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                  <text>Ohio ~ottery
'Whiz Kid'

Pick 3:
1·4·2
Pick 4:

Ashburn

WE FINISHED 1996 AS THE #I TOYOTA 414
TRUCK DULER IN THE WORLD!
WE CAN'T IMPROVE ON THAll BUT NOW WE HAVE TO
STAY THERE. HELP. HELP! HELP!

dies at 70

3-9-0-2

Sports on Page 5

Buckeye 5:
11-12-14-18·19

NGnCE: C&amp; 0 MOTORS CHEVIOLIY &amp;OlDSMOBIU SERVICE DEPT. HAS DOUBLED IN SID TO ACCOMMODATE THE HIGH VOWMI SAlES DEPT.
NOW TAKING APPOINTMENTS 127·2921. ASK FOR THE SERVICE DlPARTMEIIT.

VE

LEXUS

LOVE

TOYOTA-

NEW 1998 TOYOTA 414
(

AIR, AM/FM UDIO
IS
lOW
AS

~. 48,

.

BRAND

AMONTH

ALL
HAVE
DUAL
IS
lOW
IS

By JIM FREEMAN

1997 414 EXT. CAB

$

IT'S

IS
LOW

••

partnership
needed for Meigs
branch caitipus'·
By JIM FREEMAN

UV4
SEE

AS

·LOVE TOYOTA

NO DIALERS

ALL PRICES INCWDE

OPEN

MON.·FRL
SAT. 9·6
AFrER

TOYOTA
IS
· LOW
IS

TOYOTA

LEXUS

W.VA.'S LARGEST TOYOTA
DEALERSHIP -IS LOOKING
FOR GOOD RELIABLE SALES
PEOPLE. EXPERIENCE NOT
NECESSARY. 'PLEASE APPLY
IN THE TOYOTA SHOWROOM.
AND

Sentinel News Staff
: As a precursor of Tuesday night's
meeting to discuss the possibility of
Meigs County branch campu s of
the University of Rio Grande/Rio
&lt;;Jrande Community College, Dr. Barry M. Dorsey, president of the two
establishmenls, addressed approxi-·
rt~ately 30 people attending Tuesday's
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce luncheon at Carlelon School in
Syracuse.
· Dorsey said URG ·has a special
relationship with the county, particularly through the community college
which enrolled more than 200 Meigs
Countians last year.
He cited four reasons people
anend URG: very small classes, caring faculty and staff, the diversily of
·degree programs and reasonable cost
"We think we are a bargain," he
said.
·
Dorsey noted some of ·the ·
improvements made during his si•·
year tenure at the school including
lhe renovation of eight campus buildings, new parking lois, a state-of-thelll11rack, ihe installation of fiber-optic
telephone lines and Internet access,·
and an increased endowment pri·
marily used for scholarships.
·
On ihe academic front, the school
has reinstituted its bachelor of arts
p{ogram, extended its masters program for classroom teaching and
added new degree programs like
c'ilvironmcntal science.
Dorsey said the university was in
l~e prQI:ess of developing a strategic
plan for future deve:opmenl when
Meigs Counly Economic Developmeni Director Ron McDade asked if
he would be interested in lalking to
tlie people of Meigs Cimnly aboul a
bianch campus.
·
: Dorsey said the school agreed
slnce McDade's request coincided
wilh the school's slrategic planning

a

MUST

IS
LOW

A Gannett

Co. Newspaper

1

IMPORT
DEALER
IN THE

STATE
AS

LOW
AS

Ucvelopment

Director Ro n McDade.
.
Sentinel News Staff
"This is fantastic , Ron." Dorsey
If the future of a proposed Univers ily of Rio Grande/Rio Grande said, referring to the &lt;.:apacity crowd
•Communily College branch campus which had filled the available chairs ·
hinged solely on communily interest, · and lined up along the back waiL "We .
Tuesday nighl's meeting at the Meigs are here to exp lore together the pas- ·
County Senior Citizens Center in; sibility of making higher cd ~catio n
Pomeroy would have cemented the more accessible to the students of ,
deaL
· Meigs County."
Dorsey then introduced members
Approximately 176 people signed
· the guest register at the meeting, of hi s s1aff includin g Dr. Gregory
sponsored by the Meigs Counly Sojka, university provost who p[lssed I
Chamber of Commerce. but others out surveys concerning perceived
coming in lined up ~l o ng the back educational needs.
"We need yo ur help lonirhl," Sojwall of the room or stood just inside
ka said. "We can't tell you what your
the doorway.
URG/RGCC President Dr. Barry needs are."
The surveys will be di slributed at
M. Dorsey reiterated his earlier comments made at the Meigs County local banks and other businesses and
Chamber of Commerce luncheon should be turned into the Meigs
when he said establishment of a County Chamber of Commerce
branch campus depended upon com- office at 238 W. Mai n Streel,
munity- intc~cst, receiving informa- . Pomeroy. OH 45769.
Dorsey said the next step is to find
tion on wamed courses and programs,
and gelling assistance in idenlifying a pl ace for classes.
· Although the venture would not
a site for classes.
mark
the first ·time the sc hool has
Dorsey was inlroduced by Mei gs ·
. .

~True

NEW

HURRY,
HURRY,
HURRY

1

County Econom1c

Dorsey tells chamber

ALL

NEW TOYOTA RAV 4

2 Sections, 12 P••, 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 10, 1997

branch. campus

TOYOTA
NUMBI
OlEIN ·

cws

NO. 102

·Interest evident
in proposed Meigs

lAGS

TOYOTA COROLLA

en tine

C1117, Ohio Valley Publlohlng Company

AIR

$

•

..

1998
TOYOTA
TRUCK'S

Cloudy tonight, chance
of showers, thunder·
storms. LQws in upper
50s. Thursday, rain, high
in the lower 70s.

MEIGS CAMPUS DISCUSSED - Interest in a proposed Meigs
County Branch of the University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College was evident by a large turnout at a meeting held
held off-campus classes, it will be the

sibilily and · plenty · of park in g; a

first time 11 has had a separate institution ide nti fied as a branch , he said.

pl ace with· room fm two or more

Dorsey said the schoo l is looking

c lass rooms and office space.
"We want to' havc a separate loca-

for a central location with easy acces-

tion identifie.d as the branch campus

of the University of Rio Grande for
credi t ari d non-credit dasscs. " he
said. .
.
McDade drew a round of applause
when he said "in the long term we'd

like to sec a college campUs here in
Meigs County lhal's totally new."
. Some of the questions concerned
the type and quality of classes that
Continued on page 3

Ohio House OKs tougher abortion laws
COLUM BUS (AP)- 11m Hou&gt;e
voted to toughen the state's abortion
laws Tuesday, restricting access to
abortion for minors and state work·
ers.
If the bills clear lhe Senate, a

minor wi ll have to get a parent's per-

" Moms and dads make·infinitely

miss ion before she can get an abor-

better decisions lhan a hunch of
hurcaucrats,'· Rep. JJm . Jordan, R-

tion and stale worke rs' health plans
no longer will cOver abonions, cx.cepl
in cases of rape. incest Qr medica)

necessity. .

Wcsl Liberty. who sponsored the
parental consent amendment.
·
The amendment , pattern~:d aft er a
simiJar la\\o' in M1 ssouri , would
change curre nt law, which requires
only thai pan:niS be notified he fore a
minor has an abonion . parents ~:an~
not hloc k I he procedure. But it would
leave intact a provision that allows a
minor to Js ~ jut.lgc to allow her to get
an nhnni nn without in liolvmg her

consultation.
Rep. Jay Hottinger, R:Newark.
said the bill he intrao:juced 'that prohibits slale workers' health ' plans
from covering most abortions wa~ not
"about those great moral and philosophical questions surrounding the
issue of abortion . It is about stopping
~tate dollars from paying for I hem."
Hottinger said health plans covering_ federal workers already arc prohibited from covering abortions. His
bill . which passed 60-34, would
allow slale workers lo buy separate
abortion covcmgc riders.
· Bolh bill s head loa Senate committee for consideration.
Bul lhe debate uontinued after

goals of increasing opportunities for
older adults to attend classes and of ·
offering more classes through closed
~ircuit television or branch campuses.
paren ts.
However, he slressed the pe9ple of.
Jorda n\ amcndmcm was Jacked
Meigs County must demonstrate
onto a hi ll aimed at ~:l osi ng a loopinterest in fonnatiora of a branch camhole in Ohio 's prc-&lt;.1h.nftion counselpu s for it to become a reality.
in g law. The hil l. approved 66-28. TueSday's vole.
"This must be a lrue partnership
reqUires a \'-'·oman tb h ~vc a facc-toRep. Joan Lawrence, R-Gnlcna.
between lhe people of Meigs Counf;Jcc v1sit with a doctor 24 hours one of the leading abortion rig~ts
ty and the University of Rio Grande.
hcfnre the procedure.
advocates in the House , said fellow
This must be a true partnership if I his
Rep . Jerry L uehb~rs. D-Cincin- lawmakers imposed their own rcliis to work," he explained.
natl. Jnlroduccd lhc 24-hour bill 10 gil)us Oelid!&gt;i on woman across . the
To make , the branch campus
override an op1n ion 1ssucd hy fellow sl::llc hy vntin·g lo limits al.:ccss to a
become reali1y, the universily must
Pcm nc nH and former A tt orney Gen- l:O nstitutionnlly protected mcdi~,;al
sec strong interest in a branch camera l Lee Fisher. Days before he lcfl rroccd urc.
pus, get data on courses and pro·
office in l Y94. Fisher said women
" lt "is a sad day when we dn that
grams wanted in Meig·s County, and
seeki ng ahortions would not ha ve to with impun ity.·· she said, waving a
receive assistance in identifying and
appear in person to gel pre-ahorli on small copy of I he ·u.s. Conslitution.
seiting up a branch site, he said.
co un seli ng as req uired under a 'The maJority is n01 righl in this."
"The possibilities are unlimited,"
recentl y enacted state Jaw. He said
8ut Janet Folger. exec uti ve dircche said. "I can see older adults tak·
docto~ could provide the infnmwtion
IOr of Ohio Right lo L.iiC. said lawing classes for the first lime ... for permakers did the ri gh t thing .
hy phone or on tupc .
OPPOSES BILL- State Rep. Dale Miller (D·Cieileland) gestures
sonal enrichment or to build new job
" Who knows whal's hcst for the
The
new
hill
would
make
i1
dear
as he speaks in oppOsition to House Bill 395 at the Ohio Stateskills. By working _together we can
that
th
e
"
inl"ormcd
c.:OihCnt''
reqUJre~
child
- the ahortionist ur the parhouse in Columbus Tu.esday. The bill,, which requires women
increase the number of jobs and
mcnt and 24-hour waitin g peri od ems"' The answer has to he lhc parseeking an abortion to meet with a doctor at least 24 hours pri·
ava il abili ty or johs here in Mcig'
· were intended to include ,an in-person ents,·· she said.
or to the "procedure and minors io receive parental consent,
Cou my." ·
passed the House and will move to the Senate for approval. (AP)
Dorsey made 1hc lo llpwJng
pledge: "We will Jo eve ryth ing we
can to make this a rea lity if the interest is there."
In o1her business. chaniber Presi- BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
a display of hunting troph1es in the lows: Church scrvlcc al I0 a.m.; hill just outside the senior fair builddent Sue M.aison reported on the .. Sentinel News Staff
coonhunlers building. Bill Spaun is Di ane Nea'" and family at II a.m., ing. Those at!en~ing arc invited to
Meigs County Expo WhJCh will be \
A monsler lruck is c Jming 10 the chainnan of that display.
Robin d'Hart at noon .. Big Bend take lawn chairs si nce no seating will
held Se_pl. 20-21 all he Rock Springs Meigs County's Town and Country
An antique tractor and eq uipment Cloggers al I p.m., Bill Crane and be provided.
Fairgrounds. The chamber will also Expo '97.
There is no admission charge.
pull will take pl ace on Saturday at 2 "Dusk", Paulclte Harri son, ·Debbie
sponsor ·a parade, a casino night and
Called the "Ciyclone" the 1ruck p. m. in the pulling track and 2:30 Grueser, Sally Radford Ingles. and
Committee chairmen of events
Ohio Ri ver cruise during lhe Big has a 1997 Dodge fiber1lass body p.m. a dog obedience and com for- MiclWie Hupp at 2 p.m.; a perfor- and activities are Kenny Buckley and
Bend Slernwheel Festival wh1ch will and~ill be taking passengers on rides mation demonstration will be con· mance of Trinity Church Bells Choir Hal Kneen. Becky Baer, Addalou
be held Oct 2, 3 and 4.
over crushed cars.
·.Lewis, Jim Watson, and Dallas
ducted in the show arena by the at 3 p.m. and B. l Smilh at 4 p.m .
·
The stage will be located on the Weber.
McDade remarked he has been
The Expo will be held o111he Rock Krawsczyns.
meeting with utility representatives Springs Fairgrounds and the monsler
On Sunday's agenda will be tracconcerning t~e Tuppers Plains "indus- truck will be just one of many evenls, tor driving skills and games at I, p.m.
lrial sile and lhat work .is proceeding activities, displays, demonstrations,
01her activities will include pony
on sc hedule . He also said a public and entertai nment on tap for the rides for the children, displays by garhearing may be. held as early as weekend of Sept 20 and 2 1. There den club members and herbalisls,
the will be a small fee for a ride on the craft e•hibits, flea market booths, and
December
concerning
Ravenswood Connector project
"Ciycione."
a variety of commercial displays.
A new feature this year Will be a · Exotic animals will be on the
Stihl chainsaw sculpturer. The artist :grounds as a pan of a pelting zoo, and
will be sponsored by Ridenour Sup- entertainment will be featured on !
ply. He will not only demonslrale cre- · bolh days from 10 ·a. m. Ia 4 p.m.
ation of art objecls using a chainsaw,
Saturday's sched ule include s
·
PSU and OASU said 1n a news bul also "hot" saw usc.
music by Linda and Manhew King at
The new and the old in automorelease Tuesday that said the QEA
10 a.m.; the Swinging Seniors at II
biles will be featured at the Expo. a.m.; Sheila Arnold al noon ; Belles
was refusing to bargain.
Not lruc, OEA presidenl Mike Bil- Dealers will be showing what's new Jlnd Beaus Square Dancers al l p._m.;
for '98 on Saturday, and on sunday Debbie Powell at 2 p.m., Kelley
lirakis said.
after
outdoor church services at I0 Grueser and Cynthia Cotterill at 3
" We ' re trying to gel back lo lhe
a.m.,
drag and round track cars will _p.m. and vocalist Robin d'Hart at 4
table and hope to solve thi s disbe
on
display.
COMING TO EXPO - The "Cyclone" monster truck will be at
agreement we're having with our
p.m.
Town and Country Expo· '97.
·
the
Plans are also moving forward for
employees," Billirakis said .
On S_unday the scheduled is as fol -

Expo '97

wm feature monster truck display on Sept. 20, 21

8oth sides are waiting to return
to bargaining table in OEA strike
COLUMBUS (AP)- The president of lhe Ohio Educalion Association denied claims lhat the state's
largest teachers union refused 10 bargain in a strike wilh 1wo smaller
unions.
'
The Professional Staff Union and
the Ohio Associate Staff Union went
on strike Sept I against the OEA.

Tuesday night in Pomeroy to discuss the proposed venture. Here,
URG/RGCC President Dr. Barry M. Dorsey addresses the almost·
200 people in attendance.
·

J

�Co~mentary

Wedn•day, September 10,1997

Page2
Wldnetdlly, September 10, 1987

Pomeroy·. Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

Interest shown ...

Tbunday, Sept. 11

By Jack Anderson

'EstaHtSiid in 1948
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-215e • Fax H2·2157

.!1 ·
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
G_,.l M11111ger

__ ,.,..__ .,,., ...

Tbt Sntilld

MARGARET LEHEW

____....,....,__
Controller

*Oil.,..,.,..,_ to.,_ ldMDr tMt ,..,_.on •broltd,.,.. ot .,._

bolnp,., ['

'&gt;oil. I)Jpod ....
- ..,-p~GW ..-. ~~p«~~y.
or ........ . , 10: utaara 11:1 1M Edlor. 71'11 ...,..., 111 Court St, PclliiW:OJ', 01t1o
U7tf; 01', FAX tol1....-.zt67.
- - (.IIIG -

" ' _ , - 1110 - - . ,

_, ......... ,__ ... ,.,..,_-

What they are saying
elsewhere around Ohio
'

By The Aasoclllled Pres•
Excerpts of recent editorials of statewide and national1nterest from Ohio
newspapers:
The (Cievebncl) Plain De.aer, Sept. 8
The busmess of bounty huntJng typically bas operated well outside the
margins of the law. Bounty hpnters have been known to resort to lcidnappmg, harassment and extreme intimidation tn an effort to track down and
capture bail Ju,mpers. The intimidation turned deadly last week, however,
when bounty hunters burst tnto a Phoenix house and shot two people to
&lt;Ieath m what turns out to have been a case of mistaken idenbty.
These deaths- murder is what prosecutors are calling them-:- are tnexcusable and the perpetrators should be punislred. The Oeeing bail jumper
was not in the home, nor is there any evidence that the deceased knew· him.
Yet without a warrant or poltce escort, ftve men m ski masks burst into the
home and began to tte up young ch1jdren and shoot adults. Unfortunately, it
has taken such deaths to focus attention on an industry that ought to be regulated and closely monitored.
The Middktown Journal, Sept. 3
Regardless of who is ulttmately to blame for Saturday's tragedy in Paris
- and it appears that there's plenty to go around -it's likely that none of
us will e~er look at the grocery store tabloids the same way again.
People around the world were shocked when Diana. the beloved princess
of Wales, and her compamon, Dodi Fayed, perished m a spectacular car
accident in a Paris tunnel. Many immediately beran oointinr accusmg fingers at the photographers- the paparazzt- who were pursumg the car carrying the pair.
In the calmer how;s that followed Saturday ntght's stunning news, more
details about the crash emerged - the speed at which the car was traveling,
the blood-alcohol level of the dnver (who was also killed) - that began to
diVert the public's attention away from the paparazzi.
Photographers relentlessly chase celebnttes because tabloid newspapers
want to buy the photographs. The tabloids want to buy the photos in order
to sell more papers to us, the readmg public. And we buy them. When the
demand for this type of JOUrnaltsm - 1f 11 can be called that - goes away,
so will the paparazzi.

