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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Rain delays
running_of
lndySOO

Pick 3:

0.1-7
Plck.4:

2·2+8
Buckeye 5:

Fair tonight, Iowa In the

so.. Increasing clpudlnees
Wedneaday, chance of
rain. Hlgha mthe 70s.

10.18-29-27'!'34

Sports on Page 5 .

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*41,N0. 28

21ectiona, 12 Pages, 3S centa

Pomeroy-Middleport,
. Ohlo,.Tueaday, May 27,. 1997.

01 ..7, Ohio Vllley Publlehlng Complny
'

A cill..wtt Co. NeWIPIIf*

Memorial Day Speaker urges·

:new comm·itment··to freedom
B.y CHARLENE HOEFLICH
every continent has been saturated ·
Sentinel News Staff
· with blood," said Koster, who went ·
· · A call for Americans to recommit 'on to caution his listeners to be ever
and rededicate themselves to free- alert to freedom's cause as the coundom's cause was issued by dol. Ger- . tty moves into the 21st Century.
aid Koster (Ret.), speaker at MonMeanwhile, he said it is fitting to
day's Memorial . Day services in do what the Civil War faithful start- .
. Pomeroy.
;
ed - going to the graves of fallen
· · Koster, formerly of Syracuse, · fathers, husbands and brothers to pay
challenged his listeners to join him in respect for the lives given in the
doing whatever it takes, at ~hatever defense of freedom.
·
the cost, to be sure that there remains
· A parade led by the Legion honor
freedom and justice for all. That, he guard opened the observance. Other .
said, can only come with remaining · uriits included Boy Scout Troop 249,
a nation under 06d. . · '
'the Dazzling Dolls baton corps, the
"There's something wrong when DARE antique car driven by Howard
it becomes more difficult to get tes- Mullen, and a fire truck. The parade
tantents into schools here: than in moved through the village and then
Moscow;" commented the. retired . returned to the stage area on the parkt,Jpited Methodist minister. i:le com- , ing Jot. ·
.
mended the Legion on its commit·
Fritz Goebel, commander, gave
ment to God and country.
the welcome, Chaplain Jim Gilmore
"We will soon close a century of had the prayer, Boy Scout Troop 249 Band played the National Anthem.
unprecedented conflict of global pro- conducted that flag raising ceremony
A recitation of "A Salute to the
.portion, when the world has been tom .to open the pro_gram and an ensem· Ragged Old Flag" was given by Jim
add battered, where the ground of ble frorrl the Meigs High School Soulsby, who hlso sang "God Bless

Ame~ica," and Mary Martin for the
Auxiliary read "In Aanders Field."
A welcome by Pomeroy Councilman George Wright was given and
several village and county officials
and new Eighth District Commander
Mickey Williams were recognized.

Around the nation
There were 3,000 people at
Arlington National Ce!rtetery in Vir. ginia to watch President Clinton
place a wreath at the Tomb of the
Unknowns, before he left for Paris to'
sign an accord between NATO, the
Western military alliance, and the
Russian Federation.
·As a band began playing for a service in Plano, Texas, Navy veteran
J.W. "Jim" Harper was over.· whelmed: "It's pretty hard to express.
You just feel goosebumpy all over.··
In San Francisco, about 300 World
War II submarine veterans, widows
and onlookers dropped 52 carnations
into the bay - one for each of. the
subs sunkduring the war.

Memorial
. .
.
project
dedicated

ln -~Rac-ine .
Ars.a veteran•

remembered by
new mQnument

In Star Mill Park

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
A mission .of remembrance was
carried out in Racine Saturd!IY afternoon as approximately 200 people
gathered to dedicate the Racine Veterans Memorial and Veterans Park.
The ceremony, held adjacent Post
602.of Am~rican Legion across·from
Star Miii,Park, marked the cuhrtinlition of work by voluntee'rs to make
the monument a reality. ,
The monument consists of three
stone slabs, two dark stones flank a
tall, gray center stone. The left stone
bears the markings "All gave some,
some gave all" and "In honored triblite to the brave men and women of
Racine and the surrounding area."
The center stone ·dedicates the
monument to those who served in
American wars from World War II to
the Persian Gulf War, while the right
slab 1\onorS. those who were either
prisOners of war or listed missing in
· action.
·
·
Arranged on a 30-by-30-foot concrete slab in fron.t of the monument
are stone blocks bearing the names,

IN REMEMBRANCE- Jim Gilmore, left, and Hafold Blackston
placed a wreath in the Ohio River In remembrance of those who
gave their lives for their country, as part of Memorial Day services
Monday In F'omeroy.
. _.. ... _
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.Cou.r t allows Jones
to proceed with suit.
. agai~st the· president·
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WASHINGTON (AP)- Paula Jones carr ~rs._,li¢rJex-harassment lawsuit agairtst Presiden,\ Clil)ton while he is in offje.~. ~ Sup~me f=ourt ruled
· today. Bul'the justicd left room for a trial judge to d-elay th~ ease to accom, ·
modale "the high respect" owed the presid~nt's office.
The Constitution does not shield the president from having to face lawsuits over acts unrelated to his official duties, the justices ruled unanimously in a case that already has been a major embarrassment to the president. ·
Justice John Paul Stevens wrote for the court, "A stay of either the trial
or (pre-trial fact-finding) inight be justified by considerations that do not
require the recognition of any constitutiol)al immunity."
."The high respect that is.owed to the office of the chief cxecutive,-though
not justifying a rule of categorical immiJ!lily, is a matter that $liould inform
the ·conduct of the entire proceeding," Stevens. said.
.
Stevens said the court did not decide whether a judge could compel the
president to appear in court at any specific time or place.
. .
"We assume that the testimony of the president ... may be taken at the
White House at a time that will accommodate his husy schedule, l!nd that:
if a trial i.s held, there would be no necessity for the president to anend in ·
person, though he could.elect to do so," Stevens wrote.
The president has denied Jones' allegation that he propositioned her in
erans, above, looked at veterans' names disREMEMBERING ...- ~proximately 200 peoan Arkansas hotel room in 1991, 'the court said.
played at the front ~f the monument following
ple attended a Saturday cerernqny dedicating
the dedication.
.
• Today's ruling means Clinton could become the first president to go to.
a new veterans monument In Racine; Family
trial while in office to defend against a priviue lawsuit. However•.his lawyers
members and loved ones of Racine area vatstill can seek dismissal of Jones' claim on other grounds, or they could renew
.
service brariches and dates of service project through to completion.
of remembrance:· ariil eJ!couraged their previous effor;t to reach a settlement with .her lawyers.
Clinton argued that dealfhg with Jones' lawsuit would-take time away from
o(nrea veterans. Blocks can be added
Cleek said the project was not . . those pres~n~ to not forget those who
his presidential duties. !-lis lawyers also said that giving a trial judge control
completely done, that people can still ha~~ servtd m the anned f~~es. .
to the monument as requested.
over
when Clinton must be in court would violate the constitutional separahave
names
added
to
the
·rn.onument,
We
should
never
forge~,
he
sa1d.
The Rev. -Brian Harkness of the
tion
of
powers between the executive and the judiciary.
. H~ concluded by offe~1~g a new
Racine Methodist Church gave the and that plans call for construction of
Jones'. Jawyers argued the case is an uncomplicated one and _that a judge
opening prayer, followed by the duet a shelter hpuse to complement the m1ss1on to those present. Be good
could schedule a trial around Clinton's presidential duties. They s11id the tri- ·
of Jessica an~ Stephanie Sayre, who · monument. He also encouraged an · stew~~ of. this sacre~ place."
D1gmtanes attendmg were '!·S. al should be held ·now because witnesses' memories could fade or evidence ,
· sang "The Star-Spangled Banner," veterans to have their records filed in
·
.
.
.
the
Meigs
County
Recorder's
Office.
Rep,
Ted Strickl~nd, D-Lucasv1lle; could be lost by the time Clinton leaves office.
. and Anna Wolfe 11nd 'Kelli Bailey of
Jones
says
Clinton
summoned
her
to
a
Little
Rock
hotcl'room
in
1991
,
Retired Methodist Rev. Charles Karen Sloan, Me1gs C~unty reP.reEastern High School who perfonned
"TapS."
.. · Kirsch, who began his ministerial · ·5entative for U.S. Sen. ~~k~ DeWine; · exposed himself to her and l!Sked her to perfonn a sex act. He was goverProject coordinator Carroll Cleek career In the Racine area in the late Me1gs County Comm1ss1oner J~ff nor of Arkansas at the time and she ·was a state worker.
gave a history of the monument and 1940s, was the guest speaker for the Thornton; R~cine..Mayor ~cottH1.II; . Jones' lawsuit says she can identify "distinguishing characteristics" of
and Charles Red Carr•. E1ghth Dis- Clinton's private parts. She sued in 1994 and is seeking $7QO,OOO in d;imcommended those who helped see the ceremony.
He called the event a "pilgrimage ·trict Com':"ander, Amen can Leg1on. ages.

Eastern graduat~s fac~ .the world following ce~emony
By BRIAN J. REED
'
Sentinel News Staff
"Moving On."
. that's what Eastern High SchooJ!s
62 graduates are now pois~d to do,
and that was the·topic of Valedictorian Meredith ·Crow's commence· ·ment address to her classmates on

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Sunday.
Crow and Sal!ltatoria_n Maria
f.recker addressed ·their fellow graduates at the SG:hool:s 40th annual com- '
mencement ex~rcises, held in the
school gymnasium.
"My interest is in the future,
because I am
to spend the rest

of my life there," Crow. quoted from
Charles F. Kettering ·in her address,
titled "Moving On."
·"Today marks the end of the old
and the beginning of the new, Our
high school days arc over and now
the untraveled road stretches before
us. II is out time to s~ine, to f!lllow
our dreams and to al,ways _believe we
can." "Today, we stand at a crossroad
· and we must say goodbye to . our
chil61hoods," Crow said. "it' is now
our turn to face the world, not as.childre.~, bu~ as adults."
. . ....
Havmg received our d1pfomas
· · and taking our seats, the next act will
; . ~ · deeply meaningful,'' Crow sai~.
We will take our tassel and move II
· to the r!ght-han~ sidtt o~ our caps. "A
new milestone '"·our hves w1!l be ·
reached and we -.y1ll know the bitter·
sweet f~ing, the mixture of~ joys
and struggles. of the past ~1th the
unknown challenges and dehghts of
the futUre."
· ·
.
"From this day forward, we will
no longer be dependent on our parents because it is time for them to let
us 10· They will alwaytlet us lean on
them for we will always be their children, but they will no lonaer mllte

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. our decisions for us or lead us
"We should all consider these
·through life by the hand. They have · words of advice," Frecker said:
helped us become who we are today,
"Each new day holds new promis·
but no'r we must take all .they have es, challenges and opportunities to
give~ us and use it to become, not create !.1 successful, happy life,"
only the person of their dreams, but Frecker said. "As God gives 'each of
also the person of our dreams."
us a new day, it is our responsibility
Frccker, in her comments, looked . to use it wisely."
backwards as well as forwards, in a
"It is now up to each.of us to keep
speech litled "Yesterday, Today and our ideals -high," Frecker said.
Tomorrow."
"Remember, never sacrifice your
''Today, our life seems to be convictions for a temporary 'place in
reflected in a th~ee-way mirror," the sun."'
Frecker said. "The images reflect yes- . Principal Clayton Butler recogterday, which is our past; today, nized the Top Ten Scholars of the
which is our present, and tomorrow, . class: Crow, Frccker, Traci .Heines,
which is our future. This is a time for Martha Holter Lisa Sti:thi:m William
clinging to memories of the past, Francis, Tracy White, Amahda Milcaching out for the future,. but still hoan · Patsy.. Aeiker and Candace
seeking the security of today."
Bunting. .
·
. Frecker cited poet· Pamela . , Francis, the Class chaplai!', offered
Koehlinger's poem about success: the invocation and benediction. Class
"Behind you are precious moments of President Sean Maxey welcomed
experiences ihat you will never for- those attending, and speakers were
get, heartfelt emotions that will fade, introduted by the class vice presibut never disappear, and ideals that dent, Amanda Milhoan. Mindy
wiU:::hangin form, but remain in Sampson and Frecker, class secretary
subs
.
and treasurer, respecti'vely, led the
" ihout your past, you have 'class in the turnirig of the tassel. ·
nothina to build your future, your
· ThC senior class choir, under the
past would have no opponunity to direction of Susan Climer, perfonncd
come into full bloom."
two special songs, tbe Beatles' ballad,
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, VALEDICTORIAN - Meredith
Crow gave the valedictorian
address, entitled "Moving On,"
at the 40th annual commencement exercises .S unday at Eaatem High SchOol. Crow told her .
fellow graduates they were now
expected to make their own decisions.
·
"Yesterday," atid "You've Got a
Friend in Me" from the motion picture "Toy Story."
The Easte~ High School Concen
Band, also under the direction of Mrs.
Climer, perfonned the prelude,
"March from First Suite in E Flat"
(Continued on Page 3)

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Tuesday, May 27, 1111
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~ Commentary
.The Daily Sentinel
1\1 Court StrMt, Pomeroy, Ohio
1114-992·2156 • FIIX 992·2157

A Gannett

£Co.

Newspaper

ROBERT L WloiGm

Publlllher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW
Contrvller

o-...1MMager

-j Michigan, Ohio differ on·
~ value

of proficiency tests

~ By PAUL SOUHRADA

- .£ .

ing letter to, Ludwig is indicative of issue is, they· (the comptroller's
something the coinjltroller doesn't office) are political," ~ento told us.
like to talk about: that he's become ""Ludwig is the Clinton administraone of the most political bank regu- tion's spokesperson on many issues.
lators in recent memory. That's not a · ... The real issue is that he's been
good reputation for a mali who's sup- more successful at it (than his predeposed to be above the political fray . cessors)."
Ludwig's squeaky-clean image
as an independent ovetseer of f~r­
· was smudged earlier this year, when
ally chartered banks.
Leonora Cross, Ludwig's spokes- it was learned 'that Ludwig was in
woman, admitted as milch in an inter- attendance at a White HouSe coffee,
view. "(Mr. Ludwig) has tried, very along with 17 national and local
. hard, to keep at arm's length any kind bankers. Ludwig has since said that
of perception or reality of his being he would never have.attended had he
involved in anything relating to the known it was sponsored by the
Democratic Pany.... He didn't go to .Democratic National Comminee.
the (Democratic) convention last
"This guy is among the most
year. H.e doesn't go to fund-raisers." savvy and politi~ regulators who's
But the . comptroller does go to ever been in the. job," says one
Renaissance Weekend, the annual Republican sounee in the banking
schmooze festival in Hilton He ail, community, only halfway admiringS.C., :where tl)e president and Mrs. ly. "He's really good at manipulating
·Clinton spend lbeir New Year's Eve the political process .... He knows
holiday. ·
.
how the system works. He's not this
.Vento himself doesn't mind seeing regulator who tries io stay above the
Ludwig take on a more political.role fray."
.
·
than Pl!SI comptrollers. "I think the
UNDER TilE DOME •• Sen.
Richard Shelby, the party-switching
DiD YeLTSI!&lt;I
Republican from Alabama, has often
~To
been like a pit bull when it comes to
confronting
the Clinton administraTiMe?
tion. Most recently. he won front·
page headlines by )lounding Anthony Lake, President Clinton's nominee
to head the Central Intelligence
Agency. until Lake withdrew his
name from consideration.
It turns out Shelby's rabid reputa·
tion stretches back quite a few years.
Recently we met a woman who grew
up with Shelby in rural Alabama. She
told us the young Shelby, who was
well-liked among his peers, could
often be found driving around the
community in a pickup truck with
two large hunting dogs. 'Their names
were ..Did He Bite You?" and "Yes
He Did."
.
Shelby's office · confirmed that,
indeed, the young politician didbave
two dogs going by those names. If
only someone had told Ant~ony ·
Lake.
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Feature
!l¥••dic·ate, Inc.

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Sen. Ge.ne Watts, one 0 f.the staunchest advocates of proficiency tests in
, the Ohio Legislature, disagreed.
.
"That would die a swift death in the Senate," the Galloway Republican
said of Coughlin's biii.
The 12th-grade test is an accurate indicator of what high school stildenis
•should know by the time they graduate, Watts said. And putting the scores
pn ttanscripts is a way to get students to take the test seriously.
.~
Watts also disputed the notion that many good students do poorly on the
12tests, suggesting that either the Michigan test is poorly constructed or stu/:;dents there don't try hard enough.
~j
Instead of undercutting the importance of the tests, Watts wants to make
:.lthem tougher.
~1 "We need to raise the b.ar." he said.
.
"'! Watts said he is working with state ~ucation officials on soon-to-be-intro:,..duced legislation that would require proftciency at the lOth· or lith-grade
::;level as a requirement for graduation .
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By Nat Hentoff

In 1984, Congress, after · bitter
debate, passed the Child.Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act. When it
became law. child abuse and neglect
were redefined to include "withholding medically indicated treat·
ment from disabled infants with lifethreatening conditions."
Part of the impetus for this childsaving law had been the widely
reported death by starvation of a
Down syndrome baby. in Bloomington, Ind., in 1980. The parents had
agreed with their obstetrician that this
child could not attain "a minimally
adequate quality of life" because it·
would be mentally retarded. A horrified pediatrician at Bloomington
Hospital tried to bring intravenous
equipment to feed the baby, but he
was too late.
In 1982, an article iri the Anehivcs
of Internal Medicine reported that "It
is common in ihc United States to
withhold routine surgery and medical
care from infants with Down syndrome for the explicit purpose of has·
tcning death." The requests sometimes came from the parents.
Additional cases of summarily .
dispatching infants with other defects
had surfaced in the news. These decisions· ending life were made on ·
behalf of born children. not fetuses.
Though handicapped, they were entitled, at birth, to equal proteCtion of

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the laws:
physicians to the 19841aw continues,
During the 1984 debate in the and some have pointed out that sinco
House I was dismayed to see some of no doctor has been held responsible
the most prominent Democratic lib- · under that statute for civil or crimierals •• Henry Waxman, Barney nal liability, the law should be
Frank, Charles Rangel. Geraldine ignored because It is irrelevant.
Ferraro, among them-- oppose these Recently, in 'the prestigious journal
protections for handicapped infants. Pediatrics (January 1997), ihe first
It should be up to the parents and detailed study .ofthe consequences of
doctors, these ·humanists said, to the 1984 law has appeared. Drs.
make such life-and-death decisions. Stephen Wall and John Colin ParChildren, therefore, were chattel. tridge are the authors of "Death in the
with no rights of their own.
Intensive Care Nursery: Physician
. The new law required each state - Practice of Withdrawing and With- in order to get federal child abuse holding Life Support."
and neglect grants -- to create a sysOver three years, they bave
tern that would report to state child reviewed the medical recoids of all
protection agencies whenever dam- 165 infants . who have died in the
aged infal\ts were being denied treat- Intensive Care Nursery- abthe Uniment. No action would be taken by versity of California, San Francisco.
the state, however, if treatment would
"Most deaths among hospitalized
merely prolong dying or if the infant newborns," they write, "result from
were "chronically and irreversibly neonatologists' . decisions to limit
comatose."
·
1181ife-sustaining 3/8 treatment ...
After the law went into effect, such decisions are not infrequently
there was much anger from physi- based ·on the. physicians' concerns
cians writing in some of the medical about the infant'~ quality of life."
journals. Their profe~sionalism was
I have known a number of adults
being interfered with, they said. born di~abled ' who~ parents were
·There were pledges that the statute · advised by physicians to end their
would be resisted.
children's lives because of the future
What actually has been happening quality of those lives. One is now a
'to disabled infants since 'then has lawyer, another is a psychotherapist.
. been very dimcuh to deicrminc. Not Yet in this study in Pediatrics, the
all records of' the rea.•ons for. ending only reason 'physicians had for distreatment arc thorough or painstak- continui.ng treatment in 23 percent of
ingly honest. The hostility of many the cases was·the infant's future qual-

from hetold law practice. There's not
Imagine the fix that Kenneth Starr much chance that S.tarr will find anyis in.
,·
thing, but he fishes anyway.
He is a partisan with a con•
Another thing a distressed prose· stitu~ncy that is expecting big things cutor can do i~ glve speeches and
of him. What will they say if he does- ensure maximum ·publ~~ity by . dis· n't dCJiver,?
~
tributing an advance text of his
- He -just missed be
inatcd ~marks to the pr~ss. So Starr went
for the Supreme Cou in
and before a group o.f Arkansas editors
·wouldlike another shot. lfthe three- and nat-out accu~ed t!te Clinton
year ,Whitewater.1nvestigation reaps ' White House of creating an "impedri meager harvest, does he stand a iment" by mounting a legal challenge
to his demand for what were heretOchance?
. The man is under ·pressure. He fore regarded as privileged communeeds indictments, some trophy · nications. He ·also, complained that
heads whose names begin witiJ,C I!Rd uncooperative
witness Susan
end with N, and we'·re not ,talking McDougal is seeking a '"license to
about the Calhouns here. Problem is, lie" by demanding immunity to perhis case against
Clintons is con- . jury charges before she testifi~s·.
structed for the most part on the .. · This brings us to a third thing a
coeneed testimony of two admitted desperate independent counsel ean
liars who arc . trying to save their do. He can torture a potential witness
skins. What's a disheartened prose- who could turn the case around for
cutorto do?
him if she said the right things. So he
Well, one thing he can do is fish. has attempted to compel her cooperSo Starr has subpoenaed the notes atiun by having her cited for conkept by White House lawyen of their tempe and shackled in ironJ 111C1
discussions with the first lady about hauled off to jail, where she is
her activities in the wake of Vince chained to toilets and kept in.solitary
Foster's suicide and about the sudden c011finement.
reappearance of the billing records
Kenneth Starr needs Susan
By Joseph Spear

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· ity of life. And it was a contributing
factor in marking· other infants for
death. ·
· Moreover, "physician notes indicated that parents initiated the discussion of limiting treatment in only
a few 1/813 percent 3/8 of these
deaths." Parents were eventually
drawn into· the discussions, but the
f0ct that a neonatologist -- with all of
his or her authority -- wa.• the first to
recommend death had to change the ·
infant'S prospects.
During the House floor debate in
1984, congressman Henry Hyde, R·
Ill., said: .. The Constitution·ought to
protec1 that child." It did not save
many of those children before 1984,
and it has not since. This time. Congress should make sure that the.Con. stitution docs protect these born children.
As it is, say the authors of the
Pediatrics aniclc, since the 1984
debate, "no extensive United States
studies have as yet reported on actual physician . practices o( limiting
neonatal lile suppon -· how frc. quently and for whom? ... Why
haven't there been such studies,
except for this one hospital? Is there
so~ething tJ&gt; hide in the intensive
· care nursery?
Nat HJ=nloff Is a nationally ·
renowned authority on the First
Ainendment and the rest ol the BUI
of Rlgltts.

.It's.getting warm in Starr's chamber

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Getting rid of damaged
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McDougal in a big ;ay. The heart of with appomttng an i'ndependcnt
·his case is an allegatiotrthat GOv. Bill counsel :who is an ideologue. Indeed,
Clinton pressured an Arkansas busi- it is the prill)lem with ideologue~ of
ricssman for a federally backed whatever stripe in every situation:
$300,000 loan that he and Hillary, in Truth talces a back seat to the cause.
partnership with Susan and husband The greater good. they rationalize,
James, then divened iflto their real would I)!! served by the Clintons'
estate 'ventures.
•
deposal, even if it means strongarm, The .. busin~ssman, a local. ing people to. testify against them .
scoundrdbythc name of David Hale
And so we have' in Kenneth Starr
~ho is .cuff!:nlly serVing time on an .• am~ who was lppointed by a judi·
unrelatc~ fr~ud conviction, has ~iaJ .panel headed by a right-wing
already tmpltcate~ Cltnto~. Ja~s .. JU~JC after a meeting with two rightMcDougal. an ancnosclerollc m1n19- w1ng scn11tors. He continues his
depressive ~ho was c&lt;l!'vic:ted in an lucrative private practice, in which he •
carlter Whitewater trial and was represents more than a few ·Clinton
looking at ~4 .Years .iP prison, sought liaters, and hires an ..ethics counsel"
!o moder~te hts puniShment by bac~- , ill $400 an hour to ·vouch for his ·
tng Hales story. .
integrity. He gives speeches at P1rson
B~t Starr and It~ heavy-ltan~ed Pat RobertsOn's law school. He tries
:deptiUes m~ the mts~e of tummg to take an academic position that i$
.the screws a httle ~ tteht on Suun subsidit.ed by one or the nation's
most notorious right-wing bencfac,
1McDougal's thumb$. She backed off.
.; was dispatched to the hoosegow and tors.
·
ihas since used evay foivm she can · Now he must produce and that'~
find to actuae the independent coun- why he has bceun to poui.
:
1
sel of pursuing u "evil apnda."
;
.They want the Clinlllltl, she said.
JGupll Speu II 1 ~~~
"They tue notlooldne for the IIIIth." wrller lor Ntw.pe.,.r ~·
That, in a nutshell, is the problem Alloc:latloa.
·

~

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•

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Wedllfllday, May 211

Pomeroy pollee check two accidents

AccuWeat~ forecut for daytime condition• and high tempel'llures

•

MICH.

· ·· ·-

Democrats inanaged to scuttle ihc·bill
'through a series of contentious comWASHINGTON -- 1\vo years ago, mittee hearings.
when the Republicans' "Contract · When it was a)l over, Vento
With America" was in full swing on expressed his deepest gratitude to
Capitol Hill, Eugene Ludwig turned Ludwig, in a letter we recently
to a reliable ally on the House Bank- ·obtained .•
ing Commitlec for help.
· "Dear Gene," begins the June 30,
The new ,GOP majority was trying 1995, lctter. "I want to thank. you for
~ to push through the House a regula- your hard work and dedication ·dur1 tory refonn bill that would have tom . ing the Banking Committee mark-up
down many of the consumer protec- of the regulatory repeal bill .... When
lions built up over four decades of we began this mark-up, we laid out a
bank regulation.
. strategy to attack the bill on the basis
It was a bill that had bankers dane- of safety and soundness, consumer
ing in the aisles. But Ludwig, who protections and community responoversees more than 3,000 federally sibilities. ... Our united front surchartered banks as comptroller of the prised the Republicans and embar'urrency. wasn't dancing. Among rassed them into supponing our sueother things, the bill would have cessful efforts to eliminate some of
stripped his agency of much of its the most odious provisions (of the
power over the banking industry.
bill)."
So he worked in concen with,
At the bottom ofthe one-page letamong others. Rep. Bruce Vento, D- ter, scribbled in Vento's hand-writing,
Minn., an old-line liberal and one of are the wordS, "And good media
tbe top Democrats on the banking response!"
panel. With Ludwig's help, the
Seen in hindsight, Vento's glowBy Jaok.Anderson
and Jiln MOiler

school proficiency tests tougher, their colleagues up north ate having some
second thoughts about the whole concept.
After being besieged by parents across the state, the Michigan House voted last week to stop marking diplomas with labels indicating less-than-supe'ior perfonnance. Earlier this month, the state Senate unanimously passed
a bill that would elimin~t'\,all mention ofthe tests on diplomas for one year.
Students who. earn llW' marks on the test had received diplomas that
included a sticker labeling them proficient in reading, writing, math or science, or a combination of those subjects. Those who scored in the mid-range
were given a "novice" sticker.
·

one, .. he said.

. ..... : .•.

