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:Pege10 • The O.ly Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, May 21, 1896

The Chelsea collection feeds Britain.'s horticultural .frenzy
8y TOM GROSE

display, from blood-red azaleas to
111e social scene is just gilding on
lpedll for USA TODAY · .
royal-purple pansies to snow-white the lily. however. Roy~ty may give ,
Chelsea cachet, but flower power
• LONDON - In May, English zantedeschia. .
gardeners tum their eyes toward
"It lifts lhe spirits," says well· attraCts the media and crowds, as· it
Chelsea, a posh London borough known landscaper Christopher has since 1913.
and home to the world's most Lloyd, 75. "It's the beginning of
Exhibitofi use cold storage,
renowned flower exhibition.
summer."
.
forced growing, express shipments
111e four-day Chelsea Flower
Lest we forget, however, the from overseas and other costly lechShow, which opens Tuesday, is to Chelsea A ower Show is also one big niques to show plants from all seaBritish gardeners what Graceland is party that attracts global interest and sons : for spring, canary-yellow
lo Elvis fanatics, what Yankee Sladi· saturation media coverage. And it's tulips and purple crocuses; for sumum is to baseball enthusiasts: a a blue-blooded party at that 111e mer, scarlet roses; for fall, pink and
' sacred place that davotees must visit royal family, usually including the white asters.
al least once in a lifetime 'and true q)Jeen, is given . a pre-opening-day
Chelsea will also feature 25 show
zealot.....,ver lire of.
~ private tour of the show. That ele· gardens created by some of horticul·
: Since most adults in Britain are vales Chelsea to a high-society hap- ture' s mos1 distinguished designers.
passionate gardeners, Chelsea has a pening that's part of lhe summer The gardens will range from the traunifying, uplifting effect on the season for the upper classes, a glit· ditiona1to the very innovative, says
national psyche. And given the tery sting of events from the Royal Ruth Anders, shows manager for ttle
drumbeat of bad news in the United Ascot horse races to the Henley \l-oyal Horticultural Society. which
Kingdom this year- mad-cow dis- Royal Regalia.
sponsors Chelsea. "It's the show to
ease, a renewed Irish Republican
At the Chelsea Royal Gala Pre- end all shows."
Army bombing campaign, a school-· view, a two-hour charity fete for
But most show gardens will
house massacre- the nation 's psy- 4,000, well-heeled patrons will reflect the traditional English garden
che could use a soothing balm of knock back 2,000 bottles of cham- popularized by author Lloyd in the
rosewater and lotus.
pagne and consume 80,()00 canapes. late 1950s in his seminal'tract "The
The 3 1/2-acre grounds of the During the run of the show, specta- Mixed Border."
Royal Hospital have been trans- tors - some so slylishly turned out
Before Lloyd's book, the typical
formed into a steamy greenhouse of they'll nearly eclipse the flo·Ners- British gardener tended wward
Brobdingnagian proportions. The will down an additional 6,000 bot· monolith. One had a rose garden or
entire site is covered by a giant tent lies of champagne, 2,000 lobsters, a tulip garden. But Lloyd counseled
In~ide, 700 exhibitors will pla.:c $30
70,000 icc creams, 80,000 sand· re-creation of the many-hued. naturmillion wonh of flora on colorful wiches and 300,000 cups of tea.
. al wildflower gardens of long-gone

countrY tottages. "h's controlled
nature, planned chaos," explain~
Mike Park, a bookseller who trained
at the prestigious School of Horticulture in south London.
However one g~n s in Britain.
!here is no question that most people
do garden, which explains why
Chelsea strikes such a deep cullural
chord.
It's a $3.8 billion industry and
easily the country"s most popular
leisure-time activity. says Mintel
International Group Ltd., a market·
ing research finn lhat puts garden
ownership in the UK at 85 percent
Gardening is so popular here, it's
recession-proof. While other industries stumbled during the economiC
downturn of the early 1990s. the
horticulture sector grew by I0 per·
cent, Mintel calculates.
TV and radio stations across the
UK offer an array of gardening programs, and most daily and Sunday
newspapers have columns devoted
to the subject About I0 gardening
titles, including weekly newspapers
and glossy monthlies, cram newsstands. Indeed. millions of Britons
who can't attend Chelsea · will rely
on those media outlets to bring
Chelsea home.

Endeavour chases satellite
Spartan satellite

0

A satellite with an experimental
inflatable antenna was hoisted by
the space shuttle Endeavou(s
robot Blffi and set free 176 miles
over Australia. The $14 million
experiment introduces inflatable
structures -antennas, sun shades
and other major parts- which
are lighter and cheaper than
traditional mechanical
systems.

Endeavour's
robot ann lifts lhe
satellte from the
shuttle's cargo
bay, sats it free, .
;~nq backs away
400 (eet. ·

8rwohours
' later, doors swing
opeli and Its 92·
loot-tong struts
extend.

.Nitrogen gas Inflates the reflective
.'

Mylar antenna, measuring 50 feet across,
abouHhe size of a·tennis court. It wiH
reenter the atmosphere and bum up.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Something new for the M~igs
Local School Districlthis year will
be a fine arts festival to be ~laged
Thursday nighl in the Larry R.
Morrison auditorium. Meigs High
School.
Over 600 art projects completed by lifth and si&lt;th grade Sludents
will be on displ!iy beginning at
6:30p.m. for viewing by the public .
At 7:30p.m. a vcx;al and·,·nstrumental musical program by elementary students wi II he presented.
"We want the' community to
know that the ans arc alive in the
elementary schools of the Meigs
Local School Districl." comment·
ed Ralph Werry. art and music
teacher, who is festival chairman.
Monday the artwork of the students of Donn·a Clark. Harrisonville . Pomeroy. Rulland Sal·
isbury; Jeff Baker of Bradbury. and
Ralph Werry of Salem Center.
were judged.
Entries were in charcoal, pencil.
crayon, and marker.
Blue, red and participating ribbons were placed by the judges.
Wendy Halar. Meigs Local admin-

noon.

The satellite, which contains all
lhe data from the $14 million experiment, flew more than 20 miles away
fn)m the . shuule while awaiting
loday's retrieval.
Whether the thin . Mylar antenna
inflaled properly won't be known for
certain until the shullle returns to
Earth with the satellite next week.
·The balloon appeared to extend to its
full size of nearly 50 feet in diamc.ter and slruiS 92 feet long.
The antenna, which had noticeable
rippling across its surface. rolatcd
more 1han expected and even began
to tumble.
"But I'd say even in the worst
case from what we've seen. it was
very close 10 a full success." said project manager Steven Bard of NASA's
Jet Propulsion Labora10ry in Pasadena, Calif.
·
. The anlcnna did nol broadcast any .
lsignals. NASA simply wanted to
demonstrate the technology of using
inflatables - lighler and cheaper
than traditional mechanical syslems
- lo pface large objects such as
antennas, sun shades and solar col -

lectors in space.
AP/Tracie Tso

Source: NASA, AP research

. By MICHELLE KOIDIN
Aaa~atad Press Writer
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP)
- Astronauts today chased a 2,000pound satellite they set free from
space shuttle Endeavour to test a
h\lge inflatable antenna. . .
The spacecraft. released by the
six-man crew Monday. served as a

In a nation where only 14 percent
attend church regularly, horticullure
may be Britain 's true religion. "You
have to feed your soul somehow,"
says Sandra Lea, curator of London's Museum 'or Gardening History.
.
Ask why the English are such
keen gardeners and you'll get as
many answers as there are flowers .
Certainly. Roman invaders culti·
vated gardens here. Early monks
!ended 10 physic. or herb. gardens.
And the great estalcs built · in the
16th and 17th centuries all featured
magnificent gardens. Lea reckons
lhat among European countries.
England was the first 10 evolve from
a feudal state to a land-owning soci·
ety, giving peasants impetus to gar·
den.
Moreover. though infamous for
bad weather, the British Isles offer
the righl mix of rain. surl and and
mild temperatures for long growing
seasons and I he cultivation of plants
from climates around lhc world.
"Our dull. gloomy weather is good
for something." says Norwich grow·
er John Metcalf. a gold-medal win·
ncr in 14 years of cxhibiling al
Chelsea.
Of course. for most Brito~s. gar·

Cincinnati
loses 7th ·
straight

dening is a way to relax, a means to
work off the tensions of modem
society in a colorful, creative way. ·
And while it's mainly a pastime·
for those middle-aged and older most Royal Horticultural Society
members arc in their 60s - it is
starting to catch on with thirty· and
twenty-somethings. The Evening
Standard ne\olspaper, the nightly
bible of upwardly IJlObilc London
commuters. ,and always qUick 10
spot a trend, recently claimed that
gardening is spreading like prairie
fire through London's young ar.d
trendy set.

istra\lvc assistant: Dana Kessinger,

.;·we really think we took a giant
platfonn for the experimental anten· step," Bard said. "We really showed
na, which e•pandcd to the size nf a that you can inflate such a large structennis court when it was pumped with ture like lhis." ·
More tcsts.are needed. however.
nitrog'cn gas.
Tiny e•plosivcs set off by a timer before equipping spacecraft wilh
severed the silvery antenna from the infiatablc parts. Erratic motion like
salcll11c abou1 an hour later. Depend- tumbling and rippling . for instance,
ing on your [!Oinl of view, the an.ten· would make any anlenna prcuy uscna looked hkc a flat parachute or a less.

spring monso(Jns . a "chcmicaf

drought" occurs .
This can occur. too. on trees, espe-

cially white pines as lhe chloride ions
arc taken up by roots and accumulate
in needles.
.
It's too laic to 'try to flush the area
with water. That should have been
done before growth appeared. The
best you can do is prune out the problems, if you can.
May and car.ly June is a fine time
to shear many evergreens with hand
hedge shears. Take off a scant one·
half inch•as new growth appears or
just as it stops growing. For hemlocks
and arborvitae. the hcsttime is oflen
late June. Do not prune any evergreen
after July I or you will remove next
spring's buds on the ends of the
branches.
·
Because you arc unlikely to either
move the roads or the wea1her, you

secondary supervisor. and John
Costanzo, clcmcnlary supervisor,

Karen Smith. · parent mentor. and
Carole Gilkey, lrcasurcr. all of the
Meigs County Educational Service
Center.
Thursday night annnunccment
will be made of the winners in the
art program, outstanding for flflh

might considencplacing sah-sensi. tivc pines with salt-tolerant· plants
such as the evergreen bayberry, frajlrant sumac. ginkgo. gray dogwood,
"hawthorn or London plane·tree.
SYMPTOMS: Tea roses appear
half-dead and half-not
TREATMENT: That's bail news.
Many of these arc grafted. which you
will know by lhc presence of a knobby bump where I he top part, or scion
wood, with lhe blooms you like(d), is
grafted 10 a hardier root stock, which
has unappealing , n01hing-colored red
bloon\s, if any.
Mercy killing is called for.
Next year resolve to protect your
lea roses better. After they arc dormant either mound diri up over the
graft or make a protective fortress .
Tic up the bush loosely with twine:
and make a cage of chicken wire·
anchored wilh stakes and stuffed with

1OOth birthday
celebrated

,,

Genheimer was a farmer in
Meigs County most 'of his life. He
was known for his decorative wnrk
with wood including thin,gs like
windmills. wh\rligigs, stcrnwhecl
paddle boats, bird boxes and wish·
ing wells. Hes c~auons were many
times displayed m the l~ge yard and
driveway to the Genhc1mer home.
He raised dairy cattle, laymg
liens, broilers. hogs and sh~ep on the
tlum along with a variety of grains
8U!d garden vegetables.
·
Genheimer is now living with his

The sixth grade instrumcnlal

sludcnts of David Bowen. Brad.bury. Harrisonville. Pomeroy, Rutland. Salem Ccnlcr and Salisbury.
will pcrfonn .

clean. dry leaves.
SYMPTOMS: .The nandina is
selectively dead and diuo lhc azaleas.
TREATMENT: Many broadleaf
evergreens suffer lcrribly in a rollercoaster winter because they have
leaves in a scmidormant state and so
can dry out faster than a dormant.
leafless deciduous plant.
Salvage pruning is the trick. Cut
damaged pans .hack well into good
wood. which is where ,you sec a
strong green cambium layer under the
bark. Fcrliliw lightly wilh a slowrelease produc1; mulch and water as
necessary.

· 2 tnlla...,te p._..
.

Nexl year help broadlcaf evergreens with an anti-dcssicant spray in
November and a thorough watering
in later faiL Mulch and wrap loosely
in burlap.
Consider 1hc need fnr wind protcclion but do not creel a solid barri-

· " It'~ like Zen or lherapy."

'

•

daughter. Lucille White, in Colum·
bus.
·
·

Noteftll....dwlth•ny
eo-nnwut lgency.

The fcsliva l will conclude. with
vocal studcnls of Werry from Har~
risonvillc. Rutland. Salem Center
and Salishury. presenting selections from musicals: They will
include "Celebration for You and
Me" ; "Oh Whal a Beautiful Morn
ing" and "Oklahoma" from Oklahoma; Do. Rc.. Me" from The
Sound of Music; and "Love in Any
language:· and "Believe in Your-

se ll" frnm The Best Christmas
Ever.

Next year lay down a thick mulch ;
in laic fall and don't remove it until .,
the weather has sClllcd in laler spring. '
(If you have questions or sugges·
tions. drop a n\)te 10 Gardening.
Gannett News Service. 1000 Wilson
Blvd .. Arlington. Va. 22229-0001.)

In the John &amp; Pearl
Proffitt estate,
send to:'
Daily Sentinel,
PO Box 729-24,
Pomeroy, Oh 45769.

Mall this

t()day
forFREE .
lnfonnationl

COUpon

'

•

•

•

Mtull to: WORLDWIDE BURIAL BENEFITS, P.O. Box 1161, Galllpolle, OH. 45631

I Mr. 0
I

IIIM. ( )

PLEASE PRINT

MTH., DAY, YR. OF BIRTH

Adtlre••

Apt. •

CINCINNATI (AP) - Life along
the OhiQ River should start returning
·to normal later this week, but not in
time to save . at least two music
events ·at an. amphitheater on the
city's east side.
11uC Riverbend Music Center post·
poned two coriCC(riS that wou14 have
opened its surntner series. Some
pavilion seats remained under water
T)lesday.
,
The · concert .featuring Styx and
Kansas. seheduled for Friday night,
;..as postu"'Oncd and not immedia~Jy
resCheduled. The l!ob Seger concert
scheduled for Sunday niglit• was
moved l?ack to June 17; spokes·

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City---- - - - - - s- ___ Z i p · - - - ' - - - -

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U.S. Rep. Frank A. Cremeans'
campaign' for. Congress in 1994 did
not constitute "excusable neglect"
when his concrete business failed to
respond to a lawsuit, the Fourth Dis· .
trict Court of Appeals has determined.
The (our-judge eoun reversed an
April 1995 ruling in Gallia County
Common Pleas Coun relieving Cre·
rneans Concrete Co. and Frank Cre·
means from a judgment obtained ear·
, . lier bY.DOM Inc., Beaver.
'
While admitting "there is no
bright line test to,determine whether .
a party's neglect has been excausable
or..inexcusable," · Judge Earl E.
Stephenson of Portsmouth wrote, "a
'complete, disregard of the judicial
system' should not, for instance, be
tolerated under 'excusable neglect."'
"... This.case clearly represents an
instance where a litigant's neglect has
crossed the boundary from excusable
to inexcusable," he added.
DGM filed suit locally in September 1994, alleging that Cremeans
Concrete failed to delivcrmaterials at
·a price previously agrec;d upon. The
materials were needed·by DOM for
a project bid it prepared for the Ohio

1·1

.........

.. ...

· woman Eli~abeth Cannon said.
River Downs racetrack hopes to
reopen Thursday, after losing a week
of thoroughbred racing. General
manager Jack Hanessian estimated
that the canceled dates cost the
already struggling track $500,000 in
revenue.
Next door, Coney Island amusement park and its Sunlight Pool are
expecting l'\.,b4;,.(/pen for the Memo1
rial Day weel&lt;:end. Much of the property was overrun by the river, which
must $tay below 50 feetto allow fullscale .cleanup, said Mary Schurnach. cr. •ice presedent of wes anhe park.
The Ohio River fell to the 50-foot

.

"

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Newa Staff
Sevlraf'substitute leaching and
non-certified maintenance ·personnel
were approved for the 1996-97
·school year during the regular meet·
ing of -the Southern Local Board of
Education, Monday evening at
Southern High School
The board approved the following
certified substitute teachers for tHe
1996-9( school year: Carissa Bailey, .
Deborah Barber, Alicia Bauer, Jennings Beegle, Dorothy Bentz, lise K.
Burris, Christi A. Collins, Sharon
Edmonds, Keith 'Eubanks, .Linda
Faulk, William Gee, Michelle Gillian.
Lucille Haggerty, Robyn Hawk,
Kelly Henry, Janelle Hineman, Toni
. Hudson, Teresa King, Kelly Kisner,
Mary Jane Leach, Fann(e Lee, James
Ryan Lemley, Karen Lyons, Lester
Manuel, Paul McGuire.
Tricia . McNickle, Tanya Mead·
ows, Melani Van Meter Quillen,
.Angela Rigsby, Nathan Robinette,

Departmenl of Transportation.
DOM alleged !hat neither Cre·
means Concrete or Frank Cremeans
responded to the suit, and moved for
a default judgment in November. A
certificate of judgment was prepared
by Nov. 23, 1994, when Cremeans'
attorneys filed . for relief from the
judgment.
The Gallipolis Republican· said at
the time there had not been "any actu·
al contract" between . his .firm and
DGM for supplying concrete, and !le
had not responded to the suit because
he was "preoccupied" with his race
for the Sixth Congressional District
seat and "had no time to devote to
that suit." .
Cremeans subsequently told the
local coun he had signed lhe certified
mail receipt when the suit was deliv·
ered to his office, but said that at the.
tfme he "was no longer involved in
the day-to-day operations of his business and that the mail was left to the
employees of Cremeans Concrete to
be handled by them."
Cremeans also told· the court he
had read about the default judgment
prior to the November election. Evidence was alsb presented on his
behalf 10 show there had been a "mis-

llUc.e" in the price of concrete quQtllif,
to DOM and lhat the price was "sUb-.. '
stantially less than what it shotjld
have been."
The price error was relayed :to·
DOM, Cremeans said.
. •• ·
The court reversed the finding for '·
DGM and found that Cremeans and ·
his fif!ll were subject to "excusatile · ·
neglect" due to the campaign. . . •
DOM appealed the findifll and'· ·
found a sympathetic ear with the
appellate court, which found that ere. ·
means "was clearly aware of the '
pending lawsuit.
.,
"He nevertheless ·continued to ~
ignore the matter until after the eleC'·
tion and after default judj!llienl h.d;.:,
been enicred against him and a judg:
ment lien executed thereow,"
Stephenson wrote. •
.
"This ongoing disregard of die .- •
legal process, in order to attend to :. ·
other matters, is not 'excusable ·.
neglect' under Ohio law," he added. ; .
.Stephenson wrote that detennitl·
ing what is or is not "excusable' ·::
neglect" has to be judged on eael).
case, but noted that the . appellate
judges felt "compelled to look for ·
somi:lhing more and to analyze re.;
sons why such process was ignored"

Carolyn Robinson, Nancy Scar· Athle.tic Association (OHSAA) fot
brough. Jeryl\ifer Shuler, Rita·Slavin, . .the 1996·97 school year. • ·
Charlene Smllh, Pamela Z~rkle.
•• approved Guarantee Trust life
The following non-certified sub- Insurance Company. Brogan Warner ·
stitutes were approved fonhe .1996- Insurance, to offer student accideiu ,
97 school. year: Lynda Adkins, Jeff insurance for the 1996-97 school
Beaver, Becky Bradford, Patricia year.
Brown; Earline Ebersbach. Larry
.. approved the renewal of the diS:
Ebersbach, Tom Lane, Wallace Mor- · trict's dental insurance program with
ris, Teresa Miller.
· Coresource, Inc. for the 1996-91
Judy Parsons, David Smith, Wor- school year.
.
thy Slanley, Becky Wilson, Frank . :· approved policy revision$~ .••
Shane, Jennifer Michael , Lynda replacements, and additions for vii- ··-·
Adkins, Becky Bradford , Linda Har- ious board policies introduced at tHe
mon, Sherry Harris, Janet Manuel, lasl regular board meeting.
· ... -Teresa Mille•. Judy Parsons.
·
.. approved a motion to advertise
Becky Wilson, Melissa Grueser, the unfilled coaching positions for
Sally Caldwell, Connie Chevalier. anyone that has a sports medicine
Juanita Frederick, Becky . Wilson, certificate and a CPR card. ·
· · ..
William Downie, Scoll Hill . William
.. approved Ohio School Boards
Justis, Charles Lawrence, Delbert Association membership for 1996-97
Smith, Tom Theiss, Ron Wilson.
school year.
In other matters, the board:
Present were Superintendent · •
.. approved membership of South- James Lawrence, Treasurer Dennie ·
em High School and Soulhcm Junior Hill, board members Marty Moran- · ·
High School in the Ohio High School ty, C.T. ·Chapman, Bob Collins ·
·David Kqcsma and Susie Grueser. · '

ings.
The fire was believed lo leave
started in the alley near Bill Jackson's
body shop and quickly spread to the
other buildings.
The hardest hit areas were the
Dan Tax' building and the Gallipolis
Beauty Shop. Investigators are call·
ing the two buildings that share a
common roof a complete loss.
·
The wall that ran between the two
buildings was made of wood timbers
that are an estimated 150 years old.
The timbers had been in ·there drying
for years and were eKtremely flammable, Mills said.
Mogie's Restaurant and Elrod's
are in pretty good shape despite
smoke and water damages, Code
Enforcement Officer Mike Null said.
Magie's is believed to have been
saved by a fire wall that separated it
from DanTax. Owner-operator Edie
Cunningham worked Tuesday to
restore the business, but seemingly
was having difficulties with an electrical short.

Ohio ·River still causing problems

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lire.()

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Southern board OKs substitute personnel: ,

Deputy State Fire Investigator
Gallipolis fi're officials said that
Bob
Lawless of Ironton has been at
despite. published reports that the
downtown Court Street fire was the scene since Monday and is
caused by arson, the investigation is expected back today.
· Two spot fires were quickly extinstill continuing.
·
guished
l;uesday after they were
"There has been absolutely no
notification, from anybody to anyone detected by one of the business ownhere regarding the ruling," a Gal· ers who was at the scene working to
lipolis Volunteer Fire Department put her business back ~ogether.
One tru~k and six .firefighters
spokesperson said today. .
Investigators are working to rule reported to the DanTax building at
out the obvious causes of fire first, , I :33 p.m. when the spot fire was
such as lightening; ras leaks and elec- detected oil the second floor, eventu·
trical reasons, said · osi~ent firefight- ally causing the third floor to fall in.
The second fire in Russell Wood's
er lim Mills.
While the department f~els that storage building was quickly put out
the fire is of suspicious nature. the with a fire extinguisher.
Mills said thai spot fires are no at
cause will not be declared arspn until
all unusual in a tire of that magnitude."
all other causes are eliminated.
"II really surprised me that we
All business owners have been
ruled out as suspects and investiga- weren 't back down I here Monday
tors are thoroughly probing a lead night," Mills said. "In a lot of cases
that developed on Tuesday:
like that, you don'l see the fire but it's
The blaze that broke out in the his- still burning."
toric downtown area early Monday
A structural engineer called in by
destroyed four buildings and dam- .the city seemed to think after seeing
aged two others is estimated to have the damage that it will be necessary
caused $1 million in damages.
to remove the back end of the build-

,

•-*
o.n.- Co. Nell!
. I p1P4f

••

Probe of Gallipol~s blaze continues.

cr. which increases wind speed. The
best windbreaks arc plants or an
npen-wcavc fence; both sl&lt;iw rather
than stop the wind.
SYMPTOMS: The rhododendrons
arc resting at an odd tilt and look ,
ponr.
,
TREATMENT: These arc shal- ·
low-rooted plants readily uprooted by ·
the repealed freel.Cand thaw we have ,
experienced. This literally lifts roots ..
out or the ground and exposes them
to the air, which kills them.
Salvage hy replanting or recover- :
ing, !rimming any ·exposed dead ;

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• Aging, A Lifetime Opportu·
nlty" w" the theme. of an
obMt'Vance of Senior Citizens
Day ha.ld Tuaeday afternoon at
the Melga CoUnty Canter. Highlighting the activities were
Hlect!on of royalty, (bottom
photo) Clarence Storj, king,
and Helen Fisher, queen, and
the ·preuntatlon of prdclama- . lions from the Ohio House of
Representatives· and the Governor's Office. Accepting the
commendations On behal( of
,.the 011e..1 (top photo) were,1eft ·
tD!.r:lght,'- Su,aan- Oliver; execu·
tlve director, Sherrie Hughes,'
AI'INI Agency on Aging; and
JOhn Rice, ·president of ·the
·Board of Trustees, Meigs
County Council on Aging.
About 150 . senior citizens
attend~ tl)e observance,
Among the guests was Randy
Lelfler, chief of communlc•
Ilona of the Ohio Department
of Aging. Ther.e were special
musical programs by "Maxi·
mum Impact" of the Middleport
Church of Christ, Sharo.n Stew·
art, director, and the. Meigs
High School Jazz Band direct·
. ed by Toney Dingess. Nellie
Parker had re11dings, and the
"nlor. staff entertained with a
play written by Evelyn Clark.

You are now·ellglble to apply for up to $10,000 of Whole Life Insurance. No medical exam Is
required to apply.
·
Mall the coupo!'l below for details on the benefits available to agea 40 to 85.

undivided interest

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IMMEDJATE ACTION RE«::OMMENDED:

For Sale: The

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A

Appellate .judges reverse\~~·
Cong. ~remeans' ruling

'·

This is to Inform you that Social Sacurlty pays a death benefit of just $255, and only to
qualified d"pendanta. This won't make a dent In the usual funeral cost - anywl'!ere from
$3,501) to $8,500.

\'00 CAN'T ESCAPE Tf-£ GREAT
8IJl'S N Tl£ CI.ASSFEDS.

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Senior Citizens Day observed

A'I"rENTION AMERI~ANS .

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Pome1 oy-Middleport, Ohio,
Wednesday, May 22, 1996
.

trees.

rnols ."

Moatly clear tonight,
lows In lhe SO.. Thurldtly,
aunny, high In lOa.
•

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Vol. ~. NO. 11

"It's a spiritual thing. a really ·
important connection wi1h nature,"
relates Jason Payne, 31. a former
rock musician turned garden design·
er who has · transformed his north
L'ondon garden into a mini-paradise.
complele with a· pond stocked with
gold fish and Koi carp and such
exolic plants as papyrus, bamboo,
Santa Cruz ironwood and banana

has not increased death benefits for over forty ( 40) years

· VICTOR GENHEIMER

8424
BuckeyeS:
1·5·19-27·32

.

S-0-C-1-A-L S-E-C-U-R-1-T-Y

A .IOOth birthday open house cclehration for Victor Genhcimcr will
be held at the Pomeroy Gun Cluh on •
Pomeroy Pike Sunday. May 26,
from l.p.m . to 4· p.m. All relatives.
friends and acquaintances arc inl'ited to attend.

· Plck4:

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Gardening column: Rx for gar~en victims of crummy winter, spring weather
By DIANE HEILENMAN
but unaffected buds lower on the
The Loultvllte Courler.Journal
.limbs can take over. If this happens
The long harsh winter and rainy · winter afler winter. some1imcs you
spring has sounded the death (nr ncar . gel a witches' broom. a knot of
death) knell for many garden unusual twiggy growth.
favorites.
Next year protect vulnerable
. However, some quick ac.tion can plants with burlap screens, or wrap
save or revive shrubs. plants. lrCeS the entire tree, if feasible . This
and flowers hcforc they become involves winding it around with a
. compost
cord .tied tb .selected branches and
Here are 1he symptoms and treat· lhcn wrapping with strips of burlap.
ments for common garden problems. fastened to the cord With big pins or
SYMPTOMS: Pines and .arborvi- lhread.
tae have turned brown along the side
SYMPTOMS: Tite perennials and
nearest 1he road.
shrubs in lhe flower beds alongside
TREATMENT: Some browning the driveway appear stunted.
and needle drop is to be cxpeclcd as
TREATMENT: Road salts can
·old needles.arc shed in late spring and damage perennials if the sails have
summer. However. this selective hccn mixed with snow and lhc snow
brown death s.uggcs1s injury from shoveled or plowed over the ground.
road salts, which dcy o~ttissucs when As the plants break dormancy and
roatl spray is k.ic,ked up by passing 10ke up waler, or uy 1o, the salt solucars. The ends of branches mighl·die. lion hogs all the w:uer and. despite

Pick 3:
472

SporbonPageS

. JUDGING ART PROJECTS •• More than 600 art P,ojects were
JUd.ged ".'onday in preparation for Thursday night's art festival at
Me1gs Htgll School. John Costanzo, Meigs elementary supervi·
sor, front, evaluates some artwork as chairman Ralph Werry, art
and music teacher, looks on.
and sixth. and first and second runners-up in each grade.
.
The musical portion of the prngram will be opened with a program by the Bradbury and
Pomeroy vocal students of Chris
Rouse presenting "Identity", "We
Go for the Gold" and "America.
My Home" by Teresa Jennings.

