<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8869" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/8869?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-28T21:33:16+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19294">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/12513f9248b5a67770046558ba4adf63.pdf</src>
      <authentication>8f55a5a9af6abb74826757394c13a721</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28568">
                  <text>•

Ohio Lottery

.T"yson's bite
rocks world
of boxing

SuperLono:
4-14-23-30-33-37
Kicker:

8-M-9-3-9
Plck3:
7-G-7
Plck4:
8-8-0-8

Sports on Page 5

e

Muggy with showere
end
thunderstorm•
tonight, low 1bout 70.
Tuaadey, plrtly cloudy,
highs In the 101.

•
.

••
,;.. '

Yol. 48, NO. 52
_
C1187, &lt;~!"Valley publlllhlng Compeny

f:.

2

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, June 30, 1997

'

Sec:Uoo..; 11 ....... 3 1 . "GIMIIt Co. .............

Brady law ·nl.ling· yiel~s
little-impact fQr ME!·igs ·
·- ~ '

-··

.

.

.

'·

By JIM FREEMAN

leaders that the state cannot admin- them from unlicensed sources,
ister the 'checks ·unless llwmakers explained.
A U.S, Supreme Coun decision authorize the proJ!TIIIil. She will not
Meanwhile, Thomas 0. Stewart,
wipinll out a portion of ·the Brady ' ask them for a teinstAtcment,
owner of Stewart's Ouns and SUphandgun law will have little effect in
MeanWhile, Ohio Democratic Par- plies, Rutland, hailed the decision as
Meigs County, according to Sheriff · ty Chairinan David J. Leland charsed a "wonderful step in the rilht direcJames M. Soulsby.
Montgomery, a Jlcpublican, with tion."
ThecourtonFridayruled'thefed- "abdicatinll her responsibility as , Stewart says the Brady bill does ,
era! government cannot force lcical attorney general by tefusing to COD· notrunll "liut create more paperwodc
law enforcement agencies to conduct duct backsround checks for potential . and harass honest citizens." ·
criminal background · checks on handgun owners."
.
Under the system eliminated by
prospective handgun buyers.
Leland said over .650 handguns· . Montgomery Friday, prospective gun ·
. Within•hours, Ohio Attorney Gen- wete denied to felons and other pro- buyers were charsed SIS plus taX, for ·
era! Betty Montgomery shut · down hibited persons from January 1994 to the bac:qround check and Jequired io
the.state's background check system. December 199S. He cited U.S.Attor- · fill out two forms.
The court's S-4 ruling invalidated • ney General's office fillUres chiihUJIS
The dealer then calls a 900 numone of theJey pr9visions of the law over 2SO,OOO felons and other pro. ber·to 'die Ohio Bureau of Crimiftal
. that established a five-day waiting hibited persons have been denied Invesli1ation and Identification
period for handgun purchases so law handguns due to the Btady law.
which tells the dealer when the buy- ·
enforcement agencies could conduct
Montgomery said she supports er coU,Iil have the gun - usually S. ·
a criminal background check.
keeping guns from criminals, .but 10 days, according to Stewut. The
doubts the Brady law has stopped ·dealer then mails part of the paper·
The coun said Congress cannot ·felons from obtaining them.
wQrk back to the BCI&amp;I.
make local governments administer a
Soulsby said the Supreme CounAfter .then waiting period is comfederal program.
'
ty d(l!:ision conceminll background. pletc, 'the buyer comes back to tbe
Law enforcement agencies can checks will have little effect on· his · ·shop, fills out more paperw~ and
still do the criminal backgro,und office.
. ·
lhCn 'purchases 'the gun. . ,
checks on gun buyer~. but it rriust be
''We haven't done any," he said, · · Of all these people they've ··
done on a voluntary basis. ' '
adding the sheriffs deJ)artment has checked, there have been.no arrests·
Montgomery ended the program not been a5ked to conduct back- for felons attempting to buy a hancb ·
becauSe she believes the court deci- ground checks.
sun. Stewart Said.
.
sion Wiped out legislative authority to
''The Brady Bill won't kee'p guils
The . question now is who is
out of the lta!lds of criminals,&gt; he responsible for the five-day waiting
conduct the checks.
She has notified state legi§lative 'said. Criminals'IVillstealthemorbuy period,·Stewutsaid.
sentl~l News

'
"

l
\·

··....

'~

.

Staff

·..
;jeihte116t~x
~re·.~id,:._nt~l

'
'

'

noon. They ara looking at wllat the area
· looked like before the renovation ol the old car-

RaeIne
.

.

/

.

observes
.

·-

,

.rlage house and new construction began;

.'

open, n.;::g_. ,·

WASHINGTON (AP)- As Con- . age 16 and under and in futlite years House and Congress' DOmOI:ratic
age 18.'11ie.cutoff minorily p..essing sliongly tO inlike By CHAR ~.!ttl HOEFLICH
gress works on the final details of for those throu""
eu
·
redi
Sentinel ,._. ltllff
$135 billion in tax cuts: over five poi!lt in family income would pha5e the poor elillible for the c t:;
The new RiC:ine Branch of the
Over . 10 yean, the official
years, President Clinton will svfeet· tlutfrom$60,000to$7S,000through
en his offer of tax credits for children 2000 and phase out from $80,000 to claimed, Clinton's ptOposaJ "would Meip County Public Libory is offi·
be more generous than either the . cially open.
while insisting that poorer families $100,000 in the years after that.
proposed
a
$500.
House
or Senate bills."·
· · On Sunday, the facility was dediClinton
initially
with no income tax burden also
. caled during an open house ceremoreceive the -benefit; a White. House credit only for children under age 13. ·
ny ·that featured comments from
official says.
·
The House and Senate bills call for a
On education, the official said Kristi Eblin, Meip County Public
Clinton . planned today to credit· for those under 17, with the Clinton was slilhtly inodifyirill his Library director, Racine-Mayor Scott
announce revised proposals for Senate requiring that pBROnts of chit- proposed S3S billion·Hope scholar- Hill and Mike Lucas, state librarian.
House and Senate bargainers to con- dren ases '13-16 put the money in.an ship prop11111 for colle1e students and
In her remarks, Eblin detailed the
1
sider as lhey draft a final version of education savings account.
would ~onvert proposed tax deduc- trials of the pro;ec:t, which lwi;been
I
· th red 't t · tion for tuition into il. tax credit in the. under consideration
•
· the Libnorv
the tax legislation passed by the two
Both b'll
I s a so lliVe 11 c . I 0
by
•
'I'
'th
hi
he
.
L
.
.
J
'unior
and
senior
years.
In
addition.
chalnbers last week. Formal negoti· .amiiCS WI
·g r mcomes, p......
Board for several years..
, --,.
ations .will begin after the C\lrrent ing ii out for couples making more the interest paid 011 student loans
She told of how the board had
would
once
again
be
made
. Fourth of July congressional recess. 'than $.1.10 •000. ·
.
gone through the process of hirina·an
Clinton is putting forth the pro· Unlike the House version, Clio· deductible. .
architect and ~uring bids for a preposals "to help provide a road map ton's credit would be against the f8Jl·
vious project, of the delay when the
to a bipartisan tax-cut bill that can he ilies' total federal tax burden, incl6dRegarding taxes on capital gains bids all came in hipr than expect·
signed into law," the official, speak· ing Social Security and payroll tax· -the profit from .We ofinvesunents ed, of the purchase of the Tyree-Pick·
ing on condition of anpnymity. sa.id es, and not just on income tax liabil· -the official said Clinton's propos- ens property for the libniry building,
Suhday night.
·
ity.
.
al has "a broad exclusion structured and of the · architects' proposal to
The president is offering $135 bit- ·
Some lower-income families ca11 differently from .what Congress h.as incorporate the old carriace h~se
lion in tax cuts over five years along av9id paying income taxes through a done but is intencted to provide a rea- · into the design.
with $50 billion in revenue raising special tax credit for the wodcing sonable (tax) rate for IODl·tenn
·"Today, 1 believe was BRO all sat·
. proposals, for a·net'tax savings of$85 poor. The House GOP bill would investments.over a year."
.
isfted with and pi'Qud of the contri·
billion, which . is similar to the make these-families ineligible for the
The con1ression.. bills call for bution the Meip County Library is
House's package passed last week.
$500-per-child credit, while the Sen- cutting tlie . maximum capilal gains · makin110 the community of Racine,"
The official said Clinton would ate version would give them a portion rate from 28 percent to 20 percent for said 'Eblin~
'
propose that a $S()()..per-child tax . of it.
·
individuals making more than
"We extend OIB' hand in partner·
credit be made effective through till:
The issue has been the source of $24,650 or couples making more than ship and friendShip to this communiyear 2002 for families with children a ma~or1-dispute, with the White . $41,200 a year.
. ty as a whole as we work to,ether to
.
.
\
.

VIEwiNG
LIBRARY - At Sunday's open house, Krlstl
Eblin, Malge CoUnty Publici Ubrary director, spoke with, from left,
Racine. Mayor Scott Hill, Lee Lee and Ruth Simpson about the
flclllty end what It will olhir to the village.
· ·· .
'

encourage and promote its enrich· presented a flag to the library. Larry
ment and growth," she concluded.
Haley of the Racine First Baptist
Hill responded with comments of Church'had the invocation.
appreciation for the facility in Racine
Introduced by Eblin were Library
village, and anticipatiO!I a~ut its lit· Board members Patricia Holter, prescrary contrib11tion to the community. ·ident; Patricia Milt, vice president; •
Lucas stressed the importance of . Mary K. Yost, secretary; Charles
a public library to acommunity ~d · B~akeslee, Wanda Ebhn, Dougias
extended his congratulations to the Little and Robert Crow. . .
.
'Library Board and employees.
Also t~troduced were Enc An~er- •
On behalf of the Re.tum Jonathan son, Ohm Valley Area L1branes; . ·
Meigs Chapter, ·Daughters of the David Lisle, architect, Burgess &amp;
American Revolution, Mary K. Yost
(Co!ltlnued on Page 3)

Consumer spending ·posts .
moderate gain during ·May .

Bibbee's new
headquarters
open$ doors ·
.for business
Construction is now CO!Ilplete on
a 9,5()().square-foot headquarters for
the Bibbee MOIOr Co. near Tuppers
Plains. .
Grand openinll activiti~s were
held over the weekend for the new
facility, which is built on IS acres
near the Meigs/Athens Copnty line. .
Tho comp111y l!ad been opc;ratinll in
a much llilall~ trailer adjiiCCnt to the
new cenw. Thai ~ler will be moved
to m~ 10om for future ex.pansion.
Tho used-car dealership now
. . ~• a Nape Auto Care Center, a
stAte of the art service facility. The
Nipa affll~, accordin1 to owner
Jetty Bibbee, will provide fUSiomen
.with alllllonwide warranty I',IOifllll•
which parantees all Nape parts and
service, includina labor, towing and
service COlli.
'
'Jbe IIOW buildiq lllo felllnl
wdl-tlfi'Oillllld office Uld waitina
.!P-M (or tUIUidllll" COIIVtllience.

-- -··- . Rii~ii

---Roy

,kMIII of"'

: ~ ef C1ou • u, Llndl J&amp;wad~ IIICI
:.v-..:::1%~ ~
Jlny IIICI
,11wrr
1
liell, IIIIPIDyll, 11\d

,

....,,...,

Hor1111 br of lle.Ciwtulllb of Ca umlfot.

. (Ccnlmn II on ,_.., .

' I

'

'
I

WASHINGTON (AP) - · Consumer spending rose 0.3 percent in. May,
bolstered by an identical increase in personal incomes, the latest evidence
. of moderate ~conomic growth on the eve of the Federal ~eserve 's.intereStrate-setting meeiing.
·
.
·
The Commerce Department said.today spending totaled a $5.37 trillion
rate, compared with SS.35 trillion a month earlier. Incomes rose to an llftDu·
a1 rate of $6.17 trillion, up from $6.75 trillion in April.
·
The advances were in line with analysts' expectations.
·
Personal consumption had risen just 0.1 percent in April, slowest since
last September. Analysts believe spending has decelerated to about a 2 percent annual rate during the April-June quarter, less than .half- the S.6 percent
rate during the first three months, thp fastest in five·year~.
·
Consumer spending represents two-thirds of the nation's 17onomic activity and the newest report was released a dily before the Fed~ral Open Mar' ket Committee's two-day meeting to decide interest-rate pohcy.
,
· Many analysts l!elieve Fed officials willle~ve rates unchanled pending
. more data on the ec;onomy's condition.
·
·'
'
·
. Initial data ori the April-June perfortnance suggest it has moderated to
about a,2 percent annual rate from die fii'St quarter's si12!ing S.9 percent paCe_.
Income powth in lday was slightly above the 0.2 percent advance !n April.
Private wages and salaries, the most closely watched CompOnent of tncome,
rose S9.S billion compared with a $2.7 billion increase a month earlier. Both
e111ployment and av.erage hourly earnings increased.
. .
Disposable income also increased 0.3 percent, up from 0.2 percent tn April.
~ combination of incOI!lCS and spending meant that Americans' savina
rate wu 5.1 percent. unchanged from April.
Spendiftl on durable pxls increased 0.2 percent after fallina I. 7 peKent
a month earlier. Motor vehicles accounted for much of the May increue Uld
more than accounted for the April decrease .

�•

Pom•rar •llllkii•Port. Ohio

: Monday, June 30, 1117

.

•• •

·. The.·Daily .Sentinel

Leahy and Hag,l unl~e to ban land

m.I.Q:eB ~··

a.-.:.
of ..... •·-· ~--~- ........ nerec1 his colle.g~J uy W.y he.
. mine - to be ftCIOiilled tbrouch tile
11\d.IMIIol..
.
U.N. Conference on Disl!mllinent·· :::"o!':r~:.i':~;;; could. Rather than 1lill~J. ~
'Esftz66slid in 1948.
Several weeb before Pretidenl • notoriously slow, deliberative body. in1 ciin&amp;on to jump abolnlthe c.. , conferences, he worbd di!laendy
· behind the scenes I'JMIIIdin1 up
· Clinton '-:bel away from a historic In doing so, he effectively punted this diu inilillive.
111 Court Sbwt, PomtiJOY, Ohio
It took awhile, but Leiby eventu- · · enough allies to make JIISIIIC of lhe .·
opponuni!Y to rid the world of land
81...-·2158 • Fax 992·2157
ally persuailed Hagel to betome bill inevitable.
mines, Sen. Patrick Leahy,. J&gt;. VI.,
chief co-sponsor of i bill that see.b · : Some Iawmak~ had personal .
.
· began quietly working on a backup
to do what the president would not: · re1150ns for suppomng a ban. Sen. ,
. plan.
''
ban milles by 2000. The Leahy-Hagel · Jphn 'McCai~. R,Ariz., a f.onner pris-·
If it works as envisioned, the
bill now has 59 co-sponsors. includ, oner o~ ~ar tq Vietn~, .,vas move4 ·
lldministralion will .soon have little
·.A Gannett
Newspaper
ina all six of the current senators who -by a vtstt to ~bodta lut Novelli:' .
~;hoice but to suppo~ a far-reaching
saw
combat in VietniiiJJ. :
· ber. There, the stght of many YOUR$ .
effon to bu the global production
ROBERT L. WJNGElT
Persuading
Hagel'
"wasn't
easy.
..children, their limbs toni · away by· ·
vital issue into the ne1tl millennium.
and use of land mines.
Publl..,
There are currently 100 million "The fusl question I had;'' Hagel told ·stepping on . long·~Orgot!en land
Back in January, the administra·
lion was faced with a tough decision: land mines scallcred across the globe, ... us, "waslhatldidn'twanflodoany- !mines, helped convmce him that a··
··
·
whether or not to endorse a Canadi· most of them in impoverished coun· thing that would inhibit the military's li ban was necessary.
MARGARET LEHew
CHARLENEHOEFUCH
use
of
weapons
that
they
think
are
in
On~
man
~y
has
yet
to
pertries
~endy
touched
by
war.
1\ven. an initiative to ban all anti-personnel
Coi•alllr
Oenetal u.n.g.
suade ts Vice President AI Gore. Sev·
land mines by 2000. It was a difficult ty thousand lives are lost· 10 these the best interest of our troops."
.·
Hagel spoke with several past and eral sources pointed to Gdre as the
choice, since President Clinton had inexpensive killers every YIIIU'. and
cumnt military leaders, including chief slickina point within the admiti-,
. already proposed a ban on land many more are' wounded.
,.___. a'co ,.. -..,""'-"""' ....,.
. . po
fll.....
J)IIW'-1· · mines silt months earlier.at the behest
One of the victims now serves as Shalilcashvili and retired Gen. Nor- istration. Leaniitg on the advice of
· of then-United Nations Ambassador a freshman memberoflhe·U.S, Sen· man .Schwartkopf. "As a result of security adviser Leon Fiienh, Gore
,.--,~-~--·ate. Chuck Hagel, a Republican from talking .with them, I became con- still slicks to 'the Pentaaon's line:
Madeleine Albright and others.
Edllw, 111e
111 eoon.a. ~ m .,. ewo
Gen. John Shalil\ashvili, ch8irman Nebraska, was wounded twice by vinced that it was npt a military Why should America give up .a
fDffUINfiT.
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, was land mines during the Vietnam war. option that we would take away, nor weapon .. any weapon ., without get·
among those telling lhe president to
The conservative, pro-military a military option that was really use- ting some tangible military benefit in
return?
..
,.
take a slower approach. Clinton, Hajel had barely been sworn in as a ful today." ·
As
Leahy
puts
it,
he
continued
his
The.answer,
of
course,
is
that
land
wary of angering the military, agreed new senator when he was approached
with them. Instead of endorsing the by Leahy, who has waged a one-man crusade for co-sponsors "the old· mines serve no practical use for a
By TERRY KINNEY
Canadian plan, he ·called for a land campaign against land mines for the fashioned way." He cajoled and cor- country that has more fiiepower ia i!S
Alaoclated Prell Writer
.
..,....,.
· 1
arsenallhan any nation in history. ' ·
CINCINNATI - Patricia Brown wants 10 share hei love of'the PresWithout American support, the
byterian Church (USA). ·
·
. , . . .
Canadian treaty will have all the
The fifth-generation Presbyterian, who traces her fanuly s affibauon to
weight of the paper it's written on ,_.
pre-Civil War Maryland, was elected moderator - or chief spoke~ woman
but little more. Should the world's
-of the 2.7-million member church attts ~nvenbon last week tn Syra·
greatest superpower sign on, it would
cuse, N.Y.
.·
serve a function similar to the recent·
"I like to tell the story of my grandmother's grandmother, who went to
ly ratified chemical weapons treaty.
. church with the people who ownCd her - she was a slave in Maryland,"
That· is, it would bar the use of ·a
Mrs. Brown said.Tuesday.
.
lethal weapon, an,d help to isolate
: " They had to cross the bay, a .two-day trip, and they took their maid, my
those countries that refuse to sign the
grandmother's grandmother. That's how we became Presbyterians."
.
treaty.
.
Mrs. Brown's·mother and grandmother also were active in the church.
Last week American negotiatOts
"I spent a great deal of time with my arandmother," Mrs. Brown said.
joined their counterparts from 161
"She said, 'If you're going to be a member, you have to take care of the
countries around the world in Bru$-·
chUrch."'
sets, where the goal .is lo craft an
Mrs. Brown, 52, is a former medical and clinical social worker. Her bus·
agreement that will thCn be signed in
band, Tom, is a real estate consultant and mall developer.
Ottawa in September. One of the final
In 1992 she became the first black wom!lJI elected moderator of the
sticking points, we're told, is a clausi:
Cincinnati Presbytery, which oversees 86.churches in southwest Ohio, northwhereby the United States would sliU
em Kentucky and southern Indiana.
·
be allowed to use land mines on the
She is the third black woman to be moderator of the Presbyterial) Church
. Korean peninsula to deter a possible
. attack by North Korea on its, south.
(USA).
. . the Presbytenan
' Ch urch works, " she sat'd. "IIs
' havmg
.
"I Jove the way
ern neighbor.
;!
something to do wi'th how things work out and what matters that's really
You can be sure that American
fulfilling. And I'd like for more people to know the secret."
.
negotiators would not be so eager 10
Mrs. Brown hopes to advance the· church's goal .of inc~asing minority
strike a deal were it not for the
membership.
.
· ..
behind-the-scenes efforts of a pair of
"The Presbyterian Church has a! ways been kn?wn as a.while ch~rch,
unlikely allies, Pat Leahy ailll Chuck
she said. "I challenged the General Assembly to mcrease tiS commtbnenl
Hagel.
_
·to increasing minority membership. I plan to be very visible to those groups.
Jack Anderson ucl Jan MoDer
· · "Evangelism, education and empowerment -those are Brown's three
are writers ror United Feature
E's. I'm looking at evangelism in a 21st century way; it's a matter of pub·
Syndicate, Inc. .
lie relations and marketing."
The Presbyterian Church is losing about 35,000 members a year.
.
.
"We are an old church and we are heavily invested in the older cities and
the older parts of the cities of America, and that's where the demographic
upheaval has occurred," said the Rev. John Buchanan, who preceded Mrs.
.
.
Brown as moderator.
l
"A large part of our loss of membership is a matter of geography."
By Nat Hentotf .
· increasingly segregated schools con· embrace it if I could find a .better for students. The school is in a ·ver) ·
The church, which is about 90 perceril while, has pledged to increase its
In Brooklyn's Junior High School tinue to be inferior in resources ofall way.") Apparently his advisers had poor neighborhood, and the principal.
·minnrity membership to 20 percent by 2010.
·
.
57 "fewer than I percent of the stu· kinds, including, with exceptions, the neglected to tell him what's going on James Thyior, points out that for those
... There are a lot of thinking racial minorities that would really thrive.in dents are white," the New York teaching staff.
around. lhe country in class-based younptei'S to be qualified for ~liege.
: the Presbyterian Church," Mrs. Brown said. "lbere are also people in low- Times reports, "and more than 87
alternatives to race-and-gender-based . "we have 10 start very, vecy early."
: er·socioeconomic communities that can be empowered by the church."
affirmative action,
The students in these.va,jous propercent are eligible for free lunches." .
_
Buchanan spent II years at the Broad Street Presbyterian Church in In the eighth grade. only II. 7 percent
The very Universily.ofCalifomia grams .. from elementary'school:or
This continuing discrimination .. system. for instance, has created a •• will legitimately achieve self·
: Columbus before going to the 4,J(J().member 4th Presbyterian Church of of the youngsters are J:eQding at their
not
by law but by indifference .. is partnership between the states's SO .esteem, to use a modish term. M!JS•
' - Chicago in 1985. He urged Mrs. Brown to marshal her energy, sinte a modgrade level. ·
·
not
only
racial but is a matter of cla.'l$. Iow-perfonning high · schools that imponant, they .will .Ieam that the)
: erator can be on the road 300 days, covering 500,000 miles during a oneThese kids and many more like
Yei Clinton, in speaking of edu- will help students achieve belter test can learn. The most harmf'!l e.ffcct ol
- year term.
. ·
them .. black and Hispanic •• in seg·
cation
in San Diego, focused only on scores and grades' and thereby quali· many ghetto scho.ols is that man)
:
"My advice for her would be to take care of herself, take a little bit of
regated public schools around the
colleges
as he ritualistically preached fy for university admission 0n acad- kids there learn that they .are dumb ·
- time to reOect on what she's seeing -the year comes on you fast and furl·
country were missing in the presithe
necessity
of affirmative action. ernie merit. Many of the high scllools • and they are not. .
.. - . . · . :
~ ous," Buchanan said.
·
·
dent's "landmark" speech on race
Moreover, college admissions
• · "And l would encourage her to pursue that pilrticuhir (diversity) goal for
relations at the San Diego campus of The students al Junior High School !involved. in these college preparilto57 .. where attendance is less than 'ry programs have predomioantly directors wiii no Ionger have to play
: all she's worth....
·
the Vniversity of California.
·
The president wants us to be half in some classes •• may not get black or Hispanic students. But there a color-coded game in deCiding who
.
"one America" in the 21st century, any closer 10 a eollege than a job as are also whites and others who have gets in and who doesn't. ·
lq his speech, Clinton pointed.to
bu~ he explains, •'•money can't do it. a 'Security guard. Yet the president potential that needs to be nurtured. ·
Other colleges and universities •• the presence of While House ~id ·
II can come only from the human · passionately said in his talk thai "we
must
give
our
children
the
finest
edu·
aware
of the dubious future of affir· Thurgood Marshall Jr. Oint()Jnlid not
spirit." Hugh Price, _president of the
By The J\ssOCiated Press
·
mative action as currend)i'practiced mention Thurgood Marsliall Sr.'s
Today is Monday, June 30, the 181sl day of 1997.1bere are 184 days National 1Jrb8n League, knows bet- cation in the world."
Which children1 Or, more to the .. are engaged in similar outreach . insistent focus on undoing the racial
ter: "It will take money ... to provide
.. left in the year.
programs.
isolation in the public schoOls. Nor
the resources and quali.ty of school· point, which class of children?
Today's Highlight in History:
.
·
.
ing
required
for
youngsters
to
succ
Much
to
the
president's
chagrin,
The
University
of
California
alter·did
he address the criticiSID·pf Rep.
On June 30, 1971, the 26th Amendment to the Constitution was ratified
affirmative
action
in
colleges
is
in
ceed."
Especially
isolated
young·
as Ohio becfme the 38th stale to approve it. 'llte amendment lowered the
native •• a mention. of wbich would Charies Rangel, J&gt;.N,Y., wM.flas said
irouble not only because of Proposi~ have given some ~ubstance to the '"if Clinton wants li legacy .9 f raA:e
slers.
minimum voting age to 18.
,
.
. Unless attention is paid to the stu· tion 209 in California .. .which .the president's superficial speech •• is relations, he should invest 'in public
•· On this dJte:
·
.·
.
In t8S9, french !'Crobat Blondin (born Jean Francois Gravelel) crossed · dents at Junior High School 57 in Supreme Court is likely to affirm •• evidently going to include training of .schools."
·
.':
::
but
in
courts
elsewhere.
So,
what
will
Brooklyn,
the
21st
century
will
be.lhe
elementary and middle school teach~ · To the students at Brooklyn's
~ Niagara .Falls on a 11ghtrope as 5,000 spectators watched.
·
happen if race and gender preference ers in those i!Qiated lower school$. Junior High 57, the presiden~&gt;was far .
same
for
most
of
thein
as
their
bleak
'~
In
1870,
Ada
H.
Kepley
of
Effingham,
Ill.;
became
A,merica's
first
female
11
.. as a faetor in college admissions ·
present.
· Already underway in. the Martin more distant than San Diegot
.
1: law school llf&amp;duale.
.
The president ignored the crucial . • can no longer continue, however it Luther ·King Jr. Middle Sc:hool in San
...:
In 1921, President Harding appointed former President Taft chief justice
. Nat Hentolf Ia a aatloDIIIIy
fact that the division .of the races is is "mended,.?
Francisco, as reported by ·Rene renowned authority on tbe Fint
f~ of the Unitql States.
·
· At San Diego, &lt;;linton said he was Sanchez in the Washington Post-- is Aa.nclment aad tile rest oltbe lim
In '1934, Molf H.itler began his "blood purge" of political and military profoundly affected by experie~ in
•
leaders in (Jermany. Among those .killed was one-time Hitler ally Ernst the mQSI formative ghetto in our soci· willing to listen to any alternative to a University of California engineer- o1 Rlpts.
' ·
ety •• the public school. And these affirmative . actiqn. ("I would ing and science achieveiQCnl program
Roehm, le"*r of the Nazi storintroopers.
In 1936, the novel "Gone with the Wind" by Margaret Mitchell was pub•
lished in New YOflc.
·
·
:1
In 1952, ~ ·The Guiding Light," a popular radio program, rn~e its debut
'· as a 1elevisi9n SOijl opera on CBS.
. ,
·
In 1963, Pope Paul VI was crowned the 262nd head of the Roman Catholic
.
. .
.
.
..
.
..
.
-· ~
By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
resort-quality greens gel only a trick· liged by the devastating effects of
Powell literally built Clear.~iel!( by
,. Church.
.
.
le of goifers most days, barely that old refrain: the white niu 's ice hand..He drove the tractoriljjjj mo~
. In 1971, 'Soviet space mission ended in tragedy when three cosmonauts Gennett Newa Service
EAST CANTON - Wiiiiam enough it seems to keep the
is colder. That's. what blacks say the earth. He spreads tltC grass~
,• aboard Soyuz II were found dead inside their spacecraft after it returned to
Powell buill it, but they didn't come. open at the biack-owned golf cqurse when any product sold by whites- and pulls the weeds. Over four
~ Earth.
In 1985, )9 ~lerican hostages from a hijacked TWA jetliner were freed
- 'HID golf course he-evvad out of
even one as generic 1IS frozen Willa deoades. he and his wlfe pt.led -..
; in Beirut af~ being held for 17 days. ·
the ro!Iing hills or IR old dairy farm
De Wayne Wickham -is thouJbl to be tiettetthan the one ly evl)ry tree on the 5,900 yard laY·
•
In 1986, in a 5..4 decision, the Supreme Court ruled that stales could out· s1 yean ago was supposed to be
offered by bl11:k merchants;
lout. And in tl)ll ~ss, ~taught hii
law homi!SCfual -,cts between consenting adults.
.
more than just his field of dreams..It dw siisjl.sta few miles
the ProPowell, who is 80;'has spent the daughtet: the same of soif, .
•
Ten years ago: IIJbe prosecutor at the trial of Klaus Barbie 'in Lyon, France, was meant to be . a place ' wbere fesaional FoOtball Hall of Fame.
better part of his life bUilding his golf
~qw Renee '~'~/well is the oaiY
., denounced l{le cnres o~ ~ fo"!'er Nazi Ges~ ?fficial and demanded the blacks ud whites 'could play golf . , AI some point, the race relations ·course. It's a mon~J~Renl ·tO both his African American who holds a t:l111
• mautimum stntenQC of hf111n pnso~. Barbte daed tn !~I at ~11e 77.
.
together at a lime when segre&amp;ation dwosue Bill Clinton ~hed has to unOqging determination and his A membership in both lh6 Profes- .
,
Five yeaa;s ago! Pia~ loaded ~tth food and ~tctne ~ved ~t the atr· was the Jaw of the land.
include a frank discussion·~~ why Iaraely l!nrewarded belief.in the will· isional Golfera Associllioii'"Mcl .the
• · port in Sara.ifvo, Jtosnta-Herzegovma, as part of an tnternauonal rehef effon.
Instead of doing that, his golf so nwny whites.and African Aomi, . in1neas of peilji!C to 'tcalcl.l,he barri· ·• LIIdies PrOfessional Golf ~illiCJI!.
: Fidel Ramo• was •sworn jn JIS.the new president of the Philippines.
course- the only one in this COIIR· cans are re1i1etan1 to support black en thai divide ua'alon'a 1aciallines. .The second bl11:k woman to 'jllay oil
~ . One year ago: Presidtll! Clinton paid tribute to·the 19 killed and hun·
try designed, bui" and openiled by an businesses. .
·
. .
Like I sal4, he~ bettet. · [the ~A teiur, she's the head pro 11''
~ dreds wou~ ill the truck bomb attack in Saudi Arabia as he attended
African American- is today a stark ' · Black .econtllllic develllplllelli is · ' Jio ceniinly de$erves more sup;.· ·Ciearview.. · ·
'
;' ·
: memorial servicet at Eglin Air Force Base ~ Patrie
. k Air F?fCC B~ in reminderofhowhardiiiatochanae ' bytoAfric•l"Ainericans'abi~. tO · poit than he's · a~.n from. bllllk : Thetiextlinlelhe~ntplly~
• florida. Bot~~ian ~rb leader Radovan Karadzte responded to tnlemlllonal 'l'ICial attitudes.. .
'get Oil, eq'*' toodns with whiles, golfers, a fair ntimbel' of whom are a round of golf he ~lhl 'to do it 11
• ~sure to .fep asjde by handing his powers to an equally lllliDnalist deputy.
While Tipr Woods hat attracted ScboOJ 'inllipUcla ~ affinnllive starting to Show up at. high-JIIicod .·~IJ'sgolfCotlrae.-As~lo,
Totlay's •irthdays: Singer Lena Horne is 80. Actor Tony ¥usante is 61.
thousands of minorities to tbe pi- · ICtionii'O nlerely a~ .of brin1· iolf morts in Palm Sprinp, Mynle
s woulcl be • important one. It
Oleiilt Shqrrock (Little River Band) is 53. 1uz musician Stanley leriea and te!Cvision atldiellc:.ett that · inl tl!is 'lbout. But how 11-sful Beach and Orl~. Many ,mOle~ 'lht help m.t the.~tetWJ!e thai
is~ RociJ muaician Hal Lindel (Dire Snits) is 44. Actor Vincent. follow 1olf,the pme is still played canbldenlleptet_.biiflboY.,. aoeatbewsofblaclt ·lolf~~ steen 10 IIIIIIY people~ frOin
·o ODolrio ~B. tock IIJIIIician Tom Dnlml!load (Beller ThaD Erta) is 3.8. IarJdy by middle-c:IIH wbitla. b• lhlinMcl br white consUmtn IIIII · plly tabllhem from 01M! Jll)lf eo,nie Powell'a aolf Co.ne. , ..:. ·, .
Mlb Ty~ is 3I. ~-comedllll David Alln Grier is 42.
precious few people, bllck ,or wbltil, ow•loobd by 111 ........ llllck Ill IIIOCher. If enoup
111111e
li¥otiq rQ rol""n.'tWII ....
- · '. ·: ·... · Olllriewoneof~·l'owell·• · _.. tha ,lull a 1e.w otc;t 1 1 ;
.J '11aou11U~ TPY: ''11pe wbo ICM deeply nevw arow old; they lillY tcelheballup~lhea1•view0olf middle c._?.
.
Powa1l frreneablaier.
' , . 101f~WIIIIId110l·MMfor.. busj. IOWrlblll[f itlnp ... tbiP*rh
: ~ ot old c, they dljf youn1." - Sir Arthur Willi "-o, Ea1lisb Oub.
The lllllllcured f&amp;irwayr and
He lknrwi not to be ~rafvlil. neu,
· .• ' , . _ · . , IIIOnNPOrt~IXI*I*
¥ ';.
· dr!imadll (I S-1~).
·
•
. By Jeok Anderton

