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Ohio Lottery .

Luyendyke

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·c ops Indy

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-500

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Pick 3:

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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

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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."
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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."
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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
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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."
.
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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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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.
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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
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adhere to.a specific list of goals- or
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. 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.
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· whose .term start· that
unlawful.
·, inadequate and·. · The ceremony will take place
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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
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res1'gned in April for Olit·of-slate cedure
for delinquent water cus· months to 24 months to complete~
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ployment.
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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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'new
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eas
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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
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will be use .or t pr1son m ustnes
program . Telemarketing and com-

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· are be'mg· conSI·dered .or
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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. .
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while thulate will·conlrillute $1,960, cemeteries, making,them look sood aet rid of one JDOfC ~ongreniQilll " &lt; Earlier thts n:'onth, Re~. Dan
~ said. Council ~lished a sepa- . for Memorial Day. '
·
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perk:· generous re~menl benefits: •· Mtller. R-.Fia., toed to rev1ve the
He said the maincenancc d_epatt·
rite fund for the ftood relief money. ·
'"They really need to do this," said issue, and Ney was pan of a small
· While the money is to help repair ment hi$ 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.
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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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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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in line with those ·of qther federal
employees could ~ducc the yearly
checks to future retirees by a third'or :
more.
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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. ·
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Comtneritary

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': By .Ia Anclenon

~inl!U8

. and Jan Molllr

The Central Intelliaence ~aency
111 Court lb . . Pomeloy, Ohio
, has skated on more scJndals than it
014 112-21110• Fu 1192·2157
· bas been caught in.
· Every ·SO often, Congress will
·i chastise the agency over a covert
O!ieration gone awry. C.IA officials
•
· usually confess tbeir's inund promise
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
' not to repeat their mistakes. That'~
because, usually, agency officials are
ROiiU6T L WINGETT
just grateful that Congress isn'tlookPubilther
ing in other closets.
When it comes to sheer waste of
money, perhaps the hu·gest profligaMARGARET LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
cy in government occurs under the
Controller
Gel....:....., ·.
cloak of classification. And no classilied boondoggle can compare with
the bungling effort to help the Afghan
7 l l e - aut:O.•• _.,
of topic&amp;
mu;aheddin who foughi the Soviet
"'-)-.,..--~~~,.,pub/Is,_ l)llod,.,..
,
- - ,.,..,,. MtJIIIJ ~......,_ Eaoli ·• a~pna~urw. -.-.
army througho~t the 1980s.
_,..,..._,....-.
,..,,.,...,_ .. ,.._,,,.. _ _ ·
You won't find this report in any
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7lle Ssnllnol,
Courlll. - . , . OIIID
public record . Congress bas let this
·. L~
. _..;:·::;;;:
· :::.:::;.:;:;,,::.::.:.;:;::;;:;:;.:.:..........-.,.."!'.• -!'!'._!!!!."!'..~..'!'!
- -!!
._
!!!.!!!!!~
. ..
. .. "'
- _,....,..
.. ...~!. enormous waste of m~ney pass by
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·. Excerpts from other
Ohio Newspapers

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The Lima News, May 24
.
A group called the Violence Policy Center is up in anns about tort reform
legislation being conside~ in Congress.
There's much to debate about the Product Liability Reform Act of 1997,
but the group's lobbying proves that gun control efforts haven't ceased in
the wake of Congre~s' passage of the Brady Act.
Though the Violence Policy Center is only a small, liberal lobbying group,
its approach is interesting because it may tip Second Amendment defenders to the gun control lobby's newest strategy. The group is concerned about
tort reform because it would limit individuals' ability to sue gun makers
"when their products 'injure or kill innocent consumers," wrote VPC's Kristen Rand.
·
As much as any inanimate object can, guns kill more people than most
consumer products, But those figures reflect suicide and murder rates. The .
Violence Policy Center would have us believe large numbers of gun-relat" ed deaths are the result of the product.
Those who wish.to circumscribe the Second Amendment should be honest enough to admit this •. rather than promote backdoor gun-control methods . .
"

Springfield News-Sun, May 23
Imagine O.J. Sil!lpson lawyer Johnny Cochran patting prosecutors Mar:
, cia Clark and Chris Darden on the back for working diligently. Nothing that
civil ever came out of the mouths of lawyers on either side. But that's what
· defense attorney Stephen Jones said as the prosecution in the Oklahoma City
bombing trial wound up its case. ·
' In the Denver federal court, the efficiency.and civility of the lawyers and
the judge are striking:
, .
.
·
·
Too bad the American people are missing it. The same judge who's a mod. el of judicial discipline denied even one media camera in the courtroom.
This trial is one that could replace pervasive cynicism with renewed faith
in justic~. American justice at its best should be accessible to the public.
American justice at its worst has been.
·· "
· The (ZanesviUe) Times Records, May 22
.,
Gov. George Voinovi.ch is at it again, trying another tack in his endless
quest to have Judge Linton Lewis deposed.
Lewis, or the Perry County Common Pleas Court, has been assigned by
the state Supreme Court to review the state's plan to make its education svstem constitutional. He ruled that the state's system did not meet its own con. stitutional standard of a "thorough and efficient system of common schools."
After losing the case, the state asked the Supreme Court to remove Lewis
• and place itself in charge of determining the new system constitutional. No
:: dice.
.~
Well, now Voinovicb has a new plan. Let's Jet the voters decide whether
:; the new .system is constitutional!
·:;
Taking the issu.e to the voters basically says iJ!e constitution doesn't mat:'!: ter.
·.i It's disappointing to see the governor tell his state that some Ohioans mat:; ter more than others when it comes' to primary public education.

•

.

:..

• Akron Beacon Journal, May 23
·
·
~
Every four years the Pentagon is required to update its strategic blueprint
2 for the nation's armed forces.
·
·~
The Department of Defense asserted again the country should have the
~ capability to fight and win' two large regional wars at.the same time. All told,
~ it estimated the military should spend $250 billion a year.
It should be pointed out the department has felt the budget squeeze of
:
:; late, in large part, and quite reasonably, because of the end of the Cold War.
~.
A few lawmakers have already'noted the reductions in troop strength and
: weapons systems could go deeper without jeopardizing the country's sccu~ rity. They make a strong case. If anything, the end of the Cold War would
- • .seem to invite a bolder assessment of the country's military needs.
:
Obviously, the country. should have an adequate defense. Yet, when crit~ ical priorities, from education to·basic research. feel the pinch, it seems rca- ·
0 sonable to ask whether the Pentagon can make due on, say, $15 billion a
: year Jess.

0

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.-----~----------------~

\

Berry's World
Why did dinosaUrs

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~ome.

e,ct.\"c.t ~

I
~osethey .

,,'•

didn't know how

l

.. to use c011\p~!

..
"II

\

I
I

l

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I

I

•

i
r

&gt;
I

!

'·

. ·I

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without attention, which hu the CIA
breathing a sigh of relief. But 6ur
associate Dale Van Atta bas been able
to piece ·the story together from
highly classified CIA documents.
During the war. he also visited Pakistan arid Afghanistan.
We have found that the CIA so ·
badly mi~managed money appropriated by Congress since 1979 for the
anti-communist Afghan guerrillas
that it was unlikely those valiant
fighters ever received even 40 percent of it.
· ·
Counting matching money from
Saudi Arabia, we estimate the CIA
.spent a total of more than $3 billion
on the program-- at least $1.2 billion
of which was skimmed by arms
dealers around the world, CIA agents
and public officials in Egypt, China
and Pakistan.
If Congress had· evercared. it is
likely that the scandal of the CIA's

-5

Pagl2
· Wedttlldlly, May 21, 1117

=-.. . - --·

horrid managemeftl of die II'IIIS-IIIpply line to tbe ill-equipped mujlbeddin would haye dwllfed the Iran-contra llffair.
We have concluded that there was
virtually no CIA accounting for the
hundreds of millions of dollars spent
on weapons, at least half of which
never arrived in.Peshawar, the Pak:
istani border town wl)ere tbe mujaheddin resistance was headquartered.
In fact, tht CIA hid no offacial in
Peshawar checking what was
received.·- nor were .CIA officials in
Islamabad even allowed to ask the
mujaheddin about it.
.The only CIA contact with the
mujaheddin. that was not done '
through intermediaries (most of them
Pakistani), were ex-Army men ha'red
by the CIA to train the mujaheddin in ·
Peshawar and at an ·air base ncar
Islamabad on the use of American
anti-aircraft Stinger missiles.

____;_,:_...;....__;______:.__ _ _ _

W~N6•. DIDN1T

By The Alloclltecl Preu
. .
'
Excerpts of recent editorials of statewide and national interest from Ohio
newspapers:

.•

· Wldn11dey, u.y 21, 1817 .

~

-·•7 ~ - - • •

•

••

MARCIA CLARt'r
iOOK?

--'--~:.:.:::..._._,

OIOffTYOU
~AD

F\JH~MAN's

.4XOUNT(

THATSNOT

WHAT 601.0.44A~

WROTE.

tion -- men like Sen. Frist and Sen.
By Sara Eckel
Before the Senat · sed a bill Rick Santorum and Rep. Henry Hyde
banning a specific abo n proce· and · Rep. Christopher Smith. The
dure, Sen. Bill Frist explained why issue never dies; it just come.s back
the measure should not have an in a new form, with a new man
exception to protect the health and behind it.
fertility of the woman.
I used to believe that these guys
The problem, he said, is that were against abortion because they
"health" is too relative a term. "This just couldn't stand the idea of women
is a huge loophole," said the Ten· having sexual freedom. I still think
that's part ofit, but I also think somenessee Republican.
thing
else is at work. I think these
It's a loophole, ·he said, because ·
· mental health .fits into this cate-gory . guys really do believe themselves
- a0 argumcint that, on its face, when they say their only concern is
the sanctity of life. I think they realsounds pretty good.
I. for one, certainly don't like the ly see themselves as being .deeply
idea of a woman aborting a 5-month· compassionate souls who, sincerely
old fetus because she was having a care about the lives of fetuses.
After all, it's easy for them. They
bout of depression. I do, however,
believe that a woman carrying a can't get pregnant.
But imagine if they could, Imagfetusthat will surely die -- for .example, a fetus that does·not have a bf;lin ine if men could get pregnant. Do·you
--should hc allowed to terminate think that they would refer to amea,
. such a pregnancy on the grounds that sure that protects their health and ferit will spare her emotional anguish. · tility as a Joaphole?
Butthc men ·of the Senate -- and
.Think of all the legislative hours
all but two 9f'lhe 64 senators who that have been devoted torcst~cting
voted in .favor of the bill .are men -- abortion, not just the so-called "pardon't sec it that way. They believe tial birth·.· abortion.
Do you think that Congress would
that women should give up their. right
to protect their health and fertility for .have spent so much energy on this
the sjmple reason that that right issue if men's bodies were affected
could be abused. This bit of reason· too'1
Imagine one of our anti-abortion
ing has brought me to. a conclusion
that's been creeping up on me for congressmen with an unwanted pregnancy. No-- not even that. Just picture
sometime.
For years we' ve watched male ·him with a late period. He's young,.
legislators grandstand against abor- '

•••

in or just out of college, having a they would not be speaking with such
smashing good time and looking incredible illogic. Opponent• of intact ·
forward to a bright future in politics. dilation and evacuation, the medical
And then one night wakes ·up at 3 term for the procedure: say,it is qoth- ·
a.m. and realizes that
ing short of infanticide. But they also
he hasn't yet got a visit from his . take great pains to assure us that there
monthly friend.
·
. are ot~cr techniques available that ·
His period isn't really .late, not late would achieve the same result -- tcrenuugh to tell anyone aboUt. Not minating the fetus-- at the same stage
even late enough to make him worry of pregnancy.
about it all the time. But it is late
. If their concern is Jate·tenn aborenough to make hiin lie awake and tions. then why not confront thin
wonder ifhis entire world is about to issue head on?Why not adopt the hill
be smashed to pieces. Late enough proposed hy Sen. l,brbara Boxc'r,
for him to stan considering his which would ban all abortions after
options. Will he drop out of school? · viability, except when the mother's
Will he move back home with his life or health was in danger?
parents? Will he give up everything
The reason, I believe, is that this
that he's been working for his entire bill would barely change the curTCnt
life?
law.
. Let's face it: If men . could get
Presently, the states have the right
pregnan~ this issue wouldQ't even be to intervene artcr viability, and 40
on the map.
·
have Jaws that restrict abortions after
Of course there .would still be this time.
Even mo~e important, Boxer's ·
abortion opponents. There are very
sympathetic and .compelling argu- bill has that terrible loophole. Pro·
ments to be made against abortion. tccting women's health is just too
And there ~re sincere people who much·of a burden.
have the courage of their cnnvictions.
That's what they say now. But if
They carry their own unwanted preg- only they could walk around in our
nancie:S to term, regardless of the per- shoes for a few years. Then we'd see
sonal hardship it might "ause them. just how ~egotiablc a person's health
And they actively support social pro- ,really is.
.grams that benelit the children who
are already among us. ..
Sara · Eckel is a syndkated
But few Washington legislators writer for Newspaper Enterprise
fall into this category. If they' did, · AIISOCiatiOn.
·

You are important to uis; ·kind of

By Ian Shoalea
, Cy.nics have for some years now
been busily compiling the Big ·Lies of
our times.
·
·
You're familiar with many: ")':our
check's in the mail," "This is a bipar,
tisan effort," ''I'll always love you,"
"That color looks good ori you,''
"Nice haircut" and "This isn't a war,
it's a pollee ac!ion," for example. '
. I think I've snagged another one,
by goHy. I was navigatiaa the voice
mail of a bank the,other day; even as
·I was put on hold, a pre-recorded
vQic~ told me: "Your call· is important to us." I found myself wondering, well, if my call is so important,
why am I listening to an efficient
machine instead of talking to an
incompetenthuman being, as God
intended A day or two later, I was put ·
on hold by a Major American Airline,
~d again told. that my call was
amportant.
,. .. Twenty minutes of tinny mood
m~ic later, I found myself despairing. I had ~luctantly concluded that
my call was not important at all.
Obviously, banks and airlines
only have one operator wortcing at
~ any nme.
.
I've come to believe lhey
.even share this operator.
·
Don't get me WI'OIIJ· When you
1 actu~ly ge! through to her, this oper:
ator 11 v~ry peiJOIIIble and efficient .

••

She knows the ins and outs of check- receipt, but it :liad the1 'same general ·pose). If I were really a terro~ist
ing accounts and night schedules, no heft as a ticket. Let me go oui on a extremist, I imagine I could obt~in a .
problem. She probably knows tax limb here, and say that the ticketless pl)ony i.d. pretty dam easy. Teenschedules, collision insurance, ticket is in ract a ticket, and tbe hell agers can get one to buy beer.
defense policies, the truth about with it.
And why must we swear that our
aliens; and who killed JFK as well.
As you may have noticed if luggage ha' not only never left our ·
you'.ve traveled rc~cntly, we are also immediate lield of vision, bqt that we
.But We're not important to her.
Are you kidding,me? She'd much experiencing heightened security. If packed out l.ittle overnights ourprefer to share this infonnation with our call is so important to·them, wby 'selves, without the help of Mommy,
the lllimiinati, or one of the more are airlines making it so damn hard Daddy, or kim!ly terrorist extremists?
enlightened militia organizations.
to travel?
.
· If I'm so important, why am I not
I've come to believe that as our
The ValuJet cm.~h was due to being treated like the honorable pertechnology advances, we become incompetence, malfca.~ance and sonage I'm supposed to pretend to ·
.
less and less important. Look at poor bureaucratic fumbling, according to be?
Garry Kasparov! Sure, he got a hefty what I've read. 1WA Right 800 was · And what if they start asking me
sum for the public relations stu~t with caused by .military forces, aliens or , if I know who won the pennant last
Big Blue, but he's got to be crying all mechanical mishap.
year, as a test' of my Amcricanness?
the way to the bank ~. for himself, for
I don't want to gel into all that. I I'll be in big trouble, helicve me. I
. never make a phone
' ca.! I apin. :
mankilld. .
. just want to make the poinnhat, any maght
But I'm not that worried about the . way you look at it, passengers board- I'd just be put on hold anyway.
·
future of chess. I've been cheokmat- . ing a plane with explosive ~vices
fTo receive a complimentary Ian ,
ed by pretty much
does not seem to be a significant fare.- Shoales ncwsletter,·caU 1-800-989. every human I've ever played, tor 'in domestic crashes,
DUCK or write· Duck's Breath, 4os '
Why sweat the machi,les?
·
• Why then must I show a photo i.d. Broad St., Nevada City, CA 95959.) :
I'm more worried about airports. _ ·in order to exchan1e my ticketless
l1n SbOIIes b a syndic•t~ . ;
After I got through to God --1 mean ticket for a boarding pass (or "bolnl- writer lor Ne~r Enterprise •·
the human ticketing 118ent -- and ing passless boarding pass," I sup-· A.uoc:ltltlon.
.
:
received my "ticketless ticke~" I
fQUtld myself confronting yet another lie. Frankly, I just could not sec
Today's Birthday~: Actress Carroll Baker is 66: Los Anaclcs Lakers exei:- ·•
how Ibis ticket could in any way .be utive Jeny West is 59. Sinpr Glldys Kniaht. is S~. Sinaer Billy Vera is S3. ;·
considered ticketless. I hid t1!e
Singer J!Jhn Fol!=fty is .52.: Country slnacr Gary Stewan is S2. Actreas-direc- · :
little envelope I'd always bad, wilh. lor Sondn Loclte is 50. Ac:treu Beth Howllllld is 50. Singer RoJIIIKI Qif\ is : •
highly tickedike item inside it. Oh, it 3S.·Rapper Chubb Rock is 29. Sinaer Kylie Minoaue is 29. · ·
••
said on ill lllllface thai it wu a

rr-

Cwl u ~
-.e 1
mobile homes.
''This is worse," resident J Broek said. "It's 1oin1 to be al"ful.
They'te .1oin1 to have to bury so
IIIIIIY people."
The tomidocs were the state's
deldliest si~JC;!: 30 people died and
162 WC~l= injilltd in the f• West
Texu town of Saragosa 011 May 22,
I 987. The two deadliesttornldoes in
Texas history occurred in Waco 011
May II, 1953, and in Golilld on May
18, 1902. Each storm killed I I 4 people .
Torna«&lt;oes struck elsewhere Tuesday, although not as severely.
In Austin, one ~rson
wa.s killed
l
when a tornado destroyed two homes
around Lake Travis; a woman
drowned in a creek during the storm.
In Cedar Park, part of a grocery
Store's roof w.!' blown off, causing
the building to collapse. At least eight
people were hurt and four to Jive
were missing in the rubble.
In Bell Coul)ty, a 10mado
destroyed a marina and at least five
boats. Several houses ·also were
reported de~uoyed, but no injuries
were confinned.

