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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

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Pick 3:
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:finals

2015

Sport8 on Page 4

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Cle1r tonight, Jow ln
upper 30•. Thur1d1y

BuckeYe 5:

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2 Sectl!lna, 11 P.-. 31centa
A Gennel! Co. Ne•apeper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, WeclnMday, May 21,1997

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Governor
says
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Voters should get a say in school funding
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By JOHN SEEWER

made about trying to put the question
,A,toeltltH Preae Writer .·
on a ballot.
"
: COLUMBUS -The decision on ·
The Ohio Supreme Court, in striktiho gets to watch over the overhaul ing down thc 'siate's funding formu-.
of the state's school funding system Ia. gave' Petry County Common Pl~as
m,ight rest with the voters.
Judge linton Lewis Jr. authority
Gov. George Voinovich said Tues- over any replacement system the
·day he thinks voters should decide Legislature cicatcs. l..ewjs was the tri.lhe question ofwhether the courts or al judge in tlib lawsuit challenging the
,th.e Legislature should have final · system that 'I\) lies mainly on proper- ·
•authority over the issue.
.
ty taxes. '•
"It's very, very important that the . · Voinovi&lt;h and. other Republican
people of our state have an opportu· leaders would rather see tlie·Repub,nity to decide," Voinovich said, · lican-controlfed L.egislature have
adding that no decision had been jurisdictiori.'.Thcy believe lewis may

·require the state to spend mote money than what they think i~ necessary.
Voinovich's statements were made
after a meeting of the Ohio School
Funding Task· Force. During the
meeting, the group voted against a
resolution asking it to oppose any
effons to el!ange !he court's jurisdic·
tion.
·
~ate Minority .Leader ·Ben Espy.
D-Columbu~. proposed the . rcsolu·
tiori. He said1he task force should be
eO!"mincd to finding more money for
schools .insl\'ild of ,worrying about
ways to take away the court's author·

.

ity. . .
an·ailditional $3.S.~illion.annually.li)r . ''That's why we're seeing the results
.The ·governor said tlic task force pubJi,c !Chools. -The additionai•Jijon- that we 're sc9ing." ·
must eorhe u,p with a school funding cy would come mainly from ipcrc;L~- · . The gi9UJ1's recnmmendatio.ns
included spending. more· mon~y nn
solution before deciding whether to cs·in sales and income tnxc~.
take it to the voters.
. ' However, BEST en-chair Rohcn two area.&lt; that Voinovi~h is fond ofTo challenge the coun's.nuthority. Wehling· said 'he douhts all vf that early childhood cducati\lR and techa constitutional amendment would money would be needed each year. nology in the classroom.
The plan. developed hy husiness.
" It makes sense," Voinovich said
need to be placed on the ballot.
The task force also heard a review civiC and education leaders. focuses of the BEST report. ··overall. I think
of o study suggesting more money on raising standards for students and it's realistic." He earlier had hcen
and more accountability for-schools. schools and improving teacher train· critical of its $3.5 hill ion (ll'icc tag,
but said that he now. thinks the proThe report prepared by the g,roup · ing.
"Our ·expectmions have hcen posals could be implemented for ·
Building Excellent Schools for Today
&amp; the 21st Century suggests raisinjl grossly ina&lt;leqijle." Wehling said. ·less money. ·

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-Spruced :~~P- Testimony continues in Meigs rape trial;··

alleged victim call~d honest, hard·workf~g ~

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By JIM FREEMAN
series of rapes of minor female relaSentinel Newt Staff
tivc from 1993to 1996.
Acquaintances of an alleged rape
He is undergoing . trial in the
victim portnlyed the young woman as Meigs County Court' of Common.
honest and trustworthy Thesday after- Pleas he fore Judge Randall Kncce of
noon during the second day of testi· Pickaway County.
mony in the trial of a Meigs County
The alleged v.ictim in the case
man facing numerous counts of rape, completed her IQstimnny. reading·
sexual battery and felonious sexual two letiers she had -written ahoulthe
penetration.
alleged incidents. One or the notes
Dartell Barney, 42, Shade. is \"US a leller to herself while the othcharged with four counts of rape; er was a scaled school journal entry.
eiJ!ht counts of sexual ~1ery pfid
Site .testified that.she lcll home in
four counts of .feloniQ~~s sexi!At ~ .• !ate; No~&lt;Qfll~. ,1996, on the eve of

.Sewetal1o cboo8e
from..3 door&amp;:
4 door models In
stock. Vamos
cqnlplllf1it aDd
rolorsl .

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•:Comelnh
)'WI' 1l:st drive
today!

alleged incidents after Christmas.
Under c.ross examination 'hy
defense anorney Steve Story. the
young W11man .stated thai she would
frequently have. arguments with the
defendant that had nothing to do with
the alleged sex ucts, including arguments .about wanting w gu out with
l'ricnds and wanting In drive to
· school. She said she was l'rcquently
grounded fill' reaMms she l'clt we~
mo~tly unjustified.
At one point: she stated she w~s
gr()unded for lytng \&lt;).,~cr S\C('Jil&lt;llh-

friends when she wa' supposed til be
somewhere else.
· •
Story also brought up an inciuenl'
in which she had the defendant picII
.herup from school, after she had left
the home, to pick UJl a joh applicalion.
.
The next witness. a fumier tcachi:r
of the allcJlcd victim. portrayer her a.~
a hard-working. honest student.
She ·said the young woman had a
good allcn&lt;lance record and prcsented no. dis&lt;lipline problem~.'
.
: · , All~r the alleged .vocltm lell her

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g~i lty C)il~JijrMwr~~ru.elty clriftD~~:

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, · The Pomeroy parlttng lot area 11 gettln!f• facelift thll week..

