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·~ ~117, Ohio valley Publllhlng ComPMY

• 7.5 Gill. MlcroBrewer

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•'ilbl. 41. NO. 5 .

Pomet:OY-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, April 23, 1997

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sponsored by .Ms. Lawre!'Ce, most for counties.''
The counties would receive block
recipients wiil be allowed to receive
benefits for three years out of a five- · funding from the state to administer
year period. The .refonns also require their programs, said Stan Sells, an
recipients to get a job or further their ~:xcct,~tive assistant to Department of
educati&lt;,m.
Human Services Director Arnold
The federal government last year Tompkins.
agreed to tum. the bulk of welfare
· Sells, who is the department's
administration over to the states. Ms. welfare refonn project manager, out·
Lawrence said it was logii:al for lined ihe bill's provision for the
counties to get involved since they House Human Services Subcommit·
are closest to the recipients.
tee.
· "The thing that we hope will
The state would provide the coun·
make the whole thing work is coun- ties incentives for m~ting perforty govemanc4," Ms. Lawrepce said. mance standards in such areas as
"That's an exciting new adventure child-suppclrt collection, job place-

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ment rates and savings on the Ternporary Aid for Needy Families program, which is replacing Aid to
Dependent Children.
Ms. Lawrence questioned Sells
and Jerry Collamore, assistant director of . the County Commissioners
Association of Ohio, about whether
the incentivemoney could carry ~wer
from one budget to another.
CollllJ1Iore said that wouldn't be a
problem because the mone~ is not a
direct expenditw-e for the program.
"It would not be appropriated for
services, it would be appropriated for
incentives," Collamore said.

.,The bilf also would. reset die family of tout.
.
three-year clock for all recipients
· Rep. .Barbara Boyd, a subcom-o ;
beginning in October, giving county mittee member, said safe1uards! •
administrators ~ual footing in de vel. . sh.ould be put in the bill so that entin{ •
oping their programs.
· familie~ w:ould not he punished :
It also would authorize an "Ohio because of the behavior of one rilem- ' ;
Works First" p_rograrn, that would ber. .
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require participants to wo~k at least.
Ms. Boyd, O.Cicyeland Heights,·; '
20 hours a week, with another 10 . said the stat.e or f~~ty could impose,.,
hours spent working or taking class- sarict•ons on fam1bes that Include&lt;.
es or training. ·
more than one substance ·abuser. The
The bill would guarantee child family could be puniShed if. on~ ~
, care to program participants until . abuser seeks help and the other does- '
they get jobs and their incomes reach n't, she said.
; .
ISO percent of the federal poverty
"Our efforts are to preserve falll-'~
level, which is about $17.000 for a ilics," sbe said.
-;

Hostage
crisis ·ends ....,
•• ·
·in Peru
·.

Tighter air ~mission .
controls are forecast
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··. for midwestern states

Great For the Klde
To Uee At the Beach
Thle Summer!

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lncl~dea:

24" Towel Bar.
Toll..t naeuo,

Soap, Tooth~ruah

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• Queen SKUt 84244
• Std. B.ed Pillow

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a mustache; a man with long dark
hair who appeared to be .an American
Indian and a young white man with
a beard.
In Oklahoma City, Rudy Guzman,
Condnued on Pll~ 3

Jiispanic or American Indian.
.Those jurors whp could be seen by
reporters included an elderly white
man; a young white man with glasses; a young white woman with curly
. blond hair; a \Yhite bslding man with

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Board
discusses
personnel
matters

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The Meigs Local .Board of Edu' :
cation held a brief regular mcetina
tuesday evening to han~Jc a few per, ~
sonnel matters.
:;
Thc board accepted the resigna: ,
tion of Meigs Middle School art ;
teacber Jeffrey A. Baker effootive thC ;
· end on the work day on April 2S: :
Baker has. accepted, other employ; :
mcnt.
The board also accepted the res· • ·
. ignations for retirement purposes
Mqigs High School electronic~ t~ :
ers Gary R. Walker and Dale E; Har. :
rison effective the end of tbe schoOl
year.
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In other business, Sarah Gordon •
; was hired as a substitute teaCher for ,
the remainder of the school year, and :
a field trip for MHS FFA students to :
the Ohio Power Recreation Lands oti :
May.9-ll.
'
The board then met in executive
session to discuss pcnonnel m111ers ·
and contract negotiations. No action'
followed.
Present were Superintendent Bill
Buckley, 'I'rcasurer . Cindy ~ RhQnc:
mus and board members John Hood.
Scott Walton. RoJCr Ahhott. Randy·
Humphreys and Larry RltllC:
The next mcctin1 will he hckJ .
May 13 at 7 p.m. at the di~trict's l'Cn·
tnJ offi~:e on tht: aecond noor of till:' ·
Pomeroy Municipal Buildin1.

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Religious broadcaster Pal Robert·
· · · WASHINGTON (AP) - Ralph
son
founded the Chrilli10 Coalition
; "Reed announced today he is-resign·
after
his Lllisucceuful 1988 camplip
· · 'illl as executive directOr of the ChristiM Collition,an eight•year-old reli- for the Republican presidential nom·
: '·aioua conlei'Vative DfiUiization he illlllion. Reed hu bl!en ~ exe~:ulive
' helped build into a illajor fOrce in director and da~-to-day manaaer of
· • bpublican politica.
·
~ ~ilion from the OUiaet, build.· · · Reed llid he is Jeavina in ~ · in1 1 npulalion as 0111 of tho eon:· le1llber to form 1 politic:al coillultina r lel'nti_ve movement's shrewdest
firm, to be IIIIIICid Century Slnleaiea. ............
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Commentar

: P11Uia
.Wedneedlly, Aprll23,
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WASHINGTON-- In a town like
Washington, with puffed-up egos
11rid pilwer status symbols, sometiiQCS
the building a mover-and,shak«
chooses to occupy ttlls it all.
This is a story of America's largest
lobbying organization, and the edifice
envy they long harbored, which
brought them to their current, 'swank
·home.
·
In the &amp;r~nals of rags-to-riches, the
American Association of Retired Persons deserves a speeial place. An
elderly, retired scho&lt;iheacher staned
its first incarnation out of a California garage in 1947. 'It wrui then
.called the National Retired Teachers
Association, which at one point was
a department or. the huge National
Education Association.
The organization, building on that
core of retired teachers, didn't
become the AARP untill958. All the
while, its leaders yearned for the kind
of class, status and stature of the
NEA, which was best symbolized by
a building of substance.
·
The NEA is the largest of all labor

111 Court Sb let, Pomeroy, Ohio
814-882-2158 • Fax 192-2157

.2r

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGm
Publl8her

MARGARET LEHEW
COnlloller

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ptlllf'n:WIIflcM
Mftlt. •
to: Uffn to.llle Edllor. n. S.slftaa', 111 Cow1 St.. Pot••ot. Ohio
U7ll: or, FAX Ia 11~57.
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excerpts from other
Ohio Newspapers
By The Associated Preas .
Excerpts of recent editorials of statewide and natiQnal interest from Ohio
newspapers:

unions aflililled with the AFL-CIO, Dale Van Ana.
.
and was launched when 43 educators
By 1960, the then 2-year-old
fr0111 12 states met in Philadelphia in AARP moved its staff from the West
'1857 to form an association. One- Coast, to pew offices in the Dupont
Circle neighborhood in Washington.
1966, the AARP hit its ·first milJack Anderson By
lion-member mark. And within a few
years, it soared past 2 million memand .
bers, requiring a new .national head- ·
Jan Mollet
quarters building on Washington's K
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.
Street N.W. in 1973.
.
hundred years later, the NEA erected
It was a coming-of-age for an
a working memorial to itself in the organization on i.ts way to surpassing
form of a new headquarters building the powerful NEA it had once courtin Washington, just five blocks north ed. A Freudian psychologist might
ofthe White House.
have some fun wilh .the fact thai the .
The AARP's ·predecessor, the AARP selected a headquarters build.
NRTA, played an integral part in the ing that was, at the time, an archifour-year S1.5 million NEA fund- tectural twin to the NEA building a
raising project that paid for the new · few blocks away - though the AARP
digs. When the NEA's eight-story headquarters was glistening with
building, which they still occupy, was new, reinforced concrete muscle
completed at the infla(ed cost of $5 when compared to the already·aging
million, the Long ·Beach-based NEA headquarters. , ·
NRtA hoped to be invited to join
The Washington staff serving the
them in ·lht; new ·offices. But they AARP and the NRTA at the time,
were snubbed, ·according to internal totaling 328, occupied three floors of
accountS reviewed by our ~~SSOCiate the building. By 1991. the Washing·

By

SURFACE&amp;
MASSIVE

ICE MEL~

Akron Beacon Journal, April 10
Newt Gingrich is nothing if not resourceful, at least, politically speakmg.
· In January, the speaker received a stiff$300,000 penalty from the !;louse
Ethics Committee. The committee concluded that he had misled the House
about his use of tax-exempt funds to support a college course that carried
an obvious partisan flavor.
"
Gingrich understood that paying the penalty with campaign funds would
"cause an uproar," as U.S. Rep. John Boehner, a Hamilton Republican, put
it.'News reports have suggested the speaker's wife was less than thrilled about
reaching into family funds.
Last December, a freighter steamHow did Gingrich resolve the dilemma? He plans to borrow the money
ing
down the Mississippi River
from Bob Dole.
crashed
into a New Orleans shopping
No matter how politically clever the deal may appear, it carries the stench
mall,
injuring
more than 100 people.
of Washington insiders designing another arrangement that would hardly be
The accident has been blamed on a
available to the typical American.
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Chinese crew that couldn't understand its English-speaking captain.
A year earlier, an American Air·
Springf'~eld News-Sun, April18
Legal scbolars across the nation are justifiably appalled over a movement lines jet plowed into a mountain.
afoot on Capitol Hill to impeach federal judges if their rulings are politi- killing 150 passengers. The tragedy
was blamed on an air"traffic con·
cally incorrect. Ordinary citizens should be upset, too..
.
troller,
barely able to speak English,
What House Majority Whip Tom DeLaY., R-Texas, advocates is patentwho
was
uqable to warn the plane's
ly unconstituti·onal. Our nation's charter provides that U.S. judJ!eS inav onlv
that they were off course.
be removed from office for treason. DeLay would run them off the bench pilots
These two incidents . are worstfor daring to disagree with him on mimers of law.
case examples of what can hapj,en
America's independent judiciary - protected as it is from undue pol it- when people are unable to commu.ical influence - is a model for the rest of the world. One has only to look nicate in the same tongue. It is one of
at how "justice" is meted out in China now, or used to be in Soviet Russia; the reasons that .an increasing numto see how court systems under the thumb of a higher authority can be manip- ber of employers are imposing "Engulated and misused.
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lish-only" rules on their workers.
Aside from fears of language'
.related accidents, employers have
The ('foltdo) BJacJe; April17
tremendous economic incentive to
A German court confirmed what the .United States has been saying in · encourage their workers to speak
recent' years: That top Iranian leaders sponsor and support ·worldwide ter- · English on the job. Ohio University
rorism and assassination.
economist Lowell Galloway estiThe European Union nations urged member ·countries to withdraw their mateS that the lack of English profiambassadors.
·
·
ciency among foreign -born U.S.
Iran's arrogant 8fld murderous leaders need a lesson in civility, and if they
persist in being outlaws and renegades, they must be isolated from the woriCI
comt:nunity.

ITOledoI 57" I
IND.

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Immigrant-rights advocates take
offense to virtually any proposal that
·would give official or formal standing to English over other languages
(like the English-only laws that have
been passed by 23 states, including
California). They view such proposals as subtly "racist" and "xenophobic. u ·
But one has to have on blinders (or
ear plugs) not to recognize that
America is facing a language crisis.
·Especially, considering that more
than half the 24 million forei~n-bom
residents of this country acknowledge
that they speak liit\e or no English.
That's a substantial figure considering that immigrants make up II
percent of the U.S. work force. That
means that there are millions of people working in this country who can't
· even speak English and millions

Can you iinagine how thoroughly
schools and· what needs to be.done.
.
.
it discombobulates a Curmudgeon to
!'Jew Ohio Institute called for a new systetn of general upgrading, reduced see a contrarian idea catch on?
student-to-teacher ratios and more training for teachers.
·
No, of course you can't. The only
The Ohio Coalition for Equity and Adequacy of School funding issued people who can fathom the misery of
its outline of problems and solutions, including proposals to add I0 days to it are fellow Curmudgeons. People
the school .year, strengthen parental involvement and increase funds for whose very existence is defined by
teacher training and textbooks.
·
.
. · how far out of step they are. People
But these and other groups continue to evade the prime quest1on: How who were nonconformists before
are all these new programs.to be funded?
.
nonconformism was cool.
Defining thC problems was 'the easy part. Solving them is the hard part,
It grieves mavericks like this to
and nobody has ventured many specifics thus far.
think up an idea that flies in the face
of custom and to dedicate great loyalty to·it -- and then watch it become
worthless by becoming popular. That
is precisely what has happened with
this casual dress trend. ·
1u
·
_Ev~ry place of business you enter
Dear Editor,
tion or the Pomeroy Police Depart- these days is packed wiih workers
Dogs, dogs, dogs, trash, trash, rnent? No, of course not. We are sup- wearing clothing that we used to wear
trash. That's all I see here on Welch- posed to put up with dogs, trash, and when we cut the grass. It doesn' tjolt
town Hill in Pomeroy. Dogs I can all. Well I'm tired of putting up with a body to see ruch a thing in a car
handle if they are behaved. I have had it. I'd thin~ the mayor could do a bet- dealership or an insurance agency.
a big problem with a neighbor's dog ter job at seeing that this place be But when lawyers and bankers dress
taking clothes off my line and can't cleaned up from trash that is an eye- . in Dockers, friends, you' ve got a fad
gel a thina done about it. I'd like to sore to this hill. When is it ever going on your hands.
know why.the dogcatcher can only to be done, Mr. Mayor?
It is impossible to pinpoint preao cenain places and get dogs doing
cisely, but the casual craze see111s to
damage and running loose but no
'IluniiiY Kleill have started with Silicon Valley comWelchtQwn Hill.
"-'eey puler geeks durina the 1980s. The
Can our mayor answer this ques- .
~ beaan showing up for work in
...;_,_....;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _........_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ · shorts and sandals, and it quickly
became the uniform. The idea sp!'e!ld
. In 1954, Hank AarOn of the Milwaukee Bnves hit ~first or his
east and reaular businesses bepn to
155 major-leaaue borne runs apinsuhe St. Louis Cardinals. The·Brava won, rccosnize Fridays as "casual days."
7-S.
The Levi Stnuu Co., nalurally,lovod
In 1968, the Melltodill Olun:h and the EvMjelical United Brechren this development and pabiQhed "A
Chuldl1ta pel to form the United Methodist Churt:h.
Guide to Cullll Bu.__.~ It
In 1969, Simln Sut. - ~e~llienced to dellh for IIIMiillllin1 New Yort bepn pt011101in1 a "NIIional CuuSen. Robert F. Kennedy. Tile sente~ was liter reduced to life imprison- al Day," and turned it into a funclrm.
mlllll
ina camplip for United CerebnJ

Palsy. Contributors are allowed to
come to work in the relaxed mode.
. The movement got a huge boost in
February 1995, when the chairman of
IBM informed his dark-suited, whiteshirte!,l, wing-tipped troops they

Joseph Spear
could dress down. Now people across
the nation are t.oiling in polo shirts,
khaki pants ~d loafers. Anythina but
beach or gym wear is the general rule.
Casual has. also become acceptable at church, theater, weddings and
funerals. The president of the United
Stat ( lc 8 "Th d Th. hs" )
. es a. · ·
un er
ag
runs around in shorts; his Rcpilblican
opponent, in the last election, actual-

Letter, to .the editor
Dog$ and t·•ash

record .

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llmothy F{edenck, Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy, was arrested Tues·
da); night in Roane County, W.Va., on a bench warrantJrom the Meigs
County Court of,Common Pleas to answer to 111 alleged probation vio·
lation charge.
· .
Sheriff James M. Soulsby said a governor's warrant may be sought
if Frederick opposes extradition to Ohio.

Lott says budget
talks should continue

Partly sunny.skies
forecast for weekend Meigs announlcements

Hostage crisis..

John

-Meigs EMS logs .5 calls ·

w. Casto

can

Middleport .Court news

Stocks

Today's livestock report

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ooaaoooooooooooooooooouooooooo ooooe •••

Jury Seated..

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FREE HEARING TESTS

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Pomeroy ~an arrested on

Today's· weather forecast

family and close friends . of Joe the
OK, so there is a bit of person:jJ: .
Reporter astride a camel in front of annoyance here. I am irritated that
the Sphinx -- in a pin·stripe suit.
after many years of paying coat-and-, .
It was on that trip, actually. that I . tic dues, the whole blOody world goe,o;. 1·
was convened to casual. Everyone I casual and I, as a certified Curmud·- ·,
interviewed in Israel , e_ven top cabi· gcon, am left wfth no options but to ; .
net officials, wore short,slceved, dress up again.
·
open-collared shirts. What a v;on·
Indeed, as I write these words in '
derful, practical idea, I,thought, and my cramp_Cd little study, it is 10 in th!)
I preached it for the rest of my tenure evening the house a's qu1·e1 and no one '
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in the public eye. Then I became an else is present; but I am pounding the:. :
editor and downgraded to tweed keyboard in blazer and tie.
. ; .: •
coats witJ! elbow patches, chinos and
I am, however; still wearing my :
loosened ties. And finally; ! managed Rockports. No way I'm going to lcr: · !
!P start my own business and was the trendies deprive me of every plea- · •
able t.o dress the way I pleased much sure.
.. : ;
fthe u· And th d
·
J
hp
•
o
me.
en, ammu. evervosep
erk.lns is a syndicated; I
body started doing it.
writer [or Newspaper Enterprise ,
Association.
,
1

Today· _
in .h.istory

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WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate spending. .
Majority Leader Trent Loll says budThe ·oop senators issued . their
Charlotte. Ann Smith, 60, Ravenswood, W.Va., died Tuesday April 22
1997, at her home. ·
'
' ser talks are showing enough threat at a news conference Tuesday
A homemaker, she was born Aug. 26, 1936, in Gay, W.Va., daughter of progress that they should continue, and in a letter to Lott.'
as 10 conservative senators say
They set five conditions for their
Thursday night...Pllrtly cloudy. Tressie E. Tolley Skeen of Gay and the late Estel C. Skeen. She was a mem- even
. By The ' A..oclated Preas
they
may
oppose
a
deal
if
it
fails
to
support:
·
ber of the St. Matthews Catholic Church, a former secretary and assistant
.Low in the lower 40s.
•
Southeastern Ohio
trim spending or taxes to their taste.
-Lower domestic spending.
Friday.. .Mostly clear. High from accountant.
· Tonight. .. Cloudy with a chance of
"
We
should
keep
working,"
Loll,
- A$500·per-child tax credit and
$he is survived by her husband.of 42 years, Gene Smith of Ravenswood· ·
the upper 50s to the lower 60s·. . ·
rain. Low in lhe lower 40s.
R-Miss.,
told
reporters
today.
But
he
cuts
Saturday...Ciear. Low 35 to 40 and two daughters, Melissa Barker of Ravenswood and Lisa Browni~g of Park: said the job of reaching compromise · taxes.in the capitaf-gains and estate
Nbrth wind 5 to 10. Chance of rain
· ersburg, W.Va.; two grandchildren ; two brothers, Charles Skeen of Gay,
high in the mid 60s.
· 30 percenl.
- Steadily declining annua,l
W.Va., and John Skeen of Oklah~ma; a sister, Charlene Lott of California; with the Clinton administration
...
Partly
cloudy
with
a
Sunday
· · ·Thursday... Most!y cloudy with a
would
get
harder
if
the
negotiations
deficits.
chance of rain. High in the lower 60s. chance of showers ·and thunder- severar nieces and nephews.
- !'lo changes by Congress in the
storms.
·
Services will be held Friday, II a.m. at St. Matthews Catholic Church in last much longer because there would
·ehance of rain 30 percent. .
be
"more
and
more
threats"
of
oppG·
way
inflation adjustments are. macre
Low in the lower 40s and high in Ravenswood with the Rev. Monsignor Sylvester W. Staud officiating. BurElltended forecast
sition by lawmakers,
in federal benefits.
ial will follow in Ravenswood Cemetery. .
·.
· the mid 60s.
.
One
of
those
threats
arose
Tues-No use of White Holtsc ecoFriends may call Thursday, 6-9 p.m. at the Roush Fune.ral Home in
day,
when
.
th~
I
0
conservative
nomic
assumptions, which are more
Ravenswood. a vigil service will be held Thursday at 8 p.m. at the funeral
optimistic than the ones lawmakers
home.
· Republicans issued their demands.
"If you're not going to draw a line
in the sand for, principles like this, I use;'We cannot. in good.conscience,
don't understand why you want pub- support any budget package that viOlic office to begin with." said Sen. lates these five reasonable threshVFWtomeet
By The Associated Preas
Thursday, 7 p.m. at the DeXter Phil Gramm, R-Texas.
set tonight will be at 8:17 p.m. and
·
The conservatives, led by Gra111in eilds," the letter said.
' .
The Tuppers Plain~ VFW Post Church of Christ. Bradford Church
Partly sunny skies are forecast for sunrise Thursday at 6:38 a.m.
.
.and
Sen.
Sam
Brownback,
R-Kan.,
.
The
conservatives'
opposition
9053 will meet Thursday at 7:30. A will have devotions. Talent night will
Ohio on Thursday, but showers are . Across Jhe nation
would only complicate efforts to line
drawing will be held.
be observed.
possible in.the southeast, the Nation~ain continued this morning in the
were hoping to pressure GOP leaders up votes for a 'budget agreement,
al Weather Service said.
Southeast, which was hit by severe
to avoid making big concessions to
the White House at the negotiations. especially if others support their
Smorgasbord set
Eastem Board.sets session
Temperatures will approach 60 thunderstorms and tomadoes a day
demands. On the other hand, their
A
dllgrees.
.
smorgasbord
dinner
will
be
held
.
The
Eastern
Board
of
Education
earlier. Cloudy skies dominated rriuch
The bargainers are trying to strike a defection adds little to the likeliest
. forecasters said dry conditions of the countty, with patches of sun- on April27 from II a.m . to 2 p.m. at will bti meeting in special ~.ession on . compromise for balancing the budget
wall prevail through the weekend shine .in Aorida and the Southwest·. the Bashan firehouse on County • Monday, 6 p.m . in the high school by 2002 while paring taxes and . scenario of a bipartisan budget deal:
The low pressure that caused Road .28, sponsored by the ladies' library for the purpose of awarding
with highs Saturday and Sunday in
the' mid-60s.
·
severe weather in Alabama and Geor- auxiliary: The menu will include contracts for construction of building
..__co_nti_nued_rro_m_pa_ge_•.....
The record-high temperature for gia Tuesday was expected to move turkey, ham, mashed potatoes, gravy, bids.
this date at the Columbus weather north into the Carolinas today, bring- green beans, ·dressing, noodles,
playing indoor soccer, presumably
'
desserts, rolls and drinks. The cost is SARto meet
station was 84degrees in 1985 while ing moderate to heavy rains . .
installed electronic listening devices
the
same
tunnel
that
rebel
leader
Don Writshafter, ·owner of The
the record low was 24 in 1986. Sun$5 for adults and $2.50 for children
inside the tunnel .
•
Ohio Hempery, Guysville, will be Nestor 'Cerpa said was being dug six
under 12.
After blaSting the living room area
speaker at the Thursday, 6:30 p.m. weeks ago when he suspended talks under where ihe rebels were playing
meeting of the Sons of the American with government negotiators.
Fellowship to .meet
soc·cer, part of a 14().man elite miliCerpa had alleged the government tary·policc team then poured through
The Meigs County C~urches of Revolution at the Meigs Museum,
was digging a IUnnel for a surprise the compound's front gate and blastChrist Women's Fellowship will meet 144 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
attack. A police colonel in charge of ed open the mansion's front door.
security around the ambassador's
Other soldiers attaCked froiD the
residence said then· that the charge rear, and a third unit climbed to the
was "an invention .. or .the kidnap- rooftop and he Ipcd hostages nee the
pers.
.
Units of the Meigs County E:mer- dleport, Harold Teaford, PVH;
building.
The
Lima
newspaper
La
Republigency Medical Service recorded five
Moments later, smoke poured
9:09 p.m., Burlingham Road,
: ·John W. Casto, 51', of Harker Heights, Texas, died.Saturday Aprill9, 1997 calls for assistance Tuesday. Units Charles Winebrenner, Holzer Med· co said today professional miners from the residence. Triumphant solat a Fort Hood, Texas Hospital.
brought in by police started digging diers hauled down the guerrillas' red
responding included:
ical Center.
Born Dec. 23, 1945 at Point Pleasant, W.Va., son of the late Elmore F. . CENTRAL QISPATCH .
the tunnel i11January, that the tunnel flag , and hostages and rescuers
RUTLAND
(:al;co and Bumalee Mae Kelly. he was reared and educated i~ Ohio and
caved
in at one point, injuring sever- cheered and jubilantly sang the Peru'
7:43 a.m., state Route 248,
6:49 p.m., Meigs Mine 2, Roger
au~nded Kellogg Community College. He received a .bachelor of science
Chester, motor·vehicle accident, Preast, O'Bleness Memorial ijospital. al miners, and police played martial vian national anthem . One soldier
degree from California State University in Sonoma, California in 1973. He
music over huge speakers outside the pumped his fist excitedly like a viC·
Doris Detter, Pleasant Valley· Hospi- SYRACUSE
spent two years in the United States Amy and lived in Harker Heights, TeKas . tal, Chester VFD assisted ;·
3:16p.m., Seventh Street, Phillip residence to mask the soulid of the · torious athlete.
for a year. He was employed with (GYCO) Quality Control Inspector at Fort
digging .
II : 14 a.m. , Fairlane Drive, Mid- Smith, VMH.
Hood, TeKas. He was a member of the Moose Lodge 2179 and the AmeriPolice arc believed to .have
Newspapers in Peru and Japan had
Legion Post 573, both in Harker Heights. .
special editions loday lillcd with
Surviving are a brother and sister-in-law, Homer H. and Barbara J. Caspages of photos of the rescue and ·
to; .two sister-in-laws, Darlene Casto and Gertrude Casto, both of Ohio; ihree
lauding the end of the rebel siege.
Middleport Mayor Dewey Horton Mason, W.Va., $25 "and costs, no
nieces ·ani:l two nephews.
"Terrorism has been brought to its
processed 16 cases in Mayoi-'s1C&lt;;&gt;Urt operator's license, $25 and costs, fieAm
Ele
PoWer
.......................
40:0
!n addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a brother, f'ranklili on Tuesday.
:knees
by the resolve that the Peruvian
titious tags, and $25 and costs, unsafe
Akzo
................................
,
.....
68'1.
H. Casto; and a half-brother, Elmore Casto.
· Forfeiting bonds were: Jdseph J. vehicle; Charles McCloud, Middlestate. has shown in such a forceful
AmrTech ................................57'1.
Services were 10 a.m. today at the Harper-Talasek funeral Chapel, Jirown, Pomeroy. $60, left of·c~nter; . pon, $1 00 and costs, disorderly manway," the government newspaper El
Ashland 011 ........................... 44\
Killeen, Texas, with Rev. John C. Hallum officiating. Burial services are 2 Samuel L. McCloud, Middleport, .ner; Randy S. Smith, Pomeroy, $26
Peruano said in an editorial. ,
AT6T .............................. ~ ...... 31'•
· p.m. Saturday at the Lone Oak Cemetery in Point Pleasant. We.st Virginia. $60, expired tags, $60, no motorcy- and costs, speed; Kevin J. Montcas- . Bank One ............................... 41 '.4t
Calling hours were, held on Tuesday.
Bob Evans ............................ 13'1.
cle endorsemeni; ~hilip K. Grueser, . 'tie, Apple Grove, W.Va., $13 and
Borg-Wamer
.........................43'1.
Point Pleasant, $48, speed; ll)omas costs, speed; Mindy A. Patterson,
Champion ...............................18
S. Epling, Point Pleasant, · W.Va., Pomeroy, $25 and costs. wrong way
Charm Shps ............................5\
$63 speed; Donna McCloud, Mid- onaone-way'street; JosephF.Roush,
City Holdlng ..........................32'!.
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaU.S.' 1-2, 23().260 lbs. country . dleport, $60, running a red light; John Jr., Chester, $100 and costs, disorFederal Mogul .......................26\
Gannett ..................~ •••••••••••••• Ss'H
Ohio direct hog prices at selected . points 54.00-55.50, few 53.50; plants D. Bond, Mason, W.Va., $60, expired derly manner; William Stewart,
Goodvur ............................. ;.. 52
buying points Wednesday as provid- 55.00-56.50.
.
· tags; David W. Johnson, Gallipolis, Pomeroy, $100 and costs, disorderly
Kmert.u...................................12\
U.S. 2-3 , 230-260 lbs. 50.00- $47, speed; and Lawrence Hudson, man~er ; and Gary Rose, Middleport,
ed by the U.S. Department of Agri- •
Linda End ............................. 26'4
54.00; 210-230 lbs. 45.00-50.00.
Point Pleasant, W. V~ .• $60, expired $100 and costs, d1sorderly manner,
cullure Market News:
.
Ltd.........................................17\
Barrows and gilts: near ·steady
Sows: mostly steady.
tags .
$100 fine only, disorderly manner.
ova
39~
U.S. 1-3 300-450 lbs . 40.00Fined were: Jonathan Stone,
One Valley .............:...............37'1.
late; demand moderate with light to
PIOpleS •••••••••••••••••..•.•••••••••••• 30'h
43.00; 450-500 .lbs. 43.00-44.50;
moderate movement.
Pram Flnl ..............................14'!.
Continued
from
page
1
500-600 lbs. 44.00-46.50, few over
:
....__
___..;___
Rockwe:ll
...............................65\
The Daily Sentinel 600 lbs. 47.00-48.00.
RD-She'IJ ................... :...;......1~
Boars: 38 . 5().40.00~
whose brother was killed in the in secret with lawyers to handle the
s'honey'a ......................~. - ... ~••• 4._
CUSPS 11).Me)
Estimated receipts: 28,000.
bombing, watched a closed-circuit dismissal or prospective jurors based . Star Bank ..............................4Mo
Wendy's .................................. 2p
.
Hog market trend for Wednesday: 1 1 t f the .
d
Publ11hed every afternoon. Monday through
on their beliefs about the death penalsteady.
.
e ecas o
JUry se1cellon an
WorthlngtQR ..........................18 '/.
Fri4ay. Ill Court St. Pomeroy, Ollio. by the
Ohio Yallly Publi~~:hina ComponyJOanncct Co.,
Summary of Tuesday 's Producers · mad~ plans to head to Denver for ty or other views.
~. Ohio 45769, Ph. 992.2156. Second
. Stock report• are thet ~!:~:~
Livestock Association auctions at 0~? 1 n~ statements.
.... -paid Dl Pomoroy. Ohio.
a.m. quotes provided by A
·Many jurors revealed Intimate
1wll~beth~~ to s~ ~?wn 11mEaton.. Farmerstqwn, Lancaster,'
•
MMnber: The Asiocillted Preu, and 1~ Ohio
. WapakOneta and Caldwell:
· othy Me elgh, he ~a1d. lf.Jud'e and sometimes embarrassing details . of Gal!ipoll•.
New J J I AuociMion.
Hogs: steady to 3.00 higher.
Mats~h --:ould let me talk to h1m. I. d of their lives, including bankruptcies,
POSTMASTER: Send 1141cimll corm:riOftl to
Butcher hcigs: 40.00-.55.10:
tell ham, .Tell me th~ truth, boy."' . illnesses, breakdowns and family
Tile Dolly Seolilitl. 111 Coun St.. '""""'Y·
Cattle: steady to 1.50 lower.
Sl~ce Jllry selectiOn began th~e members in trouble with the law.
Ohi0~769.
····~·
Slaughter steers: choice 63.00- weekS ago, Matsch hll!i been rneet!ng
COUPON
StiiiSCJIImON RATES
70.00;
select
58.00-65.00.
ly c...ritt' or Molor Ralt
Slaughter l)eifers: choice 61.00One .................................................12.11)
OnoMCNIGJ ................................................ I8.10
68.501
select 57.00-65.00.
One v..................................... ,........... $104.01,)
will h give~~ I• •rgl/hllla Co••tloa
Cows: steady to 2.50 lower; all ·
SINGLE COPY PRICE
cows 45.50 and down . .
Dolly .... ............................ :.................. ) 5 c....
'
Bulls: steady to 1.00 higher; all
bulls 54.00 and down.
'Sullocriben n«de&lt;lrinato(ll)' dle-11111)'
Friday, April 25, 1997
mit in Jdyucc diRCt 10 The Dlilr Selllinel
Sheep and lambs: steady to 5.00
0111 line, lix or 12 mondli blsis. CrecM. wiD be
higher; choice · clips 95.00-108.00;
In Dr. A. J.cksoa Balles' Office
s~----k.
feeder lambs 13 7.00 and down; aged
NO'IIIhcripdoo by moil pennined In .. . .
224 •••••••• , •••,., .
'll'lfl}ifn~J CO~fJREgN.r.90~t'f£ eHUifeH
sheep 43.00 and down.

