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                  <text>·o hio Lotte~y
Mld·summer
classic stated
for tonight

Pick 3:
6-8-0
Pick 4:
1-9-7·9
Buckeye 5:
3-7-15-28-31

Sports .on Page 4

Partly cloudy tonight.
Lowe
In
the
50s.
Wedntlday, sunny. Highs
In the 70s.

en tine
Vol. 47, NO. 51
1 Section, 10 Pages

35 centa
A Gennett Co. Nowepeper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 9, 1996

Authorities discover tainted
hallucinogen surfaces locally"
..

Health department issues advisory
to parents to watch kids' behavior

-..- ....

~

7

· '" -

...

r

!

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel News Staff
·
: . Tainted hallucinogens 'have surfaced In Meigs County and pare~ are
~ being alerted by the Meigs County Health Department to watch their children for unusual behavior.
According to Norma Torres, R.N., nursing director, a youth has been treat.&lt;d at an area facility for ingesting tainted hallucinogens which were illegally purchased in Meigs County.
Torres advised parents to watch for effects of hallucinogens, like seeing,
hejlring, feeling things that aren't there, ·feelings of detachment, incoherent
speech, cold hands and feet, vomiting or laughing and crying behavior.
. She said that suicidal tendencies, unpredictable behavior or even brain
damage can occur. As for delivery ofthe drugs, Torres mentioned sugar cubes
with discolored areas in the center or a small tube of liquid that rrtight con~.~"
She explained that hallucinogens, or psychedelics, are drugs that affect a
_person's perceptions, sensations, thinli.ing, self-awareness and emotions. Hal-

~.
.
lucinogcns include such drugs as LSD, mescaline, psilocybin and DMT.
Some come from natural sources, such as the peyote cactus or mescaline,
she said, and others, like LSD, are manufactlU'ed in someone's home or garage.
The nurse said that usually the effects of the drugs are unpredictable,
depending on the amount taken, the user's personality, mood and the sur'
roundings in which the drugs are used.
Effec ts begin about 30 to 90 minutes after taking the drug. The pupils
(darker area of the eye) dilate, body temperature rises. hean rate and blood
pressure increase, sweating takes place, appetite is lost, sleeplessness, dry
mouth and tremors can occur.
Torres explained that "bad trips" are common~ that "scary sensations" can
last a few minutes or several hours, and that the user may experience panic, confusion, suspiciousness, anxiety, feelings of helplessness and loss of
control.-·
"Sometimes, taking a hallucinogen can unmask mental or emotional problems that were previously unknown to the user. Flashbacks in which the per'on experiences a drugs' effects without having to talce the drug again can
occur," said Torres.
She called'on parents to be aware, not to think that "it can't happen to my
child," because it can.

Meigs, Gallia take first step to net federal aid

.,I

.

.

repair damage to. publicly-owned Agency Notice of Entrance form By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
property in 14 Ohio counties, includ- required within 30 days of the presidential declaration - staning the aid
Officials from Meigs and Gallia ing Meigs and Gallia.
counties Monday took the first step
The meeting was held at the process.
On May 4, severe thunderstorms
in securing funding to repair damage offices of the Meigs County Emer- ·
struck
the two counties, resulting in
from storms earlier this year.
gency Medical Services in Pomeroy.
extensive
flooding and high wind
· · Officials from .both counties met ,
Keller, a public assistance officer
damage
with
more than three inches
with Greg Keller of the Ohio Emer- with the OEMA. walked the 40-plus
of
rain
falling
between 6 and 7:30
gency Management Agency in the attending through the application
p.m.
in
some
areas.
wake or a presidential declaration on process, including filling out the
Culverts were washed out, roads
June 24 providing federal aid to Federal Emergency Management
.

~

.......

were closed for hours by the high
water and the debris it moved in, and
several homes were flooded by the
downpour.
.
In Gallia County, a tornado struck
in the nonhcrn part of the county.
including the village of Vinton, and
Huntington, Morgan and Cheshire
townships, according to County
Commissioner Kenneth Farmer.
(Continued on Page 3)

~om

-·· ,. -

on exten$ion of water lines

i'

~an~ One, West Vi~ginia, NA

Pt. Pleasant is proud to be part.of th~ Mason County Fair Schol h'
-. .·
··
t~on m ou~ c~mmumty has helped result jn$59,200 in scholarship monies over the past 31
pro~am_. Our commttment to educational asptrations of our youth. We salute the Fair its partitipants and our scholarshi . . Y
the ~e ed~cated to help fulfill the educacommunity.
'
. · P wmners or etr constderable contributions to our

eaS:::
i

"
I

\.

1I
II

""'
1965:
1966:
1967:
1968:
1969:
1970:
1971:
1972:
1973:
1974:
1975:

..

1976:
1977:

James William Dunn.
Dale Wheeler
Maria Williamson Arritt &amp;
Virginia Lewis Berenet
Micheal K Sergent
Carla Crookham
Roger Rainey
Georgianna Sommer
Did not use scholarship
James Mitchael Barnette &amp;
Pamela Sommer Simpkins
Diane McCoy, Teresa McDennitt &amp; '
Stephanie Scholtz
John McCoy, nm Cottrill &amp;
Katherine Shirley
Denise McDaniel, Julie Sommer Bibbee
&amp; Jerry Casto
Kyle McCausland, Carolyn Rickard
&amp; John McCausland

1978:
1979:
1980:
1981:
\

1982:
1983:
1984:
1985: •
1986:

George C. Sommer IL Charles Zuspan, Jr.
&amp; David McCrumb
Terry Cullen, nna Sayer, Gale
Williamson &amp; Charles McColluch
usa Hill, Sandra Hickman, James
Henderson &amp; Brian Darst
Mark Phillips, Christine McDaniel &amp;
Margaret Butler
Mark Wiltiams, Sharon Yauger &amp;
Lydia Thomas
Mark Hussel, Floyd Baker &amp; Keith
Stewart
Marvin Legg, Billy Crank &amp;
DeRosa Stephens
Randall 'Keeter, James Wilson
&amp; Debbie SheD
Rhonda McCoy, Rosella Langdon &amp;
David Crank

1987:
1988:
1989:
1900:
1991:
1992:
1993:
19!U:
1995:

...
..-

EONE.

,l
·'

Whatever it takes~
Member FDIC

Scott Hover, Ryan Bumgarner &amp;
.
Doug Johnson
V~lerie McCoy, Timothy Kidwell &amp;
Mtchael Wilson
usa l,{ay, Kelly Conrad &amp;
Patricia Bing
Annette Gibbs, Charles Hagely &amp;
Amber Long
Brent Johnson, Daniel Crank, Chris
Thomas &amp; Marla Roush
Carl Baker, Tracy Reynolds &amp;
Craig Tolliver
Tera Lynn Wallis·, Lora E. Dunn,
Jan M. Oick &amp; Misty Dotson
David Hatfield, Jody Todd Roush
Kristin Wallbrown &amp; lisa D. Arth:U
Rebekah J · Graham, CanieSupple
Jamei Taylor &amp; Amy Thompson '

NEW 'FACE' IN TOWN - PIIHI'Iby In dC»wntown Pomeroy
Mondlly may heve noticed • new 'face• In town, the clock In front
of Clerk'a Jewelry on Court Street lnetlllled over the -kend.
Reminiscent of turn-of-the-century Jewelry 1tore clockl, the oversize timepiece I• In keeping with the village'• !lowntown ravltllltzatlon program. Store ownw Suun Clark, above, ldmlrtl the
new clock.

Northern Ohio helicopter
crash leaves five dead
SALEM (AP) - Ahelicopter that
crashed in a field killing all five people aboard sounded as if it might be
having engine problems shortly
before the crash, the State Highway
Patrol said.
Several people who were in the
area told aulhorities that they heard
the craft sputter and then they heard
a boom, the patrol said.
"The engines went out," Ken
Birt, of Coventry, who was camping
about a quarter mile away at Chapparal Trailer Park, told The. Salem
News. "I waited and thought 11 landed, then I heard a boom."
' Lt. John P. Isoldi, of the patrol's
Canfield post, said there was only one
er.ewitness to the crash - a 9·yearold girl who live~ on the farm where
the helicopter crashed. The field as _m
~ing County's Green Township,
north of Salem.
"Prior to .the crash, the chopper
I

was observ'ed with its main blade
rotating very slowly and its tail rotating fast, which could mean the pilot
was trying to land," Isoldi said.
The helicopter crashed about
II :15 a.m. Monday. It did not strike
any buildings, and no one on the
ground was injuned.
·
The patrpl identified three of the
vittims as pilot David W. Fausnight,
49, of Canton; attorney Kirk DclliBovi, 43, of Sandusky; and attomey
Duane Yeagley, 68, of Salem.
Yeagley was a retired CoiiDilbiana
County judge, ~~~:cording to lsoldi.
The names of two other victims,
a man and woman from Michigan,
were being withheld pending notifi·
cation of families.
The 1975 Bell JetRanger was .
oQwned by Chillingsworth Ventures
Ltd., of Canton, said lsoldi. There
was no Canton telephone listing for'
the company.
,I

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentll\el Newe Staff
The Meigs County Boflll of Commissioners opened bids on a water
line extension project Monday afternoon.
Commissioners met with Don
Poole, manager of the Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water District, to open
bids on Phase II of the TPCWD
Peach Fork Road water line extension
project.
Submitting bids were: D.B. Weber
Construction of Reedsville, $49,918;
G&amp;W Plastics/Don's Excavating and
Sanitation of Tuppers Plains,
$42,966; Home Creek Enterprises of
Pomeroy, $54,914: and Lawson
Excavating and Pipeline of Albany,
$44,995.
The board tabled_ bids pending a
review by the water district and the
prosecuting attorney.
In addition, Poole and commissioners agreed to open ·bids on the
East Letan water project on July 29.
The-project contains two bids. one for
water line and the other for a storage
tanlc, Poole explained.
The board also met with several
Racine residents about the Community Housing Improvement Project
there.
Residents expressed their displeasure with the program, which is
designed to assist low-t&lt;&gt;-moderateincome ho!Jleowners in renovating
their homes.
Their complaints specifically targeted the review and complaint

process, and the inspection process
·concerning one of the project's contractors.
One suggesti\)n made was to
change the payment process to get
more reputable contractors.
Commissioners will go to Racine
later this week and view homes.
"We will get it resolved," Commission President Fred Hoffman said.
In other business, commissioners:
• Appointed a nood permit variance board consisting of Hoffman,
County Engineer Robert H. Eason,
Health Director Jon Jacobs, Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes, a member of the board of trustees from the
township in which the appeal is
located, Soil &amp; Water Director Mike ·
Duhl and EMS Director Robert Byer.
• Noted that Wjlliam Buchanan of
Tuppers Plains Jlas applied for a
liquor permit to sell wine and
prepackaged drinks for on-premise
consumption and in-sealed containers
for carryout. The board asked anyone
requesting a public hearmg to contact
the commissioner's offi ce.
• Appointed Commission Vi ce
President Janet Howard as their representative to the Historical Society
Board at the request. of the Meigs
County Historical Society.
• Paid weekly bills of
$102, 189.28, consisting of 182
entries.
Present were Hoffman, Howard,
Commissioner Roben Hartenbach,
Clerk Gloria Klees and Lentes.

HEADING FOR AVOTE- Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mess., end
Labor Secretary Robert Reich met with reporters on Capitol Hill
Mondly to'dlecuaa the propolld lncreue In the minimum wage.
The Senate Ia sc:hedulecl to vote on the Increase today. (AP)
'·

Partisan bickering _
:.~.......surro,unds--vote :
WASHINGTON (AP)- After
months of partisan rancor, the Senate finally is voting on a 90-centan-hour increase in the minimum
wage.
But a Republican push to
e~empt millions of newly-hired
workers from the increase, plus
employees of small businesses,
threatened to p.lunge the Senate
right back into the cont&lt;·nti.,us
election-year di spute that .has
snarled its proceedings for much of
the year.
President Clinton has labeled
the exemptions,. proposed in an
amendment by Sen . Christopher
Bond, R-Mo., as "poison pill s"
that would draw his veto.
Senate Minority Leader Tom
Daschle, D-S.D., said he assumed,
but was not sure, all 47 Senate
Democrats would vote against the
amendment He said he hoped
enough GOP senators - at least
three - would side with Democrats to block it.
The hill, passed 281 -144 by the
House on May 23, would increase
the minimum wage from $4.25 an
hour to $4.75 initially and to $5.15
a year later. It's pmred with a package of tax breaks, mostly for busi·
ness.
·
While the House bill provides a
three-month subminimum training
wage only for new hires youngerthan 20, Bond's amendment would
exempt all workers durin g their
first six months on a new job as

well as employees of businesses
with gross revenue of less than
$500.000. It also would delay by
six months the effective date of
each step of the raise.
Without the amendment, "the
smallest of the small employers ...
will in my view be forced to lay off
workers. That's the bottom line,"
said Bond, chainnan of the Small
Business Committee.
According to Democrats, the
amendment would deny a raise to
more than 4 million of the 10 million workers earning less than the
proposed new minimum. Republicans said the estimate was inflated.
"The Republican s have left no
stone unturncd in their cyni cal
attempt 10 rood as man y ways a.~
possible to deny a fair increase in
tho minimum wage to as many
American workers as possible,"
said Sen. Edward Kennedy, 1)..
Mass.
Kennedy, planned to offer an
amendment ihat would shorten the
training wage period in the House
bill to 30 days. retain ing its usc
only for teens, and slri kc a provision in the House bill cxclud• ng
workers who earn tips.
The minimum wage was .first
established hy Congress in 1938 at
25 cents an hour. It has been
incrca'iCd periodica lly, wi th th e
last ri se taking effect in April
1991 . Democrats say inllation has
eroded the wage's purc hasing power since then to nearly a 40-ycar
low.

Middleport Council gives
nod to $1 million budget
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel New• Staff
Middleport Village Council
approved a $1 million budget for the
village's 13 budgeted funds and
departments for fiscal year 1997 at
Monday's regular meeting.
The budget was approved, with
recent revisions, for a total amount of
$1,05 I,575 on a 4-0 vote, with council members Beth Stivers, B"b
Gilmore. Rae Gwiaz.dowski and John
Neville voting for approval.
The budget figures arc down
. ·slightly froni the 1996 estimated
budget figure of $1,175,295.
"The im~t thing to remember
is that thcsC bddgct fi&amp;llfC$ are just
preliminary nwnbers. This makes us
awtre of where we misht have to
mike adjustments during the second
half of the fiscal yw." said Village
Clerk/I'reasurer Dennis Hoclan111.

Hockman noted that the vill age
will have paid off its $200,000 loan
with interest at the end of fi scal year
1997, freeing up around $48,000
yearly from the village budget.
Mayor Dewey Honan updated
council on completion of work at the
boater parking area nCBI the Middle_port levee, and the village swimming
pooL
Leaks have been found in the
main drain in the bottom of the swimming pool, but will be taken care of
in time for the pool to open thi s week
or early next week, Honan said.
The paving at the boater parking
area has been comJ)Ieted by the
Shelly Co., ~~jith stripina of the lot
scheduled for later this week. The 30foot aluminum dock for the levee bas
Ialso been ordered, 111d is scheduled
to come in within the next few
(COntinued on Page 3)

�•

Commentar
The Daily Sentinel
'

•
,

•

'·

Will

Tuelday, JulY&amp;, 1996

'

Democ~ats

.Page 2

OHIO Weather

~­

-

Wednesday, July 10
AccuWeaiher•. forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

set up house at the center?

