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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

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:Bulls post
: win over ·
Bullets

Super Lotto:
9-31-36-37-39-44
Kicker:
5..(14468
Plck3:

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7-0-8

. : Sports on Page 4

· Moatly cle•r tonight,
Iowa neer 35. Tuesdey,
sunny, hlghe In the mid

Pick 4:
6-5-4-9

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;o.tll. 41, NO. I

2 Secllona, 12 ,..., 31 oenee
A Gannett Co. Ill• F 5 I

Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio;. Monday, Aprll28, 1997
.
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;4fet7, OhiO~ Publlahlng eomp.ny

;tlostages still in hands
:of militant separatists
· nightfall, began negotiations . with
; :'FORT DAVIS, Texas (AP) ;&lt;'rmed militant separatists who the group from a mobile command
believe TexiiS should be its own coun- center, said Department of Public
'!iy' took two neighbors hostage Sun- Safety spokeswoman Lucila Torres.
The separatists stormed the home
dJly, and dozens of police moved into
of
Joe Rowe and his wife. M.A.
th6 remote area ot' West Texas.
Rowe,
about 15 miles away, firing
·· ; •RichiUd McLarea, the self-styled
shots
at
about noon. authorities said,
: ~bassador" of the Republic of
Thxas, told San Antonio radio station Rowe was injured by broken shards
)\'PAl that
group would end its of glass in the gunfire , . but
,standoff at the couple's hom~ in ""declined" to be exchanged for a vol,e)tchange for the. release of two unteer firefighter who offered to
Republic- members under arrest and replace him, a man identlf~ing himself as White Eagle, a chief aide til
airother key concession .
. ·.,we want them to ... agree to a McLaren, told WOAI.
Ms. Torres said Rowe also broke
'referendum to allow Texans to ·vote
.on the independence issue,'.' McLaren his right arm and was being cared for
.said from his group's headquart~rs in by his wife, who was a paramedic.
Ms. Torres said the Davis Moun·the Davis Mountains, 75 miles north
tains
Resort subdivision was sealed
of'the Mexico border.
· About three dozen local and state off, and other 1\J'Ca residents remained
'JlOiice surrounded the area and, by inside. "We would like to advise

me

them to stay calm," she said.
RellOrters were being kept several miles from the entrance to the subdivision . Telephone calls Sunday
night to the McLaren and Rowe ·
homes were answered ·by a message
saying . the lines · had been disconnected:
·
Authorities said the FBI also had
been contacted, but the FBI's El PaSo
office could not be reached Sunday
night.
.Ms. Torres refused to say how
many j:leople are believed to' belong
to McLaren's group or where they
were situated.
Residents had been complaining
for months about McLaren, a wildhaired, lanky rancher who woul.d file
property liens against his neighbors
and threaten them with machine
guns.

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:150 years
of.servi·ce

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FESTIVAL ~OYALTY - Southern High
School senior MellaA Canan, center, waa
crowned the 1997 Flower F11tlYal Queen In cer·

emonill held ·s.turday aftlmoon It Star Mill

Park by the 1996 queen; Kelly Swlaher. Firat
runnerup was VaiiiiA Shuler, right

firefighters in
Pomeroy note
~anniversary
-';By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
;sentinel Newi Staff

• . It was in . q!~7. after a major fire .
• ;s.Nck'Por;iCroy, tllafii'smallgrouj)of ....,
· ;men "goL together .tQ, organize the
,i~oineroyFire Department: one of ihe
· ' l}tst voluni~r units in . the state of _
·ohio.:·
, Saturday night, current and former
firemen- several with more than 40
.years service - · along with others
AnENDS CELEBRATION- Ohio Fire Marshal Jamel MeNu-·
who have. been in supportive roles
mH, right, attended the · 150th annivereary celebration of the
_through the years, gathered at Meigs
Pomeroy Fire Department Saturday night at Meigs High SChool.
;r;Jigh School to celebrate the I 50th
He was preaented • plaque and • fremed replce of a Northwest
' ; anniversary of the department's
Territory m.ural by Tom Reed, right.
·
}&lt;atnding.
• : • It was a time for reflection. rccog- Rep. John Carey commended the unteer service to the community.
"The department has come a long
. :l)ition of longtime firemen and pre, firemen for their dedication and
· courage, and congratu!ated the way since 1847," said Carey, who
:sintation of s.pecial plaques.
; :; Speaking at the observance; State department on its ,150 years orval- . listed the Pomeroy Fire Department
tival 1tag~ Seturday In Racine. A prize of $75
as one of many such volunteer units
•
FI~ST PLACE WINNER - This flower gar·
den scene by Paul Hill Greenhouaes.took first . wn1 presented to .Hill by the Racine Area Comwhich are unique to America and date
munity Organization, the festivel's sponsors.
place in floats at the fourth annu1111 Flower Fesback 200 years.· .
He spoke of the necessi ty .for
organized fire protection in every
· c.ommunity, noted the cost involved
even for volunteer departments and
reponed on a bill which he has introduced in the Ohio Legislature which,
if passed, will provide financial assisOther contestants were Kristen
houses taking first, Karen's Green.tancc to volunteer departments across By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Hensler,
daughter of Bill and Sherry
houses
taking
second,
and
the
Lester
the state.
·
Sentinel News Stefl
Hensler'.
Racine. and Angie CarOn behalf of the department, Tom
·A beautiful spring day, coupled Manuel family taking third .
leton,
daughter
of Cathy and Bill Carin • add ilion lo the floats, other
Reed presented Carey with ~ plaque · with avariety of activities. spelled
and a bear costumed as a firefighter: success for lhe fourth annual Flower parade panicipants were contestants leton, Racine.
Attendants were Jayme Miller,.
Special · guest at the observance · Festival staged Saturday at Star Mill for Flower Festival queen and their
Jody
Hupp, Laura Hupp and Erin
who
rode
on
open
conaucndants,
was State Fire Marshal Jim McNu- Park in Racine.
The event, sponsored by the venibles·, numerous trnclors, Racine Bolin.
mee, who gave brief congratulatory
Entertainment was presented
.
Racine
Area Community Organiza- fire trucks and police vehicl es, and
remarks and presented a certificate of
throughout
the afternoon and includHoward
Mullen
driving
the
antique
commendation and achievement tion, featyrcd a parade, crow ning of
ed
the
Midnight
Cloggers. ·the Dix"Meigs
County
Car
JR
."
.
from all Ohio fire departments and the festival queen, a potpourri of
Melissa
Canan
,
daughter
of
ieland
Ja1z
Band,
country musician
the State Fire Marshal's office to entertainment; craft and food booths,
Pomeroy Fire Chief Danny Zirkle. · and flowers galore from local grow- Michael and Vicki Canan , Pomeroy . . Steven Pottmcyer, and CTM Magic
was · crowned queen in ceremoni es Productions. A kiddie tractor pull and
.
·• : CELEBRATION SPEAKER- State Rep.
' Cerey, right, Will
The fire cl'!ief was also given a crs.
Cash prizes of $75, .$~0 and $25 held at the park. First runncrup was R,acinc Ynuth League ball games
: : apeeklr II the 1501h ennlvlll'llry celebretion of the Pomeroy Fire
plaque by the Pomeroy department in
were awarded to the float winners in Vanessa Shuler, daughter of Steve rounded
• · Deplrtment Seturday at Meiga High School. He Wll pre..nted I
appreciation of his service.
. out the afternoon
. program.
the parade , with the Paul Hill Green- and Wanda Sh.ulcr, Lctan.
; : pllque and a be.- cot~tumed 11 1 firelighter by fireman Tom Reecl.
(Continued on Page 3)

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Potpourri ·of activity highlights
fourth Racine Flower Festival

!Lack
of finance reform leaves legislators
scrambling for ca$h
;.
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a,y PAUL BARTON

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DlnMtl Newe Seniice
;··: WASHINGTON - Cincinnati-area members of Congress say the
:Wsenee of campaign finance reforms leaves them no choice but to contin~ to be aggressive in seeking out campaign cash.
; · · Most members lament the. current campaign finance system and say they
~ant reforms. even as they gird themselves for raising 1998 election camjiaign money.
·
• . "Elections are often noi decided on the b;lsis of a superior candidate but
~ho is aiJic to raise and spend the most money," said Rep. Ted Strickland,
P..Lucuville.
.
·
' . ·"'Money is far too much a pltrt of politics," added Rep. Steve Chabot, R·
~iocinnati.
·
·.
·
· .
; More his been heard about the problems with campaign finance this year
jhan ever before, especiillly in .regard to special-ihtereit influence.
: · The Brookinp lnsti,utlon. a liberal think tank, recently declared that camPalJIII finance "is well on its way to becoming the blockbuster issue of the
)'car."
~ One l"lllirina member, l(ep. Lee Hamilton, D-Nasllville. Ind .• said )le can
~I)' - why.
: · "I think there iaa powina sense in America !Qdly that dollars speak loud~111M icleu, thll..:ceu is bouP and sold," Hamiltonaid.
~ Hip.prot'illl inveMiaatioU of the way the _c:ampalp finance system
worbd ill IWS-96 II'C expeciOd to bcpn soon tn House and Scrutle com·

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mittees.
.
one for others in Congress.
- Rep. Rob Ponman;~-Tcrrace Park, will be participating in one of them,
"I think special-interest money buys access," Strickland said. "It may not
thanks to his recent appointment to the House Government Reform and Over- · . influence a particular vote, but it cenai nly buys access ."
sight Commiuee.
·
While differing in the specific remedies they advocate; area members arc
Rep. John Glenn. D-Ohio. will be involved in the other as rankin!! minoruniversal in calling for changes ..
ity member of tbe Senate Governmental Affairs Committee.
Meanwhile, members are starting to look ahead to the 1998 campaigns
Ponman, as he has in previous years. recently introduced campaign-finance
and the money they ""ill have to raise to keep their seats.
•
reform
legislation that would ban political action co'mmiuec money.from con"You have to make sure you have the resources to get the truth out," said
gressional
races and require House members to raise 60 percent of their funds
Chahot, who is still smarting from the advertising campaign that organized
from their own slates. ·
·
labor waged against hini' last year. •
.
Something like the AFL·CIO campaign, he said, "could very easily hap"Incumbents have too many advantages, a lot of which is connected to
pen again." .
.
the
campaign finance syst~m." Portman said.
.
.
Members should not he blamed for raising campaign money, so long as
.
Strickland,
on
the
other
hand,
suppons
PACs
as
way
for
average
voters
they stay within the law, others say.
·
.
.
· "Those who follow the law ... however they raise money for their cam- to pool their funds and have clout. He also said it would lle hard to raise mon paigns, should not be forced to stop," added Rep. John Boehner'stqp aide. ey in poorer congressional district~ without them.
Barry Jackson. "The usual fashion (for fund -raising) is legal." . •
Jackson decries the continuing charges that members of Congress ·are
But Strickland said he favors other steps. "I think every group that spends
bouJht and sold through campaign contributions.
money to try to influence an election ought to be required to make run dis"The system is so cynie~l, the coverage of it is so cynical. people are left
closure." he said.
with that impression," he said.
.
Strickland said he also questions Whether multiple $1,000 contributions
Cincinnati-area members deny that they themsclvcure susceptibh: to spefrom the same family are in keeping with the spirit of campaign laws.
cial·intereSI influence throUgh contributions while insisting the issue is a real

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. Mondlly, Aprll21. 1117

Cotntnertary .

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'Esttlf1fislid in 1948

111 Court Sbeet, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·21111 • FIX 992·2157

.2,
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L .WINGETT
Publisher

•
•'

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

I»-llle--

MARGARET LEHEW
· Controller

The Sentinel '""Comft loftoro to ltlo edllo&lt; frwrr .,;; o IHood ol ,.,...
Shott loltNI (3/JO wonlo or '-"1 ,_
oll»&gt;nll pub/tilled. Typed IM·
Md Ill ~My
&amp;eli ehouldlnclutte • tlllfiiiiUI'rJ, - . ,
Md&lt;Myll,..phonanumbM.Sp«Hyo_W.,.,_.,,.,,..._,,.,,. _ _
or lollor. lltlllo: LoN"" to 1M Edllol', Jbe - · 111 Court Sl, -oy, 0/ilo
~9; or, FAX to 614-m-2167.
·

,.,.. '"'Pro-

··Second E-check bill
::still riles opponents

.

Letters to the editor
What price death? .
Coomng across the carcasses of 15
·dead turkeys os not my tdea of a fair
fighi , and whoever ktlled these birds
woll someday have•to answer to the
authoriues
I remember my dad telling me it
'was okay to shoot a few rabbtts and
pheasants for a famtly meal, but there
were rules of I he field, such as givmg wild game a ftghting chance. This
scene was blatant, selfish greed.
Another lesso n was my mother
"taking me to see "Bamb1." the movoc.
I'll never forget the sight of this four' legged, blue-eyed chtld · heanng the
. crack of gunfire, then having to sec
her once-proud father. mortally
wounded, his- magnifi cent 12-point
. rack still quovering- next to a stream,
in the mud
Nearby, Bamb1's mother, a 30/30

slug in her heart. Now. Bambo. Alone.
True. hunting is one of the last
rerl\aoning sports of our heritage,
though exploited by costly hcensing
and expenstve equipment; not to
mention the high cost of bandages in
case you get shot.
And pocturc yourself sotting under
a maJestic tree, motionless for hours,
rubbing a sttck, imitating the voice of
another turkey?
•
I looked closer at the beautiful ,
silent birds before me, deciding what
10 do. Cautiously I leaned over and
touched'the coldness of death wings.
Assured the bird was dead,
wrapped on twine and reasonably
pnced. I took him to the checkout
counter.
RqgerReeb
Racine

.Today·_in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Monday, April 28, the-II 8th day of 1997. There ar.e 247 days
left in the year.
Today's H1ghlight in History
Fofty years ago, on April 28, 1947, a six-man expedotoon sailed from Peru
: : aboard a balsa wood raft named the Kon·Tiki on a IOI·day journey across
: ' the Pacific Ocean to Polynesia.
• On this date.
• In 1758, the fifth president of the Umted States. James Monroe, was born
' in Westmoreland County, Va.
In 1788, Maryland became the seventh state to ratify the U.S. Constitu- uon .
•• In 1789, there was a mutiny on the Bounty as the crew of the Briti~h ship
set Captain William Bligh and 18 sailors adrift in a launch in the South Pncif·
• ic.
In 1940, Glenn Miller and his orchestra recorded "Pennsylvania 6-5000"
:; for RCA Victor
,
In 1945, ltalian dictator Benito Mussolini and his mistress, Clara Petac:·
ci, were executed by partosans as they attempted to flee the counlry.
In 1958, Vice President Richard Nixon and his wife, Pat, began a good·
will tour of Latin America.
In !967, heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali 'refused to be
inducted into the Army, the same day Gen. William C. Westmoreland told
'• Congress the United States "would prevail in Vietnam."
In 1969, French Prcsodent Charles de Gaulle resigned his office.
In 1980, President Carter accepced the resignation of Secretary of State
Cyrus Vance, who· had opposed the failed rescue mission aimed at freeing
American hostages in Iran.

.

,,

SSA oversight office
WASHINGTON .. Here in the
nation's capital, government walehdogs are often hailed as heroes.
They're the folks who l!l't supposed
to keep bureaucrats honest, who root
out the frapd, waste ana abuse that's
buried throughout the federal gov·
ernment.
'
.
But what happens when the
watchdogs themselves are more mis·
managed than the bureaucrats they're
assigned to police?
·
Few government agencies are
more in need of oversight than the
Social S~curity Administration. It's
an ag~ncy that's charged with dispensing more thai) $300 billion in
benefits each year-- or nearly a quarter of the entire federal budget.
' But evidence shows that a rei alively small SSA office, which is
tasked with ferreting out mismanagement and inefficiency within the
agency, may be far more mismanaged
than the agency itself.
The Office of Program and
lnteg\'ity Reviews is supposed to
work as a quality control office for

Social Security. Bw this little offocc,
· ·which COltS taxpaycn a about S90
million a year. has almost nolhing to
show for its work. Congressional
-

By Jack Anderson
J

and

...

an mo,er
11

investigators claim that the office
cannot even produce a hst of the
work it has done -· nor if that work
has any value wliatsoever.
About one-fourth of this office's
budget -· $22.5 million -- goes to
finance special studies of Social
Security programs. The studies are
supposed to be done with an eye
toward eliminating wasteful practices
and making sure the taxpayers' mon·
ey is put to good use.
Yet a recent investigation found
that the offir~ w•• ;,.~If .....,;,nn
money at a multimillion-dollar chp:
And when Social Security's Office of
Inspector General confronted the top
brass ar the agency with these find·

n~ds

in&amp;s. then-commissioner Shirley S.
Clutier replied in writing that, "at this
time, we have ilecided not to com·
ment on the report."
Instead, Chacer said her agency
would like to hire an outside consultant to review the findings before it
would respond.
After reviewing the results of the •
IG's investigation, and hearing of
Chater's response, Sen. Charles
Grassley, R-lowa, asked the obvious
question: "What's the point uf spend·
ing $90 million on a quality control
program that must ~lire an outside
consultant to get its own house in
order?''
. Grassley, who chairs the Senate
S~ial Committee on Aging, recently wrote to John J. Callahan, the acting commissioner of Social Security,
with his concerns.
·
"These findings reflect poorly
upon the very 'bean and soul' of the
operation and activities," of the office
and "call into question" its studies,
Grassley wrote.
Th~ inspector general's office set

•

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out to find out if the offiCe's "special
studies" were cost-effective and effi.
cient, and whether the results of these·
studies were being used to improve
the operation of Social Security's programs.
·
What investigators found was a
program so chaotic that it was impos·
sible to even conduct a standard
audit. For example, when investigators asked for an inventory of all special reports done over a two-year
period~ officials were unable to produce one.
Investigators also found that the
office has no standard way of finding
out if their recommendations are
ever put to lise by managers, nor do
they know how much their studies
cost to perfonn. ·

by the Supreme Court .. by justices
who were not on the bench when that
case was decided.
In a series of cases, a majority of
the court has essentially ruled that
unless School segregation is the result
of state action -· done intentionally
Also affected are "our rapidly and by law .. it does not violate
growing Latino communities." Brown.
Indeed, Latino students, soon to be
·Accordmgly, of public schools arc
the largest minority group .in Ameri- largely black. or Latino because of
can schools, "now experience more residential patterns, there is no federal
isolatoon from whites and more con- remedy. (As if there had been no discentration in hi~h-povenv schools crimination in deciding where certain
than any other group of students. "
people live.)
This segregatoon of black and
After one such decision, Freeman
Latino students is not just racial sep- v. Pitts (1992), Dr. Kenneth Clark..
aration. It is also dovosion by class whose research on the effects of segMoreover. "school educational regation on black children was cited
achtevement scores in many states · in Brown .. told me, "What the court
and in the nation," the report notes, · has saod is forget Brown v. Board of
"show a very strong relation between Education. There doesn 't seem to be
poverty concentrations and low any concern about the children ..
achoevement. ... Such schools are white or black."
viewed more ·negatively in lhe com·
Clark was briefly buoyed whe~ he
munity and by the schools and col- saw a whole boy of about II from that
leges at the ne~t leveL"
sch.ool district telling a television
In 1954, a unanimous Supreme repone~. "Look, this segregation os
Court declared in Brown v. Board of increasing bigotry "
Education that segregated schools are
Dunng oral arguments in another
inherently unequal and therefore case, Thurgood Marshall asked then· .
unconsututional.
sohcotor general Kenneth Starr-- who
Why, then .. the growing resegre- was arguing that rcsoilential scgregagall~~ ol the schools? The _B~own tion absolved a school district of any
dectston has been largely domtmshed complicity .. ''But the schools arc
.
•.

Nat.HentO" ·

still segregated, aren'qjtey?,"" ...
Moreover, in other public school
cases, the courts in recent years have
made it easier for school districts to
be relieved of desegregation orders
even though they haven't been fully
complied woth.
The Harvard Report points out
that during the Clinton adminostration, "school desegregation has not
been chosen as a pnority isKue by the
Education Department's Office of
Co vii Rights or. the Justice Depanment's Civil Rights Division. And no
major new research on the conse.
qucnces ol segregation or the best
methods of improving the successful
operation of muhtracial schools and
classes have been commissioned."
Nor is the scunling of Brown v.
Board ofEducauon mentioned by the
Whole House or in the Congress.
"We'll Never Tum Back'' was a
song that helped power tho Civil
Roghts Movement in Mississippi in
the 1960s. B~&lt;tt now, says Gary
011'ield. the report's co-author, "In
American race re latoons. the bridge
from the 20th century may be lead·
ing h.tck into the 19th century. We
may h.: deciding to bet the future on
separate but equal. ..
Nat Hentoff is
natioaally
renowned authority on the Fint
Amendment and the rest·of the Bill
of Rights.

a

D.C. socialism has got to go
Quote a few !honkers have plans to
rescue the Dis met of Columbia from
the dysfunctional hell into which it
has plunged'.
Boll has a plan: He wants the federal government to assume a number
of the city's fiscal burdens -· prison
operations, infrastructure financing, a
portion of 11s Medocaod obligatoons .
- in return for ending Uncle Sam's
arlf!ual-$660 milhon subsidy.
Newt has a plan, several of them,
on fact: He endorses the 15 percent
flat tax for District residents and businesses that has been proposed by
D.C. delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton and Jack Kemp; he has suggested g1ving the District back to Mary·
land, which donated the land on
which the city sits; and he has touted a Republican stew of school
vouchers, tax credits, and a "voluntaristic prtvate sector"that would lay
siege to social problems that have
eluded government solution.
Joe has a plan: Replace the People 's Republic of the District of
Columbia with a free enterprise system.
I'm willing to compromise ihhey
are.
Truth is, I'm not too keen on Bill's
id~. The taxpayers have been throwing money at the District since Con-

gress granted limited home rule in
1974, and you sec the mess 1t's in.
Roads arc poucd, pined and hap·
hazardly patched. The traffic ltghts

inordinate sum on social welfare of the fleet is not functional.
programs, and [t sees itself as the
employer of first and last resort.
·' Over the past three years, every
The current mayor, former convoct dtmc of the S7 .3 million budgeted by
Marion Barry, staned this neat tradi· the city government ·for joh-traimng
tion when he was first elected on programs has gone for salary, bene·
Joseph Spear
1979. Under H1~.zoner's comforting tits and contractots.
'
arc spastic. School buildings are embrace, the city's work force grew
·· Over the past 10 years, the Jus·
crumbhng and students sometimes from 34,000 to 40,000. That was tice Department gave the District
have to manage without books. heforc 'he went off to prison for drug S4.4 million to assist victims of
Corpses spoil at the city morgue abu~ . The payroll now stands at crime. Seventy percent of it was spent
because the refrigeration units are in 45,000. Put another way, one on on salaries. The local official in
a constant state of disrepair. Half the every nine District adults works for charge of admonistering the llfllnt had
city's garbage trucks are serviceable the \)ity in one way or aiiQther. It the chutzpah to ask the feds if he
on a Jtiven day. Fire companies have makes for a nice power base, come could buy a car with their money.
been shut down. Policeman arc election time.
-- The city council recently decidProgress is presumably being ed to halve the mayor's personal
repairing and gassing up their squad
cars at personal expense. Judges are made. In 1995, Congress appointed a sccunty detail. He was being guard·
cleaning their own courtrooms. The "financial control board" to clean up cd, driven and waited upon by 31
water system is periodically invaded lhe District's fiscal mess, and 'it is pohce officers .. 25 more than the
playing hardball with the mayor. But mayor of Philadelphia and 29 more
by noxious organisms.
Even the Jtepublican. plans would it promises to be a protracted affaif. than the mayor of New Orleans.
auack only the revenue side of the Witness some receut events:
Go with Joe: Sack the commissar
-- A federal judge threatened to and dissolve the PRDC.
equation, and, 11111uably, inadequate
income is not Washington's problem. take l!way District control of a school
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated
The unemployment rate is very low bus system that services disabled stu- writer for Newspaper Enterprise
and its residents earn more-- $32.274 dents. On any given day, almost half Association.
per capita-- than the citizens of any
other state. It has some of the nation's
.One year ago: President Clinton aave 4112 hounofviileotapedleltimony
highest I8JI rates.
as
a
defense witness in the c:riminallrial of hii former WhiJewtller business
No, the , District of Columbia's
pennen.
A mu II1IICd ~ith a semiiUIOmati&lt;: rifle op Nd file on IOWIIII pn
problem is expenditures. Like 811 the
socialist governments wbich folded the Australiu lslind of 'llamania. killing 3S people; he - Cllpllnd by
in the past few yem, it spends .,. police lfter I I 2-hour standoff.