Currency co-mptroller··p·lays politics

.
.
• Associated Pre11 Writer
~
COLUMBUS -While Ohio lawmakers debate whether to malce high

It's the; nqvice tag that got the ax after an increasing number of parents
- acting on the advice of some high school guidance counselors - took
advantage of a loophole in state Ia'!" and refused to allow their children to
take the tests.
·
The 11-hour test is designed to assure employers that a student has sufficient skills to hold down a job,, but some students with. good academic
records worried that a black mark on their diploma would hurt their chances
of being accepted into top-flight universities. The test is not a condition of
graduation.
·
"We have honor students in my district who have failed the test, yet are
attending excellent colleges," Sen. Michael Bouchard, R-Binningham, com.: plained during t)le Michigan Senate debate. ··
"The High School Proficiency tests are proving to be questionable as indicators of learning."
Ohio high school students are required to take two sets of tests, which
measure proficiency in math, reading, writing, science and citizenship. Passin g all five parts of the ninth-grade test is required for graduation. '
Students who pass the ninth-grade test by Jan. I of the year they are to
graduate also have to take the 12th-grade test. Both tests' scores are recorded on the students' permanent records.
,
.. About 39 percent of high school seniors passed all five pans of the 12th. grade test this year, compared with 40 percent last year, the State Board of
. Education reported in April.
_
But'because there is no penalty for not passing the 12th-grade test, few
Ohio students take it seriously, said Rep. Kevin Coughlin, R-Peninsula.
That makes it a waste of time, argued Cougl)lin, who has introduced leg'
islation to eliminate the 12th-grade test.
·
" I think we ought to have one test that matt,ers and get rid of the useless

. ...

-Local News in· Brief:.

OHIO Wcdtil(·r

: ... !."·.... ~..~

,_

• "

•

69°

(f

••
•

.,

••
••
W. VA.
"

(f
ViliAooocllrod , . , . Gtlphlt:IINel

•

1\vo minor accidents wenl investigated by the Pomeroy Police Depan- .
1111=nt over the holiday weekend.
·
.
On .Friday at 6:16 p.m., Ivan Lavender of Syracuse reported that his
1995 Nisun had been struck by an~unknown driver in the parking lot at
Wendy's.
The driver of the vehicle left the scene, according to the police report.
Light damage was reported to Lavender's car.
Early Sunday, Amanda Hays of Rutland struck a vehicle driven by
James Randolph of Racine wltile leaving a parkin£ ~pace at the Marathon
station. There was light damage to Hays' 1986 Chevrolet and Randolph's
1995 Pontiac.
,
Hays was cited for improper backing.

Two held for alleged auto theft

• IColumbusI'i'o• I

•

..
..·'

The Dally Sentinel • .,.... 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

A stolen v.chicle from Charleston. W.Va., was recovered by Pomeroy
authorities early today, and two people .arc in custody for the theft. . .
According to James Stacy, assistant police chief, a 1988 Ford fourwheel drive truck, owned by ihe H.C. Nut~r Co., was recovered at the
Subway restaui'IIRt at 2 a.m.
,
Also recovered·were three stolen bicycles and a stolen lawn mower.
as well as $6,000 in .core samples.
Stacy said that the individuals were observed ttying to sell the bicycles and the police department was called to investigate.
·
. The names of the individuals suspected in the theft are being withheld
pending the filing of charges, accordin.sto Stacy, who said he expects them
to be held here pending exlra!lition. The incident was investigated and the
arrests made by Pomeroy Police officers Jonathan Sanders and James Web- .
ster.

LEADING THE .AAIIADE - Thit honilr guard of lha Draw Webster Post 39 of the AiMrtc:an Legion lid lhl pantdl through
Pomeroy Monday to open thlann1111l M•morlal Dly urvlcee•

Crash on SR 7 results In minor Injuries

.

Minor injuries to the drivers of two cars were reponed by the GalliaMeigs Post of the State Highway Patrol following an accident Friday on
State Route 7 near Tuppers Plains.
Gertrude V. Meeker, 41681 SR 7, Reesdville, and Stephen C. Trapani,
39, 428 Hedgewood Drive. Gallipolis, were not treated at the scene, troop·
ers said.
·
·
.
Meeker was northbound at 12:33 p.m. when she turned left in an
attempt to enter Orange Township Road 286 (Vanderhoof) and was struck
by a southbound car driven by Trapani, according to the repon.
The collision fori:ed Meeker's car to spin around and strike a traffic
sign, troopers said.
.
Damage was .moderate to the Meeker vehicle and the car driven by Trapani, owned by BLC'Corp,, Cheshire.
. .

:~warming

trend will bring
:higher chance of showers

, By The Alloclatecl PI'HI
.
: · A slow '!"arming trend will continue across Ohio on W~nesday while the
• chance of rain increases. the National Weather Service satd.
.·
Highs'will be around 70 degrees.
.
. Moist soutberly breeus and increased cloudiness will bring a chance of
'BEHIND THE SCENES-Thla group of anxloue gredlllltelshowerS and thunderstorms, especially in southwest Ohio.
maklng laat-minute pl'lpal'llllona for Sunday's c01'111118ncement
The chance of rain will continue into the weekend while temperatures
exe~laea at Eutern High School. Tilly ant,
Martie Holter
warm a few degrees.
· ·
. :- · ·
·
and Marla Fntcker; and etandlng, Chrle Bailey, Bill Fntncls and
Shaun Seth.
"' The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather sta. lion was 94 degrees in 191 I while the record low was 34 in .1961. Sunset
' ·tonight will be at 8:50p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 6:07 a.m. ·
•
Weather forecast:
&gt;
Tonight ... Fair. Lows around SO. East winds 5 to 10 mph. .
(Continued from Page 1)
Dickens, Eric Edward Pillard, TimUnits of the Meigs County Emer- Letan Falls, Eva Lawson. VMH.
'· Wednesday.. .Increasing 'cloudiness with a chance of showers m the after- . gency Medical Service answered 14 Racine squad assisted;
othy
Steven Epling, Amber Marie
and "Waterdance""; the Grand March,
" noon. Highs in the lower 70s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
12:06 p.m. Monday, Powell Street, Elgar's "Pomp anti Cineumstance"; Fortney, William Mark Francis,
calls for assistance over the MemorWednesday night ... Scattered showers. Lows in the mid 50s.
ial Day holiday weekend. Units Middlepon, Shirley Herman, VMH; and the recessional, "Arsenal March." Maria Diuiene Freck.er, Christopher
"·
Extended forecast:
·
I :20 p.m. Monday, OBNC. Janeth . The band also performed "The Riv, Duane Gandara, Nathan Eugen.e
responding included:
'" Thursday...Panly cloudy with a chance ofshowers and thunderstorms.
Beal,
HMC.
.
. CENTRAL DISPATCH
er of Life" and the school "Alma Goodwin, Christina Michelle Gross· · Highs in the upper 70s.
.
·
RACINE
I0:39 a.m. Satui'day, East Main
Mater," led by the senior class offi- nickle, Bruce Ryan Hawley, Traci
· •• Friday and Saturday... More humid with a chance of showers and thun- Street. Pomeroy. Margaret' Bailey,
Michelle Heines, Rickie Lee Hollon
3:43p.m. Monday, SR 124, Brian cers.
. derstonns. Morning lows 55 to 60. Highs in,the upper 70s.
·
Jr
.• Crystal Jean Holsinger Bailey;
·
Wolfe,
treated
at
the.
scene.
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Butler· presented the class to
Martha Renee Holter, Jeremy
RUTLAND
2:53 p.m. Saturday, Overbrook
Superintel\dent Deryl Well, who
Edward
Hupp, Rocky James Hupp,
8:59 p.m. Sunday, Rocksprings accepted the class on behalf of the
Nursing Center, Middl ...,..urt, Mary
Road, Pomeroy, Danny Dotson, members of the Eastern Local Board Robert Lee Keaton II, Eric Sidney
D11vis, Holur Medical Center;
' .
c):/
Marcinko Jr.. Se~n Adam Maxey,
5:41 . p.m. Saturday, state Route PleaSant Valley Hospital.
of Education .
·
:ay The Associated Prell
of Ravenna. driver in a one-vehicle
SYRACUSE
124, Reedsville, Connie Perry, VMH,
·~ At least 13 people have died in motQrcyde accident on Ohio 303 in
Diplomas were conferred lly John Adam Luke McDaniel, Teresa Dawn
2:37 p,. m. Saturday, volunteer fire Rice, president of the hoard. to the McGrath. Amanda Marie Milhoan, .
Reedsville squad assi~ed;
· : 'traffic accidents on Ohio roads this Portage County.
8:56 p.m. Saturday, Fifth and depanment and sqwid to Forest Run , following graduates: James Lawrence Christina Marie Moore, Jeanie Mae
holiday weekend, the State Highway
SOUTH WEBSTER - Calvin
~ Patrol said Monday.
Hall, 40, of South Webster, driver in Pearl streets, Racine, Devere White, Road, automobile fire, Michael 'cun- Adams, Patrick Loren Aeiker, !'atsy Newell, Wesley Michael Newell,
_ The patrol counts fatalities Friday a two-vehicle accident on a Scioto St. Joseph's Hospital, Racine squad ningham owner, no injuries repo!led. LeAnn Aeiker, Keith Allen Arix, Carrie Ranae Newlun, Peter ChristO:
Central Dispatch squad assisted;
assisted;
Laura · Ann Arix. Christopher Eric pher Nowak, Kelly Amber Osborne,
"through Monday for the Memorial County road near Ohio 140.
8:50 p.m: Sunday, East · Letan Bailey. David Allen Baker. Riki Daniel Jacob Otto, Jason Alan Pai'k8:10p.m. Sunday, Palmer Street;
QMNVILLE - Patrick Finner' Day weekend.
•... The dead:
an, 47 ., ooff Newark, driver in a one- Middleport, Dorothy McCloud, Ro"ad. Gloria Casto, VMH, Racine Michelle Barringer, Thomas Vernon er;
Leslie Leigh Parker, Mindy Mac
sq~ad assisted . .
· ~.;:
MONDAY .
vehicle accident on a Licking Coun- HMC;
Basim, Angela Jeanene Bissell, Lau3:32 a.m.. Monday. Art Lewis
TUPPERS PLAINS ·
ra Lynn ·Brown, Candace Lane Sampson, Jessica Renee Scarberry,
ENGLEWOOD - Christopher ty road.
.
10:24 p.m. Sunday, Calloway Bunting, Sherry Lynn Burke, Thomas Earl Schuler, Shaun Michael
•. Y. Smith,.l9; of WeSt Milton in Ran.EATON- Michael Eby, 18, of Street, Middlep.ort, treated at the
Seth, Li.sa . Marie Stcthcm, Henry
Ridge Road, Lester Hawk, St. Jeromee Clifford Calaway;
;,.dolph Township. driver in one-car Camden, passenger in a one-car acci- scene;
.Travis
Thomas, David E. Vanlnwa9:34 a.m. Monday, Manuel Road, Joseph's Hospital ..
Joshua Eugene Casto, An~ela
~· accident on a Montaomery County - dent Qn a Preble County road.
gcn,
Alicia
Marie Walker. Michelle
""road.
NAPOLEON - James E. Hux·
Dawn Chancy. James Patrick ClifSUNDAY
ford; 36, of Toledo, drivet in a two·
ford. Catherine JoAnn Coram, Dawn Westfall, Chad Allan Wheeler.
Meredith Lynn · Crow, Steven Lee Tracy Marie While and Anna Chris- .
::.:. CELINA- Anges M. Hemmcl- vehicle. accident U.S. 24 in Henry
tine Wolf.
::,.~ gam, 89, of St. Henry, in a two-car County.
;:-;collision on Ohio 219 in Mcneer
FRIDAY
·-·county. .
COSHOCTON . - Timothy A.
DENVER (AP)- Stung bytes- tion.thcy said McVeigh told them of '
7..: CINCINNATI- Dion Lay, 20, of Mc.Coun. 49, of West Lafayene, driCows: steady; all cows 46.00 and
:.: Milford, in a two-car crash on U.S. 50 ver in a one-car accident pn a timony from their own star witness, his plans to bomb the Alfred P. MurCOLUMBUS (AP) - Indianadefense
lawyers
hoped
to
rebound
by
rah
Federal
Building
months
before
down.
·
!:;;! in Hamilton County.
. Coshocton County road.
Ohio direct hog prices at selected
;:'"[ DEFIANCE - Jeffrey Froelich · PORTSMOUTH . - Robert M. attacking the credibility of two gov- 168 people were killed and 500 buying points Tuesday a.~ provided by
Bulls:lower; all bulls 46.00 and
:,:'; II, 22. of Defiance, driver in a one- Waller, '48, of West Portsmouth. dri· ernment witnesses who have linked injureq when it was shattered by a the U.S. Dcpanment of Agriculture down.
Timothy McVeigh to the Oklahoma ma.•sivecxplosiononApril19, 1995. Market News:
Sheep and lambs: strong; choice
.:.::.~ .vehicle accident on Ohio 15 in Deli- ver in a two-vehicle' crash on Ohio 73
City
bombing.
·
It
was
the
worst
act
of
terrorism
on
wools
I05.00 to 111.00; choice clips
' ~::.ance County. .
·
.
in Scioto County.
Barrows and gilts: mostly 1.00
Defense
attorneys
were
expected
·
U.S.
soil
and
McVeigh
could
face
the
NA;
feeder
lambs, NA; aged sheep
-·
SATURDAY
CELINA- Michael Byers, 26, of
lower; demand and movement light
to present vid~otapes and wiretapped ·death penalty if convicted of murder to moderate.
.~:; CLEVELAND-An unidentified Hicksville, driver in a three-vehicle
47:00 and down.
·
conversations of Michael and Lori and conspiracy charge's. ·
;".~ person in a two-car accident in Cuy;t- accident on U.S. 33 in Mercer CounU.S. :1-2; 230-260 lbs .. country
.
Fonier to show the couple lied repeatThe Forticrs told jurors that points 55.50-57.00, few 57.50; plants
,-~., hoga county.
.
ty.
;::.: RAVENNA - John Weathers. 33.
edly - and thill Michael Fortier McVeigh had cased the building four 56.50-58.00.
bragged that he was going to make months before the blast, that he was
U.S. 2-3, 230-~ 60 l~s . 51'.00money by cooking up "fables" about enraged because of the 1993 govern- 55.50; 210-230 lbs. 46.50-51.00.
the bombing.
ment siege of the Branch Davidian·
Sows: firm to 50.00 higher.
The
Foniers
and
alleged
contamcompound
near Waco, Texas, and that
U.S. 1-3 300-450 lbs. 44.50the
township
building,
7
p.m.
:::.: 1\arkey JuqiDg
ination
of
evidence
by
the
FBI
lab
he
hoped
the
bombing
would
spark
a
46.50;
450-500 lbs. 46.00-48.50;
.:::': Judging in the Meigs County
were
to
be
center
stage
as
the
defense
"general
uprising."
._
500-600
lbs. '48.00-52.50. few over
,::::: IKES turkey beard judging contest . Special senices
begins
ty
wrup
up
its
cosc
this
week.
Mrs.
Foitier
recalled
McVeigh's
600
lbs.
53.00.
Evangelist David Dailey will
;:; will be held Wednesday, 7 p.m. at the
Boars: 40.00-41.00.
speak
at services Sunday, 6 p.m. at Lawyers for McVe1gh had planned to use of soup cans to demonstrate how
•...., IKES clubhouse on Scout Camp
call
up
to
4Q
witnesses
and
take
up
to
,
barrels
of
explosive
fertilizer
would
Estimated receipts: 29,000
the'· Harvest Outreach Ministry,
•·' Road near Chester.
10
days,
but
got
through.
19
witnessbe
stacked.
.
.
Prices ·from .Producers Live·
Reibel Road. C.ftester. ·
·
'··,.
cs in just two days last week.
stock Association:
'
:~ Trustees to meet
TJ!e
trial was to resume today aftcy
. But)uro~s have also been told of
Hog
market
trend
for
Tuesday
:
:.::
Lebanon Township Trustees will Ctunp.cAiaceUed
a three,day .~rcak .
-.........~ Fortiers dr~g use. The defense
1.00 lower.
~-:; tneet in regular session Thursday at
'The Eastern Eagle girls basketball
The defense has asked U.S. Dis- · ·was expected to tmply -as attorney
Summary of Monday's auctions
· ~ •..
camp that was to be held on June 2- trict 'Judge Richard Matsch to admit Stephen Jones did during crossat
Hillsboro,
Creston:
r------------...;..o;;;a,~. S at Eastern High School has been a Justice Department repon heavily examination -that Michael Fonicr's
Hogs:
steady.
The Daily Sentinel cancelled, according to Eastern Bas- criticizing 1~c ·FBI lab and how it testimony was slanted to secure a
Butcher hogs: 53.60 to 59.50.
ketball Coach Scott Wolfe .
handled
evidence
.
in
the
bombing.
lenient
sentence
for
lesser
charges
(USPS 21l-!Oit)
Cattle: lower.
The request was pending. The . associated with the bombing.
Slaughter steers: choice 63.00Pubttiii!Od mry aflemoon. Mondlly tttroup
Fortier has pleaded guilty to sev- . 67 .00; select 59.00-63.00.
Fortiers. meanwhile, arc already
· ,
Friday, Ill Coon St.. Pomeroy, ONo. b, lite
familiar to jurors.
eral charges, including failure to
Olllo Yittley PubllohlnJ Compott)'/OIIIIneu Co..
Sl~ughte.r heifers: choice 63.501\:nneroy, Oblo 4~769, Pt1. 992-2 t !16. Second
While t~stifying for the prosccu- report the bomb plot to authorities. 67.00, select 58.00-63.50.
Am Ele Power .........................40_
eli» poo""" pold,. Pometoy, Obio.
.. ---· . '
Akzo ......................,...............69\
M110btr: The "-lared Pie ... and tlla.Ohio
AmrTech •.•,••••.•••••.•.•••.•.•••.•••.64\
"uod111iNi.
'
Alhland 011 ...........................4874
"
ATAT .....................................37'4
.
·
.
.,
1be government studied
POSTM"ma, send -.. &lt;0110&lt;1iono to
'
BOSTON ·National Fuelsaver . 22% of the fuel would only clrumed by the developer.
· test tlaia on vehicles made
a.nk Orte ..............................42~
The Dall,y Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy,
Bob !Yiiia- .............................. 1~.
. ' ,01Mo45769.
Corp. of Bos1011 h~ develOped b~m when it_ came in contact . In addi_tion t~ govemm~nt by se~eral auto . makers.
&amp;orv-War'MI' ••••••.••••.••••••••.••••48 r.,
1
a low cost automotive accessory Wlth the platmum surfaces of confll1IIlltlon of liS fuel savmg Listed below is the data
SUitSCitlrrtON II"TES
Chemplon ...............:...............17,
.
.,~
called the Platinum Gasaver the catalytic converter.
· claims, the Gasaver bas received fro~ a ll~t of 15 identical
Chann Shpa •.....••..•..•••.........•. !'!.
·'
One W..k............................ ,.................... SUJO
•I
One Month .......................:........................ 70
~!t,.~dlng
~
:n
which is guaranteed to increase Unfortunately, the converter patents for raising gasoline 5-hter vehtcles.

-ted.

Squads respondto 14 calls .Eastern graduates face

·Weekend wrecks kill 13

McVeigh attorneys -f ocus
on witnesses' credibility

Today's livestock report

§Meigs announcements

-·
·-·

·

Stocks

Device May Increase Gas Mileage,·by 22% TEST DATA

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llooll r.porta .,. the 1D::U
:;~.!~fqtrldld by

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521' I

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~'

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·'
.

of octane ' and, has been approved
gas mileage by 22% while process ,takes glace outside
·
meeting all federal and state the engme, .w ere the energy for reducmg emissions to
emission standards.
. . . produced cannot be harnessed acceptable levels. ·
.
With a simple connection.to to drive-the vehicle. ·
Joel Robinson, the developer.
a vacuum line, t"e Gasaver But with platinum in the commented: "We've already
adds microscopic quantities of combustion chambers, 2?% sold over 300,000 Gasavers.
platinum to the air-fuel mixture more of each gallon bums . To our surprise, as many
entering the engine. .
· inside the engine so that 22% people buy the Gasaver
. Platinum has the unique fewer gallons are required to because it extends engine life
abilitY to make non-burning fuel drive the same distance.
by cleaning out the abrasive
burn. With platinum in tlie After studying this process carbon deposits as buy it to
flame zone, yo~ increase the for five years, the government increase gas ~leige.:· call
percentage of fuel b\lrlili.lg in concluded: "Independent testing. For further uuormation
:
the engine from 68% to~- sbows greater fuel savings
1-Soo-LESS-GAS
Normally that additional withtheGasavertbanthe22%
1-800-!537-7427
Tllialld~tppearedoriaiiUIIJy. ueditorill Dlllcrilllnanothcrncwapoper.

..

•

'

vdtldo MM. M.P.o . Pm.n•
Number wnhout with l~ve ·
oaaaver Guavcr .,.,.

59
63
53
51

12.0 ·17.8 48.3%
· IJ .3 16.6 , 46.9%
14.1 20.7 46.8%
13.0 18.8 44.6%

~ · 1 ~:~

60 13.3
55 9.8
68

.

14.3

~ · 10.8

:ti

:N
17.9

~:;~

34.6%
13.1 33.7%
18.4 28.7'll&gt;
13.9 28.7%

"

66
g:~ r~::~
57 14.4 15.9 10.4%
S4 13.1 14.0 6.9%
6.S 12.9 11.3 · 12.4%
A- 12.7 16.3 28.3%

••
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The Daily Sentinel
.......
.·

I

Tu11d.,, lilly %f, 1117

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%7,1117

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Indians down Belle, Whit' Sox 10·4

DOUBLE PLAY - Minnesota Twins ncond biHilllln Chuck
Knoblauch leaps as he throws out Seattle'~ Run Dsvlll at first
.,... after forcing Mlka Blowers. (16) at 88Cond In a first Inning
double play In Minneapolis Monday. the Mariners beet the Twins,
·13-8. (AP)
.
·
.

..--scoreboardNationlil Lul;ue

'
Atlailtn
Aorida
New York
Montreal
Philadelphi:.
Houston
Pictsburgh ·
St . Louis

Chicago
CiRCinnati

Son Francisco
Color1do

By The Auoclaled Press

w
34
29
27
26
18
w
25
24
20
18
18
w
t8
27

L

15
19
22
22
ll

L

25
25
28

East Ohtision
Pet.
.694

. .604

.m

GB

4 112
7 112

.367
16
Central Division
Pd.
GB

.500
In
4
6
6 112

'. 490

.417

.m

.367
Dhlsion
P&lt;L
GB

] I

W~st

L

20
22
22
28

26
Los Angeles
20
San Diego
Sunday's resuhs .
N.Y. Mets at Philadelphia. ppd , rain

.583
551
.542

I 112
l

.411

8

Pitbburgh 8, 'Momreal6 ·
Cincinnati 7. Chicngo Cubs 5
Colorado ~- HOUSlOD 5
Los Angeles 2, Allantn 0

Aorido 6. San Diego 2
St. Loois 9, San Francisco J

Monday•s rttult.t:
Oaicago Cubs 2. Pittsburgh I
COlorado 9. Sl. Louis 7

San Francisco 4, Houston J

1
•

Cincinnati 8. Philadelphia !i. I st game ~ '
Cincinnati 8.'Philadelphia '4 ._2nd garrv:

N.Y. Mets 4. Montreiill
La's Angeles .S. Florida 3
Atlanta 12. San Diego S
1Ueaday's Garntt
St. Louis (AI.Benes ~- 4) al Colorado (Thomson 0-3). 3:0) p.m. ·
Houston (Hlunpton 2-1) at San Frnncisco (Gardner 6-1 ). J :J5 p.m.
Chicaao Cubs (}.Gonzalez 0.0) at Pimburgh (Lieber 2-5). 7:05p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Clark 5·2 ) at Monr~al (Pe~z 4-4). 7:J5 p.m.

Philadelphia (Schilling 6-4) at Cincinnati (Tomko 0-0). 7J;Ci p.m.
Aorida (Leiter 3-J) at Los Anseles (NO"nxr-.5-.\). 1,9:05 p.m.
Atlanta (MOOdu.: S-1~at San Diego (Hamilton 3-1 ), IO:O;Ci p.m.
Wedne~by's Gamel
·
Chicago Cubs (Mulhollmnd 3-J) a1 Pittsburgh &lt;Cooke 3-6). 7:05p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Jones 8-2) ,ll Montreal (P.Pw,:ill1inez R-0), 7:35p.m.
Phihtdr:lphia (Stephen.'IOn 2-0) at Cincinnati (Mercker 1-5), 7:.':'i p.m.
Only game~ KhNoled
Amuiam

Boltill'IO«'e
Toronto
New York
Detroit
Boston

w
32
25
22
19
w
26
22
22
21

L

15
21
23
26

,.

Cleveland ·
Milwauket:
Kansu City
ChiCago
Minnesota

20

11

L

ll
2.l

.

L

21 '

26

25
26
20

Anaheim

Seanle

l..eacm~

Eall Dl•islon
Pet.

.681
5 .0

GB
6 112
7

.S.' I
.458

10

II~

12112

.41J

. Central Dh•lsion
PeL
GH

.. 553

.~H9

.l

.468

4

..457
·408

7

-11 /"!.

Wtst Di•ision

w
Tew

25
25
29
2l

23
11

Ooklond
S•ndiJ's.l'tftllts
Toronto 4, Atl3heim l II innin~
KanJIU City 4. Se:l.nle ~ . II l nnine:~
De1;roit 13. Te:uu 5
Milwa.utte II . Oticaro White So:t 7
Clevelaild 7, BaltimOre 6
.
Bostoft at N.Y.'Ynnkees. ppd .. rain
Min11C'IOta 7. Oakland 6. 10 innings
Monda)"s ruulu
Boston .l Milwaukee 2
Detroit 6. Anaheim 0

GB

P&lt;L

.m

.s.n

I

I
8'

.531
.J92

. Bahirnorc.8. N.Y. Yankees 6

Seaulr n. Minrl(:scHn 8
Oakland 2. Kansas City I. II innine:i
Ck\·e:land 10. Chicn~o White Sox 4 '
Toromo 8.,Texas I
'1\tnday•• Games
Anahrim ~ Pcrisho 0-0) at Detroit (lllompson 4-31. 7 : 0~ p.m.
Milwnoktt (~rttdcs 1- l 1at Boston {Gordon .l-5). 7:0.'i p.m.
Baltimore (Kamieni«ki ~ -2) ;u N.Y. Y:ankce~ (Rogers -' ·2 ). 1J~ p.m.
Teus (Burken ~-.lint Toronto (Penon 0-21. 7:).5 p.m.
devt!land (J..oPez 2-2) at Chicago White Sox•(Drabek J.J). 8 : 0~ p.m.
Seattle (lowe 0·1) nt Minnesotn (J:nis O-OJ: 8:05p.m.
Qruc.land (Oqui!t 0.1 ) at KllJI5al City (Rosado ·' ·.l). 8:05p.m.
Wedrwtday's Games '
.
Chic;,_o White So11. (AIYM:'l J -5) at Boston (Selc 5-.1). 7:05 r.m.
Bnliimote {K&amp;:!y 8-ll nt ' Detroit 1Moehler 3-3). 7:.l5 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Mcndo'z..1 J.l) :at Toronto f'Ouzman J-4). 7:J5 p.m.
Milw:~uktt (KM12-.'il nt Mirlnesota IRildke J... J. 8:05p.m.
· Cle•cland (0J,ea .'i-,\ ) nt Kan.sas City (lkkMr ~5) . .R :O~ p.m.
A~im, {Watso n 2·3) II Oakl11ad 1KatS3)' 1·51. 10:.\5 p.m.
Te.:as tOii..-cr 2-5) 111 Stnttle (Johnson 6-1). IO : J~ p.m.