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Ohio Lottery

•

Meigs Local School District
to hold fine arts festival

round trampoline on an upside-down
tripod.
The giant orbiting balloon was
expect~d to plummet through the
atmosphere and burn up this after-

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ALISON GERLACH

ADAM J. SHEETS

Gerlach,.
Stewart,
Sheets
top 1996 Meigs seniors

BY CHARLENE HOEFLiCH
level on Tuesday and was forecast to Sentinel newa •taft
drop to about46 feet by early ThursTop scholars in the Meigs High
day.
School class of 1996 have been
That would mean a stranded pad- announced by Fenton Taylor, princi·
die-wheeler, the American Queen, . pal.
' fin,ally would be able to leave down- ..
Co-valedictorians of the class are
town Cincinnati, where it has been Alison Rae Gerlach, daughter of
. stuck hetween two bridges for two ,Mike and Debbie Gerlach of Mid- ·
weeks. It has not been able to cruise dldport, '"d Cindi Stewart, daughter
beneath the ,bridges because the riv- of Greg Stewart of Rutland and
er level is too.ltigh. •
.
Dinah Stewart of Middleport. ,
The Delta Queen Steamboat Co.;
Saluiatorian is Adam !. Sheets,
owner of ·the American ·Queen, has sori of Jennifer and James Sheets of
been helping its passengers changt: Rutland.
,
their travel plans and paying related
Gerlach plans to attend Marshall
inconvenience costs.
University where ~ will major in
board casti. journalism. She was

recently recogniied as the top senior
in Meigs County and was awarded
the Franklin B. Walter State Award
and named recipient of 1he WSAZ
"Best of the Class" award. Other
recognitions include being selected a
.regional scholar, a delegate to Buckeye Girls St~te, an Ohio University
Governor's Scholar, and Hugh
O'Brien Youth Foundation Ambassador.
AI Meigs High School, she has
been active in .the National Honor
Society, mock trial work, thC French
Honor Society, the Fellowship of
Chrlslian. Students, Senior Spirits
which included two school·spon·
sored trip to Europe, lhe marching

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and concert bands, and the senior
play.
As a member of the Middlepon . . ~··
Church of Christ, she is active in th&lt;; ~:·: •
youth group there and assists in tho ··~,
nursery. She worj&lt;s pait·time lis a disC,' .:;::
jockey for WMPO Radio.
: ~...~
· Stewart will be attending Ohiq:~~::·
University in the fall. She has been~:::::::
· recipient of the two ~eademic excel;:~;:.-..:
lence awards for maintaining a 4.11-~ ...:·
grade point avenuac, and hu partici;~:~ :
paled in the Oluio Unive~ity's Gov-:~' :;:
emor's Scholars Proaram llld a spe:~~ ~,;
cial summer Jli'OII1IIIU lherc for a com;, : • ::·
'• "'...-""'·
Puter course:
At Meiss Hish she hu been .: • ;~.
Coatlnued Oil paae 3
:· .·~:

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Commentary

OHIO Weath er

Pegt2
Wedne•ct.y, May 22,
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11lursday,~ay23

AccuWeather• forecMI fllf' daytime c:onditioftl IIIII

Laura~ Garlinger

MICH.

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The Daily Sentinel FAA's.resources are spread .too thin
WASHINOTON -The Federal
Aviltioft Adminislration's decision tQ
uppade saf.ty inspections on older
airplanes CJUIIC about a week too late.
In response to the ValuJet crash in
the Florida Everglades that claimed
110 lives on May II , the FAA
announced that it's stepping up manitoring activities on all ValuJet flights.
Since the crash, several a~iation offi.
cials have criticized the start-up airline for its spouy safety record. Mary
; Schiavo, inspector general for the
•Depanment ofTransponation. caused
; a minor uproar last week when she
told an interviewer that she refuses to
' fly ValuJet due to personal concerns
about the airline's safety.
Recent congressional testimony
by the General ACCQUnting Office'-released just two weeks prio.r to the
ValuJet crash-- suggests that 1ncreasing the number of inspectors might
n111. be the only ~swer. Accordmg to
the1r comments, recent ~udg~t. cuts
have ravaged !he agency s abtlity to
tram Its mspectors to do theu Jobs.
As of last year, the FAA had only

'EstiiMJslid inl948
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111 Court Sl, POIMioy, Ohio
114 112·21!1 • Fu: 192-2157

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper

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ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlaher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Genei'IIIMIIMget'

!

Excerpts-from other
Ohio newspapers

2,SOO wety

in~ors

to ov~

lt,OOO c~ pl10es, 184,000 prjvate planes and 66S,OOO active pilot$.
FOf nearly a decade, congres.sional
overseers have aske.d the agency to
concentrate its effons where they're they ~e,are necessary to perform
most needed. But after nine years, the their i~~~pection responsibi lilies."
effon h!IS yielded few results.
Tbe FAA took an increl§td interIn dramatic testimony given est in ValuJetlast winter after a series
behind a screen to hide their identi- of mishaps !!Used questions about the
ties. FAA inspectors told a congres- safety of its aging flee!. An intensive
sional panel two weeks ago that they safety inspection in February foUl)d
were often assigned jobs for which ValuJetlagging in employee training
they weren ' t qualified. After inter- and recommended the company hire
viewing more than SO inspectors, more inspectors.
GAO invcsti2ators feared that lack of
Though.the Everglades crash was
training was a systemwide problem. • the first time ValuJet had lost p. pas"Because of the magnitude of the senger, at leasttwo of its planes have
inspectors' workload," one GAO skidded off airpon runways in recell! ·
, official testified, "targeting (of months. On Jan . 12, a ValuJet plane ·
resources) is essential because FAA skidded off a taxiway during a blizmay never have enough resources to zard at Dulles International Airpon
; inspect all pilots, aircraft and facili- outside Washington, D.C. TWo weeks
ties.... Our work has shown persis- later, a ValuJet pJane ran off a runway
tent problems with FAA's training of at Hartsf~eld .International Airpon in
inspectors. Specifically, inspectors Atlanta during a thunderstorm.
have been
unable
to take courses that
Embattled FAA Administrator
t
.

By The Asaoclated Prete
Excerpts of editOrials of statewide and national interest from Ohio newspapers:
The Columbus Dispatch, Maj, lO
Ohio Democrats may be playiug their hand wrong when they ridicule Gov.
George V. Voinovich as the possible Republican vice presidential nomineec
"George Voinovicb's impact on !he Dole tickel in Ohio is vinually nil,"
Democratic: State Cltainnan David J. Leland said recenlly.
The Democratic chairman should be hoping Voinovich is nominated.
First of all, Joe wouldn't add that much to Citizen Bob Dole's presidential campaign,.except to make the f01111er senator look positively electric by
comparison.
· ..
A!ld ifVoinovich were to bec·ome vice presiden~ think of the turmoil confronting .Ohio Republicans, Lt. Gov. Nancy Hollister would become governor, tbrowi'ng a monkey .wrench into Secretary of state Bob Taft's plan to
bC the party stand-bearer in 1998.
·
Conservative Republicans are doing a fine job right now denigrating the
governor as a possible veep choice. The Democrals should just ride on that
carpet of criticism. Once the selection is made, they can unload. IfVoinovich
is bypassed he obviously wasn't good enough for the national office.

Tbe Lima News, May 16
.
Desperate times require bold measures. So. trailing President Bill Clinton by at least 12 points in the opinion'JlO~ls, GOP candidate Bob Dole yesterday announced plans to resign from h1s Senate seat of 27 ~ear.; to c-oncentrate on his flagging presidential campaign.
·
Dole needs to foo:efully unify his pany against the backbiting antics of
its fairly small band of moderate rebels,.aniculate a positive Rtaganesque
conservatism and duke it out with Clinton on issues. He surely won't beat·
him on personality.
.
,
Not that long ago Clinton was viewed as a bumbling one-term president:
now he is seen as invincible. Dole's Senate resignation is the wisest course
if the GOP truly hopes to cause a sea change in public opinion.
Chillicothe Gazette, May lO
As states line up to sue tobacco con\pa~ies for health costs generated by
smokers, a serious and dang~rous precedent may be set.
,
· If the couns say the tobacco companies owe the state for the health costs
of smokers, other companies should watch out.
If this precedent is set, what's to stdp companies that brew or sell alcohol being held responsible for health costs related to alcohol? Or· fanners
for the health costs of obesity and higl1 cholesterol? ·
It's time we quit trying to get our courts to set social policy. If we want
to outlaw cigarettes, let our lawmakers make a law against growing and selling tobacco. Trying to bankrupt tobacco companies with lawsuits sets dangerous precedents legally and threatens our basic right to make choices for
ourselves.
.
·
We need to get back to the idea that people are responsible for their own
actions. We are not puppets controlled by outside forces. We each decide
how we behave, eat, drink and live. Trying to make outside forces respon- .
sible for the conSequences is in the end self-defeating.,
Akron Beacon Journal, May 16 . .
· It was inevitable that someone would create a home test for the virus that
causes AIDS.
That was accomplished in 1987. It took until Tuesday for the Food and
Drug Administration to approve the test for general distribution.
The need is clear. Testing for HIV, up to now conducted by a medical
professional or a health .clinic! ~as sometimes less tha~ confidential. Fear
of exposure, with accompanymgJob loss and soclallsolatJOn that CQul~ result, ·
kept up to 60 percent of people at risk of contracting the AIDS virus fr()m
being tested.
.,
.
. .
Effective treatment of HIV requ1res knowmg a person has 11. Up to now,
being tested,.especially in small Cotn!pUnilies, was like shoupng from a street
comer. If used wisely, this test~ PfoVide an anonymous, accurate way for
people to know whether they ~ave thC virus, and tllen to make necessary
choices for the future.
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Berry's World
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David Hinson has said the eaency
plans to speed up the hiring of at least
90 new safety inspectors, and lidded
that his agency is working overtime
to upgrade its computer training
facilities. But the new inspectors
might be just a small plyg in an evergrowing dike.
. Acconding to some estimates, total
airline traffic in tbe United States is
expected 10 double over the next
decade. In the meantime. ·goveJ;n·
ment-wide budget pressure has ,.
forced the FAA to reduce its budKet '
for technical training by 42 percent
between fiscal yean 1993 and 1996.
According to Q!,rald L. Dillingham
of the GAO. it's budget cuts -- not
FAA management probl~ms -· that
are most to blame for the, training
shonfall.
1
"The majority of problelt\S in
recent years have to do with budget
cuts," Dillingham told our associate
·Jan Moller. "There were situations in
some cases where there might have
been management concerns. But that
was a smaller problem.than not being
able to fund·the mand'atory training."
.Aviation off'~eials estimate that the
2.500 FAA i0spo;ctors spend only
about one-thind o{ their time actually inspecting airplanes. Due to tiJIIe
constraints. many of the inspections
are performed by looking at paperwork rather than actually inspecting
airplane hardware.
~
To help ensure that resources go
where they' re neetled most, the FAA
is developing a system .to track all
' .'
safety inspection. But so far, the Safety Perfonnance Analy~is System ~asn't lived up to its billing. In their .
investigation, GAO officials found at . : .~
le~t one instance in which inspectors
' '
had entered data on an inspection that
was never performed on a type ofaircraft that the airline didn't use.
Still, in~estigators caution against
putting too much blame on the FAA. ,. '
"We ·don't know if there's any relation between the ValuJet cra.&lt;h and
the safety inspections." Dillingh~!ll
said. "Safety is the responsibility of
the manufacturer, the airline and the
FAA. It's a three-legged stool that has ·
to be set up."
·
·Jack Anderson and Michael
Bimtein are writers for \lnlte.J
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

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Outlawing gay m~rtiage;~..isn't bashi_~g
.

The last tim" I had my ton- · of Marriage Act formally defines
· sciousness raised by representatives ' "marriage'; · as "a · legal union
of the local homosexual community, between a man and woman." The
they left behind an 80-page " media . definition of "spouse" is legally limguide" to help me avoid writing any
· ·
future columns that would provoke
their phone calls and leiters.
,
I confess that I have never found ited to a person of the opposite sex. '
the time to peruse the entire guide
.Most Americans accept these def(produced by an outfit that c'alls itself initions as a given, but Hawaii's high- ·
the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against est coun came down with a ruling
Defamation. or GLAAD for shonr. three years ago this month thatlhreatbut I did read the four pages devoted ens io redefine marriage not o~ly in
to Morality, Ramily and Children.
the·Aioha state, but in the other 49
" Lesbians and gay men ' ha~e states as· well.
often been ponrayed as threats to the
The Hawaii Supreme ~oun
American family," according to declared that deniql . of marriage
GLAAD, "and blatant hol)lopbobia license~ to three hpm~.xual couples
has been accepte.d without question was discriminatory under the state's.
or thought of as a ' pro-family' Equaf Rights Amendment. The matstance."
ter was sent back to a ·lower court
GLAAD poses the fortowing where the state government must
rhetorical questions: "Wliat consti- show a '.'compelling interest" in bartutes a family? Is it only a mother, a ring same-sex marriages; otherwise,
father and their minor children'! Or is homosexuals will be free 10 head to
it any constellation o( 'individuals, the altar.
including gay and lesbian couples,
This prospect would not matter
.with or without childr,Cn, who share much here on the mainland ex~ept,
each otller'sjoys and, problems and under the "full faith and credit"
are willing to take responsibiliiy in clause ofthe U.S. Constitution, states
each other's.llves?" ..: ·
,
are required to· grant reciprocity to
These questions bear considert~- other states'.contracts, including marlion in light of legislation now before riage contracts.
Congress that will effectively outlaw
So if Hawaii recognizes homohomosexual m~iages. The De~en'!e sexual marriages. then every other

Joseph PerkinS

Jeremy Lee Atkins
(f

state. will be forced to do so as well. quotas is racist . It's as cockeyed as
.That's why Congress is amending the when radical feminists suggest that
U.S. code to f!:affinn that marriage any man who opposes abonion must ·
must be betw~en• one man and· one be a mi so~ynist.
woman. And that's why President
Clinton has stated for the recond that
This is not an issue of whether
he opposes homosexual marriage homosexuals share each others _joys
becau~e he believes it's ""'ong.
and problems and take responsibiliOf course, none of this sets well ty for each other's lives. It's about
with the small, but exJrcmely vocal, family life in America. Indeed, by
homosexual · cominunity. The recognizing homosexual marriages, .
Defense of Marriage Act is little more the government would play an active
than "gratuitous gay-bashing," role in further undermining the traclaims th~ Human Right• tampaign, ditional American family (much as it
a national gay and,lesbian lobbying does by rewarding single motherhood
groitp. .
through welfare, much as it also will
'But it ·hardly is "gay bashing" to . do by legally recognizing "domestic
$ay that the inslitution of marriage partnerships"). ,
should be reserved for:.heterosexual
men and women, as it has,beell'for at
' 1f gays and lesbians want to cou•
least the past love millenia.
pic .off, to .livc under the same roof,
And it is ltardly homophobic to · to share the same bed, that:s their prisay that the federal go~ernment has vate and personal business. But wben
a compelling interest irf"cncouraging they to try to ovenurn the marriage
traditional two-parent, heterosexual laws of all 50 states, to force the govfamilies, .which have been proven ernment to sa~ction their homosexu·
beyond a'"reasonable doubt to be the a! lifestyle, then that's a m·auer of the
besl unions for rearing children.
utmost public concern .
·
It's simply ridictllous for the
That's why the Congress oughtto
homosexual community to suggest pass the Defense of Marriage Act.
·that the two-thinds (at least) of Amcr- , And that's why President Clinton ·
icans who opP&lt;&gt;se same-sex mar-. oughlto sign it into law.
riages simply hate gays. It's as.absurd
Joseph Perkins Is a eolumoist
as when my fellow blac;k Americans for The San Diego Union-'IMhune.
.
.
suggest that, anyone who opposes

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MQtual fund. data is whizzing
through cy~r5pace at record speeds.
While that Jl)ay be great for some, a
lot of the information available there
you can gel elsewhere. Often, less
expensively,
' · ,
Cyberspace is the happening place
for mutual fund data. F~nd families
can't seem to create World Wide Web
sites fast enough. A few w~eks ago,
the number of funds and fund families with Web exposure numbered 75.
Today that figwe ·is probably much
· higher.
. According to the investment
Company Institute, the trade associalion for the mutual fund industry, the
typical home computer user is 41
·years old, has a household income of
$60,000 and financial asseis of
$50,()()0. But the ICI says that while
. ' most tend to be active mutual fund
investors, ritany do~ ' t ll$lllbeir PCs
for fil¢lcial transactions or to obtain
financial information.
"I've !lcen feeling out of it
because I'm not on the Wtb,"· confessed a mutual fun4 marltetjng pro.
"But I ju~ IJ&amp;ve~'t t~b the time to
aet into surfing We net or even going
on line~."
.
. If there's one thing being on line
derilands, it's time. And money. Let's
start with money. To ,gel any on-line

mutual fund data. you haveto sper\d
To others. on-line info is a pain. or of silting ·in on live forums with .
some bucks. First , there's the cost of One father of two in Orlando, Fla., portfolio managors, or of having
a c~mputer. Then the modem. Then grumbled that finding mutual fund mimerous newspaper and magazine
the phone line. for that modem, . information on his computer .(akes stories access·ible.
But that convenience costs montoo much time away· from his already
ey.
If you were to tally up what one
hectic schedute.
year
of on-line services costs, you
,,.
'f
" Between my job and my family,
because anybody who has been on I don 't have a lotoftimetodevoteto· could easily subscribe to a handful of
line knows it's a teal annoyance to researching funds at home," he said. good financial magazines and have
have that pay-per-hour time inter· "Plus. on~e I find what I'm looking money left over. And sure you can
rupted by "'I incoming call.
for, I wina up with too much infor- review -- or even order -- a fund's
As for ,on-line costs, some are mation and.no one to help me sort it prospectus on line. But you can also
pick up the telephone, call tbe fund'$
hourly, some are monthly, some•are out."
'
- both and all add up. America Online,
So, before you rush out into dcep- 800 number and get the .same inforror instance, which 'recently intro- space in searc.h of what you might mation, plus a whole lot more, for
,duce.d the Mutual Fund Center, " think you're missing, think again and free .
Finally, "Chen it comes to mutual 1
charges $9.95 per month. That cost .consider that there are a numbCr of
fund
investment advice, surfers can't
includes 5 free hours of on-line time diffcrent·sides IO the mutual fund SIO·
expect
anything 'more than broadeach month. Web-servers typically ry in cyberspace. Two of them are:
charge flai monthly rates for unlim--To a mutual fund fam1ly, bemg based answers to very specific, perited hourly usage.
. on line simply offers one more way . sonal questions,
Dian. Vujovicb Is the author elf
· As for tinte, it flies·in cyberspace. to tell its story and sell its funds. Boil
"Stralaht
Talk About MutiQtl
An hour can seem like minutes when down a liome page to its simplest
form And it•s an advenisement. Peri- Fu~" and "StraJabt TaUt About
'exploring what's availab(je.
lnvesllD&amp; for Your Retirement:'
oWhat do you get for all your time od.'
both
of whleb are puball.laell by
•and money? To some folks, using on•• To fund investors, thete's no
McGraw
Hill. 1Send qu'esilona to
line services to acceps mutual fund denying the convenience of having
data is lietter than going to ' the Morningstar's data at your fingenlps, her Ill care of Ibis DeWiplper.
library.
'
'
"Everything··is right in front of
you. fllus it's easily llecessible,'' s~id t One year ago: The Supreme Coun ruled, ~,to-4, that states cannl)t ,limit
Kevin Brady, a 20-something fund l set'Yice in Congress without amending the Constitution. "the CBS ~~ing
invest?,'· "It's like a library in your · News" resumed a single.oanch6r formal with Dan Raiher, after Connie ChunJ
was dropped from the broadcast.
.
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t-1ike Dawson, the aovemor's .
spokclman, said Voinovich would not
propose a tax cut.
Dawson wouldn't speculate about
whether Voinovich would veto a tu.
cut if legisl11ors sent one to him.
"There are 80 different proposals
floating out there. We're going to do
what's fiscally responsible," Dawson
said. ·
State Budget Director Gregory
Browning today outlined Voinovich's·
capital improvements spending plan
for higher education, prisons. parks
and spans stadiums before the House
Finance Committee.
The bill contains $539 million for ~":
higher educaiion and $270 million for "''
pritnary and secondary education.
The state's prisons depanment would
g~t $269 million.
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Today 's weather to·re·Aast ·

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Showers, thunderstorms are
possibility for southern Ohio

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.Meigs announce~ents

·ValuJet pilot got first · ~~~~:.
flying lesson ·in Ohio :~;~~

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Gerlach, Stewart...

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.Today's l.ivestock report

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Hospital news

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\lllhere home Cll'rift' savice il available.

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MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
1-MdiJ·Coonl)'

tl WOolct ............................... _................ m.!O

26 Weeb, ............. .. ,............................. ,,S:!J.Il

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52 WOotct ...................:........................,.. Stll.5.l6
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Stocks

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Sus,pect pleads guilty
·to bank robbery charge

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TP-C water main .break .
may take months to fix

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Lewis W. Smith

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Dlsn Vu'ovlch

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Mediator says Freemen
unwilling to negotiate

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COLUMBUS (AP)- ~p'*n
may try to tack a tax CUI OftiO Gov.
Oeorae Voiaovich's new $1.6 billiOil
construction budpt even lhouah
Voinovich hill all but slammed the
door on the idea. .
An amendment that would pay for
a tax cut with part of a$1 bi)lion-plus
sutplus in the stile's separate operating budget could surface in either the
HaYSe or Senate, or in both, officials
said Thesday.
Senate ·Finance Chairman Roy .
Ray predicted the attempt will fail.
"The governor has indicated that
he dOesn't want any kind of a tax
cut," Ray, R-Akron, said ill an interview.
Does Ray want one?
"I've had a lot of wants in my life.
I would say at this point my wants are
not on the table."
··

.•• -

!
Jeremy Lee Aikins, 18, of Rutland, died Monday, May 20, 1996, of
W.VA.
t
injuries sufferW in In automobile accident in Oallia Couaty.
Born on Jan. 30, 197g in Oallia County, be wu the son of Rogcil' Atkins
of Pomeroy and Lcnaa Alkilll of Rutland.
;
In addition to his parents be is survived by two listers and a brother-in~
law, Rodney and ~IIi Blandford of Rockport, Ind., and Misty Lane of Shade:
grandparents, Leslie and Yvonne WbjUington of Middlepqrt, Fred Tackett
of Vinccmt. and LyvOilnia Young of Middleport: pat-grandmother, Anna
Wek:ll of Middleport; two aunts, a niece, a nephew, and several cousins.
He.was (n(:eded in death by his great-grandparenta, 5am and Lillie Smith,
: tt~
. and a step-pandflther; AI&amp;ed Young.
JORDAN, . Mont. (AP) - The over. They need to feel some pain "
. ' · · t'
'Funera) services will be Thursday at 2 p.m. at the Rutland Church of the . anti-government Freemen are unwill- Duke said. ·
.
.
.
~
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·
I1
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, NUilft:ne with the Rev. Sam Basye offteiating. Burial will be in Miles Ceme- ing 10 negotiate an end to their standFriday
...
A
chance
of
showers
or
tery
ill
Rutland.
.
I
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off with the FBI and have resoned to
He would not elaborate, other than ·r ,,
By T!te Associated Press
thunderstorms. Lows in the 50s and
Friends may call at the Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport today
Southeastern Ohio
using children as shields, a frustrat- to sugge~t cuUing off cable TV to the ' i ' "'
Today... Patchy dense fog early lliis highs in the upper 60s to lower 70s. (Wednesday), 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
ed mediator said.
ranch, 30 miles norlhwest of here on ...
Talks with Charles Duke broke up ·the easterot Montana plains.
...;(,••,
moming ...Otherwise sunny. High 75 Saturday... A chance of ,showers or
.
I J11
to 80, Nonhwcst wind 5 to I 0 mph. thunderstorms. Lows in the ~ and
in anger Tuesday and the Freemen·
,'\)
·
sent out anned patrols around their
Tonight...Clear. Low 45 to 50. highS in the 70s.
Sunday... A chance of thi!nderLewis W. Smith, 56, Portland, died Tuesday, May 21, 1996, at the Ohio
Calm wind.
·
~annhouse for the first time in the
In an interview today on ABC- •''J&gt;·:
storms.
Lows
S5
to
60
and
hi&amp;)ls
1S
State
University Hospillls. ·
.
·
eight-week standoff.
TV's "Good Morning America.~ he ·1 • _
Thursday... Su.nny, High 80 to 85.
to SO.
Arrangements are being handled by Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
DUke, a Colorado state senator also suggested cutting off the com-' ".' ; ' ••
Extended forecas~...
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and
leader in the so-called patriot munications radio that was provided ' 1'I
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movement, blamed Freemen stub- to the Freemen. "Right now, they' ve :' , ..
born ness for the breakdown and even got a pretty cushy life in there," he ··&lt; "'.
praised the FBI's patience:
·
said.
·.;.l!v '
Dance planned
Barbtlcue set
''The
time
for
negotiations
is
~•~'\
._
By The Aasoclated Press
of. th~ Appalachians. ln. ·Delaware,
Job's Daughters, Bethel 62, MidThere will be a chicken and rib
.
1ft"'"
With a high pressure over south· W1lmmgton sweltered · under 9!1- dleport, is sponsoring "A Night to barbecue at the .Chester fue station
east Ohio, skies will be mostly clear degree heat to top a 62-year-old read· Remember the Times Gone ~y" &amp;\ Monday. Homemade ice cream will
with temperatures falling into the 50s. ing of92. Today's forecast called f~ the Midc!leport Masonic Temple, be sold. Serving will begin at I :30Thursday, the high will move off readmgs 5 to IO depees cooler.
June I from 8 to II :30 p.m. Music a.m. The b~ue is being· held in
to the east and a cold front will push .
The West also wttbered. At Waco, from yestery- will be 11rovided by conjunction with Memorial Day serinto the lower Great Lakes. Skies will Texas, the temperature hit 97'and Torn Payne, di~ joc~y. Admission, vices.
1 r~~ ~ ~ .
MARIETIA (AP) - The pilot of to do. She had to compete vigorousbe partly sunny ard there is a possi- ~rP.ke a record of 94 for the date, set $4 per person, $7 per couple plus .two
ValuJet Flight 592. which crashed ly against a lot of Odds."
bility for showers and thunderstorms tn 1925.
. •
non-perishable items 'to be donated to Bible school set
• " ' ''
May
II, took her first flying lesson
to develop over the northwest. Highs : ,, .Ahead of cooler '!r, muggy con- local food pantry. The dance is open
The Racine United. Methodisl
She and her mother, Marilyn &lt;•
will climb 10 between 80 and 85 in dtttons should prevwl today across to all Masonic and Eastern Star Church vacation Bible si:hool will be in Ohio.
Chamberlain, lived in Marietta for a • rt no•
The Marietta Times reponed shon time in the .1970s. She attend- . •'L.•,;
the afternoon. . ,
the Gut~ Coast; ,mid-Atlantic and membets and invited guests. Pro- held June 3-7,9 a.m. to II :30 a.m. at
The record high temperature for So11theast. Thunderstorms were pas- ceeds will go toward Grand Session the church. Theme will be "Camp Tuesday that Candalyn Kube~k.then ed Marietta High School for pan .of •:·. 11~'
Candi Chamberlain, was 12 when she her senior year iri 1978 before the "~'
this date at the Columbus weather · sible, especially across the Florida expenses ofJob's Daughters.
Courageous."
took the lesson at the Wood Couoty family moved !~San Diego.
station was 93 degre,es in 1941. The peninsula and. much of southern
,;,; - ,;
Airpon
while
visiting
her
uncle,
record low was 35 in 1883.
Georgia.
.
a-to meet
Having little fear and a love for :•··'""
Senic:es annoum:ed
Geoffrey Cline.
Sunset will be 8:46 p.m. Sunrise
·.More storms were dragging across
The Pomeroy Hip School class·
competition made Kubeck a great ", ,. , ;~
Drew-Webster Post39, American
Mrs. Kubeck, 35,.was believ~d to pilot, Cline said.
central Washington and Oregon, of 1946 will meet ~t Trinity church
w1'II be 6 :10 a.m.
""
Across the nation
.
where up to an, inch of rain fell1\ies, annex, Second Street, Pomeroy, Sat· ~gion, announced today its schedl!le · be the first female captain of a com-'
She grew up listening to stories of ,I '~ .,,
Cooled considerably by thunder- day along coastal areas.
urday from I to 4 p.m. Class mem- for Memorial Day services. A special. mercia! jet to be killed·in a U.S. crash flying, .he said. Her late grandfather, ~,: ; : ;
storms New York was 66 degrees
Severe thunderstorms were bers, families and friends are invited program with a speaker' will be held ~hen the ValuJet DC-9 crashed in the Andrew Cline, flew in the Army Air
at II a.m·. on the parking lot. There Everglades. The cause of the crash, Corps from 1928-29. Geoffrey 'Cline .:;••!' •
befor!' day.!lreak today'as a three-day expected across the central Plains, to st011 in lllld visit.
·
will be no parade this year. The ceme- whfch killed 110 people, remaine.d flew in the Marine·Corps from 1965- : '·
heat wave lOOsened its grip on much and scahered rain could move acr6ss
tery·visit l!Chedule is as follows: Rock under investigation.
of the Northeast,
the .Great Lakes and into New Eng- Revl¥al conlillulnl
66. And Doug Cline. 51, another :&gt;c•·'.
·Cline, who now lives in Santa Fe,
. It was 48 degrees· and raining in land.
Revival services at the Ash Street Spring at 9 a.m. Beech Grove, ~IS
uncle, flew for the Navy in Vietnam. '' :•
Sean!e. Fort Worth, Texas, shot up to
Mostly dry, windy conditions Free Will Baptist church will contin- a.m.; Sacred Hean. 9:30 a.m.: I :05 N.M .. recalls Mrs. Kubeck as a deterAll three told Mrs. Kubeck their · ~· - '• ·
80 before dawn.
should prevail across the So11thwest. ue through Friday with services at p.m. MerriOrial Gardens, 1:30 p.m., mined little girl who always wanted. flight stories, and she loved Iistening. ,· ';
· ·
The sweltering heat spawned vioAreas of rain and·mou!llain snow 7:30 each evening. The Rev. Calvin Cbester, and 3 p.m., Hemlock Grove. to fly:
Their tales fuele.d her fascination with "' · J.. . ;
"She never, ever was afraid,"
lent thUiiderstom•s that raked much were forecast across the Rockies.
Minis is speaker.
aviation. Cline said.
' t;J -. ,-~~
Cline said. "It's all she ever wanled
of the East. toppling power lines and
Temperatures should climb into
trees Tuesday from Philadelphia to the 50s in the Nonhwest and the 60s
... . ' .
southeastern Massachusetts.
in New England and·across the north~" ~ ~·..i
In New Bedford. Mass., a 12-year- , ern Plains into the inter"Mountain
old boy was missing and presumed region . Readings ~uld reach the 8\!5
" ... ;-1..; ~,
Continued from page 1
drowned after the high winds over- across much of the Northeast and
or
Society,
the
French
Club,
·
Quiz
,· ~­
turned his raft.
mid-Atlantic regio'n ~nd the 90s · GUYSVILLE (AP) -It could be months before a water main bfeak that cheerleader for four years. She
Team.
Student
Council,
band,
and
, ·,;•·,.;
The storms cooled things down by across the South. The mercury could has left hundreds of Athens County residents living under a water-boil order belongs to the National Honor Society, Senior Spirits. the speech and senior class play. He achieved all- ., ; '" ,;
afternoon in New York, but not top 100 in~e deserts Southwest.
is fixed.
academic TVC for three years. · ., .. •. ,..
drama club, and is a library aide.
before II 5,000 homes in the Queens
The nation's hottest spots Thesday
Reaults from water tests taken after the main broke on, Friday were expectHe currently works with the Ohio
Sheets
is
a
panicipant
in
the
postborough lost electrical power for sev- were in Texas, with ·San Angelo, ed to be released today. If those tests show no contaminants, the boil onder
University
Depanment of Campus ,,,·,,(.,
secondary option program and is curera! hours because of a severely over- . Killeen Gray and Cotulla at. 102 affecting an estimated 600 residents,could end.
•.
.
rently attend,ing Ohio Universily Safety, is commissioned as a special . !~
loaded electricJII system.
'
degrees. The coldest place was YeiBut a ban on outdoor water use, impo~ after eros1on and htgh water where his study emphasi~ is on psy- deputy with the Meigs County Sher- ,.;~. ~
From Boston so~th, 90-degree lowstonc, Wyo., at 21.
i:aused the main break near this community abut 75 miles southeast of Colum- chology, foreign languages and law ·· itfs Depanment, and this summer / ;
heat toppled temperature marh cast
bus, will remain in effect another five to seven days, .said Donald.Poole, gen- enforcement. He plans to attend law will t~ke an II week· basic officer ·. ~,.-: '
eral manager of Tuppers Plains-Chester Waler District.
. . ·.
school after graduation from OU.
training course at Hocking College.· ·, . ·•
Because the break is under water, officials had not been ·able to ptnpomt
He was a Rotary Exchange StuHonorarians of the class are .• ;.. , ..,
its location, Poole said. It is probably somewhere between the Hocking Riv- dent to Italy and spent the 1993-94 Dorothy Wilmetta Leifheit, Amber · ~ · · ;. ·
er and a flooded field nearby.
.
school year there. He attributes his Bliss Bennett, Anne Elizabeth ·" ;,, o,
Officials must wait until flooding subsides before making permanent interest in foreign languages to that
Brown, ·Thomas P. Gannaway If · , r.i ·. :
repairs. If the break is in tJ.te field, it could be fixed withi~ ~couple of days, experience.
Lori Ann Russell, Dodger·E. Vaugh: •!:::
ton Federal Savings &amp; Loan branch Poole said. If it is in the river, it could be August before t1 ts fixed.
HUNTINGTON , W.Va. (A P) Wrestling and football have been an, James D. White, Tracy Shaffer, · :.•·• ·!
in
Huntington,
said
U.S.
Attorney
An Ohio man pleaded guilty Tuesday
Water was temporarily being supplied by a bypas~ line.
his spons interests at Meigs where he and Craig Allen Knight.
·.
"'·''·:
.
in U.S. District Court to assisting Rebecca A. Beus.
..
,, '
has
been
aciive
in·the
Nalional
Hansuspects also exchanged gunanother man in . the robbery of
SOUTHE~/1 PHOTO'SPA CkAGE S'PfC/Al
., Jf'' .:O' ,
$27,000 from a Huntington bank, shots with police, authorities said.
Sexlon faces up to 12 112 years in
a11thorities s~id. '
~~
COLUMBUS (AP) - indianaU.S. 1-2, 220-260 lbs. 60.SOSPRING VAllEY CINEMA
Mar~in E: Sexton, 33, of Chesa- federal prison and a $12S,OOO fine
Ohio direct hOg prices at selected 62.SO, few 60.00 and 63.00: plants .
44 6· 451 4
peake, Ohio, pleaded guilty to acces- when l!'entenced Aug. 12.
buying
points
Wednesday
by
the
62.00-63.50.
Sex\Qn
was
arrested
and
released
sory after the fact to armed b~'nk robU.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. S3.00bery. He helped Charles G. Waldo Jr. by police shortly after the robbery but U.S. Department of Agriculture MarSITTINI
was
rearre.sted
in
February
after
ket
News:
60.00.
in the Nov. 13 robbery of a HuntingFff
Banows and gilts: steady to weak:
Sows: steady to 1.00 higher with
- ... . - . ., ...
...-., police realized another man was not demand
moderate to good on a mod- most advance on weights over 450
a suspect.
i
Waldo earlier pleaded guilty to a crate run.
lbs.
'
The Daily Sentinel . federal bank robbery charge and
U.S. 1-3, 300-500 lbs. 41.00- .
45.50;
500-650 lbs. 4S.50-48.SO, few
faces state clitirges of attempted mur~USPS 113·!&gt;60)
I
der.
Authoritiessaid
Waldo
was
49.00.
'
!
Published every aflemoon, Monday throuah
Boars:
34.00-36.00.
expected tg coop_erate as pan of a
Friday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
An Ele Powsc .......................co\
Ohio Valley Publishing Compnny/GIIflneUCo.,
Estimated receipts: 33,000.
plea agreement.
Akzo
......................................5'7\
Pomeroy, Ohio 4.5769, Ph . 91J2-21.56. Se&lt;:ond
Prices !'rom Tbe Producen
Aaltlartd ()11 ...........................43..
dn.u postaae poid ot Pomeroy. Ohio.
ATAT ••••~'.........;. ..................:••12\
Livestock Adoc:lation:
Member: The Auocinted Pre.u, ond 1he Ohio·•
&amp;Mil: OM ...................................
c;aule: steady to 2.~ !.ower.
NewApQper Assoeiolion.
Veterans Memorial
11\
Slaughter steers: chmce S4.00aorg.warrwr .........................40!1. 61.00: select 48.00-SS.(J!!,_
Tuesday admissions - none.
POSTMASTER• Send addres! cornctions 10
Clalilt~ .............................13~
The Daily Sentinel, Il l Court St., Pomeroy,
Tuesday discluirges -: Richlrd
Ohlo45769.
c~.JI.
Shop .................~ ...1\
Dill Sr., Pomeroy : John Sllajn,
I
Racine; Mary Evans, Middleport;
SUBSCRIPTION RATBS.
llofllll••••~..............~..1
By Cnritr or Motor Route
• Mabel Oliver, Pomeroy.
CIMH*t·...................................trt
One W&lt;et. ................................................. ll.OO
Holzer Medical Ceater
.GooctvW TAR ......................12~
One Month ........................................,....... $8.70
S 10.00 FOil SPliT PACII:AGE
One Year .................." ... ...... ........ ~......... $104.00 '
K~ ....................................1~
W.Ciuiips May li - Megan
...,., l!rld........... _IM&lt;!........... .22).
SINGLE COPY PRICB
Meade, Delben Jenkins, MrS. Randy
YOU GET A11THISPWS YOURNEGATIVES
Limited lno~--~-~-·--··'"''.21\
owly .........................,......."................ JS eenu
Stewan and daughter, II!IICS Powell,'
!
· 2-lOxl~
'-oplll
..
'rl
~.
Pansy Mayes, Louis Laudetmilt, Julie
OtiiO YJilly '
....................
Subleriben not des• t1J to pay ~,; earner..I'PIY
l
&lt;4-!5" 7
remit In advance direct 10 Tbt Daily Sen~net 1 Dun'away.: /
.one¥~-! ....- ................
•I
(Publlllhechrilh permlalon)
011 olllloe. li•or 12 monthbano. •er.aitwiDI!e
ROckMII .................~...........11\
Biven carrier ei!Ch woek.
Roblllrw ·~----.......M\
- ~ 0\lt
'
..............110\
No subscripri~ by ' ~ail petmltted in •reu

