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Stock Your Freezer Beef Sale

OhioLo~ery

COCA COLA
PRODUCTS

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Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D- W Va.,
said he began talking to Toyot~ about
investing in West Virginia 10 years
ago. He met Dr. Shoichiro Toyoda,
chainnan of Toyota Motor Corp., and
other Toyota officials on a January
1986trip to Japan.
"Today, West Vitginia shows lhe
world that we have arrived on lhe
global economic stage. We are ready
to compete with anyone and optimistic about a future · made more
prosperous by Toyota Motor Corp.,"
Rockefeller said.
Gov. Gaston Capenon said, "This ·
announcement is a tribute to our
long-tenn economic strategy and
great West Virginia teamwork at the
local, state and federal level. ThankContinued on page 3

()h10 s _AG OffiCe says It has no

iy JIM FREEMAN
.
·oyp newa etafl .
' Jury selection and opening argu-

~~

·Pomeroy f!~erch~nts

plan .hoti.day act~vities
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

$intlnel news ltaff

BOUNTY
TOWELS
ROLL

(

by_l~ SJ!~

Attorney General Betty Montgomery,
said an 11-mon~- probe prompted by
a mass1ve peut1on campa1gn was
closed Wednesday.

' I ''We were unable t&lt;Yl!ncover any
e_vidence of collusion lietwee~. gasohne reta1lers m Galha County, Boy• Continued on page 3

COLUMBUS (AP)- Increases 1987 with lhe exception ofl990,the to live in Meigs County," Berno said
in salaries of public S~:hoOl classroom council said.
in an interview.
teachers across Ohio exceeded inflaDonald Bemo, president of the
Districts with lhe highest average
lion in nine oflhe lastl9years, a pri- non-partisan economic and tax salaries were in urban/suburban
vale tax study group said.
.' research organization, said salaries regions. "The lowest ories are defi·
.An Ohio Public Expenditure depended in part on seniority, state nitely rural," Berno said.
Council.report released Wednesday minimum beginning salaries, union
The lop five:
said the average salary for teachers, contracts, and cost of living.
- Pell)l, Lake County, $51,352.
excluding fringe benefits, was
"The salaries are driven by years
Beachwood, Cuyahoga,
$38,084 for lhe 1995-96 school year. of experience. and to a degree by the $51,218.
· · . Teacher salaries have matched or gedgraphic location. It costs more to
Mariemont,
Hamilton,
suipassed inflation In each year since live in Cuyahoga County than it costs $50,910.
- Shaker Heights, CuyahOga,
$50,476..
·-Cuyahoga Heights. Cuy3hoga,
$50,461.
•
.Districts with lowest: average
salaries:
- Frontier, Washington County.
$25,202.
.
- Eastern, Melp, $26,030.
- Danville, Knox, $26,077.
- Ridgemi)nt, Hardin, $26,447.
- Ripley Union Lewis, Brown,
$27,166.
Average salaries nave ,increased
19 pen:enuince lhe 1990-91 school

year compared with an estimated
inflation rate of 15 percent.
Demo said salaries and benefits
'
ma&lt;\e up 75 percent to 90 percent
()f
a school _district's operating budget.
· "The labor intensity is to be
expe&lt;ted. You want to have as few
students as possible ·per teacher," be
said.

:::n::.eo~x~edR~~:,:~~:~~ spe!rl~i=~~~a~~~-:~";::!~~ Eastern's salaries rank among lowest In state

Pomeroy in the Meigs Common -~-clYoulh Serv1ces fac1hty after plead~
Pleas Coon of Judge Fred w. Crow ing guilty to Ollt count each of robill.
·
bery, kidnappins and burglary stemRobinson faces two counts each of ming from the ·incident. •
rOObery, kidnapping anjl one couni"of
_loshua Paul Crcmean~ pleaded
aggravated burglary in the robbery of guilty to the c!lirges· on Jan. 17-and
the Meigs County Salvation Army in w~ sentenced by Judge Robert Buck
Pomeroy on Jan. 15.
to the youlh facility until he reaches
· He is accused of breaking into the the age of 21.
•
Salvation Army at 115 Butternut
He and another juvenile are
Ave. and detaining two elderly expected to testify against Robinson
womentherewhilebeandajuvenile . today. ,..•_ 1 _ · •
accomplice ransacked the building,
:In add1bon, i&gt;ubhc defender !stealing an ·undetennined amount of Mtchael Westfall of Alhens, who IS
cash.
representing Robinson, will seek to
. Allhough not injun;d, Dora Win- ~ave ~ trial m9ved to ~other_ loca·
ing, 90, and her. daughter, Helen uon, c1tmg pretnal pubhc1ty wh1ch he
:Townsend; were bound and gagged said.~ay ~ake it _impossible to select
wilh duct, tape during the robbery. a fatr jury m Me1gs County. . .
.•
. TOwnsend was there laking care of
Jurors .are scr,d~led to v1ev.: ~
Wining. who had just been released ·robbery sne which IS located w1thm
from the hospital.
short walking distance of the courthouse.

.160Z

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1--s u.s. Juslice Department ligation
i.n!O Gallja CQUn:
Iffound gulfty of all five charges, laifr)cliis: iuf ~iivesligatio~ into .the ty prices .has Y.ielded no proof of
Robinson may · face more_t1utp 60 . sud4en mcrease tn gasohne pnces alleged pnce fix1ng by _local relall~.
yeats in priS~?."~' ...
.
. w:ound tiJe CO';'ntry; a parallel mves· ·
Todd .Boyer, a spo~esman for

Programs and displays to entice
visitors into the downtown shopping
atU were planned at Wednesday's
meeting of lb.: Pomeroy Merchants
Association held in the Peoples Bank
conferenCe room. ·
· . : Susan Clark. president, eneour.aged merchants to decorate their
.windows for Memorial Day holi·
·day.weekend when many alumni will
.,e returning to attend high, school
~!iss reunions. Memorabilia from ~

D.A.R.E. county-

Salwjes of teachers represented 64
percent of total public school salaries
and wages for the 'school year studied. The rest went to other professionals, administrators, suppon starr,
office and clerical employees .
"Because labor costs and fringes
are a .large pan of their budget, it's
something they've got to be really,
really careful with," Berno said.
School superintendents on average
were paid $69,203 during lhe 199S96 school year, while principals had
average salaries of $56,666.
•
Bus drivers were paid an average
$12,206. Food service employees on
average' earned $9,638.. .

\

Twister strikes Kenova
and Ceredo, Br:afford said,
"II picked up their freezer and
lhrcw in into the powet plant substation. It's still in there." he said.
No damage estimate was available
and power has been re~tored, liraf.
ford said.
A funnel cloud also touched down
in Cereilo and blew the front porch
off Ceredo Police Chief Roger Miracle's house, said Kenova Policeman
R.B. Chafin.

•

STAR KIST

TUNA

Toyota, Japan's largest automak-·
cr. also has engine plants in Georgetown, Ky., and Cambridge, Ontario,
which produce 500,000 and 90,000
engines a year respectively.
The addition of the West Virginia.
plant will allow the company to pul
North American-made engines in all ·
North-American-made Cbrollas. '
"Today's announcement of this
new engine plant is yet another step
ill Toyota's localization of all aspects
of the vehicle production process,"
Okuda said.
The announcement brings good
news to a state that lrllditionally ranks'
near the bottom in unemployment.
West Virginia's unemployment rate
was 8.8 percent in March, the latest
available. ,
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••••••••••••••••••••••••
70Z.

NEW TOYOTA PLANT LOCATION - Thle ..,_
82, neer ttie CSX railroad abOut 30 mil" northIll view allows the 230-ecre elte ,_, ~to,
welt of Chllr!Hton. Toyota wllllnv11t $4011 milW. VI., whMe Toyota" will build li plant to 11111ke
lion In lhe hlghly..utometld flclllty, which Ia
· : 300,000 Corolla 111glnll 1 ~r, beginning In . expected to employ 30!1 W'OI'IIIml~ (AP)
·
: 1998. The Plant will blllocltld on W.st.VIrglnle
, •
'
.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)Toyota Motor Corp. announced today
it will build a $400 million engine
plant in Putnam County lhat will ·
employ up to 300 people.
· The plant, ·on a 230-acre site in
Buffalo, about30 mi.les northwest of
Charleston, will house machining
' and assembly shops and have an
annual produclion capacity of
300,000 units, company President
Hiro!!hi Okuda said at a ceremony ar
the state Cultural Center.
The plant will produce engines for
Co~;QIIas starting in late 1998, Oku·
da said. News reports said the engines
will be sent to lhe automaker's New
United Motor Manufacturing Inc.
plant in Fremont, Calif.. a joint ven·
ture with General Motors Corp.
.
•

i!rguments ~!JitJ,_ tot!ar ~roof -of 'gaS price fixing' in area ·

.. $399-

.

· ..d

.J ury selection, opening

410Z

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Putnam County engine plant will employe 300,
cost $400 million; opening date slated in~'1998

640Z

s

A Ginnett Co. Nenp1p1r

Buffalo, W. Va., gets
new Toyoto faci~ity

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Chops •••••••••••••••••••••••
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS
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s
139
Rump-Roas ••••••••••••••

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35-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 9, 1996

(

· BONEUSS PORK SIRLOIN

Low tonight In lOt.
Cle1r. Frld1y, pertly
cloudy, high In mlcHOs._

APP.LESAUCE

DOMINO

SUGAR

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,Commentary

Thuraday,ll•y 9,1996

'

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.Paui2

,......__Local

FriQy, May 10
A.:c:uWealher"' forecut for

Evolution
of
de~oluti· on _________· _··
The Daily Sentinel
'F..stablisnd in 1948
111 Court Sl, Pomeeoy, Ohio
614-982·2158 • Fax: 992-2157

.!1,

f

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH

MARGARET LEHEW

GMeral Manager

Controller

L-,., 300-

'--..... --II'"-·

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wfU be pu/11/MM. L - ohould Ill In fOM ,.,,.,
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, , . . . . . ..

What they are.saying
elsewhere around Ohio
By The Auoclated Preaa
Excerpts·of editorials or f"ewide and national interest from Ohio.newspapers:
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, May 6
1be closer Russia comes to the June presidential election, the clearer it
becomes that President Bo1is Yeltsin. despite his undeniable faults is lhe
best hope of keeping lhe country from once again emerging as lhe primary
threat to world peace.
. ··
Thanlcfully.lhe Communist revival seems to have peaked. A recent poll
shov.:ed that Yeltsin, who was once considered a laughable long-shot for rt·
electiOn, has actually taken a slight lead in opinion polls.
. Yeltsin's recovery is owing panly to his own efforts, including pander-.
mg to the electorate so shamelessly that he would be at home in American
politics, and panty to the less:than-subtle measures taken by the West to boost
his standing wilh Russian voters.
. All of this effort to help Yeltsin runs the risk of tying the West's fortunes
too closely to his. But given the lack of electable aliematives to the Communists, there is little choice.
•

"fm from Wubilaton llld J:m
here ·to help you" wun't always a
gag line.
Bilek in 1936, Americans were
asked "Which do you favor -· concentration of power in the federal
government or in the state government?" By a 56 percent to 44 percent
mqin, they favored the federal gov·
ernment (Gallup). A 1995 poll shows
respondents voting .69 percent to 27
percent !hat state government does a
"better job of running lhings"lhan do
lhe Feds (ABC News/Washington
Post).
.
And so. the issue of "devolution"
will be tested in the 1996 election in
a way that may permanently change
the American political landscape,
and perhaps the American way of
life.
One presidential candidate says he
wants to "reinvent government" and
that "the era of big government is
over." That's Bill Clinton, the candidate of the Democratic Pany,the very
pany that in recent decades has supported centralized federal government.
Republican candidaie Bob Dole

a card upo11

whiclr is printed ing two world wan, President
the devolutionist's dram, the Tenth Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal
Amendment 10 • the Constitution response to the Great Depression, and
which says that all powers noi President Lyndon Johnson's "Greal
Society" programs of the 1960s.
1be trend line undulates, wiggles
and fluctuates -- but it marches everassigned to the federal government upward and ever-ascendant.
by the Constirution are to be reserved
Until today. Alternative projec, to lhe states or to the people. Dole tions for the future are seen on the
says, "The debate today is not graph in lhe form of dotted lines: One
whelher power should be shifted out continues upward, one shows a flatof Washington, it's how fast we tening out, one beads downward.
should do it. "
Could the level or down projecThe argument about states' rights tions actually happen? 1be Congress
began before the ink was dry o~ the recently voted to abandon federal
Tenlh Amendment. And it is clear speed limits on interstate highways.
who has been winning. Imagine a Power to lhe states! 1be Republicans
graph. It starts more than 200 years are demanding medical savings .
ago with the ratification of the U.S. accounts in the heallh-&lt;;are bill. PowConstitution. A bold, solid line er to the people!
labeled "federtd )iower"lravers~s the .
On a broader seale, the elimina·
graph. There are some panicularly lion of "unfunded mandates" by the
noticeable spikes in the line: post- Gingrich Congress also showed the
Civil War lllliCndrnents, which feder~ trend. If the Fedshave to pay for what
ally ,guarantee individuals due they do, they will do less.
process and equal protection of the · What's going on? A confluence of
laws, !he constitutionill amendment in many things.
1916 allowing for a federal income
The Feds gobbled up the spending
tax , the need for federal activity dur- power. Back.in 1930, fully 66 percent
1118VCS

Ben Wattenberg

ELEC.TING 808 POLE PRESIPENT. THAT'S WHAT THI$ CAMVAklN
IS ALL ABOUT.

.••

::The Columbus Dispatch, May S
:;: President Clin!on's misguided veto of a much-needed national product:::habdtty-refonn btll should add tmpetus to the effort in the General Assem.jly to make needed changes in Ohio's civil-justice laws. ·
::: The Ohio ~ouse approved such important legislation in February.'
:•; Some porttons of House Bill350, unfortunately, were watered down but
:~ow it faces the high probability of even more severe tampering in the Sen·~te.

:~~ c;aps On p'unitive damages are just One Of the common·S~nse reforms that
:~ m the state btll and also were part of the federal legislation that Clinton

'.;:tietoed.

1be pre~ident, typically trying to have it bolh ways, 'said he rec.ognized
~at the nation needs tort reform but that this bill wasn't it.
~•• Gov. George Voinovich is a proponent of tort reform. If the General
~ssembly comes up wilh a sound, bipanisan product Ohioans can rest
~sured that it won't be vetoed.
'

:f:.

't'

::J.M Lima News, May 2

·

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:~ With all the se~ous_problems our nation faces, you'd think Congress and
. ~ Omt~ admirusttatton would have btgger things to worry about than surg·
;ot~g gasohne pnces.
._ . .
,
·: ~ R~'!'er tlian engage in se~ous debate about jJolicies !hat effect gas prices,
.~hllctans ·~stead are pumpmg out fevered rhetoric in hope of scoring elec·
.~n-year pomts.
.
.~~ Gasoline prices remain amazingly low. According to the American Petro~um Institute (Yes, that group is tunded by Evil Big Oil), gasoline prices
jA 1981 averaged $2.26 a gallon in 1995 dollars.
:; It is cenainly frustrating lo have to pay more at the gasoline pumps. But
.~nspiracy theories about big oil companies purposely gouging consumers
'1$ utter nonsense. Americans who don 'I like lhe price jump should find ways
~~ drive less until prices once again come tumbling down.
,

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"•

~

froday
in history
••
:JlY The Associated Preas

.
.
:~ Today is Thursday. May 9, the I 30th day of 1996. There are 236 days
left in the year.
Today' sHighlightinHistory:
· On May 9, 1754, the firSt American newspaper cartoon was published.

;RJe illustration in Benjamin Franklin's Pennsylvania Gazette showed a snake

tut into sections, each part representing an American colony; the caption
read. J' Join or die:..

.

l-etters to the editor
A solution to flooding

•

Dear Editor,
··. Well MeiJ!S County, the flooding
Lt back.
Our area is truly affected by what
50me call the gutters. Our area has
~n stripped of her goods and left
abandoned. Old abandoned strip
mines fill our creeks and streams
e..-ery passing day. Now our creeks
ate full, our towns flood and farmland
in some areas is swamp because the
ct'Ceks are full of sand.
I have written lots of letters, but no
tearjerkers like this one. I have lived
in Meigs County &amp;II my life and have
seen what the strip mines have doqe
firsthand. What once was beautiful
rQlling hi lis wilh hardwood trees
now stands highwall and washed out
ravines. 1be state has done a lot to
help, but the depanment of natural
~'(Sources needs to speed up and help
Meigs County.
• I know some flooding is impossi·
ble to stop, but in an area like Rutland

it can be helped and some of the
county roads in ,this area could be
raised so peoflle could get out. Our
creeks and dttches all need to be
cleaned out and that will be an all
summer job il, looks like 'if it quiis
raining.
.
Meigs County residents must push
and call or write their senators, congressmen and· state representatives.
We have see~ West Virginia get millions of dollars for flood control, why
not us? So come on Meigs County,
· we might not stop flooding in our
county, but we sure can )Work on
some of it plus put millions· or' tax
dollars back in Meigs County and
maybe put some Meigs County residents to work.
So come . on Meigs County. if
you're like me we have to do something. lobs in this area will depend on
it.
Ftoyd H. Cleland
·r
Rutland

Seeking soldiers relatives

1

t

.I

•

By means of Ibis letter and with Ohio, born 11112/1918
your help I hope to track down lhe
Army number 66 64 309
horne addresses of the relatives of an
504 Prcht lnf. 82 Airborne DiviAmerican ·hero killed in the Second sion
Killed in action, Oct. 2, 1944, in
World War and the grave of whom I
have adopted.
. the Netherlands.
Peter J.M. J001tea,
He is buried in the American Mil·
Sta&amp;n.dnnstruc;
IO.A.
itary Cemetery at MarJrllten, the
6131 BA. SmARD,
Netherlands:
(The Netherlucb)
Walters, James H., Pfc.. from

.

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of all tax revenues went to . . . and
local 1overnments and 30 percent to
the Feds. By 1994, 70'percent of tax
revenues went 10 the Feels and 011ly
30 percent to state and local governments. The power 10 tax is the power to alienat,e. The power to tax greatly is the power to run up areal
deficits, which limits the power to
tax.
Meanwhile, the state government~
have (apparently) become more competent and less corrupt. They are now
called "laboratories of democracy. ·~
Wilh the passage of (federal) civil
rights laws, the states have been bet•
ter able 10 make !heir case and the
opponents of state power lost •
potent trump card.
This may all sound like a dialoJuO
for policy wonks. Is it really so
important what l~vel of government
-· federal, state or local -- sets the
speed limits, levies the taxes, isiues
· lhe drivers ' licenses, determines the
criteria for welfBfl', decides what
restrictions there should be on abortion?
Apparently so. Over the y~ that
seemingly prosaic argument has led
to death, destruction and angry rivers
of blood -- around lhe world and in
America. Our famous tea party was
about who paid taxes to whoin. 1be
bloody Civil War was about what lev~
el of government was in charge.
1be root of the argument is about ·
liberty. Devolutionis\S say a ·strong '
central government i!DpoSes heav)
handed restrictions on citizens. The
siates, they say, would be more
tuned-in. Better yet, let pedjl)e dQ
things for themselves. Opponents
say only the. Feds can vouchsafe for
individual liberty and for a hqmane ·
safety net.
Ten score and seven years ago oar.
forefathers brought forlh on Ibis con- .
tinent a roaring and perpetual argu-·
. ment, conceived in liberty and dedicated to ambiguity. · Now we are ,
eng~ged in a great civic dialoaue. :
testing .whelher the. prior, onaoin11 ·
resolution of lhat argument will long
. endure. V!e are met on a great peice- •
. ful baulefield of lhat argument It is
·called the election of 1996.
Ben WatteJJbert; a senior rftlow ·
at the American En"rprlse 11'511· ·
lute, is ~ author of a new boOk;.
"Values Matter Most," and Is the ·
host of the weelily publlt televilion '
program, "Think 'limk." . 'i · 1

poes 'the java jive really love me?
I don't drink colas. I don't do
.decaf. I like my coffee so hot I have
to sign a release form to buy it. I'm
a large-black·.to-go kind of guy. My
. morning goal is to drink just enough
coffee to set my back teeth grinding,
form beads of sweat on my forehead
the size of marbles, and cause my
hands to shake uncontrollably.
How do I know when my caffeine
needs have been met'' Simple. When
lhe slightest noise makes me jump
four feet in the air, and when I can no
longer hold small objects, .1 use both
hands to tum the cup over. It's a good
system. It works for me.
But I'm no snolr. I realize that
everybody has his or her own favored
me\hod 'of caffeine ingestion. Some
chew tablets. Sol)le .sprinkle instant
coffee on their com flakes. Some
enjoy a frosty malted laced with
ground beans. Some make a thin
paste of sugar, cream, and Italian
Roast and smear it on their ·gums.
These are all viable ways to stay
awake.
And rnore are being launched
every day.
According to The New York
Times, a new "caffeine delivery system" Is doing quite well in the 12

By TONY Sf'IOW
Creators Syndicate
WASHINGTON .. Forgive the
unavoidable pun, but no topic in
America Incites more infantile debate
than the issue ef abortion. Ralph
Reed, executive director of the Cluistian Coalition, discovered this last
week, when he attempted to discuss
the matter with subtlety and delica-·
cy.
I
Reed has written a book · that
advocates civil discourse about
important moral.concerns. He argues
along the way that Republican Party
platform language on·abortion might
benefit from some tinkering because
Americans have lillie · interest in
amending the constitution to ban
abortion.
"My argument draws an a,nalogy
wilh the civil·rights movement," he
explains. "The Civil Rights Act
passed because Martin Lulher King
persuaded a majority of Americans
that segregation was morally bank·
. rupt and a great evil. He and olhers
succeeded so well !hat 80 percent of
all restaurants and hotels had dispensed with separate accommodations by the 'time the act became law.
"Here's the point. Y!)u cannot by
legislative fiat achieve ·what you

midwestern states where it is being
marketed. It's called Water Joe -- a
16-ounce bottle of anesian well water
with a 70 milligram dollop of caf-

picks yeu up then puts you· down!
(My last product along these lines,
Zac ' n' Jack-- a mixture of Prozac
and bourbon -- did very well , espe·
cially among college students.)
We ·could make caffeinated lipstick, balms and nail' polish. My
feine. It's intended to be a healthier research lab is currently working on
alternative to coffee and cola .
a sun ~reen lotion that will block
Who's buying it?
harmful ultra-violet radiation -- and
·
"Truckers and traveling salesmen deliver a 100 milligram dose of java
• ·
whose stomach~ rebel at the day's right through your skin.
My development team experififth or sixth cup of coffee or can of
cola, banenders and students trying ~o mented with a coffee styling .mousse.
stay alert in the wee hours, coffee Unfortunately, it just wouldn't keep
fanatics looking for ways to brew you awake. All it did was curl your
their java with an extra kick and folks hair.
A portable caffeine i.v. drip (for
who want their hreakfa~t oranQe
juice to be a real eye-opener." Also use in the. car or home) is now in the
guzzling the hype.Water are futures testing stages.
traders at the Chicago Board of
We're also working on a cafTrl!(le, where, "to avoid messes, bot- · feinated stuffing that will keep the
tied water is the only beverage family alert during those long
Thanksgiving dinners. And we've
allowed on the trading floor."
Apparently lhe market for caffeine come up with a maple syrup/coffee
is endless. There .must be a way for combination that'll have you wolfing
an entrepreneur like me ·to.cash iQ on down waffles compulsively till
it. Here arc some ideas. Any markei- lunchtime.
ing types out there, give me a call. We
How about a caffeine patch, like
can make a deal, I just know it.
the nicotine patch? We could cafHow about a Prozac and coffee feimite envelope glue, or the backs of
capsule? Easily dissolved in water, it postage stamps. How about installing

Jan Shoales

pre-packaged' coffee filters right in '
the shower head? Oet your morning ·
jolt and a shampoo at the same time! ;
Now, some might sec this array of'
products as evidence of a conspiracy '
by coffee makers to get America ·
hooked on their product. If that's true, .
it's fine with me. It would lead
d1reclly to the next marketing phase:
' mass decaffeination.
Highly trained in deprogramming
techniques, equipped with mini-vac-,
uums that can detect and suck cafe
feine from any substance, our special '
uniformed agents would travel in ,
two-person teams from door to door, ·
. rather like Mormons or UPS employ-'
ees.
:
As the final stage of lhe decaf- ,
feination program, they would d.istribute sample packets of herbal tea
among the desperate and jinery.
,
The beauty part?lbe first one's
free.
·:
, Jan Shoales is a syndicated :
writer for ' Newspaper Enterprise
Assodalion, ,
.
,
(To receive. a complimentary.:
fan Shoales newsletter, calll-800- ,
1189-DUCK'orwriteDuck's Breath, 1
408 Broad SL, Nevada City,. CA ,
115959.)
.

The O.lly Sentinel• Page 3

OHIO Weather

~

Thuray, lily I, 11M.

Pornero~ • Middleport, Ohio

conditions and

Relieffund activated

MICH.

Etta Cullums-

'

•I Columbus!84•• 1.

,

Etta CUll urns, 94. of Pomeroy died Wednesday, May 8, 1996, at Pleasant ValleyHospiW. Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.
Born Jan. 30, 1902 in Flora, she was the daughter of the late 1ohn O'Brien
and Faye Miller. She was a homemaker and a member o{Hurisonville Eastem Star, Hemlock Grove Grange, the Modem Woodmen of America,' and
the Walk In Garden Oub. She tlllended the Hemlock Grove Christian Church.
Slie is survived by a daughter, Helen Swartz of Coolville; two brothers:
Frank O'Brien of Columbus, and Rex O'Brien .or. Pomeroy; two grapdsons,
and four great-grandchildren.
She was preceded .in death by her husband, Russell Cullurns; two sisters,
and two brolhers.
Services will be held Saturday, 10 a.m., at the Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, wilh the Re'(. Charles Domigan officiating. Burial will follow in
Burlingham Cemetery, Burlingham.
Calling hours for family and friends will be Friday, from 5 to 9 p.m., at
lhe funeral home.