By Jack Anderson·

.!1

and
Jan Moller.

Co.

_..

-

,...,,....tJI..,_
I,,,_

.
·-,-·......_....,...,,.... .....

__ f'/10_01'_1_,. __
_.,..,..
01'...., ;:r:--..,
,.,u,.,,
,._.,..FAX

·Cincinnati woman begins year as .
moderator of Presbyterian Church

.4

·rhe,Jso· latioQ ~dpf

bJack schoOI·children

I

NatHentofl

(Today in history

Buying·into bla·ck-ow.ned

~usiness
'

cloon

trom

~

of._

. spur

bi!t

•

t

''

..
.'

·Sexual predator.
notification limit
worries critics

'l'llllll:f, JaiJl
AccuW ,...., b w for

..

•

1

'

......

Local News in Brlet:
Pair charged after altercation

·

.

Two men wse cbarpd with disorderly conduct after a aldnDilh at J•
my's Spons Bar in Poiwll)' Sllurday night.
· '·
Brian Arnold. 20, and Onmr Arnold, 47, both of Pomeroy, blcJP'
involved in 111•catim with- Jimmy Ingels, accordiq to Pu;wcy
Police Chief Ger,ald RouP:
'
Both were cbarpd with disorderly conduct, and Grover Anold charged with public intoXication.~ allegedly breaking a wiaclow II the
East Main Street ber, He was treated at Veterans Memorial HolpUal for
abraSions and then tranaported to the Athens County Jail.
. Both Arnoldi will appear in Pomeroy Mayor's Court on tile c......

AKRON (AP)- Critics are quell- . Christopher Da"Cy, a spokesman
tionil!g ~nes from the Ohio for Attorney Genanl Betty Mont·
· a110mey general's office that limit the . gomery, said information on &amp;elt
nl!lllber of neighbofs .who can be told offenders will be av&amp;iiltble to every· . Deputies
two-vehicle
when certain sex oft'enden move into one. However, ·people wanlina die
.No,injuries were reported following an unusual accident involvilll twO
their areas.
information will have to file public
vehicles
II Five Points early today. ·
'
Ohio's new notification law takes records requeats wilb local aulbori·
A tire and rim fell off a tractor and semi-trailer driven on State Route
effect Tuesday. Under the guide- · ties.
1
by
Robby A. Smiih, 22, Fort Gay, W.Va., temporarily diaablinathe vehilines, the only neighbors who may be
• Ohio was among several stites to
.
.
cle,
according
to a Meigs County Sheriff's DepartnMnt report A 1992 Ponnotified are occupants of property cltanae its law after a case in which
tiac
coming
the'
other way, driven by J1150n A. Parker, 18, Pon~e~oy,llniCit
directly behibd, adjacent to _or across a New Jeney girl, Mepn Kanka, was
,the
tire
and
rim,
with the car sualaining modente damage, acconliJII to
the street from u offender's house. murdered by a neighbor whose fun·
the
report.
·
.
Nolifi~on is more limited if an
ily was unaware thai he wu a twiceoffender lives in an apartment build- convict~ sex o~ende!.
.
In Ohio. those identified by Judges
. ing or next ·door to an apartment
6
complex. Officers may contact only as sexual predators, habit~ seil ' 1..
those living Otle or two doors away offenden 11!111 sexually onented
.., I"
. IjI 1
from the .offender's apartment, and offenders DHISI register periodically .
p"eSI~~'~ent
only the apartment manager ~Y be with ~ir local ~ff's o~c~s. The
.
I I
II
I 1
\II
notified if the offender lives next door office ts. chlrpd wtth nobfymg not
.
.
to an apartment building.
only neighbor&amp; but also schools and . WASHINGTON (AP) - An ·Clinton's extramarital affalrs, they
Officers may not tell more people the c,ounty's Department of Human Arkansas sllte trooper asSigned to ~arne concerned for their jobs. He
because authorities fear they could be Servtces.
guard then.&lt;Jov. Bill Clinton sai(J in ] said they believed they would tiQl be
held liable if someone decided to
"I am hearing that muy people . ill affidavit thai as part of efforts lo able to gel another job in Albuu
harm the selt offenders or damage ~eel that. if they (sexual offenders)~ discredit Clinton he confirmed stories : because·of Clinton's ties to the Slate •
their property.
m a neJpbodlood, then the enbre. about alleged marital infidelities he , As part of his professional conBecause a selt offender has a right nei~hborbood should receive notifi· knew were untrue, according to pub- tract with lhem, Jaclcsoft said he
.
.
.
to expect to live in safety, there must caliOn, especlally where both parents lished reports. ,
.agreed that he would "use his bell
· By The Allocla,l8d Presa .
·
·
be
a
good
reason
greater
feaifor
work
or
a.
sing~
~nt
works.''
said
Inc
a
1994
affidavit
to
the
'
presi·
'efforts to secure alternate acceptable
·: Warm and moist air from the Gulf of Mexico is creating uncomfortal!le
another
person's
safety,
fore~tample
PaulaSmath,directorofStarkCoun·
dent's
lawyers,
trooper
Ronald
·employable
opportunities for body·
·: conditions in Ohio.
,
·
-to
disclose
such
information.
·
ty's
Vi~tim-Witness
program
in
the
Anderson
also
he
was
offered
a
guards;
if
they
so desire, outside the'
, · Hot imd humid weather, with occasional thunderstorms, will continue in
A Massillon resident, who said he county prosecutor's office.
high-paying job in e~tchange for state of Arkansas."
·, Ohio for the neltt several days, forecasters said. .
··
.
·
was molested as a youngster by an
Medina County sheriff's Lt. information incriminating 10 Clinton.
Jackson told The New Yorker .
·
Highs on Tuesday wili be in the mid·80s aitd on Wednesday, near 90.
oider
Boy
Scout,
said
"everyone
Thomas
Del
Regno
said
the
nolifica·
·
The
New
Yoiker
magazine,
in
its
that
another trooper, Danny Fergu·
The moistuq: from the south will raise huirtidity levels and ~ntiaue to
wiJbin
at
least
a
twoor
lhree·blnck
lion
sylltcm
should
be
given
a
chance
July
7
edition,
said
that
in
early
disson,
.
stated he would not sign a
: generate the threat of showers and thunderatotms.
.
:to work.
cussions with other members ofCiin· release giving the troopers' informaThe record-high tempenture for this date at the Columbus weather sta- area" should be notified.
"This law is to protect those in the
"This·is·Ohio's .first try at ftotifi. ·. ton's security force allout a proposed lion to the news media unless he wu
,: lion was 99 degrees in 1901 while the record low was 46 in 1943. Sunset
nciJhborhond. not just those next cation," he said. "If things really book on Clinton's sexual dalliances, promised $1 million.
· tonight will he at 9:04 p.m. and sunrise Thesday at 6:07 a.m.
door
to someone like this;" said the show that maybe somethin1 needs to Anderson verified stories he .knew
Ferguson claims to have brought
.
Weather forecut:
,
·own,
who
spoke
on
condition
of
be
changed,
then
we
can
go
back
to
were
false
or
on
which
he
had
no
Paula
Jones to a meeting in an
'
Tonight... Muggy with showers and lhundentorms ljke)y; Lows from tbe
anonyaiity to the Aleron Beacon Jour· the Legislature to do thai."
ftrsthand knowledge.
Arkansas hotel room in 1991 where,
:· upper 60s to the lower 70s.
·
· '
It .said Anderson does not diseredit Jones says. Oinlon made unwelcome
'
Thesday... Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and thundeniorms. nal for a story Sunday.
all the stories but that many "were sexual advances.
_ ·
• Highs in the lower 80s. Chance of rain 40 percent
·
nothing
more
than
old
fish
tales
with.
Jones
is
suing
the
president,
chars·
Tuesday night.. .Dry with fog developing; Lows in the upper 60s.
·
little, if any, basis in fact."
ing sexual harassment, and 'the
Extended fotecast:
Both
The
N,ew
Yorker
and
Time,
Supreme
Court ruled May 27 that the
Wednesday... Partly cloudy. Achance of showers aild thunderstorms. Highs
COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana·
Snmmaey of last week's IUC• in its latest edition, quoted Anderson case can go forward while Clinton is
·: in the mid and upper 80s.
·
·
Ohio ~ hog prices at selected tlo• at llllllboro, Eaton, Farmer.
: Thursday, .. A c~ance of showers and thunderstorms, dry at night, Morn- . bu)'ing ·poilltS Monday as provided stoWD, Lanc:uter, Wapakoaeta, as saying tltat Cliff Jackson, an in office.
Arkansas
lawyer
and
longtime
.
C
lin·
The
writer
of
the
New
Yorker
arti·
ing lows in the mid and upper 60s. Highs 110 to 85,
by lhe U.S. Department of Agricul· . MOIIId Vei'IIOII, Bucyrus, Creseon, ton nemesis, promised the troopers cle, Jane Mayer, also interviewed a
• Independence Day... Mostly clear. Momipg lows 60 to 65. Highs 80 to 85. ture Matket News: · ·
Cald.well ucl GaiUpolls:
jobs outside ~sas for seven years co-woilcer with Jones at the Arkansas
BIUTOWs and gilts: 1.00 to 1.50
Hoas: steady to 1.00 higher.
at an annual salary of S100,000 in Industrial Development Corporation
. higher; demand and movement mod· .
Butcher hogs: SO.S0-62.75.
exchange
for their cooperation in who said Jones was very pleased
crate.
Callie: 2.00 lower 10 1.00 higher.
efforts 10 link Clinton lo sexual mis· about her meeting with Clinton.
... By The Alloclated Preu
64, of Ashland, the driv11r of a golf · U.S. 1·2, 23().260 lbs, country
Slaupter steen: cboice 60.()(). ibehavior.
.
Pam Hood compared Jones'
At least 12 people were killed in cart struck by a car on Ohio 603 in points .59.()()..6().50, few .58..50 and 67.00; select 54.()().63.00.
"All that is totally false. It is excitement al having mel Clinton to
'' weekend traffic accidents in Ohio, Ashland County. .
·
61.00; plants 59.7S-61.SO. ·
Slaughter heifers: choice 57.()(). libelous, and it is perjurious. Ronnie the "bubbly enthusiasm" she had
, including an Amish woman whose
• SIDNEY- Derwin Sanford, 45,
U.S. 2-3, 23().260 lbs. .53.5(). i65.75; seiect 55.0Q.62.oo:
Anderson knows il," Jackson told shown on an earlier liccasion when
: buggy was hit by al drunken driver · of .Fon Loramie, in a one-vehicle · .58:50; 21().230 lbs. 49.()().S3.SO,
' Cows: 3.00 lower to 5.00 higher; .The Associated Press. "That is total- she had caught a glimpse of actor
; and a man who wu drivina •a golf , accident on Ohio&lt;47.i!' Shelby CounSowa:«eaaay to finn.
.., . : , .all cows 49150 and down. . .
· ly false. I never guaranteed anything Arnold Schwarzenegger in Little
: cart on a hiahway, the Sllte Highway . 'f'' .
. r
.
. .
U.S. 1.3 30().501) Jbs. ~3.oo:4,.00, · Bulls: J.Or;q owtr to highei'; all
''
Rock. She said Jones' nickn-- at
. Patrol said today. .
. coN'I'INENTAL '- Christopher fel" 42.00; S00.600'1bs. 45.00-48.00, bulls 66.00 arid ltoWil.
Jackson said that in 1993, when the office was "Betty Boop."
· The patrol counted fatalities from M. Pou, 18, of Continental, in a one· few over 600 lbs. 48.00.49.00.
Veal calves: lower; choice 90.00 the troopers were talking about comThere have been conOicting
; 6 p.m. Friday through Sunday,
vehicle accident on a Continental \liJ.
.Boars: 38.()().41.00.
·and down.
ing forward with their accounts of · reports of how Jones reacted
The dead:
- lagestreet.
Estimated receipts: 30,000.
Sheep and Iambs: 1.00 to 12.00
· SUNDAY
€ELINA-RoxieGrieahaber, 79,
Prlea
Prodacen Live- lower; choice woois 70.()().84.00;
ASHLAND - Emma Schrok, of Van Wert, a pasienger; in a two- stock Aasoclatlon:
choice clips 60.()().80.00; feeder
• 73, of West Salem, an Amish woman vehicle accident on U.S. 127 in Mer·
Hog maiket trend for Monday: lambs 90.00 and down; aged sheep
(Continued from Page 1)
: whose horse-drawn buggy was struck cer County.
1.00 higher.
65.00 and down.
The operation is open Monday
; from behind by a drunken !~river on
STEUBENVILLB - Janet M, .
through Saturday from 8 a.m.. 10 6
: anAshiand.Countyroacl.
Givens. 46, of Yorkville, in a one- .
.
p.m. for sales, Monday through Fri· '
. . .Iii&amp;£ :Ziti Pi I
.' REYNOLDSBURG - Johnny · vehicle accident on a Jefferson Counl IPKIM.
1\JI!I. JUl.'t 1 "IIINIH aACM• (!JQ!!l
day from 8 a.m.to 5 p.m. for service,
1 Justice, 38, of Newark, when struck ty road.
. :units of the Meigs County Bmer· Holzer Medical Center, Pomeroy and Saturday froni 8 a.m. until noon
IT.tii'TI TOMONIOW: by a pickup tritck as he walked alons
WARREN - James B. Young, gency Medical Service recorded eight Isquild assisted;
for service. The business is closed on
9:57 p.m. Saturday, Jimmy's Bar, Sunday.
: Interstate 70 near Brice Road in 48, Of Lake Milton, when his motor· calls for assistance Saturday and
, Reynoldsburg.
. cycle trashed on a Trumb\111 County Sunday. Units responding included: Jesse Arnold, VMH;
The business is located in what is
·LEBANON - Bradley Hillard, rot1tL
CENTRAL DISPATCH
6:S2 p.m. Sunday, Lagoon Ro~. expected to be a booming area for
: 36, of Monow, in a two-car collision
CAN10N - An unidentified
9: I1 a.m. Saturday, Overbrook Hobson, Keith Mauox, .HMC;
deVelopment, with the construction of
' on U.S. 22 in Warren County.
feniale in a one-vehicle accident
Nursing Center, Middleport, Everett
9:17 p.m. Sunday, Rocksprings the new Tuppers Plains Regional
"
· ·
SATURDAY
' 1 FRIDAY NIGHT
Delaney, Plc:a1111111 Valley Hospital; . ·Road, Clarence Story, . HMC, Sewer District and the Meigs Coun' GEORGETOWN - William J. . NEWAIUC-Jose H. Cruz. 52, of
3:QS p.m. Saturday, OBNC, Edna Pomeroy sijud assisted. ··
ty Community Improvement CorpoBryan, 53, of Groveport, when his ColumbuS, a passenger, in a one· Foster, Veterins Memorial Hospital;
. . POMEROY
ration's industrial site. ·
motorcycle ran off of a rural Brown vehicle accident on Interstate 70 in . 6:26 p:m. Saturday, Rocksprings
7:21 p.m. Saturday, Condor Street,
The building program in the East·
, County road and crashed. .
Licking County.
Road, Pomeroy, Wyatt Radford, Madeline Payne, VfdH.
em Local School. District is also
::
ASHLAND - Ralph E. Tyson,
.
RUTLAND
expected to attract business and
6: ll p.m. Saturday, volunteer fire . industry, according 10 economic
Boanttomeet
departmentandsquadtoHappyHot·•
.
low Road, motor vehicle accident, development officials.
"I hope that this can be a sparlc that
The board of directors of the Gal· Robert L. Diddle, treated at the
• CLEVELAND (AP) - No one with five of the numbers, and each.is lia-Jackson-Meigs·
VintOn.
Joint
Sol·
gets
t!Jjngs started here in Tuppers
; had a winning ticket in Saturday's .worth $·1,267. The 4,758 tickets id W~le Managemtnl Djstriel will scene.
Plains," Bibbee said.
.
:$16 l!lillion Super Lotto drawing, so showing four of the numbers are eaCh meet on Wednesday at 10 a..in: at the
·
·
.
Roscoe
Mills,
a.
'mcmtier
of the
·
.
; Wedtlesda)"s jackpot .will grow to worth $80.
district
offlt:e.
Meigs
County
Chambe!'
of
Com·
•.
In ·Kicker, no player had the exact
l $20 million, the Ohio Lottery said..
Vetenns
Memorial
merce,
expects
the
Bi.bbee
operation
six-digirnumber worth $100,000. . ·
~ Sales in Super Lono totaled
GIFT tSIT'R:ADI AVMMLII
Saturday admissions_ none.
to grow in years to come.
The four Kicker tickets showing Trusleel to meet
: $4,423,760. Sales in the Kicker
,..
'Uioii
..1WiiirniiL.....T 1
Orange Township Trustees will
Saturday discharges _ Harold
"This is just in the infancy stage,"
the first five digits are each worth
' totaled $676,470.
L--J.'!!!!'!P.: .. - - _.
meet on Tuesday ·at7:30 p.m. at the Volmer.
Mills said. ·~n:·s r';!Om for gr~wth
:. There were 96 Super Lotto tickets $.5,000. The 71 with the first four home of the clerk, Osie Follrod.
suft.4ay admi~ioQs _ none.
here, and lthtnk 11 wdl happen.
••
numbers ~ each Worth $.1,000. The
612 with thc .firstlhree numbers are
S11nday discharges - Francis . . .---------------.,..-~
Sialen com1D1
Davis.
·
' The Dally Sentinel each worth $100.
Penn V~ew Chapel Singers will be
Haber
Medical Center
(IJSPSJIJ.MOI
at the Calvary Pilgrim Chapel on
DlichaJ1es
J..ne 27-Alta Dill,
~tate Route I 43, Wednesday, ·7 p.m.
l'ubtlolled n«y - - . Monday di!Wih
Wav!f Hyden, Henry Eblin, Freda ·.
• Frtdoy, Ill Court Sc.. Pomemy, Olllo. by !lie
Victor Rou~h, ~tor invites public. LuttoQ, Carlos Galliamore.
Olllo Valley Pul&gt;llobi"' eon-JGonlldt Co.•
' - Y · Ohio ~5769, Ph. m:21". Secorill
DIM:~~arp~ June 28 ...:.. Dorothy ·
, claoa poo..,. pold • Pomeaoy. Ohio.
.
Am Ele ~ .......................41/.'
·
8
Wyari£ Marjorie Huffman.
Akzo O'"Mfoh ....ooouoooo~ooooouoouo•t•lljt
'
hi-J
"""
'Ii
Mauben 1be )\uodlled Preu, and the Ohio
AnarTach •• -o....................... J.I~ . - (~nued from Page 1.)
..,.-;barJ;es uae 67 essa
Now i t Aaoclllion.
Aahlei"CC 011 ...........................48\ ·Na'ple Ltd ·Gre·g ~Bailey contracto~. Saxon.
ATAT ·--····..........,...........35\
Home C~k En~; and Henry
Blrtbl - Mr. ud M,p. Tim ·
POSTMA~! Send - · eo&lt;reetioo• 10
1be Dally Sentinel, Ill Coon St.. Pomm&gt;y,
Bentt one.;..........................
Jktitund Dale l:lart, Racine Village Neekamp, ;son, ·Gallipolis; Mr. and
Cillo 4$769.
Bob Evlr.la~·~··:···.~··;·.~·;··-···~·1•,.
· be
·- ·
Mrs Oreiory White dauahtet Oal
1
. 1 ·Council mem ts.
··
. ·pot··
•.
•. •.
...-.- ..,._
~
Also ititioduced ·wu ·•Norma It ts.
·· · · ·
·sliUclttPTION IIA'111S
Chamfll!ln _ .......;..................1'!..'4 .Ha··......_· ..__ o --,·ne Ia'.brarian. The .
(Piililiabed wltb _ . _...._)
1J OlrrlorwM..Clrllnn~-=••••""~ ...,..,,..,,,,,_JI_
WUIUII~Utt;n.;
J"'5la.....()Be \Vaet.......•......~ ...............:...................$100
CIIy HO · .......;.........;.........:33
library will be open Monday, noon to
()lie MOIIIb ........ - ............. _,,,,,_,,,, ............$1.70
'
o.ov. ........................................... lt04.oo
Fecllr'lllloO!II...........m .........1
8 p.m., and Tuesday lhroulh ·satur· ·
~-- ,•••~.......................... 00l
day, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m..'
.
.
Sll'KIU COPY PRICB
' lllily·............................:........:............ 35~
Goodv..............................
~
Ralph
w~rrv
provided
keyboard
tctn.{.............................,_,'!!Z- k
-·J
I
I
'
.
Solloull&gt;ell ... dellri"' to poy ... ...y
Llindllnd......."""""""'""-·211&lt;o . musi~ for the open house. Aqwers
NELSONVILLE (AP)
1W0
:ll"'I'PA services include:
...,.,I• .a- direct 01 'lbe Dolly SeMI11I
UtL
.............
~
.....
,
....
-"""""1~j'
in4
greenecy used in the ~ng ·
.
od
00 I - dzcwl2 month bloiL tNdltwiO ..
01111 . . Finl ..~;. .....................1!,
were provided by Melp ~ tcen~agm are back tn cust Y at a
Free as~e~sment of your skills to
OY8 ............:.... ~.....................38
· Conm)issioner Jeff Thorn~Cln, · and juvenile ·detention center in this
help you decide wbat job is right for
~~---. No Rlllocri(lllon by· mt,IJ ·pormlaed In INU
One VaiiiY....;........................~1
Friends of the Library did the deco- southeastern Ohio city.
' .
you.
' '1111.111 ;,...-......,...,....;..........--:;
riling aad serVed the refreshmeilts.
The twO 14-year-olcl ~ Counp..m Flnl...............................1.!,
Grouild for lhe Racine library ty boys ~lped from Hocki~l Valley
Assessments inclUde IUgtltlons ror
•' ,fi,t,ue, _
... ...,. ..............
RRDII
.
a
llt•lllall
.
l
....
..i
..
.-...-...
,_
...
~.11\o
•
·
·
.
u__·_L ..:...• ..._.. __ on
·
the
tiormer
'
..
Coaimtllllty'
Residential
Center
Fri·
· tralal• or uparad.lq 1k1Dr.
Q' ; ~
. .~.%~:;~
;.:r· tv·-~~r""'".......-.. ...... _.
:a
mmao~1 .,._ ""~'
. . . . . . 110)' llo ir'pl
- -,
81\onay'a
,,.;.,,
..
_
...
_,,_.....
··
yY~Pickena
property
on
Sept
13,
day
ru,bt
They
were
captured
at
II
, . _ . , . . I I; Ill
Flna!ld•l Aalltallce for tetraining. ·
'
Blink
......
1996.
'IWo
winp
were
added
10
the
·
p.m.
Saturday
by
Nelsonville
~lice
MAIL._...WIIOfll
&lt;=-JIIIter matdl or your sldlil wltb
11W===..-~IV'•:.;"jjji'"''·-·'-·
""""'"'
old..-..~~ botrN OD the
t.o In
die A.Jbena
. Count)' comrnuntty of
lollilo *"c..,
I
Wr-rllllngton.-...---.....
~
1J
BUChtel
job baak of 40,000 employers fril!n
.
_._._ . .
provide 3,000 ..... faet lpiCC. I
'
.
auo.
.
~ .......................................
Columbus to Charleston.
.._ rap 11rta .,. 111e 10:1f! 1bia Includes a foyer, main book
Police and de!enlion center ~111111111...-•.o............
,110
-~MofiiC..,· · ..
·.. ~
-G ="·' oVIdld by . . . rooq~ kitdteLetli6 Mli'OOIIII and a . cials h&amp;ve not released any addiUon·
' -...........- ..........,........-,.bt~
Uf- - - 'meeti~.
'niCa! COlt of pro. . ., infonn_.don on how they escaped
~--..................................,
·
ject
W!ll
$367,000.
1
· · or on their arrest.
i • ._. ....... -...:.-..." .. _ .._ .._slae.n
..
'
1
..

