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Ohio Lottery

.:Tornadoes
oust Eagles
by 3 runs .

Pick 3:
3-7·2
Pick 4:
2·5-3-2
Buckeye 5:
2-4-8-16-37

Sparta on Page 4

Partly ·cloudy tonllgtlt
Iowa In the lower
Wednesday, ahowera and
thundentorms likely.
Hlgha In the m~ 801•

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\til, 41, Jl(). 11

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2 Sec:tlana, 12 PIQH. 35 centa
A Ganrwtt Co. Ne eu I Pit*

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, May 13, 1997

0{117, Ohio \/lilly Publtlhlng company

J:3all field improvement
gets commission'S nod
By BRIAN J. REED
sentinel News Staff

.
: The Meigs County Commissionet:S will help pay for improvemel)ls 1o
a . ball field at Scar Mill Park in
Racine.
. At their regular weekly meeting
on Monday, the commissioners voted to give the Racine Youth League
program $5,000., ·
Gary Norris, coordinator of
improvements at the field, told the
commissioners that he had applied
for a grant through the Natureworks
grime program of the Ohio Department of Naturlil Resources to obtain
funding for lighcs, bleachers and a
pressbox for one of•lhe·two fields at
the park.
That grant application has not yet
been approv¢, Norris said, and, if
approved; will require 25 percent in
local matching funds. Norris said that
he had made a.commitment to purchase light poles for the project from
a local construction company, but
funds were not available to pay for

the poles.
"I saw where Syracuse had
received money from you for their
pool," Norris said, "and I would like
to submit my project for funds if they
are available."
On April 21, the commissioners
approved $6,000 in assistance for
repairs to the London Pool in Syril,
cuse,. and in· 199ti, provided funding
for both Lond6n Pool and Middleport ,
Pool.
·
,;We've helped Syracuse and now
I think we should help Racine, too,"
Commissioner Jeff Thornton said, in
making a motion to give the monev
for the Racine project. Commissioner Fred Hoffman made .a second to
Thornton's motion, and the motion
passed unanimously.
A bid opened for a used brush
truck for the Scipio Township Voluntee~ Fire Department was tabled,
pending review by the department
and Prosecuting Allorney John
Lentes . .
The bid was received from the'

Bohemia Fire District in Bohemia,
N.Y., in the amount of $20,000.
The commissioners also:
• Authorized two fund transfers
within the budget of the Meigs Coun- ·
ty Department of Human ~ervices of
$88,429.77 and $114,144.10;
· • Approved· an additional appropriation of $1 ,699.82 from ' the
Appalachian Regional Commission
for a water project for Tupp~rs
Plains/Chester Water District at
Letart;
• Approved an interdepartmenllll
transfer of $800 in the clerk of
courts' budget;
• Authorized a three-day disciplinary suspension for an employee at
the Meig~ County DHS; '
• Approved payment of bills in the·
amount of $174,226. I 0, with 278
entries.
Prejient were commissioners Jeffrey Thornton, Janet Howard and
Fred Hoffman and Clerk Gloria
Kloes.

.' 0 meroy .c·0 un
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C'l up a e .
P
.on fall Sternwheel Festival · County considers future

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. ;;~~:.~~~: S~mwheel
. :, , ~~!~~.~~~;a$~ 1 o;,~hassociationhas
tm~, .

Plans for tile l!tg Benil
. SQDICihiRg gmng alhht
MussFestiv.al in Ootobef were discussed at er said.
a special meeting of Pomeroy Village
Davis said · that several events
Council on Monday night.
from past years are ,planned again Ibis
Council members met with Jim - year: ~&gt;araoke on Friday evening; and
Davis, president. of the Big Bend live entertainment on Thursday and
Stemwheel Association, and coordi- Saturday. Lisa Wagner, a ·past Ohio
nator of the festival, to.discuss enter- fiddli11g champion, is set to perform
. lllinment and activities for this year's Tllursday night, and Mike Morrison
event.
.
on·Saturday night.
, Of particular ,importance tocoun- · !he festival ~ommitte~ also plans
ell 1s the expanston of the festtva~ to to ·~elude the hne·throwmg contest,
mclude Sunday acll\ltlles. accordmg cht.h cook-off, boat races and capto Mayor Frank Vaughan. Council . taili's bonfire again this year.
. members also urged Davis IQ seek
According to.Davis, the bonfire is
: more musical entenainment for the a big draw for sternwheel caDtains
event.
an&lt;l crews. ..
·. · "This festival is very imponantto
"We are the only festival that has
. Pomeroy. Middlepon and Mason a .~nfire," Davis said. "All up and
; County," Councilman John Musser . do~n the Ohio River. from Cincin' said. "I heard that last year's festival nati•.to Pitcsburgh. people know about
· was lacking in even Is, that it didn't
and a lot of the captains
: flow veiy well. and we are concerned
our festival because of it."
. that those problems don't happen
said that the merchancs

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FATE DISCUSSED- County Conlmlaaloner Jeff
left, and Gallipolis eng!~ Randy ·
Breech.took a tour of the Pomeroy Masonic Lodge Building Monday. The building, which Is
owned by the county, has fallen prey to"dr~lnage, a;ps and vandal~, and may be beyond repair.

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cocoordin~ .f~JJJQ..Ma$J;JIJjC_~.TempJe
r~r·""'

• and a
night, and
has indicated to him that they may ,
have a casino night in conjunction
with the festival.
For the first year, kiddie 'tractor.
· pulls will be held. Winners of those
pullf will qualify to panicipate in
national competition in Columbus,
Davi~ said.
.
, Davts also satd that 1_1 boats have
been con.firrned for lh1s year. and
more are.expect~- Twelve vendors
~~d concess10na1res have also commll!ed so far, accordmg toDavts. The
P.A. Denny wtll be the ex~urston boat ,
th1s year. ,
. ,
,,
Present at the meeting, m addmon
to Vaughan and Mus.ser, were ,coun- ·
ctl members Scott Dtllon, Gen Walton, Larry Wehrung, George Wngh~
Wtlham Young, and Clerk Kathy
Hysell.

B~ S"IAN J. REED ,
sentinel Nawa Staff
What is to become ·of the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple building?
.
The fate of this Moorish building is in the hands of the Meigs
County Commissioners, who o~n
it. Some people would li~e 10 see
it restored and used, others think it
would be better as a parking lot.
The building was donated to the
county in the early 1990s by the ,
lodge, and s.ince that time, has
remained vacant and unused,
deemed unsafe because of structural damage· caused by drainage
and slips frQm the hillside behind
it. ·
The building was erected as an
armory in tbe early part of the century.
At one · time, the building
housed several county offices,
including the Soard of Elections in
the basement, and the draft board
and plat. map office on the main
floor, . The plat map office and
board of elections office moved out
of the buildihg in 1988, due to safe'ty concerns.
·
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' According to Rita Smith, director of the board of elections, water
was draining into the electrical outlets in the office at the time .the .
. operation was m·oved to Meehan.
1c Street.
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the building as an annex to the .
The second fl()()r of the building
counhousc
or as a cultural center
is dominated by a ballroom, which
or theater. Both such ·uses have
was once used by the Masons for
been mentioned at recent commistheir meetings. The cavernous ballsioners: meetings. The county now
room features a gallerY on both
pays rent on three privately-owned
sides of the room, and a balcony
buildings to house the board of
which overlooks the floor.
elections, the prosecuting attorIn 1994, over $60,000 from the
_ney's office and the fair housing
Department of Mine Safety was
office.
earmarked for repairs to the buildThe funds needed to restore the
ing, obtained by the office of U.S .., ·
building to a usabl e co ndition
Rep. Ted Strickland, D-Luca5ville.
seem to be prohibitive. In addition
However, those funds were never
to needed structural repairs, abatespent on the structure.
ment
oftbe drainage and slip probThe building has also fallen
lems would also be required.
prey. to vandals in the past few
Breech compared the present
months. Windows have been brocondition of the building to the forken, and damage caused to the decmer condition of the old Gallipoorative brickwork on the front
lis
Theater, now the Morris and
steps, ·
Dorothy Haskins Ariel llJeatre.
Randy Breech, a consulting
engineer from Galli a County, esti- · which was restored in t990, and
now serves as a cultural center in
mat"s that needed repairs to the
exterior of the building alone
downtown Gallipolis.
Breech noted, however, that
would cost $250,000. That figure
does not included repairs to the
most of the fundin~ for the restorainterior of the structure, which
tion of the Ariel butlding was prowould put the repair bill into the
vided from private benefactors,
millions of dollars, Breech said.
rather than public grant fund s.
County· Commissioner Jeff
There appears to be ·no immeThornton took Breech on a walkdiate plan for either restoring or
·ing tour of the building on Monday,. demolishing the Masonic Temple,'
and amici !he falling plaster and .,c , building, although Commissioner.
peeling paint, said that he would. · Janet Howard said Monday that the
space would he ideal as a parking
like to see fundiog sought to restore
the building.
area for the.courthousc.
'
Thornton has suggested using

Scientist's claim.'offers more fodder
for opponents of new clean air rules
Jnslcll Silyre

··

Hillery Harrla '

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;Southern names co-va 1e._1_
c or1ans,
·salutatorian for Sunday ceremony

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M,Sda.,.f.\

CHEVRDLEI

.,.,.&amp;,·-·

J#JGI1.Dir8r~
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class vice president for three years, as
member of student council and as
.Sentinel NeWs Slalf
captain
bf the s_!:hool's volleyball and
· Amber Dlirlene Thomas and Jes·
co-valedicto- softball teams.
sica Sayre were
She
haS
also
served
as statistician
rians of tJle Southern High Sl:hon! ·,
for
the
boys
varsity
and
reserve· bas. Class of 1997, while Hillery Mae
.
ketball
teams,
three
yem;
off'K:e
,}lams Wllf named class salutatorian.
usistant,
two
years;
yearbook
com· .
\ ~is the dauJhter of Jim and
·. Darla Thomps of Synu:use, while miuee, ~ y~; senior class play ,
Sayre il~tfte dau&amp;hter of Aaron and cast mem~r; Scl!ool maaazine, two
Shirley ~.-. of Letart Falls. Harris years; student council. two years;
. il tho tlaiabler ol Jeff Harris and · prom . committee, two years, and
Meigs County Junior Chamber of
'Peborah ~s.l!oth of Ponland. · COIIIliiCI'C:e,
one year. Sbe attends the
·' 1bia f~l. Thomas will attend
Middleport
Church
of Christ
. ~llskitapln Colleie in New Con· S11yre isa member of the Nation·
. ~·wljere ~lte will study journal·
, 111. ~Y llld business. She al H8nor Society and lw been active.
in aumerous achool, district and state
of the Nlliolllll Honor · filA ll!:tivitiea, and ltlldent 1ovem·
·
·
· .,.. beeq ~&lt;:live ia clus
menL
·
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.t MKI ,.,.,.. •rving u

'lty JIM FREEMAN

a

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WASHINGTON (AP) - As · the
U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency approaches ics July target for

~;~~n:n~~.~~~:~:~~~h~;;,~~

~;~.!ss~~~~~~w:kattacks
on the
Last week, two House subcom-

She plans on attending the Uni- mittees collected testimony from.
versity of Rio Grande, wbere she will &lt;loctors and reseirchers who had
study early childhood development ' their own opinions about the hunand business, She has served on dreds of studies examined before the
sc:hool yearbook staff, PRIDE, Teen new regulations were proposed.
lnstitute, choir, quiz bowl, ~and'.
This week, a scientist who'$ been
Meigs County Junicir Fair Board. both an insider and a gadfly used his
library assistant, Mei&amp;s County . unusual status to question the way the
Ju!(ior Chamber of Commerce, and government looked at available S«:i1
mentorship program along with oth- entific data.
er activities.
·
. Tblt seientisl, Kay Jones, gained
Harris will attend Bob Jones Uni· attentiQII in environmental circles by
versity in Greenville, S.C., and is a catching a mistake made by the EPA
member of the Racine First Baptist when estimating how many lives the
Church. She is a member of the controversial regulation might save.
National Honor Society, a Bible
After )ones pointed out a math
sc:hool secrewy and the Proteens error, the EPA admitted he was right ,
'group.
and changed its estimate.
She is active in· the achool yearOn Monday, Jones alleged a dif(~ued on Pltge 3)
fereni sort of error, involving analyt-

ical techniques and the labeling of
some original data in one of the many
studies examined by the EPA.
Instead of possibly preventing
15,000 early deaths each year, .the
proposed standard for airborne soot
would prevent fewer than 1.000 pre·
mature deaths annually, he said at a
news conference convened by regulation opponents, Citizens for a
Sound Economy Foundation.
Jones suggested another five years
of study "to find answers to all questions that remain" about the health
problems caused by microscopic dust
known as paniculates.
The EPA said it was willing to
admit error - and did when Jones
found the math mistakes - but
found no basis for funher changes
based on Jones' new work.
"EPA scientists believe that Dr.
Jones' critique of Ibis particular study
is inaccurate," spokeswoman Loretta Ucelli said.
1be particulate standard was proposed after examination of "over 80
. independent and pee-r-reviewed stud·

)

ies," she ·said.
Ron White of the American Lung
Association said that group, whi ch
wants more restrictions oo diny air,
had not seen Jones' critique 'but "we
would be skeptical about how independent this analysis has been." ·
" Kay Jories obviously in this case
is working for industry representatives who have an agenda and an ax
to grind
about this issue,"
.
. White said.
The utility indu~try. manufacturers
and other b11sinesses oppose changing the nation's air-pollution stan. dards because of the potential cost,
both in new l!quipmimt and in higher electricity bills,
EPA Administrator Carol Brow ner has argued that under the law the
agency cannot take cost into account
at this stage of the process, but that
economics could be addressed later
- for instance, by giving slates extra
time to meet new slllndards.
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Con1mentary
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fu982-2157

A Gannett Co. ,Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGElT
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

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By DeWAYNE WICKHAM

'E.sta6fisfltli in 1948

7118 Senllnol """...,.. - 1 0 llw editor from

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Shott,_.. (300 - · 01-) , ..
1»111!1 pub//- J)'pod _,.
Ill ""Y Ill ad/1111. EIOh lhouldliNI/ude I ~ - -·
- lla,rl,.. phoM number. Bpactty • Hill ff ·· • _,.,,..10 • , . . , _ • ;, a11 10: Lettwo ro 11w Editor, The s.nuno1, 111 coutt sr.. - . . ,, 0111o ·
45711; or, FAX 10 fl44112.;!167.

troubled school system have Balli· poor. Both make sease, bl!t neither is
Gtulllelt News Senice
moreans stampeding out of.lhe city central to stemming lhe loss of popBALTIMORE - This city is and into neighboring counti~s . To ulation in large urban centers.
combat both, city officials have come
bleeding people.
Keeping middle-ci~~SS- people in.
Last year, 14,000 packed up and up with some novel solutions. Balti- the city is.
moved out. This decade, 61,000 have more is installing dozens o( cameras
.Redevelopment schemes i~ dying
bolted to greener pastures. At this downtown so police can monitor cities that focus on business develrate, Baltimore - which celebrates street activity. And lhe city has effec- opment or housing the poor waste tax
its 200th anniversary Ibis year - can tively ceded control of its school sys· · dollars. Not many businesses can
hold its tricentennial in a phone . tern to the state.
thrive in places that middle-class peo' booth.
.
One of six cities designated as ple have abandoned - and money
What staned out as white flight in empowerment zones by the Clinton used to build housing for the poor
lhe 1960s has now become a steady administration in 1994, Baltimore would be better spent on dwellings
exodus of the middle-class people of will get $100 million dollars and spe- . for lhe middle class.
, .
all races from this majority-black city cial tax breaks over a 10-year period ·
For the most pan, peol!le don't
lhat one in four Marylanders once to help revitalize itself. Millions follow businesses, businesses follow
more have been given to the city to people. Developers didn't build subcalled home.
·
·
A Jot of well-intentioned people rebuild its aging public housing urban malls outSide of Baltimore and
are strambling to stanch lhe outflow, stock. ·
olher cities in hopes people one day
But lhe key to saving cities like would move nearby. They followed
but few seem to understand the
Baltimore is not spurring economic lhe migration of middle· class famicause .
development
nor new ho.using for the lies away from the urban core.
Local politicians say crime and a

By DONALD M. ROTHBERG
Associated Prell Writer
WASHINGTON- By nonnal standards, President Clinton ought to feel
lhings are going his way.
.
·.
Unemployment is at a 23-year low. A treaty that 1s a maJor step toward
ridding lhe world of chemical weapons just won Senate ratification. A deal
that might lead to a balanced budget is sealed, albeit a little frayed at the
edges.
·All in all, good·news for the incumbent president - so long~ he does
. not turn to the opinion columns. All he is likely to -find there are references
to his dismal failure as a president and as a person .
Whatever happened to lhe hberal-leaning press that Republicans have long
denounced? Clinton cannot buy a kind word lhese days as columnists he
might have considered likely allies seem in a competition to see who can
get off the nastiest jab.
·
· "Somehow, I lhink, he disappoints people," historian Roben Dallek said
of Clinton. "He's so sman, he's so aniculate, he gives such effective speeches and effe~tive press conferences. l think people an; eKperiencing a gap
between what they expect from him and what he delivers."
·
The kind of Clinton bashing that's been a predictable staple in conservative journals like the National Review and the American Spectator, is commonplace now in The New York Times and the New Re~ublrc;
.
Times columnist Maureen Dowd wrote last week that Clrnton s pres1dency
was "so becalmed, so shrunken, so defeated, so armless" lhat his Republican predecessor, George Bush, "looms as a giant who bestrode lhe eanh."
Anyone who joins with Clinton !o promote a cause as rnoffensrve as volunteerism should beware. ·
In the New Republic , columnist Michael Kelly Mote wilh disdain of the
volunteerism summit attended by Clinton and fonner Presidents Ford, Bush
and Caner, dismissing alllhe attendees as " rich people with servants."
"I volunteer, too," wrote Kelly. "I volunte~r. again, to lambaste the pres·
ident and his cronies for putting together the largest pile of dirty money ever
seen in one place in politics." · ·
What is.going on here? Is Clinton this bad, or is the press in a terrible
snit?
From inside rhe White House, Deputy Communications Director Ann
Lewis sees in the bashing. of her boss that "the na(ural impulse of the press
is to define conflict as newsworthy."
.
Recalling the days when the media were under fire for being too liberal, Lewis said the current hostility toward Clinton is "overcompensation,
an effon to prove they are not liberal .".
.
Political scJentist Larry Sabato of the University of Virginia, lhe author
of a book abour the media and political scandals, thinks the attacks reflect
a frustration over the fact that "the public hasn't responded to a lhousand
revelations about campaign finance."
'
.The press is often accused of being cynical, Sabato said, but in this case
" I think they ' re shocked at the depths of the public's cynicism."
Another factor in the medra's dise.nchantment, he said, is lhat "they've
discovered something that shouldn't surprised them Clinton is mainl~ interested rn Clinton. He doesn't have any strong phrlosophy. He can fhp-flop
with ease."
·Of course, Clinton is not the 'first president to feel the sting of an unhap·
py press.
.
·
Dallek completing the second volume of a brography of Lyndon B. Johnson, said LBJ rarely referred to. the press in private without an unprintable
expletive.
.
..
.
.
He quoted Johnsol) as saymg the press accused me of everyth1ng I dtdn't do and they never found out what I did."
1
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George Washington left office to th1s commentary from the Phtladelph1a
Aurora:
" This day ought to be a jubilee in the United S~tes :" for the man who
is the source of all the misfortunes of our country, 1s thrs day red':"ed to a
level with his fellow citizens." •
·
EDI'fbR'S NOTE: Donald M. Rothberg bas covered national affairs
in Washington since the Johnson presidency.

Berryls World

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Why? Because no program~
meant to aid lhe poor will last long
without the t3x base needed to sus~ii
!hem. Without middle-class voters tQ
satisfy, state ·and federal legisla~or~
will slow lhe flow of taK dollars rrl}o
cities like Baltimore.
·
By focusing its resources on ere:
ating housing. and neighborh~~
that middle- class people want to hve
in Baltimore- by extension - will
~ forced to improve lhe police services and schools lhat served lhe.se
,,.
communities:
.
Most people who move to the suburbs are choosing new home con:-·
struction and manicured lawns over:
the aging housing stock and cluttered,
streets of lhe cities. Their perceptions:
about lower crime rates and better
schools are largely anecd!&gt;tal-lheir'
decisions about where they want 'to
live are based more on personal ;
observation.
And what about the poor? What
about'their needs?
Baltimore- and other cities los: ·
ing population - would do .well to
stop building public housing. Instead, ·
it should use taK dollars to provide '
subsidies for poor people to rent
and/or ow~ apanments and homes
built for lhe middle class.
Such a strategy will disperse poor
people througbout the urban area,
reducing the large pockets of poverty that are· the breedidg ground for
crime - and open up many old
neighbors for renovation or rede_sign
for the creation of middle class housing.
To save its schools, to rescue its ·
poor from the grip of poverty, to save :
itself, Baltimore must make holding
on to the midd)c class its first priQr· ~
ity.
.

