000 Milts, $3,800. 08()

Call614-256·1147.

lRl. wv.304-755-51115.

209f).

large tllecdon of used horn.. 2
or :1 bedl00t111. Starting at $3AQS.

Beginning Salar~ Of S8.79 Per
Hour Plus Benefits. An E~ual Opportunity Employer. Applications

Condlllono. 100% Hoapillllzallol\ May Be Picked Up AI Jackson
401 K Plan, Lllo lneuranco. Paid CO'Unly Department 01 Human
Vocallolll, Paid Holiday, Apply AI
Services, t35 Huron Street,
Or llal Raaume To:
Jackaon Onio Or e_. ContaC1ing
Beny McManaway, Oirrtc:tor At
814·286-4181 Berween B·OO A.M
And 4:3U P.M. Filing Deadline Is

July 16, 11197 At4:30 P.M.

Temporarily Carpenter Needed,
Need Uachlnlat, Minimum 3 Up To 2 Months, 110 51 Per
Years Experience, Setup And Hour, Call Warner H~at 1 ng &amp;
Oporolt Lathe And Mil. 814-448· Cooling, 614·985-4222.

2835.

tight Receptionist, 20 Hours Per
Week, Send To: Reaume, P.O.

Mount Vtrnon Avenue,
room•. 2 or 3

;!!Chon,

fenced
back~ard .

3o4-e75-e31,0.
HouH and properwy, approx. 41·
cret. Ideal start.,. home. BHc:h

51., Pomtroy OH. 3D4-882·2Dn.

Box 542. Karr. OH 45643·
Now Accepdno Application• For

dleport. Billiardt, video games.

ParHime ucretary, 15·25/hrs.

....tc.. PayroM, typW\g, billing. Fkli•l·

ble houl'l, eaperience preferred.
Send to: Daily Sentinel, P.O. Box
7211-4o4, ~ Qio 457811.

Wanted · Optometflc AsSistant,
experience preferred. Send rasume c/o The Oail~ Sentine4, P.O.

Box

729-48, f'omeJOy, OH 457811.
wanted To Do

Plan!Managor IBalchtr . Pro- 180

___

duction Experience With Con- 1-~-=..,:..:..,...,:.:.:::..;_:._::..;_
crete Materials, Dry lWei Batch- ANY ODD JOBS: Extftfior paintmg. Block Prod., lmmedtata Need ing, thrubl &amp; weeds trimmed,
ln ·Niw HIW8n Atea. PIIIH Send landscaping, sidewalks edged,
Rn_ume To Rose Terry 5711 SIB· lawn care, etc. Call Bill 304-875Pitl Mill Road. Richmond, VA 7112.

Babysitting In rrrt home localod In

23221.
Poot Manag8f' For The Gallipolis
Municipal Foot Applications May
Be Plckld Up At"Tha Municipal
Bulldlng, Recreation Department,
518 Second Avenue, Gallipolis,

Pomeroy, 24 hour aarvlce, reasonable rates, eaperlenced, refer·
ences upon request, 814·912-

7726.

OH eo- Tho Hours 01 a A.M. Experienced carpenlr)' and remoTo !i P.M.
dating. Ins ida and outside,
' POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT

BYITEII!I COORDINATOR To
Develop. Evaluate And Maintain
Computer Syatam For A Multi·

decks, v1nyl sid1ng, add-on addi·.
tiol"'s, cabmat retactng Of newl_y
rebuilt. Aalerencet·Ftlll Eau-

JimSh~l 304-4175'1272.

rrei8L

Georges Portable Sawmill. don•t

ance~,e 14 _24 s- 5887 .

SOI!wo18APiu&amp;
Bachelor's Degree In

Com~ter

Sclanco (Or Rtlaltd Field) Wi111
Prelarred. Compati!Mt
With E•collont Fringe Benelit
ckage. Submit Resume, A
1.t11tr Olln\ereot With Salary Re-

Will babyail tn my home Mon-Frt.
3)4-875-1'831.

Will babysit, three meals with
eire, excellenl care, in my home

Or yours. Cll6f4·992-7647.

~

Will Do Babysltong Evenings &amp;
W8 ek d1 A1 M H
C 11 AI
en
Y ome, a
7
814
.., P.M. -448-044&lt;1.

qukemenll And Thru Leiters Ot
Reference To Ronald A. Adkins,
Ewutive Director. Galha- Jackson- Meig1 Board Of Alcohol ,

Will Haul P1clc -Up Loadel. Variou1 Olher Side Jobt, Patnting,
Landscaping, Ek. 014 U6 '"?

Drug

And Mental
Hnlth Serwicat, P.O. Box 514,

FINAN C IAL

Gallpollo. 0111o 45631 By .klly ie,
.11187.EOE
21
POSITION: CASE MANAGER

o

For The Gallia ·Jackson ·Meigs
Treatment Attern.tlvea To SUeel

Business
OpportunHy
INOncEI

Counselor (CCDC) Or llcansod

Social Work (lSW) Preferred 1
Meigs County R111dant IValld

Oriyer't license: RESPONSI·
IILITIES: Screening, Alllll·
menl. Referral, Call Manage·
ment, Monitoring, And Random
Urinalyals For Court Referred
Subatance Abusing Juvenlltl.

Sable Ridge 14x72, 3bedroom,

Must Sell: House, 8 Acrn, U\llng

y.,,,

Old. Patriot Area. 155,000 814256-6867.
Newly remodeled lhree be«oom.

APPLICATION DEADLINE: Ap·
pllcollons Available AI Tho Meigs

30~

or 81o4-992-5478111tr5pm.

Three bedroom home with one
acre land, one mile on SR 325,
above ground pool, garage a~

barl\ 81·-742-2078.

•

County Juvenile Court Appllca·
tiona Mull Be Received Bt July

~~~~~·i;li·=~!,D~;,~~
~~~~~~~;_______

We Are A Growing Cot~struction

B-l-0-W-O.U-TI
$499 !lcMn on 181\ld lingle aocbOn. $999 Down on HIIIC1.mu~­
IK1ions. 2·3 or 4 Bedroom models availablo.Oakwoad Homao
N1tro. WV. 304·755'5885.

12)160, all elecuic, 2bedroom,

And Ia Comronable And Conlld·

tnt In Talking Wllh People. Tho

Poaillon Entails Es~matlng And
Bidding Remodeling Jobs, New
Construc:tion Joba, .a.nd Other

Rllltld AINL There lA Custom..
tr Follow-Up, Contract Wriling,

E1c. That Goeo Along Wllh The
Job 1\loo. It You Foal Up To The
Chlllenge Give Ua A cal At: 614448·4514 Or Stop In AI 1.;03
Eastern Ave•. Galllpolil, OH We
Art Ctw'i&amp;tlan'l Cons11uction And
Look Forword To -llng 'o\:iu.
S••klng Qualified Individual To
Administer Low Income Rental
Alllltance Program, R11ponai•

ble For Oa, fDI)' Operaliont

Which Will Include All Admlnll-

ltaliYI Functions, ContacJI With
Landlords And lntptctlon Of
Aonlll Unlll. Knowlodgo 01 Sllndarll Oltlco Equlpmom And Corn-

putt&lt; Required. Attention To Do;
tall A Must . Must Bt Able To

All rooleolale -lnQ ~

1hla nBWij)llpor 11 subjec1to
rhe Federal Fair Housing Act

ot 1988 which makes MlliegiO
to adllertlse "any preterence,
limitation 01 diacrimlnation
based on race, coklr, religion,
se.: familial atatua 6r natklnal
origln, or any lntM'Itlon 1o
make~nt such prefe1'811C8,
limitation or dilcrimlnatlon."

