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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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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
.
.
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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

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Seasonal em·p.lqyment·lowers jobless ~laims

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.&amp; H4656
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•

Democrats protest .GOP's minimum wage plan

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....--.-scipio. Fire

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

,.

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"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
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tlbor.

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

.,

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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
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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.
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Pomeoow •Ill *"• pori. Ohio

Commentary

•
•

Thu...-,, lilly 23, 1•

Two weeks aao. with Sen. Bob . tries to distinpish himself.
in the ,_;dential rxe is 58 percent asked who tbey want to have more
Dole, R-Kan., strugaJinl to be both
A ·major tax cut proposal, for to 38 percent, accorclinJ to Gallup.
inOuencc over the direction of the
..,, '
• presidential candidate and Sena1C example, would fly in the face of the
When voters were uked whether nation for the next four years, 53 permajority leader, one of his close just-unveiled "Dole budget" for fis- the Republicu I 04lh Conpess has cent of voten laid Clinton and only
~11 Court St, P~, Ohio
advisers wondered aloud what Dole
614-912-2158 • Fu: 112-2157
been a s~ss or a failure, a 49 per- 38 percent said Dote.
had in mind when he told voters he Morton Koodrac/ce . cent to 43 percent plurality said it was
Polling on Clinton's minimum
. had "one more mission" to carry out.
a failure. With limited prospects of wage proposal and Dole's gu tax cut
• " Is the. mission just to win the call997, which calls for a more mod- dramatic success .Ibis year, Dole also indic11es that Clinton is by far
Republican nomination thai's always est tax cut than Republicans previ- apparently decided th4t if he stuck the superior pplitical strategist.
· ·1
A Gannett
Newspaper
eluded him." the adviser asked, "or ously favored. And making affirma- around, he'd'be stuck in an undenow. Eighty-one percent of voters favor
does he actually want to be elected . tive action· a major campaign theme
Moreover, when voterS were raising the basic wage, while S6 per~- ·
and be president?"
ROBERT L WINGm
could divide Democrats, but also the · asked, "who do you want to 'have cent favor cuttins the tax, according
1
As campaign aides now tell it, country.
Publlaher
more influence over the direction of to Gallup.
.
Dole already had made up his mind
the
nation in the next four years -To hiS credit, Dole has been willTheoretically, Dole could have
-- in early April, in fact -- to resign kept the Senate seat and title, dele- Clinton or Republicans in Con- ing to develop a new stump speech
··.CHARLENE HOEFUCH
MARGARET LEHEW
from the Senate and devote himself gating daily leadership duties tooth- gress?" S4 percent said Clinton: 41 and to submit to coaching to improve
. : Genend Ma111gw
·
ContJoller
fully to being the GOP presidential ers and using the Senate flOor to petccnt, Congress. That's another his performance. He's !tamed how to
nominee. But the adviser's question secure press coverage when he was- sign that being identified with Con- use the pronoun "!" instead of talkillustrates the doubts about Dole's n' t on the road. This is lhe route that gress is a loser.
ing about himself in the third person.
resolve·that had arisen even among many of l!is top campaign advisers
Campaign ,aides deny that polling
The new speech, according to
his intimates. ·
had anything to do with Dole's deci- press accounts, contains a concise
expected him to take. ,
Now, of course, Dote' has dealt · . But the latest Gallup pollsunests sion to resign from .the Senate. They statement of w.hy Dole wants to be
with those qualms as decisively as he why it was iii Dole's interest not just say that he came to it privately dur- president: "because l want to return
can. But his decision to hit the cam- to give up his leadership post, but to ing his vacation in Florida. discussed integrity to our government .. because ,
paign trail full time begs the question: divorce himself from Congress. too. it with his wife and.campaign man- I want to restore the vigor of the
What's he going to say out there?
With Democrats tying the Senate ager; Scott Reed, in early April, and American economy... because I want
Not only-does President Clinton up in knots, Dole's approval ratings had planned to announce it recently to restore an instinct for dignity to our
continually succeed in occupying as majority leader have. been drop- but got embroiled in the gas tax fight ·national life ... because I believe that
the political center·· lately, by mak- ping, from 57 percent to 31 percent instead..
great as America lias been, America
ing it known that he opposes same- positive in March, to 51 percent to 36
Polls indicate that Dole waited too has even greatet, better days llhead!'
ElY·TO.M RAUM
sex marriage -· but Dole is also in percent positive this month. Clinton's long, and that now it's no' just Con·
As campaign aides tell it, between
Aaaoclated PreH Writer
danger of driving too far to the right approval
now
and July Pole will .vary the
is 5S percent to 39 gress that the public has d.oubts
..WASHINGTON) - While Bob Dole may be relinquishing "the trappings on taxes and affirmative action as he percent,
lead over Dole about. It's also Dole himself. When stump speech with theme-a-week
of.power and comfort," he won't exactly be hurting financially by resignpolicy statements that contrast his
iug.from the Senate.
own approach and criticize Clinton's.
: .tic 'll'soon be eligible for.retirement benefits of at 1east $1 07,QOO a,year.
.Still, to o~ercome Clinton's lead,
That's a healthy chunk of his $148,400 salary as the Senate majority leader.
Dole has to come up with long-bomb
Dole .may be running short on campaign funds but shouldn't have any .
proposals. with. aides and advisers
personal cash-flow problems from his surprise decision to resign frOm the ·
indicating that a broad-gauge tax cui
Senate - after four decades of government service.
and an assault on affinnative action
Dole has said he will quit the Senate on or before June II to focus full
as the likeliest weapons.
time on his presidential campaign.
An attack on affirmative ·action
1
Dole's salary of $148.400 is the san\e as Cabinet members- and would
might help Dole divide conservative
eqiJ.al President Clinton's annual pension if voters retire Clinton this Novemwhite "Reagan Democrats" from
ber and give Dole his job. The president's annual salary is $200,000.
'
liberals and minorities in the Demo::·sen. Dole's lifetime of service to his country, 35 years in Congress and
cratic Pany and might be ·a v~hicle ·
. fiv~ years in the military, make him eligible for benefits that are exceeded
for Dole to make gains in California,
bf those of Bill Clinton after just four years in office," said Dole Senate
where 'an anti-preference ballot inis~kesman Clarkson Hine.
·
••
tiative is expected to pass. But it .
"The irony is that next year Bill Clinton will be receiving a pension and ·
might also brand him as desperate
president Dole will not," Hine said, not passing up an opportunity to make
and divisive, willing to exploirracial
a political point.
division for political gljin .
','"11 was time to leave all those traPpings of power behind and all the comAnd if and when Dole comes ilp
fort 'and security ... and demonstrate to the American people that this is seriwith a tax cut proposal, he's bound to
oos·business," Dole told a group of auto dealers on Monday.
be asked, "What abowtthe Republi·
'Dole was seriously wounded i,n World War II and, to this day, receives
can budget you just introduced in
a $18,300-a-year compensation check from the gove111ment. These disabilCongres~. cutting back on the size or
ity payments continue on top of any pension Dole draws.
.
GOP tax cuts?"
· As a72-year-old, Dole also qualifies for Social Security benefits. These
It's a fair question, but Dote is .
an! paid when an individual reaches age 70 - whether or not he or she is
now in a position to answer: That was
still working.
a Senate proposal, not a presidential
·However, Dole has relatively little due from Social Security as a mem· ·
one. That was then, this is now.
oor. of an older congressional retirement system. In 1984, when federal and I;;;·~
(Morton Koadncke ill ~tlw
congressional retirement systems were merged with Social Security,. Dole
editor of Roll C.U, t&amp;t -.,aper .
d!!rcised an option to remain in the old system.
of CapltoiiWL)
Dole is entitled to some Social Security ~nefi'ts -due" in pan 'to money he paid in before he was first elected to Congtl!ss in 1961, including eight
years as county attorney in Russell, Kan. .
•
However, Dole so far has elected not to apply for these benefit payments,
based on his' tax returns through 1995.
·
Boris Yeltsin's rival for the Russ- undermined Russia back in the ·60s, ity figures, thus driving themselves to
· .Ronald Reagan, who was 69 when he took office, declined to apply for
ian presidency, the Communist Gen- who is this so-called "we"? I thought the fringes of culture where their · its most emblematic --the black marS9'iial Security payments during his. two terms as president.
nady Zyuganov, has been running we wore supposed to believe that the extreme opinions would (paradoxi- ket. Russia will soon be a free marAs a citizen, Dole also would no longer be required to tum over his speech around
telling potential voters that the United States' media are run by a left- cally) gain more credence. Don't you ketplace ruled by gangsters, .pirates
,fees to charity- as he and his wife Elizabeth have both done in recent years.
and ~orrupt officials.
United States was to blame for the
.
.
get it? Republicans are undercover · So .Boris Yeltsin is actually a
~efore announcing his candidacy in 1995, Dole commanded about $2,000
collapse of the Soviet Union.
hippies! 1'bey're all wearing tie-dyed Communist, Zyuganov a democrat,
·ian Shoales
pegspeech before groups ranging from the American Warehouse AssociaHooray for our side, huh? PresiT-shirts
under their blue suits!
ti«UfJo The Fertilizer Institute. (Mrs. Dole was getting as much as $20,000
Gingrich is Jerry Oarcia's evil twi'1&gt;
dent Reagan knew what he was leaning cabal. Did we stage a tOP'.
Look at the militia movement. and Clinton really didn't inhale after
in ~h fees).
.
'
doing after all, right? Well, not quite. secret journalist . exchange in the . Militias all settle in ilrmed comfl:~Jrs. Dole is on an unpaid leave as president of the American Red Cross.
Zyliganov says that President John F. ' 60s.' Did we swap our right-wing pounds. Could these compounds be .all. Who's behind all this? Well, the
Mafia of course, lb!: CIA, and the
Sljejlas said she will return to the $200,000 post, whether her husband wins
Kennedy did it..
reporters for their left-wing reporters, virtual hippie collectives, with guns? Illum,inati:.Rut who was the masteror:teses.
According to the San Francisco to try to cause the collapse of both Do the miliiia not allow federal mm
. d?. ~
. .. · .
.
41le Doles also have investments worth well over $1 million in real estate,
Chronicle, Zyuganov claims that Communist and democratic ways of agents on their property because
Surprisingly, it wasn't John
m.;Jaal funds and stocks and bOnds.
·
. "the Soviet breakup occUrred as a
·
life?
they
are
trying
to
conceal
the
fact
that
Keruledy,
but Jackie! Her demise was
~either Dole's Senate office nor his campaign office would give details
direct result of a secret 'new war'
they are actually organic gardeners. - faked, you know. The entire latter
onlie senator's pension.
Kennedy started after the 1962 Cuban . If so. who is behind this conspir- They spend their free time not on tar. half of the 20th century was just a
:Jlut the National Tax~Jayers Union, a nonpanisan research group which
missile crisis. Under Kennedy 's acy? What is to be gained?
get practice but playing Frisbee and fiendish plot to drive up the value of
kej,as track of tax issues and congressional fringe benefits, calculated it at
orders, the United States took control
Let's examine this further.
learning the chords to "Uncle John's her personal possessions. She's
noJess than S107,000, including Social Security. That figure was not disof ihe Soviet mass media and used it
In his day, Presiden.t Kennedy was Band."
sec.retly living of( her auction pro~ts \
pulJd by Dole aides.
.
-to .sow dissension·- including nation-' considered a liberal. Nowadays this
Here's
a
horrifying
thought.
Whlit
mtJ executive vice president David Keating said Dole's pension could alist and religious separ~tism, and means "socialist." No true socialist if we aren't America at all, but Rus- m a s~mptuou~ underground mansion
in Bethesda, Md., with Aristotle
ha~ been as much as $122,000 a year - . hnd he exercised different options
disrespect for the elderly ·- that led would strive to bring about t\Je col' sia in disguise? And what if Russia is On ass is' clone. I think Howard Hughin ISandling his retirement account.
to the collapse."
lapse of soci~lism. Therefore -John ;tCtually America? Yes, the giant cor- es, Amelia Earhart and Jimmy Hoffa
:f.There is also the interesting question of what Dole's pension would be
Doesn't that sound like what's Kennedy must have been a coven . porate mergers of the last few years are in on it too. I don't .know what
if ~ serVed one term as president," Keating said.
going on in the United States today? Republican.
were not capitalist movements, but they 're; up to down there, but it can't
:~ congressional and presidential pensions are separate. so he could
Some want to 'build a wall between
If this is true, however, what does socialist. When ihe lime is ripe, · be any good.
drew both.
America and the rest of the world -- that make Republicans? Back in the' these materialist giants will reveal ·
(To receive a complimenlary
· ~r that reason, the U.S..ex-president getting the highest pension is Oerthere's nationalist separat~m in a nut- '60s, hippies warned us to mistrust that they aren't corporations, but
IaniShoales
newsletter, c:alll-1100at&amp;B. Ford, who had been House Republican leader before his three years
shell. Others are selling up quasi-reli- authority. Today, it is Republicans revatpped socialist multinational colas ~e president and then presiden.t. He gets ~ughly $240,000 a year in comgious enclaves in Wyoming, Idaho . who warn us that authority is not to lectives, in which shareholders, not , 989-DUCK or write Duck's Breath,
408 Broad St., ·Nevada City, CA
biltd White House an&lt;! congressional pens•ons.
,
and Montana -- religious separatism! be trusted.·But Republicans, unlike
95!159.)
.
workers,
own
the
means
of
producHine, Dole's Senate press secretary, said Dole would be more than delightAnd if trying to eliminate Social hippies, are themselves authority figtion.
Ian Shoales is a syndkated
ed to defer his congressional pensiQn while he is earning that $200,000 presSecurity isn't disrespect for the elder- ures. By telling Americans to trust
Ahd Russia?lt is fast going down writer for Newspaper Enterprise
idential salary.
ly I don't know what is.
•
them w!Jeti they say not to trustthem,
the road to laissez-faire capitalism at Association:
.
But I'm still confused. If we they undermine their status as authorEDITOR'S NOTE: Tom Raum covers the White House and national.politics for The Associated Press.

Herschel L. ·cub•

IICH.
I

•

ITolddo!64" I

'LstisDGslid in 1!J48

llenehol L. "Cub" Oilby, 75, of Owbire died Thunday May 23, 1996
It Ve1Crul MDIIOOiial.~ POUIIIIO). •
•
Born May J-4,'1!121 i•.Meip Ollunty, he was the- of the IMe Hurley
IJid Clara Delloey Gilby. He wu a IDit employed plumber; a World War
n 1,J.S. I\n'4y veter~t~,.aad a member of feeney lkucu Post 1128 Ameri·
can Lcgi01111d 'lhe D.~V.
..
He is survived by bis wife. Lydia 1bontpttoa Gilby or Oahile; !Yeo IODS
. and daugbters-i•law. Wale}' lOll UaJda_GiJby ofMitldlcprwt, and~ and
Debra Gilkey of Pomet:oy: one danpwer, Utlda Radlbum of Pomeroy, and
seVOD grandehiJdrell.
Services will be held Sanuday, II a.m. at lbc Filher .l 'luaal Home, Middleport, with the Rev. l'lul Taylor ofticialing. Btaial will follow in Gnvcl
Hill~. Cflesblrc.
·
.
Friends may call Friday eycnillg, from 6 to 9 p.m., at the funeral borne.

\

~ ·

.!lr
Co.

•ICOJUIIibul!76· I

Elizabeth M. S,harpnack

Bob OGle can enjoy
r.etirement benefits

Today's weather forecast

Everybody look what's go.in·g down

.

.

RC~-1945. Nazi official Heinrich Himmlercomminc4 suicide while imPrls·
oned' in Limeburg, Germlllly. ·

..

Laws encourage·negative campai.gns

By TONY SNOW
.
lain~ na.tional C3!llpaign.
.
terms. Incumbents' funding advan· p.rues and build popular support.
Creators Syndicate . ,
_L1ke 11 ~r not, Dole has to kiss up tage has grown from a ratio of I.S to 1 Only plutocrats such as Ross Perot
WAS~INGTON -- You ve gotta to the national press, whose Wash- 1 to more than 4 to I. The number of .and Steve Forbes can afford the high
love the 1rony: Bob Dole, banner car- ington correspondents preferred Clin- political action commiuees has . cost or running an independent race
ner for the "Pany of G':"~d.'_' has all ton to Oeorge Bush by a m~in or 89 increased sevenfold, to nearly 4,300,
The · binest flaw in campaign:
but run out of cash. while Bill Chn- perc.entto 7 percent. If '!'edm ~ounds and re-election rates for incumbents· finance laws is that they tried to solve
ton, the Emperor :of ·Empathy, has don t report about h1s actiVIties, have leaped above 90 percent. Even roblems that didn't exist.'tt's hard to
m~re than $20 mllhon in his. cam- though, nobody will hear a!lout him. . in the "revolution" yearofl994, 91.4 ~gue that we spend too much monpa•gn uti.
He therefore will entertain·the scribes· - percent of the Capitol Hill incum- ey on pOlitical campaigns: Amcri~
Even th~ugh Republicans are by delivering provocative speeches . bents running for re-election won.
will dish out three times more this "
enJoymg the1r best fund-raising year and persuading surrogates to spew
The law also has lpecome a year for potato chips than for every '
ever, federal electwn . l.aws have prodigious volumes of mud toward ; weapon for intimidating grass-roots political campaign in the country.
forced Dole mto the pohucal equiv· the commander in chief.
-activists. Bradley A. Smith points out
Similarly big bucks guarantee
alent of eaung _cat food. ~ike a disDespite somber tal~ about the in a recent ~ato In~titute paper "!at nqthing. Micluiel Huffington· and ,
solute heu, he 1s se~hog h!s e~tale to . need for mannerly pubhc discourse, .fedei'BI offic1als.tnun the1r pns diS" .,Oliver North ran the two most expen· '
make end_s meet -- ~ucuomng off few reporters haye figured out the prOJX1rtionate!y at challengers. In 'sive u.s. Senate races in history -arid
·office eqUipment, for 1nstanc~ _-- and · diny little secret: Campaign-finance one of the most famous examples of ' lost. 111e one thing campaip ex_pensendmg tire servants away ~nul help l.aws encourage negative campaigns. the_phenomenon, a school o.fticial in ·ditures roulinely provide is.informa, ·.- ;
~lves. ~e Feder~) Electt11n ComNobody intended this. When Cpn- Oh10 pe~uadcd f~ ollic1als to So lion. According •to Bradley Smith,'' •
. miSSion will hand h1m ~ ·$62 m11lion gress overhauled spending statutC:s after Margare~ M~Intyre, wh? had '.'i!J(rcased campaipspending does
chec~ after the Repubhcan.conven- two decades ago, it thought it C()ald handed. o~t literature ~m~ a translate into a better-informed elecllon.m Augus_t.)
. ·
stan\p outspecial-interest favorilis~ !'Dod-levy ancrease. He~ ~rnnc? Sign- toratc.... Spen!ling Jess on campaigns
For the ume bemg, the proud by clamping a lid on individual con-· 1ng her fact-l)ased pebuon with the will not elevate ihe level of debate
KanSIII must depend on !he kind~ss tributions..
·
, . name · :~onccmed Parents and Tax- but it will result ilfless public aware:
of strange_rs. The Republ_Jcan NauonUnfortunately, the experiment payers. It ll~k her lllven ye.s and ness lllld undentandins of ~ ·•
al C~mmttt~ h~ co~tnbu~ a $20 backfired. Since the federal Blections · Jl~told legal bills to ~vertJim the ver- ·isaues." This .also ~my cxplllin ~hy
.nulhon :wvertlsmg blnz des1gned to Campaign Act took effect in ~mid- · d1ct.
.
.
.
·, ~paign dollars almost always propottra~ Bdl c,hnton as ~ sc~ndrel ·: 1970s, spending on con~ional
It has ""';~ all but lmJ'I!"Ible VIde more punch for challensers . '
and a har. That s ruce, butu can t su~- .. races has'tri~lc;&gt;d in inf)ation-adjusle4 for humble Citizens to form their own than incumbents .