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, Ohio Hlp S&lt;hoal Buoboll Pairi"''

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Ott6o Stalt Hl&amp;h Sthool ButNIITh•nwntnl ·

11,.1....1~olriop
1

DIVISION I
AI Euclid HiJh School
Otvcland 54. lpatius (20-!'i) vs. Elyria (18-3), Friday. 1:30 p.m.
~
Mayfteld (15- 11 1 va. Younastowa Boardman (22-t). Friday. 4:30p.m.
l
ReJional Final Saturday. I p.m. ·
J AI 'nlqrman MuiUOn Sllldium in Can&amp;on
f.¥elid &lt;21-3) •s. Hudson (21 -3). Friday. 1:3!) p.m. . .
Drackn Tri-Vallry (22.1) vt. Barberton (16-IOl. Friday. 4:30p.m.
! lkJiOMt Final Saturday. I p.m.
r ..UIM• L.ake Hi!Jh School in Lcwistawn
HilMird (20-7) va. Toledo Scart 123-1). Friday, 1:30 p.m,
(Wioway Welt'-nd (22-3) vs. Ddiance (17-4). Friday. 4:30 p:m.
I ........ Finol S.omloy, I p.m.
f At WritiM Stair Uaivtrslty in Da)10ft
·1
Qoe,_ Sywnoo: (19-9) ¥1. V..dalio Butlcf (2l·J). Fridoy, I:JOp.m:
t HllaihoP (2S.2) vs. Cineinl'llti Glen Este {IS..9). Friday. 4:30p.m.
........ Final S.unloy, I p.m.
·
1
;
DIV1510N II
' ..u flu;Oaraa Pllt in Yovaastown
Falls Wallli Jthit (20-~) w. Younascown Mooney (20-6), Fridly. I :30 p.m.
' c..on CeMrll CllholiC (26-1) ••· 0\lrdon Nocre·Dame·CIIhednl Lltin (17·2), Friday, 4:JOp.m.
ltqtONl FiRII Sallll'dly, I p.m.
!
J

[ c.,..,..

r
•
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•

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"' 0.11011
Hip
Clolioo.....
(20-l)
vo.School
0..1"" Cloy (te&lt;ool UDIYiilable~ Friday. I:JOp.m.
Sheffield lrooUHk •20-4) n. Columbus Watterson (2S-l). Friday. 4:30 p.lil.
....... Fiul-y. I p.m.
At lea¥en Add 11 1 er
St a.. ..•illo (.-11 - · • - • n On:lnil"' Lopn Elm (20-.1~ Friday. I:.10 p.m.
~ E&lt;IMO (....nl -•ail.... ) •~ Wo...ty (22~). Fridly, 4:JOp.m.

I
...... fiool-y,lp.WI.
.
' 1v. Field io Piqua
~
C' . t '·l:&gt;d*t&lt;l3·3) vi. CiatinllldMcNichola&amp;(IJ..IJ), Friday, l:lOP.m.

.

.'

Hershiser, did extend his hining
s~ tq 21 games - matehing a
c,;;;;) high - wilh a single in the
eightlj.off Jose Mesa. _He also had two
grounilouts and a smkcout.'
· When Belle reached first after his
hit, he had a conversation with lndians rust baseman Jim Thome.
"I won't tell you what I said to .
him, but il was 111 in fun," Thome
said. "Albert and 1 were close. We
were friends and we are still friends.
He is a very great player. Once we
continue to play them,l think Ill this
(hype) will go away. 1 really do."
Belle, as usual, would not comment after the game.
He'll make his first visitto Cleveland next week when the White Sox
play 111 Jacobs Field on June 3-5.
Blue Jays 8, Rllllgen 1
At Toronto, Roger Clemens (9-0)
became the :AL's first nine· game
winner, allowing one run and fo~r
hits in seven innings and striking out
seven. Off to his best start since going
14-0in 1986,heloweredhisleague- .
leading ERA to 1.81.
. Toronto's offense. which has
struggled all season, ~atched its season high in runs - doing it in the
first two innings- and hits (13).
Ruben Sierra went 3·for-3, and Ed
Sprague and Orlando Merced home·
red.
·
Rangers staner Julio Santana (2·
2) gave up eight runs - seven
earned- and 12 hits in six innings.
Orioles 8, Yankees 6

1

.542

JO

By TOM WITHERS
AP Sports Writer
Indians I, Albert Belle 0.
That's how_fans mar view Cleve.land's 1().4 wm m Ch1cago Sunday
over Belle ani! the White Sox.
But those closest to the situation
had a different perception of Belle's
first game against his fonner club.
':I became n:signed to the fact that
Albert Belle was a White Sox'.playera long time ago," Indians manager Mike Hargrove said. '"The White
Sox were good before Albert s1gned
and t~y 're a good team after Albert
signed. We didn't come here to play
Al~rt . We came here to play the
White Sox."
That logic dido 't stop a substantial
group of Cleveland fans from mak. ing 1he trip to Chicago to boo Belle,
who left the Indians during the offseason to sign a $55 million deal with
the White Sox.
.
"The people of Cleveland don't
much like Albert Belle. But person·
ally I like Alben. He's not a bad
guy;" Hargrove said.
.
Elsewhere m the Amencan
League, it was: Toronto 8, Texa:- I;
Baltimore 8, New York 6; DetrOit 6,
Anahe1m 0; Boston 3, Milwaukee 2;
Oakland 2, Kansas C1ty I · m II
innings; and Seattle 13, Minnesota 8..
·The Indians scored six runs in the
second and Ore I Hershiser (5-2) survived a shaky fir~tto go seven strong
innings.
Belle, after going 0-for-3 against

At New York, Bnldy Anderson
homered on the . firs.t 'PilCh of the
game from Andy Pe~ (6-3), then
doubled off~ Yan~J~U.du~ng a
s1x-run rally m these~ 1nmng.
The Orioles werejusi,..l4 against
the Yankees last season, including a ·
five-game loss in the AJ.CS. But AL
East-.leadi~g Baltimore won the first
meeting thiS year, even ~~gh rna~ager ~avey Johnson wu _eJected m
his return from a two-day abseQCe
caused by a family illness. .
B.J~ Surhoff had three hits and
three RBis for Baltimore.
The Orioles won for the seventh
time in nine games. New Y9rk has
lost s1x of seven.
.,
Shawl! Boskie (2-2) pitched a
scoreless sixth and Randy Myers got
.three outs for his 16th salle.
TI&amp;en 6, Allaell 0
. c!
At Deiroit, Omar OlivllfCS (3-3)
pitched a four-hitter for his second
shutout this season. He wbn for the
first time since blanking Cleveland&amp;:
0 on May 10 for his first career
shutout.
·
Only two ru.nners got to second
base for the Angels, who. have lost
two straight after a five-g~me winning streak.
·
Chuck Finley (2·4) lost for the
first time in three stans. ·
Red Sox 3, Breweni 2
At Boston, Tim Naehring hit a
two-run double with one Q~t in the
ninth as Boston rallied for ju~t its fifth
win in 20 games. •
,
Blanked on two hits through sev-

en inninp by Milwaukee swtcr Ben
McDonlld, the Red. Sox scored one
in the eighth. and two mon: in the
ninth_off J:)()q Jo~s (3-1).
M1ke Mllheny hit a two-run home
run for Milwaukee.
Chris Hammond (2-3) pitched the
ninth for the win.
' Atllletifs 2, Roy~ 1, UIDalqs
. _At. K~nsas Cuy, Mo.. Scott
Sp1ez1o Singled home Jose Canseco
with one out in the lith.
.Can~o drew a one-out walk off
,M_1ke :W~hams (0·1) a~d . Ja~on
G1amb~ smgled Jlefore SpiCZlO h1t a
clean smgle to naht.
Kansas City stane~ Kevin ('~ier ·
struck out a season-h1gh 10 m nme
innings, but didn't get any run support and failed in 'his fourth attempt
to get his IOOtll career win ..
Willie Adams (3-5) pitched one
inning for the win. Aaron Small got
three outs for his second save.
Mllrinen 13, Twins 8
At Minneapolis, Edgar Maninez
andJayBuhnerbothhomeredtwice
and Joey Cora extended his hitting
streak to 21 games for Seattle.
Martinez hit a pair of three-run
homers and Buhner connec~ on two
solo shots as the Mariners won for
just the third time1n II games.
Greg Myers homered and Rich
Becker went 3-for-3 for the Twins.
Seallle staner Scott Sanders ( 1-5)
picked up the .win despite a shaky
outing, allowing five runs and eight
hits in 5 1-3 innings.
.'
.
Scott Aldred (2· 7) took the loss.

Reds run string to four in row with twin bill syveep
By The Asaoclated Press
After their worst stan in nearly a
half-century, the Cincinnati Reds
finally are putting together a good
streak:
·
Barry Larkin reached safely in
every plate appearance as Cincinnati
swept Philadelphia 8·5 and 8-4 Mon·
day night, giving the RP1s a four·
game winning streak -their longest
since last July.
'
"I don't want to get too excited
about a four-game wirining streak,
but I'm excited," said manager Ray
Knight, who lost his temper several
times during Cincinnati's 14·31 stact.
Larkin reached in all seven plate
appearances, extending his streak to
12, two shon of the NL record set by
Pedro Guerrero in 1985 and four
short of Ted Williams' major league
record set in 1957.
Larkin, who drove in three runs,
had a triple, double, three singles and
two walks in the doubleheader. He
was in his car ready to bead out of the
stadium when reporters arrived min·
utes after. the second game ended.
" I've heard, 'lohe said, when asked
about the streak. "Don't jinx me.
We' ll sec."
With that, he drove off.
In other. games, Chi~ago beat
Piusburgh 2- 1, Colorado beat St.
Louis 9-7, Allal)ta beat San Diego 12·
5, New Yor~ beat Montreal4-3, Los
Angeles beal Florida· 5-3 and San
Frnncisco beat Houston 4-3.
At Cincinnati, John Smiley (5-6)
allowed eight hits and five runs over.
seven innings .in the opener, and Mike
Morgan '(2·4) gave up three runs on
six hits over seven innings in the second game.
Mark Leiter (4·5) lasted only four
innings in the first, and Matt Beech
(0-1) retired only four of 14 in the

sixth inning.
It was l)le first time two insid•the-park homers have been hjt in the
same NL game since Lou Brock and
Hector Cruz of St. Louis did it
against San Diego on June I 8, 1976.
·Greg Gagne of the TWins had two
himself for Minnesota on Oct. 4,
1986, against the White Sox.
·
Kevin Foster (6-3), Mel Rojas and
Terry Adams -combined on a three·
hitter for the visiting Cubs. Francis·
co Cordova (3-4) gave up two runs
and five hits in seven innings.
Rockies 9, Canlinals 7
Andres Galarraga hit a 469-foot
two-run homer and Vinny C\IStilla
added a solo shot as Colorado overcame a 6-0 deficit at Coors Field.
Galarraga drove in four runs and
Walt· Weiss hit his second homer in
two games.
With the Rockies trailing 7-6 in
the eighth, Dante Bichette singled
and Galarraga followed with his lith
homer, a drive off Mark Petkovsek
(3-3) that was'the third-longest homer
in the three-season history of Coors
. Field.
Mike DeJean. (2-0) pitched the
eighth and Steve Reed worked a hitless ninth for his fifth save.
Braves 12, Padres 5
Michael Tucker drove in three
runs on two doubles and a triple and
scored twice as visiting Atlanta beat
San Diego for the sixth straight time.
Tucker was 3-for·S with a walk,
Jeff Blause~ was 3-for·5 with two

RBis and Kenny Lofton werit 2·for4, drove in tWO runs and scored twice
for the Braves, who had 16 hits. They
had only 14 hits in a thre'c- gam~
series last weekend as they lo5\ twice
to the Los Angeles Dodgen. ..
Joe Borowski (2·0) was scoreless.
in I 2·3 innings. Tim Worrell (2·6)
was the loser.
•'rl
Mets 4, Expos 3 · ..
Rey Ordonez drove in th~ go· ahead run with a two-out single in the
eighth following a two-run single by
pinch-hit~er Matt Franco off !iJgueth
Urbina (2-4). New York · (~7 -22)
. moved five games over ·.500 for the
first time since they were 25·10 on
May 24 ' 1992.
.
Rookie Cory Lidle (3-0) allowed
one run in
ofttelief,
and
ninth for
his· 14th save,
Mets

their founh win in five games.
Dodgen 5, Marlins 3
.
Eric Karros .hit a tiebreaking tworun homer and Todd Zcile and Raul
Mondesi hit solo shots as Los Ange·
les wo~ its third straight. ·
· Chan Ho Park (3-2) won for the
first time in four stans since May 4,
allowing three runs and live hits in 6
1-3 innings. Todd Worrell got three
outs for his 14th save.
Rick Helling ( 1-3) allowed four
runs and five llits in six innings for
the visiting Marlins.
·
Giants 4, Astros 3
Barry Bonds homered off Jose
Lima (0-3) to break .a 3-3 tic in the
ninth at'San Francisco.
·
Julian Tavarez (1-2) got the final
out in the ninth for his first NL win.
Craig Biggio• went 4-for-.5 .. for
Houston.

Sports
briefs

BASEBALL
Defending cluimpion Louisiana
State beat South Alabama twice, and
second.
Mississippi State defealed Washing·
"With the infusion of young play- ton to complete the l'ield for the Col·
ers and Barry getting healthy and run· lege World Series.
ning, we're starting to look like the
The pairing for the eil!ht-team
team J thought we'd look like in ·.. double, elimination tournament were
spring training," Knight said.
announced and third-seeded Stanford
Cubs 2, Pirates I
meets sixth-seeded Auburn to begin
Chicago's Sammy Sosa and Pitts· play Friday afternOOn. LSU, seeded
burgh's Tony Womack hit inside-the· , · No. 2, will face seventh-seeded Rice,
park homers five minutes apan in the making its first appearance in the
CWS, Frida ni bt:

SAFE AT THIRD· Cincinnati's Barry Larkin (11) gats bacll to
third base safely Monday In the first Inning after a plckofl attempt '
from Phllldelphla clltclier Mark ParanL The Red• won a twin bill
from the Phllllea 8-5 and 8-4
•

·Attention Advertisers
Middleport Is Observing ~
It's Blcentennial This Summer
.The Daily S.entinel will.pubUsh a
com'memuratiVe edition for it's
July 2nd issue. · ·
You can be a part of this
historic edition
For More Information
'

'

•

The o.lly Sanllnel• ..... •

Heat ends jinx, defeat Bulls·87-80 ~-

· MIAMI (AP) - Michael Jordan
spent a Cree aflemooo on the golf
coUrse, then showed up for work the
next day with6~'1 his illr'Ob.
INDJANAPQLIS (AP) -·
But Jordan denied lha! his favorite
·They're goinato ruri the lndi~napo­
hobby
WIS the reason he missed his
lis 500 until they get it rilhL
first
14
shots Monday in the Chica, Right u rain. ,
10
Bulls'
~7-110 loss to the Miami '
After two days of dreary weather,
Heat.
The
defeat
left the Bulls lead- ·
after two days of watchins drivers
ing the Eastern 'Conference final 3-l
named Durant and Sospiri try to comgoing
into Game 5 Wednesday at the
pete with the JegaciC~ ofAndreni aild
United
Center.
Unser, the excitement of "GendeWith
confident Chicago in commen, stan you engines" has given
mand of the series Sunday, Jordan
way to "Can't we just get lhiJ thing
headed for the Miami links following
·over with?"
practice. His score wasn't.disclosed,
They' II return to Indianapolis
but
be shot 9-for·35 Monday, which
Motor Speedway today, trying once
led
to
an obvious question:
again to finish ll race thlll just won't
Why
play 46 holes of golf in 85end. Heck, in two days, they'vt
degree weather during the playoffs7
barely got it ~tatted :
"I don't think it had anything to
"If we don't get it in (today), we'll
do
with the way I played," he said. . '
go tile nut day and so forth until we .
"tfelt
fresh. I felt good. I played 45 . ,
. get it done," chief steward Keith
minutes.
I can't say that bothered my
Ward said.
energy
level."
' .
Sunday was • total washout. The
Jordl!n
had
29
points
only
because
. . ..
• Arle Luyendyk walla In hla
during
cars llttually got on the track Moohe found the range in the fourth quar· .
day, but a three-car wreck an the final
at the 8111 running of the litdlanapolla Motor Sp11d · ter,
scoring 18 consecutive Chicago .
pace lap kept the green flag- from
way.
The pole a1tt1r Wlll8 running In IIICOnd piKe behind .
points
to lead a furious but futile
coming out. It finally did, but men- .Tony Slawart bafore a rein postponed the race a 88Cond Ume. ·
comeback
from a 21-point deficit.
acing clouds loomed just over the
The race wae I'HChecluled for today. Participants got 1., 15 lapl
Tim Hardaway scored 25 poinlll
horizon. ·
Monday bafore the IICOild jiOitponement In two days. {AP)
for
Miami. Alonzo Mourning, who
By the time the showers began, ~--:.................,.......................,................_. """':'.......................,..
. ...................:...........-, had predicted the victory following a
three other ·cars had alre&amp;dy blown
their engines .- and that doesn't even 50,000 short of Sunday's rsin-soaked smoke belching from the rear of his . 24-point Heat loss in Game 3, added
JORDAN DRIVES· Chic:aVo's Michell Jordan drifts to the ba•
couni'Jim Guthrie's .car; which was crowd, turned out for Monday's car, the victim oft~ firstengine fail· 18 points and 14 rebounds.
·
ket
while baing guardacl by· Mlaml'a Jamal Mashburn during
.
Chicago had been 9-0 previously
stuck iii the pits, spewing out water rescheduled race. This time, there ure ~f the day.
fourth
quarter action In Miami Monday. The Heat won, 87-10 to • c
was sun in the morning and everyPmally, 14 mmutes after the against Miami in the playoffs, win·
from an overheated motor.
11111ialn
alive In the post--son playofts. (AP
' i
thing was right on time - until it was scheduled start. the leaders took the ning by an average margin of 18
This is Indy7
green, with Luyendyk beating Stew- points. The Heai improved to 5-0 this first time Jordan ever went thrOugh a rhythm and missing easy shots."
"It just seems like iJ's the story of time to race.
As
pole·sitterJ\rie
Luyendyk
llfld
art.
to the first turn. But Stewart, last year when faced with elimination.
half- regular season or playoffs_
Mourning an!l Dennis Rodm
the month here," driver Jeff Ward
Tony
Stewan
were
leading
the
35-car
year's
rookie
of
the
year
and
pole:
"It
would
have
been
eaSy
to
go
without
a
field
goal.
Many
of
his
provided
an entertaining sidesho
said. "We're just going to have to
field
to
the
starting
flag,
rookie
Kenstaner,
took
the
lead
with
a
pallS
just
out,"
coach
Pat
Riley
said.
"As
shots
fell
short,
suggesting
fatigue,
throughout
the game, trading barb
keep waiting to get going."
much as tliisteam has been maligned and both coaches said the golf may and shoves until the~ wrestled eac .
Many people won't be here wben ny Qrack iangled with rookie Affon- before the finish line.
so
Giaffone,
who
in
tum
struck
Within
minutes,
Schmidt's
Bluefor not deserving to be here, I know have taken a toll.
' ' other to the floor with 8:14 remain
they finally r,et going. The crowds 111
Stephen
'Gregoire.
print
Racing
teammates,
Guthrie
and
how
hard
they've
worked.
They've
"It
looked
like
he
played
it . ing. Each received atechnical foul •
Indianapolis . Motor Speedway,
That
left
the
C!ltire
fifth
row
in
rookie
Claude
Bourbonnais,
were
in
been
crucified
for
trying
to
win,
and
today,"
Riley
said.
giving Rodman 15 in 12 playo~
already down because of the feud
.
.
ltl!ink they felt that a little bit. They
"If that's what was called for. games, including at least one i
bCtween speedway boss Tony CleorJie pieces Scattered across the fourth tum trouble. .
of Indy's 2 112-mile oval. ·
·
. Guthne ~ve mt~ the p1ts on lap · deserve the right.to dream and hope that's his priority," Bulls coach Phil every game.
;
and Championship Auto Racing
, "l really don't know what hap- SIX beca~ his engme overhea~ like anybody else."
Jackson said. "It might have cost us,
l
Teams, tljinned considerably on
:~~~:
B=i~~d
..
"I
got
knocked
costmg
him
~ven
laps.
B~nnBJs
Now
they
hope
to
win
Wednesday
but
that's
the
way
it
goes
this
time
of
Moments
later,
Jordan
finally
go~
,Moft\lay and were expected to be .
· then brought out the first official cau· and return to Miami Arena for ~e year. Sometimes it's better to do·that hot, sinking six baskets in 5 112 min
·even smaller today.
·
During
the
ensuing
caution
period
lion flag on lap 10 when his engine 6 on Friday. ·
.
than to stick your nose to the grind· utes as Miami's lead dwindled to 79 ,
"It won't be the same if the seats
- with laps still n01 counting died.
"We're not concerned" Jordan stone."
· . 78.
,~
aren't full," driver Billy Boat con· rookie Robbie Groff's engine
Alessandro
Zampedri
who
under
'
A
·
J
rd
ared
be
.
. . ..
•
.
• said. "We know we can play better.
t times o an appe
to
"For a half he shows ·he'll
c~ed.
Sl?dppeddl
,lfethavinbg
hksim
stranh
.
dbeed
in
the
:w~nt.surgecy
mne
~mes
followmg
leg
We
showed
in
the
second
half
the
shooting
a
grindstone.
His
first
bas·
hutnan,"
teamma•· Steve Kerr sa 1· c~,•
Forecasters cllled· for a cloudy, m1 eo e ac tretc · forehe
tat
d
1
tl
ft
k
09
~
.
.
.
IDJunes ~us ne m a as • ap eras
intensity we can play· with and how . · et came with 8: left in third quar· "In the sccqnd half
he shows hc'li
:cool day with a 20 percent chance of got
go1ng
agam.
at
Ind_y
m
1996,
was
next.
He
went
they
can
get'rattled
..
We
feel
confident
ter
to
make
the
score
56-37.
godly/'
rain.
dfirst,yearthlnd~ sta~ehrbSI amk out with an oil leak.
that if we play our game as we did in . "I knew what tbe numbers were,"
But Jordan missed hi.s final thrc.(
· At least 300,000 .people, ·perhaps Sc~dn
m1 t rove to .e p1ts wit ac
J
d
'd
"I
k
1
h
'd
'
mad
1·
the second half, we'll be all right."
or an SRI .
new a n t . c attempts and the Heat hit six consec-t
U the Jordan who struggled a basket. I really wasn't helping the utive free ·throws down the stretch rot
through the fi~t half resurfaces, the situation, but I had a determination to the win.
.
!
.'
·Bulls have a problem. He was ·O-for· somehow get involved in .this game.
"We felt the pressure of his greatt
II at halftime" when Chicago trailed
·
ness coming back," Riley said. "YrnS
47-31, setting a rranchise playoff
"ln·the first quarter Hound myself watch him go on one of those runt
record for the fewest poinls in a first rushing shots trying to bea.t the shot and hope the game ends before h4
. I ,
half.
·
clock. From that point on I found gets them all the way back and. gel(
Bulls
publicists
believe
it'
was
t~
myself pressing,. trying to find my the final hoop."
;
DETROIT (AP)- They'v~ tried . Tbe Red Wings ·will opc:n the . "They des~rved ' to win, definitely."
"'t\&lt;erythilll! el!ie: Ml1ybe taking the, firi'als on ihe road Saturda'y. against
Detroit outshot the Avalanche 14.underdog's route will help the Detroit the Pliiladelphia Flyers.
3 in the firsl period, most of them Woods draws huge crowd to course angling for PGA even~
Red Wings end hockey's longest
· Two years ago, de~pitc being quality shots, but nothing was getting
FARMINGTON, Pa. (AP) Nearly 30,000 paid $15 apic'cc to August; he wasn 't going to play i.E
championship .drought. So far, it has heavily favored, Detroit was swept in past Patrick Roy, performing like the Tiger Woods was so popular at the attend the event.
these types of events.· ·
:
them in position. ·
· the 1995 Cup fi~als by the New Jer- playoff giant he has become.
third annual Mystic .Rock Charity
Joe Hardy • .the multimillionaire
But t~ big paycheck - Wood1
The Red Wings, who last won the _ S!lY Devils. Last year, after winning
But the Red Wings kepi up the Pro-Am that tournament officials founder of a.chain of lumber yards, reponedly received over $1 million tq
Stanley Cup in 1955, returned to the an NHL-r'ecord 62 games, the Red pressure in the second period, final· had to curtail autograp~ requests so . spent more than $20 million to de vel· play in ·the event for three years -i
Cup finals for the seeond time in Wings were eliminated 4-,2 by Col- ly breaking ihrough with Lapointe's that the young star could tee off.
op Nemacolin Woodlands Resort, and a chance to combat lcukemit
second goal of the playoffs at. 3:29.
three years Monday night with a 3-1 .orado in t~ conference finals .
"People have to realize that I'm including the. championship course convince&lt;J him to come after he hwf
victory over the defending champion
Sweeping changes were made to The play was set up by Igor Larionov, only 21 and I'm only human and that designed by Pete Dye.
tumed down several other offers. :
. Colorado Avalanche.
mak.e the Red Wings bigger, stronger the Russian playmakcr who skated sometimes I need my quiet time out ·
Now 74. and having given his
"Going back to when I was 4
: "They outhustlcd us every· and younge~. They slipped to third ·. the puck through the neutral zone . . on the course." Woods said. "Just daughter daily responsibility for the child, I used to go down to a chilj
Larionov. sighting Lapointe ·like I hav~ to realize that when I'm 84 Lumber chain he founded, Hardy dren 's hospital ·and speak to canc.·eJ
where," Colorado captain Joe Saki(; overall in·the conference, but' made
said. "They did to us what we did to . themselves into a better playoff team. streaking in behind Claude Lemieux' out in public, I'm in the public eye." ·is spending millions "\Pre to attract patients as well as ·abused ~s.
,them last year. TI~ey played well.the
"There's satisfaction in .. that," on the left wing, threaded a superb
Woods shot a seven-under-par 65 stars like Woods in hopes of showing . Woods said. "It's something I like ,
forechecked. They de5erved !O win.·: · defcnseman Larry Murphy said . pass just beyond Lemieux's reach to to win Monday's event. No prize the course can handle a PGA tourr\a· to do, love to do. Anytime I can g1ve
Manin Lapointe, Sergei F~orov "Playing t~ underdog role is a good the blade of Lapointe's stick. money is involved, but the profes- ment.
something back,. I'm more than hap!
and Brendan Shanahan scored 1n the direction to come from. But after the Lapointe's shot from the top of the sionals ·were paid . appearance fees
Woods, whose winning streak py to."
~
win that gave the Red Wings the best· first two games, we showed ourselves . left circle bounced off Roy's block· and their expenses were covered.
ended at two straight when he fin·
er and into the net for a 1.0 lead.
of· 7 Western Conference finals by a we could w.in this series."
Woods edged out Michael Bradley ished fourth at The Colonial on Sun'
Detroi1 kept the pressure ·on the and PGA ·Senior Tour player Jim day, said that when he turned pro last
4-2 margin.
.
· · Scott Young scored for the
"We. were . relen~les~. a.~ a team Avalanche, who were held to just two r.emainder of the period. making Thorpe, both of whom.shot 66s.
th~ou!hout the ser~es. Sh~nahan goals i~ three playoff games at Joe every shiftlook like a power play. It
John Daly, who will come back to
. sa1d. We rolled over every hne and Louis Arena where Detroit is 7-1 in seemed like Colorado's maroon the PGA Tour later this week at The
sweaters were always surrounded by Memorial, admitted to being rusty
· playe!i every defenseman and got the playoffs.
great goalt~~mg. It was really a
'"The Red Wings played well," · someone wearing white and red.
and sl:lot .a one-over-par 73.
H~•e
team effort.
Colorado center Mike Ricci said.
"It was fun. " Woods said. ·"It
amazes me that in a onc·day event,
this many people would ~orne out
.Dave
Hon~e
and watch. I think it goes to show you
that this pan of ,the United States
Grate
needs a PGA Tour event People arc
CONCORD, N.C. (AP) - The boro, Ky., Ford, 333, $33,6oQ.
38. (6) Ken Schrader, Fenton, kind of starving for a tour evcnl
of
order of finish Sunday in the Coca-,
18. (19) Jimmy Spencer, Berwick, Mo., Chevrolet, 231, $29; 100.
Rutland
Cola 600 . NASCAR Winston Cup Pa., Ford. 332, $32,700. ·
39. (23) Kenny Wallace, St. Louis. llcre."
Our statistics show that mature
drlvera and horne owners have
race at Charlotte Motor Speed'\Vay,
19. (SfJoc Ncmechck; Lakeland, Ford, 192,$25,400.
Furnitlll'e
fewer
and less costly losses
40. (29) Sterling Marlin, Colum. with starting position in parentheses, Fla., Cheyrolct, 332, $26,375.
Public Notice
Minister to member of
than othsr age groups. So It's
driver, hometown, type of car, laps
20.· (17.) · Rick Mast, Lexington, bia, Tenn., Chevrolet, 188, engine,
congregation:
"I'm sorry you're
only lair to charge you less for
_completed. reasQn out if any and Va., Ford, 332, $33,650. ·
$34,400.
moving.
You've
been excellent
PUIIUC NOTICE
your Insurance~ Insure your
:money won:
.
21. (8) barren Waltrip, Franklin,
41. (28) Robby Gordon, Cerritos,
The eighteen member
sermon
material.
•.
home and car with us and save
. GIIIINICIIIOII Milga 'I Mn:l .
: I. (I)JeffGordon, Pittsboro, Ind., Tenn., Chevrolet, 332,$30,525.
Calif., Chevrolet, 186, wreck,
more with our special
of AICohDI, Drug Wdkrllon
You can now**·
reach wrong
and ....,... lhellh ...,.an
multi-D&lt;!llCY dlacounts.
:Che2vro(21el)t,Rm, $~~j900. S . LO .
.z.2C.he(4)Jieff 3G3ree2$n2,60wensboro, $21i~~·i) T~d . Bodi,ne, Chemung,
:
.
usty .., ace. t. . UIS, Ky.,
vro et,
,
,175.
.
all
over
the world
numbers
II
Appolnl8d
by
the
O
l
•Ford, 333. $108,025.
·
23. (37) Ted Musgrave, Franklin, N.Y., Ford, 47, engme, 525 •400·
af thll Ohio Deplirtment ol
Without operator al;sistance.
Mentel
Heeltll
(4
: 3. (II) Mark Manin, Batesville, Wis., Ford, 3,32, $29,600.
Wi
ed
***
745
136
appal-),
the
otreetor
ot
· n, m..... mner's average spe .:
.
The best way to judge people
,'Ark ., Ford; 333, $77,500.
, 24. (30) Lake Speed, Jac 1cso
the · Ohio DeJNirtment of
Is not by their looks, but by
: 4. (I 0) Bill ElliOit, Dawsonville, Miss., Ford, 332, $29,225.
I"'
Alcohol ancl Dnlg '\dcllellon
•G
F
rd
333
$73
300
Time
ofracc:
3
hours,
39
minutes,
their bumper stickers.
, a., o ,
,' • .
2.5. (42) Hut Stri~kliri, Calera,
8ei'\ICII (4lfiPOIIIIMI) lncl
the County Commlellonare
: 5. (16) Jeff Burton, South Boston, Ala., Ford, 332, $29,l75. ·
10 seconds.
In Gallll, Jeckeon end
Many a ·man***
thinks he's g(!lng
26. (36) Brett Bodine, Chemung,
Margin of victory: OA68 seconds.
:Va;, Ford. 333, $61,750. •
1111111 Countlll (10
places
when
he's ~eally being
• 6. (14) Bobby La6onte, Corpus N.Y.•. Ford, 332, $28,725.
Caution flags: 7 for 50 laps.
appolntall). Currently,
taken.•
!Cluisti, Texas, Pontiac, 333, $58.6()9.
27. (3) Dale J~. Hickory, N.C.,
J..e!4 chan,ges: 27 a~ong 12 dri,
!Mrl . . lhrM ¥MiinCIM to
1M illlld by two County
: '· 7. (33) Dale Eamhaidt. ~napa. Ford, 332, $40,875.
vers.
pole J
CoiM
I IIIOnll'
Sign on commuter bus: "Take
'is. N.C., C~vrolet, 333. $$4.400. ,
28. (35) Jeremy Mayfield, OwensLap leaders: J.Gordon
; arrett
eppolntmente
and
one
twice a ' day to avoid : .
; · 8. (9) 'te:rry ·Labonte: C~rpus · boro, Ky., Ford, 331,. $21,525.
· I; Craven 2-4; J.Gordon 5· 17; Jarrett
ODADAS appolnb1•1t lor 1
J
congestion.' ,
Fhristi, Texas. Chevrolet. 333,
29. · (7) Bobby Hamilton, · 18-23; J.Gordon 24-27; Schrader 28lemlly 'member of a
"'71
600
N
·
h
'II
Te
p
·
·
331
42·
,
Elliott
43-62,·
Jarrett
63-67;
·
DOl I IFlit.
.
·
u V! e, · nn., onuac, · ,
,. · • . • ~
lncllvkluele lnlwHtecl In
I 9. (25) Morgan. Sh~pl!,erd. · S34.Q7~.
,
Craven 68-77; Irvan 78-113; D.WII~
being
-.elderld lor thale
l::onover,, , N.C., Pontiac, 3~3 .
30. (26) John Andretti, lndi- trip 114; Craven 115-122; lrvan 123IPP Dlllbllillll 0111 do 10 by
:544.000. ·
an..,Oiis, FOrd, 331 , $28,450.
137; Jarrett 1'38-150; J.Green 151.requtettno an eppltoltlon
, : . 10. tiS) Ricky Rudd. Olesapealce; · 3L (38) Gary Bradberry, Chelsea, 153; Craven 154-156; Irvan 157-184;
~
110m:
. . IIDnlld A. Adklnli
f/11-· Ford. 333, $5Q,OSO. .
· Ala., Fori!, 33\.$18,440.
Bbbonte 185·217; Irvan 218-220;
ll.outlve Dlo uta r
• II. (27) Steve Grissom, G.tldaden,
32. (34) Billy Standridae, Shelby, T.LabOnte 221 -240; R.Wallace 241·
a.111a
• · an sF ,...
Chevrolet, 333, $41,500~
. N.C., Ford, 328,,$18,435.
275; Elliott276-28S; J.Gordon 286~
ao..t or All atot, liNg
' 12. (24) Derrikei;:ope, Splnaway,
33. (15) Dick Trickle, Wisconsin ·295; .Earnhardt 296-297; T.Labonte
.
Utlahn
tNash., Pontiac, 333, $33,400.
Rapids, Wis., Ford, 323,$20,930. . 298·306: R.Wallace 307-316; J.Gor·
antlltlnlll Hllllh ler&lt;IDII
4141nand"~Sarvloes
: 13. · (13) Ernie lrvan, Salina, . . 34. (12) Mike Skinner, Susanville, don 317-333: ·
\
P.O.Ikllcl14
~if., Ford, 333, $.55,200.
Calif., Chevrolet. 292. $111';425.
Series points leaders: T.Labonte
1
214 EAST MAIN
a1P1t1 all, OH • •
: 14. (31) Kyle l'l:tty', Rlndlemln, ,
3!1.(20)WallyDallenblclt,Bualt, · 1,69l;J.Gordon 1,6115:JIITCIII,S79;
......,. ... lid
POIEIOY
~.C .. Pontiac, 333, $31,300.
Colo.; Chevrolet, 246, $18,420.
Martin 1,.5.59; B.Labonte 1,484;
Tile lkllt4 strtvu to
IINUI7
mittnt1tn il llalenaed
t 1•.5: («&lt;)Johnny Be-, Onnd
36. (39) Wud Bunon, South Earnhardt 1.438; J.Bunon 1,432;
rapraeentetlon
et
·.
~Midi.,PontillC,333,$39,200. Bolton, Va., Pondac, 239, wreck, . Rudd 1.306; R.Wallace 1,2.5?:
' l•" r••ee
Alllo
· aomiiiUnltr m11111nrs end
, -16.(32)DIVid&lt;lnen,o-.lloro, . $18,415.
, . M:\'f:altrip 1,238; Elliott 1.223;
·i
Lie Home Car But~neae
· wti0011181 minority or
k~, CheVrolet, 333, $24,500.
37. (2) Ricky CraW~n, Banaor. . Hamilton 1,197; Benaoa 1,180; IMn
flllllll&amp; I ....
! L.....!!n.~~':,!-'-~"':!~=-..J
li7.(22)Michle1Waltrip.Qwena. Maine,Q'e~, 233,$36,710.
1,172; W.Bunon I,!Sl.
,
(IQI7,• Ilea
.,;,;;,;(.

