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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page A 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, May 8, 1995

DR.OOTT

Museums .---Hands-on lab---. Tachycardia syndrome
~~~· linked to medicine
.
take on a
new look
'By PETER U. G01T, M.D.

DEAR DR. GO'IT: Wllat C1D
you tell me about POTS - poslll·
raJ orthostatic tachycardia syndrome 7 Information on the cause
and treatment would be greatly
appreciated.
DEAR READER: Sometimes,
in the presence of heart disease or
drug therapy for cardiovascular ailments people experience a sudden
drop ln blood pressure whi:n they
quickly sit up or stand. This causes
weakness, Ugbtheat!OOness or fainting, associated with tachycardia
(rapid pulse, as the heart Uies to
compensate by pumping more
blood to the brain ~ainst BJllvity).
The causes of thts syndrome are
legion, 'but the end result is the
same: postural (orthostatic) low
blood pressure with compensa!IIIY
tachycardia - that Is far more pronounced than the usual iigbtheadedness we all may occasionally
experience upon rapid standing.
In patients talcing medicine to
reduce blood pressure, the syndrome can be prevented by a simple reduction in the dose of the
drug, under medical supervision.
For those wbo are not medicat·
ed, the thempy is somewhat more
Uicky and complicated. Regular
exercise will belp by toning up the

EDITOR'S NOTE- Thoae
hulwarlu of tradltlqn, the
workl'• mueuiiiOI, are •nderplaa wlde·ranglna expaaaloaa,
offerlna entertainment , and
pnnet fOjld with theaters, audl·
torlums, shopplag and under·_
around parJdnK.
By JOSEPH VEITZMAN
Assoclaterde Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) -Museums
!hroughout the centuries were hallowed repositories of history and_
culture, bringing the pa,st to new
generations with virtually mono·
lithic rules and programs.
1
Not any more.
In a matter or just a few years,
museums worldwide have been
undergoing uemendous chanses,
and at such a rapid pace that their
usual slaid cbaraCief and solemnity
bave been changed for good.
The basic dictionary definjtion
or a muSeum is "im institution,
building or room for preserving
and exhibiting artistic, bisiOrical or
scientific objects."
.
And indeeil lbey did, amassing
arcbaeological objects, works of
ar~ documents and other samples
or' the past and preserving them for
scholars and students, b'istorians
and the seneral pubtlc.
But as coUections increased and
demw1ds grew, ,the original struc·
tures were supplemented by new
balls and galleries and even whole
wings.
It didn't take long for auditoriums, or sculptUre gardens, to make
· their appearance, as at the Museum
of Modem Art in New York, the
Hirschhorn Museum in Washington D.C., the Museum of Modem
Art in Fon Lauderdale, Fla., or the
Fondation Maegbt in Vence,
France, among others.
Even faster was the uansforma·
tion of what were little more than
stalls inside the museums, selling
postcards and posters, into small
shops, then stores, and lately yeri •
table deparunent-store complexes
selling reproductions of works of
art, jewelry, textiles and clothing,
toys, books, stationery, and even
household and decorative items.
Modest ·snack counters became
coffee shops, then full-blown
restaurants, followed by gourmet
menus; arid places to meet socially
for lunch or dinner. And finally
museums began catering and renting their balls and galleries as the
settings for parties and book
Wlllouncements. '
Also, small rooms for lectures
and recitals became auditoriums for
·discussion panels, audiovisual presentations and film showings,
·deriving shortly thereafter into
facilities for courses and seminars,
and whole departments for art and
history classes and theaters seating
hundreds.
On the occasion of the opening
San Francisco Museum
of the
of Modern Art, The New York
Times' art critic Michael Kimmelman noted last January that,
''Museums have increasingly ·
become multipurpose emporiums,
places to shop and eat. Tbey
depend on tbe income they get
from these businesses, and their
buildings are designed according-

\

y·It supplements more traditional
sources of funds from government
subsidies and corporate and individual donations and admission
fees.
New installations and facilities
at a museum complex undoubtedly
attraCt a larger public, and tourists,
· said George Passwell, a spokesman
for the Meuopolitan .Museum · of
Art in New York.

By FRANK FISHER
· Associated Press Writer
CENTRALIA, III. (AP)
Dhananjay Natu came all the way
from India to Jearn to fly American-style, mortgaging his apartment to pay the $18,000 tuition and
leaving bls fiancee bebind for a
year.
It's worth i~ Natu says, because
be can get more done at Airgo
Inc.'s flying school than be could
in twice the time back home in .
Bombay - and at about a third of
the price.
"Hardly we have two aircraft
per flying school there, and the
number of students who wisb to fly
(is often) more tban 20," the 27year-old form~r manager said. "So
we hardly got an hour or two in a
week to fly. By tbe time you take
your lessons, go to the sky and stan
recollecting what you've been
taught, it's time to land."
Airgo, which bas Uained hundreds of pilots at Cenuatia Municipal Airport for more tban 20 years,
is seeing many foreign students
like Natu at its school in the rolling
prairies and cornfields of southern

kin~~~~~~~!f::~
bad SOOie
1 shepa•sed
unique
thai sbe
Oil

tome?
DEAR RE~~R:Absolutely.
Most cases of baH ·s (bad breath)
are caused by bacten . action on ·
food particles that are caught
between the tcetb. It is entirely possible that your Iarmer panoer rransmilted large numbers of bacteria til
your mouth during your intimacy.
See a dentist to discover if you
have 1.) a dental abscess that is
unrelated to your past fling, 2.)
signs of py.orrhea ("trench
moutb," a common Infectious
mouth disorder), or 3.) a problem
with food particles between your
own teetb.
Your problem might be solved
by a course of antibiotics, coupled
with renewed attention to dental
hygiene. The dentist can advise
you.
Copyright 1995 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRJSE ASSN.
(For information on how to
communicate elecuonicaliy with
this columnist and others, contact
America Online by calling 1-800827-6364, ext. 8317.)

.illinois.
The school, with a fleet ofl8
planes, graduates 80 to 100 students in a typical year, owner
Leslie Erb said.
This year's student body
includes five students from Indonesia. two from India, two more from
Bangladesh, and several others
from Portugal, France, Britain,
Andorra and New Zealand.
Other aviation schools across
the counuy also are seeing a rise in
the number of foreign students.
Some, like Airgo, have been
aggressively marketing their progrwns overseas.
Foreign students are "clearly
the fastest growin~ section of flight
training in Amenca \oday," said
Jim Coyne, president of the National Air Transportation Association.
Coyne estimated there's been at
least a 10 percent annual growth
over tbe. past five years in foreign- ·
crs learning to fly in the United
States. Today, about 15 percent of
the enrollment is foreign, be said,
and this year's enrollment likely
will increase 25 percent over last
year.

On~

big reason is that the more
than 2,000 U.S. flying schools are
much cheaper than their overseas
counterparts.
Stephen Ash, a native of England who is Airgo's cbief-insuuctor, said a 250-bour commercial
multiengine rating would cost
about $90,000 in his home counuy,
while Airgo offers the same license
for $18,000. That includes six
months accommodations and pickup and dropoff in St. Louis. Tbe
rating is a prerequisite to a job with
an airline.

EASTERN SCIENCE - Tbe Eastern Local School District is
te.acbi!'g children · about science through hands-on land Jab,
R1vervtew second grade teacher Lea Ann King said. "{he students
studied a nature path, bird houses, bird reeders, growing frogs,
herb gardens and use of indoor and outdoor thermometers. The
projects are funded by slate grants. (Top) Riverview sixth graders
Amber Baker and Chris Barringer measure the growth of vegetables in a hydro-greenhouse. (Middle) Riverview fifth graders
Danielle Rucker, Rachael Hupp and Thomasina White tested
which plants grew the fastest. (Above) Riverview second graders
Morgan Weber, Casey Smith, Charis Collins and .Jamie Reel
watch the growth of butterrues, which were still in the pupa stages• .
(Sentinel photos by George Abate)

5 days only May 8th to 12th.
10 a.m. to 5 p.m ..
• All Wrapping Paper &amp; Cards. 70%
• Southwest Blankcts ................ 50%
• T~Shirts ............................. :..... 40%
• Selected Gift Items ................ .40%
MARIA SHARP

10% OFF HAND CRAFTS

Sharp birth

• Country Cubbards • Shadow Boxes
•Shelves

. . Mike and Pam Sharp of near
IuppeR PJams announce die bitth- .-1-1- -~-·-of their nrst cbitd, a daughter,
•
Maria Christine, born April 7 at
Holzer Medical Center. She
weighed eight pounds, three
ounces.
Grandparents are_Richard and
Eileen Mees of Darwin ·and Glendon and Patricia Sbarp of Ironton.
Great·grandparents are Heuer
Houck of Pomeroy anll Mary
Akers of Ironton.

BANKEONE.
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Member FDIC

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Pick 4:
7380
BuckeyeS:
2-5-9-24·34

Sports, Page 5

Vol. 46, NO. 7
Copyrlght1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, May 9, 1995 .

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. N~per

Council's goal:·

Improve quality of life in Middleport
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel Neww starr
Middleport Village Council
took two steps to improve the vii!age's quality of life at its regular
meeting Monday !light.
Council unanimously approved
the first reading of a revised build' ing code ordinance.
,
Last fall, Councilwoman Beth
Stivers pushed legislation that
would bave increased the rules put
·on landlords and levied a fee to pay
for inspections. After complaints
from landlords, the new rules were
tabled.

"I want to see a better quality of exempt from these rules, since they
life of Middleport. It's a needed will be grandfatbered. But, all
improvement" Slivers sai!!. pf the _ dwellin_gs mgst bave smoke detecnew rules. "Tbe rental properlies tors, Stivers said.
•
and tbe village as a whole needs to · . Originally, landlords were upset
take notice."
about a $25 fee placed on the land·
Last nigbt, the 11ew ordinance lords each time a renter moved out,
was unveiled, nuiking cc;&gt;ncessions Stivers said. The fee now will be
from the original ordinance.
$12 a year, for each rental uniL A
Some wording removed in tbe rental unit is considered an ·apart·
new ordinance included: not requir· meat, not just a bou_se.
ing Insect and pest removal; not
Currently, the vtllage has about
requiring screen.s an~ S'?f'D doors; 440 rental units.
and not demandmg hgbung of pubMtddlepolt Mayrn: Dewey Horlie balls.
ton commended Stivers for the
Current rental properties will be countless hours she spent develop-

ing and reworking the ordinance.
"If you have rental units that are
kept up it will help the landlords in
·controlling bllgbt" and sustain
property values, Horton said. "And
it will pro(ect tenants from not baving to live in unfit conditions."
The village bas not had the
money to tear down several blighted homes, be added. The fee will
pay for periodic inspections and
any left-over money could be accumula ted to remove these eyesores,
be said.
.
These rules will be enforced
with inspections following com-

plaints from tenants or other indi- cinder blocks, Horton said . .
viduals, Honon said. Landlords
The coUection wiU begin at the
will need to pick up the ~1, mt _city limits. fll;llf Hu~on Sueet anQ
it out and pay for it at the village work towarrl the other end of the
offiCe.
.
village. Only one pass wiU be made
In other village improvement during the two days, be added.
action, Council also .clarified the
Middleport Council President
guidelines for this week's clean-up Bob Gilmore said the lrasb should
of the village. "The Pride in Mid- . not accumulate and should be disdleport Week" will include free posed of on a weekly basis.
uasb pick-up this Wednesday and
have never gotten as many
Thursday,_ Horton a.dded. .
p~one calls _as b~ve _this spnng,"
The v!llage w!ll not. ptck up Gtlmore, said . . It s btgb time we ·
automobile P.arts mcludmg axles take a little pnde m Middleport.·
and motors, ures or building mate- People should be forewarned we'm.
rials, such as boards, bricks and going to enforce the ordinances."

:·r

!.

Construction work resumes on PNRC project
By GEORGE ABATE
PNRC bas not and does not plan that job with substandard wages Patrick Day,
Sentinel News Staff
take the union to court on this and benefits, we will be there with
PNRC is building an $800,()()!)
· a public infonnation picket."
Construction crews at Pomeroy action, Mervis said.
· addition to bou·se a speech lab,
The local carpenters' union
False rumors bad circulated that occupational therapy training area
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center
carpentry
work would begin tomor- and a physical therapy gym. Tbe
returned to work this morning after · began passing out leaflets on the
work was balled for a week by an project last Monday. The union row, Day added, according to cor- project bad been set for completion
informational picke~ company offi- members· presence batted the respondence with attorneys from in June.
both sides of the dispute.
work.
cials stated.
When the carpenters picketeSI
"We're hoping to get something early last week, some members of
The unionized carpenters will ·
The company will employ union
not resume their informational worked ou~" Day said. "I can'l say ' the District 1199 of Service
plumbers to work on the project,
said Mike Mervis, a spokesman for picket if they are employed for the I'm optimistic.... At this point we' II Employees International Union
project, said Patrick Day, not picket."
PNRC.
supported the picket.
About 10 members of the Car"We bave a tentative under- spokesman with the South Central
But, since Tuesday's 3 p.m.
standing with the carpenters," he Ohio District Council of Carpen- . penter Local Union 650 in shift all employees had returned to
ters.
Pomeroy passed out leaflets work, Mervis said. Patient care was
added.
''We'd like to have a fair shot at because PNRC hired non-union not affected by this picket, he
Carpenters will not return to
that work," Day said. "If there are constrUction workers for· an addi- added.
worlc today, but all other laborers
people
doing carpenuy .work on tion Monday and Tuesday, said
are set to return, MerVis said.

Judge appoints new attorney for bombing suspect
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) - A sents one of Oklahoma's most
Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building by McVeigh's family will not bankilled 167 people and injured more die the case . McVeigh said last
judge bas appointed a new attorney · notorious death row inmates.
··we honor the memory of the
than 400. A grand jury is investi- week that he didn't wanktheir help.
for bombing suspect Timothy
In Washington, Lucas met in a
McVeigh because his original victims by granting the accused gating the worst terrorist attack on
effective
closed
assistance
of
counsel,
due
U.S.
soil.
·session with Republican
lawyers said they were too affected
·
PEN PALS • Don Hoblit, 71 GreenvUie, points o~t some World
process,
a
vigorous
defense,
and
Rep.
Ernest
Istook, Democratic
McVeigh
was
charged
April
21
by the attack to represent him.
War II souvenirs he presen,ted to Nathan Appleton, 11, Riverview,
uial
by
jury,
not
bysteria,"
said
Rep.
Bill
Brewster
and Republican
under
a
federal
anti-terrorism
Also Monday, members of
during ceremonies Monday outside the United States Air Force
Jones,
a
former
judge'
with
the.
Sens.
Don
Nickles
and
Jim lnbofe.
statute
that
carries
a
possible
deatb
Oklahoma's congressional delegaMuseum In Dayton to Mark .V-I£ Day. The two became pen pals a.
Oklahoma
Court
of
Civil
Appeals.
·
All
five
men
support
building a
penalty
.
He
is
being
held
at
the
tion said the federal building
part of a student project to thank World War II veterans for their
memorial
park
In
an
interview
today
on
NBC's
at
the
site
of the
Federal Correctional Center in El
should not be rebuilt at the swne
service. (AP)
·
"Today"
show,
Jones
noted
that
Reno.
·
devastated
federal
building.
site, even if it costs taxpayers more
McVeigh bas not yet been 'indicted
His original attorneys were John
"I think there's consensus that
money.
·
the building .needs to come down,
"That's ju st not an option for and said a " trial by leak is inappro- Coyle III and Susan Otto. Coyle
and it probably. needs to come
the folks back home," said Repub- priate and -unfair." He said the pub- said his golfing buddy died in tbe
lie should withhold judgment on blast and a law parmer was injured:
down soon," lnbofe said.
lican Rep. Frank Lucas.
· The General Servfoes Adminis:
McVeigh's new federal public --his client. He .also said be and Ms. Otto said she kne\1&gt; at least 10
tration
estimates ibat demolishing
McVeigh
"Conned
the
basis
for
a
people
who
were
killed.
Stephen
Jones,
was
defender,
DAYTON (AP) - Students ·different," Cody said. "From a ·
working
relationship."
Russell
also
reaffumed
that
two
the
ruin
and rebuilding on another
appointed
by
U.S.
District
Judge
·
eager to learn about World War II real person who wrote it, it makes
The
April
19
bombing
of
tbe
altorneys
who
say
they
were
hired
David
Russell.
Jones
also
repreContinued on page 3 ·
and thank the soldiers who fought yop feel kind of sad.''
Adams, 74, of Kettering, was a . ·
it may have given the veterans as
pleasure as the students got as part
of a pen-pal project
sa!!!!nr?rrLefa!!YPbillis
. Project organizer Bob Tbum
"How much do YOU agree or
"111\portan~y._ no state serv1ce
said.
said a theraplst at a veterans hospi- and spent more tban three y~ars as all the Ohioans questioned in a poll
tal in Cleveland told him the stu- a prisoner of war.
agreed that edUcation was a funda- disagree with the statement that:
has a btgher ~nonry wnong the Cl,';
Burke Marketing Research in
dents' lellers had. served as therapy
Adams enjoyed his correspon- mental right. But a majority also Every child in Ohio should have a
IZ~ns of O.bw than ~ducauon,
Cincinnati conducted the poll from
for some of the patients there.
dencc with Cody.
said health and police should share fundamental right to a level of eduWlllllllll Phillis, coalmon execuuve April 17 through April 23. It 'bad a
"They bad bottled this up for all
"I told him don't thinlc of me as the same government spending pri- cation that prepares him or bee to
dlfector, swd at a news conference.
4.9 percent margin of erroc.
these years, and now by writing to Rambo and that kind of stuff you ority as schools.
·
be a productive citizen?"
But 60 percent of those quesThoma s Needles, executive
.the kids, it was coming out, .. Tbum see on TV. I'm not," Adams said.
Those were among tbe results of
Seventy-five percent agreed
tioned said health and hospitals assistant to Gov. George
'said. .
"I said I was out there to cure men, a random-sample telephone survey
strongly. and 18 perc~nt agreed should enjoy the san1c priority as Voinovich , re sponded tbat th e
On Monday, some of the stu- not to kill them."
of 400 people that the Ohio Coaliso!Dewbat. Two percent neither funding for education, and 53 per- administration recognized ·there
dents were able 10 ineet their pen
He said youngsters must be lold lion for Equity &amp; Adequacy of agreed nor disagreed; 2percent discent said police _-protection should were serious problems in school
pals during ceremonies at the Unit- what happened during the war and School Funding released Monday.
agreed somewhat; and 2 percent ha~e the same pnonty as schools.
fundmg,
ed States Air Force Museum mark- why it happened.
.
Respondents were asked if tbey
disagreed strongly. !)De percent did
"Now remember, this su rvey
"The system currently perpetu. ing the 50th anniversary of V-E
not know.
was taken in the context of the ates a statewide system of poor
Former Army soldtcr Don thought the opportunity for a qualiDay. Some 1,400 children, veterans Hoblit met 11-year-old pen pal • ty education was a fundamental
Another question asked respon- Oklahoma situation. It was taken in schools and wealthy schools. And
and others attended.
Nathan Appleton and presented right thai couns protected, similar
dents to place a priority on funding
the context of tbe Medicaid crisis for those reasons, ·we have taken
Cody ~eece, 11, of suburban bim with miniature flags, German to freedom of speech.
of education vs. other uses of gov- and all of those concerns that
Continued on page 3 ·
Riverside; got a chance to meet bis. money and uniform patches. ,
"lie told me about be was a
pen pal - Robert Adams. Cody
·:
said Adams' letters brought the war prisoner of war and how be got
home.
captured. I feel it's kind of scary,"
"From a book, il would be a lot said Nathan, of Riverside.

Ex-soldiers mark V-E Day
with student pen. pals

~~~!a~~~:~z~~~~~ ~~tt[u~~~a!~ar~~ta!~u~!lenci~s s~~!f!~.share

Productivity
up 0.7 percent

Simpsonjurv hears ABCs of DNA
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- With the co-author of O.J. Simpson's
·genetic material looking on, prosecutors began showing bow Simpson's DNA blueprint could place b'im at the scene of a double murder.
Lanncbing the most critical phase of.the prosecution's case, a·
biocbemisl took the stand Monday to demystify DNA for the jury
and explain .bow one blood sample can be matched with 1111otber.
Coincidentally. Simpson's elderly mother, Eunice, returned to
court for the fir.;t time in weeks. She sat in a wheelchair near the
front of tlje couruoom just a few feet from ber son.
'
Robin Coiton, director of Cellmark Diagnostics in Germantown,
Md., used diagrams and band-drawn pictures to explain bow the
body's "genetic blueprint" is passed fr&amp;m p"arents to child, and
bow the storehouse of this infonnation - the DNA molecule CIID be unraveled, diced up and photographed:
.
Time ran out before Cottoo .got to ~tual test rcsul~. She ~as to
·~I· - return·IIHKIUCH00a)'7. Legal expens gave Cottori bigb mwks for her thoroughness and
clear delivery, and said her explanations are crucial to whether
jurors acoept DNA evidence.
"I thought she was spectacular. I thought her axplanation was
lucid, was clear. She was really a teacher much more than a tradi. iional witness,'' said Erwin Cbemeririsky, a law professor at the
. University of Southern Catlfomia.
.
Mostjurors appeared to pay close attention, as they bave tlp'ougb
all J.!ut ihe most tedious parts of tbe trial. Those in tbe·l&gt;ack of llie
jury box craned forward to get a better view· o( the charts. Many
took notes during tbe afternoon.
\

..
.'