(COntinued from Page 1)
Reed presented MeN- with a
tTamed replica of the Nonhwest Territory mlll'lll at the Flll1nUS Bllllk, a
gift from the bank, and also a plaque
from the fue depmw~e~~t.
Joe Struble, emcee for the program, fCCOinized Edith 'Sisson and
Pat Thomil, who.worked for the vii·
lagc and dispatched fire and emergency equipment prior io the establishment of the current EMS system,
81ong with Polly Legar and Ruth
Smith, widows of fuemen.
Longtime members recognized
were
Reed Will, most years of service
Columbus l12•
in the depanment; Joe Struble,
Howard Mullen and George Nessel·
road, 40 or more years o~service, and
Arthur Slusher, Jack Follrod, John
Manley, James Soulsby, James Sisson
and Tom Werry, 30 or more years of
service. They were presented plaques
W.VA.
•
and certificates.
1
The history of Pomeroy's fire .
department was presented in a display of pictures and newspapet clippings.
Accounts of the department's early years tell or firefighters operating
with what was essentially a bucket
brigade. It wasn't until ncar the tum
of the century that the depwtment
then located in four "wards," or sections of town, got equipment.
A hose reel, a combination hose
reel and wagon, a hose wagon and a
steam pumper were provided to the
station was 85 degrees in 1914 while Pomeroy Fire Department by the Barthe record low was 28 in 1967. Sun· ckoff Organ Co., which had come to
set tonight will be at 8:22 p.m. and town, built a factory just off Spring
sunrise Wednesday at 6:34a.m.
Avenue, and recognized the need for
Weather forecast:
Tonight..Mostly clear. lows mear
35. North winds 5 to 10 mph.
Thcsday ... Stinny. Highs in the mid
70s.
Tuesday night...Clear. lows in the
upper 30s. ;
Extended forecast:
Wednesday:.. Mostly clear. Highs
in the upper 70s. ·
Thursday ·and Friday ... Mostly
cloudy with sCattered showers. Lows
in the mid 40s and highs in the upper

Aa:uWea~ fot!ICIIt l'or daytime conditions and high temperatures

MICH.
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IMansftekll69· I· .

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KY.

Aaln

"Over the years, SSA's Office of
Program and Integrity Reviews has
provided invaluab_Ie support to ~he
agency in evaluaung and assessmg
the integrity and Q'!ality of the programs we administer," Gambino said
"The track record of OPIR has been
excellent, and their work has often
prevented program and system
abuse."

Back to separate and unequal
researchers concluded that there are
"clear sigrls that ... the nation is head·
ed backwards to a greater segregation
of black students."
'

150 years of ·

But Social Secunty spokesman
Phil Gambino told our associate
George Clifford JIJ that the office os
doing a fine job.
·

In 1996, Gambino claims, the
office saved taxpayers more than
$165 million with a review of agency
decisions on disability applications.
Galtlbino defended the decision to
bore a outside consultant, claiming the
situation cries out for an "independent" look. Another Social Security
official, who spoke on the condition
of anonymity, beheves the harsh
tone of the inspector general's report
may be panly the result of a turf battle between the IG's office and the
OPIR.
That's small consolation for tax·
payers, who might be wQndering:
Whai's the use of having a watchdog
that can't mind its own house?
Jack Anderson and Ju Moller
are writers for United Feature
Synditate, Inc.

In 1963, I was in Washington for
the March tor Jobs and Freedom,
keynoted by Dr. Manin Luther Kmg.
The evening before, a friend, Malcolm X. was teasing me about my
high hopes for the next day: "I bet
you thonk you're here for a real hostoric event You've been fooled, like
everybody else."
1was angry at his cynicism, all the
more so when the march was over
and ots organizer, Bayard Rustin, saod
that the expenence "madeAmencans
fcel for the first time that we were
capable of bemg truly a nation, that
we were capable of moving beyond
divisiOn and b1gotry. "
·
Despite the Civil Rights Act of
1964 and other such legislation,
despite the mcreasing presence of
black lawyers, journalists, professors
and mvestment bankers, the glow of
that day of one nation has largely dis·
solved. ·
The future of the nation, as politictans ritualistically chant, is in the
young -- and therefore in the schools.
On April 5 of this year. the Harvard
Graduate School of Education issued
a report, "Dcepenong Segregatoon m
American Public Schools."
Examining the racoal composition
of American pubhc schools frorn
1968 to 1994 (the most recent year
for whoch data arc avatlable). the
.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Wc ~ Jth c r
'nleadly, Aprtl%9

a watchdog

OOPS.

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The E-check program, m whoch cars are tested at various speeds for ozone
emiSSIOns, has been crtllcized almost since it started in 1995. The program
· was mtrod uced m 14 northeastern and southwestern Oh10 counties that ran
afoul of standards under the federal Clean Air Act of 1990.
Motonsts have complamed about long lines at testing centers, cars damaged by test operators and huge repatr bills.
Johnson satd hos boll would not make all the problc!ms go away but represents the best cHance the state has to correct the problems without facmg
milhons of dollars in lawsuots by testing center operators.
· The bill also would prohibit the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency
from starting emissiOn tests outside the 14 counties currently under E-check.
That also rubs Bell's coalitoon the wrong way.
"We look at it as we're kind of a leper colony," he said. "Certain Ohio
cnunllcs have been turned into a quarantine zone so E-check won't spread."
The coalit1on has dubbed Johnson'sbnl 1'E-check II" but hopes the Sfn·
ate vcrs1on of the b1ll1s more responsove to the coalitoon's WIShes, I~ell said.
'"There just dodn 't seem to be enough suppon for the proper reforms (in
the House). " he satd. "We're not gomg to support anything that isn't fair."
Bell and other E-check opponents went through the same fight during the
lasllegislati ve session. A bill that would have killed the program never made
11 ou1 of !he House Fonance Committee.
.
Envmmment Commmee Chairman Sen Gary Suhadolnik, R-Strongsville,
. has scheduled a second hearing' on Johnson·s bill next week. Bell saod his
group would testify agamst the bill at a later date.

• P&amp;JI2 .

.

By JOHN McCARTHY
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS· The Legislature's second attempt to kill Ohio's unpopular E-check emossions testing program hasn 'tompressed the leader of a
motorists group that opposes the tests.
A bill sponsored by Rep: Tom Johnson. R-New Concord, that would
replace the test with a less intrusive tailpipe inspection passed the House
thos month and os on the Senate Energy, Natural Resources and Environment
Committee.
The btll would replace E-chcck in northeasrOhoo and on the Dayton area
· but would not affect Cincinnati, which still falls short of standards establtshcd by the 1990 federal Clean Aor Act.
It also would create "aor advisory councils," to consist of local and county officoals, to select compltance measures beyond ·the basic tests in each Echeck area
·
That could open the door toE-check's return Wothoutlegislative approval
on any area that falls out of compltance woth the clean air standards, saod
Greg Bell, spokesman for the CoalitiOn to Repeal Ohto E-check, based in
Dayton.
.
.
He said the provosion means lawmakers would not be accountable should
E-check return.
· " You see that the enhanced test could immedoately be re-1mplemented,"
sa1d Bell , whose group mcludes about 620 people, mostly m southwest Ohio.
" We don ' t want a mechanism in place .that would gove legiSlators hands·
off."

'

lllondiY... . . ~-1~
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The Daily Sentinel

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\111-lld-~

J

. Warmer air, sunshine
~: returns to area Tuesday
' By The AAocleted p,..,
Plenty of sunshine and warmer
temperatures will return to Ohio on
Thesday, forecasters said. Highs will·
be 65-70.
•
The high pressure system that's
'. bringing the warmer weather will
:. clear out the skies tonight, allowing
: temperatures to dip to the'upper 30s
: to mid-40s, the National Weather Ser•, vice said.
The warmer conditions should
•· continue into Wednesday but the
:. rain may return to the state, forecast;, ers said.
'· . The record· high temperature for
this date at the . Columbus weather
:-

OLD-,.AS HONORED~ The't~tse~~~: Arthur
Jack Follrod, John Manley,
memberl of the Pomeroy Fire Depai biJ6111 Wll1'l Jamee SOUIIby, James Sisaon and Tom Wer·
praentect piiQull or certificates as part of the ry; seated from left are lhoae with 40 and more
1501h cellbratlon ollhe Pomeroy Fire Depart· yeara ol service, Howard Mullen, Joe Struble
nte11t Saturday night Stllndlr;~g to the left are and George Nnselroad.
members who served 30 years each or more,
Congratulations were extended
better fire protection.
Also presented a plaque at the
by
Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan.
The equipment was stored in the observance was Ethel Shank, who
ward houses and the horses were sta- has four sons currently serving with Cub Scoui Den I, Pomeroy, led in the
bled in the rear of the old Pomeroy the depwtment. They are Jeff, Chris, pledge of allegiance, and the Rev.
Roland Wildm!UI gave the invocation.
village hall, located 11ext door on Sec- Stacey and Bryan.
ond Street to the Methodist Church.
The building has since been tom
down.
The department purchasc:d its first
piece of mechanized equipment in
1929-aSeagravespumper. Inthe
1960s. the wards merged onto a mam
department and in the mid-' 60s
moved into the station on Butternut
Avenue.

: Explosion .at steel plant
· responsible for 4 inj·uries

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:;• ·traffic accidents on O~io roads this
~ . weekend, the State Haghway Patrol
.._, said Sunday.
:;.
The patrol counts fatalities from 6
;:::. p.m. Friday until midnight Sunday.
;--': The dead:
.::-:; .
SUNDAY
;.~·
PIKETON -Joy Tonkin. 71, of
;::;~ Amelia, a passenger, in a two-vehi•.... cle accident on state Route 32 in Pike
'"'" County.

. . r------------,
The Daily Sentinel
(I!SPS IJ).HI)

Pubt;ohed OY&lt;f)' aftemooll, Monday lhrouaJI
Fridoy, Ill Court St . ,._,,, Ohio, 1&gt;]1 the
Ohio Valley Publlohlna c-y~l Co.,
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cia"""'""" paid 01 i'otm'oy. Qhlo.
Mr~~~ben

'l1te APOCialed Prell, aDd lhe Ohio
·

New8plpef A11501:1Mion.

I'Oi!ITMABTBRI Send - · comc:don• ro
l1lO Dally SenHntl. Ill Coun St., I'O,_.y,
Ohio45769

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Annette Knight
OUTSTANDING ENTRY- This entry by the Lester Manuel fam·
ily in the Flower Fealival parade typified life down on the farm.
The old wagon pullad by a team of horaes with their young by
their aide was flllad with flowers. It look the third place prize for
floats.

Both sides in budget talks
push for accord t"'is week

USA Today
White House and congressional
negotiators have narrowed their differences •and are pushing for agree.men! this week on a plan for balancing the budget.
But both sides still say that the sit·
uation is volatile and that they remain
$70 billion apart on a key part ofthe
budget.
That $70 billion, spread over five
years, is how much more Prcsodent
Clinton would spend on a variety of
MILLERSBURG- Vera J. Car- domestic programs than Republiroll, 70, of Nonh Canton, Donald J. cans would.
After weeks of private talks, presGreer, 68, of Millersburg, and Mer·
lyn P. Weitbl'echt, 53, of Millersburg, sure is on both con¥tessional Repuball passengers. in a two-vehicle acci· lican~ and the admonistration to cut a
dent on U.S. 62 in Holmes County.
deal.
Congress already has missed ots
SATURDAY
CINCINNATI Andrea L
deadline for adoptoug a budget plan
Meuey, 32, of Cincinnati, in a one-car and 'Can't wait much longer to begin
accident on a Hamilton County road. action on spending bills' for fiscal
DAYTON- Deborah L Cox, 42, 1998, which starts Oct I.
Aides say Clinton wants a resoluof Huber Heights, a passenger, on a
two· vehicle crash on state Route 4 in lion before he leaves next week on a
trip to Mexico, Barbados and Costa
Montgomery Collllty.
·
·
RAVENNA-.Dale Kawasny, 43, Rica.
But
despite
shrinking
differences,
of Mantua, in a mo.torcycle crash on
· negotiators face several stumbling
a Portage County road.
blocks. Among them:
• The $70 btllion gap in spending
for domestic programs, other than for
the mtlotary and entitlements such as
Am Eft Power .:~ ................ 39 314
Social Security or Medicare.
Akzo ..................................63 518
• Word from independent analysts
. AmrTech ...........~ ............... 58 3/lil
that
both parties' plans fall about $50
Aa,...nd 011 ....................... 44 1/4
,
billion
shon of reaching balance by
ATIT ................................. 31 ~~
2002.
Bank One ............ ~ .............40 518
- To fill the gaps, Senate-Republican
Bob Evant ..............................13
Borg-Werner .....................43 118
Leader Trent Lou again urged ClinChampion ...............................18
ton to take the lead in p;oposing a
Charm ..........................5 9116
way to adjust the consumer price
City Holclng ......................311/4
index to slow the growth of annual
Federll Mogul ....... ~ ...........28 118
Clwwtttt .............................84 518 cost-o~-living increases in many benGooctyter ..........................51 718
efit programs.
Kmart ................................. 13 318
And Clinton, White House offi·
~ End.:.....- .....,........... 25 314
cials say, answered in good faith, sayLid....................- ................17 314
ova ...................................31 112 ing he would consider a reduction in
the CPI "if it's justified:"
Orw Valley .........................37112
Peo~ .............................. 112
But a CPI reduction is fie~Iy
PrtNi\ F1111 ...........................14 314 opposed by f~tions in both parties.
Aoc"-11 ............................. 711
RD-8twll .............. ~..........171112 Liberal.Democrats say such a reduc·
lion would hun retirees. Conservative
....,.,,............................. 4 314
fear that it will raise taJIRepublicans
link ..........................40 318
Wetldy'l .........~.......... ~........ 20 112 . es and fuel !Ids attacking Social
Security ucuts. ,,
WOI'ttlll'lgton .......................17 314
nmc magazine reports, and White
810011 reporll .... the 10:30 House Ules confmn, that a secret
pnmd 11 br Adwlt
meetina was held lut week bet~'«n
of
lpoll..
White House ch~f of llaff Erskine
.
Bowles, HOllie Budget Committee

Weekend accidents: kill 7
By The Auocleted p,..,
;:::-; At least seven people have died in

Stocks

swr

..mo.r-

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Janet M. Hawk, 47, Walnut Street, Middleport, doed Saturday, April 26,

1997. following a brief illness.
Born in Parkersburg, W.Va., daughter of Mazie Johnson Holsinger of
Springfield, and the1late Winnie Holsinger, she was a graduate of Eastern
High School and attended Hocking College, the Umversity of Roo Grande
and Ohio University. She was a teacher at the Rejoicing Life Cbfistlan School
in Middleport.
She was a member of the Syracuse Church of the Nazarene, and attended the Church of Christ in Mtddleport. She was a member of the Chester
Garden Club and the Ohio River Herbalists.
Besides her mother, she is survived by her husband, Phtlltp E. Hawk: her
rnotl)er i1Rd father-in-law, Carl and DeEtta Hawk of Albany; a son, Tone Chapman of Kingston; a daughter and son,in-law. Angela and Mall Hu xley, Middleport~ a grandson, Tryston Huxley of Middleport; a stepdaughter, Mel lisa
Hawk of Marietta; a stepson, Trav•s Hawk of New Marshfield, two sisters,
Brenda Day of Coolville, and Paui Beverly of Springfield: and two brothers, Ronnie Holsinger of Georgia, and Doug·Holsinger of Lottie Hockmg.
Memorial services will be Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the Eden United Brethren
Church, State Route 124, Reedsville, with the Rev. Robert Sanders, AI Hartson and Mark Matson officiating.
The family suggests contributions be made to the Eden United Brethren
Church, in care of Frances Holsinger, 67875 SR 124, Reedsvolle. Oh10 45772,
in lieu of flowers.
The body was donated to the Ohio Universoty College of Osteopatluc Med·
icine, Athens, for education and research.

~n..

·,
MIDDLETOWN (AP) -Investigators were looking into the cause of an
: . explosion and·fire at a steel plant that shook nearby houses and injured four
: people.
:
The explosion at AK Steel Corp. occurred about 10 p.m. Sunday when
: · molten steel apparendy dripped into a slag pit that holds waste, said plant
·. spokesman Alan McCoy. The fire was out within t"!o hours.
~.
Firefighters said AK Steel employee Terry Brown, 38, of Camden, was
treated at Middletown Regional Hospital and released. McCoy satd three sub' contractors were treated at the plant's medical center. He said he did not know
; their identittes.
'
Slag is a waste product of molten iron. The explosion apparently sent
pieces of the molten iron flying through the air. Some of the material struck
'· a construction trailer which caught fire, McCoy said.
'·
Nobody was inside the trailer, he Sliid;McCoy also said he did not know
•· how the four people were injured.
.
Mark Myers, who lives across the street, said the blast rocked his mobile
home. He said he heard four or five explosions.
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration said in December
; · 1995 that the Middletown plant had more fatal accidents during the past two
years than any other steel mill in the nation. There have been 13 deaths at
" the plant since 1981 and nine since April 1994.
·
Four AK Steel Middletown Works employees last year filed a lawsuit in
Butler County Common Pleas Coun demanding safe work practices at the
• · mill.
::- '
A judge declared the su1t to be a class action. AK Steel is challenging that
,_. decision.
.
;;. '
AK Steel makes flat-rolled steel for usc mainly in making cars and appli7 ances. The company employs about 5,800 people at its Middletown head:-- quarters and Middletown Works and at a mill in Ash ian~. Ky.
,.

Janet M. Hawk

Chairman John Kasich and House
Speaker Newt Gingrich to talk about
a solution to the CPI question .
But the meeting ended with Gtn·
grich reJeCtong the idea as too politically risky.
On the budget plan overall, GOP
negotiators sent an offer to Clinton
late last week. and the White House
returned 11 with a counteroffer. Talks
could resume as soon as Monday.
Besides domestic "discretionary
spending," differences in other key
. areas rem am, such as the size of tax
cuts, al)d spending on Medicare and
Medicaod. But' both sides have moved
closer during the past tWO weeks in
those areas.
The $70 billion gap in domestic
spending reflects a difference in pnonties on the part of Clinton and congressional Republicans for the broad
pan of the budget that involves annual appropriations. This includes federal spendong on education, the environment and law enforcement.
The government will spend $281
billion on those programs this year. If
all are allowed to nse at the rate of
inflation, the government would
spend $1.525 trillion on them over
the next five years.
~

Hospital news

Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissoons - . Mary
Jones, Pomeroy.
Saturday discharge~ - none.
Sunday admissions - Rosemary
Raub, Pomeroy.
Sunday discharges - none.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges April 2S - Nancy
Griffith, Mrs. Tommy Long and
daughter, Mrs. Jacob Lowe and
daughter, Kelley Hawkins, Elisha
Walters, Grover Smith, Lulo
Richards, William King, Daisy Boyer, Mila Fain, Emma Davis.
Discharges April 26 - William
Green, Dortha Adams, Lisa Criner,
Charles Shields, Gil Neal.
Dlsi:harges April '1.7 - Ginger
Siders, Jack Henson, Robert Sa.un·
den, Ramona Roush, Cotton Keefer,
Sandra Thacker.
Births- Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan
Allbriaht. 5!&gt;11· Gallipolis; Mi':"'and
Mrs. Thomas Angel, daughter, Gal·
lipolil.
(l'llblllbed with permlaloa)

Annette Knoght, 81, 104 Legion Terrace. Pomeroy, died Sat~rday,'Apnl
26, 1997 in the Rocksprings Rehabilttatoon Center. She was a reured schoolbus driver and homemaker.
· She was born on July 28, 1915 at Pomeroy, daughter of the late Dayton
and Ethel Meyers Ashworth. She was affiliated with the Trmity Congregational Church in Pomeroy, and was a 60·year member of the Order of East·
em Star.
•
She is surv1ved by ~er husband. Chester Knoght; two sons and daughtersin· law, Terry and Sherry Knight of Marion, and Dick and Bo Knoght of Marfield, Ky.; a brother, Willard Ashworth of Niceville, Fla.; thre_e grandchildren and one great-grandc~ild; and sevc_ral meces and nephews.
Besides her parents. she was preceded on death by her Sisler, Ula Matlack: and an infant brother.
·
Servoces will be 1 p.m. Tuesday in the Ewing Funeral Home; Pomeroy,
with the A.ev. Roland Wildman officiating. Burial w1ll be m the Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p m. 1oday.