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LIIn H. See o.tiJ~ter, 76. or Mjc!cQcprn died Monday, May 20, 19%,
• Holzer Medjcal C
, OeiHpolil. •
1
Jom Mlrcb 21, JC)20,1he Wll the dauJhler oftbe !all Pearl ancl Miry
Bllialt. She - alnw I t.
•
She is IUI'YiWJd by line 110111 and dlqlun-in-law, Dave IIIII Cherie See
or Poii'ICIV)', Bill UM1 Debbie See of B011o11; Mess.• and Cecil and Kalhy
See of Pomeroy; two sisters, one brolbet, eiJbt pandcbildren, two Jl"'llgnodehildren, IIIII teveral n'-s and !MJ~bews.
.
Sbe wu p~etotled in dealh by ber huband, Ray, on May 3, 1996, and
three brothen and rwo sislm.
·
No callinl hours or ~«Vices will be observed. At Garlinpr's request, her
body wu donated to the Ohio University School of o.teopathic Medicine
for.medical ~h.
·

• IColumbus Iaoo I

On-line i~f~ takes time an~ money

'

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By "sck Anderson
snd
Michael Blnsteln

mole dwi7,S(l0 dommm:ial ain:rUt,

·Legislators may·
propose
~ax cut
-"'-

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. _ O.Jsld&lt; Melp Counl)'

--............................................ $29.2$

'26 \Veeki .........M, ..;..,., .. ,.,.,,.,,.,.,.......:...... l56.6&amp;

--~· _..~_

IIRIECIE

$1 /79

\

1111'1 ........._,;_.....- ...11\
lglon Ind.

w
·--------..2'1\
ttolli .....-.. ... tbe '10:
-.==~~did
oro
...
.by

-·--·-

wrTH FAIES......$2.5

...

Mldcleport
Saturday, May 25

11 :00 am til 4:00 pm •

52 Weeki .. - .... ,...,...... :....:........., ..........St09.n

.

788 N. 2nd AV..In

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 4 • The Dally S111tlnel

The Daily Sen~~f
utsr,llly 1•

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We Flee'

m

,_,..Food
Aigllta

Stamps Quantity

-Mid

••'
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~arlins·' 3-2 -Win pushes ·Reds ·to seventh straight defeat

•.

By .JOE KAY
•
CINgNNA~(AP)_- TheFiari·
da Marltns area I !*IJCuiMiy taken
with their first win.W.J record in two
yean. The ~ay dtoy' ve gOIICn it '-a
them dratlni\IB· ,
Down~ sllrter and one closer,

There's Nothing
Like A Big Bear ·Hug

die Marlins went out Tuesday and
won anyway. David Weadlers
retumed from lhe minors, homered
and pitched six shutout inninp for a
3-2 victory over .die floundering
Cincinnati Reds.
The Marlins' 13th victory in IS

'

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•;

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record

JameS~ !heir
to 24-23.
It's lhe first time dley've been over
.SOO since June 17, 1994, when !hey
were 34-33.
Impressive? NOI Mlly.
" The winning re~ord docan 't
mean anythinJI 10 me," manaaer
Rene Latbemann said. "Of coune,
you want to have a winning m:ord.
The only time the m:ord counts is
,the 11151 day of the season."
·
"1 think everybody right now is
just more happy that we are playing
good as a team," said Terry Mathews, who filled in for tired closer
Robb Nen and JIOt the save. "You go
out and play good ball with the tal·
ent .we have on this team, you're
goinJIIO have a winning n:cord. It's
11ood to see we' re finally pullins it
together." ·
,
The Marliqs appeared to be 'in
deep trOuble when they openea the
season 4-11 . Their 13 victories in
May - a franchise record for the
month- have them lookins up
instead of spiraling.
Theyconsiderthemselvesbackin
the chase for a wild-card playoff
-~rf!!, itll.~t..~. M.Jl.!lst .!!.t.~!,_ :

I

l•

•

i
&gt;
I

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.WJ,
l

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•

•

SPack
7•Up, ·R.C•.Cola-

•
....

.....
•

:
•-.

.,

0.

'

Scoreboard

''
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Philadelphia (Grace 6-1) IV S11n Dieao
(Hamihon6-;\), 10:35 p.m. .

Ba se b all
~

.....,

· Thunday'opmies

..•

~-

JH~ilion

Ill.

Ila .

!\( J.
Now Yort ,............. 2S 16
Baltimore .............. 14 19

TOI'Oilt6 ..................20

!ill

.610

.

.

. ..

.
•

Umlt4Piease
With $10
Additional
Purchase

·~ cans
. . ·..

CLEVEI.AND ....... l9 U

.690

Chicago ...• :............ 2S

.S81

21

.500

Minnewta........, .... .l9

2•

.442

!

.

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Pre~oric~ed

2.99

Seanle .................... l:\
Californio...............-21
Oak.l111d .............. ,...20

20
2.1
B

.53_5
.477 ··

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Toronlo (Gilunnn 4-Jl al Chicaao
(l'enllo&lt;loz 5·2). 2:0l p.m.•
··
Milw111ukee (Karl J·2 ).,al CLEVELAN[! (Mct&gt;owelll· l). 7:0l p.m.
Seattlt&lt;Wolcotl 2-~, nt 80!11on (Waittficici 2-4),1:m p.m.
.

I

York (~lltlt!: 6-2). 1J~ p.m.
California "(.&amp;.bbott ·t·· 6) ut· Billi:itOOrt

I
I
I
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''
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(Clemens 1-4._ 6 :0~ p.rn.
M.ilwau~ee (Miranda 3-2) m CLEVELAND (Hc;n:hiscr )..)), 7 : 0~ p.m.
Minntl()(a (Mahomes 1-2) w Torooto
&lt;Viola 1·2), 7J~ p.m.
,
Te)IDJ (Oiaver )-1) 41 K11f1181 City (Ap-

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NL standings

j

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Eutem DiwWon

:rt. .

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16
18
l.l
2J

&amp; ·

.644 .
.609
I~
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6
. ~ II
· IO~

NcwYOt'k .............. l8 26

1'

SPRING lAWN

Iii

L ln.

AtiMIIl ..............-, ... 29
Montreo.l.. .............. 28
Philadelpllio ...........22
, Florlda ................... 24

•

I

Baseball
. Amtrkan Ltaaatt
BALTIMORE ORIOLES: Called up
RHP Arehi~ COrbin l'ron1 Rt"M.:he5ler of the
. tntrmorional Lea'cue.
BOSTON RED SOX: Plnctd RHP
Sran Belil!,do on lhc: I '·da~ di1abled list.
Recalled LHP Vnughn Es helman from
PaWruckel of the International League.
·
NEW YORK Y~NKEflS, Piau&lt;! OF
Bernicf.'w,hiums on lhe_IS-dn y disibled.

o,.tland (GroOm 2-0) II New York

t

GARl)!N SAlE

~

.409

Cmral Dlwlllon

Houston ................. 22
Chioaao ................. 21
Sr. Louis ................ 19
CINCINNATI ...... 16
Pin1burah .............. 1_8

•Wheelbanows
·•Shovels
•Spades
•Rakes
•Hoes

25 · :468
2~ .4.11
26 .422
24 .400
27 .400

.

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san Diego .............. 21 18 .100 '·
San Franc.:i~ ........ 24 · 20 .S45

~~-~ : :::::::J1 ~: :~

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Tuelday's eeoi'el

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6-3) at CINCINNATI
(Smi~ l-4)1 12::\5 p.m.
.
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Chi"caao.(8ul,inaer 3-J) '' ~,tlanta .,.
(Giavilll&lt;l-3), 1:10 p.m.
·
.Pi.i ubutJh (Smith_2-1) 11 ColoradO

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Florida), CINCINNhTI l

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GREEN BAY PACKERS :

yo)Jr

Wt~ived

painful muscle aches, joil'!l aches,
simplebackache,bruises,andmore.
AlthOugh the mechanism of actio
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odorless, greaseless, no~stainin
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srr (iso

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M•e.tlkote Wlr
Coloro TouGh Up
Paint or AU
l'ui'J105" l"r1mer

Mllf ~ .

Simonize,

· Treatment.

SPECIAL).-- A new drug has bee
approved that is exciting research·
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as arthritis, burs:tis, l'hcun.atism,

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Pain maybe
eliminated
for millions

wet

reb- fl&lt;"

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Romnn Okoli .

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209 Upper ~lver Road

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iloDLEPORT

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SiO ""'""

2-6).):)5 p.m.

(Kill ~2l. •I:G!I p.m,,

PICKENS
.
ttARDWARE
,
.

'

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(ESPN)

p.m.

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.

QB Miie McCoy~
NEW YORK GIANTS: !iignetl DL

Friday's game

·/

Pinlburah :11 Florida.

(Ro&amp;eri 2..0). 1:05 p.m.
Seattle• (MIIackl 1-0) ~ ~ Bosron

I

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Stacking
Chair

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Thunday'sga~

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(ESPN)

Oaldand ()\'ojciechows.kl 4-0) nl Ntw

.(Hayne•

•

Detroit ar Colorodo. l ::tO p.m.

(Ura j.J), Ul p.m.

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FoothaU

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·· · ·

Teus (PaVlik ~·I} at Minneao~a (Pill'l'a'
1-2~ i : t!·~:m. .
·
.K~•u ~ity•(B~Icher 4-ll Iii Detroit

•

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•

Nattau.l FODiballlAaaue
CHICAGO BEARS; Signed QB Dove
KrieJIO .none-year contrict
•· ~
DETROrT LIONS : Si 8ned RB Def •

No games tonight ·
•

•

WASHINGTON BUI.l.ETS: Extend·
· rd lilt L'On tr'iiCrs or Jim Lynam. coach ;
Bob Slaak, Derek Smith nnd Buz:i Bro·
mnn , wi~ tant j;ODChes : and Ktvin JohnsonJ trqiner, throu~~ the IIJ?~·-99 season,

Tuesday's score

\

' -- .

•

founh straight game, over MontRal :~
in San Francisco.
·•
A 4.8 earthquake struck 60 miles r
southeast of the ballpark in the lop ••
of the third inn.ing, causing the·preiS ·'
box suspended below the upper 4e.ck ·i
to shake. But the tremor went unno,, ::
ticed by players or umpires on
field, .and the game continued -,vi\1)· . -:'
out interruption.
· · .: ;t
Thomoson's two-out sin~le came ' •
in the sixth off Derek Alk:oin ((}.1 ), ·:,
pitching in his major league debut ;:.
Trailing S-1 in the fifth, the Giants
tied it when Mall Williams' three-run
homer capped a four-run rally off ,··
stanerJeiT Passero.
···
Mark Dewey (3·2); the second of ' '~
four pitchers, got the win in relief. ' ·Rod Beck pitched a perfect ninth
inning for his 12th save.
Cubs 4, Braves l
Sammy Sosa hit a two-run double , ...
with two outs in the ninth inning, • -·
giving Chicago ' the victory at : ;:
Atlanta. Sosa was (}.fo.r-5 , in his • ·•~ ,,
career against Mark Wotilcrs ((}.I) , ...
before the drive into the left-center
field gap.
·
The loss witS Atlanta's first in live
games and only its fifth in 22 games • c.
.. ;·
.(See NL oti Page 6)

Basketball

Coklrado :i, Dcrroit 0: Colorado leads
strieJ~·O " •.•. '
'r·
.,
· ~,
'

I. r

Pittsburgh scored three in the
ninth and had the tying run on sec,
ond with one out aJiainst . Cunis .
Leskanic. But Bruce Ruffin got the ·
· last two outs for his fourth save. Darren Holmes ( 1-0) e.Bmed the.victory.
Jason Christianson (3-3) took the
loss.
,
In other games, it was St. Louis
8, Houston 2; San Francisco 8,
Montreal 5; Chicago 4, Atlanta, 2;
Los Angeles 6, New Yolk 4;
Philadelphia 5, San Diego 2.
Cardinals 8, Astros 2
John I\IJabry went 4-for-S as the
Cardinals overcame a 12-strikcout
performance by Shane Reynolds at
Hous(on.
.
Mabry . duubled twice, singled
twice and scored a run. He is 6-for·
9 in the series with a homer and three
doubles. He is hilling .410 (43-for;
I05) in his last 29 games. ·
Reynolds (6-3) tied a career high
, for . strikeouts, including II on
swinging strikes. Todd Stolllemyre
(4-2) got the victory.
Giants 8, Expos 5
Robby Thompson's second RBI
single of the game broke a tic in the ·
sixth, three innings after ·a mil&lt;!
canhquakc. as the Giants won their

Nllloul 'l lalbtball Aaodallon

NHL conference finals

. .. ·. &lt;Today'• pmet•·

I

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Ho ckey

6
6'&lt;:

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.

at lll~ . 8! ~ p.m. ITNTI

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•

Friday'• P!fll!

1

KMwCity7.' Denoitl
Se!e!tle I~. Bosloo 1
New York 7, Oakland)
OU~.'2~ :t:oronto I ..
Cl.E.v~D ~- Milwakee S
· Mianewta 4, Te~ei»o ;l
Collfc;lmia ~. BaJtl~nDR. 2
,•

I

14

~lle

Tuesday's scores

i•
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II

.614

I .

3 lb. or
Heavier
Pkg.

Chips

~~

R«~led RHP
Derek Aueoin from _Onawa of !he lntmw·
lionaf~agut. Pla:ud RHP'JoJe Poniagun
on 1M IS·d::l)' disabled list.
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES : Pb:ed
OF Leftny Dylc.stm on the l!'i·dar dis&amp;:~bh:!d
Jist. retro:.ctive 10 May 19. AL'hv41ed O'F
Lee Tilldc~ rrom the disllbled. list.
.

Cbka1o CJ:\, Orlando 88; Ctiit; l\&amp;0
• _lemds aen~ 2..0
...· -

8

10~

11

: I
•

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Teli.U ..................... 27

I

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.

"''·MONTREAL EXPOS;

. Tuesday's !f!:OI't ..

. Wesafm Dlvbloo

r

National Lta&amp;ue
HOUSTON ASTROS: Aclivaled
LHP Greg Swindell from the I ~-day dis - ·
abled li11. Sent LHP JeffTabukn ~nd RHP
Jim Douaherty to Tucson of PCL. Re·
c&amp;:~lled LHP Dean Harl]!.ravcs from Tuc·

NBA conference nnals

,.4~5

KanaM City ........... 20 26

I

Groun·d Fresh Daily

18

MiiWDUW .. :.......... 21

•••

y's Ground Beef
Potato

homer - his second of the game and it was the game-winner.
·
Walker also ha~ a \riple and ·double and drove in a career-high six
runs, powering the Rockies to their
sixth Slfaighrvictory, 12·10 over the
.n~ed .
.
Walker came to ·bat in the ninth Pittsburgh Pirates.
"I
was
thinking
about
the cycle.
inning Tuesday needing a single for
the cycle. Instead. he hit ~ two-run on that last at-bat and I told (home·
plate umpire) Tom flallion, 'I should
lay a bunt down here,' "Walker said.
. . . UNHAPPY SOUL - Clncln·
"I told first-base ump' Jerry Craw· natl pitcher R·oger Salkeld
ford
if it was close, he should call me
~how. hll teeUngl 11 Rari,dl'l
David .Wnthers rounds ltiMi - safe and I could get the cycle thing
over with. It just didn 'I happen."
beHI In the distance· after the
' Walker, whose 13 total bases set
latter's 101o homer In the ftfth
a
club record, hit a two-run homer in
Inning of TUMdly night's Nldfo!lthe first. He doubled in the fifth, hit
al League pme In Cincinnati,
a two-run triple in ·the sixih and
where the Marlins won 3-2 ·to
another two-run h'omer in the sevhand .t hl Reds their Hventh
atralght Jon. (AP)
enth, his II th of the season. The
Rockies finished with io hits.
The Rockies, who also won a
club record-tying eighth straight at
home, drew 48,037 for their 72th
. CQnsecutive sellout, a major-league
record. They also reached I million
lit~, rtlronctive to May II.
T£XAS RANGERS: Purchued rl}c
faster than any team for the founh
conuac1 of INF RMC Oonza~ from Ok.-·
conseculive se«soti, doing it on their
lahoma Chy of the Americaft Associ~.
21st home date. Balli man: n:ached I
~i~~ INF ~J Worlhin&amp;Jon for • •
Jipment Tnwf
LHP Chris Howtlfd ..
million.over the w.~e~~-I)JI. but ne~~·t'rofn the 15· to the 150-dny disabl~_ lisJ.., ,
ed 23 dates. " ·
·.

B as ketball

. 45~

Central Di~~

i

·

Philadelpbia (S. Fer~~ande1 2-4) at
Sm! DiegO(Tewksbury ~1). ~;0~ p.m
CINCINNATI (PonoJal 0..) 01 Col·
Ollldo (Freeman ;\.-3), 9:05 p.n11.

.Sl!

24

Boa10n ................... l1 2$ .4M
Detroil ... ................ l2 :\4 261

12· oz-.

:r

.

By The Associated Pren
On a record-selling night in Den·
ver, Lany Walker had more numbers
than he wanted. It turned out to be
just what · the Colorado Rockies

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t::

.Rockies slip past Pirates; Braves lose

!

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·:

.four hilS over six inninp in his first
He also hurt them widl hit tint
startoftheseuon.&amp;-ICIII"down 11111jor-lequc homer, • solo shot ill :.
to the mi110n May 10 a/ter'lllllkinJ the fif\h illllilll oft' ~lop' Sr•eld (~ .:·
JS relief appear~s. and hlldmede 1). Ore11 Colbn.nlltldod Ill RBID
his last 23 major-leaaue appear· Jle in the eiahth olf Johmly llufllft ''
ances out of the bullpen. ,
and G8ry Sheffield followd wilh a r.,
While at Triple-A 'Charlotte, II!Crifice fly.
•
•..
Weathers analyzed why he was .• The R~s I~ the . _ ~ : :
strunling and concluded he simply • .two outs 1n die ea!lhlh. but Yortds • ;
needed to relax.
Perez sot Hal Monilto JIOUIId ~· ;.;
"I'm not myseU out there some· Perez gave up I tWcHuR homer 1ft f
times," he said·. "Once I get to the
the ninth to Eddie TaubenMe befOR ·~
mound, sometimes I'm tense. Madlews ca~ on~ aot the IMt J~
Tonight 1 said, 'What have I got to
two outs for his ~ aave.
:;
Jose?' 1 was myself out there.
· N«ee: The _Marli~ wen: 12-IS in ; !
"I've sai'cl it before and I'll say it
May 1994, thetr prevtous best n:eord •:
again: This·is where 1 belong."
for.. the ·month. ... The Marhns ::
His performance wasn't totally a opltoned shortstop Kun Abbott to :
surprise considering he almost
Tnple-A Charlotte on. Monday ,
always does well against tbe Reds. beCau~ they want to 111.ve Edgar ~ ~
His last three wins as a starter have
Rentena a chance. Rentena went 3- ·'
been over Cincinnati, and he has a 4for·3 Tuesday with a double and ~o : ~
. ocareer mark againsllhe Reds. He's smsles. ·:· Reds nJiht·fielder'Rente ·~
11 -20 against the rest of the Nation· Sanders 1s expected to come offdthesk
al League.
•
~isabled list Thu~Way. He tore a 1
, •. "David Weathers did an out- tnhlslowerbacklastmonthandhas ;;
standing job. You-can't do much bet- , bee~ on a ~ical rehabilitatio_n : .
· ter than that" Lachemaliil said. assignment w1th Tnple·A lndt- , ..
"He's pitched very good against anapolis.... Willie, Greene became :,
those guys."
:~ =~seventl) cleanup hitter of '~

ln .other NL action,

'

. I

Diet 7•Up,. Cherry7•Up, .Diet Rite, A&amp;W Root Beer

"It's far IWly. Teams like Alllnll
and MontRal, we've JOI to catch
them," Mathews said. " Blllto 10 out
on ani~ like might and win shows
that we have that c8jljlbility,llhink."
The Reds have shown no si1n of
pullinJI out of their nosedive .
They've lost seven strliBflt and 16 of
23. At 16-24, they're off to their
worst40-game start since 1986.
The biggest problem now is the
offense. Cincinnati has seored three
orftwerruns in seven ofits last eight
games, leaving the pitchinJI and the
defense no margin for error.
Plus, the Reds tend to crumble
when they do something wrong.
"We can't get by with any m~takes," manajer Ray Knight said.
"All season. we haven't been able to
get by . with anything. We make a
mistake and it snowballs. We haveto
play almost perfect to win."
They had a good opportunity to
pull out of their slump Tuesday. The
Marlins ; had to call up Weathers
because Kevin Brown went on tbe
disabled list Monday with a bruised
leg.
But Weathers ( 1·0) allowed just

~

22.

Wed!

•

FRUTH PHARMACY
711 NOIJ11!2ND AYE.
.,
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~y
SWIIHER LOHSE PHA!qiACY

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112 L 11A1N IT.
111112181

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P9 I • The Dilly 81 iiiiMI

.·-·.

Pomeroy • llkldl1port. Ohio

Behind Franco's clutch homer,

Indians get 6-5 victory over

THERE IT GOES!- Clllllllnd't Julio FIWICO w.tches hla two-out
drive go over the t.nc:e for • two-Nn homlt' lhat belt the vlaltlng

CLEVELAND (AP) - Lui ye.- pull the ball. Milwaube pilll:bed him
the AL clllmpion Cleveland Indians inside and he adjUJted. This pme it
won 27 aames in the final inning. all about adjustin1 to what lbe other
They' ve 4one it twice this year team does and Julio did it well." ~
both behind the bat of newcomer
Brewers catcher Mike Malheny
Julio Fnnco.
said his team, which had won five ·
" It is a great feeling' to win a strai1ht. missed its chance.
pme with a home run and not too
" It was the timin11 of Franco's
IIWIY people ever 1et to enjoy it," homer thai wu discourqing lwc••
Franco said after hitting a two-out, we didn' t take advantqe when we
solo home run Tuesday night to lead had them down. We had a chance to
the Indians to a 6-5 win over Mil- win this one and didn't."
wallkee.
Franco hit the first pitch otT MarFranco, who played for the Indi- shall Doze (0-2) into the left-field
ans 1983-88, was signed by CleVe· bleachers for his sixth horner: Winland as a free agent Dec. 7. His lith· ncr Julian Tavarez (2-1) allowed one
inning homer off Mike Stanton hit in I 213 innings.
defeaied Boston 7-6 on April 14.
"In that situation, two outs and
"Julio has the ability to pull the the game tied, you have to go for the
ball like that," said Cleveland man· home run," Franco said. "When I
ager Mike Hargrove.
have tried to hit a home run, maybe
"His aame is ordinarily hitting to ·I have done it one of 100 times.
right field because people pitch him
Cleveland's Albert Belle had a
away, but if you get it inside, he' ll single itt four at-bats, extending his
hitting streak to 21 games, longest in

(AP)

In other AL set/on,

Milwaukie Brawara 6-5 In Tuelday night'• American League game.

