<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8519" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/8519?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T07:21:59+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18938">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/4e852e192c8ef8f07b8fb9bfdc4c0dd4.pdf</src>
      <authentication>fc43b0765891f93bd1bfac2eb18dc8c6</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="27512">
                  <text>'f'loe

'

08... ).......

lbW

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleaaant,

WV

Monday

sunday, June14,1998

House of the week

Marti.n wins Mill.er Lit~ .400, Page 4
How to combat Medicare fraud, Page 7
Cat haters, listen to this: beware, Page 7

today: Partly sunny
High: 80; Low: 60s

A single-sto·r y with sparkle

0 Tomorrow: Partly cloudy
By BRUCE A. NATHAN

AP NewefutuNI

Multiple bay windows, quain! dorme111
and a front porch with a cameo front
door give Plan 1-12, by HomeStyles
Designe111 Network, an engaging facade.
This country-siyle home has 1,595
square feet of living space.
The great room is at the cen!er of the
floor plan, where it merges with the dining room and a screened porciL The
great room has a 10-foot lray ceiling, a
fireplace, a built-in wet bar and a wall
of windows that provides a view of the

.-

...

rear patio.
The eat-in kitchen has a h&amp;lf-wall that
keeps it open to the great room and the
hallway . The dining room features a
spindled half-wall that faces the foyer,
and a bay window th at overlooks the
front porch.
Isolated from the other bedrooms, the
master suite includes a bay window that
reveals views of the backyard, as well
· 8s a 10-foot tray ceiling and a luxurious
private bath. Among the bath's amenities are a dual-sink vanity, an ov_elliized
tub, a separate sh·ower and a walk-in

BEDRM •I

TWO CAR GARAGE
20'-o·x 21 '-4 •

BEDRM •J

By JIM FREEMAN

•

AN,IQDES .LIMI,ED
.
.

1-12

·

Open Dally Mon.·Sat. 10:00·.6:00
Sunday 1:00·5:00
.
PH: 740-446·9020 or 740·446·2m
350 2nd Ave., Gallipolis, OH 4563(

.,.,

• Stress Tests
• ECHO Cardiography
Diabetic Management
• Cholesterol Counseling
• Blood -Pressure
• Thyroid Dlsorilers
• Critical Care Medicine

lJle aviation training will be conducted at a facility near Athen~ytltfi
transportation provided from Gallipolis and Poll)eroy The training will
begin June 22 and end July 31 wHh class held each ·afternoon Monday
through Friday.
.
·

p~lng

Yoolh age 14·21 interested in
can obtain additional
information and an application by calling 740-446·1 018 ext. 98. A 30
minute meeting for Interested youth and their parents, v.o!lich will Include
a brill video presentation, will be hek!
altha followina iDeations:
.

OFFJCE HOURS: ·
MON·FRI 8:30·5:00, WED 8:3D-NOON

.

Accepting New Patj.ents

859 Third Avenue Gallipolis !J AM Thurs .• June t 1
33101 Hiland Rd . . Pomeroy 1 PM Thurs .•June 11

.

304·675· 7700

'

Applicants must lle age 14-21, residents of Gallia or Meigs Counties,
and meet JTPA guidelines. Youth who C.)iTlpleta the aviation training will
be given priority consideration lor _a~rallable temporary employment In
August.

Me~cal

Office Bldg. 2520 Valley Dr.
Suite ·2'12-Pt. Ple~ant, WV.

Gallla·Melgs Community Action Agency
8010 North Stell Routl7
Cheshire, Ohio 45620-4272
Equal Opportunity Employer

.

Sentinel New• Steff .
.
.
.
A representative of the Meigs County Highway Depart~nt outlined the
department's need for a permissive auto license f~e that. tf enacted, would
cost vehicle owners an addition $5 a year per vehtcle.
. During last week's regular meeting of the Meigs C~unty Board o~Com­
missioners, Engineer Robert Eason requested, and rece1ved, two public hearings permissive license tax.
• If npjlroved, Eason's request·would increase the basic cost of re_gistration
from $22.25 to $27.25, including the deputy registrar's fee. In Middleport,

By WILL LESTER

Board ·c ex ftfled.Inter•tal Medicine

Gallla-Meigs Community Action is currently accepting applications for
FREE Aviation Training Program for youth. Participants in the program
will receive training in a variety of aviation skills including navigalion,
flight planning, aircraft Inspection. maintenance, and weather
foracastlng.' Participanls who successfully complete the training will
have the opportunity to fly in aircraft from a local airport.

GMCAA office
GMCAAoffica

•

the· House is 227 Republicans, 206
ASiocieted Prell Writer . . Democrats 1111d one independent who
· WASHINGTON-Voters'dwin- usually ·Votes with the Democrats,
dling interest in politics and President with one seat vacant.
Clinton's shrinking coattails are
While national elections in nondampening Democrats· chances of presidential yean~ hardly ever favor
retaking control ofthe House of Rep- the president'~ party, Democrats have
resentatives, according to a poll spoken in recent weeks of their hopes
relea.-;ed today.
of reclaiming con1r0l of the House.
The two parties are locked in a staBecause Republicans make up a
tistical tie in the battle for tbe House bigger shan: of those considered
- DemoeraiS at 46 percent and most likely to'vote;Democrats would
Republicans al44 percent- with the . need a molivaled electorate to close
GOP holding a narrow lead among the gap, the ,poll suggested.
diose most likely to vote, said the poll
When the sample was limited to
for the Pew Research Center for the voters considered most likely to vote; ·
People &amp; the Press.
House Republicahs enjoyed a small '
• In a similar survey three months lead, '48 percent to 44 percent, over
ago, congressional Democrats were House Democrats. the poll found.
favored by 52 percent to 40 percent
Also. 44 'percent of Republicans
for Republicans.
surveyed said they followed govem·
Signiftcantly, Democrats lost sup- ment and public affairs closely, while
port amons white women and voters only 37 percent of Democrats surover SO, more ihan half of whom veyed placed themselves .in thnt catfavored Democrats in March while egory. ·Republicans fared better than
two-fifths leaned to the GOP. Now, Democrats in thai category in polls
.Republicans have a narrow lead beltn·the lasltwevff-yearelec!ion
, s.
n .,...._hrcrt"'ll!!ia!!IJOIIPI·
... 1990 and 1994.
-· &lt;i
.
The current party bn:akdown in
The poll •,found the proportion of

j•

ATHENS (AP)- House Speaker Newt Gingrich spoke to Ohio University gr;tduates Saturday and
encouraged them to think big,
The Georgia Republican said the
graduates should a.~k big questions
and spend their time trying to solve
big challenges.
"The 21st century can be the century of science. progress and prosperity if WI\ .are willing tO· make il
happen," Gingrich said. "It requires
fi111t that we in the federal govern·
11JCOt continue to invest massively in
~~ ientific basic re~an:h. and that's
why r m committed to doubling the
federal resean:h budget over the next
: He also challenged educat.ion
maj0111 in the a!Jdicnce to promote the
teaching of science to future generations.

J'

~

On Tuesday, June 2, 199.8, a Severe Hail Storm hi' Galli_polis, ·
Ohio- Over 100 New &amp; Used Cars &amp;·Trucks were affected!
These vehicles will be sold without repairs· We will pass the
.· cost of damage plus any Factory Incentives ~ yo~!
New &amp; Used Vehicle Damage Liquidation Sale N.ow At••.
Gene Jo.hnson Chevrolet-Oids.
1

'Your Hometown

•

·•

·By KEVIN KELLY

OVP News IEdtor
. RIO GRANDE - The value of a
college education as a new century
and it• technological 'demands
approach wa.' brought home to 349
gr.aduates or the \Jniversity of Rio

Good Afternoon
Today's

.

...
·-..

•
.

Sen

2 Seciions • 11 P•ges
.Vol. 49, No. 311

Dealer'

OLDSMOBILE

GENE JoHNsoN
Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer

.

1616 Ea~tem Ave.

(614)
•

GaUipolU

446-~672

CaU .ToU Free 1-800-521-0084

.

Otrio

.

~::: PUUe Notice! PUUc Notice! Public Notice!·Puhlie Notice! Public.Notice! Pultlie Notice!·'·
'

'.

~

&lt;'

•

·

'superLocto: 11·13-33-36Kkbr: 4-0-8-1-0-3
, . Pldt 3: 1-2-6 Pldt 4: 4-6-2·0
W.\'A. .
Dilly 3: f-7-7; Dally 4: 3·3-7-S

•

0

•••

Hometown Newspaper

•

Pomeroy, Ohio

Si ngle Copy - 35 Cents

Pomeroy and Salisbury Township, the cost would increase to $32.25. Those
fees apply to passenger cars, and arc higher for non-commerciallrUcks and
otber larger vehicles.
.
Each county, according to Deputy Registrar Sue Maison, is allowed to
place up to $20 in permissive taxes on the cost of registering a vehicle. Currently. the viiJages of Middleport and Pomeroy, and Salisbury Township, have
a SS permissive tax on vehicle owners.
Highway department office manager Dave Spencer said Friday the fee
would add about $81 ,000 to the department's coffe111, money that would be
used a5 mall:hing funds to leverage additional State Issue II funding.

"We have to compete with other District 18 counties for funding on Ohio
Public Works programs," Spencer said. The district is comprised of Athens,
Perry. Morgan, Noble. Monroe. Washington, Hocking and Meigs counties.
"Those are the people we have to compete against for Issue II funding, "
he said.
.
.
Grants are awarded on n point system, with projects having the most pciinls
given preference for funding, he explained. One factor in·gamering additional
points is local contributions.
The additional $81 ,000 for highways could mean up to $500.000 for C!&gt;un(Contlnued on Page3)
·

people who closely follow politics
and government was down from
neartyhalfin 1994toaboutone-third
now. Then: was also a significant .
decline in voters who want to see
change in Washington this year. from
,one-third three months ago to just
one-fifth of those surveyed now.
aose interest in politics, now at
36 pertent. was lower than the 39
percent recorded in 1990, which had
the lowest voter turnout in the postWorld War II era. The ·pollsters not- ·
ed thai 1990 had very high incumbent
re-election rates;
In the March poll, support for
Democratic congressional ~idales
wa.' boosted by President Clinton's
hifih approval rating of 65 percent,
the pollsters said. But Clinton's pos·
itive rating has softened somewhat to
59 pertenl.
While the poll offered no clear .
Melga
~=:'),.; lane
trip
· down
reason for that slippage, the pollst~rs
SUnday afternoon aa a part
suggested a nat~~ral fading of voter
of .the Heritage SUnday
backlash to criticism Clinton underwent at the lleiahl of alleaationsthat . olilerva~, at the Meigs
h8.Jiid in'ilriir_~..._~ House
Maae~•.,.~. 1~,.:,q.. •'il'''i!Ot."
1ntem.
·
·
. They listened to elderly
resldeflta tell of early life In
thtlr reepectlve tc)Wnahlpa
and = n al"ging popular
Of ya.f8118ar aa
a part of the occaalon.
"Meigs Memories" ~aa
He said that 110metime in the mid·
the theme of the afternoon.
die of his rust week a.~ a professor. he
Featured In the programwill have been free for 2.4S4 daysmlng were video ....iona
the same number of days be wu held
where township rap......,

•• • • •

! '

.

'

'

~·

"Y9u are volunteers in life." be
said. "You an: given by God a
chance to P!llliUC happiness, which
dosn't just mean frivolity, but · it
means the deepest sense of a life
worth living."
.
The spec!ch was the S«ond of
three commencement addresses Gingnch is giving this weekend. The Olhelli wen: at ~ia Institute of Tech· .
nology in Atlanta and the University
of California's San l)iego campus.
Gingrich spoke during one of two
commencement ceremonies the univen;ity conducted Saturday for a
record 3.600 graduates.
· Speaking at the second ceremony
wa.~ Terry Anderson. a former Associated Press cOrrespondent who wa.~
held h011tage it) Lebanon for nearly
seven years. Hi! will become a visiting profes.o;or of journalism at the univen;ity .in July.'
.
.

hos~:C~ he used his captivity to

tatlves talked about family
learn from the other nine people with·
traditions and llfestylea,
whom he wa,~ imprisoned at various
their educational experitimes.
.
encea, the churchea they
"I learned again what it was to
attended, the buslnesaes
simply learning and to study without
they operated, and the
a purpose except just for the knowlentertainment
.
they
edge." he said. "In the lime you spent
,.,Joyed...Talking on Bedhere, 1hope you felt some of that joy \'for,d Township were Vacla
and learning. too."
Hazelton, Sara Cullums,
Anderson encouruged the gradu- ·
ates to continue edueation in and out
and Maurita Miller, seen at
of the dassroom. ·
rlghl
·~The wortd you are heading out
While raftectlona were
into i5 more complicated and moves
going ·on In the upatalra of
·au faster pace," he said. "The probthe museum, singing of
lems are more acute and the danger
the golden olcllea waa tak· .
gn:ater."

lng place downstairs, top
photo. Talented Jennifer
Sheets was at the plano for
alnglng under the direction
of Bob Hoeflich. Gathering
at the plano to sing "On

were

Moonlight Bay•
from .
the left, seated, Allegra ·
'Will, Hoeflich, Colleen
Dunfee, Maurita llllltW, .
Maxine Whitehead, Jim .
Soulsby.snd Hal Kneen.

'------------------------------'

Speakers urge Rio Grande grads
to continue the learning process

'

CHEVROLET

•

Gingrich asks Ohio U. graduates
to think big,-be problem
solvers
.

decade."

~.. Public Notice! Public Notice! Public Notice! Poblic·Notice! Public Notice! Public Notice!
........ ..
.• ..

Page4

:;;;---~~

F. HAWKINS
MD

YOUTH AVIATION CLASS AVAILABLE

•
Continued rrom D-1
available for pick up a1 our extension
office.
Twiliaht Veaetable Meeting and
Tour at Karen's Country Market,
S4886 State Route 124. Portland,
Qllio on June 17, registration begins
at6 p.m. Vegetable growe111 from the
tn-stale area will be .able to discuss
tbeir cultural. insect and disease
problems with Ohio State Universi:..
ty Extension Specialists. A field tour
will begin tbe evening's activities.
"Lend A Hand", the Ohio River
!\_w~p will be held the morning of
Sajurday, June 20. Won't you help in
Cleaning up debris along the Ohio
Riv.:r. The~;e are four sites to meet at:
liorked Run State Park. coordinated
by.Tom Hayman (9!15-3509) and Carol,yn Wdsh; Racine at the landing ~Arry Circle: Pomeroy at the GazcI.,:-: Hal Kneen: and Middleport at
David Piles Park - Kenny Wiggins.
~iability release forms must be
S!ined by all participants, and childiin under IK need a p:~rental siJlnatli(P. Jlor further information plea.o;e
cl!1tblct Mei11s Countv Litter ConlrOI
iiQ!Je momfn~ts at 992-6360. .

to three-peat
with NBA title

·Apathy may d~rail Democrats' ...---Taking a look back
·hopes ·t o regain House control

·

__,~L

THE LONG FOYER ftowe Into the greet room, which anchora the rea~ or the
home. A ecrHnld. porch 11 ICCIIIIbla from thl1 1peca, and lelde to a rear
patio. The dining room 11 jult off till foyer end acijolna thl kitchen. The nearby
mudroom grentl ICCIII to thlpreoe. A abort hallway near the kltchan leeda
to the meeter bedroom lind beth. Acro11 the home, a lhort hallway connect~
two bedroom• end 1 full hill beth.· .
·
·

Raising a
garden...

t::oll~tlbles

quaUty Antiques &amp;

(Located In the French City An.lquas &amp; Craft Mall) ·

PORCH

Bulls surge

Fee hike spells·more road, bridge repair funds

13'-o•

t'·o·x u·-·o1

Middleport~

A Gannett Co. Newspape r

cloSet
On the other side of the home, two secondary bedrooms are situatecl just off
the main foyer and are separated by a
full bath. A hall closet is nearby for
storing linens and extra towels.
(For a more detailed, scaled ptan of
this,housy including guides to estimating costs and financing, send $5 to
House of the Week, P.O. Box 1562, New
York, N.Y. 10116-1562: Be sure to
include the plan number~.

t3'•4'x 1 •'-••"nl

•
Meigs County's

--

GREAT RM

60s

•

MULTIPLE BAY WINDOWS, I pair of clormere lnd I nicely dltlllld front porch add liUuty to thll country·ltyll dlllgn.
SCREENED
PORCH
13'-4·• 12'-(f

High: 80s; Low:

Sports

June 15, 19118

Weather

""Ollie

Volley PUI&gt;HolllnJ Co.

Grande/Rio Grande Community Col- uates have learned and to continue
lege by two suests during cOm• learning during their can:ers.
"In modem civilization, a college
mencement exercises Sunday.
education
ha.• alway.s been a must.
WOWK·TV's Sandra Cole. the
main speaker. and Dr. Richard Sis· but in today's technology-driven
son, interim president of Ohio State world, it's a nei:euity," said Cole,
University and the recipient of an who has co-a11c:hored the HunlinJ!on,
honorary degree from Rio Grande, in · W. v-..bailed CBS affiliate"s evening
separate addresses touched upon the news propams since early 1994.
'"Your professors hive taught you
need for application of what the grad·
much. You ·llhould be grateful. for if
you aren't today, you will be in the
futun:." Cole noted.
C:ole offered several obtlervations
to the Jl'll(luates, urgina them to value n:lationllhiP" with friend&amp; and coworkers, .to work qiilllll compromising their Ideal~ if they'n: right,
and 10 lel&amp;vc the world 1 bener place
than they found iL
Comparing li!f to the staaing of a
· news program, epic lllld ~ "!lOIRe~
times. things go terribly wrona. but
you hope the next broadcast will be
better, and that )'011 will have the
chance to 1edeeni younelf." .
Siuon. who has bellied up OSU
. since early this year, said thll ~ hu
. been l!llllled by the advances en the
world since'the days of his upbrinainl on a Oallia County farm.
~As limes have cflanaed, 10 have
the ideu of w11at it will lake to face
the futun:." SillliOii said. -Jt is importanl Jhat your Rio Orude edueation
(Coilllnuld on , . I )
r

~--::::~~:~

r-

·

·

· RECI!IV!I OI!GREE- Catlwl.t• aro.oa!DI'

of PomlnJJ, _right, ~d lrer b1chllor'.1
·. dt; • fnlm . . Colelt! of L1lllnl Al'tllnd ScilftDII floln IJnlvlrllty fir Rio Olalde ao.d fir
'ftu141tll Pmldlftt Jecll Frulh d&amp;R1ng Sundlly'4

t

..

•.
~

•

l

�Monday, June 15, 1998

·commentary
The Daily Sentinel

AcatWeathe~ forecast for

to find throngs
of proteStors fillBEIJING- Few people know revo- ing liananmcn
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
lution like Liao Sui Penn. ·
Square.
614-992-2156 • Fax 992-2157
The 93-year-old WOIIIIjll left her
But a rela·
hushand and child to help form the Qli- lively quiet shift ·
nese CommuniS! Party in the 1920s. from
central
The husband was laler executed by planning-, to a
Nationalists f&lt;r his wife's treason,
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
market-based
Forty years later, Liao listened· economy has
through her thiJ) apallment walls as the started bubbling
ROBERT L WINGETJ:
girls
next door denounced their futhcr lo the surface.
Publlaher ·
Moller &amp;
as a counter-revolutionary during the People
wallc
Andlr*on
, CuiiUJ'al Revolution. When military alqng the strccts
;
soldiers executed, the man, his children of Shanghai past shops such as Cartier
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
DIANE HILL
took the body and had it =mated, and Esprit, talking on tilly oellular
G-lllanager
Controller
Hushing the remains down the·toilet.
phones. In Beijing, foreign luxury cars
''Their mother went. mad " Liao have allllOiSI completely replaced the
says matter-of-factly "'hile sitting amid horse-drawn car1s that onoe filled the
the squalor of her tiny apartment. streets.
.
"They had to take her away."
Even morc remote cities' sooh ~
When President Clinton arrives at Chengdu, in China's southwestern
Beijing's special airport for foreign Sichuan province, have changed. Highdiplomats this week, he will find a rise hotels are under construction and
country in the throes of yet another rev- billboards advertise the movie "litan-'
olution. While Liao and many older ic," which has sold out many theaters
. Chinese arc bracing themselves for since opening in April.
another bout of national upheaval and
"China's going through an lndustri·
uncertainty, the country's leaders arc al Revolution, but it's 100 times what
.welcoming change and inviting Ameri- happ:ned in the United States," said Ed
By RICHARD. CARELLI
cans to participjlte.
Nichols, an American who operates a
A1soclated Press Writer
.
Clinton won't see military tanks consulting business in the Chinese city
WASHINGTON -As the Supreme Court starts ·its often-frantic sprint rolling down Beijing's streets and chas- of Zhcngzhou. "There are no easy
toward a three-month summer recess, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg says ing after dissidents. And he is unfikely answers, and nobody likes it because of
· civility, if not tranquility, reigns.
· "Again this year, in line with what may now be the trend, the court's
·opinions so far have .been steadily civil in tone," she recently told a group of
'federal judges.
· Ginsburg admiued to joining a dissenting opinion in which Justice
Antonin Scalia commented on a majority opinion's "feebleness" and "uuer
lack of logic," but she says the opinion's author- Justice Stephen 0. Brey·.·er- "is not easily offended, and he enjoys (Scalia's) sparkling wit, as I
· do."
·
The court term is expected to end in late June, but the justices first must
· ·ann(!unce decisions in 20 previously argued cases.

.

-Civility reigns as
·high. court nears

l

In that speech to federal judges, Ginsburg talked' about the court's ruling
last month that found most ofhistoric Ellis Island is in Nc;w Jersey, not New
· ·York. She reported a one-liner that Breyer got off during the decision-mak. ·ing process that never fqund its way into his publis~ conc~ng opinion . .
· "I am forced to conclude that my grandmother dtd not land an New York,
·as she likely thought," Breyer said. "She landed in New Jersey, first stop on
her way to St. Paul and eventually to San Francisco - in' Minnesota and
. : California, respectively, I sincerely hope."
· '
An article in Esquire magazine's July edition focuses on WIIShington
wri:cr Ron·Sus\ind's meeting with Justice Clarence Thomas many months
aP:&gt; while working on his book, "A Hope in the Unseen." The book is about
inner-city youth Thomas previously met and counseled.
.
ThMlas, who has spelled out his opposition to most forms of affirmative
· action in various speeches and court opinions, summed it up in a paragraph
·for Suskind. "I'm not saying that scores of black kids don't need help and
resources and a huge commitment to get where they need to be to compete,"
Thomas was quoted as saying. "I'm just saying don'tlower the bar. Don't
make it so that everything they're working for is meaningless. No one tries
· if they know at the end of the day they won't get full credit for the victory.
· ·No one will fight for something that everyone knows was a gimme."
·
·
Suskind reports that when Thomas was read a poem written by the youth,
· :now a studeot at Brown University, the justice's eyes became moist.
"There's no doubt. He wept," S~kind writes. "Not like a man letting go
: ·of himself. there was no spectacle to it. It was just a touch. just one round
lear."
.
That tear was enough for the magazine's headline writers: "And Clarence
Thomas Wept."

ar

•

.
Jack Andenon and JID Moler
•~ writen for United Featu~ Syn-

dicate, Inc.

Does anyone ·remember Karla Faye Tucker?

By Nat Hentoft
Amnesty
. At 6.:4.5 p.m.' on Feb. 3, Karla
lntemationFaye Tucker, 38, was pronounced
al's efforts to
dead in a Texas prison ·eight minutes
abolish the
after lethal drugs had been adminisdeath 'penaltered by an agent of the state. Her
ty, thought
final signs of life were a couple of
she would, in
coughs and a soft moan. Fifteen
death, help
years before, she had enthusiasticalraise
conly killed two people with a pickax.
sciousness
Gov. George Bush, who had
about capital
refused to intervene, asked God to
punishment.
bless
her.
'·
.
lndccd,
•
Hentoft
Many
An!cricans
were
iuned
to
in March, a
A host of Washington's leading lawyers gathered at the Supreme Court
Karla Faye Tucker's final hours,
new .survey of
· ·recently tor one more tribute to the late Justice William J. Brennan, who having, for days before, seen her
Texans'
opinioM
of
the
death penalretired in 1990 and died last year.
.
'
interviewed on television.
1y
revealed
that
suppon
for capital
Duti11g a courtroom ceremony, Attorney General Janet.Reno represented
few
hours
after
she
was
proA
punishment had slipped from 85
the legal profession in praising Brennan before the nine robed justices. Chief
nounced
dead,
the
British
Broadpercent to 68 percent .. largely
• ·Justice William H. RehnquiSI, as pan of his response, remembered Brennan
casting
Corporation's
World
News
because
of the debate over Karla
: 'fondly.
.
radio
program
asked
one
of
its
Faye
Tucker's
execution.
:
"His career exemplifies the happy truth that a judge need not be a prima
reporters at the necution site why
But polls are evanescent. When
:·donna to have a lasting influence on our country's laws,:· Rehnquist said.
so much attention ~ad been paid to . Joseph John Cannon. was executed
• No one on the bench blushed.
Karla Faye Tucker. "She put a face on April 22, few Americans ,knew
: · What docs a Supreme Court justice do for fun? Teach. Well, actually irav- on capital punishment," the reporter his name or cared about his death.
answered. "People had gotten to Some opponents of capital punish: :el and teach.
.
know her."
ment had pointed to his having been
·
Being a legal superstar has its perks, one of which is getting invited by
They
knew
she
was
attractive,
only
17 when he killed a mother of
: .scads of law schools to teach summer school in some desirable locales- all
articulate and .a born-again Christ- eight. There was hope that there
: ·expenses for justice and spou~ paid_ by the host law school. .
· .
: . Itinerarie~ include Rchnqutlllto Stcna,ltaly; Gmsburg to Voenna, Austna; ian. They also knew that Texas, ·might be a revulsion against execut- ·
which prides itself in the frequency ing someone who had murdered ' at
-:Justice Sandra Day O'Connor to three European cities, ending in Vienna;
of
its executions, had not put a so UJ,lformed an age. There turned
: .and Justice Anthony M. Kennedy to Salzburg. Austria.
. woman to death since 1863. And outto be no reason for such hope.
There was also a claim that Can. EDITOR'S NOTE- Rklwd Carelli coven the Supftllle Coun a..J they ~new that even som~ supporters
o( the death penalty hoped she non was not in full possession of his
: .lePI iiAa for The Alloelated Prea.
would be spared. Pat Robertson. for faculties when he killed Anne
example. ·
Walsh. As John Burnett pointed out
Afte'r she was killed by the state in an illuminating report on Nationof Texas, Samuel Jordan, director of al Public Radio, Cannon, at 4, had
'

~ Letters to the editor

:;Alcohol
a legal deadly drug
'
.

vcrr

·oa·

-r,
1

/•n

h/•S"or·
y
11

•

been. hit by a car, resulting in severe
head injuties. ~ ·Beginning at age
seven," said Burnett, he had been
subjected to "constant Sexual abuse
from his stepfather and grandfather,
as wefl..as 'beatings." At age 10, he
was ~spitalized for sipping gasoli~e to get high. At age IS, he was
diagnosed as psychotic and attempted suicide by drinking insecticide.
Cannon's lawyer, Stanley Schneider, notes: "We have a system that
says 17-year-olds can't see X-rated
movies be~ause they're too imma-.
ture to understand the content. We
have a system that says you can't
buy cigarettes wh~n you' re 17
because you &lt;lon't un.derstand the
consequences. You can't vote. enter
into a contract. You can't get marricd beci!Usci you'•re too immature."
But you can get executed.
According ·to the Death Penalty
Information Ceiuer in Washington,
D.C., 16 is now the youngest age at
which the commission of a capital
crime can lead to a death sentence.
That is the rule in 20 states. In four
. states. if the murderer was 17 ·when
he committed the act, the death sentcncc can apply. Other states wiil not
sentence·anyonc to death for a crime
committed before 18 or older.
Twelve states have not·yet yielded to the popular thirst for capital
punishment.
One impatient legislator, state
Rep. Jim Pits ofTekas, has proposed
that the death penalty apply to can·

didates as young as II, but they are
not to be killed until they reach '17•
And Gov. Pete Wilson of California
h¥ indicated interest in a state law
that will permit lethal injections of
those committing a murder. at 14,
Gov. Gary E. Johnso11 of New MeKico would not spare 13cyear-olds
under certain circumstances.
Karla Faye Tucker's death. has
not, after all, noticeably humani7.ed
much thinking about capital p;nishmcnl.
·
.
,
I would urge that since cxccu·lions arc conducted in the name of
the public, we should have the right
toscctheseexccutionsontelevision.
That way, a.~ those strapped to the
gurneys become .younger and
younger, we can't say we didn't
know what was happening. And we
might remember some of their faces.
At the beginning of our nation in
1786, 12-ycar-old Hannah Ocuish,
mentally retarded -- who had been
sent from foster home to foster
home •• was executed for strangling
a 6-ycar-old. Because of her mental
state, some doubted whether she
could be held responsible for her
actions. But the judge said she must
be made an example to the community. And so she was.
;
Nat Hcntoft is a. natlaaally
renowaed authority an the Pint
AMendment 1nd lhe nd Ill the
BUI of RJabts.