Low llliiJ&amp;bllll 601, partly

cloudy, nln. Wedllelday pariiJ
cloudy. HJ&amp;bs In 70..

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Sunday 12 noon-S pm

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Also, doctors may encourage
more dietary salt (to increase blood
volume and blood pressure.) Finally, elastic support stockings, wbicb
prevent pooling of blood in the
lower extremities, may stabilize the
circulation so that faintness and
tachycardia don't occur.
In my opinion, patients with
POTS should be examined by cardiologists and .may need special
eardlac testing, such as stress tests.
To give you more information, I
· am sending you fm! copies or my
Health Reports "Hypertension"
and • 'Understanding Heart Disease." Otber readers wbo would
like copies should send $2 for eacb
report plus a long, self-addressed,
stamped envelope to P .0. Box
2433, New York, NY 10163. Be
sure to mention the title(s).
DEAR DR. GOTI: Is it possible
to catch bad breath? Out of loneli·
ness, I began a relationship with a
horrible older woman wbose teeth
were loose and whose breath was
unbelievably foul. I ki~sed her
often. Now I find my own breath ·
stinks in the same way hers did. No

Ex-R.ed
66, dies

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bed.)

GOTl', M.D.

Small midwestern flying school
attracts students from around world

new

' ..

cardiovascular system. (POTS· is
much mom frequent In sedenwy
individuals and is common in people who have been confined to

PETER

Ohio Lottery

•

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
productivity or the American workplace rose at a 0. 7 percent annual
rate from January through March,
the slowest advance in a year. Unit
labor costs hit a two-year high.
The Labor Department said
today that· seasonally·adjusted,
non-farm productivity was much
stronger in the final .three months
of 1994 than previously though!. It
revised the earlier 1.7 percent gain
to a 4 percent increase.
. The advance meant productivity
rose 2.3 percent during all of 1994.
rather than the earlier 2.2 perceqt
estimate.
the
business
since
increases mean companies are
making their goods more efficiently and at lower costs.
·The report said unit labor costs
rose 3.4 perccn~ highest since a 4, I
percent gain in the flfSl quarter of
1993. Costs bad dropped in both
the third and 'filurlh quru:ters or
1994 and rose opiy 0.8 percent for
the year.

WAHAMA PICKET- Laborers from the
Local ii54J be&amp;an an lnform•ttonal picket In
front of Wahama High School Tuesday morning; Wuam Comtruction-Co •.bepn working un
the hlgb scbool's multl-~urpose gymnasium and

·-'

cafeteria two weeks aso. The Chester contractor
has not employ~d union laborers, said Terry
Albright of the union. '"We'd like to see them
sign a c:~ntl'Rt -with 11s,"' Alb~ighl sald.''We•re'
not here to kMp tht kids out of school.'' (OVP
photn hy George Abate)
·

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Commentar
The Daily Sentinel

••

!mown as the Alibi Aae. perbaps it

is an liJll)lllpl'iat time to auess the

.1-'UI I o'FDIA,INC.
ROBE~T L.

WJNGETf
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
·
Controller

LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less thao 300
,words loog. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
·should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

in conflict

··------~--------~------------~

···congress

By JILl, LAWRENCE
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Republican consressional leaders once predicted
they'd have a wmfortable eigbt monJhs or so before .J.996 politics began
·' to dominate Capitol Hill. Turns out that was overstating the case by
:. ·months.
The general election campaign look off in the past couple of.weeks
with Republican congressional leaders· ancmpt to 11ras President Clinton
into their dilemma over Medicare's ruture - and his decision to let them
feel their own pain for a while.
'
But long before that. the eyes of tbe conservative GOP primary elec·
torate were on tbe Senate. Republican presldenllal politics have been having a substantive imi!BCI oo natiooal business, from llix cuts to budget-bal·
anclng to Dr. Henry Foster's surgeoo-general nomination,
The conservative standard was set by House S~aker Newt Gin~ricb,
R·Ga, and bis ''Conlracl With America.'' a collection of pet GOP ISsues
the new Republican House acted oo in its fmt 100 days.
It•s already clear tbal minority Democrats and Clinton veto threats are
slowing down !be "Contract" express·in the Senate. But that's done little
to discourage the more-conservative-than-thou competition under way
between Sens. Bob Dole and Pbil Gramm - the two most prominent
.
·
GOP presidential contestants.
Dole, R-ICan., is the first Senate majority leader to run for president
· since Lyndon Johnson in 1960. Gramm, R-Texas, is bis competition on
the right. Each is trying to prove be is more fmnly opposed to abortion
and taXes, more committed to gun rights and small ~ovcrnment
The atmOSphere "Is not conducive to construcuve pubUc policy-mak·
in g." said Tom Mann, director of governmental studies at the Brookings
Institution. "Dole is not going to open up any distance on his right. He's
just not going to do it."
, IneVitably there will be cQIIlpromis'es Ol) taxes and the budget as spring
wears into ~ummer. If and when Dole brokers them, and It seems be must
· if a budget is to be passed and s.i~ned, "Gramm is ~re to pounce," said
· analyst Stuart Rotbenberg, a political newsletter publisher.
The Foster nomination mushroomed into a political showdown after
the Wbite House and Foster failed to·disclose that be bad performed some
abortions and then bad trouble pinnipg down the e.xact number.
Dole .and Gramm jumped at the chance to prove their fealty to social
conservatives uncomfortable with their candidacies. Sen. Arlen Specter,
meanwhile, a presidential candidate aiming for GOP moderates, used the
· · opportunity to lecture both men.
Gramm is vowing a filibuster against Foster; Dole countered lbal be
ll)igbt not bring the nomination up foc a vote.
·
· "I do not think we need these kinds of threats," Specter, R·Pa., said
last week on the floor.
.
Dole did say on Sunday that be would not decide on calling up the
nomination for a floor vote until after be bas bad a chance to sit down and
talk with Foster. He said be thought Foster bad done a "preuy gOQd job"
in bis confirmation bearings before the Senate Labor and Human
·Resources Committee.
In the end Dole may not win points with religious conservatives,
· because they do not believe, as he does,lbat Foster's problem is credibili·
. ty. Conservative presidential candidate Patrick Buchanan puts their view
starkly: "An abortionist cannot be America's family doctor."
·Pressure from the other side is coming from Dole's home-state col, league, Labor Committee Chairman Nancy Kassebaum, wbo ran the Foster bearings and is pressing for a floor vote.
.
According to the Dole campaign, 2~ SCflatoi§. have en4orsed Dole;)3
· have not yet been identified publicly. Kassebaum, already on record, is in
. the awkward position of pushing bim toward a floor vole that could be
:: ' : damaging to him in the primaries.
:l

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;.: :
EDITOR'S NOTE- Jill Lawrence coven Congress for The Asso,. · elated Press.

( Today in history

•

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By The Associated Press
.
Today is Tuesday, May·9, the 129th day of 1995. There are 236 days
len in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
On May 9, 1754, tbc fmt American newspaper cartoon was ~ublished.
The illustration in Benjamin Franklin's "Pennsylvania Gazelle ' showed
a snake cut into sections, each part representing an American colony; the
caption read, ''Join or die.''
On this dale:
.
.
In 1502, Cbri~topber Columbus left Cadiz, Spain, on bis fourth and
final trip to the Western Hemisphere.
.
In 1913; the 17th amendment to the Constitution, providing. for tbe
election of senators by popular vote rather than selection by state legislaIures, was ratified.
In 1926, Americans Richard Byril and Floyd Bennett became the first
men to make an airplalle flight over tbe North Pole.
In 1936, Italy annexed Ethiopia as Benito Mussolini celebrated in
Rome. ·
.
In 1945, 50 years ago, U.S. officials announced tbat the midnight
eiitertiiinmiml cuifew was being lifted immediately.

.

·Berry's Wo'rld .
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"Tile thing l /iktt bttst l!lbout OUR •mililitl is /hal wB 'r8
not as wacky as some, lilut . wackiar than others."

Welcome, then, .t o tbe first

drug and alcobol problem.
9 .•1be 'l(!atriarcby" did it. by
Gloria Steinem. They foreed girls
10 be cheerful and that is wby they
dot their "i's" witb little hearts.
8. The weather did it, by the
U.S. Postal Service. Yes, the ageacy that ooee defied rain and snow
and gloom of nigbt to 'deliver tbe
mail suffered a decline in perfor·
maoce in 1994. Tbey were stymied
by storms, they said. · ·
•
7. Tbe lady lay person burden
did it. by Ellen Cooke. Tbe former
treasurer of tbq national Espicopal
Cbwth eml)ezzied $2.2 millioo and
spent it oo jewelty, clothing. airline
fligbts and limousines, but tbere
was a reason. She suffered a
•'breakdown precipitated by many
factors external to me and related

Pro:iae Prize CC(eiiiOiiiel, deslped

quality" or the excuses dreamed up
so far.
Joseph Spear ~
Maybe we sboUid even band out
some awards~ Let's see, wbat can
we call them? I know, bow about to booor the most creative excuses
the Prozac PriZe&amp;?
of the curtenl decade. We are here
The papular drug does seem to to have fun, so we will salute no
symboilze ·the '90s. don't you alibis that people bave used to
think? In an era when nobody explain away heinous acts - no
seems willing to take mspoosibility "urban survival syndrome" and no
for anything, an antl-depn:ssant pill "parental abuse." Nor will we
comes along that provides a bandy coosider all-purpose, never-fail and
excuse for any abemmt behavior. exceedingly mundane alibis like
Remember tbe Florida prostitute · Jbe media, or the music, or the
wbo claimed Prozac l1lr1ICd her into video game did it
a nymphomaniac? Or the U.S.
OK? Here we go, then. At the
Bureau of Engraving and Printing halfway IIUlik, tbe I~ 10 most ereemployee wbo pleaded guilty to alive excuses of the 1990s sre: ·
stealing $1.6 million in test cwren· 10. The demands or celebrity

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aw~.Tbe stress ofpoliti~ life did
it. by a local California government
official. He managed to garner
numerous benefits and a lifetime
disability pension with this argument. The possibility that members
of the U.S. Consress might attempt
to emulate his example so dis·
turbed Sen. Barbara Boxer, D·
Calif., that she introduced a bill to
prohibit it.
1. "1 can't take it, anymore." by
Tracy Hampton. With these words,
tl)is YOUilg juror persuaded Judge
Lance Ito to take ber off the O.J.
Simpson case.
.
Do you realize what Ibis woman
has done for us? No matter bow
sorry an act we may commit. all we
bave to do is say that after a year of
O.J., we "just couldn't take it'any·
· more."
Not a jury in the country would
convict.
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(For Information on bow to
communicate ·electronically ~th
tbls columnist and others, con·
tact Ame~ca OnUne by caiUng 1·
800-lll7-6364, exl 8317.) .

,

.••

Last Sunday, courtesy or
Reuters News Service, I read that
L.A. weatherman Sean Boyd
alleged be was fll'ed by his boss at
radio station KMJ, one of the top
three markets for Rusb Limbaugh's
syndicated show, after Boyd
refused 10 change bis forecast of a.
chance ofrain for Limbaugh's second annual Dittobead Barbecue and
Politically Incorrect Picnic.
Boyd claims bis boss asked him
to ''fudge" his report. KMrs general manager countered that Boyd's
firing was from a buildup of a "lot
of things." But the heavens did
indeed open on tbe day of the picnic, and it poured. A weatherman
flfed for being right Is that ironic,
orwbat?
·
What is a "Politically Incorrect
Picnic':' by the way? P.C. people
don't even have picnies. To be
completely· P.C. they'd bave to
elimmate charcoal, meat and con·
versation. They might have a light
tofu snack at a consciousness-raising session, but that ' s as far as
they'd go. So the message I'm get·
ling is: You musi now be a Republican just to enjoy tbe god" given
right to get rained out of a barbe·
cue. What is the world coming to?
On tbe other band, what about

poor G. . Gordon Liddy? For
expressing the opinion that proper
marksmanship is imponant wben
armed intruders enter your home

tan Shoales
without knocking. the ex-con/talkshow bost was knocked off tbe air
in several of his radio markets.
Worse, an invitation to auend an
Alfonse D' Amalo event was
abruptly withdrawn. Talk about
your rabid beast calling the dingo
savage.
·
I'm .no fan of Rusb Limbaugh,
but I've always bad a fondness for
G. Gordon Liddy. I think it's
because be calls "3 p.m.," say,
"fifteen hundred hours," or maybe
it's the way be calls "five"
"fiver," and "nine'' --niner."
I read Liddy's book, and even
taped its made-for-TV movie (starring Robert Conrad). The scenes in
wbicb Liddy stuck bis band in the
candle flame to impress a woman,
and ate a rat 10 impress bis fellow
convicts - well, they convinced
me that Liddy is a completely serious person who will do anything
for a buck except run for public
office.
In that regard, we pretty much

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Democrats foolishly duck Medicare debate
Even though they think they are
making political bay, Presiden 1
Clinton and his fellow Democrats
actually are risking disaster by
refusing to engage Republicans in a
serious- debate on Medicare and the
federal deficit.
Instead of coming up with positive solutions to the crushing bur·
den or federal debt, Democrats are
betting their political future on tbe
chance that Republicans either will
fail to enact their proposed solutions or will do so and offend large
swau:bcs of the electomte.
But it's just possible that the
. GOP will bave the guts to offend
interest groups, slash spendin!l_and
reduce the deficit. House Revublicans certainly were beading ofT to
their policy retreat in Leesburg,
Va., with that aim in mind. If they
persist. the public will rewatd tbe
....Republicans Cor li'l'ing up to..tbeia"
promises and will punish tbe
Democrats for avoiding tbe cbal·
lenge.
Worst of all, Republicans will
be empowered for the foreseeable
future to help their well-off conslinients witb tax breaks and deregulation wbile cutting programs that
aid Slr¥Uiing workers an_d poot
people.
, Clinton began punting on his
responsibility last December, wben
'--"'"

be decided - against tbe advice of
Wbite House Cbief of Staff Leon
Panetta and Budget Director Alice
Rivlin - to give up on deficit

Morton Kondracke
reduction as a top priority and
leave it to incoming Republicans.
· In keeping' with that abdication.
the administration Is now refusing
to propuse any policies 10 bail out
the Medicare system. wbicb will be
bankrupt by 2002.
The administcation position is
tbat it will talk about solutions
wben Republicans produce a bud·
get, which tbey've so far failed to
do. The Democrats are delighting
in 'the GOP's difficulty In delivering on its promises.
In the process, thougb, they are
betting their already teDU9US JlQiiti•
cal' futu1 c. m• the-pioposition that
the GOP can't deliver a budget
prodilct lfiat-the pulih"' wilT mre.
There's no qU&amp;stion tbat the
GOP bas set a daunting task for
itself, promising to balance tbe
budget by 2002 without cutting
either Social Security or defense.
The House bas made the task: all
tbe more diffi,ult by enacllng tax
cuts· totaling $200 billion over live
years.
During the April ,ecess, the
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Republicans came face to face with
the hardest part of their agenda the need to produce $300 billion' in
savings from Medicare from current baseline projections . GOP
polls showed that the public considers Medicare just as sacrosanct
as Social Security, meaning tbat
GOP politicians would have to
choose between touching tbe fatal
"third rail" of American pulitics
or failing to balance the budget.
The Republicans are squirming,
all right. Republican pain is evident
in House Speaker Newt Gingrich •s,
· R·Ga., claim that be wants to sepam1e Medicare reform from the budget process - a ridiculous idea.
It's also evident in Gingrich's and .
Semite Majority Leader Bob
Dole's, R-Kan., appeal for a bipartisan commission to study Medi·

to portray as "reductions in rate of
growth.''
In Leesburg, the House Budget
Committee was scheduled to pre·
sent three separate plans to· the
GOP Conference that would bold
Medicare growth to 5 percent per
year, down from its current mte of
9 percent to tO percenL
According to Budget Commihee
member Rep. Cbris Shays, R·
Conn., federal outlays for Medicare
will increase from $176 biUion this
year to $~62 billion in 2002 and
spending per recipient will increase
from $4,684 to $6,390.
By contrast. Sbays said, discretionary domestic spending will "go
down dramatically" and Medicaid
will be converted from an entitle·
men~ to a _bl~k grant. though its
fundmg w11l nse. Sbays confessed
pa,re._. _, ,.• ,-. .-.------.ID.MJ!~~en~..,"w_l!.t;re th~re·s Jots of ·
Ana yet maicatilJIIS are the GOP . wasle, won tbe10Uctie(lal'fdllill!
will produce a budget resolution farm subsidies will remain an entilbaC angns spending alld revenues. tlement with reduced funding.
·
Tbe House and Senate versions
''Tbere are things in tbis budget
will differ oo taxes, but there' s no . that, as an urban moderate, I bate,"
reason to expect they can•t come to said Sbays. "On the other balld, we
terms in conference.
are determined not to go back to
Both House and Senate RepilbU· our districts and say tbat we failed
.
cans also a.re lilcelY. to come up to bljlance the budget."
with Medtcare· c&amp;I.IP~es tbat
(Morton Kondraeke li u.,.,u.
Democrats and seniors lobbies live editor of Roll Call, tile newa·
will denounce as draconian
paper of Capitol Hill.)
"cuts," but which the GOP will try