'

Gomer Pyle T-shirt and baseball cap
while lounging on the beach.
By The A••oclated Preas
,
.
,: 1
So, we have come to this: An idea
Today is Wednesday, April23, the I 13th day of 1997. There are 252 days . f
that I touted for 20 years has become left in the year.
.
, :
the vogue, and I will have to abandon ·.
Today's Highlight in·History :
·
·
' ~
it because it is against my principles
April 23, 1564, is the. generallv accepted birthdaic of the English poet ·
to like fa.ihionable things.
and d!lllllllast William Shakespeare. He died on1he same date 52 y·ears !at- ':
When 1 started in the news busi- er.
.
ness, coats and tiea were de rigueur
On this date:
: •
forreponen. OK, it_...llllinly polyIn 1348, King Edw~ lll of England established the·Order'oftheGaner: ·'
ester, but I wore tl*ful polyester. I
In 1616, the Spanish Poet Cervantes died in Madrid. The S8llle day· •.
hated drasing up, but I wu only a William ShakesP,Care died in Stratford-on-Avon, Enaland.
· '
fledgliRg CurmudJeon at the time, so
In 1789, l'resadent-elect Wuhmaton and his wife moved into the first
I .,..t .W..g. On my rnt trip over- executive 11111111ion, the Franklin House, in New Yorit.
·
- · I ltllpidly !*ked nochi~~g but · In I 791 , the tsth preaident of the United States James Buchanan
lllill IIICI spent four weeks ill equa- · 1 born in ~in County, Pa.
'
'
IOrial Alrica 1111 the Middle East 1 In 189ll, the Vitucopc sy-.n for pojec!ina movies onto screen w~. ·. , :•
1
cooking iASicle of worlted pnneata. 1demonltnled In New Yort Caty.
·
·
• •
IICIUally hew a phcxo, - only by
In IMl, about 200 people died in a dante-hall rare in Nlldlez, Miss. • • ' .

Walter Wright, Colburn Road, Shade, recently reported rhe theft
of a Yar~man ridi~g mower, chainsaw, string trimmer and two loggmg chams, accordmg ta a Meigs County Sherifrs Department report.

Charlotte Ann Smith .

. 1-

'

Theft reported

. Vl.t Allti buret F'reu Graphlc!N#4t

lot of the claiins are, in his view, "as ,
onerous and offensive lis suggesti~g ·;
that for the purposes of your business .
image, all your employees. ought IQ. ;
be white or have blond hair."
: &lt;•
But this is j~st plain ridiculous. A:n ·'
employer insisting that · everyone
speak the same language is hardly the ;
moral (or legal) equivalent of . an
employer insisting on a while· blond~- .
only work force .
·
The EEOC has adapted an extrem- .
ist definition of discrimination. So ·
much . so that companies boasting ' .
ethnically diverse work 'forces ,;
with whites and blacks and .yellows ;
and browns represented in political- ;
ly correct proportions -- risk runni~g ,
afoul of the EEOC if they ask all their
employees to speak the same lan 0 ,
guage on the job. Most Americans do .
not believe that it's unfair or dis-' ·
~riminatory to require that everyone .
m a gnien work force -- native and ·
foreign born -- speak English. It is, ,
after all, the language of the United
States, whether official' or not.
:.·
Joseph Perkins is a columniSt ·
ror the San Diego UniO..-J'ribunei
· and a commentator for MSNBC. •

What's a casual Curmudgeon to do?

The (New Philadelphia) Times Reporter, April 16
.
The state of Ohio is getting a lot of advice on what's wrong with· our

•

Joseph Perkin$

who can speak .English, but
who regularly .chit·chat lllith fellow
foreign-born workers in iheir native
language.
·
The most' perverse thing is that the
federal government. is actually
encouraging language divisiveness in
the workplace. Indeed, the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission has filed language-discrimination lawsuits against 32 employers ·
around the country who have
required their workers to Weak Eng:
lish on the job. J'he EEOC asserts that
English-only work rules are unlawful
unless an employer can prove "busi. ness necessity."
.
One victim of the EEOC's language-rights crusade was an American Red Cross'infectious-diseasc lab
in Rockville, Md. The. commission
saw no reason why lab workers and
office personnel should be compelled to spea~ the same language.
. Indeed, to the mind of EEOC
Chairman Gilben .Case lias, very few
companies can make a justifiable
busincss·nccessity claim (including.
apparently, infectious-disease labs). A

Marvin D. Glasgo, 77, of Reedsville, died on Wednesday, April23, 1997
at O'Bieness Memorial Hospital.
'
He was born on November 25, 1919 in Millersburg, son ofthe IIIICAibert
~nd Laura McDOw Glasgo. He owned and operated R&amp;G Feed·and Supply
m Pomeroy fO!' many years and had recently ·retired from the business. He
.was a veteran of the U.S. Army during World War n, and was a member of
the American Legion, the DAV. Knights of Pythias Sterling Lodge #173 in
Sterling. He w.S a member of the Athens United Methodist Chlirch.
He is survived by his wife, Phyllis Lawrence Glasgo of Reedsville; two
daughters and sons-in-law, Constance and Dan Gross of Wheelersburg and
Lauretta and Tom Huggins of Houston, Texas; a sop and daughter-in-law,
Donald and Linda Glasgo of Norwich, Vt.; a step-daughter, Joyce Ritchie.
of~ine; six grandchildren; five great-grandchildren; two brothers, Roland
Glasgo of Birmingham, Ala.•.and Max Glasgo of Loudenville; and a sister,
Van Carle, Smithville. . ·
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his first wife, Kathryn
E, Glasgo and a brother, Brooks Glasgo. ·
. •·
. Services will be held on Saturday at II a.m: at the Pomeroy Chapel of
F1sher Funeral Home, 59(}'East Main Street in Pomeroy. Burial will be in
West Union Street Cemeteo;y1jn Athens, with graveside services at 12:30 p.m.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Friday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
.p.m.
.
.

IMansfield I59• I•

United States .is faci·n g a language c·risis
mor~

A 1991 Dodge reported stolen from Chesapeake was recovered
burned on Tower Road in Salem Township, acx:ording to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
The car, which was totally destroyed, was backed into a field near
a loggmg road about 20 feet off the road, Soulsby said.
·

Marvin D. Glasgo .1

•

ton staff'Iiad expanded to 1,050, filling every nook and cranny of tlje
1909 K Street building, and van-pooling to leased office space at five oth·
er downtown locations.
:
Those numbers allowed the
majority of the AARP staff to believe
that new. more extravagant quarters
were called for, no matter the
expense. The important thi~g. they
told themselves, was to be under one
really nice·roof. The happier the new ·
house made them, the better 11\loy
could serve their members.
The current I().story elegant headquarters of the AARP was built and
designed specially for them at the
intersection of 6th and E Streets. The
price of the annual lease is $17 million. which sucks up the annual $8
dues of 2,125,000 members. 'It is lo
swank, with special lighting, heating
and other features that eve~ staffers
call it the "Taj Mahal."
.
It's an incongruous headquartCl)'s
for the AARP, of course. After al~
this is an outfit that doesn't thiik
twice about pestering congressmen lo
grant multibillion-dollar favors te
America's seniors, paid for by the
taxes of America's workers -- and
then returning with a smile of self- ·
satisfaction to. plush offices who.se
artwork alone .is .worth enough to
treat tellS of t~ousands of indigent
elderly to royal banquets.
,
Occasionally, an outside voi~e
will cause some staffers Ill doub1
whether such an ost~ntatious display
of power and prestige is really in til•
best interest of AARP members. NQl
long ago, ·a Senate aide overhearj:l
another Senate .aide needling tOe
fiancee of AARP's top lobbyist aboui
. the fancy digs. "Shouldn' t you be
embarrassed?" this ·aide .asked tbe,
smiling, but defenseless bride-to-be. ·
Another AARP official, allowing '
a brief moment of self·criticism wit!) ,
us, bit her lip and finally pouted :
"What do you want us to work in? A ·
blU1l?"
. That's the Washington beltway
mentality for you .
Jack Anderson and Jaa Mollar
are writers. ror United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

bliefs~--.

Stolen car found bumed

MICH. ·

.

workers costs employers $40 billion
a year in lost productivity, including
on-the-job mistakes; time delays and
poor putput,

,.__Local

AccuWCIIher' forecast for

F~ZEN

The Columbus ~ispatc:b, Aprilll
Even prisoners are entitled to civil rights, but only. in America would
courts con•ider paying $25,000 to each of tw.o inmates for their part in
encouraging other prisoners to sue the state.
·
. ·
,
State officials are absolutely right to-fight proposed $25,000 "incentive"
payments for two inmates who helped round up claimants in a $4.1 million
prison-riot settlemeni.
Ohio Attorney General Betty Montgomery and state prisons director Reginald A. Wilkinson insist they never agreed to such payments as part of the
settlement to resolve a lawsuit filed by 3,000 current and former inmates at
the Southern Ohio Correction Facility, near Lucasville.
U.S. District JudgeS. Arthur Spiegal in Cincinnati approved the overall
settlement Tuesday, but he postponed action on two issues: the inmate-incentive payments and Montgomery's effort to foree inmates who.receive money to pay outstanding obligations, such as victim compensation or.child support. The state deserves to prevail on both.

Sentinel• Page 3

Th'!nday, April 24

-

....... ·-

.

~ini948

~M-aar

.,

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

Beltway .status
symbol.is .10 stories tall
.

The Daily Sentinel

CHARLENE HOEFUCH

Wedneeday, Aprll23, 1117

•

..

.Spaghettl·Dlnner ··
'jrldaiJ, 14prll25
6:00pm

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P 2?1
... -

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11111erW1 !he riJk to . . . ; _ U

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-at·--pdoo.

MAIL~If'tiONS

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Ho~pital

news

Haber Medieai Center
Dilcltarpe .April Z1 • April
Queen and Lomt Moore.
lllrtll - Mr. and Mn. O.vid Deem,
a ct.upcir of Pomeroy.
(PULP I d 'lPidl pennfllion.)

'

9:01-Noon
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Sports

,~W~td~n~l~l~dt~y~,~Ap~-~~~123~,~1.~11~7~.~~--~~~-,---~------~~--_!~~m~MK~O~y~·~M=~~~~d~..~~:~:·~O~h~~
!. NHL playoffs contl~:~ue
,
.

The Daily SentinS~

··Devils, Blues and Stars ·win;
Blackhawks beat Avalanche

VWednaaday,Aprll23,1897 ·

Mets get 7-2 win· over Reds
·

earned, on seven hits before depan,
NEW YORK (AP) -Rick Reed International League.
still has trouble sleeping before start·
" Reed was my most consistent · ing in the fifth when the first two
Mets reached base.
ing assignments with the New York pitcher at Norfolk." said Mets manMets.
· ·
"I throw inside and they turned
ager Bobby Valentine, who handled
1
on
the ball. I try to get them to hit
Norfolk before being promoted to
' All I do is keep thinking about
ground balls to third. I expect my
the opposition, and it's about two or the parent club last September.
three in the morning. before I drop
"When it came down to · com- guy to be there, but I guess not. I'm
off. It drives my wife crazy.:• said pleting the 25-man roster this spring, struggling as a pitcher, but I'm not
Reed (1-1 ), who pitched a seven-hit· I had no J'{Oblems picking him . .The · going to worry about' it," Smiley ,
said.
ter Tuesday to give the Met&amp; a 7-2 strike never entered IIJY thought,"
Manny Alexander beat out an
victory over the Cincinnati Reds.
Vale~Jiine said.
" Day· games are killing' me. The
But the strike was very much in infield single to start the Mets' secnight before,l can't sleep and I can't the thoughts of Mets closer John ond and scored on Ordonez's double
eat," said Reed, who struck out four ·Franco, the team's player rep and l)efore Reed doubled home Ordonez.
New York expanded its lead to .Sand walked none in pitching his first outspoken union supporter, who
complete game since June 25, 1990, publicly criticized the team for hav- O in the founh when Ordonez singled
with two outs and Reed was safe
when he shut out the Philadelphia .ing Reed in spring training.
Phi llies with the Piusburgh Pirates.
"I still haven't talked to John. but when Reds shortstop Barry Larkin
Cincinnati has lost seven of eight I'll find a time definitely," Reed said. dropped his soft liner on the edge of
Reed also helped his own cause the outfield grass for an error.
games on its current road trip that
Af&lt;er Smiley walked Lance Johnended today with the finale of the with an RBI double in the Mets' two- ·
son to fill the bases, E,pgardo Alfonseries agamst the Mets.
run second inning.
"They say when it rains it pours.
Johit Smiley (1 -3) was upset that zo doubled horne three. runs.
Alex Ochoa's sacrifice fly in the
but we're in the midst of a monsoon Rey Ordonez and Reed were able to
now," said Reds manager Ray slap successive doubles past third fifth and AleKander's RBI single in
Knight, whose club has lost 12 of 15 base in that inning and complained the seventh off reliever Ricky Bones
overall and · JJ of 12 on the road.
about the position of the Reds in the accounted for the final two Mets
runs.
Reed was a replacement player · field .
·
during the lockout before the 1995
"They can play guys wherever · Willie Greene's third homer, a
season in the TeKas Rangers' camp, they want to play them and I'll just solo shot leading off the fifth, and
but pitched ,last season for the Mets' try to pitch around it," said Smiley, Hal Morris'. two-out RBI single in
Triple-A affiliate at Norfolk of the who was charged with six runs; three the ninth produced the Reds' only
runs off Reed.

Rockies hook Marlins 1.3-4;
Cardinals &amp; Astros also win

•

GOT HIM I - New York third baseman Edgar·
do A.Honzo lays the leather on the Clnc:lnnatt
Reds' Brook Fordyc:e (far right) In the. eighth

Inning of Tuesday's game In New York'a Shee
Slad,uin, where the Mets won 7-2. (AP)

By KEN BERGER
There is no reason to panic."
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
It just so happened ·that Avery
matched the pitching line he proAtlanta in 1966. Led by Maddux, and John Mabry followed with an Cleveland Indians' pitching woes
aren't
getting
any
better,
and
everyduced
in a 1995 World Series victothey have pitched a major league· RBI double, sending Los Angeles to
one
else.
seems
to
be
rubbing
it
in.
.
ry
over
the Indians - three strikeleading four shutouts.
its third straight loss.
While
their
league-worst
ERA
outs,
five
walks, one solo home run.
San Francisco was held to · live
Lankford, sidelined since undertook
yet
another
beating,
the
Indians
" It was the same weather," said
hits and had its longest winning going off-season surgery for· a tom '
were
dominated
Tuesday
night
by
·Avery,
who is trying to regain the
streak since 1994 stopped.
left rotator cuff. went 2-for-4 with a ·
Steve
Avery,
the
left-handed
pitcher
form
that
made him a two-time ISAtlanta scored twice in the first walk.
they
balked
at
signing
during
the
off·
game
winner
with the ' Braves. "I ·
inning against William Vanbanding· Astros 12, Padres 3
season.
thought a little bit about it. But that •
ham ( 1-1) on a sacrifice lly by ChipDerek l,lell and Jeff Bagwell both
Avery allowed three hits in six was a different team back then ."
By BEN WALKER
pe;r Jones and Ryan Klesko's RBI had three hits and Houston took '
Avery retired II straight in the
advantage of the Padres' sloppy play innings and beat Cleveland for the
AP Baseball Writer
single.
third
time
in
his
career
as
the
Boston
.
third
through siKth innings to beat .
OK, it's only April. Still. it's·hard
In other NL games, St. Louis raJ- at San Diego.
Red
Sox
beat
the
Indians
8-2.
for the second time this
the
Indians
to overlook what Larry Walker and lied past Los Angeles 6-4, Houston
Nine of the Astros' runs were
,
"They
showed
interest.-·but
they
season.
Greg Maddux arc doing.
bent San Diego 12-3 imd Montreal unearned because of three errors.
Nomar Garciaparra went 4-for-4
· Walker raised his batting average downed Chi.cago 5-1.
Scou Livingtone, playing in place of were son' of like. 'Eh. we're not
sure,"'
Avery
said.
"They
didn't
with
three runs and hit the first pitch
to .507, getting four hits Tuesday
Rockies 13, Marlins 4
Gold Glove third baseman Ken
come
after
me
as
hard
as
Boston
.
of
the
game for a solo homer off
night as the Colorado Rockies beat
Roger Bailey pitched a six-hitter, Caminiti, made two mistakes. ·
did."
Ogea.
the .Florida Marlins 13-4 at Coors overcoming a pair of two-run
Caminiti missed his first start of
After three sub-par seasons with
"The thing that makes me happy
Field.
homers by Moises Alou to send the season because of a strained
Atlanta,
Avery
signed
a
one-year,
is
that
we're wirming right now,''
" I am surprised," said Walket, Florida to its fourth straight loss .
hnlnstring·sustained Sunday in a win
$4.85
million
contract
with
Boston.
said
Garciaparra,
who raised his
who also leads the NL in home runs
Bailey (3-0) 'pitched his second· at Honolulu: He's listed as day-toThe
Red
Sox
thought
Avery
might
be
.
average
to
.349
with
his second
·
with nine and RBis with 25 in 17 . straight compleie game. retiring 13 day.
a
John
Tudor-Bruce
Hurst-Bo.b
Ojecareer
four-hit
game.
games. "The broken bats are going ·consecutive· batters in the middle
Shane Reynolds (3-1) extended
Mo Vaughn and Reggie Jefferson
through , the ground balls are· going innings. He also singled twice and hi• scoreless streak against ·San da kind of left-hander who could
have
success
at
Fenway
Park.
each
drove in lwo runs, with Jefferthrough and I'm hitting the ball 60 scored two runs.
'
Diego to 19 innings before Tony
If
he
can
keep
this
up,
Avery
will
son
hitting
a towering homer to right
feet and getting a base hit."
Ellis Burks. who began the game · Gwynn hit an RBI single in the third.
be
able
to'get
'em
out
anywhere.
in the first. Vaughn just missed a
Maddux, meanwhile, extended batting , 163, had four hits, including Gwynn later hit a two-run homer. ·
"Once I got really settled in and grand slam in the fifth, settling· for a
his streak to 24 innings without an - a-hom~ run.
Bagwell. homered in a six-run
started working fast, the way I nor- sacrifice fly that was caught a step
earned run as Atlanta stopped San
·Pat Rapp (2- I) lasted just 2 2-3 ninth.
mally do, it was the best I've felt in from the right-field fence that gave
Franci~co's ni 0e-game winning
inning~ and gave up 13 hits and 10
. Expos S, Cubs 1
a
while," said Avery, who missed Boston a4-1 lead.
streak wi.th a 4-0 victory.
runs. He has pitched two shutouts in
Dustin Hermanson. won in his
.
.
two
months last year with a strained
The Red SoK snapped a six:gan'te
Maddux left after six innings. He Denver, one at Mile High Stadium first start since college, and Montremuscle
in his side. "It's a good step losing sttcak in Cleveland and
missed his previous start because of and a one-lliner at c._s Field.
al won at home.
improved to 2-1 against the Indians
a mild strain of his right hamstring,
Cardinals 6, IJallters 4
Hermanson ( 1-0) last started for .in the right direction."
The
Indians'
pitchers,
on
the
othyear after going I-ll last .season.
this
and he re-aggravated the injury
Ray Lankford , playing for the Kent State in 1993, and had never
er
hand,
keep
going
backward.
s
.
"ll's a different year, and they're
while covering first base.
first time this season, keyed a three- pitched more than three innings. in
" I just kind of doinked my leg, run rally with two outs in the ninth the majors. He held the Cubs to four Chad Ogea (2-2) allowed six runs on a different club, too," Vaughn said.
that's all," Maddux said. "It's JUSt inning at Los Angeles.
hiL,, including Sammy Sosa's homer, eight hits in five-plus innings to raise "The Indians hove· got a great ballthe ERA for Cleveland's starters to club. II just tokes a while to pull it
one of those bener safe than sorry
St. Louis trailed 4-3 in the ninth, in five innings.
.a
league-worst 7.70.
together when you make switches
· things. Why jeopardize the next 200 and Dodgers reliever Todd Worrell
Doug Strange hit a two-run
"Actually, I' m almost glad this like they !lave."
innings for · one or two more (0-1) retired the first two bailers. But homer as the Expos won their 'third.
team is , going through this now
tonight'!"
Lankford singled, stole second and in a row. Chicago, which lost its first
The Braves improved to 14·4, third, and Brian Jordan walked.
14 games, had won the pl'\lvious two. because i{'means better things are to
co~.;:~~•.,~a said. " We willbc fine .
Butch Henry retired nine straight
their best start si nce moving to
Gary Gaeni hit a two-run double

batters to end the game for his ihird
save.
Troy 0' Leary added a two-run
homer in the ninth for Boston.
Kevin Seiizer hit a solo homer in ·
the third off Avery in his tirst game
since Apri I 16. Chad Curtis led off
and playo;d center field for Marquis.
Grissom, who was placed on the ISday disabled list before the game
wi.th a strained right hamstring. ·
Avery also gave up a solo homer
in his World Series win at Cleveland
- to Alber&lt; Belle. Atlanta won that '
game 5-2, and went on to win the
series in six games.
Notes: After starting the season
21-for-34, Indians catcher Sandy
Alomar is in a 1-for-17 slump, dropping his average to .431 .... Avery has
not allowed. a home run to a lefthanded hitter since •Darren Daulton
in 1994. ... Cleveland manager Mike
Hargrove said Curtis and Brian Giles
will platoon in center lield while
Grissom is on the disabled list. ...
The Red Sox were no-hit four years
ago Tuesday by Chris Bosio of Seattle .... One hundred years ago Tuesday. Louis Sockalcxis made his
major league debut lor the Cleveland
Spiders, becoming the first native
American to play in the majo.r~. .