report

accident

·TJ ,..olner adml•ts con l.•mtng
•
unt·•ut·...s about

·:As rainfall continues, humid
.; conditions ·set to increase .·
~ ~

.m!l

!Today's livestock report .

:weekend wrecks kill 12

rnm

Bibbee's new

EMS UnitS
• resp0n
. d tO C811·$

'

$

iSuper Lotto jackpot goes to 20M

!

. Announcements

Hospital new$

______....,.....,

,__

Stocks

Library' OpenIng

·

Are you 55 or
t;tlder and
·.Looking for a
job? .

.48l- .

-w-. ............................

M;

Juveniles return
•to h'oldlng cen•er

The GaUia-Meigs .TTPA
grop-am can help you!

-"""'"--lomllllllo.

;

. . . .

3

,_,,,'"""""""""!

....
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
-.
.
.....
1
.

-Hott. . o... o.... -

+:·

...

. .......

~

•

The Dally S1ndnel• P81tS

t ..

•" • I ' &gt; ~

r',

:,1• ,', ' ~ .,-'

-·-r

room.

..

rT.:!
the

I

•

�..

Sports.

•

•

·TheD

,•

Sentinel

Blue Jays clinch .
~ sweep of Orioles;
. M.ariners ·also win

,

Palll4
June
817

.
.
l
Cardln~ls top R
'

.

Pom11 t1'J • Middleport. Ohio

'

•

s 6-5 In 12
,

I

•

,.m.

homer in 66 113 inninp, a lwo-n.~n ,
By J01 KAY .
of m.t pill:e.' .
CINCINNATI (AP) - Ron
"We played hard !!lit aeries," shot by Eddie.liubensee that tfcd it !
Gant'a modell hit made a inonu.. Gantlllid. "We pleyed'Jikc the Car· 111 3 in the third innina. B·enes has ·
mental differonce.
dinals of lalt year. This was a good allowed only tJne homen this season, the other two comin1 in a May
After blowlna four leads, aquirm- series for our confidence."
.
ing throuJh tJne Cincin11atheoring
II wasn't sood for travel sched- 3 aarne in New York.
'Thubensee
also
had
a
sacrifice
fly
!threats and enduring two 10111 rain ules. The game began at 2:17 p.m.
· :delays. the St. Louis Cardimils man- BDT and fini~ al 8:37 p.m. with in the fii'SI ·innina. 111d lfal Manis
1aged to go home feeling pretty good · · rain filling and perh8ps 200 fans left tied the game al 4 with a .double in '
· Sunday niahi while thC Reds went in the standa, There was a rain delay ·the sixth off B~nes. Who allowed
away numb.
of I hour, 27 minutes in the second 'eight hits'and struck out seven over
·
·
Gant singled softly to ript f~eld innina and I hour, 26 minutes in the six innings.
in the 12th inning, driving in the lop o{the lith.
Mike Morgan remained wioless
decisive run in an exhausting 6-S
·The Cardi11als won for the first · in three starts agai.nst St. Louirsince
victory· that ended more than' six time in five exlrl-inning games this the Cardinals released pim last season. Morgan left after only 4 213
season. The Reds are S-61.,
hours after the fint pitc:h.
"It was just a long day/ ' Gant.
Daimy Sheaffer started. the 12th innings wiih St. Louis ahead 4-3,
said wearily, ,after driving in the Car- with a single off Hector Carrasco ( 1- givina up Ray Lankford's 16th
dinals' finit run in extra innings this ' 2), advan~cd on ~lino ~hields' homer and a pair of RBI ,singles to
season. "We felt if we,were goini to sacrifice·and came around·oo Ganl's MeG~,
.
.·
Lankford's·
16th
homer
in
the
stay here all night. we might as well . single to.right.
third
inning
was
only
the
fourth
off
win and go home happy."
·John Frascatore (3·2) pitched out
That's ·in sharp' conrrast to .how of jams in the filth and II th to get Morgan this season.
Notes: Wlicn the Reds gave away
the Reds felt after W!ISting-scorina the win. and Dennis Eckersley got
threats in the ninth, t Oth and II th the final three outs for his l6th save fishing rods on June 8, rain fon::ed
postpo~emenl of a game against the '
innings. ·
,
·
in 18 chances.
"I was too delirious," said Joe
St. Louis had four earlier leads, New York Meis. They gave away the l
Oliver, who caught all 12 innings , the l.ast after Royce Clayton hit a· leftover rods on Sunday. .. . John '
and homered in the eighth to send it solo homer for a S-4 advantage in the Mabry was a late scratch from the
·to extra innings. ·
eighth, 1".1. Mathews gave u~ Ia two- Cardinals'Jineup because he felt ill.
"It was a tenible loss," ·manager .out homer to Oliver, his fourth, to tie He pinch-hit and drew a walk, in the
Ray Knight said. ·~we had so many it in the bOttom of the inning')
. . 12th. ... Sanders, asked ,out of the.
opportunities to score the winning . The Reds had chinces to·:~ in in Reds'lineup so he could regroup. He
run."
,
.the ninth, lOth and lith innings. was inserted ·as pinch-hitter and
The Cardinals took three of four Willie McGee ran down .Dei on went O.:for-2, leaving him in a 2~for"
in Cincinnati and have woli five of Sanders'linedriveiorightfiej~ with 31 slump: ... Pete Schoufek, disabled
seven from the Reds this season. The · two runners on base in the bottom of by tendinitis, jllayed catch before the
game and reported.tbat his elbow fell , .
defending NL Central c:hampiOns the lOth inning to preserve~- tie.
have won .seven of their last nine
St. Louis' Andy Benes failed to fine. There's no timetahle for his
games overall to close within a hold three leads'and allowed hli first return.

a

.,

'

··

Giants -defeat Rockies 7-4;
Braves and AstroS·; also win

grounder in tha fifth inning·of SUIIdaY'e National League game in Clncinneti, _..,. tha C.rdinale won 6-5 In 12 lnnlnge. (AP) .

FORCED OUT- The St. Louis Cerdlnllle' Dell·
.no DeShleldl (right) 11 forc:ecl out at third ban.

. . , Clnclnlllltl third sacker Eduardo P ruchee third after ecoopi119 Gary ,Gaetti's

Yankees down. Indians 11-10
· for the Yankees. New York carne
back ftom a 7-Jdeticit and blew a
kind of win that typified their 1996 I 0-7 advantage before prevailing.
IICIISOn,. and it gave the New York.
"We never give up," Martinez
Yll!lkees another reason (o think said. "Cone got it a little bit today,
1997 could be special, too.
but our team linew that we were able
"For anyone who doesn't think . to score some runs. And no matter
We have that tire or desire this ye.ar," how far down.we got, we were able
New York catcher Joe Girardi said, to come back and win the game if
"they should take a look at a game our bullpen did the job. And they did,
like this: We've still got it"
late in the game." ·
The Yankees withstood an early
After a tight 3-2 New .York win
, Cleveland 'onslaught against David on Friday, the teams combined.for 31
Cone and rallied from four runs . hits Saturday in .Cleveland's 12-8
down Sunday before holding off the victory. Sunday was another slugfest
Indians 11; 10,
,
as the clubs totaled 21 runs and 28
By winning two of three tough hits.
games against the Indians, New
_ "We.had a chance to win all three
York moved within S 1(2 games of games," Cleveland third baseJI!an
AL East•leading Baltimore, which Matt Williams said. "You-can 'I ask
dropped its fourth straight. Just for more than that:"
weeks ago, Yankee fans were ready
Arter Yankees relievers blew a
to concede the division to the Ori- three-run lead in the top of the
oles, but with the Atlanta. Braves eighth, Martinez came through in the
coming to ·town for a three-game homehli.lftocontinuehishittingtear.
World Series rematch, folks are Martinez, who hit a three-run homer
thinking October baseball again.
in the first inning, bas II hits in his
Tino Martinez, who hit a three- · last 20 at-bats. His first,inning bonier
run home!' in the first inning, singled was his sixth in 17 at-bats over six
home the winning run in the eighth game_s.

By TOM WITHERS

.

· NEW YORK (AP) - It was the

.

.

'

.

.,

.

By BEN WALKER
the seventh.
five"run deticino complete a four.
''Estes was tough on us," ,\;,aid game 'sweep at Turner Field.
,
AP Baeeblll Writer
"I'm just seeing the ball real well
Barry ·Bonds is the big name on Dante Bichette, who struck out')fjth
The Braves have won five in a ':
right now and the opportunities that the San Franclsco·Giant.s,llllll right· runners on first and third to end.fhli row, and have won nine straight
are being presented to me by the oth- fully so. A three-time NL MVP, he's third inning. "There is nothing ~~~e series against . Philadelphia. The
er guys in the lineup is incredible," · on a recent tear in which he's hit II about his record, and he's a reason · Phillies have lost six consecutive ·'
· Martinez said. "I'm not a power hit· home runs in ~2 games.
the Giants are in first place," 11
games and ,_.of IS.
.;
ter like some of tholie big guys.! just · - Shawn Estes, however; has been
Walker hit a home run in the mnth
Phillies starter Scott Ruffcorn
go up there and try to hit the ball . just as resp(jnsible for keeping the off .reliever Doug Henry. Walker was pulled after S 113 innings, "
hard. Right now, I'm seeing the ball surpris,ng Giants in first place in the went2-for-3 and leads the majors''" · though lie had noi allowed a hit and ,,
well . and getting a few over the NL We.st.
batting at .410.
.
held a S-0 lead. But Ruffcorn walked
Estes won his seventh straight . Bonds hit his 19th home run, and · · four, hit two batters and threw two
fences."
·
Manny Ramirez (!rove in four decision, pitching San Francisco ·Jeff Kent and Damon Berryhill ~~~!&gt; ·wild pitches.
. .
runs and Williams hit liis third homer past !he Colorado Rookies 7-4 Sun- connected for solo homers for San
Ron Blazier relieved in the sixth, '' •
day at~ Field. · . ,,
l'niiieii!IXI'. Both Darryl Hamlltim'aliil'' and Mark Lemke hit an ~RBI single :
in two days for ihe Indians.
Cleveland catcher Sandy Alomat
Esies (11-2)' shut out C!Qiorado Bill Mueller had three hits for lfte-· and Lockhart connected for the first
~ingled in the ninth inni~g to exten~. until Lany Walker's RBI single in Giants. who led'S-0.after six innings. , slam of his career, tying it at S·: Fred ,. '
his hitting streak to 26 games, five the seventh inning. It was another
"Getting the lead helped my con. McGriff tripled home the go-ahead "
shy of the team record set by Nap sttong outing by,the left-hand!:r. who fidence and help me relax becauSe:·'! run in the seventh.
,
"
Lajoie in 1906.It was the sixth time hasbuilt·asolidcaseforanAII-Star didn't have my changeup," Estes
Mets 10,Plrates8
during his streak · that Alomar has berth in his first. full season in the said. "I spotted my faStball away 11'of
John Olerud homered twice and
gotten a hit in his last at-bat. ·
majors.
strikes aiKI was effective changing Todd Huildley, Butch Huskey and ,.
"We didn't pitch well," Cleve·
"There is no·question he llelongs, speeds when they were looking over Matt Franco alsl' hit home runs as , ,
land manager Mike Hargrove said. and today was another example of · 'the plat_,." ·
;, .
New York oven::ame a 6-1 deficit at ,,
"When we score. seven to 10 runs, why he belongs," Giants mllnager
In .otherNI,games,Atlantarallled Three Rivers Stadium.
Dusty Baker said. "We needed this past Philadelphia 6-5, New Y~rki~t · John Franco, who f!lew two save
we shoul!l win." '
With the score tie&lt;l at 10 ill the game and SHawn pitched well Pittsburgh 1o.a, Los Angcht:s . chances Jut week against Pitts'
eighth, Paul O'Neill singled with one enough to wi!l. He got into some stopped San Diego 10-4, Aorida burgh, earned' his 342nd save, mov- ,
out off Jose Mesa (0-4)' and raced to jarps like Tom Glavine and Greg defeated Montreal S-2, and HouSton ing him past Rollie Fingers into ·~
. · third on Cecil Fielder's opposite- Maddux do and got out of them just downed Chicago 10-8.
fourth place on the career list.
Brave~~6, Pblllia S .&gt;t·,
Franco had a two-run hoincr, ·•
field hit Left-bander Paul Assen- like Glavine and Maddux."
macher came on to face Martinez,
Estes struck out seven and left
Pinch-hitter Keith Lockhart !lit a giving him six . straight hits as a .,
who lined a 1-1 pitch to center.
with the bases loaded and no outs in grand slam as-Atlanta rallied from a
(See NL on Pqe S) ·

., '

..j'

(WCD8"d 3-6). 10:0!1 p.m.

Base ball

! AL standings

Tuesday's games

-~~~·' l! J. Ea.' .

-•, r -

Gil

iiiiilii&gt;ore ...............!O 17 .649

~

~ :=.:: ::::: : :::: ~ . it

~
~

l)ciroil .....................1:1 42

~}~

lli

.455

IS

.. ~
c-niDI.WO..
:· CL.EVELAHD ,... ,.J9 ~3 52~
i ChiCIIO..................&lt;IO 311 .51.
' ' t,lllwulooo ............. 37· 3') .~7

3

-:: · Min..ota ..... ,.........l5 43

6

I

.': KuAI Cily ........... ~ 40 .474

'

~:

4

.449

Walem DiYIIie»n

' llalllc ... ............... ..47 ~3 .5118
1 AMbelm ................41 ~8 .519 .
' 'foUl ..................... 38 40 ,487 '
• Qald... ..... ............ :14 48 .415

·.

5~

8
14

·satuNIIr'• sc:ores ·
CLEVELAND 12. N.Y. Y"'l&lt;ees 8
Dotroir9, ...... 2
Milw11ukee ~. Klftlal City 3 ·
T-o 5, Bollinae 2
.
M.,_a II , a.icqo While So• 5

•1

T.W2. o,klond 0

)

SUIIIIar'ts; ~· ~
.

~.:~~~:=~~~
2

'
,
.,

.

N.Y. Y=II·
. DIO
CliiCIIO
Sloto6. Mi.-4
-Ooki~.?~T,.2 ·
·

!

