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                  <text>Lottery

Cardinals
·hand Reds
5·2 defeat

"B111P81' Lotto:
1-fi-7·1 1-44

7-4-646-0
Pick 3:

944

. Sporta on P•oe 4

Pick 4:
G-6-9-5

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, MOnday, June 23, 1997

J· f

~Freedom'

2 s.ctlana, 12 ...... 3 5 A GMrMtt Co. ~per

.

w111 be :th$me
·of R·a cine observation.

Sweeping.it clea

'

"Freedom" will lbe the theme of will be in charlie of the equestrian information, contact Dallas Weber,
Racine's Independence Day obser- · unit. Entrants Clll' call her at 992- club president. at 742-3020.
RACO's annual Frog Jump will be
vance.
2800. There wiU be awards in this
.,
held at 5 p.m. with prizes awarded in
The day will be kicked off with a category.
All parade . 'winners will be two age groups. for more informaparade staning at 10 a.m.
Line up will be at Southern Hish announced at ihe Star Mill Park tion, conlal;t Aaron Young at 9492545.
School at 9: IS a.m., followed by a stase at noon.
Enlertainment will be on the park
: flag raising ceremony at 9:4S .a.m.
:The Racine Volunteer F'U'C Depart· Monelllly awards will be given for ment and Auxiliary will have a bar· stage staning at 2 p.m. and continu·
.
the first three places in the float divi- becue· and home-made ice cream ing to 10·p.m.
Craft boolhs will be set up at the
sion in the religious and theme cate- staning at II a,m. at the fire station.
g_ories. Awards will also be present- The Racine Afea Community Orga- park and anyone wanting to reserve
:ed t.o the three best bicycle entries. . nization will ~ave kids' games stan- · a space can contact Dale Hart at 949Anyone wanting to enter the parade ing at noon in the park.
2656. Any other questions about the
The Big Btnd Farm Antiques event ·hn be direcled to Marilyn .
'should conlal:t Marilyn Powell at
949-2676.
Club will have an antique tractor pull . Powell or Kathryn Hart.
Terri Carsey of Lone Oak Farm at Star Mill Park at 2 p.m. For more

Ed.ucators 'arget 'urnf.~ir'
tax law as top concern
TOLEDO (AP) - Improving land. it mealns their major source of · very diffiCult to resolve, opportunity,
Ohio'.s public school buildings and money doehot increase with infla- but it is still an opponunity to final·
,;
ly fix some of the problems," .said
chansing property tax Jaws are tion.
amona the issues slale lawmakers
The s~ could get more money to Howard Fleeter, an assistant professhould address in creating a new middle-cJS'ss districts by fine-tuning sor at Ohio Stale University who spe·
funding plan fQI' schools, a newspa- the law, slllll Paul Marshall, legisla- cializes in school finance.
per reported Sunday.
tivc director for the
Department
The Ohio Coalition for Equity &amp;
TheOhioSupremeCourtdeclared ofEducll!ion.
.
' ' Adequacy of School Funding _had
in March the state's school-funding
one way would bet\)~ the law filed a lawsuit in Perry County in .
syslem unconstitutional and.ordered tOthei~iorftafe';'preventingsharp ( 199,} Ol!~!fof~ostofthe Stale's
li-~"''ilid.e'gislaliir("to ~lai:e 'it wiffiin' · incrwt~"ln ~es. • . ~' .-·-~ 611 ~iStiiCJ1;'11)0~081iti~iiJalilh. ~as
one year. . ·
·
. · ·
The B,ll!4e mlerviewed educatOrs seekmi.' a hew'~' fllndms · fl!etl\od
· Any funding plan should include and students all around the state, because .Jhe cun:en~ system favors
modifying a stale Jaw that may have -many _of ~hom spoke bitterly about · wealthy sctlool\lt.stnc.ts.
.
d.amaged public schools more than the cumni fundina system, built
The Supreme Court mandated that
any other statute, Sllid Tom Slater, around Joeal property taxes. ·
~ new s~stem uphold a conslltu·
superintendent of the North Fork
"It's ii:tcredibly unfair," Erik Pep- 110nal l'e!l~trement for a .".thorou~h
.school district in Licking County.
. ·pie, a rece~t graduale of Lima High aqd efftctent" system of public .
The law, 1!a5sed in 1976 during a School, to!d the newspaper in t!le first schools across the_sta~.
.
period of high inflation. prohibits in a series;·of &amp;rticles about school
~e most glanng .problem ~tth
increases in property taxes from vot· funding in 'Ohio. "It's the argument, Ohio s cum:nt syslem ts the condtbon
er-approved tax levies if home values 'If I'm in Columbus, Why sh.ould I of many !luilil\ngs. the newspaper
rise, .
have to w/my ·about someone in s111d. .
.
It favors school districts with Lima?'"
.
·
A
released last year
plenty of land for businesses to , Observer$ said state lawmakers
· stales,,Ohi!&gt;
d~velop. for largely residential dis- shoold carepdly craft their solution. ranked
the _Dtstnct of
.tricts and those without unde':eloped
"It is a ,politically wrenching,
. ,,
condttton of tts
l
schools. .'. '
'

Ohio

•

· The annual Ohio River Sw.ep was held SaturdaY morning at aeveralloeltlonaln Meigs Coun·
ty. Boy Scouts of Coolville Troop 52, above, picked up trash fro~~:~ around the Forked Run State
. Perl! launch ramp near Long Bottom. About 150 volunteers cleaned up In the Rledavllle-Long
Bottom am while Pomeroy, Middleport and Racine had around 170 volunteers. Several hun-

,dred bllga of tiaah were picked up along the river from the three-hour ev!lllt.•

Ohl"o·
tobacco
gro·w.· ers 'bew
· ··ldere·d'
by
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By The Asaoc~ Pren
the . tobacco co'!lpanies, seeking to will have to affect us," said C.A.
"~:om Delventhal · and Vivian · recover taxpayer money spent treat- Duncan of the Gallia County Pride in
Hemphill are among those who hope ing sick smokers.
. .'
Tobacco Association, a group reprethe nationwide settlement between
·"I hope it will inspire me to quit, senting owners .
tobacco companies and the federal once and for all," said Tom Delven"It's been a crop that is legal to
government finally will be the straw thai, 39, of the Cleveland suburb of grow, and it was very respected until
that breaks Joe Camel's back to get Berea.
15 years ago." said Duncan, who
them to quit smoking.
"There are people who want to grows 20 acres of tobacco on his faroCigarette companies on Friday stop and will be inclined to do so with ily's 600-acre fann.
agreed to pay $360 billion over 25 prices rising," Ms. Hemphill said.
"Growers are bewildered."
years 81!11 place strict restrictions on "But the die-hards will pay as long .· "It 's going to end up in longer
their product in exchange for limits as they can afford it.,
Jines at the unemployment office,"
on their liability in lawsuits.
Tobacco fanners fear the settle- said Bill Pfeffer, who grows tobacco
· The stale said it expects to get at .ment will drive them out of business. oil 4 acres of his 88-acre farm in
least $5 billion. Ohio joined other
"When the companies we sell to
(Continued on Page 3)
states 1as1.month in a lawsuit against are put under this much pressure, it

:'Stronger cledn air stani:tards produce
~ new ri.f ts ·bet\feen i~dustry, ecologists
'
'

By SARAH PEKKANEN,
•' .
torate-:- would likely vote for them.
- Gannett .Newalervlce
,mln''s•rator Clii'IOI'•
~ou'" . ·During his speech. Dingell out• WASHINGTON-Astheluly -19
11 r-""-'"' · 1' 11
'I '"'"""'" "'' · 1"
linedwaysinwhichConJfCsscould
just entoke the iltailtlards that are there and derail the plan, suggesting one option
.. deadline approaches for one of the
·, most significant environmental deci: ·get ,..,..o~o~J
,, e to l'fiiiCh thoSe~ ·she would do
could be to attach a rider on an appro' sions of the decade, the White House
,.,.. .,1'!'
priations bill prohibiting the EPA
:- - besieged for months by massive,
more to ·help the environment than 'to from spending money to implement
:competing lobbying campaigns- is. Increase t1Je standards, fully knowing tl1,f1t In
the regulations.
.
. in a state of temporary paralysis.
.SO-me a......._. •helv a·re never ll'"'in
.
to
be
Conceding that such a.· move
1•
1 """'.
· At stake are the controversial
T
"'·
would be temporary and could prove
tighter air quality standards champi- ' ' reached.,, I
politically volatile, Dingell advised,
oned by the Environmental Protec,
--()hlo
G - Volnovlch "Let the mayors know, the .county
• tion Agency. Supporters say the
&lt;1
....... • " '
officials ... The most important and
tougher standards will save thousands
best option for us is to stop this thing
of lives. OpponentS say that claim is tion itself- Ieavins the fate of the House or Senale, who wants to pver- ,at this particular time."
grossly exagj!erated. and conte'd t1te proposals very muC!h in'qu~stion.
tum it, l!lake my day, •• thundered Sen.
Some in the White House proposals will do more harm than · The upheaval bilan in November, Barbara Boxer, O.:Calif., this month squeezed by countless complaining
good by financially crippling busi· whc;n the EPA, which is .required to as she stood before a patriotically .col- letters from citizens, mayors, ·and .
nesscs and farmers.
review the nation's ;iir quality stati· .ored chart labeled "Asthma Deaths, business owners - are thinking
· . EPAAdministrator Carol Brown- dards every five. y'Cin, laid out i!S 1979 .to 1993." ·'
.
·. ·
along the same lines.
· ·
Rep. J!)hn Dingell, D-Mich., .
Admini~tration officials have held
. et )!as adamantly refused to weaken suggested rule. Under the pWI, the
the proposed stantlards, leaving the le&amp;al size of micros&amp;pic soot from appears eager to step into the (ing a number of meetings wit!t Browner
White House - and, notably, Vice autos, power plants 1111d factories · With"lier.
in recent weeks to express their con. President AI Gore, who will solicit wouldbereducedfromthecwrent 10
"I don't want to fight'my presi· . cemltbouttheeffect?ftheproposal~.
, the sUpport of environmentalists in microns tp 2.S m·
. By way of dent and I doft't want to fi1ht this And last week, Nlllonal Economtc
, his bid for the presidency in 2000- comparison,. a hu
hair is 70 administration, but if this decision is ' Council Chairman Gene Sperling
· to make a final ·decision about microns thick.
not hapdled wisely, I am ptqlii'Cd'to · •reportedly wrote Browner to recom·
whether they should be diluted.
Part· twO of the EPA plan would go to war.'' Dingell told a receptive 'mend that she increase by about 20
· · Major industries, including oil, dramatically sti!fen al~llble ozone,. crowd at a.brealcf.-t of the American percent the allowable size of airborne
utilities, and automol!ile · manufac- or l!llOJ, levels. . "'". · Association. of Manufacturers Jut soot. The Jetter also suggested that
turen, are blnkrollin&amp; a viaorous
The proposals imt*illely. won week. ·
.
Browner allow more frequent 'local
1
: gtass-roots carnpai1n clesisnecl to · impassioned suPporte" ,and detriC·
Bill opponents of the pWI hope it violations of. \)wile.
.-~b!HY ~he~ In the While House, tors in Congreu. MantJfldweJ!em never &amp;dJ that f•.Already, more than . If Browner continues to resist such
· ,;:~Jefore it reaches Congress.
members, whose districts lend to .40 House memberl have signed a let- modifitations, the matler will fall
'::: Meanwhile. environntCntal JIIOUP' inelude bii: industries, vqwed to fight ter.hailinJ the EPA'&amp; "prudent poli- squarely in the lapa of Clinton and,
~lOCI the ~ Lun1 Association, the plan. Maawbile, NQrtheulem . cy deciaion."
.
, more especi~ly, Gore.·
:'which are less well funded, are flub" pqliticius, who complfiin that airOpponcats Ill! circulatina tl!eir
With this in mind, the Sierra Club
;p;; ~of~ childlen borne soot is carried tn~ their 11a1e own !etten in the House and Senile, · began nmnina television ads this
:mfront of ncwa can- and talkin1 by eujern-travellna ·~,. currents; and have helped collect .lj() con· 'week ~ng a mother of an asth. ~. .t how dcllh Illes rile alon1 with quickly jolDed ~ BPA'~,I)IIDP·
. · ...-~ aipatlnl oppllling cir ,malic 8-year-old urpng Clinton and
i:lbe le~l.
.
I
The COII!pd~ r.m.. promile. Cll*liOnlDI the ltllldlids. a.. that's '(]en to support the tilhler standards.
t:: The ltlllllilla fallout bas diVided IP Jlua it out the prnpc.wd stan- juit their back~up
since The ada were unveiled 'in places that
: ttie lUIIioa aloa1 I'OII'Ipllical fitult ~ lhould illey . . . . inlal:t maay of thole Who qt'NitOned the ·Ocn hll plrlicular intemted in:
~pea. frllctund Colpua. and, ulli- hal the,Wblte Houle. ,
. lllllldlnls ~ awa of the envUoil- . Iowa IIIII New Haa!pshire.
.~~·lplil the ClinfAJn adminillla-'.
thin is anyone onqthe ftoor, qJentally friendly .J!!Ood of the elec(Continued on .... 3~

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Myths, realities of Clean Air Act
rules spurring debate, confusion
By SARAH PEKKANEN
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON- The debate over proposals to stiffen the nation's
air quality stan4ards is doing the unthinkable: It's making the average political campaign look almost genteel.
Supporters and foes of the new standards accuse each other of hyperbole, fact-twisting and outright lying- and, from time to time, they're
. both ·right.
·
Citizens caught in the crossfire can hardly be blamed for being con. fused about what'the proposed crackdown on smog and soot would actu. al)y mean to their lives.
·
Here are a few of the myths swirling around the debate and the reality of the matter:
.
.
MYI'H: The new clean air rules would restrict Fourth of July fireworks
displays.
·
REALITY: After a W!15hington University researcher made that comment during a meeting of the government-appointed Clean Air Science
Advisory Committee, opponents of the EPA's new standards ran radio ads
thai stated: "Imagine that- a new government regulation that takes away
our freedom -to celebrate our freedom ."
·
The problem is, the researcher who made that comment told the St.
Louis Post-Dispatch that he was joking.
·
· .
MYI'H: U~der the new standards. citizens wouldn:t be able to usc bar- .
becue grills or gas-powered lawnmowers.
.
REALITY: These claims sound eerily like assertions made nearly a
decade ago, when an opponent of the 1990 Clean Air A~t told a Senate
. committee, "Mouthwash is practically all (volati'le organic compound) ...
' so that means that would be gone."
, EPAAdministrator Carol Browner recently sent a letter to a concerned
: member of Congress that stated, "No such attack on barbecuing actuai.·
. Jy is being considered."
MY11f: The new standards .will save 20,000 lives.
REALITY: The EPA retracted its own initial claim after a researcher
noticed a statistical error in a chan used in this calculation. The EPA·now
says 15,000 ·lives would be saved :.... a figure thai is still hotly disputed
. by the other side.
.
.
·.
·
.
. .MYTif: Pigs and cattle would be considered pollution-producing units
' under the new rule. A print ad featuring a photograph of a cow decl.ares:
: "Old MacDonald had a farm . And that makes him a big polluter, accord·
: ing to the EPA."
· REALITY: Once again, Browner has rebuffed such claims, saying agri. culture "would not be the target 9f EPA control strategies."
'
MY'lll: The EPA rules will meap farmers can't plow on dry, windy
days.
.
.
.
REALITY: This theory was put forth in a radio ad by Citizens for a
Sound Economy, acoalition representing industry •a viewpoint. The EPA's
reply: because or its size; agriculture dust generally falls into #JC "unreg. ulated" cateaorv.
·

.

�.

9otnmentary
8lld Jlin Moler

111 Court Bllwt, Pomeroy, Ohio
814-8112·2158 • Fax 912-2157

·. .2.

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINQEn
.· PublleiW

MARGARET LEHEW
ConlroUer

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Ohio's version of Megan's
Law likely headed for
Supreme Court review
By M.R. KROPKO
.
Associated Prea• Writer
CLEVELAND - . A new state law that requires notification when a sex
predator moves into a neighborhood is likely to be challenged in the Ohio
Supreme Coun.
Defense attorneys say the Ohio version of the New Jersey statute called
Megan's Law adds punishment beyond the coW'!-imposed sentence and is
bound to be challenged. Prosecutors are expecting lengthy litigation, too,
but are confident the law will be upheld.
·.. Our view as defense attorneys is that you can prosecute a criminal who
commits se~ crimes, and that's fine," said Vanessa MacKnight, a Lake County public defender.
"Megan's Law, we believe, persecutes rather than prosecutet."
Staning July I, sheriffs departments in Ohio's 88 counties must notify
neighbors when a convicted sex offender who has been labeled a "predator" moves into their area. A predator, under the law, is the most severe of
three labels a judge can give sex offenders before they are released from
.. prison. ·
Judges across the state have been holding special hearings since Jan, I
to determine whether se~ offenders deserve the predator label.
·
Bur some judges have turned their attention to the law itself. Lake County Common Pleas Judge Martin Parks ruled June 9 that imposing the law'S .
requirements on alre!ldy-sentcnced sex offenderS is retroactive·punishment, ·
forbidden by the U.S. andOhio constitutions.
His ruling came in the case of Richard Semcnak, 34, of Eastlake, who is
eligible for parole after serving seven years for the attempted rape of a 5year-old girl.
·
Judges in Portage and Franklin counties have issued similar decisions.
MacKnight is not surprised. "Probably there will continue to 'be contradictory rulings even in the appellate couns, and that would get it into the
Ohio Supreme Court automatically," she said.
The Ohio law is modeled after one in New Jersey named for Megan Kan- .
ka.a7-year-otdgirlwhowasabducted.rapedandkilled.Megan·sparents
and
neighbors learned only after her death that the attacker was a twice-convicted sex offender.
Joan Englund, legal director of the American Civil Libenies Union in
Ohio, said similar Jaws throughout t~ ~ountry create a ·mob justice nien•
tality.
"These laws encourage vigilantism," she said. "They create a false illusion of safety and may force sex-offenders, most who are not prone t.o recidi- .
vism to move place to place·, and that makes b'eatment difficult."
Chris Davey, a spokesman for the o.ffice of Attorney General Betty Montgomery, 'said Montgomery's staff has been working with county prosecutors to develop sb'ategies for defending the Jaw against constitutionality challenges.
.
"We're also working closely with local law enforcement to do everything .
we can to make sure the registration and notification aspects of this law can
be implemented effectively," Davey said. .
·
If !he law ends up before the Supreme Court, the attomey general is confident it will be upheld, he said.
John Murphy, executive director oflhe Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys Association, said he also is figuring that the law will be challenged.
"We think it's going to hold up eventually," he said. "I think it doesn't
increase acriminal penalty retroactively, but I'm sure it will be litigated in
Ohio Supreme Coun just in the natural course of events." ·

HiJh-level Department ofEnc!JY
officials are scrambling to develop
" significant contingency plans" to
addtess the possibility of a walkout
by security personnel who are
charged with safeguarding top-secret
nuclear·weapons infonnation at !he
DOE's Washington headquarters.
Over lhe Memorial Day weekend,
a portion of .the DOE sccwity force
engaged in a "sickout" to protest
recent problems ....lh their paychecks.
DOE officials hope the sickout isn't
a prelude .to a full-fledged walkout.
But if problems with lhc security
guards' paychecks persist, that's
exactly what could happen.
·
More than a minor'inconveniencc,
a walkout by the guards could pose
a grave threat to national security.
DOE headquarters houses more thar
7 million pages of classified docu·
ments, including more than 2,00C
pages labeled "Top Secret." Many ol
these doCuments, kept in alarmed
vaults, contain highly classified information about nuclear.weapons tech-

nology.
The trouble began early last
month, according to a DOE off~eial ,
when the "vast majority" oflhc pay-

By Jack Anderson
and
r·~.
J,an ••o/''e·~--=.;.:...;;m='=''
checks issued to security guards on
May 9 bounced. The problem wasn't
cleared up for nearly two weeks, forcing many of the guards to work without pay.
On the next pay day, the Friday
before the Memorial Day weekend,
no paychecks were issued to ihe
members of the security force. That
was the last stnlw for a number of the
guards, many of whom depend on
their modest $27,000-a-year salary to
support a family.
Frustrat¢, some members of the
fon:e decided to call in sick over the
holiday weekend rather than work
without pay. As a result, the &amp;bsences

of iuarda li'Om their ))0111 totalled request for COJllmtnt.
approximatoly I SO houn over the
touted as South Carolina's lqest
three-day weekend, aceordin1 to the · black-owned business, Am-Pro's
director of tile DOE's otrsce of IC!:U· finances took a serious hit last Octority affairs. ·
her when the company loSt iu conThe diminiShed security force left tract with the U.S. State Qepartment,
the Energy Department isra risky sit- worth an estimated $70 million over
uation. "We do not .feel we had.any five years.
·
vulnenbility," a DOE official told
By May, a floundcrins Am-Pro
our asiOC:iatc AmiD Karp. But this barely had lhc funds to pay the suards
official admitted thai "had there. at the DOE. Only through several
been an emergency, it would have . "extraordinary" agreements .between
been much more difficult to DOE officials, Am-Pro, and Amaddress." The guards were paid on Pro's bank, North ,Carolina-based
the Tuesday a~moon followina NationsBank, were die guards able to
Memorial Day.
. be paid. Not being able to afford such
At lhc root of the paycheck prob- uncertainty with its security force,
lem are ihe financial woes of Am-Pro DOE officials infonned Am-Pro in
Protective Agency, the COlumbia, mid-May thai lhcy intended to terS.C.-based ~mpany contracted by minate the department's contract .at
the DOE to rovide security services. month's end.
Am-PrO was ce a lUcrative securiIn a last, desperate move, Am-Pro
ty services corporation that provided deelared bankruptcy, which, by law,
secwity guards for several federal . forbade the Energy Department from
and state government agenc1es. But terminating the contract. Last week,
the company recently declared bank- DOE o.fficials, with lhc assistance of
ruptcy to .avoid losing its contract Department of Justice bankruptcy
with the DOE.
e~perts, sought relief from a federal
Am-Pro· d1d not respond to our bankruptcy coun in South Carolina.
Citing pressing national sccurityconcems, Energy o.fficials asked the
coons to allow the DOE to terminate
its contract with Am-Pro.
Joseph S. Mahaley, the DOE's
director of security alfairs, expressed
· concern in a statement to the ,coun
about "the repeated fa'ilures of AmPro to make timely wage payments."
As of this writing, Am-Pro and lhc
DOE were negotiating an agreement
with the couns that would protect the
security guards from future payment
lapses. Under lhc agreement, however, Am-Pro's conb'act with the
DOE would not~ ierminated. Mahaley, m~anwhile, would like to terminate Am-Pro's conb'act, and says the
c~rrent situation is "unacceptable."
''The current conditions concerning financial instability of the Am-Pro
contract ... are seriously impacting
the effectiveness, motivation and
reliability of our protective force,"
Mahaley wrote. "If permitted to con- ·
tinue, there is a real possibility of
serious' damage to the national security or the Department's employees or
the public."
· Jack Anderson and Michael
BinsteiD are wrlten for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

••
contliti0111 and

Becky
Meeks
Becky Meeks, 45, Shade,
Satunlay, Juae 21 , 1997

IND.·

1)

I'VE ENt.JOVED
WATCHING
YOVGROWUP
THE£'E .
PAST FIVE OR

SIX YEARS.