Rare c~ance for real democracy in ·Nigeria

: ·Dear Editor
' · It has been nearly a year since Todd Johnson's death. I've waited for time JBy DeWAYNE WICkHAM
October. But
then Abacha
to heal this family's wounds, but came 10 the cO&lt;ICiusion times goes slow. We G1nnett Newe Service
will always wonder why. ·
•
WASHINGTON - Nigeria is' manipulated'
I have an opinion and would like 10 spealc lln behalf of everyone who was the new South Africa.
the proc.ess to
Where once the former white ·ensure he was
hurt ~ this traledY God knows I've bc!:n through druJS, alcohol,etc. The
~:ornllinaaion will make you do things ypu would not onlinarily do. Alcohol apanhcid state was the leading the only candiis alepl and deadly drug. Yet the govemmeat makes money on it.
oppressor of black Africans, that date.·
As I understand everyone that day had a
high blood alcohol level . . distinction now belonasto lhe'govLast week
Also thcr'c were people who could've stopped thts.
. ·
crnmcnt · Of that contincf's most that subterfuge
To Todd Johnson's family I give them my prayers, everyday, especially populous nation.
came to an
Todd's mother. You never know what it's like to be a mothet linlcss you are - 'Throughout most-of the years abrupt
end
one. It's very special.
.
· . . ·
·
since it gained independence in when
Abach a
Wlckh1m
I do have to say thatm my opmton .everyone there was at fault. They 19(i0, Nigeria has been ruled by a had a heart attack -and died. Next
should have done somethonc to stop thts. ~orne. are free, are Aot. 1.. succession of military dictators, day he was replaced by another
believe those there could have done somethong to prevent thiS death.
desPQts who have shown little tol- member of the country's military,
·
Cheryl A. HyMII erance for diuent and even less for Gen. Abdulsalam Abubakar, who
Pomeroy . thci~ peoplc~s yearning for a demo- quickly assured Nigeria's restless
crane reform.
masses the transition to civilian rule
1~y
lime and asai!'l. Nigeria's lea4- would take place as planned.
g
ers promised a return to civilian
What he didn't say is
government, only to rcnesc at the his name will be on the ballot- or
last minute.
if more than one candidate will be
llyTbe AIIDCIIIId Prea
.
Today is Monday, June 1.5, the l~th day of 1998. There are 199 days left ' But there is reason to hope that allowed .
cycle of deceptiOn has been broken
The early indications are that
'tn the yar.
· '
· ·
~ith
tl)e
dellh
ofOcn.
Sani
Abacha,
Abubakar
is a true reformer. f!c is
Today's Hi1hlipt in History: .
who
had
1\lled
Nipria
with
a
iron
thought
to
be a member of a faction
. On June 1.5, 121.5, King Joh.n put his seal 10 the Mqna Carta ("Great
fist since 1993. Like many prcdc- within the military that w~nts to
Chiller") II Runnymede, England, sranting his barons ~ libcity.
ccssors, Ablleha said he wanted to tum over control of the country to
Onthiadlile:'
In 177.5, it. Second Continental Congress voted unanimously to appoint end Nigeria's military government. an elected, civilian leader.
He promised elections next month ·
" We remain fully committed to
Oecqc WuhinJIOII head of the Cominental Army.
to chose a civilian president arid the social-political transition proIn 1836, Arkansas bcci!IIC the 2Sih state.
turn over power to the winner in gram of General Sani Abach~'s
I .

wheth~r

•
IToledo I 78" I

Estalinc Boswell, 70. Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Sunday, June 14, 1998
in the Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.
.
Born June 20, 1927 in Point Pleasant. daughter of the late Earl and Marie
F. White Tllmer, she was a homemaker, and a member of the First Church
of God in Point Pleasant.
She was also preceded in death by two sisters, Doris Neville and Rose
Ann Stanley; and two brotherS, George Turner and Bcril Turner.
Surviving are two sons. Qcorge Allen Boswell of Point Plea~t. and Roger
Kent of St. Petersburg, Fla.; a daughter, Diana Lynn Kent of Point Pleasant;
three grandchildren; and three sisters, Mary Marg~ Smith and Fl'.llnccs Cam.den, both of Point Pleasant, and Geraldine Lewis of Princeton,,W.Va:.
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday in the Wilcoxen Funeral Home, Point
Pleasant, with Pa.,tor Lester Errett Jr. and Pastor D3lc Vollmar officiating.
Burial-"'!iUbe In the Lone Oak Ccmetel}'l Friends may call at the funeral home
from 7-9 tonight.

'' '''

IMansfield I 78• I•

''' '

. .-

IND.

'.'

'·

,,

'"'• IColumbus! 78' I
'

administration," Abubakar said in a rapid transition to civilian rule of
televised acfd~ss to his nation.
the oil-rich nation of 107 million.
But the .time for mere talk is The potential for violence is Jf\'~1
past.
ih this unsettled situation.
If AbubaKar is to win the confiIf Abubakar really is ~ommillt:d
dence of his people -and forestall · .to ushering in democratic govel')lcivil war- he must let his actions ment -:- and not just pullin1 off
speak for him. To begin with,. he another political sleight-of-handshould release from jail Moshood he should get opposition leaders
Abiola and Olusegun Obosanjo.
involved in the planning process.
Abiola is the wealthy business- By doins so, he can avoid the kind
man who was leading in the 'vote of protests that rc!cently tOok scores
count during the11botted 1993tran- of lives in Indonesia and topp'ed
sition to civilian rule when the clec- President Suharto, that nation's
tion was annulled and mililary rule longtime ruler.
·
reinstated. Obosanjo, himself a forIn the wani,ng days of South
mer · dictator, is the only military Al'rica's apartheid state, F.W. •de
leader to hand over the reins of 'Klerk was faced with· a tousb
Niseria's t~overnment to civilian choice. He. had 10 oversee the lltld
· authority - a. transition short- of that nation's white-minority goyJived.
crnment, or ratchet up the violent
.Both men have been accused of suppression of the democraO:y
'atiempting . to undermine the movement among South Africa:s
nation's military government but black majority.
·.
widely are viewed as political prisAbdulsalam Abubakar fliccs a'n
oncn. Releasing ~m would send a equally tough' decision.
.
11ron1 sianal .! hjlmc and abroad
He must either allow democracy
thai Abubakar is ..rious about end- to take hold in Ni1eria and return
ina the military's oppmsive .....
the military to its barracks,' or li,lce
is of lhe essence.
·
his predecessors, usc the force df
{)priqsition leaders are pushing arms to dub the hopes of his peafor street demonstrations to forte a pie.

nme

' .. .

Hope M. Eblin

W.VA.

Hope M. Eblin, 69, Syracuse, died Sunday, June 14, 1998 in St. Ann's
Hospital, Columbus.
.
Born J;eb. 18, 1929 in Meigs County. she was the daughter of Sola.' and
Lera Howell Bennett. She was a homemaker and a fllember of the Calvary
Pilgrim Chapel.
.
· She is survived by her husband. Ira (Artie) Eblin: a daughter and son-inlaw, Diane and Charles Brush of Centerburg; a son and daughter-in-law, Roger
E. and Karen Eblin of Columbus: two sisters, Eileen Snyder of Middleport,
and Marion Jean Moore of Columbus; and four grandchildren.
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in the Calvary Pilgrim Church, State
Route 143, Pomeroy. The Revs. Victor Roush and Amos 'fillis will officiate. and burial will be in the Rock Springs Cemctct')'. Friends may call at the
Ewing Funeral Home from 7-9 p.m. Tuesday.

: ..

-ltd:.Stormy weather persists
• lll.t

Grophlctlltl.

:. ~n ar~a

through Tuesday

. . By The Associated Prea
·
. . The showers and thunderstorms will continue acros~ Ohio atlenst through
Tuesday night, forecasters said.
.
, , . That means the threat of flooding will persisl'w.here there are heavy down- . pours, the National Weather Service said.
· .
.
.
, • . Lows tonight will be around 60. Highs on Tuesday mostly woll be on the
70s.
.
•. , . . The record-high temperature for this date at the Colum~us weather 'sta·
. .lion was 96 degrees in 1897 while the record low was 47 tn 1959. Sunset
, . )Onight will be at9:02 p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 6:02 a.m.
, .. .
Wcalher forecut:
Tonight... Partly cloudy. Lows 60 to 65. Southwest wind 5 to I0 mph.
. , Tuesday... Partly cloudy. A chance of showers and thunderstorms in the
.. ;afternoon. Highs in the lower 80s. Chance ofrain 40 p,ercent.
.. . Tuesday night ... Mostly clear. Lows near 6Q.

·.'EMS units answer 10 calls
1p

_ ". Units of Meigs Emergency Services answered
calls for assistance on
" .Saturday and Sunday.
·
·
' .
CENTRAL DISPATCH.
' · Saturday, I:45 p.m.• Dye Road, Raymond Lnrrlbert, Veterans Memorial
.•.Hospital, assisted by Rutland squad;
·
·
·. 7:03 p.m.. Overbrook Nursing Center, But1c White, Veierans Memorial;
" Sunday, 5:46a.m .. Riverside Apartments. Middleport. Keith Musser. Veterans Memorial:
9:50a.m., Country Mobile Home Park, a.~sisted by Pomeroy, Charles Sexton, Veterans Memorial;
,
·
II :29 a.m., assisted by Pome~y. Spring Avenue, Martha Graham, Veterans Memorial.
•
POMEROY
. II: II p.m. Sunday, structure fire, Fisher Strejlt, assisted by Middleport,
,no ;,njuries,,
·
,
•
RACINE
...
: . · Saturday, I0:10p.m., Elmwood TeiTIICe Apartments, Opal Cummins. trent;
; ed.
.
.
Sunday, 12:26 a.m., Fourth Strec;t, Harry Lyons, Veterans Memorial.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Saturday I:57 p.m .. State Route 7. Beulah Kline. Holzer Medical Center.
.'
MIDDLEPORT
·
. . · Saturday 2:1.5 p.m .• Mulberry Aveime, Pomeroy, Nancy Ackerman, Vet:· erans.Mcmorial:
·
'
, · .. 3:09 p.m., Pomeroy Cliffs Apartments, Loreua Flint, Veterans Memori. al.
!;

'

Speakers urge graduates

.(Continued from Pege1)
·' ha~ given you the breadth of ex periL: 'ence to meet the demands of the
· ' future. We need you ·more than ever
' to resolve contlicts. restore civility
. and make critical decisions.
' · ' . "Continue to expand your hori:.'. .zons beyond the safety of your

;: The Daily Sentinel
(VSPS 213-HI)

AGo-C..~per

•. '

Published every afternoon, MofWiay thrtN&amp;b
Fridoy, Ill Court 51., Pomeroy, Olilo, by tile

Oliio Valley Plll&gt;lil~lni Compony/llannetl Co.
Sewnd claM poltiJe p-id at Pomeroy, Ohio.
MMbtr: The Aaoc: ..tc:d Prell and 'lha Ohiu

~ ' • Ncwap~per Auociation.
Send llktrcu COfl'«&lt;iOI'III to The
~ : DIJiy Stnlinel, 111 Court St, Pomeroy, Obto

. ·...._rr:

'

4S769.

SUJSCRimON RATES
By C.rrior or M- Roolt
Ooe - k ................................ .$2.00
0.. Montlt................................ $5.70
One Ycar................................... St04.00
SINGLE COPY Pillet:
.
Dlil""''''''" ............................. l~ Cc:nta
Sttbo:oibcta "'" tleairinc ., pay tile caricr moy
r~~r~illn ldYIIMX dltm 10 The Daily Sentinel on
a three, sill or 12 monlh bull. Credit will be
Jfvcn Anier uth week.
1· ·No'lllblt:riptiott by ...u )"tmined In .....
where home carrier JPVkc • 1vailable.
~ 1 • 'hbUthcr ~el &amp;he tf&amp;hliO adjust ralel dur·
i 1 Ina the subscrlptiM. period. Sublcription n11e
ehlnps may be; implcmc:nled by chlnJ.I"'Ihe
duration of the: fllblcription.
lo

•

MAJLSUISCIImON

'

1ultlt Mdp Coii!"Y
13 -b. ...........................$27.)0

.. ·.

n

..
..
I_ "

.-0.-

26 - b ........................... .$53.82
Wedts .......................... .SI05.56
Melp Ctloolly

13 - . . ............................$29.25
26 . b........................... .$56.68

.!2 .................................. .$109.72

RC'ader Services

,.

Comctlon Polley

·o . r - - . n Ia elliiOIIalllo·bo
·: ......... 1r,... 1o1ow .r .. error Ia •

•• lllwr:Y, ... doe -

.r

Ill (741) 992-

am. we ,.. chock , ... .••-dOll
pel_... oornc11oa lrwiiTIOitd.

. .

no -

Newe Oepllrtrt... tll .

........ 11 tn-2.15.5. Depeot•

......

C

'aiiU"tt

,,. Mn

a c ............ _..........Eld. 1101

Nlwl........................................~~·~::: :::

known world," he added.
Sisson made his remarks after he
wa.• awarded· the honorary degree in
pub!ic service by Rio Grande. A citation detailing his accomplishments
wa.~ read aloud by Jack Fruth; president of the UniversitY. of Rio Grande
Board of Trustees, while Sisson was
hooded by Carl Dahlberg, chairman
of the RGCC Board of Trustees.
The addresses by Cole and Sisson
preceded the presentation of bachelor's and a.•sociate degrees in the first
outdoor commencement at Rio
Grande since 1992 under partly
cloudy skies and temperatures in the
80s.
"How ~weet it is to be out here
after six yea111." Or. Barry M. DOrsey.
Rio Grande's president. commented
to Jhe crowd a.• he opened the ceremony.

a.
0

•'

~-~~~,Ill.

liM
I
.£111. 1107
tiW .W...........:..............,....I!IL liDO
I

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

.

The dcparttncnt has a $2.S million budget, currently fun~ with money
from automobile license and gasoline taXes, Spencer cxplaoned.
Counties and other political subdivisions are allowed to increase the permissive taX in increments of SS up to $20. Boards of county commissioners, township trustees and village councils_can enact the local piggyback fcc,
he said.
Middleport and Pomeroy enacted $5 fees in 1986. Salisbury Township
also has an additional SS fcc.
.
If the measure is approved by commissioners, Pomeroy and Middleport
will get 50 percent of the new fee for vehicle~ licensed to residents of the
villages, while Salisbury Township will receive 30 percent from, vehicles
licensed in the township.
.
·
Almost20,500 vehicles are currentl)'registered in Meigs1County, including passenger cars, motorcycles, motor homes, trailers and other licensed
vehicles.
Spencer Said many of the counties in District 18 talce advantage of the
additional funding including Petry County, Athens County (where many peo- pie·pay up to $20 extra per vehicfe per year). Washington and Monroe counties, in addition to municipalities in Morgan and Noble counties.
Roads and bridges are expensive, he said. The dt'llartment has to maintain and replace equipment. maintain roads and bridges and buy material, he
added.
There are more than 300 bridges throughout the county, about 10,000 culverts, 15,000 traffic signs and more' than 70,000·feet of guardrail, Spencer
said.
"We need all the help we can get in generating revenue to take care of
it," he said.
The immediate goal is complete the paving of all county-roads, he said.
All but 13 of the 250 miles of county roads are paved, he explained.
· Maybe then the department can address safety issues. straightening out a
few curves, taking down humps. he added.
The first public hearing on the proposal will be held on Thursday, June
25 at 7 p.m. at the Meigs County Courthouse, and residents will be permitted to voioe their opinions in .favor of or opposing the new permissive tax.
. The commissioners must act on the issue before June 30.
'

Starr's closeness to media casts pall over probe
By ANNE GEARAN
Asa.oclated Press Writ8r
WASHINGTON - Prosecutors'
contacts with reporters covering the
Monica Lewinsky investigation
underm.ine the legitimacy of Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr, a
senior aide to President Clinton contends.
Starr has acknowledged occasionally briefing reporters during the
5-month-old .investigation and said
his top deputy has done so extensively. But he said neither he nor the
deputy, Jackie Bennett, leaked any
improper information.
.
Starr was quoted' in a magazine
article that werit on to lash him for
"leaking the most damaging details
of the investigation to a willing. eager
press corps."
"These charges are so serious and

they go right to the heart of the legitim.acy 9f the office," presidential
adviser Rahm Emanuel said Sunday
on NBC's " Meet the Press."
The White House repeate.dly has
II!'Cused Starr's office of leaking sensitive information to the press during
the 'investigation into whether Clinton had an affair with Ms. Lewinsky.
a former White House intern, and
then tried to cover it up. The president ha.' denied any sexual relationship.
"This cloud exists over that office
and until that's cleared up, that cloud
will literally stay over the office and
also over Ken Starr." Emanuel said.
Siarr defended himself Sunday,
saying his office brok.e no secrecy
laws.
'
.
"We arc living up to our professional responsibilities," he said.

Meanwhile. editor Steven Brill
appeared on seveml Sunday morning,
news shows to publicize and d~fend
his article cri!icizinll Starr..The ani· cle wa.' published tn the onaugurai
issue of Brill's Content magazine, a
journal of media criticism.
Background briefings for reporter.;
-such as Starr gave "clearly violate the
law as interpreted' by variouscourts,"
Brill said on "Fox News Sunday."
"There really isn't any other lawyer
on the planet who interprets the law
the way he does."
On CBS' "Face The Nation," Brill
said evidence is "absolutely crystal
clear" that Starr's office timed leaks
tti put pressure on potential witnesses and thus strengthen prosecutors'
hand.
.
Grand jury proceedings are secret,
and federal law prohibits prosecutors

from revealing what witnesses say in
the grand jury room. At issue for Starr
is whether it is also illegal to disclose
what witnesses say outside the room
-such as in interviews with the FBI
or prosecutors.
"It's definitely not grand jury
information. if you are talking about
what witnesses tell FBI agents or us
before they testify before the grand
jury or about related matters," Starr
wil.~ quoted in the magazine article.
Others leapt to Starr's de(ense
. Sunday.
Prosecutors have an obligation to
explain complicateqf\!a.o;es as they
unfold, said Sen. Orrin Hatch, RUtah, chairman of the Senate Judi·. ciary Committee.
,
"I would believe Ken Starr over
almost everybo&lt;.ly else." Hatch said
on the Fox program.

Senate leader remains doubtful of tobacco bill passage
The Senate ha.~ been debating the
By JIM ABRAMS
mea.•ure
for three weeks, with both
Alsoclated Pre•• Writer
WASHINGTON
Senate Republicans and Democrats padding
Majority Leader Trent.Lott is givi!lg the bill with amendments advancing
the huge .anti-tobacco bill a tinal a variety of ccauses. The legislation
weelc, saying _that without major originally wa~ aimed at cutting teenage smoking and increasing federal
changes it is doomed.
"If somewliere this week we can't control over cigarette content.
"This bill is so bad right now, I
get it to a conclusion we've got to
just
don 'tthink it should be passed in
move on." Lott, R-Miss .• said Sun. this form," Loll said on ABC's "This
day.

Fire damages Pomeroy
res.idences Sunday night
A Fisher Street home sustained
serious damage and a sricond minor
damage in a tire Sunday night.
According to Pomeroy Fire Chief
l&gt;dnny Zirkle, the home of Tom Wilson. at II Fisher St .. sustained seri·
ous damage to a downStairs room and
the second floor. while the remainder
ofthe house suffered "severe" smoke
and heat damage.
Nobody was at home when the
fire starred, according to Zirkle.
A neighboring house, the owner of

which is unknown at this time, sustained exterior damage, as weir.
According io Zirkle. it is suspected that the fire began around a central air conditioning unit, although the
cause is yet to be determined. .
The Pomeroy VFD responded to
the fire with 26 firefighter.;, three
trucks and ah emergency squad. The
Middleport fire department sent one
fire engine and five firefighters.
There were no injuries.

Week."

LOti had said a Week earlier that
the bill was " dead in the w~~~er." But
there was some movement during the
week, with Republicans winning
approval of amendments· to end the
marriage tax penalty and channel
money to anti-drug programs.
Even so, Loll said Sunday that
"everybody that has touched it has
made it worse."
House leaders, led by Speaker
Newt Gingrich. say they will only
accept something far more modest
than the Senate bill, which charges
the tObacco industry $5'16 billion
over 2S years to fund anti-tobacco
programs.
At the end of ~~~t week. senator.;
were saying that the best hope for the
bill would be to send it to a conference with the House, which h~s yet

to come up with its ver.;ion, and try
for a compromise on' a more uccepl·
a!Jie package.
.·
.Even before· that. t.ott said. it
might be necessarY to "set (the Senate version) aside or cume up with
some way to go into sume negotiation ·
to. come up with a bill that's much
smaller. much more in lin~ with the
original concept- and I'm trying to
think of some wuy to accomplish
thai."

Loll said senator.; "still haven't
resolved some of the stickiest prOblems of all, and that is what do you
do about these massive attorneys'
fees and what do you do about how
the farmer.; are compensated."

-Meigs announcementsSpeaker set
Featured speaker at the Faith Full
Gospel Church at Long Bottom
Wednesday, 7 p.m. will be the Rev.
Dale Sides of Bedford, Va. The public is invited.

Bank nlghl slated
The Mejgs County units of the. ·
American Cancer Society will hold a
bank night Tuesday, 3-7 p.m. at the
Veterans Memorial Hospital conference room to team . ca~Jtains in the
June 2() Relay for Life. Captains will
tum in money collected from .team
members and pick up T-shirts.

Bible school
"Come and See, Jesus, the Lord"
will be the theme of the vocational
Bible sch~l at .the Middleport Boil advisory
Pomeroy residents on· Spring
Church of C~rist, June 22-26. Cla.~s­
Am Ell Power ......................4711.
es will be held from 9 a.m. to noon Avenue north of Rock and Fisher are
AkZo ............................:.........104
.
for ages three to 12. The kickoff will advised to boil their water until furAmrTech.....~ .........................44~
be held Saturday with a bike pamde . ther notice. That urea is currently
Aahlend 011 .......................... 48~
AT&amp;T ~ .....................~ .............~81'f.
at 9:30 at Dave Diles Park to· be fol- receiving water on temporary lines,
llank One ...................-.......... 58'- lowed by a pool party from. 10 a.m. a£Cordinl! to John Anderson, village
Bob Evan• ............................ 20)t.
to noon at the Middleport Pool. For administrator. Residents will be'
&amp;org.w....,.r ...........................45 more
information, residents may call advised when the !)oil order is lifted.
Broughton ........................... 14"1.
Anderson said.
992-2914.
Chlmplon .............................12'1r
Chlrm Stipe, ........................... 5\

Stocks

Kroger .............................:••..44'-

Landa End................... ~, .. ~ .....33~

Umlttd .................................31'-

0ak Hill Flnl ..................... :.... ~

ova .........................~.............42).

OM Valley ......................... ,.33.,._
hoplea ...................................30
PNm Flnl.................................a1

Aoc:kwell ..........................50,.

RDIIhell ••• ~ ...........................13 't.
Seara....................................81tt.

,.

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

~·

Star Blnk. ............................81 ,_
Wltlldy'l ............................... 24\.

-·-·-

Stock rep(lrt1 1re the 10:30
1.m. QUOlll provldld by Atlvest

.or Oelllpolle.

.

RABIES IS ASERIOUS
rACCINATE
YOUR PETS.••
PROTECT
YOUR FAH/Ll

Hospital news ,

Cit¥ Holdlng .................:...•.. ,.45~

Fedtral Mogul •••••••• ~.... ~ ••••••••lii'O.nMtl .................................ll\
CloodvMr ................................11
Kmlrf............- ......................,.20,. ·

Worthlnglon ..........................1&amp;'4

; :..., It

tY roads. he said.

Estaline Boswell

*

away.~··

.

I.

the loss of jobs. But it has to be done." get through this roUgh period, but it's
Premier Zhu Rongji has initiated a going to be really SCIK)'...
If some older Qlinese ll'e timid
strict reform plan that would overturn ·
much of the Communist dicta from the about changes, Chinese youth have
past 40 years. He wants to close or sell ·mostly embraced them as an opportunioff thousands of govenunent-owned ty to find private-sector jobs with highbusinesses, abolish many government er pay· and quicker advancement than
~~gencies, and force the Chinese people offered by the government bureaucnoto ·buy or rent their hOmes mther than cy. But th;tt message has been lost 011
some parents. whO still don't D'USI the
live in subsidized housing.
Zhu wants to reduce the number of market reforms.
Shan Bin, a 23-year-old' who gradugovernment ~~gencies ·from 40 to 29.
from Shanghai University last
while closing or selling off most of the
year, works for the city's economic
79,000 state-owned companies.
· His plan would tlrow nearly half development agency ~ng forthe country's 8 million government · eign investment on China. He had
employees out of wOfk, according to hoped for a mere exciting job in the prisome Chinese estimates. Beijing would vate sector. but his parents pressured
be the hanlest hit - one out of every I0 him intO the ;ecurity of more stable
bureaucratic work.
·
working adults would lose their jobs.
· Faced with that11ifficult challenge,
"The generation gap between my
China's leaders likely will ask Wash- parents' generation and my generation
ington for help in Slorming the gates for is a very big problem," Shan said. "My
reform. American investment and sub- Parents want me to have a stable life,
sidies would ease the pain China faces but I think there's too much to try, and
as it eliminates jobs and industries.
stability is not always the best thing:"
"From the standpoint of major'
Where Shan and his friends ·sec
interaction between the Chinese and excitement, older genemtions see danAmericans, Clinton's visit is timely and ger. During the Cultural Revolution,
in fact long overdue," said Harvey which lasted 10 years during the 1960s
Nelsen, a leading expert on China's and 1970s, people who wore flashy
economic reforms at the University of clothing or spoke out against the status
South Aorida. "If foreign invcstment quo were often killed.
· continues to Dow in, the Chinese may
Liao, for one, has kept her dil;tance
from the current economic revolution • but even she has not. been able to
avoid it.
From her apanrnen~ with its peeling
paint and age-old calendars covering
the walls, she watches the construction
of a new high-rise office tower from
her bedroom window.
In the evening, Liao faithfully turns
011 her color television to wllll:h Chinese reporters talk about the daily bulls
and bears on New YOfk's Wall Street
.and the Shanghai Stock Market.
"I'm a very independent woman,"
she said over the television stock
reports. "The only thing I want noW is
medicine to make all the pains go

(Continued from Plg~1)

conditions and

MICH.

EcQnomic clian_
ge evident .in China
By J8ck Andlnon
lnd J.-t Moler

'Estlliwlilll in 1948

More road, bridge repair&gt;

OHIO Weather
~esday, June 16

.-

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

' Crash injures
Shade area man
A Shade man was injured in a
motorcycle accident Sunday on State
· Route 681 at the intersection with
·Bedford Township Road 244 (Cullums), the Gallia-Meigs PoSt of the
Sto,te Highway Patrol reported.
Michael W. Ruchti. 42. 4S U.S.
33. ·was transported to O'Bieneu
,Memorial Hospital. Atliens, by
SEOEMS following the 4:30 p.m. ·
accident, according to the patrol.
Troopers said Ruchti was eastboUnd on 681 when he mad~ a lcli
turn onto Cullums, lost control of the
motorcyde and overturMd.
.
The motorcycle was slighdy damaged.

Holzer Medical Cenler .
Dlscharxa June 12- Mr.;. John
Harrison and daughter, Mrs. Victor
Artz and son, Homer Osborne, Dale
McGraw. .Walter Green, George
Kalatta.
Dlsc:lwps June 13 - Aerica
Rowe, Rand)' Mulford, Mindy
Gilbeo;t, Robeo1 Moody, Karl Bmndcau, Gusta Mannon, Thelma Prins,
Richard Turner, Ruby Caldwell.
Blr1h- Mr. and Mrs. James Wal·ton. son. Patriot.
.
Dlsc:haracs June 14 - Betty
Skidmore, Jan Rccs, Patricia Gould,
Mrs. James Walton and son, Rosie
Wood, Keith Miller.
·Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Sellers, daughter, .Bidwell.
(Pitl6hed wltll permission)

Your family veterinanan can ~lp you learn more about how
you can protect your pet and your family against Rabies..
• Leave Wildlife alone.
• Report bites to your local health department.

'

01110 t&amp;l IAINdY
MJ!t*'4t 4110CU'l101f

!Ms ........,._.,,. .

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

/.li .....,~~~~~a~Aslllillilllllt

�. ·.

~

Sports

The Daily Sentin~~
Monday: June 15,1981

Chicago wins sixth NBA crown

MJ's clutch shot
propels Bulls past
Utah Jazz 87-86
By KEN BERGER
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - The
ball was m Michael Jordan's hands,
the court glistened m front of him'and
the clock became pan of the heart of
thts man who's made a Zen-hke connecuon with ball. buzzer and nylon
As he fixed hts eyes on the nm
and htS future. a question became
embedded m lime: Would he do tl
agam' Of course
Was tl the last ltme' Nobody
.knows.
"My answer ts that there are sit II
a Jot of unanswered quest tons," smd
Jordan. who scored 45 pomts. tncludmg a pull up jumper with 5.2 seconds
left that gave the Chtcago Bulls their
sixth NBA champtonshtp wtth an 8786 victory over the Utah Jazz m
Game 6 Sunday night.
"It's a lot of sympathetic feelings
about thts team and where we want
it to go
Jordan. nn Amencan origtnal .
stood at halfcourt waggtng stX fingers
for the number of champtonships he
has nearly single-handedly won for
the Bulls. A unammous chotce for his
s.xth Finals MVP trophy, he walked
off with that. too
If he walks away for g'ood, this
game would be the ulttmate stamp on
an mcomparable career. Wtth aJumpstop and Otck of the wrist he seemed
to want to hold onto fore\·er. Jordan
added another incredible moment to
a htghltght film that future generattons wtll have trouble believing
Jordan wtll be a free agent thts
summer and has spoken of retinng.
Coach Phil Jackson has insisted that
he doesn't expect to be back, and
Scottie Pippen, Dennts Rodman and
six others wtll be free agents.
"Unless somelhmg absolutely
unusual comes out of left field,"
Jackson said, "I don't expecl us 10 be
back here"
Thts was up lhere wtth all lhe
incredible moments in Jordan's
career- the shot that won lhc 1982
NCAA champtonship for North Carolina. rhe 63-potnt game agamst Larry Bird and the Boston Celtics, the
career-htgh 69 potnts against Cleve-

land and allrhose hean -~topping performan~es at Madison Square Garden.
"Thts was lhe best performance
I've seen by Michael Jonlan m a crt tical siruatton m a cntical series,"
Jackson said. .
Wirh Chicago rrailing 86-83 inside
20 seconds, Jordan sneaked up
behind Karl Malone, swatted the ball
away and dribbled upcourt He pulled
up 19 feet away. nearly faked Bryon
Russell out of his sneakers arid lei ny
from 17 feet with 52 seconds left.
"The moment started to come.
and once you get the moment, you
see the court and you see what the
defense wants to do. I saw that
moment," Jordan sat4-""\
"I let the ltme ttck to where I felt
I had it where I wanted tl. I siopj,ed,
pulled up and had an easy Jump
shot"
The shol senl a reverberaling
shock through the stunned Delta
Center, as formidable an opponent as
the Jazz in rhese Finals. II left furure
Hall of Farner.; Malone and John
Stockton sltll wtthout a championship after all these years of gnt and
arltslry.
And the worst pan is, Stockton
doesn '1 believe any of this business
about the impeniling' breakup of rhe
Bulls
'"It won't be last one," satd Srockton, whose clutch lhree-pomter with
41.9 seconds left was dbhterated by
Jordan. "It's been a nice story for
everyone here. But he'll be back, and
Scoltte will be back and Phil Jackson
will be back. I'm tired of hearing all
that."
Some feared lhe Bulls' dysfunctional dynasly would cease to function at the Delta Center: that noise in
lhe arena and the shadow cast by the
Wasatch Mountams symbohzed a biller end 10 a remarkable era.
But they forgot who was still run·
ning this show - dislracted, injured
and low-on-fuel a~ it was It was
unmistakably Jordan, and he wa~ perfec!fy marvelous for perhaps lhe last
rime.
"That guy was rtdiculous," satd

I

•

!

Hayes wins Bu.ick Classic
By JOEL STASHENKO

Inslead. Hayes won his firs! POA
HARRISON, N.Y. (AP) - J.l,'. tour tille by rolling in a 6-foot birdie
Hayes doesn't have Jim Furyk's pun on the first playoff hole at the
track record. bank account or putting Weslchester CounJry Club.
touCh.
•
"I was a linle bit nervous over rhat
Bul lfayes does have the Buick pull, but nol as nervous as I thought
: Clas~ic championship Furyk may I'd be in thai situation," he !laid . .. 1
; have lhoughl he was deslined 10 win felt very confident I fell like I wa.~
· when Furyk speclacularly eagled the going lo make it I saw the hne and
: lui ho~ of regullllion Sunday 10 il5eems like everyth!ng went right"
: force a playoff. ·
•

.....

.tr,'
._:r."d

~

....

. " ]#'

'

-.--'

,,

' •\

~

•.

., .'