By Tile AW!M'Ialed Prall
It would be pretty nice outside if
it weren't so weL A second straigbt
day with ll:tJlpelalUres appllllCbing
80 degrees was forecast for
Wedncsday,'but the stormy weatbeJ"
. is returning, too.
The National Weather Service
said rainfall amounts could measure as much as 2 incbes under
cloudbursts. Elsewhere, rainfall
will total about 1 incb DD Wednes·
day.
It will be about 10 degrees cool·
er on Thursday but the rain will
. linger, forecasters said. Friday
looks to be dry.
The I'Calfd·bigb temperature for
this date at tbe Columbus weather
station was 93 degre~ in 1896
while tbe record low was 28 in
1947. SUD,Id tonight will be at 8:33
W.VA.
p.m. an.d sunrise Wednesday at
6:22a.m.
Ac"""" the 1111tlon
A large area of New Orleans'
was under water this momi~g after
.as much as a foot·and·a·balf of rain
fell in just a little more than six
boon. )'be beavy rains were moving across coastal Mississippi.
,
Inc.
Mucb of the flooding from
Monday's violent thunderstorms
bad receded by 2 a.m. today. The
Extended foreaut .
-Thursday...A dlall!le ofsiiOwetS. storms were concentrated in eight
Lows in the SOs. Higbs in the 60s. · parishes extending in a circle about.
4S miles from New'Orleans.
Frida~ ... Pl!rtly cloudy. Lows 4S
Two confirmed tornadoes
to 50. H1ghs 65 to 70. .
Saturday...A chance o( showers
or thunderstorms. Lows
Highs from the upper 60s north to .
tbe upper 70s south.
«;range sets meeting
' .. The Rock Springs Grange will
meet at 8 p,m. Thursday at the ball
The Hemlock Grove grange is wel·
come. Members are urged to
attend.

accompanying the storm smashed
into a subdivision in Slidell and
deatroyed a COIIIIDerCial building in
Chalmette. bOth eastern New
Orleans subwbl. No injuries were
immediately reported. ·
Tbe strong winds and fterce rain
also may bave derailed 10 railroad
~. also in Cbalmette. Six incbes
of water stood in the emergency
room at Touro Infumary. a major
New Orleans hospital.
Tbe wind- a cab driver said it
was a tornado- also ri~ away
the front of New Orleans 6th Dis·
trict police precinct. It also
smasbed tbree New Orleans homes, ·
but again DO injuries Were reported.
The rain's feroeity b~~~:l!:ed up the
city's sewage system, forcing some
manhole covers to float away.
T001adoes destroyed at least one
bome, knocked down power lines
and damaged farm buildiag,s in
Nebraska, but there were no imme·
diate reports of injuries late Monday rugbt.
More severe weather including
heavy rainfall was expected today
from southeast Louisiana to the
Florida panhandle, Alabama, and
western and northern Georgia.
where 2 incbes to 4 incbes of rain
were possible.
~ ScaJtered rain and som~ tbun·
derstonns also were expected today
in the Mid-Atlantic region, the centra1 Appalachians, and the eastern

so toss. ___.__Announcements-----

Area death--

Donald R. Pullins

Scenic IDils plans open bouse
An open bouse will be held at
Donald Richard Pullins, 72, Williamstown, W.Va., died Monday, May
llie Scenic Hills Nursing Cenler to
, 8, l99S, atMariena Memorial Hospital.
Born Aug. 25, 1922. in Meigs County, son of the late Jlilymond and kickoff N alional Nursing Home
Alice Townsend Pullins, be was retired from B.F. Goodrich where be Weelc Monday, 10 a.m. Congressworked for 40 years.
·
man Frank Cremeans to preside
"•
He was U.S. Army veteran of World War II, a member of the over the opening ceremonies. Bal·
Williamstown American Legion General George Post 1S9, a lifetime loon launch, tour of racility,
member of the Disabled American Veterans and a member of the Intema· . brunch, entertainment. Ice cream
'· tiona! Operating Engineers Union.
social, 2 p.m. May ' l8 with The
He is survived by bis wife; Pauletta "Peggy" Benedum, to wbom be Old Thyme Choir to enlertain . Free
was married oo Fell. 23, 1948, in Parkersburg, W.Va.; a daughter and son- blood pressure and glucose checks
... d. .
.
'
in-blw, Rita and Richard Wentz of Fleming; a grandsoo, Rick Wentz of ouere
" Canton, and a granddaughter, Renae Wentz of Fleming.
Also surviving is a sister and brother-in-law, Vytice and George Sell- SHS Class of 1985 to reunite
Tbe Southern High Scb90l Class
ers of Racine;.a brother and sister-in-law, Stanley and Beth Pullins of East
of
1985 will bold an afternoon
Spana, and a sister-in-law, Minnie Pullins of Mineral City.
,
He was preceded in death by a brother, Wayne, and a sister, GeneVa reunion from 2-5, May 27, at tbe
bome of Alan Crisp, Apple Grove·
•• Pullins.
.
.
Services will be beld Thursday, ll .a.m. at Hadley Funeral Home in Dorcas Road, Racine.
· .Marietta with Roger Rush officiating. Burial will follow .in Sand Hill
Cemetery in Long Bottom where a graveside service will be held at 2 p.m.
Friends may call from 6-8 p.m. today and 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Wednesday
at the funeral bome.
r

Chicken barbecue
The Tuppers Plains Volunteer
Fife Department will bold a chick··
en barbecue Sunday starling 11
a.m. at the Tuppers Plains Volunteer Fire Department Cost, $4. ·
Firefighters to meet
The Meigs County Firefighters
Ass.ocialion will meet May 17 at
7:30 p.m. at t11e Olive Township
Fire Department, Reedsville.
Richard Fetters from the Obio Fife
Academy's Outreach Program will
be the guest speaker. Refreshments
to be served.
EMS cookout slated
Holzer Medical Cenler will bold
an appreciation cook-out for members of tbe Meigs County Emergency Medical Service from 5-8
p.m., May 17 at the hospital sbelter
bouse. The cookout is being beld in
conjunction with EMS Wcctc. May
14-20.

,___ _ Local briefs _ ___...,""'""'

. . Meigs land transfers posted

-~

bombing was a set-up by Clinton·
and his minions to frame right·
wing talk-show hosts. (A loboiOIIIy
with that trim, petbaps. sir?)
A case could be made that the
Information Revolution bas made
us all clinically insane. Fortunately
for you, I'm not going to make that
case.
}Jere's all I know: A picnic
should not have a political agenda.
Neither Rush, G .. nor I should ever
run for pu~lic office. Once you run
for office, you're no longer a loudmouth, you're just a demagogue . ..
'to expect action to flow from your
opinions Is foolish. My voice bas
never been heeded, yet I've never
felt the urge to blow up a federal
building.
Come to think of it, I've never
wanted to cat a rat either.
(To rece.lve a complimentary
Ian ~hoales newsletter, call 1800-989-DUCK or write Duck's
Breath, 408 Broad St., Nevada
City, CA 95959.)
Ian Sboales Is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(For Information ·on how to
communicate electronically wltb
this columnist and others, con.
tad America OnUne by calling 1·
800-817-6364, exL 8317.)

.

'

' ·:· The following land transfers acres;
· were recorded recently in the office- ·
Deed, Velma E. Winland,
of Meigs County Recorder Emmo- Velma ·E. Stobart to Cecil E. and
,'. gene Hamilton:
Sue M. Rice, Sutton, 4.660 acres;
·. : Right of way, Edith M. Welch
Deed, Thomas o,, Stacie A.,
to Columbus Southern Power, Sci· Theodore and Leona J. Pullins to
pio;
·
· Thomas 0 . and Stacie A. Pullins,
• . Right of way, Milton Ray and Chester parcel;
Brenda S. Roush to CSP, Bedford. . Deed, Jobn M., Karen A. and
, 1 acre;
Linda V. Dress to Deanie and
. Rigbt of way, Merwin Eugene Kathryn Frasure, Salem parcel;
and Mllljorie Smith to CSP, Bed·
Deed, Ivan and Evelyn Wood to
ford;
Rodney L. Wood, Chesler, 1.547
Right of way, Clleycnne and acres;
• Rodney Newman, Robert Wellman
Deed, Randolph E. Blackburn
and Wanda Wyeth to CSP, Scipio, Jr. to David B. Dillard, Salisbury,
75/100 acres;
five acres;
'·
Deed, Louise L. Stewart.
Deed, Orenda A. Coole to Ger'· deceased, Roy H. and Ruth V. aid and Hattie E. Sellers, Salisbury,
Kesterson. Sutton;
.3329 acres;
.
Deed, Mary G. Napper to Jack
Deed, James C. and Genevieve
Lyons to Urban L. and Judith A. and Joyce Ervin, Salem parcel;
Graf, Cbester, 4 acres;
Deed, Carol Cross to Ellis
Deed, Sue M. and Cecil W. Rice Myers, Salem, one acre; ·
~ to Velma E. Winland, Sutton, 3.27
Deed, Carol Cross to Jessica M.
'·
Saxton, Rutland, 3 acre.

· Judge..contlnuedfrom page1

' site could cost as mucb as $40 mil·
Jioo, Istook said. The Daily Olclaboman reported in today's editions
that the GSA bas confirmed the.
building is stcucturally unsound
and sbould be demolished, but the
method of demolition was still
being discussed.
Implosion - demolition by
'· carefully placed explosives - is.
·
· · · ... --•
,.

The Daily Sentinel

.

CUSPS 21:1-960)

more practical and safe than a
wrecking ball, "but we don't want
to offend tbe people here," .Judy
. Parnell, director of the GSA command center in Oklahoma City,
told the newspaper.
. Some local leaders bave '
expressed concern about tbe effect
of a blast, both on structurally
shaky buildings nearby and on the
fragile nerves of the people. Mayor
Ron Norick said be bas no objections to using explosives, since that
woula be safer.
,

Published every afternoon. Monday through
Friday, Ill Coun Sl.. Pome roy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Vullcy Publishing Company/M ullimedta
Inc., Pomeroy, Oh Lo 45769, Ph. 992 -"2156.
Second class posuage pald at Pomeroy, Oh io.

Ohio4l169.
SUBSCRIPTION RAT ~S

~.
I

•

..
·~.

!•·;

A Middleport man was cited following a one-vehiCle crasb on
Homer Hill Road in Scipio Township Monday around 9:38 p.m.
According to a report from the Meigs County Sberiffs Department, Keith T. Herdman, '35, Middleport, was southbound on
Horner Hill Road when be lost control of his vehicle wbicb landed
in a yard, sustaining heavy damage.
The Rutland Volunteer Fire Department and Rutland squad of
the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service respon~ to the site
wbere Herdman was treated at the scene, according to the sheriffs
report.
Herdman was cited by deputies for driving under the influence,
failure to control and possession of a controlled substance.

Youths escape injury in wreck
Four youths escaped injury when the pickup they were in
plunged in Middle Sbade River in Olive Township Monday
evening.
Kelly W. Rogers, 17, Loveland, was northbound on Township
Road 444 wben be lost control of the 1989 Ford Ranger be was
driving. The truck llien crashed into the river, aCcording 10 a Meigs
County Sheriffs report.
.
.
. No injuries were reponed, but the truck sustained heavy damage.

Two-vehicle accidt;nt probed
No injuries or citations were reported following a two-vehicle
collision on state Roule 124 near the junction of Hysell Run Road
·Monday afternoon.
·
According to a report from the Meigs County Sheriffs Depart·
men~ John M. Yost. 54, Rutland, was eastbound oo state Route 124
when he struck the rear of a vehicle driven by James G. Hysell, 23,
Middleport, that bad slowed to make a right tum into a private
drive.
Damage to Yost's 1975 Ford piclrup was lisled as heavy and dis·
abling while Hysell's 1981 Chevrolet truck suslained light damage.

No one injured in accidents
No injuries were reported following two animal-car collisions
Monday reported by the Meigs County Sheriffs Department.
Amber L. Well, 18, Pomeroy, was northbound on Pine Grove
Road near Salser Road in Sutton Township when she struck a wild
turkey flying across the road. Her 1991 Chevrolet suslained moder·
ate damage.
.
Amanda S. Clonch. 26. Pomeroy. was driving on Rutland Town·
sbip Road 366 when sbe struck a deer that ran into the path .of her
1988 Ford causing moderate damage.
.

BJ Cavier·or Motor Route
OneWeek ............. ...................................... SI .75
One Month ................................................ $7.60
OneYear ......................................·........... $9!.00

today in .the 40s and 50s for the
upj)er Midwest. 60s in New Ellg·
land, 60s and 70s in .the Midwell.
70s in the Mid-Atlantic:. 60s to the
80s in the West and Southwest. and
the 80s and 90s in the Southeast
and in Texas.
The nation's bot spots Monday
were Tampa. Fla., McAllen. Texas/
and Moody Air Force Base, Ga.,
wbere it was 93 degrees. The bigb·
est beat index, 109, occurred in
Brownsville, Texas. The coldest
spot was South Pass City, Wyo.,
wbcre it was 18 degrees.
·
·

H0 ·use ·t 0 vote 0 n

m 1-n I st r Ike ban
•

•

•
'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) For some teachers' unions, balf a
strike bas been better than none.
But balf a strike may be getting
closer to being illegal.
The House was scheduled to
vote today on a bill sponsored by
Rep. Lynn Wacbtmann, · RNapoleon, 1ba1 would probibit part·
lime strikes by public sebool teacb·
en. In a pan-lime or intermittent
~trik~ •. !eacbe1s_pjcket outside
scb~l part of the day, then return
to their classrooms to teach the rest
of the day.
.
Tbe House was also set to con·
sider bills:
- Barring people who know
they are infected with tbe AIDS
virus from engaging in prostitutioo. ·
- Requiring lottery profits
above $661.2 million to be distcibuted on a per-pupil basis to
schools.
Wachtmann said be intcoduced
tbe no-half-strike bill after the
Napoleon Faculty Association used
the tactic from mid-October-Nov.
30 , 1993.
A J'udge eventually ordered ibe
teachers baclc in classrooms full·
time to avoid conflicts with
The d'
replacement teachers.
lspute

·
was resolved the following April.
''Tbat should be banned
because it brings the intensity or a
strike, tb~ great discomfort of a
~~~~~ with the
.. 1 don't think that's where a
strike belongs. Human nature tells
me ibere's no way teachers can
keep those negative feelings out of
. a classroom when they're there for
part of a day." .
Ohio Education Association
President Michael Billirakis said
local teachers' unions bave used
part-lime strikes a handful of limes
10 the past 1.2 years .

=::

If Wacbtmann's bill passes the
Republican-contcolled House u
expected, it would take away some
of the union's ability to pressure

~~~l::O~i:!f~~ls into negotiating,
Billirakis said that eliminatinc
part-time strikes would not DC&lt;lCS·
sarily lead to more full-blown
walkouts.
''Those decisions are made
blocdallhy." be saidt. '.'kWc havbe n~t
a t at many s n es to egm
with."
.
I
Democratic Rep. Robert Hagan
of Youngstown said Wacbtmann's
bill is aimed at teachers • unions.

Meigs EMS logs 9 calls
Units ol the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service lpgged
nine calls for assistance Monday
including one transfer call. Units
responding including:
MIDDLEPORT
4:29 a.m .. Mill Street, Jason
Ryan, Veterans Memorial Hospital;
11:27 a.m ., Overbrook Nursing
Center, Lola Bobier, VMH;
1 : 5~ p.m ., South Second
Avenue. Joseph Rhodes, Pleasant
Valtey Hospital.
POMEROY
4:53a.m .• Mulberry Avenue.

Dimple Eakins, dead upon arrival;
8:09a.m., state Route 7, Mae
Young, Holzer Medical Center;
9:12 p.m., volunteer fire department to auto fire on W. Main
Street.
RACINE
9:37 p.m .. Racine Fire Station,
Hannah Hawley, treated al tbe
·
scene.
RUTLAND
9:48 p.m.. VFD and squad to
motor-vehicle accident at Horner
Hill Road, Keith Herdman, treated
at the scene.

considerable ·steps in reducing the
disl'arities iri resources bet ween
we31thy districts and poor ones,"
Needles said.
"We've narrowed tbem more
than ever over the last five years, ·
and state spending for education
bas substantially increased at more
than twice the rate of inflation." be
said.
The nearly $10,000 su~ey was
financed tbrougb the coahtwn, a group that includes more than 500

of the state's 611 school districts.
Dues from member districts pay for
coalition operations.
Perry County Common Pleas
Judge Linton Lewis Jr. ruled in
July that the stale system of fuiancing primary and secondary educa)ion was inadequate and
inequitable.
··
Tbe coalition lawsui·t now is
pcpding in the 5th Obio Di strict
Court of Appeals in canton

.Poll says ..~onllnued from page 1

·

Divorces and
dissolutions
The following ac tions to end
marriage were ftlcd recently in the
office of Meigs County Cleric of
Courts Larry Spencer:
Dissolutions asked - Anna D.
Frair, Middleport. and John R.
Frair, l;lamilto n. May 5; Gregory
G. King and Nancy J. King, both of
Pomeroy.
Dissolution granted - 'Edward
Lemaster and 0 . Katherine Lemaster, May 8.
Divorce granted - Katie Mae
Gilmore and William Robert
·Gilffiore, May 5.

oan:a. WAI II~ In
GIFT CERTIAC:A TES

CELLULAR PHONE
.
SPECIAL
.

- Entire Month of May-

Cellular.
Ph011es
Star,ting At

Two Reedsville men were arrested Monday by the Meigs County
Sheriffs Department on outstanding warrants .
·,
Charles 1. Smith, 58, was ;u:rested on a warrant charging him
with failure to work ofT a fme and 'oou!t costs of $404.80 and failure
to report for 10 days jail, said Sheriff James M. Soulsby. ·
,
In addition, Wendall Barber, 31 , was arrested on a warrant for
•
· ·
failure to auend a status beanng.
They will appear before County Court Judge Pauiclc H. O' Brien,
Soulsby said.

POSTMASTRR: St rKI add reu com:clions to
The Daily Sentinel, I ! I ~'!urt St , Pomeroy,

"

Man cited in crash

Great Lakes region, and from the
western Great Lakes region to por·
tioos of the central and Dortbwest·
em PlaiDs.
Sbowets and tbundenll!OJIS also
were possible from NOrtbern Cali·
Cornia and the northern West Coast
to the northern Rockies, especially
in Oregon and Washington. Dry
cooditioos were expected in New
England and !be rest or the South·
west, with temperatures reaching
into the 80s in the deserts from
southern and western Arizona to
southeast California.
Temperatures were forecast

Men arrested im warrants

Member: The Associ ated Press, and tht Oh io
Newspaper Association.