•

IToledo I 64• I
."""

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W.VA.

•

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faclllty were conducted, rtlfrHhmllntll -...
MI'Wd 11nd COIIIII*nOtdve fltVOrtl wilrtl gtwn·
to the Yl•ltortl. Here BruC8 Fiahll', ~/dirK­
tor, gi'Mt8 Miry lnd Tom B~ of l'otne,roy.

: Ohio
; . Tonight.:.Showers likely with a
; chance
of · thunderstorms
: .ljlest1..Cloudy with a chance of show~ ers or thunderstorms remainder.
.Lows in the low to mid 50s.
·-' Thursday... Showers and.thunderstorms likely. Highs 65 to 70.

Extended fol'ftast
Friday...A chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in t'he SOs.
Bertha F. Johnson, 89, of Oak Grove Road, Rllcine, died today, Wednes·
Highs upper 60s to lower 70s.
day,
May 28, 1997 in the Overbrook Center, Middleport.
Saturday:.. A chance ·of showers.
ho111Ctnakcr and member of the Cannel United Methodist Churcb, she
A
Lows in the SOs. Highs in the 70s. ·
was
born
June 30, 1907 in Spiller, daughter of the late Edward Newton and
. Sunday...pry. Lows in the SOs.
Es111 Mae Yost Eaton.
·
Highs in the 70s.
She married Curtis D. Johnson on Aug. 18, 192S, and he preceded her in
death on Sept. 17, 1986.
·
·
·
Surviving are two sons and a daughter-in-Jaw, Roy and Betty Jobnson of
Carroll, and Dale Johnson of Wadsworth; t~ daughters and two sons-inlaw, Ruth and Delbert Smith of Racine, l'!ileen Cartwright of Cookeville,
Tenn., and Della and J."' Sauer of Point Pleasant, W.Va.; and 20 grandchildren and 34 great-grandchildren.
She was also preceded in death by two sons, Harry Jobnson inc! Clyde
' ~'By The Aaaoclated Prea1
Severe thunderstorms- were Johnson; a son-in-law, Glenn Cartwright; and by a sister, Neva Eaton DQw.
... Wet.
expected across southern Illinois and
Services will be I p.m. Saturday in the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine.
That sunis up the Ohio f~t fm Indiana, into western Kentucky and with the Rev. Kenny Baker officiating. Burial will be in the Letart Flllls Cemethe next t~e da~s, the National Tennessee and across Mississippi tery. Friends may call ai the funeral home from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Friday. .
Weather Serv1ce ·satd.
.
. .
and Alabama. Winds topping 60
Showers and thunderstorms w11l · mph, large hail and tornadoes were
spread ~cross th~ st~te on Thursday . possible. ·
and w1ll. remato . m the forecast
In the Northeast and mid-Atlantic
Delilah Johnson, 103, · 'Albany, died on Sunday, May 2S, i997 in Gal·region, dry and calm weather was lipolis.
through Saturday, the NWS said.
.
Temperatures will warm from .forecast.
. ·Born on May 10, I 894 in BucombC County, N.C., she was tbe daughter
highs in the 60s on Thursday to the
In the Southeast, thunderstorms of the late Alexander and Alice Shepherd Silvers. She was a farmer and hOme. . were expected.
·
70s on Saturday..
maker.
·
·
. The record·htgh temperature for
Rain was predicted in much Qfthe
She is survived by two sons, Gay F. Johnson an'd Ray Johi)Son ofAlbany ;
thas. date at the Colu":'bus weat~er Midwest and northern Plains. Show- a niece, raised in the home, Violet Jones of Marion; eight grandchildren; 6
station was 94 degrees m 1911 while ers' were also forecast for the Pacific great-grandchildren; t~ stepchildren and 12 step-grandchildren.
the record low was 36 in 1971. Sun- Northwest.
Besides her parents she was preceded in death by her husband, Ernest
set tonight will be at 8:S I p.m. and
The forecast called for dry and hot
Roy
Johnson. in 1983; two brothers, John and Harvey ·Silvers; and two sis,.. sunnse Thu~ay at 6:06a.m.
conditions in the Southwest with
ters, Dolly Jane Morrow ai1d Ora Edwards.
.
;:: Ac~~s the ~ation ,
. .
record highs in southern California.
Services
will
be
held
at
II
a.m.
Wednesday
witb
additional
services
at I
• ,,
L1ght ram fell across the M1ss1sThe tornadoes that hit Texas Tuesp.m.
on
Thursday
at
Bigony-Jordan
Funeral
Home
in
Albany,
with
Rev.
Mar;;; siJ)pi . Vall~y and _the northern Plai~s day killed at least 30 people in Jar:; thas mornmg, with showers also m rell, a small town about 40 miles vin Markins officiating. Burial will follow at School Lot Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral hQ,me from 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday.
; , wes.tern . Oregon and northwestern _north of Austin. An entire subdivision
.
was. wiped out.
.
:: Caltforn1a.
rrom P•11e 1
;;
It was. cloudy but calm m .Texas,
The high tcmperatur~ in. the low:: the mornmg after tornadoes ki.Jied at er 48 states Tuesday was I 03 in Ther- for the program, according to Coun- Approved the hiring of Marilyn
,, least 32 people there.
mal, Calif. The low was 22 at Grand ty Grants Administrator Jean Trussell, Bogard as a social services worker III
~ ::
. A low-pressure system that caused Canyon, Afiz.
who conducted the hearing.
at the Department of Human Ser: :: those tornadoes was. e~~cted to
Highs . today were expected to
The commissioner$ passed ares- vices, following an executive session
: ; : ·move mto the lower MtSSISStppi Val- reach the 50s in the Plains 60s in the olution carmarlci'nR $3,400 of their with DHS Director Michael Swisher;
: :!..l~y and lower Ohio Valley today.
Midwest.
'
formula funds for Meigs County's
- Appointed Ron McDade and
local match for the New Horizons , Barbara Chapman to fill varcancics on
program.
the Private Indu~try Council board;
A bid from Southern Heating and
- Reappointed Sonny Gloeckner to
Cooling
to
replace
the
heating
and
air
the
Gallia/Meigs Regional Airport
Continued from pllae 1
with American Ele,tric Power for . conditioning system at the •county
Authority;
.
aggravating flooding in the village.
maintaining village streetlights. Hor- courthou~e was approved. The
-Approved the purchase of a new
Stivers said she has heard com- ton said the village pays approxi- Racine form's bid was $49,380. Bids
postage
meter for the county at a cost
. .pliments from people living on mately $2,317.50 a month for lightfor the .system were opened last of $294;
Broadway· Street since. the sewers ing in the village.
week.
'
·,Approved a transfer of $5,000
were cleaned out · in an effort to
·- Approved the minutes of the
The ex1stmg syste111 was . from the budget of the county treareduce the risk of flooding in that May 12 meeting .
destroyed in March in a slip behind
area.
· -- Appro-:ed the mayor's report of the courthouse, due to excessive surer to the commissioners' continShe also said the village needs to $3,748.85 plus $267.19 in old fines. rains. The ·commissioners also hired gency fund, to pay for lighting at Star ·
inslllll "children playing'' signs in
.-- Approved .emergency second D.V. Weber Construction to install a Mill Park in Racine;
-Transferred funds in the amount
several locations and pointed out and third readings or an ordinance retaining wall behind the courthouse.
of$1,040.71
in the budgei of Meigs
numerous complaints conce111ing the naming Jamie Ash assistant police
Both the heati~g and air condi- County Court for a loan payment;
2~-mile-per-hour speed limit on the
chief.
'
·
tioning system and the retaining wall
- Appropriated $1,200 into the
lower end of town . .
_: Hean! a report from Stivers who will be funded with monies received
county's
victims assistance program
In other business, council:
said' it will cost between $8,080 and from the Federal Emergency Manbudget,
representing
funds collected
-- Gave a third reading to an ordi· $11 .000 to repair the concrete drive- agement Agency.
through
fines.
nance allo~ng the village to refund way for lire trucks at the fire station.
The commissioners also:
Present, in addition to 11lomton
. a $25 deposit for political posters if The current driveway causes trucks to
- Accepted the bids of. Asphalt
removed within JOdays after an elec· scrape when they enter or leave the Materials. Marietta and Middleport and Hoffman, were Commissioner
Janet Howard and Clerk Gloria
tion.
.
fire station. ·
Terminal, Gallipolis, for June bitu- Kloes. ·
. -- Approved a five-year contract
--Met in executive session to dis- minous materials;
c.uss personnel matters.
Presept were Horton, Mrs. HockDaily
man, Stivers and council ,members
(lJSPS 213-Htl
.•John Neville. Sandy Iannarelli and
Mick Childs, Browning and street
Pllbliihed lVII"/ .,-_,, aqon, M~Miy tltn:Mab
Frldoy, I II Coun St., " - · Ohlo. by doo
supe.rvisor Brent Manley.

•

Delilah Johnson

Housing project. ..eo~ttnu~

Middleport Council ...

Sentinel

Olllo \IIIIey .....lohi"l Cooopony- Co.,
..........,., Ohio 45769, Ph. m:2tS6. Secood
ct... pold .. ..........,.. Ohio.

Mt.t.lr1 The Alloellled
New ; 4 Alloclllion.

Prest. and the Ohio

•
~~IJI'!~5!IIR: Snd iM'eu CIIIUCdOIII to
Polly Sndncl, l1l Coon
45769.

St., l'omoioy,

SVli8CRIPTIOI'IIIATIII

a,c.m..
..- $2.110
............:...............
,. ...................

One -

.................................... :........... $1.70
One v.. ........ ~ ...... ~ ..................:.........$104.110
Ooe -

• III'IGLBCOPY~CI .

not_,., -1110)'
.....hi ......... - .. ,. Dolly--·

.----Iali-.---·
S.i

10 p1y iho

lboos

on o-. sl• or t2 . - boslt. Cndk will Iii

.

No •blatptloo by • • ,......... lo

Revival slated
A revival with Richard Baker
singing and speaking will .be held
starting Tuesday until June 8 at 7 p.m. ·
nightly and Sunday from 9:30-6 p.m.
at the Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene. Pastor Glen McClung
invites the public.

nson

·....'Rain forecast across
·:~Ohio next three days

The

.

·Meigs announcements
.

.~ Today's weather
forecast
.
.

Revival services set
·Revival services will be held Fri-

Hospital news
Veten111 Memorial
TIJESDAY.ADMISSION- Raymond Lambert, Rutland.
TUESDAY DISCHARGES None.

Close Out

.. S~clals

·· All flea and

---~4.71MOII

.......sn

411 cutting
pNnlume 70'

4"poal0t
&amp;llrun
off

TrUstees to meet
Board of Trustees of Columbia
Township will meet Monday:· 7:30
p.m. at the fire station.

Meigs EMS logs 3 calls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service logged three
calls for assistance Tuesday. Units
respOnding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
3:05 •·Ill·• Pomeroy Police Depart:
merit, John Smith and Gary Ball, Vet-

crans Memorial Hospital;
9 a.m., Crosspoints' Apartments,
Middleport, Shirley Herman.'Holzer
Medical Center;
II :49 a.m., Fairlane [)rive, Middleport, Harold Teaford, Pleasant
Valley Hospital.

·Tobacco negotiators
nearing agreement
WASHINGTON (AP) - State · tlcment.
"What's on the table now goes
attorneys are edging closer to signing
a peace pact with cigarette makers, beyond what any single legal victo. but they first have a tall order: Con- ry could achieve," .said Massachu·
vince angry public health expens that sctts Atto.mey General Scott Harshthe secret deal,making is worth call- barger. "If every state won their Jawsuits tomorrow, we coold not have the
ing off their war on tobacco. ·
About 100 anti-tobacco activists historic impact on children and on the
and doctors will gather in Chicago public health that appears possible
today to hear tobacco negotiators tick through thcse'.discussions."
· The American Lung Association ·
off a Jist of concessions cigarette
makers are wining to .accept in a set· already has blasted the proposed
deal

Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog .prices at selected
. buying points Wednesday as provid•
ed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Market News:
Barrows and gilts: weak to 50.00
lower; demand and mpvement light
to moderate.
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country
points 55.50-56.50, few 55.00 and
57.00; plants 56.00-51.50.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 51.0055.00; 210-230 lbs. 46.50-51.00.
Sows: steady to I .00 hwer over
500 [bs. ·
.
U.S. 1-3 . 300-450 lbs. 44.50·
46.50; 450-500 lbs. 46.00-48.00;
500-600 lbs. 48.00-51.50, few over
600 lbs. 52.00.
·
· Boars: 40.Ci0-4I.OO.
Estimated reccipl.: 30,500
Prices from Producers Live.stock Association:
Hog market trend for Wednesday :
50.00 and down.
Summary ofTucsday's auctions at
Eaton , Farmerstown, Lancaster,

Wapakoneta, Caldwell: ·
Hogs: steady to 1.00 lower.
·. Butcher hogs: 45.00 to 59.50.

Clllldltmdlfl

Hubbard•
Gree.n hou•• .
. .-4771

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Middleport Is Observing
. It's Bicentennial This Summer ·
.Th~ Daily Sentinel will publish a
commemorative·edition for it's
.July 2nd issue.
· You can be a part of this
historic edition
·For More Information
·Contact 1be Daily Sm,tinel.
· at 992·2155
Dave Harris Ext.l04 .
Don Rfftle ·Ext. 105 ·

.

day \hrough June 8 at 7 p.m. each
evening at the Rose or Sharon Holiness Church, Rutland. Bill McCoy
will be the speaker and Bill McCoy
Family will be the singers.

Attention Advertisers

•Opan.-,1-1

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'

OPEN HOUSE • More then 300 plll'aorll
1tlellded thl open houM of the Fllher Funer·
al Home, Pomeroy Chapel, IOC8tecllt 580 E11t
Main 9t. SUndly •brnoon. Tourt1 ot thl new

.

same

•

Tornadoes •••

Thunday, May 19
AccuW~ forecut for daytime conditlon1111d hiah

Pakistani sources insisted io us
they· would have allowed greater
CIA contact with the mujaheddin -especially to check on the supply ~ne
-- but the CIA never took them up on
their offer.
.
From beginning to end, the CIA
arms supply line was rife with graft,
abuse and waste to a degree not seen
since the agency ran secret programs
in Vietnam. during that war. This
included, we .wei-e told, kickbacks
Pakistanis made to CIA agents. The
opportunity . for abuse was overwhelming · since it was the largest
covert U.S. assistance program since
Vietnam.
.
CIA and othel"intel.ligence sources
intimate with the details ofthe secret
program tell us ihat the CIA did, in
fact, have monthly lists of what they
purchased for the rebels from arms
dealers in Europe, the Middle East
and China. The chief purchasing was
directed by the CIA station chiefs in
,Cairo, Islamabad and Beijing.
But the CIA had no list of any kind
that uacked what the mujaheddin
received in Peshawar. Yet at least two
of the seven primary mujaheddin
groups receiving the secret anns regularly put together manifests of what
they had received.
'(The CIA does not have the manifests because they don't want·them,"
revealed one intelligence source who
had access to the details of the CIA
·program. "So they never even asked
forthem . That's why the CIA had no
idea of how much is getting through
-- they only have half the information: what th~y bought."
Of all the many places where the
U.S. government hemorthages money unchecked, the covert operations
of the CIA and other intelligence
agencies receive the least scrutiny. It
may be time to take .a close look at
the Afghanistan debacle to determine
what had habits the CIA continues to
have. ·
J..,k Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, !tic.