.The SOI.ICI•to· r genera( tO the reSCUe

By Nat Hentoff
ly because s~ was the wrong color. · National Public Radio: "We couldn't sentative example of non-remedial,
Some of the most. ardent advo- And there was division in·the Justice win this case if our lives depended on affirmitive action in employment"
cates of affinnative action can do Depanment.
it."
since it is not school-wide. Furthermore harm to that increasingly beleaIn January, the Supreme Coun more, the school. though having had
One of the critics, on constituguered remedy than its opponents.
asked the Justice Depanrilent for its an li.ffirmative action policy for 18
analysis of the case. By now, Walter years, had only used it once and evenDeval Patrick, for instance, when he
Dellinger was the acting solicitor tually got rid of it altogether. Accordwas head' of the Civil Rights Division
in the Department of Justice, devot- tiona! grounds, was Walter Dellinger, general and the friend -of-lhe-coun ingly, the school has had exceedinged much energy and passion to a case .then an assistant attorney general for brief to the ,coun is essentially his . . ly limited experience with affirmative
from Piscataway·, NJ.
·
the Office of Legal Counsel. I've Dellinger disagrees with the idea that' action.
The advice to the Supreme Coun
The Board of Education there, in ·known Dellinger 'through the years, there should never be an affirmative
an economy move. was faced with and he deserves the sometimes loose- action diversity plan unless its intent by Dellinger is io not take ·the Pistwo teachers of equal seniority and ly bestowed title of constitutional is to remedy previous proven dis- cataway case. But he emphasizes in
· the brier that the Third Circuit made ·
ability, The board fired the white scholar. He is also a careful student crimination.
are
times
and
places,
he
a "serious misreading of Title Vll
·
T
here
teacher.and kept the black teacher.
of the Supreme Coun.
The reason, said the board, was
The Piscataway case eventually notes in the brief, when, for instance, itnd its purposes" when it ruled there
the need for diversity in that business went to the Third Circuit of Appeals "against the backdrop of racial can be no non-remedial affirmative
education depariment. The surviving which, last August, ruled against the unrest, a diverse police force may be action in .any case.
If the Supreme Coun accepts
teacher was the only black in the divi- Piscataway Bo;~rd. of Education, essential to secure the public suppon
sion. The Board of Education, how- emphasizing that ... unless an a.ffir- and cooperation that is necessaty for Dellinger's advice, he will have
ever, did not claim that it was reme- mative action plan has a remedial preventing and solvipg crime." So .saved the possibility of using race as
dying past discrimination in the fac- purpose (to deal with specific proven too, he says, : thel'e can ·be a com- a factor under cenain non-remedial
ulty of the high school as a whole, discrimination)," it is in violation of pelling particular need for a diverse conditions. j!ut ir the ardent paladi~
By The Associated Press
·
·
.!Jf affirmative action, Deval Patrick,
because there was no such discrimi- Title Vll of the Civil Rights Act. And work force in prisons.
•
Today is Monday, June 23, the I 74th day of 1997. There are 191 days nation.
But the Third Circuit had ruled out had prevailed, tliat window would
such an a.ffinnative action plan. said
: · left in the year.
Another factor looming over the ' the coun, should not '·'unnecessarily any such non-remedial Wle of race. If have been closed throughout the
Today's Highlight in History:
.
case was that the Supreme Coun had trammel the interests" of non-minor- this weak case were to·be judged by country. It'll be interesting to see if
Fifty years ago, on June 23, 1947, the Senate joined the House in over- · been giving very careful scrutiny to
the Supreme Coon. it is very likely ·. some or Dellinger's critics, including
ity employees.
.
• riding President Truman's veto of the Taft-Hartley Act.
racial preferences that would result in
The Thinl Circuit's !lecision was tOO Board of Education would lose those in the Justice Department, will
. On this date:
.••
people losing their jobs: It is one not unexpected because the 'Piscat- and the broad Third Circuit prohi&amp;i· openly recognize what he has done
In 1836, Congress approved the Deposit Act, which contained a provi- thing not to be hired; it is quite anoth- away case was weak from the start, tion of any non-remedial use of race for lhc faith : A benison from Jesse
sion for turning over surplus federal revenue to the states.
er to lose a regulat salary and bene- though not' to Deval Patrick and his would become 'the Jaw of the land. Jackson would be in keeping.
In 1868, Christopher Latham Sholes received a patent for an invention fits.
'•
supporters. Nonetheless, the school
It is evident from Walter
Nat .H eatorr II a nationally
b~ called a "Type"Writer."
·
There was a split around . the .board has appealed the Third Coun .Dellinger's brief that he does agree .reaowaed authority GD the Fint
Ih 1931, aviators Wiley Post and Harold Gatty took off from New York country as to whether affinnativc
opinion to the United States Supreme with lhc Third Circuit that the firing . ~lldmellt 8lld the rat olthe Bll
• on the first round-the-world flight in a single-engi.ne plane.
action was going too far when it Coun. A member of the Justice ' of the w~ite tcaci)Cr was wrong.
of IUPII.
In 1938, the Civil Aeronautics Authority was established.
resulted in letting go a teacher sole- Department told Nina Totenberg of
'l'he.
case,
he
says,
is
"an
unrepreIn 1956, Gamal Abdel Nasser was elected president .of Egypt.
In 1967. President Johnson and Soviet Premier Aleksei Kosygin held the
• first of two meetings in Glassboro, N.J.
In 1969, Warren E. Burger was sworn in as chief justice pf lhc United
• States by the man he was succeeding, Earl Warren.
In 1972. 25 years ago, President Nixon and White House chief of staff By DeW"VNE.WICKHAM
says such an empty gesture is "an. the ori.11lnal 13 colonies into an eco- . middle-class home construction and
- H.R. Haldeman discussed a plan to use the CIA to obstruct the FBI's Water- Gannett NeWs Service
,
avoidance of problem-solving," nomic giant among natioos. The to subsidize the dispersion of poor
• gate investigation. Revelation ·of the tape recording of this conversation
WASHINGTON - Getting the though I suspect his putdown of the sWeat equity that slaves put into Ibis people throiagh~JUt. such developsparked Nixon's resignation in 1974.
president to apol9gize for slavery is idea is more of a partisan attack on nation cannot be repaid with a few ments. I'm not talking about spend·
In 1985, all 329 people aboard an Air-India Boeing 747 were killed when rwt Qtte.bf my passions.
Clinton than a sincere effort to repair hollow words.
·
ing new money, just using e~isting
: the plane crashed into the Atlantic Ocean near Ireland, apparently because
Cottting ·so late
the end of the damage thai: slavery wrought.
What Clinton and Congress ovie funds wisely.
• . of a bomb.
that terrible chapter in American ~is·
"When you hun somebody; · African Americans iaa real opportu- ·
Ralhcr than apolosize for this
••
Ten years ago: The Iran-Contra hearings resumed with testimony from
tory, a pn:sidcnt.iahpolol)' for all the · whether it's your best friend or some- -.. nity to.~ out li'Om underlhc morass · natiQn's past sins. the president
fonner CIA employee Glenn·A. Robinette, who said he'd install~ a $14,000 pain and mi~ the "pecUliar insti~ · one in your family, unless you go of probl,ems that 2"!6 years of tov- should correct its current failures in
security system at the home of Lt. Col. Oliver Nonh, then helped make it tulion" visited upon millions ofblac:k · back aad I!)KIIogi~e. tllere's this Cl'llment-aanctioQed slavery . and 99 lhc areu of,edi!CIIion and employ; . appear that Nonh had paid for the work.
folki would be an actiOii full Of more underlying sense of hun," says Tony years ofJim Crow laws fostered. I'm ment opportunities.
:
Five years ago: Israel's Labor Party upset the hard-line Likud ~loc in par- symbolism than substance.
·
Hall, the white Ohio ·congressman . not talking about a handotlll'm talk- . Across Ibis Cotlntry, urban SFJ~ool
~
liarnentary elections. John Gotti, convicted of racketeering charges, was senSaying "l'm-sorry" might make who ha~hed the apology· idea.
· ing about a ~!pina band.
dillrieu are increuinsly undelfund·
• tenced in New York to life in prison.
some people feel good, but it won't
Sure, an e~pre.1sion of. remorse
That's what tllis government owes ,ed and overpopulaled with minority
:
One year ago: Congressional Democrats unveiled a "families first" leg- do a thin.g to improve lhc lives oflhe can ease a person's pain- but not in blackfolks.And this is the issue Clio- studenu. Where law once dic:talfd
! islative package aimed at winning middle-class voters and retaking Capitol millions of descendants of African this case. The rust slave ship landed . ton shoulcl. iddrels.
·
~hool segreption, now whil!l flisht
1.
Hill. Fonner Greek prime ministe,r Andreas Papandreou died at age 77.
slaves whole troubles are rooted in in Vii'Jiinia in 1619, a yeir before the
ltastead .of an apoloay, he needi to is·the villain. For most black schoolToday's Birthdays: Advertising e~ecutive David Ogilvy is 86. Foqner Sec:- Ibis nation's 2 Ill-century e~pcri- Mayflower dropped aticbor 11 Ply- offet up a domestic Manhall Plan to cbilclren,lack of inte.,.Uon is not the
retary of State William P. Rogers is 84. Actress Irene Wortb is 81. Singer ment in human bondage.
mouth ltock. Slavery was a way of wipe 0111 tilt urban sluins that .,.,ve problem, inadequate fundinl of the
• June Carter Cash is 68. Singer Diana Trask is 57. Musical conductor JIIIICs
.N if to drive this point home, Bill : life in thi~ CO\Intry for a long time, . become poverty's breedin1 II'OIInd. schools they attend is. The president
Levine is 54.. Rhyihm-and-blues singer Rosetta Hightower qhe Orlons) is · Cltnton · says only an apology is and its nefarious benefiu were Chief among' iu elements should be should look ror creative ways to fi~
53. Ac\orTed Shackelfonl isS I. Actor Bryan Brown is 50. Supn:mc Coun under Couideration repara'. enjoyed by 1 wide CrOll leclion of I stratc&amp;Y to ilop buildin1 bousin&amp; for this jMOble.11.
'
Justice Clarence 'J'bomN is -49. Aclml Fnncel McDonlllnd 11 40. A.ctrul ti0111. ln other worda,lip -me, not Americaftl. , ,
poor people. Lib dllstave qllldlrs
JC.in Oustmon ("'Jipl") is38. Rock musleiln Steve Shelley (Sollie Youth) ea1i, Ia all~ he intends to offer up
11 the lilt ceacury, tlavea pro- .of old. sUch pulllic: houlilll illltllllI 4oll't object to Bill Cllatoupol, is 3!1. RhyiJtln..and-bluea sinpr Vqo Willilllll (Ohollowns DJs). is 22.
as proof of his remone for the~- du ~ed the raw 11111eriaiJ that fue1ec1 tiollllirea J19venj.
Olizilll for slavery, I just !hint he
• lhouaht for'Ibclay: "Sulferiaa widtout Undenwidina in lhl•life is a heap turiol of free labor that Ibis nation theenJinesofthil illlion'sindualriIfCiiiiiOIIWMUtomalrallllllllda, lhould 1110 ICiioli, not won!f. to
wone lhan sulferin1 when you have at Jeaat the p-ain of an idea what it's extracted li'Om Its sla-.
11 NWiulion. They were the bact- he can do 10 by llliq flltltlrtll haUl- OJtpiaa his leiiiCN'M.
all for." - Mil)' Ellen Chase, Americu IUIItor (1887-1973).
Newt Oii!Jrich is iiaht ~n he booe of an economy that bansformed in1 clollm to flllllr the powdl of

NatHentoff

Today in history

/c6 ,
,,

By The Asaoclated Press
At least 14 people have died in
b'affic accidents on Ohio roads this
weekend, law enforcement agencies
said.
.
The State Highway Patrol coun!ed fatalities from 6 p.m. Friday until
midnight Sunday,
The dead:
. SUNDAY .
GRANVILLE Donald L.
Angle, 32, of Hebron, when his motorcycle' ran off a road in Licking
County and hit a tree.
· ATIIENS - Terry W. Downey,
41, of Jaekson, w~n his motorcycle
crashed along U.S. SO in Athens
County.
TOLEDO - Karen S. Hieber, 30,
ofToledo, in a three-vehicle accident .
on a Lucas County road. ·
McCONNELSVILLE- Roben
l Grover, 28, of Columbus, in twocar accident on a Morgan County
road.
,
CENTERBURG - ·· Michelle
Sabo, 20, her father, Samuel, and

r

'

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS113-Pub11Nbed e~ery nftemoon, Monday lhroUJh
Friday, Ill Coun Sl .. Pomiroy, Ohio. by the
Ohio Vane, _PublishiiiJ CompanyiOannen Co..
Po"""'Y· Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. SC&lt;ood
tiOKI pol. . pllid a1 Pomeroy, Ohia.

'

M...bll~1'111c Auociated Preu, and the Ohio
.NtwiJIGI'Cf A...ociBIIOI.
·
POSTMA,.-s~s Sead addma «MTCCdons ~o
The Daily· Sentinel, Ill Court $1.. Pomeroy.
OIIH&gt; 4S769.

•

Stbcks
Am E.. Power ........................41 '2.
AkzO ••••••••••••• ~ .,.......................86\

AmrTech ...............~ ................79).
.Aahlend ou ...........................47\

AT6T ....................................~•.37
Bank One ..............................
Bob EYII\8 ............................11'\

en

......~..................s2\

ott·cers
recov·er
1

Stronger clean air standards

EMS units log eight calls

Tobacco growers

~;::::::::::;;:::::::::::::ii:t
Hospital news·
·.................1•• .:...............12'1.

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Meig$ announcements

SINGLE COPY I'RICI
Doily.: ............ ..... ........ ;.................... :...)!~

No subocrlpdGO by moil permiiiOd In .,...

,,

.

Today's livestock repo·rt

Ctllrm ~ .....;....•.••..-.........&amp;\.

si=---.

not

UMW Jo&lt;~~;~~al. Rohens, of Cabin
Creek, Kanawha County, is seeking
re'election l~ter this year.
He helped negotiate a reopener
agreement to !he 1993 National j!ituminous Co~ Wage Agreement and
improved pe~~ion coverage for active
union coal IJ!incrs.
The · agreement does not expire
until Aug. 31 .. ~998, but the union has
asked
. for an ~ arly stan to negotia·
.
uons.
1Rohens sai4 most' miners want
increased emp\~yer contributions ·to
the UMW pens1on fund.

e~-w.,....,.

WASHINOTON(AP)-AsCoa- Anney, R-Texas, said be tltougbt
died
at Mount Carmel gresS beads for climactic votes on the Clinton would sign lhc tax cut portion
East Hospital in Columbus.
·
balanced budget package, Preai~nt of the P.ackase, bucking pressure
Born Man:lt 12, 1952 in Athens, daughter of Ambroie and Zelcla VanMeter Clinton and lhc Senate's Republican from fellow Democrats who say it
HOWII'd of Guysville, alae was a 1970 graduate of Alexaader High School leader are at odds over whether tbe should be rejected beca11se most of
plan should require wealthier older the benefits go to the rich.
and was employed 11 Tri-County Mental Health and Counselins Services.
She was a ~ber of lhe SL John's Catholic Church, Guysville.
Americans to pay more for lhcir
The House and Senate hope to linShe is survived by her husband, Greg Meeks; two daughten and sons-in- Medicare health coverage.
·
ish work this week on the huge
law, Kristine and Scliu Furner of Athens, and JiU and Scott Lallier or Shade;
·Majority Leader Trent Lott. R- spending and tax cut bills that will be
a dauahter and special friend, Leah Meeks and Tim Bissell of Shade; a son, Miss., said on CBS' " Face the a framework for the balanced-budget
Scott Meeks of Shade; tluee annclchildren; a sister and brother-in-law, Janet Nation" Sunday morning that he hid agreement crafted between lhc White
and Kenneth Bell of Ouysvill~; ·and two .brothers and sisters-in-law, Roger spoken with Clinton about a Senate House and the Rcpublic•n congresand Vicki l{oward, and Richard "Dickie" and Nancy Howllld, all of Guysville. provision raising deductibles for sionalleades'ship.
Disputes over lhc tax cut package,
Services will be II a.m. Tuesday in lhc Christ the King Catholic Church . affluent Medicare recipients and the
in At,hens, with Monsignor D!laald Horak officiating. Burial will follow in jxesident "indicated that he wouldn't which includes $85 billion in cut.over
St. John's Cemetery. Friends may call today from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the object if we included it in the pack- live years through a $500-per-child
Hughes-Blower Funeral Home in Alhcns, where a vigil service will be held age."
tax credit, education initiatives and
at 7 p.m.
But at a news conference in Den- capital gains and estate tax cuts, cenver several hours later wrapping up ter on how lhc relief is distributed.
his summit with otherworld leaders,
Democrats objecttoGOPplans to
Clinton said he feared such a provi- deny the child tax credit to those who
do not cam enough to pay income
Clara Louise Mitchell, 80; Coral Springs, Fla., died Sunday, Junc23, 1997 sion could explode lhc deal. .
"We haVe ·a got a great budget tax. "This is no longer a debate about
at lhc Northwest.Regional Medical Center. Margate, Fla.
·
agn:ement;" he said. "We'should not whether we're having a tax cut. It's
She was a former member of lhc Linden Heights Methodist Church.
Surviving are a son and daughter-in-law, ThOmas Craig and Lisa Mitchell alter it unless there is agn:emi:nt about who. gets them," Rep. Vic
of Santa Cruz, Calif.; daughtcn and sons-in-law, Grace and Ralph Hanawalt · among all the parties ... because oth- Fazio, D-Calif., said on "Fox News
.
.
of Merritt Island, Fla., Donna and Tom Thomas of Coral Springs, Fla., Jeanne erwise we risk undermining the Sunday."
.
But Anney, appearing on NBC's .
and Steve Drown of Gahanna,.and Renilda and Michael Marshall of Colum- prize."
The president added he was will- "Meet The Press,... reiterated the
bus; si~ grandchildren and three areat-grandchildren; a brother and sistering
to consider the idea of the high- . Republican view that transferring
in-law, Osby and Mary Martin of Middlcpon; sisters, Edna Martin of Middlepon. Sylvia George of Galena, Janice Roush Jnd Connie DeVor, both of er deductibles but that the issue · money to people who do not pay .
Ponsmouth. and Carolyn Rummel of Nebraska; and many nieces and should be set aside during the bal-. income tax was another form of weianced-budget debate.
fare. "That point is non-negotiable,"
nephews.
Under
the
Senate
plan,
annual
he said.
She was was preceded in death by her husband of 49 years; Thomas; pardeductiblcs
that
Medicare
recipients
· The .Senate version does provide
ents, John Edward 11nd Mary Frances Blankenship Martin; and si~ brothers
must pay for doctor's visits and oth- some relief for lower-income fiLmiand one sister. ·
'
, Friends may call Wednesday from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. at the Shoemaker er outpatient treatment would jump lies. Treasury Secretary R9ben Rubin
Funeral Home, 2830 Cleveland Ave., Columbus, where services will be held · from the current $100 to $S40 for said on CBS that the Senate had made
Thu..Sday at 10:30 a.m., with Pastor Will Marling officiating. Burial will be individuals with annual iocomes over substantial improvements, but "we
$50,000 and couples above $75,000. still have very serious concerns about
in the Franklin Hills Memorial Gardens, Canal Winchester.
These co-payments would slowly the bill in the Senate....
'
'
•
·
rise to a maximum of about $2,160
The White House also strongly
per person for those with incomes objects to GOP plans to index the
above $100,000 and couples above capital gains tax for inflation, which ·
Snm-ry of last week's auc· $12.5~000.
the administration says is too cxpenCOLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaReg~!ess of their income, all sive, but Rubin said it was "a little bit
Ohio direct hog prices at selected tlolll at HUisboro, Eatoa, Farmerstow
a,
Laacaste~,
·
Wapakoneta,
bencfic1an
. .es now·pay .lhc first s. I 00 early in the game to he talking about
buying points Monday as provided
'
h
Mouat
Ve111011,
Bucyrus,
Crestoa,
m
p
ystc1an
.ees,
wt lh Med1.care Veto."
by the U.S. Department of AgriculCaldwell811d
Gallipolis:
'-JIII%ii"S'O
Pc:~ent
of
lhc rest. .
Loll also showed a willingness to
ture Market News:
Hogs:
steady
to
2.00
higher.
The
30-nullion-member
Amencan·
compromise
. on that issue, saying:
Barrows and gilts: mostly SO
· Bu~hcr hogs: 44.50-61 .25. .
Association. o.f Retired Per.sons has "we' ll have to factor in their thinkcents; demand moderate on light to
!ed opposition to I he mcrease. ing."
Cattle:
uneven,
2.00
lower
to
3.00
moderate movement.
Becau~e m':','y M.edic~ recipients
Both Lott and Arm~y stressed that
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. collhtry higher.
Slaughter
steers:
choice
60.00buy
pnvate
Mcd1gap
msurance
to
·
Clinton
strong supponed the balpoints 57.00-58.50, few 59.00; plants
68.'10;
select
56.00-64.00.
~over
cu~nt
deductibles,
lowanced
budget
deal and, if necessary,
.58.00-59.50, few 60.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 60.00- 1ncome poltcy-holders could end up · \VOUld break with congressional
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 52.0068.00;
select 55.00-66.00.
. . paying mo~ along with tl)e affluent, Democrats who strongly oppose parts
57.00; 210-230 lbs. 47.50-52.00.
Cows:
steady
to
3.00
higher;
all
AARP offic1als have argued.
of it.
Sows: steady to finn, some 1.00
cows
55.00
and
down.
The
~ouse's version of the packThe president, said Lott, "has·
higher. ,
Bulls:
steady
to
4.00
higher·
all
age
to
bnngfederal
spendmg
and
revshown
that sometimes he goes
U.S. 1-3 300-SOO lbs. 42.00-45.00,
'
en~es in l~ne by 2002 contains no co- against the very liberal Democrats in
so0-600 lbs. 45.00-47.00. few over bull~ 68 :50 and.down.
Veal
calves·
nla·
choice
125.00
payment mcrease.
.
Congress - maybe he will do it
600 lbs. 48.00-49.00.
and down.
·
'
House
Majority
Leader
Dick
again."
Boars; 38.00-42.00.
Sheep and lambs: 2.00 to 5.50
,
Estimated receipts: 29,000.
Prices frolll Prodacen Llve- lower; choice wools ?s.ao:-96.50;
stole~
choice clips 77.00-96.®; feeder
·
stoelr~latloa:
·
Hog market trend for Monday: lambs 101.00 and down; aged sheep
A stolen automobile wa5 recovered and returned to its ow rs on Satur,
steady.
49.00 and down.
day evening.
.
·
According to lhc Pomeroy Police Depanment, a call was received concerning a 1993 Oldsmobile, believed to have broken down at the intersection of East Main Streei an!l Nyc Avenue.
·
.Upon investigation, it was discovered that the car, bearing dealer's tags,
Trustees IO Dteet
Mercer Midkiff will hold a reunion had been stolen from the parking lot at Eastman's Foodland in Point PleasC.arleton College Board of ~unday at the home of Ross and Pam ant, W.Va., and belonged to Gallia Auto Sales.
Trustees will have its annual meeting Flowers, 1911 Shafer Road, NelNo fingerprints were apparent on the car, which was determined to have
Thursday, 7 p.m. at the residence of sonville. The home is located near the been abandoned. It was later retumed to the owners, David and Don Mink
Bob Wingett, president. All board Holiness campgrounds and Bow of Bidwell.
·
J!bembers are urged to attend.
Hunters Club. For more infonnation.
.descendants may call 664-3807.
Southen Sc:bool Board
The Southern · Local Board of Po111ona Gran1e
House is dearening. As the clock ticks
(Continued from Pllge 1)
Meigs
Counl~
Pomona
Orange
Education will D)eet tonight in regQ"The public will know how the ·toward the July 19 deadline for the
Iar session at 7:30 in the Southern will met Friday at Star Orang~ hall, . president and vice president voted," White House's decision, Gore con.7:'30 p.m. instead ofJuly 4 as regu- Deb ·Callahan, president of · the tinues to hold his cards close to his
High School cafeteria in Racine.
larly scheduled. Degree work will be. League of Conservation Voters, chest.
e~empli(ied in full fonn for inspec·· Meigs Local Board
"We've inet with him on ·the
warned this week.
tion.
The Meigs Local Board of EduA coalition of i!ldustries, including issue, we've urged him to speak out.''
cation will meet Thursday, 7 p.m. at
oil and manufacturing groups, are said Phil Clapp or the Environmen.
the disb'ict's central o.ffice in the RACO meeting
running an equally innovative cam- tallnfonnation Center. "And so far,
· The Racine Area Community paisn. Wary of seeming like slick. we' ve heard nothing but silence."
Pomeroy Municipal Building.
Organization will meet Tuesday, 6:30 Beltway ins.iders. the coalition decidp.m. nt Star Mill Park. New members ed not to award contracts to panisanReunion set
Descendants of Issac and Lydia welcome.
tinged lobbying finns like the one
now run by former Republican
National Committee Chaimuin Haley
Barbour.
Instead, the group is targeting
Units of lhe Meigs County Emer- ed.
mayors, county officials and business
MIDDLEPORT
gency Medical Service recorded eight
8:20p.m. Saturday, volunteer fire people, and urging them to write II)
calls for assistance Saturday and
Congress complaining aboUt the stanSunday. UnitS responding included: department and squad to State Route dards. Since hundreds or counties
5S4, structure fire.at Herb Slone resCENTRAL DISPATCH
would be out of compliance under the
10:58 a.m. Saturday, Crosspoint idence, no injuries reported, Pomeroy new standards, opposition to the
Apartmenls, Middlepon, Audry VFD assisted,.
standards hasn't been hard to rally.
POMEROY
Dougherty, Holzer Medical Center;
Ohio GOP Gov. George Voinovich
12:01 a.m. Sunday, VFD and
3: IS p.m. Saturday, Third Stn:et,
. is among those who oppose stiffer
Racine, Russell Meadows, HMC, squad to Mulberry AVenue, smoke
rules. "If Browner would just enforce
odor.
Racine sqUad assisted;
·
the
standards that are there and get
.6:32 p.m..Saturday, State Route
people to reach those, she would do
689, Albany, Paul Carter, treated at
'.
more
to help the environment than to
the scene;
(Continued from Pllge 1) .
increase
the standards. fully knowing
2:04 p.m. Sunday, Condor Street, Brown County.
·
that·
in·
some
areas they are never
Pomeroy, Lisa Haggy, Veterans
One of those.who did not like the going to (be) reached," Voinovich
Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy squad settlement is Carolyn White, 52, of
said.
.
assisted; .
Ludlow.
Amid
the
din
from the competing ·
- 8!03 p.m. Sunday,· Ptarl Street,
"It's our right to smoke," she said. camps, the silence from the .White
Middleport, Latuna Thomas, VMH; . "This country is getliog to where it
10:01 p.m. . Sunday, Fr1J1ces is a conin\unist state. I qrce that chil'
Eskew, VMH, Pomeroy squad lissist- dren sliouldn 't smoke. but adults
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
should be able to do what they
and
·.
_
want.
.
The Poll'l!eroy Fire Dept.
· Gone Dwyer, 4S, of Akron, said
.
agreed:
•
.
VeteJ:a~~~ Memorial
A•• now taking orders to have flllmiiJ
· Saturday ~missions - none.
"I smoke becaUSe I wanno and
plotu... taken for t8.8&amp; JOU will receive a
Saturday discharges - Mary nobody is going to change my
canvas mounted I Ox 13 famiiJ portl'alt.
Wingcu..
mind," he said. "If the price of cigda ad · ·
Addltla.wal portralb m&amp;J be purchased when
arettes soes up. I'll just switch to a
.;n Y IDJSilODS- lione .
~ltsaraahown.
·
.
chellper brand. If I ever decide to quit,
unday" dilcbariea- none.
it'll be my decision." · ·
Holzer Medlc.J C.ter .
Plotu..S will be taken .tuna 18th 30th at
Dilchtlrps Juae 20 - COle
Rellilen oxpect the settlement to
Tile Pomeroy FIN Dept., Butternut Ava. In
Spurlin, Jeremy Dutton, Kenneth· havo little effect on sales.
PomaPOJ• We will ca.wtaot you regal'dlng JOUP
Williams, Mrs. Richard Hill atld
"I don't think it will be a big
daughter,
deal," said Jim Rolf. manager of C•- ' photog• aphy appointment time•
' "'-"·- J
21'
De
If 8lfJ ~..... oontaoa
----..- ...
lores roual Keyer 'IOblcco Shoppe in
suburban Oncinnati. ·"We sdl more
Stave HartenNoh 881·7741
Aeiker, Charlea Blj&amp;htwell.
and
more
cigan
e~day.
'Ibbacco
in
.
OP
Juae 22- Owies
8
cigan is all-natural compared to all
1cott walton 181·3314 .
(PIIblldaed willa~
ilhe additives in ciprenes."