Despite all its problems, America's doing all right
By Jan Shoales
Well, Ellen has come out as a lesbian.,and lhe Republic still seems to
be standing. The d~uble-wide
embassy for the Republic of Texas
&lt;§lands abanddned, and the great state
of Texas .remains adhered finnly to
the union. What a relief.
The great state government of California, meanwhile, only took two
voting sessions to declare the soil of
San Joaquin to be tlie official state
din. Not only am ( not making this
up, I understand it was truly a bipar.
tisan effort.
An anonymo'us (for now) 63year-old woman gave birth, and 77year-old Tony Randall became a
father for the first time, giving hope
to kid-friendly Golden Agers everywhere. But ·I wonder how many
retirees really want to bear children.
I would hink that most of them would
prefer to spend their waning years
playing b dge and grumbling about
Social Security, rather than changing
diapers and complaining about the
high price of private schools. I sus-·
peel the number of old-timers who
want to hear the piner-patter of liitle
fect around the retirement community is actually very low. More good
news 1

The controversy surrounding
· Tiger and Fuzzy seems to have abated. And how long could a con troversy involving people named Tiger and
Fuzzy last anyway? The nation
shrugs its shoulders, and moves on.
Despite public fears, McDonald's
didn 't run out of Teeny Beanie Babies
after all, The Babies have had their
month in the sun, and now the Happy Meal is back doing what it does
best -- promoting Disney movies.
(Come to thrnk of it, Tiger. and
Fuzzy sound like·they could be characters in a Disney movie.) ·
Yes, America's doing all right.
Unemployment is down. President
Clinton and Congress have reached a
budget agreement. Charlton Heston is
now a vice-president on the board of
the NRA. The Red Sea of gun control will pan. Beanie Babies will fall,
like manna, from the sk-y.
Everybody's firing up high-priced
stogies and reciting real estate developerand publisher Monon B.
· Zuckennan's mantra: " Privatize,
deregufate, and do not interfere with
the market."
President Clinton, former presidents Bush and Ford,
Nancy Reagan and General Colin
Powell gathered together for the

President's Summit for America's
Future in Philadelphia, joined by 30
governors and 100 mayors. Man~: of
them wore T-shinscommemorating
the occasion, the sleeves of which
they rolled up, and cleaned up an Smile stretch' of Philadelphia street.
Also AI Goreand the Philadelphia
Eagles uilt a playground,
'
Yes, poverty will now drop, ihe
FBI will become a cherished institution once more, and FOR will stop·
smoking and learn to walk -· even
beyond the grave! Fala and Checkers
will romp together in a doggie bipartisan effort.
So ihe Millennium is not looking
as bleak as many millennia! isis would
have us believe.
But we should keep in mind that
many of these changes are merely
cosmetic. Ellen may have come •out
of the closet, but her plots wi II
remain lhe same. She used to •have
trouble getting dates, you' ll recall; I
predict that future episodes will be
about her having trouble getting
dates. Genders may change, but the
situation remains the same.
And there are other double-wide
embassies in our great nation, stuffed
to the ceiling wi!h al\gry men .w.ho

think the nation of their bitter dreams
is more real than the place where they
live.
Legislatures will spend more
waking hours debating which couli:- .
ty has better dirt, than on a bill that
has, oh, I don't know," substance, 1·
suppose.
.
Today's Beanie Babies are yestor•·
day's Barneys. Today's Tiger ahd·
Fuzzy are yesterday's Nick the Greek
and Howard Cosell. A mouth may
change, but the same foot is always ·
inserted.
·
Our new voluntecrism may be
rooted in the philoso.phy that it's better to teach a man to fish than to buy
him a nounder, but if you don't give
him a rod and reel, a license, and
access to the pond, it's not really
much of a skill in today's deregulated, privatized, free-market economy.
In other words, no matter what we do, :
Lucy will never be in lhe Big Show, '
never, not even a lesbian Lucy.
(To receive a complimentary Jan:
Shoales newsleucr, call I-800-989-.
DUCK or write Duck's Bream, 408
Broad St., Nevada City, CA 95959.) :
lan Shoale.s is . a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
·

The good wife syndrome takes its toll
her boyfriend's office Christmas par-'
By Sara Eckel
Margaret was feeling over- ty, and loved to dance with his cowhelmed. She had planned on a sim- workers. But after they married, she
ple, unconventional wedding in her stood primly by her husband's side in
hometown of Chicago. But before . a tweed suit, even though he kept asklong, a Holiday Inn in western Michi- ing her why she' wasn't dancing. Olhgan was booked for the event, and er women spoke of giving up fonns
Margaret was on her way to her third of personal expression -- journal
bridal sh~wer -- given by her future writing, professional singing-- after
in-laws, and auended by people she walking down the aisle. Still others
had never met.
found themselves acting strangely
And then there was the big white schoolmannish; one woman recalls
dress. "I tried not to spend too much gently scolding the teller of a racy
money on it," she said. " Because joke, where she once would have
ihey all basically look alike." Then laughed.
she paused. " You know, I really
The ghost of Donna Reed, say~
wanted to keep things. £imple, .but Heyn, is still haunting many of
then I realized lhat in order to do any- America's married women -- even
thing different it's just so much more women who don't know who Donna
effort. So you just end up doing Reed is. The culture has so lhorthings the way everyone else does oughly absorbed the idea of lhe
them because !hat's lhe easiest lhing · Good Wife, lhat even now women'
to do."
cari't quite shake the idea that when
I was reminded of lhat frantic crill they marry their voice5 should
-- of the way this sman and inde.- · become a liltle softer, !heir sexual his·
pendent woman felt completely tories a little tarner; their ambitions a
caught in the undertow of her own little more restrained. "1 monitored
wedding --- as I read Dalma Hcyn's my wo~s a little so we would act
new book, "Marriage Shock" (Vil- alo_ng really, really well," said one
lard}. The subject of tfeyn's fasci- .recently married woman. "Now he
nating book is marriaae. not wed· wanted to get married as much as I
dings, but lhe voices in it sciund very did .. in fact, he was lhe one whO
much like Margaret's.
pushed for it. And yet it wa$ as if
Marriage shock, says Heyn, is•the there was an understandina that I had
feeling that married women get when BOt what I wanted and in exchange
they suddenly don't feel u fn:e to for gettins whal I wanted, if I want·
~sert their indepencknce. their sex· ed to keep thin1s good between us, I
uality, !heir creativity, !heir sense of had better toe lhe mark. You have to
fun. One woman, for ex101ple, understand, no one said Ibis. This is
always wore funky, sexy clothes tO how I was acting; it wu u if we
1;

'• ,

,

I

I

,.

agreed on somelhing."
Another woman describes why
she staned second-guessing her plans
to go to medical school: "An)l mention or school felt like a direct chal·
lenge ,to my marriage, to mamage
itself .. no, worse, a challenge of my
love for my husband! Like, if you ·
love him, if you love marriage, if you
love your home, blah blah~ you'll
what? You'll shui up! You'll shut
up!"

·.

.'

Heyn believes "that foJ many
women one result of lhese Inner Donna Reeds .is depression, and she
makes the point that the 'rate of
"
depression for married women
is
tim times the rate for single women.
Another result is divorce -- which,
she notes, is usually initiated by the
woman.
I don't know if Heyn's lheory on
why so many Americans are divorcing is correct, birt it does make a lot
more sense lhan some of lhe olhers
going· around these days·. It seems

''. '

quite possible that the reason women
arq leaving their marriages has nothing to do with the culture of the '60s
or the structure of no-fault divorce · .
laws. ~aybe lhey are leaving because
... they're not happy.
·
· And maybe the solution to the
problem is not creating punitive
divorce laws or putting everyoi!O~s
brains back in 1955 (as if that were
even jlossible). Maybe we should trY
to figure out 'how to make marriage
a better experience all around.
.
"In the past 25 years women have .
bloomed," writes Heyn. "How un ,
· we still be talking abou{ fitting mod• • ;
em wives back into an ancient insti· •
tution, rather than enlarging an :
ancient institution to make room for · : ·
modem wives?"
··:•
Send comments to 'lhe author in :
care oflhis newspaper or send her.e- :
mail at saraeumaol.com.
' ':
San Eckel · Is a syndicated · •.
'writer for Newspaper Enterpn.e ; :
,•;
Auodatlon.

Today i-n .history

..
·. .. '

By The Alaoclatld .......
Today is Tuesday, May 13, the 133rd day of 1997. There are 2'.12 days··
'left in lhe year. .
.
Today's Hiahliaht in History:
On May 13, 1981, Pope John Paul II was sliot and s'eriously woundeft ~~ '
St. Peter's SquaR by Turkish assailant Mehmet Ali Aaca.
On this date:
·
· ·
In 1607, the English colony at Jamestown, Va., was settled.
J•
l_n 1846, lhe United States declared that a state of w.- already ui~ted·
a&amp;lllnst Mexic;o.
.
.

·.

c~ltlons lnd'hiah temperatures

forecut for

thrive

tf.

School standards
pl"n incomplete,
opponents claim

· Wedan•ay, May 14

...

The offer .o f tax breaks mighi
induce a few businesses to ret~
into inner cites, but only !hose that
depend on unskilled labor will
in communities lhat lhe middle-clas~
have desened.
; The key to Baltimore's survival is /
its ability to hold its middle class.
And to do lhat, it has to make keepif~~ them in the city a biggest _priori.

Clinton a target for
columnists of all stripes

•

..

Ponwoy • Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Wci'ltller

Baltimore must flght ·to keep-middle class

The Daily Sentinel

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
G1111ersl Man.,-

,.
•.
Tuaaday,May13,1117

.. '

Tuaa-ay,May 13,1917

•

The Dally SeJitlnel• P-. 3

Local News in Brief:.......
Pool not forgotten, mayor says

The Middleport Pool has not been fcqouen, Mayor Dewey Horton said
at Monday night's meeting of Middleport Vrllage Council.
Durin&amp; !he brief meeting. Horton addreued lhe subject of the _pool,
which hall been closed for two Huon~ arid is currently underaoing ren·
ovation.
"Some people think we are not doing anYthing," Horton said.
'' '''
he voted against the stan~ds
"We haven~ forgotten the pool," he said. "Some people lhink l"e aren't
By JOHN McCARTHY.
because they lack a specific tesling
doing anything ... we don't want to do anylhing wrong."
' ' ''
Aeaocleted Preu Writer
Last rnonlh, council hired a pool manager, Dave Barr, to oversee oper·
COLUMBUS -The new stan- mechanism.
IND.
"In 1983, when lhe last standards
ations at lhe facility.
dards the State Board of Education
Following Horton's comments on the pool, council went into execuhas adopied lack half the pieces of the were proposed, lhc board brought us
'
tive session to discuss personnel matters.
puzzle: how to measure students up the whole· package," said Ocasek,
who lhen was a state senator. "I don't
Afterwards, council agreed to hire Assistant Police Chief Jamie Ash
to
those
standards,
opponents
of
lhe
' ' ' ' " lcotumbus!sa•
lhink we have a package deal."
as a salaried employee.
plan said.
Ocasek also objected to what he
In olher business, council:
The board voted 13-4 Monday to
said
is
seen
as
the
state
dictating
to
:
• Agreed to h•ve someone fix lhe electric in the resident dispatcher's
adopt the standards and forward
apanment on lhe second floor of the municipal building;
lhem to the Legislature, which would local districts.
"I don't like to face my con• Set lhe next meeting for Tuesday, May 27 at7:30 p.m. since the reg·
need to change Ohio law to put them
stituents who say lhe state is taking
ular meeting day falls on the Memorial Day holiday;
in place.
• Appro.ved bills and the minutes of the April 28 meeting .
.
·
;. , The school standards would over," he said.
W. VA.
·Proponents,
however,
told
the
Present
were
Horton,
Clerk
Dennis
Hockman,
Council
President
Beth
replace rules that tell districts how
Stivers and council members Rae Gwiazdowsky, Sandy lannarelli, Mick
much class time lhey must spend on board that the new standards will provide a more meaningful edl!cation to
Childs and John Neville . .
subjects.
'
The proposed changes would students.
James May, director of vocation·
require students to show comp~
al
and
adult education for Kent citY.
cy in 10 subject areas - Englisli,
Monday, June 2 is the last day to apply for the homestead real estate
schools,
said a similar program has
health and physical education, malhtax exemption for tax year 1997.
.
·
.
ematics, science, social studies, ans, .been in place in lhe nonheast Ohio
The
state
reimbursed
program
proy1des
real
estate
_
tax
reductions
!or
foreign language, business, family · district for about one year.
•"
senior
citizens
and
lhe
disabled,
and
is
based
on
1996
rncome,
accordrng
His district works wilh local busiand consumer services, and technolto Meigs County Auditor Nancy Parker Campbell .
nesses to prepare studtnts for careers.
ogy.
In order to qualify for the homestead eKemption, residents must be at
Schools have !heir O\lln standards The plan, which received a special
least
65 years old during 1997,live in lhe home and have a tota~ yearly
of achievement, based attendance, waiver from lhe state, has been a suc·
income of not more lhan $20,800, or be permanently and totally dtsabled.
graduation, dropout rates and other cess, he said ..
.
.
There is a separa1e application for owners of manufactured homes,
"It's based on competency arid not
The Auocltltect Plftl
. lhe rooord low was 34 in 1996. Sun- measutes. Schools that do not live up
Campbell
said.
: More rain and cool temperatures set tonight will be at 8':37 p.m. and to Jhe standards would have to locked into time," May said. "It
allows students to go along as fasl as
)!re' in lhe forecast for most of Ohio, sunriSQ-at 6:17a.m. on Wednesday. employ a plan to improve.
Before
the
vote,
the
board
heard
they can."
1hi: National Wealher Service said. .
~ Weather forecast:
The board considered several
from
educators
and
parents
on
bolh
;·: -~low pressure syste~ will trigger
To~ight ... Panly cloudy. Lows in
amendments
to the plan and adopted
bowers and lhunderstorms across lhe the l~er 40s. West winds 10 mph, sides of lhe issue.
One of the speakers said that the one lhat would recognize the full
ste.te today and on Wednesday. Some · shifting io the south late ~~lis evening.
board
should not adopt standards lhat number of gifted students in lhe state.
of lhese storms could contain small
Wednesday ...Showers and thundon't
measure student competence. The original plan had withheld fundCJNCn\?NATI(AP)-StateTrea- avoid a battle wilh Taft in the May·
hail in tlie central and eastern pans of derstorms likely. Highs ,in the mid
hoard
said it would develop such ing for ·some of those students. surer J. Kenneth Blackwell is lobby- 1998 primary election.
The
ihe state.
60s. Chance of rain 60 per~ent.
"There is absolutely no interest in
Opponents of the amendment said it ing Republican activists for debates
: Skies will become panly cloudy in
Wednesday night.... Showers and measures over lhc next year.
"We
cannot
focus
on
resulis
if
we
this
fall
with
Ohio
Secretary
of
State
Ken,"
said Jeff Jacobson, chairman
could cost lhe state $95 million.
inost locations tonight with temper- thunderstonns likely. Lows in' the mid
lhem,"
said
-Melanie
cannot
assess
The Ohio Department of Educa- Bob Taft to detennine which should of the Montgomery County Republi~tutes dropping to lhe mid 40s in lhe 40s.
Elsie, an education policy consultant tion hopes to implement the standards be the GOP's nominee for governor can Pany, a Taft supponer. "He is
southeast and around 40 degrees
Extended forecast:
·
in 1998.
going to end up doing damage to
in lhe 1998-99 scbool year.
elsewhere. On Wednesday afternoon,
Thrlrsday... Partly cloudy. A chance from Nonh Canton.
.
Board
member
Oliver
Ocasek
said
Blackwell,
who
has
been
hinting
himself in the long run. People have
high temperatures will climb into the of showers in lhe afternoon. Highs 60
that
he
will
challenge
Taft
for
the
·
stopped
paying atteniion. Most of·us
itpper 50s in the north to upper 60s to 65.
1998 gubernatorial nomination, find Ibis whole thing rather boring."
littlte soulheast.
Friday... Panly cloudy. Lows in lhe
wrote Monday to Ohio's 88 GOP .
Only candidates who have raise~
, ·-The record-high temperature for lowerl 40s and highs 60 to 65. ·
county
chairs
and
all
66
members
of
$250,000
could participate in the
this date at the Columbus weather
Saturday...Ciear.. Lows 30 to 35
the
state
RepubliCB!t
central
commitdebates,
Blackwell
said in his letter.
'station was 88 degrees in I982 while and highs 65 to 70.
tee. He suggested that the Ohio The Ohio Republican Party would
•
WASHINGTON (AP) - Retail sales repons for the last two months Republican Pany sponsor debates in then conduct a statewide poll of
sales fell 0.3 percent in April, the are the strongest arguments for the all 33 Ohio Senate !listricts to deter· Republican voters and the winner
mine who should be the pany's. · would be the pany:s nominee, which
.
biggest decline in 10 months, as auto Fed holding back."
endorsed
candidate to replace Ohio would avoid a primary contest
The government report showed
sales dropped by lhe largest amount
Gov.
George
Voinovich, who will run between the candidates, Black well
~ DENVER (AP) The same person," Fortier said matter-of-fact- since November and cold and rainy lhat department store sales fell 0.9
said.
Miqhael Fortier who testified lhat ly. ".[just didn't think Tim had it in weather dampened depanment store percent in April, lhe second consec- for the U.S. Senate nell! year.
Some
Republicans
who
say
they
The Ohio Republican Pany is cool
sales.
'limolhy McVeigh spent monlhs plot· • him,"
utive decline. Sales had been down
favor
Taft
wish
that
Blackwell
would
to
the
idea.
Jing lhe Oklahoma City bombing had
_McVei~~:h. a 29-vear-old Gulf War
The Commerce Depanment said 0.1 percent in March. Last week, a
1Jragged to friends early on that he veten1n, could be sentenced to death today that sales totaled a seasonally surve~ of major retail chains had also
:Could lie about the blast and make if convicted of murde~ and conspira- adjusted $212.2 billion last month shown disappointing silles in April,
mrllions on the talk show circ1,1it.
cy for the worst terronst attack rn the compared -with·a revised $213 billion which analysts had_blamed on' cold
t wa5 a contrast lhat defense attor- United· States. The April 19, 1995, .in March, when sales had been and rainy weather.
·
(Continued from Page 1)
Don Roush, Kimberly Lynn Roush,
:ney. Stephen Jones was expected to ~x_plosion killed 168 people and unchanged from February.
Sales at auto dealerships also bn.lk and was a three-year member of Jessiu Erin Sayre, Lorn Jean Sayre,
The April decline was the biggest dro~ped 0.9 pei'Cei~Nast~~; Southern volleyball team. .
;e1p)ore often once cross-examination IOJUred 500.
Jennifer Lynette Scarberry, William
;resumed today. Jones has suggested · - · _W.W!e prosecutors have asked ot~­ since a 0.5 percent drop in June.
lowmg a 0.3 percent dechne rn
Honorarians are Brian Marvin Earl Sheppard;
! that Fortier slanted his testimony to er Witnesses to descnbe McVetgh s
The number c~ered financial ~arch. The April setback was the Allen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Vanessa Kay Shuler, Nathaniel
•secure a lenient sentence for lesser hatred of the government, rt w.as markets, which have been rallying in btgg~st srnce November.
Allen: Emily Joann Duhl, daughter of Jacob Sisson, Melissa Rae Smith,
:charges associated wilh the bombing. Fort~er who was called to provrde recent weeks on a belief that signs of
SnK:e retarl sales account for _about Mr. and Mrs. Mike Duhl; Trudy Paul Michael Smith, Daniel Guy
: .:Yet Fortier, lhe prosecution's star deta~ls of the suspect rn the months a slowing economy will keep the one~thrrd of total economrc actrvrty, Juanita ·Justis, daughter of Mr. and Teaford, Amber Darlene Thomas,
~ witness, insisted he was telling the lead1ng to lhe bombrng.
Federal Reserve from raising interest monlhly ch~nges are clos~ly watched Mrs. Bill Justis; Mark Fitzgerald ~athem Renee Turley, Sarah Eliza'truth Monday when he testified that
Using a model of dow~town Okla- rates when they meet next Tuesday. by economrs!s..for any stgnals they Lewis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank beth Wallbr,own, Larry Eugene
Bond prices rose . immediately may provide about the course of the Lewis; Gregory Allen McKinney II, Willis. Craig Michael Wolfe and
; 1-,t~Veigh cased lhe Alfred P. Murrah homa. Ctty, Fort1er sa1d he ~nd
· Federal Building monlhs before the McVe1gh drove by the Murmh-burld- after the figures were released, push- overall economy. . .
.
son of Mr. and Mrs. Gregory McK- Roben Lester Writescl.
•blast and even considered crashing ing four months before the bombrng. ing down open-market interest rates
Economrc actrv1ty was . racrng inney· and Tonia Nicole Nazarewycz
Baccalaureate and commence·, his truck bomb th~gh the glass He showed_where he said McVeigh that move in the opposite direction.of ahead in lhe first three months of tbe daughter of Mr. an~ Mrs. Dougl~ ment eKercises will be held Sunday,
front doors in a suicide attack.
plannelj to put the ttuck and ari alley prices. Yields on 30-year Treasury year, w~th the gross d~mest1c product Rees.
•
May 18 at 8 p.m. at the Charles W.
It was riveting testimony. Foni- where he plano to park a getaway bonds dipped to 6.86 percent in the expandrng at a tomd 5.6 percent
Members or the Southern High . Hayman Gymnasium, with the Rev.
early going today from 6.89 'percent . annual rate. The raptd growth pushed School Class of 1997 include:
'ercalmly recounting how his former car. 1_ .
.
. .
Aaron F. Young, youth minister at the
•Army buddy and the best man at his . . Fort1e
. cVergh asked h1m !o, late Monday.
lhe unemployment rate down to a 23Frances Lynn Adkins, Kelly Racine First Baptist Church, deliver·wedding talked about renting a Ryder jorn th lot but he refused., He sard
Analysts, who had expected a . year low of 4.9 percent last month. Renee Alkire, Brian Marvin Allen, ing the address. ·
:truck and filling it with explosives to he le ed oft~e b,~m.brng whrl.e decline in April sales, said the report
Fears _tha_t the economy m1ght be Thomas Malhew Bailey, Christopher
destroy the building as revenge for .wale ng televrs1_o~; R1ght away I provided more ammunition for those overheating pro~pted lhe Federal Ryan Ball, Chad Michael Blount,
in the Fed who are 'arguing that the Reserve to nudge rnterc~t r~tes up by Amy Marie Boggs, Matthew Joseph
;the 1993 government siege. on the thou . t Tim drd 11.
.
Branch Davidian compound -f\Far
e•rful he would go to pr1son and central bank does nol'need to raise a quane~_percentage pornt rn March, Bradford, Tyson Kenneth Buckley.
·Waco; Texas.
'
eve be,executed, Fortier said he lied interest rates again because the econ· the first rncrease rn three. years.
Keri Lynn Caldwell, Melissa Lee
' • "He told me they wanted to bomb toe rybody, from the FBI and the omy is slowing on its 9w11.'
. That sent Wall Street rnt_o a nose- Canan, Tracy Leec Card, Angela
"This suppons lhe notion lhat lhe drve as the Dow Jones rndustnal Dawn Carleton, Gary Lee Cooper, ·
:the'· building on lhe anniversary of media o his father.
.
.
:Waco ... to cause a general uprising
"~ father was takrng _th1s very consumer is coming back to earth
~verage shed 9.8_percent of 1ts _value Angel Star Day, Emily Joann Duhl,
; in, America, hopefully that would hard, sard Fortr~r, chokrng back after an autumn and winter buying rna month. A vane~ of recent s1gnals James Allen Evans, Matthew Shane
knock some people off the fence and tears. 'He was gorng through a ner- spree," said Roben Dederick, chief that the economy 1s slowrng have Evans, Kevin Cunis Fields, Daniel
economic consultant at Nonhero tu~ lhe f!!ood on Wall Street to Wayne Fisher;
, cause them to take action," Fonier vous reakdown."
.
: said.
F rtier, 27, pleaded ~Uilty . to four Trust Co. in Chicago. "The retail cautiOus optn11_rsm
Nicholas Wade Fitch, Nathaniel
: .Yet Fortier insisted that McVeigh fed I ~arges •. rncludmg farl~re to
Albert Franko, Nathan Daniel
Our statistics show that rneture
: was not the face of terror depicted on rc n tHe bombing plot and lyrng to
Haines, Philip Andrew · Hamm,
drivers and home owners have
; the cover of Time magazine.
th~ FBI. .H~ faces _up to 23 years rn
Hillery Mae Harris, Kristen Nicole
lewer
and less costly losses
' :;'"If you don't consider what hap- pnson, bu~ hkely wrll get less because
Units of the Meigs County Emer- Rutland squad assisted;
than other age groups. So It's
Hensler. Stephanie Lynn Jones, 'Ihldy
• pened in Oklahoma. Tim was a good of h1s testimony,.
7:19p.m., Minersville Hill Road, Juanita Justis, Brian Keith Kimes,
. gency Medical Service recorded I0
only fair to charge you less for
·
Jones
noted
that
Fortier
told
Eli
White, Veterans Memorial Hos- Joseph Lloyd Kirby Jr., Jason
calls for assistance Monday. Units
your Insurance. Insure your
. . ' · ~ ·- '
another friend he wanted to "wait till responding included:
pital, Syracuse squad assisted;
home
and car With us and save
Alexander Lawrence, Barbara Ann
The Daily Sentinel after the trial and do book and movie
I0:3S p.m., Crew Road, Po111eroy, Layne, Joseph John Layne, Mark
even mo;e with our special
CENTRAL DISPATCH
' rights. I can just make up something
multi-DCllicv discounts.
8:06a.m., Laurel Street, Pomeroy, Christopher VanReeth, O'B lcness Fitzgerald Lewis, Travis Jay Lisle,
(VSPSJI~)
juicy."
Memorial
Hospital.
Kenny Hawk, treated at ihe scene;
Tiffany Dawn Lonas, Jeremy Lynn
POMEROY
Publilhed every oflemoon, MondD)' throUJh t
12:40 p.m., Overbrook Nursing
Lyons, Joshua Wayne Marshall;
!flday. I I I Court St.: Pomeroy, 0111o, by tile l
1: I I p.m.,'· OBNC, Lawrence
Cenlef, Middleport, Ada Starcher;
Jesse Ryan Maynard, Gregory
Ohio Valley ~btiJhiftJ CompanyJOannett Co., :
Stewan, Holzer Medical Center.
Potnoroy, Otuo 45769, I'll. 997·21 56. Second
Pleasant Valley Hospital;
Allen . McKinney II, Tonia Nicole
cltio- paid • Ponaoy, Ohio.
RACINE
Aln Ele Power .......................40\
3:56 p.m., Leading Creek Road,
Nazarcwycz, Darrell Ryan Norris,
Akzo
......................................
87\
9:
14
a.m.,
Waid Sayre Hill, Amy Jo Northup, Roy Lee Pierce,
·
Middleport, Betty Lemley, PVH,
M~mbtrr The Aaoclillld l'nlu, and 1M Ohio
Aml'fecb •••••••••••·····~··••n••••••~.63r
Franklin Lemley, &gt;.'MH. '
New•paper Alsocial:ion.
Brianne Lea Proffitt, Dec . Jay ·
AlhlaMOII .•..•..•. ~················.45f.
RUTLAND
rqn'MAS'I'IR1 Send addraa conecdoot 10
AT6T ....,-............................... ~32:4
Mildred
Richards, Amy Marie Rizer, Charles
12:02 · a.m., OBNC,
lbe Deily Sentinel, Ill Coon St. Ponaoy.
BMk Orw ..............................42\
Qui!
to
meet
William Robens Jr., Adam Wesley
illiio 4l769.
.
.
Bob Evirla .............................. 14
The Roek Sptings Better Heallh Clark, PVH;
Roush, David Jason Roush , Joshua
!!'&gt;•
Borg-Warrter
.........................
47\.
1:31
p.m.,
Salem
Street,
Buryl
n""
SUUCRIPriON IU.TIS
Club will meet Thursday, I p.m. at
Chlm~ .............................1·8 \
': .
., c.rltr•MMr ....
White, HMC ;
the home of Phyllis Skinner.
Olio \Volt. ................................................$2.00
CMrm Shpe ............................&amp;\
4:17 p.m .. · OBNC, .Gertrude
&lt;lne Mo..t. ................................................ $8.70
Cltv Hold,q .................... ~ ...... .31
Deweiss, O'Bleness Memorial Hosdnt Year ................:.............................. $104.00
Meetbig eanceleci'
,_,.I MoguJ ........................ 29~
.
0.Mtt ................................~92~
A meeting of the 1977 Southern pital.
' .,
SINGLB con PIIICB
Qooclyelr; louuoooououooooouuooooooo54\
~ly .................................... ,............ J~ c.m
High School aass reunion commitKmarf.....................................13\
'
.
tee ~hedufed for tonight has been
~bon .......... poy ............. ,
Uncia End ...............................27
·~,In l d v . - - 10 The Dolly SeMIMI
canceled.
Djllolutloa ..-..ated
Ltd.........................................18\
01alhree. tb. or 12 mondl biiiL Credit will flit
. An action for dissolution of marova
..........
-...........................
3o'.(.
)lveOCMtcr-~k.
OM V•llfv _...........................31\
Rally achedaW
•
fiase !las been granted in Meias .
;.,;, subiCIIpdoll by mail pl!inlhtd lo 11011
rttoPIM ....................... ~..........32
A Believers IIJ'e Receivers rally Colpaty Court of Common Pleis to
,..,. Flnl.~. ,.................4••~ .....11
" " " " - - -IIIYiillllle.
.
his been .scheduled at the Rutland Ansela G. Hood and Steven R.
Rockw•ll .. .:................ ~ ...........
Mu.r.-....,... .. ...,..._ .....
ChW-ch of God, State Route 124, Rut· Hood.
RD-111111
..............................180~
1.. r1!o •INc:•ipdGo porlod. Sobo r..,._ land, Siturday, 7 p.m:; Sunday, II
clioiOIIOIY bo I. .. , _ by--'"' 1M
~· ••• J.";; ••••~ ••••••••••••••••••••.s\
a.m. and 6 p.m.
............. ;..........................42
Marrlap IIcea214 EAST MAIN
*end¥'• ,;..............................23f
. Marriage licenses have . been
, ~
MAILIIJIICRIPTIONS
,POMEROY
~
18'/c
,..~
Rmval anaouuced
issued in Mei1s County Probate
t~121.30
99H887
· Revival services will be held at the- Court io Jason David Shain, 24,
- -.......: .......................................1153.12
Stoall
nspclrtl .... till 1Q:30
Calvary
Pilgrim
Chapel,
SR
143,
~l
...,._ce
Racine, and Aimee Milenc Lemley,
D -......-.... -.....-.......... -..... _..... $1Cl!.l4i
••Ill_• ...,.. pravtded by Adw8t
'Wednesday
through
Sunday,
7
each
'
-~,..~
r I
21, Rutland; and to Kevin Andrew
Life Home car Business
~ Glllllpolla.
ll.'wroi.L................-............................h9.2S
evening.
The
Rev.
Earl
Newton
will
Lambert,
21
,
Pomeroy,
and
Katrina
' '
... ...................................
n. ~ . """"".
· be evangelist. Public invited.
!~~....:.......... _............ -........ StOI.n
Ruth Turner, 22, Pomeroy.