-

! ·

. ••• ~

' T41CiaAL1'•1aa-L
~ NL
ll:oe-• (lc~jra 8-7) 10 ChiciiO

1
l
1 0*
. +4).li:2Dr·"' .
l
Florida, ( emi~4ee •6) 11 Bo11on
(Wiia:fteltl l-7). 7«1 p.m. .
N.Y. Moll (CI~ 6~4) ar Douoit
1
• ~H~ 7; p.m.
.
A- C&lt;*ol• ) • H.Y. Y ~ 3-:~ 7:3, .....
.·
I ' PIIIJ:*Iea (M~. l-6) ar Bdrl-

l

1•

9-2~ p~ I ·"'
~~~-~ 41l1111i~ 9-ll ar
1-4~ 7:31 p;m. .

'......

r .

' ua-.oo

T.,...,.

~ · CJrkaao "';" so. co-io
NA11~S.5).
(Ill

m

. ·

:)Sp.a

7-I)•St~

,· ~··..
· rar :
... .

·
.

'
!IWr ..., • ,,..
"AIIIIrol• ·COroll, I .OJ at C t -

•I "'"'t-3).

.:

· .
loll •

\411t!!m HS
p
7-1) • CINCIH·

~ ,. I qt
f
Mihr......

•
'

; ~~~~,.,. .
H) .. l.ol Alltltl

1

·, 1; ~

Monucal (Judcn 9·2) al Toron1o
(Clemens 12-2). 2 p.m.
'KanQI Cily (Haney 1·2) lit Chicaao
Cub1; (Cos1illo 4-9), 2:20p.m.
Aruahtim (Finley 3·6) 111 Color.ado
(Burke 2-2).l0!1 p.m.
·
San Dieao (Ber~man 2·2) o1 Oakland
(Prielo 6-5)13: 15 p.m.
San Francit&lt;:O (VanLaadinpam 4-S)
· ar Seanlc (Moyer 7-2), 6:35p.m. .
N.Y. Meti ,(Jone• 12-4) al Octroi~
(Moehle&lt; 5-6), 7«1 p.m.
·
Florida. (Brown 7-4) 01 B01110n (Eslwlmea. 1-:\), 7:()!11 jJ.m.
.
ChiciJo White Sox {~oldwin ~-1) n1
Pillobursh (Coolie $-11), 7.l5 p.m.
Milwaukee (Mereedu :t-3) 111
CINCINNA11 (8u'" 4-8), 7:35p.m.
,Atlonla(Heoai&lt;. IHl., N.Y. Y......
B-SJ. 1:~5 P·"'
Philodolohla (Beodo 0.3) '" Bll!ln...
(Eritkooo IM);7::1.1 p.m. . .
.
. MinhCIOta (Hawkiu 1 ~2) .t Sr. Loui•
(SioUloR1Y"' 6-3), 8«!p-m
,
,.CLEVELAND (Wnpl I.Q) 01 HOUI·
roo (Holl7·5), 8:0!1 p.m...
Teau (Sanlana 3-3} 11 Lo1 Anac:lcl
(CIIIIdiOIIi 4-1), IO:OS p.m.

t'"""'"

NL standings

Apojocim6,.Sanlo I

-

. •

SIVI Fruciato (Foulke 1-2) Ill Seaulc
(Wol~oll4-4). IO:OS p.m.

-..-r;"
J('!'fJ..t)uOik...
-·....,

:r-

21 .6!10
32 '595
:14 ,570
3~ .557
55 '.295

c...n.40111.W..
4.1 .494

Sr. Louis ............... JII 41 .~I
Pi....... ..............36 4~ .4.~
CINCIIINA11 ..... ... 33 &lt;16 .• 18
Ch1CIIO..... :........... JI ~9

.3118

G.l

·~
6~
7~

·28

Saol'rMcli&lt;O .C-....&lt;16 :14 .l75
Colontdo ...... ,.........42 .l 9 .l 19

-l
=·
-··-1

.418
,438

SatuNIIy'•ICOra

~•uH 116
~it~~ 2

9. Loo ......... )
Floridl
'
H.y.-~
'
,

~9•-p
~- •- ·

.

l

~~
U n•

_..

TeAll. .350: Ramirez, CLEVE·
LAND, .3:\9; W. Clark, Telr.al. Xt,CI :
Oreer, Teu1• .3~; M; V®ahn. Boston. ·
.m:luori .... CLEVELAND. c ~l~.
RUNS: · Griffey, Seaule, 64;
Krioblaudt', Minneaotu. 61 ; E. Martiner.
Seatlle, 57; Garciaparra. Bo11on, ~6: T.
Martine&amp;, Ne• York, S_, : Bernie
Williams, New Yorlr., !'i4; F.,Thomas,
Cbil:qo. S4: Holliaa, An*im. _,4,
RBI: Griffey, Scank. 79: T. Martine~
New York. 16; Toll)' Clark. Delroir. 70:

Tew. 97: E. Mllllinez. Seuirle. 91: Gr.n-

denon, Anabciin. 96:· Garciaparra.
Bo•1on, 9S: T. Maninez. New :York. 94: ·

Bell&lt;. Ch!01110, 92: Griffey. Seonle. 'It:
Bntdy. Ander~on . Balrimor-=. 92: Cora_.
Scmtle. 92.
.
~
DOUBLES: O'Neill, New Yort, 26:
~""· ToroNo. 25: Cono. .S..tlo. 2~:,1.
Rodrif""· Te..,, 24: A. Rodri..,.z. Siol·
tie, 2. : Cirillo, Milwaukee, 23; R. O."l i.~
Seanlc. 22: 0...:, Tuu . 22: S. Alonw.

1

I
)
6

8~

5

~~~c.: I

s.rn, I o7,Cilorado4

4~

7
II

a.,..·

ST.OLEN .ASES: D.

- WUHOMERUNS G
~'
,
: rlffey: ""'""· 19;
McGwrN. Ooldllld,l9: T. Mor!lnez;Ntw
Y-ork.2!:_!11omc • CLEVELAND, 12;
8
. -1e. 2 I: TOO)' C11rk. Dtiliail.
S
BASES: B.L, Hunrer. De·
rroir, l7; Hi&amp;oo, T...,.o. .14: ll:oablaodl.
M l - 32; T. ~ .. Kauao Clly.
30: V.I. CLEVELAND. 211: llwhall.
' Ch!~&lt;!, II; Euley, Deaoir. l7.
'
PITCHIHO (10 declliO..l: Clo-•.
TOIOIIo, IZ-2•.857, 1.19: RoodJI'!"-n,
.Sanlc. tl-2..1146, 2.18: Munlaa. Bolli·
""""· 9·2, .811: 3.29: Etl•boo. Balli • • ,
- ., 10.), .769, 329; ICeJ; Bdrl..... '
11 ·4, .713, 2.661 P -, !lealriO, 8-) ,
.121, 3.65; c-, New York, 8-3, .721.

.2.62.

SllUKaotrrS· . _ . , - Ileal- ~ 164: c. ~. ...,:.. Ycd. IS); Clitoioo;
,....,., 1• .: Applor. "-a Cilv, 104:
M01ol11, Balli_,, 99; 8. M&lt;Ooultl, '
Mlhr~95: ........ T....... IIO.

•

'

''

l:.ul Anplelll HoaMon, 7::\0 p.m.

' I"
'
l

"

••

,,

·;·J'

.

'

· "'

.

,

. n·

~ .more

·

! -,

.

: I

j'

.._.c ri:

,,

the--.......-.

'

"..,,

,

I)'

The Dalfy'~~nd. The VhlcOIM Medii-...

It

WNBA ...........

,)

' 1~

. _ .... a., IS:.._, CINCDI"'A11,15.

lmpaGt In

,1:

c). . . .
.'
..,._,.
· ... ~-·-·_.. 1~'-S"

.l

·

•Siiilla:

71tl9K,..., ,...,.,._.......,... ---..- ,

..

I

" .

• - :.·
4----t

••....•

~

~~~~~1---~~------··
··---------------------J~·----~----~~~~------~----·~~~~
~~-=::~:·:'=:*~·-·--------------------------~··~.
i
.

'

•

•

''

•

,

,

'

·

·

h

. .

.NL games••• (COIIIin~
· =.

&gt;1&gt;

&amp;4ch IIIII!¥' 4dultt, Jtisrn; in the nn~Jsp•ptr.
r

I

6"
, •44
.

' I

' i

BtJ.rn ,
rubber.

•

' ' \f '

.7~.
•15!).

'.,1:,
' ,
w-. .-nllr.

'

..•

••
,,
'

'

2.67: P.J, Nlllllllia.·- . . .; 9-3; '
IJI:_ICIIt. "....00. 9-3, .75!1. 2.14',
STRIKEOUTS: Scllllllnl. I'IIIIHII·
phia, 151 ; P.J. 11!1111,.., ........... US:
· Alu ..... ·Sti LMil, I36; 'Helme, 1M
Ailiola. 125: KJ . ....... ~'~~!ida. Ill:
!mollz, Arlaioa. 10);·0 ; .....,,; AI·

bites·ear
of l-lolyfielc:t, who
retains. WBA title

'People's su:nday'
sees·Henman and
fiv'e A_
mericans win

•. ; The Eastern Athletic I ~oOaters . ing ·f1111!1s ~ing the barbeque profbe sJ'I&gt;nsoring ill annual Super its provididffiim ModemWoodmeo
Weekend at Tuppers Plains Elcmen- of America,' camp 3730. MCI!ls are
a.,y School Friday and Saturday. · S4.5Q.
, · . .
..
:. Thi• year's event looks to be one .,
Entertainment,.v!'"oua F.ornpet1·
of. the bigest Eastern Super Week- tioas, lnd games wtll be_staged. A
ends ever with plenty of action for . water biitle Of.die area flie depart·
... entirefamily, Apll'ldC ...II~Ick ,ment.s.wmbe'i J'I.liOa.m.,whilc!J
off the festivides at 9 a.m. whilo a yard sale will/lin all day lona until
cllicken barbeque w.ill r11n from · · 8 p.m. B~l and softball toiU'IIa·
,from ll a.m. to 8 p.nl. with liUilch- '
..
,, •l . ''
.
,
'
I

H

f1-:i ...

Ty~on

Wimbledon action continues

I

?Ill

..

Fight lasts three rounds

· automobile eds•

·kastern·IKJbsters set Super Weekend to begin Friday

lf':lf;

SAVIS: hck. Ill Frudoco; 26: '.

'

Tonlpt's pme

1

.loal or regional.Rf':"'sp~per, while ~7% rea~ a d~lly ,
, n~paper on a IYP•~I weekday. ~adcrsh1p srqwpo
64% on a rypical Sunday.
,

PITCHII'Kl ()0 .........,, NeOalo. AI·

:o,ll-1. .1146, 2.72: lodoir, M,..Niil, 11-2.'
..811. 4. ll : G. M..Wua, ~lll!llta. IO-),
.769. 1.5$: 8.1. ~ llew York. 2-4 •

"

· Pl~ce ~~r ads where more peopl~ can sc:c: rhc:m·:·~nd act.
71% of U.S. adults read at least one weekday edmon of a

Lolloo, Arlula.l9; I. Wolkct. Colondo.
Ill
·

.... I H, .911 i 3.27; Blla. SM

.Sund•:r'• scores

qoverage.

Sali~"' ;

. ..... , ........ 23: Joft)s,, ""' 11'.-L
19;
~ · 17: ~...a.'*
~ .._
..... 16:
Sr. Lolli. 16:

SAVES&gt;M. I\l-.HowYort.l6; ,
~,..,.......,.,il!l:l.
. ~
- , • ...
'. 19:
Dtlrra
·
laool, Tfuo, It:~~~~-TQaor, ' (
Oatlood. 15: ~Ill
15.

.l.~ ·1~s

)

"
"

Great:

CINCIHNA11. :1.1: W.-.t. Plul!ltvrlh.
31: DeShleldl. St Louia. 29:'Erie y..,ii..
· Colonldo.- :10: CloJIOD, Sr. Louis. 19;

·

2 .lOll ' · -

Saturday's oeoret
Pboenia MI. CLEVELAND ~3 ·
Hawlon 76. Ullth 58

'I

San-""'·

· •. ~ ....1. CLEVELAND. ~: 8 are lied

NL .,.,..

u..-. ............... . . . . . 1 .

2A; Boawell. _..,.,22: o...,...,c,~-·
undo.ll: Cao11Ua. CoiOIIIdo, lO: tl•ndley,- Vo&lt;t; 19: 8ootdl.
It; Botkt. Col010do.l7. · ,
'

'·

~,!"-."'· 5; oo.._. Kanoao

s - . . .............. 2

.,,

' Ntw York 6$.l'lloeni• 57 _
&lt;.'har!nlle 67. CLEVELAND 44

Wtlllm Conltrtnce l:., '
Los An,.:t.:s ...... ,...... l . l ' ·.500 1 Pboeni ...,.............. ,.. 2 2 - ~ . -

San

·

'llll

1.00
.750

I
, I ·
ctlorkllk: ......... ,........ I . 3 .l.W '.1 '3
3
CL!!VELANI:J :........ I ) · , 3~3

RBI: OalalnJU, Colorado, t12: BllJ·
well, Hou11ua. 72; L. Wulker. Cotun.do.
~: Alou. Florida, 64; .O.wyna, San Oi.:J,o.
6); Chipper Jonrs, Allantn, 62; Bit:h.m\.!.'
ColorwJo. 61.
. HITS : Owynn, ·sun Di.:au. 119; L.
Wulka, Cokwodo, I Ul: Biuiu. Hou11on,
I0 I : Galntrq4. C~lollldo, IQO: pjuu;
l:D• AftJelel, IJ9; Lofi,OII, Alllthln. 98: Eri~
Youna. .Colorado, M; &amp;awell, Housttm,
94.
.
.
DOUBLES: (irudlielaftek. MOftlreul.
29: Ba1Wc11. ifou11on, 26;· M_.ndini,
Phikidelphta, 2.1: L. Walter, Colorlldn.
25: .BrOJill, ~i,adelpiM•. 24: Bonilla.
FloridA, 24: ._..,_Monl,..., 2.1: Strow.
-IICo. t1: Ooyfl!p. St ....11. 2.1:
Olenrd.,_.. York. ill ·
. ' ·
TRIPLES: W. Gucrmo. Loo A.,.la.
8; O.Shleldl. $r: Lou~. R: Randa. Pinoburah, 7; Wonuck, l"llllburah. 6: D.
Sondoro, CINCINNATI. 6: Toctor. AI·
l&amp;uila. ''Eric Y011n.. Colorad0. 5. · · '
HOME RUNS: 1.. Walker. Col!lfiolu.

Oakll\nd.

0

Htl.5100 ............... ' ... ~

-.~5.

62: Buhner. Scatlle . 61: F. Thomus.
Chi"''o. l9.
HITS: I. RodriJUU. Tew•.110: a-.

20: ~· '-20.

w....... ~ ,

Loo .................... 39 41
SlolliOJO .... ....... ...l5 45

driRue~

TRIPLES: Ieter.NewYori&lt;.6; G'"'; a.

l! J. Ea.

-oo . . . . . .' . .
·

8A1TING: F. Thoaw. O.icnr:o .. 3KO:
S. Alomor; CLEVELAND• .)72: I. Ru-

M~.:Ciwirc.

Nc,-. Vnrk ................~

Gwynn. San Dieao. J 9J: Pioua, U111 Aa, aclcs, .367; Blatuer, Allanta, .J49:
Laftoa, Atlanta. .144; LankJacd. ~l.l.oui !l,
'. J3~: Gal MilL ColuraOO. JJO.
RUNS:.L WaBter. Coliwdo. 71: BiJ·
aio, Houlton. 69; GaiiVI'n,n. Colt~riKio.
65: Bondi , Sun Francisco. ~&amp;: l:ri(
Yowna. Col«&lt;do. '~: &amp;Jw~:ll. Ht,ullon.
S5: Olcrud, New Yurk. ~~ : Burka. Col·

ALieaders . ·

Belle. Cb!,aJO. 66:

Iaal

BAnlNG: L Walker, Colorado, .410;

Florida S, Montreal 3
Sr. U,uis 6. CINCINNATI5112)

CLEYEI:AND. ll.

-...01.-

AI- ................... 52
Florida ...................41
- York .......:......45
MGIIII001 ................44
Plilladelphia ........... ~1

Los Anseles 10. San Diea.~&gt; . 4

••

•

''
l! J. Ea.

wu the loler.
• Jofaybe tl!e Baltimore Orioles
Mar' • 3. .u,.112
· woa't n.1n away with the AL East
. Rookie Jote Cruz Jr. hit a solo
aft« all.
homer off Ric:h Delucia (6-3) with
· Joe Cider's sacrifiCC fly broke 111 two ou11 in the nilll!l ·al the. Kinieiahth-inning tie .Sunday as the dome, and Griffey WOIII 1-for-4 in
ThroniQ Blue Jays beat the Orioles 3- his tim tiutfield sWt silice atraining
2 to complete ~ir fii'SI four-game a lwnllrinslut Wecl!lelday.
sweep in BlitimtR.
Randy Jollnsoll,· in his tint start
"They did 'Ill the thing$ we've since slrikina oul. 19 apiasl Olkbeea doinalil y- long," Baltimore land, struck out aeven in eiaJ!t-plus
manager Davey Johnson said.
innings. He allowed two rtmJ .;......
· Blitimore'alead; 9 112 games on noae earned - on five hill ancLfive
June 5,'is down to S 112 games OY(:I' walks.
.
the *DI!d-place New Yodt Yankees.
Anahe.im loaded the bues with
· Geronimo Berroa, making ·his no OUII in the ninth and the SQOre 2!lcbut with Baltimore after beina Ill but Bobby Ayala (5-2} ~aped .
obllinccl in ·a trade with Oakland, the j101.
·
weni 0-for-S with three strikeouts.
White Sox 6, Tw1D14
The Orioles' new designated hitter
WilsOn Alvarez (7~) won his
snnded six run nets, making the fourth straight s1art u vilitiliJ Qica.
finllliutonaflyballtothewarning ao won for the lOth time in 12
itow's THE EAR?,.... RIIIIW Mille Lane lookt at the right llr of ·:
· track in center with a nln~r on fmt. g101es. All four Mi.IUieloia runs · EwncMr Hottfleld.ln1he thlnl. round of hll WBA heevywllght title :
· "It's only one ugly}lay. I'll be were unearned beca111e of (ieldina bout lgllnat Mlkt ,..,.. Seturdtly In Lie VIIJIII, Nev. 'fYion'e die- :•
t
•
· OK," said Berroe; who ilrrived in
errors by first bueman Frank . quallllaatlon, r11ultlng tram the ex-chemplon'e biting Holyfield'• - · ·:
.DEUVERS SERVE-~ RloMy ........,_ ~lv.,. hll
Baltimoreat2a.m. ''I don't have too Thomas and thil'd baeman atria lllowld HOI}Iftlltllo l'llaln hie c:Mmplon'e belt. (AP)
.
.:
wrvelo F1'81101'1 ~ulllllme ~cUing thllr llnal!!e metch at WJm. mliny games like that io my life."
Snopek.
.
blldon Sunday. Renlbera'l vlc:tory put him -In the tlnl111 for the · · Juan Guzman 111111 tJne relievers
Mike Cameron robbed Roberto
flrat time In 11 YWf8. (AFI) : ·
·
· .
.
combined for a five-hitter, with Kelly of a potential game-tying
KciYim .Escobilr allowing two hits in hqmer in the eighth with a leaping
4 113 innings to get· a win in his catch above the center-field fence.
•.
major-league clebuL Mike Timlin got . Roberto Hernandez then pitcbed the .
his third save of the series.
ninth for his, 19th save in 22 chances.
· Armando Benitez (0-3) was the ·
Dave Slev.ens (0-2) was pounded
lo5er.
.
· for six runs and nine hits i• 3 '}fl
In other AL games, Oakland beat innings.
Texas 7-S, Seattle edged Anaheim~- . ·
Red Sox 8, Tlpri 6
.
2; Chicago beat Minnesota 64,
Darren Bragg, in an 0-for-1 S
.
.
Boston . defeated Detroit 8-6 and slump, doubled off Jose,Bautista (I·
Milwaukee edged ·Kansas City 3-2. 2) to b~ a 6-6 tie in the seventh at By TIM DAHLBERG
through an enraged crowd that was 1
.
i
'
.
·Athletics 7, Ranieri 5
Fenway Park and Mike Stanley
LAS VEGAS (AP) - For once, screaming and making obscene gcs· '
Mark MfGwire hit his . 29th added a run-scoring single later in even Don King was silent
tures at him: A bottle of water
By STEPHEN WILSON
to become the first Briton to win the . homer to tie Ken Griffey Jr. for the the inninl!,
Mike Tyson's postfight excuses thrown from the stands just mis~ ;
WIMBLEDON. England (AP) men's•title since Fre(J Perry in 1936; m~or league lead, aiKI John Wette·
John Wllsdin (3-3) pilched I 213 had long since runa hollow, and not his head, and he had to be stopPtd '
- . I( Tim Henman· had his way,
"Come back again as soon as land blew a save for the third time in innings, and Hciathcliff Slocumb got
every day at Wimblcclon would be possibl~"wasHenman 's message to · four tries, allowing run-scoring hits five straight ·outs for his lith save, even the usually long-winded pro- from going into the seats to beat up '
.
,
"People's Sunday."
'
Sunday 's crowd. "I would love to Pave Mag!l(lan and M.ark Bell- helping Boston stop a three' game mciter in charge of Tyson's career . his tormentors.
was up .to the task of resurrecting
The fiaht, which stai'ted with ,...
It's easy to unde~tand why.
.exactly ihe same crowd .to be out hom in the bottom of the eighth.
. losinl! streak.
them.
Holyfield
smiling and singing to c
In foot-stomping, flag-waving, there again. Unfortunately I don't
Carlos Reyes (3-0) relieved StevF
Brewen 3, Royall :Z
The
outrage
that
foUpwed
Tyson's
himself
in
his corner and, Tyson
,name-chanting scenes never seen think a lot of them will be there for Karsay in the sixth and allowe!l one
Jeff Huson's two-out single off disqualification for biting Evander grim-faced across the ring, ended in ,.j
before at the All England Club, my nextmatch."
·
run ··arid t1vee hits before Buddy Jeff Montgomery . (0-3) scored the
"Henmania" reached new heights
nl'-tmatch will be-against anoth- · Groom got the final out for his sec- go-ahead run as visiting Milwaukee Holyfield's ears showed no signs of bedlam; with Tyson seemingly out of
abati~g. though, even in the con- . control and trying to hit anyone ·,;
Suilday as Britain's top player pulled er Dutchman, defending champion ond save. Xavier l'Iernandez (0-2) rallied for two runs in the ninth.
spicuous absence Sunday of the for- around him. .
;,
out a marathon victory to reach the Richard Krajicek. He's playing as
mer
heavyweight
champion
and
his
His
actions
might
cost
·
him
far
,"
fourth round.
well as he did last year.
handlers.
. .
more than a fine and suspension. ·:
'Henman's five-set, four-hour win
"Maybe he's the favorite,'' Hen.
"It's
certainly
a
sad
day
for
~xNow 'the target of the. scorn of the
over Paul Haarhuis made Centre man·; sai(l. ·"He's the _defending
ing,'' said Marc Ratner, directOr. of boxing world, Tyson will have a. ·1
Court feel like Wembley Stadium chii!Dpion, he's ranked higher than l
the Nevada State Athletic Comrnis- · tough time reaping the hu;e paydays ' '
during an England-Gennany World am. But that's nc» the way I'll
sion.
that have been his sjnee leaving •
Cup soccer match.
approach it. l .defmitely think I ~an
In
the
13-1
S
year-old
division,
Holyfield
nursed
a
pair
of
tender
prison two years ago after serving a : '
"I',Ve neverp· 1ay ed at"'
· " · , .·
nem bl Cy," WI!J,
.
'C· !11 '•frid11y's
• Tri-Sate
S Junior
ood Golf
Q. lf Brian Bickle of Gallipolis took third cars.Sunday, a day ·after Tyspn wu term for rape.
.
.Henman said. "But I can say ~lit's
While Henman got today otT, top•tcu•.t action at ugarw
·o
place
in
the
first
fl'ght
with
a
76.
disqualified
after
the
third
round
of
"We
don't
know
what's in store" i
n...t
·
·
· "
lded p s
~llie9
Club in Lavalette, )V,Va., nine, ~ocal
as i"'f.'''!~. JI &amp;\l,ts !ll tFnJI•~· . ·
se &gt; .
, , .I!IIIPI:8'wasso;
- ' golfers were
. among·the 103\..•.:.;cl- Dusty Cox of Gallipolis shot an 83. his rematch with Holyfield in box- for Mike Tyson." said Jay Larkin, ·:;. ·
For only the second time in his- fo~, ,., third"I'QIInd match on Centre
....,¥
the man betiind boxing for ShoW• .·,
toiy, Wimbledon opened its aates on Court againsl Byron Bllll;lc. Anothe~
J11111ts present in tile third leg of the · In ,the-. 10-,1~ yea,t•old-divisioo, ing's,ric~t fight ever. . . .
Nathan Plantz of Gallipolis shot a 4ll
Holyfield
is
$3.5
million
richer
.
time-SET.- which still has a ·1 ll2· :•[
the middle Sunday to beljl make up . three-time champion, Boris Becker,
series.
·
to
take
third
in
the
second
flight.
and still holds the WBAheavyweight year .contract with Tyson. "We're
the huge backlog of matches after a _ was paired against another Brit - .
In the 16-18 Y~·old division,
Drew
Bush
of
Gallipolis
shot
a
S2.
title, but il was a hollow win in a · wailing for a lot.of answers."
c.;,
waterlogged first week.
~ark Petchey ~ on .Court 1.
Sterling Shields of Mason.. W.Va.
The
series,
which
has
reached
the
fight
that
fell
well
short
of
its
potenEven
in
the
topsy-turvy
world
or,•
·
Like the first People'' Sunday in
.On the women's side, N\l .. 2
shot a -75 to win die seeond flight halfway pilint, '(lill resul)lC on Fritill
of
be
ina
one
of
the
best
heavyboxing,
where
things
can
change
.•
,
1991 , Centre Court was filled with Monica .Seles was up tg'aii)St SanAdam.Bu&amp;hofGallipolisshotin87.
July I I at Bellefonte Golf Club weight rematches in recent history. quickly, there seems little chance :.;,
thousands of fans who queued up , · drine Testud, · !Nhile No. 3 lana
In the first flight, Ryan Norris of day,
in Ashland, Ky.
·
Tyson, meanwhile, celebrated his Tyson will get !lnother shot at Holy- i
through the night to get seats that Novotna was due to•face;Gala Leon ,. Racine took third place with a 7.! ·
3181
binhday today ill the face of field.
·
usually go only to the privilege(!.
Gan:ja. .
. · ... Brian Ratliff of Vinton shot an 80.
·public scorn.
·
"We don't believe Mike Tyson ...
Even . when . Henman and
With top-seeded Martina Hlngis
L.
·
A Nevada bo~ing commission is deserves the privilegeofheing in the ·- ··
Haarhuis were warming up. the alrell!ly into the fourth round. the . .
OC~t.ers
.
scheduled
to meet T\lesday to con· ring with someone· like Evandcr ·"
14,000. fans - many draped with women's field was shaken up Sun··
· .
•
·
,1
sidcr finina him up to $3 million and Holyfield," said )im Thomas, Holy- "
U~ion Jack flags ...,.. macl;e so mU&lt;:h . day by the .eliminati,Oil of six seeds .
. suspending him from boxing for bit-" field's attorney.
·
notse the players cQuldn I hear the - No. S Lmdsay Davenport, No. 6
·
·
.
ina part of one offlolyf.eld's ears otT
The bizarre end to the fight came ..
ball hitting ·the racket. D,uring Amanda Coetzer, No.7 Anke Huber,
Isabelle Fijalkowski led the Rockers and trying to do !he Slllle with anoth- just as Tyson was starting to rally :·:
CHARLOITE,
N.C.
(AP)
chanaeoven, 'theY chanted "Hen- No, 10 Conchita Martinez; No. 14 .
with 1.5 points.
. er.
•
· _
arterlosing the firsuwo rounds. With
man! Hen-man!" They even cheered Brenda Schultz-McCarthy and No. There's no place like home. Just ask
"(Charlotte) shot well tonight. ·
"It's over. I know it's over," an a minute left in the third round, he
the
Charlotte
Sting.
•'
16 Barbara Paulus.
'
Haarhuis' double faults.
After starting the . seasOn with They were very comfortable," said anary Tyson kept repeating in his suddenly snapped and bit oiTa piece ,"J
· "from die word go, it was s6meAill!a Kollf!likova, the. 16-yea:rCleveland coach Linda Hill-Mac- dressing room after the fight. "~y of Holyfield's right ear as the two d
lhing I'd never expe~ befOre," oid RuSilian star who h8s been at the three road losses, the Sting beat . Donald. "In the tapes, they didn't career is over.".
fighters went into yet another clinch . :~
J{enman said. "'J'hb noise Wll!ljusta center of tabloid- attention here, Cleveland 67-44 on Suilday before look at all comfortable."
Tyson had 'just fought his ~ay
· ·-~
totaiiy different level. II gives you an . pulled off one of the biggest wins of an announced crowd of7,289 in their
home
opener
at
the
24,042-seat
Stinson said the te11111 is starting to . ,........._ _ _ _~------------.---.;..,-, ~
amazina sort of buzz. Virtually every _her career when she bjial H\lber 3-6,
Chatlotte
Coliseum.
find
its rhythm.
'·
time I won a point. !t felt like the roof 6-4, 6-4.
·
"We needed · a win under our·
Andrea
Stinson
had 19 points and
was going to come off."
Only five Americans, t1vee men
belt," s11e said. "We have been try·
Haarhuis held at matCh point at S- and two women, remained in the 10 assists to lead Charlotte (1 -3). The ing to ;et ourselves together. We are
former NOrtli Carolina State star also
4 in the fifth set, but doable-faulted draw after Sunday.
working toaether, we talk every day.
'had. five rebounds and two steals.
twice, each time the crowd breakiog
Richey Relieberg. whose lour-set
Win
or lose, we are learning a lot
. ~ Stipg_scored 23 points off 23 .
with etiquette and cheering those .win over Guillaume Raoux put him
about
each other."
mistakes.
·
in the round of 16 for I~ first time turnovers aild 6utreb6unded Cleve.Charlotte · Hornets forward
The tWo stayed on .serve until the in II yea!J, acknowledaed the gulf · land .O·ll 34-29, The Sting had 19 Anthony Mason, whose ' team has
fastobreak point$ to four for Cleve•
-- · land.
'26th game of the set, when Henman in American tennis.
sold out every home game for more
.
Accelc:ralc: your auro sales; advertise: in the newspaper.
broke at love to.complete a 6-7 (9"ltseemsrightnowthatthere'sa . "I thought the team played . than eight seasons, watched the
7), 6-3,6-2, 4-6,14-121riumph.
bit of a dtouaht comi,ng.'' ~said.
Customers arc: 7' times ·more likely to usc the newspaper
and unselftShly•" said Char- · women's action from a front..row
Henman, the 14th seed, became a "In a few rears, there. s defimlely a together
lotte coach Marynell Meagers. seat:
than 'rclevisio~ as rheir primary ad source.
nJI(ion!ll hero last year when he . possillility of not too many Ameri:''It's not a boring game," Mason
"Everyone played great defense and
. reached the quarterfi.nals. This year, cans beinJ•hiahly ranked. "
said. "They' reou1 there banging just
His. vicl' was shared ·by Dav~n- ignited the offense."
· the expectations .,e even greater as
Vii:ky Bullen added 12 points and as hard as I do."
-Henman and Greg Ruscdski -also , port, ~o&lt; (ell, 7-5, 6-2 to Den•sa Rhoda·Mapp II for the Sting. w~ile
The source people rely on most for
dlrough to the fourth ro~~nd - ~k: , Chlridkova! , , . . '·

to collect .first-ever VJCtory

