<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9173" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/9173?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T06:01:59+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19602">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/13e5bdabd719371dfd8d7eb0dcd2145a.pdf</src>
      <authentication>5e3d44ee44413e6542291d52e6d82989</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="29486">
                  <text>Page 10 • n. Daily S1 1Unel

Bulls.set
newNBAwln
mark
. . 86-80

.lm.provements are seen immediately after snuffing out last cigarett~

l

Ann
Landers
'"'· IAII A....

,..s~_.c.

-s..-..

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: Last fall, my
47-year-old brother was diagnosed
with lung cancer. Years of smoking
had finally caught up with him.
After months of medical attention.
the doctors have told us that my
orother has maybe one or two years
1eft before the cancer kills him.

My heart is broken. I 1m 1101
ready 10 say aoodbye 10 my brolher.
Please. Ann, pt the messaae OUt
!hal all !hose smoken who think
they are huiting only themselves are
s.dly mis!Uen.
I am enclosina an article I read
recently. If you would print it in
your column, it just might inspire
some smokers to quit. It could spare
their children, parents, brothers, sis·
ters and friends the great sorrow I
am experiencing today. -- Saddened
in San Jose
Dear San Jose: As a life lnlstee
on the board of lhe American Canc;er
Society, I 1m delighted to print the
article. You might think it's too late

to quit smoking, but here is some

good news from the Amerielll Cancer Society:
"As soon as you sn.uff out that
last cigarette, your body will begin a
series of physioloaical chuJes.
"Within 20 minutes: Blood P"!lsure, body temperature and pulse
rate will drop to normal.
·
"Within eight hours: Smoker's
breath disappears. Carbon monoxide
level· in blood drops. and oxygen
level rises to normal.
"Within 24 hours: Chance of
heart attack decreases.
"Within 48 hours: Nerve endings
slart to regroup. Ability to taste and
smell improves.
'

•

"Within tine clays: Bteadtiaa is
eqier.

.

" Within two to three months:
Circulation improves. Walkina
becomes euler. Lun1 capacity
iticreues up to 30 percent.
"Within one to nine months:
Sinus cotiJellion and shortness or
breath .: ~. Cilia that sweep
debris from your lungs grows beck.
Energy increases.
"Within one year: Excess risk of
coronary heart disease is half !hal of
a person who sm~es.
"Within two YC8f'!l: Heart attack
risk drops 10 near normal.
"Within five years: Lung cancer
death rate for average former pack-

a-day smobr decreases by almost
llalf. Stroke ri1J1 is reduee4, Risk of
moudl, throllllld esophageal cancer
is ~f ~of asmoker.
Within 10 yean: Lung cancer
delth ra&amp;e is similar to !hal of a per•son who doe$ 1101 smoke. The precancerous cells are replaced.
"Within 15 yean: Risk of corepary heart disease is the same as a
.'person who has never smoked."
Dear Ann Landers: My nephew's
family lost a beloved pet, and it
· ~~ever should have happened. A dish
of chocolate candy was left on. lhe
coffee table, and !heir 2-year-old
-.,nngcr spaniel ale it all. He died
.rter two clays of suffering. The vet's

bill - eJIOI'IIIOUS. The flllliiy wp
devuta'd by pilt ~ grief.
!
Chocola&amp;e is poisonous to ~A lot of pe.ople don't U.w ~Dogs love chocolate. but a ~
· small amount can make 1 &lt;los sic:k.
A large amount can be fa~. Ple.Ue
· •
m.onn
your --•~rs. An n. - J .K. .
in Seattle
'

w

Ohio Lottery
Plck3:

879

Plck4:
8993
Buckeye 5: .
2-6-8-18-23

.. '

·•

Dear J.K.W.: You did, and
thank you.

;1

Sead queltloal 10 Ann Lan·
den, Creaton Syndk8te, sm W.
Centvl'y Blvd., Suite ~00, Los
Angeles, Calli. !10045

It's time ·for breakfast:
Post Cereal cuts prices

......,

...·•. .
•
-..
...
~ 41,

NO. 241
.
·02 8ectlone, 12 .....

..