•

111 Court Street
PomerGJ, Ohio

nurses who volunteer aid to the. poor, ev.en more difficult.
By MORTON KONDRACKE
and lower taxes.
The Democrats' centrMVfamiiies
At long last, Democratic congres· Asked whether Republicans will and tax breaks for poor people wbo
First" agenda has the ~iage of
sionl\lleaders have figured out that come back with a different agenda in want to start businesses.
The cost, $44.8 billion over five being a leadership idea. Pi6Da2anda
Gannett Co. NeW.paper
the party has to move to the center to 1997, House Majority Whip Tom
years, would be paid for by redu&lt;&gt;ing issued at its laun,ch declared.ihat "u
win elections. Burwill they stay there
•
"corporate welfare" and cutting back is different because bf what •jt docs
if they succeed in recapturing control
various
government social programs not do. It does not offer a new
of
Congress
this
November?
ROBERT L. WINGETT
bureaucratic program for every probby
a
maximum
of 5 percent.
Speaking
privately,
many
DemoPublisher
The idea behind the plan is more lem we face. People don waht big
cratic activists think the party needs DeLay, R-Texas, iold me, "We
at least two more years ou~of power wouldn't change a thing," including re'volutionary for Republicans than government solutions-and they don' 1
to get the point that traditional big- the plan to reduce Medicare growth "Families First" is for Democrats. want empty promises."
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
MARGARET LEHEW
The agenda includes balancing the
GOP leaders usually emphasize elim,
government,
interest-group liberalism by $270 .billion over six years.
General Manager
Controller
is a loser, and that a new formula is
Only a few Republicans, like Sen. inating government programs or federal budget while increasing tax
required for Democratic success.
John McCain of Arizona, understand "devolving" them to states. But the breaks for education, small. business
House
Minority
Leader
Richard
the need to demonstrate that GOP Coats-Kasich proposal takes a dif- and child care, plus pension and welLETI"ERS OF OI,'INION are welcome. They should be less than 300
Gephardt, D-Mo., and Senate Minor- policies are designed to ·improve ferent tack, hoping to strengthen fare reform.
words long. All leiters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
.
address and telephone number. No unsigned letten will be published. Letten
ity Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D., lives, not satisfy ideological urges. churches, private charities, and grassOne Democratic activist com should be in gOOd taste, addressing issues, not penonalilies.
unveiled a ''Families First Agenda" And even fewer see a need for new roots organizations that will empha- ! mented that "measured against the
. recently that Gephardt accurately policy iQ&lt;as to accomplish the task . size values, even "love," in minis- Ipaleoliberalism of the recent past, this
' - - - - - - - - - -.....- •. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___. described as "modest ane moderate,"
The latter category includes Sen. .tering to the needy. ·
is progress, but it's still a~ allocativc
but it dodged many difficult issues Dan Coats, R-Ind., and former EduAlthough GOP presidential can- agenda with the goodies doled out
and demonstrated limited creativity. cation Secretary Bill Bennett, now didate Bob Dole has endorsed the through the tax system instead of
It's not jlt all clear the agenda will be joined by HouSe: Budget Committee charitable tax credit (as has President bureaucracies.''
followed in a Democratic 105th Con- Chairman John Kasich, R-Ohio, in Clinton), Coats and Kasich have yet
It's probably true, as .Gephardt
gress.
sponsonng a "Project for American to convince Dole to adopt the entire says, that a Democratic-run I05th
One former Democratic congres- Renewal" that includes a $500 per "Renewal" agenda, though they say Congress would be centriSt by necessional leader said he worries that the person tax credit for contributions to it could provide him with the social sity. What voters are loQking for,
collegiality-minded Gcphardt lacks poverty-fighting local charities.
"vision" his campaign so far lacks.
though, is evidence that the party has
the forcefulness to impose "Families
Convincing GOP congressional moved to the center by choice. ·
The agenda also includes a $500
First" principles on Democratic com- · credit for those who provide care in leaders -especially when it comes
(Morton Kondracke is executive
By WALTER R. MEARS
mittee chairmen who will be pre- their homes for the sick or abused, to eliminating subsidies and tax editOr of Roll Call, the newspaper
AP Special Correspondent
dominantly liberal and who got used
breaks for corporations - may be of Capitol Hill.)
WASHINGTON- In words of one syllable, Bob Dole was describing to having their way in previous, insurance reforms to help doctors and
the campaign toll he sees - or hopes - successive White House contro- Democratic-run Congresses.
J ,...--------------------------~----'-------,
versies will take on President Clinton. "Drip, drip, drip," he said of the accuGcphardt's response is that ill
sations and admissions Republicans believe will erode Clinton's standing in
Democrats do recapture the House in
r~~ • ~~
the eyes of the voters.
November, their vote margin is likeThe latest round of public opinion polls indicates that may be happening
ly to be so narrow that only a modnow. But waiting it out is a passive course for a challenger with a case to
•
.-·uu~,,
make for change. And Dole, served up an opportunity to press integrity as :;;~ agenda stands a chance of pasissue against Clinton, hedged.
New polls indicate that DermO&lt;crats~
"It'd be viewed as being political," he said in an NBC television intermay
well regain control in Novemview.
ber; and Republicans seem to he
Campaigns usually are.
Dole, an acid, harsh campaigner earlier in his career, has dealt gingerly improving the Democrats' chances by
showing little inclination to moderate!
with the pileup of problems at the White House - the Whitewater convictheir .own agenda,
tions of two former business associates; the admittedly improper collection
The latest Pew Research Cefilt~rl
of FBI files in a mismanaged White House security office; the Little Rock
poll
gave Democrats a 6-point
trial involving donations to Clinton's last campaign f(lr governor and the role
of a senior aide to the president, although neither is accused of wr&lt;,&gt;ngdoing. on the "generic" congressional
And now the contested, unsubstantiated accusations of personal miscon- erence question, 50 percent to
duct and sloppy security at the White House, as detailed in a book published cent, their largest advantage yet
by a former FBI agent assigned there until 1995. "It is filled with lies and that suniey. A recent Gallup
distortions and mischaracterizations and trash," Clinton's spokesman, showed.Democrats up by 7 points,
percent to 43 percent.
Michael McCurry said.
The new Pew poll also shows
The author, Gary Aldrich, defended the book but could deliver no proof
when
voters were ~ked about
of his allegations when he was interviewed on ABC's "This Week With David
"policies
and proposals" of
Brinkley" June 30, over White House protests. He hedged his published alle·leaders
in
Congress;
50 percent
gation that Clinton slipped secretly from the White House to late-night trysts
approved
and
just
36 ner.cenll
at a nearby hotel, calling that a mere possibility. Two other TV interview proapproved.
grams canceled Aldrich appearances.
Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga.,
The White House and the Clinton campaign complained that Aldrich was
and
other Republican leaders main-.
being given a platform for lurid, unverified charges that wouldn't have met
tain
that
the decline in GOP poll ratthe standards of a supermarket tabloid.
ings
is
largely
the result of massive
The point is sound. But the episode is one more drip of controversy in
negative
advertising·
by Democrats
the sequence confronting the White House.
•
and
not
a
lack
of
public
support for
niu..--1 ..11.A llC"'rALV .
Two new public opinion polls indicate that the FBI files and Whitewater
the
GOP
agenda
of
less
government
L...--_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
151
_
_
-dl'_ll.lll_~_'=""_'_&lt;~_.u-_
.. _...,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __..J
cases may be affecting Clinton's standing. Majorities said they do not believe
that the files were obtained because oT an honest, bureaucratic mistake, as
the president has said repeatedly. An ABC-Washington Post poll shQwed nearly half believe Clinton did something illegal in the Whitewater land deal.
But Clinton still led Dole in that survey and a CNN-USA Today poll, by
margins only slightly narrower than before.
.
"I think the race is tightening with or without the FBI files," Dole said By SARA ECKEL
moment."
an undue hindrance, such as horse- ·to 1988 the Olympic Committee forl
after those surveys were published last Monday.
As in many Islamic nations, jumping, shooting, skiing and table bid South Africa from competinC
In many ways, the summer
He also said that integrity ought to be an important factor in the campaign, Olympics in Atlanta will be a water- Algerian women are forbidden from tennis. And this year an Iranian because blacks were not allowed on·
and that he doesn't believe all the White House mistakes were made inno- shed event for women - a record participating in almost all forms of markswoman will be the sole woman that country's team.
• ,;
cently. "It's one thing after another .. .," he said in the NBC interview. "I 3,800 women will compete, a third
on- her country's team. But for the
But the IOC blithely dismiss~
think honesty and telling the truth are important.
• mosr part, athletic competition for Atlanta Plus's letter. "The problenip~
more than did so at the 1992
"But again. you know, we're going to campaign and try to look ahead." Olympics in Barcelona.
. Muslim women has been limited tp women in spons is a fundamcri~!
He clinched the Republican nomination nearly three months ago, and his
all-female events, such as the first issue, but what is in the letter does ilq(
But this will be cold comfort for
look-ahead promise is still in general terms, details to come. "We will have Hassiba Boulmerka, the Algerian international sports competition, Islamic Women's Garnes, which took concern us, It is an attack against re~li
an agenda." Dole said in San Francisco last Tuesday. "And it will he my native who did not dare return to her because Muslim law forbids women place in Iran in 1992. At these game,s, gion for political purposes," said I '
agenda. It won't be the House agenda or the Senate agenda.! am the candi- homeland after she won the 1991 to appear in public without covering serious women athletes were permit- ;general director Francois Carrard:: 1
date for president."
World Championship in the I ,500- their bodies in heavy robes and·veils, ted to compete in shorts and tanks ; In other words, the IOC is takio~
He 's had his own campaign distractions, and has been complaining about meter dash. Muslim clerics in Alge- a form of dress called "hijab," The · because the arena had been cleared of :the well-worn stance: Racial dis •
news coverage, particularly in the controversy stirred by his statement on ria condemned Boulmerka for "run- laws restricting women's dress and all men and cameras.
:crimination is an international out :
After the 1992 Olympics, where rage; gender discrimination is a re~l:
June 13 that tobacco is not necessarily !Ulrlictive. Democrats said he was cater- ning with naked legs in front of thou- movement in countries like Iran,
ing to tobacco interests that donate to GOP campaigns. Dole said "the lib- sands of men" and put out a "kdfr," Afghanistan and Saudi Arabia are so . more than 30 all-male national teams gious value.
.
.: :•
•
.
t eral media" were echoing the Democratic line by questioning him about dona- or denunciation, against her. Boul- strict that a woman can be arrested cQmpeted, a European-based group
Ann1e Surgicr, .a founding membct
tions when both panics get tobacco industry cOntributions.
merka moved to France and went on for letting a lock of hair slip out from called Atlti~ Plus wrote a letter to of Atlanta Plus, JUSt can 'I figure ·It "
He had a different take on the book coverage that stirred the White House to win the gold medal . at the under her headscarf, or for leaving the Intemationlil Olympic Committee "I n Barce Iona, people were cel1H11
the house without a m•le "chaper- urging it.to bar any nation that does
protests, say~ng that on that the media were doing their job.
Barcelona Olympics.
btating the end of apartheid ·and
"I think the media should do what they do when they.cover me," DOle
"For Muslim women · I symbol- one." Just last month a ~rackdown on 'qot allow women on its Olympic return of ~outh Afrie~ to .the Oairie,:·1
,
·
said "They ought to check it out carefully and make a judgment."
ized freedom," Boulmerka. told the women's sports in Iran led to the team.
.she said. "But no one W¥ 'sayil\:g l
After all, the group argued, the
(Walter R. Mears, vice president ud columnist for The Assodated London't&gt;bserver, "but, believe me, heating of several women, who were
anythmg about the 34 countries th~t~:
Press, has reported on Washington and national politics for more than many think it's not appropriate for .charged with violating the state's Olympic charter states that "All have no women athletes represe11ting •
30 years.)
1
women to take part in sport dressed ·indecency laws. Their crime: riding forms of discrimination with respect them."
l
to a country or a person whether for
in clothes that show our bOdies .. . For bicycles in the park.
If all goes well for the IOC, that'!
There have been a few exceptions. reasons of race, religion, politics, sex ~ilence will hold in Atlanta . .1:.•; , . I
the conservatives and religious leaders, we become the first targets in the In the past, Muslim women have par- or any other are incompatible with
(Sara Eckel Is a columiiiiHcir ,I
'
.
fight to halt the progress and a sym- ticipated internationally in sports in the Olympic movement." And there
By The Associated Press
bol of all that is bad in Algeria at the which the heavy Islamic. garb is not already was a precedent: From 1964 ~=:.~paper Enterpris~ Al~~a:.)
Today is Tuesday, July 9, the 191st day of 1996. There are 175 days left
' in the year.

IToledo I 75• ·1

,.
·,,

!Mansfield !1~

"'
"

:r

75°

•

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an

r

A shift ro northerly winds behind
a cold front will keep Ohio's tern~ peratures unseasonably cool the rest
: of this week, the National Weather
• Service said.
: Thunderstorms could develop in
: eastern Ohio on Wednesday on the

YCXI'~NOT AGIANTf

1

SuM(

Pf. Cloudy Cloudy

edge of the slow-moving front.
Lows tonight will be in the 50s
and highs on Wednesday in the 70s.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 105 degrees in 1936
while the record low was 49 in 1963.
Sunset tonight will be at 9:02 p.m.

\Meigs, Galli a take first

lll

'

(Continued from Page 1) ·
"We will be happy to get the assis: lance," said Farmer, who added that
: Galli a County sustained more than $2
'i million in infrastructure damage,
"not counting personal loss."
! Meigs County sustained approxi: mately $1.5 million in damage as a
: result of the storm, according to EMS
' Director Robert Byer. In addition,
Ithere is ~nether SI million in projects
Ithat need repair or preventative measures, he noted.
r Keller identified the incident peri:od, the time in which the damage
:occurred, as extending from May 2:2s. although Gov. George Voinovich
'may extend it for some areas, includ;ing Gallia County, which was struck
:again by flooding in the southern por·tion of the county June 22-21
: Affected local government in the
:declared.,ounties will be eligible to
\apply for federal funds to pay 75 per;cent of approved costs for debris
iremoval, emergency services related __
to the flood, and repairing or replacing dama~ed public facilities such as
'

i

'

Stocks
_Am Ele Power .......................41

r

Akzo ...................................... se~
Ashland 011 .............................39
AT6T .....................................59'1.

Bank One ................................ 33
Bob Evans ............................ 14'4
Borg-Warner ...........................40
j;:hampion Ind .......................1Th
Channing Shop .....................
City Holdlng ................:...: .... 22'1.
Federal Mogui ....................... 1Th
Gannett ................................. 69'1.
Goodyear T6R ......................47'1.
!(·mart ................................... 11'1.
Landa End ........,...................... 23
Limited Inc .............................. 20
People• Bancorp................... 23
Ohio Valley Bank.................. 33'1.
One Valley ...............................34
Rockwell .............................. 54~
Prem Fln1, ................ ~ .............13't.
Royal Dutco111Shell .............. 153'1.
Shoney'sl'lic, .......................... 10
'Star Blink .:: .............................68
·Wendy lnt'l. ........................... 18'1.
.Worthlngton Ind ................... 19'1.

6'-

:
my is a fragile instrument; it requires pens when there are more sellers than; :
a deft touch to keep tuned and free of buyers' What happens when stocks :
those awful sour notes.
lose their suppon? They drop.
•' :
A similar perplexing situation
, It might .not happen; till: shares' •l
exists with capital gains and the stock redeemed m•ghtmerely provide cash:' 1
market. A popular contention is that for reinvestment in the market. Log- :
a capital gains tax cut would free up ically, however, a plunge could occut·• ,
billions of dollars of equity (and tax- since many blllions are tied up. ~ :
es) now trapped in the market.
S&amp;P 500 index has risen 11-fold in' :
So long as shares of stock are not 22 years.
· .
•
l
1
sold, even ifthey have quadrupled in
The posst·b·1
·
f
h
1
tlly o sue an unwe . ,. j
price, the owners pay no capital gains come event is heightened by ·demo- · 1
•taxeS. Lower the tax, it is ~id, and graph1cs. Many of those big-gail)" 1
·these owners will be more inclined to stocks are held by folks approach'ng
•
1
· se·11 • take the tr' gatos
· and retnvest.
·
·retn'Clnent,
·
and therefore in need 0( • ••
That's the theory. But what hap- cash and desirous of lower-risk secw-. l
pens to all those stocks that have run ·rities such as bonds.
,
. ·,
up in price during the current bull • The moral, if there is one, is !hit·· 1
market? These are the underpinnings you can't fiddle with the economy :
of the popular averages,'almost all of and expect it produce the · precise.'; ;
which arc now near their record notes you want It' ·
pie · •
highs?
;and too fragile ·anJ~tusttoo
c~m
x ;
1
What happens? Well, what hap- ltankerousness '100 _ ts mnatt Y can- , :
•
··
·
: ·:
·
·
·• · •
Thought for Today,. "There are two kinds of
1 ·
· ..
·
peop e In one's life- Jleo' '' :
pie whom one k~ps w11.1111g - and_the people for whom one waits ... __; ~ ~ :
S(amuel) N(athaniel) Beiumal}, American author and dramatist (1893-1973): :.
.
'

!

I

every

PvbliJIItd
olleflloon. Monday lhrou1• ,
Frida~, Ill Coun Sr., Pomeroy, Ohio. by lhe
Ol1io V.l~y l'llbUohina eon-y/GUO&lt;It Co.•
Pomemy. Ohio 4l769. Ph. 992-21l6. Second
class paid 01 Pomeroy. Ohio.
Mftabtr: The Associlll&lt;d Pn:u. and die Ohio
~spiptf Astoeildon.

PQS1MAS11!R: Send addrao&lt;:Cllft&lt;lloos 10
The Doily S..tinel. 111 Coun 51.. Pomeroy,
Ol1io 45769.
SUBSCRIPTION llATIS

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SINGLE COPY PIIICB

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Perry cites low security
prior to Saudi bombing
WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S.
military commanders underestimated
the terrorist threat in Saudi Arabia
and were slow to improve security
measures before the fatal June 25
bombing in Dhahran, Defense Secretary William Perry said today.
He told a Senate Armed Services
Committee hearing into the bombing
that claimed 19 U.S. airmen that officials were misled by intelligence
reports and a smaller-scale attack on
U.S . troops in a national guard facility in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, last
November.
.
"Why, in the face of serious concern about force protection and
extensive measures to improve force
protection did the K.hobar Towers
tragedy occur?" said Perry, referring
to the Dhahran apartment complex
where thousands of U.S, service
members live.
"First of all, the security measures
we introduced after the bombing of
the Saudi National Guard facility
were focused on a threat less powerful than actually occurred," he said.
"Secondly ... our local commanders,
for a variety of reasons, had not ,completed some of the measures that
were prescribed and which they
agreed needed to be done ."
Perry described the voluminous
intelligence on terrorism in the Persian Gulf as "spotty and inconclusive," leaving military COI)ll!)anders
with a difficult task in knowing what
to plan for.
Two top military commanders
accompanying Perry painted a grim
picture of the terr,qrism threat in the
Persian Gulf. They said it would not
go away and that terrorists would
always look for the weak point in the
security protecting U.S. forces. All
three defended the "vital" U.S. mission in the oil-rich Persian Gulf.
"We must face one hard fact: we

Today's livestock report

will have more terrorist incidents,"
said Gen. John Shalikashvili, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. "No
one, not even the Israelis who have
more experience than any other people in dealing with terrorism, has figured out a way to decisively defeat
it.
II

0

starG~;n,~in;~:~ea~h~\~~: ~

United States Central Command, the
Tampa, Fla.,-based headquarters
responsible for Saudi Arabia, defend- '
ed his own actions and those of his
subordinates in the months leading up
to the June attack.
Intelligence information available
at Central Command headquarters
was fully shared with commanders in
Saudi Arabia, Peay said. A review of
the intelligence surrounding the Khobar Towers complex "reveals an
increase in suspected surveillance but
no clear indication of an impending
major terrorist attack," he said.
Peay defended the U.S. commander of the Khobar-based unit, the
4404th Air Wing, Air Force Brig.
Gen. Terry Schwalier, for implementing some 130 security improvements following the November attack
in Riyadh.
Giveri the massive size of the
Dhahran truck bomb - as much as
5,000 pounds of explosives - "it
could have been worse: several hundred could have been killed," Peay
said. "The measures taken appear to
have prevented this incident from
being catastrophic."
Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C.,
chairman of the committee, pledged
a bipartisan inquiry to find out .
whether security concerns were
passed up the chain of command and
how senior officials in the United
States responded. He said the panel
will focus on "why safeguards that
might have thwarted such an attack
or minimized casualties were not in
place." '
Lawmakers, particularly RepubliS'peclal speaker slated
cans, are focusing on questions about
Denver Hill of Foster, W.Va., will missed opportunities
be the guest speaker at the Red Brush
Church of Christ, Bashan Road.'
Racine, Saturday, 7 p.m., and Sunday,
Units of the Meigs County Emer10 a.m . and 6 p.m.
gency Medical Service recorded eight
calls for assistance Monday, includMeeting postponed
ing four transfer calls. Units res)lQndThe Pomeroy Merchants Associ- ing included:
ation meeting has been postponed
MIDDLEPORT
until July 17, &amp;:30 a.m.
12:54 p.m., South Third Avenue,
Gladys Walburn, Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

•

COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Tuesday, as provided
by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Market News:
Barrows and gilts: steady to SQ
cents lower; demand moderate on a
moderate run.
U.S. 1-2, 220-260 lbs. 55 .50-

S8.00, few SS.OO and 58.50; plants
~7 .00-59.00.

U.S. 2-3, 2)0-260 lbs. 49.00· SS.OO.
Sows: 1.00 to 2.00 1ower.
U.S. 1-3, 300-450 lbs. 45.0048 .00; 450-500 lbs. 48.00-~2 .00 ;
500-650 lbs. 52.00-54.00.
Boars: 38.00-40.00.

Middleport Council gives
(Continued from Page 1)
weeks, Horton sa!d.
Counctl also approved the second
readm~ of the ordmance ordenng an
immedtate 2Q percent mcrease m
water and sewage rates. The mcrease
"':ill raise the minimum village water
btlls fro.m $6.65 to $7.98, while mmtmum vtllage sewer bdls w1llmcreasc
from $7.80 to $9.36.
In other matters:
• Council President Gilmore complimented the village on the Founh of
July entenainment and firewQrks cciebration, adding $412.84 in additiona! donations had been collected
for the fireworks.
"This year is probably the biggest
crowd we've had. It's great to see this
happening in the village," said

Gilmore.
• read the June report from the
Middleport Police Department. The
department recorded 32 traffic arrest
and 39 criminal arrest for the month,
housing 17. pri soners and taking 24
incident reports .
• approved the June mayor's repon
in the amount of $6, 180.50.
• heard from Grant Street resident
Bob Schmoll concerning delays on
repairs to drainage problems along .
Pearl Street, between Lincoln and
Grant Streets, which have caused
basement flooding and sewer backups with more and more frequency
during heavy rains.
• Gwiazdowski reponed a resident's complaints on pickup of brush
by Rumpkc, the village refuse contractor. According to Gilmore, the
refuse contract notes that brush and
limbs must be cut into four-foot sections and tied up in bundles if they arc
to be hauled away.
Anendi ng the mccti ng were
Stivers, Gwiazdowski. Nc~ille and
Gilmore, Horton and Hockman.

POMEROY
Near Pomeroy-Muon Bridge
992·2588
.
VINTON
O.ttla County Dlaplay Yard
155 Main St.
388-8603

Announcements

Meigs EMS runs

POMEROY
3:35p.m., \\'est Main Street, Linda Foreman, Holzer Medical Center;
8:~5 p.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Margaret Riegal,
HMC.
RACINE
7:42 p.m., Sharon Road, Karen
Saltsman, treated at the scene.