'•

LOFTON STEALS SECOND- The Cleveland Indiana' Kenny LoftOn
(right) ateala second ban •• New Yortc YankHI ahortstop Luis Sojo
looks for the call In the flrat Inning of Sunday's American League
game In New Yortc, where the YankHs - n 4-2. (AP)
.

STRIPPED - As Chicago forward Dennis
191) watchea,
Utah forward Karl Malone (canter) gets the basketball atrlppad by
Chicago's Michael Jordan In the laet minute of Game 8 of the NBA
Finals In Salt Lake City, where the visiting Bulls, behind Jordan'• last
plvolll basket, won 87·88 and took their third straight title. (AP)
Steve Kerr. who clinched the tttle last
year with a winmng shOI m Game 6
whtle Jordan was double-teamed.
" He's so good. it's ridiculous."
He made IS shots, including three
three-pointers, and had his highest
scormg game m lhe final~ since
scoring 55 agamst Phoenix in 1993
What made this championshtp
even more spec1al was the way Jordan had 10 work in the· clinching
game. With Sconie Pippen severely
hobbled by a sore back, Jordan
pumped up 35 field goal attempts and
15 free lhrows.
"Michael's probably gol an01her
five years lefl in his career before you
even see a decline in him." said Pippen.
The Jazz pushed closer nnd closer tO a seventh game behind Malone,
who was dominant again wilh 31
points The Mailman got an offensive
rebound and hit a jumper that gave
Utah a 79-77 lead wtth 4 16 left.

Martin wins in Miller Lite 400,
·:claims fourt~ victory of 199Q
· By MIKE HARRIS
ond on lap 157. but the two-time
BROOKLYN, Mtch (AP) series champion wasn't finished.
: Mark Manm watted for the race 10
All of the leaders had to make one
. come to htm Sunday, before pulling more stop · under the green nag.
: away loan easy VIctory to the Miller Everyone look on rwo right-side
: Lite 400 at Michtgan Speedway.
tires and enough gas 10 finish
Jeff Gordon, the defendtng
When the Hurry of ptt ,Jcttvity was
. NASCAR Wtoston Cup ch~mpion, over on lap 182. Martm was JUst
.dominated the firsl three-quarters of ahead of Gordon and Jarrett was
the 200-lap race on Michtgan's two- third.
mtle. htgh-banked oval.
On lap 192. Jarrell caughl Gordon
He led 132 of lhe firsl 1491aps and pulled alongside They banled
before Ford drivers Manto and Dale Side-by-side for most of the nex1 two
Jarrett both cam~ on to challenge his lops before Jarrell. who now hns five
Chevrolet.
straight top-five finishes. moved inlo
The key to Mart to's series-leadmg second place.
fourth vtctory of the season and 26th
"I was happy to see them get to
: · of hts career was I he first of only two racing behind me," Manto said.
caurion penods
"Dale Jarrell was strong. Before we
Gordon was nearly,IOseconds- ptlled (the lust lime). he was catcha full straightawuy -ahead or Mar- '" tog me a linle...
tin and Jarrett when NASCAR waved
Jarrett said, "We just couldn 'I get
tbe yellowOa•e on lap II Raflerspot- the car down on the bonom for the
ling .t piece of latlptpe that had fall- tmck early in the race. I hnd tonto the
eo from the rear of Sterling Mnrltn's htgh groove and thai hun me. Then
car.
Mark JUS! had too much for us al the
"The lirst pan of the race was a end."
race for second." Martin said. "Jeff
Gordon said his car became hardGordon wa.' checked out and I could· er 10 drh•e as the race wore on.
Jk h
h
. )
r n't calch htm. 1 seems t c t roug •
"My car just gO! !10 tight allhe end
:r out' the race. they losl the h;mdle a lit· I couldn 'I hold (Jrurell) off," he said.
tie.
"I hated to hold Dale up. I knew he
"Things JUsl played out in our wanted to go up there and run with
favor. We seemed to chase the tmck Mark, but I wasJ'us11ryinn" to hold on
around and it Just came back to us in to second I though! if I could !!lay on
rhe end."
the outside of him, maybe I could
Gordon remained in the lead after hold htm off. But there was no way. •
ptlling during 1he firsl caution and
'"Those two guys were fast ;dl day
again after a four-car cmsh on lnp 123 long. I just got the jump on !hem ear·
brought out the second and final yel- ly on and had no caulions to slow us low Hag of the race But !he tenaciouS down
.
•
•
,
Martm was close behind.
"When !hat cautton came oul, lhat
Martin challenged Gordon for the got us behind and we were never the
lead several times. pulling alongside same."
on lap 132 and again on 141 before
Jeff Burton, Manin's teammate
finally laking the lead on lap SO. Jar- and lhe !ROC race winner ~ere S~trett then moved paS! Gordon mto sec- urday, w_as fourth. followed by senes

.,.

'.'t

points leader Jeremy Mayfield, Btl!
Elltott and Bobby Labonte.
Mayfield now holds a 26-potot
lead over Gordon, who is two points
ahead of Martin and seven in front of
Jarrett. Rusty Wallace, the 17thplace finisher Sunday. fell from second to fiflh, and !rails his teammate.
Mayfield. by 68 potnts.
-•Here are the results of the Miller
lite400NASCARWinstonCuprace
at Michigan Speedway. with starting
posttion in parenlhese,, driver, hometown, make of car. laps completed.
reason out if any and money 'won:
t t7tMIIrk Matttn
A.t . Fanl :wo
2
" r~l&gt; M 1,.,11. lfi&lt;k"'l' N c "''"'· 2r.,·
$76.m
1 ••• JetrOonto.,. Pi'""'"" Ind .. Cl&gt;t•nlf&lt;l
2CMI.•~,;i~rrounno. Saulh a..... "". "'.... 2&lt;111.
s~ 2"
ll$tk,.myMio&gt;f"'ld o..••....,, K, "''"'
21•1.' s.M.~ll
6.t6&gt; 8111 ~Ilion. Duw!iOIIutl&lt; Gu . fnnJ :!&lt;Mt
S$11.~1 ~ 111 _ , .....,.,.,•• C•l&lt;J'II• Cllri~• r...,

a.,.,.,,,.

,..,.,,,.,,2&lt;11 ~101s

• "' w.., aonno s...h a.~"'"· v. ·"''"''"'·
21
•\~t,'J,,. N&lt;m«hd. '""''""'' Fl• a...n&gt;
"' 2111 ' '7 •1s
.
IU Uh Willy llldltntwh. Ba.-.ull. Cuk1 , C'b.!vro1&lt;1. 200. u2 o7s
" IJIItJ•..., s-.... ~tm.id Pa "'"" 1w.
SU,ll.1
t2.tf2&gt;DomettWatlnp."""""ln Teno.CI&gt;t•n&gt;
"'· tW.$27.400
I), IHI kcnoy ttwln. tnd..""f"''l• F..,. 19\1,
Sl9.tllt
t• lll&gt;Emiettvan. s.t...,.c.tor ·""""""·'119•
S.l3.1100.

a.r.'!t.::~~~t.6~·

kln..pc11ts NC ·
, t6 nJia..d L••"' Sjloll..,, Wosh .. Fonl. tlfll.
1 7
Ru~1 w,1,_ 51 t.oo Fant tlfll
"

'fi'·m

Sl6.'JW.
1!.

1:161

Sle~t.,

-

"·

•

·

Martin Cntutoblo T•nn .

C'tlrYmkt IW 12...1165.
t9 111 &gt;Tmy Lallmlc. C"'JJII' Ch•••t. T....
tlfll S16.'llll.
1
1
1911 516 ~~ """ Andmol. tnd"IUifiO"'· """""'
21 ll4t MK,.., "r.ronp. o......,~o&lt;oo. K1 •

Cht;r'

"""'2l.~~~=; a...... Gn..d ..,.a, M~h .
Fanl ,.,, SJIIIIOO

·Yanks defeat Tribe;
Rangers ground
Angels; BoSox win

AL roundup
Ron Harper hit a lytogjumper that
appeared to come after the 24-second By BEN WALKER
clock had expired. It wtll taSie sour AP Banball Writer
to the Jazz all summer because they
By baseball standards. lhere are
had Howprd Eisley's three-pointer certamly more tmpressive streaks,
waved ofT in the firsl quarter. It clear- . such as those sel by Cui Ripken and
ly should have coun1ed
Joe DiMaggio.
"You have to play through those
The New York Yankees and Troy
thmgs," Stockton saod.
O'Leary. though, have plenty lobe be
After Jordan lied it at 83 with four proud about
free lhrows, Stockton made the shot
The Yunkees lied q mnjor league
thai everyone would be tal~ing about record Sunday by playing their 24th
today if n01 for what happened next. slraight series and no1 losto~ any of
Yes, Jordan had one more srroke of them. New York matched the mark
genius left in htm.
by beating Cleveland 4-2 in a sel
Was lhts it?
shortened to one game because of
"Hopefully. I've done enough so rain.
lhat everxbody can have some
""It was dtfficult for both teams
rhoughts about what Michael Jordan
did m 13 years," Jordan said. "'I have
another life. and I have to get to tl nt
some poinl in time."
II could never top thts one.
Could tt?

over lhe whole weekend," David
Cone said after winning for I he ninth
lime in 10 starts. "It was n big series
and we've JUst been stlling around all
weekend wa1ting for tl to happen."
0' Leary. meanwhile. posted hts
stxlh conseculive two-htl game. He
singled home the winning run in !IJe
IOth mning ut Fcnway Park to Iin the
Boston Red Sox over Tumpa Bay'3·

2.

I

"I got lucky," O'Lflilry said. :
The Yankees lead the m01jors \1 1ith
a 47-14 record. TheYJomed tht 1912
Red Sox and rhe 1971} Cincinnati
Reds as the only teams to" in or ~p'lit
24 slraight series in a sea,on
"Thts team is like a much me."
(See AL on Page 5)

:Monctly, June 15, 1981 '
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
The Dally Se~tinel• Page 5
·~~~~--------~
~ --------------------~--~~--------------------~~--~
•

:· Astros rally in 1Oth inning.
to notch 6-3 win over Reds
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI CAP) -The Houston Astros took advantage of a rare
off-day by closer lefT Shaw and ral·
hed for a win that meanl a lot 10 then
self-esleem.
The Astros emerged from a series·
long slump by scoring 1wo runs in lhe
ninth off lhe Ctncinnati Reds closer,
then added three more in the lOth for
a 6-3 victory Sunday.
Houston didn"l hit the ball hard a~
irlost the firsllwo gameR of the series
and went into the ninlh tnailing 3-1 on
Sunday. The Astros broke oul of !heir
slump wilh their lhird final-inning
comeback of the week.
"I think that speaks 10 character."
manager Larry Dierker said. "'It also
sars we haven't been as good in the
first eight mnings as we had been ear·
her m the year.
••J hope Ihis shakes some of these
guys out of il. It's hard to say. I don't
' · think we're playing our best baseball
~ ·now:'

'• · They were awfully ~nod in the
final two innings Sunday. when they
rail ted for !heir si~th vicrory in eight
games. The ASiros lend the NL Cen·
val by lwo games and are tied with
lhe 1980club for Houslon's best slart
a141-26.
"This was u very big win for us,"
said Bill Spiers, who had four hils,
including a double ofT Shaw ( 1·4) to
~tart the ninth-inning comeback and
a two-run homer in Ihe IOth. "After
losing lhe last two games and gelling
· ~own like we did - I don't want to
!;By it wa• a must win. but it was a
pick-me-up type of game. It f~h like
thai"
It wa~ an out-of-chamcrer game
· for Shaw. who hnd nor given up an

World Cup soccer
By BARRY WILNER
PARIS CAP~- On the eve oftheir
rualion's first World Cup game. Eng·
lish fans turned violent - as they
often do.
Thi:y clashed with police and
Tunisian fans on Sunday in Mnrseille,
resuhing in 80 arrests.
Some youths broke shop windows
and several of lhe fans suffered
minor injuries, authorities said. About
a hundred others. singing and chant·
ing - many drunk and shirtless -

ll tlH!thcl; MIN . l~.una!ll'*'' "'" f'nn.l Pal?.

S~l.\1111

191. Sl9.:1&lt;1t

11 IN18~u Hn.lnw C1wmun#. NY. H.wd 197
SlC..:!l,
'
:W 4111 Oury Br..dheiT). Cbtl~a. i\1;~ . Furd

19S St9.1M.

lS 1271 Jrny Nadeau D;~nbury. C'oon , J1urd.

~~~ 519.11'1~

36. '421 K)le 1\!ny Mandltm•n N (' . l•nnltlll'
1\1~ S:!61l'WI
lP.IVI Rd)' KucW, C'ht'IUflrulot. \J;j Fnrd I'J~

U~l~l

1M !Iff• H4-.htly Hmulwn. Nu'lh\illc. Tenn
C'hevnllcc. I'U. l31.KIII

1'i t:!ll k~nny \Yull.-:~. St lt~~.tt~. hmJ. I~

SIHMHO

40 1,1 Kt\lft l.q'NIVt Shdhumr Vt , Clu:-1 tn·
kl IY:! 1iiK HKU
,
-'I lllitStn~Cin~.. ,m.Clutl-.dtn Ala ('~,n• ­
let I KK. S2;\.KKII
-'2 ,_,1 I Hut StmUin C&gt;~lrn&amp;. Al£1 , C"bt1 rultl .
l~_t. nu~h.

$JI ,l*l

121'11 MniJIIA Sfwrlln'J. C'nnmn N (' ,
M. rltttrk11l. ~IY. lNU

Chtl· nt~ .

stood outside un Irish pub along one
side of the Old Port. linered with an
overturned car, broken glass and
scattered cafe chairs.
Authorities canceled a free
evening concert in 1he Old Port, and
most res1aurnnts closed for lhe night.
The lirsl violence broke out early
Sunday momtng when a mororist
who was blocked for severn! minutes
by dancing English fans lried to push
his way through. His car struck and
slightly injured an English fan. setting off !he melee.
About 200 English fans showered

B&lt;~seball

W1lhams , Tnrontn. 7-1, J7g l 02 P Mn'nlltc-:t
~t!iiM 7·2, 71K 1 -16, Hclhng Tcxu~ y, \ 750

"'"
'""
.420

J
9' ·

~10

AL standings

I~

22

]II)

lalttm DI•Wan

· rj'lew York

»:

.. 47

1.
. 32
10

IJm,fnR

Toro•tn

i 8.1lllnkft

27

Tamraoay

CI.F.Vm.IIN()

L rd.

770
20 61MI
14 ~MI
)(I 471
14

.!9

c""rot~~Mo~ao~

.•• JK 27
.I I l'
. 21 19

• Mtnncsntil
~ (111'-"U~n

411'1
~K~

•JO

.....

m
2' 41
40 .1 7'

Kanl'olll C11y

.•24

U..inltt

llll

Salturcl•y'• lk.'lll'es

Cbt~o.".IJ') Cub1

10
1
16 •

An~~~ta

10. PhiiNllphm M( ICJ)
1 St l..nuts 4

Cnlnrado 4. t..t. Aqeje, 2
N Y M•u 7, t'lomda 4
Mllwat.k« K, PindturFh I
('INCINNATI 7 Hnu:~ktn ..

IK',.

22',.

'•

Allouwa II Mmunml7

7'

II'·

Suad•y's

,,.~

Atbnut ~. Mnnntal I

I 1',

..,or.,.

Huustnn 6. CINCINNATI 3 ( 10)
Phtbklrflw 4. OdUf.ll Cuhl 2
Pimburp.h 7, Mdwaukft! 2
St Lou., 2 An:wnu 0

Saturclay'oKOI'a

N 'V Vank\'I:A. prd . wet

Jtf'IOnob

Tuaclay'spmn

Mllwaub.-c (WtlOlL.'lll 2-21111 OIK:aJO C

•

t

~

l-.:ra-

ducl6-2),210pm
1\ntoln cD.Illl 2·4) 111 CINCINNATI CHnrnt!'l;h
ft. I1. 7:011i p.m
N Y Nt.11 Cl.t.'lk."f 7-1) 111 Mmnn.·al IHtnnan ~nn

.._,), 70"rm

GMCAA office
GMCAAofflce

859 Third Avenue Gallipolis 9 AM Thurs . June 11
33101 Hiland Rd. Pomeroy .1 PM Thurs , June 11

Applicants must be age 14-21, restdenls of Gallla or Metgs Countte
and meal ~PA guidelines Youth who complete lhe avtatton tratning w~i
be gtven prtorlty constderatton for avatlable temporary employmenl

~-

m
Gsiii1·Melg1 Community Action As~ency
1010 North Slit' Route 7
.
Cheahlrt, Ohio 45820-0272
Equ11 Opportunity Employtr

..

Cttkw11dn CJ••nc!l 1- 1) 111 San l'ro~nt.:illc:t• Cth.'l)hl~r
tHJ. 10 tJ." p m

ALieaders
BA.TTtNCi I RmtriJ\I~it. Tcltmt, .l72 II
Wdlion•~. r...... v.wlt: •. 'J1. Scpw. Seattle. ~: H.
Murn111. Kan~~t~ Ctt)'. 11¥, T Walk«. Ntnllk'Mtta
,\J), O'Nc•ll. NL-w Yrd.. )lZ. 0 .k."'-,.· New Yurt!.

.12'1

•

"

•

RUNS. Gnff.:y Jr • St:anh:. ~IJ. 0 kh:r. New
Ytd . Jl 'Oiomt CLEVElAND. ~l. Ourlwm
o.i~o:Jif:tl. ~2 . Oritw, Oakland, ~I : A Rl'tkiJ....-«.
Stanle. $1. K•lhl•~:h . Ntw Ytwtc. 49
RBI JUMOonzaln. T~••· MO.Oriffll!y If.~·

tie. ~. Thome. CLEVELAND. $~. lt:lk!, C'htCAJil.
""· R Palmttrn. IIBtlinllwt. H: A RadriJ.Wl. Stal·

l

II

IIMI

I

II

I UH

I

I
I
I

,~··

I
s l(f;lllll.'ldll

II

111 f.wo

~1ft Oh~Jtt.

'IK SL:hmM.It Pill5.....h. M·l 117 } MO. Hltlllf'tillll
Htm$hlh M-1 717 2 KM R M~o.-...-d, N..:w Y11fk 1'1 ·1

Jl7.211
STRIKEOU rs

S~:lulltnf. Plnltuk.•lr1b1.1 1.. 7
Stnlllcn1yrc St lnm~ . W W•111d, (.ln..:~u 9X M
Mll1tnct, l..u~ Anttclt.•s, Ill . R..:ynt•kh. Huu~11m Klt
M~
20 , N~•11 , S,m
Ul. H Wa~tk'r

AIIJ.! L'k~

Tu~sd•y's
I.A•~ 1\IIJ.!~k ~

al

•

J

.•.

SAVES. Hoflttuua Sa• Dk'111•,
•19, Shaw. l"INCINNA n

Ht•!lton, 16 Urbina Muntn..'nl 16 lk-..:k lluL".IJ!.II.
1ft, J fn111c:o, Nt.."W Yllf"k. I :'I

Basketball

I
I

~MI

I

Nl

J!Ume
11111111

Stanley Cup rinals
Saturd.ay•s st.•nr~
l~lrnti ..:! ~W,tli lllll]:l olll J )\'I W •II~ . II I • •~m·• ~

II

Future ~am~s
rut·schn·
lll.·lru" .11 W.l'hUit!llltt H)I tu If SI'NI
WII~hut,:tu••

ThuNili.,11 J),•lntll H p

111

tr

Ill u

••·•ry

tl llXJ
S111urd.uv

Jk1n•ll tf Wu,.hiiiJ!Inn K I' 111

ihSI'NI

•

TuNIII\\',Jurit-2.1

W.tJ. hfllt!lt11'1 .11
II UX)

l~t ru u .

K Jl lll

Transactions
~~Mob• II
l\nwrk111n l..t'IIIJC•t'
KANSAS CII'Y MOY AI S l'l.tu'tl INt ktry
l\!ndk.'klf1 nn ll~~o.• I "·dty dt N L~'il liM no~n ~;~oo: llll' 111
June 10 M1.'1.:ulk.'il MHI• IJ,WJ H~.~~~~ lt1111U ~ )IIIith~ • "'
Ilk! Pl'l ~
n :XAS RAN{;! MS 11hll'\:tll Ul1 l),lrt\ II I tint I
lllllht: 1~1)' tti~'ttlk:d lht. nlrtomtl\\ 111 Jm~~o· II

I
0
l~tn:balltt.llllll' ~;lllltr.ll."ftl( (.' M•~k Wr.m tl'n•n• 1tt.l t
Dottoi...:J'M. 91 , I Rt-.irie••· Thl• ' W""
1"-DA
• standi•.,.
.._...
lllmlitllft"" rn.
119. A Ru·lri~ . ~Illite, f7, M V1111,hR. ~-m.
~l. M&lt;&lt;:nd... Tlfll'1l'•'"l· tW; !lorJ••· s...~. (!.1, l. .••iitlittitltill••••••••••••••••••••..
Ju. Oonutea.. rcaiJJI. lW
'"'·Hfn;:
~·· Eaolty.
ltncad. A

DOUBLES Thoo~&lt;. CLEVELAN() 2ft. I Ro•·
Tuu, 24. EdmtU. Anahrim. 22. Ju~i~o.-c
CI.EVEI.AND. 22. E MIWII .... s.... r..ll. Ori ....
dril~·

Ootdud,ll. C

llelpdo T....,n. It: 1.... 011Ua·
It&amp;.. TtAIII, 21. O'Neill, New Yort, 21
TRIPlES Off~rmun KMSu Clly, 7, Durham,
bucap, 6, 0 Jeter, Ntw Yort. t 8 Wlllh•m•.
Ntw York. 5, 9 are d~d wilh .a

HOME RUNS· Griffey Jr , Sealtl&lt;, 26.

/4,

Ro·

drlt~•ez, Se1Uio, 2-t: Ju1n 0011111&amp;, Teaas. 21.

Canaa:o, Toronto, :JO, M V•u•ahn. Bosmn. 19.
Eool&lt;y. DoKroit, 17, Thom&lt;. CLEV~LIIND 17. R
Pat..,.,_ Botti..... 17

$TOI.tilt BASES: He-. Oolloool, 2$, T.
Oooftlo, Teuo, ZJ: Loflolo, CLEVELAND. 21 :
CaiUfio, Toroato, 19. I .L tlltiMtr, Delroil. II.
- · T - 17: KIIIIWoodl.- Y.... 11&gt;
PITCHING (I cloc:itloot)· c-. New Y.... ').(,
'100,4$6, D. Wdlo, New Yort, l-1 , 11119, 42.1. W

•

i\MIZO
1\tth Wt•kttll

If the 992 Exchange Is a Free Part of Your
Telephone Service, Then You Can Call
Holzer Clinic In Gallipolis
Toll Freel
DIAL

992-7834

llli\MUNPHM'KS

(0-2).

Twins 2, While Sox I
LaTroy H"wkins pitched seven
effecttve mnmgs and, desptle ugam
getltng ltttle run support. led Mtn·
nesota over Chtcago 111 the
Metrodom~.

Hawktns (4-6) allowed only four
hus and won for the first ttme stnce
May 21 The Twms average JUst two
runs per game tn Hawktns stX Joss·
es. but two runs were plenty agamst
the White Sox
Todd Walker homerelf on the second puch of the game from J;ume
Navarro CS-8)
Blue Jays 7, Orioles 4
Ed Sprague hit " three-run homer
and Roger Clemens struggled for his
seventh vtctory '" Toronto beat visiting Balttmore

You Don't Need 'Th
Be Rich To Start
Investing, But You
Need To Start
Investing For A
Chance To Be Rich.
Call Me For Details!

I Ut Mi n Ill th~ 1-'C. I Ku tllul KHI'

llnhhy ( lln11111;1 tlln •m

Investment and Ta~ Consultant
740-992· 7270
SocunlltS offered through H D Vest
Investment Secuntleslnc Advtsory

Optt t m~11 KHI'

lll ~o~• •tt

OAK I /\Nil Ki\IIJI KS Si):nullll lhfftd,

S4.'orrs

Sa~r.mll.'lllu

(' 1l,1rrm

t'IHJiball

K, Bf\nYn.San I&gt;WJl,tl Nt Nnmu flk.-..Vurtr.
I~,Jeu

Nuti•nall..-uKUt

N•l mul ••, ..tlbuH I tu~tll'

Hockey

~n. I~

(1m:.a•
6·2. 7~.

,.

'l'oni~ht's Kames
Hnu,ton .11 (. 11.1rlun~· 7 10 11 111
(.II VI 1.,\NI&gt; ,,, I )L"'rtttl 7 IIJ 1' 111
N..:wY••rlt 11U1nll 1'ptu
W.tlihlll~l~&gt;ll ltl l'huo. ' IIU 10 I'm

c,,,,.....

17~ . Tn-.:h~~t:l ,

.
'

-

Sund.-y 's score

.

M!U.Iu11., Atlant.l IJ..2 "'~
JP. 6·2 7~0. l KC\ M1wh.

!ill

1\dll .tl~tl

~~~ldk•r fl'llm lhL l'i.,l,t)' , h~lthlulh !OI S..•nf Ill JnM:
l'ntlln S)T. l ~tl lth\'.lllll'I'UIIt l' n lll.~.·,,}!t k

Wtstern ( 'nnferem:e
l'ht-.!111-

l.nu••·

Pllilool&lt;!f'ltll• l~

l"tJM:ON I 0 Ill Ul JAYS

()()Cl

J

II

Wlt!ilnll}tiUII

l,tu1.: 11t~

STOU:N BASI:.~ l~c Yt~ttnJ!. lAili An~l'k'll 2ft
Wumallo: Ptll•hur'h 24 lli¥J!.In, Hntt•hm 11
L'fll\.'fiol llund,l 20, Cl.t)'lnn S1 l..tiUili, lft, ~lynt:• .
CIN&lt;.'INNATI. J.;. INSint!kl.• St l..nui11. 14
PITCHING HI tli...:l~wn!C I M1flwund. Allun111. 9·
2, IIIK. 17'\ Glt~tnt Atl;utln '11·2, MIM. 17K G

c,,l4wadt) (1bt.'N'mPn "·M t11 Sun fmtk.'l!~i:n cr:;li\."!11

"·').100:\p.m

Sund•y'""""m

~,

Cut. cW,w-d

fi..l) MD.'ipm

0t."lmtl7. K.u ...... City I
'"\fnabP.!tm IK. Tc1t~ 1\

lk~un 1, Tatnru llo1y l ( 10)
TCIL!b 4, Anahl:tm 2
1 nrnllh11. lbllmlltl"e -1

Chi~o:aan

"

' RUN.1i BIJPU. Houstoa. fll . Glll.vrnJ•• Atlanta
jK ("hipp..y J.w:s Att•a. "'7 Glanvllk l"'nl.11.5d·
~: M.:Gwin:, St
.'\.l, Sus~t. Oncn~u
51. L. Walker. Culora.Jn, ••
KBI ~Gwtn:. St Luu11 HU: G.tl•li'Tll~a . Athulla
M , Ca.ttlla. Cnlur..._1 M . Si.15.:1 l'hlloli!U H) l\l11u
Huul'ton, $7 0 V"uJhll, :;un U~tu• ~7. hrttJ;ROI

41 7•"pm
Flnntln (ftlniCIMit ().31 nl Allanln tNI.",IJit 7 "')
740pm
Sl Ll111111 (1\L~'I."dt• J.J) ,fl H1-u-lllfl CSt.:bl~l.; l.
4J. K,O, rm
U1!1 Anatdt.:l (1 111rk ~· 't SIIUOii."JU clln.wn ft.
1). JCJ o:\ r m

7l~p111

"hlwnuM.oc ti!IJh.'d 2-41 at

F.!llltern Cnnlere111:e
»:2 L &amp;1.
Iam
Hill
Ch:lf~IIIC
I II 1111
CLEVmJIN() .
0
I OMI
l&gt;ctnnl
2 ()00
Nt.•w Ynrk

H11tl ~lt lll 7 ' Nt.•w YurL: f t ~
(_'harhiiiL' 7K lk'lrotl f•''
Ut.th 7~ \\ll•hiiiJ.! lUil 11

+

])

(Ueber ola1) ut J'hil,l6llrf1i:. (lk"L"1.:h 2·

ner made 11 pasl ftrsl base
Johnny Damon homered · in the
first innmg off rookte Seth Greisinger

Karl Kehler III, CPA

BATTtNO Oll."rud , Nl."w Ytfrk 'H:!. M.~rlt
Cine&amp;.'C'. OtK:UJII. '112. Gwyun ~.m IJi\.'1!-11 :\.1ft II
Jurda11, St Lo•ts. '\oil, Altu• Huush1n \111
Kcltditll, P11111hurJh. l,'\6, l Wallo:ct. (.'ulttnHIII

HITS. f.lunvlllc, rtlii.Kidpbi.l, W., llidt~..'lll" t't•l·
tM&lt;Idtt, '"· Mart Gr;k l' ('ht..:&gt;~BII. MCJ. Chil'f''t J11tll:li
Atlunm . Ktt, CMIII!,t. ('ultw,lt~l. K.' . Stl!l;t (1UCo\l!l'
Ill, PiiQI!UI , Huu.\11111 K1
()(lUHLE." l'ulln11.."1' Mnull\';d 2K I W.tiLlf
h, 2K 11 ILIIuk.·. t 'JNCINNAI'I.:!l J K....,n
S11u fr&lt;1nm~.:n, 21. I&gt; Yvunll. ( ' IN('INNA II . 21
lh"tu, Huu~tnn 21 lhchcll1.', ('nlur:..lu ~I. Unmls
S,lft lrAnt.'I~U. 21
TRIJILf-"' lkShtt:ltl !i St 1 nau11 1 Gl.ltl\ .u ~
Ptui.Mklllllla ~ 9 olh! lk'\1 wuh 4
HOM.I. RUNS t.t,:&lt;iwtn· S1 l.nmN. '1 (i,,I,Lrr.t
~&amp;. 1\ll;ant.t. 211i. C..::L~ IIII.a ('nlttr.ll.lu. 2~. (l Vau~lm
S.1n l&gt;tl"~n l:!. Su:o;;a. L'luc•• ~~~ !I tlu111"'r Jntk.'!l
AttiMt,l 11 Mulll.k~t I ''Ill 1\n~tdcli 1$;-J l.nr11.'t,
Atdaut.l J" AltMI Huu•ltm. l,,llolkb San lr:.ll\.'1'-

P111~tturp.h

Uu'"'f" While Sna l Minn.!lllllll

1:

Tonlpl'l pma
M · ~• ot CINCINNATI
7 O;t; r m

PntdtufJh (Stlvu 6-31 111 Mul.d:lrhta CCim..'f•

Youlh age t 4-21 tot11rested in partlclpattng can obtatn additional'
tnformalton and an applicatton by calling 740-446-1018 ext 98. A 30
minute ~eettng for interesled youlh and their parents, whtch wtll mclude
a brtef VIdeo presentatton, wtll be held al the following locattons:

said .Chuck Knoblauch. who scored
Wade Boggs had three Juts for
one of New York's runs.
Tampa Bay. whtch lost lor the ntnth
The Yankees have lost only one time m II games.
.'
Rangers 4, Angrls 2
series, dropping their lirst two games
Rick Helling pitched etght slrong
of rhe season at Anaheim. They can
set the maJor league record in a three· inmngs and Mi~e Stmms homered
game series that begins tonight at and drove in thr~e runs as host Te•ns
Baltimore.
'
stopped its three-game lostog streak.
Cone (9·1) struck our 12 and gave
Helling (9-3) gave up home runs
up only four hits in eight inntn!Js 10 Jim Edmonds and Tim Salmon on
despite rhe rain thai fell curly in the consecutive pitches in tlie (ourth. bul
game al Yankee Stadium.
had no olher trouble. He struck out
Jarel Wnghl (5-4), who beat the seven, walked one and rettred his last
Yankees twice in last year's playoffs 14 batters.
- and touched ofT a be:tnball hattie
Anaheim. which had won three m
with New York in spring traming a row. loaded the bases to lhe ninlh
allowed three runs m six innings.
against John Weneland But WelteKenny Lofton went 3-for-3 and land gol hts 19th save by retiring Garhomered for Cleveland, playing irs rei Anderson on a game-ending
first game since Wednesday.
grounder.
In olher games. Toronto beat BalAthletics 4, Mariners 3 (10)
timore 7-4. Texas topped Anaheim 4Oakland rallted agninst Seattle's
2. Oakland beal Seattle 4-3 in 10 relievers forthree runs in the seventh
innings. Kansa.~ City defeated Dcl~t i~~ing, then won it in the IOth on
2.0. Minnesota dow nell Chicugo 7-~rd baseman Russ Davis' error
Red Sox 3, Devil Rays 2 (10)
Alex Rodnguez. Davtd Segui ani!
Boston won its fourth in a row Glenallen Htll homered for the Vtstlwhen O'Leary singled with one out ing Martners.
in the lOth.
The /1\ s had runners at first and
Baseball research is incomplete. third with one out in the lOth when
by 1he way, on the maJOr league Mike Blowers grounded 10 Davts
record for conseculive multi-btl Scott Spiezto broke for the plate and
games.
scored when Davis bobbled the ball .
Nomar Garciaparra hit a leadoff
Royals 2, Ticers 0
smgle against Albie Lopez (2·2) and
Glendon Rusch scattered seven
M1ke Benjamin bunted for a single in hits in his first major league shurout
the lOth. After Reggie Jefferson as Kansas City won at home.
lined out against reliever Matt
Rusch (4-8~. commg off ftve
Ruebel, O'Leary smgled off Jim straighl losses, walked none and
Mecir.
slrUck out five. Only one Detro11 run-

~.u.turday's

rh••·

H._.u•ton (Hatnphln
(Ttllnku ,_,,

, Ouklund 7. Seattle 1
Tttn.JIIIn t}, O.tldmnn.• K
Tm"f\11 R.1y 111 liPlll•'n. JIPI,I , mm

'· ~ Utkbklol ~l"'~ (10)

The avialion training wtll be conducled at a facility near Athens wtth
transportallon provtded from Gallipolts and Pomeroy The traimng wtll
begtn June 22 and end July 31 with class held each aft11rnoon Monday
through Friday.
:

AL games•.. .:..&lt;c_o_nt_in,...ue_d_fr_o_m_P...:ag::..e_4.:..)- - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - '

~)(I

Snn Dieto 1. San r~tsco 2
J-"kwida -'· N Y Mdllo ol
CL~Vfil.AND at

4 42:, S..hnbup.t:n. Dn~tun, M-3 727. ~ 0\, Wak~ ­
fldtl. Ou!Utllll. 7-' 7011 4.07. NJt~.y. t1J:Vm.J\NO
7.], 100 ~ IK C ltnlly ft.tftun 7-' 7111 2 K,l
SlRIKIOUIS R Jnhu~un S1.".111k· 122 I'
Manm~z . Ho~um, 11-'. C ltnky An.llli.'nu I(JI.J
Cl1."1lll.!ft5. Torunlll. W . t:n .. ksun DIIIUIII\lfl.", Ml
S.:k. Tc1as 7K A"lljl.t. IIIIIIJI•III.ty 77 lnt~~: N~·w
Vntk 77
SAV(!S Pcrt:IV:II. An.lhcttn , Ill. Guntuu lltllllitll
I'J WenL'huttl fuull 1-,, Runtly Mycn ft•ratnlu
IM M Rt~cnt NL'W Ynrk ll. M J,,dt~1n (II Vl •
LAND. I\, 1\p.Uik.T.I. Mmn&amp;.,t'll.t I\

NL leaders

Sa• 011."~11 It SM ffllklk:O 2

c..,...... 1 t.oo A•J&lt;'"' 21121

.