Bre~ers

11111-.-.

lbe lillian thia , _
for
1118 lecljee 1iac:e fJMCO's li·1ame
llreak ill 1911.
.
Oewllllll tr.::ond tine Rill in lbe
leVCtllh for 1 5-4 lad, bul Milwau-lree tied it ill tile eiPth on COIIIeCu-tiYe doublli by Dave Nil11011 and
Malt Mielke.
Jim n- hit Jhe lint pitch of
the aevetllb an ..um.I 435 feet for
hii!Otb '-of tbc ~ llldlllC·
ond of ihe PM- ~ Indiana went
alud 5-4 on aucrifice by Ken·
ny Lofton IIIII Franco's RBI single.
C11'101 Baerp put Cleveland
ahelld in tW lint wilh his second
homer of the aeuon and tint Iince
April 7. Thome IIUide it 2-0 in lbe
second with his ninth !Jomer, the
longest ill Jacobi F'aeld hUtory at 445
feet
"The scary thinJ is that 11m
docsn'I ralize how stron1 he is,"
Indians IIWiagcr Mike Hargrove
said. " He actllllly tut hi~ swing

PEPSI·

down a little toni81Jt, hut when he
doer lhlt he Jell even rnot'e bjtt

speed and with hil strength ... well
you saw the _..._ .
"ClevelMd is Join&amp; to hit home
runs. That's their pme." ui4 Brew·
en suncr Ben McDonald, who 1ave
up two runs, both e.ned, on four hits
in five inninss.
"I made a aood pifl;h fo B~erga
and he hit il out. I IIUide a terrible
pitch to 1'home and lie hit it 0111. The
&amp;ood thing was there'"'"' nob9dy on
base. You culive up solo shots early in the gaine and a lot of times it
won't beat you."
Nilsson's bases-loaded' single
puUed Milwaukee to 2-1 in the third.
The Brewers went ahead 3-2 in
the fourth on an RBI triple by Math·
eny, who then scored on a aroundout
by Chuck CIIT.
Greg Vaughn's lOth homer leading otT the fifth made it 4-2.

ny

At least the Detroit Tigers didn't
allow any home runs.
The Tigers take small accomplishments where they find them.
Tuesday's 7-lloss to the Kansas City
Royals dropped them to 12-34 and
left their ERA at 7.35.
"I just want' to have a chance to
win," Tigers manager Buddy Bell
said after Detroit's seventh straight
loss, its 27th in 31 games. "It seems
like we 're never in a position to do
so."
Remarkably, Detroit .allowed at
least one homer in each of its 18 pre·
vious games at Tiger Stadium this
· season.
It's not just the pitcbing that
stinks. The Tigers ' team batting
average is .246, the worst in the AL.
. "It's a combination of us not
being very .close most of the time and
their pitchers not having any pressure
on them to make a pitch,'' Bell said.
· Doug Linton ( 1- 1) got his first
victory since . June 17, 1994. He
. allowed one run and four hits in six
innings, struck out five and walked
one. Julio Valera finished with hitless

By JOE ·KAY

(0-1) was taapc1 for six runs ud five
hits in tw&lt;Hhiids on 1111 inning.
Y.._ Atbletics 3
Dwight Gooden, ~ng oft' a nohitter, aave up a hit ~ batters into
the game. He won his third straight
start. Gooden (3-3)' allowed three
runs and six hits in seven innings, ·
stqtck out stven 1104 walked one. .
Raines hit a leadoff homer at
Yukee Stadium. Wade Boggs, out
since May 15 due to a bad back, had
three hits. Carlos Reyes (3-7) gave
up five runs· and II hits in four
inpings.
White Sox 2, Bhse lays 1
Frank Thomu hit an RBI double
and Dlrren Lewis drove in the goahead run with a groundout at
Comiskey Park u Chicago won ·
desP.ite gettina only two hits.
Thomas doubled in the first otT
Jeff \VIIre (().J), a!\(1 Lewis doubled
in the third.
Kevin Tapani (4-3.), Matt Karchncr and Roberto Hernandez combined on a five-hitter for Chicago.
ADam 5, ~ 2
Rc1&lt; Hudler and Don Slaushl Jed
off with conseeutive home runs as
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Wellston softballers defeat
_Meigs 8-B.i~? season finale

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Thigh· injury forces Becker
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r--wloeel

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Wellston diamondmen hand .Meigs 6-2 .setba~k

NL .games.

·-..