News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline

992 215·6
Alomar and Hirsc~beck make pe~·ce; O's edge ChiSt...-o-x-3--2----American
League
roundup

As the Baltimore Orioles took1he
field at Camden Yards, Alomar
detoured before taking his position at
second base to offer his hand and
some quiet words to Hirschbeck,
who was working at first base .
Finally face-to-face, the two

astern dl·amo·
. ndme n .p.0 u. n d .Rebe Is 20•5.
''

Eastern's bascbali team pounded
t&gt;Ut 17 hits en route to recording a
;~O-S victory over the host South Gallia Rebels.
Eric Smith struck out JO and
walked four in a coinplete-game ·
qrffort.
·
The Rebels ' pi";hirrg

Baseball

Courtney Booth, Steve Queen and
Greg Montgomery - struck out four
and walked 15.
Eastern's hillers were Steve Durst
(3·3), Pat Aeiker (3-4), Chris Bailey
(3-4 &amp; a three-run homer in the sec-.
9nd inning), Corey Dillon (2-3), Eric

· (l..opez.().l ), i :O~ p.m.

Yanlcees(Rogtrs 1-D. I:05('1.PI. ·

AL standings

C hkag1J White So11 (NuYanv 1- 1) 111
Buhimo~ {Coppinaer0.0),' 7 : :\~ p.m...
Detroit tOh\'lllel 1-0) at Tuni(Oiiver ·
1· 1). II: ]~ p.m.
t.Cin~~~:sota. (Robenlon l-0) 11 Oakland
(Pri~o 1.0). 10~ p.nt

luternDivtllon

lia

!X I. laS.

8ullin]m: ............... l :2

4

.7!i0

Bosto-t ................... 10

8

.556

Toromp ............. ....... 9

8

Dctroi1 ..... ................ 9

II

New 'r'OJk ................ 9

II

-~2\J
. 4~
. 4~

WI
J

T(trf!nto (HI!nt\en l ·l) ·nl An:~htim

J l:

1·2), 10.. 5 p.m.
Kansas Cil) ( Pm ~ lcy 0- 11 at Seanlc .

(l.nng~ron

~

5 .

(T.Davis 0-0). IO:l S p.m.

Cmtr~l Division

Minnetota ........... ,.. ll
Milwm~kee ............. JC

8
7

- ~79

. ~J-'
.+W

.412

~

Chlcnav ................... 5

.26J

6

14

Wahm DlvWon
-Seault ................... IJ
1 . 6~
Te11.a.' .... .......f........... /1 8 ,j()C)'
10

Anaheimr···"······ ..... a ·JO

,414
.444

Thursday's games

··r

CLEVELAND .......·..x 10
KAnsas Ciry ....... ..... 7 10

Oakland ................. 9

2h

Derrolr (Brocail 0-1) 111 Texos (Pavlik
1· 2). 2;.15p.m.

J

MinnQOia (Rodriaucz 1-2) a1 Ouk!and
!Tcta,_0-1). 3:tS p.m.
CLEVELAND (Naat la I) 81 Mllwauk&lt;e (Eid«d 2·1), Hll p.m.
80110n (WAkefiekl 1-1J at Ballimore
(Kamicnie&lt;ki '1 · 0). 1:JS p.m. ·

4

NL standings

:1 ~

Tuttday•sMinlletOU 5, Oakland 3
Bot1oo 8. ClEVELAND 2
8al(i,_ 3, ~ Whiles., 2
If.Y. Y - 10, Milw•U. 2
Seaode 7, Kano!o Ci1~ 2 ,

T...... 7.A.-m6

:r..
!X
All.wa ................... 1•
Florida.................... IO

ao CUlVELAIID

"4 .m
filL

8
MontraJ ............. ..... K 9
New York ................7 12

. Philadelphia......... .... &amp; 12
-

.l56
.471

,:t68
..m

C_.niDiv............ ..... 12 1 .632

Dillard (2-5), Jeremy Kehl (1-3), · ton St. Joe today, play Southern at
Wes Sanders ( 1-4) and Smith {1-5). Racine Thursday arid host Symmes
South Gallia's hiuers were Booth Valley Friday.
(2-4 &amp; a double), Eric Swindler (2· Iooinc tlllll1
3), Steve Queen (2-4), Mo~tgomery, Eastern ·
154-403-5=20-17-0
Rush (both 1-2) and Matt Bess (1-4). South Gallia
001-002-2='5-9-6
WP: Smith
The Rebels (0,5) will host IronBooth

Piusburgh ........... ,.... tJ' 9 .471
S1. Louis .................7

II

3

4~

J89

CINCINNATI .........6 B .316
- Oiicilgo .... ".............2 · 15 ~ .1 J8

·6
9

WftltemDMtien
San FranciKO ........ I3 .f. .76~

Colorado ................ t2
Los AoJelca ........... IO
SIWI Diego ......... ....... 9

5

:roil

!

1 .'588
S .529

3
4

Iii
~

~~
7~

8

Phll. .lphlotMaduro t-2) 11 Plnobwsh a;..;,.. 2-o), 7:0l p.m.
. C.icaao Cu bs (MulhollafMI 0-2) at
-(lul!i...,0-3) , 7:35p.m.
S1. Looh (Siaoo~"'YN 0-t) •Lot A..
·

(HIIIIpll)o 1-3) II Soli 1Jiqo

,(Hoooihon 1-1), IO:lS p.m.

1bunday's pme

"1 thought it was a great gesture,"
Orioles manager 'Davey Johnson
said. " I thought it was a couple of
good men. getting it all over with.
He's a good umpire, Robbie's a good
player. Let's play b.a.,eball - no
more q·uestions."
Alomar and Hirsc~beck did have

Transactions
liMe baD
A.m...,u... ·
CLEVELIIND INDIANS: Plau:d CF

NHL playoffs

MMpJtll Gna;om

Mont~l

.

4; New Jcr-

York "'"dueries 2-1
aucaao 6. Cotoroclo 3: Jerialicd 2-2 .
Sl. Louis 4, Detroit 0; Jeries tied 2·2
Dan• 4, Edmontoo:t; serin tied 2-2
.......... 2, A.....m0: oerici tied 2-2