If men could get pregn·ant

Ponwoy •lllddllport, Ohio

OHIO \VC &lt;i! IH' I

•

.1CIA wasted in Afghanistan goes unexamined

The Daily Sentinel

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The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Pege4
28,1997

Schilling's arm leads Phils. past Reds 2-1

_

Luyendyk wins
Indy 500 trophy
fo·r second time

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Once Curt
Schillins. got Barry Larkin out, the
rest seemed easy.
Schilling got Larkin to fly out in
the third inning Tuesday night, ending,the shortstop's slmlk of reaching
base· safely at I 3 plate appearances
- one shy of the NL record.
Schilling then went on a little
streak of his own,• retiring 15 con-secutive batters as he led the
Philadelp!lia Phillies to a 2~ I victory over the Cincinnati Reds.
The right-handet allowed only
seven hits and struck out II in his
third complete ganie of the season.
He raised his National League leading strikeout total to 93 and helped
the Phillies get over a doubleheader
drubbing by the Reds on Monday
night. ·
In short, Schilling (7-4\ was
everything the Phillies needed.
'' He's-a leader over there, a stop- ·
per," Larkin said. "That was a big
sweep yesterday. They needed a
pick-me-up and they got it."
"That's why we' ve got·him, days
like today, " manager Terry Francona
said. "We came out yesterday and
had nothing to show for it."
The Reds came out of the doubleheader with a season-high fourgame winning streak, and Larkin
came away with a shot at a record.
·He had reached base safely in 12
. consecutive plate appearances, two
shy of the NL record set by Pedro
Guerrero in 1985.
·
He singled in his first at-bat
Tuesday and got caught up in the
excitement when he came to bat
ag3in in the !hird inning. Although he
didn't attach much significance to
the record, he had fun trying for it.
"That at-bat was one of my most
fun at-bats this year. It was a challenge." Larkin said, "He was not
going to try to fool me. It was like,
'lf you get it, you're going to get it

By PAUL NEWBERRY ·
ence of the one he beat seven years
INDIANAPOLIS . (AP) - The ago, was still a victory of skill and
hair is shorter now, and tinged with cunnin~ .
.
.•
·.gray. No more flowing locks for Arie
" I'm probably more excited than
Luyendyk. ·
·
. I was in 1990," Luyendyk said. "We
· The rivals now are drivers named had to run a lot harder through the
Stewart. Boat and Buhl. No more whole race . ... It never let up."
Andrettis and Finipaldis.
Take the near-crash about 15 laps
· Ah. but he's still the Flying from the finish. Luycndyk dove out
Dutchman.
of tum two and tried to pass 26-year- ·
. Whether it;s taking . a dri ve old Tony Stewart on the inside.
t)1rough the grass at 220 mph when Ste"warl", who has criticized the
some . churlish youngster tries to Dutchman's starting technique, driftbrush him aside, or pushing the ped- ed low and cut him off.
ai to the floor when the green flag
Luyendyk wound up with his two
siims waving, Luyendyk certainly left wheels skidding along the infield
khows his way around the lndi- turf.
" I've never had to drive through
anapolis Motor Speedway.
·, He was a link to the past in a year . the grass at 220 mph," he said : "My
..!hen the Indy 500 was full of new car started going from left to right
f~es and engines and ended with a - aiid I !laid to myself. 'Ohman , I'm
· going to spin here.' But I w~s able to
confusing restart.
; When Luyendyk made that sharp put it back on the track ; said a few
l.ift tum into Victory Lane on Tues- unpleasant words and went on my
d?y Jor his second Indy 500 triumph, way.'~
tljc politics, dwindling crowds and
After a crash with 12 laps to go,
two days of rain delays were forgot- . Lu yend yk and teammate Scott
t~ for a momcnL .
Goodyear stayed on the track, gam; " It does really make up for a lot hling th.cy had enough fuel , while
of bad days," he said. · ·
others on the lead lap pitted for a
i This is the way it's supposed to be splash ol" gas. On the resn1rt, .
ai Indy: a still-dashing figure savor- Goodyear led by a half-second, but
ilig the chanfs of "Arie! Arie! " and Luyendyk got a great jump and blew
sicing his way through the hordes to by the Canadian before the lap was
g{ab the most delicious drink in rae: complete.
i~g
When Stewan hit the wall ncar
• ;,Let me have that milk!." he . the end of lap 198, Luyendyk still
s4outed after climbing from his held the lead. The caution period
~rora G-Force.
lasted only one lap, and Goodyear
l The turmoil of racing doesn't had vi sions of making the same kind
niatter once the 43-year-old of move that Luyendyk put on him
J1ycndyk climbs behind the wheel . just a few minutes earlier.
of a race car. This victory, against a ·
Only this time, the restart for a
·rri:ld with nowhere near the ex pen- ·
(See INDY SOO on Page 5)

on my best pitch.' Unfortunately for
me, he was like Cy Schilling out
there today."
Not in the first three innings.
Schilling, who lasted only l 2-3
innings against New York last Thursday for his shortest outing in foQr
years, had trouble in the early going
again.
Cincinnati got five· of its seven
hits in the first three innings. Deion
Sanders had a single and a triple and
scored on Hal Morris' ground out.
"I'm the kind of person that
sometimes can swing one way or the
other in a situation like that, "
Schilling said. "I can continue to get
mad at myself and fight myself, or I
ean .get back t~ the bench and work

myself into a good frame of mind. I involved Schilling and Sanders, who
. exchanged words on the field during
did that tonight"
The wa~ Schillinjl was pitching, Cincinnati's 10-2 victory on April
the Phillies didn't need much. Rob 26. At the time, Schilling let Sanders
Butler singled home run in the sec- know he was unhappy that he stole
ond off Brett Tomko .(0-1) and Rico bases with the Reds comfortably
f!rogna hit his eighth homer in the ahead. Sanders was unmoved.
fourth inning.
On Tuesday, Sanders had two
Otherwise, T()mlco was impres- hits, Jtruck out twice, stole a base
sive in his major-league debut, and scored a run . Schilling got a litallowing only five hits and two t.le revenge by picking him off secwalks over six innings. Tomko, 24, ond base.
is expected to return to the minors for
The pitcher didn't care to bring up
more development.
old history.
"Knowing that I can go out and
"We've got to worry about winperfortn at this level is very satisfyning the game first," he said. "That
ing," he said. "There's always some
stuff all has a way of coming out in
doubt until you do it."
the wash. }t's a long season."
.The only other sub~lot Tuesday

a

FIRST·TEAM HONOREES- TMM alrl8 WIN
selected by the lelgue'a coec:hea •• fi~IMm
all-TVC Hlectlona. From .rt to right are K.uy

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Brogna!s fly out to lett field In the eighth Inning
of Tuesday night's National League game In '
.Cincinnati, where the Phlllles won 2·1. (AP)
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Braves down Padres ·9-2; Cubs top Sues . ~

By TOM WITHERS
AP Sports Writer
Baseball's most exciting play is
quickly becoming as routine as a
groundout.
.
·
In the last three days, there have
been six inside-the-park home runs
in the major leagues. One on Sunday,
.three Monday and two more Tuesday.
·
Strange. huh?
Yes, Doug Strange of Montreal
had one of Monday's shots.
But Kenny Lofton's inside-theparker Tuesday night in the Atlanta
Braves' 9-2 win al San Diego topped
them all .
Lofton. whose sp.ecd on the
bascpaths makes him one of the most
likely candidates to homer without
clearing tlie "wall , got the first inside
shot of his career in a bizarre way.
With runners at second and third
and one out in the fifth, Lofton hit a
slicing one-hopper into the Padres'
bullpen. The hall dropped onto a

small ledge bCtween the outfield
fence and the bullpen seating area.
Left fielder Greg Vaughn, expecting a ground-rule double.to be called,
raised his hands toward third-base
umpire Joe West. But the ground
rules at Qualcomm Stadium say the
bullpens. are in play.
Lofton took advantage by racing
around the bases, touched home and
headed toward the dugout after giving the Braves a 5-2 lead.
Lofton said manager Bobby Cox
discussed the ground rules before
Monday ni ght's series opener.
" Bo~by said that everything into
the bullpen was live and to keep running, keep running. l saw Greg
Vaughn just standing there, but I kept
running," Lofton said . .
"I thought the ball v.:as out of
play, and itwasn't," Vaughn said.
Greg Maodux (6-1) repeatedly
pitched-out of trouble for the Braves,
"who collected 21 runs on 26 hits in
sweeping the two-game series.
The loss spoiled Tony Gwynn's
30th career four-hit game, which
raised his lifetime average against
Maddux to .464 (32-for-69) and his·
season average to .402. Gwynn went
4-for-4 against Maddux before
grounding out against Joe Borowski
in the eighth.
Jooy Hamilton (3-2) allowed five

runs on five hits in six innings, with
four strikeouts and a walk.
Elsewhere in · the National
League, it was Florida 8, Los Angeles S; Chicago 8, Pinsburgh 7 ~ ¥on- .
treal 5, New York 4; San Francisco
5, Houston 4 in 10 innings; an,d St.
Louis 8, Colorado 6.
Marlins 8, Dodgers 5 '. ·
At Los Angeles, longtime
Dodgers nemesis Jim Eiscnrcich hit
a bases-loaded triple off' Hideo
Nomo (5 -4) in the firs! inning as.
Florida won for the. lith time in 14
games.
The Marlins loaded the bases with
one out in 1he first heforc 'itie 38ycar'old Eisenreich, who has'"a .421
lifetime batting average agaiqst the
Dodgers. grounded a 2-0 pitch down
the right-field line for his
triple
"'
of the season .
AI Leiter (4-3), m~king his second start since being sidelined .for
three weeks l)uc to a brui-sed right
knee. earned the victory with fiveplus innings.
~ ·,
Cubs 8, Pirates 7,,
At Pittsburgh. Brant Brown, who
had only eight hits all season. hit a
three-run homer. and Brian McRae,
pinch-hitting for Brown, ~ad a tworun single.
Jcremi Gonzale z (1-0) won his
major-league debut for ·!IIC Cubs

,..

lirst

I

despite co nstantly pitching in trouble .
during his 5 113 innings.
The Pirates have lost eight of II ,,
overall and eight of 10 at home.
,.
Expos 5, Mets 4
..
At Montreal. · Darrin Fletcher :
homered and pinch-hitter F.P. San-· ~
tangelo hit a tie breaking sacrifice fly •
in the fifth inning to rally Montreal. '
With the Expos trailin~ 4-2, ,
(See NL on Page 5)

Meigs Legion
baseball tryQuts
set for Thursday
Tryouts for the Meigs American
Legion baseball team will be held on
Thursday at the Meigs High School
baseball field.
For further information, contact
Mike Merckle at 698-6880 or Jerry
Davenport at992-7323 . ·

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(Continued from Page 4)

VMH sets dates ·
for MHS physicals
Physicals for any athlete interest- ,.
ed in playing athletics at Meigs High
School for the 1997-98 school year
will be held &lt;m Saturday from 8 lo
II a.m. at Veterans Memorial Hospilal.

Scoreboard
I

Milw:aukc.:c

j..

ne ~ot a (Robemon

(Wengcr1 2·1). ~ : 1.'\ p.m
Chicago Whih· Snx (Dnrwin !·2) at

l AL standings
;

'.:'

,Eastern INviMon

Iua1

.

!
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&amp;1.

ll' L

• Bahimore .......... ......t~
~ Toronto ................. l."i
t New YOfL ............ l6
": IA.'I roi t ................... 2J
Boston ................. '20

I~

-~

22 . ~ .12
24 - ~20
26 .4m
21 A-26

~-

Central DiwlsMm
CLEVELAND ...... 26 22 .!142
Milwnuket ............. 22 2-1 .47K
Chicago ............ ,... 22 2.111 .46K

~

KaniUS Ci~y ....~ -- ...22

Iii
7':
R

10':

1) ', .

)

) '.-

;

; j

Wesetm Dhttaion
; TeaaL ....,. ..............27 2 1 .56:t
1 Anahe1m ........ ...... 2:'i 2J . ~ 2 1

_,:!0
..UW

.,
~
!

J

.

1~

.700

.111 2

2
1

Central DIYilioft
Houston ......... ........ 2 ~ 26 4YO
PiUliburgh ..............14 lfl .-»10
St. Louis ... ............. l l lt!. .4l K

'

Detroit 6. Annhci m 2
Botl~ 1. Mil¥o":W~ 6

Tc•:as U. Toronto :'i
Chi ~DJO ~bite So• 8. CLEVELAND

Toolaht's gamtt

Chit:aJ.O Cubs (MulhollanJ ,1-:\ ) :1l
Jlittsburgh (Cooke :t-6). 7 :0~ p.m.
"N.Y. Me" (Jopes g.2Jat Montreal tP.
M:Lrtinez 8- 0).•7 : .\~ p.m.
.
PhihuJclphia (Steph"c olo.n 2-0l ~t
CINCI~NATI !Men:ker 1 .- ~l. 7. 3~ p.m.

l.&lt;NIStMnms I ~). 11.05 p.m.
-~ Dic&amp;o (VaienZUI!Ia 2·6) 11 HOus·
ton (KtM: 5·2).•8:0S p.m. ,

~o

JK~

~

CINC NNATI. ...... IH Jl

.Jbll

6'.

Basketball

Wntem OiYisktn
Sun Frnncitcu ........ 29 20 . ~ 92
Colorlldo ................ 27 · 2~ .~
Los Angtlts:... .......26 23 .~IJI

l\

NBA conferenee finals

Chic:a!o ................. l9

San Dii!J0 ...........:.. 20 29

.oiOM

Tuesday's ...ores
St. Louia ll. COior.Kio 6
.San Fmncisco.'\, H o~mon 4 (10).

.1
9

Tu..Uy'socore

Utah 96, Houlton 91 : Ut~ lcada le·

,;e, ).]

Chi(:aJO Whitr ~OJf (Aivnrtz ) -5 ) ;u

s..,.., (Sele l -Jl. 7.m p.m.

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FREE EYE SCREENING

(Guzman 3-t). 7:3S p.m. ·
·
Milwaukee (Karl 2· 5) ar MinMIOf:J
(Radto 3-4), t,mp.m.
CLEVELAND &lt;O.:ca ~;\ ) a t Kantat
Ciey (Be._ ~-S). 8:M p.m.

Anaheim (SpriaJet .1· 1) at Oakl and ..
(Kanly t-$), I~ JS p.m.
Teuo (otiY&lt;t 2-Sl 01 Stante (JohniOft
6-I), I~ Jj p.m.

I

lbundlly'sp,_

N.Y. v..u.. (CoM S-~) II T0&lt;0111o
(W, Wil- 1-4), 12:JS p.m.
Blfd•on: (M•uina 6-1) ,., Derrolr
(,..... 1- t), .1:0:1 p.m.

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111 Chicu111. 9 p.m.

Thursday's RMme

Ch ica~n Cuhs.. l&gt;.: ~l ~ oah!tl
li u itS.~i}! ftlllCnl.

Utah 111 Hl"ltlslun. 'J p.m.

CUb~ (Tr.-;luel24), 8~, p.m. ·
'
'" · ~na. An.lcl..el (~su:u.: io ~ - :\) al St. ·

'

M ~u m i

Tonight's games

Culun lll.!o (8. Jones 1.0) :at A urida (A.
f'!,!l"nal\dc~ ~·~). 7.0~ p.m
•
San Francisco (EIICS 6-2 1 at Atlttntu
(Smollr. 6--:i l, 7 :40p. m'. ~
.
CINCINNATI (8urb."l4-4J al ChiC:IIJU

- ~~ ~

I.HP Ll:lrry 'rhnmilS In NOllilvillc nr Ill!! I
Snuthcrn Lcu!!UC. At:livalcJ I.HP Tnuy ·
CaMilli• from lhc 1~-J:~y lli sahld lli M..
KA NS!\S CITY KOYI\I.S : Claimcd..
I.HI•.I.:trry (."nsi:an .utl "'!tll vcr~ lfnm .thc

Tonight's ganie

Philadtelphin 2. CtNqNNATI I
Chicago Cub5 K. Piusburgh 7
M o nt~al ~ . N.Y. Mt:t!&lt; 4
· Atlonto 9, San Diego 2
A llfidn K, Los Angek s ~

Thursday's games

1'&lt;1.

At,rhla .............. .. ... JO 19
M onll'l! ul ....... ."., .. .27 22

Atlant a ..... ....... ,... J .'I

Ballhnorc ~ Ke y 8· 1) a t Oe u oi l
(Modller J.J), 7,J j p.m.
N.Y. Yllftkeft (Wella4-:\),M Tom1110

·

.W L

•

, I 2
,r
Baltimore 10. N.Y. Yanbts 6
Oakland H. K;uun~ Cityft (·IOJ
Minnnota II , Seaule 10
1

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NL standings

New Yufk ........ ...... 27 2.~ · . ~40 Phil:adelrhiu........... l \1 .l l ..,KO

TueSday's Kores

1

11. IO:O.'I p.m.

Ealitern Dhision

.·LO

, Seatt le ............. ...... 2b 24
1 O:lkland .......... ,....•. ~ ! .ll

Boston tSuppan 0-0), 7:0.'\ p.m.
CLEVELAND tCq lon 0.. 21 ;11 K11ns:1s
City tPinslcy 0-·-IJ. M:O.'\ p.m.
Tcxa.'l (Hill 3-1 1 a!' Scauk (M("Iyc r 4-

Iwn

..l~tl

26
29

'I MinoeJotn .... .. ..... 21

{D ' Ami ~.: o

1· 2) nt Min='·2). I: l:'i r.m.
An ahe im (Wat ~ n n 2-~ 1 nt Onkl:anJ

Baseball

Friday's JIBme
Chicngo

:tt Mi:tm~. IJ

('.m.. ir

nt! C~ll·

s:tu-y

Transac tion s

C Tim Sltchr
I
NEW YORK YANK EES·: l•~tn: cJ ·
RHP Hrian !IIM.'hrini!L'f un tb: '1~-day diN·

"

ahlctlli sl. RecullcU RHP Dunny Rinli fmm
Cn lumhu ~ nf the l~tcrnatimlall ..c;•itu&amp;: .
OAKLAND ATHLETICS: Rc..:&amp;~ JicJ
RHI1 ()anc·Jolm101m fwnl Edmomun nf the
I'CL. Optim~'ll RHI1 Willie A~am~ tu IW-

munltln.

Lft•

Baseball
American·

BALTIMORE ORIOLES : SlgncU ·
RHP Ken Greer to u miqnr·lcaiJ!UI.! ~.: nn ·
. tfoctnnd ~aiJ:ned him m Rot;l,:stcr uf thl.: ·
ln1er!UllinnaJ l.LaJ.U&amp;: ..
BOSTON Rl::.D SOX : Sent RHP ,
Toby Borlund tu P.o~wtut: kc t nf the lnl t rnu·
liMlll ..........

CHIC"AOO WHITE SOX: 1\~.: tiYai L.otJ
tlF Lyle Mnutun rrom tht 15-ll:•y 1115ohbltist. OJ.llloned INF Grcl! Nnrl un unt.l

.,
"

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Nallnna.ILHJitt'
CHICAGO CUBS : Rc\·ull cLI RHP
lcremi Gun1.alcz from lmwu ur the Amcri ·
cn n' A !l.~ uc tmlon .