8lld ...... Moller
SAN FRANCISCO -- The cable
car operator, Ted, has a story to tell.
Tounsts love the trolleys, he says,
so the city wants to keep them operatmg just the way they always have,
which means no eleclroruc improvements.
That means 1he "gnp man" still
has to pull a huge lever back and
forth to brake and move the antiquated cars up and down San Francisco's hilly streets. And that produces aches and pains, in the shoulders, back and anns.
As a result, a lot of Ted '~ friends
don' t come to work and are getting
paid workers' compensation. He's
thmking about doing it h1mself,
beca11se the pam ts getting to htm.
Yet the mayor, Ted observes, is starting to ride a little herd on workers'
comp claims.
"I don't know who got to Willie,
but he's been beefing about this,"
says Ted, as the trolley bell clangs
and he takes off.
"Wilhe" IS Mayor Willie Brown,
for many years the Assembly speaker in the Californta l..egtslature, and
the most powerful Democrat 1n the
state. At ftrst, Brown seemed to
oppose every effort at senous refonn
of a system gone hayw1re in California -- until it hit him in his own
pocket.
Brown personally mvested in an
Oakland rad1o station and suddenly
got slung with a blizzard of workers '
Clomp claims for "stress" caused by
the change in ownership. The
claJmants said they feared the
changes that would be made at the
station.
California. supposedly the land
of the laid-back, had become a state
full of "stressed" -out workers, he
found One reason was that 11 was
one of only six states that routinely
allows beneftt payments for gradual,
nonnal workday mental stress. The
second, more Important, reason was
that by law a worker only has to
prove I0 percent of his stress was

What Meigs County does have

I
~

I

By Joaeph Perkins

have a lot of options for ratsing revenue here, so cost redpction
becomes a big 1ssue. Any time you
save money, n's like generating a
new source of revenue."
Mayor Brown wants to clamp
down on the system a bit, but knows
11 wJ\1 be slow going because of
"organized labor unions who IJave
an awful lot to say about things like

Julia Helen Barton
Juha Helen Barton, Pomeroy, fonnerly of Mason, W.Va., d1ed Wednesday, Sept 10, 1997 1n Umverslly Hospllal, Columbus.
Arrangements will be announced by the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason

'''!Mansfield

l12•l•

Pauline S. Hall

IND.

Pauline Shinn Hall, 72, Henderson, WVa., died Tuesday, Sept 9, 1997
m Pleasant Valley Hospital
Born June 6, 1925 in Mason County, W Va, daughter of the late Fred and
Nma Purdy Ke1fer, she was a housewife.
Sur~iving are her h~band, Plulhp James Hall; two sons, Dav1d Greer of
West VJrgtma, ~nd James Hall of Mount Alto, W.Va., a daughter, Phillis Smith
of Kanauga, SJx grapdehtldren; and two sJSters, Maxme F1gura of Aonda,
and Opal Tull of Arizona.
Serv1ces w1ll be I p m Fnday m the Deal &amp; Brown Funeral Home ' Pomt
Pleasant, W.Va., with the Rev. Ralph Workman officJatmg. Bunal w1JI be m
the Wolfe Valley Cemetery, Leon, W.Va. Fnends may call at the funeral home
from 6-8 p m Thursday.

'' '''

workers' comp.n

' ' ' ' '•lcolumbusl72•

A look at the ftgures shows that
San Francisco's transit authority
spends nearly $4,000 per employee
on workers' compensation, well
above the ftgHres in four comparable
transit agencies around the country.
And the c1ty's cable car operators have a h1gher 1nc1dence of InJUries
than workers in typ1cal bus and subway serv1ces.
So cable operator Ted was nght
to p1ck up the scent of refonn But
what worries the friendly gripman ts
going to be good for the beleaguered
taxpayers of thJS c1ty
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers ror United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

I

W.VA.

Zelia Riley
Zelia Lou1se Lighter Riley, 83, Middleport, died on Tuesday, September
9, 1997, at the extended care umt of Veterans Memonal Hosp1tal.
Ice
Sunny Pr. Cloudy Cloudy
She was born on January I, 1914, daughter of the late Jasper Thomas
L1ghter and Lemma Leora Pullin L1ghter. She was a member of the Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Wnnesses and was a homemaker.
Survtvmg are her husband, Thomas A "TA" 'Riley, Middleport, her daughter, Sharon L Ashley, Middleport, two Sisters, Mary Wmgett of Syracus:
and Bett1e Mans, Los Altos, Cahf ; two grandchtldren, three great grandExtended forecast.
1 children, a great-great granddaughter and several meces and nephews.
Friday...A chance of ram northeast ·
BeSJdes her parents, she was preceded in death by a brother.
and east central. Dry elsewhere.
Serv1ces Will be held on Fnday at I p m. at the Mtddleport Chapel of FIShLows in the 50s and h1ghs around 70. er Funeral Home, w1th Lane Damels offic1at1ng
Saturday Falf Lows m the 50s
Bunal wtll follow at Gravel Htll Cemetery.
and h1ghs 70 to 75.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Thursday from 6 to 8 p.m
Sunday... A chance of showers. Mainly north and west Lows m
the 50s and h1ghs m the 70s.

Today's weather forecast
Ohio
Today.. Showers with a chance of
thunderstonns. Highs 70 to 75
Ton1ght Cloudy Ram hkely
aorth Mainly early north ' central
and, northeast Scattered showers
south early Lows 55 to 60.
Thursday ...Cioudy. Rain hkely
north Scattered showers central.
Highs around 70

I THOU6HT FAIRY

TALES HAD
HAPPY ENDINGS .

By The Associated Press
A low pressure system that
btought rain to Oh1o w1ll rema1n m
the state unttl at least Thursday
morn mg.
Lows tomght will be 55 to 60
degrees.
Sk1es wdl be cloudy on Thursday.
and some ram is forecast. H1ghs will
be about 70.
The record high temperature for
thiS date at the Colurnbus weather
station was 96 in 1983 The record
low was 41 in 1943.
Sunset today w11I be at 7 48 p.m.
SunrJse Thursday w1ll be at 7:09am.
Aero.. the nation
A gray dawn broke th1s morntng
over much of the East, where low
pressure brought clouds and the
threat of heavy rain from Kentucky
to New York state, and a cold front
men;u:ed the South
Moderate to heavy rain was forecast from eastern Michigan and western New York south to eastern Kentucky and West V1rgin1a. As much as
2 to 4 1nches of rain was expected,
bringing Oash floods to low-lying
areas.

enues to schools, but also eannarks a
Now these m1ght be reasonable
spec1fied percentage of state lottery trade-offs 1f smaller classes meant
proceeds to schools.
that students would learn more than
But there IS no proven correlatiOn they would in larger classes But
between school spend1ng and stu- education researcher Enc Hanushek
surveyed 152 stud1es that
dent
' perfonnance.
considered pupil/teacher
Indeed, per-pup1l expenratto, all but 27 of which
ditures in the URiled
showed no statistically stgStates rose by nearly 22
mficant results
percent 10 the 1970s
(adJusted for mflat1on),
As to the 27 wtth
and by more than 48 pers1gmficant ftndmgs, 14
cent in the 1980s. Yet,
showed a pos111ve benefit
over the same span, averof smaller class size, 13
age SAT scores dechned
showed a negauve effect.
These mJXed results hardly
nearly 100 points.
seem to JUSilfy the b1lhons
-- Smaller class SJze
of
dollars .that Caltfornia
enhances student perforand
others states are
mance.
Perkins
"
m
vestmg"
m smaller cl~sA number of states
have bought into ' this fictiOn . In es
trend-setting California. agam, the
CoMputers are v1tal to
governor and the l..eg1slature agreed Improvement m student achlevelast year to "mvest" SI b1\hon to ment.
reduce class SJZe in grades K to 3, to
ThiS JS the latest technology fad
no more than 20 pupils per teacher
that's supposed to revolut1on1ze eduThe 1mmed1ate effect of thJS cation (much as it was previously
move to smaller classes was a m1n1- predicted that motion ptcture~dto
cnsts throughout the state school and televtston would prove to be
system. F1rst, the schools had to Invaluable teachmg tools).
open up some 18,000 new classThe frightenmg thmg about n IS
rooms, wh1ch meant that they con- that the federal government IS preverted space from rhe1r hbrar1es, pared IQ spend up to $100 bilhon
' auduonumS: .cafetenas and play- over five years to put a computer m
grounds. Then the schools had to every American classroom. And
make an all-out effort to h1re an both Prestdent Chnton and House
add111onal 18,000 new teachers, one- Speaker Newt Gingrich are vying
fourth of whom, 11 turned out, Jacked for cred1t
teachmg credenuals
But there Simply is no proof that

computers will make students
smarter. And a Los Angeles elementary school, Corona, provides an
instructiVe example. In 1985, the
school was selected by the state of •
California to create a model computer program for students Corona
received money for computers,
printers, editing equ1pment and
teacher traming. Yet, after six years,
the elementary showed no change in
student test scores
Much of the pubhc blindly
accepts the conventwnal w1sdon\ ·
about educauon -- that more money,
smaller classes and new technology _
are the key to Improved student per-

allows people over 60 to take classes up to the 200 level free on a non'credit, space-avatlab\e bam
"You never stop learning." he
sa1d, addmg that the older adults generally enrJChen the classes they
attend
Dorsey also sa1d the branch could
draw students from ne1ghbonng communllles m Mason County, W Va . or
Washmgton and Athens countJes
He also sa1d about 85 perccn1 of
the umversuy's studenls recc1ve some
sort of financial a1d, making school
more affordable for Me1gs County
reSidents
Also present was Paul Lloyd
dean of the College of Profess1onal
StudieS
Dorsey sa1d the survey results will
be calculated and presented to the
U~G board on Oct. 18 wnh a recommendatiOn acccptmg or declmm~
the branch campus concept
If approved, Dorsey sa1d he would
hke to have a program m place by
Jan 3, 1998
"Help us do thai ," he sa1d
Two of the local speakers commented that 1h1s represents a "great
day" for Me1gs County
"Th1s IS a great day for Me1gs
County," sa1d R1ebel
"September 9, 1997, has been a
great day for Me1gs County,"
McDade concluded

Educational survey distributed

Nellie Mae Newell

Highs were forecast from the 60s
m Matne to the 70s m Maryland.
A cold front was movmg mto the
Southeast and Gulf Coast states,
bnngmg scattered showers and thunderstonns - some severe w1th h1gh
winds, ha~l and flash flood1ng. Temperatures were expected to reach the
m1ddle and upper 80s.
Clear to partly cloudy sk1es were
expected from the Plains 1nto the
Mtssissippi Valley, though a cold
front brought rainy weather to southwestern Texas and eastern New MexICO
Htghs were expected to range
from the 60s in northern Mmnesota
to the 90s across southern Texas.
The highest readmg m the Lower
48 states Tuesday was I 07 at Blythe.
Cahf The low was 33 at Leadv1lle,
Colo.
Widely scattered showers and
thunderstorms were expected over
the.. s_outhern and central Rocky
Mountain reg10ns. as a upper level
high pressure brought moisture from
the Pactfic. Other showers were posSible across northern Oregon and central idaho

ferred meetmgs days and t1mcs rangmg Jrom day and n1gh1 weekday
classes and weekend classes of varymg class length
The th1rd section concerns needed scrv1ccs rangmg from parkmg,
ch1ld care and financ1al a1d to academic and personal counseling amJ
computer laos
The surveys arc available at local
hanks and other bus mess In odd111on
area student~ w11l be g1vcn surveys to
take home
Comments conccrntng the above
survey que stion~ can be also be scnl
v1a
clccuon1c
ma1l
to
bdorsey@ urgrgcc edu

Meigs EMS logs 8 calls

Middleport Court news -

Med1cal Center,
5:20p.m . state Route 124 Gerald
Pentx Ill. VMH.
MIDDLEPORT
7 29 p m , OBNC. Sara Boyles,
Pleasant Valley Hosp11al
RACINE
5·20 p m. state Route 124 Robert
Forester, VMH
SYRACUSE
3:08 a.m , Manuel Road, Racmc,
Ed1th Manuel. VMH
7:30am .. Un1on Alley. Erma R1f
Oe, VMH

Patrol steps up enforcement
along 33 construction zone

fonnance

But ev1dence shows that student
ach1evement was actually higher :
three decades ago when education · :
spendtng consumed less of the '
nauon 's gross domestic product,
there were more pupils per teacher,
and there were no computers (or:
even calculators) in classrooms
No one would deny the nation's
schools the resources needed to '
properly educate Amenca's chtldren. But, the pubhc has every right
to expect that, as school resources ·
grow, there will be a commensurate
Improvement m student performance.

Meigs announcements

Zelia Riley
;t:ella Lou1se Lighter Riley, 83, Middleport, dted on Tuesday. September
9, )997. at the extended care unit of Veterans Memonal Hosp1tal.
She was born on January I, 1914, daughter of the late Jasper Thomas
Ltghter and Lemma Leora Pulhn L1ghter She was a member of the Kmgdom Hall of Jehovah's W1tnesses and was a homemaker.
SurviVIng are her husband. Thomas A. "TA" Riley, Middleport; her daughter, Sharon L Ashley. Middleport, two SJsters, Mary Wingett of Syracuse
an&lt;j Bettie Maris, Los Altos, Cahf. a granddaughter, Paula Ashley, and a
grandson, Bob "RG" Ashley, both of Middleport. three great grandchildren
Stephame Kmg and Amy and Matt Yonker, all of M1ddleport, a great-great
granddaughter, Dame lie Kmg, M1ddleport, and several meces and nephews
Jjes1des her parents. she was preceded m death by a brolher
5erv 1ces w1ll be held on Fnday at I p m a1 the Middleport Chapel of FISher Funeral Home, w1th Lane Damels offic1atmg.
Jlunal will follow at Gravel Hill Cemetery
fncnds may call a1 the funeral home on Thursday from 6 to 8 p m.

Joseph Perkins is a columnist
for the San Diego Unlon-1iibune
and a commentator for MSNBC.

ment store - says the motorcy'Cie- pened.
re!ponSJblitty for the crash that took :
ndmg paparazzi who were m hot
"It was D1ana's w1ll the car go the hves of Dtana, l'ayed and Paul,
pursuit of the car are to blame forthe fast That 1s Without questton, " she and senous mjured the security .
fatal crash. If they hadn'1
sa1d, before flymg from guard
been so mtent upon usmg
London to New York for
He says the mternallonal tablOid
1he1r cameras to leer 1010
an appearance on the press JS at fault.
every pnvate moment hJS
Monte! Wdhams Show,
Thelf reckless pursuit of celebrison shared wnh Diana,
where she w1ll no doubt ues fuels the kmd of mmdless
AI-Fayed said through a
repnse her seer act
behav10r that produced the Pans car
spokesman, the car carryAnother blame-11- chase that cost D~ana her hfe, he sa1d
mg them would not have
on-D1 theory says that had at a Los Angeles press conference
raced through the streets
the pr10cess been wear10g
That's a plauSJ ble stretch.
of Paris at breakneck
a seat hell she probably
But then there JS Moammar Gadspeed.
would have survived the hafi, the L1byan leader and coddler
That 's reasonable to
Wickham
crash that caved 10 the car's of international terrorists, who
assume
roof and pushed 1ts engme block mto announced thJS week that the Brittsh
What's not is where Lady Cohn the front seat ThJS b1t of wJSdom and French secret serv1ces conspired
Campbell heaps the blame for this comes not from the rescue workers to killed Diana
tragedy She puts 11 squarely in the who took two hours to free her from
Why?
lap of the woman for whom much of the tangled wreck, but rather from an
Because she was m love wnh an
the world now gneves
offic1al of a Gennan automotive Arab
" Make no mistake," she told assoc1at10n who d1dn't get any closThey "executed an Egypllan
New York Post gosSip columnist er to the acctdent scene than his t•le- nattonal and a Bnush nauonal
Cmdy Adams, "11 was Diana's vmce vision set.
because they were annoyed that an
that wh1pped that chauffeur to go so
Fayed's former g1rlfnend Ara.b man m1ght marry a BntJSh
fast. It would not be the dnver 's model Kelly Fisher- says he and princess," Gadhafi reasoned "So
chotec to speed like that."
D1 would be altve today if he hadn't the Brttish and French secret serAnd how does she know thts?
dumped her for the Princes of Wales. vtces arranged an acddent and perAs the author of a bwgraphy "None of th1s would have hap- petuated a repugnant cnme in front
about Diana's life as a member of pened," she whmed on the "Today" of the world."
the British ·royal family, she cla1ms show, if Dod1 hadn't cut her loose.
The sad truth is that death comes · :
an insider's knowledge of the Now that's some really mean-spirit- to us all And when our time IS up
princess' most pnvate thoughts. She ed hindstght.
there is nothtng we can do to delay
IS adamant 1n her bebef that the
Actor George Clooney had his it's arr1val. No amount of 20-20
prmcess is the cause of what hap- own 1dea about who should bear the hindSJght can change thJS reahty

Continued from paae 1
would be held at the proposed branch
campus
Sojka sa1d that would depend on\
the results of the survey, but sa1d a
class has to have at least nme students
enrolled
The 1deal SituatiOn would be to
have a long-term pr~gram w1th a
cohort of about 25 students, he srud
"Classes would have to be of
equal qua\Jty or we would not offer
it," he stressed "D1fferen1 cannot
mean lower quailty ·
H1gh school JUntors and semors
could take advantage of the post-secondary enrollment opuon in whtch
students can get a h1gh school diploma wh1le gettmg college credn
"The goaiJS for them to get a taste
of college hfe ," he sa1d
John R1ebe\ Sr.. supenntendent of
the Me1gs County Educauonal Servtce Center, saJd the county's three
dJSiricts already have post-secondary
optiOn students and that the post-secondary opt1on would certamly be
posstble under the new program
Dr. Janet Byers, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sctence
wh1ch tncludes the school's nur&gt;mg
program. satd Metgs County nursmg
programs could posSibly work tn
partnership With local med1cal estabhshments
In addmon, the school currently