.again today

ear

I

l

h

Detroit eliminates defending
· NHL champion Colorado 3-1

J

We Give Mature
Drivers,
Owners·and·
Mobile
.Owners Special
. Savings.

.The Light
'n

By

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***

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•i'Ja..

Contact The Daily Sentinel
at 992·2155
•

Dave Harris Ext. 104
.Don Riftle EXt. 105

lndySOO
racers try .

Coca-Cola 600 NASCAR results

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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IIQ'D,1117

• Middleport, Ohio

Despite· misgivings, Yeltsin
will sign NATO-Russia pact

REMAINS OF A CRASH - Roll County
Sheriff Ronald L Nichols looked over a portion
of the wreckage of a plane that crashed In a
field outside of the Ross County Airport nur

Bainbridge Monday. The plene wae moved to

a nearby hangar after the cr11h. The men fly·
Jng the plane, Erwin W. Dresbach, died In the
creah. (AP)

Pilot dies in crash of private aircraft
BAINBRIDGE (AP) - Witnessessay a small plane took off from an
airstrip, went into a roll, turned
upward and then nosedived in.to the
ground, killing the pilot.
Erwin W. Dresbach, 61, of

County Sheriff Ron Nichols said. He
was the only Pc:rson in the singleengjne, t\vo-seat experimental plane
Dresbach built in 1986.
Witnesses said the plane took off from the private Haas airstrip at about

crashed near U.S. Route 50, about
one mile west of Bainbridge.
Federal Aviatton Administratio.n
invesllgators were to contmue thetr
mvestigation into the cause of the
crashtod~y. .
.

By_JEFFREY ULBRICH
Auocleted Preu Writer
PARIS -East and West take a
step closer together today when Russian President Boris Yeltsin sets aside
his concerns about NATO expansion
and signs a historic agreement with
the 16 Western allies.
President Clinton, the driving
force behind NATO's' plans expand
into Central and Eastern Europe,
· says, "We are going to be safer, we're
going to be more prosperous, the
world will be a more decent place if
we maintain our engagement."
Yeltsin has called NATO plans ··a
strategic mistake," but said "the
negative consequences of NATO's
enlargement will be reduced to the
miqimum" through the NATO-Russia deal he was signing today. The
~act- officially called the Founding
Act of Mutual Relations, Coopemtion
and Security- is between the Russtan Federation and the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization.
The first new members will be
designated at a NATO summtt July 89 in Madrid, Spain . Leading candidates are believed to be Poland,
Hungary and the Czech Republic.
Romania and Slovenia also have
been mentioned.
NATO officials say they doubt
more than five will be invited in the
first phase of expansion. The candidates must be approved by the parliaments of all 16 current NATO

~.n:~~~~·o'fa~g~d~~~sn~!g~wo:: 31~:~!~~~u~~:~~~i~:~~~~ of~~~~"b~~tsaboutSOmtlessouth . . High

Ftrst-of-tts-ktnd referendum ~l~ows
Cleveland voters to state optntons
By JOHN AFFLECK
Associated Preas Writer
CLEVELAND - A referendum
on whether the financially troubled
Cleveland school dtstricl should be
reimbursed for money lost m tax
abatements may reflect opimon on a
larger policy issue.
The first"of-its-kind referendum
will be Aug. 5.
By their votes, Cleveland residents may be registenng thetr opinion on the wtder issue of governmentled economtc development efforts.
Does a short-term loss of tax dollars
~ translate mto long-term economic
growth for the city and schools. or is
that revenue lost forever?
" It's a senous policy question for
all cit1es," satd Michael Casserly,
executive dtrector for the Council of
Great City 'Schools. which represents
50 of the nation's largest urban
school districts.
· "'It really transcends personalities
and pohtics in Cleveland."
Carl Rist, a policy analyst for the
Corporation for Enterprise Development, satd there arc no reliable figures on how much state and local

governments nation wide lose from
·abatements and other tax credit programs. It could range from $10 billion to $30 billion.
lllere's less information about
whether the incentives work.
"The scrutiny applied to spending .
programs can be tremendous." he
satd. "But then we've got millions
and billions going to businesses some of which may be ver.y good
investments - but we just don't
know.• ,
The Cleveland Teachers Union got
the proposed city charter change on
the ballot by collecting more than
32,000 signatures.
"There is no justification for paying for economic development with
school funds," said Richard DeColibus, p~sident of the ·s,OOO-member
umon.
That's important in Cleveland,
- where the stale's largest school district is$150 million in debt. It has .
been under state control for more
than two years on ord~rs of a federal judge upset by mismanagement
and poor performance among the districl's 70,000 students.

The district loses about $21 million a year to abatements given by the
city, DeColibus said. The referendum
does not eliminate tax abatements but
would guarantee schools get bll!'k any
money they lose.
DeColibus said the city could
keep the abatement funds f•om being
transferred onto the backs of local
taxpayers easily: just make corporations pay all their school taxes.
But business leaders, Mayor
Michael R. While's administration
and City Council members say the
union is oversimplifying how economic development works. Some
have accused the union of retaliating
for a biller contract dispute last year.
John Habat, a vtce president of the
Cleveland Growth Association,
which supported a controversial ctty
school tax levy last year, is worried
that if Cleveland limits tax abatements, it will be at a disadvantage
when competing against suburbs that
don 't have simtlar rules.
field
"It makes the playmg
uneven,"' Habat said.

Tow·n shares worry over missing woman
BLANCHESTER (AP) - Faded
yellow ribbons lted to trees and utility poles in th1s southwest Oh10
community commemorate the disappearance ntne months ago of Clarissa "'Carrie" Culberson.
Residents still worry and wail for
word about what happened to her.

"'The only way to·get peace is to
get the truth, .. said Debbie Paul. "No
matter how homble it may be, we
need to know the truth."
Any news of her dtsappearancc is
savored in this Clinton County town
of 4,000 people, about 40 miles
northeast of Cincinnati.

Land transfers _
p osted
The following land transfers were
recorded recently in the office of
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene
Hamilton:
Deed, Hope Drake to Edward E.
and Tammy R Adams, Olive, I acre
parcel;
Deed, Btlly T. Dmley tc.&gt; Ricky L.
and Connte S. Murphy. Ohvc, 2.3
acres~

Deed, Fredenck J. Jr. and Doris V.
Smuh to Dennis M. and Cindy A.
Smuh, Salisbury parcels :
Deed, Btlly R. and Karen S. Allen
to Roger L. and Barbara J. Bissell.
Chester parcel : ·
Deed, John S. and Beverly L.
Codner to Mtchacl A. and Rebecca L.
Codner, Lebanon:
Deed. Wayne A and Bcckey J.
Carder to Kenneth B. and Beuy. L.
Young. Orange, cm:rective deed;
. Right of way. Eileen Mees to Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District.
~edford. I acre:
•. ·
•
Right of way. Monid Good to
· TPCWD, Lebanon, 29.9776 acres;
Right of way. Katherine Deskin·
and Donald Elliou to TPCWD, Scipio, 2.58 acres;
·
Right of way, William H. Wine
and Vicki D. Wright to TPCWD,
Letart,;
Right of way, Randal A. and Phyllis J. Cooper to TPCWD, Lebanon,
.75 acre ;
Right pf way, Billy T. Dailey to
TPCWD, Olive, 6.20 acres;
Right of way, Carol W. Cline to
TPCWD, Olive, II acres;
Right of way, Jonathan S. and Carol S. Miller to TPCWD, Chester, 17

acres;
Right of way, Robert A. Sr.• Mary
L., Robert A. Jr. and Sue L: Jacks,
Wisteria Corporation to TPCWD,
Scipio, 68.937 acres;
Deed, Melvin D. and Ginger K.

•

Comer to Rtchard A. and Dorothy
Hagerty, Columbia parcels;
Right of way, John J. and Nora M.
Casto to ColumbtJs Southern 'Power,
Lebanon;
Right of way, Ruth F. Koenig to
CSP, Orange;
Right of way, Donald W. and Barbara J. Crabtree to CSP, Columb1n;
Right of way, Jack1e and Clarence
E. Fraley to CSP. Columbia;
Right of way. Cathy D. Clifford to
CSP. Chester;
Right of way. Charles T. and Linda K. Schoeppner to CSP. Bedford;
' Risht of way. Larry and Teresa
Kennedy to CSP, Salisbury;
Right of way, Bmy G. and Betty
I.. Combs to CSP, Lebanon ;
Right of way, Greg and Kim Sellers to CSP. Lebanon;
Right of way. Otis. Edna L., Max
L. and Ji II L. Knopp to CSP, Sulton;
Right of way, Ricky A: and Alisa
A Findley to CSP, Sulton;
Deed. Ralph A. and Gertrude F.
Monroe to GertrUde F. Monroe Trust,
Scipio parcels;
Deed, ·Gertrude F. Monroe to
Gertrude F. Monroe Trust, Scipio;
Deed, Phillip H. and Karen Sue
Werry to Edward J. and Robin L.
Werry, Chester parcels;
Deed, Mont and Joyce Ann Vance
to Ronald A. and Nancy J. Vance,
Scipio, 1.18 acres;
Deed, Jeff Coley to Wanda R.
Wyeth to Robert Wellman, Scipio,
I 7.338 acres;
Easement, Larry Michael. and
Patricia A. Bissell, Thomas P. Groen·
eveld, A. Marilyn and Mark D.
Miller, Orva lean and 1o1m C. Bond
and Janet K. Groeneveld to Ohio
Department orTransportation, Olive;
Deed, Home Natlo111l Bank to
Paul H. and Carol A. Schuler, Salem,
2. 104 acres.
.p

• On May 16, a police officer m the
Cincinnati suburb of Norwood spotted someone drivmg a red car bearing Ohio licenSe plall: ROL402, the
plate that was on Ms. Cul bcrson ·s red
1989 Honda CRX when she dtsap·
peared Aug. 28.
""
" Her car shows up - .thill shollld
be a hig development," Paul Myers
said. "'But who knows who vias in
that car?''

The car got away before the ofliccr was able to turn around and pursue it, Norwood police said.
"'Thcre's.somcthing curious about
that car being spotted," said another
resident, Deana Bo~gs . "'I'm not sure
about it."'
The car spollmg is the biggest tum
in the case smce Vince Doan. Ms.
Culberson's boyfriend, was -indicted
in March on kidnapping charges.
Donn, 24. says he IS innocent He is
to go on tnal June 9. ~
"The car may have been spoiled,
but where is Carrie'/" said Kathy
Baldridge. ""'fhl\t's the big question.
Where is Carrie?"
There are posters offering a
$10,000 reward for information leading to a conviction in the case. From
the Heavenly Accent nowcr and
Bible shop to the Forever Summer
Tanning clinic, the reaction is the
same: How could this go unresolved
for sl'l long?•
"'I wouldn't have believed back
·when Carrie disappeared that this
would have gone on until now,''
Myers said. "Everybody wants the
case to be solved. That'll make it
ier on everybody, especially Carrie's
mom. Her family is su(fering a lot."

eas-

Marri~ge

licenses

The following couples were
issued marriage licenses recently inthe Meigs County Probate Court of
Judge Robert Buck:
Bruce Har\ley_ Gheen, 34, and
Debra Jean M~Owraith, 34, both of
Shade; Charles Phillip Knopp., 30.
and Mary' Ann Roberts, 25, both of
Pomeroy; Tony Alan Rockhold, 23,
and Kristina Lynn Connolly, 23, bolh
of Reedsville; Howard Scott Kiser,
28, and Kimberly Lynn Dent, 28,
both of Pomeroy.
·

members.
U.S. critics are concerned about
the cost to American 'tax.-yers and '.
that U.S. forces will be committed to
dtfending-the new NATO members.
'The ratifteation process probably
will ,take about two years but still
could meet Clinton's desire to weicome the new members to the fold by
1999, NATO's .50th an~iversary.
Secretary of State Madeleine
Albright said the NATO-Russia document, which creates a Permanent
Joint Council giving Moscow a consultative voice, but not a vote, in
NA1"0 affairs, "will help to bring
Russia into a European system and
will in fact roll back many of. the
problems that have been created by
the Cold War."
Added French Foreign Minister
Herve de Charette: "By their signatures, the chiefs of state and governmen I are solemnly going to bury the
Cold War and erase the division of
Europe that resulted from the Yalta
agreement."
Russia believes NATO's enlargement plans.merely will push the division of Europe eastward as the West
absorbs ~oscow's former allies from
the now-defunct W3fliaw Pact. The
new agreement is meant to assuage
those fears.
NATO, for its part, believes that
the post-Cold War security structure
of Europe !)lUSt include Russia and
t(Jat Moscow must be convinced the

Western alliance has no ho~tile intentions.
Already, interpretations of the
new agreement vary widely.
Yeltsin, under pressure from
nationalists at home, has insistC!i to
his Parliament and public that NATO
made major concessions, giving a
clear promise it would not move
nuclear weapons qnto the territory of
new members nor station new troops
there.
The document, however, only
repeated earlier NATO statements
that it has "no intention, no plan and
no reason" to change its current
nuclear stmtegy and that it will carry out its defense needs by reinforcemoot rather than stationing
"substantial combat forces" in new
member countries.
Nothing, however, precludes
NATO from changing its nuclear or
troops strategy if the situation
requires it, or to take into account
what the Russians may say in consultations.
Yeltsin's spokesman, Sergei Yastrzhembsky. insisted the document
was open to interpretation.
"The signing of the agreement is
not the end, but the beginning of its
life," he said. "It begins the struggle
over its interpretation."
The document also set out wide
areas for cooperation and joint action,
such as peacekeeping, nuclear safety, defense policy and arms control.

court will hear arguments
on veto power for spending bills

By RICHARD CARELLI
Associated Preas Writer
. WASHINGTON - Congress'
historic decision giving President
Ciinton the power to veto specific
hems in spending bills is facing a
Supreme Court showdown.
· After hearing arguments today,the
nation's highest court must decide
whether Clinton will become the first
U.S. president authorized to use the
so-called line-item veto to auack government spending.
. Nearly every president over the
past century has sought such power.
hailing it as a valuable tool for controlling "pork barrel" programs. On
the state level, 44 governors have
such ~uthority.
A federal trial Judge, acting in a
lawsuit filed by six members of
Congress, siruck 'down. the law. He
ruled that the new law impermissibly
shtfls too much power from Congress
to the executive branch of government.
The court's speeded-up decision,
expected by July. won't necessarily
have to address the law's eonstitutionality. In addition to·defcnding the
law, admin;stration lawyers contend
that members of Congress lack the
legal standing to challenge it.

'The lawsuit was file; by Sens.
Rl;lbert Byrd, D-W.Va. ; Mark Hatfield, R-Ore.; Daniel Patnck Moynihan, D-N.Y.; and Carl Levin, D-Mich.; and Reps. David Skaggs, D- .
Colo.; and Henry Waxman, D-Calif.
Hatfield has since retired.
U.S. District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson ruled that members of
Congress can challenge la!WS "that
affect their constitutionally prescribed powers."
·
The Supreme Court has never
ruled on the standing issue.
The line-item veto law -the only
major provision of the 1994 Republican "'Contract With America" campaign manifesto that Clinton
endorsed ~ · took effect in J111111ary
but had not ,yet been in.voked by the
,presi&lt;jent wheq Jackson i~validated it
on April 10.
··
The law allowed the president to
sign a bill and within five days still
reject a specific spending item in it.
Congress could then pass a separate
bill to reinstate the specific item and
the president had the power to veto
t.hat bill. At that point, Congress
would have to muster a two-thirds
majqrity to override the president's
action.
"The dynamic of lawmaking is

.

.

fundamentally altered" by the new
law, Jackson wrote. "'Where the president signs a bill butt hen purports to
cancel part of it, he exceeds his constitutional authority and prevents
botl1 houses of Congress from participating in the exercise of lawmaking authority."
Jackson said the line-item veto
means that congressional ll\llmbers ·
·votes operate "only to present the
president with a 'menu' of items from
which he can select those worthy of
his approval, not a legislative fatl
accompli that he must accept or
reject as a whole a.• in the Past."
The law therefore vtolatcs that
part of the Constitullon spelhng out
how Jaws are made, Jackson ruled.
Pre:wious attempts to add a line-·
item veto amendment to the Consli·
tution never ·made it through the Co11r
gress.
Immediately after Jackson's rul·
ing, White House spokesman Mike
McCurry said the president had "fully intended to use the line-item veto
in the interests of taxpayers."
"Ultimately. the president docs
need to have that authority to restrain
spending," he said.
The case is Raines vs. Byrd. 961671.

Only college program i·n community
service readi~s its first gr·aduates
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) Future.
last month's summit is any guide,
When she saw the wonder on the
"I think there's a desire in young businesses are ready. said Bill Barrell,
faces of the deaf children. Rebecca people to provide to their communi- spokesman for the Corporation for
Dunphey knew she had made the ty. It's a rebirth in idealism," said National Service, which oversees
right choice when she switched her Rick Bauistoni, director of the 50- AmeriCorps, the Senior Service
college major to community servtce. student institute at the priv~tc Provi- Corps, and Learn and Serve Ameri" lt 's so amazing to watch the kids dence College.
ca, which provides grants to schools
and sec how much they learn from ·. Dwindling involvement in tradi- to incorporate community . service
you," said Dunphe~. who used sign tional volunteer efforts and ·cuts in . into their curricula.
language skills to design an AIDS .' government social programs gave
"I think there is growing interest
education course. "'It's very excit- rise to tltc p~ogmm, whtch involves in the corporate community in being
in g...
professors in multiple subjects. part of the service movement," he
The 22-ycar-old from South Port- Coursework is mixed wtth commu- said.
land . Maine. is mic of the lirst seven nity involvement, such as tutoring
~my Peuinc, 21, of Fall River,
graduates from Providence College's and working in homeless shelters.
Mass., switched into 'the community
Femstein Institute for Public Service,
Juniors and seniors learn leader- service program after studying mantho country's only degree program' in ship skills by teaching freshmen and agement for-two years.
community service.
sophomores, and all seniors must
"For me, it's all about change. I
The goal of the 3-year-old instituie . design a communi~y project.
plan to influence change," she said.
ts to create leaders for the next genA senior on the college tennis
Pelline's senior project involved
erallon of volunteers.
team created a tennis camp for i.nner- hclpmg nonprofit groups to more effi" Wc'vc got a consumer culture city children. another worked in the ciently provide services to the needy.
where everyone ·is striving to get prison system to help those about to
"In an ideal world we wouldn't
ahead of everyone else," said Dun- be released and a third cre.atcd a pro- need service, it would just be inhcrphcy. who sw tlche~ her major from gram mixing drama and education. cnt in the system," she said. "[ feel
psychology. "We should gel back to
The institute was founded with a 'like· I'm majoring in something that
the ani tude where people genuinely $5 million donation 'from Alan shouldn't have exist."
calc and have concern for their Shawn Feinstein. who also provided
neighbors.··
money for the Feinstein High School
Pu I Your Fa 111 i s
The call to community service"hw; for Public Service in Providence ..
increased in recent years, starting
"I think this is the first time in htsfuture The
with former President Bush's 1.000 tory where parents cannot automati- .
"points of light" and including Pres- cally expect ~ better future for their ,
Hand s Of
ident Clinton's AmeriCorps, the children than they had,'' Feinstein ..
youth service corps where partici- . said. "If there ts going to he a belief 1 1 SonwoiH' Yo11 Celli
pants are given living allowances and futuro;, people will have to work I
nearly·$5,000 a year for college.
together to lift up our country."
·
Yom
Last month in Philadelphia, comBut will there be johs for the com- 1
munity· service was the focus of the munity service graduates'! ·
(;ran~\' ,\~ c ut.
Presidents' Summit for America's
If the corpomte ipvolvement in

h-'
.