~~~ ~

Scoreboard

•in. Awodal 1 t1 Pa 111

·S·,..
. · b ea t .R
,rng

..

.

The o.lly Senllnlil• Ptrge 5

Shields captures flight title .
in latest T-SJGC te&gt;urney:

.

.

•

will

'

·

,

~nts, f~Wing various ase groups

,will also be on handfor a COIIPle of
w~ll conliil~ ~ghou~ the day shows.
, .
.. .
w1th full, concesstons bemg run at
The group w1shes to remmd
those sites. , .
.
everyont ~the ~ivitics will be at
Among those ~on the list of Tuppers Plat~s this year. because of.
emenammenl are H•sh: Country, the conslfUCIJon a~ the high school.
Speckso.ftheBiue Orass, Out of the ·
All proceeds will go to the EastBlile, Delivered, Run and the ~m Ath~etic BOOSters. For rnore
Gospel Tones, Jua.t Country and·the . mformauon please contact Roser
Seabluglu. The Big Bend Cloaaen WillfOid at667-36$3.

· Weekly newspapers
orthoJII*I

•
I

TV

19%

Ill u sed

•

MagazlnH .

r:.:~•~4:!.&gt;·....,....----~......--__;_--------:-----

i

·::::ued:::;ftorn::.::
. :::..:
,

Pinch-hitter. He i~ baltinJ .500 ( 12· ' Louii .traded him to San Diego
fdr-24) !IS a pinch-hitter. beit in the Pernanilq Vlienmcla on June 13.
· .
'
·· Aatrot 10, C.bl8
IJIIIIOrlDoc~,.. '10, l'lldnl4
. ' Tol!lmy .G!Cii~~ making his tim
' PedroAIIacio, 0-7 in hia pteVious · 11art since Sept. 16, 1995, struck 0111
1~ lllaiU, pitdled Los Anples to ill
seven in 4 1-3 jnninp u Houston
fim yic:tory in II' JPII'IIII apilllt San woo a1 WrifleY Pield,; . ' _'
~
Dieao. The Pldrea woe iheir ~
o-ne; Who pitChed .a 'no-hiuer
oua eiaht 111 Dodpr Sladi11111. ·
for fhiladolpllia in II» I and sent the
Brie Karrol *Ove ill four lVIII u PbiDIIIIO die 1993 World Seriea·b)'
~io (4-7) improwd to 4-0 life.. ..... A11t1n1a in Oame 6 of the
*"'tplllltthePidrel.
·
1993 playof'fl, milied lut 1111011
· ,D y Jacbon U.~)dt~ his ,becaaue of lilck and ah!luldel'
;·liJdlllllnoijlk llld.lllla 0-41tnce St

for

'

'

'

,.

lnjuries.
.
·
· a - hit an RBI double'as the
Aatrol iOQk a 7-0 lead. But he tired
on the mound and left after allowing
four runund six hits.
J • Derek BeU and ~rad Ausmus
.drove in tJne runs apece for Houa~. '!my Mulholland (5-9) hulost ·
five straiaht lllaiU for Olie~~D·
Maillltl5, IQoa 3 .
Moi~e~ Alo\1, Who
M~treal
jntheofflmootolipwaththeMir•
li111, hit a two-run triple dill hiah-

fe!l

liahted a . four-n.1n first inning at
Florida. .
Bobby Bonilla homered in the
founh, giving the Marlins a 5-0 lead.
·The Eltpos scored twice in the sixth.
but left the bales lOaded -when Jose
Vtdro JIOUnded out.
.
M.Uns JI!III8ICI' ·Jim Leyland
wu ejocte(l for the finl timethil • ·
1011. He wa~· thrown ilul in the bot·
tom of the eiahlb b)l fil'll ~ bale ·
ulitpire Wally Boll for ....OJ a
qhaclt-awiDI·

..

•

7t% .

U.S. Daily nl\'ilpapers

The ·Daily Sentinel. The Welcome MediURI.

·
•S.,,.., lA./"""""" f,iliiOA

I.i I
1.

.

~

c)CMIMIJ

•

s

I

*" ,(,..., hf · - · -.,.j,, 1'1f- hr $&lt;......__ Roooca.

~i

. .l----~·~.d~h::~:~~~~:·~-------------------------------· ~.J'
, I

,j

'

.I

I

�Pomlroy • Mlddllport. Ohio

States'
record
.keeping .
tar.geted

Mlr astro.nauts

eBend

get ~

·br~al from.rigors ·
· of ·. ~tati~n's repair ;
11t1r URCIA IU.. .
:·p •erupt -• 'WIIk ·

'

.
·

.

·

The Dilly Sentinel• P~~ge 7

Identifying w.arni

.·

Dear Ann Landers: I am sending
you a column of yours that changed
my life a few years ago. I recognized
myself at once. Please run it again.
Maybe it will help someone else the
way it helped me. These last few
· years have been the best of my life.
.Please tell other abused women that

!

• ·., 1'lle ~ ot'Russil's maoglcd Mir space stltiOn salcl. "We are llive,
tbenk Clod," u the three-man mow finally gol a m,ncc to res&amp; 51!nday after

By MICHAEL J. SNIFFEN .
Jut week's_unprecedented collision. Alsocllted Press Writer
· Conditions aboard the 250-mile-high outpost were much improved: Some
WASHINGTON
Justice
of
die lilhts were bac:k on. the air conditioner was working again and the'.
Deparunent officials are confident a
autQmlllie
steerina syilem was almost back on ·line.
· '
national compute.r system wtll be
·
In
al'lldici
conversationtheir
first
since
the
accidentthe
wife
of
com'
ready by November 1998 to check
mander Vlsily liibliyev warned him, "Be carefut"
backgrounds of handgun buyers.
"I understand her feelings and her worries, concerns," Tsibliye~ told
Even so, they c.oncede state criminal
repcncrs
gathered at ltussia's Mission Control outside Moscow. "When I'm
records hooked to the system will be
listenina
to
her I cannot feel that she's worried. But I can imagine she triell'
woefully incomplete and inaccut:ate.
to
contain
it
in herself and. in fact, after talking to my wife I was calmed
Half an hour before the Supreme
down."
Court struck down the Brady Act's
later, NASA astronaut Michael Foale got a chance to talk with his wife,.
requirement that local law enforcevac:ationing
with their two young children in Kentucky. And he assured his
ment officials check the background
Russian
crcwmates
and flight controllers that, regardless of all that's hapof would-be purchasers, Auomey
pened.
he'd
be
willing
to fly again in space.
General Janet Reno assured reporters
Unlike the four pn:vious days- hot, humid, nerve-racking and crammed·
Friday:
with
power-salvage work .-.,. the crew enjoyed a slower pace and even took'
"'The system will be operational at
time
out
for a brief news conference.
that point. But what we all must strive
.
The
chief
flight director. Vladimir Solovyev, Commented on how well the
to do is to make sure that the state's'
men looked.
&lt;··
histories are as accurate as 'possible,
"We
.,e
alive,
thank
God," Tsibliyev replied in Russian. ·
and we're working with the states in
Indeed,
the
three
crewmen
appeared robust during the video conference,
that regard."
smiling
and
even
laughing
at
times.
·
Ken1 Markus. counselor to Reno,
In
case
they
didn't
already
know,
the
men
were told by a TV reporter tha
put the problem in focus: "Will we
they
had
become
the
most
popular
guys
in
the
world.
•
be at I00 percent when the comput"I wish it hadn't been that way,"1Tsibliyev responded.
.
er system starts up in November
Nati.
o
rial
Aeronautics
and
SI10Cc
Administration's
shut~
The
director
ofthe
1998 ? No way. Will we be at 80 per·
tle:Mir JII:OI!ranl, Frank Culbertson. wa.~ heartened by the ani'"llled .convercent' No. Will we be at 50 percent?
sauon.
We'hope so."
"That's a 11oot1 sign that they feel like things nrc gelling more under con-:
In 1992, only 1.8 percent of state
Culbertson said. "Basically, what you have is a slowly incrcasinjjlcv·:
trol,"
criminal records were accetsible by
el
of
comfon
on board and on the ground that things arc retul'!ling to more
computer. accurate and complete
normal
operations."
.
with the disposition of arrests and tri·
Mir's aluminum hull was pierced when a cargo ship slammed into the sta-:
als. a Justice Department survey
QUESTING ON SHOW .:.... Sarah Brady • · Brady, who wa• shot and wounded by the
tion
on Wednesday. 11ie inipact was so great that the crew felt and iil:ard the:
found. By !995, the most recent Juswallwd past 1i photographer while IHvlng ABC
asMsslnatlon attempt on Pre•kiMit Reagan In
bang,
and then heard the sound of precious air being sucked away.
•
tice survey found 33 percent of the SO
1981, dlscuesed gun control. (AP)
studios In Wall'llngton Sunday after appearing
It
took
the
men
at
least
eight
minutes
possibly
as
long
a.~
20
minutes·
million state criminal history records
on "This Week." Brady, the wife of JIRIH
-to disconnect power cables and cut research-data lines running between'
were accessible, accurate and comCops all over the country have to to replace local bw enforcement Lott. R-Miss., charged, and Markt,ts the ruptured Spektr lab module and the rest .o f the station, and to seal the.
plete.
.
The 1995 survey was completed · pla~e phone calls to court clerks to checks by the end of November 1998. deni~d. that "the Justice Department · hatch. Because Mir's newest, most-used solar panels arc located on Spektr;,
.
'
Gun dealers will be able to call a has delayed implementing an instant the station immediately was reduced to half-power.
as states began to get federal money find.out those dispositions."
Cosmonaut
Alexander
Lazutkiit
said
despite
all
his
preflight
training,
noth·'
Although gun control spurs con- number, identify the would-be hand· check system."
for improving records. By now, more
ing could have prepared him for such an emergency. Hc,said his brain went
than $150 millio~ of.an anticipated troversy swirling around the Brady gun buyer and get an instantaneous
On Sunday, Wayne LaPierre Jr. of
into automatic mode and he did what he had do without.stopping to think ..
$200 million has been passed out, Act, every state wants the accurate response.
the National Rifle Association said he
After four days of recharging Mir's remaining solar batteries, the crew
State officials will answer most of talked with Loll and House Speaker
and all 50 states have computerized criminal databases it mandates.
finally
managed to tum on fii(_C or six gyroscopes, which had been ·shut down
Markus said: "Judges want to know those calls, because ·~states wapt to Newt Gingrich and. said they are
some records.
after
the
accident )Jecause or insufficient power. The automatic gyroscopes
"Traditionally, states have been past records before sentencing. Cops be the ones at the other end of the ready to meet with President Clinton
are
the
preferred
way to steer the station because they use hardly any fuel.
preuy good about gathering arrest want to know whether the guy they phone, ... want to know who' is try· and "do whatever it takes to get the
The crew had to fire gtts·guzzling thrusters to point the stiii-functioning
data," Markus said, ''But it is not are about to arrest has a history of ing to buy guns who should be n.ational·instant check on line;"
solar
panels toward the sun.
denied." Markus said. Federal offiuncommon to find a murder arrest violence."
TheNRAopposes the Brady Act's
Because
the new oxygen generator still was not running, the men were
What is being constructed?
cials will field ,calls wherever state five-day waiting period for pun:hlsrecord 'that doesn't show what hapforced
to
use
two solid-fuel canisters to ·replenish their air supply. It's the
The Brady Act requires a com- officials choose riot to.
pened - whether the guy was cones and supports instantaneous checks. suite~~ of canister that'burst into Oamcs in .Fcbruary, causing.thc worst
Senate Majodt~ Leader Tre.nt
victed or the charge was dropped. puterized federal background check
fire ever in space.
· Flight rules require that tile crewmen stand by with fire extinguishers and
oxyscn masks each tiiiiC they activate one of the~;C canisters -just in case.
Back in Russia. meanwhile, officials husily prepared for the next supply
..n;,hl..,.Mlr. The cargo ship is to be launched as soon a.~ July S with equip. ment for a repair spacewalk. .
. A week or two aft!irthe auppJy., ship arrives, Mir'~ two cosmonauts, wearing press11rized spacesuits, are supposed to·enter the airless Spektr to connect power cables to urgcnlly needed solar batteries inside. and replace the
winners and losers," said Murray, the of transportation.
By Af)IICK JESDANUN
. hatch with a spare Ot,ttfitted with power connectors.
coal company's presidenl and chief
• Indianapolis and nine smaller .
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Two giant executive. "There are people whOse communities in Ohio, Illinois and
rail carriers see their blueprint for lives and livelihood depend on this." Indiana that now have rail competi·
· Analysts generally apce that CSX tion wo~ld be. left with a single carcarving up Conrail leading to
ANCHORAGE. Alaska (AP) improved service across the ~stand and Norfolk Southern's plan to break rier. In ni'ost cases, CSX and Norfolk
Members
of a college mountaineeradding nearly $ l btlhon to their bot· up ·conrail and . expand into the · Southern plan to give each other
ing class were :deseending •asnow·
Northeast offers more benefits than access to·preserve competition.
tom line .
rtcld in the Chugach Mountains when
Robert Murray. on the other hand, drawbacks.
. .
The federal Surface Transport&amp;·
they
slid on the 6lklcgree slope into
The plan would tntnoduee compe- tion Board has a year to review the
fears tough times ahead for his 500
a boulder lield. 1.000 feet below.
workers at the Ohio Valley Coal Co. tition to several Northeastern markets .plan and l an reject i~ outright or
Hands 01
Two people; man and 11 woman,
for
the
Orst
time.
in
two
decades
and
·
impose
cond.itions.
Not everyone will come up a winner
were killed.
CSX spokesman Rpbert Gould
from the ~mise of Conrail, and Mur· allow CSX and Norfolk Southern to '
Solllt'OIH'
Twelve ot~rs ·were injuned in the
ray fears he will be among.the losers expand interchange-free options for said the company already has worked
accident Sunday evening oo Ptanni·
as CSX Corp. and Norfolk Southern many CWilomers. Norfolk Southern out asreements with several shippers,
gan l'l:ak: about 16 miles sQIItheast of
Corp. split up Conrail's lines. · · says that for every single-line shiP: although he conceded "there's · no
downtown
~nchorage.
Right now. Conrail trains CWT)' I.S mcnt eliminated, six new exchange- way CSX will be able to solve everyGran!-{e .\gent.
Seven
men
apd liv,e women were
one's problems." ·
million tons of coal each year in a free shipments would be created.
transferred . from the mountain to
"Realistically, the plan cannot
"Obviously we feel this is a very
straight shot from the Alledonia,
Providence Alaska.Medicai·Ctnter by
Ohio, mine to Murray's bigges.t cus- benefit all carriers or all customers ~ood transaction that's pro-competi·
helicopter, said hospital spokesequally,"
said
James
W.
McClellan.
uve
and
pro-growth
and
can
only
.
tomers, a pair of power plants ncar
woman Janet Asaro. She said Iwo
Norfolk Southef!1's vice president for mean good things for the shipping
Lake Eric. 175 miles away.
were
confiFmcd dead and the 'others
If federal regulators approve the strategic planning.
·
public," he said. "Where there is.ncgMERGER'S IMPACT - Bob were in serious condition with mul·
$10 billion deal. ·Norfolk Southern
He added that "two-~arrier com· alive impact, we will Work out the Murray ot tbe Ohio Valley Colli
tiple fracture injuries and laceruwould take coal from Murray's petition offering services almost concerns on a case-by-case ba~is ."
stood near an where tions.
Powhatan No. 6 mine in southeastern everywhere .in the East is a much
The Wheeling and Lake Erie Rail· Co.
COlli II 1tcricl ""' la.ded onto
Climbers in the University of
Ohio and hand over the cargo to CSX greater p~blic benefit."
way Co. has one such concern. The trains at the.mine he tnlnl911 In
Ala.'iku
group wc{C roped
Scattered amid the companies' regional railroad had partnered with Alledonle, Ohio. Murray •
in Cleveland.
the togetherAnchorage
in .teams of tw~ or three ..
Muttay said usinR two sets of 14;81 (}.page proposal arc other forms Norfolk Southern to compete with mine "'-Y shut down due to the
crews and equipment Would drive up o£ displacements that the railroads Conrail in the Pittsburgh area. After added expenae of transporting They were descending from the top
Ill E. Second St., Pomeroy ·
of Ptarmigan Peak, which is nearly
shipping costs and drive away cus- identilied and insist arc sinall in num- the merger, Norfolk Southern would the coal. (AP)
5,000 feet high, when the accident
tomers once a promised five-year rate ber compared with piL't mergers. · tako over the Conrail route and
992-3381
occurred.
said.A.Iaska State TroOpers
• Some 2.000 jobs would be elim- become a competitor.
freeze runs out.
spokesman Steve Wii~.Imi.
"We're just ,the little guy in· this
The railroads consider such ·dis· inated nationwide. about3 percent of
ruptions to be minimal and unavoid- the current work force of 70.000. . whole thing, " said Reginald Thmnp·
able in a complex transaction, but . Pennsylvania will bear the brunt of scm, the company's vice president lilr at Nmiunnl Lime and Stone Cil. in
marketing and sales. "This is a $10 Ohio. ·said he .looked l'urwunl to get· .
their assurances come as little ~on­ the cuts.
I
· • About 80 miles of tracks would billion acquisition. and we arc cun- ting his day heft}rc the Surface Transsolation for Murray and others in his
bc abandoned, forcing four cu~- · ccrncd about getting swept uway. "
portt~tinn Board.
position.
.
..
torilers
in
Indiana
to
find
other
means
Chuck
Hodgkiss.
a
suiCs
!Jianagcr
· " It's callous to say there wtll be

.
·
·
"d
t
'OSJ
on
UR G Pli
rosses
ry
·
add
1

.

. I t;;'

'•)
'

Rot·~
.:

. Q

.

.C_
omm;unity ·d~lendar
The .Community Calendjlr Is
RmLAND ·.. The Rutland Gar. published as a 'tree-service to non· 'den Club, regular meeting, home of
profit groups w,isbin!l to_.annoupfe · Ann Webster, Rutland, 7._p.m. Monmeedng ·and spe~:ial · evenl!l. 'The day. "
'
calendar is not designed to promote
sales or fund raiseri or ally type. TUESlJAY
Items are printed as spa~e permits
· RUltAND .. Rutland Township
and cannot !Je-paranteed to run a Trustees.' Tuesday, 6 p.m., ·Rutland
specific number of days..
Fire .Sultlon. Budget hearing, 6 p.r!t
"
.MONDAY
COOI!.VILLE
Orange Township
POMEROY .. Meigs County Vet· · Trustees will meet•on
Tuesday at 7:30
erans Service Coin mission, 7:30p.m.
p.m.
at
the
home
of
the clerk, Osie
Monday at the Veterans Service Follrod.'· '•
·
Office, Mulberry Ave:, Pomeroy.
•.
POMEROY .. Summer practice
for Meigs Band, Monday, 9 a.m. to
noon . All members of the 1997-98
band required to attend. Questions,
call992-7141 or99?-5018.

break your neck.")
12. Breaking or striking objects,
(Breaks your possessions, beats on
the table with fists, throws objects
near or at you or your chi ldren .)
13. Uses force during an argument. (Holds you down or against a
. wall, pushes, shoves, slaps or kicks
you. This type of behavior can· easily escalatll to choking, stabbing or
shooting.)
.
Please, Ann, tell women that help
is as close as the telephone. Any
woman who sees herself in this col·
umn should call the nearest women's
crisis line and ·tell someone what is
happening. She will be provided
wi!h supp.ort and safety options.
Identifying the warning signs is
the first step in breaking the cycle of
violence ... Portland, Ore.
Dear Oregon: Some women . do
. not realize they are being abused until

199!. l..of; An1ela
·111ae1 Syndic~~e and ere.
IWM"I Syndica1e.

someone ~ints it out to them. They
have been made to believe that abusive treatment is what they deserve
and that most women are treated this
way.
I hope·!he women who see them·
selves in today's column will check
out the nearest women's shelter and
keep the phone number handy. They
can also call the National Domestic
Violence Hotline at 1-800,799-SAFE
(TDD: 1-800-787·3224). ]t could
save their lives.
Send questions to Ann Landers, Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif.
90045

A. No. Earnings for household my Social ~ecurity disability benefit?
workers (such as baby sitters) under
A. No. Your Social Security disage 18 are exempt from the Social ability payments would not be affe~tSecurity tax unless household ed by any private insurance you may
employment is the worker's primary have. However,1hc amount,.of your
occupation.
Social Security disability !benefits
Q. My husband thinks that I am may be reduced if you get worker's
becoming hard of hearing and says compensation or certain other public
that I should get checked to see if I · disability paymen~ .
need a hearing aid. Will Medicare pay
for this?
A. No. The cost of hearing tests Where Your
and hearing aids are not covered Social! Se~:urity Tues Go
under Medicare.
Out .qf every dollar th@l most
Q. I'm getting married soon .and workers and their employers pay in
I'm going to take my husband's sur- Social Security and Medicare taxes:
name. Should I contact Social Secu,-69 cents goes to a trust fund that
. rity before I get married or wait until will pay their retiremenl benefits and
I return from n\y honeymoon?
their families' survivors benefits; .
A. Changing your name in Social .
--19 cents goes to a trUst fund that
Security records requires proof of will pay for their Medicare benefits
your identity and evidence to support when they reach 65 or if they .become
the name change. Your marriage cer- disabled;
tificate can be used to verify your old
--12 cents goes to a trust fund that
and new name, or two documents, will pay .disability benefits to them .
one with your old name and one with and their families if they have to stop
your new name can be used. It would working because of a serious illness
probably be easiest to contact Social or injury.
.
Security soon after you return from
Your Social Security taxes also
your honeymoon.
pay for administering Social Sec uriQuestions tmd Answers
. Q. fve been looking at a private ty. The administrative costs· are paid
Q. If I hire a teenager in my neigh- disability insurance policy. If I were from the trust funds descri9ed above .
borhood to watch my six-year:oJd to become disabled would the and are only about one cent of every
this summer while I work, do I need amount I would receiv~ from the pri- Social Security tax dollar collected.
t&lt;l_~J!!&gt;!L!!J.is_~o -~~&amp;! -tei:~~?.' . va~~Ai~l?jlity Jn~u~?c~ poJicy .;t'fec! ,. __: ·-·-r· ., ,, . ~ ,. , ,, .

the pre-retirement earnings of the
average worker. The disability protection, the only disability coverage
mos.t workers have, is·valued at over
$200,000 for a young worker. Tbe
survivors protection is valued at over
$322,000 for a young worker.
It is the "Personal Earnings and
Benefits Estimate Statement" that
unlocks the real potential of the protection however. Fin·ancial planning
is the key to successful living in mod·
ern society. Knowing how much you
and your family can expect from
Social Security frees you to exercise
optitms that may generate additional
income for you, i.e., private insur·
ance, investments, savings . ,
If you're not among those receiving the benefit statements automatically, you can get a statement by calling our toll-free number, 1-800-772· 1213. Ask for a fonn, SSA-7004
("Request for Earninj!s and Benefit
Estimate Statement"). If you ·have
access to the Internet. you can request
it from bup://www.ssa.gov. Your
statement will be inailed to you
within four to six weeks.