· Tocbry'o pma ·

reunion will indeed allow Alomar

J-21 at Chie&amp;&amp;o

New York 4, Florida 3 (OT) ; New

CIHCINIIATI (M"JM 0-1) 11 N.Y.
Mets~CIIrk 1· 1). UOp.m.
·
Florida (Brow• 2·0) 11 Colorado
(Wriahfl· I U :Ol p.m.
A1lan1a (Gltlvlpe 1.0) M 5M Fram:l1-

~~~~H~~~~t~linally put the inci-

Hockey

,.ylcodo-s)-0

Housron 12. San oteao 3

-

(~dowa

New Jersey 6.

Arbnta 4. SIUI Franciaco 0
S1. Louis 6, Lot Aa,eles 4

...., (Monina 2-tt.IO::U p.a

Pin&amp;burah

shared a private moment before
38,392 fans.
. :'I'm sorry," Alomar said .
"Thanks, now maybe thcy'lllet
us both . do our jobs," Hirschbcck
replied.
Hopefully, Tu~sday night's

Cubo (Traclllel 0-3), 8~ p.m.

· Tueoodoy 's seori!S

Tunclay's~~eores
NY. MeiS 1, CINCIIINATI 2
Monlml ~. Chicaao Cub! 1
Colonldo IJ, Florida~ ·

co (llueter 1.0). l :ll p.m.

Clalltm Div-

Today'•......,. ( W - 0.0)

-

Milwaukee &lt;McDonald 2-1) ul N.Y.

ley Cup champions and owners of
Thursday night at Monlreal.
" lt'.s just teamwork/' Zelepukin the best recuhu'-~n reeord in the
said. "It's five guys working hard. NHL, have lost two 'sttaipt after
You just have to be in the right place easily winning the first
games of
at the right time, and I was three the series.
times tonight."
.
. • "I'm sure 'we've opened up their
Bob Proben, known more · for eyes," said Proben, who had only
brawli11g than scoring, scored twice three goals in his previous 44 playas the Chicago Blackhawks defeat- off games. "We lost the ·first two
ed the Colorado Avalanche 6·3 to games, and maybe they were a little.
even their Western · series ·at ·.two ov~rcon'fident, but I'm suR&gt; they're
games apiece.
.thinking now, 'Hey, this is ~ good
The Avalanche, defending Stan· ·team we're up against.' Now they

two

.Ba·seb.all Ma·_·rauder·s· .· kn~~~~;~.~;~;;:~~Tuesdily
;beat GaiUpolis 6-2 ~£;E~~~:~~Q~!:~·

.•

Red Sox down Indians 8-2

By TOM WITHERS
moment that all of baseball had
AP Sports Writer
. longed for seven months to see. · .
A simple handshake ended one of
It was the first time that the two
baseball's most dist~rbing episodes. had met since that now-infamous
Roberto Alomar and · John game in Toronto last_ September
Hirschbeck stood in short right field when ·a . raging Alomar spit in
Tuesday night and shook h.ands, a Hirschbeck's face.
· · ·

By The Aeaoclldecl PrHa
The top seed in the Eastern Con. ference playoffs is one win away
from an opening-round sweep. However, the top seed in the West is
struggling.
Valeri Zelepukin scored three
~ goals as the New Jersey Devils beat
, the Montreal Canadiens 6-4 Tuesday .
· • night to take a 3-0 lead in their bestof-seven series. The Devils; who had ·
the best regular-season record in the
· East, can sweep by winnihg Game 4

Tolilpt's pmet

Bu#Tatoaoo.-.. 7~·!0""·

Pltlladelphi. . Pim
, 1:30 p.m.
"!'lew Yon, 7:. p.m.

, , florido

1b..,....y'spmes
NeW Ieney 111M-. 1:30 p.m.
£lticofo a ~..1:.10 P:nt.

.• .
a.7...,, f.10 :~

Plloooiaal\oolltlim, !0:30p.m.
~

onaw..

..

New Yott ao Florido, 7:!0 p.ot.
SL IAIIIM Dtmeir. 7~ p.m.

S.lmontolll O..lll. I p.m.

01'1 I~

I ~-day· dlsubk.'ll

lisl. Called up INF..OJ 1 Oami11n "Jat.:bun
fron' Buff&lt;do ut the Ameri&amp;:M Associa-

dun .

•
TORONTO BLUE JAY S: Rl!..:ullcU

-

or tbi:
hnemat1onllllc11aue. ~ioncd 28 Felipe

UtP H~ck F~ner from Symtu'C
· c~spu 10 SyrDCUIC.

........

CHICAGO CUBS . Recoiled RHP

Dav.: SWirllbiMfb rtoM ltnu of lh~
Alllllric:.ln AIIOCiMIOft. Placed LHP IMry

Cuionoo""' Is-day tliiObted U•.
SAN DIEGO PADRE.~ : Tnded lhe
riaftla to ltHP Hidekl lrlbu, 28 HOJMr
Buoll, OF Cloolon Arnenonllltd OF Vctnctn Muwell to 11M! Ne~ York YanleeJ
lor S3 noillioo, OF Rubea
RHP

Ri..,."""

-il .-.......

Rarael ......._, pcldiaa approv11 rro.

.....u.,. ....... -

.

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: ~vaood
OF RaJ Lookl.... , _ otw 15,4oy dis·
RHP -~
lloaio lo
Louitvile oldto,..,_""Ooiliio.-.
Nltilllll'#, 'A
P.HOEN!X SUIIS: Activated F-C

••

•

another rendezvous during Baltimore's 3-2 win over the White SoK.
After Alomar singled in the sixth,
he was called out by Hirschbeck
when first baseman Frank Thomas
caugtrt a . line drive by 'Rafael
Palmeiro ·and stepped oil the bag
ahead of the diving Alomar.
This time, there was no argument.
Before the game, Alomar said 'he ·
was looking forward to stepping on
· the field with Hirschheck again . .
"I'm real happy it's going to happen, so we can get this thing over
with, " Alomar said. ".John waots to
put everything that happened beh.ind
him, and I personally ·want to put
'(See AL on hp 5)

Mark B!fMI from .lhe irjam:d lilt l..)c..m-:.

livuletl C Horw.:iCl Llamas rn1m lite plny11ITn111Wr.
.
VANCOUVER ORIZZLIES . Rene'*c=d the ~.vntrac.1 or Lionel Hollins, IIi·
silllanl I.'OilCh,!OecJined 10 renew lhc COlt·
lr!JI.:'t l- of Ru Huahts aad Jinwny Puwdl,
. IWltlant CC~a~:hes.

Football

Nol- Fooobolt a-- ·

CAROLINA PANTHER"!&gt;: Si&amp;n&lt;d·
FB Brion O'llcol.
.
DENVER BRONCOS , Si.ned LB
Arnohl Ale, 08 Tom Ba:ll, c 0111011
Simmom;, TE Man l..cpsia, C K.C. lORn.
DT David Rt:ehie Md WR Q1a1J M-.:Uy.
liRESN BAY PACKERS: Waived S
Mon~y Chow and Cl 8.-:r 0Wal1.
JACKSONVILLe JAOUARS : Re·
1eued CB Mickey WuhinlkJft. Waived

QBs.... r - •

KANSI\5 !n't CHiEFS: Siped FB

oo.ell&amp;eMeH to • • •,_. 4.'0Ml'&amp;'t .
NEW EIIOLAND PATRIOTS '

~ C Mite Oldor""" DE Jerroohte

I'IIILIIDELPIIIA &amp;AOLIS: AafiOd
IO ..,..

with Dl

~ ~.

LB

.

night, the New York Rangers edged

Anaheim 2-0. .
·~i/,
All those best-of-sevA!a series are
tied 2-2 except for N.ew Ypillc-Fipri·
da, which the Rangers lad
The playoffs resume tonight with
Buffalo at Ottawa, Philadelphia at
Pittsburgh, and Florida at New York.·
Philadelphia leads 3..0; while Buffa·
lo has a 2-1 advantage.
De'l'ill 6, Canadlens 4
At Montreal, Zelepukin scored
twice in the second period and put
HELD tiP - COlorado canter Stephana Yelle round playoff game Tuesdlly night In . Chicago,
New Jersey up 5-4 at 7:50 of the
(26) Is held up by Chlca~·· Steve Dublnlky (14) where the Blackhawk&amp; won 6-3 to tie the Mrlee
third on a power play. Saku Koivu,
u Yelle tr1ea to tum the c:omer to shoot the puc:k at 2·2. (AP)
.
who tied the game 4-4 with his first
during tha third period of Game 4 of their flrat·
. ·
··
goal of the playoffs for Montreal at
4:37 of the third period, was serving
his fourth minor penalty of the game
when Zelepukin scored the go-aht&lt;ad
goal. Brian Rolston scored short·
handed into an empty net with 59
seconds left in the game.
By PAUL NEWBERRY
Zoeller is playing in the Greater will get to select the menu for the
Ranprs 4, Panthers 3
AP
Sporta
Writer
Greensboro Chrysler Classic, which Champions Dinner next year.
At New York, Esa Tikkanen
Fuzzy
Zoeller.
apologized
again
starts Thursday at the Forest Oaks
Kman spokeswoman Shawn
stl'red the game: winner off thl\ goal·
for
raeially
charged
comments
about
Country
Club
..
He
'didn't
comment
Kahle
declined to say how much
net camera with 3:31 left in the first
Masters
champion
Tiger
Woods.
on
the
end
of
his
relationship
with
Kmart
paid
Zoeller for the sponsorovenime. Tikkanen's hard slap shot,
That
wasn
't
enough
for
keep
Kmart
Kmart.
ship
and
to
have
the gol(er promote
which rang off the inside of the Flori·
from
dropping
its
longtime
sponsorThe . Greensboro Jaycees, who its products. The company has spon· ·
da net and c¥Qmed out, . required .
ship
ol
the
popular
gqlfer.
run
the PGA tournament, issued a· sored him for ·more than six years
several minutes of review be(ore the
Kmart
announced
itsdecision
statement
dissociating the organiza- under a eol)tract that originally was
shot was ruled good. An apparent
Tuesday
after
Zoeller
called
Woods
tion
from
Zoeller's comments. But scheduled to expire in December
winning goal for Florida at 2:44 of
"that
little
boy"
and
urged
him
not
they went ahead with a long-planned 1998.
the ovenime was waved off when
·
to
request
fried
chicken
and
collard
to
the
golfer
Tuesday
night
Under
his
deal
with
Krnart;
tribute
referee Dan Marouelli ruled Scott
greens at the Champions Dinner · because he played in the tournament Zoeller carried the company logci on
Mellanby interfered with New York
when he ·returns to Augusta Nation22 years in ·a row.
his golf bag and visor and also
goalie Mike· Richter. The Rangers
al
next
year.
,
·
.
Alston
said
the
Jaycees
statement
appeared
at Kmart events. He was .
forced ovenime when Luc Rbbitaille ·
The
Troy,
Mich.-based
company
was "trying to sugarcoat their posi- the only pro golfer sponsored by
scored with 18.9 seconds left in re-said the commen)s were inappropri·
tion about Mr. Zoeller." Alston said Kmart.
.
ulation. ·
ate
and
·offenstve,.
even
!hough
the
.
NAACP
might
hold
a
protest
WOOds
Was
in
Portiand, Ore., on
Bluel4, Red Wblp 0
Zoeller
said
he
was
only
joking
dur·
for
private
meetings· with
during
the
tournament.
Tuesday
At St. Louis, Geoff Counnall
ing
an
interview
with
CNN
shonly.
Kmart avoided the prospect of Nike, his major sponsor. A local telescored two goals and Grant Fuhr got
after playing the final round at the
corporate embarrassmentby cutting vision station showed him outside
his second shutout of the playoffs·.
Masters on April 13.
its links to Zoeller after reviewing. Nike headquarters shooting a.pro,
Counnall was one of the goats in the
"Regardless of the eonte&gt;&lt;t, they
the comments he made in the CNN motional spot in which company ·
Blues' 3-2 •loss in Oame 3. drawing
are
contrary
to
Kmart's
longstanding
·
interview.
.
.· . chairman Phil Knight served as his
a five-minute major and game mis·
policies
that
ensure
our
words
and
"That
little
boy
is
driving
well
caddy.
conduct in the secorld period for
deeds
are
without
bias,"
Kmart
said
· and he's putting well," Zoeller told
Woods was not availahlc to the
head-buuing Kirk Maltby. Courtnall
in.a· statement.
CNN about an hour after finishing mediti for the second ,day in a row.
•
spent no time in the penalty box this
Zoeller, who issued a public apol·
his round at Augusta, while •Woods and Nike spokesman Jim Small said
· .time, but many of his teammates
ogy
in
a
statement
Monday,
apolowas still on the course completing a . he had no commerit on Kman's deciwere penalized following ,a brawl.
!
gized
again
Tuesday
to
the
acting
12-stroke victory. "He's doing Slon .
with I:21 remaining in the game.
president of the North Carolina
everything it takes to win. So, you
During an interview with Oprah
Blackhawks 6, AvaiiiiiChe 3
know what you g~ys do when he Winfrey that will be broadcast on
At Chicago, Proben and Tony · chapter of the NAACP while in
Greensboro for this week's PGA
gets m here·! You pat nom on tne oack Thursday, Woods said it bothers
Amonte scored twice for the Black.
Tour
event.
and
say congratulations and enjoy '!I him when people ·call hi in an
hawks, who outworked and outskat, Federal Hocking had been cruis- more times in the sixth.
·
"People
who
know
me
know
I'm
and tell him not to serve fried chiCk- African-American. He is onc-fq!!i'tJ. ·•·
ing along to one of its best softball
Eastern hillers were Kim Mayle a ed Colorado. Proben made it 2"2 at · a jokcster.· I just didn't deliver· the
en
next year. Got itT'
'
black, one-fourth. Thai , one-fourth .' - .
5:53
of
the
second
period,
body·
seasons ever. but rari head on into a double, two ,walks and . five stolen
line
well,"
Zoeller
said.
"I'm
in
a
nosnappe.d
his
fi'og&lt;:rs.
Chinese,
one-eighth white and one- ·
Zoeller
slamming
Claude
Lemieux
off
the
tiesly Eagle green wave ' as Eastern bases; Aeiker a si~gle and triple,
win
situation.
Accept
my
apology.
turned
to
wa)k
away,
then
added,
eighth
American
Indian.
defeated Federal Hocking 18-0 Martie Holter a single and three puck, feeding Eric Daze in the slot
please.
I
apologized
to
Tiger.
I
apol"Or
collard
green.'
or
whatever
the
"Growing
up,"
he said, "I came
behind a no-h~, shut-out by sopho- walks, Amanda Milhoan a single and and scoring on the rebound. After
ogize
to
anyone
I
might
have
offendhell they serve.:·
up with this name: I'm a 'Cablimore Valerie Karr.
double; .and Valerie Karr a single. , Ethan Moreau put the Blackhawks
ed."
Woods, as defending champion. nasian."
ahead
on
a
pass
from
/\monte
at
•. Eastern (9-2) took a 2-0 lead in
Karr got the pitching victory lor
Skip Alston of the National Asso: the fin;t when Kim Mayle walked . the Eagles, hurling a no-hitter, walk· 6:57, Probert drove hard~lhe net to
ciation
fot the Advancement of Col• and stole second and third, then ing three, hilling one and fanning deflect Jeff Shantz's pciW,feed past
ored
People
accepted Zoeller's apolPatrick Roy for a.powet,O!t,fpal at
came home on a Kelli Bailey field- four. Ell!itern made three errors.
ogy,
but
also
threatened a boycotl of
10:16.
.
' ..
·;·ers choice. Stephanie Evans, who
J. Pullins suffered the loss. She
the tournament.
' . Stan 4;011!tn ·
'walked, stole ho"'e for the second fanned six, walked 13 and gave up
"He didn't insult only Tiger
At Edmonton, Bidt~·· (\lilc~rist
.Jun.
.
18 runs. Federal made eight errors.
Woods,
but the entire African-AmerEastern scored singled runs in the
Eastern goes to Nelsonville today and Jamie Langenbrunner scored
ican
community
nationwide," Alston
third-period goals and Dallas hung
. second. third and fourth for a 5-0 and to Trimble Thursday.
said,
adding
that
Zoeller's .comon to tieat the Oilers. Gil~hrist
lead. Then the Eagles broke it open Jpp!pl tl!tal.s
ments weren't . "funny to us. You
snapped a 2-2tie at I :53 of the third
· "·in the fifth with a nine-run rally.
Eastern
211-194=18-7-3
don
' t pick at our culture and expect
period, and La.ngenbrunner put' Dal•• Big blows in the inning were a Federal Hocking OQJl-000=0-0-S
us
to
laugh."
las ahead 4·2 at 5:31.
• Kim Mayle double and three-run
LP-'Pullins
,,triple by Patsy Aeiker. That made the
WP-Karr
(C:;i{tinued from Page 4)
scar~ 14-0. Th,cn EHS scored four
By DAVE HARRIS ' .
.Senti~! CC11'1'81pondent
Metgs sc,ored three runs in the
, first inning and never looked back as·
the .Marauders defeated GalliaAcademy 6-2 in non-conference baseball
. , action Tuesday in Gallipolis.
The win breaks a two-game los· ·
· ing streak for the Marauders (9-4 ).
Meigs scored their three runs in
the first inning after two outs. Tony
· Dugan and Chris Ro11sh both singled
and Rick Hoover walked to load the
. bases.
Jason Mullen then singled to dri·
ve in Dugan and Roush, Hoover
, came in to ·score on a Blue Devi~
error to give Meigs a 3-0 lead. .
Meigs increased the lead to 4-0 in .
the fourth inning. After Jeremiah
Bentley single!! with two outs, Scott
, George ~as hit by ~ pitch. Brad
Whitlatch singled to score Bentley.
The Blue Devils added a run in
' the bottom half of the inning when
Tim Si~ers slammed a solo home run
to pull Gallia Academy to within 41.
'Collin Roush singled wilh one out
in the sixth inning lind advanced to
second on.a Blue Devil error. George ·
then was hit by another pitch, which
marked the fifth time in two games
that he has been by a Blue Devi I
.pitcher. Whitlatch then followed
; with a run scoring single to make it
"a 5- I contest.
·
Isaac·Saunders led off the bouom
.of the sixth inning with a double. He
· advanced to third on a·ground out.
Siders walked and was caught in a
run down, but he was in the ·run
down long enough for Saunders to
"'score and make it a 5-2 contest.

A.J. Vaughan and Rick Hoover
l.ed off the top of the seventh with
singles. Two outs later, Roush followed with a single to close oUt the
·MIIfauders scoring and . give the
Marauders the 6-2 win .
Whitlatch was the winning pitcher as Scou George picked up the save
pitching the last inning. Whitlatch
gave up three hits, walked two and
struck out three. George struck out
one.
Roush led the Marauders going
three for four with three singles.
Whitlatch and Dugan added a pair of
singles each. Chris Roush, Vaughan,
Hoover, Mull~n and Bentley had singles to pace Meigs.
Heath McKinnis was the starter
and loSer for Gallipolis. He gave up
12 hits, struck out five, walked one ·
and hit George twice.
Siders led the Blue D~vils · at the
plate with his solo home run. Isaac
Saunders and }..aron Beaver added a ·
double each.
Meigs has a full slate of games
the-rest of the week. The Marauders
will hOst Waterford on Wednesday,
play Belpre at home in a make-up
contest on Thursday and host Vinton
County ·on Friday. On Saturday the
Marauders will travel to Marietta for
a ganie with Sugar Creek at 2:20
p.m. and the Tigen; at 5 p.m.
Gallipolis is slated to play at
Marietta today and host River Valley.
Thursday.
loolna til.lab
Meigs
300-101-1=6-12-0
Gallipolis .
000-10 1-0=2-3· 2
Whitlatch (WP), George (7) and
Mullen
McKinnis (LP) and Woodwllrd

. ST. LOUIS lAMS: Slpotl P Wilt
· llol
l DT I I - J - . L1

·---•n..o.o....

•

•

W!

.

Kmart drops sponsorship .
of Zoeller despite his apology

fll ··

Ta~k is

cheap.
Sos the beep.

.AL gSfflfiS...

:Wah·ama baseball
.team tallies 5-2 win
.:over Tornadoes
Pitcher Danny Sayre carried a noPork Dill came on in ·the fifth and
. . hitter through four innings, but at the had two straight 1-2-3 innings;
::same time had control problems, as be(ore Yonker reached in the seventh
· : Southern a 5··2 tQ the defending West and scorec;l on G. Hufrs second hit of
: · Virginia Class A state champion · lhc night. Those were the· only two
: · wahama White Falcons:
Wahama hits.
.
Wahama took a J-0 lead in the
Sayre gave up four runs, no hits,
first when Dale Johnson walked, walked nine and hit one in four
~ David Mitchell walked and both ·innings, while.Dill gave up one run
advanced on wild pitches, then Lane and two hits. They combined for I0
Yottna squeezed JOhnson honie on a strikeouts. Southern· m.ade thre~
suicide squeeze.
errors.
Chad Ord g~t the win for
Southern (6-9) tied the score at I;
I in the next frame when Pete Sis- Wahama·with Fields coming in durson reached 11111 an error and scored ing the sixth frame. They gave up
on Danny Sayre's double.
two runs, six hits, ten strikeouts and
. · Wahama regained the lead in the walked two. Wahama made two
.
. . .
third as a walk to Mitcheii..Two wild errors.
Southeni hilteni were Nate Sisson
pitches and another Youna suicide
:squeeze brought hOme yci another · a triple, Jesse Maynard a single,
'run to make the score 2-'1 . .
· Corey Williams a single, Pete Sisson
, Wahama added two mm· ruos a single. Sayre had a double and
witiJout the benefit of a hit in the home run.
iourth whCn with two out, Finnicum . Southern gOes to Albany to face
Walked and ' IIOic second, Cunclilr • Alexander todoy and hosts South
t-:hcd on u ln'DI' and tine Jtraiglll Gallia thunday.
lllllli
Jil'alb broughl home two n1111 for a
101-200-1=:5-H .
4-1 tally.
.
Waluuna
: Southern added one in their half Southem
0 I0-1 00.0.2·6-3
the fourth u Sayn slanuned a Ions
WP-Ord
~ run 10 !.ad off the frlmc.
LP-Sayn
••

'

t

. Karr's no-hitter
drives Eastern
.: ~ past Lancers 18-0

'='=

D II wa l'ooll. 0 ........, 1!oYwft, C
. Doo-.l'l -.~.DI
,_,{ :.:· 0 111..,.; Swt-. WR
1oortiiC.,W-.

a-1.

•

everything that happened behind
Jeff Cirillo and John Jnhu· homered for the Brewers.
me.
'.' Arid I hope that from tonight on,
Marinen 7, Royals :Z ·
you media guys can lca\'e me 'aloile .
.At Seattle. Jeff Fassero pitched
and let me play the game of b~eight stron:g innings to stay unbent·
ball. "
.
. en with the Mariners. and Joey Cora
Baltimllre stoner Mike Mussina hit his 14th career home run .
(3·1) allowed two runs and seven .
Fassero (4-0), traded from Monhits with.,one walk in,seven innings treat for three minor leaguers last
to earn his second win against the October, allowed five hits and one
·WhiiC Sox in five days.
run. He struck out seven, walked one
Danny Danr;in (0-2) took the, loss.
and lowered his ERA to 2.57.
Elsewhere in the AL. it was New
Cora *dthe score by leading.on·
York 10, Milwaukee· 2; Seattle 7,
the founh against Tim Belcher (1 -3)
Kansas City 2; Toronto ?,.Anaheim with his first homer of the sea.,on. It
6; and. Minnesota 5, Oakland 3.
came in Cora's 2,612th career at-bat.
,
Yankees 10, Bftwen :z ·
Blue Jays 7, Anaels 6
- At · New York, Al111y Pettittc
Carlos Garcia's two-run single
with two outs in the ninth inning off
pitched a six-hitter for his fourth win,
aild the Yankees scored eight runs in
Mike James ( 1-2) lifted Toronto to
the fifth inning.
victory at Anaheim.
Tino Martinez, Derek Jeter and
With the Blue Jays trailing 6-5, ·
Joe Girardi clrow .in two runs each
pinch-hitter Carlos Delgado opened
the ninth with a single and advanced
for the Yankees; who earlier i!l the
day acquired the rights to Japanese to third on a sacrifice and a fly ball
pitcher Hideki I111bu.
before Garcia connected.
. Brad Radke (1- 1) allowed just .
Ed Sprague and Alex Gonzalez
three hits - including solo homers
homered for the Bluo Jays .
by Mark McGwi~ and Jose Canseco
Paul Quantrill (2·1) got the win in
- and struck out seven in 7 713
relief, and Dan Plesac pitched a perinnings.
, feet ninth •for .his first save with
· S~einbach, who aiJned a free· · : Toronto.
agent COIIIniCt with Mianesota on ~ Jim Leyri~ hit a three-run homer
-Dec. S. spent the firll 10 yean of his ; and Oary DiSarcina hi! a solo shot
career with the A's. He led off the : for the Anacls.
fifth with a double, and the Twins :
'l'frill5, Atllhdcs 3
loaded tile bues on a walk iad 10
Ron Coomer's three·ru·n double
error by .-r Mike Mql!ler (0-2)
broke up a scoreless game as Min·
before Coomer connocltld.
neiOia won in ~r 1lny Stein·
t.:b's ndllm to Oaltland.

Phone Special

Pag er Special

Mitsubishi AH 129/$29

3 months service ond

Motorola TVM200/$29

poger for $69.9 5 .

Motorolo DPC550/$29

Offer expires Moy 9, 1997.

Motorolo TVS200/$29
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Mcitorolo Piper/$49

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614/992-7070 t en 38A Mqin SlrMI614/286-6073
1

--""'--•-,. o.c---.
•

I

�PofMror. Mldclllport, Ohio

P get•.TheDIIIyiiilllnel

Mardaways to display talents
)n Heat•Magic bout Thursday
'''By FRED GOODALL
'" ORLANDO. Fla. (AP) -'Jbere's
' ·ncithing to debete as far as the Mia: 'mi Heal and Orlando Map: are con:•ocerncd.
.
I·. &lt;They will tell you the best allaround point guard in the Eastern
• Conference is named Hardaway.
.:·The only argument is whether it's
· .
. -Tim or Penny.
"You're talking about twoexcep, tiona! players," Orlando coach
·Richie Adubato said. "Very different
styles. But very, very effective."
Tim is Miami's 30-year-old floor
.:leader, a three~time All-Star wl)o has ·
•rescued ,&amp;career that was in decline
, .because of injuries. At 25, Penny's
one of the NBA's most popular
,squng stars, a gtfted big man who
t,.plays a little man's position.
r
One likes to penetrate and break
: down defenses when he's not
: lliunching three-pointer.s from the
: perimeter. The olher uses his size to
: post up smaller defenders and can be
1caught most nights finishing moves
~ to the basket with highlight-film
~ dunks .

Hardaway vs. Hardaway figures
; to be one of the keys to the first;: rounc! playoff series between the
' ; Heat and Magic that begins Thurs; day night at Miami Arena.
~ : Then again, maybe not.
·: . "It's a nice match up, but it does: n' t always happen because they
; don 't guard Penny with Tim Hard' away," Adubato said. "They' ll play
: him on either Nick Anderson or Den-

nis Scott and probably play a bigger was obWned in i tnde that tent
guy on Penny."
Bimbo Coles and lecvin Willis 16.
The Heat' concede as much, GQiden Slate in Fcbnaary I996.
acknowledging that Dan Majerle,
'The eighth-year pro responded
Keith Askins and Jamal Mashburn with perflaps the best season of a
probably will spend as much time on · career thai began 10 decline when he
6-foot-7 Penny as six-foot Tim.
ton; the anterior cruciate ligament in
"He poses the same problems as his left knee and missed the entire
a Grant Hill and Michael Jordan and · 1993-94 seasOn.
B~ides leading the Heat in scorSCottie Pippen.... He can beat you by
ing.
be set franchise single-season
himself, if he's on his game," ·Heat
records for assistS (695), steals (IS I)
coach Pat Riley said.
.
"Obviously they will try to ere· and three-point baskets (203).
ate sonic mismatch. We can counter
"He's good off the dribble, a guy
that. They have to play him on the who can gel to the basket whenever
other end, too. So it goes both he wants to," Orlando's Hardaway
ways."
.
said. "Jl!e way I have to approach
While he gives ·up seven inche~ in it to make him work hard at both
height, Tim feels he can make up for ends of the floor - not only on the
the difference with quickness.
offensive end, ·but the defensive
"I've played Penny before. I end. "
know what he likes to do. It's just a
Adubato was the coach of ·the
matter of containing him," he said. Dallas Mavericks during Hard·
"He's j4st like Michael Jordan. away 's early years with Golden
Whoever's guarding him, be's going State.
to do what he wants out there . ... But
"I' ve seen him forever, and I've
it's something both teams have to never seen him play better," the
deal with. It's going to be hard for Orlando coach said.
me to contain him, but it's going to
"Offensively, he does it all . And
be hard for him to contain me, too." be's playing better defense than be
Orlando's Hardaway has the same has . ... One thing about Ti'm Hard·
son of respect for his Miami coun- away is be plays with 'tremendous
terpan, who averaged a team-leading aggression' and tremendous confi20.3 points for the Heat after it dence. And it doesn't mauer if he's
looked like he didn't figure into having a good game or a bad game.
Riley's plans for this season.
Even in a bad game, he makes the
Miami courted free agent point big shots in the end. He'll be 4-forguards Gary Payton and Kenny IS and hil the last three. That's what
Anderson last summer, ,then settled we can't let happen in this series."
for bringing back Hardaway, who

:Major League Soccer hopes
it o fill arenas With media·blitz

Wedn11t'ey, Apr1123, 1117

weSTERN CONFERENCE

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Flretround

Sern~A,·Ir

(belt-of-5)

(belt-of-7)

Finale
(bell-of-7).

Flnlll

Semlftnall

Filii round

(belt-ol-7)

(belt-ol-7)

(belt-ol-5)

1

(beet-of·7)

70rlando

Pllolnlx7

3NMYY11111

Houlton3

6Chlrlotte

Mlnneaotlt 6

NCAA restores five-second
rule for 1997-98 ·cage season
Keating said. "By putting it back in, ment with changing the held-ball
By DOUG TUCKER
we hope to get teams more into an rule, making it an automatic turnover
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) . Four seasons after abandoning col- 'offensive flow rather than having instead of awarding alternale possession. This will be strictly up to the
lege .basketbell's closely guarded one player dominate up front."
During a !wo-day meeting ending conferences whether to try or not.
rule, the NCAA is overturning itself.
- Let coacbe~. not just players,
The men's baskelball ·rules com- Tuesday, the committee also voted to
require
most
preseason
tournaments
call
timeouts.
mittee voted Tuesday to reinstate the
- Allow substitutions during
'five-second count beginning next next year to use a 40-second shot
season. They said thai. instead of clock, instend of a 35-second shot multiple free throws only before the
final attempt or after the final
enlivening offensive play. as intend- clock.
This will be mandatory for most attempt.
ed, dropping the rule reduced shots
-. Enforce more aggressively
and tended to make games less preseason tournaments that begin
exciting.
before Dec. I. including the Maui the coaches ' box rule.
"We don 't announce vote totals, Classic, the Great Alaska Shootout
The committee also· voted lo let
but I can tell )'OU it was not close," and the preseason NIT.
conferences experimenl with having
"Coaches very strongly support a maximum of five players on the
said Larry Keating. committee chairman.
putting the five-second count back free-throw lanes durin!} foul shots. In
Under the rule, an offensive play- in. but not all are in support of the preseason tournaments, thiS will
er may not dribble the ball more than changing the clock," Keating· said. be mandatory. Decreasing the numfive seconds if a defender is withig "Most felt strongly that the five-sec· ber on the lanes from nine to five
six feet of him. The offensive play- ond count was more of the culprit. "should clean up a lo~ of the pusher must shoot or pass or be called for But we put. a 40-second clock in to ing and shoving g!)ing on," Keating
see what happens."
said.
·
a turnover.
If successful, the 40-second shot
Currently, under the held-ball
"The concern has been that the
flow oft,he game hasn't been as good clock could become permanent for · rule. when a defensive player ties up
and the game doesn 'I look as good." the 1998-99 season.
t~e ball with an offensive player,
In other action, the committee possession is awarded according to
Keating said.
"The group felt pretty strongly voted to:
an alternating possession arrow.
Allow
conferences
to
experithis was one o.f the reasons why,"

l#:lingis' knee surgery will sideline her
j(or at :least three weeks, mother says

I*

..

•

dominated by. pros.
"For the 1998 championships in
Greece. I can assure you the USA ·.
team will consist of atleasl 10 NBA
players, who will be named sometime next fall," Granik said.
"We will wait until the sprins for
lbe two other spots," which could
also be filled by NBA players or college stars. The process will be the
same for the 201Xl Summer Games.
Stankovic, the FIBA bead, said ·
his group is expected to expand its
rules on foreign player quotas to
non-EU Europeans.
"Opening the borders is a re~o­
lutlon," Stankovic said. "We are by

M""r'"""'"'"

15 EU members, and lhis would
expand the frontiers."
Righi now, European basketball
clubs can only have cwo non-EU
players. If quotas are slackened, top
Greek, Italian and Spanish teams
would be free to pack their rosters
with talent from counlries such u
Russia, Croatia and SerbiL
FIBA will vote on the maacr 11 its
European congreu in Denm.t May
22-23. .
The United Slates is one of nine
countries that plan to bid for the
2002 World Championships,
Stankovic said.
Bids are due July 31, and a host
will be choeen in November.

manaa·

Sox.
I

portionality. Under Title IX. the ford that tied football stadium
number of female athletes needs to improvements to funding for sever·
"substantially mirror" \he number of al women:. sports, she said.
.,
. women in the overall student body.
"Everyone is looking f6r ways (to
according to the 1st Circuit inler- comply with Title IX) without cutprctation.
.'
ting sports," she said.
Brown argued the percentage of
Brown's compliance plan
female athletes only needed be in includes adding three women's varline with the number of female stu- sity sports,' two of which will be
dents interested and able to llartici- donor-funded. '
pate in a varsity sport. It said it could
Lynette Labinger, the lead attordetermine interest levels through ney for the women who sued ·Brown,
student surveys .
l:..s little compassion for schools that
The disparity between the number cemplain about having to make
of men and women athletes at most tough choices about what sports to
schools:is due to the football )earn, fund, yet have discriminated again's!
which sometimes has more than 100 women for years.
members - enough participants to
"Any institution that was holding
field several learns in most othe{s · ils breath, thinking there was an
sports.
opportunity to revisit Title IX
:·schools thai will have an easier thro\lgh Brown hopefully will tum
time complying with proportionali- back and look at its sports programs
ty will be those who either have few- and move ahead with changes," she
er women (than men) or those who said.
do not have a football team," said
The Brown lawsuit was filed
Beverly Ledbetter, Brown's legal after the school eliminated funding
counsel. ·
for two women's teams, claiming it
George "Buddy ",Sasser, athletic no longer could afford them. Since
director at Coastal. Carolina Univer- then, the school has found ~ays to
sity in Conway, S.C., said he is con- fund those teams, add other women's
corned football programs will be an teams and not cut any men's telims,
inviting target at schools that fear a Laliinger said.
lawsuit over Title IX. ,
Schools that cui men's teams
"I am very concerned, having without looking for other .ways to
been a football coach 28 ye&amp;fs, expand opportunities for women arc
what's going to happen to intercol- using Title IX as a scapegoat, she
legiate football?" be s~id .
said.
•
.
KathryJI Reith, director of public
"They don't have ·tO cut any
information for the National Colle- teams," she said. "To say, 'we have
giate Athletic Association, said in the no option,· I have to say that's a pholast five years many schools have ny response .... 11 can be done. If peostepped up solicitations to pay for ple want to be creative and commitnew or eltpanded women's teams so led to making things work, whether
lhey don't have to Cl!t men's squads. they do it by ~locating, fund-rais- :
The NCAA runs ~mintlrli for its ing \!rives, they can .do it.'
members 10 lei them now about suecessful campaigns like one al Stan-

.Tribe puts Grisson on .DL to help
strained right hamstring recover
By KEN BERGER
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Cleveland Indians will have to try
reversing tl¥ir poor start with Marquis Grissom on the disa~ list.
The leadoff hiller and four-time
Gold Glove ccnler fielder was plaCed
on the IS-day DL Tuesday with a
strained ri,tlt hamllring.
. Grissom, acquired in the spring
trainin1nde thiiiCRt Kenr~y Lofton
to the Adanta Bnvea, injund .the
hamstrin1 in hill fint pme with the
Indians M~reh ~7 apinst the Kansas
City Royals. It kept geuin1 wane,
and the lndi- decided to ,;ve it a
chance to hMI completely.
"It wasn'1,oin1 to pt any better until we put him on the DL. and
lot-him healthy, .. Cleveland
er Mike lflrJrove said before Theaday's 11me tpinst the BOltOn Red

Grissom was off to a slow start, away from me beCause of it.
batting .234 with six stolen bases in
"ll's hurt me a~ the plate, too.
seven attempiS. Known for playing When I tum on the ball, it bites ffil:."
a shallow center field, Grissom had
The Indians acquired Grissom
moved deeper lately to take pressure and David Justice from the Braves
March 2S in exchange for Lorton
off lhe hamstriJI&amp;:
.
"It wun't aettins better' the way and pitcher Alan Embree."Lorton ·is
il should because be kept going out betting .443 with eight stolen beses
there ·and extendin1 himself," Har- for Atlanta.
· The Indians called up infieldcrgrove said .
Grissom played I58 games for O\Jtfielder Damian Jackson from
Atlanta last JCISOn. bettina .308 Triple-A Buffalo 10 take GriSIOIII's
with 23 homers, 74 RBis and 28 place on d.)C roster. Grissom's disstolenliases. ·He stayed in the line· abled list usipment isl'lllrOactive to
up despite a sore heel and saw his A.r11 20, and he is cli&amp;ible 10 return
stolen bese total fall for the fourth MayS.
~nHCulive ye*r since his career
Jackson likely will be Mini bM:k to
high of78 iii 1992 with Montreal.
Triple-A by Salunlay bee•• Cle~
Grissom said the injury kepi him land needs 10 recall a pitdlea ·to take
11 75-80 pei cent.
Jack McDowell 's 1(10( in the roca"ll's hurt me ,.._.ing beses and lioo,,Harp-ove said. McDowell; MID
running," QriJIOIII said. "I've .,aen '-a 12.51 BRA. har been demoled
three, four or five inftekl hits taken to the bullpen.

•

·'

•

..

IM, L0J NIJtles
1\11111!1 $pldir;ac -

Porillnd 5
Sllltle2

11

ROME (AP) - The United
States will continue to field a
"Dream Team" ofNBAstars for the
Jf'98 World Championships and
:WOO Sydney 01 ympics. NBA
df_puiY comissioner Russ Granik
sfid today.
; Granik and Borislav Stankovic,
~ncral secretary of the international bllskethall federation FIBA. spoke
111 a news conference in conjunction
with the European Final Four club
chlmpionships.
The first NBA Dream Team
played at the 1992 llarcelona
Ol~ics. followed by otben Ill the
Wortd Championships and the
1996 Atlanta Games.
Wltile IOIIIC critics have called for
a - to alealll made up solely of
u.s. ~. . playen, Oralrik Mid the
nllkloal - . wiU conlinue 10 be

Ann
landers

. L.A. Llklfa 4

Brown lawsuit may increase
funding pressure - ~n colleges·

for 'Dream Team' to play in' 2000. Olympics

.

8

NBAFinala ·

.
11le Dally 811ttlnel• hge 'J..
.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.Mother's grief on ·lost child isn't less .because of her age~!

1111111

; By BRIAN TRUSDELL
their feet ... er, nippers. Unable lo Queen of England, "the official
: NEW YORK (AP)
John
keep up with the (Washington) D.C. spokeswoman of Major League Soc; Harkes tries to train seals. Alexi· United captain, the seals waddle off cer."
:Lilias breaks cement blocks with his
with Harkes running after them:
The queen is seen- among oth•seemingly rockhke skull. And Roy
"Hey guys, where are you going?"
er places - in a pub reaching into
;Litssiter kicks out the lights.
The humorous ads also give each her purse to buy "a pint for every: . Major League Soccer is taking its player a nickname, as in John "The body" and in the Galaxy dressing
' H). team circus on the road this year.
Juggler" Harkes.
'
room palling midfielder Brad Wilson
&gt; · Confident it established itself in
Lalas, probably the most recog- on the head and thanking the play: its 10 cities in 1996, the new 'league
nized player in the United States, is ers for bringing soccer to the Unit- .
:has embarked on a $5 million
presented as "the headhunter." After ed States.
: "~LS : This Stuff Kicks" ad cam- . two guys try to break cement slabs
"We're hoping to create some
~ palgn and marketing effort to spn;ad
with their heads and are carried off talk value, create some noise. We
~ it~· name nationwide.
on stretchers, Lalas comes in, places wanlto get people to notice MLS,"
~ · "After.establishing the league in
a ball on lhe blocks and smashes the said Tom Clendenin, ESPN's manBy FRANK BAKER
·year one, it's very important to't.ake , concrete into pebbles.
ager of advertising and . program
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) - If
: it to the next level;" MLS exect..tive
. Others featured inclu(le Roy marketing. ,
you
· attended ·college and haven't
:vice president Randy Bernstein says.
"Lights Out" Lassiter of the Tampa
The league also is increasing its
received a solicitation 10 help your
;. '"J{e thought it was very important Bay Mutiny, Marcelo "Iron Man" meq:handising program, looking for
school's athletic department, check
::tq establish our brand."
Balboa of the Colorado Rapids, $50 ·million to $60 million in retail
the mail.
· . Kicked off more than two weeks Cobi "The Missile" Jones of the Los sales, three times what it did last year
With money lighl, many schools
.:aco. the campaign pushes· the Angeles GalaKy,· and Preki "The and double what it initially projectare
asking for donations or seeking
~ !&lt;ague's stars. It started with an ad in -Destroyer" Radosavljevic of tbe
ed fo~ year two.
corporate sponsors to pay for teams
•USA Today featunng one player Kansas City Wizards.
Besides the revenue. the league
so they may equalize athletic oppor:· fiom each of the 10 clubs with the
Lassiter's commercial "takes its · hopes that items like its quirky 4tunities
for men and women and
,headline: "Some hciroes have masks: theme from the I 984 baseball movie inch player figurines will create
avoid
sexuai
discrimination. law;s(lme heroes have capes; some "The Natural."
awareness.
suits.
;heroes have balls."
Walking off the tield. teammate
The figurines are m~de by
"The marketing in college ath• : It will continue lhroughout the and defender Cle Kooiman asks Bandai, the same Japanese toy comletics
al all. Division I schools has
.·season
'
~
dTV
with I 0, 30-secon
com- Lassiter to "get the lights." I:.assiter pany that created the Mighty Morshown
dramatic growth over the last
:IIJercials, featuring each of the I 0 spins and lires a ball into the light phin Power Rangers, a hit in the
10 years. They realize they can't
·players.
·
·
tower, sending sparks everywhere United States at Christmas ·in 1995.
make il on institutional funding
: : " We wanted to bring a comical and causing a blackout. "Thanks, . "It's all just fluff," said Lalas,
alone," said Michael Cleary, execu:ti~htness to it," Bernstein said. " It's
Roy," Kooiman says.
whose figurine includes his tradelive director of the Cleveland-based
:a~ irreverent look at sports. Soccer
MLS' commercials go 'hand-in- mark red mane and goatee. •'I'm an
National 'Association of Collegiate
'dptsn't .have OVeL· 100 years Of his- hand with another campaign by · athlete and soccer player, all this othDirectOrs
c;&gt;fAthletics.
:tciry (in the United States) like the ESPN, which televtses some of the er stuff is.just essential to creating
The JIRSI!I!C to raise money to
\~L does."
games.
awareness, helping. soccer become
pay
for s~ ,will only increase nnw
': ~ In his ad, Harkes instructs seals
Those commercials have come- established as a new sport in the
that
th~ U.~. Supreme Court has let
;.,~ bouncing a ball on his bead . He
dian Michael McKeon dressed as the U.S.
stand
a I st ..U.S. Circuit Court of
~lien asks the animals to try it with
ApJII!als ruling that found Brown
Universily failed to comply with
Title, IX. The 1972 law prohibited
sexual discrimination at schools that
receive federal money.
Although Monday's action sets no
l . ZURICH, Switzerland (AP) May 26 to June 8, Molitor said.
bach in eastern Switzerland on Tueslegal precedent for other uni v~rsities
Hingis was hurt as Steffi Oraf, day.
!Martina Hingis, the world's No. I
.
and colleges, the practical effect
!women's tennis player, had arthro- whom the Swiss 16-year-old
Today 's arlhroscppic surgery
might be enormous.
j;opic surgery today to repair a knee dethroned as No. I. was, recovering repaired a partly tom ligament. MoliWhen the lawsuit was filed hy
from
her
own
knee
inj~ry
and
plantor
said,
but'
she
didn
'I
disclose
~njury suffered on a fall from a horse.
female athletes in 1992, many in col.She will be out at least three weeks, ning a comeblK:~. in the mid-May where the operation was performed
lege athletics fe)t Brown - the first
tournament in Berlin.
or whether Hingis remaint)d hospi~or mother said.
school with a women's hockey team