Elizabeth M. Sharpnaek, 94, of ColuPmus died Thesday, May 21, 1996
at Riverside Memorial Hospital, Columbus.
· Born 1une.27, 1901 in The Plains, she wu the daughter of the bite Jonas
. Wolfe and Molly Pickens-Wolfe. She lived' most of her life in the Apple
1Orove and Racine areas. She was a member ofthe·Racine United Methodist
·church . .
. She is survived by two sons and daugbter$-i•law: Jack &amp;lid Norma Sharp• nack, Jr:, of Columbus, and William and Unda Sharpnack of Peru, Ind.; two
daughters and a son-in-law, Kathryn and Gary Spires, and Marabellc Sbarpnack, all of Colw:nhus; five gtlllldchildren, and two great granddaughtea's.
She was preceded iri death by (ler husband, Jack;·daughter, Bvelyn; son- ·
in-law, Hank Baker; and four brothers: Glenn, Carl, Richard, and Anhur.
·Services will be held Friday, 2 p.m.• at the Letart Falls Cenietery Chapel,
with .the Rev. Gerald Kost and grandson Jackie W. Sharpnack offtciating.
. Burial will follow in Letart Falls Cemetery.
Calling hours will be observed from I:30 p.m. until time of service Fri- ,
day, at the chapel. ·
.
Jn lieu o(flowcrs,the family request that memorial contributions be made
to the Racine United Methodist Church.
Arrangements are being handled by the RUtherford-Corbin Funeral Home,
Worthington.
·

Today... Sunny. High 80 to 85. derstorms. Highs in the upper 70s .
Southwest wind 5 to 10 mph.
and lowe~ 80s. LowiJ.tl tlle mid SOs
Tonight... Pardy cloudy.. .Then to lower 60s.
mostly cloudy with a chance of Emaded rorecast
showers and thunderstorms after
Saturday...Dry
and central.
midnight. Low in . tlie lower. 60s: A cllance of thunderstorms south.
Light winds. Chance of rain 30 per- Lows in the upper 40s nOrth to the
cent. ·
upper 50S south. Highs from the mid
. Friday... Mostly cloudy with a . 60s north to the upper 70s south.
Sunday .. .Dry. Lows in the upper
chance . of, showers and thl!llder,.·.
stonns... Mainly in the !lftemoon. 40s to mid 50s. Highs from the low
High in till: lower 80s. Chance of rain 60s north to 'the mid .70s south.
50 percent.
Memorial Day...Fair north ...And a
Lewis W. Smith, S6, of Portland, died 1\aesday, May 21, 1996 at Uni·
Outlook for Memorial Day week- chance,of rain South. Lows in the 40s versity Hospital, Columbus, following an extended illness.
end... A chance of sbowers and thun- and highs in the 60s.
Born on Oct. 13, 1939 at Clifton, W.Va, he was the so~ of the late James
and Sarah Marie Railey Smith. He w&amp;S a coal miner and farmer.
He is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Sandy and Arlie Malone,
Stewart; a son and daughter-· ' 1w, T10110y iind Rebecca Smith, Racine; three
sisters, Bertha Hayes and Bt , .rly Adkins of Mason, W.Va., and Barb Hunt
of Ravenswood, W. Va.; three brothers, Homer Smith of Mason, W. Va.,
James Smith, Jr., of Racine, 8nd : fik:e Smith of Pomeroy; seven grandc1UJdren, ~vera! nieces and nephews.
·
·
Services will be held Friday at I p.m. at .the Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy. The Rev. Roy McCarty will offtciate arid burial will be in Brown- .
ing Cemetery, Portland. Friends ~my call at the funeral home tonight (Thursday), 7 to 9 p.m:
WASHINGTON (AP) -:- Repuli-' both houses," Bain told the House
licans in·Congress are making anotb- Ways and Means subeommitt~ on
'l'ODI pace •
er attempt at changing the welfare human resources which asked her to
system, .but ·still may not be abl.e to . explain thtpresident's·proposa)s.
the· local communities a chance to districts. l!ach district receiving
get President Clinton 'to go alo-ng with · "The p~sident has made it-clear · make decisions on their own for them school building assistance money
them.
that, if Congress sends him a clean to panidpate in this capital veniiJI'C?" would have to c.ontribute a ·local
. Clinton administration officials welfare reform bill that' requires he said.
·
match based on a sliding scale.
. were optimistic Wednesday · after work, . promotes responsibility and
" If they want to build a stadium
1 Rep. W~yne ~one~, D-Ciayahoga
House'and Stnate Riipublicans joint- protects c~il~n. he will sign it," she well and good. But if they want to Falls,
ranking m1nopty member on
· ly introduced their latest legislation. said.
·
build a liule park ... 'for S100,000, the committee, said Voinovich had
But in testimony to a House subWays 4J1d Means Chairman Bill with 10,000 people and $10 per per- - included less money for SchooiNet
. committee, Health and Hun\an ·Ser- Archer, R~'fexas, s'Bid the Republican son, wouldn't that be much more than legislators had recommended in
vices Assistant' Secretary Mary Jo ' liill is built on four principles. .
fair?" Netzley said.
previous legislation.
··
· Bain indicated that liriking welfare
Browning said the Legislatu~
"They'rt saying basica,lly . they
and M"jli91'id G~anges, as the Rqlu\)"We believe people ought to work was responsible for 'making si&gt;und
can't
spend it fast enough. So they're
lic8ns proposed, would not be accept- for their benefus: There ought to be decisions about use of state money.
able.
·. ·
. stricttime limits. We ought to cut off ·
"I certainly think the administra· really still pi'omising it.• but it won't
And while ihe' Republicans said welfare for noncitizens and ,felons tion would be happy to sit down with be ·fi&gt;r two more years," Jones said in
the bill contained bipar\isan recom- and we ought 10 tum welfare over to yliu and anyone else on th~ .commit- an interview.
mendations from t~e nation's goyer- the states," he said.
tee and talk about different ways to
nors, Democratic governors comSenate·Finance CQmmittee Chair- do community projects," he told
plained they hadn't seen it yet.
' man William Roth, R-Del., said the Netzley.
Vetei'IUII Memorial
After two v~toes aqd months of bill chl~Jlges the Medicaid system to'
Among the 'largest categories of
Wednesday
admissions - Jessie
·
discussions among the White House, give .the &lt;~tales more flexibility and spending in the Voinbvich bill:
}arrell,
Pomeroy.
Congress arid governors, t~ Repub- . conforms, to the governors' recom• ijigher Educatio'!: $S39.2 mil. Wednesday dischafges - none. ·
lican and Clinton proposWs are clos- mendations.
lion. ·
·
Holzer Medkal Ceuter
than ev~r.
While Republican governors were
' Primary and Secondary EducaD.llcharps
May 21 - Eva
Both Congre~s and the White praising their congressional col- tion : $270 million.
O'Connor,
Sylvia
Rupe, Adrienne
House s~y we.lfare must be trans- leagues, •Nevada . Gov. Bob Miller
• Prisons (adult and juvenile):
Hurlow, Alice Swiderski, Mrs. John
formed into a job-oriented ~ys1em said his fellow Democratic pvemors $269.6 million .
that offers financial suppon in a cri- hadn't signed off on the bill and·still
• Natural Resources: $131.8 mil- Harrison and daughter, Earnest Gillman, Lemona Casey, Tamara Stewan.
sis, but should not be allowed for any had questions about many .of its pro- lion.
· Birtlas - · Mr. and Mrs. Daniel
longer~ fi~e years over a lifetime.
vlsions, including ihe sections on
• Mental Health. Mentalll.etardaThey agre~ gllVernment f.unds Medicaid:i·
'
tion, .Alcohol and Drug Addiction: Garvey, daughter, Jackson; Mr. and
Mrs. Kelly Gruescr, son, Pomeroy.
should be supplied -for child care,
.,
$70.8 million.
(Published with permission)
with the R'epu~licans proposing even
Voinovich proposed $150 million
more money than the White House
Ior SchoolNet Plus, a program that
KANAUGA DRIVE -IN
has .
intemls to have a computer work staBut they differ on some details
tion for every five children in kinderFRL, SAT~ SUN.
Am Ele Pow• ............- .........41%
and the broad issue of turning MedDAHAYKROYD
garten
through
4th
grade.
~ '"''1" .............; •••••••••••
58
IN '
AII11811C1 011 ..............................44
icaid into a block grant program in
He also recommended pumping
AT6T
........
............................
62\
CELTlC
PRIDE
PG-13
$120 million into an existina pnigram
the welfare bill. . •
•
AND
Bank 01\11······..•••••••••••..•• •..•••• 36 ~ that helps local schools pay for con"We.strongly hope for legislation
Bob E~, .............;.............-15),
WALT 1118NEY'8
that builds IJPO.n,IJ1e original ~ation­
J[l.ori-W_,., .............~ ••••••.••~..41% , struction and renovation of buildings.
TOY
STORY G
al Governors Association wclfii(C
State aid would target low,wealth
~ 111d.......................1ft
4411-1018
agreemc;nt, the_ Senate-:p~sed bi_ll
Charming Shop ...,..,,,,,,""'8'City ..~ ..............: •••••••••••.23'1.
and the recent blpantij!!IJ~IIIallves 111

north

Lewis W. Smith

Clinton _favors
·changes . in GOP's'velfare ·reform

.

By The Asaoclated Prell
·
.
·
·
Today is Thursday, May 23, the I 44th day of 1996. There are 222 days
left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
On May 23, 1934, bank robbers Bonnie Parter and Clyde Barrow were
shot to death in a police ambush as they were driving a stolen Ford Deluxe
·along-a road in Bienville Parish, La.
Oh this date:
In 1430, Joan of Arc was captured by the Burgundians, who sold)ler to
the English.
.
,
. .
In 1533, the marriage of England's King Henry VIII to Cathenne of
·
Aragon was declared null and void.
In 1701, Captain William Kidd was hangedin London after he was convicted of piracy and murder.
·
•
.
· Iri 1788, South Carolina became·the eighth state to ratify the United States
. .
ConsututJon.
Iq 1873, Canada's North West Mounted Poli&lt;.;C force was established.
In 189S,the New York Public' Library had its origiflS with an .agreement
combining the city's existing Astor.and Lenox lii1£aties.
·..
In 1915, Italy declared war on Austria-Hungary itt World War I.
In 1937, industrialisi John D. Rockefeller ~ied in llnnond Beach, Fla.
In 1940, Tommy Doney liJid His Orchestra, the Pied Pipers and featw-ed
soloist Frank Sinatra recorded ''I'll Never Smile Again" in New York for

J

•

The Daily Sentinel Dole hi.ts road, but what Will he ·say?

Today .in history

FAA: King ~ever "released
parachute while skydiving::

Pege2

Meigs MRIDD•·· eootlnaec~

•

Hospital news

CHARLf.STON, W.Va. (AP) A Kanawha County commissioner
apparently did no1 release his parachute while skydiving nqr CJJes.
peake, Ohio, a Federal Aviation
Administration inspector laid.
"k WISII'Ithe equipmeall," inspector Corinne Brackett said Wednesday.
" We dill a very thorough i nvestigalion."
Gary King, who plummeted to hi~
death Sunday, had been skYdiving for
several years and had aboul30 jumps
to his credit He made Sunday's jump
from 10,000 feetalong with two other divers after taking off 'from the
Lawrence County (Ohio) Airpark
with Tri-State SkYdivers.
Brackett, who visited the crash site

Today's livestock
report
------COLUMBUS' (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Thursday by the U.S..
Department of Agriculture Market
News:
Barrows and gilts: steady; demand
•·
U.S. 1-2, 220-260 lbs. 60.5062.50, few 6Q.OO and 63.00; plants
62.00-63.50.
U S 2 3 230-260 lb S3 ()().
· · • '
s. ·
60.00.
Sows: steady.
.U.S. J-3, 300-500 lbs. 41.004S.50; 500-650 lbs. 45.50-48.50. few
49.00.
~oars: 34.00-35.50.

Meigs announcements:··:
Barbecue set
There will be a chicken aiJd rib
barbecue at the Chester fire station
Monday. Homemade ice cream will
be sold. Serving will begin at II :30
a.m.; parade at I :30 p.m. The barbecue is being held in conjunction
with Memorial Day services. Dona-'
tions of pies and cakes are needed.
To host meeting
The Chester Garden Club will
have an open meeting at the Chester
'Methodist Church, June 5, 7:30p.m.,
with a program on herbs. Bobbi Kan
will on the history of herbs, their use
in cooking and decorating and for
medicinal purposes. All garden club
members along with other interested.
persons are invited to auend. Chester
Garden, Club members are to tak~
food made with herbs and a recipe
containing herbs, as well as adoor
pnze.

.

(UIPIIlt,__

Gtrlrwtt ..................................88\
G~r TIR ......................52~
K~lrt .................................:.10j.
L.lrtd8 Erld..............................22141

.

;

I

a....-...................32

One Vel~y.,............................321,(.
Rockall ·-·············.................57

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

~··1116
12\1
..., BAM·.;..-...........................18\
WetldY .1111'1.....- ....................18\
Worth1,_,. .a,..t. t........... ~.....21\
'

-·-•.:. .

a.m.IJIIOIM Provicted by A:~~:11
'

, Stoctc rel!orta ara the1

SUI8C;RIPI'IOH 11,\DJI ·

, IIJc.ntttor_..,.

of•GIJ.JHPolfl.

ClDc ~ ........ wO&gt;&gt;OOOo. wOn0o""'"" ' ' ' '"""'' .)$2.G0
()ne t.to.fl,, ... ,!l.,.... M.00000""' ""'"'"'\"""_... .'70

.
0.¥-........-............. _..................$104.011 , . . .~------. .- - -. .

~.~-~. , -~sc- .: r.~aC..;.;,;.~,;.,~.i.;;.;,...;i.~.=--1

:,:.-=-:~~-Odwll-""

~

·

----·-

··

Reg.M.75U&amp;.75

4···---·1
...

MAiLsUiacllfl J0Ns
f!loip c..,.
13 ----·--..~ -......................$2'1.!0
, •215 ......
15112

.

...~

AI n.tl R.V.a.eo lOW SJ.
All 1' 11nr•lti
~

No toWrijodoo I&gt;)' moll .......... ip -

$5.00

·'· -..soc

·-r-·----... . . . _. . __,. . . .s•Oit.56
n-...................
t .. .......,!.............. -

Annual dinner announced
Burlingham Modem Woodmei'~ ·
annual Memorial Day smorgasbordn.
will be held Monday, serving 11 a.In, :
to 6 p.m., eat in or carry out for ,a
donation. There will also be a ba~ ,,
sale. Funds ra1sed with matchiqg ,_
· home office amount to go to-Mr. and.
Mrs. Leroy ·sauters for medical, surgical and rehab bills.
:. ..
•

Meigs EMS logs 8 call$.~~
Unils of the Meigs County Emer- Jarrell, Veterans Memorial Hospiult; ,
gency MedicaL Service reconjed 8
4:41 p.m., Sellers Ridge, Wanita"·
calls for assistance Wednesday, Sellers, Veterans Memorial Hospi~ :
~. ·
including three transfer calls. Units .
responding included:
POMEROY
10:24 a.m .. State Route 7, Vir,gini1a J
· Williams, dead on arrival;
II :38 a.m., State Route 7, Mary
Mora, Holzer Medical Center.
. MIDDLEPORT
12:06 p.m., Meigs Health Services, Tomas ~ley, Veterans MemOrial Hospital.
SYRACUSE
5:25 a.m., Pomeroy Pike, Jessie

COLONY THEATRE

ii1.

'(()NIGHT

MRS. WINTERBOURNE
PG13
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STAIITING FRIDAY
WALT DISNEY'S

OUVER AND COMPANY
G

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
44&amp;41923

Stop In dn :Friaay, Mag 24tfi

Robblnll.~ MVera .........""""'~"

Ropl DUtChiShell ..............151\

=:--.~.::==~~s.::·

BoU advisory canceled 1
••: : .'
The Leading Creek Conservancy •
District has canceled the boil adv~, , ·
sory for all customers on Bailey RuJ!. .
Road, it was announced !his mominj!: '

MLCOM'E :JiO!Nf'E .9L£/U!Nf9{I!
.!farmers tBank_ Is :Having 5'1. ~union

Umlled lite:............................21-\
PeopiM BaMorp. :.................23

•.

Ohio Valley

Dlil1-, .....

· Coolvllle alumni ·
The Coolville Alumni AssociatlOO'
,will hoid its annual banQuet Saturdiy, _
6 p.m., at the school. Everyone wliQ.:
anended. worked, taught, or graduated from the school is encouraged 19 ,
anend the meeting and dinner. Ti&lt;;k, ,
ets are $10 per person. For mq~..
mformauon,'call 667-378 I.
· ·

~ MotiiUI....................~••1ft

.....
. . . ... ··- ---The,,p~y; ~..~eJ
-~ - . :...,

'

.

---~c..;
tl 'liletl........:..;.......r-..................... ,.......a.zs
215 Woob......._ ...................- ............. 156.1111 ' .
Wl!b.....I ..\............................... SI09.72 :

n

0p-. D111r N, lUll. IH

...... 4..........
OIL

'~

•

:For Ca~, Punch ani Coffee.

ana

Let a arelfe
• memorW

See aUf !frienffs
Cfassmates
JOil)[.Il}/_TJf'E !flll)£

Juat for .voal

Your Bank~4t···
lfnl
Fa-rmers
. L:.!J

221 wm sem•d st.

.......,
. 992·2136

.

..=. . + •

ltsb&amp;hiiJ0%01f

..

:From 11:00 JtM. Unti£ 5:00P.M.
...

•

'

••,

Estimated receipts: 31,000.
,
Prices rrom '111e Producen •
Livestock AsiO&lt;'Iatiom:
_, !
Cattle: steady to 2.00 lower. ,_,
Slaughter steers: choice 56.0i:'
61 .00; select SJ.(J().S6.00.
..,-.
Slaughter heifers: choice 55.(1().
61.75; select 50.00-53.00.
•";
. Cows: steady to 2.00 higher; 311..
cows 42.00 and down.
"'
Bulls: steady to 1.00 higher: au '
bulls 44.50 and down.
·
_, :,
.
Sbeep and lambs: steady; choice
wools 100.00-107.00; .choice clipS''
100.()().106.00; feeder lambs 90.00.'
and down; aged .sheep 34.50 aild
down.
( .
•. · ·

'""-

11;. . . . . . . .

II

the followiq day, Slid she hMMed •
lilaaft or pilot fail- 1
ure. The ~~CDC)' is 1101 ft 111 ondble for :
inspecting the main ptnehutt, but :
Brackett said King never pu.lled the ;
cord for either the main or reserve ;
parachute.
I
The investiJalion shows the ,
reserve parachute ejected upon '
impact when Kins IIIICied in tbe ;
median of~.S. S2just~ ~ ;
peake. Ob1o, Bracken said. A senes ,
of pins would have been released had :
the cord for the reserve parachute '
been pulled, she said.
~
State Medical Euminer Irvin ··
Sopher said King. 47, died from :
injuries he received at impact, JJOl ;
because of a bean attack or other ail- ;
ment during the fall.
·
'
out equipmn t,

,

Bank

State ROlfe 7

Tuppers Plails
985·3315

�.

.

Sports

The Daily SentiR~l

•

.

Southern edges
Notre Dame .5-4

pitch with Sabo at bat to let in the
By liOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Game tying run, and walked Sabo to reload
after game, the Cincinnati Reds the bases.
wailed for something to get their
"They say you can't defense
struggling offense slarlcd.
. walks, but we tried for seven
A tape-measure home run. Adou- innings," manager Rene Lachemann
ble with the bases loaded. A sacriface said.
.
fly to break a tie. Ache"'' hit to scon:
Boone, who had already failed
a run in a: close game. Anything. · twice with the bases loaded and was
"We've struggled so much, we 0-for- Jl, came up to face Terry
were just looking for something," Mathews. Boone singled through the
manager Ray Knight said. "And it hole at shortstop for two runs, and
happened to be a wild pitch. "
Morris finished the rally with a nlnModest, yet appropriate. Matt scoring forceout.
Mantei's wild pitch with the bases
"I had left a lot of guys out there
loaded let "in the tying run Wednes- and I felt terrible," Boone said. ·"I
day and started a four-run seventh went from having a pathetic game to
inning that gave the Reds a 4-1 vic- a great game in one at~ bat."
.tory over the surging Aorida Mar"It's nice to smile and mean it,"
lins.
Knight said. "We dldn 'I get the big
The Reds ended their seven-game hits today all ·along and finally. the
losing streak but not their offensive man who struggled the most did
slump. It was only the second time · what I expected·him to do."
in nine games that they· scored more
The wild pitch and Boone's hit
than three runs .. .
were enough for John Smiley (4-4),
A,nd there should have been a lot who gave up one run and six hits
more. AI Leiter (6-4), who led the over eight innings and didn't walk
American League in walks and wild anyone. Jeff Brantley . pitched th~
pitches last year, matched his career ninth for his IOth save.
high and set a team record with nine
The Marlins could have come
walks in 6 1-3 innings. Remarkably, away with the best road trip in fran;
the left-hander shut Cincinnati out chise history by winning Wednesday.
until the seventh.
They had til settle for a 4-2 trip and
The Reds had bases loaded in the a .SOtlrecord overall.
first and third, but" failed to ·score.
That's not bad at all for a team
. Bret Boone grounded out in the first, mat opened the season 4-11. By winand Boone struck out and Hal Mor- ning . 13 of the last 16, Florida has
ris grounded out in the third.
gained confidence and an optimistic
The frustration got so deep that outlook.
Joe Oliver snapped a bat over his
"I'm pleased," Lachemann said.
thigh after striking out in the sixth.
"If you would have told me we'd
"Everybody on this . club has . come home .500, I'd definitely have
gone through tough times and left a to be pleased. We just can't sit back
Jot of people (on base) out there, " and Jive on any "laurels, by any
Boone said. "personal struggles are means. We've got to keep grinding
going to happen throughout the sea- it out."
.
son, but it's tougher when the team
Notes: Ll:iter has allowed a total
is not winning."
of five hits and 13 walks in his last
While Ll:iter frustrated the Reds, . three starts, covering 22 1-3 innings.
he also frustrated hi!llself. He threw ... All II of the Reds' walks were to
131 pitches, leaving after giving up three batters - Larkin (four), Qavis
a single to Eric Owens and a walk to (three) and Sabo (four). They hit
Barry Larkin ardund an out in the third, (ourth and fifth in the order....
seventh ..
... Greg Colbrunn went hitless, end"Just one of those days," said ing his live-game hitting streak ....
Leiter, who is 0:2 since his no-hitter Upset by his team's failure to get
against Colorado on May I I. "I just down bunts in the last two games,
couldn't find the"plate. I was battling Knight is going to put more emphamyself and the Reds. I tried to sis on bunting in pre-game drills . ...
throw strikes, and · I couldn't do The Reds' home attendance is down
that."
64,431 from last season, the thirdNeither could Manlei, who biggest drop in the NL. Only Chicarelieved and walked Eric Davis to go and Philadelphia have had bigger
load the bases. He then thl)lw a wild declines.

Scoreboard

By SCOTT WOLfE

8111111111 Corr1ap0i'MIIIot

OWENS scORES - Clnclnnllll'a Eltc Owent (Mft) talall ldwaritlge of the wild pltt:h by Florlcl8 pltcher..lllltl M tlill (right) to ICOfe
In the Mventh Inning ot Wednnd1'' N8tlonll L••gue 11111111 It;!
Cincinnati, where the Rtdl won 4-1. AP)
,

Vinton County beats
Meigs 8-1 to win title
'

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel COi'relpondent
Vinton County jumped out to a 30 first inning lead and went on to
post an 8- I win over Meigs in TVC
baseball action Wednesday evening.
The win gives the Vikings tl)c
1VC Ohio Division crown with a I 13 mark in the division and a 11-6
record overall. Meigs drops to 14-8
on the season and closes its TVC
schedule with an 8,6 mark.
The Vikings took advantage of
singles by Ward, Eberts and Rucker·
10 go along with two Meigs errors to
take the early 3-0 advantage.
Meigs scored its only run in the
second inning when Cass Cleland hit
·a l-2 pitch out for his second home
run of the year to make it a 3-1 contest.
·
That is the way .it stood until the
fourth inning when the Vikings dented the plate for three more runs to
increaSe the lead to 6-1.
Eberts started the rally with a two
out single, three straight walks plaied one run and then Maeker singled
in two more runs.

The Vikings closed .out the scoring in the fifth when Ward singled.
A Marauder error and hit batter and
a single by Murphy scored the two
runs making it a 8-1 game. ·
·
Murphy was the·winning pitcher,
giving up five hits, walking one and
striking out six. He hit two batters.
Ward, Eberts, Murphy and Maeker
led the Vikings with two singles
each.
·
Brad Whitlatch was the starter
and' loser for Meigs, pitching the first

-Di-

.11: I. f&lt;l.
.l'll

8altimore ............... 25 19
TCIC"&lt;*I0 .................. 20 2~

.WI
.444

lill
I
61:

1&gt;

.m

...... .. :................ 17 26
~mil.. ................. l2 Jl

.m

CtnlraiDRislon
Cl£VEl.AND ....... 29 14
CbiCilJ0 ..... ,........... 26 18

.674 '
.:'i91

Milwaukee ...... .......22 21

- ~ 12

KIWAJ City .......... .21

26

.447

Minnesota .............. l9 2:'i

.432

.~l

Olklud .................21
Califomia............... 2l

.471
.467

23
2"

San Dieso (Tewksbury S- 1), 5:05p.m.

-·

Arlnnta (Smol!z 9-11 at PhnbUrgh
(Darwin 2-4). 7:05 p.m

10~

):,

6~

1

Wednesday's scores

St. Loui5 (Morgan

u1 Florida

San Diego (Valenzuela 2-2} at New

L.os Angeles ( Asracio 3-~) 11 Montreai(Urbina 2·0). 7 : 3~ p.n1.
Chit.:ugu (Tr;uchel J-3) ut Hou•ton •
~~oiii.Ol: R:Ol p.m.
CINCINNATI (Schourd; 4 -.~) at Col·
oraOO (Thompson J-J), 9:05p.m.
Philadelphia (SchillinJ 1-0) .al Son
Francisco (W::atson .5-:\), 10:05 p.m

Transactions
Baseball
American Leapt

Today's games

Oaklund (Groom 2· 0) Ql New York
CRoaen 2·0), I ;OS p.m.
•
.
Sean It (M'ilacki 1·0) ar Boston
(Qcmens 2-4). 6:05p.m.
Milwookcc (Mirand:l J-2} Dl CLEV£..
LAND (Hmhiser 3-J}, J:O:'i p.m. ·
Min~som

.(Muhomcs l·l) at Toromo '
1. 2). 1:.J•
m
,p..