2UTERS

•

ager'sjob is. Somehow I've tailed to
do
that."
CINCINNATI (AP) - Ray
·Knight is embarrassed, but he's not
Knight said Tuesday that he did
j:
giving up.
. . not otTer to resign during the meetThe Cincinnati Reds are otT to ing, but mentioned to Bowden that
their worst start in .10 years, and the he did not want to stick around if he
~:
strain is showing on their rookie· . was hurting the team.
•
r
~:
·
· ed ~
"I just expressed to him what l
· H h
manager.
e
as
gotten
eject
ra:"
felt,"
Knight
said..
"And
in
the
i:
a game, blamed himself for h1s
'
team's failures and said he was del!ths of that conversation, I talked
,
'·
embarrassed by his results as a man- about if I were a problem, if anybody
I.
felt I was one, hey, let's do some•••
age[ooking for explanations, he has thing about it because I don't want
••
•.
even told general manager Jim Bow· to see thit team sutTer. That's all.
•.
•
den that he's willing to leave if he's
"It wasn't a direct, 'Hey,! want
•
••
holding the team back. Bowden says to resign.' " ·
••
he's not.
It's reminiscenl of a year ,ago,
••
"It's not Ray Knight's fault," when Pavey Johnson said virtually
•••
Bowden said Tuesday, before die the same thing following ·the Reds'
Reds took their seventh straight loss, 1·8 start. Johnson told others in the
· 3-2 to the Flori!Ja Marlins: "He's front office that '(le was willing to
done a good job. The team obvious- step a5ide if he was a problem for the
ly has not played up to its capabili- · team; the statement was soon forties. We've had injuries and some of gotten, and the Reds went on to win
· our big guys have not done what the NL CentraL
they did a year-ago. .
"It's just like Davey Johnson a
.,,
"But to put the blamJ: on Ray is year ago .when he was frustrated with
not accurate. I think Ray is a com· 1-8 and tried to put the blame on
petitor. He wants to win. He's a very himself," Bowden said. "As I
score tied at I : 1. Scott George s.an~· the game wide open in the si~th
compassionate man. He puts every- explail)ed to Ray, you can be the best By DAVE HARRIS
Lamhert went the first two
Sentinel
Co.,...porident
ed
for Mel's on May 7, but because inning when Patton walked ·and innings w!th Kuhn comin&amp; pn 1p the
thing into the game. He's very frus- manager in the Wl&gt;rld and not win
The Meigs Marauders dropped If he pitched on Monday, Gary Stanley Stevens hit the first pitch to him over
trated."
ballgames·."
·
third and picking up the 'win. The
6-2 decision to the Wellston Golden , picked up when the action resumed . the left field fence for a 5- I Wellston
Monday was perhaps Knight's
There' are a number of reasons
two gave up three hits, walk three ·
.
lead.
lowest point since last fall, when he why the Reds are 16-24: owner· RQCkets Tuesday evening ·at Mejgs : on.Thesday.
and
strike out seven. Chafin and
High School. The los~ gave the
Meigs took a early 1-0 lead in the
Wellston closed out the scoring in Young had a pair of singles each to
• was introduced as manager and told Mlirg~ Schott's payroll cutbacks, Marauders five conference·losses for
top of the first when George reached the sixth inning on singles otT .the lead, Wellston. Stevens added his
a room full of reporters that he had seven players on the disa!lled list,
tl)e
year
and
all
but
ended
·
the
base when the catcher let the third bats of Young, Pugh and_Chafin to home hln.
·"no doubt" about his ability to sue- team leaders having otT-yeus.
. Milrauders TVC tide hopes.
strike
'get away. One out later, Scott give the Golden Rockets a 6-1 vicceed.
Meigs will end 1VC play today in
· 'The Marauders (14- 7 overall &amp; 8- scored when Stan.ley singled. .
tory.
McArthur against Vinton County.
Knight spent ·much of the day
KnighJ has made -a few rookie -5-in the Ohio Division) came o_ff an
Wellston tied the game in the botStanley the second -o f three Meigs will travel to Zane Trace on
meeting with Bowden and ot.ber ·. mistakes, such as calling an April, emotional4' 3 win over state-ranked
tom
·
of
the
inning
when
Chafin
·
Marauder
pitchers was the losing Friday for the Division IJ disttict
front -office employees evaluating game a · "mus,t-win" situation. He Jac_kson on Monday in district tourreached
on
a
Mari.uder
error,
a
pitcher.
Stanley
combined ·efforts ·final against the winner of Tuesday's
the team's problems. After a loss,to 1 also has irritaied some players by nament, and had problems getting
passed
ball
and
Patton's
single.
with George and Whitlatch to sive Hillsboro-Nonhwest game.
Florida, Knis~t called Bowden ipto constantly juggling the lineup.
started on Thesday.
Wellston took a 3-'J lead in the up seven h'1'· two walks and six lnplg. IJdlll
his office for a half-l)our discussion ' On Thesday, Knight said he still
• The game was organially staf\ed third inning on two Mejgs ~rrors, a
strike outs. Chad Burton, Stanley and
on a Jot of different topics.
thinks he made the right decision by on May 7. but
called after two fielder's choice and a single by Brent Hanson had the Marauders' Wellston .. .. ...... .... I00-200- 1=6-7:o
Knight would · not discuss becoming manager, and he has no innings beca.use of rain ,with the ·
Meigs ........ ........... J00-000-0= 1-3-3
Chafin. The Golden Rockets blew hits, all singles.
specifics.afterwards, but admitted.to intention of leaving.
WP-Kuhn
reporters 'for the first time that he has
LP·Stanley
failed as a maQager,
"There's no way in the.wor!J that
· "We don't do a.lot of things," I'd walk away from something bad.
Knight said. "But it comes right to · No way,' : Knight said. "But there's
rne. I've got to somebow inspire peo- also no way in the world that I'd stay
ple·to do that. That's what the man: here if I was part of the problem.
.
.
.
.
.
DUESSELDORF, Germany (AP) clay.
- Boris Becker is pulling out of
Becker said he felt the· injury
next week's French Open because of Monday in his first-round defeat to
a-thigli injury.
Marc Rosset of Switzerland at the
"! have a do.uble muscle pull in World Te~m Cup.
Wellston scored four runs in both fence in left-center field .scoring my left thigh. I am \!Cry disappointOn Tuesday, Becker attended the ·
· the fourth inning and fifth inning to King .and Fackler. Cottenll then ed but I am, unfortunately. serious- farewell game of soccer star Rudi
erase a 1-0 deficit and post a 8·6 win ca.~e m to score when t~ throw to ly injured," Becker said today.
Voeller in ne&amp;!'by Leverkusen, where
over Meigs in TVC softball action thn'd rolled mto the Me1gs dugout. · The world's fifth 7raqked player· he was examined by doctors of the
Thesday evening at Meigs High But that was as close as the Maraud- and the Australian Open champion · German national soccer team. ·
. School
·
ers got.
was playing in this week's. World
"They·told me, 'Boris, you can't
MeiBs took an early 1·0 lead on . Well~to_n nailed down the
Team Cup, a ~ann-p for the French play in Paris,"' he said.
two walks and a single by Shannon IItle, fimshtng With a 13·1 Oh10 Divl· Open, the second Grand Slam event
It's the third time since 1992 that
Jenkins.
sion record and a I 4·3 overall mark. of tile year. He was seeded fifth for Becker withdrew from the French
That lead stood until the fourth Meigs finished the season at 8-12 the clay coun tournament.
Open.
inning when Wellston took overall and 5-8 in the TVC.
· Gabriela Sabatini, a six-time
In 1994, he withdrew minutes
Wyatt was the wmmng p1tcher for semifinalist at the French Open, has before his first-round match because
advanatge of five singles, a walk and
a sacrifice Oy to take a 4-1 lead. the Rockets. Parsons led_the wmners withdrawn because of a stomach of a pulled back muscle and a right.)'
Wellslon increased the lead.to 8· I in at the plate w1th three smgles.
muscle problem that had forced her thigh muscle injury forced his to pull
.1'
the fifth by taking advantage of a . _Fackler led Me1g_s at the plate to pull out of the Fed Cup and the out in 1992.
)
'
waik and four more singles.
w1th three smgles. King added two. Italian Open in the .past four weeks. ·
Two semifinal appearances have
STANLEY DELIVERS - Melga pitcher Gary Stllnlly dllllvara • ., ) -~··
Meigs added two runs in the fifth Cotterill chipped in w~th her double. She was seeded eighth.
'·.
pitch
during 1\111 C!AY'I 1\!C 1111...,.11 gama again at w.. l•ton. The
been his best showing at Roland
on a walk and singles by King and Gilkey, Lc;e and Jenkins added sm·
Becker, a three-time Wimbledon Oarros, but the last one was in 1991. conllnuallon ola eottlllt lllrtld two WMka.ago ,..u._. In the Gold1,:
Fackler. Meigs made a game of it in glcs. Cotterill took the loss.
champion, said he was Oying to
. en RocUta tallying • 1-2 viCtory. (Sintlnel pboto by Dave Harrl1)
&lt;~
the seventh when with two outs King · Ipplpr i!lbtll
.,
Munich later in the day to begin his
. \,
walked and Fackler singled. Cynthia Wellston ............000-044-0=8-11-1
therapy.
~~~.~,~ ~~~~~~~
~' ~
Cotterill followed with a~ve to the Meigs ...................OI0-020-3=6-9·3
He said he would take a 10-day
break from .tennis and then start to
~. ~
··~"""&lt;~::C.::::on::::tin:::ued:::.:.:.from~P.::::ag;:;.e.;;.:s&gt;~--~ practice again, hoping to be fit in
time for Queens, a major warm-up
pn innings before beirig removed for
since April 26.
-;
for Wimbiedon that Stars June Hl.'
a pinch hitter. Todd Worrell got three
Atlanta starter Greg Maddux was
.With t.lt.lhne
drhe llld
Except for French Open, Becker
.. •~ •-:
outs for his II th save.
not involved in the decision. He
•
242-lb,
payload
CIPICity.llle
has won all other Grand Slam tourPhillles S, Padra 4
ICIJw II a.,....:Q)4x4 wiU
allowed eight hits and tw9 runs in
naments. He has never won a title on
.,..._:.-,
Pitcher Terry Mulholland nearly
eight innings.
·
ioltac.
11111
.
became the I3th player to homer into
. ~-~~
Dodaerf6, Meta 4
jlalttt
It
.hi
lite
riJ)It dlntcdon. .
the
second
deck
at
San
Diego's
Jack
Mike Piazza and Eric Karros hit .
1'nlll~ 0111 for a
two·hln homers and Ismael Valdes Murphy Sladium, hitting a 407-fooc
._arldetfay. .
won fofthe fifth time in six starts at shot. Mulholland's second career
homer, oft Scan Bergman (2-4), was
Los Angeles.
Berurd Gilkey had all four-RBis just 21 feetshort of dropping into the
loge level.
·•
for New York.
~
Mulholla[ld (4-3), wbo. throws
Karros hit his eighth homer in the
t•
sixth off Pete Harnisch (3-3) to put left-handed ihd bats riJht-handed,
the DOdgers ahead 4-3, and Raul allowed three runs - one earned Mondesi hit his II th llomer two and eisht hits in 6 213 inninp. Ricky _
~
pitches later.
· Bottalico got four straight outs for
Valdes (5-2) allowed four runs- his league-leading I 3th ~save.
three e3f1led -and seven hits in sev· ~

'

Accepts Credit Cards

•

visiting California won game that_
began after a 2-hour, 16-minute rain
delay.
.
Randy Vel&amp;rde drove in three JUnS
for the Angels, whose third win in 14
games lifted them ·past Oakland out
of last place in the AL West.
Shawn · Boskie (5- 1) and two
relievers limited Baltimore to eight
hits. n-oy Percival.finished and is 12:
for-12 in save chances.
'
I
Rick Krivda (1·1) alloWed four
runs and five hits in six"plus innings_.
'IWins 4, Ranccn 3 · . ·
Rich Becker capped a two-run
rally in the ninth with a sacrifice fty.
stopping Minnesota's fO!JI'·gllliiC losing sb'eak and sending the visiting
Rangers to their fourth loss in five
games.
·
With one out in the ninth and
Texas leading 3-2, Scott Stahoviak
doubled otT Mike Henneman (0·2),
pinch-hitter Chip ,Hale walked and
Chuck Knoblauch's RBI double tied
the score. Becker then hit any ball
to left. and Lou Frnier.'s thrOw to the
plate was high.
·
'
Mike MiIchin ( 1-0) pitched the
ninth for liis fir:st major.league vic"
tory.

nm

PRODUCTS

STOll HOURS

•••

Knight says he'll s.tep Royals tame Tigers; Yankees beat A's
a
down if he's keeping By The Auoclatecl Pre11
1;
Reds from winning
relief for his first save.
Linton, who hnd shoulder surgery
in 1987, said he didn 't pitch again
without pain until three years later.
"E¥er since. it seems I pick up a
mile an hour a year on my futball,"
Linton said. 'T m not the hard throw·
er I used to be. I just have 10 realize
that I have good stuff when it's downin the (strike) zone."
_.
Brian Williams (0·3) gave up
three runs and nine hits in six
innings.
In other games, Seattle beat
Boston 13-7, New York beat Oak·
land 7-3, Chicago beat Toronto 2-1,
California beat Baltimore 5-2 and
Minnesota beat Texas 4-3.
Marlnen 13, Red Sox 7
Ken Griffey Jr., became the seventh-youngest player to hit 200
.homers and Jay Buhner homered for
the fifth straight game.
Griffey:1s three-run shot and Bull-. '
ner 's two-run homer carne in a sixrun fourth at Fenway Park that
wiped out Boston's 5·4 lead. Seattle
had 19 hits, four by ,Edgar'Martinez.
Bob Wells (3·1) allowed one run
in 4 113 innings. Vaughn Eshelman

-

-• .

'

c .
'

51

-SAT. 5/25

$ 69

MAX. soc
NOT GOOD ON
SAUitEMS

UMIT 2 PLEASE

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�•

• ••

•

•

.
'
Weclnesdlly, May 22, 1996

Wedulll•t. u.y 22, 1996

•

In the NBA Eastern Conference finals,
Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Bulls notch 93-88. win over Magic
lyRICKGANO

CffiCAGO (AP) ~ Trailing in
lhe second half by 18, the Chicago
Bulls dida't look at all lib lhe super
team that won 72 regular-season
pmes and trounced Orlando in the
opener of the Eastern Conference
• finals.
"We were lost.'' admitted
Michael Jordan.
So the Bulls turned to a full-court
press and sent their double-teaming
defense at Magic center Shaquille
O'Neal.
.
What followejl were bad passes,
turnovers, missed shots and a total
breakdown of Orlando's offense.
Suddenly the Magic's lead went
'poof,' disappearing more quickly
than a Jordan steal, length-of-the·
court dribble and acrobatic, tonguewagging dunk.
Orlando became so discombobulated it managed only 35 second-half
points Tuesday night and the Bulls
pulled out a 93-88 victory that gives
t~em a 2-lllead in the best-of-seven
series.

"Needless to say it was a very dif·
ficult basketball game . for us to
lose," said Orlando coach Brian
Hill, whose team lost by 38 in the
opener.

••

.

"We lost our aggressiveness on
offense. ":Ne began looking to pass
backwards."
.
The Bulls trapped ballhandlers
and doubled 0' Neal, forcing the
huge center to pass. He'd hurt them
with 26 first-half points, mostly in
one-on-one coverage.
"In the ftrSt half, they played with
a lot of rhythm in the way they got
the ball into Shaq," said Jordan. who
had 35 points one day after winning
his fourth MVP Award. "But once
we were able to purthat.press on,
they lost the fluidity. It takes a lot"of
energy to play the press. When we
were down 18 points, we had no
choice."
O'Neal, who had 36 points and 16
rebounds,l!it a shon hook to give the
Magic a 64-46 lead with 6:17 left in
the third quarter.
Then carne the collapse.
Orlando missed II of 12 shots,
had five turnovers and Jordan scored
nine points to spark. a 26-5 Chicago
run. That gave the Bulls a.three-point
lead. Orlando came back and
regt9ned the lead, but never the poise
it had earlier in the game.
''We had a lot of careless
turnovers," O'Neal said. "When I
was doubled, I just had to give up the

F-amily

ball and shots weren't falling.
pme."
"Anytime you have a lead like
Orllado came blck to take ... 81·
that, man, you just got to tnke care 791cad on O'Neal's l•yup with four
of the ball. ... But they (lb.: shots). • minutes left, but the Bulls scored the
will fall at home. No need to panic next nine poiota -IS-foot jumpers
now."
by Jordan and Steve Ken:, two free
Eleven of the Magic's 17 throws by Randy Brawn, a foul shot
turnovers came in the second half.
by .Dennis Rodman llld a layup by
Penny Hardaway, the Magic's Scottie Pippen - for an 88-81
other star, had 38 points in Game I. advantage with 41 secoo&lt;4 left.
Bul he was limited to 18 Tuesday
Jordan wnpped up the win with
night on 6-for-15 shooting an() he four free t~s. sivit\g him 12-formanaged to get off only one fourth·
12 in the second .half and 15 of 16
quarter shot.
·
from the line for·the game.
"I told myself[ picked the wrong
"Any time you allow Michael
day, the biggest game, to not be Jordan to go to !he line 16 times, we
ready to play. And it cost us the vic- . are tiot going to have a chance," Hill
tory," Hardaway said.
said. "Every time he drove to the
Games 3 and 4 are in Orlando on basket, we got called for a foul, even
S.aturday and Monday. The Magic though he initiates the contact."
ltbpe to be bolstered by the return of
Pippen finished with 17 points, 10.
Horace Grant, who missed Tuesday rebounds and nine assists and Den·
night's game with a hyperextended nis Rodman had a· season-high 15 ·
left elbow.
points and 12 rebouncb. Orlando's
"Orlando has to be very disap, Dennis Scott, scoreless in Game I.
pointed," said Bulls coach Phil lack· scored 13. But Nick Andenon, who
son. "They played welt for 2 112 had just tWo points, in · the opener,
quarters. Now they have a chance to continued to suuggle, shooting 3-for·
go home and maybe g~t Horace btlck II an four scoring nine.
·
for Saturday's game. They play very
Once again, Orlal)do's three-point
well ar home. We have to go to shooting wOS:.Off. The Magic made
Orlando and find a way to win a only four of 19 and in the two games
are just nine of 35.
·

Medicine
Jqhn C. Wolf, D.O.
A&lt;sociate Ptoressor
cf F•mily Medicine

-m

(AP)

:Rookies dominate
.
:history's fastest
.Indianapolis 500 field
.

_' ay STEVE HERMAN

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - It's the
scariest moment in auto racing.
The first tum of the firs\ lap on
the flat , narrow 2.5-mile Indianapolis Motor Speedway oval, dangerous
under normal circumstances, may be
downright terrifying this year.
Seventeen drivers who have never taken the green starting flag are in
the lineup. The fastest field in Jndi·
anapolis 500 history will be led in a
140 mph Hying start on Sunday by
a 25-year'oid rookie.
By the time they hit the first turn,
_they'll be ·going 190. Then they'll
start building some serious speed. It
will be tense.
More drivers .have been wiped out
in first-lap crashe~ than have won the
race by leading the opening lap, and
the pressure and responsibility facing Tony Stewart is huge.
"I haven't real!,)' thought about it
too much," said the Rushville, Ind.,
rookie, who inherited the pole position when teammate Scou Brayton
was killed in practice last week, "I
don't know, we'lljust worcy about it
when it comes. I' II try not to think
about it too much."
By Sunday, you can be sure
Stewa11 will have thought about the
start more than a lillie. He' ll have
advice from his veteran teammates,
Eddie Cheever and Danny Ongais.
He'll have warnings from chief
steward· Keith Ward.
And if he wants it, he 'II have a
history Jesson from last year's race,
when six cars tangled in a first-lap
crash that critically injured Stan
. Fox. Or from W92. when polestarter Roberto Guerrero never even
made it to the green flag, crashing on
the parade lap.
Or from the 1988 race, when
Guerrero; !lrayton and Tony Bettenhausen wiped out on the opening lap.
In fact, in the first 79 runnings of
Indy, 36 drivers failed to get through
the first lap of the race. Only 16 first·
lap leaders w~nt on to win the race.
"This isn't the first time I've
started on the pole of {he race. It's
just the 500, so we'll just have to be
careful with it," Stewart said Tuesday. 'Tve run midgets, we started
. three-wide at the Hut Hundred every
year, and I've started on the pole in
.that race. so it's not that difficult.
" But I have a responsibility to
bring these guys down clean, and
hopefully I 'carr bring it down at a
safe enough pace to where it's comfortable for everyone."
The 33-car field, including
Ongais• car that Brayton qua~fied
for the pole at 233.718 mph, aver-

aged a record 227.807 mph, breaking the former record of 2i6.912 set
last year. At the start, the frqnt row
of Stewart, Davy Jones and Eliseo
Salazar will begin jockeying for
position going into the initial turn at
about 190 mph.
''I'm going to give him the advice
to keep his cool," Wl\fd said of his
talk with Stewart. "It'll be his
responsibilit¥ to bring that field
down to the starting line, and all he
has to do is concentrate on doing
'that, keeping the (front) row lined Up
and bringing them down at the proper speed. If that happens and the field
is lined up, then we'll drop the green
11 ag. "
If everyone makes it through,
.
they'll be up to 230 by the end of that
first lap. Then, as the .field begins to
string out, the drivers will be able to
pick their spots to improve their
positions.
Stewart, the first rookie pole ·
starter since Teo Fabi in 1983, actually may be in a better position at the
front of the pack, ahead of the traf·
fic, away from the unsettling -air turbulence.
"I would assume so, I don ' t
know. I mean, I've never been
through one o( these," he said. "I
would assume, from what I've heard,
you either want to be clear up in the
front or clear in the back of it, so I
feel like we're in a good spot."
Cheever, starting his seventh Indy
500, will' be right behind Stewart on
the inside of the second row. Scattered throughout the 33-car field will
be 16 other rookies. Ongais. the old·
est dri.vcr in the lineup ·at 54, will
start 33rd as Brayton's substitute.
Stewart, meanwhile, is looking
for advice.
"S&lt;;ott was the guy that I was
going to talk to about it, because I
kind of relied on him, since he was
going to be on the pole, to help me
get through this deal . But I'm going
to have to go to another source," he
said. ''I'm sure I'll talk to Eddie ...
There's numerous people I can talk
to."
Another rookie, Davey Hamilton,
already has talked to the most expe·
rienced driver in Indy history, four·
time winner A.J. Foyt, his car own·
er. What did Foyt tell him'/
"Caution is the most important
thing," Hamilton said. "You never
know what's going to happen at the
stan when 33 guys come down to
that small !Urn. It has gotten crowd·
ed and it could cause trouble, ·so we
have to be cautious and careful and
not worry about the first 400 miles,
atid then race the last I oil miles."

OSU'S Bosley and Gradney face
theft charges in garage break-in ·
ins at a campus parking garase on
.. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) May
12, acc.ording to a Fran'kliri
Ohio State officials said they would
County
Municipal Court employee
talk with the families of I'VO players
chllflled with breaking into tw? c:u-s who would not giv~ her name.
Both charges-are misdemeanors
before dedding on any dtsctphne
punishable
by six months in jail.
beyond the suspensions thO players
Bosley
allegedly
took a stereo
•already are serving.
· . .
, Jami, Bosley charged wnli · from a 1992 Toyota Pasco and Grad·
'attempted theft and .~u Gradney ney allegedly took an anti-theft
.was charged wtth theft tn lhe-.break· device from a .1993 Pontiac Sunbird.

By HARRY ATKINS

DETROIT (AP) _ Where does
Detroit go from here? What can
Scotty Bowman do to put the onceindomitable Red Wings back togeth·
er again?
The hockey world will soon find
out.
The Red Wings and Colorado will
continue the Western Gonferencc
finals in Denver with the Avalanche
holding a 2-Qlead in the best-of-seven series after a 3-0 triumph Tuesday
night. Garnes 3 and 4, are set for
Thursday and Saturday.
. The Red Wings, seeking their first
Stanley Cup title since 1995, won an
NHL-record 62 games during the
season. They have looked nothing
like that high-flying team in the playoffs, however.
Detroit was not shut out during
the regular season. Yet the Red
Wings .now have been blanked ~n
regulatton m·three of the1r l_ast stx
playoff games: The loss wa.• the
fourth at hlmle m the playoffs for the
Red Wings, who dropped only three
at Joe Louis Arena during the entire
rcgu,,lar, season.
. ,, .
..
It ' a ltttle frust at
D trot
r mg, e '
•
forwar~. Dino Ciccarelli , said.
"We've gouo be able to play a game
the way 'Ve did in the regular season.
We, played a patten! g~me then~ and
we ve gottoagam. We ve gotto wan
for. the opportun~!ies. We can't be
trymg to fo~c~ tt.
.
The preciS ion passmg and opportune scoring that made the Red

Wings the top seed in the league has
disappeared. Age may be cteeping
up on Detroit, especially its defense.
Vtacheslav Feusov recently
turned 38. M1ke Ramsey, 35, who
will retire after these pl~yoffs, ~as
the vtcttm ofMtke Keane s overttme
goal m Game I. Paul Coffey, who
will tum 35 on June I, went out with
back spasms in. the second period
and never returned. His goof contributed greatly to the Game I out.come. .
"There's nothing wrong with our
defense," Bowman said stubbornly.
"I certainly don 't think defense was
the problem tonight. They have
soine of the best forwards in the
· league and we didn't give them a lot
of room. We just didn 't score."
Patrick Roy had a lot to do with
that, since Detroit outshot Colorado
35-20. The veteran goaltender now
has seven playoff shutouts, two this
season. It was his 80th playoff victory, tying him with Ken Dryden for
second place on the NHVs career
list, eight behind Billy Smith .. ·
"Playoffs are playoffs," said Roy,
who was 0-5 against Detroit during
the season. "And that's a lot different than the · regular season. Th1s ·
team has been pointing to the Stanley Cup and they've gotten a really
good ·mix of players to do thaL
We've gc;&gt;t guys who've won it
before and who've been there before,
with a lot of teams."

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POMEROY .. Ruck Springs Bet·
tcr Health Club. I p.m. Thursday.
home of Phyllis Skinner.

THURSDAY
POMEROY .. Meigs County
Library lloard of Trustees. I p.m.
Thursday at the library.

MFIRST OF THE

RACINE .. Red Brush Church.of
Christ, special weekend servJcc:s;;
Saturday, Tp.!n.; Sunday. 10 a.m: and
6 p.m. Denver Hill of Foster. W.•Va.:
speaker.
1-:'.. •

•

· To "harvest" the saphenous '-ei~;
doctors make a 2-inch incision ncar. .
the knee. Through it they insert a wtx:;.
about an inch in diameter and maneuver it atop the vein to serVe a a.t~:
nel for other instruments.
:- .•.
~:
.
·
.- .
A fiber-optic camera and rem~
surgical instruments, linked bY1II~
cable~ to the surgeon's hands,:~ ·
passed through the tunnel so they~
sever the vein from vesse 1s, alho~~.;.i!
si~c and clip those vesse1n u~ :::
•+ Two other, even smaller incisi~ii![
are made at the ankle and grohein·:tlz
doctors can reach the ends oft - .
tion ot vein to be removed. Once}i;c
vein is freed, it is pulled throug~
incision. Then it can be cut :iititi
pieces to replace blocked cor~
.
artenes.
··. •.

--

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~(;,1~1.11:

.Yello
.s weetc
&lt;

CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI, MTN. DEW,

Diet Pepsi or
Pepsi Cola
.24-Pack 12-oz.

TERRE JASPER
Church of Racine. ·
Sou thern Seminary, the oldest of
the six Southern Baptist scmiilaries,
was founded in 1859. R. Albert
Mohler Jr. has served. as the semi·
nary's ninth president since August
1993 .
•

BY MIKE SNIDER
architects usc , golfers can lower their
USA TODAY
scores. " My co urses are tactical and
Golfers can iden tify with Prcsi" · strategic . ... But we want the course·
dent Ei~enhower, who asked · the . to yield to gooU shots."
.
Augusta National Golf Club to move
He encourages golfers to think of
·a tree that plagued his game. Like golf as outdoor chess or pasture
other hackers, Ike learned that he had pool. "It's · not only how you make
.. to live with haza rds.
your .shot. It 's also where you leave
Until now. SimGolf, ·a PC game your hall for the. ncxr s.hot, " he says.
c~ated with noted · golf architect
Jones recalls a recent survey of
Robert Tr,cnt Jones Jr., le.\s 'you tinker business exccuti ves' thl\t found nearwith the course, for example, by ly hal f would trade their jobs to
moving trees and other hazards.
become gulf architects. "SimGolf is
Actually, Jones says, the goal of going 'to let them have their wish
SimGolf is Ill teach golfers how to come true . ... Of course, if they real"read" a golf course.
ly want to get into it, they need a
Like his 1994 hook "Golf by bunch of land and several million
Design,'' SimGolf goes " ituo tile tac- dollars. But then they should come to
tics of the game," he says. "Golf us. " '
'
architecture is like being a goalie. (In·
More PC golf developments:
SimGolf) w~ teach yo~, in effect, ·
- Links, perhaps the nfost P_OPU·
how to try to beat us : ·.~
lar· PC golf ga111c to date, IS getUng a
About 200 video clips of Jones . ·makeover. Best of all , you can play
will be in Simnotf wheri the Win· as Arnold Palmer. Links ts and ·
dows 95 CD-ROM com~s ou! by. fall 1\tnold Palmer at Latrobe Country
(no price set). It will also indudc at Club wi!J be sold together (both COs
lea.~t three PC-playabl~ c~urscs based Tot Windows 95 or DOS. due soon
on real ones d.es[gncihby· Jon~s. for about.$79).
.
Among them:' Rancho ta Quinta, a
In . Latrobe, Arnie 's on-s.c recn
new California course that hosts this ch~rac ter comments after shots;
should he barely miss a putt, Arnie's
year's annuaf·Pt;;A Skins event. .
Plus, the design program lets play- Army lets tlut a loud aaaaaawww.
crs change the existing courses or The game also has a redesigned cundcsigq their ow n'. Any course crC&lt;~I· trol panel, improved graphics and
ed can be played on line . " It l ~ts you . greater realism. ·'Now an IS-inch
design your own course.and play it on putt is not automati c," says Access
the Net. It 's exponential ,'' Jones Software's Allen Brockbank.
says:
.
.
Li!1ks LS also ,Offers a variety of
SimGolf lets Y\lu htt the ~o il ball play 1ncludmg match play, best ball ,,
differentl y than other PC golf games. .and .ski ns, a betting game whcfl! playYou click ahd t~en slide the mouse ers t(y to win Loles 9utright instead •
forward to affect the shot's directioll of post the lpwcsr' JS&gt;holc score ..
and length.
.. ~ Just in stores: Greg Norman .
"It offers a greater ~c n se of Ullimate Challenge Golf (Grolicr.
·immersion, pl~ s it takes mor~ skill," Wi~dows, $49.95), which lets you
says Andy Larson of Maxis, the com- play ' skins and match play nn the
pan y designing ~imGol f and the Medalist Golf Club, Norma~\ I' Iuri•
mak"" of SimCity:
da home course, or a runtasy course
The world· renowned rour~e called the Links Ill Oursct Cliffs. ·
designer calls Oulf hy Design and · ~ EA Sport~ just released a Links
SimGolf' '·my ~ifts o hack to the at Spanish Bay ;Kid-on l!llur!c for its
game." By studying the mct~od~ g1&gt;lf ,PGA Tour 9(&gt; PC gmn.c

.

~

TASTY SWEET

MJOOLEPORT
Ohio Valley
Cnmmandry, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday,
at Mi&lt;!dlepun Masnni' Temple.

POMEROY .. Blll'lingham MOO:'
ern Woodmen hall. annual Mcmori;
al Day smorgasbord, ann¥al rriatdi;
ing fund dinner, scrviDK II a.m. to 6
p.m., eat in or carry out for a .donation. Also bake sale. Funds raised
with matching home offiCe amount to
go to Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Sauters for·
medical, surgical and rehab bills.

cans

A new course for computer golf .

SWEET VIDALIA .
TEXAS 1015 ONION ·

•
vices, Ash StlllCt Freewill Baptist
Chur,h. Middleport. through Satur·
day. 7:30 p.m. eoch evening. The
·Rev. Calvin Minis. 'peukcr.

...

Terre A. Jaspe r, daughter of
Robert. and Catherine· Wood of Long
Bottom, . nqw residing in Danville,
Ky. , recci ved the master oJ divinity
degree from The Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary in Louisville,
Mav 17. at its I77th commencement. ·
iasper was one of approximately
184 graduates to rece ive degrees .
from the semi nary. Morris H. Chapman, president and chief executive
officer of the Southern Baptist Convention's Executive Committee, was
cdm111encement speaker.
She is married to Kevin Jasper.
Her ho'me church is ·.First Baptist

POMEROY, OHIO

OR

cusc Church nf the Nazarene,
Wednesday through Sunday. 7 p.m.
nightly to Sunday, then~ p.m. Spe·
cial singing. Rev. Paul Womack
evangelist.

.Jasper
earns
.. ·-·
masters

MEIGS FARM MARKET

ATLANTA (AP)- After removing a cancerous lymph node from
Brett Buder's neck, his surgeon says
the Dodgers outfielder could be
back in uniform nexl year if he
recovers as expected.
"I couldn't speak for Brett; you'd
have to ask him. But medically, sure,
he could g~ back," Dr. William Grist
· said Tuesday after the three-hour
. operation at Emory University Hos·
pi tal.
Grist said at a news conference
that the lymph node was enlarged to
the size of a man's thumb. Other
lymph nodes froff! the right side of
Butler's n·eck and the remaining tissue at the base of his right tonsil,
which was removed earlier, were
also removed:
Grist said he believes all the cancerous tissue was removed.
. "He'll progress just like we
planned. He'll begin swallowing as
soon as his pain permits," said 'Grist,
who predicted Butler would leave
the hospital in about five days
In two to three weeks, Butler is to
begin radiation treatments.
The doctor said 70 percent of
patients with cancer similar to But·
ler's recover.fully.
"Head-neck cancerdoesn't' gen·
erally spread beyondlhe primary site
and regional lymph nodes," he said.
"This cancer was caught early and
has been treated very aggressively."
A malignant tumor was discov·
ered and removed when Butler, 38,
underwent a tonsillectomy May 3 at
a hosj!ital near his home in Duluth,
northeast of Atlanta. Tuesday's
surgery was to remove any remain,
· i~g cancer.
Butler told the Los Angeles Times
in an interview published Tuesday
that he hopes 10 return to the
Dodgers before the end of the sea·
son, "even if it's strictly far moral
support."
....

. The same thing happened to the ;boost and ittoo'k\thecrowd outofthe
Red Wings 'last season. They had the game,.. Avalanche coach Mare
NHL's best record then, too, only to ·Crawford said. "In the playoffs;
