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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Cincinnati
nets 1-run
victory
$porta on Pee- 4

Pick 3:
6·2·8
Plck4:
9-0-9!.7
Buckeye 5:
15-16-30-32-36

a.- of ah~ and
thund1r1torms tonight,
the lOa. Thuraaay'
likely •

•
...... 41, H0.41
.
01117, Ohio Ylllly Pubi!Ming eamp.ny

'

2 Sectlona, 12 Plgle. M - *
A Ganrwtt Co. Ncf I I rr

Pomer.ov·Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, June 25, 1997

Senate approval, sends state
blJdget to Voinovich's desk
•By AARON MARSHALL
Sentinel Columbus Bureau

•. COLUMBUS- Devoting nearly
30 percent of a $36.1 !lillian slate
. two-year budget to primary and sec. ondary eaucation, ~tate lawmakers
; approved Ohio's final spending blue' print for 1998-99 voting 30-2 in the
Ohio Senate. ·
·
With a March 24 Ohio Supreme
Court ruling tossing out the slate's
· system of school funding looming
·over them, the top priority for lawmakers was clearly school funding
reform.
"Our main focus throughout the
budget process was education," said
· Roy Ray, chair of the Senate's
finance committee and member of a
. conference committee that hashed out

differences between the House and committee from the Senate's version
Calling himself the "cowardly
Senate versions of the budget already of the budget.
lion in the Wizard of Oz" during a
passed.
.
TheSenateOK'dcommitteedeci- floor speech, Sen. Michael ShoeThanks to the court ruling, prima- sions that last week added $80 mil- maker, D-Bourneville, grudginsly
ry ,and secondary education received lion for . primary and secondary cast his vote for the budget.
thC lion's share or attention ·and slate schools, $50 million for textbooks
"I'm voting for thjs tOday,
money.
and other instructional materials and becau!\1' this is obviously the best
Overall, tl!e budget gives $10.3 $125 million in additional dollars for . we're going to do," he said.
billion for Ohio's schools with a total school building assistance. The extra
Comparing the state's education
of $550 million earmarked for school money had come from savings found system to a dying patient waiting for
building assistance. Also due to the from a reduction in welfare case- surgery, Shoemaker said he hoped
court ruling which orders lawmakers loads.
.
that "we're going to do something to
to develop a new funding system by
In fact, the additions to the budget · really help this patient before the
next March, second year school were enough to' quell most Democ- patie~ts decide they need new docspending details were nixed with the i'atic criticisms of the Republican- tors."
$5.5 billion earmarked for 1999 dominated budget process. However,
The .budget compromise package
placed into a lump sum to be dis- two Democratic senators did vote moves to the Ohio House today for a
persed later.
against the bill largely over the flo~ vote. If it passes the House, it
The vOle technic~lly approved expansion of the state's voucher pro- will move to the desk of Gov. George ·
changes made by the House-Senate gram in the proposal.
, Voinovich for signing.

Gone to

the ·dogs,
National Plott
hound activity
starts Thursday

BUDGET DEBATE - Ohio
Senate Minority Leeder Ben
Espy, D·Columbus, gestured ss
he spoke In opposition to the $36
million state · budget In Columbul Tuesday. The budget was

approved by the Senate 30·2.
(AP)

1st graders to continue
attendance.at Syracuse
ova so

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JOGIOOSI
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undlr • waterfllllt the A1cl'lltlon Clnw Wllllrplrk In Kllfllr.
lng. Temperaturw haWI ~I"'CCInto thl901.throughout Ohio thll '
. WMit. (AP)
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�Commenta1y
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ROBERT L WINGETT
PubiiiMr
CHARLENE HOIJIUCH

MARGARET LEHEW
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Excerpts from .other .·
Ohio newspapers
By The Auocllltwd Pren

reian of terror.
It is an episode so c.u.clysmic, an
If the iafnous Cambodiin dicta- apocalyp~e so chilling, that the wcrld
tor Pol Pot is on the run or captured, would not believe it for .many years.
as nocent reportS su~ it could
mean the most sensational intemation~ murder trial of the century.
Jack Anderson
It could also mean a final healing
and
of sorts for a counliy that has been in
turmoil for more than two decades.
Jan Moller
Pol Pot is the guerrilla who led the
Khmer Rouge in taking over Cambodia in 197S. For four years, he,. We were the fintto report on the hor·
rul~ Cam~ia with a systematic ror !hat scruck Cambodia after the
VICIOUsness an(! cruelty unseen since fanatical Khmer Rouge seized powAdolf Hitler's concentration camps. er. We had aecess to secret intelliPol Pot . emul~ Mao, he said, gence reports that provided docuand was intent on creating a com· mentary evidence of the death marchmunist agrarian society. He outlawed es, the forced labor and mass e~ccu­
rcli1ion, education, commerce and tions.
cuIlure. And he torturca, killed and
We tried to tell their story .to a
starved his own people with horrible world that would not listen. On June
.
4, 197S, only five weeks after the
purpose.
.
.
At least a founhofCambodia's 7- communist takeover, we asked:
million population was 'killed. SlllllC "What has happened to more than 3
estimates suggest that as many as 3 million Cambodians who were driven
million were wiped out by Pol Pot's · out of. their city hbmes?" ·

By

A Gannett Co. Newspaper ·

.

Excerpts of recent editorials of statewide and national interest from Ohio
newspapers: .
The Lima News, J~~~~e 17
. Twcn~y-five years after the Watergate break-in, many top federal officials
contJn~ to give the American public plenty of reasons to be wary about the
conuptmg mflucnces of power. The sins lhat brought down the Nixon crew
:- lying•. obstrucli~~ just~ce, abu~in~ f~IJK!wer - . are on full display
m t_he Cl.mton admm1strat1on, wh1ch 1s dodgmg Its .way around a variety of
senous offenses.
.
·
Just last week, Bill and Hillary Clinton's former business partner in a failed
Ad&lt;ansas thrif~ James McDougal, suggested that Hillary may soon be snared
. by Kenneth Starr's Whitewater investigation. In an interview with a LiUie
Rock TV s~ion, McDou~al said, "The institution (prison) I'm going to ...
IS co-educational and I thank there's an excellent chance that 1 might see
Hillary there."
·.
.
. Ironically••Hillary was an attorney on the HouSe Judiciary Committee dur. mt the Wa~~ate probe. Sh~ was charged with looking into impeachment
charges agamst Pres1dcn1 N1xon; now s()JIJe congressmen are considering
. impeaehment proceedings against her husband for some new "gates": Lippogate, Travelgate, FBigatc and so forth.
.
It's no won.der so many Americans continue to distrust.high-ninking gov.
emment offic1als. But matters could be far worse. Imagine the trouble our
democracy would be in if Americans always lnisted those men and women
who hold or seek government power.
·
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, June l2
I l::~:l]~~
Oppone.nts are shooting at it. with all they've got, but soon~r rather than
later the tnal balloon the Senate Finance Committee sent up .Thursday - · ·

' mlttcc
to.start.peggingMedicareded~ctionstoincome-dcservestofly.ThecomItself, Democrats and Republicans alike, deserves not just praise but

.

To stir the world's conscience, we
wrote a book called "The Cambodia
File." But at the lime Amcric:a and the
world wanted to forget about that
trouble-tom nation .next to Viclnam,
which had caused so much anxiety
for the decade previous.
· It took a Vietnamese Invasion in
1979 to throw out the Khmer Rouge
accounting. n
and to rip down the bl~~:k cunain that
We collected a two-inch-thick file had hidden Cambodia from the
of intelligence reports and affidavits world. The infamous Pol Pot should
attesting to the slaughter in Cambo- have been condemned before the
dia. But not until May 1978, after we world. Yet incredibly, President Jimpublished a series of ~lumns on the my Carter supported him in the Unit·
Cambodian savagery. did 1M world ed Nations. As pan of a three-hand·
cd international poker same wilh the
pay any aucntion. . .
.
Even then; no acuon was taken IQ Chinese and Russians, the Carter
counter the savagery of !he coll!mu· Administration ordered the U·.S. repnist regime. In fact, the U.N. vo1ed to resentatives at the United Nations to
recognize Pol Pot and the Khmer vote to allow the Pol Pot government
Rouge as the legitimate government to retain the Cambodian seat.
of Cambodia, entitled to the dignity · This amounted to a stamp of
of a scat in the august international' approval that gave Pol . Pot
body. To its shame, the United States respectability. Still, few complained.
was one of those nations voting in In fict, the genocide seemed barely
favor of the mass murderers.
not.iced by Americans until a movie,
"The Killing Fields," a)Vakcned ihe
world to the horror, b111 ionly after it
. was largely past. It became more a
cautionary talc than a real-time preventive effort, as this column tried to
be.
.
111cre are many lessons that ·can be
learned from the bloody historical
page, and an international tribunal ,
·judging· Pol. Pot would be just the
place to ·.air it. Some, including
anonymous voices within the Clinton
administration, argue privately that ii
would be better if rebellious Khmer
Rouge soldiers or the Cambodian
government cxtiact a "confession"
and then kill him.
11lc trouble with that approach, as
we have seen over the decades, is that
it docsn 't close the lid on the coffin.
It sometimes, as with Che Guevara
and others, causes gucn:illas to
hecomc manyrcd heroes. Cambodia
will never heal properly until there is
a full public airing of the Khmer
Rouge cruelty before its chief ~ic­
tims, . the population of !hat small.
A'ian country.
,
Jack Andenon and Jan Moiler
a~ writers for United Feature ·
Syndl..te, Inc.

.

roundly unlucky. In m()st murdlir cases, the convicted killer not only
escapes a death sentence, not only
avoids a life sentence; . he doesn't
even serve mit half of whatever sentence he receives.
Thafs why there is so little deterrent to murder in this country. That's
.why 20,000 mu(ders are committed
every year. 11lc criminals out there
know that they can· get away with
murder in most ca.o;cs with little more
than a slap on the wrist. ·
State lcgislaturcs . have tried to
address this failing of the criminal
justice system. They •vc . passed
mandatory sentencing law.s.111cy'vc
passed. three-strikes laws.
These laws have been somewhat
helpful. But they have been overly
broad, covering all manner of crimes,
·great and SJ1lall. What lawmakers
really should have done •• what they
. ought to do now .• is target murder,
the crime the public fears most.
. They should pass laws that guarantee
.,, an d s.ure pums
· hment .or
' crimsw11'
inats .."(ho take lives.
·
If a murderer has been sentenced
to the gas chamber or to lethal injcc·
tion, he should not be able to spend
eight years (on average) filing . all
manner of appeals at the state and
federal level.
Once eoovicted, he should get
· three appeals: one· before a lower

.

stale court, another before a state high
court and a final appeal to a federal ·
court: This process should take no
more than 18 months, six months per
appeal. .
·
As to those murderers sentenced
to "life" imprisonment ··like Sirhan
·.; they shouldn't even dream about
living "as a nonnal citizen," no'mat· ·
. tcr ifthey'rc model prisoners, no mat,
ter if thcy•vc learned a trade in
prison. If a jury sends a kill~r away
for life, the public should rest assured
that he will be safely hehind bar.l·until
his lifeless body is hauled aw11y in a
pine hox.
Thc!'e also should he "truth in sentcncing" for those murderers who
receive something lcs. than a life
tcnn. It's bad enough when a killer is
spared both the death penalty and a ·
life sentence. It's a gross miscarriage
·of justice when a parole hoard considers reducing a murderer's IS-year
(or whatever) prison term.
States ought to be S(l hard on mur·
dcrcrs thathe
·
t y are .happy
mere1y to
stay alive. It's a joke that a notorious
a.'sassin like Sirhan Sirhan thhiks he
should be set free because hC thinks
he has done enough time for his
crime.
•
Joseph Perkins is ~ ealumnlsl
for the San DJe&amp;o Union-Tribune
and a commenlator for MSNBC.

Albright hopes to unify Cambodia's ·feuding coalitions .

•

s World

'
l'

By DeWAYNE WICKHAM .
agrarian sOciety. In the 18 yeW'!\ since dh and Sen that it's time to move mula for more of the tribalism ·that
he was driven from power, he waged beyond their pelional differences. It's gave rise: to the Khmer Rouge, not a
Gannett Newa Service
WASHINGTON- The arrest of a guerrill' war against successive time for them to stan working togeth- plan for nati!)nall'CCllncililltion.

Pol Pot and Cambodia's willingnes~
to extradite him for trial falls fll' short
· of what that countiy's government
must do to set the fi!lancial aid it
needs to recover from his reian oftcr·
. ror.
That's the message Secretary of
State Madeleine Albri1h1 should
deliver to Cambodian- leaders when
she arrives in Phnom Penh on Satur·
day. ·
Pol Pot, who is thou1h1 to have
. ordered t_he cxterminat~on of more
than a mllhon Cambocl•ans -any·
one with an educa.lion above th~t
nceded to tend a nee paddy - 1s
reJiortedly being held pri!K&gt;ner at a
remote jungle location by a faction of
the Khmer Rouge liutchers he OJ~~:~

j

!

governments.from his jungle hideout.

The leaden of the feuding coalitiOJI Albright meets with this weekend arc both former allies of Pol Pot.
Prince Norodom,Ranariddh, the first
prime minister, is a member of Cambodia's royal fal)lily. He sptlnt much
of the past two decades fighting
alongside Pol Pot against the Viet·
nam-installed government before
· winning a U.N.-sponsored election in
1993. Hun Sen, who headlid that govemment from 1979 to 1!193 was a
member of the Khmer Rouie who
broke with Pol Pot in 1978.
In .the four years since control of
com"!~· .
: ..
· Cambodia wu divided between
Bnngmg h1m to JUSilcc has lon1 them, Ranariddli and Sen ha~ w.aec1
~n a goal of the United States, a fJCrCe- 'and often bloody- fiJht
wh1ch tine years ~P · created . an to Ollll the other from power. Bolh
Office: o~ C~mbod1an Ge~1dc , men command weli·MIJied privete
ln~1aauon, tn pan to compile tile .-mica. 1\nd each ia recent months
evidence an ded to make • case hu tried to win units of the Khmer
apinst. Pol Pot and hili bru~ lesioa. Roup OV1ir to their aide, not prote. ~n1 the four yean he nut.Cam· cute them for~ mtlrder.
bodia s aove~t, l'ol Pot Uled
. It's into this P&lt;'!itical cesspool that
mass murder m an a_ttempt to 11'1!1'" Albri 1ht JON ·this weekend. Her
fonn the Country tnt~ a MIDis~ million is 10 try to c:Onvlnce Ranarid-

•

er and stop pulling apilrt if CamboHanding Pol Pot over to intema·
. dia is"to recover from tho killing donal authorities for trial is a good
fields of Pol Pot.
idea. Cambodia lacks the. lctil and
11lc United States ha.~ a vested political infrastructure to bring him to
interest in Cqmbodia.
justice.
..
. .
.
·A demociatic ..and economically
But much more needs to be done
strong Cambodia will help huoy the to clasc this painful cluiptcr of, that
ceonom ies of that region of the Dillion's histo,ry.
world. A stron@ southeast Asia is a
Alllright should tell Ranariddh and
bulwark . against an eKpansion of Sen in no uncertain tc.nns to work
communist China's .. innuen'cc together for the good or Cambodia or
throughout the area - and a ·hedge face the political isolation lltd ecoaaainst it bocomins a real superpow- nomic ostracism .that helped toppki
er competitor for the United States. A Pol Pot from power. The~ can con~
·Cambodia mired in tiM; confusion of tinue,tlleir increasingly bloody fighJ
its curront divided government is a ·for power.and become the linear sue·
brccdina ground of social and polit- ccssors to one o( die wOrld's brutai
ical diseontent,and the resurgence of mus Ji!Ui'dercrs.
· · ,
the Khmer Rouac.
Or they can. seck a peaceful so1111 ·
Cambodia's leaders want Pol Pot tion to !heir diffcrentes and helP,
oul of the way. Not because of the Cambod1arocovcr from the bulchery
heinous ac11 he commiuod, ·but or a man whose fate they miglll
instead to !lecf !IP their armies with crwi!IC be made to fJM:C.
'
ilefeeton frcm his ranks, That's a fQr·
.,

oih'

T~y's.Binhdays; Movie diroctor Sidney Lurnet is 73. Aares5 JIJIIC f..ock· •
han ts 72. Rhylhm·and·blucs sinacr Eddie Floyd is 62. Basketball Hall-of· ;
Funer Willis Rf:ed is S~. Sin~ Clri.Y Simon is S2. ~k music;iu ian: .
McDonlld (Fonnaner; K1n1 Cnrnson) 1s SI.1V paraollalky I'Jtyllls 0qmp:
is 48. R,oc:ic sinJCI' Til!l Fina (Spli~ Eni!; Crowdod Houae) is U Rock siapr :
Oe&lt;qe Michael is 34. hpper ea.lyllllrt is 29.
. 1

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Robert C. 'Bob' Cochran
'

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•ICoLumbus!84~

Mary E. Richmond, 35, Gallipolis, wu arrested Thesday aflan0011 by a.J.
lipolis officers on a 1996 indictment warrant charging theft and four counll
of forgery, III:Cordinl to Meip County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
She wu lodged in the Athens County Jail, pending arraignment'in the
Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
•

R~ C. "Bob" Cocbi•, 91, New Haven, W.Va., died MOIIday, June 23,
t997 ·tn Phuant Valley HOipital.
Born Jan. 4, 19061n Haadley, W.Va., son of the late Albert and Caroline
Monis Cochran, be wu a former X-ray tec:hnician for the West VU"ginia Residents transpOrted to prison
'!Wo Meigs County residcnis were transported Monday afternoon to bqin
Health DepanmcnL
·
He wu a member of tile New Haven United Methodist Church and a for- serving court-mandated prison sentences.
~tics of the Meigs County Sherifl's Department transportCd Patty Haw·
mer trustee of the Oraham Ccmeterj.
Icy, Kingsbury Road, Pomeroy, to the Women's Reformatory at Marysville
He is survived by several nieces and nephews.
··
·
H~ was preceded In death by his wife, Ora R. Cochran, in 1994; three to serve a sentence for welfare fraud.
brothers, Carl, Edmond and John Cochran; and three sisters, Kathleen Kil· . Roben "Pee Wee" Riffle, Racine, was tnmsported to the Orient Rccepllon Center for ~robation. violation. He pleaded guilty to usin1 illegal drugs
collins, Daisey ~s and Mary Workman.
Services will be I p.m. Friday in the FoaJesong Funeral Home in Mason, wh1le on probaoon for an earlier breaking and entering charge, and was senW.Va., with the Revs. Oregory Blair and Eldon Shingleton officiating. Bur- tenced to serve the remainder of his 18-month sentence.
ial will follow in the Oraham Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral·home
Friday from II a.m. until the time of services.