SUBSCRIPTION RATIS
11r
Corrlortr M - - · $2.00
One .................................................
One MOIIIh ............................... .................$1.70
Ole Yt~r•.....•.....:. .......... ..,. ....................S104',00

Subo&lt;ribotll 1101 ....... 10 PV
mojl
remit In odvonce ,....,, 10 'lbo lloiiJ Sclltlaol
on 1 dlree, lil or I l: 11'1011111 '-'L CNdlt wift be

1

mother, Carol Lynn, 42, all of Walbridged n a two-car crash atthe intersectio11 of a county road and Ohio
314 in Kno~ County.
SATURDAY
LANCASTER- Dwight W. Carpenter, 73, of Bremen, in a two-vehicle ~ident on state Rou!e.•204 in
Fairfield County.
WAPAKONETA Taigi J.
Adams, 20, and passengers Regina R.
Blllir,_:iS, .and Shiann Y. Adams, 2
montlis, all of Jackson, Ky., m a twovehicle accident on Interstate 75 in
Auglaize County.
NEy.' LEXINGTON-.. Suzanna
Estep, ~4, of Crooksville, m a twovehicle accident on state Route 13 in
Perry County.
WARREN - . Joseph L. Miller,
42, of .,fanndale, when his truck
crashed.1.01i Ohio 88 in Trumbull
County.
·
F81DAY NIGHT
TOLI;PO- Patricia A. Diehl, 57,
of Toledll, a JlCjiestrian struck by a
v~ on a , ~ucas County roid.

UMW readies proposals .
for contract negotiations
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (Al')·J)nion officials say the nation's min·
~rs will be asking for wage increases, more money for b'aining and education programs and improved pension conb'ibutions when early conlfa&lt;;t talks begin this summer.
'
United Mine Workers of America
President Cecil Robens outlined th.e
11oals in last week's . issue of The

after

"

Cloudy

•

14 killed on Ohio.highways

Action ·best apology for slavery, not words

I

Pr. Clo::cly

I

By The Associated Prns
It will be.sunny and hot in Ohio for the next few days.
.
Lows tonight will be 65 to 70 in nonhern Ohio and near 70 in the south.
Highs Tuesday will be in the 90s. •
.
High temperatures and humidity are forecast for later in the week, along
with rain showers and lhunderstorins.
The record high temperature for Ibis date at the Columbus weather station ll{as 96 in \948. The record.low was 44 in 1918.
·
·
Sunset today will be at 9:04p.m. Sunrise Tuesday will be at 6:04a.m.
Weather foft&lt;ast:
·
Tonight ... Mostly clear. Areas of fog developing late. Lows in the mid 60s.
Calm wind.
Tuesday... Mostly sunny and hot. Highs in the lower 90s.
Tuesday night... Clear. Lows from the upper 60s to the lower 70s.
Extended forecast:
Wednesday... Partly cloudy. Achance of showers and thunderstorms in the
afternoon. Highs .from the upper 80s to around 90.
·
Thursday .. .Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Lows near 70 and highs in the upper 80s to around 90.
·
Friday...Mostly cloudy wiih a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows
near 70 and highs in the lower 80s.

..

I

sunnr

"

.Clinton, Lott at odds
over deductibles-hike

·
M
•
h
II
ar·
8
·
•
ltC
e
'
cl
L

Hot, -dry weather staying
around through ·Tuesday

.

I

1.,

..

..

~tOI .cam

• lColumbusl93•

W.VA.

r---------------------------...-----------.

The Dilly SenUnel• Pege 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OHIO We&lt;ltllcr

By JICk Anderaon

~inl948,

0 111nlll8nall«

Monday,Jur'II23,1H7

DOE security force is on shaky ground

.The ·Daily .Sentinel

CHARLENE HOEFUCH

'

'

It

·

a

=-...

I.

'

I '

'

\

'

�..

llondlry, June 23, 1117

The Daily Sentine!

Sports.

Pomeroy •llldclleport, Ohio

Els wins
Buick
Classic

Alomar's three-run HR helps
Indians down Yankees 5·2
CLEVELAND { AP) - Catcher
Sandy Alomar's hunch paid off with
a three-run homer and helped the .
Cleveland Indians 10 vicoory over the
New York Yankees.
"On the pitch I hil for a homer, I
went up to the plale intending to be
aggressive," said Alomar. "I was
looking fo r a breaking ball. I guessed
right and ittumed out well for me."
Alomar hit his homer into the leftfield bleachers in .the fourth inning of
the Indians' 5-2 victory Sunday.
Alomar had already extended his
career-high hilling streak to 21
games with a second-innin'g single
hefore hitting the homer.
Alomar has hit .442 (34-for-77)
during his streak to raise his average
to .373, second in the ALto .Chicago's Frank Thomas at .383.
Alo111ar's lith home run. backed
another solid outing by pitcher Brian Anderson (2- I).
. The left-hander, who scattered

ifying to do that."
Indians manager .Mike Hargrove
said Anderson showed how much he
ha5 developed.
"Brian is still inconsistent with
his curveball, but it gives bauers
somelhing else to thing about,.. said
Hargrove. "With his changeup and
the abili1y to spot the fastball, that
seiS everything up. Brian has shown
confidence to·put pitches where he
needs to in order to gel batters out.
He has been a big plus."
Cleveland took the final two ·
games of the series, but is just 4-13
at Jacobs Field against the Yankees
since the ballpark opened in I995.
Paul Assenmacher and Mike
Jackson each pitched one inning of
relief, with Jackson getting his eighth
save.

New York scored twice in the
fifth after loading the bases with
none out on consecutive singles by
Charlie Hayes, Mariano Duncan and
seven hi~s over se ven innings, Chad Cunis. Hayes scored on a sacallowed two runs and one walk and rifice fly by Derek Jeter, and Duncan
struck out fi ve in his lhird start since came horne on Pat Kelly's bloop sinbeing recalled June II from .Class gle to right.
AAA Buffalo, where h~ was .4-0.
· "I think our team was liule frusAnderson said he wasn 'I happy trated today," said Yankees managwith the way he threw Sunday, but er Joe Torre. "We hit those balls hard
he was pleased with the resuiiS.
and got nothing to show for it, well,
"It feels good to win without your a couple of runs, but it could have
good stuff," he said. "Anybody at been much more."
this,level, when they're on, will win.
Cleveland went ahead I -0 in the
When you are not on and you know first. Kevin SeitZ~r's hit-and-run
it you have to keep your learn in the single sent Marquis Grissom 10 third.
game and pull out a win. It was grat- Grissom, who had led off with a single, scored when Julio Franco hit

into a double play.
Cleveland IIUidc it 5-2 in the seventh as Omar Vizquel hit a two-out
double and scored on Grissom's
single off shonstop Jeter's stove..
Wells (8-4), whose ERA rose to
3.3 1 career against Cleveland,
allowed four runs on seven hits over
four innings. He left with a muscle
spasm in his lower back after fielding an infield hit by Manny Ramirez
in the fourth.
Kenny Rogers relieved and
allowed one run on three hits and ohe
walk over four inninss. It was his
first relief appearance since April 9,
1993 when he was with the Texas
Rangers.
Notes: The Indians won· two
straight from the Yankees in Cleve·
land for the first time since August
27-28,1993 .... Aiomar's lith homer
came in his I99th at bat. He hit II ·
homers all of 1996 in 418 at·baiS. ...
Wells' loss was his first 10 Cleveland
since Sept. 17, 1993, when he was
with Detroit. ... Cleveland avoided
becoming the first AL team to lose
I ,000 games to one opponent. The·
Yankees lead the 97-year-old series
999-805 .... Grissom has hit .444 (8for-18) since returning to the leadoff
spot June 17 .... New York's 'nno
Maninez went 1-for-4. He is hilling
just .199 (28-for-141 ) in 35 games
since his average peaked at .368 on
May 9 ... . Ramirez has reached base
safely in eight straight plate appearances with six hilS and two .walks.
He is on a 39-for-92 (.424) streak.

Gordon coasts ~o victory
in inaugural California 500

By JOIL ITASHENKO
HARRISON. N.Y. (AP) - The
IJ'8poiiJe was so IYP.ical ofE!rnie E!ls.
Informed that his victory Sunday
in the Buick Classie, coupled with
last week's U.S. Open championship, had propelled him past Tiger
Woods to No. 1 in the world rankings, E!ls looked puzzled and asked,
"'No 1?'"

HIGH
PARTICIPANTS- 1"- high
IChool lllhlltes 'toOk pert In the 1817 1111gs
lllreucler glrla beakelbell camp IMt WMk It
Melga High Sohool.-ln front are (L-A) Stephlt11e

GETS DOVBLE - The St Loula Cardinals'
Dellno DeShields alldu Into HCOnd base with a·
double while IIYokllng the tag of Cincinnati shortatop Pokey Reese In the flrlt Inning of Sunday's

National League game In St. Loula, where ·the
Cardinals won 5-2. Watching the play Ia umpire
Ron Darling. (AP)

Cardinals defeat Reds 5·2

s
. ed

"I think winning this ~s might
be something we all look 'back on," · .
Lankford said. "I think we're final-.
ly playing our kind·of baseblill and
it showed this weekend.
... You had key hilS by Brian (Jordan) and strong pitching by Alan
Benes. Winning this series can be the
stan oflhe stretch that wins the division·for us."
Benes (7-6) allowed two runs,
struck out seven and walked four in
eight innings before giving way to
reliever Dennis Eckersley, .who tied
Jeff Reardon for sec\)nd plaeci on the
career saves list with 367 when he
pitched a perfect ninth. Lee Smith of
Montreal has 478 saves.
La . Russa said EckersleY, had .
compiled a great record considering
that he had spent much of his~ areer
as a staner. "In a baseball t01t n like
this, his accomplishments I,Tiean
something, especially when you consider he's only been a reliever for 11 12 years."
Reliever Scott Sullivan ( 1-2),

who allowed one run ·in 2 1/3 ·
innings, was charged with the loss.
Reds staner Brett Toml&lt;o allowed
two runs in 4 113 and said he didn't
understand why he was lifted from
the game.
.
"It's Ray's decision," he said. of
manager Ray ~night. "I may not .
have had much on my pitches but I ·
was giving it everytbing I had. "
Knight seemed more conterned
about his team's hiuin'g than its
pitching;
"We're scuffling for runs,"
Knight said. "You don 't win many
games with f9ur hits."
· . .
Notes: The Reds' pitching ·slaff is.
the only one in the majors \l{ithout a
complete game. :.:. The ,C!'!'dimils
drew a Bat Day crowd of 43) 9'4, ihc
sixth straight crowd of 40,000 or
more .... John Mabry was 0-for-4 to
end his streak of reaching base by hit
or a walk at 30 games. ... Terry
Pendleton left the game after fouling ·
a pitch off his right foot in the founh
inning. X-rays were inconclusive.

Eutem Dl•lsfon

.AL standings

Ium

Eastern Dlvidon

:w.
Bollimorc ..... .......... 4~

Ium

L. 1'&lt;1.

22 .686
New York ............ :.40 J2 . ~.~6
Toromo ................. J ~ .) 6 .471!

Deuoir....................n J8 .457
Bo01oo.................32 40 .444

CJntniiMvilion
CLEVELA.ND ....... ~ 7 32 . ~ :46
KonsasCiry ........... :\4 3 ~ .493
Milwouk.et ............. ~4 J~ .49J
O.icugo................. .J4 J7 .479 '
Minnesoea ...............n J9 .458

Wenem Dit-!Ron
Seuule ....................42 Jl ..n~
'Annheim ...... .......... JK ) 4 .528

Texa• ..................... 36

3~

. ~07

Onklnnd ................ 3 0 ~t .400

!ill
9

14\·
16

I7 ·

J
4

.'i ~

}i

1 .~

Baltimore !'i , Toronto 2
·
BQston 2. Detroil I.
CLEVELANDS. N.Y. Yaakces2
Chicago White So" l . MinhaQia I
Kan.w: Ci'l y 6, Milwa•kcc S
Anaheim 7, Oakland 6 .
Seaule 6, Texu4

·Tonl1ht's pm..
N.Y. Yaakces (Cone 7-3) IU ~roil
(Ura4-J). 7:0S P:.m.
"'
Minaes ota (Radke 7 - ~ ) at CLEVELAND (Oaea l-7). 7:05 p.ni.
Boslon (Scle 8-S) at Toronto (WilliliN
1 2-6), 7:3S p.m.
,Bal~imore (Key 11 -l) at Mllwau,tee
·f (0 Amu;o .-.3), 8:05p.m.
K11nw Cily (RosadO 7·3) ll O.it110
1' While Sox (Drabek 6-4), 8:05p.m.
·
! Anlhdm (Wauon ,_.) at TelM (Oiiv·
.
1 er l-8), 8:35 p.m.
..
Oakli.11d (Telaheder 2-l) ar Sctnle
(!no&lt; 1·2). 10:0!1 p.m.

Tuoallay'apaM

N.Y. Yankcu (Mcldou 3-2) af De-:
s..,),7:05p.m.
Mlnnetoll {Sceven1 0.0) at CLEVELAND (Wrilhl 0.0). 7:05 p.m.
Boaon {SupJ~U 2·0) a1: Toronto (Andujor0-3), 7:3.! p.m.
•
Ballimore (Botkie J.:\) • MilwiUtot
1
; ( - 3-2). 8:0!1 p.m.
·
:
" - Cioy (Pinolty 2--4) • Oi&lt;aJo
Wb6tr Sox (Aivara 5-6), 1:05 p.m.
Alllbeim &lt;~"2l • r ... (Hill
troit (Oiivate~

.

OokJMcl ( K - 1·7) It Seonle (Jolin10:05 p.m.

101111 · 1~

•

S1 . Louis ............... :n

~9

.438

Piltsburgh ............. .33 40 . 4.~2
CJNCJNNATL..... JO 42 .417
Chicnao ................. 2M 4S .384

Iii
3'11
~ ~:

6
24

~
3~

6

8~

Watt1111DiYlslon

San Francisco ........42 31 .575
Co!OIJ(Io ................ 39 JS .S27
Los AnJCICI .......... 36 J1 .493
SnnDie&amp;~ .............. 31

Sunday's scores

4-5~ 8:35 p.m.

Central Oiw......
Houslon ................ :37 37 .SOO

J'r:

CLEVELAND IJ. N.Y. Y:~nk 1!01 4
Ballimore 5, Toronto I
Olicago While Sox 5. Minne5otll ~
Ot:lmit It BMion 4
Sen11le l ~ . Tu DJ M·
Annheim 5. Oakland J
K o n ~s City 111Milwauktc, ppd .. min

~

:W. L 1'&lt;1.

A1lan1.a ................. 47 26 .644
Flnnoo ................. ..4~ 29 .m
Monlrea1 ........ :..... ..4 1 .~I . ~9
New York ............ ..41 n .S62
Philadelphia .......... .22 49 .310

~

Saturday's scores

.1

S. Alomor, CLEVELAND, .373: W.
Clark. Te11a s",. J~~ ; IRodriJ•e..z, Teua1.
..l46 ; Cora. S eaul~ • .340: 0fftl'. Te"a~.
JJR; R..Un:z, CLEVELAND. .J3l: lol.
Vauahn. Boston . .JH: Justice. CLEVE-

42

.425

J1f!
6

It

Saturday's scores
Moncrul 4, Florida 3
Hau11on 7, Chicago Cubl]
Los·Anaelea II , San Francisco 0
N.Y. M~1 s 3, Pinaburgh 2
A1lan1a 9, Philadelllhia 8
S1. Louia 6, CINCiNNATI 2
CoiOflldo 9, SWJ Dicso 4

Sunday'sscorea
Flofida 2, Monera! 0
·
· A1lama 12, Philadelphia S
Sr. Louis ~. CrNCJNNATJ 2
Houlfua 3. Chicqo Cubs I
N.Y. Meoo l2, Pinsburp9tl0)
San Dtego 4, Cokwudo l
San Francisco 4, Los Anaeles 2

.

Toalpt's pmes

CINCINNATI (Smiley S-81'" Monor.nl (Bullinaer4-6), 7:35p.m.
Florida (Htlliaal-4) 11 Phihwlelphia
(SchillinJ 8-6).. 7 :3~ p.m.
.
Allanla (Smoltz 6·6) at .N.Y. Men
CRted 4-4). 7:40p.m.
.
Chicaao CUbs (Oonulcr. 2· 1) o.t St.
Loui• (Vale....,. 2' 9). 8:0!1
'Pitt1Hrah (Cordova .5·4 11 HOMston
CGIICIA3--1), !&lt;IS p.m.
.. Colorado {Rita 5-6) at Los Anples
(Nomo 6-6), 10:«1' p.m.
·.
s.. Die&amp;o cc..n.n. 4-ll " s... F....
ci1&lt;0 (Gordiler 8-2). 10:0!1 p.m.

r·'"·

Tuaclay'opmeo
s.n DJeao (ll&lt;kaoll 1--4) 111 Sao Fran-

a,..&lt;- H&gt;. J::Up.m.

LAND. Xt~ .

RUNS : Oriffey. Sea-tie, 61 :
Knoblauch, Minntioca:, ~7; BeWilliam~.'
New York, ~: Hollla1, ANileim, SJ ; £.
Martinez. Scallle. :12; ARodriJUCl. S~lll ­
tle. Sl ; F. Thnnw. Chicoao. 50.
RBI: Griff~y. Scaule, n: T. Martinez, . ,
New York. 63: ToCiarlt.. Detroit, 62 :
Belle, Ol.icQ&amp;o, 62: Buhnn, Seattle, ~8; F.
Thomp, Chh:aao. S:1 : M~;Owirt. Oak~
lnnd. :1:1.
· ..
HITS: IRodriauez, Te"u., 99; GAnder·
son, Anaheim. 91: Orftr, Texns. M9: E.
.. Manlnez. Seattle. 89; ByAnclenon, Balli·
more. 87: Cora. Seatlle, H7; Oan:iapam&amp;.
8oo1011. 86: ARodripez. S..Oole. H6.
DOUBLES : SrruJu~ . Toronto. 2-J:
Cot'a, ~n11te, 24; O'Neill, New York. 24~ .
IRodriauez. Teaas. 2~; ARodriauez. Seat·.
lit, 21 : G~. TC:J.u, 21 ; Cirillo, Milwau1«&lt;,21.
TRIPLES: Oardop~rra . Boston . ~ :
J~ter . New York, !I ; Vtzqucl, CLF.VE· ·
LAND. ~ . Dnmon, Knnaas Cl1y. 4: BL-Humtr. Od~t1 • : Bumilz, Milwlluk«. 4;
TGoodwin, KIUI•a• Cicy. 4: Knoblau~h.
Minnesotu, 4; Oft1mmn, kliMA~ Cily. 4:
Alica. Allllhdm. 4.
HOME RUNS: Orincy, Seaulc. 29:
M'-'Owirc, Oaldaad, 26; T. Maniau, New
York, 22; M. VauJhn, Bolcoo. 20; Buhn:r. Seallle, 20 : TuCiarl., Delroil, 19;
Thorror. CU&gt;VELAND, IK.
STOLEJ'ol. BASES: BbHunkr, Detroit.
H : Ni.11on, Toronto, Jl ; TOoodwin,
Kat~~• Cilr.· 29; KDObl-=h, MinKIOIL
29: Vlzquc , (UVELAND, 19; Duollam,
Chic.... 17: Bumloz.lolil-. 14.
PITCHING (9 Decioiono): Rondy
~ John•o•. SeatUe, II• I, .9l.'~rol . l9; Key.
Ballimore, '11 · 2, .846, 2.ll; ClenHftll, .
T.-o. l 1-l •. 146, 1.90: ~- Balol- ·
l'l'lare, 10.2. .an. :u•: M••sillf, Balli·
- - 8-2, .100. ~ .». llkbooo. A -.
B·l • .111. 3.37: Henoa•n. Toroooo, R-3.
.717, 2.61. .
•
S'1111KEO\I1'S: ...... Seoo·
ole, I )I; CoM. Now Ycri. 131 : Ciemofto.
TC'ltOnlo, 113: A.Niier. KIIIU (il)' , 102;
BMcDould, Mifwa'ukee, 9l; Mutslna.
BaJri~ 81; HeM,en. Torc.~o, 86.
SAVES: lolym.
:IS:
Mlll..ra. New \'oR, 22:
Mil·
wiOIIoeo. 11: R. lito
Cbicqo. 16:
w-..,.,, TeUI, " ' Apllola. M........
Ia, 1~ : Toylor. Oookland. 1).

loll-.
Dol-.

'*'

NLieaden

Christie, 37: got out quickly and
Track and field
never was ~hlillenged in winning in
MUNICij, Germany (AP) Linford Christie raced 10 his fastest · 10.04 seconds at the meet·which pi~
time of the year at the European Cup Europe's eight lop track and field
nations against each other.
Saturday.

Dler.-

~A.-,50.

·AL"-den

.

• ' BAmNG: F. Tloomoo, Chi"'Wo, .:1113:

Rll:.llal~~~~p.

......-...r.

Hoe-.

·

colonlolo. 79: lq-

wtll. H - . 7t ; L W-. ColorodO,

. 62; AIOo, l'lorido, 60; Clodllo. Catondo,

,,
•

•
••'

lanm. 1.9 : Erie "Vouaa. Colorado, IK:

Clayton. Sr. Luuii. 17; L. Walker. Cui·
onoclo. 17.'
.
.
PITCHING (Y Oei.'IJion'): Nea,~ . AI•
hul4a. 10-1, .909, .),26; Estca, San Fmrt~-i ~t­
&lt;o. 9-2 • .RIK. 2.114: Bllones, Now Yorlt.
1-2- ~ .. MOo, 2.19': ,ludcn, Montreal, K·2,
:BOO, 4.3ot; Ourdner, San FrmK:i110n. K-l,
.!JOO, 3.12: PJ. . M.,;..._ Monorcool. 9-l.
.1~: I.M; OMiddu1., Minta. 9-3.. 750,

2.67.
STRIKEOUTS: Scblllina . Phllool&lt;t-

phia. 126: PJ ... Martintt, Mnlltral, 124:

Al&amp;nes. St. Uuh, '119; Norno, l..oJ An·
aelca, 114; K18ruwn. Florida. 107 :
Smolra. Ailtnca . 92; Stolll~tmyre. 51 .
Louil. K'T ; R. Mtnina.l..ull Aqelca.AI7,
·
SAVES: Beck . San Fraaci•~O . 24; ..
M~n. Aorid11., 19; JoFranco, New YO(k,
IM; ToW-11, t..o Aopleo, 16: Wohlon.
Atllftla, 1_,; Bonalioo. Ptliiladelphla, 14:
Ec~. Sl. l.4oolt, 1•.

" Toaltlht'~·ll'""""

Los Anplteslll U111b. 7:30p.m.
NeW Yl.lfk nt Sacrnanenh'l, 10 p.m.

.·

Tuadiy's1ame
Phoefli" ut

Hcu~ton,

8:30 p.fll.

Tran sactions
BaRbaII
A•ericart Ltq!l;t .
CHICAGO WHITE SOX : Actiutcd
18 Frank ThomiUI frum IlK! IS·dily disllblcd lill. Optioned OF Jeff 1\bbou 10
Nas)Jville or the A~fic [m · A~ociatlon .
A1rea.'il to Ierma wilh SS J1111on De:llaeru
1111d uni,'!;~ him In S&amp;ntolu nf lhe Florida SlAte
ue.
·
,
KANSAS CITY ·ROY.ALS: PIOICcd
LHP Olend.on Rui\1!11 !11\ ,1he 1 ~ -duy di i\ ~
Dbled lii\t, n.'1roucli~ IP June 16. RL-.;nllod
OF Jon Nunnally from Om•h11 of che
American 1\uociation.
·
MILWAUKF.E BR~WERS: SiJncd
C JIVEd MruhiRand :\8 ·Jeff 01:1\Jorff .11nd
• nigncd them IP Ogden nf lhll: Pioneer

W&amp;ue.

'

MINNE.fii:OTA TWINS: Sen1 LHP
Scuct A~ oucrlshlco Salt Litke or ttk:
Pacilic C0011 L.caaue.

;

N~IL...ue

FLORIDA MARUJ'IS: Plo«d OF
Cliff floyd on the: u:•y disabled li ~l.
RO\:alk:d OF Billy N~,;Milton from a,..-.
lone or ct.,: I~ Leaaue.
J
HOUSTON ASTRUS: Pla,~d RHP
R"" Sorin1er onlho J!l-doy.diiiObled Ill .
Rccalle•I'RTIP loloo Hooclek tmno New Ork:aftl of tbe Americllll As101.:iaHon.
UlS ANGELES DOOOERS: Sianod
C Will Mc:~ro~l)' and auia ~d him 10

V¥irnn of ow NonhwcSI LeUJue.
t,10NTREAL EXPOS : ACfivaled IB
tlavld 54ejui 111nd OF Vlodimir. Ouetfero
fron1 lhu ~ -d:1y disabled list. Plnced 18
Doug SlrnnJe on the l~·dlly dimtblcd list,
retroa..:tivc tQ June 11 . Of!ti oned tHP
Omur Dual 10 01111wn of tne lnt\.'l'nlltinnal
Lo:a~uc .
·
·

PHILADELPHIA PHILLIE.~ : Acli ·
vatted RHP GiUTcU Stcphcn~on frnm the
I ~ -day di~ ablcrJ li~l . ()phoned LHP Erik
Ploml'.m~rJ 111 Scnmmn of the lntcrnn.litll\lll lclljtUC.

.

PITrsOURGH

PIRATI~~ :

Recalled

OF Jermaine All\.'flliwonh frnm Cnlgaty uf

. lhc Pacific C..' un1! Lca~uc. Opliui'H.-d 01:
Adrim1 Dmwn to Caltuwy.

.

-..!~~':,\1..._

..

1\11.1\NTA FAl.CONS: Signed IJE
Anlhnny Plcusoutt and C Cillvin (.'ullin!l.
Cluin11.-d 1m Jllspn · .~inunun~ nrrw;"VCffl.

'

Hockey
N1do111tl HwkeJ IAIWit
·
CAROLINA HURRICANE.~ · T--.1
11 1~7 fillt· murtd dntfl pick 1o the Snn
JusC Shark~ fnr 11 I\197 Je\;nfld·MUnd l.lral~
rick 11nd a IY9K condilional drafc pkk.
NEW JERSEY DF.VIl.S : Trw.k.&gt;d two
ICJ97 tbird-round tlrali pieb 10 the Onmwa
Scruators fur n 1~7 se\.-ond-round drafl
r k k.
·. .
NEW YORK RANGERS : Acquired
LW Mike Ptluso rrum lhe St. l.Wis Blua:1
· as cumpcmmlion fur 1he hiring nf Llwry
l'k:lau ns aei'L-rDI man~r .
PHOENIX COYOTES: Nomed1John
T1ll1~lla Wli\IIUtnl 1:00\.11.
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING: Tr""""
.LW SINiwn BlllliU the San .fitsc Sharltli
(or II IY'J7 fifib-nJuhd drafi pick. Trlllbl
G Rkk Tabur~~~Xi tu the Culaury RnrrM:S
hll' II 199M louith-ruull.l dr11fl pick. Numed
1\:tct
wr . . I.