TIU _ . w i l l not
k~or.cep1

lldvet'tilementl for realastale

which Is In violation ot 1t1o
law. Our readers ere hereliy

lnlonnod-lhaUII dwellings
-lnlhlla111 avilllablo on an equal
oppot'IUr1l1y beals.

Maintain A Harmonloua Relaliono~lp Wllll Appllcantl, Landlor-ds,
And StaH. Sand Resume To: 381
Buck Rld91 Road Bidwell, Ohio
4581.;. Wrilt HAP On Envalopo.
Call 814·441·0251 For lnforma·
don. No Roeume Accepted A~.,

7-1!1·17.

EOE
Shophttd Logging Anyono E•·
porltne» With Chain Saw, Aloo
~~.11481211o102.

REAL ESTATE

Mobile Home, Township Road, 2

in Syracuse. doea not Uood, 81+

992-39110.

11

Jr. 304·576-2336 ar
004-4175-2722.

-------------...,.----.....r
RENTALS

2 Bedroom Home For Renl, No

Polo, $240/Mo., $150 Oeposl1,
2bedroom on Howard Avenue,
$300/mo plus $200 deposit No
ptll. 304-e75-8672.
3 Bedrooms, Near North Gallla
High ScOOol, No Pels, $400/Mo.,
Plus Deposit; 614,.48-8495.

1064 Aller 8 PM.

448-2957.

Hi182 14x70 Nice Lot, Ou•ll
Creek, 3 Bedrooms, 1 Bath, A.

1988 14x70 Cla-,ton Newport,
2badroom, 1bath, Cia, new car·
po~ 1 porcll wtrool. l13,!i00. 304-

10am-2prn. 304·882-3716. Equal

Housint~ Oppurtunll)l.

Nice 2 Bedrooms, 4 112 Miles
From Gallipolis. Watet", Stove, Refrigerator Furnished, No Pets,
$275 / ~o, 8141 · 256-1684, 814 ·

686-9238.

Floors. CA. 1 112 Bath, Fully Csr-

0101 .

Tw1n Rivers Towet', now accepting
applications for 1br. HUD subsidIzed apt for elderly and handi-

Unfunished 2 Bedroom Apartment, 322 Third Avenue, 61•-

256-1903, F10m 9 A.M. -9 P.M.

Upstairs Apanmenl For Rent·
$300 00 Month • Must Pa-, For
Gas &amp; Phone - Now Ki~hon o.,
Large Bedroom • living Room
And Bath • Excellent Condition.
No Pets. Deposit Reqwed. Can
Be Seen At 1403 'Eattern Ave-

nue, GallipoliS, Cal 614-446-4514

For Appointment

450

Sq fl. Near Golf Cour•e $6501
Mo., Available lmmed•ately~ 614·

Buying eporta cardsl
I will buy any Elites or new Dtamond Kings. If you have cards to
sell, let me know. Cell 614·949-

30116.
Concrete &amp; Plastic Septic Tanka.
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evan! Enterpnses. Jackson, OH

Furnished
Rooms

Sleepmg rooms with cook1ng.
Also trallet space on nwr. All
hook· ups. Call after 2 ·00 p.m ,

304-773-5651.Mason WV
460 Space for Rent·
Hurricane Main St. 1,000sq. ft.
Ollu:e space . Formerly beauty
salon. $550/mo. 304-562·5840.
Mobile home tile available between Athens and Pomeroy, call

PllftO Dr. 814-446-4525

JET

AERATION 1.10rORS
Rflpa1red. New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock.

Maple desk, dresser, twin size
bed With mattren. TVNCR stand,
microwave, dlnene set, 61-4·985-

3595.
O~lo

740

·•

Motorcycles

olluallon

I JEST DRAPPED

Share W1rh 1 -2 Other Contttuc·
lion WOrkers. 814-,..2515.

Three bedroom houR In Middl•
port with garage,

Hay &amp; Grain

.

24S-92 12.
Tobacco water bed plants. 304 ·

895·3954 ,

TRANSPORTATION

Valley Bonk Will Oller For

Sale A 10~ Redman M.IH Serial
111244098, A 1991 Breezewood
MIH Serial 111237710. And A 710 Autos for Sale
1Ji78 Freighllinar Truck VIN
T-blrd, good conduion, $3700,
ICB1 13HP142162. Public Auc- 61 4·992-4256

·es

tion Will Be Held AI Tho OVB
Annex, 143 Third Ave., Galllpolia,

1980 Chrys ler Newport. good
on ly

OH On 7112197 A110:00 A.M. M1 condition, one owner,
H'o &amp; Truck Will Be Sold To High- 44.417 miles. 304-675-2()31 .
est Bidder ·Aa Is'" Without Expressed Or Implied Warranty

And May Bo Sean By Calling

Keith Johnton At 614-441·1038.
OVB Raur'll!t The Righi To Ac-

1983 Ch9\l)' Celebnt-,. 1985 Buick
Century, both run good. asking
$500 each, ~14-992-4540

cept Or Reject Any And All Bids, 1983 Oids
And Withdraw Property From

Sale Prior To Sale. Torms 01 Sale:
CASH OR CERJFIED CHECK.
Rainbow eweeper WJattachments.

304-075-1725 belore 5pi1\

Recliner, Oak Dresser, Curio,
81~.0137.

7,000 BTU 111 conditioner, wnh
elltra lransterable warranty, S200.

Cutlass Supreme 2dr,
auto, Steel blue, 350 Rocket w/
t2,000 miles, shift .kit wuac1ng
transmission . new t1res, moon
roof. oa·raged in winter. 304·882·
3552 alter 7pm . Senous call
only $2,500.
1984 Buick. Electra Station Wag·
on. 116,000 M1les. Great Condi·
tion Inside &amp; Out, $2,600; 1983
Nissan Max1ma Wrecked. Me•
chanu::ally Good Shape, $500.

614-1182-38511 or 614-949-2607.

614-245-h111 .

Full IIU 1tUCk 10pptr $45; new
portable phone, wilr se!l at 112

1984 Cdro Z28, 350 motor, au·

price, 125:814-11-49-2045.

Set Of

.