I

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June L. Griffin
June L. Griffin, 7S, Long Bottom, died Wednesday, June 2S, 1997 ai the
Memorial Hospital Extended Care in Pomeroy.
Arrangements will be announced by the White Funeral Home, Coolville.

V~tenms

'

:Thunderstorms on·tap
·.for region on Thursday
'
By The Aaaoclated Preas

.

Rail\ is expected in 'Ohio tonigf!t. Lows generally will in the 60s, reaching the low 70s in the south.
.
Clearing will begin in Thursday, and highs will be in the 80s. Showers
may linger in central and some counties in southern Ohio.
The record high·temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station was 101 in 1988. The record low was 43 set 'in 1979. ·
Sunset today will . be at 9:04 p.m. Sunrise Thursday will be at 6:04 a.m.
.
Weather focecast:
Tonight... Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows
from the upper 60s to the lower 70s. Southwest wind S to .10 mph. Chance
of rain 40 percent. ·
,
ThQtsday... th.undcrstorms likely. Hazy with highs ·in the uppoer 80s.
Chance of rain 60 percent.
·
Thursdy night...Panly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms ..
J..ows in the mid 60s.
.
Extended forecast:
Friday... Mostly clear. Highs in the lower 80s.
.
.
Saiurday... Panty cloudy. Lows in the lower 60s and highs in the mid and
upper 80s.
Sunday... Panly cloudy. A chance of thunderstorms in the afternoon. Lows
in the mid 60s 'and highs in the mid 80s.

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.Lawmake~s promise tobacco
growers won't be forgotten
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) - · One $4,000 to $8,000 (a year), so that's
of th~. bil! unanswered questions in very important," he said. "And 69
the proposed $360 billion sclllemcnt Jl!lrcent of those people have anoth·
nlr,\\~.,~i~l"'eu~-rill!"~rs is .what hap- . er j(lb. So the buyput, in my judg·
. pens !o tobacco fanners. Lawmakers inenl, just wouldn't work in Ken·
from tobacco states say they won 'tlet tucky."
them be forgollen.
Ford said the only silver linings he
"You can bet tha~ we'll be look· could see in the proposed settlement
. ing at.every eric!&gt; and cranny to find - for farmers are the promises to keep
. a way Ill prol~t the farmer," said the FDi\ from interfering with tobieScn. Wendell Ford, D-Ky.
co growing and to shield growers
But members of Congress whose from liability in future lawsuits.
cp,nstituents grow tobacco apparent·
B~t he said that's not enough, He
. ly are qowherc near agreement on said.Congress will have to look at the
what to do to help those farmers ifthe "$7SO !llillion that goes to NASCAR
settlement becomes · l~w .. The pro- and rodeos and other ·items that
)il&gt;sal, drawn up by s.tate attorneys would lose tobacco advertising to
, a~nera.l after negotiations with ciga- make them (the farmers) whole."
flllle-makers, is subject to approval
"What in the world are they toing
~y Congress and the president.
to do for the farmer?" he said. "If he
Rep. Ed Whiifield, R- Ky., said has a reduction of income, should we
s()me of ~he money left over after have a pool out there to offset that?
smoking victims arc paid should go I think it can be done."
'
tq farm~n looking .for a way out of
About 60,000 of Kentucky's ·
the busin~ss. "There .has to be some 90,000 farmers grow tobacco, as do
IJIODey that would give tobacco farm· 9,000 of Indiana's I05,000 farmers .
ers an opportunity to sell their allot- . With health concerns about smokIJienl if they want to (jo it.'.' ·
ing growing over .the past several
Ford said tha,t could help grow~rs years, several auempts have been
. i~ ·states such as North Carolina under way to find alternative crqps
·'Vhere farmers . have much larger for growers. But there have heen few
.~Jiotments for-growing tobacco.
takers, and o~e reason is thattobac"Th~y have I SO acres of tobacco, co IS such a b1g moneymaker.
SCI if you sell a ISO-acrc allotmc~t
According to 1993 l,lniversity of
ypu gel a lot of money," he said. "But Kentucky estimates, tobacco· nets
ijtKeqtucky, we've got 6S,OOO farm · about $1,8.44 an acre, compared with
' tjrmllies with a 2,000, to 4,000- $29.89 an acre for. com and $73.18
wuncl allotment, and !hey wmddn't for soybeans.
. a~t anything."
Right now, ninny farmefs are too
"Butt~ydohavcalifetime,asof busy worrying about the weather .to
",pw, income of anywhere from be concerned about a seulement that
; '', ... ..• • ;, ~
. ..•, . " miaht be yeats in the making..
"I . guess you might say that
·
they've heard so much in, say, the last
·.
.· .
: · five years that they're a little bit hard·
. (~21Utel
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. ,
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. 'The·l)aily Sentinel
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Michael G. Lockhart

Ra,lph Macomber

Michael 0. Lockhart, 52, Coolville, died Monday, June 23, 1997 in the
Clarksburg Veterans Hospital.
.
·
Born Aug. 26, 1944 in Parkersburg, W.Va., son of Beulah Burden Oer- ·
ber and stepson of Dale Gerber, both of Coolville, hC was a !rUck driver and
worked on guardrail.
He was a vetenm of the U.S. Navy during the Vietnam CQIIflict 8nd a member of the Coolville Lions Club.
·
Surviving in addition to his parents arc a son, Michael Shane Lockhart ·
of Canaan ville; a stepdaughter, Tina Deeter of Coolville; two brothers and
sisters-in-law, David and Carolyn Lockhart of Coolville, and Jerry and Loret·
ta Lockhart of Little Hocking; and .three nieces and three nephews.
· He was preceded in death by a grandmother, Belva Barr. ·
Services will be II a.m. Thursday in the White-Blower Funeral Home in
Coolville, with the Rev. George Horner officiating. Burial will follow in the
Stewart Cemetery in Hockingport. Friends may call at the funeral home on
Thursday from 9 a.m. until the time of service. .
·
·

Ralph Macomber, 81 , of Bowles Road in Dexter, died on Wednesday,lune
25,1997 .at Holzer Medical Cen.ter in Gallipolis, following an extended ill·
ness.
He was born on August 17, 1915 in Vinton, son' of the late Richard Mill:·
mofler and Benha Evans Macomber.
He was a retired bus driver for the Meigs Local School District. a mem·
ber of the Dexter Church of Christ, a veteran of the U.S.Army during World
War II, a member of Star Orange No. 778 in Salem Center, and a member
of American Legion Post 161 of Vinton.
Surviving arc a son and daughter-in-law, Richard and Janice Macomber
of Langsville; a brother and sister-i n-law, Donavin and Lucille Macomber
of Radcliff; two grandsons, Richard "Chip" and Michael Macomber, both of
Cheshire; a granddaughter, Stacy Macomber of Langsville; and a step-grandson, Ryan Watson of Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Besiilcs his parents, he was preceded in death by his wife, Nina N.
Macomber, whom he married on October 29, 19S6; and two sisters, Merle
and Madge Macomber.
Services will be I p.m. Friday, June 27, 1997 in the Dexter Church of
Christ, with Roger Watson officiating. Burial will follow in the Standish
Cemetery in Dexter. Friends may call at the Birchfield Funeral Home in Rut- '
land from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. on Thursday, June 26, 1997.

Ralph Macomber

.

.
Ralph Macomber, 81, Bowles Road, Dexter, died Wednesday, June 25,
1997 in Holzer Medical Center, following an extended illness.
Born Aug. 17, 19JS in Vinton, son of the late Richard .and Bertha Evans
Macomber, he was a retired bus driver for the Meigs Local School.District.
He was a member of the Dexter Church of Christ, a u:s. Anny veteran
of World War U, a member of Star Orange 778 at Salem Center, and a memberof American Legipn Post16t'in Vinton. .
•
.
Surviving arc a son, Richard (Janice) Macomber of Langsville; three
grandchildren and a stepgrandchild; and a brother, Donavin (Lucille)
Macomber of Radel iff.
· He was also preceded in death by his wife, ,Nina N, Macomber, whom-he
married Oct. 29, 1956; and by two sisters, Merle and Madge Macom~.
Services will be I p.m. Friday in the DeKter Church of Christ, wit~ Roger
Watson offici~ting . Burial will be in the Stanaish Cemetery, Dexte• 'riends
m•y call at the Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland, from 2-4 and I p.m.
Thursd:!y.
·

Meigs announcements

Syracuse Mayor's Court
Syracuse Mayor George Connol-·
ly accepted bond forfeitures from II
people on Monday, while one person
appeared in court.
.
Margaret. Schw~. Middleport,
speed, $SO; Orcgmj Richter, Pickerington, s)ie!'d. $64; David Clark,
Oberlin, speed, $SO; Dale Johnson,
Wadsworth, improper passing, $80;
Oreg Garretson, Rutland, no trailer
license, $80; , . Stephanie Kelly.

(Continued from Page 1)
VFWtomeet ·
·event &amp;lid invites the C(\lllmunity to . carpool and to mow their lawns in the
·
The Tuppers Plains VFW Pos( worship and fellowship with the con- evening.
90S3 will meet Thursday, 7:30 p.m. gregation Sunday at 10:30 a.m.
A group lhat monitors air pollution
said Middletown eKceeded clean-air
standards for the founh time in the
Service planned.
Reunion set
Special weekend .services will be · past three years.
Descendants of Sam and Melvina ·
That means the area will have to
Birchfield will meet at the Henderson held at the' Red Brush Church of
Community Center, Sunday, with a Christ, Bashan Road, Saturday, 7 seek another extension from the U.S.
p.m.; Sunday, 10 a.m. and Sunday, 6 Environmental Protection Agency or
basket dinner at noon.
· p.m. Denver Hill of ,Foster, W.Va., face possible sanctions, said Sallie
will be the.speaker.· ·
·
Hilvers. spokeswoman for the
Sets scssloa
Regional Ozone Coalition.
The Meigs County Veterans Ser·
vice Commission will meet at 7:30 .MeetlnJi set
· In Cincinnati, 30 "cool centers"
A public meeting concerning haz- were set up for residents who do not
p.m, Monday at the Veterans Service
ard mitigation grant fu"ds for Salis- have air conditioning.
Office, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
bt~ry Township will be held on MonHarry Sinclair, 'air monitoring and
day
at6 p.m. at the Rocksprings Unit- analysis supervisor for Hamilton
FeDowshlp planned
The Pomeroy United Methodist ed Methodist Church. The meetings County Environmental Services,
Church will celebrate a quanerly fel- are held every Monday, and concern urged residents to cut back on their
·
lowship Sunday immediately fol· an application for grant funding for driving.
lowing worship with a carry-in din· flood abatement in the township.
"I would say either car pool 6r
ncr. Martha Hoovet will chair the
take the bus," he said.
Pat O'Loughlin, director of energy services for the Dayton Power &amp;
Light Co., said the usc of air condiUnits of the Meigs County EmerRUTLAND
tioners increased tile demand for
gency Medical Service recorded eight
7:04 a.m., . Main Street, Henry power from the utility by up to 25 ·
percent over last week.
calls for assistance Tuesday. Units Eblin, HMC;
responding included:
2:01 p.m., ,BrowneliAvenue, Mid"Summer's finally here," said
dleport, Justin Hodge, VMH. .
· O'Loughlin.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
The hot weatlicr also produced big
SYRACUSE
8:33 a.m., Meigs Mine 2, Roy
9:43 a.m., Maples Apanments, crowds at swimming pools. .
Blackburn, Holzer Medical Center
· "It's incredibly busy," said Janelle
via MedFiight Ill helicopter arnbu- . Pomeroy, Charles Kaiser, VMH;
I
0:08
p:m.,
Second
Street,
Perry
Bucrschcn, a lifeguard at a water park
lance; ·
.
in the Dayton suburb of Kettering.
I :46 p.m., Powell Stree~ Middle- Levacy, VMH. ·
.
.
"There are tons and tons of people
port, Bobby Dill, HMC;
out here and they're having a lot or
8:13 p.m., Eagle Ridge ,Road,
fun. It's packed."
Chester, Bonnie Walker, Veterans
Construction worker Paul SteinMemorial Hospital.
REEDSVILLE
GLOUSTER (APj - A 9•ycar9:11 a.m., State Route 7, motor old boy drowned while canoeing with I
vehicle accident, Beth Shank, O'Bie- two other boys, the Athens County
ness Memorial Hospital, Tuppers Sheriff's Office said.
Plains Volunteer Fire Department .
Chad Kasler of Glouster drowned
and squad assisted.
Tuesday in a pond in Glouster, 12
miles n.orth of Athens.
·Witnesses told deputies !hat Chad
. Vetera.. Memorial
was canoeing with two other boysTuesday admissions - Bonnie a 16-year-old and another 9-year-old
. Walker, Racine; Harold Vollmer, - when the boat capsized.
·
:t:iew Straitsville. .
The 16-year-old tried to drag both
· Tuesday dischiuge~· .::. none.
of the
boys to safety when
Chad
under the water.
·

furth wiptlct his face witli a sweat·
soaked T-shirt as he repaired a Toledo street.
"This is no fun;'' said Steinfunh,
32, of Toledo. "But I'll tell you what.
I'd rather work outside in the summer
than freeze to death in.thc winter."
Don Gensler, 19, of Toledo, said
he had been looking forward to
warmer weather so he could hit the
beach and work on his tai. But the
University of Toledo student said he
was staying inside..
·

EMS units answer 8 calls

Athens County .
youth drowns

Hospital news

Olk Hill Flnl ..........................11\

OVB .......................~..........,.•.•38~
One Yatlly...............................41
Peop._ .................................sa\·

Prwrn Flnl .................................17
Rockw 11 ..............................\10).
RD-IMII ............. ~ .....·.........201'&amp;
It"IOI'Wf•............._ ................
.
...,.
Star Bank ...............................,.

Wertdv'l .......................:..._..~~.,

-·-·-

Worth1"1f01" ··-····-··........-.18'1.

The Gallia-Meigs aiTPA
urogram can .help you!

"""' services Include:
Free asaeament of your skills to
help you decide what job is right for
you.
Assessments include ••utloasfor
tralniDI or uparadlaa sldlls.
Flaandal Allllltllnce fur retraining.
1· c:om1putenuatcb or your llkllls With
job bull. of 40,000 employers from
Columbus to,Charleston.

·'

..
I

L---

·A re you.55 or
older and
·Loo~ing for a
job?

.

Unct. End ..............................M
Ud. ................:.......................18\

.

'·'

Greensboro, N.C., speed, $52; David
Karbley, Ravenswood, W.Va,, speed,
$4S; Gregory Michael, Columubs,
speed, $S I; Carla Thrncr, Albany,
speed,
$49; . David
Perry,
McConnelsville, speed, $~8; and
Joshua Roberts, · Pomeroy, speed,
$56.
.
.
Appearing in coun was Debra
Me~dows, Racine, speed, costs only.

Ohio broils under heat

- ........................................... SSUI

.)
I •

News in Brief:-

Anwat made on Indictment

We reponed that the Cunbodian
commllnisu "may be pailty of pnocide apinst their own people. Cer·
!Ainly, the ruthLess uprooQnl of 3 million people is an act out or the Dark
Agcs. ,Yet no one -- not the. United
Nations, nilt the Red Cross, not asingle nation •• has called upon the
Cambodian authorities for an

.

the support needed to persist and succeed.
·
.
· Cliar11ing different beneficiaries different amounts is a sea 'change. But By Jonph Perklne
reminds us \hat even a so-called
Medicare's. soaring cosls an~ looming deficits require radical changes.
Sirhan Sirhan appeared last week "life" sentence doesn't really mean
Mcans-tesung, by way of a sbdmg scale of out-of-pocket expenses recipi· before a California parole board. It life. It reveals that the prison system
cots incur, is among the most fair.
was the lOth attempt by the assassin · has become so tilted toward "rchaOnly some 2.S .niillion qf Medicare's 38 million beneficiaries would be to be freed from his "life" sentence.
affected at all. And their share of th&lt;!lr t:are still could be capped at about
Sirhan was originally sentenced to .
Jose,h Perkins
$3,000 a year. The stat~ quo alternative is far more onerous: Bankrupt the die in California's gas chamber after
l'
system for all or tax ch11dren and grandchildren at punitive rates:
he was convicted in 1969 of gunning bilitation" of criminals that irhas lost
down presidential candidate Roben sight of its foremost purpose •• pun·Kennedy at a Los Angles hotel. The ishment.
ne Columbu Dispatth, June 22
as$8Ssin got lucky iil 1972 when &lt;!alIndeed, Sirhan's parole board
The felony indictment of Paul C. Mifsud, charging that the former chief ifomia's death penalty was ruled declii)Cd to set him free last week not
of staff to Oov: George V. Voinovich tried to cover up a $100,000 break on unconstitutional. His death sentence because they felt he was insuffihome-remodeling work, is dismaying.
was changed to "life" imprison- ciently punished for his crime, but
As one.of !he Stille's top public officials, MifsUd had a replilation for being mcnt.
.
. because, they said, the assassin has
shrewd, tough and fiscally savvy.- So the investigation and indictment of Mif·
Yet, Sirhan is not satisfied that he neither learned a trade while in
sud has left Statehouse observers wondering why - if the charges are true escaped his much-deserved llppoint· prison nor completed other self-~· would stoop '? ahering a building permit.
mcnl with the executioner (even· . improvement programs.
L1ke any. other cnmmatdcfendant, he deserves the presumption of inno· thotlgh California's death penalty
Chances. arc, if Sirhan had not
cence. But 1f the charges are borne.out- and even if he is cleared - the was reinstated in 1977). He somehow commilled an especially notorious
!ime-ho~red admonition about avoiding cven.the appearance of conflict of thinks he deserves to be returned to murder, he already would be a free
mtercst 1s underscored.
society.
;
man. In fact, more than 1,500 con. · "I'm ready to live in compliance victed killers are living in communiThe Claclnnlltl Enquirer, June 22
.
.
with the law," he told the parole t.ies throughout California, having
·'J'!te Nati?nal C~mmission on Restructuring the Internal Re~enue Service board. "I'm ready to live as a normal been turned out of prison by state
hasn t even ISSued Its report ye~ but the Clinton.administration has launched citi1.cn. J'vc done my time. I've parole boards.
pre-emptive strikes.
,
·
·
behaved myself."
AndCal•''om•'a•'sbynom
· eansthc
''
Vice President AI Gore has announced the creation of three new ~nels
Sirhan's attorney, Lawrence only staic that is soft on killers. A
to work on fix1~g the agency- something the bipartisan commission spent · Teeter, chimed in. His assassin-client Bureau of Justice Statistics survey
the past year dmng anyway. And a top Treasury Deportment official has called was a model prisoner, he assured the found tha~ nationwide, !he average
the commission's plan a "dangerously flawed" one that "poses an una&lt;:· parole board. He would pose no sentence for murder was IS years,
ccptablc risk to our nation's revenue stream." Translation: It poses a risk to threat to society. He even had a job while the average time served was
Treasury's turf by seeking to peel away its grip on the IRS; which accounts awaiting him on the outside as a his· only 5.S years.
for 60 pen:e~t of tl!e deportment's budget.
.
·
.
torieal researcher.
.
That's why the hundreds of ~'On·
All of wh1ch proves the ]Xlint of the commission's report, due out Wednes- · · or cdursc. this entire p~eeding victe4 · murderers on death row
day: The Internal Revenue Service should be ripped away from an antiquated . was a mockery of criminal justicc.:lt thropghout the country arc probloated bureaucratic mind-set that has perpetuated horse-and-buggy tech:
nology, horrendous error rates and slow response times.