TeAIII (Oiiw-r )·I ) ar Kansas Oty (A~
· J-4)• 1:u.•
rur p.m.
PI&lt;'

Friday's &amp;•mes

CLEVELAND (AnlkrJOn 0-1) at De·
tmil (Gohr 2...6),' 7:05p.m.
~land (We_n&amp;ert 1·2) 111 Baltimore

(Muumal-2). 7 . )~ p.m.
Mianrsot:t

0 - 0~

(Burkcn J - ~l - 7:M p.m.

.

Oolland ~ .

tv •-•
~·

Col·

Friday's games

Milwaukee tO. CLEVELAND 8

'

at

York. {llringhoiuliCn 2-S). 7:40.p.m.
·-

Tea;u 6, Minne10ta 5
Kuw:·City 6, Detroit4
Chicqo 2. Toronoo I OIJ
Stanle 6, Boston I
New Yorl. I
Baltimore 10, California 5

.

4

ll\ ·

1
.10

WnumDfvW....
Te-.as ................... 28 11 .622

S&lt;onle .................... 24 26

Today's 1•mes

Philadelphia (S. Fnnandez 2 4) at

CINCINNATI (Ponugal 0-4)
or3do (Freeman 3-J). 9 :0~ p.m.

J~

BOSlllN RFD SOX: Ploced 28 Wll
·c..-dero un the l~·day disabled lilf. Pur~
chased the: co nu:u:t of INF Jeff Manto
frnm Powtu clte t of the lnternarional
Leaaue .. Oni&amp;nllled C· INF lim Tatum for
wi~nm.:m .

.

NEW YORK YANKEES: Recalled C

J(lrge Pos."ldii ood OF Ruben Rivera from
Columbus of the lntern:nion ul League.
Plat."td OF Tim Rainrs on the 15-day dis·
abled lisl. Rele:.sed INF Feli~ Fermin
· from his n1inor-leagw: ronlracl.
,
TEXAS RANGERS: Aclivated INF
Benji Oil from the 1~ - day di1ablcd lise
nnd oprioncd him to Otlnbomn Ciry of the
Amnica11 As:KICiation.

TORONTO BLUE lAYS: Sold ohe
of QF Wes ChDmbcrlain to the '?'i·

(Rob:rt&amp;On ~J.ar.J~n,.
oo _ _ _ ri&amp;hts

(~ ~:'i).

bft..bolk.~arines

7:.1.5 p.m.
Milwaukee (Spouks

~ - 4) 111

ChicaJU

Lt~t~ue .

of tht- Japantsc PIICtfic
~
-

(-1.01. 8~p . m.

'

T'cx111 (Win 4-J) nt Kamns Ciry (Gu·

bicza3·6}; 8:05 p.m.
• Bostoft (ScJc 2·J) at C31ifomia (Finley

HI. !0:05p.m.

New Yort (J(.Amieftiecki 1- I) lll Sea11k
:(Hilchcock J-2). 10:05 p.m.

NL standings
.

Euttm Diwhlon

r..
.11:
......... ........... .. ...... )0

I. f&lt;l.

Ill

.6 17

1~

Florida ..................24 24 ..100
Pllilado:lpl&gt;lo ...........22 22 .lOll
New York .............. l9 !6 .4.22

1
7
101

t.{onlreal.. .............. 29

.652

16
18

CtlllraiDiwWon
QWeqo .......•...... ...21

26 .447
51. L.Ouio ••. , •......o..•26 26 .4~5
CINCINNATI ..•....17 24 .41$
Pln-.h .............. 18 28 J9r

I
I
II

J

We~~tmDivWen

S• okao .............. 28 18 .609

u

s..Fnoct...........
21
Colorldo ................ 22 21
Loo .................... 24 24

.sn

,SI2
.lOll

Wedamd•y's IOOftl

ll

4~

5

'

lgpinJ tldall

Meigs...................o10-000-0=1-S-3
Vinton County..... 300-320-x=8-9-0
WP-Ward
.
LP- Whitlatch

.

-...
.,

.

when Dupy singled, wu sacrifiCed
to IICCond. Then Deemer re1illeled a
strike OUI. With two outs, Kelly had ~
two strikes, but hit a bloopcJ over
second just out of the reach of three
SHS fielders 10 tie the game at 3-3.
The game then went to extra innings
as a victory .Jipped through. the
hands of the Tornadoes, at least for
the time being.
In the top of the eighth, NO went
ahead when Rutman tripled The '
throw to.third went awry, and ND ';,
: went ~ad 4-3. '
In lhe e.ighth, Jesse Maynard sin- ;..
gled to lead off the frame. After ;:
McKelvey singled, Joe Kirby hit a l.:
ball to the shortstop, who booted it. ...
:t'J!at allowed Maynard .to,5core and :;.
tie the game at 4-4.
!'
· Not knowing how much longer
they could go, both starting pit~hers •
pitched their hearts out. Deemer and ·:"; ·
Rutman had held on for their longest· ; ,;:
oUtings of the year, boih stellar per- •;
formances. Pork biJJ st~ in the ' ·
shadows to be the Southern pit.t:her ..,
of record in m~ I t m, but got off the •
hDtlk with a burst of Southern •
offense in the lOth.
:
In the lOth, with one out, May- ~
nard doubled, Daile;&gt;: hit ball" to
_shortstop and ND threw an inten- . f.
tional walk to McKelvey to load
bases. NO drew in its infield for the •.
play at the plate. Kirby hit one to the ·~
second baseman and Jesse beat the ...,
throw home to wiri the game.
,, ,
Southern hitters were Mike Ash · ·
with a single, Travis Lisle two sin·v •
gles, Maynard three ,singles and a ··
double, Dailey a single and Jay ;~·-:
McKelvey two singles.
NO hitters were Glockner had a . . ,
single, Kelly a double And single, ',
Rutman a triple, and Bukiewicz a '"
single, Boldman a double and Dupy
a double a single. ·
.-. .
Deemer got the win four runs, on
eight hits, struck out II, walked four ,
and hii two: Rutman struck out I6 · ""
.'
and walked one.
' ·• I
Winebrenner added, " Kevin ••
Deemer pitched really well. This was
probably the biggest and best game , ~i
of his life. The kids really started to .. . il'lo
hit and field in the last few games.
Not only was our hitting coming ..'"'
along, but it c~me along at the right ·.:-.:. ·
times. The kids just never gave up."
lnaiDitmb
·
Southern.....012..()()()..0 I0-1 =5- I0-2 '""
,"
. Port. ND ....... IOO-OI0-110-0:4-8-5 . ,,\} .,
WP-Deemer
LP-Rutman

Meigs County golfers participate
in Ohio Optimist tournament

Padres beat Phils;
·Braves down c·ubs

. CLEVELAND (AP)- Mi(wlllkee's Mike Felten knowl Oeveland
sluuer Albert Belle will aet lftOih-.
er chance qainlt him.
Fetters preserved the Brewers'
10-8 win a~ainst the Indians
Wednesday m,tlt by striltinc out
Belle in the ninth iMin1 and endinJ
Belle's 21-1ame hitting slreak,
lonJC" in the majors this Y-·
"Belle, u is his custom, wasn't
talking to reporters ~ ~ JIIIIC
but Fetters knows he will have to
face him again.
·
•
"I'm sure Albert wiD germe back
·one day. He's such 1 ·areat hitter, but
tonight t sot him." said Fetters. who
threw a called third strike.past Belle
wim two runners on ~·
" I' m a groundout pitcher, not a
strikeout pitcher. I'm thankful I got
through it and got him out," Fetters
said. "I've pitched him different
every dme I'v.e fileed him and I don't
think he has a real.good read on me
yet. The day he does, I'm in trouble."
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THE STREAK ENDS- Cleveland'• ~Belle~ hJa (!at 1ftar
taking • called thlfd ltrllca tq end W!ldnlldiY nlght'a American
Laap .contHt •• Milwaukee catcher Mike Matheny hMCia to the
plate to t::onar~ulata hll! pltt:her following the B~W~Wra' 1CI-8 victory. The ltrlkaout endad ~lla'a 2~ .game hitting Jtruk. (AP) ·

LHP Greg Swindell..from thr IS·"y dia~
abletJ list. Recalled UIP ~an Hwtsraves
from Tucson of the Pacific Coasl Leaa~ ­
Optioned RHP Jim Dou&amp;flerty and LHP
Jeff Tllbaka to Tucson.
LOS ANGELES DODGERS: Op ·
ttoned INF Mike Busc:h to Albequerque of
lbc Pacinc Coast lnpe. ReclllecfiNF:
Jaon Cutillo from Alboquuque.

SAN DIEGO PADIIJ;s :" Sisned LHP
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS: Placed
OF Mel Hall UtJ wWvcn fOf the purpose
of sivin&amp; him his n:~ . RecaUcd C Klrt
Maawaring from PhoeniA of tbe Pacific
COISIL.eque.

~tball
Nalllnll ........ A

I

?fee

CHARLOTTE HORNETS: Aanounced SIH)Dcer S1olpen, prealdenr, Ia
kawina hia potldon with lhe tcwn.

for interferenllll.
Harpove •a wd aM- ejected
by fiest true wnpiae Rldl Olrtia.
Lofton ejected "' lltllle pllle
umpire Terry Craft afW ~~~ 111i•1
out in the ninth.
Nilsson's sillh . . _ lllllt 1140 in the third. Cleveland ICGNd IWice
in the bottom half 011 RBI powtdouts by Omar Vir.quel and Loftoa.
McDowell, wboee last loll- ••
on opcnina day, Wutl't happy with
•
his ball placement. ·
.,
"I hall good stuff, I jult couldn't
put it where I wanted. I never felt out
of whack, but never felt comfortlble, 1 •
either," said McPowell, w"- 3 113 "
inning outing was his shortest of the
season. He had pitched into the seventh inning in each' of his fiest line ~
starts.
··

•

"Give Milwaukee credit, they are
swi~ging the ba« well," McD:owell ·
said. "They hit some good pttches
and hit some mistakes on my pan."

N.Y. Knicks to retai·n
Van Gundy a.s coach

NL games•..

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By The Aa1ocltlted Presa
After ,hitting 22 last season,
Geronimo Berroa, villo has made Berroa has I I in 1996. Oakland
life miserable for the New York Yan~ manager Art Howe said lie isn't sur·
kees the ·past three seasons, saved a prised.
. ·
special effort for his latest meeting
"I knew he was capable of it,"
' .
.
with the Bronx Bombers.
Howe said. "I managed against him
Berroa hit three solo homers in ~inter ball and I know he can get
Wednesday night in the Oakland real hot."
Athletics' S-1 victory over the YanBerroa hit a solo homer in the sec·
By HAL BOCK , .
factor'," Checketts said. "Our team kees in New :York. Add those to the ond inning off Andy Pettitte (6-3)
NEW YORK (AP)- Old every- was well-prepared and played hard. six he hit against New York last sea- that tied it at I. His second came in
where else, the New York Knicks They· respected the coach, listened son and three in 1994, and Berroa the lifm and gave Oakland a 2-1
decided to stay young on the bench and executed. As a motivator and haS 12 homers in 26 games against 1e ad .
by signing Jeff Van Gundy as their coach, he d.id a good job."
ttle Yankees.
.
Berroa completed his first CllfCer
coach for the next two years. ,
He also had the endorsement of
But Wednesday night was special. three-homer game by leading ojf the
Van Gundy, 34, the youngest Patrick Ewing, who went to the front
"It's the best game of my · · ninth with a line drive over the cencoach in the NBA. took over for the office after the season to support Van ca:reer," Betroa said. "I didn't try to ter-field fence off Bob .Wickman.'
final two months this season, and his Gundy. Checketts said the team lis- do anything different. I don't try to ,
Berroa also singled in going 4performance convinced management tened. "We talk to our players aboui hil'llomers."
for-4. Mark McGwire and Torey
he was the right man to oversee the trades and moves," Checketts said.
Lovullo also connected as Oakland
reconstruction of me aging team. He "They don't run the place, though."
·scored all of its runs on solo homers.
will get a reported $1 million per
Still. Ewing's backing didn't hurt,
Earlier this season, Ernie Young
(Continued from l'age 4) .
year.
and he . was the first player Van
hit three home runs for the Ns on
The Knick&amp; cleared $10 n:tillion in Gundy talked to when the contract and tied me major league mark May 10 against Minnesota.
' done. .
with seven straight extra-base hits, a
salary ·cap money ·ror free-agent was
·
"The first homer was a bad pitch
shopping and own three first-round
Van Gundy figured he earned the streak that was still alive going into by me, but the second one was dOwn.
draft ch(!ices, all impQrtant weapons job. "I never considereil mat they'd CDlorado 's game today against He was just in the zone tQnight, I
in making over a team that we~ I go in another direction," he said. Cincinnati .
guess," Pettitte said.
Walker doubled, tripled twice
from 60 victories mree years ago to "They needed some time"to sit back
In other AL games, it' · was
47 this ~on.
•, and analyze what is best for the and walked in his final at-bat as the Mariners 6, Red Sox I ; brioles I0,
"We want to improve the cl4b," team. It was a big decision, and that • Rockies beat. Piusburgh for their Angels S; Wh i• · Sox 2, Blue Jays I
ninth consecutive win at Coors Field. in II innings; !,angers 6, Twrns S;
Knicks, president and general man- . takes time."
..
He
had a double, triple and,home run and Royals 6, Tigers 4.
ager Ernie Gnlnfeld said. "We're
Asked if he 'now felt the Knicks
in
his
last three trips Tuesday night.
going to explore our options. What were his team, Van Gundy shoOk his
Mariners 6, Red Sox 1
During his past six games: Walkour qpportunities.,will be are not . head. "It's not my team, it's our
Even though Ken Griffey and Jay
team," he said. "Management, the er has three homers, 12 RBis and is Buhner did not connect, the Seattle
clear at mis time."
·
But Grurrfeld figures the Knicks coaches and players work together .batting .S80 ( 14-for-24).
Mariners showed why they lead the
.
Mets
3,
Dodgers
2
wi II . be able to attract som~ free and put the best team on the court we .
AL with 78 home 111ns.
New York got three runs before
agents, and having Van Gt!ndY as .. can. It's a 'we' ·concept. You peed
coach won't hurt.
· players who want to be coached and · Hideo Nomo retired a batter, then
held on as los Angeles scored twice
"This is New.York. Players wlmt pushed.
to play here, We have a tradition of
, "We want no more compliments in the ninth inning at Dodger Stadi\.
winning anc;l ;.ve...want,lo keep that ' for riaying. hard. That's expected. .um.
John
Franco
retired
Mike
Piazza
tradition."
We want more than that. Our .ultion
a
grounder
with
two
runners
on
The Knicks' first decision was to mate goal is to win anll win big. We
base to end the eighth and preserve
stay with Van Gundy, acarcerassis- will pursue that."
tant who replaced Don Nelson on
To succeed in that pursuit, the ·a 3-0 lead. But the Dodgers .rallied,
March 8. The team "finished the l"!lg- Knicks may need some new parts. getting' one run on Mike Blowers'.
ular season at 13-10 With him arid ' Van Gundy is three tnonths younger grounder ll)ld another on shortstop
reached the second round of the than point guatd Derek Harper, just Rey Ordonez's throwing error.
A walk to Tom Prince put runners
playoffs. That convinced Grunfeld seven months older than Ewing, and
on
fir:St ' nd second, but Roger Cedeand Madison Square Garden presi- Jess than two years older than
no took a called third ·strike .to end
dent Dave Checketts to stick with . Charles Oakley. Backup center Herb
the game.
him a5 coach.
Williams is four years older ihan the
"Certainly, the playoffs were a coach.

taq~e
.

Tigers·
.

...

Russ Davis and Darren Bragg
neali Palmer·iiiKi w8rren Newson ·'" '
each homered during a five-run fifth hit con~utive homers in the sixth
inning in Boston.
inning as Texas rallied from a two- ,(.
Tim Wakefield (2-S) held the run deficit, then held on in Min- ,,
Mariners to one run and three hits neapolis.
mrough the first four innings, but
Palmer snapped a 2-2 tic wim a
seaitle sent 10 men to the plate in the two-run drive to left off1Wins starter
fifth;
Jose Parra (1-3), and ~ewson fol- . ,,.
lowed wim his thiid homer of the •
Orioles 1~,-Ancels 5.
Roberto Alomar raised his bauing season as Texas scored four times in ·
average to .400, going 4-for-4 with the sixm.
...
a homer and three RBis in BaltiRoger Pavlik (6-1) allowed back- "
more.
.
to-bai:k homers to Chuck Knoblauch
Alomar singled in the first inning and·Rich Becker in the seventh as the ..
and homered in the"third. He hit a 1\Nins closed to 6-S. Jeff Reboulet
sacrifice fly in the fifm, singled in the appeared to hit what would have ..
si~th and beat out an infield grounder been a game-tying home run off 1,
in the eighth. He is 23-for-45 (.5 11) reliever Jeff Rus!!CII in the eishth, but
since.moviqg to the No.3 spot in the left fielder Lou Frazier leaped near- •.
lineup on Ma~ 9.
•
ly two feet above the wall to rob
Rafael Palmeiro also home.red for Reboulet.
:"!..
the Orioles,' who have won four
~oyals 6, Tlaers 4
.,.
straight series and nine of 12 gam~s. · Joe Vitiello hit two home runs for ,,:.
Baltimore scored 26 runs on 39 hrts Kansas City, sending Detroit to its
in taking two of three fromCalifor- eighth straight loss.
nia.
Bob Hamelin doubled twice, .•,.
White Sox 2, Blue Jays 1
drove in two runs and stole two bases
lyle Mouton, who has only 54 at- for the )!.oyals, who swept the two- : •
· bats this season, hit a hanging slid- game series and have won three • •
er off Toronto closer Mike Timlin in straight. .
the bottom of the II th for a two-run
Tim Belcher (5-2) won his second
triple at Chicago.
straignt start for the Royals, holding
Last month, Mouton hit a three- his former teammates to seven hits ...
run homer in the lith for an 8-5 win with two walks and a season-high .,..
against Texas.
.
eight strikeouts in six innings. . .
Kirk McCaskill (3-2) won despite Detroit pitchers have given up 81 .- ,
allowins a run in the top of the lith. homers in 47 games. The Tigers have .. •
Rangers 6, Twins 5
· dropped 28 of their last 32.
•

SPEttu

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.ltMMI ·
Skylark

Make YoU.. Best Deal
Al··rf~ylor
Chrysler. Plymouth Do~ge
Nissan .
.
.
· . ..., · ·
In Athens, Ohio • .

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......ted

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HURRY WHILE

LAST.

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MSRP .

• 4 Sp. Automatic
• Cassette
Cruise Conlrol
• Air CondHioning
Power Windows
• Dual air bags

Rebate
Discount

Your
Cost

$

•
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• 16 Valve 150 hp engine
• 100,000 mile sparkplug
•1 00,000 mile anti. freeze
•Passlock

••
•,

Auto-theft

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IDHRepl

c:..... set••
MSRP
Rebate

22,075
·1,000

Discount ·1.430
1996 DODGE AVENGER COUPE

"Airto, alr, AM/FM caas, lilt, cruise, sport
plle, much, much mbre$.\e ~&gt;«J" "

·

aabl, center

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' aut••

Demo·

S,QOO mites

&amp;wto-

PU

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•1ft

AubvRed.

IMtlhtr

• Grin 1l&gt;!lllntl

•CDpk8

• L.oldld ~
......
Option PI&lt;G-

••

1888 t:eatary
S.-Mial

..... LeSaltre"

6~~·19,645 sP..'-'E '3,5H
·-wtlll c...a.
·3100nv:e
··-sUt
• EIIfiiM
CD PiiYt&lt;

Brand

NewI

'25,995

MSRP
Rebate

•
•
'•

18,548

·1 ,500
Discount • 767

~~·16,211

c.._

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·•lilt

Culdllui.IQ

Eq&lt;rllll'll

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We.Are Proud of
Sheriff James

,

him out. thouih."
Sandy Aloenar, who tromeml.ct
doubled lwil:e for Cleveland, hit a
two-run double duriiiiJ a five-run
sixm that made it I0-8, Alomar lJad
three RBis.
"I think all my hits were blf fastballs. The thing was I went with the
pitch. After I hit a home run, sometimes I try to pull everything, but I
hit a double to right field, going with
the pitch."
The Indians chased Scott Karl (42) in the sixth. Relievers Mi~ Potts,
Graeme Lloyd A!ld Fetters finished.
Belle was, involved in an inter·
ference call that led to the ejection of
Indians manager Mike Hargrove.
Kenny Lofton also vias ejected as
Cleveland lost for only the second
time in its last 17 games at Jacobs
Field.
Belle walked in the fourth and
Eddie Mumy followed with a line
drive out to shonstop Jose Valentin.
Belle ran back toward first base, was
hit by Valentin's throw and called out

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Belle went 0-for-3 with a sacrifice
tty and a walk. Belle hit .413 (33-for80) widt nine hoenen and 27 RBI
dl!rin1 his hittinlllreakFeuen .etieved with two outs and
none on in the ninth and pvc up sinM to Julio Franco and Clflos
Beerca blfore strikilll out Belle.
"I sure didn "t want to put those
guys oo," Fetters said. "Albert ·Belle
is such 1 danFfOUI hitter. My whole
focus wu 10 bep the ball down. The
last pi!Ch wu a sinker on the inl!C¥"
half of the plate."
Mike Malheny had a three-run
double and Chuck Carr a two-run
single and RBI doubhi as Milwaukee
built a 10-2 lead agai,nst Jack
McDowell (S-2) and reliever Alan
Embree by \he fifth inning.
.
"All I thought about in the ninm
inning was Alben's hitting streak,
rather than him going deeJ? to beat
us," Carr said. "I was telling myself
that I wilt stop his strea\c by making
a diving catch in the gap. Fetters
threw him his best pitch and struck

A's- beat Yan~ees;
Royals
.

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Good Luck·to
'
Meigs BasebaU and
Southern Baseball
and Soft~all in
Play

post 10~8 win over Indians

In other AL action,

Nat""-11AaJw

CINCINNATI REDS: Accivated OF
ReQie SoMm from !he ll-doy di1obl&lt;d
list. Called up RHP Hec:tor CntraS(o from
Jndilln&lt;lpOiis of the Ameri~:an Association.
HOUSTON ASTROS : Aclivatcd

Sfevcn Jfoff.