,,

. The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

Warm, wet weather forecast for Wednesday

Weather

Hey, loudmouths: Don't become .demagogues
have the same attitude.
There · is a common ' ground
between us (to be politically correct about Ibis), an interface
between our antisocial behaviors. I
too will never run for public office.
I'd like to think that if I were ever
imprisoned for breaking into the
Democratic Party's national campaign office, I'd eat a rat as well.
Well, OK, Rush bas said be
won't run for office, too. But Rusb
· Limbaugh is a clown by his own
admission, an entertainer. He's
· never eaten a rat in his life. He bas
yet to eat crow even .
, Poor President Clinton, however, bas ~de a political career out
of eating crow. He can't win. When
be expressed sympathy. for lbe victims in Oklahoma City, be was
accused of .using mass murder for
political ends. Yet if be' d retnained
. silent, he'd have been accused of
''insensitivity.••
Civilized discourse is a thing of
the past. At the top, President Clin·
ton placed some of the blame on
extreme right-wing talk-show bosts
for contributing to the bombing ii1
Oklahoma City. (Rusb? A mad
bomber? Hello?) At the bottom, the
guy in my barber' sbop informed
the guys wailing for a trim that the

.... f - fer

: Soutb·Central Ohio
.
Tonigbt...Mp~tly cloudy with
· scauered showers and thunder, storms. Low in the lower 60s.
South winds 10 to 20 mpb. Chance
.: . or rain is SO percent
: . Wednesday ... Mostly cloudy
With scattered thunderstorms. Hlgb
· . 75 to 80. Chance of rain is SO per·
cent.

-+--- ·

•

•

Wee~llwt
. Wect-ad.IJ, Ma1 to

Excuses from the Not-Me Decade
to tbe workplace," namely "the
pain, abUJe ud powerlessnen I
have felt during the yean I worked
as a lay woman 011 a seaior level at
tbe cbwth beadquart.ers."
6. The autopen did It, by Federi· .
co Pena. The Secretary of Trans·
portation retracted a statement;
made in a letter, that was at odds
witb Clinton administratloa policy.
But be didn't sign the letter. Some
damned machine signed it
5. Tbe ghostwriter did it, by
Newt Gingrich. Yes, tbe draft of a
novel that will bear bis byline was
a bit racy, and yes, it did desaibe a
cbaracter named George Bush as
"goofy." But Newtie "neither
wrote, saw, 1101' approved': it.
4. The failure-to-ftle syndrome
did it. by some taxpayers in New
York state. An innate inability to
act in their own interest. their attar·
neys and psychiatric experts
argued, explained wby they did not
get their tax retums in on lime.
3. An atrophied brain did it. by
William Aramony. The former
president of United Way said be
stole $600,000 from the charity's
coffeJ"s because be took a bad fall
in the mid-1980s and his gmy mat·
ter subsequently began wasting

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OHIO

..

Page A2 • The Dally SenUnel

• •

1biJ being the IIIJiliOximate mid· cy and said be wu the victim of did it. by lweball player Darryl
ooint of the Not-Me J&gt;ecade, also . Prozac-l!!()nred lmpuiael?
· Strawberry. This explained bis

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Tueeday, May t, 1tiS

•

•

gge

Certain Restription Apply

SINGLE COPY PRICE
llnily ......................................... ........... J:'iCents

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

••
~~-..

ltadle nlaelt · Clearly
CELLULARONE'
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D EA L E R

No subtcfiption by mail permt_tted tn areas
where home carrl~ Jtf'Yice t5 avrulable.
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inside Meigs Councy

13 week., ................................................ $23.92

.....................:.........................

l6 woo~u
$47.06
..52 Weeks.1................................................$92.S6
Rat" OU&lt;Jtd&lt;·Me~p Coun1y
13 w..~u ......:.........................................sn .61
26 We:elu .. ,.,a,,.,..,,,,.,.,,,.,..,., . .,.. ,.,, .........S49.66
l2 Weekt ................................................. $96.20

S/8
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Ill
Weady lnt'L
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WorthiDgtoa Iad.- - ----19
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Stock re(ioru
tbel0:30
quolu provided by Adnst
GaWpolis.

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; ELECTRONICS
POMEROY
Near Pomeroy-Mason Bridge .

992· 2588

. VINTON
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155 Main St.

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Sports

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily _S entinel·

Meigs girls down Belpre 5·1 in D-11 sectional final

Tuesday, May t, 1995

Pea•·

4.

Spurs get by Lakers 97-90 iri
By KELLEY SHANNON .
record, and Robinson added 16,
SAN ANTONIO (AP) - . A along witb five blocks. Tbe Spun
sloppy playoff game marred by QUtrebounded !be Lakers 62-46.
poor shooting turned Into a lucky
"Rodmaa ·was huge," Robinson
overtime victory for !be San Anro- said. "Wben we shoot poorly, we
nio Spurs and a miserable defeat all bave to pick up !be slack. I told
for the Los Angeles Lakers.
him before !be game we needed 20
Now the 1eams bave four days · rebounds, and be got it."
to sort out the mess and get ready
Rodman said be bad no cboice
for Game 3 of their Western Con· but to scme.
ference semirmal.
·
"I even sbot a jumper. That's
"It's a lesson for us.'Sometimes the first time I've done that In
tbe close ones send up a red flag,"
many moons," said tbc eccentric
said Spurs coaciJ Bob Hill.
forward who sporled newly dyed
The Spurs beat.tbe Lakcrs 97-90 green hair. •
in overtime Monday night to ta1r.e a
San Antonio shot only 35 per·
2-0 lead in the best-of-seven series, cent from !be floor, while the Lak·
wbicll continues Friday In Los · ers made ooly 39 percent from the
Angeles.
floor and 68 percent from the line.
"I thought the game was ours,"
Rodman tied it 83-83 with a
said Lakers coach Del Harris. "We field goal with 26.2 · seconds '
outplayed lbem."
.
remaining In regulation. Then,
In other series, Indiana is at under the Lakers' basket, Rodman
New York for Game ~ tonight,
collected his sixth foul and sent
while defending champion Houston Divac to !he line.
visits Phoenix to open their West·
Arler Divac missed both shots,
ern Conference match up. On
tbe Spurs inbounded witb 4.1 sec·
Wednesday night, Chicago is at onds left. They got the ball to
Orlando, which has a 1· 0 lead.
Robinson, .whose 12-footer
San Antonio came dangerously slammed off the backboard.
close to losing its first playoff
· Tbe Lakers scored only two
game Ibis year, but the Lakers blew field goals In overtime, both in the
a chance to win It in regulation . last 10 seconds.
·
when Vlade Divac missed two free
A 25-15 run in the !bird quarler

DRIVING HARD to the hoop In an attempt to get put San Anto·
nlo's VInny Del Negro and Sean Elliott Is tbe L.A. Lakera' Cedric
CebaU01 ln1the third qUIII'Cer of Game :Z of their NBA Western Con·
fennc:e seJiJillnals Monday night In San Antonio, where tbe Spurs
won a seven-point decision In onrtlme. (AP)

Stackhouse to leave
North Carolina for NBA
By TOM FOREMAN Jr.
CHAPEL HILL. N.C. (AP)- It
would be natural for North Caroli·
na coach Dean Smith to mil against
baving underclassmen leaving
school before their class graduates.
,
After all, within the past five ·
days, Smith has watched two of his
stars leave Chapel Hill. 'Center
RJ!Sbeed Wallace 8nd forward Jeny
S!ackbouse, both sophomores,
announced plans to forfeit their
final two years of athletic eligibili·
ty to enler the NBA dmft.
Instead, Smith alieady bas made
bls feelings clear. He wrote some
of the nation's leaders in higher
education back in 1990 and told
them the trend of underclassmen
leaving for !be professional ranks
iso 't all tbat bad. He ciled excerpts
of. lhe letler to fonner Notre Dame
president Father Theodore Hes·
bursh and former University of
Norlh Carolina system president
William Friday during the news ·
conference to 'announce Stack·
bouse's departure.
"What I was pointing oul was

Adrian Dantley, Michael Jordan
and James Worthy bave their
. degrees,'~ Smith said. "You can do

bolb.
''What would 11e the barm
would be a guy going four years
and not graduating. Then, they've
truly been exploited." ·
Smith bas made it a policy to
make sure those Tar Heels wbo
leave his prognun early come back
and complete their work for a
degree. He bas Stackhouse's word
thatlhe tradition will be upheld.
"I plan ,on doing both summer
sessions Ibis year to move me for·
ward and closer to getting the hours
that I need to graduale," Stack·
house said. "That's definitely
something that I want and for my
family.
"My brother bas graduated
from Florida. State." I can't let him
outdo me."
Smilh's letter also pointed out
lhat basketball isn' t tbe only sport
where early departures take place.
Major league pilcber ' Ron Darling
(Se STACKHOUSE
P . 5)

Scoreboard
Monday's scora

Baseball

How.1on 6, Pittaburgh 3
Montreal7, Aorida S
Philadelphia J, Allanta 2
C'hlcaao 7, SL Louli .4
san Diego .5, l.o1 Angelea 2

Major leagues
AMERICAN LEAGUE

ram

.:..... D+fl. .

l! L r.&amp;.

BoltOa .....................7

4

New Yott ................7
Torooto ... :............... .6
Boltl .......................s

4 .636

l)etroit ................. :J
M ..

.636

Tonight's games

a

CINCINNATI (Smiley 0-0) at Pt"ld•
(Rapp 0·1), 7:05p.m.
•

l

.l4S

I

6

.4SS

2

I

.273

.4

CutniOhW.
Milwauk:ee ...............l
3 .727
CJ.EVEL\1'!1) .........7
JtanJu City .............6

4 .636
S .S4S

CJticqo ................... l

I
I

Miunesot~ ................ 4

w...... ""' ....

Seattle ......................?
Cati!orn~ ............. c.6

3

.700

Ten• ..... ...................5

S J4l
1 .411

Oaklan4 ...................4

8

.333

1.5

Los Angeles (M&amp;rtlnez 2·0) at Sao

.4

CLEVELAND 6, Kanau 01y 2

Miu•ota 2

TeUI7, Oai1Ud 4 (10 inn.}

Houston (Reynolds 0-1) at PittsburJh
(Lieber 0.2), 7:35 p.m.
Atlaata (Avery 0 -l} at New York
(Saba'hqcn 0-1 ), 1:1(0 p.m.
ChiCIJO (Trachae1 0- 1) at St. Loui1

Wednesday's games

.

3

·

Diego (Valenmcla 0• 1). 4:0' p.m.
CINCINNATI (JarviJ . ~) at Florida
(Burkett 2·1), 7:05p.m
,.
Montreal (llererua 1-l) at Philadclpllia
(Qrec:n 1-1 ), 7:3.5 p.m.
Houlton (Hampton 1-1) at PittJburgh
(Wu,ner 0-2), 7 :3 ~ p.m.
Atlanta (Merckcr 0-1) at New York

T011lght'• gomes
Kan.111 Ctty (!Jotoa 0.0) II CLEVE·
LAND (lknl!ll«ll-1), 7:0S p.m.
Baltimore (McDoaald tl-0) at BoJtoD
iCormi,.l.O~ 7:0l p.m.
New Yott (McDowelll-0) at Toronto·
(l!eatacal.0),7:l5p.m
,
MinctCM (lllwkiu 0.2) tl Chiugo
(Abbott 6-l), I:OS r ·PL
.,....,It (We\11 ·I) ot Mltwtuk&lt;e (F.\-

..... t -0~ l :OS p.m.

s-te (B01io 2·0) at O!!IJaod (Stottle·
. myre 1·0), lltJ!S_ ~
..
.
.
TeXII (HelliDI 0 · 0) at C11lrornia
. (l.anptOI! 0.0~ IO:OS p.m.

Wed-clay'• c•mea

Kazuo Cloy {Oublcza. l · l) ot CLEVP.·
LAND (Noll' 1.0), 7:0l p.m.
.
Baltimore (PcrundR 0-0) at Bostu n
(llanooai.O~ 7:0l p.m.

••

New York {Peru 1·0) at Toront o
(G!W111!110.0),7:ll p.m
MiiUiesota (ErkDon O.l) • Chlcaao
(lon 0.1), I :Ol p.m. ~
·
Detroit (Moore l·O) at Mllwautee
(Scalllao 6-0p:Ol p.m.
'
Seoltle (FI&lt;miDJ J.t ) • OMI&amp;;;d (On·
u..... l·l), IO:lSp.m.
Tea. (f,ewD\Nfy 1-0) • C.Jiforni•
(Sa.Ddenoa 0-l), 10:3S p.m.

away."

Campbell's 12 points. dunng the
rally and capped by h1s go-abcad,
dunk, gave Los Angeles the 65-64
lead.
"It doesn't matter that I played
a good game as long as tbe 1eam

RT 114 MINER~VILLE, OH
The Old Sloan CarperBuilding

~----------....."':'::::=

LET ·us NOT FORGET~OG
•

Those Who Have Given Their Lives
To Preserve America's Freedom
1bts Memorial Day, we would ltke to pay tribute to the
many brave many and women who have·gtven thetr lives
to uphold and protect our cOuntry's tdea/s.

•

front-runner .

Olaroiach 0.0), 7:40p.m.
Olcaao (Foster l..(l} 11 St. Louls (Urbani 1-1), B:OS p.m.
' San Francilco (LeiiCf I .0} at Colorado

(Olivares 1· 1). 9:05p.m.

Basketball

Our statistics show that mature dri·
vers and home owners have lewe1 and
less costly losses than other age
groups. So it's only fair to charge you
less for your insurance. Insure your
home and car with us and save even
more with our special mulli·policy
d1scounts.
'

NBA playoffs
.

Monday's scores

S11n Anto nio~. l..A. Laker190 (OT);
Snn Antonio leads series 2-o

.i

Tonight's c-os

lndl ... II New YD&lt;k, Bp.m. (INI')
Jlouatoa a1 Phoenil, 10:30 p.m. ('I'NT)

.

Andrews, David C
July

10, 1961-May 5, 1980

To rel)lember your loved
one in thi s special way,
send $ 10.00 per li sting.·
Picture optional. Your
spec ial
tribute
will
become
a
permanent
.m.emorial record in our

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you
throughout time.

paper. All tributes must
be received no later than
Wed., May 24; 4:00 p.m.
· Fi II out the form below
and mail to:

• Always in our hearts,
John and Mona Andrews

TI:IE DAILY
SENTINEL
With Fondest Memories

and Family

CINCINNATI (AP) - Gus
Bell, an outfielder with tbe Oncin·
nati Reds (or nine or his 15 major·
league seasons, died Sunday
evening. He was 66.
• Bell suffered a heart attack May
1 and was at Bethesda North Hospital when be died, a spokeswoman
. said Monday. A funeral Mass is
sebeduled for Wednesday at Good
Shepherd Cburcb in suburban
Symmes Township.
.
A big fmlsb salvaged a big win off witb · a single and Ryan
Bell bit .281 while playing for for tbe Southern Toranddes as they : williams lljt a long bomc run.
Pittsb\lrgb, Cincinnati, the New rolled to a 12·9 victory over Vintoo Maynard singled, Lisle walked and
York Mets and the Milwaukee County Monday night in Tri-Valley Jay Mcj{elvey walked to loiJ!i the
Braves from 1950-64. He was the Conference baseball action.
bases. Shawn Dailey reached on an
starting right fielder in lhe Mets'
Scoring seveo runs in !be sev· · error and Deemer walked, while
fllst game on Aprilll, 1962, and enth inning, Southern overcame a Chris Hendricks hit a sacrifice fly.
got their first hit in an 11-4 loss to devastating six run inning by tbe Randolph ·walked before Martin
St. Louis.
V !kings the inning before, wben singled borne the last two run.s for a
Bell, who was born in the Tornadoes fell behind 9·5.
12-9 SHS lead.
Louisville, Ky., played for tbe Reds
Southern went up 4-2 in tbe
Starter Ryan Williams came on
from 1953-61. He was 0-for-3 as a • f.ourth .wben Jesse Maynard sin- in relief to strike out the last two
pinch bitter during the 1961 World gled, Travis Lisle singled, Smith batters to secure the Southern win.
Series, which the New York Yan- walked and Shawn Dailey had a Soutliern pitchers (Williams, May·
sacrifice. Kevin Deemer had a two- nard, Deemer and Randolph) gave
kees won in five games.
· His best seasons were 1953-, run single and Ryan Hill a two·nm up four hits, riine strikeouts and
wben he batted .300 with 30 double. Maynard slammed a solo- etgbt walks. The SHS defeose had
h(&gt;mers, and 1955, when be bit .308 borne run in the flftb as Southern three errors.
with 27 home runs.
widened its lead.
VC pitching combined for four
: He was part of a rare three-genVinton County added a single strikeouts, eight walks and their
eration baseball family. His son
run in the same inning for a 5·3 defense had eight errors. The
Buddy and grandson David also . tally, but Vinton County erupted Vikings gave up 12 bits.
have played iwllte major leagues . for six runs in the sixth off reliever Inning totals
The Boone family also bas three Kevin Deemer. Jimmy Randolph Sou.
000-410-6=12•12·3 ·
generations of major leaguers: .Ray, . came on to put out the rJre, walking Vinton Co.
2()().()16-0=9-4-5
an infielder from 1948-60; son · .one and havins another reach on an
WP - Randolph (io relief of
Bob, lhe Kansas City Royals' man·
error before getting Ward to fly Williams; Williams save)
ager; and grandson Brei, t)le Reds'
oul
LP-Murpby
second baseman.
.
Trailing 9-S, Ryan Martin led
Buddy Bell is tbe Cleveland
Indians' infield coach. He returned
to Cincinnati on Monday. David.
an infielder on lite Indians' 28-man
roster, will leave lite team to attend 1
lhe funeral.

Ill Court Street
·Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

ble. ·Sbe was left lllraDded llleCODIS
111

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Coo·
. sistency is Scott Pruett's calling
card. Speed is Arie Luyeodyk's.
Wabama's baseball team,
Pruett hasn't won a race t~is
,already. ahead 1·0 in Monday's season;. he hasn't even led a single
encounter with visiting River Val· · lap. Yet be's the only driver to fin.
ley , ' gol a two-run homer from isb among the top 10 in every race
!ason King (1-1) in the !bird inning and is the IndyCar points leader
to help push lhe White Falcons to a going into the biggest race of tbem ·
.5·3 victory.
all, the Indianapolis 500.
Cbad Ord wentlhe dislance fa . But Luyendyk, tbe 1990 winner
the Falcons, striking out six and and a part-time driver this season,
walking three along the way. River bas made the most of his limited '
Valley starter Kevin Edwards, who tracli time, and on Monday he sbat·
took tbe loss, pitched five inninss tered the unofficial track rilcord set
before.giving way to senia Bobby three years ago by Jim Crawford.
Fink (1·6), wbo wjll start in · A lap at 234.107 mph just five
Wednesday's Division II sectional minutes after the track opened
game at Jackson against the host didn't surprise Luyendyk, whose
lronmen. The ·pair. fanned 10 and Menard engines have belped make
walked four.
him and teammate Scott Brayton
The 'rest ofWabama's hitters, all favorites for the pole on the first
of whom got singles, were Dale day of qualifications Salllrday.
Johnson (3-4) and Gabe Scott (1·
"The conditions were ideal. The
3). River Valley's hitters, all of weatberis a little bit cooler, and !be
whom had singles, were Chris cars just work a little bit better and
Maynard (1-1) , Buck Reynolds 0· . so do lhe engines. The car is wotlc·
3), John Browning, Fink and Jamie · ing really good right now,"
Gruber'(all 1-4).
Luyendyk said.
Inning totals
Luyendyk drove only nine laps
RVHS
()()().IJ().I=3·5·1
on Monday, then pad:ed his car so
Wahama
102-200.x=5-5-2 lhe crew could change engines.
WP - Ord
"I think ~ere's more in it If I
. LP- Fink
could have run more today, I would
have gone 235,'' l!e saiil.
Luyendyk's best previous lap
was at 233.281 on tbe opening day
of practice last Saturday. Craw·
ford's unofficial record was
233.433, bui lhe official recordswhich may be brOken only dtuing
qualifications or tbe race itself ~
still are held by Roberto Guerrero.
Luyendyk said be still wasn't
completely satisfied at 234.
"You always bave to be careful, ·
because the competition misbt
come· up wilh a surprise," he said.
','Right now, we're not even lh~nk·
ing about tbe race, just qualifying."
Paul Tracy, who bad a top lap of

to fly out to caller.
Bobbie Butcher sinsled In !be
sixlh for Mdp, but was 0111 on a S3 puund out by McElrily.
Aller Billie Bulda got Haynes
to ground out 6-3 In the seventh,
she then struck out the last two
Belprc batters to secure tbe cbam·

Hockey
NHL playoffs '

WP - · Butcher
LP-Aroold .