NOTICE

t USPS liJ-960)

•

Adolph E. Saelens

Hospital news

The J)aily Sentinel

·

The Southern Local Board. ,of membership in the Ohio Coalition of
Education, meeting in regular session .Equity and Adequacy in School
Monday night at Southern High Funding for $440 and .approved
School in Racine, approved several ' membership in the Coalition of Rurcoaching positions for the upcoming al and Appalachian Schools for $250.
school year.
Membership in the Buckeye AssociThe board approv~ Pat O'Brien ation of School Administraton was
as junior high school football coach, approved for district Superintendent
Jennifer Cummins and Sammi Sisson James Lawrence.
as junior high volleyball coaches,
The board also agreed to grant
Alan Crisp as assistant girls high diplomas to Bill Hendrix and Jeremy
school basketball coach, Kyle Wick- Black,'who have received additional
line as eighth grade boys basketball high school credit and discussed the
coach and Zane Beegle as seventh possibility of getting $36,000 in
grade boys basketball coach.
social studies books.
Vicki Northup was accepted as
PreseRt were Lawrence, Treasurhigh school cheerl~l~Jding advisor, er Dennie Hill, Board President Susie
with Brian Weaver approved as vol- Grueser and board members Bob
unteer freshman boys basketball Collins, C.T, Chapman, Dave KucsAdolph E. Saelens, Bidwell, died Tuesday, July 9, 1996 in Holzer Med- coach.
rna and Marty Morarity.
ical Center.
In other personnel matten, the
The next board meetin~ will be
Arrangements will be announced by the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy. ·board approved Donna Taylor as a Monday, Aug. 5 at 7 p.m. at the high
. substitute cook.
school.
·
In addition, the board approved

Walter M. Riggs, 86, Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Monday, July 8, 1996
in the Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, Point Pleasant.
Born Dec. II, 1909 in Mason, W.Va., son of the late Thomtls and Ona
Mcintosh Riggs, he was a retired construction worker, a U.S, Army veteran, and attended the First Church of God in Point Pleasant.
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Alma Riggs; and a brother,
James Riley Riggs.
Surviving a sister, Hattie M. Fischer of Pomeroy; and a sister-in-law, Norma F. Riggs of Mason.
Graveside services will be I p.m. Wednesday in the Meigs Memory Gardens, with Pastor Dale Vollmar officiating. Military services will be conducted
at graveside by StewaJt-Johnson VFW Post 9926, Mason, and Smith-Cape: hart American Legion Post 140, New Haven, W.Va.
Fri~nds may call at the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, on Wednesday
from II :30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

Lt. Gov. Nancy P. Hollister will
visit Meigs County Monday as p~rt
of a two-day tour of southeastern
Ohio.
·
At 9 a.rn., she will visit Carleton
School in Syracuse to tour the scltool
and Meigs Industries facility. At I 0
a.m., she will visit downtown
Pomeroy to view work on the village's downtown revitalization proHolzer Mediall Center _
Discharges July 8- Mrs. Jimmy
ject.
The southeast Ohio tour is to dis- Dunaway and daughter, Barbara Curcuss regional economic and work- ry, Mn. Darvin Meade aqd daughter,
force development issues with local Sandy Blessing, Billy Clymer, Mrs.
officials and development profes- Lewis Bowman and son, Barbara
sionals, according to the office of the Scott, Julia Rupe, Clava Kay.
(Published with permissionl
lieutenant governor.

-·-·-

Spending spree may ·have urifors"e·en ·lmpac·tll

roads, bridges and utilities, according
to the Ohio Department of Public
Sa'oety.
•
In the next step in the aid process,
FEMA and OEMA inspectors and
local representatives will inspect the
damaged sites. Afterwards, FEMA
will review the damage survey
reports and approve funding for eligible projects.
"Damage must be a direct result of
the disaster event," Keller explained.
Federal funding for small projects
- those under $44,800 - will be
released up front, while funding for
larger projects will be advanced as
work progresses.
The federal government will pay
75 percent of the costs, with the state
picking up an additional 12.5 percent.
Local governments will have to pay
the remaining 12.5 percent.
Gallia County officials attending
included Farmer, Local Emergency
Planning Commission Director Tercy Hemby and County Engineer Joe
Leacfi, in addition to township and
village officials.
Attending from Meigs County
were Engineer Robert Eason and
Byer, as well as township, village and
other officials including representatives from water and conservancy
districts.
Keller also advised the officials to
apply for funding to help prevent
future damage.
"Feel free to propose hazard mitigation measures ," Keller said.

Hollister to visit

Stock report a are the 10:3~
a.m. quotes provided by Advelt
·'!f Galllpolla.

Today in history -.. -

:-llllj!

'

~ l;ly The Associated Press

lljql

John Cunniff

I

''' Front expected to keep
··things cool for this week

SaraEc/cel

i;c;:!·~~~~~:~i:~si=g~.i~~iu'ty9,

··!columbus!7s•

Ice

st-

1896,WilliamJenningsBryancaused
a sensation at the Democratic National Convention 1n Chil!ago with his
·
.
·
• speech denouncing supporters of the .gold standard. Said Bryan; "You shall
·
'
·
.
not press down upon the brow of labor this crown of thorns, you shall not
By JOHN CUNNIFF
which hit a IS-year high in the first
crucify mankind on a cross of gold." (Bryan went on to win the party's nom·
AP Bualneu Analyll ·
quarter.ination.)
NEW Y0RK- It seems that all
At this stage, a spending surge in
On this date:
of Am~ca's retailers, many of its the absence of broad income gains is
In 1540, England's King Henry VIII had his six-month-old inarriage"to economists, most of.. its equity
hi s fourth wife, Anne of Cleves, annulled.
investors and certain political candiIn 1755, Driush Gen. Edward Braddock was mortally wounded as his dates are hoping the consumer will .
troops suffered a masstve defeat during the French and Indian War.
soon go on a spending spree.
likely to add to the uncollectibles of
In 1776, the Declaration oflndependence was read aloud to Gen. George
Such an even·t, it is supposed, will lenders, which in March rose to~ per-.
Washington's troops in New York.
help sell can;, avoid recession, boosts cent of payments due, a six-year high.
In 1816,'lhe
Argentina
declared
independence
from
Spain.
stocks
and elect officials who like to Higher figures could mean chaos.
In 1850• 12 th pres•·dent ofthe Uoiled States, Zachary .Thy lor, died.after claim they have something to do with
Worse, a spending surge could
serving only 16 months.
the. longest of all post-war expan- mean highef interest rates.' since the
In 1918, 101 people were killed as an inbound local train collided with sions. ·
.
,
No. 1 priori!}' of lhe Federal Resem
an outbound express in Nashville, Tenn. '
· ·' .
. But ··w lll' t· a m1'nute· or two·. Have is to keep the economy from
- ·overIn 1947, the engagement of Britain's Princess Elizabeth to Lt. Philip they really thought this tbrough?
heating, which it tries to do by makMountbatten~~ ann~unced.
If the consumer does indeed ing borrowing costlier. It could mean
In 1951. stdent ruman asked Congress to formally end the state of decide to have more fun at the malls bankruptcies.
war between the Uruted States and Germany.
·
-.. and the showrooms and at the 1 And soon thereafter, if events
In 1982, a Pan Am Boeing 727 crashed in Kenner, La., killing all 146 nation's expensive rec~ational mec- jwere to proceed as in the past, the
people aboard and e1ght people on the ground.
cas, it will likely have to be dooe on economy might be fighting recession
Ten years ago: The Attorney General's Commission oq Pcimography ~t. Incomes aren't rising much
retailers and investors et alia
released ~final draft of tts 2.000-page report, which linked hard-core porn tbeee days.
.might experience still another examto sex cnmcs.
.
~ Already, milliOOJ of Americans 'pie of unintended economic conseFive years ago! F~ CIA officer Alan ~- Fiers pleaded guilty to two live beyond their means, as indicae- .quen;ces.
misdemeanor charges 1n the Iran-Contra aff111r. The International Olympic eel by: I, their lelldency to asswne , There.is no proof this will h-n. .
Committee readmitted Sou
. tb Afnca. The Arne.rican Lea.,,.. defeated the new debt •aster than,...., pay o~old •
'"'~'~"'
the All S
•"
u-r
n
but it is more than just the otherside
2
National League, 4-to- • •n
- tar Game ID Toronto.
,
debt; 2. credit-c:ard delinquencies, of the stO!j. Big as it is, the econo-

~

., :

UbY, WltiT AMtNUTt;HI

Gender bias still taints spirit of the ..Oiympics

I•

PA.

W.VA.

Dole backing away
from Clinton integrity
issue, for the moment

fO .r

•

IND.

_.

Mortpn Kondraclce

1

Walter M. Riggs

MICH.

Home National Bank asks that the business owners and
operators in the Southern Local School District meet with
them, Thursday, July 11, 7:00 p.m. at Star Mill Park in Racine.
Farmers, Greenhouse owners, and self employed operators
are especially urged to attend.
Claudia C. Roush
John T. Wolfe
Krista Smith
Gary P. Norris
Chris Roush
Bill Nease
Linda Evans
Marvin Hill
Jeannie Wolfe
Carroll Norris
Connie Cundiff
Wayne Roush
Susan Roush
George Neigler
Debby McKinney
David Fox
Roma Sayre
George Lawrence
Maxine Rose
Ben Petrel
Kelly Eichinger
Brent Rose

We
Mah•n
'
Drivers, Ho•
Ownerslnd
.

Molllle Ho111e
Owners Special
Savlnt•·
Our statistics show that mature
drlvera and home ownera have
fewer and less costly losses than
other age groups. So It's only fair
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�Sports

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sent~~~

On the NBA off-season scene,

·On Hubbard Memorial LL Tournat:nent's opening night,

Point Pleasant, Hubbard's
Greenhouse &amp; Harrisonville win

The Philadelphia Phillies will host the 67th • nnual All-5tar Game, at Veterans
Stadtum. It wtll be the fourth ttme that the Midsummer Classic will be played in
Philadelphia. The previousAII-StarGameswere held at Shibe Park (1943 and
1952) and Veterans Stadium (1976).

Today's schedule begins with
The 19th annual Bill Hubbard while committing four errors. Bid:Gallipolis
Reds facing Point PleasMemorial Little League Tournament well pounded out eight hits while
ant Mead's Body Shop at 6: 15p.m.
got underway Monday evening, with committing two errors.
three teams advancing in action at
Harrisonville will now face Mid- The night.cap between Rio Grande
King Field.
dleport Thursday at 7: 30p.m. in sec- and Chester will begin at 7:30 p.m.
Point Pleasant Hardware built a ond-round action.
7-1 first inning lead over the Gal. lipolis Yankees and held off a late With second half coming Thursday,
. six-run charge by Gallipolis in the
final two innings to advance by a 9. 8 final.
Ryan Hodge; Ashley Pyles and
Seth Hatfield shared mound time in
the win for Point Pleasant, who
pounded out nine hits in the win.
CINCINNATI (AP) - Cincinnati used in a platoon arrangement , may
Gallipolis finished with four hits and
Reds manager Ray Knight has rea- begin appearing in the cleanup spot,
two errors.
son to be somber during this Ali-Star between Reggie Sanders and Eric
Point Pleasant will face Federal
Davis.
break.
Hocking Thursday at 6:15 p.m. in
"Willie has really • blossomed
The offense is in a slump. some
second round play.
mentally
and physically," Knight
key players are out with injuries and
The tournament's defending
the team 's opening-day starter this · said. "He's become a big, big factor
champion. Syracuse Hubbard's year may be gone for the rest of the on this ballclul&gt;."
Greenhouse, opened tournament
season because of upcoming elbow
The Reds are II th in the Nationaction with an 18-1 victory over tbe
. ai League in batting average and
surgery.
Pomeroy Yankees.
The Reds went into the Ali-Star 12th in runs batted in. Only shortstop
Ault went the distaniC for Syrabreak with a depressing loss Sunday . Barry Larkin, chosen for Tuesday 's
cuse, allowing only four hits in five
when all-time saves leader Lee All-Star team, has produced offen1996
1996AII·· innings of mound work. Syracuse
Smith
could not hold a two-run lead sively as he is capable of doing ,
Star
*Honorary*
pounded
out
17
hits,
but
committed
in
the
ninth inning in Chicago. The Knight said.
captains
managers
·
six
fielding
errors
on
the
evening.
Cubs
went
on to beat the Reds 7-6
"We're just not doing anything
American League
Pomeroy pounded out four hits, in 13 innings.
AL-Mike
offensively, and we pretty much
Earl Weaver
Hargrove
with Chris Pickens and Ray Klein
That left the Reds 39-43 for the haven't ali year," Knight said.
National League
leading
the way with doubles.
season's first half, 4 112 games "There hasn' t been a guy on our
NL-Bobby Cox
Johnny Podree
Syracuse advances to face Mason
behind NL Central Division co- 1 ballclub, other than Barry lately,
VFW Wednesday evening at· 8: 15 . leaders St. Louis and Houston.
who's having the type of year he can
AII·S~r Game wins
p.m. in second round play.
Knight said he is considering have. We've .got a lot of guys not
In the nightcap, Harrisonviile retooling the Reds' lineup in the neKt doing what their bubble-gum cards
NL
39
held off Bidwell' 11-9.
half, which starts with a home game say they can do ."
AL
Marcum and Jackson contributed Thursday night against the PittsLeft-handed
pitcher
Pete
for the win for Harrisonville, while burgh Pirates.
1tle
Schour~k. who opened this season
Call took the loss for Bidwell. HarKnight said Wiliie"Greene, one of coming off an 18-7 record, may miss
risonville finished with six hits, several third basemen the Reds have the rest of the season.
AP/Ed De Gasero

Knight makes plans
to retool Reds' linea.,p

AMERICAN LEAGUE LINEUP
Player
'----~ . Kenny Lofton, Cleveland, ct
2. Wade Boggs, New York, 3b
3. Roberto Alomar, Baltimore, 2b
4. Frank Thomas, Chicago, 1b
5. Albert Belle, Cleveland, II
6. Ivan Rodriguez, Texas, c
7. Cal Rlpken, Baltimore, ss
8. Brady Anderson, Baltimore, r1
9. Charles Nagy, Cleveland, p

NATIONAL LEAGUE LINEUP
Player
---1. Lance Johnson. New York, c1
2. Barry Larkin, Cincinnati, ss
3. Barry Bonde, San Francisco, II
4. Frad McGriff, Atlanta , 1b
5. Mlka Piazza, Los Angeles, c
6. Dante Blchene, Colorado, rt
7. Chipper Jones, Atlanta, 3b
8. Craig Biggio, Houston, 2b
9. John Smonz. Atlanta, p

Barkley
and Tyler
plan civil
court fight

*

lnterleague play may affect allure of All-Star Game starting in 1997
By BEN WALKER
PHILADELPHIA (AP)- Randy
Johnson vs . John Kruk in 1993 at
Camden Yards. Greg Maddux vs.
Cal Ripken in 1994 at Pittsburgh.
Hideo Nomo vs . Alben Belle last
summer at The Ballpark in Ariington .
Think of the most intriguing atbats in recent All-Star games, and
then think about why they're so specia! : Ali fans love a good pitcher-hitter matchup, and those are ones they
don 't ordinarily see.
Same goes for Tuesday night's
game. How will NL starter John
Smoltz fare against Wade Boggs? __
How will AL starter Charles Nagy do

against Barry Larkin ?
By next summer, though , no one
will have to wonder.
Interleague play is supposed to
start in June, meaning Smoltz and
the Atlanta Braves might have
already played Boggs and the New
York Yankees, Nagy and the Cleveland Indians might have already
faced Larkin and the Cincinnati
Reds.
That means no mbre mystery for
many All-Star match ups. And that,
six -time NL batting champion Tony
Gwynn contends, Is not a good
thing.
. "From the National League fan's
standpoint , they want to see the

Amencan League stars play,"
Gwynn said . '·' And probably, we
should feel !he same way.
" But this game is a special occasion and a special time that a lot of
guys don 't have the opportunity to
enjoy," he said. "My feeling is
interleague play may take away
from this event. "
NL manager Bobby Cox of
Atlanta agrees.
" l' m not an advocate of interleague play, OK?" he said. "!like it
the way it is. There are franchises,
obviously, in trouble and this will
increase attendance. Eventually, I
think it will take a liule luster off the
World Series and All-Star game."

Certainly, the introduction .of
interleague play - the plan still
needs approval from the players
union - will change elements of the
All-Star game.
As in, rather than just sitting back
in the dugout and appreciating the
talents of opponents such as Barry
Bonds, Kenny Lofton and Mike
Piazza, players might be paying
more attention to details.
"You wi II be more apt to try to
get some scouting in," Kansas City
Royals reliever Jeff Montgomery
said.
The question of whether interleague play will hun the All-Star
game is still a year away. In the

Celebrity softball game draws Meat Loaf and others
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Fans
at the All -Star workout got to see
Meal Loaf pitch - and no, it wa•n 't Greg Lozinski .
Instead of displaying ponly oldtimers trymg to poke one out Monday, baseball brought in the fences
and brought out the glitz. No oldtimors ' baseball game this year. Its
repla&lt;ement : the first All-Star
celebrity softball game.
Meat Loaf, a rock music star,
gave up a first -pitch homer to Lou
Brock, a pop that went about 275
feet to right field . Meat Loaf then
said baseball needs to do things to
attract .young people after last year's
strike.
" I ·think they need it," he said.
" l! 's coming back. I'm a huge baseball fan . They didn't lose me. I'm a
Jiule upset, but they didn't lose

me."

Actress Rita Moreno was upset
when someone called her a bat-girl
in the celebrities' clubhouse.
" Bat Diva!" she corrected.
The game, televised by ESPN ,
included comedian Bill Cosby.
author John Grisham, director Ron
Howard, 76ers guard Jerry Stackhouse and MTV video jock Jon
Stewan. Rapper LL Cool J and
Chubby Checker were no-shows.
Baseball was represented by Dick
Allen, Larry Bowa, George Foster,
Steve Garvey and Keith Hernandez.
" If we don't emotionally connect
with the kids' franchise . 6- 18, in a
very meaningful way, the future of
the game is in jeopardy, " said Greg
Murphy, hired last month as baseball's marketing head. "The other
leagues have done a great job mar-

MLB fan attendance up 5.4o/o
from same spot in 1995 slate
By RONALD 9~ :JM
PHILADELPHIA (AP)- Baseball owners hoped half the fans who
desened the sport after the strike
would return this season.
So far, only a quarter of them
have come back.
Through the All-Star break. teams
are averaging 26,338, up 5.4 percent
through the same number of dates
last year. but down 17 percent from
the 1994 average of 31 ,612.
" I still say we are in the early
stages of what I believe is a very
powerful recovery." acting commissioner Bud Selig said. "There 's a lot
of work to be done and a lot of pieces
of tbe equation to be filled in."
Eleven of the 28 teams have seen
attendance drop this year from 1995
- when teams couldn't sell tickets
all winter because of the strike.
"You guys say it's not back,"
Barry Bonds said. "But it's back. just
not all the way."
There 's still no labor agreement,
and if there isn't one soon, baseball .
could be draged back into coun.
While the sport has·a new marteting
head, it still bas no permanent commissioner; owners refuse to hire one
un!il there'$ a labor deal.
"There does seem to be some
progress being made," said Florida
pitcher Kevin Brown, one of the
players involved in the labor talks,

" so hopefully, we ' ll be going down
a road we haven't gone down before.
·11 be
h f
H f 11 he
ope u y. t re WI
somew at 0
a common effort."
Management negotiator Randy
Levine and union head Donald Fehr
lk d ·
were sched uIed 10 Ia
unng the
All-Star break, but formal negotiations won't resume until late thi s,
week at the earliest.
In the meantime, teams still are
seeing the fallout of the strike:
- Toronto's attendance has :
dropped 318,000, 10 an average to :
3l ,463.
.
- Philadelphia's attendance has
dropped 255 ,932, to an average of
24,395.
.
- Oakland and the Chicago
White So~ have seen attendance fall
by more than 100,000
On the phis side, first-place Seattie is up 6SO,OOO and San Diego has
had a rise of 513,000. St: Louis is up
295,000 and' Texis is up 283,000.
Baltimore, Cleveland, the Yankees,
Houston and Pittsburgh have experienced increases of 100,000 or
more .
" We have some markets that
improved and some that have a lot of
work to do," Colorado Rockies owner Jerry McMorris said. "Overall,
we're moving in the right direction,
but probably 1101 as fast as we would
hope."

keting their games and connecting
with kids and we haven't. But it's
doable. The giant has been sleeping."
· Monica (no last name, please), a
rhythm &amp; blues singer, violated
baseball tradition whe~ she stood

directly on home plate while singing
the nattonal anthem. The celebrities
might not have been graceful, but
neither are old-timers' games.
"You have to find something to
do, " Cosby said. "So bring out the
clowns."