Meigs County reSidents wtll have
unttl Sept. 30 to complete
URG/RGCC Me1gs County Future
Student EducatiOnal Needs Surveys
'
Nelhe Mae H1ggmbotham Newell, 77, Southstde, W.Va., died Tuesday, and turn them m at the Me1gs CounSept. 9, 1997 m the Pleasant Valley Nur&gt;ing and Rehab1htauon Center, Point ty Chamber of Commerce office on
West Mam Street, Pomeroy.
Pleasant, W Va
The firs1 part of the survey proBorn Sept 28, 1919 1n SouthSide, daughter of the late Floyd and Grace
VIdes
a hs1 of academ1c programs
Cornell H1ggmbotham, she was a member of the Hannony Baphst Church
w1th respondents bemg asked to
in Souths1de.
She was alsq preceded m death by her husband, Lester Wilham Newell, place a check by theJr h1ghest pnoron Apnl6, 1992; a daughter, Peggy Pnce, a sJSter, Cora Ruth Baud, and two lly bachelor of SCience m nursmg,
brothers, Robert Htggmbotham and Paul H1ggmbotham.
, microcomputer apphca110ns m busiSurviVIng are three sons, W1lham (BIIhe) Newell of Odenton, Md , Den- ness, socml servaces. busmess manver (Pauhne) Newell of Galhpohs, and Charles (Norma) Newell of South· agement. behaviOral and soc1al sciSJde; SJX gra~dch1ldren, four great-grandchildren and several stepgrandchll- ence degrees. commumcauons, gendren , four Sisters, Magg1e Sheppard of Pomt Pleasant, Zora Rawson of Mid- eral stud1es and other
The second pan concerns predleport, Dorothy Clonch of Gallipolis, and Ltnda Dunn of Pomeroy. and four
brothers, John H1ggmbotham of Buffalo, W Va., Carl H1ggmbotham of Henderson, W Va, and Ray H1ggmbotham and Charles H1ggmbotham. both of
Souths1de.
Serv1ces w1ll be I p.m Fnday m the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, Pomt
Units of the Me1gs County EmerPleasant, wnh the Rev Steven Carter and the Rev. Fred McCallister offiCIatmg Bunal will be m the Beech H1ll Cemetery Fnends may call at the funer- gency Med1cal Servtce recorded etght
al home from 6-9 p m Thursday
calls for asSistance Tuesday. Umts
respondmg mcluded
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2·04 a.m , Overbrook Nursmg
Center,
Middleport, Evelyn Murray,
I
M1!1dleport
Mayor Dewey Horton veh1cle, M1chael E Myers, Crown Holzer Med1cal Center,
processed 14 cases 10 Mayor's Court Cny. $21 and costs, speed, Patty S
II 30 am ., Second Street, Syraon Tuesday evenmg.
Lavender, M1ddleport, $14 and costs, cuse, Helen Barton, Veterans MemoForfe1tmg bonds were Steven R. speed, Kathy V Shockey, Pomeroy, rial Hospnal, Syracuse squad as&gt;JslPeckham, Middleport, $150, dJSor- $25 and costs,leavmg the scene of an ed,
derly manner; Terry Day, Pomeroy, acc1dent, $25 and costs, 1mproper
12 35 p m , Mulberry Avenue,
$60, no operator's license, Clint Allen backmg, Mehssa Ann Roush, M1d- Pomeroy, Paul Bush, VMH pendmg
B1ckle, Galllpohs, $47, speedtng; dleport, $100 and costs, possesSion of transfer to Oh1o State Umvcrslly
Charles D Jeffers, Pomeroy, $60, manjuana; W111iam R Ptfddy, Midassured clear diStance , R1chard A dleport, $100 and costs. disorderly
Reitmire, New Haven, W.Va., $150, after warmng. Kenneth W Wyer, Jr.
diSorderly manner
Gai\Jpohs, $20 and costs, speed, PrcFmed were Mark A. Haley, Jr., cious Moore, Middleport. $100 and
Pomeroy, $21 and costs, speedmg, costs, d1sorderly manner, a~d
June H Ashley, Racme, $25 and W1lham E ChcvaiJCr, M1ddlcport,
He1ghtened enforcement will l&gt;c
costs, boardmg and leavmg a parked $65 and costs. assault.
seen on a secuon of the U.S 33 fourlane now under cunstruct1on, the Gallia-Melgs Post of the State H1ghway
Patrol has adv1sed
Special setvices set
Water pressure low
The contractor w1ll be w1ll be
A songfest wtll be held Sunday at gnndmg up and removmg old surSyracuse reSidents w1ll noted that
wafer pressure 1n the VIllage JS low the Rock Spnngs Um1cd MethodiSt faces and replac1ng them w1th new
for the next several days. Jantce Church at 2 p m. Rev1vaJ serv1ces matenals Lt Wayne McGlone, the
Zw1lhng. v1llage clerk/treasurer, will be held at the Rock Spnngs post commander, sa1d constructiOn
reported that the tank JS bemg dramed Church Monday, Tuesday and workers will be workmg close to, and
and cleaned and water w11J be Wednesday at 7 p.m each evenmg
pumped dtrectly from the wells, wJth Joe Rader as the speaker There
will be spec1al smgmg each eveni,ng
resulung m the low pressure.
Holzer Medical Center
Fund drive slated
Discharges Sept. 9 - Iva NorCoin Club to meet
The Tuppers Plams F1rc Depart- man, Mrs. Mark Kleyman and son,
The OHKan Com Club w1ll hold ment Will have a fund dnve Saturday Mrs Steven Moore and daughter,
tts regular meettng, Sept. 22, 8 p.m startmg at 9 a.m. Ftrc personnel wtll Jesse Duncan, Betty Marcum, Robert
at the R1verbend Arts Council bUJid- be gomg door to door to collect dona- Canter, Mrs George Denny and
mg m M1ddleport The pubhc JS mvlt- tions
daughter, Yvonne Nichols, Knsty
ed. An aucuon will be held Refresh- Reception postponed
Devers
ments will be served.
A weddmg receptiOn for Brad
Births - Mr and Mrs Larry
Morrow and Ashley Roach scheduled Asr.burn, daughter, Vmton; Mr. and
Annual meeting set
for Saturday at the M1ddleport Mrs James Beaver, daughter, Crown
Sarah Weddtngton, attorney who Church of Christ's FamJ\y Life Cen- Cuy, Mr and Mrs. Allen Dav1dson,
won the landmark case Roe vs. Wade
ter has been postponed unttl a later daughler, LangSVIlle, Mr and Mrs
before the U S. Supreme Court, w1ll date.
Kevm H1ggmbotham. son, Leon,
be the keynote speaker for the
W Va; Mr and Mrs Anthony Polcyn,
Planned Parenthood of Southeast Dan&lt;e &lt;lub set
daughter, Jackson , Mr and Mrs
\Oh1o, Sept. 16, followmg a press conThe Belles and Beaus Western Rohert Waugh , &lt;laughter, B1dwell
ference to be held from 4.30 to 5 p m Square Dance Club w1ll sponsor a
(Published with permission)
at the Athens off1ce, 396 Richland dance Saturday from 8 to II p.m. at
Ave, Athens
the Sen1or CitiZens Center m
Pomeroy. Tom Poe wlil be the caller.

More rain forecast for Ohio

Playing the blame game in Diana's death

By DeWAYNE WICKHA'M
Dear Editor,
Gannett
News Service
Often we hear someone runnmg down or slammmg Meigs County, gotng
WASHINGTON - So who's
on and on about what we do not have. It JS true that Me1gs County does not
have a shoppmg center or a mall , we do not have a mov1e theater, and most really . responSible for the death of
tmportant we do not have a youth center, a place where our young people the Princess of Wales?
From lite moment news flashed
could go and have great time
around
the world of the car crash
I would like to remind us what else we do not have. Metgs County d~s
that
took
the life of Diana, the search
not have drive-by shootmgs and gang warfare We do not have hookers or
for
someone
to blame for her demJSe
crack dealers standmg on every street comer.
has
been
a
maJor subplot of 1hJS
Meigs County does not have a cnme rate so h1gh that 1t IS not safe to walk
story.
down any sidewalk or street at anyume of the day or night. Me1gs County
The list of vtllains range from the
does not have air pollution so bad that there are days dunng the year thai you
-obvious
to the ridiculous .
'
cannot go outstde and breath the atr.
Chtef
among
the
usual
suspects
Meigs County does not have water pollut1on so bad that the water cannot
be used on anything, not "even on your household plants What Me1gs Coun- in a tragedy of thJS sort JS Henn
ty does have qre the fanners, coal miners, plant and factory workers, those Paul, the dnver of the Mercedeswho work m our stores, who work in our banks, our supermarkets, and those Benz in which the prmcess, her comwho teach school, who work tn all our d1fferent businesses. The people of panion Dod1 Fayed and a security
Metgs County are the very backbone of Amenca They are the type of peo- guard were passengers. Only the
ple that no natton can- do without. The men of Me1gs County are very hard guard sumved.
French \officials say Paul was
working, loyal and patnotic They have fought in every war from the Civil
drunk
as a skunk- wnh a bloodWar to the Gulf War.
alcohollevel
of nearly four t1mes the
The women of Meigs County are also loyal and patriouc They are very
legal
limit.
St1ll
the blame game
hard working and they are some of the most beautiful and intelligent women
goes
on.
In
pan
because
Paul 's famthat you could ever hope to ftnd.
1ly
IS
quesi.Jonmg
the
accuracy
of the
Inside or outside of the United States, the people of Meigs County are
government
blood
test
results
and
some of the finest people that God Himself ever put on this green earth. So
demanding
that
an
tndependent
one
the next ttme you hear someone start telling what Meigs County doesn't
have, you tell them what we ~o have, the most tmportant thing of all, the best be conducted.
And also because people think
people that can be. That ts what matters the most.
there's a lot more blame to go
David Edwards, around.
Fayed's father, Mohamed AIPomeroy
Fayed - the btlliona~re who owns
London's famous Harrod 's departL

caused by his or her job. In other
Incredibly, one out of four city
slates, the standard IS usually 51 per- workers ftles clatms here. Budget
cent, or the majonty cause.
analyst Harvey Rose completed an
As a natural result of this, expen- exhaustive 210-page audit in 1994
SIVe
stress-related·
and concluded that as
claims in Cahforma
much as 25 percent of
leaped 700 percent m
the annual $38 million
the last decade In a
workers' comp expentyp1cal case, when a
diture was being wastSouthern Cahforma
ed on fraudulent
gannent manufacturclatms.
mg plant shut down, 26
Usmg a two-year
employees filed mental
companson with Caltstress cla~ms, usmg the Moller and Anderson fomia's 15 other most
same attorney and medpopulous c11Jes and
ical clinic, and fihng virtually the counties, Rose discovered that the
same med1cal report, wh1ch was number of clatms ftled l"ere 159
constructed by a word processor percent above the ' state's average,
from a checklist.
and that San Francisco spent at!
"At that moment (that this hap- average of $2,370 in direct compenpened to me), you could be sure that sai.Jon for each claim compared to an
eltmination of stress claims was No average of $1,270 1n the other JunsI on the agenda." Brown recalled to dicttons.
an audience of msurance executives
"The general perceppon is that
He helped the Repubbcans pass a we spend too much money on workbill that has sigmftcantly reformed ers ' compensatton," conceded Fred
the system 10 Califorma. He hopes Howell, a workers' compensation
to do the same m thJS city, and it's manager, m an intervtew with our
high time.
assoc1ate Dale VanAtta. "We don't

MICH.

Smaller class size enhances student performance··

It's that t1me of year again. Most
of the natiOn's school ch1ldren have
returned to their studies And the
public hai; turned· tts auent1on -- if
only for a fleetmg moment -- to the
cunent state of educatton m AmerJca.
The Columbus Dispatch, SepL 2
Is a more conservative parole board being too tough' on Oh10 prison
Th1s seems an appropnate time to
examine
some of the latest trends tn
inmates? Some crittcs think so, citing1110re 8,!1d more decis1ons to keep peoeducation. What we dJScover, not so
ple behind bars for 10, 20, 30 or even 40 years.
A tut;nahout m attitude by recent appomtments to the Ohio Parole Board surpnsingly, IS that much of the
IS evident in the numbers. In 1990, the board released 42.4 pen:ent of pns- accepted wisdom-- as promulgated
oners at thetr scheduled hearing; by last year, the release rate had dwindled by the education estabhshment -does not stand up to scrutiny.
to 18 percent.
That crackdown was a response to publtc concern bordenng on outrage
Consider the following articles of
at some of the violent cnmes committed by those on parole.
fa1th:
Critics also say that repeatedly denying parole creates the potential for
-- More money spent on educapnson riots, something officials dispute. Yet 1f keeping people in prison tion yields better student achtevelonger makes them more v1olent, 1f anythmg, that's a reason to keep them ment.
off the streets
This 1s the mother of all educaLike sentencing, parole decis1ons should not be arbitrary, but they cannot tion myths. It's why education fundbe reduced to an exact science. People, law-abiding and otherwise, can't be . mg has become almost the "fourth
reduced to equations.
ra11 " of pollucs •• touch 1t and mcur
Chillicothe Gazette, Sept. Z
the wrath of the 4 1111 11ton or so
Many serv1ces are better prov1ded by businesses than by government teachers, princtpals, administrators,
but running pnsons is not one of them.
librarians, engineers. custodians,
Missouri found this out recently when it sent 415 non-v10lent pnsoners to secunty officers, coaches, couna pnvate conect1onal institution tn texas because of overcrowding in its . selors, nurses, ad mfinttum, who
own pnsons.
owe their hvelihoods to the educaA videotape has surfaced of guards beating pnsoners at the Brazona non industry.
County Detention Center and letting guard dogs attack the inmates. The
Lawmakers prove thetr "commitcompany that runs the pnvate prtson JS Capttal Correctional Resources Inc. men!" to educat on by bhtltely and
1
Impnsoning our citizens in not the job of a pnvate business Only the
indiscriminately throwing money at
government 1s empowered to accuse and try people for crimes. Only the
schools. That's why California, for
government should be m charge. of the1r 1ncarcerat10n.
instance, not only has a const1tuttonal law on 1ts books that apportions a
spec1fted percentage of yearly rev-

Letters to the editor

AccuWealber" forecast for

Cable car work claims are slowed by mayor

The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

The Daily Sentinel
(USPSlU·...)
Plllthshed every aflemoon, Monday through
Fritby Ill Court S1 , f'orMro)'. Oh1o by lhc
Oflto V11lley Pubh•hma ComfJinyJGanncll Co,
Po'J'Croy, Oh10 45769, Ph 992 ll!ifl Secood

cla-.s pos1agc paid 11 Pomeroy, Ohto
Mtp~bn':

The Auoculed Press, and tile Oh10

Nc~r Auocum011

POf)"MASTER: Send addrrss correc11ons 10
Thll Da1ly Sen11nel, Ill Court Sl, Pomeroy,
OhiO 457ti9

Hospital news

The Do4gers beat the Yankees m ;
the 1955 World Senes for their only !
Series v1ctory wh1le m Brooklyn. '

Stocks
Am Ele Power .........................45
Akzo ...................................... 78~.
AmrTech ............................... 63'.1
Ashland 011 ...........................52\
AT6T ..................................... 41,..
Bank One .............................. 55~
BobEvans ............................

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at slaying of young girl

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where horne can.er tervta: ltlvallable
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0ak Hill Fln1 .......................... 20'1.
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RD/Shell ................................52\
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IRONTON (AP)- A ne 1ghbor of
Volgares. 44, was a tormer factoa couple suspected tn the death of a ry wor.ker who lost a I~'" h~Fionda
g~rl found buned tn a trash can tn a motorcycle acc1dent e1g ors say
shallow backyard grave said he was he wore h1s half in a ponytail. H1s 28shocked by the g~rl's death.
year-old w1fe was descnbed as pet1tc
" It's hard to fathom anyone domg wtth long, dark ha1r.
anythtng hke that," B1ll Stephenson
The body was found Sunday '"a
told The Dally Independent of Ash- blue 30-gallon ra:a~e canhbuned ;n
land, Ky., for a story Tuesday. "It's the back yard o t e orne t e coupe
a b1g shocker An mnocent child hke rented from Jack Volgares ' brother.
that bemg murdered "
Lawrence County Coroner Burton
Jack and Mona Volgares were Payne has sa1d the body had been
bemg sought m the death of a girl tnSJde the trash can one to two
au th on t1es have tentauve1y 1dent1fied I months but refused to comment furas Mrs Volgares ' 8-year-old daugh- ' ther Tuesday
ter, Seleana Gamble Ne1ghbors sa1d 1 Ne1ghbors d1d not know the famthey moved out of thetr house m the 1 1ly well.
m1ddle of the mghtlast month.

m some cases, on lraveled portmns of
the h1ghway
The conslf\ICIIOn zone has since
had speed hm1ts reduced from 55
mph to 45 Double fine SJgns have
also been erected m the zone,
McGlone said
Troopers w1ll be concentratmg on
speed enforcement tn the zone, "to
prov1dc the utmost safety durmg th1s
construction phase,'' McGlone sa1d.
If construction workers are m the
area at the lime of a speed vJOlatlon,
the ftne could be doubled
The reduced speed zone w11l
rema1n eff&lt;;ct1ve through the first part
of November, McGlone sa1d

The Ph1ladelph1a Athlct1cs, w1th
Conme Mack out as owner, were
moved to Kansas Ctty m 1955.

Get AJump on
Winter with
Our Huge
Selection of
Stove Pipe,
Furnace Filters
and
Accessories.
BUT NOW
ANDSAVB!

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.
773·5583

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The -Daily Sentinel ...~-

Sports

.

Stynes' homer helps Reds tally 5-2 win over Cubs

Pqt4
Wednn!l!y, Saptlmber10.1•7

By JOE KAY

Eastern spikers beat Meigs; both clubs defeat South Gallia -~
By SCOTT WOLFE
Se:Jti: Mil Correspondent
In a battle between the two league:
divisional leader.;. the Eastern Eagles
defeated the Meigs Marauder.; 15-6.
6-15, 15-4 Tuesday mghtto remain
undefeated in seven games, taking a
sttonghold on the Hocking Division
title.
.
Meigs continues t~ lead the Ohio
Division and has a 5-3 overall mark .
Both clubs defeated South Gallia
in the triangular match.
In the first game. Eastern rolled·to
a fairly easy win. after Me1gs took an
early lead on a . Bridget Johnson
serve, then gained two more points

on Becky Smilh serves.
A string of five straight by senior
Kim Mayle gave Eastern a 7-3 lead.
along with giving the Eagles the
momentum they needed to carry
them through the match. Julie Hayman ·added three more,
css Brannon added four, and

Michelle Caldwell offered up the
game point. 15-6
' In the second game. Meigs broke
open a 5-4 game with six straight

serves from Valerie Cundiff to give
the Bend Area squad a 10-5 advantage. Several great volleys. diving

added a mader for the Eagles.
Tangy Laudennih made several
di' tng 53\'eS and great sets in the
Meigs dnve, then added two marker.;
for a i2-6 MHS lead.
Amy Hysell slammed a spike and
utTered a block as a Laudennilt sa\e
pro,·died another potnt for Smith.
Meigs led 13-6. Hysell added the
last two points. despilc a good spike
by Eastern's Ang1 Wolf"'.
Eastern was near na,.·less the
third and final game of the match.
Jess Brannon a!1d Caldwell gave
Eastern a 1-0 lead. Tonya Miller had
a key spike to gain a serve for Meigs,
but it went wide and set up a Kim
Mayle dink.
Junior Stephanie Evans notched
three straight points with an ace and
two kills from Valerie, Karr.
. Carissa Ash finally got Meigs on
. the hoard, but the momentum was
killed when Meigs hit the next spike
attempt into the net.
Mayle added three more points.
then Meigs called time. Ea&gt;tern's B·aolcy and Brannon each oddcd serves
around a Laudcrmih safety for. a I().
2 tally.
Despite a good effort from the
cnLi~ Meigs crew. including a Miller

remainder of the game. · -

saves. and !!T'Cat slams hie:hli2htcd the

block. Eastern rolled on to the win .
,Evans canned the last three markers for the game point m the 15-·4
Eagle triumph .
·
S[eph Evans led the team with ten

Caldwell ond Tracy Coffey traded
spikes , to regain scrYcs for their

respe-c tive cluh&gt; and Kim Mayle

points also handhng the ball "'ell and
often. She
notched 24-17 sets. four for kills.
!WO dinks. and two aces. StatiStiCS
revealed that Juli Hayman had a spectacular floor game with a 35-44
sp1 ktng average. two sets for kills,
four points. and five dinks.
Karr was 8-17 spiking with tluee
kills and nine blocks, wit~ one ace.
Kim Mayl&lt; had nine points in a stel_lar 11-12 serving night with an ace
and five dinks. Brannon had eight
points. an ace. and a kill . Angi Wolfe
had two kills and two blocks. as did
Juli Bailey who also added an ace.
For Meigs. Johnson had live
points on 5-6 anempts.
Smith had six assists jn a good
Ooor game. Ash two kills and two
assists. Miller seven kills and two
blocks; Cundiff seyen points ·Jnd an
ace, Laudcrmilt six assists, five
points. and an ace: Coffey four kills
and a block: Hysell an ace and foul:
kills.
Eastern was sharp as a tack in the
Meigs tilt. but was as dull as a huller
knife in the second match a•ainst
South Gallia. a match that E~tcrn
eventually won 15-2 and 15-11 .
Juli Bailey gave Eastern a 2-0 kad
right out of the gale in the seco nd
match with o great spiraling S&lt;:rve and
an ace for a 2-0 EHS lead. Evans
added a marker. Karr a o solo spot. ·
and Mayle added three off a Brannon

sptke.
South Gallia called time, traohng
1-0.
.
The ro broke the momentum.
Tanya Haner and Robya Harrison
tallied markers for a 7-2 sc""'.
. The Rebels rolled the ball down
the ott and out of bounds.
Brannon aced a sen-., ·in four
tallys. then-alier another time out and
l~t serve. ,M1chelle Caldwell rcgistered t"o 5\'rves off a Karr kill .
Karr added the 14-spot oth Brannon spike .and Brannon offered the
game-point oO. the Karr spike.
Eastern won l~-2 .
Eas1crn played lacidaisi&lt;:ally in the
nightcap. and South Gallia played
quite well.
..
South Gallia led 7-4 on points hy
Rachael Waugh. Manso Snodgrnss.
Sabrina Moon~y, Harrison. Haner.
and Clark.
Sommer Fulks ad&amp;d two in the
drive. but Eastern's Bailey nullified
the short-lived lead to 7-9 on five
stra1gh1 serves and two a•:•:s.
SG called time .
Angie Wolfe made it I(). 7. then
S,noograss came back with three
beautiful s'""' for a 10- iO tie.
SG showed a lot of fight.
Eastern's oce Caldwell turned the
game around with four of her patentcd side-spin scrvesfor a 14-10 Eastem lead. Mooney pu lied her dub orn:
'

post a tc:un s1.:urc. Southern anc.l
Miller remained tied after using the
lifth and sixth scores.