•

~·

TheH grildeschool basketball pllyera took part In the1817
, Meigs Mereuder glrla buketball camp held llat
' week at Meigs High School. In front are (L-A) All; son Wooda, Jlllan Jenkln1, Mllggle Rupe,·Simantha Gilbert, Sam1111tha Cole, Brittany HyHII, Brittany Bartlett, Anna Sayre and Katie Reed. In the ·
second row are Samantha ,Reed, Renee Bailey,
Justine Dowler, Jennlflr Hayman, Brandl Meld·
owe, Charla Collins, Brooke Venoy, C.IHif Smith
.

.

'''*'11!111..

........ cJll[ L
Honon .................. J -.o
NtwYOit ,............... t , 0
Choriotoe ........, .........0 I
t

1.00
1.00
.000 .

.oop

. ... :.........:...... 1 o uo
~ ............. 1 0 't.oo
t..o Aoplu ........... .O I .000 .
UooiL .......................O I .000

Satlmlay'•-

-YOit67, t..o ......... 57
_ . , . . QAVIUNI) 56 .

. ko&amp; d

IS 10, lJIIIt dO

ln ...- third row are 818phanl1
Sere Barringer, Morgan
Andere Fitly; Klnl
Buffington
In the fOUftll 'row
·era .Jeaalca
· King, Nicole
McDaniel, Pamela
Jenlca Blllttnlr and Ajl Bllckwell. In .t he
are 01mp · atlfl
1111111ber1 Cerl818 ~. Cheryi.JeMII, coach Ron ·
Logan, )Nandi Shrlmplln and Ashley Roach.
and

Foster,
Weber,

.

.

Meigs girls' basketball camp ends
The 1997 Meigs Marauder girls
basketball camp was held last week
at Meigs High ·school's Larry R.
Morrison Gymnasium. The camp
was conducted by Meigs varsity
' head coach Ron Logan along with

Dennis Ault, Mick Davenport and
senior with members of the Lady
Marauder basketbail team.
The ~ampers received instruction
in all aspeciS of the gam~ from the

WORKING WITH TIGHT ENDS- Mike Bartrum (right) watchll ill
Jeff Th01111aon, 1 tight end with .tha Super Bowl champion Green
Bay Packera, works out the tight anda at the Mike Bartrum Football
camp hlkl Friday at Melg1 High School.
.
.
·

WORKS WITH RECEIVERS - N- Engllnd wide receiver Troy
Brown (left) works with the wide recelv•• at the Mlkl Bartrum Foot~
bill Camp Frldey at Meigs High Schoot. Brown, il fonner Mershall
all-American, played with Bartrum on the Thundering Hard's 1992
NCAA Dlvlllon J..AA national championship team.
,_
'

Bartrum
&amp; NFL
.
associates hold
camp and linkfest·
.

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Corretpondent
· · Maggen's last chance carne qn ·
The first Mike Banrurn Football
Camp
and Celebrity Golf Toumathe par-5 18th. Trailing. by two. he
put his ball about 30 feet away in two ment was held this past weekend and
·
and ~ an eagle pull. But Els was was a huge success.
More than 250 boys took .pan in
also .on the green in two, and both
the football camp in Friday, while 16
golfers made two-putt birllies.
For Maggen, who was also sec- five-player learns took pan in Saturond here to E!ls in 1996, it. was the day's golf tournament at the Meigs
. ninth second-place finish ·of his County Golf Course.
The football camp was held in
career. Thoup he has won nearly $4
two
sessions with the morning ses. million in 6 112 years on tour; Magsion for youths in grades 5-8 and the
gen has only one lour title.
"If I could win alHhose tourna- afternoon session was for youths in
meniS thai I finished second in, I'm grades 9- 12.
Among the NFL players coming
going to have a hell of a career, I' ll
in
to take pan in the camp were
tell you that," Maggen said.
· . Els became the first wire-to-wire Green Bay Packers tight end Jeff
repeat champio,n on· the PGA tour Thomason and defensive imd Walter
since Tom WatsOn won the Tourna- .Scott, New England Patriots wide
ment of Champions in 1979 and receiver Troy Brown and linebacker
)980 at La Costii'Country Club in Many Moore, former ·Kansas City
Carlsbad, Calif. He also continued . .and Washington linebacker Erick
his remarkable run of success at the Anderson, Seattle Scahawk defenWestchester Country Club, where he sive end Matt LaBounty, Former San
has finished !ICCOnd, tied for founh Diego and Green Bay defensive end
and won twice sine~ first coming Darrin Krine who is now strength
coach at Seattle, Detroit Lion quarhere in 1994.
·
E!Is' four-round total of 16-under terback Mau Blundin, Alan DeGraf268 tiC!! the tournament record set by fenreid. DeGraffenreid played at
David.Frost in 1992 and equaled by Ohio Stale and has played with
Kansas City, Green· Bay and just
Lee Janzen in 1994. .
·
Jim Furyk and tour rookie Roben recently signed ·a contract witli San
Damron lurked within four or five
shots of the lead for most of Sunday,
but they never made serious chal(Continued from Page 4)
lenges. They finished lied at 10-·
win
of the season, made his final pit
under274. ·
Tiger Woods shot'his third l-over stop one lap a(lcr Gordon and knew
·
72 of the tournament Sunday and he had enough gas to finish.
. "!lost a lot of time on my last pit
finished at 3-over 287. He saiahe is
stop,"
Labonte explained. "I had a
going to go home to Florida, fish,
bad
vibration
and I had to come in
rest and try to get his mind refocused·
real
slow.
That
was the distance we
on golf. ·
were
behind
at
the
end.
Woods, playins his fifth tournament in six weeks, said he has fig·
''We didn't know which tire was
ured out lhlt that kind of schedule is giving us the vibration, so we had to
too grueling for him to both play his change all four.' Jeff only took two
best and to handle the crush of media (tires), so we thought we might he
and finS .
able to chase him down. But I guess
. or some"I need a lilt of rest dealing with I just used 'up the tires
all this,'' he said. "k's awfully hard. thing." ·
I've deiermined that I don't play as
Ricky Rudd, also stretching his
many weeks as some of these guys gas. finished third, followed by Ted
- five, six weeks. I ~an 't do that. I Musgrave; Jimmy Spencer and Bob. run myself in.the ground ...
by Labonte.

staff. Stionsors for the camp were
Big Bend Health and Fitness. Dairy
Queen Brazer, McOOnalds, Mitch's
Video, Skyline Lanes, Subway,
Vaughan IGA Video and Wendy's.

California SOD.•.

WNBA stanclings
. :r.. .

Then he shrugged.
If theRi is one mannerism that
SCCD;~S to symbolize Els' demeanor,
it's a slu1Jg of his broad shoulders.
Good ·shot Bad shot. Bad bleak:
· E!ls' shrug, says, "Don't worry.
I'm not going to."
The same unflappable aif .that
allowed him to survive the pressirre .
of the final nine holes of the U.S .
·Open at Congressional served him
well on Sunday at the Buick Classic
as he played just steady enough to
beat Jeff Maggen by two strokes.
It capped a remarkable week for
the South African, who became the
first golfer since.Hale Irwin in I~ ,
to win the week after becoming
Open champion.
Jumping to the top of the world
rankings was merely the exclamatiQ~
point, one that E!ls said he probably
deserves.
"I've never said that in my life
before, but riglil now, after the last
two weeks, I've got to think that,"
the 27-year-old said.
But Els. said he wan IS his game 10
stand the test of time, by continuing
to win tournameniS and especially
Grand Slam events. He has won two
U.S. Opens so far, five American
tour tilles ~ounling Sunday's victory and 17 events around the world.
"You've got to look ~tit week by
week by week and to be on lOp you can ask Greg Norman, Faldo, a
lot of other guys - it's tough to stay
on lOp." he said . .
For Maggen, the struggle to get
to the lOp continues. He was one of
the golfers whom E!ls outlasted at the
Open on the · final nine holes last
weekend; and he made the South
African earn the Buick Classic .Iitle
by shooting a 3-Under 68 Sunday in
a final round delayed by two hours
when -a violent thunderstorm swept
across the Westchester Country
.Club:
Trailing by three shOIS when play
started Sunday, Maggert twice got to
within one shot of Els. But he could
never draw even as E!ls kept making
.par in a 2-under final .round of 69 and
Maggen could not make enougll
birdies to close the deficit.
"I felt if I kepi it in play, if I
played sensibly. the guys had to
come at me," Els said. "They had to
come out of the pack and chase me.
I was just trying to hit fairways and

greens."

Iii
'I

I

w...... c ..

BATI1N0: L W-. c-. .~1$ : ·
0'1'- ...
.)9); ....... t..o Anaelet •. H.S: 8 auler. Atla•ta, . l~l ; ·
Lofton.
.J&gt;M:
So. Louio.
.344; Otl iliL Cokn1D. .343. ,
RUNS: L W-. Coloooolo. 71 ; lit·
alo, Hou"oo, 6): &lt;Joll!nop. ColoiMO,
61 : a..u, Colon41o. J-4; Btl&lt; Yooo1,
Colorodo, 52; Boawoll,
S2: ',

At-

'

•
•

56: Kenl. San Franci~~.:o, ~•: Blchen~ .
Colorado, 54.
HITS : L. Welker. Colorado, 110 :
Gwyan. San Diet;o, 110: Lafton, Atlnnta,
98 ; Golarraaa .. Coloradu, 06; Biaaio.
Houstoa. 9S; Eric: Youna, Colorado, R9 ~
Baaw~ll . Houtton •. sv·; OSandcn ,
CINCINNATI, 89.
QOUBLES: Orudzielonek. Montreal,
27; Baawell, Houscoa, 24: Morandini,
'Philadclfhia. 24: ~ · Walker. Colorado.
24 : Bon~l_la, Flor~da, lJ ; Claylon, Sl.
Lowis, 22; Biglo, Hou1101J, 22.
TRIPLES: WGuerrero. Lot Aaaetcs.
6; Rllllda, P&amp;tt•bur.h, 6; Woroock •. "Pilll•
burah. 6 ; DcSh1clds, S1. Loun, 6:
DSondm. CINCINNATI, 6; T""ker· Allantn, S; ~c Ynuna. Colorado. :1.
HOioiE RUNS: Boopell, HDU110n. 22:
L. Walker, Colomdo, 21 ; OallftiiJa, Col·
omdu, 21 ; C•dlla, Co~. 18; HunJ·
ley, New York, 17: Blril, Calnmdo. 17:
Bonck, Sun Frondsco. 16.
STOLEN BASES : DSunder! .
CINCINNATI, ~I ; ' Womack. Pilllbur&amp;h.
l7: O.Shiolclo, St Lwi•. 27: r..oonn. Ao-

CLEVI!LANI) .........O

CINCINNATI ( - ! -5) 11 Non(C. ,._ 11-4), l :JS p.m.
•
Fluridoo (A. Lei"' H) 11 ,.lilddphio
(Ruff....,O.t), 7:3lp.m.
All ..la (Brock 0-0) 111 N.Y. Wets
(Ciort 6--4). 1:40 p.m
Qicoao Cubl ( ...illollaod !1-7) 11 St.
Louio (Ao.Bneo !1-3~ 1:05 p.m.
Pht1burlh (LieNr 3 ~1) 11 Hou1tDa
(Wall:!-4), ~
c - &lt; 8-5l "' t..o """'"'
( - 3-6~ I . p.m.

JUNIOR HIGH CAMPERS - These girls took Eichinger, Mindy Chancey, Shannon Soulaby',
part In the 1997 Mllga Mareuclerl girls bllskelb!lll Carrie Myers and Merle Drenner. In the third row
camp held last week at. Melga High School. In are camp counselor Dennis Ault, Nicoll Dawa,
front are (L· R} Ashley Roach, Shawna Manley, Candice Fetty, Amber Snowdln, Alicia Werry,
Juley Eblin, Megan Haynn, Brook Bolin, Llnd- oCOIA'IIIilor Mlclt DIMnport Jllld coach Ron Logan.
aay Bolin and A.-,.anda Fany. In the HCOnd row Not presen1 when picture waa taken were Miry
are Tlrzah · Doc:laon, Jlllchell1 · Drenner, ~!Ina Schultz and Holly Ferrel

'
------sports
briefs-----

Scoreboard
NL standings .

Pa;n., Trac:i Cotr.y aftcl Angle Wolle. In the third

row .,. llejo;ie Btllton, Tiffany Hllfhll~ Valerie
KMr, Tonya Millet', JennJr.r Shrlmplln Jllld Amy
HyMII. In the fourth !'OW are &amp;tiff memberl Den-

Wigll, lllrl818 Whaley, Sh1111non Price, TMgy . nfa Wah, coach Ron Logan and Mlclt Dlwnport.
Lludennllt, Trlcll DIVIs, Broob Wllllame and - Not pictured II Aahley Rupe, Melli.. W..-ry and
Amber VIning. lri th1 81C0nd · .,. Bethlny Mlclt Chlldt, 111 of whom were also on the staff.
BoyiH, Becky Smith,
'
'

ST. LOUIS (AP) - With Ray
Lankford and Brian Jordan leading
the way, the St. Louis Cardinals
. c~ld be on their way 10 the playoffs
th1s season.
·
By MIKE HARRIS
those nail-biters. They were telling
Manin began to pull away, but
"I think we're going to play well
FONTANA, Calif. (AP) - Can me I was a lap short (on gas). But I was forced to stop for a splash of gas rrom this poini on and these two
Jeff Gordon get any better?
knew I saved a lap of fuel the way I six laps later, givif!g the lead back to guys are the key," manager Tony La
''I'm still learning things all the was running out there at the end."
Gordon, who easily stayC!I in front of Russa said Sunday afrer ihe Carditime," Gordon said Sunday after
Gordon was in constant radio Labonte, the defending series cham- · nals' 5-2 victory over the Cincinnati
winning the inaugural California communication with crew chief Ray pion; the rest of the way.
Reds.
500. "I learned how to conserve fuel Evernham, who knew it was going to
Following his slop, Manin was in
Jordan, who has missed most of
today. I never had to do that before. be a close call.
founh place. But he ran out of gas the season with a back injury, had
It was pretty. interesting."
"Rlly got me ·nervous," Gordon again one tap from the end and · two hilS and drove in two runs.
The 25-year-old wunderkind put said. "I wasn't nervous until he stan- wound up I.Oth, falling 92 poiniS
tankford, who is batting .351
the finishing tou~hes on his seventh ed telling me to 'Conserve! Con- behind Gordon in the Winston Cup with slx home runs against left-hanvictory in 15 starts this season and serve! Conserve!' But I didn't want standings.
ders this year, doubled off left-hanthe 26th win of his budding career by Te...V to catch up too much. I thou
. ght
"Wo · needed 1
t
the.
d
der
Mike Remlinger to drive in the
.. ,
e
ong runs 8
en ' go-ahead run in the sevcnlh'.'~_Lank·
nursing his Chevrolet to a 15 car- he might really have something for but we J·ust didn·'t have the m1'Ieage
length decision over Hendrick me if he could catch me.
we ni:eded.'' Manin said. "Gordon ford missed the first three weeks of
Motorsports teammate Terry
"I was trying to keep the distance was awful fast, but there at the end the ~n while recovering from ·
Labonte.
between Terry and ·me about .lhe of lh\11 run, my car carne on and his off-season rolalor cuff surgery.
·
. Gord on prompt1y ran out of gas - same.J was rea11 y, rea 11 y conservmg,
didn't. ... We had a good run. We had belThe cardinals
b t are hstill six gJIIIles
· d
500
going into the third tum on the cool- even down the straightaways, and a contending car. That's all we can
ow ·
u say t ey are poise
down lap. He had to coast the rest of letting the car. roll into the-comers." do."
.
.
.
10 make a pennant_run.
the way to Victory Circle, cutting
All of the leaders were affected
Gordon, who led six times 'for a
"We haven't had· our lineup aU
h'1 h. 113 1
h fi
·year and we' re lucky to be as close
across the grass beside .the front by th''. e gas situation.
~ace~ 8
· aps, eros
t e m- as we are in the race," Lankford said.
waightaway as most of the crowd of
Mark Manin; who came into the · : 1sh hne 1.074 seconds - about I 5 · The. Cardinals are three . games
85,000 at the sparkling new Califor· race with a string of eight straight car-lengths- ahead of Labonte. The b h' d h f
nia Speedway stood and cheered.
top-five finishes, kept the pressure . . winner ran the final 55 laps _ 110 ' ·e 10 t e irst-place Houston
·
· finally passed him miles- without slOpping.
Astros.
"I didn't know I was going 10 wm on Gordon and
the race until the checkered flag," . for the lead on lap 234 of the 250· Labonte, still looking for his first
With their victory Sunday, the ·
Gordon said. "This was one of lap event.
(See CALIFORNIA on PageS) . Cardinals won two out of three from
the Reds. ·

Baseball

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

._..,==

. . IYRACUII IIJCT'H.aRADIM ..,... Tile .,....
lllllllllf{tllni hid

a.,_

llfl,
. . . lilt.. lgJC. IIJ~
liNt lilt two IDIIIII&amp;¢ Willi IIIII Ill DUd lilt IIICIIh.
ICIUI'IMIMit. IWIIICIUJIIIIo . . . . . Lllg • Tour........... tnl PJJdtlle.IIIIDRin'IIIIIIWIIII
I

.

ShuiiiiOp Dick Blltell o( the
N,w Yorlt Oianll played 1 10-lnnina
· pme in 1935 without 1 fJeklin&amp;

.

ehanc:e.

Francisco.. DeGraffenreid just fin ished his third year playing in the
World League with the · Scotland
team. Former Kansas grcal and
Kansas City quarlerhack Chip Hi!.
leary was also there.
Others taking .part in the ·camp
were former Division 1-AA Natioll~
al Lineman of the Year and Marshal~
all-American Phil Ratliff and formcti
Marshall tight end Cun Nuttcrcuu:Anderson .spoke to the morning .
campers about his days at Mic higali
and his professional career, urging;
the campers to get an education sO'
· they can be ready to go out and w or~
in the . real world if their footbalf
career doesn't work out.
J
In the aflernoon, Krine told th~
kids to run with the right crowd and\
he talked about the dangers of drugsJ
Also speaking to the aftcrnooro
campers was long time Mei g~
Marauder coach Charles Chancey.,
Chancey urged the kids to g i v~
everything the have, not onl y ini
spans but also in life. He then addc&lt;Jl
that Bartrum is one that has workctC
hard and that is why he is playi ng i1 "
the National Football League.
;
The team ·o r Matt Blundin , BoO:
Ashley, Larry Whobrey, Dick Owen:
and .Wayne Horsley won the goiC:
.. tournamen,l with a score of eight-;
under-par.
1
.

"We thouaht Gordon and ·
Labonte
to have to pit," .·
Rudchaid. "We weren'tswe lhal we
could make it, but we fiaured if ~
did,
JOinl to win."

-aoina

we'

.

.

Downing, Childs, :
Mullen, Muller
111 B. Seculd St, Pomeroy

•
•

•

;

992-3381
~
-....,--~..j

�P~t~e

e • The Deily S•aiiiMI

....... -.-

Pom noy •Mictdl1port, Oldo

Summit closes with differences unresolved . Armored car driver who
intlnl!!l"'llll

G-8 has become 1 reality," · he
AP Eoonomlce Wrlllr
. declared Sunday.
.
DENVER- World leaden ttied
1be nditioul Group of Sevento wrap up !heir first Summit of lhe the United States, Japan, Oermany,
eight with a grand show of hlnnony, Britain, F11111CC, Canada and Italy but !hey could not paper over differ· went out of the way to demonstrate
ences on everything from the econo- that Russia is now a member of the
· my and Africa to lhe environment and club. The final communique praised
the United Nations.
lhe economic reforms Russia has
President Clinton, who as host got undenal&lt;en and held outlhe hope of
to set the agenda, labeled the three more prizes down the road, including
days of discussions by leaders of the membership in the World Trade
world's seven richest economies and Organization .
.Russia a huge success !hat had·
But on othertssues, there was a lot
advanced the causes of glotlal peace less unanimity. Clinton found
. himself
I
and prosperity. ·
standing alone on sueh tssues as
" Here in Denver, we have actual- reducing the carbon dioxide cmisly made .real progress on problems sions that contribute to global warmthat ·matter to our people," he tol~ in~.
.
.
reporters at a closing news conferThe .European countnes had
en Sunday.
pushed for·specific reduction targets,
ssian President Boris Yeltsin something the United States oppos·
also w ecsratic, posing proudly with es, and Clinton's position prevailed.
the ol leaders for all the class picGerman Chancellor Helmut Kohl
(ures- e perfel:t symbol that Rus- · complained that because of theAmersia ·is no a full-fledged membtr of · ican position, "we could not reach
the group.
·
more" in terms of cleaning up the
"All th talk has been about the environment.
·
Q-8. The ei~ht this, the eight that. The
French President Jacques Chirac

wu evon 11101e blunt, termiq the
United States "one of lbe world's
bigest polluters," with "each Amer·
ican respons.ible for lhree times more
(CFC emissions) thu sh French
person."
France and lhe United States also
were at loagerheads O"!C" lhe prpper
way to help Africa - lhe world's
poorest ~ontinent. Here, tile commu•
nique took the classic approach: It
included calls for the more expensive
direct foreign aid lhat France wanted
and the cheaper trade benefits and
debt relief advocated .by the Ameri·
cans.
On the United Nations, it was
Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chre·
lien who took the sharpest jibe at the
U.S. positioh. lhat lhe world body
must streamh?e. and econorruze to
contmue rece1~mg Amencan paym~n.ts. ~ Umted States owes $81~
mtlhon tn _back dues, . money t~at
Congress tS wtthholdtng pendtng
U.N. reforms and a cut in the U.S.
annual assessment.
"I don't accept the notion that one
country or two countries will dictate

the policia of an
orpniurimliblhii,"Ca•lllid,IIUIaeeti•hl lilt Ollit8d NlllioM IDOWl
its beaclq-. to Monlrell.
llemlrb lhlt Clin1011lllllle upon
his arrival in Denver also l'lllkled
some other leaden; The pmideat
boasted of an economic appuw:b 1m.
hid CMbled the United States to
"move -uer and mon:~~ron~ly tban
most other nations into lhe new
· global economy."
But lhe defiCit cuitillJ, corporate
downsizing and welftre overhaulina
!hat have been hallmarks of lbe U.S.
approath are not soinl oYer tb8l well ,
in Europe, and most of !he Other 'II""'
mit leaders were not eager to sign on
to lhe American model.
"We are not in the process of try· ing to hold a competition between the
American and European (economic).
models," said J~~~:ques Santer, pn:sident oflhe IS-nation European CQIIImission. "Our model is based on solidarity; social cohesion and lhe rejc(;tion" of leaving out Certain people.
such as the .urban poor.

. . . suspen d ed aft er co11•IS,IOn
• . k•JJ
I, s· PI•1 0..t
A··r show

th~oght he

was.a loser
suspect in $22M theft ·

....'

- hdw a
spina.kept him out of police or miliwy ~~· ho~
God never save him a wife, how he couldn't find a good-payang Job.
1be oomplajning ceased jn la&amp;e March. Johnson may finally have succeeded 81 SOIIIC!hlng 'Significant. IJi one of lhe !liggest heists on recpid,
he is accused of rObbing his employer and stealins a van stuffed with $22
million.
.
. .'
.
·
.
Aulhorities llC:Iieve that Johnson, 33, ~nslaldngly pluned lhe robbeey for years~ome officials suspect he's fled o,verseas. · \,
,JOhtiiOII li
llone in a small house he'd bought in·a ~st nel~hborhood for
.000 seven years ago. Inside, afier the robbery, Nhce
found a spray:p,lnted message scrawled atross a wall- "HoUle of Pain."
.IIi the days before !he·heist, friends and neighbors say,John19n voiced
his l'rustrations. ·
· ,
. .
"He just coufdn't get anywhere in life. He was always talking about
his disappointments and his job didn '!paY. good. It was always negative
about things," safcf neipbor June Glover,' who spoke to Johnson just hours
before lhe robbery and has not seen him $ince.
Mts. Glo- said she and Johnson sometimes talla:d about God. "He
would say, 'I used to believe in God, but I don't now because he never
did anything for-rite. He never got me a wife.' I've tried to get all kinds
of Jobs. ·He won't~ me gei a good job.'
"
"If he really dicfit, he was smaner t~an I thought he was," she added.

===-------...1 .

Beef

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5Qt.hll

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WHILE SUPPLIES

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$2'~

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'

calenda~r

'Batman &amp; Robin' grabs top spot at weekend box offices

Tiffany _Gardner-H_
aynes
graduates from HTC

10.75 Oz.

· umt4.
~

Jl

·. 298 SECOND STREEt
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PRICES EFFECTIVI JuMM, 1117 ONLY
•IL

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The Gallia;..Meigs .TTPA
urogram can help you!

f0
h
h
Happy
en . lng -.rn the laciest '~Bamtman~9o~
v1••e_.r . ==~~=::!:J!~ithlli
NEw YORK (AP) -Joel Sehtt;
, ..~ ~
While attendina Hocking Col·
'

•

'

older and
Looking for a
job?

of

~~

'

Are you ·55 or

c
01.
U•lt2

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Large

Eggs
Llmlt2

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10 Lbs.

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Products

.