Amer~can Raang Wheels,

14 Inch, Plaid $440, Will Sell For
1300; Headlight Covera For 8~

rona. Paid 140 W111 San For $20:

814

us

8005.

lomatic OD, red , t-tops, PS. PB,
PW, power seat, Dartona radials.·

$2500 0!10. 614-367-793&amp;

1984 Ford LTD Stati on Wagon.
good cond .. runs well . Mo'f'IRQ,
Must sell . $900 080. 304·675·
2 105 01 304-675 -0967 ask lor

lout• Free Eslimalesl Add-On showroom condi t1on. 304 ·675·

510

614-992-31g4.

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
10150 2 Bedrooms, AC, Trash &amp;
Water Furntthed, 1 M1le From
Ga~ipolia On ROJIIe 141, No Peta,
Relerences. $100 Depasit, 12001

Mo., 614-448.0761.

Household
Goods

Appliances :
Reconditioned
Wishers, Dryers. Ranges. Rein·
grators, liiO Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag, 614· 448·

7795.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, rafrig&amp;ratort,

ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 76

1•x70 Suilabfe for 1 child, no in·
side pet1, App,legrove, WV. 304-

678-28110.

VIne Street, Call 814 · 446·7398,

1-li00-499-3499.

-:-:'"-----::-:---:--:---1 Kllchtn carper, $8.50 Silo On All
2 Bedroom T1aller For Rent; 8

Room Size carpets, Mollohan

Miloa Down 218, Galipoli' S2251 Furniture, 814-448-7444.

Mo., + Deposit, Reler.encet Re-

quired, 814·44D-8172, 614·258- Nice Clean 11 FL Amenno Allrig1251.

erator, Avocado Green. Greal

3 - railer. 304-1175'4088.

Condlllonl 814-256-1291 .
Scla. ChOir, End Toblol, Chnt 01

Two bed'oom trailer 1n Middlepof1.

814-W2·3194.

IN

TO

.••
•

•

1978 Kawasaki jet ski, call&amp;1•· '
992-32+4.
I
1987 20 ' Citation In/OUtboard .
170hp., trailer &amp; accessories in·'
eluded. Runs &amp; looks great. \

1

'

'

I

1988 Ranger 373V 18' 12 ·24V•
Trolling Motor, 150 XP Evinruda ~
Oultx)ard, $9,800, 614·992-2710. ~

1989 2A Ft. Pon10on Wnh 50 HP
Engine Good Condition. $4,200,

814-448-411811, 61.._._5.

1ii3 POlaris Wav. Runner Runt i

Like ATop, $3,800, Dayo: 814·:
448·8579, Or Evarings: 614-448-.
1324.
Two 1902 650 Yamaha Wave •
Runners, Purchased New In :
1992, Deluxe Double Trailer, ,
15.500. Oaya : 81•-4ol8·8570, Or t

E'""ingl: 814-448-1324.
760

•

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

BudQel Price Tran1mlnions,

Sillrbng at 199.00 and Up, Uaod I
Rebuilt, All Typos, Over 10.ooo',
Transminions, A.cceu Trantfer

Cases I Rear Enda, 6U·245·· ·

Hoor Pumps Only Sllghty Higt1er.

Call Us Today. 1i97 Is The
Twenty . Seventh Year In The
HaatinQ &amp; Cooling Bulineul 814·

~. Llmpa, 11 ..245-5181 .

2~0 ailer l!pm.

1988 Chevy Nolla, body good
cond, needs head gasket &amp;

OOPl&gt;!.. . rr:s
VOU . "FORC&gt;ET
IT. THEN.

6677

Full line of auto body panels,
Pl!lints and suppllet, also glau,
light assembly. Oxygen and ace·
tyiene lanka filed and exchanged,
814-742·2792.
I

·

·

2 Bedroom Apartment, Central
Air, Gas 1-ielt;-WID Hook-Up
CIOII To GallipoliS, No Pets. 814·
2bdrm. apia., 1otat electric, appllancu furnished, laundry room
facill~tt. cloae to achool In town.
Appllcat.onl available at : Village
Graan Aptt. 14i or call 8l4·8i2·

11,358 down, S2~1mo. frH tlr, 3711. EOH.
lklrdng. a dtiiYOtY. Only II Oak·
wood Homes Nitro, WV. 304· 755-

Antiques

Buy or sell. AIYirlne Antiques,

1124 E. Moln SIIHL on Rl. 124,
Pomeroy. Houro: II.T.W. 10:00
o.m. 10 •:oo p.m., S.nday 1:00 ID
n·oo p.m.' I14-9D2-2526. Ruoo

Moo,. owr'llf',

Metll roll· top desk, old, good

cond. $850 llrm. 30&lt;-175-3281
olltr 8:00pm.

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise
11 hp Lawn Chltl Riding Mower.
1200. PhOnt 304-675-2008 a11t&lt;
4:00pm.

P55T!

CAN I
:COPY
, OFF

' .. You?

:
,

600-273-9331.
Set of atock car r1mt. $60; set of •
Crager chrome r8\letJI, $60 ; •

790

.

Campers &amp;
Mot!)r Homes

HAVINO AN OLDeR
SISTER IS LIKE
HA¥1146 A COMPA~
. TO GUIDE VOU
TI-IROU611 LIFE ..

Support Walker for elderly or
handicap .&amp; electm: lift ' chair.

304-075'2290.

1990 Buick LaSabre custom,
n1ce clean car, looks &amp; runa

good, $5000. 304- n3-!5349.

U1ad 3210 Dltch....Wii'~h Trencher. 1991 Corsica 3 .1 11·8, Loaded,

oonrot $11,300. 304-675'5286.
20 fl. Argosy, (By Air Stream)

T.T. Very light, Pull With An-,
Medium Size Car, COmplete!-, Re-

4743.

furt&gt;ishod, 12.800,614-448-2957.

1995 Saturn SC2. Automatic, Air,
Cruise, AMIFM Calltttt, Trunk

Slide-in camper lor Nilan, To-,ota, Datsun &amp;mall pickup. aetl-contained, Deer Hunter's Specie!,

Release, $12,500 Cal After 5 P.M.

(Serious lnquiri&amp;l Onltl) 814·

448-&lt;4015.

$275, D14-i92·5192.