.str~ggl_e in the playoffs. Detroit was you have 10 play physical hockey
swept 10 the C!Jp finals by the New and that's even more true against the
Jersey Devils.
.
Red Wings. With all the offensive ; ·
. Thts year, the Red Wmgs need~d talent th~y have, you're dead if you
stx games to get past Winnipeg in the give,thcm. any room at all."
,,,
first round. They needed a goal in
Opponents all around !he NHL' • -~
double overtime by Steve Yzerman seem to know this. They realize that
to eliminate St. Louis in Game 7 of penalties aren't called :as closely in
the second round.
.
, the playoffs. As a result, the Red
So it's not just Roy. even though Wings 'regularly struggle during the
he has been superb.
.
postseason.
"Oh, no' It goes back lO Win·
The Red Wings sustained ·stunnipeg and (Nikolai) Khabibulin," · ning first-round upsets at the hands
Ciccarelli said. "We went through it of Toronto in 1993 a.~d San Jose,in .
with Jon. Casey and St. Louis, too. 1994. Then carne the sweep in the .
It's playoff hockey, anp goalies 1995 finals. Is there more heartbreak ·
always play a bigger role in the play- ahead?
offs."
·
·
"Every game is a Game 7 right
Joe Sakic, the leading scorer in now," forward Martin'Lapointe said.
the playoffs, Warren Rychel and " We 're facing a bit of adver.tity
Sand is Ozolinsh scored for the high- now."
scoring Avalanche, who had 326
Yzerman, who didn't play after
goals during the season, one more the second perioo in Detroit's 3-2
than Detroit.
overtime Joss in Sund~iy's Game 1.
The two wins at Joe Louis Arena was scratched just before the game.
have branded Colorado, the No. 2 The team captain, whose injury is
seed, as the team to beat. The pani- listed as a groin pull, appeared to be
D ·
san etron fan s seemed to know it · uncomfortable shooting during
too. Not one octopus was thrown 0 ~ warmups. ·
·
the ice until late in the game Then
"Blaming the Joss of Stevie is just
a couple were hurled mostly .out of looking for excuses," Ciccarelli said.
anger and frustration, something the " We've got enough oth~r guys to
. Red Wings know all about.
score."
" I think the key was to get the
None of them could Tuesday
first goal, because it gave us a big night.
·
- -,.. · ·-· ~-

MEMORIAL DAY HOLIDAY SALE

Doctor says
Butler.'s
surgery
successful

The Community Clllendar is
ptlltlilhtd u • rree senke to non·
,..,at 1rool!is wltthina to 811-nee
IDtdlt~~ ltDd speclill eWDU. The
cllmdarluotd Ja•"iitop..-e
..aei·or runcl'ntllcn ol any ly~.
lkmlare prlnte4 u IIP'I"t permits
Ud C8IU10t be p....,.leed to nn a
spec:ll'« nulnller of days.
·
WEDNESDAY
. MIDDLEPORT .. Ohio Valley
Comrnandry, 7:30 p.m Wednesday,
Middleport Masonic Temple.

cal~ndar--.:.,....
_ .;....;....;;;.~~~
· ;
•..
MIODLEP()RT .. Revival ser- SATURDAY
•

'Videoscopic' procedure reduces pain after heart surge~~

Avalanche hand Red Win·g s 3-0 defeat

FINDS SEAM - Chicago's Mlchaal Jordan (23) finds a
In
tha Orlanda detenaa as Shaqullle O'Neal (far left), Brian Shaw and
Dennis Scott W!llch his layup In the fourth quarter of Tuesday'a NBA
. Eastern CO!lflrlnce championship aeries game In Chicago, where
the Buill' 93-88 win gavalham a 2-o lead In the best-of-aaven sarles.

_____......___ c ·ommunity

MIDDLEPORT .. Meigs County
Qitestion: My daughter-in-law has hody tissues to be higher than n0\1llal.
Churches of Christ Women's Fel·
just been diagnosed with Wilson's The body tries to compensate ,by
lowship, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Braddisease. Can you tell us the 1:1test in~reasing the amount of copper in
ford Church of Christ.
SYRACUSE .. Revival; Syra;
information on '!his disease. How the urine. but the kidneys simply can't
" long can she expect to live with treat. remove enough to make up for the
ment of her condition ?
decrease9 elimination through the
Answer: The goOd news is that · bowels.
with proper treatment. begun in time,
In people with Wilson's disease,
.
your daughter-in-law·should not have the body's copper levels usu,.Uy rise By PATRICK HOWINGTON
dure, using a tiny can!cra In help tun- the inside nf the leg.
The
Louisville
Courier-Journal
her life shortened by Wilson's dis- slowly over a period of years. By age ,
. Spence and Dr. Laman A. Gray Jr.
. ncl into the leg .to snip and repair
For niany of the 300,000 Ameri- blond vessels.
did the lirst cases ;11Jewish. The tech·
ease. It is, however, a complicated 15 most individunls with Wilson's
disease, and I need to explain to you disease start showing si·gq~ of liver or cans who undergo heart-bypass
The procedure requires only three nique has been used .on at least II
in more detail the nature of the dis- central nervous system disorders. surgery each year, the·worst pain is small incisions - at the ankle. knee patients at two hospitals so far.
order.
Occasi9nally, however, the symptoms in the leg, from which surgeons strip and groin.
Kenny &amp;ydenstricker, 64, of Hunt·
Wilson's disease is an uncommon, of excess ~opper may not develop ·; a vein to replace diseased coronary
In addition to greatly reducing leg ingtort, W.Va., the ,fifth patient on
inherited disorde~ affecting about until age 40 or older. The first symJ&gt;- --arteries.
.. pain, eliminating the long incision whom the new technique was use.d;
That's because "you don 't walk should reduce the number of infec - was walking three days after h~ .
one out of every million people. A toms often include signs Of liver
gene on chromosome 13 • responsi- involvement fatigue;.jaundic,:.livet on your chest - you walk on your tions in bypass'patients. said Spence. March 12 quadruple bypass. His leg
ble for making proteins necdsary to enlargement, and bleec:jing disorders. legs," said Dr. Paul A. Spence, a Uni· who worked with a manufacturer for was still slightly bruised· aloQg the
prop~rly use the element copper -is Nervous system damage can res~lt in vcrsity of Louisville heart surgeon. about.. three years on equipment for path the surgical tools had taken.
defe,tive in people with this condi· trenibrs. difliculty speaking, trouble And surgeons usually slice the leg the surgery.
"Thebes~ thing was, 1 could only
tion. Fortunately, you must inherit a · walking, dumpiness and personality Oj1en from groin to ankle· to get the
The equipment, made bY Johnson feera little soreness in the .heel ," lte .
defective gtnc from both your moth· changes. A "tell tale" sign of Wilson's replacement vein.
&amp; Johnson's Ethicon Endo-Surgery said. In .fact, he felt so good ~· couple
eiand father to have Wilson's disease. disease is deposits of copper in the
But now Jewish Hospital in lnc .. was approved by the U.S. Food of · days • after his surgery · that he
This is what docturs call a "recessive eye thai form an abn;,rmality called Louisville, Ky. , is pioneering a pro- and · Drug Administration for testing skipped t-,vo straig~t doses of his pain
trait." In Wi Ison's
' a Kayser-Fleischer ring. This is s~e n cedure to make it easier for bypass at Jewish Hospital and a few others. medication.
disease, the bodr's copper levels as a crescent of dark copper pigmen- patients to get back on their feet.
He had expected much worse leg
It is si milar to equipment for other
become too high, which then results tat ion at the edge of the cornea.
Recently, the hospital became the minimally invasive operations. but is ·pain because hi s brother-i~- 1 aw had
in · the . malfunctioning of several ·
1
lirst in the nati on to remove the vein designed specifically for removing a bypass years ago and " his leg was
organ systems.
·
Without trealment the damage through' a new "videoscopic" proce-. the saphenous vein, which runs along pretty well cutup."
There are small amounts of cop- caused hy excess copper levels of
per in many of.the foods we cat, and Wilson's disease ultimalely becomes
this is fof\unate since our bodies need fatal, usually from liver failure . For·
a little of this mineral 10 functron tunately though, this consequence
properly. Most ,cxccss cupper is elim- need nm occur. Treatment with p~ni­
inatcd from your body in bowel ctllamme can be qunc effecuve.
movemertts. with a small amount Penicillamine is a medication t~at
being r&lt;!moved through u.rination. attaches t.o copper and then carries it
Bowel movement elimination 1s from the body in llowel movements.
achieved by the li ver's abi lity to When the mcdicati~n is started 6efore
increase . copper concentrati ons in seqous damage has occurred to the
bile, which is released into the diges- hver or nervous system, a near DO&lt;'"
tivc tract to help digest foQd. Diges- mal life expectancy can be anticipattivc waste· including the copper-con- ed.
.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly.
taining bile .. is then eliminated from
the body during. bowel mqvemehts. cplumn. Tosu~mitque~lion~, wri~e
In Wilson's disease, the amount of to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohto Unt·
. copper eliminated in bile is marked- versity College of Osteopathic
ly reduced. This, then , causes the ).:,.. Medicine, Grosvenor H11ll, Athens,
el of copper in the blood and 'other Ohio 45701.
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In the NHL Western Conference finals,
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The Dally Sentinel• P"itelt'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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BOneless

Pork ChOPS
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Prl&lt;fn(J '

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U.S.O.A. SEI.ECT

FAMl Y PM:K I~BS. OR MOI!f/

. 'Armour
canned Ham
3-Lb.Can

"FIIIST OF THE SEASON"

·R ibeye

Texas Jumbo
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steaks

Each

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SElECTED VARIETIES

Bush's
Baked Bean

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Peruvi·ans 'face to face

Wednesday, May 22, 1998

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boDes llld lis-. of IIICical people, took ..". les ol
USA TODAY
bc.c Uld b1ir ud ~issue from the mummy's skin, least
WASHDIG'ION - 'l1le b ...._ofPcna, a put.- -s muscle. JoseAalc.io Chavez, dee olacJ DioiY
cent IKu lid SKrificed to lhc aodJ ~ yea •o, ..,. llllhc Clllbntic Univcnily in An:quipa. l'ml. plllltled 10
unveileci'IUnday for lhc lint time llllhc Nlllional Gco- usc DNA ITom lhe Alllples 10 1rKe lhe mpiiS of 1be
gnpbie belldq.ws.
lncans ud to fiDel Juanita'siiiOdem ldalivea.
Aod lhc mystay surTOUIIdina bow lbe died, which
BUI Mceanby said 11011e of lhe cells I'XII!Iint4 so far
bas blffled ~~~:ie~~lists aince bet' diKovay last Sepember, c:onllin a nucleus. whicb boldl DNA. Thai means Juanihas beea solved.
ta did not freeze foe several days, givina bet' cells and
ThelceMaiden,consida'edlheBIOStreiJllfkablypre- DNA time to begin de&lt;:omposina ..Nol all of the tissue
served mummy in lhe Weslenl Hanispbete. arrived in has been eumined but McCathy is nol hopeful uy
lhe United Stat~:~ last week and -..ill be 011 display heR DNA ,..;n be recoveml.
.
Ftslunan estimated Juanita wu about 4 feet 10 inch•unliiJune 19.
She has Ions brown heir. muscula' arms, slendcr lin- es tall. normal for bet' aae. CT imaaes show bone plates
gen and lone nails. One hind clutches u alpaca atsu. a ~ ·between her joints were still in poWih srages rypical of
wrap-around dress. And unlike
a preaifolescent She was well
Egyptian IJlUJIIIIIia, which were
-,. " - ' - rror.hlped mounfllln nourished and in good health. ,
treated and w•ipped.lhe Ice Maid- godl; , . , Norrn«J thMr ~ "She has lbe best set of teeth
en was mummified llllwally by dren'l hNd81n,. lhape of,.local I've seen in a long time," said
fieezjng lempmiUla, said uchae- mounr.ln pMb. TINJy ptfiCtlc.d F~.
ologist Johan Reinhard of lbe F~eld 11uman IIC~ 10 app 1 FFI .... godtl . For the last 500 yean, the
Museum of Natural 'His!ory, w11o "'-¥ fllouiJht ••lfiPI41d ltWm wifh peak of Nevado Ampato was
Chi~o. who found her.
lftllr ftll' tiJIIf lfl:'ls&gt;c 1 lllld fleldl.
covm:d by ice and snow. But
The maiden's ccrcmonial dress .
•
it begu thawin,g several yean
ago after a volcano on nearby
· and textiles are considered lhe
most signirJCIIIt ever. found for undetslanding the lnc.IIIS NevadO Sabancaya eNpled. As a result of the thaw. the
mode of draa, llid Wdliam Conklin. a pre-Columbian ridge where Juuira was buried bepn to collapse and
textile expert at the National GAllery of An. ·
. she came tumbling out onto the steep slope.
In a private ceremony Tuesday, PeNvian President
Her face, expoSed to tun, was dried out 111hen ReinAlberto Fujimori and fust lady Hillary Rildham Clinton hard .and fellow climber Miguel Zarale discovered her.
were the first officially to view the maiden in her cus- She was surrounded by burial artifacts that had sj&gt;illed

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tom-builtrefrigerateddisplaycase.
.fheroutergannentswastominthefall.
Jesu~'
"We now stand face to faee 'with il visitor from our outwhenoneo
Reinhard has
climbed more thrn 100 Peruvian pe&amp;b
mys'tical past;" Fujimori said. ·
.
but never before found a muinmy, "I bad no expeetation ·
In I SOO A.D. the Incan Empire extended 2,5()() miles of finding anything at all. I was there for the view," said 'By LORI SHARN
GanaNaldes, who also is workMembers of the team reported
from Colombia to central Chile. It was one of the most ·Reinhard, who wanted to wau:h the erupting volcano USA TODAY
ing
with British· and German scientheir research on the shroud, believed
advanced civilizations of lbe Western Hemisphere . 1,000 feet below.
· A new analysis of the Sbroud .o f by some to be the burial cloth of tists. says the woappings of the niumbefore it was destroyed and looted by Spanish invaders
As they were climbing, Zarale was first to notice a Turin indicates the cloth is many cen- Jesus, at a meeting Tuesday of the my of an ibis. an Egyptian bird, testin 1532.
tiny, perfectly preserved reddiSh feather peeking out turies older •than previous stulijes American Society of Microbiology in ed 550 years younger 1han material
The lnciiiS worshiped mountain gods; they eve11 "from the ash·covered slope. They both knew immediate- have concluded, placing it closer' lb New Orleans.
from the bones.
'
deformed their children's ~~Cads in !he shape of theJocal' ~ ly it belonged to lbe ceremonial ~or' a doll. It the time of Jesus' death, researcher$.
"Tbe radiocarbon dating of
'
. . say whether .,tht'"''"'~
mountain peaks. They1~L. human sacrifice , .to · wils buried with Juanira.and is on cji,splay with her frozen say.
,
ancient textiles is not reliable," says
But he cannot
,...•: ';
·appc•se the Jods who they tholapn supplied them ,with body.
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A film of microbes and fungi on Leoncio Garza-Valdes, a professor of shroud dates fulm the I st centu'r For _ .. :
f~ villages and field~.
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With only two hours ofsunli&amp;l!t,left, Reinhard Cl~Jried the li~en threadS" skewed earlier microbiology. !~W~ lia~ fouqd these t11!!1. te~earchers must develop a tech• ';,"t 'I
· !• .. "' The maiden, IIIJIIed Juanita by the"l'eruvian people; · the SO-pound body .down the mountain where Juanita r&amp;diocarbon dating, says a team from
types of coatings from every single nlque for·separating the film from the
·
was found SeJ1L 8, 1995•. expPSed on a steep sloP': at lh_e wo_uld even.tilally find .~ new borne at Catholic Universi- the University of Tex~ Science wrapping that we have studied from fiber.
20,700-foot-hiJh sunumt of NevadO Ampalo. m tht · ty m Arequ1pa.
. ·
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Health Center at San Antonio
ancient mummies1• -·
.
Andes.
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. A group o( Peruvian archaeologists and politicians .
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Roughly ~ ye.n ago, Incan priests brought Juani- , had criticized efforts to.bring Juanita to the United States
.' '
ta. wbo wu 12 to 14 yean old, to a ceremonial platfonn for tile visit. The. group had said the ·mummy, which
at the saCred Sl!JIImjt. Ampalo may have been their most must' be kept frozen io prevent detenoration, might be
·58CJCd site. N9 mummy bas ever been found so close to damaged during shipment. B'ut Luis Carpio Ascuna, who
Cu:u:o, the heart of the Incan ~re. Reinhard s~id1 . is _in charge of the mummy at the Catholic llniversity•.. ·
• Just before her death she was probably drugged with and President Fujimori. agreed to the visit.
' .
a narcotic to induce a deep sleep, then placed in a kneelThe National Geographic Society anjl the Mountain
ing .position on the platfonn. Since she had no visible · Institute, headquartered in Franklin, W.Va., supported
injuries, Reinhard 'and team members first believed the project.
Juanita was left 10 freeze on the mountain lop. ~e
The Canier Corp•• Syracuse, N.Y.. cusloni-built the
repo!'IS the discovery in the June National Geographic. refrigerated display CalC to keep the mummy frozen. An
but ~~.tlbe
of publication nolbing was known abou! . identical case is at the university for when Juanita
'
the maiden's death.
returns.
"The girl shows no sign of a violent death," he
Fujimori said Juanita has .captured the hearts and
. writes •. "either bY strugulation or a blow to the head as imaginations of the Peruvian people.
was sometimes the1case with lncan hu'!'an sacrifice." '
She has foreycr captured Reinhard as well. Musing
'
· But CT (computed tomograp!ly) scans taken last ov~r her last days, lie said the !~can pilgrimage to the
week at Johns Hopkins Hospital show she was killed by jummit was probably restive with a procession of
a hard blow to the head with a blunt club. Radiologist ·. ptiests. helpers, llamas and villagers. By the time Julll!iElliot Fislunu Tuesday displayed for the firit time CT ·ra made it to the' peak, exposed to the extremely thin air.
skull images that show· a lqe fracture in the temple she was surely weak and fatigued.
·
regi()n. ·The brain was pushed dramatically ~o one side
"~ can only suppose what the girl's last moments
due to a hemorrhage caused by the blow. She. would were like," he said. "She may have felt honored to be
have died within hours.
,
sacrificed, imagining perhaps that ~be ·was entering a
cr scans make Ji:-n~y images of c(I)Ss-secti~.s or tlie gforious afterlife with the gods in.a palace in a moun. body. More than 650 slices of the mYmmy were made tain."
and turned into· three-dimensional computer images.
Juanita probably never imilgiJled that she would
Edward McCarthy, a Johns Hopkins expen on the become an ambassador of an ancient civilization.
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Sentinel Classified•

to aRevi
·nowntown.

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992·2156
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1993FORD .
THUNDERBIRD Ll ·

. 25,600 miles on this
Air cOnd., AMIFM stereo,
automatic trans., rear
defogger, poWer tacks.

Power windows, power
locks, _pOwer Iseat, lilt,
cruise, o_verdrive.
Check It out!

one.

LAKIN BISSEU

·First birthday
celebrated
Lakin Elizabeth BiS$Cll, daughter

$8995

Onlr$f995

1990GMc
SAFARI VAil

1992 TOYOTA
COROLLA. Dl 4 DR.

fo,:J,t~althy CQITifl1Un.ities, 6ecause an attractive and prospei'QUS
t

of Royc;e ai!d S*Y l\issell, Pomeroy,
recently celebrated b:r first birthday
wilh a Cinderella themed pany at the.·
·. Automatic, air, AMIFM
Glaval Conversion, tilt,
home of her maternal grandparents,
stereo, rear defogger,
cruise, power locks, power .
Edward and Charlotte Coon of New
windows, 4 captain seating,
clean inside and out. .
Haven. W.Va.
sofa bed, low miles. Sharp.
SALE PRICED
•Attending in addition to her pat~ end maternal grandparents w~
Brittany Bissell; Craig, Trac.y. ud .
Ashley Coon. paternal grandpare"ts,
DouJ and Carolyn Bissell; Mj!(e,
.
'
Allgi~. and Christopher Bissell; Brent
and Michele Bissell; nm Bissell,
AutO., air. - , ,
,
Mill. Bissell. Jodi and DarciAnn Bissell; 'Becky. Abby, and.Aiyss,a Fetty;
Susa11 Hoffman_; J~nni(er and Mary \·
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~uiPj)849ne~er. ·
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Carolyn"Wiley. ' · : •
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Selldint gifti were; pi-grand·~
DR~~ ~~.~.Cill
mOther Sara Coon. great-grandmolbit out, only 17,000 miles.
cr Sylvia Curtis. Brien Bissell, Kristin
Acree, and Keith and Allie Reynolds.

$8495 '·

$7950

-oflnllldings. .

·1990 PONTIAC 6000 U •••••••••~.Sale $5495
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Gallipolis .
(614) 446-0902
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Middleport
(614) 992-6661

Pomeroy

(614) 992-2133

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Rutland '
(614) 742-2868

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All •1111• Reg. $6.50 lOW $5
All ...........
Reg. $5,75 &amp; $6.75

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Open Dlllty t-5, Sun_ 1M .

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·WE£COM'E !J{O:M'E .9L£/UM9{l!
!Ja~rs tJJank Is !J{aving Yl!!?§union

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Stop In On ![ritfag, :Mag 24tfi
.from 11:00 YLM. 'llntif5:00P.M.
·!for Ca~, · Puncli ani Coffee.

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Cutting salt may not help lower blood pres$ure

occurrence.

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The solution is to stir v~getable oil
NA~CY NASH-CUMMINGS
into the "fuined" chocolate at a ratio
DEAR ANNE AND NAN : At of about I tablespoon or oil to 6
Christmas time, I make sofne of my . oqnces of. chocolate.' Bingo!
.
own candy that has to be coated with
PEAR ANNE AND NAN; Splatchocolate. My problem is that after a ters ~ splatters everywhere in the
few days, white spots show up .on the kitchen! My washable.- vinyl-coated
candy and'get larger as time goes on, wallpaper cleans up nicely except for
P....oy
Tuppers Plains
till the chocolate is almosl entirely oil/grease mistakes. I've discreetly
white. It doesn't seem to affect the tried kitchen-type cllilnsers to no day, and we produce A i.OT of fuzz
taste, just the looks. r ve never seen . avail. The paper is· only 5 years old, (lint). We would love tp be able to
this on chocolate that's ~ought in a ·and I certainly won't replace it. -- recycle it ·somehow,instead of throwstore. Can you find out why mine MRS . LEDLIE GUTZEIT, Ell!um, ing itaway.''
·
'-''
gets white spots? '--.. VERNA 111.
We put bits of our fuzz (ot lint) out
QISHAW, Sagola. Mich .
,
DEAR MRS. GUTZEIT: A couple in the spring for birds to use in nestDEAR VERNA : Those wh1te of things you can try: Murphy's Oil building and also use it to make fire
1
spots are called "bloom," which is Soap (full sti'Cngth) or any waterless starter.. We put some lint into each , . - - - - . . . . - - : : - - - - , - - - - - - - - . . . , - - - - - - - - - , - . . - - - - : - - - ; . ; _
caused when cocoa butter --.added to hand cleaner such as GOOP (read the compartment of paper egg cartons.
give commercially produced choi:o- label to make sure it is the waterless We then moisten the lint with m•tt::-"1 -:J~~~No~d;:==l
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
1ate its srr10o1h lexture -· ri,ses to the hand cleimer and not the adhesive. ed 'paraffin and let the whole mess _
ce
remover) or a product called Goof- harden. When 'we light a fire in our
NOncE OF SALE
A. ~.1181.• defendant•, June 1M, at 10:00 a.m., the
surface.
PlfCII No. 2: The
. The chocolate u~ed ~Y .con fee- Off. which is terrific for remciving fireplace or woodstove, we ~ a coiJay virtue 01 en Onl" of upon • cludgment llleretn following Iandi end following rill e1tat1
pie of "egg compartments" io get the II II IIIUH Out 01 Ihi rendeNd, llllng CeH No. l!!'•,m•nll. A complelll altuotod In Olive TOM!elllp,
!loners usually comams s1gmficantly caked-on grease and oil.
Common Pt.ee Court .of 11-CV-0111 In eetd Court, t _,e dnCrlptlon ollhl llolge County, Ohio, In
. less cocoa butter per volume ~f
Test it first in an inconspicuous fires started.
111e1p Couna, OhiO, In the will offer lor .... at the fran! 111111 II 11 loltow.:
Section
3e, Town 4, Ringo
. chocolate, so the problem does~ t place to make sure itdoesn 't damage
Dear readers. ple115e send us, Rul'lll loonomiO a doOr
~ourtholin In
P1rc1t No. 1: The 11: Blgtnnlng 1aat 1181.75
arise. To prev~nt ''bloom," stoi'C your wallpaper's vinyl finish. (All Cltris and Jack some of your id~. comiRunlty Dewlopmelll ' - " • llelg• County, fOllowing d11crtb1d •••I f..t along tho cent1r of
your candces, t1ghtly wrapped. m a, · these produciS should be available in (Clothes m.ade out of lint? Well, why ...-flee., plalnllll ,._ Ruth Ohio, on the 30th d1y of lllall botng In hallan No. Slllto Route No. 11110, 1110
3e, Ollv1 TDWnehlp, lltl(ll north 414.1 .... and north I
cool pl,ace.
your local hardware store.)
not7)
County, Ohio, ciiiCrlllld 11 dtg,..l ,..Ill 100 fMI .......
Incidentally, while we were . STUMPED: ·Chris ahd Jack
Write to "Ask Anne &amp;. Nan" at
follow.: Beginning 1111
centar of lila Tow11ohlp
re~arching your question we came . Mallin of 'Bristol, Tenn., write; "~ P.O. Bolt 240. Harrland, VT 05048.
5111.75 IMt 1101111 the Clnllr Roecl lrom the eoulhwe1t
up?il a hint. that we KNOW we are couple of years ago a lady some- Questions · of .aeneral in1eres1 will .
01 Still Route No. 110, 1110 comer ol Secllon 3e; 1111nc1
gomg to fmd •helpful as we are where .in Virginia had a news.story in appear io the column. Due to lhe volalways forgetung our choco1ate wh1le the local paper about making clothes ume of mail,.personal replies cannot
from t.,. eouthwalt corner rold; thane• •oulh 14
t:ne.lting it on thc.stove. ln the past we.. out of dryer fuzz: I have lost the art;- ~provided .
01 Soetlon No. 3e; thlnCI dtgrotl Wilt t•l IHt to
have added a b1t of water to try to cle and was wondering if anyooe else
north I dlgraao ,.. •• too the 111t nne of the School
. Anne B. Adams an&lt;! Nancy
"save" it, thus causing the chocolate collected dryer fuzz to use in any- Nash-Cummings are co-authon of
'"'roadalontgh the conltrutohholcll4 Lql; lllenco toulll 80.5 leal
; 1nca eo
along tho uld School Lot;
to clump and harden (and get tiJr&lt;lwn thing. We· have an· auto-detailing "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" (WhetstQne) 81\(1
dlll'"l ,..el117.tflll to thene• north 14 degrao1
out).
shop and wash and dry towels every "Dear Anne and Nan:
tho - t line tho School ·lilt zoe.• '"' to the plica
~"'::'.::rt:n!":l.':: :,.~Inning, COnlll..,_ :n
lehool Lilt;"'- north 14
Exelpt al llgel ·rlghta of
••at
1te.5
flit
to
wey.
Deed R•fartnca•:
found little relati(\llship between sail
By TIM FR.IEND
~ho..!1 t.~ot .O..f beginning, Being p110DI No. 2 o1 -1
and hy~en~ion in people under ar'
OOIJ&lt;&amp; ncng ,..., 111at1 IIIICI'IIIItl In 'lol_,.
USA TODAY .·
lxOijll ell llgal rlghl of
zt7, 1nc1 'lo'45
.
The
link
was
pier
bu!
sull
Most pc:ople shouldn't v.:orry
wlaya. Th•
abavo
751 oflhe .......
small
in
older
people,
espeei~ly
about cutting satt from their.dicts. a
obese indivlctbats with hypertension.
diMrlpllon
filmllhod
~
llr
Ho•er --Hyaall,
R.l~ ll=:x.~~R
ru
lear-.
new study concludes.
c.rtllloa
k
1274.
DIM
'
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VALUI:
"We feel pcoJile can problbly S1!JP
The findings conflict with U.S.
won:yin•
about salt,'' said Alexindir
" ' ' - - ' ·!foluJM 117,
guidelines that since the '80s have
. . . . . . . allll VOiuliie-.
Logan
of
the
l:laivonll)'
of'lllrOIIto
in
urged restricting salt to help lower
, ... •'111, llelg1 Countr
Wednelllay'aJoumal oflbe American
Deldlluu•.
blood pressure.
,
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Scientists, analyzing 56 studies, Medical ~ss~iation.

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oc:cuneace. All binhdlye tpllll be
subinltted Within 42 day• · ol *I

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For Sale: The
undivided Interest
in.the John &amp; Pearl
Proffitt esta~e,
send to:
Daily Sentinel,
PO Box 729-24,
Pomeroy, Oh 45769.

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of the poppy
11 Iva Powell, pictured with
Marge Flltty ·and Mary Martln,llfl, looking on 11
Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan elgna a procla·

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992-2136

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lis Dlily ltribune ani! The Daily

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Today

G~po-

Sentinel will not accejM woddinp
after 60 dayt frolll1be dlle of the

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Auxllllry membeR will be
on the
Friday and
s.turclay, olflilng poppJ11 11 a ·
to 1111ldentl of 1M ~~erlflce1 of vllterlna. Chairman

221 wat

• j •

.. NeW~:·cP91.,CY
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to ,..; elfort m#ide OUf l'efder· .
ship widl
news, the
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criteria.
•Tiltsprogram excludes /oan,f /of purchase

1993 ·F.ORD ESCORT Ll 4 DR••••••••••• $7995

991 OLDS CUTWS 4
Check

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Sellcl qu ""'"'to Aim I den, • :•.;'
Cm~ton Syadlcate, 5717 W. C.. ·•
lury Blvd., Suite '7G8, Loa Ani ha, ,. , .;,
Calif. 90045
· ,.,;:
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By ANNE B. ADAMS and

Peoples Bank believes that vital downtowns make
downrown can help to create jobs and retain lhem, not to mention provide apleasant
placl! for folkS to get t9gelher and enjoy themselves. That's why we've allocated
U million ln.awiJable loans for downtown tevJtalizati&lt;in projects. The loan may be
· used forh!asehold imprOvementS; fixtures; equipmmt, landscaping or odier structw:ai
and.beautification projects. • In addition to our own revlJalizalion pro~, we·alSO
'
support a number of federal and state ·
p~ch as SBA,LOWDOC,
Unked oeposit, th¢ tli6 PJogram and ·
others. If you've got ideas for dowotown
improvements, we may be able to help
you along the way. Stop In and see us.
All loans are subject to standard credit

the poiiJIIISI«. - Joe lhe &amp;-Mml- • ..._.
man in Miuillippi
' ';'
Dear Joe ; Seven! pottal etDWYees wrote with· lhc advice. • ·tC
.Readers, however, came up -..itb a •.'-.l•
much simpler lillution, I'm goi., to ;•
use il myself. Here it is: Don't open •• · •
the envelope. Write in bold !etten: , _.,,_.
RETURN
TO
SENDER. :.;,.:_&gt;
ADDRESSEE UNKNOWN.
,\

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.
Words of wisdom on chocolate .

.,

1994 PONTIAC
SUliiiRD 4 DR. LE

r

was in for six weeks. Alii could think their family physiciil1- for ~nsiwe
wliS how lucky I was and that I couJd. diapoatie testl thatrepelliildly come
· n't wait to see my children.
back neplive.
"Suddenly, an undiagnosed illness
"When they say they can.'t rmd
didn't
seem
so
terrible.
I
'Could
live·
somethinJ,
that doesa'l meail it's
Fort· Myers News-Press
He£e are key . facts about with it. In fact, maybe. just maybe, I nothins," .he says. What it is is often
thought, there really wasn't much hypochondria.
hypochondri a:
wrong
with me after all." • ·
But tile patient wants a phyuc.t
. -Hypochondriacal behavior costs
That
epiphany,
along
with
years
of
diagnosis.
A hypochondriac is likely
the U.S. health care system $20 bil:
therapy and ~. help of antidepressant to gel upy when a genCral practilion to $30 billion a year.
- . Single people - separated. medication, mo:ved Cutor to rise tioner suggests he or she seek psydtvorced and widowed - suffer above her condition and then to chological help, Keown says. Often,
write about it In her new book, die patient· -..ill walk out to seek
more unexplained medical ail"Phantom Illness: ' Shattering Ole anolher doctor ud ao through stiJI
ments than married people.
Myth
of Hypochond.la," (Houghton more tests.
-Hypochondriacs consult doctors
Cafteantor-~·ght help for her ~b-le
four times more often and have · Mifflin, $22.95).
The book offers hope to 1em
r R&amp;Ciftg a newspaper aruc
medical bills 10 to 14 times highhy)iochondriacs, who often have been about hypochondria. She linked up
er than the national average.
- Six percent to 10 percent of ridiculed and dismissed by the liled- with a New Yoek area psychiatrist ·
ical industry l!S whiners. ·
who pre.scribed the utidepi-essut
people who 'visit physicians exhibTheir
numbers
~
difficult
to
drug
Prozac 1111d talk, therapy to
. it some degree of hypochondria.
pinpojnt, but it's estimated that6 per- accompany it. · ·
Many more are in doctors' offices
Prozac is a central element in the
primarily because of psychological . cent to I0 percent of people who visit
physician$
exhi,
b
it
some
degree
of
w()J'k
beina done by Dr. Brian Fallon,
or social stress, rather than medical
hypochondria.
Many
more
are
in
docthe
Columbia
Univcrsjty psychiatrist
illness .·
..
·
tors ' offices primarily because of psy- who collaborated on "Phantom Ill·
-Children of hypochondriacs are
chological or social stress, not a medJ. ness" with Cantoe.
subject to more emergency roo.m
ical illness.
He and a handful of other psychiuse, disability and suicidal behavJust
whal
is
hypochondria?
atrists
are using antidepressant medior than medically iii children in
Ancient
Greeks
considered
it
a
icatipns
- including Prozac, Paxil
other families.
digestiv~ disorder; Elizabethan Eng- and Zoloft - to 'tieat hypochondriBy .KAREN FELDMAN
land considered it (fashionable mal· lcs. Fallon's work is funded by a
ady associated with melancholia.
SSOO,OOO grant lnlm the National
' Fort Myers News-Press
Wrist pain may not seem like the
Today, mental healthprofe5sionals Institute of Mental Health.
first step .toward a stay in a psychi- say it is a psychological condition;
The theory is thrt if these drugs