In

Trust -

BRING OUR WORLDS TOGETHER .

··-and

Host an A18E

Exollana• 8&amp;uden&amp; tills fall, .. .,..,.

OuP
dtelrl of -.,.111 PI IH and
Uncleretancllnt• lhutluta fpom ..,... .1 0 oountrlll
to ohooee from,,..._, apaalt......,..
. ......... mo...,. and .......Silo .

..._own.

0•11 todiiJ J.aoo.818UNG. •
Amerloan lnteraultuNI lleutlant lxoTca111•
A nonprofit tu ~·• atluaallo"'l faun 1 lion.
•

•

DOwning, Childs,

MuUen, Mqsser
111 E.~ St., Pometoy

89Z-3381

l•

Tuesday, May 27, 1997

It's best to keep track of Social Security earnings

Beat
of the
Bend
By BOB
HOEFLICH

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

to Social Security correctly (with Social Security -catches most of the
By ED PETERSON
Social Security Nnager, ,Aihena
your correct name and Social Secu- errors. but you should not take a
Do you know how much you rity number) over the years and paid chance that we miss
have credited to your Social Securi- taxes on the earnings. But .Murphy's
ty record? Do you know for sure Law may operate;-"if something can
This is why we tell people to
· whether the second job you held for go wrong, it will"--and tt would be che.&gt;:k their Social Security earnings
five years is reflected in ~our Social to your advantage to check your record at least once every three
Security records, or the farmer you earnings in your Sqcial Security years. In fact, we've now made it.
1 worked for during e summer 20 record now and then.
easy t;or you. You cari order a "Peryears ago reporied your wages to
If you change jobs frequently, sonal Earnings and Benelit State·
Social Security·?.
have a diffic11lt name to spell, or menl" from us tpal will tell you what
If the system' works as it is sup- have held more than one job at the earnings have been credited to your
posed to you're OK--that is, if all same time, you increase the risk of account and the amount o'f the beneyour employers reported your wages ' an ertor in your earnings record. .fit payable on those earnings if you

I
.

'-----------....1
--"'"•

Will and Sue Cundiff--Will is the
son of Mrs. Elizabeth Cundiff of
Syrac~se--are spending some time
in Russia. However, the couple is
not having a frivolous vacation
there. No sir. They are serving the
Salvation Army.
Will and Sue have sent along a
leuer so that you can share the
events in their lives since they left
the Ohio Valley over 20 years ago.
They write:

· "We began working with The
Army in Mobile, Alabama
in February of 1976 and finally
allended their seminary in Atlanta
(The school for officers training)
and graduated in June of 1979 with
honors.
"We have service in Alabama,
Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas as
pastors, administrators and even
e\-angelists.

"We currently supervise the
regional headquarters, four corps
churches imd one outpost, a new
church, a large social and humanitarian work endeavor including
food, clothing distribution and a
feeding site for the elderly for about
130 seniors per' day. We hope this
year to open at least three new
' churches and two new feeding sifes. •
Very soon we will also begin a much
needed medtcal ministry The work
here is truly amazing. People are
hungry for the gospel and in desperate need of everything. Most normal
living supplies are scarce and expensive according to local standards.
The average wage is about $37 a
month with some seniors living on
as little as $15 a month. It is a tragic
legacy of communism.
"After the breakup of the USSR
they experienced a civil war and the
results were devastating for the
economy, not to mention Moldova's
people. T)ley are kind and hospitable
folks and they are, indeed, anxious
to make the democraltc process
work for l~em a.• proven by the
recent peaceful national election.

records may be lost through acci-

"Sincerely Yours" was the thpme fo~ the annual mother/daughter banquet
held ·recently at the Zion Church of Christ.
Ann Lambert gave the blessing before the meal served to 60 mothers and
daughters . The tables were d~corated by Tammy Dummiu who used green
tablecloths with centerpieces of greenery, magnolia blossoms and boxes
from whtch sptlled memorabtha of old lellersl post cards, jewelry, old handkerchiefs, old pictures, gloves, doilies, etc.
The program included a welcome by Tammy Dummiu; Jennifer Htcks
singing "Smcerely Yours" and Haiel Stanley giving a readmg of "Andy's
Leiter".
"In A Liule While" was sang by Kathy Arnold, and Tammy Dum mill read
an article from a Pomeroy newspaper printed in 1901 about "Hogs In The
Kitchen.':
.
Kathy Girton was guest speaker and she used scripture from First John
12. There was a sk11, written by Bonnie Arnold, called "If You Golla Go--Go
Early" to conclude the progmm and Peggy Bole had the closing prayer.
Those in attendance were: Kathryn Johnson, Leona Hysell, Virginia Wyall,
Carolyn Kesterson, Dorothy Reeves, Carne Wears, Evelyn Thoma, Su1.anne
Wan~er, Peggy Bole. Gail Sargent, Sherry Shamblm, Becky Hess, Kathy
Arnold, Tina Hoskins, Martha Varian, Audrey Momson, Pat Arnold, Charlotte Lambert, Jo Ann Gillbgly, Wilma Davtdson, Mtrinda Davis, Hazel
Stanley, Jennifer Harris, Kay Proffitt, Jennifer Hicks, Cindy Lambert,
Kristie and Carrie, Sarah Gibbs, Sharon ~~rr. Mary Kesterson, Lmda Darnell, Ida Murphy. Mary Coleman; Barbara Thurner and Elizabeth,- Kim Dettwiller and Alyson, Goldie Reed,Bonnie Arnold, Gina Thomas, Whitney and
Caitlyn. Linda Bates, Charlotte Crank, Tammy Dumnutt and Kattlynn,
Kathy Girton and Amy. Mary Grover. Ann Lambert, Conme Watson, Whitney and Lindsay. Anna Lockhart and Joanna, Carmel Evans, Lisa Wilson, ·
Cheryl Holley, Helen Watson.

~alvation

utive meetings and updates on the
changing political chmate, humanitarian aid possibilities and management training.

your record .. Businesses close, and

. Considering the things that can
go wrong in a system that depends
on th~ actions.of so many people, it's
a wonder that it works so well. But
it's not something you can afford to
take for granted when it come~ to
your own financial security. Check
your Social Security earnings today.

banquet held at Zion

"Our path has oeen a long anq
busy one through what seems now
like the entire South.

Moscow four tunes a year for exec-

If you wait longer than three
y·ears to check your earnings, you
mcrease the difficulty of correcting

dents or poor record keeping and
you may find it har~ to hold someone accountable for }fclur unreported
earnings.

..---Auxiliary scholarships----. Mother-Daughter

"Some twenty-one years ago we
left our home there with you in order
to find reasonable work and pursue
our calling as ministers.

"In July of 1996, led by the Lord,
we began this current appointment
in Moldova, C.LS. We are the
regional officers with responsibilities for the work in Moldova, the
break away transdrieter regmn and
possibly soon Romama, God wtlling. We are required to be in

become disabled, for your family if
you die, or when you retire.' To get a
copy/ all you have to do ts to call 1800.772-1213. We'll send you an
application to complete and you will
receive the statement within four to
-six weeks after you send it in. It's
that easy.

The Women's Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial Hospital has a.wardedthrae $1,000 scholarships
to students pursuing medically-related fields of study. Pictured during the presentetlon ceremonies from the left are Rhonda Dalley, RN, BSN, director of nursing; Hospital Administrator
Scott Lucas; Lauria Shenefield and Teresa Williams, recipients of $1,000 scholarships, and Abbie
Stratton, auxjllery president. Shenefield, Langsville, en LPN, will work on her registered nurses
degree and Williams, Harrisonville, will continue her tltildles to become an assistant physical
therapist technician. Botl:l ar.e students at Hocking College. The third recipient is Stacie Reed,
Rutland, who will also study physical therapy 1!1 Hocking College.

Modem speeds rev up

--Community calendar-The Community Calendar is
published as free service to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not designed to promo~ s~ or fund ralsefS of any .
type. Items al'e printed 1H space·
permits and cannot be guaranteed
to run ·a specific number of days.
TUESDAY
RACINE -- RACO meeting,
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m Star Mill Park.
New members welcome.

a

POMEROY ·- Meigs County

Veterans Service Commission, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at tiJe Veterans Service
Office, Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy.

ance
Program,
membership
renewals, LEPC projects update and
LEPCIEOC operations in a disaster.
Call EMS director Robert E. Byer at
'992-6617 for more information.

CHESTER -- Meigs County
IKES meeting Tuesday, 7 P·Jll· a! the
club· house on · Scout ·catn(!' Road. . WEDNESDAY ' ·• . ' . ·
POMEROY-- Public meeting for
Trap shooting to "Start at 6 p.m.
nood mitigation projects in the SalPOMEROY ·• Meigs County isbury Township areas of Rock
Emergency Planning Committee Spdngs, Willow Creek and Laurel
meeting Tuesday, II :30 a.m. at the Cliff, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. ,at the
EMS building behind' Veterans Meigs County EMS Building Debind
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy. Veterans Memorial Hospital in
·
Busmess includes LEPC Compli- Pomeroy.

HealthCorps programs set for senior center

"Actton for Health" programs for
senior citizens, a project of the
HealthCorps ProJect at the Ohio
University College of Osteopathic
Medicine (OU-COM) will be presented at the Meigs County Semor
Cttizens Center every Tuesday in
June.
'
The programs will be held from
"It is interesting to watch the
economy growing in this new repub- 10:30 to II :30 a.m. and from 12:45
lic as it makes the transition to calli- to I :45 P·"1· Residents may register
with Diane Coates, 992-2161. Sestalism .
"
sions will also be held in Athens
"We are excited about being here County in June, and in Hocking and '
and .leading Tite Salvation Army's Vinton Counties in July.
effort in Moldova. The . chureh is .
The program is designed to teach
growing constantly. We saw nearly older adults how to instruct their
200 new members accepted in 1996 peers -- as well as learn for themand currently have nearly 50 in selves · -- ways to improve their
recruit classes to become new soldiers of Thee Salvatmn Army.

health and well-being.
mental needs through service.
The four-two hour sessions will
•
be! led bY. HealthCorps members
In Southeastern Ohto, Healthwho will discuss a variety of top1cs Corps IS offered through OU-COM's
such as exercise, relationships and Offtce of Community Service Prowellness. Each session includes a gmms. It' includes seven members
healthy snack and suggestions for who are assigned to six agencies
simple nutritional changes .that can· . serving the counties of Athens, Yinbe incorporated into everyone's diet. · ton and Meigs. The site sponsors
Simple ·exercises are also part of include OU-COM, Planned Parenteach lesson.
hood of Southeast Ohio, Rural
"HealthCorps is
part of Action, Athens County Health and
Appalachian Access which is the Human Services, Tri-Counly Mental
recent national service initiative Health and Counseling, and Health
. signed into law by President Clin- Recovery Services.
ton. Through AmeriC~s.
individuals of all ages and 1i grounds
The programs offered at each
address the national's ed ational, ''Action for Health" site is limited to
public safety; human
environ- 15 participants.

"We do have translators to help
us administer the work and preach in
both the Russian and Romanian languages. Both are necessary to operate in this country and occasionally .
Ukrainian is needed. We have a staff
of nearby 30. 14 of which are lay
ministers and three more currently
iQ 'the school to become officers.
Our work is interesting and sometimes difficult because the forces of
darkness are here working hard as
:well and sometimes we see the rem·nant of communism.rearing it~ head
and struggling for a foothold! Christians are not popular wit(ltHis segment of 'the community aPd are
often the target for their ang~r.
SIXTH GRADE WINNERS - Sixth grads winner at the Her·
"Please pray for us and t~e work
riaonvllle
Elementery School Science Fair ware, from taft: Wes Call,
of the Lord in this region as we fight
second
placer
Jessica Preaat, third place, and !'len Bookman, first
the good fight o~ faith."
piece. Bookman also won belt of show for Ilia prolect "Stuck on
Glue."
I
I mentioned earlier that •former
resident Victor Genheim~r will be
observing his IOist birthday this
I
week. You can tum on you~ television set Wednesday morning and see ·
Winners of the Harrisonville Ele- Daniel Bookman, Ashley Savage,
Vic\or-- a photo at least-- receiving mentary School .Science Fair were Rachel Gardner, Elsa Gardner,
recognition from Willard Scott.
Miranda Beha, Cassie Lee, Sarah
announced recently.
Lee, Megan Dodson , Charlie
Sixt~·grade y;inners were, in
order: Ben Bookl!lan, Wes Call and Williamson, Shane Lewis and Jodi
Alumni weekend is such pleas- Jessica Preast. Bookman's project Donahue .
ant occasion . I . enjoy seemg the "Stuck on Glue" was named best of
Governor's Award winners were
graduates making that return trip show.
Amber
Haning, Ashley Savage,
.
,
back to the home grounds from
Other -winners- were : Cayla Lee, Peggy Duff. Wes Call, Shane Lewis,
across the nation. Durned near Clinton Kennedy; Talisha Beha, · Chadie Williamson and Jodi Don.enough; td help orie keep smiling. 1
Chelsea Noel, Samantha 'Hively, ahue .
Josh Price, Peggy Oul'f, A.J. Haning.

Harriso~ville Elementary School

Scien,c~

Fair winners posted

By BRUCE SCHWARTZ
USA TODAY
.
'
. How far can you stretch a plain .old phone line? Ever further, 11 seems
Even as ballles continue over the standards' and limitations of today's
fastest modems, neY! technologies continue to push the data-carrying limits
•of copper phone lines.
A new modem promiSes two-way speeds of 67 kit obits per second (kbps).
Today's modems top out at 56 kbps, and then only when receiving, not sending. And recent announcements from U.S. Robotics, Texas Instruments and
Bell Atlantic presage digital phone services in the next few years that could
bring download speeds more than 100 times faster to homes and businesses.
. "It's a crazy market," said analysti.isa Pelgrim ofDataquest in San Jose,
Calif. '
Slow modem speeds have been a major drag on the Internet's growth and
user satisfaction. But about 31 mtllion modems were shipped last year in
North America (including those built mto PCs), up 66 percent over .the year
before.. according to Dataquest.
.'
'ryle 67k modem is being announced Tuesday by Transend, a subsidiary,
of Braziltan manufacturer Digitel S.A. It's due to ship in two weeks for
about $600 list, more than twtce that of conventional modems. And it
achieves high speeds with a bit of trickery: by using two phone lines simultaneously.
•
·
.
The modem will be marketed at first through Internet service providers
as part of a high-speed package. The initial market 'is likely to be limited to
small businesses looking for inexpensive Internet access without investing
in digital lines and equipment, and to telecommuters looking to hook up
faster td office network's.
.
• Next year,' U.S. Robotics and Texas Instruments promise logo even further, with a line of x2/DSL modems aimed at consumers. Startmg at under
$250, they' ll come -equipped for 56 kbps service and be upgradable vm a
software download to new telephone company digttal subscriber hne (DSL)
services. Eventually speeds will range from several hundred thousand to
several million bps with current phone hnes.
The question is when. Other digital means of transmilling data, mcluding
ISDN and cable modems, have rolled out much more slowly than expected.
E&gt;SL may be no different.
"We hear a lot about technologies coming down the pike," Taylor said. '
"But the only tried-and-true data access is still the analog modem:"

.

Find the best buys.ln tlce

Sentinel Classifieds

To place an ad, call
992·2156

••••

- • tips, call

992-2156

Fruth Pharmacy In Middleport now offers
Free delivery ~il prescriptions in
Middleport, Pomeroy, Syracuse, Rutland,
Racine, and Chester areas.
Senior
Discounts of 10% on
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10% discount on Childrens prescriptions
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Middleport, Ohio

788 N. 2nd Ave.

.,

�The Dally Sentinel• P~gel

.'

'page 8 • The Dally Se~nel

~Middleport

· ROGER WAYNE ROUSH
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Steff
More than 275 graduates and
guests attended the Middleport ·
Alumni ·Association banquet held
SaiUrday night at Meigs Junior High
,'ichool.
Music on the calliope by Myron
Duffield and games of yester)'ear
·were held on, the front lawn preceding the banquet~e scholarships

tu11t1ay, lilY 27, 1987

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

40
froo Puppita, Part 1M l IPWt
Collie. I WHIII 0111, 1114-117181.

alumni award schol_
arships; recognize qlassmates

were awarded and reunion classes
and oldest graduates attending were
recognized.
Charles Haskin~ was emcee for
the ba11quet and speaker was
Richard Rawlings who gave humorous reflections involving alumni of
the class of 1952 which planned this
year's reunion. Cliff Coleman had
the invocation. and Ginny Guinther '
led in singing the Alma M~treIntroduced and presented gifts
w~re the oldest graduates, Farie
Erlewine Kennedy, class of 1924;
Harold Lohse, 1932, arid Ike Neal,
1933. ·
Prior to naming ·the recipients, a
report on the SI!San G. Park Scholar·
ship Fund which began in 1961 with
one $50 scholarship to Rosetta
Richards, was given by the Board of
Trustees, Jeanette Thomas, Judy
Crooks and Nancy Cale.
They noted that since then,. 114
additional scholarships have been
given from -interest on the original
$25,000 and ,tbe interest from -the
donations of M.H.S alumni. The
fund has given a total of 115 schol·
arships totaling $47,600, and there is
currently $46,631.90 in the scholar- ship fund, it was reponed.
· To qualify for scholarships, stu·.
dents must have at least a 3.5 grade .
point average, be the direct descendent of a graduate of Middleport .
High School, and be accepted to an
accredited college or university.
Beginning with the Class of 1998,
natural grandchildren of alumn'i will
be eligible to .receive the scholarship, it was decided.
, ··
This year $550 scholarships were
awarded to the following students:
Laura Leigh Riley, daughter of
Don Riley and Joy Boggs Riley; a .
member of the 1965 class, a gradu-

ate of Marietta High 'School who
will enter Capital University and
pursue a degree in Criminology.
_Hcalher Marie McGuffin, daughter or Harry McGuffin, Jr. of the
class of 1964, a graduate of John
Marshall High School in Glen Dale,
W.Va. with plans to attend West Virginia University.
Roger Wayne Roush 11, soil of
Roger Roush, a member of the 1964
class, a graduate of South-Western
City Schools, will attend Ohio ~tate
University in the fall arid major in
political science.
·
Also awarded was the CrawfordGray-Lewis SchOlarship to Ricky
Hoover, a graduate of Meigs High
School. He is the son of Rick and
Jackie Hoover, Middleport.
Members of- reunion classes
attending were: ·
1932: Harold Lohse, ·Pomeroy.
I937, Charldene Hanning,
Dorothy Evans, Ruth Ebersbach,
Wallace Russell, Edna Evans, Middleport; Willa Bowers, Springfield. .
1942: Barbara Mullen, Kenny
McElhinny, Henry Clatwonhy. Mid·
dlepon; Joe ·Young, Pomeroy;
Robert Mitch, Wheeling, W. Va;;
Bill. Call, Racine, and Peggy Kerns,
Sebring, Aa.
·
1947: Virginia Betz, Hilliard;
Varginia Schaaf Koehler, Columbus;
Sara Owen, Jo Ann Karr Morris,
Pomeroy; Jim Arnold, Cincinnati;
Mildred Bailey , Lehigh, Aa. ; Max·
ine Smith Seyfried, Lynchburg, .Va.;
Wilma Herrman Parker, Chester;
Madelfne Johnson Derring, Columbus; Anna Blackwood, Chester;
John Kircher, · Columbus, Jack
Kauff, )&gt;oint Pleasant, W. Va.; John
Fultz, Middleport; John Mayer,
Grove City; Clara B. Riley. Middle·
pon. Dorothy ScottWalker, Gallipo-

Wublich. Belle Valley; Kay. Ault
1952: Doris Mayse Coleman, Lopn, Middleport; and Paul Hayes,
Jackson; Harold Hinkle, Columbus ; Coolville. \
Patricia Saunders Hoy, Columbus; , Other alumni auending were
June Smart Kloes, Middleport; Jean Orace Abbott, Judy Arnold, Richard
Smart Siddall, -Cincinnati ; Carol Bailey, Bruce 11ingham, Carol
Bachtel Tannehill, Middleport; Elma Brewer, James Buell, Owles and
Miller, . LaGrange, Ga. ; Nancy Helen Byer, Robetf Myer, Jack and
Miller Beaver, Middleport; Shirley Carolyn Bachner; Nancy - Roller
Miller Coleman, Rutland; Julie Calc, Nancy J. Cooper, Jean Craig,
Mitch Houck, Marion; Julia David-- Jcanene Cunning~. Norma Jean
son, Grove City; Ruth Ch,ase Jenk· Custer; Maxine Coates Gaskill,
ins, Thurman; Carolyn Pierce Litch· Jeanne Bowles Gross, Roben and
field, Point Pleasant,W. Va.; Gladys Hazel Guinther, Rae Gwiazdowsky;
De:Vol Stewan, Mason, W. Va.; Marlene Lathey Hall, Cinda Sauer
William Taylor, Brecksville; Adri- Harris, Donna Ruih l'fayth, Virginia
enne Mills Munns, Lynchburg, Va.; .Grogan Holman; She1la Stover HubWalter I.' Clark, Point Pleasant, W. bard.
,
, ,
Va.; June Seines Duffield, MiddleRuth Chase Jenkins, Clifford and
pon; Charles Haskins, Spencerville; Martha Kerris Cunningham, Arlene
·Donna Ward Johnson, Stone Moun· Bowles King, Robert King, Patricia
tain, Ga:; Ann Rupe McKay, War- · DeVoll Kloes, Kenneth and Lois
ren; Nola Knopp Swisher, Middle· - .McElhinny. Roben aM Joyce Mills,
port; and Richard Rawlings, Mason, Roben and Mary Mitch, Marjorie
W. Va.; Larry Rice, Lexingt()n, Ky.; Diles Mitchell; Willard Buddy
Carl Glaze, Longview, Texas; Mary Moore, James Mourning; Don
Williams Walburn, Columbus; Payne, . Donna Preston; James and
Peggy Herman -Thomas, Cheshire.
Ann. Thomas, Charlotte Van Meter,
19.57: Stephen Coats, West Martha Ohlinger Venndri. ·
Plains, Mo.; Bessie Pettit ' Darst,
Dennis Walburn, Raymond WaiRichard Hovatter, Gail Hovatter, bum, Juanita Hawkins,Walker, Alan
. Middleport; Barbara _ Murray. Wallace, James Walters. John Ward,
Pomeroy ; James Bowles, Point James and Jean Wilson. Roscoe
Pleasant, W. va,; Robert DeLay, Wise, Rowena Young, Katherine
Columbus; Bob Hennessy, GallipO- Bachtel Dallas, Madeline Derring,
lis.
'
Bill and Mary Diles, Roger Dillard,
1962: Texanna White Wehrung, John Dudding, Myron Duffield,
Pomeroy ;' Darla Schafer Smith, Naomi Oyenurf Durst; Helen Taylor
Columbus; Karen Gregg Rous~ . Fox, Ronald Fultz, Marilyn Fultz,
Patricia Lowecy Stein, Middleport; · Kay Ault Logan, Chester Rice, Den·
Helen · Taylor l'ox, Marysville; ver Rice, Robert Richards, Richard
Cindy Abboit, Cairoll, and Beverly Roller. .
Perrin Dixon, Clarkston, Mich.
Karen Roush, Alfred Scarberry.
1967: Ruth Halley Carsey, Mary Smith Schwab, James and
Athens. Rose Marie Hackett, Lex- Clara Sanborn, Betty Ashley Snow,
ington. Ky.; Kathy McElhinny Charles Stobart, William Stobart,
Hood, Middleport; Roberta Bing William and Nola Swishe~, .Darla

Klttona To Lolllllt Horne, •
E.- ....... C F1 I

lis,

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8:00 e.m.·3:30 p.m.

•Lawn Mowers
.Chain .Saws
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Commercl•l

II

Public Nottce

110 PF for tile Kibble

t.oberl1 A -11, and n•a

FOundation -Bernard V. anoiilary equtpmW, ""'*'
~Hz, Tru-, II IIVIllable 30 claya of IIMipt of Iiiia
for publle lnapectton at not1oa or a.., lllllllaquent
iemird V. Fultz LAw Offloe, publication lhlreol' In a

1/2 W.' Second Slrftt,, IIIWIPII!IIr or llllllfli' clrOlllci . 45711, OUIIIIion In lleiga County.
during regular bualnaaa Name Of I 1110.": JlmN P.
ICotn for 1 period of 180 Lalllbart
daya euba•quant to ..._of La-: Akron Oil
Cor1toretlon (eulg,.e of
Pubilcl!lon of IIIII notlcl.
·
(J) "12, 13, 14, 15, 11, 11, 11, HlriteY E. Hardin)
Deaorlptlon of Land:
liD, 21, 22, 23, 2112 to
Rul property loaaied In
.,.,.. of Seellolta 30 ltld 31,
:
Public Notice
lleilallury Towlllillp, .1\11111•
County,
Ohio, mora pirtlcuo
: NOTICE OF INTENT TO
llltJ dnalbld • ilouhcled
; DECLARE OILAHO GAll
on lhl North by 11nc11 of
• U!Ast! fORFEITED
To: Akron 011 Corporalion, Waner Hell,_., boundlci
on lhl ~ by Iande of
Ue-Street
Gary
C.l'llllln, H.B. Culd,
1!\0. Box 121
boundad
on lhl Iouth by
~NJ1178112
' : PINaa be aware lilllt, Ianda of William RIIUttr,
JIU-nt to Ohio Revlllcl Gary CenMn, K. ,toil-,
and bounciad on the '!Vnt
~ 8acUon 5301-332, tile
llndtrllgnad
hereby by ....... of May Hawk.
Number - of ecru:
oac~a- lhllt ... below ,.,.
eniiOid ..... til be forfall. approxlmltlly 113.5 '
Dell of lllaa: May 27,
tel
for I Ia lhl tm.t:ilon
below
ltltad.
of · 117t .
Dataa of aukinment:
"" undtr81gnad til file for June 21,1111l117A -.c.
record wlih the llelge
County R-rdtr en efll- lng ·lllllrMt) lnd Ocl blr 7,
dlvlt 01 forfalture H ,au do , . (12-ft I&amp;Oildl. lnlar•
not nlnn 111111 and iltll to Ml) In I 404a'e parllan of
the mineral lnterell In aald ..._ deal:' ~ tile ,
aaalgnllllllte meniionad Lambalt ItA drll&amp;n..

ERIN KRAWSCZ'YN
Joan Hcwetson Anderson and John
Anderson. Pomeroy.
1967: Janice Eskew Nolan,
Tampn Aa.; Mary C. Francis Rose, ~ .
Winter Springs, Fla.; Debra Spencer,
Pomeroy; Bill Radford, Columlius; '
William B. Do:ov11ie, Jr., Racine; ,
Jewcil Price Neeley, Columbus.
1968: Jennifer Menchini Kirby •
Arlington. Va.; Becky Nease Ander· .
son and Jim Anderson, Racine.

News policy
In an effon 'o provide our reader·
ship with current news. the Sunday .
Times•Sentinel will not accept wed· · ,
dings .after 60 days from the date of ..
the event.
·
·:
after
d Weddings
deadl' submitted
.11
d the 6().. : ;
ay
me WI appear uring the :
week in The DaiJl' Sentinel and the·.·
GallijJolis Daily Tribune.
· ·:
All club ineetings and other news :
articles in the society section must ::
be subrpitted within 60 days of ,
occurrence.

OM Out
S~eclals
All flats and
baeketa'4.71MIIII

DAV installs officers

4" cutting
se...nlume }0'
All odler

4"pow&amp;O$
· 8hruh an off
Opan dnllj ..,
Oluatllunt.,.