Philadelphia expects thick
revenues from All-Star Game
By DAVE IVEY
·No, leave that to the. All-Star
PHILADELPHIA (AP)
bizarre. · an odd assortment of hapScalpers, strippers and sham sou- penings surrounding the day's events
venir salesmen have all been cashing that included at least one Elvis-like
in on tonight's All-Star Game, a . sighting.
gravy train that only rolls through
" I think I saw Alben Belle in
town every 20 years.
Starb~cks," said Johnny Wilson, 19,
Phil adelphia's first All-Star game of Somerdale, N.J., one of about 15
since 1976, together with an ongoing autograph-seekers staking out the
Cezanne art exhibit and two-week lobby of the Philadelphia Marriott
Welc ome America' celebration, was Hotel.
expected to attract more than J mil" I want a Frank Thomas. It will
lion visitors and tens of millions of be worth a lot of money some day, "
dollars .
he said, showing his fondness for
No wonder it was baseball, hase- America's true pastime - cold cash.
ball everywhere on Monday.
Outside of the Marriott, an unliIn addition to Pinnacle 's All -Star censed vendor selling " All-Stars
FanFes!, the Gillette Home Run Game" T-shirts kept moving briskly
Derby and the MCI Celebrity Soft- from block to block. no doubt
ball Game. other corparate-spon - atte!llpling to avoid the Licenses and
sored fun included the CoreStates Inspections patrol .
Summer Mummers Parade and
"Can't talk," he said. "Busy. Buy
something called t~e Honey Frosted something, I'II talk. "
Wheaties " Sweetest Swing in BaseThe hotel was also a popul ar
ball " contest.
gathering spot for ticket scalpers.
" Ron," understandably shy about
"I just washed down my official
1\11 -Star hot dog with an All -Star giving his name because he's breakcola and I'm looking for the All -Star ing the law, said he could get as
bathroom," said Michael 0. Robins. much as $700 for a pair of mediocre
45, of Bos!on, attending the FanFest ducats to Tuesday night's game at
with his wife and two sons.
Veterans Stadium.
In side. they passed through the
"I am making a lot of money this
All-Star Bazaar, a freebie-filled week, but not that much," said Sanspace where visitors coold pick up :di, an exotic dancer on her way to
Amtrak schedules, sample salsa, ·work at a Center City club. Though
subscribe to a newspaper or sign up
she )ladn 't spotted Belle, she did see
f 8
d'
or ere It card. Uh. baseball any- "scltne clean-cut guys" that could
one?
· . have been ballplayers.
"I will he sorry to see it end," she
" All the corporate stuff is a little
annoying, but not enough to spoil the said. "When's the next All-Star
good time we' re going to have," game, anyway?"
Robins said .
Warm, loving host families souaht for high school foreign exchange
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meantime , this year 's game has
another problem - injuries.
Gwynn and Ken Griffey Jr. and
Matt Williams were out even before
Monday 's workouts began. Now.
-there's also a chance Robeno Alomar
and Frank Thomas might not he able
to play, either.
Gwynn, elected to start in the outfield , is sidelined with heel trouble.
His spot in the lineup will be taken
by Lance.Johnson, who will lead off
and play center field.
Johnson will be the first player
from the New York Mets to start an
Ali-Star game since Howard Johnson in 1989. Howard Johnson also
was a replacement, taking the third
base spot that Mike Schmidt vacated when he retired earlier that season.
"I was really looking forward to
.seeing Tony hit," said NL teammate
Greg Maddux, who might not be
able to pitch because of a cracked
nail on his right big !Oe. "He's one
of the guys !like to watch."
Griffey, the leading vote-getter in
fan balloting for starting spots, is
unable to play for the second straigh!
year. He has a broken right hand,
though it did not prevent him from
standing at·shonstop while the AL
took batting practice.
"I' m here for the fans, and the
Ph illy cheesesteaks," he said. "They
voted me to be here, and I'm· here.
That's my obligation, and I didn't
want ·to let them down."
Brady Anderson, leading the

majors with 30 home runs, will stan
in place of Griffey in r.ight field and
hat eighth . Anderson normally hats '
leadoff and plays center for Balti:more.
"Just being in the staning lineup ·
is an honor to me," he said. "ll doesn't matter where I'm batting."
Williams also' will be absent for ·
the second straight summer, this time :
because of a bruised elbow. Chipper
Jones of the Braves will start instead ·
at third base for the NL.
Alomar, voted to stan at second ;
base for the AL. missed the workouts,·
'. because of an injured finger. He is ·
listed to bat third by AL manager
:Mike Hargrove, who said MinnesO' ·
:ta'sChuck Knoblauch would start if .Alomar can't play.
1 Thomas has been hampered by a ·
.sore left foot for ahout a cck. H the .
.Chicago White Sox lirst aseman '
.cannot start- the injury co~ him u :
·chance to defend his title i e home '
run derby - Mo Vaugh
Boston
will play.
"I'm in a tremendous mount of '
pain," Thomas said. "You get voted :
in, you want to come. Who knows if
I'm going to play or not?"
The AL also has Oakland's Mark ·
McGwire as a backup firsrbaseman. :
He hit the longest ball in Monday's
home run derby, reaching the upper '
deck in left field with a 460-foot drive, but Bonds won the overall com- '
petition.
I
Albert Belle, meanwhile, did not
take part in the contest.
·:

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The Ohio Casualty Oroup

Ill .. _ _ c. .......

WHERE EXTRA EFFORT IS OUR POLICY

"It'll be something to see teams '-'·prime considerations. The teams
with the most room under the salary
maneuver and shift."
A possible snag in today's noon cap will have the most options, but
EDT starting time arose Monday any team can exceed the $24.3 mil night. Player and owner represents- lion limit to retain one of its own
tives were still working on a final players.
draft of the agreement, and the NBA
"The market will be dictated by
has insisted that the agreement he the superstars. and the time frame is
signed before the market will he immediate. Teams that have salarv
allowed to open.
cap room won' t take chances with
The free agent market was sup- waiting to spend the money. " said
posed to open July I, but an eightday moratorium was put in place
until the six-year collective bargaining agreement was finalized. Players
had until Monday to vote, and overwhelming approval was expected.
About 150 players whose contracts have expired will be available.
Money and location will be the

U.S. Olympic track
coaches-&gt; see tough
competition coming

By KEN BERGER
CLEVELAND (AP) - A lot of
bar fights start this way: Two guys
mi~ it up amid loud music and blinking lights on the fringe of a crowd•
By DAVID DROSCHAK
ed dance floor.
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) Except this one involved Charles
The U.S. track and field team is comBarkley.
ing off highly successful trials on the
"You just get sick of people trysame Atlanta track where the
ing to sue you and make money,"
Olympics will be held - including
Barkley · said Monday. "But I'm
Michael Johnson 's world record in
never going to settle."
the 200 meters.
· Barkley and a 23-year-old man
But men's track and field coach
from Spencerport, N.Y., have filed
Erv Hunt believes foreign competi·
police complaints against each othtion has gotten much better in the
,;r after they scuffled at a popular
1990s, resembling the rise of EuroCieveland dance club early Sunday.
pean basketball in the '80s, prompting the addition of U.S. pros for the
, Barkley accused Jeb Tyler of
attacking him, and Tyler alleged that
first time in 1992.
Barkley assaulted him . As in many
"We have a very strong team, but
fights, each participant had a differlet's face it, the rest of the world has
ent version of how it happened.
caught up, " Hunt said Monday as
. "I don't know what's going to
team members began arriving at .the
happen with it," said Barkley, who
University of Nonh Carolina trainis no stranger to fisticuffs in drinking site. "We are going to win a lot
ing establishments. "I .know my
of medals, but whether we 're going
security guards say he hit me, and I
to do what everyon~ expects us to
filed a complaint against him."
do, only time will tell."
In an interview Monday, Tyler
When asked what events other
said he probabl¥ would not seek
countries are starting to excel in,
criminal charges. He said he was
Hunt said: "I think you can go right
considering a civil complaint.
across the board." ·
"I really don't want to see
Hunt said the U.S men's team will
Charles Barkley get arrested and
be strong once again in the sprint
detained for this.," Tyler said. "He events, along with the hurdles, long
would have to come back to Cleveand triple jump, and ~everai field
land and get arraigned in two weeks.
events.
He 'd miss the Olympics."
"When you look around the
Barkley had been in town for the
world and you iook.at some of these
U.S. men's basketball Dream Team's
athletes, there are some awfully
good athletes we are goin11 up
exhibition game against Brazil . The
Dream Team moved on to Phoeni~
against," Hunt said. "We ran great
to prepare for Wednesday's game
times down· at the trials, but once
against China.
some of these other athletes get on
Tyler, who is 6-foot, 180 pounds, ._ Jhe track, they are gotng to do the
claims that Barkley puncbed him
same"thin~. "
.
Hunt satd Amencan atllletes m~st
after Tyler refused to leave the bar at
about 1:30 a.m. Sunday. According
now begtn to focus on the Olymptcs
to Barkley 's police complaint. Tyler following several meets in Europe.
made a lewd comment to a woman
who was with Barkley and fellow
Dream Teamer Reggie Miller.
Barkley said he told Tyler to leave,
and Tyler charged at him.
Tyler has a small red mark on his
forehead and some bumps on his
head. BarKley has no visible injuries.
No criminal action will be taken
unless Tyler or Barkley wants to purWIMBLEDON, England (AP)
sue it. detective Denise Reeves of the -In a fortnight that ran out of days
Cleveland police said.
· before the tournament ran out of
Tyler bought a $500 plane ticket matches, Wimbledon crowned its
to fly from Rochester to Cleveland
youngest champion.
on Monday and gave his account of
At the age of 15 years, 282 days,
the fight to city prosecutor George Switzerland's Martina Hingis
Pace.
teamed with Helena Sukova to capture the women's doubles before a
packed Centre Court crowd Monday.
The odd couple of Hingis and
Sukova, the former half the age and
eight inches shorter than the latter,
completed a 5-7, 7-5. 6-1 victory
over Meredith McGrath and Larisa
Neiland.
Hingis was three days younger
Kanawha Valley Dragway in
than
Charlotte "Lottie" Dod was in
Southside, W.Va. featured a 5 Sec1887
when she won the first of her
ond Shootout this past weekend in
five
singles
titles. Women started
addition to the normal bracket schedplaying
singles
at Wimbledon in
ule. The field was open to any car :
1884,
seven
years
after the men, md
running the 1/8-mile course in five ·
didn't
begin
doubles
until 1934.
seconds or less.
"For
every
tennis
player,
this is a
Bill Craddock of Hernshaw,
big
goal
to
win
Wimbledon,
even if
W.Va. took the win in his 1991
it's
doubles,"
the
5-foot-6
Hingis
Beretta by defeating Shane Wiseman
said.
"But
I
hope
one
time
it
will
be
of Beaver in his 1993 Dragster.
the
singles,
too.
Charlie Armstead of Clendenin,
"I always wanted to have this title
W.Va. finished third .
(as
youngest Wimbledon champion).
In the Pro Division, Mark Bow·
because
I have broken so many
man of Flatwoods. Ky. took the win
records
already.
But she won the sinin his 1995 Dragster. Sheldon Gergles,
so
it's
a
little
different. But still
lach of New Haven, W.Va. finished
I
beat
her
in
the
doubles.
If you have
second in his 1927 Roadster. Rick
the
chance
to
do
it,
why
not?"
Williamson of South Point was third
Hingis lost in the fourth round of
the singles to eventual champion
In the Modified Division, Tim
Steffi
Graf, who won the first of her
Baum of Chester grabbed first in his
seven
Wimbledon championships at
1968 Camliro. Ken Madden Jr., of
19.
.
Middleport finished second in his
Hingis and Sukova had all but
1968 Camaro. Duane Weber of Mid-·
won
the match Sunday night when
dieport took third.
they
led
4-1 in tho thinhet the match
In the Street Division, Jim Saunwas
halted
because ohain and darkden of Eleanor, W.Va. was the winness.
Asked
· ho~ they would now
ner in his '68 GTX. Kevin Venoy of
celebrate,
Hingis
said they already
Long Bottom took second in his
hid.
1972 Nova. JIIBOn CarmichiiCI of
"We went for dinnc!r and had
Sandyville, W.Va. and Chuck Roach
some
fun," she said. "It was pretty
of Proctorvllie were semifinalists . .
late.
Today
we fly away. We should
In the Junior Dragster Division, ·
be
in
Jakarta
already for fed Cup,
Jus till Thornton of Hurricane~W. Va.
·
but
it's
better
to
win a Grand Slap~."
took the win. T.J.' Snodpass of Gal·
Sukova,
3!
,
won
the Wimbledon
lipolis took second, while Jonathan
women's
doubles
title
in 1989 and
Clay ofWest Hamlin, W.Va. finished
1990
with
fellow
Czeth
Jana Novotthird.

Baum, Gerlach
and Weber get
top three slots
in KVD races

. THING

IIW3I1

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP Basketball Writer
The largest, gaudiest and priciest
free agent market in NBA history is
opening for business.
Michael Jordan , Shaquille
O'Neal, DeMis Rodman, Gary Payton; Reggie Miller, Juwan Howard,
Horace Grant and well over I 00
more players will be allowed to listen to offers from any team wishing
to pick up the phone and make a bid.
"The general managers didn 't
get to. do anything last summer
because of the lockout, and they' ve
~aitod all this time to get their jollies," Miller said Monday.
"It's going\ to be interesting .
probably the biggest free agent market the !~ague will ever see," he said.

"We are fonunate that the trials
are about a month from the
Olympics," he said. "Some of these
people are coming off that emotional high of the trials. Now, they have
to get back and get rested and get
their minds right and get back into
this thing and get serious.
"What this really boils-down to is
what do you people expect? Do our
people think we're going to win 35
medals, 25 medals?" Hunt asked .
Hunt and women's head coach
Deanne Vochatzer did concede that
running oit home turf could be a solid advantage for his team .
"The fa'Ct that we're at home will
be some added pressure on us·," Hunt
said. "But we'll be up to it. You
always tend to compete better at
home in front of your friends, family and your country,"
At the trials, "we saw the most
extreme circumstances where sometimes it was II' degrees on the
track," Vochatzer said. "They have
certainly seen the worst, aitd that's
going to be a marvelous advantage
for our athletes because they know
exactly what 10 expect, they've been
through the scenario."
Hunt and Vochatzer have yet to
finaliie their relay teams, which mal'
come following a Saturday meet in
Durham.
"We are expected to win the
relays and there is nothing better
than something at the end of the
·Olympics or any meet than to win
the relays," Hunt said. "There is a lot
of pressure there because not only do
most Americans expect us to win
(the relays), but they also expect us
to set the world record."

.
'

na, and in 1987 with Claudia KohdeKilsch of Germany.
"Martina is a little bit different
player than the other two (partners)
were, and you have to adjust,"
Sukova said. "She basically has all
the shots. I only try to keep up her
motivation. If I tell her to hit a shot
down the line, she hits it down the
line. If I tell her to hit a lob, she hits
a lob. It's quite easy to make the
game plan. You just like to put her
in a good mood, so she feels like
playing, and then everything works
fine ."
Sukova met Neiland again in the
final of the mixed doubles later Monday, and the Czech won again . After
finishing off their women's doubles
final , both had to play through two
more rounds of mixed before making it to the final.
Sukova and her brother, Cyril
Suk, triumphed 1-6, 6-3, 6-2 over
Neiland and Australia's Mark Woodfordc despite losing the first set in
only 18 minutes.
In another championship decided
Monday, Olga Barabanschikova of
Belarus and Amelie Mauresmo of
France teamed up to win the girls
doubles, defeating Lilia Osterloh of
Columbus, Ohio, and Samantha
Reeves of Monona. Wis .. 5-7, 6-3,61.
Big-serving Dutchman Richard
Krajicek captured the men's singles,
Graf won the women's titlF for the
seventh time, and Australians Woodforde and Tadd Woodbridge won the
men's doubles for the fourth consecutive year.
Other champions are; Vladimir
Voltchkov of Belarus, boys' sinjles;
Mauresmo, girls' singles; Daniele
Bracciali of Italy and Canada's Jocelyn Robichaud, boys' doubles;
Wojtek Fibak of Poland and Tim
Wilkison of Asheville, N.C., men 's
35 doubles; Australians John Alexander and Phil Dent. men's 45 doubles;
and Jo Durie of Britain and Anne
Smith of San Antonio, senior ladies
doubles.

r---------~-----

•

The Miami Heat, New Yorlr.
Knicks, Minnesota Timberwolves,
Indiana Pacers and Vancouver Grizzlies have the most salary cap room,
and the Los Angeles Lakers will join
that group if the anticipated trade of
Vlade Divac for Kobe Bryant is
finali zed after the moratorium on
signings, trades and negotiations
expires.

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David Falk, the agent for Jordan;
Alonzo Mourning, Howard , Kenny
Anderson and several other free
agents.
Jordan, who wants ~ minimum of
S18 million to stay with the Chicago Bulls, has threatened to play elsewhere if Bulls owner Jerry Reinsdorf
comes in with a lowbaU offer. But
almost no one around the league
expects such a scenario to occur.
·- -·- ·

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O'Neal among th~se expected to try free .agency

· Tuesd~y, July 9, 1996

1996 ALL-STAR GAME

The Dally Sentinel • Page s

A'

.

•

•

~) ~----------------------------------------------------~~~~~--~~~--

�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, July 9, '1.996

l~y, July 9, 1996

...

The Dally.Sentlnel ~ Pagi 7

Polnei'9Y • Middleport, Ohio

Take two aspirins and go online for medical a11swer:s
-

• ·i

' Ann
Landers
19,, Los AnJeks
Times S)'IX!icMe and Cn:aton SyndQIC.

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: Your column
has often given readers invaluable
information about how to recognize
~nd gel help fo~ their health problems. Computers can now provide
even more help. Anyone with access
to the Internet can tap into the
world 's largest and most up-Io-date
collection of medical and scientific
information.