HovAOo ................. 22 26 .458

a

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CINCINNATI4. Florida I
All!mta 9, Chica&amp;o 4 •
Colun:Kio 6. Piusburp,h J
Montrea14. San F~isco :t
St. Louis~ - Hoo11on 2
New Y.01k ;\,Los Angeles 2
San Diego~- Philadelphi~ 2

NcwYvrk .............. 2.l 17

3 213 innings. Chris Roush finished
the game for coach Scott Gl)een.
Cleland led Meigs with his home
run.; Scott George, Rick Hoover,
Whitlatch and Chris Roush chipped
in with singles.
D-IJ district fioal Friday
The Marauders will be shooting
for a spot among the "Sweet 16" on
Friday afternoon when they travel to
Zane Trace to pl'y Hillsboro. Hills·
boro defeated Northwest4· I in first
round action on Tuesday. ·
·
' only other district champions · in the school's history cam7
in I97 • when Meigs went to the
s e tou ament. In that season, the
Mara rs finished in the middle of
the pack in the Southeastern Ohio
Athletic Leagu~ standings, but got
hot and won sectional, district and
regional championships. Meigs lost
a heartbreaker in the state tournaments that year, losing 1-0 to eventual state champion Elida.
In that contest, Marauder ace
Jeff McKinney ·fired · a one-hitter
which wen·t fOr a triple. That runner
scored the game's o!'IY run on a sacrifice fly. Rick Rumer pitched a nohitter for Elida.
·· The game Friday starts at 4:30. To
get to Zane Trace High School, take
· U.S. 3S·to Chillicothe and take U.S.
23 to State Route·I59 exit. Tum right
and travel to S.R. 180 and tum left.
Zane Trace High School is a short
distance on the right hand side.

It took 10 inningsofllllld ball, but
a great pitching .battle ended up in a
hard-fought S-4 Southern win.
Southern's Joe Kirby laced an opposite f~eld ·grounder to second base
with tho bases loaded to bring home
Jesse Maynarl.l with the winning run
to give the Toml!does the Division
IV district championship victory
over Portsmouth Notre Dame
Wednesday night at Jackson.
As a member·or Ohio's "Sw(let
16, Southern( 12-11) will play in the
DUblin regional next Friday at 4:30.
The other district championship
today wiil determine Southern's
oppqnent.
Soumem ace Kevin Deemer and
PortSmouth Notre Dame's Ryan Rutman hooked up in a torrid pitching
duel, wim both toughing it out to go
the distance.
·
Veteran Southern coach Mick
Wine6renner s&amp;id, "I just ddn't know
what to say. The boys picked a good
time to start playing well. During the
last six games they really did a.good
job&lt;Earlier, I was hoping \Ye would
win the sectional for seniors, but now
mis is just icing on the cake," said
veteran Southern coach Mick Winebrenner. .
Wednesday's victory sealed
Southern's third trip to the regional
tournament under Wi.nebrenner.
Southern's sectional championship
was its fifth in a row.
In the · first inning, NotJ:e Dame
got on the bollf\l when Gloc~ner
walked to lead off game. Rutman
wa.lked before Deemer got two strike ·
· outs by Deemer. Then Bukiewicz
singled in Glockner for the game's
first run.
In the second, Maynard singled.
Then Rutman tried to pick him,off at
first, allowing Maynard to go to second, where Jay McKelvey singled
him home to make the score 1-1.
In the third inning, Deemer
walked, Lisle singled, Maynard
reached on an error to load the bases
and senior Shawn [)ailey singled
home a run. Jay McKelvey hit a sacrifice fly to centerfield for the the
second run and a 3-1 score. ·
In the fifth, Glockner Jed off with
single, Kelley doubled, then with
runners at second and third. Cassidy ·
hit a sacri lice fly as Notre Dame cut
Southern's lead tp 3-2.
In the seventh, ND tied the game

4

piayed at Weatherwax Golf Club. . u..,:'t
On May 19, 'three Meigs County Shuler was the J995Tri-ValleyConIn other NL action,
junior golfers participated in the ferences Most Valuable Player and
Ohio Optimist Qualifying Touma- will well represent Meigs County .....,_.
ment at the Jayl:ees Golf Course in Junior Golf~rs at t~ Ohio Ch~mpi- · ···
hnr
Zanes_vill~.
.
onship.
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Thts tournament IS one or the
A tournament score of 84 was .'" 'P
jlt J
world's largest, wim advancing play- . pecessary to advance. Meigs sophoers eventually .play in~ at the Doral . mores Clay Crow and . Mick, Barr
of strikeouts, which meant that his Country Club rn·Flonda.
By BEN WALKER
narrowly missed the cut. Crow ~hot
ball was moving for him, and the
AP Baseball Writer
Southern senior Jason S.hulcr a round of 85. Barr had a round of ·
For so many years, the San Diego Phillies couldn't catch up to us. So fired a fine round Of77 and advanced 86
•
Padres' offense consisted of Tony it was a good game for all of us to the Ohio Championships to be
·
Gwynn and not much else.
tonight," he said.
••
This season, though, the Padres
Hamilton (7; 3) struck out a
•
brought in Wally Joyner and Rickey career-high 10 in 6 113 innings. Four
•
Henderson to heip their six-time NL Padres pitchers struck out 15, tying
•
batting champion, and it's working. a team record for a nine-inning
Joyner homered twice and drove game.
'II
in five runs Wednesday night, and
''I guess till: basic conclusion is
the NLWest-leading Padres beatthe . you don't strike outl5 times and win
.......
Philadelphia Phillies 5-2.
too many ballgames," Phillies man· .
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Joyner, a few weeks shy of his · ager Jim Fregosi said.
34th birthday, is batting .335 in his
. Joyner hit a three-run homer off
first year in a new league. ~t this Mike Grace' (6-2) in the first inning.
rate, he could make the All-Star ieam
"That was real nice," Hamilton
for the forst time since his rookie sea- said. "You like to see that, especial·
son of 1986 when he played for Cal- ly the first inning, it gives you a lit·
••
ifornia.
tie room to breathe and a little room
The Padres led 3-2 in the eighth
to work with, but you still have to go
when Gwynn singled and Joyer hit after them."
his fifth home run of the season. (1
In other NL games, ColonldO beat
was Joyner's eighth multihomcr. Pittsburgh 6-3, New York held off ·
game in the majors.
Los Angeles 3-2, Atlanta defeated
"I think we have the ~onfidenee' . Chicago 9-4, St. Louis stopped
to know that if our pitching staff can Houston S-2 and Montreal downed
keep us in the game, we can win the San Francisco 4-3.
ballgame;" Joyner said.·
• Rocldes 6, Pinta 3
':J.uey ,Hamihon .did ! hat. He
. LariY WJ~!I:er set an NLT«&lt;lfd pitched very well for us. He had a"'ot
(See NL tiD "p • S)
I

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. In ·D-IV district biiSBba/1 f11111ls,

Reds end losing
streak at seven

•
AL standings

Brewe~s

Thf.nclly, ..., 23, 1...

By beating the Martins 4-1, .·

Bas eball

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Pomeeur •ll$111paft, Ohio

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Sou~by .

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NEW YPRK KNICKS : Siaoed Jell
V• Oundy, cOICh.to a htr'D-)eM ~

N.2nd
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992-5627

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�. ....,. I • The Dally Sentinel

. ~•roy • Middleport, Ohio

t r

Th&amp;ncllly, lllty 23, , •

On the Indy 500 IJCfHHJ, ·

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second womu to n1ceat Indy.
But Carburetioo O.y Joel Q11.
Today's practice wu 10 p~ the
33 driven one lasi chaace to test
their ntee-day Nllllll, one Jut chuce
to practice in tralfic, with fullla.ds
of fuel. One lllll chucc for 17 rookies, the 111011 in the lineup since
1919, to squeeze in a few more tn·
cious laps of ll'lll:k time.
"I'm not sure when it started. I
think it aoes·back to 1920s at least;
a final senion when they adjusted
carbureton for the race," Davidaon
said of the final practice.
But in the early years, the Cllt!urelion Day program was not even
part of the officill Speedway scbedule and was nllt publicly announced
until a day or two before it took
place.
,
By the early '.50s, carburetors
were on the way out, but by then, the
tradition had been fiflllly estab·
lished. No one has ever suggested

morelndiuapolisSOOtnldili~tha!

rcfulel to die.

OUT OF THE BLOCKS- Melga eprlnter D.J. Blllnb cherv- out
of lhl blocks In lhe boyi'1CIO-mltiw dllh In Wecln11dlly's DMIIon
ll reglorllll trKk mwt lit lhe ChHIIeulhe C.V.IIIR' lllh~ coinplex,
whirl Blllnka'11.&amp;-llto."lll flnllhWII good for llxlh. (OVPphoto by
~- &amp;pincer Olbome)

Fuel injection systems began
repl1cin1 cuburcton in Indy can
more than 40 years •go, yet the designation for the final practice before
the nee still carries the archaic temn
Carburction Oay.
"Traditions die hard;" U.S. Auto
Cluti. historian Donald Davidson
said.
After today's finaltwd-hour praclice session, it's baclqo the' Gasoline
Alley garages until Sunday, when the
cars are returned to the track and
aligned in II rows, three abreast, lo
await the traditional command,
"Gentlemen, start your engines."
Even that tradition, of course, has
been altered slightly in recent years
to "Lady and gentlemen ... " to
acknowledge Lyn St. James,- the

•

ton- 1963, and they wen: pr«ty

elated i1 'IIdi=IP"'is. Tamm~
l!merQI Fiaiplldl pnctlcod both Ill
hiJ c.- ud i1 Tncy's.

. The only 111ar1er who did not pr1ll)-

nee cllly, IIIII Pitlipaldi hid 10 111rt

c'-ai•l it
. '"1'h. IMtli~ dtey '-1 enure-

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pr~ctlce

Carburetion Day marks fl.nal
By STEVE HERMAN
INDIANAPOLIS (AJ" - It's
called C.rtlwelion Day, just one

Pomllot •llldclapDI't, Ohio

few llld fll'betwecn then," David- ' '"!eiiiOitt-.-t~~~C.son said.
burction o.y practice ta 198the7,
The ~ext year, they were ~~ when Fiui~i ..t AJ. ~hit
forever.
walls. Foyu c.- - "" ed by
lice on Cllt!uretion Day last year 33rd in a difrlnlll c. llld fillished
wu O.vy Jones, wbo wu in Chlr· · 16th in the niCe.
lotte, N.C., for qualifications for the
NASCAit eoc.cola 600. Eliseo·
Salaz81', one of his Indy toammata
last yel!f, also practiced in Jones' car ·
on Carburelion Day.
Coi~~~:identally, both Jones and
Sllazar will be on the front row next
to pole-starter Tony Sll!wart on Sunday.
In 1993, Paul-'l'ntcy was excused
from the final practice so he could
wait with his wife at a Toronto hos·
pital for the arrivll of their first child
Aseven-pound,eight-ouncedauJb- ·
ter, Alysha, was born just IS the track

The year before that, Dennis
Firestone cnshcd durina the final
pnclice, bul his c.- could not be
repaired and Dick Simon, u first
lltemate, wu added to the fteld in
the 33rd spoulld finished 14th.
Al10 part ofloday's p-opam was ·
the annual pit stop contest, offerin&amp;
a $3.5,000 first' priic 10 the .quicke~l
crew amona Stewart. Jones, Eddte
~ver, Roberto_ G~rrero and
rookie Davey Hamilton. .
l.4st y- produced the first overtime~ionm.~ 19-yearhisloryo(
the ptt compeuuon.

Bulls need to .keep up
defensive pressure
Red Wings ·to ·face Avalanche tonight
on Magic in finals
:JJy MIKE NADEL

· CffiCAGO (AP)- The Cl)icago
Bulls are more than Michael Jo.rdan
.·.laking fadeaway jumr&gt;ers, Scottie
: Pippen leading the break and Dennis
; Rodman crashing the boards. ·
: Chicago also is one of the few
• teams capable of turning around a
. game by repeatedly scuttling an
opponent's offense. Jordan, Pippen
· and Rodman .were NBA all-defen: sive team Selections, and Ron Harp; er would. have been a deserving
•choice.
. Defense was an integral ingredif nl d~ring the Bulls' league-record
12-wm regular season. And 11 1s
again in the playoffs; Chicago is 91 despite shooting only 4S P"Jrcent.
"Offensively, you're going to go
through stretches where you just
can't make a shot consistently," Jordan said. "But defense is an attitude,
·p commitment, a responsibility.
l)efense wins championships in this
;league."
; The Bulls displayed that attitude
··again Tuesday. They used -a SWIIJ'ITI·
. ; ing, pressiJtg, trapping defense to
; :tum an 18-point deficit into a 93-88
; Yictory over the Orlaildo Magic, tak: ing a 2-0 lead in the Eastern Con• ference finals.
' . "We'.ve been hesitant to use the
:press that much," said Jordan, whoic
team . can sweep ..the best-of•seven
series , by, winning 'Saturday and
~ Monday in Orrando. "We're proba: bly the oldest leliiJI in the playoffs.
· We try to conserve our energy. But
; when we were 18. points down, we
: didn't have much choice."
So the Bulls -, led by_30-somethi~gs Jordan; Pippen, Rodman and
Harper - pressed. And their Gen; eration X opponent cracked.
' - "We lost ·our aggression offen; ; ively. We were looking to pass the
ball backward rather than trying to
bum the pressure for easy baskets,"
: Magic coach Brian Hill said. "You
:. can prepare for the Pt:.C55 • but you
:· can't put Pippen, Jordan and Harper
:: on the floor (in practice) and simu•: late that type of pressure." ·
·
'. · Chicago trailed 64-46 midway
through the third quarter. Orlando's
~ ~haquille O'Neal,had 30 points by
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that juncture as the Bulls let other
Magic pla}-ers get him the ball in the
low post effortlessly.
Then the Bulls' defensive frenzy
began.
·
After almost every Chicago bas·
ket, Rodman was on the baseline,
harassing the inbound passer. Rodman would then slide over and belpo
either Jordan or Harper pressure the
ballhandler.
When the Magic managed to gel
the ball into the frontcourt, a doubleteam involving Pippen and another
Chicago player was waiting.
"We were able to get them in the
coffin corners right as they crossed
halfcourt," Jordan said. "They had
trouble handling the press; we sensed
. that, so
turned it up."
Even when the Bulls failed to
steal the hall, they su~eeded in disrupting Orlando's offense. By the
time O'Neal touched the hall, only a
few seconds remained on the shot
clock. Then Chicago would doubleteani the 7-foot-1 eenter, forcing him ·
to make hasty decisions.
The Bulls used a 26-5 surge in a
10-minute span to tum their IS-point
deficit into a 72-69 lead. Though
Orlando edged back ahead, 81 -79, ·
Chicago answered with one final .
run,. scoring the next nine points and
forcing three turnovers and three
missed shots.
The game was over, the Magic's
chance to steal homecourt advantage
· was gone.

we

Sampr.as pulls
. out of World .

Team Cup

By JOHN MOSSMAN
So the Red 'Wings bear a sense of
DENVER (AP) - ·The Detroit urgency in Game 3 here tonight.
Red Wings, who looked nearly Game 4 also will be in Denver, on
unbeatable during the regular season, Saturday night.
are suddenly getting beat up by their
ColOilldo not only has momentum
own fans and media.
and a bot goaltender in Patrick Roy,
The Red Wings, who won an it has the healthier team. The
NHL-tecord 62 games during the Avalanche are relatively injury-free,
season, have stumbled in the play- especially when compared to Detroit.
offs, and their 0-2 start in the WestPaul Coffey left Tuesday's game
ern Conference finals against the with back spasms. Steve Yzerman,
Colorado Avalanche has angered the who didn't play after the second perilong-frustrated Detroit fans, wbo . od of Detroit's 3-2 overtime loss on' ·
haven't raised a Stanley Cup since Sunday, was scratched just before the
1955.
second game with what was lisfe4 as
Informed his team was trashed in a groin pull.
.
·
the Detroit media in the aftermath of
"Coffey couldn •r· do much
Tuesd8y night's 3-0 loss, Red Wings ·.today," Bowman said after Wednescoach Scotty Bowman said, "Trash day 's workout. "He's gone for treatmore! 'It would help us. The best ment. He's had this condition all seachance you have is if nobody gives son and has had to miss a game here
you a chance." ·
or there. Last night, it went into
The underdog tag doesn't fit the spasms during the game. I'd say he's ·
Wings, whose precision passing and day-io-day. If we had a game tonight
scoring !Jiad~ t11em the envy of the (Wednesday), he obviously would
NHL during the season. But they not play.
·
have endured their share of adversi- · "Yzerman Is feeling better. He
ty of late.
chose oot to skate today, but will get
"We had our backs to the wall in thr~ treatments, and then will try to
the last series (against St. Louis) and skate (Thursday) m.,ming."
had to·win a game or be eliminated
Bowman also said left wing Bob
on their ice." Bowman noted ilrrey is out for the rest of the playWednesday. "We did it. We're not in offs with a separ-ated shoulder. "He
a situation now where we can be won't need surgery, but he's probaeliminated · by one game, but when bly going to need six weeks to
you're down 2-0 you have got to get rehab," Bo\vmim said.
going and win pretty soon."
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crime fora Specia{
(jift

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We will be

.Sunday May 26th
FQr Your Memorial Day P~ Supplies

'

. TONY'S CARRY 'OUT

· Come one, come
is the
· be happy 10 serid you
serSI!I!e issued by th_e IICtive nietnberi o!' · vices, costs ·and so forth, if. you're
the P~m.croy H1gll Scbool Alumni interested. Just request one by writAssoctatton.
'
ing the service at · P.O. Box 21 S,
. The cafeteria at Meigs High 330~8 S.R., 33, Pomeroy.
School where the . annual alumni
------- .
reunion will be .held this Saturday
'A reminder. Tom Dooley will be
night will be decorated Friday looking for you to bring some Midevening and you're ipvife4 to come dleport High School memorabilia in
O!,ll and lend a helpin' .hand. Deco- {or the windows at the Mid4leport
t1i~ng will beg\n at 6:30 p,m. ' .
Department Store ,for the upcoming '
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alumni weekend. ·The windows are
The best laid ;plans of mi9e and always an attraction so do take parL
men.
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Tom will see that you ·get all of you
· Yoo probably noticed several phq- "M.H.S. stufr' back.
tos in the Tuesday edition of'Ibe Dai· ---·--ly Sentinel showing employees .who
. Could be wrong, bitt we think
· were presen~ . service awards · for Mrs. Martha Gannaway is the only
~ long-tinie employment at Veterans Pomeroy High School graduate who ·
; Memorial Hospital.
late taught at Pomeroy High School
Unfortunately, an accompanying still living. Martha will be taking in .
. few lines submitted·with the pictures . the.P.H.S. Alumni Reunion Saturday
:· apparently disappeared into thin air night in the hopes of seeing ff)rmer
· so let me point out that, following tra· students.
dition, the awards to the employees .
including two retirees were: given as
· I'm advised that there will be no
a part of National Hospital Week at Meigs High School Alumni Banquet
the hospital. Hospital Administrator . thi.s year--just separate reunions of
Scott Lucas presented the awards and various classes.
refreshments were served following
One class that will be doing the
the presentations.
· reunion bit and hoping for a big
-------tumouj is the class of 1971 . The class
You might remember that I men- committee working on die get-togett.: ,
tioned recently that the current edi- · er is reminding class members to
. lion of Ohio Magazine dellt to an send in their respon~ to Debbie Ellis
extent with spring high school proms as soon a5 possible.
artd"the 1995 Junior-Senior Prom of
........
Meigs Hi&amp;h Schoo\ was the one
It "ain~" been a good week. In
selected to b&lt;! covered by the maga- fact, it was a heart-breaker at our
zine. It featured some nice colored · house. Our 17-year old genuine
photos. ·
·Heinz 57 dog, Kizzy, finally became
, I didn't know at the time, but now so ill that it was inhumane to allow ·
I do that the limo in one of the pho- · her to continue living; I thank Dr.
tos was from the Laurel Limousine Kelley Grueser ·of the Meigs Veteri., Service at Pomeroy. and the young narian Clinic who showed so much
man pictured with the vehicle is Matt consideration and compassion in
O'Bryant. .
.
. .
helping me to part with my long-time
Lori M1ller who Wlth_.ller_husbi!l.d, friend who expected nothing from
John, operates the semce m Me1gs · me, never talked back but was always
County notes th~t 1995 was the first there with enthusiasm and love.
year for the service to be in business Unfonunately, our pets always
and that they had no 1dea how to run become members of the family. Leta limousine company. They've ting go was one of the most difficult
l~am~ a lot since then and the se~- things I've had to do. Smiles are a IiiVIce IS now well off the grou~d. lnc1- tie hard to come by right now so I
dental_!y; th~ se,rvice now , has a · 'will 'expect double effort on your
brochure which, I m sure, they would part--do keep smiling.

1994 GMC SIERRA
1500 '
Short bed, Y-l, ,tutQ,.

cond, AM/FM
etc.

CUI,

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1993 NlSSAN,QUEST

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(jraauation

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LOCAL "TRADE

NFL owners plan to .wait ·
until October to set rules
on purchasing other clubs

;:NBC turns
''
L
·•
SS COmmentator .