Marauder· senior Clay Crow wa&gt;
mau:h medalist with an even p~1r 36.
Other scores were Dave Anderson 's

37, 39s hy Steve McCullough and
Jared Warner, Mick Barr's 40 and
Josh Pncc's 41.
For Southern. Mitchell Walkl'r led
the way with a 46. Other scores were
.Troy Hoback's and Billy Young's
49s, 56s by Chris Randolph and Benji Manuel' and Kyle Norris' 62.
In a non-cimlcrencc match played

at Clillisidc in Gallipolis la st wock,
Meigs finished founh in a matl.'h fC~t~
turc::J four of the premier teams In
sou theastern OhiO'.
~~l'cnding state champion lrunt(IO

was a tri·match.

In the win over Trimble, Bridget

Scoreboard
I J.) . I.~

Baseball

K.1~ j • . m .

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IIUJIIUII ... .

11!7

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570

70 7-1

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50.\

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7..

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....... .1~ 70 ..~17
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su,.(lkr..· .\- I J.H:O.'i!•-m. ..
"1\trullt,, tWilhams K-IJJ •• lbl.:lamJ tO..JIII .~ I .\.
.'i). IU:II.'i p.m.

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··

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l.A•!n&gt;il {l\luhk'f 10- 10) at S..·:111k ( I ::I~M' It • I~ ·
MI.IOO~ JII II

1.- hlrhl:l

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77
. 72 71

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Munlll':ll. .,

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l'tontral
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t'hu:a~•·

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AII HIIIil ....

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Fit Together
AEROBICS
Tues. &amp;Thurs.
7-8 p.m.

RO" .&amp; • 0 .. I r
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a...m
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For more 1n:orma11on or preregistration
call Jeannie Owen; -992-6893

POMEROY

Auto nacin&amp;
West Virg_inia Molm Spcc-dw:oy-7 p.m. ,
Douhlc Features/Season Cham1&gt;iunship&gt; .. :
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Saturday
IS
17 .
9
Sat!ll\lay
6
()

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8
7.5

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Jackson Co. Speedway
Jackson, Ohio

"

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Friday, September 12th

"
"

Buckeye Mini Sprints 600
· $1700 purse w/min. 18 cars

..

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Gates open at 5:00 ·p.~.
Hotlaps at 7:30 p.m.

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AMRA Modlfledo, 4-c:yllndero, Bontbero, and

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Racing every Friday night.
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lor more Information

Holzer Occupational Health,
Sports Medicine and
Rehabilitation Center
4th and SycamClrf' Streets
Gallipolis, Ohio

Quality Berkline and Flexsteel Recliners
and Rocker/Recliners.
Styles and Fabrics to Suit Every Need

STORE HOURS
TUES.-5AT. 9:30-5:0
MONDAY NIGHTS TIL 8

.

Suuthcm a1 South Gallia ,,
Wnhumn at F.nstcrn
R1wr Vulley at Mci~s

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Reeliner Sale

ANDERSON'S
FURNITURE AND APPliANCE

"

The Sports Injury Clinic will be staffed by Dr. Kelly Roush
(Chiropractic and Sports Injury Physician), Nationally Certified
Athletic Trainers, an x-ray technician and support staff.
Parental consent is required for evaluations.

FLEXSTEEI:
America's s.ating Sptaet;st

'241

R~lpn: ,~ Md~~

Sports injurieS' need prompt attention.
Holzer Clinic's newly expanded Sports Medicine Center will be
providing Sports Injury Care beginning Saturday, August,30, 1997
and continuing through Saturday, November 1, 1997.
'
Walk-ins are welcome beginning at 9:00am . .
The goal is to provide a comprehensive program
to return the athlete to the previous level of competition.

'1'114'tluw(H~.·tu~.:ul"'·\h:tl Oaldnnti{Lumtlu~.: .1. 1.-------------------~-~--'

. Sale Prltel
Start AI Only

V!\ ,

Holzer Clinic
Saturday Morning
Sports Injury Clinic

-IM

~-W
.~UJ
--4{,1,1

C'hr.- 5 p.m ..

~C~u=n,~li~n~·h:n~d~o~s:~~-~---""""'-~::::::::::::::::::::::::J :.:

II '

Kl

V.1lk~

at W:uerfmd

Carson Midkin' added u 49. Andy
Duvi&gt; had a 50. Tommy Roush and
Nick Dctwillcr had 52\, :ond lil&gt;on

Wulrrn Uhbiun

NL standings

Vimnn Co. (tt Ohhl

Eastern vorsi:y volk)•bull

&amp;

The Meigs reserve golf tcum run
their record to 4-0. hy picking up a
one stroke 'lolictory over Poinl Pleasant in o dual mulch at Hidden Wiley.
Meigs had a score of 191. while
Point Pleasant carded it I~2 .
Josh Prtce. for the fourth straight
match. was the mcdali&gt;t with a 411

.1'

77

tri - mat~h v~,

'fhu,.,duy

Meigs reserve
golfers stay
undefeated

., " "'.m ,.•
"'"" "••• .,
711

I~

Fnday
Friday
Ftiduy
• All ga\"es at 7:30 p.m.

Ohio Division
(after 5 matches)

Ul"l~lun

Now 9 Week Session
September 15th

Tu~sd.ay'.s s~.·ore.s

I

K:ut,,ts l'uy !Hu~.-1 • '\.!.IJ
:-1-MJ. 10,05jun

ll: L 1'&lt;1. . !ill

... !i'J

ll:deinMII\' .. ·-.

1"'4 Y_ Ym1Ln•s

· ,

l'I.I ~ \11:1./\Nif(Nattr 14-IJ J .11 l'hn.:ilf!" Whll\'
Sn:t t DultiV.III 11 · 1-' ). Ktl~ Jl .lll
M i lll k:~Ut:t (f{:ulk~: IX-tl) ott 'l'l·.,a~ t l ';n· h~ ~ -·h

IQm

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l ~·tO . 7 : J~ l' ·m.

•:astt'm IJivisiun

SC:tt,k• ... , ..
Atlith\·irn

.

NY . Yanh1.· ~ IPt'tnllt' 16·7 1 :11 lt ahun •,n· 0\cr

AL standings

Mil~¥:•u"'-'l.' ....
(1Ji\."l l~l l ...
Mltllk.'~c)l:i
' KO!Il}li\S City

p.m

'lhmhk ..

M&lt;•nd11y. Sept.

. tri · lll~lh.: l.'
• All ntatches at b p.nt. unless otherwise indkat•-d

TVC standings

won with 11 147. Gallia Al·ademy,
which carded a 154, was followed hy Meigs
Athens (15M) and Meigs ( 171 ).
Akxander
Todd R'ccd of Athens tired a two Wellston
under par 34 to take medalist honors . Belpre
For Meigs, Andcrwn led the woy Vinton County.
wilh a 41 . Also scoring were Stew Ncbonvilk-York
McCullough (42). Crow and Barr
(hoth had 44s ), Warner (46) and Zach
Hocking Division
Meadows (51!.,
W11terforil
Trimhk
Fedcrul H oc kin~
E:t&gt;tern
Southern
Miller

Johnson led the way with six points.
Against Ironton : Cundiff .~nrcd
and II _of 12 _&gt;erving. Carissa Ash SC\'CO points on 10 for 10 serv ing.
added live points. and lour &gt;SSISIS. Ash had ti\'Cpoints and sc.,•cn ;1~sists.
Volene C undill and Tangy Laudcr- Johnson four points. Davis three
mth both scored five pomts. hoth points nild fl fnr II serving .. Miller
g~rls were seven of c1ght servmg and hag three points and nine kills and
three blocks. Becky Smith scored two
Laudcrm11! had three ass»IS.
Tony a Miller added four ·points. points and -had two assists.
four kill&gt; and four assists. Trida
In the loss tn River Valley. John-·
Davis scored three points on five l&lt;lf son hod live points on II for II &gt;erv five serving and Becky Sn11th :-;cored ing: Miller had four point\ and two
IWO points and had live a.&lt;Sists.
kilb . Cundiff three points. and Davis
one point.
··

.,.,

.' Southern \'arsit~· 'oil··~ hull
Thun~~..by

Vanity football

Meigs varsity spi.kers top Trimble
&amp; _Ironton, but lose to River Valley
The Meigs volleyball team picked
up a couple of wins recently by picking up wins over Trimble and Iron-· ton recently. while dropping a match
to River Valley.
Meigs defeated Trimhle by scores
of 15-5 and 15-9 and Ironton hy ·
scores of 15-8 and 17- 15. River ValIcy defeated Meigs 15-0 1 and 15-6.
The Ironton-River Valley matches

.

Mund~1 y. S~.~pl. t:~

Meigs golfers outpace TVC rivals in match
The Meigs golf team took another step closer 10 its eighth maigh ~ TnVallcy Conference golf crown hy
picking up a win on Monday nt Fairgreens.
The Marauders won the match.
which fcatu.rcd aU 12 TVC ·teams
with a team score of 151. Behind
them were Waterford ( 159), Akxan:
der (16b). Wellston (168) and Trimble ( 17:\).
,
Federal Hocking carded a 176
Behind the Lancers Were Belpre
( 188), Vinton County ( 191 ). Southern
and Millcr (both had 200s) and Nel sonville-York (2 16). Eastern did not

-M-eigs County sports slate~.:·.

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~ nere for Yoor HeaiU1. Here for Your Lifelimel

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(614) 446-5244

,·a.il Holzer Clinic...

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CINCINNATI (AP)- Jon Nunnally and Chris Stynes came to
Cincinnati
the same midseason
trade. So far, they'vetumeditintothe
Reds' best trade of the year.
Nunnally had an RBI single and
Stynes hit a three-run homer as the
Reds scored four times in the second
inning and held on for a 5-2 victory
Tuesday night over the Chicago
Cubs.
"Nunnally and Stynes keep delivering," manager Jack McKeon marve led. " It 's nice to see those guys.
They're playing hard and having a littie success. You like to see those
_young guys come in there. "

in

••

closer at 14- II. but Kan- capped the ten poinl'ii.. mnc &amp;.'-~•sts~ and wa.~ •2·
13 SCf\'lftl .
scoring for the I S-11 linale.
Miller hid fout points. 12 ktlls.
Brannon had o 7-9 servinl! night,
an ace. three kills. and se\'&lt;:n points. and was 7-7 ~n· tnJ , Tanty Laudo:rCaldwell was also 7-9 "'ith four nlih h3d thn:o: Jl&lt;lln~ four assists, :and • .
aces. tine dinks, three kills and sev- three kills. Thtoc-c) C.&gt;IT~y had~~ kills •
l'llld ~ blo.:k. while Anty Hysdl had ~
en points.
Evans was 12-13 scuing. with four tWO kilh. 1illany ~llhill had IWil "&lt;
sets for kills. 2-2 S&lt;:rving. four dinks, killS. Mcli&lt;Sa Werry ooc point, &lt;llll: ~
and fh-e poin~. Angi Taylor was 7-8 ktll. and a J.J serving nig~t. Ttk:i3 ~
servmg "'ith (wo points. Karr w .. 6- Dnvi• -was· 1-1 serving. and V~k:n.,
6 sen•ing with ci'ght kills. a dink. and Cundiff wa.~ 3-3 Sfl\•ins.
three points: Hayman was 16-2 1 setMeigs. ~-2 in. k:llgi!C. c'Oinpikd
ting with five sets for kills. and 1 a tOial ~rvi~ OUtput of »~2m the. l
point. Wolfe had a kill and an ace. Sooth Gallia @llllC and 48-48 "8llinst
Bailey t~ oces.
Eastern for 98-100 for the entin;
Me1gs played a great game in the ftll!
.
.."'
' hI.
n1ghtcap defeating South Gallia 15Meigs oach Rkk Ash satd~
8 15-5.
"When we pass well. we ~•• c'Offip.~e ,
The Mar.~ulkr,; played a ncar- with anybody. Right now '""' l~k"'
llawlcs&gt; ~ame. passing the hall well. experience. This team i• goinr tn .
selling well. and scllmg up the frnnl~ come ~fnllnd with exrcri~no.·c a.&lt; they .
Iinc for kill&gt;.
gain ~onlidcn,-c .
Johnson had four puint&gt; ovcrnll
We'll h.:
w•th a 9-9 &gt;erving display: Bc-.:k~
heucr past the half10uy point o1: ,
Smith had g (&gt;'lint':-.. mn.: a.'\.'ii~ts . and scaMm. Toni~httn til&lt;.• l:~&lt;t ~aniC they
was 10-10 &gt;erving. Caris.'lll A&gt;h h:llf did everything WI.' II ."

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

RICHIE ASHBURN

They combined for four of the
Reds ' seven hilS off Jcremi Gonzalez
(11-7). who couldn 't overcome the
one bad inning. Nunnally finished
. with a pair of hits and a walk. and
Stynes had three hits.
It was nothing new. Since they
came to the Reds from Kansas City
on July 15 in a trade for relievers
Hector Carrasco and Scon Service,
Nunnally and Stynes have turned
themsel ves into regulars .
Nunnally is hitting .382 in 21
games since taking over in center
field for De ion Sanders, who went
back to playin g football . Stynes has
become, a regular by hiuing .374
since his ~ all up on Aug. 8. .

"We've played next to each other for a while now." Stynes said. "It's
been fantastic ."
,
It could pay off for them ne&lt;t season, when the Reds ' will go with
young players to fit their budget.
" Hopefully, it's very meaning. ful ," Nunnally said. "I want to be an
everyday player. I wanlto start. If 1
gel a chance 10 play every day, I
know I'm capable of helping ."
Mike Morgan (7- 11 ), who at age
37 does n9t fit into the Reds' longterm plans, put together another sol· id start for his fourth victory in five
decisions.
Morgan allowed a pair of runs on
six hits as he led the Reds to their

Ashbu'rn 1
dies at 70

.

For the second consccuti"e game,

Gonzalez had trouble throwing
strikes in the early innings.
" I threw 75 pi tches in the first
three innings. That"s a lot of pitches,''

&gt;aid Gonzalez. who wound up.throwing 124 over 6 213.
" It looked like he was only goi ng
three inmngs, but he turned it into

seve n.'' manager Jim Riggleman
soid. "He gave us a chance to win the
game ."

.

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Ashburn, rarely seen off camera

without his pipe and cap. spenltwo
years with the Chicago Cuhs and a
linal season with the expansion 1962
Mets before ~coming . a broadcast·
cr.
"The way he played, running as
hard as he did and as fast he did,
absolutely convinced people he was
lrying a lithe time,,. :;aid Bill Campbell, his first broadcast partner. "Thts
is a town that thrives on effort."
Ashburn is survived hy his mother, Tools; his wife, Herbie; daughters
Karen Hall, Jean Ashburn and Sue ·
Ann Morrison; sons Richard and
John; a sister; a brother; and nine
grandchildren.

Morgan reached on a fielder 's
choice for the second out, Pokey
Reese walked and Nunnolly singled
to right to tie it. Two p11chcs later.
Stynes hit hi s fourth homer.

Play and WIN with FOODLAND

By JOHN F. BONFATTI
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Richie
Ashburn's play opened the heans of
P~iladelphia. Cooperstown lumed
out to be a harder sell.
.The longlime Phillies player and
broadcasler, who died of a heart
atiaek Tuesday in New York at age
70, was one of the city's treasured
sports heroes, but his enshrinement
into lhe Hall of'Fame didn't come
unlil 33 seasons after he retired.
"They didn't exactly carry me in
~ere on a sedan chair. with blazing
lrumpets," Ashburn said when he
linally made it into lhe Hall in 1995.
"So I was a little shaky aboul joining this select group."
Then Ashburn lhanked his fellow
members for embracing him, just as
the fans of Philadelphia did during
his 12 years as a player and 35 years
as a broadcaster with the Phillies. His
unupected death siUnned the cily.
·"Richie Ashburn was a Phillies
treasure," said Dave Montgomery,
lhc team's president. "He made
baseball fun for Phillies fans."
"He was as good a friend as a
man could have ," said Harry Kalas, ·
his longtime broadcast partner. "He
was like a brother to me."
Ashburn, a two-time NL batting
chaljlpion and the center fielder on ·
lhe 1950 Whiz Kids, spent 12 years
on the field and 35 years in the
b~casl booth for the Phils. He was
a five-time All-Star.
, " We have lost a cherished
friend;-' said Mike Schmidt, the
Phillies' lhird baseman who was
· ind~cted into the Hall of Fame with
Aol)bum in 1995. "You didn 't have .
to:J(now him personally to consider
hiD! a friend."
·, In Cooperstown, N.Y. , Ihe flag at
lh~ Hall of Fame flew at half-staff,
and a wreath was placed next to his
plaque.
Ashburn and Schmidl's induclion
dr~\V the largest crowd ever, an estimaled 25,000 to 28,000, with 200
' bu~s coming from Philadelphia.
h'he Phillies announced they will
W&lt;l'lf a black armband with Ashbum's No. I for lhe rest of the season, and the disk bearing that retired
number at Veterans Stadium will he
dr4pcd in black.
~shbtirn 's baseball talent becamf
so )lpparent early in his hometown of
Tililen, Ncb., that at least three
!CUlT'S tried to hire him before he
sig~ed with the Phillies in 1944.
Converted from catcher to out· ·
lield, Ashburn earned a place on the
Phi! lies roster during spring !raining
in 1948. An injury 10 defending NL
hattjrig champion Harry Walker gave
him the cenler field job.
·
Ashburn, known to his friends as
Whjtey, was a classic singles hitter
who used hi~ speed 10 beat out bunts.
He placed hils between fielders and
slic~d balls down the line .
The sight of Ashburn's churning
legs on the basepaths prompted Ted
Wiljiams to give· him the nickname.
of ''Putt-Pull." His speed wos also
his piggesl asset as a tieldcr. He led
NL pui11cldcrs in putouls nine times.
tying a major league record. .
He was the only Phillies rookie to
start an All-Star game, the lirst of his
live, With a league-leading 32 stolen
basQs and a .333 average, Ashburn
· wa~ lhe Sporting News ' Rookie uf
the 'Year m 1948.
'fhc higgest play of his cilrecr
CUII)C in 1950, when the Whtz K1ds
won the NL pennant. Not known lor
a s1rong arm, Ashhum threw nul
Brooklyn's Col Ahrams ill the plilte
to preserve the _Philli~s' pennant-.
cliil!ihing Victory rn the hnal game ul
the season. The Whiz Kids were
swept hy the Yankees in the World
Seril's.

sixth victory in eight games. Jeff
Shaw pitched the ninth for his 34th
save.
Cincinnati is 21-21 uriiler McKeon, who took over for Ray Knight
on July 25. The Reds were 43-56
when Knight was fired .
The Cubs lost for only the second
time in seven games, falling to 21-50
on the road . The club record for road'
losses is 56, set in 1956. Chicago has
II game s left oway from Wrigley
Field.
·
Chicago went up on Mark Grace's .
RBI si ngle in the first, but the Reds
scored four 1uns with two ou ts in the.
second off Gonzalez. who leads the
NL in wins by a rookie.