The National Library of Medi- other whenever he exercised.
cine's vast database, called "Internet Through Grateful Med, the doctor
Grateful Med," is available on the · was able to . read articles about an
World Wide Web. This technology extremely rare condition called harwill be an important tool in saving lequin syndrome. The man has since
lives and cutting health-care costs. been successfully treated for the
Here are some e~amples of 1what problem and is doing well.
Grateful Med has done.
A physician in a remote Alaska
A Maryland woman was heart- town had a patient who could not
broken after e&gt;periencing six first- taste or smell. The doctor ran a comtrimester miscarriages. Sbe consult- puler search ·on Grateful Med and
ed Grateful Med and discovered a found 20 citations that fit the
way 10 prevent these recurrent loss- woman's condition and noted that
es. She and her husband now have a • nasal allergies CQ!Jid be the cause .
healthy 11-month-old son.
The doctor used drug therapy to treat
A doctor in Watertown, N.Y., was the allergy symptoms, and the
baffled when an otherwise-healthy patient regained her sense of taste
patient became beet red on one side and smell.
of his body and chalky white on the
Please let your readers know

about this exciting high-tech devel- Christmas newslellers, but since
opmenl in medical information. 11 seven months have passed, i thou~ht
can save lives. -- Michael E. it might be safe to bring it up again.
DeBakey, M.D., Baylor College of
~ reader who signed himself
Medicine, Houston
"Bah, Humbug" blamed you
Dear Dr. DeBakey: Thank you because he didn't get any newsletfor making it possible for me to alen ters last Christmas. He said that you
my readers to something that could had no business discouraging people
help them cope with health problems from sending them and that ;ust
and save lives.
because YOU thought they were
Your dedication and innovative either brag shee!S or boring, it didn't
approach to medicine has made you mean everyone else felt that way.
one of the admired individuals'in the
Instead of writing to you 10 comannals of medical history. My warm plain, maybe "Bah" should have
regards and thanks for everything wrillen to those friends he is so conyou've done these many years for all cerned about. I, too, enjoy reading
of us.
· Christmas newsletters, but I -don 'I
Dear Ann Landers: You are prob- wait a year to write to someone I
ably plenty fed up on the subject of care about. -- Lori in New Orleans

Dear Lori: Thanks for !he.!,l}novalive defense. I owe you one. ···
J;&gt;ear Ann Landers: If you. think
this is as funny as I do, go ahead and
print it --Longtime Reader i~ Bentonville, Ark.
Dear Ark.: I do, and I will. Here it
is:
·
"I asked my Uncle Jeb why h~
and Aunt Tessie had so many kills•
He replied, 'We lived down by the
tracks. The train woke me up at II
a.m., and I didn't have lo be any ~
wbere 'til?."'
:
1

Send questions toAno Landersj
Creaton SyndiCate, 5777 W. Ceo"
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich
Where do they get all that energy?. urday, July 13, where physicals will
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee of ,be given also. Southern Local stuPomeroy flew lo St. Johns, Mich., dents will be processed at the hospi1asl week to anend the activities at !he, tal from II a.m. to I p.m. on the 13th.
70th anniversary reunion of his high
school class at St. John~ .
Bob Parker of Middleport has
· It's interesting that 18 of the orig- identified the youngster who sang so
inal 53 members of the graduating well at the Oklahoma City disaster
class are still living and 10 were on memorial service. He is George Weshand for the reunion.
ley, Jr., 13, and on the July 4th week: In St. Johns, Chuck and Daisy · end he appeared again with the
were joined their their daughter and :Boston Pops Orchestra. He did gel
grandson, Patricia Circle and son, 'to sing the National Anthem at that
Mark, Wichita, Kansas, who drove time, but his goal is to sing the song
fhe Blakelees' back lo Columbus to for the opening of a national league
pick up th~ir car and then the entire baseball game. He's pretty talented
group came to Pomeroy. Patricia and and I feel certain that will work out
Mark visited relatives and friends in for him don't you?
Pomeroy, Racine and New Haven,
W.Va., where here and the family
Is nothing sacred?
observed Mark's 27th binhday while
All these years I've lived comhe was in town.
fonably with the mental picture of
George Washington paying a visit to
Dr. Douglas Hunter will be doing Betsy Ross in Philadelphia with Betall sports physical e~aminations at his sy bent over fabric for days creating
office on Saturday, July 20.
the first American flag.
The examinations will be free of
Now the historians tell us that
charge on that day only and will be George Washington didn't visit Betavailable not only for all sports but sy to recruit her to create that first
fot cheerleaders also.
Stars and Stripes. They say the flag
· Here is the schedule that Southern was designed by Francis Hopkinson
Local youth should follow in gelling who was a member of the Conlinenthe examinations done al Dr. Hunter's tal Congress. The Betsy Ross House
office: 8 a.m. to 10 a.m., seventh, in Philadelphia has changed its
eighth and ninth grade girls: 10 a.m. brochure to read that "Elizabeth
tO 12 noon, seventh, eighth and ninth Ross" did, indeed sew the first flag
grade boys; I to 3 p.m., lOth, lith but that il was Hopkinson's design.
~nd 12th grade girls, and) to 5 p.m., Another historian goes even further
lOth, lith and 12th grade boys.
these days in stating that Betsy did
: Those undergoing e&gt;aminations not even sew the first flag. There was
arc asked 10 dress comfortably in no visit to Betsy by Washington and
shorts, !-shirts and tennis shoes and .. oo link has been established between
they are to take a completed sports Betsy· and Hopkhtson, one historian
physical card signed by a parent or charges.
guardian. These cards are available at
Now how's that for bursting a:
D•. Hunter's office or through Howie beautiful balloon?
Caldwell, Southern Athletic Director.
I wonder how mariy other things
Any questions should be directed we believe that really aren't all that
to Dr. Hunter's office, 949~2683.
factual? 1 guess it son of points out .
Now any student not bemg able to 1 that we ought to take a lot of things .
make the schedule w1th Dr. Hunter on i with tongue in cheek. Now can we do ·
the appointed day, can also repon to . thai and still keep smiling?
Veterans Memorial Hospilal _lhis Sal- Sure, we can.

The Community Calendar is
. published as a free servi(e to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any type.
Items are printed as space pennits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.
TUESDAY
POMEROY -- Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce luncheon
Tuesday, noon at the Senior Citizens
Center. Paul Labovitz of the National Park Service will speak.

RACINE -- CHOICE Home
Schoo! Support Group, Tuesday, I0
to 2 p.m. at the Star Mill Park,
Racine . Take sack lunch. For mor.e
mformation call Tammy Jones,"9926743 .
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -- The Stoke Survivors Support Group will meet
Wednesday at I p.m. at the Meigs
County Senior Center. Fpr more
information call Karen Gibson, 4465601.

THURSDAY
RACINE -- Southern Local BuildCHESTER -· Chester Township
Trustees, Tuesday, 7 p.m. !own hall. ing Committee will meet Thursday, 7
p.m. at Star Mill Park in Racine.
Budget hearing canceled.

POMEROY -- Big Bend Stem•wheel Association will meet Thurs.day, 7:30p.m. at the Carpenters Hall
in Pomeroy.
TUPPERS PLAINS -- Tuppers
Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars Post
9053 meeting Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
·Refreshments at6:30 p.m.
,fRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT -- Widows Fellowship Group, Friday at the Middleport Church of Christ, po!luck dinner at noon .
SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT -- Mtddleport
Masonic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, past
masters' night, Saturday, 7 p.m. at
Temple. Work in Master Mason
degree.

By DONNA ROSATO
USA TODAY
America Online will give millions
of subscribers a free hour of on-line
time and more clearly disclose its
billing practices 10 sellle II class
action lawsuits brought against the
nation's top on-line sen. ice.
AOL and lawyers representing

AOL users reached a settlement last
week after nearly a year of negotiation. AOL denied any wrongdoing
but said it' agreed lo settle the lawsuit
to avoid legal expenses. "The whole area of on-line services is unregulated. II look a case
like this to get the ~ourts to put some
much-needed guidelines in place_~

said Tim Bajarin, of technology consulting firm, Creative Strategies.
The lawsuit charged that consumers were misled about AOL
billing practices, wl'lich involved
rounding up per-minute charges for
on-line time. Also, AOL adds 15 seconds to each session for connection
time .

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light a fire in your heart with her
humor and biblical challenge."
Informal workshops are a popular
feature of the rell'eal weekend. The
mini-sessions focus on topics rela•ting
to women's roles including both
itual growth and everyday concerns. ·
Damaris Carbaugh, featured ·
. soloist with the Brooklyn Tabemacle
Choir, will be in concert Saturday
evening. Akron's Judy Chenoweth,
soloist, will alsv be featured.
The Women Anew retreat is one of
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For more information residents
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Good Health" was presented by Janet
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Cheshire met last week at Cheshire
United Methodist Church.
Janel Thomas, a representative of
TOPS, offered helpful hints to incorporate into your travels this summer.
"Car trips are great for famdy
togetherness and usually easy on the
budget," she said. "But they can be
murder on a sensible eating program.
So, plan ahead and pack a cooler with
ice water, diet drinks, small canons
of fruit juice and low-calorie snacks.
Whole grain cnckers and a variety of
sliced raw ,vegetables and fruit are
good choices."
On airplanes. Thomas recommJ.ids ordenng special menus at the
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Hendenon Community Center
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Reeoanized and prese1uecl gifts
were Effie Roacb. the oldest woman;
Jim Smith, lbe oldest man; Wesley
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Geri Gibson was TOPS best loser
when members met June 24. June
TOPS best loser was Pam Clary with
Thomas as June KOPS best loser.
Each received a cash prize and a certificate of recognition.
Members
participated in a discussion on typi cal summer situations. Clary was the
winner of the "Bear With Me" contest and presented a certificate and
cash prize.
•
Titdmas, leader, attended a TOPS
WorUhop on June 22 at the Holy
Trinity Catholic Church. Hostess for
the workshop was TOPS IIOH IS 17,
Jackson . Auending from the Jackson
chapter were Diane Skog and Margaret Clement.
Clary was TOPS best loser June 17,
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-.

614-992-4025

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

985·4198fl11111
I

-.
FREE

Tllpperl PIIIM, Ohlci 45783
614-985-3813 or 814-687-6484
Plastic Culvert- Dual walland Rcsular 8" lhru 36"
4" S&amp;D - perf. - solid pipe
· 4" &amp; 6" Fie• pipe
4" A 6" Sch 35 pipe
1/2" &amp; 3/4" C. P.V.C. pipe
I 1/2" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
3/4" &amp; I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (100' roll's thru I ,000' roll'•)
314" U.L. approved Conduit
8" Graveless Leach pipe
Gao pipe l" thru 2". Fining•. Regulators- Rioers
Full assortment or P.V.C. &amp; Flc• fining• &amp; Wa1cr linings
Full line of Cistern. Septic &amp; Water stora~e tanks.
St. Rt. 7

. 411164 Starcher Rd.
Pomeroy, OH. -45769

M

1-800-889-3943

G I WPW11CIAID IIPPLY

Colters 'l Carpet -Convefllble Tops - Anllque Cars ·
• Boat Seats •
Over 20 Years Experience

Locally OWned &amp; operated

-. --

(614) 992·2364

Heedtlnllrl • Custom Seal

949-3151
742·2246

;:BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE :
-:: 2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!
------

35Y•II~

614-992·2979

Racine, Ohio
Complete Commercial &amp;
Residential Service

-------::
::

Resldenllll - Commercial
Roofing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspoull
Complete Remodeling
Decks - Bathrooms - Kllchens - Siding

Cal

Pest Control

----------------

B&amp;B ROOFING and .
CONSTRUCTION

Remodeling

Wlnclowa Kitchens
Skiing
Decks
Roofs
Molt
Add-ona
Anylhlng

D&amp;T
;;! II I 1111111111111111 I !I! I! I!!!! II I I! !1 !I I Ill! I I I II II I !I I! I 1! !I!,;

Attending were Effie Roach, Hentlerson, W.Va.; Charlotte and Everett,
Michael Grant, Racine; Shayne
Davis, Al~y ; Ron and Drearna
Harvey, Proctorville; Nathan, Lenore,
Brandi, ~ Kella Wills, Poca, W.
Va.; Jean, Jimmy Smith, Nonh
Charlelton, W.Va.; GBI')I and Mary
·Osborne, Winfield, W.Va.; Johnny:

$20.00/HL

For GHhty Work

l

.

WILDII&amp; &amp; FUIICITIOI

WWews
ehiWGal¥1

985~4473

able are fruit or seafood plates, as
well as meals identified as low-calorie, low-eholesterol,- low-sodium, diabetic, or vegetarian.
'The .same principles apply at the
beach or collage," Thomas said.
When it comes to celebration
meals, whether it's a ·wedding or a
picnic, Thomas said it's important
not to deprive oneself of favorite
foods. Just eat them in smaller portions than you might normally, she
said; and then add some exercise.
Pledge of allegiance, " neve ~ quit"
pledge and TOPS pledge were led by
Judy Jones, with Mary Manin leading the KOPS (Keep Off Pounds Sensibly) pledge. Prayer for lndepen·
dence Day was read by Helen Trout
TOPS best loser of the week was
Sylvia Neece; KOPS best loser was
Janet Thomas; and best losers of the
week received cenificates of recog·

CHEAPER BAlES

LARRY'S LAWN CARE
·Mowing '
(residential &amp; commercial)
- Weedeatlng
·Tree Trimming
• Shrubbery Maintenance
No lawn too large
or too small.
Call today for free
estimate

(814) 1112-61311
114 1112·2751

, 14..2112

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, IN(.

.... lltllllld

!lri1 .... TFM

fiiiiiE EITIIIATEII

.J. 1!. DIDDLE, OWNER

537 BRYAN PLACE

Gutt.re

FREE ESnMATES
949-2188

•Remodell~

Family reunion----

••

"We Service
What We Sell"

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

Remodeling
Stop • Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

W.Va.
•.

Cuelalll .................

\

(No Sunday~

Health tips offered to TOPS members

- ---Complete

Off All
DlnettH
end
Dining
Roome

• TAPPAN
• WHITE
WESnNGHOUSE

SMH'S ·
COISIIUCIIOI

• Every style and Color
lmagineabfe
AS LOW AS

$179

614-992·7643

Muetbe 10

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

•Garages
•Complete

Foster Parents Needed in ·
Kentucky·and Ohio!!! YDCA will
pay up to $40.00 per day for.
keeping a child in your home.
If you are
interested in
opening ym.tr
· home to a child,
please call
1-800·331·9989.

Over 20 D1nettes &amp; 01nmg Rooms

• GIBSON
• KELVINATOR

448-8416

CHilD'S I.DE

$399
..

Olragea • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roo"flng
COMMERCIAL lnd RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Ext.24et
83.!111 per mill.

Howard L WritHe!

992·2156

Call
1-800..290-6303
Jimmy Wedge, Inspector

$199

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Mldcleport, Ohio 45780
Danny &amp; Peggy~

•New Homes

If you - buying or NIIIng • ' - • we ln8pect
lrwlcle lllld out, from b••ment to little. "For your
PIKe of mind"
"

AS LOW AS

/4tw Homes • Ylny• Siding New

TFN

Clea•ifieda

1215 Viand Street
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

AS LOW AS

YMIU

.&amp;14-742-2193

with the ,.,. • ,.,-vice to back It up
s.Mng S.E. Ohio a Wftl VIrginia

Need Direction?

WEDGE

SAVE HUNDREDS oo oomo
ol Amercla's bool quaJily glider
rockers In either solid oak
Of solid meplo.

.,

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

Reel Eetate Generel

Chemistry. This year BE-WISE was
honored 10 welcome Kathryn Sullivan, oceanographer, astronaut, and .
first women to walk in space, as a·
guest speaker.
f
For over I00 years the American ~
Association of University Women ·
(MUW) has been an organization ·
commiued to promoting equity for women, providing education and self
development of women over their life
spans, and promoting positive soci·
eta! change. Currently one focus of
MUW is the education of girls in
America with special emphasis on
math and science. The BE-WISE
Math\cience Camp is one effort to
encourage young women in Ohio to
pursue careers relating tQ these areas .
Jamie had received a scholarship
in 1992 from The Meigs County
MUW to attend BE-WISE as a
camper. Since then , she now returns
yearly 10 serve as a counselor. Next
year she will be returning for her third
year serving as a counselor

Midway MallPhone
Blvd. (216)
Ste. 104,
Elyria,
4403!1-2496.
323-7003

614-992-3470

HOME INSPECTION
SERVICE

Retreat ministry planned
Women Anew, a non-denominational retreat ministry, with the purpose of ~piritually encouraging
women, will meet Oct 25, 26, and
27, at the Ohio Center, Columbus.
The conference e~pects to draw
over 2,000 women from Ohio and
surrounding states lo the 23rd retreat.
Attendees include pastors' wives,
homemakers, and businesswomen
from Ohio's independent, evangelical
churches.
The theme of the weekend is
"CHRIST in me ... the only HOPE"
(Colossians I :27). FeaiURd speaker
will be Lee Ezell. Lee is a wife,
author, and nationally known .peak·
er who is described as one who "will

BENNEnS

Bt!IJ» OIANGE A

Student attends BE-WISE
math, science camp
Jamie Drake of Chester, a junior
a! Eastern High School, was among
16 women selected lo serve as a
counselor for 150 young women
fwm over 80 communities in Ohio
who participated in a Math\cienee
Camp held June 15-2 1, 1996atDenison University in Granville.
The BE-WISE (Women in Science Education) math and science
10amp was sponsored by the American
Association
of
University
Women/Ohio and was started seven
years ago.
hs aims are 10 develop interest,.
excitement, and self-confidence in
Math and Science and was open to
young women who will be in seventh
or eighth grades next. fall . Counselo"i
are past campers of BE-WISE and
range from high school freshmen to
college se niors .
During the camp week, the curriculum featured hands-on activities
in Astronomy, Environmental Sciences, Ecology, Math, Physics, and

Gravel, Sand;
TOp Soli, Fill Dirt

We would like to
thank everyone
who helped to
make our July 4th
celebration a big
success withoUt
friends and family
we would not
have freedom and
fun. Thanks again
to all of you.
July 4th
Committee
Racine Volunteer
Fire Dept
Voluhteer Fire
Dept Auxiliary

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

lbout the futurelll
1-900 •• 4100

laellawM

Umesto~,

;

LIVE PSYHICS
Ltt lhtm tell you

HAULING

C8rd of Thlnkl

.\BOlT TilL

America Online customers to get extra.
hour of free service in suit settlement

WICKS

614-949-3308

match
1·900-988-8988
Ext. 7907
2.99/mil18+
T.T. Phone Req.
Strv"V
(619) 645·8434

NERV()lJS

• No Loads or Fees
• Accumulate or Month ly
Income
• High Safety!
• Wide Choice of Annuities of
All Kinds
Call for Information:

H&amp;H
SAWMILL

Low!IMII)

Meet your

SUNDAY
PORTLAND -- The VanMeter
reunion will beheld Sundax a! t~
Portland Park. Those atlending are to:
take a covered dish and table service.;

Guaranteed Safety &amp;
High Interest Yields
Available

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

(Umlltonlo

o'

- - - - -·community calendar-----

..