Hubbarc:la
8reenhou••

\
I

80, .jlllgla

. b. · non-produc!lon of
gaa or all alna. 18113
Any

queatioM •reg8rd•
.laiiHII

Lambert, 311111 Hellman
Rd., l'o!Mroy, Ohio 45711.
Jemee P. Lambert

(I) 27;1TC

Chester, Ohio

Saturday, JUIII 7, II
10:00 a.m. Tile Hom.
National Bank will Dllwr for
iate 11 public auailan on
the bank parking lot II
........ Ohio, tile following:
1"' . . Ford
Serial
121'ABP42F1GX11111334
1. . Pont Ranger Strlll I

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COIMIIIIionl, ~.
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mgmt
oppclltUnlllll. Ful-tlme
~. 11tt.111 hiNe car.
For lnWI f I hltllnlaA

,•

Cell Mr. UJnao

•'
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11 .....·7440

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•IIJOM lnvoluclln
8tellllntaprop~...,

line ,.nee •• tl27

..:
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· Joe N. Sayre

o - at., Raclne,o

SayreTrvcking (o.

.. t.D. C.IIM'I

Founctatlone,
Drlvewlya,
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Before 6 p.m:
leave message.
·After 8 p.m.
614-985-4180
'

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Free E~ltrllltes

614-742·3411
111M 1 -

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PSYCHICS!!

Don GMry, Owner

Sensatlolai .Results

-~~~~

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(Pay-lllllllod Qlll$1 oWid crdl

ANNOLnJ CE rAE NTS
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Now Open For Spring
Semon _
• Pansies $6.50 flat
• AH vegetable &amp; bedding
plants $6.50 flat
• Blooming &amp; Foliage
Baskets $5.75- $6.75
o4 ln. Assort. Pots
sse . $1.25
-Rubber trees &amp;elephanl
ears $5.50 .
.Cannas $2.00 ea.
•Shrubbery
We honor Gc&gt;lden

985 4473

614-992-3120

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J a D's Auto Part1. Buying salvago Y9hicln. Soiling porto. 30-4··
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CONstRUCTION

ESTIMATEES .

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•
550PageSt;
Middleport, Oh. 45780
HomePh.
·

Bailment Floora.

Antiques, top prlcoo paid, River-·'
lne Antique a, Pomeroy, Ohio,·

Non~Workln~ Washer, Dryers, ~

Stop ~;::pare

Quality Work et

~

Sat., June 7, 1997
$P.M.

For mllflllnfo call Pom
885 t4el or Uoo SMe-205:!
Auctlonur:

985·4422

D. GeaJ7'S
Jlod~

DRIVERS WANTEO

500 Milo Radlu,s • Home Every
WeekanJL_f,mily Insurance Paid
By Camp~n-.ntal, Eye, Pre ~ '
ac:rlplian) 40it&lt;Rt't4.emenl Plan, .

Flrot In • Flrot Out Dl..,.u:h, lall
Model

Con~t.

Tractora . With · ·

Fill- Trallero Compedtlve f'lly
• f'tNCII illlgl 01 Groll.
ORANT TRUCKINO,INC.

MUIR II

OAK _IIIU.,
OHIO212-21U
-

NIID INITIIUCTOM

Accounlng, Ecanonico, 114111111011
M1n1C""'· Soc111 Sclonco, ;
Sond
me To: P.O. Boa 54a,
ICetr, OH 45843.
•

Now Tilting i\tJpP llonl AI Don\. ' '
lno'o Plu~ In ... Cllllllltlllolillll , •
FIDI••ur -.llltfiDr:llriN:I. · '
'

•

'·
'

I.--

'Ruaa Maara qwner, 814-882-:

Felrgrounds ·
Sponaorecl by
Ml!lga Co. 4-H 'florae
Commlttes .

614-742·2138 .
•New HQmas
.__ _ _ _.,:rm:=rw:.;"':;, •Garages
' •Complete
r-FR-E,;,E,_E_S_n_II._!A_TE_S--i
Remodeling

· SEmCES

~.

••

Llmeetone &amp; Gnwel
Septic Sylteni•·
Trailer &amp;
Houses~~n

c~lonof

'

1GTCit....aRI5111440
.
1M Font S.:tal I
1FAPP14JIPW117404
.
T h e - or lhluie.,.
caaiL llolile NBIIOIIII Bank
, . . _ lhl rlglll til bid. II

turnclcMnl,

UULI.I8

For lnfonMtlon

Cont•ot· Ron Miller
112-4021

•

•...,....

• t,OOO RRARDII

1113XM133MF'107145
1114 GIIIC Sonoma 8afllll I

Yard-Bake SeJe

Aboolulo Top Dollar: AI U.S. 511' '
ver And Gold Colno, ProoiHI.;:
Dlamondt, Andqut J-~y. Golcl! Ringo, Pro·li30 U.S, Currency;
i Stllfllng, Etc. Acqullld0111 J-.r_
M.T.s. coin Sllop, 151 s.....a:

2ND ANNUAL
TICK AUCTION

10/.........

Aeration Motor oSalea &amp; Repairs
Cle.,lng Septic Syatema
Port· A.John • Rental• • Serviced Weekly
No Extra Charge for E;venlnga or Weekenda
24 Hr. Prompt Seivlce
7 Daya A 'Week

•...at llftd

Public Notice

Qh,. yourself A
RIIHii\ '87...

Everyone Weioomtl

POMEROY, OHIO
614~992·7119

,IUtlllnt to the

Sales: Women a Met!

HarriiOnVille Prelbyteriln Churcll•
Saturday, May 3111 .
9a.m..... p.m.,
Sponeared by: l.end-A·Hand

Limestone • Gravel
· Dirt • Sand

P. ·

·lhl -uon or to any or Ill . _ frO:n lhl
lilt II lily 11me.
(II 27, 30; (8) 3, I; 'fTC

•

wanted to Buy .

Monln, et4-aa2-7+~t.

DUMP TRUCK
- SERVICE

JACK'IIIPftC 8
PO..,..A-JOIIIIRIICI

lng 1111. notice . alalld be

dl....... to

tile - -

..

(614) 367-0266
1-800·950-3359

R.l. HOLlON
TRUCKING

....

liOmeroy;

Public Sale
and Auction

90

614-992.;s479

-

. VoiUIIHI ·and page . of
aulgnm-: Votuma 71,
...... Ill end Hl, _.,.d
VafUIIHI 73, ~ 111 end
120, . . . county, Ohio
C.UM of ForfeitUre:
•· ~nt of royal·

1n

80

Free Ealienolea
I colno, 1011. 11mpo, gu111, tool~~
,____i:iiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;.,--• tttlltea; also appralaala, Otbt..

Volume end pqe of

INW. Volume
IIIII and IIIII

before the ad Ia to run,

lund•r I Mondiy odl11on·
I:OOpen Felrloy.

IIIJI,Ohlo a Wool Vlralnll, 304'
773-5785 Or 004-773-S..7, . ~.

20 Yrs, Exp. . lno. OWner: Ronnie Jones

Public Notice

'
beloW, lrililudlnti the
: . PiJIILIC HOTICI
Tile annual report l'orm t.Rblrt ,,. ciftl• • tile

Advlnco. DIIdllno:1:oGpenlllo

d•r

POMEROY, OH.

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grindin,Q .

--

1(11111 .....

992·2825 •

POmaroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
An Yard Boloo l!ult lo Pold In

Rick Punon Auction Comp1ni;.

114-742·2707
11

·· ~

Quill Crook ConuiMinlty An·
null Ylrd lllol S.L Juno 7th. 8
1111&gt;3 pm. AI SI.O Clo'*'O, lola ol

· full time auctionetr. complete :.
auction atrvlce. llcenud ·

304-8824541
Free Estimates

lrf.U,it

·1G:OOI............

Eatate, Farm Salaa. Phone 114-

GOODNm'S '
QUALITY·ROOFING

..._,...r...

. ..
, Public Notice

I

F:lrlor.Mo..,.--

Lomloy'o Auction S..lco, Lollle
Ltmloy, Auctioneer. Houeollold,

Middleport, OH.

742·2925

''