: •

•
0

..
0

.,

SERVICES

~~~~~~~~~~~~P.O.
AST~O-ORAPH

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Building
Supplies

Btock, brick, aewar pipes. wind·
owa. lintel' etc . Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Call 614 · 245-

5121 .

56Q

Pets for Sale

A Groom Shop ·Pel Grooming .
Featuring Hydro Bath. Don
ShHII. 373 Georg11 Creek Rd.

e14·448-o231 .
AKC Pomeranian !'lips, ShoiS
Wom.cl, 614-448-8253.

&amp;

AKC Reg Bax1t1, tst shots &amp;
wormed. 614-992·4199
AKC Registered Champton
Bloodline Boxer Puppl11, Tail a
Docked, Dew Claws Remov8d, ,
Vet Checked, Warmtd, Six Famalta: Orw Malt. 614-448-7166.

AKC RtgllttroG Ron Woller
Pupa, 2 Moloo $275 Each,
...e827.
AKC Ron Wallar Puppies, 8

- 0 4 1280, 81+2,5&amp;-1851.

Upton Used Cars Rt. 62·3 Miles
South of Leon . W'oJ~ Financing

Availibla Xlo4-_!5&amp;1oBD.

C&amp;C General Home Main- '
tenance- Painting: vinyl tiding,

carpentry, doo11, 'M~, balha.
mobile home repair and more. For ','

lrea es~mate Call Ct1et, 114-D82-

llonlltl
111111

By Phillip Alder
You cannot please all the people
all the time. G.K. Chestenon wrote,
"An consists of limitation. The most
beauliful pan of every picture is the
frame ."
Bridge is mostly a science, but
occasionally it approaches an an
fonn. I find loday's deal beautiful,
though I am not planning to frame it!
How would you play in four spades
after West leads the club two, dum·
my's queen winning the trick?·
The deal occurred during ~ teamof-four match in Denver. South stan·
ed wilh nine tricks: six spades, one
bean and lwo clubs. The hunt was on
for number 10.
The first declarer drew two rounds
of trumps and played a diamond to
his king. However, West won wilh
the .ace and returned a diamond. East
took two more tricks in lhe suit ~
before swilching lo a bean. Declarer
finessed his queen, but il lost to
West's king: one down .
l)outh complained about ali four
cards being wrong, but the second
declarer showed that no luck was
needed. After drawing trumps, he
cashed dummy's club ace, ruffed a
club high in hand, returned to dummy with a trump, and called for the
iasl club.
When East discarded, declarer
had two winning options. He could
ruff, cash the heart ace, and exit wtth
the queen. Whichever opponent won
the trick would have to open 'up dia·monds or to concede a ruff. and·dis·
card.
Instead, South chose the anistic
line of discarding a low diamond,
giving West the trick. Whichever red
suit Wesl returned, declarer would
receive his lOth trick in it.

ITHURSDAY

queen bed. loaded, very good '
cond, includes hitch &amp; away ' ·

Uled 3210 DitCh Witch Trencher.

614-894-7642.

and unci
mlxt...
290atecl
3D Bakery
buy
31 Fomout

40 Ford llop
41 Botat
42 :rv:lte

W&gt;ul/ ~ (loatilf on tJ cloud wf!h
rhe buys y.,u·n find rn the
dtJssifeds.

1i88 Hi·lo 22 FL Camper Excel- ·
lent Condition. 'AC, Awn~ng. ElK· i
Inc Fronl Jack And Many Other
Accessorial, 11,250 81 t&amp;-2&lt;15· .
5811.

Great Condttion, Inside And Out.
Runs Good $4,500, 614·448-

23 llii1Nglinf
24Hadtollave
25 Mlmi'IIIUY
26 - - Wliil for
Chfl27 Clay

· wlnt vallty

45 Wood atrlp

46 -ofpatuge
47 Farmer'a
purcheu
49 lllaydl1yl
50 lleo - •tung
52 Mine lind
53 Picnic
pall

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campo8

Celeonty Ctphet Ct)'plograrnl.,. C!'Mied from ~ by 1amota P«1JJe PM' and .,.._,.
Each Nttef ll'llhl qq, ..... for lflOiw Todly.1 CJW· S ~ C

'HDL

S E J XL

INUVLA
ORH

J

z

TWH

GDJNL

HDUH

HDUH

T LEW

0 R' E T LA ,

DL

INUVLA

0 U A N V ;- •

(SWXI . WZLE)
TLA
EWELX
PREVIOUS SOLUTION· "II lime were lhe wicked sheriff in a horae opera
pay lor riding lesson~ and lake his gun away"- W.H. Auden.
'

I'~

••••••
•••
'::~~~, S©i.~lA-l&amp;t.~s·
Nlloolloy ClAY I. POlLAN_;:.__ _
_
0 four
Recmangt~ '-'tars of the
words beecramb~

low 10 form lour limplo words.

~-:-j,. . rt:. . .:l;. .:s: .,.;(~1;.2.;1:. ,. .1-.~l .

I

GUNEO

~I

I

--,.;I:_;T..:S::..,::H:...;.O
s I--11-..:,_'
_

I_ I_

_

My roommate always laid
around and just wished lor the
best. I think that there are no
shade. trees on the way to

t-j- .I.: C:. A~I"'6s~ls~c;.,I7,.!E:. .I,. . .l ~ -i~;~~ ~~~h:h~~~~1.
I ~~-:e~nus r r r r r t I' I
~~sc_::.Lmtutol I I I I I I I
L-..1.-.1..-l--.J....J:......J · you develop from np No. 3 below.

SCJtAM.UTS ANSWI!tS

lng; 1699 McCormick Road, 8t4- ,.
446-1511 .

614·894-7642.

22l:t~'J:'..

37 Falrgr38 Portlend'a

-.

446 8308, 1-800-~1-00!18.
J
b&lt;akes, 1600. 304·882·2219.
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon 1988 Ford Taurus, exc. running
Upright, Ron Evans Enterpnsas, cond , $1,200 080. 304-875- ...,..,..,.-:------ ~
1i88 Pace Alrow 34'L basement.
Jacl&lt;lon, Ohio, HI00-537-9528.
5320.
TV, VCR, Salelllle, CB, 8.5 gon,
Stroller, high cha ir, drening 1986 SS Monte Carlo, $3,200 . 2/VC, leYeitrS. 304-875'1131.
I
table, M i n~ baby bed, car seat. 304-417!;-5339.
198i Argosy (by Airstream) 33' ~
304-175-4546.

550
530

r

New -gas tanks. 1 ton truck ~
1
whe ela &amp; radiators. 0 &amp; R Auto, •
Ripley, WV 30•·372-3933 or 1 · •

814-742-2407.

11kbNW

21.S.W.

43. car:!'mla

$2,000 nego 304-773-5921 . II~

$6.ooo. 304-675-4221.

·=

, 3 Sltclct&lt;
14-llnar15 8loocl fluid
51 HocUy player
18 Alrlctn land . 54 Defy
17 Plfpon
55 Ovwly
18 Llq. meoaure
cltcoratod
20 Sixth eense
56 Mlnldlke animal
(abbr.)
57 Cleared
21 llkaoome
aheiVH
DOWN
25 Actor Jack 1 Burlll
28 Beau 2 Spriglltly tune
32 At--lor
3 Now--me
words
33 Hlmalayen
-nloallep
4U.S. aoldltra
counlry
34 Pltcl of chino 5 Sklnbonom
8 Loo-.blt
35 Smtlla
108e1Ngle
7 Young turkey
31AWuo
11 Aldlatlon
8 Cany
Anouk-UIWI
9 Give - - Wllln 12 Ginger37 - Scott King

Opening lead! • 2

'

Waterlilly'l While &amp; Yellow SS To
$8 Call814,.48·94 711.

•

TH'

NEW BROOM II

1994 Honda 2 whee l driv~;

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for sale

44P_gr_.

.J5 12th1P'tdera

The beauty
of bridge

w.-

448-2072.

··AN'

see THr NEW BRIDE··

son wi th all the eauas, llertO, t
cl ock, casseue radio, Intercom ;
system, cruise control, CB radio, ,
$14,000, call 614· 742-3181 .
~