ROWE
POWERWASH
SERVICE

HARTWELL
. HOUSE
Open Monday
nigh~

l

Authorized AOA Dalltbutor

• Welding Supplies• Industrial GIMI• Mlldllna Shop
SeMc:ee • Stftl Sales &amp; Flbriceliori • Repair Welding

until

• Alumlnum'Stelnlesl • Tool Oretlllng • 0mem1nteJ

Sllpi -Stalll, Re~lnga, Pallo Furniture, F1Npfew
• Items, Ptanlar hanger&amp;. Ttelllel &amp; lol8 ol other lluflll

7:00p.m.
Gifts • Follcart

"No Job Too ,_.,.,. or Too Bmllll"

•Antiques

We wHI work within your buclgll
.
Ptl. 77M173
fAX 77N111
1011 Poml Street
Melon, WV

992-7696

LL HOLlON
IIUCIIII

ANNOUtlCEr,H rn S

DUMP TRUCK

005

l'lrwonllt

. 'ERVICE
Lin IIICMII• Gnlvel
Dlrt•Sind
8111 tt22

..... oeellint man

so-eo ••

lme w rnartoe lite wllll.
PftOne I, I plCIU .. Ill: loa
I CID Pl. Plealnt Altiloler 200
Sl. Pl..._._ 211llo.

~~~~~-

"

"
.

--- - - - - - -- --

-- - -·----~-

t

•

rt

1

'

s: .,.

1

•

;.

•

,,

,

••

, . , .....

!:.C...l·~.....

..... . .- ......~..a..

l\

�·T

.,'

·.

I

Tuesday, July 9, 1996

:

The Dally Sentlne~• Pagel

Pomeroy,e Middleport, Ohio

..

NEA Cro11word Puazle

IRIDOJ:

...

!A=..
.

PHILLIP

ALDER

ACROSS

; t ~nc.c....

" llalrlng'

113 Pullllllllnl
bluncMI

1lollowar
1=-

57 Dyed

:40 .

" .K-· 10

M~ 'M.. GATALGA~

11« fa(a.tR FRf'Z
~~SIR

-::v-

a
Wea&amp;

East

• 3 2
Y A K Q 10 9 4
• Q 5

• Q 8 7

Commercial Building For Sale

On

Fl. 2 Balllo I Kitchen, $85,000.
814-258-1210.

Air ~onditioners, Washer, Dryer,
Refnoerator, Freezer, Stove, Microwave, Color T.V.. VCR, 814 256-1238.

Prof8laion&amp;VBuaineaa buildi"'Q tor
subte&amp;M. located at 509 S Third
S~ee~ Middl-~ Ohio. E xcellenl
for
·
ollc;e or real lltal&amp;
atreet oarkOno

Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Refri·

Route 7 Crown City, 100 Ft. x60

K1ttena To Good Home, litter
Tra1ned, Call Afler 6 P.M. eu -

448·11808.

Allraal esuue ai!Vertl81ng In
1hls newapaper Is subjecl10
lheFaderal FalrHoualng Act
al1968 wNch makes HIllegal
to ai!Vellloe "any pretoronce,
l!mlli11on or di&amp;C11mlnallon
..,_ on race, color, nlilglon,
aex fllmiNal stalus or nallonal
origin, or any Intention 10
make any such preference,
llmHallon or dlscr1mlnallon."

ThisaliVe-

wiH not

1&lt;11&lt;&gt;oMngly aocopt
for realostalo
wNch Is WI vlolallon of llle law.
· our reaclera are heraby
Informed lhet alldWelllngo
adverllsadln this n - r
are available on an equal
opportunity basis.

350

Lots

a. Acreage

1 Acre footers, water, septic, garage, blacktop road, in Addison

area. 814-388-8978.

par-.

14
11om 1.2 10 11.8 acres.
s,ome ~erlooking Racine. partial

hnanc1ng, 814 -992· 710,. itter
8pm.
. Hannan Trace School

I Tobacco Allolmenl,
814-258·1811
~or.a

for rent: Now takWig applicabona. COtJn~y lont Mobile Home
Park. Gallipolis Ferry WV. 304 ·
Scenic Vall•r.· Apple Grove,
beautiful 2ac ott, pubUe water,

Cttclt 8awen Jr., 304-578-23311.
REAL ESTATE

RENTALS

310 Homes for Sale

410

Houses for Rent

2 Bedtoom ,unfurniahed, 507 112
2nd St. New Haven . Call alter

5pm. 304-e7S-3469.

2 BR. 1 Balli, LM lot Rremodled. Fairland 1 Galli• County
· School a. Call Dolalla:
258-1095

Pomeroy,
Middleport

2·3 bedroom house, Sox100 lot,
located in Syracuse, apptlancea

a. VIcinity

All Yard Sales Mull Be Paid In Pan-rime ct"lureh cuttodian posiAdvance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the tion. Send retume to: P.O. Box
day belora the ad is to run, Sun - 228 PL PlaaHnl WV 255!10.
day &amp; Monday edirion- 1:OOpm
Fr1day
Parr-Time Loglotlca Clark Wllh
f'lllanllal For Full-Time EmployF1ve family· July 10, 9am-•pm. ment General Computer KnowlBailey Rd . off Texas Rd . XXXL edge Required. EMT CERTifl·
men's, girta. miuea, women'1 CATIO,. .PREFERRED. Dudes Inclot hing , baby 'oed. misc . Rain clude Ordering Srock &amp; Slipping
cancels.
Supplot, Administering Uniform
July 11-12, corner Success &amp; Vouchers &amp; Employee 10 Badg2~8. TV's, stands, too/a, adult. es • &amp; General Office Duties Send
hdd
1o h'
• · R
Resume .Jp SEOEMS Diarrlc1
~els. ren c 1 tng. ,ran. ain can· 3240 State ROute 110, Gallipolis.
OH 4!!831, By 711&amp;118.
Three family · July 10-12, three
miles north of Meigs County lair· Sale Reps For Snap On Toola,
grounds on Rocksprings Rd. WtAreEOE,aoi.Q28-8128.

~G~ir~r·s~s~iz~es~lo~6~X!!,boy~·~··~me~n·~o~~.I ViltaQI Pizza IM Now Taking Ap.
_

IOOS and nxxe.

80

Public Sale
and Aue11on

~

pli:a"'1"&amp; br Cook &amp; Wairou.

Wt •Aro A frenchlae 01 Burger
King Cor!IOrttlona Curr~~~~r ap.

~~~~~~~~~I
pereting
·21 Ro111uran1a
ln,Ohlo
Rick
Pearson Auction
West VIrginia,
&amp; Kentucky,
Wi.th
tun time auctioneer,
Plana To Expand In The lmme.
auction
service. licensed diate Future. We Now Have
6 oh·10 &amp; w y·1 · · 304 Openif19l For RallauranriAanag" er, Atl'atlint Manager, Manager
16 ·
est rgmla,
773- 5785 Or 304-m-5447 ·
Trainees. Wa OHer Compelillvo
Wage• Alonu With A Bonua
90 wanted to Buy
P1an, A Complete Benelil Pack·
Clean Late Model Cara Or age Including Medica( Dental.
Tru cks. 1990 Models Or Newer. Vacations,_Shorr &amp; Long Term
Sm11h Bwck Pcnliac. 1900 Eall· Oisabillry, Ltle lnsurence &amp; A New
401K Program. II You AroWilh
ern Avenue. Gallipolis
One 01 Our Compe1i1ors &amp; Have
Graco walker and Graco twinp: limited Growth Opportunity,
small Lillie Tyke toys. Mull be 1n Would Like To Talk Wilh You .
good condi tion and reaaonably Fax Or Send Roaul)le To: 304 pr1ted . Call 614 -992-3725, 10am- ~211-0055 Or Burge&lt; King, P.O.
4pm or 61 4·002-6959 after 4pm.
Box 2407 Huntingllln, WV 25725,
J &amp; O'a Auto Parts. Bu~lng aal·
vage vehiclea. Selling parta. 304·

773-5033.
Non -Working Washers, Dryers,

S1oves,
Refr1geratora,
Freezers,
A1r
Condi
tioners, Color
T. V.'a,
VCR's. Also Junk Cars, 614·256·
1238

·

(814)

Aaanlion: Danny O'Brien.

170

lnclucled, call 814·992-5787 aller
•pm.
3 Bedroom 8r1ck Home 1 112
Barhs, New front I Back f'llrch,
New 30 Year Shinaes, New Solfiet
&amp; Guuara, New CA. Well lnsulaled 5 Minulea from Golllpolia.
Small Vinyl Sided Our Building,
$79,1100 814-441·1·17. '

3 Bedroom Houaa With Dolll:hed
Garage 5&amp;18 On 1.9 Acraa Zoned
Cammarcial Beautiful Seuing
Ac'roll From Jumbo In Rio
Gnonde, $82,900 81•·298-2554.
3 BR., 2 balll noncll. 2 car - ·
Spring Yattey area, clota Holzer
Holl&gt;lal. 814-446-7940.
8 room houte, Racine, carpeled,
a.c ., &lt;4 .88 acres, garages, our-

building, $75,000 neg., 814-892·
2924, 81.·892-8971.

Charletlon Araa-3 Bedroom,
lanced yord, lull baaeman~ wood
burning fire place, our bulldingl,
garage, garden apace. Upper
80'1. Call 30•· 773·5407 aner
101m.
3 BR houaa,.118111, liVIng room WI
hardWood noora, kitchan &amp; dining
area together, new 1rOof, garage,
on AI 2. Call 304·875· •139 or
304·675-7328 after 8:30.
Ona bedroom home in Pomeroy.
Will aoll on land con1ract, 61'4·
91!2·5858.

Reconditioned

grators, 90 Day
~rench

Guarantee!

City Maytag, 8U·41•US ·

7795.
Big Savings On Carpet &amp; Vinyl In
Srock, $8.00 Yd &amp; Up. Mollohon
Carpela. R7N. 6U-44e·741t4.
Cast Iron bed SSOO. Other furni ·
ture. 304-773-5401 after 4pm.

Country Furniture. 304 -675-8820.
Rt 2 N, 8miifl, Pt Pleasant, WV.
TUGs-Sat 9-8, Sun 11-5.
GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

Washers, dryers, refrigeratora,
r~ngea .

Skagoa Appliances, 78
Street, Call 6U-440-7398,

V~ne
1- 800- •99-~9.

Trailer for rent in Gallipolis area.

1::""7"__.;.______

Low Ronge, Rtver..

I TI·IINK Tl-lROWIN6

M'&lt; ARM HURT5 .. I'M
NOT SURE I CAN

•ss,

SI.SOO
304-e7S-.a41 AFTER 8 P.M.

PITCH

ALL 1l40SE CURVEBALL5
PVT TOO MUCH STRAIN
ON M'/ ELBOW ••

TODA'&lt;..

r--~

~·

CALLfP fO, NY "FIPPLE#lS Ttlllet'!
~ IAfltNT · MY ·

A(;GOUNT!tNT'S[

r

i

v

.

,

~·~ W), Vl()(£1'~

Nlt:.

ewe.

[f~T

.

me.~T

10gallank ae1 up specials. Fith
Tank I Par Shop, 2413 Jackaon
Avo. Poinl Plaaaanr. 304·875-

lrlthmlln, a.g.
1- FCMHI unit
18 !xlll

11

3Y

36

Pass

4Y

7t

All pass

P~lllip

Alder

At the end of March, tbe sidewalks
on Long Island looked like badly eroded beaches. Sand limd salt, which had
since dissolved) that had been sprin·
kled over lhe snow-covered roads had
been blown to the side. Little did we
know that another six inches of snow
was coming nine days later. It made us
aU long for hot, sunny seaside beaches.
One of the most popular European
tournaments is held in Juan-lea-Pins,
which is east of Cannes on the Cote
d'Azur. Play taltes place only from 4 to
8. This leaves the morning and early
afternoon free for absorbing IJie SliD's
rays, swimming, golf, Iennie or shopping. And after the bridge you can
sample at leisure the excellent local
food and wine.
·
There is a lot of luck in pair events,
no more so than in this deal from Juan.
I don't ~ow the exact auction, except lhat Soulh opened lhree diamonds
(a ·bid lhat the Young Turkll consider
mandatoeyl, and then showed club values later In•the au~n. This perslllj(led North to bid seven diamonds. ·
A black-suit lead would probably
have defeated the contract - by sev·
eral tricks. But West selected the
"safe"'heart ace.
This left South with no choice: He
ruffed with dummy's diamond 10, tben
cashed the diamond king and spade
aj:e before rulllng a low apade back to
hand. When tbe diamond queen 9bligingly appeared under the ace, South
drew East's last trump, played a club
tu dummy's ace and discarded his four
remaining losers on dummy's spade
wiMers..The cold bottom suffered by
East-West cos( lhem several French
franca in reduced prize money.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campoa
Cetebrity Ciptwr etyptogram1 ..-. crated from quollllonl by Wnoul people , ~ and preMI'It
EIK:tllttt.i In the cipher st1nds lor another. roct.,r.: '*-: S _,.,.,. 0

FUWKAZF
IV

UFJW

A y

F

PVG

D FYI

ZVOYTAKFZP

RFTTP. '

CVRO

OTSAJW.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "You have to have alol ol lhe llnle boy In you to play
baseball lor a llvlnq."- Roy Campanella.

::::

'::!:~~~, Set:\\(l~-4~t~-s·
lollto4

~r

ClAY I.

~

O Rearrange

lettert of
four Krombled word1
low 10 lorm four worda.

20113.

Chrlalyo Palo Store, 271 Nor1h
Second Avenue, Middleport
Oh. aupptlea &amp; animata IMthea'
dipa, &amp; kennel care,

1988 Buick Skyhawk 4Gr., IUIO,
4cyl, leaded, 47,000mi, $3,800.
304-675-4172.

814-1e2:

1514.

.Dog &amp; Cot Grooming: rouonablo
prK:n, t 5yrt experience. Call for
appll. 304-4175-8831 .
German

Shepherd

Pupa,

PRINl NUMBERED lETlfRS
IN THESE SQUARES

Groom Shop ·Pal Groolning. foarurlng Hydro Both. Don S'hae11.

••pen-

Sftld Sanrico Pu-•· GroomiOO:
Buy, Soli I Trtdt, All Breeda.

Top Prices Paid: Old U.S Colna,

~-

PupPr Palace Ktnntts, BoardinG

Pa)'menls Welcome, 6 U · ~88-

.

Regiatered Oaahound, female

1gsg Olda Cullan Citra Body

810

Home
Improvements

Damage, Runa Good, 4 Door AC

,,nd

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFNG
.
1980 Pontiac 8000 lE, aulo, air, UnconditiOnal lifetime guarantH. i

Alter Sil 814-448-12•4.

'

Sovlllfl Y011'll
In lilt
.
.
Clossl(ltd
Stet
loll.
ttl ...

amlfm caasene, 21 ,800 actual Local references furnished. E1· ·
tabhshed 1075. Call ~81&lt;4) &lt;4•&amp;· ·
miiea. se.ooo. 814-992-7853.
OS70 Or 1-800-287-0571. Rogera
198D Pontiac Formula 305ho, aU Woltr.pniO~
power, 1-topa, Alpine atereo,
se.aoo 0110. 304-875-87110.
Appliance Parra And Sefvice: All
tDOO .Dodge Spirit • Door, Au · Name Branda Over 25 Yta11 E1·,
tomabc, Good Condition, 12,800
All Work Ouaranl•d~
OBO, 614 -258 -1233, 814 -258Clly May rag, 8 14·441· ,

.

I

SCfiAM.UTS ANSWERS
Indian· Waxen • Young· ROSBry • WAY AROUND. "You know irs an election year," my husband mut·
tered while coming back from the mail box, "when Congressmen write to you rather than the other WAY
AROUND.'

JULY91

1589.

t~Ot Cadillac Seville •dr, 1~.000

C&amp;C General Home Main!
tenence - Painting~ vinyl lidlnf,
corpenrry. coora, Wl-, bllha.
1992 f'llnloac: Firoblrd V-1, 55,000 mobile home repair and mew.. For
mlee. oxc. cond. S7,300. 304-1175- lreo oabmale call Chal, 11H92·
8323.
1178.
mdes, exc conct. $8,000. 30•·&amp;751178.

,

:
:

•

'

DRYWALL

1993 Chryalor. LaBoron GTC low
Excellent Condition:
t1o ,gee, 304 -875- 1782 Leave
r.tooaago

lillsl\ . . ..

Mil11,

.

UNSCRAMBlE LETTERS 10
ANSWER

SERVICES

Pa PS. PW, $750, o 14-446-; 815,

1150, 814.;e2·511511.

6 GET

IS

Woeka Black I Ton Purebred No
Papora, Wormed S75, 814·38S8548.

SOUTHERN STATES 304 -8 75·
2780 aboul HAPPY JACK KEN NEl DIP.

IA .T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue. Gallipolit, 814-•46-2842.

I

AKC Reglaltred Boaton Terrier
Puppitt, Excellent Bloodline,
Shots &amp; Wormed, ·Now Taking
Oepoai11 You Choose Your Own
Paymen~ As~n8 S300 Each CoR
014-446-UlO.
•

uk

Collecr)btes, Paparweighll, Etc.

/

r••dy 1• go, call 814.0•g·2•85:
814-902-3752 or 814-902:31185.

lolonlhly noa pr.ograma ore

Silver. Gold , Diamonds, A. II Old

.. ... wttfN

AKC Regi1tered Boalon Terrier
one male, one female

. 11"1 &amp; don't kill Uckl. For fleu
licka, ~ita, and ' hor'apota',

e14·446·9575.

10 lclllrldle apiC

aubltance
41 Ex11nct wild ox
• Drugtgcy.
43 StatUI-

3t

· By

pupplea,

Lob Puppioa, AKC Chocolalt .1
Woeka, 111 Sholl, Wormed
Htalth Certificate &amp; GuarantH&lt;I
Excellonr Temnvnenr. S250.
814·882·74n.

Do

7=~

11 Clolhlna

On the beach

Condition, S2.800, 81.......,

AKC lhasa Apao Puppioa Now
Accepting Do~aill Wlil Ba
Roady July •th, 111 Sholl And
Wormed $175, Firm, 814·3818058 Ahor 5 P.M. 814-388-8434
Babe5P.M.

Jack RutMII terrier puppies, 10
1111. lll - · 11 colora, $250/n.;·
·two Shtltie miniature Colllaa.
mal-. $125/aa.: 814-742·2050.

Apartments
for Rent

~~=~

Opening lead: " A

AKC Lhua Apao Pupplea.
Roadyl Sholl, Wormed, Prlvalt
Ownar, Alhent/Mariena, State
Rou"' 550,814-551-2722.

Top dollar - anttquea, furniture,
gla ss. chma, clocks , gc'd. Sliver,
coms. watches, eata .u . Oaby
Martin, 014·992·7441 .

'

texrurld, ptaaltr rep8ir. •
394-4175-41118. 2Q,yoara :

Rttilll&lt;t&lt;l Ror-lar.a 12 Woeka,
All Sholl And Wormod, Up To
Oalt, Bolh Parenti On PrtmiMI,
$250, 014·388-8220.

Wanred To Buy Uotd IAobllo
Hom.. can: 614-448-0175
wantecl To Buy : A.utO 'I &amp; Trucks
Any Condition, 614 -388·9062, Or
614-446 -PART.

Two AKC Rooillerod Chow puppita, one cinMmon female and
one black mate, first 1ho11 and
warmed, 1150 each, 814·8&lt;48·

Wantec:l To Buy : Junk Autos With

Or Wtlhout Motors. Call Larry
LIVtly. 614-388-113Xl.

ASTR0-0RAPH

2210.

FARM S UPPLIE S
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Wanted : Old Wooden' ..Screen

ooora, Any Condition, Size 36 By
82 Call Anytime, 814-UG-2501 ,
814-3117-oa 1~

610

E~1PLOYMENT

Femi Equipment
.

SERVICES

110

car,

I

· 35 Aldhor Hum.r
. 36 F.llta
40 Ttua brelk

Sa

MY WIGi II

Bauon Hound Puppiaa AKC 7
WeokaOid. 81o4-448-3354.
.

C8A814-4~1.