~~ cllli!enl, bullneaa owneraend vlli*Oe official• were on
hand TuHdl)' lltllrnoon to prepare flo- btidi, ln11111 br1cketl
. for flllgaand perfOrm other cleln·up work. Period light poall, like
: ihil ona being painted by Councilman John"Muaaer, will hold col~ orful fl•g• on· the parking lot, and PomttrP.Y blnnera on Main,
: Court •nd Lynn .Sirelll. These banners an!\!.ll~~ga ahould be fly·
: !ng by the Weekend.
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&gt; COLUMBUS (AP)- The Senate hnes Tuc;sday. Gov. George
anil Gov. George ·voinoyich made Voinovich tl)iln quickly signed the bill
~jck work·of the bill that eliminates into law jus,!' hours after the vote.
~vailing wage on school construeThere was hule .debate about the
too projects arid speeds up distribu- bill in the Senate even though it had
tio.n of money for school buildings. heen mel with much.rcsistancc from
: •The bill was approved by hoth the Dcll)&lt;x:rats and lahor unions who said
~atc a~d House e11rlicr this month. · taking nway, provailing wage will hun
~~~~ it was sent back to thc.Scnatc for · workers.
.
·.
apllroval of ¥hangcs made by House . ~ 1\!Ugc'law guarante~s that' co~· la~makers .
·
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strucuon W~ll)cer~ get . U~ton-ne~~u·.
:.· The Repuhliciui-supportcd b1ll ated pay on &gt;~~Ubltc,~utldtng p.roJCcts
· '!~S approv¢d 21 - 12 along party
Conttftued on page 3
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interferes in any manner: he will he
immediately arrested and taken tn
jail.lcntes said . In addition. Halliday
is ordered In pruperly care for any
animals which he may have in the
future.
lcntes also reported that on one
occasion when authorities were
called Ill Halliday's house, si• dead
puppies were found op the porch and
inside Ihe ho~sc. all having apparently stmvcd to death.
·
It was reported that township
trustees and the prosecuwr's onicc
have hcen trying w gel fences huilt .

made tQ rollnd up the cattle, with no
cooperation from Halliday. To date,
he suid. approximately 50 head. of
c.attle have been rounded up.
. In compliance with Judge
O'Brien's order the animals will he
fnrtcited and sold and the proceeds of
the sale paid in In the Court. The
costs of collecting, transporting, feed-'
ing
md the sale of the callle will
be taken out and a hearing will he set
at a later &lt;late to determine if there is
money left to satisry any claims for
damages ·as a result nr the Callie running .hXJse·.

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DENVER (AP) - Oklahoma terrorism in U.S. hiswry.
City bombing prosecutors prepared to
Prosecutors expectc&lt;ll&lt;l rest their
wrap .up .their co.~e against Timothy . case 'today hy culling at lea.'! one
McVeigh after the.judge thwarted a more homhing survivor ·and presentdefense plan 10 fully altac.k the FBI ing stacks of death L'Crtil1cates from
crime lab_ a weak link for the gov- the 168 people killed in the hla.".
erriment.
"They've obviously wurked hard
Through Tuesday. the prosecution and dilij,!cntly." 'defense illlnrncy
had called 134 witnesses i~ 1Kdays, . · Stephen Jones said outside court.
using McVeigh's former friends and "We will S(X&gt;n have ourturn at hat."
even his sister to try to tic him to t~e
A source close In the case lnl&lt;l The
bombing. the w&lt;irst act of domestic 'Associated Press the defense will call

30 tu 40 witnesses over the next 1wo

dling of-the hnmhing' investigation.
. McVeigh .. 29, faces the death
penalty if convicted of murder and
·conspiracy in ·the April 19, 1\19~
explosion.
Allenipl.&lt; hy McVeigh's allorneys
. on Tuesday Ill launch a full -scale
auack on the FBI crime lah were cui
short when U .S: District · JU&lt;,Igc
Richard Maisch harrcd &lt;.juestinns
ahnut federal criticism pf the lah..
Continued on 11•11e 3 ·

weeks to challenge "every facet " of
tfic ~rovernment's allegations .
Sources said anwng the first
defense witncssc1 likely will he penpic expected In cnnlmdicl testimony
lrom prosecution wilne&gt;hcs.
.The soun:es. who spoke on the
condition that they not he identified.
said the defense ulso hopes lo discredit the FBI using a report hy the
agency that criticizes its 11wn hun-

-~oppyDa

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"The Senatc' plan places an even
(AP) ':.- Senate
bUtlgct-writers had an advantage over greater cmpha.&lt;is on school funding
their colleagues in the House- they hasics... :mid Ray~ .:hairman of the
got to see-the Ohio Suprem~ Court finance comm.i!tec.
. The hudgctprdposal also provides
decision tossing out the state SChool·a
$285.7. million tax cut through a
fuMing .system. · ·
.
. .The budget plan submiued to the · mechanism created during the 1995
Senate Finance &amp; Appropriations hu&lt;lgct process, The cut would have
heen larger. hut Senate Republicans
Commince on TUesday t;eflccts it.
decided
to cap the amount at ahout 4
Though the $36.1 billion plan
percent and divert the rest of the
detailed by tpp Senate GOP leaders
comes in slightly below the level state ' s, higher-t~an'expected tax revpassed by the House in MIII'Ch, it enues to education.
The Senate version also took out
includ~s an extnl $110 million for primary and secondary education, and several controversial provisions
$125 mill ion more to help districts · inserted into the budget in the HQUse.
rebuild or repair rundown school Among the ' deletions sure to raise
eyebrows among House Republibu(ldings.
: 'fbe school building money comes . cans: a requi~ement .that a stateo6 iop of the $300 million set aside financed libra~ ~omppter n~twork .
.in·&amp;separate bill that cleared the Leg- screen out onliii!C pornography, a.test
Islature and was signed by Gov. of a chancr sehools in the Toledo
area, a ban on state fundina for~
·George Voinovic·h Tuesday.
· The emphasis on education is a lie heBith clinics that provide &amp;bonion
. a school·fun,ding
nod to the Supreme Coun decision- counseling, and
~ down just days before the
formula designed to shield.subtirba!l
Hciule bucltct vote - that declared distric:ll from the effecu of rising
openy values.
•
· the Slate's school funding system
House
Speaker
JoAnn
DaviciJon,
· uacilnllilutto!l"o said Sen. Roy Ray,
R-Rcynoldsbu11 , preilicted that .at.
R-Akron,

CHEVRDifl• DLDSMDBILE •I.EIIUS • TDYDia

·

puts its brand on bu~get bill

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P,reyailing-Wage ~ill OK'd p;;,;;;~if~ri ~";;;~";~d7,fM~t/,;;gh case

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Qhio
Senate
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A Dexter man wos found guilty quatc care. .
.
Tuesday on charges of cruelty to aniThe caule would frequently get
mal's in a trial in Meigs County.Court out.. searching l'nr f&lt;XKJ because Halbefore Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
liday was not feeding them, accordFound guilty of the charges was · . ing to Lcntes. At least six nf the cnws
Allen Halliday of Strongs Run Road. died from starvation and/or malnuHe was sentenced to 30.d'ays in the trition. he rcpnrted. The calllc runcounty jail and lined $1,000, with the ning loose did cause damage to propjail sentence and the fine both sus- · erty and represented a threat to perpended and Jialliday placed on pro- sons t~nd propeny. the prusecuthr
bation ror two years.
added.
.· Meigs County Prosecuting Allor- .
As .a condition nl' his probation.
ney John R. Lentes rcpqrted that the · Halliday was ordered to cooperate
charges resulted fmm numerous com- with nfficials and not interfere in any
plaints about Halliday's cattle not way with the round in~ up .and

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lawmakers who want the predominantly black sch&lt;KJI in Wilhcrl&lt;lfce
shuttered hccausc or 11nancial mismanagement.
The House had .leli the roughly
$30 ·million Central Suite "udgct in
an escrow account held by the State
Controlling Bo11rd.
~An e~tra $70 million for public colleges and universities, and thi:
elimination of a S pcn:ent ·cap on
tuition in~rcases" - though. any
incre~ above 8 percent would have
to be used t(l increase undergraduate
financial aid.
·
Senate Democrats said·at a separate news conference that·they were
· generally pleased with the budget, hut
stopped 1hon ~f promisin110 vote for
the bill.
S~n. Judy Sheerer, D·SIIaker
Heishu, siid tllere were several ·
· Frlclly 1nd Stlturctay heve ~ decllred Poppy Daya
i~sue• the Democrats still- would like
·
Pomefoy
Mayor Fl'lllk Yaughlln,
llbove. Also pictured
to ~~-nose include incrcasins
Fritz
Goebel
of
Drew
Webetlr
Poll
m,
Amerlcln Legion, and
state ch'iiit-care subsidies for the
Joenne
Y1ughln
o1
lh•
Drew
Webllll'
Auxiliary,
which conductS
· workinl poor by $10 million a year,
Poppy
Deya
MIIUIIIy
I
I
1
funcnlaer.
Fundi.,.
UMd to benefit
koepinJ open I 5 unemployment seraw~
veteren•
1n
the
Y.A.
Hoapltalln
ChUIIcothe,
u
wwll
11 vellrana
ate President Richard Finan, R· vices offices silled to clole in a costIn locll ntlfllng homH, ecc!)rdlng to Y•ughlln •
. cutlinl move; and cUminatina SSO
Cincillllllti.
F'uwrsaid he disicreed ~~tith some million in bulinesstax breaks.

least so~c of the issues would come
up again when Senate and House
negotiators meet next month to work
out differences between the two versions or the budget.
· In pariicu!ar, she n~tc.d that hdth
.l:!!;vJ!'I'~ntsund Rcpuhl1cans suppurled the new school-funiliilg formula
created by Rep. Jeff Jacobson, RDayton. Overall. though. Davjdsnn
said she was plea.scd with the direclinn taken by the Senate.
"A lot more things were left ,in
that we did th11n were taken out," she
said.
· Other differences from the Hou~
version include:
. -· . Full funding for Central State
Uni'&lt;ersity · - but with strings
· attached; includins an end to its ath·
let~ progtam,s, financial overJiJht by
the Ohio ..Boanl of 1\egents and st.!C.
budget olfteials, and a rcduccd.coursc
offering concentrating on i1(lucation,
business and ilrls and scienceli.
·
"We want them to concentl'lle on
.the.ir academic: Stren"'... ," said Setl-

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Con11nentary_

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The Dmly Sentinel
'£st#DIJslid in 1948

A Gannett Co.

~ew~paper

AOIIERT L WINGETT
Publt.her 1

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW

a-ni . . . . . .

Controller

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111

WASHINGTON-· At the heart of
the Watergate-like scandal swirling
around lsraeh Prime Minister jlenjamin Netanyahu is a divisive quesbon that's been at the bean of Israeli
politics since the modem state was
, created in 1948: Who is a Jew?
' Americans tend to thmk of Israel
as a homogeneous state. In fact, its
relatively small population may be
the most diverse in the world. By one
scholarly coun!, Israelis speilk 81 languages and trace their recent origins
to I02 different countries.
Given the tragic nature of recent
Jewish history, ~ogic suggests that
Israeli Jews have compelling reasons

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_..,.Ohio gin or color. But that isn'tthe case in
L~~~~·~·~·~MK~IO~~~~~~~~~-~--------------~~~~~~---l
. , . - . 7llt ..,._,

CDwt St..

Advice season on
college campuses
By WALTER A. MEARS
AP Special Correapondent
WASHINGTON- It's advice season, "a magic moment," as President
Clinton put it, of college send-offs with homilies, admonitions and platitudes.
" Dream large, work hard and listen to your soul," Clinton said in concluding the first of three commencement addresses he'll dehver this year.
"Whenever you have any quesuons about which path to take, consult your
own moral compass," Gov. Chrtst1e Whitman of New Jersey said. "Practice using it on the smalllhings and it won't-let you down when the big things
come up."
Those could be lines from the same swech.
The president was at Morgan State University in Balttmore, Whitman at
Colgate University in Hamilton, N.Y.
Commencement rhetoric does tend to blur.
,
It doesn't tilke protests or pickets to milke the world better, Ch1cago Mayor Richard Daley said at Providence College. "You do not need a war ... or
econ'om•c oppression to find a reason to join togelher and to extend a helpmg hand," he said.
.
"At the end of the. day, !here must be' something more to life than the
pursuit of mdividual wealth," Gov. George Allen said at the Virgima Commonwealth Umversity in Richmond. " ... It IS not our opuon but our obhgation to be members of a commumty."
And at the end of a commencement address, it often echoes most of the
others of every graduation season. There isn't that much to be said by way
of advice to the graduating generation that hasn't been said and repeated
before.
·
But w1th exceptions.
There surely is one for Neal Simon, the play writer, who told a graduatingclass m 1984·
"When you leave here tOday it IS vital that you take off those long black
gowns. Very few businesses are gomg to hire someone applying for a job
weanng a long black gown."
And for Bill Cosby, the comedian and Ph.D., who told George Washington
Umversity graduates on Sunday that the first thing they ought to do when
they go to work is get to know the janilOI\ because they know everything
and everybody.
"Don't ever think you know more than the person mopping a floor," he
-saod.
: And sometimes, the standard advi&amp; comes with a poliucal message, as
' in Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's message at The New England Conservatory,
. seeking to rally opposition to Repubhcans who want to eliminate the Nation•al Endowment for the Arts.
: "The know-nothings want to tum back the clock," he said. "They thank
'that the United States should be the only industrial country ... that fails to
:offer direct government support for the arts."
• In his Morgan State address, Clinton declared a national goal of devell!ping a vaccine against AIDS Within the next decade.
• Attorney General Janet Reno warned against the "growing development
pf anti-Immigrant sentiment," and criticized a measure approved by California voters to bar affirmative action programs in state h1ring, contracting
and education.
; "We must always honor this country as a nation of immigrants," she said
at the University of California Hastings College of Law. ,
, "Discrimination based on race IS terrible," former President Caner said
~~Duke Umvemty, "but I thank worldwide and in this country right now
!he greatest discrimination is the rich against the poor."
• He urged the graduates, one of them his grandson, to help deal woth 11.
: Carter was in an unusual role for a former president, a second chmce
~peaker. Eli~belh Hanford Dole, head of the American Red Cross, wife of
lhe Republican pres•denllal nommee, and a graduate of Duke, couldn't milke

it.

: · On other campuses, commencement speakers urged volunteensm, counseled careful chmces in an increasingly complex society, and delivered their
~ow-to-succeed lessons
• And then there was Cosby:
. "If you really want to make it in the world, you don't have to be huge
and powerful. All you have to do is pay off your student loan."
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mean, vice president and columnist
for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and national pot.
ttlcs ror more than 30 y... n.
•

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'71le economy is gtr)Wing at·5.6
percent annual
,.,., and the unemployment rate Is at a low 4.9
pe~*t. Now, then, HOW can we maka this into
BAD llft7?" .

- Israel, as confirmed in numerous
mterv1ews over the years with lsraeh
leaders by our associate Dale Vari
Alta.
This IS a critical 1ssue for
Netanyahu. His power -- and that of
his conservative Likud Party ••
depends to an unhealthy extent on
catering to an array of small , ultra-

•

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OrthodOx panies ·that help Likud
keep a sltm maJonty in the Knesset,
or parliament.
The scandal which broke in January, known as the Bar-On affair, has
its roots in this poliltcal-religiOus
conglomeration. Netanyahu badly
needs to keep the Shas Party, which
controls 10 sealS in the Knesset, pan
of h1s coalition. But its leader, Aryeh
. Den, has been facing corruption .
charges and was not happy with an
ongoing investigafion into his affairs.
It has been alleged in Israel that
Netan~ahu, fearful of losing Shas
supporl, appomted Rom Bar-On as
attorney general m January with the
understandmg that he would go easier on Deri.
This story caused a furor last
month when police investigators in
Israel recommended that charges be
brought against the pnme minister.
But Israeli vrosecutors announced
within days that there was not enough
evidence to charge Netanyahu with a
crime, adding that there was a "tang•ble suspicion" about his culpability in the scandal.
Because of their political power,
the Orthodox rabbos have been able

to maintain a monopoly of sorts over
Judaism in Israel. For example, the
late Prime Minister Menao:hem Begin
OI1Ce won crucial suppon from a
small coalition of Onhodox parties
by.promising that El AI, the state airline, would not fly on the Sabbath.
This led to employee strikes and several unpleasant confrontations.
Some ngidly Orthodox Jews have
stoned veh1cles dnving on the Sl!b·
bath and attacked bathers on Tel
Aviv's beaches for their ommodest
attire. Tourists VISiting Israel Will find
it difficult to have milk and meat m
any restaurant, or find anything but a
"Sabbath elevator" workmg in their
hotel on Saturday -- one which stops ·
at every floor.
Because of Orthodox power,
tourists visiting Israel get a false
impression that Ismel 1s a religious
state. It ts not. The majority of the
population 1s secular, or belong to tlie
Reform or Conservative wings of
Judaism.
!\ classified State Department
analysis calls the Onhodox pan1es'
"insistence on the pre-emment status
of religious law in Israeli civil life"
quite d1visive. It is a pressure that is

HoW COMe
We CaN BaLaNce
THe 8UDGE!T, li'VT We
, CaN'T PvT a MaN
ON THe MaiN?
I

.

'

fom:ut for daytime conditions IIOid hish tempenolures
.M ICit,

I Toltldo I w I

"a recurring problem" for Isnoeli politics a "lona-sinua«iog controveny
ove; 'Who is a Jew?' (which) pits
govem{llental qai~st , reli,ious
authority in detenruruna cntena for
the state's legal definition ofa Jew."
The latest roun4 in this battle
began in 1995, when the Israeli
Supreme Coun suggested a more
"libeml" interpn:tation of who is
Jewish-- not just the Orthodox interpretation. FuriouS, Orthodox rabbis
continue to insist that only they can
sanction conversions. to Judaism.
They want this codified in law, but
that would amount to political discrimmation because Israeli law says
any Jew residing in Israel is entitled
to full citizenship. Thus, the Orthodox are inherently arguing that converts to Reform or Conservative
Jud11sm not be allowed citizenship.
And that's not the only "Who is
Jewish" issue, either. There is a
longstanding ethnic division between
Israelis of European backgt;ound.
known as Ashkenazi Jews, and those
with roots in Asia and Africa, known
as Sephardic Jews.
When the Sephardic Jews first
began flooding into Israel in the early 1950s, having been ejected from
the Moslem countries where they had
Jived for centuries, the dominant
Ashkenazis tried to integrate tbo;
mostly poor and unskilled atrivals
into the new Jewish state. But the
Sephardics saw these allcmpts as a
threat to their cherished cultuml heritage, and for the most part resisted
integration.
Over the past four decades, how,
ever, the Sephardics, committed by
tradition to large families, gradually
emerged as the popular majority. But
they have yet to achieve political and
economic power commensurate with
their numbers. The average standard
of living.for Sephardic Jews is much
less than that of Ashkenazis. More
than two-thirds of Israel's slums are
inhabited by Sephardics.
.
That doesn't milke them happy, of
course, nor does the consistent lock
on political power that Ashkenazi
Jews sllll enjoy.
Jack Andenoa and Jan Molter
are writers ror United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

\

century is attrobutable to animal test- riot ·at UC Davis. "We arc here to
By Jouph Perkin•
When animal rights groups from mg.
defend the ammals."
•
The polio vaccme, for mstance,
But there is an appropriate way to
around the country descend on the
nat10n's capital next month for the so- was developed by use of monkeys defend ammals, JUSt as there arc
called Anima! Rights '97 National and rabbits in the laboratory. appropriate ways to protest abortion
Convention, organizers ought to con- Chemotherapy was refined with tests and support AIDS patients. And just
side( whether extremists within the on mice and rats. Heart-bypass as Operation Rescue turns off rca"movement" are hurting their cause. surgery was ach1eved through exper- sonable-minded people when it
Indeed, JUSt a few weeks ago, 32 Imentation on dogs. And the discov- harasses women at abortoon climes,
animal rights activosts, representing ery of msulin resulted from research just as ACT-UP engenders much Ill
will when It ; members throw AIDSseveml of the organizattons partici- on dogs, pigs and cows.
Obviously, none of this matters to tainted blood at foes, animal rights
pating in the convention m D.C.,
were arrested on trespassing and bhndly zealous animal rights activists lose support from folks who
vandal ism charges after they stormed activists. Indeed, a mere month might otherwose back them because
,
the California Regional Primate before the protest at the UC Dav1s of their oftcn-cxtremosttactics.
This confrontational apptoach can
Research Center, on the Unoversity of pnmate research center, another medCalifornoa Dav1s campus.
ical research fac1lity on the campus be blamed on leaders of the animal
The activists, carrying placards was the target of an arson attack by roghts movement, like Ingrid
decrying "science gone mad," sought an outfit called the Animal Liberation Newkuk, co-founder of People for
to "liberate" 3,500 monkeys from the Front. ALF has been identified by tile the Ethocal Treatment of Ammals, a
research center laboratoncs, where Justice Department as a domestic ter- group claoming a quarter-million
scientists have been stud~mg birth ronst group. ·
members throughout the country.
defects and gene therapy. 1 •
including
a number of misguided
Of course, whenever animal rights
Apparently, 11 did not occur to any actovists engage in acts of "civil dis- Hollywood celcbnty types
of the overzealous protesters that, at obedience," they argue that their end
Newkuk, who 1s slated to be a feasome pomt or another, one of theor JUstifies their means. "We are here turcd "presenter" at next month's
very own fncnds or famoly members ' today not because we are hell-bent on animal roghts convention, once
probably has benefotcd from medical breakmg the law," said Josh Harper, declared that "a mt is a pig is a dog
research usmg animals. In fact, every one of the provocateur.. of the near- is a boy.' ' In other words, there is no
major medocal breakthrough of thos

_Chess~ result
By Jouph Spear
Today's riddle is: What is the difference between the Hundred Years
War and the battle between man ~nd
mach me?
Sorry, you only had five seconds
to respond. The answer is: It took just
50 years for the Ch1ps to defeat the
Neurons.
.
Computers as we know them have
been around since 1946, when
researchers assembled a 30-ton belle·
moth- -with 18,000 vaCIIum tubes
which they 'called ENIAC. The first
direct computer challenge to human
intelligence was mounted in 1967,
when a chess program called Mac
Hack was pitted against human players.
The real people won, and they
kepi wmning-- until May II , 1997,
when an IBM supercomputer na~d
Deep Blue defeated world chess
champion Gar:ry Kasparov in the final
game of a showdown in a Manhattan
skyscraper while hundreds followed
on closed-circuit television and millions kept up on the Internet. A Russian prodigy who has been winning
chess matches since he was a child,
Kasparov at first hinted darkly that
the Deep Blue team had cheated. But
at another point he allowed, with an
air of wondertnent, that the machine
had "played like a god."
I don't know enough about the

·gives the
.

game to understand the technical
details, but in a nutshell. Kasparov's
strategy had been to feel out
Blue's weaknesses and then fake_
the machme. Problem was,
p
Blue didn't fall for Kasparov 's feints
-- wh1ch, 1f you think about it, os sort
of scary.
Indeed, this whole thing has got
me kind of spooked. Pan of nie
believes that a computer's dcfc~tt of
a chess master and the dawn of a new
millennium are not entirely coincidental. This same pan of me wonders
whether, in years to come, they'll
date the epoch with references to
BOB (Before Deep Blue) and ADB
(After Deep Blue). I mean, I can't
escape the dreadful feeling that com·
puling machines are preparing to take
over the planet.
Oh, I know there are some sman
people out there who pooh-pooh this
notion. Machines can only crunch
numbers, they•say. They cannot think,
!hey cannot feel, they have no soul.
Why does Ibis milke me think of what
Charlie Duell said in 1899? Charlie
was the head of the U.S. Patent
Office tt the time. "Everything that
can be invented has been invented,"
he said. ·
I'm saying to myself: A decade
ago, we were looking things up in the
encyclopedia, and now we turn on a •
machine and search the ether for

!

.'

i.

Grace Fields Cunningham, 84, of New H•ven, W.Va., died Tuesday, May
20, 1997, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born March 3, 1913 in Hartford, W.Va., she was a daughter of the late
Charles and Mary (Rings) Fields. She was a homemaker and member of the
Fi11t Church of God, New Haven.
·
In addition to her parents, slle was also preceded in death by her husband,
Cecil N. Cunningham; and several brothers and sisters.
Surv1vors include two daughtel)i, Sharon L. Cunningham and Pat A.
Young, hoth of New Haven; a brother, Robert Fields of Southgate, MI ; a
granddaughter; and several nieces and neph~ws .
Service will be Friday, May 23, at3 p.m. in the Fir.t Church of GOd. New
Haven, with Pastor Glen Lambe/\ and Pastor Dave Fields officiatmg. Burial will follow 10 Kukland Memorial Gardens ..
Fnends may call a! the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, W. Va., Thursday from 6 to 8 p.m. or at the church one hour prior to Friday's service.
In lieu of flowers , contributions can be made to the American Heart Association .

·'.

'(f
W. VA. .

~heila

Today's weather forecast
Ohio
1
Thl'iight. ..Ciear with patchy frost.
Lows from the mid 30s to around 40.
Thursday...Sunny. Highs in the
Extended forecast
Friday...Fa1r. Lows 40 to 45 west
and 35 to 40 east where patchy frost

is agam possible. Highs in the upper
60s to mid 70s.
Saturday... A chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Lows around 50
to the mod 50s. H1ghs mid 60s to mid
70s.
·''
Sunday...Fair. Lows 45 to 50.
Highs in the mid to upper 60s.

home and the charges were filed , the .
teacher said she read the sealed Journal entry and turned it over to the
family with wh1ch the student resided
io be turned over to th~ prosecuting
attorney's office.
Afterwards, the alleged victim's
school principal identified her as "one
of our school's beuer students," and
said she occasionally worked in the
principai's office.
The fonal state's witness, the
defendant's w1fe, desert bed ' the
alleged victim as an honest girl.
She said she found the lcuer the
girl had wriuen to herself and con"'ronted her husband who denoed the
incidents had occurred .
On cross exammation, she indicated'that she had no personal know!edge of the alleged incidents, butlater, on redir'ei:t by Prosecutmg Allor-

ney John R. Lentes, said she had scch
some thongs to make her susll"ct he
was having sex with someone in the
house other than herself.
She said she found soiled T·shirts
and towels, stained bed linen and one
time fou11d a hair, not her own. tangled arouo)d the shoulder strap of one
of her negligees. Earlier, the alleged
victim had testified that the defendant
made her· wear his wife's lingerie.
After the slate rested its case, the
defense dilled two witnesses, neoghbors and co-workers of the defendant,
who briefly auested to his honesty
and charac1er.
"'bdaY.
''
• Barney ,·s expected to tcstify in his'own defense prior to closing arguments. If found guilty on all
counts, he could face between 112
and 280 years if sentenced consecutively• ,

6os. '

·Testim~ney.... contlnii~ rrom page 1

... Ill

doffcrence between a rodent, a swine:
a canine and a human child. And
anyone who thinks dofferently, she:
has stated, suffers from a "suprema-•
cost perversion."
It is this kind of thinking that.
undergirds the animal righ~ move-.
ment in this country. Newkirk and her
1lk are not merely coocemed with the
humane treatment of animals (which
most reasonable Americans advocate). They would ban all human use·
of animals.
If they had their way, there would
be no primate or any other animal•
research centers. No steak houses or
fish markets. No zoos, no aquanums,:
no petstorcs. No dog shows, no horse·
races. NQ "101 Dalmatians.'' no•
"Babe," no "Toto" (unless they
were animated features). No leather ·
shoes and certainly no fur coats.
Animal rights activists want to.
impose their v1ews on all Americans.,
And when gentle persuasion does not '
work, they are only too Willing to
resort to drast1c measures.
:
Joseph Perkins is a columnist'
ror tbe San Die1o Union·Tribune
and a commentator for MSNBC. ,
I

d~ep

onformauon. If we can put bhps on a
disk and give a machine the·capabiloty of calculating 200 million possible chpss moves in a single second,
it can't be long before we arc programming feelings into the thing.
Talk about blows to the ego. First
there was Galileo, telling us the
Earth is not the center of the universe.
Then there was Darwin, telling
humans we arc the product of trial
and error and tile descendants of apes.
Now comes Deep fllue to tell us
machines arc more intelligent than
humankind and may be capable,
eventually, of running the world
without us.
Even if computers arc, not plan·
ning putsch, you have to admit that
they've taken the romance out of
chess. Before Deep Blue, the game
had a certain aura about it. It was
widely perceived as a definitive test
of human intelligence. Now, a
damned gussied-up ad~itig machine
.is the master of it.

a

'

Grace F.Cunningham

••

blues·

So what's next? Computers •
already read soup can labels, operate I
phones, fly airplanes, print newspa- ~
pers. They say the line that will nev- ~
cr be crossed is an. Computers will ,
never be able to wnte a Motart sym- ;
phony, they say, or paint a Mona Lisa, •
or write a "War and Peace," or pen :
a line remotely as heart-rending and :
melancholy as the best of William :
Butler Yeats.
Not to compare newspaper work :
with authentic art, bUt I have my :
doubts that a computer will ever be :
able to write a column, either. I com- 1
pose these words on an IBM inal:hine :
twice a week and I can give person- :
al witncs~ to the fact that it is, many :
t1mes, a smgularly unproductive con· •
traption.
:
. I can also say with certainty that :
ot never feels my pain.
'
·
Joseph Spear Is a '•ylldlcated
writer for Newspaper Eaterprile

Auoclatlon.

•

Temperatures will dip into 30~

s

'

M.inor
accident investigated
' ..

A Langsville wo111an was coted for
failure to maintain assured clear distance in an accident on West Main
Street, Pomeroy, Tuesday afternoon.
Cited was Lorena Oiler, 22, whose