I

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

~Local

..

n ....,, JQilt 26
AccuWeathc~ forecast for daJilme condili0111

StI•ff sen tenclng
· • mus··t a·wa·l•t mu· rderers
.

OHIO Wcillllf' r

agony ·must be examined

lnci...,Ma..r

111 Court ...... Pomeroy, Ohio

-

Wedr•••C:'· June 25, 1111
By ..... AndtltiOI'I

~lnl!J48

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page2

Cambodi~'s

D.Wy .Sentinel

o............

Wedn1edly, June 25, 1197

' I

.

�Sports-

)
..

2

By KEN !ilERGER
Thome's third homer in two days
CLEVELAND (AP) - The was also his l i th in June as Clevecrowd gave him a standing ovation land backed Wright with its 12th
in the sixth inning. The manager was three-bomer game.
·
practically singing he was so happy.
Sandy Alomar extended his hit. · This Jaret Wri&amp;ht kid must be ling streak .to 23 games with a twosomething special.
·
run, bases-loaded double. For Alo. The Cleveland Indians, in a sea- mar, catchin&amp; Wright overshadowed
son-long search for consistent, his slreak.
·healthy pitchers, showcased the jew"I had a bigg~r job tonight,'' AloeI of their fann system Tuesday mar said. "To take care of that kid."
night. And Wright, didn't disapWright ( J-0), a 21-year-old right·point.
hander, allowed five runs and seven
Wright, Cleveland's No. I dr~ft hits in 5 213 innings -. hardly a
pick in 1994, showed pluck, p01se sparkling line and not close. to what
and some impressive stuff in win- . his father. did in his major league
"!ling his major league 'debut. I0-S debut.
over the Minnesota Twins Tuesday
Clyde Wright, a left-hander, ~Jso
night.
·
. made his first big league start agaansl
"To sit and watch Jaret and the the Twins. He pitched a four·hitter
pitches he throws and the idea.he forthe California Angels and won 8has, it was very impressive," said J"on June 15, 1!)66.
manager Mike Hargrove, obviously
Despite allowing three homers,
enthused about a possible answer to Wright offered a glimpse of the lndiALOMAR DOUBLES- The Cleveland Indians' Sandy Alomar (far
Cieveland's pitching woes. "The ans' future with his hard fastball, ·
left)
joins Mlnneaota catcher Greg Myers al)d home plate umpire
kid has a chance to be a very,- very tight slider and toughness. .
Drew
Cobia In watching his drive to lett field go the distance for a
special one."
Ron Coomer and Many Cordova
.two-run
double In the sixth Inning of Tuesday's Amerlcsn Lugue
He came alpng at the perfect time. hit consecutive homers in the founh
game
In
Cleveland,.wh- the indians won 10-6. lAP)
Two of Cleveland's top four starters, . as the 1\vins cut Cleveland's lead to ·
Jack McDowell and Chad Ogea, 6-3. After Scott Stahoviak singled , he came to bat with the bases load~d away from the club-record 31-gamc
both are on the disabled list. .Wright Wright showed some big-league . in the sixth. He hit a drive off the hilling streak, set in 1906 by Nap
is expected to make at least one more guts by hitting Pat Meares, then base oFthe left-field wall, driving in Lajoie. The major league record for
stan.
retired three ' straight to end the two to make it9-S. With the hit, Alo- a catcller is 34, by Benito Santiago
: "II looks like he's got a good inning.
.
.
mar tied Ray Fosse for the longest in 1987. Alomar's streak is the
·arm," Twins manager Tom Kelly
"I like him a lot, because he did- streak by a Cleveland catcher.
fourth-longest in the AL this year....
Alomar is hining.424 (36-for-85) Fosse hit in 23 straight in 1970. The
said. "He'll be all right in the n'tlel the .home runs distract him,"
future."
Alomar said. "That's when you during his slreak. His season average last Cleveland player to have a 23Even in his debut, Wright already know a kid's got a good makeup."
is .368, second in the AL to Prank . game hitting streak was the curren!
looked all right. .·
He walked three, stru~k out four Thomas.
manager, Hargrove, in 1980.... Greg
"There were all kinds of butter- -including Paul Molitor twice.
Minnesota. starter Dave Stevens Swindell, who relieved for the Twins
Oies," Wright' said. "You can 't
"I don 't think he was trying to (0-1), making liis first big league in the fourth, .was the last first-round .
describe it, pitching in front of show anybody up and say, 'Hey, I sui.n after 129 relief appearances, draft choice to make s·uch an antici~0;000 people. It's like a movie."
struck out Paul Molitor,"' Alomar · lasted only three innings. He allowed pated debut for the Indians.
' Fonunately for Wright, the script said. "He didn'i care who it was."
six runs a11d seven hits with four · Swindell, selected No. 2 in the June
included home runs by Jim Thome,
Alomar, batting fifth for the.firsi walks.
1986 draft, made his first stan on
Notes:
Alomar
[is
eight
games
Aug.
21 ~ 1986, against Boston.
Malt Williams and Brian Giles . . time since J99t was 0-for-3 when

e'!.!.~pet br.,!I:,~~~~~..~:~E""~~!if_~~ ~~,h~:!,.._
'AP Sports Writer
ninth, he slapped .a liner to Jeft-cen- seasons w~th Atlanta before !.om1~g
· Carlos Baerga remembered, teroffWohlerstog1vetheMetsa6- the_ Mets In .the offseason., Were
:which made it especially sweet..
5 victory over Atlanta.
trymg.to geliD the hunt. Were nghl
In three of the four games the
"It was a nice night for me," he where we need to be."
'cleveland Indians lost to the Atlanta said .. "They had my number in the
With Wohlers (2-3) on the mound
:Braves in the 1995 World Series, World Series."
· in the ninth, Todd Hundley w_alk_ed
-Baerga made the final out-tw.ice
Baerga's heroics gave the Mets · with one out and Carl Everett sm.with Mark Wohlers on the mound.
their sixth consecutive win, inciud- gled, Hundley going to third: That
Now, Baerga is playing for the ing two stmight over Atlanta, and put b~ought Baerg~, who was 0-for-5 m.
hotiesttearn in the National League, them II games over .500 for the first h1s career agamst Wohlers, to the
the surprising New ~ork Mets. Tucs- - lime since July 30, 1991. II also pia~~..
.
day night, it was payback time.
moved New York 10 fo.ur games
. Car-los, Car-los, ~h~ted the
"I think i!'s one of 1he best feel- behind the firsl·place Braves m I he Shea S~IUm c~owd, knowmg Baerinss I've ever had in my career," he ' NL East.
" ga has r~lsed hiS ~verage from .161
said.
"It means so R)UCh more to us,
to .289 smce Apnl28.
In the eighih inning, Baerga's said winning pitcher Greg
Atlanta manager Bobby Cox

AL standings

.526
.41JJ

~·.

43

.427

II

Sun Dtett~ ·-······ ··• ... 32

E.t'"' Dl•ldon

rum
l!! L
Bnllimore ..•............49 . 2J

Nt:w YOJk .............. 42 · ]2

San Fmndr.co 4, Snn Dietto I

"
"
1~ ·...
16
17

Toronto .................. :u 38 .465
Boston ................... J4 40 . 4~9
. Delroit .... ............... Jl 40 .444

Florida 4, PhilllddphiD I
N.Y. Mels 6, Allant:a 5

Sr. Louis 7, Chicago Cubs 2
PiHabwrgh M, Hooston 3
C&lt;J_
Iomdo (1, Lus

Ctnlral Di"bllon

CLEVELAND ....... lK ))

. ~)l

Chicoao ................. 16 n .49J
Milwaukte ............. J!i ~6 .493
Knn1111 City ........... )4 ]7 .479
M"inntiOfa .. :.............:\4 40 .4~1J

~·~::

Wttttm Dlvllion
Scilnle .................... 4J J2 . ~73
Anaheim .............. ..40 J• .!141

l '·:

TeABI ..'.................. J6

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Oaklnnd .. :......... ..... 31

46 .403

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Colorado (Burke 2· 1I !II , Lo~

CLEVELAND 10. Minntsom !i
Bouon 9. Toronto 6
Baltimore 6, M"ilwmlk« 2
Chi...-:a,o White Sn11 • · knn5as City 0
Anaheim?. Tt:xa.s6
Oallilnd 4, Scaule I

(ValdeJ.J.}I), IO:J!i p.m.

Philadtl('lhi:."tBtcch 0-:!.) nl

Ballimore (MuiJi"a 8•2) Ill Milwi:W~
(Eici!H 1-7), 2:0! p.m. ·
Kanw Cily (Belcher R-7J 111. Oli~ o
White Soa (Dnrwin 2 ·~). 2:0!1 p.m. .

Anftim (hrisho 0.2) Ill Tea• (Win
llr4), 2:ll p.m.
.·
Minne101a (Robmson 7-4) lll CLEVELAND !Nagy IH). 1:0! p.m.
Bo11on (Wakefield 2·71 AI Toronto
CHerKgn 1-J), 7 :3~ p.m.
Ollkland (Wenaert J . ~) a1 Sennlc

-

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10 ,,

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40 .-167
St. Loob .•:.............3&gt;1 40 ,..,.
CINCINNATI ....... ll 4l .419

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CHICAGO CUBS; A ~o1iv11ted SS Slwwon Dunuon. optiontd OF Miaucl Clliru
tolown nf the An~rkim As!W.w.: ialion.

CINCINNATI REOS: -""iva..'&lt;I"RHP

Mike Morgun from 1hc 1.111-duy di!iBbh..'lf
li~l . Announced lhcy are mu\OiRJ lhdr
~printt: lrainintt aile r~ Plant Cily. Fin. to

S:vusot:a. Fin. Promoted INF Pete RnRc Jr.
111 lndionapolit of 1~ A~cun A~ och1·
fi(IO ,
HOUSTON ASTROS: Recalled OP
Chut.:kic Cm from New OrJc.~:~m uf the
American Auo~o:h11i on . Placed OF Ray
MOftiJOmet)' ftll IS·Wty di~tlblc4 Ji~t

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IJIIve a FREE helwing lelt to - If ril ptaiJ!MI c.n bot Mtpecl. Bring W. il
coupon wilh you for your FREE HENIINO TEST, a ~11.00 llllue.
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·

. MONTREAL (AP) _ Eduardo
Perez has another fond .memory of
Montreal to add to his collection .
Perez homered, drove in lhrec
runs and had a career-high four t~its
as the Cincinnati Reds rallied for a
7-6 win in 10 innings Tuesday'nlght
over the Montreal Expos.
Perez. the son of Reds great Tony

.,

The Racl"ne
V.outh
League
w·O'. ~•ld . Like
To · Thank
"
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ARMCO, UAW, AND ALL OTHifl
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••••••••••••••••••••••••••
1\ ' '

Perez, Jived in Mon)rcal for three
years in the ·latc 19,70s, when his
father became a fan favorite -playing
for the Expos.
·
. "I'm really fond of this city,·: saisl
Perez, who returned to Montreal on
Sunday for the first time since 1979.
"I lived here for three years. I've for. (See REDS on P~ge 5)

,

Mitch Meadows
Crow's Steak
House
Larry Cummins
Pepsi-Cola
· Distributors
John Cortirig
. Powell's
Smith &amp;
Associates
..
Accounting

By STEPHEN W1.S0N
jicek had a achcduled second.round
WIMBLEDON, Bn&amp;land (AP) . llllllch apinlt~ Pavel, and No.
- · In his 14ch y.- ll Wimbledon, 2 seed Goren lvaniscvic faced MilBoris Becker knows thlt could be his nus Norman.
lui chiiiiCC for anodler Orand Slam
On the · women's side, No. 2
title, And the All England Club Monica Seles had a first-rounder ·
would be the perfect settina.
IJiilllt ~McQuillan and No. 3
"As ion&amp; u I'm in tennis in a Jana Novotna wu pined agaill$1
very competitive way, I think I have Wlltrud Probst.
a chance at WimbledOn," Becker
But many eyes were on Court 3,
said after powering into the sccon\1 where 17-yesr-old American Vellus
round with a 6-3, 6-2, 6-3 victory Willimis was set for her Wimbledon
Theads)l over Spain's Man:os Aure- debut · 11ainst Maac!alena Orzylio Oorriz.
bowsks.
.
"II ctepends on the draw, depends
sampns wu 1110 m.ost impressive
on the weather, depends on many winner TilesdliY, cfl!ising 10 a 6-4, 6- ··
thinp, \lut the grus-coun pmc is 4, 6-2 win over ~Wilden's Mikae!
very natural for me. And once I set nJistrom. He lost ~ once in the
going, I feel like ! .have a c:hancc to first set, but was never troubled the
play wcllqaill$1 anybody."
rest of the mat~:h.
Becker won the first of his three
Sanlpru·. said he felt ll borne
Wimblcdot\·tides ll the age of 17 in . apin after a JIOOf'Clay-collrt season
198~. addins victories in 1986 and
that included athiRl-round loss at the
'
1989. He-hu abo won the Australian Preni:h Open. . ·
Open twice and the U.S. Open once.
"WI)ea I' itartcd hitting on the
· Last year, Decker's Wiinbledon grass and playina
Queen's and
·title hopes were wrecked -when he then walking iround this site, I felt,
damaged tendons in his right wrist 'This is my place. This i' where I'm
returning serve in a third-round supposcciiO win'and I eXJ!Cct myself .
mllch.againll NevilleGodwin.
10 win."'.,
Becker, sidelined for six months,
Thosline Cloes nOt apply to fifthsaid he once feared he might never seeded Michael Chan11, who lost in
come back from the injury.
the fii'SI round for the second year in •
"Many people, includin&amp; myself, a row and founh tjme overall.
weren't sun: ifl would back at all,"
Chana fou&amp;ht back aamely Jro.m
the 29.year-old Oermsn said. "But a 1-S deficit in the fifth setto~o up
now I'm back, I'm injurj free, and 6-S before succumbit~~toAustralia's
ready to play a few more mllches Todd Woodbridse 7-6 (7-S), 3-6, 6here."
. 2, 3-6. 8-6. Woodbrid1e held serve
Becker was one of.four Wimble- in the 14th aame of the set to close
don men's champions in action Tucs- . out the match after 3 hours and 55
day, alona with Pete Sampras, minute&amp;.
Michael Stich and Pat Cash. All but
"I thouplll was gojng to win it,"
Cash .made it to the second round on Chang Said. "I didn't give him anya day when four men's seeds \"ere . thing. He came.up with the shoy he
ousted. ·
needed at the end."
.With showers predicted for today,
AnotherAI!Ierican, 1993 runnerdefending champion Richard Kra- up Jim Courier, lost in straight sets
10 Sticb, the 1991 champioq, 7-6 (70), 1-S, 7-6 (7-2);
.. .
Of'the 14 American men in tile

T-SJGC draws 11 local
golfers in latest tourney

•,

\.;-

'

,j

....
, ..

PLAYS VO!:,LEY .-Justin Glmelstob plays 1 volley from Brazil's
,Guatavo' Kuertan In their first-fOUnd singles match et Wimbledon
lHich!y. _Qimelatob deiHted the French Open champion 6-3, 6-4,
4-8, 1-:S, &amp;:4. (AP) .
draw atme,stan ofWimbledon, seven have already lost. Sampras is the
only American seed left.
.
One American bucking the lrend
was 20-year-old Justin Gimelstob,
who ousted French Open champion
Gustavo Koenen 6-3, 6-4, 4-6, 1-6,
6-4. In the fiiuil game, Kucnen bl.ew
an easy volley and then double-faulted on match point.
"Grass is like this," the II th seeded Brazilian said. ":You play two bad
points, maybe one, and you can lose
the set or the match. ~·

Gimelstob, wbo earned a secondround meeting against Stich, said he
wouldn 'I make the mistake of joking
that he's onlf six matches away from
his first Grand Slam title - a comment he made two years ago at the
U.S. Open.
"A couple of the guys took me
aside real early'at the U.S. Open that
year and told me that I had better
stan keeping my mouth shut before
I staning winning any matches," he
said. "You're not going to. get that
out from me anymore."

In last Friday's 1ii-Slate Junior
Golf Cin:uit action at Esquire Country Club in Barboursville. W.Va., II
local golfers panicipated in various
divisions and Ri&amp;hts.
In the 16-18 year-old division,
first-flight panicipanis included Abe
Epling of Gallipolis, R~an Norris of
Racine (both tied at79), Drew Dunkle of Gallipolis (84) and Adam
Bush of Gallipolis 486). Sterling
Shields of Mason, W.Va. shot an 87
in the sec01id flight.
·
In the 13-1 S year-old division,
first-Right golfers included Dusty

~.

,,

o.j

...

buea with none out.

"Both Smith and Veres were
¥flry wild~" A1oU said. "'l'here will
..be day$ like this. We foupu hard 10
tie it' back up."
' .

Heary Rodripo&amp; homered IRd
droft in four 1'11111! for the Bxpoc.
Who llllt for._the fourthdme in 17

.....

•

••

J
I

Cox of Gallipolis, whole 76 wai
good for second pl~~ee, and Brilul
Bickle of Gallipola, who shot an 82.
In the second Right, David R-' of
Mason shot an 87.
'
.
Iii the I0-12 year.:Old division)
Drew Bush of Gallipolis shot a 43 to
take first place in thll ael:ond Right.
Zilch Rice of 'l'hu!1!1ln shot acSS in
that Ri&amp;ht. Nathan Pla'ntz of Gal.,
lipolis shot a 46 in the fi"l Di&amp;ht. ·
· This week's tournsmcnl is ICI for
Friday at Sugarwooci Oolf Club in
Lavaleue, W.Va.
'

Meigs volleyball .
coaches schedule
camp for July 7

fiDtRRAT
IS ON...
· CHICK OUT OUI
SHCWIUYS • .