MEAT WIE"ERS
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�By The Bend
Ann
Landers
IW1. L•" Antc lc~ Ti~

Syn!IK:alt ·"rKI Creawn
Syno.ht~l&amp;:

Dear Ann Landers: I was upset
by your response to the -leuer about
ihe diabetic driver who accidentally
caused the death of a young woman.
He had not been monitoring his
blood sugar and had been drinking
the night before the accident
occurred. You said there should be
· laws to protect people from drivers
like this.
·
Passing a law against diabetic
drivers would not solve the problem

of accidents caused by non-compliant people. I am an R.N. in an emergency room, and I take care of many
such individuals. Not long ago, I had
an 18-year-old male brought in for
the second time in a week because
he suffered a seizure. This time, he
was driving and ran into a tree. He
was lucky he didn ' I kill himself.
While the young man's sister was
standing by, I asked him why he
hadn 't taken his ami-seizure medication. He said, " I didn 't feel like
it." I told him ·he was likely to have
his driver's license revoked. His sister replied, "He doesn't have one."
No Jaw restricting his driving
would have made any difference to
this man, He doesn't care about himself or anyone else. The same goes

The Daily Sentinel
.

for 'drunk drivers who stay on the
road despite having had their licenses revoked. Laws are no deterrent to
people who have no respect for
authority. So what's the solution,
Ann? -- Clovis, Calif.
Dear Clovis: The Jawbreakers
should be dealt with promptly in a
no-nonsense manner. For repeat
offenders, jail time should be meted
out. Lots of rad!o, TV and newspaper publicity may also help keejWhe
offenders in line. Shame and pu~lic
disgrace can .be strong deterrents.
I'm for using whatever works.
Keep reading for more on this
subject: .
From Midlaud, Pa.: Nice going,
Ann. We diabetic drivers are a real
h.azard. I bet you could eliminate

quite a lot of accidents by getting us '
off the road. And while you're at it.
Ann, why not pass laws to withhold
licenses from the stupid, the rubberneckers, tl],e animal lovers who drive
with pets in the front seat, the elder- .
ly, the day dreamers, people who use
cellular phones, women who put on
makeup while driving and those
who eat their breakfast or lunch
while driving? And, hey --how about
the idiots "''ho try to read your column while sitting in tralfJc?
Give people with diabetes some
credit. Sure, there are jerks out there,
but just because someone has ~
hypoglycemic episode doesn't mean
w&lt;: need another law. The majority
of people with diabetes
well '
aware of their blood glucose levels

are

Wednesday, September 10, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

PEPSI &amp;
MT. DEW
PRODUCTS

.
.. Page&amp;
Wedneedly, September 10, 1997

and .are very responsible.
Vernon, Conn.: My daughter
and I were very disappointed in your
response about the diabetic driver
who accidentally killed a young
womart. I hope you aren't advocating different Jaws for diabetics than
for the rest of the population.
My daughter has been a diabetic
for eight years and will be driving
soon. She is in excellent control of
her diabetes. Like most diabetics,
she can tell when her blood sugar is
low and keeps a readY. supply of
sugar at hand. Diabetics are faced
with ml\lly challenges, but they· can.
do anything as well as a non-diabetic, including drive.
The problem with the driver in
your
column
was not his diabetes
,.
.

STORE HOURS

but his irresponsi ble behavior. That
driver was well aware ofthe steps He
needed to take to prevent an insulin
reaction, but he did not follow them.
He was a menace to himself and others on the road. I say crack down on
ALL irresppnsible drivers.
Please don 't make life any more
difficult for m:- daughter by making
special laws targeting diabetics.
Dear Vernon and all who
wrote: Message received and noted.·
Thanks for the well-deserved clop in
the chops.

RUTI..AND -- Tips on how to grow really perennials mentioning impaand propagate annuals and perenni- tients, coleug and Swedish ivy. He
als were given by Hal Kneen, Meigs reported the garden mum which is
County Extension Agent, speaker at considered a perennial is now conthe open.meeting and guest night of side.red by the state as an annual.
the Rutland Garden Club.
Kneen said that a mum must
Held at the Rutland United establish a good root system or it
Methodist Church, .the speaker was will not survive during the winter.
introduced by Pauline Atkins, presi- The root sy~tem should be broken .
dent. He showed several perennials up a linle before planting and given .
and demonstrated how to . separate, plenty of water to establish a good
clean, plant, and store them, and root base. Mums should ·be planted ·
how to treat diseases or vennin in July, he said.
infestation. Used in his demonstraThe extension· agent stressed that
tion were dahlias, cannas, iris, now s the time to prepare spring
peonies, hosta and caladium.
perennial beds, Literature on annuHe pointed out that some flowers als and perennials, planting times
which are considered annuals are and care was distributed at the meet-

'by Bob Hoeflich

ing.
Guests were welcomed at Atkins,
and Ann Webster gave devotions,
Janet Bolin reported on the Ohio
State Garden ,Clubs Association
where clinics. a flower show, and
horticulture speakers were featured.
She won a blue ribbon on her
arrangement exhibited at the state
convention . .
The 50th anniversary of the Gallipolis Garden Club was announced
for Sept. 21 at the Grave United
Methodist Church, Gallipolis. A
vote of thanks was extended to Eva
Robson for her donation to the Rutland Church for use of the facility.
Door prizes were presented to

Accepts Credit Cards

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SEPT. 13, 1997.

7·UP

Family
Medicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

DR. PEPPER,

NOW ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

Send questions to Ann LandeT', Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
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each guest by Sarah Dawn Jenkins.
The table arrangement of gladioli
was provided by Atkins.
Belly Lowery gave tbe hint for
the meeting on herbal gifts, suggesting that herbs be planted indoors and
use for Christmas giving.
She said basil, coriander, and dill
can be seeded now and grown in a
south window for past-Christmas
harvests.
The perennials, ro~emary, sage,
and thyme are even easier to grow in
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Dorothy WoOdard wi II host the
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Reader's hot .peppers are too_hot to
handle- doctor gives soothing answer
Ohio University
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2 LITERS

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM·10 PM
298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

·Rutland Garden Club meets with Meigs County
extension agent Hal Kneen as guest speaker

Beat of the Bend ...

The Daily Sentinel• Page 7

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45065 EAGLE RIDGE RD.
POMEROY, OH 45769
TO IMPROVE MANY FACETS OF OUR
OVERALL OPERATION FOR THE
BEITERMENT OF THE FAMIUES WE SERVE.
ONE OF THOSE STEPS IS TO VAUDATE THE
INFORMATION IN OUR CEMETERY FILES
WITH ALL OF OUR PROPERTY OWNERS.
MEIGS MEMORY GARDENS MANAGEMENT
ASKS IF YOU ARE AN OWNER, PLEASE
CONTACT OUR OFFICE AT 992·7440, SO YOU
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�Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

Officers of -Hemlock Grange installed ·.:
Officers for 1998 were installed
at the recent meeting of Hemlock
Orange 2049 held at the hall.
Installed by Helen Quivey were
Rosalie Story, master; Jim Fry, over. seer; Harley Haning, stewart; Robert
Reed, assistant stewart; Gold Reed,
lady assistant stewan; Opal Grueser,
chaplain ; Barbara . Fry, secretary;
Jane F!)lmyer, treasurer; Linda
Schoeppner, lecturer; Margat'et Hanning, Ceres; Leota Smith, Pomona;
Nancy Wells , Flora; William R;ld-

ford, gate keeper; Roy Grueser, legislative chairman; Sara Cullums,
membership chairman; Nancy
Wells, women's activities chairman ;
Linda Schoeppner, youth chairman;
Tatum Smith, junior chairman;
Hilber Quivey, Ziba Midkiff, and
Rollin Radford, execulive commit- ·
tee.
Thanks were extended to those
who participated in the co ntests and
it was announced' that Hemlock
Orange took first place with its

booth at the fair. The ' birthdays of
Leota Smith and Roy Grueser were
noted.
Muriel Bradford presented the
lecturer's program using "Back to
School" as her theme. The group
sang "School Days" and Opal
Grueser read "The Teacher." A skit,
"In the Park" was presented by
Sarah Cullums and Helen Quivey,
Vada Hazelton Margaret Haning,
Nancy Wells, Ziba Midkiff and
·Leota Smilh had jokes, and vocal

selections were .presented by a trio ~ ·
of Ann Lambert, Rosalie Story, and
Wallace Bradfond.
Student bloopers were read by
Sarah Caldwell and Barbara Fry. A
story "The Therapy Session" was
read by Muriel Bradford.
A cookout will be held in October with Nancy Wells in charge.
October lecturer will be Margaret·
Haning. Rosalie Slory presided at
the meeting which was preceded by
a melon feast .
·

--Meigs Community Calendar---:-The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
·groups wishing to announce meeting
and special events. The calendar is
not designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items are
printed as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific number of days.

CHESTER .. Regular meeting,
Shade River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM,
Thursday, 8 p.m. Refreshments.

FlliDAY
MIDDLEPORT -- Women's conference will be held Friday and Saturday, 7 p.m. at the Ash Street
Freewill Baptist Church. Pastor Les
Hayman will speak on loneliness,
depression and unsaved spouses ..

WEDN.ESDAY
EAST MEIGS .. Eastern Local
Board of Education, Wednesday, 6
p.m. at the high school library.

Mr. and .Mrs. Jeremy Allman

JOHNSON-ALLMAN
Amy Beth Johnson became the
bride of Jeremy Curtiss Allman du,.
ing a July 5 wedding ceremony held
at. the Syracuse Church of the
Nazarene.
The bride is the daughter .of Mr.
and Mrs . Kevin W. Knapp of
Pomeroy and Mr. and Mis. Robert J.
Johnson of Middleport. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Curtiss S. Allman of Syracuse.
The 5 p.m service was conducted
by the Rev. Jan Lavender and music
.was presented by Norman Matson of
Syracuse.
For her wedding the bride wore a
white satin gown with simulated
pearls dangling from the lace
trimmed collar and keyhole back.
The' bodice; sleeves, skirt, and semi·
cathedral train were embellished
with lace, sequins and simulated
pearls.

..

Honor attendant was Michelle
Dawn Folmer of Pomeroy. sister of
the bride. Bridesmaids were
Michelle Knapp and Becky Matson
. of Syracuse, and Ashley Knapp of
Pomeroy. The aitendants wore .long
formal dresses of seafoam green and
carried pastel lilies.
Emily Babbitt was the tlower
girl, and Dylan Matson, cousin of
the bride. Best man · was Jarrod
Folmer of !'omeroy. Ushers were
Matt Arthur of McArthur and
Charles Knapp of Syracuse
1l1e bride is a student at Meigs
High School and will graduate in
1998. The bridegroom is a 1995
graduate of Alexander High School
and now works at Pro Moving ·o r
Albany.
A reception was held in the
church fellowship hall immediately
following the wedding.

-----~Correction

CLIFTON .. Hymn sing at the
THURSDAY
Clifton Tabernacle 7 p.m Friday.
RUTLAND .. Meigs Local Singers to include Junior pnd Ri1a
OAPSE, Chapter 17, Thursday, Rut- White, The Clarke Family, and Denland Fire House, 7:30p.m.
nie Sergent.
LONG BOTIOM .. Hymn sing
TUPPERS PLAINS .. Tuppers Friday, 7 p.m. at the Faith . Full
Plains VFW, Post 9053. 7:30 p.m. Gospel Church. Long Bottom. The
Thursday at the hall. Refreshments . Peacemakers to sing.
at6 :30 p.m.
'

SATURDAY

.Custom Homes

••

19911 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Remodeling

Part• and Servlce!t

TUESDAY NIGHT
FAMILY NIGHT
Buy One, Get One

FREE

250 Condor Sireet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A Division on· Nichols Metal, INc.
Phone: 614:992-2406
· Fax: 304-n3-5861

/

12-Pack 12-oz. cans

Disease and related

Alzheimer's Disease

call

SCENIC HILLS
NURSING CENTER's

-·-·---

I

I

. I
j

•

'f2PJ

'

Up

U.S.O.A. CHOICE

.Houra:
7:00a.m. thru 4:00 p.m. Monday thru Friday

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

·Howard L Wrltasal

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

New t1omes • VInyl Siding New,
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·992-7643

Gutters
Downspouts,
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTiMATES

(No Sunday Calls)

949-2168

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINQOWS

ANNOUNCEr~ENTS

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

005

"FACTORY
D.IRECT

Don't Juat Talk, Find A Datel 1 ~

s....u (8111) 145-8434.

Quality Window Systems
110 Court St.

Pomeroy, Ohio
HI00·291·5800

wv 10234n

892-4119

*

White ··
Potatoes

WASHINGTON
(AP)
Antoinette Duarte worries thai deeply
depressed milk prices.could jeopar·
dize the California dairy farm her .
family has run for 25 years.
,
"We must have .a floor price to ;
continue to survive on a farm we 1
have worked so hard on," said Mrs.
Duarte, who operates a farm with 420 .
cows in Elk Grove, Calif., with her 1
I.
husband.
Mrs. Duane spoke during a rally ,
of about I 50 dairy farmers Tuesday ·
urging Congress and the Agriculture
Department to set a temporary mini- '
mum price of $14.50 per hundred 1
1
pounds of milk to offset losses suf·

*.

*·r.~~~~~~~::::::l
,•,

r)

10

TH

~

11

r~,

',;,T

12

13

·L;~~;;;;~-;-;;;·-~__J~~~~~-lf_ll

We are Committed to Seiving . ·
Ir

·

l-800-853-3033'
·t

Personlll

1100·285-11035, 12.88 /Min., 18 •

PRICEs~~

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
~ '":

RADIATOR REPAIR
Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New Radiators
Oxy • Accetl Regulator Repair
State Certified Welder
Stick • Tig • Aluminum Welding

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING
992·5583

7/22/tlio

•Room Addltlont
•NewGaragea
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Rooting
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Palnllnu
Alto Concrete Worll
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-8215
Pomeroy, Ohio

live Glrltl Call Nowl 1·800-2550700 IKt. :582. S3.DO per min.
Must be 18yr1. Serv-U 81Sl-645-

IW34.
· Shire Your Thoughtl With Glrla

1 On 1 Livelli 1-800·255-0700
Eu 2083 t3.88 Min, 18+. Serv·U,

114/1111

fered because of chronic low prices
paid to farmers this year.
"There's no more margin to cut,"
said Jackie Clossen, who lives Ln a
small dairy farm in Cortland County, N.Y., with her husband and four
children. "We need a minimum wage
for dairy farmers ."
The farmers came to deliver peti·
lions signed by 9,000 producers
around the country in support of the
temporary minimum price, which
Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman
has said would require action by Congress and is inconsistent with the
'more market -oriented 1996 farm law.
That law sets a minimum price of

1 Dou looks Like German
Plus' Kit·
-·14·25H487.
Shopllord &amp; Pupp~.

halted

1 long

blac:k, inole "'"""·

ald. 304-8711-2887.

-

2- ~- :114-175-58112.
2 Pupplea, ew1t.1 old, German
ShophardiMlxed, to good home.
814·'*48·3302 or' 814·448·8077
alllrS(&gt;m.

304-175;1734.

John Wllllama, Owner
Ui::enaad Electrician
Work Guaranteed
Frft Eetlmatn
Providing Quality
Reeldentlal Service.
24 Hr. Emergency

~

Novelties
Spedal Designs
Wearable Advertising
P.O. 110&gt;&lt; 215

-

(814) lltl2-4279

50% OFF
All Carpel-Upholstery

O..Ung

CHEVALIER'S
STEAM CLEANING
Carpet-Upholstery

614·992·0077
Middleport, OH

"'Y loving. 304-8ll5-3017.

Canning Fruit Jafl, BH-3888448.
ChUdl whGtl chair, apecial tricy cle tor c:hlld wtparalyzad legs.

Frtt Klntna liner Trained, 2

• Top • Trim • Removal
~ Stump Grinding

long Haired, 2 C11ico, 1 Brown
SOipod, 114-25U780.

20 Yrs. Etcp. • lno. Owner: RICk Jol1nlon

Free E•limme•

Gla11

7537:

lora to tliviO""~· 11•-1182·

One adtnable long-haired
ltltton. 8 - old, 814-11112-17•5.

CELLULAR PHONES

Window1. Bathtub. lavatory.
--304-875-1911.

60

Lost and Found

810~ pup, 6 tnonlh old, lrl-.oc~. Duhon Rd. .~...

360° Communications

· lty, 114·848·2238 or 814·D•D·

3038.

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE

Found: Sundl~. young malo dog,
wlill lpD~ Rqclrspringa .....

113 W. 2ND ST.

70

POMEROY, OH.

no collar. 114-1192~

Yard Sale

614·992·5479

Gaillpolls
&amp; VIcinity
3 FamHr: .Ingalls Rood 011 218,
Wad, Thurs. Fri. lDII Of Bar·

uaJ,.I

ALLYarriSatoelkrat
BoPoldlnlodvonoo.

DEAg.!f«: 2:00p.m.
tho cloy - - the.,
1e IO·run. S.ndoy

edNioft • 2:00p.m.

Frldoy.llondoy edition
- 1D:OO Lm. Solunloy.
Elecrrlc Sewing Machine, .LOti
Morel 13th, 1•lh. 15th, 1058 Soc:·
. ond AVOIIIO. Plllly In Houoe.