Hingis' absence won't affect the tali7.ed.
! "So far it is certain that Martina
- had among the nation's most
Last January, Hingis escaped
~ill have to t:niss Hamburg, Rome standings immediately. She has a
equitable spons programs.
iuld Berlin." said Melame Molitor. 771-point lead over Oraf. .
injury when she fell from a horse in
With Brown's athletic program
The Blick reported that Hingis Austm!ia before going on to win the
who also is Hingis' coach. .
now deemec;l discriminatory, the fear
The German Tennis Federation got up and laughed otT her fall Mon- Australian Opj:n .
is that almost every qther school
confirmed that Hingis had pulled out day from lbe horse. which.belongs to
Molitor has previously insisted
could be found similarly guilty and
of the Hamburg tournament that a friend. But the next day she was that Hingis have as normal a life as
be fOJte&lt;! to make sweeping changes.
unable to straighten her left leg.
possible and continue to enjoy her
sWtS April 28.
At ihe heart of the issue is proHingis was then examined by pa.~sions for horse jumping and roller
It is possible thai she also may
hl\ve to miss the French Open from specialists near her home in Trueh- blading in spiie or any dsk to her
career.

v.s. to continu~ emphasis on NBA stars

........ r'lf, Aprtl23, 1117

MllrJ

S,.tdicw.

Cn:·

Ann' Landers: You printed a
letter from "Seventeen Going on
30/' a you_ng girl who had given
btrth to a sullborn child.
I was barely 16 when 1 found out
• I was pregnant. I miscarried when 1
was about 10 weeks along. 1 was
· amazed bow many people told me
how "lucl&lt;:y" I was. How could I be
lucky? The e.motionai conflict that 1
endured was incredible. I was
mourning the loss of a child. If 1 had

been 25 and mimed. no one would
have dared tell me how "lucky" I
was.
·
I realize now, as I look at· my
beautiful I -year-old son, that ~ was
given another chance. I Wll4 not
ready to be a mother at 16. li have
taken that "other chance'\ an(!
become ~ national award-winning
teacher. When I miscarried my baby
' al age 16, all I wanted was· to be
treated as a grieving· mother. That.
girl who wrote to you need~ the love
and support Of her friends and ramily. I hope she gets it. --Indiana
Woman
·
·
Dear Woman: And so do' I. Your
Jetter was one of hundreds I received
expressing compassion for the
young woman who wrote. It is enor-

-C.ommunit~' calendarTile CommoDity Calendar is
CHESTER -- Kindergarten regispublished as a '""' service to non· tration at Chester - Elementary
profit groups wlsblna to announce School will be held from 8 a.m. to 3
mee!111g and special e~ents. The p.in. Call 985-3304 to 'make an
calendar is not designed to pro- appointment.
mote sales or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed as space SATURDAY
,
permits and cannot be guaranteed
STIVERSVILLE -- A youth rally
to 11111 a specific number of days.
will be held Saturday, 7:30 p.m. at
THURSDAY
\he Stiversville Community Church
POMEROY -- Meigs Education- Ieaturing speaker David Dailey. and
al Service Center, special meeting, · ~he gospel group Deliverance. PeoThursday, 6 p.m. at the service cen- ~ ple of all ages welcome
ter office in Pomeroy to discuss per- ..,,,
sonnel matters. .
f POMEROY -- Mejgs Retired
,ifeachers, Saturday, noon, luncheon
POMEROY -- Town and Country ':St Trinity Church, Pomeroy. John
EXPO committee, 7:30 p.m. Thurs- :Milhoan, district director of the
day, Meigs County Fairgrounds. &lt;Ohio Retired Teachers ··Association,
More information, call 992-2924.
;;to speak, For luncheo~: reserv•tions
!,call
. . 247-2723, or 985-3580.
REEDSVILLE -- Riverview Oarden Club, Thursday, 8 p.m. home of ~'SUNDAY
Ella Osborne.
./ HAR1FORD -- Revival Church
; of Chris1 in Christian Union,
MASON -- "Strand Down for t through May 4. Hubert Salle'y,
Vets and Senior Citizens" Thursday,' ; speaker, · April 27; BOb Wiseman,
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. -at the VFW Post, ;·: April28, EvangelisLLeland Allman,
Mason, W. Va. Medical services and ;,;Cincinnati, April 29 io May 4. All
evaluation and health clinic.
;:services, 7 p.m.

..

POMEROY -- Dr. Leopold Liss,
M.D. to present program on
Alzheimer's J;&gt;isease, Meigs County
Multipurpose Senior Center, Thursday, 7 p.m. Public meal, 4:30 to 6
p.m. preceding. Dr. Liss is medical
director
of
the
Columl!us
Alzheimer's Care Center.
. , ... ,,
POMEROY -- Library Board,
Thursday, 4 p.m 31 the Pomeroy
Public Libr.ary.
'

;': POMEROY -- Unity Singers to
{.' present "Hea~en . ~ound" 7 p.m.
' ·Sunday, Zion Church of Christ.
;:
·'
: MONDAY
i · POMEROY -- Meigs County
j Veterans Service Cotitmisson, 7:30
i p.m. Monday at the Veterans Service
· Office•.Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
i
·~ · MIPDLEPORR'l.' -- OH Kan
. &lt;;:oin Club, Monday, 8 p,m. River~ bend Arts Council, Middleport.

FRIDAY

'Backyard SleV\(ardship'
theme of Soil ,and Water
Stewardship observance
"Backyard Stewardship," the theme of the 1997 Soil and Water Stewardship Week observance, suggests thai one of the best places to practice individual stewardship responsibility over natural respurces is right in our own
backyards.
Organizers of the event say there is 'greal potential good if each of us•
ta~es care of the immediate backyard to the neighborhood, region, continent
and the world.
To encourage benefiCial conservation practices in backyards, the Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation Districl is asking individuals and organizations
fo join with the National Association of Conservation Districts in celebrating the annual Soil and Water Stewardship observance, April 27 - May 4,
1997.
.
.
The conservation district, which works throughout the year to encourage
soil and wa1er conservation practices, is providing good literature and information assistance to local churches, civic organizations and schools interested in furthering good soil and water conservation practices in homes and
·
communities.
Charles E. Yost, ch.airman of the Meigs SWCD, said the "Backyard StewardShip" theme will have special appeal to an estimated .78. million adult
Americans.who are ai:tive gardeners. He pointed out thai some common gardening practices can be considered sound conservation practices as well. For
example, he said, backyard gardeners can terrace or contour.'their gardens,
use drip irrigation, mulch bare soil, add trees and shrubs for windbreaks or
protection from the sun, and add umall .pond for the benefit of wildlife.
To learn more about conservation practices that can benefit the backyard,
just as similar practices benefit farm land,·contact the Meigs SWCD during
business hours at 33101 Hiland Road, Pomeroy or call 614-992-6647.

.

'

...
~

mousiY rewardina when my readers coffee pots clean.
reunion. Back in 1950, Mlltin was a . ·those folks who were raised in ·and
rush to console someone whose
When I was a bookkeeper, I was town of about 4,000. Forty-eight -around Martin, Thnn. Althou&amp;hr yc
experience mirrors their own. never ,;ven any kind or m:opition gradllltes and their spouses turned have made great strides in teehnOloKnowing that my column helps pee- because I didn't have the title of 0111 for the reunion. Someone uked gy, medicine and space expl~n
pie to lie more compassionate is' a "secretary." I know if you print Ibis, if we remembered the· worst disci- since 1950, we have lost some of,lhe
wonderful feeling.
Ann. my boss will receive at leut 20 pline problems ·in the school, and old-fashioned virtues, mainly .:JIIe
Dear Ann Landers: This is for all copies of it on his desk. I just want No. I was talking in class, No. 2 wu importance of something called
bosses everywhere: Please do not to say. how !IIUCh I appreciate the I9 running in the hall and No. 3 wu "character." Too bnd.
1 .;
honqr me during National Secre- ot!Jcr people who help
do my chewing gum in class.
Congratulations to the Class :of
taries Week. lf yo11 are going to work. -- Secretary in Oklahoma City
Each claas member gave a brief 1950 for knowing the true meanl)tg
honor anyone, le( it be all your ' Dear OklahQIIIa Secretary: How syn&lt;ipsis of his or her life, describing. of tbe word commitment. Tlaese
employees, not just one of them.
generous or you to forfeit your pllK:e what had happened since gradua- days, when so mi!Jiy marriages end ·
When you· first started out, I did in the sun and share it with otherS on 'lion. First, I was amused, and then, I in divorce. it's lovely to know of- a
everything. But your company grew, this special day. Thank you on was astoWtded. Ann, although two community with such .a spectacllltu'
an~ you hired a bookkeeper, then a
behalf of all those to whom you gave had been widowed, there was not a record of success.
' •
research assistant, salespeople and a a lift today. You can be sure they will sinale divorce among them.· .That
technical adviser. And Jet's not 'for- hold their heads .a little bit higher.
must beat all odds in the books. How
Send questions to Au La..,....,
get .the custodian and the cleaning
Dear Ann Landers: My wife of 44 do you accoUnt for such a record? -- Creaton Syadlcate, 5771 W. &lt;lea~taff. They are the ones who keep · years .lll!d I went to Martin, Tenn.; Seaford, va.
tory Blvd., Suite 700, La. Aalelti&amp;,
the air conditioning going and the for her Class of '~0 high school
Dear Seaford: My hat is off to Calif. 9QOotS
01.

me

Art in the public consciousness·:.
with commercial rend~rings
:
By JANE BURNS
The Des Moine• Reglater
It is, perhaps, the most famous
of all expressionist paintings.
foJ!aybe .because it's an expression
we all know so well .
"The Scream."
Nowadays you can express
Edvard Munch's Angst -or your
own - by writing a check, driving
a B~ick or belting a punching bag
. designed .with the brooding Norwegian's most famous painting.
"The Scream," painted in 1893,
is everywhere .
' "Even we can't stick , it on
another thing," says Paul Donovan,
whose RoseRcrantz and Ouildenslem' Banknote Corp.. catalog features Scream checks and other art- ·
related objects. "And we can do
just about anything."
.
· "The Scream," however, is just
one piece of art that has worked its
way S(l far into the public consciousness that even an art ignoramus knows what it is. Art doesn't
jusl hang in a museum anymore. II
decorates a sofa or tells Jhe time.
These days, one can buy:
-A Mol!a Lisa pillow that gig·
gles when· you squeeze it. Perhaps ·
it's Da Vinci's answer to "Tickle
WORKS OF ART· You don't have to travel to the world'a
Me Elmo."
-A nisht light with one or Vin- flnut muMUma to a-t • peek 11 the tlnnt art. TheY can be
'cent Van Oogli's self-ponraits- a II your tlngertlpe • on 1 mug or 1 l'lfrlgemor . magnet.
handsome face guaranteed to spark Amo!IG the conv1nilnt work8 .Of art aVIlllble Ia a refrigerator.magnet of Mlchlelengirlo's, above, glorlouaaculpture
a good night's sleep.
Of David- complete wllh Vlrloua chlngn Of clothing, like
-Posters and pins of Raphael's
a
paper doll. ROHnCI'IIItZ encl . Gullden..-n Banknote
angels. the innocent cherubs who
Corp.,
cate109, right, teetun~~ Scn~~m checkl and other
look up with a dream-like gaze.
1111-relltad objecll.
.
- A refrigerator magnet of
bastardize
literature,
literature
go spoofed two of its most
Michaelangelo's glorious sculpture
steals
from
literature.
It's
not
so
bad
famous
paintings
of David - complete with various
if
it's
done
self-consciously
·with
"American
Gothic" and
changes of clot~ing. like a paper humor...
·
"Nighthawks"
with
doll.
And
respect.
That's
the
key,
Christmu cards in its holiAnd, from Rosencrantz and
according
to
Danoff.
day
1996 catalog. The man
Guil(lenstern, checks that feature
"It's
the
golden
rule,"
he
says.
and
woman
in Orant·Wood's
the works of Munch, Monet, Van
"If
you
change
'it,
it
loses
the
magpainting
were
made of
Gogh and Michelangelo.
netism
of
the
work.
The
anist
as
a
snow;
the
fiaures
crowded
'.'Yes, putting the Sistine Chapel
creatOr has some rights."
into Edward Hoppc,r's lateon checks is sacrilege, but it's kind
That's
why,
though
be's
willing
night diner were Santa and
of funny," Donovan says.
to put "The Scream" on checks, his reindeer.
' Those kinds or items bring art Donovan·doesn't like the car.com- ·
Another Hopper paintinto the mainstream, and that's not
mercia!.
·In
the
advertisement,
the
ing,
"The Automat," is one
all bad, says I. Michael Danoff,
subject
begins
as
he
is
in
the
paint·
of the best-known in the Des
'director of the Des Moines (Iowa)
ing, but the answer to his Angst is · Moines Art Center's collec~
Art Center.
.
tion. The woman siuing
"Fundamentally, I think it 's the· ride be gets in the new car. ,
"How dare they?" Donovan alone at a table is a popular
·great :that art is part of everyday
life," Danoff says. "It has been that asks. ''l'·m saying it doesn 't work image for posters, Danoff
way in Europe because it has been .to make that guy cute and cuddly. says, but he hasn't seen any
But just as I'm saying that, I think a takeoffs on it yet. It was,
part of their culture for centuries."
Scream breakfast cereal would be however, used recently as·an
In .paris, gargoyles decorate
great - you'd gel it so 1he milk illustration for a Time maga- ~,;;;,._..-...
Notre Dame.- Here, they're bookturns all those swirling colors.:·
zinc cover story entitled "20th
debate - is it art or just naked
ends. In Norway, "The Scream" is
That's not on the market yet, but Century Blues."
people?
- and that's pan of
beloved as the country's mosi
there
are
enough
other
lhings
One
piece
of
art
that
is
about
to
appeal.
The
work features a nud~ -1
famous painting. Here, it's more or
watches, rubber stamps, magnets, 'lake off in commercial form, pre- woman pinching the breast
less the inspiration for Macauley
. ties and business-card. holders.
dicts Donovan, is "Gabrielle another in what was possibly 'u ·
Culkin in the ads for "Home
Even
the
museums
get
iltto
the
..
d'Estree and Her Sister The ,18th century ·pregnancy test,
Alone:·"
act of repackaging and re-selling Duchess de Villars."
Donovan,
whose
company
uses
"This is America; everything is
It's a work that sparks thC eicr- for stationery and night lights.
awful," Donovan says. "Movies their an. The Art Institute ofthicaContinued on pqe 9
-~~ '------ -

Book club reviews book on the. life of. Queen Caroline
· "The Unruly Queen the Life of His agreement to marry Caroline
Queen Caroline" was chosen for centered mostly on payment of debts
review by Betsy Parsons when the for his fastidious way of living,
· Middleport Literary Club met at the accOrding to Parsons.
home of JoAnn Wildman.
.Princess Caroline, the reviewer
The author, Flora Fraser. the continued, "(as the unlucky, yet
reviewer began, has only one other . 11nruly.woman who became his legal
published volume, but·has inherited . bride, mother of his only legitimate
ability and much researc~ material 'child but a woman whom he
from her mother, Antonia, and her abhorred. Her father was a respected
grandmother, E;lizabeth . Longford duke of Brunswick .her mother, a sis. who have written a number of his- ter of George Ill, another political
torical biographies.
marriage which did 'lot result in
· "we, as Americans, are aware of happiness, Parsons. said. Caroline
events on our side or the Atlantic," was tlltractive, witty and an indepenParsons 'slated, picturing George m dent thinker. Had bet prince treated
of I;ngla11d as the "Villain_ of the ller more c~sly, she may have
Revolutionary War and the king .who responded more graciously. but his
went mad.•
tud,eness brouaht her flippancy and
The reviewer said he did suffer coarse, vulaar ·conduct. George's ·
periods of insanity until in 1811 Par- hatred made her life miserable,
Jiament declared the Price of Wales restricting her company, limiting the
the Regent until he became George time she could spend .with lw own
IV in 1820. This George became c:bikl, sending spieS to 1ep0rt on·her · ·
Caroline's husband--in name only. It actions. The Prinl:ea did acquire .
wu l1ls duly to nwry MCI pockice sympllhetic ·friends; rhe popu- ·
an heir, but wu ie 110 hurry to do 10. ._ with the pas and the people, •
·Ia fact, be wu ahldy tllllried to
popularity thl Prince did DOl a.joy.
conm1011er IIICI a Catholic which .it - repol1ed.
wu not valid in the Jlnililb 1ys1cm.
There were 10 IDIIIY ~ of

a:

'

scandalous affairs, Parsons noted,
that different Commissions and
Investigations were set up. Witnesses were called with many contradictio~s occurring. They found no
proof of misconduct although there
was evidence of poor judgment.
Siich. vindictive behavitll' between
parents . the reviewer stated, affect-

On May 2, 1997, Meigs County Court will be serving warrants ori all
individuals who owe the Court deliquent fines or have failed to appear to
serve their Court Ordered jail sentenees.
.
·All Law Enforcement agencies of Meigs County will be assisting the
court in making these arrests.
·
If ~ou owe a. fme that has not been paid or you are not current on your
payments; ot: if you have failed to show on your scheduled date to serve
jail time, you must personally contact the Court at 992-2279 prior to May
2, 1997.
All those arrested on May 2, 1997,
be jailed ~til their fines are.paid
in full or their sentences are served.
.
Judge Patrick H. O'Brien
,. ,.

will

.

•

ed their only child, Charlotte, the ing her, according to the reviewer.
heir ro the thro~ of England. She When King George died. Caroline's
married Prince Leopold without her husband became king but relations'
mother being invited. and eventually were more strained than ever and
died in childbirth without her moth- after a cruel trial Caroline died, as
er being informed.
was said "uncrowned' and un-prayed
·As Caroline's troubles multiplied, ·ror."
she fled England and traveled in
Europe with accusations still follow- ·

,,

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POWE

Customer Appreciation . Celebrating
Our 23rd Anniversary

L'S

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Make your own tart apple pectin

Coca
Col·a
Products

STORE HOURS
Mondaythru

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8AM-10PM

298 SECOND ST.
Accepts CredH Carda

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WE~RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES

Pepsi Cola&amp;
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Products

PRICES G00DTHRUAPRIL26, 1997.
WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS
• SEE STORE FOR DETAILS

cube 24 pk, 12 oz. cane

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Bottom Round

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$

CHICKEN LEG

39¢r:
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12oz.

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USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

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roll or 10·
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Sausage ••••••••••••••

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59

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$

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Snloln Chops .•.. ~.....

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Where to find po.pulat
versions of fine art

15.5oz.cant~

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Margar1ne ••••••••• 21 · 1
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$ .• 89
·Skim M·11k •••••••••••• 1
Strawberraes •••• lb•··
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BOR~EN .

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Ketchup········~···· .••79¢

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P.ork. n .Beans. •• ••.31
15

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t:VlJJ&gt;()I1S
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DANIEL LAWRENCE

1 Not good on S,ale it&lt;&gt;nu!
1 - See store for further

:
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details
Good Thru 4/2fJ/97

--- ...

Win A
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This Wetek

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$299
Ice ream •• ~ •••. ~.... .
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28 .oz.

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Toilet Tissue

Libbys Peaches
or Fruit Co~ktall
2$30oz.

Domino
Sugar

12pk.

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llmlt2

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desi,gnate ·Day of ·Prayer

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Quarters •..•••••••...•••
.

Family
Medicine

Commissione~s

12 pk. .
12 oz. cans

79

Vaughan (Stephen G~een Press, for every cup of prepared juice or (P.O. BoK 1756, Manchester Center,
1988), there is a pectin on the mar- fruit should give a good gel, but VT 05255-1756;
1-800-818•• •
ket made exclusively from ·apples don' t be afraid to eKperiment!
GAME) that it has recently been re•I
but, unfohunately, the book doesn't
A friend of ours, who is a " frugal i~sued and is now available again.
•
•
menu on the ~arne of the ~ompany Yankee," always saves and freezes '\By the time you read this, Martha ·
'I
that produces tt. (Maybe our readers the apple ~ores and peels remaining should have a · good supply of
I
John c. Wolf, D.o:
I
can help?)
after cannmg applesauce or making Kismet on hand .
'
Associate
Professor
But how about ~aking. your own apple pies. When ~he has accumulatJewell Shockley of Spiro, Okla.,
I
of Family Medicine
apple pectm? Here s a rectpe:
ed what. she constders to be a suffi- was wondering how she could fill
I
TART APPLI;l PECTIN .
cient quantity, she. boils the~ up for out a set of "Poker Dominoes," but
~~----.....:........----' ':
(note; th_e less fully: npe the pectin and th~n feeds THOSE leav- unfortunately didn' t' include enough
'
apples, the htghe_r the pecun content) mgs to her chtckens.!
.
of a description of them to enable
ication.
Instead,
weight
reduction
to
:
4 pounds shced apples WITH . STUMPED: Judy Vickers of Martha to figure out what they are. ·
Question: Outing· a physical for
·•
ANNE AND NAN: I am. peels and cores
Cambndge, Md., wonders where she
Please readers, be as clear and work, they found my blood pressure the ideal range is very important as r
l&lt;?oking for some apple pectin. We
8.cups water . . .
can find the tapes she needs 10 re- complete as possible in the descrip- . was a little high. I've been to .my is avoiding excess salt, sugar and •
u~~d to get it, but) can't find it anyStmmer (httle sllmng ts needed) stnng her Venellan bhnds (they h&amp;ve tions of items you want us 10 help family doctor a few times since, and caffeine. Regular daily exercise and :
w~ere now. I heard you can't get it . for 3 minutes. Press apples through a 2-inch slats). We've looked every- you find. .
.
he has now started me on medica- adequate amounts Of dietary calcium :
iQ • anything but 50-pound bags. I sieve to remove cores, etc. Return . where and have come up with a big
;
· Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan'' at tion. I feel fine, as I did before I also play. a role for some.
dah 't want 50 pounds of the :stuff as hqutd to a heavy kettle to cook zero. Can one of our readers out P.O. BoK 240, Har'tland, VT 05048. started the drug. I know my doctor
Readings of 140 over 90 or more ;
l~ve no place to keep it. Where can briskly, stirring, until .volume is there help Judy?
·
Questions of general interest will told me to take my medication eyery constitute high blood pressu·re. lndi ~ 1
I: buy a "reasonabLe': amount? -- ~educed to one-half.. Clanfy by pourTO OUR READERS: For all of . appear in the column. Due to the day, but it is expensive. What would viduals with hi'gh blood pressure ~
Ij:Cil:ABETH YOUNG, Sumner, mg thro~gh a stou~jelly bag that has you who h~ve written looking for volume of mail, personal replies · ·happen if I didn't take it all the time? usually benefit from non-drug treat- :
Wllsh .
been mOt~tened wtth w~t~r. Use, can the gam_e Ktsmet, we have just g0t- ~an not be provided.
Answer: High blood pres- ment, but may also require medicine :
DEAR ELIZABETH: According or freeze m small quanttlles. Four to ten the good news from our friend
Copyrigbtl997 NEWSPAPER sure, or hypertension in medical jar- to keep their pressure in the saf~ •
to one of our bit:i1es," uPutting 6 tablespoons -of homemade pectin Martha at The Old Games Store ENTERPRISE ASSN.
go n, is a very common ·condition. range. You apparently fall .into thi~ :
Food By," by Green, Hertzberg and
There are. about 60 million Ameri- very common category,.
. !
cans with it. Wow! That is a problei)-1 .
The specific medicine your doc: '
of staggering proportion, isn't it? · tor recommends to treat your hyper-' ;
And just like you, most of those who tension depends upon the ~ause of :
suffer with the condition have no the condition. Ninety percent of j
symptoms at all. That is par( of the those with high blood pressure hav~ ·
: Proclamations were signed on
problem. The absence of pain or no specific underlying cause thai ;
Monday by the Meigs !=ounty Comobvious symptoms from high blood medical science can identify. These :
!"issione~s, Mayor Frank Vaughan
pressure doesn't mean that there is folks , with so-called "essential ·
of Pomeroy and Middleport Council
hypertension," benefit from any of : .
no danger.
mentber Sandy Iannarelli, proclaimCompounding the issue is that of . the many .medications that bring, ;
ing May I as a Day of Prayer in
.those 60 million people with high pressure into the normal range. The. i
Meigs County and . its two largest
blood pressure, only half are actual- remaining 10 percent have· specifjc.:
communities.
ly aware they have the disorder. Fur- causes of their hypertension an~ : ·
The theme for this year's event is
ther, only one third of those who benefit from very specific drugs. ;
"In God We Trust." Presi~cnt Clinknow they have it are getting appro- Figuring out the best choice for yol( .:
ton, Governor Voinovich arid the
·priate high blood pressure treatment. is a job for which your doctor is c!
governors · of the other 49 states,
High blood pressure 'increases in trained...
·
.
&gt;!
Puerto Rico and several other U.S.
frequency with advancing age. It
So what would happen if you qutt
territories are all expected to sign
does occur, though, in the young and taking you medication? Your biOoa :
proclamations declaring the Nation-·
relatively young - but at a much pressure would shoot back up.
al Day of Prayer.
lower rate. Young and middle aged in a few years you'd undollbtedlf :
More than· 15,000 events are
men are also afflicted with it more have a heart attack or stroke! lmpo(? l
planned in local communities, to
commonly than women. After mid- tant business
-· this treatment c1 l\
.
pray for the nation, its leaders, edudle age, however, women .lose their hypertens10n.
•
. ,
cators, law enforcement agents and ·
"advantage" in this situation and 'are
Talk to your doctor if you are :
American .families. ·
strick.en · with _hypertension at an having a problem with your medic11• :
. Members of the county's Day of
equal or slightly higher rate than fion . Common concerns are that the '
Prayer Committee are Les Hayman,
drugs are eKpensive, hard to remem- :;
.. men.
Coordinator, Steven Beha; Peggy
African-Americans of all socio- ber to take regularly, or are Causing ~
Crane, Brenda Barnhart, Rev.
economic levels .as well as econom- undesirable side effects. Altemathei: :'
Robert Robinson, Bill Fra~ier, and
ically disadvantaged Americans of that minimize or eliminate these :·
. Norma Torres.
·
·
every racial and ethnic background pr.oblems are usually available, bill ::
Local observances will begin on
have a -higher frequency of hyper- your doctor · w~m't know to prescribe ·
Sunday at ~ p.m. with the start of a
tension. And as for the risks of them if you don't explain your prob- ;
Bible-reading marathon at the pavil"
.
.. ·'
untreated high blood presSure, it is !ems first.
ion on the Pomeroy parking lot. A
"FamUy Medldne" is a weekly ~
the leading cause of hean .disease
prayer vigil at the Pomeroy United
and stroke. We all know how com- column. To submit question-. :
Methodist Church will begin ai the
mon these problems are and how · write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Oblo :
same time. The two activities wlll
devastating they can be.
University Colleae of OsteopatbJC •
continue daily from 8 a.m. until 8
· Blood pressure is classified as Medldoe,
Gnisvenor
Hall,
p.m. and Mon~ay, Tuesday and
· ·.,
normal· when it is le~s tl]ati 130 Qver Atll.~as•. Ohio 457Ql;. '
'
Wedllesday, .&amp;.Q.nc;l&lt;tcliqg aL J.ll a.m.
85. High ppnnal pressures are valon May I.
· .
··
ues between 130 to 139 for the top
At 7:30 a.m. on May . I, a prayer
number and betwe~n 85 to 89 for the •
breakfast wUI ~ held for public offibottom number. Indi vlduals in this
cials and members of the clergy at
high normal range have an incrc;ased
the Pomeroy United Methodist
risk for heart disease and stroke, but
· Church. From 11 :30a.m. untill2:30
the amount of increase is modest.
the events . .He can be contacte&lt;i at The best treatment for individuals in ·
p.m., prayer will be offered on the government leaders, and for church- Will Baptist Church in Middleport.
Hayman
said
that
everyone
'
in
·
992-7410.
Beha can be reached at this category does not involve medes,
families,
schools,
and
communisteps of the Meigs County Court698-7245.
ties.
At
1
p.m.,
a
Concert
of
Prayer
Meigs
County
and
the
surrounding
hou-se. Public prayer will be offered ·
.'
· on behalf of national, state, and local ·will be held at the Ash Street Free communiiies are welcome to attend
11

RC
Prdducts
·USDA CHOICE BO~ELESS BEEF$ · .·

'
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Ohio University
College of Osleopethic Medicine

ADAIID • •AII

211ter

St,~nday

.

!W~ed~n~ll~d~a~y~,A~pn~
- ~1~23~~1~98!!7________________________~~----_!P~o~me~~~y~·~M~I~dd~~~~~rt~,~O~h~l~o----------~----~----2The~
· ~O.~I~~Se~n~U~~~·~P~~~~~ -

-Wadn11dey, Aprll23, 1

Lawrence
earns·degree
'from OSU
. Daniel A. Lawrence of Long Bottom received his bachelor of science
degree in civil engineering from
Ohio Siate University at Columbus
at the end of tbe winter quarter.
He plans to begin work ~'" his
master's degree in engineering in the.
fall . Meanwhile, · he is employed
wilh·a company at Delaware.
Lawrence is the son of Joanne
and Bob Vaughan of Pomeroy, and
the late Howard M. Lawrence, Sr.
"

The Des Moines Reglater
There are a numbe! of places to find objects that use famous art works to
decorate everyday objects. They include:
·
-The Unemployed Philosopher's Guild. Pillows and pins are the specialty
in this catalog froJ!l New York. Call I (800) 25578371 or see .the Web page
at http:(slash)(slash)www.l q.com(slash)pinbeads.
t
- Rosencrantz and ·Guildenstern Banknote Corp. Checks are this New
Hampshire company's specialty, .but the catalog also offers,address labels,
night lights and stationery; I (800) 354-4708.
.
·
.- Signals ..The catalog of public television currently offers ties and throws
with Frank Lloyd Wright designs, ·gargoyle bookends and Dress-Me-Up
David refrigerato/ magnets. Catalogs have also featured Van Gogh and. Sal·
vador Dali watc~s; I (800) 669-9696. .
- Collura.' Th~ ': ceramic a~ specialty catalog includes 19 watches with .
R~naissance paitl'iings; I (800) 348-6608.
.
_. M.I.P. Sales Inc. Internet mail-order business features umbrellas, tote
·hags and pillows with images by Impressionist artists and Raphael's Angels.
http:(slash){¥ash))Nww.dezines.com.mip(slash)

Art .. ' .~ntlnued

''

froni page 7

':That liaby is going to have a
life,'' Donovan aq&lt;~s .. "We 're not
putti~g it on a checl&lt;'for a number of
. reasons. But it's both funny and
erotic." ·
Sp(lofing and commercializing
art isn ' I new, but the selections have
increased over the years. The Mona ·
Lisa and American ·6othic are two
of the most parOdieq pieces of art in
history, Now they h\ve some company. ·
.
"Maybe it's just a lot of media
eKposure .computer~ television,
'

liSJf{Joutlllffl@ ~
· JiS~boutJJ!JJm

film,'' Danoff says. "It's incredibl~
how it's put l\fl into the fabric of
people's lives."
.
Even if it is just to get a laugh. .
It takes the right kiml of ail. however, to i:,reate the right kind of irony.
T-shirts or tdys with a Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol or Keith Haring
design don't fit the bill ·because
iro~y ~as the intention of those pop
antsts 10 the first' place. But stick
"The Starry Night;. (by Vincent Van
Gogh) on a tie, and it's just kind of
goofy.

'

· · · . ..· . Society sc~~pbook---_;__

$200
FraeCaahl

Stop In The
Store
For Details

Saturday,

I

Aprile, 1117

WEDDING ASSISTANTS
Saundra Koenig, Heather Well
and Cassidy Coffey assisted at the
reception honoring Tracie Marie
. Wcstjohn and Travis Lee 'Gilmo're
following their March 15 wedding at
.tho Rutland Chufl:h of the NaZII!ene.
The reception was held at the
. Chester fire station.
.
.
· ·· SCOUf ~ELEBRATION
Girl Scouting is celebratins its
85th anniversary and an observan~e
has been planneq for Sunday m
Middleport.
.
All former and current girHcout
volunteers are invited to a attend the .
celebration at the anneK of Feeney-,

Bennett Post 128, Amei'ican Legion, by Alyin Chutes Band. Classes to be
2 to 4 p.m.
·
honored will include 1927, 1937,
Highlights of the afternoon will · • 1947 and 1957.
include a girl scoilt tri ··a contest, a ·
Scholarships are still available.
fashion show of histori Ill girl scout Any alumni, or someone related to
uniforms and reminisci,ng with other an alumni may apply. . ·
volunteers. Refreshments will be
Reser\'ations and membership
. served.
dues are to be sent to Racheal
ALUMNI REUN~ON
Lefebre, 35251 S.R. 143, Pomeroy,
The Harrisonville-Scipio Alumni 45769; ·no later than May 19. BanAssociation officers met recently to . quet, dance and dues are $10 with
make plans for their annual banquet dance only being $4.
and diloce. Dinner will be served at
Alumni officers · are Carolyn·
6:30 Saturday, May 24 at the Har- Collins, president; Connie Chaprisohvillc School.
· man, vice president; Janice Debar,
The dinner will be catered by treasurer; and Racheal Lefebre: secWilsons and music will be provided retary:

PLEASE QU1T SMOKING

.

The Surgeon General said it all, "Smoking causes Lung Cancer. Heart Disea:&gt;e,
Emphysema, and may complicate pregnancy." Please quit .smoking.

•''

fiJin Pleas:mt Valley:
ltl-.&amp;I Hospital · . . .
25211VIIIIr.._ . . . . p

rr.Wi-·00116ll IJIO

..

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�Pomeroy e llddleport, Ohio

.....,10 •The D811y Sentinel

By BRENDA C. COLEMAN
/
AP Medical WriW · .
CHICAGO (AP)- Women wilb hart disease are getting
far too little treatment for dangerously high levels of so-called
"bad" cholesterol, which can lead to early death, researchers
found.
The study in f.ednesday's Journal of the American Medi.cal
Association found that fewer than one of every 10 femal_e bean
patients had receive!! treatment that lowered their bad cholesterol to a safe level.
With proper treatment, researchers said 80 perce~t of them
could have achieved safe levels of LDL, the low-density
lipOprotein cholesterol that promoteS'fatty deposits in arteries
that can cause a heart attack or stroke. . . .
Treatment usually requi(Cs cholesterol-lowering drugs, controlling high blood pressure and diabetes, and lifestyle changes
including quitting smoking, losing weight, eating properly and
exercising.

I wonder whal the Pomeroy High
School Alumni Association would
do if llle "~~me old bunch" weren't
arourid ever)' year to pick up the ball
to plan for the annual · association
reunion.
Perhaps, tht!rc arc some waiting
in the winas, but as these things go,
I doubt it.
The "same old bunch" includes
Dan Morris, president; April Smith,
secretary-treasurer, and the committee of Joanne Willi,ams, Judy Sisson.
Yvonne Young, Bob Burton, Mary
Jane Wise, Chuck Kitchen, Frank
Vaughan and Kenny Wiggins.
· Again this ·year, the committee
hopes to see Pomeroy all decorated
in purple and white, the colors of the
former. Pomeroy High, for reunion
activities. A commiuee member
mentioned it's great to try to outdo
the orange and black decorations
that come out of hiding each spring
for the Middleport High reunion.
The committee. member also commented that returning grads love to
rttum to the old htJme grounds and
see the decorations including the
window displays that are set up in
business houses.
And, by the way, if you are wait·
ing in the wings to assist ~ith the
Sell Money Orders
reunion in Pomeroy, the group will
be delightell to see you at the Meigs
We Wire Money
High Cafeteria on the evening ·of
Postage Stamps
Friday, May 23, to help decorate.
Film Developing
There's just never enough help for
the handful of people trying to do it
Pre-paid Phone Ca.r ds
. all.
Foodland Gloft
The deadline for scholarships
Certificates
heing awarded by the · Pomeroy
Carpet Cleaner Rentals
Alumni .this year is May 16 and
Columbia Gas Payments
. those scholarships are for children
or grandchildren . of alumni. Two
Lottery TICkets
scholarships will be awarded for
(except Buckeye)
academic excellence. The . Charles
AEP Electric .
Gibbs Scholarship will be awarded
to a student who lives in Pomeroy
and will be auending the University
of Rio Grande or Ohio University.
Ohio Valley Bank
Those wishing to apply for the
sch11larships are to send a complete
"SUpenbank"Senrices
transcript including the second
• Greeting Carda
semester of the senior year, a recent
• Floral Sales
photo, the name of the parent or
We accept credit cards
grandparent graduating from l'.H.S.,
and the year that Jierson graduated .
The reunion is again traditionally
on Saturday of .Memorial Day
Weekend, May 24, at . 6:30 p.m. in
t~c Meigs Cafeteria with Wilson's
Catering of Point Pleasant, W. Va.,
providing the banquet food. Popular
organist George Hall will not only
·be providing music for dancing fol lowing the banquet but will also
play during the dinner !;lour.
The cost of tickets for the dinner,
· &lt;lance and dues remains at $12 e~~Ch
ror alumni and guests and the dance,
9 to midnight, is open to the public
~t $S a •person. Color photos of
reunion classes will be taken in the
I'Criod between the end of .the banquet activities an~ the beginning of
the dance.
If you wish to order tickets,
please send your check and a
~tamped , self-addressed envelope to
t~e Pomeroy Alumni Association, ·
li.O. Box 202, Pomeroy, Ohio
15769. When ordering tickets, you
1\"'· asked to include your year of
50 lb bag
~~aduation and your maiden name, if
licable. If you're not going to be
e to be present the association .. . . Cne~&amp;en 16 ......
1 uld appreciate yo11r sending ·$2
Cblpe AlloJ' tz.89
~~es. And those applying for the
~holarahips are to send their inforc .. ldll 11-18 0..ration to the same !llldress as the
Naiiii111S Mil
II"• used for securing tickets.
The~ alumni reunions seem. to
suciJ happy events for particiltBntS and so typically a way of life
ir small towns across America.
..._1111' dhnll 'Z.Z9
l,ong 111ay they live. They do help .
Cnklll 8 Cl ell I I .,,S 0..IFple 'to keep smiling~

Dr. Helmut G. Schroll, the lead author and an woc:i&amp;te professor of preventive and internal medicine at the University of
Iowa, said the findings suggest that either doctors aren't treating women aggressively enough, or women aren't laking the
drugs prescribed for them.
·
"!.suspect it is the flrsl one," he said.
Almost half of the 2,763 ·women in the nationwide study
were on cholesterol-lowering drugs, but only 9 percent of the·
total had LDL levels at or helow 100 milligrams per tenth of a
liter of b.lood, the federally recommended maximum for heart
patients.
Pan of the problem. said an accompanying editorial by
exi'Cns not involved in the study, is that women are often
believed to be less threatened by heart disease or less responsive to treatment - both.erroneous assumptions.
.
The editorial said several studies have shown that male ·
heart patients face a sifllilar level of inadequate treatment, but
more concern surrounds their situation because of the per-

ceived greater risk.
•
Hean disease is the leading .killer of women. Some 233,00!J
women die annually from bean auacks, 87,000 m,ore ·&amp;om
strokes. The total is more than sevenfold the annual toll from
breast cancer.
Dr. Deap· Ornish, a hean disease prevention&lt;expert not
involved in lhe study, disagreed with Schroll's view that inadequate treatment was behind the high levels of bad cholesterol
In women.
.
·
~'This study clearly shows that most people don 'I take their
pills," said Omish, adding that most patients aren 't motivated
long-term to take drugs that don't improve the way they feel
for "some hoped-for future henefit." ·
.
Omis!J advocates using drugs to lower cholesterol only as a
last reson. Patients canfeel .vastly better and rea~h safe "LDL
.levels with an extremely low:fat vegetarian diet, exercise and
stress reduction, said Ornlsl\. director of the Preventive Medi•
cine Research Institute in Sausaiito, Calif.

USDA Choice Boneless l

EASTMAN'S

ast :.

FOODLAND

s

3# or More

Howard County
Chicken Thigh

Quarters

s

Sirloin Cut
3 lbs. or More

Boneless

e

.Pork Chops

.

'

99

Lb.

Foodland
Colfee·.

10#bag

.

Straw-berries

·~--,-----:_...;P_;u;;,;;b;;.;ll..;.c.;.;N.;.ot;;;lce;.;..,_

•

•
'
PUBUC N~ICE .
: su:~~E~~LDI,:C::S~HIO
•
.DEPARTIIENT OF
~ NATURAL R.ISOURCES
•
•
DIVISION OF REAL
EiTATE
ANO LAND
••
uA u AQEMENT
_...,.
•1 'WILSON WETlANDS
WILDUFEAREA .
• Sealed bids will be
'iDepartment
raoelvad by oftheNatural
Ohio'

34.50z

can

Flavorite Sborteake SbeUs 2/S•

s

United VaUey BeD

Ice Cream
5 Qt. Pall ·

Potatoes

E

'

ooze•¥

l

1~News
",;

.

policy-

In an effort to provide our reader~ip with current news, the Sunday .
~~~mes-Sentinel will not accept wedngs after 60 da.ys from the date of
evept.
.
Weddings submiUed after the 60y defo(lline will appear during the.
. eek in The Daily Sentinel and the
allipolis Daily Tribune.
All ~hib meetings and other news
lrtic.leJ in the society section must
be submiued within 60 days of
occurrence. All binhdays must be
submitted within 60 days of the
·occwrence.
.
All material submitted for publication is subject to editing.