~

Country Edition, Y-1,
•uto, •lr cond, tilt,
cruiH, P81 PI;Pw.-..,
AM/FMc..a.

by ~b.
Hoeflich ·
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a consensus."
DUESSELDORF, Germany (AP) . By JOE MACENKA
While the cross-ownership matter
CHARLOTIE,
.
N.C.
(AP)
_ Pete Sampras pulied out of his
appears
headed for likely action in
match at the World Team Cup today NFL owners are wailing until at least
because of a back problem, but said October to set rules governing their October, less cenain is the fate of
he •will be ready for the French Open purchase of other sports franchises. three proposals that were withdrawn
"We want to wait and get some Wednesday for what the leag1,1e said
neKt week.
more
information to everybody · was a lack of support among owners.
"If the French Open had begun
One of the three was a measure-to
Wednesday, I would have had to before .we move on this," commissioner Paul Tagliabue sai~ Wednes- increase the annual playoff fields to
withdraw;" Sampras said.
The world's iop-ranked player day after he and the owners wrapped J6 teams, up from the current.allot-. ·
had been scheduled to play Richard up their two-day spring meeting at ment of 12. The proposal would have
eliminated first-round byes and creKrajicek in today's matches between the Charlotte Convention Center.
NFL.owners have long been pro- 'ated four extra games in the opening
· the Uriited States and the Nether·
hibited
from buying teams in 'other round.
·. lands.
Also withdrawn were two similar .
sports,
but
some
type
of
change
is
But he decided not IO play
· measures relating to the timing of
because of tenseness in his back needed to accommodate Wayne contacting prospective new coaches
~ dOWn OUgBniS .
muscles. Since his arrival in Europe, Huizenga and Paul Allen. Huizenga
owns the Miami Dolphins, the Flori- and front-office executives. Both
~
Sampras has experienced problems ~a Marlins and !he Florida Panthers, proposals were offered to promote
·
.
C has
with the unseasonably cold, wei
. and Allen, who owns the Portland . fairness among the clubs,
. ' NEW YO~K (AP) -. NB
• weather.
,
,.
The three proposals can be resubSampras said he hopes to play · Ti-ajl Blazers, has -an eKclusive
. decil!ed agamsl usm~ former ·
.
milled
at New Orleans.
·
ppt1on
to
purchase
tHe
Seaule
Sea:· qlympic djving champ1on G.reg · Saturday against Russia.
'
hawks.
·
·
Wednesday's
meeting
followed·
:· J,ouganis as a. commentator at the
"I will practice on Friday and
Tagliabue said the owners, wbose . an all-day ·session Tuesday in which
.. Atlanta OlympiCS, the New Yon Post . then decide if I can play Saturday,"
next meeting .is. Oct. 30 in New the league outlined its plans to con. .
he said.
;. reported today.
Orleans,
still have some concerns duct an experiment !Nith instant
~- : The diver broke a hfettme of
Sampras said he would travel to ·
related
to
revenue-s~aring and other
replay in IQ exhibition games in
Paris e~en if he does not play Satur· silence in 1994 by an~ouncmg he
financial
matters.
.
August. Tagliabue also told the own. was gay. Last year, he d1sclosed that
day.
"We're
going
to
raise
it
again
at
ers
he was imposing a han on·any
he had AIDS.
.
"I know my body and feel that it
the
fall
meeting,"
the
commissioner
franchises
talking to other cities
: Lou,ants had let 11 be known that . is improving day by day," Sampras
said.
"We're
going
to
present
a
about
possible
moves this SC!I$0!1,
he was eager to work the Olympics · ~id. "I will play in the French Open
repon
before"the
fall
meeting
and
and
said
violators
would be subject
for NBC~
no matter what."
then di_scuss it and see if we can get to a $500,000 fine.
&gt; An NBC spokesman, who wa5n 't
further identified, told the ne~spaper
that the network would use C:,~nthia
Potter as a diving analyst because
she was considered the best in her
field.
.
·
, "Just say I'm pretty disappointed," Louganis told the Post. ·
The four-time Olympic gold
medalist was still 'expected to be in
Atlanta for the games, the Post said,
Ill help open a new Speedo store
•
there in July.
: Of his health, Louganis said,
"The T-celllevels, aren't great. But ·
1'm still OK. overall. I'm taking
' good care of myself, eating right and
working out in the gym."
·
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1995 JEEP
CHEROKEE

Beat of the Bend ...

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graduei.s of 1946 lieadsvllht; MOine Guthrie Yost, Lencuter;
Sal· Frencla A. Benildi!IYI, Reedlvllle; Mlrgarllt Hentheir ~ grecf... cllrlon Follrod, Pomel'!)y; Paul G. Buckley;
of the c'*tt; •II CooiYIIIe, 1nd June Lon C.raon, North C•rollN«*'nnl Jean Tor; , n1. The Olll(I'Ore"ge Alumni A11oclltlon ben· ·
,£~~~~~~~ Dill A. · Barr; quet •nd dance will be held 1t the TuppeR
.

~In• elementary 11chool, formerly the OlhteOrenge High School. Dinner will be 11rved at
7 p.m. wllh the dance to atllrt lit 9 p.m.

·

.Rice

"Evelyn
Robert E.

B~sinesses

conducting ·
osteoporosis awareness -..program
·'

1992CHEV
%TON VAN

~

Osteoporosis -- ~ bone-thinning awareness (li'Ograrn. Merek ·&amp; eo,, a
disease that afflicts 25 million Amer- pharmaceutical manufacturer, serves
icons -- can be pre"'&lt;!!led with early as 'co-sponsor.
· ·
.
detection. But, too efien, II¢ disease · · · 1'We .want everyone to be aware of
progresses.withouu~ptotlts·uritil,it .. tl!e 'risk factors and the painless, relihas taken firm hold.•, ·, '·' , , , . ' able screening)that is, available for
ijAtf of all WOIIJ~n o,~er 6S Sllfler · oste&lt;;&gt;porosis," ,$aid Robert L. Beri_..from osteoporosis, which5an le~ t~ well, vice pt'e.jjdent, Gener-al Man- debiiillltin·g fraclures oftlle wrist, hip ager;-l'amlly Pharmacy Division,
and spine.
AmeriSOiitce Health Corporation.
To combat this disease, 22
''This is a disease that can be
AmeriSource Family Pliitrmacy drug caught and halted in its early stages
stores; including Swisher-Lohse o( -- there's rio reason for anyone to sufPomeroy, and six Holzer Clinics in fer from it," he added. .
southeastern Ohio an~ bordering
Information on risk factors and
West Virginia are conducting an : current .ther~pies wi)l be available at

'

.the local area Family Bharmacies.
Oirect mail, promotional flyers-and
advertisements promoting bone t\tass
IJleasurcm,ent tests, which·are a.vailable at Holzer Clinics.
Family Phatmacies are enrolling
patients in Merck's ~Special Interests"
program, ·keeping them informed
through periodic mailings on the !atest ~velopments in the prevention
and treatment of osteoporosis. The
Holzer Clinics are also distributing
promotional flyers and scheduling
screenings. The campaign is part of
the National Osteoporosis Prevention
Program
. .
,,

c_JubJnerrib~$rs hea~ ·abaat~_stat~-~pa!~&lt;s· .

. : Nancy aitd RaJ!dy Wachier.Jl(e~ . w~ ,no~ !llat Diana Kimqs has of May" ~nd "Mother's Love;." '
.
sented a program on state'..-D lit the· clulrge ot the nature. center al ljle
Refresh.ments were served to ·
rece~~t rneetina of'the Ri~rview Oar- . pll'k. Wachier tpJd aboUt (Jicnil; imia. ·' those named and Pauline Myers,
den Clu(i held recently at ~ home of hikins . trli.J~, C'l"Jiing, and bolting : l;lelores; Frank, ~araaret GIOISnickIanice YounJ, Co-hostesses for the that are avad~ at Forked Run. l:fe le, Manlyn H8JI!Ium,,Fnnces Reed,
meelinJ were Ella Osborne and Janet · ~ that the park's logo is a stern · Grace Webet, Maxine Whitehead,
Connolly. ·
·
, wbeela'.
Theda Haskins, and Ruth Ann
' ~ Wachter is manager of Jhe
Roll clll was answered by naming Balderson. Flowers were given to
Forbtl Run State Pirie. The prollfllll a bee that yoo would expect to ICC at . each one attending as favors. Mary
leaded lhowed slide&amp; and videos of a alate park. Devat,ions were given by ·· Alice Bise.received tbc door prize. ·
aevera1 !filfei,nt Ohio Swe Pirkl, ll ~ola Y011ng. She reid '~Lovely Month .
·
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. Pomatot • Mld~laport, Ohio

~.lilly 23, 1 •

Thufldly, u.y za.

1•

.

~

.,•••
often lwice. Beine YOUIII IIIII lllive.
I
IICCOIIIJnOda.t him. We hid sex
Ann
every day for 14 yean, even throuJh
Landers
my periods, llld up to the niJht
before tbe binh of e.ch child.
'"'Aftetl :4 years, I realized my
menial heallh was at stake. I told
him every other night was my,limit.
Ann Lailders: I should have After 26 yeus, he wonders why I'm
wrijlen 26 years ago. What fmally cold to him. We arc now in couples
tOiniinced me to write was the letter therapy, but I doubt that I will ever
froin the man who said that if wives truly enjoy sex again. Emotional
doil"'t satisfy their husbands' sexual blaclcmail and lack of respect and
~lites lhe men will lOi&gt;k else- affection made it a chore.
If husbands treated !heir wives
wliere. I'd he happy if my husband
did-:justlhat.
· like lhey did during couruhip, lhey
r·loved sex before we were mar- would get more· (of everylhins) In
'
rie&lt;l, but after lhe wedding, he ret11111. -- Mn. X
Dear Mn. X: I'm glad you are in
demanded it- at least once a day,

-·--0.
-....

couples thenpy at !0111 last The
first 14 yean of your nwri&amp;~e must
have been hell. The fac! that your
husband qreed to counseling bodes
well for lhe future. You would be
surprised how many huJbaads uy to
!heir wives, "It's YOUR problem.
YOU go." Yours didn 't. Thill 's a
good sign.
Dear Ann Landers: I just rc.ad
about a couple in Santa Ana, Calif.,
thlt is seeking legal advice because
lhe Social Security Administration
has given their newborn daughter a
number lhat includes 666 -- lhe biblical mark of the beast. The parents
said tbey will not acknowledge their
daughter on !heir '96 tax returns
because of the nUIIIber.

'IWo Qf !DY •iblillfS IIIII I have
666 in our Social Security numbers,
but our parents did not compJ.m.
The humbers never hid any ifiiii'Ct
on our personai or professional
lives, nor have we been pused over
for employment because of it. No
one ever told us that we carry lhe
mark of tbe devil.
I think lhe whole thing is idiotic.
What about you, Ann7 --Cranston,
R.I.
Dear Cranston:; · · or not,
superstitious~ · ·
'resPorul to
reason. We c
• the Social
Security Admi
and were
told lhat people
'ionally object
to their numbers for cultural, religious and superstitious reasons. It

hal bee• SSA .,dicy NOT to reas- WMt 1heir !Idler to ten..-ry, capelip numbers, regardless.
cially if he Ills 11illle money.
In this California cue, however,
If he's in modeat c:imaniQncel,
Commiaioner Shirley Clllfa plans they iry to 1 - him IOWard I ricb
to provide lhe baby girl wilh a new widow 10 they won '1 have him 011
Social Security number IIIII review their·hands,
the policy in order to ollow numbers • What llllout it, Ann 1 Am I rip or
to be reassigned if there are legiti- wrong? -- A Witness in Houst011
mate reasons to do so. Now, isn' t
. Dear Houston: I don't share your
that nice?
cynicism. Some chikftn only want
Dear Ann Landen: Your column !heir father to have 1 Jood lifo lfter
certainly puiS the best and the worst Mom dies IIIII do what they can 10
of human llllure in the spotlight. make it happen. Bless them.
I've lelmed I lot from you over.the '
years. Your column bas been a postSeDd q1ietllonl10 Au LeDden,
graduate course in life. And now I'd Cnaton Syndlnte, 5777 W. Cetalike to point out something I've tury Blvd., s.Jte 700, La. A..el'e•,
learned on my own . .It's the selfish- c.ut. !10045
ness of grown, children who ~n 't

Church raises money
for vehicles for third
world countries
· PET, that's Personal Energy TransportatiOII, is a special Pentecoslal Day
proj~ct of the Pomeroy United
MC\Ihodist Church.
:~t a toll of $200 each, lhe goal of
the · ~hurch lhis Sunday will be to
r~lie money for lhree of the vehicles
to ·be sent to Third World countties.
.&lt;;:'onstructed .of. wood with melal
fl"liJlleS and lhick rubber tires, PETs
have pad~ seats wilh tool or storagttbOxes benealh, and a~ in back
foe1ransporting children or packages.
:They are ,operated by tUIIIing controls on lhe handle which is connect·
ed J.o a steering mechanism. They
als.O :have an emergency brake. The
vehi~les require little maintenance,
according to the,Rev. Bob Robinson,
pastor of lhe Pomeroy Church, who
hopes to take lhe PET project countywide lhrough lhe United Methodist

....
~'

llb~ Commuaity Calendar is
puhlisbed u a free service"to aonprotlt groups wlsbf!Jg to anaouace
meedq ud specilll events. Tbe ·
calt!lilar II aot d ·Poi to promote
sales or fuad raisers or aay type.
Iteail are priated u spliCe permits
udl'ID•ot be panuiteed to run a
speelftc nnmber ol days.
THURSDAY
P:OMEROY -- Meigs County
Library Board of. Trustees, I p.m.
Thur!lday at lhe library.
I!IIDDLEPORT -- Revival services; Ash Street Freewill Baptist
Church, Middleport, lhrough Friday,
7:3q·:p.m. each evening. The Rev.
Calvih Minis. speaker.

..

POMEROY - Rock Springs Better Health Club, l p.m. Thursday;
home of Phyllis .Skinner.
MIDDLEPORT -- Meigs County
Churches of Chris! Women's Fellowship, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Bradford Church of Christ.
REEDSVILLE-- Riverview Garden &lt;;lub, Thursday, 8 p.m. at the hoe
of Marilyn Hannum. ·
SATURDAY
. RACINE ~- Red Brush Church of
Christ, special weekend services,
Saturday, 7 p.m.; Sunday, 10 a.m. and
6 p.m. Denver Hill of Foster. W.Va ..
speaker.

Room Additions ' Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDEtrnAJ.
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643

etratea how the equipment worke.-

·G ood Luc~ to the MeigS .
Maurader Baseball
Team in the District

Championships. Friday

."No Job Too ,_.,. 01' ToO Small"

. Bllc:khoe

-

All

mo. pd.

let aPSYCHIC

• Shaw Carpets

oDelta Faucets

1~900.990.3737
·'1
'

. Model Home Located at
Intersection of Rts. 7 ~ 33
•
Ppmeroy, OH ~14-992-2478
·Model Home Vie.wing Hours l :00 • S:OO p.m.
1\Je.• Sat. or by appoinimenL

•

Serv-&lt;1 (1119) 645-8434·
., '

'

!,'

. I

!

-

-LI'NDA'S
PAINTING
.,

'
Talc nne to our (lifted

FREE ESTIMATES
THai~ p!lil HI of .
.............. ·~ •• If. '

in!!~; saft~ ,nc~
mDfll. ~- -'

.

Ext. 3505 ,,.,$3.99 per min. " .

VIIY1RWOIIAIU
UVIiHfiRIICU
614-915-4110

MUSI be 18 Y"!· ..
Serv-l.i (619) 645-&amp;,134
. I·
.H'.

..

- . . FREE
. , y·ss Your ~Don .t • TV Times•••
C'ditlOll ol .

-eek .

·

EverJ '"'
1nTbe

!.!!!!~!!.~

..•'6&amp;0f51NG_ ,
'

I

~ NEw'~. &amp;PAIA
.. ·i\'
· G~
'
Downapollta
Gutter Cleanln
Pltlntlng
FREEESnu
'"...
1
·. '"
149-2168
.

,.

...t~·

,

1-800-508-8887
• Top • Trim ~ Removal
• Stt.imp Grinding
15 Yrs.

Features· . eek
. free ·ThiS 91 .

tn'fhe . ·.
«~·-,., ii~
~~all~~,·. .

TIIIJ 'annutlt report Form
· teo PF tor the Kibble
Foundation Bernard V.
Fultz, Tl'u"etee, le ivallib_le
you always, " for public· lnepectlon 11
hrNrd V. Fultz Law Olf!c!l,
Happy Birthday
111 .112 w. seeond strte~,
Mom
..
Pomeroy, Ohio 457"ilt,
during regular buel_...._• .
Albert, Gerry, Joan '
......
oa•A '
houra ·for ,JI pertod 0 r'T1J&lt;VV
J-,, ,., otlll'o dayi
aub. .quent to
Becky, Kenny end
publication ot thla ~~
L---~~!!!!!~ ,(5) 17, 18; .20; 21, 22, 2S.24,
. 21: a:rc.

Real

,

Uc. -Ina. Ownlt:

Rick,_,

JONES' TREE·SERVICE
Top, Trim; Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Years Experience • lruwed ·
Owner: Ronnie Jones
387-0286..:. 1..fi0o..950.3359
.FrH EstltNt.s

PICKS1SPREADS,
FINANCE .
HOROSCOPE, SOAP
. RESULTS

r-~~~~--,

YOUIIG'S

3.1111i. ell Rt ~ on Ctlb ....., Rd. ':

• .... 24th &amp; 25111. 8· ? MEA~'t•

RE!;«NCE
.
Fri-Sat·Sun Bml . Nortll on R~J .:• .
01-. booko. lgli buntr ctouill, ,1

CAIPENIEI SERYI(E
41- Add1111MI8

1011 ol ontlquoo,

...;.....--...;_..:.......:.....--- •
Mo~ 24th-25th 1107 27th
willbt-

PIIntlug
AIIO CDncrN Walk

80

(FAEI! ES1'111ATI!SI
V.C:YOUNG Ill

Ext. 1449

$2.99 ~r min.
Must be 18 yll.
Serv-u (619) 645-8434

I/Mift

Mt-2512

Dirt• Sand
.,

115 ••22
CI!Ht8r, Ohio

DATE
LINE

sort cushion. Not responsible loJ • •
accidenta or any kind on ptOptriv, ··
no acholic beverages aloUd.". ·
Take At 2 tram Poinr

Se!ViceU
645 "8434

(Umeator.
LowRMIII

WICKS HAULING
L~ettone,

G1111"81, Sand,

TOp Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470
New24hr.
. Dateline ·
Meet lhl Man or Woman
o1 your llnt8lm Never .

Plelni'tl, •.,

Rd.. turri ltfl be·

s•de Whitt Churcll go 114 Mi. do
right , Information 304-675-1875. ... • · '

,_ .

~'=---.,-_;._;-

Rick Pearson Auc:lion Compahy, • '

28583 BASHAM RO.
Racine, Ohio 41771
Mt-3013 Phone

rull time auctioneer, complfre=. ".

auction

serv ice.

Lietn..cl•, •

•8e,Ohio I Wert Virginia, ~·· .
773-5185 Or 30&lt;4·773·5«7.
'
'•
t

IMt-2011 FAX

,90,.,.,.,.-w....,a_n,te_,..d.,.t_o...,B,..uy.:,._.,.
·, .. .. :

FUGUNT
FIELDS

DIE

pm
I
~&gt;,.;'
Booka, Books, Books. Old Rar•
BOokS,· Good Condition, lsi Edi_..
tlon Prefered. Also. PIQtr cei::

Pick-up di-rtied
bellellll, appllanc• &amp;
many rnelllle.

814-992-4025

~·

.

lec:tabtes 614·448-7282.

8am-lpm .

Clean late- Model Can C!Sr'

Truckt, 1990 Models Or NtwtfJ•• ~
Smllh Buick Pontiac, 1900 EaU..: • ~­

••• ~- , ;,
J &amp; D's Auto Parts. Buwing, s~1-1 ~ ' ·

. lt'ri

.~wen.~e,

Gallipolis.

ANNOUNCEMENTS
vage vehictas. Selling parrs. 3Gi-#. •·..
- - - - - - - - - 1 7 7 3 - 5 0 3 3.
,;,.,,

Thur.-SIIl10.5
Hemlock Grove
IID1mo.od.

Summer lmag,s
New.Location
Middleport, Ohio
WHh 3 Beds to
Serve You Better.

12-$20.00
16-$25.00

005

Top dollar- anlique1, lutnituft:,""\o •.~.

Personals

,.---,-""'":':-~..,.,.-..,.,.---1 gl111. china, ~;locks, gold, aitver,• ~ ·

For sala : The undivided intereal
in the John &amp; Pearl Proffin ellale,
tend to: Oall~ Sentinel, P.O Box

coins, watches, eslates. Osby
Martin, 614·992· 7.,.1 .
-~ ' ' ·

728·2•. Pomeroy, Oh 45769.

Top Prices Pa1d: Old· US. CoinS:,

::-:-:-'--::--:-'':--:----1

Sliver, Gold, O•amonds. AU Old

SMiling S.nd,.. L Beilver
Collectibles , Papet"we•ghte. Eu: . 1~ ... .
Please con11ct Anita Y. Brown at M.T.S . Com Snap. 151 SecoRd , •
614 ·9:.&amp;-2973, in rega'rds to Avenue, GalliPOlis, 61&lt;1·446-2842: ... · ~
health &amp; wlttol "'"' lalhet".

:.::=::==~==::....--1 Wanted To Bu~: Auto's I Trucjoo.,

40 ·

Giveaway

Arrt Condition, e••-31llt9082. or

-:-:"-:-:==:-::--::-:7-:---1
814,.&lt;18-AIIRT.
1·Lab Bmo ." old, 2 Beagle dogs,

"•·. " ,
K.:•1 •

emo.otd, .3 call, (2-~ellow, 1-cali- Wanred To Buy: Junk Aulas Wirh . co) 1-Tarrlet 1yr old . 304·675· Or Withoul MototS. Calllarrr l ... \

... ;_ ~
· 2 Btac~ cats' cule t&lt;lttens, to Wanled To Bu1 : looking For lit·
gmd home 814-446·8196
tie likes Sand 8oa, Picnic Table
:-:---:---:---:--::---:--1 &amp; OutdOor Co·itage, 614-245.-~· ;

_•850=·..,..---'....:...- - - 1 lively.614-388-9303.

Phone·992·2489
.

1960's 101'1, G.l . Joe, Star Wei~~ , •
ec:t. Will pay fair price baud on • · .
cond ition. 614·446 ·8830 ~In\!:'!· -J

.l

.

Herbs
Sce•tn
8eranlum1
lwerlastlnga

Your Sweelheart as
i:lose as your'phonfl

,..._~61

-" ·

enrs. Bring dancing thoes and; ~ . ~

JUS! past Jericho

TRUCK IN&amp;
~•Gravel

Public Sill
• and Auction

.-n•

cl'lildren Undrtr 12, 11.00 w/pi.r-

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
· · I MACHIN.ESHOP, INC.

I.L HOLLON
· DUMP
' . .TRUCK
SERVICE

1~ "

Poactlui Valle~ Festival : F(o~. ·;
motkel ....~ 2•. 211. 21 81m-tpm.
Set-up 1oo SI.OO .. nd 12115
apece. Old fashion auction 2Sltt, ;•'
12noon till ~pm. B&lt;ing iL we1 1011 ·
ir. 15%0f ulet. 81uegtlll ,...~;c ·· ·
25th, 7pm· l1pm. Rocky t.lauiiiiJ!I -·
Boy1 and oue11. 14.00 ~duk,,

ttl2.f218
· Pomtroy, Ohio

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

bunco o1 "aMI'. • •

lla~ 24th-2Sih 8·4. 1107 27th ll K
,.in wiM bt In 81-·
~ '

oflew OM lilt

•Eitctflc:IIA Plumbing
41ooll!lg
•lnttl'lor a ExiBrfor

1-9()().776-2525 EXT.
5961
$2.99 per min
Must be 18 y!l!.
(619) 654-8434

....

ll'nl1010.od.

MGM

Part

5887

leave message.

Want•ng 10 bu1· L•Uie Tike&amp; 1
ourslde toys. Ask lor Sharon. 6"l4-

.

2 ·Kiuens grayfwhite:. 304 · 675-

,.1173.

GENEUL

;,

,,..•

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

. spaniel, 6mo. old , 1-ma"le, 1-fe·
male. 304-675-8187.

\

~ ~

'388-8955.

' 2 Miaed dogs. JerrJ!ir &amp; cocker

COIITUCTORS

h ..,,

2 Female dogs.
Beagt&amp;'J er·
rler. 304·675·2961 II no anS\I¥8f

Siding • VInyl ·
Aluminum • Roofing
~. New • RepairGutters&amp;
Downapouts
Free Eatlmatea
992-3607
512111111 , mo.

FIND TOTALSATISFACTION!
Through a Live
· Personal Psychicl
1-900-255-0500

Ext. 4009
$3.99 per min.
Must be 1B yrs.
Setv-U (619)
645-8434

be lonely llgllln.

a......1

.Real Estate Oenentl ·
&lt;.