answer leB\1&amp; message.

f:/""ltr'l .

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
South
Weal North East
1•
Pass
I•
Pass 2 1
Pass
t 1
Pass Pass
Pas6

BARNEY

0

0788.

51115.

•:

11 Ft. Sell-Contained Truck •
Solid Wood 80 Inch Olfice Desk, Tim
House in Pomeroy lor sale or 614·385-4387.
1100: 15 Cu. Fl. Freezer 1 112 1984 Honda Accord hatchback, Camper, 814-4411-2583.
ran~ 814·892·3090.
Yeara Old, Finger Print Proof, high mill's, mter1or good condition, 1975 Pull Behind Camper 21 Ft. '
470 Wanted to Rent
$200, Call Be1ween 10·5. 614· air, S50QOBO. 814·949-2344.
Good Condition, $1,400, 080 ~
Newly remodeled one bedroom
441!-&lt;1553.
614·448·9853. _ _ _
:.:.:...:..::.::::=:.,...
house, near Gallipolis: also one Two or three Uedroom tlouse m
1965 Collector's Series Cad11iac
bedroom furnished apanmenl in counuy, cal! 614·i40· 1go(l,
SUMMER SALE: Central A1r Sedan Seville, Raman Chariot, 1i84 Prowler 22' AIC Awning; •
Middlepor~ 811-9112·2178.
Conditioner~ : Full 5 Year Warran· near perfect condition
1978 Swiss Colony 20' AJC Awn· ~
MERCHANDISE
ty. ,r You Oon't Call Us Wo Both 1919 Ford F-150 auto. au, near lng : 1975 Mallard 27 With Awn- ,

Creok, AllllllancH a 10.12 Dock
Stayo, Pilct To Gol 114·411-

10i7 14180 S or • Bedroom,

640

LivestoCk

Ti mothy &amp; OrcHard Grass,
Square Bales. Heavy Bales. 614·

2720, AFTeR I P.ll
&amp; dryar. 30+67!HI574.

Otkwood Homeo. Nitro, WV. 304756-51115.

We make hydraulic hose assemblies. Sider's Equ1pmant 304·
675-7421.

Commercial Custom SlaughterIng &amp; Pto(4essing. WV Sausage
Co. 907 41h St. New Haven, WV.
Caii304-8S2-3 194 br appl

18&amp;4 3 Bedrooma, lacattd 41h
Mile Off Reule 8, On Gtorges

1887 Ux70 2 or 3 Bedroom,
lli5 down. \11.85/ma. Only at

gallon Rubberma1d water lrt&gt;ugh's,

Grubb's Plano- 'tuning &amp; repairs.
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the

0155, 814-448-27011.

croc11t Ctll1·800-e91-em.

992-5518 BYenlnQS.

$100each, 614-247-1100

630

Utility Trailer, Nice Sofa &amp; Loveseat, Bedt, Uving Room Cha~rs,
Microwaves. Color T.v.. King Size
Wa!erbed, Complete With M1rror
HeldKiatd. Autorn~bc Dryer. 8 Ft
Topper For 8 Fl. Bed. 814·379 -

Now-t917 14 Wldt-1 both, $8991
down, ll391mo, wl1h approved

7421 .
487 N.H. haybm, $21!00: 1W0 150

1-1100-537-9528.

Cal! Ron Evans, 1-800-537-9528.

Tara TownhOuse Apartments,
Very Spac1ous. 2 Bedrooms. 2

References Needed! 614·448·
3817.

EJCteutive Home For Lease, 2.000

1974 Cameron mobile home, ex·

Newly nmo¥ated, electric heat,
air conditioned, laundry facilities,
sewer, water &amp; trash induded In
nmt. Extermination dooe monthly. Income llmita do apply. HUO
accepted. Old Ash Village Apartments, eth &amp; George St. New Haven, WV. Office hours ·Mon-Fri

Miloa Off Routt 7, 123.000, 614· capped EOH 30H75-6679
2511-9104, f14-251H1135.
Two bedroom apartlnent in Mid8 10 9 lllnlhs ol an acre of llalland dapor~ no pats, 614-W2-~.

Mobile Home 12x70 2 Bedroom,
All Electric Washer Over HookUp Mull Be Moved 61-4-441-

Immediate Po11eulon, 114-441.

Who Hu A lla&lt;k!l"'und In Saln

Schools, Paved Road, $20,000,
Raslricted. 814-245-9033.

WIDE ONLY AT OAKWOOD 410 HoUseS for ~ant
HOMES OF BARBOURSVILLE

-~1 TIME ONLVI

10% OFF all farm tractor pans.
Sider's Equ1pment. 304·675·

pered, Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
350 LOIS &amp; Acreage
Patio, Start $350/Mo. No Pets.
2 Pluo AClWI Sale: Wooded Lot~ Lease Plua Security Oepas1t ReGroen Townohip, Gallipolis City . quired, 81 4-446·3481, 81 4·446-

14111.00 OOWN 1 1.11'1. APR !f~_uiiluiGJove· Scenlc Valley.
2acrt loll. public watar.

895'~591 alter 6:00pm, no 10b 10
21, 1997. Sand To G·J·M TASC, srT'IIi or 1D BIG. WV.02120e
875-4825.
P.O. Bo• 88, Ga!!&gt;olis. OH .;51131. Livingston's basemern water·
Gallla -Jacoson ·Molgs TASC 11 proofing, aiU baaement repaira 11193 14x70 Glamour Beth, Dish·
An Equal Oppcnunit[ Employer
free estimates, liltt1me washar. Heal Pump, Rented Lot
Fundod By The Ohio Deptt111tnl done,
guarantee.
10yr1 on job expen- Must Sacrlflcol Prlctd Upon In·
Of Alcohol And Drug Addiction
ljiOCrion, 814-441.0701.
S"viCII Through The ·Gallia • onco. 304-075'2145.
Jackson -Meigs Board Of Alco·
11184 14x80 Brandy Wino 3 Bed·
hoi, Drug Addlc~on And Mtntal
room1, 2 Full Balhl, Dock. GarH-Sarvlce.l.
den Tub, laundr~ Room, 3 Ton
CA, W1111 Heat Pump, Underpin·
SALES POSITION AVAILABLE:
nino, Tie Downa, Man-, EJCtru,

Company LQok•ng For Someone

rate. Rented lot can move or
stay. Ready lo move ln. Moving,
muat aell. 304-875-5943, leave
ITMIUIIglt if nD-8111WBf.

20 Acre Farm, Barn, 3 Bedroom·

modlod, Now Dilhwaohor, CA. 2
Services
Bulldingo, $13,000, Muot Seol
HARTS MASONARY - Bloco, 814-2A5-8153.

briO. &amp; s~one work, 30 years ••·
penance, reasonable rates. 30•·

Can 1011 together or aopo-

Nice home in Syfacuae, ciolt to 110 Acre Farm 8 Year Old
-~ nice lot, twa bodn&gt;om, liv- Houu, Machinery And Canle Ining room, k1tchan and baltl, ullliiY cluded, Reduced Price, Will Ac·
room, priced to Jell, 814·7·U- cap! Ollero. 814.007-7031.

¢all Toda1 AI 814-US· 118,950, CaD 614·245-5585.

Professional

111p1.

ono and 112 bath homo In M330 Farms for Sale
por~ 614-992-3485 altor5pm.

Retlrtm&amp;ru Data Is Near, Which Ccwerecl Porchea, And OutbuildMakes Me Want To Cheer. •Pet ing, Uparadea Include New FurFor Sate• If You're Serious nace, HBiil.t Pump, And Carpeting.
Buymg AI I Am About Re- Portable Dishwasher Sta-,t,

230

central air, .new carpel $34,000 .

2bath, lots of buill-in e•tra. Bx20
deck, 10x30 awning. concrete

Room, Ki1&lt;:hen, DR, 6 Bod1001111, 2

610 Farm Equipment

Rd., 2 bedroom, 2 bath mobile

4514 Of 814-992·2817.

celont condlllon, $8500, 814-mCrime Program. (Malgo Loeo~lon). OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. 3931.
SALARV !BENEFITS: Beginning recommends that you do busiSalary $19,720 Nogotlatod Ac- ness with people you know, and 1979 14•70 Schult With Ellpando
cOrding To Exper~ence. Licen- NOT to send money throuph the liwlng Room And A. 1986 12xol2
sure, And Education /ItO Houra mall until you have invesbgated Add-A-Room On A Rented Lot.