A volleyball camp will be held
from Monday, July 7 until Friday,
July II at Meigs High School for all
area girls entering grades 7·9 this
fall.
·
Aslros scoreless after the second ·
The camp will run from 9:30 until
inning.
II a.m. daily. The cost is $2S. Each ·
Cardinals 7, C.ubs Z
camper will n:ceive .a T-shin.
At St. Louis, Andy Benes (6-~)
Send $25 and shin size 10 Meigs
allowed four hits in seven innings for High School varsity coach Rick Ash
his JOOth career victory and Ron at P.O. Box 126, Syracuse, Ohio
Gant broke out of a slump with three 45779. Campcrs .can also register on
hits and three RBis as the Cardinals !he 'first day of camp.
won for the third lime in four games.

WHm MOUIITIIII

ICI CIEAII
FIIEZIIS.
Our Compllte Une
of Rubberinald '
Coolers •nd ,
Insulated
Beverage .
ContalnfN'a, juat In
time for aummerl

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gotten(ContinuedfromPage4)
my Fn:nc~. but I still remember thec:ity. Everything wu &amp;real, it base, ·Baerga pumped his fists. high· allowed only one run in siil innings
was marvelous to my family. I in the air.
and Jim Eisenreich and Gary
remember running through the hall"Things are sure not going our Sheffield each drove in a run as
ways (at Olympic Stadium).ll defi• . way, I tell you that," Cox said. ·
Florida handed the Phillies their
nitely brings back great memories."
In other NL games, Florida · ninth Joss in io" games.
Lenny Harris helped keep
it
that
stopped
Philadelphia 4-1; San FranLeiter allowed only four hits,
1
way.
·
cisco downed San Dieao 4-1, St. . struck out seven and walked five.
Harris singled home the winning Louis defeated the Chicaao Cubs 7- Robb Nen worked the ninth for his
run in the J'Oth innin&amp; u the Reds 2: Pittsburgh heat Houston 8,3 and 20th save..
snapped
Philadelphia staner Scou Ruff"l , ab"three-game
l"ft ., "dlosing
H · .slreak.
bo , Colorad o down ed Lo s Angc1e s 6-2. .
t s _a . 1g 1_ , Sll _ams, _w __ , Rockies 6, Dodaen
corn (0-2) gave up only two hits in
~.ntered_m the nmth as~ pmch h1Uer.
At "Los Angeles, Darren Holmes 4 113 in~ings, but walked 10 while
BsP_Cctally ~hen you ve got Pedro ( 3_1), starting in place -of ailinJ stri~ing out three.
Manmez ~omg (Wedne~ay). Yo!~ Rockies 81:0 Roger l'lailey, pitched
Plrales 8, Astros 3
kno~ r,ou .ve got to come m and gel eight strong innings, and Larry
. At Houston, Jon Lieber pitched
a wRm.d
R
K . hi Walker hit his 22nd homer in Col- seven strong innings and AI Manin
e s manager
ay
mg
orado's victory,
and Kevin Young hit back-to-back
a~. ,
.
. . .
ijolmcs, normally a reliever, gave . home runs as Pillsburgh moved
I can I emphas1ze ~ b1gnes~, up fiVe hits while walkinatwo and · within 1 112 games of the Central
the •.~ge~ss, the e.~onmty ~f 1~1s strikin&amp; out a career-high seven. He Division-leading Astros ..
wm, Kntght sa1d. We dtdn.l d1e.
fred 16 of the last 18 batters he
Lieber (4-8) be~t Houston forthe
We stayed up. You fight back and ~ ·
· · first time since July 14, 1994, giving
fi&amp;ht back. and once you lie _it, you
• Meri!JII.f,l'lllllles 1
up one unearned run. striking out
the mtndsel you· can With
get
ballgame."
. the __:-A:t
The Reds came back 10 win after
surviving a confrontation with Carlos Perez, the Expos' honest stanin&amp;
pitcher. . ·
.·
Perez, who tossed three shutouts
and won his four previous starts, was
chased 11fter the Reds put ·togther a
three-rim sixth, drawing 'to 4:3.
''He started getting the ball up,"
Kni&amp;ht said of Carlos~- "He~
us chasin1 the ball a bit, but when he
Started to elevate a bit in the strike
zone, we were able to get some hit.s
off him.
"He's done such a good job."
Kniaht said. "We just wim~ed to get
him out of there and get 1n1o the1r
bullpen."
·
''He had it good in the first, hut
lost hu early as the second," Expos
m.an\ipr Felipe Alou said of Car!os
Pere;E. ·~cincy is a team that has giVen .him trouble before."
·
Eduardo Perez belped key the
·decisive lOth inning.
Tied at 6, Perez led off the
Cincinnati lOth with a single and
· was bunted 10 second. Deion Sanders ·
walked and Harris followed with a
sinale 10 riahl. driving in Perez.
"We JOI 1 win .0\11 of it._'' Perez
said "That's the" biigest thtng. We
UKil all the guys on the bench
today. It took 2S guys, pretty much,
to beat Montreal." "Bdllardo Perez
just pourideil the ball.' Knipt ~.
"Thlit's as hard as I've seen a ball hit
since George Fosler played. He hit
the ball all night l.ong."
.
Jeff Shaw (2-0) sot the WIR
despite llllowin&amp; a Mike lansins
homer in the nintli 10 tie it 6-6. ·
· Curtis Ooodwin had put CincinRIIi ahead 6-5 in the top of the ninth
'with a two-run tin&amp;le olf Dave Veret
' (2-~) after Lee Sinith bad loaded the

~------.

By .JOHN F. BONFAm
after Radja an6ved in Phill1trpHs.
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Even . the two ce.ms qreed to exlald die
u he announced the trade thll was deadline for completion qf the lrlde
bringina Dino Radjato the Philadel- 24 hours - unlil S p.m. today.
phia 76ers, coach Larry Brown
the 76en tnlded forward·
admitted he was concerned about Clarence Walherspoon and cont«Radja's injured left knee.
forwltd Michael Cage to die Celtic&amp;
That concern turned out to be jus- for Radja, a 6-foot-10 llCIII«-fortified. Four·days after the trade was ward, in the first deal betwc~a die
made, Radja failed his physical with teanis' . new coaches, Brown, ud
the 76ers, who immediately BOltOn's Rick Pitirio.
:,
announced they were calling off the
Weatherspoon and Cage 111111 0
deal.
·
their physicals in BoltQn, Ccllic;l
"Dino Radja has failed to pass his spolceaman Jeff Twiu lli!l 'fuel!lsy.
physical examination conducted by
Celtjcs general m=...- Cllril
team doctors," 76ers vice )IRISident Wallace said Tuesday nlptlhaof basketball operations Billy .King ·would not have any ~on•IM!Il OR
said in a statement released by the Radja failing the phyaical.
team Tuesday niaJ!t.
Even as the deal was !Dade.•
"Therefore, per the contingency Brown exJIRISsed concern llwl Rl6incl\lded in the Philadelphia-Boston ja's left knee;which W8l! ~eO on.
trade.of June 20, the trade is null and lui January, had not healed sum~
void."
ciently 10 allow him 10 play.
However, both Th~ Boston Globe
Radja balked al the trade.
and the Bosron Herald reported that

NL.games. .•
• (,.c:!:on~ti~nu~
. .ed~tro~m~P:..:a:~:ge:.;4~J------'---------

'

FREE HEARING TESTS ·
............. •lt•l..u...c....... ~~y
ftea,,• HEARING AID CENTER ••
Friday, '••• 27, 1997
••
Ia Dr. A. '•ckMn ..lies' OHice
•

I
•

7-6 in 1b innings

.---~&lt;See::,~N~L~o:n~Pa:;:j&amp;~e~S~)---------------------~----

'

•••••COUNtt
••••• ••••
··'

Thursday'• PJ1*

!! .. llfl,

CLEVELAND INI)(ANS: Phu:cd 01:
U.Lvit.l Ju-'l il.-e and RHP Cb.1f.l Oiti::.l \In the
1~ - d::ay di~ u hlcd lillt. Rcc:alll!'d or
Twnid&lt;ld Huhburd l"rom BufMu nl' the
A.mericou1 A1suciudon. Pur~o'hi!M!d the .contnw:t of RHP Jnrel Wright fn1m"Ruffaln.
MILWAUKEE BREWERS : Fired
Tim Irelan\!, manager of Tunon nf ttK;
Pacirie Cn•u Lcaauc: N;1med hiuin(l
coach Bob Marinno manager of Tuc!ml
fur the rtmnlnOer nfthc ~n .
KANSAS CITY ROYALS : Pl&lt;~ccd
RHP Randy Vern on ihe 15-dily dis:abled
list. Re~:nlle!.l LHP Jamie Walker rmn1
Wkhitn of lhc Tcxui Lcliguc.

.

. (Wolcott J-4), IO:J~ p.m.

:r..

~lhmta

(Nengte IO.It 7:-tOp.m.
· Houston &lt;Holl 7-!ll ut Chi~a~o Cubs
(Casbllo.4--9), 8:0!1 p.m.
Slln Francisco (V:mLnnUinttham .t-!il .
nt Colomd!.1(Rckar 1..0). 9:M p.m.
San DieJll lilt:r!ln'll.lll 1· 2) M Lus An·
pies IC:~ndiolli 4-2). 10:0!1 r .m.

.

fai Is t~am physical

'

Ritchie's Auto Sales
.Pomeroy Lion's Club
Kroger Pharmacy
The Corner Restaurants
Home National Bank
Rutland American
Legion
.
. .
Brogan-Warner Insurance
G &amp; M Fu~l ~nd,.~uppiY ..
Darrell Norris
·
Jeff Harris
'
Wesam Construction
Co.
Prescription
Oxygen
.
'"'-"
Fairplain l=actory Outlet Mobile Home Sales
Roush Funeral Home
Ewing's Funeral Home
Fisher's Funeral Home
'
Virgil Hill &amp; Sons Farm &amp;Greenhou~es
R &amp; G Feed &amp; Supply
Gen~ Johnson Chevrolet-Oids
Cablevision ·
Tyrone Brinager &amp; Sons Farm
Norris-Northup Dodge
Jeff Warner Ins. &amp;Uttle, She~ts. &amp;Warner
Arthur TreacHe.rs
' I'
"'/
M LContracting &amp;Margie Lawson, DDS
Rose's EXcavating
Southern·Oil Fiel~ Supply
.
John Jeffers,Con~u.ction Co.
Racine Optometric Clinic &amp;Dr. Doug Hunter, MD
Gallipoli~ 'Elks Club ..
.
'
Five .Points Driving Ran'ge &amp; Ohio Valley Plumbing D~vi~ &amp;Kathy ,$tarom

Baseball

NatiGnaliAIIIM

Thursday's games

N.Y. Yonkeel (Penitte 8- ~) at Oecroh
(1bompton 7-ll. I:Ol p.m.

NL ttandlnp .

Anl!~k ~

Sixers call ·o ff trade
with Celtics after Radja

Reds••• ·

f{

Thtlii\IIS.

Montn:al (Juden ll-21 ;tt F1urK.Ia (R:IpJl
4-41. 7:0! p.m.
·.
St. Louis (St o lllcmyr~ ~-~) :tl
CINCINN~TI !Bu.t.o4·7~ 1:ll p.m.

Today'o games

Cioy IH..,.l!;~I:OS p.m.
r.... 1 · }:2JotOotlaod!-•
3-S~ IO:OS p.m.
.
Aaahei• (Dicbon I· ~) 11 Seanle
IMcl!&lt;r 6-2), IO:OS pJn.

2

Florida (Fernandez 7-6) m Pbilndel·
phin (Mndum :\.6). 1:05 p.m.
Piu~burah (Co,Jkc ~-91 ut Hou~11111
(Kilo llrl). l : l~ p.m.
.
CINCINNATI (Mt!n.:krr 5·5) ut Montreal IP. Manine~ 9-J). IJ~ p.m.
Atl.it.nta (Glavine 7-4) al N.Y. Met ~
(Jones 12·J).I :40p.m.
·
San DkiO IA11hb~ J.J) :u San Fran.:l5·
en (Fc:reimde::r. ]-4). :u~ p.m
~hica1 u . Cubs (Trachsel 4.6) at St .
Louis CtdomJ ~- 4). 8:0$ p_. m.

4

Detroit (MoehWr 4-6) at lk»&gt;ton (Ei·
holman 1· 2). 7:0! p.m. .
•
.
Toran.to (Cle•ru 11 -2) a1 Ballirnon!
(Erickson 10.2~ 1 :J~ p.m.
Chicaso.While SoJl (lladwia 4-tH 11
MiiiiiCIOia(Hnlkintl·l), I:O:Sp.m.
Mi~.. kee (Mencdell·2) tf Kuual

At~p.eleH

Today's games

J

J

Tlltlday's sc:ores ·
N.Y. Yanlteu 12-, Detroit9

.

't
I m not .~urpnsed they dldn r
walk Baerga,._ Nev.: Y~~k managee
Bobby Valentme said. T?ey wcr
pr.obably afraid of Wohler s control
there:·" .
. .
's
H1s lmer over the_ shortstop
he~ scored Hundley witllthe _ga~~;
endmg run, and as he ·crossed rs
.

Expo~s

Pal Joey Golr1;

Anwrk111 Ltape
BOSTON RED SOX : Sianed OF
Murk Fischer, INF A&lt;~run Capis ra. RHI»
Jt:rf Taglicmi. LHP Anc.lruw Hazh.m. RHP
Mttrty McCleary. Uf~ Thorn•~~ Mil~r, \
Otad Ali:\Oru.s. LHP M1chard 0 Dl..'lte, INF
lori!c ~l~n. RHP CA.•orr;~: Rayhom, OF
D:mny H:tns, INF 0:1'i iU Eckstein . LHP
Dri;in Partenht::imt&lt;r &lt;~nd RHP JoNC)Jh

CINCINNATI7, Montrc1•l6 ( 101

~

•"Je

f
Reds de eat

Tran sactions

6

Tuesday's scores

!ill

f&lt;l.

. 6~ I .
. ~68

rna~.,

•
TAKES FLIGHT- Cincinnati center fielder Curlls Gooctwln (right)
goes airborne In an atte!l)flt to catch a linedrive by ~trol'sl,)aVId
Segulln the fourth Jnnlnp of TUesday night's National League contest In Montreal, where thf. Radii won 7-&amp;ln 10.Innings. a..hiJ:Jd Goodwin Is left fielder Edusrdd Perez. Neither wsa
to keep Segul from
getting a double on this play. (AP)
·
.
'
·

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•
· Color,Wo:............... 40 ~
l..os AnJelea.. ......... ~7 ~M

. Wimbledon action continues

at

Success Of Their Recent Golf Tournament Held At
Riverside Golf Course In Mason, West Virginia.

Scoreboard
WHitm Dl¥lslon
S;m Frand~co ........ 4.l :n .57J

Pom1roy ,; Middleport, Ohio

Becker, Sampras
and Stich move
into second round

Wright's pitching
pushes Indians .
to beat ·Twins 10-5

Baseball

Wedl udsy, June 21, 1tr7

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�WASHING'ION {AP)- With an
almo1t straiabt f~ee, Col. 1oba
Haynes bel8'bis public: pmelllltion
of the Air Fon:e 's lllelt clebullkina of
the Roswell UFO "incident" by say·
iq Ibis surely would put to rest the
most enduring of UFO stories.
·. "We're confident ... that Ibis will
be the final won!," Haynes said with
the hint of a grin.
Even before he finisMd explain·
ing the Air Force's 23l·pqe Roswell
report Tuesday - sublitled "Case
Closed" to emphasize a point skcplics were dumping doubt, and it
was clear the case is not closed.
Kent Jeffrey of the International
Roswell Initiative, · which does not
believe UFOs visited Roswell, said
·the Air Force did itself no. favor by
offering a ·new explanation for the
. alleged sighlings of alien "bodies" at
: Roswell.
· · The~xplanation is Ibis: The "bodies" witJJCsses reported being
removed .from debris in the New
Mexico desert in July 1941 were
actually life-size dummies the Air
P.orcc used in the 1950s in high-alti·
tude parachute e~periments.
Three· years ago, the Air Fon:e
gave its explanation for the debris. It
was from parts of a high-altitude Air
Fon:e. balloon that pulled disc-like
radar reflectors and other devkes as
11811 of a classified reconnaissance
opmllioil. Tuesday's follow-up report
offered the first explanation of the
'.'bodies."

But Haynes said lbeAir Fora: hid
no cxpllaltion for tbe lime pp: Why
would witnesses mix up lbe 1947
event with sightinp of dummies a
decade later?
"If you find lhlll ~talk about
dlinp over a period .o f time, they
bepn to lose exactly wbe'n the date
was," said Haynes,
Air Force
declasiifiCMion officer who presented the report ala Pentqon news con·
. ference.
"I have no other explanation."
That, in Jeffrey's view, will only ·
· ldd fuel to the fare of those who ·
believe the Air Fon:e conspired to
cover up its recovery of UFOs and
their extraterrestrial crews.
Dean Crosby, director of lbe International UFO Museum and Resean:h
Center in Roswell, said the report
raised . more questions than it
answered - and it certainly is not
sufficient to let lbe Air Force wash its
hand of the conuoversy.
"It's not going to do that at all,"
she said.
·
What it has done, however. is
reopen a window on a fascinating
period in Air Force history, at lbe
brink.ofthe United States' first steps
into outer space.
Haynes showed reporters file
footage from the ·1950s of dumnties
dressed in Air Force flight suits
pulled aloft by enormous high-alii·
tude balloons, then dropped 10 Earth.
The object was to devise a way pilots
or 'astronauts could reach Earth if

an

ByT~e

,.,••

Skepticism greets Air Force's
~final word' on Roswell ·I ncident

Products

fon:ed to esc~p~ 11 eueuely bip
lllituda. One Air Fon:e lell pilot Jat.
er made tine such jumps hiiiiMlfone from 102,800 feet in AUJUst
1960, which still stands as the world
record hiahell parachute jwnp by •

SIO_.IOIIS

.....
.,
..... ,.