atric ward, but it's not as far a reach characterized by intense and unwar- ~ave been effective in balancing
as you might think.
ranted fear of illness, which also can brain chemistry- alleviating symp. Consider the case of Carla Cantor. cause intense physical pain . .Some toms of depression, obse~sive-com­
recovering hypochondriac .
refer to it as "somatjzing," or pulsive disorders and ·anorexia The mother of two was enjoying expressing emotional discomfort in then hypochondriics with their simlife with her husband. her 3-year-old physical symptoms or pain. .
ilar anxieties also nii&amp;ht experience
daughler arid newborn sori when her .
The main problems in·treating the the same benefits as those with brain
wrist began to hurt. The pain grew condition have always been in first, disoi-ders.
e~crudating and traveled up her ann. correctly diagnosing the problem,
The drugs also may reduce their
Her hair started falling out.
·then getting the patient to seek help. anxiety so they cu trckle the issues
Although the doctors she consu'ttCantor, 41, recounting her battle that caused their illnesses in the first
ed said she seemed healthy, she was wilh hypochondria, h9J"'s her book place. Keown says. ·
·
sure she had a terrible disease.
debunks many of the myths and
Cantor says Prozac made her feel
Desperate, she went to .a hospital offers new .hope io those stiuggling better almost immediately. But: she
emergency room and shortly there- . with the debilitating condition.
believes it was the combination of the
after. ; he recalls, "I found myself
"Somehow a lot of people think medication and the work s~e did in
imprisoned, a patient on a psychiatric it's a joke," Cantor said. ~'It still has therapy that helped her. conquer the
ward . ... It was not at all what .I'd 1his whole horrible s~gma of the vicious cycle oUeir and pain. She
intended."
whiner, malingerer ... a'person who's has beeP oiJProzac since Jan\181)' and
That one night in the psychiatric manipulaiing other ~pie."
· · continues to feel well . .
ward served as a wake-up call.
· Dr. Richard Keown, a psychiatrist
"I' til Dol a perfect penon now;"
"I spent it in a cold, bare room on who prac.tices. in Cape Coral, Fla., she says, "but as you get older. there
.an uncomfortable bed, .talking to my says hypochondria is a particularly are a lot or things you can't control,
roommate, a 23- year-old \¥Oman who difficult condition 10 treat becaus,e but if you can solve some of the
had been di agnosed with schizo- patients generally don 't go to a psv- behaviors'that are really screwing up
phrenia," she said. "This time she chiatrist. They're too busy going to , your life, it's really worth it."

'

Tur'tn .shroud dated. clo·ser to

" moved. left no addral.'' This card

should be accoo.,.aied by a letter to~ :

-Key facts about
·hypochondria

ber of Troop 235, Chester, lnd II I student at
. ' &amp;Item High School. Keaton (center) II pictured with Troop 235 acoutr11111ters C1thy Cllf·
ford and Gale Oaborne.

. Dear Ann Landm; I'd like to
help uswer lbe Jetter from the
woma11 whore in· law• died. She had
!heir mail forwarded to her, and
years later, their mail continlled to
come. You told her where 10 write to
have the in-laws' names removed
from the junk mail lists. Junk mail
isn't forwarded. She must have been
referring to first and second-class
mail.
What this womu needs to do is
fill out a change-of-addrCss card for
the in-laws at the primary address
where they lived. In the section of
the card that indicates "new
address," she needs to write in big
letters "MLNA.' ' This means

· -._......."'
Hypochpndria: How to know when ,__,_..... Poppy proclamationyour malady is ~II in your head

•

,

Bobby e&lt;.ton, ~ of Bob lliCI Pill Kelton
of CoolvHie, wa pnrrnt.cl his e.ga. Sc:olit
•wwct on Aprll21, 181Sin a~ lltAifrld
Unltlld Methodlft Ct!urch, Alfred. He Ia 1 rnem-

'*'-

off with a lnlanl officer
t. ·llllhuliliwasaH ·,.. n..u,t kit 11i111 udal I I ll!lacbM!f
didn't Willi to Iillo IChool.
tbe JMde4 . . . . . ' a~ 01 a.dl Uld IUIIIed to juvelli)e
"For sevea min••· tbe founb- ...t IOid tbe allcer Ill ..... lldllr .. lllllboriciea. HU lllber - cbqecl ·
Landers
~ beld Polk Deputy Sheriff' Eric llhoot llillldlla 10 lllldtool.
.
-..itb extortion and t'elilliiiJ • offi1993, 1M A~
Rauch II bay with a I 2-pap tlbot"Ooddi ..W 1111 cbild'1 fllltler -·"
·
,_s~wc~
Dear Allom&amp;y; Tbanlc you for the
JUR· The olf~cer bid come to the cane ~ -.1 • · t oftidlll ol
unS~It.
youth's home to check on him.
. pickiaf on Ilia-. 'If it wOIIId ..,_ Np01t. II I!O!•nda M if that
"As backups began arrivinJ, lhe been - . I wwld !law shol Ill' fourth..pader's love of ~ wu
boy grabbed his niece, put bet' in depuly,'lhc fadler- '-'d to say. 10111etbi•1 he le.aocl from his
By ANN LANDERS
front
of him and told Rauch to lhoot,
"N cJepuries tried to i:111m down ·flllher. But~ doeS a 10-yar-old
· Dear Ann Landers : You often
print articles aboui criminal matters. said sheriff's spokeswoman Sonya lhe &amp;Iller, be bepn ....... 10 pt lAm llbout uslq a 3-y--old child
his .shotpn lick. When SJl. Du u a human lhiekl? TV, of course.
and . I thought you might want to Dodds.
"Arter
the
incident
in
the
boy'1
Pc~
said it wu evjdenoe; the
I can .-antee you lhal this is
share this story with your readers. It
living
1:00m
ended
·without
injury,
flllher
·
lbreatent4
to
sboot
him
not
tile Iaiii we -..ill be hearinc·about
appeared in the Orlando Sentinel. -· .
Rauch
asked
the
10-year-old
why
he
betYoeen
the
eyes,
authoritiesllicl
that
family. The PoUt County law
Florida Attorney
"The boy wu chtrJell widi , enfoo:ement folks have their work
"A 10-)'ear-old with a loaded used the tot as a shield. He replied;
shotgun is charged wit~ using his 3- 'Because that took your shot away.' agpavtlled Ulllilt -..itb a rue.tn on cut out foe tbem. I wish them luck.
"The boy, known to school a law enfoo:ement officer, armed They are goins to need it.
year-old n?ece as a shield in a stand·

Ann

wit_
h a.mystic'al past'
By , . II

The Drl)f 8entlnet • Plge11,0 =-:
•

-Criminal chile ·probably learned behavior from father, W ...

·,_....;...--Eagle Scout Award------.

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Pc:o.ftlrDJ • 'I IIIIIII 011, Ohio

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Page 12 • The O.lly Sentinel

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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House set .to OK modified 90-cent minimum wage hike ;
WASHINGTON (AP) -forcing
a savage campaign-season struggle,
the House is on track to approve a
modified 90-cent increase in the
minimum wage despite opposition
from many Republicans.
Legislation to raise the federal
wage floor from $4.25 to $5.15 in
two steps was slated for a vote today
in the House. Minority Democrats
and a small group of GOP moderates
have been demanding the increasealso sought by President Clinton from a reluctant Republican leadership.
·
Under the measure, a 50-cent-anhour increase would take effect on

July I, to be followed a'yw Iller by ' House Majority Leader Rielw'd
an additional 40-cent hike. It al o Armey. R-Thxas, made it clear he
couldincludeseveralpoPprovision · hasn't changed his mind lbout his

exempting certain small busines~es
and young ·employees during their
first few months on the job.
.
" DemocraiS have refused to give
up OIJ this issue," House Democratic Leader Richard Gephardt said
Tuesday. " And Newt Gingrich and
Bob Dole are finally showing si~ns
of. surrender, after desperately trymg
' to stall and submerge and defeat the
issue," he added of the ~ouse speaker and the_ Senate maJor~ty leader, the
presumpuve GOP prestdentaal nommee.

opposilion, even though it fell to him
to work out the terms for floor
deblle ..
"I think you can give all the blame
in the world to the Democrats," he
told reponers Tuesday, although be
added that some moderate Republicans "feel very good about -their
efforts."
Republicans are also advancing
companion legislatio~ that includes
tax breaks for small businesses
designed to offset any economic
damage caused by the proposed

•

increase in the millimum wage.
The minimum wqe hike itself
would be atUIChed 10 a sepmaae measure. And to further mollify conservatives, the GOP leadeBhip was
hoping to add provisions that limit its
effect. Tbele include a projlosal permlhing 1ft "opportunity wage" that
woUld allow businesses to pay young,
new employees the old rile of $4.25
an hour for their first 90 days of
work.
.
A second proposal was likely .10
spark· stronger opposition from
DemocraiS, and perhaps the White
House, as well.' II would exempt businesses will\ income of $500,000 or

less from the minimum waae ~

House passage lillY help

e111

a

Senate loaiam, ho-, ad 1111111 to ,.

ments.

Supporters of the pay bib IQIIC
lhat the minimum wqe is cumatly
ala 40-year low in purchuiq power. Opponents counter that 1ft
increase will cost jobs as business
adjusts 10 hiahcr I.OOC costs.
Approval in the House would
sef)d the issue to the Senate, where
the minimum wage strugle has also
been waaed fiercely. Tl;tere, Democ- .
rats have'been demanding a straightforward vote, only to be thwarted by
Dole, who plans to resign from the
Senate by June II. to campaign full
time.

votes on the mi~ ,... • weU ~
u a temporary roll back in the fed..
efll JUOiine .wt thai the House • •
clwed 011 Tuesday.
,
Democrats hive been tryina for
weeks to force the minim11111 waae
increase to the House noor. '11le O(&gt;P .
leadership has manqed to thw.-t
their efforts liy promisina Rqubii&lt;:an
moderates a vote on the issue this
••'
sprinJ.
Even so, there was evidence of
lingering tensions among t~ GOP ·
ranks.

IISSilliUILDIIS, IIC.
Jtea Homll • VlnJ'! Siding Hew
G1 .... • Replacement Wlnila "'·
Room Adcllllo.-,. • Ro aJh4
. COir'.JERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992·7643

Teacher
~------------------------~--~--------~----~~~~~ ·••
shortage
in big cities
WASHINGTON (AP)- Big city
sc hool districts have pressing needs
for special ooucation, bilingual and
minority teachers, according to a survey that says some districts are being
forced to hire uncertified instructors.
Districts that responded to the sur·
vey al so say math, scie nce and elementary teachers are in·demand . .
"To meet the shortage, some districts wi II have to issue emergency
licenses or crede.ntials, which is risky
because you're putting unprepared
teac hers in the classroom," said
Michael Casserly, director of the
Council of the Great City Schools,
wh ich represents the 471arge city distri cts surveyed.
The survey addressoo teacher
shortages in urban school districts,
bu tlhe problem is widespread and is
expected to ge t worse because of
increasi ng enrollment and hsi ng
teacher retirements.

.

·SAVINGS

FOODLAND

Some school di stricts are selling
recruitment programs at
colleges and universities. Sixty-nine
percent of the responding districts arc
targeting their rec ruitment effortS at
histori call y black and Hispanic uni-

up special

versilies .

"Sixty-fi vr percent 'o f our teachers are white, but 75 percent of our
students are students of color. "
Casserly said. " It 's not that the goal
is to have statistical parity, but the
'numbers are so out of whack that we
need to do something about it. "
The 39 sc hool districts that
respo nded to the survey arc :

••

771111

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' oCon!Firte
Rel110dtiiW
SlopACa~

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AIIICIYou

f-11904tlt4t4

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Ext.1277

SUI per min.
lluet M18 Y1L
s.v.u (ttl) 145 143t

--

13.11Pwlllnule

-

Ext. 41.83
$3.99 ))!lr mtn.
Mull be 18 ytll.

1

Strv-u (819) 645-8434
.

...
•

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•

•••

•

Coca ColaS 99

•'

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12 packs

Asst Flavors

·Herrs

·.

•

Jumbo Sweet

$

Potato Chips

:&amp;WIWIIt

Pomeroy,

\

10 IALIIII .

. 1110111.

1·1!00-255-0500

.

,...............
lllliliOI·IIIIIIOI
FREE ESTIMATES

.....Ill! ... .. ... h.

VEIY.··~
BIIOIIIIII
.

u .......
~14-tiJ.4111

&lt;131..0....

-

1·900-446-1414
Ext. 6445
$3.m! ~r mJn ..·
Must be 18 yq old.
Service .u
(819) ~54

8434

..

7

MUll be 18 yq.
Serv-U (819) 845 8434.

Live 24 Hrs 8 day
Tall( to Beaulifu/
Girls

99

PUaUc NOTICE
The •nnual Nport Form
"0 PF tor thl Kibble
Foundltlol) Bernard v.
l'ultz, Truitt., It available
tor public lneptctlon at
lltmant V. Fultz LIIW Otflcl,
111 t/2 W. Second Strllt,

" - "·

'L";r~t

Ice Cr-eam
s;;~~ ups
.

12 piCk

All Sport

21:1TC

Kingsford
Matchhght Charcoal

Sib bag

.

LLIOUOI
IRICIIII ·
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Urneetone e Grevel
.Pirte Bind
•
985 4422
. C"'ater, Ohio

DATE
LINE

(n g
Pick-up~

billlln1aa,lljlp[l8ncee •

You; Sweetheart as

lbllfiYmetllll.
614-992~5

cloSe as your phone

· •-·lpm ..,.

1-900-988-8988
Public Sale

Ext.6733
$2.99 par rnlnuJe
Must be 18 yra odd

ServiceU
.._~81 845 8434
(LimtStontLow,....)'

fUf~! H ~' VAu... t,BLE :;o, pr, ~J
I If t CTI\f &lt;, IQ TO 'i /. -ll

•:.t

.WI(IS

$329

HIULIN&amp;
Umutone,

Gravel, Sand.

99

OFFICE 992·2259

-~

..•••'
.•'
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'
. '
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'

Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470
New24hr.
· Dalellne
Mliet 111e Min or Woman
of your Dnllina Never

.
....'.••
...'.
.'

32oz

417at,

(S) 17. ·" · 20, 21, 22, 23, 24,

Asst. Flavors Homemade Brand

112981
.

Ohio

-

houN tor • JMrlod of teo
daye eubaequent to
JIUbllcatlon of lhiii'IDtlcl.

Ea.·

(~FECTI\t[51'lTC.l~','l•,

$2.99 per min.

dtirtng regular buelntll

.. and Auction

,,,MH f t'.CT JRER S 1h\L Jl\fll E crJ,JP(Hj

Ext 1449
. Serv-U(619)845-8434

Public Notice

Public No~

No argumenlsl
No Naggir1gl
Just the mate of

. Mual be 18 yq..

61~742-2193

'

riot. 311•-875-2111 " ..

2

PICKS, SPREADS,

3 ctliCo killona. 1 -1104-815-51112.

7.- . . . . .

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r--~iiLiiiwm4~iiitiiiiii;r--1
. I I W .. • - • Ill SllflY

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60

Loet lnd Found

.,,.5-3113ori1MIT-6U4
Plutil: Culvert· Dual wall and Regul.i 8" thru 36"" .
4" SAD - perf•• solid pipe '
4" A 6." Flex pipe
· 4" A 6" Sell 35 pipe
112" A 314" C. P.V.C. pipe
I 112" thN 4" Sch 40 pipe
.
314" A I" 20Cl p.s.i. water pipe (til()' roll's lhnt 1,0110' mil'•)
3/4" U.L lfiPIOved Conduit
8" Oravelcss Leach pipe
Cos pipe I" thnt 2" • Fininp • RegulalO&lt;S- Ri~
·
Full usortment of P.V.C. &amp; Flex fiulnp A W- liuinp
Full line of Cistern. Septic A WIICf SIOfliJC tanh..

.. '
. .

Zlllt.

· "·

Loot Boalootlor 3 -

-

·

·· "

Bo_, Fifot &amp; Third Avti'a. Gal· • . • · •

lipolo ~ - 114-&lt;&lt;8-0138.

70

,. ,

Yll'd Sale

. ..
. ...

Galllpolll
&amp; VIcinity
5120 ·!11251111 I -Dorll, 1027 o..to
Rood, Off T-1 Run. Fl101 Tlmo .
E...,l ~-. HouMholcl, LOll .

Glo-.

FUGUIIT
FIELDS

TllurAilt. 1M

Hemlocit: Grove

Phona 992·2489

Enrlmtl•a•

CI"&lt;Hclt.

Pomlloy,
Ml!ldltport

&amp; VIcinity
3 lomlly lolo, 1/2 mil• .
ol Forkod Run Slate Park on SR
t24 nur Long aouom, Fr ida~ .
Soturdo,, uo, 2oth, 25th, li ·S.

..--------~---------,·

Top, Trim, Remova

I

&amp; Stump Grln~:Ung

__ .J
20 Years Experience • Imuna
Owner: Ronnie Jones
_,....., _ 1 800-""""3359
387-v&amp;vu
-----•iiir\r

.

Thuro. &amp; Fri 2 Fimllr Yard Sole
Vinton, ICfOII from 81Piilt -

--·

JONES' TREE SERVICE

..

Monday lldilion . 10:00 o.m. Sol·

unlly.

With 3 Beds to
Serve You Better•

12-$20.00
16-$25.00.

....'•

~he da~ befort the .ad 11 to nm.
Suncloy odlllon • 2:00p.m. Ftiday.

New Location
Middleport, Ohio

..,•...•.
--·

e••·37U3le oret•·37&amp;-li2M.
AU Yard Salea Mull Be P11d In

::;:.o::~~·~ ~~~~~~

.

dlj odilion- ·1;OOpm Frida,. Uon .. ,

.dar edition IO:OO..mcSaturday.

=

Yltd ..... 1131

H,..r~ St.. Uldcl•

Thllfldor uay 23rd •
j ---:::pt::-.~p..
!·
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Residential - Commercial
Roofing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling
Decks - Bathf9Qms - Kitchens - Siding
35 YN,. Expet1e11ce
.

(614) 992·2364

1-800-889-3943

Frld., •

=-.-.-1111-t-

&amp; VIcinity
AVONIVARD SALE : Tu01-Wod·
ThurM., 2111, 22rld, 23rd. 11·8. 1 , ,, •.
114 rni bldl· Ntw HaMO, M H1n

. ..

llin wll bo In (11/0gt.

May 241h·25th Q07 27lh ll It rain

... bo gi!Ogt.
80
Public Sale
and Aucllon

Peaceful Valle~ Featlval : Fl11
mor1101 Mar 2•. 25, 28 tom-epm,
Sol-up IN t&amp;.DO ..nd 12l1 5 ·

lutlion 2Sih,
12,_, till .pm. Bring I~ ""'I IIGII
II, 15'!WII IOIU 81Uotroll muoi&lt;
25th; 7pm-11pm. Rocllr Mountain·
Boya and gunt. $4 .00 Adults,
chltdrtrt under 12, 11.00 wlpar- ·
enta. Bring dancing shoea and a
salt cushion. Nat rttpanalblt lor
ol ony kind on property,
no acholic banragu aloud.
Take Rt 2 lrom Point Pleuant,
jual p011 Jeri"'" Rd., turn left bolide While ChuJC:h go 114 mi. on
rigttl . lntormo~on 30&lt;-87S.tl78.
lp81Ct. Old luhion

..,_II

'

"

,, r,

Rfck Pearaon AuctiQ-n Compan~.
full lime auctlonttr, complete

(614) 441-1191
1-800-S08-8887

• Top·• Trim • Removal

. . • Stump Grinding .
UC. ;

tne, Ooll)lr: RICII.IoMion

....

IIIIIW
COIIII4CYOU
81dlni • VInyl

Aluminum e Roofing
New e Rapalr .
Qutlera.
DoiiNpoula

, .... ll!ttlinatft
812-3807 .

845-8434

llltiMt-

..

'

L--...:li~fl~f::f~E&lt;:::•:.:U:.:m:::B::fe::.::B;..______,.: -~..:..~_3o_•...,·8-12-·3_1_•8_.._F...,•n_t•_•_tlc
May 2•11&gt;-251h 11-•. 1107 27th ll II

BIB IDOnia and
CDIS71UCft81

,

-

ALL Yard Salol ·Uull Be 1'810 In
Aclvonc:o. DEADLINE: :l:oo p.m. •· ·•

S.llltl' Images

Herbs
Sce•tetl

.

,.

AntiQUtl, Rototilltf, Toya. Guns

'

auction aervlca . licenatd
IM ,Ohio I West Virginia, 304773-5785 Or 30&lt;· 773-54•7. .

1Q60'a IOy'a, G.l. Joe, Slar Wat'l
tel. Will ~Y fair pric:t baud a"
condition. ts1•·'•UHSG30 afler 1

pm

Bookl. Booko. Books. Old Rare
Bookl, Good Condition, 111 Edl·

tlan Prtftrtd. Alto, P•per Col1«11111111 BW--7~
"~ean tale · Model ' C1r1 Or
i' Truokl, 18110 Uocr.la Or N-r.
" Smllh .Buick Pontiac, 11100 E•ot·
tm IWeRie, Galllpallo.
.

·'

,,

....
.'

... .
'

..'

....
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;

.

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•
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J I D'o Auto P8rta. Buying oat· ' "
~sa:-· Soling "'"· . .. " •• t.
~

• I

· , Top dellar· anJI:qUtl,' furnllure,
gltll, china; ciOcloa. gohl, -

·

oolna, watch••· &lt;iototn Otby
....... 811o882-7441 ;

lt&gt;p !'rio.. Paid: Old U. 8. Colnt,
Silver, llold, OIO,...,do, AM Old
·Coii«Ubl.,, P,g'""olflrtt, Etc.
U.T.S. Coin Shop, 111 lecond

-.llo11Jli&amp;I1..-IIU, .

.
'

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• •
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301-773-8118.

L••t·
..,.,.,.. b e - · • "
Eogl•"""SL
Rldo• Rd. 111&lt;1 Car"* 'c '·
Chord\, tu COIIDnl"'lon •·
IIOhld tO 001111, Clll B U·••t, ·

~·-l'UpfMta Pilllna, OhJo 45713

81. Rt, 7

1-9Q0.2$5s0500
Ext. 4009
$3.99 per min.
Muatbe1hra.
Serv-U (619)
· ! ...._ _ _ _ _ __

-

~~;;;;'i;iii

FINDJ'OTAL
SATISFACTION!
· ThrOugh a Uve
'Peraonal P8ychicl

I

I

.... ............,.... -

·'

BIG BEN:P

"
.
. -bo '· .

s....
Roure 1 r
Sourn, - e...u ... T - . •
'
··.-..'S..ulltula 1011. old ~ ..·,..,1

IIOMI...olllllllt

==

· To ...,..

IHn ' II 14134

~IIUY'S

Food

. •

· ...,_, Lab rttia; ~ ,
boa . . . . lor ...... bod, a1 .. ··- •
742-2512.
• • •.

Muttbe18£.. .
Serv-U (819) ~34

$2.99 par "*'·
Mual be 18 yra.
Serv·U (814) 845 8434

J

"
•

2 yr. Old, -

1·800-776-2525EXT.
5961
$2.99 par min

15 Yll.

Also, Minneapolis and St. Paul in
Minnesota; Dade and Broward coun·
ties in Florida; Rochester and Buffalo in New York: Dallas; Houston;
Fresno , Long Beach, San Diego, ~n
Francisco, Los Angeles in Cahfornt~;
Memphis and Nashville-Davids~m .~n
Tennessee: Dayton and Toledo m
Ohio; and Jefferson County m Kentucky.

.

.-yiWhite. :104-171-

-~181.

RESULTS

1-900 888 8003
Ext. 1021

(

Kil~l

2 Ui1od clogo, tllftlir a cocloor ·
..-n111, - · old. , ...... Ho· ,. ~

HOROSCOPE, SOAP

CALL NOW

Chocolate Drink

1

• t173.

FINANCE .

be lonely lglln.

•

lb.

Atl anta, Milwaukee, Phoenix
(both High School and Unified),
Ind ianapolis, Detroit, Pittsburgh,
Oklahoma City, St. Louis, Chicago,
District of Columbia, New Orleans,
Seaulc, Denver, Norfolk, Va., Birmin gham , Ala., Charlotte-Mecklenburg in Charloue, N.C., Portland,
·o re., Omaha, Neb., Tucson, Ariz .•
and Newark, N.J:

......r

Date-un~

1·90().988·6988

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.,
Midcleport. Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles

Ext 3505
$3.99 per min.

SPORtS/
ENURTAINIENT

7

your chojce.

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

mates, 8811-help lllld

a-

..
2_.....,_.....,r. ..

IU.IH1G7
114-7Q.S!n

H&amp;H
SAWMILL

tov&amp;, • ·• caaa, tare, sOul.

80

·. LB.

I

..... _.....

1·800-291·5600

paydllcs on qiM1dooe of

$2.11 per min.
Mu1t btu 18 Y1L
Serv-U lt1t) t45 I(M ,

CHATUNE
. .

PAINTIIG

Ohio

1·900ot90o3717 Psychiciline
t :; Ta• line to our gifted
..... 2261

Vidalia Onions
.,...,.(

IJ11

*.ft.
'I

,......,

AnDCIIYI. QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

411MWI-

LINDA'S

•
••
••

..••
•
...,,

992-3838

'

•

.

7

"'''
e PIN!
SAWED
LU'ROUCatt
IR.
14'-11'

Umlted . , . Offet
Cali todlly wtth your
window alzM for rlrM
quotaI

..

l

''U''

81 A•I.I.ON.lw.t a .....

r-1o'-.iltl. ·

etnsulated

A!l K1nds of Ear th 1'/ork

C.ll1·900 888 4900

I

,

1d, ,.., :b4, :1111

•Tilt-In
-Double Hung

Houee SIIH and
UtllltiQ

They have~

./

s19500 lnetllled

Semc.e

. millions lind fortune,
success and love.
The future sJar18 today!

Potato Chips

IEPLICEMEIII
WINDOWS

Howard hccvotin
Bacllhoe

Let a PSYCHIC
·change your life.

-

T~T-Ae~aled

s.-(111)1 . . . . .

Bullclcmng Mid

~

.

UOO IIIIIDG

-~

s
2tor 3

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

'RII . . . l

Allc.w YcM..w •

•

9oz.

7

llat;llle Home Ill '"• • Coolie.

,.....,..,.yc!Kto

•

Lays

•w•••

. . . - .

G

Btnlnue

.

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II

. . . . 11ynl
SenKI 11 145 ltat

Trucking· ·
Umestone

..

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n •• ••
•••
n n

$3.99 Per Yn.

1154473

7

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1-900 446 1414
EXt. 1477

FREE ESTIIATES

au

FMII!y fl l'IIWs

24 PACK-

agam.

. tea chers. ·

0

....,

~rz

.LAMM

•

.

anracl people_to the teaching profession.
Demand is so keen for special
education, secondary math and sci·ncc and bilingual elementary teach' in the Los Angeles Unified School
District that once one is hired, the dis·rict immediate ly starts searching

•

'

.

-

" lt'·s like pulling water in ~sand
hole," said Michael Acosta, ad min·
istrator of employment operations for
the di strict, the second largest in. the
nati on. '' What it causes us to do is
recruit people who aren't full y credentialed - they're working and
train ing at the same tim e."
Thirty-nine school di stricts
responded to the survey rel eased
today. Among its findings :
- 77 percent of the distril'lS hire
unce rtified teachers in response to
shortages.
-64 percent let uncertified teachers teach with emergency licenses.
-40 percent allow long-term substiw tes to be hired.
- 33 percent permit teachers to
use provisional licenses.
-27 percent let uncertified
interns or apprentices teach.
·More than 90 percent of the large
city sc hool districts surve yed cite an
immediate demand for minority

tlla Howu

Nlecl Dlllidlon? :

ROCKY TOP SOFT DRINKS

ers Inc., an or}!anization working to

I

Hey Gu;'tllf Yow
I'JMidlil girt.. ... "'
tD heet' liOm ~I
24 Houri A o.yll
Cal now

~

1bt.4M

" Fully one-third of America's 2.5
million K-12 public school teachers
today are movi ng into their retirement years," says Keith Geiger, president of the National Education Association. "The student population is
rising rapidly, due to the mini-baby
boom and increased immigration. "
The Education. Department pro·
jccts the teaching force will grow
from 2S million in 1980 to 3.3 mil lio n by the year 2002.
"This should be a wake-up call to
the nation," said David Haselkom,
president ·or Recrui ting New Teac h-

I

- -~

(No Sunday Calls)

Survey reveals

a..u.

•
'

•

�........,,...,22,1-.

.
_..,
........... 11
•

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......
....

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NBA Croaword Puaale
•

PHDJ.IP

ALDER

.

Clt... llolll, GIIIINIII. OH 114441-2101 Of 11of47-0itt. Eflt.
ciontr - . . . C*t. ""· " ' -

.... ,,...,

Roomllor- : -

Sllrllng
at I I - .,..1
.. 11\!eD.
Slttpin' roomo with

NorUI
• J 10 I
• 8 5 .
• Q J 10 7 6
.. 10' 3

·

-Ina.

Alto rratlar apace ·on riMf. AU

hook· upo. CoN aher 2:00 p.m.,
3tii-773-5851,11UanWV.

'
'

•

HOUSE FOR SAlE
BY OWNER
Smau a lltdtoomo, V«r Goo&lt;!

With----·

111110 T.flr&lt;l t ~.Au-·
lc, 1100 ..... dallla. 114·2511IIS11.

114·
441-t 774 Homo ; tl4·441.o374
-Alii F a r - -·

tt81 Kawasaki 300 ATV 2

Houl8hold

Goods
11114 ·

A;ppl ianc:••:

Wos!wi1,

OrYtr1,

gr110r1,

liiO

Aec:Dndltloned
Rangto, Rtlri·

Oar GUiflftiHI

WHITE'S METAL D£TECTOAS

Ron-.1210--

:;.,ns•: r .Otioe1..,...

Fronch Cltr Martag, 114·441·

550

Cal-tio1gll14-441-t114

Building

111114 ~Pick-Up 310 .....
lOr. Half Ton Hoowy tlury, Auto,
Goof liMY~. Poinl.

'. .
'

ttU Yahomo YZ·IO, ridden 2

.......... tQoks new. $1,000. 3CW·

175-1041.

' ATIN: Porrc Ploolllllr
Postal Posltia na. Ft.rrn1nen1 tull·

Ranr WhHis 12850 Coli 814· 1185 I'Utaris Exptoror 4x4 400,
44Hit72
.
14.300-304 45811181.
11111 cr... c-ion Von. Ma- 12 KX 250, new kic;k start gear,
roon and Gray 305 VI Loodod. 0 - par~ 1 1 - 1 CDndi·
.17.- rnitn_ll,ll5. 81.,.2511- 'lion, ook ing 12,200, 114-742·
10117.
.
.
11823.

PAW TOOK

-r

MOONSHININ

·props. $2,500. 080 304·882· · ,;· •

maa bitll • homalar WDrk. 1..aoo-

~
18' S1ar craft boll, 115 noru

Rop.

JoMoon motor &amp;

002·1358 or 304·882·2145, Ind.

~' -

1970 Gollly

rauer 814·065-

11 Fl. Open Bow,

• ·~

!!.,et

1087 IDS Boat With 1.3 liltr
Chivy engine. -•llanl c:oncllion,

a-or Etoctric, .....,;c strM "'
douiHCMn. 1125. 30«75-CIOII

,With low hoU .... $7,800 with CUI •

.--n traier ca•I14· U8 111630 aher

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Walhara. dr1era, rafritlrl! tore,

epm.

Vir- Strear, Call1""•« ·7308,

1tto Yahama Wave Runner LX·
850 I tra1ter. $2.800. 304-8 751352.
.

ranges. Skaggs Appiioncoa. 71
11110 Thu-rd 11,100 - ·
Cai-3:3Dpm-1111 Cudau Coloia. 4CJI, Slp&lt;l,
-oor, IC. runa I tooka ..od.

~ ·~

WllAT WAS IT MV

'7;;

.. •,-!,
....,.
...

1 70 ~!!. ~
c. c~~ Ga·
1
.- - - '
.
.
- - · 1... ~.....

IJROT~ER

U.SED TO

SAl{? ' It=' I{OV'RE
LOST. JUST REMEMBER
1liAT !lOLL'(WOOD
IS IN THE WEST,
AND TilE MOON
IS AlWAVS OVER
:--"'="'-\. 1-!0ll'(WOOD.. P

.':J: ,
'· •'

..

...•'- ..

'

••
; l

13,500. Clti:DW175-2048..

_.

S. Eagle lnlla- ..,.1 With five
....ty C0"1*bNntl. auimbte for
railing, 2 l1p. moiOf, 1110tor moun'

Twin &amp;.dt Complete Set 1200

colsllor lplft .,....,... 7317.

..... boanla, ..... 81 ... 9112-6035.

VI'RA RIRNITUI£

760

Auto Parts &amp;
· Accessories

Budget Tranemiuions. Used IRebuill, All Types, Acceuibtt To
Over 10,000 Trantmlttlon; Atso
Ovomuol K111, 81 ...245-587~

The Meiga County Commluion~
ers will accept resumes tOt rhe
flll'l limo ...,... , _ position or a
Grants Administrative Alllatanr
unDI May 27. 11111 a1 l1e oftlc• ol
1he Meigs County Commillion~
ers. CaurlhouM. Pameroy, OhiO

----.........

New Qll lanka. one J~n u~ck

1000.11 ...~)140.

needed.

$15,000 income potonbal. Call 1·
lll0·513-o03ol3 EJtB-!1388.
Looking lor Layout I Foreman br

530
FINANCIAL

concrete worlt, Wus1 ba able -to
run crew. mull have ••perienc•
wirh all fac" of concrete irteh.td·

210

Buslnen

8:00 p.m. 01&gt;1·11112·25!·

OHIO VALLEY PUBliSHING CO.

recommends thef you do buai~
n&amp;ll with peapte rou know,

only.
Need Full Time lnalallers. Mutt
Be E•poriencod. Apply In POfoon
At COmfort Air, 2-43 Third Ave·

AI STEEL Aaaidontial. Cornrnatcial, ~riculturo building DEAL·
ERSHIPS ovailolllt. Bil I'Utontial
Profile ffom •lea and construction. II quollliod. buy laciOry clroct
tram Nolonol .Manulacturor. 303·
7511-3200 .... 2t00.

5 Acres L~c:ated Saito( Road,
South Of Vinlon, 110,500, 614·
388-11521 .

etratld lumber fDt rtvw uu, 814-

5 Acres Loce1ed Sailor Road,

1250 nlglno

381-8521.

630

A good

South 01 Vln1on, 110,500, 6U·

-

....... Doolar' . .

_l-

304-675·

4232(-ngo).

Alrooi--IQin

this r:a IJ'II'«IIIOOIICI to
tho F - FltlrHooalng Act .
ol1011wtotch- lllltglt
.. _

... ..., ........ 1Ct.

•••llui• or t11ertrnn1111on

beAd
an -_
·O
oolor.
rllglan,
_ .......
f nallanal

ortgtn, Of . , lnllnllan lo

Whore Vou Llvt·ln And Stoy

Overnight In Ellher 24 Hour, .tl
HoUr, Or 72 Hour Shi!ls. It Pays
18 Hours A Day. Bur An Over·

- . , ............. 1Ct.
••illllkiiior6ciill••tlon: .

___,.,........

night SIIY to Required, U~lerHI·
ed Ploooo Clll Usa~- At

~:.::: ':.1101

1.8QO.ON-OUTY·2.

-

Paramedlci'IEMT'S immediate

oPI"i'!lll. tor M or port·limt poli·
tioris. 304·372·i1155.

.... _

ol tho law.

01!&lt;-.,. florllly
lllfOrmld ..... dw. . .

~lntiWM

Poat1l I Gov' t Joba 121·.·/Hr •
Benefill, No Eap. WiP Tratn, For
Appi And Info 1-800·5311-3040. .

J4f4t

Parcell available for new home
.c:onttrl!lction on Rayburn Road. 5
parcels ranging ftOIT' 1.84ac to

BORN LOSER

;-----, .
'
r)lo.OCYINb m LCXJK
0 . IR111£~

~

WT 1 ~i ~ lO fl~t&gt; IT...

info bailable on requ11t No lin·
glt wide inquiries pltlll. 30•·
875-5253.

RESPtRA101W1HERN!IST

HF PrcMcf.

.

REA\ ESTtdE

2722.

304-571-23311.

44::;
10;;.'_ _ _.....,_
14::.;•;::..
2 ;..

I:':.:.

Hr • a.t1tlltl, On Tha ilob . _ . 1 lo~ IIIH!1s,

t both,

li\ling room

~~:."' In 'lbur - . t.-. ltll ltord nod floor. Kitchen &amp;

dfl*'t _, combined. Ylnyt litiSumm.r bae,.....,, hm..4flllt. ita 1i1itr raol, 2 tat - · wookdert. AcdWI• IJr old, In M \IIIilf l NIYigtroiOr wift bo
childl ...... Pl. ..,.._.aNI. lnclulllld. Colt 304·1711-4111 or

1···_-_...
_304_.._,..._7_121_.-

2311dlyL

11183 Ford Rongor, 4cjl, 4apd,
... 11,1011. 301-e75,2D74.
1017 Ford F250 3 Quarter Ton
,351 Wlnaor 2 wltatl Drtvo,
$5,000 81....,48·2145 or 30U7s.
.

~

5f'WLD ll\f. WI\Y
IT50LI~D51

31Kind ...
3111UIIIH'I
._

K 2.
.. A J 4

31

-ndk:-

311 . . . . .

I was sitting ori a plane, looting at
the video screen without being allle to
· hear the sound. During a program from
the Entertainment Network, I read on
the screen that· soine celebrities were
asked what \hey would never stop doIng as long as they Uved. Wluut's your
M!wer'
·
. If you travel a cross several time
!(Illes to play in a bridge tournament,
in my experience it takes at leas t
three days to get over the efl~t of jet
lag. South in loday's deal had just ar·
rived in North America from Asia. He
reached three no-trump and West led
the spade three . After winning with
dummy's nine, declarer played a diamond to his king and another dia mon d. Ea s t won wilh th e ace and
switched to tbe heart queen. Suddenly
South noticed that he probably didn't
ha ve a clumuny entry. Spotting one
chance, he ducked the first heart
trick. won the s~ond; cashed his oth·
er top heart, discarding a diamond
from the dummy, and exited with the
club jack. He was hopin g that West
would have both cluo honors and be
e ndplayed into giving the lead to the
dummy. It wa,sn't to be, the conlract
finishing two down.
• "I r.ould ha\'e done a Irick better,"
said South, "but I wanted to t ry te
· fllake it."
.
·
:'You could have donf threP tricks ,
belter," replied North. "Just win the
first trick with the spode 'q ueen or ace:
After East wins with the diamond ace
and returns a heart, win and 'lead a
low spade. forcing a dummy entry .
You get t hree spades, two hearts, four
diamonds and a club." ·
I don't know what tile celebs said,
but my , imll) edlate ans wer. was
"breathing:• Oh well'- I'll blame it on '
jet lag, like the declarer.

r.:l:~:t

'

...

...... ,...
1t1lltlla

..
.

W,tQ'ERPROOffNG

perience ~II Work Guaranteed,

French City Maytag , 814-UI!i·
7115,
'
CIC

General Home Malntenence· Painling, vinyl aiding,

carpentry, doors. windows, bathl
1111 Dodga Truclt, N - lllnor mobile home r.,.;r and mora. FeW
Bodr. work I point job 318 2 rr.. astl.mate ctll Chet, 61-'·9G2·

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CELEBRITY CIPHER

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ' Ron Brown wu a man who walked and 1'11n and flew
· th.rough tile. He was a magn~lcent lite Ioree.• - Bill Clinton.

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IObacco

304-G:J7·

4x4 or pontoon boal, Ill t4·tt2·
25114-lpm.

11112'4232.

Ron's TV Serv~. tpecialiiing in
·Zenith alao urviclng most 01her

brando. House calls, t·800,797·
0015, wv 3().1.578·2318.

y0&lt;r

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by tilling in the miuing -ds
dovolop from llitp No. 3 below.

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Votoron urgonlly looking
lor 30·100 Hdudod, privolt ICf·
e1. wim or wilhoul buildings. Land
l:ontract. 614-742·2182

I IIIII II

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f1ENTALS

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820

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BERNl9E ,

BEDJ!:·bSOL
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Plumbing &amp;

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2 Bodroom, It 75rno. Need ralor·
tnces I daposlt. Can 301-875·
1420e'* 4:00pn.
.
2 bldroom in Harllord f225mo.
No poto: 304·112·2101 or 304·
175-3100. - 4pM.
.

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SmaA houat.. 12211W1o. plus utlli-

, t ·,.

tial. .100 rlopooit, ... 114olt22000 un~t noon, 304·773·5707

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23, 1988