vehicle stnlck the rear of a car driven
by Rita McFarland, 39, of Mason,
'

·-

Th.e Daily Sentinel
(USPS 1 t3-M0l

and southern New Mcxoco.
.
Scattered showers and thunderstorms were expected tOday in north·
ern Florida, southern Georgia and
southern Alabama. wuh 60 mph
wonds 'and large haol possohlc The
rams may cause noodong problems
along the Gulf Coast.
Fair and cool weather woth partly
cloudy skies were due in the Great
Lakes to the Tennessee Valley, as well
as the Northeast.
Scattered showers and thunderstorn1s were possoblc from :-vestern
Texas and New Mexico to Wyoming
and Montana. Some ol the storms
may pack strong wonds and small
haol
Dry condotions were forecast for
the West Coast and into the South·
west.
Several thunderstorms Tuesday
from southeast Texas to the Carolinas
produced heavy raonfall.
.

months of this year has been runnin1
at an annual rate of S125.5 billion, a
detenO..ation from last year's total
deficit of $114.3 billion.
One hallmark of President Clinton's adminostratoon has been a focus
on lowenng trade barroers as 'a way
to promote sales of American products overseas. However, administration cntics contend the policy has
been a failure that ha~ cost thousands
of American jobs due to imports from
low-wage countries.
The admmistrat10n has been
stymied in efforts to get congressional approval for the negotiating
authority it needs to expand the current North American Free Trade
Agreement beyond Mcxoco and
Canada. Critics have called NAFTA
a disaster.
On his reccntlrip to Laton America. Clonton tried to buold suppon for
the so-called "fasttrack" legislation
hy cmphasozong that the United States
was in danger of losing out to European and As1an competitors in Latin
America. one of the fastcst-gmwong
rcgoons of the world.
.
.
For March, the de licit wuh Mdico rose 23 2 percent to $1 5 billoon,
the wurst showmg stncc last Nnvcm ·

ber. The delicu with Canada was
down 13.5 percent to S1.3 billion.
U.S. exports to Canada and impons
from that country were both at the
hoghest levels ever recorded by the
Unoted Slates on trade With any country.
U.S. exports to all of Central and
South America rose to a record $5.2
billion on March.
America's foreign oil bill edged
un a slight 0.3 percent in March to
$5 3 bollion as a 13 percent jump in
volume was oflsct by a decline in
pnce. Crude ool pnces dropped to an
average of $18.72 per barrel, down
from $20.49 on February.
.The Commerce Department suffered a major embarrassment last
month

Preva~/ing... co~tinued rrom pag&lt;! 1

such as roads, libraries and schools.
Labor unions estimated that workers
could lose as much as $1.500 a year
wothout prcvaohng wage
Rcpubhcans think it could cu1
ahout 15 percent of sehoul construetmn costs - $45 molhon ollhe $300
mlllmn set asode for school proJects.
The bill includes $150 million for
school buildong assostunce on the
state's poorest distrocts, $100 milloon
for the eoght IUfgesl dostncts and $50
mollion for emergency rcpaors.
A new School Faciloties Commossoon would oversee distnbutipn of the
money and help eliminate some ol
nomic growth ~nd continued high the red lape schools must go through
employment can breath casocr," said to get money for buildongs.
Jerry Jasinowsko, prcsodent of the
The House on Tuesday passed a
Natoonal Associatoon of Manulactur- holl designed to get people with
Cf!t..
home sewage systems. such as scpThe Dow Jones average of ondus- toc tanks. to pay for the permits they
tnal stocks, whoch had been down need tn operate lhem .
about 30 pomts just hclore the
Sponsoring Rep. Dale Van Vyvcn,
announcement. clnscd up 74.58 at R-Sharonvollc. said the dchnquency
7.303.46. about 30 points shy of its rate for the permits m Hamilton
all-time hogh setln&lt;t'Thursday.
County,' where the cost IS $30. os
The Fed raisci..l mtcrcst rates fur ahout 9 percent.
the i1rsttunc on two years on March
The bill would allow county audi25 . '"'reusing ihe federal funds ra1c tors to attach dclinque01 permit fees
by a quarter of a percentage point
to a homeowner's properly tax, ereThat ommcdomdy translated ontn along a hen on the property of the bill
steeper horruwmg clJsts l't1r Amcncan
husmcsscs anti consumers un cvcrythonl! from crcdol cards Ill auto loans.
Holzer Medkal Center
Dischai'Jles May :ZO - Harold
Nice. John Thompson, Walter Fraley.
Sarah Nelson. Ernest Johnson, AlmeBarbecue set
da Wallace.
(Published with permission)
The Racine Fire Dc·partmcnt and
Auxiloary woll sponsor a chicken
harhecuc Sunday. Home made icc
cream woll al•o be avmlablc.

Publis~ e'Yery onemoon, Monday 1hrough
FridaY, Ill Cou• St.. Pomen&gt;~. Ohio by !he
Ohio Valley Publl•h•"' Companyi0.-1 Co.
•Pomeroy, Oh•• •5769. Ph. 992·2156. Se&lt;nnd
cliM pw;IIIJ~ pG~d a1 Pomeroy. Ohio.
~ber;

,., A110Ciated Pnl~~ nnd the Ohto

New.,;lper Auocillkln
.K)STMASTERt Send addrtu correcdon~ 10
The Doily seaunel. Ill Coun ,SI .. Pomeroy.

Ohlo•5769.
SUISCIIIPTION UTES
.,. c.m.....- M - - ·

. .

One Week ... ..................... ............. $l Oil
One ........................... ................... ... 18 70
o.ev.... ......... ........................... 110100

•

·SINGLE COPY PRtCB

Doily .................... ................... Jsc....

Sublc:riWn .,a~ deairin&amp; to pa.y 1he carrier mil)'

nemil in advance dir.c:t 10 The Daily Se:~t~Jntl
on a1tne, sl1. or 121Mf!d1, but~. Crodit win be
liYeft . -...hWftlt.
II

I'll-.. . . . .

N'o ~r.~biCripdon by mall permtued ia are•
where horne carrier ICn'ict 11 l'llllable

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13 - ........- ........................... .... -Sl7.!0

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...........-.... ·-· ... _.......... ....m.ll

52-............-..........................- 1105.~
t~ -

1

Wahama '52 picnic
Jim Barton and Earl Dean Knight
Oiler saod she dod not sec McFarland arc hosting a picnic for the Wahama
High School Class of 1952 at the
slop.
New
Haven Community Center on
McFa~Land was taken by the
Saturday,
noon to 5 p m. All former
Pomeroy l!j:Juad to Veterans Memor- ·
oal Hospital where she was treated teachers and spouses arc invotcd in
and released. There was hght damage addotion to other classmates that
to the rear of her car. and moderate were on •chool in 1952. The picnic is
damage to the front of the Ooler vcho- in addition to the cvcnls at the high
school .
·
clc.

•

............................ -....... ...... -. 129.25

Stocks
Am Ele Power .......................40'1.

Akzo ......................................68~
AmrTech
64'1.
u

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

Ashland 011 ...........................47'1.

ATAT .....................................34'1.
Bank OM ..............................4V.
Bob Ev- ............................ 14~

Borg-W1111er .••••..•.•...•..••••.•••. 47h

Chain~

............................. 1'6'1.

rcmams unpaod.
Representatives als.&gt; passed hills
that would requnc insurers to re(l\lM
people suspected of fraud to the
Department of Insurance, and allow
counties with a ropulation over
200,000 to sell delinquent tax "cerlllacatcs ·' to Investors who could

hold hens against the delinquent
.property owners.

BLANK
1 : 20 Do\lLT

NA71MIIB SATUIDlY/SUMDAY l:JD Cl

FATHERS' DRY
•• , _

0111 -~· . . . . .

7:10,1:20 DAILY

NATIREIS SA7/SUM.1:10,lrJO (fG1)

THE fiFTH -&lt;lit•
ELEMEN
.. , . _

WI

•t!M9

7: 00,9t.l0 DAILY
MATIHB!U IAT/SU. . 1:00 l:JO

1

BRERKDDWN
. , ·~NU

•• -~~~~· Ill . . .

7:10,1: 10 DAILY
MAfJHI&amp;I SAT/.0. 1: 20 1:10

1

RUSTIN
POWERS
7:20,1:10 DAILY
TIMIZI BAT/SUN , t:20,lz10 4.U1J

IDM¥ I MICHELE'S
NIIH SCHill IUNJ•N
1110 DAIIol

M1'JWDI IA'I'UaDAY

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•

UOLCRND

... _

..

--111111.,,

hOO, hlO DAILY
MTUIUI 8A~/I'-1.1 l CIO, J1 JO' fPOU '

LIRR-LIRR
1110 1 ,120 DAII.Y

MTJNKIS SAT/SU.,1 110 Jaae IPGtl

COIIIOG~.~~~ifii

~

.,
Steak dinner planned
A puhlic slcak dinner will he held
Saturday at the Raconc American
Lcg11m w1th scrvong to bcgon at II
a.m.

CLASS OF

Meigs EMS logs 3 calls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Mcd1cal Service recorded three
calls for assistance Tuesday. Units
rcspondon11 included:
C~TRAL DISPATCH
I: I &amp; p.m., West Main Street,
Pomeroy. motor-vehocll;' accident,
Jcanetle Smoth, Veterans Memorial

GROSSE POINTE

Hospital, Lorena Oller and Rita
McFarland rei used treatment;
4:50p.m., Powell Street, Middlcpgrt, Emmett Lightl&lt;lot, treated alihe
scene ;
II p m , South Third Avenue.
Moddlcport, Barry Alford, treated at
the scene .

C"-m Shpl: ........................... 5~

='dlng ............................ 32
I Moguf.......................28~

Gannett .................................92~
Goodyeer ..............................&amp;&amp;:.
Kmart ................. ~ ...................13'A.

Landa End.............................291\.
Ltd .........,...............................19%
OVB ..........1.... .........................32'1.
One Valley .................h ............40
Pao~ ................................... 32
Prem FM1 .............. ~ ..................1&amp;
Rockwell ...............................&amp;&amp;\

RD-hll ..............................192\

~• ...i............................. s\

lttir a.M ..............................42,_
w~a ................................23\:
W
nyton ..........................18\:

Stock

-·-·-

rePort• are tha 10:10

Lm. QUOCM provldld by Advwt

of GafllpoiiL

:16 - . . ..................:.......:........... -..... , . .

52

Hospital news

Meigs announcements

'
W.Va. Pomeroy
police reported that

.

cblnpl rMY bJ lii+lwme~:ll!d "" dwtll., die
oheoubocripliotl.

By The Auoclillllcl Prl II
Today is Wednesday, May 21, the 141 sl day of 1997. There .,. 224 days
left in the year.
.
.
Today's Highlijht in History:
1.
On May 2i, 1927, Cbarles A. Unclbeqh landecl bla Spirit of St. LGD ;·
near l'lris, completing d!e f111t solo li~ fiipc acrou tbe Atw.ic Oc
'

Sheila "Sput" Sue TumerJ 38, of Cheshire, died Monday, May 19, 1997,
in an automobile accident in Galha County.
Born December 18, 1958 in Galhpolis, she was a daughter of the late Margaret "Magg1e" (Stewart) Messick. She was a homemilker.
In addition to her mother, she was also preceded in death by her maternal. grandparents. James and Elizabeth Stewart; a sister, Reta "Charlie"
)laughn; and two sons, Rqy Edward Harmon and Marvin Euge11e Harmon
Survovors include her husband, Robert "Bob" Turner of Cheshire; a son,
James Harmon of Gallipolis: a step- daughter, Janelle Turner of Cheshi!f.
father-m-law and mother-in-law, Billy G. and Lenore Turner of Point Pleasan. W. Va; twq sisters and brothers-on-law, Judy and Dale Roush of Henderson, W. Va., and Linda and Tom Tucker of Mt. Airy, NC; a brother, Roy
"Trigger" Messick of Addison; three sisters-in-law and brothers-m-law, Lois
and Glen Johnson of Chapel Holl, NC, Diane and Bill Crouch of Hurncane
and Barbara Turner of Pomt Plcasanta; and several nieces and nephews.
· Servoce w1il be Thursday, May 22, at 2 p.m. in the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home, Point Pleasant. Bunal will follow in Kirkland Mcmonal Gardens
Friends may call at the funeral home Wednesday from 7 to 9 p.m.

WASHINQTON (AP) - The
trade deficit narrowed sharply in
March to $8.5 billion as Amencan
exports hit an all-time high, led by a
big jump in sales of commercial aircraft to China.
The Commerce Department sa1d
today that the deficot in goods and
services was the lowest it has been
since las,t November and was down
a dramatic 19.3 percent from a February imbalance of $10.5 billion.
The trade defocit with China.
which is expected to surpass the
ombalancc with Japan this year, dod
show at least a temporary Improvement in March.lt fell 22.4 percent to
$2.6 billion, the smallest gap in nearly a year. Sales of U S. commercial
Jetliners rose whole omports of Chonese toys. shoes and clothing all
declined
The deficit with Japan. however.
was up on March by 8.3 percent to
$4.6 bilhon, the highest sonce last
November, as imports ol Japanese
computers and telephone equipment
were up.
A worsening trade defocll has
been one of the weak spots on a U.S.
economy that is pcrli&gt;rmong remarkably well at present
. Whole a 23-year low on the unemployment rate had raoscd concerns
that tight labor market&lt; could make
inflauon a problem down the road,
the Fcdeml Reserve passed up the
chance on Tuesday to ratse mlercst
rates.
Critics of a Fed tightenong move
in March had argued that the central
hank was needlessly raising borrowong costs to light an onllatoon threat
that did nol cxosl. Consumer proccs
this year are actually nsing at a slower pace than in 1996.
The March trade delicot was much
better than had been expected Before
the report, economost&lt; had hecn
expecting a delicot m the range of $10
bilhon. Even woth lhc omprovcmcnt,
the trade dclicit in the lirst three

Interest rates will remain steady

riilht 10 odjtoot -Air·
loa lhe 10bo&lt;rip&lt;lon periocl Subo&lt;ripcloo .,..

Today in history

•sput•. Sue Turner

By The Aasoclated Press
Temperatures Will be below normal in Oh10 for the next few days.
Highs will be in the' 50s and 60s.
Skies arc expected to be clear
tonight, With wonds hght. The
overnight low woll be 35 10 40, and
there will be a threat of frost.
Temperatures will begin 10
rebound as a high pressure sysll!m
moves out ol OhiO on Fro day
The record high temperature for
th•s date at the Columbus weather
station was 92 in 1941. The record
low was 34 set in 1883.
Sunset today will be a( 8:45 p.m
Sunnse Thursday w111 be at6: 11 a.m
Across the nation
Cool and dry weather prevailed
over the Plains, Great Lakes and
Ohio Valley early today. woth winds
1
ne,~r.
·
Continued rrom page I and partl_y cloud7 sk1es on th~ North1
g
•••
cast. Ram fell m the Rock1es, and
,;,,
'
.
thunderstorms were arriving in Texas
The Justice Department found Terry N1chols ~llegcdly. stash&lt;=&lt;! bomb .
~ast month that FBI scic.ntists, includ- mgredle~IS. Ntchols woll be troed !attng some who worked on the bomb- \!f.
.
.
.I
. ,
.
ing case, produced flawed work or
Burmeostcr ~lso smd McVe1gh s
WASHINQTON (AP)- Federal
slanted their findmgs in favor of the cloth1ng- wh1ch tested pOSlltve for Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan
prosecution: ·
explosiVes Tcs~duc - showed up at
and his colleagues avoided a barrage
McVetsh auorncy Christopher the cnme lab •.n a rolled-up grocery of criticism by opting to hold shortTritico 'tried unsuccessfully to ques- bag and not m the scaled plastic term interest rates steady. for now.
tion FBI chemist Steven Burmeostcr envelopes usually used.
But they may be just postponong the
about findings in the Justice Depan"I would say thatt~erc. arc better inevitable, many economists behevc .
ment report. Tntico also was barred methods oftransportatoon. BurmeosThe central bank ended a meeting
from questioning Burmeister about tcr smd.
. .
of its policy-setting Federal Open
new laboratory procedures put into
The. cross-cxam1nat1ons . of
place since the hombhig.
Burmeister and bomb expert Lmda Market Commincc on Tuesday with
Matsch only allowed Burmcostcr Jones ma~kcd the dclcns~·s last shot an announcement that 11 would have
to answer spee~lic questions about at doscrcd1tong the F_BI cv1dence dur- no announcement. That told linancoal
markets the panel had decoded to
somc poss1ble shortcomings of the mg the pro_sccut1on s case. . .
leave
the federal funds rate on
physical cvidellce. •
Matseh' IS cx~ctcd to proh1b11 susovcrnightioans between banks at5 5
Burmeister testified that explo- pen~cd FBI sc1ent1s_t Dr Fredcr~c percent and immediately spurred a
sivcs residue, which was found on Whuchurst, who cnt1e1zcd the labs
McVeigh's clothing and earplugs. handling ofhombing evidence, from modest rally.
"From loving rooms to boardwasn't detected in McVeigh's alleged testifying for the defense because he rooms. anyone concerned with ecogetaway car or in the Kansas storage had lillie d1rcct involvement on the
bin where McVeigh and co-defendant mvestigallon .

ft•osecutJ•on
r..1

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

Trade gap narrowed
substantially in March

Thanday, May :U

Rabid fringe pushes anirpal rights .

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.Israelis squ.abble over who·i·s a Jew
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•• edtllldly, May 21,1117

The Dirlly Sentin~!

Sports

•

~ Bulls top Heat 84-77
~to begin Eastern
~Conference finals
•

Wednetd!y, May 21,1117

CHICAGO (AP) - They hid
;ad a lona layoff, time to rest their
. : aging lep between playoff series.
: But that's not why the Chicago
• Bulls were able to take control in the
: tinal minutes .and beat the Miami
:

! Heat.

"
: . It was as much mental as physi: cal. The Bulls were in a champi• onship state of mind. When it's time
: to win a close game, they know how
' to do it.
: · "We can speculate about the lay; off and their seven-game series hun
~ them," Michael Jordan said after
~h1cago's 84-77 victory to open the
: Eastern Conference finals Tuesday
" night.
"But we were able to come back
• and win. We've been in that Slluat•cm
: a couple of times already. We've had
; some experience dealing with 11. We
: were able to keep our potse."
,
In their opener against Atlanta m
• the semifinals, the Bulls, after a five • day break, came out sluggish and fell
: behind by 16 points before over! coming the Hawks.
~
Agamst the Heat, Ch1cago played
.' a team commg off a gruehng seven:. game series against New York. The
~ !,lulls, on the other hand, were play'·ing for the first time in a week. They
' struggled in the first half, again fell
' behind by 16, trailed by II atthe half
: and were down five with just over
:'six minutes left.
:: "We were right where we want;'ed to be. We were ahead five going
• mto the last five mmutes of the
game. We just needed to be stronger
~ at the end and we got flustered,"
'' Miami coach Pat Riley said.
; The Heat, the younger of the two
• teams, didn't get tired. The Bulls just
, got better, especially on defense.
Miami, which had only six sec-

BENTLEY SCORES - Moments after stealing third base,
Meigs Marauders' Jeremiah Bentley slides home to score on 1 wild
pitch In the fourth Inning of Monday's Division II sectional cham·
pionshlp action against Warren Local at Lucasville. (Sel)tlnel photo by Dave Harris)

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent

The Me1gs Marauders have
advanced to tile d1stncl champ1.onsh1p game Friday evening at
Lucasville Valley on the strength of
a 15-0 whitewash over Warren
Local The Marauders will tangle
wllh Waverly, whtch delcatcd South
Pomt I!J..I Tucst.lay to advance to the
lmals.
The game was started on Monday
and was suspended hccause of heavy
rams that hilthe Lucasville area on
Monday evening. At the umc the
game was called, the Marauders
were on top 11 -0m the SIXth mnmg
The Oh10 H1gh School Athletic
Assoctauon gave the two teams permiSSIOn to fm1sh the final two
mmngs at Me1gs H1gh School so the
teams would not have to make the
100-mile-plus trip to Lucasville to
play the lasttw'? mniligs

The Marauders broke a scoreless
uc m the third mnmg with a run m
the third mmng Brad Wh1tlatch
reached on a Warnor error and
advanced to third when Tony Dugan
hned a smgle mto left-center f1eld
and the center lielder hobbled the
ball bnclly Whitlatch then scored on
a sacrilicc lly ofl the hal of R1ck
Hoover.
The Marauders scored their second run in the lounh mning when
Jcrcmmh Bentley reached second on
a Warren Ll,)cal error Bentley then
stole third and came mto score when
the throw got past the third baseman
George then helped hm1scll by
lmmg the lirst p1tch ol the hflh
mnmg over the nght f1eld lcncc to
make 11 a 3-0 contest. Whitlatch
reached on an error and Dugan smglcd and stole second Hoover than
hil a dnve that hounced over the
lencc m center field ~conng Whit·

HOME RUN RECEPTION - ·The Melge Marauders' Scott George
(far right) trots home to a reception from hla taammates following
his fHth·lnnl11g solo homa run In Monday's Dlvlalon II sectional
championship action against Warren Local at Lucasville. The game,

latch and Dugan.
Chns Roush then line a shot
through the legs olthe Warren Local
shortstop scoring Hoover. Ryan
Ramsburg grounded mto n fielders
chmcc to move Roush to second, but
he was thrown out at third on a stolen
base attempt Bentley sm!!lcd and
score the mnings lillh run on a w1ld
pitch giVIng Me1gs a 7-0 advantage.
George was m control on the
mound. Hcwas perfect gomg into the
lifth mning bel ore Shawn Taylor led
off the fifth wuh a ground ball UJllhc
m1~dle lor a smglc Taylor was
erased on a llcldcrs choice, a strike
out and walk later the Warnnrs had
runners on lirst and third, but Gcor11c
came back to stnkc nul Shawn
Sadler In end the threat.
Meigs plated seven runs in the
sixth innmg sending II rlaycrs tn the
plate. Whillatch had two singles. and
Chns Roush added u single Four

walks and two Warren Local errors
plated the runs.
The game was delayed for ahout
I0 minutes in the mmng hecause of
rain, after resuming the cun1cs11t wa.'i
stopped once agam a lew mmutcs

later After u delay of ahout an hour
11 was suspended. When play was
resumed on Tuesday at MHS, the
Marauders p1ckcd up where they left
off sconng three more runs
'

Me1gs closed nut the seonng in
the seventh 1nmng on a walk In pinch
hitter Steve R1cc , two w1ld p1tchcs
and a stnglc by pmch h1ttcr Steve
McCullough
Whitlatch went to the mound lor
coach Scot Gheen's Marauders on
Tucsduy and g,tvc up a single 10 the
sixth lCl Jason Taylor und another smgle to Shawn T.1ylor m lhc sevcnlh.
but Warren Local was unahle tn do
any more damage .

moved to Meigs High School's ball park Tuesday after a rainstorm
halted the action Monday, resulted In the Marauders winning 15-0.
(Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)

Dugan led the Marauder Jut
parade wllh a smgle and a double .
Whlllah:h .1ddcd u pa~r ol smgles.
George a home run. Hoov&lt;:r a douhlc, ChriS Roush. McCullough. and
Bentley each added singles
George p•cked up \he Win, J!IVing
up (Jnc h1t m live mnmgs ol work
He struck nut SIX .md walked nne.
Wh1tlat.:h wenllhe linaltwo mnmgs

wnh a 21 -7 mark. Game tunc lur Fn·
day's Iitie .:ontesl IS 4.30 p.m. at
Lu•asv1llc Valley High Sch•~•l. War·
rcn Local limshcs· lls sc;.1son with n
15-K nmrk
Valley H1gh School IS lm:ated
across the mull lrcnn the Southern
Oh1o Cnrrect10nal Factlity 1n
Lucasville The best way to get ln
Lucasville ts to take Stale Route
321124 lrom Jackson It&gt; P1keinn und
go south on U.S 23 Turn left at the
lirsl traffic light alter turnmg on
U 5.23 onlU S.R. 72K. The h1gh
school is one mile off of U.S. 23 on
the Jell and the,lie ids on the 'ii«t rnad
HI the Jell past the pmnn.
Inning 1!!ll!b
Me1gs
(KIJ-157- 1=15-\1-11
W.men ·lnc.d
&lt;XMHHHHI=Il-3-6
Scott Genrge (WP) and lllson
Mullen
Adam Sprague (LP). Shawn Malone (5). Joe Fox (6), Shawn Taylur ·
(6). John Cnlfman (7) and Earl Tidd

giVIng Up tWO hilS. !'.tnkmg 'lUt'lhrcc

and walkmg one.
Adam Srrague, 1he hrst of' live
Warren pnchcrs p1cked up the loss.
The Wamnr pile hers struck out nine.
walked Ill and gave up nine h1ts
Shawn Taylor had lwn smglcs fur
Warren local Jasnn Taylqr h.1d the
other Warnor h1l. a Single
The Marauders' 19-7 record h.IS
garnered the most w1ns 1n the
schtxll's history. hrc.lkmg the mark ol
17 wms set by l.tsl ye.1r's tealll en
route to the st,ttc sctmlm,\ls. Wnvcrly Will head mto the diStnct linals

•

"It's quite an easy game 1f you
make it that way."
Goodwm was 4-for-5 with two
runs scored
"He JUSt conunucs to do well.''
smd mtcnm manager DenniS Menke,
filhng- m for the suspended Ray
Kntght. "The last I0 day~ 11 seems
like he's been thiS hot every game.
He JUsllncs to keep the hall out of
the air and uses hiS speed to get on.
I thmk he is JUSt staning to rcahze the
type ol player he can he "
Dcwn Sanders led ofl the first
w1th a smglc tn tell he lore Goodwin
surpnsed the Astros With hiS bunt.
"I thought the bunt had a h1g
1mpuct." Aslros manager L•rry
Dterker sa1d. "The bunt was the catalyst. Once he got on. we knew they
were gomg to double steal. The
throw was good, hut (Sanders) just
heat 11."
~ Hal Morris added three hils for
the Reds. whose 14-29 record IS
baseball's wnr-l and Jeff Shaw
earned hiS lillh save.
Lu1s Gonzalez went 3-lor-4 lor
Houston,

W1th the score lied 3-3 in the
c1ghth, Moms doubled wnh one out
off Russ Spnnger ( 1-2) and W1lhc
Greene lollowed w1lh a run-sconng
smglc. Greene look second on the
throw to the plate and scored one out
later when shortstop Ricky Guiterrez
':"isplaycd Joe Oliver's soft liner for
an error.
The Astros closed to 5-4 m the
bottom of the innmg when first ba.,cman Morns misplayed Scan Berry's
grounder But the Reds padded thw
lead wnh two runs m the mnth
Morns s1 nglcd hnmc Gnodwm
w1th two outs and Barry Larkin
scored on a wild p1tch.
Houston starter Chris Holt
allowed three runs and eight hils in
live mnmgs
Sm1lcy couldn't cxplam hiS mastery over the Astros
"I wasn't aware of that," he san.l .
''Alii know IS I used to stmk against
them when I was With the Pirates.
Glenn DaviS used to kill RIC I
couldn 't get h11n out. The Astrus
always beat up on me then "

LARKIN SCORES- The Cincinnati Reds' Bar·
ry Larkin (left) slides across the plate and scores
as Houston pitcher Tom Martin drops the ball in
the ninth Inning of Tue1day night's National

Ramirez said he knew his bat was
. cra(ked when he went to the plate,

.NLgames ...
(Continued from Page 4)
drove in the go-ahead run With hts
'first hit of the season as Atlanta won
"its fifth straight.
Mark Wohlers got three outs for
his lOth save, sending the visiting
~xpos to only their second loss in
·'filne games.
·:·. Atlanta trailed 1-0 in the fourth,
• but took the lead on run-sconng sm~yl!les off Dustin Hermanson (2-2) by
~.Mark Lemke and Wade.
~"
PhUiles 3, Cubs 2
• Marl, Leiter (4-4) gave up one run
•·a~d three hilll m e1ght innings, and
:r~lcky aottalico survived a Wild
: mnth by . striking out the side at
, Wngley Field.
:: Rookie SfOil Rolen and Gregg
;Jefferies each homered for the
::fhillies, who took a 3-1 lead into the
.. inth. Bottalico gave up three con~oecutive smgles, then struck out
~ncb-hitters Brooks Kieschnick and
ike Hubbard for his lith save.
:::::; Frank Castillo (2-6) gave up six
• its in stx innings.

Giants down Rockies 6-3;
Cardinals &amp; Braves also win

By The Associated PreSI

Forget Barry Bonds . Jeff Kent is
the offensive star of the San Frunctsco. Giants.
Kept hit his third grand slam th1s
seaso11 and drove in a career-high
five runs Tue~day mght, lcadmg the
Giants over the Colorado Rockies 6·

3.
"I don't want to analyze every·
thmg that's been happening to me.
I've hccn ahle to control my cmouons and simplify this game and it's
been fun for me," Kent satd. "That's
what gives you success."
H1s tQ homers are three more
than Bonds' total and his 42 RBis arc
20 more than the three-time MVP
has driven m.
"Barry Bonds is one of the best
hitters tn the aarnc and he's always
going to cet respect for what he has
done and what he can do," Kent said.
"Guys hiuinJ behind him JUSt have
to be reilly to hit. I've been fortunate
cnoueh to hnc IOI1lC opportunities
and al10 fortllnale enough to come

throuall."

All three of Kent's slams fol·
•

lowed walks lo Bunds. 11cd With
Frank Thomas fur the major lc.1guc
walks lead .1142.
"He's taking advantage of pitching around Bonds. " Rockies man·
agcr Don Baylor ''"d " In suuallons
where Bonds can heat me. I'm nut
ahout tu let h1m "
W1lham VanLmdmgham (2 -2 )
won for the lirst time in snt :-il..arts
since April 15. allowmg three runs
and four hits in seven innmgs Doug
Henry pitched the c1ghth, and Rod
Beck got three outs lor h1s 15th save.
Ro)!er Bailey (4-4) walked a season-high seven m seven mmngs tn
lose hiS th1rd stral)!hl start. Ellis
Burks and Vmny Castilla homered
for Colorado, 2-9 on 1ls 13-gmnc
road lnp.
In other games, San Diego beat
Los Angeles 7-3. Flonda beat New
York 6-5, St. louis beat Piusburgh
3-1, Atlanta beat Montreal 4-2 and
Philadelphm beat Chicago 3-2.
Padres 7, Dod1ors 3
Wally Joyner drove in four runs
and Sterling H1tchcock (4·4) allowed
one run and five h1ts m e1ght inmngs
at San Diego.
Arthi Cianfrocco, starting at third
base in place of injured Ken Caminiti. drove in three runs for San Diego
and Tony Gwynn went 3-for-3 with
a pair oJ doubles.
Mike Piazza went 3-for-4 with
two doubles for Los Angeles lsmacl
Valdes (2-5) gave up four runs and

CLEVELAND (AI') - A few
hours after s1gmng two nl 1hc1r
newest stars to long-lcrm cnnlracls,
the Cleveland lndhms got a vtctory
rcmimsccnl nl old times
Manny Ramirez hrokc a 1-for-22
slump w1th u two-run homer in the
eighth that gave the lndlllns a 4-3
victory over the K_ansas City Royals
on Tuesday mght, tbe1r lOth comefrom-behind win~nl the seuson
The v1ctnry, wh1ch put the lnd•·
uns hack in lirst place m the AL Central, also came hours aflcr the team
announced the Slgnings of David
Justice; Marquis Grissom and Jnn
Thome tn multi-year contract exlcn'ions tntahng $KI.I million.
A regular-season recurd crnwd ul

mnc hils m s1x mmngs

Marlins 6, Met~ 5
Rookie Todd Dunwoody smgled
to cap ,, IWI\·run rally in the ninth
agamst John' Franco (0-1 ). who had
converted 12 consecutive saves and
hadn't allowed a run m hiS prcv1ous
16 games
,
Flonda won 1ls c1ghth straightone short ol the lranchiSc record and unproved to a maJnr league-best
18-5 at home.
Robb Nen (4-1) won dcsp1tc
allowing a pair of unearned runs m
the ninth.
Cardinals 3, Pirates I
Danny Jackson, making h1s season debut, allowed three hits in 6 113
mnmgs us St . LouiS stopped a fourga~c losing streak. Jackson had
been stdclmcd , ince early m spring
training w1th a rib-cage muscle' pull.
Ron Gant homered for the third
time in four games, and John Mabry
had two RBis as the Cardinals won
for only the second time in JO
games The visiting Pimtes have lost
four straight.
Denms Eckersley, the Cardinals'
thnd p1tcher, worked the ninth for his
e1ghth save. Esteban Lootza (4·1)
allowed two runs and llix,hits in scven innings.

Brant 4, Expo1 2
Terrell Wade (2·3) allowed both
runs and c.ight hits in six inning!l and
(See NL on l'liae S)

League game under the Aatrodome In Houlton,
where the Reds won 7-4. Martin's wild pitch •
allowed Larkin to score from third base. (AP)

•

43 ,167 stood and murcd when M1ke
Jackson got the lust out m the mnth
- an unmiSHlkahle reminder nl
1995, when Cleveland had 4H comclrom-hehmd Wins ''"d went to the
World Scncs for the f1rst tunc since
1954.
" The lans sensed the laclthut we
were gom~ lu ~omc hm.: k," sa1tl
Thome, who agreed to a $24 S nulhun, lhrcc-ycm cxh.:nsmn through
2CXII "It's a lecilng m the .ur. That's
another rcusnn I stayed · We 've got
the hcst lans m basehall."
The newcomers conlnhuted, t•x•.
Gnssnm drove m a run wllh a sacnlicc lly in the Indians' two-run seventh, and Justice singled tolcud oil
the c1ghth to set up Ramirez's towering. 357-foot homer tn lelt - u

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By TOM WITHERS
AP Sparta Writer

SKYHOOKING OVER 'ZO Ia the ta•k of the moment for ChlciQO
forward Scottie Pippen (left), who extands himself to take the •hot
against Miami centar Alonzo Mourning during TuMd~ night's Eaat·
ern Confsrlnce finals opsner In Chicago, where the defending NBA
champions won
(AP)

84-n.

Bulls were able to do wilat they've
always done- disrupt Wllh defense.
"W1th Michael, Ron and I at
guard, we take up a lot of spacl),"
Pippen sail
·
"We feel we have the abtlity to