The bl~ek-and-white footage is a
one-of+kind collection of Air Force
film and photos, including a shot of
a fully outfitted dummy called "Sier,
ra Sam" standing upright with his
arms oulltretched over lbe shoulders
of two officers.
The majority of the dummies whic:h had skeletons of aluminum or
steel, skin oflatex or plastic, cast aluntinum skulls and instrument cavities
in their torsos and heads - landed
outside military bases in eastern New
Mexico, riear Roswell, the Air Force
repcllt said.
The par~ehuting with dummies
was not lle(;reL ln fact, the operations
were widely publicized at the time,
which would seem to make it even
more unlikely that people who claim
to bave seen the 1947 UFO debris
would confuse it with events years
later.
The repOrt says there simply is
nothing in Air Fon:c records from the
1940s -classified or unclassifiedthat raises even the remotest possi·
bility of a recovery of extrateirestri·
at beings or allything else resemblins
life forms in the Roswell area. The
only possible explanation, it says, is
the test dumnties.

291 SICOIID .n.
WI 11111¥1·111.liGHT TO UIIIT OUIITRIIS
PIICU •
TIIIU SATUIDIY, JUliE ·21, .1997

a

,....•r

.Family
Medicine

· · MAUBU, CaJif. (AP) - Brian
Keith, the b\lrly actor best known as
Uncle Bill on the TV sitcom "Family Affair," cjid nOI want to wail in a
hospital for canCQr to take hialife.
Instead,ICeith, 7S, went home and
apparently 1\illed himself.
"Knowing Brian, who bas been so
independent all his life and always
wanted to do things the way he want·
ed to do ... tbat.could've meant bell·
ing the grim reaper before the reaper
lot him," said Kathy Garver, .who
played Ciuy on the popular CBS·TV
series, which ran from 1966 to I 971 .
· , He· left the hospital "because he
didn't want to die there." she said. ·
Family members found Keith at
his Malibu home Tuesday with a self·
inOictod gunshot wound, , llheriff'1
-deputies said. Newspaper repcirtl
~ Keith hid luns cancer anc!
')dlpllylerlla.
" . ''He wu • crusty olcl chlftclel,
: ·b!lt a 101 Qf tun," said Pl(d Doheny,
• -. . lpnt for ICeidJ. "A WCJdllflal
. JUY, wonderlill
Keith lppearec! in IIIO'Yiet
~ the 19501 . .

7up, ·
Dr. Pepper,
Mug Root Beer,
Crush Flavors

Calaway recogni~ed ·
Jeromee Calaway of 38680 Sumner
has been recognized for his
achievement as
an
America's
Champion AthJete Award · win·
ner by the United
State Achievement Academy. .
A picture
and biography on
Calaway who graduated ·from East·
em High School this spring will
appear in the Academy's official
yearbook.
The USAA America's Champion
Athlete Awards provide students
with many benefits .and services and
is a great trib'ute to a student's dedication, talent and ability, said Dr.
George Stevens, executive director

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BLUE .BONNET ~.

;

y-··

one to eight hours after eating the
contaminated food, and the vomiting
is more severe and the diarrhea is less
intense. Second, Staph food poisoning is the resul! of consuming a to~in made by the bacteria rather than as
a dire~! result of an infection by the
bactena. I can tell you from person·
al experience that this type of food
poisoning isn't a desirable · conse-

meal.
.
.
t.
The'best wav to prevent these,bac·
teria from'lnla'cking your food and
your family' is to keep all foods
"cooking hot" (above 140degrees) or
"refrigerator cold" (below 40
degrees) until they are consumed.
Temperatures in the middle of th1s
range .. the pleasant room tempqatures .. are. the most dangerous.

Meigs County area society scr~pbook

•

of the Academy. He.'said that reco~nizing and support youth is more
important titan ever toda)l: and that
winners should be ~ngtatu!ated ancl
appreciated for
tkloir dedication to
I
~
excellence and ac~vemcnt.
.Calaway finisl!_~d· his football
season with the ~ern Eagles with
· an impressive 3S~~Fes, 210 yards,
caught I 3 passes for 258 yards •. ·
averaged 10 tac,kles a .•game, and
ended .with a totilllof lSI tackles. He
received . outstan~ing defensive player, Tri-Valley Cb~ference first team,
defense All Di~irict team, and All
State honors. ,I ·
'
·
He is the soiil of Bob and Joann
Calaway of Sumner Roa.d, Pomeroy,
and the grand!'bn of Bill ·and Faye
Pullins of Alfred and Guy and Annie
Calaway of 1\jP.pers Plains.
.;.

On dean's list
Pomeroy; Melissa Wilfong, Middle·Several students have been named port; Teresa Williams:.Pomeroy; and·
to the Dean's t.:.ist for spring quarter Tyler Wolfe, Middlepo".
at Hocking College. Thlise,students
.achieved at .least a 3,3 grade 'point Fourth Celebration
..
average and completed 12 or more
"Hillbilly Fourth of July" will be
credit hours.
,
the tHeme of Wilkesville July 4
They are: Jeffrey Arnold, parade to take place at _II a.m.
Pomeroy; Troy Bearhs, Pomeroy;
· Registration will be from 9:30 till
Laura Betzing, Poineroy; Heather 10:45 a.m. in fwntof the American
Buckley, Rutland; Anita Calaway, Legimi Auxiliary Hall. Priles of $25
Coolville; Brenda
Dequasie, each will be awarded for the best decPomeroy; Tamela fry, Middleport; , orated entry in the one to six age calMaria Graliam, Pomeroy; Cara · 'egory, and the seven to 12 year old
Hayes, Pomeroy; Edna Hensley, Thp- category. A total of $30 in cash prizes
pers Plains; Michelle McCoy, Syra· will be awarded for the best decorat·
•cuse.
j,d . adult noat, children's noat, and
Stephanie Otto, Pomeroy; 'Misti horse entry. ·
Powell, Middlepon; l,.m:a Rawson,
Entries in the antique and restored
Racine; Renee Russe'll, Racine; Jen· automobiles and farm equipment,
nifer Saylor, Athens; Julie Wandling, .

•• or Lowfat Ma11arlae.
'

...:."!L~.I~:
....

~---llll!llll

Win A Bankroll
This Week
Powell's Super
. Value

are encouraged. The para(je,willline
up at Wilton Elementary School and
proceed down High Street · The
reviewing and judges' stand will be
located on Main Street.
·
· All area festival queens, fire
departments, parade lovers, and especially children are invited to panicipate in the Wilkesville Parade.
Refreshments w'ill be served on the
square. Kathy Fitzpatrick at 6695646 may be contacted for other
·information.

·

Workshop set July 12
The Institute for Local Government Administration an~ Rural
Development (ILGARD) at Ohio
University is sponsoring a "Building
Computer Competency" session for
10wnship clerks July 12.
The introduction to Microsoft

Works includes word processing,
spreadsheets and databases with
emphasis on letters, memos and minutes.
Clerks more familiar with the
software may attend an advanced
computer workshqp Sept. 20. That
workshop will offer an in-depth
exploration of word processing,
spreadsheets and databases.
Each training session will be at
Ohio University from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
· "Thes.e workshops are central to
ILGARD's mission 'of building
capacity in local governments," said
Pat Dewees, JLGARD associate
director.
For more iofom\ation or. to regis'
ter, call Terry Murphy at 6!4/ 5939197.

.Free·
. Cash,~

'

· Stop In The StOre

· For Detall1 •.

........, June 21, 1117
.I
lllltliiill....,.. .............................iiiiiiliiiii..,-.
, .....
,.

ser:vi_c~s when ·ii'V,!~Ilable Il);the~.r COIJI· ~

mumt1es. , .r£.
{
'
The next meeting will be September 1&lt;2-. 1997 at Meigs County
Senior C~jner in Pom~roy. •'

~

a- 10.0a.., Alaorteet V.rlel141•

.. Tostltos or

Baked

1-lb. Pllg.

Bunsl~

or Regua..

Annour

l'

Meat Franks
LLOYD BLACKWOOQ

Salaries and benefit package
approved for OVAL e~ployees

'' Hope Baptist Church of Middleport Sunday sc,hool held a picnic
re.cently at the Herschel McClure
farm. The group enjoyed fishing and
swimming.
Members and guests at~nding
were Penny · Cox, Susie Co~ •. ·
Michael Cox, Kenny ·Cox: Greg
Oattrell, Norma Grueser, Stephanie
Onicser, Kenny ImbOden, Sue lmbo1'&gt;. . den, Brian Justlce, .Jackie Justice,
Matthew Justice, Jessica Justice,
Brad Knotts, Ashley Laudermilt,
Bob Lewis, Peggy Lewis, Cindy
Lewis, Sonny McClure, Rhojene
I

•

would assure that the same nutnber of
units per . each six month • period
would be authorized as have been
delivered for the two six month periods of 1996. This level of service
would be ~ntained until at least
June 30, 19?9. assuming state funding is constan~ it was reported. ·
· The Area Agency on Aging would
assume responsibility for client
assessmeJ1t, case coordipatic;&gt;nl atid
the cost·s"'"ng process for clients .
served in the Options Coordinated
Program.
The spc;aker, Mary McPherson of ·
OU/COMIS Community Service Programs, pr~sented the various screen- '
ings available thr0 ugh the UniVersity's Mobile H~~th Units. She encour·
aged seniors,r~J a~e adv~tag~ qf 1he ,

•

1 · lb . Pkg. Thorn Apple v.lt.)'

511ced Ham or Sliced
- - - - -... Turkey Breast ......~......
t 2 -oa. Pk9. BrowtJ Sug.r or ........

Valleydale
Sliced Bacon.................
t•t. SuntiWMI ltF ... Chfta·IU 01' 14-16-ol:.

.Baptist congregation -holds
picgic
.
-

·$20'0
'

Client cost-sharing of services '
funded in whole or in part with federal and state monies was discussed
at a recent meeting of the Buckeye .
Hills"Hocking Valley Regional
Development District's Regional
. Advisory· Council on Aging held at
Logan.
Lloyd Blackwood of Pomeroy
represented the.Meigs Couniy Council on Aging at the meeting.
· The Council teviewed community policies and programs which affect
older residents of southeastern Ohio,
assists the Area Agency staff in
assessjng the needs of older adults
and identifying resources available to
meet these needs, and reCommends to
itte Executive Committee'ofBuckeye ·
Hills those programs which should be
· •WJif&lt;led- fundinJl,;ll~ ·fiell ,as f!lflding
levels. .
. • • · ·, ·
Mary MC'Intyre, Area Agency
director, presen.ted the agency's recommendation. She talked about the
sliding fee scale based on self·
declared income . She noted that
senior participants whose income is
below · 150 of the federal poveny
guideline will not have to contribute
toward the cost of services received.
The Area Agency's propqsal is to
move the SCSBG funds \hat have
been traditionally blended with Old·
.er Atpericans funds to the Options
Coordination Program. Providers
who have previously delivered SCSBG funded services would be at a rate
for them in a separate SCSBG service
proposal .
_
It was explained that the Agency

A salaries and benefits package tar Chillicothe Ciiy School District,
Ohio Valley Area Libraries employ- Chillicothe Correctional Institute,
~es which provides an a.verage Hocking Correctional Facility, Ross
tncrease of 3.6 percent for the com- . Correctim:i'al Institute, Vinton Coun·
ing year wiiJ; approved at last week's ty School ·Libraries and Waverly
meetmg of the Board of Trustees held Local School DisiFict were approved
~~the Wellston he_adquarters.
by the Board . Also, the OVAL Board
. The board reYJewed staff perfor- approved the renewal of the 8ooks
mance, economic data, and the ex ten- By Mail Services contract with Lane
siye tenure of existing employees in Public Library.·
· .1
creating · the package. They also
Contracts with the Nelsonville
approved a ~ew job description for Public · Library, Briggs Lawrence .
· Access Services Clerk. 2 Terry County Public Library, The Garnet A.
T~rkelso~, g1vmg her additional com- . Wilson Public Library of Pike Coun·
puter dulles.
.
ty and Portsmouth.Public Library to
. Smce June IS the end of the conduct the Reading anq the Young
oyAL fiscal year, the·Boar~ accom- Qlild Program we{e also approved.
plished many closeout activities: The
. ·Founded in 1973, OVAL is Ohiq'~
Interlibrary Loan contract, providmg oldest chartered reg(onallibrary sysback . up servtce f9! . the, member tern. In cooperation with member
tibt:anesby ~eAiden .Library .tJfOhlo public libraries, OVAL provides ·
U~1versny .m Athens was approved.
resources sharing, library ·develop·
. A bUtldmg cleamng contract wnh ment and books by mail' services to·
Optimum Cleamng Service was . more than 260,000 residents in
approved, as well as the annu~lhe_at- Athens, Hocking, Jacksori, Lawrence,
mg and .cooling contract with AJ. Meigs, Pike, Ross, Scioto and Vinton
Stpc~metster Plumbm.g•. Healmg &amp; counties. Wanda Ebl\!! ser;ves on the
Cooling:
·
OVAL Board as a representative of
·Affiliate member contracts for the Meigs County Public Library.
'
.
. ~

c

UIIIT 1PLEASE. ADDITIONAL PURCHASE '1.99

4 roll pk~

«•dna&amp;

~"He lillie

c

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such

·eo... •,....

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i.JMIT 12.·PLEASE 3t' .-oomoNAL PURCHASE

.

•

inside the body and causes diarrhea,
vomiting and fever within eight to 48
hours. ·
·
Staphyloc(&gt;Ccus aureus, another
bacterial germ, is the second most
·· common cause of food-borne illness.
A~ut .1.5 percent of reported food
poisonmg cases are due to this Staph
. germ, which produces an illness that
differs in .several ways from thai

Client cost-sharing
services council's~topic

June II, 1910, in Saint-Andre-de· so. He converted it into •floating lab-'
Cubzac, a small town near Bor- oratory outfitted with lbe most mod- . ·
deau~. His father was a lawyer who em equipment, including Underwater
·
traveled constantly. As a result, the television gear.
In 19S2-S3 Cousteau took the
boy was often on the move.
He was a sickly child. Nonethe· Calypso to the Red Sea and shot the
less, he learned to swim and spent tint color footage ever taken at a
hours at the beach. Formal schooling d~pth of ISO feet,
One of his . most renowned
bored Cousteau; he was expelled
from high school for breaking 17 of exploits was the unearthing of the
the school's windows.
hull of an ancient Greek wine
His first dive was in Lake Harvey, freighter, buried deep in fossil mud
Vt., in the summer of 1920. He was 130 feet below the surface off the
spending the season away from New French coast near Marseille.
York City, where he and his parents
The Calypso also conducted the
lived briefly.
fint offshore oil survey by diver's. •
In 1930, Cousteau passed the
Cousteau's feature-length docuhighly competitive entrance exami· mentary, "The Silent World," won
nations to enter France's Naval Acad· him the Grand Prize at the Cannes
emy. He served ·in the navy and Fibn Festival in -1956 ·and
first
entered naval aviation schooL
Academy award a y~ar later.
A near-fatal car cnish at age 26 .
He authored counties~ books,
denie4 him his wings, and he was including "The Livins Sea" {1963) ·
transferred to sea duty, where . he and "World Without Sun" {1965). A
swam rigorously to sutnglben ~adly 20.volume encvclooCdia, "The
weakened arms.
Ocean World of Jacques Cousteau,"
The therapy had uninte~ con· was published in the United States
sequences, as Cousteau writes in his and England. ·
.
1953 book., "The Silent World,"
In 1977, the "Cousteau Odyssey"
which has sold S million cOpies in · series premiered on PBS. Seven
more than 20 languages.
·
years later, the "Cousteau Amazon"
"Sometimes we are lucky enough . series premiered on the Turner
to know that our lives have been Broadcasting System. In all, his doc·
changed, to discud the old, enibrace umentaries have won 40 Emmy nom·
the new, and run headlonp; down an ina&amp;ions.
·•
immutable course," he wrote. "It
In the 1970s, he · formed the
happened to me .,.. on that summer's Cousteau Society, ail environmental
day, when my eyes were opened ·to group based in Norfolk, Va.
the sea."
His Conshelf projects were ambi·
. During World War D. Cousteau tious experimentS in undersea human
was involved in espionage activities habitation. Con~helf Three had six
for the French Resistance. After the "oceanaiats," including Cousteau's
war, he was decorated with the son, Philippe, living 300 feet below
Lepon .of Honor, France's 'highest the surface.
honor.
Altho"!gh he owned many apart·
He also made his fust underwater ments around ·the world, Cousteau
films during lbe w• period, and, with preferred a spartan existence aboard
enpneer Emile Gaanan. perfected the the Calypso.
piece of equipment that he said
He ha!l his critics. Some said· he
enabledhimtobea "manfish"-the Jacked scientific training: A biograaqualung. an unde-r breathing pher, Bernard Violet,· said .he mis·
apparatus that supplies 0_9'gert to treated animals during lbe filming of
divers.
some documentaries, and that he
In 19SO, Cousteau bought the once bought lobsters at a market in
400-ton fotmer mine-sweeper Calyp- Marseille and used them in a film
. about the Red S.ea.
.

including
light comedies as
Disney's MThe Puentl\'llp" in 1961
and"With Six You OCt Bpi'' with ·
Doris Day in f968. ·
.
On television, Keith playod retired
Jl/(l&amp;e Milton G. ~tie in the ·
ABC crime dl1rna ''thrdculle .t
McCormick" (rom 1983 to 1916.
In "Family Affair," thi bloJid.
haited Keith playod a ~belor rais·
in1 hia orphaned nieces and nephew
- Buft'y, Ciuy and Jody- wiih the
help of a proper En&amp;lisb buder. Mr.
French.
Johnnie WIQIIker, who played
Jody, said he apoke to Keidl ~ tcJe. I •
phone about five days liD·
.. . '
"He -IIOt feell111 JOOd becil11e his adult debUt ill 1953 II! lhe West· ,
he bid been pin1 dlroulh the em "Amlwheed" with Charlton Hes.
cheiiiOibetapy for Ilia - · and ton.
·
.
His
ii
I« fame came lbrouah
he'd been bavinl other pcobleml,"
television.
He
llaui[id uMIIIAIIdera
WhillllriJ Mid.
.
in
the.
19.5H6
..,... "~"
AniMa'101*, WilD ~ Butfr,
clild
o•lldoll 111976. . and u Dave, llaljnpmo in "The
tcehh W1i barilla Bayo.ne, NJ., Wemmer" Ia 1960 belen fakinJ on 1
lbe role of Bill DaVit hi ·"Family
to JM 1 ii WilD WMi.allo lcton.
Affair. tJ
'
.
He lliPil Ilia ~bow '"•inmc:aw
willl • \ ; :; . . . . . 3 ill 1111 . · .Keiih it IIIMvod by his wife,

ahead. An episode ?ffood- borne Ill·
ness Cll!llUrn a p1cn1c mlo '!II unpleas·
ant
event.
. .
.
'&lt;ii
Mo~e than 25 percent of the foodJohn ~-Wolf, D.O.
borne Illnesses reported to the feder·
Associate Professor
al government's Centers for Disease
·of Fa(llily Medicine
Conuol and Pre~eniion are caused by
you have lillY sugge~tions on how to
Salmonella. This bactenum can be
avoid food poisoning when preparing present in dairy products, eggs, beef
picnic meals7
· and poultry. Once the tainted food is

Question: In the summer we picnic a lot, and I'm always ;concerned
. about the risk of food poisoning. Do

211ter

Film, TV star Brian Keith ·
:._dies in apparent sulcld~
•

Pege7

~:!E:jl~;!!~~~~n~?~~su~~~~ ba~e~~r~!~~ ~~! by~~~~ne~~~R. be~~~Pencp~f~~!~la!:anl

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medi~ine

24 ........
Ulllt2'....