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins . Owner: Ronnie Jones

Friday, Saturday, Grandfather

Clo~;k,

Motorcycla, Avon, Car
And lola Of Other hemt, Every·
fling Mull Goi3t54 KtinW Rood,

Oft218,11~18.

R. L. HOLLON

Opening 9·1·97

Selling Household llama, Para-

TRUCKING

L&amp;J

SWAP·SHOP

Clothol. Starting Slpl 8· 11th, D
A.M. To 4 P.M. 187 Dodrill Road,
Vonton.

DUMP TRUCK

We Buy, Sell

SERVICE
985-4422

and Trade
New and
Used Items
202 E. Main St,
Pomeroy, Oh.

Chester, Ohio

614-992·9086

Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

1Oi2Si'96/tfn

saw,

Ulac. Tool,,

Women•

Pomeroy,
Mlddiepon
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Salta llull Ia Paid In
Advance. OHdllne: 1:OOpm the
day before the 1d Ia to run,
Sunday I Monday odltlon•
1:00pm Friday.

fl/271971 mo. pd .

On RL 82 in Clifton, WV. little !)it
or everything! Sarurda~. 9113/97

and Sunday, 1111&lt;197. ·

MobUe lome Furnaces
and leal Pumps

330681 SR 33, Pomeroy, OH

!

Giveaway

malea, 2 tallco, 1 gray, 1 aolld

614-949-3060

The volatility has led some dairy
farmers to slaughter their cows
instead of milking them, is putting
many more deep ·in debt and could
harm small -town businesses such as
feed suppliers and banks.
A sign at the rally Tuesday said,
"Why Own the Cows When You Sell
the Milk for Nothing?"
~

40

1-900-329-0611
Ext. 1881

Dally Rd., Racine

ago.

(81t1)145-IW34.

4·7 month old klttena, all ft·

CORPORAL ELECTRIC

$I 0.20 per hundred P.Ounds of milk
for this year and phases out the price
support by 201\(l. The price of milk
last week was $12.07 per IOOpounds,
but it has been as low as $I 0.70 this
year- the lowest price in six years
and a free fall from $16.50 a year

IAnely'l UniiiiJIIIy'l You Nn ftnd
rour epeclll eonwone nowlll 1·
800·288·1017 Oil Nll7. $2.8111
min. MUll M 18yn. Serv-U-

SPORTS!
SCORES!
SPREADS!
$2.99 per min.
Mus! be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (614) 645-8434

Dairy farmers increase pressure
for higher minimum milk price

. ALL PURPOSE, NEW CROP

Boneless·
ChuckPOund
Roast

:·

: ; m . ; l * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * :·

985-4473

custoX"tl

.

* Title V is a project .of Corporation for Ohio Appalachian * :
* Development of Athens. OH and is an Equal Oportunity * i

ESTtMATEES

HolM

A;;ged
In vase .................-.. oozen

.HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

KINGS' .

'

WICKS

LUMP AND STOKER COAL
H.E.A.P. VOUCHERS ACCEPTED
DELIVERY AVAILABLE

Fill

•
•
•
•

'

1-614·594-8499 Ext. 231.

FREE

backing lhe Castle amendment.
sexual ·matters with their parents, it is .
The fight for notification was led critical that they have a safe place to
by Rep. Ernest Istook, R-Okla., who go to obtain counseling, needed con·
argued that it is essentially wrong that traceptives an&lt;! related health tests."
parents must give permission for their
Istook, who failed with a broader
child to receive aspirin at school but amendment last year, tried to win
minors can receive contraceptives. . aren't notified when minors receive votes this year by narrowing the
The House vote Tuesday was a contraceptives at family planning scope -requiring notificatiQn rather
Pick up dltcarded
than parental consent for contracepJoss for conservatives who have tried, clinics.
appllancea,
batteries,
"Any
program
that
deliberately
tives
and
saying
a
minor
could
still
largely wilbout success, to put their
menymelala&amp;
·
bypasses
parents
to
provide
birth
con·
get
counseling
and
treatment
for·sex· mark on an $80 billion spending bill
motor bl.ockt.
lo pay for labor, education and health trol devices to minors in mv iudR- ually transmitted diseases without
614-992-4025
8 arn-e m
mcnt is an egregious violation of telling her parents.
programs in fiscal year 1998.
.
But unlike in the past few years,
Republican moderates, who tn family values," said Judiciary Com•
the wake of the balanced budget . mittee Chairman Henry Hyde. R-Il l. the GOP-led House has shown little
agreement have worked hand this "This is little less than Jegitimi l ing appetite this year for attaching controversial social issues to spending
year· to craft spending bills that wm promi.scuity."
lmprovemellls
But opponents of the Is took bills that would lead to a presidential
Democratic and White Hou~e sup3351 Happy Hallow Rood
port, instead pushed through a com- amendment cited studies showing veto. The White House is strongly
Middleport, Ohta 45789 •
promise that narrowly passed, 220- that 80 percent of minors would stay opposed to parental notification.
New Homea, Addlllona,
Conservatives have chosen the
away from health 'dimes if they
Roofing, Siding,
201.
were
forced
to
tell
their
parents.
labor-education-health
bill as a vehiThat version, offered by Reps.
Pole Barns,
. Notification, Porter, would " not cle to show their unhappiness that the
Michael Castle, R-Del., and John
Decka, Painting
Porter, R-111 ., requires federally fund- only not help teen-agers, it would balanced budget deal reached with
Call Us For J1 Free Estimate
ed health clinics to encourage, but not actually destroy any chance they the White House left intacl many of
814·742-3C)g()
mandate, minors to consult with their have of coming to grips of becoming . the big federal spending programs
814-742-3324
families . It also requires clinics to an adult in a responsible way."
they oppose. .
614·742-3078
counsel minors on how to resist . Gloria Feldt, president of Planned · But in lengthy and often con. Parenthood F&amp;!eration of America, .\ tentious debate beginning last week,
coercive sexual activity.
Fony-six Republicans joined 173 applauded the House vote: "Wben a minority of Republicans have
Democrats and one independent in teen-agers feel they cannot discuss joined Democrats in thwarting efforts
to change the bi II .

:

* The Senior Community Service Employment program in *
* conjunction with the Gallia/Meigs Community Action has *
* openings for a Transportation Driver and. a Clerical *
* Aide, If you are at least 55 years of age or older, and *
* meet the income eligibility guidelines you could be
* working 20 hours a week making $5.15 per ~ur. * ·
*Contact Donna Dodds-Rife at COAD, Title V by calling*·

*

Meigs County Fairgrounds

·· ~I

WASHINGTON (AP) - Accept·
' ~ng the argument !hal teen-agers
woul~ stay away from health clini cs
if forced to tell their parents, the.
House has defeated a measure requiring parental notification before

***********************

I

~

\. \

:Conservatives lose battle
·over parental notification

••
•

~~
I' DAIRY IlLLEY '

.

_•

I)

•New Homes ·
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

Intersection of US 33 &amp; SA 7 (Northwest Comer) ·
september 20th &amp; 21St
Saturday 10-5 p.m. &amp; Sunday 10·5 p.m.
For More Jnformallon Call: 992-6696 992·5293 742·3020

offers a specailized
afflicted with Alzheimer's

rr---------------------~

Cheshire, Ohio

~

I

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

.

I /
(Ji: f

SCENIC HILLS
.NURSING CENTER

-C ifl55iC

••••••••••••••••••••••••••

:

614-742-2138

AD~:,ON t[~-. IAD=.oNI
C\~/ 2ndAnnual ,'f#,
~~ - EXPO '97
"'t'~ .

residence for those

• Call W Fr•l·I00-634-526Sfor •I •••tt appolllllolll. •
• Tile tests wl be 'It• by a UciiiSid Hlll'iiB AW Sptdalst •

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY

STATE ROUTE 124
Approximately 1.4 mllaa east ol Route 32.
WEUSTON, OHIO
814-384 6212

81H45-8434.

For more information on

HEARING AID CENTER •
•• .a..,•
Friday, S.pte•ller 12, 1997
•

*

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Umeatone &amp; Gravel
~ptlc Syatema
Trailer &amp; Houae SHea
RHIOIIIIb/e Rlltel
Joe N. Sayre

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

4 P.M. to Closing

'·

'

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

disorders.

will Mlln•l• Me11t/hllhl c..•thllltJ

.

SAYRE
TRUCKING

Complete Machine Shop Service Fabrication

Open 11 A.M .

COCiE'Cili

(UmeStoneLowRates)

511f/lln

Starting Oct. 1
New Store Hours

FREE HEARING TESTS.

Spcdab

Specializing In
wedding, anniversary
and blrth(lay c:akBS.

BUMBI Mlllll

Pomeroy Location Only

••••••••••••
COUPOI

ft&amp;

ReopE!ning for full
time business

State Route 338 • At VIne • Racine, Ohio
(614) 949-2804

Unit, 446-7150

!9
!9

992-6194

lrltts &amp; StrattH: Mast11 Strwke Techtridln
Oltdoor Pow11 l'ulpaenl AsHCiatloll: Certlfltd 2 Cydt

Specialized Alzheimer's

• Anyone who has lrouble hearing or ooderslaroding COf1V8fS8IiQn is invited lo
• have a FREE heanng teat to see ~ lllis problem can be helped. Bring this
CIOUpon with you for your FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value.
•
ARMCO, UAW, AND ALL OTHI!R
•
INSURANCE PROVIDEI!S
•
WAU&lt;..JNS WELCOME
.

laurie's £ustom
Cakes

1

•Mowera •Chain Sawa •Weedelllera •Authorized
Dnler For:
•Brlgge &amp; Strllllon •MTD •Murray •McCollough
•Echo •Ryobl •Roper •Rally •Hydro Glar
ANDOTHERSJ

DOMINO'S
PIZZA

notice - -

Ia Dr. I. Jackson Balles' Oftlce
224 East Main, Pomeroy
t:OO·Noon

HouM It Treller
Sltea
Drlv.e waya, utiiHiea,
land clearing,
Mpllc •v•tama.
Hauling Umaetona

FIW E.U,.IN

IIKIII Mowa CLIIIC

LONG BOTIDM .. Mt. Olive
Community Church, Long Boltom, SUNDAY
7 p.m. Saturday. Builders Quartet of
Rl.fiLAND .. Rutland Church of
Ripley, W.Va.' to sing. Public invit: God homecoming, Sunday. Morning
ed.
service will feature Jim Satterfield
SALEM CENTER .. Star Junior as guest speaker. Dinner will be at
Orange, bowling and pizza Party, 12: 15 p.m. and the ·afternoon proSaturday, 2:30 ·p.m. at he Skyline .gram featuring gospel singing by
Bowling Lanes in Gallipolis.
"The Murphy Family" of Marietta
and "The Spirilual Life Singers" of : .
·POMEROY .. ·Return Jonathan Idaho will begin at 2 p.m. Randy · ·
Meigs Chapter, DAR, Saturday, Barr, pastor,
Mei gs County Public Library,
Pomeroy, 10 a. m. Followi ng bu siPOMEROY ·c Homecoming
ness meeting, the members will go Sunday" at the Zion Church of
to the courthouse where Nan cy Christ. Harrisonville Road. Roger
Campbell will talk on ta• dollars Watson, paSior. Services, Sunday
and how they are spent. This will be school at 9:30 a.m.; morning worthe beginning of the DAR recog ni z- ship at 10:30 a.m.; carry-in dinner at
ing the 208th celebration of the sign- noon , and afternoon program nt 2
ing of the constitution of the U.S:A. p.m.

. 1192-3838

· •DECKS .
• ROOFING
• SIDING

"Stop p_utting off those much needed
home improvements." CaU Today! . ·

Constitution Week is Sept. 17-23.

The correct name of the infant in daughter of John Ryan Hill and
a five generation picture of the [am- Bobbi Jo King, a fifth generation for
ily of Velma Stobart Windland pub- Jhe Stobart family. Incorrect inforlished Monday in The Daily Sentinel ·mation .was provided to the newspais Katelyn Nicole Hill. She is the per.

••
•
:

CONSTRUCTION
•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• REMODELING
•GARAGES

Joe Wtlson
(814 992-42n

EICAYinl&amp;
&amp; TRUCKING

IIHBIIIfiiM. ' ;jlj ' •

Alto Auc1lon At. 2 &amp; 33 '"Croat~
roada• Ewery weak from now til
Chriatmat. Different dealer each
nlghl. Jeff Dyke Sat Sept 131h.
Frl Groceries, new &amp; us&amp;d m•lf~

Blonlellblel

'2800 8 month
1Heat Pumps Installed '3800 a month

Blonielablel

Free Esllmales·

Crawlord'a flea Market. Handtrw
aon, WV. Everyday awe. Craltl,
antiquea, tnldlng cards, turnltura,
lOY~ Vllilty, 304-876-5404.

(Paymems based oiiniapiprr,ov;jediclred~l~t
l iiini['i~

IBIING 8 COOLING .
1391 Safford School

AUCTION Fri . I Sat. 7pm. Mt.

fnlnch 500 Floii'IAarkol
Glllll ·eoun~ Jurior FllifVllund•
Soot 13th and 14th
In h Ciroon 4H Food Booth
BuldlnQ

I F~1rn81CBS

1-80Q.872·5967

Auction
and Flea Market

-ida Ed Frazlor i1930.

- Easy Bank Financing -

Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WV

80

814-446-1141&amp;

· I

OH

Rick Pearaon Auction Comp111y,
lull lime aucrloneer, complete
auction llr"Vlce. Llcen11d
lei,Ohlo &amp; W111 Vlrtllnia, 30477.1-5785 Or 304-113-S..7.

..

�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

edneadlyr$epbHnber10,1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Oblo

· Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

NEA Crosaword Puzzle
1 lnformel llllk
41~ .....
,, , AclorE- 43Trlplet - lnd hiW
45 Y-(Sp.)
12 Trick
45 11.11113 MHitary
48 Dtncer Miller
attltlant
50 Lack of good
14 Ear
Iaiita
(comb. form)
53 Salad herb
15 Ou1rageou1
54 - flat
17 large roclont ·
( - o slon)
18 lllngUOtge
55 Slut!
autUx.
56 Bottle
UT•57Wu
20 Cotton fabric 58 Fumbltr'a cry

ALDER

-It

TGp -

: All

U.fl.

Sl-j~;;;;;~-~~
....;:-."AAn;}jAI~co;hol~
Drug eou.-.g IPYe-

- Mol Gold Colno. p.,..f"''
Diomondo. Anllquo . - y, Gold
Pre-11130 U.S. Currency,
EIC. Acqulllllont ..-y
• IU. Coin Shop. 151 Second
· """llp* 11.__,2842.
Anllqu.., lurnlllirt. glall, cNno.
colno, lOJI, ltmpo,
to.olo,

vonllon ~11&lt;1 Ill And Joclllon Coundn, lo Sttk·

~

Nortla
• 2

lnft An Ambldouo lndJvldual To
fl A Prevtntlon Pooldon. Thlo
Poroon Will Work Wlih.AII Agt

· - OociDt
SI*'IOK.
Au~~.Flrlll.
Iii:~'
AIII-¥M.
dn.t
Car. UOOO

a&lt; :'
.... lintr, ••,.,... ...... •

77S-5033.

Qvalllicallona: Blchlfoll DttwM.
A Plu1, Good
Communication Skill CWrlUen
And Oral). Ruponolblllllta:
Awartntll Aclivltin Educadon
Pragt'llmt.. Training Programa.
And Dtvtlopmant And lmplt,....llon Of- GrW ......
Sind Rtoume Br Stpt tO, 111117
To: f.A.C.T.S., t770 Jackoon
Plio, - . Olio 45114 Or Fa:
114-441-1014 EOE llof.tl.
A. 1 Pizzo
drlvn _ .
td, tllPIY In allar 4:110pm.
32485 Wa;nar Lona, Pomtror.
No .,... .....

No~t-Worklng Wuhtr, Drrora,

Tho AIZhelmtr'l Unll Altotnlc

Pr- Cor-

fl14)tte-1

Groups In The Cornmunlllel.

Y""'·

tltat••: aJao appra sal a, Oaby
111111n. 114-W:I-7441 .

Anllqun, "'P pricoo polO. Rlvtr·
1M Andqull, Pomeroy, Ohio,
fluu lloort ownor, 114· 882·

2121.
Clton Lillo llodtl Ctro Or
Truckl, 1880 llodelo Or Ntwor,
Smllll Bvld&lt; Pondac, 1800 Eall·

em-....

e.-;

""lip+
J 1 D'o AulD Porto. Bvrlng Ill·
- - Selllnt ptr11. 304-

s-.
Rtlrl;trtton, frHitll.
Air Condltlcinoro. Color T.y:o,

111110 Ftlrd XLT Lllrtl F110,

.....
•lllOrt.
.,.,_
.....-. ... I
Gartll Upl, .... 'I
pb, llldlng ,.., ....... _...,

.,. ......

Mobllo home lito tvtllablt bat·
Allltnt ond - , . call
-

_
__
...,.
thon .,000
..,100.

FOIIIALIIY - :

11.1 Court. lrt Gallpollo, 1
Floor Pion, I Btdrooma, 1 Car.
Cllrlol. Loi.JdiD, Ctii14-3J'II.
2720 For •••••••• Ottlr AI·

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sa.rr.

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ID4-I75-

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et•n2-51115 bttwHn e:ooam-

s:agpm.

CtmeiiiJ aaloat Ito iha bell
ktpl -rtt In Ameri&lt;:a. High
commlulonl, bonu111, blntfltl,
-. plul 4011&lt;. l!iOCIIIII
lllrt Wllinll bor\U~ ... 014-11112·
7440.

420 Mobile HoiYIH
lOr Rent

Twt roor old OH tltllloo, In·

lng c·u nalnl &amp; comfoflef, 304·
511-22ZI.

···-·-

COlor T.V.. W.lhor, Dryer, gera1Dr. ~. Air Compr

ctnllvl fund, f4000; tlto -

-=

quorttr horotl and Utorou;h·
114-1451111.

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South

--. .,.. :'

I BLOCKS DOWN
TH' ROAD II

I

~~Pet::-:-s-::fo-r-::Sa:-:-1,--l
Sponlng
Goods
UounlalnMf 1rchlrr compound
bow willS 1 80'IIo 1t1 on and new
~ 304-451-1541.

Whltl And WhHI StriW 3rd
Cut*og Alfallo - . ....
1t8 U:rl.V.. SP.t.l.

TRAN SPOR TAT IOtl

$2,210; 11184 4 Whtoli('&lt;~

•14 Ford LTD, new Urea. uphol(i;;;;;;;;-s;;;;;:p;.G;;;;;;j~,lllrr. Rlllllor oyltlm,.. ...... ...

i

TV
WI
box, 8mo. old pullet
chonntl
ocannar, ameli bltcklwhltt TV.
304-17HI12 Cll- lplt.