force them in and knock the ball
loose or force them mto a poSilum
where they don't feel comlortahlc
handhng the ball."
Jordan scored 37 to lead the
Bulls.

-·

but used it anyway.
· . .. , didn't think 11 was gmng out
from the way 11 sounded," sa1d
Ramirez, back m the hneup after
missing six games recently Wtlh a
strained abdominal muscle...When
I came back and showed it to (hitting
coach) Charlie Manuel."
The 24-ycar-old right-fielder satd
he might use the damaged bat agam.
Cleveland tmiled ~-0 through six
mnings .got two runs in the seventh
and went ahead in the eighth.
Paul Shuey ( 1-1) retired all four
batters he faced in his first appear-ance SJnCC coming off the disabled
list. Jackson was perfect in the ninth
for his fifth save.
"It's hcen kind of a strange season," satd Jackson, who has hcen
moved into the closer's spot because
Jose Mesa l• struggling. "We knew
things would turn around for us.
Things couldn 'I get much worsc.1'
Cleveland Improved to 21 -20 and
broke a first-place 11e with the Royals. But it 1s still the Indians' worst
start after 41 games since 1993,
when they were 16-25.
"This team is so talented, 11 dnves you crazy to sep how we've
played.'' Thome sold.

So on the Indians' off-day Monday, Thome sat down with his father
and watched a h1ghlight film of the
Indians' 199SALpennaPtseason,in
which they also won 27 games in
their last at-bat.
"When you walk into thts ballpark, you've got to be afmid to come
here," Thome said ...That's what we
want."
The Royals got solo homers by
Johnny pamon an~ Chili t;&gt;avis, and
an' outstanding pcrfonnance by rookie starter Glendon Rusch, taking a 30 lead into the seventh.
"I feel bad for him," Royals manager Bob Boone said of hiS starter.
"But.l feel worse for us not coming
away with a win."
Thome and Sandy Alomar start·
~d the seventh with singles to center
and moved to second and third on a
sacrilice bunt by Omar Vir.qucl.
Gmsom, batting .200, made ·il 3-1
with a sacrifice ny, and Tony Fernandcz drove in Alomar w1th a single. A shaky Jeff Montgomery got
out of the inning by sinking out Matt
W•ll•lll!ls
Jamie Walker (2-2), another rookic, started the eighth and gave up a
single, homer and another single by

Thome before he was taken out. •
Julio Franco extended his hilling
streak to 18 games wit~ a double in
the lirst
Rusch, a 22-ycar-old Jeft-hander,
allowed eight h1ts m 6 113 mmngs.
strikmg out SIX and walkmg one.

Damon homered m the second oil '
Charles Nagy. who allowed 10 hits
in 6 213 innings. Davis went deep in
the fourth to make it 2-0, and Bip
Roberts added a sactificc ny in the
seventh.
Notes: A new 495-seat section m
the nght-field bleachers raised
Jacobs Field's capacity to 43,863.
The · crowd of 43,167 was Cleveland's I49th stra1ght sellout. ... Fmnco's career-best hitting streak was 22
games in 19881orCicveland. The
Indians Improved to 2-13 when trmlmg after seven mnmgs .... Royals
catcher M1ke MacFarlane, on the Dl
with a swollen nght shoulder, could
be act1vated thiS week; the team satd.
... NFL Hall of Farner J1m Brown
threw out the lirst pit..:h .... The Roy·
als are 15-3 when lcudtng after seven innings.

Junior's got 20 homers in 44
games. Go ahead. do the math.
It's only May, but it's hard not to
think about Ken Griffey Jr. chasing
Roger Mans. It's hard not to think
about Griffey headmg mto the AllStar break wilh 35 homers. or starting September with 50. After all, he's
on pace to hit more than 70.
Griffey h1t No 20 Tuesday night
with the type of shot we've come to
expect from h1m - a no-doubtabout-it, 470-foot blast to right field .
For some historical perspective,
Mam got his 20th '" game 55 when
he hit61 in 1961, and Babe Ru!h got
No 20 in game 52 when he hit60 m
1927.
" If there's anybody out there who
can, he 's probably the guy," Anahetm's Ttm Salmon said. "He's one
of those guys who, every ttme he
gets up there, you go, 'Oh. man. I've
just got a bad feeling here.' And there
aren'ttoo many hitters like that."
Salmon made some nmsc of h1s
own Tuesday night, h1ttmg a i'hrccrun double in the eighth mmng to li'u
the Angels to· an 11-9 wm over the
Manners.
Wtth the Angels tratling 9-8,
Seattle reliever Greg McCarthy
walked J1m Edmonds with one out in
the eighth and was replaced by
Josias Manzamllo (!J..I)
Dave Hollins walked and J•m
Leynlz reached when lhml baseman
Russ DaviS was late trymg Ior a
force play at second. loadmg the
bases. Salmon drove u 2-2 pitch to
the gap in left-center to make il 119.
The VIctory was the Angels'
eighth m ·mne games on th1s I0game homcstand, and the seventh
time they've ralhcd from hchind
Before the game, Griffey downplayed a pursuit of Maris
"I don ' t think ahoul going up
there and hilling a home run," he
said. ''I'm Just trying to have fun. If
it happens, it happens If h doesn't,
it doesn't I mean, I'm 42 homers
away nghl nnw. I can't gn up there
thmkmg about h1ttmg home runs.
What I've got to do " go up there
thinkmg about what I can do to help
this ballclub become bellcr."
Elsewhere '" the American
League, it was: Toronto 2, New Ynrk
0; Baltimore 4, Detroit 3; Mmnesota 4, M1lwaukec 3; Ch1cagn 10,
Boston I; and Texas S, Oakland 3.
Blue Jays 2, Yankees 0
At New York, Pat Hentgen. who
edged Andy PCllllle for the AL Cy
Young Award last year, barely beat
him again by p1tchmg a live-hiller
Hentgcn (5-I) extended hiS streak

of consecutive innings without an
earned run to 39. He won his fifth
straight dcc1s1on wnh his leagueleading second shutout
Pellitte (6-2) p1tched nearly as
well, but was doomed by a shaky
defense. Errors by first baseman
Tino Martinez and seco11d baseman
Mariano Duncan produced an
unearned run m the sixth. A hard-hit
grounder that got under Duncan's
glove allowed another 111n to score m
the eighth.
Orioles 4, Tigers 3 •
At Baltimore, Scott Kamien1ecki
(3-2) took a one-hitter mto the eighth
and the Ortoles scored four t1mes m
the fifth for their founh straight win.
Jesse Orosco got the la.•t out in
the e1ghth and Randy Myers got
three outs for his 14th save
Omar Olivares (2-3) was the loser.
Twins 4, Brewers 3
At Milwaukee, Scott Stahoviak
homered and Mmnesota handed the
Brewers their seventh stra1ghtloss
Stahoviak homered for the second
time in four games since coming off
the DL.
R~ek Aguilera, the Twms' fourth
pitcher ol the c1ghth innmg, struck
out three of four he faced for his
c1ghth save
Mmnesota took the lead in the
sixth on Chuck Knoblauch's RBI
single off Cal Eldred (4-5).
Mike Trombley ( 1-0) p•cked up
the wm.
White Sox 10, Red Sox 1
At Ch1cago, Frank Thomas
reached hase m hts lirst three plate •
appearances, then Jell one short of
Ted Wilhams' record I&lt;If most consecutive times on hasc.
Thomas doubled in the lirst oil'
T1m Wakclicld ( 1-3), then walked in
the third and fourlh to pull w1thm
one ol Williams' record ol re"chmg
in 16 consecuu ve plate appeamnccs,
set1n 1957. Thomas ll1cd oulto center m the hfth.
Ja~mc Navurrp (4-2) won his
lOth consecuuvc decision against
Boston.
Chtcago ha.' won live stra•ght,
wh1lc Boston has lost nme ol 10.
Rangers 8, Atbledcs 3
At Arlington, Texas, Bill Ripken
broke a fourth-mning tic with hiS
lirst homer since June 5 ol last season. and Rusty Greer and Lee
Stevens added two-run shots lor the
Rangers.
Bohhy Wilt (7-0) struggled early
hulllcd the team record lor best start,
set by J1m Kern tn 1979 and matched
hy Jeff Russell in 19HK. Warren
Newson set a career high wilh four
hils for Texas
. Ancl Prieto (3-3}ttK•k the loss.

------Sports briefs------..;..
Football
KIRKLAND, Wash (AP) Free agent linebacker Joe Cam,
commg off lour stra1ght ltHJ.tacklc
sea.~ons w1th Ch1cago. stgncd a $1.6
m1lhon. two-year contract With the
Seattle Scahawks.
Golf
DENHAM,

Colin Montgomcrie dclcutcd countrymah and defending European
champion Sam Torrance b and 4 in
the sCimlinals, and then outplayed
Italy's Costantmo Rocca 5 and 4 lo
wm the Eumpean leg of the Andersen Consulting World Championship.

•

Indians defeat Royals 4-3
By KEN BERGER

ond-half field goals, went6 minutes
and '21 seconds without a basket in
the final period.
" I don't think it was a fatigue factor. They jusJ pushed us and made us
tum the ball over," Heat guard Tim
Hardaway said. Hardaway, who had
sc~d 38 points in a Game 7 victory overthe Knicks, managed just 13
Tuesday night, missing 10 of 14
shots.
The Bulls, especially Ron Harper, were able to stop Hardaway and
con~in the Heat's pick-and-roll play
in the second half, forcing the Heat
into bad passes. Miami had four
turnovers in one crucial three-minute
stretch of the final quaner.
"We weren't real aggressive, real
forteful or real strong with the ball .
They were slapping the ball out of
our hands. We were jumping up in
the air and throwmg the ball away,"
Hardaway said.
And the Heat, especially Alonzo
Mourning, who finished with 21
potnts and six blocks, were awful at
the free throw line.
.
Mourning mtssed S-of-6 free
throws in the final 2:20 and made
only 7-of-15 for the game. As a team,
the Heat were 15-of-30.
"The most disappointing thing 1s
knowing you outplayed a team for
prelly much the whole game, knowmg that you outplayed them and
worked hard tD establish yourself
and establish the tempo ofthe game,
and then in four mmutes let it slip
away," Mournmg said.
"It wasn't just the free throws.
Everybody is going to look at thatwe got to make our free throws,
we're professional athletes They're
free throw(, that's why they're called
lree. We got to take care of the basketball."
Chtcago's Scouie Ptppen satd the

Angels survive
Griffey's 20th HR
to defeat M's 11-9

IndianS... ~----~~------------~-------------~~~~--------(Contmued from Page 4J

Reds get 7-4 win over Astros
HOUSTON (AP) - All CurtiS
Goodwm has to do to perform h1s
best "to thmk the worst.
"The secret IS me makmg myself
thmk I'm hitting about . 100 or
.150," sa1d Goodwm, who tted a
carccr-h1gh wnh four hns as the Cincmnatt Reds beat the Houston
Astros 7-4 on Tuesday n1ght.
"I JUSt keep that m mmd and that
way I never get too relaxed or thmk
I'm domg too good.
John Smiley (4-6) kept his
unbeaten slnng agamst Houston
mtact by scattcrmg eight hits in scven mnmgs. Smiley ha.' not lost to
Houston since May 8, 1993, and IS
S-0 m 10 games agamstthe Astrns
smcc then.
Goodwm has gone on a lear
smcc commg up Irom lndiUnupnhs m
late Apnl. He has hit safely in 10 of .
the last IS games, gmng 18-for-43
(.419) m that span. His bunt smglc
m the lirst inning helped the Reds
build a 2-0 lead
"I feel If I make myscllthmk I'm
hitting. HKI, I'll slay lucuscd nn the
ball und have .1 lot better at bats."

The o.lly Sentinel• Pagel

•

•
: 8y AICK GANO

Meigs shu_
t s out
Warren Local 15-0
in district semis

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Baseball

shot that sounded funny because
Ramirez was using a crucked hal.
(See INDIANS on Page !i)

AL standings
W L bl.

New York
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442
101
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19 21
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.. 24 17
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Tuesday's scores

K..I&amp;U Cit' (Applcr ""ll at C'LEVf..LAND tHmhil&lt;l' )··2l. 7.0~ r m
T«onto (C1emenA 1-0) at N Y Ya~t­

Otkllnd (TtiJhcdcr 0-2) al Tcaa1
I .\5 p m.
Sean!~ (Manl1ez 1·4) 11 Anahe1m

tAnley 1-I), IO)~rm

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CINCINNAT 1Mor100 1-41 01 HouMII:la(Rey.nt'kJ'+-1), K0..~ p_m
Anjlc)cl (Park 2-2) al San 01c-'u

(lim Worrtlll· ~). 10 35 p m

Thu~'sgomes
Cillomdo (Thom~~nn Q-2) nl &amp;In fr.m·
~·•~o {Gnrd..- ~I). l J~ p m.

Lt'IJ An,ekl (Non)() ~-2) at San Diefn
IHamlllonl-1 ). 4.M p m
NY Men (8. JaiCl 7·21 111 Ptnladel
(lh•a {Schlllins 6-1), 7·VIi p m
P111Jburah (Lu~kr 1· ,) 011 Mon1n:ul
(i'c~z 4-J), 7 .15 p 111

OHSAApiJII
COLUMBUS. Otno (AP) - How 1
Jlale paMI or coad~• raru Ohio hiJh

J&lt;hoolbol&lt;boll -.a ialhc Rllh* ftnal

poll for Tht Alaodated

Prtn (by Ohio Hip Scboot Alhld.c "'·
MK:iafion d1Y111on1, wifh nrsr•placc votes
lftputllbcKI):

DIYIIIonl
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Thursday's llllll•

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Friday's Jtame

Kl

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S~t~:ond 10: ll · Urh .&amp;n~ 4::!

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19 16-LUCASVtLLE VALLEY

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Stmnd II: 11 -Vena~llrs ~ 12-LIIR·
OOn Madnon Plam~ •2 D ·Granv1lle lM
14-i'lcw Lo..... )6 t~· BARNESVtlt.E

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3-F•rpon H"""' Hri.. 01 ll-2. 227
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Transactions

:Wl

2·0Md. lnt.ltan V:1llcy IM·5
l·Coklw:t&amp;t.T {I I 19 4
.
+Mnnon Rl\'t.'f Vullc.•y 11-l
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Mmnu Ill ChiL!II!!II K \() r 111

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Salunl11y's game

ToniRht's Ramo

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1hc 111111rcd list
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'fhursday'•~~Kme
Culnr.ltlu .11 Dctn111. 1 \() 1'111

l'lulntlclplu.l m NY

Nallunall.t'a~ue

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No ~am"" tonight

I0

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Frid11y's game

Tuesday's ..,ore
Ch•~·'lo\~'

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NBA playoffs
~n'-'~

Dl•lsion II

Tuesda.y's store
Plni01Uclrtnn fl N Y
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ll 19
Detroil .... . , .....,19 24
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�_..... I • The o.lly 81 tiiMI

Ponw'oy •_llldDIIport, Ohio

~ Flyers

record 6-3
Iwin over Rangers
~. in Eastern finals
.

: By MARGARET ULLARD
:

NEW YORK (AP) - Today's
~ schedule, 11ecording to the bl~ek­
·: board in the New York Rangers '
locker room, is "Rest and recovery."
~
It doesn't mention anything about
.• Eric Lindros, and maybe it should:
: The IIIIISsive Flyer captain was as
• much a problem for the Rangers as
~- their
injury-riddled ·lineup in
·: Philadelphia's 6-3 victory· Thesday.
• night.
~
Lindros scored his first playoff
~: hat trick as the Flyers held New York
t scorefess through two periods, then
: quickly came back from two ties in
~- the third to take a 2- I' lead in the
·.: best-of-seven Eastern Conference
·: finals.
.•- "It was pretty similar to what ·
:.~ happened in Game 2 in our building
. · ·when they would jump· ahead by a
:_ couple of goals and we would come
J back," Lindros said. "Once we went
·;;, ~.by two again, we ran out of
~.... ume.
.
· ··
What was markedly different was
•. the way Lindros behaved. While
New York's shadows had driven him
•• to penalties in the series' first two
•• games and suspension late in the reg{ ular season, he kept his composure
~ Thesday and helped his teammates
r do the same.
:
"It is a time that, with some
; young guys in particular, you could
; start to fall apart a little bit, but Eric
• is talking on the bench, then goes out
• and gives us some big shifts and
~ helps us get our feet back under us
.t;..again," Flyers coach Terry Mun'ay
• said.- "It is just another example of
: the maturity that he is starting to

•

: show as a player.. "

;

Lindros said stricter officiating
helped.
•
"We were warned before the
game and told that the first incident
was going to be called," he said.
"When that occurs and someone is
in the box, you get an opportunity to
go in on the power play, it makes it
• a lot easier to turn the other cheek."
~
• ·The Rangers, their thin lineup
! padded wiih little-used players and
min~r league call-ups, played a predictably ·disorganized game in the
.:;.first half of the evening. They hope
. the break before· Game 4 on Friday
will help.
·
"With the two days' rest, we can
'! regroup and get our defense back on
its feet and come back with some
: forwards and get a good practict
under c,&gt;ur belt," coach Colin Camp-

bell said.
New York, with four important
forwards already on the injuted list, .
lost substitute Ken Gemander to a
concussion ~arely two ll)inutes into
the game. Defenseman Alexander
Karpovtsev, a regular Lindros foil, is
in Russia because his mother died.
And Norris Trophy candidate Brian
Leetch was noticeably less effective
with a sprained wrist.
The Flyers took advantage of
· New York's flaws · and their own
tightened defense to hold a Z-0 lead
after two periods. After the Rangers
twice tied it in the third period, the
Flyers regained controL
"We came back. We could have
won," Campbell said. "We got' real
sloppy. They got the breaks and they
scored. We should have sat back and
waited when we tied it 3-3. We got
a little bii loose, and that's not our
style in the playoffs."
Wayne Gretzky tied the game 33 at 14:21 of the third, but Trent Klatt
beat Mike Richter on a two-on-one
with Shjon Podein. putting Philadelphia ahead 4c3 just 38 seconds later.
Rod Brind'Amour made it 5-3 on a
breakaway with about three minutes
remaining, and Lindros' hat trick
goal came with 37 seconds left.
Russ Courtmill made it 2-1just 43
seconds into the period on a slap shot
through Ron Hextall's pads. He tied
the game 2-::! at 4:02, tapping in a
pass from Luc Robitaille that
bounced off two Flyers to Courtnall
·on the open right side of the
Philadelphia net.
· .
·
"It was exciting there a little 'bit
to get backjnto the game and to contribute. Then to turn around and be
back behind the eight-ball again, that
was tough. "·Courtnall said.
Lindros gave the Flyers the lead
again by firing John LeClair's pass
from. the high slot past Richter at
6:45 of the third.
"Once we tied it· at 2, it was
important to just settle it down,"
Richter said. "We did a great job
coming back. We didn't finish the
job by keeping the lead."
The Flyers went up 2-0 in the lirst
period, outshooting New York 12-5.
Lindros scored his tirst at 7:43,
faking Richter .out of the right side
of his goal and sweeping around the
back to tuck the puck in the other
side. ·Just over 7 112 minutes later,
Richter lost his stick and was unable
to stop a Petr Svoboda slap shot that ·
_ ~ent through his pads.

tSospiri stands
- ~ among 13 first-time
:Indy
500
drivers
•

RAY KNIGHT

NL slaps
Knight with
three-game·
.suspension .
By JOE KAY .
CINCINNATI (AP) - Manager
Ray Knight considers his three·
game -suspension excessive.' The
umpires' union thinks he deserves
worse.
Knight sat ·out the Cincinnati
Reds' 7·4 victory Thesday night iii
Houston, the first of three games he
will miss as a result of his dirt-kicking, base-throwing outburst last
weekend.
. National League ptesident Len
Coleman also fined Knight an undisclosed ·amount Thesday for his second on-field blowup in 17 days.
Knight is th~ first major league manager to be suspended since 1995.
Umpire Jerr¥ Layne warned
Knight about bumping and spitting
while the manager argued a call last
Saturday during a 6-2 loss to San
' Diego. On~e ejected, Knight kicked
dirt on third base, uprooted it and
threw it down.
·
''I think it's excessive," Knight
told WLW-AM, the team 's flagship
radio station, late Tuesday. "They
said it was because I bumped him
and ... while I was tal~ing to him, I
spit on him. I didn't (purposely) spit
on the man. That's ridiculous.
"I don't mind paying a $10,000
fine, but let me stay with my ballclub. The worst thing in the world is
Ill suspend me and &gt;get me away from
my team. It hurts me, it crushes me."
Umpires' have been waiting to see
how baseball deals with players and
managers who act up this season.
They've taken a tougher stance since
Roberto Alomar purposely spit on
umpire John Hirschbeck last September and got a five-game suspension.
Pat Campbell, associate counsel
of the umpires association, was
pleased that Knight got a suspension,
but thought it should have been more

.

ByRONSIRAK
FORT WOR1ll, Texas (AP) Tiger Woods and Fuzzy Zoeller
agree on one thing about Zoeller's .
racially insensitive remarks at the
Masters: Maybe golf can benefit
from the controversy.
"Over time I think we will all see
that it's an incident that was good for
golf," Woodk said Tuesday after he
met with Zoeller for the first titne
since the remarks last month.
".It will take some time to unders.tand it,'' he added.
The pair met briefly at Colonial
Country Club, site of this week's
tournament, in a get-together.
arranged, in part, by the PGA Tour.
"We have a responsibility as profess_ionals to tum this into a positive," Zoeller said. "We've got the
doors open now . ... Let's joke about
it.' ~

Zoeller said at the time that his
statement that Woods should not
serve fried chicken and collard
greens in the Masters champions dinner was a joke.
:" The only thing I'm upset about
is thl!l I .~ad to buy his lunch,"

Zoeller said, again trying to play the
incident for a laugh.
Though Woods Sl\id, ."Now it's
done. it's over," an . undercurrent
could be felt beneath his words.
"I've had a lot worse that this,"
he said. "Hopefully, I won't have a
situation like this again, but that is
highly unlikely."
Woods, an Asian black in a overwhelmingly white professional
game, said he was not surprised a situation like this came up.
·
Woods last week said he was dis- ·
turbed that Zoeller walked away
. after saying the fried chicken remark,
then turned and added, "and collard
greens, or whatever it is they serve. "
He remained upset by it aticr their
talk.
"I have a problem with anyone
saying it in that tone," Woods said
after the meeting. Woods said the
meeting lasted 20 minutes and
Zoeller placed it at ·12 minutes.
"Fu1.zy and I had a nice lunch and
a ni.:c conversation an!! I found out
some things I needed to know,"
Woods. "Now I understand
he
was com in~ from."

By TIM FRIEND
USA TODAY

· WA~HINOTON -

PaleOntologists in Argentina
have disc:oveted a 7-!001-long, fleet-footed meat-eating
dinosaur dill is the most bird-like ever seen.
·
Its unusual arms, which could nap like wings, and a
bird-like pelvis offer the strongest proof so far that birds
evo!ved from dinoS;&amp;urs, ~ltperts reported Tuesday at the
Nattonal Geographic Soc1ety, which funded ~he excavation.
Because of the features, the new dinosaur rePt-esents
an intermediate stage of evolution between dinosaurs ·
and the oldest known· bird, ~d paleont.ologist Fernando
Novas of the Musco Argentino de Ciencias Naturales in
Buenos Aires.
The predator existed at the same time 8s birds, but it
was a living relic, a member of the missing dinosaur line
· that led io birds, Novas said.
"The link isn't missing now. We found it."
· 1be discovery, to be rejlorted in Thursday's Nature,
should settle any debate over whether birds and
·dinosaurs were related, said Hans-Dieter Sues, curator

of the Royal Museum of Ontario and a member of the
society's research and exploration committee.
Most paleontologists believe birds are direct descendants of dinosaurs. A few still believe they evolved separately.
'
Novas and colleague Pablo Puerta ·named the
dinosaur Unenlagia comaheunsis, which means "halfbird from ndnliwesl Patagonia" where it was found.
Unenlagia was 4 feet tall at the hip and had long slender
legs. It was prol)ably as fast as a modem ostrich.
rolovas said the forelimbs folded like wings and were
probably extended for balance while running and jump- .
ing in the same way a surfer or skater uses his or he!
arms.
Unenlagiil's shoulder sockets also pointed to the side
like bird wings. Its pelvis and hind limbs are similar to
Archaeopteryx, the feather-covered, chicken-like
dinosaur 1hat is the oldest known bird.
Novas found a total of about 20 bone fragments on a
sandy hillside . Geological dating of the sediments suggest it is 90 million years old. Archaeopteryx lived 145
million years ago.

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YALESVILLE,' CT- And you
thought steel. and titanium were
tough. Well, steel and .titanium
can't penetrate an armor-plated .
tank or sink a warship. Tn pierce
their defenses the military had Ill ·
make so(!lething sn powerful it
had to keep it secret ... so powerful thai 1mce it waS' declassified.
srime innovative company would
surely · apply it to the face of a
golf club to add distance.
One has and h doesn't bode
well for .golfs curr~nl state-ofthe-art metal, titanium. A
well-known professiortal outhit
his own titanium driver with the
new club by 25 yards. Antither
Tour pmfessional outhit his titanium driver by almost 50 yards!
The new driver is the creation
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weeks ago."

Zoeller's remarks were broadcast
by CNN the Sunday after the Mas·
tcrs and Zoeller apologized ·the next
day . .Woods accepted the apology
four days later in a statement faxed
to news organizations.
Several golf insiders, speaking on
condition of anonymity, said there is
resentment in the locker room that
Woods waited so long to accept the
apology of Zoeller, a well-liked, 20year veteran of the tour.
"I wouldn't say resentment,"
Woods said, acknowledging some
tension . "They just questioqed it. I
just told them I was brought into it,
. I didn't start it. I just want to play

WE HAZ JAZZ. ·TheM fourth, fifth and sixth graders at Riverview School In Reedsville play
alavea, hoboes and jazz alngers In the production of "We Haz Jazz, •, to be performed for the
public on Thl!rsclay avanlng, at 7 p.m •. They are, front, 1-r, Steven Dillon, Holly Roaa and Emily
Brock, Middle, l·r, are A.J. Tolliver, Brittany Tolliver an!! JanHar Chadwell. Back, l·r, are Christie
Barber, Kelly Chevalier and JessiCll Barber.

LIMIT 12 PLEASE

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nium . This makes off-center
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to draw and fade t~e ball with
more control. I wa!Chcd a top
Tour pmf~ssiunal test the club m

2Lml

LAYS

Ex-Navy en~ineer puts ·
armor-pierczng material
on a driver. Outguns . .
steel and titanium on dista'-'----'nce.
PGA professionals"

RC COLA
PRODUCTS:

...---Riverview production'O:~-

Zoeller, who tried at least twice to
speak with Woods previously hut did
not have his calls returned , said he
w'as relieved to tinnily have met with
him.
"I did do apologies. I told him I
meant no harm by it," sai~ Zoeller,
when asked if the "whatever it is
they serve" remark came up .
"I'm relieved," Zoeller said. "It's
over. I thought it was over three

GOLFING NEWS

.Potatoes••••~···· · .....____.: ;.,.
COCA
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with the Condor Armor-Pierce.
Imagine than&gt;n TV. Titanium dri- ·
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Condor Armor-Pierce's priCe."
The once-.
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CAT AND MICE • "The Mica from Outer Space" will be praaentad · by primary students at
Rlvervlaw School Thursday evening at 7 p.m. Pictured are, front, 1-r, Jesalca Adams and Jackie
Smith. BICk. 1-r, ere Hannah Pratt, Craig Hensley, Jake Gillilan a"" Slxtil Grader Abbl Thompson,
who ptayi the cit 11'1 the.P,ogr1111. Back row, 1-r, are Cttarlea Wilson, Shawn Reed, Tiffany Smith
and Joey Dalley. Performances for Cheater and Tuppare Plains Elementary Schools are schedulacl for Wedneaday and Thursday mornings. The playa are under the direction of Vocal M,uslc
Teacher Suean Parsons.
·

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TOILET TISSUE.

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Ont:t·SKrtl t'T-10 is usod on shells to ptnetratt tanks and
to withstand htat on ,...entry. It is t~~:k• as hard a.•111ttl,

'Stomp' just the start of funk-rap gospel

a PGA Tournament. Hei't:'s what backed up by a' stainless steel
he told me.
head the same size as a titanium
"I'm hitting the ball 10 yards driver &lt;250 cc's) for maximum
past my driver and mntrolling it forgiveness. To maximize clublike a five-iron. You sec all . my head speed it comes with a
cumpctit&lt;H'S smiling at me? Th&lt;tt's 45-inch graphite shaft, or a new
notadmimtiun. It's worry."
big butt Turbo/Tip''"' graphite
The . company·~ Research shall w11h ~xtra ~~o~eight in the tip.
Director ~xplained t~e club this
You can test the Condor
way .. ,
Armor-Pierce for 30 days by
"It 's basic ·physics: The harder callmg 1-1100·2115·39011 any time
"The harder it's hit, the
you hit a ball. the farther it goes, or day or faxing 1-203-2114·
farther it goes."
and Condor'' Armor-'Piercc (the 1623. Or you can send your
adapted it to the hilling surface of club's name) clobbers a ball like · name, address and check (or cc
a steel driver. They say their a battering ram'. II not only number and ·expiration date) to
adaptation is proprieiary and a launches it farther down range NGC Golf (Dept. TCN·143); 60
than any thing else on the mar- Church St .. Yalesville, CT
patent has been applied for. · .
All the company will say is ket, its CT-20 face .reduces a 06492 . The club ·cost only
that the new metal is a sort of ball 's ·m)rmal spin rate. A lower $121J;(XJ (a fractit&gt;n of the cost of
ceramic titanium, ceramic for spin rate keeps the ball flying titanium clubs) and you can add
hardness and titanium for longer and at a lowertrajectory the 3 and 5.-woods for only
·
$1 OIJ .OO each. Add $20.00 to .
strength and lightness. The for a longer roll.
"Condor
·Armor-Pierce
also
,
these prices for the new
material - called CT-20 - is
reduces
abnormal
spins
that
·
TurboTip
(big butt) shllft.
twice as hard as steel and 70%
harder than titanium. ·It whacks cause oft:-center shots to hook Shipping is only $10.00 no mal·
a ball with such force that at and slice. That's why he's out- ter. how large your order. Specify
hitting his titanium driver by regular or st.i ff flex, men's or
clubhead speeds of 120 MPH the level of longball champs - 30 yards and controlling 300- . ladies'. when you order. Rightthe new club split the cover on yards shots like a five-iron. It's handed. only. There's a 30-day
a pleasure to watch, isn't it'! · money back guarantee, if the
· some balls.
"You know who he is'! (I Said 1 clubs are returned undam!lled. ·
CT-20 ·atso increases a
did.)
He loves the club. I wish hi:
Oh, yes. If you swini at 120
golfer's accuracy by ·holding the
weren'ltied
up
with
a
big
compa·
MPH,
take some extra balls. 1.'
ball on the face of the club four
times longer than sjeel and tita- ny. He would shoot in the 50's
Ollool
1117
1alol41

r

'

•

Woods &amp; Zoeller resolve rem·ark
issues on eve of tournament

'

•

.

This week is fan appreciation ent; Lonnie Darst of Rutland hal
This week,uocher Jru1 nicht of
niaht at the local track. and general been impressive at the track. Dantin
r~eina is on tap at Skyline Speedway
ncar Stewut, where the winaed out- admission is only $8.00. Kick-off the only the second sprint car racer of
law Super Sprints have made a Memorial Da)' weekend in a big way modem times in Meigs County.
The best crowd of the year at Skyreturn in plnll style.
and make plans to attend.
The . ~00-honepower, 1,200·
Additionally, great stock car line saw nearly 100 cars in four
pound rockets are the most powerful action is on the racing card, includ· exciting divisions compete for the
winners share of the purse. Again,
land !~lachine per pound know to ing outlaw steel blook late models.
many
of the top names. in .the Midmankind. Because of the exlnlvagant
Last week, after over a month of
guaranteed purse, ·some or the best bad weather, the sun sbined bright- west turned out for · the well-bolnames in Midwest Sprint car racing · ly on Lou Hubbard's Skyl)ne Speed- .stered Super Sprint purse, some of
have been on hand eaeil week at way. When the dew .had settled on which are preparing for the Friday·
Skyline. These high-flyers have the beautiful Skyline speedplant, night June 6th Coca-Cola Classic,