Gallta-Metgs Community Action is currently accepttng apphcalions 1or
FREE Avtallon Training Program for youth. Participants In the program'
will receive tratntng In a variely of aviation skills including navtgation,
flight planmng, aircraft Inspection, malntenanca, and weather
forecasllng. Parttcipants who successfully completa the training will
have lhe opportunity to fly tn atrcraft from a local airport.

10th-Inning single during Sunday'l National
League game In Cincinnati. In part because of tha
error, the Astros went on to win &amp;·3. (AP)

......

NV Yunl~o'\-s ... CLEVI:lANl&gt; 2
KarNJCuy2 ~,""10
M1n1111..'*"" 2. Chtcaft, Wlmc ~u' I

YOUTH·AVIATION CLASS AVAILABLE

pt&gt;lice and their vehicl~s with bottles
and cans. sending at least one gendarme to the hospilal with a head
injury.
French televiSion also showed
Enghsh fans burning a Tuntsi~n nag.
angering . moslly French-born
Tunis~ans from the Marseille area.
"'One of them threatened us with
a knife," said M;1Jhid Bouzbhi. "I'm
worried aboullomorrow's match."
About 10,000 British fans were
expected lo attend Monduy's game.
and thousands more were in town
looking for tickets.

GETS TO SECOND- Houston's Craig Biggio
(right) get1 to second baH end baatl the teg of
Cincinnati aecond banman Brat Boone after ·
center fielder Reggie Sandarl misplayed Biggio's

Scoreboard

I

I

12 1401 Mu._.n ~s~lt-). A"ht\ lllc N C 1:uro

--:D

Second team selections were Dan
Jewell and Dan Mens of AJeXUJKIU,
Zach Ke1th of Belpre. Clay WalkiOs
of Nelsonville-York. Shane McFerren of Vinton Counry and Matt Hal·
ten of Wellston.
;
Trace. a JUnior pitcher and shortstop for Trimble leads the list pf play·
ers from the Hocking Division. He is
the only repeater from lust season's
team.
Southern had five players named
to the team. Micha~l Ash, Corey
Williams and Matt "Pork" Dill were
first ream selections. Adnm Cumings
and Pe1e Sisson were selected to the
second team.
Joining Trace on the firsl ream
were Steve Dursl and Josh Will of
Eastern. Thmmy Curtts of Federal
Hocking, Adam Keller and Randy
Nelson of Miller, Mike Drake of
Trimble. B~n Hiener and Thad Skin·
ner of Wlllerford.
Other Second team selections
were Dante I Jones of Miller, Duston
McClelland of Trimble and Robbie
Cooper and Jeremy Scaggs of 'liimble.

a threat in the bonom of the ninth and
go11he finallhree ouls for !he win.
The wild finish was a reversal
from the firsl five innings, when Sean
Bergman and Scon Winchester took
!urns pitchmg out of jams lo keep it
scoreless.
Slumpmg Eddie Tauben5eeled off
tbe Reds' si~th wilh a homer, his
fifth, 10 pu1 !he Reds up 1-0 .
Taubensee had been in a 2-for-29
slump thai dropped his average from
.362 to .320•
Reds manager Jack McKeon then
made a surprising move and pinch-hit
Winchester. who had given up only
lhree hits and struck out a career-high
seven in six innings. Winchesrer
showed extraordinary control, throwing 55 strikes m his 70 pitches.
Scon Sullivan relieved and Alou
hit his seventh pitch for his I Sth
homer, tying it J.J in the seventh.
The Reds wenl ahead again in the
e1ghth wtth a lol of help from lhe
Aslros' bullpen. Dmitri Young doubled with one out off Bergman and
reliever Mike Magnante lei Bret
Boone's comeback grounder deflecl
off his glove for an infield single.
Magnante walked Melvm Nieves on
four pitches to load the bases and
gave up Perez's pinch single.
Notes: Bergman. coming off a 4
.inning slart that matched his
shortest of the season, allowed eight
hits and struck out a season-high sev·
en in 7 lt3 mnings .... The Astros
have homered in their last eighl
games, their besl power streak of the
season. Overall. they have hit at laS!
one homer in 13 of their lasl 15
games. , . Taubensee's homer was his
5001h career htt.

·:British fans clash with police;
.Croati·a, Arg~ntina notch wins

Meigs County teams
see nine get aii-TVC
baseball honors

By DAVE HARRIS •
Sentinel Correaponj:lent
Division champtomi Alexander
and Trimble swept !lie mdividual
awards in the Tri-Valley Conference's all-conference baseball teams ·
announced recently
Lance Rolston the Spartans senior
shortstop look home the player of the
year award in the Ohio Divtston,
while Alexander's Dave McLaughlin
was selected 1he divtsion's top coach.
In the Hocking Divtston, Trimble's Brady Tmce was selected lhe
player of the year~ Phtl Faires of
Trimble was selected the top conches.
Meigs received two all conference
selections. Junior pilcher and infielder Jeremiah Bentley and senior outMARK MARTIN
fielder and catcher Tony Dugan were
2l 120J Ocnll' Bodu..:. Chemuna. N Y Ford
selected to the first team.
198. SJI :::!65
24 Oth Dick frkkh!. W!sctMNn RllJ!kls Wt~ ,
Rolston and Chad Kuhn were the
Ford. t9H s10m
only
repeaters fro~'\ las! season's
2\ lll)I.AkrSpml JU~.'~SOJI. MI!i"i font l'fK
Ohto Division selecrions
S~J.lllt
26 1211 Tttl Musl:!fU\c. Fnmklm. W1~. l'unJ
Others named the the firsl team
I~K. S2V.96U
.
were P.D. Stewart of Alexander,
17. ""' Rn:h 81di:k Edgc11nn. Wi" Fim.l. llJ?,
$1b.IUII
•
Kyle Broldford and Brad West of BellK 11~1 ktn ~hnllkr. fcnlll• Mu Olt\'nllel
pre, Ben Robey of Nelsonville· York,
191. J:!&lt;i.J.IIt
•
Aaron Ward of Vinton County and
:!'1 !411 "M.c Skmnrr. ~u~:.n' 1llc. Ciillf
,Chr,mlt1. 197 Sl:!:M.'\
Brenl Ewing and Morgan Srevens of
:to tJII J"O G~ttn Wh11ehnu\C', Tcnn .Chrut..
· Wellston.
ltl. IIJ7 Sl'l ~I

earned run in hiS previous 18 appearances spanning 25 1/3 innings. He
had a 0.97 ERA when he took the
mound- best among NL closen but gave up seven hits, a walk and
five runs m two innings.
The five runs allowed marched his
sea!IOn tolal.
" It was a ca~ where everything
they hil jus1 dropped in." Shaw said.
''I'm not going 10 be perfetl all the
lime. That's just not going 10 hap·
pen ....--His failure undercut a late mlly by
lhe Reds, who went up 3-1 wtth lwo
outs in the bottom of the eighth when
Eduardo Perez had a tiebreaking,
bases-loaded single.
Spiers set lhe tone against Shaw
by opening the mnth wilh a double on
an 0-2 pilch. One oullater, JeiT Bagwell singled Spiers home and look
lhird on Moises Alou 's single. hts
third hit of the game.
The Asrros lied il when the Reds
failed to rum a double play on Carl
Everell's sofl grounder to shortstop
Barry Larkin, whose hurried Oip to
second was in the dirt for an error.
'"We hadn 'I swung lhe bars al all
this series," Bagwell said. "It was
JUst a mauer of rime before we got
some hils."
Shaw"s fifth blown save in 23
chances turned mlo a Joss an inmng
later. when Ricky Gutierrez lied ofT
with a walk. slole second and came
around on Craig Biggio's single for
a 4-3 lead. S'piers then hit his second
homer of llle season
"You don't do that all lhe ttme
againsl Shaw. He's one oflhe best,"
Spiers said. "You've go1 to feel
lucky when you do that."
Billy Wagner ( 1-2) pilched out of

Services offered lhrough H D. Vest
Advtsory Serv1ceJ,Inc 6333 North Stale
Highway 161, Founh Floor, Irving TX
75038-(9n) 870-6000

j , ___________......

(lr.,h.tm

We at Ritchie lluto Sales woulct like to tlw . .,
evertjone who ctonarect to the Seconct llnmtal L&lt;.'"
(Jenct Car Show &amp; Crwse -m helct on MaiJ 30ti1. 799{3
to benefit 'josh Sm1th of Reectsv111e area to help w1tf1
mect1cal expenses that occurect ctue to cancer
Don '[ate Motors
Coljrt St /31'1r di (jrt/1
Home NQttonl'll /31'1nk Raone
PQrkersburg II••to .i'one
Krogers
OuiCkle 9ns 1/genc~;~
Royal Oak Resort
P1zza Dans
'[QZ MarC!thon
Clark ')ewelrld
WesC!m Const
Pomerold Kawasaki Shop
ChesterOMtcl&lt; Stop
tJelpre 1/utolone,
/3C!Mm [!Amber
[rf&lt;M Auto SC!Ies &amp; Serv1ce
RtaenoMr S!Appl~;~
Deems (jlass
CCK Conventence
Arthur '[reachers
'[PC Water- [ aates 9n Office Oualltlj'}urmture '[ P
Kelj Motors
S!Agl'lr I'&lt;Mn Mtll
Odell fMmber Co
Dale 'fa111or Rea It~;~
Pomero~;~ tooa Shop
Dommoes
S!Abwa~;~
1/uto Opt1ons
'}ast" lA- Melson. W Va
Coca-Cola
MQ(kSIIMto Sales
Speoal '[ Screens
general 'ftre Sclles
Carolma fMmber
'flwmas Do-9t Center
Poor t]oys
'fN'f'frMck PQrt,;
(jood year 'ftre Store
[eo's 1/Mto Sclles
1/dvQnce 1/uto
Noms-Northup Doclge
Peoples !Jartk
tJtq 11. 1/uro Parr;;
McDonalas
MarC!thon
(jene &lt;johnson r:hevrolet
PrectstOn lluato
WhQieys liM to Parts
Dtlk5 Car WC!,..h
Hutton Car Welsh
~oosh !If!tO !'jody
'}ohnn~;~lluto Parts
L'one Oal&lt; JC!rm
'foaa·s fJot;ly
IAn(Je Sams!Jcx:i~;~Shop
/SIC!ck Motorsports
Advance lluto (Prkbg)
Oesterle Auto (jlass
MC!netta 9qn
MC!Ico
"
Mtster !!Jee
Ill&lt;( tO lone (Pomeroy)
K'obert K?ob1e
EC!qles Club of Pomeroy
Charle:. ·chuck · Ritl:hte- a spect&amp;~l Thanks for your helpers! 14na
a spe(ta/ thC!nlr.s to Roclr.sprmqs RehQb IJenter Ladies for thetr:
,Jielp. The wmner of the raffle car was [ean Rose of Raeme.

�.,

.-

•

.

: ·

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

.

Monday, June·1s, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
'

Crippling effect of _
GM strike vibrates through industr:y
FLINT. Mich. (AP) - The walkout of 9.200 workers at two General
Motors Corp. plants ha&lt; rippled through die giant automaker's North American operations. idling 60,000 workers. The strike was costing the company
at least $40 million a day. ·
Talks were expected to begin again this morning after stalling over the
weekend GM offtcials met separately with representatives of two United Auto
Workers union locals at the Aint Metal C~nter and the Delphi Aint Ea.&lt;t plant.
but no progress wa.&lt; reported from either side.
Parts shortages from the strike have closed or partially cloSed l3 ofGM's
28 wholly owned major assembly plants, and 59 pans plants in the United
States. Mexico and Canada.
"The big moneymakers- pickup and sport utility vehicle plants- are
down now," said Stephen Girsky of Morgan Staoley Dean Witter. "GM can't
hold out much longer beyond this week."
.
The Delphi strike began Thursday. while the Metal Center strike started

JuneS.
Girsky said losses would rise to $60 million a day this week.
The UAW has portrayed the strike as a fight to keep U.S.job$ from beina
exponed to Mexico, Thailand and South America. Its leaders accuse GM of
breaking its "social conuact" with Americans to provide secure jobs that pay
well.
·
GM said it needs to make plants more efficient to compete with nonunion
plants operated by Japanese and European companies and foreign suppliers.
GM and the union also disagree over quota and improvement issues.
GM shipped dies from the Flint Metal plant more than 200 miles to a metal center at Ontario, Ohio, to press sheet metal into hoods, fenders and other truck body parts, ensuring that GM'S' new line of full-size ' trucks get to
ckaler showrooms in the fall.
·
" We're not really happy about the way-it came about~ but there's sighs
of relief that there are jobs here." said Tom Young, a welder at GM for 21

years.
Johnny Givand, (llaident of United Auto Workers·Local 549 in Ohio, said
national union leaders gave his members the go-ahead to opefl!le the transfemed equipmenL
.
There had been some talk of a sympathy strike. but w~~~rs sll!d that wa'
squelched quickly. GM said they don't have a choice- 11 s tn thetr contract.
"The way they've got this set up it's every plant versus every plant. It's
every local versus every local," Young said.
In Flint, where GM was founded in 1908 and an estimated three of tour
workers in the county are tied to the automotive industry. analysts predict
that the strikes will hun efforts to revitalize the city.
"This is reinforcing the message that most people belie_ve Aint, is a bad
place to do busine.\s," said David Cole, director ol automauve stud1es af the
University of Michigan.

'

20 injured by
four twisters
in Oklahoma

'Buick City' abuzz over impact of walkout

By LISA SINGHANIA
A11oclated Press Writer
c.
FLINT, Mich. - Roy Bunlier
· OKLAHOMACITY(AP)-\
spent more than three decades work~as the house Ron Keef and his
ing as a tool maker for General
wife had always wanted: a spa- . Motors Corp. He credits his union,
cious brick home in an upscale
the United Auto Workers. for the pen,
housing subdivi.&lt;ion. tucked in the
sion and benefits that feed and clothe
northeast comer of the city.
him today at age 73.'
" When we saw it, it wa&lt; more
But Bunker ha' mixed feelings
than we could afford but we said.
about the strikes' at two Flint parts
'This is it. ' It had all these beautiplants that have shut down dozens of
ful trees, beautiful trees," said
other North American GM plants and
Keef. an Oklahoma City police
idled tens or thousands of workers.
detective.
"It's like a marriage," he said
Much of those trees and that
between sips of coffee at the Supreme
house was gone Sunday af!er four
Doughnut shop. "They've got to sit
tornadoes swept through the city
down and talk it out. I'm afraid Ai-nt
the night before. Parts of the Keef is really going -to get hurt. "
home's wooden frame, insulation
About 9,200 GM workers are on
and gla.&lt;s lay scattered across the
strike in a dispute that analysts said
yard, and many of the trees had could shut down GM's North Am~r­
their tops sheared off. .
ican production by week's end. More
Atleast20 people, inCluding l7
than 50,000 workers at 13 a.&lt;sembly
at a theme park off Interstate 35,
were injured. No deaths were
reported. Officials said at least SO
homes and businesses were
destroyed or had major damage,
By DAVE LARIMER
and 234 had minor damage.
Aorlda Today
The twisters appeared to have
El Nino has been blamed for just
cut a I 0-mile long swath across the
about
everything: From Ooods to
city's northern tier. uprooting trees,
famine, from increased numbers of
spewing glass and battering anyAorida tornadoes to decreased numthing tall in their way.
bers
of tourist&lt;. And now, the Pacif• "While some of the damage is
ic weather phenomenon has been
significant, the important thing is
linked to the most famous disaster of
there were no major injuries'Ot- los.&lt;
the century: the sinking of Titanic.
of life," Gov. Frank Keating said.
A Melbourne, Aa., research mete·
Storms in southern Nebra.,ka
orologist
studied weather conditions
and nonbea" Kans;IS also spawned
in l912 and sees a correlation
tornadoes Saturday. Only minor
between El Nino alld the number of
injuries were reported.
icebergs that penetrated North
In Elwood. Neb., a twister damAtlantic shipping lanes that year.
aged buildings on nine famnsteads.
John M. Williams found that a
And in Sabetha.· Kan .. a tornado
strong
El Nino was under way when
plucked trees from the ground
Titanic strock an iceberg and sank.

•

plants and 59 parts plants in the Unit- strikers" in his shop window last
ed States, Mexico and Canada have week. even though his business likebeen idled because of parts shortages ly will be hurt by the strike.
caused by the strikes.
Raiche I spent his summers during
At issue: the futu"C of .the 33,000 college working for GM. His broth,
GM jobs remaining in Flint That's er and sister-in-law work for GM.
down from more than 75,000 as \although not .for the factories on
~cently as the l970s, and the strikstrike. His father and grandfather
.ers feel IIIey muS( fight what they per- were part of the historic ·1937 sit·
ceive as GM's efforts to downsize down strike that paved the way for
and move their jobs and livelihoods the UAW to organize CiM employees.
overseas.
The union gives strikers SISO a
Although the dispute isn't the only week, and laid-off workers are eligi·
thing on people's mind'- a·week- ble for unemployment, but that leaves
end arts fair attracted thousands and little money for flowers.
golf courses reported brisk traffic Still, Raicliel is confident the
it's difficult to ignore.
strik'e is the right thing to do.
Pickets congregated on street cor·
"GM has to realize they can't
ners outside the two parts plants. Bar keep screwing people and breaking
signs near the plants advertised "AU promises," Raichel said, citing OM's
Day Strikers Happy Hour" and "Go pullout from a 1995 plan to invest
UAW."
· $300 million in Aint operatilms. •
Rower shop owner Dan Raich•t
He dismisses GM's contentions
put signs saymg "Support . UAW that the plants, wbere many w~ers

'make more than $40,000 annually. enjoyed incomes ranking among the
highest per capita in the country. The
aren't competitive.
"Talk to anyone who works on the union is such an integral part of Aint
· assembly line," he said. "It never history that one of the interstates
stops. It's haid, stressful work. ... through town is called the "UAW
Freeway."
The)"re underpaid."
The area nourished until the
"You got to suppon tbe union,"
Paul Oershac said a&lt; he loaded golf l970s, when GM began tightening its
clubs into his car Friday. The retiree belt, and today Flint is dotted with
spent 37 years working on GM's vacant lot&lt; and boarded up buildings.
Avery Chandler, an administrator
a•1sembly line. "The economy runs
on GM .... And OM is always trying at Mott Community College, says
to cut something."
A int' s problems are more complex
Indeed, Aint's economic health than this cument dispute.
He says more than two-thirds of
depends heavily on OM. Although
GM has worked to diversify, a 1996 city schoolchildren rec~ive free or
repon estimated that roughly 75 per- subsidized lunches and the l)'elfare
.cent of workers in Genesee County. rolls are growing.
where Flint is located, are somehow
And although Aint's crime rate
tied to GM or the auto industry.
has declined, many people move to
OM was founded-in Aint in 1908: . nearby suburbs, where the streets are
Five years later, the company opened cleaner and crime is lower.
the massive Buick City plant, cover' ing 22 square blocks. Residents

El Nino now suspe~ted as cause for Titanic disaster
He also noted that the number of ice- .
'bergs drifting south of Latitude 48
degrees North was extremely high.
. "Although niost data has to be .
taken from later years due to lack of
infonnation, we can safely say there
is a possibility that El Nino and the
Titanic met on April 14, 19l2,"
Williams writes in a research docu·
ment
Williams, a hurricane research
affiliate at Aorida Institute of Technology-in Melbourne. uses four factors in his study: The Southern Oscillation Index (SOl); the number or ice·
bergs moving south of Latitude 48N,
the doration .or the Atlantic .iceberg
Season, and tropical stomn activi_ty.
, • The index: Williams explains in

his piiper: "The Southern Oscillation
Index is tbe mca\ure of mean sea level pressure difference between Darwip, Australla and Tahiti. If the number is a negative number, it indicates
an 'EI Nino' condition. The number
in April 1912 wa&lt; · •2.28! In April
1983, the most intense El Nino ever
recorded at that time showed -2.18!
According to (the National HWTicane •
Center), there was an ongoing El
Nino of moderate to strong strength
in 191l-1912."
·
• Icebergs: Williams then looked
at statistics that charted the number
of icebergs crossing Latitude 48N
.from 1912to 1997. - - ---·He found that in 1912, two to
three times the normal of number of

icebergs were in Atlantic §hipping
lanes.
In 1912 more than 1,000 icellergs
CfO!Ised 48N during .the entire year
and 395 in April alone. (Titanic hit
one of them near Latitude 4l degrees,
46 minutes North, Longitude SO
degrees. 14 minutes West.)
While lists do not reach back to
1912. recent statistics show the mean
number of il:ebergs pa..sing south of
48N is 446 and the average for April
is 110.
For comparison: During a non-EI
Nino year in the early 192~. fewer
than 400 icebergs crossed 48N and
only 58,floated past the mark in April:
, • Duralion: The research also dislcovered the "iceberg season" reach-

es into July in the North Atlantic ..The
average number of icebergs per
month south of 48N during the peak
season: March. 55; April, 120; May,
138; June, 86, and July, 32.
• Stomns: "During El Nino years,
tropical cyclone 'activity usually
increa~es in the Pacific Ocean and is
inhibited in the Atlantic Ocean. One
example is the 1982-83 El Nino. This
period shows a total of 44 named
stomns in the northea~tem Pacific and
52 in ljle western Pacific. This 'is
above normal activity. The Atlantic,
on the other hand, had five named
stomns in 1982 and four in 1983 both years, below nomnal.

. ·- --~ ·

-

ss·than·five minutes and you'll
be hooked on the 400 Series!
\

·By.The Bend
·•

.

The Daily Sentinel
Page7 :
Monday, June 15. 1998 ·

.

Airline pilots battle sleep ,deprivation as they fly
that airline pilots are completely
rested and full of energy.
During my career as an airline
!•ilot for one of the "big four" airlines, I was confronted .with several
IWJ, 1.01 Antele• nmct
SyndiCIIC aJW1 CJCilfJQ
shockers, 8J1d sleep deprivation w.as
Syndicale.
one of them. If you think pilots are
well-rested and alert; perhaps you
should hang onto that illusion for the
printed quite a few letters a~ut sake of y~ur, white knu,kles.
_'
sleep-deprived doctors. One wnter
There rsn- t room here to descnbe
said that the lack of sleep endured by tbe situation in detail, but it is an
doctors would be ludicrous if-easy subject to un!'Over •• just ask
applied to other professionals, such · any pilot But for now, recall the
~ biJck drivers or airline pilots. I'm
fatigue you felt at the conclusion of
sure your readers got the impression your last Hight. Then, consider that

the crew had already Oown one or
more trips before the one you were
aboard.
I once fell asleep a1 the controls
during an approach in a snowstorm
in Milwaukee. It i~ true that the
"sleep" lasted for 01:ly a second or
two, but it was enough to scare the
hell out of me. I wish I could tell you"'
this was an isolated incident, but it

Ann
Landers

wasn't.

Why aren't night crews provided
with proper rest? I'll .tell you. The
answer is money. -- Scottsdale, Ariz.
Dear Scottsdale: I sent a copy of
your letter to Oerald Greenwald,

chainnan. and CEO of United Airlines, and asked for his comments.
This is what he said:
Dear Ann Landen: l.appreciate
the .opportunity to respond to the
pilot in Scottsdale, Ariz.
Federal Aviation Administration
regulations mandate the maximum
amount of night time for which a
pilot can be scheduled on a daily,
monthly and yearly Qasis. In addition, most carriers have limitations
in their contacts with tbeir pilots
unions, further reducing their hours.
United has more than 9,000
pilots. We count on each and every

one of them to be in good physical
condition and get enough rest prior
to tbeir first flights of the day. The
FAA oo:quires captains to have a
complete physical every six months,
and United requires a company
phy,;.;al once a year.
'P.Iank you for giving me the
opportunity to se! the record
straight-- Gerald Greenwald, chairman and CEO, United Airlines
Dear Gerald Greenwald: I
appreciate you'r response and am
sure the "frequent H)ers" in my
reading audience w.ill, too. And now,
a word from me.

When a passenger plane goes
down, the airline must pay an astronomical amount of money in damages to the families of those killed,
as well as large sums to compensate
the injured. Aside from the humanitarian aspect. , it makes nn fiscal
sense for an airline to allow an
exhausted pilot to ny a plane.
&lt;B&gt;Send questions to Ann Landers,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045&lt;1'&gt;

kCat haters, beware! I Combating Medicare fraud-what you can do
Sy Ctirol Lemley

Animal Cruelty lnvntl~or
1 am ju~t gelling started as the
Humane Officer for the county and
would like to touch on a serious problem. This situation wa~ brought to my
attention and I have recently experi- .
enced it' myself •• the poisoning of
cats in die community of Middlepon.
. The person who ha.\ had this
problem ha' lost three family peL~.
and I have lost one. I realize that voe
have a cat overpopulation problem in .
Middleport; but to eliminate cats by
pt&gt;isoning or anti-freeze is inhuman~
and cruel -· and punishable by law.
There has to be a better answer than ·
killing cats!
One answer might be to have all
pets spayed or neutered. especially if
the animals go outside. This will help··
with the overpopulation of our furry
friends, The Meigs County Humane
Society has a reduced rate for spay·
ing and neutering for those who qualify..C'ontact me at 992·6371 or call
.the Meigs County Humane Society
Thrift Shop for infomnation. Cl,ll' that
people are certain are strays will be
taken to the Ripley shelter by an individual with whom we work at the
Thrift Shop.

The big respoqsibility begins with BY ED PETERSON,
the pet owner. Cats are free and roam- MANAGER
ing creatures. The .next time one- Athens Diltrlct,
comes near your horne and you pre- Social Security omce
fer it not be there, shoo it away and
Over 800 million claims for.
try to contact the owner. Do not Medicare benefits were submitted 10
administer .anything that will make Medicare'forpayment in 1997. Some
the cat sick, or anything that will kill of the claims were fraudulent. As
it.
fraudulent claims were detected,
Remember that section 959.03 of. some providers were warned; some
the Ohio Revised Code prohibit~ the were tined: some were thrown out of
malicious or .willful destruction of !he Medicare program;_and some
animals. One may consider inhumane were sent to prison. Despite the
activity as simply "ridding die neigh· efforts, it is estimated tharas much as
borhood of a few pesky caL~." but it $20 billion was stolen from
may cost that person a day in court, · Medicare.
and a family could lose an important
Each time Medicare pays a claim
member of the family.
it shouldn'~ the government is being
I am currently investigating the ripped-off, and as a taxpayer so are
shooting of cars with a BB gun on you. This is considered fraud under
Aatwoods Road, and the poisoning federal law. It happens .when someof the cats in Middleport. Anyone one knowingly and willfully lies on·
with -information about either situa· their Medicare claim in order to get
tion should contact me at the office paid. Fraud most frequently happens
oftbe prosecutor,.at992-6371.
when a doctor, medical facility or
(Carol Lemley who serves as the other medical care provider misrepcounty's aniJDal cruelty Investiga- resents on the claim fonn what was
tor. Ms. Lemley Is respoaslble for furnished to the consumer.
Investigating'complaints of animal ·
When you S\ISpect that Medicare
neglect.)
bas improperly paid a claim. conlacl
the insurance company that plid. The
company will contact the medical
provider to investigate. If you wish,
your name will not be used: If you
·feel comfortable doing so, you may
contact the medical provider that submitted the c_laim before calling

Rutland readies for .
July 4 celebration.