I

Deadline set for application

.

~Rainy

conditions expected
.ito continue into Thursday

on

lty

Blackwell's push for de_bpte
worries some Republicans

Drop in April retail sales .
cheers financial markets

ttncVeigh attorney hammers
~~ credibility of cUent's pal -

SHS co-valedictorians

Squads respond to 1o·calls

We live Mature
·Drivers, Ho•e
Owners and
Mobile Ho•e
Owners Special
· Savings.

Stocks

Announcements ·

.

Meigs court news

'B.~!'ER~

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

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�Tu11dly,lllty 13, 1187

The Daily· ·s entinel :

Sports

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.

.. .

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - In overtime, Utah's strateay wu. as predicUible as it was Hnstoppllble.
Give the ball to Karl Malone and
try to stay out of his way.
· That was just fine with the Jazz
power forward, who responded with
a performance underscoring his bid
for league MVP: 32 points, including
six of Utah's nine overtime points,
and 20 rebounds in a 98-93 victory
Monday night that eliminated the Los
Angeles Lakers from the NBA playoffs.
The outcome put the Juz in the
Western Conference title for the
fourth time in six years. In the three·
previous appearances, they have
failed to reach the NB~ Finals.
"I knew they were going to nin a
lot of plays for me in overtime," Malone said with a lfin after giving the
Jazz a 4-1 decision in the best-of-7
second-round series. "I never forget

NatleMIJ..ape

•

By SCO I I WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
A srcat pitcbing duel ended in a 52 SouiJ!em victory as Petie. Sisson
grounded a bases loaded single
through the hole at first to break a 22 tie and give Southern the.evenrual
winning runs Monday night in the
Class A Southeast baseball sectional
at Southern High School.
Southern advances to the tournament finals, while Eastern bows out,
despite having a couple regular sea.son games to finish.
In the second inning, Travis Litle
led off with a single and stole second,
Nate Sisson singled, then Lisle carne
home on a 'Jyson Buckley single for
the game's lirs.t score. In the first two
Eastern half innings, Southern piicher Corey Williams sat the side down
in order 1-2-3.
Eastern's hurler, freshman Eric
Smith suffered.. a rocky second, but

EASTERN'S freshman. pHchai' Eric SmHh fires away against
Southern In Monday night's secllbnlll tournament baseball game.
The Tornadoes won 5-2 to advance to th8 sectional finals.

MHS r~llies ·to edge
NY Buckeyes 6-4. ·
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Tony Dugan's bases-loaded triple
in the sixth inning cleared the bases .
in the sixth inning and gave the
Meigs Marauders a 6-4 victory over
the Nelsonville-York Buckeyes Monday evening in a make,up contest at
Nelsonville.
With the win the Marauders raise
their record to 17-7 overall and 13-3
in the Ohio Division of the TVC. The
defending Regional. Champions open
up tournament play on Wednesday
when they travel to Jackson to tangle
with the top seeded Ironmen.
Meigs took a 3-0 lead in the third
inning on a pair of singles by Scott
George and Brad Whitlatch and a
couple of Buckeye errors. Nelsonville-York scored a run in the botloin of the third to pull to within 31.

In the -sixth inning with one out A.

J. Vaughan walked, Brad Davenport
singled and .Robert Qualls walked to
load the bases. Dugan then hit a drive to left tHat got past a diving Buckeye left fielder to clear the !&gt;ases.
Nelsonville score three in the bottom of the inning, but couldn't get any
closer.
Jeremiah Bentley picked up the
win with help from Brad Davenport
and Scott George. The three combined to strike out five, walk two and
give up seven hits. George and
Hoover led Meigs at the plate with a
pair of singles each, Dugan had his
triple, Whitlatch, and Davenport both
added a single.
Reeves was the losing pitcher for
the Buckeyes, Lindsey and Watkins
had a pair of singles each to lead the
Buckeyes.
Meigs
003 003 0-6 7 I
Nels-York 001 003 0-4 7 4

Smith ac.c epts
Kentucky post
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) - Tub- we interviewed," UK president
by Smith expects to carry on the ';olin- Charles T. Wethington Jr. said before
ning tradition at Kentucky.
the UK Athletics Association
"There's no reason we can't be as approved the appointment "He . is
successful and to maintain this level truly the choi.ce of this administration
of excellence that has already been for the filling of tliis position of bas:
established over the years w1th thts · ketball coach."
·
great tradition," he said after being ·. ' Smith, who is black. downplayed
named Monday to succeed Rtck Pttl· the race issue in taking over one of
no as Kentucky's coach.
the most visible programs in the
· Smith's inherits a program that nation.
~ach~d the NCAA Final Four three
"It's more important that 1 be
umes on. the past five y_ea~, wonnong judged on my character and the con,
the tttle tn 1996 and linoshong runne.r, ' tent of my character than the color of
up ,this year. K~ntuc~y ha~ won stx my skin. But I realize that it is impornatJOnal champ1onsh1ps on It~ stoned tant. Just like I mentioned to everyhistory,·
one that i.s a Kentucky Wildcat fan,
"I hope we ~an reach those e~pec- there are blacks that also are inter· h, w ho has ested and eKcited because I am a
lations. •' sat·d smtt
coached the past two seasons at . black head coach.,
Georgia. "Coach Pitino set the bar
Kentucky 's all-white team lost to
·
.
.
Texas Western, a squad that started
pretty high."
Smtih planned to meet wnh ' five blacks, in the 1966 NCAA
retut:ning players m the next few days • championship game that came to .
10 let them know. ·what he. expects of symbolize segregation in college ba&lt;.them.
.
ketball.
"M
h'l
h
·
b
ed
on
lo
c
. y p I os~p .Y1s .. as . .. ~ •
Rupp didn 't successtully recruit a
famtly and dtsctphn_e, he satd. I II black. player until Tom 1 Payne in
th
h b
h
challenge em to raose t e ar anol • 1969, three years before Rupp retired.
Rupp's son, Herky, said his father
cr level and work ev~n harder than
they have on the past.
would have welcomed Smith as
Smith received a five-year con- coach
. tract, .butfinancialtermswerenotdis. "He wouid have •one up and
d fl ev
h
rt dl
e
close ·. ow er, e repo e Y shaken his hand and congratulated
would mcrease his salary from the him," he said. ''He would have
$605,280 he would have rece1vcd at wished him well and '"e would have
th $1
''
volunteered to be able to help hi!ll in
Georgia next season to more an
million .
any way he could "
·
"He was the only candidate that
· ·

•

Murdoch apparently on verge
Of buying los Angel~s Dodgers

·
r

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Rupert
Murdoch appears on the verge of
adding the Los Angeles Dodgers, one
of sport's premier franchises, to his
burgeonina business empire.
Owner Peter O'Malley, whose
family has controlled the Dodgers
since 19.50, when they were still in
Brooklyn, aaid Monday he has .asked
bMeball for permissiOn to enter irito
serious ulks with Fox Group, an
affiliate of Murdoch's News Corp.
Fox spokesman Vince Wladika
iaid, "We're in negotiations," but
would not comment further.
A t&amp;levision soun:e, speabns on ·
the condition he not be identified,
told The Alaoclated Press .the deal
could be announced next week. The
pnc. i• expecled ~be SJSO million-

$400 million.
O'Malley said in a statement
issued by the Dodgers: "We're in the
fifth month of what we expected to
be a six-month process."
The team's sale price is expected
to set a baseball record, topping the
$173 million Peter Angelos' group
paid for the Baltimore Orioles in.
1993.
'
O'Malley ann6unced on Jan. 6
that he was putting the team on the
block.
He needed the permission of baseball officials before he could share
certain financial informatiOn with the
Fox Group, including delails of basebtll'l national television, marketing
and licelllin&amp; deals.

I

then settled down to pitch out of several jams and carne through with the
big play in clutch situations.
Williams walked Eastern's Daniel
Ono to lead off the third inning, Jeremy Kehl i'eached, but erased Otto on
a 5-4 fielder's choice. Joey Dillon.
designated hitter for left fielder Wes
Sanders, walked and advanoed on an
. error, as Kehl came home. PatAeik. er walked, aitd Eric Dillard singled
him home on the hit and run for a 21 Eastern lead.
Young Smith had a good third
inning, allowing only a double to
Jesse Maynard, who was left stranded. ·
Eastern threatened by getting the
first two runners aboard in the fourth,
Smith on a walk and Josh Win a hit
batsman, however, a doubl.e play ball
and Williams strike out erased the rattv.
·
In the Sou!hern fourth, Michael
Ash led off with a double for Coach

Mick Winebrellnel's crew, Williams
sacrifice him to second, and Nate Sisson singled him home for a 2-2 tie.
All sides were quiet iii the fifth, ,
although Southern played for one run
when Dill walked and was sacrificed
to second by P. Sisson. Williams, on
the flip-side, retired Eastern in order.
In the sixth, Ash ·led off with a
single, Williams singled, then with
two out, Matt Dill walked to load the
bases. Petie Sisson worked the count
full, then grolpled a bases loaded
single through the hole at first ·to
break a 2-2 tie 8lld give Southern the
eioenrual winning runs, 4-2. Steve
Durst then came on in relief. He
issued a walk and hit ~?atter to force
home aDQther run, 5-2 before getting
out of the inning."
Pork Dill then came on ill relief to
get the save.
,
Smith and Durst combined for
nine hits allowed, four strikeouts, five
walks, one hit batter, and Eastern

made no errors. Williarns,.the w$
' •
ncr, and save man Dill pvc up j t
one Eastern hit, fanned eisht
walked five. Southern made ofje
error.
. ~
Southern hitters were Pete ·sissdn ·
with two RBI's and ningle, Maynald
a double, Ash a double and sing~,
Nate Sisson two singles, Buckleyla
· single, and Williams a single. Joe KO"·
by had an RBI. .
. 1
Dillard was the lone Eastern h\1ter.
,
•
The Eastern-Southern Southealu
Sectional softball Championship w4s ·
postponed until tonight because ~
of the umpires failed to report to tJje
game site. Game time is tonight at' S
. Ra.
•
p.m. tn
ctne.
Lincscore:
·
Eastern "002 000 0=2 1 0
Southern 010 103 x=5 9 1
WP-Williams
Lp-Smith

26
21
18
19
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Atlanta
Florida
MoniiUI
. ' NewYolil
• Phi'-dclphia

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19
16

Pinsburgh
St. Louis
CinciMari
Chicago

II

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San Fnncisco
Color.do
Los Angeles
San Diego

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Monday's
rtSUIIs
.
I

Atlanta I0, Pittsburgh 2
Colorado 9, Philadelphia 2
Florida II, Houston 4
Only games scheduled

;

1\Josday's GIUIIeS
St. Louis (An.Benes 2-1) at Philadelphia (Stephenson 0-0), 7:05p.m.
San Diego (Valenzuela 1-4) 81 Monlreal (P,Martinei 5-0), 7:35p.m.
San Francisco (Estes 4-2) 81 Cincinnati (Burba 3-3), 7:35 p.m.
Houston (Hampton 2-3) 81 N.Y. Mets (Reynoso 2-0), 7:40p.m.
. Florida (Saunde!S 1-1) at At!jll'ta (Glavine 4-2), 7:40 p.m.
· Los Angeles (A.stacio 3-0) at Chicago Cubs (Mulholland 3-3), 8:05 p.m.
On_ly games scheduled

New Lexington ousts
Meigs .from sectional
tournament play 6-4

'Wednesday's

Baltimore
New York
Toronto
Boston
Detr!lit

24
21
19
15 .
15

I

..
-~

•

PeL

. II

.686

19
17
17

14
15

w

-Sports briefs-

.GB

---Sports briefs~. . ...

explode," Knight said.
The manager helped break up the
argument and talked with both players afterward, while the clubhouse ·
was kept closed to reporters.
"I was. there very quickly. I've
seen it happen I0 times in clubhousto 80 .at-bats. But, hey, those 80 at es. I've been involved in a couple,"
bats are over with. I can't worry Knight said: .
The tension has been building
about -what 's happened in the past.
"It's been frustrating because we through the Reds' poor play in recent
haven't played well as a team, which weeks, Knight said. It has worsened
makes it worse.''
·
.That tension show in the club- .as the Reds .have often left runners on
. base, killing potential scoring opporhouse Saturday night when Boone tunities.
and Deion Sanders had a disagree- . "Dei9n, obviously, had opportument after the Reds lost 9-6 -to the nities to drive in runs and didn't do
Padres in San Diego.
Boone and sanders were it. so he's ticked off. And Dret, he's
been frusirated all year," Knight
said.
.
.
.
restrained by teammates and the ·
cause of the dispute wasn '{ clear,
The R:eds wovnd up the 4-5 road
although it apparently was rooted in
trip
by 'losing 5-4 Sunday in II '
h'
somet mg that occurred during the . innings, then had Mond11y off. They'·
game, teammates said.
stan a seven-game home stand
"~y didn't fight,' ' Knight said. tonight with the first of two games
"There was jusr exchange of ver- against San Francisco.
biage in the heat of the loss.
'"fhere is frustration, probably, in
Flnt to iuke dJI .
struggles that we're ha.ving individThe first transcontinental teleually. Things heat up and you have to phone call. between Alexander Grarelease them. Sometimes somebody' ham Bell in New York City and
says something-to someone, and you Thomas A. Watson in San Francisco,
was completed in 1915.
·- ~· '·
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after the rain delay. Houston's Ricky
Gutierre~hit his first home run of the
season in the seventh.
·
AI Leiter, who has been on the disabled list since May I with a bruised
knee, will rejoin the Marlins rouition
May 21 against the New York Mets,
Btaves 10, Pirates Z
Chipper Jones homered and Greg
MadduK h.ad a two-run da,uj)le as vis. iting Atlanta beat Pittsburgh for the
third day in a row.
·
Jones had a homer, double and
single in his first three at-bats against
Jason Schmidt ( 1-2). ·

$1,899**

:I

•

The Daily Sentinel. The Welcome Mldlum•.

· the NL in batting, tied thejr seasonhigh hit total when Heredia singled in
the eighth.
Bonilla, who went 2-for-3, has driven in a run in six consecutive
games. ·Moises Alou went 3-for-5
with two RBis.
· Aorida iook the lead on
Biggio's bases-lolided error during a
five-run rally in the fourth that
knocked out Shane Reynolds (4-3).
Derek Bell hit a 424-foot homer
and an RBI triple agail)st Aorida
starter Pat Rapp, who allowed three
runs in four innings and departed

••
•
I

to the

go int'O the road trip with some!hing
positiye under our belts," said backup catcher Gregg Zaun, . who had
three run-scoring singles.
The Marlins went 5-3 on their
homestand. Their 11-5 home record
is the best in baseball, but they 're 411 on the road.
,;May~ it's the home cooking,"
Zaun said. "Home cooking doesn't
· matter to me, because there's nobody
home cooking for me." ·
Florida trails Atlanta by five
games in the NL East.
The Marlins, who rank eighth in

NcMr houtll.June 30, 1997, your John Deere
d:BPr is dn 'ug down pr~ And widl ito iutaesto no Pl\f·
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••
•
•'
I

Bmr: Rnpontlt•n who srlrrktl• mttlium

''For the most part-, I kept the ball
team."
"It was just kind of freaky the way
down
all night, which is what I was
Elsewhere in the AL, it was Bal- it happened," said White Sox rcliev. timore 5, Oakland I; Milwaukee 9, er Larry Thomas, making his first trying to do," Key said. "This season
Seattle 8; Texas 4, Cleveland 2; and appearance this season; "Like I told I've stayed out of big innings, and
Minnesota 12, Toronto 2.
the guys, it's not the way I wanted to that's why I've won."
The Angels needed a boost after debut. But we'll get over it, look at . · Tony Tarasco ,hit a three-run
going 3-8 on their last road trip. The our mistakes, come back tomorrow homer for the Oriol~ s. who at 24: II
have the AL's best record.
lopsided victory ended a live-game and not let it happen.a2ain.''
Brewers.9, Mariners 8
losing streak. . .
.. Orioles S, Athletics 1
At Milwaukee, Jeff D'Amico won
"It 'wa_s an tnnmg we n~eded,
Jimmy Key allowed siX hits in 7
for
the first time since last Sept. 21
·AnahetmmanagerTerry Colhns satd. 2-3 innings to become !he first sev- ·
as
the Brewers won their fifth
. ' 'Edmonds' hom~ run was the sp.~rk en-game winner in the major leagues.
that got us back tn the ballj!af!'e.
· Key (7-0) retired the first 10 batters straight. Milwaukee scored seven
. Ganet Anderson dro~e tn the 'before allowing consecutive doubles · runs in the fourth ,.then barely s.ur.
tymg and go-ahead ~ns •n the sev- by Rafael Bournigal and Jose vived.
."Another
easy
one
at
the
ballenth as Anahetm rallred from a 5-0 Canseco .in the fourth. He allowed
park,"
Brewers
manager
Phil
Girner
deficit. Edmonds hit a two-run ho~er one other double and three singles.
dunng the rally, whtch lasted 45 m_m- Key, who improved his AL-best ERA cracked after his team got through a
utes, 48 seconds and mcluded mne 10 1.82, did not walk or strike out a ninth inning that included three twoout hits.
singles.
batter.

.