Outstanding t~chers and the students
who nominated them were honored at
a Iitncheon hosted by the Meigs
County Historical . Society at the
Meigs Museum recently as t1 pan of
the annual "Teachers Make a Difference" contest.
The 'winners· were awarded certificates and given a year's member·
ship in the Society. .· ·
Winners from Southe1n Local
District were Donna Norris, overall
district winner, nominated by Travanna Moore; William Baer nomi·
mited by Mick Williams; Suzanne
Wolfe, nominated by Rachel Marshall; Tim Curfman, nominated by
Jamie Sm:ith, and William Wickline,
, nominated by Matt Nelgler.
Winners from Meigs Local were
Karen Walker, overall district winner,
nominated by Sandi Gilkey; Mary
Carolyn Wiles, nominated by Sarah
Clifforcl; Mary O'Brien, nominated
by Melissa Kirk; Tim Curfman, nominated by Melissa Young, aAd Kathy
I:taley, nominated by Darrell Jenkins.
Winners from Easter Local Distric~ we~ Joe Bailey, overall district

Eagles
Club ·

224 E. Main St.

P.Qmeroy, Oh
. . '992-9976

Every thursday
6:30pm

.Starburst-·
Cqv~r-AII.
,. ,. . Early·Birds
Uc. IIOOfiOI
•I

•

LIVINGSTON, Mont. (AP) · "'anted·. movt'e extras eager to watch
'"
rock star Meat Loaf chase a greased ·
pig. The pay: free soft drinks.
""'
'd 1ove I't I'f we got as many
..e
as .1•000 people out there •" said
EI1'za
" beth Schul••, coordinator.for the
~

Edge," and wife Meg Ryan have a
made-for-TV movie "Everything local residents haye bigger roles.
1bat Rises," directed by and starring
Hot dogs and other· goodies will home neafby.
Dennis Quaid.
be for sale. Proceeds from food sold
"Everything That Rises" is the
II be . boo .
k od
WI' II go
the Livingston Flood Vic- story of a man trying to hold onto his
10
He'
s ung a moe r eo
land and his family amid serious
and greased
Relief Fund,
. pig d. contest at kParkd timQuaid,
who'sSchulze
starred.said.
in such problems, including a disabling acciCounty F1111'groun
· 1 s next
fill hwee end movies as "The Big Easy," "The dent that injures his.son.
and needs peop e to t t e gran •
stands for Meat Loaf' s scene. Sorne Right Stuff" and "Postcards from the

'Hercules'
number one
at box offic.e

LOS ANGELES (AP)- 'The two
faces of John Travolta and Nicolas
Cage edged Disney's cartoon face of
"Hercules" at the box office over the
weekend as "Face/Off" debuted as
the No. I. film.
The' action-thriller starring Tra·
volta as an FBI agent who switches
identities with a terrorisi played by
Cage earned $22.7 million. "Hercules" took in $21.5 million in its
. The Daily Sentinel BABY Santinef is a
first weekend of wide release, accord·
Special Edition filled wrth photographs of
ing to studio and industry estimates
WEDNESDAY
.
local kids· ages newborn to four years old :
Sunday.
.
.With final figures due out today,
The BABY Sentinel will appear in the July
. MIDDLEPORT •• Middleport
Wesleyan Holiness Church, mission· Disney believed the race for No. I
29th issue. Be sure your child, grandchild
·
ary visit, Ptl'm and David Ferren serv- was too close to call.
or relative is included.
· "We think it's a dead heat. We're
ing in A13$ll:a, 7:30p.m. Wednesday.
Complete the form below
••
going to wait until the real numbers
and enclose a snapshot or
come in.'' said Chuck Viane, senior
wallet size picture plus a
· v·ice president and general sales.man·
$5.00 charge for each
1
.ager for Disney's Buena Vista Pic·
photograph . If more than
tures.
·
• one child is in pi9ture
·..,u.n.
Paramount, the distributor of
Pictures must
enclose an addiltonal
. "Face/Off," safd it-would have done
be In by
$2 per child.
·winner, noll)i@ated by Wes Crow Josh even better but lost potential movieTuesday,
(ENC!,.OSE
Kehl; Becky lldwards nominated by gtlers to Satunlay l)ight's telecast of
July 22th,
Joey Taylor, Scott Wolfe, nominat.ed . the heavyweight . boxing match
1997 .
by Josh Weavef, and Donna Wol'f. !Jeiween Evander Holyfield arid Mike ·
Plclures can
Tyson.
nominated by Cindy Clifford.
be picked up
· The contest required that the stuWayne Lewellen, president of
alter August 4
dents write ¥,•,essay to nominate a . Paramount distribution, estimated the
teacher telli~t,why the teacher has · movie lost IS percent of its take
Send To:
made a difference in their lives. because of the fight, which was
Judes looked~ sincerity .and posi- aimed at tile same rp'lie audience.
tive influence"'\n the student's pre·
"Hercules" .earned slightly more
sentation.
than Disney's last animated musical,
The 'contest give students an "'The Hunchback of Notre Dame,"
opportunity to say "thaitk you" to which made· $21 million a year ago.
teachersfordoingagoodjobas ·well :
"Batman &amp; Robin" edged "My
as being a me~ for the community Best Friend's Wedding" for third.
icH!Iu,sNAME(s&gt; &amp; AGE(S): - - - - - - - - - , - to recognize tft'e positive influence ,. But despite such stars a~ Arnold
teachers have·on children, said Mlir· · . Schwarzenegger, Uma Thurn:tati•and .
garei Parker, Historical Society PI'Cs- George Clooney, "Batmari" took in ·.
ident.
.
·
only $tS.4 million, a 65 percent 0
&amp;STATE----~~--------~-----------She noted ti'IIJij•it origiruilly began decline in just its second week. "M~
.
.
as a contest opeolo all grades, but ~as Best Friend's Wedding," starring . ,.
The Above lnformali11n )VIII Be Used In Ad .
now been nanowed down to JUnior Julia Roberts, earned $15.3 million
,
Submitted By:
No
high grades only, By junior hi&amp;J;I it ~s only a 29 percent .decline from iU ·
felt students have had an opponum· · debut weekend.
.
ty to ev~luate the !n~uonce teac~rs
"Con Air," ano~r Cage filni, . i
are making on the1r hves, she satd. earned $S.S million for fifth.
J
&amp;;;;:--;:;;;;·:::.;::.::~

Meigs Historical· ::so1c1
outstanding: teachers,

P9~eroy

•

.

1

mu~uy

Mullen, Musser

• 1 •

.

G'
.

included in the drive is $3 il)illion for · ave~age. 18 first two years and nine
scholar
. sht'ps.
1 t1
d
as IWO years; over 60 · egree proThe university offers free tuition grams, a caring facility, and reasonto all valedictorians and salutatorians able dost.
·
from any high school in Ohio, said.
Dus t'm R.tggs wasthe guest ofh IS
'
the university president, who also grandfather• Gene R'tggs. Ha1 Kneen
said ·that . th.e Atwood scholarship presided at the meet·
d
811
· ofmg
also provides free tuition to all high announced · installation
,officers
school graduates scoring 25 or better for thc inew year at the next meeting.
on the ACT test with a 3.0.or Baver-

Downing, Childs,

for

and animals.)
.
' 7. "Playful" use of force in sex.
(May thfow you down and hold you
during sex. May stan having sex with
you when you are sleeping or
demand sex when you are ill or tired.)
8. Verbal abuse. (Says cruel and
hurtful things, degrades and humiliates you, wakes. you up to verbally
abuse you or doesn't let you go to
sleep.)
9. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde personality. (Sudden mood swings and
unpredictable behavior .. one minute
loving, the next minute angry and
punitive.)
·
10. Past history of battering. (Has
hit others but has a list of excuses for
having been "pushed over the
edge.")
H . Threats of violence. ·(Says,
''I'll slap you," "I'll kill you" or "I'll

0
c:~~:;t:~~~~~~~~i:~:i~~~Jttai!~
• ~~~~:~~ty~~~~~bo:a~~~:~~ ~o~~ ·Extras soughf for roie' in TV 'movie, 'Eve.ryth'ing Tha:t' Rises'
ing driving since 1979 noting that
College ... small classes, an
.
·

You Can
Trust - Your

r------""·- -----------------_,

0'

and

a

"

.

·

BY ED .PETERSON
Social Security
manager, Athens
With all the information we have
been providing on Social Security's
"Personal Earnings and Benefit Esti·
mate Statement," I have come to
believe that Social Security migbt
legitimately be considered a type of
financial planning service.
.
We are now automatically sending
the statement to people who are 57 or
older. In 1998, we will be sending
statements to people 53 or older. And
by the year 2000, we will begin sending them to workers age 25 and old·
er.
.
While it~ true we promote the
statements as an imponant financial
planning IO!JI. it may be stre.tching it
a bit to view ourselves as a financial
planning service. You should consid·
er, however, that your Social Security taxes represent a substantial
investment in your financial future,
and the package ·o r 'protection you
receive covers the most horrible
threats to your financial ·security-retirement, death and disability. To
·the extent that i~ provides • ·basis for
financial security for you and your
family, .it's value in financial planning
should not be und~restimated.
. Social Security's. retirement pro-

Dr. Banry Dorsey, president of Uni· age irt'high school.
· versity of Rio Grande and Rio
· Dotsey noted that all faculty now
·Grande Community
Colleg_e, have ari E-mail·address and·all build-·
explained·how to improve delivery of ings are now wired for long distance
equational services to Meigs County techrlology, that a degree program is
through the use of distance learning offered in Environmental Science,
and modern technology, when he and 1h'at the university . is pushing
spoke at last week's· meeting of ~he ecori!Jrilic development for Southern
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club.
Ohill ·including providing office
Introduced by former Rotarian space· for the Southeastern Ohio
Judge Robert Buck, Dorsey pointed Regional Council.
out many 'things that have been hapIn addition, he said, the Univerpening at Ri'o Grande during his six sity provides many summer camps
years as president. AI the recent comshort courses to encourage con· mencement .the 363 graduates timii!d education. Reaching children
included the first class of 27 recelv- early is the key to j!etting them to go
ing a bache!~ of science degree ill to college, he said. ·
.
nurs~
·
·
: l' ~.~rs~Y.9~ncluded,~~ ta.I!!;:Jly.giv, '~S!i~ r~pl~c.~~ ~~\!! ~~.P.C'iE~cPf

Put Your Family's
Future In The

,.

,

ADDRESSES ROTARY. Dr. Barry Dl!l'~, president of the Unlvt!!rllty oi .Rio Grande, was spaaker al.la!l.l week's mating of the
Middleport-Pomeroy Club.
.
·
·
''

Two killed In climbing accident

NEW YORK (AP) _ Score·one faced two months ago, protests came president of KtigRn Tcl~-.:tHII Assnci- tu step up its lubhying of Washington
for the antitrust critics.
quickly. Critics focused on how ates in Atlanta. "This is a self· pulicymakcrs.
"I think W"'.ll
...........
Protests that a $50 billion merger · rc·ioint
• ' ngA't.&amp;TwithtwoofitsBahy mOicicd wound." .. ~
• ·.·-· 1!11 111 ..-·of AT&amp;T Cqrp. and SBC Communi- Bell offspring.·sccmod to conflict with
AT&amp;T. the nation's largest lung· tlcntctl lnbhyins ~ITon hehind tile
cations Inc. would squeeze competi· . the spirit of the court-ordered breakup t!istan'ce company, . is stm lcavi~g sc~ncs to try 111 soften the regulatory
lion killed the deal, which h~d of American Telephone and Tel~- open I~ option of another cprp11ratc tllarkctpltWe," Kagan said . .
already started unraveling last week. graph in 1984. touted as tile.biggesr merger or partnership as li way 111
Pos.~iblc partners ~ited by industry
people familiar with the talks said antitrust victory in U.S. history.
break into locll phone markets, said · analysts arc another Baby Bell or
Sunday.
·
Two weeks Rgo. Federal Commu- people familiar with the ·talks, who GTE, which aiso provides phone serW:hat finally sank it, the sources nications Commission Chairman insisted on anonymity.
vice in local communities ac:rois the
told The Associated Press on condi· Reed Hundt. a former antitrust' liti· .. , Industry obscrven expect AT&amp;T ,United States.
tion of anonymity, was ~BC's rehic- Jator, declared that the I)'ICrger was
tance to open up local phone marbts "unthi~tkable" bc):ausc of its poten·
in 1he Southwest and West Coast, · tial
monopoly.
· . IIIOftCIIO Mal OIMO CUIIGMNI
where it dominates, to new rivals
Hundt's remarks came a week
such as MCI and Sprint. No formal after AT&amp;:T cblirman Raben E. Allen
proposal had been made.
said I hYJICIII\eliclllltCIJer between •
AT&amp;T suspended the talks friday loni-di•r- provider and local ·
after SBC refused to open up its IIIII'·. phone compllty could be done in a
kets before the deal was approved. · way to ac:tually boost competitioo.
SBC, formed in I rneracr Of twO .
"Whal'l ~SOIJ!C 10 me i1 the
Baby Bells, serves cuatomen in av- ~ the1 tlida t realW: bow m-:'t
en 11ate1 includina Texas 1811 Clli· OppoiJtloll tbly wwe &amp;01111 to ' - 11 :
fomia:
·
'
ayia110 put Humpty ~ bid:
Aft« word QfthC - .. llllta M· IGJI hr qeil,:' llid_lelfrey Kapn.

it's .. Not ltxJ&gt;ILil&lt;c
I. Jealousy of your time with coDear N.T.L.: Nothing I might say workers, friends and family.
could be near\\- as effective as what
2. Controlling behavior. (Controls
you have writtVn. Here's the column your comings and goings and your
money and insists on "helping" you
you requested:
.
. Dear Ann;'Landers; Please print · make personal decisions.)
3. Isolation. (Cuts you offfrom.all
this list of warning signals to help
women determine if a mate or date is ,supportive· resources such as ·tele·
phone pals, colleagues at work an&lt;l
.a potential (or act,ual) batterer:
; ...
close family members.)
4. B.Iames others for his problems.
(Unemployment, family quarrels ..
everything is "your fault.")
5. Hypersensitivity. (Easily upset
by annoyances that are a pan of daily life,. such as being asked to work
overtime, criticism of any kind, being
asked to help with chores or child
care.)
'
.
6. Cruelty to animals or children.
(Insensitive to their pain and suffering, may .tease and/or hun children

Ann
La'nders

Social Secu,rity•s financial planning service

Proposed rail merger ·wo,r riso·me
for industries relying on.service

Competition concerns doom AT&amp;T-SBC merger ·

signs first step in breaking cycle of violence
'

. By ANN LANDERS

'

·

The Dally Sentinel

ftJDD~Y,

1117

,.ha DailyS
·BABY

el

el

·honors
nts

I'I
J..

1t
I,
I

-

I .

'

,.

· The Daily Sentinel
"BABY SENTINEL"

---~----~Q~~2~I~~fQ~£~~~Q!~------­

NAME:----------------------------

---~-----~--------~=-~-~-~-~~~~~~~~

�'

Monday, June 30, 1117

1Wo sets of Blue·
Notes battle over
'

'

Wary of bombing explanation, two
Oklahomans ·force grand jury probe

'70s band's name·

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) Widt Timodty McVeigh awaiting
execution and 'ICrry Nichols facing
• PHILADELPHIA (AP) - WbCn was a high school student. The 1960s federal trial, a grand jury opens a new
Harold Melvin's Blue Notes perfonn brought a few minor hits.
Then in 1972, the group took off investigation of the Oklahoma City
their trademark song "If You Don't
bombing Monday, prompted by two
Know Me By Now," even the most when Melvin gave drummer Teddy men's profound distrust for the offiavid fan would be hard pressed to Pendergrass a microphone and made cial explanation of the blast.
him the grilup's lead singer, and the
know any of the singers.
The men - one of diem the
group began to work under produc- grandfadter
Or which Blue Note to believe.
of two bombing victims
Two versions of the 1970s soul · ers Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff.
Hits that followed included "If - collected 13,500 signatures to
!;Mmd Harold Melvin and the Blue
empanel the grandjury. In doing so,
Notes - one ofthe mainstays of the You Don't Know Me By Now," "I dtey ignored ·me Objections of Oklalush Philly. Sound -are warring over Miss You" and "The Love I Lost."
homa's attorney general and OklaThe early band split widt 'Melvin
rights to the name.
·
homa County's district attorney, who
· M~lvin died at age 57 in March, over money in 1975. Pendergrass left has already promised stale murder tristill touring widt a newer version of for a solo career, and the remaining als for McVeigh and Nichols. .
the band until he had a slroke. His Blue Notes saw their last connection
"The verdict will be that, yes,
to stardom leave .
. widow has continued the group there
were other people with
"It was a very, very hard fall. I
and drawn fire from dtree of the earMcVeigh in Oklahoma City that
ly Blue Notes, who say she has no know one thing, God got our anen- cornmined the bombing," a confident
tion," Wilson said. His sparse, onerightlo dti: name.
State Rep. Chari~ Key predicts.
"We're sick of these phony Notes room apartment is lined with gold ,
Key and Glenn Wilburn, an Okla. running around. " said Bernie Wilson, and platinum records and a Grammy homa City accountant who lost .
a Blue Note from the band's heyday. nomination. Well-worn photo albums grandsons Chase and Colton Smith in
"They should go get their own hold pictures of the group with Liza the blast, say they were motivated by
group, get their own records, get dteir Minelli, Sidney Poitier, Sam and two basic beliefs: that a larger con- '
own fame, not live off of our blood, · Dave.
While Melvin continued to tour spiracy was behind' the bombing and
sweat and tears."
that federal agents had prior knowlHarold Melvin's Blue Notes, with rotating singers in different ver- edge of the attack.
under'Ovelia Melvin's management, sions of his b~d. me original memAldtough the federal indictment
have recently played hallowed clubs bers found linle luck.
McVeigh and Nichols alleged
against
Renamed the Legendary Blue
~uch as New York's Apollo Theater.
they
plotted
the bombing with ,"othSometimes Wilson's group, the Leg- Notes, including Wilson, Brown,
endary Blue Notes, pickets the odt- Lloyd Parks and a newer member,
ers ' shows, warning audiences . Anhur Aiken, they foun~ it difficult
to get gigs bigger than street festivals
"Oon 't be fooled."
. Larry Brown, a member of the and local hotels, .
JERSEY SHORE, Pa. (AP) · Both Wilson and Mrs. Melvin talk Nope, no oeean he.re. ·
Legendar)' Blue Notes 'who once
sang with Melvin, says:. "All the gigs · about legal action.
No sand. Noboardwalk. No saltShe said Melvin copyrighted his water taffy.
(Harold Melvin's Blue Notes) are
name, though there is no record of it
· doing we should be getting," . .
· The closest sal.twater is a live-hour
at
the U.S. Copyright Office in Wash- drive away. The closest water of any
Melvin started as lead singer with
the doo-wop group in 1954 when he ington, D.C.
size? The west branch of the Susquehanna River.
So why do travelers continue to
pull into Jersey ·Shore - elevation
550 feel above sea level - and ask
for·directions to the beach?
"They're very shocked when you
tell them they're not in Jersey," said
Turner has been easing back into Ronda Rhinehart, manager of a con. LOS ANGELES (AP) - Janine
the
movies. She plays cookie-baking venience store a few yards from a
Turner says she felt her life was like
mom
June Cleaver iii "Leave It to highway offramp. "They wonder
a hamster wheel until she took a h.iatus for the last few years to live on her Beaver." She also has a new beau, how they got there so fast."
Jerry Jones Jr., son of the Dallas
ranch.
Cowboys
owner. ·
" I think you . can work, work,
work, but if you don't take time to
nourish your soul ... I mean; gosh, I
MALIBU, Calif. (AP)- About
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Without
'never had a· love life," Turner said, 100 friends -and family members
animated
hits like "Fantasia" and
despite dating the likes of Alec·Bald~'\who gathered to . remember Brian
"Beauty
and
the Beast," the Walt
win and Sylvester s·tallone.
,;keith described him as a "loving cur. As an example of her work sched- inudgeon" not unlike his character in Disney Co. would have lost nearly
ule, she said in Movieline magazine's the "Family Affair" television show. $100 million on its movies in the earJuly edition that she wrapped up
Keith, who had been suffering . ly .1990s, according .to corporate
shooting a season of TV's ""'onhern from lung cancer and emphysema, documents filed fot an ugly 'breach·
Exposure" one day and flew to Italy died 'Thesday of a self-inflicted gun- of-contract lawsuit.
The legal action, intensifying just
the next day to .film the 1993 film shot wound . .
as
Disney's
"Hercules" is hitting the''Cliffhanger."
_ Two actors . who co-starred on
aters,
has
opened
'a small window
"There are a lot of false notes "Family Affair,'' which ran on CBS
into
the
real
power
of animation.
about L.A. and me industry. and I from 1966-71, remembered his sense
Disney's new film releases near
. personally have a very hard time in of humor at a service Sunday.
the
etid of studio chief Jeffrey
L.A. - ·1 feel suffocated, "' she said.
"He would tease me all the time
Katzenberg's
reign would have lost
:'In Texas, with my horses and fam- and say, 'I don't like that bum you're
$92.6
million
without the video
1ly and a boyfnend. I thmk I can be going out with;'" said Kathy Garver.
releases of animated musicals like
a much better person."
·
"Beauty and the Beast," according to

en unknown," federal IUihorities
The petition names seven witnow doubt a lqer conspincy. And nesses who have said they SIIW at
they veheme11tly deny lmy prior least one other penon widt McVeigh
knowledge.
· in Oklahoma City on April 19, 1995,
District Attornc)' Bob Macy has ' the day a truck bomb ripped through
an agreement widt federal authorities the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Buildto file murder charges against ina. killing 168 peop~. None of lhe
McVeigh and Nichols at the end of witnesses was called before the fedthe Nichols trial, scheduled to begin era! grand jury primarily concerned
Sept. 29. Macy does not need a grand with indicting McVeigh and Nichol.s.
Key and WOburn !llso want the
jury to bring chlll)les, a)ld he opposed
panel to look into a ~hldowy netw~
the petition.
Diplomatically, he now says he · of _whtte supremactsts and foretgn
hopes the 12-member panel will. nattonals and to ask bard questions
"lind out what the ttudt was in me about rumors that qgents of the
Oklahoma City bombing, if there is Bureau of Alcoool, Tobacco and
any additional c:vidence." But then he .ftrearms had pnor knowledge of the
adds: "I'm unaware of any (such) attack,
evidence at this time."
The witness at the intersection of
· Attorney General Drew Edmond- those two beliefs is Carol Howe; a
son is more vocal, criticizing the . fonner ATF infonnant now awaiting
grand jury investigation as a waste of a federal trial on charges related to a
bomb threat.
'time and taxpayer money.
"The notion that it can learn
A few days after the bcimbing, Ms.
something that me FBI was unable to . Howe, a former tulsa debutante, told
learn, is, I think, ludicrous," Edmond- FBI agents she had overheard Gerson says. "The witnesses mat Mr. man national Andreas Stras5meir and
Key is talking about, we know who white supremacist Dennis . Mahon
they are, we know what dtey have to ·discuss bombing federal buildings
say. That doesn't get us any closer to months before the attack . .
knowing the trudt of it, hearing them
"Why in heck haven't the feds
say it again."
gorie out and brought these guys in?"