Four Bedroom1, 1 112 B11h1,
Par Wook ICoun11 Employee 111e ollerlng.
Family Room. Underpinning, 2
Bonollll. QUALIFICATION8:
Certified Chemical Dependency

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Paiesline Rd., Glenwood, 15
miles from .Milton 1111. Johns Ck

304-582-5840 or 304-576-2718.

14.000. 304-773-9554.

Addiction

755-7191.

S&lt;Joolh

41TVnewa

o K 54
• 63

I

19,9 FLTC - Ultra Harley DaWd·,

Palattlne Rd., Glenwood, 15
m1111 from Millan axiL Johns Clc

In Rutland , 4 bedroom, 1 ph.11
acrea, $18,000 080, 814-8Sil2-

Agoncloo And Slate Departments
FIXED BUVS ANV SINGLEAI Well AI Train Paraonnel. Robyn's Homo Cleaning: Wookly, WIDE ONLY AT OAKWOOD
Abllilr, To Gathtr And Analyze Bi-weekly, Excollont Roferenceol HOMES OF BARBOURSVILLE,
Data niO Reporlsls A Requisite Call Anytime, 814·4411-2315 If No 1::-=-:-:--==::34;:llll:.:·=::-""-::-:-:----:=
Musr Be Knowledgeable In IBM I Answer Leave Message.
1,
IBiof Compatible. DOS, And UNIX
Syateml. Familiarity W1th Novell
Netware, Internet, And CMHC

3 loh,

home on 314 acre, city water,

County Alcohol, Drug Addlclion haul your logo 10 me mill iull call 320 Mobile Homes
And llontll lteallh Sonilcea 304-4175- 1957.
tor Sale
Baa rd. Provide Liaison Serv1CII I.:;Ho:..;me,.:;_Clf:_;,:OI.:;fi_co--C-Io-an-ln-g-.-Al-l-OfOn Behalf Of The Board With

Onl~

""limeWoekondL

Baths, Full Basement, 10

Patnted. ;

1988 1200 Sportster S6,000:~
Days: 61-4· 4"6· 3278, Evening•: •
614·446-3099.

owner financing 1Va1ll.bl1. 304-

• Q 10 8

•AQ

Work.

=6~75'~7~6~12~--------------- :

3238.

• J 9 4

•J9654

sQJ9854

Bod)'

1

$1050 down. Call 1-800-837·

• K 10 8 2

• 10 2

Speed, AC, 1e.ooo Miles, Needl 1

1982·-450 Honda Custom 10.834
miles, looks &amp; runs good. 304-l

New ti97 14Jf70 three bedroom.
includn 6 monrhl FREE lot tent.
Only 1181.88 par month. with

For Silo .1!\r Owner, 3 Bed- ·Rd., 2 baths, 3 bedroom mobile
room Homo, LeGrande Boulovard, home on 1 acre, city water, can·
With New Raol, N1w Carpet. tral air, $35,000. 304-582·
Above Ground Pool Wittt Patio 5840 01 304-576-2716.
Wllh 2 Level Doco On Back,
Ho&lt;IIO

Stay, Lot &amp; 112, Green Schoolo,
202 Norlh Sacond Avor&gt;ua, Mid·' 814·446-7307 Alter 4:30 P.M.

Dryer Hook-Up, One Bedroom. Acepong appllcallons Friday, July
814 44811811.
11111 lor lurura employment
PiCk up appiJ&lt;alion.

wv. 304-755'5885.

Naw Bonk Ropo'ol

Fenced In Back Yard, ApplllltlCIII

Brookakle Apartments. Washer &amp; music and dance. pizza to come.

month. Free delivery I 111up.
Only It Oakwood Home•. Nitro

East

Unle

V·8, 27 ,000 m11es. $19.000, 614-

limited Offerl 1i07 doublewide,

West
• 3
"K U 7 2
t A 7 6 3

.

1Qi6 Dodge Dako ta Elltende6 1
Cab 4ll4, po'lll'er options, ~dhnar.

For ule, 1 bedroom home in Po- 3br, 2bath, $17g9 down, S27gl

meroy, wll ull on lond contraCL
614-1182-58511.
GREAT PRICE
GREAT LOCATION

IAQ, 7~

1

$13,000 080, 614-256-1233.

All brick, 3bodroom Ranch, lull Quick delivery. Call 1·800-837·
basement, cenual air, Camp 3238.
Conloy. 304-075-1371.

s

• J 92

19116 4 WO Dodge Truck, 318, 5:

0

Mult havt At lust 3 Years Experience, Preferabl., Jn Jobs
Shop. W.. dert Mull Tig . Many
Po1lt1ona Available. Growing
Companr Offers Safe Working

• 6

EEKA:MEEK

1DQ4 SUburban 1500 Series -414, ~
loaded, excellent condition, ,
'36,000 actual miles, 814- 742· ~

5 112 AC, 2 Bedroom•. 1 Bath, IT'S. BIG. 19t7 4BR, 2BATH
Ready To Move In, E11 ln Kitch- DOUBLEWIDE . S1,848 DOWN,
en, Oak Cabinets, Refrigerator, I3191MO. FREE DELIVERY '&amp;
Elec. Range, Fuel Oil Furnace , SETUP ONLY AT OAKWOOD
Bxt2 Storage Building, $38,000, HOMES, NITRO, WV. 304· 755·
614·245'581 1 614·36U763.
51115. Liriltd Ollor.

Virtually All Courses
IN SOcial Work. Wm
To Civil Service Testing

(

07-IO.t'l

I AK 7 6

1989 Dodge Caravan Lt. Blue ;
s2.soo. 614·:)87.0240.
.. 1

ohop OAKWOOD HOMES, Nl-

704 Keesee Road, Morgan Twp.

.Nort

1987 &lt;x4 Ford Ronger, New Pain!,.

-

ocorn

1 DltllcuH

7

320

31 &amp;poaoood

Frida,¥. July 11, 1997
Tile year ahead should be an
active one both socially and businesswise for you. Your abilily 10 adjust lo
new people and environments mighl
amaze your friends.
CANCER. (June 21-July 22)
Wishful thinkers who bel on blind
expectations usually wind up losers;
but today, a flyer mighl fulfill expec·
tations if you think things through
sensibly first. Gel a jump on life by
understanding the influences thai
govern you in 1he year ahead. Send
for your Astro-Graph prediclions
today by mailing $2 and SASE lo
Astro-Graph, do this newspaper,

Box 1758,

M~u~r a~y~H~i~I ~S~Ia3ti~on~.~!C~AP~RI~C~O~RN;~(D~ec~.~2~2~-J~an~.~i~9)

New York. NY 10156. Be sure to
·Siale your zodiac sign.
· LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Take
developmenls in stride today and try
10 maintain hamlony in your rela1ionships. If you let calm prevail, it
will permeale a positive almosphere.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Unusual swings in your financial
affairs might become multiple occur·
rences today thai could suddenly put
you on the profitable side of the
ledger.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Your
.popularil)' is at a high point and could
cause friends to vie for your time and
attention. Try not to play favorites but
to treat ali equally.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Developments over which you. mighl
have little control should work outlo
your advantage today. Lady Luck
will be adjusting all llie bells and
switches.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec.'
21) II could prove most enjoyable
loday to plan something social with
just a few friends whose company
you truly enjoy.

Elevate your sights higher lhan usu·
ai today; you can achieve what you
envision. Use your ingenuity and
don't be afraid to experiment.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) In
y!lur.iovolvements with others today,
the man lie of leadership might be
foisted upon your shoulders. Take
charge!
·
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Your ·