D.o nald W. Price
Donald W. Price, 42, Bidwell (Rodney community), doed Sunday, April
27, 1997 at his residence.
Born April26, 1955 in Gallipohs, son of the late Rev. Wilham Price, and
Darlene Roush Price of Cheshire, he was employed hy the Galli a County
Senior Citizens "Meals on Wheels" Program.
A 1973 graduate of Kyger Creek High Sehoul, he was a former employee of the AEP Towing Co., Point Pleasant, W.Va. A U.S Army veteran, he
was an active member of the Old Kyger Frecwtll Baptost Church.
Surviving in addition to his mother arc his wife, Hope Smith Price, whom
he married June .17, 1994 at Vinton: a maternal grandmother. Loutse Roush
of Cheshire: a stepson, Roben Imboden Jr. of Gallipolis; two stepdaughters,
Chrisloan Barcelli of Gallipolis, and Bobbie Sowards of B1dwell, two stepgrandchtldren: four brothers, Robert (Brenda) Price and Timothy (Myra)
Price, both of Cheshire, James (Ellen) Price of Gallipolis, and Mark Pncc
of Columbus: a soster, Cmdy Hoffman of Cheshire, and several nieces and
nephews.
.
.
Serv1ces will be 2 p.m. Wednesday tn the Old Kyger Freewill Baptist
Church, with the Rev. Roben Thompson officialing. Burial will be in the
Gravel Hill Cemetery. Fnends may call at the McCoy· Moore Funeral Home
Wctherholt Chapel, Gallipohs, from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Tuesday
Military graveside rites will be conducted by VfW Post 4464.
In hcu of flowers , memonal contrtbutoons may be made to the Old Kyger
youth m1nostry, in care of Bob Price, 554 Stingy Creek Road, Cheshire, Ohm
45620.

Clarence Wickline ·
Clarence Wickline, 86, 50250 Hoback Road, Racme. dted Sunday, Apnl
27, 1997 in Holzer Medical Center
-·
,
Arrangements wtll be announced by the Ewong Funeral Home. Pomeroy.

Lottery results
CLEVELAND CAP) - The Super
Lotto jackpot will grow to $12 milloon for Wednesday ntght's drawing,
after no one carne up with all six
numbers pocked Saturday night With
$8 million at stake in the Ohio Lottery game.
Sales in Super Lotto totaled
$2,936,628. Sales in the Kocker
totaled $510,005.
There were 63 Super Lotto tickets
with five of the numbers, and each is
worth $1,282. The· 3,040 tickets
showing four of the numbers are each
wonh $83.
In· Kicker, no player hlld the exact
six-digit number worth $100,000.
The five Kicker tkkets showing
the first five digits are each worth
$5,000. The 45 with the first four
numbers are each worth $1,000.

...

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·S ports

The Daily
Sentm,~\
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NHL playoffs

.

Ducks~

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continue

Sabres,
Senators and Stars
record latest·wins

Jordan's ?5-point
clinic helps Bulls
defeat Bullets

"

"We did everything conceivable
By CHRIS SHeRIDAN
to try and contain· Michael," Wash- ·
~ B•1111lbllll Writer
PeQple have c:alled his te.am vul- ington coach Bernie Bickerstaff said.
nerable. People have said the MVP "He basically put them 01) his shoulresides elsewbele. ~pie have con- ders. He showed why he is the great·
vinced thorilselves that this year will · est basketball player; and he needed
all of it."
be dilfetent.
Jordan, who has an NBA-record
How dare they.
·.
34
!-poi nt postseason average, was
Michael Jont.n proyed again
22-of-35
from the floor in matching
Sunday that his era is far from over.
his
high
point
total since coming out .
. The sreateSI basketball player in the
world scored SS points, including 20 of retirement 25 months ago. He also
of his team's 23 in the fourth quar- had 55 at New York on March 28, •
ter, to lead the defending champion 1995.
It was his 37th game with at least
Chicago Bulls to a I~-I 04 victory
SO
points, eighth in the playoffs. He
over the Washington Bullets for a 2has had IS games of 55 points, five
0 lead in their best-of-five series.
''I got into .that wrie and I could-· in the postseason. His last 55-point
n't get out," Jordan said. "I just felt playoff game came against Phoenix
in the 1993 NBA Finals.
compelled to stay in that mode."
"They are a good team," Jordan
It was a good thing he did, too,
because the rest of the Bulls weren't said of the Bullets. "They 11fC gain:
doing much . Scoaie Pippen managed ing confidence and I'd like to get this
just three points in the second half. thing over with quickly before they
Dennis Rodman grabbed just eight get too much confidence.''
Game 3 is Wednesday night at
rebounils. Toni Kukoc scored six
Landover,
Md.
points and Steve Kerr had just two.
Elsewhere
Sunday, the Lakers
And nobody seemed able to stop
and
Heat
went
ahead 2-0 in their
Chris Webber, Juwan Howard and
Calben Cheaney on · the defensive series and the Sonics and Pistons
bOunced back with victories that tied
end.
their
series 1- I .
But just as he has done so many
The
Lakers defeated Portland
times in his career. Jordan carried the
107-93, Miami trounced Orlando
team.
· "M.J. is M.J.," Chicago's Ron 104-87. Seattle crushed Phoenix
Harper said. "We allow him to do his 122-78 and Detroit topped Atlanta
· thing. If he wants to take over a 93-80.
Lakers 107, Trail Blazers 93
game, there "is nothing Sconie can
At Inglewood, Calif., the Lakers
say or (coach) Phil (Jackson) can say
got
a little less from Shaq and a Iiito stop it."
Said Jordan: "That's 'my_ job. tie more from everyone else. ·
Eddie Jones had 19 points. Elden
That's what! get paid the big buc~s
Campbell
added 16 and Nick Van ·
for. I .want to win. I want to win
exel had 13 points and nine assists to
another championship."
.
· Cheaney scored 26 points. Tracy back up O'Neal's 30 points.
The
Blazers
did
a
better
job
of
Murray had 22 and Chris Webber
had 21 for the Bullets, who felt they containing O'Neal, who had 46
would have won if they were play- points in Game I, but the ·Lakers
ing any team that didn't have Jordan went ahead for good by outscoring
the Blazers 13-2 to stan the second
on it.

.

..

sixth, made it 2-2 withjust 2:16 left
By VINCENT CINISOMO
in regulation.
Aaaocllted Press Writer ·
" We banled back and had an •
Think·about .where the Anaheim
Mighty Ducks would be without opponunity to win it," Tlcachuk
Teemu Selanne and Paul Kariya. said. "It's all even ·going to the last
More importantly, think about where same and they have home ice; but •
they're headed wjth the high-scoring we •ve played well on the road all
',
duo: back home for the deciding year.''
Phoenix ended the 'Ducks' ·
game of their first playoff series.
· Selanne and Kariya. second and unbeaten string last week and must
third in the NHL this season with win again in 'Anaheim on. Tuesday, •
possibly witbout high-scoring center '
I~ and 99 points, res~ctively, led
the Oucks to a 3-2 overtime victory Je~my Roenick, who injured his left •
Sunday over the Phoenix Coyotes. - knee in a collisi!)n with Anaheim's .
Kariya scored the first and final Ted Drury midway through the sec- ·•
goals. and Selanne assisted on the ond period.
In other gall)es, Detroit eliminat- "
winner. This first-round series is now
lied 3-3 with Game 7 to be played ed St. Louis in six games with a 3-1 ·'
Tuesday night at the Pond, where the victory, &lt;Dallas forced a seventh ..
Ducks went unbeaten for 16 games game with Edmonton with a 3-2 win,
and Buffalo fought off elimination .
until losing to Phoeni• last week.
Selanne and Kariya are line- with a 3-0 victory ovet ·Ottawa. No
mates, close friends and by far the games are scheduled for today.
· · Sabres 3, Senators·o
•
biggest offensive · threats on their
In
Kanata,
Ontario,
Buffalo
back·
~
team. Selanne had 51 goals and
Kariya 44, while the next-highest up goalie Steve Shields, replacing •;
scorer had 19. They were the only injured star Dominik Hasek, recordforwards to score goals in the fir.;t ed his first NH!: shutout as the' .
Sabres forced a seventh game in their :."
five games of this series.
To illustrate their jmponance, the playoff series, in Buffalo on ~sday. ..
Shields, who entered the third
Ducks won only once in their first 12
. when Hasek sustained a knee ..
games of. the regular season while game
Kariya recovered from an abdominal . spraip,. made his third straight stan ::
IT'S MINE!- The Chicago Bulla' Michael Jordan pulla down a injury. They had ol!ly one power- and stopPed 31 shots.
!.
rebound In front of teemllllte Ja~ caney In the lourth quarter of play goal in 41 chances, were averBrian Holzinger gave Buffalo a 1- :':':
Game 2 of their NBA llrat-round plllyoft aerlea agalnat the vlaltlng aging a league-worst 2.25 goals and · 0 lead in the first period. Alexei Zhit· "!
Wallhlngton Bullets. The Bulla won 109-1041n part behind Jordan's
. nik added ;1 goal in the sec,ond and ::
had lost their first five at home.
55-point effort to take a 2..0 lead In the beat:-o'·flve serlea. (AP)
The Ducks finished 23-12-6 at the Jason Dawe finished the scoring in
Pond, and their strong end of the sea- the third.
half, giving them a 62-531ead. They with a little more energy on our son helped them grab the fourth ·
. Red Wings 3, Blues 1
:::
blew the game open early in the home floor. do what we need to do
Visiting Detroit wrapped up its .•.
pla)loff spot 1\way from the Coyfourth quaner.
to play a 48-minute game," Panfirst-round playoff series in six
·
otyes.
''We really turned it on in the sec- land's Clifford Robinson. said. "No
' For the game-whiner, Selanne games, getting power-play .goals "
one
wants
to
get
swept."
·
ond half," Lakers coach Del Harris
and Kariya used a designed play, frorri Viacheslav Kozlov and Bren- "
Heat 104, Mapc 87
said. "In the fourth quaner, we put
'
with Selanne flipping the hockey dan Shanahan.
At Miami, it was Blowout II.
it in overdrive. We did that in both
While ihc Red Wings continue
version of an· "alley-oop" pass over
A22-3·run at the stan of the sec- the neutral zone.to Kllriya, who beat their quest for their first Stanley Cup
games."
Game 3 is Wednesday night at ond period gave the Heat a 42-21
Coyotes goalie Nikolai Khabibulin since 1955, the Blues haven 't made "
lead.
They
outscored
Orlando
3613
Portand.
with a wrist shot into the comer of it past the second round since 1986. "
•'ftopefully, we can come back
(See PLAYOFFS on Page 5)
the net.
Stars 3, Oilers 2
,
· "We practice that all the time,"
In Edmonton, Alberta, Mike
Selannc said. "I've reached him
Modano scored at 14:42 of the third,,
01any times where_'he gets the puck.
period to lift Dallas over Edmonton
but not where he doesn 'I have to do
and force a seventh _gjllll~ of their
anything. It was lucky· the timing
race," Hillin said. " I'm not saying th~re and they will all line up and go
NHL Western Conference playoff..
around you," . he added. "But if was perfect. There's always some serie.s.
tha~ we put more effon into this race,
. . , .. ~.... ,,,
luck involved."
but because we went hqme from tbe you're fast, then you are going to run
With each team playing a man ,
The winning shot came 7:29 into short. Modano took the puck from
restrictor plate races last year and across this ol' boy and he '·II .say,
the
.first extra period. Kariya and B.ri- Oilers defenseman Luke Richardson,
really struggled at them, I think we 'Hey, I know this dude is fast. I'm
an Bellows had given ~miheim a 2going to tuck in behind him and
worked hard on those."
in the Edmonton zone, tore up tlw•
0 lead in the second, !i!Jil the Coyotes middle of the ice and ripped a shot'!
Talladega and Daytona Interna- we're going to go.' ·... If I can find
- like the Ducks·also in their first
tional Speedway are the two one or two guys with that attitude,
that deOected off Oilers center Doug .
playol'f series - tied it on scores in
NASCAR tracks where the sanc- then I'll stay up front all day."
Weight's stick and pas! goalie Cur-.~
the third by Darrin Shf non and KeiAndretti, 34, who is in much the
tioning body mandates carburetor
tis Joseph for his fourth goal of the"
th Tkachuk.
restrictor plates to slow the cars · same position as Hillin, except that
~rics.
L"~
"We should have had it in reguhe has yet to win his first Winston
down.
The Oilers, who had hoped tcr,;
lation, but we foughi ~acl\, regained
Hillin said he would love to show Cup race, said, "Hopefully, this will
eliminate the favored Stars on home·•
our
composure and broke the game
that the team can be as competitive give us some momentum and get us
ice, now must play Game 7 ito Dalopen," Kariya said. .
·
_headed back in the right direction."
in the race as it was in qualifying.
las on Tuesday night.
Tkacliuk's goal, his playoff-best
"We've got a shot at it Monday.
"A lot of it depends on how
strong our car is," said Hillin, whose We've just got to keep giving ourFord will stan alongside the pole- selves ·shots every week and, even. winning Thunderbird of John tually, it's going to happen," Andret"
Andretti .. " If our car is just the least ti added. "It was the same with Jeff
bit off, the competitors will take Bunon (who won.his first race earadvantage ofthat'and they'll all gain lier this month at Fon Worth, Texas).
and untested Lou Savarese, his proATI.ANTIC CITY. N.J. !APl against me arid go on down the road. His team is always up front , and you
George Foreman walus to stay home moters said they hoped to sign an '
"It's kind of an unwrinen rule that are boUnd to get one that comes your
opponent to fight in August, Scp- ·,
next tome·.
they as~ume that you don't belong up way."
The amazing 48-ycar-old heavy- tember or October. perhaps in the •
weight. who has made a second Astrodome.
career out of proving people wrong,
No doubt Foreman will monitor!
says he wants his next fight to be in the selection process. After all-,. he ·
Houston. ncar his Marshall, Texas. headed into Saturoay 's fight with
Savarese thinking the rangy 31- '
hOl'\e.
Still glowing ahcr Foreman's 12- year-old would be another cupcake..'" ·
Tue5day 's games ·
PluliKiclphia 6, t'iu~burgh ~ : Phii1Kk:l·
· ,.,_
round split decision over unbeaten He wasn ' t.
Colorado (Baile)' J -0) 111 Ht)U~Ion
phiu win.~ scri~s +I
· ·
.

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...

Rain delays Winston 500 until today ,
good qualifying before," said Hillin,
By MIKE HARRIS
.
whose only Win~ton Cup victory
TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP)
came
in the July 1986 Talladega
Bobby Hillin Jr. and John Andretti
race.
"My
attitude is that I've got to
know that racing up front is just as
keep
the
intensity
level up and stay
imponant as qualifying there.
Both of the surprising front row .Jopused and not jump up and whoop
Sl8r1CfS for the Winston 500 were dis- and holler and say, 'We've done
.
appointed Sunday when rain at Tal- great."
"
We've
only
taken
one little step
ladega Superspeedway forced poston a real tall ladder. We've got a long
ponement of the race until today.
More rain in the forecast could way to go. That's the way I look at
force NASCAR to move the race to . it, and I want my team to be as serious as I am."
~y II, the next open Sunday on its
Hillin is in his third season dri~hedule. The Winston Cup teams
1re slated to race next weekend in ving for Doug Bawel 's Jasper Motor· Sonoma, Calif., and officials must spans team.
So far this season, the 32-year-old
,.now time for the team trucks to dtiracer
has failed to make two of eight
"e to the west coast.
But the gloom and rain didn 't races and has finished no better than
33rd in last week's Goody 's 500 at
~ampen the spirits of Hillin, whose
Martinsville,
Va.
·
~urprising performance in qualifying
"We need to realize what got us
,pn Friday earned him a start from the
here,
because if we put this kind of
putside
of
the
front
row
of
the
43-car
1
'effort into every race, I think 'we
~eld . ·
" It means a lot (to stan up front), would be more successful in every
l~ut I haven 't gotten excited over a

Foreman struggles to beat .
Savare~e in split decision

Scoreboard
-

lhl1 imon: tCoppingt:r 0·0) :11 Min·
ncso1a &lt;F. Roc.lricuei 1·2). R:05 p.m.
T~x.as (Puvlik 2·2) :u Chir.:ucu Whil~
Sol"' (Nuvnrro 1· 1), ft ·O~ p.m
'

Baseball

AL sllmdings

NL standings

Easltm Division

ItQI

.

J:ll J.

I'd.

Baki!fKire ..... ..... 14

7

.667

Boslon ................. l2
New York ......... ... 12
Turopco ..... .......... HI
Drll'\tit .......... .. IU

II
12
II
IS

..~22
.SOO
.47()
400

~

Ctmrtl Dlvis6on

Mil""'*ket ............. IO 10
CLEVELAND ....... II 12

-~
. ~1K

Kans~ Cny

476 ·

........... 10

MinrttMMa .... , .. ....... JI

II

.~

wftaemDi~klon
s.................... .... ll 9 .62l

•

'•

II

- .
•

.lOO

T(!!\lrlto 4. ~tl¢ :\
B~ihimt:II"C: 14, floacQn ~
N~'V, Ym•kecs 10, Chicago While Sen

•

•
••

K 619
12 .lj)()

· Saturday's scores

)

. •

-.

13 . . 4~ 8

ChiC.:li&amp;O ............ , ...... 7 16

Te111:'f ........ ............. 1~
Daldiond .,. ....... ., .... 12
An...,im .... :......... II

Gil

2

~Jo.ftd 1. Kanaa• City 6{11)
Mllw"'... 9, CLEVELAND 8
T¥iJI b. Mi-IIMa I'
Dolfo'l 2..A-m 0

Eutent Division
Iam
}! J. ~
Allanlu .................. 17 5 .77'3
~lurido ., .......:.......... 13
9 .391
Mon~real ............... ll 10 .S24
New York ... ..... ...... !1 1• .391
Philadtlphiu ............. 7 14 .Jn

Gil

-.
4
4i'·,

8~;

9'~

c..tntPirillon
Houston ........... ..... 14 9 .fDI
Pi1tsbtqh .............. II II .500
S1. L.oois ..... :............ 8 14 .JM
CINCINNATI ......... 7 15 JIR
O.kaJn ..................4 -Ill

9' ~

.7b2
.714
.S24
.429

I
S
1

MUIIIR!td M, N.Y. Me1s I
Colomdo4, St. L&lt;M• 2
Chi~•o Cubs 7. Pituburgb 6
....... ), San [l;cJO 2 (IQ)
San Fnn:-isco 2. ~to~~Mon 0
F1orido 8. Lo• A...ln )

Sul)day's·lialftl

Tonlcht'spma

Picuburah {l,.oiaza 2.0) at PhiladeJ.
phio (l'onuJal 0-1 ). J :O.• p.m.
Sao Oiefo (Worrell 1· 3) at Florida
CSoundenO- ). 7:Mp.m.
N.Y. M.ecs (Reed f, U a1 CINCIN·
NA11 (Smiley 1...). 1:)S p.m.
~ Aqeles (Milliner. 2·1) 11 A..tlanea
(O...,oo 3·0), NO p.m.
•
M..-l(llero-I.Q)II&lt;lllaiF
W.. CM•IooCtood 0-l), 1:0:1 p.m.
S.. Fr 'eM {V..a..a.dl-.llllftl· l-1)
II 54. l..ooda (Arid)'- ~). f.11! p.m.
If

Lo1 Angeles (Park ~J- 1) lll Allantn
tlllaJo O.Q~ T:40 p.m.
San Fnmci1..:o (lteut~r 1-0) :u S1.
Louis (Siotdemyn: 0-1). K:05 p.tn.

Tuesday's gaines

at Bun'at.u. 7JO p.m.
&amp;!morMon al Dub. S p.m.
Phocni11 a1 Apaaht.-im. IOJO p m.
Ou:~wa

Basketball

Mmn&amp;.*!iota H4:

·Amtrican LHaue
.
BOSTON REO SOX: AcliYliiL'd RHP

H11ll5lon

knlls !lt:rte" 2.0

,

RK:h GIU\:Cs from.the IS-day diitublet.l lis~ .
Oe~ianarc:tJ RHP Pnl Ma1Jum&amp;:5 IUr u!\i'lip:n·

N~w York lOll. Clu~rlouc ~.1:' New

YIH'k k:alls !Ients 2·0 ·
Ulah 10~ . L.A. Clippcn 99: Utah
_ l~: ~d~ uneli 2.0
.

.

HMMOII

1 -3~ 1:0:1 ,. ..

.-

CLEVI:.'LA"ND INDIANS: Kccullcd
RHP Bartolo Colon rrom Buffalo ol lhc
Amerir.:nn A.uocilalion. Sent INF Dnmt11n

. l •·

Jar.:luon to BMffalo.

NEW YORK YANKEES: lle&amp;IIMied
RHP David Weahm for usi&amp;lltntnl. Recalled RHP .Jim Mcc:ir rrom Columbus of

Tonl&amp;ht's pmtS

PITTSBURGH . PIRATES : An·
IIOUfti:M lbc rai,llllion d MD Drilooll,
vice ptai*'tf 0 broldwr:ina and adYet•

thclnlet'nlt-Leq...

,..,_

fllderthip

.

RHl~~D~~a.!;~,! ~u~ .::::~·

tiona.

LOst~

reldership

. .n
;!I
o l

Rrarh mrm adults, fasttr, ;, tht ntJIJJfHlptr.

'

SAN DIEOD 'PADRES: Ploced IB
Willy loyt~er on the IS-day rliubled liJt.
Recalled I B Dend&lt; t..e fnHn LM Veps
of lbel'l&lt;illc c- . __
.

Hou110n • MiiUII!IOta. 9:30p.m.

Scaftle • ,._.ix. IO:JO ,p.m.

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Hockey

. NHL playoffs
Salllrda,.'•'llnl·rotlllll-

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The Daliy Sentinel.

I

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.,,

.. c&gt;......
•SouiOt: Jlt 195¥ MJM

.'

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1be W.lcome M1dium.

..................F#ni-.-..,..,

0: New Jer-

"'"
.

••

'

C..n111 . . . . . . ..

'"•

ra' t

'
lnlti uL::=- ., Sdlulla.n. a...,
.