REDUCED TO

1995 HONDA CIVIC 4 DR.
Auto. trans., air cond., power steering, cruise control, power windows, tinted
glass, cruise control; power locks, rear defogger, radial tires, full wheel covers.

· ONLT

1

$1500 down, 24 mo., 12,000 mi)jl yr., Lease Value $11,175.40. Rate factor .00248, 1st payment
&amp; security deposit.
·

...

ATHENS

CARS

TJlE 5{jfppy JI09{1J.9l. prropL'E
810 E. STA"J:E ST.- ATHENS, OHIO\
594-8555
Used Car Des:,t.

POS'f.l\1

NO'fF.S

•

First class postage ·32¢ ~
mules, boats and bush pilots
included free.

nui.liTH, Ga (AP) - Second·
seeded Michael Chang continued
bis Iitle defense in the AT&amp;T Challenge, beating Wade McGuire 6·1,
6:2 in lhe second round.
Fourth-seeded Todd Martin beat
Germany's Karsten Braasch 6-2, 62 and New Zealand's Brett Steven
upset sixth-seeded Aaron Krick·
stein 7-5, 6·2.

GENERAL TIRE SALES ·
614·992· 7161

32().00()-x•S-9-2
000.001.0.1-3-2

•

-Sports briefs--

•

lnnlnc totals

Meigs BeliR

Gray, sunroof, auto. trans., power windows &amp; locks, cruise, rear wiper, tinted
gl'aas, air cond., 16" custom wheels &amp; tires, custom stripe.

other driver above 230. Next are
Mauricio Gugelmln at 249.481 and
Michael AJWre.tti at 229.299.
Brayton, who went 232.408 on
Salllrday, bettered that wilh a speed
of 232.859 Monday. Robby Gordon improved his best lap by
almost 2 mpb to 228.531. Pruett
raised bis best speed to 226.9.52,
and like everyone else he said he
expects the Menard-powered Lolas
of Luyendyk and Brayton to doml·
nate the pole-positioo qualifying.
"We all lrnew tbey were going
to be tough .here. This is their focal
point," Pruett said of Team
Menard, which races only at lndl·
anapolis. "That's why they tested,
I think, 40 days here between last
year and this year. For tbem, doing
that is no surprise. We lrnew they'd
be that fast
"The big question mark Is how
fast and how to.ugh will they be in
the race, bow consistent will they
be in the race ... "
Pruet~ tbe 1989 Indy co-rookie
of the year, suffered severe leg
injuries during tests the following
spring and missed the entire 1990
season. He returned .to racing in
1991 and teamed witb former win,
ner Bobby Rahal. After finishing
30th in 1992, he was bumped from
the lineup the next year, did ·not
compete in Indy cars in 1994 and
joined Patrick Racing this season.
. "This is the firSt time I'm bav·
ing a lot of fun ~ing Indy cars,"
be said.
'

C:0\11'1 TEH TIBE B \1. -\:\I:J:\(;

Meigs hillers were Fackler 2-2
with a double and walk. Blackwdl
2-3' with a double, Stewart two
doubles, Cotterill a single and
walk, Boi!bie Butcher a single, and
Novak a single. BeliR hiaers were
Arnold, Rouse and Nikki Aniold.
Billie Butchez picked up tbe win

with anotber 1re11 d'tort In addltioo
to IJOIDC aood delCIIIive playa 6:om .
her teammates In the field. Slle
fanned nine and walked jllll two.
Anrold suffered tbe loA widl four
slriteouts and three walb.

1994 HONDA PASSPORT EIW 4 WHEEL DRIVE

Wodnetrdoy'a gome

QkaF • Orlaodo, 8 p.m. (J'N'I)

Iolm Amott's Maraudcn. (15-5)
will advance to lhe district toWDa·
mc:ot lata tbia week.

Billie Butcbt:t 101 Crystal Goin

SOUthern diamondmen
beat Vinton County 12-9

top RVHS 5·3

Hockey
WINNIPEG, Manitoba (AP) A last attempt to sell the Winnipeg
Jets to a local group failed, meaning Canada will likely lose one of
its eight NHL teams.
Jets president Barry Shenllarow
said he would like to sell the rmancially ailing team as soon as possible.
,
S@veral U.S. iniCrests bave been
·mentioned as possible buyers, wilh
the Minneapolis group led by
Richard B ilrke considered the

Drivers, Home
OwnersAnd ·
Mobile Home
Owners Special
. Savings. ·

waJ!'r:d

Pruett and Luyendyk
tabbed drivers to watch
in upcoming Indy 500
Wahama boys By STEVE HERMAN
231.315 on Monday, is tb.e only

On Sunday, May 28, we will publish
a special section devoted to lhose
who arc gone bul not forgouen.
'fhe names will be placed in
alphabetical order and will be
similar 10 the sample below.

We Give Mature

By SCOTI' WOU'E
frame, bitting the second batler
SentiDeiCornlpGDdellt
Amy ' Rouse but eacarina
Scorlna tbRC runa In ~e llnt •msarbed, Belprc MDI dowu -2-3
inllinl IIDd two In tbe aecood, tbe In tbe IClCOIId
Melas Marauden, behind B Ulic
After Meigs bad two ouu· In !be
Butcher's pitching, posted a S-1 . . botlool or tbe leCOIICI. Fadd« linDivision II Nortbeut Sectlooal aJcd. Blackwell doubled ud Stew·
cbampionibip vi~ over tbe Bel·· art bad a two-RBI double few a 5.0
1ft GOlden Eagles:
Meigs adYIIItage.
Tbe championship was !be secHmn~
fm' Bel·
ond for !be Meigs sqUad in as many pre m the third, but Billie Bu~
weeks, as Meigs took the Tri-Val~ fanned two and personally retired
ley Conference Ohio Division tbe las.l blUer on a groundout.
· crown last week.
· Meigs I!VIIDI down 1-2-3 In tbe third
Stephanie Slewart got two key . and foUrth as Nikki Arnold mowed
hits In the MHS ~ailing order, as down tbe Meiss bailers after a
sbe and Amber BlackweU starled rocky siDrt.
tbe game twa-for·twn. .
BiUic Buldler _mowed do_wD tbe
Meigs scored tbRC runs in the Golden Eagles With two strikeouts
fmt wheo Emily Fackler led off the and a popup In the fifth. Meigs
game with a walk, Amber Black· threatened in the fifth 111 Cotterill
wen singled, and both scored oo a walked and advanc;ed to second,
Stephanie Slewart double. Cynthia but sbe was stranded.
Cotterill sins led before Bobbie
Belpre Iii up the aluminum In ·
B utcber balled In a ,run on a 1· 3 the sixth inning wben Kim Arnold
ground out for a 3-0 tally. Th*t led off with a double before Rouse
came afler Billie Butcher healed up singled. Then witb two oul, Nikki
in the first with a near.perfect Arnold hammered a two-run dou-

E:rln

Gus Bell
dies at 66

r~d~Eii~D~·~ii~;~~-

-Sports briefs--

··

\

· ·

Tbe Spurs considered them·
selves lucky.
"We don't lrnow if we deserve
it, but we ·will sure take it," said
Avery J obnson, wbo bad 12 points
and nine assists.
·
David Robinson bad a pitiful
shooting game, but made a crucial
field goal :ind two free throws in
overtime to seallhe vic lOry'
"I was mi ~s ing shots from
point-blank range, and tbat' s pretty
tougb," .said Robinson, who was 6for-26 from the field, but still led
tbe Sputs in scoring along with
Dl;nnis Rodman. They scored 22
points each.
Wilh 1:54 left in the extra peri·
od Robinson grabbed tbe ball afler
be missed a shot and made a basket
to give lhe Spurs a 9().86 lead.
He sank two free throws with
1:14 remaining when Elden Campbell fouled out. ibe 92-86 advan·
tage scaled it for the Spurs.
Rodman also grabbed 22
rebounds, a San Antonio playoff

·.

loses," wd Campbell, who led !be
Lakers with 2S points and 18
rebounds. .
.
Eddie Jones scored 20 pomts,
wbile Nick Van Exel bad 17 plus
10 assisls.

(Quaiilrill 1.0). 7:35 p .m,

2
4.5
5

Moaday'•scora

Odcqo 4,

Phllad~lpllia

(Oiboroe 0-0), 8:0S p~!Jl'
Sao Franclaco (Wi11on 2-0) at Col. or&amp;do (Ritz 0-0), 9 :05 p.m.
·
Los AoaeleJ (Caodiotli l·l) at ·Sao
Dier~o (Sanden 1·0), lO:OS p.m.

I

.333
.27l

Montreal (Henry 0-1) at

lhrows
and
tbe witb
score4.6
tiedseconds
83-83. remaining
"I had lhe game in my hands,"
said Divac, wbo made his other
four free-throw atlempts Monday.
"It burts a lot to let this one get

~verti~e

.

.

•

In the NBA playoff•,

The Dally Sentinel • Pege A5 :

The 32¢ fust class stamp you stick on an
envelope imposes an obligation on the U.S.
Postal Service to get your letter from wherever you are to wherever it's going, whatever it takes. To fulftll this mission "to
. provide uniform service throughout the natio~," occasionally it takes quite a lot.
Mules cany mail to the bottom of the Grand
Canyon. Bush pilots deliver mail above the Arctic Circle
or in the Alaskan wilderness. We use mailboats to
deliver to ships on America's rivers, and along the bayous of Louisiana. And we do it six days a week, 580
million pieces of m!}il a day.
But, you say, if the USPS could do all that for 29tt
last year, why is it 32¢ this year? Be.cause, unlike many
other government services, the USPS is a self-supporting business, not funded by' tax dollars. So when the
price of gasoline goes up a penny a gallon, for i~tance,
it costs us .more than $1 million extra in operating costs.
We don't have exact' figures on mule food, but that
probably costs more too.
On the other hand, through high-tech equipment
and automation, the USPS continues to have the lowest.· cost rates for ftrst -class mail of any industrialized nation
in the world.
'

.'

Hours M·F 8-5

-~---'--

_.J\nd.-.with the-USPS

:lLO-U+C.~!L!:QUnt.CJn..getting

, the same service everywhere, from our biggest oftke
(the one in Manhattan) to our smallest, the 61 square
foot office at Ochopee, Florida. •
UNITEDSTIJTES

STRUTS

#

. SHOCKS
TIRES

POSTLIL SERVICE~

We Deliver For You.
.'

CI~USPS

...

~--

�page A6 ·The Dally .Sentlntl

..

Tuesday; May t, 19815

Pamtroy • Middleport, OhiO

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page AT

:jSighs of a stalker may begin irl seemingly inno~ent mistakes ;

- - - - . . . , , · believe the lillie 11 supenor and has everywhere. 'Ibll college girl should
toll I propriellry rig~ts over the waste no time, go straight to the
female. ~ are ~ngle-~1nded school authorities and identify the
and petiiJiall. They Will conunue 10 I intruderhealuse the longer she waits,
Slllk .until they are caught. And the less credibility she will have. 1
.. 1• • l.OII .......
aomc.umes even ~~ ~t ·
pray that she reads your column today ,
-Syi
Th11~1ed friend mtendediO aild acts promptly. I am •.·
~'~·
"!JIC that ~irl, rough her up if_ needed, , EXPERIENCED IN THESE MA'J:
Dear ADD Landers: Your advice kill ~ 1f necessary. Cons1der the TERS IN ALBAJIIY, N.Y.
10 ·uneasy in N.J." was terrible. The f~lloy.omg: Now that~ has caught
DEAR.. ALBANY: 1 did not
male student wlio walked into her h1m m her room, he Will have~ find · inrerprel that young man's behavior
: donn room inlhemiddleofthe night another way or~ woman. And 1 as anything 10 become alarmed abouL
: and frightened her to death is no when Ill: does, tt :WI~ be too late -- Apparently, you did. ·
.
friend .. he's a smlker. And he will she W_Jll be InJured, raped, .
1hope the girlwbowroletome will
· be back, if not to her room, 10 the ~umatrzed •.mayhedead-andthere see your comments' and give-them
' room of some other unsuspecting Will he no _wunes~ 10 the atlliCk. ~e some consideration. There may be
woman.
" .
~tahe Will have IS her word agamst some validity in your interpretation,
Stalkers have serious psycho- h1s.
·
although I did not attach the sinisrer
logical problems, not the least of . Tbcsc are Strange times, and there motives lo h'is entering her room that
· :Which is an inflated male ego. They IS plenty ol SC.Iry stuff going on you did.

·

Ann
Landers
I

...

&lt;
..OU-COM names Catol
~~Kline new community
::service coordinator

Jackson andlM:organ.

One of the existing programs
under the umbrella of KJme's new
p()sition is the Childhood Immunization Program (CHIP), which
uses a mobile health van 10 provide
immunizations for mumps,
measles, and rubella, as well as

1

A program on Mother's Day
was featured at the recent meeting ·
of Chester Council 323, Daughrers
of America, held at the ball .
Readings IDcluded "Somebody' s
Mo.ther" by Opal Hollon; "Our
Garden" by Fnna Cleland; "Mom"
by Joann Baum; "Mothet'' !!y Lora
Damewood; "At Gilmdma's
House" by Mary Jo Barringer; "A

othel services 10 cbildren In South-

·
· IOlnc will work with Eric Hase·

,

Geni of the ~)': I( you're feeliql
W..:• c~c?"'t despta: Even ~ ~

a sulkmg spell every RIJht. but 11
comes_blckupew:rymominJ.lt'alhe
one thing you can count on.

..
YOIH'S
,. CAIPEITII Rilla
oRoomAddllioM

......

~
.. o£~1ilciil .. Plumbing

"

All alcolwl pmb/nlt? How a111 ,OK

lte/p yDIU'#/f 01' SQrrtMift! yoKIOWI?
•Alcolwlism: How to Recotlliu It,
How to Deal Withlt,How to C0111111ttr

'

Grandmother'' by Jean Welsh; and
"What Is. a Mother?" by Esther
~mlth

Each mother was presented a
potCedplant.
A card soower was held booor·
ing Ethel Olr on ber 90th birthday.
Mrs. Oeland feiiO!!ed on the rallies
at ntfm and CICYetand and a visit
to the Tiffin home. Reported Ill

CAROL KLINE

..

L

It" willtiWI yoK.tlte QILJWers. Sellll a
self-oddressed, long, busiNss-size
envelope and a clteck 01' 11101111y Older
for $3.75 (this iiiCiudes postage and

and of the services whieb are avali-

Painting
AIIO Concnle WOI'tl

1~

(FREE ESTIMATU)

S2... permln.
Muot be 18 yra.

"' r.u~·c:::en~sed~--.....-

57-94545-v

J

~uctioneer

1

35581 Flatwoods Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Cert~led Personal
Property Appraiser
Banded (614) 992-4079

_________
~ PUblic

Notic8

WAHAMA ALUMNI BAN·
QUET
The Wabama Alumni banquet
' will beheld May,27 at. the Wabama
Higb school gymnasium. The din: oer will- be served at 6 p.m. by the
Wabama Athletic Boosters. The
. Wah~ Choir will perfonn .
· Scllolarsbip awards will be
made. Reservations forms are
' · available at the Peoples BJ!nk in
Point Pleasant, Mason, and New

At Tuppers Plains
Fire House
Sponsored by the

earned .the Valmont Irrigation
scholarship wonh $1,000.
Sayre is pursuing a degree in
pre-veterinary medicine and communication at the University of Rio
Grande. She is the daughter of
Aaron and Shirley Sayre of Letart
Falls.

Kathryn Johnson eonducl-

·I

Fire Dept.
TUPPERS PLAINS, OH.
SUNDAY, MAY14, 1995
Serving nme Beglne
At 11:00 A.M. Prlce ~.00

Chol.- 01: 112 Chlcll,en or

&amp;.

1la11!J, Mom!

BAKED STEAK DINNER
Senior Citizens Center
Thursday, May 11
Serving from 5:00 to 6:15
Cost $4.00
Music the Classics

RIVERSIDE .
WHOLESALE
Furniture/Mexican lmp0rts
OPEN MAY5-14
9 A.M. TO 8 P.M.
3. pc. Patio Right Iron Sets
$t99.00
Loveseat, Rocker, Reg, Chair
Bird Cages $60.00 &amp; Up
Southwestern Vases
$6.99 to $50.00
Indian Statues $:i.OO to $100.00
3" tall to 8" tail

~/mr~/ ·

Dinette Sets $280.00
InclUdes Padded Chairs &amp; Hutch

5 Pc: Bedroom Suites $t50.00
H.B. Chest, Dresser, MirrOr. ·
Night Stand
AT. 7 S., CROWN CITY
FfjEE GIFTw/purchase over

The Light
Touch
By

'

Teka the p11ln out of
plllntlng. Let ue do It lor

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

m-ge.

Bill Slack
992·2269

you. Very ,_on8bte.
FnteEitlmates
Before 8 p.m. t•ve

AttarS p.m.
6144165-4180 ........

FARMS

'1-9110-656-5000
Ext.1861
$3.99 ~r min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-74204/4/K .

HAULING

House Repair &amp;

JIM REEDY Auctioneer .
AlttlqHS

Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

Remodeling
KHchen &amp; Bath Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Patios
Reasonable
Insured - Experienced
Call Wayne NeH 992-4405
For Free Estimates

Owners:' Robert Barton &amp;
Harry Clark '
992-9949 ' 992·6471

Mon- Fri 8 a.m. · 6 p.m.
Sal. 8 p.m. · 5 p.m.
Sun. by appl. only

Furniture 1 . - . . - - - - - '

4'13115

PSYCHICS
Advise on future
opport]lnity,
decision-making, love,
success, money.
LIVE 24 HOURS

1·900·868·
3800/Ext. 4741
min. titust be 1B yrs,
Procell Co.

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

NEVER
BE LONELY

Custom Building &amp; Remodeling
'NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
•NEW GARAGES
•REMODELING
•S!DING
•ROOFING
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AGAIII
CALL 1-900·945-6100
Ext. 8587
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
·Procall Co.
(602) 954-7 420

FREE ESTIMAT-ES
mo.

. .. .