·USDA Rl.lral Development ·

CALL NOW
.. 1·1100 1188 6003
Ext. 1021
- . $2.iili per nlln.
Mullbt18ytl.
s.v-U (814) 845-8434

{Formerly Fanners Home Administration)

Goveinn\enf ·Foreclosure Sale.!! ~'

60 ·Lost and Found

CHATUNE
Live 211
- Hrs
~ t!.de"
T Talk to Beautiful
Girls

1·900'-446·1414
Ext. 6445
$3. 99 per min.
Mustbe 18 Y"! old.
Service U ·
(619) 654-8434

. 30,1996

&amp;
IIISULAnOII

t:agle Ridge Rd. and CarmetiDy...:..:..na.:..m-,hi-Fa-tl.:..o_os_P_&lt;od_u_c_t.- _:.
_
11 08
Church, has cottorYf11lon cord a1A Day. Lose We ight And Mak•· . ·
h d l0 II
II 81 4 • 9 49• Money.
lac •
co ar, ca
Minimal lnves1men1, 61..:· ··~ -~

. 23119•
.. 6-1236.
.. . ' .
. Lost: Basket lor 3 wheel scooterBetween First 1 Tturd A-ve's. Gat- Earn $1000s weeki}' stuffing en-· ·
lipolia. Reward. s 14 ..t46 -o 139.
veloj;~es at home. Be your bon.'"• :--#
Start" now. No &amp;Jipariance . Fre• ~ · ., ~
LOST : Female Siamese cai. lasr suppaies, info. No obliga~oti. SlflCI . . . ,:
seen at Rod traile r pa;k, beside S.A .S.E. to Preslige Unit IL, P.0 ,1 ' • •
sewage planl in New Haven. Ct!ill Box t95BOi, Winter Springs, Ft
30&lt;4·882·3435 01" 30&lt;1-882·3348.
32719.
' . .•

..

FOUND : Mod size dog. tong

Yard Sil:le
===::=::::=:;===I
014·992-2384' 1 ·;~~-:_'
Gallipolis
"" IIIIPOinomono. eoe
.. ,

H&amp;H

i:30 A.ll.-3:30 P.M.
POIUICLOSURJ! SALE
'

c...,c::....., • .

. . . Ooor ..........
For More Information Call: (~14) 65&amp; :5'31 May30, t996_•t.l~ua.

·

1 : ~·-·· ·

Executive aecretary n•edtd for "' ' r,,
local Con'!Piny, call

&amp; VIcinity
Home T~pioto. PC uwo nHdod:' .: •
:5120
=-.-::512S11111=::::-:-:-oa~r~-::
=::
::
-:o.:::.,-:::
.
·1
S45,000
incomo potentia l. Con 1!1.. , .•..
1 02 7 1
1
Rood, Ofl Toont Run. Firtt Timo llOt).St:l-43&lt;13 E•L II-83H.
•0 ~-- •

SAWMILL

Ewer! Compl•te. Houaenokl,

Lo11

NHd e ladies To Sen Avon. e1.._ .

Antiqull, Aololilllf, Toys , Gun1 .448·3358.

814-102-2772

who

.

•.. , ,, ,

haired, black collar, tamale, lound
onJollaroon Blvd. 300-8~2150.

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

517 BRYAN PLACE .
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

Computer Users Needed .. Work.··." ·
own hours. S20k to $5Qklyr. 1· · •..!

Loal· "'~!.-St. Brunard berween 800-348-7168 xt508.

70

j

'·

No argumenlsl
No Naggirlgl
Just the mate of
. your choice,
1-900-988-6988
. .

Must be 18 Yll! old

4

Pl. PIIISII'It
&amp; VIcinity

1~

ENTERTAINMENT

••

• dar adtiott 10:0000.01. SoiUIIIor. . ••

IIM!i 1.11!. Ottlo a Wilt 'o".cp..

Date-Line

$2.99 per mlnule

(614) 441-1191

...........

··,..-----,
SPORTS/

·~

Advanc:•. O.adNna: 1;00pm tflle

11+74H337

"1·900·9Q8-8988 .
Ext. 6733

~.··

Pj}~UC NOticE .

tiDIS and. .·
L~ . . It's All

..

36Y..,..Exp.W

· Public ,Notice

A.re&amp; Tele"isiO

· .

Decks -

,.

0

,

_
Residential - Commercial
Roofing - Rubber - Shin9tes - Minor Repali"S
Guttei"S and DownspOuts
COmplete Remodeling
Bathrooms - Siding

. 511fllltl TF

. ~imtt ,. ~I\'"'
~uublll
. . . _
' .

aad

Howard L WrlteHI

In Memory or

VELSIA(MA)
ROUSH
.

-· .

•.·

•.

"

·COISftDniDI

t-goo,25s.o~ '

11M

1'·10'30hft.
14'·11'-. ft. .
Al80 IMIIIIIII
4x4'1-4lll'a·
il1 4 'liS 4107

PWIICSIID
~ P1altle. Ohio 45713 •

i14 815o"3813orlt&lt;HI7-1414
Plaslk: Cultien- Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36:'
4" S&amp;D - perf. - solid pipe
. 4" &amp; 6';, Flex pi.Pl:
4" &amp; 6" Sch JS pipe
112" &amp; 3/4" C. P.Y.C. pope
I 1/2" thru.4" Sch 40 pipe
~ . ·
3/4" &amp; I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe ( 100' roll's thru 1.000 '\ II'!)
314" U.L. approved Conduit .
·
8" Grave less l.eacb pipe .
o... pipe I" ·lhru 2" . Fiuings- Regulltors- Risers . ·
Full.assonmem of P.V.C. &amp; Fie• fininr- &amp;: Water fillings \
Full line of Ci.stcm. Septic &amp; Water stotagci la!lks.
·

.

WHITE PINI! .ROUQH'
.SAWED LUIIUR.
1:d, 1x8, 2114, 2d ,

for.-

St. Rt. 7

..,...,.,..

.'

d4ly _ , , tho od it 10 '""· Sllfl&gt;t•·
d4ly edition- 1:00pm Frifltr, M&amp;n- . ·

Mobile Home Hating &amp; Cooling

s.rv,u

Umlt.d TJme Olfef .
'eatl tqd8J wllh ~
window alas

fSyG~ OJ\!I~IIIIJO!'! !!.!,
1UV8, success, care, IOU

,

lllllltoi·IITIRIOI ' ·

f6ryH,

.

Psychic-Line

.,., .... ""

-

s.rv.u (1111&amp;45
·8434
411 ........

J

t

I

$2.11 pw min.
Muit 111118 yrs.

~-...;.....::::.:::::;..:::;...~

.

I

Ext. 2261

· $3.99 par mlrt
· Must be 18 yrs.

.

Work

992-3838

Ext. 4193

CD-GilT ASSURED.

FAMILY HOMES INC.

MEIGS ATHLETIC
BOOSTERS

ThiiY have he(ped

Call1&gt;1100o888-4~

..! Master T-lock Vinyl Siding With Lifetime Warranty
• 2S Year Warranty Aspbalt Shingles
• 10 Year Structural Warranty On The Home
•·•
Our Prices Are The Lowest bl The A"-". ·

We Are Proud of Vou

change·your life.
Sl~a~~· love.
The f~re ~118 tod~yl

_

Kind~ of Earth

' ARRICTlYE
&amp;WIUING
.TO TILIIII

millions find lortune1

EJIAL
....

Tciuah-T-IIequftcl

. tlnr-U 1118) •••• .,.

eDouble Hung ·.
.. n!lullted ·~~

Utlll11aa ·ll; ,

· ·'

Truck: ·
614-44h7558

• AnnstroRB solarian floornle
• Marillate Cabinets
• 8 FoOt Ceiliftl
• 2x10 Floor Joint. 16.Jn. On Center
• S2 Oall~ W- Heater

lnataliecl
•Tilt-In

l

t

' $8'*•• ~
·,Hou..· Sli•• ~d

614-992·2524

• Anderseo 1111 Windows
• Slanley-Doon
• ~6 Ex!erior WaUa, 161n, On Center

'19500

8ulldo7.1ng and

QualitY Work'
Competitive Rates
Ru.:

811ft

. , . .... FIIn....
"lfultlle11JfL

REPLACiEMENl
.
.
WINDOWS

Umest--

IE

Tal

Flllllly MII.....
Allow -Yow
Pwrlonlll ,.ycillc to
AulatYOu
.
HIOOII81100
·,
Ext. 1277

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IllliCE

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ol ForMil Awn Sltlt Pwll on llfl.' ·
· 1a4 noor Lqn8 Bolletll, F&lt;itSiil', ,:
, Soouru~. llay 24!11, 21rh, 1· ~ ••.
81 ..37t-«178orl14-3- '" ·.::..A;.;II..:l'a~rd_;Sa;,;
_ ..;_IO.;_I..;_M_UI...;I_,;Bo~Po_;i&lt;(~t{"

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Wt will-" wtlhln ,our budget .
P11.77H173
MX .771 1111

T"!Cklng - ·• ·

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lllciJMpan
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• ~ • Tool Do lit I IQ•Omatnenlll
Stept·SUIIia, R1l IQI. Pll\0 FU11111u18. FnPlleml, Pltliltlr hlngtrt~, Tl'llliFit l 1011 ol other llufttl .

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,._. Direction?

·• v...,111 &amp;,,uu •lnduelrill a- •1.-cl*~a Sllap

- Howard hcavalin

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A Few Of Our. Home Standard Features ·

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IIUUIIFUL wa 7771

13.111 permln.
Mul1 11118 YrL
s.rv.u (1.111141,1434

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•New Homes

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985 4473

• !xl...t4301

Homes To fit Your Lifestyle

COISIIICIIOI

FREE ESTIMATES

...

In Memory

.-:.

•1

1;900-441.1414

•

GuyaiiiYour
ltpjiiCial girt .. W811ilg
to hear tram youll
24 Hours A Day!! ·
. Cell noW
HOO 448-1414

&lt;Complete
Remodeling
·S top. Conlpp

. YotiOWIH

Donahue
wins
.
Lifetime
*hievement
·'
Award
By -KAREN MATTHEWS
Aeaoclllted Preu Writer ·.
JQEW YORK (AP} - And the
winrie.r is ... not Susan Lucei.
The "All My Children" soap star
failed for a 16th time to win the best
actress trophy as the 23rd Annual
Daytime Emmy Awards were handed oat Wednesday night.
Maybe Lucci should prepare for
next year by enlisting the help of lhe
scheming Erica Kane, her- character
on the ABC drama for 25 years.
Phil Donahue, the departing dean
of daytime talk, received a Lifetime
·Achievement Award but lost in two
competitive categories: to 1-fontel
Williams for bestlalk show ho~t. his
first;:and to Oprah Winfrey for best
. talk show.
\V,illiams and Winfrey thanked
Donahue for paving the way, and
celebrities
including
Shirley
Macl-aine and the Rev. Jesse J~~Ckson
lauded him in video clips. ·
"W~. as a people, as a nation, .are
benet off because you came into our
lives," Jackson said.
Winfrey, who had won best talk
show host the previous five years,
presented Donahue's lifetime
~~))ie:vement award.
·
"Personally, I want to thank you
for opening the door so wide, wide
enough/or me to walk lhrough," she
said,·
Williams said: "I hope that I can
only :carry on the legacy that he
~gan. " ..
Dollllnie, who taped the final
·episooe of his 29-year-old show lhis
month, said his wish .for those who
remain in daypme TV was "a long,
long list of sjlonsors who refuse to be
intimidated or terrorized by outside
pressure groi!JIS
know what you
ought to set."
AS for Lucci, she was beaten out
of the best a.:treas·award "for the tee·
ond straight year by Erilta Slezak ~(
"One'Life t!J Li ~-" The E!IIII!Y was_
Slezak's fifth,

~ Homea • VInyl Siding New
01~ ·Replacement WindowS.

HUlFIOII

Parish.
Robinson desCribed PET as appro- .
prlilte technology for Third World
countties.
"Emphasis of local churches, he ·
says, will bi: to provide lhe manually operated vehicles for Africa where
residents have to travel long distances.
over bad roads for just abQut every•
thing lhey need or do.
He said PETs are just right for use
by mothers who can travel about the
countryside carrying their babies in
the back compartment.
The vehicles are also invaluable
for those who have lost their legs,
such as in land mine explosions in
Angola, because only hands are used
in the operation, the UMC coordinaior said.
.
.
The project is sponsored by the . PENTECOST PROJECT - Sundey .member• of the Pomeroy
United Melhodist Rural Fellowship.
Unltld Mathoclllt Chuo:h wl.ll have an opportunity to ·•upport •
project .to help the poor reeldente of Third World Countrlu. The
goal Ia to colllct enough money to buy t1tne .PETa, P1r1011a1 Energy Traneportatlon vehlciH. Hent the Rev. Bob Robinson demon- ·

Community calendar

BISSELL IUILDEIS, INC.

-17.'.

AU.- - M u l l ..
~·-· OlAOI.INE: 2:00

Gil...,..

·

t

.,.,
•

.... \ .. I.
. ·- _ Nood adult bo~litttr. Ono c~lld: • " Norlhup. Second houat acro11 Your home, dayllmt In O.llpol~ .. '.:
bridge In Norlhttp. Mo""-r 27th. eroe. 814·448·1012 8pm-7pm ' . ' ·
Fl_, !OWl; Cltllclrtrlt clothing, Olliy. .
•
•,

32124 ~Hollow Ad.
Dfl. ONo 45780

Mll't""

Oeft!1Y a ~ llridclte

nile.
.
·
·
• Need Full Time lnslallera. Muaf-' :~ 'l.
Thur0. &amp; Fri 2 Family 'lllrd Salt .. ~~~iont:ad. APPlY In
1 ~·
V.lnton, acroio fro"! Boptill AI CO!IIIOrl Air, 2d "Third Avo- .

114.742•2113

Ptr..,.

' Church.

·· v

-

Glllpotlo.

..

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'

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I

Thu..ay, ·M.y 23, 1998

•llldcllport, Ohio

OOP

------~------------~----------~~
N&amp;• Cro••word Pu••.le
•·
PHJLLIP

--------------~~~~------.---------~----------~:..

....

ALDBR
F

INA NCIAI

...,,

Bullnlu

210

,.,.,

Opportunity
1115 U11IO Norrl a l~andar
- · 21&gt;111. 91U-87S--. '

1\11 STEEL Reoldon lial, COmmOf ·

Now lnlfflitwinQ fDr CHA CIMI· c.ial,, Agricwltu rt buil~lng OEAL ·
•• lnd part·dme LPN politiona. ERSHIPS •lllillllt. Big Poltnlial 330 Flflnl for Sale
Appl~ In perton at Sc.nlc Hilla Ptoft\1 frorri ulet and construc.Nur1inl' C1nt•r. 311 Buckrldoe iorl. " quolllod, lluj' llc:Dr)' ~~~­ 16 Acres Wllh BUildlngt. 1870
Aoo4
a.- 8arn-4pm, front Nai_. Mtn~flc:lur..-. 303· Kerr Bethel Church Road ea.
11-F
. , . _ , txl2100.
'&lt;51·3&lt;11HMngL
,

a;-.

Now taking applications for I X•

IIMrieneed roofeta and carparn1~

eta Wutl have, hand 1oola and
tranaporlatlon. Staning pa~ 7.25

P••••••••..:l,

114 1cre lot Gh131 in Galllpolit
Ferry, mobilt home ready. 304175-1783.

ParamediciiEMT' S Immediate

_..,., br luR ., PI~· time po,;.
..... 30ol·312·98!i6.
Now booking showt &amp; rKruiting
coneul1anra in thlt area. Great
opponunity, extra cash, lree lingerie • lott al run. Far inro. call
Jolma. 11&lt;-24S.118;!3. '

Postal I Gav't Jobs 121 tHr +
Benelitt, No Eap. Will .Tra in, For
Appl Ancllnlo l-800·536-30ol0.

1llls

2.61 Acre 1n Gallipolis Ferry or will
sale 1n 1011. Cny wa1er. 304·576·

5 Acres Loca ted Sailor Road,
South Of VInton, $10,500, 614·
388-8521.
5 Acttl Located Sailor Road,
Soulh 01 Vinton, $10,500, 814·

Our readarw are hereby
lnlorrnod lhalaH dWellings
aiMI~Ised In lhls newspaper

5 Acres Located Sailor Road ,
Sou1h 01 Vinton, S10,500, eu.

388-8521 ,

are available on an equal

5 Acres Localtd Sailor

opportunity basis.

388-8521 .

HoT scare And SkUftd NF Prcwid-

60 Acres of goad pasture. 304 115·3030(days) ·
30&lt;-615·

., Hal Opening For PT &amp; F)' Po·
sltlant. Clinical Assessments ,
VV And PSV EliiPttience A
Mutt. Minimal Travel And On Call Required. Call Beck I At 1·

Social Workefs. Now H.rj ng S23 1
Hr ... Benefits, On Tne Job Tral nII'IQ To Apply In Your Area , 1·800·

339-e150.

•

.

South 01 Vinton, $10,500,

REA L ESTATE

423~8Yef'Wngs ) .

pooil. no poll. 91U-871-5112.

Chippewa,
lowest

conSirucilon on Rayburn Road. s

5.32ac. PablWtd road, counly water,
reatona

e

info available on request No aingle wide inquiries please. 304·

2 BR.

675·5253.

1 Bath, Nice level lot
Newly Rremodled. Fairt;tnd or
Galha County Schools. cau lor
Oe!ails: (814) 258-l095

Scenic. Valle,-, Apple Grove ,
beautiful l ac lots, public water,

Summar babylllttt, 91m·4pm .
waekdaya. Active Sly.r old. in ::..:.=:....:::..:.:.::..:.:...::..:.:.____
tohildl home. PL Ple11an1 area. 3 Bedrooms, 1 btllh, h~oting roam
has hard wood floor . KitcMen &amp;
Coli 30oi-G75-411190 9-4.
dining room combined. Vinyl slding, new roar, 2 car garage, sae,
dishwather &amp; relrigtw"alor will be
included . Call 3Do4-67S·•139 or
aller 6:30 CoOI30&lt;-G15-7326.

360

Real Estate
Wanted

3309,

Oisabfed Veteran urgemty looking,
for 30-1 00 tecluded, privata acres. wilh or wilhoUI ~ildings. land

Twin Rivers Tower: now accepting
applications fDr "1br. HUO aubsicf..
. ized apt for elderly and handl·

l Conltlc~ 614·742·2182...

Country selltng, 4 bedroom, 2
bath, living room. eat-in kitchen,
tam~~ room. walk m closets, 2 car
garage, 1acre. 304·882· 3326 al ·
t&amp;repm.

capped. EOH 30H1!HIII711.

RENTALS

Va lley View Apartmenta,

Gr.!nde.

4 ~ 0 Houses for Rent

JET

!!:!§!!.!j~~~l:re:e=•:•~r-~3:0:•~- ~

!

1950· T traetor; needs crank
wrned. Oliver 17SO, needs motOf
partt, cab trike front Oliver 880

Silage Wagon, 16ft tandam 3

meter, Roal Goad 614· 2-45· 51g3
Alliler Farm Eulplmont
·
Squate tw.y bailer, Charolais bull
&amp; tobacco planta. -Cal afler -4pm .

30oi-Gl'S-2848.

HOuSE FOR SALE
BY OWNER

Small 3 Bedrooms, Very Good
Condilion, New Vinyl Siding, Cll·
~~:-::--;-;:;-:::::::=-:::~::::::1 port Unattached 2 Car Garage
':::
With New A.par lmDni AboVe. su.
&lt;48·111'4 l:!omo: 81 4·446-037&lt;
· Worll Ask For Mark Palmer:

2 Bedroom. S l15mo. Need relere.nce!l &amp; depos•l. Call 30-4·675 ·
1429 alter 4 :00pm
2 bed~oom in Hanford S225mo

No Poll. 304-882·2106 or 30&lt;·

IOOibleRatHI814·37'9-2fW7.

Generll Mainlenance, Painting,
Yard Wor~ Window• Washed
Guuen Cleaned light Hauling,
Commerical, Residential, Stave:

trealed lufnber d~ck over·
looking a 1h32 lnground pool .

N1cely lan&lt;lscaped. 304 ·6 75·
2588.

81-4·308-0429.

Porter. 114 mi. of( St. Rt . 160. 2
aetas. 24x32 1 BR. 2 car garage.

Georges Portabte S&amp;wmill , don'l
h&amp;ul youf Iota to the miH just call

10110 thad. All new sinc4!11 ·1989.
Privateloc.ilion. $35,900 . 614·

304·675-1957.

388-9893

light doz• work available, honest . Six proplftitt lor sale on land
&amp; dependable, have rerar..nces. contracl .ranging from $10,000 ·
CaH anytime 304-675-3911&lt;.
127,000. 304-67!&gt;2722.

698-6581 .

Cormicll Road, 614·4&lt;8-9669.
Furnished, private lot, porch,
yard. good clean condition, no
pets, $275 with water, 304·882-

1,000 Sq. Ft.
largo Parking; SA 141, c.n-ry
Area, 81ol-256-8338 Allor I P.M.

640

MERC HANDISE

2122.

Bu5ineaa location.

2486 anytime.

614-992-1044.

510

Housihold

Goods
2 112 tan Gla unit $250.00 after
8pm I14...S-G251.

Appliance•:
Reconditioned
Tfaller for ren1 in GallipOlis area. Washers,
Dryers, Rangea, Retrl gfators, 90 Day Guaranleel

Traitor lor Rent 8;•·44~1279
Two and three bedroom mobile
homes, .slarting at 1240-$300,
sewer, water and trash included,

614·992·2111.

440

tent Cate a References,

304-73a·

2923
:23911:::.:..·1:,_1_4-3_711-_.,.....
·.,.....-.,..---1
Will do bobyoinlng Jn my home
any oge. CIHn onvlronma•c. and
nice play araa. Nurrltloua meal1,
and antclla prepared . Ctrtlflca·
lion •nd rtftrencal avai.U... Call
or le&amp;Ye mtallg' It 814· 015-

Available I 61 &lt;·2•7·2032 Aller 8
P.M. Or~~~-Apple Grave 3 bedroom. 2 bath,
w/ 3 .8 acrea $40,000. 304-578 ·

_.000:.:.,;1_;.
. - -- - - - - -

~4:309::::·~-:--:-:::-;-::::;:::--;;::;:~1 Double wide SU95 down.
Wtll Do lncerlor Or Ex- "-lnl- U2&lt;mo. Froo oir. 1-800-691 ·

lng Reaoooablt Aaltl, Exparl· ~6_77_7_.--,--...,--~--:­
~Mr~a. For Free Etti~ Limited Otfert 1998 doublewld•,
::.:::.::.·:'';.:ol-:.;2:.:•5-5:_:15
:.:.:..5.~--:-;-:-l3br, 2balh, $1700 doV~n, $2151
Will 1111 wllh elda~y day 01 ntahc, monlh. Free delivery a seiUp. ·
will 1110 do hOuHCitani!'Q, have Only at 01kwood Homes, Nl1ro
.. parioriCI • CPR rr•lnlno, 11o1- wv. 30&lt;·755-5885.
DD2·4065.
UObile home tor sale. needs repairs, 12000. e ••·DD2-5858.
enc'ect,

FIN ANC IAL

Apartments
for Rent

fflnch City MaytaQ, &amp;14-o441·

nue, Gallipoijs, Otio 814-446·

' 4336
Would tike to buy uaed plastic;
ladder -lor above ground pool,

814-992·5053allor!pm.