COLORADO

RUCKI "~ :

S.01 I.HP

Bruce Ruf"(in to New Havl:n or the F..lll!l·

c:t:" ! ~ ague on ." ~~ab ilh llfil •n ll~ll i~nmcn t.
S1 ......... RHP T•m Swu:

•

GARDEN ""
SPUYERs · -"
&amp; DUSTERS
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PLUS A
COPLETE LINE
OF
INSECTICIDES

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PICKENS
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,..,
HARDWARE

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FRIDAY, MAY 30, 1997
•

FRUTH PHARMACY

716 I. 21D ·

MIDQLIPOIT, OHIO

11:00·1:00
0 to.ttrlst: Dr. ••·•••
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MMON,W. VA.
77~5513

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and Brad Whitlatch.
Individual awards went to Whitlatch for honorable mention aiiTVC and to George and Hoover for
first team . all-TVC . George and
Hoover were also selected to allSoutheast District and will· play in
the all-District 13 game on Sunday,
June 1.. George was also a unanimous selection for the TVC's Most
Valuable play~r and Gheen was
selected district coach of the year.
Steve Beha then ended the
evening . the benediction.

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ALL·ACADEMICTRACK
- TlMM
girls 1-'"d TVC "all«ademlc honora at Tun·
day evanlng'a M1lga spring spoilt benquel. Pic-

Mothers and babies.
·· We pamper you both; ·
Just ask ·
·
Robin Johnston. ·

Robin Johnston works hard. And
she wouldn't have it any .o ther
way. That's because she's part of a
· special staff of nurses who devote ·
their ·lives to helping bring more
than 500 babies into the world
every year.
You see, our maternity staff at
O'Bieness Hospital has more nurses certified in obstetrical nursing
and neonatal resuscitation than
most hospitals our size. We are
a.lso well equipped with the latest
in neonatal technology. So you
and your baby are in goild hands.

turecl trom .n to right are Danlelll o..-, Jet- .•
Ilea Johnaon, Michelle Bill ill and Windy .Shrfm.. t
plln. Not plctwed II Taryn Doldga.
.f .

Whai's more, we know how to
make your birth. experience 1ruly
memorable with spec;ial emphasis
on your very own birthing oj)tions
-und preferences. Arter all. it's your
baby. You ought 111 be able to have
it ynur way. .
If you· re pregnant or planning
to have a baby. give our maternity
staiT a call tn explore all the wonderful options that are available to
you. We' ll make sure you get the
special attention you and your
haby deserve.

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, final-lap duel had everyone conAs f~r Goodyear, he feels like the
fused. The green flag came out •.but victim of an Indy curse.
tbe lights around the track continued
In 1992, he wa.~ beaten by AI
to flash yellow. While GOOdyear he~Unser Jr. in th9 closest finish at the
itated for a moment, Luyendyk sped speedway. Two years ago, Goodyear
away to a 0.570-&gt;econd victor)' passed the pace car near the end uf
the third closest .in Indy histoi'y. ·
the race and wound up finishing 14th
· ·:1 · just · kepi g9ing." said even though he was the first one
Lu)oendyk. who averaged 145.827 across the line. ·
·
mP,h. "I said,. 'What tl\c hell, they
- " It's tlie biggest race in the world
better know what they're d,oing. I andwecllll'tgctitiight,"GoOdycar
beUei just keep doing what I've been said, furious at speedway stewards
doing."'
over the confu.~ing restart.
·' Former motocross star lefTWard.
. Cl1ief steward Keith Ward admitwho led for 43 laps before he made ted the mistake, hut said. he didn't
one of those late pi! stqps, finished think it affected the outcome. ''Aric
third and claimed the rooki~ of the was clearly" the fastest car."
year award. Defending champion
Since his 1990 victory. the fastest
Buddy Lazier was fourth, and Stew- in Indy history. Luyend~k's career
art. the youngest driver in the linehas tikcn n\any wrong turns. Never
up, held on for fifth. Those were the . afraid 10 speak his mind, he lost his
only live cars on the lead lup.
ride in the more established Cham. pionship Auto Racing Teams and
·was forced to hook on with the. Indy
Racins I.casue.
(Continued from Page 4):
"In racing; you hnve.not so many
fletcher homered to open the fifth highs and many lows," Luyendyk
off Mets· starter Ma"' Clark (5-3). said. "You get hardened by it."
DOug Strange's RBI si~gle tied it,
· But this montli, l.uycndyk was
and after ropkie Cory lidle relieved, cleal'ly the man to beat.leadin1 every
Santangelo lifted a fly ball to medi- ·practice tiession in which he mn,
urn left, and Joe Orsulak scored lis winninJ the pole and running at or
Bernard Gilkey's throw home was near the front for all200 laps in the
wide.
race.
Marc Valdes (2·2) pitched twoHe had to gel .tbrough two frusthirds of an innins for the win. ·1.ee trating days of rainoulll and survive
Smit.h; the majors' career saves a race in which
35 Slllllers were
'leader, pitched the ninih for hjs• in new'~ powered by engines that
fourth sav.e of the season and 477th hlld .never.run i S00-111ilc event.
of his career.
Thesdafs we.lher was just fine,
GlaDU 5, AttiW 4
anll everything went·off on ~ule,
At San Fram:isco, Stan Javier's . IIIII only lhot!t IOO,POQ ~pechlloB
single off the glove of shortstop lilled the IriCk's 320,000 ~~eats. ·
Ricky Gutierrez drove in the winning '·
..,Us wu the ,ec;onc~ lpdy run.u
run with one 011t in the lOth u the part of the llod,JiJIIIRL, the braiD·
Giants won for the ninth time in their child of lf*dway_.J1N1ident Tony ,
final at-lilt.
GeorJe. Hil bilaki with CAin' has ·
Barry Bonds dOubled to open the
kepi the biiJIIII- and teiiiiS ~f
IOth, and ~ outlator, M8rk Lewis . the ~-car 1p01t away l'roin thiS.
wu hit by a pitch from Billy \Vap,_ IB» 1995.
er (2-2). JaVier followed with a ·
11111111 tu1111iq of lhc ~had
JfllllllderlhiiOulilnudovefor.t . 13 rootiiiMd ·10 111lllltl-yg-dri- •
knocked illtO shallow left · field,
¥Ill - n.y Of d.n u.r.iii8r :
..~... Bandito
up. .lO lliybody but the 111011
Rod Beck (3·2l pitched 01111 , "'"*'caafanl.
innin1 fi1r lhc win.

·
·
NL.games,...

TORONTO BLUE Jl\ YS: Activutcd
RHI' Rnbcrt Pcnuo l"nim the 1.'\·tlll)' di~·
allll•Ll liM. UptiuncJ RHP Chris Curp;rttct
10 Syr:~cusc uf !he lnlcrn:Ltiunull..caguc.

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By DAVE HARRIS
Heather Ferrell, Mindy Haltey, Amy
Sentinel Correspondent
Hysell, Tawny Jones, Stephanie
The annual spring spons banquet Kopec, Kelli Lightfoot, Mistie Musswas held Thesday evening at Meigs cr, Liilzie Nottingham and Julie
High School. The event was spon- Spaun.
·
sored by the Meigs Athletic BoostVarsity softball coach Dale Harers whh booster president Jim Souls· rison introduced members of the ·
by serving as master of ceremonies. Ohio Diyision champion team _that
Steve Beha opened the evening the · , finished ljlith a 20-j record. Team
· jnvocation after a pot luck dinner.
members include Ginger Darst, EmiFirst up was girls' track coach ly Fackler, Kelly Gilkey, Julie King,
Mike Kennedy, who introduced Tangy Laudermih. Sara Lee, Jessica
members of his team. Team mem- · McElroy, Tanya Miller, Melissa
bers include Michelle Bissell, (lev- · Ramsburg, Casey Sanford, Pairicia
erly Burdette, Taryn Doidge, Rhon- Smith and Brooke Williams. ·
da Drumm, Tara Gray, Danielle
Individual awards went to Kelly
Grueser. Bridget Johnson, Jessica Gilkey, Tangy Laudennilt, Jessica
Johnson, Jeqnifer Lambert, Heidi McElroy and Emily Fackler who
Legar, Holly Milhoan, Wendy were all named by the conference's
Sl1rimplin, Whitney Thomas, Maris- coaches to first team all-TVC. Facksa Whaley and Barbara Whittington. Ier was a unanimous selection for the
Kennedy then introduced Bissell, most valuable player. Harrison was ·
Doidge, Grueser, Jessica Jo~nson also named by t!Je coaches as the
and Shrimp lin as members of the TVC's coach of the year.
Tri-Valley Conference's all-_academ·
Reserve baseball coach Pete
ic team.
Woods iqtrodilced members of his
Kennedy then filled in for boys' team that finished with an 8-7 mark. .
track coach Dave Barr and intro. Team members include Steve Beha,
duced ·members of the boys' track Jeff Brown, J.T. Humphreys, Odie
team. Team members include Orion Karr, Clayton Olllinger, John Owens,
Barrett, D.J. Blanks, Ben Crane, Tom Roush, Jeremy Rowe, David
John • Davidson, T.J. ·Davis, ··Brant Shule'i;'Kyle Smiddie, SI)Sha SperDixon, Chad Dodson, C.D. Ellis, ling, Aaron Vanlnwagen and Daniel
Shawn Fife, Adum Grim, Jonathon Young.
Next up was baseball coach Scot
Haggerty, John Hill, Gustavo Lucio,
Joseph McCall; Zach Meadows.• Tim Gheen, who presentedomembers of
·Peavley,- Ryan Pratt, Justin Roush, -his .team. The Marauders finished
Corey Stewart, Adam Jason Thomas, with a· school-best I 9-7 record and
Adam Joseph Thomas, Ryan Well, were Division II .sectional champs
Adam White, Mike Williamson and and district runners-up. Team mcmShawn Workman.
·
hers include Jeremiah B~ntley, Brad f
Reserve softball coach Mary Davenport, Tony Dugan, Scott
Grim ·. introduced members· of her. · George, Nath~n Hallltill, Rick ~
tciun that finished with a 12-$ ruord. Hoover, Pat Martin. Steven McCuiTeam membeni include Lacy Banks, Iough, Jason Mullen, .Robert Qualls,
Bethany Boyles, Kindeii"'Brown, .Ryan Ramsburg, Steve Rke, . Chri~
Jessie Burton, Eli.zabeth Farley, · Roush, Collin Rou~h. A.J. Vaughan

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From .rt to i1gl1t- Rtcic Ho~. lind Whitlatch ::

and Scott George.

Meigs H.S. h.o nors spring·
athletes at awards b·anque~

...

YOU'RE OUT!-· Cincinnati catcher Joe Ollv·
er (right) tags out the Pl!iladalphla Phlllles Mlck·
ey Morandlnl; who .t ried to score on Rico

Gllay, Emily Fackler, Jeulca McElroy and
. Tangy lllodennllt. Fackler was the TVC't Moat
Veluable
.. , Pliyer.

· ALL·TVC BASEBALL HONOREES- These
three .-lved luuball awards at the spring
aporta banquet Tuetclty at ~ High School•

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O'BLENESS

·Memorial Hospital
SS Hospital Drive, Ath&lt;ns, OH 45701
6t4-593-555l

.A ltospilal we can aU

lit prorul of.

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Page 6 •

n. Dally S•MIIIel

Wd II r'ey, ..., 21, 1887l
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NBA Western Conference finals continue

,

Jazz defeat Rockets 96- 1··to :·lead 3-2
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By CHRIS SHERIDAN ..

ref'used to ao down easily despite took the ..De lboll tonjpt, but '
S'ALT LAKE CfiY (AP)- Karl falling behind for 8QOd in the second wai a little •PIIIfe iw~R bf when' !
.
was rushlnl them." .
Malone awoke Thesday to a headline quarter.
All in all, it was a strona e11ough
II was the 21st straight home vicin the local paper screaming: " Hey
Karl,Isn'tit Time To Deliver?" ·
performance to possibly put to rest tory for the Jazz, who haven't lost at
It was.
·
.lhe criticism Malone has received the Delta Center since Feb. 2l They
"When someone takes a' stab at despite scoring 21 , 24, 21 and 22 wjll look to ~ "up the series
you on the front page !If the paper, it points in the first four games.
'•Thursday niaht in_'' 'Houston, but .
kind of upsets yuu," Malone said. "I
. "I read'about·Karl today, but Karl · !hey,' II have to · ~m~ th'e tirsi
am . human, contrary "to what you Malone is n91 the only reason the ·r team to win a ~ game in this
guys think."
.
. . Jazz won 64 g~mes. They've got · ·senes. · 1
.
" '}•' "
Malone wasn't superhuman 1\t~s- some other good players, and they ,
Six U~p)ayers scored in ~oitble
.day nigh!. but he had his best all- played well tonight," Barkley said. figures. John Stockto~ bad 'another
around perfOrmance of the series as "Unfortunately, he's the man. And slrong game wilh 17· points, Bryon
lhe 'Jazz moved within one game of · he doesn 't get .all the credit, but he Russell scored 13, Jeff,Homacek I ( .
finally reaching the NBA Finals by takes all the !&gt;lame."
and re5ei'Ves Howarif Eisley and
beating the.Houston Rockets 96-91 .
Malone~ who averaged 27.4
Antoine Carr .10 each,
Malone scored 29 points on 11- points on 55 percent shooting in the · · Hbkeem Olajuwon • scored 33
for-22 shooting from the . field. regular selisol), but 22 points on 43 points for Houston, while: Clyde
.including 7-for-ll in .the second percent this series, locked up the vic· . Drexler had 15 and Matt Mal~mey
half,' grabbed 14 rebounds, shot"7- to!'y on two free throws with 13 sec- 14.
, ·. '&gt;' , . ·
for-8 on free throws and had four onds left, giving Utah a 96-89 lead.
Barkley, who unsuccessfully trie&lt;j
assists ..
"This one right hen: was so-so as · to draw Malone into a ·traSh-talking
He also shut down Charles far as I'm concerned," Malone said. duel in the firsl half, fmisbed with
Barkley defensively, and several of "I can do better."
just .10 points on 3-of-6 shooting.
Malone's.shots were rally-killers in ·
"Maybe in the other games I And he did almost nothing after
the second half when the Rockets rushed a little bit," Malone said. "I .• making IW? tlu'ee·pointep in the first

GETS REBOUND - Utah forward Karl Ma~ne (32) geta the
rebound with Houston center Hakeem Olajuwon riding hla hlp In
the fourth quarter of Game 5 of the NBA Weatem Conference finals
· .Tuesday night In Sah Lake Chy, where the Jau won 96-91 to take
a 3-2 lead In the beat-of-seven aeries. (AP) ·
'V.~

The 1997MeigsMa,raud~r0irls'
Basketball Camp wilt be hold from
June 91h-13th at M'eigs High School.
. The camp will be divi~ into three.
sessions.
The first session will be for girls
. going into grade 4-6 and will be held
from 9:00a.m.- II :30 a.m., gra&lt;les 7-

.8 will be frilirt 12 noon until .2~3Q
p.m.; and grades 9' II froin I :QO
. p.m.-3:30 p.m.
,
The cost of the camp is $35 and
no family will have to pay more than
$55 if more lhan one girl attend.
Instructors for the camp w)ll be
Marauder coac.h Ron Logan and his

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3 11'2 minutes of the aame.
1
"I \hoUBht it was the best game;
we played in the series," Barkley';
said: "We got our butts ,kicked the:
first two limes we played here, and; .
in this game we had a chance to win.
That will be encouraging for me onl
Sunday (a possible Game 7)."
·
Pan .o f the reason for Barkley's .
·poor showinJ! was Malone. who
held his 'ground against Barkley in
one-Oii•one isolations better than he
did last weekend when the Rockets
won' two ·straight ·games to tie the
series.
·
· Malone also found the range on
his turnaround jumper. which has
become his bread-and-buller shot.
"If he k~ps making .that fadeaway jumper, I'll shake his hand
after the series and say good tuck
against the Bulls," Barkley said.
Utah took the lead for good on a
jumper by Stockton with 6:361efi in
· the second quarter, making it 37-36.
The lead fluctuated between one and
nine poilliS the rest of the w~y.
·

Meigs girls' cage camp set ,for June'isecond week .·

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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s~. former Meigs ~ys' coach and defensive skills; team and indi-.•,
Mlck &lt;liillts, former Meig$ suindout ·· ·vidual J!lay, position skills, rules of'
Mick Davenport and senior players the game and sportsmanship.
of the Marauders.
·
Applications can be picked up ut
·1be girls will rcceive .lnstruction any elementary school in Meigs.
in basketball fundamentals including LocaL For more infor'mation, call .
shoo\ing, ball handling\ ' passing, Logan at Meigs High School 992dribbling, and reboun~ing. Offensive 2158 or at hume 992-2723 .

,. :

Wednetdlly, May 28, 1987

Beat
of the
Bend

_
Inter- ational quilts.on display·at Dairy B.arn .