.
E
~

Annoar
VIenna

Z/*1

Coca Cola

.FoocllaDd Dozea

Products

J.ar1eEccs

VanCamp's

Pork 8 Beans .

$

ss
CJpr••· - I
.
ao... 2. 9S_
40 Lb.

,

•••t
....
blg .2
CowNa•aae ~

Pte+i+lam a Cu. ti.
~

Big Bend, Buckeye, Gallipolis,
· Ohio Valley, Twin Rivers ·

.

Sft
..
.•. ,

prepares to push off while giving North
. Dekotl Gov. Ed·-Schafe~
.
'

"The fact an investigation is going
on in.· my command and me not By JULIA PRODIS
knowing is not.a characteristic or me Associated Press Writer
GRAND FORKS, N.D. -Nearnot caring that it was going on," he
ly
ISO
National Guard troops worked
said. .
Simpson was arrested in Septem- into the night sandbagging an elecber, 10 months after the initial com- lrical switching station to keep the
plaints. He is charged with raping six lights on for·what remains of this sui).
· ··
trainees a total of 19 times, plus oth- merged town:
"Power is about the only thing we
er criminal offenses. He has pleaded .
guilty to having conse'nsual sex with have left," Carl Hagen, illt Air Force
II trainees, but denies raping anyone. . engineer, ·said late Thesday. ".We' d
Simpson, 32, could be senteqced have a blackout if this went out."
Exhausted Nonhero States Power
to life in prison for a single rape ,con.Co. employees were holed up inside,
'viction.
Alexander said he couldn't recall . sleeping on cots and bathing with
any complaints against Simpson from bottled·water, as the line of National
trainees during all of 1995, when he Guardsmen in chest-high waders
.·tossed heavy sandbags against the
was Simpson's commander.
· "It's beyond me why there was no walls.
· Lights illuminating the inundated
inkling ,whatsoever to me of any misparking
lot and the feet of a Water
conduct," he said. :.
tower
with
a painted smiley face
The captain also said he was ·
unaware that at least three other remained bright. So did the 1Vs,
.trainees had reported sexual harass- refrigerators and lights of emergency

Public Notice

_

. .

,.

\

SUPERMARKETS

Public Notl9e

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

Notice
__ ' MelgePublic
appro~~:ed by

,.__ .,._,.-_,
=
fl.._..&gt;• • •

t~:
";ederel , . :
IIIMiat llotloll 104 Ill of

Unclean Motor Blocks
a Unprepalred Steel

=~~t:::=

High Prk»f Being Paid

I

Ct• 7 nGI I II I 1117
..,_ •••, Me1112na ~
~--..w.:!T()N §(]lAP
fNAIIA), •• llfeiMI. .;
" . .. : ; _ _ . , , _
Tlt?a IV ol ISla
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IA14)
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rf;ltllelllldllr
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.

National Guardsmen work through the night to
prot~ct power, phone stations in Grand Forks

VIllage ol Racine, Fire Courthou.., Pomeroy, OH
Protection Faolllly and 45768, ·4:30 p.m. on llay I,
EqulprMnl, CDBQ Formula 11197, which le at luet 15
and
Local
Iunde; day. after the publication~
Conatructlon of New Fire thle comlllnact notice.
Hou•, Single year pro)lcl,
NOTICE OF INTENT TO
1238\000.
·
REQUEST RELEASE OF
It hae been determined
FUNDS (..,."'ROFI
,_,.,.,
the! eueh Requaat lor
.To elllntweatacl P.erMna,
Releaee of Funda will not Aganclea, and Groupe:
conelllute an action
On or about, but not
elgnlflcantlr. •"•ctlng the before, May 1, 1117, thll
qua 111y o . th a human M• lg • . C o u n t y
environment and according Com m1111 on ere, wIll
' ReiOUrCIIa, Dlvlalon of Real the ' Melge County requeet the s- of Ohio to
; Eallla
and
Land· Commlaalonere, hae rei••• Fld. .t.lunde under
.Management, Bldg. C-4, dao~ed not to prepare an Section t04 (g) of ntle I of
•Fountain Olllo Squere,
Houa 1ng · an d
•,cotumbu.,
43224, up En' v1ronme nt • 1 1mpact th e
Statement under the Community Development
•IO •nd Including May 13, Natlonel Envlronmentai Act of 11174, •• amendact;
!11117, untll3:30 p.m. lor two Polley Act of 1168, aa Sactlon 288 of Title 11 of the
•(~ aurplua bulldlnga arnencled.
Cnnaton GonDIMIIItlonel
.~ooated In Middleport
Environmental Ral(lew Affordable Houalng Act
• .,_lp, Melp Co&amp;!nty.
Raeord(e) (ERR) lor eact:o of (NAHAl, •• amended; .
' ·All bide are to ba
Prolect(e) lletld above 811d/or 1llle IV of the Stewart
t-tJiimltted · on forme
bean oonductad by the a. McKinney Homelaee
Jwnlahed
by
the
ga
C au n I y Aealetanoe Act, aa
!Department of Natural Cammllllanera. Tile ERR(I) 111118nded; to be UMd flir the
:l'laeourcaa no later then d a cum e n t •
I he proJtot(l) ~bed abOVe.
ollay 13, 11117. The State environmental revlewa of
The Melga Ca11nty
:nHIYI• the right to retlcl 11M praJICI(e) and more fully commtee'-8 Ia Cllrtllylng
.any or ell blda.
1111 forth the reaeon• why to the State of Ohio, that
• For "Bid Forma" or 1uch etetement le :nat Melge Count!.' and Janet·
:Jurtlier InfOrmation, contRt required. Jhll l!RR(a) ·are on HOWl rei, In 1'11/her official
&gt;Ma.rk Hemming, Aree llle and available lor ·the cap_1clty 11 Prell dent,
~=.111•• k5H4D
•
publlc:a .examination and Melg •
C au 'n 1y ·
01 1113, 0Chlo"..........
'"
copying, upon requeat, Commlul01111ra, oonunt lei
e 14..82·71$24 or Sandy betwnn the haure of 11:00 accept the Jurlldlctlan of
J&lt;tglay, Dlvlalon of .Rill · a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Monday Faderel courta " !111 IOII!m
Eatlla
and
Land through Friday (except 11 brought to enforce
ti~Mgt~Mnl, It IIIIi above holldaya) et lite olllee of the reaponelbllltlea 111 relltlon
ildd- - talap'- nunlber 11 • lg e
C o u n 1y to environmental mlewa,
(1114) 285 11381.
·
Commllllonert, Court declalon·mtklng; 1nd
: Suactallful bidder only Hauae, 100 Eall Saconct action; tnd that then ·.
will be notllled. The Street, Pomeroy, Ohio reeponalbllltl.. have .._,
aucoeealul blddar lhOUid. 45711,
utlellecl.
hote 11181 .1 twrlormtnce
No furlhttr tnvlron-"1
The Jegtl affect of thll
IUIIWIIty II requii'M 10 be mltW of IUCh proJect II oertHicatlon le u.t upon Ill
polled. Tht •mount JIIOPNM 10 be aoilcluctact, approv11, the llalg1 CoUnly
"ppa1ra on the "!lid Form", prior to thll requa1t lor C!lmmlltlonera m•r 111Mi
for MCh building.
r.lna- of Fe,ler8lluncll. · !Ill Facteral lunda, and the
{4)23,28,30;(5)2;4~
The llelg1 County
of Ohio ,Will hlvt
Cammlaelonere · plln •to Ullellecl fie relponalbiiiiiH
Public Notice
undtrtake the proJICI(a) under the Natlontl
c~a~W~becl with the l'lderal . Envlrol-nl"' Polley Act of
fundi cited above. fUry lltll, • -ded.
parlOR, egtnclta, and/or
The Steta of Ohio- wnt
groupe, who . have eny. ~ en obllllllon to Ill
comma...- rega;ctlng the epprovtl of -the ral••• of
environMent .or who lunda IIIII ICCiplanwolthe
dllllrtl with lhle llndlng of CM11111caUoli only II ft te on
No 81gnlflotnt lmptol one of lhe two follOwing
ctaoltlon, tre ··lnvlted to
· (I) !Ill otidftullo~
_
-~• ....... u .....ll; IUblnlf wriiiiH oomltllfll8 not, In fl4lt, uaoutacl
~· "" Ohlo 411711
lor oonalde1'811on to 111e · by the Metge Cou~l Olllef
1 1
M•lga
count p
orncer or other
!I'D. All hoiMnlld ,.._, c-PII Ian•.,.
the County .of-.
•• naln, Mel ClrouPI:
·
,
. The . llelga CounJr :
ara. . . . . , f t
t:. omild..lo'*'..::r=
- nA.I"' &amp;CIA#"
1 or ........,....
Tlile
ca~a•uniiY D•••lap•enl

W.RJJ , . . .

'

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3 Lb.

150z.Can

Maleh

,,

Zlor•l

Foodland

2Uter
Bottle

Top SoU

.

center, 1 boat trip through the flooded downtown aectlon of
Grand Forks, N. D., Tuesday. The man at right Is unidentified. (AP) ·

TOUR FLOODED AREA· Coalt Gilat:daman Lee Kemlakey,laft,

.!.J,

..1......-z.a•

IF

'

•

Caliloraaia

Kennebec

. DETROIT (AP) - About 5,400
At Chrysler, the strike ~~ the
workers were off the job at a Gener- Mound Road engine plant in Detroit
al MO!Qrs plant early today as a ihird
is larzely over plans to outsource proongoing strike threatened supplies of duction of drive shafts to a nonunion
popular GM and.Chrysler models at supplier. That strike began April 9
the ljeginning of the spring selling · and· has led to layoffs at 16 other
season.
Chrysler plants in North America,
· Local 594 of the United Auto affecting 22,98 I workers.
· Workers went on strike at the PontiThe strike has stopped Chrysler's
ac East plant near Detroit after bar· North American production of its
gainers failed to reach agreement on Dodge Ram and Dakota pickups and
a;· local cotitiact by the 11 :59 p.m: Jeep Grand Cherokee sport utility
Tuesday . deadline. Talks were to , vehicles. The strike also has halted
. resume .Thursday momitig.
assembly of the Dodge Viper sports
The plant assembles Chevrolet car and Ram vans.'
C/K arid GMC Sierra full-size
"If they dC)n 't settle that stiike
extended-cab . Pickups, among the soon, it will be devastating," said
!=Ompany's biggest moneymakers.
Alan Helfman, general manager of a
. : The' union has demanded more Jeep-Eagle dealership in Houston.
:.staff."We're going into our big season."
:: "There arcl)'l enough people . David H~aly, an analyst with
·;working ~ere," Jim Abare, sourcing . Burnham Securities Inc., estimates .
:·coordinator for Local 594, told the the slrike has cost Chrysler more than ·
&lt;industry publication Ward's Auto- · $100million after taxes. He estimates
·:motive Reports. "Workers with' 25 the Oklahoma City slrike has cost
)ears' I!Ciji&lt;;lrity can't uike a vacation ·· GM more than $150 million. ·
: day. The company wants to hire ternWhile GM has faced a series of
::poiary workers, but our position is strikes·in the past two years, this is
· that they should be permanent with the first walkout at a Chrysler plant
: full benefits."
in nearly three years and the longest
: .GM's Oklahoma City plant, which in more than 30.
: produces the redesigned Chevrolet
"it's the first time that Chrysler's
· Malibu and Oldsmobile Cutlass, has had the GM disease,:· Heaiy sajd.
: been sllut down since April 4 because "It's getting exceedingly expensive.
: of a similar dispute over staffing lev- It almost puts them out of the light
els. ·
quck business."

ABERDEEN
PROVING
GROUND, Md. (AP) _ An Army
captain whose subordinate is charged
with raping trainees testified that he
took pride in his management style
and a policy that encouraged women
to repon harassment.
capt. Scali Alexander was the
. : final defense witness Thesday iri tile
; court-martial of Staff Sgt. Delmar
•. Stmpson, a former drill sergeant at
: Aberdeen. Closing arguments could
: come as early as this .afternoon.
TWo female trainees at Aberdeen ·
: accused ·Simpson of sexual harass; ment in a Novemlier 1995 complaint ·
:to 'another drill sergeant and the
;company's first sergeant, a prosecu, tor said. The first sergeant should
;have reported .the complaint to
• Alexander..
·
• Alexander testified that he didn 't
;remember hearing ofthe complaint or
·~ a su,bsequent tl)ree-day investiga•liOn.

Lb.

Steaks

&gt;

.