Remember, PUerto Rico, the U.S. for the entire month. But, the law
Virgin Islands, 1Guam, .. Amcrican says that you "pttain" your age the
Samoa, and the Northei'n Mariana day before your birthday. Since ,you .
ciary who plans to travel during lhe Islands, ate U.S. ierritories ~o were born on Aug~st 2. you legally
The Community Calendar i~',
summer,lhere are certain things yciu Medicare pays on lhe same basis as attain your age on August I; therefore published IS a free service to non. should know. If you're not now hav- for any other U.S. hospital.
· you're eligible for benefits for August
profit groups wishing to announce
ing your check sent directly to your • If you plan to stay outside the because you're considered age 62 for
· meeting and spedal events. The
bank, now's lhe lime to do it. It means country more than 30 days, other · the entire month.
calendar is l)ot designed tb promote
having your funds available to you rules may ,appJy. You should call
Q. I've been receiving Social sales
or fund raisers of' any type.
even when y,ou're not !here to cash Social Security and ask for a copy of Security survivors benefits ever since
Items ate printed as space permits
your checks. More than half of Social the booklet,' "Social Security - Your my fillher died three years ago. I'm
Security beneficiarie• receive !heir Payments While You Are Outside the going to graduate from high school and cannot be guaranteed lo run a
specific number or days.
checks lhrough direct deposit. It is the United States" (Public\ltlon No. 05- next year, May 1998, burl won't tum
method of receiving checks recom- 10137).
,
18 until December of 1998. Will my
mentled,by Social Security for con- Questloas lind Aniwenl · ,
benefits stop in May or December? MONDA\;
MIDDLEPORT -· Oh-Kan Coin
venience, ·safety and speed.
Q. My mother receives her Social
A. Your benefits will stop the Club,
Monday. 8 p.m; Rivcrbend Arts
If you're planning to travel outside Security retirement check on the month you become age 18--DccemCouncil
building. New members weilhe United States, you should con- .third of the month. She heard some- ber 1998.
com~ . Refreshments.
sider your Medicare coverage. What thins about Sociaf Security changing
Q. Do you have to be destitute
happens if you get sick?. Generally, the day people -get paid. She's vety before you can receive Social SccuCHESTER -- Chcstcr:Shadc HisMedicare does not pay for hospital or· worried; she has a certain schedule rity disability benefits?
torical Association special. trustees
medical services outside the U.S. for paying her bills, and if·her payA. No, a person does not have to· meeting, Monday, 7 p.m. Chester Fire
However, there are three exceptions. mcnt date changes she might have to be destitute to receive Social Sec uri- State; Chester Shade Days commitMedicare will pa:v. Jor your care in pay late fees.
ty disability benefits. To qualify for tee meeting to follow .
·a qWIIified Canadi• Or. Mexican hos·
· A. Your m!llher has no need io Social Security disability benefits, a
pita! if: Vou '~e in~~1t:Tnited.States ·. •orry. ,She will· continue to receive person· must have worked long
SYRACUSE .. Vacation Bible
when an erriergenc~ occurs, and a her payments at the same time as enough and recently enough to be School, Syracuse Church of the
Canad!an or Mexican hospital is the before--the third day of each month. insured under Social Security and Nazarene. 6:30 to 8 p.m. Mcmday
closest hospital to the emergency site.. The new payment dates will only must meet Social·Security's medical ·through Friday, nursery through sixth
You live in lhe United States and a affect new Social Security beneficia- requirements. You·might be interest- grade. '
·
Canadian or · Mexican hospital is ries.
ed to know that Social Security also
closer to your home lhan the nearest
Q. I w!ll he 62 on Ausast 2 of this administers another type of disabili- TUESDAY
U.S. hospital. You are in Canada trav- year and that's when I plan on retir- ty program, called · Supplemental
REEDSVILLE -- Riverview Garcling · by the most direct .route ing. Will my first benefit check be for Security Income, or SSI. SSI dis- den Club, Tuesday, 6:30p.m. potluck
between Alaska and another slate the month of August or September? . ability benefits arc paid to people picnic at hnme nf Nola Young. ·
'
'
when• an emergency occurs, and a
A. To receive retircment .benefits who have low income and few assets.
Canadian hospital is closer than the . . you must be at least age 62 and ben- The medical rcquircm.cnts for dis- THURSDAY .
.
ne~sl U.S. hospitaL
efitsJlegin the month yoy are age 62 alillity payments arc ' !he samc .. for
MIDDLEPORT -- Meigs County
~
bdlh programs·.
•·
· ., Family and Children First Cnuncil,
Thursday, R:30 u.tn. at the· Meigs
County Depanmcnt of Human SerBy J!FF Wll:.SON
sader camecl $43.6 million, &amp;.;cording . we certainly delivered the women," vices.
Associated p,... W.rlter.
· Ill estimates Sunday from Exhibitor satd Ed Russel!, a spokesman for
RUTLAND -- Leading Creek
LOSANOELES-lbewcekend RelationsCo. lnc.
TriStar, which produced Roberts'
Angela Beth Murphy and Kevin Gregory Burgess were united in mar·
·Conservancy
Board, Thursday, 5
debut of "My Best Friend's· Wed"My Best Friend's Wedding," lilm. ··wc·r~ very happy.:·
riage by Rev. Sharon Hausman in an open church, (jouble {ing·cere.mony
p.m.
at
the
office.
ding" was lhe best ever for a roman· with Roberts playing·a woman who . The prcvtous top·grossmg r~ma~ on-Oct. 19 at St. Paul's United Methodist Church, T\IP,pCrs Plains. , _
tic comedy and for its star, Jt.dia decides to sabotage th'c wedding of a uc com~dy d_cbut was "Sleepless on
· The bride is the daughter of Gary and Roberta Mu~hy. ofThppers Plams,
Robens. But the biggest audience · former flame, brought in $21.5 mil- Seattle, whtch opened wtth $17.2 FRIDAY
and the Oranddaughter of Hazel Murphy of Tuppers 'Plains, and the late
SALEM CENTER .. Mci~s ··
flocked to
and Robin."
lion for second place. Final figures million in 1993. Roberts' biggest
Roscoe and Ellen Wells and Mavin Murphy.
County
Pomona Orange, Friday, Star
The
install-· were to be released today.
. open in~ h?,d been 1993's ."The Peli·
The groom is the son of Philip and Sus.an Burgess of Syracuse, and the
.Grange hall, 7:30p.m. Degree work
merit of
series with
"We clearly got our target can Bncf. wtth $16.8 mtlhon.
grandson ofPhilip and Olive Burgess of Florida, and the late Charl.es. and
GeOrge .
the ~aped Cru- females. 'Batman' got the men and
. -"Batman ·&amp; Robin" not only will be exemplified in full form for
Thelma lytle.
.
grabbed the weekend's top spot pu1 inspection.
The bride was given in mBITiage by her parents and tscorted to the altar
lopped the opening gross of the origby her father. She wore a Jessica McClintock design, .a ~bite lace and c~if· .
', ' "
inal "Batman," which opened with
·. foti full-length gown with an off-the-.shoulder neclchnc. The fitted bodtce
$40.5 million in 1989. Tfti: mhcr
was adorned with antique crocheted lace and seed pearls with satin roses
sequels, however. did better
at the back waistline ..Thc chapel length train consisted of chiffon streamers extending from ihe waistline. .
· . _
.
.
The bride created her cascading bouquet constslmg of /l!htte roses, while ·
carnations.' burgundy sweetheart roses, fern; miniature ivy; and silk ribbon.
ANNOUNCEBmrrH-~
Michelle Murphy, sister of the bride, served as maid·of honor. BodesLand Kathleen S. Moore, Rua·
maids were Amy -Wagner of Pomeroy, Amy White, cousin of the bride, of
. nllspolnt, an.nounce the birth .
of their first child, a daughter,
Cincinnati, and Christie Tatman of Athens.
·
.
Kayla Ann Sue Moore, born
The attendants wore hunter green full-length crepe gowns. They carried
June 2 at Lima Memorial Hoa·
colonial style bouquets of off-white carnations, burgundy sweetheart ro~s
pltel. Shit nighed 7 po11nda, 8
and miniature ivy, also_made by the bride.
.
ounces and
21 lncha1
Kelsey Williams of Coolville. cousin of the bride, was the flower gtrl.
long.
Grandparents
are FredClayton Findley of Syracuse was the ring, bearer.
. ,. •
·
die
L.
and
Dalla
M.
Moore,
Chris'Murphy of Columbia, Md. served as best man. Grliomsmen were·~·
Cheshire,
.
a
nd
Leland
and
Mar·
M~rk Murphy. co~sin of the bride. of ~~h~ns, Gary. Free~an of Syrac~se .
garet
Parker,
Pom,roy.
PaterJerod Moore of Newark David Deem of Pomeroy. and Chns Stout of Syrn.
'
'
nil grelt.:graridmother Is Anna ·
cusc. Mark Murphy ~nd David Dccm .also serv~d a.~ ushers.
Kerwood, Gallipolis. ·
The pianist was Kelly Eichinger and the so)oist \YDS
!!chloss of
.
'
.
AI ...
uuny.
.
' " .
.
Guest book atlendunis were Dara Glasser of Athens and onica Free- .
mail ·of Syracuse.
·.
.
·
,
· · Following the ceremony, a buffet-style dinner and dance owere ·hcld at
Royal Oak Resort, Pomeroy. The three tiered ca~eJeat~rcd ,IIJJluntain l)lld
side cakes. Serving at the reception were Sinn Murphy, aQnfl'cH the bride,
Tena Harper, Rena Vales, and Cl~J!!e Russel. _
.
·
'l'be bri.dc graduated in 1991 from ~ell'l H1gh School and In 1996 ~rom
OhlQ Univc!liity with a degree in therapeutic recreation. She is ,a Cc:rttfied
Th~rapeutic Recyeation Specialist employed with Adult Day ·'Scmces of
Massillon as an activity coordinator.
·
·
The groom grnduatecl in 1990 from Souihem High School afld in 1995
from Ohio University with a degree in mecltanical Cfll!ineeririf: He is a
Tiffany Otlrdner:Haynes, .~ife of Colonial Dtive, Gallipolis.
·
mechanjcnl engineer for the M, .K. Morse Co. tn &lt;;:anton. . .
.
t.lattbew Haynes or POmeroy, and
She is the granddaughter of M~­
Followi~g a honeymoon trip to Key•West, the col:IPle restdc n Strasdaughter AI~ Oard~ of Picker- and Mrs. Earl-Johnson, Mason, W.Va.
burg.
inpon: and Michael Oardnet' of Fon
s'
Myers, Fla.• graduated from Hocking

M~rphy-Burg. e~~

Bob Evans

'

""*'If you're aSociaJ Security benefi-

United.Valley Ball
I

.

'

Send questions to Ann Landen,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Callr. 90045

BY ED PETERSON, IMII8gel'

gent, scoring 1,200 on his Scholastic Aptitude Test.
.
While still in hilh school, Johnson began .taking classes at Monroe
Co. mmunity College and eventually' earned a two-year d.egree in criminal
J"ustice.
"He was real focused on getting dut of school as soon as he could,"
Ludeman saa'd. "He~
. _anted to be a state policeman. It was his goal from
the time he '"'IS
,.. IS ''16."
. His ·atu'tude chan~ when he was turned down for law e.nforcement
J"obs t"n Ne'w· "or~
•• .., · 'tst'ana and Flort'da, ht's teacher said. .
"When t"t '"··arne
-parent he was never going to reach this lifelong
"""
...,.
goaI, he '"··
"""arne very d'~sillusioned and quit the church ," Ludeman
. said
. .

Ice Cream

lems wilhout being handed 19-yearold losers.
Please feel free to issue an ipology to the men and women who serve
in lhe United S!lteS Army, Navy, Air
···Force,.Marines and Coast Guard, as
well as numerous other military
qencies th!ll protect our freedom. R.M., Foresthill, Calif.
· Dear R.M.; Sorry, you'll pi no
apology from me. Countless so·called losers who were taaed "hope·
Iess".have found themselves in' lhe
Am!ed Services. They needed discipline, a sense of pride and the selfrespect lhat comes ·wilh meeting

Citizens Against Lawsuit Abuse
(CALA) is a non-profit, educational
group in the greater Los Angeles area
dedicated to putting an end to lawsuit
abuse. CALA serves as a watchdog
group over the legal system and those
who seek to abuse it for unfair financial gain. I feel they perform a valuable ser~iec and hope you will print
this letter. --L.A. Times Reader
Dear L.A. Times Reader: I agree
that tl:te organization fills a need, and
I wish there were more like it. Thanks
for letting us know about CALA. .

lloclllllectaity Oflloe,

LA T

Fresh Ground ·

challenlea. Of course, some dido 't presented the "~ney Lawsuit of
llllke the p11lle and washed OUt, but lhe Month" award to a woman who
lhll's the way it is in college, too. l've sued a hOspiial claiming negligence
heard from many ·young men and and infliction of emotional distress
women who credit the Armed Ser- after she fell off a toilet and sustained
vices wilh saving them from going a cut on her forehead that required
down the tubes.
· ·
stitches. She had been brought to the
Oranled, this kid sounds plenty far emergency room hours earlier with
out and pn:tty far gone, but if he were' an overdose of medication following
willing to clean up hisatl and·go into a suicide attempt and was lreated
lhe, service, he just might surprise with Sorbitol and activated charcoal.
everybody.
The woman took another fall
Dear Ann Landers: I have been when the jury ruled in the hospital's
following lhe loony lawsuits cited in favor in only two hours . The threeyour column lhese last few weeks and day trial cost taxpayers appro xiam pleased to call this item to your mately $18,500. based on the cost of
$500 for ench lawsuit filed in Caliattention. I hope you will print it.
. A group lhat has named itself _ fomia, plus court operating costs of
"Citizens Against Lawsuit Abuse .. · approximately $6,000 per day. .

will sugestion. Why didn't you tell
him to &amp;et a job writin1 for a newsPIPCf? The miliwy has enoup prob-

'

kichardLude~,Johnson'steacherforfouryearsattinyf..imaChris·
tian School in 'Rochester, N.Y., said his former student was quite intelli·

,,

' P-a-7
Monday, June 23, 1997

Social Security ·tips for vacationers Community

..11111•11

NO RAINCHECKS

.

•

nose ring lad lsilly-Jooki(IJ, lll:fllgly
goatee. He wu ~ in 1
Ann
junior college but rarely ~wed up
Landers
for classes. His (*ODts r,l~n't know
what to do wilh lhe kill ·And were
ready to give.up and thr(,w'him ouL
, Your "advice was to Wet •hirri into
counseling immediati:Iy, ' !lave ·him
. take some vocational courses or·find
By ANN UNDERS
. a career in lhe miliwy WHOA!! I
Dear Ann' Landers; I'm respond- am a retired military ~1teran. I, ,u
jng to a recent letter in your column well as several olher ,ihilitary ptr·aliOut a teenager who lives with his sonnel, find thal'advice ~ffensive and
paients, wrecked two· cars given to very much out in Ief't fi'eld. The milhim before age 19 and was fll'ed from itary doesn't Waitt him':'·
·numerous jobs. The boy was a clasItsaddensmetosenomeonewho
sic under-achiever and a drug user ha5 been writing ad vi~~· for so many
'who sported the grunge look, com- years and has given helP. to so mlllly
plete.with dyed hair, pierced ears, a people come up with ~~han off-the'

Oecqia~or of $1 an hour.
lk
··
conalllllly, biller about a lifetime of lost opponunilies

Prices Good Tuesd

The .Daily Sentinel

redited with ·'savi_ng' countless 'losers'

J~ I'lL (AP)- Philip Noel lolm1011loiled I~ yell'S
11 an ~ car driver, t.Ji111 millions of dollars II'OIInd Florida and

'

O'Connor.
pital·Stonybrook Sunday night, hos"They were going around Pylon
STHAMPTON . N y (AP)
WE
' . .
"The wing of one plane clipped pita! spokeswoman Ellen Barohn 2.... One plline climbed up and hit lh_e
Two small
airplanes
olher plane, they were vyang for pos1"tn flt'ghtcompeting
and crashedin ina another," said 1im Ryan. a. said. ·
lll.ded
Chris Kalishek, 38, of Madison, tt'on 1'n lhe last lap," said witness Don
flrace co S d d · g an .; show on spokesman for the Suffolk County
ames
un
ay
unn
~r
Wis., was hospitalized in critical Lewa·s.
I I d k 'll' ·
L
0 fthe pilots Executive Robert Gaffney.
ong
·
"T!te planes are very flimsy,
The cause was u.nder investiga- co.ndition with extensive 'mjunes
to
d ·s·an11 · ·t ·tng· onethe th
an Th
cnuca
they're very tiny," Lewis added.
· 1Y tnJunng
·
1 o er.
two of tion, although witnesses said winds hts face and body.
.
e· smg
P anes, at the had picked up J'ust before the crash. •
· an "The w1'ngspan is 17-112 fee
. Lit's like
1· e-engme
·
The four planes were followmg
f
our
ctrc
mg
a
race
course
you
wear
the
.;rplane."
o L
11 d h
Dick Goodlett; S1. of Louisville, oval course marked by pylons, flying
~
W.
mgs
s ow,
The tw~day
show was suspendat Ky., was burned over 90 percent of only 50 to 150 feet above Ihe groun d
~
h d ver fong s ant tors
·eras
e Gabreski
away rom
specsaid
a Suf· his body and died at University Hos- at speeds ·up to I 80 mph.
ed a•ter
Francis
Airport,
•• the accident.
rnunlv Pn1irP.
~--~------...;;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . .

'

ByTh~Berid

.

'

By MARTIN CRUTSINQER

.

\

d,

Sch!IIIUICher, who iJ.O direc~ lege, she received !he-Ohio ~ool
matller got the haPPY ending he
waated for "Batman&amp;: Robin" when "The Client" and "A. lime to Kill,"· Fooclservice Seh"laJ:thip and lhe .
reigning C!!Jied Cnisader Val Kilmer . . was anpy durins ihe nilkins of Pierre Foods Scholanhijl. Haynes ·
backed Dllv
"Batman &amp;: Robin" when goss.ip maintaifiC!d a 3.7 .cumulative grade
1'IKl di~lor's ~ve haldes vnth writers made a big deal about Batt~irl pOintavCfB1e, was on lhe ·Dean's List
Kilmer during "Batman Fon!ver" Alicia Silverstone's brlefweiibtgain. all quarters and wu recoanized as a .
·
, "It was horrible. lthouftl ii was . Preside~t'a L,ist N~minee.
. ,
were no .re.t. .
"Thai was my dilemma; how am very cruel," ~chumatller. W/s. ·:she
She ts acheduled.to take her state
I goihg to make this movie and work ' wu a teenager who lll~a few board exam Oct. 18 In Columbus aad
. wilh·somconc 1 don't wut to work pounds-likull ofua~o ~in upon s~ssful compledon _of the
. with-7" Schumather 11y1 in lhe times ..I W9Uid confront fe
JOIIf- · exm, wdl . become 1 reJIItered
N~wsweek mapdne th8l hits news- nalists and rei say, 'Wilh stJnany dielelic technician and JeCOgRized by
5~ Monday. "!Jut then VII made young people sufferina from IIIOiel· lhe Amerii:aa Dietetk: Alaocialion.
it very, very easy becatl!e he wanted ~and. bul_imi,~ why ue you ~ifyHay~s has ~~' ace~
• 10 do 'lbe $aint'illlleld."
· rng thtl gul?
.the pouuon of ~eteuc: tec:hllic1111 at
OeO!Je c~ Jill the l.ead rote "'
$
the Holzer SeniOr C.. c:enter, 380

.

..

•
•

I

j

'1.,,

•••

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services inc.
lud.eskiiP'
: · . to
Free assessment
of your