• MILWAUKEE (AP)- Phil Garner wu tiiiiUed at the Brewcn'
ninlh-lnnin1 comeb-.:b this week~ end.
"It's one thins to do it when
you're hot," the MilwiiUkoe manaser Qid Sunilay iller his team rallied
from a four-run deficit to beat the
Clevelali.d Indians 6-S.
Milwaukee had lost six straight
before rallying for three runs in the
ninth SatUrdliy against Jose Mesa.
The 'Brewers trailed 4-0 Sunday; then
came back from a 5-3 deficit in the
. eighth against Eric Plunk (0-2). ·
, "lfiyOII're Cleveland and you pull
a gaine.ourof the fire like that, as hot
as they're• swinginj! the bats, you
kind of expect something .like that's·
going to happen," Garner said.
"When you can't sec daylight and all
of a sudden we win a ballgiii!IC off
of Mesa like we did l!ISt night. And,
Plunk has just stuffed us ... I can't
ever remember beating him."
Milwaukee trailed 4-0 in the fifth
before Marie Loretta's RBI ground'
out and Jeff Cirillo's run-scoring
dou~le. Jesse Levis • RBI single
closed the BrewerS to 4-3 in the seventh. · ·
Pat Borders homered in the eighth
to give the Indians a two-run lead. .
Dave Nilsson and John Jaha sin-

gled olf Plunk ia the eiahth IIDCI threw out Franco a1 the plate for his
scored on Jeromy 18umilz's RBI lcag~~e-leadin1 ftfth uailt.
double IIDCI Jelf H'*' 's double-play · "Jelf Newman ia 01111 of the bell
grounder.
· third-base coaches in the Jeaalle,"
LIRa aiftlled w\lb one out in the Harpove said. "I expect him to do
ninl!l. Cirillo walked and Nilsson it the.same way nexttime. Jeff made
songlec;lto left plf l'lul Assenmach· the right de!:ision in sending him
er.
...
(Fernandez). Williams made a great
''These things h8ppen," Cleve- play and a great throw on the ball.
land. manager Mike Hargrove said. Mieske's .throw was also perfect." '
"We can't be perfect Ill the time. l'm
Nota: Thome's first-innina
n01 making exc.\ISCs, but why they homer was his SOOth career hit.
gave up the lead I!Je·Jast two· nights, Thome has reached base in 19 of his
I don't kl)ow."
,"
first 21 pmes .... Prior to the game,
Doug Jones (2-0) pitched a per- the Brewt\JS designated pitcher Jamie
feet ninth for the victory. ' .
McAndrew · for assignment and
Jim Thome had taken Cleveland recalled pitcher Sean Maloney from
to a 3-0 lead in the first, 'co'lnecting 'Iiiple-A Tucson. McAndrew was Jon JelfD' Amico's'0-2 pitch follow- 0 with a 6.7S ERA in four games,
ing Chad Cunis' walk and Tbny Fer- including three starts. Maloney was
nandez's bunt sincle.
;
0-1, with a 5.23 ERA in eillht Jllames
Cleveland got another rUn ia the· WI'th. Tucso
. n. ... Chad 0 gea•• start~.or
third. but two outfield assists p~ . Cleveland was the first against somevented a big inning. Fernandez one other than Animl'im or Boston.
walked leading off.and attempted to Ogea is 2-0 against the Angels and
score from first 'On Matt Williams' 0-2 against the Red Sox . ... Last seaone-out double to I!he left-field cor- son, the Brewers did not win a game
ner. Gerald Williams' perfect throw when trailing after eight innings
, cut down Fernandez at home.
until September 18, a 2-1 victory
' Julio Franco &lt; singled home over Toronto. ... The 116 pitches ·
Williams from third to make it 4-0. thrown by D'Amico were a careerManny Ramirez was hit by a pitch high. surpassing his previous high of
and Brian Giles followed with a sin- 98. ... Borders' home run was the
gle; but right-f~elder Matt Mieske first off Bryce Florie this sea.•on.

''·

I'

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·~
:a
\;;!a

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American lellgue game.ln Milwaukee, Where~ •
Brewers won 6-5. Franco tried to score on a drl·
ve by .Brian Gllea. (AP) ·

NAILED ct~tcher Jeue Levis
(left) puts the glove down to tag out Clevelllnd'a
JuiiQ Fr'llnco In the third lnnlng of Sunctey'a

l·

Marlins, -Braves, Pirates,
Mariners, BoSox, Rangers
&amp;_Yanks _s tand among victors _ Mets &amp; Cardi_nals tally -winsolfthe glove of second baseman Nelson Liriano into right field. Floyd
He hit his fourth homer in the first
hustled to second and was given a
inning and hlid an RBI single in the
double.
third.
"When I saw it hit otT his glove
In other games, Boston beat BatI thought the worst thing at leut was
timore 13-7, New York stopped
I can get thrown out hustling,"
Chicage&gt; 7-1, Anaheim downed
Floyd said.
Detroit 6-5, Kansas City defeated
Luis Castillo walked and Edgar
Oakland 7-1 and Thxas topped MinRenteria
followed with a ground sinBy The Associated Preas
·nesota 7-3.
gle
that
just
eluded Liriano. Right
A five-game losing streak took a
Red So11 13, Oriola 7'
fielder Raul Mondesi's throw was off
Bill Haselman, who previously little of the luster off the Florida line.
Marlins.
Npt
to
worry,
they
bounced
took his most memorable swings at
· "This game can eat you up," the
Camden Yards with his fists, hit a · right back and swept a three-game Dodgers' Greg Gagne said. " You
home run' and three doubles as · weekend series from the Los Ange- just try to make it as simple u you
les Dodgers.
·
·
Boston beat Baltimore.
can."
·
"Expectations
were
high
after
a
· Haselman's third double keyed a
Mark Hutton (2-1 ), who gave up
spring,"
Marlins
·manager
Jim
great
three-run rally in the se~enth inning
Mike
Piazza's tying home run in the
that put the Red Sox ahead 8-6. He Leyland said after Sunday night's 4- eight~. got the' win.
hit a two-run homer in the eighth, 3 victory. "We don't want to say we
At Miami, Dodgers rookie Wilton
and rdiever Armando Benitez was were pressing. but if you don't hit, Guerrero was called out when ·he
ejected aftenhrowjng his next pitch you don't win."
With the NL East-leading Atlan\8 rounded ·second .after a popout and
ncar t)le head of Jeff Frye.
.
forgot to retouch' the base as he
Haselman, who drove in four Braves olfto their best start this cen- retumi:d to first.
runs, ma~e a. scene, !II Baltil)lore in tury - that's saying a lot. considerDodgers third baseman Todd
1993 when he charged the mound ing they've been in 'four of the last Zeile made a mental gaffe In the first.
after,being hit by a pitch from Mike five World Seri~s -· Florida has a lot . With runners on second and third
of pressure to keep winning.
Mussina.
.
.
Los Ange!cs1 which has lost six of with two outs, he grabbed Moises
Mo Vaughn, Tim Naehring, Troy seven. helped 'the
Mllflins by making Alou 's grounder and stepped on
. Jhird, miSillken!y, thi,n~ing there was
two mental
errors
and one lh!lt
could
.
I
'
,
a fqrce play; IJ cost the Qodgers.
have-been rul~d an error. · .
h?mered,.twice and Cal Ripken .hit a
"That was bad, costly, stupid.
' With one out in the ninth and the
three-run shot for the Orioles.
wh~tever
you want to · say;" Zeile
score 3-all. Cliff Floyd hit a one-hopsaid.
:'It's
not
something any big leaper off Darren Hall (0-1) that went
from

~~~~~~...lll•lllilllillllll · 69). Carl Hubl1ell set the major drove in both runs for the Mariners.
• league marie o{ 24 with the New
York Giants (19~6-37).
"I don't loo~ at statistics Hke
that," Johnson !iaid. " I didn't even
know about the ,winning streak."
Instead, he's focusing on how he
feels. And right now. he says, he's
fine.
1
" Lasts~ I was kind of tight, but
By BEN WALKER
this was the ,kind of game that
AP Banbell Writer
The big news for .the Seattle should allow me to come out in five
Mariners might be real bad for the . days and go even longer," Johnson
rest of the AD!Crican League: Randy said·. "I'm s)!lrting to build my
endurance back, up."
Johnson, it appears. is back.
· Johnson looked like his old, dom. ,,
Johnson
gav~
up six l!its, and his .
ina,ting · self Sunday; striking out
nine in-eight. innings as the MarinerS fastball was-c\QCked at 97·mph late
beat . th~ Toronto Blue Jays 2-1.
in the game.- He nearly .allowed
Johnson (3-0) won his I 5th another hit that could have cost him.
straight regular-season decision, a but Juan Sam~l's bid for a three-run
streak' that staned in 1995 and car- homer in the ,eighth inning barely
ri'ed through last year, when he was hooked foul ..
severely limited by back trouble. ·• · · · "My heari,. was pumping a bit
· The l\L' record for ·consecutive watching that oPe.'.' Johnson· sai4,
~ins is 17, set by Clevelan'd's John·. "lie may haye been l~ng for a
·· ' ·
ny. ~ll~n (1,936-37) and mat~hed . by ' breaking ball."
Alex Rodriguez homered and
Baltimore's Dave McNally (l%8·· ·
,; '

American
League
roundup

Re_·dmell· clro.·_· p

o
·
.
F.
d
I
b'
f
·
t 0 .. -an ay e ore
tw
.•..'.

'I
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'
.
beat•lhQ w
. a S · "WIC8

~~~:af:rn:..::~s~~~~r~D:~~~
An~~n~=~:;.~~~~::~el

·
.
Redwomen
win
three
~~u~e~a!e·~~~~f:s'~::.~.;
of f,•a·st fr#.our·
games
.
.
1·
n
bu't ml·ss p f·a~o s
Yankee Stadium a day earlier

After . winning two. of the final , Findlay last Friday, but bounced New York past Chicago.
four regular-~eason Mid-Ohio Con- back with ~sweep of Walsh UniverPellitte (S-O) joined current coacQ
~
ference ,tiaseball matchups, the Uni- sity Saturday aft~moon.
· · M 1S 1
h
1 y k
versity of Rio Grande.Redmen mUllt'
Gam·e one at Findlay required an pitchers
e tOlltoemyre
as tgames
e on yin an
cc
win five
April.
.
,
now play ·the waiting game to see if' extra int~ing before the Oilers pre- The left-hander is one shon of the
they did enougH to earn il spot in the vailed 9-8. Rio Gf&gt;ande led 8- 6 head· major league record for most victoDespite wmning three of the last
conference post:season tliumament.• ing into the bottom half of the .sev- ries in April- Vida Blue ( 1971) and · four regular season Mid-Ohio ConThe Redmen (11-22, MOC 7-11) enth inning. but surrendered a pair of Dave Stewan ( 1988) each won six
ference games, the University ofRil'
were swept by the ' Universiiy of ·run.s !hat tied th~ game. Findlay for Oakland.
Grande Redwomen will miss the
·
picked up the winning run in the botPettitte. whp leads the majors in
playoffsfor the second strnight seatom of the eighth 11fler the Redmen. wms,
· held Ihe Wh't
s
f'
h'
1 e ox to our 1ts
son.
failed to score in ,the top half of the in 7 2-3 innings.
Rio Grande (24-24. MOC 7.-11)
inning.
''
Paul O'Neill hit a three-run douswept Tiffin University Friday lifterRio Grande again let a lead slip blc and a solo homer for New York. .noon to give themselves an outside
· (Contin11ed from.Pag114l
away in the second game, losing 5- Frank Thomas homered for Chicago
shot at the tournament. The Red·
3.
The
Redmen
took
a
1-0
lead
in
the
I
be
B
11
in the quaner. hitting 13 of 19 shots,
and A n e c had two doubles.
women prevailed 4-2 in game one
· Angels 6, Tigers 5
with Jenny Murphy picking up the
und led 56-31 at halftime. The mar, . tirst inning, hut could orily hold it
until the third when Findlay tallied
Tony Clark, Travis Fryman and
win. She scattered five hits over six
gin reached 32 points in the third
twice.
·
Brian Hunter all homenid for Detroit
innings and surrendered just tme run.
period. "
The
Oilers
added
a
run
in
'
the
'
in
the
sixth
inning,
but
Anaheim
won
Rebecca
Evans ;got the save.
: Tim Hardaway had 20 points and
fourth,
but
the
Redmen
rallied
ih
the
·
at
home
on
Jim
Edmonds'
RBI
sinRoxanne
Sagle went 2-for-3 with
II assists, P.J. Brown and Alonzo·
.sixlh with 1\vo run~'Df their own to . gle with two outs in the ninth:
a run and an RBI. Bobbi McGiiee
~ourning scored 17 ea.ch and Dan
tic the ·score at 3-3. Findlay came
Luis Alicea opened · the ninth
was 2-for-4 with a.double and two
ltfajerle came off the bench to score
right
back
with
a
pair
of
runs
in
the
with
a
single
off
Mike
Myers
(0-2)i
RBI.
Michele Ulmer was 2-for-4.
~ for the Heat.
·
bottoll)
half
of
the
~ixth
to
take
the
He
moved
to
third
on
a
sacrifice
and
In
game two, Evans pitched a
: "Once again we got ahead 15 or,
lead for good.
r
groundout,_and scored on Eldmonds'
complete game to get the win. She
1&gt;6 points, we just kept trying to put
It was Rio Grande's turn for liner that shon-hopped oil' the cen- struck out three batters and gave up
tLe pressure on." Miami coach Pat
comebacks Saturday as the Redmeil. ter-field fence.
just three hits as Rio Grande won 4J{iley said.
rallied
from
delicits
to
take
two
Bubba
Trammell
homered
for
the
I.
l Game 3 is Tuesday night at
games
from
Walsh.
Randy
Tigers.
in
the
fifth.
Hunter
hit
a
solo
In 'four of the seven innings.
Qrlando. •·
Kistemaker's two-run home run in homer and' Fryman hit a two-run dri- ,Evans retired the side in order.
: SuperSonics Ill, Su111?8
the
third and Kevin Green's RBI ~!n: ve off Allen Watson in the sixth, and
Roxanne Sagle went 1-for-2 and
, 1 A1 Seattle, Shawn Kemp had 23
.gle
in
the
sixth
carried
I~
Redmen
Clark
connected
on
reliever
Pep
scored
,a run. Robin Cordle was IP!lints and 15 rebounds and Gary .
to
a
6-5
win
in
the
ftont
end
of
the
.
Harris'
first
pitch.
for-3
,
tripled
and scored a run .'
Plyton scored 23 points to lead Seattwinbill. · •
.
· Royals 7, Athletics 1
·The Red women's chance . for a
tl. to a 44-poi'nt victory. ·
.
two
brought
about
a
dra·
Tim
Belcher
nearly
.
notched
his
return
to post-season play went by,.
.
Game
: The defending Western Confermatic
ending
as
the
Redmcn
fell
18th
career
shutout,
pitching
six.
the
boards
Saturday as Rio Grande
eOce champs, fastbreaking with
in
lhe
seventh
inning.
A
hittcr~hat
led
Kansas
Cil):..l)Ver
Oaksplit
with
the
University of Findlay.
behind
5-4
. a~ndon against ihe smaller Suns,
failed
atiemp~
to
squetze
home
the
land.
Rio
Grande
rallied
from a 5-0 deficit
· ~ 22 of. the game's first 24
tying run set t~e stage for freshman
Belcher (2-3) limited the A's to
in the fifth inning to tie game ·one 5·
pqints and siayed ahead by at least
to
be
!he
hero.
four
singles
until
the
,'ninth
inning,
5,
but Findlay scored twice over the
Shawn
Sommer
Jd points for the rest of the night.
Sommer
launched
the
lirst
pitch
when
Jose
Canseco·
doubled
with
tina!
two innings to take a 7-5 vic! Rex Chapman, who scored 42
from
Walsh
closer
Ralph
Bloom
into
·
one
out
and
scored
on
Matt
Stairs'
tory.
pdints and set a playoff record with
the late afternoon sky ~ the Red- singled with two outs.
Michele Ulmer's three-run triple
nifje threc' pointers in Game I, led
men
took
home
a
7-5
wm.
Joe
.
Vitiello
hit
a
two-run
single
iii
the
fifth tied the score for the Redth~ Suns with 18 points and wu 2•
for
the
visiting
Royals
and
Shane
women.
Jenny Murphy (8- 14) took
fo!-4 from l~·point range.
Rio
Grande
now
awaits
the
final
Halter
got
his
first
maj()f
league
RBI
the
los~.
,But Kevin .Johnson and Jason
regular season conference standinp w1·th a sq"ueeze
·
bunt.
Garne two was no contest as the
,·
.
Kijld were a combined 1-for-19
I
whi~h come out ater today (MonR•cen 7, Twills 3
Red women dismantled Findlay 9-1.
from · the noor. ~ohnson
sill
day)
to
find
OUI
if
they
cam
a
spot
in
Warren
Newson
broke
loose
with
'
Rebecca
Evans (9-3) pitched anothpoints and Kidd twQ.
·
the MOC tournament.
a horner1 double and single as Texas er complete game for the win.
bame 3 is Tuesday nisht at
Last
seuon,
the
Redtnen
upset
completed
its firSI sweep at the . "We're disappointed about not
Pbllenix.
top
seed
Mt.
Vernon
Nuarene
ColMetrodome
since May 1995. The . making the 'playoffs, but we 'played
' ....... 93, Hawkl 80
lep
in
the
openins
n)Und
befqre
·
Rangers
have
won five in a row and hard as a team 'this y~ar." said Rio
)'t Atlanta, the PistonS outscored
bowina out in lhe IICrlli·finllls.
the Twins have lost five strai1ht.
,· Grande head coach Angelo Pone.
Atlanta 29-15 in the founli quarter to
·
R8dmen
Mnior
fmt
baseman
Newson,
activated
from
the
dis"We have everyone except for
si~ thelllllltvu 1 ~~ to clillcb
landy
KiAemtllter
had
•
btltlner
lililed
listApril20,
wasjuit
1-for-13
~lisa
coming back next
tJ.i ben.CJ(.five llel'ies on their home ·Milt widiii!M '-"and* RBI. this season before geni111 three hits. year, so Sisson
we
'
re
confident
about our
COM. The 11111t two ...... will be
Klm•at• hit .368.
His ticbreakinc home run hiahlilht· · prospects for success." ·
.....,.. 81 The ,.... of Aubin
'l1lild
basellllll
Adlla
Welsh
hit
S·
from Ru!land• was the
HlkllapntUDJ with Clime 3 ,_, .'"""widlfaurdoubleuadllveiUII. ed 8 five-run rally in the eiJhtli
ISIOD;
......,
inning.
lone ~enior on the Rio Grande squad.
da9 nilht·

NBA

1 .

-

·

"Me lisa has been one of our top
.
players over the past four years
and
we'll miss her," said Forte. "She's
not only a great player, she's a !'inc
student and solid member of our
· "
campus .commumty.

a

•
I

'

/ '.

..

guer shouid dO, especially ~Ot a.;:•
eight-year \\eteran.''
. ''~
. In other ~~es, Atlanta ~t Sa~.
D1ego 2-0 on a· game shortened td
five innings btlcause of rain, New'
York beat Montreal 5-3 in' 10,
innings, P.ittsburgh beat Chicago 7_j:
0, San Francisco beat Houston 3:;c
and St. Louis beat Colorado 6'2-''
Philadelphia '~ game_ at Cincinnati;:
was postponed by raon.
·. '
Braves 2, Padres 0
1
Greg Maddux (3-1) allowed jus}'
one hit in a game called by rain in the,:
bottom of the fifth, pitching ttie'
minimum 15 batters in his _._22n~/
career shutout.
. .• :
Visiting
San
Diego
lost
its
,fiftH '
.
.
straight, and Padres first bas~mart 1.
Wally Joyner was placed in 'lhC 15~ ,
day disabled list after spraining his'
right ankle.
·
JA '
Atlanta set a team record with 'it/.
17th win in April, and the Braves~
17-5 record .is the,beJit. in li:a!lii/lise,.
history arter 22 gaines.
·~ ' 1 ' Chipper Jones hit a two -run'-dQ~, , •.
b!c ill the ,thi,rd· off Fe~pand 'ya!en:,:i
zucla (1 -3).
, ·•.
''
Mets 5, Ex~ 3 · .'." ' ·
Rcy Ordonez hit 'a t~orriJD,fiilgl~
in the IQth offlee Smith (0-l),
ing the i.OOOth relief appear~nce ·of'~
his career. Smith allowed )Jis lirsf'
two runs in 23 career appearan~-cs .at G:
Olympic Stadium.
·
. Greg McMichael ( 1-2) struck tlut ';
a career-high six in three shutout •
innings of relief. John Franco pitclk.'&lt;l ·~
a scoreless IOth for his lounh save. ·~·
Pirates 7, .Cubs 0
'·
Jason Schmid; ( 1-1) held Chica- r
go hitless until the si•th inning, and '
Kevin Elster and Jose Guillen home- , ·
red for v.isiting Pittsburgh. Eisler also •..
added a two-run double.
· "'
Amaury Tcleonuc~.· (0- 1 ), called &lt;. up Saturday from Triple-A Iowa, '·
struck OUI a career-high nin e in 6 2/3 I '
innings.
~·
I
·:~

to

.

ti!,k!J·.

I

p_~~yoffs ..•

I

-· ,,.·

B rn ·

&lt;.

tu~ber.

'

••'

'

..

Accelerate your aulD sales;· advenise in the newspaper.
Customers arc 7 times more likely to use the newspaper
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ad source • .

\J.

·The source people rely on.mo,t for
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.
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or shoppera

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~'
..

19%

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nm

•

~

Magazines

7%

usf!d

Get more impect In the newspaper.

1-1

•

Get mon ltnplltlt In .... _.,.,_.

Bubtblil

,........ ''WA
I 'he
MILWAUKEE BUCKS: A-.nc:od
lbe oaipOtioo af Mille Duoleavy, _.o

lf ~

"

71l(,

_1...._

Tuaolay'spmn
Miami II Orlando. 7 p.m
Atlucaat Derroil, ap.m.

.j

I'
I

list. Recalled RHP Robcn Pet10n from
Sy~Q~:IIIl: of the lnkmllional J...aaur. ·

York Ill Oarlone, i p.Al.
Utuh Ill. A. Clippm. 10:30 p.m.

New Jenoy 4, IO)IwiOI-4-1

- '

m.:nt.

Miami I04. OriAIIIo Ml: Miami lcld r;,
Rrie1l·O
L.A. Lokm 107. Ponland 9l: LA
Lakcnlea&lt;lr&lt;ries2-G
Chi.:aao 109, Washinaron 104 :
Chi"''o leodueri., 2.()
·
Oaroia 9J, Atlama 80: series tied 1-1
Seanle 122. Phoenill78; serie11iN I·

~w

I '

Place your .ads where more people can see them-...and ac1.
71% of U .S: adults read a1 least one weekday edition of a
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64% on a typical Sunday.

BuebaU

Saturday's ftrsl·round S&lt;ores

Great
coverage.

., I

'

Transactions

NBA playotTs

Sunday '• scores

Allanta 2, San Diego 0(411:1 inn.-min)
N.Y. Mets l. Montreal], 10)
Philadelphio 01 CINCINNATI tppd ..
min)
·
St. l..ooi• 6, Color.ldo 2
Pin•burah 7. PMcaao Cubs 0
San Fmncitco 3. 1-baaoa 2
Aoridn 4. l.os Anaelrs 3

Coloredo (W'ript 3-1)

N.Y Mcts lCI11rk 2- llul CINCIN ·

Houshlfl % .

l 'ulnmlln

. Sunday's scores ·

6' :

.IK2

~:

l)alllt5l EdmunltiO 2: ~&gt;eri~ s til.-d .~ - .\
Decruit :t St. Lnuts I; Dclrttil wins
SC riC S 4-2
AniJIICim ) . Phocnill 2 cOl'); SCri\..OS
lh:d ) - ~
Burraln J. Ou:.waO; ~~Cric ~ w.:d ~ - :'I

NA11 (M"'JM 0-2). 1 : )~ p.m.