Commander says he didn't .
know about trainees' complaints

Country Style
Bucket

ReciRipe ·

1897

Mere GM workers
go on .strike today

StUdy: Women get too little treatment for. 'bad' cholesterol '

Beat
of the
Bend

I

Wednaadity, April 23, 19•'i

shelters, command posts and a few
packed motels and · convenience
stores on higher ground.
Red Cross President Elizabeth
Dole planned to visit the area this .
afternoon . Federal Emergency Management Agency Director James Lee ·
Will, who toured flooded areas with
President Clinton on Tuesday, said
today the situation was " ve.ry devas·
tating."
"I don't think we've ever seem a
disaster where we have lost entire
cities, 50,000 people," he said on
NBC's "Today" show. "It is j11st
incredible and it's going to. be very
difficult, It's going to uke time and
a lot of money to recover."
He said applications for.relief arc
already coming in. "We've already
received 6,000 from North Dakota,
several thousand from Minnesota,
South Dakota."
•.
As the ·Red River flows north-

ward, evacuation orders have ' been that gutted nine downtown buiidings.
Most residents turned ofT electricissued in smaller towns on both
ity in their homes before they fled.
sides of the U.S.-Canada Q&lt;&gt;rder.
When the work trucks arc out of
"Basically, we're evacuating all of
sight,
jack rabbits hopping along railthe rural areas and all of the cities and
road tracks and garbage sliding
towns in about the eastern IS percent
·of Pembina County," extension agent around culverts make the only soul)ds
Andrew Thostenson said Thesday. . . in this deserted place .
At the power company building,
Things stayed relatively quiet
the
Red Riv~r had first hipped gently
overnight and there hasn't been the
sort of devastation that has hit Grand against the cinder blocks. Theil, it
Forks, Jody Lindenberger, Pembina . started seeping through the porous .
County emergency assistant, said walls and trickling along the floor '
inside.
early teday.
By nightfall Tuesday, the man- ·
"Not the bad part. We've still got
overland flooding, but as far as agers of Northern States Power knew
,what's hit Grand Forks, we haven't they were in trouble. If their control ·
gotten that," she said.
. panels got wet, !t was lights out for
Grand Forks is a veritable ghost Grand Forks.
town now, with more than 45,000 of . "Get it going! Move it faster!" the
its 50,000 people gone. Aoodwaters troops called to each other as they
have shimmied homes ofT their foun- heaved the heavy bags down the line.
dations, contaminated the city's waier. Before, rpidnight, with sandbags piled
system, and prevented fighting fires 3 feet high, they knew.they had saved ·
the electricity.
·

the

Slllte ~I Ohio; or (b) that tht

env.lronmental review
record lor the . proJect
lndleat.. omllelon or · 1
required declalon, nndlng,
or alep 1 ppllcabla to tha
·r:l
· act to the environmental
ew pra u ...
·wriHen obJectlona muet
be Eract and eubmlttact
In
cordance with the
...,.,, procedure (24 CFA
.•
.,.. 58), and mull be
Part
lddreoll8d to: State of Ohio;
Envlronmentel Officer;
Community Development
Division; P.O. Bo)C 1001·,
·Cotumbua, Ohio 432811·
0101.
Objecllona to the .RIIH"
of Funda on baa .. other
then !hoM etataclabOVe wtll
not be conalde"" by the
Stale of Ohio. No objecllona
.....l.ved lifter MIIY 28, 11117,
(which le 15 c1aya lifter It Je
antlclpatld that the State
will r-Ive a requaat for
rei•••• of Iunde), will be
conaldel'ad by the Stale of
Ohio.
· The addrell of the chief
execuuve olftCIIr Je:
..Jenel HoWard, Pretldent
· Melli' County
.
Commlnlonera
Malge County Courthou•
Pomeroy, Ohio 457811
{4) 23; 1TC
~;.....;.._ _ _ __ __
In Memory

inds.
.

.
~

'

.

{That's the power of cellular service from .360" Communications. }

In loving memory of

ourdeariOn,
.brolher Mel friend,

PHILLIP K. GRIFFIN,
on hla 40th blrthclt?y,
Apr1123,1117.
Phillip ...,.,_ this

life on S.ptwmber
21, 1111. He wa·a
trueblenlng to our
temlly lftd to ..,..,
.... he touctsect, and
• will never bl
folliOltlM.

So Mdly miHecl by
trlln •• and fltmllr.
Plllllp'a Loving
,..,.., Mom, Ded,
... . . lftdll717tlo

·360° Communications
..cw'-Wt&amp; or.....,.......,.. oCIMT'lUie1'

o ..... -

.....-...-~

.......... DTOu.

, .....,..T Te IIII&amp;Dn' Al"f''IIIYA'-o 0,..... ~· IIIlA,. 11 , • • •.,.

aa....... , .. ,...,;. • ....._.,..

�.

Page12 • The O.lly Santlnel

.PoiMroy • Mlddlaport, Ohio

,

, Wedl aaday, April 23, 1117

Wedneadey, Aprll23, 1817

•
'

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2 ....,.._, Fri... Jllh .... ; '

_Out ......... .

~

/
•

FOOD&amp;DRUG

, L L IOLLOI
TIUCIING

n .....,...P-...

.'

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

Wednesday;

Umeatone • Grevel

Apri/2~

Dirt. Sand
985-4422

98S·J8JS

ComPlete Madt!ae Shop Serv!ce Fabrication
•
•

.•
•

••
•
•

..
•

'

Start Your
Oay ¥lith A
.Breakfast
From Kroger

,.,,.u.

c:lanl...

..
'

992-6342 (Diane)
i 992·7275 (Brenda)

•NewHomas
•Additions

•Remodeling

INSURANCE

113 W. 2ND st

.614-992·5479

'

•·DICTORI ·
.
EJIITS. FROOT
RICE KRISPIES TSflM'"CKS RJIIISIN
LOOPS, SUGAR
,...
' ES
BRAN OR·CORN FLAJ(

.'
:....-......--

-

........,

TYSON/HOLI, Y FARMS JUMBO PACK
(4-1.85. OR MORE)

Kellogg·s
cereal
'14.8-24-oz.

614-742-4202

Du's .·

~,~..~~=

QUALm

results. Cal nowl

·L.Oaflrig ehecla to horae arenas..
Roof repair and paint to structural repaiF.
Steel buildings as low ae $4.00 eq. .ft.
delivered. Free eetlmetee, prQmpt end
profeulonil III'VIce. Cal! tciday

··~·
1

614/992·7274 .
Roofing~

Gutters-

Siding

...______
...._,,._......

•Small Engines,
•Lawn Mowers
•Weed Eatere
2 mi. off Rt. 7,
Leading Creek Rd.

742·2925 '
"W.a.wrou

EVENING MEAL
at
MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR C'1&lt;.1"""'~R
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy ,
'lbesdays and Thursdays during
·April Serving from 4:30 • S:lS

Leg·

Donation $4.00 for meal

Pu6fic is invite/

-c..•llardwi/Software
TnUittg .

ASSORTED

Set-Ips .
eiiStalatfel

Kroger
Juice

...,,...s .
•Mittor Rep*s

.
SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS .

lriBIIIIII'IIAI 5ehp Help

Day Ph. 992-3871
Eve. Ph. 949-2534
Brian Andereon

PRI£ES''
Quality Window Systems
1112-41.19

·Pancake
syrup .

.

Buy One-Get One

Plcg.

HOT oR MILD

·

· fREE I
.

.

•

Buy One.Cet One

·

'.

F
. REE I•

.

cHICKEN. sTEAK oR sAuSAGE ,

.

DiET COI(E OR

coca

Classic

.J&amp;M MUSIC
NOW HAS AN ASSOCIATE
PIANO TUNER AND
REPAIRMAN
JOSEPH WHITE, JR.

12-Pack
.12-()z. Cans

New Television Station
in Pomeroy

Buy one-Get One

.TV27
OPEN HOUSE _
S\JNDAY, APRIL 27th
2 to 6 P.M.

Buy One-(:et One

=eo."'

23 24 25 26

i&lt;F:- Lrlghl.=t--:

Llmeetone &amp; Greval
SePtic Systems

Saturday, May 3

212 Rock St., Pomeroy
. 992-2727 .
Churches: E•to win a
. FREE 30 Min. Progrant.
BusinesSes: Enter to win a
FREE 30 Sec. Commercial. '
Serving MeigS, Gallla ·
&amp; Mason
Your Hometown Connecttonl .

SENIOR CITIZeNS

CENTER . ·
Mulberry Hetghll,

PorMroy

· Tabtea fOr $10
Call

"•

tfyouhavestwstilnS. c.um•Jtsc.-qLatb•

,o!Jase corQ:t )QitDe tnlf'l(g'trorCIIt

1·111111-85~·51155

'

.

.

Vlctrllly
lnL; . . .

24-21, .......... -

Umestona,
.Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

614-992-3470',

p~e~.,...

onttqua a mlllt IIOtltH,

80

Public Sale
lndAuctton

ball cl.. ll, wreatllno alnolet a
- · ball eardo, 2 ._......
iy~tar, lo¥0. hundred crahl,
tUie 11dr10, &amp; Ilea elolho. back
p11ck1, cl~thal a 111oeo. bookl,
J-11· new ltHI 101 ahooo.
.nu:hmort Btrrt ~

Laroe H1nd Tool Sala: Friday,
SaluiMY I P.M. Located Slate
11ou1t 1,
at,. 0111a.

c_-

Llqlllf'a Allaoiln Service, Lulie
L..,ley, Aucdo-. IIIIUMhold,
E••· Ftomo S... Cd II&lt;H*

HAULING

flick - - Auction Compeny,

• Gravel

WILLIIUL1017 cau..

,• Refuse • Etc.

992·7074

• Umestone

a..-·.

Reaeonable Rites

Sand. No Minimum.

(614) 742-3800

TIM'S CUSTOM
CARPEr

Roofing, Siding,
Pole Baomo,.Deckl,
Pel!lllng, Ga...,

Jurt off Bnldbury Rd.
(look for algnr)

Porches.
CIIH Ut For AF'" Ellfmalw

614-742-3090
614-742-3324
614-742-3076

clll"'

. 50%·75%

llallehaprove•e•ts

vor And Gold Coln1, Proolotil,
Diamond!, Mlique -.y, Go1cl
Rlnoo, Po•II:IO U.S. CurNnar.
Soorllng, Ell:. Acqulll- .-loy
- ll.tS. Coin Shop, 151 Second
AlMnue, Gllip III, 81 ......214

SAVE

3351 Happy Hollow IIOIICI
Middleport, Ohio 45760
New Homee, Addition•,

80 . Wantacl to Buy
AbiOiutt Top DONII: Aft U.S. Sll·

Gravel, Llmeatone,
Topaoll, Fill Dirt,

WHI haul-just call.

lull dme oucllonee;, complaoa
auction urvlce. Llcan1ad
ltle,Ohlo &amp; - • VIrginia, :104·
773-5185 Or 304-773-5447.

MiddlepOrt, OH
614-11112-5379
· Day It Evening Hra.
ftfM1 mo.

7

AnUquH, furniture, gleU,
colnt, ~·· lampe, guM. toolt,
HlaltO; altO appraiHII, Colly
llar1tn, 114-182·7+41•
Andquoo. lOp prlee1 paid, Ill..,·
ine Antlqula, Pomeroy. Ohio,

Ru11 Moore owner. 014·112·

2521.

.

Clean· Late M'odel Cart Or ·

Truck1, 1880 Modell Or ""'"·
Smlill Buick Pontiac, 1800 Eali·

om -..., Glllpollo.

J &amp; D'1 Auto Parll. Buying oal·
vehldeL satuno porto. 001.
773-50133.

Wonttd Timber &amp; Or Timber
Land, Prafaatlonal Servlcel,
M..d Paper Woodland1, 11'-

LARRY'S
LAWN CARE
ellowlng

(

Your · \

I#Aarketplace)

(RUIIIIUIIIII Com11111tlll)
ANNOUNCEr.1UlTS

oWIIfllleatlng
•Trill Trimming
Shrubbery
Maintenance
Plan AMad, Call,.,.._,
lor free ..llliiete.

742·2803
or446-3622

005

772-3831.

wanted To

Bu~:

We Bur Junk

Cart114-4411-MFIT, Or 814-31111012.

Wlnltd: UIOd HardWood Flooring
In Good Condition, Coil e 1'"2•5~7.

Er11Pl OY~1ENT
SERVICES

· Plrlonall ·
AmNTIOH

Hal 'lbur Marriage Or Relation·
ohlp Gat Up a 'No!C. SlOp ., Prln""' Vldoo And Rtnt Ono 01 OUr
Adulo VldtoL 1380 Ea-.. ,....
·nul, GalllpaMI, Or 011111,.-..
11922.

.

Eur Match ' Making ' II Ready
Nowi1·900·7711-,7118 Eli. 51100,
$2.98 Min. Mutt So ll'florl.
. Loto wolght while you

110

Help Wented

I.VON I All Ar..1 I Shirley
~304-1115-l.a

loblo Avon flepreotnllllvol
nHdod. Earn nionor lor Chrlll·
,., bill at homaloo -r.. 1-800892·1358 or 30•·1182·2845, lnil.
Alp.

OPAL oabltio' and
available at Fruth

Golf Lessons

Golf Sales, Club ·
Repair, Custom
Orders, Awards,
Engraving
' .
John t:eaford
Chester, Ohio

.Insured

Complete House
and Trailer Site
Work, Bulfdc)zfng,
'

MGA Construdion Services
.'

~lectrtc
Repairs ~'

WI mo.

,,., £,.,~ .... .

nrtd of paying high
coetlabor rates?
Hook-up charg•?
We'll match or but

llsl~··

... ,plumbing carpentry

versions Remodels
··· -·2~~2413 '

SR 33 Pomeroy, Oh.
992·1330
. M·S9-5

J

N

N

.........

Syracuse ~
N0111 Open For SprinB
SeG.an -

• All vaga1a111e a bedding
planls $6.50 1111
.
• Bloomilg &amp; Follagl .
Bulcltl$6.75- $8.75
f4 in.IAIIorl Poll
~·SUS

-RIAlber""' aellphn
....5.50
oeam. $2.00 ea..
o8lvubbely
We honor Golden
Cards
. 01*1
N 8irl12-6

=

compet"or's price?

33 AUTO CUNIC &amp;
24 HR. TOWING

"'

• Pansies $6.50 nat

'

•New Hc;»mes
•Garages .
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
· ESTIMATEES
985-4473

any other

(614) 992-383.8 Usi"l tht Cl•ui/ittl1 ·

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

7/22/lfn

Driveway Umeetone

Septic Syetema
IMialled .

c•STo•·

Ucenaad • Bondad

EXCAYAnNG CO.

, B.-:tchoe, Trlc:tchoe.

SHARPENING
SERVICE
HUPP'S

982-2181

·HOWARD

..

WeAre ,
Committed
To Serving You

g:00-4:00 '

tiZIIWfn

. JumbO
~
Bagels_______..... --~---·. 6 -et.

Items I Prices Good ThrOuGh April 26th, 1997.
,.--....,,......---r--...,---, c;olvlot1117. The
WED THUR FRI SAT t.'Car~aJ::::~o,

RUMMAGE SALE
Ft;EA'MARKET

., 814-742-2138

FREE!
.
· . FREE'
'*"·
•
.·

Ullillll

Sayre Trvcklng Co.

JimmY
Deans ~:-,lc"Biscuits. ..............- · .
DELl NEW yoRK sTYLE

Pomeroy, Ohio

Trailer &amp;
Hou"SIIe.a
RH.onab/e R-IH
· · Joe N. Sayre

valleydale ·
··
Pork Sausage. . . . -~-u~_. Ro_" .
\

(614) 592·5025
Athens, Ohio·

NID0·291.aecl0
. . --

acavm•

CAfFEINE FREE DIET COKE, SPRITE.

owaltney
. ·.
Sliced Bacon______,_,,_

.

' WV lfl'l!M77

Safranek

Pt. Pllallit

'

:Z4--D~.

REGULAR oR Low sAL r

Attorney

DIRE£T

110 Court St ·
KROOE~

CHAmR7 • CHAPTER 13

All Yard ..._ lluat eo Pold Ill
Mwnct. D•••••: 1:00piiiiM
dot kloro lhe ad II le ,.~,
Iunday 'a IIOIIdlf adlll••·
1:CIOpMF'*J

••· eomronen, aheett, drapn.

HAULING

Kountry Klub

-''FA£TORY

.VICinity .

8241,114 • • 8113

The

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

.

-

Pariiii'OJ,
MlddllpOI't

Ga11go Slole Zo402 Jellaraon
Ave., PI PlauaM. Tllur-Ftl Alldl

WICKS

614-992-3120

Don (;•ry, Owner

....... ,For e•• ,..

i

(Ume StoneLowRiltt)

Quality.Work at
• Fair Prlcrl
650 Page St.
Middleport, Oh. 45160

Home Ph.

lelUNIY April Mil; 10 uo.- •
p.111.; ~17 Grahemlclloolllld,
Looll Foo 'l'lrd Slole l i p;

Customers

liNGS'

•Chain Sawe ·

Free E~lnudea

· COMPUTER
HELPI

Chicken

•Roofing
•Siding

."Stop putting off those much _needed ·
home impro11ement~. " .CoU Today!
992·2753 Free Estimate• · 992·5535

:11271TFN

1·9G0-263·270Q
EXT. 6925
•
•
$2.99 per lllfn•.
Must be 18 yrs. .
Serv·U
(619) 645·8434

., •DICkS

•Garages

· POMERov; oH.

REPAIR OR NEW
CONSTRUCTION

.. '

Windows
..... Adlltlons

Service to New

FREE ESTIMATES

I.K.

360° Communications

Farm Buildings

Gallon

Bod~5Jaop

·CELLULAR PHONES ·

KROGER SKIM DELUX OR

Kroger
.
SklmNIIIk

-

D. Cear,'s

.

10%0ffAny

· Pomeroy, Ohio

'

JEFF WARN

! Call

.Allo CCIIICI ... Work
(FREE ESTIMATES),
V.C. YOUNG Ill
99U215

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT

•SIInl~·
Doers &amp;

614-696-1376
Lawn Mowing &amp;
Landscaping

.

hinting

. J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION
=m llll WI :Jaws ·

Fax:

Ciani...

'

oRoollng

11112·2772
a:oo e.m.·3:30 p.m.

'

Plumbing

oEiectrlc*

Aeretlon Motor -&amp;lies &amp; Repairs
. · C!Mnlng Septic Syawma
Port·A~ • Rentals • Serviced Weekly
No Extra Charge tor Evenings or Weekends
24 Hr. Prolitpt 8ervlce ·
7 Peya A Week

. 614-992·7643

~-·

.

...... ltw. EJCirrlar

250.Condor Stl'llflt
Pome!Oy, Ohio 45789
A Division on Nichola Metal, INc.

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

..•

614-992·7119

Big Bend Fabrication,
Machine &amp; Walcllng Shop

• · Phone: 614: 992-2406
••
••

.

.....,a....a

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
·Garages i Repla~ement Windows
Room Additions ~ Roofing
COMM.ERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Monday-Friday· 8:00 a.m.· 4:30p.m.
-· Saturday· 8:00 a.m. - 12 noon

•

.POMEROY, OHIO

AliDS
IIUSIWIIIS

._Wdlllona

· BISSELL BU.ILDERS, INC~

Steel Sales, WelciiJII Supplies, Industrial GIIS
Radiator Repair &amp; Replac:emj~Ut

·'

·(AIPiliiM SEIVKE

• Fertilizer (Bag or Bulk}
• DeKalb &amp; Pioneer Seeds
• Small Seeds • Chemicals
• Twine • FHd • Lime
•

Chester, Ohio ·

POMEROY ·

4/rih

..

70 /

IICI WII.IEI

PllmM

GallipoliS
&amp; VIcinity

Auto, Trucl1, R81ld1nllool,
Ca Ma'nl
S' Ulop olt, OH.
114-742rmr7

1011 Soeonc1 IW...... Thura, Frl,
April hth. 25th, t A.M. ·4 P.M.
RllnOrShlno.

LINDA'S .
PAIIYfiNG

HowardLWtilllll

""1 clotuly d.y, ·

QuiiWa

A IJfH!fl pabtlJab .;,.

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

-a.~t

Yird Sate

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
I

0ownspou11

.ti.L~-lihldlll-.

P'tp -~ 1:00 .....

"':.'::'~..:::,""

.,.=:,;::=..,

1Nwm1111gt.

FREE . , _......8

... !lie. 'l)lrd e.1e1 April r'*"·

-2168

-d. a Mlleo Out. ttufvln...

1141114110

""" I - · ..

_;;,HE;,;;LP::-:::Wio":":N:::TE:::D:-:·117'--- ~

"'n•--lr••-no ·
elrcull Manlllelecii'Onlc com- ~
April ali ·28111, 1 A.II . Movlno, , . . _ I I _ E !I Ianoe- ·.
Low Prtc.. Aoctllr, 8 u1 ; 1 • 81 filii II.,, . . lnlln. .......
.. .
w T.V., Ptanll, Lampo, lluch
In...
Col .·
llcn,IIQal II
~---~-01-

GutiW Cteenlng

. Aftlr. p.m.

~Rio Grande, 814·245-MIO :

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

.....1or
IIIIIIi I 8 p.m.

~

Unl..,oloy ·;
Acceptiilll ;
Appllcallonl For Kllchan Help. ,'
Soduho Food Service, Unfvwal. ,

''"7?

IIIII, • ·D;tlt. 710 Clleny "--n!

.. "''JMIIllN ' .,••• t..Dc*,. .....

.

�.

,

.

WeclnlldaY, Aprtl23, 11t7

•

,Wid'n11dey, ApriiZI, 1117

~·roy •llddtlpart, Ohio .

.•
uq-oop
•
lkllllllnn,._.,

'

Houoa llld - " · lfPrtoL 41craa; Ideal illillf llotile. - h
Sl., Pomao"W OH. 104 • . •)77.
32 Acraa Oul Hannan Traca
Road, At Crwn CIIV ONo. Rural
Conn! Air, 3 aa~ 2
Fdll Balho, 155,000, 114-441·

lleotlod tO LIMIIto To' Sell - ·

. . . t..tl11t •• IIOQ

Tlldno o\ppllcllono AIDomlno'i Pizza In tho GaUipob and
lor. DdVIrL

Office Type Work In Evanlngo,
Expor.- In
(Microiofl Worcl, Excel &amp; Acceoa);
Word Ptrfocl &amp; Loblo. have II
vra. 0111ca Elcpaltaooce. can -k

'Cdl1t •• ~!!

-.,-.on,

Nutle Ald• Training Progf'llm·

Rocklpringo Rotoobilitallon Conw
· wil bt olforlng nlnlng cU... In
lho monlh of liar. Appllcationo

are now being accepled

at

.-7511
Rockaprlngt Rd., _ . , .
011. Clan IIZI lo Umllad, Throe

(3) ........ ~ ... rwqulred.
with appllca!IOn. Apply In paraon

- EEI(&amp;t:·MEEIC.

......

Nagotiablo. Alao Will
Type Of Typing Jobt, Rtlumaa.
Term Papert, I)Ocumenra. Etc.
Moll Jobt Dc.le Within 2&lt;4 Ta 48

Hra.--

•Qn

Syracuee· thrH bedroom. one

410 HouHS tor Rent

Sanlor Cldzen Wanii-Car In A·l
Condlllonl Proler lltdlum 'Size
Ina To Work In Long·Term Care Car, 1n Tha 11th. 114 148:1375.
StUing. PIH18nl Environment. Sawing In home, wind- 1raatPlc:ll Up Application In Paroon AI menra and acc.tiiO(III for an
Scenic Hills Nursing Center, 311
Bllckrldga All, Bldwoll, OH NO room&amp;, aoma a I'""do no a nd ,..
prrl11, 114-882-3220.
PHoNE CAllS PlEASE.
Shafer'• Lawncare Commercial
Ovorllrook Contor In lllddlopor~ And Rto-1 -·Cell Fat
Ohio 11 now acceptlnf applicaE - 81
- a
... ~ 1 -1
tions far pari time S NA 'a, all ~
lhiftl. F01 mot'l information call
·8PAINQ Cl E"•IO
Sp I Cl
I D
614oGG2-a.72.
G u
II .our
r ng 'lOur
tan na
var
Willi
1
St&gt;ond
SUmmto
Parl tiN hot tub repair, muat In lalaura. CoM Naw Ta Gel
'lOur
hlvo ganotal electrical 6 pluml&gt;lng exporlonct, poy negollabla, Spring Fever Cleaning Dlacounll
daptnding on crtdondola, apply
Wtonlad·
hOUII 10 ltlr down lor
at Baum Lumber Chlotor, Oh or 114
U8 3008
eend raauma 111 Box 67, Chi-. klmbtr, 11 4-tlll2-2322. ·

baaamtril, alocrrlc lurntCOihttl 114o4411-4111.
·
pump, IWD-car garage l 2ldl!), il Badraom·Houaa, In Gallpollt,
and 114 nioo, 11 4-112· - - &amp; Dtpolil Aaqulred,
No ,.II, All9arpal8d, 81+178Syracu••· IWO a&amp;Drr colonial, 2400.
araatlocallon tor chll-. 111raa
11a o1raama, . -1 oonclrlon, ;...,. Room For a lnilvlduala, Homey
dlale poa-alon, 11&lt;1-8112·5558 Envlronmanl U~Htlaa, S - A+
ar 114-812..e542. ·
frlgerator, CA, Provided, 1100
-Each, 11-2511
T..., lladroomo, One Ball, Latga ~"'"':"~.:.;.;--:-..;..;.:.;.;~KIIA:hon, On large loL Dna Car Nlca 2 ............... In Po-Garaaa. Two Porchia; C014)448- or. no pera, t3SO willl do011211
poall and good , . , . , _ Mar
~~--:--:'--:-.--..o..--laetl on land conlrac•• 114..88·
7244.
320 MobHe Home&amp;
Pr Plaaaanl_. 2badroom houaa,

Nuruo: NM41ng Pari·Timt RN'o
And LPN'a Fat All Stolfto Ao Col~

:',"71.