insights in business mailers will be
constructively focused today. Be·cog·
nizant of your hunches, but also rely
upon your common sense.
ARIES (March 21·Apriii9).Usu,
ally it's not too wise to put credence
in snap judgments. Today, however,
your on· lhe-spot decisions are likely
to be on the money.
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) Suecess is indicated today in most areas
where you blend your practicality
with logic. Each are supportive of the
other in constructive ways.
GEMINI (May 2l ~lune 20) The
basic axiom of your success today is
dependent upon your faith in ideas
and your future. Know mentally that
what you conceive can be achieved.

Dumbly- QuaH- Inept- lmporl- PAY for IT

.

I learned very early in life how to shop. My dad always sa1d that I should demand quality and be willing to
PAY lor IT.
.
·

JULY 10 I

�Ohio Lottery

Minn.esota
defeats
Indians

Pick 3:
2·1·1
Pick 4:

!

I

~0-5..S .
Mostly clear tonight,
lows In the lower 60s.
Saturday, moatly sunny.
Highs In the upper 80s .

Buckeye 5:
7-8-18-22-32

Sports on Page 4

•

en tine
lA!!. 41, NO. 61

Was it done too swiftly?

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••
....-·-· 1-

\

•

One-day conviction in drowning-murder of Meigs
teacher draws questions from state public defender
By JAMES PRICHARD
A charge of manslaughter or ecutor John Lentes advised Hysell of
Associated Press Writer
involuntary manslaughter probably his rights and explained the charges.
COLUMBUS - In less than 24 would have been more appropriate. After consulting Johnson's family,
hours, a man killed an elementary he said.
Soulsby and Lentes then offered to
school teacher in a fight, pleaded
"If you're going to do something .- reduce the aggravated munder charge
·guilty to a reduced charge of munder to put you in jail for I 0 years, to munder and drop the remaining
and was sentenced to a prison term. shouldn't you spend more than eight counts in exchange for a guilty plea.
The rapid-fire sequence of events hours thinking about it?" Bodiker
Hysell agreed and, still without a
happened this week in Meigs Coun- asked.
lawyer, entered the plea before Judge
ty in southeastern Ohio, where Jason
"In most instances, this system Frederick W. Crow IU of Meigs
Hysell. 23, of Pomeroy, admitted to would seem to benefit from thought- County Common Pleas Court, the
authorities that he got into an alter- fulness and caution," he said, answer- sheriff said. In Ohio, when a defencation with Todd C. Johnson that left ing his own question.
danl pleads guilty to a charge, the
the Harrisonville Elementary School
Soulsby said Hysell and Johnson judge must impose the maximum
teacher dead.
were among a group of four men and penalty.
Johnson, 30, of Rutland, was a two women swimming together
Crow, an eight-yeaneteran ofthe
divorced father of an 8-year-old son. Tuesday in Leading Creek in Rutland bench who served 12 years as coun. He. was killed Tuesday evening Township. The exact relationship ty prosecutor, said he's never been
and the county grand jury indicted between Hysell and Johnson was not involved in a felony case that was
Hysell on Wednesday morning. After clear.
resolved so swiftly.
waiving his legal rights, including
Around 5:30p.m., for reasons the
"I think the record will reflect the
representation by an aUomey, Hysell sheriff's office did not fully under- defendant was asked .whether he
entered his plea and was sentenced stand, the two men staned to fight in wanted an attorney aboutiO times,"
Wednesday afternoon to Is years to the stream, apparently away from the the judge said.
life in prison.
rest of the group. Soulsby said Hysell
Hysell was taken to the CorrecJames Soulsby, the countY sheriff hit Johnson, wbo went beneath the tiona! Reception Center in Orient.
since 1989 and a law enforcement water for 'some time and was uncon- where he will be assigned IO .a Stale
officer off and on since 1960, said scious when Hysell and some others prison. .
while it is uncommon for justice to dragged him to the shore.
· Bodiker said Hysell has the right
move so quickly, it is not unpreceParamedics tried to resuscitate to ask the court to withdraw his plea
dented.
Johnson, but county Coroner Douglas "within a reasonable amount of
"We have had probably at least Hunter pronounced him dead at Vet- time." If the court agrees, .the plea
two and maybe three other times erans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy. agreement would be tossed out and
where a case has moved as swiftly as Meanwhile, Hysell was taken into he would still be indicted on the origthis," he said Thursday. "So, it has custody.
inal charges. if it refuses, there is an
happened."
The next day, the grand jury appeals process.
But David Bodiker, who heads the indicted Hysell on one count each of
Soulsby said the investigation into
Ohio public defender's office, sai~," .-ggravated munder, aggravated rob-. Johnson's death 'remained open
Hy.selly,by.tlutily agreeing II) a ple;o bery, int~rfeflng ~with omm:g'"""y because-9~~pi11Cin in_~
bqain, probntily got a · ~ sen: medical personl\!1 and eS~:ape, all witnesses' ~~ateill!iifs to deputies.
tence than he would have otherwise. . felonies . . Deputies were unable to He declined to elaborate.
Bodiker said the killing did not locate Johnson's billfold, which
There was no anJwer Thursday
appear ·fo be intentional, a require-'- resulted in the robbery count.
evening at Lentes' office. His home
ment for a murder charge.. ,
Soulsby said he and c~nty Pros- telephone number is unpublished.

'17

2 Sec11ona, 12 Pages, 35 COintl
A Gennett eo. N-peper

'

-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohjo, Friday, July 11, 1997

01117, Ohio Valley Publlahlng Compony

IN CONCERT _:. The Ohio University Communlveraity Band preHnted an hourlong con-

t
i

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't'.··-

~

cert In Pomeroy Thusdsy night. It was spon·
•·
sored by Peoples Bank. .

Rutland
·considers
annexation
of property .·

liT.