On ·Thursday, May 1_8, The D_aily ~J!Otinel will
-have a speciaL edition with photographs of
high school seniors graduating ·this year.
.1\,iow through Friday, May 12, Drop Your .
Photo Off At The Daily Sentinel or At Your
High School Office To Be Include~ In This
- -· · .Special Edition, At No Charge.
(Attach Your Name and High School to Photo)

\

. Air canditiomng In the offiee-is
nice - but at least the old·
fashioned electric fan got rid of
the t!ay's work by'blowlng it off
t11e desk.
• • •
We're living in strange times
wh e n co upl es have to
bost pone . th,eir weddi ngs
because they can't get a sitter.

(614) 992-5535
(614) 992·2753

41:!5/tfn

MINI STORAGE
NOW RENTING

Comparable Sizes &amp; Prices
New Haven, WV

304-882-2996

MINUY'S
, HOME IMPROVEMENT

Rooting, Siding, Room
Additions, Concrete, e.tc.
P.O. Box 220,
Bidwell, Oh. 45614
. 614 388-9865

GUYS!
We want to hear
from you!!! We're
live and waltinglll
1·900.388-7000
Ext. 9970
$3.99 per min.
Must be 1&amp;-yrs.
Procall Co.
. (602) 954-7 420
41:!...5

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOPl

- ..

Where do all the' solutions go
when· a - candida te gets
elected?

~

*- * * ·*
-.- ANY PROFESSiONAL,~BUSINE,SS~INDIVIDUAL ~·-

*·*

'

OR CIVIC ORGANIZATIONS WHO WOULDLIKE TO HAVE AN ADVERTISEMENT IN THIS
· SPECIAL EDITION PLEASE
CALL 992·2156.
··
Ask for Dave or Bob
•

11 I'IAI EllOUSIS

Rutland Furniture
742·2211

.'

.

--

One mile out
143 from Rt. 7
Tues.-Wed.-Fri.-Sat.
1-6
•Craftsman Tools

Now renling on S~R. 7
In Chesler across from

NEW-REPAIR

FREE ESTIMATES

. 949-2168
-

110\\\IW
E\C\\ .\TI\(;

Produce

Flowers &amp;
Vegetable Plants
Hanging Baskell
&amp; Flats

Bulldozing, Backhoe,

$6.00

Systems &amp; D'riveways.
Trucking· Limestone,
1bp Soil, Fill'Dirt

Services.
Home Sites, Land
C !eari!!g, Septic

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985-4473

Call '
Tonight!

Buy • Sell • Trade

1- J--,-1~900-126·0033

WHATYAMACALLIT
SHOP

Lone ly ?

MR. RIGGS

Ext. 8878 ·
$2.99 Per Min
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co
(602) 954-7420

I

NEW&amp; USED ·
Household ·
Collectible
9·5 T-Sun.
1 mile from Pomeroy,
SR33N

992·7502 or 992-5805

.... :.....
~

'

·. .

.....

~

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

Kenny's Auto Rental
. Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a car rental.

We Have Cars and Vansl

Kenny's Autd Center
· L
1-800-486-1590
264 Upper River Rd.
Bus. (614) 446-9971
Gallipolis, OH. 45631
""""

BISSELL.BUilDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614;.992-764.3
( No Sunday Calls)
2/1 2192/tfn '

Meet Interesting Singles
Safely And Privately
Listen to voice mail messages left by interesting
sing les of all ages . Leave messages for si ngles
that interest you or open yo ur own voice ma il
box. It's fun, exci ti ng, and can lead lo new
fr iendships-and· meaningful relationships.

Call 'l-900-65 6-3000 Ext. 5752
7 Days A Week - 24 Hours A Day
· $2 .99/Min Must Be 18 Yrs.
Procall Co. (602) 954-7420

/

'

One Stop Complete Auto Bedy Rep1lr

PRECISIOJlAUI.OMOTlVl
Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome
State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

POOR BOYS TIRES

MERIT

J

h 7~--' \.\I . 117~ - .\.&lt;.1.!
I knckr,on. \\ \
C.1ll Lu11 Neal For The Dc.d ,\t The :\ ,·" SII'IL'

COMP.ANY
- - . -·

CONSOLIDATE
Ted A. Warner &amp; Fan1ilvl
lois Wamor-Thompi;onJ
&amp; Fan1ilvl

·I ~-T.l!~Jlwk~£!.1tin~L-J,~
'·

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Daily, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.

5/16/94 TFN

ROBERT BISSE.L L
CONSTRUCTION

1.

-..---

I
I
~·~----~----------------- I
. . . . . ,_. ._, ____., . ,. _. .~ '•~-- ,. ··--· 1. . -~-1
I
•
Total lines
x $1.25 =,_
. _ _.....;
I
Using Artwork #
x Price =--I
. TOTAL COST+_ _ __
I
\ Mall to: The Daily Sentinel
or Ca ll
1 111 Court Street
I
61 4-992-2156 .
I Pomeroy, Oh 45769
'
I

J

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

Call 992-3961

Rill Brothers

Roger &amp; Tom Hill
49534 Slate Route 338
Letarl Falla, Ohio
(614) 247· 2015 daytime
(614) 949-2231 evenings

ROOFING

baals, furnilure, or
whal ever you want.

Call 992-2487
Ow ners: Pe te &amp;
Di ane Hendricks

3).•~---------·~
' ------~-----­

-~

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR All MAKES &amp;
.. MODELS
992-7013 OR
1)92-5553 OR
TOLL FREE 1-800-848·007
DARWIN, OHI,~,
7rl1
TFN
Howard L. Writesel

5:00-11:00
16 for 25.00
12 fo r 20.00

~----~--------------------~

•

614-742·2138

IOx28 -slore (Drs,

·T~ys

Open 9:00-2:00

..

.

Joe N. Sayre
SAYRE TRUCKING

lhe Dairy Queen. Size

-Glassware
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell-Trade
1W111'1D.

SUMMER
IMAGES

Begin Messa~_:y ith person 's first name.
Messages will be arranged alph_abetically.
- Approximately S words per line. FOlJR biNEMINUMUM.
.
.
Please print or type. My Mother's Day greeting should
·
read as follows:

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

House Sites.
Reasonable Roles

MODERN SANITATION

B&amp;W
Garage and Towing
se..Vice Autamotive and Truck
Repa ir
Gas Tank Repair
Radiator Service
a nd Welding
Butch Wilson,
- t- t.SLBt.--3JB,-'=eta rt, OH
614·247 ·3522

Daytime Phone ~-:-----:---=~-.....,==­
____...My checkfor $_____ is enclosed.

· ~

limestone &amp; Grave~
Septic Syslems, Traner &amp;

STORAGE
COMPARTMENTS

Home Phone ---------..,.------------------

1)·------------~------~~--

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION

Call for rate schedule
Min. $2,00

City -----~ State - -- - ZiP-.----

ATTENTION!
AREA HIGH SCHOOL
GRADUATES OF
194J"5
•

People who .smile In the face
of trouble are either brave, or
covered by insurance.
•• •
The person who is ne ver
criticized isn't breathing.

. 32124 Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; .Peggy
Brickles
614-742-2193
.onw"

Serving Pomeroy1 Middleport
&amp; surrounding area.

- .;...
· -----------------------Address -------- ;;..

•

'

H&amp;H SAWMILL

COMMUNITY
CAB CO. INC.

Your Name ______________________________

Dave
Grate
· of
Rutland

Call for all of your storage needs

Portable
Bandsaw Mill

AUCTIONEER
SERVICE

SERVICE

{Specialize In
driveway IIJIIaadlng)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,

(602) 954-7420

Open For Business

'

MiFF REMODELING

$3.99

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-5251

RACINE , OHIO

949·2192

LIVE
PSYCHICS .
1 ON 1

Convenient Mini-Storage Units
S. R. 7 Five Points

Sfti.A·WAY

ss

6.

........ ..•

....... &amp; .
lxtorlor

WICKS

4/:M/'1

3..

4.

.........

. (1111 &amp;liM laW htt1)

hlllvH.............
I i'wtt;elc.
(Depot St) Rutland to
Leading Creek, then to
Paulins Hill. Just 2 1/2
miles from Rutland or4
112 miles from SR 7

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

1995r·--------~----------.----------.

ss
ss

$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420

4'21f95

BULLETIN BOARD
'6DO column Inch weekday&gt;
*8DO column Inch Sunday

The National FFA Foundation
awarded 850 scholarships Ibis year
out of more than 7,QOO applicaMom's done a lot of nice things for you, sp now is the time to do
tions. The ·winners earned their
awards based on the applicant's something nice for mom. 'fell her you love her ·with a Mother's Day
academic record, FFA and other ·
activities, career plans and finan- greeting in The· Daily Sentinel on Friday, May 12. .
Your personalized four:line message is only $5 for four lines,
cial need.
additional lines are $1.25 each. Special artwork can · further
customize your greeting. ·
Give her a gift she'll remember- a heartfelt greeting in The Daily
· Sentinel. Deadline to place your greeting is Wednesday, May 10,

2.

(614) 992-4279
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Got Your Message Across
., With A Daily Sentinel

others
CJJay """reetings

ss

1·900·884-7800
Ext. 4466

centa Elltra.

•

'{!J

Ll-•lnelor
Wedtllap,.._ms
·and Speelal .
Oeeulo•

Rlb1.•88ked Bnn1, Colt
Slaw~ Dinner Roll, T• or
Coffee. Pie and Cake 150

Show Her She's Special Wuh A Daily Sentinel

..--

EASY MATCH
MAKING IS
READY NOW!!!

""' mo.

,. ~

614-742-2165 or
304-862-3704'
Ask for Mike

Laurd.Limo
Service

••••

·MILHOAN

able. She said that polyesrer materi- ed the meting announcing a counals, old sheets for the bed pads, and . ty-wide bymn sing at Hemlock
fabric .scraps of all kinds are need- Grove, and a performance by the
ed . .
Unite Singers at the Zion Church.
There were 16 In anendance. Sabra Ash gave a report on Ladles
Openinpong was "He Keeps Me Day at Middleport. Tbe group
Singing ' led by Ann Lambert, with voted to give mattress covers 10 the
Eleanor Hoover giving the opening camp. Next meeting was set for
prayer. Devotions were by Doris June 29, 7:30 p.m. There was a
quiz on "Encounters with Angels~" .

'

Haven, Health Aid Pharmacy at row of Syracuse, will be a member
NeW Haven, and Fruth Pharmacy at of the college's class of 1999 starting Ibis fall .
·
Middleport, Deadline is May 20.
The scholarship provides an
award equal to 50 percent of the
ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATcollege's tuition. To be eligible, a
ED
.. Rev. and· Mrs. Floyd (Edith) student must have at least a 3.5
Ross celebrated their 42nd anniver- grade point average (on a 4.0 scale)
for academic course work and have
sary Monday. They are the parents
minimum combined score of
of four ebildren, five grnndcbildren a1200
on the SAT or a minimum
and three step-grandchildren. Rev.
composite
score of 27 on the Acr.
Ross is pastor of Zion Church in
Shade.
SA Y1lE RECOGNIZED
SCHOLARSHIP RECIPlENT
A Meigs County native recently
Jacob Marrow, a senior at
Southern Local Higb School, was received a national Future Farmers
recently awarded the Marietta Col- of America scholarship.
Srepbanie Sayre, a freshman at
lege President's Scholarship. Marthe
University of Rio ·Grande,
row, son of MarJe and Viclci Mar-

-

...

RHETI'

were Ethel Arbau~ .and Ada Van
hieter, hospitalize, Elizabeth
Lawrence, and home from the bos·
pita!, Roberta Maidens. '
A meeting of the past councilors
Qub was announced for May 10 at
7:30 p.m. Mrs. Hollon repMed on
a visit 10 see Goldie Krackenburger. 'IbeDag pledges, scripture reading, and National Anthem opened
the meeting. OffJCers gave reports.

Free E.rlmates
Porchea, Decks, ·
Reroofing, etc.

Proc.oll Co.
(&amp;02) 15+7420

TIEl IIIMIIIG
IIID IUIOVIL

PAIIITIH &amp; CO.
Carpenter Work

Ext.2579

IN-

$4.55.)

Carder.

As Close As
Your Pllo1e

V.C. YOUNG lit
982-8215
Pomeroy, Ohio

handling) to: Alcohol, c/o Ann
I.Andtrs, P.O. Box 1156Z. Chica,o,
Ill. 6061UJ562. (Ill CIJII(I(/p, send

UIIDA'S

SweeiMartls

olntertor .. Exterior

Women's fellowship lists activities

Residency Program (grant funded),
Activities at. the ·Senior Citizens
which gave way to lbe ATRAD · Center .were detaited by Allee
position in June 1990. The !alter Wamsley, speaker at a recent meetposition coordinated all residen- ing-of the Meigs County Chulches
cies, internship and medical stu- of Cbrist Women's FeUowship held
dents within the the OU-COM at. the Pomeroy Church.
Southeastern Ohio Regional TeachMrs. Wamsley talked about
ing Center, with a medical educa- activities at the Center, including
tion office based at u ·!:Hen~·· making lap robes, bed pods, stringMemorial Hospital in Athens.
ing bead, and making ceramics,

Y•

·' -Rooting

CHICKEN BARBECUE

--~.;....._--Society scrapbook-----EGG HUNT
· Approximately 6.5 cbiJdren participated in the Olive Township
Volunteer Fue Department Easter
.egg bunt at the Belleville Locks
and Dam Park.
In the 1-to-3 age group, the
:golden egg was found by Benjamin
Ayers with the silver egg being
found by Andy Roush, who also
found the most eggs.
In the 4-to-7 age group, Jordan
Kimes found both gold and silver
eggs and Justin Dillon found the
most eggs.
In the 8-to-12 year old a.ge
group, the golden egg was found
by Tara Hauber, the silver egg by
Frank Buskirk ~nd the most eggs
'by Terry Hauber.

IL

Chester D of A holds program

eastern Obio. .

meier, D.O., associate dean of
c:cmmunity and clinical services.
KUne earned her bachelor's
degree of nursing at Ohio University In 1981. A native of Nelsonville,
she earoed bcr masrer' s degree In
bealth
.
service administration (MHS A)
from Ohio University In 1991. A
graduate of the St Francis School
of Nursing In Columbus, her I0year nursing career as an R.N. bas
encompassed certification in school
nursing and diversified medical
occupations (vocational education)
and acure care nursing.
In November 1988, Kline started her career at OU-COM as coordinator cJf the Family Medicine

, were not intereSted 1n hstemng.lpve
1up.
I may not be brave enough 10 try
10 11lk 10 you again. h takes a lot of
·CCJUriiiC to bueonc'a QIJ, and I am
,not IDftl I c:an try'IICICOIIII time. How
;sadtbalyoulostthechlncetobelpa
friend and I have lost the C0Uf11e to
trust you with my heart. What a
. sorrowful day.- ANY "-ACB ON
PLANET EARI'H
DEAR A.P.P.E.; Sometimes, in
order
10 keep a relationship health)!
1
'we must he more specifiC abolll our
needs. One simple sentence could
have made the dill'ereoc:c. Instead of
remainingsilentandfeelinil: hurt. you
should have said, "I am deeply
troubled about something, and I need
you 10 lisren."That would have done

•

.

Carol Kline, R.N., MHSA, an
· ;administralor at the Ohio UDiversi1}' College of Osteopalble Medicine
(011-COM) for the past seven
years, bas been named 10 tile new
position of coordinator of community service programs.
The new position will be
respon~ible for the coordination
and development of clinical services, health pro.grams and outreiCh In a 21 &lt;Ouilty catchmet area
thai IDcludes Meigs, Athens, Washington, Jackson, Vinton, Meigs,

Dear Ann Landers: Who ltsrens
10 the lisrener? Sometimes.lfecllhe
answer is no one. Perhaps someone
who reads this leuerwillask, "Could
this be me?"
·
This is for my friend: I came 10 see
you 1oday. There was so much I
wanted t~ say. I was_f~ling lo:"'·
Several thmgs were we1ghing heavily
on my hean. lneededyou 10 help me
sort out my thoughts because I value
your judgment. I was sure you would
be very supportive and a source of
strength. .
'
Unfortunately,itdidn'ttumOUIIhat
way. You were so eager 10 rell me
about the things you were doing and
the places you had been, there
was no chance for me to unburden
myself..I tried several times, but you

_,

'

,

~

Bankruptcy, Judgements , Siow Credit
Our Specialty

$top 1n &amp; Sign- up fOf

A FREE VCR

l ~SOO..MERIT-98 I,
MB#0489

•

.

'

,-

- - 0'

�-..

•

1

TuHCI.y, M.y 9, 1995

Pomeroy,. Middleport, Ohio

TUIId.,, 11., I, 1818

Fom.roy • Middleport, Ohio

•

'

NEA CrOIIWOrd Puzzle

...... -""

----------------------------------------------.-~~-~
.-• ·'•
ACROSS

I

--........

I KI1: 'N' CARLYLN •,-·Larry Wrtpt

•

-

PHILLIP

ALDER
--~

.•
•A 5 3

•

~

4 Lubrlc.ted
t MoiMr of Mile. 42 lUll
12 IIDDnd penon 43 Slop

uuar.-.

Mlf':E. 1't'50kl 15
0010010 Fletn"
MICHAEL~ ...

Glv••lf

:::. :u:n:::: ·.. •....

•a a
EAST

,_...,. _..,,_

.104
•KJ9 7'42

t -llllt.oi. ... 111 1111

• 32

~. .dlr!:.\. .l.,• ~
-.IOMJMMf.

•s

....

4 2

'SOUTH

U2

....... ,.......... -rtrod. .....

41 0vw IMro

15 Revofvoble
17 Thealllr olgn

50 Topertng to
1 pOint

(lbbr.)
18 folace lor

54 N k - 101'

21
23
24

•A Q 7 6 5

QJ97 5

14 l'uppy noiM

18

•A 8 3

t·

~=-._gill
41 s.ta

1 A - n 3,000

13v.ller

DX. •

Cll!lt -

38 &amp;plolt

27
30
31
33

1 Scot

·

55 TorrltotiH
56 High llovo.
57 Compau pt.
51 Breld

eombool
Llvleh..
fondneu (on)
One IScot.l
Monatar ·
Mouth ol
volcano
Mote beloved
Danllll 111ond
Ancient
Actor Roboort

Ingredient
59 Corrode

DOWN
I - Brecklnrldge

2 Anchor

De 3 s_.,hl' 34 Cultivated lend 4 - rating
35 1'1'?""'~ 502
, . (of""~)

5 Wrttor Levin

6 Ad 7 Slippery liah

•Q 10 6
+K J
•A K J ~ 7 6

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: SOuth

motion detectors."

IIIIIM-

FER

__ ...._.11 ...
-......,;1M •• 1111

51

Lost I Found

IS

tiouaehold

55

'--= ·... ........ Colle In
IIUlliild
r 1oon1 ploloo
... 1Molltl-21f0.