••d8Jthn

human.

Sentin~l

The Daily

Wednesday, June 25, 1917

Explorer Cousteau takes final
plungeJnto 'world of silence'
PARIS (AP)...; French underwater explorer and filmmaker J~eques
Cousteau. who opened the mysteri·
ails world beneath the seas to mil· ·
lions oflandlocked readers and viewers. died in Paris this morning. He
was 87.
.~ The Cousteau Foundation, which
in recent years handled all of the
famed explorer's business and per·
sona1 affairs, said in a statement
annoilncing his death that "JacquesYves Cousteau has rejoined the
World of Silence" -the Iitle of one
of his most noted documentaries.
The underwater adve'ntuier,
author, environmentalist and scuba
pioneer had reportedly been ill for
months though·the foundation did not
immediately divulge the cause of
death.
· · ·Cousteau's 60-year-long odyssey
with the Earth's seas- much of it on his famous boat, lbe Calypso - was
more than a·great adventure. He coinvented the aqualung, developed
one-man, jet-propelled submarine
and helped start the first manllf.l
undersea colonies.
·
·
But the ' bes~ctacled, wiry
Cousteau, often wearing his trade· .
mark red wool cap, becsme a household name . primarily through his
hugely popular television series,
"The Undersea World of Jacques
Cousteau," and his many documen·
taries.
After he led a 1972 voyage to
Antarctica, a worldwide television
audience saw for the first time the
extraordinary beauty . of sculptured
ice formations under the sea.
CQusteau liked to.call himself an
"oceanographic technician." But he
was also a romantic' who once said
that for him, water was the ultimate
symbol of love.
"The reason why I love the sea, I
cannot e~plain, " a chuckling
Cousteau said in a recent interview
with The Assj)Ciated Press. "It's
physical. ... When you dive,, you
bepn to feel (hat you're an angel. It's
a liberation qf your weight."
Jacques-Yves Cousteau was born

Bend ·

McClure , .David McClure,
Don
'
Mullins, Susan Mullins, Carolyn
Nonnan, Rachel Norman, Melissa
Norman; and Sierra Nppnan.
,
Marty O'Bryant, PatSy O'Bryailt,
Brooke O'Bryant, Andrew Bryant,
Richard Oliver, Lou Oli~r. Andrew
Oliver, Sarah Oliver, Rebecca Oliv·
er1
Jeannie Owen , Jonathan Owen, ,
Michael Owen, Rebecc&amp;Owen, John
PauleY,, Bobbie· Pau(ey, Tricla
Richards, Ray Smith, Ash lee Smith,
and Jacob Smith.
·

Sunshine

Clleez-1~ .........~...............·

AU. PACKAGES

·Wampler ·
Fresh Chicken

.
r

(

'

· ~

�•
P8ge I • The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wlldi 11~, .JuM 25,1117

·Child molestation can leave lifelong scars
spend the rest of my days in prison Salem, Ore.
because of it.
Dear Salem: Your SIOry is a sad
Ann
I have been incii'Cedled for nine one, and. I thank you for having the
Landers
years now, and thanks to a lot of Iller- Cll\lfBIC 1o ~II it. You have educated
I,S,_
Loll ..
A. c...
..
apy, lwas able to confront my adop- a areat many people today, and 1 am
,_
live parents and tell them what their gn~efulto you.
daughter did 1o me. Their o1tly cornThe next let~ is from a feader
.
ment was "That's water under the who
that child molestalioo can
By ANN LANDERS
bridae."
leave 'lifelong sc~ and that molesDear Ann Landers: I am writing
Ann, please inform your readers ten doo't deserve a .break:
·
about the letter from "Also a Victim that child molestation is a horrible
Dear Ann Landers: You missed the
in PitiSburgh," who is in prison for . thing and that sirls can molest young · boat in your response to the Texas
killing a man. Apparendy, "PillS- boys and "water under the bridge" mother whose 7-year-old daughter
burah" had been sexllllly abused by doesn 't cut it. It can damaae a child was molested by a 16-year-old
an uncle wben he was a child; and he forever. Nobody knows this better CO\!Sin. While you were wise to recbelieved the man 'he killed was that than I do. -- Paying the Price in ommend therapy, in most states, any

... s,....,

aarees

adult who suspects the sexlllllbuse
of a child is required by t.w 1o repol1
it .to-QUid Protectioo Services.
As a ·psychologist, I believe that
people can chanae and should be siven the opponunity to do so, but
molesters are an exception. .·They
rarely stop, even with therapy. Sexuat abusers of children should be ·
offered counseling, but it should take
place during long prison sentences.
And those sentences should never be
reduced for "good behavior." These
abusers should not be given the
opponunity to find new victims.
·Although many sexual abusers

The

..
J&amp;L

were lbused lhenuelws, there woinen and childrea will continue 1o
plenty of abused children who do not be sexllllly abused. ··A Weary Witgrow up to beCome pcedators. To sua- .ness in Minnesota
.
aest, as some people do, lhat havina
Dar Witnels: I appreciate your
been abused as 1 child is an excuse presentina .another point of view.
for such behavior, ii 1 cop-out.
Almost aiiiUthorities on molestation
In Minnesota, we have a new agree with you. Thanks for writing.
community notification law that
Gem ·of. lhe Day: It is true that
requires community members to be ultra-conservatives miss a lot, but
notified when sex offenders are don't be so open-niinded that your
released back into the nei&amp;hborhood.
brains fall out
While I applaud this elfon to protect
women and children. it isn't enough.
Send queatlom loADD Luden,
Our legal system, designed and still
Creator!!
Syndleate, 5777 W. C..
mostly run by men, needs to be
tury Blvd., Suite 700, I.. Allldes,
changed. Until ' it is, millions of Call(, !J0045
.'
I

I:Dtla.m.-3:30 p.m.

1
II~:J::!:WWows
Gtngn

I•Stall'll Doors &amp;

Wlltlows

Not • • FlnMclll

SOLID,VINYL .
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
In YEARS IN BUSIIfESS

"FACTORY

DUMP.TRUCK
· $ERVICE

110 Court St. ·•
· '"
· WV11f1113477·
· 1112-4118

RutiMd,OH

•LargeJoba
Atia80IIIIbla Rlltl

Pomeroy, Ohio
NIOO.Zt1-5100

Muon, WY
2liZeO

FREE ESnMATE'S

....,..,
• Fair .,.cal
550Pitge8t.

HomePh.

1·900-656-2700
Ext. 8789

614-992-3120

Must be 18 yrs.

Middleport, Oh. 45780 '
·

1

Mull
100 R -... ~
1380 Ea11am Alloru1, Galllpolio;

OrCIIteu ue •22.

Exparlancad

(614) 742·3100

MoRRISON'S HEAliNG

UP-TO-DATE
SPORTS
FINANCE
STOCKS
AND MOREll

D.O.af7'•

•• I limON

Hat 'lbur ...,... Or Relation""" Got Up ' Wort. ..... In Prin- Yldoo And Aln1 Ono Of Out

v-.

•Small Joba

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

Qllaljgy Work at

·oiBECI'
·. PRI«::ES''
Qu~ty Wind~w Systems

Cheeter, .

McCumber Rd.

&amp;COOLING
319 S. 2nd Ave.
· Middleport

Salea Service

lnatelleilon

flmolt lleoglo. Found AI Bnlwn'o
Uorkt~ State Routt 110, 11.4·

245 0525.

$2.99 per min.

Don Geary, " -

'---.....-...:::.,..=""'~~

Serv-U (619) 645-8434

Address ________________

·FOODLAND

c~------~Smm~--~~

During Our 98th Anniversary Cele.b ratlon ··

We Sell Money Orders
We Wire Mon.y .

Postage Stamps
Film Developing
Pre. paid Phone Carda

THURSDAY
.
. MIDDLEPORT ·· Meigs County
Family and Children First Council,
Thursday, 8:30 a.m. at the Meigs
County Depanment of Human Services.

Foodland Medium
Grade 'A'

Double Cqupons

Foodlend Gift Cei llllcatea
This week at Foodt.nd, Manufacturer's "cents off" coupons up to and
Cerpet Cleaner Rtlnlllls
Columbia Gee Paymenta including SOe are wonh double face value. Coupona valued at more

i
1

RUTI..AND -- Leading Creek
Conservancy Board, Thursday, S
p.rri. at the office.

Ohio

Bank

"Suplrbank"Se~••

Greeting Cerdl
Flo111ISalel
We eccept credit cards

Dozen .

Foodland Vegetables

· POMEROY -- Town and Country
Expo 97; Thursday, 7:30p.m. at the
old grange building on the fair
grounds.
POMEROY -- Alzheimers Disease and Related Disorders Sup1pon
Group, Thursday, I p.m; at the
Multipurpose Senior Center. Nancy
Smith, patient representative from
Holzer Medical Center, speaker.

•

auu..

. . DoWntpOutt
Gutter Cleaning
Pllntlng
FREE ESTIMATES

0

14-15.25 Oz.

Professional
Pet Groo~
.,

CIM
Lb. Pkg.

Boarding - Tralnlng.Supplles

UmH 12 With lddlllonll

£oca $
l!ola .
Products

99
12Packa

i\Mt. Flavon

Velvet Natural

· Ie~Cream

SALEM CENTER -- Meigs ,
County Pomona Grange, Friday, Star
Grange hall, 7:30p.m. Degree work
will be exemplified in filii form for
inspection.

~we treat your

Large (:allfornla

4-7 Lb.Avg.

Frozen ··

Tuppers Plains, Ohio
(814) 887-3526
"Acroas from li · rs Plains Elemen
SchOol"

£antaloupes

Turkey99
·
~
Breast ·

'3

Lb. ·

Meat Welners

• tll98 on July 7, 111117, 8:1111

Peaches

:at
home ol olllrk. at ·23238
· Hill · Rd., Racln•, ·Ohio,
•

1/2 gill.

Ta•pleo (;ltrus
• Tropleal
Punch
0

•

liZ GAl.

· sUNDAY

NELsoNVILLE ,. Descendants
of lsiiiiC and Lydia Mercer Midkiff,
· reunioti. Sunday, home of Ross and
Pani Flowers, 1911 Shafer Road,
Nelsonvilie. Call664o-3807 for informatioo.

.

••·n ·
C::• •eb:•• or
Ot\Jitel~me
c::..'de•

REEDSvn.LE - Whaley family
re11nion will .be held at the Forited
Run State Park, Reedsville, Sunday, ·
June 29. Families to take two covered

.Angel Soft

For All c::.llee Mallen

Bath
'Dssue .

Foodland
Coffee

BAST LE'I:AKI' - Meip CoopCI'IIive l'lrilh fifth Stlllday hymn
tiDJ, 1!111 Lecart Unilild MediOdUC
Cllllldt, Rowe ltOid. Sunday, 7 p.m.

Public Notice .

"
PUIIJC NOTICE ·
• The Bedford Towntlllp ·
i!udget lor 11118 will be·
.open tor tnapeotlon upon:
)'tqtMt et lh! atarltl' holM
from
jluly 7,

...

" Thank~

to

remembered me

IISEWAIUDS. .~~
AH4NDY ...
TOOL

99

....

aU who

28th through

• l'ht

on my 90th
birthday. Meigl

County /ollu '
are the best.
Dorothy
,. L----.;;.,;,;;--.
Doufili.e..

RflfJIIOnabte Ratu

much needed
home improvements." Call Today!

4Roll

BIG BEND .·

•

J

"BWld Your Dream"
11188 Mlrtln Straet
Poqteroy, Ohio 45781
·JoeWII8on

(8141 882-4277

IHARPEII/11 ·

"".,.,,
IEIWI~E

,.,,..,
H•""
,,.,
,,,
4-N,FNA

Wanted 10

s~m•~-~- Bmm~br·,l.:~====~~~:!::~::::~:::!=:::~:!::!::!~~~~==~::::::~:::;::~::::~::::::::~~::::::~:::::::::·~
Rlstar'IWa••t lelrl'ltl ........

•

1'111111:

Er.1rL ovr.1ENT

.

SERVICES

Easy

•Small Englnee
•Lawn Mowera
oChllnSIWI

(Pa'rn• • a..~ on hi1 eNd cndM)