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•

Get mote .lfiiiNICIIn the

ateallna • prop•• b lne fence au
1117 Cro11 at.. R•Dine, OH. 1

'

I

Mogazinn

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'

Marlins defeat Astros 11-4; Braves, Rc:Jckies win

'j

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I .,

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~

'

•••••&amp;
and convlc&amp;Jon of aiiJone Involved In

' '

~~~::::::mpionshipsinl98~.~nd

rn .;

we had them, but they came ihroup
big.''
·stockton's layup with 39 seconds
left in regulation tied it at 89, and the
Lakers had a chance to win in the
closing seconds. But rookie Kobe
Bryant shot an airball over Bryon
Russell from 17 feet just before the
horn sounded.
Malone, who was 9-of-21 from
the field and 14-of-18 from the line,
opened the overtime with a pair of J
free throws and a comer jumper that '
gave the Juz a 93-891ead with 3:20
remaining.
The Lakers didn't score in overtime until Elden Campbell made 1'1"0
free throws · with 2:08• 1eft to cut
Utah's lead to 93.·91 ,
After Stockton made on~ of two
from the line, Bryant - who shot
two more airballs in overtime - hit
a driving shot to pull the Lakers to
,94-93 with I:43 left. Malone then
scored again to make it 96-93.

•

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MIAMI (AP) -The Aorida Marlins
waited out a rain delay, came
Texas
20
from
behind to beat the .Houston
Seattle
21
IS
.583
·19
,441
5
Asttos, then caught an early I!IOrning .
Anaheim ·
15
23
.395
7
15
flight to Atlanta.
Oakland
·
Monday's ftSUlts
Now comes the hard part.
Milwaukee 9, Seanle 8
The Marlins, tied for last in the
Minnesota J 2, Thronto 2
major leagues with four road victoTexas 4, Cleveland 2
ries, play lO of their next 12 games
Baltimore 5, Oakland l
away from home, beginning tonight
Anaheim 16, Chicago White Sox 8
against
the first-place Braves.
.
Only games scheduled
Aorida
tried
to
build
a
little
.
1\Jesday's Games
. ·,
SeaUie (Johnson 4-l) at Milwaukee.(Meteedes 1..0), 2:05p.m.
momentum for the trip by beating
Baltimore (Mussina 4- t) at Oakland (Mohler 0-4), 3: 15 p.m..
Houston 11-4 Mond3j night.
..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,_,..._ _ __. ·
"We ·needed a boost so we would

•

CINCINNATI (AP) _ Bret
B
h h d · RBI , h'
oone, w o a SIX
s m ts past
thiee fh
games,
says
he's
finally
coming
'
out o ts season-long batting slump ..
"I really wanted to get off to a real
good start, and it didn't work out that
way," Boone said. ···so it snowballed

'

By The Aasoclated Preas
. The Anaheim Angels won the 13run pool - in one inning. ·
The Angels tied a team record by
scoring 13 runs in·the seventh inning
Monday night, beating the Chicago
White Sox 16-8. Anaheim had II hits
in the inning, with four players get·
ting two.
· Each of the first seven players in
the Angels' batting order had at least
one RBI in. the seventh as 18 men
came to ·the plate.''(lary DiSarcina,
Darrin Erstad, Dave Hollins and Jim
Leyritz each had two hits in the
inning.
"It's one of those innings where
the hitting is contagious," DiSarcina
said. "Guys were getting excited. It's
definitely a pick-me-up for the whole

cam..

16
.568
4
16
.543
5
20
.429
9
21
.417 . 9 112
' Cenlral Division
L
Pet.
GB
14
.576
17
.500
2 112
18
.486
3
2&lt;r
.412 . 5 112 .
23
.395
6 l/2
West Division
L
· Pet.
GB
14
.588

w

Milwaukee
KansuCity
Cleveland
Chicago
Minnesota

L

.

"It's going to he a dOgfight. In ihe
Western Conference championship,
you can't expect anything less,"
Stockton predicted.
The Lskers -promised Game s.
would be physical, and it was. A.total
of 61 fouls were called, with L.A.
having 31. Lakcrs forwtll'll Robe!'l
Harry was ejected in the third quarter after taking a swing at Utl\h's Jeff
Hornacek, and Los A,ngeles center
Shaquille O'Neal fouled out with
I :47 left in regulation .
Nick Van Exel led the Lakers with
26 points, while O'Neal had ' 23
points and 13 rebounds.
"There's an old saying, 'Before
you succeed you must learn how to
fail.' And I just hope ihat I don't fail
too many more times." a dejected
O'Neal said. "I'm getting tired of
going home early,"
"We fought hard, but they hung in
there, and they deserve to move on,'.'
Van Exel said of Utah. "We thought

Angels score13 runs in 7th, top . Chisox t6-8

· East Dlolsion

w

my own plays; it gilies you a chance
to be the hero, or the goat."
With the two teams tied 89-89 at
the end of regulation, Malone put
Utah ahead to stay, 91-89, by making
two free throws 36 seconds into overtime. He also hit a pair of jumpers as
the Jazz outscored the Lakers 9-4 in
the extra period.
.He credited a thunderous Delta
Center crowd of 19,911 with lifting
him when it mattered most.
" We went into overtime after
dc:XIging a bul)et, and we got the fans
into this thing," Malone said. "I can't
really· describe the energy and the
confi~nce that the guys had; it was
a great win."
John Stockton had 24 points and
I 0 assists for the Jazz. who will play
· the winner' of the Houston-Seattle
series in the Western finals. The
Rockets lead 3-1, with Game 5
tonight.
'

San Diego (Bergman l-1) at Montreal (Juden 3-0), I :35 p.m.
Los Angeles (Martinez 3-2) at Chicago Cubs (Trachsel l-4), 2:20p.m.
St.l..oui,s (St~lemyre 1-2) at Philadelphia (Madum 3-3), 7:05 p.m.
Coloradtl (Wfight 4-2) at Pittsburgh (Loaiza 4-0), 7:05 p.m.
San Francisco (O.Femandez 3-3) at Cincinnati (Schourek 2-3), 7:35p.m..
Houston (Kile 2-2) at N.Y. Mets (Reed 3-2), 7:40p.m.
Florida (Brown 3'-2) at Atlanta (Wade 1•2), 7:40p.m.
American Leacue

rounding first causing the New LexBy DAVE HARRIS .
ington center fielder to hobble the
Sentinel Correspondent
New Lexington jumped out to a 5- ball for a second. In her attempt to cut
0 lead before the fans could get set- Fackler down at second she threw
tled in their seats. And the Panthers wild and allowed Fackler to go to
held off a Meigs Marauder comeback third. But the Maraudenournament
attempt in ,defeating the top seeded trail ended when the next batter
Marauders 6-4 in the finals of the grounded out to end the game.
Allen was the winning pitcher for ·
Division II Girls Sectional Softball
the
Panthers·, she gave up six hits,
Tournaments Monday evening at
struck out four and didn't walk a batMeigs High School.
With the loss the Marauder's drops ter. Mohler led the winners. at the
',,,
to 20-3 on the season, the Ohio Divi- plate wiih a double.
••' •
Fackler was.tlie hard luck loser for
sion champions have one more game
to play ag,ainst Nelsonville-York in a Meigs. She gave up nine hits, walked
'
make-up contest, no date has been set one and struck out four. The senior
,
I
led Meigs at the plate with two doufor that contest.
New Lexington jumped on Meigs bles, Mcf;lroy, Laudermilt, Gilkey
fast as the first six Panthers reached and Miller each added singles .
base, and 'the first five scored to give ·
New Lex 500 001 0-6 7 2
New Lexington a 5-0 lead.
That is the way the score stood Meigs · 003 001 0-4 6 3
Allen (WP) and Sole
until the third inning, when the
•
Fackler
(LPJ and Sanford
Marauders started to claw back into
••
the contest. Casey Sanford walked,
•
Jessica McElroy singled and Emily
'
TAKES A Cut· '-lga' Brooke Williams takes a cut during sec;
Fackler followed' with a double, TENNis
llonalsoflbell tournament game agalnll Naw Lexington Monda~
Tangy Laudermilt then l,ined a single . BERLIN (AP) - Katrina Habsuavenlng.
The Panthers ~ulll up a quick 5-G lead, then held on te(
to pull Meigs to within 5,,3. ·
dova of Slovakia and American Mary
edge MHS, 6-4.
.!
New Lexington scored•ari insur- Joe Fernandez both reached the secance run in the top of the sixth inning, ond round ·of the $927,000 German
but Meigs scored a run in the bottom Open.
.
.
of the inning. Tony a Miller had sinTop-seeded Steffi Gra(. returning
I
gled arid advanced to second. Miller · from a knee injury that has sidelined
wnn
National
League
and
Amcricall
went to third on a ground ball to her for 100 days, will see action in BASKETBALL
Player of the Week awards o4
short, the Panther short stop fired to singles Tuesday or Wednesday
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) - K.C. League
Monday.
·
:
third in an attempt to retire Miller. against Chanda Rubin after a first- Jones, the former NBA coach and
Hundley batted .444 with th~
The throw was low and Miller kicked round bye.
Celtics great wbo earned 12 cham pi- .
home
runs and II RBis. He went 8•
. the ball away and it rolled into the
ROME (AP) - Third seeded onship rings, was hired as head
fbr-18
with 19 total bases and a 1.05~
Meigs dug out allowing Miller to Thomas Muster easily beat Italian coach of the New England Blizzard
slugging
pen:entage, scoring six runS,
score and make it a 6-4 game.
wild card Marzio Martelli 6-3, 6-2 in of the w9mcn's American Basketball
Clemens
won two games, allow~
Emily Fackler tried to generate
23
opening day of the $ million Le~~~~~. an · assis;ant. with Boston ing 13 hits and striking out 24 batter.!.
some two out lightening in the sev- the
Italian Open.
enth inning as she line a shot into cenAlso advancing was No. 5 seed this _past season. played for the He finished the week with a 2.8 J
.:
ter field . Fackler didn't ·break stride Richard Kraiicek.
. Celtics from 1958-67 - eigh!: of ERA.
OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP.)
•.
them Iitle seasons, He coached
.
- Texas Tech, awaiting possible ·
. punishment for scholarship infraC.
tions, will be the host for the Central
Regimial
and Lousiana State, rankell
NEW YORK (AP)-Todd HundNo. I, will host the South Onj:
ley.oftheNcwYorkMctsandR\Jgcr Regional in the NCAA Division'
.
. . ·
.
.
Clemens nf the Toro~to Blue _J,ays
basellall tournament.

Cincinnati stay.s .
/•n hl•ttl•n·g slum·.p

The Dilly Sintlnel• hgll

.......-.Scoreboard__.,..... Jazz eliminates Lakers with 98-93 OT win

. ...... 4 ...
Tu11c!ay, Mey 13, 1187 !

t

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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•14-hp engine
•38-i'!ch cutting width
•6-speed gear drive
· • Mulclr compatible

E R E®

CARMICHAEL'$ FARM AND LAWN .

.

PINECREST DRIVE

614 446-2412

GALUPOLIS

I.D. C.llerl
Contact · Ron Millet· 992-4025
.

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11w 1!1910 MtJJ. f#rriwom s...., t.r c~'""" ..._io. t...m... br s.~oo~-. ..._
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.Guilt-ridden father tries
Ann
Landers

-'""· ....

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·'Jy ANN LANDERS
-: Dear Ann Landers: My son,
;"Joe," walked out of a bad marriage
..:SCveral months ago and is overcome
with guilt about leaving his 3-yearbld daughter, "Annie." Joe bas been
granted regular visitation rights and
can sec Annie whenever he wishes.
you might say? Well, not real-.

:ctood.

-Community
...
calendar

TUII rJey, May 18, 1187

Pomeroy • Mlddaport, Ohio

Iy. The child bu become his entire
life. He never disciplines her, so of
course the child is out of cootrol and
spoiled rotten. He buys her everything she wants •d allows her to
stay up as late as she pleases.
I doo't enjoy Annie's .visits anymore. In fact, I'm beginning to
dread them. The child runs wild and
abuses· my pets. trashes the house
and refuses to sit through a meal.
She will not go. to sleep unless an
adult, preferably her father, lies
· down in the bed with her. Joe thinks
Annie is adorable, and he is so
obsessed with the child that he is
jeopll(dizing his relationship with
the wonderful woman he is dating.

He is more interested in being with
his daughter than with his lady
fl¥nd, and she is getting fed up with
th! threesome.
We have told Joe that he is ruining the child, but he refuses to listen
to me or his father. We are distressed
about what is happening to our
granddaughter. She is becoming
totally self-centered and obnoxious.
Maybe if Joe sees this letter in print,
he will wake up. We are -- Praying
in Del Rey, Calif.
Dear Del Rey: 1iying to buy love
never works. Children who are overindulged and undisciplined are
invariably insecure and unhappy.
Joe's obsession with his daughter is

tp buy daughter's love
not only unhealthy but dellnlctive.
When she reaches adulthood, she
will expect all males' to cater to her
like Daddy did.
I hope your son will speak with
Annie's pediatrician and get the
name of a counselor. This man needs
professional guidance to help him
become a sensible and effective parent. The direction in which he has
been ·going is the wrong one, and his
child will pay the price for it.
Dear Ann Landers: I lost my copy
of a priceless column of yours. It
contained the poem about a lady
who knitted socks that didn' t fit. It
appeared in 1981. Right now, we can
all· use a good laugh, so will you

pleue print it apin? -- Millie from
Ontario
Dear Millie: That poem came
from a reader in North Dakota. He
signed himself "Buster in Bismarck." Here it is:
Dear Ann Landers: I laughed
when I read your comments about
how you knitted a pair of socks for .
the American Red Cross to help the
war effon and your supervisor suggested that you could better serve
your country by knitting for the Germans.
You must be the person to whom
the GI wrote the following ditty:
Socks received. Some fit!
I use one for a helmet

. MIDDLEPORT •• Middleport
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, special session,
'I'uesday, 7:30 p.m. work in master
-mason degree.

one'

!P'

Rita Bernstein of Wilton, Conn.,
won 't let her kids eat junk food. Her
daughters get carrots for snacks,
salad twice a day and no red meat. '
So when Chelsea, 8, and Hay lee,
3, wound up in the hospital last summer with E. coli poisoning, it was a
shock. Tests show the bacteria were
in prepackaged, triple-washed
mesclun salad mix.
Chelsea recovered ·after three
days in the hospital, but Haylee got
sicker. She was admitted to YaleNew Haven Hospital on July I with
hemolytic uremic syndrome, the
most severe complication of E. coli
0157:H7 poisoning. She was there
14 weeks.
·
"I never knew what I was in for,"
Bernstein said. " I had heard of E.
coli, but I'd never heard of HUS,
and I'm glad I didn 't."
· Hay lee. suffered kidney failure

Sead questions to Ann Landers,
Creaton Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
tory Blvd., Suite 700, LOs Anples,
Callf. 90045

The Ohio Genealogical Society..
which already sponsors First Families of Ohio, launched a new lineage
society, The Society of Civil War
Families of Ohio.
Membership in the society is
based on documenting a person who
either lived, served from, or is
buried in Ohio.
Keith Ashley of Rock Springs
and his daughters, Rachel, Whitney,
and Emily were accepted on the
basis of Corp. William Ashley, who
served in Company I, 36th Ohio Volunteer Infantry, and ~rge Washr
ington Holter. who served in the
Meigs County Militia during
Moran's Raid through Meigs County

MIDDLEPORT -- Middleport
Literary Club, 2 p.m Wednesday,
home of Mrs. Wendell Hoover.

150 years of women's contributions to the church ware celebrated at Sunday's service at Trln~
lty Congregational Cht~,rch, Pomeroy, as a part of Ita anniversary pelebretlon. "The Unbroken HerIta~, 150 Yeare ol Service• was depicted by members. Women In costume give first-person
accounta of a time In history. Some oJ those participating were from the left, front, Janla Schmoll,
Eleanor Blaettnar, and Donna Carr. In back from left, JoAnn Wildman, Donna Nelson, Linda Mayer,
and Pat Holter. Others participating will be Trlcla Pavia, Debbie Haptonatall, Dixie Sayre, Diane
Hlwley, and Whitney Haptonatall. Gay Perrin had charge ol the progr111m, with the aaalatance. of
Maya Mora as historian.
·
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·

"Sarah and Hager: Lost in the
Wilderness" was the program topic
of Elma Louks, leader, at a recent
m~eting of the Syracuse Asbury
United Methodist Women.
Scripture for the program was
read by the leader. Hope Moore and
Jean Stout were the readers.
·Mary Lisle,,president, opened the
meeting with a reading, "The Perfect
Gift of May" and also presented
devetions on the May theme. The
purpose of the UMW was given in
unison.
Officers' reports were given by
Jean Stout, secretary, and Lisle for
treasurer Ann Sauvage, who was
absent. There were 24 sick calls
made during the month, it was
noted.
A repon was given on the special
meeting held at The Plain~ IJnited
Methodist Church in April attended
by five members from the group.
Moore gave the closing reading
about Mother using as her scripture,
Proverbs 31. She also had the closing prayer. Others present, besides
those mentioned, were Beulah Ward,
Rose Ann Jenkins· and Marie
Houdashelt.

in 1863. June Ashley of Letan Falls
was also accepted into membership
based on George Washington Holter.
Emma Ashley was ·accepted into
the society based on her ancestor,
Levi Detter. who served in Company K. I 87th Ohio Volunteer Infantry.
The Ashleys were all presented
with the new military style pin of the
organization--a blue and gray ribbon
with the triangular emblem of the
Ohio Genealogical Society suspended from the ribbon. Keith Ashley
attended the banquet and presentation ceremonies as senior. vice .commander of the Ohio Department
Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil
War.

i·

_SQrority learns how to get involved in legislative process
-

'

Pam Smith, Ohio Education Association representative, was
guest speaker at a recent meeting of Alpha Omicron Chapter of
Delta Kappa Gamma held in the recreatiorrhall of Saints Peter
and Paul at Wellston.
·
· Smith talked on "What We As Teacl)ers Can Do ·in the Legislative Process." She discussed "dos" and "don'ts" when meeting with legislators.
President Carol Eberts conducted the business meeting.
Jean Ward presented profiles of four prospective new members
for vote by the society. Viola Gettles, legislative chairman,
gave information about imponant legislation.

Marjorie Fetty, Founders Day committee member, pre'sented the Founders Day program.
Eberts honored those who have been members for one to
nine years. They each received an angel pin. "Getting to Know
You" featured a stitch in time, with many different kinds of
sewing displayed.
The necrology service was given by Necrology Committee
Chairman Feme Felton. She read "The ·Other Side of Death"
and presented a white rosebud in a vase to be taken.by family
members or friends of the deceased. Esther Maerker gave ·a
s~ort of biography for Esther Dauber, · Mary Houser, Avice

Frecker. Beatrice Rinehart, Mary Ellen Smith, and Emily
Sprague.
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_
Dinner was served by the women of the church. New
Dimensio.n Show Choir, under the direction of Dorothy Repin·
hoff, entertained presenting several songs, including numbers
(rom "Fiddler on the Roof."
Attending from Meigs County were Donna Jenkins and
Marjorie Fetty.

through your question, I had the
feeling that the lights went out. Here
you are, suffering from diarrhea,
undergoing extensive testing, finally
achieving a diagnq,sis --then everything goes blank.
The hydrogen breath test is the
method of diagnosing lactose into('erance. When positive.'it proves that
the patient lacks an enzyme tQ digest
milk sugar (lactose), a common and
PETER
harmless condition that causes diar·aoTT, M.D.
rhea, gas and bloating.
If I were your doctor. I'd celebrate. The treatment for lactose
intolerance is either avoidance of
milk products altogether or the use
of over-the-counter Lactaid, a prodmy doctor ordered a hydrogen uct containin'g the missing enzyme.
llreath test, which was positive. Do I
i don't know why your physician
have to suffer the rest of my life?
failed to follow up on this test. He
DEAR READE~: As I read . should have sat· you down and
DEAR DR. GOTT: For three
years I have been suffering from
diarrhea. I have had numerous blood
tests, stool exams, endosco~and
colonoscopy. Finally, in desJ)eration,

DR.GOTT

The next meeting will be at American Legion hall in Middleport, Sept. 22 at 6:30 p.m.

Great
coverage.

on the Boards of Directors of the ton County 'school Levy Committee
Pnesident of the Southeastern Ohio Vinton County Chamber of Com- (treasurer), Simon Kenton Council,
Regional Council (SEORC).
merce (past president), Jackson Vin- BSA Board, and Eagle Scout &amp;
• Knox is the president of the' ton Economic Development Board V.!$il .~onor Member of Order of the
-..
Unity Savings Bank. lfe lives in (past president), SEORC Bo.ard Arrow, BSA.
McArthur in Vinton County. He (current president), University of
Knox is married to Doreen Kay
replliCCs long time SEORC Presi- Rio Grande Board of Trustees, Ohio Mas say. They have two children
·dent Bob Evans. The Counc1l Will be League o( Fmanc1al lnsutut10ns .Conner David, four and Evan
celebrating its SOth Year Anniver- (president of 4th District), Vinton Alexander, one."
·
sary this fall.
·
County Business Advisary CommitKnox serves on the SEORC's
.. Knox has been involved in many tee (chair}, Vinton County Pilots and Executive Board with newly elected
c;qmmunity activities. He has been Airport Boesters Association, Vin- Vice President Gary Cooper, Cooper

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Financial Services in Pike County,
Treasurer John Jones, Milton Banks
in Jackson County, .cart Dahlberg,
past Executive Director, and Executive Director Sam CIJiwford.
The Southeastern .Ohio Regional
Council serves 12 southern ·Ohio
counties, including Meigs and Gallia. The Council's primary emphasis
has been highway development,
economic development, education
and industrial sites development.

Rev. Gary Panon, direc!tor of the , Middleport.
NUSRING HONORS
Department
of Pastoral Care at St.
'JWo Middleport residents were
Friends and relatives presented
. .mona the 49 students at the Uni~­ Mary's Hospital in Huntington, W. her gifts and cards. Those calling
lity of Rio Orande and Commumty Va. Students were presented caps were the Rev. Mark MOrrow, Dale
CoUep to be honored recently dur- and chevrons prior to a candlelight Walburn. Liz and Saan Stewan, •
ial special recopition ceremonies · ceremony and recitation of ibe Flo- Boonie Searles, Cindy, Cronic and
rence Nightinple pledge.
for (ant year COIIIpletion.
Lorn Carter, Flossie Hysell, Birdie ·
They were J•on Dowell and
Hysell, Eulonda Haley, Pam Davis,
. ' 15TH BIRTIIDAY
l!tkhM Rtuall. The siUdents will
Regina Wall•. Missy Moms, Kate
Ruth
Johnson
celebrated
her
8Sth
Brown, Dorothy Morris, JoiiiiiiA
p.tueMin 1998.
·
birtbcWy on May 4 at her home in Root, Shirley and Geneva Wise,
S.,
I•
at
the
ptopam
the
,
.

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· Plan.s for a work day where the
"(Omen will gather to make quilts for
children of AIDS victims were made
when .Hemlock Grange 2049 met
recently at the hall .
A potluck supper preceded the
· meeting conducted b)\ Rosalie Story,
master. Presentation 'of the- 'flag.
songs, "Be a Booster" and "America,
the Beautiful" opened· the meeting
attended by 25 members and two visitors.
Sylvia Midkiff, Bernice Hawk
and Eva Robson were reponed ill.
The·birthdays of Harley Haning' and
Linda Shoepner were celebrated.

Newspaper Nadatship•

------..,...
· --,~ociety scrapbook-...,.----~-.;_..,_

1111.

&amp;afh mort aJulis, ftUttr. ;,. tht ntwspaptr.

Georgia Smith, Peggy Casto, Kathy
Yancey, Don and Barb Mullen,
Mona Neal; Mark, Sherri and
Michelle Haley, Bob and Fran Park· '
er, 1iish and c.rie Walker, and
Angie ~yers. '
· .
Sending gifts were Becky Drenncr of Florida, Ruth Hawk of
Colwitbua, ·Dorothy Lo.g, Comtie
Hendricks and A8ron Little.

----~News

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The Dally Sentinel.

The Welcome Milium.

event.

,,_...a, fit

Game's were played by the group,
"Name lhe Birds" and "Pass the
Rose." '
The annual inspection . of the
fourth degree ritual was cbnducted by
state deputy Patty Dyer who follo"!ing comments were complimentary.
~

The literary prognim by Linda
Shoepner began with readings as fol lows: "In Praise of Man." by Jane
Frymyer. ''Country Homecoming, "
by Ann Lambert; "Nose Woes,". by
Wallace Bfadford, and "Time for
Flower Ladies Twirl," by Helen
Qujvey.

policy--·- -

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· ·Weddings submitted after the 60-day deadline will appear during the
-..:eek in The Daily Sentinel ·and the Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
All club meetings anji other news articles in the society section must be
submitted within 60 days of occurrence,
All birthdays must be submitted within 60 days of the occurrence.
: All material submitted for publication is subject to editing .

_______________
................

~Swla: 7lr

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Ally s~n

Maxson recently celebrated her second birthday at the ·
home of her parents, Ron and Wendi
Maxson.·
·
A "Winnie-the-Pooh" theme was
carried out with cake,. ice cream and
chips being served.
·
Attending were her brother,
Aaron, Geneva Maxon, Lois Hawley, Kenda, Kayle . and Keri
Lawrence, Sarah Kloes , Amber
Ellis, and Cherie, Robbie and Brittany Nickels. Others sending gifts
were Becky and David Ellis, and
Mary Beth , Tom and Scotty Musser.

Recognlz8d In caremonlea Mondlly afternoon wal'll Veteran• Memorial Hoapltal's "Nuraas of
the Yaar." Nomlnstlone for the awarda were made by the nursing staff with all hoapltal person•
nel voting on the final selection. Rhonda Dalley, R. N., director. ol nursing, pictured left,
, announced the winners with Hospital Administrator W. Scott Lucas preaantlng the plaques.
Named nurses of the year were from the left, Shirley Luda, LPN who works In Skilled Nursing;
and Jackie Fields, nursing assistant, and Tina Story, R.N., both In Home Health Care.

In an effort to provide our readership with current news, the Sunday
Tip1es-Sentinel will not accept weddings after 60 days from the date of the

·c)---

Hamburger leads to a painful
death
Eric Brill, 5, of Brick, N.J., was a
"bird eater" who rarely cleaned his
plate at dinn.ertime, his mother said.
She was pleased one Saturday
night in May a year ago wh~n the
family went oul to eat at a local
restaurant and Eric wolfed down his
hamburger. "It was the first time this
kid ate all of something," she said.
A couple of days later, Eric, middie son of Kathleen, a full-time
On the morning. of the day ·he
mom, and Kevin Brill, an elevator died, Eric was frightened by all the
technician, felt sick. He had a rash medical procedures being performed
and a fever, a bit of diarrhea, an on .him. "He got really scared: He
upset stomach. The other boys asked me if he was going to die," his
Kevin 'Jr., 9, and Timothy John, 4- mother said. "I told him no."
were fine.
The Brills took Eric 10 the hospiShe blames herself for ~ot looktal Tuesday night, but the next day ing closeiy at that hamburger to
"his platelet count dropped. It kept make sure it was cooked through. "I
dropping. So much happened so really should have checked it out,"
quickly."
she said . ." We don 't eat chopped
Platelets are small partiCles in meat ·anymore. We barely eat any
biood that play a big part ·in blood red meat."

ALt.YSON MAXSON

Bertha Williams of the Wellston Chur¢h of God was guest speaker at the
recent meeting of Senior Saints at the Rutland Church of God.
.:w'illia~omments were based on John 15 -- "that you love one another.
Jackie Preece conducted the meeting. The Rev. Randy Barr had prayer
and there was reading in unison of "Oh Lord." G~t well CllfdS we~e sent to .
Alice Chapman, and birthday cards to Bub and lcyle .Herdman. The deaths
of Katherine Weaver, a member of the group, and several others were noted.
A bake and yard sale W!\S held, and plans were made 10 go to the l:luntmglon Civic Center to see th¢ Ga1thers.
·
.
'A potluck luncheon was served to !hose named and Alice Kitchen, Nell ie
Hatfield, Louise Eads, Reva Walker, Geraldine Sexton, Birdie Hysell , Mary
Lambert, Ernest Lambert, and Kay Barr.

ultimately, as I look at the world
around me, we all come to a point
where we say what IS this dance all
about, what is the purpose of life,
why am I here doing this dance?"
His answer? "I am here because
God created me to experiences his
love and his grace ... through the
painful times and the joyful times.
We were ultimately put on this Earth
to expenence a relationship with the
one who put us here, and he is in that
context the lord of the dance."
Not all of the changes in Chapman's music have been intentional.
The high-tech light show that usually comes ·with a Chapman concen
ran into,technical problems early on,
forcing him to change the show.
"Some of the· things we were
going to have _;. the projectors, the
technical gimmicks and gadgets ended up· crashing and burning," he
says. From then on, the shows
became more intimate.

"It's really become a tour about ian bands D.C. Talk and Audio
the music and the hearts of the peo- "Adrenaline.
ple on the stage, more. than relying
. Although Chapman is pleased
on the flash and the explosives and
that kind ef s.tuff. I feel more like I with his new direction, the
am wilh friends as opposed to an soulsearching continues. He's content to continue play.ing music, no
audience."
That's a style like the vintage folk matter what the level of success.
rock Chapman likes to listen to:
" I think I am even more in this
"The kind you would imagine Bob
Dylan making if he was still making for the long haul. as long as people
recordings." he says. His record col- will hear my music and want lo lislection for the road also Includes ten. If the platform gets bigger or
The Wallflowers (led by Dy(an's son smaller, I ·am resolved more than
Jakob), Collective Soul and Christ- ever that that's OK."

Work day set by Hemlock
Grange to help others ,

71% of U.S. adults read at least one weekday edition of a
local or regional newspaper, while 57% read a daily
newspaper on a typical weekday. Readership .grows ro
64% on a typical Sunday.

l'lot........ hip .

cloning. A deficiency in platelets
can cause internal bleeding.
Eric was moved to a larger hospi·
~ but doctors weren't sure what
they were up against. "They played
around with maybe it's leukemia,
maybe this, maybe that," Brill saia.
"He just got worse and worse."
By Thursday, doctors thought
they had him stabilized. "They told ·
us he would be fine, that he would
go home Monday," she said.
But they were mistaken. Eric
died on Friday, May. 10, '1996, less
thim a week after eati ng what his
parents now think was a hamburger
contaminated with E. coli 0157:H7.
His death certificate lists the cause
as kidney failure and hemolytic uremic syndrome.
·

Devotional speaker makes
presentation to Senior Saints

from · Chapman's heart. Known for
"We brought everybody in the
an introspective "adult· con tempo- studio the way they used to do it in
Wilmington News Jpurnal
In his I 0-year career as a Christian rary " form of Christian music, !he earlier ~ays, before sequences
.songwriter, Steven Cunis Chapman Chapman stretched back to his past and drum machines. This time I realhas earned three Grammy .Awards, loves of fo)k rock and bluegrass to ly wanted it to breathe and have a
three gold records and numerous put' ·· together the most eclecttc sense·ofrealness."
The result was an environment
Dove Awards. He recently won recording of his career.
"Signs of Life," which was No. I where the musicians created rather
Doves for pop-contemporary album
of the year, best artist, best male or 2 on Billboard magazine's Con- than recorded, he said, with much of
temporary Christian chan for 30 the final product coming from the
vocalist and best songwriter.
You 'd think he'd be happy. But weeks, is as much about overcoming first take.
'The lead single, "Lord of the
success hasn't come without a price. a lifdong habit of being a people"I think you get to those forks in pleaser as with the stagnation that Dance," features extended guitar
the road,'' says Chapman. "Having comes with success, Chapman says. riffs, much like the bluegrass that
"It's really been a time of spiritu-. influenced Chapman,. 34, when he
traveled down the road and experienced the success; you. say to your- al growth in my life just to recognize · was growing up as the son of a
self, 'I'm not sure if I am writing the how imponant it is to not live, my music-store owner in Kentucky (be
song this way Q&lt;lcause I know what life trying to meet up to everyone's · now lives in Nashville, Tenn.) The
words also carry an autobiographipeople expect from Steven Cunis expectation of me."
Chapman changed his habits to , cal tone.
Chapman, or how much I am writing
record "Signs of Life." He chose
"Lyrically, it really is a song that
·from the heart of me. "
eight
musicians
who
had
never
sums
up the reason I make the music
·. He saw his latest album as a
chance to d1spel some of those heard his music and began recording that I do. Life goes through all these
doubts and reinvigorate himself. with no chord charts of finished different movements; some days it's
like you 're lost in the mosh pit. But
"Signs of Life" proceeds straight arrangements.
.
.

r----------'!l"'"-...;.;.;.___

D. Bruce Knox has been elected

age support for new federal food
safety regulations governing production.of meat and poultry.
"Sometimes life has some really
mean lessons for us to learn,"
Rudolph said. But, -.. , know in my
heart I've done eve~ng I possibly
can to make things OK, for her."

.Second birthday marked

Nurses of the .yea

By RHONDA B. GRAHAM

explained all this to you. (But then I about how to avoid them.
Be especially caref~l of salad ily be treated ~ith antibiotics. Howwouldn't have had the pleasure of
DEAR READER: These bacte- bars, because bacteria easily multi- ever, as you point out, prevention is
answering your question, becau~ ria, which cause severe diarrhea and ply at room temperature not only in better than therapy, especially in the
you wouldn 't have written me.)
(sometimes) .life-threatening dehy- dressings and sauces but also on raw very young and · the very old, in
Return to your doctor for further dration , usually live and reproduce vegetables. (111erefore, avoid salad whom· this. intestinal infection is
explanation and advice. Lactose in raw, unfrozen meat and poultry, as that is wilted, dark or appears less more seriOus and can IJt! fatal.
intolerance is treatable. You do not well as .in dress(ngs and sauces.
than fresh.)
Copyright 1997 NEWSPAPER
have to suffer any more.
As a consequence of the muchE. Coli an&lt;\ Sal111onella infection, ENTERPRISE ASSN.,
· To give you more information, I publicized Salmonella/E. Coli out· once present in the ' body, is diag.am sendmg you a copy of my Health breaks in various ,parts of the· coun- nosed by stool analysis and can easReport "Constipation and Djar- try, public health authorities urge
~--------..;,
rhea." Other readers who would like consumers to adopt the following · ·
a copy .should send $2 plus a long, approach.
,
self-addressed, stamped envelope to
Cook all meat and poultry thorP.O. Box 2017, Murray Hill Station , • oughly. When eating in a restaurant,
New York, NY I 0156. Be sure to insist that such food be cooked
mention the title.
through-and-through. (No more rare
DEAR DR. GOTT: How can the hamburgers.) Defrost mellt and
average citizen protect himself poultry quickly (for example, with a
against E. ·Coli and Salmonella microwave oven), rather than let the
infections? Despite all the public1ty food slowly warin on the counter
Place your.ads where ~ore p_eople ~an see them ... and act.
about these . bacteria, I am unclear top. Wash poultry beforc·cooking it.

Southeastern Ohio Regional Council elects new president ·

an emergency room , ·but the doctors
sent her home, 'telling Rudolph to
see her pediatrician in the morning.
On Christmas Eve, Lauren was
admitted to the hospital and in the
next four days, her condition deteriorated uncontrollably.
She died Dec. 28, after suffering
three hean attacks and the collapse
of all her m'\ior organs.
"Lauren went through the most
excruciating pain that it scared me to
death . ... You have no idea how help;
less you feel when you know there 's
nothing you can do."
· Five weeks later. Rudolph
learned from a newspaperrepon that
Lauren's was the ·first documented
case in a multistate E. coli 0157:H7
outbreak traced to tainted, undercooked beef served at Jack-in-the-'
Box restaurants on the Wesl Coast.
Until then , she had no idea what had
killed Lauren.
" Before this outbreak, I don't
believe people (knew) what kind of
demon this E. coli was," · Rudolph
said. She set out to change that.
.Thanks in pan 10 Rudolph 's lobbying, California passed laws
requiring doctors to report E. .coli
cases to public health officials and
restaurants to cook hamburgers to
155 degrees, well-done. She and
other parents also worked to encour-

:Religion: Christian singer Steven Ci.Jrtis ·Chapman still seeks .his voice

Readers symptons all poi~t to easily treatable condition, lactose. intolerance
By PETER H. GOTT, M.D.

and
hemodialysis. a organic spray or baking soda and
three-hour P9JCedure in which all water before going into' the refrigerthe blood in the body is cleansed ator.
through a machine, every other day.
She no longer buys prewashed
She was on a breathing tube for II carrots or salad. She won't allow her
weeks. S~, had hemorrhaging daughters into the kitchen when she
behind her retinas. 'Bleeding in her prepares chicken. "I don't lettbem
brain required 'surgery.
near anything raw. I don't use
For weel(s, "we never had two sponges, I don't take chances with
good days in a row," Bernstein said. anything.
"I didn'tleave the hospital, nor did
"I'm nervous. I lived this. This is
my husband. We couldn't. Every 10 ,not a story I read somewhere. I
minutes there was another major cri- almost lost her."
sis."
,
Finally. Hay lee began to recover . Helpless vigil as a daughter suf•.
and on O~t. 4, she came hoJ!le. Now
fers
back m nflrsery school, she still has
Not much more is known today
. health problems that require her to about treating hemolytic uremic
take insulin and anti-seizure medica- syndrome than was known in
tion every day. Her vision is December 1992, when Lauren Beth
impaired.".
Rudolph, 6, of Carlsbad, Calif.,
And h~r mother is scared of food. started feeling sick.
·
" When ! 'would hear about E. coli,"
Two days earlier, on Dec. 18, she ·
she said, " I thought it was because had a special dinner out with her dad
someon&amp;was careless - they didn't and her big brother at a Jack-in-thecook the meat enough or they mixed Box in nearby San Diego. On the
cooked with uncooked."
20th, Lauren had a headache.
·Now she knows better. "If this
The · following day, "we· were
could happen 10 me, it truly could supposed to see Santa,' said ~er
happen to anyone."
·
mother, Roni Rudolph, " but she was
If she was cautious about food so sick. She threw up."
before, now she's on high alen. "It'
Rudolph thought her daughter
takes me ati hour to put groceries had flu, but by Dec .. 23, Lauren had
away," she said, because every fruit, bloody diarrhea · and stomach
every vegetable is scrubbed with an cramps. Her mother brought her to

Asbury UMW
hears about
Mothers

Genealogical society gives
.Ashleys Civil War honors.

' WEDNESDAY
FEAST MEIGS -- Eastern Board
' 'bf Education, Wednesday, 6:30 p.m.
high school library, regular session.
,.,

MARIETTA ·- Public forufll on
school and family involvement,
Thursday. 4 to 6 p.m. at the Washington County Career Center, State
Route 676. Marietta. Emphasis will
be on working together for educatiOn with opinions to be shared on
how parents can be involved in
-schools and how schools can wel.s,ome family participation. Child
care available. Refreshments provided. Sponsored by Ohio Department of Education, Office of Family
and School Partnerships and Washington County Schools.

this 'truly could happen to any-

Peggy Lee Duff, daughter of
Robin and Melvin Duff of Dexter.
was a finalist in the 1997 Pre-Teen
Ohio Scholarship and Recognition
Program held over the weekend at
the Hyatt Regency in Cincinnati.
· Pre·Teen Ohio is a by-invitation
only _schohirship and recognition
event for girls 7. to 12 years of age
based on school academic . records,
awards, and honor$ won.
·
The participants were judged on
the basis of academic achievement,
volunteer service to church and
. community, school honors and
activities, development of personal
skills and abilities, general knowledge~ ability to community, aqd
Pre-teen Ohio awarded $5,000 in
stage presence.
educational bonds, prizes and
awards.

DARWIN -- Bedford Township
·Trustees. Tuesday, 7 p.m.

-THURSDAY
RACINE -- RAcine Grange 2606
will meet Thursday, 7 p.m. Har·
risonville will visit, inspection· will.
he held.

USA TODAY
: In • . matter of just days, E. coli
can ste.l a dilld's life, attac:kina
one major organ after another.
USA TODAY's Anita Manni111
~ked with three parents: one
w~ose daughters survived brushes
With E. coli and two whose chil·
dren died.

And one for a miu.
I must say. Dear Lady,
You've done your bit.
But where in the bell
Did you learn to knit?
Gem of the Day (Credit Will
Rogers): Whenever you mad something you cannot understand, you
can be sure it was written by a
lawyer. And if you can't read the
writing, there's a very a004·chance
that it was written a doctor.

scholarship program.

..,

The Dally Sentinel• Page.7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

E. coli Th-reat:
A
simple
meal can shatter a family.
underw~nt

.----Through the years----. Duff participates in

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to non' profit JI'OIIPI wishing to announce
"meeting and special events. The
calendar is not designed ~ pro:mote sales or fund raisers of any
~~- Items are printed as space
. J!ermits and amnot be guaranteed
, to run a specific: number of days.
:,:J'UESDAY
" POMEROY -r Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce, luncheon,
:.Tuesday, noon Trinity Church. Kay
Rowe of ACCESS/Head Start,
speaker. Reservations, 992-5055.

kACINE -- . Spring cleanup in
Racine, Wednesday and Thursday.
Yillage workers will pickup every. ~ng except tires. batteries, oil and
gas containers.

TUIIdey, May 13, 1997

I

- ~,

(,f

Hearing Joss can occur at any age. It often occurs so
gradually that the person with the hearing loss is the
last to realize ther!l is a problem.

Signs of hearing loss:
•
p
e
•
•
•
•
•
• • • • • • •
• P eople seem
to mumble or : Free Y2 hour
speak too
no•obllgatlon
softly
• Friends or
cons•ltation
famil
members say
with ~o•pon by
they need to
repeat things
• professional
for you
audiologist.
If y~u thlnk yoti •

maybe
heating Joss; call
us today!

Coupon expire•

5/31/97