*'•

7

VardSala

·: Gallipolis
I VICinity

2•

Pass
Pass

Building
SUppllae

m~-c­

=...~--

West

SLOPPIN' ·
' HOdiS II

~~~

MYlln!e • 114 111 .... .....

_ , ...... a ........

This newspaper will not

MA'IBE SOMEDA'f' '(OLI CAN
~ER To ME, OKAV?

NIOI Dl .d'rNIII Wid haalwp
R.fww
D p t Hit .....

EXPLAIN

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

'

advertisements for real estate
which Is In violation at the law.

•r

1111 oo1 11 to run.
SUndor 1oo1on
odlllon • 2:00 ...,..

-~
p.m.
,.

-

· . 2:10

Our readers are hereby
Informed that an dwellings

advertised In this newspaper
are available Dn an equal
opponunitv basis.

-·-·--·

...

erdertr
_,
....._. Apply .., .....Ina liiO
• Jl:ltndl to . . . .
wonnlnlw _

Bloek Vonl,

. .,,_

r-.

10t1 tl2

Eaotom A... 1n _ ,
o.co:r.&amp;lna Etp h .. ... Olad\lng.

Fumlton,lllo.

Mer 11 •13th. Cclmp!olor, Clolllol

~ .2N

a lllic. :1M
Sloto Route 211, Golllpotlo.

Employment Services

n.o.

.,..., -...... olo ....
" " ' - · Ohio 41711, .......
1

1

_ . , . . , """• ' '·
-cp•lro'Mftt.

11

Hilp Wanted

!!tJ11o!

w-

a-

Fill Or Pootllnoo
FOr Buoy 8hcp, 1nqoo1ro AI:
SIJIIng 8okin tiiO
..,...ro,
lulemAvenue.,fl1111
I I
AVON to lolly • ~~~~ Mldlyn, ~
Tonll cldvor -~~~ lor IGcll
~..;:t 3011'1N644 or

.;,AVON.;__..;,.I..;;A..:U:.......AIM...;_o--:1""
· llllller=.,......... ~-.

... ._ ...........,.....,.a...A
lloorik . . -

=

Upotolno, I I loth 11
Bod"*"), Futnf-. CIIOn,
A o - ond DopOoll fie.
qulrod 114-448-1118.

bll Ho
32 Mo e mn

tor sale

u-., ..., no•-. 21oo1
both olodlorA. . -

-

-~

IMIIIdlngo, -

Vety IIIMn 1 brd a m .,_..
"""" In Mldd~opootJ.ooiiM-10
1304 or 111 1"-Mtn.

45

=·:=.t.~­

Fumlahed
Rooms

I HP ..... craft_, laiOCIIW•
UNci ...,. ........ ltl ?:?'
..... · Rulli ....,. ............

roun:~=--

,.... good--·· ..."t:::-

. _ Br ... Wtna et.lpp-.
-40 To .a D1p •4lUI. 8rawn

Olllllntlld. . _ Pllolo, liiO
lhoeCIII,IM 441 " '

COL-.. - .

- - Por: IO'IIoatw.ololr

Appllcll- . . bolng -~~~ ol P"-"1 Con e&lt;ntor,

J04.&amp;7W710 bltUIIR f.

""'111111•-

iMiroonont

8

Public Sale

Sllllllna -

-

Toom wanted, hive Claoo
A COL Wo11U. mot,· bo wUIIng to
... out Nwka.. por: ~ ol
- . , . grooL 36W111-a710 IIM-1-fOpm.

170 - - Drlvo, Golllpollo,
OH 45031 for luU lime and Pili liiO Wool Vl!glnlo ~ NolloNol
Guanl hal! lmrMd&amp;lle ·:p· •lngl
timo, ............
for lndlvlduall with priG&lt;
-.~w~
wogoo
..
._
lwentlol w~h .......... tq.... onllltary ••por'-- ,....
loin. ,.., 1r1orto on o gOod
Oppoounlty E"""oror.

- ·

plan; ooo .._.... .••

14x7V 8lcytlno, I 116-

roamo, AJC,
-·
Ro!Jiaorotor,
Window,
2 Dilcko,
llontoa

Lat. ldr:flaan. 112,100. 114-»Jo

Doub-R-.--

~7

IMIIIollna lor

A-ll

. 14110481 tiOlO.

Mlln Sl-,

Poo-.

ront, olftoolr""l,

81 Fann Equipment

:.:-".:1

..-Jng for lllcll ., on1oo

----whh -a&gt;~IDn

-

and .,.

ft. nrsdtd A.-pond In

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

....

63

,.........

; l14o2al loll

.._.ook
Uv•••

...... 1182AQHAP_In_
Ina. ~ 1114 lit Point
Hlllor PUIY, 11111 112 Honda
Hunt 1111 AOHA lloro,
AQHA Flflr I

Merchandise
5I

==-=---

1101

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Tnlclo
drivor
wontM-otrolghl-biJol
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llconoo,
truclco, mull ho" own madlcll

114-247-2&amp;&amp;4.

Farm Supplies

13011 "'.... .... ........ lovol

112-7384.
Moloo 2 ~ynoontl and move lnl
New 14• I or .... l'lnlinclna Trollor 1o1 lor ront In llloldloport,
Avollabll.
I A _ . . - , 1" 114--7153.
IDO-IIII.aG'IV.

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Inl ~.'1 Avollobll. CoM

AUGUST FOR ANNUAL TRAIN-

INGI

Allti lrWfor -

-~~-~·Mloon
"""'YN.
2:110 ........
304-7T.H181,
46 Space for Rent

DO TO GiRIIAHV WITH US IN

Ak:ll Poaroon AuctiDn Componr,
full tiiM aucUonMr, complet•
auctkM'I
Hf'VIce.
UCanud
.ee,Ohlo a w.. Ylralnla, 3047l'W781 Or-~

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IPI&gt;Ir ond
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poyci&gt;Kio.llt lor o pet!~lrroololi.

&amp; Auction

$;2500 ~ Tl'£
l3tX:if.l W"'ltl-\ YOU

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To
Over tv,OOO Tronlftllooforl, Aloo'

77HIA.
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1/2acno Soulholdo,

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Jolmoono Tranom- Ancr
Borvlco, Uood And Rebuilt,
- - Aloo, Cuh And,
Corry T""""'lloolono, 114471-

bolllher5pm.

Prof..olonol
TriO loMco.
T,.. C.., Buol&amp;lii
Truck s.r.kie .fO Fl. Rooch,
Slump Romovol, F110 &amp;-

Cam.,._.•
Polol: All Old U.S.
c:otno, Qold Ringo, Colno,
Qcld Co1no. II.T.B. Colfl Shop,

1"11 -

,.,_,...._Gollpolo.

Truck -

311W7U4'11.

79

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.......... 114478-»11.

for

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campers 1

170.
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Coointry Futnftu~uno lor

ev..,
Roorro.~Jo.-h,
Pt.P-

Autoalor S81e

tllll 21' Titan onotorloonw. tully
•f.oont•lned,
dolll:llt dear
refr.....or, mtcrVW~~W. raof air,
torf)O - o r . 20' lllfllng,
IO,IOOrrM. 11,000. 301........1.

Gootvla t1or onotor homo
· - dolly, 11,1!00m1, loorlod,

Nke - . IO+e71-a1111.

--

Services
Home ·

":::l:'l'lL...,....
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PICKENS FUANITUA£ •.

......

W.ntod loll-

to Sit
Houoo KHplng.

NowAJood
No oppif- l'oo I 1 - fUI'.

nlohlng. \12 mi. Jorrlchl Rd. Pt.
Pl..until WV, 01M ~MIG,
114 448 -14L

Rentals

Will de bocklloo wort. -

114-112-3173 or 114-11248SI.

ASTRO· GRAPH

·-o.

41 Housea tor Rent
I , . _ /Both,
$350
Dtr all. y..,. LAMe, 42 VInton
A - . Golllpollo, 114-44
:MG4, U .M. -t P.M.
'

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

In a-

Thloo bodrooon -

tO&lt; .....,. ........... hDooolng

Financial

no~ '::Z,

·-

•poolt roqulr.a
oiiiJr flpno.

42 Mobile Homn
for Rant

-"bur ,

'Birthday

Wednesday . May tO , t995
Yo u may need to make ce l1jlin adjust·
ments lo achieve your goals In lhe year
ahead. You shouldn•t hesilale to chenge

your aim if il tmprowes your game. .

r

Yotl/1 Come Up Aces' With
.-~~-- .~The C/assifieds

1

Apartment
_ forRant
and 2 Vl'mmw

.,.,mente.,

BWNP

ZSWEL

u

Z J T B J .T B

GDJNL
NWML

D L ' Z

ZWTB.' · -

XLN

TAURUS (April 20-M4oy 20) Oespile your
con~ervative instincts, speculative ventures wtth elements ol risk m!lV eppeal lo
you today. Be bold, but also very cautious. Taurus , tre.at yourself to a birthday
gil l. Send for your Astro· Graph predtc·
tions l or lhe year anead by mathng $2

Whlte'a11r111Dt1IDI•
- . . _.........
1210Ohio,
- .
Gollpollo,
4414*
.

and SASE ·ro Aslro-Graph, Clo lhis news- your judgment of another tnehd. Think tor
. paper, P 0 . Box 4465 . Ne w Yor k, NV you rself ; you mig'ht see quaht1es not evi• .10163. Be sure to state your zodiac sign. dent to others .
GEMINI (Ma~ 2 1·Junit 20) Success is SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23· Dac . 21)
... indicated today '" situalions GOOcer.ning you have achieve8..your obtective
you and your mate. The strength in vour take measures to secure your victory
not to let success shp through your
un if1ed act1on will determinE! the results .
CANC ER (June 21-.July 22) Metntain a gers due to a weak grip.
pos1ttve athtude today, even it you slum· CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan . 19)
ble comtng out ollhe slarttng block. Earty experiences ml~hl be somewhat unu:su- 1
al. You'll be dJsappointed where yo
misrtJkes can be rectified.
L EO' (July l!S•Aug . 22) llll~ough linan: .. expectaltons wheie htgh; ye1 you 'll
cia I conditiorts might not· be opttmum much from a seemtngly lost cause.
today: lhey wtll sbll be qull~ lavorab!e· ~OUARIUS (Jan . 2Q-Feb. 19) II wot,ld 1
Make the mosl ol each eXIsting opportu· be best nor to buy something costly
unseen today. Examine the
ni!y.
VIRGO (Aug. 2 3· Sapt. 22 ) You will In close detail before you make any
prove reliable even when developmen'ts SIOOS .
get sticky loday . but others may nol get PISCES (Fe b. 20· Mere h 20 ) Sell·sufft·
that 1mpresston until they've had ttme to ciency ts a must today. Do not count on
others to cover for you when you target
think 'about 11 later.
.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 23) When rnaktng to do thtngs . T~err memory mtghl be
, 1mporta nt assessments today. empha- ayen shorter than yours .
ARIES (11..-eh 21·Aprll, 19) Protect
SIZe realt!y. Restst l!'lting wlshlul thtnktng
malerial tnleresls today, but try 10 do
diStort your percephons .
.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Try nor 10 · in a way that wo.n 'I create ill will among
let the preJUdice of a certain friend affect your associates. •

.. .-

•

•

•'

•

.

..

HWEXL • •
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "Nice guys linish last"- L~o Durocher.
"Even when I was liHie, I wils big."- William ·Refrigeratof Perry.

':~!:t;~r ~©1\~~-Jtt.ifs•

WOlD
IAMI

Edit•cl by CU. Y I . POLi.+N

0

Rearrange letters of
fou r Kramb led words
low to form four words.

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CEE T HR

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T E GHI

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Myfinancialwoesaresimple,
I just figure if I can't pay any of
my bills I have what is called a
money •. .--.••• •.

.

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I

UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER

Frugal· Wlndy · Judge - Glossy - ON a JUR Y
From the didja ever notice department: "Those who
are quick to judge others try hardestto get out of serving
ON a JURY?"
·

MotorHomea

Compoho IOX100 $3,1100 OBO,
304-812·2482, 1. To e.

114-448-2151.

HDJTC

BAVZ

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

.....

.......,..

7010.....---·Sun Vllter NllllilfJ'._ lchoal.
Clllldcaroii-F 1om-6:30Pm Agoo
2-K, Young S.hocll Alii Durinj
Summor. :J O.ye per
Ill ...

SUT

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CoMplete the chuckle cj uolod
by fdl,ng m the m•SWlQ words
L-....0.-.L...-i-..O.......JL-..J you develop from step No. 3 below.

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Smalll 114 311 0113,

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Umotool lnou11nco, 24 Hr.
Emo&lt;Qoncy And
aovor No T- Too Big Or Too

Utiod P - TD
114-24W811l . .. -

WT L

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Boone Co., WV, lppntL 242,820
board loot oloncllng timber.
(!loytol; . . . . . . . . . . II.

TWH

.

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4812.

-. '

' J'X

PRINT NUMBERED
I
'&lt;;;II tEllE RS IN SQUA RE S

Will a

tormotiDn maUod en roq-.

by Luis Campos

Celebfily Cipher cryptograms art created !rom quotahon s by famous ~. past ana pr...w
.. Each lett er in the ciphet tlands for anotl\er TodiJy's cJw: fi ~ u

'A

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304.f7U253.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

,.._S_O
_i,...R_R_A_Y_

22113.

Olllllo, 12,1100. Phono 71'1-111&amp;ocroo, m ft '!ldo ridge top
building olio, ttf,110. R.oYbum
Rd,. ,....nabll -trlcllono. No
olroglnlldo lnaulroo, ploloo. ln-

How many trumps do you need for
game in a ~or? In lodaf.s deal, taken
from New Zealand Bridge magazine ,
Aucklander Nong Li found a 3·3 fit suffi.
cient.
North 's double was for takeout, a popular agreement these days among expert players. South, assuming three
spades was asking for a spade stopper,
tried an imaginative four hearts. He felt
he had already denied four cards in
hearts by not bidding three hearts on
the previous round. East could hardly
·suppress a smile as he passed it out. .
Li won the first trick with dummy's
spade ace, played a diamond to his king,
overtook the diamond jack wiih· dum·
my's queen and called for the diamond
ace , Bizarrely, East discarded his re·
·maining spade. After discarding his last
spade, Li ruffed a spade in hand &lt;East
threw a clubJ and played three rounds
of clubs , West. thinking hi s partner
would be following suit; ruffed the last
of these. Dummy released a diamond
and East,, with only trumps remaining.
chose to underruff. ..
West played a spade, ruffed low by
East and overruffed by South with the
heart 10. South ruffed a club with dum·
my 's heart ace and called for a dia·
mond. Li bad to score the heart ou...n 1
en passant for his .loth trick.
What' a triumph! But it proved to be a
Pyrrhic victory. At every other table,
North -South played in three nn. lnunn I
apd , after a spade tead, declarer platye(ll
clubs from the top to keep West
lead. When the queen dropped, they had
at least II tricks. So South earned a
round zero for plus 420 1

.

BIG NATE

1.11ocno ciMnod lol cKr
wotor a cable TV ovolloblo.
$4,1100. 304-57&amp;-U18.

~

Pass

5

Porto,I~L

2po Buahllno u . - ouho,

W.nlool: -

Ptlss

Pass

By Phillip Alder

OnDIMw tlvlnJ. 1 and 2 .....
room IJIIrl- ol V I Me,_
....
~
~In Mid-= FRWII
$23U3U • CIOI 11-- Ul8.
&amp;qUif Hoo .... Opport-

knowllngly ac:cepl

tho

3•

A plus isn't
always good

lhe Foderol Fair Housing Ac1
of 1968 whk:h makes Hlnegal
to advertise •any preference,
limitation or discrimination
basad on race, color, religion,
sex, familial status Of natiOnal
origin, or any IntentiOn to
make any &amp;LtCh preference,
Hmltatlon or discrimination.·

ALL Vonl - - lo Pololln

East
Pass

lead: •K

All real eslale adverilstng In
· lhls newspaper IB subject to

......_.~2:110p.lll.

North
·Dbl.

-

�Page A 1o• The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, May 9, 199ls

Pomeroy • Mtddleport, Ohio

.----..,.--Flower festival winners-__..,

PoFJt's Corner

Just that Way!

..••

DisJK.

.

Alii dream of is all lbe sadneu tl
lbe
aigbt.
Everywhere I so I see people in
"Wby
Oh, Wby" I'll never lr:JIQI!f
love, just lbe way I want to be.
only
blm.
"God"lmows.
How in lbc world did I let myself
Now
I
lay
me down to sleep wiib
set so alone.
·
my
eyes
all
so Wed as I go to sleep,
It's bell wben your heart: is in need
My
body
is
so worn. out aad
for SOO\cone.
heart
feels
like
it can't take anodl&amp;'
As. I sit wilb lbe rain coming down,
bclat.
~
I bave thoughts of ybu, being
S
be
was
tbe
most
beautiful
ball)'
tosetber and having all kinds of
out of tbe whole Upited Nation.
fun.
All I want Is to love someone and And wben God made ber be lllldc
,
let tbere be trust and not lefl in the lbe best aution.
Teresa
mu
Mllltlr
dust.
Letart FaJ!s
I want to feel wanted, and loved
and love them the same way.
My baud is reaching ouJ, but will
•
••
anyone take bold of it or will I be
·alone day aftCr day.
••
Teresa mu Miller
Letart Falls
For you I tried to better my self.
For you I tried to change,·
For you I turned my self
:
Into someone new and stranill. •
·I didn't lbink someone like you ;
Could-love a girl like me, ·
"
So
I
changed
myself
into
someono.
God ooly knows why sbe! bad been
I thougbi yqu )IVould want me to bli.
taken away.
Telling me that she's alright, but I realize now it waS somewhal sill f.
she is gone now and I know she To put on an act tbat way,
But no_w it's much to late, you see,.
will survive.
.
~
I hear her voice saying tQ me that · For you have run away.
sbe's alright
·
'
• · . ··
Teresa IDI MUWr
Into the rain, I hear it fall into the
LetartFaJt!l

PARADE WINNERS- Parade wlnnen In the second mn1111l
Racine Flower Festlv.. were, from left: K1ren mn for Karen's
Greenhouses, nnt place; Jarrod RUt for Vlrall HW &amp; Sona Farms
and Greenhouses, second place; and Crestfyn Hill for Paul mu
FarmS, third place. They received ribbons, plaques and monetary
awards.
·

For You

TUESDAY
POMEROY - The Tuesday
Morning Golf l;eague wiU meet at
lbe Meigs County Golf Course at 9
wn. Tue~day morning. All ladies
are invited to attend.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY · Narcotics
Anonymous, 7 p.m Sacred Heat
Catholic Cburcb, 161 Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy. Helpline 1-800766-442.
YOUNG
-Josh Smith, Megan Williams and Jacob
Hunter, from left, were named flnt, second and thlrd·place winners, respectlvely,ln division one 'Kiddle Tractor Pull action at the
Racine Flower Festival. With them are Chris and Ted Smith who
directed the event sponsored by Ken McFann of Star Supply.

Garden club reports on highway cleanup project ·
· A report on the cleanup project
along the highway from the
Riverview scbool sign to Long
,Bottom was given by Nancy
Wachter when tbe Riverview Garden Club met recently at the home
of Janet Connelly.
Maxine Whitehead reported on
tbe project at the cemetery, noting
-

that Bill Osborne was ·oolpful with
the project Ruth Anne Balderson
gav11 a report on shrubs that bad
been set out by lbe historical marker at the Belleville Locks and Dam
park.
The program was given by Janet
Daugherty of Belpre, intnxluced by
her mother, Ella Osborne. She pre-

•

•

sen ted an informative program
showing slides of Russia aad displaying scans, dolls, watches and
other items that she received as
gifts from her friends in Russia.
Mrs. Osborne presented a gift to
MrS. Daugheny in appreciation of
presenting the program.

MIDDLEPORT -

Middleport

-

Vol. 46, NO. 8

C:opvrlght1995

Court rules in GJMV's favor
By GEORGE ABATE
. The GJMV district spent more AH ·district claimed the $50,000
Sentinel News Staff
than $50,000 in attorney fees bat- was set aSide for planning its new
The Gallia-Jackson-Meigs-Vin- ding the contrac~ Wilson said.
dtstrtct The GJMV district mainton Solid Waste Management Dis"Our
funding
was
eaten
up
wilh
t~in~d the departing two-county
-bict must give the Athens-Hocking attorney fee.s, but we prevailed in _ dtstrict
was breaking_the contract
SWMD $50,000, the· Fourth Ois- this matter;"- Wilson said. ·"We · _byllemandlnglhore money~ .
_
. bict Coun of Appeals ruled Tues- bave an action pending againsl
The GJMV disbict flied a fraud
day.
~eeems." for full recovery of attorney and breach of contract suit last
But the GJMV district director ''
June.
is calling lbe decision a victo_ry .
Because of the crunch the disJoe Kasler, Athens-Hocking
. "I bave reviewed the entry," said pute puts on its budget, the district waste director, would not say
Lance Wilson. "Our attorney was had to delay beginning a· more whether his district would appeal
upheld on all points."
aggressive recycling campaign and yesterday's ruling.
The court ruled that the disbict the hiring of a staff person, Wilson
"We'll leave all our options
must stick to its original contract, said.