r--

tnceaHoaa O-riiY
dtpoall
- ~~~~fo~r~Sa~le~:~l1112
.. ~ t2Gotmo.
Riter·
qulrad. :10+1112-2o105 or 104 11ta
and

fl-

2221.

01!, _~5720.

Part-Time (15-20 · Hour&amp; !Wk)
Paroon For Laundry Dept, Midnigh! ShUt Also Notdlng Pari·
Time Coll-lno For All Shllll In
Laundry And HouMkHplng. Apply In Peraon AI Scenic Hilla
Nuroln' Centtr, 311 Buckrldge
Ad .; Bodwell , OH. NO PHONE

&amp; hulell.

Fruzer, Walhei', o·ryer, VCR,

Rtfrlgeratora, Microwave, 114·
256-1238.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waahara, dr 1ara, rafrlgararora,
rangea. Skaflll' Appllancta, 71
VIne Sir~ Cal I1+441-73GI,
1.0 • 3488

...150 rd. Sola on
Floom 111n ilanra .,...

turnlrur.. ~~~ HRS.II.f
t0-4Wolluyro.

520

1087 14180 3 or ~ Bedroom,
$1,350 - . . $220/mo. Froa air,
lkiJdng, &amp; dallvtry. Only II Oak·
wood Homo a Nitro,WV. 304-75558115.
3 Trailora lorllle.304.0l'fi.107e.

Pooral Job&amp; 3 Poalrlono Availobit, No ExporllfiCt Nocaaoary,
For lnlormadon, C8111·116-784·
8011 En 3020.
Allmal.-18 ad\l8rll8lng in
lhlo nooo~oer
10
tho Fellonll Fa~ -.g Arl.
of1988_.,mokullilegal
lo adveollaollarit prole..,.,.,
llmltollon or dlaclltnlnallon

1a...,....,

1;

color. rolfgil&gt;n.

IIXIa.:.~lui.,;nollonal
origin, or any - l o

rnal&lt;lilnyaucllprofM!ICe,
llmllallon or dllcrlmlnallon.•

T h l o - will no1
~ accep1

_,.tor.,..--·-·•

-ill

in...,..

ol tho law.
Our ...... n haraby

are·-

Woanodllatllll oiiiQI
allo•lllorjlnlhlo,., Pit*
on an oquo1

opportunlly bula. .

.........lfllirl-...llll-11
..•
HEA l_ F S TATE

Dlaaotar Rolltl """"'m ·

We hove $rooo to fi!ooo par
home In dlaaoltr rollof fundi
. avaUable 10 help you purchtM a

porlllon.

-

'
Graveltll ••wer pipe. Siders 1887ToyOII IIR2 JVC Sloreo I ltf7 P.M.
CD Plarar 10 Inch Klckora, 2
Complatt 111 golden ram goll Equ41mon130HI7S.7U1 .
Ampa, Looka I Au no Good, 11184 Mirada 18 Foot Open llpw,
clubo, 1a11 llandad Wlbag U!L
wilh Sun Dock, U .UW VI, llar5x8 ullll!y lnallar 14150 or $500 8tNI Bulldlnga, ,. . . 40x60x14 $2,1100, 814-31H21U.
crulaer, with Am Fm Ceaaou•.
with loading rampo. FloJtllalm Waa $15,250 Balance fi,D~O; 1g88 Chevr. Coralca 1.40,000 _and
Ski Aocanory. 814·250·
Crown lmparlal wl"ltlp ohoao 150x100x18 Waa $21,200 Balance
mlloo,
$1,500
good
cond.
304·
t1383
'"
117,831
60XI
150•11
Waa
M2.1500
(-). alza lc, 2palr brown, 2pr
black, f8Sipar pair. 304-1175· Balance U9,872 ·1-800-408· 11fi.8141.
lUI
SlraiUI
215
Pro/
Xll DC
51211.
.
2111.
Ball
Boat
175
liP.
Evll!ludl
Uka
. . ~
~
New ·111nr Ex1rila. Mull Seal
" " Ford T·Bird V•l, garage 814;441-oall
.
kapt f4,opo. 304-57&amp;-211211.
Antiques
530
A Groom Shop .·Pal Graomlrig.
1118fl CMUtr, 1MI flrablrd, T- 34 Faot Hauaolioal, 304-773·
Bur or oall. Riverine Antlquaa, Faalurlng Hydro Ba1h. Don· Topa
Wllh All Opdono, f4,150; 5815:
ShNII. 373 Goorgea Craok Ad.
11~ E. Main Sll'aal, on Rt 124,
11187
Buick Ctnrury 4 Doorl,
814-448-0231.
Pomeroy. Houra: jot.T.W. 10:00
Boar Sola Going On ·Aouattt,2DS; Cook Mo10ra, 814-441- rDn
a.m. 10 1:00 p.m., SUndal' 1:00 111 Adorablio _AKC Aoglatorod 0108.
Boata -Cuur Cablna ·-Bow
e:oo p;m. 114-GG2·25:ie, Ruaa Chlnaae Pug Puppr 2 Ftinalea,
Aldora -Baa• Boall ·Johnoon
1 SA ApL Clolo 10 - . No Oulboard llororo Sallo. Sarvice
&amp;
Wormed,
Vat
Checked,
Shall
(81~) 44fl.2072
of II ou.._. Clr1lild iiietlwr .
DraiMr /Uirror e375;- Mirror Now Accaptlng Dtpoalr Or Parlc. • • • • ... vla11. 2111 Klrr
Nlca, _ , elton, ac, new carpol, $11; 1Wo Plcrura Fnrmao (3'x1r) menra, Wu 1400 080, 114·388appliance&amp; lnc,_d, t22Simo., (OtiO Frame Haa Plcblrt) flU ,...., 111125.
OlriO. .
..
111111 ~rd Crown Vlclarla, o..
plua udlldat.- &amp; garbage ln- Both; Small End Tabla 140: Call
owner,
A-1
candltlan.
verJ
low
AKC Goldan Rtlrltvora Puppleit
cludad.304-e15-4175••••
114-441·1228 Allar 4:30 P.M. •200
molor, 06 Yamaha, 5
tach, Vel Checked, Shar., ml'a.... allvtr'·color. Call 304· ourboud
(Prien
Negollalllal
hp,
·aoklng
ttl50; lao a Ulan 10
175-11127
or
304-e7fi.IIK.
2bdrm. apta., total alacrrlc, ap.
Wormed 014-378-2llll1
.......
tl4-742-10150.
.
pUanceo lrml-. lau,.y room
AKC Tlnr Toy Poodle, born 3·12· 10111 ·~ilac SUnblrd, crulao, dl~ Procrd I!Oal w1111 Tralltr, Garoga
!Kllltlaa, doll 10 ochoolln ...... 540 Mllctllaneoua
87, malo, champoJgna color. 304- -~ bladr. -font oondlon Kap~ 2 Floh Finder (Humming
Appllca~ona available at. Vllllge
Men:handllt
17S.57M.
-and~ t2750, ... Grotn Apll. t4D or call 814-1182·
Bird) 70HP Evonruclo, 2 Banorr.
I 12 John 0Nra tftn _ , , 40"
. . . . . .14112-4.
3711. EOII.
Enu .,. t41 '290
cu~ runa 1100!1. 1700 0110. 114- CFA Himalayan killona, llama
point malta Wlblue ·ay_n $175. 111112 Toyi&gt;ra MA2, ra4 with black
458 112 Socond Aua. Gllllpolla. 2 lllfl.4755.
760 Auto Pula 1
SA., AC, Appliance&amp;. f4150 Mon. ::..=~~----~-----l · :~~.e~Ts-:.;s~n:.:•~----------- inltflor, au10m01c. ...... L windawa,
power
doOr
locka,
re.:24'
Round
swimming
pool,
HayAcceuorlea
t225.00 dopoall. Ulllllitl Paid.
ward ftlttr &amp; pump, all acceuo, Pato Plua, Sliver Bridge Plaza. covared 111111, 53,111 mllaa,
'(814)-441-21211
' . .
f&amp;,ooo, 81+a•-2:111 c1apo, 11+ Budgll Price Tronamloalone.
rleo Included. fiOO. 304·878· 81~1.0770.
Slltlfng at IGII.OO and Up, Uotd I
Apartmentl For Rent On l:lrer 1184.
570
.
Atbulll, An Trpoa, Over 10.000
-....II~ •• 8221.
211 Gallon Aquarium With All Ac·
Tranamluion, Ac:ceaa Trenafer
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT ct~oorlaa &amp; E•traal fiOO OBO
Caato &amp; Aaar Encla, t14·245,
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Call 304·175·5227 Afllr 5 P.ll.
sen
ESTATES, 52 Wearwood Drive ~8P.II.
11185 Chevrolat Coralca, 32,000 Naw goa tanllo, 1 lqn liuclt
$210 10 tsa4. 10 ihop 3 Flal&gt; aquirlumo. I!Ogal, all ••·
111110 4 Cylinder, AC., PW., o4
&amp; redlalllro. D &amp; A ""'"'
I '"""'"· Call 114-448·2588. c•11orle1 InclUded, no leakt,
Door Exc- Condldon ta,OOO wllotla
Alpttr, WV. 304·172·3833 ~r t '
Equal Houilng Oppcnml~
Ofl9,c1114)4411-7127
prlct neg. 304-773-548&amp;
100-273-11828. .
. ' !
Down_, Galllpilllo: llodorn 1
tatl Dodge Noon . 4 Ooora,
Badroom, AM Elac"lc, Carpelad, ... heavy corruaalad pipe, 100ft. ·Sior Guitar, c - . Ohio- ..... 18, fOO Mlltt. Aulo, Air, Aoldng
Campers 1
rol. 121.811. ~ PLUS HARD- ona and 1...,.....11• plano. gui- f7,280 080, 114-2581340, ., ...
ComPialt KIIChtn, Elacltlc
I
Motqr
llomls
Air Condllloning, 11(·441.0138 WARE. 304-tT~.
"'and dru... 114-3117-G902.
7.
e-.
1088 II Fl. Col!lpor SlttPI 4!
~~.....
Booro By ·Radwlng, Chip-a,
17.0 Wlnlmaotor I 2 11115 Dodat Neon 2 Doorl, Aula, Single Axla, Air Conditioning,
Elllcltnl Apottmanllln OaUftiorla, Rocky, Tony Lama. Guaranraed Rtmlngron
3" chamber, 325; A..,.. AC, 38,000 llllaa, ee,l500 OBO Cornplollly Salt-Con-. Good
280 Fourlh Avenua, $110/Mo.; LOMII- A I - Celt, 011on model 7100, .30:01 rlftt, 814-2581340, 114 2M 1487.
Conrlllor). ••• soo. 814 - 0407. "
510 Third Avanue f2051Mo., . 1:;:lpol:=:;ll.;___ _.....;_ _ __
:114-742-10150..
'
Evarirllln,:;lulfld, fiOO De· Bora clolhll a..moa up 10 1.
1 - Jotp Wralr;lor,
w/ 1880 Holldiy Al!l!i*M inolor·: ·
poall, 011
"*"'"Go 114-381- Girl&amp; ....... 7.. up 10 _ , . t.
brown clath lop. 4CJI, sapci, homa. Clan c-11..,. - n g -'
I
AfH.1
SlJ
I'f'
l
•I
,
I lUI.
304-5711-:1114.
13.000 ...... 110,000. 304 oenerator·on Ford chanlt·480:
&amp; I IVf S TO•.. •(
englne-48,000 milia, axe cond.&lt;
Furnlahtd 3 Aooma &amp; •th. No Cancralt 1 PI&amp;OIIc ISaotlc Tanlll.
. . . .~ .
·
·t
Pall, A I - And Dtpoall At- 300 Thru 2,000 Galiono Ron
qulrad. .,.,..._1518. ·
Evan&amp; Entorprl111, Jackaon, 011
1t81 Tarry l'laaan 1'iallar 25
Fill; .11111 Ford Good Condition, •
Oraclouo living. t and 2 ballroom 1-t!t~D-~37-11521. ·
apor-11 01 Vlllega Manor and Farm Lumbar - · ·· lOOft. por
Alverolda Apartmtnllln lllddl• bu d f 20 bundl nand
1884 noaa llonrara, claia ·C,'
port From t231-1304 . Col 81+ ,..;~·~
wldii~·-J::
18,000 mllaa, ... 114·0112·410S:
8112-10114. Ell\lll Houalng Oppor· 111*1 or 1- • 18al
!It can bt a1 ae Hudaon Sl.,•
..... . l
'
GGOd tin &amp; lumllof, from old

-

replacement home. Call 1·80048fl-7671 10 ott appolntrntnt lor

FAClORY DIRECT.
NO IlDDlE MAN.
SAVEtm.
Oakwood Homoo Ia rho only
doaler In the lrl-llall araa lllal
IMIIIdo and aolla rholr own
homaa. For fociOry dlrtcl prlcoa.
a hop OAKWOOD HOMES, NI·
TRO, W'l ~·7Sfi.51185.
Four Small Uoad Mobila Homaa
$250 I0 '$1500. Call 814-4483087 Evonlnga

on,.

IT'S 'BIG. 1807 48A, 2BATH
DOUBLEWIDE. $1,0~8 DOWN,
S310/UO. FREE DELIVERY l
SETUP ONLV AT OAKWOOD
HOMES, NITRO, WV. 304· 755·
58115. Llrr*d Ollar.
large otlacllon ol ulld homo. :i
or 3 btcfroonw. Stnna 1113485.
~k dallvory. Call f-100·137·
Llmit111 Ottorl IGG7 dollbltwlde,
3br, 2balh, f17011 down, f27111
monlh. Froa delivery &amp;.Mtup.
Only or Oakwood Homeo, Nlrra
wv. 304-7IIMIIS- .
.
Mobile Hirmo With llany Amen~
rial 0n ·113 /4J:te +I· 4&amp; Ill. N. 01
~':';"' f30,000.00 Caoh. ~.
T.l No~ call.

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PREVISXJS ~UTION: "Think olllllllt beau!y sllllleft around y~u llld ~
Mi!pY. - From IIIII dilly or Anne FrPk.
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low 10 farm four -.11.

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Best Use Of Their Time Have

·r-r-1_uT'I'1 .v-_1T'I'~. ;.E~s...,
r:-.--~1 e.~:;~~ -.~~
1 1

·6entlemen;

V

Enclosed please find
my latest short ~ry..

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chuckle ·qumtd
by lilling In the milling -cfs
L-~-....,.J.._J._-J..-J.. .....1 you dtvtlop
Irom Slap No. 3· below.

·.·'

I' I' 1• I' I' 1'1' I' I ...
I I I 1. lro I I r I I I ' ". .

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS
.

·:

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sc-..,M UTS ANJWIII

Sllny • OWner. • Eight· Hither· 1o11HO Is R(GHT
"The only person mor'e unpopular Dian a wise guy,'
.
told her brother, • is a wise guy WHO is RIGHT.,.

................
_
...
1• •, . . . . . , _ . . . 4

. . . . - . .,.,., 114-74

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I
llclpenle. Know where lo look. for lilre .I IIQI
romance end ,ou'l f!nd H. Thl Aatro- K&lt;llll 10 1081. J+Hov•.J11 Frllndl . .
Qrej)ll Mllchmeker lnelenlly reveal• find your peradnellty ·dynamic and
' wllldl lip . . ~~*fee! lor ~
10111t: - .,. 10 ,..., ~C~&gt;o~tn:­
1'011· ...,. St.?$ 10 I 1 I '" al•r. clo .,. • ... ....,. nWIIOUI!
,•• .,.,.. P.O. Boll 17M, ~ . .. ~AIIIU8 (Mov. II-Dic. Jt)Oihara
.....,_..... York, NY 101111.
. . 1111 l k ' ' " " Ia ,..,., NqUIIIla
• m
Tllllll • 000e1 IOdiJ • you
10 . . , emtMiol.. 10
dtriOdoliomer I ' ..... ~ ....... ctw ........
1 C&gt;li111101e- .-.til Holle II
~~g~.- 10 • • - . , . ,. , m ' ciMon .. _.. ......... ,... •:• ...
a ....... ttwii&gt;MCi IOdep, ... I ..,1111
CMC M ...,_ltjltl'.., Dllllll ...... ulld to brii!O lbout IOMihtng you
, __1 I ttl lo ,oiirM11 IOdiJ, • ,_ .., • ..., dllfre. Trull,.. pull ... 1111- •
. ,...__ 10 t.wtlt ,... •• • •• .., Jude.
•
•AQt!MJUa ....... ,.., ,., Ill ......
1111 Nlodl •• ll1la I I 'I . . . .
U0 Ullir D • I lit A I
l'!lla
· 'l1ulllllir'. Apll M, 1117
mlglll lie required lodly Ill order 10 - , _ IIIIIIOdl . . lie OUIISIM I I 7
In . . , . . tNed _ . , 1111/ , . . . . . Milia .. a Cllllalil II I e. T . - ID IOdiJ, I I'OU _, .... irlllc:w II
or !' II
I I IIDOIIIilpi OIIUfd lie .....
P11Ci8 tpW. •
GMirM
fiiiMI. e.ch rorlff lie wflll an hldlvlduiiP VIRGO CAul- D I I I Ill f. .... 1111· ....,Ill,... •~ glt• • lrr •u IOdir·
*!lOW" · In ..... IIIII._ liN 111111.,.._;
""" . . . . . llGI--I!IOul ...,,.
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OPdonel M,700
...74&gt;12.
:

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~VENT .YOO t&gt;Ja..'"'

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awnar llnancln8 avallalrlo. 30+
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llbllohed 1871. Cal . (It~ : : .
0110 Or ,_.-o5'1e.

....,., ,urdnt. roet poJndno.
.p sreMCftwMIWIIhhOUN.

11118¥1nt

graen

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Pet Ot flO A Dap, WI ..
Nice PIIJ Area for 1114., 11 • ·

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FI:EL

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Openl"l lor peraon In p,.,.,. 3BR
2
bollia, cenldf air, &amp;Inola car gecart
·
Dar•
Panoonal
ear.
pool, 112
. - . 11111ta :1324 or t1441Z· - · 1exu "'
acra 1o1. Colt s:oopm. Sari""' lnqulf111 ONLV, 30o4·175-

31 !IIDirlDII

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BAIEUENT

8lultlona

M Enutupa

1 - -llral you

atur.-hor•

Ufldp'pJ

Siror-.

WANTED-..IIrolner, mull be
....., &amp; daplndtblt, poaldon
_ , _ lmmtdlalaly. 304..75-

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32,.,...

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2 lllaiUIWCioul
I Lllr8 111 Ill In

Opening lead:.• t

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Gnrlib·a Plant- ..;,. ,-~wpa~...
Pftlblc:ne'P Mild 1\Nd? Ctll ...
jrlonoOr.IIIUIIUI

120

.,...

10 •-t.·aal;an

DOWN

•

· Ill Ford F·2150, 4x4 XLT Larlir~
351, 1 apH4, loaded,
'
Coupe QIVIHa, 1 IIU, 74,000 mltal, fiO,OOO
owner, 85,- aCIUal mNaa, ga- 114-7U·ZIT.l
,... kap~ immaculale lnalda &amp;
740 Motorcycles
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 GaRon OUI. t31500, I! -.us&amp;.
11173 Harlap Davldaon
Uprlllh~ Ron Evano Enrorprlaaa, 1817 Coprlce PW. Pl., AUlD, Till
- . . , Olrlo, 1-8110-537·0628.
3150 HP 350, 2500 Milt On RI- vary clean, vary tao~ ~!iDO lim!,
IMIIId, New Palnl. f4,000 DBO. II+IIG2.e620.
SUmmto Spaclal- jll anllon . oll~4~4~4a~4~2'll:f__ _ _· -~
moiOII lor MPdc llllka t388 ptuo 1868 Honda 200SX good cond,
IU. lnllallation $35. 81~·448· 1883 Chr1alar New Vorkar 51h new tlrn. $2,000 OBO. 30+112·
~782
/No, loaded, 38.000 mlltl, &amp;harp
,
·
·
car.
304-87!HI132.
~••-n1NIHonda250X. ' 1,7150.304'lUlL
CIARDEH CENTIII
1.8114 Bronco II 8 Cyllndor, Au· 875-1214.
·\legatallla Planra, Bedding FJow. 1oma11c, Good Shapal Depend· ~...:.--...,---~.,.aro, Hanging Baikall, T,_ And tlillll1,850, 11+37MIIB51811! 250X Founrax, axctllont
·Sivubt, Srall Roull-218., Uor·
condldon. $2,200: Can be 101ft
corvlllt, 01;1. Open 8:00 A.M. Til 11184 Flt!o, Aad, f Speed, ISK on behind Go·lllrlln PL Pl..aant •
8:00 P.ll.
·
ahorl Block, $2,000 080. Call 30&lt;HI7fi.l1311.
Evonlng, Woakend (814)387· 10111 Honda 300 4·whatl drive;
Wedding Gown And Vall $850 0333
draa. loll of aaii'IL 304-773~
uVj1111. 10
Sel1 1 Far 1200 Size 1~. 11185 Oldomoblle N. ~ - · 304- ::..":.:45.::__ _ _ _ _ __
1
v "V
•
875-731115.
1DD3 Kawaaakl Vulcen 1500 Ab·
Whillmort Pallor Stove 2 Ynro
aolurely lllnt Condllion, ~.000
Old llko New, $300 OBO 614·
lllleo 12.1100 Firm, Call 114-317·
2111-1713. 01~1-G488.
1885 TOfoll Pickup, WrtiCkad,
7tnoreu uo tl01
parlo tzoo : 1817 Tayot.ir Van,
550 . Building
Four WhatiDrlve, NM4o Elaclri· 1DD5 Honda 300·4X4 +whtettr,
cal Work. S1,000; 1885 Dodge aoklng U,IIOO. 304..75-11438 al·
SUpplies
Canavan St-. Call 814-~48· llrl!prn.
Approxlmalely 480 Paving Brick, 3087 Ewnlnga Dnlr·
Inch 112 X3 114XIInchaa $100.
750 Boata &amp; Motors
. o\ppro&gt;lllllloly 70 L.F. or Popular
for Sale
'Fencing Height 5 Fool o Inch
Wldlh Varin 1100. (81~)~~~­ 1887 Monra Carlo SS, 305 ho, 12' Abtrglaoa boar with- IIYoo
~00::211=-.,...,..,--,-.....--.,...,. lotded, IMirgundy, runo &amp; loako well, ball -~ txctl~~ condl·
tlon, uklng t30o. 81+0112-f5ol30.
Block; brick, alwor plpto, wind· good. 304-773-50111.
Hmtla, tiC. Claude Wlnrara, ~,'='ee=z~
.
N:-::,...
-n-.,-a-xl_ma_5_,Sp,......aa-d-.1 11183 Saari, 21 Fl Cuclcly Cabin,
Rio Grande, OH Call 814·245·
Uadad, 62,000,81 t • • 4047.
3150 110 Evorythlng G-1 Excal5121.
.
ltni -Condlllonl8!4-44&amp;o1713 AI·

.

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C..t.Slrvlcaa.
"' Wei "'
Sldlltd
And ·
Atlltb
Apply
In
Ptoaon AI Scenic Hlllo N;:,r;B
c... 311 l!uc:llridgt Ad.,
OH. NO PHONE CALLS,
PI.EAIIE.

30&lt;HI75-3018.

c~~a;,.

Good Tw-uor., Daako. aJoc•lc
a1ove, lampa, lloakcaae, tloar
model color TV, blcyclaa, brink·
becl•, mahrtiHI, lcit1 or goOd

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. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, April 24, 1987

111.1111
,.
prisoners,
p'~jects ,wiill go on inside the pri!IOn
.waus, tisks s11ch as refinishing desks
for local schools..
·
.' ·The city spent an estimated $7
million acquiring, clelring and clean·
i~g . up the site, · improving nearby
!lllreel$ and providins utility service.
• · A .conatrlletion contract for the
prisOn 'is likely to be awarded early ·
. in the filii, said David Blodgett, chief
oflhe correction cJep.tment's Bureau ·
of Facilities C9nstrilction.
· The groundbreaking follpwed the
gc}vemor's visit to Northwest Sta(\1
Conimunity College near Archbold.
where he held a regional cabinet
tileeti!ll and dedicated a new engi:
ntierins ~hnology building. ·
. Voinovich was greeted ·there; by
.til!out 70 pickets representing north·
west Ohio unions who were protest·
itig ·liis •suppon of' a new workers'
1;0mpensation bill.

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• POIN'rPLEASANT, W.Va. -A .
Point Pleasant High School student
:.Vas expelled from any and all school. relattd activities unti1April22, !998·
by the Malon County Board of Edu- ·
cation Tuesday.
.
· ··The student, known as lffi97' 13,
expelled for bringing a bomb
onto school grounds. Su~rintendent
Dr: LI!I'\'Y Parsons made a recom·
11\endation to the board to follow state
cc:iile tRA-S-1 A and expelthe student ·
frdm school for one calendar year.
: Board members went into execu·
ti:YC session at 6:~8 p.m. with Par~s. PPHS Principal Rick Nonhup
aild V'ace.·Principal Larry Martin to
dlfCllss the situation. At 7:~ they
retur:ned' and the board voted 4-0 to
exjlel the student. Board . member
Amanda Clark was out of town and
.did not attend, the meetina.
•, -TIIC 15-yelit·bld student was
il-iaied April 15 after a bomb was
discovered in a student's locker. S!u!Jepts were ,ev,acllalcd from school '
aftdlater'relcased. The 1111~nt faces .
fi\i' felony counts as a result·of the
incident. The county prosecutor is
aliU investiplin1 the episoilc.
l'lni!IJS •id lhe ll(udent will have
- ilppootunity to be pro¥ided with an
~ve form of education. Board
~idlnt David Mcqan aaicl he
wllllld to quaah any rumors by aay- ·
lni the 1tu ....t wiliiiOI be .I lowed on
l. ~I site for any IUIOO .

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By JOHN SEEW!R .
AtiOCIIIIed PrMI Writer ,
.COLUMBUS- School administrators should
running their districts more like a bUsiness rather than
speilding without rcaard for the bottom line, the state auditor said.
one atory structure. The cll!IIC II being
bY
Conetructlon of lhe $2 mill~ Meigs COunAuditor Jim Petro said WediiCJday'
Holnl' Clinic HCI Coneolldlllilcl tt.allh
ty Medlcll Cll!'lc on lll'ld ldjlcent to Vetlrana
that too many schools operate withttma,1nc., .,.,.,., of ttot.. ii.dlcll cant1r end
Memorlll ~lit underWay. Heavy aqulpout a financial plan that is based on
·
, ment blgln moving dirt WICIMidey In .,._ · Vetlr8na Mamorlll Hoepltll. Conb ICtal' It Erdtheir future needs.
man and Aaaoclllils.
" •
, ration for building 1 new
aquare .fMI.
"One of the thinss we keep dri. ving home is. the importance of planning," Pelro told members of a Sen·
ate education subcommittee.
As the May 6 election approach-' and William Young, all incumbents, May 6, to decide a 1.8 mill additionThe auditor's office has COII\plet·
es, so do deadlines 'for candidates in are challengejl· by Kyle Woods and at levy for the Carleton School and ed detailed analysis of the financial
Frederick Werry, Jr.
Meigs Industries. That levy is for conditions in both 'the Younptown
the November general election.
' Those interested l'n running for
In Middlepon, where four seals maintenance, capital construction and and Cleveland districts, Petro aaid he
.
miahl do simil(ll' ev81uations for all
-.:illage offICe can still do so. The are also open, only two candidates, . program operation.
Sandy
-lannarelll
and
Rae
G~iazTownship
offiCials
.
w
ill
be
on
the
21
of the state's urban schools.
deadline for filing as an ltlllependent
The auditS woul\J help lhe lcltools
.:andidate for villaae council seats i~ dowsky, bot~ incumbents, have filed November aenerel election ballot,
petitions.
and.clllldidaiea have be;un to pick up set their own slrllteJic plans. He said
MayS.
Another Pomeroy man has picked petitions for thQIC offices. Thi: dead- · schools should have an idea of how
. 1lle only \COntested primary in
up
petition from the board of elec- . line for tilina as a candidate for town- to avOid fmancial pitf.tls.
Meip County will be in Pomeroy,
"Just like a business mi&amp;ht devel·
where five Republican candidates are tions to run as an independent. but. ship office is August21, i!ICCording to
Jane Frymyer, Deputy Directill' of the. op," he aaid. ·
seeking four seats on lhe villare ha.'l not yet filed.
Sen. Roben C11pp, R.·Lima, uked
Polls will _open county-wide on Board of Elections. ·
council. John Musser, George Wright .

start

bul"s,...

May 5 Is deadline for Independents to file for posts

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Petrd whether .he thouahl !IChoolS:
should be forced to spend within their
budget.
·
•.
"I mink that is perfectly ap~
priate," Petro responded. He iddecj:
that schools should focus on financial'
stability before they · stan t.tkinf;
about improving the q~ity of edu&lt;
cation.
'
"We've found that l.r.e, urbail:
districts m excessively wastelill," he
said. "There is no doubt that there In!,
schools with excess flc:llitiea."
"
Petro pointed · to Younastow~ ·
•
sehools a5 an example.
'n1e district now has about 2,800
studlmts in its four hi&amp;h schOols, bu~
at one point it had u many u 6;000
in those buildinp. Petro asbd whY:
administrators have not INde better
use of lhe buildings.
"There needs to be Ill lllldlr~ .
standina that cloaina lllliklt~~~ ca
save money," he IBid. "In any 1C11aoC
district, IIIey first tUe a Jot ol ~
when lhey close buildiqa, 11u1 It'
really Bood judJIIICnt."
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