"Quilt National ·7", an intema- Austria, Canada, England, France, card pieces to give an American's
lional juried exhibition of art quilts Japan, Israel and New Zealand.
impression of Asia. And for Ohio
The Dairy Barn stri ves to pro·
from 26 American, ,stale and eight
Although the materials, tech- artist Terrie Hancock Mangat, it's mote the ans, crafts and cultural her·
different countries ~ill be un display niques and messages differ from the environment She created a quilt, itage of Southeastern Ohio and to
at the Dairy Barn Southeastern Ohio those of the heritage quilt maker, displayed on a real bed encrusted bring into the region the very best in
By BOB
Cultural
Arts Center in Aihens today's art quilts are products of the with sticks. The message ... we've arts from around the world. The hisHOEFUCH
through August ;;;
·
very same creative energy. The dif- created this envirpnmental bed, now tory of the Dairy Barn is as colorful
·
as many of the exhibitions and pro. "Quilts have always been person- ference is many speak din:cily to the lie in it.
· You mil!ht want to mark Sunday,· al expressions, and :the works in this· viewer. · Artist Bernie Rowell
This is the tenth anniversary of grams its offers. The building was a.
June !), on your cidendar as a day to collection ·are.no expeption," accotd· .addresses women's issues, such as Quilt National which is held every working dairy farm connected to the
get out "among 'em."
·
ing to Qujlt National Project Dlrec- breast cancer and m~nopause in her · other summer at the Dairy .Bam. As Athens Mental Health Center until
· Nut only has the Meigs County tor Hilary Fletchet!. ·
. · quilt, "For tl!e Tribe of the One · . many . as 6,000 people, including the 1970s. Local· artists rallied supPioneer and Historical Society
The 83 quilts that make· up Quill Breasted Woman."
.
numerous bus tours, will travel port all the way to the· Ohio Statescheduled that (jay for the obser- National '97 .come from all over the
For artist, Niki Bonnett, it's trav- through the Appalachian foothills to jtouse to save the building from
of H~ritage Sunday bot an United States .~"well as Australia, el memories as she uses real .post see Quilt National.
· demolition, turn ing it into a cultural·
open house will be staged al Veterans Memorial Hospital on the same
I'
date.
·
·
· Hours fur the Heritage Sunday al
ihe MeigS. Museum in Pomeroy will
be from 12 noon to 5 p.m. while the
EAS~MAN's ·
· · hospital's open house will 'be hetd
from 2 to 4 p.m. The historical soci-·
ety will be showcas.ing musicals of
the Big Bend Minstrel Association
oV'e r .the past40 .years.
·
There's been a lui of activity at
Veterans Memorial over the past few
months and hence, the open house'.
During ·the June 8 observance
you will get the opportunity to view
the new day program facility in the
Meigs Medical Complex. as well as
visit the .headquarters. of the hospital's Home !leallh Service and the
offices of the two new physicians,
Dr. Chiabria and Dr: Rahman, all
housed in the complex. Within the
hospital structure, you can visit the
new behavior unit which will open
We Sell Money Orders
in early June · in quarters formerly
•
occupied by the hospital laboratory
Case
We·Wire Money
and · the ·emergency room facilities.
Postage Stamps
During the visit you will also view
Film oeY'Ioplng
.
the new location of the laboratory as
well as receive · information on
Pre-palh Phone Carda
access patterns to ihe present emerFoodlabd Gift Certificates
gency room facilities.
Carpetl_pleaner Rentali . ·
. Free services to be offered during
Gas Paymenta
Colllnfbla
the open house --:ill include choles...
terol testing and bluod pressure
Lottery Tickets
.
'
checks. Favors will be presented vis(except Buckeye)
Mug Root Beer, Dr.
itors and Margaret Corsi and her
AEP Electric
l)utrition department staff will be
Pepp er. Li pton Tea
serving refreshments in the hospital
cafeteria. In addition, musical enter12 Pac k 5
t.ainmenl will be provided during the .
two hour open house.
There is no charge for either open
house.

vance

ro60¢

umlt 6 c.Upon•
·see mwelor details.

55¢ -:;: $1.65

Stars and-Mirage
win Rio·Grande AAU
tournament ·titles
Th~

Hocking Valley Stars defeated the West Virginia Intensity 83-79
to capture the 15-year-uld .division
crown in the third annual Bob Evans
Restaurant Invitational Girls' Bas. ketball Tournament on the University uf Riu Grande campus Monday.
This tournament was sanctioned ·
by the Amateur Athletic Union. '
Thc Stars, who have Eastern
sophomore Jessica Brannon on the
· roster, were led by Lisa Morris' 36
. points, Jessica Stanley's 14 points
and Cassi Moore's 13. ·
Hannah Hawkins led the lntcnsity with 13 points. .
Hocking Valley's Moore (the
tournameni's most valuable player), .
Morris and Sian ley and Lisa Henderson were named to the all-tournamenl squad. They were joined by
Nicci 'Downey of Tri-County
(W.Va.), the Lima Bullets' Erin Murphy, SEO Personal Besl'sAbby Jennings and Wilmington 's Megan ·
Woodruff.
·
In other action:
.
• SEO Personal Best, with Galiia.
Academy sophomore Alisha Rojas
and River Valley sophomore Megan
Mulford on ·the roster, won two out
of five pool games and defeated
Wilmington 55-38 in slngle-eliminaiion action before losing 71-SS to
Hocking Valley !n the semifinals.
• The Intensity, which entered sin-

244'ack 12-fJZ.

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Jeremy Buckley of Po;~~:~Y(j.;~~
one of:over' 60 students at the
State . Univ~rsity to showcase
research at the Ohio Union. last
· week.
.
. The students participl!led in the.
·p,;ichl!fd .J. and Mart~Ja D, Denr'!an
·undergraduate ' Research Forum.
Kathy Sulli¥an; president of 'the
Center of Science and Industry in
-Columbus, · gave the keynote
.address. '
Eal;b.&gt;year, the forum gives OSU
s.tudents the chance 10 purs.ue professional-quality research with fac.ulty members in the_ir chosen ··s.peciallies, including facc;ts of ·biological, engineering and physical ·sciences; a combination of the adminis. lrativc, educational and social and
behavipral sciences ; the arts and
·humanities; and medicine.
Buckley, a gr,aduale of Eastern
High Sclmol, presented research
.entitled,. "Evaluation · of Ultrasound
. &lt;;an.:&amp;S~ Analysis in Beef Cattle."

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Lt. Go!. R:onald See, a former
Galli a Councy·resident, 'Vilsspealcer
at the MCltlorial Day services held at
Gravc:J::.J;UII' ,Cemetery over the
weekend-. ,~., .; •t&lt; ~ • &gt;t '"- .
~~f,~~¥,...arr!'om-' ;n '~!tllia
Cou'iity and 1~ a .graduate of Kyger
. Creek ,l;l~gh School. He enlisted in
the armed forces in 1961 and has
m9ve4 thro\'gh the ranks to his present position. His· next assignment
. will be at the Pentagqn In Washington, D. C:
·
'
CoL See has a· lui of -relatives in
Meigs County who are quite proud
of his military · accomplishments.
They include Betty frazier and
Rubert McDaniel of Middleport;
Margaret Bealmear of SyraC\ISe, and
Clara Krider of Racine. All are first
cousins, Roy See uf Bidwell is a
. brother.

Buc~ley

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FIRST OF THE SEASON ; ·. ·

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Pepsi Cola
Products

FOODLAND

Years ago-•I don't want to say
huw · many--! loved ihose cookies
which consisted of a mound of
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assumed . like a lot of other good
~tuff that they were no longer made.
Noi so. The other day .I encountered
those cookies .in both pink and w~ile
in the cookie section of a local store.
' What .a pleasant sight. I ·grabbed
up a package ·and· hurried home to
enjoy a treat, which was such a
favorite o( my 'childhood, Well, as it
goes, somehow,. the' .c ookies did.n't
_11eem all that .gre.a t Either the cook·ies or I had changed. Or both. What
a disapp&lt;iinlment!.
· Arid the moral of that story? ll's
· tru~ yo.u really can't go back hume.
Do ke~p smiling.

_._,,®~

,

sugar

.

Ice.cream

_

CLEAR VALUE

Bing
Cherries.
'
.

ft.AIUXIB

••••••

'

CaliFornia . Diet PePSI or . .
··
cantaloupes · .Pepsi Cola
cans ·.

Split Chicken .

. next plate af,pwance, ,ending his ·
.
Basketball
BOSTON (AP) - Rick J&gt;itlno · streak of reaching base safely at 13,
appointed &lt;:hris Wallace, director of fall ina orie short pf Pedro Guerrero's
.
·
player personnel for Miami, general NLreco!d.
· 'Hie. Reds lost to Curt &amp;hillinj
mana1er uf the Boston .Celtics.
The Cellics hid to aive Miami the iltld the Pllllldelphia Plllllies 2·1 on . .
30th overall pick in the upcomina · Tuesday niJht:
. l~tW
drift and In return aot .the Heat's
NEWYORK(AP)-CaiRipken ·
35th .pick for hirina away Wallace. ·
IllUded fOIII' Sli!ehes to Close a CUI on
CJNCINNA11(AP)-Cincinnali · his rilht lhln that opened when he
. shortstop Bany Llr!Un, after ainaling ttied to ca~Ch foul popup
his tirsl ti1ne up, ·wu retire~~ in his
•
' J .

CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI, MOUNTAIN DEw,

SUGAR SWEET

gle-elimination play with a 4-1 mark
that earned them the second seed and
a first-round bye, defeated Lima in
U.S. GRADE A WAMPI.ER
the &amp;eJ1lifinals.
-In ihe 16-year-old division, the
Charleston Mirage downed the Marletta Magic 75-62 in the title·game.
The Mirage were led by toumament MVP Jill Clevenger's 18
points, Amy Belcher's 16 points,
Kristen Meadows' 14 and Charity ·
MorriSQn's II.
Lb.
.· The Magic were led by Steff
Gillis' game-high 25 points. Team- Assorted Varieties
male ioanie Grebb had 16, and Kroger
· Tammy Spence had 13.
Also .making the ail-tournament · Alai
. team were the Athens Lady Bull- .
dogs' Sarah Ward (River Valley
j\'nior), Charleston's MorriSQn and 1/xal.. " · · · · · · ·: · · .... · .. · · · · ·'
Amber Oliver , (Point Pleasant
junior), Hocking Valley's Erin Mulcahy, the L.T. Gems' Amber Ellison
and Jessica I:Iines, Marietta's Gillis
and Spence and the Ohid Players'
Khi.sha Asubuhi and Suzie Inhaf.
'In olher ' action:
.. ·
• I
I • The Athens . Lady Bulldogs,
w.ho also had former South Oallia
junior Vanessa Sh~!rt and Oailia
· Academy 'sophomore Angie Warren
on the rqster, were only ones lo enter ·
single,elimination piay w:ithout a.
·win in five pool games. They lost to
the L.T. Gems in the first round.

-----sports brl~•-----

The first exhibition for lhe,Dairy
Barn was Quilt National '79. Quilt
National was the first and has lhC.
longest continuous histOry of inter,
·national and national art quilt·com;
petitions and exhibitions. It is con- ·
sidered by many in the quilt wurld to '
not only .set standards of art quilt
.exhibits, but to have contributed sig'
nificantly IQ the de'•elopment of lbe
art quill as a respected contemporary
art form .

Get One

Food&amp;Drug

CROWDED - SEO Personal Best's Allaha Rojas (far left) 'finds
herself crowded by the Lime Bullets' Krista Oberlander (1) 6nd Sara
·Swearingen during Sunday's pool action at Lyne center. SEO, which
won two out of fwe gsmea In pool play, advanced to the 15-andun.d er division semifinals, where they loet 71•55 to evantual cham-.
pion Hocking Valley. (Tribune photo by G. Spencer Olborne) ·

arts center.

24PACK

-)

·

The Dally Sentinel• Page 7 '

Pomeroy • ,Middleport, Ohio

. 24 OL '1.99

.TOPSOIL •

FULL FIATS ·
Flowerbig
Impatiens

£0\1' MANURE

Bi£BPEAT

40LB. BAGS

EASTMAN'S

Big Bend

SUPERMARKETS

I

llh aiM Thru Sat.,~ :tt1117 • USDA f!IOd Btampe end WIC Coupons Acclfjted • Nol

•

.,

·,

. ·~t t

I·
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I

'I

�---·

- ·- · ~ ·--·

··----··-·

-

---Community calendar· -1

'l1le Ca

'1 Cah der II

,.Milt · - ...... ..me. t o pnftt~ .~ U a to a- a ·x
•eetlq ud .-cW evrwt1 Tile
ealendar .. liCit dtiped to promote sales or Iliad nilen ol uy
type. Item. an prlated WI SpliCe
, permltlud caaiiCit be pai'IIIICted
to nm a IJiftllle number f1l days.

WEDNESDAY ..
POMEROY-- Public meeting for
. flood mitigation projects in the Salisbury Township areas of Rock
Springs, Willow Creek and Laurel
'\ Cliff, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at the
Meigs Cou~ty EMS Building behind
Veterans Memorial Hospital in.
.Pomeroy.

judging contest, Wednesday, 1 p.m.
II the clubhouse on Scout Camp

Road.
TIIURSDAY
·POR'Il.ANO -- Lebanon Township Trustees, Thursday, 7 p.m.
township building.

•

SUNDAY

Gustavo Pellinati Lucio, a Meigs
High School foreign exchange stu:
dent from Sao Paulo SP,.Brazil, was
the guest of honor at a party given
by .his • host parents •. Harley and
Kathryn Johnson, following his
graduation from MHS.
· At MHS. be participated in cross
country, wrestling and track. He
attended t)le Zion Chu~h of Christ
with his host family during his stay
al(d was presented a Bible in honor
· of his graduation.
. Auending were the ~ts Pew
and Jeff Bole and thetr exchanp
stUdent, Sucha Sperling, Ida Murpliy Dorolhy Reeves, Wilma David1M~ Missy Hlrris, 'Cheryl Holley, .
qJvln and Justin, Richanfand Anna·
GUSTAVO LUCIO
S~uler, Brian llld Amy Girton.
gifts from members of ihe Zion conHe wu presented with se\'eral grellation
and JUCSIS at the pii'IY.

.'

2,1 SICOID Sl.

'

.

~

{

(

.

7up, l»re . ·
Pepper, Crush
.Flavors, Mug
,Root leer

WE .ISinE IHE 118111 10 Llllll QUIIIIHIS
PRICI_S GOOD 111RU SAniDAY, MAT 1,1, 1997

·YOUNG'S

a EIIWiar

992-U15 '
Pomeroy, Ohio

•·

Pomeroy, Ohlo45789.
A Division an Nichols Metal, INc. .
.,

250 Condor Straet

Phone: &amp;14: 992-2406

financial obligations and arrange a fair
distribution of assets. Debtors in bankruptcy may
keep •exempf' property for their personal use.
This may ln9lude a car, a house, clothes, ilnd
household goods.
Information R~dlng Bankruptcy contact:

Attorney William Safranek
· Attorney At Law

·

.....,.

McCumber Rd.
RuUII)d, QM ·

;-Gravet, Umellone,

Experlancacl

; '
:,

PUBLIC NOTICE
;
ua-t Nollce
: "-qu• for bld1 on, II

,._ng81'
'''II'

..'·

&amp;en.icel (41pp01nllile) IIIICI
tiM Countr COinmllllanera

.. ....
I.
I,

I

'

In Gallla, .JaCikiiOn and
Melga · Countlu (1 D
eppolnteea). Currently,
thllra era thrae v-110111 to
be filled by twa Countr

.

I

,.......
I.

CommiiiiOIIII

'.

eppotntmenta end an•
ODADAI eppalnll-.tt lor 1
lemlly · memllar · of •

...
'••
•.

aonau....,..
lndlvlduela lnlerated In
being aonlldeNCI lor U..
1ppolntmenta cen do 110 by
requeatlng an ·application

•
••'t••

. ' .'

150Z.
T

STOKELY'S
hans, Corn, Mixed v..., PHs

24

.

·'

.

.

.

~

.

LillY'S Sllcetl·or Halved

Peaches·&amp; F.rult ·cocktail
4
•
2830oz.

99

.

---

'.
'.'''''',.
!~

Sentinel
Classifieds

.,
•c
'
..•i

.

'

.

'

992-2156

.

POMEROY, OHIO

-·

Vall.•• .

s-an

Loet:
Hullkr PuPIIf, ._ ·
- . 35 Pound1 An&gt;und Morcor· '·
wltte Area. Reward! PIIIH Call
114-2118-16a5,
.

:A~;!~

Gtlttpaiii.OH41131
Tilt Board alrlvt't to
mtlntetn I llelanotd
r.eprtuntell.on · of
community m1tn11tra tnd
waloomta minority or.
r.nlllt epplclntl.
(5) .%7, 21210
Phone: IU Ul I 022

Dirt o Sand
985-4422
I 01251!16/iin

a

A11atlon Motor oSelea Repairs
Cleaning Septic Syatema
Port·A-.Iohn • Rantala • Serv~ Waeldy
No Ex1rll Charge for Evanlnga or W..lc8nd1
24 Hr. Prompt Service
7 Days A Week

LINDA'S
PAINTING
A pod point job on
ony r/oady tloy,
molcea il oeem

bnpler.'

a O...vel

Septic Syatetria

line fencollb 1827

~RIIfN

..

COICIEIE
SIIVICIS
'

FREE ESTIIIATitS

D.O.aJ7'S

Fou-.o_.. __

JJo4~Sftop

,_.,..,,.,

. Drlvewayt,
llclawalke, PatiOs,
O.ageand

· Bae•ment Floora.
·F'" Eatlmatea.

lnaured

au.uty Work II
• Fair Prlcel

550P9St.
Middleport, Oh. 417110

H-Ph.

614-992-3120·

-

Don Geary, OMw

·:;:

&amp; Compare

FREE
ESTIMATEES
985-4473

II

•' .

I

•

I
I

•

• •

•

c".~

.Etsy .... RiJ!IIdll
.
It c.n•aiiii'S kal••• '2r a lllllllh ..

1

llelt ,...lmll1• '3P • lllllt6

•700

(Piqii&amp;.bllldonfiDPicuedCNCIO .

·'

• 10:110 ..... !latllniOJ.

Grar Bldg., 11 NoM, GalllpoNt. 2 '
Famllr, Sit. Mer 311~ ; A.M. To ..
' P.M. Ctall11ng. TV'1, Cablnoto.
Running lloordo. Numorous Olhor •
homo.
.
'

Ouell CrH' Communllr An· "
nual Vonl Sltol SIL' Juno 71h. 8 ·
am-3 pm. AI Slm Clolhlng, loll al , , .
Bab)' uema, Craflt, Furniture, ·
Soma1N"ttlor Everronel·

Remodallng
Kitchen Ceblneta
VInyl Siding • Roofs
Decks • Garages

Free Estltrlllr.8

614-742-3411
1/1/fl' 1 - · pel.

Hugo moving 1ille, College Rd, .
Sytacu... May 30·31, rain or

......