,,,,,

Audrey E. H. Hart

W. VA.

Audrey Ellen Hayman Hart, 63, of Racine died Wednesday May 8, 1996
at Veterans Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy.
Born Dec. 20, 1932 in East Letart, she was the daughter of the late Thomas
Hayman and Emma Cook. She was a retired secretary from lhe Ohio Uni·
versity Engineering Department, wilh 24 years of service. She attended the
Racine First Baptist Church.
,.:
She is survived by four sons and daughters,in-law: Dennis Hart of Middleport, Barry Hart of Los Angeles, Calif., Brett and Sherrod Hart of
Lafayette, Ga, and Monty and Paula Han of Racine;'two sisters: Helen Barnhart Bailey of Syracuse, and Hazel Cadle of Security, Colo.; five grand·
cent.
children, eight step-grandchildren, one great grandchild, and several nieces
ExteDded forecast ·
and nephews.
. Saturday...Achance of a shower or
She was preceded in death by her husband, Gilbert Hart, and a son, Gary ·
thunderstorm extreme south ·
Hart.
Otherwise fair and cooler. Lows
·se..Vices will be held Saturday, I p.m., al the Ewing Funeral Home,
frorn 45 northwest to 55 southeast Pomeroy, with the Rev. Larry Haley officiating. Burial will follow in Greenand highs from the low 60s north to · wood Cemetery, Racine.
.
lhe lower 70s south.
Calling Hours for family and friends will be Friday, from 2 to 4 p.m. and
Sunday and monday... Fair. Lows 7 to 9 p.m., at the funeral home .
35 to 45 arvl highs mainly in the 60s.
Updated ta remove dense fog

•

Today's weather forecast
Southeastern Ohio
,
Today... l'artly sunny and warmer.
Still a chance of a late afternoon or
evening thunderstorm. l{igh in the.
mid 80s. Southwest wind 5 ·to 15
mph. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Tonight. .. Mostly clear. Low near
60. Southwest wind 5 to 10 mph. ·
' Friday... Partly cloudy. A chance of
late afternoon thunderstorms. High in
the mid 80s. Chance of rain 40 per-

briefs----.--.~.

Lilly Mae Oxyer

~dvisory

Pomeroy merchants...