"Celebrating 45 years with Fami- residents of Rutland .
More information on the parade
ly, Friends, and Fireworks" will be
the theme of R11tland's Fourth of )uly may be obtained by contacting Cindy
observance. '
.
Parsons, 742-3703, or Kim WUford,
Plans are moving forward with a 742·2103. !.
parade at 9:30 a.m. to kickotl the - Activities of the day will include ·
day's activities. 'Participants are to · karaokeby Jeff Nonh, 2:30 to ·s:30
line up ai Brick and Depot Streets. p.m.; Alii Stanley, a band from Mari·
Registration will be taken ut that time etta, 6:30 to l0:30 with all different .
and entries will be given a number for types of music.
The Rutland Ladies Auxiliary will
judging purposes.
sponsor
a cow drop. Tickets are now
Judging will take place in lO dif~
ferent categories. They are religious, on sale for $5. The cow dwp will be
non-religious, bicycles, horses, held from 6 to 8 p.m. Rutland firemen
motorcycles, go Cllllll, 4'wheelers, and auxiliary members.have the tickdecorated pickups. semis cl!l'sic cars. ets for sale.
An auction of items donated by .
one; over-all walking unit: and antique
cars.
area businesses will be helcl at the
Grand marshal will be Eugene park at 5:30 p;m.
Fink whose wife. Katie, will ride with
Games will be hell! and food
him. Mr. and Mt;~. Fink are lifelong served throughout the day at die park·

.·.: · . .

Medicare. Inform the medical
provider that Medicare paid for the
. item or service, and why you believe
Medicare should not have paid.
If the medical provider made an
honest mistake, it can be corrected
and Medicare will get a refuhd. If the
medical provider told you before yoli
received the service that Medicare is
riot .likely to pay for the service, you
may have to pay 'for the service.
If you believe Medicare is being
cheated, call or write the Medicare
company that paid the claim. The
name, address and telephone number
are on the EKplanation o( Your Part
B Medicare Benefits. If you plan to
write rather than call, clearly state at
the beginning of your letter that you
are filing a fraud complaint. This will
ensure that your complaint is
processed through the mailroom to
the fraud unit. Address the envelope
· to the name and address on the Explanation of Medicare benefits. Attention: Medicare Fraud Unit.
·
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Q. Can I get more Social Securi.ty credits by working more than one
job?
A. The maximum number of
Social Security credits that a person
can get inayearisfour.ln 1998, you
receive one credit for every $700 of

without the need 10 work a second job you are age 65 have an effect on your
to obtain them. An additional job may Social Security benefits?
increa.&lt;e your earnings base and give
A. Yes. Working beyond age 65
you a- higher benefit amount when add&lt; to your lifetime earnings. These
you retire. For more infomnation, call earnings a~ used to compute your
Social Security and request the book- Social Security benefits. In addition.
you receive credits for each month
-let, Retirement.
Q. When my ex-husband retires, you delay ~tirement after age 65.
can I receive wife's benefits even if
The percentage increase depends
we're divorced?
on what year you were born and is
A. If you and· your ex-husband based on a graduated scale. For
weremarriedforatleast lOyearsand example. people who were born in
ifyouareat least62yearsofageand 1938 receive a 6.5 percent i!lCrease
currently unmarried, you will be eli- for each year beyond full retirement
gible to receive divorced -wife's ben- age that they delay receiving Social.
etits ba.ed on his Social Security Security. And if you're at the top of
work record. If your ex-husband is at the graduated scale because you were
leastage62.youcanreceivedivon:ed born in 1943 or later, your benefit:
wife's benefit&lt; even if he is still work- . will be increa&lt;ed by 8 percent fo(
ing and not yet drawing his own each year you delay retirement.
Social Security retirement benefits if
Q. I'm going to hire a teenager in
you've been divorced from him at my nelghbomood to watch my live-:
lea.~t 2 years.
year-old daughter this summer while;
You can receive an amount equal I work. Do I need to report this to
to up to ~alf of your ex-husband's Social Security?
·
benelit if you wait until you're age 65.
A. No. Earnings for household.
At age 62, you receive about 38 per- workers (such as baby sitters) under
cent. Any benefit&lt; payable to you do age 18 a~ exempt rrom the Socia~
not affect those payable to his cument.... Security tax unless hous~hold
wife or minor children.
employment is the worker'sprimUJY.
Q. Does continuing to work after occupation.

roet the latest in sports new,s from the"\ :

Da1·ly Sent•"nel

coveredeamingsuptothefour-cred·
it maximum. Most people are easily
~
able to obtain the maximum-credit ,.....,_...;.._ _ _ _ _...;;;..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_,

~ee•s o~1 ·

f~1 p51' . .

.

BERKLINE QUALITY

RECLINERS
A GIFf HE'LL ENJOY ~OW, AND
~----- · FOR MANY YEARS'TO COM.EI
··· ~

Community calendar

MC519 Material Collection System

40

lo~der

51 · 111 Broom

The versatile 41111
features liquid-cooled, 20- to 22-hp
engine and 54· or 60-inch mowing deck.
..

.. -

450 Tiller

The Community Cale..ar Is
publlslied • a free aervlce to nonprofit poups wishlnato a1111011nce
!fteetlnl and special ~enu. The
, calendar Is not d 1Jlped to promote
sales or fund nllers o1
type.
· Items •"' printed IS space permits
and canaot he auaraahed to run 1
• ~Ilk number of days.

••Y

Includes Riders, LX lawn
Tractors, GT, 300, &amp; 400. Series
lawn &amp; Garden Tractors, FSOO.
Front Mowers, and all
attachments.

47 111 S11ow Blower

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT-· Missionary service Wednesday. 7:30 p.m. at Wes·
leyan Bible Holiness Chun:h. 75
Pearl St., Middlepon, with guest
l'dONDAY
RACINE- RDCineNillage Coun-. speaker Dr. Donald Smith ~present­
cil will meet Monday 1117 p.m. at the ing ESM Mission. All welcome.
municipal building to discuss budget
THURSDAY
and police.
MIDDLEPORT •• Rep. John
' LETART •• The Letart Township Carey (R-Wellstonl open door meetTrustees, Monday, 7 p.m. at the ing, Thursday, 2 tQ 3 p.m., Middleoffice building.
port Village hall. Carey will meet
with iildividuals on · a one-on-one
POMEROY •• Special meeting, basis to address concerns with state
governing board. Meigs County Edu- government.
cational Service Center, Monday, 7
p.m. offices of Athens County EduMIDDLEPORT ' Sen. Michael
tational Service Center, Athens.
.• C. Shoemaker (D-Bourneville) open
door hours, 2:30 to 3:30 p.m. at the
TUESDAY
Middleport Public Library.
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport

54 111 Front Blade

It's easy to g_et att~d to a 400 Series Lawn and Garden Tractor. With over 25 different implements to choose from. lhe 400 is designed to work on more than just your lawn or garden.
W1th the Ou1k-Ta¢i implement mount1ng system that lets you get hooked-up 1n mmutes. you can change attachments as fast as you change your m1nd. No tools needed. Which 'means the only
problems you'll have with a 400 Series lawn and Garden Tractor is deciding what to get attached to next Get hooked-up with lhe best lawn equipment See your John Deere dealer

•

.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

.

.

',

Lloyd/Flanders Somer Furniture
_Reg. $162 Lo-Back Chair

&lt;90 Days
Same as
Cash

Your Choice :

Gun Cabinets
6, 8, to·or 12 Gun capacity
. Oak, Pine, Hackberry

Father•'
DaY Sale

30% ·

off

·Flexsteel &amp; Berkline Recliners
Many Styles &amp; Fabrics
father'i
Dar Sale
'.

25% off
$26
'

Sale priee1 •tart at only

~~----------------------~-------r.

·,

M-S

•

9:30 TO 5:00 .

NOTHING RUNS LIKE A DEERE

~vwivilt'ert· r ·u,J

\

$

.. Reg. $182 High-Back Chair

In addition, Michael T. McK· Muon G. Fisher and Jay P. McKelvey, boih of Syracuse, were named elvey of Syracuse was 8lllled 10 the .
to the Miaini University, O{ford, sec-· president's list for acllieviq a 4.0
ond semester dean's list. To be named gnde point average for the IICICOnd
to the dean's list, a student must have semester.
o 3.5 or better srade point aVCfllle.

(740) 446·241.2.

..

.

Miami University students honored

'S
661 PIIECIEST DRIVE .

Chun:h of the Nazarene, women's
ministry and fellowship, meetina to
be held at the home of Judy White,
Tuesday 7 p.m. For more -information, call 992·7779.

ANDERSON'S.
DOWNTOWN POMEROY

992·3671

.,
•

•

r

•

•

•

•

�p.g. 8 • The Dally &amp;mtlnel

Monday, June 15, 1998'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

By JEFFREY ULBRICH
Al.cM:ilacl PNII Wrltll'
: AVIANO AIR BASE, l!aly
NATO fighter jets and ~onnai~5a11Ce aircraft roared into the sky ear·
ly today. hoping to intimidate
.Yugoslav ~ident Slobodan Milo-llevic by showing him how quickly
· ond powerfully the Western alliance
can deploy iL• foices.
Eighty-four aircraft from the Unit. ed States and 12-other of NATO's 16
:member countrie~ · staged several
houill of aerial exercises over Alba·
.nia and Macedonia, which border
·Yugoslavia.
"This is an exercise intended to
demonstrate the alliance's commit·ment to peace and stability in the
· region and the alliance's ability to
-project power into the ~gion," said
· 1.1. Gen. Michael Shon, commander
of NATO air forces in the alliance's
·southem Europe division.
' Much of the world ha.• been
agha.•t a.• Milosevic 's Serb-led army
' and police cracked do)Nn on dissent
in Kosovo province, inhabited most1y by ethnic Albanians. Mo~ than
~ 300 people have been killed and
· ~ thousands have t1ed across the border
lnto Albania.
Western leader&gt; want to halt the
violence. They do not want to be seen
'giving comforl to the Kosovo Liber·ation Army. which is · tigpting lor
independence of the province.
The planes began departing about
7:50 a.m. today. leaving fmm air
ba.~s in Italy, Greece; Fmnce, Ger-

many, Britain and the Adriatic Sea.
Suppon planes. including ~fueling
ranker&gt;, al~ady we~ in the air.
Fir&gt;t of the 24 aircraft departing
Aviano were two Arperican F-16s.
followe(l by four Spanish F-18s, a
tanker and another half-dozen American F-16s.
NATO's air power exercise shows
alliance unity on halting the Kosovo
crisis and the ability to act with "significanllethal capability" should that
be necessary, Defense Secretary
William Cohen said today.
The fighting in Kosovo has
sparked alarm that the violence could
spread south to Albania and Macedonia. which agreed to let their territory be used for the exercises.
Asked early today if he expected
the aiicrafl to be picked up by
Yugoslav ground radar. Shon said,
"It's very reasonable to say the aircraft will be tracked by Yugoslav ear·
ly warning systems."
Shorl would not say just how
close the allied planes will come to
the Yugoslav border. But Col. Emerson Gardner, aboard the USS Wa.•p in
the Adriatic Sea. said: "We will be
close enough that the Serbs w~l know
N~TO will be the~ . "
All NATO member&gt; sent ain:mft
except Iceland and. Luxembour~.
which have no air forces. and Cana~
· da, which could not deploy planes to
Europe on such shorl notice.
The air nerc,ise. code-named
Determined Falcon. wa.• ordered by
NATO defense ministers on Thursday

during a meeting in Brussels. The
ministers also ordered the alliance's
f!lilirary planner&gt; to look at a wide
range of options for futu~ action.
including dir~ct intervention in
Yugoslavia with air and ground
forces.
·
Russian Defense Minister Igor
Sergeyev today publicly rebuked a
lOp U.S. military Commander, a~~US·
ing NATO of failing to consult with
Moscow on holding air exercises
over the Balkans.
The nire public cla.•h came as the
Russian F~ign Ministry said Milosevic's imminent meeting with Russian President Boris Yeltsin in
Moscow would be "potentially decisive" in defusing the conflict' in
Kosovo.
· Sergeyev gave visiting Gen. Henry Shelton. chairman of the U.S. Joint
Chiefs of Staff. a dressing-down
. before reporters. He said .NATO
decided to launch the air exercises
only aller he Jell Brussels.
Cohen said he and other NATO
ministers had "a number of meetings" with Semeyev at NATO headquarters last week.
"II was very clear-NATo expect·
ed the air exercises to lake' place. :..
It should come as no surprise to anyone that they took place today."
Cohen said.
Milosevic is in Moscow today and
Tuesday, and Yellsin ha.&lt; promised to
use what influence he ha.&lt; to defuse
the situation in Kosovo.
·'-

. - CARDIFF. Wales (AP) - Euro- dent.
to dominate .
. )iean Union leaders must ·plot a
Campbell acknowledged Britain
When the EU leaders last sought
:course out of a tangle of disputes or wa.' not going to broker a solution
overhaul
bodyof
i1 year
ago, theya
ti~k delaying their plan to draw in · over the CarditT summi_
t, the clim~x lo
produced
thethe
Treaty
Amsterdam,
.tfleir ea.•tem neighbors in hopes of of its six-month EU p~sidency. watered-down compromise that most
. tinally ending the postwar division of Britain hopes to atlea.•t get die debate now acknowledge solved none of
Europe.
·
on track so the enlargement can go · their problems. By re-launching the
. The 15 EU nations agree the ahead in the first half of the next debate now, the Europeans are aim:union's w9rkings must be stream- decade.
ing to ~solve the instiiUiional dispute
·lined before it brings in Poland.
"If we can put economic reform and .divisions over who pays by
Cyprus, Estonia and up to eight oth· and political reform for the fumre 2000
: er new members. But heading into a right at the lop of the agenda. that is
~y are unlikely to get a break·
' two-day summit that begins today. a significant advance," Blair told · through on Gennany's $11.7 billion
'
EU t1i
'I
ihey ·were hopelessly split on bow the reponers in the Welsh capital Sunday. net-contn'bu lton
to
CO ers Unll
·reforms should adjust the EU balance
French President Jacques Chime after the country's legislative elec·
of power.
··
said reform wa.' essential before the lions in September.
The leader&gt; know taking on the union could ojleq its arms to its
. Away from their internal probpoor farmer&gt; and declining indu.&lt;tries "brothers"to the ea.&lt;l and reunite the lems. the EU leaders will have their
of the old Ea.•t l!loc will add 10 the European ':family" after the divisions customary debate on how to get
EU's budget burden. but they can't of the Cold War.
Europe's 18 million uneiiiPioyed
: ag~e on who should pay.
"To be frank, (EU institutions) do back td work. They a~ boosted this
· . Germany. the EU's biggest donor. · noc work very well." 'Chirac said time by encouraging signs of eco'!iays il&lt; contribution should fall-. But Sunday. "When we are more than 15,' nomic recovery. •
:poorer members- Greece, Portugal they won't work at all."
EU foreign minililers. also in
Chime and German. Chancellor Cardiff. will monitor developments in
·and Spain -resist talk of diverting
.Che flow of EU fund' from south to • Helmut Kohl wroee to.Blair 10 ·say the the Balkans after NATO launched air
.east .
.
.
way ahead was to de'!olve power exercises today over Albania and
"The~ are horribly comphcated from EU head office to nationalgovMacedonia in an effon to dissuade
disputes that are going to have to take emments 10 c.reale whal the French Yugoslav President Slobodan Miloplace." said Alastair Campbell,. leader called a "Europe of nations." sevic from pursuing· his militarY
:spokesman for British Prime MinisBut smaller EU nations fear that's action in Kosovo.
t~r Tony Blair. the cu~nt EU presi- a ploy to allow the EU's big countries

•Re-cores • New Radiators

: :

Oxy- Accet Regulator Repair

: :
' •

Welding Supplies. Steel Sales
Stick • Tlg • Aluminum Welding

Its name - which translates as
"Lay Observation Post" - is a
takeoff on the Vatican's own newspaper. L'Osservatore Romano (The
Roman Observer). Negri's group also
hopes to raise mon~y by selling
olive oil under the label "The Sack
of R&lt;&gt;rno:."
. Osservatorio's supporler.; object to
the Jubilee_ extravaganza on both
philosophical and practical grounds.
First, they don't think the state.
should be footing tbe bill for a
church party. Se..'OIId, they say hordes
~City.
of religious pilgrims will make life
Rome '• congested streets are a miserable for ordinary Romans.
'daily ballleground for lumbering buiiOs.~rvatorio's is a small voice
_a!o..hapless pedestrians and daredev- amid the piety and nffteial happy talk
-ils on motor scooters. Add several surrounding the Jubilee. But it echoes
·thousand~ tour buses and sev~rthe dneiid and doubt.• that are heard
11 hundml thou.'8nd extni tourists a e-very day in Rome's shops. streeL•.
day and what will you get? .
cabs and cafes.
• "A cata.•trophe! A catastrophe!"
The David vs. Goliath baule is
proclaims Giovanni Negri. president wagecton a shoestring. Osservatorio
.9f Qgervlllorio Laico. asma!l group mised a modest sum rrom riupporters.
dial is fighting a lonely battle against mo:'tly liberal intellec!tlfll~ith ~rm
die Vtllk:an •• millennium mega-ba.&lt;h. 1deiis. about churc~ sepatat1on.
()gervatorio Laico, which pub- and 11 sta)'ft allolil selling bumper
liihes a new5JNIPCr under the same ~icken and illl neW!&lt;paper.
.-me. is nothing if not imverent.
As a ma.~ot. Os.~rvatorio chose

Giordano Bruno, a 16th century ·
philosopher-astronomer-mathematician who was burned at die stake. His
idea.~ made him a heretic 10 tbe
Roman Catholic Church - and a
symbol or free thought to 19th cen.tury Italians fighting the church's grip
on Italy.
"We're not ·a party or a move-ment, we·~ a network." Negri says.
•·we have an offtce of sons. but it's
really ju~l a phone and a fax."
Until recently. Os..ervatorio wa.•
ignored by :rhe Italian news media.
which ha.~ signed on -literally -to
the Jubilee. The ANSA news agency
and stale TV both have agreements
with lhe Vatican to give extensive
coverage of Jubilee events. most of
them religiou.• services.
A Jubilee "trial run" in May.
changed things a bit Girding for a
gathering of 250.000 people in S!.
Peter's Square, the city sent out flyers urging Romans to stay oiT the
•treet~ and not to ,use their cars.
As huge crowd~ crammed ihe city
and thousands of lour busea muscled
down streeL•. parts of Rome came 10
a standstill.

~xican rights group probes goverlim~nt raids
· SAN CRISTOBAL DE LAS
CASAS. Mexico lAP) - A federal
humin right~ OffiCial ha.&lt;-promiscd IO
ii)YC!Ilipte a polil;e-and-army raid on
pro-rebel villagers that resulted in
liine death~.
· ·
: At a news confcm~Ce Sunday,
,Adolfo Hemandez Figue1011 said the
N.lional Human Rights COmmission
W opened an inv~igation. He also
•ked that rou1h ueatment he
Nt:eived 111 the hand~ of grieving
jlel!llntll in Union Progreso not be
tiled 11 111 excuse for more police

ICIIon.
.
· Mote lhln 1,000 liiiJrY lndims on

S I *f ~ the team from
... federal Rl1hts Commission,
wJilcfl had &amp;:OitiC to deliver die bodill or eiiht people killed l11$t .week
~

during r:~id~ on two villages and the
small town of El Bosque.
Hundred• of troops and state .
police. with weapons that included
gRnade launchers. entered the town.•
in scores of trucks Wednesday to
serve 1.5 arrest waJTalll5. ·
The Chiapa.• siDle attorney general's offiCe said Sunday ·lfw one of
those detained, Mario Santiz Ruiz,
had confes.~ that he and six OCher
Zapttiu rebel8 with rifle!l in'lbushr:d
the hundred.• of troops approechins
Union l'roll eso. It said the II'OOJI!I
tim! in response 10 the agression.
The agency uid olf~eials have
freed 24 of lite .53 people am::rcd in .
the raids, ilnd 29 have been amligned
on various chii.IJCS.
~villagers in Union Prog~'IO
•
I

•

Kaid that six of the eight killed there
had been seen alive after being cap_lUred by state police.
Apparently due to the ~'QIItrover­
sy over the deaths, slale offiCials condueled a second aulllf"'y llllbe human
righL• cornmiilllion's request, Hernandez said. Result• were pending.
Oft"~eials say they are trying 10
~impo.!C "the stale of law" in chaotic Chiapaa. w~ lapatista rebels
staged an uprising in 1994 and whe~
their sympathizers lllill often defy the
aovemment.
They deny lhlt Wednesday'8 raids,
or ~Kent raids on three ocher prorebeltownil. constitute a vioiMion of ·
a cealle-fire with the Zapatista
National Liberation Army.

CELLULAR PHONES

·

' JE"ff, · WIMARNE
' R
.

Ea••

Illite County, Olllo.

Prior lnatrument refer.
•ne•: Volume 337, Page
211.
Property llddr111: pt 00
St•te Route 33, Pomeroy,
OH 457ft
Appr•IMd 11:

33

~~~~"'8F

TRANSPOATAnON
Columbua, Ohio
OfllceofContreell
LAiaiCopy NumHr: 880412
UNIT PRICE CO.NTRACT
• Mailing Dill·. -ft1111t1
"""'
_
ER-GIION(182)
• SNied piopoNia wilt be
. 'aocaptad from 111 pre·
:. qualified bleldtrl II the
. • Offici Of Contracla of the
~hlo D•r,•rtmant of
. "'
. Tranaporlat on, Columbua,
unUI1a:bO a.m.1188
·, ;ot.to,
-Wedllllday,JulyOB,

FREE ESTI.MAJES

614• 992• 7643

.

·

ROOfING
.NEW•REPAIR

In the VIllage of

;:.:.p.
M.~:~'c:~.:.~.
Ohio, In accordanc• with

plana and apactllc~lona by
conatructlog River bank
protaetlon along IM ~nk Of
1111 OhiO River.
"The d•t• .. t for
compl•tton or lhl • wor k
ahall bl •• " ' forlh In lhe ·
bidding propoeal." Plana
and Spaclllcauonl ·~ on
fll• In the Department of
Trenaportlllton. .
·
Jerry Wrty
DlriCiot' of Tranaportllllon

' t

Downspou s .
Gu"er Cleaning
,.
Painting

Tht T1HJ1Mt You Sttl I• lhr

S..l"fl You'H Frod In tllr
Clon•fltd Sruicrol ·

Reason•bl• Rat•
S

Joe N. ayre
61 4-742 _2138

You·NG'S

·SALES
·SERVICES
·INSTALLATION
DON NITZ

Alao Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, o"1o

1-740-742-2842

£ARPET R. L. HOLLON

PLUS
· "TRUCKING
.
DUMP TRUCK

Professional
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES

Apartmenhl
. for Rent

740-698-9114

'

or

110

. ' 985·4422

740-698-7231.

Cheiler, Ohio
tar.t

.,,,..~.

Now Accepting Applications
Fir The Elderly &amp;Disabled

BABY

SERVICE
.,
Agricultural Ume,
Umeslone • GriiVtl
Dirt· Sand .

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

(UmeSioneLow Rates)
WICKS ·

HAULING
Limestone,

Help W1ntad

Gravel, Sand; .
The Dally BABY Sentinel is .a
Spacial Edition filled With photographs of local
kids- ages ~ 110 four yetlrll old.
The BABY Sentinel wtn appaer In the July 181

-_...:.Issue· Be sura your child, grandchild

belnby
Friday, June

11111,1PicllirN can

or relelive II Included.
. Complete the form below
end enctoee allllpllhol or
willet lize picture plua e
$5.00 charge for 8IICh
photogrlph. If more then
- child is In plctunt
anc:1oee an 'f'tNh • kll
$2 per child.

Overbrook
Center
Is
curren~y
accepting applications for Director of

Top Soli,

614-992-3470
'

Social Services. The Ideal candidate
will have a BSW and be licensed. We
Send

your

resume

hone calls

_

SHOP AND MORE

_,

to

-c- try-_..
of our

Administrator, Overbrook ~enter, 333
Page Street, Middleport, Ohio 45769.
No

.

•

•Iring In your oclda &amp;
lncla and we'll Alflll

ttilm

lease. EOE

•New aprlng poltef'l'

(

Free Estimates
II
a .740
. •l43•5426
.,.-'
, mo.
~_.,__
I

CloiiCI lun. a Mon.

Yolt _.•.apacro•i.

(ENCLOSE

..... ~ Dally S.iWtl

IIIII. 1CI-&lt;I

(740) 985-4180

SL AL -124,

Free EaJimates

. Mlnlravllll, OH

I

I

BULLETIN BOARD

beplckldup
eftllr July 2nCJ

•.,.. colu•• 'Inc•·wHkdar.s
colu•• lncll .Swiltlar

•r
·..w-• oui OI,KI AT 992-2155.·

Sand To:

The Daily Sentinel
"BABY EDITION"
P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
r r·c··HILD·--,•S•f(·-AME(·-•••S)·-.··A•G-E••(S•)":-- ---:---------------~,

Beanie Babies

...........
·•Excawatl•g

Curly, Peace, Valentino
June 16· 9:00 a.m.

CITYA~~D~=;=================------The Above Information Will Be Ulcd In Ad
!Ph&lt;.,. No--------- SullmilledBy: _ _ _ _ _ _ __

BACKBDiua
DDIIB ·SERVICE
•Septic Syste~s

New Shipment

P~NAME:-------------------------------~

'S

II
~

I

The Specialty Shop

•

T&amp;"''

:~~~~ 7~~!:'l.'o~7~~d30~~;~~

·.. 9" Rib Pattern

!985 .

$1.25 per running foot ($39.40 per lq.)
3' Wide x 10', 12', 14' &amp; 16' Lengths

wonted: Aulo'o tn Any Condi11on.
. Call 740·388-8062. Or 740-446·
7276.

For u•es
on Pole Barns, Garages,
..
Storage Buildings &amp; Porches
ROOF TRUSSES .

f:f,1PLOY111ENT
SERVICE S

"'ltiEIIS'
Must be 18 yrs or older, 10 required. New club In area . Senous

BAUMLUMBIR
Chester

Week Wllh Benefit Package, EOE
/ESP.

Hairdresser &amp; Nail fechnlcan
Needed For Busy Salon. 740·

441-1880.

Licensed Physical Therapist
needed to diagnose and provide
direct aervlc11 tor chlldren and

aduna 11 tho Malgo County Board
o1 Mental Retardation and Dovelopmtnlal Dllabllllles. Schedule to
lollow lho Carlelon School cel,n·
dar. Comprehenalw banoiH package. Submll by Juno 30, 1998.
Contact : Certeton School , P.O.
Box307, 1310 Carleton Stre~l.
Syracuoo, Ohio 45779, 740-9926681. EOE
Local Trash Service Needs Orlv·
or /Loader Wllh COL uconlo.
Serna EICifllrlence Praferred. S.ncl
Resume To: P.O. Boo&lt; 117, Bidwell,
OH, 45614.

LPN'o, PERSONAL
AIDES, HOMEMAKERS

CARE

Pleasant Valley Private DulY
now accepting applications for
per diem LPN's, Perso·r\at Care
Aides, Homimakera for private
!futy home care cases. Flexible
&amp;chedull~5 . Excellent pay. For
more information, can Debbie

Mitchell. RN at 304-e75-7400_or
apply In person al Pleasant Vetloy Home Heallh. 1011 VIand
Street, Pt . Pleasant, WV. EOE/

M.

MDS NURSE POStTIDNS ;
Openings For MC.S Nurstl In
Southeastern Onto Nursing FacMIIy. {Medicare &amp; Medicaid Co¥11·

11adJ. Excellent Wor~lng Envllon·

mtnt And Benefits. Quallfie8Uons
Include. Ohio RN Llcenae,
BacheiOf&amp; Degree Preferred. nle
Successful Candklate Will NeJd
Strong Clinical Skllll &amp; Experl·
ence In MDS Submission. Plene
Submit A Resume To P.O. Bpx
11184, Alhens, Ohio 45701.

· OAK tiLL COMMUNITY

MEIIICAL CENTER
JOBPOBnNO

.

Tho Home Health Depan,.nl AI
Oak Hill Communily Madlcll C6nler.. Thtr Qualified Candldales
Wilt Prov!C!o Nurting'Cirt Olract•
ly To Palienla 01 All -Ages AI
Their Realdences. State Llc•n·
sure Required. Experlerice Prelorred P- Apply In Person -or
Seod Resume To; Oak HIP Cam·
· munily Medical C.nler, Anent~ ;

Looking For Eaperienud Semi
Tractor Trailer Oriv1r1, Exctllenl
.Pay &amp; Insurance Package, 7iD·

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

682-6613, Bo-n S.5. .

CLASSIFIED$/

•

Overbrook Center. 333 Page
Slreet. Middleport, Ohio has full

lime end pari tlmo STNA po)l-

• Recopllonlal {Gallipolis)

ANNOUNCEMENTS

• LabOratory Information System

tlons available tor all shifts, an·
yone interested please 11op bY
and fill out an application. 740-

Splcllil11 !Gaitl!&gt;&lt;*•l
.
• Cardlotogv Echo Tech IGalllpo- 992-6472: EOE.
111/Jacklon) •
POSTAL JOBS TO I11.351HR.

Pettonala
Middle Aged While Chris.Han
Man Would Like To Hear From·
Nice Chrllllan Lady. Wrlle Wfth
PhOto To: Civil War Collector.
10009 St. Rt. 160, Vlnlon, OH
005

:

Exeanant Communicator. Oevetop
Knowledge 01 And Be Sensitl~
To Birth Control And Aeproduc·
live Health Issues, Detail Or}lnted . Evening And Saturday Houra
:ro Be Expected. Tra.vel To Other
Sites As Needed. Send Reaume, Letter of Interest And Three Employment Referenct5 To Planned
Parenthood Of Southeast Ohio,
396 Richland Avenue , Ath1n1,
OhiO 45701 . 37 .5 Houri Per

McKenzie. 350 Char/one
appllcanll only. 1-304-578·2966 Brenda
Avanue. oa~ Hltl, 0111o 45656. ,·
or 1·304-e33-7526.
•
_985-3301 .
AVON I All Areas I Shlrlay EOE
Speara_ 304-675-14211.
.Oak Hill, 011&lt;1 Trucking Compiily

St. At. 248

P /8 Contradors, Inc.
·Bobcat Service
•Concrete
•Masonry
•General
Commercial and
Reeldantlal
· F- Earimlllea
No Job Too Smell
Brian Morrison
(740) 985-3948
111:l/1 mo. pel

..__..

"DANCE AS'

Call for Quote Today

maiO&amp; And Malos. Schedule Ancl
Slall Phyolclan Cllnlco: Mull Be

Registered Nurae P011tlons .. In

Help Wanted

110

southern Yellow Pine Conatructlon
. · Custom Engineering

VISOR For Private Non-Profit
Family Planning Sarvtcea B111d
In Gallipolis, Ohio. Thll Position
Also Manaoas A ·Mobile Sltt1n
Meigs County. Medical anct Educational Services For Potenll,al
Case Load Of 1,500 Clients. Pro·
vide Outreach, Intake. Labotlltory
And Follow · Up Services To ~­

• Rogilttrtd Nuru {GallipoliS)

Emptoyo&lt; 011trs Excollont
8oMfiiiAnci-

E..... iroiNII8hl c.&gt;nty auawtlold

Al&gt;lrbnll- Apply.

•5686.

An Equol Opporlunlty Empioyo&lt;
Send-To:

Humin--

30 Announcements
DIABETIC PATIENTS: You May

Olporlmtnl
-·90JacklonPille.

Be Entitled To Receive Your Oia·

Galllpolo, OH 4M31·1562

betic Supplies At No Cosl To
You. For Mote lnlormallon 1-888·

IIIIM!III

sn-6561 .

~~.s:r:'~!a:o~;,~~g:~~~

813·3585, Exl 6~74 , 8 A.M. ·9
P.M., 7 Days lds,lne.
'
SUMMIT TRANSPORTATION

O!Jenlngs For om IJrNor•.
• .29e Per Milo
• $12.50 Per Hour
• Unloading &amp; Dmp Pay
• POrsonalimd Dispatch

•

·oHomaWHkly

MORE - I I THAN WE CAN

o 401 K - Vacation, Holiday Pay
IINIDI.Et
• Medk:allnsurance
·Well Ellablls~ld Tranoportallon Call 800·876·0680 Mon ·Frl 9:00
2 Dogs 1·Beagle and 1·Ausrra- Co. Suks Eaparlencad Ttactor A.M.To 5:00 P.M. .
liOn Shepherd {7401245-5e68
Trailer Drivers To Moko Deliver·
las In The Columbus. Cincinnati. TM Southern Local SchOol Ois314 Collie, sabllt.&amp;While, ilmaiO, And OIIYIOn Area. RELOCATION lricl haS lhe lotlowlng certlllod pothroe years old, not good wllh EXPENSES PAID! Maka sitions available for the 1998·"
~Ids. 740-742·1010.
$32,000.00 Annually Wllh No school year to all appliclints with

Giveaway

6wk old klntn, black. while a.pol ,
nt 304
Angora, to good home 0 y. .

675-1193.

""•lralian Sllophard 1 -

OTR Expanaaa. 8onuus Can

Add An Addillonal $2,000.000 To
Thai 1nco01a. CDL Cl111 A Ro·

' quired. W.Offof:

BluO

Merle, 1 FamaiO Tricolored. one '&amp;colorM HHIIIIIftiUI1IriCI
year old. Good Homos. 7~1).446.- • Co. Paid Lila And Oloabiii1V In·
auranca

1032.

LUDSCIPB
D£11811

Male bluo merle I male Trl Col·
ored.7..,.__1032

• Paid Holiday&amp; And Voclllionl
• o40t(k) Retirement With Co
Match
•Co. Paid Unllolma

Baby Rabbit Good For •-H Pro-

For More Info Call M-F. 9-5. I ·

Australian Shephard Pups : 1.

Computer Graphics
Designs
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Servlcll
•Commen:lll
•Realdtntlal
OWner, Mickle Hollon
C"eeler, Ohio

Please send Inquires to Jamea

uwronce. 5upelln18ndent, Soutttern Local Schools, P. 0. Box 17~.
Raclna, Ohio 45771 or Cl!l (74Pi
949·26e9 SLSO II an Equal Opporrunilj Empioyo&lt;.
·•

701l-742-IOIG. ·
· 1351 . P.O
Ace. Oopl:
, . Bo11 ·-t
••• ,
Bl~c~ Female Pup moslly Lob, Oiomoncl Bar, CA 817115.
7ol0-448-ll42
Full limo L.I'~N . SITE SUPER·
Border Coma puppies. 740-9-49- . VISOR 101 priveiO non-profit laml·

WOrlllng -

Stuffing EnYIIopea At Home. For
0118111 . Ruah (Long Setf·Ad·
dressed Sttmped Envtk)pe) To:

Beauliful Border collie, one year,
male, sm11e1 for your love: lwo
male Hlmlll"tln/Siam~lt mill ;

ly pltnnlng 11rvlc11 balld In
Galipolll. Ohio. This polllllon eiiO

klneno, 4 llllck tncl w11110. 2 monogeo 1 moblt. 1111 In Molga

black. eleven weeki old, IIIIer,

.

handle Special Edueallon and '~

110 Poovams.

Tho Unlvoroily of Rio Grandi on·
nounees an opening for a s.c,.._
lary It In lhe ROCO&lt;t11 OIIICI. Re- .
ljiOnllblllflla ol lhlo 1ut1 lime pb-

ffM

J&amp;L SIDING I

1'1ansh1e Social studle&amp; reac"-';
and Adminlslratlva Asslsttnt tCI

joct, 2 Browns &amp; I While. 740· 600-837·3837 Ext 8. .
386·9036.
$1 ,000 WHtdV

2940.

'740-985-4422

the appropriale cer1ilication and

bacllgrouncl clledi; 9-12 ~

·lllinld. 7-·5628. ·

County. Medical end educauonal
- · lor potenllol cat1 Ioiii ol

&amp;ltton Includes dlta entry~ dUties
lion;

1111

Record•

otudonl .......:

mtlllllen..nce:

R....,.- ancl-llolg li1d
••urvlalon ol work IIUIIV ttud·

OUIIIIICIIIOnl lnctudo 1 Ngf!
achool diploma or aqullrtlonl re.'
quifld, an IIIOCIIII degree Jf\
Seerllarlat Science 11 proterro!J.
IIIII.

At least tl'tr" yeers preyloul ....
perlenco -ldng In an ofla ltf.,
ling II required . Exceltenl oral "
written and interpen.o,.l ~
niCIIion lliiN II I'JQUired II wttl

1500 cllonto. P(ovldo outrtoch,
Mot. Roblrll. Grey &amp; Willie, Gin- lnloko, lobofotory ond follow-up
&amp;.,1111
til, Orut Fo1 •-H. cage And FIJ:. ltfviCII to femalea tnd ma111 ;
•• deor&gt;nolralad
- proceiiOf.~
-t Ympl Siding • Soffit '
- - · 7-40-311 81112.
ociiiiiiiiO anclsll" phyllclan clln- compurera
and word
Must be abJe to nlabtilh prtori..
• R--:- • S1amlna
Mother car. 1yr old. tiger. long lea; musl be txctltlnt communi·
,._...
CIIOr, devolop -nowlldgo Ol lnd till, worll lndependtntly aNt'
GuiMr • Ia at••
heir, good hOuse Pll. loving, be Hn&amp;lllve lo lrlrtllconlrot ancl handle
1nd reaotve recurring
7
..L..
good.-.30U 5-I11J3.
'""'""uctlve hleith - 1; dell.ll problomo. lnteroatod lncllvkluola ·
• RlpiDIIIMfltWioWNWI
.....
Old barn, tree If you 11ar down, oriented. E-...nlng and 8aturdiY
should send a lener or tnlereit •
• ~ Doclti
7-·2822.
hours 10 bt expected. Trovol to and a resume Including ttte
• .IIDwn lnttllation
Olhlr IIIII II · S,ncl ,_,
names
eddreea of at leatt"
Two nice BorHt' Cotlt. P"'lffill. """"· olin- oncl 1lnl bellnlllo- ·
• Gal mgu • DtcU
WH montho old; 3 ceta, 3 kll· employment rof11tnc1t to
11181
10 .... ""' '
;lAX 2ol Jlala luildi.
.,._ ois- 74HINI4t.
l'llnMII ... wrtl1ood of ow.- ol""'
Olllo, 3H Rlchlencl Avenue.
olllto '
,-- 11i11 IN. at $5995
WNIO llllplilrdiiiJIIoylll Huoty Alhlnl, Olllo .S701 . 37.5 lloUII
'""--•2772
puj)o, - n --·· will be_Iorge .per Wllk with bentllt PICU(II,
451174, •
7...,...,.,.
d"GI. to g&amp;od hom•. 7•0-815- EOEIESP
3371 .
.
==~~---·INSU' •·:noN

...

CALL

152 ;3rdAve

wanlad To Buv: Rollrod TY
Beanie Babin? Wt Have Zlggy,
Jelly, Luckv. Waddle, Legs,
Waves, And Scottie. For More
1-rna11on cal Pam AI 740.2455443.

aoonll UD .smlll

LIIDA'I
Plllfl'lll

m8S81g9.

Open 1\111.-Frl. 1H