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help you decide whatjob is right for
you . .
Jwessments include suaesllons ror
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Computer matclt or your skills with
Job buk of 40,0011 employers from
Columbus to Charleston:

~~~~~==~ill

I

I

�Pllge 8 • The Deily 81ntiMI
••

Hungry ·p·lants in little shop of
FORESTVILLE, Calif. (AP) In a greenhouse just off a winding
back road in the heart of California's
wine. country, unsuspecting prey are
being lured, captured and devoured.
There are no toothy. growling
beasts - just a roomful of plants.
Hungry plants. This is the macabre
world of California Carnivores, home
to the nation's largest selection of carnivorous plants.
The store .grows. and sells thousands of. Venus flytraps, American
pitcher plants, sundews and Mexican
butterworts. All bug killen.
More than 450 varieties of carnivorous plants- called CPs by hqbbyists - are cultivated 50 miles
north of San Francisco at California ·
Carnivores by partners Marilee
Maertz and Peter D' Amato.
And who's buying these stealthy

Monday,June23, 11117

Pomeroy • lllddllport, Ohio

'

..
green.I$SUStns.
"I 11ee a 101 of fathers with their
sons," said MICriZ, while tendini to
a row· of yoilng sundews. "A lot of
our customen are people who tried 10
grow a Venus flytri!P u a child. Now
they bring their kids, and you can see
it in their eyes."
And the kids ean bring their own
bugs.
Armed ,with a pair of tweezers,
volu111eer John Rizzi scoured the
greenhol!se floor for a sacrificial
earwis.
.
"You're getting eaten DO'!'. This is
yollr big moment." said Rizzi as he
snatched a wiggling bug.
Slowly, he lowered the bug
between the jaws of a flytrap. The
insects' twitching triggers the sensitive hairs inside the plants. Suddenly, Rizzi's bug disappeared with a

horro~s

attract young ·and,old

snap!
oquatic species can be found floating
Maertz and D' Amato are the only in ponds and lakes. It looks innocent
employees of the store thll opened in enouah. but in the blink of an eye,
1990. Last year, they recorded some one las bug.
"It has a bladder in the water and
$70,000 in ulea.
'
There is a premium placed on edu- a trigger hair mechanism," Maertz
catina the public about (onsecvllion, said. "A trap door swings open, sucks
but it's really the voracious appetite ·in the victim, the door shuts. wits Out
of the stock that keeps (USIOmers the water and crushes the victim."
And it all happens in about one
coming back.
·
one-thousandth
of a second.
Sam Rose, a cancer researcher
The
Nepenthes,
or tropical piti:hfrom Oakland, came to buy several
er
plants,
works
slower.
It grows funplants. He said the plants might
pique the interest of his grandson, but nel-shaped cups which slowly fill
with water, digestive enzymes and
he enjoys them, too.
·
acids.
Flies, bugs and small rodents
"I have Venus flytraps, purple
climb
on the plant, become intoxipitcher plants arid butterworts," Rose
cated
by
a substance secreted on its
said. Without remorse, he added with
a grin, "I give preference to one surface and fall inside the cups to
drown.
species over another."
Perhaps the most commonly
Evidently, so do the plants. Take
known
CP in the United States is the
the Urticularia, or bladderworts. Tile

,...

Names in
. the news
NEW YORK (AP) - Yet anoth. · er Cuomo is getting national exposure.
Christopher Cuomo, the 26-yearold son of former New York Gov.
Mario Cuomo, who is also the
younger brother of Clinton administration member Andrew Cuomo,
debuts this week as a host on
CNBC's nightl~ .public affain program, "Equal Time."
Cuomo, who is sitting in for reg\llar host Bay Buchanan, sister of Pat
Buchanan, said he hopes to attract the
interest of his generation.
"Young people ... don'lsee themselves as players in it," he said of politics. "The dialogue clearly is about
Mr. and Mrs. America, their households and their children. Between
those two poles lies my entire gener.. ation."
.Cuomo bopes .he can lure dad to
the studio.
"I know that he would if I paid
him enough,'' he said, laughin!l.
AUGUSTA, Ky. (A~) - George
Clooney may be one of Hollywood's
biggest hunks, but in his hometown
he 'sjust a nice boy who made good.
' "I'm very proud George is going
TAKING A BREAK - Telemachoa Tal'llbllnll
to be our Batman and that he is from
takn
a braak from his work 111 the Gothsm
Augusta," Orenna Meyer said. "It's
Focicf
Dell
on Columbue Avenue In New York
something we are all really pleased
about."
TV's best ever
Clooney, one of the stars of NBC's
smash "ER," plays the Caped Crusader in "Batman lind Robin," which
debuted as the weekend's top film
with $43.6 million in receipts. ·
By DAVID BAUDER
He still comes back to visitAugus- · AP Television Writer
ta, a town of 1,400 aboui 35, miles - .. NEW YORK -TV Guide loves
south of Cincinnati. He last dropped Lucy'- but it loves Mary just a litby about two months ago, shot hoops tie more.
.
at his high school with girlfriend
The hest television show ever, the
·Celine Balidran, signed autographs magazine has decided, was the 1975
and chatted with the locals.
episode of "The Mary Tyler Moore
Betty McClanahan said Clooney's Show" where the WJM-TV news" down-to-earth" appeal has a lot to room gang mourns the' death of
do with his unpretentious upbrin~ing. Chuckles the Clown.
.
"When he comes back to visit he
It came tn JUSt ahead of Luctlle
kind of blends into the crowd. We ·.Ball's tipsy turn as the Vitadon'tbother him ... he's just one of - meatavegamin Girl.
us " she said last week.
Moore figures in 19ur of TV
'
Guide's picks as top 100 episodes,
WASHINGTON (AP) - Issue two as S\llr of her eponymous 1970s
One! John McLaughlin's nuptials·. series and two as Laura Petrie in
Will taking a bride soften up the "The Dick Van Dyke Show."
crusty Washington talk show host?
Choosing the top episodes
The · 70-year-old host of "The involved "lots of arguing, which
McLaughlin Group" married Cristi- we're still doing," among the weekna Vidal, a . 36-year-old business ly magazine's editors and the staffers
executive, hefore some 300 guests at from cable's Nick at Nite who were
Holy Trinity Church on Sunday.
called in to help. said Steven ReddiMcLaughlin, whose previous mar- cliffe, TV Guide's editor in chief. The
riage ended in divorce, met Ms. list appears in this week's issue.
·
Vidal at a bookstore in 1990. She is
Not only was Chuckles' demise
a vice president at Oliver Productions the high point of one of television 's·
Inc., the. company that produces best sht~ws, it managed the delicate
"The McLaughlin Group."
trick of getting laughs from a funerMcLaughlin also appea~s on the . al, he said. ·
interview program "John McLaugh"It still makes you laugh and
lin's One on One)" He is a former laugh uproariously," he 5aid. "And it
Roman Catholic priest, and served on
the Nixon White House staff.

City. Tal'llblnta, a Greek Immigrant, hn helped
Hrve coffee In the dell owned by two of his
son-lrHaws for the past 10 ynrs, (AP)
•

When Mary mourned Chuckles· the Clown

NEW YORK (AP)- Val Kilmer
has already been there, done lhat as
the silver-screen version of moody
rocker Jim Morrison. Now movie
producers may bring back other
musical giants from the days of
Flower Power.
. Cuba Gooding Jr. of ·"Jerry
Maguire" fame is neg01iating to star
in "Blaze of Glory," the story of soul
· singer Otis Redding, Entenainl!lent·
Weekly reponed in its June 27 issue.
. Kilmer played Morrison in "The
Doors" in 1991. The magazine said
the story of Jimi Hendrix, the psychedelic guitarist whose "Star Spangled.Banner" made for a memorable
Woodstock, is· now the subject of a
· film being developed by the makers
of "Dead Presidents."
The magazine also said hramount and TriSW are getting ready
to take a piece ot the action on the
Janis Joplin story. Paramount may
snag Melissa Etheridge 10 play the
"Q~ of Rock." Tristar is lookin11
at a tip-synchins Lili Taylor.
·
Why all the flashbacks?
"Hollywood is absolutely ravenous for storie$ from real life," producer Michie! Cieply uid. "When
ycu talk about Dllllic .... of the ·~.
you're talking about some amwns
stories."

'

IJ

bop and tM'Ibes ill WiJmiDifOD,
N.C., the flytnpln on Nord! Caroliu '• list of proCected pluts. Ill
dwindling numbm Ire bltune4JII(illily on poacben who pther the)luats
for fast cash from black-market buy·ers.
NOI on I I!"' the pl.ms hlrmless 10
humans, they're actually helpful in
some cases ¥ homespun medicines.

·i

ta
MDGSCO~S~ORC~

fl'ublic is invited

Mon-Sun

Caffeine comfort vs.
corporate 'gorillas'

INGELS ELECTRONICS
llatlle lllaeK Dealer

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

Middleport, OH

Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio
.

I

BANKRUPTCY

can' relieve a debtor of
obfigations and aming~ a fair
distribution of assets. Debtors in bankruptcy may
keep "exempl" property for their personal use.
This may include a car, a house, clothes, an(j
household goods. ,
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:
finan~al

.Sid., June 7, 1997
&amp;P.M.
Melga Co.
Fairground•
Sponaored by
Melg• Co. 4-H HOI'Ie ·
Com milt"
. Far mare Info eall P1m
liS 448i'or LIN 94t-20112
AuctlonMr:
Rhen Milhoan

.::o-::c:.

Middleport, Oh. 46780 .
Home Ph.

1310 Ealltrn IWtnut, GalllpoNo,

Rluoneble"-'"

252fl0

OrCollt14 441 1122.

MORRISON'S HEAliNG
Middleport

Sale• Service
lnatallitlon

.
Attorney At Law
(614) 592-5025
I

Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, Industrial Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Replatement
Monday-Friday · 8:00a.m.- 4:30p.m.
Saturday • 8:00 a.m. - 12 noon

CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes

•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTiMATEES

.Big Bend Fabrication,
·.·Machin4t &amp; Welding Shop

845-~

INC~

4jocm Addlllonl
oftlwGarlgtl
oEIM:blcaol a Plumbing
oflooflng
olnllrlor a Extettor

of&gt;llntlng
· AIM Conciet. Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG II
. 892-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

250 Condor Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A Division on Nichols Metal, INc.
·
Phone: 614: 992:2408
· Fax: 304-n3-5661

985-4473
7122/lfn
· CORPORAL ~CTRIC
Dailey Rd: Racine
614-949-3080
Joba Williams- Owner
Ucensed Electrtclail
Work Guaranteed
Free Estimates Providing
· Quality Resld9111lal
SEirvlce New
.
construction- Total and ·
- parli!ll rewires on older
homes
. 24Hr
Service

Ulldlll ·

ft IJt

BkCAV&amp;ftll

Umelltone a Gr,vel
. Septic Sylltenfa
Trailer a

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

'

.614-992•3470

•

.

·

NOW OPEl ·
COICIITI
SEIVICIS

'•FA.crGRY ·
DIRECt'

HouileSttes'

ReesoNibla RafN ·
· Joe N. Sayre·.;

PRI«;ES""
Quality Window SysteDJS
110 CCIUrt St. .

•

'.

$AY~:iv.~ETE

Howard L. Wrlt11el

.S1,000 RIWARDII

W¥1023477

JC

K-9 Designs~

CONSTRUOION
Uc. WV011030
Roofing, Painting
Guaranteed
Qui~

w.r...........

· "We 1rea1 your best frund W.e our b~11 fmnd" ,St. At. 68~
Tuppers Plains, Ohio

FrH E~tlmatea

992·9057 or
992·1056...,.

(614) 6674626

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR
Gutters .
Downspoutl
Gutter C~lng
Painting
. FREE ESnMATES

949-2168

Simi'S

.• New Homes
'
• Additions
• Remodeling
• Garag~

From At. 33 take Rt.
691, past Quality Inn,

. tmiletoCo.Rd.1,
21/hllles to Co. Rd.
2~ First left tum.

• Decks
-·ROofing
• Siding

"Stop puuir,s offtho•e much needed
home improvements." Call Today!

·· Near H611ntJS
Campgrounds and
' Bow Hunters Club.
Slgnl poated.

•"

·-

33, Galllpolll, OH 45831 .

poaillon. Send reaum• fa Peraonnel, 11 Pl•a•ant Valley Hoa-

pllol 25:20 Valier Dr.• Pt Plooa-

llrle.t.noe Mt1117

' . 1-A~Ierl ;·_
Contut· Ron Mlu.i'

S3.11S per min.
Must bl18 yrs.
. SII'·U (81t) 145 8434

cr... st.,,......o

r.::"''

A pod
jo6 on
ony " udy ·day,
. """'"" il ..eem
bnpler,

Interior
Be(ol'll 8 p.m.
l•vt meeNge. ·
Aftll' I p.m.

Nulling Hamo, 814 UB liDS•.

.·

HOM£ lYPlSTll,

MISSING: TNT erea, Ronwollor PC uaora needod. S45,000 In·
mlllfl, lomalt. l&gt;lack &amp; ton, taml- CIIIIHI potential. Call t-800-513- .
ly pet, aadlr mlaaocl. REWARDI 4343 Ell. B-11388.
~saar30C-a75-&amp;030.
Houaai&lt;Hpor 10 cart lor 2 allghlREWAROI Mal• Sltm.M, wtor· ly disabled people, lull or port
lno purPle n.. collar, Ma.aon limo. 614-388-0805.
..._ Call t--582-7277 Alk tor
HVAC SERVICE TECHNICIAN
Katly o(riiUm .. 11211..,r. SL
Needed •. . Requirement• ; RSES
&lt;:ertlllcatlon In Rehigeration And
70 ·. Yant Sale
. Gallipolis

. &amp; VIcinity
~--111101

a. Pold lri Ad....._
PEIQUW; 2!. p.m.
thtdllf btlo .. lhtad
Ia to ovn. limdor
ldHion- :too p.m.

PotdiJ. Mondor ldhlon
- 10:00 e.m. Sttunlar.

Pornet'oy, ,

Hear Pump Sya1am1, E•perience
In HVAC A Mu~tr Knowledgeable
In Manufactured Hauling Heating
~nd Cooling· A Plus. lnlervitws

Sr Appointment Only: Call: Bennon'a Moblkt Homo floating &amp; dg.
AI 8tH46 -9C16 9 A.M. To 5
P.M.

HELP WANTED
La Cantina
._,lean Roataurant
QaiNpolla Forty WV
30C-11711-7115.

Nurae Aide Training Program·

Rod&lt;oprlngs Rehabllilatlon Con1ar
Mkklleport
will be offering rraining claU:H in
&amp;VIcinity
lht month or May. Applications
now being acceplad 11
All Yard lalat Mull ·ao Peld Ia · are
367511 Rocksprings Rei,, Po1111f0j,
"""'~· DMdllnt: 1:00pm tho
dsr before Ute ad ~~ 10 run, OH . Clau alze Ia limited. Three
(3) refetence papers are required
Iunday a Monday edition· with
application. Apply in person
1:Gipnl Fotdly.
betwHn toam &amp; 3pm M-F. Stud. an11 lhat auccanfulfr campltta
80
Public S81e
tho TCE ctaaa will bo eligible lor
.and Auction
emplormenL Absolutetr no phone
colla. EOE

.

........

'

UY'S ,
TUNS.ISSION

•...........
.., .,... ,.,.
(lormer1y of Dlen'l

n-.,Aibeny)

123 P181iNnt Rldgt

Pomeroy, OH

Call 992-9045
for all your

•

·-

transmiNion nlld1.

814-~180
Iii

E•pentnced RN Will Do Privott
Duty Homo Health, tfoapllal Or

Tal Uve To A"
Real Gifted .
Psychic
1·900.868·4900'
Ext. 1817

PAINTING •

Call614·843-5426

992·2753 Free Eatlmate1 992-5535..

992·9200

~apropariJ

UNDA'S

• Vinyl Sieling • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Over 20 years experience
Free Estimates

C.ll fer Otr ••••1•1•

Far lnfarnllltlon
Jelldlnt to 111e
arrest·and
comrlcrtlon of
MJOM Involved In

I ,

LONG1 8
CONSTRUCTION

WagJMr laJM
f&gt;omll'oy
Delivery or Dine ln.
More thanjuat •
pizza place.

•. 7

' 111.40211

L...;"Ac:;::;::.r:;:oa:s~fr:::om:.:.:.:li~u=:::ra:.:P~I::ai:.::ns:.:E:;I;:::em:;.;e::;:n.:::ta:::.I.;;;Sc;;h;;;ool-.,'...,.' · L.._..,.___.::.;.;:::.J

RT. 7 PIZZA
EXPRESS

Founctltlona,
Drlvewaya, ·
Slde-lks, Patios,
Garage.and
B11ement Floors.
Free Elltlmates.
Insured

Ohio

.

Billing. Mull a. Compulff Lltoralt, Profoulonal And Rolilble, 11F o.y Shill, ReiUmt To: P.a Box

Recliner, noedaflltd. 304-875- FuH-Timt !Part-Tim• W. Are Ar&gt;eua.
ctp~ng Appllcallona By AppointTo Good Ho.,.: I Black &amp; Whitt ment Only F-.r Dedlcalad, DeKitten, F~mtle, e Wttkt Old, pendable Employer, Oulltandng
hnolltal • Wooklr Solary, • ln111 118 Z»&amp;AfWSP.U.
cendva Program &amp; Comptehtn·
aivt Bonelli Po~age. • Paid Va60 · Lost and Found
c:adon After 1 Year Of Conltnuaua
Found· Wid. -lng, roung to· Sorvlco, 1-118&amp;-772-2455.
malo, black dag, Sr. 12~ oroa
HOME BUSINESS Cheap SIAirt,
llowmon'tRun, ··~~1211.
Sand SASE + $5 To ·C. Rouetti
Loll: Stt Of Toola On Eaatorn P.O. Bo• 7421, Canton, OH
.
Avonuo, 114-387-0305, Leave 44705.

11-.

Llme•tone,
-. .
Gravel, S~md, .
Top Soli, Fill .Dirt

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

Professional Pet Groo~
Boarding • Training- '
Supplies
't·

. MIDKIFF
Sunday at n.oon Jun1o:l
29, lhe decendanta of
Issac and Lydia Mercer
Mklcllf Will h9kl a
potluck reunion at lhe ·
hOme of ROll and
Pam Flowera, 1911
Shafer Rd.,
NelaonVIIIe,

POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

I

...

Gravet,·Umestone,
Topeoll; FIJI Dll'l,
Sand. No Mlnlnum.

:20 Y11. E&gt;p. - lno. Owner. Rick JOh111011

MIDDLEPORT

- ' . ·- ...

~so• Communications

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding .

537 BRYAN PLACE

'

WILLUULIDftCILL.
992·7074

HAULING

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

good lllml, 114-7C2-2t87.

"·I c p
•· •- 814
;;.';.0'
7,Pf' noM -•o-.

WICKS

Free li•tlmate•

IILUNO DEPT.

Malure Ptrtan Having Experl·
ence In Mtclleart And ln~utanct

.,~ WV 25650. MiEOE.

CELLULAR PHONES

· 113 W. 2ND ST.

'

Pordoo, churcMI &amp; ICIIoola. ·Pt.
DRIVERS WANTED
PltiMnl,'WV. 25550. 304-8751847,
.
500 IIIIo Radiua -'Homo Every
Waokand, Famu, lnauranco Paid
40
Giveaway
Br Companr (Denial, Er•. Pro40tKRa11ramont Plan,
t Malo Gtrmo" Shephard, Hat acrlpdon)
Pepora; Unte Black llite Mllltd . Firat In · Firat Out Olapotch, Ute
Chow Plarlul PupPJ, et•-3n- Modtt · Conv. Tractara With
Fla tbad Tralltrl Competitive Pay
~
.
'
• Fen:tn11Qt Of Grou.
tt ·12llon1h Old Malt Puppr.
.ORANTTIIUCKING,IIC.
Arn.rlcan Fox Hound, Lovtt
· Mtl8SR13
Children, Will h Good Wllch
CWIIILL, OHIO 45111
Ooo • Hu'*'D. su ue :M04.
lllJ0.2112·2183
2 cute brown/black kluano. Pflrl
Angora. Alao 1 loving yellow
alrlpe, .cat -5-4302. · Eaar Workl E•cellont Pari At·
aemblt Product• a1 Home. Call
Angora cat, 7 monthl ·old. ollv1&lt; Toll Frtt 1·800-487-5588 EXT.
l whlta, very loving, to good 12170.
homo onlJ. ~75-1183.
Experienced RN needed 10 ""rk
Collt pu~ mat.. 7 monlho old, 10 Midnights In tho ICU. Full-lime
Ftw ICiaor!l. 01. 0483407.

JEFF WARNEIIISUUIICE

I

Pattr.llrlvt.

·-Aoall

(No Sunday Calls)

• 5/atlr11 1'110.

Bab)'alnor needed night&amp;. WociS•t. thl 11t lhru 20th al IICh

11404,

Heat PUIIIP
(814) 992-7434

614·992·7643

Athens, Ohio

Door, Quick Cuhf 'Bonuaea•
Fun I H00-827-4840 inci'SiaiRep.

'IIIIOICWI"

New Homes • Ylnyl Siding New
G•rages • .R,placement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing .
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Attorney William Safranek

Local Aceta 100-1357741 .
AVON 18 -Stl tHr, No Door To

.. 114-742·2548.
Coinpu1er Uttrl Needed. Wo1k
CriWIOtd'l Fl.. Morkot Plu1 In own houra. S20k to S50ktrr tHenderaon. WV. Frtl space In 800-348-7188 11508.
Ju... Call lor Clotalll. 304-875-

319 S. 2nd Ave.

Freedom

(819)

30 AnnouncementS
••oo -nltor laf'VIIl &lt;"-mica~
ly floo tlulaln pt~ICII, Equl&lt;)o• ilo-

&amp;COOliNG

Ext. 8789
se~-u

'

mon!h. Applr In poraon 148 H.

Reduce aale and la11 wltll Go- Tebltta lnd e.v.p Dlu,.llc,
II Fruth Piprmacy,
-.n,
. Mld-

(6

$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.

.BISSELL BUILDERS,
a-

flop.

ohlp Gat Up l Worr; Slip In f'rin.
Vlcloo And Rent Ont Of Our
Aclutt VW.C.. 100 ,._ Rt' OsiMI

~--------~~·~--------~--~------~
~--------------------~
Complete Machine Shop Servite F•brication
ROBERT BISSELL-

•Room Additions

.........

At. 1, Box 44-C
M1111011, WV .

UP-TO-DATE
SPORTS
FINANCE
STOCKS
AND MOREll
t-900-656-2700

Ill-_,., ·-

.... bllt or 304-112-2141, Ind.
112-tue

' JUilhTICN

-·,

2ND ANNUAL
TACK AUCTION

oStorm Doors &amp;
Wlllllows

742·2925

Quality Work 8t

Don Geary,

10r'2&amp;'915mn

a:oo un.-3:30 p.m.
•Rllacemenl Windows
•8 d Garages ·

..._lriltll.

.._ .....
D. Geo.-.'s

614-992-3120

992·2772-

ril:::

992-2825

FREE ES7JIIATES

Avon Rtpr...nted..a
· Earn monfl' lor Chrlll·

Abl•

-

Hu 'lbur lletrlao- Or Rela~on ·

.

R. L. HOLlON .
TRUCKING

-

l--.f

McC.. IMrRd.
Rutland, OH
•Small Job•
•LargeJobl

'

By VERENA DOBNIK
lishments, the Gotham goes more for
Associated p,... Writer
the common touch.
NEW YORK -There are still a
"We strve mostly working peafew places where you can get a pte," says Telemechos Tarabanis, a .
steaming cup of java served on a native of Greece who helps Dill in the
worn counter in a greasy diner that business owned by his two sons-inofTen the comfort and familiarity of la'\Y, one Greek and the other Hunmom's kitchen, But these days mom- garian.
,
· imd-'pop simpliCity is fighting for sur- . Along with some basic groceries,
vi val against the corporate caffeine Gotham sells about 150 cups of drip
gorillas.
coffee a day - "good Colombian
Along a one-block stretch on . coffee . for average people," says
Manhattan's Upper West Side, a vin- manager Sergio Go11zalez. "We're
tage neighborhood deli that still squeezing by."
serves a 65-cent cup of joe, along . Squeezing by in New York means
with good-hearted chatter, is vying about $15,000 a month rent for
with three chain bars serving.a vari- Gotham's narrow storefront space.
etyof fancy brews that can top $3.SD. Staibucks would not discuss what it's
.There's Timothy's, a shiny, paying for a comparable space, forglassed-in shop. Just up die street is merly occupied by a candy store.
tiny but tony Dalton: Across the street
While Gotham stands alone, Staris the soon-ill'open neighbOrhood ~lucks has . ·1,200 bars across the
Goliath - Starbucks, · which has country, with revenue of$215 million
computers, track lighting, something a year. Gotham employees.on Sunday
called "rhumba" chocolale-laced cof- didn't want to discuss fiscal details. ·
fee, and no less than three kinds of
That makes the Seattle-based Starsugar.
bucks "a 3()()..pound gorilla," says
And alongside Starbucks is the Andrew Resnick, executive vi.ce
family-owned· Gotham Food deli, a president of operations·for Torontoneighborhood fixture for 20 years. ·. based Timot)ly's, which llas more
The new giants represent ."an · than 70 venues inNortli America.
a5sault on the smaller people trying
With the arrival of Starbucks.
to make it against a homogenized · "everybody is shocked. We don't
world, against the globalization of need another one here," says Gonzaeverything," says coffee drinker lez; ''What's going on here on this
Robin Pluer.
street? They're all going for the
That is not to say she freq\(Cn~s money."
. ·
Gotham. She drinks her cappuccino
Some customers share !tis opinat Dalton, a small New. York chain, ions of the big newcomers.
because "this place is also kind of . "Theirs isn't better," said real
struggling" an~ now will soon face estate agent Paul Palush~j~ who
Starbucks' competition.
depends on the Gotham for two
"I'm 100. percent sure we'll be morning cups of coffee. "And Vjhat
hun, but I don't know how much," REALLYcountsisnotthecoffee,it's
said the Dalton manager, a Russian· the atmosphere, the smiles, people
born woman named Victoria who who know you and say, 'Hi! What's
was reluctanllo supply her last name going on w.ith you? Que pasa?
along with her fears,
Buenos dias!'"
Alongside the fancy new estab-

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN.HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY.

l,h+L.....,cjJpJU

Speata, 31M-1175-t421.

••.2115

FAMILY DENTISTRY

304-773-5822

HIIPW••tell
A~ON l All Areal I lllllrter

ACCTI PIIOVIOIDII tmrnadlatt
US ReaiOCk l Procoaa Reg. lnv

....., ......... D.D...

Mulberry Beapu, P.omeroy
1Uesday1 aad''J1landays
Serving from 5:00- 5:45
Donation $4.01 for meal

,,

ranging from ·~prolong tife; treat
everything" to "provide comfort care
only."
The final instructions for the
· Medic Alert paiients, who wear ,;..;_.,__...,__...,....__
bracelets or amulets with their n~~=
· and toll-free numbers, could include ·
II::!W
lnforination on decisions for a terminaliY. ill patient and whether oq:aml'l
would be donated after death.
11
The bill of rights will be incorporated into a death-eduadion pro- ,
· . iram the AMA Is operating·over the
next two years.
"The AMA ftrmly believes that
· end-of-life care wu of .the hishell
poisiblc quality, ihe ·~1 for phyai· cillft-auilkld suicide woulcfbe ctru, tically .redUced, if not olimilllled,"
•Small Engi*
said Dr. 1bomaa Reardon, Vice chair
•Liwri Mowers
of the AMA board oflllllleel.
The i._ has become more beatoCiullnS.W.
ed in' I'CCCIII years, la!Jely beciUH of
··WMCIEatera
retired Micbipn pllholotlst Jll\:k
2 mi. (Iff Rt. 7.
Kavorkian, 'w.bo has bolped .more
L.Mdtng Creek Rd.
thin -40 people ltill thetDiel-v,..
hu beett ICQUIUid in
In April, I'Ntident Clintouipecl
a bill blnnini the lliC offederalliiOIIey to pay foussisted auicidea.

~ IISOI DE~~ CUE

EVENING MEAL

Coffee war:

Doctors present bill of
rights for dying patients ··

By BRIAN BERGSTEIN
Associated Press Writer
CHICAGO (AP) Dying
· patients should be assured their doctors will follow t)leir last wishes, the
Americ1111 Medical Association said
. Sunday while introducing two initiatives meant to head off calls for
physici1111-assisted suicide.
At its 1111nual meeting, the AMA
presented a bill of rights for dying
patients and introduced a way for
people with Medic Alen bracelets to
leave instructions for the.ir final care.
"We do nol have a right to die, but
we do have a right to be free of
unwanted intervention," Dr. Linda
Emanuel, the AMA:s vice presidenl
for ethics standards, said at the organization 's annual.meeting in Chicago.
·
While the association opposes
physiciu-usisted suicide, the U.S.
Supreme Court is considering its
leaality. .
.
Patients . who belong . lo ·. Medtc
Alert, the noilprofit orpniZ&amp;tion thll
keeps. medical infonnation ud is
available for emeraencies, could
.c~ options for their final care

toric:ally used the fluid in the ·
Nepenthes • u utiNcterial eyewuh, MII:IU uid. And butterworU
are Jabbed on the skin to IRat bums.
''There's always some drama or
ttauma around here,.. MII:IU uid u
insects struggled for their lives. "'I'd
probably feel happier if man was
their prey. Now thai's fair pme.l rescue frQas sometimes, though. We're
not heartless."

110

·~

Viu.,.n in IOUtheut 'Alia have hi•

'

i1
I

DiOIIIIII&amp; IIIUICipula, or Veau llytrap.
Native only 10 a ».mile ndiua of

Usift&amp; tlw Classifitrl$
l1111 Eiuy 111 • • •

-

Phone 664-3807

Will
Utilities Put You ·
In The Poor House?
Consider:

t

'·
'''·
••
••

'·

~

Easy Bank Rnondli ·
·
1
Air Condlllonen'lnm6d 28" aIIIOIIIh
HeatPlnpslnslaiW '3r amonth ·
ll'eiil..... !liNd OIIIIIIP'O'Md cndl)

'

•

•Free 5 Year Parll Warranty

•Free Digital Thermoltat
1111 'luln 8nlt

~. 'Ohio­
Jot Will mn.

BEATING 4: COOUNG
BIN~IIISIUhl III uOHlWV
1.-a 1111117 1311 8s8aed SGhool

(814)--.u77

I

414 4411411
.a '!)Dill, OH

'

THE MAPLES
in Pomeroy, Ohio

,

l '.'1'1 ()YUHJT

.

Rents are computed.according to your

';I flVICI S

inc01)1e. l.,ovely apartm~ts featuring
wall-to-wall carpeting, with all

·--Pt.--

HtlpWanted

appliances. .
ALL PRIMARY UTILITIES PAID
M&amp;~Jt be 62 years of age or tlancbpped.
meet HUD eligibility r8QI~Ire~rntr11t8
For further detailS call today

I

SauftiDrlt ... Bar

OA1 11POLI8

OHIO 411131
(614) 367·0266
1-800-950-3359

1\.2

W'l.

11041 175-11155.

· 1•614-992•702J=.j§.J\l'-=20~Y=11-::!!!!:
....

~

"

w.

�••

1887

•

. Page10 • The Ddy Sutlnel

S1nUnel;,.

llondly, JLI1e 23, 1887

11

.NI:A Cro••word Puzzle
PHIU.rp

ACROII

1

ALDER

Homo lor aato on RL 2 North
- - - - - - - - - - I about 10 mllta from Pt. 5 bad180 Wanted To Do
raomo on aero lo~ ahown br appolnlmonl only. Call 304·3 72·
AN~ ODD JOIS: Eatorior pain~ ,4218 1!em 11-Sprl\
·
Jn8, ahruba I WHda trlmmad,
landacaplng, aldawalko adgad, Houao and propo&lt;fW, lllt)rCJI. 41•
laWn cart, otc. Call BIH 304-875- ern. ldaal allrtor ho!ire. B-h
7112.
St, """- 011. :IOW82ell077.
Chock IIIII DUl Saw nt lnltrio&lt;/
extetior painting, roof painting,
prouuro and hand woah hou&amp;o,
mobllo homoa, near work guaranteed, 15 Y••ra experience 1
rerertricu. FrH Estimates. 304e75-8a21 or 304-8115-3821.

2 Now adult woa .. rn aaddl ...
Throo
whHI
blko,
24"
3
apaed;
.
.
:;304:..:. :;1.:;75-1040:.. :;::.;;;:·_ _ _ _ __
IOichon Corper ... 10 Sola On AI
Carpal In Stock a Room Silo alao 20" glrl'a blka; 814-a02· Riding and Buggy Horaoa 814·
MollohonC..... 81.....,7444.
28511.
441-&lt;4110
Topaoll $20 A load, 814·148·
1052.

340 Buslntla.nd

Buildings

840

Whirlpool dryer, 3pa. old, 1110,
114-1148-3080 aftor 6pm.

550

.

Corn lor 1111e. 18.00 par bullhtl,
0Dnlleltl4-lll2-2417.

'

--·

Building

ToHcco ...., bed plornts. S04·

SUpplies

Houao For Sale II)' Ownor, Rooltort Welcome At "% located. On
LoGronda Bou'-"1, 3 ...,....,
Houao, Wllh New Root,
pet, 2 Car AtlachH Garage,
Above Ground Pool With Patio
Wl!h 2 Lavtl Dock -On Bock,
:.:..::..:::;=;,::..;..::.:~=--! Foncod In Back Yard, .Appllancaa
Expartorw:ed wpanuy and ramo· Sray, Hlco Neighborhood For
doling. lnaldo and oullldo, Klda, 614· 448-7307 Ahtt 4:30
dO&lt;kl, vinyl aiding, add-&lt;~n addl· P.M. For Appolnrmont

Block, brick, _ . , plpaa, wind·
owe, tlnlolt, ate, Ctaudo Wlnttra,
Rio Orondo, OH Call 814·245·
5121.

-Car·

TRMJSP0f1 rt, fiO N

1148 Ch.. rolol FIHHina, et 4·
1153 Buil!lr a,...... 15,100 Ftrm,
814-448-0217.

c -. a.

1g10
Robull Orfal·
nsl Tranamlaalon, AC, Rafiy
Wheell, Remodeled Interior:
NO.Oa Exttrlor Work St.eoo.
010. 814-441-0138, Allor 5 P.M.

4

Baaomonrln Ground Pool, 1 tr2 .
Aero lot On Rt. 7 Facing Rlnr,
Goorga&amp; Porllblt Sawmill, don'! 814-&lt;148-11755.
haul rour logo IO lho mil jUII call
304-875-1857.
Houao plu&amp; 12at8 tralor, houao
jull palnltd, good ahapo, bolh
Proloaalonol Troo StfVIco, SlUmp Oc&lt;uplod wllh gcod rontors, 304·

----------1

taat Eaalo AulD;
Otl8.

Removal, Fret Eatlmat81 1 In- 882-3«)3.

1885 ·Chilly Euro Spon Wagon,
..-; ~14-241-11885. .

Signa Mada/Returblahed. Mtlal

19U l:londo Civic 4 lloo&lt;a, Aulo,
·Runa Clood SSZ$.114-370-2845.

::::'~ :"4-:2-~= : : - '

trimmed. Handyman work, wood· Pomeroy, Flahor Svoo~ 3 BR, 1
en sltl's. 304-875-81125 Rick.
BA. ,_ carpal, .......oallng,

1114 BMW, good condition,
. 11250 080; 1083 Mai da RX7,
aood condlllon, 11250 080; 614·
002-Jelg,

=~=_.:.;..:...:.=--"":'"'l$t3,000,col814-82!1-4850.

3971 .
Will babyall,

l~ree

maalo wllh

care, excellent care, in my home
or youra, call 814-992·7847.

320 Mobile Homes
for Sate

1014 Buldk Stoyt-, I'll. PS, SA,
AT, AC, Excollanl ConditiOn,
$1,115080 814--7.

Cal Ahtre P.M. a1.......,7321 .

FINA NC IAL

210

11188 Oakwood 14180 2 badooom,
2 balh, waohor &amp; dryor hook-up,
diahwlahor, conlrll air. 304·578·

BuslneS!J

Opportunity
INOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

recommends that you do busi ness with people you know, and
NOT to send money ·through the
mail until you have investigated
lhe olforii'Q.

BE YOUR OWN BOSS local
Vend Rte For Sale Big Cuh
Wkly, CaH Today 101).371-8383.
Buainall for aale. Hardware &amp;
Sporting Goods. 405 5th St.,
New Haven, WV. 304·882-35A4,
~~~ mH-~.
.