~~!

Saturday's scores
CINCINNATI tO, PhilllllolphL1 2

(llorripolo

(Wu\1 0.0 •. I :,.15 p m.
Monu~al (8ulh11Jer I&lt;H 111 Chir.:A£0
Cubs (Tmduc:l 0.1), 2:20p.m.
Sun Diean (Hamih\)n 1-1J al Flurh.hl
(Brown 2·1 ). 7:0S p.m.
Pittsburah (CordO\'a 1-2) nl PhilndctrhiR (Madura 1·2). 7:05p.m. ·

2\:

Wtslem Division

Snn fmnc:ISI,."' ........ 16 5
Culomdo ....... ........ IS 6
La• Angeles ...... ... 11 · 10
Si.ln Ok~o , ... ...... ... •&gt; 12

CnluraUn 6. Chicugu
WinS liCrlC li 4·2

Pomeroy • Mkkllport, Ohio

.JJrewers rally to top fribe 6-5

.
1817

'

NSA playoffs continue

.

Aprll21,1117
.

The Daily Sentinel. The Welcome Medium.

c)GiftiEII'
·~n:t:

JN 1991i Af,J;. E,lmiMtn, S.I'M'J h)· C... nnnl RC1f.tn:h. l nlcf'lit~ by St:ht~tn.m . Munc~.

.............."'"

J

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�•

....

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: MCMC111y,Aprll28,1897

•

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Pomeroy • Mklcil•port, Ohio

: !P~~~·~·~n.~~Dm~~~~~~~~~~~~· ~··~--~------------~~--~~--~~~m~l~r!oy~·~M~~~~~-~~~~~·~Oh~~~----~~~~--~~~._JM~o~~~~~·r~·~A!
..~~~.~~1~1~17

The Dally Sentinel• P~~g~ 7

hio.·News in Brl~f.·---. ·Prosecution

s.ttlor Hall of Fame to Induct 11

i~;ok..~~~~
n~:,v~~~~oans
will inducted into the Senior CitThe induc;tecs will be honored May 28 at
Martin Janis Senior cenbe

lhe

ter on the SUite fairgrounds.

.
The hall was established in I 977 to recoanize ~~~:hievernenll and con.
'tributions by
Ohioans. Since then, 207 people have been inducted. ·•
This year's inductees arc: ·
.
·
• D9ris Blackston, 72, the first woman mayor of Sidney. '
j
• Elsie Calamese, 80, a community activist in, Sandu~ky.
• WilliamS. Derry, 72, fomier 'president of Van Wen City Council and
.the Ohio State Pharmaceutical Association.
· • Orville R. Ferguson, 80, of Portsmouth, founder of the Miami·Valley Minority Business Association.
. .
• Dr. Willard ~maid, 73, of Columbus, medical director and chair·
man of the Heinzerling Foundation. ·
· ·
·
• Edward J. Groening, 63, of Cleveland, Simpson United Methodist
Church activist,
• Elsie Helsel; 81, Qf Athens, advocate for rights of the disabled.
•MargaretHunt,82,executivedirectoroftheSouthToledoSeniorCenter and promoter of senior activities in the Toledo area.
• Cecil A. Maxwell, 74, former mayor and current Cardington Village
Council member and president of the Delaware/Morrow County Mental

allier

He~I~! ~Swick, 80ofNewark, longtimescoutmasterw.iththeBoy
0

Scouis of America.
.
.
• John B. Williams, ?4, of Columbus, co-founder of the South Linden .
Blo~kwatch Alliance and the Grearcr Linden Gateway Community.

Sentencing prompts attorney to faint
COLUMBUS -An attorney fainrcd at a·senrcncing heari~tg for his'
client, who was convicted of tax evasion. ·
·
·
Eric Nordman, 41 , of Worthington, collapsed at a hearing for Vivian
Rice.
'.'II was a freak thing," he said. "I think my kneesjustlockedup."·
UoS. District Judge Joseph, Kinneary recessed the hearing Friday for
15 minutes while emergency- personnel r:evived No,rdman. The hearing was
reconvened and.Nordman was allowed to sit through the 'rest of the proceeding, which lasted two minutes. .
.·
. .
Kinneary sentenced Ms. Rice, 50, to six months in prison, Her feeler'
al sentence is to run concurrently with a state prison term of·as much as
25 years she alrQidy is serving.
The earlier prison term • results from her 1994 conviction on theft
charges. Rice helped John Babel, 54, steal $800,000 from the state Police
and Firemen's Disability and Pension Fund. Babel, the pension system's
former assistant finance director, is serving a seven-year ~rm for his role
in the theft.

Man ·c ritical after plunge to shore

promises more
·I
t•
.
•
M
\I • h t • I
g fl m eS 1m0 ny 1n · . C v eIg . Fl a ,'· ·,
•

By PAUL QUEAAY
AIIIOclldllcl , ..... Writer .
DENVEll _ SICJI by step, wit·
ncsses of the Oklahoma City bombina'already have painted for jurors a
vivid picture of a normal dlly at the
ufficc that was transformed into .a
bloody nishtm~. .
Nine witnesses took the stand Fri·
day ai the trial of Timothy McVeigh.
They describe.d how they greeted coworkers, ~ped their kids off at day
care ,..ct sipped coffee before the
blast ripped through the Alfred p,
MurraliFedcral Building on April 19.
1995.
'
McVeigh .faces murder and con·

spiracy charges in the ~J[plosion that blast. Her voice sometimes shook as
killed 168 people and injured l)un- she added a brief description of each
dreds of others.
· ·
person's job. ·
·. . . .
The trial was to resume today with
Michael Norfleet, then a recnutina
rcstil)'lony froli\ Danny Atchley, a f4c officer for the Marine Corps, had
department photograplter who p,ulled · stopped 10 speak to his colllliUII)dina
injured children from the rubble.
officer when the bomb eit.
·
Grim details of the explosion and
"I tOQk a piece of glass fron\the
the deaths brought ~ars to some in top o(my head, and it flayed open rny
the counroom Friday. As witnesses right eye," Norfleet said, "It Clll an
testified, U.S. Attorney Patrick Ryan arrcrv in my.forehead. It cut an artcrv
had them m~k il floor plan of the here in rny cheek; and at the .same
building with spots where theinol· time, it cut an anery on my wnst.
leagues died.
"I could feel the life ebb out of my
Susan Hunt ended her account by veins. 1 just knew that I was losing
reading the names of 3S fellow . strength and that if 1 ·s~~~ in the
Department of Housing and Urban building, that! would die.
.
Development employees killed in the
Norfleet said he followed a tnul of
•

blood down the blliklina's step~ IIIII ·
fOIIIId help. Doeton Iller told him he
hid lost nearly half hia blood,
Helena Garrett, whose 16-DICIIItb- ·
old son, Tevin, died in ifle blliklin1's
day-&lt;:arc center, recalled droppinJ
him off and turning to look' at !Jim,
throuJh floor-to-c:eilina windows as
she walked ~~~:ross. the· street to her.
offic;e. · ·
. .
,
A fe"'' Jllinutes IIIIer, she frantically searched the rubble' for Tevin and
wat~hed rescue workers lay olii, the
bodies of his schoolmates.
"A lady came, a nurse," Ms. Gar.
rett said. "She starred tagging dur
babies; and riahtthen I realized they
were dead.''
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Mom's eyes .r•vete• . on aug ter s a ege . . I er

·TAMPA, Fla. (AP) ~ Even with
legs shackled a!ld hands cuffed, Glen
Rogers manages 10 saunter into coUrt.
His long 'blond hair pulled into a
ponytail, he keeps his jaw clenched
and his blue eyes locked in a cocky
stare. ·
·
Maty Dicke's eyes stare back..
They never leave Rogers. Suspected
of killing four women in four stares,
Rogers is charged with fatally stab- ·
bing her daughrcr, Tina Marie Cribbs,
and leaving het ·body in the bathiub
of a cheap·motel in an industrial area
at the city's edge.
·
.
"I never move my eyes," Dicke
said. "I know this when I stare at
him : When he looks at my eyes, he
looks at rny daughter's. And I don't
want him ever to forget it." ·
Dicke has been in court, staring at
Rogers, through months of pretrial"•
motions and delays . .On ·Monday, ·
she'll be there for the stan of his firsl·
degree murder trial.

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Roger$, a carnival worker, is ~lis· body was f~nd in the bathtub of:her p~ng, we went shOpping. If I went olit
pectedin a killing spree committed_as Jackson, Miss., .apartment Nov. 3. to dinner, we .went out ~o dinner.
he drifted acro~s th~ country !n lh,c, Police said she and Rogers had lived She'.~ always been marna's little
fall of 1995. Pohce ptclccd up his tnul together si~ce meeung at a state fatr gtrl. .
.
,
m !ampa that ~ov; 7 wlie,n a morel weeks earlter.
.
Dtcke re~~d her daug~!er s
matd found Cnbbs ~y m a room
• Andy Jiles Sutton, 37, whose . absence, but pohce assumed Cnbbs,
rented under Rogers name. He had . stabbed body was found on her punc- a 34-ycitr·old banendcr who hung out
been se~n leaving the day before in tured warcrbed in lhcAir Force town at rough bl!fS, probably was "just
Cribbs'.white Ford Festiva.·.
of Bossier City, La., on Nov. 9.
having a good time and I didn't know .
A national manhunt began, and ·
Rogers is also suspecrcd in ihe it," Dicke sai~.
Rogers, 34, wascapturedaweeklat· 1993 slaying {)f his 71-year·old
Qtcke spentth"tday ·and·lhe nel[l
er in Keniucky a~:r a 100-mJ)h c• . · roOmmate, whose decomposed body searching on h~ own and returned
·chase. He was drivmg the Fesuva.
was found wrapped in a sheet in an home Tuesday JUSt before the 6 p.m.
~e defenditnt was extt'tldited to abandoned KentuCky cabin.
news. A friend c~l!ed llild told her to
Flonda fiv~ months later when c;:iov.
. In Tampa, Dicke k:ne\\1 her daugh· tum on the televiStC)n. .
. . .
Lawton Chtles •$fCC.d to let ·tt,te otJt. tcr was in trouble Mooday morning, . . A reporrcr was .sayma a se~al
er states try Rogers tf he avotds the Nov. 6 when she didn 'I come over ktller was on the, loose. Poltce
death penalty in Florid&amp;., •
for coffee after a night out at the described his Tampa victim as
Besides Cribbs, Rogers is charged Showtown U.S.A. bar, just down "lane,Doe;'' in her mid·30s, with nd·
with murder in these cases:
U.S. 41 from her horne.
dish·brown .hair, ; a missing front
• Sandm.Gallagher, 34, a barmaid
"Her and !.had never missed a day tooth and a homemade tattoo of a
found raped and strangled in her having coffee, never missed a day cross on her left shoulder. .
burning pickup in Van Nuys; Calif., without speaking five, 10, I5 times,"
"I was scream
. ing," Dicke said. "I
on Sept, 29, 1995.
·
Dicke said. "We were kind of Hke said, 'Dear God!.'Don'ltcll me this I~
• Linda Price, 34, whose stabbed sisters, best of friends. If I went shop- ·
·
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· PAINESVILLE- A mat\ who plunged 100 feet down a cliff onto rocks
along the Lake Erie shore was in critical condition at a Cleveland hospi·
tal.
Scott Lewis, 22, of Painesville, had to be rescued by firefighters and ·
the Coast Qu!lfd. Authorities said Lewis was at a party when he apparently walked too close to the cliff behind the qouse and fell arou.nd 3 a.m.
·Saturday.
Two firefighters had to rappel down the cliff to reach Lewis; who was
then loaded into a basket and floated to a Coast Guard ship, The ship took
Lewis to Fairport Harbor, where a helicopter picked him up an(ltook him
to MetroHealth Medical Center in Cleveland.
The rescue took about 45 minutes.
Lewis was in the hospital's intensive care unit Sunday, ~uffering from
hypothermia .and broken bones, said a nursing supervisor who declined ..
to give her name.
· ·
.
Firefighters also rescued Kevin Broi&gt;IJI, 21, a friend of Lewis who used
a rope to climb down the ctiti to help Lewis but was unable to get back
up.
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•••The FasteSt ·
~~ewiflt·~Bond•· •ealership In .Ohio!!···:

Four killed'at KentJo be recalled
KENT- Four students killed during a protest 'at Kent State Univer·
sity will be remembered this weekend at an annual, three-day tribute fea·
turing music by Crosby, Stills and Nash and a candlelight vigil. ·
The May 4 Task Force, a student organization that has organized the
event since 1975, will honor ·the memories of the slain students: Allison .
Krause, Jeffrey Miller. Sandra $cheuer and William Schroeder.
Nine other students were injured oti May 4, 1970, when the Ohio
National Guard opened fire .after being called out to quell a campus protest .
against the Vietnam War:
.
All of the events will be free and open to the public .
An arts tribute wi.ll feature poets. musicians and visual anists on Friday. On Saturday, a panel discussion, "Casualties of War: Uprooting
Racism and Colonia] ism ... will take place at the Student Center.
A commemoration begins at noon Sunday on the commons below the
May 4 Memorial. In the event of rain, events will be moved to the Stu·
dent Center Ballroom. Crosby, Stills and Nash will perform around 2 p.m .
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Mailbox vandalism irks residents
r&gt;!~ION - Marion County homeowners are no fans of mailbox base·
ball .
In less than a year, vandals drove past the rural home of Donald Bum·
gamer, an assistant principal at River Valley High School, and smashed
his mailbox II .different times. usually with a baseball bat.
·
''I'm talking about putting it up one day and it goes down the n~xt day,"
he .said.
·
·Bumgarner now rents a post office box .in New Bloomington.
"It's a major inconvenience.':: Bumgarner said. ''Sometimes I can't get
to the post office before it closes. A lot of til!'es I don't get the mail for
two or three days ."
.
. Since the beginning of the month, Marion County sheriff's deputies
have received 13 complaints from victims of mailbox vandalism, said
Chief Deputy Tim Bailey.
..
·
"It's been a problem as far back as I can remember," he said. "We've
always had a greater problem in the spring and summer. It's.usually kids
using a big baseball bat, brick'or some type of object..They smash it and
move on . About the onfy thing we can do is continue· to patrol."
Postal employees have had their own share of the problem. Catolyn
Ellwood, supervisor of customer se..Vice at the Marion post office, !!aid
she has rt;placed about two dozen mailbOxe~ at her rural residence over
the years.
.
.
·
·
Vandalizing a mailbox technically is a federal offenSe, but people
accused in such cases usually arc charged with criminal damaging, a misdemeanor punishable by a line. Bailey said.
·
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UNTIL
'MIDNIGHT

··1997 LINCO
TOWN CAR
997 THUNDERBIRD

·1997 CONTOURGL

tilt, cruise, power locks and
auto, AM/FM cassette,
.wheels, rear spoiler.
MSRP Before Discount

cruise, power locks, AM/FM
lcassetl:e, anti-lock brakes.
MSRP Before Discount
$17,200

16,683

•,

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UNDERNADA
RETAIL ·VAL.UE
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DOwn Pymt........ ;....'20QQ
Ref iec. O~p ...:........ 'a15
Total due at

MANSFIELD - A Richland County.· grand jury will decide in May
whether to charge a fourth person in the slaying of a 17-year-old girl. .
Prosecutor James Mayer Jr. said Friday that he will present a.case
against Shawn McArdle, 18. Mayer is asking the jury to charge McAr·
die with one count each of obsiru.ction ofjust.ice and of conspiracy t\1 commit murder in the death of Amanda French .
. Heather Bunn, 17, was convicted in February on an aggravarcd mur· ·
der charge. She was given 23 years to life in prison.
Two other people, Cassandra Clark, 22, aDd Claudia Spicer, I7, have
' been ctmvicted as accomplices. In March, Ms. Spicer received the same
sentence as Ms: Bunn, while Ms. Clark was senrcnced to five years on a
compiracy charge. ·
.
'
·
The murder' revolved around Amanda's relationship with Heather's ex·
· boyfriend, William Lee Kelly. 28.
Authorities said the crime was motivated by Ms. French's relationship
with MI. Bunn's former boyfriend.
''We wanted to try the mttin participanll rtrst ... then focus on the seconcllry players" such ai McArdle, Mayer said.
.
If convicted, McArdle ci!Uid face two to 10 years in pri1011.
-Tilt AalitiDI Is tl PriM

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In Stock Units • •• First Come Gets The .Pick, Over 40 Units In Stock

$19,055.00

Charges considered In girls' slaying

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ON
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. All PRE-OWNED .VEHICLES
.
...
NLY UNTIL MIDNIGHT- APRIL 29

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MUST HAVE CREDITAPPROVALON THIS DAY

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�By .TheBend

The Daily Senti~~l

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. . . . . Aprll . . 1...,

The Dally Sentinel_e

................. 1........

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L~

Yvette Young named Volunteer of the Year

"-:~'

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Umettont • Gmel
Dirt • Sind

885-4422 .

POMEROY, OHIO

· lbtdllttor Repelr It: R~nl
Monct.y-Frlday • 8!90 e.m,· 4:30p.m.
Saturday - 8:00 a.m. • 12 noon

4endlon Motor.tSalee &amp; Repairs
c•nlng Septic Syetema
Port·A..John • Rentale • Serviced·WNk!y .
NO.Extra Chal'gl! for Evenlnge or Weeklnde
24 Hr; Prompt Service
7 Days A Week

,.

oJnllrlor It Exterior
.PalnU111
Alao Concretll Work
(FREE ESnMATES)
V.C, YOUNG Ill
~215

Pomeroy, Ohio

250 Condor Street
Ponieroy, Ohio 45769
A Divtalon on Nichola tAial, INc. .
Phone:.614: 992·2406
fiiX: 304-n3-586t

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. POMEROY RESIDENT . HONOR~D • Yvette Young, right,
lcceptlll plaque pri'aentecl by Dr. Mlchatl Dey, euperlntendent
of tha 0.111~ Developmei del c.ntef, for her ielectlon aa the
lnclvldulll Voluntwr of the Year. She lea reeldent of Pomeroy and
• senior at the Unlverilty of Rio. Grande.

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

a ••..,
~
ca••....,

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Bod~51aop

11112-2772
· 8:00 e.m.-3:30 p.m.

eRI!IIacet~~et~t Wiltlows

eW!Garages
•Stn ...,, &amp;

Quality Work at
. a Fair Prlcel
550 PaRe St,
Mldclleport, Oh. 45780
Horne Ph.

614·992·3120

Windows

(No Sunaay Calls)

Don Gory, Owner

..... Atldltloas

41-

T.K•
HAULING

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,I

JEFF

INSURANCE

113 W. 2ND ST.

POMEROY, Otl.

614-992-5479

•NewHomea

•Decks
•Roofing
•Siding

•Addltl~na

• Urnestone
· • Gravel
• Refuse • Etc.

•Remodeling
•Garages
"Stop putting off those much needed
home improvemen11 •."CaU Today!

992·2753

Free Eetlinatea

992·5635

Will haul- Just call.
Reasonable Rates

,614) 742•3800

'-===·=====.I
(Lime Stone·
Low Rates)

DU'I

Quam

•Small Engines
•Lawn Mowers
•Chain Saws
•Weed Eaters
2 inl, off Rt. 7,
Leading Creek Rd,

Raan•a
Fr~

Estimates

614/992-7274

742·2925
. "w.s.wrou

Roofing- Gutters~
Siding

·EVENING MEAL
at
MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR CEllfTE.(\.
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy
Thesdays and Thursdays during

April Serving from 4:30 • 5:15
D.onatlon $4.00 for meal
eC011jllfer Tnilhlg

Set-1ps
eflstallatiort
,tiJpgtades
eMilorRepalrs

. SOLii) VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
.26 YEAR$tN
BUSINESS
•I

. CHAPTER 7 • CHAPTER 13

I

DIREl:T

ellllf'llt Sellp Help
Day Ph. 992-3871

-

Howard L Wrltaeel

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

Quality Window ~ys1tents
110 Court St

UILIIIe

i*CIIIftll

Downepoute

Trailer &amp;

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

HouMSitea

Tired of paying high
coat labor rates?
Hook-up chargee?
We'll match or beat
any other
. , competitor'• price?

R•sot~~~ble R11tH

JoeN.Savre

Sayre Trucking
814-742-21

,33 AUTO CLINIC &amp;
24 HR. TOWING
'SR 33 Pomeroy, Oh.

Pome~oy .

992~1330

Tabhie for $10

,.

M-S9-S

Cell

3351 Happy Hollow RDMI
Middleport, Ohio 41710 '
New H - , Adclltlotw,

WILLUULiUft CALL, '

Rocillng, Sieling,
POle Blmt, Dtcb,
Plllntlng, OlrltgM, .
PorchoL

992·70:74 '

,_A Flit E II u.-

Gravel, Umeatone,
Topeoll, Fill blrt,
S.nd. No Minimum.

814-7~

814-742-3324
614-742-30711 .

614·992·3470

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
·New Homes
•Garages .
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
.
ESTIMATEES

·985-4473

••-!IIIIa

com'*""' or....,

m
'Q · ,

SHARPENING
SERVICE
HUPP'S
CUSTOM
·SHARPENING

Ucensett • Bonded
Insured

MGA Construction Services
Electrical Plumbing .. Carpentry
Repairs ""' Ccmverslons ;.. Remodels
N

H..blls ......, ..

Kt!Untry Klub

Syracuse

Goff Sales, Club
~epair, Custom

Orders, Awards,
Engraving

.!ohn Teaford
C.hctstar,

YOUR MESSAGE .

...

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...

Now Open For Spring
Sea• on
• Pansies $6.50 flat
• All vegelable &amp; bedding

planls $6.50 llal
·
• Blooming &amp; Folage
.8alketl $5.75- $6.75
· &lt;4 Jn. As8orl Pols
85e ·$1.25
-Rubber trees &amp;elephant

oShrubbery
We honor Golden
Buckeye cants
0!*1 Dilly 9-5 Soo 12·5
411!fn

$7.00 PER DAY.

•

Ohio

992·5776

aara$5.50
o&lt;;amas $2.00 ea.

CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF

.