550

7795.
Caloric Gas Range~ S12S GE
Space Savlf Olshwllhtr S-40 ;
Good Condlllon, After 5 Pll 81ol367-ll451

·

Building
· Supplies

D7,000 mlleo, $650 080, 61&lt;·
940-2311 days or 814-04t-28U

MOingl.

'lllll!ulck Reoal. PS, PB, POL, PW,
120,000 mlln, 12500, 6U-DD25000.
&lt;&gt;

Bedroom New E111ra Nic.e l
Range,. Aelngefator Fufnltl'led,

Gas Heel, 12i161Mo.. Plus Utilities,
Oepo~l A""'irecl, 81H411--2D57.

'81 Pl,moullt Relilln1 LE llltiOn·
w1gon, burgandy, tronl whttl
drive, auta, 1/c, ·front damage,
""' do~ D1 8:11 mlill,
cl"!n ..,, t650
114, daya or e1•·0-49, 28U

New Haven,. 1bedraom, unfur-

.

......

I

j1t87 KX80 Oirt Bih t300. IU· •i .
31St·2101
.:_ ,
.o

Norlh Carolina. Orig._p.int&amp; in·
l•lor." '18,000 mil ...'$2700. 080.
81H&lt;1·11DD owO,Dpm
t983 Ford Ranger, 4cyl, 4Spd,
exc cond. St ,800 304-675·2074

1ga7 Ford F250 3 Quar ter Ton
,351 · Winsor 2 wheel Oriv8,

t5,000 61U&lt;8-2..5 or 30&lt;·6752315 "
1981 ~dge· Truck, Needa .Minar
Body 'Work &amp; pain1 job 318 2

speed,.nice, 70.000 m1ias, $5500,
may consider parlial tfade for a
4xo4 or pontoon boll, tst4·992·

251Uaflar8pm.
19D3 Ford Ranger Splash Aulo,
V· B. Aif, Tilt, Cruill, AMIFM Ta -

1=7~~~~~--~~~ ··

1DD5 PDiarlo E:iplorer 4o4 oiOO, . !
IC$4...;,300:.;_;_1...:.:;0...;3Qoi-4'---Y.-1111_.- - .
IC
••
e2 KX. 2!;0, ""' kick 11~r1 - · . ' ·

8oldll

.

HECHAa.&amp;s Ml

-.•,.
'
'.

W..t

Nartln

..

EMt
tNT

...

Opelling lead: • 6

· FER. SWIIPIN'll
•

·An impossible
defense to find?

·:

,'90 Yamaha Wave~unner. twa.. t
passenger, eacelltnl condition,
•
$2500080,11 . . . .2311 dayl. . ~

...

·rf'-'"1

1211. Alullir~~m -WI 3.511p. mo- , 1
IDr In .... good ·" ' -· S&lt;IOO. 304- : :

l'

773-8118. .

By Phillip
.. Aide~

,, '

'•

~ 5 h. alum., bll11 ·boat. Ttrrr Pfo '
40. t2. 100.81 ol-4\06·&lt;108
•

'

1111. open .b ow Invader. 140hp •·. 1
· Evklrude, akia, tube; life jackellof .nr
.Muff. ttainleaa st,el &amp; alumiunl · ~

,;&gt;ropo. S2,500 . OBO 30&lt;· 112-, "
.3325.
.
'
\ 1

-::----------- ' !'

· 18' Star crafl ba•l, 115 horu )
;Johnson ma1or &amp; tra1ler 814-98!-· •

3891 .

f

'

ID Fl. Open-Bow,
rl70 HP, 110, Mere. Cruiser, Ga.·
:rage Kepi, S3,BOO, 814-3118-1114&lt;.

'
!

''

.1987 Ainilar iQ5 !loot wilh 4-~ iler
i
1Chevy lf1tine, ••caHern Condition,
with fow hours, S7,100" wUh cut- ~. •
tom trailer call 814-.t..a&amp;3o alttt' 1

!

.

•

ltsgo Yahama wa.,. Ru"~ner i.x. :
·e5o l uailer. S2,800 . 304-615· -;-!
i6352.
•·r..-

1.231l Pon-. compltlell rniDreo;·~
. ..:
· ~993. 70hp motor also, neW· 1913.

1

sa.100.304-e75-62n.

1

(('ET

I

Sea Eagle intla1abl&amp;

boat with five._«· I
tofttpartments, suitable br ,,.., I
rafting. 2 hP. mo10r, motor moun!,"_
:''" I
floor boards. oars. 81 4·t)92-803S. ;~· I

Auto Parts &amp;
•
Accessories
,
_;:B~udg:-al:"t~ra_n_sm-.-is.;.•i-on-,-.:o:U-secf-.:-IR:::-e- ·:

760

CA~D..&gt;

•

~

not

I

••

buill , All Types.· Accltsible To;
Over 10,000 .Transmission, Also,_
,OYemual Kil$, 6~ 4·245-5677,

••
•

New' gas · tanks, one

'

!on truck
1
wheels, radiators, floor mats, etc. 7·~

~~1!1~~~"'' ,..,

~

'

.

' 0 11te br NEA. Inc.

D a A Aulo, Ripley, WV. 304-372·, o•r•
3933or I ·BP0-273·9329.
.., J

790 . . camp.rs &amp;
Molor Homes

Today'• ~ wu declared '117 Mike
Lawrence, from Berkeley, Calif. He
won the Bermuda Bowl twice u part .
of the ACel team ·Ia the "101. After he · ln-+--+--1
hlld made his four-8pllde c:on~ he
realized that be eould have bel!n lle!l!llted. See if you can spot the defen·
. sive eoap that wu miNed'
· East's .opening bid showed 13•15
pointe. If be bad opened witit a 15-17
.no-trump. I wonder If' Lawrence
· (Soutb) would have bid biB haJid qulie ·
so aggreaaively. Al110, North should· ' A II J
T J U I:
II
D8NAWJG'U
YPJM
have retreated to five cluba, a contract
that makes eully with both blllek-llllit Kll
XBJKDIISGII.'
T, X •
RYJIPU .
ldnp filwnlbly pllleed. Yet that would ' .
have ruined a great story. .
West led the heart aix. After winning
with the ace, Lawrence played a low· 'V'A
ZNUS
II
XMADIIYGJ
tnunp. West won With the king and led
another heart, forcing declarer to ruff.
TJ. US .
AMJ
But now came a spade to dummy~a
queen, followed by the club 10 for a
wliming finesse. A club to the queen PREVIOUS SOLUTION: '"The goal of all inanimate Objects Is to ,..1111 man and
..
·
.
· found West unable to ~ so declarer ulllma1ely 10 cfetear him," - Ru'!'ll Baker.
cubed the spade ~ce and~ clubs.
·from tbe ·top, The defense could take
'IIIIHAILJ
PIIlLII
only two spades and one dialilond.
lAM I
Did anything strike you?
·
Lawre!l,ce noticed that if West had
·PlaYed bli low 8pade, the ldng. at
trick two, the contract would have
failed. Declarer wini wlth dummy's
. qlieen and takes a club flneue, -but
OTRDEI
then what? U he takes another club fi2
nesse, Weal ruffs and the defenders
I
get three spade trlcb. And if South
plays a spade to the ace, he cannot re_peat the club finesse.
Finally, note that lhe-ailme defense
II needed to deleat the coutraet If the
· Eaai·Weat playa .011 diamonds from
trick one. But who ·would ever find
that duck?

....

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.. •'

~

. ..

'TAAI 1-i~OE.r:K'«J.l:..~

i.

:

.. ~(l·US.I~

'

Wc.o1N6TO

1984 Toyota Miraoe mini mOto'r~-.r '
n~me. ~b air, 4cyl, Sspd, siOve, ·~:
llnil, r11~1g. U.OOO. Call 304-G75· · · · "
~G.
~
.
~

flllo\

IT?

I

- I I I 1 I

'

• rHdy June 15, a«epiJna dapooo
ho, t250 - · 81oi-D&lt;0-3fm.
Thunderbird, lmmal:tlllle
con~dldon, !!8:700.tclual mllea.
AKC Rf'! lamale 2yr old Welmironor I clog hOuH .. I50 To lovi"D S•rfoua calla aniJ. Phone 11.4-~,2111 •.nor St&gt;mnome. 304-773-Sole1.
AKC R-oilltrod blu• &amp; gold 1813 Cr-. Vlcltlllall, ru111 good,
· YOrkthtre ltfriers, 2 malti, , ..._ int.,ior good, pain! rough . • 300.
5pm.
male. P1pera &amp; ·vacclna.tion 2108l01Qoln
,r..ordo. 12 '112.wookt o)d. •~oo
. . IIH-522 b6liire 1prri. II·
• Sull.

INt.,.,.

.

.

...
•
•-.

". · ~

- ...

..'
'-

-- '

,,

'·

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~

'

-:='----.....;--....,,_-- ..,
...."'";-"1

lmpro¥aments

.,_...

Unwell - Juice - Niece - Roller ~ JEwELER

l~al references lurnlshed. Call ~
(G14) 441·0870 Or Ill&lt;) 237- c· • •

04~ Roglfs Waterproofing, Es- ~

mblished 1975.

;,., - ,

•"'1 •

.

,.

.,----------·,.--,
Appliance Parll And Strvice: All - :
perlence All Work Guaranieed, - -- '
French City Maytag, 814 · 448· .
,
7195.
' .......

~-:--:------------ ·1 •
C&amp;C Genaral HOme • Main· • ·

tenence· Painting, vinyl aldlng , •\ · :
c:arpentry, doors, windowa, ·baths, 1 •
mobile home repair ana more. For • •
h'ee 81llmate call Chel, 81•·092·

. I'
!"_, !

6323.

.

I THURSDAY

Name Branda O;ver 25 Yearl Ex· -. - ""l

Father and·son were watching a cir.cus act. The son.
turns to the dat! and asks, 'Can you call a ring master a
JEWELER?"

MAY23I

/ HOBOTMAN
1.00&lt; ~'T -nilS WWOR\( .. .
t.lllliS IS WRI'TING .. .

I!• •
.

DRYWA~L
Hang. finish, tepair. '

' oil I

;:

'

•

I

·Cemnoa 1ea1ured, pl.ater 1epalr. !
Call -Tom 30&lt;·875-4186. 20 yoaro :1:
eapenence.
. -Ali
.

.

-'
"'"

~

Eafl'a Home Maintanance, ·vinyl • • ·
tiding. roofing, exteriaf and lnteri· : :
or painting, power waahing, fOOm. ~ ,

hoe COYer, 36,000 lllleo, Orange . :;:~~- · Free Estimates, .• 14· :-; :
Reef, S1 1,500, 614-4&lt;0.7850 Atter
• P.M.
Ron'o Til
In
80 Chevy Luv. 4a4 , Good condi·

,...,J

llon. $1,500.81~oM8 1608

_jeJ

ahead. · ~nd l~r ·yiiui·- laln to a financial lnWIVement.
L---..&amp;a~~~=~~~~::' ~oAotro-Graphe year
p.edictb• today by malllrig • SAGmAAIUS (No¥. 2HIIc. 21) Toctay,
and SASE to Aotro·!Jraph, C/o thla your. primary concern will, be lo oee lhal
newspaper, P.O: Box 1758. Murray 'HIII , everyone. wllh whom yQ.u're lmrollred Is
Station, New Yorlt, NY 10158. Make,IUnt 1J'Mhld epproprialely. H not, you wtll Ullce
$2

A81RO·ORAPH ·

83 Ford F- 150. 302 ••• 4 llpll.,
rust.-LoOk• &amp; ;&amp;~na grval ·UCOO.
814- ~?D-2601

tO..._ your Zll tiiic IIUn. - -

BERNICE ·
BEDEOSOL
Plwriblng.
Htatlng

·..

...

SQ.U\ UTS ANSWIU

Uncondlltonal "lif&amp;tim8 ouaraniH. '·· 1 t

'

'

•. ~ •'

Home

----~~~~~-----:
~
B,t,SEUENT .
~'
. ' WATERPROOFING
W.....!

'

'

' '

-.

SERVICES
,

'

•

=

=
810.

'

..

w'J j ·

820

'
.
i AKC mlri Plnocl\lro; IWO ......

·-

..

~

·-: cilrref11Yi.mNiura; .. -:- - - -·
CAPIIICOIIN (OM. 22.Jen, 11) Set vour

CAI\ICIII (J- 21.July 22) Do not be
alanMd Wi CioN 'Jitend pokel her 110M '
Into yciur privati·allalnl today, SIMI might
point out several wayo to reaolve your
troubles.
·
. ,

tlighW, h!gh In )'lilA' finencill and CCIIIII!N·
Qlal • - today. Keep In mind thai you
can niii1UIIn ~ u iong·ll you Wltlt
IQ be In !Ill INd. ,
.
LEO (JufJ 23-Aug. ~I Tag lldla
AQUARIUS .(JIIn. 20·1'•b. 11) Same·
when eetecting your altiN Wyou are going times a ,_ acqualntanoe remalrllln OUr
out today. You may nave an . ~ llvea·lor cirl!)r a~ lime. Toctay, '-¥. fo meet IIOfl1liOne you've been MXIous 1o !N, when you - • ._, you'l

.

en ·I

.. AKC German Shepherd pupL
' 304-G15-6831.

•

"•

'

\

. Coottno. 'l'
Fretrnln'a HH.t int And
I\ '

IO,IIIIi«Uan ·And Strvlc:e. ,EFfA ~1
· COrd~I AI~iltnilll, Corn140clal, ·i
.11&lt;·251-1811 .
.

....

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.....

~

:·r.:t~
-~·t,·
;J n ur.

Pupa AKC.
llo_rento on olie. Hl,14-

I Gem . .

Pul
Pua

Dao:

nished apt.,doet have stove, rt·
frig, washer &amp; dtyet. Deposit &amp;

4 IliON arOIIC

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: Eaat

Coachman Pap -up camper
awning. sleep&amp; 8, A.CtOC etec:tric. ·
eac. shape. Must set 10 apper·
ica1e. $2000 or 090',.,304· 773·
91115.
.._

'

..

•• •

ISoupdii' 2-IOok
a -IIIF1a

••

1012 V.hiiN VZ•80, ftdden 2 w
;
au......, io9ka-. S1,000. ~ 1
e75-!i0ol1 :
.,..

~..,.,.--.,.......,----....;''

OJ

DOWN

•AQJ71$

~ I

'

t AQ J
• Kl 2

.A71SZ

'1HO K1WU1ki 250 ,.inji. ~~ :~
lronllllr~
814'381-4J323. . ,

.750.

••

.A

I

1D6'9.

Drive AC, AuiO, 97,000 M
Slraw for oale, S2.25 per bale, S3.0000B0614-256·1~
Haml0r'NIIIo;81H96·B25ol. "
IDD2 Ford F-150 Unaer 35,000
Wil be cuuiing 'hay soon. ·salt in Miles, Bedllne, Step Bumper
field. 304-576-2950.
300SX. 5 Speed, Duel Tanks,
Cosllllla, PS, PB, Like New, 614.
Will be c~nlng hay aoon. setl In 245-9110.
lielcl. 30oi·5111-2D50.
1992. lsuzu p1ckup, 4 cyt. 5

84 FOf'd Tempo, 4 door automat·
lc, left rear" 1111 lighl dam•ge,

t

lc.i-*tgll14-441-1314- .

1986 LaSiiaro molof home, air &amp; ~
awning, good cond. $9.~ . 304· ~
682·2373.

:=.:..:.::.::.:::.:.:::.:.:.:..::.::.==-~-IWhHI

1

•

2 bedroom
' aparrmenl. 1350 per
monlh, $200 dtpoli~ utilities paid,
11'&lt;-1192·5124.
....

30 level ,acres grass, clover, les. pedeza hay. 'Next to fest area Kerr Hania Rd. 814·245-9393.

710 Autos for Sale

5121 .

nished and unlurnilhed, aec;:uri ty
deposit requ ired, no pets. 61•·

. roloroncii1L 304-882-2•

Hay &amp; Grain

TR AN SPO RTATION

and 2 bedroom aparlmentl, fur·

992-2218.

'

17,000 Water-bed
tobacco
planti. Ready to set out 304·937·

WHITE'S METAL OElECTORS
Roo AMison, 1210 Second Ave-

tK171Z
4

Runt Good .218

Auto Loana. Deater 'will arrange financing even if you haVe been
turned down elsewhere. Upton
Equipment Used ca·rs . 304 ·458·

1877 Jtep Wagoneer, 4 dr. From

Reglttered Black Angus bull, 3
· yra. old. eacetlent quality, aired by
Century Toushstone, phone ts14·

3 Bedroom Mobile Home On Mc-

t

C"""rolet Co..nw. Turquolao,

'ID F-250, au..,..lic, sliding Window in back. 300 8 cYI•• a•c:etlant
condition, great work truck, lirat
$3850 takes it home, 614·949·
2311 dlly~

~

814--446-8&amp;49.

W.it Vlriginia Home, Excel-

88 Plyn,outh Road Runner:· 74
Ford one ton truck tlat b11d; 84
Ford Mercury Lynx; 1980 Dodge
Aspen station wagon: 6 U :992-

614·3711-2981!

Road, Rem &amp; Oe~sit S250 Each,
No Pets, 614-446·4426,

'1

1DIIO kawuak l 300 ATY

•• •
•

• J 10 • · a
• K J I

Q1114

A

'

....

Kl

tatel~

anli·klck bfakea. POL, new tires.
•3.135 f'l'lilll. Exc. cond. $8995.

2 Bedroom Trailer In Sk 1Gmore

pool ~

Ona,

1D.93 Red Conver~ble iluollng;
LX, AC, Am-Fm CIIMIIO, PWIPI.
40,000 Ulln, E..ellont Condhlon.
110,500. et&lt;·DDZ-5488. 814-092·
311117.. .

~

2or 3 Bedroom Mobile·Homes In
Porter Area . You Pay U!ilities ,
Reference5/~ 0epo ~Ji t Req. 8,4-

Three bedroom turnishe&lt;t mobile
home, S2501m0 . plus $~00 de -

1992 Noms 18x80·3 B&amp;droom, 2
Batna. Cenrrat Air, LP Gas Fur·
nace-And S1ove. Underpinning &amp;
Many htraal Very Spacious.
Pf.IC.ed To Sell ! EltiY FinanCiflQ

1993 Po.Uoc Grand Am Y-e Motor, SE Striea. loaded. e1~482445, Ask For "-Iii.

MobUe tiqmBs
tor Rent

388·9182.

r

1 N I - XUOOR 11200, 11110 I
:Z50R 1400, Bolli lOOk aNI ~
;rungood.l1....._..1 ,
1
1WIIHI OM,

Q 4

• It 7 I I
t It I 4 S
•' • It I I
&lt;

I

epm.

2 dr, auto., air, aler_., caasette,

Mobile home lOt rent in coun1ry, 3
bedroom, depo&amp;ll &amp; references
required, 614-667-3974.

Will Care fDf Elderly lady In My

leevemessaao.

73,000 mlln. Cillllr1.·.S1,300•0BO.·
81ol-258-e1118. .

No pets .. Call 304-882"-2018 or

Owner reloca.rlng. 2,000+ sq.It, all
brick. Ranch, 3-4~roam, OR, 1
112batht, beautiful eat-In kitchen
w1caramic counters and oak cab-

:=:=:.:.::::.:.:..;_..:,:.:..;_;;____ 1 12a21

1992 Chevy Camaro. 25th anniveraarJ. Fully ltiodad. Rod with
block otrlpeo. Coli. et 4-245-5812

88 Dodge Omni , 4 dr .·, s epd: ,

·

3 bedroom in Hanfcifd S350mo.

4~0

inets, large familY room w/double
French doan &amp; raised ceiling .
Outside, enjoy the sun on a

needa body rork, 13,500. 304·
IIS-2002.

87 Olds,Cullase Supreme, a/Cl .
pw, ps, V-6, 2dr., lady Clnven, verw
mn toar, toall &amp;1•·992-2358 any time. _..

Twa bedroom house. carpeted ,
nice and &lt;:lean, deposil requited,
no inside pets: tMree bedroom
house, deposit required, no inside
pelS: 614-992-3090.

Don' t Lawn Care. Residential,
Churchea, &amp; Cert~ellfiea, Rea·

1991 Ugh! blue Cadillac Saville,

Only made 500. Very good cond,

675-3100. al1er cpm.

JIUC &amp;MEEK

___ 1 1919 Goiaxy

6 1&lt;·446-3-137

Nice 1hree bedroom home in Pt.
Pleasant, no pets, 814·992·5858.

;::::::_:.:..;_:.:.;,~:.:.;,-----1

.;_;;~_;_:~;_~,;;,;.,;;,;,.

78:' Ui1cotn Mark 5 Coil. ••riet.

3)4-875--3100.

David's Lawn Mowing· free esti·
miltS, reasonable rates, haVe
own 'equipment. in Tupperl Plains
SI-4-GeNl32;o.

1991 Cudaoa Calaio, oleyl, Sopd,
sunroot. ac, runa a looks goOd.
S3,500. C.! 3Qoi.B7S.:!D48.

5073nk lor Ray.

Four bedroom. two bath home in
Syracuse, 14x36 fam11y room, or.e
ear garage, equipped llitchen ,

SDO,OOO OBO, 61&lt;·992·5862.

1089 BUick LeS1bre, tKctUent
running. condition, V-e, PB; PS,

IDDO Thunderbird $1,DOO "'DD·
Co! .,., 9:30pm 304a2-2030.'

Ford Itt Flnithing Mower. GaUre
314 horlt power flow 8ft. Hay Ttdder, King t&lt;uner 5fl.
pool pump, Hayward Brush Hog, All 3pt and in axl~
pool, send filllr, cond. 614-2&lt;5-5811
llgh~ 8H·DD2·,
Ford Bailer 532 good cond w/
kitket. $1,500. !XJ4-67S.2741 .
.

. AER.(fiON·MOTORS
Rapllilld, l Robuil In SIDCk.
Cal Ron Evina, 1-800-537·DS28:

1988 Sublru XT, '01. Saleem 4
WD, Loodod, 1 Owner, $3,500
814 - ~-1854 Of llol-251-833.

1Dl'7 Chevy C20 camper van,
stovt, rtrrigeratar, furnaa,. Oliver

CII304-5111-2D50.

Tta11or space fo r renr. 614 -448 1279

1988 rtct·Fireblrd, V-e, au., &amp; air,
"cofltnt condition, $2,800, 1147&lt;2·2351.

AC, -windows, S3800, 114!M8-20ol5or814-i-41-ZI02.

845 New Holland round bailer,
utld tittle. a~ed inside. t4,000 .

1 Clyde Bowen Jr., 30&lt;-516-2336.

Auto, AC, 40, 000 M, 4 baar,
S1,2000B081ol-256-1233.