..,

·oWHdEatera
· 2 mi. off Rt. 7

May 30-31 I Juno 2. 1.5 mttoi up
Beller Run Rd. Kld'1 ctolhet. liz·
H 510 7, ••
men's. mite.
Thuredar· Bone Hollow Rd.
1tralgh1 acton lrom Leadlno
C1- on lhl SR 7 bypeoo. Night
atanda, dntca, lampt. mlrtara,
.-.zoo. chairt. toll and toll at
misc. B-Ing your 11\JdiL

Leading Craek Rd.

80

rna-.

•Small Engines

742·2925

··
.
,l

·

,.
.

PUblic sale
and Auction

Lomloy'l Auction Slrvlco, Loallo
lamlef, Auctlaneat. Household, •·
E11ato, Farm Solei. Phone 81~· •
318-o.w3.
I~

......... 1'...
"-q"

7/22/lfn

GIFTED
PSYCHICS!!

llo"""'

PE!p ·~·2:00 p.m.
tltedarlllloNtlteod
Ia to ...... lundiJ
orllllon - :too p.m.
FlldiJ.
odlllon

New Conatructlon a

olJiwn .Mowera
•Chain Saws

Stop

.

ALL. Vani-IIUII

Suntet Heme
Centtruetlen

•New Homes
Remodeling

..-... -...

:llflllvu 31 .. 1-? I Millo Soufl .
OnRaulo7,Cioblllloo.
.

Malga Co.
Falrgrounda
Sponeoracl by
. Juno 3111, •11, 11-5. No Eartr Slloo, •
Melge Co. 4-.H Hcne
1301 Slalo Route 588, Ctolhoo
CommlltH
Slzea: a-10 And 18·11 lelkota, .
For more lnfa cell Pam ·
Home Interior, Kln&amp;.W:t•rb•d
Loll 01 Mloc. Rain Or
. ".
185 Ullt or Uu 140.2052
· AuetlonHr:
IIDYing Silo: Slturdlr Mer 3111 ','
Rhett Milhoan
8:00, Evorrlhl'/t.aM;= Got 212 ·
W., Dtlw, 011
CIMII: ·

I

1/1

- ·

J&amp;L SIDIIG &amp;
IISULATION

...

Auc~on ComP*ny,
auctioneer, ~fc':~:~

,
,•

-·
•

'