at

~~~~~~~:e.heaton-Oxyer,78, Cheshire died Wednesday, May 8,1996

Born Sept&gt;26, 1917 in Gallia County, she was the daughter of the late
Continued from page 1
History Co~ference. Emphasis of the Forrest and ~aude Strausbaugh-Wbeaton.
. out the theme in wmoow displays. conference is to bring together those
She attended Poplar Ridge Church.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Bill Oxyer, March 5. 1964;
1be Meigs County Historical Society . who are interested ilf sieamboats, .
will be having activities on both Sat- stemwheelers, diesel towboats, and . one great-grandson; three brothers, Harold Joe and John; and one sister, Marie
urday and Sunday. at the Museum. . excursion boats, so that river-related Wheaton .
Traditionally the merchants have organizations can share_resources. · Survivors include one daughter and son-in-law, Carole and Clyde Fitch
contributed to the yesteryear atmosNumerous boats wtll be there, · of Cheshire; three granddaughters; three great-grandsons; one greal-grandphere with displays of historical ani- Clark reported, and the thought Is that daughter; one sister, Ethel Little of Crystal Lake, Ill.;·and several nieces·and
facts. H~ritage Day will be observed perhaps through contacts made at the ' nephews.
.
the second weekend in June.
event, some interest will be shown by
· Funeral services will be 1 p:m., Saturday at McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
Plans were discussed for an art boat owners in stopping at Pomeroy. Wetherholt Chapel in Gallipolis with Rev. Paul Stinson officiating. Burial
show downtown and volunteers are ..
Bill Quickel who is on the board will be in the Poplar Ridge Ceme~ery. . .
·
'
needed to.head up that activ\ty. Any- of the American Cancer Society,
Friends May call from '5 to 8 P·~ · · Friday at the funeral home.
one interested is asked to contact Meigs unit, talked about fund raising,
Clark. ltishopedlhataperformance and distributed com camsters for
of lhe Bend area community band . business use.
Alice M. Riblett, 65, of Racine died Wednesday May 8, 1996 at Holzer
can be ·scheduled on the satne day.
Medical
Center, Gallipolis.
As for the revitalization project, it
Born
Feb. 8, 1931 in Kinsman, she was the daughter of the late Ge,rald
w115 repPrted th}lt progress on the
Continued· from page 1
and Nellie Barrett Root. ·she was a homemaker.
.
promenade .and· gazebo is slow
.
She is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Gloria and Dav id Barner
because of the rain. Painting on er said.
PresFnted with petitions ,cari-ying of Pomeroy ; three sons and one daug)Jter·in-law: Gerald W. Banks of Akron,
Court Street buildings is underway,
upwar~
of 9i000 signatures in April Robert L. Banks of Racine, Ronald and Lori Riblett of Akron; four sisters:
however, it was noted.
1995,
Montgomery's
office launched Lois Morrison of Long Bottom, June Kost of Warren, Helen Bradtohl of
Deanna Stroth reported that a representative fi:om .tlie Ohio Historical ··an investigation in June, Boyer said. Uniontown, and Dorothy Murphy of Kinsman; one brother, Frank Root of
Society will be in soon to look at the Investigators conducted. fi_eld inter- Champion; several grandchildren and great grandchildren, and several nieces
progress and provide input on the views, and ,issued inveStigative and nephews.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Edward Riblett, in 1978.
project. Contracts for construction &lt;&gt;f demands of dOcumentation and ques'
the amphitheater are expected tq be tionnairesl o businesses selling gaso- . Graveside services will be held :;aiurday, ll a::m., at Chester Cemetery,
'
Chester. Arrangements are being handled. by Fisher Funeral Home. Mid·
awarded next week, it was reported, line.
wjlh the work to get under,vay in .ear1 h d dleport.
. .
I .
1aunc
The
pelltto~
campatgn,
e
No calling hour will be observed.
ly June.·
by
commWJity
activist
Ellen
M
.
Members discussed banners for
the new period lighting poles which Saunders, sought to determine if
.
•
will go 'in along the promenade. Galli a County gas prices, some up to ·
These will promote the historic fla. 10 cents higher per gallon than in sur.
Karen L. Hall Alexander, 56, of Middleport, died Tuesday, May 7, 1996,
rounding counties, were being fixed at the Overbrook Care Center in Middleport.
vor of the village.
Sandee Mills reported on attend- locally or possibly out-of-stale.
Born July I, 1939, in Hartford; W.Va., she was the daughter of Louise
ing tile last meeting of Pomeroy Villnvesll~attve de~ands, also . Kearns Hall, of Hartford, and the late Pearl H. Hall.·
lage Council .where it was deciqed known as tn\~rrogatortes , produce,d , She is also survived by a sister and.brother-in-law, Katherine Lavon and
that parking meters will remain in ftve .boxes ?f respon ses for the AG s Eugene J. Hession of Ocala, Fla.
,
place 'except along· the promenade staff to revtew, Boyer satd .
Graveside services )Viii be Friday at II a.m. at Graharri Cemetery, with
• where permit parking will be prothe Rev. William ·"Bud" Hatfield officiating.
vided.
Friends may call Thursday at Foglesong Funeral Home between 7 and
Cleanup of the downtown was disnew~
8 p.m. In lieu of flowers, the family requests contributions be made to the
cussed, and it was noted that the
Hartford Baptiit Church.,
MEMORIAL
M&amp;M Cleaning Service will bring in VETERANS
WEDNESDAY
a streeJ sweeper Sunday for a first
Admissions: Mary V. Evans, Midtime cleanup to be paid by the Merdleport.
chants Association .
Larry T. Ball, 47, of New Haven, W.Va., died Wednesday, May 8, 1996;
Discharges: None.
A1so discussed at the meeting was
at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Huntington. W. Va ..
development of a Pomeroy village
Born July 8, 1948, in New Haven, he was the son of James H. and Leona
brochure .for promotional use, along
Fay (Powell) Ball of New Haven.
.
wit~ individual store advertising
He was a Vietnam ve,teran and a retired truck driver in the U.S . Army,
piec~s to be available from a-common
and was a member of American Legion Post 140 in New Haven .• He was
board loca.ted in a convenient place
also a trustee at V.F.W. Post 9926 in Mason .
in town.
.
He was preceded in death by a brother, James R. "Jimmy" Ball, who died
A delegation will be traveling to
in 1995.
..
Louisville in June for the Steamboat
Surviving are two brothers and sisters-in-law, Jeffrey K. and Rhonda J.
Ball of New Haven, and Steven R. and Cindy L. Ball of Rising Sun, Ind.;
and a sister and brother-in-Jaw, Bevedy and Curtis L. Hill of Washington,
W.Va ..
The Daily Sentinel
The service will be Saturday, I p.m., at the Foglesong Funeral Home in
(USPS 213-9110)
Mason. with the Rev. Charles W. Hargraves officiating. Burial will be in
. the Sunrise Memorial Gardens with military graveside rites.
Published.every afternoon, Monday thro!J&amp;h
Fridliy, Ill Coun St, Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Visitation will be from 6 to 9 p.m. Friday at the funeral home.

AliCe M. Riblett

Oh I•0 'S A G

1be Meigs County Ministerial Relief Fund established 10 help victims of lhe 199S Mother's Day Hood has been reactivated, according
to a spoiesman. the Rev. Kenny Baker.
Donations will be actepled at the Farmers Bank in Pomeroy or the
Home National Bank in Racine.
.
Those in need of assistance to replaCe or repair household or oth.er items damaged in Saturday night's flash flood may make application for aSsistance at the Cooperative Paris)j Office on Condor Street
in Pomeroy.

Worker injured in Gavin accident .
One worker received minor injuries Wednesday afternoon in an
accident at Am~rican Electric Power's Gavin Plant at Cheshire. ar. AEP
spokesman canfirmed this morning .
.
The accident occurred around 4:45 p.m., when a w.orker with the ·
contracted firm VFL, Inc. was filling a truck at a silo storing fly ash.
A malfunction caused more fly ash to be rel~ased from the silo than
nonnally is released, briefly trapping the worker. a spokesman stated.
. The fly ash. which is a byproduct of the scrubbing process, has a
consistency of that between sand and talcum powder, and is transported
to area landfills by the contractor, according to an AEP spokesman.
. Units of the Meigs and Gallia County Emergency Medical Services
responded to lhe scene. The worker, whose name was not released,
wits transported to Holzer Medical Center, where he was treated and
released.
·
· The accident is still under investigation by AEP health and safety
officials.

·Buffalo, W. Va.,

•••

· Continued from page 1
sites.
Toyoda flew into Charleston on ;
you, Toyota, for believing in us."
Caperton went to Japan in 1989 on Saturday and met privately with
his first gubernatorial trade mission Rockefeller.
The automaker qualifies for state
and subsequently established the
state's only overseas trade office, in tax credits and $1 ,000 in state-fundNagoya. One oflhe office's goals was ed job training for evEer hired
to auract automobile manufacturers in Buffalo. :rhe stat so will spend
er, sewerage
and automotive parts producers ·to $2 million on site,
and
road
improvements.
West Virginia.
·
·
Newspapers had reponed the plant
In July 1995, Toyota officials viswould
cost $198 million and etnploy&gt;
ited several potential V!est Virghiia
up to 500.
Also allending lhe ceremony were:
Akira Takahashi, senior manaae'r:
Units of the Meigs County Emer- director of Toyota; Yale Gieszl, exec-·
gency Medical Services recorded 9 utive vice president of Toyota Motor
c~lls for assistance Tuesday, includ- Sales USA
ing one transfer call. Units responding included:
POMEROY
•1:01 a.m., Locust Street, Jeff
Wiseman, Veterans Memorial Hospital;
.
3:13 P·lll·· Hill Street, Kenneth
Brooks, Jr., Veterans Memorial Hos- .
'pita!; '
, . 3:26 p.m., fire department, possible structure fire, Liberty Lane, no
injuries.
MIDDLEPORT
4:56 p.m., fire department, AEP
Gayin Plant, assisted Gallia EMS
with rescue;
7:56 p.m., Cole Street, Mary
Evans, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
RACINE ·
I :58 a.m., Oak Grove Road ,
Audrey Hart, Veterans Memqria l
Hospital; '
2:39 a.m., South Second Avenue,
Roland King , Veterans ·Memorial
Hospital.
SYRACUSE
7:37 a.m., Sharon. Hollow Road,
'Betsy Heck, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
'

EMS logs 9 calls

i

I'

Karen L Alexan· der

STEVE MARTIN IN

SGTBILKO,..
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY .
WALT DISNEY'S .

HOMD(ARD BOUND II;·
LOST IN SAN FRANCISCO •
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

Hospital

Larry T. Ball

Homes To Fit Your Lifestyle

·Who- ~ays you
can't take it
with you?

Ohio Volley Publi•hin~ Companylll"l!,n&lt;lt Co.,
Pomm&gt;y,llhlo 4l7tl9, Ph. 992·2(l6. Si&lt;ond
clast- pol.d 'I Pomeroy. Ohio. '

..

Mt.ber; The AssoCiated PR11, aad 1he Ohio
Newapapet Auoc.illtion.

·--a

us ·create
a memorial

POSTMA8TBR: Send ...................... to
The Dalli Setllinel, Ill Court St.,
Ollio 4l769.

POmeroy,

just f9r you.

SUJ!CRIPTIOI'IRA'JU

ly Conlor o r - . _

Ooe Woek................... ;.............................. $100
Ooe ldolllh ............................................... $8.70
Ooe Year&lt;............................................. $104.00
·

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Sublcriben not ttearlna to pay the Carder 11111y
rtmll~ln ldvlllet direct 10 1'be Daily Sentinel
on a tine. ax or '12 mondtbuiL o.dl1 will be

li·..

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lolll~theUIID
I

No oabJCriplioo by mall permilied In .,...
where...hornt cariir ten1ce It availlblt.. '

MAILSUBSCRIPTtONS

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13 - .............................,, ....................$77.30

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$2 . . . ...,.. MOO...Ol"'''' ' :''''''''''''.. "''""'" 109.72
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31118.03

Meigs announcements
To be closed
.
The Meigs County Clerk of
Courts-Title Department will be
· ·closed on May 15 so that employees
· ,may allend a title semi~ar in Jackson.
'
Country music night set
· Country Music Night will be held
at the Lottridge Community Center
Saturday, 7 p.m. to midnight.
Refreshments
Alumni banquet set
The Racine/Southern Alumni
Association banquet will be held May
25, 6 p.m. at the sehool. Reservations
. are to be made with Shirley 1ohnson,
Portland, 843-5279. Tickets can also
be purchased at the Home National
Bank and Southern Hi1h .School.
. Bolli'd to ~·
.. 'I The Racine Board of Public
.(IJ.U,S will nieet at 7 p.m Monday at
theannex.
'

Andques Club to meet
The ,Big Bend Farm Antiques
Club will meet Monl!ay at 7:30p.m. ·
at the Meigs High School Library.

AA to meet
1
1be Pomeroy Group of Alcoholics Anonyll!ous will hold an open
discussion meeting. 7 p.m. Thursday
(tonight) in the ~ement of,Sacred
Heart Calholic Church.

A Few Of Our Home Standard Features
• Andersen Tilt Windows
* S;anlcy Doors
• 2x6 Exterior Walls, l61n. On Center
• ATIJIStrong solarian Floor Tile
• Marillate Cabinets
• 8 Foot Ceiling
• 2A I0 Floor Joint, 16ln. On Center
• Si Gallon Water Heater
• Shaw Carpets
....... A.S.SI.RO.
•. Delta Faucets
• Master T-loc:k Vinyl Siding With Lifetime Warranty
• 2S Year Warranty Asphalt Shingles
• 10 Year Structural Warranty On The Home
Our Prices An The Lowest In The Area.

-i91AL

'

FAMILY HOMES INC.

FRL, SAT., SUN.
WALTER MATTHAU,

Model Home· Located at
Jnte~tlon of Rts. 7 &amp; 33
Pomeroy, OH 614-992-2478

JACK LEIIIIIOH IN .

GRUMPIER OLD
· MEN PG-t:i ·• '
,
AND

Model Home Viewing Hours I :00-S:OO p.m•
The. • Sat. or by appointment .
·

ROBIN WH IIAMS IN

JUMANJI PO
. 1"

J

'

.

~

•

..

'

�'

Sports

..

Thur-.dlly, Mly9, 1996

The l)aily Sentin~~

•

B.y DENNIS GEORGATOS

..

With two weeks of rest. Pete
Schourek looked invincible.
Schourek rebounded from a sore
shoulder to combine with Jeff Shaw
on a three-hitter Wednesday might,
and the Cincinnati Reds beat the Los
Angeles Dpdgers 5-0 for their first
shutout this season .
.
·
··I didn 't feel any pain," said
Schourek (4- 1), who allowed three
hits in six innings. "While I was
throwing on the side the last couple
of days, it didn·'t bother me, but it's
always in the back of your mind until
you test it. I did that tonight, and it
didn 't bother me, so I won't think
about it any more."
Eric Davis and Jeff Branson
drove in two runs apiece as the Reds
won their season-high fifth straight.
" It was tremendous, huge, colossal," manager Ray Knight said .
"You c"ould see right away by his
arm angle that he wasn 't feeling any
pain." ·
At Riverfront Stadium, Shaw finished with three innings ofperfect
relief for his first save.
Chan Ho Park (3-2) threw the
firs t two wild pitches of his career.
walked four, hit a bauer and gave up

" We 'rejust pot hitting," Dodgers
manager Tommy Lasorda said. "Our
run production - ' you know what
it's like. Two runs last night and no
runs tonight, that's.the problem."
In other NL games, Atlanta beat
Colorado 5- l, Montreal edged
Chicago 4-2, Florida defeated New
York 6-3, Philadelphia beat Houston
2- 1 in 10 innings, San Francisco beat
St. Louis 10-7 and Pittsburgh and
San Diego split a . doublebeader,
with the Padres winning the opener
5-4 and Pittsburgh winning the second game 4-3.
Braves S, Rockies 1
Jeff Blauser hit a two-run homer
in the seventh and a two-run double
in the eighth as the Braves complet·
ed a three-game sweep of visi.ting
Colorado.
•
Tom Glavine (3-3) gave up four
hits in eight innings ~nd didn't allow
an earned run.
Armando Reynoso (2.,3) gave up
tlu"ee runs and seven hits in 6 213
innings.
Expos 4, Cubs 2
Henry Rodriguez drove in two
run s and Rhea! Cormier (2-2)
allowed one run and five hits in 6 213

Scoreboard
Baseball

Friday's games
Atlanla nl Orlando. 1 p.m. (INT'J
Scanle at Houston, 9JO p,.m. (TNT)

AL standings

Hockey

Eastern Dlvlsicm

:.1: L

1'&lt;1.

!ill

Baltimore .. ....... 10 16 - ~
.... 14 18 .438
Toronto ....
..... 11 20_ . J:'i~
Basron
10 2 .~ .286
Detroir ..

4'c

Iwn

20

New York

64 .~

II

N HL ·playoffs

6~

9

Wednesday's scores

12

Cenlul Di¥ision
CLEVELAND ...... .2J II .6!'\6
:::'hicago ...... ...... .. 18 14 .56.1

1

Minoesora .. ............ l6 16

.:'iOO

l

Milwuuktt ..... ..... .. lJ 17
kansas Ciry ......... 14 20

.4D
.412

8

Sr . Louis 5, Detroit 4 (OT): Oeuoit
le:xis series 2-1
Colorado J. Ch1cago 2 (3 rrr): .ow:ries
tied 2-2

Tonight's games

7

Pi!1~burgh at N.Y. Rangers, 7:JO p.m.
Philaddphinnt Aorida. 7:.\0 p.m.

Western Division
Te~a.s ........

.. ...... 22
California. ............ 18
Seanle ................... 18
Oakland ... ........ 16

II .667
15 .545
16 ·.529
17 . .485

Friday's game

,,4,

Dr:trual at S1. luuili, 8 p.m

6

Nalional LeaJUe
.
CINCINNATI REDS : Designated
RHP Tim Pugh for llSsignment. Purchnsed
the contril\:t of LHP Derek L111iquist from
Indianapolis ofrhe American Association
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES: Sent P
Rich Hunter to Scranton-Witkcs-BarTe of
the: lnlernalioiQI League.
SAN DIEGO PADRES : Acliv;lled
INF-Of-' Ctaig Shipley from the 1~-dlly
di~abled lis1. Plxed IJiJf. QF Arc'hi Cilln·
frocco on1h~ IS-day dis:~bled lisa

Bosketbl!ll
Natimaai 'Ba.•kethall A!.'IOcialion
NBA: Fined Hous1~m Rocke1s cemer
Haket:m Ol:ajuwon S~ .OOO for eiOOwing
Seanle SuperSonics forward Detlef
Schremfr in a game on Snturday
PH LAOELPHIA 76ERS : Namt:d
Brad Greenberg gener;tl manager and di-

Transactions

Wednesday's scores

national Leugue. Sagned SS FeiL'I h:rmin
to a minur-league controct .

reclor of baskecball op«:uion~. replacing
John Lucas, who was recnintd as coach.

Hockey

Bos10n a1 Milwaukee, ppcl . min
MinnesOia 7. Seanle !i (lOt
New York 10. Dctr~1t J
Chic11go I I. Ballimore 2
TeAas 4, Toronto 2
CLEVELAND 7, Oakland 3
Kall!iaS City ~. Cahfornin I (14)

Baseball
1\.R~rrlcan

Lrague
NEW YORK YANKEES : Placed
RHP Uawid Cone on the 15-day disabled
li ~ t. rctruacriwe to Muy J. Recalled LHP
P:JUI Gibson from Columbus o( 1he lnk!r·

Nationlll Hockey Lea1ue
SAN JOSE SHARKS : Signed RW
Owen Nolan to a muhiyear conlr.w:t.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS : Azrttd
ro temu with RW Sergei Berezin.omd LW
Fredrik Modin

Today's games

"The A's outscored Cleveland 131 in winning the first two games, bUt

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP)- LosIng a couple of times to the rebuild- couldn't solve Nagy (5· 1) until they
ing Oakland Athletics got the Cleve- already trailed 1-0.
,land Indians' attention.
Nagy blanked the A's on four hits
"The Indians avoided a series until the eighth, wheo Brent Gates
,sweep by beating the /ll:s 1-3 on had a run-scoring groundout and
Wednesday night, getting a strong Jason Giambi homered. Jose Mesa
eight-inning outing from Charles got the last 'three outs, but gave
Nagy and a five-run outburst in the Oakland's third run.
fifth keyed by Albert Belle's three"My ball was moving pretty
run homer.
good and I was able to throw my
"It was a big win for us, espe- curve for strikes," said Nagy, 21-1
cially with them winning the first over his last two seasons. " I just tried
i wo," said Jim Thome , who had two to keep them off balance."
hits and scomd twice for the defend·
A's starter Carlos Reyes (3-5)
ing AL champions. " We need to be allowed six runs, including five in
consistent."
the fifth , which proved to be .hi s last
"You can't be overconfident inning.
•
against any team," added Julio FranThome began the Indians' fifth
co, who drove in a pair of runs with with a double, and Omar Vizquel and
a sacrifice lly and a single.
· Kenny Lofton walked to load the

Reds shut out Dodgers 5·0;
Padres split DH with Pirates
innings, helping Montreal complete
a three-game sweep.
Rodriguez hit a sacrifice lly in the
first and an RBI single in the fifih,
rai"sing his RBis total to 31 . Montreal
won its lOth straight at Olympic Stadium and fifth straight overall.
Jaime Navarro (2-4) allowed all
four runs -.three earned- and nine
hits in six innings. Chicago lost for
the fourth lime in five games.
Mel Rojas got three outs for his
third save.
Marlins 6, Mets 3
Jeff Conine's two,out, three-run
homer capped a four-run seventh as
Florida completed a three-game
sweep at Joe Robbie Stadium.
Conine atoned for a first -inning
error that led to two unearned runs.
Alex Arias also homered and had
two RBis for the Marlins. who have
won six stroight against New York.
Florida trailed 3-2 when pinchhitter Joe Orsulak and Quilvio Ve~as
si"ngled to start the seventh against
Doug 'Henry (1 - 1). Greg Colbrunn
singled in the tying run.
Phillies l, Astros 1
Jim Eisenreich singled with the
bases loaded in the I Oth at Veterans
Stadium.

up

bases. Franco then hit a sacrifice ny

1.1~

and Carlos Baerga had a run-scoring
single before Belle hit his 13th
homer.
"Giving up five Nns, \hat just
ki.lled us, " Reyes said. "It's frustrating because I didn't give my team
a ch3l.oe to win . l turned what could
have been a good game into a night·
mare."'
Reyes said the most distressing
part of the inning was issuing two
walks. Oakland manager Art Howe
agreed.
·
" Walking their No. 9 and No. I
hitters set up the inning for ~m."
Howe said . "He had pitched well
until then. But when you .put those
two guys on , you're asking for trouble because then you get into the
meat of the order and you can't
dodge them every inning."

BEATS TAO - Cincinnati's Berry Larkin
. (right) arrives at third ..... beating the tag of Los
Angeles third baMtfiln Mike Blowers In the sev·

Jeff Tabaka (0.2) struck out
Kevin Stocker to start tiM lOth, but
then hit Mark Whitell wilh a pitch.
and Whiten stole, secOiid. Lenny
Dykstra and Miclltiy Moraildini
walked, loading the bales, and
EisenreicH followed wlth'1f!e gamewinning hit.
.
Ken Ryan (2-1) pill:hed a perfect
lOth.
•
Gianls 10, Cardin6 7
Barry Bonds hacjthree hits and
two RBI&lt; as visitinj.San'francisco
overcame a grand slam by pinch-hit;
ter Ron Gant.
Mark Carreon drove in three runs
for the Giants, who had I~ hits. They
led 8'0 on the way to ~!Kling St,
Louis to its 12th loss in II games.
Mark Gardner (3-1) aJ!9wed just
one hit and one runMr ill the first
five innings before·rilfljl ill the siKth.
when the ·Cardinals !11\0fld seven
runs and closed to 8-7~ .~
Andy Benes (1-S) wa pounded
for seven runs and lllile hill in 5 'U3
innings, losing his tlfih stillght start.
Rod Beck pitched i 1/3 innings
for his seventh save.
Padres 5, Pirates 4
Pirates 4, Padres 3
Ken Caminiti hit two-run homers

By The Anoelatecl Press
- After five starts for the New York
Yankees, a 6.39 earned run average
and a world of trouble, Dwight
Gooden needed a victory.
1
"This is definitely the sweetest
one of my. career," Gooden said after
defeating Detroit 10-3 for his first
victory in nearly two years and his
first in the American League. "Num-

.
enth Inning of Wednesday night's National
League contest ih Cincinnati, where the Reds
won 5-0. (AP)

cocaine. It was his first victory since
June 19, 1994.
.. From where I've come from,"

Gooden said. "This time last year, l
didn't even knoy; if this would
come, if I would even have the
opportuniiy. After being at rock bottom and coming back. For me personally, it's a miracle."
Whe~ he left the game after th~
eighth, Gooden I ipped his cap arter
receiving a loud ovation from the
Yankee Stadium crowd.
"It's been a long time since I've
heard that after gelling a win ,"
Gooden ~aid. "It was just another
reward for coming back from all I've
been through."
Gooden walked two and struck
out a season-high eight. He won 151
games in the NL with the New York
Mets before drug problems derailed
his career.
.
Wade Boggs went -3-for-4 and
scored four runs, Tim Raines hit hts

ber one."

Gooden allowed three runs and
two hits in the .first inning Wednesday night to fall behind 3-0, but he
' retired the next 22 Tigers before
' leaving after eight innings.
Since the Tigers are ihe worst hitting and pitching team in theAL, the
· Yankees liad little trouble coming
· back.
At least, it was nothing compared
to the comeback by Gooden, who
returned to baseball this season after
sitting out all 1995 when he was
banned for testing positive for

run wllh an eighth-inning single.
Steve Finley homered twice,.
including a two-run, two-out shot in
the eighth off Jason Chrislianen (3·
2) that lied the" score 3-3. ScoU
Sanders (0-1) was the loser, arid
Francisco Cordova pitched the ninth
for his second major-league save.

in his first two at-bais of the doublehea~er opener.
Bob' Tewksbury (4- 1) gave up
four runs and SIX hits in 6 'U3
innings. Darrell May (0-1) allowed
five runs and four hits in five
innings.
In the second game, pinch-hitter
Dave Clark drove in the go-ahead

------Sports briefs-----Football
Committee at meetings in late April.
OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) .
Also ccrtilied were the Alamo
-The NCAA has certified 19 bowl Bowl, Carquest Bowl, Citrus Bowl,
games, including the first one to he Copper Bowl , Cotton Bowl, Orange
played on foreign soil.·
Bowl, Aloha Bowl, Las Vegas Bowl,
The third-place finisher in the Sugar Bowl, Sun Bowl, Outback
Pac-10 will play an at-large team in Bowl, Peach Bowl, Holiday Bowl;
Auckland, New ;?.caland, in the Haka Independence Bowl, Rose Bowl,
Bowl on Dec. 26, tile NCAA said of Liberty Bowl, Fiesta Bowl and Gator
actions taken by the Special Events Bowl.

Eastern's softball team continued
·to dominate play around the area,
posting a 7-0 Division Ill sectional ·
• tournament victory over the Trimble
· Tomcats.
·' The win advances the Eagles
•(14-1) to the sectional cham pi·
onships to be played today at Eastern High School.
·Eastern scored one run in the first
; andk t~l. proved to be all that was
neeil'ed·. Leadoff hitter Nicole Nelson
"walked, stole first and second and
_. came home on an attempted steal

which produced an error on the
catcher. Later Patsy Aeiker singled in
the inning, but was left stranded.
Eastern pitcher Rebecca Evans
retired the side in order in the first
inning,.then in the second struck out
the side after giving up a two-out sin·
gled to Erica Campbell. Eastern
plated another run in the second
· when Meredith Crow walked and
scored on a Jennifer Mora single.
In the third, Trimble threatened
with Misty Coffman's single and an
error on Hardy, but Evans fanned the

third-spot batter to end the inning.
· Eastern plated three runs in "the
frame as Tracy White walked, Patsy
Aeiker walked and Evans.slammed
a two-run double . Amanda Milhoan
followed with a run-scoring double
and the score stood at 5-0.
· Eastern added single runs in the
fourth and sixth innings.
Evans picked up the win while
fanning 14 and walking just one,
while scattering two hits. Davis suffered the loss with six hits, three

strike outs and nine walks.
Eastern hitters were Evans arid
Milhoan with doubles and singles by
White , Aeiker, Crow and Mora.
Coffman and Campbell had the
lone Trimble hits.
Inning Ml11i
Trimblc .... ...........000-000-0=0-2-2
Eastern ..... ....- ....... 113- 10 l -x=7-Q-2
WP-Evans
LP- Davis

618

2
l

676

.5.11
.406
.400

1-614-991-6614

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CUTLASS SUPREME
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NL standings
Moplreal .....
11
Arlnmn
..... 21 . IJ
Philadelphia ..... .... 11 15
New York
..... IJ IIJ
Fluritla ...
. 14 21

'

.

Kan sas Cily (Haney 1· 4) 011 Seattle
(8osio J-2). 10: 0~ p.m.

!ill

or
.'

~ i~nesota (~odrig~.aez. 2-J) at .Oaklnnd
(WoJCiechows~J .MI),_I0:05 p.m. .

~:&lt;~.

Pimbur~h

... 11

. 16
Chicu~o ..
.. ... 16
CINCINNATI
14
Sl LolliS .
. .. 14

17 .."100
17 4R5
Ill ..171
17' .452
19

4'24

•
9':
j '·.

2' :

Wednesday's scores
DH: S:m Diego 5. Piusburg~ 4: Piusbur&amp;h 4. San 01 ~: go ~
Florida 6. New York~
Atlanla ~ . Colorado I
Mnnlreal4. Olicngo 2
CINCINNATI.'i. Lru Angeles 0
Philadelphia 2. Houston I ( 10)
Sun Fram:iscu I0. Sl. Louis 7

Today's games
San Francisco (0. Fernandez 3-1) at
St. Loot s (0sbome 2·2), I.J:'i p.m..
Colorado (F~man :l-2) :u Flonda (K.
Miller 0·0). 7:05p.m.
.
.
San Diego (Ashby ·' ·2) at Pittsburgh
(Wagner 4-2). 7:0:'i p.m.
.
Houston (Kilt .1-2) at Mnntreal tR~u1cr
2- 1). 7JS p.m.

Friday's games
Colomdn (Ritz J . )) a1 Florida (Rupp
1-.l ). 7:05p.m.
.
•.
San Frasu· iti ~ O (Lc11er 2-.a ) nr Pltt~ ­
burgh (Neagle 4-1). 7 : 0.~ p.m.
Hou ston (ftrL)l.;ail I·J ) 011 Moncreal
(FU!sc:ro 2-.1), 7:35p.m.
Allan! a (Smohz 6· 1) at Philadelphi;~
(Mulholland J-2). 7 : l~ p.m.
San Diego (Bergman 2-Jl ul CINCIN·
NATI (PortuKal 0·4), 7J5 p.n1
Chi cago {Castillo 1-:l) a1 New Yurk
(Jon~s 2-1), 7:40p.m. . .
· Lo5 All!eles (Candtolp 1- J ) at S1.
Louis (Stoll emyre 2-2). 8 :0~ p.m.

Basketball
NBA playoffs
Wednesday's'scor'e

ATTENTION!
. AREA HIGH SCHOOL
GRADUATES OF 1996

.
'
On Thursday, May 23rd, The Daily Sentinel1rill

The Southern Tornadoes rolled to
an impressive 10-6 win over the
Miller Fa.lcons as Corey Williams
picked up his second varsity win for
the Tornadoes.
Miller took a 1-0 lead off SQuthern Chad Blount in the first as Neal
got a lead-off triple and scored on a
fielder's choice. Miller then went
ahead 3-0 when D. Jones and A.
Keller each.singled and scored on a
Shawn Neal single.
. Southern's offense struggled as its
ck:fense began to bend even worse.
The Falcons plated twq more runs in
the third inning to go up 5-0 as
Blount pitched ·his last frame .
Williams then came on to retire the
side and at the same time the Southern offense quivered. Kevin Deemer
reached on an error, Jesse Maynard
doubled and Shawn Dailey singled
for a 5-2 tally.
In the fifth Joe Kirby walked ,
Williams singled. Michael Ash singled," Deemer singled, Travis Lisle

t

singled and Maynard singled. Jay .
McKelvey closed the inning with a
sacrifice and SHS led 1-5.
•
Williams picked up the win in 2 ~:
2/3 jnningS of work., giving up just ::
one run un two hits ,.lhrce strike ouls - ~
and a walk . Matt Dill worked one •
and one-third innings, giving up no· :
runs on one hit, one walk and no
strike outs.

•

Five Miller runs were chargeu to
Blount who gave up five hits, three
walks and Jaimed three . Kelkr and
Frye combined in the loss with four
strike outs, one walk and 14 hits .
Southern · hitters were Wiliams,
Deemer, Lisle ahd Maynard with
two hits each and singles by Ash,
McKelvey, Dailey, Sissort, Kirby ·
and Blount.
·
Inning~

Millcr........... ........ l22-001 -0=6-7-3
Southern .. ... ......000-250-3=10-14-4
WP - Williams
LP - Frye

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Orlando 117, Allllnlll 105 ; Orlando
leads series 1·0

Utah ,.·San Autonio,ll p.m. (TNT)

Southern baseball team
hands Miller 10-6 loss

..

.

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"

STEALS SECOND - Cleveland's Omar Vizquel dives under the
feet of Oakland sec.o nd baseman Brent Gates (B) for the steal of &amp;ec· .
ond base In the third Inning of Tuesday's American League contest:
In Oakland, where the Indians won 7-3. (AP)

'

.

1995 BUICK
'
CENTURY .

Cenlral Division

Houston .... .

..

1·800-8:S7-1094

Bus10n (Gordon 2·2) at Toronto (Hent·
gen'4-11. 7:35p.m
Baltimore (Haynes 1-4) nt Milwuukt!e
(MdJo Rald 4- l ), 8:05p.m.
New York (Peuine 5-1) at Chi cago
(Tnpani 2· 2). 8:0.5 p.m.
.
!Xtroit (Lima 2-2) at Texns tPawhk 40), IUS p.m.
CLEVELAND (Mut!inez ~ -21 a1 California (Springer 0-01. IO:OS p.m.
·

1.

'

Eastern -blanks Trimble 7-0 in D-Ill sectionals

'

friday's games

n
.. ... 2~

•
•
•
•

,,

first homer and Bernie Williams hit
right-center.
a two-run shot as the Yankees won
Hipolito Pichardo (2-3) pitched
their fourth straight.
three innings of three-hit relief to
" Right noy;, we're in a zone that pick up the victory, getting Tim
I like," New York manager Joe Salmon on a grounder for the final
Torre said.
'out with runners on secpnd and third.
The Tigers have lost six in a row
· The victory was the seventh
and 18 of their last 20.
straight for · the Royals over the
Elsewhere in the AL, it was Min- Angels, including four last year and
nesota 1, Seattle 5 in I0 innings; three this week.
Chicago II , Baltimore 2; Texas 4,
After Angels starter Chuck Finley
Toronto 2; and Kansas City 3, Cali- left with a !..()lead. Troy Percival,
fornia I in 14 innings ..
. with II saves in his previous II
· Royals 3, Angels 1
.
appearances, escaP."d a jam in 1 e
David Howard doubled home eighth .
·
two runs in the !.4th inning after
Smith. who started the seas n a
Kansas City tied .the game against the closer before going on the ·
Lee Smith in the ninth at California. abled list with knee problems, gave
Jose Offerman capped his second up a sacrifice fly by Bob Hamelin in
three-hit game in three nights with a the ninth, forcing extra innings.
one-out single in the 14th aff Mark
Rangers 4, Blue Jays 2
Eichhorn ( 1-2), and he advanced to
Texas won its fifth straight game
second on a balk. Bip Roberts was and improved to 11-0 at home
intentionally walked before Howard against the AL East.
lined his game-winning double to
(See AL on Page 6)

.

Bnhimore (Mussina 4-2) at Chicago
!Alvarez 2·2), M:05 p.m.
Toront o (Quantrill 0-41 at Te~as (H ill
4-2). 8·35 p.m. •
.
Kansa.~ City (Gubicza 2-4) at Cahlornia (Grimslt!y 2- 1), 10.05 p.m .