610 Farm Equipment

puling 'hlsaia, last geara, no engino. MIIZ engine IIOck. 2 ..ier wlbra..... 100 llhlell ol 10'
SV .roofing. 114·388-0184 after
!lpm.

restric~ont . Map and

814-992...11480.

~~~·~6~1~4-~&lt;~411~·~1D~&lt;~o._ __

Nice 2 bedroom. we1htr I
hook-up. relefentec required,

pafcels ranging tram 1.84ac to

1 112 stOry, 4 bf., fr.• dr., tr., basement &amp; sun porch, $36,000, call

2 bath ranch. 2 car gamge,
Vailey area, close to Holz-

limited lickett. ·1e•l 8589 Man-Sat

•

llol-142-1300.
;_1
_ _,V_
· 4-:5--:Ih-D- n-a•:
7,-S1,000.91U-815-7u2. ~

,..,. .... parts, ·~ cord=--"!
aaking 12.200, 114 -.742~; -.
1tlon,
1057.
•
.
~ o I
.'
r~~~~:-:~-.....;~­ 1
1750 Boats &amp; Motors ~ · :
1118e Pivmoulll' - . . . 4 ~ !
for Sale
~ •

1·

Parcels av.ailable for new home

310 Homes for Sale

"--cotkl 3 pair, tiOO per polr.
11 ol-318-2101

·00&lt;1 , Allot I P.U.

4

388-8521.

But or sell. Rlvtti~e Antlqutt1
t124 E. Main SltHt, on At 124,

Pllppy " - - Konr111o, Boordlng,
Pomeroy. Houro : II.T.W. 10:00 Sw&lt;i S..vlc• Puppies, Grooming,
a.m. to 1 :00 p.m., Sundor 1:oo 10
Middleport 1 I 2 bedfoom, fur· 8110 p.m. 114-tl!2-25:18.
Buy~ ~ell &amp;Welcome,
Trade, All814·388·
Bteedt.
Paymentt
niohed apll. AIIO, 2 """" elllcllnOoi2D.
CJ. Deposit &amp; reference• rt· 540 Mtacelllneout
qulred. 30ol-882-2511.
Reoiacered Aifedate pupptta 8
· .Merc:hindlse
w1&lt;1 old, lholl and wormed $200
.,::,.,~o~dl~·~~~~;~'!"~e~~~Ba~d-ro_o_m_:A_p_•'_1_· , 3 Pc couch, Li¥e-ttlt 1 chair, caN 11&lt;-251-1103.
L-~ 10 - ·· 2' - I I chllra. Two cllOw puP., tns •ell. e~&lt;Nice 1 Bedroom In Counlry Sit- Vor1 oood condition. 114·441- 2&lt;7-21flll.
llna, W.ohlr IOr,•r. ShiVI, Re· 3&lt;37.
lrlgera1or, Nd "-10. No Smoken,
E.era Cleonl S300 Oepoll1, $3501
FARr~ SUPPLIES
llo., AP91ic111Dn1 AI 1143 C..ll&amp; LIVESTOCK
: nar)' Roa~ ; G111ipolil, 814·4.t8·
5 da,o/4
2205.
Must Sell I

-

3150.

-'""'not

IUr'iHo.

In Pt. Pltaaant ·upal81ra Unhunished 5 Roam AIHirtment. 8.14-

i&lt;nOwllngly accept
a&lt;lvt111otmen1olorroal-11
which Is In vlclalloo ollho law.

RE8PIRA'IORV !HERAPtST

800·.551 -2213 Or Fu Your· Assume To 218-243-5457.

opar1mtnll 11 Yllllge llanor and
Riv.,o~ AporllMnis In lllddl•
P8fl .F111m 1232-1355 . C.U 114D82·508ol. Equal Houll-o Opw-

Ridge Rd. 1/4mt. off R,t 2 al l

1DI1 Nlllan aoozx Turbo TTopl, LOidtd. -Excellent Cof'dl·
lion, &amp;1 •25e 8535

1D81 ChiV. Cavalier 2dr, while,
llonllir U.. ,....,... nolod help? oporty, high mileo, aula, ca11
·Aok SOUTliERN STATES 30ol- Inlet car lor ..,.,. or ICIIOOI) 304875-2710 ai&gt;OUI lht HAPPY n3- ~.
•
JACK S·X FLEA COLLAR. Klllo 1-:::-:"::-:-::----...,._,_
n111le &amp; lemale adull IIUI. FDf
Ford Rangor/hlppal.
dogll-.
llol-+ll-22110

~

renced. 10 Acr(ls llat Cily walet".

-lloo "' dilcl1mlnlllloo.•

Pen ·Fathiona. Oes4gner lingerie.

••.ooo

Yiniature Schnauzer pyppiet,

. . . ,. . 2-

22 112 Acre U~on Co. Pleasant

ouch,..,.....,,

10110 Nlolln Sen1na ~oleyl, 24r,
llo•d•rd.
or OBO. 11.110,
1Dl3 Buick. Call alter 1:00pm.
91U-87!.23S2.

AKC. d)ampion btoodline, ahOtl
-.nod, 11-7-3000.

Sllaro blllt t145 Monlh, DID 2nd
, lwe. l14--5
.

-·
-ol-

..... any

.,,._242.

...~ed. l1-151t.
Furnlohod Ell. All Ulilllill pd ,

2 Beautiful hilltop 1011 In Ridge
wood Subdtvl~on over 3 112 acrea. &amp;30,000 .for both. 304-875-

... iemlllalllaluo O f Otlgln, Of any lntenllon to

See: Jol'\n Altirar, 20 Vinton

s- GlillpoiL

Black Labo AKC f\eglllertd ,
c~ llloo&lt;llino, 2nc1 Sholl
Ancl-•

atalra, U!lllllft Furniatwd, Clean, ,
~ "-'' Roltronce, O.pooll R•

Ire-·
D.:.I.;.2~H.;_o;_ndi

condillon, Reasonably Priced,

Acre loottn. water, •Pile, ga- · FurniaMd 3 Rooma ,&amp; Bath •. Up-

OnOu, . , _l
Ia !tcti nl~ Saell ing To Recruil
CNAa Who Ar•look1ng To WorN
Long Term Home Care Cun
Where You live-In And Stay
O'lernight In Either 2.t Hour, •e
Hour. Or 72 Hour ShUtt. It Payt
15 Houn A Day, But An Over nlahl Slay II Required. H inlorell·
od'Pioui Coil U.. ~AI '
I-8CJO.ON.OlJT'i 2.

on IICI&gt;, COlOr, rel(llon.

'* Uncal• T"*" c.. e.-

2083.

446·3111.

11'81. 614·388-8918.

ol1811wlllch malaill Hllloga!
t o _ ... "lny pralonlnce,

­
.,, .._"-*~~·
.... _....

.

Ava. Polnt Pteaunr,

Utililtea Paid $2'25 Uonth. 814·

hr. 814.-2.5-0&lt;31

1llls . _ IIIU\liOCIIo
11o F - Folr Houolng ~

10011 11nil Mi up
Tonil I "-' Shop,

Ba th, Eacellenl Neighborhood,

rage, blacMtop road, in Addiaon

AI rotl-o -IIINig In

BEAUTIFUL APARTIIENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES' /I,T JACKSON
ESTATE$, 52 W•o-.d Drl..
lront 124• ID 1315. Wllik .. lhop
&amp; movies. Call 114· ~'8 · 2511 .
E"'al Houoillg ~nity.

Ell. APirlmenl 2 Rooms Pr~vall

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

-

'•

Ml'l!l-·
YiliGO (Aug. U··tpt.
22) Helping ' -""~oi"'"~
PI8CI8 (l'eb. 20 "n ol1 20)H·you ' f
lrlenda coufd have, mulllpla benellll an Cbnipalng urge to do iomllhlng .U..
F......
. , !M.u 24, 111111'
lllday. You will help lo pfiMnole 11\eir Inter· .· tiC or ~ IIIOUnd lhe lqoae IOdJIY,
"""'' '
tila
tt.e allorl8 will Milke ;ciu llitlk' IICI on thla impulle. The r8IUIII will be
Evan lhOugh lut yaar ·you might' havl · good in 111e proceaa.
plelalng .lllld IMIIng.
expertanced moni Iowa than hlg!ll. lhe t.t811A (8tps. aa.oct. HI·When you ~ ~ 21-Aprtltl) you c.n.win
oppo1111 could be irue 111111 'fll/lhN.!I· lnllr a room todly, ·your chert.,. wiH h tidlt•tlli0i1 ol vour p111UJday bv cii1
Ccinllnue 10liU11~61fiM~ and ha!J-'ul.
bec:cJ!nt. ~nl to ~- ,proaenl. pJIIying ~ UfiCIIr ~.'E- I you
011571 (lily it.J- 20) Yq&lt;J will aay You Will !101 do·lhll COIIIi*iuiiY. k wll'jult . are on 1M ll\aldl, ·your llllnda

n

. . . . . . . . . ladly.bUtnll-wll
accuse you·of belnD glib or lntliiC*I•·
·Your . . , _ Wtl lmW thtl you fliilok
from your 1111n. o.t I jUmp On Nil bv
unclwoataudlnO lhl ~ that ~!"~""' :

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1l1ouGI! you 1J18Y ' - r:di a nllnor lalll!l .......,.Ill you Ill 'w1* IIIIIPI*III:todav,
1 pr~ OJ9811IZICI111t ~na .... jay lo btl. .l wlf1 . . I IIIII .. WIL You
IOCI*y, you C1n benlilt M 1111111.

n wll pero 01!"' Ito!¥ Mio( Will !MIIIi llllcliitr jll(ol.-

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.--UnfJer the Big Top . . . . .·Pre-digital specia-l effects
still ~ork oti tjjg s·cree~r
«

1ood eiiOUJh. So we shot 1 loc
shoot You e&amp; Je1 mu::b ~ inle(models and explosions 'lftd !ben · UIIDI...,..., ce imnd wtdl IMm
Hollywood's hoUal buzz in ,_. (blellded) them with people, flyilla better, caa liJIIt IMm mu::b qujctrr."
Bill "computer iiiifl"' 1 1111bs the
yean bu l'oclllld oa diJitally crat- can. exln Jlus."
eel dinosaun. motphina llldroids llld
Devliri apes wilh lhosC who say illlllion muc:~ DIOIC. ~· ".
faux IOmldoes. ae.ty, movie,oen computer papbics are Hollywood's
The 1110$1 Jmportalll COIIIidcnlioD
dia diJilll, ullhown by the enormous new toy. "But that's not always nee- is .~ ruulu, _say~ Bob Hoffman_
box-office IUCcess of ~·Jurassic eawily the beat way to do your Dilllli ~n. You would think
Park," "Terminator 2: JudJment effec:ts, llld it's certainly not !he lOIII !he lmld would be mbdels ~ _used
Day"IIJid "Twilla-."
exp~~~~ive."
1~, 111111111 are used less, lndiuonal
But flhqmtken haven't tolllly
Dipw effec:ts haYCJ\be jilice. but pyrotcchllics are usc4 tea: F.- from ·
IabaDdoncd lft'dilltalapecial effects modelS:' pyrotechnici,•liahlilltl IJid 't..Ail the compurer-grlphic stuff iJ
' for contpu~ ~~ons. One. of camera uaates are·stilf'a lri1 part o! doing is elll\l!lcinf' tndition~
summer s IDOII anbCJP-1~ IICUoa' Hollywood mJiik:.
proeessesso you don't bow what 11
films. "ladcpi:ndence ~ay" (opening
"We'~ coming out of the diailll whaL"
1uly 3'), makes "lhe b1agest use of. lienzy of the last fe~yean, but I
Still, this s11111111er's ~~etion films
models ever.in •.mo~e." says.B~ think repons of the (lealh of minialllre owe i debt to ·compu"'',anphics,
Stockier, ~tor~~ chief of Millnne- photography were a bit premaiUR," even if they ~·tnec;"•vily rely 011
ter MagBZJne, w_hich ~oven spec;ud- says .Lucas Digilll presideD! Jim them. "WIIafwe're stilting 'to see for
effeciS compan1es. Indepeoden:c" Moms.
,
Ibis SIIIIIDIU ii payoff for !he seed&amp;
proves old-fashioned spectal . Digital technology lc:b filmmlkers that were pl1nted when "Jurassic
,eff•II:IS.arestillpowerful."
do "things you' couldn't do with 'Park"cameout"inl993 saysLucas
· Utter globallllnihil8tion isn't easy to rnini!~~~Jrea ulilll tnditional tochnol- Diailll's Morris. "Wri~, directors
ponray. But "~ndence Day"~ · ogy," he says, but it iin't always !he and produc:en see that, 'and sudd!:n. crealors Dean Devhn ~~/wnt- 1110$1 cost-effeCtive~ "Many . ly a lot of scripts (are genenlled)
er} and .itoiiiJid Emmencb (director) pyrotechnics provide gru1 bang for because they realize diJilll imagina
manage 11. •
.
• . the buck, sinoe there are various types tectinology allows them to do stories
. The~ consule~ ume ~d quality of effects shots wilh m()!lels and IIIII ab&lt;iw lhinas they couldn't do
m dec1dmg wl)ich spec;ial-effects pyros." Tbe caveat: "If you can get before."
·
techniqqes would be used in the what you need doing iqhat way, it's · · The big payoff comes in !997;
fihl,l,'s sbots.
.
·111 irie~nsive:• ~· ·
' Hoffman aays. Next year will brina
You need a lot of . explodmg
Cohn lijtchie, busiJIIIII develop- · a mother lode of digital-effects
buildings and streeiS," Emmerich ment director at QuanteI, which . moVies including a "Jurassic Park"
says.. "\Yith comp~ter. ~hies, it_'s makes cfiaital editingltllions, aarees. sequel.' "Aliens 4," "Batmin 4,"
. not possible to do 1t WJibJn a ceiUJn :·computer araphics works to some ·."ntanic" and possibly "Godzilla."
time frau)e,·and the quality of ~a extent, but it'~ much better if you . •"It will be a humongous visualfire effects and stuff JS really not yet have a model. Models .-e easier to effeeu summer."
·
BY BRUCI HARING

UIA TODAY

«

l

AARP tailoring prOQ:f~Dl~ .
for aging · baby boomers
. .

Llea, a 7,500 pound Aalan Elephant, wtn be at clown a. ·
1f1e Roberta Brott..... Cln:ua May 211 during two
The event will be held 111ln or 1hlne under the
ahows 5:30 p.m. and 7:30 p,m. at the VInton Park big top.
.
on SR 325. The VInton Volunteer F1111 Department 1 Proceeds from the clrcu• will go toward the
11 aponaorlng the clrcua.
, purchaH of llfety equipment for the fire departLiu'l dally menue con•._ of five balel of hey, ment.
.
50 pound• of mixed grain (~1), 1 bag of appiH
..
and all of tha peanutl anyone will give her.
.
Tlcat. Ire on ule at the following outletl:
. The circus travail with over 2.0 vehlciH, of Ratliff's Auto Se!vlce,.Little John'• Cttgo, Colony
which, liVen are large truck of unique dellgn.
VIdeo II and FlY'• Tanning In VInton; fhe KCII'MI'
New aluminum and atael conatruction lor 1,500 and Colony VIdeo II In Bidwell; and Jortlln'e G11
· people takel up a whole HR!I trailer all by ltlelf.
Service In Rio Grandt.
·
· - The circus feature• elephli_nts, PCJ~~Iel, goata,
Tlcat. can also be purchaled from any fire
·
.
ltl'lallata, dllredevlal acrobefl, equlllbrlltl and dtpertrnent member. ·

By JUDITH KOHLER
Aaaoclated Preu Writer
DENVER'(AP)- They were
the generation of Woodstock, anti·
war demonstrations and lhe warn·,
ing "Don't trust anyone over 30."
Now they're turning SO - old
enough to join the AARP.
While it still may be a drag getting old. lhe impact of aging baby
boome(S on the American Association of Rep red Persobs could be
huge. ·
· 1
Already the nation's largest ·
advocacy group with 33 million

.

.

u

.

members, it hopes to aqract many . est lobbying voic'e for Medicare
ofthe75millioilpeoptebominlhe . 1 and Social S~ty. it:s.a time to
United States between 1946 and· I reinvent i~lf 'f!&gt;r ,a crowd that '
1964.
·
. : grew up rebelling agaidst lhe,very · T~ do that, it's aimiAJ pro~s·' "''pti~~e ~p).rui~tli\ · '
, .. .. .\
specifically .at the . ~ymg :
Their ·expenen&amp;S have been .
boomers.
. totally ilifferent," said Wayne Hae\
At AARP's co;mven~n. whic~ · fer, AARP's membership director.
opened Tuesday to more than
"They're more likely dian not to
20,000 (leople, "baby-boomer
have gone to ~JIIing)i_k,e Wood~ack" ses~ions focused on finan·
stock. may1).i ) sed,-.4riJJJ, had a.
ctal plannmg, stress management,
family lhat·il div.erc.d.m !hey 're
maintaining good he~ and ,new
divorced lhemselves. They're
computer technolo~y; . '
going to have differen.t expec;ta- ,
Far a group that JS sull the loud- ·· lions of lhe organization."

Over To

·Indian convent trains Sisters in self-defense This Weekend For...
one of 30 women in · the current
By JAVA JWIENON
hand$ to toughen them.
Aaioclated Preu Writer
' · "At the end of it~ I'm sure do
MADRAS. India (AP) - More hooligan in a lonely street will be able
l)lan prayers are wafting over lhe to harass them," Husaini ~aid.
w~ls of St. Anne's convent lhese
Women .traveling alone in India
clays. There's also the full-throated often feel vulnerable. Nuns have an
grunt of physical combat and the · additional worry because o( sus pithwack oftoughened hands smashing . cions aboln Christian missionaries
brick tiles.
harbored by many people in this Hin. The Roman Catholic convent in du-dominated country, where only
this southern Indian city is training about 2 percent of the 920 million
nuns to go out and do God's work people are Christians ..
wilh hands of steel.
. Since the earlv davs of European
: A 45-day karate class was inlro- colonization in the 17th century,
duced for neophyte sisters a year ago . Christian missionaries have sought to
.qfter several nuns were threatened or conven India's lowest castes, who are
harassed doing sbcial work in nel!1'· condemned io a life of poveny and
by villages.
oppression within the rigid social and
The instructor, Shihan Husaini, religious hierarchy of Hindu culture.
said he was surprised by how good Their work was resented as an intruthe nuns are, even in comparison to sion and a threat by the upper castes·.
tfle soldiers he has trained.
One nun was murdered in the
The sisters' ability to concentrate southern stale ofKerala last year, and
and their intense self-discipline make another was raped in the northern
them "much better than any normal state of Uttar Pradesh. Several con·Strpng person; even a commando," he vents have been targets of break-ins
said.
•
and robberies during which nuns
Training is rigorous. The nups were beaten.
learn . to counter knife-wielding
"When I went to a school in a villissailants and to throw jabs at an . lage a few months ago, some people
·attaCker's throat or groin. Lined up threatened me and I ned from there.
prone on the ground, they allow a Now I feel so bold I_am just waiting
jeep to roll over their ouiStretched to go back,',' said Sister Arulmozhi,

course at St. 'Anne's.
The inlrOIIuction of martial ans in
church met with some resistance.
"There were protesiS from the
congregation. They saUl it was
against Christianity," said Sister ·
Leema, a senior nun who initiated the
program.
"But we know lhe hazards that
our sisters face while on iheir field
work. I felt the training in karate
taught us self-control, self-discipline
and loyalty," she said.
Sister Leema was·among the first
group of SO nuns to take the course,
where the oldest nun was 66. The
idea came to her while watching girls
in the convent school studying the
sport as part of their extracurricular
activities.
The nuns. who wear muslarli-colored saris ·rather lhll!l habiiS in an
effon to blend the local church with .
local customs, see no contradiction
. between ,their p.hysical and spiritual
training:
"W.e will forgive and we are not
violent. But these days' if I am
attacked, I cannot tum the other
cheek," ·said' Sister Yanmitho. "I am
· ready to defend myself, although I
will still pray for my attackers."

Do M.D.s need list of dos and don'ts?
By PETER H. GOTT, M.D.
Appmntly, · in China, the new
inroads of capitalism are being hindered by the legacies of Communist
rule. In no segment of Chinese cuilUre is this confrontation more apparent than in retail ventures, where rude
sales clerks traditionally have provided atrocious service to customers.
According to the New York Times
of Oct. 22, 1995, the Chinese govemme.l!! began a program of nation. 'l"ide politeness about a year ago. But
the campaign has not been a. huge
success. In fact, it's been such a dismal disappointment that bureaucrats
have issued a lis! of SO phrases thai
1lre now banned at all service coun. ters. l won't print all 50, but here
some.
1. liey! Old man! (Country bump• kin, soldier).
·
' 2 What does it have to do with
you?
. 3. Who told. you not to look
where you're goina?
4. If you don't like it. go somewhere else.
S. What do you have ears for?
6. Th't's just the way things are!·
7 1don't care who you complain

are

~0. ·

·

.

·

8. Are you finished (8lldns'i

·

9. If you're not buying, what are .
DR.OOTT
you looking at?
I
10. Buy it if you can afford it, oth. erwise get out.
.
·
PETER
II . What are you yelling about?
'
GO'IT, M.D.
Keep your shirt on.
12. I'm busy, what's the hurry?
13. I don't know.
14. I just told you. Why are you
asking again?
15. I have no ~hange .
.
16. Go a5k the person who sold it
to you.
..
·
17. Yout time is up.
30, What can I do? I didn 't break
· 18, The price is posted. Can't you it.
see it? .
31. Don't play the fool with me.
19. No exchanges,
32. Get to the end of the liqe!
20.1fyou'renot~ying,don'task. · . ~ ~on ' t bow whelhe~ these'jlt'O21. Stop shoutjng. Ctl\l~t y~u see ~ hibJUons wll! malte. Chmese sal~s. I'm eating? ·
people more courteous ..To date, no
· 22. 1t's not my {~1,1lt.
, . e~loyee ..... ~n . fired since the ·
23. We're not open yet.'
policy wis put l!'to effect. . ;
24. Don't ask me so many q11es- · But I do realize that today s U.S. ·
lions.
.
~oct~ whore~ this lis_t ~ust ex~· 25. Didn't! tell you? How come nence a. rev~laUon, a feehng of deja
y()u don't get it?
vu ..ln disguised ways, we of~n tre~t .
26. StoN~JShing.
pattenta lhe_same way, es~Jaltr m
27. If you want it. speak up; if you Heallh Mllqtcnance Orgamzallons
don't, heat it. Next!
' ~-people's rig~t ~o chlilge physi28. Now tell mo. wliat have yoU, CtanS IS severely lnruted.
been'Cioilltl all this.timo?
More IIIII more health profes· -29. The busier hm,lhe more ~ou . slonals are dealina.wilhcaptive audibother tile. ·
ences.
\

The weather has finally improved! It's
not too late for your. ga~de;n &amp; flewer
.. beds. At Bob's you~ll fmd a fresh;
healthy supply of quality bedding plants
and hahging baskets everyday!!

All

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Flowers ··'
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