turned the 3/8 mile track near the 1(}. news of some of the finest racing in $3,000 to win Sprint .Car extravasecond mark, an average speed of tbe Midwest hit the airwaves as Ron· ganza.
.
nie Myers pulled of a hite race pass
For an action-packed night of
nearly 132 miles per hour.
Ronnie Myers and Tracy Hoover to bring Pete Smith's West Virginia clean, family fun and excitement, or
put on a side show of full course Sprinter home first in a wild super a night in the cool spring air and
wheelie-stands during last week's sprint A -Main, Lerpy Ferguson relaxation, come to the new Skyline
action, much to the deligt of the claimed an eKciting Late Model Speedway, located on County Road
crowd.
main,' Middleport's George Adkins 53 between Athens and Coolville, off
Of course, when these winged took the Pure StOCk win, and Ronald U.S: 50. Warm' ups are at 6:30 p.m.
warriors get a little too agressive, the Harris claimed the Four-Cylinder an~ racing is at 7 p.m. each Friday.
high speeds have resulted in some feature.
Gates open at 5:30.
devastating accidents. Strict safety
Myers, ·who has Meig~ County
A 14" cooler limit is in oiTecl.
requirments, however, have left the connections. is the cousin of former · Super Sprints, Late Models, Pure
drivers in check and out of imminent Eastern sports stars Jimmy Caldwell Stocks and Four-Cylinder.; will be on
peril.
and Jeff Caldwell. Another local tal- the menu.

sev.ere.

"It sends some kind of signal that
this is not going to be. tolerated, "
Campbell said. "I would say that ·
we're happy that he's suspended, hut
•
It's very difficult to win races with
I don't know that three games is
; ·.By HANK LOWENKRON
enough for doing something . like
•
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Italian some of the teams," Sospiri said. "In
that. I don't know if it sends a strong
Vincenzo Sospiri didn't expect to be America, you can come with a enough signal.
·
~ in Sunday's Indianapolis 500, let
decent team and show what you can
"I understand that this is not Alo; alone starting on the front row.
do ...
mar 11, but' I think that in the past
., · That all changed in March when
The Indy rookies arc no strangers even the unintentional bumpings
; the 3(}.year-old read in a newspaper to racing, having competed in a wide
have been treated m~~re severely than
: that the Lola Formula One team he array of competitions ranging from
three·games ...
: was driving for had decided to ter- go-karts to midget and sprint cars to · The National League did not sin: minate its program.
Formula One. They come from vast•
"It was a big shock, a much big ly different backgrounds. represent - gle out any aspect of Knight's behav·
ior in assessing the penalty.
• shot because I found out from the ing six countries. and many levels of
"We're basically saying it was
• newspaper," Sospiri said. "They education and wealth.
Jack Miller, who will stan in the inappropriate behavior, which
! hadn't even infOrmed me that they
mii:ldlc
of the sixth row. was a den- includes the full range of Ray's
: were going to quit. It wasn't very
tis!
until
the lure of racmg became behavior," leagpe spokeswoman
: nice. but you have to get used to
Katy Feeney said.
:"these things in Formula One and in too strong to ignore.
Tyee
Carlson,
staning
in
the
midFeeney said Layne reported to the
• motor racing."
die
·
o
f
the
ninth
row,
was
raised
withleague
that Knight "sprayed" him
;
Sospiri wasn't without a ride for
in
1
o
minutes
of
the
Indianapolis
.
with
spit
accidentally while arguing.
·: long. Andy Evans, owner of Team
"He got pretty close. H'c didn't
• Scandia, called him one day after Motor Speedway and became bitten
by the excitement of the race as a charge him, " Feeney said. "It was; Lola's announcement.
.
.
n't a spitting incident."
:
"Evans was very quick to call youth.
Affonso Giaffonc of Brazil is -flu- ·
Knight was unavailable for com•.me. I had some other phone calls lat. ment at the team's hotel in Houston
·:er on, but I had already decided,'' ent in Portuguese, English and Span- when the suspension was announced.
;; Sospiri said of his decision to come
ishRohhi~ Groff followed his older ·· Ga.,
He returned to his home in Alhany,
&gt;to Indianapolis.
and did nm return .a telephone
~
Sospiri is one of 13 drivers in the brother Mike, also in Sunday's line- message.
• 35-car field who will be starting their up, into the sport.
· Batting coach Dennis Menke will
~ first Indy 500.
· .
Carlson, the youngest rookie at run the team in Knight's absence.
' Sospiri received $5,000 on Tues- 27; began his racing career on a hike Knight can return for a home game·
·
. ~ay in recognition of being the at age 12.
Saturday against the Chicago Cubs.
~fastest rookie qualifier. He'll begin
Fourteen-time World of Outlaws
Knight i~ the first major 'lcaguc
.1he race on the outside of the front sprint car champioll Steve Kinser is IIUlnagcr suspended since September
::row after averaging 216,822 mph for the oldest newcomer at 41 .
1995, when the Reds' Davey John~his four-lap qualification run.
All of them were recognized' son and Houston's Terry Collins got
• Sospiri, who now lives in Mona- Tuesday at the traditional "Fastest two games apiece for a series o(
; co, beaan racing karts in 1981 and Rookie" luncheon. ·
·
brawls between their learns.
' :;.. mainly driven in the international
While Sospiri and·Billy Boat arc
"I've always supported Len Cole·
;pormula 3QO(l series since '1991. He
making their first start, their learns man." Reds general manager Jim
~lans to continue with the IRL this
arc loaded with open-wheel fillCing Bowden said. "I thi_nk he's a l!reat
::Year, although a return to Formula experience.
leader for the National League. I sup:one is still on his mind.
Sospiri has Dick Simon, who port the decisions he makes on
; "I still have to prove myself in
started the race 17 times and behalf of the' league."
:formula One," he said. "I haven't remained active as an owner, team .
Knight's outburst Saturday result~ the chance to prove what I could
manager and· engineer since his ed in his second ejection in 17 days.
retirement in 1989, on his team.
~ in Formula Oilc. Now I'm conHe 'also was thrown out of a game
~naon the IRLseriesiOOperBoat, 31. arrived here this month May . I ·by· umpire Wally Bell for
lent; and to get the best out of it. ... without a ride after a career th~t · arguing a ball-and-strike , call. He
2&gt;nce I've done that, we can talk included a U.S. Auto Club-f'I'Cord II · rubbed his foot, hand and cap across
)bout something cl~e."
straight midget victories in 1995: home plate before Ieavins. drawing
He'll be making his firstiRL start for
: Solpiri and the other 12 rookies
a fine f.rom Coleman.
II'CI optimistic they can be successful
f~&gt;Ur-time Indy SOO winner AJ. Foyt,
Asked if the suspension resulted
; . the 2·yew-old IRL circuit.
now a car owner after r~eing at Indy in part because it was a second
.. ·"Formula OM. you have one or
a record 35 consecutive years •.
offense, Feeney said, "That didn't
'-o 1111111 dill can win races. The
-"I've got plenty of experience on help his case. But each situation is
my team," Boat said Thesday.
. • .of~ Me jult there 10 show up.
judged basically on its own merits.''

The Dally Sentinel • P~ge 7

New predator 'missing link'
between dinosaurs, birds

Skyline Speedway set to race
winged outlaw Soper Sprints
'

Pomeroy ~ Middleport, Ohio

WedUIHy, lilly 21,1117

Weclneedlly, lilY 21, 1117

By STEVE JONES
USA TODAY
At the start· of God's Property's "Stomp." Kirk
·.Franklin intones, "for those of you who think· gospel
music has gone too far. or.that we've gotten too radical'
· with our message, I've got news for you. You haven't
seen nothing yet."·
·
. .
There certainly has ra[ely been a gospel tunc that hilS
sparked. as much attention on main~tream radio as .
"Stomp," a soaring. funk-drenched pratse song that features a rap from Salt-N-Pepa's Cheryl James an(J a riff
from Funkadelic's classic "One ·Nation Under a
Groove."
In its 'fourth week out, "Stomp" has ·shot up to No. J9
on Billboard's R-and-B airplay chart even though it isft
in record stores. It has 'already surpassed Franklin's
debut hit, "Why We Sing," which peaked on the chart at .
No.28 in 1995.
The song can be found on "God's Property From
Kirk Franklin's Nit Nation," out Tuesday, as the first
release from B-Rite Records, a gospel joint. venture
between Inter· scope and Claude Lataillade... He's the
husband of GolpoCentric owner Vicki Mack :Lataillade.
. 'wh!l helped tum Ft'lnklin into a multi platinum ~ist
Claude says Interscopc's clout i!l tbe mamstream
.marketplace allows B-Rite to reach its targeted urban
youth audience in a way gospel labels usually can't.
·That Intencope' also distributes sangsta rap and hard·
edge-ioclc records wu not a problem.
''When you look at the landscape, all the major com·
panies have put out ne1ative music, but we wan~ a
venlllre with IOIIICOIIC who believed in what we were

•

•
"

doing," he says.
lnterscope president Jimmy Iovine says he believes
that gospel and inspirational music arc about to move ·
irito the mainstream much like country music did more
than 20 years ago, and that B-Rite has the right team in
place to be consistent hitmakcrs . .
''We like taking genres of music that arc unique to the
commercial market and investing in something that most
people wouldn't on first sight." Iovine says. "We arc
going to b,ack them_in _.a way gospel music has never
been backed before."
·lnterscopc's savvy .in .getting "Stomp" .on mainstream radio has also boosted interest In the album at
religious outlets, says Word Records president KOiana
Lundy.
"If early indications are true, the cKcitement for
product that hasn 't even been released is like none
I've seen in the 25 years I've been working
Lundy says. "We are already getting calls from accourlll
wanting to up their orders."
Vicki says "Stomp" is an el(tcnsion of songs by
artists like Franklin, Hezekiah Walker and John P. Kce,
who've been fusing gospc;l messages with strong R-andB beats for some time.
.
The lnter.;copc connection helps B-Rite go .beyond
marketing limitations often placed on gosJ)el music.
"Our mission ha5 been to effect change - not by
saying what you're doing is wrong. but by coming out
with music that is competitive, and it's in your face, and
yOII have to deal with it the way you deal with eve_ry- '
Chlng_else.':
.,

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• The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Ulddl1pat1, ONo

· The Dally Sentinel • Page 8

\Yednelday, May 21,1897

Wednn I ;, Hay 21, 1187

.Two half relatio:nships don't make one·good one
Ann
Landers
I'JIIIS, 1..o1 Anscks
,TlMC!I S)'Niic:w Md Cn.··
lliolO. S,-.dica~e.

..

.

Qy ANN LANDERS
. Dear Ann Landers: Th js letter is
in response to " His Wife in fV!aryland," who complained . about the
Other Woman. I am one of those socalled " homewreckers." I am a married woman, and the man I was
involved with was also married. Our
affair was discovered, and though
Vi• still loved one another, we chose
to end it and stay with our spouses.
An affair. doesn' t just happen . It

Here's one more oo' lhe subject:
Dear Ann Landers! How aboul'
givina the Other .Woman a voice?
I' m sick of readina leuen from
wives who whine ahout'their lousy
husbands and what liums they are as
dads. If these women aren't happy.
why $tay married? A victim d.oesn 't
·make a good role model ror her children.
I was once a wife, but I'm much
h4ppier being the Other Woman. I'm
no beauty, but I'm never at a loss for
companionship. I travel 'with my
lover, and he buys nie gifts and
treats · me like royalty. Why?
Because I make him feel like a king.
I never bring my problems to him,
lhere arc no kids yelling in my
home, pnd he has no responsibility

is a symptom of problems i.n lhe her to beain with. Matriages CAN
marriage. When your needs are survive' an affair. 11le keys are forbeing met outside the relalionship, it giveness, re.collllllilllient and comis easy to find fault with your wife or munication. It'~ along, hard process
husband. 11le fact retnains, however. but well worth lhe effon.
Finally, for all those married peothat two half relationships are a lot
less satisfying than one wholly com- ple who are contemplating an affair,
I urge you to focus on your marmitted one.
"Maryland" is obviously .unhap- riage. If it is absolutely beyond
py in her marriage, and she needs to ·repair, end it before becoming
work on what is wrong and try to fix involved 'with someone else. You
it. Focu•ing all the blame on the will save yourself a lot of heWche.
" homewrecker " is no solution. The short-term pleasure ·is n01 wonh
There is a .reason her husband. who the long-term pain. -- Lived and
,
fools around, cont.inues to come Learned in Oregon ·
Dear Oregon: You can't beat wis. ·
home to her. The wife always has a
distinct advantage over lhe Other dom born of experience. Thank you
Woman. It is every homewreckcrs for a splendid response. Your hQnfear that the wife will spark the pas- csty and clear-eyed conclusions
sion that made her husband marry were refreshing.

here, only pleasure.
A real man would be home helpina with his children, milling love to
the woman who blessed him with
thOse kids. If his wife thinks I'm
waitina for him to lea1 her, she's
mistaken. I don't want any commitmenu from a man who obviously
.can't keep them.
These unhappy wives need io lay
down the law. If women ' dido 't put
up with such lousy treatment. fewer
men would be ·dishing it. ,!!Ill· Most
· men cheat because thcJt can get
away witll it. If they thought for a
minute that their il.(ives would leave
them, they 'd stop horsing around.
When are lhose wives ·going to
stan enjoying their lives instead of
sitting home alone and whining? I

--

say, 1ive the men an ultiiiiiiUIII~ If it
works and lhe man
cheatin1,
the wife wins. If be coati- 10
sneelc around, she hun't Jolt a thiaa
by throwins him 0111. Ia faet, she' ll ·
act back her ~elr..Csteem, her ~hil­
dren:s respect and alai more. - His.
Lover in Albany, N.Y. ·
Dear Albany : You have given the
wife JOfDC good advice. Here's some
for you: Dump that married man-and
find someone you qm build a life
with. The road you aro traveling
leads nowhere. He 'II use you as Ions
as be can. Wake up, .and bail ou1

st.,

OPEN ,
Reaular Hours On
Memorial Day .
Monday, May 26th.

now.

Send questloou toAIUI iAnden,

Cnaton Synd!aate; 5777 W. Cea· ·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, LCII Anples.
Calif. 90045

'

''

Fashion:·
H·
u
sh
Puppies
that
Senior ·King and Queen
make you wann,a ·S·hout!
.

.

. By HEIDI KNAPP RINELLA
Fort Myers NeW1-Presa and
RICK BLANCHARD
The Detroit NeWs
Back when we were in high school, nerds with names
like Earl and Wayne wore Hush Puppies with lhcir pocket protectors. The rest of us snickered. No longer. -.
Earl and Wayne arc somewhere making money bigtime and Hush Puppies - those safe, beige or gray
crepe-soled, soft suede shcics arc shouting out loud.
·'Ellen" star .Ellen DeGCncres came out in Hush Pupp.ics. Sporting colors liltc wild violet, ncoo green, hot
pepper and oxford bluc , :th~ ~hoes are seen on folks like
Nicolas Cage and Kevin Spacey: .What's the world com.mg to.
'
·,
In the continuing popularity of all things '60 and
'70s, the Puppies have continued to boom since heing
reintroduced ..
"They arc on fire.:: says Jeff Lcwi~. market in!_! agent
wi!h Hush Puppies in Rockford, Mich.
·
Just chew on these nationwi\lc sales of HP classics:
65.000 pairs in 1994. 43'1,000 in 1995 and I . ~ mil.lion in
1996.
"And this year. we 'rc well ahead of '96. " Lewis says.
And "on tire" is one way you can dcscrihe spring's
new colors: Try cQbalt " blue bayou,'' nearly-neon
"salad green," or sunset-omngc "Miami coral."
Also new this year arc HPs with an open back for
women, sparkling in suede and patent leathers of the
new colors.
.
.
.
.
For men. it's the new "classic with a twist, the Boss."
Lewis said. And this slip-on with a pewter HP logo is
commanding sales.
·
The Boss joins the "Wayne, " the "Earl " - .nr&gt; longer
Leo and Ma..Y Davidson were cr-ned King and Queen at the Meigs County Multipurpose
nerdsand the two-tone suede and · patent "Lee ,'' as
Senior Center Tuesday. The crowning of royalty waa ~rt of Senior Cltlzana Day, an annual obseJ,: .
hO
I
sell~lii"inHP'sc
lassi t linc.- sllilcsfor \lll nccasio~,r." ­
.vaneeo'Whloh Included luilch;·apelllmlilnd entertainment by the' SeriJor ·swlngers ·clence trouP., ·' •
Who's
wearing
these brave new HPs'&gt; And with
and stBtt members.
whar'
"Jack Nicholsrm wears them with his Armani suit,''

.

Is "~spirin

· WHITE~

.

says Mary Payn~ . office manager at Jennifer's in Fon
Myers. Fla. The store's manager. Elaine StOrti, .says lbc ·
shoes arc most popular with women in their 20s to
around 4s.• who either arc too young to remember when
Hush PUppies were de rigucur l'or nerds or arc openminded ~nough lo. ignore it. They 're also selling to
"older-older" women for whom comfon is the primary
concern. ~he says.
.
.
·
" A lot of older women have a hard lime with a
clunky shoe," Storti says. It looks lik_e too much shoe to
wear with an outfit. where the younger women don'tlecl
that way," Sloni says.
,
.
Crys!:!l Miller of Fort Myers, who : nts into the
younger liategory. has a pair· of black Waynes - and
oxford-slylc tie --: and she's a committed fan.
"I lo\'c 1he fact that they're very comfortable, and
they arc real easy to wear with just about any1hing," she ·
says.
.
An q&lt;;1nher issue of People mag111.ine pictured Tcri
Hatcher. star of "Lois and Clark: The New Adventures ·
of Superman," in a violet outfit with, sure enough, wild ;
violet Hush Puppies - the Wayne style.
The shoes arc featured in major catalogs: Sak 's
showed them with $365 Giorgio Arrnani spectators good company. considering 1hat lhe new Hush Puppies
sell fo~ ubout $70 . .
If you're musing at the marketing genius of the folks
who !)lake Hush Puppies . at Wolverine World _\Vide in
Michigan. don 't. It stancd whim New York· designer·
John Bartl!:ll decided colored Hush Puppies would give .
just the right rclro kicky kitsch 10 the runway models
displaying his fall '95 colleclion. He approached tbe
folks at HP. who, true to their image, w~re a little timid
about the w~ole idea. But. noted Jeff Lewis. once they
saw the reactions tn the colors. thcv r'cali1.cd there wa.~ a
markCl cllillfie?~."' : '"""" .......... ,.,.-~ ..t -.,.,-lrl'r',...,.. "'\"'&gt;•....
"They

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By PETER H. GOTT, M.D.
DEAR DR. GOTT: I love your
column and have a '. question .
Because of a hlecding ulcer. I wa.'
l&lt;&gt;ld ne ver to take aspi rin. Yet, I read
that aspirin helps prevent hear!
anac k and stroke. Shnuld I lake it nr
not''
DEAR READER: Aspirin acts as
a mild anti-coagulant. Thcrci&lt;Jrc. it

,f

all three diseases, this is a tough call
that I would leave to your family
physician .
In my practice. when the hencfits
of aspirin arc unmistakable, I'll prescrihc extremely low doses (e.g. a
hahy aspirin a day). even if the person once had an,ulcer.
'
Again. in your case, you ' ll have
10 analyze the risk/hencfit ·ratio -and follow your doctor's advice ..
To give you

mo~c

\

Lb.

information, I

am sending you a copy of rny Health
'PETER
Rcpon " Peptic Ulcers." Other rend:
crs who would like a copy should
GOTI, M.D.
sen(.) $2 plus a long, self-addressed.'
stamped envelope lo P.O. Box 2017,
Murray Hill Station. New York. NY
I0156. Be sure to mention the title.
DEAR DR. GOTT: i was
is often recommended in low doses shocked to learn that my g·rand(a half to one tablet a day\ for men daughtcr ·doesn't need a premarital
and women at risk for diseases (such hlood lest. In the past, this was stanas hca&lt;t aIInck and stroke) caused by dard procedure: Why, With the epismall blood clots that frum on artcr- . demic of AIDS. doesn 't the health
iallinings roughened by ancriosclc- depanment require blood tests for a
rotic plaque.
marriage license'!
Many medical studies have ·
DEAR READER: You've hit a
shown, ro·r example. that low-dose sore topic for most physicians, many
aspirin 1hcrapy helps prevent a sec- of whom helievc thai premarital
ond heart auack or stroke in patients AIDS testing should be obligatory.
who have suffered these amictions. However. AIDS is to some extent a
As yet, the authorities have not rec- ''political" disease: Questions of
ommended aspirin for the average. privacy override public health con:
health y person.
cerns. I agree with you that premariUnfortunately. a.~ pi rin cari also tal AIDS testing should he maodatocause peptic ulcers. depending on ry.
!he dose.
lbcrcfore. as with any medicine:
Each stale makes up its own r.ulcs
patients and their do&lt;tors must bal- al&gt;oul marriage licensing. In most.
. ance the risks Vs. the hcncfilS Of premarital b)ood testing lilf syphilis
aspirin lhcrapy.
is still the law hut, to iny knowledge.
If you. have, never had a heart lio slate hcnhh department has had
auack or stroke. avoid aspirin:, The the courage tn tlcmand premarital
risk outweighs the bcnelit. If you\\:.:.AIDS tcstint!. Because nJ1ininn on
have had either o( these di sorders this issue is sn divided. I wekome
(but no ulcer). you should take low- comments -- huth r&gt;rn and con --·
dose a.~pirin daily. If yotl have had frotn readers.

CAFFEINE
FREE DIETCOKE, SPRITE,
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£QMe · jN 1\ ·~·g""'f"T\-E.
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'5-60 \,eNe.·t&gt;i!i:"TAN.~I MiNII"TI!i: F~ll Fe~ eNf YIA~-

By STEVE STERNBERG
that negative emotions can actually
,
trigger ischcJllia," said lead
USA TODAY
People with coron·ary artery dis - rcseard\er Elizaheth Gullcue of
case may suffer more than mental · Duke University Medical Center in
anguish when they arc angry, frus- Durham. N.C.. whose sludy appears
trated or sad;1thcir,coronary ancrics i~ Wednesday's Journal of lhc
may narrow. and limit the amount of American Medical Association.
blbod flowing to the heart, new
Doctors have long recognized
research shows:
that ischemi~ episoc!e&amp; can · occur
This · ~ondition , known liS durin&amp; rest or acti~ity. But their tim.
m;;ocardial ischemia. is one of the ing and d11111tion vary 10 much from
most scri'ous risk factors for life- person to person that researchers
threatening heart attacks.
wondered whether flcetina emotion!
" What surprised me was the al slates, among them an~iely, sad~er of the association and the fact . ness and anger. could be a factor.

•

~

.

"

Emotions may trigger narrowing of.
arteries in people with ·coronary disease

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Family
Medicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

Freshly ground chuck and
homemade buns make a superior
·burger, but you'll love the following recipes even if you don't go the
extra mile.
·
·
HAMBURGERS INSIDE OUT
I and one-half pounds ground beef
2 to 3 ounces. blue cheese, Gorgonzola or Roquefort
Vegetable oil
Good quality ~rench-style bread
4 tablespoons (or so) butter
Salt
Freshly ground black pepper .
one-fourth cup minced shallots
(I large)
•
I cup red wine
Form beef into 6 patties. Work .
your thumb into the center of each
burger, making a sizable hole. Fill
each hole with a crumbled slice oJ
cheese, close' it.up again, nattenin'g
the burger gently so the cheese
stays in a lump.
Heat I or 2 ·skillets with the
barest film of vegetable oil for
about a minute or two on mediumhigh heat. Cbok the burgers until
well-browned on both sides. nippin~ after 4 or 5 minutes and ·
adjusting the heat if you need to
keep the burgers from burning.
Cut the French bread on · the
diagonal to make long slices. (If the
bread diameter is small. you might
wan,t to use 2 slices for each burger.).Toast them on both sides to a
very light brown and lightly butter
them.
When ihe" burgers arc done,
place each one on top of a piece of
toast (either on a plate or serving
platter) . Drain . excess fat from the
pan, then add a tablespoon of butter, salt, pepper and shallots.·Cook
the shallots unti I soft. then b"uuer
and remove mixture from heat an·d
spoon over burgers.
Serves 6.
Nutritional analysis per serving:
1.164.9 calories; 57.7 grams total
fat: (22.8 grams saturated fai); 62.1
grams protein; 237.6 grams carbohydrates; 128 milligrams cholesterol; 3,117 milligrams sodium.
RANCHO BURGER
2 teaspoons ground coriander .
2 teaspoons freshly ground
black pepper ·
I tablespoon chili powder
2 teaspoons salt
3 tablespoons brown sugar
4 large cloves garlic
I and one-half pounds ground
beef
A little vegetable oil
I or 2 ripe avocados
I or 2 medium tomatoes
Combine coriander, pepper, chili
powder, salt and sugar in a small
bowl. Peel and mince garlic.
Forni beef into 6 patties. Sprln·
kle with garlic. pressing the garlic
into the pattie. "!'urn the patties over
and sprinkle with spice mixture.
using all the mixture. Put a little oil
in a skillet or two and heat over
medium heat about one minute.
Place the patties in it. spice .side
down; and cook over medium heat
about4 minutes . Tum the patty and
cook 4. minutes more.
Watch the panics us you cook
them. The heat should he high ·
enough to cook the meat. but you
don 't want to burn the spice mixture or the garlic.
Lower heat. ur llip the burgers

. .;. . . _,Community calendar~ The Commpnity Calendar is

FRIDAY
CHESTER .. Michael Vance ,
Columbus. speaker at revival ser-vices, Friday and Saturday. Harvest
Outreach Church, Riebel Road.
Chester, 7 p.m.
·
SATURDAY
LONG BOTTOM .. Free cloth·
ing day will be held at the Ha1.el
Community Church DeWitts Run
Road, 9 a.m. Saturday. .
RACINE
Racine/Southern
Alumni Banquet, Saturday. 6:30
p.m.. Southern High School in ·
Racine.Special musical · program to
follow. Tickets arc $1 0 at Racine
Home National Bank or by calling
Shirley Johnson at 843-5279.

• POMEROY -- Alzheimers discase and related disorders support SUNDAY
SYRACUSE .. · The Southern
group. I p.m. Thursday at the Meigs
: iilultiphasic Senior Ce11tcr. Rebecca High School . Class of 1977 will
lfl!nin music therapist to speak.
reunite Sunday, I p.m. ·at Carleton
. . .
School in Syracuse. All welcome, no
•
. :· TUPPERS PLAINS -- VFW reservations needed. Brin~ covered
9f153. Thursday. . 7:30 p.m . and dish.
r~reshments. 6:30p.m.
·
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NEW TASTES· Beef up the
beef wl1h new preperlltlonl'

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and condlmenta.The, top,
Hero, left, Alpineburger and
hamburger i111lde out put a
perl9fl81 flavor to your ordJ.
n1ry undwlch. Let.your talltl
, be your.gulde.
cl

·'
I and on·e-half pounds ground
beef
Dash cayenne pepper
3 to 4 ounces extra sharp Cheddar cheese (such as Vermont or
New.York State)
one-half cup Major Grey cllUlney (or chutney of choice)
Pickled jalapeno slices. to taste
In I or 2 wide skillets, cook
bacon over medium heal until crisp. ·
Form ground beef into 6 patties.
When the bacon has cooked.
remove it to an absorbent surface
(such as a paper towel). Place hambuigers in skillet and cook on one
side about 4 or 5 minutes. Flip the
burgers ~nd sprinkle them with a ·

.. f.

··,.

By SARAH FRITSCHNER'

the supermarket, and you might get a mixture of miscellaneous me.at trimmings mixed with the eom:.:t
proportion offat. The writers at Cook's SUiltlCSt buy.ing chuck roast and ask)ng your butcher lo '· grind it&gt;
or grinding it yourself (ea•y to do in a food prdccsJ,
sor as well as a meat grinder.)
If that sounds a little obsessive, consider Bernard
Clayton Jr.'s take on buns in· his "New Complc1e
Book of Breads" (Simon and Schuster, 1987):
"It is almost always pi&gt;ssiblc to buy good meat. It
is not always possible to buy good buns. But it. is
possible always to oake thc!fl yourself - and of
superior quality."

Louisville Courier-Journal

The news js full of "Burger Wars," as fast-food
franchises baitlc for adult taste buds.
..
But the hype can't obscure one simple fact: A
homemade burger tastes better than a fast-food burgcr. Better yet. you can make it truly your way ... with
jalapeno pcp(ll:r and horseradish or bacon and chutney or gar Ii~ and spice tubs.
·
Now, those are adult burgers.
The best burgers come from ground chuck.
according to taste-testers at Cook's Illustrated magazine. But buy something labeled ·•ground chuck" at

~··

•

EACH

.Jumbo Paper
Towels··

Frlto Lay
Potato ~hips

'

Lar.est Selection ol ~Uk M~morlal
Day·Flowers In the Ohio VaDey!

or

2/ 1.1

6 1/2" Pots$

Geraniums , t2ecenta

'()lin; i;~ ~/,;e; 11wn-. .·

·· . . . Each

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407 PEARL ST•
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
45760

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4 1/2"

I1NIDfJDD DOVBLE
COUPONS!
BVBJIT DAY UP TO SO'

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With Today's

.

IDAHO BAKERS
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1•'10#,8AG

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ROSES IN $ 2. 95,
$133 SNOWBl\LL . JEAcH .

Old Fa-s biofted

•

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.~- HEAD . 2/
.
99¢
SWEEt ONIONS 3'- ~ LE11'UCE
.
.

LARGEVADALIA
•

$244

.

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Bedding Plants
~:~~:"~ ." .· ,y\x&amp; $633.
ti: · .Ma~ch Flat

·2 99 · Perem)iaJ
Plants ,

. ··

.

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Scented

FREE

r---~

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'

$;~ch

Bu)' One Get One

.

Buncbft, Stone Marker, Ea~la, Crollel, Etc.

. $

Root
Beer

, 8 Oz.

99

•

Hanging -Baskets

Up24Pack

Mardi Gras

Pac;:k

.Farmers Bank Is ,Having A Reunion
Stop In On Friday, May 23rd ·
From 11:00 a.m. until3:00 p.m. ,
.For Cake and Punch·
See old friends and classmates

$£;99 .

&lt;I

One FREE 7-up or Mug Root Beer with ·
the purchase of a Mug Root Beer or 7•

A
mushrooms and cook over
3 ta lespoons buller
da,;h of cayenne. Cook 3 minutes
high ttcat, stirring constantly, 'until
2 medium onions
then top with slices of Cheddar
8 ounces· mushrooms. cleaned mushrooms have retluced in si'-"
cheese. Cook 2 t4 3 mindtes more, and sliced
and darkened, .about 3 minutes. Set
then remove to buns. Top with a lit·
I and one-hall' pounds ground · mushrooms aside. Form beef into 6
tie chutney, some· pieces of bacon beef
patties. Heat skillet over medium
(broken in half) and then with
heat fur I minute, then add patties,
3 ln 4 num::cs Gruyere cheese
remaining half of bun. Serve with
6 hamhurgcr huns
·
Flip the burgers after 4· or S miqpickled jalapeno slices. if desired.
Heat 2 tahlesptxm·s huller in .a utes. Check the interior of a burger
Serves 6.
wide sk.illet. Peel and slice onions wilh a paring khifc to sec if meat
Nutritiimal analysis per serving: and add to skillet. cooking over has lost its pinkness - continue
542.2 calories: .41.2 grams total fai: medium heat about IS minutes. or cooking until it docs. -Top the burg-·
(17.9 grams saturated fat);,26.9 until onion is reduced iol size and· crs wi(h grated Gruyere. cheese,
grams protein: II .O.grams carbohy- quite 'hrown. (Onion 'hrowns faster giving them another minute or two
drates ; 124 milligrams cholesterol: cooked in a cast-iron skillet.) in the skillet to soften the cheese
405 milligrams sodium .
Remove from skillet and set aside.
ALPINEBURGER
Continued on pail• 12 .
Add remaining buller Ill skillet.

'

7-UPOilMUG
BOOT BEER

WHOLE
WATERMELONS

Build a better burger: A blueprint for launching seas~n·s construction