Middleport, OH

~~~-·2:90p.M.

B•br hems. Crafta, Furniture,
SOmding lor Ewrwonol

INGELS ELECTRONICS

RICI WALlER
PAIIIIII&amp;

Auto, Truck, Rnldentlll,

..... Allcllllals ·
'·

.....

· 2 mi. off At. 7
Lladlng Creek Rd.

1

113 W. 2N" St

1- ·

•Sm111 Engines

' Windows

LIBERTY KING

Gravel, Ummone,
Topeoll, Fill Dirt,
Sand. No Mlnlnum.

BIDILS

537 BIIYAH PLACE
MIDDLEPORT .

-

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE

992·7074

882-8215
Pomeroy, Ohio

.....

"'.""". ,.,......,.....

3118-1443.

Juft

Allo Cone! ... Work
(FREE E8Tlii4TES)
· V.C. YOUNG Ill

.ILI.Yonllllooloi'PIIil-oo.
Pf'N M: 2:00p.m.

360° Communications

WILL

-Roofing
olll... lar • Extll1or
...lntlng .
.

614-741-3513

.aa,litr•rll -Wiiillows
~G.tps .·.
:.Sttr111 Dears &amp;

Plumbing

211fl Thru 31ot; &amp;-? I Mllll
On Rolllll7, Clolwa' llloc.

1-614·992·7022 ~

CELLULAR PHONES

._n

o£Jtctrlc:Bl •

oalllp0118
&amp; VIcinity

lladle lllaeli Dealer

YOUIIG'S"
. CARPENTER SEIVIQ
Adcllllona
..... a. ...

IF lift IIIII

tabacoo memorabilia.
Specializing in
matchbox cars.

;o--· ~;_~'-

ALL PRIMARY UTILITIES PAID
'
'
Must be 62 years of age or handicapped.
Must meet HUD eligibility requirements ·
'-~For further details ~II today ~

614-992·7643

Loi~mdan. male, Rt

2 aroe. !;:lild'o pel, anoworo to ·

in Pomeroy. Ohio
, Ren's are computed accor~ing to your
income. Lovely apartments featuring
· . wall-to-wall c~rpe~nQ\ with all
apphanc~.
- •

JoeWII10n
(814),992-4277

Ap-

et'-258-1!5e&amp;.

Consider ••

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
·Garages ~ Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL .
FREE ESTIMATES

250 Condo!' Streat
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
ADivision on Nichola Metal, INc.
Fax:
614: 992·2408

. 614·992·3470

Gloeckner, Pomeroy; Geneva Web- · Urban, Morrisville, Pa.;
ster Haney, Findlay, Edna Durst Ted Warner• .Mary Powell, Mary
Slusher, Pomeroy, Chester Roush, Grueser McAngus, Emma J\. Nease ·
Columbus.
Owen, Com MaeVanlnwagen Marr,
1937: Richard ~- Hartung, Bed- Phyllis Meier May, Ronald D.
ford,.Pa.; Dan Rubin, Charl,eston, W. Smith, Mila Jane Stark Wood,
Va.; Allegm Wood Will, Rutland; Pomeroy; Shirley Beegle Huston,
Cecilia Leifheit Hart, Margaret Syracuse; :Jimmy DonovJin, Ft.
Thomas Bailey, Charles E. Sayre, Myers Beach. Aa.
1953: Ted C. Scott, Westland,
Dorotha Calvert McKenzie, and
Sylvia Heilman Midkiff, all of Mich.; Sue Struble Tubbs, Marion;
Pomeroy.
Sue Clark Roush, Rutland; Marlene
1938: Richard Crow Syracuse; Moore Wilson and Shirley A. Smith,
Pomeroy.
Ziba Midkiff, Pomeroy.
1939; Thomas Albert Smith,
1954: Joann Thornton Vaughan.
Coluf!lbus; Mildred T))oma Ziegler, Pomeroy.
Pomeroy.
1955: Nancy Jacobs l:lanold,
194Q: Harold Heilman, Belle- Columbus;
Paul
Eichinger,
,
Ilomeroy,
fontaine.
1941: M. Paul Tedrow, Wellston;
1956: Carolyn Brown Charles
Syracuse; Mary Jane Scott Wise,
Abbie Warner Stratton, Pomeroy.
1942: Mary Sayre Rogers, Dan· Middleport; Ron Bearhs, Pomeroy,
bury, Texas; M. Louise Russell and Bob Hill. West Jefferson. ·
Gilkey, Albany; Dave Holter,
1957: Mike O~linger, Albany;
Pomeroy.
Ruth Lewis, Bellefontaine; Barb
19.43: Mary Wiggins Bentz, Donovan Mylin, Newark; Bob
Belva Young Glaze, Homer Hysell. Roberts, Uniontown; Rita1N~utzling
Pomeroy.
Davis. Sumpter. S. C.; Jerry M.
1945: Bill Radford, Pomeroy.
Davis, Sumpter, S. Va.; Janet Stru· ·
1946: Howard 8. Mullen, Roy , ble Williamson, Rutland; Edith
Holter, George Wright, Pomeroy; . Riggs Heckert, Rootstown; Mary
Eleanor Smith Walter, Toledo.
Jane Eiqhinger Gibbs, Par,kersburg,
1947: Dick Rosenbaum, Danville W. Va.; Carole Hamm. Columbus;
Calif.;
IJarbara D. Goodrich. Gahan- Marvin White, Coolville; a·ob East· .
-~ ·
· na; Charles T. Baird, Etowah, N. C. ; man, Gallipolis; Ray Johnson,
Elizabeth ·Tedrow Dobbins, Ham· Deland, Fla.; James R. White, Sis·
den; Betty .Heilman Gilkey, Colum· son ville, W.Va.; Milton B, Lambert,
bus; Mary Joan Scholl' Childs, Mid· Cincinnati; Janice Roush, Chesa·
dleport; Evelyn L. Ficgcr. Toledo; pcakc; Mike Evans, Portland; Ear·
Billie Jean Barnitz Hoelscher, St: lenc Renshaw Bumgardner, Mason; ·
Loui s, Mo.; Mary Curtis Stark , Judith Hoyt . Morris, Middleport;
Glendale, Ariz.; Paul E. Jacobs, . Carol Curtis Riggs, Su1.anne Vaugh·
South Short, Ky.; Horton Thoma.•. an· Warner, Linda Moore Jett, Max
Raleigh N. C.; John Howard Comp· A. EicNnger, V. Leroy Sauters,
· ton, Calif.; and Mildred Kapte_ina · Richard Houdashelt, April Shasteen
Phillips, Horace Abbott, Wilma Smith. June O'Brien Eichinger; Dan
: OLDEST GRADUATE - KathiHII Bailey Scott of Racine, cl111 of 1925, was the oldest greduete Neutzling Mecs, Claude K. Nease. ~orris, · Rita Ball Lewis. all of
attending Saturday night's Pomeroy Alumni Auoclatlon banquet. She was recognized and prelllilted Frank Vaughan, Ida Johnson . M~r- Pomeroy.
a commemorative plate. Pictured with her are Joe Struble, emcee, Dan Morris, president, and BMted, phy, Bill Ohlinger, Joe Struble, Btll . _ 1958: Fay Thomas Dewees,
her daughter Ma_ry Scott Wise, first vice preeidanL
Lehew; Frank Ryther, Kenny Wig· Grove City.
1959: R.uby Taylor Rife, Middle·
gins, all of Pomeroy. ,
1948:
Frances
E.
Roush
Weber,
pon;
Carolyn Meier Pobesek, Men·
and Frank Vaughan.
·,
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Officers elected for the 1998
· Recognized as-the oldest gradu- reunion were Morris, president; Jo Kenneth 1-larris, Phil Ohlinger, Caroll tor; Gc11e Romine, .Pick~rington.
Sentinel New Steff .
1960: Jim . Sisson, ' Pomeroy;
For many the trip back .to Meigs ate was · Kathleen Bailey Scott of . Anne Williams, first president; Mary Evans Ohlinger, James Will, Margaret
Jean
Bryant
Werry,
Pomeroy;
Mark
A. Grueser, Shade, Chuck
County to attend the Pomeroy High Racine, class of 1925. She was pre- Jane Wise, second · vice president;
School Alumni Association reunion sented a Pomeroy memorial plate. and Judy, Werry, secretary-treasurer. June Whal~y Van Franken, Norfolk, Kitchen; Mason, W. Va.
1961: Mike Robens, Akron; Nor· .
Saturday night was long, but more Others recognized and presented
Appreciation was extended to Va.; Betty Pullins Sayre, Middle·
man Price and Ben Ewi)lg, Pomeroy.
than 300 graduates and guests came, gifts were the youngest graduate, Lila Mitch for posting the necrology . port.
1949: Lee Wince, . Zanesville; and Nancy Hamm, Columbus.
They traveled from California, Jennifer Menchini Kirby, class of report. Classes given special recog1962: Mike Werry, Belpre; Anita.
Pennsylvania, Texas, Missouri, 1968; and the oldest class valedicto- nition were those of 1927. 1932, Jack Seelig, Starke, Aa.; Bill Thbbs,
Michigan, · Kentucky, Tennessee. rian, Evelyn Fieger, class of 1947.
. 1937, 1942, 1947,1952, 1957. 1962, Marion; E1,1gene Thomas, St. Louis, Russell Neutzling, P~ersburg, -w.
·
Mo.; Anna Lee Wamer· McIver, V:a.; 11erry W. Oh linger, Zanesville;
Washington, Florida, Colorado, A.ri·
Also · recognized and speaking and 1967. . .
·
iona, North Carolina. South Caroli· briefly was · Herman Wilkes of
Pomeroy High School graduates . Johnson City, Tenn.; Patricia Meier R!lymond Jewell. Judy; Miller Jew·
na, Virginia, Wesi Virginia, and all Chesapeake, basketball coach in the attending and their class years were Suchoza, .McMurray, Pa.; John E. eii, \ Pomeroy;· Larry ~ 'Morarity,
Werry, Martha Terrell Struble, Lancaster; Ruth ' EdW;ards Parter,
across Ohio, to join their high school mid-forties at Pomeroy High as.follows :
School.
classmates.
1925: Kathleen B!liley Scott, Pomeroy; Irene Angus Bailey. Mid· Castle Rock Colo.; 1.01&amp; Ziegler Sig·
dlepon; George .Dallas, . Agowia nom, Dayton; "~ina Butor Jeffera,
It was an evehing of reminiscing .
Morris reported on the Bob Recin&amp;.
,
Athens.
'"'
and reflecting. sharing memories of Robe.ns/Pomeroy Alumni Scholar1927: Nonga Fleming Roberts, Hills, Calif.
·
'
"
1950: Vema 0 . Snowden, Gal1964: . Yvonne
eat .Youpg,
days at Pomeroy High ·· founded in ship fund and announced tbe names Pomeroy, and Mary E. Daniels
lipolis;
Betty
Thomas
Grant,
Pomeroy.
.
1876 and consolidated into the of this year's recipients of $600 Rous.h, ·Racine,
196S: Carla Will Werry, Belpre;
Meigs Local School District in 1968 scholarships. They are Liberty King
1928: Ella Midkiff Romine, Croo~sville ; Itoben Burton, Pat
Burnside Thoma, Pomeroy; Emmo- Donna Hauck Carr, I'innciroy; Faye
:. and giving to preS~;rve the past and Erin Krawsczyn, both Meigs Pomeroy.
,
while making a positive contribution High· School graduates. Both are the
1929: Maxine Jenkinson Russell. gene Edwards Hamilton, Syracuse; Cramer Isenhaur, Clan:moot, N. C.;
to the future . with scholarship granddaughters of Pomeroy gradu· Crooksville and Loretta Meier Bee.' Margaret Thuener Lehe~, Pome~y.
_1951 : Janet E. Htll, Ractne;
.
ates.
gle, Pomeroy.
monies.
Hysell
Sopher
Mi!(dlepon;
Shirley
King. daughter of Tim .and Edie
1931 : Mary K. Baer Roush,
Purple and white. the school colNew officers we.e insttlled at the
Joanne Jones Williams, Syracuse.
ors. decorated the Meigs High King of Middlepon, is the grand· Racine; Lula Hampton. Pomeroy.
recent meetin1 of ~hapter 53, DisJ9S2; Charles F. Roush, Philo; abled American Veterans.
1932: Aileen Rea Wehrung, HarSchool cafeteria for the banquet daughter of Wilma NeutzliQg Mees,
C. Joachim Wolfe, Belpre:
Jean
1947.
she
plans
to
attend
class
of
lan H. Wehrung, Pom&lt;:roy; and Vir·
emceed by' Joe Struble, and the
lristalled were El(ner Pickens, Sr.,
William
A. Smith, Vancouver, corn!Jl&amp;n(ler; Senior Vt« Commandance which followed where organ Ohio Northern University where she ginia Smith Heilman, Canton.
1933: Louise Hartung ·Bearhs, Wash.; ROO.n Lehew, Whitehall; der, Robert MiiCJMII, senior vi&lt;:e
music was provided by George Hall. will major in international business.
Krawsczyn. daughter of Bette and Catherine Raub Welsh, Guy E. Guinther, Gallipolis; Ann commander; Lloy4 . ohnson, junior
. The reunion was planned by offi·
Piersall Persinger, Mt. Hope, W. Va.; vi~ commlllder; James Bailey,
cers, Dan Morris, president; Mary J. Hobstetter Hoffman ··and John Pomeroy.W. Venoy, Columbus; Hmy ICIJIIWit/lreasurer; Jllllel Gilmore,
George
. 1934: Wilheimine Smith Maier.
Wjse, first vice president; Jo Anne Krawsc:zyn, Pomeroy, is the grand·
Wj lliams, second vice president; daughter of George Hobstetter, Westerville; and Rachael Elberfeld L. Brown, Orange, Teua; Sarah chlplain; Denver c!:urtis, Jeaialatiw
Stowe Neijler, Racine; Sylvia chainnan, reporter Md110rVice offi.
Apt:il Smith, secretary-treasurer, and 1934, and Muine Eberabllch Hob- Downie, Racine.
Sands, California; Steve ~ and JIIIICI Spurlock, IIIJUIIIII
Schwab
'stetter,
1936.
She
plans
to
attend
1935: Evelyn Roush Seelig, Lora
committeeS of Ula Mitch, Robert
Bunon. Chuck Kitchen, Kenny Wig- Ohio University and will major in L. Swank Crispin, Westerville; Har- Hill, California; Mary Drake Hug· ' anns.
gins. Yvonne Young, Judy Werry public relations.
riet Ohlinger Rauch, Columbus: Joe gins. Westerville; Dorothy Orueser

-1

In The Poor House?

BISSELL BUILDERS, IN

Big B•nd Fabrication,
Machine &amp; Welding $hop

Llmeltone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

Pomeroy alumni reunite for reminiscing, scholarship presentations

.

.,

Complete MIM:hlne Shop Service Fabrication
Steel Sales, Weldin8 Sappliel,lndustrlal Gu
Radiator Repair &amp;: Replacement
Monday·Ftiday ·8:00a.m.· 4:30p.m.
Saturday· 8;00 a.m.· 1211000

HAULING
HEATHER _..CGUFFIN
Schafer Smith, Dan Sanborn. Paul
Haynes, Ted and Clara Belle Riley.
Tom Darst, Dana Walburn, Mary
Lou and Lionel Boggs, Harl}'
McGuffin, Olivia Bowles Lockett:
Mary Brewer, Bob Ashley, David
Ashley, Mike Garten, Roy Coleman.

Founri·--·--

Doa With Bob•Toll, friendly a
Loveable, Choahko ArH, at4·
317-.

Ramodellng

1998Martln Street
PomeRIY, Ohio 457Q .

20 y~ Elcp. -lne. owiw. Rlc:lc ,.,_

(LimeStone- •
Low Retel)

'

found: '*' SR I l l , --doa. IIH, tlln ,w ltl ....., fiK, rod
diir, 1 1 . - - .
.

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding .

'

.

110 Lost lnd Found

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

"Bau.t Toar ~am"

Top•

814-742-3080
814·742-3324
814·742·3078

.

llllo,l1-1·317-.

THE MAPLES

o.aa-.

.

llmlll Bilek II White Mile Oog
Willi Bob· Tall, FrlofMIIy I Lovo·

New Location: 2 mllee off At. 7 on At. 124

. 11 a 1

,.Hollow

. . . .1.....

II. . o.lmltlan, , , _ old. 104·
t'IS-711D.

AJC Condensers/HOM Aasemblltl

Maaon, WV
2UeO '

Mot Wilt R-clll

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

.sponscants. sports
memorabilia, tabacoo
tins, cigar bOxes, and

.

U.UL a ••.,... CDPMA

Ohio

... - (

- lndultrlal • Automotive
·New Rldlatora • Re-Corea ·

FAMILY DENTISTRY
304-773-5822 . Rt. 1, Box 44-C

PRJ~"

.

-

~ 1 "'f.:~.":" 1 , . . . .

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Buyers of vintage toys,

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•

'

�•

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The C.lly s;nllnel• Page 11'1 f

·.

.

Pomeroy • ;dlleport, Ohio

.•

DIDOK

'

£,

~

NEA Cro••word Pu_.zle

PHIU,IP
ALDER

............-...
a c.....,
.................
41 O....(ofll

ACROS&amp;

,....,._

7 .......

~

,.,._

rr r wt

47 - KNro
13 TODih cover'"'l 10 Cc '
2

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.....

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Mobil

Homll

Apa biliilll

foi'Selt
IIOIIU'IPIS'IS,
PC UMII noedod. S.CS,OOO In·
como patontlal. Call 1·800·51.3·
013 Eld. 8«168.
·

11 you want to make moMY., ate

•llllng to work hard and like to
~elp ott..ra, we may have a job

lor you. Local Rtaidt nt. Exc•l·
~nt income poaaibllltiea and
hamo a~lco training fa&lt; peroono

teltc:ttd. Mull have pleaalng

peraonallty and be willing to
meet the public . No experience

ca11

For more information,

c-, RIH1"'' at 304-f75-8019;

MCHU.'f:

or maH resume to ·2413 Jackson

A.._; POint

EOE

Ploaoan~

WV 25550.

,,.._,.~'"

Ho

'*

l'll'ot' luubjoCIIO

. . F - Fllr Houolng Act
o1 1911wlllen mokoo h llogol

- ..
-..Uur. ar .llsu••••tfou.•
,~ouch,......,..,

lmwlk9r IICCejll

advertllemantslor real estate
whldlllln Ylolollon ollho law.
Out' realilra atel'lfel&gt;y ,

,....

lntonued flat d dJUIRings

PINKERlON SECURITY

Ojlj)OfiUI1IIy blslt.

• Be Abia To Provide Complete
Et1111oYmonl Hlstoty Fot The Pall
10 Ve8r1 With Compktbt Names,

Addre11as,

And

Telephone.

Nurrllorl.
• Pr.ovlde A List Of Three Per-

sonal References Who Are Not
Relatives Wi th Their Complete
Name&amp;, Addreuas, And Tele·
'phone Numbers As Well.
·

·1 Apjjlcalions WUI Be Accoplod
F'orn. Galtpolls Area On
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HHlTALS

N-1997 14 Wide- I both, 181101
dawn, 1131/mo, with approved

Naw·l997 14 Wide- I both, 18991
down, $138/ma, with approved Four bedroo·m houn With large
crldii.CIII 1-IOMII ..m.. ·
rord, no appllancu, $225 par
fi\Onlh, $100 dapa olt. Call 814o
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742-3011 , 10oatod In Doxtor.
sggs down, ug51mo.
Oakwood Homoa, Nitro,
POmeroy Ohio Wltzgal Slroet 3
755-5115.
Bedrooms. $350 Monlh Dapaalt
.:..::..:::=-,:-:-::---:-:-:=1 (513)574-2539
1887 1•xBO 3 or 4 Bedroom, :.:_:;__ _ _ _ _ _~'7':$l,3511 down, 12211/ma. Frft air, POnieroy: 3 Bedroom, 1 112 Bolh
aklrdtig, a dallvery. Only at O&amp;k· Homo For Ron~ Month Ta Month,
wood Homoa Nltro,WV. 304·75§. Addillonal 2 Room Ollico Sullo
5885.
liar Be Ren1od Seperalelr Or
.:.;.;~--~~-~-:--1 Wilh Homo, 114·4~1-2055, F~r
1997 doublewlde II 445 down , Delaila.
1 .
S2211/IIICI. Froo dellvorr 6 aotup.

Mlddlopart hOI part drne
AN i&gt;ooldono available lor 111
aNria, IXporlonce preferred. H lntettlled plaan com·e in and nu
ouun app11c:at1cn. no phone cans.

Drug Scnlon

7251 AJWS:pm.ar\''IJhlnd&amp;

boood on roco.

SlrN~

To QuaiiY ~-lluotllool
thi llowlrg:
• Bo 18-.0tAotOrOider
• HIMt AClo8n POllet Rocord
• Muol Bo Able To 1'111 A

1994 Clayton IIX80, a liR, 2
Balho, •23,800.00 (114)·317·

crldil. Ctllt-«&lt;H81..m.

001 famlllllttaiUI or nolk&gt;nll
origin, or any ~ t101 •ton 10

--In
......-...........

1111&amp;-

-c

eu uea•

1 0 -..., pr.........

-don or -•tlr•don
-...Nil;l o&lt;l.

140 MllctMI liiOUI
lllerchlncllle
IHI~-"-Fiatoii'Wis

12115 llolllto Homo For Salo,
814- 1'12

n.-perwll..-

Overbrook Canter. 333 Page

tor Rent

410 HouSH for Rent

,72 T harblno •7,100. 411 I'
ha~bine 17,DOO. 492 I ' hayllino
Tt'ICII Achl-. Pd .780. 11.400. 415 diacblno II' cut .
oo wll 1011 br f40Q.OO. Excallent 113,500. 5115 aquw baifr 3 )alnl
COrdlon. (114)-11
PTO wogon hllch tt,200. 134
.Ound belor U,IOO. 144 round
OUt 01
~Salol baler IUiowrap I I 2.100. 154 R.
114246110'33
.
boltr IUIOWtlp II 5,400. 451 T
alcklo mowol fa. I SO. 115 a·a•
~Thrift Shop- now buying
rurnilure, ehlldren'e oummor dlac , _ t4,700. I uaod roUnd
1. . ~ tllt. cab, aoD, 11CJ
clalllll, matornlty ciOihlt, bollr baieriD -loin!.
K-.-CI!Itot
Ca&amp;Hito, dll, CIUllO, Tanno1~
ilorna ond lerea tayl. Call 614·
IIIIN725.
.
It Al17
- • · 7,100ml., •14,800. 3041
Twc bedroom aparanont In Mid·
PI Phannll illolor Ad
1175-15794. . •
· ..
1
104 lli-:llt4.Ro•IQMIOr, Couoh I Tlbto. il ..
dlopar~ . . 114-812-!Hl

450

FurniShed

ROom.

Stooping raoma with cooking.
Alao uailer apaco an river. All
h~ak· upa. Call ahtt 2;00 p.m.,
304-773-51151, Muon WV.
..., Rent
460 Space ~ .
·

clean,l.;~;~~lloot~:o~ltlcl~~~~po:ce:.

Bu-

AJHENS W&gt;BIQAOE CO
Financinga'i'Bila!:jefrorHouset
and Mobi .. Homes. New or used
purchases; Refiruncing; Bill con&amp;OIKiadon; land contracll. No

atipl•callon leo; AllieYels ol credit
CallOda~ lor a ~eo ane~~sl
IJOG.IJ28·14GZIII4-5t2o40011
8oauliful 2 S1or~ On Corner Lot
WV 3 Bedroom, 2 Full Ball1s. Uv·
lng, Dining. Familr Rooma. Modern Kitchen, Large Laundry Aroa.
$S8,000 Sl4·446·2205, Or 814·
816 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant,

048·9585.

available to help you purchase a
replacement home. Call1 · 800·
otQf-7871 to aet appointment for
dela~a.

IT'S BIG. 1997 4BR, . 28ATH
OOUBLEWIDE. $1,949 DOWN,
$319/MO. FREE DELIVERY .6
SETUP ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOMES,
NITRO, WV. 304·755·
.
58I5..Umllod Ollor.
laraa selection ot used home. 2
or 3 bedraoma. Smrdno a1 $3495.
Oulck doliverr. Call 1·800·137·
32311.

30•·

By- owner: Mount Vernon Avenue,
Semi Drivers For Flatbeds, 614- .Point
Pleasant. e.rooms, 2 or 3
11188 8841
bedrooms, 1 bath, large kltet'len
Service Technician Mull Have with laundry hook-up, all on one

Mabile &amp; HCdonal home• • pari&amp;
IIIMce. 304-f175-t400.

Taking Bida Until Uay 30th, On 3
floor. BaHmant, vinyl siding. Bedroom, U77 14x70 Schultz
Moch8nical Expori4ftCet ApPly AI ·carport,
finCltd back yard. Per~ Gas Heat, Naeda . Work, Alter
Big Boys Water
oys, In
loci
atortor
home or for older ind&gt; 5:30 Call61 ..245-9572.
(:lleahl ... 81 ..387·7802.
1
W1111tod: 31 People Lose 18 ·25 :~ 7 ~~~.ooo. "CALL Nowr 330 Fanns for Sale •
Poundo In The Nou 30 Days.
11 o Acre Farm With Accello·
Natural. Guaranteed! 1·800-690. Corner Lat•02 FOurth AVe. rie&amp;
On Stale Roure ss•. 5 112
(Great
For
Bed
l
.Brtaktut)
8
2295.
Bedroom•. 4 Belha, Formal Lhllno Year Old Hause ~llh New Home
Room 1Famil~ Room Wllh Pol:kat Improvements. For More lnlor180 Wanted To Do .
Doora, UUiity Room, Garage. Re· tnolon Call814·387-7031 .
ANY ODD JOBS: Exterior painr- modeled.· 1115,000 · Shown B~
ing, shrubs &amp; weeds trimmed, ~lntrnenl Onl~, 814·441·2858 340 Business and
landscapin; , sidewalk• edged, Aller 5:00 P.M . .
. Buildings

ti'BIOI Jim Shull30oHI7!H272.

Georges Portable Sawtl'ilt, don't
haul your logs to th&amp; mill just call

Swimming Pool, $34,000, 814·
V48-2528, Or 352-11114-I lOV.

ouranco, Bidwell, Ohio. 614-388·
11148,11 ..387-7010.
Seamatre11 25yrs. experience,
hems, zippers, alltrat!on&amp; tor
mon 6 women. Call Mon-Frl 304·
07W728.

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

14180 Cla~ton Chor~kto, In clude&amp; big kitchen, 2bedrooms.
ln&amp;lder heat pump, $17,Q95. Call
Mountain Slato Homta 304-S75·
Will haul .junk or rrash away. $351 1400.
pickup load. 30..875-5035. .
1Q74 Cameron mobile hC)me with
141SO add..., room, bock parCh
FINANCIAL
awning, amall atarago bulldlno,
10122 deck with troatod lumbar,
::;:;:~~~..:..:-----1 now lurnaco lnotalled In Decem21'0
Business
ber, con1ra1 air, ,.,. ..,...~
excellent condition, mu11 move,
Opportun lty.
call ovonl!'P end - - 814·
.
!NOTICE!
992·31131.
PUBLISHING CO
OHIO ""LLEY
•~
llobllaCon•
hamo an corner lal
recOmme
. n"'a that rpu do bual·· 11Di4
Maaon
ete drlvowa•

,..
·
n
·
..r
,,
ne11 wid'! People you know, and sidewalk l pario, 12x12 &amp;IOraae
.NOT
10 aond
lhrau~ lht builrllng..20'&amp;:J04.773-5372
rMI until
you mane~
have investigated

. . ollorlftD.
•
IH7 Skyline 14x72, 3br, 2bolh,
;;;;;,;;:;;;;;,l:;....~-:--:---1 bulidlrig, porch, awning, lkltling,

, 230

ProfiiSional

Hun 1385. 304-5112·5840.

Mobile Horne lor rent. White Rd, 2
br., $225.monllt (6 14)..41-4389
bedroam, parti-.Hy futnlshed,
central iir, largo ~ard, good daan
caMillon, no poll, S230. par
Two

monrt1, New Haven, 304-882-2468

an~time. ·

440

Apartments
tor Rent

-'"*'"·

1nlshed
and 2 bedroom
fur·
and unfurnished, security
deposit required. no peta, 614992·2218,
2 Bedroom Apilrlmon~ $39511.to.,
$100 Depooi~ All Ulilldos Paid, No
Pel' 814-448-3437.
2 Bedrooms In Gallipolis, No
Pets, Relerencea. Waler Paid

S2501Mo.. 81 . . .17011.

FRANK &amp;'EARNE.'JT'
A ttOTATIO,_, ltA'tt TtiAT'S VA!IArL.el ONE ltfVOL.UTlON
e\ie,y !69 Arlt:&gt; V4 P~YS! TIL.TEl&gt; A)(l$.... WtiO Ttlt lffCk
vi A$ ,,_, CtiAUE Of $PI,_, G.OriTitOL.. Orl ·
·rt~•f o~~tel.1 · &amp;
c~fArltNv

1977 POnUac Grand Prix, 11,500
MilOt. 61 ..";46.021M.

1

g153,

··' . .

5320. . •..

poln~

34Q3.

' I

ceillnl condilion, t550Q, 81 .. 94~

.,
twru~. rf#\~f.,T YOU
'

TNJQNC&gt;ON T~ f'lll)lole WITIJ.
••-=- fiiOOn\ FW..! WI1J W"'
IT m't'W"H =r-1

1g Ft Crtllllnor Cuny Cabin, •

Cyllt)dl&lt; M-r Cruillf, Alumt
num, Loll 01 Accooaorltl, ClocHI

1..akt Erie Boa~ $3.~ Firm.
388 0685.
'

' Pon"toon 1811. Ball Tracker
40hp ....r. 304-67§.581 7.

bllll b'•n

.· 31 Flarlda ciiJ
40 lrlahoGMIIC

8 -tanala
1 Prtftxlorpod

10 Dame Myra 11 .Art dtco
lllu12 Ft8QI'II'It flower

••

By Pbllllp Alder .
One of the moat respected bridge

players and writers, Alfred Sheinwold,
·died in Loa Angeles on March a at the
age or 85..Born in London, Freddie, ....
he wu known to lllhil friends, moved
.with his family to New York when he
wu nine. He stayed in Manluot~ Cor
nearly 50 years, before moving to LA.
. After graduatinc summa cum laude
from City College In t933, Freddie was
hired by Ely Cull!eltson, then the leail·
ing bridge peraonalily. Freddie apenl
tbe reel or his life wrillng about tbe
game in magazines, newspapers tror
the LA Times Syndicate I and bogka
("FiYe Week&amp; to Winning Bridie" bas
sold mlllions or copiesl. A top player, .
he,won two nation.a l and many region·
al 'tiUes:
.
• · During World War II; Freddie was
·the chief code and cipher expert or the
. OSS &lt;Office of Strategic Slirvicesl.
: Here's a·simple but effective defense
Freddie produced. South went Cor six
no-trump as it 1"as a national pair
.'championship. 'And he aeema to [lave
12 easy tricks, iloesn't he? However,
when Soulh ·playe!i a club to ,hi&amp;,JICI! .at
trick two, Freddie dropt)ed the jack!
Trying to judge the distrlb!!,Uon,
South contlnuelf with his two top
' spades, East discarding a diamond.

"t~i;'N&amp;"~~rJ f~~~~~~fJ":l ' and
Now thinking West wulona in spades
diamonds, dect.rer led a heart to

"'

1~;rt'l~'&gt;
I'

WI

:

dummy's ace and plfled a Club to hie
nine. Happily, Freddie produced the 10
and ran the diamonds; rour down.
Freddie will be greatly missed not
only by all who knew him but aleo by
his readers.

.

Hl!;AANBEO

zao

.P H

DHH

.D C H Z X .D

DZTFHJD ,

IHZANBE

CZBRD,

..

I
VHAIZAO

"',

IN R P

ELJUHA
LB

..

VZEEW

L .A

AHDCHGII . '

PNT

IINE · HA

..•

ILLOO .

.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Some lolka can look so busy doing .nolhln' lhat they ·.
seem '"~lspensable
.
·
:
. ." - Kin Hubbard.
. .

'

.~··..

O four
Aoorrongo lollero al
sciomblod worda

...
'·

tho
bo·
low 10 form four limplo -ds.

I

N OR

..

uT u

I
.I
t-'r-::'r-=-'n-:3,r.:-1~
NELNI

·,

·Ir -:-L.-A::-:8--::-0~.V:-.~.,,.,:N"',•
s 1 1
.I I
_ . _

.
'

After reading the moniing
paper I believe that politicians
and actors tend to believe ev- •
;::~~~~~~:.., erything gOod thai is -- - - - - - ·
P R VS C l
laboutthem. ·

.

~

O

..

'.

Burlap - Daunt· Grant . Fatten • GET UP
' The best way to lead a balanced life,· a cutie told her
pal , "is to try to go to !:ied the day before you GET UP!"

•

For~ IINIIOf home' 2Qf~ tll\lj!

$2,1100,614-311-11293. '

0 L B 'R

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

•''
I DD3 Colomon POp-Up Campo!
Quean Slzo And fJIII Size Bod,
Excellenl CbndiUon, Well Maino
talnod, Air ConditiOner &amp; Futno~

5 acre tractS available in aouth ·
ern Vinton Coun1y fronting an
State Route with rural water ava~ ­

'W L F

'"

6 GEl
UNSCliAMBtE LETTERS TO I
ANSWER
·

oond. 30... 75-5817.

Z~~

J)Mer1t

t";AA:

PRINt NUMBEREO lEITERS
IN IHESE SQUARES

i

Motor Homes

1887

.....

~-T~-;;~':'6.;..,1;:...;.,r:7:-=-rl-l
Cornplele the chuckle quoted
. ....I.
by filling in the mining words
1 .-J..-~.,......J.;-..J.L-..J...
,
you develop from step No. 3 below.

campers &amp;

790

.CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull Campot •
c.lebrity c"* c=,..,. ... CI'HMd !rom qLdUoM !!"/famoc.. people. pat! Md
,
hc:tt
In the c::iph!lf IWICII .I of anol'ler. T~y'•
V «JU.~Is 8

I

Now gaa lanko, I ton llu~~
wheal a. I radiatora. D I R Auto;
Riploy, WV. 304·372·3g33 or fl
1100·213-..

.,

'

fTUESDAY

·•

1DI4 Prawl•r 30ft camper, ·llke

new._queen-alze bed, tr;c:rawa'1

able, $9,900.

alr,liWnlng. 304-575-2547. ,, , ,

Owner financing available wilh
S500 down pa~ment, 1 14·&amp;gl.
5.707, (agontownodJ.

$;1.300. (81~-

5 Acre a On Georgea Creek

Rood, 011 SIBto Routo 7, $35,000,

BiluNER LAND
81.4-l'75-1173
Ollllo Co.: Galllpollo, 2 lljiet OUt
Neiehborhood Ad .. ID Aero Par·
col II 7,000 Or 22 Acrn At·
duced To $24,000. Graen
Schoolt , Coun1y Water. Frlandlr · In Point Pleaaant Unhlrnlehod,
RtdQI, Private 1D Acre 1 $11,000, Spoeloua I Phil Roome, Rtltr·
8.5 Actll 17,500, I .S'r.crtl
tnce &amp; Dopaol~ II 4·448-0041,
.
$8,000. GrNn School a, ounty A'* I P.ll.
Water. Teena Run Rd. · .l31.1P
Nftl~ rlrftodolod'One blidroom
Atxo l'llcols, 110,000 •·
furnlahad apartment In Ulddl•·
Co. : Nur Athena Co.
114·912·2171 or 114-112·
Ramalt 10 Acre a
0r1y .1.000 0own + 1101
AI
I Sa At Ni
""10, n mt ea. ce
Silo ON 5 Acree $7,500.

Knalla Or
l'orlocl
AC&lt;n

.

"·

'

Wlnnoboga-ITASC'A 27ft. mata\home, self contained, air, lul,.
naco, altept 8, aonora1o1
18.soo OIIQ 304.e75-4122. . ,

Call Allar 8:00,114-448·7188.

Ca.! Jacltaon, llolutilul
Sitat FDr Your NOn Beaver

..

2T Coachman Ca._; olr, llllf.
Contained, Awning. Sleopa liVery Good Condition. lluol Satl.

u-

dlopart. ..
polcl. t270 .....
•100 dopaalt, 114-IDZ-7808,

.....!prn.

.•'·.

..

810 '

~J\Rf. l

SUPPIIF S
11. !IV! ~; lOCK

I

81 o Farm Equipment
Ill% OFF all lirm ltiCior· porto.
81dtr'l Equipment 304·175·
~~421 .

417 Now Hoiland Hlr Blno, It..
441-2114.
'

~1•100 Paria And Sat¥ico: All
N- Branda Over.25 Ylora E•·

porlonco 'All Work Guerinioed,
Fronch Chr i.ta~log, 114·441· ·

~

One bedroom aparament In
Ploaoant Furnllhld. Vlrr clnn
I nice. Na- 304-f75-lOno bedroom aportmonlin Mid·

!ol
f.'

SE RVIr.F S

=.;:;..:;.;;;;___;;_~-1

FOR 11001 Truekt, boalo •. 7795.
moror ,_,, lurnl·
C6C Goneral Homo · ·Mol.;.
11;. - - compUIM C .
tononc•· Palntino. vlnrllidlng',
11J
i/11, 1111.
A,.Hablo raur carponitJ,
_ , wl,_a, bolllll
erlli now. Can 1·100·113·4348
£x!.fl.«a . I .
homo tljiOir """ , __ For
,_.111111111o caV Cho~ 81 ..112·
4r~lort,

w.

832:1.

.

""" , . _ llod-

rllornt. 1\tro Bolho, a.-. 56

B•ma and Fence.
-!iii. 0111. (114) •7-7714

· Acree with

,-.., ....,.,,, homo on ,.,,...
lion! ......... ~· ~~ lot ill Flral Tlmt;:::,;.eur Flnenc·
·a ll;ullo F.,.,. H4'1t pymp. • . lngl 2 &amp; s
around •200
I fvll ....,,, OR, lt~"' I bo~k
, . , _, ....... bulldl"'l· 30•- ,., mon1h. FrH dolhitt~ I Ill·
up.
1400-251·
17NI44QEP';at-L
.
5010.

Wo--

"

••

I

7Ukaaome

North . Eut
Pass
I.
3.
Pass
Pass
s•
· Pass
Paso
Pass

.

19111 Olda Cutlall· Ciera, runs
gooc1. S3:ooo. 304-f7H&amp;Ia.

I'!J',:;; ·

112 8lory -

West

"

an rented lot, can 11ay, oxc.
Slfvlcel
cand. tall JD 114·441·D340 ar
,;.,=,.....,~i:::~:::;.--;~:::-1
30W75-se43- m111090.
HARTS J!IASONARY • .Black, 1_. ~ 14170 211t, 2 bo*
brick &amp; . , . . wartc. 30 ,...,. IX· " ..
bl
1112 deck, on ranllld lot. axe.
1 304
=~ ~=-~~·: jol).; c~nd .. aoklng Sl4,300 OBO.
-or &amp;IlliG. WV-(121 Zlll .
30W75'105HAI\!e 1110111$10.
,...,. Sc:hool&amp;

t

e•

0101"--~ .. ~. ~...'B't'E!

,.

S)HI 14' Flshlno 'Boa1 With TnlJl
1985 Foro~. Muallng LX 2 Ooora, or, Oulck Sale, 1500; 10' Alum;.
4 Spaod, 'tandard, Crulao Con- nuin, Grolt •For POnd S?5. Bl+
'
l
trol, Air Condidonlng. Saw Blado ·448 4941.
Whtola, ~ Root Whttl Drlvt,
•
Serloua lrlqulrlea Onl~. $2,000, 760 Auto Parts &amp;
61 ..256-13111.
Acce110rles
•
.
1988 Ford Eaoorl N:., Good Con· I!Jd~et Price Tran~m1111ofJ. ·
didon, $750, Gl4o441-4141 AllOr S Slltllng a1 $911.00 and Up, OHCI.I
P.M.&amp;W-a. .
Robuill, All T~pea, Over IO,CMIO
r
.. namloalanl, · Acce11 Tranllil!
1988 Ford Tau rua, Ill! C. running
Caaoo
cond .. . lt ,SOO OBO. 304·175· 5&amp;77 i Real Enda, 814·245•f

llllkl S•te -~ $9,1100.

310 Hom II tor Sill

SUzuill, 115+ mph, II&amp;'OVO kop~

....,.,........I{UU.O rMPII ...f#U.IC.Ilt .. .

...

work car. 30H7H515.

Gallipolil . More Acrt:age Avail-

.,.,.,... IQyra on job exporl· Dlahwoahor, 2 POrche&amp;, HOlt
once. 304-t75-2146. ·
Pump, Awning• And Eavoa
11 5,000 llltloua tnqulrloo Onlr,
114-Z!e4115.

IU lbol SniOI lid boa~ 180 ~

.

1g33 - a Accord, 4 eylindlf, 4 . IGII 16 Fl.. SltiiOI Ball Baal
door, 4 D~9d tlrea, 5 spe8d, With Trailer 70 HP Jollheon lid·
35,000 on rebuilt motor, now tar 1212~ Volt Trollllolor Road,
brakea, runa aood, bod~ good, To Fiohll7,000, 304·675-8322,
tinted windowa, prl~ed to sell, L-11-.
'
SSIIS. Sl4-992-2904.
1994 MoNda 18 Foot Open &amp;eM
1984 Chav~ Cltotlan V-e, Slltirln w1Sun D•ck, 4.3 titer V6, Ml,...