Htat r.nps hiSialld 38" amonth
5

•Free 5 Year Pa118 Warranty
·. •Free Digital Thermoiltat

~~~!ell

.........
•••Q"

BENNETT'S MOBILE HOME .
HEATING &amp; COOLING
StMng ScMhMitem OH 6 wv
eu t411t11

742•2925

Mom

I

: .

At~ I~ '28"a month

· L.udlng CI'Hit: Rd. ·

$7.00 PER DAY.

w Financing

DRIIlLI

1-ICIH'INII7 1381 s.lbd School Rd.;Gallipolll, OH

,,
'

u11d t.lobllt

9·1~1

2 mi. affRL 7

YOUR MESSAGE
BE'SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF

.'

bur

Homo. call 814:448-0175 or 30-4875-59115

•W.edeatera

•

Co.,

992·2753 Free Eatlmates 992·5535

Calllllllol

EASTMAN'S .

I

Sayre

llanyMIItllla.
114-112,...

. 34.5 OZ. CliO ·

1• ........... riW'IIwiii&amp;, ..... 1117•UIDAI'ootll!llt:;NiftWICC..,.ana• r l .. d•NoiAu,

· Joe N. Sayre

Pick Up DIICinled
Appii811CMA

CAN
W. A I ,. ... AIIIttiDUIItiiQa

Trttller &amp; 1.
•·. Houu Sltel .

~Stop purring off those

LoceiA... .

99

dilhes.

L

i'ownlhlp are lnvltad to

~$

,
HEMLOCK GROVE -- Fifty .
Sunday hymn sina. Sunday, 7:30 ,
p.m. Hemlock Grove Christian
Churl:h.

'

:~ :zauc

PubliC Sille
and Auclton

Remodeling

Call 614-843·5426
.~rtTownahlp 1..::====:::::::::-:::::;:::;=::.;:::;:==!
· '
:::
"'-rcl of Than....

:41771. f- •
\
•
. • Jopl White, Ctarll

80 .

Custom l:lomn

• Vinyl S?ding . • Garages
• New Homes · • Pole Buildings
· • Room Additions ·
Over 20 years experience
Free Estimates
.

:pnt II till Olllca l!lulldlng.
•The budget can lla vlewecl

99

SATURDAY

PUIUC NOTICE .

The Board ol Tluet- ol
: Letart Towneh!p will hDid a
• Budget HHrlng lor ~1r

·Sweet Southern

'D!aderllw'

•

LONG'S.
CONSTRUCTION

. · Public Notice
•

•

• Additions

•Garages

St. Rt. 681
0

Limestone a G1'1Vel
Septic Sy1tenl1

• Decks
• Roofing
• Siding

•New Homes
• Remodeling ·

beotfrU.nd like our beotfrisnd"

&amp; VICinity

3117/M'TFN

·~ aJr K-9 Designs . i

•

Pt.Pittunt

949-2168

2o Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jonas

'SO Announcements

•

GUYSVILLE -- Camp meeting,
"Evangelizing for Jesus", Guysville,
Sunday through July S, I p.m. daily,
prciK:hinl! and singing. Pastors DOn
. and Dee Miller.

ROOFIN.G
NEW-REPAIR

992·3371

. SYRACUSE -- Cilrleton College
Board of Trustees, annual meeting,
Thursday, 7 p.m. at the residence of
Bob Wingett, president. All board
members uraed to attend.

REEDSVILLE-· Hollon n:union,
Forked Run Park, Saturday, I p.m. ;
business meeting, 3 p.m.; potluck 5
p.m.

11Brs.1.~.1 1.49

Howard L WrlteHI

: For'filformailoil
: leading to the arrest
: and convktlo1 of the
• lpersoii'S"Wiii'bnlie"'
: inlo the A·frall• oH
; 681 In Reedsville•
: · Call Meigs Sheriff

Blue Bonnet ·
Margarine ftuarters

Cr1ineh

For'

$200 REWARD

•

Scooter

POMEROY ,.. Meigs Local Board
·of Education, Thursday, 7 p.m. in the
district's central ortice, Pomeroy
Municipal Building.
RUTLAND -- Meigs County
Churches of Christ Women's Fellowship, lbunday, 7 p,m. at the Rutland Church of Christ. Catherine
Russell, missionary to Mexico,
speaker. Middlepon Church to have
devotions.

Eggs

thaa Slle are redeemable at face value only. Umit one coupon for each
product purchased. Urnit ooe coffee coupon. No Beer, Wine or
Cigarette coupons will be doubled. Nqt valid on Free Coupons,
Foodt.nd·coupons, in-ad coupons or competitor coupons. 'ibe
amount redeemed cannot exceed the price of the item. You
must purchase product in sizes specified on lhe coupon. This
offer applies ooly to maaufal:tured prodiiCis "cents off" cou110ns
for items we carry. To assure product availability for all our
customers, only one coupon j,er shopping family will be doubled
on any brand item durillg.each store visit.
·

Lottery Tlckete
(except Buckeye)

Phone - - - - - - - - - - - . - - Must Be 18 Yrs Or nld,Ar

Manufacturer's

1

•

Usit· L......, CJQIJfA
,

TRUCKING ·

D.D.S• .
Rl1,8Cix~

'Public is invited

R.l.

a....,

FAMILY DENTISTRY
3()4.773-5822

Nam•--------------~----

' MIDDLEPORT -- Fee:ney-Beln·
nett Post 128, American ~~~r::~,e~'
the Auxiliary wlll meet for
· at ·
6 p.m. to be followed by the meetings.
·

putor.

......., B.

Mulberry Belabta, Po•roy
. Tuesdayuad 1bunclays
Serving from 5:00 • 5:45
Doaatkm $4.00 ror meal

. ~-2772

FOODLAND ENTRY BLANK

WEDNESDAY

'

MEIGS COUNTY SBmOR CENTER

IIIIDDL.I!JIOA't

Llm.ltone • Gravil
Dirt • Sand
-985-4422

The Commlll!ity Calepdar Is
publlllhed as a free •nice to DOD·
profit groups 'WilhiDe to IIIIIIOIIDce
meeting IIDII ll(leCIIII events. The
caJmd•r Is DOt d IIP'd to promote
salts or fund ninn of aay type.
Ite1111 are prlatecl• space pennlla
and ClliiDOt be puaateed to n&gt;D a
specific aulllber of days.

.

AT

. U7lfl't'AN PI.ACI!

EASTMAN'S
.

Community
calendar .,

FRIDAY ·

EVENING MEAL

iNSULATIOI

knowr-:=:::::::::::::::::=::::::::::::::::;-----..;.,;-------::-~--------------------------------,
..,

uncle. Yoil
. said
didn'tcase to
enough
about
theyou
writer's
offer an opinion. Wen, I'm a male,
and I would lilce to comment This is
what hlqipened to me.
When I was I0 years old, my ISyear-old adoptive sister began to
sexually molest me. This repeated
abuse took place for about two years,
and lhen, it stopped abruptly. I dido 't know that women could molest
boys, and it .confused me. The confusion turned to anger, and then, the
anger turned to hatred. Tbe hatred
. turned to out-of-control rage, and an
innocent man lost his life. I ~ill

Sen!fuel• Page t

.....
Soumbk Show Bar
Rt. 2 Pl. Pllaant WV. ·
(S041 875-5856.

X·RAY TECH To Work Pon-Timo:
&lt;:00 P.M. -11:00 P.M. t.IQndar ·Frido, And Sorurdoy 1:00 A.M. •
Noon. Rtaponilbllllloo Include
"-~orming Rodlologlc Ttchnolog' Practdureo, D-pmtnl Of
Filma, And Cro11-Troln To "-r·
form 01htr OUIItl AI Alllgnt&lt;l
s, Mono..,. Roqull-na: MUll
Hovt Oomploted .A 2 Yoor Ro· .

dialogic TtcllnoloiiY T11lnlng Program AI An AliJA

· Appr-

School Arid 8o Carlin.d IEIIglblt
ByThoARRT.
• .

�Page 10 • The Daly Sl!itlntl

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

PHILLIP
ALDER

Wedn11dliy, June 25,1917

·.....

,.,·~
-

~=---.
' ' II ,.

I IID . . III

--a. 0.V 40 lllrlll•• I
121p1u111,r..., ..........
I

1JTco111t

GlooMIIIIIIp
411 ~
_..

14 8lleck

15LMIIt~

,. &amp;

41 Foot.•r

roll

18

.. J t 8 3
• K J B3

20 Slngw

•

AH. ~MER .. .VJ..Ql .
A MAk.IS f'At-Jc:'t' 1t.0lS

Diana 21 Female

9 3 2

Easl
• Q 7 52

9542

-ro 1I1:X.l6HT5 ~ ~~~n

• 10 7
• 9 6. 3
• Q 10 5

A 10 7 5 2
A KJ 4

Soutlo
6 A K 10 6 4

•AQ6

53 L8rga __.

.

atone
56 Cllllr de •
56 Non-profit TV '
57 Otpila ol

31 Word1 of

WHEN WE GOT
HITCHED, PAW,
IWAS ONLY

WHAT'S YORE .
SIZE NOW?

2•
Dbl.'
Pass · 46 '

• For takeout

. under8tandlng
32 Mualcal gr33 Farm toOl··--;

n-+--+--t

- -+-1----f

2 ... .
All pass

· 'I
~~ [(OYt. TOTI\1~

[ '*'~~&gt;~DeC&gt; a= f&lt;\'(

v

'

~

I\OW~YOJ, ~.Mt
YOO f.N&amp; ((ll.f. CJ...O':£ TO f£TIII(,

..

H"-D p._ .
61i!W:Ht-I-OOE: I
[ QN(£

fo.. f'I:U-1~-()If; fUf:?

0
0

CHECkED

OUT

MEH WJ!H ... .

tiA HA HA

HA

......, .

HA ~A!.. :

THE

C.At.l!&gt;IDS
YET?

22 lira. Chertee .
Cheplln
·
23 Phyalque (11.)
24
Ll- llutd .
25 Strlllght - -

3 IIHroom, 2 Hllltoom, -

26 Lock..,......
27 Author Grey
28 lwo word• of '

&amp;102 lor appolntmln~ Priced In

1M WRITIN6 TO CIIUCK TO
TELl filM HOW MUC~ WE
MISS HIM, AND HOW WE.THINK
OF HIM H161-1T AND DAV... .

M 601N6 TO ~OOL MIM .. 1M
USING PINK ST.«&lt;"IONER'fSOn~""'l
THINK IT'S A LOVE LETTER ..
1

BTU WindoW AIC'a,

550

Building

Supplies
Black. briclc,- ~·=­
awa, lnltll, til:. Cia
W s'
Rio Grtndt, OH Call 114-24 ,:51:,:2;::1·:....~-:---::--:--­

S ,.. tr=l=. 102. .
llmllr - ·niafllld.....
pet i Hnoloum, IIKII/In ground

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32.:n ..-one•

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35 Reced

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36 Linde Evana '
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.

ANY ODD .IOIIIz &amp;ttrior pill""
lng, &amp;hfubl a Wadi trimmed,
iandiiCiiplng, alcf...,llla edged,
tewn cart, e1C, Cll • 3Q4.f7S.
7112.

36Factell.....,..
39 F!)Ur qta.
41 o~~tva

:

42 lnvttetlon
lnlts. ·

43 SeHer of
Moby Dick

44 ·Cievfr
aaylnga
By Phillip Alder
45Wax
Y~sterday, 'I destribed how
,.,..+--+-1--f .41 Adjective
North's two-heart contract was
ending
47 Plant .
defeated. (I have rotated the deal
eontelnera
· ioday to make South the declarer.)
41 Large knife
Now let's look at the play in four
,BO Mao --tung ..
51 Light beem
spades.
West led the club ace, East dropCELEBRITY CIPHER
ping the five to show an odd number.
,. by Luis Campos
.
He switched to the diamond ace. East
Cetebrity Cipher cryptoaratfta a,. created frornlqLIOfationa by ta~ peopte, pasl and preMnl
Eactl.itinai in tt. eipher llands tor another. Todlly'S clutt: J .qu.tlt 8
playing the six as he had an even
number. West continued with anoth' F U S G H U ·.A U S
YPUTUP
JMSCK.'
er diamond, giving South, Barbara
BSCP ·UI
AUHHMS.
Travis, a chance. South cashed the
spade ace, played the heart six to
y K
· 'IR ·UPU
AMSUD ,
GRUPU
GRUPU . •
dummy's jack, and took fpur more
,.
rounds of ·trumps. West threw· his
YK
TVFRGYSF.' ·
ABPVBS
remaining diamonds, the club four
and club jack. Declarer·cashed the
B 'S C U P K M S .
.'
hean ace and overtook the heart
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "CAULIFLOWER: cabbage with a eoilege education."
queen with dummy's king. However,
- Mllr~ Twain.
.
West took the last two tricks with the
"CLOVERLEAF: our nallo"'!l nower." - Lee MetcaH.
heart nine arid club king: one down.
•
There :were two ways home·. As
WOlD
the play went, at trick II. declarer
tAM I
could have retained the lead with her ·
_ _ _ _...;_....,;; 14Mod ~y CIAY I . I'OI.LAN
'
heart queen. She exits with a club io
Reorrana• letters of the
West's king, forcing him to concede
four
~&lt;:rambled word• be-'
the last trick to dummy's h&lt;:art king.
low to form four tirnpl~ words.
This is called a steppingstone play.
(West could have avoided this ending
by discarding his club king and
keeping a lower club.)
'.
'Alternatively, at trick five , deCiar. er could have overtaken the heart
,.:.:R;..;A,:......jl.·
queen with dummy's king. Then,
after drawing trumps. when the heart ·
:•
.,
ace drops East's I0, declarer . can
r - - - - - - - - ,'0.
finesse dummy 's hean eight.
"',,
Before .getting· married 1re-....
. .This deal hi ~lights the inexpediceived many supposedly help. ·
ency of using on I)&lt;, count signals. If
lui hints to a happy unioh'. r ·
East can signal widl an encouraging
: lub 10 at trick one, it is easy for the
A l M E R V ~1~i~~ -~~ ~nly free thing in l)fe ..
defenders to take the first four tricks.
5 I
J6 I I
tomplete the chuckle quoted
1
.~-.L--J
by filling in the missing warda
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BC-NEABRIDGE
Wednesday, June 25, 1997

\.

'
co-Ina
1i Comporidlvt1
17 Seed

IIII:IIIIICIIN

29 Sticky

The same,
·but different

..

Buy or atlt. Rtvtrint Anllqllta,
1124 E. Mllln Strtol. an R~ 124,
Pomtr!!Y. ·Hour&amp; : M.T. W. 10:00
. a.m. ID~m., Sundlf UIO ,to
1 :00 p.m.
tt2·2521, Run

""'"m""'"""' ..,_

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lead: •l\

SWEET ·
SIXTEEN
II

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I.GcoiBotlt&amp;Sioo r "'
Dlaplar. -

. .
'·•'
1 Stubborn ON! , . 1 ·CIIIneM
2 Dye
. " , .Dhttosoplly
3 Waatern marah
a total
plant
Q Tolado'• aiiiAi
4 Certain mlg1'11nl 10 ConWint
5 Money In lndfe
dWeller•
6 Aarctvark'a diet 11 Troplcallrult

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: West
8autlo · Weal Norlli Eaat
1·•
Pass Pass
Dbl.
36

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DOWN'

.35 Goaalp maven
Barren
36 R..11..

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wv.

aandplper '
22 JapeneM aaah
~lght
24 Cake mabr
58 S.tng
27 Study ol
.'

animal•

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2nd l - I l t
Pl. Pl-.t,
FM l.dm'll 1\

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you develop from step No. 3 below..

,,.

.-. PRINT NUMBERED. lETTERS IN
W
THESE SQUARES

6 u~~~~N~~~e lETTERS

I I I I I· I I

.

SCilAM-LnS
ANSWERS
'

;

Jlo!ISIIul3044~1272.

-

Experltnctd child catt -lder
I I I I I - aiiiiO- 2 _....
btalnnlna JuM --.. ~ .an
tllf 1 ntir
e•..,
HIGh a1
- I14-·
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ltavt
mtllegt
HI-4114.Rala•WM• $'1,
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Experltnetd AN Wll Do Prlv!ote
DuiJ.Homt Htslth, Hoapltal 01

'Nutatng

Home,.,...-,. .

Gtatgn Potllllte Sawmll, don't
hlul your laO• 10 ... mil ju&amp;t ...
30H7S.III51.

Proltuianll Trtt s.rvtc8, Slimp
Rtmaval, Fru Eatlmatt&amp;l lnIUIIIICt,

._,Ohio..,._,.._

- . 014-3117-71lt0.

aper-ttn MlcfIIIII
1raah, you pay
1nc1 otectttc,
1200 per month, $IOO,depalil,
1Wo -

Slgnl Mld..Reloublahed. Mtlll
roala. p•lntld, 11wn~ mowed,
IIIIIIIMtl Handyman work.

. . . . . ~Ride.

deparl,

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we lilY wtllf;

e••

114,012-7101, 8am-5pm. AVIIl·

... ...., lit

Wonttcl painting tniRtro. tlfiOit
amrv houau, lnaide a·ouL Rtf·
·3!171.
· - · · • ttiiiNttl.
304·1111'

1Wo bedroom apar-t IIi Mlcflhpor~ no pttt, I I 4-fi2-665&amp;
Unlurllholl Apertmem, 322 Third
AvttMII, 114-258·1903, From 8
A.ll-11 P.ll.

Will btbyalt, tiltH rn•lll With
caro, txctl1tnt care, In mv llotM

DfJQIIrt.calll+tt2·7847.

450

Fumllhld
Rooms

f'ltl/\tJCI/\1

Hf-IJTAi S

210
tNOI'lCil
OHIO VAU.EY .Pualt8HIII6 CO.
,_.,..nd• thll,... de bualwlfl
people
""'_
llnaw,
1101' to
ltnll
money
. , IIIII
...
~~ until you . _ tnvuo,tttcl

'*"

lltollltq.

.

ACC1i PIIOVIDIDII ltntlllll1te
... &amp; ProMss RtO- trw
•4,2115 Local Aaatt 100-US.

7741.

lnln.u hlr ialt. H•rdwaro &amp;
Spordng Gaada.' 405 . 5111 St.,
N• Ht-. WV. :104-lll!-:1144,

-·
-In - -

SIMI bulldlftt deaterlhlp OVIII·
Deeltra•lluy
tactorr dlrec~ Hloh prolt
poltrllal, Hlti at CGniWUCifon. (303)
7IN2IIO Ext 71!11.

230

-.,
1

· Jumper- Manly- Filly - Voiced- FAMILY .

Our daughter sJeptwith her new puppy. My husband .
says that man ha' made animals other lhan his own
species a member of hi~ FAMILY.
.
.·

E-*"'" carpentry IIIIId•llng. lnalde and autoldt,
dtdll. vinyl llcflng, add... addlllonl, cabinet rtflclng or ntWiy
r•bullL Rtftrencta-Fret EIU-

,,

'

!WEDNESDAY

Ctrtlllld In •otllt ohlld Olrt,
Uon.frl., 71111·1pm, 814-U02142.
HARTS UASONARY - Black,
' wrk, 30 ,..,. ...
DttltnCe. ,...... reltt. lfl4.
MS.3tllll llllr I:IICipm, n.lab 10
10 an WV.OZ11Dl1
llvlngaton•a ba••~·~t wter·

*

-or

praenne. ·Ill

r.1lRCill\rJDiSc

510

Houlehold

. GoodS '

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dona, , .. 111iml1e1,
guarantM. 1Orra "" Job ••Pifl•
-~14

APPIIIncta:

RtcanditlaM&lt;I ·

5877

w.:....... Drr-. Rqoa, ljooltl-

.

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•

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.

Couch 4 PI- StcUCIIIII t1BO:
Laroe O.lk -.o- Eltctric sto..
ti,OO Or Btll Ott.r, 114-441·
Ot25.

~~~~~~~~~~~paper,
ASTRO-GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Thursday,IQne 26, 1997
In 1he year ahead your popularity
could ascend to some very high
points, both socially and 'career-wise.
There are also indications of ariother ·
posilive change regarding a favorite
sport or ·hobby.
CANCER (June 21 -luly 22)
Today .could provide the opportune
time to discuss an il(lportant issue
you've bel\n wanti.ns to talk aboul
witlr your mate. He or she should be
receptive and open-minded. Know
wllere 1o look for romance and you'll
·find it. The Astro-Oraph Matchniak.er illllandy reveal1 which signs are
romanlically perfect for you. Mailing .
$2.75 1o Matchmaker, c/o lhis news-

M niof-

..

..,.. r:

.
your
a
Station, Ncw.York,
lUI 56.
touch of the:atnics. You will be more
LEO (July n : l\u~ . 22) Twu close ciTeclive and hettcr remembered ..
assudatcs might each trcut yuu in a
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19) It
very spccio1l, considerate manner looks like something you've 'been
l&lt;lday, unbeknownst tu.thc behavior wanting mighl soon be acquired. The
of the other. Lucky yuu.
way in which it comes to you could
VIRGO (Au~ . 2~ - Scpt. 22) Your h8 auifie mysterious 1\-rul surptising.
judgment and cmnmunkatiun skills
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
arc twn nf your strongest assets Someone 'for whom you did 'a favor
today. You wi'll be armed for success recently may do a nice deed for you
in your social or commercial deal- today without mentioning it. It will be •
ings.
up to a mutual frie~d to fiU you in.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-()ct. 23) You
.ARIES (March 21 -April 19)
may feel inclined t!lday to putter Wishful thinking is not a frivolous
around ihe house a bit. If you think endeavor for you today, .provided that
of it more as a, hobby than as work, your 11$pirations are eatnest. Intense
the results could be very grati(ying. · expeclations stimulate positive
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)' Your action.
.
chimning, auraclive manner will be
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) Convery appealing 10 your colleagues ditions will be easier for you today if
today. These auributes will make you you approach · life philosophically.
a standout wherever you go.
Keep in mind thai whatever .occurs .
SAGiTTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. can be used for your ultimate goOd.
21 ) The concerns created by a mate- · GEMINI(MIIy21-~une.20)Today
rial maner look like they might be you may accomplish somclhing that
erased today in a way that could pro- wili fill you with a p-eat deal of pride,
duce a happy ending for you and your · ye1 you might be secretive about its
family.
·
· happening. ·
·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
When presenting in frQnt of an audi-

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l(lotor Hames
::20~F1~.-:,._,~tD:':I~'I.~(::Iy::":"A;:ir-:;S;::trt::.,..::.::l

Klldltn ColrPtl te.tltl Solo On AI

! 4'!;om
Slzt
7....,.· 2101 JeflalanM.,_

Ouptt tn Stack
llollal•• c..ea. "

..........

=.

::

T.T. ~gh~ f'I!IL Willi A"'

CARS FOR 11001 Trucka, -

..

4-whttllfa. molllr llomta, hurl·

~:·.«;::;,~ -

SFfl\!r:r·,

Opln tl:iO • 5110 lion-SaL
-~(Ja21

810

1'11'111 . . noll

· ra-~~

-

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·~to
,-,.~lei

••lillie:

;'

Now
ttnlla, 1 tan truck
whttlt a rldiaiOra. D &amp; R' AulD, •
RiplfV, WV. 304-372-3133 or !·
100-273-8329.
.

aci••JIIInll"'

"' 18il '!lllctt- tlleiJII
to liMo"- 'an; p•laaiCf.