4005.

H~lt

t9ee Otkwood 14l70 l!llr, 2 balh,

cond., 11,200 080. 304·875·
5320.

1112 deck, on rented lot, e1c.

Professional

30•-875·8061 leave m8aaage.
Mull Soli.

1980 Clayton 14a70 3 B.oroorn&amp;.
I 1/2 Balha. Elactrlc, N.,. Cond·

••e ""

4111-4022 Aftor 7 P.M. ·

1989 Schula LtD Llmllod 14a7o'
3tlr, 2 bath, contra! air, vinyl aidIng, ahlngled root. Set-up on
baau~M rlfltod lot In Orlan~ OH.
25 Minuras 10 Columbua. 304·
882-3274 or 814-877-01135.

111115 F-150 SWB, XLT, all tacl~
o~na. rod Wlwilllo i nltt~Dr, 351,

• is

1u.soo. 304-675·3073
e:oopm.

1884 Joep Chorokoo, 'S2,Q001 ·
814-256-1514, Allor 8 P.M.
,
IQ86 Ford Bronco Full Sizto
$2,100, 302 Molllt, 814-31J8.802G. '
IQ88 Ford Convoralon high to~
- · good condllfon, lie, cb, t&gt;Wl
12300. 814.0.0.221&amp;.
'

Musical
'lnllNmentl

570

304-5111-4010.

Fernandoa 4 atrtno baaa 8UI..r.

1088 Toyollt'Truck 414, New

taGS T0'/018 Tacoma 414· 24,100
'

ed, Undet' Manufactured Wi.mm-

Shapa, $1175 Finn,
LMWMeaaago,

1988 Oodgo Conversion Van,
Good Condltlon, Original Milts,
814-258-8808.

3,300mle&amp;. holmo~ n.,., $2,301:f.
304-875-5010 or 304-675-4811. , ,

1QQ3

Kawaiakl

J

550

proollng, all butmtnl rapalrt N.W-Iaa7·14 Wlda-t barh, $8911

420 Mobile Homes
lor Rent '

Sw (lulw, Chaahlra, Ohio- ,....
ona and tnstrumoOII· plano, gul111 ond druma, 614-387.()3()2:

leVI Do&lt;lao Splrll 104K Runa
Good •.Well·Malntolned, $2,100,
814·388-8203.

once. 304·675-21 45.

1 Aero Lor Nnr Porter, 2 Car
Garaga, $225, Oepoafl &amp; Raftt·
oncoo, 814-386-11081.

580

Strowblrrlta. Pick 'lbur Own, Call

1887 14x80 3 or 4 Bedroom,

I Bedroom Rocandy Ramodelod
located In l&lt;anauga, Fumlahftd,
$200/Mo., Plua Utllidaa, 814·44874011.
.

1997 doublowide $1445 down,
122aimo. Free delive,Y &amp; aolllp.

14•70 All oloctrlc with &lt;lflllll air,
2 bedroom, 2 barha, lurnlal\td,
locoltd In Mti8L NO pata, roltr·
encas raqulred $200 dtpolll &amp;
$325/mo. You pay utllldta. 304·
773-5185.

--.

1987 14x70 2 or 3 Bedroom,
Rick Walker Painting, residen- $995 down, $195/mo. Only at
tial, c;;omrriercial, auto, free eatl· Oakwood Homes, Nioo, WV. 304·
mates, 614·742-2707 or 814·949- 755-5885.

2958.

$1,359 doiwn, 1~29/mo. Freo air,
aklrting. I deliverr. Only at Oakwood Homea Nltro,WV. 304·7555885.
..

1..4J()()-e91o6777.

All real estate advertising in

. this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 whk:h makes it illegal
10 adventse ~any

preference,
limitation Of discrimination
baSed on race. color, reltgion,
sex tanliUal status or national
origin, cr any intention to
make any such preference,
limitation cr discriminatiOn .~

lia7 Floorwood 14x52, 2 Bod·

rooms, 1 Bath, Washer

f0r~er,

CA, 118,900, 814·387-0516 Or
814·1102·5428.
111 rrmo

au,.,. E·Z Finalnctng, 2

Or 3 Bedrooms Around t200
Month Fraa Oeliwory &amp; Sal Up, I·

800-251 ·5070.

D l - Rolltl Proaram
We have 11000 to Uooo por
home in diluter relitl fundi

available to help you purchaH a

replacement homo. &lt;:all 1 ·110~·
466·7671 to 101 appolnlmont lor

ThiS newspaper will not

koowlngly accept
Bdvertlsements for real estate
whk:h is in violation of the
law. Our readerS are hereby
lntonnad mar all dwellings

adwrtlsad In 1n1s nawspapor

dallile.

FACTORY DRECT.
NO MIDDLE MAN.
SAVE$$$$
Oakwood Homtt 11 the ontr
dealer in the trl-atate area that
buHda and sella tMir own

oppootunily baSis.

Ef!!oraon Quill Kool ll/C, 18900
BTU.
4 drawar chest, 125:
call
eu-a92-5047, II no

maaaaga.

742·2803.
3 B.oroom Trailer + 2 a.ctrooma
For Rtnt In Potriol, 114·441·
1778.
.

r.H IH IIMJiliSt
'

510

HeM II IIOICI
Goods ·

Grubb'a Plano- luning &amp; rapalra.
Problamo? Head Tuned? Call tho
· plano Dr.et-525
High chair 130. Ptaypan t35.
BabJ awing $15. Walkar •10.
Slnllltr $15. 1Wln ma!lrMI 1 bolr
iprlnga
Exc. cond. 304-17._
8118.

•eo.

12

t

A .Ntod A-9or? No Crtdll, Bad
Crtdll. 111nkruptcy7 we Can Help
Ro-Eatalllfah C.redlll Mull Make
-"-...;._...;._-.,----JIIIO Woek Takt Home, 1$'11o
Holland &amp; Hoalron Hay Toot Down On Cllh Or Tradt. To
Salo-472 7Haybfna 17,1100. 481 auatll)' For Thla Bank Flnionctng.
r Hayillna l7,tl0o. ~ II'Haybf!ll No Croclll Turn Downal 814-44t.
$8,400 .. 834 R'. Bator 1101 0807.
·sg,1oo . 144 R. Baler 1.0001
$13,300. uo R. Iaior IOQOI CARS FOR $1001 Trucks, boll&amp;.
.Bait Ccmmancl Nat w,.p 4-whoalora, moiDr hcmoi, lurnl·
lti,IIOO. 854 R. Baler 111001 tura, tlOCirOnlca, compurora otc.
$15,1100. ets Dlac M-. 8' r br FBI, IRS. DEA. A""llablo your
curl4,700. Hoaaton 30' v Raka orH now. Call 1·800·513·•343
14,200. H..aton 710 Olac - · ElL 5-11381
,
oro ts.soo. Hoaaron tO' PuU Ted· .
.
.
..,
...
1
· Cord
elora 11,300.
HoaaiDn
r 130
Sllib Guarda.
Ho1110n
CAM FOR 11ootn
R. lolora 1101 $7,to0. Hoaaton
t!::'~~.~
540 R. Baltta I 0001 $10,800.
"'" '"'""''
HelliOn R. Iota Slllgo Wrapper
,~;730,I4'1,i~ 1
17,300. Aa·Wrap R. Bait Sllaae
·
•
Wrappar. t7,300. All Wrop Flfm Cradlr 'Probtarro?
Fliln tiOCIO' Ill par llill 311'1 80011' nMclng, IK Down,
171 par roll. I Uaocl Round lol· AI loW AllieD Par Monti. No
ora ta Chooao From. t&lt;ooter'a ~. ~-1 Cal Ru., 114 •••
lorvlco C011tor SJ. AI. 17 Pl. '"'" "'"'""
·
- ·
. " ' - • t • Rlptoy Rd. 304,fllll- 21t7. ·
::-317:;;!1. :"""-:-:'::'::"'"-:"'-.:-:-~ Upton Uaocl ella Rt S2·3 Mllaa
;;_ . , _ . , - .,~... ~~ Soull! ol Loon, WV. Financing
304 411 IOH.
wagon, 14 bola
vory
Clndllforl, 14
111-~ 7211 'lhlclta lor Sale

r.::. b:la. ~14

'"

c:&amp;;:""';

--- -

ll

/.

1111.,,

t

- Ro-.

I

I

Spoocl T-mlaalon Runa Eacaf·
1on1, $2.7110, 814 4ae 8883

V'Sinild to Buy

c-. 1n a ........ c..

-Dttlryet~

1 gwc:~~~~

•.··

.\

~

Anfr

LETTERS TO

SCIIAM LETS ANSWERS
~ ~

Joyful- Wedge • Pivot -Inborn • BLOOO

..

. My friend has the.knack of building a fire under someone without making their BLOOD boil!
·

·1MONDAY

JUNE 231

Slarllng 11 $99.00 and Up. Uoed 1:
All Typoa, Ovtr IO,OOOo
Trl.namilliona. Acce11 Transfer•
CUaa I Roar End&amp;, 614·Z45·:
5177
..
•

.

Full line of auto · bodiT, panel a, •
palnta and 1upp11... a 10 gtua.:

light otMmbly. Oxygon and ... 1
~ iantos lllOd and IXC"""""" f
' 814-742-21112. . '
·-~~~

810

'" ASTRO·ORAPB

BERNICE
BEOEOSOL

Home
II)!Provementt
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING -

~

UncondlllaMI
Local
rotaronclltadmo
.. turnflhod.
Et·· '
llbllahod 1171. ean cet41 41110170 Dr lei00-287.0S18. AOJOf4
-rproafng.
:
'
"'
Appllanct Porta And Sorvtco: lf.J'
Name Branda 0vtr 25 ~ e..
parlonco All Work Guaranttod,
French City Maytag, 814·4.. ,

.

CIC Ganoral Homo Main-: '
-•co Palnd"'. vlllfl

•ldlntt

. . . . . . ."Clio~ 114·H2-

r·1, .r 1·

I' I' 1
I I I I I· I I I

:~~E~~~~~E~ETTERSr

'.

NawYOilr

. Monday, June 23, 1997
.; In qrder to fulfill your ambitious
_.pirations, yqu might have,to work
a trifle '*«&lt;er in the year ahetd: However, if you're diligent, yout elfons
Will be substantially rewarded.
' CANCJ:;R (June 21-July ~2) A
c:t\ncemed friend · might offer you
8C!IIIC I8JC advice today that could be
· a,,bitter pill to swallow &amp;\ first ~­
i!IJ. Lttler you'll have real apprec•adon fer its content Major c~ are
ahead fer Cailcer in the c:Omina Y~­
&amp;nd l'or your AJ\ro-Oraph predic:tiOIII b(day. Mail $2 and S,.SB to
~. elo dtls neWIJIIII*,
P.O. Boll 1758, Munay .Hill Sllllon, .
)IIOw York, NY' 10156. Be awe to
....., your zodii!C ~IJII·

'

'

•

I

I

i

Robull~

SER VICf S

I

I~

Budget ·Price Transmi11ions, '1

whoola I radlatora. 0 1 R Aulo,
Rtploy, WV. 304· 372·3833 or 1.
IIJ0-273-9329.
'

••••

I' I

I.

~•.- . . - -.. btnlllt•
, . Oodgo Dlktra 4 CJllndtf, 5 -hom! ..... and- For,,

LMMact'
14 Clm• 1111 ltll c-. 1111 •

.

...

Botona Garden Troctor 18 HP.
And ......1,200,
Call E**'oa. 814-2&gt;45-flll.

130

2151-51170.

I

S~R4\l)A-~t.trs·

' I

t,' :

1"3 F·210 4 ~~ Standilrcl
lhllt. ...ooa Ac1ull • • 1800: ma,

OIC

tor HOOkH on Phonic.
Plloot1111:p141-M.,

FOt
Me· Dr OWnor·l 112 mtlot RNo'l 'rl:,IAII No111tr LW
aut aondhfll. *· • batll, '"''" k ,..
a itt Up, t-too-

....., 1140,0110.1114415-11401.

-

.chance
April issUe of Australian Bridge end53 Abominable
ed with Ibis paragraph: "CongratuSnowman
IS - COnllr1deno
lations must also so 10 \he orsanizers;
se--111e
the Festival must be an enormous
Mood lor
workload. I'd also like to mention.a
Lovo
57 Mimicaddy called James for doing a wonElliott
, derful job." James? Why highlight
51 Tlkllo court
James?'
·
'
81 Woo
vlctorloua
Tmvis· was referring to the Summer Festival of Bridge, held each JanCELEBRITY CIPHER
UBI)! in Canberra. The premier event
by Lula Campo•
is the National Open Teams. Travis
~Cipher Cf\IP!ogfams ..-. crNMd frvm qucMtlonl by temoue people. pa111lnd preaent
and her three .teammates reached the
E~ litler In the cipher_.... lor a'tOChw. TO&lt;Ut)l'• cful: u sq.:uls C
final, IQSing t9 four Indonesians by 40
' K ' I
S D N A L. S
0 K iN L P
N C
D
T D I
international matchpoi'nts (IMPS).
This deal was a lriu!f1ph fpr the
0 ' UCDUA
N C
HKPKJ , NLS . NADP
Australians. At the other table, the
Indonesian South opened one club.
VCCNTDOO . ' - .
NDOY
DTCEN
Nonh responded with a debatable one
no-trump, and South raised to game; ,ITSCDIUDJNLS)
OOLF
ADZYKPJ .
·Five diamond tricks later, the contract
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "II Adam came on eanh again·the only thing he would ,
I'8COIJ"Ize would be the old jokes."- Thomas _Robert Dewar. .
.
was one . down. · Nnt time, maybe
' Nonh will raise clubs. Note ,lhat five
clubs is unbeatable.
·
·
TIATDliLT
WOlD
In this at~ction , the inventive
PIIZZLII
• Michael Counney opened one spade,
- - - . . . . , . . - _ ; 14llod ~y CU.Y I , POUAN - - - . , - - ~ailing ·that suit five cards long.
Roorronge lttttr&amp; Qf tho
After Nonh 's two-spade raise, South
four acramblod words bewas always going to game, but rebid
low ro lorm four simple wordo .
three hearts in case North had length
there. Nonh (Peter Gill, who is BarACENNI
bara Travis' brother) jumped tofour
spad~. as he was maximum for his
initial respi&gt;nse. ·
The defenders took two diamond
RUP0
tricks, but·Courtney had no trouble
winning the rest. for plus 450, Along :
1~
with the SO at the other table, this
gave a net plus of 500, which conOSLAN
verted to II IMPs.
l--.
......-..rrs-.--l·~
Man overheard at his fiftieth
Be willing to treat very strong
1
1
1
1
.
, ··
·
~ 'birthday party, 'I've reached
four-card s,uits like five-carders.
the age wher!! What I think is
Who is James? I thought it was
N'
c
c
r
p
·
only
an·- -·---."
,
going to be Barbara's son, but he is
1--.,~,:-TI_;"'I?:i-.,,-.,,.--1 Q C~mpl''' tho ch.ucklo quotod
only six and 'not yet a caddy. This
by filhng in the missing Words
L-.L.-.1..-..1.-..1.'-...J·'-..1~ you develop
James is 17 and was apparently the
from step No. 3 below.
best caddy atthe festival.

4 Clood Yaar Wrangler Firs, 245
75R /16 13,000 Mil.., .150, 814- '
245-0851.
:

oa.....Po,_.,..

---

44ll.ocrntne
41Gineong
plant
41 'IWangy
eo Row
mlnorala
51 Take I

:o

PEANUTS

New gaa tanka, 1 'ton 1ruck

llournlul cry

(3 wda.)

II'PII

-•

.

herolno

32~rl

0

181111 2.81. Front Whaol Orlvo Er&gt;•

QIIW, S250, 81~-3407.

llo-·

L-Ift

~i.- Sat!

Accessories

28 - SIIntl

30 lola

-

. ...

198.5 Monte Carlo.. LS All Power,
laallar ln-r. Roar Spolor, low
Mllaage Mull Sot To Appreelatt
-No.814-25B-1401 :
11185 Sllllrn SC2. Automatic, Air,
Crulaa, AIIIFM CaaHno, Trunk
Ratoaao, 112.1500 Cal Ahar 5 P.M.
(Sorloua lnqulrlea Onlyl) 814·
418-4011.

a Pllp an wonta

(comb. form)

MAASllAQLLolils

780 , Auto Parts s.

pr1 clrAblllon

world"'

1 Not
2 TVhoriO ·
(2 well.)

41

A TENT,.SilL

1D84 Graan Chorokol Spotl, 4
Doora. 34,000 loliloa, PS, I'll. pw,
Air, 2 Whoet Drive, $10,500, 614; ·
441'1537. ·

40WI_~..,....

Ev33 PrOitcllon
31 Ripped
39 Ear

.. TI-IESE ARE ·

lolodol '800 Ford traclor, luUy,.
'llored ; 5 opaod, with 8' bladt,
Sll700, .,,._.,11072.

=
Now= r:-1

n.eoo.

•

f::::==v-.. C.~Y I :

SU PPLIE~;

7

On...,:= Now

:'::~ .... 2...

\&lt;
. .!€

TillS ISt,)!'T·

IO'IIo OFF all farm tracror parll.
Sldtr'l , Equipment 304•875 ·
7421 '
1872 Lima Truck Ring 145,000;
tate Harra Pilt Driving 'Hammer;
1980 GMC Fuel Truck $2,750:
46' Drum Shtopa Fool Roll or
$3,250: 1880 toa50 Olfict Tral~r
t4,200; 1g3g John o.. ro A
$1,300; Mlac. Stool Boomt 12 To
57 Ft. 814-843·2300, 11-4 P.ll .;
Allor 4 P.M. 814-843-ZIII.
4is7 N.H. hoyblnt, $:liiOO; """ lifO
gallon Ru-.naid woltr liOugh'a,
t1000I!Ch. 1114-247·1100.

-

Rooriro a Bdl.
Ulllnt 141711 2 .., . _
CI1J. . _ -1111. u.tna ~ Aoorri, ..,.

Aalrl, CIW11

Lf.fT ME Fl'lt: 01!- :ll!l~.,r.~
•.,._ ef.NTLEY N-It&gt; lli15

810 Farm·Equlpment

2 miles out,lidt Rutland on New
liiJ'IO Rd., 2 br, total oloctric, 814·

.

:m:E BORN LOSER

'

•••a.

ga-.

~2.J.

&amp; liVES 10CK

2 112 Ton Htll Cantral Air, Fully
'Two Trailara At Blua huntaln Stlt-Conllln.o, Gauranttad Stll
homoo. For lacmry dlrocl prlcoa, MOll\, 814 448 0211, Ptaua Clll
'
&amp;hop OAKWOOD HOMES, Nl· Monday -Friday 8 1 - 3 I e ChOapl 114-387-0342.
TRJ, WV. 304-755-5888.
P.M.
Appllancoe; · Rocoftdldonad
ReAL ESTATE
WUhtrl. Dryatt, Rengot, Rafrl·
· Flr11 Time Buyor&amp;l E·Z Financing.
gratora, tO O.y Guaranraol
2 or 3'badroom. $200/mo. Froo 440 ' Aplrlmentt
'P'IIfo't
Frtnch
City lolaytag,
014·441·
---Ho----f-or--:Sa~le-- dollvory 1 111 up. 1· 800·251·
for
Rent'
71H.
.
.
.
Baby
Crib.~.
E..,I:IM
31 0 11111
5070.
Blko, Amana Srovo. Zorox Par·
1 and 2 t • wm r
fw.
1118 SUIIaot Drive, 3 B.oraom&amp;, ITS BIG. 18g7 4BR, 2BATH nlahod ond u'*&lt;rnllhtd, aocurflr Couch a chllr tso. 304·875· ..,., Ccpioo, 814-24HIG4.
'
-llco conaola -oo. 1 rrac.k
2 1/2 Balh Homo, Full Baaomeru, DOUBLE WIDE. $1 ,g4g DOWN, dopoalt required, no poll, 114- 111..
rn
Prlco:$18.100, 114-448-8238 For $318/MO. FREE DELIVERY I 1182-~ta.
GOOD .UIED APPLIANCES tapaa, counl!Y I waatorn a ooa_ _..n.
SETUP ONLY AT OAKWOOD
w..llort, drytra, rolrlgtratara, " ' - Pliono '173-5881.
I
Btdroom
Noar
Holltr
Ern
;;;~Ro;.o;.m_a_Ra,.;-n-ch-S.,.~-1-H-o-m-t' IHOMES, NITRO, WV. 304·755·
., 0
' 111188. Llnilld Olllt.
Nlct, Central Alr'-~~1/lolo., + rangoL Skat~~ AppU-os, 71 au-aiH wattrbl\1. bookcaM
"
sa.ctroom, 2 112 borha, lar'-"1:-----~-:-...;..--'­ U!IHtioa, Dorioall ""'I· 114-448· Vlna Strett. Cal 114-441·7301, "• 01 dbo ar d• padd h• ra 11 a, 1u~
1.o•a•
•
klrchon &amp; dining room I tamoly La~ aoiOCifon or uaocl homo. 2 211&amp;7.
ma~~~Ma and-· Phofl4!
rooma. 2 p o r - . 2 car or I bodiooma. Starting at $34ti5.
304-773-S4I 4· '
garag•. 8/10 milo our Sandhill Oulck dtllvory. Coli 1·.800·837· 2 Bedroom Aparlmonl -c-at
RoPif l;o condltlollto, 7,000 BTU,
Air, Ga1 Htat, WID ktok;Up
Rd. ond loll more. 304-6~71 .
·
wbh
,.nnnatorablt warrantw,
CioN
To
Galllpolla,
814•4481~-:--~~~~~~~--~----------Badraom Homl Wilh 0 . - I llmt!Od Ollarllaa7 doulllowldt, 2072.
1210,814-112-3111
Bam, Malnttnanco FrH, loco~ 3br, 2balh, 11711 - · · $2191
od: Addl111n Townahlp, 114-441· monrh. FrH dtllvory &amp; aotup.
::':':~"""':~:-"'":":'"-:"'=-·1 S..ra 38' aut rldlnt mawa;, 10
~1112.
Only at Oakwood Homoa, Nl!ro
h.p., l'Kumaoh. coildl·
wv.
304-756-1115.
' liOn, -t:MI 080; fuiiiiZo truck
3 Bedroom, 2 .bathrDDm, nft '
,
141; , _ porlidola flhonoi,
IIIIIIIY room. ,_ rooUifdlng!Gir· Mobile Homo: IN4 Travtlo, Apo
112 prtco, 125; ~~pol &amp; ltnotaum, dock/In ground - . 12'11110' 2 Bedt- 1 Bdl.
pool, I car
110- build- Mobllt Homo IIUII 8o Moved
Int. Oroon School Dlarilc~ 102 From P r - Sl...
C111
LeGrande
Bill~. Coli ll4·441·1i8~1;4~4411;1~3~J~Oi;;b;;i;;;;\
3li02
lot •PfiOinlmanL
Prlcod In
toWIO'a
·
'
Newill? t4170 ll)rM baelooom.
·
tncludoll FRIE l!IIIWit
311r, ,..,. prd In Qallpoh For- Only 1111.11 poo monll! wllh
.....
oy.lolulllol.1104170-4111.
11010 down. Call .t·to0' 837·
1.1 Acroa, 2 y- old tocllonal 3238. ·
.
,
ator, 2 bolha, central air, NICE I Ntw lanit llopo'al Only 31alt
Soononr~'- RNIIJ. 304-171-3030 own• flnancl111 available. 904·
' .-110417W431Jtar&gt;c755,71tl.
'
•
81'8 available on an equal

.

Strawblrrtaa, You . Pick, we Pick,
Openod: 11-8 Mon, Wod, Fri; Sal
1-Noon, Cloaod Sunday'a,
Taylofl Borry Patch, Korr Road,
114-241-8047•.