Ho!Met4-387-t388

t'

IICI WILIII
PAlIIIII
Auto, Truck, Rnlclentlll,

Comiiiii'CIII

1 Middleport,

Ott• .
814-7414707
Racine OH 11
Hill

LINDA'S
.PAIIUING

ProvJde ..rvl.c11 tWice a month
or •• nMdecf. Muat provide writ·

Kinono To atvoa.,ar ·To Good
.

ten documentation of r..ldenta

.

tvaluated andlar treated for Wit
accoundng P."rpoan II poutblo,

Malt Hundllt eog:·Mlllld 2 Yooro
Old, Love Ktdo, Vory Frtondtr,

vendor 10 bill Medlcaldlllodlcare

and/or anw third party agencl...

814-Ms-5170.
60 Lost and Found
FOUND: Pager at Harmon Pork
bal field. Identity 1 claim at Pt

lnt,rllted persona contact 304-

875·0880 EXT. 102 or 108
8:00am-4:00pm Mon-Frllor bid
lorm. Lakin Hoopltal to on EEO
Employer.
Ploa-1 Rogtow, 2llO Main St
Conoultlng Spieth Theroplot to
Loot, Cotuo, female, Union ~voJ work at lakin Hoopllal, Lakin,
tolulberrr Avo., vicinity, chlld'o WV. Mull be certiriod thoraptot.
B14,8g2·4551, 814-DD2· Provide ••••leo• twice a month
or81-2-5al4.
or 11 neoded (approxlmatttr 11
1.hourllmonlhl. Muot tuovldo wrlt70
Yard Sale
tan documentation or reotdanto

;;.;;.=.;;.;,.;==;..;;..--...,

===;::;:::=;===
lwaluar.d andlor trN.ted for coet
. GallipoliS
accounting purpooes. 11 posllble,
· · &amp; VICinitY

--;~~;~;-·I

Church Yard Sate: Friday May 2.
11187, t-4; Saturdo)', tolay 3, 11187,
8-3. Houoehotd noma, Toyo,
Clothl~g. Al10 Bou Sate ltomo,
Popcorn a Pop. 3773 aeorge'o
~~~~'\ ~\!::: 1 • Att
Moy ·~~~ 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 0:00A.M.
To
8 P.M.
41 Chillicothe
::._
Clol~lng,
~dutto a Road,
Mloc.

vendor 10 bill Modlcaldllot.,tlcate
ond!or any third party ogonclu
875,0860
Interested pereons
EXT · 102
conllct
or 304109
8:00am-4:00pm. Mon·Frl lor bid
lorm. Lakin Hoopltol to·on EEO
Employ•. .
•
Coornoto!Ogioll Neodod Full And
Part·Time Guaranteed Wages
Raid Ver:ationo, et.l-448·7267.
DRIVEASWAH'IID
local P81rotaum Diotrlbutar lookIng For Ouallflod Cbl Drivari.
Blnofito, Competitive Wageo. ~
opond To Ba• ct.A 410, c/o GaiU·
polio Dally Tribuna, 825 Third
lwlhle, Gaillpotlo, OH 458:11.
Earn S1,000 Weekly Stuftlng Envelopes At Home. Stan Now. No
Experience. Free SuppUtl, lnlo~

No Obligation. Send LSASE To :
ACE, Dept: 1351, Bax 5137, Ola·
mond Bar, CA 91785.
Pomeroy,
Mlddltpon
Easy Wo•kl Excollont Part ~ •.
semble Producto at Homo. Call
&amp; VIcinity
Toll Flee 1-800-487-5566 EXT.
All Yord SetH lluol Bo Ptld to 12170.
Advan... DNdllno: 1:OOpm tho
tl•r lttfDre the ad Ia to run, AVON I All Areas I Shirley
Sund•J l llondiJ edlllon, Spears, 304-875-14211.

. 1:00j.olll Frlcloy.

Rain or lhlne· oaraga llle, four

lamttr, tormorly Jo'o Glfl Shop,
Syracuoo. Tuooday and Wod·
nolday, 2Dih·30th •.Shorts, good

Able· Avon Rapresenratlvaa
needed . Earn money tor Chrlltmas bills at homelat work. 1-aoo.

092·8358 or 304·882·2845, Ind.
Rep.

dresies, jaana, · taenag.er'a
cloth411, children'• clpthes. dish·

rnon'l ohlns.

so

Publtc

sa1e

and Auction

Adrnlnfwtrwfln AIII.MJt
F?otblgn· A.drrintsrrativa
Aulatant For The Galtla -Jackaon Treatment Alternatlvtl To

s-t Crlnie Program (TASCI

IIIINIBmt!ltJ·

Benefill.

lull lime aucrloneer, complete

~~~~~~r~vt~oo~
. ~ltlc~e.~304·
no~e~d
&amp; West Virginia,

~90

304-773-5447,

I

wanted to Buy

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•..,.

ciahtt OegrM Or Equivalent Plu•

3 To 4/Galli
Year•
or Related
Expert-1
ence
a Counry
Raaldeney
Valid Dri...,.llcenso.

KncpwledQe·

Office

/Clerical,

614-696·1376
Lawn Mowing &amp;
Landscaping

10%0ffAny
Service to New

AbiOIUIO Top Donor: All u.S: Sit~ Spreadsheets. Ability To Typa 50
ver And Gol.d Colna, Proofaela, Words Pot MinuiO.
Olarnondo, Anotque J-lry, Gold
Rlnga, Pr•1G30 U.S. Currency,

&lt;Mowing ·.
{Relldlntllll Commercii~
•Weedeatlng
•Tree Trimming
Shrubbery
Maintenance
Plan Ahead, Call today
lor tree Hllmata.

SAVE
TIM'S CUSTOM
CARPET

Conduct

tistical And Direct Service ReAntique•. furniture, Qf811, china,
And Prepare All Purchase
coin a, toya, lampa, guna, toola, · pons
Order&amp;
eotatoo: aloo appraluls, Ooby·

Martin, 814-1182·7441.

Antlquea, top price• paid, RiverIne Anttquea, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Russ Moore owner, &amp;U -992-

2526.
Clean lale Model Cars Or
Trucka, 1890 Models Or Newer,

URRY'S
LAWN CARE

RiePRnalbi!Hin;

Starling, Etc. Acqullltiono Jewelry All Clerical Aspects 01 Tho or.'
· M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151.S.cond fica, Enrer Client Oa1a Into The
A......,, Galllpolio, 814-«8-2842.
TASC tollS-System, Prepare Sta-

Gallia -Jaclcson TASC Ia An
Equal Opporlunlty Employer

Smith Buick Pondac. 1900 Eost· Funded By Tho Ohio Doparlmant
01 Alcohol And Drug Addiction
Services Through The Ga!lla .
J &amp; D'o ~.ulo Pallo. Buying oat. Jackson - Mei~s Board Of Alco;=clu: Selling porto. 304· hol, Drug Add 1c~ on And Mental
Health Services.
Wanted Timber &amp; Or Timber APPLICATIONS Will Be Accept·
Land, Profalllonal Services, od Until Thursday, M, 1, 1997,
Mead Paper Woodlands, 814- For The Pool Manager PositiO n ..
772-M!e.
At London Pool For Tho 1997
Swimming Season. Resumes, In·
Wanted To Buy Uood Mobile eluding
Ellperience, Training And
Homll. 'Call: 111 .. · UIS-G175 Or Recommendaliona Are To Be
304-87!&gt;5D85.
Mailed Or •Submitted To Janice
Wantad To Buy: We Bur Junk Zwilling, Clerk 'Treasurer, Vlllsge
Caro 814·446·f'ltoRT, Or 614·388- 01 Syrac use, f.1unicipal Bldg.,
Srracuse, Ohio 4577,9. ,
llllfl2.
Wlnttd: Ulld Hant.vood Flooring Food Service At The Unlvarall)'
In Goad Condition, Call 814·245· Ot Rio Grande Now. Accepting
am Av...,o, Gatipotill.

5887,

E~1PLOYMENT

Applications Far Kltcnen H•lp. ·•
Sodexho Food Service, Unlvefll·
ty 01 Rio Grande, 814·245·5880

EOE.

·

SERVICES

110

Help Wanted

Juit off Bradb~o~ry Rd.
(look for signs)
Middleport, OH
614-992-5379
Day &amp; Evening Hra.
3121117 1 mo.

HOWARD

EXCAVATING CO.
Driveway Llmeetone
Complete HOUM
and Trailer Site
Work, Bulldozing,
Bllckhoe, Treckhoe:
Septic Systems
· lnetalled

BOTTLED WILL POWER I LOSE
up to 30 poundo, 30 DAY MON·
EY BACK GUARANTEE! Natural,
Doctor Recommended, ·114-441 ·
1U82.FtoolllrTjlin.
CAIII.E TV OIID£R TAKERS

life Guard Ap~icationa Ar• Be· .
lng Accepted For London Pool !0

Eorn $15 ·$18 Par Hour+ Com- s,riCUII For Thil Summor, Sub- •
mlnlone. Extremoty High Cuo- mrt Appllcotiono, Including Trainrom•r Demand, No 0Mtnignt Ing And Elpartonca lntormattan,
Trent. lmmedlltt Opening~. To Janice Z..itllnt, Village Clerk,
C.ndldatoo Muot Bt Avoilobta To ·Trteaurer, At The Svrecuu Mu· ·
Sllrtl'aklllUIIng Poaaram Now.
CALL PIIUL Tni.L FlEE
1 Ill 4D•7371

nlclpallluildlng.

Noodod 10 ladlao To Soil ~von

(614)992~~ ' Camoterr ·satoa, ...., body Col 814-4411-3358,
- I t , 81.-..7440.

""' clDudy dGy,

6riPur.

.

Rick I'Hroon Auction Compony, au•neeugmr

A tpHHl pow jo6 .oil
make•il-111

113,200 •

't8,200 According To Expori·
ence "nd Education 135 Hours
Per Wook. /County Employee

50%·75%

The

r, Golf Lasons

.. .
.:'

E~. ·

Conoultlno Phyolcat Therapjll to
Hall ~kill Pupploo, Stx Weeki work 11 lakin Hoopltol, lakin,
Old Wormed, Free To Good WV. Mull be cordlled thoraplot

Accounting, Word Proceulng 1

·- 992·2483 ·.

-D.IIItllll ·&gt;

... ..._ ....... 1.,...

what nolo, microwave, lamps,
r'::::::::::::::;'1'"
antique open 30 ;anon crock,

949·2647..,_

992·2161

..H_.I.,...vt••ls

C111 U.

RUMMAGE SALE
FLEA MARKET
Saturday, May 3
9:00.4:00
SEN,OR CITIZENS
CENTER .
Mulberry Helghta,

KINGS'

'

Safra.-ek

(614) 592·5025
Athe•s, Ohio

Ohio

WYI023477

Guttara

311794/IFN

Attorney

PRil:ES~

Umeatone &amp; Gravel
SeptiC Systems

949-2168

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

ATHENS .
GWSMASTERS

\

"FAentRY

Eve. Ph. 949-2534
Brian Ancleflon

WICKS
HAULING

Pu6fic is inVite/

.

'ottanlwan/Soltw..

CCL hears about dyslexia

•

MIDDLEPORT

I"'

com. mun1•ty 'caIe.·ndar·- --------,.--

Ollie.,

D. Gea~'s

CELLULAR-PHONES Simi'S

992·7275 (Brenda)

Project officials honored ·

Downing, Chllds,
Mullen, Mn•aer

FREE ESnMATES

53T BRYAN PLACE

614-992·7643

360• Communications

Call
992-6342 (Diane)

I&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSUlATION

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
·Garages • Replacement Windows
," · Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
.FREE ESTIMATI;S

may affect SSI benefits

--

o~~oonno

614-992·7119

.BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~

Big Bend Fabrication,
Maddne &amp; Welding Shop

Ann
Landers

-·

t£1ecb lull&amp; Plumbing

Conoultlno OccupoU.not T lllot to work al ~kin Ho'l'!tal,
lakin, WV. Mutt ~~ cordiiH
tllertpiiL Pravlde NrYINIIIIICI
~1 w..tc. Muat prov~ written
S.V..U !11)1tS 1111
doc:umentaU.n or r - • -•·
ualod ondlor troat.d lo1 coot ac4D
G!vuw8y
counting purpoooo. II pooolljjo,
- r to bill toledlc:aldiModlcare
Pllpploo: 2Home
L-..With
I 4· and/or any third perty -teL
S.tklno
Children,
lntertsrad per&amp;Ona contact 30•·
11-1-1107.
875,1880 EXT 10Z or 10g
8:00om·4:00pm. tolon·Frllor bid
lorm. Lakin Hoopilal Ia en EEO
. . . . '101111 Ll'lwmt
. .Melt
Ctlt.JGO ... 1. . iEJI. 8140

Homo, 81.._._7,

Steel Sales, Weldin&amp; S.ppllu)atlllitrt.I Gu

Teens say new
sex test stinks

(

o1tooon Adcllllono

tNewGMtitle

'

'

•

' ,

985·3131

•'
.
~tplete Mril• Shop Service f•bricatlon

It's no secret that most people just field of dentistry, but I never
don'tlike going to the dentist.
was taught the important peoDr. Steve Lovell, who practices pie skills I learned · at Boot.
·dentistry ·in .Point Pleasant, W.Va. . · Kamp." ·
attended a Planned Marketing DenAccording to Dr. .Lovell,
tal Boot Kamp in Texas' this month Dental Boot Kamp is setting
to find out why this theory seems to the trend by which all profesbe common public opinion in many ' sionals should follow. In addi't
Dear .Ann Ltl!!ders; ,I just got
cases Afu;r four full days of class- tion to invaluable people skills
around to writing you about your
room sessions, along with sqme fun, training, Dr. Lovell and his
"Teen-Age Sex Test" and am plenty
Dr. Lovell and team have returned to staff were shown how to better
upset. Whoever decided on the scorthe community with a lot of enthusi- work as a tearrl, organizational
IM, Lor. Alltclel
ins system is Jiving in another cenasm and a new outlook on how his info'rmation outlining how his ·
n...s,-...... o..
tury or is just plain nuts.
a1or1 S)Wiicalc.
practice should be perceived.
office could operate more
A girl could, according to that test,
Dent al Boot Kamp was founded effectiv.ely, and even skills
1
· go out with.a me)nber of the opposite
by Walter Hailey, who created the that will help each team memsex (2 points), French-kiss in a reclin- . taken in context. For example, it's :
N.E.E.R. Marketing System and bcr in Dr. Lovell's practice
ing position (6 points combined), iake unlikely someone would have · ·sex ·
Steven Anderson, who is the ptesi- . relate better with family and
·
off
all he~ clothes (12 points alto- withoutalso taking off clothing, kiss· :
dent of the fast-growing TeKas- friends.
gether)
and still be considered "nor- ing in il reclining position, etc., all of
based company. Dentists from all
"There is no way to put a
mal and decent." Give me a break. which would mal&lt;e the score higher. ·
over the country also help facilitate value on what I have brought
Or, to figure it another .way, she .
I'm glad to know tha! the teen- ,
the program .
back to our community with
AnEND DENTAL BOOT CAMP - Pictured, left, at Dental Boot Kllmp are could he picked up by a stranger and . agers' in your school took it serious- ;
"It was amazing to find out that I me," Dr. Lovell said. ·
Steve Anderson, residant of Planned Marketing Associates; Rhonda Davis,
had so much to learn about my own
Patients of Dr. Lovell hyglenlet; Ti'icla Fenderboach, hyglanlet; Jodie Davie; office manager; have sex with him il!id still get a rat- ly,. ho~ever. That speaks well for :
practice," Dr. Levell said. "I am, very should soon be seeing the Walter .Halley, founder; Bonnie Glllleple, aseletant; Dr. Steve Lo\1111; and ing between "Normal and Decent" · New Trier. Keep readi11g:
and "Passionate and Headed for
From Los Angeles ; That new
well schooled technically within the results of his trip to Texas ..
Jeff Gray, facilitator.
··
Trouble," as long as she didn ' t drink Teen-Age Sex Test stank. I am 16 and
or smoke or .take off all her clothes. it seems that I am "Pure as the DriA girl in our phys ed class was in ven Snow." (Actually,l'm far from
tears because she is '"Condemned" it.) Something is very wrong with the
even though she is a virgin, techni- scoring, or didn't yo~ ~otice?
.
reduced if:
considered income to you and could receive up to the maximum SSI cally speaking.
BY ED PETERSON
··
Greensboro, N.C.,. I m a 16-year--You live somewhere else and reduce your SSI payment. Items you amount payable. But, if you l_ive in 11
SOCIAL SECURITY
Also, if a person wanl'! to follow •• o.l~ gtrl ,who pr~m•sed,~y p~e?ts 1
you pay only a part of your share of ·re~eive that cannot he used for food, public shelter, )&lt;OU can.only recefve . the guidelines to aT, i guy could take , Ailtl~ tlot dnnk, smoke b~ d~gs1
MANAGER IN ATHENS
cloihing or shelter are not considered SSI for up to 6 months out of any 9 ·a girl out and spend the whole night unttl 1 tum I 8. I have also promtsed
It's important that you tell Social food or housing costs; or
,;You live in a house, apartment or income and will not affect your SSI months that you live 'there.
Security when your living arrange.
in his car with her doing everything myself I wtll not_ have sex unttl I_am
ments change so that you will r.eceive trailer.. but someone else ' pays' for payment. For example, we don't
Contact Social Security for mor~ but you-know-what •. and his score ·mame~.• Accordmg to your scorm~; :
the correct amount or' Supplemental - your food, rent or mortgage expens- count things like small .kitchen appli- information about living arrange- would be the same as an altar boy or I am . Innocent and ~paw are: ,
es, and other things like electricity ances or a piece of jewelry of mod, ments and how they may affect your singer in the church choir as long as A~c?rdmg to that same method of : .
Security Income (SSI).
Your monthly benefit may vary and garbage removal; or ·
est value tha,t someone gives you.
SSI eligibility or monthly payment he dido 't light up a joint or drink a · sconng, I_ could have smoked pol, had ·
--You're
in
a
nursing
home
or
hosdepending on where you live and
If y'ou are homeless, you may amount.
beer. That does not make a whole lot se.x and hed to. 111Y pan;~ts and would
whether someone else pays for your pital for the whole month and Medof sense to me
sull be constdered Normal and :
icaid pay·s for over one-half your :
Jiving expe nses.
Although that test came out quite Decent." 'Please e.xplain this to me :
.
Generally. you can get up to the bills. ·
a while ago, the kids at New Trier bl:cause I JUSt don t get tt.
. :
Your SSI payment is· based on
max jmurn SSI payment if you live in
High School in Winnetka are still
Portland •. Ore.: Ho~ come taktng , ·
your own place, or you live in some- your income, not on your expenses.
talki~g about it. 1 hope you won't LSD ts 8 pomts atld bemg ptckC!I u_p ;
one else's residence, but you pay the . However, the cost of living.expensprint any mote tests like that because by someone you never saw before ts '
es such as food, 'Clothing or shelter
lull cost of your food and shelter.
it upsets the kids who are really. only 7 and getting~bustcd is 10? 1
However. your SSI benefit may be that someone else pcovides may be .
decent, and the wild ones just laugh Looks like you are in trouble only if ~
and think it's funny. --Miss X in Win- you get caught.
;
netka, Ill,
·
Charleston, S.C.: I am {0 years :
Dear Miss X: 'ijtanks for writing, old, and my wife is 68. We took your '
but d)dn't anyone notice that the test sex test and were thrilled to find out •
Principals. guidance counselors volunteer, said ~bout 7,000 students
was
updated from one thaUppeared. that we are "Passionate and Heading ;
·and t eachers from area high schools were provided information on how to
more
than 20 years ago and the new for Trouble." We are looking forward ;
;.,hose students have been part of the access higher education and another
scoring
was · set up · by Canadian to the years ahead with a new sense ;
RECOGNIZED - · Guidance · counMiore recogn.lzed · at
AmeriCorr project over three year 500 were dealt with on a one-on,one ·
teens in Winnipeg? While 'times have of joy and anticipation. Thank you. •
AmeriCorps Appalachian Accese and Succese lunchaon rawnt·
period were hosted during the Amen- basis. Packets were provided to high
changed
311d teen~agers tend to be
'
school
personnel
and
a
presentation
·
ly
were
Ito
r,
back,
G•ry
Baldwin,
AppaiiJichlan
Ac:c:eae
euper·
Corps Appalachi an Access and Sucmore
experienced
fhese
days,
I
doubt
Send
questions
to
Ann
Landers,
:
on
was
done
by
Lisa
Wiseman,
HC
visor;
Kevin
Spangler
and
'Gabe
Wlcal,
AmeriCorpe
rnembere;
cess Rccogniti oq luncheon recently.
that
kids
in
')Vinnipeg
are
any
looser
Creaton
Syndicale,
5777
W,
Cen·
·
James Lawrence, superintendent of Southern Local School Dis·
Those recognized were career placement and services counthan those in Winnetka. .
·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Anaeles, :
trict, and front, Bryan Huwar, AmeriCorps member; and Shirley
Bruce Rogers, Nelsonville-York High . selor. Other AmeriCot:p volunteers
·
The
scoring
makes
more
sense
if
Calif.
90045
·
with
local
projects
are
Kevin
SpanSayre,
Southern
High
School
guidance
counMior.
School principal; Shirley Sayer, guidance counselor and Avery Allman; gler and Bryan fluwar and Amy ·
teacher. both from Vinton Couniy Fugikawaisaformervolunteer.
-----,..----Also atiending the luncheon
High School; Supt. James Lawrence
·
·
·
and Shirley Sayre, guidance :coun- were Wayne .White, Ohio Appalachian Center for Higher Education
The Community Calend!lr is erans Service Commission, 7:30p.m. Wellman, speaker.
selor, both Southern High School;
"
RACINE -- Free skin testing clin- ·
'
and Martha Wiggins, teacher, Zane (OAHE) director; Terry Hogan, published as a free service lo ROD• Monday at the Veterans . Service ' RUTI.AND .:: Rutland Garden
· ic, by Connie Karschnik, R: N.,
Trace High School and Gary Bald- director for Appalachian Access and proOt groups wishing lo announce Office, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
Club,
7
p.m.
Monday
at
the
home
of
Meigs Tuberculosis nurse, Racine
win , Hocking College's director of Success and Ohio University's &lt;;en· meeting and special events. The
MIDDLEPORT
-OH
Kan
Coin
Chelcie
Brattc&gt;n,
New
Lima
Road.
fire
Station, Monday, 4:'30 to 6:30
calendar is nol designed to promole
high school relations, is the Amen- ter (or Community Service; and Can'
p.m.
Club,
Monday,
8
p.m.
Riverbend
Arts
dace Vancko, HC's vice president o( sales or fund raisers of any type.
Corps supervisor.
·
EAST MEIGS -- Eastern Board of
enrollment
services.
ltenis are printed as space permits Council, Middleport.
·
Gabe 'Wical, AmeriCorps
and·cannol be guaranteed lo run a
SYRACUSE -- Southern Local
Education, special session, Monday,
MIDDLEPORT -- .Revival ser,- 6 p.m. high school library for purpose Board of Education, 7;30 Monday at ,
speciOc number of days.
. vices continuing through Wednesday, of awarding contract• for construc- Syracuse Elementary School.
· :
7 p.m, each night at the Hope Bap- tion of new building and renovation
'
MONDAY
POMEROY.-- Meigs County Vet- tist Church, Grant .Street. Rev. Bill of high school.
A program on dysle~ia and elec- to Smith who may he contacted at the
•
.tjon. of new officers htghhghted a Meigs County Educational Resource
meeting of the Mtddlepon Chtld Center (County Board of EducaPubliC NOtice ·
Public Notice
Pubilc Notice
. Public Notice
.
Conservation League held recently at tion).
Officers elected were Kathy Darst,
PUBLIC NOTICE
Nolloe of E'-otlon an.Tex
M~liQN TO liD
81ld ' tu being:• An ·
· the Rock Springs United Methodist
The
Vllllie
of
SyrecuM
1ddltlonal
111x or 1.8 m1111 M ; '.
SoperaleJ.
1111111
LIVy
In
Exof
the
Ten
president;
Kathy
Dyer,
vice
president;
Church.
·
will ecoept bld1 until 1a PfOPOIIIe will 1M ,_Jvod
IIHI
Umllltlon
•
rite
nol
1.I "
Nancy
Morris,
secretary/historian;
Karen Smith, a parent mentor for
noon an May .1, 1117, from ..........of . . ,.,_.,.., . RewludCode,lecllana
milia far llllh allll tlalllr of "
Li~da
Broderick,
treasurer;
and
Peg·
Meigs Cqunty, presented t~e program
lllolly llclniiNI lnaurance ofthe8011'd of l!duoetlclll of' 3101.11(0), 5705.11,5701.21 Vlhlltlon, which ....... to : ~
which is tlesigned to provtde educa- gy Harris, reporter.
...,a, Southern Locol Sohool · Notln 11 hor~by given elgh._ ctnll (SO.11) for •
to
provtcle
to
the
Yllllgo
or 0111rlat. Realne, .Ohio, .tl!at In purauen011 of a MOlt one huncll'ld clollll'l or · '
meeting
was
opened
with
the
The
tional information to parents of spelyraouM
far
tho tonn ot lllelga COunty, until 1a:oo IIIIOiutlon of the aa.d or vetultlon, far e oanllnulng ,
pledge
of
allegiance
and
"Mother's
cial-needs children.
·
•'.
OM (1) yMr, OOIIIIIIIriCI"' o'olook noon, June 11, Camml11lonera on tho period of 111M.
' She said that dyslexia refers to an Prayer," led by President Linda Brod... , 11' 11117, '1'"'1Mfdll 1tp7. l'or 1tuo Choaal1 end COunty of llilllgl, POIMfOy,
Th1 Poll1 lor 11111 : ,
-overwhelming difficulty in learning erick. Devotions were given by
prapl~ OomtMrCIII.....,_
lodlel. ~~~ Of thl Ohio, pUled an tile 1lth E'-otlon will open 11 1:30 ': '
Kathy
Dyer,
"Five
Different
Steps
in
••
lllbllltr,
_
.
.
.
euto
~
daY of l'eltru.y, 1117 . . . . o'aloall A.M. and ...-In • • ·
to read, write and use language. PostnlltrUOIIon
to
llllddlra,
IIIII
wiA
1M IUbmtnecl 10 1 vola open until 7:Jtl a'aloalc P.ll. : ·
octvol'll•
end
-mentlal
Child
Rearing•
and
"Are
All
the
Chil~ble signs are children bei_ng late. in
· _.
IIFOJ!O
..
I
fo,_.
-r
1M
of
th.
111111110 Of IIIII ahelcl dey.
lnllnd
marine
htlurtlloe.
learning )he alphabet, dtfficulues dren In?" by James Dobs&lt;)n,
1y aftler ot . . a..d or : -:
tilde 11'1 to bt In • .-1111 allllitlnod 11 the o111o1 or "' •ublllvl•lan ot · • ._..,
The District Spring Conference
learning Jetter na.mes or sounds, co.nIIIOIIoil 10 be hllclln the lieatlonl, of ...... Countr. •. '
envllopo 1111rked "lnlur• Trn1urar,' Dlnnle lL ...
~
Ohio. • • ~
11141
·
l
olr!l
of
•duullan
County. or ...... Ohio, ot
fusion in how letters are wtlllen; dtf- was held on April 18 at the Rodney
IIIII" lncl eultnllnlll or
,.,
..
,.,..
the
right
til
rajlat
...
,.
.
.
.
pll
..
VOIIntl
ltenryL.,_
;.:
111111111
to
J1"'Zw1U1111,
United
Methodist
Church.
Some
ficulty in blending letter sounds, difalii, or per1a or -, IIIIIW!n. "' .. 1111 . , tit
CI\Anw • : ··
Cflltl.,...,..,, Yl~f., •nv
ficulty copying information and one members of the M.C.C,C.L. attend·
11111 .. 111e11.
: ..., 1117, the IIU ullon or
ltit&amp;-, Ml tllltll I
Dllltl
Mlrotl11,
"" : :
or both parents with the same disor- ed the conference.
· ly order of hlml or lwjlng' e IIIX, In • --or
lrr•lueo.~4i771.
Dli I Ia . ... .
The sroup served the canteen at
der.
Yllflto of lyl'ln" r•· lduaatlon •f IHIIMrri the llrl mUI llmllllloll, for
(4)T,14,11,i11411
.
:,;
LOOII
lohool
Dlltrlot.'
.
.
111111111
of
......
c-..
• She suggested that parents who the recent bloodmobile.
" " ' " the rJtllt to raJeat
•
.,.,._IL
IU,
11
1
a,
for
the
purp•••
ot
lilY
.....
llltll.
A brown bas auction was held.
fell' their child is dyslexic should talk
•
•
D1
alii
L
•
llalntona11oo,
oa1111t1t
Jllllae~llg,
with the child's 'teacher and ask that The traveling prize, doowod by BfOd.. ·
'
ILID ...... YIIIIR, .... IJlrlllll
Cllll•TflllliiW,
111 E. SmJad st., Pomeroy
he be evaluated by i qualifted spe- erick, was won by Helen Blackston.
DINIII L.. of Cl IIIIa 1111011 111M1
w I 'till,. IYII.-cl.l
• •
11
- ..... I, ......,: Ill
The hostess pft was won by Pegcialist. Children wich dyslexia quali(4) , .. ., ..... ..
•' •
'
lt.O. . . ' " .., ..................
fy for extra help in school, according gy Harris. Kathy Oyer served dessert
''
lllaltte,
retucilittlen
'"'
to the memben.
'
(4)11, . . \1)1,11411
tllnl pwltiiC 'Sit