Sl

3 Po. Living lloOfn Sulto, I Qlno,
Gun Cabinet. Call Alter 5 P.M.

.;,11;.:4-3711-..;,;,;.:28;;,;,;;27;..:._ _....,...-.,.-~
Art rou bv•ln• new furnlwro?
• •
.
~
Soll ,.., utld MnltulW 10 lilt ""
....., Thrift Shop. Tlttre II a M
nttd for brookfaot and dining
room ooll. ·w, aloo buf blbr
""""' good utld top. llull ba In
oxctllant' condillon. Good ..,.gil
lor Clviornu gllll. Call 81-2372$. TuoadiiY lhru Frldar, 101m4pm 11220 Etllllain 5ntt, Po.....,.
BABIES! (114)-251·

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:'~SGI~NTISTS

~TtfAT M~N tMVf
.!1,000 MO,e IMiftl
,.··· (fLI.S TtiAf!l
·"· l&lt;t!OM~f!l.
~E BORN LOSER
"

... .

WOrf&lt;lng With Tho Public A PluL
Expef'fence In Word Perrect.
Wlndowl, Lotua. Or Othor Word
Prtc-lng PrGgllml Eo ...tlal.
Mu1t Have E•..-riencl And A
Wo.tJng Ki.tldgl Of CUitDmlf
Btrvlce TtclwllquH A• Won AI
A Prvlollional Approtch. A Trplng Ttll AI Wtll AI A Compullr
Teat II., Bt Given To All Applk:anlt. PDrtfolloa Of Orlalnallr
CrHttd Documontt Or Wrlllrtt

llotOts

flog. Wtlmlrtnar pupo, tallo 1880 llitoubllhi Pr,.to 5 op., IIC.
docked, dec law• removed, runs vary good, 30 MPG, new
2ltmaln, 4rnlloo, S250n. 304- tim, 971&lt;, $11100,114185 43811.
1185-311t5.
t ;; t Buick Rtgtl Cullom V· 8,
Rt;lllertd \Valktr Coon-dog. u Good Condition, Front. Whttl
-old. (814) 4481253
Drive, Air, AIIIFII Tilt &amp; Crulot,
Aqua Tread Tire a, eu-•..eI Schnaurtll, mlniatur11, AKC, 4580.
·
·
chomplon bloodllna, oholo,
110rmod, -mod: alto Tor Poo11111, black, olao whitt: 814-e87- tRUt Chtvr Lumina, a.t Euro
.
- . OIIMtll,
......... -IUIOmlll;c.
"'· c:rullt,
3404.
lrwfm
bhM,
Whlto Flll1y -Icon Fvlllood- 73,000 mllto, f5250 080; 114·
td Elklmo. No Pap.., $50 Each,
114-387-77211.
111112 Dodgt ShldM ES • DoOfl,
Ytliow Lullno, Handllmt Cockl· L011ded, 4 C,tlndtrt AulO. AC.
tltl With Cage flO, 114·245- 73,000 llllta, f4,000, 114478G141.
1163.

......

570

MUSical

IIIS1rUments

tfi3 llozda t26LX 5 Sptad,
~Color, 4 Cylindao, AI
11,000 Clr,
I&lt;Uitl,
..........
Got ·
Co.....,
18,11110,
1144•1304

::_::::-:::-:~:::-_::::-::::::::-::~
·

Uercwrr 50 Power Thraih TroM· ,'
lng ....... 114-245-1227.

760

Auto Parisi

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by luJ• Campoa

Celebniy Cipher c.yptograms are crue.ct lrotn qwotat1ons by famous people, put and~
Ead!Jetterinthe~5tandlt;for~~MJ~Nr . TOIMy'a clw: O ~8

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make any such putfeniuce.
limiiAtion or dlacrfrninltiOn.·

RFAL ESTATE
Sept. II, 1997
ln. the year ahead, stronger ambilions ··wm come into play as your .
need~ for material gratification .
become more · active. You will be
willing to .work harder for what you
want.,
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Socialize with friends today who can
help · you in the workaday world. :
Blending business with pleasure in .
·appropriate prollonions could be a i
profitable, m1x. Know where lo look ~
for ~ance and you'll find it The :
AstroiGraph Matchmaker instantly :
revealS which signs are romantically ,
perfeet file you, Mail $2.75to Match- .

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "II isn't the mountain ahead that wears you out the grain of sand In ywr shoe,' - Robert W. Service .

it's .

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WORD
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S©ll~lA-~&amp;i.trs·
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scrambled words

the 1"'~--.

be·

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PRINT NUMBERED LETTE.RS IN .

6 .UNSCRAA18LE
ABOVE LfT.IfRS
TO GET ANSWER

5o A CtJOI Cot And Clretl 0vr drt
S.wnr "' 11rt Ormifir:d lectim.

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telefencH taqwirtd. Send

aouditrn ONo Correcdontl Far:llltr Ia Seeking To ConiiiOt An
Oltlo Llcenltd Phfok:ltn. Con·
net Pltlod 1o 10101117 To 81301
H Subjtel To IMutl AgrH·
.,.;., Tho Ptrlod C-..1 By Tho
Enaulng Contract Mor Bt Ex·
tandtd For (21 'tWo Additional
'tllrl. Ouafilltd Mtdlcel .... Cal Tho lnlllUiort llullniH
Olb At 8.1._5-!5644 Ell_,.,
:1274 To RICiiW Bid Formo And
1no~uction1 llelor• 12:00 Noon,
frldlr, S4il•ltblo 11, 111117.

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aume 10 Sol Gll·tt, 'lloPt Plttolnt Atglollr, 200 Main St., Pt

.... Care Ftcllitr With Ex·
::Ouent AapUIItlon For Alzhelmtft Clrt And Rtliab. Applf In
Plrton Atllcenlc HIUI Nuralng
Conttr, 31 t. Bvckrlcftl Ad.. Blclwoi,Oil

77 percent of the time.

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PARALEGAL, exporlonct prt·
terrH. oood communication
oltlllo, computer oklllo roqulrtd,

PooiHn Opening: Port·Timt AN

N orth'sjump to three clubs doesn 'tshow a 5-3-3-2 hand with 10 or II
points . That hand should raise to
three n o-trump. Instead, it promises
either a hand with at least small-slam
interest or an unbalanced game-going
hand .with a singleton or void somew.h ere. Here, North's hand fits both
bills ! If South has, for example,
three low spades, three no-trump will
go down with five or six clubs makable . H owever, as South has only the
two unimpressive clubs, he beats a
quick retre at to three no-trump.
If not wanting beuer 11ian a 50 percent chance of avoiding the S.iberian
salt mines, South will lake the club
finesse at trick two. Here that doesn't wo rk welL East grabs the trick
with his king and returns a spade, giving the defenders five · tricks.
South does bener.lo play a diamond to dummy and run the heart

•

'

\

lot Parton AI Sclric H~l Nuri11111
Ctnltr, 311 Buckrldgt Rd., Bid'
woi,Oil

For M1cHgtt1 Stilt. 81111 D l lltl Oflortd. Prvgruolvt Com-

30. S1orogeano•
32 Llklapony
people
35 Allow to
38- Doodle
12 Luau food
43 Trlnlttt'
44 Loottn
45 Maple genua
45 Doll aandwlch
47 Pronto
(abbr.)•
45 llellets
51 Summer
_..__.._,__.
drink
· 52 Sgt., e.g.

in the nine?

f ..

e......nt;fd. H lniM•Itd. "-"'r

-wv-

r•nean

area (2 well.)
28 - -do-well
29 Ancient
ltallon f1mlly

· It w ould also have been true if he
had learned to play bridge -- except
perhaps for any partner who made a
mistake! How would one of the
Rus sian dictator' s partners have
played in three no-trump here after
We&lt;tled Ihe spade five and East pul

all) aboul

:
1- 7 tlh. Imp. tiOhp lltf\cru!Hr w/WIIer, 2 lifo ilcktll,~
talqaerl. 11~1._
....... •

TX11 112 8111 Tracker 70 HP

3•
Pass

Let's suppose West wins with the
jack and switches to a club. Declarer calls for dummy 's ace, plays a
heart 10 his ace, returns to dummy
with a diamond, and takes a second
heart finesse. This line will generate
at Jeasl three heart tricks (and nine in

· ....

1811 Ranger 373V 18' 12 ·24V
Trolling Motor, 1SQ XP Evlnrudt
Ou-.t, IB.BOO. 81._882-2710.

Pass
Pass

25 Clinton'•
birthplace
26Madiler--

East
Pass
Pass

mne.

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YOU AAD FOC DINNO:. I

_.,.....,
'Ill ·
F .... Ski
1
tl t ...,.
_ , •z.ooo 114;.- I
245-5511.
'·
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ITS JUST YOJ~ 5TOMN:.fo\
Q6.)f,C.TIN6 TO TAA.T C~ILI

C005C.If.loiC£. ...

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origin.

~1'\1., IT~ NOT YOU~

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13118.
t818 Hondo GoldWin; Ao_.in •
-11a88 Ford TIIITipa. twD door, two c:ade Excellent Condhlon, lcht Y
.lac:k Aullel ....., pvpo, 11 wkl. ownoro, fvll alztd oporo, bodr llllta;t, Lotdtd Wllfl Ellraa;J;:;
olllllllo -.ct. llt ....ll. S22S, good. olton; onglna, priced 10 814 1411110.
- . "l_•
81._l056.
Mil· t1000, wllh CD pl.,or,
- 1
$t200, ato-11411-3081 ltovl .,.._ tHI Horult Sfvodowllotorcr~te ~ Purobrtd Huokr Pupolto, Snow - o r 011- 5:30pm.
3.100 IIIIo: 1881 Honda CAt IIIII. • '
Whitt &amp; Block &amp; Whitt Eroo,
Motorcycle, Both In Elctlitnt • · •
1• • .
Blue, Brown, Ona Rort Color, 1UIU Olda Cutitll SUpremo ~ ltoH41-7315.
. "'"
Shob I Wormed, f100, 11•251- llako Good School Car, E.,_
!882.
Condlon, lt4-245-54111l
750 Boats I
~-- 1

lite Foderal fair HoullnQ IICI
"' 1911-....... ft lltegal
to adv8t1tl8 •any pttr.Anc:e,

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a..t&gt;jeet

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-Bolo;-

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1883 Foftl Aorootar XLT. loldttl,·
po, pb, plwlndowo, air, crul
lnl'fmi:tllltto.304-e75-28115.
.
Torota 4x4, lie, 88,000 mllft;' •
chrome roll biro, nlct whttla, ~
oharp ~vck, nino oxetlen~ 114-;742-3142.
' ~u..o
c1
..,.an:y IS

dro"

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AI-&amp;- TtfAT MfANS

·DIP, YOU E~ FW.. UK£ 1\
lLTTl£ VOle£ De£P 1~0£
YCllU W~ W.YINC:&gt; TO TaL. YOJ

:;;;;::-:::'::::::=:::-:;-;~~::" ,

1883 Honda 13,000 millo,

Nh15 ITfM

r' ;

78,000 llllto; 1187 S
Ol!lf"'
Corio ao.ooo llilol Cook llotora, 8 14 441 01
c ;;;:::;:::.c.-='0S.-;-:~~::::::-:::::'·:·~_;
::
1882 Citovr FvU Slzt Convtraloti},'
Yin. f12,DOO, 8t4-448-7523.
_

OUI, ... Ihlpt.:ID4-e75-7:1114.

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of volut. call 304-882- ~-::::-::--::--:'
:;:--:-::-::-:-~t";,
21it561:CJOam..&amp;;OOpm.
1a81 S-10 4X4
4.3 y,e. Auti,--.,.
s 11

)887 Ford Ttmpo l,ll, 5 optod,
air, now lir•o. lhlrp, high mlloo,
RMnlngton Alit llodtl 7400.8DI.
puppln, but runo 8r•t. f1800, 114·885- ·
automadc CAL 270 w/ocopa. ::::::-::---::-:-:-:----:--1 4318.
$3115.
AKC fit; Bo-. Ttrrltr fiUfipltl, ::::::-:::--:---:;--:;--:-:-;--:lllrlln Alit llodtl 338 '--lie- 2 ltmtloo. 111 ohota &amp; -mod. 1811 Chrfoltr Now Yorkor, loadtlonCAL 35 . _ $110.
lwl&lt;a old; •zoo11. 114-882· td. au IH VI, loti of ptrll.
high mlltago. no rult 814-44JRu8ar Rtoolvtr llodoi·Vtquero t313.
7112' blrrtl CAL 45 long colt. -::=-:::::::::--:-::-:::::-:-:-;:-~:-1 38t4.
f245. 30H75-t73t.
AKC A~td llalt t.b Pup- -:-t.:=
•• ::~.--d':':'E""'-rt:-::EX::P:-:5:-:r-::-,-...
pl. • Provon Hunti~ Stock - ~
530
AntiqueS
cha.;..,.on Bloodllnt aii::ki25G, aunroo~ oportr. '"' goo cond.
81461S-!1211.
88,VOO mlln.• 1,885. 304·882·
Bul or ttll. Alvorlne Antlqutt, :-:;:--;:-::=:~7""::"::=:;;-::::-1323811 4 E. Main SlrMI, Ton RL J~ AKC Rt;llltrtd Aottwtlltr, ':'
::-::::-:F:-o-rd:-l:'o":m:":po':"":n":tw-:":ll:':"rt:":l"":'l
Pomoror. Houro: 11 .•w. t :
-mod, IIIIa dodltcl, " " ' - 188 8h
b k
1
a.m.IO 8:00 p.m., Sundar t:OO 10 rtii10Vtd, ....,.. chllmploll blood- c utc , uanom 1111on, ra tl,
1:00 p.m. 814-882-2521, Ruu h $350,114-742·22118.
oolld mtchonlcal cond. nttdo
--·
lmtllrtplllr.Bo•OIItrl304-ll75-

25• COlor TV, blackiWhJcl

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U80 ,.,.,,., XLT Trip Comp..
Prtm. Bound, 4 Copt Chtka,
Good Condition. """'"' ...200.

22 T'wll!ad 11W1Y
23 Exprns
24 Hod cook

Dr. R. Downey, a former Archbis hop of Liverpool, said, "If Stalin
had learned to play cricket, the world
migh1 now be a better place to live

1814 Ringer 4 Whttl Drlvt. · ·--

317•JI71.

Weal

~:J..k

2t Involve

By Phillip Alder

--~ ~

tIllS Chovf Bluer KS Sllwrtdo
4X4 V-t, Automatic. PW, PL. 1D,
AIIIFII Coaotnt, Towing Pick·
ago. TlrM I - . EJCtl..
ltnt Condition. Col Aftlr I, 8t4-

11

111 get ill

Dictate the
·better play

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from

rillme

11113 4X4 Dodgt 111m 0-10, .... :
Looko Good, NHdo Work On ,

Sp~

component

10And-

Opening lead: • 5

1178 C-tllcolldalt- ••
Up. Sloort - - . 414. Eacolltnt Condldon. Profllllo..,
Paln4 Job, New 350, VI Engine..._
15,5011.00 814-441-7t71, 814...7371
, -; _•

1885 4x4 S.tO Plck-tJp 2.1 v-e,
Auto, In Good Shapa, 12.500,
8 t • - 1:

$21)0.

Ized Tuka AI Ont Tlntt.
To.....-pit
Prior
Rtceptlonl11 Experience Or

!NT
3NT

· l'D SAY HE'S ABOUT

I

u.r. 111 118 '025

g Crinoline

6 Mall!
1 Fu11
8 Lilli out air

Both
Dealer: South

=~..:.=-...:.:.: I

.

~

Promoted To Anothll Pooltlon At ·
Sc1ric 111111 Wo Art Looldng For
Anothtr Frifndl1 "Pocppt.f'waon'
Aa A Front Doak Rtctptlonlot
Mull Bt Focuotd And Organ-

• 10 9
4 K 96

Vulnerable:

I

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1 Motley(muolc ilro&lt;JP)
2 Alllll'l
folloftrs
3 Ttnnlo player
· communication
Arthur -'38 Hotel room•
4 Golf peg
37 Light 1nd 10ft 5Pet

• 10 9 6 3

• J 2

300 "' t2,210,1t+251-t050.

2·t21n. JL -Audlo oub wolfaro, 1
PPI amplifier 150•1. t Alpine
- - . 304-l~ta
22 Cubic loot Saara froutr
• h
(clttll trPI Intor Ior llr::t; .. ao
lroll. 304 75·11115 I tor Spm.

n'
Llwlng1ton'1 baaement •tar~
Oppor'wnlllel Allound At Unit proofing, Ill beotmtnt repalro
f E
done, frN esllmatll, Nfetlme
Cltltlll All Ltvtll O
xp. gvoranttt. , ... ,. on job txptrl·
Nttdtd Grill Growtll Po-•r
Flex llchadultl.t._Bo."UI Plln tioru.P.iii:JOHiill75-iiZ•t•4l.lllilil~
4011(, EIOI ,..... To: P.O.
Boll 10, . . - . Wo/ 25504.

Ponr F..- Salt: 44' 11rok1 to
;tntit $375. 1114-17511363.

0111 Cltlna- from- Eapr- Toddltr.., bad Wfmatoh-

540 llllc:ellaneous
llen:handiM

Min

tHI

DOWN

24 Scorch ·
27Salaa
31 HebrN
prophet
:13 Mltcaro target
34 Wrltltn

• KQ 7
• A K 10 7
t K J 7 6

730 'IIIII I 4-WDI · _.. ;

s,......

'121l

• Q 6 52

22 E•ltolad
23 Btnalblo,

Soulh

~· c•l•rw.,....,..lt~

ANY ODD .10111: Elllrfor !111r*
lng, lhtYbl &amp; WHCII trimmed.
landocaplng, old-lh tdgtd,
110 · Help Wanted
1twn cora. tiC. Coli Bill a~M-~~75TIVH bedroom, two lltlft, an
7112.
RENTALS
largo comor lot, loetltd 33114
Clollclcart In llr Homo 2 Ot&gt;On- Now Umt Ad., Autloncl, $35,000
AGcepalng appllcaliana through lngo For Anr Ago, Mondor tllru :o. 841-357-2854 ovonln;•
410 Houses lOr Rent
Septtmbtr t2th lor Rt;lotaroa Frldor. Occaolonll Waoklnda.
1.01111 Term Care Nulling Aooll· 814·441-3131, Eaottrn Av.,..t, ""two-'-bocll-.-,-,
.. -bolh,--:-kl-:-1:-bo-,.
-,-.-~-l 2 llodn&gt;om hovtt In Now Havon,
'
tanl Clan. Paint Pluaant Nu,.. Odpn'&amp;
altlchtd - ·
Olio, U501mo. 304-773-Rt7t llavo
lng and Rehal:liilllation Center,
Slate Rou11' 82, Point Plea•nt, Cltrlolltn lldf wUI do hautt 011114-8115 31133
-·
WV 25510. A GI-·IIVilclrt cleaning, flllrtnc•• upon , ...
41 Bedrooms, Green Town1hiP.
quoat, frM talmatH. :104ol75CGrnpony. EOE.
1425/llo., Afttr 4:30 P.M. ~14·
17a
Alolalllnt Farm llaneger nHdtd
on a ill1lO pn llrm In litton &amp; e....tolad -"""" end Pumam coun1111. Sell mollva- dtllne. '"''~• anc1 ....,.Ide,
don, dtpondtbllll)', mochtnletl dtckl.wtnrflidlfW,adHnlllclabWfJ, 1 gtner'llt.rm lu.awtadga tlono, cablntt rtlaclna or rebuilt. Aeterenc:••·"'" E•lf·
rtqUHd. 304-1137-3435.
-Jim811J13114475-1272.
Aittndon Sl)'latl Fltata Hllr And
Tanning Salon Of Jackoon, Ohio Georgn Portalllt Sawmill, clon'l
It Now Hiring P r o - StyUot haul ,..., iogiiO lilt . . jull ctll
1100 Hiring Bonus Conact Tim 304ol75-11157.
Or Andr• For Mor• lnlormalion Pnlftulonll Trtt Slrvlct,
AI 81._2llll-lllllll.
Removal, frH E•tJma ..•l lnAvon Clvi1tma1 $8 -$t8 llfr, No auronce, llldwtll, Ohio. 114-3111Do« •To -Door, Quk:k Cuh, Fvn 11848, 114-387-7010.
/Relaxing, 1-1100-738-0tll lndl S&amp;M Water Hauling Service•.
lltllop.
•where Purlly 11 Our Paaalon•
Two bedroom hc:tuM ~tb IIOVI
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SCRAM·lETS ANSWERS
Nudism· Otter- Exact- Frosty- TRUE ASSET
• My friend was always speaking out of turn. She hasn't
learned that the ability to keep your mouth shul is a TRUE
ASSET.