:rwn

'

•••

Yanks blast Tigers; White Sox also win

p.m.

Eastern Olwtslon

•.

•

In other AL action,

Detroit (Gohr 1-4) at New York (Key

I-3),7:3Sp.m.

·-

•

Cleveland scored its first run in
the.third when Vizquel singled, stole
second and scored on Franco's twoout single.
The Indians added their seventh
run off reliever Mark Acre on
Vizquel 's run-scoring double in the
siKth.
"It was about time we started hitting their pitchers," said Vizquel,
who had three hits, an RBI and two
runs scored. "The first two games
we didn 't make any adjustments.
Tonight we did." ,
'"We swung the bats well, though
it took two or three innings," Cleve- •
land manager Mike Hargrove said.
"'We adjusted to Reyes. Nagy was
throwing very wei!. Albert got a
changeup up in a bad spot and he hit
it and broke the game open for us."

Roston (Sele 1· 2) at Milwaukee
(Bones I-S),

'I

'

..•

three hits in six innings.

The Dilly Sentinel • P~ge 5 :

·Indians ndtch 7-3 win over Athletics

In NL action, .

By The Assoelllted Press

•
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In the NBA playoffs,

By FRED GOODALL
ORLANDO. Fla. (AP) - The
Shaq ct Penny show is gearins up for

long playoff run.
"We had eight days off,"
Shaquille O'Neal said Wednesday
night after his playoff career-high 41
points keyed the Orlando Magic's
117-105 victory over the Atlanta
Hawks in the opening game of their
second-round NBA series.
"I think we lost our killer instinct
just a little bit," the Magic center
added. "But we've got the first game
out or our system, so I think we'll be
all right"
Penny Hardaway, the other half of
Orlando's young All-Star tandem,
equaled a career playoff best of 32
points as the defending Eastern Conference champions beat the Hawks
for the sixth straight time at Orlando Arena.
Game 2 · of the best-of-seven
matchup is Friday night, also at the
0-rena- where the Magic have the
best home record in the league the
past two years.
1

117-105

vi~tory .over Hawks

"A win is a win, but the way we
won the game ... we didn't care too
much for it, especially in the first
half," Orlando's Horace Grant said
after the Magic squandered most of
a 10-point lead before pulling away ·
for good in the third quarter.
"A team like New York or Chicago, if we get past this round, they're
not going to let us do that," Grant
·said.
The Magic finished a first-round
sweep of Detroit on April 30, bin
couldn't begin preparing for this
series until Atlanta got past Indiana
on Sunday.
·
Magic head coach Brian Hill
worried that his players might be
rusty, but O'Neal and his teamm ates
showed no such signs in shooting 58
percent from the field and winning
easily despite getting just one.point
from .a non-starter.
Hill described the layoff between
series as a coach's nightmare.
"You stop and think about il. We
experience nothing like this at all
during the regular season. You're in

Reds fans display
feelings .with Schott's
latest comments
•

CINCINNATI (AP)- Some faris
apparently disgusted with Reds owner Marge Schott's continued careless
comments found a way to let her
know how they felt.
They l)ung a bedsheet-sized banner over the left field railing at Riverfront Stadium during Wednesday
night's game with the Los Angeles
Dodgers.
.
It read: "Marge, Please Keep
Your Mouth Shut."
It lasted just one out before it was
taken down by a security guard.
Schott could have seen it from her
seat next to the Reds dugout, along
the first base line, but there was no
indication she did.
Prior to the game, she was on the
field with her St. Bernard, as she
often is, and ignored questions about.
het interview broadcast Sunday by ·
ESPN. In that, she repeated a state- .
ment first published in 1992 in
which she said German leader Adolf
Hitler "was good at the beginning,
. but he just went too far."
She issued a written apology on
Tuesday, but there were strong signs
Wednesday that her hometown had
tired of her offhand remarks. Both
daily newspapers ran editorials urging that she relinquish m~nagement
of theJeam.
the Cincinnati Enquirer said the
Hitler remark "is just the latest in a
long string of embarrassments that
have drawn shame like a magnet that
stick~ 10 Cincinnati."
Schou was fined and suspended
in 1993 by Major League Baseball
for derogatory comments about ·
blacks, Jews and Asians.
"Marge Schou has a right to
speak her mind. So does Cincinnati.
And we deserve _better," the Enquirer said.
.
· The Cincinnati Post. in an editorial tit1pd "Time for a new owner."
called Schott "thOughtless, cruel,
stingy. bigoted."
"The best thing that could happen
is for Mrs. Schott to step aside, to sell
her interest in the Reds to someone
who will restore professional manage~nt and bring credit, not shame,
to our community."
Columnists were- even harsher.

"Acting commissioner Bud
Selig's spineless response Tuesday ·
was that he would 'continue to monitor the situation,' but the situation
• merits more drastic measures. If
Schott will not' step aside willingly,
it is time she was shoved," wrote
Enquirer columnist Tim Sullivan.
"She speaks mindlessly, without
concern, without consideralion.''

columnist Joe Posnanski wrote in
The Cincinnati Post. ''Marge Schott,
who so loves children. should visit
· Y' ad Vashem, a place in Jerusalem,
where there is a room lit with candles, and a voice. 24 hours a day,
speaks olf the names of the children
butchered in the Holocaust."
Newspapers around the state published editorial cartoons lampooning
Schou, the Cincinnati auto dealer
who bought control of the Reds in
1984.
One showed a child offering a
..,Pen and a baseball to a cartoon
Schou; as if asking for an autogmph.
"Could I get your swastika?"' he
asks.
.
Another shows a muzzled Schou
silting in a Reds box next to her dog,
Schottzie 02. And still another shows
Schott reading "Mein , Kampf,"
Hitler's autobiography, upside down.
Schott, reached at home by The
Associated Press on . Wednesday,
hung up without a word.
Still, encouragement from two ·
supporters found its way into p_rint,.
"She believes the best in people,''
Reds controller John Allen , one of
Schott's few confidants. told the
Post. "When they say, 'We want to
get your side of the story,· she
'believes that. But there are some
people in the media who don 't hold
to that."
Today's Op-Ed page in the
Enquirer included a letter from Lori
Mayer, of suburban Deer Park.
• "Why can 'I we give Marge
Schott a break?" it said. "She is an
honest woman who speaks what is
on her mind . .So do we all sometimes; lucky for us our words are not
printed for all the nation to read,
scrutinize, criticize, take out of context, interpret and misinterpret."

trainin1 camp for one week. You much of Wednesday night. And ,
start playins exhibition games and when the Hawks did try to double· ~
the loosest break {al'ter that) is the team O' Neal. help often was late get- ,
All-Star break, which is a total of ting to the ball.
:
"We cannot let him come in and ,
about five days," Hill ~id.
" We were a little rusty. We did take the low post position like we '
not play well in the fi~t half. It's just allowed him tonight,'' Atlanta coach ,
nice to get back in 5ome type of , Lenny Wilkens said. "We allowed •
rhythm again and knowing that him to get way too close to the bas- '
we're going to be playing in 48 hours ket. It doesn 't make any difference r
if he's that close, the double-team •
as oppos~ to eight days."
O'Neal dominatc:d Atlanta's c'l_nnot get there qu_ick enough." .
Stacey Augmon led Atlanta with
Christian Laettner, making 18 of 28
shots and grabbing J3 . rebounds. 23 points. Mookie Blaylock and "
Hardaway was 12-for-.19, while Nick Steve Smith had 18 each, while Alan :
Anderson scored 21 p()inti and Grant Henderson added-17 off the Hawks' :
bench, which outscored Orlando's
•• .
had 17 points and 10 rebounds.
.
The Hawks used' a variety of dou- reserves 28-1. Laettner had JUSt s~v- ;:,
~
ble teams to contain O'Nealthe last en potnts.
Atlanta,
which
played
without
time the teams m~t during the regular season, yet lost by 15 as Dennis key reserve Craig Eltlo because 'tlf .;
Scott hurt them from tlie perimeter migraine l¥:adaches .and a stom"':h t;
with a NBA-record II three-point- virus, vowed to bounce back In :
ers.
Game 2.
::
"We are not a team that is going ...
Laettner and Sean Rooks,
Atlanta's other undersized center, to quit," Wilkens said. "We 'arc · :;
p'
tried to hanCile O'Neal one-on-one going to keep working harQ. and the ·111
next game we'll be ! lot better."· ·E .

AL 9/!mes.• . _.-. . l&lt;.: ; Co: : n: : tin~ued=fro:. :.:.m;,;,P. .;: ag:.:. .e

played without defenseman Chris
CHICAGO (AP) - Joe Sakic Chelios.-their captain, best player
started the scoring and, to the delight and regular-season scoring leader.
and relief of the Colorado Avalanche, But the Blackhawks wouldn't say
Joe Sakic finished the scoring. In why he wasn't playing until the
between , it was one· of the wildest game was a period old and wouldn't ·
hockey games anyone could remem- · give any details about his pulled
ber.
right groin muscle until after the
Colorado defeated ihe Chicago game ende.d.
Blackhawks 3-2 on Salek's goal
Chelios sustained the injury in
4:33 into the third overtip1e Wednes- Game 3, but the team held out hope
day night, tying the .Western Con- that he could play un!il a pregame
ference semifinal series 2-2 and pain-killing injection made him too
ending 4 hours, 48 minutes of end- numb to skate effectively. Chelios
to-end excitement.
provided some drama when be came
"Wow. What a game,'' Chicago's out for warmups before the fils!
Denis Savard said. · "It would've overtime; after a few turns around
been a nice one to win."
the ice, however, he told coach
After winning the-first multiple-• Craig Hartsburg he couldn't go.
overtlme game in franchise history,
"Anytime Chelios is not on the
the Avalanche certainly thought so.
ice, you always notice it," Black"We were desperate," Mike Ric- hawks goalie Ed Belfour said. "He's
ci said. "If we had lost, the series such a presence, always making big
might have been done."
plays, always doing the right thing.
Instead, it will go at -least six And he's such a leader."
games. Game 5 is Sa~urday night in
Hartsburg said he didn't know if
Denver. The besi-of-seven series Chelios could play Saturday night,
will then return to Chicago on Mon- · but the defenseman has a high pain
day nighl.
threshold.
But Game 4 set quite a standard
-Then, there was controversy.
for entertainment value:
Midway through the first over-'
-First, there was intrigue.
time, Chicago's Jeremy Rcienick had
Already in_issing injured wing a breakaway, but was tripped by SanTony Amonle, the Blackhawks dis Ozolinsh. Roenick should have

Bobby Witt beat Toronto for his
IOOth career victory, allowin,g eight
hits in seven-plus innings, with nine
strikeouts and one walk, to send the
Rangers to their seventh consecutive
victory over the Blue Jays.
Witt had the Blue Jays hitting the
ball in the air. Toronto did not record
its first ground-ball out until Otis
Nilfoo grounded out to end the seventh.
Darryl Hamilton went 3-for-4
and reached base four times, and
Mickey Tenleton had two RB!s for
the Rangers.
Wblte Sox 11, Orioles 2
Robin Ventura's three-run homer
highlighted a six-run fifth inning,
and Chicago handed visiting Baltimore its fourth straight loss and ninth
in 14 games. .
James Baldwin (3-0) allowed two .
runs on five hits and walked none in
six innings for the White Sox; while
Scott Erkkson (2-3) gave up seven
runs·, six earned, and six hits in 4 13 innings:
ArlhurRhodes relieved Erickson
in the fifth and allowed Ventura's
fifth homer, making the score 11.0:
'fWIIII7, Mv~Qen 5
AI Seattle, Minnesota's bullpen
held Seattle hitless in the final 4' 1·

•

3 innings as the Twins won in I0
. mnmgs.
The Twins' relievers held the '
Mariners to a .114 batting average
(4-for-35) in taking two out of three
in the series.
Pitcher Bob Wells' throwing error
allowed the go-ahead run to score in
the ij)th.
. Dave Hollins doubled to start the
lOth off Wells (2- i ), and pinch-hitler Richard Becker sacrificed Hollins
to third. Wells fielded the bunt and
threw to third baseman Russ Davis,
but the ball went down the left-field
line.
Greg Myers added a run-scoring
· double later in the lOth, giving the ·
Twins a 3-0 record in extra-inning
games this season.
Eddie Guardado (1-2), the·fourth
Minnesota pitcher, got the victory by
working the ninth. Dave Stevens
pitched the lOth for his seventh save.
'brlef~t-S.- -

--Sports

· Soccer
BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) Paris Saint Germain won the European Cup Winners Cup final for the
first time, beating Rapid Vienna 1-0
'On defender Bruno N'Gotty's goal in
lhe 29th minute. ·

been given a penalty shot, but referee Andy Van Hellcmond bl~w the
call .
Roenick wasn't available for
comment, but Hartsburg said: "We
thought it was grounds·for a penalty shot. He was wide open in the
clear.But there are lots ofthihgs you .
can look back on and say, 'If we
would have put the puck into the net
at some point. we'd be out here smil-

in, but Jon Casey made a~pad save.
Casey also made a glove save on a
point-51ank shot by Keith Primeau in
·overtime.
~ 'He stoned Primeau three times,"
·

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;;}
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Red Wings' road 'games in the play- ..
{S~ BLUES on Page 8)
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"When you get near the net,'' llo
Colorado coach Marc Crawford said, po.
ing. '"
"there's no one else you'd rather
Besides, who's to ~ay Roenick have there ."
would have scored on the penalty
That's just where Sakic was when ,
. shot'! Though he beat Patrick Roy on he took Alexei Gusarov's pass and '
a breakaway in Game 3, Roy had scored low to Belfour's stick side. •
stopped Joe Murphy's'tlreakaway in ·
Had he been thinking he might ;
the final minute of regulation to keep score the winner'!
:
Colorado alive.
·
·
"No, I was too tired to think," he •
-There was great· goaltending said. "Both teams wanted it. Both ~throughout.
teams played hard. It was the• most '•
Be'lfour made 54 saves and was import~nl win (in franchise history). ;
especially incredible in the second If we don't win, we're dowri' 3-l in •·
overtime. Nevertheless, he _lost for the series and that's tough."
':.
the first time in a month after a 6-0
It was the second consecutive
start in the playoffs. (Jeff Hackett overtime game between the teams, ~­
started for the ill Belfour in Chicathe third of•the series and Chicago's '
go's only other defeaL)
fourth in live games. The Black- ::;
"Now we've got a loss on Eddie,
hawks, who finished their firstand hopefully we can keep going,"
round sweep of Calgary with a ~
said Roy, who made 32 saves and triple-overtime victory, hild· won ~
dominated the first oveltime.
their first three OT .game,s. ·. . , • 1 • • )
- Finally. there was Sakic, who is
"We finally broke through,' ' Roy
making a name for himself after sevsaid. "We had no choice. "
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Blues defeat--Red Wings 5i4 in OT

.;.;5&gt;_ _ _ . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. . . .

we wae bystanders in this matter."
said spokeiinu Clwles Perltins.
The llwsuit names the compu~y
and Stuan Bianchi, a Prudential broker in Kenosha, Wis.. who handled
the accounts of New Era llld its
founder and pn:sident, John G. Bennett Jr.
The lawsuit contends that Pru,
dential and Bianchi were integral

£

In other NHL playoff action,
·were on the ice."
·
.
Konstantinov had a goal, Kozlov
had two assists and Larionov one for
Detroit: ·
Tony Twist. an enforcer who has
six goals in 256 regular-season
games,- forced' the extra period with
his first career playoff goal at 8:46
of the third off a centering effort by
Kravchuk. He's never had a bigger
goaI·
"No. obviously not," Twist said.
" I think in peewees I had a hal trick
once."
·
Then Kravchuk, who had seven
goals in the regular season, broke the
tie with his first career playoff overtime goal. He intercepted a clearing
pass by Fetisov, barely getting to the
d thc bl ue 1m
· e,
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.k
"
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The goals by two of the more
anonymous Blues spoiled a threegoal game by Steve Yzerman and a .
comeback by Detroit. The Red
Wings led 4-3 after Yzerman scored
his fitih goal in two games on a power play at 3:08 of the third period.
Yzerman had a chance to end it at
15 seconds of overtime on a break-

'fhe o.lly ~~ ~~~~~~~ e ,....7•

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The lawsuit seeks $90 million in
compensatory llld punitive daJna&amp;es.
A spokesman for Prudential Securities, the investment ann of the
nition 's IUJest insurance company,
said Prudential acted only u New
Era'$ investment broker.
"We empathize ~ith these charities, bot their a&amp;:tions should be tak·
en against the people responsible, llld

I
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Avalanche get by Blackhawks 3-2

By R.B. FALLSTROM.
.
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Before the
series, St. Louis Blues coach Mike
Keenan joked that his Russians were
going to have to be better than the
Detroit Re~ Wings' Russians. For at
least one game. he got his wish.
Defenseman Igor Kravchuk, the
Blues'lone Russian, and not the Red
Wings' famed Russian line, made the
difference in a 5-4 overtime victory
Wednesday night. Kravchuk set up
the tying goal and then got the gamewinner at 3:23 of the extra period to
cut the Red Wings' series -lead to 2I heading into Game 4 Friday night
in St. Louis.
"There arc no Russians. " said
Kravchuk, who has played with all
. ·
of the mem be rs 0 f 1he Red Wtogs
'
Russian line. "They're Red Wings.
That's what's on their jerseys."
·The crowd certainly noticed,
chanting "USA, USA" at one point
in the third period as Detroit's Sergei
Fedorov, Igor Larionov, Vladimir
Konstantinov, Slava Fetisov and
Viachaslav Kozlov hit the ice.
Kravchuk heard it.
"I didn't know why, then I realized it was because their five guys

PHU.ADELPHIA {AP) - Coi- , Philadelphia, the Detroit Institute of
Ieses, seminaries llld other nonprof· Ans and United TheoloJical Semiit JIOUPS. that lost money ~n the nary in O.yton, Ohio.
Foundatioo for New Era PhilanThe poups, which uy they lost
thropy collapsed are suma Prudential $39.6 million when the RadnorSeewities Inc., citin1 its role as a bro- based charity declared banlcruptcy
ker for the oraanization.
l.ast May, said they thbught their New
The civil racketeering suit was Era investments were safe because of
filed Tuesday in federtll coun by 31 Prudential's reputation as a "trustgroups, including the Free Library of worthy fiduciary."

'

In three overtime periods,
GETS REBOUND -orlando's Shaqullle O'Neal. (fllr left) graba a
rebound In front of Atlanta's Chrlatlan Laettner (32), Alan Hender·
eon (44) and Stacy Augmon (8) during their Eatllm Conference semifinal series opener Wednesday night In Orllndo, Fla., where the MagIc won 117·105. (AP)

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•

.

expecting lntly soo·qualifying records to fall soon :

on-track activity.
'
• INDIANAPoLis (AP)- RoberGuc~ set the current track
'~!!~expects his four-ye¥-old n:cords of 232.618 mph for a single
l.ndillllpOiis SOO qualify ina records lap and 232.482 for a f\)111'-lap, 10,JabehiAorybytheendofthisweek. mile qualifyina run in 1992. Even
• 1be two-time Indy runner-up with limited practice so far this
.ipates dtat one of four Team month because of the rain, the top
:Melllld entries- all ye'.r-old Lola's speeds have. been well above those
J)owered by six-cylinder Menard numbers, so it's likely the records
en11ines- will be doins the record- will fall Saturday in pole qualifying.
'breakin11. and he is hopeful of a sec-.
"I thought it was going to fall last
.ond-row start in the May 26 race.
year, but even with a Oulce event it
. ' " I do.n 't think you've seen the will go this year," Guerrero said.
-most out of how fast the cars can "Even if it's 90 degrees, I still think
's.o," Guerrero said Wednesday as they can run 237, ""d if it is really
rain washed out the day's scheduled cold I think they can run over 240."
Meanwhile, the large contingent

of rookie driven aod the few experie~ veterans hoping to qualify
for the 801h Indy SOO are fiahting a
losing battle with rain for practice
time. The track has been idle due to
we( weather more than· it has been
open for practice since Saturday's
ofracial stan.
, ,.
,. .
Wednesday's c·omplete ramout
was the second in five days. During
that period, there has been only one
day in which some time wasn 'tlost
due to a wet track. Teams have had
less than I Lhours for practice out of
a possible 35 ,hours.
Due to the large number of newcomers, officials reserved the first

three days of pnctice time for the Stewllt, is next 11235.997, followed
rookies. The schedUle was revised by Scott Bntyton, 1.r year's poleo
widt special moming sessions for the winner.
rookies after the tint two days were
Bntyton, who also is the most
dnstically reduced by rain.
experienced driver here with 14
Veterans weren't able to go full Indy SOO stans.recorded the faste1t
speed until neatly 2:30 p.m. on unofficial Indy lap ever, 237.S5S,
Tuesday aod only 30 drivers have durina wtinJ laat month. His faalC$1
been on the track thus far. Team so far this month is 235.750.
Menard has the three fastest times.
He's followed by 1990 Indy SOO
Rookie Tony Stewart reconled the winner Arie Luyendyk in a 1995
month's fast lap of237.336 mph on Reynard·Ford at 233.621 and GuerMonday and has been the fastest dri- rero at 232.336 in a 2-year-old Reyver on each of thc three days of prac- IUII'd-Ford. Rookie Mark Dismore.
tice. Formula One and Indy-car vet- the fDiirth Menard driver, is 25th
e.ran Eddie ~ver, a teammate of . fastest so far at 228.566.
"We can't even worry aboul
them," Guerrero said'of the Menard
According to Informant In Irvin probe,
can, "I think we're soing for, hopefully, the second row.'lt's the Joal ....
1be three Mcnards, and even four,
may be in the top four. I guess, Wl:
al, scheduled for June 24. State Dis- White H.ouse" to which Pedini Cowboys playen a place to do anyBy MEUSSA WILUAMS
all
knew that colhing in. It's someDALLAS (AP) - A confidant- trici Judge Manny Alvarez inslruct- referred was leased by former Cow- thing they wanted, jncludins drugs,
turned-informant says he ran the ed him to abide by a gag order in the boys receiver Alvin Harper. Afler Pedini said. "There was a lot of thins you have to deal with, and you
have to hope that won't be the case
operation of a residence, known as case.
Harper went to Tampa Bay, KXAS . drugs ... a lot of !Jlllrijuana, cocaine."
in the race."
.."the White House," where Dallas
However, that action did not bar said, the two-story brick residence in
Asked if players used the house
Meanwhile, the Menard team
-Cowboys wide receiver Michael KXAS from broadcasting already- Valley Ranch, near the Cowboys' as a place to have sex with w11men,
was
anxious to set ''more practice
J""in and other players had wild par- taped interviews with Pedini and hid- practice facility, went into the con- Pedini said, "Yeah, it was like going
rime.
~
ties.
den camera footage that purports to trol of a property management com- there instead of going to a hotel."
"I
haven't
done very much testDennis Pedini, 31, made the rcv- show Irvin discussing with Pedini his pany and of a company by the name
The station quoted two other
c)ation in a taped interview shown acquisition and use of drugs.
of Spec1rum Foundation, owned by men, including an unnamed former
Wednesday night on KXAS-TV on
KXAS-TV revealed Tuesday Pedini.
Cowboys player, as saying they had
the . Fort Worth station's fourth night that it paid Pedini $6,000 "for
Asked why the house was in his been in the house during parties and
Installment of a 'Tarnished Star" licensing and assigning rights" for company's name, Pedini said:
saw hc.avy use of drugs and wittl)vestigative series on Irvin, who his secretly recorded footage.
"So that if anyone l1&gt;oked into it, neased "aroup sex" in which as
"was indictc.d April I for possession
Pedini told the station he clan- there would be stumbling blocks. ... m""y as ciaht to 10 women were
ofdruss.
destinely filmed Irvin and got him to I basically ran everything, to keep . having sex with players.
Pedini appeared in court Wednes- talk about drug use because after all everything private and protect them
But the two also said this was not
ilay in answer.to a subpoena Tuesday he'd done for the players, it became from the public, from prying eyes." unique to .the Cowboys, that similar .
from Irvin :s attorney and was sworn clear they had no respect for him.
The house gave Irvin and other activities were Occurring all over the
in as a potential witness in Irvin's triKXAS said records show "the
· league. The Cowboys players also
used a house in ncai'by Coppell and ·
an apartment in Valley Ranch, the
11nidentified former Cowboys player told the station.
"It's amazing what goes on, but
when you have that kind of money
and access to whatever you want.
By JAY REEVES
Athletic director Glen Tuckett Alabama.
anything is possible." Pedini said.
Pedini said he ran the house and
.. BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) said the university would not have to
. Tbe NCAA announced the outAn NCAA enforcement 1&gt;fficial said reappear before the Infractions Com- come of the case ' in its monthly has phone recordings, photographs,
V-6, lluto, lilr CQnd,
films and other documents to prove
Alabama, already on probation, mittee when it considers the enforce- newsIetter. Wh 1.le the summary d'd
1
AIIJFM CIIH, tilt, cruiM,
could face additional penalties stem- ment .staff's investigation of Jack.
not name the school, officials at it.
.
·
·
1
ed
Tbe
station
played
what
it
said
PB,,
PS, PW, PDL.
_ll)ing from football players' tire pur"We're fine. They're bringing it AI abama con fi1rmed that1t mvo v
to a conclusion," he said .
Sutherland's dealings with players were recordinas of messages left for
chases from a Crimson Tide fan.
FlberglaH Topper
•~in on an answering machine at the
nd
J
k
David Berst, executive director of
· Berst said sanctions were not pre- a ac .
t' '
"EDD.IE
.epforcement and eligibility appeals, ·eluded by the fact the loans in quesSutherland told AP he had repeat- · house.
.
declined comment on the likelihood tion were not uncovered by NCAA edly contaCted Jack asking that the
Most of messages were from
·Ill severity of any further sanctions. investigators during their last review school make players repay their women:
· The Infractions Committee could of Alabama.
loans.
"Hh Michael, this is Jennifer .. .':;
h~ the Alabama case at its -next
"There's no sort of double jeopThe NCAA summary said the
"Hi; Mic.hacl, this is Courtney ... "
· 1ated
One was from a male caller, who
·
· meeting May 31, Berst said.
ardy rule," he said.
assistant
athl e1·1c d'•rector " VIO
. .. School officials confirmed
Sutherland did not return tele- institutional self-reporting proce- said: "Michael, I understand you' Ye
. Wedi!,Ollday that two players have ., phone calls seeking comment.
dure~ by failing to forward informa- been with mY sister. I would like to
The Associated Press reported last ti?n he received to. (tile) institution's talk to you.t 1 lost their eligibility until an inquiry
is completed i~to tire loans guaran- August that Boyd Sutherland, own- dtrector of compliance, conference
· Pedini said ttle players who uS!"i,,
teed by'Boyd&lt;Sudterland, 'OWfttr of..... er of Bojo's, claimed hc •had .. soJd·~ ,offu;c..ot..biCM..cnfarceii\CI\f, 'JA(f the Valley Ranch residence stopped
Bojo's Mag Wheels and Acces- . thousands of dollars worth of mer- for review and consideration."
using'irJast'JuiY, lis well as the Valsories.
chandise 10 current and former
The summary said the store ownley Ranch apartment, which he said
The players, who school officials Alabama football and basketball · er allowed athletes to make financial
was used by the same players.
would not identify,_still have out- __ players on credit without being paid. arrangements for the purchase of
Pedini until recently lived down
t1!e street from the Cowboys' Valley
standing balances of about $1,000 - The university and the South- wheel_s and tires based on the1r staand $190 with Bojo's,the school and eastern Conference reopened probes Ius w_•th the team. The. owner th~n
Ranch . facility and once ~ad an
the NCAA said.
into Sutherland's claims following promtsed to pay o~ the1r notes wtth office in a building near the practice
Both players participated in thi!APstory. Their findings were for- fin~cmg compan1es 1fthey became field.
spring drills but will not be able to )Varded to !he NCAA.
.
dehnquent.
. .
According to county records, he
play this fall unless the loans arc
Sutherland, a self-described
. The NC~ ~a.•d 11 already had
formerly operated the nonprofit
resolved, said Culpepper Clark, an "diehard Alabama fan" who did not restored the ehg•b•hty of an unspccSpeclrum Foundation Inc. and a
aide to president Roger Sayers.
attend the university, said he rou- •fi~ n~~be~ of p~ayers.
business, The Dallas Cigar Lovers
Clark said "four or five" .other tinely guaranteed payments for playEhg1bt~1ty (wtll be~ restored for Association.
Crimson Tide players also .were ers with finance companies so they (players) With outstandmg balances
Officials with the building's mandeclared ineligible by the school late . would be approved for loans.
afler they complete pay~ents ~~r agement .company said he was evictlast year because of their dealings
Sutherland said he guaranteed thetr merchand1s~ or obtam legtll- ed last July fo~ not paying his rent.
with Bojo's.
loans for only "two or three" other mate and perm1ss1ble loans that are
Pedini's attorney, Mike Heiskell,
The NCAA restored the eligibil- customers. during · seven years in not guaranteed by merchant's busisaid.after Pedini's court appearance
ity of the other players as soon as the business.
·
ness," s~id ~ summary.
Wednesday that his client was "holdLS, V-6, auto, air cond,
school asked in late November,
The AP reviewed documents
Alabama IS on a three-year proing up real well."
.
AM/FM caas, tilt,. crulae,
Clark said. But enforce~nt officials showing overdue debts ranging from bation for rules ~iolations involving
A Dallas County prosecutor indiPS, PB, PW, . PDL, Pwr
are still looking into the actions of $140 for a football player to $1,164 former dcfens1_ve bac_k Antomo . cated Wednesday the video and. othseat, keyliH entry.
assistant athletic director Gerald for a basketball star both of whom Langham, who s1gned w1th an agent, cr documents aired by KXAS might
'
Jack.
•, have cllmpleted th;ir eligibility at and Gene Jelks, a defensive back
become part Of the evidence against
ONLY 24,000 MILES
who obtamed an Improper loan.
Irvin, who was indicted after a raid
·
·
'
of an Irving motel rpom on March 4
and marijuana were

~White

.: South~ast Ohio Senior Olympics set for Ohio Qnivers·ity ·

.

House' served as haven for drug use

; . ~P Countiant n invited to
the !9?6 Southeast Ohio
Setuor Olymptes to be held in
·.AtJ.R. May 31 ~June I.
· .'I'hc_ev~t Will be held at Ohio
· Umventty with TllOit activities taking
place ll J'eden Stadium and Grover
· Cr HI •
·
' The. s~..t Ohio . Senior
. Olympa_~ a major project of the
·Athens Ctvt_tan Club and is directed
· by an ottamzina COD!Diittec consist,·
'JOID_ tn

uid Caver, who l'llteieed I
concusaion and injund IUleft lhoul- ·
der when he mailed in pnteli!:e at
Phoeaix in Mln:h. "I speal my '
Phoenix ntee lookinJ at preuy lllftea in the holpilal. When I '*lie out
here 1 month 1110· I spent about a day
and a half (IUtiiiJ)."
Olecvcr didn'tset onto the track
until Tuesday, pulling in 54 laps.
"It is getting kind orlatc, and I'm
glad I got some ruanins in," Olecvcr said. "11)c car is extremely well-.
balanced. We're makina very sood
use of all the telemetry that we have ·
and our engine department has done
a great job. The ~ar is really handling
well."
Bray to~ is also weary of the idleness.
"! 'know that we're ready. but
there's also a lot to learn about the
new (repaved) track surface, and
what you have to do to be really
11ood on qualifying day," he said
"The (Menard) cars are really very
close between all three. The only differences would be the engines and
the ride flciahts, and the tires that you
happen to be on."
iftJ,.n

:Literary
.club reviews
-'Bernstein'

~Alabama faces more sa-nctions

Jn wake' of gridders' tire loans -

1994 FORD F150
414

1994 MERCURY
GRAND MARQUIS

GEORGE'IOWN, Ky. (AP) Georgetown College .might not be
the only Tigers in town next year; the
Cincinnati Bengals are "!lnsidering
Georgetown for the site of their new
summer training camp.
Bill Connelly, the team's business
manager, visitc.d G.Orgctown College officials Tuesday for whitt both
sides called a promising meeting.

on·s, got off to a slow start. The·