Pay1ng Top Dollar For Junk Cars,
Trucks. &amp; Running Vehtcles To
Dave,

THAT LION IS
LAFFIN' AT

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

I'~~;:E~n:or~g~y:':1~A~D~a~y~6~1:&lt;4· _.
Wanted To

Good Shape, I Parll

tDOftller)

i 3233 illd
claar
Overt..-.ct

Vulnerable: East·West •
Dealer: South
Sou&amp;b
West Nortb Eu&amp;

BARNEY

1080 flionliac Trans -Am Au·
tomatic, 2 Doora, Sunroof

31-~

tAJ9743

530

All Natural Fat Lou Product .
Lose Weig;ht, Feel Bener, In·

180

Building
Supplies

• 8 6 2
a K5

4 llefol'allpl.
51...... I .

• J 10 9 4

FREE colo- cnlog.

550

-

•

t Aaea!Mid

" 5 3

Gal '1004Y 1-800-842-1305.

3 All Slotl Bulldlnga, Ropoa ·
ae11ed, New 40a:80a:U Waa
''15,700 Now ta,l80; 50x100x18
Used Furniture 130 BulaviUe Pike Woo U8,800, Now $18,180;
Refrigerators, Waaher, Dinan.,:: 8011.0118 Wu •42,800 Now
Bunk Bed1, Entertainment Cen· S2!1,!5al, 1-800-745-2885.
tars, Miac. e14-446-4782.
Block, brick, IIWtr ptp11, wind·
YI'AA FURNITURE
ow1, linitiS. ttc. Claude Winter~
814-446-3158
Rio Grande, OH Coli 814-245:
Cluaiiry Housoro&lt;l Furnlrure And
5121.
Appliancu GrHI Deels On
Call!l And Ga"yl FENT-2-&lt;JWN
560 Pita for Sale
And Layaway Also Available.
Fraa Ooliwrr Willlin 25 Milot.

Buy or sell. Riverine Antlquea
112• E. Main Street, on R1 12i
Pomeroy. Hours : M.T.W. io :oci
3 Bedroom houat br rent on Ha- .a.m. to 8 :00 p.m.l Sunday 1:00 eo
6:00p.m. 81•·992-2528 , Ruu
.., ~-~... 304-8112-27117.
Uoore owner.
3 Badroom HouH For Ran~ Balli
&amp; 112, 2 Car Garage, Rio Grande, 540 Miscellaneous
No Pets Inside, References &amp;
Merchandise
Depolit Required, 814 -379-2720
AFTER 8 P.M.
10 mobile home breo WJrn, good
3 B&amp;drooma, With Refriaerator, c:ond. 304-675-2882.
SIDVe. $300/Mo., 814-446-9845.
1987 Ford Tauruo, 240 Homallte
Nice 2 bedroom, buement, ga. cnain saw, 3 Pl. Hitch. 14 Inch
rage, ntce yard, references, de- plows, 3 Pl. HiiCh, ~isc. 30H753208.
po~~ no poll. 304-875-5182.
Nice 2 or 3 bedroom houte in ~ · 2 Rings 14 Cara1 Yellow Gold, 1·
t 114 Carat Cluste r Retail Tag :
rneray, no pe11, 814-892-5858.
S895 Sell: $450: 1- 112 Caral Re18il Tag: S499, Sell: S250. Or Bolli
Small 1 Bedroom Haute Unlur·
nllhad, No Peta, Near K-Mart, 1 $800,814-258-8850.
Window Air Conditioner, $3251
Mo. You Pay Gao &amp; Eloc:lri&lt;&gt;, Call 3 PC. EXERCISE EQUIPMENT:
Belore 9 A.M. Or Allor 9 P.M. Professional OuaHty In Good
Condition, (With One Of Theta
814-446· 1822.
You Can Work Out In The ComUnfurniahed 2 bedroom house. fort And Convenience Of Your
ntce &amp; clean, no inside petl , de· ,Home)' One West Bend 5500
Multi-Gym Rowing t.Aachine $75;
posil required, 81•·992-3090.
One Schwinn Sigmu1.1re E•ercy420 Mobile Homes
cle, Coli New $250 For S150
Cash; One Super Deluxe PTS
lor Rent
Turbo 1000 Exercyclo, Coli New
2 Bedrooms, Furnished. 1 Oueen $1.000 For S375 Cash, Call Earl
Tope, 614-448-0181 .
Size. 1 Full Bed, 2 Baths, Clay
Chapel Road, 614-258-8•08.
4· 12• Competition Sunwoolers
3 bedroom mobile home, 2 barhs Less .~han 4 Months Old, Perfect
in Middleport, no pets, 814 -992:
5858.
11•-448-8848.
Trailer br rent outstde of Pom&amp;r&lt;fY, 814-992-5039.

. 0a B
. 1977 CORVETTE Red Wilh Gray
Whua
y ad With Fr~me And lealher, Loaded. Has 1981 Rear
Ua11re11, Also With Bedding, Spoiler Fruh Engine, Recent
8'4· .. 8-1&amp;.4Q.
Paint, New Exhautt And Mufflers.
New Brakes, Custom Wheels
Wolff Tanning Bod a
With New Tires, Nice Car, $7,900,
TAN AT HOME
Caii814-24S.8248.
buy DIRECT and SAVEl
eornrr.ralfiHomo Unill torn
•• 1111.
Low l!'lonl!1lr
_,.

Kenmore Refrigerator, side-by·
side wl ice maker, 22 cu tt. S125.
30-4-875-3296.

2 Btdroom Houte, 2 Bedroom
Trailer AC, In Gallipolis, 81'-4•8884g F"' ~liormalion .

440

Miscellaneous

Appl iances :

YJS7&amp;2

• 4

oeo.

sc. "'"door.

•

South

1

DOWN .

24 =';:l!nure 2 OICan1fl
3 PlaMtO.IM
'1:1 oav. • lalk

A 83 2

• Q 7 6

Ill LMaure
11M ment

211MoN

t

a

Business and
Buildings

17 Dlah collec:tlon
IIRII·-·20 Conlumed
food

07-4»-116
aAKJ109S5

I

340

==-CM=

" Billy bid
Nortll

•

47 GI'IIIUIIy
50 Gilt rid of

' 7 lnll.a

·11 Mlllt'WI

Sedcleb(ed Hollil, 3 RoglaiOrtCI
·Mtr.oa,
And A 1VI8 Volley 2 : g8o Dodgo Ram Van B-241,
l'wtry'a Groanhouoa: End 01 S.. Hor11, ThorobrtCI
Trailer, 8U- 72,000 lAIIta, $0,000, Con II•
aon F,._ Selol1 Milo Wall 01 _441-otl24.
Saen At Golllpollo Dally Trlburllt,
Rodnay, 814-an.tme.
825 Third Avenue, GolllpoQa
Olio.
Hay &amp;Grain
Pionaar Caasello, AMIFM Radio, 640
18 FIA Par Sell Mualt Search, Exc.1 l - ,_ 11em $80/IDn 1 u• 1802 Ford Atroalar Van . 304 ·
Auro Reveraa, Pull Out Chaaala,
.•,
~
075-1753.
Loll IAora, Book Included, SI20 Morgan forms, FH 35. 30•· 9372018
tDO• Toyora Pick-Up 4 WD, Ex·
81•· 441-04811.
·
llnded Ca~. With Topper, AC, V:Clu:-een~S::.iz;,:e,::O:'"r-lho-ped-ic-M-1-tt-ro-II·J S - in lol4 304-e75-1tl07.
8, 23,000 Miln, $15,500, 614 446-4528.
Se1 And frame. Never UHCI Sdll
TRAN SPO RTAT IO N
In Plulic Coli 1800. Sail S250,
1988 Ford F-150 414 B100 Milos,
o••-ns-23110.
AulD,
Blue, $7300, 304-075-1782
-:O;.;u•..:•;.;n:.::Si.::ze::_W_o_ro_rb_o_d-SI_O_O.; 710 AutOI fOr Slle
"'304-875-4815.
Woaher Dryer Pr. S125: Ralrlg- '&amp;I Ford Tempo, 4 door. ou.,mtlMotorcycle
araror. S75; McCullough Chain· lc, loll roar rail light domaga, 740
:-:-O!Il_"_S&amp;O~;:.::a-:14::-~...:.:..:115.::7.:5;..:
. _ _ 97,000 mllea. S350 080. 814· 1873 Harley Oavid1on Supa:rOuten Size Watarbed Wlih 8 g•g-2311 doya or 814·948-2844 ;lldo, loll ol naw parra, $7000
Drawara, S225; Enterltlnment oveninga.
814-11112-3798.
Cen1ar ••so, ,.o Colla Allor 10 '89 Thunderbird
3.8
~M. 814-4411·2221.
lilre. V-0, ali It model lurbo, PS, 1882 Yamaha Vortgo Low MilePB, AC, 5 speed. power seats age Good COndilion, •• ,300 0110,
Re!rigeralotl, S!OVtl, Wllhtrl and locka, "Grell car, • $5200 81~3271,81.~3099.
.
And Dryera, All Reconditioned neg .. 614 _992-7•78 or 814-949·
1988 250 f'lllaris • Wheeler
And Gaurontaedl SIOO And Up, 2879
$1,100 Or Trade for Good Diri
Will0-. 8t4-8811-8441.
·
Biko, 11•-448-4025.
Roper air concloboner, 7.000 BTU, 1987 Plymoulll Sporlllury 82,000
.h
clad
original mile' $1,800 000.
WI! exttn
warranty, 814-Qg2. 1978 New Yorker, parts or whole
KX -80 Kawuakl, goof'
3858"' 814 -949-2!107.
car. 304-875-2158 aha' 5.
now parta . •800. 304-881,
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upfight. Ron Evan• Enltrpriaaa,
1973 Chevy Malibu 4 Door, I~:::--=-:-~:----Jackaon, Ohio, 1-800-537-11528.
Runs Good. $1100, 01 4-446_. 270·
f'lllarla 350 4x4 4 Whaalar,

•
. . . . . ,....101d ........

Dozera, Loadera, John Deere
•501:, 350, BOO Backhoe., TO 2~
lnl. 877 Ctl, Bonllm hctvotor.
llaaaay ferguaon . tractor. 10
Ford 0.,. rudo, uaad porta. 394·

Help wanted

738-71811.
Tyke riding toy, baby bed
car ltlt, atroller, hlgh· chalr,
ploy-pan. ~75-4541.
Mattre11 And Hn1er Onlr. Fill
OuHn Slzt Wtltrbed Uke New
Ahl&lt; ~ P.ll. 81~13.

.
BERNICE
\

18110 GEO Prlzm, lour dOor, au·
romalic, 14,800 mllta, ·ee Cha'ly
ono D1 11111boci,I1H42-Zl84.
Au., Loana. llaoilr will tn'tngllinancing even if rou have been
turned down etaewhtra. Upton
Equiprnanl Uled Cora. 304-458-

:'0111~:.·~-------

..... for Slle
IIU""1
720 -.

820

Heatlnft

BEDE OSOL

&amp;

.. '?'
f r - n:• Healing And Cooling, •
. ln11111o1oon And Service. EPA
Ctnillad. Roaideoollol, Commercial .
' 114-2fii.I011.

1882 Ford Explorer, 4 Door · · 840
00111 Milta, Loaded, Mull Salli
014-317~.

Plumbing

Ellclrlcat lnCI
'"dr..._lon
..... .......

Wednelday, July 10, 11196

Hydraillic HoMt, To Drdtf.
Slclar'a Equlprnan1 Co. 304-075-

7421 .

630

Llvlltock

CAPRICORN (Dec. U·Jan . 11) Your
$2 and SAS~ to Astro-Graph, c/o this b!!havlor will be scrutinized closely today
newspaper, P.O . Bo• t758, Murray Hill and othara will grade you by the example
Station, New York, NY 10156. Make surp you set. Try lo ~eep lhis in mind.
to state your zodiac !Sign.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 211-Fib. 11) Chances
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) You will have lor material succeos lool! good today, but
good luck·H you maintain a positive ani· you musl rememller to ac:IIIIO'Medge and
tude today. II you believe you can do reward help given to you by associates .
aornethlng, success w~l be easy .
PISCEB (Fib. ~ch 20) The social
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 221 Others might arrangements you make loclay ahould
have to COII)pllle lor attention today, but include friends with whom you always
you will not. You can stand out In any ·feel comfortable. DO lhlnga you Hke with
group wfihout•having to ahow off. Smile pals you like.
·
and be youi'MII.
ARIES (lltrch 21·Aprll 11) You can
LIBRA (lapt. 23-0ct. 23) Do nol let inCrease your , _ by tal&lt;ing 1he in~
material ..._ inllu811Cf your dec:ialona tiallve. VIsualize a IIP8Cific amount aa

I

You can ICIIieVe your goals In the year . today. Intangible and aealhellc I actors your target and go for the guatol
ahead withOUt laldng urolli:II'I'Y risks. lhoulelallo be taken into corwlderalion.
TAURUS (April zo.Miy 20) Fcienels with
Eatabliah 8 game plan and stiCk lo lt. sc:ofiP\0 (Oct. 24-HoY. 22) An acqualtl· disagreeable dispositions won't be' able
Don't try -to pin tile tall on the dOnkey
whO hal never lmpreSied you hal to stay angry aroiJnd you loday. You wiN
.
While bill ldlolded.
· .
alwtya hald you in high regard. Today knOw whaf 10 do 10 c:llatm ~ lhe 111011 • : l
CANCI!R (June 21-Juty 22) You could you might~ lhia fKI for yourMII.
dllllciAI plelple.
be exllemeti loftunlllllldly In ytJAlllflll" SloQmAIIIUI (Jio¥. 23-0ec. 21) Your QeiiiNI (IIIIW 21..,_ 20) A cortiCienclel
particularly with I pe1'80I1 .,.,.,_PIC~
wil be righl on targal , lioul frilnd who it...._ Ill~.,.
whoa" polllica and yaluea are In sync today. H you get a atrorig feeling aboul eent bul'dlnlwil do ewcytllng he 011he
with •oura. cano~r, treat youraeH to a row •on IIIIIW rglhould be &lt;~elM. adcJ1owl. can to
you ~ Wyou Ill IIIII per· .
,,
__, ..... .......: " ·
. ~know .........
need.
.
•
1
birhlay gift. Send for your Aau..--.r..,... _,... •
- •
, '
.

lance

sea.

~~an·a

prediclion8 lor the year ahead by mailing

and . . . Colvin - . and

Arizcno jaonl. loll or glfla . .
achool. AI Tho Thrlh Shop,
Main SUN~ Fo11111oy, ·

ali.ncn,

*

Milt

I

;'i

I

.!

-

'~--~--------------------------------------------------------------------~---

,.
•

.

..

�..

) '

't}
.....

...

,._4,.
Pomeroy • Middleport, .Ohio

Page 10·• The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, July 9, 1996

'!

'E~~Ey-o~ ?_n~!.~~!~~~~~ ..~~~~~ht :{
· The ~l~v~~IWMI

and Leland and Ctystal .Payton. The
. This ts
ason for the back · covrr ts nostalgic for.b~by boomers
· yard cookout. Around Kentucky, and thetr parents: a p81nbng of a '50s
where I hve, most folks &amp;et the gnlls dad. with apron, gloves and white
out by early May, tf not sooner, but chef's cap, smiling toward a '50s
wtth_the u~usually cool, wet weath- mom, dressed like June Cleaver,
e~ this spnng, that wasn 't been pos- welcoming guests to her beautifully
stble.
.
.
appomted patto table.
My own httle gnU, a spartan and
"Patio Daddy-0" brought back
· old-fashioned affatr, cooks wtth char, memories of my family's first grill,
coal, not gas, and ts gerung rusty acquired sometime in the mid-' 50s. It
from the nuns. Any spell of hot was an elaborate stainless steel affair
weather :- unpleasant for other activ- with cut-out spaces for bowls of bartiles-:- ts perfect [or cooktng out.
becue sauce, stearrung ears of com
Thts year there s a new httle book and so fonh. It also came with the
fm ,the outdoor chef: "P~Uo D~d~; req~isite apron, gloves, chef's cap
0. 50s Rectpes wtth a 90s Twtst
(whtch my brother and I used for play

cooking).
';1
. Friends o.f my pare~ began an
mtcrgenerattonal "patiO pany"
around the time that they built a fancy brick barbecue in thefr suburban
back yard. The party continues and so
does the name, and three generations
of chtldren have been admonished to
beware the sizzling grill.
· ' ·
"Patio food of the '50s was like
Prozac for the tongue and tummy,"
the writers declare in their introduction. "The daddy-domintited. patio
gastro-bash was an exereise in gustatory savoir faire. in shbtt, a ritual
signifying the man's ability not only
to bring home the bacon, but to cook

-----Society scrapbook

GRADE A • "Select" means Is that a particular beef contains
less Internal let marbling than beef graded either choice or prime.
True, select has less saturated fat·- as well as less juiciness,
mouth appeal, etc.

OUT-OF-TOWN VISIT
Jean and Norman Wood and lona
. Brickles recently visited Sue, Steve,
. Jeffery. and Michael Bricldes of Germantown, Md.
While there they attended ·the
graduation of their grandson, Jeffery,
from Seneca Valley High School at
the DAR Constitution Hall in Wash·
ington, D.C. They also auended a
graduation cookout in his honor at the
Seneca Creek State Park.
The Woods, Jean, Norman and
Ronnie, also recently visited Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Wood, Carrie, Cathy
and Donna of Columbus. going espe- ·
cially for the graduation of their
granddaughter and niece, Cathy, from

•

In 1980 the U.S. Depanment of
Agriculture renamed "good" beef
select. According to Connie Crun·
kleton of USDA's agricultural marketing se"ice, consumers had been
asking for leaner beef; the industry
could produce it, but consumers
were percei,ing " that good was
not quality beef when all it meant
was that it contained less mar·
bling."
Initially, an absence of fat
appeals to most consumers, says
Marlys Bielunski, test kitchen
director for the National Li'e Stock
and Meat Board based in Chicago.
"Most people think select beef
looks so nice and red and they
think it will gi'e them the taste
they waRt," says Bielunsld. But,
she adds, the flavor often comes up
shon:
At our back yard barbecue my
husband and I found our select
steaks weren't as toothsome as
choice rib-eyes. Bielunski says
you can't expect the select beef to
perform as well on the grill.
While the cooking times for
choice and select aren't different,
she says, the appearance after
cooking is different. "A mediumrare select will look well-done
even after y'ou cut into it."

Meat, poultry inspection
changes seen saving lives
By NANCI HELLMICH
USA TODAY
Sweeping changes in meat and
poul!ry safety rules announced by
PreSident Clinton on Saturday will
save lives. says a national food technolog ist and a Washington, D.Cbascd consumer group.
"In the long run, the rules h.-e the
potential of saving li'es and reducing
incidence of foodbome illness," said
Frank F. Busta, presiden.t of the Institute of Food Technologists and head
of the depanment of food science and
nutrition at the Uni-.rsity of Minnesota, St. Paul.
The Agriculture Depanment safe-

"Patio Daddy~ Burge~," "Fab~;:'
lous Fifties Fned Chtcken" an""
"Siab-0-Fun 'Bilrbequed Meat:!'•

Imay

Ohio Lottery

,.

NL shuts out
·AL in·All-Star
contest

Pick 3:
o-7-2
Pick 4:
2-6·7·2
Buckeye 5:
4-19-23-27-34

Sports on Page 4

Loaf."
_;J
: Let's (ace it?Most of these reci~

explain why so many _agloi'f

boomers find themselves eounbng fat;
.grams and calories. Back in the '50s ~

;people didn't care as much ab&lt;Jui:.
those things, and the meals filled chil-:;
ldren with red meat, sugar, Jell-0 ancJ:!:
1Kooi:.Aid. But~ then, as the authors !:
as.k: Why ts hfe worth hvmg? Cer-.":
tam things can get you through the t
rough times. The World .~cries ..,;
Chuck Berry records ... Twthght:
Zone"re-runs.:.anddessert...