~~~::~ofdn_ecr~~eMo:r~~~~:~~

992-&amp;78.
Clean La1e Model cars or
Trucks. 1990 Modolo or Newer,
Smllh Buick Pontiac, 1900 EaSIern Awnue. Gallipolis. .
Jwroc~od
&amp; 0 Auto Parts. Buying
or salvaged vohlcloa.
304-77H033.

0 ver 20 years experoen
,, ce·

12/11/tfn. '

Take the pain out of
painting, and lei me
do il for you.
Interior
Before 6 p.m.
leave
Aller 6 p.m.

Antiques &amp; cloan used lurnlluro,

Vinyl Siding • Garages.
.H
p I B 'ld'
New omes • 0 e Ul JnQS
• Room Additions .

(614) 992-3838

COUNTRY CANDlE

offer a competitive salary and benefit
package.

Fill Dirt

Ume1tone Hauling .
HOUH I Trlller Slte1
Land Claarlng &amp;
Grading
Septic Syetem •
Ulllltles
Estimates

2S26.

•

WlaT• ~lilTED

CARPENTER SEYICE
·Room Addltlona
•New Garagea ·
•Electrical &amp; Plum!llng
•Roofing
•Interior
Painting&amp; Exterior

Ina Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio, ·

Rusa Moore owner. 740-992·

conSTROaiOH

5/26/lln

"P1•ced righl allihe lime."

1

:,TRUCKING
H II
Ex
tl

949-2168

Eipll Housing Opportunity

Picturalmuat

Abaolulo Top Dollar: All u.s. Sll·
var And Gold Colnl. Proolsols,
U
aO
.,.,....
Olamoncls, Anllque Jowolry, GOld
Rlnga, Pre-1 930 U.S. Currency.
1998 Martin Street
Joe Wlllon Slerllng, Etc. AcquloUIOno Jewelry
1 • M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
L:P:om::e:ro~y~,O::hl:o~45=76:9:.__ __:&lt;:::&amp;.:.14,ilaS992W1;·~4Jii277:ili.J
.
AWinue. Gallipolis, 740-448·2842.
1
·
Anllqueo. top. prlceo paid. Rllior·

"8 Rei v: ur n--..m"

'

IDLY Ill, 188

aucllon service . Llcenud
t68.0hlo &amp; west' VIrginia. 304m- 5785 Or 304·173-5447 '

U

aan~~~·. 0111o 7ol0-379-mo.
90 Wantld to Buy

Septic Syatema
Trailer &amp; Houae Sl!I I

Card of Thankl

-Cross Pointe
.,Apartments

PI mblng

· LOHG•s

FREE ESTIMATES .

The family gf
Mary L. Dul'llt
wish to thank you
all for your
support,
sympathy .apd
kindness to us
. during the' loss or
our loved one.

Sheriff, ..... County

.

80 and ~a':':rket

Wedemeyer'• Auction Setvlce,

au ng, cava ng
&amp; Trenching
Umeitone &amp; Gravel

Gutters

"Don! right lhe flr1l lime. "

$37,-.oo

I

SAYRE

(IJ·15,2221c

. )i Por IIJip;ovlng
0
21 250 r:·~
EG-»- • • u. ·

440

,.be

I

d

Garages • Replacement Win ows
Room Addition~ • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

Howard L w'rltuel

NOTICE TO BIDDERS

M J

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

Public Notice

J. Michael DlbUltr, OH

(113) 241-311111
(1)1,1,1531C .

side WMPO, Juno 16-20 Olartlng

119:00.

' ·Trim
• stumP

Grl!ldlll9

· Roofing

':===~~~~~ L----~(N.:,:o.:S:.u:;n.;.d:.a;;;y:...;;C;.;a:.;,ll;.;s.:..)__..;21::.;1:,2102111
:::.::::~n

7/22/lfn

Tenna Of Sale: Clah
J111111 M. Soullby
Sup. Ct.IG012881
Lerner, Sampaon •
RolhluM
120 E. FDIIflh SlrMt,
llhFtoor
Cincinnati, Ollto 45202

OH. ·Rem~~'~•' ·

Gigantic gan1ge sale, Bradbury
Cnurch of Christ parsonage be-

I_L_D_E_R_S_,-.~~-c-.-,· _C_u_s-to_m__H_o_m_e_s_ _._~,....R-e_m_o_d~e~l~ln~g,l r~~k~i~:r:~~~~;~:~ ~~~~~;~

• Plahweaherl
Call Ken Young
(740) 985·3551

-~====:::==~I·
'• '
Public Notice

117, PIIJI es, Recorda of
D""• of M•lga Coun(\i.
Qllto, and by Dana Hy11t1
and wlf• by deed dated
November 2t, 1821,
conveyed to Ray McKey
and Roala McKay and
r1carded In DHd Booll131.,
P... tM, RKord Of Dlldt

GALUPOUS, OHIO 45631

• 1op

r .- .-.-S_S_E_L_L_B_U
....

"NIId~::~:n anv
• Wathera
JM.,
. • Rena••
• Relrlgerlllora ~:;.;;.r
• Dryer
• Hoi Water Heeter
• Freeure o

985-4473

:• .

Public Notice

I

ftll SERVICE

NCE
.}

The Appliance Man

• •Garages
.. ':•Complete
~-.:: :. Stop
Remodeling
' Compare
·• ·
:::
FREE .
,•
ESTIMATEES .
.,.
''

· Public Notice
of S.Uibuf'l', In 1111 County
of Melga, and State Of Ollto:
Sltutlt In s.ctlon t, frlelton
2, Town 2, Range 13, tn th•
OCP, and dllcrlbed 11
lollow.: Beginning at 1
tlake at the NorthWIII
corner of Jam.. Sch..g·
man tract elong the
PomerOy end AIIMne Roed
end 15 ,/, f••t Northwell
from the h11d walt. of a
cutv.rt neer the min•
opening; llllnc•
etona
lh• Norlh boundlf'l' of the
11id Jam11 Schwegman
tract 1 dlellnce Of 240.2 fHt·
.to • elate; thence lOuth 511
·degr•a 37' W11t 2G0.7 1Mt
to e lllke near the curb or
th• brick road; th•nce
foiiDWI- the --~ 'No'-- 33
d111 _;;2o• w~;'; 32 .:;;. Of
th• piece of Hglnnlng. n
being pari of the tr1 ct of
tand eonv• Ye·d • to Dana
H
b
G
1
slh":egman Y_,nd ~f.rgb~
d1td dll•d -April It, 1111,
1nd recorded In o.ect look

s·uu'

POMEROY,

day. 161h·17th, Beulah Ward.

Glen Street, Syracuse. Housei'IOk1
Items, some collectibles. furniture,
al&amp;o house for sale, 10 until 1
Rain or shine.

JONES

.

•New Homes

Public Notice
Public Not1c1
NOnCE TO BIDQERS
bidding propoaal." Plana
STATE OF OHIO
and Sptclflcatlona era on
DEPAIITIIIENT OF
flit In IM Deparlmtnl of
· TRANSPORTION
Ttantporlltlon.
Columbul, Ohio ·
Jarry Wrw,
Office or Conlnell
Director or Tranaporlltlon
lAQII Copy Number: 180413 (6) 15, 22, 21c
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Milling Dill: 011/0111198
Public Notice
ER-oooN(1e3)
.
S.eled propoNII will bl
SHERIFF'S SAL£
accepted rrom all preREAL.ESTAT£
quellfl•d bidder• II the CASE NUMBER 117CV134
Ofllc• of contra cia or the STAR BANK NA
Ohio D•r.artm•nt of PLAINTIFF
Tranaportat on, Columbu•, . VS.
Ohio, unlll 1o:oo a.m.
PATRICIA J. WAUER, et al .
~•.JulyOI, 1181 · DEFJ!NDANTS
For Improving 11ct1on
COURT OF COMMOI\,
ME0-338·33.580, State
PLEAS
Route 331 In Lebanon
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Town1hlp, Mllga Coun...,
In pureuanct of •n Order
Ohto, tn accordance wlih or Sale to m• directed from
plana and ~~peelfle~~tlona by llld Court tn the above
drelnlng, paving with entllt.ct •ction, I Will expo•
aaphall con. crat• and to~-••le
II public euctlon 11
conatructJna a drilled llhBft t... coun hou11 on July 10,
.-.tllnlng Wii1.
1188 at to:oo a.m. of 11ld
"The date ..J for dey, IM following deeeriH:d
complttllln Of thla work reel •tale:
IMII bl Ia HI forth In 1111
Situated In the TOWI(nahlp

'IN'

113 W. 2ND ST.

(Cut Outlot Futuro Dlocounll

'•. ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

r==========-~r==:;:::;:;::::::===~r==:;::::::=====r-=:;::::::====

FULL'( INSURED

360° Communications

. •·'

Ellate tala· Thesday &amp; Wednll·

SENIOR CI11ZEN
DISCOUNT

~------·-·~~-·s_s_a_3_~
.;.._...;;._9/._ITI'N...I L----...:.6..:1_4;..·.:.9.:.9..:2_-5~4_7_9____;3127::;:,;1Tf~N L--2-o_v_rs....E-x.:p..:.;·:::.lns.-Owner:..-R:..on_"_'•-Jon-es"""!'_.. ': 992-2007.
Mowing and Olhor odd joba, 740-

;.. •

en

Full Time L.P.N. SITE SUPEII·

All Ytrd IIIII MUll 81 Pekl In

· TONt'S PORTABLE WELDING

day. European Union lelderl muat P.lot i
COUfll out of 1 tangle of dllputel or rlllt delayIng their plan to drtiW In lhalr
hllll Mlghbon
In hopn of finally ending the poatwer cllvlllon
of Europe. (AP)

119, Pl. Pleasam.wv as550.

Adnnco. Deed line: 1:OOpm tho
before the ed 11 lo run,
' Surld.oy
Mondoy odl!lon·

: 'Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive

'Little group in lonely fight over
··vatican's Jubilee celebration.
ROME (APl - Prediction No. I:
The Vatican's nonstop celebrdtions of
_Christianity's 2.1l0111h binhday could
IJraw 20 million people to Rome.
Prediction No. 2: It's going to be
an unholy mess.
· The lirst f~ca•t is the official
one. The second comes from Rome's
self-appointed Jubilee watchdogs.
who view the impending invasion of
visiiOr!l with dread.
Much of their fear and loathing
.centers on traffic. the curse of the
Eternal- and eternally bottlenecked

Free Estimates

RADIATOR.REPAIR

OFFICIALS PLOT COURSE • Brltllll Prime
'Minlatll' Tony Blair, center, hllka with German
Chancellor Helmut Kohl, left, 11 German ·
Finance Mlnlater Theo Weigel, right, lookl on
at the atart of the Euro Summit In Cardiff Mon-

getlc and people oriented .
Please aend resume to P.O. Box

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

740'·742·3411

,. ·

.Money and power wrangles
.cloud EU drive
to reunite Europe
.
.

flee In Pt Pleasant. We art took·
tng for a team player that Ia •ner-

Pomeroy,

Roofs • Decks • Garages

•t
•

Experienced Dental Aulstant
needed lor a high '-&lt;:h denial ol·

ldltlon • 2;00 p.M.
Frldoy. Mondoly• 10;00 o.m. Sllurdoy.

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding ·

:

Hrl.

. . P*l In Ach•a.
Qf!Df!NE: 2:00p.m.
. . clay bllolw . . Ill
1110 run. Sundly

New Construetlon &amp; Remodeling
Insured

VENDING rto. ·Muol ..tl I~ II
21 lnvnt SGK To Earn S41C +I
Mo. No Glmmlcka. Striout 11'1 ·
qulrlres Only. 1-800-813·1533 24

Galllpolll
&amp; VIcinity
AIJ, Yood Ioiii MUll

.SDNSft -BOMB
CONS,.RUC,ION

.

Help wanted

110

Y1rd Sale

70

NATO forces stage aerial dri-lls over Albania, Macedonia '

9

The Dally Sentinel • Page

llondly,June15,1998

1·740·949·2015

•

.

-·

•

•

(

•

�Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 .• The Dally Sentinel

•

Monday, June15, 1998
June 15, 1998

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

Ohio

---

NBA Crosaword Puzzle
ACROSS

1,.

PHILLIP

I

I=,A.D.

ALDER

10A....,.,....

HelpWanted

110

• Progre'nlve long ·Term Carl
FacUlty Specializing In Skilled
• And Rehab Service• Has Re·
• warding Positions Open For
: Friendly, Oulgolf"G And Dedicated
• RN's (Part-Time). Plaasa Apply In
· Person At Scenic Hills Nursing
Canrer, J11 Buekrldge Road, Bkl~r . OH45614
Rtlt,LPN'a, CNA'I
PFIN wort;, top pay. choose when
&amp;. where you worlc. Capital Nursing Agency 1·S00.576'6:148.

Siding applicators &amp; carpente r
helpers Must have lransporla·
lion, 7&lt;0-992-69 15 beiwoen 10am

440
31M', 1 1&gt;81~ , OUII!ack 01 Nail( til·
...., on 112 acre. 304-882·3&amp;45,\

3br, 2 baths, fireplace , ali elec·
trlc, cotner lOt, 2211 Wa&amp;hlngton
Avo. Pl. Ploasan1, shown by appoilb'nont304-675-4515
9 room housa wl111 baaamont, 2.5
aorts, 1111n driwway, netclo work,
as Is, 87,500. Texas Road, 740.
895-5311 .
tr.
Approx. 112-ac:re land with 4br, 2
baths. $25 ,000. 112 mile on
paved road Pleasant Ridge Rd.
Gallipolis Ferry, WV. Very nJce
locetibn . School bus goes right '
by house. 304-n:l-SO.O.
.

NEW, BEDROOM
($18,995)
OAKWOOD HOMES Borbouro·
Yilt 30ol-736-3409

WILDUFE JOBS TO $21 .eo IHR.
Inc. Benefits. Game Wardens.
Security, Malnlenace, Park Aanoera. No Exp . Needed . For App.
And Exam Info Call 1· 800 -813-

3585, Ext. 6475. 8 A.M. - 9 P.M, 7
. Days ids, Inc:

Situations
Wsnted

120

-

2 Payments Move In No
Payments After 4 Years, 1·800·

ol46-2957

(REPO)
811 up on lot, 1!101 Oftof. 800-3838182.

~

Bedroom Apt. SIOYtl and rofrlg
Included. 74 &lt;;our! Sl Gallipolis.
7-2563

New 14 or 11xeo. Only make 2
payments to move In, no pay·
manit- 30HI55'7181 .

2bdrm apts., total etectrlc, appliances furnished, laundry room
facllltlea. close to school in town .
APPlications available at 'ffltMI
Green ~pis. 149 or call 7&gt;10-~21cEOH:~

•vns.

Have open ing for 2 adults In
group noma, Darst PriVate Care
Home, Syracuse, 740-992·3324,
'7&lt;40-992-5023. '

170 Miscellaneous
Chinese f&lt;enpo Karate, R,rivalt
lessons &amp; spamng classes, Jay
Clark, 740-742-2546.

180 Wanted To Do
.\NY ODD JOBS
Shrubs &amp; weeds trimmed, mulch·
ing, llower beds. landscaping ,
s1dewalk
edging,
mowing,
etc . Free Est1ma1ea. Call Bill
304-675-7112.
Circle -N-•Conyalescent Home,
Has 2 Openings Elderly Or Hand·
lcapped Person In My Home,
740-441 -1536.

Cullom Fit Builder '

Double wide 3br, 2 bath,
$1;32~:-dowrr;-$205-:-por moilltic-hiiW"19118 14i70 11\rNtii(!reom,
1·800-tl91-87n.
lncl.... a 81n001hs FREE lol rent.
lnclud11 tklrllng, dlhnte etep&amp;
House lor oalt at 379 Salem. and aerup. Only $187.08 per
Stroot in Ru11and, 5 roomo &amp; 1&gt;8111. month with S1075 down. Call 1with garage and hail basement. 800-83~-32311.
Our o1ths flood aroa. caa at 7&lt;0742-201!5.
NEW BANK REPO'S Only 3 lehl
Still under warranty, owner fl·
Immediate occupancy· cozy two nanclng available. 304 ·755·
bedroom, Iaroe lanced comer 101, 7191.
'
vinyl siding, new vinyl windows,
two car garage, low raxas. 1m- New Ooublewlde 3BR, 2 balh .
maculate, call 7•0-742·8200 or $1,325 Down &amp; $205 por mo. 1·
740-992-3041 .
699-928-:1426.

110

Furnilure repair, refinish and res·
toration. also custom order&amp;. Ohio
Valley Refinishing Shop. Larry
Philips, 740-982-6578.

Three bedroom, bath and hall, In
Mlddlsport, call 74Q-992-J485 af·
llr 5:00 or anytime weekends.
Vinton, Ohio 128 Clay Street, 2
Bedrooms, Very Nice, Flnilhed
Baaemenr; 2Lota, 7-40- 596-1 929.

(A'TTEN110N DEVELOPERS.
CAMPGROUND
COUNTRY ESTATES) ,
38.26 Acres. Approx . 8 Acre
Lake, Mobile Home With Large
Add On Gallla City Water And
Eloelrle $125,000 More Aerllgt
Available, 740-3SH676,

haul junk a~ traSh away. $35/
pietwp load. 304-675-5035.

FINANCIAL

Business
Opportunity

210

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do butl·
ness with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall unlit you have Investigated
llloofforlng.

'

Extra Money Workl~g Part Time.
Set Own Hours, Great For At·
tlrees, Students Or Anyone With
E11tra Time And A Need For
Cash , Realistic Earning Potental
$1,500 $2,000 /Mo., For A Mod·
esJ Investment Of S3.000, 740..
446-8325.'
Start Your &lt;;&gt;wn Erntwoldery IMonovrammlng Business Wllh A Mel·
co EPl Embro1Ciery Machine, Ex·
cellent Condition Include&amp; Ace•
sarles. Das•gns, Fonts, Thread,
Supplies And Training Manuals.
$8,500 7'\(H46-8325.

230

Professional
Services

Livingston's basement water·
proofing, all basement rep airs
done. free estimates, lifetime
guaran1ee. 12yra on JOb e~eperl·
..... 304&lt;875-2145. '

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1.2 Acreage, 1987 Clayton Mobile Home, Chalnllnk Fence, 3
Bedrooms, I 112 Bo1he, $28,000,
740-.. 1-()4117.
1·2xBO trailer or can be used for
offict trailer, S3QOO wlth out air
eondlllofll!r, 14000 wllh, 740·949·
2217, 7:00orii-10.00pm .

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

.1561 .
a acrea or 2 acre lots on Bethel
Rd . wv. No Slnglewldes. 304·
675-7946.
.

APT AVAILABLE NOW
,..,In Rivers Tower now aeeapllng
applfeadone lor 1br. HUD aublkl·
lzod op1. lor oldtrly snd handl·
""""""· EOH 304-675-6679.
Upatalri apartment tor rent,
downtown Galllpollo, ono bod·
room, $235 dapool1, $235 momh,
no pets, reflrencet required, wa·
lor and lra8h paid, total oleelrlc,
7&lt;0-7__,,

450

Rooms

For &amp;ale- nice lot with house on
Gral/81 Hill In Middleport, central
air, 1 112 balhs, many pasalblllllo~ eau 740-992-Q052.

1• x70 '3BR, $999 Down &amp; ONLY
$179 per mo. Free air &amp; hat siclnklg. 1-699-928':1426.
'
'

Furnished ·

Jim Walters Home! Near Comp...
lion Whh 351150 Fl. MOlal Garaga
Building lnsula18d, Also Trailer
Pad Sei; Up, 2 • Aeroa, ·Rural I
14x70 3br $999 down, $198 per Water, Approx. 1 Mllea From
mo. ~.. air &amp; jllolrung. 1-800-691$32,000, 7&lt;0-258-133&amp;.
1
am. ' ' •
1,

Circle Motel Lowest Ratea In
Town, Newly Romodoled, HBO,
Clnemax 1 Showume &amp; Disney.
woe~ Ralea, Ot Monthly Roles,
Conatruction Workera Welcome
740-441-15698,
, I

1

1h80 3br, 2 ba1h, 11 ,325. down,
$205. per mo. Free air &amp; skwt 1699-891-67n,
•

360

'

.\i&gt;t&gt;rox. 112 Aero Trailer Lo1, 1 11
2 Mii&amp;J From Gallipolis On Sr. At
see. 7&lt;40-44&amp;-3413.
F!'f Rent Excollenl Offico Or ~1811
I 01
Space Approx, 718 s1 Wlrh Plenty
Parking located: 26 Cedar,
Gallipolis. 7:'0-256-61161.
Mobile home site avattable bet·
ween Athens and Pomeroy, call
740-395-4387.

1993 ••x70 3br. 2 ba1h, CIA 30oi4511-25IMI"' -.58-1916.

410 Hou- foi Rent

1993 Oakwood •••eo Single
Wide By Ownar: 3 Bedrooma, 2
Ba111s, Wll11 Hoa1 Pump Included.
7&lt;0-3117-735ol, 740-317-741 • .

2 bedroom housa, clean, carpeted, stove, no re1rlgoralor, no Inside pels, dopask required, 7o!C·
982-3090.