Blues scored on their first three
shots, taking a 3-1 lead at 7:58 of the
first period.
"We kind of dug ourselves in a
hole right off the hopper," Vernon
said. "We let them off the hook in
the third again and in overtime."
The loss knocked a chink in the
armor of the Red Wings, who
haven't won the Stanley Cup since
1955 - the longest drought in IJ,e ..
NHL. Detroit had an NHL-record k2
victories. in the regular season.
The Red Wings didn't appear
worried. • ,
·
"We'll.'bounce back." said Yzer~'
man, who has seven goals and eight
assists in nine playoff games. "I
don't think Chis is going to have any
lastin&amp; impact. We've been good all
year at putting bad 11ames behind

P'~~~~g ~~:~!u~i~~=~.: ··
0

· "We have some mterest, defi- to .use when the Bengals are not
nitely,," Bengnls President Mike there.
Brown said Wednesday. "They were . The team, which currently holds
very recepuve to us. The process of ns four-week summer training sesinvestigating possible sites is still si~ns at Wilmington College, 44
going on, but Georgetown is deli- . m•les northeast 'of Cincinnati is
nitely a contender."
looking for a place to pract•'ce beg' ,·n-

on (KXAS) relating to Michael Irvin
for grand jury review to determine
whether one or more provable criminal offenses occurred," assistandtdistrict attorney Mike Gillett sai .
Irvin's defense team also is pursuing leads stemming from thtttapes
and Pedini 's involvement.
If
the
move
is
approved,
It
would
niiiiiiln
lltiiiin•liii91i97il.iil
·
---;._~:·
- - - - - - - - - -. .
·
mean a new t'dotball stadium and 1
'
other modem facilities for the school

Blues win •..__&lt;c_o_nt_in_ued_fro_m~P_ag_e_6)---:-c

333 Page Street

Middleport, Ohio

·into the first period.
(814) 982-8472
The Blues also started fast. AI · ,
'
. '
Macinnis put in a back:hander off a
feed from Brett Hull at4:43, and 22 ·
seconds later Noonan ppt St. Louis
ahead. Adam Creighton lost cobtrol
of the puck on the ri&amp;hl side of the
~to
net, but it siid through the crease to
Noonan alone on the other side.
·s,. Louis made it 3-t at 7:58
This Health Fair Is FREE to the Pubic. It \viulnclude:
when Shayne Corson scored his
eighCh goal of ~ playoffs; he had
•Cholesterol Screening by Valley Diagnostic
only 18 in the regular ·season. He
La~o~ea
.
deOected Macinnis' drive during a 4- ·
•Blood Pril88ure and
Checks
on-3 advantage. · · •
·
1lle Red Wings went most of the
•H..IIIth Snacks and ReCIPes pro~ded by N.C~S.
way without defenseman Paul CofNutriOoo Services
'
'
fey, who argued after getting whis•Heai1ng Screena by U88 Koch
tled by Kerry Fraser for f9Ughing at
· •Other Health Related Booths
18:09 of the first. Coffey drew.. a I0I
minute misconduct and then a game
misconduct afler he nuns a towel' on
Door Prizes Along with Important Health
the
ice
while
heading
to
the
rocker
us."
Information will be Given·Away
room.
Detroil seemingly picked up
"-He plays a key role on our team,
:
.
where 'it left off ft'Of!l its 8-3 rout in
so that didn't make thinss eaSier;"
For a Good Tune and l~rtant lnforriUJtion,
Game 2 when ~ B,lues ~llushed up
Vernon
said.
"The
rest
of
the
defense
Pie
A nd 0 Jl, al h ~ · ·
the ·puck iri the defensive zone and·
played
well,
but
there
were
only
five
·
·
tUe
tte_ _ _
'UF' _
· e_4
!"~~'•
ofthem."
. ._..__ _ _ _ _
__
..,_ _ _•
Konstantinov' beat Ca5ey high l :34
'

Will Be Having Its First Annual
Health Fair on May 17th from
11:00
2:00pm.

Supercab, 4.0L V-6, 8Uto,
air cond, PS, PB, tilt,
cruiM, AM/FM CIIH.

'

ONLY 12,000 MILES

1994 MERCURY
SABLE

ca..,

LOW MILES

I

'

Il,
1993 FORD Fl SO
412-XLT

LOCAL TRADE

•'

.

l'

news_,.;;.;.--_ _ _,..;..,___

·Bottom :news notes------

McDonald's debuts fast food aimed at making adults ·happy

a

CHEV S-1 0
. BLAZER •

009

·aLL
.
N'S
SHOES

;Ji.

2 Dr, 4ll4, 4.3L, v.a, auto,
A/C, PS, PB, PW, PDL,
tit, crulee, AMJFM

·e.c.

•

Head Start
. ro
· II'.Ing f0 r
en
up
· coming
. ho-ol year .
Sc

·'

4 Dr, 4x4, 4,3L, V-6, auto,
A/C, PS, PB, PW, PDL,
tilt, crulll, AII/FM CIA,
etc.

mailed to Southeast Ohio Senior
Olyqlpict, P.O. Box 2332, Athens,
Ohio, 45701. 5132.
1be Athens Civitan Club is 1
community service OIJIIIiZIIion open
to all. In addition to the Senior
Olympics, the Club supports Special
Olympics, the Holiday Tree Festival
of SEPAN, the Red Crou WOUB
and Project Planl Mem~ meet Q.;
the second and fourth Monday of
eacb month at noon in the Baker c:Cntet. of the Ohio University campui .

· A review of "Bernstein" by
· Humphrey Bilton was given by Mrs.
. Clarice Erwin at a recent meetina of
The Child Development Center at
the Middleport Literary Club held at
the University of Rio Grande and Rio
the home of Mrs. Daniel Thomas.
Gnlnde Community College is once
1be detailed and in-depth biop: phy was written in 1993 just three .
·again offerin11 summer child care for
children who have completed kinder· years after the musician's death by a
garten up to age to. Parents interest• man who was friend and colleague
. for 30 years. 'Burton, the reviewer
ed in the pro~ are urged 10 register their children early due to limitc.d ·
stated, is a noted British Television
space.
.
. .
: director with many awards lo his
credil
The Rio Grande CDC summer
program allows chilc4cn the oppor- ·
. : . Erwin presented Leonard Bern. 5tcin as a composer, pianist, author,
tunity to refine aod expand their math ,
and readin&amp; skills as well.as explore -·
'IV personality, educator and con'science concepts. Childre1&gt; will also
ductor without peer. 1be word "Oambe involved in ari, music and draboyant'' is f~uently used to describe
matic play activities.
"his versatility and boundless enerSports, creative movement and
gy."He hlld an enormous cravins for
bein11 "center stage," Slle noted.
recreational play arc also .part of the
summer program at the•Rio Grande
: As for his background, Erwin. ·
· said dtat he was the · son of JeMie
CDC. Field trips and computer lime
- Resnick and ~am Bemstciq whQ
on Maclntosli Performa computers
: eini&amp;fated from the Ukraine at the
will be made availl!ble for young peo· tiii'TI ofthecentury. lbey lived a poQr
ple.
Children who are enrolled in the
but happy life. Leonard was a sickly
Rio Grande CDC s~mmer program
, haby, but was obsessed with music of
will also have access to the Univerall types even as a toddler. Later, at
sity of Rio Grande Enrichment Pro· Boston Latin High School he put on
gram.
.
' staae shows with his ~lented sister,
. The unlor d~ama c~u at South4lm High Moore and Nick Smith; l'lllr, C.J. Harrt1, Rpn
The cosi for summer child care at
Shirley. This experience proved
School will pree.~t "Whole Lotta Shakln" 7 Hill, Rob Crow, Robin GIIUsple, Bee Llllit, Jen..
the
Rio Grande CDC is $80 a week:
• -invaluable ·dining his ·years at Harp.m., Frl~ at~ high IChool. The claa wrote ny Cummine; Jyl Mlthews, .lay McKelvey
The
price includes meal_s, snacks, and
v~ University from which he gradthe play .Milch takes
In the 19501. The Samml Sluon, J11011 Shuler and Teael cum:
Uated "cum laude. ~!
tuition
for the Enrichment program.
Southern 'c'holr will a so .,erform before· and mlns. Admlaelon le $1 for edulte, 50 centa for
Summerchildcare~s from June 17
- In 1932, Mrs. Erwin said, he
lifter the pliV. The CQt lncludea, from left: front, etudlnta and,free for preechoolera.
•
until Aug. 23 from 7:30a.m. to 5:30
b!:gan a relationship with one of
· Bill Hendrix, Kelly SWiiher, «&lt;m Cornell, Becky
p.m~ each day.
"
Boston's beat-known piano teachers,
To
register
for
the
Rio
Grande
. Helen Costs, which lasted more tllan
Child
Development
Center
summer
. SO years. She improved his technique
• · 'IO' ~ •• ed, cell
child care program, residents may
and, disciplined hi$ spqntaneity ·and
call 1-800-2&amp;2-7201 or loeally 245WI!S 1~ fii'sl to 'fully comprehend his
'. ' ''\ ' 992·2156
7477.
talenl She'~e hili &amp;CCI'j:tary and
: confidante who arran~ tours and
•
~y a~ts ,ofhis life. includinr his
o~neonv~on~ l!ehaVic\r.
· l.s the l\i)ll~er ilcili!di«'Iarae voi'J',
'
,.
UT)IC witS n~ to 'repo.rt Lennie's · By NELLIE
read Eagle trail. Gale Osborne gave Ruby Kingsbury of Falls Church, Va.,
from friends.
.
varic4 experiences: B~W!IY hits,
World, War
Gamer C.
I Bobby Keato~ w.as hono~ with the candidate presentation, Eagle and Kathleen Kelley of Marietta.
frichdship with the Kennedy's and , Griffin \vas
25:at his the Eagle Scout Rank atAifled Unit- charge and oath. Sean Maxey pre- ·Friends Preston and Helen Walker
Jliy outstandins performen. ~o- ·borne for his
·'JWelve ed Methodist Churcl! on April 28 sented pins; he and Adam McDaniel came from McLean, Va.
ciation with. 'the ·New York .Philhar- members of the Dnol&gt;!.1Wel,stcor Arner'- with a large C!'Owd in attendance. ·
escorted Bobby's parents, Pat and
Will Poole and Nellie Parker
monic. and other symphony orchea- ican Legion Post 39 of Pomeroy ·
The program was opened with the · Robert Keaton. Bobby's grandfather, attended the 'plays "Murder, They
tr&amp;s, the PBS series and Tanglew09'1 . came with a decorated ~e and ice Pledge of Allegiance by Scout Troop Lester Keaton, read the Eagle poem. Wrote" at Meigs High School. Mrs.
activiti.es. .
cream to help celebrate the occasion. 235 and 'introduction of court and Candles were extinguished by Lamar Parker's great-niece, . Dorothy
Family members, neighbors and gu,ests by Larry Filkins.
,
Lyons. Pat .Wood gave .the Eagle Leifheit, actc.d in two of the plays.
Pastor Sharon Hausman ~ave the benediction. Reception was observed
: 1bese and many more connections friends were there and took pictures.
Florence Ann and Richard
invocation.
James Clifford had · after the ceremony.
Griffin's
grandson,
Kevin
Griffin,
· Spencer attended the funeral of their
a1 home and abroad kept him 5o busy
· Other relatives ·attending were his niece, Cathy Spencer, daughter of
that he_ had littl~ for his loving wife, came from Columbus. The honored charge of the candle lighting cereguest
received
48
cards
and
letters
mony
by
tile
scouts.
Walter
Welker
grandmother,
Imogene Kc.aton, local; Barbara and Virgi I Spencer, at Som- .
F'elicia, and their three children. One
· aunts, Glenna Buch""an of Barlow, ersct.
of the best-known of modem musi•:.
cjans, his worlc lfid not always receive
unmixed adulation. He met with
death threats and some criticism for
,
hjs off-beBI methods. Yet his faine
Tennessee with Mr. and Mrs. Carl tion uniil health problems arose.
By MELODY '30BERTS
endures, Erwin said. Lauren Bacall
Moodispaugh, Reedsville; .Melody
Visiting .Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Hunnell of Columbus. While there
described this hiography as a "devotMrs. Delores Hawk and Robbie Roberts, Long Bottom. Dinner trays
eil, thorough, loving and surprising Ki~s have becn)dts. Susie Miller they toured Opcyla"nd and saw sever- had an Easter dinner at their home. were delivered to Paul and Mildred
· book: on the life of Leonard Bern- . and daughter, Beverly. Mrs. Kimes al shows and a boat ride on the Gen- Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Chad Hauber.
' Larkins has returned from .
stein---a most extraprdinary man of and Margaret Nessclroad enjoyed a eral Jackson, a stemw!tccler.
Sinclair; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sin- · Dorscl
Condolences to the friends and clair: Mr. and Mrs. Mike Bowles, a trip lo Aorida.
!rip to town together.
extraordinary talents."
family
of the late Mrs.. Ada Bisseli. Nicholas and Jenny; Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Ken Young are back
Mr. and Mrs. ·Kenny Riggs and
I
She
was
a
faithful
member
of
the
from
Aorida
for
a
visit.
Robert
Bowl~s.
all
of'Pomeroy;
Mr.
family
have returned from a vacation
Twelve members answered roll
Long
Bottom
·
Community
AssociaWells
Van
Dyke,
Broadwell;
Shanno~
.
Mrs.
Lela.
Hawk
enjoyed
a
trip
to
in
Aorida.
call by }laming another. 20th century
, I
.
\'
.
.
.
American .composer.
Refreshments' were served and a
small sift book '.distributedJo each
.
.
one present by the hostess.
'
By BRUCE HO~OYITZ
Paraded out.bylnothervery adultori- . But industry expeits say the effect
"Let's be· frank,' ' says Cheryl
and DOmE ENRICO
ented symbol: the Rockettes.
these new offerings have on ~dults Russell, editor of the Boomer Report
U$A TODAY
.
In the $100 billion fast-food will be a far cry from the gotta-have- newsletter, "the best way to appeal to
Ronald McDonald has finally seen industry- whose growth has slowed it mentality that youngsters have adults is to serve alcohol, not burgthe future: it's got bifocals and a.pot to a crawl- the stakes don't get any towards its Happy Meals.
crs."
belly.
.
bigger. No one has ever spent more
America's fast-food behemoth has to introduce a fast-food pi-oduct. And
belatedly decided to grow old along no fast-food chain has ever successwith .the .nation's 78 million baby {ully found a_~ay to appeal .both io
boomers who all hilt cut their teeth on · adults and children.
its burgers and fries. Today, MeDon- : . As America ages adults . arc .
.
.,
1\ld's rolls oudts rendition ofa prod- , increasingly becomin~t-foOd
. · ·
· .
.
.
.
uct squarely aimed.'at adultS.-the • target. ·But it is Burger King- not
~ Galha-~etgs l:le~ $_~J'!:o- Arch Deluxe. Its burger comes on
McDonald'_
s - that industry analysts
8f8!'l IS ac~pung apphCBIIons for · potato-flour bun with leaf lettuce, say has :done the ·top job ' luring
e~llme_nt !n ~ 1996-97 school · slivered onions, to · to slicea,Amer- adults. McDonald's, which spends
yc.ar ~gmm,ng 10 .Septem~r.
.
ican cheese, and :.eash of a grainy, more than $490 million a year on
~h1ldren whll will be eJther three . Dijon. mustard
mayo sauce. advertising, is· thi: country's 4th
or_ four years _of age before 8_Fpt. 30' Bacon's optional. tJ.
laraest advertiser. With more than
Will be c~nstdered for enrollmcn~.
McDonald's is expected to spend (wice the ad-budget of Burger King,
~ on •~co~, a~e, and ot.her
up. to $200 million promoting Ar&lt;;h · McDonal~'s hopes lo capture Burs·
g•~!•_ty cnte~~- Chil~n wtih dts- Deluxe along with seVeral Other adult er King's adqlt crown.
aiJi!tbes are shown pnonty for en~ll- entre~s o~ its fa$1-food . horizon.
Besides the Arch Deluxe, MeDon- .
ment. '
McDonald's is renting out Radio City 'aid's jtlso plans to introduce chicken
1
' .
: fle'ad 811111 is a developmental pre_Hall for the day, where its and fish sandwiches later this ye~.
scli®l pro~. that ~vill!!s •COlli- ,
_,.,...,,.~~raer.~ill ,be
+.J..... "';,-• •
~
f
•
pltilc- :~til. denlal) uiil ·social·.i!ei- :IP~IIIIIiiil....iilltliiiilii...,,..,..,.~~--~-.-.~~-isiil~
vi~. nuiritious "ineJI~,aitd JJieei:h .
anti llearinr screeninss far all '
el!iolled children. Sp'ecillc scryicea ·
.
at'( provided for childt:CD wi,th disab~ities.
. : ; . . ' .
•

~-.,__--Long

I

V-6, auto, air cond,
AM/FM
tilt, cruise,
PS, PB, PYi, · PDL, pwr
Mit, keylHI.

ONLY 14,000 MILES

~ laulil(lin&amp;les ud doubles),
bees' box stack, discus, sbOI put, and
Olber vari®s ll'll:lt aod field events.
Reaitlnttion will tab place on
May 31 from 6 to 8 p.m. in the lobby of Balter Ceater and from 7:30
Lm. to I p.m. on Saturday at ~
Stadium. ReJislnlion is S8 if entry is
mailed by May 27111d $10 thereafter,
dw: with the enuy form. Checks
should be made payable to lite Athens
Civtlan Club. . Enuies should be

set at child
.deyelopme
center

~~---~,r-""'--'-Aiftetl

Flareslde, 5 spcl,
cond, AM/FM caee,
cruise, PS, PB, PW, PDL,
loaded.

shulflebowd, softball tlwowiaa. table

Whole !-otta Shakin'-----. Schedule

............. ..,.1•·•·

300, 8 cyl, auto, air cond,
AMIFM CIIH, tilt; cruise,
PS, PB, PW, PDL,
bldllner

1993 CHEV S-10 .
BLAZER

Each evtlllt will •ve ten divisions
bMed oa tbe followiac aae calesories: men/Women- S0-54, 55-S9,
60-64, 65-69. 70-74, 75+. Ellcb person will compete witbia his.1let qe
aod aex aroup. Mrd•l• will be aWIIded to the lint threl: finisbiO ia ~
event for each lite aroup, men aod
w.omen.
Events lakin&amp; plat:e durin&amp; the festivities include bubtball, bowlina,
croquet, · football throwins, aolf,
boneshoes, one mile walk, pool,

r.lace

e!•-

·

_,,:, For , .

o
·
'
R CK ·sPRINGS GlEE

PUIH

•
'

1994 FORD ·
RANGER ILT 414

.~~~~-cocaine

BengiJ/S ponder Georgetown College
as site . of new summer training camp

.l.ml)en

ina of Civitan
Md od;ler
interested penou_ ~or lpOIIICJn
for this year's event include ADthem ·
Blue Cross aod Blue Shield. Tbe
Athens Mcucnp, Kerr Dillribuliac
Company of Alheas, Follcus University 9ooh«n; 'l\i-Counly Community Adion AtencY Senior NUirilion J&gt;rocntm, and Ohio University.
This y- nuda a new addition to
the participant lite cateJories to
include men aod women qed 50-54.
,,,

..

For aa enrollment application or
additiOMI information aboul the program, call the Meigs Coullty Hc.ad
Start Office at 992-~8. 'the Ollila
HAd SCirt Cenler it ~186« tbe
Ceatl'll Head Sllrt Office It 4466674.
.
.

.'

Moilier:~ ~Day

· · RIJTUND ,

THE SHOE
PLACE

~.2ND AVE.

Credit
See Slon for Detalk

'112-6827•

FURNitURE CO.

"We Se01i.ce What We
Main S1relt • R~a~,

�•

,...10•TheD 1JS16..

~.~··'-

Pomelot•MidciiiJOI'ttOhlo

Pomeroy • Mlddlepo;'"., Ohio

sliD ... IIOt ICided

tile whjed
· Ewry IDIIftlh 111111 JOC5 by
C05ts my IQ(IIha •oher SI ,OOO.
,..._ ..., M flllber slopped seediot Deaa
!.':', . .. oo. ~ yan .,_ sly;q be old
enoulfl to suppc:w1 himself. Manwhile my JC0C1a worb 1 Joe of
AM I ""'m: My mocha, overiline. Site says ne. will eVen59·- divocccd. ... been suppolt· tually pay blct all the _ , - she
inl •Y 38-ycar-old brolher, bas pvea him, but she basn' l kepi
"Dee." Cot 1be past 20 yews while track of how mucll IIIII is.
be·· been em~;., co11eac in IIIOibAnn, my brother is obviously 1
.. - · Deln holds two . - · . QI'Cterstudcnt. He'safntidofthereal
dcpees ud bls beell wcirtin1 OD biJ world and will problbly stay in
Ph.D. The scbool told him be could
academe fon:ver. 1 don 't think my
COIIIFie5~ biJ.ciOcwnre in m monlhs
I1IOiber is doinJ him any favors by
bec•use of previous resan:b, bul
supporting him.
CD

!.,

has . • puler re_JJIOilSi~iUtr, but
don l COUDI 011 him _,.., tl that
way. And d011't COU.Dt 011 Dean
~ill&amp; tile - ,_be bls ICilCpted
from your mother, euber.
I suuea thai you md your husband stash away some money 011 a
reculu basis so wben the time
comes, you will be able to do the
have~tab:care _?fmymolher.
aavdinnouhavealwayswantedto
My husband and 1 believe Dean &lt;!!&gt;. and pay ~ to look lfier
should take care of Moot. He owes it your mother, tf necessary.
to her. Am I being selfish? Is it
Dear Ann Landers: What wid!
unreasonable to think Dean has a engagements, weddinJS and graduagre.mr responsibility here? Please tionsj UJt around the comer, we have
advise me. - Frustrated in Pensaco-· m..., some new sift rules ll our
Ia. Fla.
house. Perhaps you might lib to
.
.

-w

bave Jll*&amp; of mind if she
S1R thll I would SlljlpOrt her
when s11e JC1S too old to won. My
hsnhacd lnd I have labored hard md
to
we are. Wben
retire, ~ d ~to aave~ • biL lt 5
depressinato think - IIIIJhl 001 be
~le ID have some of these plusuln
mour goldcll yean because'"" Will

~~ ~ ~

.

~

.

~

Over The Bend
I

ARTS

i l :

COtiCERT S

OUTDOORS
'

ClllriMton Civic c.nw
Clwlnton, W. VL

lby 17·11
Doonc:e Con~wt
OhiQ UniYallily, Athena
Pulnam o..... Studio
7 and 9 p.m. · M.y 17

The...,.,.,_

· 8p.m. ·May 18

CJ04):MI-TMay 29 • Bob s.g.
and the SIMr Built IIMd

,

TICkets: S2
For inform.tlon, cal 593-1826 .

..., 17·18

•Ofte Min E.JdliWIQIIIZli•
Aone-man theatrical .,.,..
by Robert POll
Ohio UniYellily, AlheM
Ridgal Aud~orium
Tsckatl: $10
For inforrmetion, cal 593-1780

Mly17-18
"One Min Exti'IV.,.za"
A an•man thelllrieal aHow
by Robert Post
Ohio Univaraily, Athens

Ridges Audkorium
Tsckatl: $10

For information, cal593-1780

lnt8mlllol•l SINet F81r
Court SlrMI, Athens
For lniDrmlllon. cd 583-4330

Buckeye uu . . . . c.nw
..70 Eut, lludllp Lilla
June 15 -·Jmmy Buleii'J
Primo PanolhNd Pllly fY
Polllrls Amph• ......,
l-:mlllol1h, CoL:::ibul

Cas-t, ...,• . 1-eoo-TII-lllOI
MJy 24 • Bab Seg.
May 29 - Tm McGrw wlfailh Hll
June 1 - Styx wA&lt;anus
June 4 - Crolby, Stilt, &amp; Hath
,r/Chk:ago
June 18- oBand
June ·21- Hank Wlllama, Jr.,
Chalie Danilll Band, lnd
the Marshal Tucker Band
June 22 • ThJ Moody BkJH
wl ¥1/ortd Fes!MII Orcheilra

Maid-•

. July 3 - Oelleppa:d
July 12- Dwlgtc YolkJm
wiOavid 8al
July I Q • Stave Miller Band

Aprll12 ·May 11
Governor'• Youth Art Exhlblllon
The Daily B~~:n. Alhena

w/1'11 a.n.tar

Aprll12 • Mly 11

TecMI&amp;IMiillllo mw

Ana Art on Yllw

for~Mwillbc:we

A&lt;811ional juriecl
all-media extslliioi.

•
llly18 '

sst

T......._., Oiellola, or b)' caling
61U3t-3800o&lt; 513-2212323

The Daily Barn, Athens

m.t- .,. the)' !fad,_., r- a&amp;

you note, you cannot: it, show
it, read it, waJclt it: -ea it, spend it,
play with it or use iL
Sip me _ Snm Dne Who Has
Given Gifts. aad Received No
Adnowledpnent (lndiaa)
Dear Someone: 1 lib
llfl'
rules. Wouldll;t it be W(llll)erful if
IIIOR houses bad diem? (P.S. For
parents who clip columns for their
chi~n, this one is 1 keeper.)
Dear Ann l.altdcn: I was invited
to the homc.-JI( a co-worker for
luneb. That momina._sbe .plloned to
say another c- was bricsial " 1
friend." and her lllble- could sell

*

and . . . M eiiQIIe llboul not bei..
llbllto come·II Ill How .would ,.0.
ha•e tat•edod?- "-illo
· Dear Amlrillo: 1 would baw
~n .-.,l~dy upfronl _.oo· ~
ba(,,ii'Thank you, bu1 the Jttvi110'-1« interats me."
Thai friend neded ID be l8lllllt
somethinJ a11ou1 decent manMn.
You lost a sooc1 ~-

The Cnm-ity Cale~~fer II
CHES'JEt- S._. River l.odce
pule" hhu freuenlce to-· 4S3 meetin1 Thundly, 8 p.m. lithe
profit poeps wl*hc toM II" e lodge.
'
Bto ' ' 1 IIDII' ap W na(L Tile
cal~dwrinotd dpedtDJIIPOMEROY - Rock Springs
Sllla or fund nloen of 07 type. Gnu!a.'lbundly. 7:~S p.m. Annual
Items are priDted u space pennies · inspeCiloo to be helcl:. All members
and caJtDOt be .,.......teed to nm a · '"1ed lo attCnd.
specific nomber (!/clays.
POMEROY
FRIDAY
'JlfURSDAY - Preceptor Beta
· POMEROY - Hemlock Gnutcc
Beta meeting Thursday, 6 p.m. at the 2049, open house, Friday, 1 p.m. at
Episcopal Parish House. II;ISiallation the Jl'lllge hall. Speaker, Patty Dyer,
of officers will take place.
state deputy. Entertainment by Mid·
dlebnnc:h. Refreshments.

•
:

:

:
:
•

••

Racine United
· Methodist Women mother-daughter
banquet, 6:30 p.m. Satwday II the ,
chun:h. Reservations to be made :
with Opal Diddle, 949-205 I or l:a
I«, 949-2454.

I.MIIIluJJ1at

Alfred United Methodist Women
Prayer by Nina Robinson opened
studied the program, "Understanding the business mc:eting with members
Missions Today," led by' Nellie Park- r'eponing 71 friendship calls. Saiah
er, when the group met at the church Caldwell reported that reading
recendy.
repons had been sent. Osie Mai
The worship center featured a Follrod noted her readinJIIId shar·
cross. world globe and a vase of ing of Joshua. Report was made on
lilacs. All members took part with the recent conference in Denver.
readings and discussion .
Pastor Sharon Hausman sent ~ bi~
From World Outlook and 'day card to be signed by mcmbers fot'
Response magazines they selected Carlene Triplen, director of the town.
and told about missions from·differ- and rural resource program that helps
ent parU of the world -- China, the Meigs Cooperative Parish. The
Bolivia, Philippines, Bangladesh, society signed appm:iali,on cmls for
Bosnia and then located tliem on the ~onations from Marpret and Carglobe. 1be Lord's Prayer concluded leton Follrod and from Beyerly and
the program.
Ronald Koewler in memory of Clant

plrl al ThJ Ohio Uni¥J!sity

' Pertormw 111 Ana Sarlls
lolamoolll Adortum, Athens
8p.m.
Tlckell: . . $10
For lnlarmllion, cd 583-1180
IIIJ11

Oltlo Un~lhy
&amp;,mphanlc Band
· M1morjal Audlortum, Athens
.
8 p.m.
Fr• Admission

THEATf1E

FoUrod.
lbclma Henderson ~ave a mission
report from the May, 1996, Respoilse
on preaching and healing in China.
Mr. Tang is a spiritual leader and
health care provider in China's Anhui
Province. He is a third-generation
Christian who serves as lay leader
and cares for health needs.
Martha Poole served ice cream,
strawberries and cookies during the
social
hour. Charlotte Van Meter
.
gave the grace.
Next meeting will be May 21.
Sarah Caldwell will lead the program
and Florence Ann Spencer will be
hostessc
.
.

,
.
··
,·
:
:
,
·;

1

· Nobody Undersells
Acqulstlons on 14K
end 10KGold
Necklaces end
Brecelets-N~

NOW

1 Carat
$999 '499
lCarat
$1,899 . 11,299
Sappllie or R..y Bracelets
Diamonds

'

Reg.

Reg.

•

Reg.

NOW

Ytt plr-~$199 $99
y. pt..
$399 $199 y. "~-~sm $199
SS99 $349
~ pt
SS99 .$299 ~ pt
$1200 $599
I c111t
$1200 $599 1ant

NOW
5

Reg.

IOpttw-'115 59
2S pi l w -'399 5175

"

so,. .._

LAYAWAY-ONLY 10% DOWN!

JLCQ11ISilfiO
TWOU&gt;CATJONS:
15t SECOND AVE., QALLIIOLI8 4*2142

t11a.L ST.,IIDDLIPORT

'

1111250

5
"'

699 I '

Free Gift Wllpplng

•

:

.....

••

100 Years 95 Years 92 Years

•.••

Forest Hill Cleane~J

Satler'slnc.

Anter Bros. Co.

P~5SS-11122

Eiteblltltld 1115

Phone 155-2211
Et...,..,..
11100

Phont 555o4431
Etlllllllhld 1903'

80 Years

78 Years

.•·',••
AllU 3 PIECE

...,,,

lMNGROOM

sums

• 'I

.,.J
:l

Acme Rentals .

.•'
: r.l

40%0FF

25%To

fill

.

•

•:

-••''

••
••...
••••
••••
••
•••
••
••

•

.::a
-.,

QUEEN SIZE
SUEPSOFAS

•·•·.•'
••
•

I

PhoRJ555-1782
Esllblllhld 1915

~ '·•

. t'

75

Vlrcap Services

••

Phone 555-8242
Ellablllhld 1917

.,••••
•••,
••'
••,
,.

' I

l

SPIEa .

I

WOOD

DINmES

'""
•199

'

~

,...l..

Foreign exchange atudents attending Meigs oilna Magna of France, Pedro Alves of Brazil,
High · School ma1 wl1h pomeroy ElerMntary · Vladymyr Stetanovych Of Ukraine, and Rodrl·
School8tudente as pert of Right to Read week go Barredo Lopez of Spain, lett, listen to Elena.
which hal been tied In by the atudents with the Gorbunova of Russia play selections on the
up - ... Ina
Olympic IJitnH In Atlanta.
Hera, Car- school plano.
. .

70 Years
The Geist

.

.

67 Years

61 Years

E·Z Motor Service

Woodlow's Diamonds

Phone 555-9245

Pl1onl'555-4466 ·

Et181111Jhad 1825

- Eltlbllahad 1934
'

Years

:·,.

60 Years

FLANDERS

Coin It Stamp Center

Ball Security Bonds

Phone~

Bail Security Bonds

Phone 555 6565
Eatablllhld 1941

Phone 555-9547
Ellabllahld 1943.

OUTDOOR
FURNITURE

.• •••,••••
'

•••••

UOYD

Eltlblllhld 1835.

52 Years

.

.••
.,•.

• ;••

•.• •••

..•
...
..
~.

0

50

RECUNER
SECDONAL

44 Years

40 Years

Kramer It Sons
Phone 555-&lt;lm

S&amp;M LandscaPing

Establl~

30 Years

SERTA ·
BEDDING

Mecf.Care Center Inc. Trlskett Party Center
11182

Phone 555 6855
Ellabllahld 1165

Phon~ 555-~

••

.

Eatabllalltd 11!$

·IIAVE YOUR BUSINESS LISTED!
.
.

.

ROLE MODELS - Four Malg1 Hjgh School
·
1zec1 w-.enesdey aa DARE
senlorl _ . recogn
.
(Drull Atluea Rlllatllnee Eduelitlon) Role.Mod-Jafl.
all. Studenta gw.,n plaquas were, from
•
flanked by Slieriff Jamn M. Soulaby and
DARE officer Mony Wood: Er!n Knwaczyn,

The "Honor Roll" will appear in the
Friday, May 17th Edition of
··The Daily Sentinel. .
The Cost Is Only $12

. Gary Stan"y, Trevls Abbott and Donald Yoat..
Soulsby nld the wtudeilll are good at!llete• or
lleholara who go Into ele,nantary achoola wl1h
Wood t·o ·-·e 88 role models for the younger
- •
pupils.
,

------·· Laurel Cliff news----:--....,.

~

DON'T BE L~J.--J· uu·J: ..

'
and Mrs M'l1 Perry ,of Athens were Sunday guests ·ry,local, aod Mildred ~rry of Athe~s
Mrs. Phyllis Grubbs
· • • ·of their sister aad nephew, Femdora called on Helen White at Holzers
died Perry of Athens were ~nt ;:,~ and John Story. Mildred attended · Senior Care Center, Btdwell. They
itors of Ferndo~a ~fry, v~s~;~i
evening worship with the family at had an enjoyableNisit and tollr of the
shopptng dt~mn~= Sc~- Westside Church of Christ.
care center.
Mr. an
r~;
d Mrs Bill ,
Bernice Swan and Femdora Sto.
· •
fer of MQunt vernon an
·
.

CALL DAVE OR BOB AT 992·2155
TO LIST YOUR BUSINESS.

w.

\

.

-

l

I

••
•

~

Crystal Glass Co.

Phone 555-0267
Eltablahld 1870

•
:-•

~•

20 Years

25 Years

•

••

Phone 555 5454
Elllbllshed 1955

1951

,•

,•

'

1299 149
1499 $329
1799 5469

HMONDAY

Membcn Jewclcn' ~
Bo1R1 of TrW . _ ,

-

:•
'

5

OPEN
.• NDAILY

'

:FI'J{'E
:mW££/lfY
.
.

NOW

Reg.

10 pi lw-5199
Y.. d.
1
'999 5450 25 pt lw- 499 ~49 Y.d.
100 ,. .. _ '1999' 51299 SOpttw-11599 Sf SO Ys ct.
s.t In 14K Gold
s.l In 14K Gold
Ys ct.
100 pt.. 1 c..
100pt. •1 c.r.t

.·--

.•••

$988

Solitaire

NOW

-------

I•

$1,499

Reg.

Diamond Pendant

.tO\.\
·Of

'•

Through Saturday, May 11-

Diamond Earrings

--,-_
---

••

NOW

Marquise Diamond

NOW

----

--

•

wi,.

Round Diamond

--

--

,....-......-International gathering---,

'

Reg.

$2,995

.

,,

••
• •

Heavier, WhHer and Brighter

4d.ltlllwd..l

..,

t

il.,i

Dia11ond Tennis Bracelet

....,.., IQ:a&gt;ti-IJmiiM)

~

i

0

sl 9

niques experienced fewer headaches. !
And, foc the first time in a controlled j
study, we've shown that the SJIDe l .
type of mast cell activation that l
occurs in adult migraine is also pre- 1
sent in children."
·
•~
Such masl cell activation causes.;::
migraines by releas ing neurotrans·
miners in the brai n. That leads to :-.
changes in the vascular and nervous "
systems and migraines.
··
Researchers taught children to .11
think of·a favorite place and use an ,.,
im ag inary control to "turn off" ·i.

--

---

-I
:

Day Special Sale!

n,....

ley's fifth grade, Jennifer Zielinski,
Jeremy Roush and Sarah Kloes, Mrs.
Lowery'.s fifth grade, M1chele Runy~
on, Chris Smnh and Ntcole Daves,
Mrs. Hubbard's sixth grade, Chelsea
Moss, Mary Schullz and Sara Moon;
Mrs. Davis' sixth grade, Elizabeth
Bush, Nicole Runyon and Caleb
Ellis; Ms. Bauserman, Keith Day and
Anthony Tennant; Mrs. Gee, Jesse
Klein and Kyle Kinnan.
This year's f~r was judged by Brian Reed from the prosecuting attarney's office, Donna Schmoll from
Farmers Bank, and retired teachers
Rita Slavin and Jack Slavin. The fair
was directed by Becky Triplett. Trophies were provided by Farmers
Bank of Pomeroy.

'

Acquisitions Fine Jewelry

Ill.
$2tt

Fifty-one Pomeroy Elementary sica Sheets, Whiitney Johnson and
S.chool students were recognized at Ryan Browning; Mrs. Deem's first
the school's annual academic fair held grade, Dru Reed, Courtney Haggy
Tuesday at the school.
and Michaer Blaettnar; Mrs. John·
More than 150 students entered son's first grade, Ashley Russell,
indi~idual projects.
' Stephen Will and Rebecca Klein;
· Top winners were: Delana Mrs. Jeffers' second grade, Whitney
Eichinger, best language arts; Bran- Thoene. Wes Ault and Cody Hysell;
di Thomas, best social studies; Mrs. Carpenter's second grade,
Angela Wilson, best science, and Nathan Jeffers, Amanda Jeffers and
Alex Johnson, best fine arts. Jessica Josh Kennedy; Miss Haley/McCarBlaettnar won the Bonnie Marlene · ley's third grade, Amanda Hoyt. JusFisherawardforthetopprojectintbe tine Dowler and Magg:e Molden;
show. Her project was on airborne Mrs. Henslet's th1rd grade, Ken
particles and their effect on breathing. . Evans, Trevor Depo_y and Letha LauOthers honored were. by class: dermilt; Mr. Deem·s fourth grade,
_Mrs. trent's TuesdayfThursday Jordan William~, Jayne Davis and
kindergarten. Bradley Jones, Michael Paul Will:· Mrs. Van Matre's fo~rth
Ball and Jesse Mowery ; M~. Trent's grade, Brandyn Bumgardner, Al:sha
Wednesday/Friday kindergarten, Jes- Burton and Matt Strong; Mrs. Stan-

I

;

._, I• 1016old

studlea; Angela Wilson, bait aelence, and
· Alex Johnson, best flna arta. Je..lca Blnttner
won the Bonnie Marlena Fisher award for the
top project In the show. '

1

·10
"The Thr....-:oiiJ Opera"
Ohio UnivarJky Sphool a1 Thlater
Forum ThMter
O.U. Telec:omnMI~ Center
Plflonnancet nfllhllr• 8 p.m.
T:cbla: $8adub, $811Uden1$ ·

Set In 14K Gold

·

'

Alfred UMW look at today's missions

I

Pomeroy Elementary scholars honored

POMEROY -- Burlingham Modem Woodmen, potluck dinner, 6:30
p.m. Saturday. Meal, rolls, bevenges
provided. Mothers to be presented •
flowen;. Guests welc~.

For lnlormllliOII, call 513-4800 ·

I Carat Of
· Diamo•d

ACADEMIC FAIR HONOREES- Top winners
In tile Pomeroy Elementary Acedemlc Fair held
Wedneedey were, from left: Delane Eichinger,
bast language artl; Brendl Thomu, beat social

SAnJRDAY
~ RACINE ••

.
.
1be study mvolved 30 children
aaet Sto 12 andexcludcd youngsters
w~o .used medicate?" to pr~vent
illlgratnes or_had prevtous •~penence
wi'!! relaxat:on techneques..
C?w' resean:h determined that
learnmg relaxat:on techniques and
us,ing i~age~ IS ~ore .effectsve m
ehJn!naung JUVenel~ mlg"'.'"e . tha~
prescnbmg preventeve ~ed:catJOn ,
said Dr: Karen Olnes.s, d1rector of the
Pec:hatnc Blobehavmral Center at
Rambow. ,
. ,
"tlle ch1ldren usmg 'these tech-

· Be A Part or·
The Dail,r Sentinel's

;

'

•

Mother~

By THOMAS J. SHEER~
Aa~ p,.._ Writer
CLEVELAND (AP) - A_ new
study suggests that self-hypnosts and
Yelaxation techni~ues will reduce the
frequency and pam of m1gmnes for
children.
The findings by researchers at
Rain how Babies and Childrens Hospital of Cleveland and the medical
school at Tufts University iq Boston
are for rel~asetoday in W~hington,
D.C .., at the annual meetmg of the