'·

Full lint ol auto body penala, r
paint&amp; and tupplllia. alaa glut, f
liotita..-r&amp;',:;&gt;•rllf" ltld act- •
tWIInl .,..
n _... a•d. _
IIH&lt;IZ-2112.
.·

Day OUirlntHI
Frtnch City Moytag, 114-441'

Ort!Or'l, ·90

HOmt
''ipi"''Vtmmilll
BASEMENT

....... tor .... -ltln-Oftlt

WATERI ROOFING
Uncondlllon.l lilt- •••lllllllllllltnlto&amp;e.l. ..
Local refwtncta lurnltheol. Eallblithtd 1t75. C11l ( t 1 =

.... OUr...-. .. '*""
iibllilllfhllld:&amp;IIQI

aM~r u1n•11• ·~ jr

0171l ·Or t-100-217-05711,

• • r'Etll eruln ICIUII

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almoll
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USED

'fUANffiiAe 130 luli' lttt
1

Balli ...... Booil llltl*a,
Hid&amp; ·IbM OaiAII!ttl, ..._ ~~~~~
,,....,; ~iolohatra. 11~-448·
47U. HRI 10·4. Wo HF ulld
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er, Laaeus, CeiOr T.V. 114-

•••

�Spurs take
Duncan In

Ohio Lottery
· Super Lotto:

•

1-~7-41

Klck8r:

8-G-4 4 3-5
Pick 3:

first draft

lloatly cleer tonight,
with fog developing titter

4-5-4

. Sporta on P1ge 5

Pick 4:

mldnlgtit, Iowa Iii 1M 101.
Frldey, a&amp;n~y, hlgha In V..
mlclao..

1•5-4-7

•·
'
\til, 41, NO. 50
01117, Ohio Yllley Putllllhlng c:omp.ny

.

~

Pomeroy-MI~Ieport,

••

2 Sectlaola, ,. PegM, 311 cenl8
A Glnnelt Co. Nez I . 1

Ohio, Thurlday, June 28, 1997

State budget r . fleets 9°/o increase in spending
By AARON MAASHALL
Sentinel Columbua BWNU
COLUMBUS -A carefully crafte4 $36.1 billion two-year state b~get
providing ·an overall nine· pen:cnt increase ~vcr the next two years crwsed
through"the Ohio House Wednesday.
.
The House vote on the budget bill was a bipaniJ!In 93-4 with high praise
heaped oR majority Republicans who negotiated the prickly differences
between Hoose and Senate versions. The bill now J!loves to the desk of Gov.
George Voinovich only needing his signa.ture to ~m~ l~w. He has the power to strike any items from the budg~t pnor to s1gmng 11 mto law ~fore July
I.

'I

.

.

In a budget that p..-tially reflects the result of a court-ordered reform ~
school funding, $10.3 billion, or nearly 30 percent, is devoted solely to pnmary and secondary education, Faced ~itiJ a schqol building probl~~ esti;
mated at $10 billion in·t990, lawmakers saw fit to prov1de SSSO mllhon ln
school building assistance funding.
·~
·

millioo

A majority·of the SS$p
In achool building assistance will be run- mary and secondary schools, $50 million for textboob and other instrucneled into low-wealth distriets in the state. Allhqush those schools in the low- tional materials and $125 million in additional dollars for school building
est five percent will receive lint crack at the building assistanCe, all achools· assistance. The extra money had come from savings found from a reduction
iri the lowest 2S percent of districts by wealth arc potentially eligible for state in welfare caseloads.
money.
..
•
.
In fact, the additions to the budget were enough to stymie most DemocIn Meiss County, Eastem LoCal School. District ranks low enough in ratic criticisms of the Republican-domtnated budgetprocess. However, Stale
wealth (54th) among Ohio's I district~ to potentially receive a share of the Rep. Dan Brady, 0-Cleveland, rose on the floor to state that he was voting
state building money, according to 1996 Ohio Department of Education sta- against the bill over the business tax breaks for financial institutions includ·
tistics.
·
·
ed in the legislation.
Chair of the House-Senate conference committee on, the budget, State Rep.
Also., included in the 2000 page spending plan is an II percent hike to highTom Johnson, R-NewConcord, said that the "majority of the growth" in the er education funding, an expansion of a constitutionally-ch!!llensed achool
"record time budget" goes towards educati011. ''I' m very proud of the effor1 · voucher program, increased funding for foOd banks across the stale, and a
made on this budgeL"
·
·
··
4.5 percent tax cut for individuals.
·
Yesterday's vote technically approved chang~ made by the House-Sen- ·
Firework safety prclvisions, orginally included In a bill peddled by Stale
ate committee from the House's wrsion of the budset passed in March. The Rep. John Carey, R· Wellston, were also slipp¢ iqto the budget following
House
OK'
d_
committee
dec:isions that last week added $80 million for pri:
__
_
. _....;.."'I'
.
.
(
(COntinued on Page 3)

6'

'

Impact of national
Plott hound . .event
._ ma·de on economy
.

.

~

By JIM FREEMAN
making the coonhunters welcpme,
Sentinel Newa Steff
putting up signs rel!ding "Welcome
The dogs and members of the Nationill Plott Hound Association."
National Plott Hounds Association ·, "We have been encouraging busi·
have slightly changed the face ,of the nesses to put up signs welcoming the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
group," said Meigs County EconomBIIflls and stalls, usually inhabit· ic Development Director Ron
ed.by livestock, seem well suited to McDade.
lodgins m.an's best friend. Replacing
· "This not only gives us a .cltance
the usual moos, baas and oinks, to show off our beauty," he ~d .."It
there is the occasional baying of ~ ~l!!~,!!.~!l'lsly , with revenue·
:··;:;i,l,IJ!!~;t~.:m.
motels and 'restaurants." . .,. ~-- .
~
:nilimiat:- ~ng. from
·· ·we cefialnl)-"'irrl.;....pleiiied1t!il'f ll\ey hosted this year by the Shade River chose M¢igs County for their site," he
&lt;;oonhuil~,91 t-s.sociati~, will ha~e said.·~!' hope its successful and that
little loiJg-'tenn ~ffect. on the . fa•r- they cQH.Ie back."
~u~ds, some ate,~ are al~~y con·
If tlij, ,IP:oup was giving a trophy
s1denng t!Je groupseconom1c 1m~t-: for the ,:Cirthest traveled, the winner
on the SUITilUnding area.
would fuost likely be Linda Mack of
· When up to 400 people J!!Ove into J:&gt;lacerVI!Ie, Calif., who · made the
an area for three days, they ha~e to 2,200 R)dt trip to attend the showeat, and some people moved m as her third.national event.
juat 8 SMSI'I aport," Meek ·
CAUFOANIA COONIIUNTEA- I.Jncll Meek . grot,mda, "11'1
early as SuncJay, according to the host
Mack, who arrived Sunday, haS
IIJid,
lidding
lhlt
Mr
llporl encolll'llgM the Vllof
"-vii..,
Cellf.,la
_ol....,..llusodliid
club's president, Bill Spaun.
.
spent most of her time relaxing and
·UM
of
IIIIUre
and
conllt'VItlon.
Plott hoWid ISSihualeata allsndlstt the fll.?b'"
Meanwhile, Spaun has been busy sightseeing. shci has had Plott hounds
eiP!O!H!ii!I!P.•I!p
ltl?rCosi!tJ'*'
trying
to
find
places
for
people
to
since
19&amp;'6.
·
'
"This ;:s· my first time to Ohio," she . Mai:k said she will spend lbout · · Stevens and Mack hav~ been vis· lies, according to Spaun.
. stay.
While. many people-are camping said.
That is hardly surprising in a
S~ overallattendins the event. see- itinlsites in Meigs County. Stevens
at the fairgroun!fs, all the hotels in
Anticipating that all .of Ohio was ing old friends and making new said he was impressed with the region· that caters to other hunters,
· Meigs and.Athens counties are filled, flat, she was pleasantly surprised to ones.
Meigs County · Courthouse · in where ll'St,aurants open early to serve
he said, in addition to hotels in discover ioutheastem Ohio's rugged•. . Ralph Stevens ofO!arlotte, N.c;:., Pomeroy.
deer hunters in the f.ll.
.
· ·Mason' County, W.Va., and most hilly terTa).n.
.
.
"This is a hunting area/' Spaun
huJ~een raising Plott hounds for 35
11)e Meigs County citizens seem
rooms in Gallia County.
Every.I!bdy likes the country, she years. adding tb_at the Plott hound is receptive to hosting hundreds of .said
Some local businesses have been said.
.:
·
. (Continued . on Page 3)
the North Caroltna state dog.
cdonhounds, tbeir owners and farni-

.....

not

.

·sale of farmlanil develop.m ent rig~ts eyed bytlawmakers
u.s,·

COLUMBUS (AP) - State. and ' The
Senate version of ataxfederal legislators believe they can cut package would reduce estate tax·
preserve farmland by allo"!ing farm- . es on farmland if the developmen~l
ers and their heirs to sell or donate the rights - Of _Fonservation easements
." development1.rights to their land,
-have been donated.
Sen. Grace Drake, R-Solon, said
About ItS-states have similar pr'oshe will introduce a bill that would grams in plaqe, and the program was
·. allow state and local governments to included in the . Ohio Farmland
. pay faimers the difference between . Preservation ·l'a5k Force i'ecommen• . the developmental value and agri- dations mJU!e to Gov. George
cultural value of their farmland. The Voinovich Ia,t month.
. · land would continue to be used for
Ms. Drake, a task force member,
agriculture, and ihe farmer would be told The Columbus Dispatch for a
• able to sell it or pass it on to heirs. · story Wednesda'y that she wil~ push

her legislation separately from a bill gomCry' has said current law prOiiibits
being~ to·cover the task force's siate and local governments from
other reci&gt;mmendations. That would buying developmental rights to farm·
allow quicker passage, which wliuld land, but the Ohio Gonstitution does
help counties considering· develop- allow fodegislation enabling such
ment-rights proarams.
·
programs.
· A similar proposal was withdrawn
from the state budget bill over conThe federal proposal, called the
cern about the J,cnnanence of the ·' American Flum and Ranch Protecpta,!. Ms. Drake said her new plan tionAct,'is to help ranners who inherwould allow the leaSe and sale of it land, boi have to sell some or all of
rights and give counties flexibility it to pay the estate taxes.
and conuol. ·
F11111 adVocates say that farms that
Attilrney General Betty Mont- make little money ofU:n have land

and equipment that exceed the thresh·
old for estate taxes.
The tax cut would reduce estate
taxes.by 40 percent for donated easements and be'limited to land within
2S miles of meuopolitan areas.
"We can live with it as a first step
but would like it to be expanded,"
said Chuck Beretz, federal policy
program manager for the American
Farmland Trust.
.
He.said the trust wants to extend
the policy to development rights that
are sold.
·

Sweeping
reduction
il1taxes
faces vote
WASHINGTON (AP) ~ The
House is poised to pass thi: biggest
..tax cut in 16 years, a sweeping $85
billion package with goodies for
middle class families, investors and
businesses. ·
Passage of the Republican tax cut
plan, .which was going to the House
floor today, was expected, since the
· GOP holds a 22 seat edge over
DemocraL•, not counting the chamber's lone inllependtilit.
The plan was a .high priority of .
House Speaker' NeWt Oin8tifh. ~- ·
Ga., who spent a,l&amp;rge. chunk of his
lime this week at ·campaign-style ·
·media events promoting the tax bill.
"This is one of the most important
votes, I think, in mOdem times, ''Gingrich tol.d a House GOP pep rally
Wednesday. ."It 'provides economic
opportunity for more growth, ·and
more jobs, and more wealth creation.:
· "so more Americans can move•

towards prosperity."
'
The Senate, meanwhile, began
debate Wednesday on its version of
tax relief, and was expected to deliberate through Friday.
The House bill, strbngly opposed
by the White House. proposed S135 .
billion in total tax cuts over five
years. offset by about $50 billion in
new revenues, for a net tax cut of $85
· billion.
Major elements included a $500 ·
. tax credit for children under age 17,
which would cost $71 billion over
five years; education tax breaks a'nd
college savings incentives, costing
$31 billion; and cuts in capital gains
taxes, relief from estate taxes and a
reduction in the altcmative minimum
tax.

•

The bill wa.• insulated from
amendments during today 's House
floor debate, except for a substitute
tax pi~ sponsored by House Democrats that focused on the fairness of the
GOP tax cut plan .

Clinton sides. ·with e·PA on ·clean air standards

:Task force

.

may have

WASHINOTON (AP) - · In ~:lear- quality standards, with the econo- a way that srows the Ameri~an econ- tection.
ing the wa'j for tough new air poilu- mists arguing for ways to soften the omy."
"The punishing new standards ...
lion rules. President Clinton cast rules. Browner, accoflling to adminBy all early accounts, that will be are a noose around the neck o.f
aside concerns from some of his top istration sources. stood firm.
unlikely.
.
··American business," complained
economic advisers aild ignored indusWith a growing number of
Industry groups, which have • Thomas Kunn, president of the Edilry criti~ whO sald'the public would Democrats as Well as Repu,blicans in waged a multimillion-dollar cam- ~ son Electric Institute. which reprepay a high price for JIW'Iinal health Congress voicing opposition lo the paign in Congress, within the admin- , sents more than 200 utilities, many of
-benefits.
· . __
.
EPA proposal, industry lobbyists istration and in state capitals around . whom will be key targets of new
COLUMBUS {AP) ....: Will taxes
Instead, · Clinton aided with the ·recently had begun to express guard· the country to rally opponents to the emission requirements.
be going uiJ to pay.for achools? Th,e
head of the Er)~ l'rolection od optimism tbat the White House ~le, sa!d-t~y plan~d to press the · Brown~r, speaking at the White
answer could be clearer next week.
Agency, Carol ·Browner. who has would overrule Browner.
1ssue w1th sylnpatheuc lawmakers. ·House, s&amp;~d the tougher health stanState • Budget Director Greg ,
'
been
Q
.
l
ll
the
pmjdent
to
IOUJhen
But
on
Wednesday,
the
president
"It's clearly up to Congress to pre- ·dards for smog-causing ozone
: Browning said Wednc;sday Jhat he
HII;AAING
TESTIMONY
the
1970
Clean
Air
Act.
sided
with
his
top
environmental
vent
EPA from innicting this hann- ·soot "represent a major step for. ·
. would give members of the Ohio .
It was a .bitter pill for. induslry, enfotcc:r 11nd left· the agency's pro- ful proposal on the American econo- ward" in curtailinJ unhealthy air that
. School Fuliding·Task Force a list ne111 Gov. George
week with possible solutions to tbe ill he Ulltlolll.. 1 wlb •••..... ·which aot admiUina clef.-"' Slid 't -·• for tou..._ health standards tor my." said Jerry Jasinowski, president makes life more difficult for asthma :
mymgib.,Eo;~·
Ohio~ . nbw ~d lib the blttle Co~ ~
euentillly iniiCL o( the National Association of Man- sufferers and cuts short the .liVe$ of .
•achoot fundiq iss~. ·
The task force; which includes Flindln_ Tllak P0rc:e et 1M ......, ~- , .. ..
. Clinton i!! a speech before ·a-lam· · uf.Cturers.
.
I S,OOO elderly Americans each year.
qdeylnCoiiii'IIIIIIL · · ButoBJ!viron!MntaliltaMd health ily , forum in Nashville, Tenn.,
Sen. Alfonse D'Amato, R-N.Y., · "Thecurrent5tandards ... ~vef.- . ·
:Qov. George Voi~vich aiwi'lelisla· houll
· idvoc:alea ~ . . .ic lbout the ~~:knowlodJed ~ new air pOllution pledged this wee It to fight any . too many Ameri~an~ · at risk, 100
tlve leiders, jslryiilg to ~;ome up with , .
.
iisbter ~ on 'moS"'*-ina rules "will be somewhat 'controver· attempt to delay or weaken the stan- many children at risk," she said.
a solution to the Ohio Supreme up one pen:cnt. "
Voinovk:h
WMD't
willing
to
~k
'
ozooe
lnd IOOllhlt ihe EPA will iuue sial" but sal~ he had concluded they ·dards. At the same time, the U.S.
The new requiremenu, fint pn1. :
. Coiut's order to.4ev~lop a new fund. ·
about the specifiCI included in the . next.IIIOIIdL ·
Were .R II ~ d to ,proteCt the elderly Conterence of Mayors voted at their posed by the EPA last NOVCII)ber, will
in1 sySiem.
·
qationaJ convention to oppose the limit cn:one, an inlfodient of 111101. to
· The coon ruled in Mlln:h that the plan ..~UI he did IJY the final ctew,IJ.· . "'l'hQ in ..... vil:lory," said PiuJ . and children with llthma.
are be1111 wprked out.
'
0. flillinp of the AmerkaD Luna
"I think kids ou""' 10 be healthy," EPA plat\.
0.08 parts 'per million, !llllnplled •
· .stale doel not provide allloroqh and
"Jt's
1oin1
to
cost
a
111(,1'
·
AeiiOCia'ioll,
--adilll
Clinton
Clinia.decllred,~naiiJllliiCIII$
~les
DiBo~a.
presl&lt;!ent
of~
with0. 12parts"'''milliofteurrent~y, :
efficient odlication aylllltll. The l.el·
.illabnlllllll approve the
piiCk· · VOiaovidl Aid. •:J cloll't wu&amp; to blllllldinabyBIO:NI*".,....thiti from'illdullryamup~lhal-health American Petrotcum lnshtute, said IIJid make other clllnpa 10 ~~~ore
apeculllle on how JaiK:b."
. . musiyt lotlby" by indutry 10 1ry to . ~wiD NqUinl COIIIy pall..X. ' the new polllllion C0111101s will threat- accullllely rafloct air qai!IJY owr 1 •
.
....--. .. "Nqt week 1111ie w.k to 1alk
Senile l'reliden&amp; Rich•d Fi. ., kllliiiPA propoul.
iliiHtl.oll llld prtmcle. ~ Jen "thouuftda of Inner city jobs" by Ion..,- lime period.
·
about speclftca," Brawnl111 ~R-Cincianlli,lllid he·• "l*t• plln
For~ Browner llld 1101111 of helkll beneflll.
'·
I::~~nedoutathemoJ-pl~II .. For lho flnt_tltM.
t
1
• · Same llltl olfict.I,have IIJUI'•· will 10 tint to the Sellllle Finance . the I* u deat'IUip ICOIICIISiic idvilm
"'Wolt wiih 111," he uqettllili c:tk·
-H'e 'l'llailltat
rues w1 WI11~IUIIellllc:rDICopic:
plllic:.... ar
- that tho lillie's aalea tilt could 10 Commi~.
llld Nlllod over the ~ new ilr·. . ict.._·~ ·We wiJI find a way to do this In . · not aipificantly improve health pro- soot, lhal are u amall u 2.~ microns.

·solutions ·
next week

and

YolncMch........

q
' t

..;. .

-u,

and:rn:7oot

new

....

the

•

I

:,

•

!\1

'

1

the.,,..

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