Sllsatioltil Reslllts

~~~~:-:';

UVEIII
1·900-(414)-1020
Ext. 1412
$3."permln.

. I'
' •

a VIcinity ·

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

BREBILS

•Garages

Ylrd Sale

Galllpolll

TACI AUCTION

ROIERI BISSELL
COIISIRUCIION
•Complete

-·-

I

70

211D AIIIIUAL

1/11/1000.

Ct ... 8to1 RIIOino,O · '- · Joe N. Sayre .
I.D. C.llerl
ContMi- Ron Miller · Sayre T...... Co.,
614-742-2138
. . . .021

,.,

lntarlor
Befora 6 p.m.
leavemeaaaga.
· Attar 6 p.m.

114-985-4180

-Trailer.
' · . Houae Sitae ,

.
Ad-ctlon
:and Mem.t HMith 8e1V1a11 . ,.._ _ _:, ;..._ __
414

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
um..tone o Gravel
Chester, Ohio

614·992·711.9

SEIM(:IS .
7

.......

ThlaWeek
Powell'i Super

Dog Wllh Bob· Tall, Frlondtr &amp; ·
Loveable, Chuhtro Area. 114·,.
317-.
:::.=_..:...
_ _ _,

- • I I Laot-Dolmdan, mole, R1 .
2 aroa. Chllcl'a po~ onowaro 10
. .,...,, 2&gt;4..75-5030.
''

IIRIICI

8tMI.... aprapll'tJ

daa. 1111. tlln will . . _ tur•.red

Found: Srnott Bla&lt;* 1 - Moll ·

R. L HOllON
TRUCKING

· SAYRE CONCRETE

......
.....

· '

... llu8tbe11,...
llrv-U (IIIII• 1134

Antlquia, furniture, glan. china, · ·;
coins. toys, lampa, gunt, tools, · ••
estates; 1110 appraisals, Osby . \
........ 114-1111.2-7441.

HIITWILL

lOUSE

-Free 5 Year f'arta ~

Free Cashr
. Stop In The Sklle
Faro.t.lla •

...,24,

'

'

"'

•

'

Win A Bankroll

oofar,l14.etl&amp;-21101.

ao vrs. Exp.• 1111. OW!)e&lt;: Aonnte Jonei
Free Ealimalea

~

UMtT 12 PLEASE_. ADDITIONAL. PURC~

.

'

ROIIIICI A. AdkiM,
ExeQitlve Dl1801or
011111 Jaclalon lhlgt
Bolrd of 'Ia a.'lol, Dnltl

J .•

,".

,,•
•

~

.

4

'...
•'•

.

from:

..
,.r .

·'

''

.

.
•

.' .

Middleport, OH

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

Um11tone

eo

LOll end Found
Found:,_ SA ea1, rauna "'""' :

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

I!I'I'MIMd
conviction of ,
. ., _ Involved In

Lang holr.-d kltttno. 304·875·:
5003.

llatlle llaaeN Dealer

614-992+179 .

.1,000 RIWARDII
For l11hN111atlon
IMdh4totM

e.... Holghtl, a.JIPaiL

Small Black I Whlto Malo Dog
Willi Bob-Toll, Frllndtr I LaYI·
ll&gt;le. 814-387-.
.

POMEROY, OH~

PUBLIC NOTICI

Klnon1 To G - r . 3 Gray &amp; 3
- · 814-245-!11170.
Killen• Ta LDYing Hame, 33

Male DalmoUan. 1111111 old. 304875-7183.

JEFF WIRIIER IIISURAIICE
113 W. 2Nr ST.

.

Loot: Man' a Wallet, VIcinity: ,.,.
ound Grl¥elr T,.ctor 81IH, In '
Almer~ ~11 .......72&amp;

Public Notlct1

a01rd

c-.

~

~&amp;o• Communications ·

--

-··

,.

Beans

CELLULAR PHONES

304 882-3541 ..
·Free Eatlmatel

The ·. . . . member
11011001 bill with . Deadline for eubllllltlng
GIIIIII-.IIICbon
Mllll a.n1
1M
raquiNCI
bid
lnflli
nlllllan
""'llahlllr lift. lnf0mt1Uon
of
Alolltlol,
Drug
h!r blclera, IRIIrUCtlonl and and bid opening II end Menlll lfellthAdcllollon
cil.ndltlone for •u.llmlltlllfl Weclneedly, JURI 11, 1"7, •• appolnllll by 1MIIMell
Dlractllr
lild8 mar be obiiiMd It 1111 12..-J.
8tnaanlt1. of tiM 011to Dlplrtmenl or
Cauntr
ol
818-E.a.ha · Mantal, Hulth
(4'
Mental Retardation a
.
._...,.
Dl~an appoint-), the Dlractor of
q,vatopmellllll DlullllltlM, ,.,12 11 27,., 2 4tc
tha Ohio Department of
.a10 Carleton StrMI, P.O. ,~, ' ' 'v'
·
Aloo!lol and Drug -....rctlon
'

1l

UMIT 4 PLI!ASE 5t' ADDITIQNAL PURCHAIIE

,

lOx 307, Syracu.. , Ohio
41771, Phone: (114) "2·

I

2/$100 '

'

GOODNITE'S
QUALITY ROOFING

Public Notice

.,

I

6.5oz.

.

Giveaway

t 1wk old, block Chaw pupPf, •
..,.lly
SW-e75-7eeo 11om

INGELS ELECTRONICS

,.

(614t742-3h0

• Sand. No Mlnlnum.

Showboat
Pork&amp;

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESnMATES
614-992-7643 .
"
.(No Sunday Calls)

114-oJ~.zm

R-bl•"-•

: •Topaoll, Fill Dirt, ·

•

40

' - -_ _1·614·992·7022
- ..l-L...::::.
_ _ _ _ _ _.:;:
...:-::..:·~-~.:::o...:
:•u

Auto. Truok, Raahlantllll,
CommetDial
. Middleport; OH.

•Small Joba
•Large Joa.

992·7074

c

TUNA

· ..

Athens, Ohio

(614) 592·5025

~·

STARKIST

Fax: 304-773-5861

BANKRUPTCY can. relieve a debtor ot

..:·''.. ..... aaUL·cau.
----·

4 roll pak

Caring P1rchlc1 Will An1wor
Yaur au.. IIDnl AbOut LDVI,,
Monay, Succeu, HHIIIII 1·800·
11112-1ooo E••· 1122, ss.ee P•• ·
Min. Mullllo 18 Yrs. S...IJ 111845-tw34, Touchtono Required,
24Hra.nc.,

'(ir

IIClWAllll
PAlIIIII

Bath Tissue

_...,._!

TAIIECIWICIE OF

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC;

Machine &amp;Welcling·Shop

i

...

Northern

REDUCE: La.......... · IOU
otoop. Tako OPIIL labloll and- .
Vap DIUIIIIC IVIillblo al Frulh
Phein..,.

THE MAPLES

:, . ar~~~~ A;:lt':~~~~on~gows

·

.

....lntlng
.
, Alia Cot ICIWIIi Work .
.. (FREE ESnMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

c

UMIT ONE PLEAsE,-'1.311 ADDmONAL PURCHASE .

15.25oz.

';'

B~iua:;rF~bri~;iJ;n,

~tlrlor

Towels
Single Roll

41bs.

HAULING ·

I!Rooling

Paper

.

Will Your UUIItles Put You
In The Poor House?
Consider:

• Top • Trim • Reinov'-1
·• Stump Grinding

~=._M;:.u;:::;.:,::.~~= ·,

..... Girlgle
.
ol!leclrlcll • Pllimblng

Boltlify ·

99 4

:....:....,._

't':':!';

.~::!n.
SEIYICE

·coca Cola
'Products

PURE SWEET ·
BLENDED S,~GAR

&amp;lliiiiNO

Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
· 614-992-3470

21iters

.

Remodeling

(6 14) 446-4759

WICKS

11•11 4 add. purch. 79 4

Potatoes.~::.... 99
.·

A,.,..

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding .

H2IIO

II
r

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

~

.;

C

-CDPJU

lld•.LBr1

OhiO

Rt. 11 llox 44-C

in Pomeroy, Ohio
Rents are computed according to your
814-742-3_!)90
814-.742-3324
19111 Martin SbNt
JoeWIIaon
income. Lovely apartments featuring
· all YIL Exp. ·1111. OWner. Rlclc ....,._,
814-742-3078
Pomeroy,
OhiO
45781
.
(814)
1112-4277
wall-to-wall carpeting, with all
Free E•limat••
appliances. ·
........_...._.............
. -· .,.
. ......
. - .........,...
- ...;;·...;;'";,;,o
" _.. ---,;.·,;.· .. ,;,;
· ·;;;..
- ,;;;
.. ·,;,
· ....·i;,·...
.. ......... , __ _ _ _;....__ _ _...;,.._...,;Ill
~LL PRIMARY UnLmES PAID
'Must be 62 years of age or handicapped.
· Must!meet HUD eligibility requirements
RadJator RePair&amp;: Rep~aeement
New Homes • VInyl Sldlrig New
~For further details call today
Monday-Frtday- 8:00 a.m.· 4:30p.m.
G
A I
WI d

SPLIT CHICKEN

· .

'

lndultrlal • Automotive
New Radlatora • Ae-Cores
A/C CondenHra/HoH Aseembllll
New l.,ocatlon: 2 mil" off Rt. 7 on Rt. 124

v··nn,.wv

Custom Hom••

Bam8, Dec:lca. Pllntfna,
Garllgel, Pon:hea.

12 pk. 12 oz. cans

·· ·

•
WV10a4n

Rooting, Siding, Pole

Products

US #1 Russ••

110 Court St.

304-773-5822

Middlepoll, ohio 45780

Rc·cola .

''

ratdS"
Quality Window Systems

,teo Hamel, Addltlona,

Cl/ll Uo For

c.

. FAMILY DENTISTRY

3351 Happy Hollow ROlli

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DIII.ECr .

Down8pouta

..... l•p••n••ts

$

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2 P112 OZ CANS

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DEITILCAIE

1111 ~Ill .USIFIUI

~ Gutt.r Cleaning
':.
Painting
FREE aTIMATES
~ 949-2188

••

-=-News policyIn an effon to provide our readership with current news, the Sunday
Times-Sentinel will not accept weddings after 60 days from ' the date of
the event.
Weddings subn\itted after tbe 60day deadline will 8JlPC8!' during the
week in The Daily Sent1nel and the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
All club meetings and OCher news
· articles in· the society section must
be submitted within 60 days or
occurrence.
All .birthdays must be submitted
within lill' days of the occurrence.
All material submitted for publiclllion is subject to edilinJ.
·

.:

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. 270 attend Racine/Southern Alumni event

Exchange stuc;jent hon·ored

ROOFING
.' NEW-REPAIR

la&amp;:IOPM .

TuEsDAY
POMEROY -- Revival through
June 8, 7 p.m. nighdy and 9:30a.m. ·
and 6 p.m. Sunday, Pomeroy Church
of the Nazarene.

The Racine/Southern Alumni ·
Banq'uet was held s,turday evening
in the Southern High School Gymnasium with 270 alunini and guests
attending.
Alumni committee members
included Gordan Fisher, Tonja
Hunter, Joann Crisp, Roger Birch
and Shirley Johnson·,
Candidates for king and queen ·
were presented by Roger Birch and
included Brian Allen, Jamie Evans,
Travis Lisle, Adam Roush, Keri
Caldwell, Angie Carleton, Amy
Northup and Amber Thomas.
•
Evans and Northup were named
the 1997 alumni king and queen and
were presented flowers by the 1996
queen, Jyl Mathews.
Gordon Fisher, Southern High
School principal, aanounced scholarship winners Brianne Proffitt and
.Philip Hamm.
Serving as hosts and hostesses for
the evenin~ were Mike and Lee
Codner, Norman and Janet Roush, .
RACINE-SOUTHERN ALUMNI ROYA,LTY- Jamie Evana and Amy
Mary Grace Cowdery and Shirley Northup were 111med the 1997 Raclne-Southam Alumni King and
Stobart Roberts. ·The dinner was Qu1811 at Saturday evenlnga Rac:lne-Southem Alumni Banquet II
served by the high school's junior Southern High School In Racl111. Evana Ia the son of Mr. and Mra. ·
class.
·
o.t~ny Evana of Raclna while Northup Ia the daughter of Mr. and 1·
Tbc gymnasium was decorated Mra. John Northup. Here, 11196 Racln•Soulhem Alumni Queen Jyl
with flowers 4onatcd by the many Malhewa, right, places a crown on N!3f1hup.
·
greenhouse growers in .tbe district · Thereon Johnson and Elma Louks; ·west; 1931, Mildred Spencer
including Tyrone Brinager, Karen's 1937, Eileen Boyd Roush, Susan Shuler; 1933, Harold Rot \Russell
Greenhouse, Jeff Harris, Art Hill, HQI,ctr Gates, Mary Lew Philson Lee; 1935, Florence Adams, Ethel
Marshall Roush, Darrell Norris, Johnson and Paul Sayre; 1942, Car- Holter Cooper; 1936, Mary Virginia
Hubbard's, Sue's, Pine Grove Farms, roll Salser, John A. Kessler, Waynita Easterday; 1938, Robert G. Beegle;
Perry Hill and Down To Earth farms. Cleek Harris, Martha Watterson 1939, Wilma Ammons Church,
Other donations were by Nancy Beegle, Paul ·Beegle, Mary Jane Robert W. Taylor, Doris · Wagner
Campbell, Farmers Bank,, Home Foster Carr; 1947, Jean .Spencer Adams, Wayne Roush; 1941, Mattie
National Bank and Medical Claims Lindsey, Joan Spencer Mattingly, · Holter Lawrence, Carroll Norris,
Service. Betty Carpenter was com- Betty Cleland McMurray, Sheila Addie Norris; 1945, Blondena Thymended for mailing over 800 in vita- Shain Roush, Mary Hayman Lewis, lor Rainer, Audrey.Hoback Boichyn,
tions.
Grace Rose Earich, Odessa Wolfe Myrtle Easterday· Holter, Dorothy ·
A tribute to Jim Adams, former Er~s. Geraldine Holter Cross. Powell Spencer; 1946; Herman Carprincipal, was given by Carla Robert Rhodes, Maxine Proffitt son Jr., Elizabeth Fisher Proffitt,
Shuler. Mr. Adams was a graduate of Sellers, Emma Jane Jividen Robin. David Sayre, Delores Jean Miller
Racine High School and served as son, Etta Mae Shields Hill. June Fisher; 1948, William Shelton, Opal
principal and teacher at Southern for -Holter_ Ashley; 1952, Janice Roush Cozart VanMeter; 1949, Carroll
22 years. He die&lt;! in February. His Briggs, Larry Roush, Janice Hay- Cleek, Howard Ervin, George M.
family was introduced including his man Simpson, Marilyrr . Brewer Sayre; 1950, Ruth Bradford Frank;
mother, Mrs. Doris Adams, his wife Beall, Dora Birch Lipps, Juanita 1951, Mary Bradford Carson. Eula
Carol Jeah and children Todd and Timmons Wells, Joe Swain, Virginia · Roberts Hensler, Margaret Foster ·
Kim.
Amott Rees, Grace Hill Griffin, Cleek. • Grover Salser Jr.. Dortha
Minutes of the 1996 ·meeting DOris Hensler lhle, Victor Wolfe. · Pearson Salser; 1953, Dan Smith.
were read by Secretary Shirley Esther Clark Salser, John Fisher, David Hill, Donna Ward Larkins;
Johnson and approved by those ·Gene Wells, Gary Gibbs; 1957, 1954, Joyce Hart Manuel. Shirley
attending. Tonja Hunter announced Donna Circle Mutti, Don Johnson, Powell Shively. Norman Roush ,
that she wished to go off the board June Proffitt Turner. Betty Sellers Shirley Stobart Roberts; 1955. Lilafter having served four years. New Reynolds, Phyllis lhle Relyea, Larry I ian · Powell Weese; 1956, Ruby
members nominated. and approved Holter, Robeit Euler, Dwairi Sayre, · Holter Turner, ianet Beegle Roush;
for ne&lt;l year were Carla Shuler and Carroll Harris, Larry Ebersbach, 195.8, Waid·Foster, Shelba Hill FosGeorge Sayre.
· Emma Lee Brewer, Denny Hill, ter, Linda. Mallory ·Hill; 1959, .
A musical program, "A Senti· Doug Graham, Claudia Shields Nadirie Roush Euler, Donna Hillmental Journey", was presented by Roush, Shirley Ward Rose, Lester dore Dyer, Shirley McKelvey JohnCarla Shuler, . Dixie Sayre and Manuel; 1962, Allen Graham; 1967, son, Virginia Johnson Wheeler;
Shirley Johnson. Highlights of the Gary · Rupe, Anita . Houdashelt 1960, Mary Grace Stobart Cowdery;
decades beginning in 1920 at Racine Moore. Patricia London Cox, Bob . 1961, Joann VanMeter Crisp, Roger
were given by Shirley Johnson lind Grueser, Nancy Yost Circle; Robin Birch, Miriam Foster Compliment;
. music of that era followed, accom- Steams Porter, Mary Pierce Gravier, 1963, ·Jess Wood; 1965, Gordon
panicd by Carla Shuler and with Cliff Ashley, John McClintock, Paul Fisher, Nancy Parker ·Campbell,
vocals by Dixie Sayre.
.
Black, Debbie Hayes Wolfe, Phillip Faye Roush Shiflet; 1966, Dixie.Cir·
Presentation of the classes fol- Hill, .Marvin Hill, Darrell .Wolfe, cle Sayre, -Denny Evans, Gary Willlowed by Tonja Hunter. Also recog- Carol Wilcoxen Young, Brenda Nor- ford, Linda Adams Evans; 1968, ·
nized were Irene Miller Hayman, tbe . ris Strawser, Ed Moran, Donna Bush James Lawrence; 1969, Carl Robinearliest gradllate who graduated in Matson; 1972, Joe Johnson . and ·son, Carolyn Manuel Robinson;
·1924, and Faye Roush Shiflett, who David Graham; 1977; · Jerrena Dill 1970, Susie Whipple Hill, Ian Alkire
traveled the farthest coming from Ebersbach, Patricia Authcrson Hay- Hill; 1971, Don Smith,' Keith AshSan Anu_mio, Texas. Tbcy ~e,re pre-. man, -Lcslie Roberts Hayma~. Kevin ley, Rita Salser _Matthews, Deborah
Willford, Lisa Allen Woods, Denise Cross Harris'•. Jeffrey Harris; 1974,
sentcd g1fts from the assocJatJon.
It was announced that the alumni Roberts Holman, Bobbi Chapman Michael Codner; 1975, Terri Findley
· assoc1ahon has purple and gold Hill, Traei Weese Lanham, Brenda Roush; 1976, James . Holman, Lee
Christmas ornaments with pictures · Lawrence Johnson ,' Tony Carnahan, Ord Codner; 1978, PelT)' Hill; 1983,
or the old Racine High School and . Eric Dudding; 1987, Joyce Foreman Tonja Sals~r Hunter; 1984, Jane
the present Southcm High for sale.
Groves and · Kim Adams Harris· Manuel Graham; 1986, Todd ·
The Sc:hool alma mater was sung '1992, Michelle·McCoy.
' Adams; 1988, Donita Manuel Sayre;
by all with Carla Shuler accompany'Members of the graduating class 1989, Alice Parsons, Becky Evans;
ing. The evening benediction was by of 1997 were guests for the banquet. 1990,. Chad Taylor; 1991, Melanie .
Paul Be~gle.
.
.
.
Other .graduates attending were: Adams; 1992, Robin Manuel; 1993,
Those aucndmg mcludmg the 1924, Irene Hayman; 1930, Wilma· Michael Evans; 1~. Jyl Mathews
following reunioq classes: 1927, Sayre Styer, Emma Easterday and C.J. Harrill.
: ·
· Josephine Hoback Smith; 1932, Adams; 1931, Esther .Longworth

•

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••.•day ,

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

flown L Wrt u1

24plr. ....
IIIII 1 ..W. ,.na.. 5.49

nOUIOIIS
thn

POMEROY -- Town and Country MONDAY
Expo Committee, 7:30 p.m. ThursVBS, Middleport Nazarene
day, Meigs Cbunty Fairgrounds. Church, June 216, 9 to noon, 3
Those interested in belping invited · through sixth grade. "Adventures
. to llltcnd. Call 992-2924 for further U.nlimited Expedition to the '
information.
Promised Land."

CHESTER -- Evangelist David
· Dailey, speaker, 6 p.m. Sunday, HarCHESTER - Judging in the vest Outreach Ministry.
Meigs County IKES turkey beard ·

•

Pepsi .
Products

POMEROY - Annual reunion of
tbe GeorJe Holter, Jr. fllllily, Sunday, home of Jim and Karen Holter ·
Werry, Court St., Racine, I p.m.
Take pictures, family, friends for a
picnic. Rain will not cancel. Call
949-2746 or 247-2344 for further
informatioo.

1117

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Burlnt
T_Or......,.,

cltpontry and ...,..

ln1ida and Dutllde,
docks, vinyl aiding. add-on odd!· 1874.C I - - homo lllth
Clean · loto Yodel Caro Or tiona. catNnet relaclno at newly .14al0 odd-on room, bod! parclt
Trucko, ltto Uodolo Or Nowor, rebulll. Rtferencea·fr" Et ti· owning, • .,.u amrago building,
Smllh Bulok Pontioc, 1g(lO East· ... ~~75-1272.
101122- .tlh trlltod l u -.
em_.....Oelpn's
lur.... lnatolled In Doca..
Gooreao Portoblo Slwmtl, dOn't J a D'• AulD Porta. &amp;urlng Ill- haul ,.., logo 10 tho nil jull oall blr, air, - - . . , . . .
Olcoltont condition. mull move,
..tlltteo. Soiling porto. 304· 304-4175-1067.
cai..W.. Md . .. . . . . 114deling.

773-!iiii!S.

IIVl!-31131 .

--

: U I O d - Flooring
In Good Condition. Call 614·245'

Remo~ar, Free Ettimatetl In·

Er.H'LOYr.1EN T
SERVICES

Help wanted

110

Prololllanal Tr• Service, Stump
........ Bidwell, Ohio. ., ol-388614-367·7010.

WIM Do BabJaltting, In my home
lllrting In ~ly. 81- AIM, CPR
and Arat Aid Training (114)38f03l1 uk lor Faull

AVON I All Arau I Shlrler Will houl junk Or truh pldwp lood. :JO+e75-!ill35.
. ~.. 30+875-14211.

Jl51

F INAtJCIAL

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a oc,. rrac• ...,.undlld by

lookl s.. " -•.900:

Oli-111-87

•AQ852

I ocro traGII -lablo In aoulhoin Vinton, County fronting on
. . . Rau• with .............

......-

For Sale: Ntiw Idea •83 Round

Ownor financing avolloblo .with
111110 down pormonl, ·eu-596·
5707, ,...,. -*1).

In Ma~an. Concrete driveway.

old-lk 1 patlo, t2112 oloroea
buldlng.·l20'a. 304-773-1372. . .
1Q81 Oala ood 14170 2br, 2 bath.
8x12 deck; on rented lot,

txc.

oond., aoklng 11~,300 OBO.
304-87!5-41051l- 1991 14a70 CioyiDn Northridait 3
Bod 001111, 2 Bolhl. t With Glom- .
our Tub Stove, RlfrlgoroiOr, And
Olahwllher, 2 Porchtl, Heal
Pump, Awnlngo And Eovea
$15,000 Sorlouo lnqulrlll Onlr.
..... 25&amp;e115.

,·

--.....,.--

Hay Work. Round Or Square
8aleo, A11o Wil Bulh Hog Br Tha

Hour Or. Br Tho Job, 114-367-

remota, .boaudlul ion~ ; Uolaa
County, Scipio Townahlp. SR 11112
flult oft SR 143). awn. ho)Civ.
Coil lor good mop, 1·814-59S.
8E45.
RENTAlS

~-

Haw Holond 55 Hor Rake, ExcelCounrrr &amp;Ito Apt Laroe 2 Bod·
JET
1tnt Condldon, With Frolh Paint,
room, 2 Largo Batha, Woahor
AER.UION MOTORS
I Field RHdrl 11,3!10, 114-44&amp;Dryer Hook-up, Cor\uaf Air
Rallllirod. New I Robuik In Stock. 01031•
Uonlh
Dopoall llequlrtd call Ron E- 1.-.537.g521J.
(513)574-25311
-Holland HarTool-.

••so

1!aJ Oftlr

410 Houses for Rent

7251 Afllr 5: pm. Oltt'flahsndl.

·

dono, free eallmarea, lifetime
guarantH. 10yra on job experl~

. Computer Users Needed. Work once. 304-875-2145.

own houro. UOk -to '50kiJr 1·

cover. 7,500ml., 114,500. 304·
175-57g,j,

0e1t worklrlcaahler needed. Must

be 1errs. old. Allfllr at Craom.ro
In lleud.,.on. WV.
500 IIIIo Radluo • Homo Every
Woolcend, FamiiJ lnsuranoo Paid
Br Companr (Dental, Eyo, Pro-

acrlptionJ 401 kRetJrement Plan,
Flrll In - Flrot Out Dlopatch, late
Model Canv. Tractors With

Flatbed Trailers Competitive Par

• Paroonllgo Of Gtou. .

OAANT111UCKJNO,INC.
S481SRt3
IWCHLL,OHI0-

-212-2t83

Fiberglass Technician- duties ·,,..

dude wet iaJ·up. '""ld production,
porto lay-up. Ptoa.. oaU 614·g,j9231t 9 :00am-5:00pm w"kdara
(FC, Racine, \)hlo).
HOME TYPISTS,
PC users· needed. $45 1000 in-

come poteri!IDT. Call 1-800-5t34343 Ext 8-9388.

AI rNieatt advtriiSlng 1n
. . ntl•oplller Ia IUbject 10
lho Fedoral Fo~ Holootng Ac1
of taea which mllkH R!legal
to advor1lol "any prtforWnco,
llrnltollon or ~-•lll•llon
bolld on ,...,
religion,
-famiiiiiiiiUiornaoriQin. or any lnllnlton 10
• • C.1J ouc:l1 prtf.......