open until we explore every oppor~hi~h . stated the Athens-Hocking
"This (lawsuit) was always on tunity ," Kasler said. "It was not a
district would gei $50,000 when it the back burner, so we bad to make unanimous vote."
·
split from GJMV in 1993. ·
contingencies for that," be added.
The Athens-Hocking dislrict
The six-county district. formed · "We put this on bold until all of the spent more than $15,000 in legal
in 1989, had assets of the more legal mess was resolved."
.
fees.
than $500,000.
In the two-year-old dispute, the

•
•
•

•

jl

POMEROY - Meigs County'
Board of Commissioners specw
meeting in commissioners' offioe
Wednesday, 2:30p.m. to review
bospitallease.
:

.EMPLOYEE RECOGNIZED -'Mary Hysell, a long-time
cook at Meigs High School, wlls recogniztd for more than 25 years

•

of service at Tuesday's Meigs Local Board of Education meeting.
Board member Roger Abbott presents RyseU a plaque.

'

D &amp; M Pizza &amp; Subs
, NOW DELIVERING%

Ella Osborne .and Janice Young
were co-hostesses for the meting
which included a tour of ·~Flowers
by Craig" at Coolville. He showed
annuals and perennials in attractive
gardens. The group also toured his
greenhouses which were filled with
blooming spring flowers.

Beginning Friday May 5
Syracuse Racine Minersville
Areas

COLUMBUS (AP) - Judges
would have more power to require
. HlV-testing of criminal defendants
under a bill that cleared lhe House
with ea.o;e. •
Representatives on Tuesday

teachers walk off the job for several boors a day.
"During a partial or Intermittent
strike, students may be left unsupervised between the time teachers
leave the building to strike and the
also:
time substitute teachers reach the
-Voted to block teachers and classroom," Wachtmann said.
olber unionized public employees
The legislation, which now goes
from staging partial or intennittent to the Senate, drew support from
strikes instead of full-scale walk- Rep. Michael Fox, R-Hamilton.
outs.
.
Fox said partial strikes effec- Postponed a scheduled vote lively moved picket lines into
on another bill that would dis- classrooms. "It's an insidious act
tribute excess Ohio Lottery profits of labor terrorism,'' he'said.
on a per-pupil basis statewide
Rep . Robert Hagan, Dinstead of putting the money into Youngstown, said partial striking
the stimdard school funding formu- was the on I y tool teachers bad
Ia
when more cdnventional auempts
Rep. Marilyn Reid, R-Beaver- at resolution had been used.
creek, won 93-4 appreval of a bill
Hagan said the bill was not
to increase penalties for proslitu- abOut education.
tion,
"It's abOut hurting the bargain"It\ increases the penalty for ing power of men and women
prostitution, currently a third · when ibey arc trying to negotiate a
degree misdemeanor, to a second fair contract," he said.
degree felony if the prostitute is a
The lollery profits bill on wbicb
known HIV carrier who engages in . the House ~ad been scheduled to
prostitution," Reid said. H!V is lbc vote was instead sent to lbe House
virus that causes AIDS .
Finance Commiltee for more bearThe bill, which now goes to the ings.
Sponsoring Rep. Ronald GerSenate, also would expand the
number of crimes for which judges berry, D, Austintown, said be was
could require HIV testing of defen- disappointed but recommended the
dants.
delay at the reque st of Hou se
Reid said judges now may order • Speaker Jo Ann Davidson, Rtests in cases of rape, sexual baltery Reynoldsburg.
·
and corruption of a minor.
•' I lhink the referral means that
She said the bill would extend Ute governor and the iulministration
the autliority to include gross sexu- have a concern for !he -bill," Geral imposition. felonious sexual pen- _beny said in an interview.
etration. prostitution, solicitation,
All lottery profi'ts go to schools.
and olher acts believed to have
Gerberry' s bilr would require
posed a risk of disease transmis- that starting July 1, 1997. a ny
sion.
excess profits beyond lhe $661.2
. Tbe House approved 64-33 a million expected at that time go to
btll that Rep. Lynn .Wacbtmann, R- schools on a per-pupil basis instead
Napoleon, introduced to stop a of through the complex formula
- union school sbike' tactic in which used to dlstriblite basic slafe aid. · -

t::all 992-7287

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Bombing charges filed
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'

'

On iiPP'lJYQd creot Not responSible lor t~rali!cal errors

.

Lawmakers halt partial
-strikes by public workers

Syracuse, Oh

0

Monday - Saturday; 9 am • 9 pm
Sundar: Noon '· 6 pm

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2 Sections. 16 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc:. New1paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesay, May 10, 1995

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·-- -

5

)

Literary Club, 2 p.m Wednes~,
bome of Mrs. Bernard Fultz.
.
James Diehl will review "T e
Thread That Runs So True" aDd
Mrs. Ronald Reynolds will rev~
"The Johnstown Flood". For roll
call members are 1o name their rtr8t
review book.

1.- tonl&amp;b155, !builder•.
storms. [bursday raiD. H!ab Ia
60s.

•

WhyOh Why

-Comrrtunity calendar

TRACTOR PULL.WINNERS- Buddy Young, Tim Wolfe and
Jesaka Wolfe, from left, were named f1rst, second and tbird-plac:e
winners, respecUnly,tn division two In tbe Kiddie Tractor Pull at
the Racine Flower Festival. With them are Chris and Ted Smith
who directed the evtnlsponsored by Ken McFann or Star Supply.

Pick 3:
959
Pick 4:
. 2371
BuckeyeS: ·
14-19-28-29-33

Sports, PageS

mr

SPONSORS HONORED -lndlvldaal. tpOUOriq _entertaJn.
• meat at the second IIDIIual Racine Flo- Festlv.. were praented
plaques by Rac:lne Area Community Ors11nlzatlon PreJident
· Kathryn Hart. ReceMn11 plaquea -re, from left: Dr. Mel Weese,
sponsor of the MlclniPt Cloaen; Dr. ~lu Hunter, sponsor of
the Steve Pottmyer Shw; and Toin Wolfe or Racine Rome NaUon·
al Bank for sponsorlq the Johnny Lee Sbow. •

Ohio Lottery

.'

Reds win
third in
·row .9-1

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) Federal authorities have filed
bombing charges against Terry
Nichols, who picked up his friend
Timoiby McVeigh here three days
before the blast, newspapers report~'
A sealed complaint was filed
charging. Nichols in the Apr) I 19
-bo-mbing that killed 167 people, the
Los Angeles Times and .The New
York Times reported ioday, citing
unidentified sources.
Nichols, lbe second person to be
charged in the :worst terrorist attack
on U.S. soil, was bein g held in .
Kansas as a material witness. He
was tq appear today before a federal magistrate in Wich ita, Kan., a
federal official speaking on condition of anonymity told The Associated Press.
On Tuesday, the FBI said it was
investigating wbetber Nichols'
husky 12-year-old son could be the
person depicted in lhe Jobn Doo 2
sketches. The son is not betieved to
be involved with the bombing, but
may have been with McVeigh
when be rented the ., truck believed
to have carried the bomb.

McVeigh was chargeq April 21
under a federal anti-terrorism law
lbat carries a possible ~eath penalty. He is being held without bail at
a federal prison ou ts~· Oklahoma
City.
·
·
Nichols, 40, of He gton, Kan .,
surrendered April 21 after hearing
his name on television.
At n federal court hearing ·in

Wichita, ·Kan., last month, prosecutors described a close association
between Nichols an&lt;! McVeigb .
Afler completin,&amp; Ariny basic liain.{ng together and serving in the
same company, they ran a military
surplus t:msiness, sometimes shared
a hou se and traveled extensively
together.
Authorities also believe they
shared extreme anti-gOvernment
views.

'

The Alfred P. Murrah Federal
Building was bombed on the second anniversary of the fiery federal
raid on lbe l:lrancb Davidian compound in Waco, Texas, that ended
wilh the dcalbs of 79 cult members.
Federal inveStigators say they
.found a reCeipt for possible bomb
materials in Nichols' home

" If nothing more is done and we
lose our percentage due us, we'll be
sbon that much money," Kasler
•
'said.
The population in Athens and
Hocking counties represents :&lt;16
percent of the six-county former
district, Kasler added.
Despite the court bailie, the
Athens-Hocking disbict developed
recycling and'clean-up programs.
"We haven't wasted any time. I
don't think it was a waste," Kasler
said. "It was an obligation to the
citizens of our district and wbat we
may have to do in future."
The AH district's auorneys aad
six-member board will review this
ruling and decide its next action in
about two weeks, be added.

Meigs school board OKs graduation·list
The Meigs ·Local Board of Education, meeting in regular session
Tuesday night, approved a tentative
list of 140 seniors for graduation on
May2L
In .personnel matters, the board
accepted the resignation for retirement pmposes of Carol Ohlinger;
frrst grade teacher at Pomeroy Ele-

Southern Coal
pays $260,000
to w.·va. EPA

mentary School, effective June L
The board also hired Wesly
David Smilh as a substitute leacher
for the remainder of lhe school year
on an as-needed basis and· Dennis
Tillis as a substitute cusiodian .
. Mary Hysell, a retired cook at
Meigs Hig)l School, was recog-

nized for more than 25 years of service to the dlsbict Board member
Roger 1Abbott presented Hysell
with a plaque.
After communications .by interim treasurer Richard Koker, the
board approved a motion allowing
Koker 1o borrow from the diSirict' s

~pendi~g reserve if necessary pendmg rectept of funds from the next
real estate tax settlement
Present were Superintendent
Bill Buckley, board President Larry
Rope and board members Abbott,
John Hood and Scott Walion. Vice·
presidenl Randy Humphreys was
absent.
·
·

Middleport Council approves first
reading of cable service contract

By GEORGE ABATE
citizens and disabled residents.
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - Sentinel News StaiT
.
Mayor Dewey, Horton said be's
An Ohio coal company paid
Middleport Village Council' at received several complaints about
$260,000 in fmes for discharging • its Monday night meeting unani- cable rate increases, but the rates
untreated water from. &amp; flooded mously approved the first reading arc now determined on a fede(al ,
mine into the Ohio River, the state of the ordinance tbat will detennine not a local leveL
Division of Environmental Prole&lt;;- the cable.service with Continental
Since the cable company is
tion said.
Cable Vision for lhe next 15 years.
installing fiber optic tines throughIn a settlement that led to the
A ~5-year- contract with the out lhe village, tlte lower channels'
May 2 payment, the division company ended April I. ·
reception may be clearer, Childs
agreed not to pursue additional
The council bas negotiated with said.
clalms against Soulbern Ohio Coal the cable company several items,
In other action, the council:
Co., Director Dave Callaghan said . Councilman Mick Childs said.
-paid $10,000 as part or'the
Tuesday. It had assessed $1.8 mil- They include:
annual installment for the village
lion in fines.
- keeping a minimum of 12 fire truck; 1
"The complexity of the, case channels included in the basic ser- did not require lhe Blue Tar.made it necessary for us to reach a vice, since the previous agreement l~n to hold a public hearing to
settlement agreement," Callaghan only listed a maximum number of renew its liquor permit si nce no
said.
channels;
·
problems have been reported with
- holding the franchise fcc at 3 the estllblis.hment;
Southern Ohio's Meigs 31 mine
in Ohio flooded in July 1993 when , percent, since any increase in this
- . is working to fix water line
a · seal broke. The company fcc would be passed on _to the cos- leaks near the Dig Bend Fitness
received permission from lhc Ohio . tomers;
Center lhat were located on village
Environmental Protection Agency I
~ increasing the liability bond
lines;
to pump the untreated water into from $5,000 1o $7,000 in lhe event
- will make some contacts to
_several Ohio River tributaries, off1- of accidents; and
move the Valley Lumber sign; and
cials said.
.
- protecting a 25 percent dis- · · - may pursue pu rchasing a
But much of the 1.5 billion gal- count on basic services for senior cm;nputer to improve lhe village tax
lon~ of untreated.waiCJ' flowed into
parts of the Ohio under West Virginia's control above Point Pleasant. The divisio11 found lhe dis charges viplated water quality standards for iron, aluminum and manganese.
A person who answered lhe
phone at the Southcm Ohio office By GEORGE ABATE
The project involvennoving i.3
in Jackson, Ohio, said company·· Sentinel News Staff
million cubic. yards of dirt, 1 milofficials would not be available
The project engi neer for the lion yards of rock, 2. 2 miles of
until today to answer questions.
development of the U.S. 33/lnter- storm sewers, 53.000 tons of aggresta te 77 connector de tail ed tbe gate base and 10 miles of underremainder of this $12.3 million ground water removal pipe.
"It's an asphalt/paving job,"
project in a talk al Tuesday's meetHunter
said. "One thing that's realHUNTINGTON. W.Va. (AP)- ing of The Meigs Couniy Cbalnber
ly
kept
lhe price down is the numAttorneys for both sides requested of Commerce at the Senior Citizens
ber
of
bridges."
a delay in the trial of a Mason Center.
Two bridges will be built ncar
County doctor accused of taking ~
Scott Hunter, with Kokosing
Meigs
H'igh School to allow for the
his two young daughters to his Constru~tion Co.'s h¢avy highways
road
bet
ween the school and the
native India witltout his estranged division, saicLhe remains rcsponsi·
county
fair
grounds, lluntcr ad~ed.
wife's consent.
ble for moving U1c project forward.
Kokosing has operated for 30
Trial was supposed to begin
"I set the crew up and push
,T uesday for Dr. Bakshy A. K. them as bard as we can," Hunter years and last year it boasted sales
Cbbibher, but U.S. District Judge said. ''That holds the cost of the of more than $250 million. The
company has four divisions: heavy
Charles 'Haden delayed it indefi- project doW{!." ·
·
nitcly to give attorneys time to get
Kokosing - whi_ch is based in highway, asphalt. building and
information from lhe S~1te Depan- Fredericktown - aims to have 1wo trcaonent plant
The chamber's Horace Karr said
ment and ' videotaped testimony lanes open by November for the
from foreign -vitttesses.
2.25-mile section of highway he would have liked to have seen
Chhibber, 43, a Poinl Pleasant between Rock Springs and Five the ·onc million cubic yards of
internist, is charged wiih interfer· Points. This project marks the first waste sc!,up to form the nextovering with the rights of a custodial new 51ate hishway construction in pass at Five Points.
Karr questioned wliy this w~as .
p&lt;trent He is tree on $50.000 bond the counly in more than 25 years.
and must stay away from the girlS
unless accompanied by a lawyer.
If convicted, be faces up to three
'years in prison and a $250,000 fme.
Under a custody agreement,
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)- pany committed pollution violaChhibber alid Bbairavi Chhibber A Mason County metals plant will tions over the last seven years.
exchanged custody of their daugh- ·pay the state Division of Environ- Kanawha County Circ'uil Judge
ters, ages 6 and 10. every other
mental Protection $250,000 in fines Irene Berger signed lhe selllcment
daf, while Mrs,.·Chhibber bad-full
.
.
to settle a lawsuit over air pollution _April20. ·
custodx of their 15-year-old "son.
violations, court records sbow.
The division filed suit in June '
Chbibber is accused of taking
American Alloys Inc. agreed 1o 1994 after American Alloys failed
thel!irls 10 India while be bad them
pay the fine ov~;r a two-year period, to com pi y wlth an order to cease
for visitation last August. Mrs.
conduct li broad environmental operations until it fixed pollutionCbbibber, after pleas to state and
audit and improve poUution-control control.equipment damaged by an
federal officials, went to India,
equiplllcnt at its New Haven facili- April \994 nrc. coun records indi(ound the girls with the help of
ty, records show.
cate.
police and brought them home.
Division offiCials sa'id the com-

assessor's process.
· Senior citizens day will be celcbrated•May 16, Horton proclaimed.
The village will host a "Midnigh·!' Magic Elf!C bic Light Parade"
beginning after 8:30p.m. Aug. 12. I
The parade will include area
marchin g bands and will use an
audio system to increase lhe performance. Roats will hegin construction later this month, show producer Bruce Wolfil said. Wolfe leads
the Midnight Cloggers.
The village police collected
$2,180.75 during the April mayor's
cour.t. The Middleport Police
Department mad e 37 arrests,
served 158 meal s. drove 4,358
md iles and investigated eight ~g:i- '
ems.
The Middlepon Volunteer Fire
Depanment answered 70 calls during April, with 15 fire and rescue
runs and 55 emergency runs . The
lire department logged 36 hours in
fire, EMS and rescue training,
while adding 125 hours for equipContinued on page 3

Dev~lopment

of connector
project chamber topic
·

Trial postponed

not cornplctcd when two businesses
had to close and the land was
already purchased .
· In olher business, Meigs County
Economic Development Director
Julia llouda,helt -Thornlon said a
recent tour of Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. was s uccessful.
About 300 Meigs Cou ntians have
'
jobs at this plant.
Also, Thornton said tlte countf s-~trategic plan sl!rulid be mmpleted by June. The county could
be paired with 28 other Appalachian counties in Obio to attract industry since these areas have· high
unemployment, low tax bases and
developabte resources.
In other ac_lion. Steve Story local coordinator for highway
development - told the .group lie
and . olhcr members of the, Sou'thc
cast Ohio Regional Council will
hold a meeting M'l.l'.1L ~
' Continuet:l on page 3

Mason plant will pay $250,000 pollution fine
Assistant Attorney General ·
Mark J. Rudoiph alleged _American
Alloys created and IJlaintained a
public nuisance by causing air pollution that. endangered publit ,
hcallh, safety and the environmenl
. The lawsuit said the company
was illegally discharging arsenic,
cadmium. chromium, iron, lead,
manganese, mercury, nickel. selenium and·silicqn compounds into ·
tlte air.
·

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T

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