~~~

CWf'/t~O/In/C?/ CX&amp;ml?/ dl tU!m~i; l

-..•
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·FRESH GROUND

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The Dally

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.,
Sentinel• P8ge 1L .

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to the coojer side. Check the iniCri·
or of the burgers to make sure the)'
bave lost their pinkness. If not,
cook a little-longer. Top with slices '
. of ripe avocado and a slice of tomato. Serve on.buns: Makes 6 burgers.
Nutritional analysis per serving:
500.8 calories; 41 .5 grams tollll fat;
(14.0 grams saturated fat); 20.9
grams prote'in; 13.1 grams carbohydrates; 96 milligrams cholesterol;
813 milligrams sodium.
BACON CHUTNEY BURGER '
(WITH CHf:ESE)
6 to 9 slices bacon

Louisville Courter..Journal

for

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· By SARAH. PRITSCHNI!R

:•Question: My sister is pregnant clearing vomit from their mouth and
atld expecting her first child. She is 'airway and, thus, may actually
v~ worried because of stories she's choke to !Ieath on their "spit-up."
s~n in the press about babies who
To minimize the risk of SIDS • .
dil while asleep in their cribs. Our babies should be put to bed on a firm
mbther used to tell us about her .. mattress. A mattress sbft enough that
b!S&gt;ther who died when he was 2 the baby's head can make an indenlftSlnths old. so I'm sure that this. tation on the surface can cause the
hClJps make my sister extra worried baby breathing problems. This cauabout this happening to her baby. t1on against soft surfaces holds true
What can I tell her to make her feel not only in the evening but also
IeZs worried?
when putting the baby down for a
Answer: The condition you nap. At nap time, be particularly
d&lt;:$cribe is called Sudden Infant careful not to lay the child on soft
D~ath Syndrome. -- or SIDS for
surfaces like bean bag chairs, or sofa
siJPrt. This terrible. condition is cur- pillows. Also, be sure to keep soft
reootly responsible for the death of pillows and stuffed animals out of
aoout 6,000 babies a year in the the child's 'Crib at all times.
United St.ates. It is the leading cause
Further. to help keep body tem- .
of. death
babies between two perature -within the normal range.
~ks and one year old and most
don't overdress the .infant. A good .
C\'DJ1monly strikes those between rule of thumb is to dress baby in the
twoo and four·months of age.
same amount of clothing that !llakes
~ SIDS is a mysteriqus condition. It you feel comfortable in · ihe sa111e
kills seemingly healthy babies with- temperature and humidity.
o~ warning, and often an autopsy
There are a few conditions that
c'-nnot conclusively unco,ver the · increase the risk of SIPS. Having a
cfisc of death . It is important to . previous 'baby who died of SIDS is a
remember that SIDS is a syndrome, risk; but having an aunt or uncle that
aAd like all syndromes, it is a collcc- did (as is the c~sc in your family)
tian of symptoms rather than a sin- doesn't. Premature birth and matergle specific disease.
·
nal smoking also increase the risk of
: Many experts feel that the posi- SIDS, as docs low birth weight
tion in which a baby sleeps might among full-term babies.
p!ay a role in some cases of SIDS. 'In
The usc of an apnea monitor. a
1992, the American Academy of device that signals if the baby has
Pediatrics suggested .that babies quit breathing for more. than a few
ullder the age of six months be seconds. can be successful in prepfaced on their sides or their backs at ·venting SIDS in children who arc at
~dtime, not dn their stomachs. This
risk. This treatment has a high price
simple change has resulted in · a .in terms or lost sleep and emotional
greater than 50 percent reduction in stress because of. frequent false
the fre~:~uency of SIDS deaths.
alarms. though. Fortunately, the
': Researchers aren't sure why plac- apnea monitor is usually only necesirig young babies to sleep on their sary for a few months and worth .the
st0111achs increases·the risk of SIDS. emotional wear and tear on the parb!!,l there are ·at least two plausible · ents. .
ti)J:ories. From the stomach-sleeping
"FamUy MediCine" Is a weekly
· position the .baby lias more trouble column.. To submit questions,
r.;ulating his or her body tempera- write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
ture, and ' it is felt that this may be a University College of Osteopathic
factor in some who died from SIDS. Medicine,
Grosvenor
Hall,
A1so, young' infants sleeping in this Athens, Ohio 45701.
pQsitimi may have more . trouble
.

-

· w•:nzlly, May 21, 1111

Get adventurous put a new
spin oh that old burger ·

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

. pllbllshed as a free service to non·
Ptoflt groups wlshin1 to announce
n:~,~eeting; and special events. The
C!J!Iendar is not desiped lo pronoote sales or fund raisers of any
tjpe. Items are prinled as space
.,Crmits and cannot be guannleed
tl run a specific number of days.
.· WEDNESDAY
. ::' POMEROY - Battle of BuffingtQn Island planning committee,
*dnesday, 5 p.m .. Meigs County
Museum.
•
thURSDAY
•• POMEROY -- Preceptor Beta
~ta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorori~. 6:30 p.m Thursday potluck picnit. home of Ruth Ann Rifne.

Wedn11dly,llly 21, 1117

Pomeroy • Mldclieport, Ohio

._. 10 • Thl Deity Sentinel

OPBNUSOURS

1 DA.ra A

1..,

· MEiGS FARM MARKET· MAIN ST~ POMEROY·

w:u.rcr ·
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�Pille 12 • The Dely S1ntlnel

Wednllday, Mer 21, 11117

Pomeroy • Mlddllport, Ohio

Burgers .. .________________________;
. Continued from .,.. 10
patties and place them in the skillets.
(cover the skillet with a lid if the · Salt and pepper them. Cook them
cbeese seems disinclined to melt). about four or five minutes on each
Serve burgers on buns topped with side, or until they are no longer pink.
nlushrooms and onions. Makes 6 in the middle (check by sticking a
paring knife into the center of one).
burgers.
Meanwhile, mix soUr cream,
Nutritional analysis per serving:
jalapeno
peppers and horseradish.
621.9 calories; 44.3 grams total fat;
Stir
together,
Toast English muffins.
(19.9 grams saturated fat); 29.4
Top
the
cut
side
of English muffin
grams protein; 25.5 gram~ carbohydrates; 133 milligrams cholesterol; halves with a little bit of onion mixture. Top with cnoked burgers, then
624 milligrams sodium.
sour cream mix•ure and finally with
the other-half of the English muffin.
HAMBURGER HERO
Serves
6.
Olive dressing:
one-half cup imponed black olives, Nutritional analysis per serving:
601 .0 calories; 39.9 grams touil fat;
p[tted and chopped
one-half cup green stuffed oliv~s.

(1~.4

grams saturated- fat); 24.9
grams protein; 34.9 grams cubohydrates; 105 milligrams cholesterol;
478 milligrams sodiwn..

....,,._e, ..... ....,..

10 coat all

over. Cover the bowl with
Warm lt over heat or in the plastic wrap and set in a warm place
microwave until the butter melts. until doubl¢ in bulk, a!x&gt;ut I and
Pour into a harp mixi., bowl and one-half hours (or overnight in the
let the mix~ cool slighdy. Add S refrigerator).
GOOD HAMBURGER BUNS · cups of flour and the yeast and stir
Grease a baking sheet. Punch
I and one-half cups milk
until a dough forms. Thrn the dough down the dough; then tum it out
4 tablespoons tiutter
onto a floured work surface ·and onto a iightly floured wll!l&lt; surface.
I tablespoon sugar
knead in the remaining flour, knead- Divide the dougll into 12 pieces.
I tablespoon salt . .
ing 3bout 10 minutes (the dough Shape each into a ball and place on
6 cups (unbleached) all-purpose . should he smooth .and elastic; if the baking sheet about 2 inches
flour
you're vsing bleached all-pufJIO!Ie . apan. Cover loosely with a kitchen
I package active dry yeast
flour, you may need more than 6 towel and allow them to rise about
I tablespoon com oil
cups).
·
.
· 30 minutes (or an hour if the dough
I egg
Shape the dough into a ball. Wipe has been chilled):
Combine milk, butter, susar and the bowl clean and grease it with oit
salt with I cup water in a saucepan Set the dough in the bowl and tum it
Heat oven to 450 degrees.

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

To_,....,.....,.....,
_ _ ..,_,.., ..7 . . ....
..

Beat eu with a tablespoon of
water. Use a pastry brush to glaze ·
the top of th buns with the eg mixtun:. Put the rolls in the oven and
immediately reduce thC ICI!Iperatlll'e
to 400 degrees. Bake until lilht
brown, :ZS minutes or so. When they . .
c'ome from the oven, brush them ·· .
)Vith melted 'butter or vegetable oil .
Cool on a wire rack. Makes 12 buns.
Nutritional analysis per bun: 302.?
calories; 7.0 grams total fat; (3.4
grams saturated fat); 8.4 grams protein; 50.6 grams carbohydrates; 32
milligrams cholesterol; 593 mil· ; ·
ligrams sodium.
·

'

ROOFING

·· NEW-REPAIR
Downapouta
Gutt.rCielnlng

949-2188

. isb

·
6 English muffins

To make t(]e jam: Heat oil in a wide
skillet over medium-high heat. Add
onion slices and cook until wilted
ahd browning - about 15 minutes
(they will lose their redness). Stir the
onions occasionally. Add Worcester·
shire sauce, soy sauce and sugar.
Reduce the heat to low and stir until
the onions are coated with a thick
dark brown syrup and look very
mcnancing. Set aside.
To make the burgers: Heat one or
two wide skillets over medium heat
for one minute. Form beef into 6

Tyson BoDy Fan11s
We Sell Money Orders
We Wire Money
Poatage Stamps
Film Developing
Pre-paid Phone Carda
Foodland Gift Certificates
Ca~ Cleaner Rentals
Columbia Gas Paymenta
Lottery Tickets
(except Buckeye)
AEP Electric

·Split.Chleken Breasts

PUIUC NOTICE

Tile Vlllq• of Pomeroy
daelr.. to receive
" bide tor paoli'"! pi'Oduete
unle8d8d plu• &lt;• octent)
• end 112 ~ luel for • one
r- period. All IHitd bide
ellill lie recelv8d In tile
' Clellt'• collloe, - ..........
• 8trMt. PltinMo,, Olllo on or
HfiiN 11:GO .AM EST J 2, 11t7. The Pomeroy
CouMII r111nee 1M rlgltt

•••led

Umft orie.wiUI acldllloMJ
. '
purclla18

•

'

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INSULATION

Fresh Lean . •

537 BRYAN PLACE .

MIDDLEPORT
1112-2112

Ground
.bR.,

2Uter

lii5=:~;~·

12 Packs
15 Oz.

$2.49

$

·Asst. Flavors

21'3

lee CreaJD

Orange Juice .

99

12 ,---,.

Mug Root Beer
~

·~

Gal.

.

Diet Rite
And

(jola

9-12 Oz.

Golden ·
Ripe

bH

.992·2825

~hiquita·

Meadow Gold
'IWbl Pops or
Fudge Bars
,.,....pleo
· l:lturs Drlak

12~21'3

$ 88·

39

. CONSTRUCTION

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Com~re
· FREE
ESTIMATEES
985-4473
7/22/lfn

1 Lb.

Pkg.

POR.,.._JIII SERVICE
POMEROY, OHIO

IACRAftOI
Limestone &amp; ~ravel ·
. Septic Systerris

Trailer.

anyonelnvohntdln
· st•llng a property
· line,._ 8tl t827
Cron st., Raolne,O

May 26th

.Chester Fire Dept
Annual Memorial
Oay BBQ

..

$f39

Chicken &amp; Rlbl, Homemade
. Ice C{eam.
Dinner $4.50
Chicken &amp; Alba only $4.00
Pie &amp; Cake doniliiOns

'lender• est
Meat WelDen

•
•

appreciated. Serving time ·
' 11.:30 Parlda at 1:30 meet at

'

••

Sayre Trucllng Co•.
814-742-2138

....,,_,
FREE ESTIMATES

D. O.a17'1

Founclatlona,

Driveways,
SldaWIIkl, Pltloa,

·

Qulllly Work at
a Fair Price!
•

Gu~ga1nd

550PsgaSt.

Baaemant Floori.

Middleport, Oh. 45780

Free Esttmstai.

SAYR~"C~~RETE

. ·HomaPh.

Don Oeaty, Owner

.

'

Everyone ~lcome to march

120z.

-

614-992-3120

school at 1:00 for IIIMIIIP.

'

~

BIG BEND

~eetlng Thur.

May 22 7
pm Dining 'Room Toplc"Physical Therapy" last
Chance to Bring Money ·
· tor Cedar Point Trip
. ($80 per J*8011) . .

f•
•'

•'•

·weooepl or Nfeot tnt or Ill

•'

SUPERMARKET

\

I

•• '
••

.
•

I

\;

mo.

RICK WILIER
PAINTING

Auto, TrUck, Reatdentlaf,

Commtreltf
Mlcldf,pDt1, OH.

GOODNITE'S
QUAUTY ROOFING
. 304 882-3541

Free Estimates
...,_

EasY Bonk Anancinl

Nr Condllonen 1161a1.1 12raIIIDIIIh

·GIFTED.
PSYCHICS!!
Snsatiollal Renlts

LIVE!!! .·

HARTWELL
· HOUSE

HIGI Pumps lnsli It· 138" amoillh
(lllrmtt - ""- ONeil)
· •l=ree
5 Year
Parts

Warranty

BEATING &amp; COOLING

eu ••• eua

~School Rd.,

AlB

·~

•Fnte Digital Thennoelat

Serving SoulhMIIIm OH a'IN

G

Gillllpolle; Oti

"*'·

Lfft.ktlllloyond Uncoln
ThrM Familr Glltllgo Salt: Sellr·

dar. Mty 2,, 8:00 To 5:00 727

Poma10y,

Mlddllporl .
&amp;VIclnHy
3 limiir

lumicu..,

and rots of misc., rain canc:els,
Seyroresldeni:o, 3rd St, Raclnt.

All Yard SliM Mull .Bo Pold fp
Advanao; Doadflno: 1:OOpm tho
dey before the ad 11 to run, . ~
Sunday a Mander e41tlon· ·,

Buckeye Caids
Open Daily 9·5 Sun 12·5

1:oopm Friday.

&lt;17dn

Foil• family, Thuroday, Mar 22.
400 Ruifand Scroac. Chlldren'o
dolhtl, houllhold, OIC.
Pl. Pleasant

2ND ANNUAL
TACK AUCTION

&amp; VlclnHy
•-family Garage &amp; 'lard Sate. 11

2mlle off Rt 2 on 87. Friday &amp; '..,
. S.NIIIBJ.
Yard Sale. Thur, Fri, Sar, Sun.
Lois antiques. Rt. 2 North 8
mllr&gt;t.

Public Sale
and Auction

80

"

lemlay·a·Aucdon ·Sorvlco, Loollo

Auetlonur:

Lemley, Aucllonear. HouMhold,
Eo1110, Form Saltt. Phono 814388-11«3.

Rhett Mlllloan

Riclc Paaraon Auclion Compan,.,
full time auctioneer, complete
auction
111vice. Ucenaed

Sunset He11e
Conttruatien

t6B,Ohlo &amp; Well Virel~ia, 304- •

713-5785 Or 304· 773-5447.

Wanted to Buy
AIIIDIUII Top Dollot: All O.S. Sll·
ver And Gold Coins, Proofsels,
Dllmondo, Anclquo Jowt~y. Gold
Ringo, Pr•1930 U.S. Currency,
Slt&lt;llng, Ecc..Acqullidotll J-~y
. II.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue. Gaillpoilo, ~.14~21142.
90

New Construction &amp;
·

KHchan Cabinets
VInyl Siding - RoofS

Decks • Garages
Free Estlmstes

AntlquH, furniture, gl111, ,chini.
coins, loys, lamps, guna, tools,

614-742-3411 .

eatat••: also appralaall, Osby

1/1/171- pd.

Martin; ~1H92-7441.

Antiques, top prices paid, Riwi"·
lne Antiques. Pomero~. Ohio,

Ruu Moore owner, 814·ii2·
2521l.

,.

,
-

Bu~l(1g Standing Pine, 1 Acire

Trae1 Or urger, e,.-25H031.

Clean Late Model Cars Or
Truckl, 1080 Models Or Newer, '' 1
. Smith Buick Pontiac, 1DOO Easr-' . r:
omAverut,Ga~lis.

-----~--1 J

Peraanall

. 005

yard uta, Friday a Salur·

dar. QOod ciolhlng, -

-cannas $2.00 ea.
•Shrubbery
We honor Golden

ANNOUN CE MENTS

,

McCormick Rood.

ears $5.50

SAVESHPS!
Shop the
'
Want Ads

.

Stlurday, 5/2,, 8·5. AI: 3043
Staca Routt t41,.Firal Hou• On

• All vegetable &amp; bedding
plants $6.50 flal
• Blooming &amp; Foliage
Baskets $5.75· $6.75
-4 ln. Assort. Pots
85¢· $1.25
•Rubber trees &amp; elephant

· Sit, June 7, 1997
6 P.M. .
Meigs Co.
Fairground• ·
Span110red lly
Melgl Co. 4-H Horl8
Commlttae
For more InfO call Ptm
11115 4489 or UN Me-2052

, Cancel if Rlin.

Dt.TESNDWIII

a D'o Auto Parco. Burlng oal·

vaga vehicles. Soling pa-11. 304- ' .
773-~

.

1·1100-77jH54fllll21178
Wanted co bur ustd Mobile
· t2.1M11nin 18+ ·
Home, call 8,.·«8·0115 or 30&lt;·
SlfV.U-81fHols.tl434
875-69115
=~:-:-::--:::--:-:::-:-":""I
FEMALES..Mill Wool 'tlrginia Wanied To Bur: Sttnding Timbor

Teen USA Pageant search far Or Vacenl Property With Timber,

canttatanta. Information write : 614·388-9908.

Hudquotton, Dept 10, .:..:..:..:..:..:...:..:.....:..:..:._,.---.,3-47 Loculi ,...,...,, WalhlngiDn, 1'/anltd· Gland Mlddloptilt
PA 15301 . DEADLINE JUNE brlcl1; coll614-522-65t7c:ollocl
.;.1ollh;,;_.- - - - - -·--1 1'/antod: Ulld Hot-d Flooring
REDUCE: LoH weight while rou In Good Condition, Call814-245oloop. Takt OPAl ttbleto and 5887.
Tr~Sittt

Yap Dlurelic available at Fruth

13.•

1. . . .11 1117 1311

••

1(11(1

per min.
Mutt be 18 yra.
Serv·U (818) 141 8434

•

•

A good painl job on
any doudy day,
make• it seem ·
· briKf•ler.
Interior
Before 6 p.m.
laava.maseage.
Arter&amp; p.m.
614-985-4180

Ext. 1412

tosetup.

PVH ·Medical
Explorer

LINDA'S
PAINTING

1-900-(414)-1 020

In paractt. Also there will be a
Flea Market/Cratt Fair for

EASTMAN'S

Friday, Monday odl!lon

-to:oo a.m. Slllllday.
$92-m&amp; · Fr.:,-:2; Mar 23rd, 8;4, 8t5 lt·

Remodeling · .

.'
814-742·2707
Racine OH 814--21111

COIICIETE
SlniCES

SERVICES

.

HouaaSitae • ·
Rellaonsble Rate•
JoeN.Sayre

I.D. Caller!
' Contact• Ron Mll.l er
"1-4025

'•

'

BIULIIIt

conviction of

985-4422
10125196111n

Aeration Motor oSales.&amp; Repllra
. . Cleaning s.ptlc Syetams
Port-A~ohn • Rentals • Serviced Weakly
No Extra Ch•rge for Evenlnge.or Waakanda ..
24 Hr. Prompt Service
7 Qays A

,000 RIWARDII

Umestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
Chester, Ohio

614·992·7119

•t

.. Paid In-'-"'·

Seo.on
• Pansies $6.50 flat

.·. SERVICE

ludlnttothe
. ......stlllld

•

..... .

)

For Information

·l.l'

I

'

1(1111 MO.

R.l. HOllON
TRUCKING

ROBERT BISSELL

' ,'

· Dr. Pepper
LiptonTea

Kahn's
Meat

Bananas

12 Pae~ut

(;oo"-es

.

... ...,.y_
....,.

-

~-::::=====.====~?===========~:-~·~Avalon Water 111ter ._

. $189

.. ..

m/TPII

742·2925 .

....'299

1/2

Arehway

.. '

··614·992-5479

. •Small Engines
·•Lawn Mowers
•Chain Saws
•WHd Eaters
2 mi. oft At 1

Leading Creak Hd.

.In Loving
Memory of Edith
E. ·King, Sunday,
May 18. It has
beeh five years
since you
'passed away.
Sadly missed by
your Family.

.·

Anterlean
Singles

Foodland

YourCholee
IJnltetl Valley Bell

992·7074
Gravel, Umastona,
Topeoll, Fill Dirt,
Sand. No Mlnlnum.

lllaeli Dealer

"lMiddleporf,

1iDd.UUL·
JDft CAid•·

DUMP TRUCK

79

All·Storas

INGELS

· cE~LULARONE'

ViarletiN

Herr's Potato
Chips

Ohio Valley &amp;
BuckeJ•

•·

•.m.-3:30 p.m.

Beef

toea tola

.

'

• Ohio Valley Bank
"Superbank" Servlcas
• Greeting Cards
• Floral Sales
• We accept credit cards

. PUBLIC NOTICE
The •nnual report Form
110 PF for the Kibble

P\lbllc Notice

. 1-

&amp;J.Vonl--

Now Open For Spring

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE BRIBILS
113 W. 2ND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
20 V111.
·Ina. Owner: Ronnie Jol1ft

1

.

PEAr! 'Hi~ 1:00 p.m.
tile day liiloN the ...

Syracuse,

3600 Communications

(614) 367-0266
1-800-950-3359

lng, Mile. -

llsll.ds GratiiiHivse

(No Sunday Calls)

"

' Galllpolll, Ohio 45631

Allo~Worlt

Ea.

Fax: 304-n3-5861

ty Clothea Uen. Womtns Clolh-

IIIIo ""'· 8unday

CELLULAR PHONES

' (FREE ESTIMATES) ·

. Public Notice .

publication of thle natloe.
(5) 12, 13, 14, 11, 11, 11, 11,.
20, 21, 22, 23, 21121C

Phone: 614:992-2406

Acld.u- ·

POmeroy, Otllo

·

~. 2:110 ......

614-992-7643 ·

250 Condor Street
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
.
A Division on Nichols Metal, INc:

Extarl« .

'

St.,PIPituMIWV25510.'

992-5583

Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Machine &amp; Welding Shop

oPIIntlllfl

R~
Foundetlon Bern•rd V.
Fultz, Trualell, te •vellable
for public ln•peotiOII -'
Bernarll v. Fultz Law Office, ·
111 112 w. second Street,•
Pome!OY, OhiO 45718,
during reguiar llueln•aa
houre for • pertod ol 110
d•Y• eullaaqutnt to

Bi9 B8nd .f abriCGlion,·

SERYIQ

V.C. YOUNG Ill
11112-1215 .

1!!!U
,.._

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding'

·Garagea • Re-placement Windows

YOUNG'S

Soft Drinks
Bob Evans Italian or Tabasco Linke and
Bratwurst '2.69 Lb.

$

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

614-992-3470
81
'"

Found

-·

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

R8dlator Replir." ReplacemeDt

Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Tap Soli, Fill Dirt

24Paek

/

·Good only at

WICKS
HAULING

Rocky Top

n

Fovncl- young lomite Dobarmon.
in· Pomeroy, Oh'10
Loe~CIMII Ad...., o1 .. 742·
Rents are computed according to your
23lt ~pm
income. Lovely apartments featuring
~~:""Colt Tolcjandfr,
.
W8ll~tO-Wall Carpeting, With a!l
Found: Black Dog largo ltb
appliances.
Trpe, Vory Frlondty, 114-441· ALL PRIMARY UTILITIES PAID
FOUND: ,.,., doOppod ac 1 yard
Must be 62 years of age or handicapped.
,... In PI -during March.
.
t
lid name, pllont number a d•
. 'b'.1.
I
HUD
Must meet
e rgt 1rty requ1remen s
. ocrli&gt;!lon of ""'-""' 10 Box G-20,
~. For-further details call today ~. ·'lfoPl Plteunc Rtglller, 200 lltin

~

B·ISSELL BUILDERS,·

LowR1t11)

99c AND UP

Remod1llng

Lott

.__. .1•614•992•7022
Found: rod ltno for WllllghcoH
a._.;:"'::;;;"';...-------....o"';;;;
...
-.;,•;;;--------"'"'boat
. 88Ml28. trailer, call tD 10. 81··
(614) 446-4759
Milling: Saine Barnerd Since
17111, May Be In Cilll&lt; Ctwp.
RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE ofMtyRoad.
Vlcinlcr Or Rout• 110
"BuiU rour DNam"
. • Top • Trim • Removal
Aru R-rrll Plt..o Ctll 814· .
-t3e3, Or 11448-1473.
• Stump Grinding
Industrial • Automotive
JotWIIeon
tlllll
Martin
Strut
20 Y11. Elcp. • 1... Owner: Rick Johnoon
70
Yll'd S.la
. (814) 892-4277
Pomeroy, Ohio 45718
· l'.law Radiators • Re-Cores
Free E.aimi.ue,
AJC Condensers/Hose A•semblles
GallipoliS
&amp; VIcinity
New Location: 2 mll11 off At 7 on At 124
~-----------------------;-1~--------------------~~r
Complete Mrilne shop Senice Fabrication
INC·~
~. 5122, &lt;121 M- - · 11-2,
Steel Salel, WehHDJ Sllflll!l-, Industrial Gas
8tbJ Cfolhtl. F..-nil.l.._ lltltrni· '·

(LimtSton ..

~

25210

Not .... Flnlnclll

worked on, muat pia u,. eu-

eo

:........

614-742-3090
614-742-3324 '
614
. ·742-301r6

FLOWER SPRAYS
.

U.l• ... ...st... CI»PJa

81

:3351 Happy Hollow Road
Mkllle!l ort, Ohio '45710
New Homee, Addltlona,
Roollng, Siding, Pole ·
Barna, Declca, Palnllng, .v
~
Ongee, PQIChee.

.'

Wide Variety
of Wreaths

Ohio

WVfOD477

=·:=.:r.-:'.:=
-:Mo1.

THE MAPLES

Rt. 1, Box 44-C
llaon,WV

Custom Homea

,. Qolllll FGrAFtw Ed iiolw

FOODLAND

..

••••tsr•n••••••

-:::::::;:;;::~:;;;;;;;::::;;;;;;;;;;;:;,

EASTMAN'S

News policy
In an effort to provide our reader,
ship with current news. the Sunday
Times-Sentinel will not accept weddings after 60 days from the date of,
the event. ·
Weddings submiued after the 60day deadline will appear during the
week in The Daily Sentinel and the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
All club meetings and other news
anicles in the society section inust
be submitted within 60 days of
occurrence.
All birthdays must be submitted
withi'n 60 days of the occurrence.
All material submitted for publication is subject to editing.

110 Court S1.

--

Consider:

FAMILY DENTISTRY
304-773-5822

PBI£ES"
Quality .Window Systems

P8lntlng
: ~E ESTIMATES

In The Poor Hou•1

......., .. B.......,D.D.I.

"FAentRY
DIBECI'

Outlarl

olives, capers, oregano, garlic and

COOL AND SPICY BURGER
WITH SWEET ONION JAM
Onion jam:
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
.: 2 medium red onions, sliced
I tablespoon Worcestershire
'
sauce.
2 teaspoons soy sauce
2 teaspoons brown sugar
B11rgers:
•
I and one-half pounds ground beef
Salt and pepper
·
one-half cup sour cream
t or 2 pickled jalapeno peppers.
·
minced
· I tablespoon prepared horserad-

• \'2AR81118USif ....

:.;._,.,u ... •~eno~~r. ,,.,..