~~~UL.Il..!ILL.,

WASHERS•
DISHWASHERS· • -.... -~.-.·
RII;FRIGERATORS

.....
1. All

CONDITIONS OF SALE

n•* Maytags will be tagged wl1h a Stle Price.

"'

2. Fr.. deliwry. lnttaltetton (tJCCtPl bullt·IM) tnd rMIO\III of old appliance In llmiiH

3. All tagged Pfletl incluGt tht tttndarel Mtytq w..-.ntr.
' · Terms are 10 dayt Nl'l'lt 11 cash fOf qulllfted buytrS. VI• and Of~eov• . .

........

s . Cluantllit't and color ...ec:Uon m1y be llmlt.d on 101M models tnd PfOdu&lt;:tt. Firat

come - flrll ltf'Vtd
1 . No Cltlllrt or whOtaul.,, - pletstl
7. W. Offlr leNICI eft.,thl N6e,

•

.

'

USA KOCH,
M:S., C.C.C.A.

l 'WEEK- MAY 12 THRU MAY 17

0Hear
· · For ·

·INIEARING ute·
;·;:it:

42123 St. Rt. 7 '

Acroet Street fl'om Fal'll18(8 Bank ·

Mon.·ThUI8. 9-5

Fri. H , Sat. 9-4

'•

I&gt;.