MAYORS CONVENE- Mayors representing 11 counties In
southern Ohio met at Trinity Church on Thursday, guests of
Pomeroy and Mayor Frank Vaughan. The Mayors' Partnership for
Progress meets regularly In different communities, !MJt Thursday
Is the group's first meeting In Pomeroy. Marsha Lewis, standing,
representing Ohio University's Institute for Local Government
Administration and Rural Development (ILGARD), dlscuased a
new sortwa{e program that provides villages and ciliell with internet access.

Portland mother,
child die in crash
near ·Ravenswood
.

.

From AP, StaH Reports
.
A Portland woman and her 7-month-old son are dead following a twovehicle accident near Ravenswood, W.Va., late Thursday afternoon.
Monica Beth Wolfe, 20, and her son, Kenneth Tyler, were declared dead
at the scene of the accident on State Route 2, near Century Aluminum, formerly Ravenswood Alumimum.
·
.
.
Acconding to a spokesperson for the Jackson County Shenft's Department,
Wolfe was southbound on Route 2 when she left the pave~e~l edge, crossed
tbe southbound lane and drove~nto the nonhbound lane, stnlcing a 1981 Ford
truCk driven by Donald Bonar, 35, of Ravenswood.
The truck was owned by Valtronics Inc., Ravenswood, acconding to the
,herift's department.
. .
.
.
Bonar who reportedly drove onto the shoulder of the road ln order to avOid
the head:on crash, suffered no yisib_Ie injur!es. ,
.
· _
The Associated Press reported thts momtng that the child was buckled m
'-safety seat in the back ~at of Wolfe's car, but the impact of the crash threw
lfte child from the restramt.
·
Funeral arrangements for the two victims are under the direction of the
Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine.

T

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Rutiand Village Council discussed
the possible annexation of land and
flood repair projects during a Tuesday night meeting at the Rutland
Civic Center.
The meeting was a recessed :;ession after Monday night's meeting
was postponed due to an emergency
medical service call in response to the
Todd Johnson drowning near
Langsville. ·
Mayor JoAnn Eads and two of the
council members serve on either the
squad or volunteer fire deparrment.
. Council also spoke with Paula
Hicks, who expressed interest in
having her property, located along the
border of the village past Salem
Street towand Miles Cemetery,
annexed into the village.
Clerk Roselll&lt;ll)' Snowden-Eskew
was advised to call and see what steps
need to be taken for the annexation.
It was reponed that the village did
not receive the Community Development Block Grants it had applied
for to resurface village streets. The
next step will be to apply for a State
Capital Improvement Program (Issue
II) grant for the proposed project.
- However,.the village-did receive a
$40,000 CDBG grant that will be
used to put a new roof on the Rutland
Civic Center.
The Civic Center was also the site
of the June Great Ohio Bicycle
Adventure (GOBA) stopover in Rutland. The civic center realized a profit of$1 ,567 through the sale of homemade pies and other items during the
lunch stop. The money will be used
for the civic center, it was noted.
The village received a thank you
letter from GOBA, indicating the
stopover was one of the be~t lunch
stops during the week-long.event.
Village maintenance supervisor
Dave Davis reported that money for
the Federal Emergency Management
Agency projects is coming in. The
money will be used for repairs to the
· sewer grinder system, streets, cui(Conllnued on Pa111 3)

VIEWING ART WORK- Carol Riggs of Darwin and her granddaughter, Anna Sayre of
Pomeroy, enjoyed the ."Art In the Park." Here

they admire a teapot pslritlng in the collection
exhibited by Gina Tillis.

Concert revival, art display bring
·crowd to Pomeroy's downtpwn
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel New Staff
sights and sounds on
Pomeroy's Court Street delighted the ·
· more than 200 people who turned out
Thursday evening to hear the music
of Ohio University's Communiversity Band and see the work of local
arrisls on display in the mini-patk.
The band, directed by John
Climer, came to town under the .
sponsorship of Peoples Bank, which
is reviving the tradition of an annual
Communiversity band concert here.
The concert was delightful with
the musicians presenting a variety of
music - everything from' folk and
Appalachia tunes to Big Band theme
songs, and a mix of marches and
.patriotic selections. The audience
was appreciative of all the music and
gave a standing ovation to the concluding_number, "Stars and Stripes
Forever."
Participating Meigs countians
were introduced by . Climer. They
were DaVid and Jeanne Bo)Nen, Chris
and Kevin Neel, Anna Wolfe, Kelly
Grueser and Judy West.
· The "Art-in-the-Park" display was
coondinated by the Pomeroy Mer•
chants Association. The paintings
and drawings were attractively displayCji, some on backdrops, others
around ·live floral arrangements and ,
antique pieces, with accents of quilts,
crocheted pieces and other accessories.
· There were family portraits in
pencil by Mary Powell, still-life oils
'
'

The

ENGRAVING - Stone engravings by Greg Davis will mark an
entrance to the riverfront parking area. One was on display at last
night's art show.
·
by Gina Tillis, a pastel portrait of
Mike Stroth by his wife in pastels,
charcoal drawings by Becky
Edwards, Egyptian ar1 work in pencil and pen cr~ated by Jason Witherell, an art major at Marietta College,' portraits and tlorals in acrylic,
~tels and charcoal by Carol Tannehill, landscapes by Audra Well, florals and landscapes in oil by Hilda
Quickel. and two paintil!gs'completed years ago by the late Anna Ogdin.

longtime Meigs teacher.
Also on display at the art show
were some stonework pieces by Greg
Davis of Syracuse. He had on c•hibit a large stone picturing a sternwlieeler and engraved "Historic .
Downtown Pomeroy, Established
1&amp;40."
.
It was reported that he plans to

donate the stone to the village to be
displayed in the riverfront p~rking
area.

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