510

1993 Skvttne mobile home
28x44 , 3br. 2 ba1ho, CIA, oil·
~~~ 2
nd •~ 000
·~··~· . acroo grou • ....,,
.
30ol-675-7563 or 304-e75-4210.

2 or 3 bedroom houH In· Pomer~
oy, nice yard IOI!h 1reeo, Will eenalder purchue on contract with
~•·~
good ••-•nc:a•. ....,.. per month
plus dapooil, poll extra, 740-69872«.

Appllaneoo:
Recondllloned
Woehora, Oryoro, Aangas. Ro~l­
grators, 90 Day Guaranteer
French City Moy119, 740·4•17195.
'

•••so

1995
2 Bedrooms. 1 Ba111,
All EltC1rlc. Wl1h Slow &amp; Rofrlg·
at U d In I I el d8d
er 01Be
' n erp n ng " u
Mull
Moved, $11,000, 1•0-'
256-6040, Or 740-256-6123.
1995 Cllylon, 14•70, en aiOC1Jic,
call Tom Anderoon 7&lt;0-992·33-41
afltr 5pm.

3 Bedroom On RO&lt;Jit 160,
Near North GaHio ..,
••oo!M•,
Do~
pool. Ne Pits, 740 446 8495 .
I ·5 IEDIIOOM HOMES FROM
f4,000 Locol Gov't I Bank
Ropo'a Call 1-800-522-2730, X
1709.

1996 Kirby Sweeper &amp; Snam·
poorer, Generation •. Price: $800,
Or Take Over Payments, 740·
448--2456.

MERCHMWISE

Household

Goodl

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
waahers, drvert, _
refrigerators,
rongoa.- Skaggs Applloncor, 76
Vine Slrto1, Coli 7o!C-«8· 7381.
1-IOQ-.499-3489.

clotlllrll ....,

2 Grave Lot&amp; &amp; Vault Bought For
$2,300 Sell FQr $1 ,500. 74Q-367·
0347.

.\KC Regl sllrod Boston Terrier
Puppies, B&amp;W, 6 wke old . ·~ol
Cheeked. Fksl Shots. 740-3889306.

Brand Newl Great Glftl CO/video
storage unit. Black and cherr'y.
Never out of box. $125. Holds up
to 940 discs, also holdl tapes.
Call 740-992-1636 aflor 6 pm .
coo &amp; ...... nollnc:ludod.
For Sale: Ciopay 9•7 Molal Ga,rage Door, No" (Wrong Size)
$190; 1 Used wooden 9!8"6'
Garage Door $50, 7&lt;0-245-9654.

•u"e

SchnaUzer, miniature, AKC,
champion bloodline, 740 •667 •
3404.

1989 Dodge Oyneaty, needs
lfansrnlsalon work, 111: body, ex·
Ira molor. saoo. 30ol-n3-5054.

4065.

580

Fruits &amp;
v-•bles

- ..- Black reapbtrrles ready lor you to
pick, Vlrgll'a Berry Pa1ch. east of
Syrocuse on 124, 740-992-2378
Strawberries: Ta~lor·a Barry
Pslell, 2684 Korr Road, Bldqll,
740-2o45·9047.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Grubb'e Plano- tuning 6 repalro.
Problems? Need Tuned? Cell1he
plano Dr. 740-446-4525

610 F1nn Equlpmtot
140 Farmall. fast hitch, cuhlva·
tors, plows, disc. aide dresser,
marking ou~ plow. mowing machine, blade, plattorm, planter, hltl·
.... 7•o-992-1451.

JET
AERATION MOTORS
FISpalred, Now &amp; Rabuill In Sloelr.
Coli Aon Evano; 1-800-537-9528.

.'

18K50 Silo With Rool, $1,750.
Must be take., do~.Vn . 740·388·
9946

Lee's ail woolliOht color carpet ,
15'&gt;25, wl1h pedrllng, 1WO ploeea,
$100, 741J-?92-2961 .

1978 IH, 715 Delsel 'Co"lblne,
1755 Hours, 843, COrn f1ead 810
Groin Hoad 13 Foot Floater 8500
IH 9 Shank Disc Chisel Plow 57
Fool 8 Inch Cardlnai Graln Auger
1991 1.4 Farrowing Crates. 740379·2695!
I I .
I

Lorobl Mulc~lnator Roehargtoble
Lawn Mower $150, 7olo-448-8325. '

1

210 Massie Forg~aon S•,OOO,
300 Gallon Portable Tank, Many,
Uses, $75. 740-245-57~7.

Only 's1 0 qown delivers a com!
pie~• ltvlng room suite, bedroom
and Cllnelte to your door-plus a
frH 25-lnch JV. Call Home Pro~. 1·8611'252·1602.

35 ,MF tractor, gas, $3500, 740985-4195.
Farman Super A with cultivator,
new paint, good tires anl::t condl·
lion, 74Q-982-6803.

Pomeroy Thrill Shop now buying
large outside toys and baby
items, ~t~alkers , toddler car seats,
etc. Tuesday lhrough Friday.' One
1ree TY Iomeii) Beanie Baby with
every $25 or more purchase,
7.40-992r372S.
I

.,.,.,983.

12 Fl. V-Bonom Aluminum Boai 5
HP Motor, Trolllf"G Motor, Tr,I1Sr
28811Sae11,740-448-2610. -·
14 Fl. V-Boftom Aluminum 8..t &amp;
Trlalllr With 10 HP Motor, 01111.
Dep1h Flndor &amp; Banory, $1 ,peo,
7&lt;40 446 8883.
•

'

!t9ts

199~' Cavalier Tilt. Crulae, Auto,'
$37,0001Very Llglll Hal Damogo,
-Asking $5,800 OBO. 740·4•1001JleavoMossago.
1

1995 Chevy Caprice' 4 DoOrs,
.Loaded r 31 .000 Miles, Hall Dam~
age, $8,295. 7o!C-662-7512 EY8nings.

Sears 1611 . metal boat ·SIIIO.
304·675-451'9.
. .~ ..

s-.31M', 2 bll11o. "'"
baetmtnt. hardwood floors, 2
103-13111

porchoo.
good
oondiUon.
ta,IOO. 304-675-1322.
sled'"""· 211111. 4 ~.n,
1-5
of 0../poll. _...,
rd. (740)25H313

s.

311odroomo, t-112 Batho, Solid
oa~ Trim, Dooro, 1-1/2 81ory, 2
Cor Gerege, "lnrvlo" Lol
110.000 740-2JI-1817.

a

ltdlooma. ••••mtnl. 3 Acret.
2 Car
Ne1urel Gae,SIOO.OOO. 11110 llou10 110, 740311M1134, 740-3117-7917.

oar.,.,

-PEANUTS

110.. ••-o~-.wv.
:IMIII II

Huge 21k10 38R, 1 1/2 bath.
81artlng II ONLY $39,11119. Mony
opllona ovalloble. 1-111·821·
3421. '
Llrgt IIIIC110h Of UMd ~, 2

or 3 llodtoomo. Sllrtif"G al'l2895.
Quick dollvory. Call 740·385·
8821. '

LIMITED 01'1'111

1998 ~dt 0 Down $215
month. Free dollnry &amp; eel-~p.
no lind - e d. DtiiJ at Doii-

-

. . . ...,_HirD,WV-711-

2 bedroom, In """""'· S2IO por mon1h, dopoel1 81110, wa10r a·

rrael&gt; pelcf, no pe11, coli 740-1112-

~-

~

""'*·

~~~~~ I·Tctnnlleelll
Four horstt· one Reglatered
Wallcor gelding; two

540 MllclllneOul
~-

550

113
"'"' . .. .
1100, Wil111ke
MorqUla -lng ee1 112 caro1 I
elzo 7, Plid fUOO, "Ill 1oktl
112110; "'ddlng go!Wn ""h vou '
elu 7, peld 1700 Wll1 lake f300·
740-317-&lt;11181or7-2,j81. '

Pole BUilding llpocialo: 2••,.2•19.
"ilh '"o 10'11' ovorhood doors,
one 3' entry, lneulo1od roof &amp;
ooamloea
guuer,
$61148.
30'1148'18' """ one , ••,,, slkllno
door, one 3' ontty, _ _, gul-

1818 NinJa too 11. Yonce and
Hlnta PIJII. good condlllon .
t2,l100.00 (740)-448 2201

151, $7385. '

-·-diamond .......
uso:

'

1 11c1a...

u - "..
S1Jppllee

..,_,,..,,_eo-.

Inc. 1·1100-31Jf-302e, 74Q,ft2,
Mil.
t.

Arabian geldlf"GS; ona Flegle!Ored
quarterhorae mara; 7•0·742·
2050.
-----Limoualn bulla, three yoarllngo.
pollod pack loader grandaons,
S700oeell, 74Q.896-27U
NIIIOn'l Cullom PrOCtflllng
now open. Formerly Jonea Cua~
tom, 2573 Vatoe Croealng Road•.
Millon, WV. WO dO YOCUUm
pooklng. 304-743-5400.

Angua Bull, 2 Ysere
..... """""· 740-381-7224.

1973 Chevy Truck, 6 .Cylln&lt;Mr,
Auto, Folr Condition, s•oo, 140«1-1083.
1988 Ford F-160, 314 Ton Plci!Up, $2,1109, 7&lt;0-446-3570•
1889 Chevy Suburban 31• ton,
ex... ahape in I out, no ruat, 2
drlvi. PMna 304-875-:1823
wno ........ - . . . _.
11192 Ford E•ptoror 88,000 mlltl",
Florida vahlelt. $6,800. 080.
304-6715-&amp;139.
19114 Chevy Suburban 1500 nrloo, loaded, •e.ooo mlloe,
$24,000, 740-7-42-20118.

Home
lrnpt'OYetnontt

BEDEOSOL

IIAIIMINT

WATIRI'IIOof:llo
Unconditional ftfellme guaranlu
LOCII rtfertnCtl furnllhld . E• .
1975. Crrf12. Hro. (7401
«e-_01170, 1-IOQ-267-o578. Rog.

"

-

. . Wllt;pruu;~ng.

~·

'

....

C&amp;C Ganorol Homo MilO.
1onsnco- Polnung, vlnrl 0~,
carpon1ry, doora, windoWs
- " oellmoto
""""
lnd .,;,._
"
call Chtl,
740-982-

,
840 Electrical lind ,··
~.

'

co-

RefriiiOI'IItlon r·:

..,.;;g,

R..klln1lll or
11195 S·IO Truck, Y·8, Air Under
30,1J00 Milts. 740-J41-51eo.
' ,_.,....or llpllra MMisi.Ll:
conoid olocklclan. · Rrde-"'
114 s-10 Eleoll Condhlon. Pa to E1oe1riCII, WVoooaoe, 304-IJJ1711.
Sail. (7o!Cj'41UI!8l ·

Pass

Pass

4•

capital

12 Split apan
(2Wda.)

East

Pass

All pass

l'JJ(L'( '· t .t.D:if
5Jl( BN.J.!&gt;

I

I"
LN'f

Ill£
II·~
F!mt&gt;IIOf\l'f-

NIJoiTIH&gt;~ I

GIJ~~

OH. !tt&amp;HT. ..

I

FORGOT

YOU CHAI.·

LEt-luEI&gt;

TO
THAT

HIM

OUEL ..

By Phillip Alder ·
The dealer opens the bidding,
then there are two passes around to
you. This puis you in the balancing
position. There are three bid~ that
change meaning when used in the
balancing, rather than in the direct.
position. Let's look a1 them over the
ne~t three days.
First, a jump overcall. In lhe
direct position (second seal), it is a
weak bid, promising some 6-10 highcard poiniS with a decent six -card
suit.
In the balancing position (fourth
seal), one uses an intennediate ju~p
overcall. II shows some 15·16 high·
card poiniS (good 14s and bad 17s
qualify) and a respectable six-card
suit. 1be South hand in today's diagram' is ~rfect. North's' raise was
debatable, but i( he had passed. it
would have lessened the story.
West led the spade king, East
overtaking with ihe ace and returning
the ei~ht. For want of something bet·
ter to do, West played a third round
of spades.
Declarer ruffed and had to play lhe
heart suit without loss. Nonnally, he
would enter the dummy and lake a
fkst-round finesse. hoping· to find
Ea.,t with the queen. Yet thai couldn't be right here. Why not?
The key is Easl's first-round pass.
He ha.~ already shown up with lhe
spade ace. If he h:&amp;!ithe hean queen
a~ well. he would have had six
poinls and made a response. Therefore, West had to have lhe heart
queen. South ca.~hed the ace and king
of hearts. feeling that il wa.q nothing
·more than his due when the queen ,
dropped. Declarer drew the last lt;Ump
and'led'a club, bul West won with the
ace to save the overtrick.
1
Remember the balancing inter·
mediate jump overcall.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

=-..

by Lult Campoa

Cellbrtty C4ptler Cl
Each

CNIIIed hom QUOIItlonl by llmOUI people put and pr8lenl
ln lht .... lllndl for llnOCh« Todllly'J l;lw; V .,U., J

'DPHBDIIZ

J T B H W ·D T

VHWBKPM

I

YHHFRKD

DYZGQ

IZKRQJH

I

z

I

H'FPPLLP :

YRLP ' G

JTP

HL

KZJW. BP. '

KZUZBBH

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Sen. John Glenn will be the first aslronau1 ever to
mix Tang wllh Metamucu.· - (Ove~ard by) Sen. Richard Durbin.

wo ..
.AMI

8 Rearrange
letters of
four sc:romblod words

·

the

be-

low 10 form ' four llmplo words.

I

I

YACLLM

1
1

1

I ·I
'

'

•

.:• Tuesday. June 16. 1998

.,, .. A ll&gt;nJ·time desire you've been
_~~tly )'eaminJ for could ~~ to
, fR11IIon in the year ahead. Don I grve
.. up on your dreams, even when oul·
;~wlu-d appearaftce5 -m daunting.
-:&lt;• Ol!MINI (May 21-June 20)
. You're in a rovorable trend where
ma~erial interests are concerned.
lmpreuive clwtc:es for sains m
wsible today, 110 be alert for unique '
.qjlportunitiea. ,'l'ryina to patch up a
'broken romance? The AslrD-Graph
"f.tiiiChniaker can help you undtr!!laJld .
Whll 10 do to make the relationship
Work. Mail Hill Station, New Yott.

,,

I I I

' .
SC~t.M'·LETS

.,, MONDAY

_____ SCIWICEL__

Ajlplilr1CI hriS And Blrvloe· AI
Namtllrlnds OVor 25 ,._.,.-e1•
perlenoo 10,11 Worh Guoren1tld,
French City Moy1ag, 1110~ 41 •

9 Sconcllnavllln
11 Allo.re

leland
• IEeoences

ANSWI!ItS

, Starry- Radio • EKist • Beside • DISASTER .
Those who mistake a stroke of luck·for their own merit
·will run into a DISASTER
5

a••

0

North

I•

-

l'o!&gt;Up C - r lor Sole 01 TrNs,
aquar Value. Good cond~"1'·
(740)387-1879or74fl.441 -1033 1
Star Craft CMIPing lriiiOl lor ....
gat rurnace,
range ant re·
~iiiSfllo?r. fiOOO, 304-112·29811.

.

7 --taan

SEEN PROOO
OF '1'00 ..

camp&amp;n~&amp;

110

Weal

WOUI.O HAV'S

+·

7

I Ple - - moda

•

THAT WAS
600P.• M05&amp;S

1978 Camper· Prowtor 11 Fl. Elx·
celltn1 Condition, U,too, 7olllo
448-1754.
;1

1955 GMC 112 Ton 292 51• Cylin~!:i,i ~~d , ~~~ Orlglnol, .J25,

dOwn
35 Ub • modal
31MIIo--tung
37 Judge In •

'

'40-

720 Trucks for Slle

Tuni upelde

1

Auto Parte &amp;
Accessories.

'73 Duchcrafl camper, sen e~
1alned, good ahapt, $7110,
2•7-3125.
,. '

1

r

·YES ...

19&amp;8-PaeoArrow-3411. 1ooae'cll
buomonl, I .S 'gen . 2 AJC, f'W
awn. levelen, quetn bed,..
cond, 304-675-1731.
1

FREE DCJUILE.WIDE
Slop by Oak,ood Homoa o1 Nl·
tro. WV. I fiGIIttr to •In fret
doublowldo, no glmmfc~e. Only

GQU.."'(, CJ.\ IEfI

.,

OIP
HEA!l.
ABOUT
THAT,

SUMMERFUN
.
1967 Oceaolc Sea Imp 18Q"-·
Mercrulser lnlboard engine. 1111.
doep-Y wltrallor, Ills Jaekel• I
bumpers. $2,250 080. 740+4413814.
'

Scootera, Electric Wheelchairs,
Sales: Ronlal , Trado, No!W &amp;
Uted, Bowman's Homecare, 740448-7283.

w.

.,

r

Motor Homos :

wawr &amp; dryer pair wi1l1 ~" vocuum cleaner. Only •10 down
2 _, · Ne - · 1225' Woathii~J 22&gt;2&amp; Gun With
defiYiro to your ooor. Coli Hemo
Mo., $100 DopaoM, lncludoo We- :':!,~~~w 11,400 OB.O; 1•0- . ' - . 1-188-262-1802.
630
Livestock
"'· 740 446 31117.
Washer and dryer, $150: oornar
2 bldroom mobllo homo In 530
Antiques,
cupboard, ·oaklno $150; 1 .a-m. , •~!~,!•!a!r Qld Angus Bull, Calving
_._1
' New Trend, 802 Sire,
- . nope11, 740-tiii·N&amp;e.
Bur or ooll. Rlvorine Anllquoe ,
- .
7o~G&lt;1;41·1883.
2 ledluom 11111oro In llmelllall- 1124 E. Moln Street, on Fit 124,
Wattrllnt Spoelol: 31• 290 PSI
I' Perk, Ro1oronc10 I Dopoall PomOIIY. Houro: M.T.W. 10:00
$21 .95
1' 200 PSI .50 lb. Boby Plgo, Soli For $40,
.,_.._. Ne ~ 7~--1104
a.m. to 1:00 p.m., 8undrrt 1:00 10
f37.00
Brase Com- 740-311NJ347. ,
•...,..._, .... ~
•
~ : oo p.m. 740·1t2· 2521, Rues

., -

'[

KL PRO 120' Bass Boa11ncl- '
Mlnn Kola 3. 1 HP Motor, Sooety.
Charger, Trailer, Acciee'todtl.
Never, Used! Price Reduced To
$1 ,595, 74Q-446·8325.

1995 Buick Park Avenue, Eataie
Car, 28,000 Milts. Garaged Kop1,
Prlca ~15,500, 740-446-3570.

790

Boanlo Bablts, .\norred ReUrild, 112 And Up. 740-IU5-9618.

-ANI&gt; TOFV.

i

Kawasa~l STS Jal akl, oiiH undier
warranty. three &amp;eater, 183 hor.._
,power, bough\ now July o1 't1,
three matching Kawaaakl. lkt
v;aats and l,raller all go •wllh 1tl.
SSOOQ, 74Q-84~ or 740-!14'2045. will Consider trade ·ror •
'good ponloon boat.
'

1992 Lumina Z34, ax . cond.'
98,000 mllos.' 304·675-7059 after
5pm.
1,

196J Ford Dump Truck 1 112 Ton
Good Motor, Good SIHI Bod'
$1,400, Or Make Ollar; 1873 llf4
Ton Pick-Up, 380 Motor, RobuiH
Carb , No Tran&amp;mitllon, Goad
Tires .\nil WhHis 1250, 1!101 Otior, Good For Parle, 740·i••·
3969, Carl
Gilleepro, 3930
Stare Routa 588, DaiiCIOIII, OH.

e.OIS'Ttlt,
ITt AI'

J

Now goa tanks 6 body peril. I) 1
R .\ulo. lllploy, WY. 304-37'2·
39:13"' 1-800-273-9321.
'

· 11'

HOI'IIIS for Sale

: ~~~"'~'"''( '

Jon Boar U Fl. Trailer 4.5 Hilh
Powor GasOline Mariner _ ,,_,
lba. Trollif"G Motor AH For $1,l100,
7&lt;0-367-7401 .

Riding lawn mower With your
choice or a free push mower or
WHCI elltr. Only S10 down delivers to ~r dOOf. Call Home Produc1e 01-818-252-1602.

Tappan etaclrlc range In good
condllon, 7o!C-992-e&amp;03.

S'V,, TUrf

35 Horse Power Johnson• GOad.
Condillon, 1100. COl Ba- 1 -6
P.M. 304-675-5131 .

760

Your Area John Deere .Dealer
For Roaldonllar And Commercial
Lawn Equipment Compoe1 Ulfllly
Trac1ora From 20 To 39 HP. All
Sizoa 01 4 WD And 2 WD ~erm
Tractors, Hay Equipment, John
Deere Skid S1oor Loadora. ChiCk
Wilh Ua .\bou1 Financing Aa Lo,.·
AI 2.9% On Lawn Traerors And
'LOW! Ralo Flnan&lt;:ing On Now' And
Used Equipment. Carmtchael'l
Farm I Uwn Galllpolla, OH 740446-U121-800-!51M-1111.

IT'$

l'D tJ:lVf.. TO !

:··: uf(£ TO&lt;.O.RX

22 Ft Saa Ray Cuddy Cabin
Hardtop lncludu Dining Aroo
Wl1h Sink, Alcohol, Stove, Bul.-111
lee Cheat, S1oroo, Port -A -Ponr.
Now Lower Unh. Gimblo Ringo,
Exhaust Manifold, Steering. C•
bloo, Bonery, Slaln1oso StHI
Prop. Cusromlzor1 Storage ~.
$11,500,7-7108.

Rtfrlgtraloro-Only S1 0 down doliver&amp; 10 your door Free ml·
crowaYe. Call Home Product&amp; 0
1-888-252-11102.

.Or1gln. or any lr118nllon 10
. make any such ptefeteuce,
limKallon or chcrirnlnatlon.•

~10

......~.
.. .

~:THE BORN LOSER
. _r~ WJUI.D '(00 . . - - - - - ,

1V95 SeaD·oo XP 15 HP;
Polarla 3 Soolar eo HP, on uoublo Trailer Wllh Slonlge llol, 140367-09511, 7&lt;0-3117·7379.

sex familial status or nationlt

REI\L E-,TIIlc

~,

1989 24' Pontoon Boar, 7Q H'
Johnson, Full Eneloauro. "-r11·
pany, $8,l100, 7o!C~7 """
5P.M.

All real estate advertising In
this - p e r Is sobjeCIIO
!he Fede&lt;al Fair Houslf"G l\e1
Q11968 w111ct1 makes ~ illegal
10 adYertisOJ -.,prole......
limitation Of disCrimination
baled on race, color, religion.

"'

TOI&gt;AY•

NErl

1988 Four Wlnno 180 Frt~C~&lt;P.
•cyl , Inboard, ••· cond. garage
kllpt, $4,800. neg. 304-e75-7q.

'
1992
Chevy Corvelle Coupe.
Loaded, so,ooo Mlloa, 515,500
740-682-7512 EY0111ngs

4 Numaro5 FooHike pan

{CIIIgO)

In the balance

.ANI&gt;

15' SlaSiar 11981 '1Bmahl40 ftP
OUiboard Ef"Gina, Fully ErteiOetd.
Cuaomllzod Top Runa Gr...d
$2,700, OBO 7110-416-7101!. •

1

34

Opening lead: • K

'85 Four· Wlnns, Inboard/out·
board, 1T, loiS ole&gt;dlao, $5000,
7&lt;0-992·7410.

1995 Chevy Mon10 Carlo Z34
Leather lnllrlor CD Player, load·
ed, 46,000 Mllea. 740-2•S·9•eo,
. Aflar5PM.

Prllneatar- low installation with
rabalo, filii rnon111 1roe, lroe HBO.
SrarOna special S4V lne1altallon,
800-283-2640.

Mil. L.EDBffiER·-010 YOU KNOW
TUliT SUMMIR SCHOOL IS
FIXIN' TO START? - -

750 Boats &amp; Motort,:
.
. for Sale
;

199t PlymOuth Laser, auto, red,
new englne-40,000 miles, new
tr8nsmlsslon· 2,000 'fT'liles. 304. 675-1458.

• 9 7 52

• 6 4 3
• 9 6 52

,.

YolhlmOJri

1991 Fleetwood Bounder Mo1or
Horfle 34' Low Milos, Pallo AwnIng, ' Chavy Chaasls Wl1h 45•
Motor, 2 COleman Roof .\C 1J.5
BTU Each, Sustained Moderato
l!odY .Damage, Formal Repair Ea1]ma11 On File, Aaklng $28;000.
For More Information Cali Chris
Erv" Al740-441·3010.

• A 8

East

Soulb

" RARNEY

&lt;;;:

. 318-2647,laave~-

DOWN

Vulnerable7East-West
Dealer: West

1998 CBR 800 Smol&lt;in
Replica 500 Milito,
~
hau11, Many Exttaal 740· 2f59480 Allor 5 P.M.
,

1990 Nl111n Sonrra. black, 2-dr,
4sp, good eond. $2 ,000 . OBO.
304-682-2904.
1991 Chevy Corolca 3.1 97.000
Milos, nn• .Crulsa, AMIFM Radio,
Excellent Condlllon, $3,000, 740·
441-&lt;1487.
1991 Dodge Doy1ona Shelby Turbo •FuMy Loaded, High Miles, E•·
Clllent Cond111on, $4,000, 740·

......

57 MecllttrraMan

tAK4
• 6 3'

1998 Yamahl Kodlok 4 Whtlfltt
209 Mlltl, Big fOOl Kit. W~_!1"
Like New, $4,500, 740-245~
Aflar 5 P.M.
T :

1990 'cavalier 2 Dooro, $1,795;
1991 Shadow Convenlblo $3,295;
1989 8-10, 1991 S-10; Cook Me·
tors. 74o-«H103,'

115 lhrchant
115Wa-ol

lla....,....

9AK1~872

1994 Gold Wlf"G SE Many Exriao
Excallenr Condlllon, Low -.go,
.\s~ng ' " ,500, 740 448 4525. '

oao.

41i=p~~-

4li CEO, e.g.
4t1WM of split
51- Mary
{ber ordor)
54 On 1llt fritz

21 MD'acMit ·
27 Singer o.mone 1Meay2 Cry of pain
301Md
3 Larla1
32 Teb·otl

• 4 3

1991 Honda 250x 4 W-~
01 N!'W Sluftl740-441·1419. ·

1989 Ford LTD Crown Victoria
Station wagon $3,000,
7&lt;0-

. COhlanlpt
23 Dlm11CU811

South

1988 Quad Sport Suzuki '230
$900, .74Q-2!51H8011.

1987 Dodge Aries LE, 4 Doors,
Automatic, Dependable $950,
7~19-9278.
.

20 Trwtwtdi

• ·K Q J 10 9 5
• Q 5
• 8 3
• AJ 4

Motorcyclet .

Fool pert

1tllebrew~ .

•

Weat

1981 Honda CA-•oo low mllita.
... cond. $1 ,200. 304-615-1218,.

1986 Chevy Celebrl1y Station
Wagon. $150. 1990 Goo Storm
$2,500.304-675-6430 all8r 5pm. ·
1986 Dodge Lancer, 4 Ooots, AT,
R
Good·~ '"• 927
· uns
...,., ~ro- 8.

1989 Chevy cavalier ~-2• . burgundy, 5•&amp;p, A/C, PW, PB,
$3,800. loan value, take S3.SOO.
30ol-675-5069.

Musleal
lnstrumentt

740

1963 Monte Carro. new polnl ,
lnranor, show or race. alol of
chrome, runs 880's In 1f8ML .
very qu~. very aharp, $4,300. or
trade lor lara modat lamny car.
304-173-5054.

Registered Doberman Puppy. 6 11
2 Mon1hs Old, All Shots, Ears
Boon Cropped, $100, 740 _4• 1_
0750, After 3:30 P.M.

Fender Slral EloC1rle Guitar $300,
Peavoy. Amp $75, OBO, 740-446-

Go1 A Haacl Up On The Compotl·
11on. For Only $6.00, My Booklet
Will Tooch You S1ro1tgloa To
Win Your Fontaay Week . For
More Information. Call Kevin At
732-940-9338.

'

198:2 Cutlass Supreme, 2 D. 250
V8. Good CondiUon , SUOO Or
Bast Offer, } 4o-992-4586.

·570

SlOt

t998 Dodge Rain 4•• 11!00
Loidsd, 36,000 Mlloo 115,500,
Negollallle, Blaelc, Sllortllod, 740379-9384 .

1MD ·11190 HONDA CARS FOR
1100 Seized' &amp; Seld LoeaHy This
Month. Call 1·800-522-2730 Ext
•
4429

Eight monih old Cocker spenlil,'
Aeglllorod , malo, all shore.
hotaabrolr8n, 7&lt;0-992-6848.

NoTICE
FrenchCilr Pol Grooming
-Oponl
Proleaelonal Grooming by Ap·
polntmenta. Over 15 yrs. exparl·
ence, ~ven.lng appointments
available, 850 Soeend Ave. GalIIJOIIB, OH. 740-446-1528.
Ran Terrier Puppies, 740 • 245 •
5597, 7&lt;0-245-5711.

nego-.

1973 Buick, low miles, 7•0·949·
2940.

CfA Roglo!orod HlmaltWan Kil·
lans, Exira Nice, 740-446-3166.

HAPPY JACK U FLEA
LAR: klllo lleai, lick, lllll miles
wltbgut systemic poisoning. J o
North Produce, 740·••8·1933.
(www.happylacklnc.com)

1995 Ford Aerollar XLT, PCI'!If
locks, cruise, air, 8 PltNngilr,
82K. $9,800
7&lt;0-7d7243. 740-742-2333.

17

06-15-18

• 7 6 2
• J 9
• Q J 10 7
• K Q 10 a

c....

1966 Dodge Dart, • Door&amp;, 740·
379-2720 AFTER I P.M.

1980 ·I990Trucka For 5100111
SllzedAndSekl
Locally Thio Morrth.
Trucks, 4x4's, Ere.
1-800-522·2730, X 3901 .