SEPTEMBER 10 I

�Ohio Lottery
Cubs hand
Cincinnati
3-1 setback

........

WE FINISHED 1996 AS THE #1 TOYOTA 414
TRUCK DEALER IN THE WORLD!
WE CAN'T IMPROVE ON THAt( BUT NOW WE .HAVE TO
STAY THERE. HELP. HELP!.
.

SAtt-6

Pick 3:
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Pick 4:
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Super Lotto:
2-3-17-22-32-42
Kicker:
022472

Sports on Page 4

$11.1·5

NOnCE: C&amp; 0 MOTORS CHEVROLn &amp; OlDSMOBilE SERVICE DEPT. HAS DOUBLED IIUIU TO ACCOMMODATE THE HIGH VOlUME SALES.DEPT.
727

Cloudy tonight, foggy .
Lows in mid 50s. Friday,
clear, high in the upper .
70s.

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01117, Ohio Ylllley Publllhlng ComPIIny

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 11, 1997

Meigs Local Board OKs MLTA contract
The Meigs Local Board ,of Education approved a three-year contract
Tuesday night with members of the
Meigs Local Teachers Association.
The. contract calls for a three· percent pay raise for teachers the first
year with a reopen clause that allows
negotiations the second and third
years for discussion of pay raises .
In addition, the new contract raises the mileage reimbursement to 30
' cents per mile instead of 25 cents per
·
mile.

·1997 TOYOTA
. .
LOW

·&gt;
AS

'

In personnel mailers, the board
hired the following people to assist'
handicapped students: David Ramey
and Gloria VanReeth as tutors. Donna Shato and Debbie Cundiff as reader guides. Ed Cozart as a handicapped aide. Mary Beha and Debbie
Cundiff for student transportation.
Hired as coaches were: DaVid
Deem as assistant varsity· boys basketball coach, Jared Stewart as freshman boys basketball coach, Rusty
Bookman as seventh grade boys bas-

ketbali coach and Iimmer Soulsby as
seventh grade girls basketball coach.
John David Sharp was hired as a
social studies teacher at Meigs Middle School while Dennis Eichinger
was hired as athletic treasurer at the .
high schooL Bob Buck was hired as
high school quiz team advisor.
The following were approved as
subSiilute teachers: Lorri Barnes,
Cynthia Cisco. Clarence Ed Evans.
Randall Kempton·, Shannon Korn,
Lorre Osborne, Mark Stalnaker. ·

Michele Sl.archer. Teresa Vas~ o. crowdin g in Pomeroy and Salisbury _
O'Linda Jansupka, Kenneth Fanner · elementary kindergarten classes.
and Lawrence Haley.
Board members will consider getPauline Horton was accepted as a ting another .teacher lo as sist in lhe
volunteer kindergarten class assiSiant. progmm whi ch now has 95 students
In other personnel mancrs, the . attr:mling three cl a~sc s. according to
board ~ran1ed a medical leave of Superintendent Bill Buckley.
absence lo Alberta Loftis, bus dri ver,
The bonrd approved MGM-Drivc
and accepted the following resigna· Rite of Pomeroy to handle the dis·
tions': sarah anderson, pan-time assis- met's dri vers' education program at _a
tan! band director; Linda Faulk, cost of $100 per student.
.
Cecilia Harris and Nancy Wachter,
Board President John Hood voted
substitute teachers.
againSI the motion . Previously. the
The board theh discussed over- drivers' cducolion progrom had been

TOYOTA COROLLA

00 AMONTH

cws

.·lM7 114 EXT~ CAB

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admini slcred by AAA which charged
$110 per student
The board also old four uld buses
and a van to Harry Yarhrough for
$I .400 and dona led one old hus to I he
Rutland Volunteer Fire Dcranmcnt
and nppro v~d payment tn the amou.nt
of $2J48.05 1o Zides Sports Shop lor
~po rt s equipment Itt he paid from the
high sc hool aihletic fund .
Present were Bw.:klcy. Treasurer
Cindy Rhonemus. .Hood and board
members Randy Humphre ys. Larry
Rupe ond Roger Ahholt.

could delay area code change

By AARON MARSHALL
cd to drop the 614.area code in favor
Sentinel Columbus Bureau
of the new 740 area code under the
COLUMBUS - Peeved with plan.
lines drawn in the proposed 614 area
While those' plans arc not likely to
code spli\, ·a handful of central Ohio change as a rcsuh of Wednesday's
communities tried to ring up some ·hearing, it is possible the November
changes during a Public Utilities · I start date for the new 740 number
Commission of Ohio hearing. ·
could be delayed hy ·further legal
Lawyers representing central Ohio action .
communities including ReynoldsArea code lines drawn by lhe
burg, Granville, Fairfield and Licking Amcritcch officials. given the authorCounty hammered away at ity to pian the split by federal author·
Ameritech officials responsible for ilies, upset the handful of central
drawing the 614n40 .area code split . Ohio communities by either dividing
during a day-long hearing at I'UCO them with the area code split or lcav·
headquarters Tuesday.
ing them out of the 614 Columbus·
They had earlier filed suit claim- area code region.
ing unequal lrealment by Ameritech
Some claimed lhc new lines will
to bring the matter before PUCO leave them excluded from the Colum·
hearing examiner Jay Agranoff.
bus community, while others seem
The issue has local importance bothered by what lhey sec as a lack
because southeastern Ohio including of public input intoAmeritech's area
all of 1hc Meigs County area is slat- code decision.

TOYOTA

BRAID

I

cents

A Gannett Co. Newa1111per

.

.

Legal ~ action

lUMBER
OIEII
IrS

2 Sec11ona, 12 Pages, 35

"llhink my own business lS going crcd were keeping any county from
to be hurl bv this," said Granville · being split into three area codes and
attorney J. Drew McFarland, who trying to keep counties whole whcnrepresented the village and himsel(at c.vcr possible. ·:we were trymg to
Wednesday 's hearing.
upscllhc least amount of people ... she
" Sixty percent of my tiusiness is said.
.
coming from Franklin County and I . While testimony on the issue is
think it'll hun it...peoplc wijl think expected 10 wrap up until this morn'I'm too far away (with a 740 area ing . hcnring examiner AgranoiT said
code)."
he wi II make a recommendation to
Amerilcch official s defended their the Commission ir:nmc~iatcly. His
area code split They countered that recommendation, while not legally
several public hearings wcie ~eid hmdmg. is likely to he followed by
wilh economic development and the Commission when they issue a
elected officials present and lhat a set ruling.
"The Commission could cxerl
of criteria was equally applied when
drawing the lines.
authority and order it back to square
Clare Lan.: a. cndc administrator (lne or they could' do nolhmg," said
for Amcritcch. testified that her work- PUCO spokesperson Dick Kimmins.
ing group tried w keep the 614 area "Or they could do something in the
code as large os possible while plan· middle." Thw decision can he
ning. the split. Other criteria consid - appealed to the Ohio Supreme Court.

, Interest groups object to ·Democrats' plan

TOYOTARAV4
AS

POSTER CONTEST- The following Salem Center Elementery
School studente were recognized Aug. 16 at the Ohio State Fair
In Columbus for ·their work in the Ohio Tor.n edo Safety Poster
Contest Shown are, from left: front row - Kelly Napper, fourthgrade, and Joshua Johnson, fifth gracte; beck row - Aubrie
Kopec, sixth grade, and Anthony Davis, third grade.

MUST
SEE

TOYOIA:

HURRY,
HURRY,
HURRY

·'

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LOW

AS

LOVE TOYOTA

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.,

about $100 milli'on and allowing
taxes on commercial and industrial
property to grow wilh inllation.
The plan also would give home·
owners a $7~ credit against their
· property taxes and would repeal the
unpopular husiness tax on inventory
while rais1ng the corporate franchise
tax .

'

Thomas Taggart. a Columbus
lawyer representing the state bar
association, said a provision extending the .sales tax 10 legal !'ierviccs
amounts tO[\ ' 'taX 00 mbcr.y."
Hc said the legal profession is not
comparable to a dry cleaner or a
clothing store.
"This is not sofncthing people do
out of a choice on how 10 spend dis·
crclionary funds." he added . "They
don 't hi.ive a choice ."
The reaction was the same from
Realtor!'!, manufa&lt;.:turcrs. the Ohio
Arts Council. agricuhural researchers
and others who stand to lose under
1he Democrats' proposaL
"There isn't anyone who becomes

part of the -schoOl furlding situation
that docsn'i think'it's a problem for
1hcir eonslituency." said Sen. Linda
Furn'ey, D-Tolcdo.
Committee Chairn1an Roy Ray, R·
Akron, said he expected the debate to
move to two new subcommillccs ereatcd last week.
· Ray said .he expected the suhcomminecs to hcgin meeting next
week. with the Joint Subcommittee of
Finant:c fm.:using on the cost of an
adequate education and the Joiill
Suhconlmillcc of Wa'y-:;, &amp; Mcuns
. cva]Uilting the future role of' rrorcrty levies and other taxes in paying ror
schools.
..
The adequacy issue and the
rei iancc of sdmols on rnopcrty taXes
were factors in the Ohio Supreme
Court 's rul ing in March thai the
·slate\ mcthotl of paying for puhlic
schools is unconstitutional.
Ray said part..; ,_
.r the Democrats'
proposal - particularly a repeal or
the inventory tax - could re -emerge.
"The clements of lhis arc still up
for discussion," he added .

Kasich ·vows to defend budget agreement
By KATHERINE RIZZO
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - More
money for local roads is a great temptation - so tempting that House ·
Budget Comminec Chainnan John
Kasich wants to avoid a vote ·on it.
Transportation Commince Chair·
man Bud Shuster wants to bust the
balanced-budget agreement with a
generous highway bill.
The bill is scheduled to move out
of commillec ne&lt;l week and will end
up-6n the House floor unleos leaders
find a way to delay it.
Kasich, R-Ohio, said Wednesday
that his colleagues should not have to
choose belwccn the caps in the budget resolution and 1hc home-state dol-·
Iars promised in lhe Shuster bill,
which would spend five years ' w.orth

of road money in three years.
"I really don't want members
being pu1 in thm position." Kasich
said. "I'm going to u~e my sweetest
tones and my most compelling argu ·
mcnts to nol let thai happen ."
Shuster. R-Pa. kept the door open
to negotiation hut added. ;, it is my
intention this legislation will go to the
floor one way or another."
"This is juslified by the mcmey·
coming into I he (highway) trust
fund ,' ' said Shuster.. who~c proposal
would authorize spending or 30 percent n\ore than has been spent on
transportation projects during the
past three years. "This is justified by
the need to rebuild America."
The showdown between Shuster
and Kasich is the Iales! 10 a decadeslong dispute about the money dnvcrs

pay at the pump in federal gasoline
taxes .
That. money is set aside to he
returned to the states fur roads ,
bridges. hike raths ami mass transit .
Shuster and. many others have said
that for ton many years. memhcrs of
Congress who control appropriations
railed to usc all the money in the fund
be~.:au sc unspent sums helped mask
the size of the federal dcfi c i~ .
Kasirh said estimates of unspent
tr~ s t fund balances arc cxaggemtcd
by imcrcst payment~ owed to the
fund - money one government
acc(mnt woUld get from another.
Underlying 1hc Shus1cr-Kasich
conllict is a rift over how the trust
fund shoul d he handl ed. Kasich
wants to reduce the. decision-making
role of (:ongress and let states keep

more ga:mlinc tax !'"nncy.
.Shu.~tcr hclicvcs dcliherativc com·
' mi Hecs !'iuch as the one he heads have
a responsihility to set national priorities for the ga'solinc tax money.
Contributing w the dispute 1s a
prcdi..:tion that the government · is
going to he collecting more overall
t:JX money than was anticipated .
" Thi~ doesn 't hust a~:~v real num.
hers in the hudget Llc;:tl. ,; said Shu st~.::

r.

~

Kasit.:h an swcrc&lt;.l . " [n,.tend or
that arc n{·,, yet
guarantccJ . slow &lt;.! own. he patient. "
"I do not think it wnuld he good
for a Rcpuhlican Con g rc~s to under·
ln inc an i.lgrccmcnt thm wa ~"" highly
sought lilcrall y 60 d" Y' after it wa&gt;
passed." he said. " I clearIy wil I usc
every power that I have In mnintain
the integrity of the budget."
~pc mJ.ing ~urpluscs

Ex.plosion rips Columbus plant, worker missing·

••

AND

,,

1

lnmming govemml!nt spending by

Charges were expected to be filed 10 a report of an infant not breathing
today by Gallipolis City Police at Second Avenue and Spruce· Street
· Oflicers arrived first and began
against a teenage male in connection
rescue
efforts, including CPR. The
with the death of a 6-week-old infant
·
EMS
lhen
arrived and took over
Wednesday, Police Chief Roger
resuscitation
.allempls. according to
Brandeberry said.
the
release.
Ajoint investigation with the Gal"TI1c biggest prol)lcm I would sec
The child was taken to Holzer
COLUMBUS (AP) -An explo· ric acid, phenol and fonnaldchydc
iia County Prosecuting Allorney 's ·
right
now from a searching stand.
were
being
mixed
in
the
kettle
to
Medical
Center
and
taler
transferred
.
sian
that
was
fell
for
several
miles
office was launched after the infant
point
is
don 't get yoursuit ripped and
fonn
a
wood
adhesive.
A
cause
had
to
Cabell
Huntington.
extensively
damaged
a
Georgiadied at 10:20 p.m: in Cabell Hunt.
don't
step
into any standing water,"
not
been
detennined
today.
The
body
was
to
be
taken
to
the
Pacific resin plant and may have
ington Hospital, Huntington, W.Va.,
he
Said
at
a
news conferen ce outside
Fonnaldehyde
is
a
combustible
West
Virginia
medical
examiner's
killed a worker.
Brandeberry said in a news release
the
plant.
·
chemical
thai
can
ignite
from
heat.
It
Fire officials said one employee
issued this morning.
. office in South Charleston today for
Some
walls
of
the
plant
still
were
detennination of the cause of death. was unaccounted for and presumed is used in making resins for industri ·
The infanl's death was tenned
standing bu1 &lt;1bou1 half the building 's
"As a result of the preliminary dead . Authorities went back into the ai use ~nd wood products.
"very suspicious" by Brandeberry.
Searchers will be alert to chemi- roof was blown off. said Andy Nor·
investigation, a 17-year-old male has building this morning to search for
The chief said officers were called
cals and mangled wreckage. Baual- man, a regional manufacturing manbeen taken into custody in connection the worker.
to assist the Gallia County EMS at
1
ager for Georgia- Pacific Corp.
with the death," Brandeberry said.
The explosion happened as sulfu- ion Chief Warren Cox said today.
5:50p.m. The EMS was responding

'

ALL PRICES INCWOE

set for the last Tuesday or the
month in preparation for the festival.
During lhe meeting conducted hy
Susan Clark. president. it was decided to order Christmas hamicrs which
will hang on the period lamps along
the streets. Plans were also discussed
for decorating the downtown area.
Merchants will be encouraged to outline their buildings in white· lights.
The lighiS will be enhanced with gar·
lands and wrcaths and the trees along
the medium will be trimmed with
white Iights.
Ann Chapman was authorized to
proceed with having the trees along
Main Strcettrimmed a1 a cost at $100
or less.
The need for brackets and electrical work so that the candy cans can
be hung on Second Street was discussed with Councilman George
'Wright to check on what needs to he
done, and Anderson to call~c pow·
Continued on page 3
WJS

Gallia County teenager held in
connection with baby's death

AS

"

'

Pomeroy Merchants
to take part in annual
Sternwheel Festival
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Steff
Participation in the Big Bend
Stern wheel Festival to be hcld,Oct 3·
5 was planned during Wednesday's
meeting of the Pomeroy M~rchants
Association held in Peoples Bank
confcrcllce room.
Again this year lh~ group will
stage its annual duck dcrhy althc fes tival. Jim Anderson was named chairman and duck adoption papers will he
available in various downtown ~usi­
ncsscs. Anderson noted that the
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce will also be holding iiS annual casino on Thursday night of Sternwheel Festival weekend at the
Pomeroy Fire Station.
The merchants also discussed the
possibility of holding an hcrbfcst in
lhe mini-park if someone volunteers
to handle the staging and make the
contac.ts to secure cxhihltors.
A downtown de;:m-up evening

DLEXUS

W.VA.'S LARGEST TOYOTA
IS LOOKING
FOR GOOD RELIABLE SALES
PEOPLE. EXPERIENCE NOT
NECESSARY. PLWE ·APPLY
IN THE TOYOTA SHOWROOM.

101.-FRI.•·••
SAT. 9-6

.

IS

LOW

OPEl

HAWK

By PAUL SOUHRAOA
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - A linle rhyme
recalled by fanner state Rep. Gordon
Sherer illustrates the problem law·
makers face in trying to design a new
school financing system.
"Don'ttax you. Don'tlax me. Tax
the · guy behind the tree," Sherer
responded Wendesday when a Senate
Finance Committee member said
every witness had a ready answer to
explain why his or her group should ·
not have its taxes raised or its budget
cut.
Sherer, a lobbyist whose clients
include the J&lt;ings Island amusement
park outside Cincinnati, was one of
those witnesses. He spoke against a
proposal to extend the stale sales lax
to tickets for leisure activities.
ROY RAY
. If the price of a ticket climbs too
high- an adult admission lo Kings ·
Island is $30.95 now - people
The Senate Finance Committee
won't go. Sherer said. That would wrapped up hearings on Dcmucruts '
have a dramatic impaCI on the jobs proposal to raise $1.24 billion for
and touri.&lt;m dollars !he park gcner· schools by expanding lhc sales tax to
atcs.
some services that arc now exempt.

II

..

Norman a l~o said he dtd not know
when the plan I mighl be reopened.
The mi.'ising worker. whose name
had nm been released, was standing
about 10 feet from the kcnlc where
the explosion occ.urred Wednesday,
said Assistant Fire Chief Dan Vin·
cent He said there·was little h'bpc the
worker would be found alive .
Norman today said the employee
had worked allhc planl two years.

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