Pediatric Academic Societies.

.
1._
..,
"':
s,..... , w. :
'

.

~

Satd ..
den, Cnalon
577'1
· CeahlrJ Bl•cl., Saite 780, ,1.- •

Anp'11, Calif. 90045

.

Relaxation.techniques offer hope · ~
for young migrain~ victims
·:

..

!a

r.1USIC

...
,.
n.

..

Ulllil you hive wriaetl •

..

The Dally Sentinel • P~~ge 11 •

2

-

••

~rother tha!~~?~!~"!.E!!.:~!~ p~o~~~~~~!!.!~~ri ~:. ;y~~
.
Ann
Landers

•

.

I""

I..
t

":

I'j

.,.,•

�..
Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, ditto

Pole strategy emphasiz
'
~y JUDl HASSON

I

known as a foreign-policy expert. But
USA TODAY
to strengthen his credentials, he's
: While crafting the first major for-' planning .a series of speeches and is
eign policy address of hi s presiden- considering a trip to Italy and els.etial campaign, Bob Dole ·turned to a where in Europe soon.
group of advisers with ties to the ReaHis foreign-policy brain trust is
gan and Bush era.
headed by former U.N. ambassador
ln an address Thursday at the Cen- Jeane Kirkpatrick.
ter for Strategic and International
The national co-chair of Dole's
Studies in Washington, Dole will lay campaign, Kirkpatrick is il conservout his policies on Asia and attack ative who was author of the Reagan
President Clinton.
doctrine of U.S. support for democ" As a direct resull of weak lead- ratic forces against communism in
ership, vacillation and inconsistency Latin America.
.. . the world 's sole superpower finds
Others in Dole's circle include foritself drifting and defensive with an mer president George Bush; former
uncertain course and an untrusted secretary of State Henry Kissinger.
voice in the Pacific Basin." Dole says who engineered President Nixon 's
in prepared remarks.
diplomatic overture to China; and
In the Senate, Dole has not been former assistant secretary of Defense

Richard Perle, who has advised Dole
on Bosnia.
ne expen who isn't in the picture
is retired genetal Colin Powell.
Months ago, Dole's office said Powell would be a policy adviser. But
Powell has not offered the campaign
any advice, Powell spokesman Bill
Smullen says.
Kirkpatrick says Dole doesn't
need much help: "The thing that
impressed me a long time ago was the
extent, depth and breadth of his
knowledge of foreign affairs."
Dole often refers to his World War
II service and his work as Senate
majority leader to illustrate his experience in dealing with foreign affairs
and public policy.
He pla~s to use foreign policy as

Thursday,·May 9, 1996

Thursday, M~ 9, 1996

foreign policy ··

an example of OintJn'i Indecisiveness, hoping Ointon il vulnerable on
the issue.
A USA TODAYOIN!oallup Poll
in March foun.d that 4~ ~t of the
public approved"of the way Clinton
is handling foreign J!Oiicy, but 45 percent disapproved. the llltvey found
that 42 percent approvtll of the way
Dole is handling foreip policy and
30 percent disapprvvtd. !olearly onequarter of those siiM)oed had no idea
of where Dole stands,
Perle, underse=tary of Defense
during the Reag.an adlllinistration,
says Dole will focus on other differ·
ences with Ointon, panicularly on
Bosnia.
Dole has consistendy called for
arming and trainin1 of Bosnian Mus-

lims, but Clinton has vacillated on
policy Joward the region, Dole says.
Dole talks regularly to Senate
members like John McCain, R-Ariz ..
once a POW in Vietnam, for advice.
Other advisers:
- Bush. Dole has met with Bush
twice in the last few months to discuss China, one of the main foreign
policy issues of the I 996 campaign.
- Kissinger. The secretary of
state and national security adviser in
the Nixon and Ford administrations
also hCiped open U.S. relations with
China.
'
- Retired general Brent Scowcroft. He served Presidents Ford and
Bush in the National Security Council . He is known for staying calm in

emerg~nc i es.

.
- Perle, an assistant secretary of ·
Defense in the Reagan admlnistra- .
lion. He suppons a strong defense :
and was a major player in arms nego- ·
tiations with the Soviets.
:
- Paul Wolfowitz. dean of the :
Paul Nitze School of Advanced Inter- ·
national .Studies at Johns. Hopkins. :
The former ambassador to Indonesia :
a.nd undersecretary of Defense f01; :.
Bush supportS strong American leadership.
- Richard Armitage, assistant :
secretary of Defense in the Bush :
administration. He places strong :
emphasis on U.S . interests in Asia,
and he helped negotiate base closings ·
in the Philippines.

Live 24 Hrs a day

RICHARD BYRD

"But now we' have proof of what · there in theeplane."
really happened."
. Engine noise made verbal comRawlins. an asll'ii!omer and inde- munication difficult inside the plane.
pendent publisher wh~spccializes in The diacy is made up of notes Byrd '
navigation, said Byrd ilay receive wrote to his pilot. llyrd would write
criticism now since the diary has questions and Bennett would respond
been found.
by writing down answers, Goerler
Byrd wrote dowt~ times and chart said.
readings that prov~ he fell short of his
Goerler said published reports
goal by about 150 miles,10d he like- after the May 9, 1926. flight c ;~lled
ly knew he did not succt!ild, Rawlins Byrd a fake . A former .colleague of
said. He said an at&amp;ine leak may Byrd, Bernt Balchen, accused him of
have forced the planetowrn back.
flying out for a while over the hon''It's quite clear to llle he exag- zon and coming back to base in Spitsgerated and knew-it," said Rawlins. bergen, Norway when he. thought he
Goerler said Bynl used the diary was gone long enough .
to communicate with hisr:lot~ Aoyd
Rawlins said Norwegian explorer
· Bennett .
Roald Amundsen shou ld be' the one
"The diary was used, as a note- recognized as the man who first new
book for Byrd to Md notes to Ben- over the North Pole.
·
nett," he said. "The C:fCiting thing is
"I would say Byrd saw virtually
the diary puts you pnu,cally right to the pole from the height he was at ,
but this dairy disproves his claim that

Girls

1-900·446·1414
Ext. 6445
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs old.
, Service U
(619) 654-8434

CARPENTER SERVIa
•Room Addition•
•New Gar~gea
•Electrical a Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Pajntlng
Also Concreto Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pom~roy, Ohio ·
1/&gt;llfn

all Your ·
ELECTRICAL
needs

Phone ;

614-992-5048
Free Estimates

Coniraetar with onr Jll
yea,i-s experience now

.
Installed

•Tilt-in
•Double Hung
•Insulated

H• jail to sllllll or to !urgl.
Conta&lt;l Rodney Howery

594-3780 days, 698-?lJl
evenings or
1-800-l64..16390 an)'time!

Competitive Rates
Res.:
In Memory

.

..

..

...

..

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

In Memory Of

RODNEY G.
CHEVALIER
May 9, 1991

the CIRssified Stclion!

We miss you and
your·great love
of life.
Debbie Ada_,.,
Abbie, Family &amp;
Frlel}ds
Public Notice

·,

.

·

INVITATION TO BID
The Vutogo ol' Syfi&lt;.\'H
will accept btdo unttl 12
. noon on Mil)' 20, 'HilMI, from
legally llcenaed ln1urenca
companle1, or tMir agente,

=
=

=

=

Molher's Day
Chicken/Rib Bar-B-Que

•

Feeney-Bennett Post 128
American Legion·and
Auxiliary at Annex, Mill Sl.
Sunday, May 12
12:00 til gone
Dinner $4.00,
,
Meat Only $2.00
Call-In Order 992-2749 Sun.

COURT STREET GRILL
Presenls
.
Charlie Lilly &amp; The Poorside
Friday Night, May fb

9-?-

Cover

MOTHER'S DAY
WEEKEND SPECIALS
All Hanging Baskets &amp;f erns

$10 Each or2/$18
Bumli\g Bushes .... ....... $10.00 ea.
Rhododendrons ........... $1 e.oo ea.
Azaleas ... ,...................... $7.00 ea.
Rose Bushes ................. $9.50 ea.
VIne Ripe Tomatoes ..... 5 lb. $3.00
· Watermelons, Cantaloupes, Halt
Runner Bean, &amp;Sweet Com.

'

...

;
{
&gt;l

'

··to provide to the VIllage of
Syraeu1e lor the term of
one (1) year, commencing
Moy 21, 1998, commerctot
property,
ecmmoict•l
gentrll tllbtllly, commercial

=

1Ulo

coverage

•net.

commerclol lnl•nd morlnt

-

lnaurance. Bide ere tO bt In

o

at~lod

envelope &lt;norked

" tneurence

Bid"'

and

·aubmltted or mo.lltd to
Jontco Zwilling, ClerkTre..urer,
Vllloge of .
Syr1cueo, Munlctpoi Bldg.,
, Syrecuao, Ohio 45779. The
VIllage of Syraeuoo re1orvo•
tiM right to rojtct ony or ell
bid a.
i,'
Jontce Zwilling, Cllrk·
Trooaurer, VILLAGii OF
=
SYRACUSE
= (51 2,1, 16; 3TC

=
=
-

=

Public Notice

=

REQUEST FOR
: PROPOSAL
Bid Notice For Sond
Buyera: .
·
Bid prop01111 lor thl
purch111 of ICrt~ned ptt
run und from the Molga
Cou'nty .
111ghwoy
Deportment, deecrlbod
heroin, will be received by
lhf Botrd of Melgo County
COfftml~atonera In tho court
· hou.. , Pomeroy, Ohio until
10:00 a.m. on Tu11dlly the
' 28th day of Moy, 1998. The

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER
1

SERVICE

HouH Aopolr &amp;

Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Both
Remodeling
Room AddtUono
Siding, Roofing, P1tioa
Reaaonablt

Call Woyno Noll
992-4405

For Fr" EoUmat"

"'""

POOLDftD
FIRMIIIB wHrrE PINE ROUGH
SAWED LUMBER.

28563 BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 45771
(614)949-3013 Phone
(614) 949-2018 FAX
614 594-2001 NIGHT

!'"'_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...__

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters.
DownspOuts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

1

&amp;liD SUPPLY
• &amp; W PWTICS All

Sl. Rt 7

30 Announcements
. CHILD CARE SURVEY FOR MASON COUNTY: If rou ne&amp;d child
' c:are, please answer th&amp;se queshons. Mail m by May 12th. Ages

child
ren?
What Whar
days· ·ot the "
__, · of
week
care
needed?
hour s?

MOSI

TUppers Plains, Ohio 45783

614:98S.3813 Or 614-667-6484
Plastic Culven· Dual '!'1311 and Regular 8" thru 36"

~

con•ein1 1ocation tor eMo

care? ReasonatNe lee? II we may
coniact you, mclude you• nama ~ ·
address and 'ptlone 11umber. Send :
response to : Boll W-6 clo Poim .1

Pleasant Register 200 Ma in

4" S&amp;D - perf. - solid pipe
4': &amp; 6" Flex pipe
4" &amp; 6". Sch 35 pipe
1/2" &amp; J/4:' C. PVC. pipe
t 112" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
314" &amp; I" 200 pcs.i. water pipe ( l()() ' roll's thru l,()()()'roll'&lt;)
314" U.L. approved Conduit
H" Grnvctess Leach pipe
Gas pipe I" thru 2" . Fittings- Regulators- Risers
Full assortment of P.Y.C. &amp; Flex fittings &amp; Wa1cr finings
Full tine of Cistern. Septic &amp; Water stora~c tanks.

l'lllm Pteasam W. 25550
This Ia A Public Nolita That 1;
Wade Thomas Young Am Not
Retponslble For Any Debts Or
Bills tncur~ed By Naomi (Jeanie)
E.Young Aa011112.116.
40
Giveaway
Slleet

1983 Schullz Mobile
Home ·
t•h70 ~/11170 expanclo. f1re '
damaged. 304-675-6183 .

===::.:.:.:.:::.::::..__ ' .

New At Ineles .Eieetronies
.Your favorite artist
on Tape or CD

106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

992·2825

2 Males: One 4 Uo., Old Pup, 1
Part Chow &amp; Spitz : ~ Birddog , ~
61.·446-1062,
.
8 Adult fabbits . 304 -675-3973 af- .

ter Spm.

9 Uon1h Old German Shepherd
Uale, Need a To Live 11n Cit~. 4
~M. -9 ~M. 614·256-6661 .

Australian Shepherd Female
Spayed All Shots, 3 Year~ Old,

Good W1th Children. Give To
Good Hollie, 61 4-448-1574.
Free Pupp1es. 6 14-388-8532.

House To Tear Down Or Move, . '
Must Take All, 614-256 -6038

t/31/'lfn
N1ce Gai 1Co Ca t Deolawed And · ••

8'·10' 30¢ alt.

MODERI·SANI'rATION

14'-16' 35¢ alt.

POMEROY, OHIO
Tra• h Removal • Commercial or Residential
Septic Tanb Cleaned &amp; Portable Toilets Rented.
Daily, weeidy a monthly rental raies.

Also available
4x4's - 4x6's

614·985-4107

,.,_

614-742-3337

W~ OFFER GENERAL HAULING

House Broken' To Giveaway To
Good Home. 614·245-9239.

One hamster. Call304-882-3477. '
Loave message
To good home only- AKC Chow, , ..
no papers. 32300 SA 143, 5 miles ·

past Harrisonville.

60

•

Lost and Found

Limestone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

Card of Thanks

WE HAVE A·l TOP SOIL FOR SALE

, 992·3954 or 985-3418 ,,,

JONES' TREE SERVICE
" Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Years Experience • Insured

nn

Pick~ djscarded

ball

, applloncea
m•ny metela.

•

a

14-992-4025

lost lillie Brown Mixed Chihuahua, Dachshund House Doa Lost
On Johns Creek Road, Or Rocky ~
Fork Road ln. The Mercer vill e . '
Area II Found Please Call 614- '

Owner: Ronnie Jones

256c6790.

367-(1266 - 1-800-950-3359

L.PST : Male Blue Tick hound upper 5mi , area. Reward. 304-675-

Free Estimates

2799.

8am-8pm

\

10

'

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

WICKS
HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

614-.2-3470

BISSELL a·UILDERS, INC.
~ew

Homes • Vinyl Siding New.
Garages • Replacement Wi!'ldC)ws
Room Additions • Roofing ·
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643 ..
(No Sunda~· Calls)

.,........

Yard Sale
Galllplllls
&amp; VIcinity

111 Th 1rd Avenue, Gallipol is,
_Thurs. Fr l &amp; Sat, May 9th, 1Oth,
111h, 10 :00 A.M. To 5:00P.M.
4 Family Garage Sale: May 10th,
9-5, At. 160, Just Passed 554 Intersection Amby Lane.

'"

ALL Yard Sa tes Mutt Be Paid In \ '
Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00-p.n,. , .•
the day belore tt'te ad is to run.
Sunday edition · 2:00 p.m. Friday.
Monday ed1!10n - ·10:00 a.m. Sat·
,...; ,
urday.

Big Salw. Ra1n /Shin&amp;. 8129 S.A. 7 .. _ '
N.. Cheshire. OH. Signs Posted . ·· '
Mountain Bike, Roland Key Board, -. i
Toys, LoaCis Of Misc. Items. Ffi ,

DatePine
Meet the Man or Woman
of your Dreams Never .
be lonely again. ·

..

51 10th. 9-5.

Church &amp; Bake Sal-_: Clay Town- " .
house, Between 218 And At 7 9 · ~ •

CALL NOW

To 4, Friday. ,

'

.r•

Frl, Sat. 8·5. Tools, 01yer, VCR
Tapas, ~pple Computer, Electrk

1·9Q0.988-8003

1"

u

5 Family: ist Tiine Sale Fri &amp; Sat
In Crnwn City
' ·•

New24 hr.

(5)1,18; 2TC

l oll - ring, in Middleport near ·
Corner Restaura nt , 614·992· "'
3535.
Lo st- white male Chow, in Chester : '
&amp; 248 area, catl 614-985-3558.
'

llpowtil••. Name Brllnd &lt;;tolhos,

c

,',

Howard L. Wrltesel

5/lW.TFN

1x6, 1x8,2X4,2x8

Ext. 1021
. $2.99 per min.
MUll be 18 y11.
.Serv-U (614) 645-8434.

RAYBURNS MARKET

'•

949-2168

lladle lllaeli
Dealer ·
•

lnaurert - Experienced

-

. bld1 wtit be opened tt 1:30
p.m. on Tut~doy tho 28th
doy of Moy, 1998 ond read
otoud. .
· Propoeolo 1r1 to be·
returned on bid form•
1upplled by the vendor, and
wftl be opened on the date
ud ptoc•. apecllted.
Speclllc•tlon lor bidding
moy be obtained through
the Engln11r'o omco, 34110
Felrgrounde
Ro•d,
Pomeroy, Ohto.
The Melge County
Commtulonera reaervo the
right to occept or raJoct ony
or Ill blda ond!or ony port
lhottOf ond wfll accept the
bill bid lor the Intended
pu,......
•
Gloria IOo11, Clerk
Boerd of Melgt Co1,1nty
Commlaolonora

149-2512

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

IYDUULIC REPAIR
$32.00/IR.

NEFF REMODELING

All Kinds of Earth Work
992-3838
There's , lust not
enough words · to
express our love and
gratitude lo all lhoae
who helped us CQpe
with the death of my
beloved aon and
brother,' Robert E.
Authereon.
· ·
Thank you for the
service by Rev. Larry
Haley, Mr. &amp; Mrs. Paul
White, David Mllll·
gan, Racine .ltaptlat
Church, Carleton
School, food cards,
money and everyone's
prayarw.
Beulah Autherson
&amp; Family.

VCR Sick?
Call Quick
COY'S VCR
REPAIR

ANNOUNCEMENT S

1·900·988-8988.
Ext. 6733

,....;....,...,

...

I

Trucking.
Limestone
Bulldo7.ing and
Backhoe
Services .
House Sites and
Utilities

rn

Free Estimates

TrN

614-441-7558

Lillie things
art Worth Alot

15 Yrs. Exp. Lie. -Ins.
Owner. Rick Johnson

, .Jur Sweetheart B$
close as your phone

Howard Excavatin

614-992-2524

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
(304) 773-5124

Chester, Ohio

4131 11'10.

5N1 mo.

u.... be 11 yra.
Touch-Tone Roquired
Serv-u(619)64s-8434
.,,_

(6 14 ) 441 -11 9 1

614·742·2193

Quality Work

Truck:

Ext 1277

$3.99 Per Minute

985-4422

HIT REISOIIILf
lAVE REFERENCES .
614-915-4110

.

0

IWV010212

Dirt• Sand

rou.

..

Berry's World

A

.

992-4507

· Umeatone • Gravel

FREE ESTIMATES
Take IP!e pall out of
palatl•t· ·let us do ,It
for

You'll be floating on a cloud with
the
you'll find in the

Keeping patients warm during
surgery helps reduce infectiQn

'

.,. , . ,.,. • Nrlk:e Ill IMI:k lr up ServlngS.E. Ohio a Welt Vlrglnlll
Toll FrM1-800-172·5e&amp;7
448 1418

TRUCK
.SERVICE

LINDA'S
PAINTING

LEE HUSK
WELDING
SIRVICE

312111 ....

&lt;

o

BE

DUM~

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FARMINGTON HILLS, Mich. Laforet said Bastallle d'led in the
On the witness stand Tuesday, Fuchs•.a spokeswoman for the Cana(AP) - The same day he appeared in United States and that services were Kevorkian compared hi s refusal to dian Right to Die Society.
court on assisted suic ide charges, Dr. sc heduled for Thursday. '
obey what he deems immoral and
Bastable ' tried to ove rdose on
Themmis Anno, -a Rilht to Die illegal court decisions with the civil drugs and alcohol in 1994, but his
Jack Kevorkian was present at the
death of a right-to-die crusader. a Society of Canadti)pllkftlnan, told disobedience practiced by civil rights wife called 911 after finding him in
family "!ember and activists said.
The Detroit News 'il;~rt today pioneers Marti n Luther King and a coma.
that Kevor.kian and .l'Mieral other Rosa Parks.
The
Farmington
Hills
home
where
ATLANTA (AP)- United Parcel ters in Louisville, Ky. Two permanent
He had created a page on the
doctors"
police
today
confirmed
the
death
of
were present ~I' Bastable's
Kevorkian was acquitted in two World Wide Web called Please Help
Service can already hear snickers restrooms would also be added.
·l
earli er trials · on assisted suicide Me Die With Dignity, and se nt videoWhile the concept .o f riding in a Austin Bastable happened is listed as death.
about travelers buying package deals
Kevorkian
and
BISlable
had
been
·
charges.
the
address
of
Janet
K.
Good,
founder
tapes to Prime Minister Jean Chretien ,
and wrapping up vacation plan s as converted cargo plane might flop
and
past
president
of
the
Mi
chigan
in
contact
for
seve'tl"
t
ks,
Anno
Macri,
Bastable
's
son-in-law,
told
as part of his battle to persuade the·:
the company considers carrying peo- with seasoned travelers, ll)ost pas. ·
the Detroit Free l&gt;n;ss that Bastable Canadian government to allow ass ist- ·
pie on its cargo planes.
sengers on charter flights are penny chapter of the Hemlock Society, a told the newspaper. ;
"We' ve .been trying ' determine wanted to die in Canada but could not ed suicides.
. .
. ·.
The Atlanta-based package ship- pinchers who aren 't picky, said Jack right-to-die group.
·
his
involvement
oUrselves,'
'
Anno
Good
has
been
a
longtime
supfind
any
doctors
there
wi
lling
to
help.
"I'
m
facing
a
debilitating
disease
:
per may soon convert freighters into Boch, owner of JB's World Travel
said
of
Kevorkian,
who
has
acknowlotKevorkian
and
has
testified
porter
cide
in
Canada
is
punAssisting
a
sui
which has led to a quality of life that :
passenger charters on weekends agency in New York.
is not satisfactory to me." Bastable :
an idea that 's sure to make UPS the
"When it comes to low-price at his trials. Kevorkian completed edged attending 27 suicides since is hable by up to 14 years in prison ,
1990.
· Bas tabl e developed multiple scle- told the Free Press in an interview · ·
· flights , the majority of consumers three days of testimony in hi s own
. butt of jokes.
At
his
Mi
chi
gan
trial,
Kevorkian
defense
Tuesday
in
hi
s
third
assisted
rosis
26 years ago. At the time of his published in March.
" We 'II probably hear the jokes on ·noesn 't care if it's safe, doesn't care
has
described
himselr.as,.a
.victim
of
suicide
trial
in
Pontiac
.
.
• I refuse to live by healthy peoLetterman ," said Ken Shapero, if it's cargo: doesn't care if it's the
death, he was able to move only his
conspiratorial
julges,
prosecorrupt,
The
extent
of
Kevorkian's
role
in
. spokesman for UPS' airline division. back of the bus as long as they're savhead and left hand .. said R.uth von ple 's rules. I want choice."
Bastable 's death, however, remained cutors and lawmakel's. lfl has com"lt's a tall order. ... Nobody wants to ing a few dollars," Boch said.
feel like they 're a box on an airUPS' weekend flights could unclear. The police chief in Farm- pared his prosecuti"!to tlilile.i~ Nazi
·~ ·,
,.
ington Hills; a Detroit suburb, was at courts.
· plane."
underc ut prices of other charter com~
The UPS airline division expects panics, which tend to charge their Good's home this morning. Good did
not
immediately
return
a
phonemesto make its proposal to top manage- highest rates for Saturday and Sunday
rrient in a few weeks. The company trips,saidTomParsons,editor ofBest sage left on 'an answering machine
sees paying passengers as a source of Fares magazine in Arlington; Texas. there.
Bastable, 53, of Windsor, .Ontario,
revenue because most of its Boeing ·
And even though a UPS flight
had
multiple sclerosis. Officials of the
727s aren't used oil weekends.
would certainly be no-frill &gt;, it would
I
Right
to Die Society of Ca~ada said
The flights would be chartered by by no means be un safe,' Parsons said.
MIAMI (AP)-PoreiJn business
Bastable
died
Monday
in
the
prestravel companies that sell vacation
" Their planes . are probably
executives accused of 'violating a
packages and could begin in early . equipped with hettertechnology than ence of Kevorkian and other doctors. lightened U.S. embarjo'ofCuba will
1997. Destinations would be defer- you'd even find in the major carri- They and Bastable 's son-in-law, soon be given 4S days to comply or ·
Michael Macri, said he died in Mi~hirriined by the travel companies.
ers," he said. ·
gan,
but declined to say how or pre- risk losing their U.S. visa privileges,
To convert
brown-and-white
Federal Expre~s. UPS' top comThe Miami Herald reported today.·
cargo plane into a charter flight , UPS petitor, considered providing similar · cisely where m ~hen .
A delegation of A~can diploKevorkian is on trial on charges of
would load a platform fitted with car- passenger flights in the 'late 1970s but
mats
in Brussels told European Union
peting and seats through the plane's abandoned the idea, company assisting in two 1991 suicides. officials. Tuesday of the planned
Reached by telephone today ,.t his
extra-wide cargo doors.
.
spokeswoman Shirlee Clark sl!id.
suburban
Detroit home, Kevorkian · grace period and said·a list of execOverhead storage compartments,
FedEx decided instead tCiconcenutives likely .to lose •tJieir visas is
reading lights and ventilation contrCIIs . trate on its delivery service and still said, ''I' m sorry, I can't talk to you," being prepared, the newSpaper said,
~uys
would be attached permanently and has no interest in charter fli ghts. she and hung up.
·
citing
Clintqn
adml!llslnlion
sources:
Kevorkian 's attorney, Geoffrey
fCIIded up during cargo fli ghts, Shap- said.
Af[!:r the Feb. 24 Cuban dCiwning
Fieger,
denied that his client was
era said from UPS' ai rline headquarinvolved in Bastable's death. " That's of two civilian ain;nft, P.ysident
not true,' ' Fieger said from hi s home · Clinton signed II law seeklng to pun- ~---------------------------,
ish companies doihJ business on the
Tuesday night.
.
communist
island
and
using
properHe later told Canadian Press: " I
ty confiscated during the Cuban revcannot confirm or deny it." Reached
olution.
. BOSTON (AP) - At 65 degrees,
The law.denies visas to cqrporate
Sessler, an anesthesiologist at the today at hi s office, Fieger refused to
chie fs, controlling ihlreholders and
an operating room may be quite com- University ofCalifCirnia at San Fran- comment.
Bastable's body was at the LaSalle
their sppuses .,and diildN!il. The secfortabl ~ for a heavily gowned sur- cisco, described the experi!Jlent in
Funenil
Home
in
Windsor,
across
the
geon, but new research suggests the today's issue of the New · England
retary of state may ~,ilifi('the ban on
Detroit River from Detroit. The direca case-by-case bhis.
nippy air slows the patient's recovery Journal of Medicine.
The list of exeOI!Ifves \eccused of '
Being cold inhibits the body's tor of the funeral home, Philip
and increases the risk of infection .
. violatingthi:.new law .,.bly won't
Doctors who wondered about the defenses against germs. It decreases
possib le ill effects of lyi ng cold so blood now to the skin, lowering the usual chilly way. The i'eseatchers had be long. The adminiiiradl!n plans to ·
long during surgery conducted an supply of oxygen, which is necessary planned to enroll 400 patients but ,make an e xample of- lligh-profile
ex periment: Some operating room to tight infection. Cold also interferes stopped at 200 when ihe advan(l\ges companies .doing ~neil in Cuba,
such as Sherrin, a Canadian mining
patients got the usual treatment; oth- with blood clotting; warm pillients became apparent.
company.
and Ceme'l, oll Mexican
ers were kept warm.
Six percent of the warmed patients
bleed less.
The difference was surpri sing.
Sessler predicted that keeping developed wound infection~ during cement company, . the newspaper
.
The patients kept around a normal patients warm will soon be routine. their recovery, compared with 19 per- re poned.
.
'
Executives from those and other
98 .degrees .during their operations An editorial in the journal agreed, cent of those who had gotten cold.
recovered faster and had fewer post- provided more studies show the same . The warmed patients also healed companies involved hi tht more ihan
surgical wound .infections . Besides thing.
faster, so they got their stitches out a 200 joint ventures with he Cuban
day
sooner.
government can e~pect warning letbeing effective, the extra attention .
"There is a real prospect of reducwas cheap. Heating up the patients' mg complications, shonening hospiPatients who developed infec- . ters in t~e next two .weeks. sources
intravenous fluids and covering them tal stays and lowering costs after col- tions stayed in the hospital an aver- told the Herald.
'
with special, air-heated blankets cost orectal surgery," wrote Dr. Neil age of one week longer. Even if the
llie l.aw has driiWn
jsm from
$30.
the
EUropean
U11ie11
iico
and
•
cold
patients
managed
lo
avoid
infec1
Monensen and Christopher S. Gar"Isn' t it amazing that some thing rard of John Radcliffe Hospital in tions, they typically stayed in the hos- Canada, wh ich ha'-'~cant ecothat is risk-free and has such trivial Oxford, England.
pital two days longer than the nomic ties to Cuba.' t.ittlh in those
cost provides such benefit ?" said Dr.
Sessler said he thinks nearly all warmed ones because of their slow- countries have threatdlell retaliation·
ifaniel I. Sessler, one of the ~i nds of surgery will go beiter if er recovery.
against what they see aS efforts to
researchers.
Sessler said staying warm during force them to join lhtl S4'¥ear U.S:
patients are kept warm: The only
Typically, · operating rooms are exceptions are carotid artery surgery operations also eliminates another trade ban asainst Cuba. "
kept cool so surgeons won 't sweat and some other procedures where unpleasant s i~e effect of .surgery Some administratibli Mlcials said
under the bright lights. Some also lower temperatures help protect the waking up with bone-deep cold that the United States is ~plred for the
•
think the lower temperatures slow the brain, and heart surgery, where inten- lasts for hours.
consequences.
•
grow th of bacteria.
"Mbst patients who have had
" We are mindful of their contional cooling reduces the heart's
However, anesthesia interferes oxygen needs.
surgery remember waking up feeling cerns," said State ' Diilpartment
with the body's ability to regulate its
In the study, patients undergoing ~ cold and shivering," Sessler said. "A spokesman .Nicholls Ms. " But
~
IJt:l.
- "" .
own temperature. So in the chilly surgery at three hospitals in Austria .surprising fraction say it is the worst they ought to ben Pililflll "'our con91~
~~
•. 0 1896 bv NEA. Inc.
.
operating room patients often cool were randomly assigned JO be kept part of their hospital experience, cerns. They don't li'lie"9o i.iles from
down to around 94.5 degrees. '
Cuba; we do."
•
warm or to have their operations the worse than the pain."·

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985 4473

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

UPS considers plans Dr. Kevorkian attends another suicide
for human cargo on
weekend charters
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However, Rawli ns said the diary
should· prove wrong those who
doubted that Byrd even attempted
suc h a flight.
"Byrd is better off fm this discovery because it is widely believed
he didn 't even try," Rawlins said .
.·The diary documents Byrd's
courage and extraordinary navigational skills during his trip. Goerler
said.
·
" It was a major feat" he said . .
" But, this is just another piece of cvi - · ·
dence in the con tinUing controversy ·
to study Byrd's ni~ht. "

•

Plan Ahead, Call Today!
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1·908-990.3737
Ext. 2261

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he reached the pole," Rawl'ins said in
a telephone·interview.
Amundsen's flight with American
Lincoln Ellsworth and Italian Umberto Nobile came three days after
Byrd . Rawlins said there's no ques- ,
tion that Amundsen's navigational

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Diary reveals Byrd missed North Pole
COLUMBUS Some say
Richard Byrd's flight to the North
Pole was a fake. A diary found by an
Ohio State University professor suggests he never made it'but at least he
tried, a researcher said.
The diary was foOnd in January by
. Raimund Goerler, an archivist at
Ohio State University, among papers
housed in the school's Byrd Polar
Research Center.
Ohio State commissioned Baltimore researcher Dennis Rawlins _to
study the diary. His findi ngs were to
be released today for the 70th
anniversary of the flight.
The researchers said Wednesday
night the diary should prove wrong
those whCI said Byrd never even
made the trip.
.
" Years ago I was open to the v1ew
he hadn 't done it," Rawlins said.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

• Stump Grinding
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51
. 11oo

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r·:
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�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Th~y,

Thu!Wiey, May 9, 1-.

lley t, 1IMNI

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•amo•
PHILLIP

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==========!
GINipOIIs
.,.. .,., -

HaW drHMt wan\H h•ll or patt

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S1le. Wew 10th, 11th,
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___;._ __;__;.____=

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~

e Dati~. 1 Mtlt West Of Rodnew.
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'"e-7088

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304-882· 3151 between Sam ·
4'30pm Mon-Fn

Succeu &amp; 248

All Yard Salas Mull Be Pa1d
Advance Deadline . 1 OOpm the
day beforw the ad II to run, Sunday ed111on- 1:00pm Friday, Mon·
day ecinan 10:001 m Satwday
Fnday, May 10 , 12. 7, Saturdaw,
'
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lots more, Beny Sayre res1dence,
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80

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90

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J

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3080
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make any auch prefenonce,
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0205

---:~::--:7-::-~--

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Green Bo ttom W VA . Rt 2.
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AKC German $1'\epard pups 304·

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3929

-·
•

j

'

350 magnum U&amp;rcrulse, excellem _,
condition. $17,500, 814·&amp;49·2Q71

·~

1~94 Marada 18 F't Open Bow :
W1lh Sun Deck, 4 3 Lnar, V 6,
,
CruJSQr, With Ski Accesso·
1
814-2!WHUJO
",...~ 1
I
24 Ft Pontoon 8oa1 50 HP Motor.
t
r
Excellent Cond1110nl $5 500, 614

1f !~~c.:._:.::..:._.:._~.:_

1986 Chevy Spectrum 4 Door,
Auto, PB. Delay W1pers, 4 Cyl, 28
MPG, Now T""'· Extro Clean ,
Runs Good $1 ,150, su 379
2645

1987 Dodge Daytona 614 441 ·
1205

Auto Parts ~
Accessories

170

Miscellaneous

.,. Pl PleaoonJ. 9:am.,.pm,

Dog leanne! Chain link, 6ft •T&amp;, 4fl

hogh $125 304-773·5241ahor
8pm

1987 Clayton ,411:70, 3bedroom
1112bath, newly remolded bath w/
6Jet wh~rl pool , vinyl underpfnn1ng
10.1132 porch $12,000 304 576
3190 or 304-578·2984

I TIIOU611T I 1/JAS
IN BED..

•1
• 1,,

...

=~~~~~...,...~-.,..,
400 c 1 Small Block Chevrole1 ; ~ ~
~Block 0n1~· 2 Freeze Plug Mod- ,, •

1988 Beretta GT $3,000 1984

S3:....50:..·,..8_,4_.,.:..48.::...758.::...'.::..._ _ _ ;-.~

Cutlass $700 304 675 7528

:..e1:...

1988 F1lth Avenue 38,000 M1les.
.AtC,'T11t, Auto. 31&amp; Motor $3 000
Or Best Otter, 614 2.-5 1233

Budget Trensmit~ions, Used IRe· &gt;~
bu11t, All Types, Accessible To ~ •
Over 10,000 Trenanua11on, Also
Overhuat K111, 614·2.tS.5677
.....,..