�Pomeroy e llldcllepo....., Ohio

Pllgele The O.Hy S111Hnel

10
By NANCI HELLMICH
fits. Research indicates that the proven or disproven ·lbal that's an
USA TODAY
IIJliOUnt needed to help the heart is effect of viwnin Aacl for people
If you've been reading the latest about 400 International Units (IU) a who are smoldng, tlw!ir concern
scientific research about vitamin E, day, and it's impossible to get dOleS should be lbout the siiiOtinJ."
you may think it's the miracle pill of of 400 JU from food,, said thris
Pryor said some stuilies seemed
the '90s.
Rosenbloom, associate professor of to ·Show that taldng too much might
There is evidence that it protects · nutrition, Georgia State Univenity. · create mild anti-&lt;:lottina problems,
against hean disease, slows the The best sources of vitamin E are which could lead to brain hemoraging process, combats the effects of oils, oil-rich nuts and .seeds, which rhaging. "But the most recent eviair pollution and reduces the risk of should be eaten · in moderation dence shows that doesn't·happen."
cataracts and some types of cancer. hecause of their high fat content, and
So far, consumers are casting
Wednesday, a widely publicized wheat germ.
their votes at the. cash registers.
study showed vitamin E could boost
To get 400 IU of vitamin E from Sales of vitamin E have almost douresistance to infection. That fol- almonds would mean eating 46 bled in the past seven years, accord-.
.. lowed a report that it delays the pro- ounces a day - about 46 handfuls · ing to Roche Vitamins Inc, in Para- ·
gression of Alzheimer's ·disease.
or almost 1,000 nuts. That would mus, N.J., which mimufacturen the
Is there anything this squishy rack up a whopping 8,000 calories raw vitamin E used to make supplegolden capsule can't do?
and 658 grams of fat. Rosenbloom ments imd fonify foods.
Numerous scientists are taking it, said.
When it comes to the actual supmore doctors are recommending it,
Multivitamins often have .30 JU plements, consumers arc most likely
and the public is snapping it off the (the Food. and Drug Administra- to take 400 IU supplements. So do
shelves of pharmacies and health tion's
recommended
daily tile experts.
food stores and flooding mail,order allowance), far below the 200 IU
Jean Carper, who interviewed
houses. Sales of vitamin E. alQne and 400 IU used in many ofthe stud- n11merous researchers for
book.
reached $300 million in 1996. But if ies ..
"Stop Aging Now" (HarperCollins,
By
you include the vitamin E contained
So it would seem vitamin E sup- $14), said many scientists told her
in multivitamins and antioxidant plements are the answer, and they take 400 IU of vitamin E a day,
Dave
combinations, the nutrient turns up researchen are hard-pressed to find as .she does. "For preventing the
in 30 percent of all vitamins sold, · any reasons why people shouldn't be oxidalion of (bad cholesterol), stu&lt;!-·
Grate
said analyst Matthew Patsky of ·taking them. Even if vitamin E can't ies have shown lllat you need &amp;! ·least
of
Adams, Harkness, &amp; Hill in Boston: do everything recent research sug- 400 IU a day." ·
· ATHLETES COMPETE - Deldra carleton, fin athlete from carVitamin companies say 10 per- gests. most scientists say it's insurMany doctors have beeh won
R1tland
leton Scl1ool, received a second-plac:e award !for competing In the cent of adults take vitamin E as a ance and can't hun. ·
over
by
the
vitamin
E
research.
35 meter wlteelcl1alr race in the regional Special Olympics track and
"Vitamin E is one of the nire vit- Roben Butler, 70, director .of the
field meet at 0111o University's Peden Stadium. 38 otller athletea single supplement.
The
reasons
for
vitamin
E's
high
amins
for which the news .has been International Longevity Center at
We don't . see wily It's called
from Carleton Scl1ool end Meigs lnduatrlea, Soutllern Junior Hlgl1
"Income• wllen moat of It goes
profile
are
pretty
straightforward.
all
positive,"
Pryor
said.
Mount
Sinai
Medical
Center
in
New
School and Meigs High Scl1ool were ' among 400 athletes from
Vitamin
E
is
an
antioxidant,
a
son
of
Walter
Willell,
chairman
of
the
out.
York,
said
that
early
in
his
carioer
he
Soutl1eaatarn 0111o competing for top 11onors In 30 track and fl,ld
damage
control
for
the
cells.
It
fends
Depanment
of
Nutrition,
Harvard
used to tell people to get thelf vitaevents.
·
Some people · will believe
off the destruction caused by ."free School of Public Health, adds, "For mins and micronutrients from food.
anytlling If It's whispered to
rildicals," unstable oxygen mol&lt;:- healthy people, there is really virtu- But now for his patients, who are
them.
cutes that wreak havol: on the cells. ally no evidence of downsides Of older, he ·recommends 400 IU .ofvitFree radicals are caused by natural vitamin E in the doses commonly amin E, 500 milligrams of vj~in
Wilen something . faHs apart
biological processes, smoking, tox- used, 200 IU to 400 UJ." He takes C, a multi vitamin"and a baby III'Pirin
and
won't work anymore, the
ins and pollutants. ·
400 IU.
daily. Plus, he advises a low-fat,
peselmist
throws It out. The
The most compelling potential
For people with cenain health . high-fiber diet tllllt includes · five .
optomlst
hal
a garage sale. ·
health benefit of vitamin E is its con- problems, he adds several caution- servings of fruits and vegetables.
Best-selling diet book author and
TwQ Eastern Local students are among musicians across the state who nection to the prevention of cardio- ary notes. For those with macular
Wllat do you gel If you cross
vascular
disease.
Vitamin
E
stops
degeneration
of
the
eye,
there
has
healthy
hean advocate Dean Otnish
will be members of the All-Ohio State Fair Band.
an
owl wllh a skunk? A. bird
ChristineM. Grossnickle and Anna C. Wolf have bee.n selected from sev- the oxidation of LDL (bad) choles- been some suggestion that ihe (200 said 10 years ago he didn't reeomthat
smells but doesn't give
eral hundred applicants recommended by their high school instrumental terol. It halts the tint step in a long 1 IU to 400 IU) supplements might mend vitamin E, but since tbe:evihoot.
chain of reactions that leads to the accelerate the ,disease. People who dence of its benefits has mounted, he
·music teachers.
·
. Since I 952, the All-Ohio State Fair Band has been a featured attraction at buildup of plaque in the lll1j:nes, take ' blood-thinning drugs like recommends it to everyone.
We know a kid who goes to a
"The risks. are so negligible, the. very progressive schooL He
the Ohio State Fair. It is comprised of ;!50 musicians, ·making it one of the explains William Pryor, ~ vitamin E Couma&lt;!in need to consult with their
researcher and director of the Biody- doctor before taking vitamin E · costs are so small and the potential . playa avant-garde on the
largest marching and performi.rig bands in the nation.
. The 21-day camp offers a valuable ·opportunity to perform more than namics lrtstitute a~ Louisiana State hecause the dose of their medicines benefits are so great, it makes .;. lot
football
may need to be adjust~. Vitamin E of sense to consider ·taking them,"
pieces· of music of varied styles and periods. Band members work with a University, Baton R~uge.
Unlike most vitamins, however, !Jlay make the drugs more effective, said Ornish, who takes 400 IU IIJiily.
superior staff of 15 music educators from across the countcy: .
vitamin E isn't found in sufficient he said.
Many experts like(,&gt;rnish say .the
quantity in food to provide the beneWillell also points out that one only really serious downside they
for vitamin E is that consumers
==:=~=:::=:===lr====;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::=y-::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::::r========:"J Finnish study suggests that men who see
smoked heavily and took vitamin E may· think of it as a substitute for a
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
had an increased risk of hemorrhag- healthy diet and lifestyle. "My conPUBUC NOTICE
Hied In aflerlng propoula llle e1 the lllelge Counly llletl hereto, ukl accourtta ic stroke.. But, Willett said, ''it's an cern is that people will fool them. Thl annual report Form to provide urvlce ahould Record.,'• Olllae, lllelga Will 111 lor hHrlng III!Qra open questio~. I don't think ii's selves into thinldng they can coritin990 PF lor the .Kibble contact Beth A. Shaver; eo. Courthouae, Pomeroy, uld court on tha l3th clly
Foundetlon Bernerd v. Aaoclate Director, et the Ohio 45789 tor public view- til .June, 1897, 11 which ume
Fultz, Truatee, Ia avallloble lllelge County Council on log. Written comrnenta or uld ICCOUnla Will 111·conlor public lnapectlon at Aging, Inc., P.O. Box 722, requeate lor an Informal lldlncllnd conttnued lfom
Bernard v. Fultz Law Olllce, Pomeroy, Ohio 45788 to conference lillY Ill Mnt
dey to dey until nnally dlt1u 1/2 w. Second StrHt, "'-ot~..........
Obtain lull detail• ol the the Dlv. ol llllnee
.........
I
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789, .,,... u.,_,....-..on Mr- Reclamation,
1855 · ,...~o.
Any peraon lnter..ted
during regular bualne.. vice thatle needld prior .t o Fountain Squ8ra Court, may llle wrman exceptlona
hours tor a period ol ·1so pre~~.:'n' ~roo~mentl.1 or Bldg. H-3, Columbue, OH1 to uld accounta 01' to matday• eubaequent to
43224 within thirty cllye o .tara penalntng to the axtpublleatton of thle notice.
propoula .muet ba eubmlt- the 1111 dale ol publlomJon cutton olthe truet, not 1(5) 12, 13, 14, 15, 18, 1S, 19,
wlt~ln 30 deya to ll1e otlhla notice.
then 11ve deya priOr to the
20, 2t, 22, 23,2512 tc
Aelga ounty COuncil on (4) 211; (5) S, 13, 20; 4TC
dete HI tor hltrlng .
RobertBuck
.----...;..----1 Rglng, Inc. at the above
Public Notice
addreae with 1 copy to the
Public Notice
Probate Judge
Ohio
Depariment
ol
common PI- court
PUBUC NOTICE
Tr•neportlllon, OHice of . IN THE C&lt;*IIION PLEAS
Probete Dlvlalon
The Metga county Public Tranaponatlon, 25
COURt, PROBATE DMlllelga County, Ohio
council on Aging, . Inc., South Front Streit, Room
(5) 13; lTC
which It 1 prlftle, nonprot- 40S, Columbue, Ohio
SION IIIEIQS COUNTY, '
It corporation, lntendt to 43218-0899;
Attention:
OHIO
Yov Obn'r Have fo L.iolc Far
aubmlt an epplloMlon tor 1 Admlnlllntor.
IN.THE IIIATTEA OF SET·
To Spy the 8tSr8uys In .
. ceptlllgrant under 1M pro- (5) 13, 20; 2TC
TLEIIIENT OF ACCOUNTS,
lhe Clossifl&lt;dt.
•
vltlon o1 49 UBC Section
PROBATE COURT IIIEIGII
'
'
f ~
5310 ol the Fedlf81 TrMialt
PubliC Notice
COUiiiTY, OHIO
Accounla end vouchera
r
Act to provide tranaponaPUBUC NOTICE
ol the !allowing named
ANNOUNCEMENT S
tlon
urvlce lor the elderly
and dlubled Within Malge
Weterloo COlli Co., Inc. llduclarllt heve bun l.lled
County. The IIPPIICIIIOn Will ol P.O. Box 828, Jeckaon, In the Probete Court, Melgl
'
tequnt 1 .Duel Whul OH 45840 PH 81-M82•7787 County, Ohio, lor lpprovel
cutew1 y With two wheal• Ilea aubmltted 1 renewel and lllllamitnt.
chair poaiUona end ..Ung apptleatton lor coel _mine
ESTATE NO. 27S20 cepaclty o1 etevan, lnclud- permit ~ to the .Ohio Second Account ol Lettie
·lnglhl driver.
.
Dept. of NIIUral Aoaoureet~, Jllnatta Allclne, TrueiH of
'
' .
Racine Gun Club
It 11 projeeled thet 90 Dlv.
at
Min••
&amp;
thelrutt Crlllted Under the
· .,.reone .Wll uae the Mr- Reel amotion. The permit Will ol Don L. Betzlng, . Sun. May 18 7 am
Ylce 11ve dlya 1 WHk, 52
Ia toceted In lllelga Daolttad.
·noon
weeki 1 !fill' lor varloua County, Sallabury Twp.,
ESTATE NO. 29184 •
ectlvltlet, lneludlng trant- Lola 1392, 385 I 3M (T-1· Firat end Flut .Account. ol
Prizes - Giftsporratlon to the aenlor N; R-13-W), on the proper- Howerd
B.
lllullen,
Food
nutrition .ne, ahc&gt;pplng end II" ol Wllerloo Coal Co., Quenllen ol Amold A.
.,
.,.._t buaiiiHI, madlcel
Chaupeeke &amp; Ohio Knight, en 1lteged lncamMembers may
appolntmenta end eoclel
Co., and J.W. pelllnl.,.,.on.
bring a guest
and ....-1100111 _ . . In
The pertllll
l.lnleea exctpUone ere
Melge and ed]ecent coun12.8 ICrM end Ia
.
'
Ilea.
on the Chltlllre 7·
Tile Malga County h~:edre.~~~~!;
LIBGB
110 Help Wanted
Counoll on Aging, Inc. I&lt;
:":~.:~"':;
lnvltll comrnenta lind pro. poealtl lfom Ill lnteretted
The reMW•
COMMUNITY SKILLS
UCTORS
puiiiiC, privata end pertwill
WANTED:
Two
live-in
instructors
(weekdays/tran.n operatore Including
Co.,' Inc. Ill
,
. I \1'
•
•
weekends) needed to te.C~ch community and.
1•
taxi operatore, tor.the pro~~~~loll operavlelon of traneportetlon
on .,......_ r up 1o
person&lt;~! skills to one &lt;~dull with learning
'
Mrvlce to the elderlY end
yeara pMI the explralimibitions
in
Meigs
County.
e
diHbled within our Mrvlce
date ol Auguet 24,
.
(1) 40 hrs/wk: 3 pm Sun. thru 8 am Fri.; sleepThe eppiiCIIIIon 1e on
over. required; daytime hours off; sick/vacation/·
Operatorl who ere 1-holiday/insurance beliefits.
·
(2) 32 hrs/wk: B am ·Sat. thru 8 ·am Mon.; sleepover required; sick/Vacation benefits.
The bonds will be offel'(:d when, as and if issued and received byus, subject to prior
Training provided. ln,lorm&lt;~l setting. High school
sale or change in price. This announcement is neither an offer to nor a solicitation to
degree, valid driver's license, good ·driving
record, lhree ye!lfS licensed driving experience,
buy these securities. The offer is made only by the Official Statement.
and adequate automobile insurance coverage
required; Salary:.. $5.50/hr., to st~!.l. Send
resume to: P.O. Box 1104, Jackson, OH ·45640Subject to Optional Redemption.
0604; ATTN: Cecilia. Deadline for ·applicants:
5/16/97;
· which position applying

. Pulllcllll
llld Au [111 11 n
Aldl ,_...,. AYdM eoc:o•a

lull 11,.. aucuo-. colllfllell
auction -viM. Ll_...

a.

III,Oitlo &amp; W... V....... :104-

SOLID VINYL

CUSTOM

~

'l(ountry Klub
",!f.
.... Golf Lessons

_ ..Golf Sales, Club
:::! .Repair, Custom
t..O rders, Awards,
' Engraving
.. ~· John Teaford
·: · ~ Chester, Ohio
I l l"

•i •

·.~

GIFTED
PSYCHICS!!

...

•·

u

'

'

LIVElli

ll

.

.

SNO BIZ

Business Services
2ND

GIFT CERTIFICATES
AVAILABLE

. . . . . iFIII.IIII
33111 Happy Holow Road
MlddiiJIIIII, Ohio 45780
, ... . . . . Addllklilf,

Roollug, Siding, Pole
Barne, Dlcka, Pilntlng.
Gngee, Pard•.

A,_ -"'*
114-742-30110

Clf CAr IW

814-742-332&lt;t

l14-7~-3o7e
~

.

l'

'

Fifth
Third Bank
cmm.,.,;, o~no ..

••

.

...... Co. 4oft Hone

.......
oru..••••

..... -.,...

Catat Rl 1

I

AliCia n111.

'

.

GutterC!ellnlng
Palittlrig
FREE ES'JiMATES

!Jay Ph. 992·3671

-

Eve•.Ph. 949-2534 .

Dollr: AU u,s. IllAnd Gol4 Coina, P!oofNia,
D-o,
AnliQueU.S.
""""""·
Gold
Ringo, Pr•t830
Curronqo,
&amp;•llnfl. Etc. Acqulolllo"' ~ ·
- M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Soconcl
· Gaillpolll, 81o4-4&gt;111-211¢
Antiques, furniture, gl111, dlina.

coln1, taya, lampe, guns, toola,

eatatea; 1110 apprai11!1, Oaby

lllllit, 114.flll2-74&lt;11.

Andquaa, IDp prices paid,·Rlv4tt'·

lno Anllqu•o. Pomeroy, Ohio,

Run Moore owner, 81•-lillil2·

3ft7J84/TFN

250 CondQr Street

·Pomeroy,
A Division on Nichols Metal,
614: 992-2406
Fax:

.

614-696·1376 '
Lawn Mowing &amp;
· Landscaping

Free Estimates

Service to New
Cuatorners

MIDDLEPORT

992-2772

.

8:00 e.m.-3:30 p.m.

'

Willows

'*•

: 614·992·7643

· (No sunday Calls)

.
Licensed • Bonded
Insured .

~""'

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIa

•"-'! AdcfltiOM .
,oNew Gar~g~e
o£~1

•Roofing

Electrical - Plumbing ~ Carpentry
Repairs .~ Conversions - Remodels

. 992e2483

.

742·2803

HARTWELL
HOUSE

a Plumbing
.

flrlhillng
Allo Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ul
992-e215
PomtHOy; OhiO

1-

Now~....,..

(614) 742·3800

102 E. Main, Pomeroy
9112-7888
Using lht Classifitds
· Ius EAsros ...

DULIIII

PCIVIftll

33 AUTO CLINIC &amp; .
24 HR. TOWING
'
'

ANNOUN CEf,lENTS

Dll'l ·
- ~~ QDAidft

005

---====--W.li!SNOWIII·

&amp;J

1-II00-776-45411ut2178
. il2.891n*t II+
--....;:;S.V;;..;..,;·U;..;-e;.,;1;,.;g8;.,;4;.5;;;14;.34:...,_
Giveaway
4Q
1D- old and a - aid kit·
lent, 614-1112-4180.
2 Yoar Old Black Lab /Ballot
Ml1, Neutered, And Shall, 814-

..

"Bu..,. Your Drea111"

«6-a688.

JoeWIIaon

JICK'III,.IC.8
PIR,·I·JIBI·SERVICE

i:Roon••
••

..
;

•

. ''

f,ree E1tlm~tee .
-:·..tJ14/992-7274
.
.
AOoflng·
Gutte~
•••

~

Siding

EVENING MEAL

FREE ESTIMATES

•Small Engines
•Lawn MOW4!ra
•Chain Saws -,.,
•Weed Eatera
2 ml; off Rt. 7,
Leedlng Creelt Rd.

AT

D. Gea17'.i

Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy
. Thesdays "nd Thursdays .
Serving from 4:30.-5:15 .
Donation $4.00 for meal

.....

742·29,5.'

....,....,.r..,,
__
II

'

' .. .

Wlli Your Utilities,Put Your
In The Poor House?
'
Consider:
.'

•
•'•

.,

THE MAPLES .

'
•

.•

r:

;.IKI WILIII

. ..

I..·
(

(.

Canw;aclal ·
lllddtapo;t, OH.

114-742-2701

Racine

In Pomeroy, phio

..

""'•anls·Grn•••-

4-14•

o-r

Syracuse . 992-5n6
Notu OJ&gt;&lt;rll /o'.,r s,,ri"lf

.
• Pansies $6.50.nat
• AI vegetable &amp;bedding
plants $6.50 nat
s~n.•m

oR'**

tCannu $2.00 ...

oSivubbe.y

We honor Golden

Buckeye cards
. Open Ddy 9-5 811112-5

.....

,,

..

614-992·3120

• Blooming &amp; Foliage
. Baskllll $5.7$-$6.75
114 ln. Assolt. P9IS
85e -$1.25
trees &amp; elephant
ea!S$5.50

1-61.tt2·7022
•

PAINTIIiG

Auto, Trucll, Relldentlel, ·

, "ents ate comput~d .aceording to.your·,
; ·Income. Lovely aJ*tments featuring .
; ·~ · wall-to-wall carpeting, with all .
: :
appliance.&amp;.
!.. : ALL PRIMARY UT1UTIEIJI~ID .
:. Must be 82 yeara of age or handicapped.
:
meet HUD lllgtbillty requliren:l8t)tl
•
further details call today

•... ...'

QualitY Work et
• F•lr Prlcel
550 Page St.
Mlddlepo"', Oh. 4578o
Home Ph.
Don Gnry,

/

•

· cJ&gt;ublic is invited

BH~Shop

•••

...

dinoiOr IIEC) With EF Foundation
For Foreign Study, A Non·Profit
High School Foreign Exchanve
Organization Oedicat&amp;d TCJ Fur- ,
th.,-lng Cultural Awatenns. Help

Able Avon Representalivaa
nHded. Earn money lor Christ·
rnaa bills at homa/81 wor~t. "· 1...&amp;o0-

ggz.6358 or 304·882·2845, Ind.

·

ATTENTION

Forn/er l)ulllde Sales Ropa. Like
Cablo·Conceptl Or Kirby, Etc.
TillES HAVE CHANOEOI Sm, ·
Seto.lllo Dls¥s Are Big Stll011.
Groat Opportunity Awaits You In
Saloslllonai)IHIH!nL Call Rori Toll
Frlt1~7378. ·
Avon sa -118/Hr, No Door -To . ·
Ooor. Oulck Ca&amp;h, Fun &amp; Relax·
ing. 1.8C)(I.T.I6.QI88 indisi..rep.
II'ION 88 -$18 rHr. No ·Door -To
-Door,

Quick c·ashl •aonusaa• 1-

Free Shepherd mil pups, nine ble Houro EilhOr Ful Or Parr Time
-old, ca1Bt•·992-~l5.
I Receive·Ve•y Compelitiw Salary We Have The Job For You •
Free Ta Good Home 1 Gi'eat We Offer lnsura11c:e, Vacaaion,
Dane &amp; Slolilctd SMph«d a Lab Designated Holiday Pay, I Other
Pupa, 814-258-1240.
Benefits. Oualilied Applicant Will
Receive A Bonus 01 $100 For
Freezer &amp; air condi11oner, needs Approved full Time Work &amp; ISO
freon. 304-882·2803.
For Par:1 Time Work. lntereattd

. Aeration Motor •Sales &amp;o Repairs
Cleaning Septic Systems
.
· Port-A-John • Rentals • Serviced Weekly
No ExJra Charge for Evenings or Weekends .
24 Hr. Prompt Service
7 Days A Weelt

.DRIBBLS

motinp Global -Harmony. Become
An lnlernational Exchange CDOf'-

~noo::.n:OI&gt;m::.
· ~__,--'- - - CNA. And Wan I TO Wark Flaxi-

614·992·7119

U-1. If........ CDPMA

100Palnta01-l
Make Friends For Lila While Pru-

8wk1 ald. 304-875-78DO betwOen It You Are A Loeal licensed

POMEROY, OHIO .

Flnlnclng through Norweit Fluncltl

Spon, 304-815-1429.