•

YOIIII'S
.(AIPIIId SElVIG

• Fettlllzer (Bag or Bulk}
• DeKalb &amp; Pion_., Seeds .· • Small Stlfld$ • Che,mlcsl~
• Twine • Feed • Lime

Cheater. Ohio

•

Local·dentist~ staff attend Dental Boot Kamp _

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

CJI'IDII AG.U a•DICJ:

IIICiill

More than 185 people attendeil the get lost in the shuffle, jUSI remember 111e to Gray. who had become a flmilBy ODIE O'DONNELL
function with Volunteer Qircctor what Rosa Parks did for this COIDitry." • iar face at GDC functions until his
OVP Correepondent
"Volunteers make it happc:n" was Sheryl Slone serving as emcee; OutpIn his remarks to the audience that death last month, and to the hue
the theme of last week's annual lain Chuck Stansberry givins the included visitors from Ironton and Wilbert Strang, a member of lhc
awards banquet held in the multi-pur- Invocation and Benediction; remarks Marlena, Dr. Dey noted that this is his GDC's human rights committee. Dey
pose 'room of the Gallipolis Devel- by Trish McCullough, director of seventh year a5 superintendent "and noted that the evenins was dedicated
opmental Center, highlighted by the C.O.A.D. of :.Iarietta; and Eric we always consider this banquet a$ in the memory of these two,gentlepresentation of plaque awards and an Young, GDC pt .&gt;gram director.
the closure of winter in our area and men who, ~'throughout the years have
In
her
brief
address,
Ms.
Pittinger
our
volunteer numbers continue to given tremendous s)lpport to the Galaddress by Denise Pittinger, field representative for Cong. Ted Strickland. extended greetings from Cong. increase every year." He thanked the lipolis Development Center and our
. GDC Superintendant Dr. Michael Strickland,. whom she said J:tad to 222 individuals, church groups, and volunteer program."
.I Yvette Young of Pomeroy, was
L. Dey presented plaques to officers remain in Washington D.C. She con- · garden clubs who have made impor·
of the Star Bank and Ohio Valley gratulated the volunteer groups for tant contributions to the joy and com- presented the award honoring her as
Bank, co-winnerS of the annual busi-· the "Adopt a Cottage" program that fon of the 252 residents now served tile top individual volunteer for the
ness volunteer award, while the has been successful, notins "that you by the GDC.
ptist year. He noted tluit she is a senior
He then presented plaques to Barb at the University of Rio Grande, who
plaque honoring the ·top individual volunteers are setting an example of
Colemen and Liz Rumley, represent- will g~aduate this sprins with a
vol unteer was presented to Yvette compassion and leadership".
Young of Pomeroy.
She alluded to the example set by ing the Star Bank and to Jeff Smith degree in social work and will enter .·
Special recognition was also a black woman named Rosa Parks, and Bill Richards of the Ohio Valle.y a graduate school following her &amp;rad·
accorded Lucy Earwood, volunteer who in the 1950's, set the tone for Bankfortheirbusinesscontributions uation.
coordinator; Don Walker, operations integration in the United States by to .th~ volunte~rs. ,
Musical entertainment was proRt~hards was . tntroduced ~s vided by the' Gallia Academy high
director; Sam Matthews, human simply saying "no" when ordered to
resources director; members of the submit to accepted rules that applied OVB s replacem_ent for .the l~te BtU school Madrigals under the direction
GDC'resident volunteers' group; and only to black people. Pittinger said Gray as communtty relauorts dtrector. of Chris Bullion and the dinner was
·. the "Grammys," the grandparents "when you fe.el that one person doe$ . . Dr. Dey asked the_audie~ce . to catered ~y Wilson's Catering Service.
·volunteer organization.
·not make a difference; and you will observe a moment of stlence m tnb- .

992-3381 '·

Roady

11

Newt , _.,.,..711 EliL 11100,

-·

Change .in lb,(ing plans

9

Help W.eted .

110

Eur tolatah llaklftt

p.

005

P'erlon.lll

Interior
Bttore e p.m.
leave I'JIMNge.
Aftertp.m.

114185 4180

'

'

1

�.

Ohio

Sentinel•

Puiale
ACROII
lieua I

PHILLIP
ALDER ·

.......

I

41111111 .....
.. ._Mineo

...

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ll~---

............
_,.,,It
onwooUML &lt;:all aftlr lpnl.

11::=a~
tlal*

....-.

-CoUrt.-7211.
For - . 1t J oorn ' - In Po-

Owtrboool&lt; C-ln ~

Ohio Ia now occ..,dnf
dono let ·p~rt time s II .1, all
1111111. For ..... , _. .lion 11+112. .72.

tAJ

2722.

e1c. 441 sa 220 ,,.,...,--5117. .

I-ota lor .... In Hllllord, WY. Hll

Sleeping roomo with cooking,

fltiAr:C if\1

210

Buslrina
Opportunity

Tho Gollla • llelga Community
Action Agoncr Ia Saeklng An
Ellcutlvo DirlctDr. Thla lndlvldu·
al Wll Bo Roaponalblt For AdmiUIIring County, Sto"' Or feel. ·
oral And-PDvorty Prog111m1 In
Gollla AIMI llaiga Countloa. The
Succ:...ful Clndidate Will Ellie·
uti All Flacal, Pa&lt;aonnol, And
AdmlnlltladvO Pllllcitl And Proctdurol Eatablahod Through
Stoll A1M1 Ftdoral Roquirtmlllta
And Admlnilterad ow Thl Golll8
llalga Community Al:tlon Agonq

INOTICEI
OHIO VAlLEY PUBLISHING CO.
rocommal&gt;lla that you do bual·
noaa with paopta you know, ond
NOT 1D lind monor through 1111
mall until you havo lnvoadgalld
thoottamg,

BiG Colh Wkly. Looal Vend. Rte.
For Salt. Call Now 1·800-350·
83113.
Pt~-Enolnoortd

otool bulidlngL
Nadonal company owardlng
datltrahlp In open ..,...,_High
profit potential construction or
...... 30S-7!i0-3200 .... 7800.

230

Professional
Services

-OIDI...-

.

._..._,_

-t

RErJTALS

Pllatal Joba 3 Pool tiona .Avail·
~- No E1porlanco NODHsaoy,
For lnlormadon, Call 1-818-JM0011 Ell.-4012.

••w

Rtlfl
nw.pitll MtdH In
an acuto cora 18clllty. llull be

cordtlad and llcanaad In tho
Slllt of WV.' CompotltiVI aalary
11&gt;11 tiColltnl banofita. Sand roouma 111 SUo Huoooll, Coordinator of RHCiratooy Therapy,
Plaaaont Vol or Hoapltal, 2520
Voller Drlv~ Pt. Ploaaant wv
2li&amp;50. Mlf.ut:.
Soaking Roglatorad Long Torm
Cara Nulling ............ lor ln18r•
. - . long Torm Cara Nullllng
Focllltr. Rotating ahlftl, parr
dmo. Wall Vlrglnio ~ortlflcatlon
roqulrad. Jill Bumgardner, RN,
DON. Folnt Pieuant Nurolng al&gt;ll
-bllltotlon Center, Stato Routo 82, Route 1, Box 321, Point
Ploaaonl, WV 25550. (a Glen·
fllc:llty~ EOE.

~~

• OUictoor
' :iO Oullt

DOWN
. '

, Yllld

a Cekpll

. 34 Mongrel

31 .RotNn u
31 FlOrida oily

.

I bur

3 Booilllltd

llllk
.
37 Fottoo. ·
· 4 Oll-whll8 eolar ·
·31'0no-.;...ltlncl II Roman~

a w-

~1 Ninny

Thama

1877 Cadillac Coupo DIVtllt, 1

11t~l:':b.....on.r&gt;
_17 Ending lor

• K 4 3

ownor, us,ooo actual mlloo. oa·

'c.Mar

llolle (al

7 Skin dHtgn
• Contodlan

42 CIOcftmlltc.r

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

IIIII loop~ i,_CIIilto lnoldoi &amp;
..... 13600, 11-711.

South .
INT .

1814 Bronco II 8 Cyllndor, Av·
tomodc, Good Shapol Dopondobloll1,8tiD, 1 1 -

2a

••

West
Pass

. Pass
·Paao

Not1h
2•
3NT

Pus

Ealt

Pau
Paaa
Pus

Opening lead: • 2

.The extra edge ·

·was' sharp

CELEBRITY CIPHER

47112

Celeblit)' Cipher CfW)tOOflmln created from quotdona by famous peoplll , past•nd present
EliCh .,a... ., tt. cipher at.nds 101 lnOthaf. T~y'1 Ch.Je: W fiQUIJIS U
·

~CEN1ER

Vegatolllo Ptantl, Btcldlng Flow·
Honglng Baokoto, Trooa AIMI
Sltrubo, ••• Route 2111n liar·
corvll18, OH. 0pon 1:011 A.ll. TUI

8:00P.II.

Ultd Fumi"rt 130 Bulavlllo Piko

to adVonfse "ii'IY praloranca.
limitation or tllacttrnlnatlon
basad on race; cotor, oetlglon,
001 lamlllal statuli or national
origin, or any lntontlon to

Gc!Qd Ty_.llrl, Deal&lt;a. eloctrlc

atove. tampa. bookcaoo. ltoor
modal color TV. blcyclea, bunk·
bodo, mattroaua, rota ot oood
to.mhurL 814-448-4782 HRS.II·F

preference,

linltatiOn or dlscl1mlrtatlon.'

1CI-4 We buy
ll&lt;mitu,._
Wollher
IUS;uaod
Dryer
$85; Elactrle
Ringe IU5; Gao Range 1126: Rolrlgorator IllS: Wolhlr &amp; Dryer 1

wll not

knOwtlngly accept
adverllaemonta lor ralleolale
which Is In -tlon of lie law.
OUr raadtra are hafllly
.informed that·al duu ..L..,.
adVertiSed In lhls ney,cpaper
ant available on an eQual

Year Warranty $205 Each;
Skaggl AppllanGII, 71 Vlno
Strot\ Galllpolla, 814-441·7398,

Or 1-1111&amp;-818-0128.

520

550

Building
Supplies·

Block, b~ck, oower ptpto, wll&gt;ll•
owa, llntolo, 011:. Claude Wlntoro,
Rio Orondo, OH Call114·2415121.

Ij~~~~;~[~~
560

.T

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WVLGE .

U R H G.

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· .LG V F R L II

1805 Siizukl 150 LS 881 original"
=~..:.:,;:.::::.::::.=.__.:.__1 mlleo, graat ahapo. $2,000. 304·
1188 Borottll runagood, looka 175-8148.
·,
Boats &amp; Motors
=:ad. $1,1oo . oao. 304·875·

1918

~

_,

Olli&gt;Ortunlly basts.
REAL FSTATE

1880 loluatong LX oxcollenl
cond, low mll11, 4-cyllndor, 5
att,eotl. Aoki~ · I4,40D. Sorloua

Y R·V V

• t;f..

PRFLO.
.

qC.

1

:~·r.:-

.,.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "A~ting has never done anything lor me excep! · ~·
eni:ourage my vanity and proVOke my arrogance. ' - C11ndice Bergen. ,
, •••'!
~~

'

..

for Sale
12' Flbargluo boM with oart, ... ;
walt, bau 111~ oxcollant cOndl· •
lion. utclng ~- 114-11112·5430. ;

DAILY
PUIZLil

WDlD
OAMI

oMT

~.

, ..

~F.

,

Pllmoon -~ :
or. eot., llorcury,,.., buGGr 101&gt;- •
11188 -

~.000..304-1854014 or

. S704.GoodWf...

1818 Pontiac Grand Prix, V8
l.oadtd Rune Good, l.oollo Good,
$2,800.114 441 8104

I

.L t T L 0

• • •

750

0103.

Goods

OTHG.

. LT: EERGE .

IFOGE ·

Chovr Corolca 140,000
Sld1ra
.miloo, $1,500 good cond .. 304·
ll'S-81141.
.Pela for Sale
181V Cavalier, 1llaa Flroblrd, TTopo With All Optlona, $4,150;
1887 Buick Cenlury 4 Dooro,
$1,285: Cook llotora, 114·441·

Sponlng

NIM'F

'R

.

Wonted- good uald poollacldar
kltchon C-t te.50 yd. Sola on tor 4' abovo ground pool, 114al Carpet, Room Slzo Rlrn'a 114- =11112:·;:::5053.:::::;_ _ _ _ __
448 3228 •

AH raal .ftlat• .-.Iaing In
11111 nawljl6per 18 SUbject 10
t1ta Fadatii .Fa~ Houotng Act
ot 1vee which makes Hllloglt

.. '"W
.a

by Luis C.mpos

1I.IRUft LAWN AM)

This-·

.

Su""'* Spoclol Now jet ooratlon
motDrl tor aepdc llnko I3UU plua
111. lnollllatlon 135. 114·441·

.,_ 304-tl5-21ofll

ma~e any such

.

Jor:l&lt;ion, Dhlo, 1-800-5374531.

latratlon, Eduoalion Or Rtlllld

potlllon.

et.yal--

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gillon
UprlghL Ron ·Evana Entarp~aaa,

Fltld PJ aiMtd.

_Opportunltr /Affirmative Aclion
E~. Private Non-Profit Cor·

•

320 Mobile tlomts

.,...

Gallll • INigo Communltr Al:llon
Agency lo An Euqal E..-owment

710 Auk» for Sell

.

_.or

lnllftllld Feraona liar Applr At
Tnt Gollio . llolgo Community
Al:tlon Agtnq Admlnlanlilll Offico• At 80.10 North Slate Route
Chlllllrl. Ohio 45820•. Appllcallull Bt

•A .KJ4
I A73
• Q 54

'*"'

HARTS ·IIASONARY • Block,
for Sale
Qua!!katiqn• Requl(ea E1cel&amp;ent brick &amp; otona wort&lt;, 30 yoora ox·
portonco,
roooonoblo
rateL
304Vorllll And Wrllton Cornmunlca·
1U70 t2x80 2 Bodrooma, All
tlon Skllla, A Wllllngntoa To 11115 3581 attor 8:00pm, no job .ID Electric. $2,500, 000 814·448·
.,lltCl. WY-021 :1.011
Travol, Rollable Tranapcrtallon
72.814-~1.
And A Valid Dtlvora l,lcanoo, Llvlnaatan~• basement water·
P!wloua Dtmonatrated AbiiiiY In proofing, all bl.lamtnl repalra
Adrtinlatorlng Soclal Sarvlce Pro- done,
free tatlmatea, lllellme
guarantoe. 1Oyro on )ob uporl-

fdycetlpn · Degree In Scicial
Wort&lt;. Public Or Bullnoaa Admin·

• J 10
ll4lldll

remote, beautiful land: llolga 460 . SpiiCI for Rent
County, Scipio lllwnlhlp. SR 182
.., ..,.~ up
dual oil SR 1431- Ownor llnlnclng. MObllt homo t1500 por acre. Call lor good "' .18dO'o, - por ,_., ......
.._and traah Included, 814·
map,814-58H545.
IIIIN187.
Soft Sldo Wlterllad, Adlib Largo
Fetty Chllt, Bath Ghalro, -ng
1.1E llCHM JD ISE
llochlne ·Naad Ot R..,alr, 814Syracua• thret bedroom. ont 1---~~~---441-41711.
and 112 batha, LR, DR. lamlly
Real Estate
- . . Dllt """""' ... - " 11&lt;1
510 HouHhold
baaomtn~ otoctrlc furnactlhoat
· Wanted
pump,
gara01 (28132),
Goods
orw and 114 ..,..,
814-102· Nicer Homa N.W. Gallla Co. Or
5175.
air
Eall Jackaon Co. Gallla Co.
condition.
Syrtcu•• two ltory colonial~ ~·1t•••a. '
groot location lor chlklrtn, . Small l;toun, Near Downtown
badroorno,
condition, lmmo- ~!,:.~• Aroa, Clean &amp; Good
dlatt poa-alon, 814-11112-5551
. IU4t81561
.or 8t4-41112-e542.
.lloa Btdrooma, Ono Bath, Largo
Kitchin, On Lorga Lo~ Ono Car
Garaga, lWa Pllrchaa. (114)4480281-

two·•••

e • a • s·

KIt 7 ~
AQ I I I

Alto valor opaco an rlvor. All
hook-upo. Call altor 2:00 p.m.,
304-113-11851, ...... WY.

public water &amp; - •· 304· 773-

5844.