~~~~~W~V·~:-:---530
Antiques

'

I

l

•
I

~:--:-;::-:-'--::-::---:~
Tra11er 1 Bedroom, No PelS, RenJ
&amp; Deposn Each, S2SO, 614·.t46·

790

«2e.

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

I

'72 Ch1eltan W1r1nebaga pull type
camper, 22' long, good concht1on

Two and three bedroom mob1le
homes starung at $240· $3DO,
sewer, water and trash mcluded,

sakaong $2100 OBO, 61 4·985·
4194.

--:----:::-----1614·992-2167
1990 Clayron 14•70 central a1r, ~:"'-;;;,;;.:"'-....;----IolBI eloctr~. otove, relng, washer 440
Apartments
S15,5oo. call 304·895· 3838
for Rent
30&lt;-895·3243

••
•

Equ•ppedl$6,100,81..,.48 3485

•

•

ilo

...

!'~

Wanted To Do

Babysit In Your Home $5 tHr,
Plenty Of E•penence 814 256
8487

2.

·.r

2811oet ......

ollell

..

34 Sllclelllrt
35 L.ong lime
37 ..........

.·'

·~
31Cer181ncellbo

-

.........

rlly clnl*
41 8lleheNd

~ ~~

••••
••••

.

heard one woman mumble, •A
r--=-:--:--::-'7"~--, g1rdle is the dtfference between
TIL u y ifactand--·---·
•

•

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•

G

Ihs:-rl--lii6:-"TI-TI--,Ir-;
•

•

•

•

•

•

•

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,__.._...__..._...._...__. you

614·2•5-5887

8
t

MUST

~v.

r

THI .. IC.

nilS CITV
GET!&gt; ...

AAP!

DIDN'T '«lU
SEE WHAT

Complete lhe chU&lt;kle quolod
bv hllmg in the milling words

develop

lr0111 step No. 3 below.

..&lt;'. ., a

.· '

BN:K 8'1'

OUR. HOTEL~

·'.
.r·',

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LEITERS
TO GET ANSWER

H...PPEWEI&gt;

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Sovlnrs

You'll Find In I he

Clossl(le4 Sectlan.

Marrow- Fo1st - Swoop - Nmety - OPTIMIST
My ne1ghbor was going fish1ng When I asked why he
was tak1ng a ca~era he replied, "I'm an OPTIMIST!"

ITHURSDAY

..

..
..

!.
..
I I I I

I•

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

.'

..
.

Small814-448-3103

sonable Ratosl614-379·2847.

27 Aatwlllll-

Many·lime world champion ·Jeff llll+"':""l'-"
43 Demllft
Meckltrotb from Tampa, Fla., is
4S NeNaua
renowned for 11ett1ng home in con- k!r+-t-+-l--+-:rpn..,.
tract8 lhat should go down. He has 1!::11:-t-t-+-l41 Actor Rollert :!.
that desirable gift for looklns at a deal
De - ·
from the point of view of the defenders ....,..l.:_,_.~_,..l.:_
48Bam
51 Tul
and seeing how lhey are reading the
cards. Then he findl a play that writes
,'.
an inaccurate book, giving the defend·
-.
ers just enough rope to hang them·
selves - if you'll excuse lhe mixed
CELEBRITY CIPHER
metaphors.
by LUll Carhpos •
How did Meckstroth get home in an
c.t.twity Cipher '"="Mil_.. c:tMiecl 11om quolll6on&amp; bv r.mou. Plqllt, PMCII"'d .,_.,.
apparently hopeless four spades on
'
Ed
In 1hl Clpner IIMdllor ..alher Todtly'f '*'- A t1QUN L
this deal from last year's Cavendish
Invitational Pairs?
West's two hearts was a weak twovx RDXL K
XZGT
AZIB
'K
bid, showing a decent six·card suit
and some 6-10 high-card poinls.
EDXVP. '
LZ
XBL
PKHaXX
After winning the first trick with his
diamond ac~. Meckstroth drew
HZENBHT.
XVTEDGJ
• •; t !
trumps with the ace, queen and jack,
.,
East throwing a club Now Meckstroth
" '•II
PREVIOUS SOLUTION. 'There Is much to be said for failure. It •• more
led the heart six from hand!
·
,)'
tncorrectly judging that even if lnlerestlng than success • - Max Beeobohm
South had the Iring, ducking wouldn'l
cost, We81 played low After winning
with dummy's jack, Mecltatroth called
TilT tAll'
for a low club, Easl Winning with his
PIIILII
Jack. Back came a lov· 'ub, covered
'"
- - - - - ...... lor ClAY I. POU.AN - - - - - - by lhe. 10, king and ace A third club
'
went to East's queen, declarer throw·
.....~'.
ing a heart from hand. On the fourth
lp. 10 form four words
club, declarer discarded hearts from
•
both his hand and the dummy. Now
GUTHOR
Easl, having only diamonds left, had
to lead away from his queen into dum·
-·
my's king·jack Meckstroth had lost
only three club tnclta.
.·
Dellghtfully done - but If East had
f RE F 0
'
discarded a diamond on the lhird
tnunp, keeping all his clubs, the eon·
'
tracl would have failed . Even
Meckstroth couldn 'I have overcome a
' '
club at Irick 10.
N U C E D 1..
Whilt trying on dresses in a
~
local department store I over-

Dependable Lawn Serv1ce B•g Or

Wanted To Buv Unle T1kes Toys,

"'

11 1!-blotLI '"
21¥. • •1 ~22T_._ ' '
21 Tenth oh
,t
drcnd
•' t.

I I, I I

sonable offer Call 304-675-281 1

Oon's lawn Care Re11dent1al,
Churches, &amp; Cemetarlas, Rea -

131UIIcla

I

'

Used balh tub, w111 accept rea-

Wanted To Buy Large Trampo ·
hne Used, 304·576-4022

-- -,
.......
. .•

10 AFI
e
12TOIII .......

0 r::ro..n:....::::-'!..r: ::

•

,.. 500pm

180

... __..
lillie)

S(Ct'..t\lA-~i..t/is·

•

Winnebago L1kt New
40,000 Miles, 15 New 8 Ply T~res
:
New Brakes &amp; Wheels, Cylinder
.,
Generator, 2 Wa1er Tanka, 2 _4
Holding Tanks
Air, Full~ ... _
U173

Teledyne Laars gas pool healer.
E•cellent cond1t1on, uaed 72hrs
Ready to 1Rflai1 304·.075-5067 af.

=...
...........

...

.,1

V!~:o.d~~d toe Close To ~~~~~~~~~814-«1-DUh
Sell Soporott) &amp;1

I~ 'itlii'RE T~AT TIRED, I WOUI..D SU66EST
TIIAT '(OV 60TO eEIHONI611TAT51X O'CLOCK ..

,,I
•
:.

446·0150

760

7 Pul two IIICI

two taealher
• Dlllt· -

IUnl
5 PuN Into I lOki

By Pbllllp Alder

1989 Wellcraft 21 Cuny Cabin, ~:

1984 Pont1ac Fiero 4 C~hnder, AI
C Sunroof, Cru1se, T11t, New Bat
, Good T~rea, $1,150, 61

...

:

74381

al.,..5pm

'

Writing
the wrong words

Oktahamo lratlef $4,500. 304=8~ ~

19 79 Caddlac $ 4o0 304 6 75.
Pole Bldg Spl 30'x4 SI9' 1 15x8 ~ 2 86
Shdmg Ooot, 1 ·3' Man Door
19 79 Ford Thunderbird V8. pw
Pa1nred Sl&amp;&amp;l Sief1ng, Galvatume cru 1u, ac, 11 ery good cond
Steel Root S6,4_.4 Erected Iron 11 2,000m 1 $1 ooo.nego 304 675
HoraeBidrs1·800·352·1045
l5 75

4 IMorlll'a

33 -

-·

~,-984:-B::-a-:1a-:,e.o:-:v::e-::,2::2!1:-.-:,8::5::-t.,-110:::

;;:::--;:;:--;;-;-:::-::;-:::-:-:::-:: I

3" en1ry door, 1·1419 shdtng door
painted steel Sldel root, &amp;

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

1 Whole -lned
2 Y•o...t(al.l
3 UIIIIMI

opening lead: • 5

'90 Yamaha Waverunnar, two 1
passenger. excellent conditton. - ,
$2500 080. 614·Q49-231t cloy&amp;
'

bed 1rruier 304 576 2573

PICKENS FURNITURE

Refr~gerator

750

682·7512

Washers, dryett, rehigeratort,
ranges Skaggs Appliances, 78
Vme Street, Call 814-441-73ga,

for Rent

•
House lor sale 1n Syracuse, two 6958
bedroom, one bath. on two lots,
separate 24•30 one &amp; 1~2 story 16x10 2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Cen'omb1nat1on ahop ana garage tral A1r, Green Terrace, 614-388·
Sac1al Workers, Now Htftng $23' bu1k11ng. $22,500 Call Butch. 61.- 8903
Hr ... Benel111, On The Job Tratn• 992 3994
2 Bedroom Furn•st-.ed, On Cl
To Apply In l'our Area, 1-800·\ ; n;;:;;::;;;::;:-;;;;;;;;;-;;;-;:;;:;:;;: Chapel Road, $250~o
339 6160
!I
bedroom home 1n country,
Whites H1ll Rd , Rutland. one balh, PGSII, 614 256~7 18 Alter 4
Soulheastern Ohto Community tn4Jround pool , 814--992-5067
2 Bedroom, all elecrnc washer &amp;
Bank Seek1ng an AggruaNe Redryer. ac, d•shwasMr, '" Mason
ta1l Loon Off''"'' Mull Have Mini- 320 Mobile Homes
No pers 304-773·5751
mum 01 Two Year1 Expenence
for
With Good Organtzalionat And
2bedroom 1n M•ddleporr, OH Ref.
CommuniCation Sk11l1. Reaume 12•70 Schultzlraller with 14x32 erences &amp; deposit reqUtred 304·
And Salary History To CLA 385, factory 2 room traiter S 7 500 304
882·3267
clo Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 825 67&gt;5878
Th~rd Avenue. Gallipolis, OH
3 Bedroom Ltoblle Home On Me·
14170 Freedom Mobil&amp; Home, Corm«;;k Rbad, 614 446 9669
45631

d1t10n ~4 576-4190

USED

••

New Honda 1998 CA250, ~ . 500. t
Or Take Over Pay,mtntl, e 14· I
367·7539
..- :

Restored 1969 Bu1ck GS 350, 4
Speet~ , Fac torw lur, Anzona Car
13, 500 . Needs Restored . 614

1·80Q-499·3499

Restaurant now h1nng wa 1ters.
wa1tressea. d11h washers &amp; deiiYery 30-t-675-3663

1973 Cameron. 12•60, good eon

GOOD

I

-

e1•-t~
=~~7~·ro==23~----~--~~ : :

1969 Nova SS 396 • 375, Less

DOWN

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West
Soalll
WHI Norlh Eaal
Obi.
Pass
Pass Pass
Pass

1990 Kawasaki NmJa 250.

Motor, &amp; Trans 53 000 . Needs

420 Mobile Homes

448· 177• Homo, 814 44&amp;-0374
Woi11 Alk For Mark Paln"'8f'

287Q

Carpe~

N1ce &amp; Clean, S2001Mo . 1200
Oeposu Plus UT1h 11es. No Pe ts
Upper Rt 7 Add •son . 6H 367

1

l

"'

Souill
• A QJ t
• K 78
+ A IT 4
• 10 9

'.

Two bedroom house, carptled,
nice and clean depos11 requtred,
no ms•de pets. three bedroom

Unfumshed Small House,

KJ 2
A 7 2
Eul

• 8
+Qt091S
•QJ85S

.'

pnc:e ~•.814·992·5818

',

• 10 2

good elton car, 1850, 8t&lt;·g4Q.I l1i9S Polaris Eapl- 4&amp;4 400, '
2311 days or ••4·&amp;•&amp;·2644 ~S~4,300:_:;;,;;;f10GC.~:.::J04.;,;,.,;1;;;5B;_1'7ttae.;.;__ _ , :
...,..ng,
740 Motorcycles
"•
'89 Thunderi&gt;otd SC. two door, 3.8
"-.-::'7'-:=~==-==litre, V-8, ehte model turbo, PS, ~
1984 Honda Goldw•ng As..-n· , ,
PB , AC 5 spe ed, powe r seats cadi!. excellent condition, 35.000 1

Goods

+

•

Oh&lt;&gt;

'87 Plymouth Reliant lE atatlonwagon , burgandy, front wheel
drin, auto, alt . front damage,
hood not ctama~. 91,826 miltS..