3 Black, 3 Black &amp; Whlra 8 IIQ0.827·&gt;11140 lndiSI~
Weaks Old, Malo l&lt;lttano To Bobyoitrer needed, lull or '""t
.:.G•:.:.•.:.dHama,_;__:;.l;.;1..:·24..:5-..:5..:1110;;;·;____ limo, must be able ro starr lolay
Auatrollln SMpherd . black I 13, 1997,014-992-7302.
white malo, nout•red 5-13-87. Cemetery Sales, aw8ry body
304-J73.11181 .
.
needs I\ 614-992· 7440.
Black mollly Chow mix puppies,
CNA

(614) 992-42n

FAMILY DENTISTRY
304-n3-5822

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR CENTER

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

--------------~~----------~
Personals

__;,__;_;_;_;_;_;...:;..____ Parnes Should Send Resume To:
Giveaway: 1 F••• Spay and 1 P.O. Box 214, Choaapoako, OH
FrH Nau"" I'M Call Or Dogs In 45819. ·
Hono• ·01 Be Kind To Animal
EOE
Week. Grtrtd Only From May 11t ·
15th. Send Name, Addrtll, Tele· Compu1ar Users Needed. Work

phone Number To: Gollla Caunry own hours. $2Dk ro $50kly• t.
Animal Walla,. League, P.Q Bo• 800·348-718611608.
218, Galllpallo, OH 45831 .
, _ _;..___;::.:..._ __
Rusr calord, rNOd. llzed, male dog. Cosmetolagilll Needed Full And
Must find home due ta trucking Part-Time Guaranteed Wage1
Job. ..,11814)-441-42D7
Paid Vocations. u..-.7267.
Customer Service Rep~eaenra­
60 Lost and Found
~~~~---~---~-l
live,
2-4
::;DeyoPart·Timo
Per Week,Flexilile
S-gHouro.
Customa&lt;
8 monlh old German Ronwaller Service, Telephone. General Offoal on Graham'.Sc:hool Rd . in lice Skills .Nee:ded. Call For An
Centenary. I1DD. ~nl. 1614)· A In
81 - - ·

.IIPO tn)ln\ 4- . · -~
Deli WOikor/cashi• needed. Mull
boHendanoan,
18yll. old.wv.
Apply
Loot ca\ ·black with .,., s•ipea, In
· II Cr,awlonl's
Vine Street, Mldcllepart vicinity,
male, 814·992·31111.
Earn $1,DOO Weekly S'ufting Envelopes At Home. Start Now. No
LOST: Dalmatian laal -n RL 2 E1perlonce. Free Supplies, lnlo.
near Paul'l Enon. He answera No Obllg.allon. Send LSASE To:
to Ponga. Contact 30~·175·5930 ACE, Depr: 1351,'Bol 5137, Dio·
A Nttlo bcty roolly mi.... Nrn
rrond Bar, CA 81 785.
·LOST: Hoi lor, lomite, black/ Experienced Hair· Styllot Needed
whitalmOdey tace, in -back at TNT for Joann's Kut &amp; Kurt 814·"'·
..... Bethol Rd. ~75-1384.
1141111. 614-446.()214.
70
·Yard Sale
Experil&gt;nced Rooters &amp; CarP&lt;Iftl-

448·4207 Joe. ISH)-446·2238

Rt. t .• Box 44-C
Mason,WV
25260

J.R.

• j.

~.~

S887.

Are Ralmbursod, Travel Opportu•
nltin. For More lnfOI'malian Con·
tacl Cathy Bruckart At 1-800871·2528 Or 513-874-7548.

Remodeling

1-800-950·3359

M-S9-5

Flooring
In Good Condition. Call 614·2•5-

Womad: Uaad Har-d

With Exchange ·students, High
Schools, And Host Families. This
Position Is Not Paid, Expenses

' 21271171111

Bar17 B. BoUlton, D.D.S.

20 Yrs,

• 992-1330

281-4384

To Place Students From Around

814·742-2138

(614) 367-0266
• Top • Trim • Removal .
• Stump Grinding

used church · ·

The World With Families In
Southern Ari&lt;l Central Ohio. Wolk

.·Sayre T"'cking Co.

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

bu~ :

pews; any condlton. Call t-1014)-

AVON I All Areas I Shlttoy

Will haul- just call.
Reaaonable Rates

Custom Homes

r

Wantad to

1,0 · HelpWantad ·

~ MASON DENTAL CARE

Tired of paying high
cost labor tptes?
Hook-up chargee?
We'll match
beat
any othei'
competitor's price?

SR 33 Pomeroy, Oh.

101251iemn

312!19712mo.

PI

Trimming
Shrubbery
, Mlllntanance
'Plan Ahlld, can today
' lor Ire, etUmalll.

Chester, Ohio

• Gravel
· • Refuse • Etc.

7{22/tfn

. UIIY'S
UWNCIIE

985-4422

Umestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp;
House Sites
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

olnlilriOI' A EX1tlrtor

MGA Construction Services

ESTIMA~E$
985 4473

LlmestQne • Gra~l
Dirt • Sand

Wonted to buy uoed Mobile
Home, call 814·•46-0175 01 304875-511115
Wanttd To Sur: Slandlng Timber
Or Vacanl Property With Timbet,
814 381 OIIMI.
·

• Limestone .

POMEROY, OH.

FREE ESTIMATES

· FREI; ..

Doors&amp;

10%0ffAny

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
· : eOMMERGIA'l. and RE'SIDENTIAL ~~· .

•NewHomjS
"Garages
•Complete
. Remodeling
Stop &amp; C~mpare

vag• vehicles. Selling parll. 30•' 7J'3.50CI3.

POMEROY

New E:ortstructlon &amp;
Ramo;:tellng , ,
Kitchin ·c abinets
VInyl Siding • Roofs
Decks - Garages

ROB.ERI lfSSELl
CONSTR'ITION

Cloon Late Model .cars Or
Trucks, 1QQO Modell Ot Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 190CI Eallem Mrlle, GdpoHs.
J l 0'1 Auto Palla. Buying Ill· ·

1111111

AliENS
GUSS MAStERS

. . ~·IIICNII -. ": .

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

HAULING

RANCE

614-9,92·5479 ''

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~

loafing ~·tOllOrll~l-. ,,~~ ; ..,.
Roof reptlir and paint to atructu~'repetr. 1
Steel bulldlnp u low 11 $4.~. ft. ·
delivered. Free tietlmltes, prompt and
profeaelonat urvlce. C.U toltiiv

53T IIAYAN PLACE

·113 W. 2ND ST.

ll/1/t7 1 .... pd.

i" · · -

&amp;l SIDING &amp;
. INSULATION

JEFF WARNER

614-742-3411

CONSTRUCtiON

Re Le HOLLON
TRUCKING

T.K.

3'60° Communications

Suntet Home
Conthuotlon

45769 .

REPAIR OF\..NEW
·~
·
,;
•

.CELLULAR PHONES

Brian Anderson

949:21'~8

farm

.

-··Top

•742·3212

Pomer:oy, Ohio
. 1-ICJ0-2111-5100

1:900·263•2700
·EXT. 6925.
$2.99 per min.
Must lie 18 yrs.
Serv·U
(619) 645·8434
411711 mo.

ei11Stctati011

.

,

•

For more information call Fifth Third Bank
·Investment Officer Brian Seedhouse
1-800-742-8033

lACK AUCtiON

Slit., JUne 7, 11117
I P.M.
.. MalpCo.
Fllrgrounde
~by

Downt~

Big·Bend Fabricatio(
Machine &amp;.Welding SIIOp ·.

I

.

war

Dally Horoscope,
up:to-date soap
fii$Uits. CaD 10wl

eUpgl'l!lles '
•Minor Repalr.s
elnteraet.Settp HeiR

·

, Complete Machine Shop Service Fab~tlon
~ ;:steel Sales, Welding Supplies, lndustriii) Gas
;:
Radiator Repair &amp; Replaeement . r' ·'
••
Monday-Friday- B:OO a.m.- 4:3Q p.m.
'"
'$aturday - 8:00a.m,- t2 nooo .'-'

'

I

.G~8riji

Ill"'

• Exempt from Federal and State of Ohio lnci&gt;me Tax
• Non-Rated . .
Minimum $5,000
Investment
.
• Rates to. be Determined at Time of S'ale
•

..

NEW·REP'AIR

•

$3.89 per min.
••- Ill... ba 11 yre.
""'llerv-U (81111411434 .

· The bonds will be dated May 1, 1997 apd will mature December
1, 1998-2009 and December 1, 2020

......

,

ROOF,I~G

Exl. 1482

-~

.- "."

County of Meigs, Ohio
. School Improvemep.t Bonds
Unlimited Tax General Obligation.Bonds

•11-

e(=TIWII~~g
efl are/Software
Set-Ips

Howard L.Wrltelel

.

(

..........
0

·.l-900~414)-1020

Eastern ·Local School
. District

·•

•
·'
WVII023477

1112-41111

· Gravel, Ume~tone,
Top.all, Fill Dirt;
St!itd. No Nllnif1.1um •.

: .$easaHOIIII Results

,000

.

110 Court St.

lndultrlal • Automotive
New R1dllltora • Re-core•
'
A/C CondenMI'I/HOM A81erhbly1

Stlc;k/MIG Aluminum Welding

COMPUTER
HELPI

c ud t

:;c'

.

'

. ~'" Eltlniet.. . ·992·5535

10 Waullld10 Buy

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

992·7074

..

'

·"FACfORY
DIREcr
. PRI£ES''
..
Quality Window Systems

IUI'r CIY·.

r ··~

=

'

•Roofing
.'
•Siding

25 WARS IN flfJSINEN

P""

-

0

***

ar••

•Addition• ,, ',•
•Remodeling
-Garage• •

992·2753

I'he

***

ftshlng
. Derby

•Dec,ka

RADIA10H HLPAin SE:R'/ICL

2521.

"

***

1---------

-New Hom..,

"Stop putting,.~ff those much needed
home improflf!~nt•. " Call T.odoy!

949·2647

her

***

REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

.. SEIVI(E
HUI'I''S

-------. '

Eastern musicians
selected for State Band

~0r-mi4&lt;17. .

LINDA'S
PAINTING .
A pt&lt;HifWilll jt&gt;b ""
mry rlt&gt;udy &lt;111y,
" " ' " ' ' ;, llf'f'llt

luil{lrln

Gallipolis

Interior .
Before 6 p.m.
leiVe measege •
Afte1'6 p.m.

&amp; VICinitY

Yean Experience, Must

Have Hand ToOl:&amp; &amp; Transporta· ·

tion, Calllolikololarcum 614·2450437.

--::,1~1-:::'lll:::nl;o::;S:::II,~a-:iUu~ll::--1 Homo Hoaltb Aida needed lo•
lo Paid In""-"'·
adull caooo In Gallipolis ar... Pt.
PEtrM 1Nf: 2:00p.m.

IM day boloN liMo ad

lo to run. suna,
odltlon • 2:00p.m.
Friday. *May lliiMioft
· ,10;00a.m. Salurdoy.

614·985-4180

W1mo.

ahifts available. Please

800·51.2273

Call : 1·

INTERIOR WOOO

PROOUCTS

_;__.....,;=.-~-.:...-1 EstlmatoriMarkeling Repraaenla·

{Lime StoneLow Rales)

Uay 13th, And May 141h, 4111 rlw-e tor the Interior Wood PtO•
Bulaville Pike, Gallipolis, Turn In ,ducta· division of en tatablished
Shrint Club 0..1~. .
· na c:ompany. Olillified jndiYid·

FoiTIIII'O",

WICKS
HAULING
Llmesione,
Gravel, Sand, ·
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
. 614·992-3470

er~ 3

11

:

GOODNm'.S
QUALITY ROOFING
304 882-3541

. Mlddlepon
• VlcJniiV
'"
"'Z
All'""' Saloo llulf lo Paid In
Actvanea. O.dllne: 1:OOpm lite
day .. r.,; 1 1~ 1 ad Ia 10 run,
Sunday a llonday .adlllon1:00pm Friday. .
May 12-14, Oam·&amp;pm. Olio mHo
up Silver Rldgo Rd. t.om Eiotom
"" s
•
•HI....
· - · ro" 1verator, 0 '~11
%"" ":'!:r;.!:::'..:' otun, laWn

10

PUblic Sill
Met Auction

lomtora iiUGIIon

llervlce, LHI..

uol muot bo upe•ioncod In lho
a~ea of wood products metlll.u•
monta and oalas. Candldatt
""si ba • oall-llltttr end hillh'r
dopendab ... Salary plus commiiiiOft, H11iblo work ICMcfull.
Send rnumt wilh compen•tton
history ro: 2e2• US Rl 35 s. ·
Southolde'WV 2S187.
LPN immediate h&lt;&gt;IM '-llh 01·
oig......m In PomlfOY aNo. 20 to
30 hlluro • -k. oala(y l bini111 dlocu- ar "'""""" 11 ...,_
Iotta. Criminal -ground irwo~lion required, ceH .Anlla at I·
800-201·1•1Dr~1M-E.QE.

IIEO.IDENTIII. Mil

.., 42,000 ilolinll

=~~'=.!: 6:':::

~=·,=:-.:::: =::':\'~ Your Provldar Contact lie M.

Free Eltlmatn

IJ

IU3

~ llolot Eap. Flaq. -·7-

877.

.'

�•

NEA CrOIIWOrd ·Pui8le
.

•a.- -L

PHILLIP
. ALDER

· 'nc'run

......

41 1ipp I .....

.._.

..,...,[ .......

4411 F tal
411''w

:S::
.........
.·~.._ ......

13--dDIIna

1112

c'*'r V.... 1110, ¥-1, " ' -

-·1· .

"'L

.,

. ,.., Clww, 8hlllldD ·~ Pbwr,
Till, Air, CrUIM, Bed Uner, Ton-

.

.. llllfCI Olilll

.

. ..,_..... loW "'''"· .....
ol..., call 'rom _A,.roon, lf 4·

6 K Q 18 3
9 A 7 it
tKI
, __ 5 3 2

-·

ntlux,Muat s.tl Belt or,.,
(1114)448 82111
. ••

57 AIIU'n$ '

Kid -

DOWN

·Eaal
• • 5. 2

Q 10 0 :s
• .J a·s 2
• J.
.Q 10 ·• ..
AKJ12
• Q 10.
lloll..
6AJ887

1HI Dodat Ram 1100 4x4:9.T
t.lmlo, ... Rlrnl And :13' .......
Loldodl 5e,OOOK .17,000, 014·
378-2514.
'

12 - - aut
17 OeiUM

22=

,.~

•K

; 23 Put an Ice
24 Cornpa!MI
. 25 Ballet

t A 7

•&amp;7 54 3

740 · llotorcyclel
11182 V45 llaona Loqko &amp; RJno
ar.tf$2.150 81+268 . . . l
IIIIlS Hclndo 10e&lt;: 3 WhH!or,j.c
eond. t550. 304-675-31154.

c..,rlco Storlon
84,557 111111,

11811 Hortov Oavldoo~ low 23,000 lllloo, Loto Of Exr,.•o
t12.000 Firm: 1870 Hondo Galclwlng Nice Bl~o, 38;000 1111pa.
•••100. 814-2511-1384.

IT BETTeR ae
AUTM.I NTIUL lt

By Pllllllp Alder

'

12 Fl Stir Croft V·tl011am, Pllh-

flncltr, All Tha Extr11l Troller In-

cluded, 814-245-8851 Afto• 5
.P.M.
•
1888 Bamber Fl1h &amp; Ski a./., .
Ball 115 HP. llotln• Motor, G8
Pda. Mariner Trolling Molor,~a­
wrence Depth Flndor. Ski
r,
O'brian Tube, Ouel line We 1,
Very Good Condldon, B14-41B·
0228.
'
~
lllddlopart by ballpark. Caring,
· rruotlng mathw af one, parsanel

referencaa available, 814-8G24400.

cora 'In my homo, roltranc" avalablo, 814-002-8842.
Chi~

'82 Commodore, 14x72, three

bedroom, one bath, $0500, 814-

885-4282.

.

2007.

Exparloncod ....p.ntry and ramo·
doling. lnoldt and outoldo,
decko. vinyl oldlng, add-on addl·

tiona, cabinet refacing or newly

rebuilt. Reforancoo-Frto Ettl.rnalaL Jim Shul 304-875-, 272.
G8arooo Partoblo Sawmill, don't
haul your logo ta f1t mil jull call. 14x70 ·three bedtoom,
304-675-1057.
1005 Skyline, on rented
hear pump, $17,500, 814-1102- Attn : Hunters &amp; F'lahermen. 15 1
Prafollianal Trot Sarvlct, Slllmp 38111 .
acres rolling hiUI wt2 woodiad ar-:
eaa I pond. 15mln. Jrom Holzer,

R4rmowal, Free Eatlmateal lnoullnct, BidWell, Ohio. 81 ol-388-

close to Vlnlon area. Beaudluh
$18,000. ~-875-7800 .

- · 81~7-7010.
Will care for children In my
homo. Llconltd by the State of
wv. Phone 304-875-2742.

Prima Acreaga 3- f acre ~liiil,

building oltea In IotaInquires only. 304-

Will do prfVol8 pracrlcli nuralng
care in

~our

home tor &amp;kterly or

for Rent

460

6.10 Farm Equipment

RCA dlgltol ureilite dloh, 1700 1050 lllmoapollo Z TrociDr, 814080; wood heating · - · $100; =388::·::24::98:::_.-~---814-04t-7100.
1077 GIIC 112 Tan 1 Row Plant
Sam Samtrlllila'i Army Camau- Senor, Ill. John Door Tractor
ftaoo by Sandyville P.O. far wild Smo11 Trellor 4'1'7814-245-5242.
turkey ooa~n. Noan-5pm. Frl- 4810 Fold Dittal 1500 Houro 6' 3
Sun. 304' 273-!liiSS.
·
P~ King Cunor Bruoh Hag, WagSofa Bed Olive Grttn 'Wilh Bur- on Past Hold Digger, 814·379gundy a Blue Caver Uso. 814- 2708.
~-~!:5~7:_!,8~1 ~4 ~~-~
. ~'23.!__ _ ·Alill ChalmO(I 4 Row Na Till Air
Plarur814-448-2412.

1::::.:.:._ _ _ _ _ _ __
Auto Loano: Auto Dolior Wll At·
range financing Evon II' You
Have a..n Tumed Dawn Before.
Loano Available For Na Crtdl1.
BAd Crerilr And llonkrupiOy ·Buyoro, Col Diana 814-448-8172.

1ooxeo, family typo, approved
hoak·up. 814-002-50511.

r.lERCHAtJOISE

'Will Da : Landocaplng &amp; Gran
Mowing, Vory Rouanablo . .Coil
304-8~11 15.

510

· cluiCh and pr,uure plate, flrea,

Budoor Prlc~ Tranomluiono.
Sraring at too.oo end Up, uaoil 1
Robulll All Typal, OVtr 10,1$10
Tl'lntmiallona, · Accest Tranlfer
C1111 &amp; Roar Endo, 814· 2~5 1877
\ 1

·1140-21108.

New gai ..nke. 1 ton uuck

Household

Goods
'87 Ford Rangor, ""'" onolno,
pain~

Would llko To Wotch Your
Chlld(ol Far Sum~nor, Galllpollo.
Gooct Referenc:ea, Nice Yard,
814 448 0885.

0"" year •oe. .21!00, 814•

10!8 GIIC .112 ton whlto truck,

four new lirH, three apeed on

Would Like To Watch An Older
Ptroori Ea.ch Day Ao Nltdtd In
Tho Crown City Or Gaillpoila
Anal, 814-2511-1035.

naar. - pain! (no ruaQ, lock IDOl
box In bod, llx cyUndor, 0111 an
gao, runs ox~ollent, •oeo, cell
814-742-2310.1 ' .
.

FI NAN CIAL

Ford "'4 ron. loxlondod
a~l of ea-., no ruM, 302
auto,
bed Jlner, toneua
COYOr, liking 14,500. 304-8758440.

•c..

'

Business

noll whit pooplo you know, and
NOT 10 lind monoy through the
· maM unlll you have lnv11tfgattd
flt"""'rJ

230

IQQ7

t1 ,358

420 . Mobile HoiT)es ,
tor Rent ,

lklrting, I
wood Hornet

seas.

services
HARTS IIASONARY - Block,
brick I llanO worlc, 3D y•ro ox-

Buyers Eaty
.,.,..nce, reaeonable ratea. 304- 2tatI Tim.
3 Btdroomo Around
-11181 on.. 8:00pm, no job ta. lla,
Frtt Oativery I St~Up,
1111111 or 10 BIG. W\1.021208
1-800-251-5010.
Livingston·, baaement water· .3 Bedroom lloblla Home Both &amp;
praanng, all baaomenr repairs 112. Total Elactrlc On 5 Acnta. On
done.- free eedmatea, llfeUma Addlaan
Plko, Vory Nlca, Priced
guarontH. 1Oyro on job exporl- To Still Call
A""r 4:30, 814-448·
304-675-2146.
8822.
3 Bodroornt. Bolh 112. New Cot-

'*'

Two Bedroom mobile ho/tlo. $245
Month UOO dopoal~ rlqulrtld
Retorancoo, Pty U~lhlt1, 8143fl8.8312

THAN~

'.

I

I l I 1I

::::::::::::::~ ...

FE~ D.

440

814-388-8281 .

E V UNE

I

=,'

I 1 1 1. 3

.

I

1-•..;,;1~5...;,-.:_.~:._;;1_::,1--1 Q

Comp lete tho chuckle quoted
-.L.
-~-_;_..1.-..1.-..1.--1.
bv filling In the missing words
L.
vou develop from stop No. 3 bolaw.

.I I

790 · Campers &amp; ,
. Motor.Homtl ~

• •PRINT NUMIUEO l.ETTUS IN
.

1a12 Modal compor 8x18i' ln ·
Good Candilion call eu-~58·
5844

1-..

while in ihe groce,Y store 1
heard one.woman comment
that, 'Life spans would be
. . . - - - - - - -....... longer if green vegetables
. ,.- N 0 G B 0 L
smallad as good as - - - - -I'

whtrtla &amp; rodiororo. D &amp; R A\l)o,
Ripley, WV. 304-372-3033 ar,1·

8()0.273-1321.

....

THESE S9\JAR£S

A UNSCI.u&amp;E AeOVE LETTER$
V
TO GET ANSWER .

·'

1Sl84 "'i11an mini motor horftt,

111111

SCitAM-I.ETS ANSWERS
trmblem • Knell· Abho;- Jacket · TAKE the BLAME
Overtteard in office !!levator, 'He made a big mistake .

-

. ...
•&lt;&gt;
·

and he's only smiling because he thought of someone
else to TAKE the BLAME.'

ITUESDAY

o.l

~·

I

-

.

MAY13I

8ft truck cotnpor, Ice bo1,
lurn&amp;Ge, air, good lor hundnt_ I
flohlng. $375 ar wiH trade ~or
lllrlld calvtt. 304-675-1185. '
·

71 o Autos tor Sale

Aloumo loan. no "-nilor
quail lied bu,.r. 1ooe 1111. Du..,._

Apartments
tor Rent

man, lullvo.

••If contained, tin·

cludoo hitch a electric
~-875-5122.
'

~-, Frtt ~ &amp; Sat-Up, do pool! required, no polo, 81 4·
ton Tho Finance line, 1·800· 002·2218.
251-5070. .

Sf

b~o.

;i

m ICf S
1758, Murray Hill ' ·s wion; New . ,Yo11 might 5elect a listener who
York, NY 101~ .. Be sure to stale· ·could work against you.
.
1
your zodiac sign.
, SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22)
.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Faro-. ;Something of ~ubsta_I!C~_sould result
BERNICE
ily members might have difficulty , Itoday fr:om a drscuss1on -wrth a friend
BEDEOSOL keeping MQretS from you today,_espe- · ·:who kno_ws .how to analyze problems
cially if you have the ur;ae to rnvet- ;pragmatrcally. Thke notes!
'. tigate. Tho,truth won'tel~de you:
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .
·
CANCJjR (June 21 ~July 22) 21)Act in harmony with your hunch-• • • • • ·' Todar could ~ adrn&amp;mlle day for :es today, especially where career
Ill
you tf !~ m~x wtth ~JK!s who &lt;aspirations are concerned. Your ideas
May 14, 1997
share srmllll' 1nletesiS. Llll)rt your should work if . given the proper
Infonnation provided t~ ~ou in get-to~ to
who optrale on chance.
.
.
-;o!'pnt"nlence could play a srgmficant your wavek\Nih- · ·
, CAPRICORN -(Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
;:1i;1e in the year ihoead. What will be '
~:EO (July 23-Aua. 22) You may , · Keep the lines of communic~ion
· lippanccl to you _friends could belp .rcah~ a IIICI dell 1et11111 from a com- open with a friend whO now resrdes
·' ..h!rthcr your amblb~S·· ~1al endMv~ !oday, yet your
at a conai~rable distance from Y~· ·
. TAURUS. (Apnl 20-Ma~ 20) . prideofiCCOIJIPiilbmencoukhuper- Somethingaood could come ofil.
,./a!thoup you m~sht iKil. ~ rn the sede anythlnSProftt can offer.
.• · AQUARIUS (Jaa. 20-Feb. 19).
:ntoOO early in the day, ~ialrnvolve- .. VIR~ .&lt;Alii- ~Sept. 22! Your , Focus on a domestic problem tOday ;
• :Jiienll may be meaninsful to you Ill· peen_WIU 1Jvt.COIIIiderable -~to ·. • that you've been -lr)'illl to ~olve. l
ef 011. Try to arranp ~~~~ for; your rrleaJIIJday, Someo!~ IUI'plllln8 You should be able to find several
eveai., houri. ~· lrell your- , ' may follow your ~ to the solutions illllelld of just an elusive :
l!i!Jf to • birtbday sift. Send for your· lecta'.
. . a..
.
~luo-oraph prediction~ for the yew
LIBRA (Sepc. ~ 23) A~ · . PISCES (Feb. 20-MM:h 20) Keep
llllillal $2 .ad SASB to AllrO- · ;diiCIIIIiaa COli~~ with , ·: your plans flexible today so that you
c/o thia newspaper, P.O. Box, ,pooplc who Mel! l direc11y IIVOived, ' wiU be able to make chan~ " "
~
.
.
'
'
.~
'
.
'
. ... . .
~~

Alnoal- advtr1tllng In
••••ia~rll~to
Ill F - Fair !tauolng ArA

-··

oA 1-wftlch- Mfllgal
'Wly prwfeiM N»,

•• Ia r ),1 or dllcdl*lllol'
bltold on raoi, coa, Nllglon,
-lomlof llnliornelanal
011g1n. or onr Ueutlon to

.,..
""''.,."""·
I; 7 ,onr""""
"' or\tlct~••iillloti.•

·-91'. . .

nc:l

ASTRO·OIIAPB
..•

.

eus

?

......,,• • for .........
- · In l/loii!IIOn Qlflt .....
haotlly

our-..

•ilomllld f!llllald I uo

.. "' ''"'*"·
,.Oft.....

'7

5 5.

' -· 7

Olhello

410n ~ -­

•+·

TRI\NSPORTI\ fiON

540 Miscellaneous
1 end 2 bedroom a.porrnonra, furMerchandise
Bonk Repo'l Dou-ldo'o I Sil· nished and unfurnished, security

'"* "'" .......

47~1n

'

: laciultll
might be narrow, like the Hudson
48~ ,
.River between New Jersey and
Manhattan, or very wide, like the
' SOSina-~
51 CJiabl
.Atlanlic Ocean. However, to call a ship L-L.....L...
pooltloM
like the QE2 a ferry is perhaps unftat- .
·tering.
' There ia a declarer-play technique
that resembles a ferry. It is highlighted in this srand-slam contract. How
CELEBRITY CIPHER
would you play in seven spades? West
· by Lula Campoa
leada the club ace.
.
c.tiiHtly Ciphef'crypiOgraml ... ~lrom QIP U W byiM'KIUI people, put and prettnt '
&amp;d'l
cifN* la.ndllor anoetw. T~ W.: Z .,u.ll P
Four clubs was a splinter bid, show-.
lng at least game values in spades
·with at most one club. After three cue'X A F P
WE . tLP
V L W XU
AB
. bida, North jumped to the grand slam,
·confident South had the trump ace to
WXX .GEWAiol
T II U
.1 L P
ZTSPMI
AB
justify his strong bidding.
.
After rilffiitg the first Irick in the .
up
U W E W X ·X Q E W A II • '
KWVQPX
dummy, Soulh .could have rulfed three
.more clubs in the dummy, using the
GMTKOIIA.
heart king, diamond ace and a heart
ruff as hand entries. IThe filth club
disappears on dummy's heart ace.) ·
PREVIOUS .SOLUTION: "I don'l like to watch golf on television . I can'1 stand
·. whispertng."- David Brenner.
·
However, declarer decided to play a
variation on this theme: a croaaruff. ·
And South knew the correct ledmique.
Before ferrying back and forlh be- ·
WOlD
tween the two hands, South cubed bis
_;..:.:.;;::;;--;;;_;:;, 1411o4 lty ~LAY L POllAN
.
side-suit tricks.
So, declarer. played a heart to his
Rearrange lotto11 al tho
ldng. caslled 'the diamond ace, led a dilour ocrambled words beamond ..ll! dummy's ldng, and took the
low to form four olmple words.
heart ace-, dlilcardtng a club from
hand.
RECROG
· Then South tabled his carda. "I am
·about to embark on a hllfh·trump
•crossruff," he explained: ~ I will ruff
.dummy's live remaining red-eult cards
in hand and 111)' last •
clubllln.the
GE L L A
dummy. Who has to underrull the
2
pcater number olllmes1"'
"I do." replied East, "jOur llmea.•

1004 Tlago Montana. 20ft. . .
od. oloopa 111, full bath, qu4an
olza canter bed, Iota ollla"'JJI.
1g,DDD miltl, -book, wl canalder trade In of pontaOn booaar
von. Can be attn 11 38 Hud..n
Streot, lliddloparl or call 814002-4103.
I

Professional

to...,.,....

~· .