North

1992 Chf!Y C-20 Mork Ill
version Exctlltnt Condition.
$9,500 740-441-1013.

710 Autos for Sale

46-lneh big screen TV with free
VCR . Only $10 down delivers to -.\j("KCCFRlog;;l1:i;,;;;.diRR~Wo;;;;, 11"
og ora
ott
your d9Q£. qall Home Produell 0
..Belllfy To Go 81211198 · 2
1 - 668-_252:'~ -- - - F.emalts, 740-38&amp;-9768.
Approx 200 New Folding CMirs,
Alao Other Morehandlsa, 740· Australian Shepherd Puppleo, 1
~~~~~ Malo Tricolored,
258-1270.
BOTTLED WILL POWER! LOSE
Up To 30 PQunds, 30 0.\Y MON·
EY BACK GUAfiANTEEI No1ural,
Doctor Recommended, 740.44,1982, Free Samples.

1967 Ford Rongar 4K4, 6 s.,.lcl.
Tinled Windows, Sunvisor, Spoilor, E•eellenl Condlllon, $3,100,
740o446-2124.
'

TRANSPORTATION

7~31.

~·0
' 15 Wlndr
158uayMa -

~

740.«6-2751. '

2411~ .

Pets for Sale

14 Dllw

1981 cnevy 4K4, 350, Runl Qa

Round bales of nav 4 mllas out
Ashton/Upland Road. 304·576-

A Groom Shop -Pet droomfng.
Featuring Hydro Bath. Don
Shoots. 373 Goorgea Crook Rd.

1

' Real Eltate
,Wanted . ,

.Cash Paid For Land In Galli•
1987 Schultz 2br, 2 baths, fl~ e- ' Coun1y, Blackburn Really,' 1•0place, good rental property ln. 446-0008.
Mason on Aullorlcutters Lane.
We Buy Land· 30
30ol-682·2346.
I
·We Pay Cash. ,:&amp;o,o:213~~3$5;
AnllOny Und Co.
1986 Oakwood, $9,500 . wl1h
16x24 add-on $.13,500. "ilh garage &amp; lor $29,5oo. ao•-882RENTALS
3742.

560

Now 1n srOerc: urN~tr ' Treliers 5' &lt;e·
• 5' X10'
• &amp;'X12'
76"X18' KtiHII
'
I I
'
Traolor &amp; Equlpmen1. 740-446"8906.,
1

Gal"""'

uw-·•

Building
Supplies

Block, brick, aewer pipes, wind~
ows, lintels, etc . Claude Winters.
RIQ Grande, OH Cell 7•0·2•5·
5121.

Extra Nice 2 Bedrooms, All Elec·
trlc , Furnished Kllchtn , WID
Hook-Up, Cion To Spring VBIJoy,
No "-Is, 1375/Mo., Plua Re1tr· . 1602.
"""""· Dtposll, 740 448 8157.
Fully furnished efflalency apart" Compltlo Sol Of I 99 1 Enc:yclopomon1 lor ren1, eeumry sanlnG. cal dla Britannica Including Refer740-W-2292 af1or 5pm or leave ence Books, Never Used, Exceltoni Condition. $400, 7•0·446ma·rsge.
7106.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 l!adroom
apartments at Village Manor and ;Computer &amp;y&amp;tem wllh frH print·
Alveralde Apartments In MJdclle- i•r. Only S10 down dellvara 10
por1. From 12•9·1373. Call740· your dOOr. Call Home Produell 0
992·5064. Equal Housing Oppor- 1-888-252-11102.
tunillos.
Drake Salelllle Sya1em-dlsh,
Modern 1 Bedroom .\par1monl, In contole &amp; remote for 1ale or
Gallipolis, Aefitrences. Deposit trade for equal value, coat
$2,100. now, 2 Beagle doga, 1ullRoquirld, 7--4782.
blooded, 2yra old, aM aholo, 1211.
Nice 1 Bedroom Apartment, Saara Jon Boat, flbergtafls, with
Country Si~e Apartments, Route 5 112 HP motor, claa&amp;lc engine,
588, $285/Mo .• Water, Sewage, almost new boat trailer. $1,200.
Garboge Included, Depooll Re- altar 5flrl1. 30ol-578-2005.
quired, 1-699-640-0521.
Free camcorder-with purchase of
Now Taking AppliesUons- 35 S2-lnc~ big scroon TV. Only SIO
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse down detlvera to your door. Call
Apanmenll $295/Mo., 740·«6- Home Products 0 1-888-252·
1602.
'
0008.

Commerclai·Offlce or Retail, 87
Mill St Middleport. 1,450 Sq Fl.
s•oo mo.(or oulldivldo lo 1,000
sq ft. lor $300 mo.) Corner Buildlng . (7o!C)-992·6250 .\equlolllons
(nexl door).

1.5 acre partially secluded lot in
Village of Syracuoe. Located on
Roy Joneo Rd. , $9000, 74Q-992·

550

Complete living room
with
lree matching Iampo. Only $10
down delivers to· your door. Call
Homo Produe10 0 1-888-252-

7 5 5885

~;;_;;~--:-:----

'

Efficiency Near Walmart, Stove,
Refrigerator, washer, Dryer, AIC,
Cable $415/Mo., UUIIIIes Paid,
Doposll, 7110-416-2515.

.f'..:::;;.,

Three bedroom house In Harrlsonvllle , new roo'f and siding,
deck in reer, 24' above ground
pool, approx. 2/3 acre lot, call
740-742-21146.

Will

2se&amp;.

Lovely Country Home on $FI 7 Special 16xBO 3BR , 2 bath.
South With A Breathtaking River S1 ,325 Down, $205 Mo. Fret air
View Very Prlvaro Silting On 2 11 &amp; hat aklrling. 1-~l-6m.
2 Acroo But Only 10 Minutes
SPRINOSPECI•LS
From Gallpoll&amp;. 3 ·4 Bedrooms, 2
..
112 Ba1hs, Hardwood Floors, 2
..
Fireplaces, New Heal Pump, Now ·
Kitchen, Many Ex1Jaa. Won'l Lost
11-o. Po)lmen11
Longll $110,000.
·
117,111 on 3BR.
F- DoiiWiy &amp; Sokp
Call Vlrgln1a L. Sml1h Really AI
Only AI 0 . - _ ,
H0-•46-6806 Or Call Cora AI
Nftro,WV. 304-7U-6111
740·245·9•30 For Moro lnforma. TAX SPECIAL
lion.
New 3br $999/down $189/mo.
Middleport, beautiful two story, 3 Free Set-up &amp; Delivery. Only 3
br, 2 bath, large l .r. &amp; lr., oak L •~!.t;m
. ::J.,at ~o kwood
. Homes Nl·
door&amp; ~ Vim, Smith's custom oak
"'· ~
cablne1S, Jtnn-alr rango, dish- 340 Business and
washer, detached garoga, by sppc&gt;lnrmen~ 7&lt;0-992-5243. •
Buildings

Experienced carpenter will do rt·
modeling, decks. vinyl siding.
plumbin'g. Free estlfT'I&amp;tes. Call
Jim Shull. 304-675·1272. Reiereneas upon request ,

Removal. Free Esllmatest Insurance, Bklwell, Ohio. 614·388·
9&amp;111, 61.·367-7010.

Beech Stroot, Middleport, OH 2bt'
furnished apt utilities paid, de·
postt &amp; references. 304-882·

::-:-::----:~---:-

New House, 3br, 2 bath,
teOOsq .fl. Lakin area. 304·77351n.

Proleiaional Tree Service, Stump

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES .\T JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wastwood Drive
from $279 10 $358. Walk to ohOp
&amp; movies. Call 740-448-2586.
Equal Housing Opportunlly.

Single Porenl Progrewt. Special
financing on 2, 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
homes . Payment• 11 tow 11
1110. Cal now 30ol-755-5885.

Mark Cronk, 0wne&lt; 1-7~71 1376 Wlr&lt;lows-Sidlng-DoorsRooflng. lleensed and Insured

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your lOgs 10 rna mil just call
304-675-1957'

3 room unfurnished ·apr. nice lo·
cation, depostt &amp; references re·
qulred. 304-675-1090.

:::::::-:=-:-:=-----

Loaded 28180, 3br,. 2 112 both
with all options, only 12.499.
down, $362. per month. Free air &amp;
sk.,. Hl66-691-6m.

1 Bedroom Apartment Newest

Cen~al Air Condhloning, Froe Es·
tlmatesl II You Don't Calt Us, We
Bolh losol 740-448-8306, 1-600·
291 -0098.

and Cleanest In the ar11, near
Holzer $279/Mo., Plus Utilities .
Dopoo~ and Laasa Required 740-

Ma~•

&amp;5pm.

Wanled: Truck Driver To Haul
Logs. Must Have Truck And
l oader, 7&lt;0-256-1758·Evanlngs.

•COOL QQWNJ•

nlshad and unlurnlahed, security
deposit required, no pet1, 740·
992-2218.

. . C'-: ========-1

- ~-

Apartments
for Rent
1 and 2 bedroom apartmonl•. 1ur-

-10---

. '-lrllll

18"-W..or
Della
40 Derided
GR-

JUNE 15 I

''

�...
Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday,June15,1118

Pomerov • Middleport. Ohio

-Names in the ~ews~ New books added ·to library shelves .
NEWYORK(AP)-AIItbauen·
sion on the small ·sc~n between
Agent Mulder and Agent Scully?
Tune in for the big-screen blockbuster of "The X-Files" and it might
all come together in a kiss.
Maybe. ,
As befil~ the moody, cuhish TV
serb.. David Duchovny, who plays
Fox Mulder is none 100 clear in his
explanation •10. TV Guide in its June·
2o issue.
· "Mulder is forced 10 tell Scully
what she ~t~eans 10 him. And that can
lead 10 rsonal involvement ·There's
·
. pe h .
· ..
detimtely p ys1ca 1 contact, says
Duchovn
·
Co·st!r· Gillian Anderson who
· ·S
h dh
' k
Plays Dana cu 11 y' a h' er own ta e
on the ru~ored ''!'ooc •ng.
screen
.. :"There
. .s an· .mterestmg
·
. .,
·k1ss. But II s questionable whether II s
Mulder or Scully or either of them
with an body elSe:." she says.

...

-

·
.
Over 100 new books, fict10n and ladonna; The lnv~igalor. and Reck- Delight. Freedomland; Galilee; Mesnon-fiction, have, been added ~o t~e less Enct&amp;naenncn.l.
~c in a Boule: There's a Hair in My
shelves at the Me1gs County D1stnct
New larse pnnt books at the Dtn; Fonunes 011 War; Ohosl Coun·
Public Libmry in Pomeroy and at its Pomeroy f111ility are The Way You trY: Contiact with an Angel: Flight of
Middleport Bmnch.
Wear Your Hat Enduring Love; The Eagles; The MOS! Wanted; Predators;
. Librar~ patron~ in aeco~nce Upstart; N is for Noose; The Way · The Transail S.,a; Secnet Prey; The
With today s regulatiOns are perm1ned Home. and No Place of Safety.
nn Man: .BI'CIIIII. Eyes. Memory;
h~ro~c a.~ C~ ~ean-~c Pic~ ~as to check out books for a four week. ·
Non-fiction volul'(les add~ to the Monument Rock; Dou~le Image; A
g . hi d dat sa,. nta Cl~ USmveTrslly penod and may take out seveml Pomeroy shelves are Pumpkm Dec· Patchwork Planer; F1re and Ice;
Wit d stus ent ans. weanng
·
· - ustng
.· M'ICI'OOO•I• omICC.·. 1n Rec kl ess Endangerment, and Bel•
p· d tar . rek · book sat a.· ume.
oratmg,,
::;:" ant. i. c~rrymg •_car posters POMEROY l..IBRARY .
the Kennedy Style; Using Microsoft ladonna.
d seek ng autog';phs.
.
Fiction volumes placed ~~ the . Wiodows; Emily Post's Etiquette; TriThe new adult non-fiction books
He. warn~ the:.-0 ~~~~entsut.cer- shelves of the Pomeroy fac1hty m u~ph o~ Justice; Die Brola! and aJ ~iddlepon include The Joy of
Cft\On~es on atu ay agamst stnctly May were:
.
Usmg Microsoft Excel 97.
Famtly Cam!ling; The Yogi Book;
focusmg on succes.~ and results.
Forever 'and a Day· Mile-High
Juveniler~e~ionbooksaddedtothe Circumeision Ex~;.,. The Com
"Th
tb ·
nd
'
·
.
·
1"".-u,
•
.
~ pa !~ comp1.ex ~. someLove; Aight of Eagles; A Deadly Pomeroy facility nne Poppy and Rye;
umcs h~dden, he ~ald. Only by Change of Course; And Tyler, Too7; · Pri.me-nme Pitcher: The Catcher's
respondmg to that mner vo1ce can Ghost Country· The Predators· Mas(c:· Mystery on Mau1·· Horseflt'e•·
and wort h be authenuc.
· ..
' Paper
·
'
•·
one ·5 I''
•••
Promise Pending·' An Apple for Miss• Karen's
Route· Cybemacker·
And. to a whooping standing ova- Delancy· Every,thing They Ever Eliza~th Loves New'YoriC' Jnva.•i~
,.I0 n. he
· d o ff WI'th. a command Wanted; Secret
'
·
'
. Slgne
Prey; Eternity; Riding of the Body Squeezers;
Dangerous
befinmg. an adventure m deep space
· h'H -L d h H
· The O'rl
-~- R
1 s,· Tripi e. He:""'r.
. ..
·
..
WII ann .... an 1 e orseman,
etum toTer- By DARA AKIKQ' .:roM
or on earth. Make II so.
Old Copper Coli~: Gaptown La~; ro~Towe~; Picllln!·Perfea Prom, and· . Auoclated Preu Writer •
Y
The Aven~ers; ~ad Even; The Tm Wmdy Caty Mystery.
LOS ANGELES _ "The Tru-NEW YORK (AP)- He was the Man·, A Promise for Tomorrow; Free- 1\liDDLEPOJt.T LIB 0 •RY
(AP)
Maybe
d h' D K'ldar · h
""'
man Show" maintained its populariGEN EVA . NY
· ·
young, as mg r. 1 e m t e dom's Challenge·, The Most Wanted;
New adult fiction boo•· placed on
h
••s
spent
much
of
her
life
tight
,n..
The
he
h
·
"'
ty
at t e North American box ollice
·She h~ ·
· 19uv&gt;.
n
was
t
e
agomzed
Contract
·
with
an
Angel;
Double
the
shelves
of
the
Middleport
Bmnch
women's rights but' Gloria F h R 1 h de B ·
• Th
for ~ second weekend, despite chalI.ng 'or
,,
•
at er a P
ncassart on ' e Image; Final Justice; Buuerny; during Ma.y are Freedom's C
. haiSteinem would mther leave the hype Th
B' d " · h '80 N ·
lenges from new relea.~s including
orn ar s '" t e
s. fJW Breath, Eye, Memory; MonuiJient lenge; Mn. Parseter's Plot; Finding Harrison Ford's "Six Days se~en
behind. ·
Richard Chamberlain mostly stays Rock, Storm Tide; Galilee; Bel- Laura. Sooner or Later; Hean's
"I hope I'm not an icon," she told home in Hawaii and· paints.
Nights," occording to industry esti·
the combined graduating classes &lt;if
"I stayed young a remarkably
Hobart and William Smith colleges long time and then fell apart." Chamon.Sunday. "An icon is not a person. berlain. now 63, said with a laugh.
An icon is just waiting for an iconoHe returns to Broadway and teleclastto come along."
vision every few years. He was HenSteinem. - who worked a.• a Play- ry Higgins in a revival of "My Fair
boy bunny in 1963 and then wrote a Lady" a few years back. and canie
critical article about it, and later stan- back for .a sequel to "The Thorn
ed Ms. magazine- urged the more Birds" in 1996.
than .400 gmduates to experience life
But those are exceptions. "The
fully.
business has just gotlen too tough for
:"Anybody who has experienced me," he told The New York Times on
something is probably ·mo(C expert Sunday.
than the experts." she said.

Society

SANTA CLARA Calif (AP)
Who ben 1 ad . ' d · .
. cr 0 VIse gm u~lmg college ~mors th~. the c~plaln of the
Slarsh•p Enterpnsedw:•ch~f~~r all,
or;::e was comh~ e :~ ') Y go
w ene no one. as gone one·
.s Actor Patnck Stewart, k~wn fo~

Weather

•

Today: Partly cloudy
High: 80s; Low: 60a

plete Indoor/Outdoor Grill; Last
Minute Resumes; ~.Positive Power of Pmising; Bnngmg Up Moral
Children. Are We having Fun Yet?;
Emily Posl's Etiquette; In the
Kennedy Strle, ~d Pro~d Sp!rit.
New additions m the JUvenile fiction department at Middlepart are
Disney's Mulan and Locked m the
·
·
·1e nonL1brary
wh'l
1e the new JUVen•
fiction books include Salem Witch
Trials, Webster's New World Stu·
dent's Dictionary. and James Gurney,
the World of Dinosaurs .

Tomorrow: Plltly aunny
High: 80s;_Low: 60s

'Truman'·remains top
weekend movie draw

Reds, Indians post losses, · page 4
Warning signs of. suicide, Page 6 '
First impressions are crucial, Page 6

mates.
" The Truman· Show" earned
$20.1 million this weekend, raising
its ovem(l 191al to $64.6 million. Jim
Carrey stars as Truman Burbank in a
story about a man ·whose life is theworld's most popular tele~ision show.

By BRIAN J. REED

Named to,Dean's List
Joshua Moles of Cheshire has
been nameil to the dean's list at Ashland College in Ashland.
A 1994 graduate of River Valley
High School, and the son of Terry and
Sharon Moles of Cheshire. he is a stu- ·
dent majoring in Toxicology.
To be eligible, a student must be
enrolled full-time and maintain a
gmde point avemge of at least3.5 on .
a scale of 4.0.

s

082

'.

Plans finalized
for annual ACS
Relay &lt;tor Life

I

. ' ··~--~,:;·.I ,II'',,,, \II'
'
I
I
'
Marietta.Dean'~ Lisi
·p II '

1
'
Grad~tes from OU
1
Freddie A. MaL,?" ha., co~pleted
Jason Witherell. Meredith Crow
und~rgmdu~te studies .at Ohao Um- - :Ind Dorothy Leillaeit, all of Pomeroy~
. vers1ty, eammg aBBA m.acc~ntmg. have been named to'the Dean's High '.
and ha.• accepted a pos1110n With the H
. L'
M· .
·
·
Oh' A d't 0 f S
J'
onors 1st at .anetta College for .
f
.
o 1ce o
1o u ' or
tale •m · the spring semester.
Petro. . 1 bee .,,.,._,ed into the
W'the
· s1udent maJo.nng
· · m
·
' re 11 ~sa
He ha.• a so " -~-~· ,
.
computer. sc1ence and studto ai1, 1
MSA ·program
CroWIn
· pne· med'ICIRe,
· and Le'"'- ·' ·
· Se
lmell IQ 1
• at Oh10 d'UmverSJty.
and w111 begm those stu 1es m p- sports medicine.'
.
te,mber.
.
StudenL' must earn' a grade point
A 1994 graduate of Southe~ H~gh avemge of 3.5 out of'4.0 to'be named
, School. Matson 1s the so~ of M1ke 10 the list.
·
and Donna Matson of Racme.
1

m

..•.••

aACRI.ICIIWG
PRO.ITal

1'000
VI!HICLI!SI
A All.

MEMBER

..

FO. . RANIER 41.4 .

DISCOUNTS

•.

EXTENDED

!21 .'208

SERVICE PLANS

#98541 • V-6, 4X4. AIR CONO.. AMIFM.
XL PICG., 3.73 REAR ENO. M.S.R.P. SI6.9DO

UpTo$1,000
· Ownar
lncantive!

!14 '201
1

I

~.

88 FORD WINDSTAR

S11LL AVAILABLE- LumlnariH, lllca theu cJHigiled and dl•
played heN by Joan Wolfe .of Peoplea Bank, wtll figure proml·
nenlly In Salurdlly'a Relay tor Llfa avent. Thl JumlnariH 1111
ciH~o honQr cancer victims anclsurvlvo~. and can IIIII bl
pure
lithe Pomeroy bank for $5.
·
.
..
,

.,

Named to president's Ust
Julie Wandling of Pomeroy and
Amanda Well of Shade were among
18 students at Hocking College
named to the President's list. The
group, comprised of less than one·
half of one percent of the student
population at Hocking College, were
presented the Trustees' Award at
&gt;
commencement exercises on June 14.
Wandling. a second-year student
in )uvi:nile corrections, and Well, -a
first-year business management stu·
dent. were honored at a banquet host- ,,
ed by Hocking · College President
John Light and the board of trustees.

'•
#98421 · V-8, PW, POl', TILT. CRUISE, PREM.
At.NfM CASS., AIR COND. M.S.R.P. $31,799

!27

88 FORD TAURUS

LElA N GILMORE
Shawn D. Gilmone and Vi~ki L.
Hayes of . Pomeroy announce the
birth of their daughter. Leia Nickole
Gilmore, May 18, at Holzer Medical
Center, Gullipoli~.
Paternal grandparents are Richard
and Zelma Oilmone oJ Pomeroy.
Maternal gmndparents are Nancy
Hurlow of Clifton, W. Va. and Bill
Haye,, of Rutland.

CHRIS .BUCHANAN

Receives aWIIrd

The University of Rio Omnde ha.~
presented · Reedsville a:e~ident
Christopher Buchanan wtlh the
Atwood Award for Excellence. He is
a recent gruduate of Eastern High
School, and the son or Greg
Buchanan and Pam Helmick.
He plans to study business at the
URG.
.
The award is presented tostudenls
inhonorofthe university's founders,
Nehemiah and Peimelia AlWood.
and co~en full tuition for the recipient. Eligibility is based upon scholastic ac~ievetnent. aptitude
lest scores
,.
'

883 1;1~~

STAY

INFORMED....
READ

YOUR
LOCAL

Nf;WSPAPER
•

LX

' #98605 - V·B, AUTO .. AIR COND., PW,
I'OL, TILT, CRUISE. &amp; MORE. M.S.R.P. $21,605

!17 533
FORD EXPLORER

.

Plans are being finaliud for Sat
y's Relay for Life, a fund-mising and
social event sponsOred by the Mei
ounty Bmnch of the American Cancer Society.
.
.
The relay begins at p.m.. .and will be held at the midway area of the
Rock Springs Fairgrou s.
·
Teams from across I county are collecting contributions for the event,
with each learn member having a goal of $100 in contributions. Teams will
take turns walking laps around the midway area..and food, drinks and local
entenainment will keep team members occupied when they are no! walk·
ing.
•
Cancer survivors who panicipale in the Relay will walk the fint lap. and
will then be joined by ocher walkers. •
·
Payne;dise'Jcieliey from WMPO radio, ~Millie t~ emcee M:l!li'i!V8r
and Corri~nd, a local cancer survivor, will be the guest speaker.
Entenainen who will.perform at the event include vocalists Tammy Tay·
lor and BJ Smith. l!Jvis Presley impersonator Dwight Icenhower, The Big
Bend Cloggen and Midnight Cloggen, Swinging Seniors, and-the Dazzling
Dolls baton group. .
·
Like last year's event, this year's relay will conclude with a luminary service, honoring those who have died from cancer. The luminaries are available at Peoples Banking and Trust Co. in Pomeroy at a cost of $5, with all
proceeds going to benefit the ACS.
'fhat luminary Aervice· will' begin after 9 p.m.• and the names of those
remembered with luminaries will be read.
Bank day for .teams panicipating will be held on Tuesday from 3to 1 p.m.
at the conference room !II Veterans Memorial Hospital. Teams are asked 10
tum in money collected at that time.
•
It's not too late. IQ fonn a teain, acconling to Ferman Moore, executive
director of the Meig.• branch of the ACS. Velma Rue of Middlepon .is lhe
learn captain coordinator and can be contacted at 992-2396.
Teams who meet the goal of $100 per team member ,will receive prizes.
T-shins for the event will be given to all panicipants as well as cancer survivors and teatn captains.

··rom

ASK ABOUT OUR .
#98657 • V·B, AUlO.;' KEYLESS ENTRY. PW.
POL, PWR. MIRRORS, TILT: M.S.R.P. $~~.936

Page5

the CDBG program for 1998.
In additio11 to the applications relating to the Thppers Plains Regional Sew·
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Commissioners will choose from 17 proposed grant er District, applications were received from:
• Village of Pomeroy, $24,000 for.water main improvements and hookups;
projects for the 1998 Community Development Block Gmnt ~rogmm. ~e
• Village of Middlepon. $45,000 for paving of South Second Ave.;
list of applications received wa.~ announced when the commiSSIOners metm
• Village of Middlcpon, $18,365, for paving of Riverview-Hill Cemetery
.
regular session on Monday.
·
Because of the absence of O&gt;mmissioner Fred Hoffman. the commis- roadway;
•
Chester
Township,
$18,870,
for
paving
of Chester Street by force
sioners recessed their meeting until Thursday at2:30 p.m.
.
account;
Two of the 17 applications were identical applications for $50,000 m
• Meigs County Council on Aging, $29,000, for a "Hot-Shot" meal delivCDBO formula funds, citing a $40,000 match of fair housing funds, for the
ery
van: .
.
cost of connecting low and moderate-income households to the new Tup•
Sutton
and
Lebanon
townships,
a
combined
application
for $28,980 for
pers Plains Regional Sewer District.
.
paving
projects;
.
· The two applications were filed by the TPRSD and the Ohve and Omnge
• Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Department. $18,975to repiace the roof on the
Township Trustees.
.
·. · ··
village
firehouse;
The applications totaled $434,093, and comm11 5645,063 10 local match(Continued on Page 3) . ·
ing funds. The commissioners will awlird approximately $190,000 through

w•· MUST MOV.
#98337 • SIGN. SERIES. V·B. TRACTION
CONTROL. FLOOR MATS. PW. M.S.R.P. $40,150

in World Cup

.

'

98 LINCOLN TOWN CAR

Germany
blanks U.S.

Commissioners eye proposals
for this year's CDBG pro.g ram .

scr~pbook
and leadership in e.xtracurricular
activities.

Sports

June 18, 1198

Meigs weathers another round of storms
'

From AP, Slllff Repo;1a
All roads in meigs County were
open to traffic today despite heavy
rains and highs winds ' thai have
plagued the area since the weekend.
David Spencer of the Meigs
O&gt;unty Highway Depanment said
county crews have been out clearing
trees from roadways that fell as a
result of high wind,.

.
Spencer added that flooding on age that wa$ repaired Monday mom- the eastern Ohio county were allowed
roads wa.~ limited only 10 minor ond ing.
back early today. There also were
temporary flash flooding during the
Acconling to reconls at Meigs re~ns of IOrnadoes in the western
heaviest periods of minfall. ·
· County Emergency Services, 1.42 part of the state as thunderstorms
Several minor slips were neponed inches of rain fell from midnight on moved across Ohio.
throughout the county. including one Monday until midnight on Tuesday.
Sheriff Tim Zimmerly said people
that occuqed in the Spring Avenue
Around the Wlte, some Holmes living in five or six homes in the
:area of Pomeroy ·due to heavy rains County residents who were ordered southwest Holmes County commuon Sunday.
10 leave their homes and taken to a · nity of Glenmont near Black Creek
Thai slip caused a brief water out- fire sta~ion as a result of flooding in ·were taken to a fire station .

Town prays for unity in
wake of dragging death
JASPER, Texa.~ (API - After a hope peace will take over in every
week of 'camem crews and out-of- way.
More than SOD people held a vig·
town celebrity aCtivists who tried to
define the meaning of James Byrd · il Monday to remember Byrd and
3r.'s horrirJC death, nesidents now · pray for unity. Several shook their
head.~ in frustmtion when approached
by reporters.
·
"I just wish it would all go away,"
said Lucy Luelkemey~r. 21 . '
Byrd, 49, was lUlled June 1 when
he was chained to a pickup iruck by
Sentine~ his ankles and dmgged along a country road for 2-112 miles. He appar·
I Section • I 0 Pages
ently was targetcil. because he was
Vol. 49, No. 3!1
black.
6
ptcJidar .
Bynl was buried Saturday after a ,
IQwll!eds
that attmcted national
funeral
Comic•
acti~ists including Jesse Jackson and
2
Edl!orlals
President Kweisi Mfume.
'. NAACP
3
Monday night's vigil was led by
4&amp;S
local ministerS who say they're striv·
· ing 10 bring JaSper- a town .or 8,000
deep in the piney woods- together.
Lotteries
"We just pray that ... unity will
come about in this community." said
Wallet Glenn. "We pray that ... all
omo
wounds can be healed."
Pick 3: S-J-9; Pick 4: 3·1 ·7-S
"We ask thee to bind us together
....,.5: 1·14-30-31·33
as
one,"
said the Rev. Kenneth Lyons,
W,YA,
•
pulor
It
the Byrd family's church,
Dlll7 J: 4-6-4; O.Uy4: 6-2-0-4
·Greater New Bethel Baptist "Only
thee c:an mate;• whole !gain. •·

Good Afternoon

Today's

•

~·

.

0

Me~~llldU:ry

line along
Center Road OJIIIIde tile Delphi Flint Eall
In Flint, Mich.,
on Monday. Till 11rllce1 by 9,200 worklre 11
in Flint have
Idled more thin 63,000 other GM workl111 II aaaembly plants
and 661ddltlonal partl pllnls lllroughout North Amerlct. (AP)

GM strikes' shock
wave. affects over : ·
80 plants nationally
By BRIAN S. AKRE
which makes doors. fen&lt;l~.
AP Auto Writer
cmdles and other vehicle bodiN&gt;;arts.
DETROIT - Union negotiators
The automaker also colnpla~etl--'
angrily walked out of talks at one of about the UAW's nepeated attacks on
two strikebound G'eneral Motors management's cnedibility in Flint,
Corp. parts planl•. but said they where 50,000 GM jobs have been lost
would return to the table despite what in tbe la•t 20 years to plant closures
they described a.• . a management and cutbacks.
insult.
If no settlement is reached this
Talks were 10 resume today at bolh week,the negotiations could be coriaplaJ\1.' in Aint, Mich. The strikes by . plicated by the UAW's triennial con·
9:'200 workers have idled~re than stitutional convention that begins
63,000 other GM worke . at 16 Monday in La• Vegas, altd-&lt;lM's
a.•sembly plants and 66
itional annual two-week plant shutdown
parts plants throughout' N
Amer- that begins June 29.
,
ica.
Union President Stephen Yokil:h
Noj!rogress wa.•.reponed in either would (ind it politically helpful to J.lo
set of negotiations Monday.
to Nevada with a settlement that he
Union negotiators walked out of could promote a.• saving dues-paying
discussion!&gt; at the Flint Metal Center jobs. Settlement talks could be comafter a GM representative suggested plicated with union leaders at the
striking workers' support would week-long convention.
weaken on a steady diet of $150-aGM's U.S. workers idled by the .
week strike pay, said President Duane walkouts. meanwhile. will not ~e1
· Zuckschwerdt of UAW Local 659.
their union-won "holiday pay" for
. "We took major exception to that the first week of the shutdown unless
remark," he said. '''That wa.• just a they're back at work by June 26.
total slap in our face .... Obviously.
GM's UAW .contr'.act da.~sities
the company isn'ttrying to look for . the second week of' the bneak as
a quick resolution to this thing. They mandatory vacation, for which workthink they can win their ca....: by hold- ers rec~ived pay in a lump sum caring our members hostage." ·
lier in the year, company spokesman
The world's No. I automaker Alan Adler said.
Union officials insist the conven·
released a statement saying the
union's account ,of ihe meeting was tion and shutdown will ha,ve no
· "completely fabricated."
· etTect on the talks.
"OM implores union spokesper-·
On Monday, GM added two car
sons to end the public posturing and plants in Lansing, Mich., and the
neturn to the bargaining table to Cadillac factory in pet!Oillo the long
focu• on the issues ·that must be list of those affected by the walkoul,,
addre.~sed,' ' the statement said.
and said it laid off several thou.~
more workers.
The 'strikes at the Metal Center
If no settlement is reached· tliis
: ancl Delphi Ainl Ea't are largely over week, most of the rist of OM's North
fears that lhe automaker plans to Ainerican production will come 10 a
reduce the plants' employment, or halt.
close or sell the pans factories.
Major exceptions are the two
Analysl' estimate the strike wa.~ joint-venhlre plants that OM operates
costing GM upwards of.$40 million with Toyota M01or COip. in Fremont,
a day.
Calif., and Suzuki M01or Corp. in
Zuckschwerdt said GM negocia- Ingersoll. Ontario. Those plants do
tors proposed changes in the local not use pans from the strikebound
contncl 10 reduce manpower levels :Aint plants.
.
and allow for more subcontracting. : . Workers at GM's Saturn plant in
"They went blckwanl.• a.• fllr as Spring Hill, Tenn.. also would not be
we're coiaccmed.'' he·said.
r
direclly affected. Their special UAW
Bill OM said il was "of paramount contract · requires the company 10
imponance that bolh panics address · keep them employed even if the plant
inefficiencies" in the stamping plant. is forced h1 shut down.
~

*

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="414">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9838">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="27514">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="27513">
              <text>June 15, 1998</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="590">
      <name>bennett</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="969">
      <name>boswell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="31">
      <name>eblin</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="789">
      <name>turner</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