Wag~n. 17DO 0.8.0. 114·4~8- · cruiser, Am Fm Caoaone, and S~
Acc411ory.l1+256-t393
'
3t•9.
u
1g14 Mercurr Topor, naw

Electric On Bttck Top Road 3
Bedrooms, 2 112 Bath Mobile
Home With Add-On 10 Miles To

LIYing•ton'o bleornonl waltr· 11101 14170 ClaYIOn NonhridOO 3

I 2 ft l9blr Cll~ V·Bonam, Filii·
Hndtt, All Tha E1tra1l Traillf lrl·
c:ludod, $700, 614·245-9851 AI·
llfi!!M,

;,

pa, 1b, cc, . ac, runs grHt, nice

Approx. 1o Acta Spring Fed lake
With laland ... County Water,

,_

a.-..

3311..0.1·
31 C!if11on 'a

From London ·
toNYCtoLA

••••nod.

53 11

5 Taunt .
• o.tectt..

ahlekl

32 Outor

Bridge

1978 Ford F·150 V·8, Auto; AC,
Cruiaa,
Garage ~apr. Must See
Wormed 814-379-2911
To Appreciate, Aoklng $3,500,
Atc:C realaterecl Boaton Terrier Sl4-446-4053.
Bulldog puppleo. I lanllla $250, I 1982 Par~~venua, aa·aa Motor .
mala 1200, 10 weeks, 1hot1 &amp;
&amp; Trana, Haa WindQw Problems,
81.. 912-7823.
Make Goo( Dorno Car 1400;
AKC Roaloterod Coc:ktr Spaniol IDBI Olda' CutiOII V·l, Auta,
puppies, black, both parents on Run• Falr,;, f$50; Call 8U·U8·

UMd Air Condilloner I Hoot
llnilll150 S!Drm Doora 150 8144148-3301,814 44135113
Ulod Furnilure: 130 Bulavlllo
Pika, Bobr bod, play pon, oolftol
end llbloa, "IGhl atonda, dllkl,
d~ftHrl, coucha1, chillrs, rack· -premises, born ~ 3120187, ahots
era, bunk bed aet, much mora• ·and wormod, 1200. cali ·O¥oninge
814-441-4712 HAS 10. 4. We bu~ lndW40IIonclt. Sl ..9112-3931.
uood llornituno.
I.:~=:.:::.=:;Ant_lq_U_I_I_ __ 1OQal tonk aol up apocilils. Fish
Tank 6 Pat Shop, 2413 Jackoon
Ave. Pain I PloaMnl, 304·6 75·
2013,

":+~
3 Koalllryallaclel '"'
4 F....chiiOUI

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Opening lead: • K

l&gt;lpr.

5prn

• 1· 2

Pass

fy Furnished, New Fumiture, lot

ing, Hunllng, Fishing, Camping,

proortno. all N1emen1 repairs B1dswns. 2 lah, 1 WI" GTamdone. free estlmatal, lifetime· OUt Tub S.V., RefriQiriiOr, And

Soulb

Provided; $300/Mo., 814·245·
11368.
·

•nt or Huntlnuton . w\1111 accept

tJ98542

South
aAK9

lJ*;ilfiN

Kllc:ilon Clt$&gt;01 H.50 Sale On AI
Carpll In lllock I Room Size
t.lollotan Ca- SI4-44G-7444.
AKC German Shorll1aired POinter
Nice Salll 6 Ma10h1ng Love Sao~ puppiel, grea1 lOr bolh lield &amp;
lamlly, $175, 614·742-31 n.
814-3tltl-8144.
Sola &amp; chair •250. Conaolo TV AKC Golden Retrliwera Puppiea
1100. Call .304·875-7i64 alter UOO ooch, Vol Chocked, Sholl,

•• •Q. 7 4

• 2
~ K Q 10 8
• J 10 4

P'l"s

3 Bedroom Trailer, Thurman
Area. G14-2llli..Q007. .
3 Bedraoms; 2 Full Ball1s, Perna•

(OWN YOUR OWN LAKE)
43.28 Acres Excellent For Build•

5 acre tracts aurrounded by

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Pass
Pass

one and 1J.4 acres. nice. 11+99~·

5175.

• J 10 1

,.'

Syracuse· three bedroom, one able $135,000, 614.;Jtl8.8678.
and 112 balhl, LR, DR, lamll~ 1 AC &amp; 2 AC loll tor sale In
304-117§.1957.
!OOm. ook klldltn, ,_ carpe~ full
Lawn Ubwlng Services Cammer~ baaement, electric turnaceJheat Scenic Valle~ Subdivi1ion.
c:iall Residential, 614-446-4885, pump, IWO·car garage (28x32), Wedge Reali~. Braker 304·875·
2722.
814-37a-2135.
ProtMaio,.l TrH S8fvice, Stump
Removal. Fr•e Eallmatesl In·

Wnt

1 Skinny llelt
2 AgltNcl alllla

Vulne...ble: Both
Dealer; North

2 Bedroom, total electric, refer·

For sale, 1 bedroom home in Po- land and BuildinG. Crawford's·
7112.
meroy, will sell on land ~ntracL Grocery, Hender~an WV. Priced
Babysluer, 2 Kid's In Your .Home 81 ..912·5858.
on lnapoclion. Call 304-875-5404
On Weekend•. Relerences A
House with acreage in Maaon, or 304.. 75-14011.
lluollllo-256-1o lO.
wv. 304-773-5132.
350 Lots &amp; Acreage •

deling. lnsi~~ and outsid~ ,
decks, vlnyl&amp;ldlng, ~dd -on add1· Senior Cllizen In Centrai Fk)rlda,
tiont, cabinet relacmg or newl_y large lot, Well Water, 2 Bad·
rebuilt References-Free Ellt· room Trailer With Famil~ Room,

"·

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24 ll'elllllonal

•
6AKQI53

ence required, Sandhill Rd. 304·
87§.3834.

. lawn care, etc. Call Bill 304-675-

Newly remoc:teled lhMe bedroom,
one ·and 112 belh home in Middle·
por~ 614·992·3465 aher Spm.

t A3
a I6

• K 9 5
• 1

61•· 387·7555

Glenwood. ·3bodroom mobile
home in thi country. Very nice,
city water. 30mln. tram PI Pleaa-

11-17-t'l

• ·Q 7 5 4
• A J 10 t 3

. IPIIING IPICIAL: Centrll Air
Concl-: 2 Ton II.115; 2 112
Ton 11 ,295; 3 Tot\ .1,395; 3 112
T~n •1.111; 4 Tan 11;111: Prlcal
AbOYIInclude Normal lnolllia·
tlan. .Ful s V..r Worranty. ·"II 'IIIII
Don't Call Ua We loth lo1e1•
Froo Etdmatoal Add·On Heal
Pumpa Onl~ Sllohlr Higher. Call
Ua Tadar. 1187 Ia J:ha Twonty
lovanth Ynr In Tho Healing &amp;
Cooing Bulinlaal 11 .. 441·a30tl,
\.eGQ.2IHJOgtl.
.

Acrll 120,000, 3 Acre Lata

$7,000 Each
Chestlnt AANL

11 Lilla
.. One ldiid elf
17 CIIJ ....
biCtorlll
11Jol\n1Mmon'a
110n
58 Bl8ctctloatdl
20 View
21 Oeltructiv.
DOWN

57'C,_ol-

N

441-o«&lt;2.

.:...::~:::;.;.;:.;.:.;..-::-~:::-~~
I Small
quiet, hauu
no pall,In S2751mo.
- carpot. CaN
l.fJOO.IIt ..7n.
Cl ijfOn, S20Q
Eoa~ Financing dapoliL 304·773-Uig2.
8 a.m.-5;&gt;.m. mor&gt;
- - - · - 2 &amp; 3 Bedroom• Around $200/
Mo.. Froo Delivery &amp; Sai·Up, Call Twa Bodroom Houao RolriQM.,,
~wo
,·,ver •ampai111
with full $TORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
SIOY., Furnl.hed o Wa·•·r
for Sale
l.eGQ.251•5070,
MM, llr-r
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310 Ho .......
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Hook-Up 733 Third Avo. 1276. hookup, patio &amp; docks. 814-992· Uprigh~ Ron Evant Enlorprlaoo.
Jacitlon, a... l.eGQ.637-8521.
:Jilt- In Naw Hlven will! car- 3870
monlh II so. Depoall. B14·441· 5951.
122 Highland A••· 3Bodroom, 2 pcrt&amp;21oii.3Q4.882.31170.
bath bread air. gal furnace, cen·
470 Ylaltted
to Rant
ual ~lr, lull buomont ·S39,500. Bonk Ropo'o Doubltwldo'o &amp; Sin· ,..,o bedroom house, nice and
.1
~7§.1120.
ltltwido'l ffoo Delivor~ &amp; Sa~Up. clean, no inallil poll, liopaoll and 2·3 bedroom horne with GltiDI
Call The Flnenco Line, .1·1100· relorancea required, 614·992· ......, _ , . . In 1111go County,
3 Bedroom Ranch S!yle Homo 251·5070.
3QOO.
.. , . , _
With Garage l Barn, Main·
tenance Free. Localed: Addison Bur in Ma,l No pa~monlo lijl Au· 420 Mobile Homes
f.1ERCHANDI SE
I
Townslip. 81.....S..1112.
gull al 97. fleo Oollvor~ a Sal·
tor Rent
up. W.a-.1 Homtl 1-1100.251·
5 rooms, new heat pump, roof, 5070
R
2
windows. 125.000. Call Somer·
·
14X70 Mobile horne lor onl.
ttousahOicl
villa Realty 304·875-3030 or 30..
- o r Rolol Proantm
BR, Blctwoll. (St4)-44&amp;*"
Goodl
675-~31.
We have $1000 to $2000 per 14x70 Two Bedroom, Two Bath
home in diluter relief funds 'Trailer, Two Ae~es S17.800, 10
11[111. . . .--lli!'!!'!''!!!~!l I 11 Tlma Buworo

Bride 3.Bedrooms, 2 Full Batla, 2 Limited Otf8ri1Dg7 •ublewlde,
Jackson Pike, Galllpollo, Ohio · Car
Garaeo. l'lrquel Floor In En· 3br, 2balh, Sl 798 down, $279/
45131 .
try I Dining Room, Partially Re· month. Free delivery l aatup.
Po1111 Job&amp; a· Positions Avail - modeled, Nice Neighborhood Of Onl~ 11 Oa~wood Hamea, Nitro
able, No Experience Necessary, Georges Creak $89 ,900.. 814· WV.304-755-S88S.
For lnformalion, Call 1· 818-76•· 448-1252, Or 614-441·0399.
Naw ·1997 14170 ,.,,..; bedroom.
IIOIG Ext 11020.
.
Brick 311 will1 Delac:llod Br&lt;k Ga· indudoo 8 montho FREE lal rent
rage, Second lOI For Trailer or Onlr $181 .88 per month with
AN, CNA HHA I PCA
Full, Part Time Poaitions Avail· ·Largo Garden, UUgD 14UOO, $1050 down. Call 1-800·837·
3238.
able In Galli&amp; COunty. Experl- In' Rodney (1141245-5481
an'ced Salary Agency Will Train
Cheshire, Third Strati, Fac'ing New ••nk Repo"al Only 3 lefL
Emplo~s With High Scheoi .Di·
Five Rooms, Bath, Base- owner tlnanolng avallatMe.
ploma, GEO Or 2 Years E•peri· Park,
ence In Caring For The Elderly, ment and Garage. Recently Re- 75S.71.Q1Call Toda~ 81 4·38.7· :.:;:..;.:~-:--:-~-:7._.,_-.
S.nd R11ponae To : CLA 411, cia modelod.
7114
·
Sea Uanufac:tured Homes, at
Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 825 Third
Mountain Stale Honiea. AI 82 N •
-..e. GaH ipo~a. OH45e31 .
CONVENENCEISTHEKEY
acro11 tram Vocallonaltcnool .

Exp8rienced car"pentry and remo-

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CANCER :(June 21-July 22) Do · aclions that will be given passing or
•. • TRO·GIIAI'.B
nol auempt to shift your duties p nlo failing. marks. Shoot for the honor
.
, ,
.
·· . ot~crs today. 1,hey miahl say tljcy' II . · role.
,
•
t"""'.....;.._ _ _":- , help, but won'l, tiecau"" lhcy'll'rcscnt •
CAPIUCQRN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
the imp&lt;JSition,: .
9thers will.find you mare kllraclive
'.
- ,
. LEO (July 23-Aua. 22) S~Jxiue
than usual today. However, you mus1
BED! OSOL.· i~linations 1oday to try to force your . be careful lhal your hannless tlinawtll upon a loved one. You m1ght · tions aren't taken too seriously.
. :·;
'
think you're being producli:ve. but he ·
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20..FeJ&gt;. 19) Be
•• ~
or she won' t.
.
pragniatic and realislic today about
, ·•.
a possibiliiy 1hat you wili'
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Mak~
your finances. A friend might draw
majte s~ type of major' change·in every effort today to honor prom1ses
you into an expensive endeavor lhat
year ahead wher,: your c~er is. you ve .made to u~cbvtduals who
neither one of you can afford.
.
~oncemed. This chan,e could' usher believe 1n yo~..&lt;LetllnJ .lh•m. down
PISCES (Feb. 20..March 20) Pro!11 new, excilina advantaps:
could damap: xour ~lauonship. •
teet your own interests today, but do
OEMINI(May2l "June20)10day
LIBRA(Scpt.23-0c:t. 23)~eilds not put your needs too high above
you mi&amp;ht luove to make aaignirtcant. w~ want,to help YIH! today wll! back
others' . Associates will biflerly ment
t~eCision under prcuure.· The end off tf you re too cnttcal of lhe1r tac- any fonn of selfishness. ·
ARIES (March 21-Apil 19) Com·
· "suit may be good for the other JUY, , lies.•Be gnteful f~ I;"Y .lllpporl yo,u
llut nOt for you if you na't firm. rece1v.e wilhout nn-ptckjna. ,
pusion· and ge-.nity are two of
tJemini, trca1 yoiJraelf to a birihday . . S(:ORPIO .&lt;Q\:1 • . ·~4-Nov. 22) your admirable vinues, Today, how·
gifl. Send for your Altro-Onph pre-- Olllid .,aJnst IDCblllltotll loday to ever, do not give more to an individcticliona.'for the y- aholid by mail- pmble on little-. . . liluations. If ull than he or $he 'dcserv,es.
·
U., S2 ud SASE toAJtro.Oraph. do you're aoinl to tUfa chlnce on anyTAURUS (AIJril 20..May 20)
lips IICWifJIPII', P.O. Box '1758, Mur- thinf, lib a chaMA on younelf lim!. Withoul jeoplldizilll your friendlblp,
!Y, Hill .St.lllon, 'New Yolk, NY
· SAOmAJUUS (Nov. 13·Dec. yOII will luove to be finn ioday if you
~riS6. Be sure to 11ata1 your zodllc: 21) Y~ ~·t ~ ~ ~or your expec1 a pal to ante up a lona-lland·
1.1,111.
.•
tood aatonuon• today; it • your ina obliaation.
--··". ~

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Ohio Lottery .

Luyendyke

I

·c ops Indy

.,

-500

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Pick 3:

•

177
Plck4:
4754
BuckeyeS:
5-16-26-30-32

· Sporta on Page_4

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Viii. . . N0.21
!)1117, Ohio W'-Y Publlehlng Compeny

2

.Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, May 28, 1997

'·
s.au-. 12 , ..... 31.... '•
A o.nn.lt Co. flwue IP II*
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Tornado kills at least 33 in Texas
..

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JARRELL, Texas (AP) - Res- can do," Raby,,said. "It's just a flat, long and 200 yards wide.
cilers searched for missing people . vac.ant field."
· Ray Westphal, manager of a.
today in this town devastated by .a
The state's deadlies.t tornadoes in Wendy's restaurant in Cedar Park
killer tornado that left telephone a decade ripped lhrough four counties ' about .25 miles away, , said he was
poles snapped. bits of clothing hang- in cen1ral Te~IIS - from Waco to watching the darkened horizon with
ing fi'Oni fences and a !factor-trailer Austin. Jarrell, a town of 1,000 about others in his parking lot ''until the
upside down in a field.
40 miles noi;th of Austin, was hit funnel started coming through the
Dead cattle lay side-by,side, and hardest- 31 residents dead, scores sky. Then everyone panicked.".
·
where the Double Creek Estates once more inju~. 50 h~mes· leveled.
The funnel looked about two inchstood, there was nothing.
As many as nme people were es tall at first, then it took up the
"It's not there anymore," sheriff's missing in Jarrell, Department of entire horizon, Westphal said.
deputy R.B. Raby said of the hous- Public Safety spokesman Mike Cox
"As it got closer, building tops
. ing tract that was wiped out by one ' said this morning. · .
were flying around. It was picking .
of several tornru!oes ·that roared .
"II was l,ike a big vacuum sucked · cars ·right up into ihe air, flinging
through Texas on Tuesday. killing at · everything up," said Max Johnson Jr., them everywhere."
. .
least33 people.
who visite~ . the town after a funnel
Michael Carmona was driving
"I don't know of anyt~ing anyone cloud blaze~ a swath of about a mile home to Double Creek Estates when

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Housing project plan.s 'progressing'

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!!Y BRIAN J. REED

\ ·"

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preparing and publicizing.. the dcvelSentlnel Newt Staff
opment.
Plans for a housing development
The four and five-bedroom homes
. in l'uppers Plains are progressing, . planned for immediate construction
according to .owner Frtll)k He01ld, will cost the buyers between
who shared plans for the~ · Jject with $150,000 and $250,000, including
the Meigs County Commissioners at the lots. Homes priced iu between
their weekly. meeting ·on TUesday.
$85,000 and $150,000 will be built in
'The meeting was held yesterday another area of the development, Herdue to ihe Memririal Day holiday. · aid said.
According tO Herald,' the Apple
Two completed homes can he
Tree Estates subdivision plans . viewed~~ the site and arc in place to
include. lots for 74 houses, although ·."set the,tqne 11f the project,'' accordlong·t~rm plans -accommodate ov~r ing tQ. !{elllld. A model manufactured
300,11911!CS· Tbe.J!roject Is undenyqy .••~me. ca!',~l~o ~ ,vie~~.d.~avallab.le
·'lln: ill~ ·(qrmet, ~ewocxl.,~bbee, · for purebast~iii Jlt;fllld:s firm. ,,.••
Baker and Cline )ir~ities in Ot-ange,
A condominium complex 'is also
Olili~ . ~nd ChesterTown_ships. ln 'all, . being con~idere!l (or pan. of the
Herald said he has S6S acres pvail- p.ropeny, Herald said.
able for development at the site, and
Herald told the board the he has
has alre~dy spent over S I million · received interest from potential buy-

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. · "It's hard to know what to say,
because rigtlt now no one kllow!l : •
who's missing and who's dead." ~ ~ ·
said. "In a town this amall, m ls. ·~ '
probably not one perSOii who did not •
know someone killed ~P this l.
tragedy."
'
:·
Only 'three miles northeast of :
Double C.reek Estates, the bean ·of :
town, which includes the school and '
other city buildings, was spared. • :
This is the second time in a few •
years Jarrell has been tetrori~ by a :
tornado. In 1989, a tornado kiiiCd one :
person and severely dam~ged or •
destroyed 35 hjmes a~d a dozen
·c oatlaued on paae 3

In Tuppers Plains area

Old-time procession
.

the storm arrived. The spot where his other.
home once stood was nothing but a
Thiny of Double Creek's own
muddy lot. His wife, Ruth, and 13'- were confirmed dead at a temporary
year-old daughter, Satyn, were qtiss- morgue set up at the volunteer fire
ing.
department. and rescue· workers
"It's gone. Everything's gone," planned to search for survivors again
Carmona said.
at daybreak.
Williamson County Sheriff Ed
"You could hear all the volunteers
Richards was 8J11azcd.
,
calling out, hoping someone would
"Houses were literally picked up answer," said Mark Johnson, whose
and tom into pieces, scattered for .father is ·pastor of the Jarrell Baptist
miles," he said.
.Church. "But it was · pretty quiet.
Hearses trickled in as rescue , There was wood and trash still up in
workers began retrieving bodies at the air, twirling. then it stancd hail·
Double Creek. Stunned residents . i·ng."
.
·
•
covered in mud wandered around in
Pastor Max Johnson Sr. tried to
the rain, crying and consoling each comfon frightened children.

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~oc:.."::aC: :·~=~~~14:.:t~r:a:,:w:~~~e;;

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ers in Belpre. Athens. Marietta and .. them for their signatures.
Parkersburg, W.Va. He said he esti·
"This is certainly an asset for the
· mates that, when completed, the county," Comm'issioncr Fred Hoff.
· development will provide a $50 mil- man said. Commissioner Jeffrey ··
lion lax base for the county.
Thornton sald,"l think it's great to sec .:
"With the new sewer system going a Meigs County person with vision· !
in, and the industrial park being for the future."
·
planned, I look for that area (Tuppers
.The commissioners held second '
. Plahis) to grow solid into Pomeroy," . public hearing on the county's New !
Herald said.·
· · Horizon'fair housing program ror the .
The subdivision plan is now mak- new y.enr. which is funded through :
ing i~ rounds among cuunty agencies Community Development Block
1
for approval. In accordance with Grant runds.
local regulations, it must-be approved
A total of $26,800, including "
by the commissioners, the prosecul- $6,8~ local match, will be spen_t,on '
[ng l,l!iomey,'thp-cQunty engineer, the this year's •program. which inclUdes
tax 'map bmce, the health department. money for ' billbol\fd. ads, .brochure.~
the county auditor and the local the development ofh(lusing codes'. A '
township trustees. ·
consonium ~&gt;~:tween Vinton and
The commissioners pledged fo Meigs Counties has been established ·
approve thc .plan when submitted to
Continu~ on pap 3

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New proposal will k~ep CSU open nfJxt· two · ye~rs
_
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Rutland, wtio ~ Frklly, arranged thll PI'QC81IIon Tuetclly.llfblr..
ncioil, Blllck'.l body Wll di'IIWR In the frortlwegon while hla wid, COLUMBUS (AP)- Trustees at
ow, Elther Behoppart Bilek, rode In th&amp;.lfCIIII' buggy. The proCentral State University.should have
CUllan traveled from the Rutlllnd Chur~ of the Nazar- to
more input into decisions made about
'MIIee eem.tet 'I outside of town. Hor18a lind wagon• prothe college's future, a mem!Jer of the
:vldecl by Eddie Wolfe of Gallipolis and Douglas CIIT of Darwin.
board said.
But political reality dictates that
. Bilek's cllughter, Brencll Faulk, Indicated he would have appre- ·
elated the horae-drawn 1811d off.
'
the Legislature must make those
W..______..,..________._____- -·- - "· . calls, responde~! a senator who helped
negotiate a plan for keeping tpe colIU
_I .
lege open for the next two years.
Central State would have to
·
adhere to.a specific list of goals- or
1 1
. face possible closure- under a plan
the Senate will place in the two-year
'q
.
budget bill, lawmakers saidTuesday.
By JIM FREEMAN
also commended the lire depanmerit
The phin was the result of negoti·
Sentinel News Stiff
for its quick reaction when the Ingel's · ations _among majority Republicans
Middleport Council accepted the Building on Second Avenue on May in the Senate, Democrats and memresignation of Cler~as~rer Den· 18.
.
bers of the Ohio Legislative Black
njs Hockman during its regular meet·
"A few mqrc minutes and it would Caucus. which has fought to keep ihe .
ing TUesday night. The .meeting was have bumed ,up;" she said.
historically black college open as a
postponed {J'om Monday night due to
Also, Honon reminded residents rour-ycar school.
die Memorial Day Holiday,
!hat children should not be playing on
· Mayor Dewey " "Mack" Horton pr fishing off dock .. that the dock
read a letter from Hockman indicat· is for boaters getting on or off of their
i,;g his desire to resign effeetlve June boats.
JO due to health problems.
In addition, he said boaters are not
. In the letter, Hockman stated his allowed to leave their boats tielf·up to
· time with the village has been "inter- the dock overnight or to leave trail·
esti~g and educational" ,
ered boats parked overnight on ·the
· orton sa1'd Hockman hos done a levee parking lot. · ·
By MINDY KEARNS
· good job of putting lhe villil~e
I:Jonon n~ted the village was OVP newt.ttlfl
finaJ!ccS .in order. He also comph· denied an Olilo Department of Nnt· .
Groundbreakl.'ng for .the Lakin
lien·.
'or
her
·
··-ural
Resources
Natureworks
grant
for
menied Hockman 's w1''e,
''
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Correctional Center. a . 240-bed
a&amp;sistance.
.
recreational equipment.
women's prison, has been set, accord. "They work as .a ·team ... we will
Council also apprQved ,a revised ing to offteials with the West Virgin_ia
.
utility termination policy for village Regional _Jail and Corr.ectional Facilml·ss them," ·Honon said:
Councl'l must now take act 1·on to water customers to replace a policy ity Authority.
replace
Honon said was
. Hockm.an.
'
· whose .term start· that
unlawful.
·, inadequate and·. · The ceremony will take place
1
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d
A
B
e · pn ·
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June II, I p.m.. atthe site nex• to the
Hockman's resignation leaves two
Village administrator Bil1 rown- Lakin Hospital grounds. Construction
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vacancies ;,; village government. ing _said the .new policy standardizes il s~l!eduled to l!egin this summer
Hoffman the village's U\ility termination pro- and will lake approXimately 18
Councl.lman Georoe
"'
res1'gned in April for Olit·of-slate cedure
for delinquent water cus· months to 24 months to complete~
·
.
ployment.
·
tomcrs,
while
allowing the customers Summer 1999 is the projected date of
em
The village will receive federal duepfQ!:CSS under la)Y.
opehing.
.. •·and ·state funding to repair facilities
He said·the policy was approved
- be
· soJ'ICitor
· L'1nda"'
Altogether, the facility w1 11
at the ftfiddlepon Levee daR)aged in by v1'IIage
narner a nd

.M· •61(l'f.eport c. oun·c'. I•1 .
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the $36 billion spending plan, including the Central State provisions.llle
House and Senate then will negotiate
a compromise plan for Gov. George
Voinovich 's consideration. The bud,
get must be passed -by July I.
The new Central State proposal
will keep the school under the oversight of the Ohio Board of Regents, ·
which would h;l\lc the power to close
it ir it fails to meet any or the provisions..
Central State would have to balance its budget and pay the_remainder of its debt- estimated at about
$8.5 million- dut of the almost $28
million it gets rroin the Legislature.
It :llso would have to file quancrJy financial repons with the regents
to make sure the money was being
spent properly.
. Trustee Mervyn Alphonso said

more input in the process.
"llle people who are going to be
accountable, who are going to take
the blame, arc not going to be the
Legislature, not going to be the
Board of Regents, it's going to be this
board of trustees," Alphonso told
Sen. Jeffrey''Johnson, president of the
black lawmakernaucus.
Johnson, 0-Clcveland, acknowledged that some of the provisions
were a political reaction to Central
State's problems from lawmakers
who had wanted io curtail the
school's mission. But he said trustees
who. don't trust the prqcess should
consider quitting.
"I have $28 million to keep this
college going for the next two years,"
Johnson said . "This is the best I
could do. If I rtecd nine mote people
(trustees) to do it, line."

require Central Stale to raise iL~
a_dmlssions standards by August)998
and eliminate state aid to oul-of-statc
students.
But the plan would allow the continuatioil of most athletic programs,
something that Senate Republicans
had wanted to eliminate. The only
exceptions are programs placca on
probation by the National Association
or Intercollegiate Athletics - the
rootball and blashaehallbeteams. d fi
The schoo
s en un er Ire
since . reponing deb.ls estimated as
high as $20 million during .thc la•t
few years. An $11.5 million bailout
approved by the Legislature earlier
this year paid off most of that debt.
Sen. Gene Watts, one of Central
State's harshest critics, said the Senate plan puts the responsibility of
Central State's future squarely on the

c.orrectional facility at Lakin set June 11

So~~rt~~~~t!:~~=~veral . Ohio

· rcct.
approximately 100,000 square
The prison will encompa~s three
existing buildings on the Lakin Hos- .
pita! propeny. 11le first is the building presently used a.• the Mason
· 1c
County Alternate Sc hoo1. "very 1Ill
he
d
renovation will have to
one to
this facility, wh'1ch will be used as an
· 1 center roor the ·Inmates.
educauona
The second Is the old medical build__., 1t wt'II
ing, which ·IS present1y unusw.
· 1ude admm1stra· ·
be renovated to me
tive offices, record keeping an d a
medica1 center. The I h'rd
1 bu'ld.
1 mg
d,
he
·
·
·
d
·
will be use .or t pr1son m ustnes
program . Telemarketing and com-

tbis.'

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· are be'mg· conSI·dered .or
'
putcr repa1r
the prison industries program.
l\n educational director will be
· to sevcn-mcmhired, a.• well as a s1x
her staff and a secretary for the cdu• wh'1c h w1'II of'.er
cational program,
·
hn1ca1
rour full time vocational-tee
·
programs, and two full times bas1c
GED
education or
c1asses.
Approximately .85 positions_ will .
· r. AII pos1-·
be hired in the prison 1tsel
r
lions, except .or
I he warden, WI'II be
covered under the Division of Personnel. All prospective employees
will have to take the civil service test.
The average expected pay for work.
.

ers 1's between
S 18;000 and $21 ,000.
.
Over 90 percent of the work rorcc
will come from the Ma•on .Coutity
ar·ca•.offic1'als have pro m1sc
· d. ·
High level security fencing, a~
well as· ·sallypons "'ordcll'vcr·1es an d
entran c·es· and ex Is
't w1·11 sa.egua
'
rd thc
publ1'c · For the most
n ·· · 1
: part • OIIICia
s
s""•d
pn'soncrs
w1.ll
n
·
ot
be
· ~ ... ·
. seen by
the general publi~, as even outside
e&lt;erclsc. areas w1ll
· be cnclos·ed bY
walls w1th
. .a ·screened roof·
..
The
pro•"'Cied
cost
'or the roac1 1ny
.
. r;
. ~'
1s. $12
. m1lhon · Th1s
. · IS a pro·~cc.ted
sav1ngs
of
approximately
..
.
. $3 m111 10n
11 a new pnson was budt.

lawmaker-favors smaller retirement

Honon
The f!edetal Emergency Manage· compliments . on tile maintenance
, WASHJNG10N (AP) - Rep, Congress never reyisited the pension
mentAgency gave the villaae $7,30S department for work in the parks and
Bob Ncy says his colleagues ought to · \ issue. .
.
..
while thulate will·conlrillute $1,960, cemeteries, making,them look sood aet rid of one JDOfC ~ongreniQilll " &lt; Earlier thts n:'onth, Re~. Dan
~ said. Council ~lished a sepa- . for Memorial Day. '
·
· ·
perk:· generous re~menl benefits: •· Mtller. R-.Fia., toed to rev1ve the
He said the maincenancc d_epatt·
rite fund for the ftood relief money. ·
'"They really need to do this," said issue, and Ney was pan of a small
· While the money is to help repair ment hi$ been doina exira work; Ney R-Ohio. "I'm going 10 push gn1Up oflawrnaken who signed a let·
prior. damqe. Micldleport volun!Cer J)Kking up debris along the roada
Tiiey did it onl:e, and the bill got ter backing the i~ of &amp;iv:"'l relirtd
fu:efighlen acicd quietly over the leading i!lto the community.
vetoed, but that lud IICIIhi!ll to do lawmakers the same pens1on plan as
weekend to save the dock from addi· '
~'111c. people who'•live in the vii·
with the pensions and ~'1 no aood other retired federal employees.
lional damap when the Ohio River Jaae have to help keep it clean ilso," reuon jt shouldn't pus un "
Groups involved with pension
11
mill over the -kend. HOI'Ion said. he saict:
·l.
· Curial the pNvioul coaPuon· , isaues tend to favor aoinl even.~·. Pnfial*n donned wet lllill lllil
He ttbo said people llhould not put a1 ieuion, a fOCiion n'inl ~coo- tber.
,
.
.
unlocbd the flollinl 'tloclt allow!·· . . . clippillp iii the llreel .,....,... . gte1Sio1a1 m1remon1 bealfiU - ·
The Nllllonal
on Plibil to.be wlachetl 0111 or the ri..r.
they COIIWibute to cloged aeW.. -· inclacled in a budpt~l bill. lie Employee Penscoa Sy~ms and
Coac:il Pluidlll
~¥en · cwf •• .,.~p 3
Pmidelll Clinton Wloed lhll bill, aad the Natio~al Taxfl!yen Uruon boch

CHEVRD'fl• DLDSMDBilf •I.EIIUS • T-DYDia

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G;OU'~dbfiakii19"c;e~emo~·ies "fo-;'~'";~en's ·l

me

~~!~~.;.arlier this year,

•
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•
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contend equalizing ~ongrcs~ional and
. o!her federal pens1~ns sttll would
•g1ve la~makers re.ttrcment .benefits
.tha!.~ too l~e.
, ..
.
~t s unf~r to the n:st ofsoc1ety,
. Hasttngs Keuh,_a retired congres;&lt;. man and co-chwrman of PEPS, s11d
1Monday. .
.
: Accordmg to calculattQnS. made
1by the National Taxpayers Umon, at
, I~ a dozen Ia~ who recired
r thts year w~ ebgtble for more than
. S_80.000 ap~. The annual conp11~
ts $133,~.
.
Bnnsmg congressaonal pens1ons

"!lrY

be~efits

•••
·:•
•
~
•
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'
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'
••·
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:

in line with those ·of qther federal
employees could ~ducc the yearly
checks to future retirees by a third'or :
more.
.
•
Someone who took office in 1986
and stayed for20 years could expect
a yearly pension of $27,000 rather : ·
· than the current $45,000, accordfng ... ,
to Sen. Richtud Bryan, 0-Nev.. · a '
leading advocate of changing the sys- ,
lem.
.
l
· Lawmaken bec:ome fully eliaible ·!
for pension btncfiiS after five y..-s :
of service, and pensiona are adjusted
each yew for inflation. ·
'

!'

(II'.

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