Turner easing back
into the movies

IlL 1111111'
IISULA11011

Key Ilks. Strassmeir . and Mahon
have denied involvement in the
bombing, and 'Mahon calls Ms. Howe
a dru1 abuser and compulsive lill'.
If called, Ms. Howe is expected to
testify that she told her ATF handlers
·about the conversations before the
bombing. But diose familiar widt
documents in her case, including
Me Veigh attorney Stephen Jones.
say they show no specific threats or
plots. Jones tried to call Ms. Howe
durin1 McVeigh's federal trial, but
the judge ruled her testimony irrelevant.
Whether Ms. Howe will testify
before the grand jury is unknown.
Key hope~ to steer the grand jury
toward Ms. Howe, Strassmeir and
Mahon, but his ability to do so is lim-·
ited.
Oklahoma Jaw does not allow the
petitioner to go before the panel
unless called to testify. He can. how-.
ever, present wril!en material. But
Macy's office will guide and advise
the grand jury, which is expected to
meet daily.
If it returns no additional indictments, the panel's oadt of secrecy
would keep any new evidence from
the public eye.

Bikers gather for ·anniversary
of infamou~ 'Wild One' rally ·
HOLLISTER, Calif. (AP) Catherine Dabo still remembers the
day that beer-drinking bikers rode
their roaring motorcycles through the
lobby of her small hotel.
"They didn't hurt anything," she
said. "They were just having a good
t.imc."

·

That "good time" was the "Battle of Hollister," the rowdy, drunken
street pany that inspired the movie
~'The Wild One," and Mrs. babo and
others are thrilled that next weekend's
50th anniversary is expected to draw
thousands of bikers from all over the
world.
Bikers and townspeople both
argue that the Founh of July 1947
events were all greatly exaggerated
by news anicles. by an allegedly
staged photograph in Life magazine
and by the 1954 movie starring Marlon Brando.
So why cclcljrate''
" M&lt;Jst motorcyclists look at Hollister as sort of the defining moment,

when the perception of the motorcycle began to change," said Sen . Ben
Nighthorsc Campbell, R-Colo., a
devoted hiker who plans to attend.
"Before Hollister, there were
motorcyclists. After Hollister there
were hikers," Campbell said.
"Before. motorcycles were transponation; afterward, they became a
lifestyle. Before there were friendships: afterward, there was. a brotherhood.''
Promoters and pol ice expect anywhere from 50.000 to more, than
200,000 people for the anniversary
bash on Friday and Saturday. Races
and conccns are planned in · and
around the city of 25,000 about 85
miles southeast of San Francisco.
Rooms are booked solid 'from San
Francisco to San Luis Obispo, 120
miles to the south.
"There's a derman group Oying ·
i'n 700 bikes," said Tom Corllin, vice
president of Corbin Inc., a maker of
motorcycle se~ts and accessories

-2172

G.-1111

putting on a trade show. "A Canadian group from Vancouver is making
a 1,000-bikc ride down."
Residents have mixed feelings.
They're delighted to have the business and few worry that the bikers
will cause trouble. but they're concerned about the crowds.
'Tm glad there are going to be a
lot of people here," •Said Dorothy
McNett, who owns a.gounnc\ cookware store. "But we're a small town
in a small,county. We;re just not set
up to handle Ibis."
According to the July 7, 1947, edition of the Hollister Free Lance,
carousers attracted by three days of
motorcycle competition turned two
bfocks of San Benito Street into a
"race trac.k, fiesta area and beer bottle target range." Nearly half a ton of
broken glass was left behind.
Dozens of cyclists were arrested
for drunkenness and reckless driving.
Bob Valenzuela, then 7, .said bikers slept on lawns because the town's
two hotels were full.

sination 32 years ago. "today Betty tJ:.ibu_~ was deeply personal. Attallah
has passed over. and so have we, · Shabazz, the eldest orMalcolm X
from lamentation into celebration, and Mls. .Shabazz's six daughters,
Our hearts,~in g. 'Hall~lujah. ,. .
alternated between laughter and tears
Rhythmtc drummmg tilled the as she recalled the flirtatious, loving
enormous cathedral and hauntong woman. her fither called "Apple
voi~es echoed off its walls as musi- · Brown Betty."
.
cians i~ white cloth !'&lt;'bes opened me ·
"Where does one strugle to find
rnemona) scrvtce wtth a slow marc~ language or vocabulary to be poetic
to":ard the front of the tntcrdenornt- or eloque.nt when it's somedting as
nauonal chun;h. .
, . .
pure and simple as 'Mommy?"' she'
Speakers mcludong c1vtl nghts asked in a voice raw widt emotion.
widows Myrlie E~ers-Williams and
CfU!Imcd into the tiny pulpit with
Coretta Scott Ktng, poet Maya her five sisters Attalllh Shlbazz
Ang~lou, Gov. George Patalci, ~P· recalled her mother's agonizing bat'· ·
Maxtne Waters, Mayor Rudolph Gtu- tie ·to survive after suffering thirdliani, and former mayors David Dink- dearee burns over 80 pcn:cnt of her
ins, Edward Koch and Abe Beame body.
· ·
spoke fondly of Mrs. S~.
"We kept ul!in1 ourselves, 'Whll
Llbor Secretary Alem Herman gives her the I!Rn)llh to lighl so
de~ivered a tribute from President hlrd?' We whispered in her Mr,
Chnton.
,
'We're here, you:re liot by yotii1Cllf,
But am~ all the high-powered the pray~ are big ... You don't hltve
speechmaltttttl, the most powerful to fight so hard, Mom. We're doing
, . ,I

"

J

f

.il."'

'

-

.

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Umestone • Gravel

."FACTORY
· '· DIRECT
.
PRIO!:S''
Quality Window Systems

24Hr

ESTIMATEES

985-4473

. 7/22Mn

lloMd ..... ~the

uatpt or rejtct
llllrta of lny
•paclllcallon·• may
ol4llnad ~ the eddrerr
1111ow or by calling (8141
1111-4331. Bldt will b•
opiiiiCI t1 1:00 pn\llonday,
July 21, 1117.
..... alll!illaiD: .

NOTICE TO BIDDERS '
STATI 0' OHIO

DEPAII'ni.NT 0,

'

U. 11. Rllahlt,Tiwturtr Ltael &lt;;opy Null!ber 87-130
U- PRICe CONTRACT
lullm LoOII 80IIOol '
Mllllnll Dllt 8120187
~·
Nfl.t1(1221
..aolr.7
laalad
propaule wiH Ill
Rutltvllt, Ohio 411772
rcoepttd lrom all prt•
Rl: l.uiiOIIrOOm llldl
quo11fltd blddara at lht
(1121,30,(7)7. 14,410 .
Offlot ·of Coitttwtl, ROOIII

Pul!!!c Me•

111 of . . Oltlo . , . , . _

oI

.T nnrp_l llllllit,

Columblll, Oltlo, un11110:110

Wagnarlana
Pomeroy.
Delivery or Dine ln.
More th•n jult •
pizza place.

Call fir 01r Spaolalt

992·9200

a.m.

for lmptou•a--ln:

319 S. 2nd Ave.
Middleport

STOCKS
AND MOREll
1·900-656-2700
Ext.8789

l'ollleiOYo

$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
. Serv-U (619) 645-8434

-----·-

New Homes • VInyl Sl~lng New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

(AIPENTER SERVIa

CELLULAR PHONES

w.r.............
Free Eetlmal*e

992·9057or
992·1056m

'
'

'

St. At. 661
Tuppers Plains, Ohio
.
. . (814) 887-3528
"Acroa's from Tu
Plalr111 Elernen
Schoor ..

IIIIlLI

ELIM .:
HOME C4RE

•Small Engines
•Lawo Mowers .

For Handicapped
&amp; Elderly.
Dally • Weekly :

·JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE
POMEROY, OH.

Contract

·

'
Family Atmoaphitre
209 s. 4th Street
Mlddlepor1

Leading Creek Rd.

982·5042

~

.......,12_

WICKS •
HAULING

Help)Yinted

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand, ·
Top Soli, Flil Dirt

for Emer1ency.Room.
Applicants Call or
$end Resume To:
,Rhonda Da!ley, Dlre.ctor of.Nurslng
115 East Memorial Drive
.Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

61~2-3470- -

•NewHomes
e Additions

• Decks

• Remodeling

• Siding

e

• Roofing

Garages'

"Stop pufting off those much needed
·home impro11ements. ,..Call Today!
992·2753 Free Estimates. 992-5535

Custom HQmes

Remodeling

M&amp;J

Septic Systenl.
Trailer&amp; ·
HoueeSitea
Renonabte RlftH

'Joe Wilson

1998 Mar11n Street ·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

(114 1182-4277

LONG•S
CONSTRUCTION
• Vinyl Siding · • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Qver 20 years experience
·,( Free: Estimates

Call 614-843-5426

.

Phone

lllmt, Dlcl&lt;l. Painting
a.r u. For A F- E_,.,..

1114-742-3090
114-742-3324
814-742-3078

TIYoe _la,..ly y11d Ill• g:oo am 10
5:00 pn on ,July I &amp; 2 at 747

Broadwuy Suett, Mldcllaporr.
acro11 hom the park. Women's,.
men'a, children and lnfanl cloth·
ing, baby awing, todcltr car ...l.
toys, lamps, craftl, collectiblea,
bird cage and stand. and lots of
misc. Somerhing br eweryonel

Home, Call Befall 4
441...Q.468.

Sayre Trucking Co•.

P. ~ .

8.14·

Yard sate, Bashan FlrehouM on

Bashan Rd. July 1·5.

Yard sale, Clonch'&amp;, VCR plac,,

Ont 8 Weak Old Yellow &amp; While ·Old leading Crook Rd., July t-2·3.
Kinans, Liner Trained, Goad With
Public sale ·
Children, Needing Good Homo. 80
11"-"HSIIO.
anc! Auction

614-742·2138 . .

IMMin

malo, Owko old. 10 good home;
. 304-17S.11tl3.
60 Lost and Found

Lemley's Auction Service, Lea118
Lemley, Auctioneer. Houtthdldl
Estate, Far.m Sales. Phcme 814·
388-94CI,

Found: Mate Border Collie Vicini-

Rick Pearton Auction Company,
tull tlma auctioneer. complete

' ty: Lillie Bullokln Road, Patriol,
81•·258-6157.

Faulld: Iorge gok1on mote dog, SR
2411 noar Soccesa Rd .• 01'4·985·

auction

168.0hio

service.
licensed
&amp; Weal ~lrglnlo. 304·

. 713-5785 Or !l04-77a-5447.

4355.

Gallipolis
1 VIcinity

Antiques. furniture, glaaa, china ..

coins, 1oys, lamps. guno, 1ooto,
esoai$S: also appraioalo, Ooby
M~ftin ,

814-992·7441.

(formerly of DNn'l
Trant., AtbanYI·

..........

Now 0,... for
123 Pleuent Rldga
Pomeroy,OH

. Ca11992·9045
for all your
trenamlsalon need1.

..,,_

SHAIPEIIIHG
SERVICE

3 Family : July 11r -July 3rd, G·S,

Air Conditioners, Co lor T.V.'s ,

1/2 Mile On Slate Route 790 Of!

VCA's, Also Junk CarS. 814-256·
238
..:'
Wante'd lo buy used Moblle
Home. call 614 -446-0175 or 304-

Soaoa Roult 21 e. Clolhing. All Slz·
es, Children ·Adult, Glassware,

Bays, ~IIC.

= ·..,-------

s Family Yard Sale: 5573 State
5·:.:.
59:.:.
65:...__ _ _ __
Routt 1~1. June 30tn. -July 5th, ,.6:.:.7:.:.

IIA

loll 01 Clothes!

A1J. Yard Saito Must

Be Paid In Advance.
DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
tho day belorelhold.

IIUPP'S CUSJOM
SIIAI,fiiiNG
f49·2647

!• to non. Sundar
edition • 2:00 p.m.·
Fr!doy. llondoy adhlon.
-10:00 a.m. ~turdoy,

Wanted: Used Hardwood Flooring
In' Good Condition. Call 614·2~5 -

!i8B7.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Talk Uve To A

Real Gifted
Psychic
1·900·868·4900
Ext. 1817
$3.99 per min. .
Muat be 1e yrt.
Ser-U (819) 645 e434
tiiCW71-

Babysiller Needed 'll&gt;ur Home Or
M.ne , Mu st Have Relerences.

City
Road
77; Furni!Ufe. fireplace
Grooo,
Clotles.

614-388-9957.
.:.:.....;:.:.
_ _ _ _ _ __
Banker's Life &amp; Casually Compa-

June 21th-? 1·5, 7 Miles From
Poner, 8 Miles From Chethire
(55-ll. Home lnoonor, Etc...

ny. GrowiRQ senior health merkel,

Lorge Yard Salt: 646 Fillh Ave·
nuo;·July 2nd, 8·? Qualloy Child·
ttn I Adult Clothing Guess,
levi's, Toys. Games, Blc~cle,
loiS Olllioo.

dayllme wprk. leads, litld train;ng . Call 304·343·0400 An Equal
Opponunity Company MIFIHI.
RA9050.
Caretahet'IHand~man

--'!"""!!!!

Tundly, July ~~~ Lower Old Flo·
u• 7,- lltigo .Qallla Counoy Line. Reglsltr Box G-24 200 llaln St •

.....

.

Point Pleaoan' WV 255!50.

1927 Cross St,

Racine, Oh:
BENNETI"S
BEATING 4 COOLING
8er1~1118outtltllllm OH &amp; VN
1~1311
.

~· .

114 UeiM11
Ad.,
OH
"

'

,

lo live rent

free in mobile hom&amp; wllol in ••change for workJeuands. Trensportaliol') a m~11. Send rtsumt
and references 10 Point Pl•~anr

fence at:

Fri.; IIUp O'...r requlfldi deyltme hourt otr. High U
. _...:,;;;.,;;,::;::~&amp;11..,

\ .. i

Back porch 1111- 713 Short
Fourlh, MiddloporL ,
·

Two houoe yard oalo on Laur~
Cliff Road !&gt;ehind Free llalhodlol
Lllloi Trolnod Killen• To Good Coorch, Tuesday IIYu 5a1Urdly.

1,500 IEWIIDII
For Information
leading to the
arrest and
conviction of
anyone Involved
stealing a
property line

Nliw HQmet,

•

and

Allie
born Nile- July 1·2, and
of Brown Str4Jet, M-.son, whitt
_house on tJp of hll. Dllm-2pm.

Halro&lt;l Killtnl, 814·441- youlh bod. suollors, Lillie Trke•

J"!IW" 3,4,5; Gam -~Pfll ; Jackson

Adcltllot•.
Flooflng, Siding; Pole .

Help Wlllted

Salaa lluot Be Paid lq

Advance. Deacllln•; 1;00pm Ute
day bolora tho ad Ia to r~n~
Sund•r ._ Mon'day edltlonr
I :oopm Friday.

- . tlendly. Ot+D48·2QI1.

Joe N. Sayre
.

&amp;

FrH 10 good ho..,, 3 mon1h old

·

.....,.

Midd1eport, Ohio 46781

tchool ••• ,.., valet drher'tllcet. ., I(CICid dtl¥lng
rtconl, t1tret yeerallctnlld driving exper11t101,
and tMI11 , ....1111101111 end IIIMrtl8 rtqUirtd. '
Trelnlnt provtdld. Elloellent lneurtnce. encl
vecatlolf lletoellle. 1111ry: •IQihr., 10 1t11rt. H
ltrllluhlt N&lt;tliGt ca,m. et 1oiDI A1"!23QQ no .
iltlell' 111ft 7Mr. llllill Oppottunltr lmplawer. ·

•

5 long
08115.

Umntone &amp; G111Vel

to4·H&amp;

3361 Heppy Hollow ROI!I

•

• ,w

Numbor.

25% DilltJUIII

.......,...•....

'COMMUNii'Y SKILLS INSTRUCTOR WANTI!D:
LJV...n lnetructor (weell-cleyl) nttded to tutch
.oOillmunlty lnd pereonil aldlla to adultl with
Ieeming llmlllllonlln 11t1ge County. HOURS: W
'pm, Sun.; 11:»8:301f111S.t pm, T-Th.; 1:311-8:30 am ,.

'

Bllfti'S

IRIS'

E.O.E.

Call 675-5463

.

(Lime Stone· .
Low Ratti)

·Full time
R.N. Is needed
.
.

,.

441-3788 Leave Name

UY'S
TRANSMISSION

742·2925 .
"W.Ia.,.rY•u

All Yard

90 Wanted to Buy
Painting
LOll Sora~ad Or Slaten: 1 Black "A'"bs-ol,-ut-e""To-p-:
_Do'"""lla-,"'
-A""II_;,U.:,
.S_,SI-1FREE ESTIMATES
Cow Approx. 1,000 lbo., Np Tag. vor And Gold Coins, Proolsooo;
But Mark Where Tag Was lo&amp;t Diamonds, Antique Jew&amp;lry. Gold
$149·2168
In Vlclnloy Rl 775, Cal1814·379· Rings, Pro-t93o· U.S. Currency,
311]t94JTFN · 2187, Or Hartey CrauN.
Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry
...____...;;,;.;.;,;;;;o;,;;,r
.Sterling,
M.T.S. Col~ Shop, 151 Second
70
Yard sale
Avenue, Gallipolis, 614-446·2842. .

•Weed Eaters
2 mi. off At. 7

lo piece •• act, cal
StntiHI (llssiflttls ·
tt2·2156

~

5 Kittens, Male• fFemalel, 814·

MDLIII I
IIUVIft.

614-992-5479

•Chain Saws

filii 1M ... ..,. II 1M

•

-

992--f215

3&amp;o• Communications

a.tt.•ta

"We rreal your besrfrisnd like our best friend"

V8f'/ low prlceo. &lt;-' ultd.

(FREE ESnMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

(No Sunday Calls)

.

Professional Pet Groo~
Boarding • Training.;
. .~· Supplies
··

918 Sou.lh Third, lliddlopor~ July
1·3, 10am·4pm. Rain or .ohlne,

Pomeroy, Ohio

20 Yrti:'Exp~ • Ins. Owne!: Ronnie Jonee

·-.;K-9 Designs .iii

boutea. clol"-'· TuppetWiriJ,

woodcnnes.

.coo Rurland St. Middleport, Qll·
den 1ools, clot~s. boys• clothtt;
pilio ctalrs, suoller, misc.

...

. '\

Home Interior, cook books, J•rs.

. Alto Concrall Worlt '

Guttere
Downapouta
Gutter Cleanl""

-

ward Long Bottom, Oh, Plate•
rasidenc:e, dinttle ttl, dishes,

· Adult Vldtol. tOO N~M Rolaaoest 2·3, 2Q5 Wrighl Slree!, ~ ·
1380 Ellttrn Avenue, Gallipolis,
July 1, rain cancels until next day.
Or Call 114 448 8922.

•Jitoom Addlllont
oNaw Olrlgel
-EIIctrlcll a Plumbing
-Roofing
otn1llrlor a Exterior
.PalnUng
.

614-992-7643

113 W. 2ND ST.

~ .....,; .Nil' 14, 1om-?. bnepo l'llldand Pork on SR 124 to-

Garage salt· rain or &amp;hlne, JuiW

YOUNG'S

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC·~

~~·••PDn
I VIcinity

Salea Service
Bass residence swracuH, 11•·
992·5000,
lion., June 30111-Wi&lt;l.
M&lt;NOUNCEME
r
ITS
lnatallatlan
Julv 3rd, infant clothinQ. girls tike
new. size 0 to 18 mo., io-• 12
American Standard ·
months 10 3, an ~~ lafllt', ...,..
005
Personals
coHecabln &amp; more.
Freed ofT!
ATTliNTlON
iara, 1sL 2nd: 3rd. p~~oo;
Heat Pump
Hao 'lbur Marriage Or Ralallon· Garaga
house by Mama In lllcldlaport
lllllp
Got
Up
1
W...
Stop
tn
Prine
(814) 992·7434
. _ Vldoo Anll Ront llno 01 Our

NEW~REPAIR

Uc. W'l 011030

FOf Information

...

&amp;COOUNG

ROOFING

Rooting, Painting
Guaranteed

- 110

Wol*o u••r. Julv 23; 1117

·-

MoiRISON'S HilliNG

Siamese.cat, champagne color,

JC
CONSTRUaiON

.

o.mer.

550PagaSt.
Middleport, Oh. 45760
HomaPh.
61~-3120
Don Gelliry, Owner

(614) 742·3100

Howard L. Wr1t11el

~*

RT. 7 PIZZA
EXPRESS

All customers of River city
Sound Productions and Gerald
Johnson are encouraged to
lcorlfirm July dates no later than
June 30th by calling
1-614-446-0571

.

250 Condor Street.
·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A Division oil Nichols Metal, INc.
Phone: 614: 992·2406 ·
FBll: 304-n3-6861

I

NOW OPEN

YARD SALE

MaSQn Co. Fa!rgrounds
Point Pleasant, WV
Friday-Saturday-l;iunday
July 4, 5, 6 · Sapt. 5, 6, 7
August· Fair
Oct-3, 4, 5
Wanted Quality
Speclal 3 ino. space rental for
the price of 2
1naide and OU1IIdt .... availlbll

Big.lend Fabrication,
Machine &amp;Welding Shop

. 992·3371

'

TRANSPORTATION
Columllut, Ohio
Olllot of Contraoll

aFalr~l

Athens, Ohio

Complete MKblne Shop Service Fabrication
Steel Sales, Weldloa Supplies, Industrial Gas
Radiator Repolr &amp; Replacement
Monday-Friday • 8:00a.m.- 4:30p.m.
· S.aturday - 8:00 a.m.. 12 noon

'Ptrtans"WWIolwake
hdo the A·frGIIe oH
6811n Reedsville;
Call Meigs Sheriff

&lt;

· 1

Quality Work It

- 41111 COivlcflon of tH

5 Points area, Watch. for signs.
July 1, 2 &amp; 3
10,4
Toys, kic!s clothes, waterl:led,
baby

Rutland,~

•.,

American • Sllndartl,
Janltrol 1 Htltlng &amp;
Cooling Equlprnal'lt
R.S.E.S. C111Jfled •
Arl Cenlfted
Don Smith
37814 Peach Fork Rd.
Pomeroy, Oh; 45789
Phone 614-182·2735

Exparltnced

FINA~CE

leacQig to tH arrest·

PH (114111112 5850

M... any Aw.

J.IH~

UP-To-DATE
SPORTS

For lnfennatfon

(e) 18, 23, 30; (717; 4TC

44

'

De0.8J7's

Service

'IIJJID1 ....

$200 REWARD

110

tht. T - ' e
lla lday, July 21,

252t0

Not''"' flnlnclll

FREE ESTIIIAnS .

-1-

FREE

Pcimtro)', OH 457118

Aallm.)'lnoadenEakew

' ·Attorney At Law
(614) 592-5025

Stop &amp; Compare

OFFICEIAI tOi!~' ,.,~ ,

~IG

Attorney William Safranek

Remodeling

.. . \ IULLIIIN BOA
~~,:..•7'!· colu•n Inch •eltkd.a yl
. • · /9~ colulnn lnch.SundGY

p '-II Notl
PUBLIC NOTICE ..
Uu !?
ce
The Rutlend· VIllage
The l!aatem ~~ Baard Bud gel lor 11118 wl1l bt
of Education · d"lrtt ·to open lor lntjltollon upon
Mt1vt blda tor Luncrl,;i,oiii I requea1 at the Clertte home.
8upplltt 111011 u:
The httrlng a budget
Baked Goode, . Milk adoption will lit htld on
Pratlucbl
July eth lit lht Regular
In anler ID be
Council Milling.

relieve a debtor of
financial . obligations and arrange a fair
dislribution of assets. Debtors in bankruptcy may
keep ·exempt• property for their personal use.
This may include a car, a house. clothes, and
household goods.
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

•Garages
•Complete

,,_.• ,Your
.• ;,, cWJth ~· l)ally S.nl•hi~l (;.

MEIGS LOCAL BOARD
OF EDUCATION
P.O.Bolc272

.. _.. ..... .,.

5rit

OU.IIIJI .

,._...,..