You OIIJ1 ;.,....... ,.... .;,.r.e, goalS in the
year ahud . Your ambltlona. material
lllloitw.and nild lor NCOgl1ilion will moti·
-youldM..-d . ,
GEMINI (Mar 21·.fun.t 20) Let your
lmaglnallol! !lqrk for you lnata11d
8Q8Inll you lodl)r. Do not IIIVIIIOn filii·
tr.tlort ind f!ellllt'l ~· wiHmt
lltey don~ ..,.t: Know where to 100tc for
romance ll)d you'll find It , T~e Astra-

of

.,

....

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'

.
which -s1gns are rumantic~lly p~rle_ct lor you might h'"" Ill work closely w•th an
you. Mail $2.75 to Matchmaker, clotfiiS""unr&lt;~ao:::n!!ble @__nd dtlficull indlvidu~i. Try
newspaper. p 0 . Box 1758. Muroay Hill to make the mottOfi'bad-a~nt.
Slation. New York, NY 101 56.
CAPRICORN (0.0. ~· 11) Do nol
CANCER ( J - 21-July 22) Before voll ' use your lovt lOt -..one as an excuse
unleering 'to WOI!&lt; on a opemal prated !of lor 'being posMsaive todey. Your good
your club or church toOay. assess the Intentions might be hllelpllled u unreacost. Do not get stuck wllh the bill.
1 IIOt'able restralolt. .' .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) 11 you inliat on ~QUA!IIUS (Jan. IN'III. 11) An. ~nre·
dQing lhings your way, you coutd·create 19fv.d Issue that hU C8UMd I P,ll)blertl
compltcalions. For e•ample. your boll between you end your mate might flare .
mighl be equally dtlermlned to squeeze up, again today. Have. your lire 'hoall
in the las( wQfll .
rudy to battle the blue.
VIRGO (AI!If.' 23-llpl, 22) All inability to PISCES (Fill. 20-Mii'ch :10) Thia will not.
keep your temper in cheek today could bt lht right !lay to oflar, companlona
cause a nu(T'bar ol unntl:8asary prob· un~oUcitad advice .or criUcllm. II thtiy
. rerils. Try to keap · dlslurbllncea within want input rrom you,lhty will maM direct
reahstic boilndanO.
reqoo~ll.
.
LiBRA (Sept Doc!. 23) Your curiOsi,Y AIIII!S (MII'Ch 21·Aitrll18) That tidy iitlltl
might be
Intense than usual· today oum you've been prudently stashing
and 11 a re~H. you ·may 111 templed to away could be gone In one ran swoop
poke V&lt;l"r no~ Into tflualiOnl Wflere n ldy. oa·.not ~now: you will regret
-n't~.
Mlltl8r.
'.
ICORPIO (OoL 14-tfoV. 12) TQCiay. you TAutiltJI (Aptlt 10 .... 10) YQU might
IIJight be uHd aa ~ pl'wn In arl poMir 1101 be 81 """'"' u you lhould be with
game btl.,Q played by two llllndl. Thil ........
mtllllbM II*YI·Db not
con·be circumwnted Wyou',.
of •
your llll!lttt' -.nd the jleopla1whO
INI! _ , . .
itJoa you mall.

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I J~~~J~~~@~~t Graph Ma tch maker instantly revea l!
~

Helling

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17.000 nftltl, 1180 080, 114·
1!40-2311 dar• or 114-948·214•

2 Bedroom ·Hou ... 2 B.clroom

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ic, left rear 1111 light damaQe.

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·e.o Ford·T-. 4 - ..,_.

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!WEDNESDAY

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liild. 3111-571-2050.

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Father and son were watch~ ing a circus act. The son turns
to the dad and asks, ·can you
,.,- .-.-L...,.O""'R:-::R,....,E...,L,......-,
· Icall a ring master a .. , -.. -?"
6
7 I I
Q Cornpioto the chuckle quooed

UNSCRAMBLE lETTER$ TO
GE1 ANSWER

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roe~~y:.

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~·c-EICft. reu.r1n lhl c:iptw . . . . . .

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Scarce .' rrite • Awam - Oddity- TWICE aDA Y
The elderly '!Jent told the young boy, 'Nothing is ever
entirely wrong. Even a stopped walch is correct lWICE

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SCIIAM-I.ETS ANSWIRS •

tollli- 1875.

Appllortco Porta And SOfviCa: All
Nama Brands ·OVer 25 Yaaro E•·

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21=PIW

6

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BASEMENT

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4 01
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7 8 c 1111

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BIG NATE

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lmprovemems •

Will lio cuning har aoon. Silt in

Reel Estate ·
wanted

'--~---:'-~::-­ Traitor AC, In Galtlpot;s, ..,.,. .....
I'
1149 Far ltbrrnllion.
310 Homes for Sale
1 112 11011. 4 br., tr., or., ~.....
"'""' I Ill" porch, 111,000, call

r"l'l'j onlar

rnogg rJooo mm

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I 1

--~;;;;~--­
810
810

lilicl. 3111-571-2050.

12111

410 Houses tor Rent

condition. •••
$31150 IOkll II ho--ilit.i:t41j:

S1raw loo Hlo, 12.25 por bola,
-11.814-Will Ill cuttllng hay ooon. Soil In

Trailor space for rent . eu.ue.

aroe- on on-1

-""""-·

17,000

fllontJ.

Scentc Valley, Apple Grove,
b-.Uriful 2ac lots, public water,

3eO

2 p

32 In good.
:M

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L.-1--I.-I.-I.-L...;J·

Unconditional liletlma guaramee.
LOC81 references furniahed. Call
(Ill) 448·0170 Or tiH) 237·
0.088 RogOfl Wltorproollng. Eo·

mar consider partial trldl for a

rtJitonable rettdct•ont. Map and

-Jr.

..........

• A Q 54
¥ A K 3 2

of exrras, 1.8ft. Serious lnquiriea
...,, 304.. 75-8903.

A:21u For

..

IT~TNOTOC:

DICIIC*-I~Y ...

19114 lnnoi&gt;rooll, lilllr toadod, 1o11

WO't, Your Area. Toll Free 1·

800·111·8771 Ext.
c
- Llltinga. .

,

'ffiOOETI&lt;:' lllll'E

2049.

.

5.321c. Pollod 'road, coonty woter.

Cr,Gt

r.J[J[l!] !]CJ!]
00000 [][J(T)O[]OEJ
(!)CJ(i)[JG][]G.][]0 [!)[J[J
G:J o 00 G:J ru.'l o G:J o 0

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60 Acres of good puture. 304·

·

SEIZED CARS From 1175.,
Porochu, Codillocs. Chours.
BIIW'I, eo........ Also .loopa. 4

23115

Livestock

=:::.. ..

21
:r.J Rill I Cit,_
24 Ac1or BryMM
DOWN
27hp
2t •
·•
1 lftuiMII on

3 Reglllorod Saddlt BrHd
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Maroa And A 2 Horoos, 1818 WhHI Drtvo AC, Auto, 87,000 M 1323.
.. .
Valier Thoroughbred Horoo Troif. 13,000 OliO 81"'25.1233
..
•1111 .........1-0824.
ORI'WALL
• ' " I
tlt2 Ford F-t 50 Undor 35,000 HMQ, linilh, repair.
5 PoniH. 3 Riding ........ 11 ... Ulloa, Bodlino, S"p Bumper Ceilfnga te11ured. plaller repair. •. , t il
:!45-5017.
300SX, 5 Spttd, Dual Tanka. Calt.Tom 30H7S..180. 20 years
-~
exp8j illtce.
c-lt.
•• •
For sale. polled black Llmowlin 24s.ll178. PS. PB. Ulut - . 114·
••
cronbtH bull, some cow• wtth
E.arl"a Home Maint~nance, vinyl
• •
calvoa.I1H42·31'14.
1"2 lsuzu pickup, 4 crt. 5 siding, rooting, tkteriOf and interi·
''" ' 'I
I
opaod, nice, 70,000 '"''"' $5500. or painting. power washing, room
~0
t.tly &amp; Grein
additions. Free E•t•matea. 014 -

388-8521 .

875·3030(days)

Ulld ctoc:l1 lftldo Wlptn•

503·2172 dorlimo or 114·101·

South or Vinlon, 110,500, 814·

It Actively Seeking To Recruit
CNA1 Who Art Looking To WOrk
Lolig Term Home Care Caaes

,C11304-t75-.-o _ . . . .

8pm

620 · Wlmllclto Buy

IY.61H.S.0437
OnDuty-1

Hiritlltall I

nior ..,...... ioo or 10'
5V rooting. 814-381-1114 altor

388-~1 .

1975.

Soclel Wllrlteil. -

ShiCk. -

tho oltanng.

Service Man For Vaccuum
Cleaner Companw. Need Experience Wilh Elec!ric Motora, Will
Tra in Right Purson, Call 814-U1 ·

I •'

cltolala.,.....,.. no.,.

P,Uiino
gino. IIMZ ongtne

mail until you have invetttQBied

NEED IMMEOIATaY

• Hu Otienf!1g Far PT I FT fiD.
altiona.
AIHII,.,II,~
VV
AIMICllniclll
PSY ExPitrief1CI
lluar. Mirlintal Tra..r AIMI On •
Cell Requited. Cal S.Cid AI !·
800-llt -2271 Or Fex '!bur Re...,. To 21•2414117. . .

.

1850- T tractor, needs crank
turned. OUvor 1750, noodl mo10r
rrorll, cab gifto ,_, Oltver 180

South ()I Vinlon, 110,500. &amp;1•-

5 Acrea Loc:alld Sailor Raa·d,

·~,I CS'I And.51riNtd

10?7 Chevy C20 cemper van.
stove, refrigerator. lurnact. OIMr

Ford llelltr S:i2 good cond wl
- · 11,500. 304..7S.271t.

...... Gallipolil.

I

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.

5 Acre&amp; loc:aled Sailor Road,

NOT to lind moMI lhrou1' lhe

Need adult babysiltet. One cnild.
Your home, daytime in Gallipolis
area. 614- 4-48· 1012 6pm- 7pm

l

540 Mlacelllneous
MeiChenciiSt

iNOrtCEI

To Sell Avon. 614·

Antiques

Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques.
1124 E. Main StrHt, on Rt 124.
Pomeroy. Hours : U .T.W. 10:00
o.m. 10 ,1:00 p.m .. Sundoy 1:00 .,

Qpponunlty

ing poured waNs. llal work. slab I
Site work. mull be able to lrtvel,
1 have own traneporlalion,
Rooms pd lor Salary N~otiable
. calt614·441-0912Wad. 12·5 ·

t

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nancino awan II rou havo boon Coa.chman Pop-up camper wt
s2o
Sponlng
lutned down ellewhtrl. Upton •-ng. Sleeps e. ACIDC oleclric.
Equipment Uud Cars. 304-158- ea:c. thape. Must see ULapper·
Goods
101111.
ICAtt. $2000 Or 080. 304· 773·
610
Farm
Equlpinent
Turkey, Archery, Guns. Ammo,
g111.
I COf, Gol a Job. HM Bod
Reloading I Fl.s hino Supplies. 111' Llghl Duty AH Pur- Trailer Live Bait &amp; Ucen•. Crawlorcrs, With Rampa, Brakea &amp; Lights,. Credit? Wt Con Flnanca cell
SEf1VICES
Ruthi1 ........2SI7 .
....... .,.. wv.

mndM:opor nalioNI origin.

Now taking applications for e•·
perienced roofers and carparnl·
4frs Uust have, hand tools and
uanaportatidn. Starting pay 7.25

.

- · cob oir, 4cJI, 5opd, smve,
linlt, rtll'ig. 13,000. CoH 30H7S.

ing requirements, environmental
review proefdures, drawdvwn

8 Ladin
446·3356.

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1184 To~ota Mirage mini motor

implement such grants. Applic·
ants should have experience in
lhe preparation of SJ8nll, report·

~eed

'

790 . Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Applicants shOuld p011111
knowledge of Federal lnd State
Grant• and tht requirements to

UHn

•

D &amp; R Auto. Riplor, WV. 304-372·

45769 . .

Home Typill!, PC

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31100ort.aao.2-.

FAf11.1 SUPPLIES
&amp; liVESTOCK

51 .......

By Pb illlp Alder

Able Avon RapraHnlarlvea
needed. Eam money for Ctvltl•

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The obvious answer

Muff llainiHt ttHI &amp; alumlun

207-llth StrHt or call 304·675·
1111. Prioa $100.

5181
IIIII57 ,..,,,
511'1 " '

,

17ft. open t&gt;ow tnvocre.. UOhp
Evinrullll, oltls,' tuba, Ito lOCUli,

Soli, .... ~ • ninl c:ond. c..
bi aeen at own•n , ..ldence.

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1

LOWEEZY-HE1S A NEW
MAN!!

PARSON

Oon's lawn Care. Raaldanrial,
AVON I All Areaa· I Shirley Churchal, &amp; Camttarill, ReaSpears. 30«75-1420.
Ra..letoi-:J711.2147.

procedurn, bidding procell and

12~· .... _,
11--oiWiclte
14-~
1;
17 -fta ell :a
1• . , . . IUufty
11 .. II •1111

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Opening lead: • 3

SINCE HE QUIT

TH 1 YOUNG· UNS
FER A WALK
IN TH' WOODS,

5121 .

11me tor c;lertl/aortera. Full Bene·
lils. For exam, lppliutton and
sataiy into cal: J08.2N-1838 Elll
31110, 111m"' 8pm

·=. . . ......

EJ(T][.) non[!] on ~n ...:
(T]DD nn0o nor-10 ....
om'J n m~ m:mr-J(T] n '. '
PJrJ(T]OOnr.J cmonn
o 0 o m.1 o l.l
DrJl'JO r.Ji:J[l[] DOD
rJC'J00rJI] OGArJOD ..
ooormA or.J0CJ0rJ • ••
ooo m:mn rJ0DCJ

Vulnerable: l!;ast-West
Dealer: South .
Weal . Nortb East
8oulh
2NT
Pass 3NT
Allpua

.

Blocl1, llriclt,
plpn, - ·
- . Mntlis, ttc. Claude Wlniara.
Rio Orondo, OH CaH 111·215-

Meigs County is en Equal Erri·
ployment Opportunity Employer
which prohibits diKriminatton because' of race, color, religion , sea:,

a7z

&amp;uU.

WhHI OriM, Runo Gold 12885

Suppllel

payment procedufft. Clerical and
computer skills are e_stentltl to
lhe position.

• K

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9 74

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ec.,.
.., - Vinfrl - . . ear.
port Unottoc'*! 2 Car d'orogt

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hge 16 • The Dally Sentinel

Wedneedey, Mey 22, 1996

Pomeroy • ft'lddleport, Ohio

'

Saddam grudgingly aCcepts oil•for-foOd deal
•

•

NICOSIA, Cyprus {AP) - With
his economy withering, Iraqi leader
~addam Hussein grudgingly • :cepl·
ed an oil-for-food deal like a patient
f~rced to swallow foul-tasting medi·
cme.
Tile 1ortuous negoliations, marked

by Saddam's reluctant cooperation
and American insi5tence that he
remain under constant scrutiny, sug·
gest the comi ng years will hold more
confrontalion than compromise.
The deal belween Iraq and the
United Nations did produce one clear
winner: the long-sufferi ng Iraqi peo·
· pie. They can .expect lower food

•

prices in the market and mere med·
icines on the shelves after Iraq begins
exporting limited quantities of oil in
comins weeks.
But the deal doesn't sol~e any of
the fundamental -political disputes
between Saddam and his many ene·
mies, including the United States.
Saddam has lillie hope of getting
the fu ll sanctions lifted anytime soon.
And Americans are unlikely to see
Saddam driven from power.
The oil deal "gives Saddam a shot
in the arm he needed badly, especially
as his (financial) reserves were
almost gone," said Abdei-Moneim

Saeed, a poli1ical analyst in Cairo.
"But I don 't think that this will lead
to a lifting of the sanctions. at least
not in the next year or two."
A likely scenario: Saddam
remains in power, the full sanctions
stay in place. and potential con·
frontations continue lurk ing in the
shadows.
Western diplomats and U.N.
weapo ns inspectors in Iraq fear the
deal could make Saddam even more
adversarial in his international deal·
ings. And his diminished but still
powerful army is seen as a threat to
pro· Western states in the Persian Gulf

•

ical weaponsprograms.
Saddam has never cooperated
without pressure. they argue. Over
the past six years, he has foregone
billions of dollars in oil revenues
rather than accept U.N: oversight.
But as the Iraqi economy groaned
under the cumulative weight of the
sanctions, Iraq agreed early thi$ year
111 take up the U.N . prorosal, previously rejected as a violation of its
sov~reignty.

·· we believed th~l the (U.N.)
embargo was for the short term,"
Iraqi Finance Minister Hikmat aiAzzawi told The Associated Press

"

Pick 3:
510
Plck4:
3145

·ends slump
with 4-1 win

v

such as Kuwait and Saudi Arabia.
Th.e limited (Iii sales Should help
Iraq avoid a total economic collapse.
Butthe country will not recover ful·
ly until the full sanctions- imposed
afterlraq invaded Kuwait in 1990 arc lifted.
As a result, Saddam has little to
gain or lose by cooperating with U.N.
inspectors, who have had repeated
showdowns with Iraqi authorities·
seek.ing to block access to weapons
sites and documents.
After five years, the monitors are
still searching for missing details of
Iraq's nuclear, chemical and biolog·

Ohio Lottery

.. CJnclnnatl

recently. '' When it entered illl sixth
year, we saw it as a lime te revie"[ :
our policies."
Iraq, l!lellllWhile, worries that the
limited oil sales- $1 billion every
90 days- make a full lifting of sane·
tions less likely. And opposition from
powerful enemies like the United
States is fierce.
· All the same, six years of sane·
lions have not loosened Saddum '•
grip on Iraq.
In. fact, Saddarn has been busy
makin'~t long·lerm plans: Several
huge palaces are under construction,
including a huge, domed structure

Super Lotto:

..

20-2&amp;-28-3338 42

Spoeteon.,.4

Partly cloudy tonight, lOW I In the lOa. frld8y,
cloudy. high In 101.

Kicker:

347181

SOD people
believed
dead after
"ferry sinks
MWANZA, Tanzania (AP) ·Rescue boats floated idly today on
· Lake Victoria, circling an oil slick
!hat marked the site of a capsized ferry and unable to reach passengers
believed trapped underwater in the
vessel's lower decks.
· At least 500 people reportedly
·drowned in· the accident Tuesday,
many' of them teen-agers return ing
home from school. Survivors said
today that the ferry had been listing ·
w~cn it left port, crammed with
determined passengers who ignored
warnings that the ship couldn't hold
them. .
.
Ships passing by the sinking ferry saved 120 peopfe, according to
state-run Radio Tanzania. Searchers
who pulled 29 bodies from the water
offered little hope today of finding
any survivors.
The state-owned MV Buboka
sank about eight miles from port at
Mwanza in Africa's largest lake .
Some survivors said 600 people were
aboard . the ferry, which President
Benjamin·Mkapa said was meant to
carry no more than 441 .
The boat was so crowded at dock
in Bukoba that police stopped any
more passengers from boarding,.Tan·
zanian newspapers quoted survivors
as saying. Some passengers traveled
by automobile to meet the ferry at the
next port, and boarded there, sur·
vivors said.
·
When the ferry left that port, _it
was listing badly, rider Kamuli
Magolenga said.
".Then before it capsized. passen·
gers moved to the right, and then to ·
the left - and we went down,"
Magolenga told Nipashe, a privately
owned Swahili-language newspaper.
The ferry sank within sight of
shore, amjd floating .islands of water
hyacinths. The only sign of the acci·
dent today was an oily sheen from
leaking fuel.
Early news reports said the ferry
hit a rock, but some survivor accounts
suggested the weight of the ov,erbur·
dened ship had been enough to sink
. it.
Survivors said many of the victims
were trapped below deck when the
ferry capsized.
Tanzania's president declared
three days of mourning, and·Hew to
Mwan7Al. The disaster overshadowed
peace talks on Burundi scheduled to
open today in the Lake Victoria port.
"This is not an ordinary tragedy,"
Mkapa said on a live radio broadcast
Tuesday. "It is a national tragedy."
Authorities have offered no defin·
itive account of the disaster. News
media reports of the number of peo·
pie aboard the ferry range from 600
to 900, and the estimated death toll
ranges from 400 to 800. The lower
figure is from the state-owned Daily ·
f'lews newspaper.
The accident happened as the ferry neared the end.of a 110-mile night
journey from Bukoba to Mwanza.
Tanzania's most vital port on Lake
Victoria, Mwanza handles the cotton,
tea and coffee grown in the fertile
western part of the country.
The slate Tanzania Railways Corp.
owned and operated the ferry. The
company sent other vessels including the lake's largest steamer.
the MV Victori a - to search for sur·
vivors, Radio Tanzania said.
No coordinated rescue effort was
l)egun until 3 p.m. Tuesday, hours
after the ferry was to have arrived.
Since 1977, Kenya, Uganda an&lt;J
Tanzania have operated separate fer·
ry services on the lake, with only haphazard rescue cooperation. Before
that, the East Afric~n Railways and
Harbo'rs Corp. jointly provided ship·
ping, air and railway services.
Tanzania, a nation of 25 .5 million
people, sits on the southern edge of
the Lake Victoria. The world's sec·
and largest freshwater · lake after
Lake.Superior, its·waters are 246 feet
deep and contain many small islands.
Tuesday's accident was one of the ·
deadliest ferry disasters in recent his·
tory.
.
.
_
· Africa's las ~ major fen·y d1sastcr
occurred in December 1991 , when
460 people died after a ship sank near
the port of S.afaga, Egypt.
In September 1994, 852 poople
died when the ferry Estonia sank in
wugh waters in the Baltic Sea.

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AO.wlllltC::O. New I It

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Thul'lday, May 23, 1996

Meigs MRIDD· targ~ted
-i:n cons·truction pl·an·

~Middleport pool progres~-----·~

GDC, U~G lncludedJn Gall/a County ptojects
From AP, Steff Repot11

All Weighte
ADV Motor 011
1
·

completion · of · an
early
. Fnmldin County was the .biggeS\ childhood/family learning cenler. The
wmner among.the state's 88 counties center will fOC!IS on a comprehensive
·in Gov. George Voinovich's pro- variety 9f 5ervices, and is a collabo-posed $1.6 billion construction bud·· rative effort with bead start and pre·
. gel.
.
$chool piQgrams in the county.
. VQinovich on Wednesday recom·
In' Gallia County, the bill propos·
· mended s~nding $265.7 million for es .S650,Qp0 for-Gallipolis Develop-: capital improvement projecls in . mental Center, .while the University
: Franklin County.
.
of Rio· prande was ..targeted Jor
. Amounts ranged from $2 million $2491875' in b115ic renovations and
· for the Adjutant General's renovation $633,000 for the new Emerson E.
:of B.eighder Annory to $707,000 for Evans College of Business Manage.
: work at the Ohio School for the Deaf. mcint.
:Along the·way, Ohio State Universi•
Other projects in Jackson and
· ty picked up $87 million.
Lawrence ·counties, part of the 94th
: Locally, the capital bill proposes House Disttict, were included in the
· $300,000for the Meigs·County Men· _, proposal, including economic devel·
:tal ~tardati!JniDevelopmental Dis· . opment funding in Jaclison and ren·
. abilities program said State Rep. oyatiens to Obio University's South·
Jqhn A. Carey Jr., R·Wellston. • ern Campus in Ironton.
; . •4_c~ording to Steve Beha, director
"I beli.eve this is a good budget for
·of the Mefgs County MRIDD Board, Ol'tio and for the 94th District,"
'the $300,000 will be used toward Carey sald.

When lll!IOUIIts for Cuyahoga and
·Hamilton counties were includedin
the proposal; the 3.(: corridor frmn
Cleveland to Cincinnati accounted
for $416 million of the proposed bud·
. get.
E~ven counties received nothing ·
aside from what they may see
through $918 million set aside for
what were called statewide purpo~.
. R. . . Gregory
Browning,
Voinovich's top financi!ll officer,"'llll·
lined for the House Finance Committee a plan to spend the money on
colleges, schools, prisons.and parks.
· Rep. Robert NetZley, R•Laura.
said small counties were left out in
debates over how to spend $110mil•
lion in money set aside for sports sta·
diums and othetcommunity projects.
Netzley suggested distributing that
pot of money on a per-capita basis.
"Wouldn't it be 111_\)Te fair and give
.. • Continued oil page 3 ·

back 11&lt;11 Of till pool haa been .errected, with . •
concm. expected to be pour'ld within lhl niXt · :
few clap,. VIllage officials hope to have J11e pOol ' :
opc~n by July 1. (T. Hunter/Sentinel photo)
·
'

-.
FBI
closes
in
on
anti-government
group~.·
·Develqper-s .agre~ .
.

•

All Weight5 Of
Havollne Motor 011

~=~~1

JORDAN, M.ont. (AP) - The . backwards to achieve a· peaceful tric eoop'in Cin:le, cast ofJordan, but the Freemen cause, and "the rest ate
FBI has moved portable power gen· solution, and we still hope for that, llo one at the utility could be reached. nothing but criminals trying to escape
. erators near the Freemen· riUICh to but we are preserving · all our . Meanwhile at the 96Q..acre ranch, prosecution. "Tile group does not ree:
begin p)'e!l81'ations for
pOssible options." ·
the Freemen marked the departure ef ognize st11te or federallaws .
'
shutdown of electtic power to the , , ''We.~.not setting any deadlines mediator Charles Du~e. a Colorado
The FBI believes I81Jeople are on
. GWLESTON, w.va. (AP)-..,. Federal Avlia~A.dmlo· .. anli·g,9vernme.nt group ~ow in a "- .fot;~!y,~s,"Gorelickadded. "We state senater, .by flying a U.S. flag ·the comp&lt;iund, including three chil•
~.-Y*4.t.o approV. sjlenclll)llf!ID~- ro~ a ltudy of _
two-month•old sta.n4off Wll\J,.I'ederal ,. Ag:~SS!Dg !hiJ ~ay and.mak-. upside·down a(. sentry post- tra. dren. ~ome .of the. adults Qre wanted
" .........._.,. "1-r:t jn .....othw..tl!na-\Vest
nllf. --• ·
· ·
88CI!~dl~ U.S. Justi.:,c Depllrifneiit .. iiifdecisions - ~:day at a time:" · · ditionally a·iligii of distress.
on state and federal charges that
... .,,~.·-""' '"""""' ··· ll''':"'·'l1T'•" ,.,.r '·'; · ·
.
.
1• • ' '
"1bere are no ~teell here, 'said R....,aU Biller, whdliiiid&amp;
said today. · .
.
'
· Gorelick sald 'she did not know the , Duke and a fellow negotiator, for· range from writing millions of dollm
the ~ al~ projeel tor IJae slAte QejNirtJDe~l or 'frluJs·
Hours after a negotiator left the cost ·of the operation. The. Justice . m~r Green Beret Col. James "Bo" , in bad checks to threatening to kiiiporta!l!lft. ·~we try~ .end tbe.DI a q!lliJity propoul, but there are
F[elltnen
in disgust Wednesday, dli'ee Department regtilarly calculates costs Gnu, have suggested further talks nap and kill a federal judge.
·. •
' tees"'
. ·
' ·- ·.. '
.. . ,
DO guarag
. ,
·. .
tractor-trailer trucks wirh their of individual operations, she said, and With !he Freemen would be worthless
Duke said the talks appeared 10
l)eovdopen must eOJ!Iplete the sh,uly before they eaa buDd the ·
roadbeds covered by tarpaulins added: ·:tn the life. of any effort, you a~d 1he AU should be more aggres· hold promise after the Freemen
~~ M~lnvhUe, developen bave, agreed to pay $1.9mWion
moved onto an FBI outpost near the have to consider cost sometime, but stve tn trymg to en~ the standoff..
agreed to let each person at the ranch
for a itilcly to ch- the belt locatiOD.·
compound.
·
it is not a factor a( .this point"
_In Jordan, org:'mzers of a pet1t1on speak 10 the negotiators. But Freemen
Klmte)'·Hol'il &amp;: Auociates Inc. of Cary, N.C., had asked for
In' Washington, Deputy Attorney
Although agents refused to say · dnve gathered stgnatures of people learler Rodney Skurdal reneged · •
$3.3 million to compleJe ~ stndy.
•..
General Jamie Gorelick emphasized what was i~ the convoy Wednesday, who believe use of "reasonable force . _ At the end of the 1alks, Dulce ~ould
· "We 101 them way down," BWer·said. '~Ws a sizeable redue•
il! ·a news conference today· !hat a the trucks were unload~ after night· rna~. be needed to ensure a surren· be seen waving his arms angrily. Laclion from their orlglaal dollar value."
decision has not been made to turn fall and appeared 10 leave a 2enera· der.
.
.
er, at leasr a half-dozen 'members ~
The .study also would establish a master plan and detennine
off the power.
tor and a large fuel tank. The three
Duke, a leader m the patnot the group, carrying rifles and we~
llirport's environmental effects•
She said: "We are placing gener- flalbed trailers•also were left behind. movement that beheves estabhsh~ ing sideal'l)'ls, spread out in the fiela$
ators a short distance from the
The unusual traffic suggested .an government has gone beyond tts and hills.
t.
Fteemeptri.provide the ability to dis'. increased FBI presence northwest of· constit.ulional powers, had arra~ged
Duke later told reporters in De;.
c~n!inue electric service to lhe ran~h the farm . buildings where the the_ f1rst face-to-face meetmgs ver that the Freemen wanted .Pres;.
Without d1sruptmg semce to 11s Freemen have been holed up since between the Freemen and t~ FBI. He . dent Clinton 10 declare a constit.:.\. ·
March 25, when two of.their leaders left Montana Wednesday after talks tiona I emergency.
.,
neighbors."
Asked if power would be cut soon, were arrested.
carne to an ~brupt end 1he day before. · "I'm sure the presidont of lhC
she replied, "WCI have not reached
One of the trucks in the convoy
Duke sa1d only a half-doz~n peo- United States has . more importaAJ
that
decision:
We
have
bent
over.
.
bore
a
sign
from
the
McCone
Elec·
pie
ms1de the comp~und beheve m ithings 10 worry about than a few
WASHINGTON . (AP) - The range in tliat. neighborhooc:l suggests
. number of lirst·time claims for job- a moderately improving labor market
Icriminals hanging out." '
,.;
.,
less beneli1S dropped by 7,000 last and seasonal employment.
wee!&lt;; to a level analysiS contend is ·
The four-week mo.ving average o(
.consistent with modest employment new claims also feU by 7,000, to
...
growth.
. 345,75.0 from 3S2,75Q the previous
New applications for 11nemploy- week. The drilp was the seventh
WASffiNGTON (AP) - After ratic demand fo~ a minimuni wage eliminate hundreds of thousands of · would allow employers to pay ~li
ment insurance totaled a·seasonally straighl and'ptished the number to,the ·wor!cing for months to forec a vote on vote 10:hile looking to the needs of entry-level jobs.
"opportunity wage'' of $4.25 for the
adjusted 344,000, down from lowest 1evel since ihe average stood raising the n_ational minimum wage, small businesses concerned,about ris·
But Democrats said their vote for : first 90 calender days of employm~i\1
·
·351,000 :a week earlier the Labor · at ;345,25Q ·during the period ended. House Demecr~IS n&lt;iw find t~em- ing labor costs.
a wage increase had been tainted by for workers under 20 years old. . ::
The .measure would raise the cur· an amendment offered by Rep.
:Department said today.'.rt was the . Aug. 26, \995.
·
·
Selves try.Ing to' defeat 1\ Republican
Both the minimum wage incre~ ·
:lowest since 340,QOO' claims were .
•i·
minimum-wage plan that exempts rent minimum.wage of $4.25 an hour William Goodling, R-Pa.,that would and the Goodhng measures are
to$4.7SonJuly I andto$5.15ayear exempt from provisions of the Fair· attached as amendments to a minor
,filed during the week ended May 4.
After I~t week's decline, econo-- small businesses.
·
·
. States with the larges1 gains were mist Mic~l P. Niemira told clieqts • . Joining Democrats in what has later.
Labor Standards Act firms with annu· bill detailing when employers mu»
''It
is
important that we relieve al gross sales of less than $500,000 pay employees for the time speni:
-California, 2,458; Michigan, 2,343; of the Bank ofTokyo-Mitsubishi Ltd. come to be a key e!ection·year issue;
Pennsylvania, 1,1'80; Kansas, 914, in New York the new levef "echoes President Clinton said he would veto small business of some of the · that handle products that cross state commuting in employer-owned vehl~
and Delaware, 848.
pn improv~p,1ent in the labor mar· the legislation if it contains language · expense in order to pay for thai min· lines.
·
cles.
"
imum
wage
increase.
and
that.
is
The biggest declines were In kets."
"to eliminate the minimum wage and
"This amendment will take off
.
.
'
Alabama, 1,411; Ohio, 739; Wash·
Many analysts consider the less· wage protections for millions of exac~y what this bill does," said Rep. anywhere between 3 and 10 million
If that passes, 11 would be sentte
Gerald Solomon, R-N.Y.
ington, 689; Qeorgia. 639, and New volatile four.week av~rage to be a · workers."
people from coverage of the mini· the Senate together with a bill passea
York, 6Q8;
.
mpre accurate gauge of labor condi·
Afinal vote was planned today for · House Speaker Newt Gi11griclt, R· mum wage," said House Democrat· Wednesday evening that provide~
Many analysts had expected about tions because jt smooths out the the intricately crafted legislation that Ga., said he doubted Clinton would ic Whip David Bonior, D-Mich . some $7 billion in tax breaks over
'350,000 new claims. 'They 'contend a spikes in the weekly repOrts.
Republicans said m~ts the Demoi:· follow through on his veto threat. The· "This is a terrible, terrible backwards eight years to small businesses.
~
purpose behind several GOP provi· step."
: -~
sions, Gingrich said, .was .10 help
The AFL-CIO, in a statement,
Thatlegislation, approveci~fl4-10
"small business and help create jobs called it "stunning in its scope and liberalizes equipment wriieo,ff~:
for d)e very people whp most need impact ... the mos1 far-reaching small endorses a new type Qf simple pen· that very first job."
business exemption from wage stan· sion plan for small firms and retroaeRepublicans claim that the higher dards ever enacted into law."
lively renews a $5,250 tax exemptioh
wage ~ould for~e small firms to
A second Goodling amendment for employer-paid tuition.
•

to ·pay fQ~ ,study

91

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

a

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r

1

•

•

:the

Seasonal em·p.lqyment·lowers jobless ~laims

•
•••

Each
Mf~.. #'5 H4651
.&amp; H4656
.

•••
•

Democrats protest .GOP's minimum wage plan

.

Aarqdyriamlb CaP,eulee .......

Mf0.· #e 9004, 9005 &amp;~

"

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72~Mo'nt11

Silver;PI.ue

'

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..

.

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....--.-scipio. Fire

Mason .county residents -sue ~
over 1994 AKZO plant leak

,.

.

..

"011 ~ llllkM of ~ 8ciDio
Townlhlp Voluntllr Flra Depltlltlll'it- Olfl.
ciiiiY dldlcat.cl. Tueld1y evtnlng In Cl~
monlel.t Pqavllll. Tha 24' x31' bulldlna . . .
bull In .-rt wllh
Block Gnmt
· monlll Inti
:
tlbor.

BObby Amold. (T. H ~1811AIIill Pllolo)

.,

.

POtNT:PL&amp;ASOO, W.Va. (AP); Court.
,
.. four Mason County residents,are
During one of four chcmical'leaks ·
suiDgtheAKZONobe!Cheniical'lnc. betweel) April and June 19~. the ,
plartt near Gilllipolis, Ohio, from · facility released 16,000 paunds of
·where a chemical cloud originated phosphorous. oxychloride, which is
• during a May 1994·chet'nicalleak.
used to make f'latne-retardant mateDennis and Wanda Bush and rials · ·
Sl)irley and Mildred Nibert said they · The couples also allege chemical
sulfer frmn·recurring breathing prob- releases from the plant are a constant
kms, skin and eye irrilation and O!h· nuisance that have made them
er heal!h problenis frmn the toxic "chemically sensitive."
cloud that drifted · to their hollies, · The lawsuit seeks .to stOp the plant
accordin1 to the ·lawsuit filed · from releasina chemk:als or to,bily •
Wedilesday in MISOII County Circuit .
I
. .0:

.

..

~ ~

the coupl"i'' homes and pay for their '
rclqcation. lt also seeks $200,000 fctr .•
each person, as well as legal costs.•
Plant manager Butch Schafer
Wednesday said he had net seen die
lawsuit' and could no1 comment. : '•
The lawsuit also names Huntina.'
ton Piping Corp., which had a long;:
lenn maintenance contract to ~paii,
replace aild mai11tain the facility :
AKZO's parent comwy, based \II
the Netherlands, earned $2 billicln 1aat·•
year, aec:ordina tq the compa8y:s
annual t:eport.
. :•

on

•

I

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