Air

Houuhokl

~

"""· 304-7'13-5142.
~~~--~~~~~ · ·
1990 Dodge Ram Van 8·250, 'I
72,000 Miles, $8,000, Can Bo r
Seen AI' Gollipollo OoHy Tribune, '
825 Th~rd Avenue, Galhpallt ~

710 Autos for sale

K 8 54

• J 52

CantJCO Turt bar, t•cel~l condl - •

mites, ra1n suns. helmttl included,

port Unattached 2 Car Garage
Wtlh New Aparunent Above 614·

cerllt•ed

460

&lt;nc&gt;on·opm . We Buy

•

"

1088 Fard Rlnpr XLT, 2 i futl .""'

TRANSPORTATION

12noon-1pm

and locks "Great Car," $5200

Postal &amp; Gov't Jobs $21 IHr ...
Benetns. No E11p Will Train, For
Appl And Into HIOO&gt;!i3tl-30«1.

Please

wv.

,,., •.,,.,

Rid1r'1g &amp; TraJI t-torstt, Pony, D•f·
Werw: Prices, 81 ""-'45-41 10

Mooon
New Store

k01chen 304 6 75 3030 or 304·
67&gt;3431

HOUSE FOR SALE
0156
BY OWNER
Small 3 Bedrooms, Very Good
Condltton, New Vmyl S1d1ng, Car

Stall development and mlect1on
con!rol nurse lor 136-bed long
term care
must
possess
or be

SIHpin' rooms with cooking.
Alto tr11ler space on rlvtr .All
l'looll·upt. Call afltf 2:00 p.m.,
3()4. 773-5851 . l,laJOn

neg , 614 -992 7478 or 614 949·

rage, Garden &amp; Tra1ter Space,

••

,.

N•ce three bedroom home •n Pt
P1&amp;asanL no pots 6 1l-992·5858

See To Apprectatel $89,500, 30•·

M

•,

opponunlly basts

31 0

1

Rooms rat rent • wtek or month.

baths, lam11y room. complete

derly Handicapped Uan, Must Be
Good Housekeeper. References
Needed, 614 ...a 6788

Chall climber, wnnget' type wash·
er Can be seen ar 216 Twin Tow-

trllCI 3·4bedroom house 1n Ma·
son Co Please cau 304·895·

sex tamn•tatatus or national
origin, or any Intention to

For sale or rent 3 bedroom, 2

Used furniture- amtques , one
p1e'e or complete estates . also
do appra1sals, Osbw Marun, 614·

Wanlld to buy under land 'on-

limitation or &lt;lscotmilatJon
based on rece, color, religion,

2bedroom on Lincoln Ave, ac,
hlgh tfflcltncy heat. low ut1lllit1
11ove, rtlngerator No smok1ng,
no pats 304-875 1244 Sam
4 30pm only

Ow readers are hereby

Beauty shop equtpment tor sale,
far lnlarmation ca11304·87S-5246

Used Mens lev1s lee &amp; Wran
gler Jeans &amp; Oen1m Jackets, N1ke
Shoes, 61•·446-2468

to advertise •any preferenea,

Clly twnlts, $375/Mo. , • o.posn 1
Reference, No Pert, 814 ··1.48 ·
0798, Leave Mesu~

- t o r real-to

Avenue, Gaii•PDI•s, 614·44&amp;284?

992·7441

All real ostato Oldveotlolng In
this MWJPIP8f llsut:Jtect to
tho F-.1 Falr Hooslng Act
d 1968 whk:h makes 11 Illegal

____N_E_A_C_r_o_•_•_w_o_rcl__,·...h_•_•_••~---~
. ,,.......""' ....... ~

Starhng •• 1120/mO Galllo H&lt;!~
814-·9580.

2 llodrooms, Bo...,.,.\ Gollipotio

Now Taking Application• For All
Apply In Person AI 39
Cou•l str..,, Gathpohl, Mog•• ···
PositiOn~

Top Prlo11 Poid: 04&lt;1 U.S.
S1lver, Gold, Otamonds, All
Collectibles, Paperwetghts,

F01 hbrqtiQn

Carpeted, 8 room house m Ma
area Oeposu required , no
pets 30.- 875-2884

f.~~~~~~~~~~.l ~~c.~
On
Is

9 &amp; 10. children &amp; adult
toolt, lots or m••c , 1

88-4~

•1
The Deily Sentinel• p... ,. w

MAY91

•

.,,
•

-·,,"

.

.. , ...

.

. ··" ~
'

"

! . ......

···.

.. ..
~

..
•

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-

M~ro·•~ra,pn

ASTRO·ORAPH

·BERNICE ,
BEDE OSOL
820

PIU(IIblng
Heating

&amp;

Freeman's Heating And ec.o11~ ~
lnaraiiiiiOn .And Ser~IC . .. ep-A,. ~,

C""'fted Rnldlnlolf. Co,.,.,lol f,
814·256-1811.
~

840

'

Electrical and
. Refrigeration

•

Friday, May 10, 11196

_ _ _ __;;_~--~

.,,~ ,ru '

ASES CERTIFIED bE"ALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES'

;!o,~.

Heat Pumps, Air Cond!tloning, It ••:.""'~

You Oonl Colt Ua W. Both Lo,.t

Free ESM'1ates, 1·800·281 ·00N,

814-448 8308, wv 002945

'

~

•...,C.

commere~al wimtt,
tt_1.1&lt;
new lef!JICe Qf rtPIItL t.t111er li· '·hilllltl,
censad eleculclan Rl~enour

Retldtnt1a1 or

'92 Chevy AaJro van, llklno
18500. eonalder "odo lor 4•4 ol
O&lt;JJII value. 81 ..992-7507.

...,._..~,....

Eltculcol, WV0003oe , 304·87517118

...,:.;·

-OI: t~·

..

In lhto year llwleld, relllble oont8cts mlghl
help to open doOrS lor you and lnlroduCe
you 10 finlndll opportunities Do not treat

...... OCCUIY8I1Ctlfllndlfter8nlly.
'YAUIIUI (April zo.May 201 Somelhlng
beneficiAl lor you could.lranapire eoon.
but " ... miQIII be delayed. lloUitng prematurely pould teed IG ltllbllrrlltiMnl

later. Get a jump on life by~
lhto lnfluencellhlll goYim you In lhe year

prediC·
0 (Oct. 24·No1f. 22) Your
11ons tOday by mailing
and SASE to money-management techniques could
leave obseNe.rs scratchmg the~r heads.
Astro·Graph, c/o lhis newspaper, P 0
Box 1758. Murray Hill Stal1on, New York, In some 1nstances you'll be tlghtf•sled. In
NY 10156. Make sure to state your zodl · other~ you may 10&amp;8 money 10 the Wlnd. ,,.
ac sign.
I. SAGmAAIUB (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Even
GEMINI (Mey 21-June 201 You may though you will th1nk IllS •nnocenllun, IIV
have to make a dill•cull decision today
to avoid teas1ng a sensrt!Ve family memKeep In mind 1hlllhe - 1. .1 WIY DUt il bar lbday. Your bllbl ooutcl draW bloQd ' 1
m1ght not repreaenf the bell course of In tender areas
•
action
CAPRICORN (DIIc. 22-Jen. 181 II you
CANCER (June 21-.luly 22) Today, your have to ask someone lor a favor today,
co·wor1&lt;ers wMI not be inspired by an old· your wish m1ght be granted, but 1here Is
fashioned pep talk. Actions will speak also a strong probability \hal unpleaaanl
louder 1han woods, so show them t10w lo stnngs could be anached.
be productive by wor1&lt;1ng haid.
AQUARIUS (Jen. 20-Feb. 181 usa youo
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)1gnare impulses head lnslead of your checkbook t~ay.
to JUmp •nto speculalive situallons today
You can do lor yourseR whal would'&amp;.!
11 '" baUer 10 be safe lhan sorry. Take you an arm and a leg 1f you hired an
adequalellme to lnveetlgate p!0p08118.
expens•ve craftsman.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-8+(11. 221 Today y,ou PISCES (Feb. 20-llarch 201 Your corn:
could behave Irresponsibly In regard
pany won'l reward conversation today.
m1nor issues. However, your mode of bu1 II w•ll recognize performance You
operatiOn will be lrenaformed H aer10us can benefit because you will know Mwlo
·•11118 areatlllke
earn m~ for your firm .
LIBRA (lep1. 23·0ct. 23) You ,might ARII!S (lllrell 21-Aplll 18) Unleel your
have 1o pull 1111kloday 1o make subordlsuggeauons are explicitly requeeted
nates undlrllend lhat IIley ere not aulho- loday, keep lham to yourself. What you
rlzed 10 make importanl decisions on say might cause poobtemoo lor the peliOn
your behaW.
you're trymg lo protect.

10

• 1

•.di
, r: r,

.,,

•• J

'" .;

.

L'

;

. •.

�Pomefoy • Middleport, Ohio

Pi1Qe18 • The Dally Sentinel

Administration says oi.l sale will loWer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Clinton administtation said today
the sale of 12 million bamlls of oil
from the country's ema pncy raer.oe
will ease guoline prices. lndu.stry
analySIS called the move mispided
and unlikely to have much effect.
Associate Deputy EnerJy Depart·
mcnt Secreta~)' C. Kyle Simpson told
a House Commerce subeommincc,
"It is clear the best business practice
is to make the oil available to the
marlccts as quickly as possible."
While lhe drawdown has been

criticized by some Republicu lawmakers, Simpson noted that the GOP
Congress previously directed thai
$227 million in oil be sold from lhe
reserve by the end of this fiscal year.
The president decided td speed up
the sale to m~ tight peii'Olewn
supplies lhat have been blanied for a
20-cent-a-gallon jump in gasoline

prices since Fe'--Y. Simpson said.
Two industry analysts ane the
head of an oil industry trade lfO\IP
attaCked lhe use of the government
reserve to respond to what they
called a temponry price spike in

wllllled Philip Verlepr 1r., on oil
industry analyst for Charles River
Associates. He said it could diJcourage oil companies from increaainJ
their private inventories.
Vcrleger said he expects the sale
of 12 million b!urels by the government "will have no impact but will
give the American public the lnis-

guoline.

"If u.sed improperly, (draining) the
reserve
can ex..erblte a crisis,"
F

Ohio.Lottery

pr~ces

Liken Yiew that the aovernment is in
the business o{ 1118fta1ing enerJY
prices.''

John Uchlbllu, chairman of the
Petroleum llldustry ReseardJ Foundllioft, called the decision 1o ~;.. on
the S87 minion blrrels in the SttareJic ~ Reserve misguided.

Tournament
yields wins
for teams

"There is no shonage or disruption"
of oil, he said, attributing the price
increase to temponry "nwltet f~e;_.

Plck3:
9-5-7

Plck4:
8-2-3-8

Buckeye 5:

Sporta on Page 4

tors."

7·1 o-13-32-33

Today's hearinJ did not focus on
a relared Republican proposal to
lower by 4.3 cents a gallon the fed·
era! gasoline taX.

•

•

•l

'

Meigs .
County
Court

'Vai.47,N0.12

.z •••lion&amp;, 12 Poga

Showers and thunder·
stonne tonight, low In the
501. S1turd1r, IIIOWirl
likely. Hlgll1ln the 501.

35-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, May 10,1996

A O.nnatt Co. Now P por

Minimum wage hike heats up election

The following cases were resolved
last week in lhe Meigs County Court
of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
Fined were: Melinda K. McDonald, Middleport, seat belt, $15 plus
costs; Earl S. McKinley, Middleport,
seat belt, $15 plus costs; Crystal D.
Dexter, Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 plus
costs; Walter C. Asbury, Columbus.
speed, $30 plus costs; Thomas A.
Myers, Langsville, insecure load,
$20 plus costs; Donald L. Gentle;
Cedar Mountain, N.C., speed, $30
plus costs; Clifford T. Roseberry,
Syracuse, speed. $30 plus costs;
Timothy P. Crihfield, Harmony,
W.Va., seat belt, $15 plus costs;
Danny R. Lykins, Chesapeake, speed,
$30 plus costs; David Alan Gledhill,
Charlotte, N.C., speed. $30 plus

. By PAMELA BROGAN
· G1nnett New• Service
WASHINGTON - Despite bipanisan support among l!fCa lawmakers,
·increasing the minimum wage has become a hot political issue in southern
Ohio because it's an election year.
. The minimum wage - now at $4.25 an hour - has not been increased
·since 1991. Nearly II pereent of Ohio's work force, 500,000 workers. earn
the minimum wage.
On Wednesday, President Clinton said he would agree to legislation pushed
by Rell'lblicans to repeal temporarily a 4.3 cents per gallon ga&lt; tax if Congress also approved a separate bill to increase the minimum wage.
The wage increase.is a key issue on the campaign trail in Ohi'o's 6th Con.
gressional District.
• On April IS, thecarnpaignnfformer Democratic Rep. Ted Strickland, who
is running against incumbent Republican Frank Cremeans, issued a press

release wilh Ibis headline: "Cremeans flip-flop on minimum wage vote ."
A day earlier, Cremeans was one of 20 Republicans who bucked the GOP
am! backed legislation to increase lhe minimum wage by $1 to $5.25.
· But as recently as April 9, Cremeans was quoted in a local newspaper as
telling Dr. Jill Neff, a Jackson pedtatrician and aconstituent, that he opposed
a minimum wage increase.
" I don'teven know why we have it," Cremeans was quoted as.telling Neff.
Neff said sbe was quoted accurately in lhe Athens Messenger. Cremeans
did not return repeated telephone calls to respond to the wage issue or his
statements to Neff.
"Cremeans told us lhat we'd all be better off without it," Neff said Thursday. "I about dropped my teeth because there are so many minimum wage
earners i.n this area."
Neff said Cremeans probably changed his position because he's "swaying with public opinion."

Salvation Army robbery tria·l
opens with youths' testimony

costs;

Keilh A. Cline, Long Bonom, fail·
ure to control, $20 plus costs; Sher·
man A. Johnson Jr., Bidwell, speeding, $30 plus costs; Vema K. Ball,
Lowell, seat belt, $251)lus costs; Lisa
L. Helton, Anderson, Ind., speed, $30
plus costs; Allan A. Lambert, Syra; cuse, speed. $30 plus costs; Donald
E. Bowen, Fairmont, W.Va,. speed,
$30 plus costs; Marilyn J. Blair,
Portsmoulh, speed, $30 plus costs;
·: Jeff E. Collinsworth, Catlettsburg.
Ky., $25 plus costs; Roy R. Myers,
. Hilliard,. speed, $30 plus costs; Naomi J. Poulson, Warren, Ind., seat beli,
$25 plus costs;
.
Lawrence K. Biggs, Cambridge,
speed, $30 plus costs; Ryan D.
Kuhlman, Columbus, speed, $30 plus
costs; Duane R. Ketelboeter, Black
Earlh, Wise., disobeyed traffic control
device, ·$20 plus costs; Everett R.
Stevens Jr., Fleming, spee\1, $30 plus
costs; Richard Spencer, Logan,
speed, $30 plus costs; William Carl- ·- .
ton Mullins Jr., Orlando. Fla., seat
belt, $25 plu~ costs; Rodney A.
Jones, Wellston, seat belt, S2S plus
coSIS; Floyd H. Collingsworth, Lake ·
. Mary. Fla., seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Robert L. Sawyers Jr., Shade, seat
. belt, $25 plus costs; Charles E.
-: Chambers, Patriot, seat belt, $25
plus costs;
.
Uhuk G. Erdal, Columbus, speed,
. $30 plus costs; Christopher W. Cum·
mings, Athens, failure to control, $20
plus costs; Joel T. Perry, Worthington,
speed, $30 plus costs; Charles R.
· Ulmer. Enon Valley, Pa., speed, $30
· plus costs; G. Robin Benedict,
Columbus, speed, $30 plus costs;
: Delores A. Evans, Dexter, failure to
· control, $20 plus costs; Barbara L.
Payne, Middleport, speed, $30 plus
· costs; Katharine L. Pickens,
· Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 plus costs:,
Shelagh Erskine, Cincinnati, speed,
$30 plus costs; Richard L. Neal n,
: Bidwell, overload, $385 plus costs;
Ernie J. Gevas. Hurricane, W.Va., ·
speed, $30 plus costs; John S.
. Frudell, Clendenin, W.Va .. speed,
. $30 plus costs; Landis K. Wandlipg,
· Gallipolis. failure to display valid
registration and tags for commercial
• trailer. $10 plus costs; Robm C.
· Foley, Syracuse, driving under the
influence, $750 plus costs, 10 days
ja~l suspended to three days, 90-day
operator's license suspension, one
year probation, jail and $450 sus.. pended upon completion of residen. tial treatment program; Jerry M.
.. Johnson Jr.. Racine, DUI, $750 plus
. costs, I 0 days jail suspedded to lhree
: days, 90-day OL suspension, one
' year probation, jail and $450 ·sus·
' pended upon completion of residen. tial treatment program;
: , Eric A. Qualls, Pomeroy, driving
, under financial responsibility action
,. suspension. $150plus costs, 30days
. jail suspended to three days. two
• years probation; Willard L. Moore,
. . Ponland, no OL, $100 plus costs,
lhree days jail and $50 suspended if
valid OL presented withi~ 60 'days; .
•. Tina L. Riffle. ~iddlepon. fail~ to
i .•control, $30 plus costs; Donald W.
· .. ·Shaffer, Racine, reckless operation,
plus costs; possession, $50 plus
'·costs; underage consumption, $175
plus costs, three day jail suspended,
::probation; Randy Marshall, Pomeroy.
-assault, $100 plus costs, two years
· ·probation, I 0 days jail suspended,
; restraining order issued; Jimmy Gra. ham, Rudand, failure to register dog,
· '$100 suspended. costs; Sean P. .Gra. 'ham, Canal Winchester, speed. $30
: plus costs; Bonnie M. Searls, Mid. dlepon, seat belt, $25 plus costs.

.,y
JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Opening argumen15 and testimony
began Thursday m lhe trial of Brad
R,obinson, 27, Pomeroy, accused of
robbing the Meigs County Salvation
Anny ,in Pomeroy on Jan. IS.
Two youthful offenders said they
c!»nmitted the robbery woth Robmson's assistance.
_Jos~ P. Cremeans;_ 14, formerly of
· Mtddleport, and hos 12-year-old
· cousin, Thra Booth, Pomeroy, testi·
foed that Booth purchased tools.
including two crowbars. rope and a
flashlight, for use in committing the
robbery•.that day in P(/meroy.
·- In additi9n. Cremeans sai~ Booth
purcb~ a roll. of _black electrical.
tape, uSed to restratn and gag the
elderly victims, while Booth said she
bought a pair of gloves to keep from
leaving fingerprints at the crime
scene.
Alleged cme oudined
.
During the crime, Dora Wining.
90, and her daughter. .Helen
Townsend, were bound. gagged and
repeatedly threatened.
The two separately admitted ~o
breakiqg into the rear of the building
wilh Robinson.
..,
Cremeans, allegedly accompanied
by Robinson, went upstairs to restrain
the two women while Booth waited

below so the women - whom she
knew - could not identify her. Aft~r
the women were bound, gagged and
crudely bltndfolde,d, Booth JOined the
two to further assist in the robbery.
For his role in the crime. Cremeans was sentenced to an Qhio
youth facility until his 21st birthday
after pleading guilty to two charges
each of robbecy and k.idnappmg and
one count or'burglary.
Boolh pleaded guilty to charges of
robbery and burglary and is awaiting
sentencing.
'None of my business'
During·cross-examination, public
defender Michael Westfall bro~gllt up
Cremeans' prior juveril~&amp; offenses,
including one count of aggravated
robbery and one count of gross sexual imposition.
. Also. Booth's 16-year-old sister,
Tina Booth. and her boyfriend . .23year-old Shannon Scott of Middle·
pilrt, testified they were at the Robinson residence the mght of the crime
and saw Robinson with the yout~s.
Laler, the two also said Cremeans
told them about lhe robbery, bragging
that he almost knocked out one ofthe
elderly victims.
On cros~-examination by Westfall,
the two said they did _not report tbe
incident even though they knew Tara
Booth and Cremeans were involved.

Natoonwide, pubhc opinion polls show anywhere from 75 to 85 percent
or Americans approve a minimum wage increase.
Stnckland supports a "reasonable" minimum wage increase so that workers have a "commensurate level of purchasing power that they ' ve had for
the last two decodes."
And Strickland charged that Cremeans is only paying "lip-service to a
minimum wage increase."
" It's illogical for him (Cremeans) to say that he's reluctantly supporting
a minimum wage increase now because he couldn 't get the Republican' tax
breaks passed into law. There's no connection between tax breaks for the affluent and a wage increase for lhe neediest ."
Republican Rep. Bob Ney said.he would vote in favor of lcgislati.on to.
increase the minimum wage, but would prefer a package that includes tax
cuts.
"If it come downs to a straight vote on a minim~m wage increa... I'll
vote for il," Ney said.

Tina Boolh declined in fear of getting her sister in trouble. Scott indicated, "It was none o( my business."
One major inconsistency in the
testimony was .hammered upon by
Westfall: all four witnesses said they
were watching the NFL playoff game
between the Dallas Cowboys and lhe
Green Bay Packers at Robinson's
house lhe night of the ellime.
However, the game was televised
on Sunday, the night before·me robbery.
'(estimony continued tOday in the
Meigs County Common Pleas C~urt
of Judge Fred W. Crow III. ·
•__ . Bw issue raiSed
..
The Jury, consisting- ol' ..eight
ifffnr'l:munNY - Teatimony will '
today In
wQmen aqd four men, ~long wilh one the trial
27, Pomeroy, 1ccused In the Jan. 15
male and one female alternate, was robbery ollhe Meigs County ~lvation Army in Pomeroy. Robirt·
seated at 10:45 a.m. Six potential ,SO!J, center, watched · during testimony Thursday, accompanied
jurors were excused by counsel durby public defender Michael Westfall, left, and Westfall's assistant,
ing selection.
Janniler Schaffer.
Westfall questioned prospective
tatorship," he said.
jurors in an effort to determine if any . there is some bias," he later asked.
The seating of a jury halted an earrace bias existed.
"
".. .Is that present in anyone's mind
"I would be remiss for not bring- when you look here at Brad Robin· lier motion by Westfall seeking a
change of venue.
ing this out," Westfall ~tated. "You all son?"
!'
t
Representing the state were Pros(indicating the jury) ... and we all
Crow encouraged the jurors to ·
(indicatmg the defense ~nd prosecu- keep an open mind during the trial ecuting Attorney John ~- Lentes and
tion teains) are white ... Brad is and to consider only those items assistant Prosecutor Chris Tenoglia.
During bnef·opening statements,
black."
admitted as evidence.
"Is thai going to affect anyone?"
"The right to a jury trial is the Lentes presented the facts as alleged
No jurors responded . ·
most important difference. between by the state including the robbery,
"Look inside yourself and see if , hfc m a free country and life in a die·
(Continued on Page 3)

Gas tax relief moves closer to passage in House
WASHINGTON (AP) - Gaso- ·
But in the ·Senate. the Jax relief.
line tax relief is a step closer to pas- effort continued to be embroiled in a
sage in the House. hut remains dispute over the minimyp1 wage and
bogged down in the Senate, where other labor tssues. Attempts to end
~mocratic critics say they want to the logjam were stymied Thursday as
make sure the savings go to con· Democrats stood 'firm in their
sumers, -and not oil companies.
demand for separate and speedy
The HOU$e Ways and Means votes on bo.th issues.
Committee on Thursday by a 23- 13
Presidenl Clinton has said he
vote approved legi~lation that would .~ould sign a gas tax repeal. but only
suspend the three-year-old 4.3 cent- ~f Congress approves legosla(ton rats·
a-gallo.n surcharge for the rest of the · mg the $4 .25-an -hour ommmum
year in hopes of providing relief to wage as well. Senate MaJOnty Leader
motorists from soaring prices at the Bob Dole of Kansas accused Democ·
pump. House GOP leaders predicted rats Qf creating an impasse:
.
a vote' to approve the bill before
Moderate House Republicans sa~d
Memorial Day.
. Thursday. after mectmg wtth House

leaders. that a vote on a m.inimum
wage increase could come withi~ two
weeks.
While the politically popular gas
tax measure ha&lt; hecn gaining bipartisan support, Democratic critics in
bolh·thc House and Senot.;expressed
growing concern that without specif- '
ic assurances the tax .avings may not
be passed on to motorists.
"We must address the issue of
who gets the benefit. Woll it go to the
consumer'" said Sen. Tom Daschle
of South Dakota. the Democratic
leader.
'
During a four-hour session of the

House Ways and Mean panel, anumber of lawmakers said they were concerned that oil companies . would
have no reason to pass the savings on
to consumers because of high summer gasoline demand and tight supplies.
''There's no assurance; consumers

will ever see this (saving)," complained Rep. Sander Levin, D-Mich.
"Prices are likely to go up."
The House bill would repeal the
ta~ six days after it becomes law. The
levy would be reinstated on Jan. I ,
1997. If passed on, the tax cut would
save motorists about $15 over the

seven months. assuming average
travel of 15,000 miles a year in a
vehicle that gets 25 miles per gallon.
Levin suggested it might be just as
good lo give every motorist a $15
check and keep lhc tax.
And Rep. Charles Rangel, DN.Y.. called -it "an open inviJation"
to th~ .oil companies to use the savings to increase profit margins. He
offered &amp;provision that would make
it unlawful not to pass on the tax savings to motorists, but the amendment
was rejected 21 -15. Republicans said
it would be impossible to enforce and
amounted to an attempt by government to fix prices.

J

Authorities
awaiting 10·
on corpse
Local authorities are waiting for
the results of an autopsy before mak-;
ing a positive identification on a body:
pulled from the Ohio River ncar:
Apple Grove in Meigs County Thursday.
The body wa.• found around 5 ·
p.m.,by the vessel The Captain Eb.a,:
about a mile north of Apple Grove. •
Crew members on the boat report·
ed the body was first spotted in the :
middle of the river, according to
Shenff James M. Soulsby.
•
The boat proceeded down river
~nd.tied off at the old Dravo'dock. in .
an effort lo stan hack upstream to ·
recover the body. The body 'had
noated downstream and was near lhe
barges. when crew members floated
the body along side the vessel to the
Richards &amp; Sons dock a shQn distance downriver, Soulsby said.
Soulsby and Deputy Roben Beegle were the first authorities to arrive
at the scene: They contacted Wc!&gt;1
Virginia officials to handle the inves- •·
ligation, because the recovery was
made in their jurisdiction ..
Trooper William Marshall III from
lhe Ripley detachment of the West .·
Virginia State Police arrived at the ·
scene to continue the investigation. :
An age, weight, and height are
unknown, pending examination by
the West Virginia State Medtcal
Examiii'Cr's office in South
Charleston.
"The body was dressed wearing
what appeared to be cutoff blue
jeans with a black belt, no shirt, and ·
bottom long underwear. It appeared .
that the body had been in the river for
some time," said Soulsby.
An All-Term message was sent to
Ohio police agencies asking them to
check their missing persons files,
with responses coming from two
agencies, Soulsby said.
The Racmc Fire Department
assisted a Ravenswood funeral home
in the recovery of the body, which
was later transported to the state med,
ical examiner's office.

Local high sch9ol students J·OG
~heir way into ~career selections
By TOM HI,INTER
Sllntlnel News Staff .
· Some area students unsure about
what life holds for them after high
schOol are making important college
and career decisions with the directiQn provided by a new program in
Meigs County schools.
· Johs for Ohio's Graduates (JOG)
wits launched in 1986 to help Ohio
youlhs ro meet the critical challenge
of employment. The program helps
·selected high school seniors graduate
and prepares them better for the realit~s of the workplace.
-The program is in its first year at
Eastern and Southern high schools.
with a total of 51 students participat·
.irill. An additional JOG program wi II
. -bo added at Meigs High School in the
fall.

·:sso

{,
J

'

'

.

--

JOG is apartnership with funding
frq"l local, public, and private
resources, and from the state of
Oliio. ·No funding is provided by
. school districts for lhe program. JOG
~ in the local schools, allow'

.. .

• J('

-·
.l

•

ing students to combine·traditional an opportunity to develop leadcrshop
high school cla•ses wilh the added and job-readiness skills," • said
resource of JOG.
Weaver.
Teamwork between schools, flU·
Weaver also works ~~Ctively with
dents, and the business commu.ity the business community to identify
has proven successful nationally in , entry-level jobs for stud~nts, and then
the Jobs for America's Graduates pro- helps place graduates mto the best·
gram, with which Ohio and more .suited jobs.
lhan a dozen olher states are affiliat·
The program goes far beyond
ed.
bel ping students stay in high school.
Follow-up work is Conducted with
These programs have a demon- JOG participants after their graduastrated performance !ej:Ord. About &amp;5 tion, in an effon to offer further job
percent of graduates are working, in placement assistance:
·
the military or in full-time post secStudents are also attending colondary education. More than 90 per- · leges and trade. schools as a result of
cent of JOG's panicipants graduate the program. .Four students from
from high schpol.
Eastern High School will be attendTom Weaver. job specialist for the ing Washington State Community
Eastern and Southern high programs. College in the' fall, because of their
works with students at the schools in exposure to. possible career fields
helping link them to s~ial services lhrough the program. according to
and emphasizing development of Weaver.
employability skills.
"Its great 10 see the~t. kids suc"The progtllll has given m_any of ceed, by pursuing a career and conthese students a reason to stay in tinuing their education. The pr~
school. It offers them an motivation has been a real benefit to everyon¢
to graduate and develop a career, and involved," added Weaver.

•

•

LOO~NQOVERPROGRESS~~p=~=me:ro:;y,;s--~l~ln:H:.~J~~l~n;g;hw~f«~I~WI;;.Ik~l;r~;;oo;d~~~~;r~
· revttsllutlon proJect brought Mlrtlla J. Ray·
monel, right, IMiiKI of the OhiO Hlatoricel Pill IF·
VIIIon Office, Columbus to 1own Thursclly. She
Wll hww to vt.w the progre11, offer lltehnlcel
llliltl~ and ev~lulle conformity to guJde.

town - · from left, John Mu....-. grant~
admlnlstrltor for P-~:-vltlllzatlon PI'O'

jlcl; DMn111 Stroll\,
coniUIIInt, end ,
DIIMI UWIOI'I, downtown cootdll'lll1of. ($entlnel photo by Charlene Hoeflich)

••
•
•

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