~~~Ford

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISI!ING CO.
recommends that you do butl·

'IT'S

WO~E

aletpo 4, ·otavo, link, rofrig, .&lt;ab
F350, 480, A.T., 10' air, dual rnr whoolo, 20m,g . .
12.000. 304-675-2040.
:•
flall&gt;td, lldfall. IOCOnd · U·
Gtillonl mechitnlcal, •411115, can
· 1087 38" . Sierra Camper oCnd
814-002-3881.
1082 ChlvraiOI S.burbln Calliper Special, on hook upo, boUC ln
oxcellont condition, t12.500, iall
814-0112-4000.

Opportunhy

~-·

I I II ·I I I.

~J.... ~304-e75-5130.!

Will haul junk or treoh away. $351
plclWp IOtd. 304-675-5035.

210

'
:

· 760 ,Auto Parts &amp; ', ;
Accessories •.· ·I
,&gt;

'

.......

41Dama

0

..

Pro 120 12 Fl Bou Batt, rrJOr.
3.'1 HP Motor, Battery Charger, .
Acceoaa~••• New, Novor Upecl.
11,000, 814-4411-81125. .

For rent· two river campaittl,

--~-875-4150 ..

IIIW, .,..._, Ollf9.
114-tll-lla

allk
44c.nlna

.'::~:~:~' $~\\4\1~-l&amp;~~s·

4-whHiera, motor hamea, furnl•

llrlt noor
· C.ll
-·
air conditioned.
N•alflct
Carpel
(8141 448-4383 8 Lm.-5p.m. monday il.ur

eick, prefer upper Pt Pleaaant

Ball Boat Procrah 15'10 Filtjorglall With Trailer I 10 HP Evlnrudl Trailing lloiOr (2) Humri1illgblrd Flah Finder, live Woii ,J2)
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Pomeroy.-lddleport, Ohio_, WednMd_"",
_,. May 14,1997

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. !: Ohio Coalition goes before task force ·
•
;: .By JOHN SEEWER
.
': :Aaeoclated Prest Writer
: • . COLUMBUS- The group that fought the state's school funding sys:: ,tern mt;t with the Jawm~rs and educators who are trying 10 come up with
:: a new system.
·
:: · But it was obvious that both sides still don't agree·on much. ,
The Ohio Coalition for Equity and Adequacy on Thesday gave the school
:: . funding task force an overview of its remedy to the Ohio Supreme Court's
:: :decision that said the funding system was unconstitutional.
• . Most of the suggestions -including more training for teachers and bet• _ter school buildings - would cost millions. But the Republican leaders on
: . the
force want to keep costs down. ·
William Phillis•.executive director of the coalition, said the bouom line

Ill*

I'

is lhat m~ money is needed.
.
"li's wilb money that we fix the buildings, it's with money we train the
teachers.'' Pliillis said after the meeting. "The system can't be fixed with. 011t the niooey."
·
Senate President Richard Finan, R-Cincinnati, noted a magazine anicle
that cited studies showing that the amount of money spent on schools does
not affect education perfOfl!lance in other countries.
·
"Why do other countries succeed and we don't?" Finan asked.
· . Carol Young, superintendent of North-Union Local schools, said you can't
comp~W Ohio's edueaiion system to those In foreign countries, because maity
only teach their best students.
·
"'flley do not educate all of their youngsters," she said.
State schools Superintendent John Goff said there are huge differences

between countries in education. But he admitted that "they do educate their
··
children to a higher lcveltluin ours."
Gov. George Voinovich asked coalition members wl)ether they supported seuing perfonnance goals for sehools and enforcing them.
..
. "I don't see a problem with accountability," said·Carl Berg, sltperintendent of the Miamisburg schools. "Most of us welcome it."
Much of the worlt on the new plan is being.done in closed-door meetings involving the governor's staff and Republican leaders in the Legislature.
.
House Speaker Jo Ann Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg, said that she would
like lo give voters the option of approving the plan. She said voters also could
be asked to vote on whether the ~ew system .is "thorough and efficient."
That would take away the CO\Irt's authority over the plan.
.

-):Head Start's role in area main Chamber topic ·
•

•

-

; ~ By JIM FREEMAN
:: Sentinel Newa Staff
: . 1bc community role of the Head
:- ,Start program for preschool children
: was the topic-of Tuesday's luncheon
:: ineeting of the Meigs County Cham·
:- ber of Commerce held at the Trinity
:: Oturch in Pomeroy.
.
: Kay Rowe, ~presentin_g Access
:: He~ Star:' wh1ch adm1msters ·the .
.• ·Qa)ba-Melgs Head S~ programs,
~ briefly outlined the history of Head
: ~li!n ~hich began·as a nutrition_pro: • gram rn the l'HiOs as pan of President
;·; .L~ndon B. )ohnson's 'War on Pover. ;.-_ty.
.
. • Jbe 'program rece1ves both feder:: al and state fun!fing. .
:: , Today, _in some are~, Head Stan
. :. serves· children ages b1rth through
:: - · .

f

.

five and their families, she explained.
Now, in the face of greater welfare
reform, preschool programs like
Heaq Stan may play a role in help·
ing people get back to work, Rowe
said.
.
"If ptl9ple are going 1\&gt; work,
some!x&gt;dy is going to have 10 watch
the ki'!"," she said.
.
Me1gs Co~nty h~ a home-based
Head Start m which Head Start
employees visit the child's home and
·work with the child and his or her

tors woiic. on developing socializalion, motor and communication skills
as well as teaching the children to follow directions. ·
· She described the program as a
parent partnership and said parents
play a large role in the program.
"We trY to ~tel parents interested in
their children's learning," she said.
"We encourage l'arents . to get
involved in the schools ... beginning
with Head Stan."
Rowe said Head Start is very
pare~ts.
· much interested in community devel. ·"We ~ ·to . g~! the parents opme~l and is l~king at ways. to be
t~volvec!. she smd. We feel educa~ more mvolved tn the·co'"""'umty. ,
non begms at home w1th the p~Wnts.
. In other business chamber ViceIn 6allia County, children visit the president Sue Maiso'n said plans are
~.,.Stan center for 1\alf a
four being made for the Great Ohio Bicybll\et,a week. At the center, mstruc·. cle Adventure (GOBA) visitto Meigs
·
·
. County on June' 19.

"!'Y·

•

· Maison said about 3,000 bicyclists
will pass through Meigs County and
stop at the Rutland Civic Center for
lunch.
·
Volunteers are being sought to
assist with the lunch which will be a
fund raising event for the chamber.
"We're pleased and .happy to be
abl~ to host ~ lu~c~on for the~,"
!"fruson smd. ~s Will be an_excllmg day for Me1gs County and Rutland."
_In addition, Maison said plans are
be1ng made for a stet:nwheel boat tour · .
to coincide with the annual reenactmenl l_lf tbe Battle of Buffington
Island m July.
Touri~m committee chainnan
Jud~ Williams said the com~ittee is
hoptng to be able to adverttse soon
for a n~ tounsm dnector.

---~ ~-Meigs· ·Local ·Bba"rd approveS''-person nel'tltaJte·rs &lt;
:: ~ -'IM: FREEMAN .
· retroactive to Aug. 1; 1996. Board
:: Sintlnel Newa Staff ,
member Larry Rupe and .President
•
Personnel matters for !he upcom- John'Hood voted against the action.
·.: ing.school year dominated Thesday- • Cindy Fields and_Stephanie Price
•: night's meeting of the Meigs Local were hired on one-year supplemental
; • Boanl of Education.
.
conltacts as high school clieerleading
-: Thefollowingwerehif!:dOnone- advfsorandjuniorhighsc(Joolcheer:;_year supplemental contracts for .the . ·leading advisor, respectively. Board
' 1997-98 school year: Beth ·Mayer, member Roger Abboll abstained.
:; junior high newspaper advisor; Rita
Tile board accepted the-resigria' :Simmons, head teacher at Salem tion of Ann Webster as a substitute
Elementary; Scot Gheen, bead teae~~r for retirement purposes effec:·teacher at' Bradbury Elementary; tive 'irilmediately.
Hi~ as substillllt cooks for the
· -. ::Celia McCoy, ·senior class !~'~visor. ·
•. Boanl member Randy Humphreys upcoll\mg school year were: Carolyn
:: abstained.
. · Ota~man, Coleen Whaley, Kay Dod·
: • Bob Buck was hired as quiz team s9n, .~Jacqueline 1-!oover; Tammy
:.: ·advisor for tbe 1996-97 school year . Jarv~s, Tana Kennedy, Debbie Riffle
,

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::Center

:_.:_ Crow, Frecker top seniors·

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UNION WORKERS PROTEST. Members of organized labor
atand on the wnt atepa of the Ohio Statahou• In Columbua
Tuaaday to protaat S. 8. 102 which would e11mlnandll! _
ttle prevall· ·
1
lng wage law from public achool conatruct on a repa1ra. (~P)
~

and Diane Hendricks.
Doug Jenkins, Bob Johnson, Anna
Hired as substitute bus drivers for Welsh, Max Wilson, Carroll 1ohnson,
the upcoming school year were : Nancy Barrell, Jack Kitchen, Oliver. ·
Roger Cotterill, Jo Gilmore, Gary Norris, Marvin Roush, Lester Stew··~or
1
McKnight, Kevin Jewell, Oliver Nor- an and Lonnie Taylor.
.
. l'r
I 4·
ris, Ron Wilson, David Williams,
Hired as substitute secretaries
Carla.Milhoan.BenUptonJr.,Diana were: Kay Hemstey; Julia Sa~re, .
Johnson, Virgil Hartley, Richard Charlene Thomas and Jacqueline ·
·
DeMoss, Janel Hanley.
Justice.
Hired as substitute mechanics
. Hired as substitute teachers for the
were: Dennis Tillis, Gary King .Jr., upcoming school year were: Nancy
.T ·.
Ronald Mullins and Martin Davis.
Aldridge, Debora Ator, Robert By JOHN SEEWER
Hired as substitute aides for the Austin, Deborah Barber,· Jeanne Aeaoclatad Preu Writer
upcoming school year were: Josie ·Bowen, lise Burris~ Christi .Collins,
COLUMBUS - Sining on the.
M!ll1on; Phyllis Witherell, Joleen Sharon Edmonds, Linda Faulk, Statehouse steps, union worker Bob
Rupe and Debbie Cundiff. . .
Michelle Gillilan, Cecilia Harris, Maksim was resigned to the fact that
Hired as substitute custodians for James Hayman, Sandra Holcomb, there was lillie. he could do to stop
the upcoming school year were:
··. Continued on paae 3
lawmakers from eliminating part_of
the state's prevailing-wage rule.
"They're going to do away with
whatever they want," he said. But
5

39th::.graduation ceremo-nies set May 25

un1on
•

.
·
e·r.s say

• ·wage rule
1 ·
- •1j
cuttlng
Will
h u.rt e verv.one
.
. . · I·n Oh10
•

.

tion, Trade Council, said the state
will not .save any money by. elimi·
nating prevailing wage. ·
"All construction workers will sec
'their paychecks cut and see a ne,.;
tax," Williams said. ·
_But Rep. Roben Corbin, 'R-Dayton, said the bill woutd anow schools
to gel more for their money.

·~:~s~:~~~n.
s~i~e:e~,\t~~~~~-r lead~~~k,~rsth~~~!:i:::r~~~:arr
That's why he joined hundreds of they were trying to gel inlll a rock

:: By BRIAN J. REED
the boys' varsity and reserve basket- Ohio First •Scholal:ship by the Uni- ·Michelle Grossnickle, Bruc~ Ryan con.struction work~rs at the State- concen. Instead, they sat and listened
.: Sentinel Newa Staff
ball teams.
.
versity of Rio Grande and plans to Hawley, Traci Michelle Heines, · house Thesday to protest the bill that to testimony !hat was often dry and
:• Meredith Lynn Crow has been
She played varsity softball • for major in Business Management at the · Alyssa Kay Hoffman, Rickie Lee . would end prevailing-wage require- technical.
:: named valedictorian and Maria Dar- ~~tree years, and reserve sdftball for university.
Hollon, Jr., Cr)rstal Jean Holsinger, ments on school constructiO!J jobs.
Terrence Manin, a 30-year-old
:: lone Frecker the salutatooan of East- o~c. 'She pla~ed varsily vol~eyball
Candidates 'for graduation are . Martha Renee Holter, Jeremy Edwanl
About I SO workers were able to carpenter from Cleveland, said he
-:em High School's Class of 1997.
this year, servmg as ~apwn, and James •Lawrence Adams; Patrick Hupp, Rocky James. Hupp, Bobby get into • House finance commiuee thinks tbe bill is a first auempt to
:• Eastern's 39th Annual Baccalau- · played . reserve volleyball for one Loren Aicker, Keith Allen Arix, Lau- , Lee Keaton,. Eric Sidney Marcinko, .meeting to hear testimony on dt!: bill. eliminate prevailing wage on all
:; reate and Commencement Exercises ·year. She is a three-time recipieot of raAnn Arix, Christopher Eric Bailey, Jr., Sean Adam Maxcy, Adam Luke The others watched on television.
public construction projects .
•: will be .held on Sunday, May 25 at the Th- Valley Conference AII-Acad- David· Allen Baker, Manhew Luke McDaniel, Teresa Dawn McGrath,
The bill, which would also speed
"All it takes is fqr th.em to get
:: 6:30 p.ni. in the school gymnasium. ernie Awanl, given io panicipants,llf Barnhart; Riki Michelle Barringer, Amanda Marie Milhoan, Christina up distribution of school construction . their foot in the door," Man in said .
:• Crqw ·and Fte&lt;:ker will.address their varsity sports who have maintained a Thomas Vernon Basim, Angela Marie Moore, Jeanie· Mae Newelt
money, has created much debate
The committee is expected to
~: fellow graduates during the ceremo- · 35 O,£ higher grade point average. · JeaJIIlne Bissell, Laura Lynn Brown,
Wesley Michael Newell, Carrie . about whether ihe state will benefit vote on the bill ihis week and could
·~ ny.
.
lter other activities include three Candace Lane Bunting, Sherry Lynn .Ranae Newlun, Peter Christopher .by eliminating prevailing wage.
go to the House. The Senate has
~~ : \faledictorian Meredith Lynn year~· participation in tbeOhio Uni- Burke, Jerornee Clifford Calaway, _ Nowak, . Kelly Amber Osborne,
Union leaders have said the bill already approved the bill. which
~· Crow is the daughter of James and versii)I ,Govemor's Scholars Program, Joshua flugene Casto, Angela Dawn Daniel Jacob Ono, Jason Allan Park- could cost some construction ·work- . includes S300 million for school
:~ Pamela Crow _
of Pomeroy.
.
serving ;as a s!Jident.leader in the last Chancy, James Patrick Clifford, cr, Leslie Leish Parker. Mindy Mae ers about $1 ,500 each year. Republi - construction.
~~ · She is the Meigs County recipic;nt year. She was a volunteer at Veterans Catherine JoAnn. Coram, Meredith Sampson, Thomas Earl Schuler. cans said it would save as much as
M&amp;king more money available for ·
~~ of the Fninllli.n B. Walter Awlj,rd, the Memorial Hospital's Extended Care Lynn Crow, Steven Lee Dickens, Eric Shaun Michael Seth, Lisa Marie S 120 million because the state now schools has become a major issue for
:: Easte,m High School r~ipient of the Unit- ft!ld has ·worked as a waitress • Edward Dillard, Timothy Steven Stethem, Jessica Renee Scarberry, pays union-negotiated wages to all -lawmakers who ~ave to come ·up
•; Holzer. Science Award and has · dunng t(:lc S\lmmer. ·
EpliQg, Amber M..-ie Fortney.
. Henry Travis Thomas, David E:"Van- school construction workers.
with a funding plan.within the next
. ~ ; received an Academic Excellence · She _is an active member of the
William Mark Francis, Maria Dar- Inwagen, Alicia Marie Walker,
"It's going to· affect everybody year to comply with .the Ohio
Supreme Court's rulins that found
:: Award from the Tandy Corporati9n, Chesteri' United Methodist Church . lene Frecker, Christopher· Duane Michelle Dawn Westfall, Chad Allen dowri the line,'' Maksim said.
:;denoting ,the top to percent of nomi- and the church cho1r. . . '
Gandara, Ti111j)thy Ivan Gheen, Wheeler, Tracy Marie Wliite, and
David Williams. president of the the state failed to provide a thorough
:; nees nationwi.de. She is a participant
srn: plans to attend Manella Col- Nathan E~gene Goodwin, Christina Anna Christine Wolf.
Ohio State Building and Construe- . and efficient education system.
·
:: in WSAZ-lV's "Be5t of the Class," lege m1 the fall, where ·she has
~ ~ and has received the Academic · received a Dean's Scholarship, and
';sxcellenee Awanl from Meigs Coun- -plans to major in Corporate Com: ;ty Schools all five years that she has munica!fon.
.
.
:;been eligible.
M~a Darlene Frecker, salutaton- ·
;; · She is a two-year member of the an,1s tlledaughterofOtarlesW. and
Donald Mooney, who repreSentS
By JOHN McCARTHY .
•:NIIional Honor Society, and is cur- MarshaJtl. Frecker of Racine.
the
plaintiffs, said he was confident
Asaoclated Pre•• Writer
.:;rcritly serVing as its president. She _ Her ~~;:tivit_ies in big~ school have
·- COLUMBUS - A lawsuit chal- the appeals ruling would stand all the
: •has been a member of the Eastem . mcludos\.servmg as semor class trealenging the state's school voucher way I~ the U.S. .Supreme c;:ourt, if
: :High School Marthing Band and surer .ftd two-ye~ member of
program will stand up on appeal , a necessary.
·~Concert ~and for six years, ierving Nauonal Honor Soc•cty. She_wu an
"You can't do that. You can 't
lawyer for those who filed the suii
:~u section leader and squad leader for • All-~an Scholar and has been .
spend our (lall)lllyers') money for lhat
said .
purpose," Mooney said Tuesday.
i11ne·
yean.
She. will It_ IWO-year f~aturel' in Who's Who Amons . ·
1bc
program
provides
$2'
,
500
in
1
Lawmakers should hold off fund: ~ber of the Pep Band. She hu
American High School Students and ·
wpeyer money for low-income faming
Ohio's school voucher _program
:~ a member of the District XVD . in q.e United Swes Achievement
ilies in Cleveland so they can send
;:Honor Band for two years, the ~gs : Academy..
their children to private schools, until they come up with a new school
~ ~HonorBUid.furoaeyCM,and ·
She ls ta member of St. John
including those affiliated with a reli- spendins plan, a group opposed to the
~ouchers said Tuesday.
gion,
:- Meip County Cooummity BIIFld. l.UijlerU Qturdr. She hu been horJ..
Mooney spoke at a news confer' 3he W11 11em11y of the IOpilolncn ored II ttie Meigs County Acldemic '
The I Oth Ohio District Coun of
Appeals said May I that the proararn ence with members of a coalition
; Jllu lllld • four-year member of the. Banquet her IOflltomole Mel senior
;:'+\laity "13" Club. She had altlld role yean IIIII was awarded the J. Danviolated the required separation of ·called Citizens Against Vouchers,
church and state. It ruled on a chal· which includes several unions, edu~ lhe
and'- aavOcl fcJnb "I Dn You" aWI!d in Ia junior
lenp: IJrouaht by the Ohio Federation cation lfllltps ·and Cleveland-area
:'II .. oftlt:e aide thia ,...,., She Will yell'.
·
ofTeachers and a group of lallpllyers. community groups.
!,.
1 hU lllli"'fi• IIU year for
Mllril! l)as also been awlrded an
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Lawyer confident about
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