1m11ro11ur. or dloCrtmlnllton.•

*'·

TN. - p a r will nol
l&lt;nowtlngly accept

-

·lor realaolale

wHchlo In v1o111ton ol the law.
· OUr readeruro htrtCy
·-lhalaldMiings
~In 1hlo n t - r

oreo•-onanequal
opportuni1y IIIIlS

If ,ou want lo ml.ke money, Bf&amp;
willing 10 work hard and like to ~~~~~~~====~·
help othert, we may have a job I~
tor you. local Realdent. ExcelREAL ESTATE
lent Income poulbillties and
home o1flce rralnlng for parsona
llleclad. Mu11 have pleasing
personality and be willing to
meet the public. No expe,lence

310 Homes tor Sale

· 3br

lnlhr In Now Haven wllh car-

port &amp; 2 lo.. 304-1182-3870.

In 11111'1 No paymanta till Au.
ol 97. Fr.. Dellverr &amp; Set·
up. Westwood Homes 1-BOD-2515070.
Dluiotor R•t Pnlgnm
We have S1000 to t2000 por
home in di1aater rtllef funda
available 10 help you purehaao a
reP'acemant home. Call 1·800·
466-7671 to set appointment lor
dellils.
FACTORI' DIRECT.
NO MIDDLE MAN.
SAVEMSl
Oakwood Hamal 11 the only
dealer In the trl-atate arei that
builds _and sells lhelr own
homes. For lactory direct prices.

1 112 Story Home with Tlvae IJed.
ahop OAKWOOD HOMES, Nl·
0111 Clay Roner at 304-675-8019: rooms~ Two Baths, Basement, 55 TRJ, WV. 30H55-58a5.
Acres
with
Barn•
and
Fence.
o, mail reiume ro 2C13 Jackson
.First Time Buwoert-Easr FinancAve., Point Ptoasant, WV 25550. Frae Gas. caa.(01 4)367-n64
eoe
122 Highland· Ave. 39tdroom, 2 Ing! 2 &amp; 3 Badroom around $200
bath, forced air gas furnace, cen· per month. Free deliw.rr I aet·
NEED INSTAIJCTOIIS
tral
air, full basement. $39,500. up. Westwood Homea 1·8()0..251·
Aecouning, Economics, Business
5070.
:JCM-675-1
tao.
Management, Social Science,
Send Resume .To: P.O. Bo11: 542, 3 Bedroom Ranch Style Home IT'S BIG. 1907 4BR. 2BATH
K.rr, OH45e43.
With Garage &amp; Barn, Main- DOUBLE WIDE. $1,949 DOWN,
tenance Free, Loca1ed: Addison $319/MO. FREE DELIVERY &amp;
Need Neal Responsible People
SETUP ONLY AT OAKWOOD
To Pick Strawberries, Apply In Townst-ip, 614-4411·4792.
HOMES, NITRO. WV. 304-755Per1on: Sacurday May 31 Bt, 8· 5 rooms, r.ew heat pump, roOf. 5885. Umited 011or.
Noon, Taylor's Berry Patch, Kerr windows, $25,000. Call Somer·
vila Realty 304-675-3030 or 304- large selection or used home. 2
Road.-ar 3 bedfooma. Starring at $3495.
675-3431 .
.
Now Taking Application• At Do"'"
Quick delivery, Call 1· 800-837·
lno'a Pizza in lhe Gallipolis and
ATHENS M9AMAQE CQ
3238.
Fomoror Areas only lor: Drivoro.
Fir&amp;ncing available Jor Hootes
-LI-:
m-it-ed.,..-::O~IIe-r-:1-:1~=-=9~7-:d-:ou-:bl-:-e-w7id:-e,
andMobileHomas.Neworu&amp;td
3br, 2bath, $1790 down, $2791
· Po111ion Available: Medic~ Clinic
purchasea; Refinancing; Bil ~·
month . Free d811vary &amp; setup.
Group Praclice Is looking For
oolldadon: land oonrrac11. No
o
H
Nl
Compuler Profeaslonala With
•-'lcadon loe: AllkMIIa of credit Only at akwood omes, tro
Skitla In AI Loast One Of Tha Fol- ...,.
I
WV.
304-755-5885.
Coli todaJ lor alrao analysis
lowing Areas : Novell Network
II00-821·14G21614·512New 1997 14170 tlvoo bedroom,
Managemenr, User Training Of
lndudes 6 monthl FREE lot renl
PC Appli'cationo (Eopaciallr liS
' OtfictJ, Dallbllll Programming, Beautilul 2 Story On Corner lot Only $181.88 per month whh
81~ Main Street, Pt. Pleaoant, $1050 .down. Call 1·800·837·
Position Requirll A Bachelor'&amp; WV
Bedroom, 2 Full Batha, liv- 3238
Degroe Or Comparable E1perl· ing, 3Dining,
Family Room1. Mod- =~
·
onco. Applicable Work E1perl·
""
Kitchen,
Large
Laundry
Ar~a.
Now
Bank Ropo'ol Onlr 3 lei~
onco ts StrongiJ Prot.rred. Send
ReturM To Human RelaJions, DO 168,000 614-446-2205, Or 614- ownlf linanclng available. 304755-7191.
Jockaon Plko, Gallipolis, Ohio 446-9585.
.se:l1.
Brick 3 Bedrooms, 2 Full lialhl,' 2 S_a:..:le---Big:..:
. _lla....;..r_k-Down--ii:..:On_AII_SI_nCar
Garage,
Parquet
Floor
In
En·
g!es
In
Stack -Financing Avail·
Postal Jaba 3 Potllions Avail·
able. No Experience Ntcenary, try &amp; Dining Room. ParVaiiJ Rt• ablo -French CltJ Homeo, Inc.
FOr Information, Call 1· 818·78C· modeltd. Nice Nelghborhoo~ Of Gatlipotil, OH • 6t4-446 9340.
Gaorgea Crook sag,9o0, 114·
9011 El!. 80:!0.
.
446-8252. Or 8t4--14t-03tll.
Come Soa Tho lnduatry'a
Restaurant help wanted. Apply in ----'--:--:-="'-:"-:"::":'':""::"" IOidlall Bulldtf Of Homos At Tho
·person al Inlet Restaur1n1 at laf· Brick 311 with Da1lchad Brick G• Aroao Only Authorized Schult ·
rage, Second lot .For Troller or Deolor ·Franc:h City Homos, Inc. .·
r(olocluor 01 Llfart WV.
Largo Garden, tii1SOO $40,000, Gallpollo, Ohio 114-441 9340.
RN, CNA HHA I PCA
1614124
5-54811
Sot Manuloc1urod Homea. II
Full, Part Time Poolti.ono Avail- In Rodnor
CONVENIENCE
IS THE KEY
Uoun1101 Statt Hoi!IOL Rl 82 N •
able in Gallia County. Experi·
acro11
onctd Solarv Agoncy Will Train Br ownor: lolownt Vernon Avonuo,
. from riVocallonal
ho sc:hool.
Ef11&gt;lOJHI With High School 01· Point PIMIInt. e rooma, ·2 or 3 Mobile &amp; HC ona1 moo • porll
plomo, GED Or 2 Yoaro E1perl· badroomo, t both, largo kitchen &amp; aorvice. 304-175-1400.
once In Caring for T;,. Eldtfly, with laundry - ·up, oil on ono Spirl1 -1097- 14a50- 2 BR -Total
Send Raspon.. To: CLA 411, clo floor. Boaomont, vinyl aiding, Elac. $13,500 • Financing Avail·
Gollipolia DaiiJ Tribune, 125 Tllrd coroor~ lonctd beck yord. Por· ablo- French City Homes. lr\c.
......... Gallipolll, OH 45631 .
1oc1 - • homo or lor lndl- Galipot~. OH • 81• .we 11340.
·vldull (a). 173,000. "CAll, NOWr
Soml Drlvora For Flatbed&amp;, 114· 304-4175«110.
330 Fanns for Sale . .
necessary. For mora lnlormalion,

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

eee aat3

Ser.vlce Technician Mui~ Ho'e
llaclllniOOI E1parlenoo , Apply At
Big Boro Water toro, In
Chaltira, 81,..3117·7602.

'

Wonltd: 38 Poopto LoN 11 •25
Pourids lh Tho Noal 30 llaya.
Natural. Gu•IIIIIHdl 1-IOO·eeo2285.
.
Work From Homo Own Largo ln-C.!IIIaplua.114--141-0117.

180 'WintldTO Do
21 Hour In Homo Core For iolppod 0&lt; Elderlr. 11•-••tCii!t1 .

MY ODD_., E~ poi""
lng ollnllil • woedl trimmed,
tond-plng, ol-*• tdged,
- . . . , .... CIU Ill 304-17117112.
lallrolatr. 2 Kid• In lbur Homo
Ott w..llondo, Roto,...coo A
lluolllt. . . .t07D.

allld

.,.In""-·

ralloe~oc­

• o 5 !? II+M_,

--

:
I

14170 Mobile Homo. · l Badroomo,
1 112 Batha, 2 Milos From Rio
Grandi, $325/Uo .. Water Paid,
Depollt Required, All Electric,
Central Air, No Pall. Coil 114·
..,.0181 Alter 7:00 P.U. Or 81""
245·g442 Doydmo Aak For

Wantad-3br houoe or trailer Pt.
Pleasant area, renl or l•u op••n. 304-875-6111 uk lor Bran;;;,

Block, brlck, aowor pipes, wlndOWl , lintels, etc. Claud&amp; Wlntero. Big OUarllr chlltnut Mare, 1t yra
Rt 0 G d o ' · c 1 11 •1 • 2'5 old, good traR, looao and ohooa.
" •· • •
ran a, "
5121.
30-H75-1101.

t.I ERCHANDISE:

Mindy.

740

Motorcycln

I1

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1004 Hondo 300EX 4·wheetor, J
,2,600. 111811 KX125, ~- 304· .
175-4782.

THE BORN LOSER

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tn Rio Grande, Dopolit, No
Poll, Nice Yard, 614-371-2720
AFTER I P.ll.
'·

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FIP.E DRrLL!

COI1E' ONNNN,

3 Bedroom Trailer, Thurman
Arn. 61HS8-G007.

I'IP.E DRILL!

Glenwood. 3bodroom mobllo

In this deal, Deng was playing with
Kathie Wei-Sender, who has been the
link between .Chinese players and ln·
ternatlonal bridge. They were using
. Precision Club, whicb was devised by
r
.
.., Kathie's late husband, C.C. Wei. Ills
~C:lHT! f.,Kt:&gt; i'Q.I '(Ol)Ff C:OIW::I
the system of choice In'China.
One club was strong and artificial .
. TOT~ 00'{1J£1l.. Df&gt;..'(
· ·One diamond was weak and artificial.
· Two spltdea was natural, stronger and
forcl~g. Two no-trump was weaker
. '
and artlflclal. Following two n,atural
bids, Wei-Sender bid an exuberant six
.· dlainondf. · ·..
'· · , Deng won the Oral trick with dummy's heart ace, cashed the spade ace,
and ruffed. a spade -in hand. Declarer
drew trumps In two rounds and ruffed
another spade. When the king
dropped, Deng claimed 13 tricks:
r--::===::::~'1 'three spades, one heart, six dlall_londs,
(.
one club and two heart ruffs rn the ·
dummy.
·
·
&amp;UP.NEt&gt;
Deng had a keen sense of humor.
~".GAIN .
·After this deal, he said to Kathie: "If l
· can make seven. you should have bid
eight!"
·

1 and 2 bedroom 1partment1, furnlshld and unfurnithed. aeourlty
depoait required, no peta. 8U·

992-2218.

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1985 .....,, Alum: Flat 45' W/S
81-2781.
2 Bedroomo .In Galllpollo, No
Peta, Rot.rencos, Wottr Paid· A'morlcon Siddle Br~ed Horoo
S250/Uo., llol-388-1708.
11.000. 614-367-41210:

.

Furnlohad _Apartment 1 Bedroom,
839 Second Avenue, Gotllpolla.
$2115lUo., Utllldea Paid, 114·ol463844, Ahtr 7 PJI.

4' heavy corru1111ltd plpo; '100n.
rod, S21.99.1'111NT PLUS HARD- ·
WARE. 304-1175-4014.

Galllo Manor Aportmonto Now
Accapllng Apptlcotiono For t
Bodroom HUD Suboldloed Aport·
mom For Eldarly llforullclppad,
F.urnlshod Applloncoa, Equal
Houolng Opportunity, 814·441·
48311.
·
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dllngor, air oor 111, -

5 hp. air compr•aor, air lire
apln baJ.
ancor, hydraulic tranamlulon
joel!, 10,000 ll pmo, othot nioc.
olooptoola. 114-lll2-904l
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Wlioato. Eacal1tm Condttlori, 814·

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Gracioua living. 1 and 2 b1draom ,...7127.
oportmonll 11 VMiago U-r ond ..;;;,_;....~-~~,~":"'"'-:-:"'
Rlvtfalda Apertmonto In Ulddli· Automdc.Drrora f7~ Each; Sail Stat Gulllr, Chtlhlro, Ohio· ltn1F
12311304 c.u 114 t50; Rolngororor $75; Solo Bed ona and lnatrumenll- piano. gu~
PDr,, rom . •'HOUI '
• 180; Fl!il Size Bod!Nr 'Fita I Fl ., ond ...... 114-367-o:llll.
Eq~l ling Oppor· Bacl, Ltkl Nowl 175, 814·379110 Acro Farm With Accooao·
On State Route 554, 5 112
2720 AI'TIR t P.M.
f 1\IH.I SUf'f'L IE';
Old Houao Wlfl Now Homo Nawly romodelad one bedroom
lnl•r·, furnished 0partmontln Ulddlt- lr;;~By Rldwlrio, C~lppowa,
.~ llvlSlOCK
114· 992·2171 or 114-812Tony liiiiii, .Guorontotd
Prlcoo At 8loo. Colo, Gol·

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Pell. 814 418 3437.

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there's one thing harder than 8
diamond, ifs · - -.·-to .- - for
., onel'
.

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Merchandise

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low to form four olmt&gt;fo ·

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'{OUrD L.IKE TO
CON6«ATULATE ME ..

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Roorrango lott.ro ol
0 fo"r
Krilmbled · worda

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Buw or sell. Riverine Anl_iq!olet.
1124 E. Main Streeti on Rt 12,,
Pomeror. Houn : M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. 10 6:00 p.m., SUndeJ 1:00.,
8:00 p.m. 114·8gz.2521. Ru11

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ' You don't ' " him wearing eariln~ or baggy panls,
and he speaks wHh respect' - Goller Barnard Samuela, on Tiger W'oOcls.

.,

l/4 c•at round diamond oolitare
1 Bedroom unlurnishtd Apart· ring, aeven diamond aMivertary
mont. Ranea. Re~lgerator, Dlapo- band bo• a1 7 ••~ • 14 ~
oat, Garage provided . Water,
• •• zo • ..- . • ··-Sewage, Gorbaoo Poid, Depoolt 304
~..,..5.-:--::-:-:-::-'"':'-::--:--::-:
and relerencta Required, 136 Still Available Due To Back Out
Firat Avo, Roor, Gallipolis, 814+ On Purchoao: 1511 X3Ft. Dlep
444!-2!181
lilound obovt ground pool . All
Acceuorloo, •300, 814-245-

2 Bodrpom

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Mol&gt;le Homo lor rent:'White Rd, 2
br., 122S.month. (614~4-16-4389
Nica Solli I &amp;latching lovl Sao\
Trailer For' Ren.t: Bellomy Drive, 81 ...388-ll144.
S230IIIo.. lncludea Water, 614- Used Alr Conditioner a ·Htat
..6--3840. 61ol-446-o957.
Unita $150 StDrm Doors 150 614Two bedroom, pordally lurnlshad, LI8-3301 , 81 .....,-3583.
central air, Iaroe yard, good clean 530
AntiqUes

for Rent

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ant or Huntington. Will accept
HUD. $385. :lllo\-562-5840.

Apll billntl

. &gt;

Paso
Paso
Paso
Allpau

home In the country. Vtr'/ nice,
ciry water..30mln.. from Pt Pleas·

440

...

.

3 Bedroom House Trailer For

condllion. no pats. $230 par
month, New Haven, 304-882·2488
anytimo• .

• Put Dl1 IIOinl

.

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92.

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$11,500 Firm. Call Even· --'

88 S-10 Blazer 5 SP, 2 door, '
82,000 mtlll, ,7,1100 or 11"- ovar '
,.,.,.... (114)-378+2134
'

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.........

44,000 Mllea; 4.0 lller, V-8, ~ :
•12.400. 114-448 ee11
.
. •.

lng~ 11o4-3SIH770..

1'-

also bridge experts. Three exceptions
spring to my mind: lain MacLeod,
'Deng Xiaoping and Wan Li. The Orst
was.a founder of the Acol bidding system in England, and the Chancellor of
'the Exchequer when he died in 1970.
Deng Xlaoping, the archl.tect of.
China's economic reform and modemCELEBRITY CIPHER
lzalion following the cultural revolu· ·
by Lull Cempoe
lion, was an avid bridge player. The
~'--~
E«h iet..rln theelphlr llln&lt;tl1of
another. Tpdly's cbt: T 41qUM P .
drive of Deng and Wan Li, the former
chairman of the People's Congress,
y
has led to Chlna'e becoming a force In ' I K N F P
TOCUKPZN
WFVU
C H
world bridge.
. ·
Deng died February 19 at the age of TAZYNKOZ
RLFPL
LKBYV
VVMKOZ

1884 Ford Ranger STX 414' 1'

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llovo Inial 114·446-1408, Ah•r
4P.U.

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mover
·By Phillip Alder

&amp;Illes, ·350 4 SptOd, Topper, :
Roeao Hltch,Exceilonl Condition, · ,
15,000, 114-25&amp;-i158.
• . -·

1994 Ford Truck F-150 414
Sporll Model~ ~It New Tlroa,
~1 ,1)00 Mlln, ""'lint Duo To Ill-.

.... 1141
Ill llrt. In llldrld

fc)litical and bridge .

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14500, ~

poet

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111 ca....,,.

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E1collom lqr rOIIDrlng. (614f·4-48784&amp;
~·
g,j Ford Ranger, low ....... .._
par, ........ 11111/tm ca...u•• 5
apaod, good condldon, 114·992· ,.
8572- .........

1888 Ford Aerollar van,
1-304-773-5305 aflar 6pm.

arv

1

11 t~IICI
12 TvDe of aolcl
113 . , . . , , Ia.

Opening lead: • 10

-:::::::-::=.::-:::-::;:::--:-::-:::-:::::1'"
1g10 GIIC 314 Ton 414, 84,000. oo

111 Time Buyora Eo or Financing
2 &amp; 3 Bedroomo Around $2001
Uo., Froo DollYery &amp; Sot-Up, Call
1-«ll-251-5070.

DRIVE !IS WAHTED

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'1445 down,
doltvorr &amp; 101up.

II00-3CB-7188 •1508.

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40"""" loll-

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Dealer: West
8oulh
West North Eut

1 ~~7·:..:_--~--~~77~,·

vans &amp; 4-WDs

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•.0:17542
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nonclno. t 0% Down, Poy.,.nt.,.
Ao low Aa I110,Par Month. No:
TUrn Downal Coli Ruth 014.-,•

730

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ac

DOWN
208Peak
1Forgilt-- ' IO lllantiiiiiiNIII 2 All~ and Ia the
numller
31 lla•nhlill

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C.odlt Probiamo? Gau.,n100d Fl- .:

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IIIIIU7
Pt'- n t lllploy Rd
' 304-111-3174. '

1107 14180 3 or 4 Bodroom,
11.359 down, $229/mo. FrH olr,
lklnlng, &amp; dolhrory. Only ot Olk·
wood Homoa Nlllii.WV. 304-7555885.

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ci11ette, tilt, cruiH. Tonneau •

t887 14170 2 or 3 Bedroom,
l8g5 down; ltgl/mo. Only a t'
oa- Homoo, Nitro. wv. 304·
755-!1185.
.

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by FBI, IRS, DEA. A•llablo your ,

K811N'I Servfoe Center

Now-1997 14 Wlde-1 beth. tetot
down, 1139/mo, with opproved
Cl'1ldl1. Cail1-eoo.-t-em.

livingston's _batemenr wattr·
proofing, all baaement repalll

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Uptcn U11d c~ro
&amp;2-3 IIHoa '
•12 7' haJblno 17,500. 488 8' 9outl1 ol Leon. WV. Financing ,
l..oQjll poll, 6tol-992-5890.
hayblno S7 ,000. 482 8' harblno .. 301158 10811.
•
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Nod(lc Track·Achiever, Pd $750. $1,400. 415 dloc~ino 11' cut 720 ............. for Sa'•
.......,..
,.
,
oo will Hll lor $400.00; Excelilll"l $13,100. 585 aquire baler 3 joint
PTO wagon hitch 10.200. 634
•
Condition. (814)-448-85t8 .
rou na baler SQ, SOO. 84C round '01 S · 10, mechanically 10Uft4, I
:
~SIIel baler-autowrop 112.900.854 R. bodylalr,81H4M513.
baler autowrap $15,4.00 . .t51 T 1
~ O s--...a-.... 'u''' ... 800 f
alckl~:~e·0 •3,150. 615 6'8' · 993 ~•
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doc '·
$4,700.
8 ustd round lt4-448-1~
~ from.
balori .~1801 · txt cob, 11110. oc.- I1

1004 Clayton 11X80, 3 BR, 2
Batha, 123.100.00 (114)·317·

to mer
Travel.

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Baler, I I - ••• Ba~ 700 Pda., . l~
Elacric 11o Hu Bolad 100 ilolol, By thlt original ownor • 11711' •
Same Aa New, $7,000; Maoaor· Chryaler N"" Vorkor 5th Ave·. , ~:
Ferguson Uodol450 Round ·Bat· ,_ tlroo, good cond., S99511rm. "
01. Bolos Good, Gold Condition, 30+875-46!18.
' :
$$,800 080; Mont y FtrGuaon
•12 Square Baler, Good .Condi· CARS FOR StOOl Trucks, bolla, •
11on, $1 ,200 080; Wll Do CullOm 4·whHierl, moiOr homoo, lurnl· 1

1810 Happy Homo, Ua70, 2·3 5 Acroa On Goorgeo Crook
bedroomo, otr, undtfplnnlng, Raod. Ott s. Rau• 7, $35,000,
porch,' IIOOO, 114-tlll-3835 or · Coll-8:00, 81.,_7181.
81 ...1185-&lt;1274.
10114 Mobile homo on cor- lot

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fortunately for you
espe- ,, . .
:
.
if you·~ involved
~- · could have far·reachins effects.
AS"''R()·OIIAPB ·
one who. is a good salesperson. .,
. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) A
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A new profilable channel misht suddenly
contact you establish at this lime spring.openJor you t~that should .
BERNICE
could play a crucial role in the future be right up your _alley. Examine
BEDE c;&gt;BOL dircctiqn llf your caJeCI' p.th. Make every new opponunaty carefully.
sure you're at yotir ~.
· . J\QUARIUS (Jan. 20..feb. 19)
VIROO'(Aua: 123-Sept. 22)Excit- .this could be the belinning of a
, ·ini.and ex~nary ckyelopmcnts · ~~~vorable cycle, romantically speak.· ·, mitihnake place today at the work-·· 1ng. Unattached ~quarians may
.
····~ · 1plaee. Three CJPI!OI1UIIiliea of signif· uncover a new love tntercst.
Thui:Sda:Y. May 29; 199]
' '· icAt)t size misiJl make ihilr (:RSCIICC
PISCES (Feb. 2Q..Man:h '20) A.
GEMINI (May .21 -Julte~ 20) •Dq ·felt. _
.' • .
.. · m~~ ~has perturbed you looks
. not be indiffere~~t tQ;,ard, positive, ·" LIBJlA (Sclpt. -~ · 23) ~~e h~ it s ~1111 to be cone~~ Co your
Intuitive inslghiS. Theie ~ ','_ chanps in. -~ soc;iallif~,ale and•· · &lt;SIIIIsfaci!C!!'. Yourclwtmdic:lltesthat
can play a COIIItructive role In help- · caled at this tilM, bllt you II ~ to . cl0$111e miJht even be today.
.
ing you find happi..s and IIICCGI. · -helplhiliPIIIont·S...._Inday, loot . ARIES ~arch 21-~1.19) You
Know whaeto look for I'OIIIIIICe ..S for new pa-s lnd new I*Pe-.
have 1I9W ~ a prp!IUSIJI&amp; new _
you'll find it. 'J'hC , Astto-Grlpla
SCORPIO ~(~1. 24-Nov. 22) .. c_ycle filled with hopes and ex~~- .
Mab:lunaker ina1811tly reveils w!Uch . Strooa 1IIJII ~ tnalllle • new encleav- ,.. 00111. Be lien, bee••!• opponunth~ , .
,sips iie romantically perf«C for
Ia C011JUncUcrn wllh IIIDtber COUld . ,~lei develop In ~ue ways.
•:'
you. Mail $2.75 10 Marchilllker, c1o ~, - ' t 0111 well for YDII .IOday. Oet : TA\!RUS (Apnl 20-May 20) ,

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