PoR)aro~. Ohio
1-1110-211-IMJOO

•n..,.3477

BANKRUPTCY . can

•New Homea

Dlrtclar of TrantpOrta11on

All enveloptt mutt bt
CLEARLY MARKEO "MEIGS
LOCAL SCHOOL OISTRICT
BANKING SERVICES"
Cindy .1. Rhonlmut,

'

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCtiON

. .rerryw,.,

Bolin!.

1$ ~RS IN BUSINESS

..,., _

Mleon,WV

r-"-"------i·•,---.....;-.....;_;.;.;............_......- - t , - - - - - - - - - - - - - .

Public Notice
contkltrallon for en awenl.
Minimum wege rtltt lor
. proltct htvt bttn
prtdttermlntd 11 raqutrtd
by law.and art ut.forlh In .
the bld pro,_.t. :'The dale :
ut lor compltllon of IIIIa .
work thel Ill aa tetlorlh In
lilt bidding propoul."
Plant end Specllloatlane
art on flit at tht
Department
of
Trlntporllllon.
16130: (7) 7; 2TC

'

11 o Court St.

CORPORAL ELECTRIC
Dailey Ad- Racine
814-949-3IMIO
Jobo Williams· Owner
Ucenaed Electrician
Work Guaranteed
Free Estimates Providing
Quality Residential
Service New
·construction, Total and
paitlal rewires on older
homes

at all toward settlement." · said lary prnducts -rclea.'ICd while he ran
KatzenberJl's attorney, Bert Fields.
the studio.
Katzen berg joined Disney in 1984
Meisinger says Katzenberg left
and turned its animation unit into . two years early under a contract that
Hollywood's most profitable fran- . expressly said mat he relinquished
chise. He left in 1994 after he was any claim 'to profitS if.he .waiiGed out. :
passed over for its presidency, going Disney says Katzenherg was paid the
o~ to co-fo_und the DreamWorks stu- full amount of any bonuses owed and
dio wilh director Steven Spielberg that it even accelerated deferred payand music producer David Geffen.
ments.
He sued Disney in 1996, claiming
The lawsuit maintains Disney susthe studio owes him 2 percent of pended the bonus after Katzenberg
order,"
profits linked to TV shows, films and . left Disney, .even though projotL• he
Disney has made no settlement related spinoffs developed under his supervised still generate profits today,
offer. said company attorney Louis supervision but released after he left such as the stage shows, videos,
Meisinger. Trial is to begin Nov. 18. Disney. He also is challenging Dis- games and merchandise based on
"I have rarely been in a situation· ney's accounting of films and !l"til- 1994's "The Lion King."
where there has been no movement

of
EduoaUOn.wtalteeto Netlvt
PROPOSALS lor dtpotllory
of active, Inactive, and
lntwlm dtpoelta.
All propoaalt thall be
received In, end propoul
tptalllaellone mey bt
obtained ·
from,
TREASURER'S OFFICE, 320
E. Mtln Strett, Pomeroy, OH
4571111, on or before 1:DO
p.m., Monday, July 21, 11197.
The Meta• Local Bolin! of
Education rtttrv.. the
right Ia reliCt any and. all
propotalt, tnd the
IIUIIm1tllng of any propo1111
tMII lmpoM no Uablllly or
ab1lga1ton upon the aald

R. L. HOLlON,
TRUCKING

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

112-4111

'

RealdenUII Heating
&amp;Cooling
Auto Air CondltJonlng
Installation 111d

McCumber Rd.
Rutlend,OH
•Small Jobs
•Large Jobs
Raaonorblt Ratu .

At. 1, Box 44-C

u..IIIL ...... CDPNA

.

the documents filed in the last month.
The Disney corporate records also
show the video releases of animated
classics, including "Fantasia" and
"101 Dalmatians," accounted for ·
rouli!11Y half pf Disney's entire 1992 ·
corjlOtate profits.
The records, available in court
files for Katzcnberg's $250 million
breliCh-of-contract lawsuit, still hear
Disney internal stamps: "Contidential - access limited by protective

NOTICE TO

.

..

l(lf&gt;-

o.

The Mtlgt Local

304-n3-5822

~-·

Chester, OhiD

.

Serving from 5:00 • 5:45
Doaatlon $4.00 for meal

'Public is invited

' 985-4422

-it' ... '

FAMILY DEN11STRY

Wlrtllows

Dirt • Sand

•

1UetdaysQd1bunday•

tStriDeers&amp;

.....

-

......, B. • ........, D.D.S.

••ws

::i"••nl WI

•

MEIGS COum SINIOil CENTIIl
Mulberry Htlal'ts, Pomeroy

. 1:00 1.111.-3:30 p.tiL

"It's totally inappropriate, but
there it is," Zelinsky said .
Settlers from the shores of New
Jersey began arriving here in the late
1700s, setting up a community on the
far banks ofthe Susquehanna. When
locals set out to visit them, they
would say they were going to the
"Jersey shore," said local his\Orian
Jane Spangler.
The name stuck when· the town
·was incorporated in 1826. Helen
Goodbrod. wife of Mayor William
Goodbrod, said that's the way things
arc g&lt;~ing to stay.
"Jersey Shore has been here a
long, long time," she said. "I don't
·think they'd ever change the name." .

PubHc Notice

Friends and family pay emotional tribute to BeHy S~abazz
NEW YORK {AP)- With echoing drums and strong voites, widt
tears, cheers and prayer, more than
2,000 of Betty Shabazz's friends, rei·
atives and admiren paid a buoyant
and affectionate tribute to her Sunday.
A parade of public officials and
figures in the civil rights movement
took the lectern at Harlem's Riverside
Church to' remember the warmth,
love and quiet strength of Malcolm.
X's widow.
Mrs. Shabazz died on June 23,
three weeks after ·suffering severe
bums. in a fire all~gedly set by her
grandson. Malcolm X's 12-year-old
namesake. She was buried next to her
husband in a cemetery north of New
York Cit)' on Friday.
"Yesterday was Hll'lem's day of
lamentation. Oreal was our Jrief and
great our for Jri_eviq," said
actor Ossie Divis, who also eulo- .
gized Makolm X t'oJJowing his assas-

.

' Ja

..uuPORT

Meigs
Refrigeration

.IWol DiTIL CAll
.

EVENING MEAL

. U7IR'IAIII'lM:I

.Lawsuit against ·Disney shows real power of animation
'

The o.lly Sentinel• PlOtt

.

Pennsylvania dotted with peculiar town names
From ·Humptulips, . Wash., to !111d Africa, Pa. And there is Indiana,
Pahrump, Nev., to Snowflake, Ariz., . Pa., home or Indiana l.Jnivcrsity of
and Truth or Consequences, N.M., Pennsylvania.
Don't forget GoOd, Pa.. and Drab,
every stale has its share of eye-catching if not downright misleading town Pa. Cracker Jack is just a 20ominute
names.
drive s.outh of Pittsburgh. Seldom
Pennsylvania, however, seems Seen? It's on the Ohio border.
loaded with them:
Just down the road from Bird in
"Soinetirries they were made up Hand is Intercourse, Pa.; which is not
on the spot by locals who had to too far from Happy Valley. Don't
name their post oflices ·in a hurry." confuse the real Happy Valley with
said Wilbur Zelinsky, professor emer- . the Happy Valley referred to by
itus in the Penn State geography those Yiho are really talking about
depanment: "Sometimes me names State College, home of Penn State.
were quite random."
As then .there Is central Pennsyl- '
Two communities call themselves · vania's Jersey Shore, population
Egypt, Pl1. There is a Peru, Pa., too, 4,300.
"

•

I.D. Caller!
Contact:
Ron Miller
I ,

'

I

�..

' .

llandly, June •• 1117
PHILLIP

ALDER

. . . . :=:"'..=.:
.....
,·=
.........

.,,.... .
,.......... •"--•.,.....
.................

.
,.....,. -·:..........
,.~, .......~

11 =--~

·
• ..._DIII11 Unllol.. ~

tl DoiOII..
-~llnll
MON.-

17PNIII!WIIIr

17 ..... ~

Oriwrs: looking for drivtrl tor Ex&amp;lortoncod -Pontrr and remo......,., vane, in lnd around deling. lnalde and ~ut•lde,

Hobton. area. Appllc:anll mua t docko. YlnYI okllng, add-on addihan ciMn driving record, work tiona, cabinet retaclng Dr newly
ftei!Cia ochedulo and paso drug rebuilt, Roloroncoa-Froo Eotl·
1011, paid ..cation &amp; lilt In· rnotot- Jim Shu I 30U75-I2n
IUrance, le.OOhr. to IIOrt will ln~10 afltr DO dayo, luU &amp; port·

umo. Cal

Located In Maaon, 21:a:70 Palm
Harbor Modular Homo. 3bt, 2
barht, LHIDA combined. kltl:httn,
famjly room wJiir. .co, 100x100
corner lot l!eX28· gorago, prlwcy
....... 304-713-!5247.

1.013 '-crH 24ldl8 trail• . ... 2
both. cablo, cl!Y - · out build•
1104-&amp;78-2541.t22.000. .

1887 414 """' Alndlr. -

To~cco

1·800•587·1 071. Mon·

doy • Friday 10om.....

Planto; WoanUng Goa to,

Poinl,

•

COil 814·258-1147
r

.

0

'

'

'
I

l

•so ·•35 Horbo, 814-258-8504,

814-258-8307.

1U87 JO.p Wranfler, whllt o¥1th ,
black tap, CD player, '-morlcan

640 ' HI)' &amp; Grain

080, 8t4.Qil2·73ol1 . .

• 10 ••
•Jti4SI
• )[ J 10 t •

EEKA:MEEK

Sl',od&lt;a, ~llo · ~IC. Loll 01 Ex· ' :!
traol 77,000 Mlteo, $3,800, 080 ---

. !.111estock

12 ........
142,000.
20
&amp;..,..,.
2br · · cltV - 304-·
875-1402.
'
.

•

•

'

""'
• q.

!

• J ·s

racing rima,. many extras, $11000 ·
.

..

RENTALS

HYAC IERVICE TECHNICIAN

c.r••-•

- ··· Roqulromonta; RSES
In RoJ~goradon """
Hoot Pu0.. Syttoma, EIPOflenco
In HVAC A Muttl Knawtadgoable
In llanuloo1urwd Hauling Haodng
And Coolln"a A Pluo. lntorvlowa
By '-llllolntmont Olllyi Call: 8oft.

•

U.prlg~~ Ron Evan• Entorprlooo,
Pra-nallluol,.. building lot Jld&lt;lon, Ohio, 1-«10-537·8528.
oublouo. localtd at sou S. Third Treadmill ·For Sola, 814-37Q,25QB
Streot. M~ Ohio. Excolont Caii-4 ·8P.M.
lot i&gt;hYIIclan olfteo or rut oatata
opaco, Aillplo ttroot 'parking. Two 10,000 BTU Window AIC'o,
'-vallablo lmmodlatoty. Contact One: 1150; Ona: 1100~· Runt
R.L Kunz, 814-1583-3375 colecl
Good. 814·258-1130.

'

Take cart tor elderly people or
hou..-1&lt;, caU 814-7&lt;12-7804.

Will bab~lil, three metals with
care, excellent care, in my home
call 814-UU2·78&lt;17.

or""'"'
210

1.

Package, Travel Required. Food I
Lodging Paid By Company. Valid

'

FRANK~

Pets lor Sale ·

E..UtNEST

view. Uerrapolltan Environmental
Air Conditioner, VCR, Waahot,
Oryet', R~fr111aralar, ·stove, FrHz·
er, Microwave. Color T.V. 81•·
258-1231.
'

530

• u.dtolle
7 ...

Jab

dpeaina Ifll!di'• , . .

.i.:; ~

By Phillip Alder'
1

Today's deal .Jends , artistic

•••

.

•.

~
can Claulc Addllion, red &amp; white ·--

95 Honda ShadOYf -11 DO Amt,i·

.windohltl~.: dra9 pipe, cuatom ·•

..

'
750 Bcists &amp; Motors
''
,.
' tOr Sale
· ''
-:-::~=,--,--.,...---,- "'
f41t. aluminum basa boat, trolling ; :

1100 Dodge Daytona 2 Daora,
Rtd, 5 Speed, '-lr, Crulao, Tilt,
70,000 MU01, E-lent Candldon
$3,000, 814-4-44HI55i
.' '

.·',

•

.

·

.,._ .,
~~==;;:;;·;',. YOU f&gt;Oiti'T, APP&amp;A,
·
·
A
'
· ·TO J·f ,; rallY IOl&gt;Y S
'·
TYf'f:,' ., .
·

,t

seat, lealhef' sa.ddl~ bags, driving ~
lights, lots of chrome, loo"ks &amp; .-,
IOUndl like a Harley, $7800. 814· ~ '
742-3802.
.
'

Now Mini Bike $610 OBO
814-379-2001.

.

'
''

1001 Chryoler LeBaron Canvort· mo10r, Rth ftndtr, 18hp Evlrvudo, ,
lble, Exctltont CalidiUon, _ , , new seals, lrailtr, new lirtl, 1
Goragod, Law Mi!Mge, U.Md Only mora. $1,500. Call 'betwoan 3:30·
lit Good Waather, · '-11 Extraal _10pm=;..;
· 304-8..:..;_;..;7.:.5-40..:.:.:38;:;·_~-- .. .
11~137.
1U7U Baja 1U Ft. 454 Chevy ' '
1H1 Dodge Dynaaty 82,000 Berkliy Jet Drive, Engin'b Naedi ~
Mlloo, Loadad, S2,UOO Or Boat Assembled, ,2,000: , Contider •.:
Olftr, 814-258-1233.
Trado,"814-448·4880.
• _,
1881 D~dao Spirit 104K Runo 1983 Rinker 181t Ccyi .I!O, 11 )"""!
Good, Woil-Maln)llntd, S2, 500. prop, wilt pull wa1er skiers, runs .,. ,
B14-38JI.&amp;!Ij3.
g118L t4,800. 304-882·3361. .

:-!

WlfAT . , ·~1 : ..

TifT

·TYPING Tt$11
'

AKC Re~laterod Rott Woller
Pupo, 2 llales $27$ Each, 814·
448-8627.
.

Antiques .

DOWN

·d·oe'sn't .,. · ·. ·

.

.tlt.t!DVf'E
i11'1'

AKC Reglatered Airedale 7 Walk
Old P.lppiH, Warmod,c1St Shots,
S200 ·S250,.814-25e-1N3. .

6 '-.M. ·5 P.M. To SChedule Inter·

allloir..

r-----.. . .-==;-r-..;..-+....;....__:-:::-:P:-::o:-.-:::y:-::o:-:u~M~f=-A-:,.,::-.:-.":!"-~~.,. · . =1l:~~~ioo:'R:ki~·.• ~~~~
l&gt;AT I NG
·. fAIL.tP '1Tt:'f TY,I1'16 .,. 'I :l:eP~'::. :~::':::!}rina in

AKC Reg Champion Stock Boa:
glt, romale. $60 OBO. Dog kon·
rel10xi0$100. 304-875-21Q!i.

torRent .

..._.,

· BC·.NBAB~
..
·· Monday, Ju~ ~o. 1997

Adarabla Loving '-KC Roglotered
3 112 Month Old Pug Pup wu
11300 Takt ~. 614-3fl8.11325.

420 Mobile Homes

18 Do I pOIIoe

..

:rre:~
.........
........

"~·

2•-s• ·. ••·
s•.·-••
Dbl'
1'111 Plu

..

A Groom Shop ·Ptl Grooming.
Featuring Hydro Bath. Don
ShH11. 373 Gaorgol Crook Rd.
814-44tloo0231 .

30110.

• 1111111e alllild

•! ' &lt;'

387-cl468.

Two bedroom house, nice and
clean, no lnaklo poll, dopollt and
references required. 814-882·

.......
Jot=--·
.....

You:Rnow bUt he

L.INI!II

10 Walk Old Malo Sllllrlon HUI·
k• PuppiH, 111 Shota, S7S, 014·

Drlvere licenae Required. Uuat
11o 21 Yeer1 01 Ago. Collllotwoan
Services, Inc. 5055 Nlke Drive,
Hilliard, OH 43026 1·800-8807378 Or Locally Call 814·771·
1881. E.O.E.

,.

Sta. .

lloti..IOd Individual Wllh Typing,
FlUng and Organlza~onal Sklllo,
'-• Wort AI Bolng '-t;o To Work
With Tho P.lbllc.
Sand Raaumo To:
P.Q Box 472,
Galipolll. OH 4583Hl472

•=--. --

• c.-Of 1

IIOIDOIIt
.........

,•

Steel Buildings Now, Enginaorod
40x60x12 waa •15,500 now
$8.940, 50xtOOX18 waa S28,200
Now 117,03'1', 80x200x10 wil
$82,500 now SSU,972 1-800·406·

Atmaephtre, Requires A Self-

tQ.OO IHour Minimum Start. High·
or Alto With Expatlonc:e. Benofits

••.

'1'111

~es­

P;r.•·

560

.

--=-·...
.,~_...

• ......

Vulnenble: NOI'th.s'Gutb .

Block, brick. _.,
Wind·
owa, lint•lt. ere. Clau • Wlntetl,
Rio Grondt, OH Coli 114· 245·
5121 .

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

!

ol

. Deller: NOI'th
8oll* · Wtil&amp; IWtlt s.t
,... . u
AUNT I.OW!eZY'S ·
. PLAHTIN' MER
.GARDeN .

Two. Story Hause In Galllpolla,
Close To Shopping /SChools. 3 ·4
Bedrooms, 1.5 Baths, Fireplaces,
LR, DR. Kitchen, Panlry, Laundry
Room. M&lt;!30's. 614-441-0852.

.... .

'

t.1EflCHI\NlJISE

FINMJCII\L

OllotM-~at

Pumpa. Immediate Opanlnga.

5I

6 Q II t

6KJ17

UNDIRTM'

E~.

OPERATORS Dawatorlng Compony Hiring /Training Field Op·
MIDrl For Filter Prest, Dredge,

• A

•AJ107$

":490:":"--::for--L.-88--It--; I STOAAOE TANKS 3,000 Gallon

5

20 tHoura '- 'Wook -Fioxlblo
Hours. Thle Po11Uon, In An Art•

....

•• Q

• A 10 5 3 2

noa'l Mobile Homo Hoatlna &amp; ctg.

Noodod: Hou~y And Sullldtuto
lna1ructor1 For Adult Programs ;
Air Condition- Hoadng, '-uto Mechanica, Dloplecad Homamaker,.
lndultrial Maintenance, Hurtt
- · Practlcll Nuralng. Call 814245-1334, Adult Sarvlcu. Buck·
oyo Hllfo CatHI Cantor, E.E.O.

.,..

6 I 7 I 4

coma poiOndal. Call1-800-5134343 Ext 11«111.
·

'-.ll. To

, ......

• A It Q J

• 7 •• J

. . , . TYJIII18,
PC uoort needed. S45,000 In·

At 81 4-448·0" 8 0
P.M.
.

• •••

44Do-- -

'I

'

1
!.i
1

p
~.

is

• SittingEastwasRichaniOshlag.
Hesawthat"normal"defense·would
make things easy for · declarer.
Instead, he produced a falsecanl that
completely fooled South •• and he
didn't utter a word while doing it.
When North cautiouSly jumped to
only thmi hearts, Oshlag might have ·
bid three spades to direct the lead.
However, envisioning a minor-suit
game, he preferred to co11tinuc with
four clubs. (West couldn't have four
spades when he didri 'I show the suit
over one heart.) South was itching to
double fi"!l clubs, but North tried to
make up for his previous underbid.
At trick one, most dcfcnde(S sit·
ting East. would automllically play
the diamond queen. Decl~ would
ruff, draw trumps coding in the dum•
my, and luff out the diamond ace.
South would discard three spades on
dummy's diamond winners and romp
home. His II tricks would be two.top
hearts, three diamonds, three club
ruffs in the !lummy and three&gt; spa!le
ruffs in hand.
Realizing tliis, in temp,&gt; Oshlag
· played the diamond ice. Thinking
West had the diamond q - . declar·
er trumped, ruffed a club in the dum·
my,' discarded a spade on the .dia. mond king, and ruffed a diamond.
When the queen didn't drop from
West, South continued his crossruff,
but that gave him only 10 tricks: one
down.
Try not to make it easy for declar!er to Rid the cards.

' CFH . VIIIOYII
D L X S Y C ·G J

C -

'O YHJ'C

· S. J

8 .H

\,. ll •

liS

ASZ

•,\ol.t

·"'
··/ l

FGNH

"J•,J, ,

)'. (\

CFHL.'

( X Y 8 K H II II D S J 0 1.

WSI KHY )

1il

~ '1

. ,,:"'

ISI'JJA

LDIIHY.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'They pay me e~h - 110 the least I can do le
llfrive lOber, be on time and know aU the )okn. - David Niven.
•

,q

··~
"

..•Jo.
'•'' 1

....
_-.;.; "•~="; .; • ';. .S.: :. . =C ~~~~-» !/IS• ....

'

'

-.

'

•

1 .~1 ~

•' 'JI

Raorrongo lol1orl of tho

""

foUt ICIOmbfad warda below 10 fonn four llmplo -do.

'; 0.
' fl;

~:·

· ""
~e

Z AS L YE

.

~~: .

'"•
..:"f,
!

~::.tt

••
•••
'
'~

Using lht Cl4ssifi.ls ·

,.,.)

Ius

•I

.

::.,

,. .~

.· ~
~

'1..'2

1

'

FARr,1 SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVFSTOCK
S&amp;pric Tanks.
. Gallons Ron
Jackson, OH
Exua Nice Sofa &amp; Chair, Drtu·
era. Cheat Of Drtwtra, End Ta·
bloa, King Siza Complota Wa·
terlltd, Swl••' Rockor, Nit• Ml·
crowave Tabla, 814-378-2720

AFTER .I P.ll.

·

For Sale: Riding LOWMIOWOf, lllr
cycle, &amp; EMardH Bike, 814·448·

~1 .

GrUbb's Piar)O·· IIA"ntng. &amp; repaiitt.
Prot;oma? Ntod Tuned'l Call tho
plano Dr. 614-4411-&lt;1152$

2452.

.' ~-

~~~~~;:A;.;;;;;;~;:
! Saturn SC2,
AMIFM Ca111et1a,

.610 Ferm Equipment

11183 Foid 2000 traciOr, 11¥1 paw.
or, .3 Pt. ttlw ra41010r,
·1110·

.....,,h

lor, bru~h hag, plaw'a, dloc,
S4.200, 814·112·2143 or 614·

uuz.asn"'"' s.

73110.

Four wrc:~ught J ron c:haira..glala
top Iron tab!~. $150; lang Vlclor·
ian Iran bench, t17S: 814-UU2-

1995 Chryllar Cirrus, loaded, VB, automatic, like new condition
113,000 D't bea1 offer, 61,· 849:

,l2,500 Cal-

. l~qulrln OnlyiJ'

' ..
•'

'

Bud~et

SCIAM LITS ANSWIIS
Clumsy· Notch· Embed· Mona/- BLOOM

1 believe that.we shou.ld praise peoples endeavors
becau11 ·cteativity is a delicale flower that praill tends
to make BLOOM. . .
.

P.tice Tranamlttlons, . .•
Star~ng
at $99.00
Up, 10;000
U.Md 1 ,&gt;f
Robuii~AII
Types,and
Over
Transml1tlcina, Acceu Transfer 'JJ
Casea &amp; Rear Ends, 814·245· ·· I
~77
·
':

I

-

,,....

..

N•w Gil lllnkt, 1 ton li'.uck
whttll I !8dlataro. 0 &amp; R ., ..to
Ripl~. WV. :io4-372·3U33 or 1:

800•273-8321.

,

:;
Homes ~:

.!!fOr.

1181 DuJCh"",.. txceuen~ cOnd,

,

...

., •I
, .l r

·-~
·i':l .

•1

··-

...
"

t

.,

•!"!
"..111

~l:

,

~} :·
1

••

~

':

t

.

.. J '

Fu.l l line of auto body panels,
•
pa1nts tnd tuppllls. alto glatt .-- •
light aSumbty. Oxygen and ace:
:
tylona liliM filled ' and exchanged,
•
814-742-27U2.
.
'

~ campers· &amp;

477'N.H': Hayblni _,,400 814·
082·3U1141. .
• .

.

..

•

~ldtd, tlkt.-ovet Pl)'menti.' 3a4- •....~
875-5!522. ' .... ·'·
'.
20 ·Ft. Argh~: (By Air Siroom)

T. T. ·Vary Jtgnt, Pull With f._ny
Mtdlum Slit'Car, C~!v :R.

Mbilhad, s:t;~ao. 81!1-44f-ilii7..
~LHV I Cl

i

S

-

•

''ll A

' ... ,w

,,.

I

i'(.,)

-

J&gt;SS.

~~
·.~.,.~

-. v•.et
~~~

·' ' f

·~
I~

.. r•.o«

~

: r:.

-..!;.

' ,l;ll
~­

• •:1
' 011

• '! ~

. ···...:.
, "'l

��</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="401">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9783">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="28570">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="28569">
              <text>June 30, 1997</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