Will Y.our Utllltle• Put You

~ IISOIIEITIL CARE

SOUDVINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

··llo•n L Will nl·

Burger:
I and one-half pounds ground beef
3 to 4 ounces Provolone cheese,
thinly sliced
·
6 hamburger buns
In a medium bowl .. combine
red onion. Set aside.
I
Heat ·1 or 2 wide skill&amp;s over
medium heat for I minute. Fonn
beef into 6 patties and place in the
skillet(s). ·Cook about 4 or 5 minutes. Flip· the burgers and cook 3
additional minutes. Lay a slice of
Provolone cheese on the top of each
burger and cook 2 minutes more,
covering the skillets if necessary to
encourage the cheese to melt. ·Place
burgers on buns and top with olive
dressing.
Serves 6.
Nutritional analysis per serving: '
576.0 calories; 39.8 grams total fat;
(16.3 grams saturated fat); 27.9
grams .protein; 25.4 grams carbohydrates; 109 milligrams cholesterol;
692 milligrams sodium.

01\1124

1311.

or a microwave-safe container.

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

· I tablespoon capers
chopped
1 teaspoon dried oregano
4 large cloves garlic, minced
one-half cup minced red onion.'
more or less

40

·-~

101l!.,lllaln. Pomaloy

--Tell

Ptwur!ICJ
TAKE ctWIQE OF
'lOUR UFE NDWI

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

C.trlno Poychlca Will Anowlir
Your Ou11Uons About love~ --:-::---:-:--:-::-:-:---:-..._
llonay, Succooo, Hoetlht 1-QOO· 110 Help Wanted 1
5112·t000 6111. 1722, $3.9U Per
llln.lluol Be II VrL St&lt;v·U 8111- AVON I All Aroal I Shirley
045·8434, TouchiOna Required, Speoro.30o-875-142U. ·
24 Hro. 17 f)ayL
==~.::....----1 Able Avon Repreunrati"MI
40
Giveaway
notdt&lt;l. Earn money lor Chrlol·
~::-~-::-::'~~~::":"1· nw.1 bib • horla'at WOtk. 1·1002 ~l11tn1 To Good Homes, 114· 992·8358 or 304·882·284$, Ind.
~~.
.
7~~-:-:--:-:~~~--~
2 Whilt ~lntno To Good Home, AVON S8 ·•18 rHr. No -Door -To
.11,:.;,4-~44:.;,l~:..•:.;;o7:.;,.~-:-::-:-::--I ·Door, Quick Ceohl ·eo,...... 1·
1100-827-4140 lndiSIIAlop.
30x25 Houoe Nood1 To Be Torn :-·---:--::--::--:-:-::--:Down, 014-«&amp;-11128.
·
Computer Uooro Ntodtd. Work ,
own houri. $20k to UOktyr l· ' . ,,
5 Gray ~lttenl, I W.. kt Old, 800-348-71MJ150l
-•1:.:.""=-~~~~~~·~~~~~1
.,.
..
CoiiMIOiotilll -Full And l'
Grwt a 011nge Kllltn Bob Tallod, Part·Time Gutrtnltod Waitt, . '
114 ue 3841
· PaidYacedoni,Gt4-4441-7a87.
l
HouM to tear clown I ;...-.ovt.

2112UncolnM.311U"/5o1385.

l l o i i _ M r _ - Mutl

~-----:-'7::':':'"':":""-:l bot lyra. old. Apply ••
! In
WV:

KIUtnl, 114·441-4737 Afttr
P.ll.

r•ldatoor,

c.........

·

Elm •1 ,ooo _ , Scufllntt En-

•

Allor 4 P.M.

Experience. Frot SufiiiiM. tn111.

,,

;~ito,

V•rr Cute, 114-441· ........ At Home. ltan- No

.;.;,;,..;.........~--~-:-I ·N• Ololltetlon. hrMilWE Ti:
Sdlotf IIIII • fllw- ""lui*- ACE, Oopt: 1911, Boa lt17. Dil304-1171-«)7t.

lllllldS.., CAil711.

I

•'

�Wtdnllirzy,-..., 21, 1111

.

Pomeroy • Mlddlepot'., Ohio

•

The o.lly Sentinel • Page 15

••

N:IA Croaaword Pu:hle
PHJI,I,JP

ALDER

1 Acu..
,

II r

taaalhw

1311jla •

e..-1enc1d Aootlra &amp; Carpent-

er~ 3 Years E•perl.nce. Wuat

Have Hand Toolo I Tra-1&amp;lion, Cal lllklllorcum eu-245~7.

HOllE TYPII'IS,

P¢ uoori noedod. $45,000 In·
come paten~lll . Call 1·800·513434:1 Ell!. B-SI3B8.

Alrail-te~ln
ttllnt t;wpo•ii~ID
.,.F-.JFar-.u Ar1.
01 lee&amp; which mtktt Mlogal

..-liooo
-"any,..._
....
or dloeolioolnlition

AI UtwOry
(Galllpallo) naoded
to oholve
booko and maintain ohllvoo: 8
· lVI. per ftok atS4.75 an hour.
All agoo can apply at clrulation
dook. Evening and -ktnd
hours,....ncl
Ublaly -

lED. mENTAL SALES
.!100 4.2,000Pront From lntroe To Providers

'lbu JW. No Riok Ho Coot. Sovt

Your Provld~r Contact Big U .
llodlcol Solita Exp. Roq. 8DD-2;7-

28n.

HIED fiii"IAUC"IORS

Accoun~

- o n race, COlOr. ratlgiOn,
•fwnllll-ornaortgln. or any ~.., ottoo oto
maka any auc11 prtleranco,

•• n r&gt;•or illtill••t~~~~o~L·
Thio _.,., wll nol

.

kliOOIIolfh.....,.

-I
-II"
n"
-111111-te
olthtlaw.

Our--~
lnlonMd lhlt II du:albtg~

--lnthilntMPII,.
.,. ...-on on oquol
oppotiUnllybtllll

Econonjcs, Bu•nesa

Management. Social Science,
Send Reaume To: P. 0. Box 542,

Kort. OH~

- Taking Appllcationt At Domlno'o Pl•n In tho Gallipolla and

""'-Anon""" lor: Drtwn.

Overbrook Conltr, 333 Paoo
StrML lllddloport hao pert Umt
RN pooltlono available lor all
ohllto. txporioncl prtllfrod. Hln..,ootod piuu como In and fill
..,. an llll)licotlon. no ~ cal'
pltut.

Plrt-Timo l'lloltion Avolflbie Now.
Sowing Knowltclgo Required, Ap.
PlY In Ptraon At: JoAnn Fabric•
iiid Crafll: SIIYtr Brldgo Pt.1a,

OllifF I?

~unt

Valley Hospital 11 look-

Ing lor PorHimt Ptr Diem Clrdio-

R,aplratory Technicians .. Must
haYI Acute care and lono term

care e~rperlance. Must have WV
Uc•n•• and abl• to work all
lhlfts. Send rHUme to SUe Hua-

1" ' Salwa,baths,
14i70, """ badfront porch,
baclt - . hoet pump. outbulld·
ilp, t i J - can·bt _ , M18
Anno SIIML 120,000, call114·
room a, IWO

Homes for
1892 madutar name on parma·
nent foundation on 112acrt lot in

GaiHpoill Forry. HHt pump, 3br,
2 full batho, DR, front I back
porchoa, oiDrogo building. 304·
875-28-44 -"llar• 8-5.
1HI Modular homo In Rolling
Acr11 sub division, priced.· to

aoll . Call Wotoon Really. 304·
875-3433.
2 Bedroomo, 2 Balh HOUIO, On
18 Acrea·loc:ated At Sowarda
Ridge Road, CIOMI City, Avoilablo

To lluy Juno Ill, lnqulrlea Call
81~·258-15511.

3 Bedroom 'house In New Haven,

canrral air, partial basement.
Prlcod 1a sam 304-882·3772. ·

7511-45114.

IDD4 Clayton 18X80, 3 BR, 2
Bathl, 123.500.00 (114)·317·
1251 A..,S: pm.artt'ullendl.

·

-IH7 14 - · bath, MIIW'
down, $ 13gtmo. wllh approvod
ttadlt.Ctii1-8IJO.ellr-em.

2 Badrvom Trailer Far Ron~ loSporting
cated on 588, Baloro 5 P,ll. 114- 520
245'5822, Ahlr s. 814-245-58110.
Goods
2 Bedroom, toral electric. ,...,. .Rulli' GPIOO .358 magnum wllh
tnet roquirod, Sondhill Rd. 304· Blmmono 4aS2 acope and tldt
175-31134.
klclt - - hollltr 1500. 304-

1DD7 uxao 3 or 4 Bodr..,m,
$1,39 down. $22D/mo. FrH lllr,
oldrdng. &amp; dellvory. Only ar Oak·
Homea Nitro. wv. 304-75558115.

...

19D7 doublowldt SI405 down,
Smtmo. Froo delivery I tttup.

3 - . _ 2 Ful Ba"" I'Wtiaily Furnlthtcl, N.,. Furniture, Lot
Provided, $300/llo., 814·245·

1-1-em.

Ill Tl!(ll Buyoro E11y Financing
2 a 3 Bodrooma Around 1200/
llo., FrM Delivery &amp; Sot-Up, Coil
1-800-251·5070..
Bank Rtpo'o Dolitol-'o I SingloWidt"l ftH ll&lt;lllvory I Sot·UP,
Coil The Finance Llno, 1·800·
251-!1070.
Buy In llayl No poymanta till Au·
gioat of D7. FrH Dalivory 1 Sot·
up. w . . - Homta 1·800-251·
5070.

440

or

In di saster relief tunds

IVIiilllobla to "halp you purchau a
replacement home. Call 1·800·
4&amp;&amp;··7871 to sat appointment for

dollils.

.
only ·

DOWN
1 Dl•ry DI - -

H9uMWHe

32ifl...._

2 Nerrow $)11111

34 - ••• herll
3&amp; NYC'o - st.llo

3 Short·

IIID$)11red

I In regttrd to

4 Aelln color
5 lland (OIOCIII)
llndiNIIFM"*"(2wda.)
7 R•n Into

e Actor Bruc.

Opening lead: • 6

NOW rM LOOKIN' AT 1 YeARS

BAD
LUCK
II

.

Cashin
on the slip
Wednesday, May 21 , 1997

By Phillip Alder ,
· Declarer makes a slip in this deal .
So, I searched for a quotation featuring that word. The result was this
observation by Virginia Woolf: " One
has to secrete a jelly in which to slip·
. quotations down people 's throats,
and one always. secretes.too much jelly.',' Some days one cannot win! .
The qeal features ~ good defense
by Amir Levin. He was playing with
Eran Mennelstein during the Swiss
by Luis Campos
Celebrlly ~ rc:rypiOQI'Imllrt CfNttd hom quatltionl by lwnous peop.. put and pr.wtt
Teams at the 31st Israeli Festival, .
E.c:h lenef In the ci11t* standi tor aoother. Toelty'l cru.: T aquila 8
held in Tel Aviv last February.
·
North's two-heart cue-bid showed
MP
I 0 L G
DC L
PBJWUBWJF
' B V F
a strong hand : usually at leaSI 12
high-card points. (I prefer a forcing
BVF
V D N
DC
'a V F
PIDJG
LONLGP
tWo spades, yet this partnership plays
the bid as invitational but non-forcBD . JDDPB .'
VDEF
UL£F
TMJSP
ing.) East's two no-trump is called
" good-bad." It announced the·desire
'·"L J I V W J
E M0 0 F J .
.to
continue
bidding,
but
with
distri·
PREVIOUS
SOLUTION:
"When a CC!Uple Iovas and, chari~has each other;
r
.,
-..
butional
rather
than
high-card
values
.
.
every
day
Is
ThankSglvin~
and every night is New Year s Eve. - Dear Abby.
WI-lY Corel rr '££M. UK£ €.'8-.Y
If East had bid an immediate three
1"111\E L
f-1.\DE.·~D-SEfK.,
diamonds, it would have promised a
~ &lt;»~€". -m£~ "ID FI~D Me. ~
stronger hand. Perhaps South should
. have passed now." This would have
led to North's ·declaring four spades,
WOlD
TMAT DAILY
GAMt
an impregnable contract
PUIILII
- - - - - - - - E41iod ~y CLAY." I . POLlAN
True;four spades by South IO!lks
ironclad too, but declarer made a
Reorrange letters of the
careless·slip and was rnade to pay for
foVr scrambled wo rds be·
low to form four simple words
it. West led the heart six, third-high·
. est by. partnership agreement. If
BRES
declarer plays the 10 from the dum·
my, everything is all right. With a
favonible location of the .t rump king, ·
South"has 10 black-suit tricks.
SCESH
However, South called for dutn· ·
'
my's heart king. Levin didn't miss his
chance. A.fter winning with the ace,
he returned a low heart to West's jack.
r
D_A__
A diamond switch gave the defend-··
·
.
Sign posted in my psychia - .
ers the first four tricks.
5
.
1
I" I
I
· trist office: "Ev'ery Day Gives
~~=~~~=~.., You a Chance To Make Ne.w

CELEBRITY CIPHER

"*

..

. .

..
•'

·.
'•

AA'(

S©\\.Jt\1A..;. L&amp; £tr~~~

I

I

IP Ft Craatlinor Cull)' Cabin, 4 ,
Cyllndor llercery Cru)11r, Alum~ •
nurn. lots 01 Accessories, Good ~
·Ltko
Erie BooL •$3,000 Firm. 814-· •
A Nood A ca;? No Credit, Bad 388 9885
' ••
Credi~ Bankrull(l:r? Wa Can Help
Ro-Eatablilh Crodllllluat Make 1984 14ft. bass tracker ,boat wltlf --:·
$150 Wo•k Tako Homo, 15~ 15hp Evlnrude motor a'nd trailer. r
, ;:;~~oii. on . C11h Or Trade To :'~~-~~..:..;.~==-3~~:.:·~
· --~----i~
•'
Far Tltlo Bonk Finll1Cing.
No Credit Turn Downal114·441· 1991 18 Fl. , Stralos 01111 Boat"' :
0607.
.
With Tnlilor .70 HP Jolorioon I I - ·
tor 12/24 von TraH Motor RoadY·' I
Aum·Loano: Auto Otlllor WIII .Ar· To Flahl 17;000, 30H75· 6~22;:J
rengo Financing Evan II You Lel\l8 Meuaoa.
-.
.
11
Have BHn Turned Down Baloro.
Loono Avolollablo For No Credil, 1n. Marada. 18 Foot Open Bow;;-"
Bad Credit And Banltrup!Oy Buy- wiSun Deck, 4.3 Liter VI, Mer...:..~
crulltf, Am Fm cauena, and Ski -t
oro, Cal Olano 814-448-8172.
Acooaaory.814-258-e3D3
.....
CARS FOR SIOOI Trucko, boata:
•·whteierl, motor homes, turnlw 760
Alito Parts f. . ~
ture, electronics, computtrs •tc.
Accessories
/ 1
toy FBI, IRS, DEA. Available your
araa now~ Call 1 ~800·513·43"3 Budqet Prlu Transmlaaions .. - .
Ext 5-9388
Starang at m.oo and Up. IJuil 1 "'!
All Types, Ovor 10,000' ~(
Credit Pnlblomo? Gaurantotcl Fl· Rebuilt,
Tr1anami11iona,
Acce11 Tranafer f
nanclng, 10% Down, P1yment1
I Rear Ends, 114·2.t&amp;-.:., 1
As Low~~ SilO Ptr Month. No C11ea
sen · ~· -~. , j ,
Turn Do"""l Call Ruth 814-448·
2897.
New gas tanks, 1 ton · truck ' -" ~I'
Wheetl a radiatora. D &amp;, R A.u.to.. t;·
SEIZED CARS From 1175. Ripley, WV. 304·372·3933 or I· · '
Porsch11, Cadilloca, Chevye, 1100-27.1-9329.
. .
. ~
BlotW"o, .Corvettao. ~loo Joopa, 4
WD's, You.r Arao. Toll -Frat I· 790
campers &amp;
; :~
800·218-0000 Ext. A-2814 For
Motor
Homes
·
f~
currare LJatlnos.
Upton Uiod Cart Rt. 12·3 Milot 1967 sa· Sierra Camper and :
South ol
Flnonclng IDB2 Ch..roltt Suburban Cat11&gt;- ~
tr S$M!Cial, all !look upa, both In •I
txctltent condiUon, $12,500, &lt;Ill:;!
114-992-4000. .
.
.
'
Montana; 21 It, loa&lt;fo. ~ ,...
-.-· _.,_._ oix, full bath{ quooO
bod, loll ol otoragt, . ••
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TI-l AT'S,INTERESTING, SIR ..
I WEARD ANOTJ.IER RUMOR
THE MOON IS 601N6
OUT OF THE SKI{..

_M_O__

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k'"I7,.·. .,~,: C_Y;. I

=r:I 6~S:. ·.r~....J~ ~-~o-m~;.~~ •ohe chuckle quooed

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by f, lling in the missi ng words
you dev elop from step No . 3 below.

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A PRINT NUMBERED
~ LETTERS IN SQUARES

1

, 1M HAN61N6
.·.... UP, MARCIE ...

·

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I 112111rJ-wWillwwllod-

Nlco SOla lllatctin;t
114-318-e141.

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ThrM ploce LR. .,lfe with I r•
cNners, 111 monilia old, coat
13100, 111 t11100, eu 11112 • •·

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ANSWER

,

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Forage · Ch ick • Flint · Dorsal -. LOOKING
.
One long time dieler to another, I c~n rests! temptation as long as someone is LOOKING .

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your eyes open today fo~. an unusual
involved
. more efficiently
shift in conditions and circumstances . you'll
. Plus.- t~e, penpheral
that·Can open the door tO attractive l benefits or.keeping busy is a J10Sitive
1
· .opPortunity for your career.
·• . ~ mind:set.
.,
:_ CA!'RICO,R N (Dec ...22-Jan. 19)
· LEo (July 2~-Aug . 22)As a rule,
our first thOughts are always belt and · Plan some extra time to sh\)p around
brightest, but today this might not be today -for items .you intend to P~f·
,. ..
uuc ill your case. Have -faith in your . chase for your household. Bargams
· new ideas. ·
do exist, so keep your eyes open.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) A ·
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
· condition that has been impeding Take the initiative today if you ·.are
your work progress might suddenly dissatisfied with tlie pace of your coMay 22,
change for the better today. Now you workers. They will be less lethargtc
GEMINI (May 21 -June20)1t w~n··. can add a new dimension to your pro- when you stan speeding things up.
· benefit you today . lo associate with ' ductivity.
.
,
PISCES . (Feb; . 20-Mar_c h 20)
people who llimulate your e.x~ta- ., . · J.,mRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Innate· Unusual opportuntbes cou)d develop
tions and your thinkiRJ. Con~live.· . ly you'll be_ able to ~~die yourself . f?r·. ~ou IOdaY in tenns ~f your mateideas and suaaestions wtU be . , qwte well tn colnpe.utive de,el\'1" naltnteres~. How~~~r, you ,must be
ei(Chlnged through conversations ,-· · ments ~y, .whether ';heY be soctal, .• _pereepov~ m recpgmzmg ';he•r worth.
Know where 10 lcioi fori'OI1UIIIC&amp; lnd commercial or romantiC.
· ARIES (March 21·Aptd I~) &lt;¥all
· you'll find it. The Aatro-Oraph
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) ofyourendcavors today, you re hlw
Matclunalter instllltly n~v..ts whic:l\ Today you miaht be suddenly ly to be the luckiest with your newest,
aians 1111 romantically perfect for
inapired 10 make .IOJilC unusual dec• )t¢sheit interests. Give them priority.
yDU. Mail $2.75 10 MllcluMicer, do ortlliYC chlnps in your liviD&amp; SpiCe. · ·1 TAURUS (April 20-May 20) A .
this neWiplper. P,O . Box 17~8.Mur· . The end ~e~ult will haw a plcui11g ·. ~ret ambition you'~ .~n nurturray Hill Staticm. New Yodt, NY . effect.
.
titg 'has stronJ probabthbes for suc10156.
·
· SAOI1TARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 'cess todaY· This is the time to make
'·· CANCER(1une21-Iuly22)Keep . 21) lbe. more actively you are your positive-move.
not hesitate .

an

$10 Homll fOr Slit

-"·

pel

Stroot, lllddl•port or call 814- ~
11112-.4103.
·
1
2T Coaclvnan Compor; air, aoll· ~
Contained, ~wnlng . sioopa e. ~
Vory Good Condition. Mu•t St'o. • t
13.300. (11r4~•eess
, •
Winntbago-ITASCA 2lk. mator·~1:
homt, aoll contolnt&lt;!, air, lurnact, lleepll •• e•n•r•tar,

MEHCHMHJISE:

........~­
111. 111•.500.

27 Actr.e
Girdner
30 - up (atopa
drinking)

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2NT
All pass

Pass 2 •
Pass · 4 •

BARNEY.

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57

211Sale~•

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Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: East
Soutb
West North East
I'P

~.!100 01!0. ~75-4622.

Ill 1.....111 M - ieedroont. 2

~?

. . ._ a f

belOw book. will c;:on-- ', .,
trtcla of pontoo~ boat or ,-. :
van. Cao be Men at sf Hud1on.........

FINMI CIAL

....... call. 1114)117- 1114

2

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labby ' 511 F - ' 1

1

pldup- 30W75-&amp;035.

wllll hrno ancl Fence.

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•KQJ43

2 Bedroom Apartmon~ $38Mio.,
•100 DopoaiL AI Ulllltitl Plid, No
Pool' 614-H&amp;·{I437.
2bdrm. apts., total electric, IP·
pllancu furnished,' laundtj room
laciUUtt, cion to ochool In town.
Application• available at: Vllago
Groon Apll. 114D or &lt;Ill 614-g;z.
.3711. EOH.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
SUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wostwood Drive
lrom S260 to S334. Walk ID lhop
&amp; moviea. Call 614· 446-2568.
Equal Houling Opportunil)'.

Rooms

•AQ?54

• 9 7

245-585&amp;

Sllmbo It: '--n llownlng I Trim
- · (114)-31111-8678
Wll hlul junk or trllh - · $351

-

• 10 8

Rio Grandt

Seamatr8aa 25wn. ••peilence,
hema, zlppttl, alleratlons tor
man 1 woman. Cailllon-Fri 304·
175-8728.
.

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• 7 52

l JEST IROKI A MIRROR II

~

1-1/.j

t A

Antlquea

Countrv Sill Apt." Largo 2 Bod·
room, 2 Large Batht, Wather
Dryar Hook-up, Central Air.$450 2 Harltr Dovldoon Jaciwtl llano.
Month
Deposit
Required Sill 40, Ono Denim tso: One
ID50'1lllthar $100, 114·245(513)574-253D
g44Q.
Downtown Gallipolit: Modern 1 :-:----:-:-....,.--:--:--1 Top of iho Hill Dog Grooming.
Managemen1, U11r Training Of
aedroom, All Electric, Carpoled, 2·121n. Jl-Audlo oub wolfers, .Chory! Rlloy, 131 Howard SL
PC Appllcationo (Eopeclally liS
Compleli Kitchin, Eltclllc Hill/ proclolon powtr ampllller.- 304· - - · wv.304-882-3214,
875-11713.
. OHica), Databaoe Prvgrammi~g.
Air CondiiloOOg. 814 448 4383.·
· Alaltion Rtqulroo A Bacholor'a
Dtgroo 01 Comparable Exporl·
Fumlshad 1 bedroom upper lovat. 200 chanroal pollca ICiinnor, t;5;
Musical
onct. ~ppllcablo Work ExporlUlilalies pold. ldiallor lor 2 peo- 30-30 rillo, .M r actiOn, $139; 12 570
application
Large
sal~tlon
of
uaed
hoi'ne.
2
gauge
olnglo
ahot,
$59.95;
410
oneo 11 S•ongly Preferred. Send
S255.mo. 1100 deposit
Instruments
Call today a frao analyllsl
or 3 bedrooms. Starting at $3495. ple.
tho~ $84.95; Wlnchooter
Reaume To Human Relation•. 90
References Required. (814)· alnglo
800-121·140211114-512-4008
Ouiek
delivery.
~all
1·800-837·
22
rille,
S511.50;
filhing
oquipmenl;
Star Guitar, Choahlrt, Ohio· louJackoon Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio
448·1340
Ruger new SUpor Blackhawk 44 ana and lnarrumeniS· plano. gul~
4583t.
Beautiful 2 S1ory On Corner lot 3238·
Magnum, 10 112" barrel; air con- tar and dnoma, 614-387-D302.
818 lloin Slrttl, Pl. Plouanl. Limited Olferll997 doublowldt,
dl~onar, $50. Dave"l Swap Shop
Wallpaper Outlel • Part-time!
Furnlahad
I
s,droom
Aportriltrlt
3 Bedroom, 2 Full Bolhs, liY· 3br, 2bath, $1789 down. $279/
11 Five Polnll, 814·9D2·4148.
flexible achedule. 3 day work WV
Upotalro,
All
Utllllin
Paid,
854
lng, Dining, Family Rooma. Mod- month . Free dellvtfY &amp; aetup.
..;.;;0;::lilrL;;:__ _ _ _ I 580
FruHs &amp;
- · ~II day work. No SUndayo. ern Kitchen, Large Laundry Area. Only at Oakwood Hamel, Nitro Second Avenue, Galllpolio, No ·.:.:eo.-==
For lnlormotlon phone 304-875- $88,000 814·448·2205, Or 614· WV.30H55-5885.
Poll, 814-.448-11523.
s
hp.
ao
karL
1250:
rwo
iopporo.
v,egetables
. 1280.
.
448-11585.
.
8rxao widt, $.250 &amp; 1125: 114·
Mull Sell: 1973 llork line Mobile Furnl1hlld 3 Rooma &amp; Balh1 No 843-53112.
S...ot potaiD planto lor sale, con
Wllilted: 38 People Loot II '25
Poll, R t - And Depolit Ro-----:----,-----:-71 814-742-2m or 114-742-2220.
Pounda In The Next 30 Dayo. Beautllul three bedroom, 2 1.12 Home Two Bedroom1, Good qo.olotd, 114-4-48-1518.
4" hlllll' corrugalad plpa, IOOit.
Natural, Gu•antotcll 1-IOO·SgC). both log homa for aalo, largo liv· Shape, Extnt 12 112 By 16Ft Add
roll, $.21 .1111. ~INT PLUS HARD2285.
.
lng room, cuot. kitchen, full lllo· On, 12.300. Caii8H-448-9458.
Fumllhld Apattmanll Btdraom, WARE.
304-8,..__
FI\Rr,1 SIIPPLIES
131
Socond
Avenuo;
Ollllpolla,
lahtclba-~ taqullitt wood· Now 1997 14x70 lhreo badroom,
&amp; LIVESTOCK
-". loll, lorgt wli~ lllb, licy· includoo 6 montho FREE lot rent tz;Mio., Utltitt Ptld, II 4·4*3&amp;14, Afllr 7 P.M.
180. Wlnted To Do
ilgh
~
hoat
pu
..
mp,
•
A
•
:"ci~~·
Onlv
.sra1.e6
por
month
with
22 52 oquaro ·~ • 7 7•0
· $1050 do.oin. Call r--800·837· Grsciouo living. 1 and 2 bod,_.
ANY ODD JOBS: EJterlor point· 814-742·2581.
aportrnonta at Village Manor and
lng, shrubs 1 weeda trimmed,
3238.
Rlvtraido Aporb'rllnlt In llidditlandacaplnn, oldowalkl edged, Brick 311 witll Oatachad Brick Ga·
' I Onl I I
• CaN Bil 304-87~
• rage, Second lot F•r
Trailer or New Bank
Repo
• alia~ 3304
e t, por1. From l238·l304 . Call 814·
lawn cart, etc.
•
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In
Large Clardan,.Uio&amp;Og $4g,90Q, ·
nanc g av
o.
· 902·5084. Equal Houlllng O;opor-7112.
In Rodnorf (814)245-54118
755-71Dt.·
lllnija
Child care In my homo, rolarenc- Chothlro, Third Stroot, Facing Taking Bldl Untlllloy 301h, On 3 In Allnt Ploaoant: Unlurnlthtd,
• ...-. 814-!182-8642.
Park, Flvo Roomo, Bath, Baat· Bedroom, 1977 i4x70 Schultl Spocloua B Plua Room, Rofor·
E•~ carpentry and ramo- ment ancfGarage. Recently Ra. Gas Heat, Needs Work, After enco &amp; DepooiL 114·448-G041,
doling. "inoldo and outoldo, modoltd. Coli Today 814·387· 5:30CIIii814·245-D572.
Alttr 8 P.M.
dtcko, vin,l aiding, add-on addo· 1.;.71:..:1..:.4-----==w. . Ripley Homtola_..,.,..
Newly romodelad one btd!oom
•ono, cabintt roliclng or mrwtr.
CONVENENCE IS THE KEY
- 1 Hligt - i o n oi1H7
furnished apartmont In lllddltrebuilt. Reference a· free Est· By owner: Mount Vernon Avenue,
mocltla rocty to deliver. SAVEl
port, 614·192·.21 78 or 814·gl2·
mo•JimShuii30H 75-I 272.
Point Ploaaant. B roomo, 2 or 3
304- 372 ·3400.
5304.
Goorgoo Portable Sawmill, don't btdroomo. I bath, largo kitchen 340 Business and
One bedroom apartmeril In Mtdhaul 70Ut logo to 1110 milljull &lt;Ill with laundry hook-up, all on ono
304-e 7s- 11157.
lloor. Baoomont, vinyl aiding,
Buildings
dltport. ai utilititl peid, $270 mo.,
carpon, fenced back ward. Per·
$100 dapoolt, 814·8g2-7808,
Houoo Clearing, Reasonable llct sltlftor homo or lor oldor lndi- Land and Building. Crawlord"s 8ano-Spm.
Rtltt. work Guarantoa. (814)· vidual (o). 173,000. "CALL NOWr Grocery, Henderson WV. l'rlctd
218-1233
304-875-8310.
·
on Inspection. Call 304-875-5404 Twin Riv•• T-. """' aCC~~&gt;dng
oppllcotlons for 1br. HUD oubalcf·
or 304-4175-1408.
For ..... 1 bedroom home In Pol•od apt for oldtfly ind handl·
capped. EOH 304-4175-88711.
LIMI Mowing StMcea Commor· meroy, will aoll o~ land contract. 3so Lots &amp; Acreage
c1a1 1 -1111, 810 ue 41185, 814-11112·5858
Two btclroom apartment In llld·
114-378-21311. .
~t.:~~~~~~~~~Scenic
AC &amp;· 2Vall.r
AC lollSubdivlaion
lor tala In. dlopoJL we per wtOiar, and
Pnllaulonal Troo Strvlca, Slllt11&gt;
Wedge Realty, Broker 304-875·. trolh, you ...-y gaa and atoculc,
S2DD rno. plua SIOO dtpotl~ 814Aerno\lal, Fr• Eallmateal In·
2722.
11112·1808, llln&gt;Spm.
........ ~. Ohio. 814-388- . 81-7-7010.
Two btdroom aparunantln .llld·
dlepor~ no poll, 814-102·5858.
Robyn'l Homo Ctoanlng: Wttkly,
81--ly. Excellant Re-•1
450
Furnish"
C111 Any~mt. 814-448-2315 II No