. ,·:

•

"•
•

e

Independence High School. The cer- demonstrations.
A people's choice award will be
emony was held at Veterans Memorial Auditorium in Columbus.
· given but the quilts will not be
judged.
However, quilts will be for sale
QUU..TING SHOW
The Pleasants County Quilt Club, with a commission to go to the club.
· NQA Chapter 91 of St. Marys, West Those interested in displaying are
· Virginia will present a quilt show asked to send register thei~ quilts with
Sept. 13, 14 and 15.
Zepora's Quilt Shop, 116 Lafayette
Quilts from Ohio and West Vir- St .. St. Marys, W.Va. 26170.
ginia will be displayed, and residents
of the two states are invited to exhibSCHOLARSIDP RECIPIENT
it.
Bryan Colwell, a graduating
The show will have the usual cat- senior from Meigs Higll School, is
egories: piecing, applique, whole the recipient of a 1996 DeVry Insticloth, baby quilts, novelty quilts, tute half-tuition scholarship to DeVry
machine and hand made di,isions. Institute ofTechnology in Columbus.
There will a small venders' mall and
Colwell is the son of Frank and

Pamela Colwell.
The announcement was made :
recently by Dr. Galen Graham, pres- :
jident of DeVry/Columbus. The schol.' •
•arship, valued at up to $8,300, coy- ~
ers tuition payment
·~

.,

SENIOR DINNER
There will be a dinner at the-:
Senior Citizens Center, Thursda~ ..with serving from 5 to 6:15 p.m. : ,-:;
Cost for the dinner is $4 a person·.;:
Following the meal, Billy and Reg':
will entertain with old favorites ang ~:
country songs. A free will offeri~$~
will be taken for the musicians. The"l
·public is in,ited to attend.
' :::

..,

en tine

Vol. 47, NO. 52

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
· Sentinel News Staff
Something new, called Town and Country Expo '96, is being planned for
September at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
.
. . The Emphasis of Expo '96 is to show off the good things of the Bend area
· :- everything from agricultll!'e to antique tractors, from exotic animals to
live entenainment, from vintage cars to community clubs.
: · . The program will feature displays of local products and the talents of local
· craftsmen. It is geared to depicting a way of life which eombines the bene·
fits.of living in a rural area where then: is easy access to small and large towns,
according to its backers.
.
.
. The eve~t is scheduled for Saturday, Sept. 21, from I0 a.m. to 8 p.m. and
Sunday, Sept. 22, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. It is co-chaired by .Ken11y Buckley
and Hal Kilee.n, witb Karen Werry serving as secretary, and Addalou Lewis

as treasurer.
•
herbs and dried' flowers and a flea market.
Its goal is to promote Meigs County thrpugh a~knowledging the'family,
There will also be antique cars and motorcycles, new cars and trucks, exotachie-.ments of residents!and the contributions oftlubs, acti,ities and tal- ic animals and horses, contests for the largest pumpkin, the biggest car' of
ents of its citizenry. There is no admission 'charge.
com, and the tallest com stalk,' and a variety of comxnerc1al exhibits promoting
"We have a lot to be proud of if we only take the time and effon to see things a'ailable in Meigs C9unty.
what we have to offer," said Werry, in announcing Expo '96.
There will be no admission·charge. •
·
She said that e'eryone contacted belie,es this is a wonhwhile project and
Sponsors are needed and a spon sor board will be placed at the entrance.
have quickly joined in assisting to promote the region.
Anyone interested in contributing to the e'ent may contact Mary Powell at
It all staned wtth a gr~'!P of concerned citizens headed by the Big Bend .. 992-2622.
·
'
A~ttque Tractor and Equ,pment Club, and supponed by the Metgs County
Others se"ing on the planning committee area Addalou Lewis. Carolyn
Fatr Board and other .toterested area restd~nts.
.
· ftitchie, Jim Watson and Kenny Buckley of the Meigs County Fair Board;
. Planned actlVlttes tnclude an anbque tractor pull on Saturday, h'eenter· Dale Kautz, D. Brewer and Dallas Weber; the Antiqae Tractor Club; Roy
ta1~ment through both days at the htllstde stage, Sunday church servtces, a Holter, theRe,. William Middleswanh. Sharon Hawley, Eugene Underwood
qutlt show by Bunny Kuhl, a dog show by John _Krawsczyn, a craft show, and Brenda Merritt.

Rutland· Council approves
crackdown on unpaid bills

gets nod ·

Water/sewer
shutoffs began
over week,nd,
official notes

.in Sena.te

·,·WASHINGTON (AP) - With
. e)ectiOJJ·Year pressure building, most
Senate Republicans sided with
~mocrats in approving a 90-cent
iocrease in the hourly minimum
~agF for IQmillion American worker$.

Packagelf

Breast

seedless
Grapes

Boneless

Porlt &amp;oln

One-Get One
r:.q1u;u

or Lesser Vdlue

ty plan, which in,olves scientific testing of meat, updates a 90-year-old
system in which inspectors looked,
touched and smelled for bacteria-contaminated carcasses.
Under the new system, called
Hazard Analysis and Critical Control
Points, companies in every step of
meat and poultry production must
identify the points in their production
where contamination is most likely to
occur and then create plans for preventing it or removing or killing the
contaminants. A similar approach
was initiated last December for
seafood.

U.S.D.A SELECT
CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI, MOUNTAIN
~

f

,,

Diet Pepsi or
Pepsl~ola

WhOle

Boneless
Rlberes
PoUikl

· : ·The Clinton administration hailed
. "tUesday's 74-24 vote, and Senate
MajorityrLeader Trent Lou, R-Miss.,
CO!!Ceded Democrats had scored a
p:O,I(tical victory but only at the cost
of IYil!.~ ~~~ tl)o S.t;nate for 'more than
three mO!Khs.
.
:'",!illl6;•c!tJiiiiOn\&lt;alfliili1isfriiioO._tiu.
campaigned vigorously for the wage
increase an4 has ' chided· Bob Qole,
Presictentdinion's likely oppOnent in
November, for not speaking out in
behalf of it The minimum wage issue
bedeviied.Dole's final days as Senate'
majority , leader, with Democrats
blocking m~JVement of other · bills
because of GOP reluctance to take up
the minimum wage.
·. ·Dole's campaign, in a statement,
s~id he had made clear his S\lppott of
" ·i'f.liise .i.n the wage ·and said Clinton
had ignQred the issue in his first two
y.ears and was now "playing maxi·
ll}Uffi politics with miriimum wage."
· Twenty-se,en Republicans joined
all 47 Senate Democrats in approvingihe legislation. It would increase
sAVORING THE MOMENT- President Clinton and Labor' Secthe minimum wage in two steps from
retary
Robert Reich prepared to meet reporter• Tuesday at the
$4.25 per hour to $5.15 by nexl July
White House to dlacu11 the minimum wage. Ths Senate approved
and offer businesses $11 billion in tax
a 90-cent Increase in the minimum wage, raising the prospect of
breaks over eight years.
.
bigger paychecl!l for more than 10 million Americana.• (AP)
The tax breaks in the House ver•
sion tota1 $7 billion o-.r the same ed the~ increase and 138 opposed it.
. Moments before t~e (inal Senate
periqd and differences will have to be ·
"Yiljl'd have to say they (Democ, Yote, five Republicans joined
W!Jrked uut between the two chll!'l· rats) ha&amp;e been successful in grid- ·Democrats in defeating, 52-46, an
~rs before the entire package can be
lockint\lhe Senate and.'you have to amendment that would have exempt·
5ent to !he White House for President give tiMIIn credit for thai," Lou said . Cd newly hired w9rkers and small
Cllnton's signature.
ill an interview. " But in the proc'ess business employees from the wage
: The defection rate in the Senate they're missing a lo~ of very impor· increase. Clinton had threatened to
w.as even higher thail in the House in tant issues that need to be addressed veto any bill with the exemptions.
May, when 93 Republicans suppon- for the American people."

.

'

Meigs will be ' ~top
9n Hollister's . y
lour of southern Ohio

shutoffs currently being scheduled for
Prosecuting Attorney John Lcntes •
these customers.
has been consulted on the situation,
"We·shut off one of these delin- ·. and a letter will be drafted to the
quent customers o'er the weekend," property owner concerning the prop·
said Eskew.
.eny owner's responsibilny .
In routine financial review by
• heard a report from Dave Davis
council, the- following 'illage fund of the village maintenance .dcpanBy TOM HUNTER
balances were reported for the end of ment . Davis updated co uncil on
Sentinel News Staff
June b¥ Eskew: General Fund, blacklop work in the village.
Delinquent water/sewer customers $4,488.30; Civic Center, $1,873.21;
• approved a motion to pay 25 pcron th,e village system in RittlanA will Police, $1,767.34; Law Enforcement. cent of the total costs on placement
either pay up or be shut offbeginnipg $287.33; Street, $3,056.72; Higbway, of blacktop on the alleyway hctwccn
immediately, members of Rutland $3,903.82;.Water, $6,078.26; Sewer, Peoples Bank an}! the Rutland Fire
Village Council weed unanimously $4,283.46; Sewer Debt, $146.48; Department.
· discussion's on .the issue dur· Utility Deposit, $8,567.21; Replace• approved mmutes from the June
ru~!da~(s regul:lll' meeting at the menl Fund, $19,588.37.
25. meeting.
.,. ~.:,,1 ~--~••~;.ouncit~ .:. •
• approved purchase of an air,con. • approved the June mayor's repon ditiooer for·\he sewe• plant, with the
~cei,ed past
and shut off in the·amount of$2,750, with the vii- cost not to e~cccd $fJOO. It was notnoti_ces in· the village during recent lage retaining $2,070 after payment ed that a refrigerator has been donal·
weeks, according to Village of the state share of $680.
cd for the plant.
Clerkfl'reasurer Rosemary Snowden
• discussed pending construcljon
Present were counciI members
Eskew.
•
of new sidewalk in an area of side- Dick Petty. Danny Dav1s. Gladys
Money on these delinquent bills is walk damaged by a propeny owner Barker, Judy Denney, Marie Birch·
being recovered by the village, with along Main Street near Depdt Street. field and Vera Martin. Mayor Jn Ann
Eads and Eskew.

Patrol to deter~ine if Pomeroy
man's death linked to accident
. the report before making a ruling, Fla .. rolled over in a right curve. strikMcGlone said. He added that he ing Heilman 's car and another car drishould hear back from the· coroner ven by Robert S. Craw ford , 45, Ne lsonville.
within several days.
According to the patrol, Heilman
Blackburn . who was injured but
was taken by LifeFiight to the intennot
treated in the acciden t. was cited
sive care unit at Grant Medical Cenby
the
patrol for failure to yield.
ter, Columbus, after a tractor-trailer
McGlone said the check with the
Cecil C. Heilman, 37400 Hemlock struck his car on U.S . 33 near
coroner 's offi ce JS part of a fo llowup
Grove Road, died in a Canton nurs· Pomeroy.
ing home., The coron.er's office has
in,estigmion. and the patrol gener.alHeilman, ' Meigs County native ly has. up to a year to determine- if
asked the patrol:S Gallia-Meigs Post,
which investigated tho May I thn;e- and retired Diebold !ric. executive ,new information may be connected to
vehicle acc.ident irwolving Heilman, who al~o maintained a residence in a fatality -related accident ,
for a copy of its repon on the inci- Canton, was nonhbound when a
"As f~r as any additional charges
dent, said Lt. Wayne McGion~. the southbound rig owned by Highway arc concerned , the package of inforExpress, Fon Smith. Ark ., and dri,eri mation would •go the Meigs County
post's commander.
The coroner is expected to re,iew by Billy W. Blackburn, 38, Live Oak, pro&gt;ec utor' s office for further
review." he said .
.' The State Highway Patrol will
await a ruling from the Stark Coun·
ty coroflllr to determine if an 8.3-yearold Pomeroy man's death Tuesday
may have been linked to injuries he
suffered in a Mei~s County traffic
accident.

Suspect in fireworks
.fatalities may have
to pay own defense
I

The Racine United ME~thcxu:~t
Church Board
do endorse and encourage voters
of the

SUPE~

&gt;liE

Rulfles
POtato Cll/ps

10f OFF LABEL
li'EGULAIHCfNT ONLY

Clorox

Bleach

Local School District
to utilize their voting privilege.

Please vote "YES" on the bond issue
to be held
6th!!!
Paid ror by the
Soulhcm Local Buiklinc Committee
IGm PhilliJl', T... uwa

opmerlt prQfessionals. businespeoHall must prove
pie and local officials from Athens,
Hocking, Meigs. Monroe, Morgan,
Perry and Washington counties ha'e
·
Ull•t·'"
been invited to attend the breakfast
lt1l'' II
II
and forum , Hollister spokesperson
IRONTON (AP) - Defendants
Lito Ramirez said.
are required to reimburse the county
"It's a very Qptn discussion ... lhey
for legal fees if it turns· out they
will tell us whJI! their local concerns
Nancy Holllatar
weren't entitled to a public defender,
and issues arc and the lieutenant govand thai may happen in Todd Ha(l's
ernor gi,es advice, gathers infonna- munities.
case.
tion and takes it back )o Columbus to
The package was designed-to spur
Hall, 24, of Proctorville, is
.act upon, along with the concerns . investment in new machinery and charged with eight ~ounts of involfrom other partS of !he state, in her · · help businesses clean. up "brown- untary manslaughter in the fire at
next job bill," he Said.
field" sites for use for further eco- Ohip River Fireworks. Eight people
This economic development tour nomic development ·
policies died and, 12 were injured when Hall
will be Hollister's. IOth since becom• were also targeted at helping big allegedly set a fireworks display on
ing the state's second-in-command itt cities undertake ultlan core redevel- fire on July 3.
1994, but her first In southeast Ohio. ' opment and rural communities create
La~nce County f'flinmon P~
"She uses these trips not only to
industrial parks.
,
Judge W. ~hard Wahon said when
gather information ... but to gerfccdHgllister's ecoaomic development he learned of Hall's mental state and
back on Jobs Bill m to see what ts dutie$ also include advising Gov. unemployment, tie auignCd puhiic
worked and what hasn't and tighten George Voinovich on workforce defender Richard Wolfson to Hall so
thil)gs up to bec'!me more effi · t,"
development issues including· as not to jeopardize the case.
Ramirez said.
employment, training and Ohio's
·.flail had a ll)botomy followi~g a
Hollister· was .cllief arcbi
f School-to-Work initiative. In addi- '1987 skateboard ilccident.
Jobs Bill of, an ~onomic develoP- tion, she is in charge of restructuring . But unless Hail c:an prove he's
~on·projec:l.
ment package that specifically tar- Ohio's entire workforce develop- indigent. he will have to pay liis legal
~~om: and economic -&lt;level- }eted disttcsscd wban and rural.com•
mentsystem.
' fees himself., Walton said. Public

B,JAARON MAR$HALL
G!Jinnett' News Service
· COLUMBUS - Lt. Go'. Nancy
Hollister will be back on her home
turf next week as s~e caps a two-day
ectinomic de,elopment swing
~rQugh Southeast Ohio wilh a stop
in :Marietta.
' the Marietta nati'e and fonner
mayor has also planned a stop in
Mejgs County for Monday.
Holjister. will host several meet··
ings at Washington State Community College auditorium on Tuesday. At
· 9 a.m. she ,will host a breakfast reecplion. for participants of her econom-icilworkforce · development for,um.
That forum, which staits at Ill am .
anit'i~ Qptn to the public, wj!l focus
on; discussions of regional cconiimic/w'.orkfon:o development issues and
chil)enaes.
• Hollister's Meigs stop includes a
to~: of the Carleton School and
Moiis Industries at 9 a.m., and a vis: • iuo:downtown Pomeroy It 10 a:m.
: : .to·~)e~ Y,:Ork on.the villige's revi- .
'•

•

•

'I

fo O.nnett Co. Newapeper,

Promoting Meigs: expo slated for September

.vyage hike

(5-7-4.8. AVC.I
RIB HALF, OR LOlli HALF

35eenta

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July .10, 1996

.M
inimum
. '

~

Clear and chilly tonight,
lowe In the 40e •. Thursday,
sunny. Highs In the 80s.

•

•

a1

2 s.ctlon., 12 Pllgea

••

When selecting beef for the
grill, understand meanings
of 'select' and 'choice'
By ANNE BYRN
The Nashville Tennessean
John strode confidently to the
kitchen . A hea'y brown grocery
bag was cradled in his arms. He
rested the bag on the counter, dug
through the contents and carefully
pulled out two giant rib-eye steaks.
My husband, who subsists on .
pasta and 'eggies with me and the
little ones, had succumbed to
ancestral hunter-gatherer urges. He
was prepared to slap beef on the
grill, and he had purchased the
largest steaks he could find .
"They're select," he said,
beaming.
"Yum," 1 replied, sarcastically.
Indeed these tomato-red, thick ,
glistening steaks would appeal to
most any carnivore . But I knew ..
John had been duped by the sim·
pie word "Select," just as other
consumers are. He understood this
to mean the butcher had deemed
these steaks better than others in
the case.
But what "selec t" really means
is that this panicular beef contains
less internal fat marbling than beef
graded c1ther choice or prime.
True, select has less saturated fat
- as well as less juiciness, mouth
appeal , etc.

' Recipes in this book lnclu4o! .

'•

fRdfgency tO aVOid
bel·ng hl•t
bl.,

ne

.

·:: :

..

"""""

....,

'

--

•

$

--- - - -

g.

~ ·6

Sheriff's wife
pleads to 2
theft charges

ATHENS (AP) ......: The wife of
the Athens County shctiff has
pleaded guilty to two felony counts
defenders in Ohio can be reimbursed
of theft, bcr defense attorney said.
up to $40 per hour for out-of-court
Nancy Hicks. wife of Sheriff
time and $50 per hour for in-court
John
Hicks. also agreed on Tues time.
day
to
pay back $14.500 taken
County •Prohate Court records
from
a
special
deputies fund and an
show that Hall 's estate is estimated at
Athens
insurance
compan y.
$160,000. That includes the $33,000
Mrs. Hicks had been ind1c1cd on
he recei,es yearly as part of a liabil44 ~ounts of theft. forgery and mis·
ity seulemeat, $1,500 in personal
~ of a cred it card . Her trial in
propeny and a home he bought for
Athen s County Common Pleas
$125,000 in the Orange Gro'c subCourt had been scheduled to begin
division in 1994.
•
today.
Some media. accounts reponed
Defense attorney Bob Toy said
Hall's·Jawsuit netted his family $18
hi s client faces up to 3- 1/2 years in
million. But one of Hail's attorneys prison. Mrs. Hicks wiU return to
said those reports are misleading.
coun after a pre-sentencing invesNorman White represented Hall on
tigation. No return date was sel.
his suits against lhe skateboard manThe mpney was stolen during
ufacturer and West Virginia Uni,er1993-95 from the fund, which is
sity Hospital.
''
used to purchase equipment for the
"There is a world of difference county,'s special deputies, and the
· between a judgrrient and a settle- R.C. Whitmore anq Co. insurance
ment," White said. "Aju&lt;!sc can say agency, where she once was
I have been awarded SIS million in employed.
·
coun loday; but the setdement is what
Telephone messages se~Wn1
, I can get from the defendant. "
·
comment were left Tueiday"~
1
White said the $33,000 a year Athens County prosecuto-'s office
reported iri court records is "preuy . for Special Prosecut :i ~ky Cos$,
clo5e" to Hall's settlement.

.~ -------- -·-- --·-- -----.,- -----·

- - - - - -i

•!

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