2 Btdraom Traitor For Ran!; 8
Milaa Down 211, GaiUpoll&amp;. $2251
Mo., + Dopoait, Rtlaronc.. R•
qulred, 814-44,...172, 814-25a·
8251.

Furnlahod, $235/llo,, wa.. r a
Traah Paid, g20 Fourt~ Allonuo,
Galllpolla, 814 441 3144 Afllr 7
P.M.

'

vi1Tt4
.. Tt4*M·

For Sale: 1996 Honda Shadow
1100 ·•• 500 Mllea $8,000 ~
Bear.Oller, CaH A!rer 8 P.M .. Bl~·
258-e871 .
•• '

750 Boats 1 Motors
for Sale , ••

CloudaWinttr~, 614·245-~121.

FAflM

MO!f Of OV~
·. rtfVtNVf

Honda 750 V-45 Sabre. A&amp;kinp
11,100.304-875-7785.
'J

Vegetables

2 Bedroom Mobllt Homo,· You
Par Utilida&amp;. &amp; Oopoalt In Poner
Aooa $2501Mo., 814-311-1182.

Moblta Homl: SrnaR 2 Btdroornl.

Fruits I

::."~11'1N6 pL.;~~ ·~·· .._N.OW ~e . J
' ttAVf TO S't-IA,f

Hx.

perlinee, reasonable rates. 304-

dent, free estimates, lifetime down, $139/mo, with approved
guarantee. 1Oyrs on job ex peri-. credit catlt-t-an7.

GOT A. Nh/

.

Kurzwofl K·IOOO keyboard w/
case. Kimball Spinal plano. both
In 'itl'f good cond. 304-675-7133.

wa1er·

"'""'~

814-~79-28j2

,'

31 Aolor l l w -

'
By Phillip Alder
An anicle by Barbara Travis in the

Runt, Rides Great, Excellent

1888 Toyora CarNy, bl,uo, PS, PS.
oxcallonl conddon·lnalde ond 0\lt
fl11115, 814-1102-8824..

17 Far!Mnanly

10 Spanlah llrlloi
11 Pack away
5 Long t9 Building wing
e~
.
21 Tamp. untt
7 Rellgloua poem 24 Bollarlna'a
8 ,.,. of liquor
strong poln"
t Sliort ,
28 Roman
nal'flllbrona
27 lYpa of lena
28 NOt out 01
bomblttlcally

DOWN

31Porkor~

.

4 Spoek ·

BC-NEABRIDGE
Monday, June 23, 1m

-~t a.-IE. tA.ud\ TO fi\Y

1)' $17,000, 614· 258-1252, 814·
256-UU8. ..,

~-

Who ·Is that?

taat .Rangal XLT '4x4, 4,0 llr••·
$8,000 814-245-954~.
'

laa3 SUzuki AM 125 CC, $3,00Q,
1Q88 Mor""ry Marque LS Excel- Pro Race Bike, Have All T~p
lent Condition, Mtchtllan Tire a, Brand Parts Fo·r More lnform't
Asking $5,500, Call AI Nigh! 614· tlon Caii614-446-0·U 1 BerwHn
448-1501, 0aya:814-448-De87.
10pm 1D 11pm.
·1.

Livingston'• basement

NOTHlN'
BUT??

1Ml

Park 112 ball amp. Fernanda•
hard case I stand, like new,
$800. 304-675-73al.

805-3591 aher 8:00pm, no job to Naw-1H7 14 Wlda-1 ball!, $8911
amill o,r 10 BIG. WV-G212!l8
down, $1 39fmo, with approved
credit Cal t-I00-89H1777.

-~AN'

ror, 31' Tlrea, 4 Speed, Runj
Good, 11,200,814--448-11441. .,

mllol. $12,500.304-875-3210.

GUiillll¥tlng

Opening lead: • 2

1888 Jaop Charokao 4 Doora, ~
6, Automa~c. 4 WO, AC, AMIFM
CO, PS, PB, 73K Milta, t4,509
080; Rettlla For $8,300, 814'i
401·1318.
,..

2142.

lor rour&amp;ell how boauUiullll&amp;. 10
many Items to lilt. Atklng
HARTS MASONARY · Block, $25,000
. 304-675-3087 ltavo
. brick &amp; stone work, 30 rears ex· message.-

SNUFFV••DO YOU
SWEAR TO TEI.I. .
TH' WHOI.E TQOTH

Crf1111-

34 --Clew Illy

· Vulnerable: Eui-Wesl
Dealer: South
s-&amp;11
Weal N0111l .Baa&amp;
u .
Pua 21
Pua
Sl
Pua .4.
:Ailpau

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDS

• - t.rrllr
f11 Co• tile
lnllcle 01
I&amp;CrlcQI

atone

• KQa

• I'

uC!..-

31

I ·A 1•5 I

"'"I'

• •taaholio

aufflx
83 Jitcob'a twin
84 SourceOI

hidellllltl
nullllllr

s-&amp;11

• A K Q 10·

a

MvwiGI

• 1&amp;.

$14,1500. 304·570-4033.

:10 Old ...
22 Ellie, • ·I·

27U.. .

oAK J 10

.,...II

eo 8tltchtl .

---·

7

• Q7 42
t 42

M'

11 !'Oi'd !lop

•••z
• Q.

I 4S
J 10 z

1a112 Nlaaan Pick-Up, 5 Spaed,:
AMIFM Good Condlrlon, Sporty,.
$3,000, 814-448-4782.
'
;;rae;;;:..:4_;;Toy-'-ora-:E~It"'7Ca-:b-4-:-wd.-:-:-5a-pd7.i

.....

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

7

KIt

• A J 7 ea
•
Bill

I

Schnauzer•. miniature. 1111 &amp; taB7 Cho¥y Cavalier Runo Graar,
. PIPPI'. AKC, chornGion bloodline. · Mull
89 S-10 Blazer 5 SP, · 2 door,
Sall814-245-1300.
1hot1, wormed 6 ffrat grooming,
82,000 mioa, $7,100 or llka """'
814-1187-3404.
,,
IQ87 Otda Cudaaa, aaklng $2200 Paymonlsl.(814~3711·2134
080,
814-985-3al7.
•
740 Motorcycles ~:
'rro•t "Hot Spoil." Kill Fltaa, 1187 Fontlac 8000, good condi·
Tlcka, Moaqulroa &amp; Flloa On don, runa and looka gcod, $12a5, 1197 Hondo Sh'adow 7oo: ,v
Contact. Wllhcut Internal Pol· 814-992-8824.
Mlln, 5000 mllta, lmmacula.. ~on.
&amp;on&amp;. Aak J D NORTH PRO·
ci~n, $3500, 814-1192·40116.
~
DUCE 814·448·1g33 About 1ae8 Grind Am, run&amp; good, call
1988 Kawuakl KX 500 looka,
HAPPY .MCK KENotEL DIP.
814-742-Mle.

CertUitd In homt child oare, 1996 UJI70 Nor(il one owner,
Mon-Frl., 7am-Spm, 814-848- lived in for 3 months, muar 111

.

Ford T1uru1, exc. running

AC, Doctor Forbldl Owner To
Drive Who II 110, Mull Selll 814-

porches, .central air &amp; underpinning included, .must be moved.

services

.,

1888 Honda Civic, rune good ,

Steel building dealership avail - 1991 14x70 Cla111&gt;11 Nor!llrldge 3
able in opon markat Doolera buy Bedrooma, 2 Balhs, H.P. O.W,,
factor)' direct. High profit poten· AIMngo, 2 OO&lt;k&amp;, ~~ 5,000 Firm,
·tial, sales or conauuction. (303) 614-258-8115. Or 814-25111-11282.
759·3200 Eat 7950.
1992 Wlndgl!e 3br, 1 112 balh,

230

8U·M-28441Ytningl.

ta8e Ford Wlndollr GL, 95o&amp; ·
mllta, oil power, tinted wlndowr;
nttd&amp; clutch work, $700, 814· luggage rack, 814-11112-7257.
,
a411-2288. , .
.t9a8 Grand Caravan 8 Passelllf
ta88 Ponthoc 8000, 48K, Auto, or, 22,000 Milos, V-8, Auto, load-

cond., . Olklng $12,500 OBD.

t1on. SQ,!!iOO, 614

• e1

11195 Dodge Caravan V-8, Au ..,
Ovordrlvo, 25,500 Miloa. , Aakl.~
1014 Flaro Rod. 4 Spood, Runa 1 $10,050 or opo 814-258-634 ,
looka Clood, Sl1on Block, ctiramt 614-258-8487.
1¥1-. $1,100114-387.0333
11105 Ford F-150 4X4 Extendtjl
1ees Plymouth Rollanr 4 Dooro, Cab, Wirh Towing Packaoa.
AC, AT, 4 Cylinder, Solid Body, 13,000 Mlln I Yoar Or 23,000
Runa Good, 87,580 Mllta $850, Mllaaleh On Warranry, $1Q,ooq,
81--7533.
814-4ote-8075Cai1Ahar4P.Iol. , ,

12180 1N5 twa -oom mobllt
home. one bath, good candllion,
$3000080,814-8112-8134.
12x80 Good Condition, Se,ooo

'

.eoo, 8t•-i.le-

aunince, Bidwell. Ohio. 114·388·
a&amp;IS, 814-387-7010.
Noooty romodalod·lhroa -oom. .

Wanted painting trailers, lingle
s1ory houses, Inside &amp; oul. Rei·
erencu &amp; eatimateao30&lt;4-aas-

cruiM, amltm caueno, IWO·rode
paint. Reese hllch. visor; but•
ahltld, bedllner, 1OOk mll~a:
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.Ohio Lottery

·wimbledon
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Buckeye 5:
14-19-23-31-34

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Muggy tonight, Iowa
around' 'tO. Wedneadlly,
sunny 11 flrat, then 1
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Highs In the lo-11011.

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2 SICilona, 12 , . . . , 31 centa
A Gennett Co. New1p1p1r

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio, Tuesday, June 2_,, 1997

r

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,.

Commissioners explore options on insurance
By BRIAN J. REED

program ·and administered by Mcd- well as cowuy depanments outside of
According to Miller, the commis•
ical Claims Service of Ravenswood,' the courthouse, such as the county · sioners need to consider four options
Sentinel N-• Staff
Possible remedies for the Meigs W.Va. .
.
highway de~ment, helllth depart- in order to address increasing costs•to
• · Under the .self-insurance prograrn, .. ment and department of human ser- the county's general fund:
County Commissioners' mounting
• An increase in cost to the
health insurance probleJIIS were dis- premium$, paid at 60 percent by the vices.
Representatives of those partici- employee. The commissioners,
cussed at the bo.OO's regular meeting cQ!lllty and 40 percent by the employees\. go into a fund to pay claims. paling 'l!encies haye paid into the through the general fund, have
on Monday afternoon.
T1m Smith and Robert T. Miller, However, the claims.fund has dwin- ·fund a total of $100;000 in 1997 to absorbed premium increases in the
representing the insurance consulting died 1n recent months, and seneral replenish the fund from 'whieh claims amounts of 18, 28 and 20 percent for
· finn of Ohio Benefit Group of Bowl- fl!nd doUars have been paid into the are paid. Each agency's share was the past three years without any
determined by the number of eligible increase in employee premiums;
ing Green, met with the board to dis- · fund to keep it afloat.
•At its lowest •.the fund from which employees. Those asencies were rep- .. . • A m;Juction in benefits;
cuss possible remedies to the.financial diff~eulties facing the county's clainis are paiq was ~~ $3,01io. : . resented at· ).fonday's mce'ilngs by ··&gt;.iU·~qnsideratioll of managed care,
.- Covered'under the plan are soiile , depiutment heads and administrative · through a network oflpcal, affiliated
employee ·health insurance plan,
·
· hospitals, which would afford .some
which is operated as a self-in!iurarK:e I SO employees of county offices as personnel.

Miet·dlep·ort

..

Hollister will run
for cong.ress~onal
seat, ·sources say

..

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to fill two
•
vacanc1es .
in village

By AARON M.ARSHALL
· Sentinel Columbus Bureau
COLUMBUS - Lt. Gov. Nancy
Hollister will run for the Sixth District congressional seat in .1998
instead of running for secretary of
state as she had po:eviously indicated,
according to an anonymous source.
The Marietta native will announce
her run for the sprawling Sixth District seat held by Rep. Ted Strickland,
D-Lucusvilie, in the next 10 days,
said the Columbus source.
Asked t? CO):Ifil'!fl the repqrt, Hollis~ ·~f!P:~f , i'li'~raff,...6"'l!.. ~-

By JIM FREEMAN
.
Sentinel Newt Staff
Middleport shoQld have a new
councllman and clerk-treasurer effective July 14 when new officeholders ·
may be sworn in.
.
On the recommendation of Mayor Dewey "Mac" Horton, village
council Mof!day night appointed ·
Steve Houchins as a new council
member to fill the unexpired term of
George Hoffman, who left the village
for out-of-state employment.

__.,ljgJ!f,bi'.!.S.J~~!f~~lhe .
lfe1111f'~il 1 ,

.
· Urclr
Board of Trusties. '
·
. ·,; l}cy,ap. 'ScW.an.n . was ·appohiled to
compleiC ilie te~ of Clerk-Treasurer Dennis Hockman, who is resigning at the end of the month due tomedical re~~Sons.
.
Horton recommended Swann be
'appointed for a three-month trial
basis, but questions were raised over
the legality of a temporary appoint·
ment for an elected official.
Council then elected Swann to fill
the entire remainder of Hockman's
term, which expires April I, 2001l.
Neither Houchins nor Swann were
present at Monday night's meeting.
Afterwards, council ·and Horton·
presented II plaque to Hockman in
appreciation to him and his wife, Teri,
for their work towards the village.
Bob Gilmore and Mary Wise,
rep~;esen1ing the village's Bicenten~
nial Committee, presented plans for
the upco!f1irig Independence Day celebration.
''We need to go all out for· this
. one," Oilmen Slid, noting ~~ the

degree of choice to employees, but cs from Blue. Cross/Blue Shield,
woiold allow the insurance program to which provided health insurance up
until that time. ·
.
buy "wholesale." .
Michael
Swisher,
director
of the
• Shopping the marketplace for
more competitive rates from the county Department of Human Ser·
third~ party administrators and rein- . vices, said that he is a propOnent ~f
surers. The third-party administrator self-insurance, especially because of
for a self-insurance plan is responsi- the high cost of traditional "fulr'
ble for processing claims, while the insurance.
"I remember the days of 50 per, . ·
re-insurer pays any claims which
exceed an employee's limit of cent premium increases, so I'm a big
fan of self-insurance. But I'm con·
$30,000 per year.
cemcd
about what we can do to make
. The county's self-insurance program was begun in the late 1980s as the pia~ more financially sound."
a result of skyrocketing cost increas(Continued on Page 3)
:· ·

.,~~tOJfiiJienl.

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~!) ':&gt; Hollister

was unavailable
filr comri\ent, when a.•ked on June 2
about w!)cther she told Ohio's GOP
congressional delegation that she .
was running for Strickland 's scat dur- ____N:.:•::n::EY:z...:H:.::o:.:l:::ll•:.:le:r::...._ _
ing a recent Washington visit, she did Frank Cremeans, who was defeated
Mayor o.w.y "Mac" Horton and Council Prea- ·
- . CLERK-TREASURER HONORED- Middle'0ot deny the report.
narrowly by Strickland in 1996, after
ldent Beth Stiver~, above, preaen'-«1 a plaque
;. pilrl Clerk·li'MIInl' o.nnll Hoclonan,llft, wu
"I had an official' agenda that I was winning the seat from Strickland in
to Hocltmln recognizing him and hla wife, Terl,
.racognlzad Monday by the vlllagl ~nell.
fell' their -rk for the village.
·
·
there to discuss and there were some t 994.
·"·Hockman 11 realgnlng hll pOsition at the ilnd
political discussions - the details of
Cremeans, who didn't return calls
, oUhla'IIJOIIIhdueto hwlth reiaonl. Mlcldllport
1
&lt;
which I won't share with you," she request ing comment, has made no
. said: She added cryptically then, fonnal' declaration of his 1998 plans
~illage is celebrating its bicentennial . al I(Ntinger Parkway to 35 miles an safety issue. ·
"There really isn't ilnytlting to tell but ha.&lt;attended ·sevcrallocaiRepubsaid
raising
the
speed
limit
Swift
lliis year.
.
. ;.hOur from , State Route 7 to Ash
you,
but there will be."
lican events suggesting he's gearing
to
35
mph
to
Ash
Street
would
. .Wise Slid the Middlepo~ Post S_lf\\Ct.
.. ,
Ohio
Republican
Party
Chief
Bob
up for another congressional run.
Office will offer a special cancella- . ·.• 'f11e problem has already been encourage speed past the Stonewood
One thing that is clear: Republican
marking in honor of the villag~·s ..
~.with new speed limit signs Apartments and General ·Harti!lgcr Bennett, who said publicly in
November
that
he
liked
the
sound
of
leaders
want to av.oid ·a costly CrePat.
k
.
20Qth birtliday. .
.
· : . ., ·'Xill' . ~(ffl»n ~~ H~b~o~ Bridge to
"Congresswoman
Hollister,"
also
means-Hollister
Republican primary.
Councilman
John
N~ville
pre.
Cmoncil memberS, )VhO wtll sef'!e tl)!l•.. II' torp0ra~10~ ~omot, ot was not•
1
did
not
conlinn
Hollister's
impend.
"I
would
hope
that Frank would
a~ judges in the Fourth of July eil; The s~ hm1t on the area of the sented an.other viewpoint, saying the
reconsider running again (for Conparade, thanked the two for their Hobson llridge will remain 25 mph speed limit should be 35 mph fonhe ing candidacy.
" lf she is running for Congress, I · gress) and I would say to him that he
efforts.
due.to recent size and weight restric- whole length of General Hartinger
think she'll be an outstanding candi- ought to look at his other options,"
Hockman observed the village tions placed· on the bridge.
Parkvvay.
'
date,"
he said."She fits the district, · said GOP chief Bennett.
·
"It
is
a
major
headache
to
drive
2S
c.:O afford to pay for the fireworks if ·
~oweve~. Police C~ief Bru~e
she
understands
the district ... and I
E~pccting a Hollister challenge to
th ,11eed arises.
·.
Swoft and Vollagc Admt~t~trator Btll miles-per-hour," he said. "... 1 think
· . can't think of anyone more qunli- Iris seat since Kasputi1 declared for ·
, ¢ouncil then discussed a petition Browning dcfe~ded relalmng the 25 ~we need reasonaj&gt;le laws."
secretary of state, Strickland iook the
Council members encouraged lied ."
signed by almost 100 area residents m~h s~ hmtt from the oldcorpoA
Hollister
for
Congress
candidanews in stride.
ontt.isins the speed' limit on ,Go~ner' rauo,n ltne t~ Ash Street, calhng 11 a
(Continued on Page 3)
. cy represents.a much different direc- "It's not surprising to me, from what
tion for the former Marietta mayor I hlld read. It looked as if the Repubthen her long-held public stance that lican power brokers were lining tip ·
shei was "focused" on running for . behind him (Kasputis) and I felt ·it
and ;fire last July that killelt nine peo- .. would have legalized fireworks such Fourth.of July and two days after.
secretary
of state.
would bedifficuli for Nancy to over• Put in smoke evacuation . syspie AI a fireworks store in Scottown. as boUIC! rockets a~ Roman ~andle.s.
Apparently,
rather
than
risk
a
come
that kind of support.:'
·
The new measures would create . Adults can buy foreworks m Ohoo terns. ·
statewide
primary
run
against
Asked
if
pro-choice
Hollister
rep.
• Keep fire suppression systems
stricter safety rules relating to t!Je . now but must agree to take them out
declared
Secretary
of
State
candidate,
resented
a
more
moderate
and
thereon at all tiines, ex~ept during .repair.
sale, storage and exhibition of fire- · of the sta.te.
•Increase safety packaging of fire- State Rep. Ed Kasputi s, R' Mayfield fore formidabie challenge than ereworJ&gt;.s. 'It would require ·improveUnder the safety provisions, lireHeights, Hollister will stick closer to means, Stric~land disagreed.
works.
menls in fireworks 'stores, such as works stores would have to:
"I think she would be a very strong
• Limit store size to 5.000 square her soutlicasteni Ohio roots.
wider aisles, and make sprinkler sys• Put in more exits and widen their·
But those roots may draw her intn candidate ... but much of my.
feet.
terns mandatory. .
.
aisles.
. .
.' ·
The Senate and House are expect- another potentially tough primary strongest opposition in the district has:
. Ulwmn~rs removed a co~tro.ver• ~ve security on s1te dunng pen .
tussle with Galliapolis businessman
(Continued on Page 3)
stal .proVISIOn from the boll th11t sales. tomes - 14 days before the ed to vote on the bill this &gt;yeek.

·1·· ·

tion

Fi.r eworks ·s afety regulations .added to budge~ bill

. COLUMBUS (AP) -A HQuseSenate committee on Mohday
approved a bill thai would require
. touaher safely measures for fire"
works stores.
The fireworks safety regulations
wereaddcdtothestate's$36.1 billion
budget bill.
.
The nogillations were s~-g~sted 1n
a separ8ie bill by Rep. John Carey, RWellston, in response to the explosion

CSX, Norfolk .So~thern seek economic ·

•

gain of $1 .billion: via b~eakup of Co~ rail

•

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•

. :WASHING10N (AP)-Gainsof
nearly $1 billion a year and cuts of
2,000 raiii'OIId jobs are projected
undcr two rail carriers' proposal to·
break up Conrail and challenge ·the
· ttucking industry.
CSX Corp. and Norfolk Southern
Cqrp. expect to lure more thin I million trucklOIIds of frci&amp;ht oft' the lli&amp;hways and Dlito rail can by offering
better connections and fewer bottle·
ncc:ks on Colll'lil's lines.
apel'llionll ·iiJIProvements are to
save $S44 million a year, while
growth in ll'lllfK: would ylel!l $44.5
million in lllditional income after
three years, the CXllll~ies said Mooday in •kina for feilcniiJIIII'ilvll.
. The SIO billion poposal would
breakConrail'spipoathe Nonheut
and introduce my,r competition
there fclr the lint tiJM Iince 1976.
wbineoa.-a 1 H:oarailout!lf
six ......,. nilliolda, CSX anc1
. Northern Sollbern would be 11111011
evenly divided in dle,Eut.

•
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· I"Stheir 23-volume filing with the
fcde~ ~urface 1\'ansportation Board,
CSX and Norfolk SoulherJ! arsued
their plan could help reduce h.ighway
congestion and maintenance costs
and provide a cheaper alternative for
.moving prt!ducts like automobiles
apd cbil.
·
. ,
·
"The efficiepcy aains will directly benefit rail freight customers and
will eloable the applicants to provide
muclt.!jmi'JVv~ rail service to customer• thrqu&amp;hout the Unit~
States/'.said David R. Poode. chairm1111, pre~ideni and chief ellec!ltive
officer of Norfolk Southern.
·.
The rillnlads said the 2,000 jobs
thai would be eliminaled over tluee
yeill represent 3 percent of die,_._
ly 13,000 politiou at the three railroa Ailotbcr 2 300 politions would

Southern spokeSman Frank Brown.
Major cuts in management ll!ld clericai 1JOSitions are sl~n Philadelphia, Conrail's headquarters.
The Surface Transportation Board ·
is e~pected to take .,.ty a year to
decide. It could impose conditions or
reject the pl1111 outriaht.
The proposal would leave CSX
and Norfolk Soutllcm in control of
nearly 4$,000 miles or lnlcks.stretehJOB ·EFFECT ing from Montreal to Miami and kele, 11, 1 42-par
from Boston to' Kansu City. It fol- ~~~~· ·~on•
lows a pair of~ consolidalions in ·Iretta ~y whllltpllklrtt
the West over the p'ast two years and ~· outside Conrail
. could lead to a lt'IIIISCOntinental rail- hlldquartera In · Philadelphia.
Hankele, who handlea lnterroad.
CSX IIIII Norfolk Southern, which modlal blUing, pllina to retire In
llave already borrowed $10 billion to 1-112 ve-s and the announced
buyConnil'utock,plcdgcdtolpCIId . lob cuts OIUII d by Conralll'a
$1.~ . billion to improve
con- .breBupwlll not affect him. (AP)
-IOCiti~.
RCCiion• IIIII other f8Ciliticf. .
PenniY~OiiolllllMil:tqan
~ CCIIIIpQies hope to ~~ CQllnting'on ruehina more mllrkets
a -Illata 11ate1f to lolle jobl thlior mvesmtcnl,l by ~apturing on their own roatel, avoidin&amp; cosily
.
whiiC! flOrida. Cleoqia ancl some of the f!'eilht' trlfr'll' Jolt ·to · ud tlnle•coniUmina interchii!JCS
'Vi!Jlnia t.cejQb pins, ..ld Norfolk trucks since World W•ll. rrbey are 1 . between rnllroadi•

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·Schools-conscious budget
·scheduled for vote today ·
COLUMBUS (AP)- Lawmakers !lope to get a passing grade from the
courts after putting more education money into the state's new spending plan .
House and Senate negotiators on Monday approved the $36.1 billion bud. get, which outlines the state's spending for the next two years beginning July
I. The Senate will vote on the package today. .
More than a quarter of the money- $10 billion - will hc .dcvoted to
schools for building repairs. textbooks and basic student aid.
Conference committee members took into account the Ohio Supreme
Court's ruling that fou.nd the state must come up with more money for schools.
The Legislature faces a March deadline to have a new funding plan. ·
"We have met all of the clements of the court's decision," said Sen. Roy
Ray, R-Akron . "We llave a very s)rong case to take to the court." .
Lawmakers llope that the increases in education spending, coupled with
a probabJe tax increase, will be enough to satisfy the court. .
"The next 'step is to take a (tax) package to the voters," Ray said.
Schools statewide will share $250 million to· repair or replace rundown
buildings. A separate bill set aside another $300 million for school buildings.
Districts also will get S50 inillion for new textbooks and materials.
"We did the best we could with the finances we had available," said Rep.
Tom Johnson, R-New Concord.
"I would've liked to have funded education to meet the court's require- ·
ments without going to the tupayers," Johnson said. "But I don'tthink that's
possible."
· •
.
,
The three Hoilse and three Senate members on the committee unanimously •
approved the budget and sent it to the Senate..The House likely ':"ill vote
Wednesday. Neither chamber can change it - tt can only vote on ot.
I

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