-l-Mtataoa

• 8 4 2

• ti

52

24MIMPMIIIII

Soulb
• A9 83

ApM"tments

To Universitw

• K

lfi2.SI!OI .

530

Eaal

• 7 5 4."
'PJll63

Pe'- for sale

21 llot~el

'.

51 TV'I PP"IIIIPIIIIIMI .

COIICtlon

22=ltlon

A 9 8

" WeiR

Campua, Availabltl/1107. 814-

ahop .OAKWOOD HOliES, Nl·
3 Bedroom Ranch Stylt Homo TRO,
WV. 304-755-5885.
Wilh
Garage
&amp;
Barn,
Main·
1111, 2520 Volley Dr., Pt. PIOII· tenance FrM. Located: Addison
First Time Buytri· Easy Finane·
1111. WV 25550. ANEOE.
Towntlip, 814-448-.4n2.
lngl 2 &amp; 3 aHroom around •200
Allition Alltllablo; lledioal Clinic
per month. Free delivery &amp; att· ·
Group Practice 11 looking For Sr0oms, porch, utility roofh. new up. Wntwood Homo• 1·800·251Computer Prole11lonala With roof, windows, sldfng, a heat 5010.
Sloilil In At Lttll Ona Of Tha Fo~ pump. Call Somerville Really
lowing Areaa: Novell Network 304-4175-3030 or 304-875-3431.

•

•

I and 2 bt.droom aparimtnlt, fur·
nllhed and unfurnlahtd, oocurity
dtpoalt required, no pets,.814·
11112-2218.
2 Bedroom Aperunont, Adjactnt

have $1000 to $2000 per

dealer in the trl·atate area that
buildi and sells lhelr own
homea. For lactory direct prk:ea,

Auortod ulld IS" I bHmo, oal
11411112 •1.
8iocil, brick, •-r plpea. wlndOft, linttlo, ate. Claudt Wlntor'
Rio Grandt, OH Call e14' 245·
:5::.121
:.;.;_;··- - --:--:--:-:-N
I d
ow Andtroon w n owo In box,
approa. 110,000. Wll 1111 lor 112
toriol. 304-875-4215.

for Rent

Dlautor Atlol Plog...,

FACTORY DIRECT.
NO MIDDLE ~AN.
SAVEUU.
08kwood Homea is the

14X70 llobila homo ler Rent. 2 GOOD USED APPLIANCES
BR, (11141-4411-Walhore, clrYiftl, rofrlgoratort,
14x70 Two Bedroom. Two Both rongoo. Skaggo Appllancaa, 78
Trailor, Two Acroa IH,;oo, JO ~~V~Ino~S!!tr!:eo~~~C~oa:_H
_s_'_4_·-_·_73111
~·
Acroo 120,000, 3 Aero Loll UOO 4811 34~
17,000 Each 114-317·7555 Ulld Furnlwra: 130 Butavllia'
~Alii.
~ $laiiJ bod, play pen. oottool
end tabloo, nlgltl arando, dtllll.
2 I 3 btdroom mobllt homoo -~~- oouchtt. chal"' rod!.•
atlrq
1280-$300,
· - • ero, bunk
·~ ...,
•·-' aa~ much mort.
..
, endII
trllh
lncludtd,- 81 4-H2·
2117.
·
~!:.t~ HRS IG- 4. Wlbuy

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• K 10
o K J 10

14 Oldlwly .
11 An1:dats

11F-.el
. 11 Climb down
20 Building
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�Ohio Lottery

Astros
edge Reds
in 14th 4-3

Pick 3:

874
Plck4:
2212

Super Lotto:

15-2~~32-38-44

Cle•r ·tonltl'lt, low In
40e. Frldtly, IUMy,

Kicker:

Sporta on Page $
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l'llgflln upper 70e•

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,..1.41, NO. 211
01117, Ohio 'Valley Pulllllhlng Compeny

2 81111111111, 12 P~~g~~, 3 1 .A Olnnttl Co. NIWI!MPW :

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohlci, Thursday, May 22, 1997

---~--------~----~------~------~------------------~----_.
•

____________________ .
•

Barney found guilty on 16 sex counts !
of Pic~away County asked each .the incidents to ~is wife. but l~cr.
By JIM 'FREEMAN
juror,
"Is this .your verdict?" with under cross eumination by Lentes,
Sentinel Newa Steff
A Meigs County jury deliberated each jurqr responding "Yes".
said that he was never asked by his
approximately three hours ·Wednes- . The verdict followed se~eral days wife if he had molested the child.
Lentes, in his cross examination,
day afternoon before returning with of testimony in the trial which began .
M.onday.
Testifying
Were
the
victim.
16 guilty verdicts in the case of a man
at!empted lo pottray Barney as a'perthe victim's stepmother, a teacher and son who could not keep a job for any
charged with numerous sex crimes.
· Darrell Barney, 42, formerly of principal~ and two character witness: but a shari period of time -- giving
him plenty or oppoitunity to have se~
Shade, repeatedly had sex, including es for Barney.
Barney took the stand for approx- with the alleged victim. He also spotintercourse and oral sex, wilh a
minor female relative frorn 1993 to imately two hours Tuesday in his own lighted Barney's use of niarijuana and
1996. He was found guilty of four defense, fielding questions from his alcohol in the home.
· During closing arguments, Lentes
counts of rape, eight counts of sexu- attorney and Prosecuting Attorney
told jurors that the alleged crimes
al bat\cry and four counts of felo- John R. Lcntes.
When questioned by the attorneys, were done by force and the threat of
nious sexual peneLration stemming
Barney
repeatedly denied raping .or force, at1d again showed school phofrom the incid&lt;:I\IS.
.
Barney sat expressionless as the having any sexual cQntact with the tographs of the alleged victim taken
verdicts Were announced and-defense alleged victim.
during the years in question.
attorney Steve Story r&lt;;qucsicd· the
At one point, during questioning
Story reminded jurors again that
jury be polled. Judge Randall Kncce hy Story. Barney said that he denied Barney was innocent until proven
guilty · and indicated that al.though

Barney did testify. he did not have to. Testimony not allowed
of Meigs County."
•'
·"You are the objective finders or
Afterwards. Lentes said another ·
Lentes added that he has been •
fact, he told the jury.' Don't be tricked, minor female·relative of Barney's had . cooperating with the Athens County •
don't let it slide by that the burden is complained of similar se•ual abuse Prosecuting Attorney's office regard-.:
on the government," he said.
several years ago in the Dayton area. ing incidents of sexual ahusc hy Bar- '
Story hammered on areas he said
"We have sjJokcn to this young . ney when they lived the.rc.
•
produced reasonable doubt including woman 'and the story she tells is very
"It took a lot of courage for this :
an incident in which the victim called similar to what happened here in girl to come down and tell her story," ;
the defendant after she had moved · Meigs County. We were not allowed said Meigs County Victims' Advocate •
from the home to take her to pick up to usc that earlier episode in our ca.•e. Connie J. DQdson, who sat with.the :
.a job application. ·
so the jury never knew about it," he victim during the trial.
.,
. •
"Common sense doesn't dictate SUI
· 'd.
Lcntes
commended
Dodson
and
:
,
that the victim wo,uld subject herself
:Jurors also . did not hear about the Meigs County Children's Service:
to that horrible fear for a job appli- how long this abuse had been going office for their a•sistancc in the citsc.:
cation," Story .said. "Wouldn't you on," h¢ said.
Sentencing has been , postponed !
avoid him like the plague'!"
"We believe it' began when our pending n pre-sentence invcstiga• :
In a brief rcbuual, Lcntes said peo- victim was in the fourth grade . Bar- lton.
•
ple that have rapes commiucd against · ncy did not live in Meigs County
Judge Kncce ordered that the ~
them don't always &lt;io the smart thing. until about lour years ago. and we hond previously ordered he revoked :
"This happened for years and she . were not allowed to tell the jury about and Barney held without bnnd until ;
always came back,'' he said.
the sexual abuse that occurred outside sentencing.
•
•

SEQ's area phone Middleport Memori,al Day services announced
codt;Js will change .
to·. 740 in November

.•••
•

·. Ac'crcinony to name ihe American Feeney-Bennett Pnst 128, American enabling reinforcements ' to arrive· 'hnlds services at sevcral lnc~l ccmc· :
Legion Park ni:Kt door to the Mid- Legion. After the war. he resi~ed in and hold their position. His body wa.• ·terics thruughnutthc day.
.:
dlcport Post Office on Mill Street will California until his death in 1983. He found in a shallow enemy hole from
The leginn will meet at 8: 15 u.m. •
be held Monday at II: 15 p.m.
is buried at San Bruno. National . which he · had helped his platoon at the legion hull nn Fnurth Street fol'l" ·
The park's official name will be Cemetery.
.launch the counterattack. ' .
lowed by ,erviccs atl!:45 a.m. at the · ·
the Stewart-Bennett Memorial Park
The Legion Post has no record of
He had killed 23 enemy solders •Middlcpurt Boat Launch prior u, .,.
By AARON MARSHALL
guess we ' ll just have to adapt to it," in honor of Staff Sergeant Jimmy C. an address through which to notify and his actions were in the highest whfch the chaplain will place one ~in- :
Gannett Newa Service
she said. "There will be alot offll!\l· · Stewart and Major EdWard A. Ben- · his family of the upcoming ccremo- traditions of the United States Army. . glc rose in the Ohio River.
•·
COLUMBUS • Dialing Galli a pie· crossing out numbers in their · nett. both local recipients of the' ny. Anyone knowing how to contact
Stewart was horn in West ColumThe group will visit the Riyerview :
and Meigs Counties will be as easy address books I guess ....She said·she Medal of Honor.
the.m should contact Post Comm·an- bia, W.Va., on 'Christmas Day, 1'142. Cemetery and Bmdhury Cemetery at :
as 7-4-0 starting this November as thinks problems for businesses will
Bennett received the medal during dcr Ron Sinith at 992-2621 .
His mother. Ethel Stitt. and hissister, 9 a.m. and 9:15a.m.. respectively. •
phone indus!ry executives rolled out be minimal "if Ameritech runs a . World War ii when. on Feb. I, .1945.
Stewart received his Medal of Josephine Donahue. still reside as do
At 10: i:\ a.m .. the post will visit :
as an Army private at Heckhuscheid. Honor on May 1.8. 1966, in the other relatives in the h"al area.
the Addison Cemetery and the •·
'their plans to swap area residents to good public awareness campaign.' '
the new area code by next fall,
Indeed, long-distance phone com- · Ge~aily, he exhibited "fea~l.ess ini- Republic of Vietnam, for. "c?n.spi~u'The ceremony will consist of :in Cheshire Gravel Hill· Cemetery att
Sportipg promotional materials panics will, ~ responsible for edu- · ltallve. s.talwan com~at a~thty, and OU$ galla~try and t.ntrcptdtty 10 acuon ~nvcilin~:'of the ft:e~hly. pu,intcd sign. · - I0:30 a.m . ~~ ll ·a,l" .. the gwup w~11•
enibla~o.ne~ -~ilfl:lh!a!o&amp;!Ml,_,::a~~JP. cal ng~ir.cust!?m~rubouttbe·~ ·'"OIIUialldi.llwgallaRtcy-•n ~liiDI.natill_~·..- a~ ·l!!"~rts~ , ~ ~to-&lt;llf~.- !,'!mvOrilll!. ano· Al'nl!l'ii!air ' Lcg'iilti'"'Ci'iihlcm, :r visit the Middleport Gravel Htll.
~ow 740' 1', Ohio phone tndUstJ:y mg swtlch over. ~ -Jll.n1enlech en~my fire wh1ch w,as dc~tmatmg hts , beyond the ~all&gt; of duty, . ~
.
· hrief addf~ss hy Middleport May~r Cemct~ry across :fr'&lt;&gt;Ql Overbrook:
executives announced Wedhesday spokesperson Dave Robinson said liis company's ranks ..He . killed. seven · . !ie held ofl a platoo~-Sizcd all~ck Dewey Hortnn. and a 21-gun salute Nur~ing Center prior to the cercmoth~ir long-range details of southern company will be sending out direct enemy \(oops. fllakmg 11 posstble for . smgle-handedly cmptymg magazmc hy the Post 12M American Legion ny at the park.
,
: ·
Lunch will he held at the Amcri-~
Ohio's new 740area code. "Regions ' mail and doing som·e paid advertise- .the Americans to sweep all resistance after ma~azine allhe charging enemy. Color Guard. The event will end with
that arc growing and dcvclopiqg - ment• to try and get the word out from the town, savmg the hves of He then ptcked up.and hurled hand prayer hy the post chapiain.
·can Legion Annex.•it II :30 a..;... wit~ ·
need area code relief," . said Lisa about ihc new 740 area code.
many of his fellow soldiers.
grenades .thrown at him back into
ll&gt;e ceremony is part of several visits to Howell Hill Cemetery, 1:
Robertson, Number ~dministrator
The change in area codei will noi . He was born and _raised in Mid- their midst, decimating the attackers. Memorial Day activities planned hy p.m.,and Burlingham Cemetery. I :30~
for the Central and Southeastern hring any changes as to what is con- dleport and was a hfe member of · He held them orr for four hours. the American Legion ·Post . ·which · p.m .• ~oncluding the events.
•
Ohio Industry Team. "Ou.r goal is to sidercd a long-distance call, Robert·
·•
: makethetrarisiiionaseasyaspossi - son said. "Phone companies don't

1~ :~~s;?o~c;~·:~ooth
0

Ohio smog· .outlook good; Cincinnatt g
' ets.reprieve

~~~r~;J:'dt~a~~: ~~~~h~~~~~k

.. blc
.the transiBy KEVIN O'HANLON .
' lion to the new area code, those dial- said. "If it wa.•n't a long distance call
ed p ress w· r1ter
.
h · 614
od .
h
b 1.
h .
. he o
h'
As10c 1at
tn•
1
c
.
area
c
~
m
soul
em
e
ore
t
en
11
won
I
uoter
\
"
S
. "
ummer smog season ·IS underway
. Ohio fmm Novemhcr I. 19971o June either.'"
· h
,,
in Ohio, but one cny a.' gotten a
6_199Mwill sti.ll have their calls con:. nccted. But after that J.unc date
Unprecedented growth in the hrcak in dealing with its dirty air. ·
··
· 1·
·mdus 1ry ts
The U.S. Environmental Prolcc;·
. callersdialing614instcador740will tc Iec'CimmunJcnums
1
·
the
614
area
·ode
tion
A•ency
said Wednesday that
·
"bl
e or
·
~
"
. · receive a rc. cordin•" infohninJ1 thcin rcsponst
the number .they dialed as changed sp. ,.11. sa· id Rohert son. Relat'tvc 1Y new• Cindnnati ..:.. the only Ohio city to
area codes. The new area code or740. fanglcd,cmnmunication tools such as . inlss the No.vcmber 1996 deadline for
will encompass all of southern Ohio t.ax mac'·h'mcs. compu1er modcm••• mcctin•" standards set by the 1990
formcrly in 614. with the old '614 pagers•,a11 munc h num be rs rnak"mg Clean Air Act- has unlil November
number retained in cewal and north the arc11 code split imperat.ivc." We to clean up its air.
ccnlral Ohio.
· .
. arc looking at aU the a.•s 1gnable
"What this extension docs is rcc614)
be'
c
hau
·ted
by
o•nize
the improving air quality,"
.
mg ~ s
"
Kl·m Schucuc, director or the · cod es (m
"d
Sh
dd
d
h
said
EPA
spokesman Jay Bortzcr. "It
Ohio Valley Vistors Center, said the next year:· she sat . c a c t at
'
·
bl
740
be
·11
1
1
also
recognizes
that Cincinnati and .
: number chan'ge shouldn't pose a asstena
num rs WI as . northern Kentucky
• 1 c·
he
arc im.plcmcnting
.. problem once people get used to it. ·~ 1 "for at cast anot r ten years.
pollution control measures and that
o'. fficerr~ is nam~d
the area is moving in the right direc; .
,.,.
lion ... but more needs It&gt; he done."
.SUSpeCt
Ohio's big cities. like those across
':
·
•
·
the nation . .have learned to deal with
:: WELLSTON (AP) - A police himself: I,
Six-year officer has. ozone problems.
; ' officer who said he was shot while been placed on administrative leave
Things arc worst in summer. when·
;: trying to stop tree thieves at a ccme- and charge~· arc pending. Jacobs said.. heat and sun comhinc with airhurne
•: tcry is suspccted_of stealing the trees
Pendleton 1\;td. reported he was · pollutants such as car exhaust to
;· after two were found in his front yanj. shot in tbe&lt;Chest May 9 while cha.~- increase ozone levels.
:: his police chief ·said Wednesday,
ing two mcq at ·the Ridgewood
Omnc pollution also can he
· : Chief Mark Jacobs said he Cemetery where three trees had hcen formed ,frnl]1 emissions fmm other
: . believes Officer Rick Pendleton, 41, repnrted stolen. He said the bullet- sources such as industry. small htisi; . ofHamden, made up the story about proof ~esl h~ was wearing ·saved ,his ncsses. gas stations and hmitc barhc; the thieves to divert suspicion from life,
cue grills . It causes breathing proh·
lcms .l(&gt;r elderly people and those
with chronic respiratory ailments.

.W.ell'ston pollee
in tree Stealinl!ncldent

•

••

.

•.

.

.•

CHEVROlfl • ·OlDSMOBilE • I.Eil.S •
:

'•

l

pmhl~ms

z

;

the~ ·~

So what is the ozone outlook for · Cincinnati areas also were ordered l&gt;y .
with the comrumy dnin"
.
,..
e
·
Ohio this summer'!
the state to start auto-emissions test- tests.
&lt;
· The National Weather Service's in g. The E-check program was ,~\Uri•
Lo.:al "Overnment a"encics acruss ...
~
e
90-day t&lt;&gt;recast culls for average · ed in 191J5 in res[lqnse tn the Clean Ohio often ask residems .to help:
tempcmturcs and precipitation. which Air Act.
. .It
reduce high &lt;lzonc levels during .sum-;
would help hold oz&lt;&gt;ne levels doWn.
But · the l'r&lt;&gt;&lt;'ram
has
l&gt;c&lt;n
sus-.
mer
months hy canvJ&lt;&gt;Iin••.
•
.,..
" walking~
said Bill Spires. an Ohio EPA mcic- . pcn.dcd in Cincinnati hecaus~.. of . or usi'n".
public
transit.
.,
orolo•ist.
·
.,
"That's what we've had the past
couple of years wcatherwisc and we
haven'\ had too many nzone pmblcms." Spires said. ·"As it looks
right now. we·re bracing ourselves
for this summer."
When the new air standards came
out.
. Cleveland-Akron.
. the Cincinnati
Toledo
and Dayton areas were considercd to be moderate non-auain·
mcnt areas, which is three categories
bel\er than the extreme mting given .
1!&gt; Los Angeles.
.
. Youngstown, Cant()n. Columbus
and Steubenville were considered to
be marginal, which is the lowest nunattainment level .
All hut Cincinnati met the deadline. in part by tiSkinJ! citi;(ens and
industries to reduce activities that
••
cause pollution.
•
"But we arQ very optimislic that
Cincinnati will meet attainment this · . SMOG SEASON • Sllaa Jonn, a 11-yaar-old asthmatic, plays
year," said Heidi Griesmer of the
with 11 toy while waiting at the podium for a oawa conferenCe by
Ohio EPA. 1
the Regional Ozone Cotlltlon to begin on the obMrvatlon dick ' : :
The Cleveland-Akron. Day1nn and
of the 48-atory Carew Tower In downtown Clnclnntlll Wedne. .y. ~

.............__....J:
i

McVeigh defense begins in bombing trial
.

.

_ DENVER (APJ -Af'tcr a stream·
One juror wept intn a white tissue
.lined prosecution case c apped with and another appeared on the verge of'
wrenching testimony about the deaths tears a.&lt; Florence Rngers. president of
in the Oklahoma City bombing, Tim- t~e credit union in the Alfred P. Mur·
othy McVeigh's lawyers' take center rah Federal Building.tcstilied about
slllgc with a simple defense: He did- the bla~tthat killed IKcolleagues and
n't do 'it.
two customers.
The defense case is expected 10 be
"The whole huilding started to
even _leaner than the · prosecution's, hlow up. I was thrown against the
which crammed 137 witnesses in.to tlnor in a tornado·! ike rush ... said Ms.
18 days of fast-paced testimony:
Rogers. "'When I was able to stand
"It may lake l~ss than two ap, all the girls that was in the offic~.
weeks," McVeigh attorney Stephen with me had totally disaJlllllarcd. I
. Jones said Wednesday afler the pros- never sa~&lt;' them aaain."
ccution rested. "It'sjust hard 10 say.''
Prosecutors then.showcd slides of
Jones is expected to call30 10 4Q the rescue effort ll'hile Oklahoma
witnestca who will attack "every sin- City District Fire Ch.icf Mike Sh1111gle point !he aovcrnmcnt has made. " non described his search for sursources close to the ctiiC told The vivors.
Associated Press. '
Shannon said nine tloors of lhc
Proscc:utors wrapped up with build in&amp; pancaked. crushin&amp;the vic:imaps of the bomb's destruction and tims.
'
"We were .wipinJ body tluit~J off
· a .willleSs' llllCounl of .terror and lost
friends.
. our helmets and uniforms.'" he said.

•

I

The final gnvermitcnt wit.ncss, a
state medical examiner, authcnticated un inch-high stack nl' death ccrtilicates fur the victims, many of
whom could he identified only
through dental records, fingerprints
or surgical scars.
McVeigh. 2':1. faces the death
penalty if convicted of murder and
conspiracy in the April IIJ, 1995,
c.xplosion that killed 16K people and
injqred 500.
·
·
Prosecutors used witnesses to portray McVeigh as a CQWardly .tcm&gt;rist, ·
driven by a warpod interpretation of
right-wing writinas a·nd a desire to
avenge toe FBI's deadly 1'.193 siege
on lhe Branch Davidian compound
ncar Waco. Tcxti.
· Eyewit~css and 'scientific tcstimony tied McVeigh to the 20-fdot .
Ryder truck !hal witnesses sa)' was
ptK:ked with ammonium nitrate fertili&amp;cr and ra&lt;:in&amp; fuel nnd detonated

.'

t.

at 9:02 a.m.. as ofl'ice workers were •
preparing their m&lt;&gt;ming cojTce. . " .
U.S. District Judge· Richard :
Mutsch has pn&gt;hihited the defense !
from introducing the '.!henry that .:
international tcm&gt;risls WQre hchind ::'
the hnmbing. the sources said. Bcf&lt;H'C ~
the trial, Jones had suggested the
hom bing was tbe combined ciTun of :
nco-Nazis, Iranian terrorists and oth· :
crs.
In his opening statelllent, Jones :
promised the jury th\11 his ca.'iC "will !'
cstahlish .., thai my client is innocent •
of the crime thtit (the ROYOmmcnt) :
has outlined to you."
Sources said the defense will u~~e :
an attack stratcay to poke holos in the •
prosecution's case.
:
For example, prosecutors c:alled ~
co-manaaer Brie McOown, who lllitl •
he saw McVeip in a R1dDr lnlck •
the Dreamlud MOiel hi Ju~ •
City, Kan., "pril 16 C1l' April 1'7 •

••

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