• • 5s
. I Q 10 I I 2

"'

... ,_......,.
"-Good

Eat

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IIJR

20a.utt-llerte
Houllwtle '
21
......
~•
22 CrY allrtumpll
. lllan
.

• 1s2 •
kino• llotal Low.. t Rallo In
350 Loll &amp; Acrelgt
Town, Nowty Romodotod, HBO,
1 AC &amp; 2 AC Iota lor 1111 In Clna,..x, Showliflle &amp; Dlanoy.·
Scenic V~llay • Subdlvlolon. Woolilf Raila, Dt lllonftlv Ratto,
Wadgo Roalty, Brok1r 304-871- Cona•ucllan Worlloia Welcome

Ia

11ft

8S lhlellr
Edltt ..!~il..

hllatlt

,.rx=z,,,

I KI 4

fttorOW, wil ... on IMd -~
ttt- '51161

I

11

• Q II 7. 2

Ull

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

,............
or
I

1om

• DIM

1417trl'l

I or 4 b1droom.. FAG., aeniNI
air, 2 lull llalllo, nlco ·ran~. 31

., ...,.....
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304-773- :
.

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. ' ·,:,\ .

..

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i

lnjulroo only. A .1112 21104.

310 Homes for Sale

· 11110 Su,..rd, noadl oomo wort&lt;.
304-t75-1753.

.nwtt-Mu-.

Toklng Application• For Emor·
_ , Dllfl811:hlng Clau
EIIT CorUfttd Or Prtl'liaua EllS
EIPitianco Required. Full-Time
And Part·Tl.ma Emptormont Pos·
1lblo With Tht Succes1lul Complltlort OITrolrlng Courst.
-

Sand L.ottar Of Appllcationa, Slit·

-=katloniTo:

n:HTIWNINO COUF181!
P.0.-127

UAA,CHO-

W111ttd: 42 People Lou 18 -25
Poul&gt;llo In Tho Next 30 Daya.
Nat&amp;nl, Guarantlldl 1·1100-810·
22Jli.

Sttr Guitar, Cholhitl. Ohio- Itoone and lnotrumanta- plano, g~l­
torand drumo, 814-317-0:102. ·

!

Budeet Price Tr,namlnlona,
Stirling at Ht.OD and Up, Uatd

':J

FAR~l SUPPL

IFS
&amp; LIVESTOCK

48,000 mlln, ••• Tranamlsslon1, Acce11 Tran1ftf ••
lg,ooo. 304·576- Coon &amp; Rear Ends. 814·245· ••
5877

120

IMONDAY

Rebuilt, All Typoa, OV.r 10,000 "

SCRAM LITS ANSWIIU
Froien • Dress - Chops • Exhume - HOMES
One felloW to another, "I live so far beyond my income that 1. might say we are living in separate HOMES.•
•

,.. 18

•

or1!

Z·28 muat aoll, New g11 t1nk1, 1 1on 1ruck ~ ~
1
304-675-53711.
whHia &amp; raclatara. D &amp; R Au til,' ' l
32,000 Rlptoy, WV. 304-372·3g:i3 or I· "J,~
PW., 4· 8Q0.2l'3-i329.
-1

Situations
Wll1tld

1u.ooo 790

••

Motor Homes

I

I

·• r
'

I

~
F~::;:;.;.::::,· A••
810
tlomt .

lnlprQv"'**

.•

ASTRQ·.GilAPB

BERNICE
BEOEOSOL

'IUelclay, Aprlll9, 1997
A rise in status is.indi~ted for the
year ahead if you take advantage of
your opportunities. Be sure the ambl·
lions they arouse ire ~alistic: and
attainable.
.
TAURUS (Aprif 20-May 20) Success is within your reach today, provided you·-don 't trip over your own
tonaue. VG-ify youi· objectives and
pursue etiCh in an imclliaent manrtllr.
l'ryinJ to, peach ' up a broken
romaace? 'l1le Altro-Oiilph Malchmalia- 1:111 help you illtdet itwf wbll
to do 10 rlUIIIe .... tUiioallhip work.
Mllil S2. 7~ 10 t.fatchllllk«, do dlis

_ . , Thrill ....... buwlnO
furnltu,., c"'*on'o ou-r

lllolltott, .. .tamlty ...- . ..;:

11&gt;11 larae IDyL Coli et•·

•ua

,....................
.
.....
-_
...........
..
,,..,............. . .,
..... , ..•.
............

..., ..:.. • 2 - Fir m.ooo.
11+74H111.
.
I

•

-~-

newsi&gt;aper, P.O. Bo~ U58,."MUimlv
Hill Station, N~w York, NV 10156.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)Avoid
being indifferent to.develop,ments
today, as you may drift into unfriend·
ly waters. Be sure that you're in con·
trol of events.
·
· CANCER (J\IIIC 21·MY 22) today
you could be drawn into a compli·
cated' development if Y'l\\, allow others to minipulatc yW: Heed the
warning signals before [t) too late.
LEO (July 22-A'ttl- 22) Impulsive
judgments ~ould cause ~ problems
today. Do not m.ke decisions until
yoo're abl&lt;11~1y certain Yp.t beve. all
· the facts.
;..
VIRGO (Aua. 23-Sept. 22) .
J{ouscbold problems lhal·require apecia! knowl•dp llhould be left 10 the
expet11 kx'ay. ·Slick with.~what you
know or y"u could bol&amp;:h 11p the job.
LmRA (sept. 23--0c:t. :!3) Try not
to 0\WtaX yoanelf pbyiilllly today
in ,.,.110111 ICIIYiliel. 0o i lillie M
allmeiO blild up your sinnclhSCORP•.O (Oct. 24-~. 22) It
miibl be.bo-tterto llitrijiOi&amp;ily shelve

require ' your attention insteiijl of
·dbing t11em in a half-hearted way.
SAOmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
:!l) ~~ is imperative today that you
~ontrol events instead ofletting them
control you. Stay positive or you
could be d~fcatcd before you begin.
CAPRICORN (Dec, 22-Jan. 19) If
-you're out shopping tOday, be careful not .to get 11ttrac:ted to itemS'Ihat
cost more than they 're wonh .. you
can't afford it! ·

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb: 19)
Resdess \IIJCS could intensity your
. ambitions tf;lday and:entice you into,
new endcavotli. 'lllkc eare thl!l your .
methOds are productive.
PISCES (Feb. 20-~arch 20) If
you behave in a comjielitive fashjon
today, it .could provoke circumstances
you didn't anticiplle. Keep your .'
·spirits in check.
ARIES (Mild! 21-April 19) An
unphnant ~elopuem mlaltt leeve
you with IIJIIIY feelinp toe!&amp;!'· However. don't biU¥ a whole aroup for
·the behavior of a sinJic member.

1' ( t
~
' ....

..

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I! !..,.

"t;;;;;;;;--~;;;;w;;;~~i'CCii;;y'"'1fii;Ti~;,;;y"~~;;ic.;;r.fo;M;;--~
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~

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SERVICES

-

~t·

.....' ., .

•
'
:

Dooro,
Alklng Take over PIJmonto 11' 111118
814- Dutchmon camper loaded, hitch
&amp; oloctric brakll included, PIW·
monte $157tmo..304-175-5522 tor

··.~"t
', t' ~

,.

Clmpers&amp;

mora-

.

I

\•

�..

.

-

-·

--

-

·O~io ·Lottery

Knlcka, Jazz
.advance In
NBAactlon

· Pick 3:

4-6-1
Pick 4:

7-1-8-0

Sports on Page 4

Moatly clear tonight,
Iowa . . - 40. Wedne1day,
moetty aunny. Hlgha In the

· Buckeye 5:
4-7-8-13-37

uppw10. .

..
..
..

.'

.

.

'411- .. NO.I

.

2 Stcllone, 12,..... . . . . . ..

POmeroy-Middleport, Ohio, 'TUesday, Apr1129, 1997

01117, Ohio Wley Pullllllllng Compeny

AGeiMIIltC0.111 IPIP

'

·:Commissioners OK

AJr, ahnlnum wbo:ds,
. iOt, aui8e, AM/PM .
oss~te aild MrdiMofef.
,,....· ~-

'

.

\ .., :

By IRIAN J. REED

I•

.

.

8tntlnel Newa Staff
The Meigs Qlunty Commissioners approved a contract with the
il.nion representing the Meias Coun·
.l'f sheriff's deputies. and ap))roved
PI!&gt;' raises for eounhouse employees
· 11/hen they met in resular session on
.Monday afternoon.
: · The contrac.t with the deputies,
.who are represented by the Ohio
'Patrolmen's Benevolent Association,
:wm provide 3.5 percent pay increas•
es in July 1997 and January 1998,
'and will increase the percentaae of
employees' insurance costs paid by
;the county from 60 percent to 70 per·
'cent in January 1998 and to 1S per·
.cent in July 1998.
·
: · The agreement also calls for a 3
·percent salary differential from
deputy to sergeant of.3 percent, and
:3 peJ:C:ent from se,rgeant to lieu.tepant.
· This agreement has also been
"ll!iproved by Sheriff James Soulsby,
·act:ordingto Commission Vi~ Pres_idenl Fred Hoffman, who moved to

•I

I ADo, V6, ail; dlt, ctnlae,

carib;.,:AMI'FM . .
)
· · rrsseut and Morel ·:

'

enough?-- .Eastern
_building
bids win
·a pproval
'

new depUty contract

'

\ .., I () \\

~.High

'
approve the contact. The union mem- ($43,411
); replacement of the heating
hership has also approved the con- and air conditioning unit at the courtraet.
·
thousc ($55.696); and to recoup costs
After approvins the pact. Hoffman of moving and', housing prisoners at
moved to grant a 3 percent pay the county jail following the slip
increase for all county courthouse ($1,30()) .
employees effective July I, and the
Spencer said that the slip repair
board approved the motion.
project cQuld be combined with slip
The board awarded bids for bitu- .-cpair work needed in the village or
minous asphalt materials for May to Pomeroy and bid as one job. He was
Asphalt Materials Co. of Marieua and . authorized by the board to prepare
Middleport Terminal of Gallipolis. bid documents ·.and other necessary
The materials will be usc~ for l!lllch- pape(Work for the projects.
ing ~ork and dust control, which
In conjunction with the HVAC
could hegin in May.
project, tho board authorized the
The bid of Don Tate Motors in advertisement for bids for the new
Pomeroy on a new car for the hiah· equipment.
way depanment was opened. The bid..
The commissionera also;
for a new Buick LeSabre, was sub• Established a new line item for
. milled in the amount of $21,870.
$500,000 in Ct;1mmunity DevelopThe bid was tabled pending ment Block Grant funds for the Tuprcview by the prosecuting, auomey. pers Plains Regional Sewer District
lllte's !lid was the only onereccived. project;
David Spencer of the -Highway
• Approved payment of$9,500 to
Department reponed lhauhe Feder- the county fair board, representing
al Emergency Management Agency $3,000 for recent tree removal and
has approved flood repair work for $~.500, the county's annual contrithe slip behind the courthouse bution towards the CQUnly fair;
• Approved an interdepartmental
transfer of $9,360 within the emergency services budset; '
·
• Annilunccd a same-owner liquor
li~ense transfer application from
Robert Michael Robens, Pomeroy; to
TIIZ's Mara\l!qn, PQmeroy. No hearing,
. -~as reque&amp;tcd.
.,
, ;. ,~sc'!t· .i!' a.!diti!?n to,Hqtfm,~. ,4 __,,....,,_.,
'· were COmmtssloners Janet Howiiiil ·
and Jeff Thornton, and Clerk Gloria
Mora-than a taw ~tora .wara on Pomeroy'a Grand Pr(!ril1 · ·
Kloes.
enade to take hi tha vlaw of thll ·anOf'II'OUI crena. Rutaall Con·
atruction,. 1 Michigan firm, .haa ·arrived. at the alte of the new
amphl.heater _In Pomeroy to lnatall piling In the Ohio River. Tha
general contractor tor the project Ia lanka Con1tructlon of
Pomeroy. According to John Muaaar, eoordln~or Of the revitalIzation proJeet, the piling ahould bl completad thla WHk.

Separatists
pledge not
to give up Lawma
.
k
er
wants
end
,
.
FORT DAVIS, Texas (AP) . · •
\

~~~~~~E~G~IN~8~-~~
nY~Hu~f8N~W..
the Bible I'Hcllng!NII'IIthon
underway
~
plllldnglot.
evant w..
The

Natktnal Day of Prayer on Thuraclay.
from the Bible 11 her mother, Kimber~, arid
Mlc_lilael and Irian Jr., llatened. The other family memblra 1110
1ook a tum at reading. The,mll'lthon ·wiU continue all ~

Two miles from the group's
remote sprawling community, a IS·
member state SWAT team watched
and waited early today, joining at
least 75 state and federallaw-cnforcement agents for the third day of the
· · standoff.
Late Monday, officials with tiN:
gave a report to council on the in sur· Texll5 Dep1111men1 of Public Safety
Bv CHARLENE Hotfi.,.ICH
ance cornmiltcc's review of ~he bids. turned away on auorncy who said he
Sentinel Ntpwa Staff
· High wate( damaae to the floating detailing the coverage, cost1•infor- WIIS ltired by Richard McLaren, the
scH~stylcd "ambassador" of one fac,
docks ·Ill the Middleport levee . and maJion on co,payments ;~ and
lion
or the R~public of Texas secesfUnding for repair w115 discussed by deductibles, and made the recom- sionist group.
Middleport Village Council Monday mendation for the Central Benefits
coverage. The new insurance will be
"This is my client and I just want
. night with no action being taken.
to talk to him," Houston attorney TcrVillage adminislrlitor Bill Brown· effective J1.1ne I.
A lcuer of resignation from coun- .ry O'Rourke said. "I want to get him
inj reponed that an application for
IISsistance has been filed with the cil and words of appreciation for the out alive."
The DPS told him he could meet
Fqderal Emersency Management opportunity to servo wos read ,from
with
uuthurttics later thism'oming.
George Hoffman. who is moving to
~ency.
Negotiations with the Republic
.. He soid that while he expects Luroy, Va .. next month. Horton, on
futKIIng to come through. as yet he behalf of council, expressed regret ut l!ntUp were cordial, with topics ranghilS received no word from FEMA. the resignation and spoke of Hoff. ing from political philo~nphy to the .
H~ gave an estimated colt of $6.8()() man's conlrihutions to tht villul!li wcuthcr, DI'S spukcsmun Mike Cox
suid.
to iepair the dafTioge caused by hiah OJll1rulion.
water and the dcbri~ it brought.
Council also:·
:·sumc dcl!rcc of prnl!rcss has ~
· Hc.askcd council about the JIIISsj• Approved the purchase of nine ·hccnmudc." he Sltid. n:fusin~ to olahbility of moving forward on the project in till! hopes of reimbursement. n;flisc cans to he used in duwntnwn orutc. "I think then:'s sumc opti·
bUJ mcmbera were in asreement that Middleport at u custnf upprnxilnatc-' mism."
•
- Bui within hours nf 11mt statement,
the work should not be done until the Iy S4,,0Q;
' . · .
• · Heard a cumplainl from McLaren issued his own, interpreting
viUaae is offici!jlly notified by FEMA.
Lawrence Powell of Sycamore Stre~l the I'D I prnpnsals u.• demand• li1r suror funding approval.
·
render - a move his group wa.• nur
·"The general fund can't handle the ahout a drainage pmhlem;
coil. Let's wait for FEMA." said
• Appointed John 'Neville untl prepured to make. .
"Mr. McLon:n states that they
Mayor Dewey Honon.
.
' . S!lndi lannarolli to the 11nuncc ~:om.Browning pointed out ·th,11t the l!lillcc, replacing Georae Hoffman, have no intention of surrendering~
they're only interested in gelling tl)e
. ooating ICIIOI1 is here which. he uld, who hilS rcsiancd;
• Discu!IScd dru¥ testing, hoth'prc- foreign agents ofT.of Texas soil," the
puia some uraency to the dock repair.
Collncil accepted 'the joint bid of cmployJilCnt and random, to fulfill statement read.
·
· the,Wiseman Insiii'IIICe ~ncy Inc., thedru.~rrcc work plll\:epollcy, with
Asked if McLaren'5 hiring of a
of Oalllpoli•, and McNelly·l'llrii:lc .t; lannarelli. Beth Stlvcra, Browning , lawyer nicant a surrender was immi·
AHociale• lniUI'IIICe or Jaeluon for ancl Police Chief Bruce Swift bein1 ncnt, O'Rourke said: "He can't win
vllJaP hellllh iftiiRIICIIIhrouJh Cen- appointed to the drug committca;
a battle wiih guns in the mountains
tral &amp;-fill;
• Approved downpayrilent on a with the FBI and the Thxu Ranp."
Co.t to the viiiiP for health' lind Fourth of July fireworb display of He added, however, that Republic
dental i• S3,641 per month. The bid $2,000. ToW cost is $4.100. and to ·memben were "wcll·armed" and
wu the IOMtt of four tubmltlld.
dare, contributions loW S120:
pteparec1 to fi1ht.
'
ClertcfJftutnr Dlnnil fb:kman
• Heard a financial report from
About I0 Republic memben were
noeid lhlllhl c:ost Ia a rednc:tioll 'of Hockman -..d approved' billa for believed 10 be 11111'18Cbed in the
rvaeci6,0QG.ICI'I Dmt Mountains
lboul136,000 a ,.. Whal hu payljlent.
- ....... 1111111 ........
. Council moved into executive Relort community, loc:alecl175 miles
AdmlnlltriiOt Clrol Cantrell uulon to diacuss personnel.
southeast of El Puo.

·Middleport awaits funds
·for levee, docks repairs ~·

r

CREVIIO•EI • OlDSMOBILE •I.EIUIS • 'WIIo--·YDTA

. ,a

\;.

,,

•.,
•

Armed members of a group demandins independence for Texas issued a
defiant statement in response to
claims by authorities that· talks were
making progress; They had no plans
to surrender.

.•

I

to 12th .grade test. ng.

COL.UMBUS (AP) '-:A northeast Ohio lawmaker Sl\id the state's 12th·
grade proficiency test is not necde4 and should be eliminated.
Rep. Kevin Coughlin, R-Cuyahoga Falls; introduced a bill on Friday that
would do away with the tests, whicl1 are required for seniors who pa." tiM;
nimh-grade proficiency test by Jan. 1 of the year they arc to graduate.
Passage of the ninth-grade test is required for graduation . Scores from the
i2th grade test- which is not required for a diploma- arc included on
the student's transcript
·
"There is lillie motivation for n student to do well. and the.tests lak,ll away
from normal class time," said Coughlin, who added that college entrance
exams are a beuer indicatorof a student's ambition.
1 ·
d 11 fi
f h 12 h
About 39 percent of high schoo seniors passe a tve pans o t e t .
.grade test this year, compared with 40 percent last year, the State Board of
Education reponed this month.
.
.
The state board is studying ways to improve testing beyond the ninth-grade
standard but hos no immediate plans to replace the 12th-grade test, hoard
President Jennifer Sheets said Monday.
She il&amp;id thet schools' accountability is .more important than ever as the
Legislature considers new ways to fund Ohio's schools.
·
· "We need sqmething hciyond ninth-grade proficiency tests. People arc
looking for that." Ms. Sheets said. :·we have to sunrnntcc the puhlic that
they arc getting results...

GRANDPARINTI DAY- Over 200 (II_.

Jellliolt P 1 aII t, II Cheater Elementary Schoof.

:J

'
1

I

•

8cttoola fat apaclel actlvltlea, and ahared ·
luno't 1 1 ~ otuaroom visits. Florence Wyera
of Rt 1Ill uti , liD Dve, vi alta with her grancllon,
Adem Wll, fllhl, and hla fifth-grade claaamete,

........ vlaltilclthe .... l ....... olaiy ac:hoota In
~ Local 8ollool Dlalrlct ..... weak for
.Gl'llldp.-ranta Day. Gnmlp ••II were lnvltld
to CIIHter, Tuppen Plaint and Riverview

l'

By BRIAN J . REED
Sentinel Newa Staff
Bids for the district's building program were awarded at a special ·
meeting of the Eastern Local Board
of Education Monday.
The district will build a new con- ·
solidatcd elementary school and completely renovate the 40 year-old Eastem High Sch.ool building, at a total
project cost of $7,331 ,800.
The project will bC funded through
a bond is~ue passed by district voters
last year. and with money from the
Ohio Department of Education's
Building Assistance Fund.
Wesum Construction Inc., Chester,
will be the general contractor on the
project at a cost of $5,320,925.
For the plumbing contract. the
bOard hired L.T. Mandeville Plumbing and Heating. Inc. at.a base bid o( ·
$537,989. for heating. ventilation
and air conditioning. the bid or Gen-.
eraI Temperature Control Inc .. Canal
Winchester. was accepted at
$895.000. Pioneer Pipe of Maricua
was awarded the bid for electrical'
work on the buildings at $963.051. .
D.V. Weber Construction of
Reedsville will construct the new
sewage treatment plant at $114,835 .
, , ..;B,ids for .. t~e pmjcc:t,. y;jth tho
exception of the scwa'e treatment
bid, fame in at anticipat_ed costs. or
lower.
.
This allowed the board to opt for
' several features for the building' that
the district may not' have been able to
otherwise afford. Added to the general contnu:ting bid Monday were terrazzo tile for the lobbies of both
buildings. at a cost of $91,000;
ceramic tile in locker fO()Ill$ and
shower areas at $91,000; and a fuliypaved parking lot and service route at
a cllst of $71,325. These alternates
arc included in the bid awarded to
Wesam.
· One Other alternate, laminated
. doors as opposed to solid wood
doors. may olso be added to the projcct, although the board did not act on
the option.
..
Architect Barry Ingham of Vargo,
Cassady, Ingham &amp; Gibbs aucnded
the meeting 10 discu~s the bids and
the options 'that the board can add to
the project
According to Superintendent
Dcryl Well, Wesam ha.&lt; indicated that
work could begin as soon as school
· i" · h d · J
IS lnts e tn une. This initial work
could ·i~clude roof replacement, and
replacement of the high school gym
lloor.
The project officially hegins with
ashestos abatement in the hish school
huilding in early June. The project
must be completed in two years, Well
(Continued on Page 3)

ill

;.. '

t

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