--*53---- Birchfield, Martin appointed to fill

~·joooiiooooo

'

MY exactly when the new coupons
By J.L. HAZELTON
&lt;A:ill appear.
AP Bualneea Wrltar
NEW YORK (AP) - Post Cere- " The price changes !U'C cxpei:ted to
al is cutting prices for brands such as reach stores in two or.three weeks.
' Some of Post's bigsest competiSpoon Size Shredded Wheat and
Raisin Bran an average of 20 percent
said they had already cut prices
and making its coupons good for any iit recent years and Post was simply
Post cereal.
catching up.
. Past is betting that lhe price cuts
· Kellogg spokesman Anthony
.
..,...
will give a boost to the cereal busi- Hebron said his company would set
14.5 ~- iicli1 .
ness, which shrank slightly last year !~!ices on a product-by-product basis,
-~
and has been flat so far this year. aM that it hail cut the price of its verNew price
Post's own cereal sales have been sion of Raisin Bran by nearly 16 per$2.99
declining, analysts said.
cent recently. At General· Mills,
The company is taking ail)l at high spokesman Austin Sullivan said no
:g~· Nuta
~~lm ,
prices and the frustration of cruising changes were planned.
·
Clllf8lrt price
New price
the crowded cereal aisle comparing a
The cut brings Post's suggested
$3.89
$2.99
clutch of coupons to the more than retail price for a 17.2 oz. box of
... ,,
~.
~·ol'l'
·~I
200 brands in a typical grocery store. Spoon Size Shredded Wheat down to
' $Pixln.Siza ~Whlit..
"We expect this will reignite $2.99 from $3.88; while 20 oz. of
•'
.
17.2oz.boll,
.
growth in the ready-to-eat cereal Premium Raisin .Bran will cost $2.99 .
Clllf8lrt price · New price
market," said Mark Leckie, executive .instead of $4.13. Actual retail prices
$3.88
$2.99
vice president and general manager are determined by individual stores.
of the Post Cereal division of Kraft
For Irene Cotton of McCook,
Honey Bunch11 of 01t1
Foods, Inc.
.Neb., 20 percent isn't good enough.
.i
16 oz. box,
Doing away with coupons that
"At times you can get a box of
CII'NIII price
New price
apply to only one cereal and perhaps Post Toasties for 99 cents, and we' II
$3.8.5
$2.99
even just one size box will lower buy that, but when they get up above ·
Post's costs and, the company fig- that the best thing to do is just let '=Scu
_ rce
_:-=P-ost-:-Cerea::-'--,------....J
AP
ures, retailers'. The company won't them sit on the shelf." she said.
•

.vacant chairs on -Rutland Council

.t9rs

.
~-'

,,

\,

!

'

;

, ; . " ' '" ....

'.

Examining personality traits of a loner:·.

BY KAREN S. PETERSON
psychiatrist Dan McAdams, a spe- study for an exam with equanimity,"
USA TODAY
cialist il) adult penonality.develop- Oldham writes.
·
In the rush to understllnd ment at Northwestern University,
Loners' ability to "observe and
Theodore Kaczynski, !he Unabomber Evanston, Ill. "There is just very lit- collect information serves them
suspect, much has been made of the tle evidence for that. Some introverts well," Oldham says. "They can be
fact he is a "loner."
are very intellectual! and some are not sent far away- to repair an offshore
But he's a far cry from lhe solitary ' at all."
oil rig, to man a remote ,lighthouse.
types we know in everyday life. The
The solitary person is often more to watc;h for fires deep in a forest, IQ.
word loner hardly represents the successful at work than in relation- dig in the.desert for ancient artifactS'
degree to which this man wants to be ships. He can "fix a car, write poet- - without feeling lonely, bored or
' by himself, experts caution.
ry, deliver mail, design a bridge or isolated."
..
"I don't want people to think that
just because somebody is a loner, that
implies some kind of pathology," ·
says Dr. John M. Oldham, director of
lhe New York State Psychiatric lnsti- .·
USA TODAY
· Making bombs in an isolated, one-room shack in remote Montana with
tute and co-author of "The New.Perno·plumbing or electricity is not lite behavior of a normal "solitary" or
sonality Stlf-Portrait" (Bantam,
loner personality, say' Dr. John M. Oldham, chief medical officer of the
$12.95). The loner is not emotionalNew York State Office of Mental Health. Indeed, the behavior ofTheodore ,
ly damaged goods. "We want to be
Kaczynski, the Unabomber suspect, "is way beyond normal." ·
very cautious;" Oldham says.
Being solitary, or introverted, "is
Using "100 percent speculation- just guesswork," Oldham muses
. a normal variation of the human perKaczynski might he a mix of at least two personality styles gone amok.
. Kaczynski might display a "sOlitary," or loiter style that went over the ~
sonality,': says Paul Costa Jr., an
expen on personality at the National
e~e to become a schizoid pers6~ahty disorder: And he might have a "vigInstil~ &lt;;&gt;n Aging. "Society already
ill'"t" style gone to tl!e extreme of paranoia:
penaliZes the many artistic, creative
According to Oldham's book, "The New Personality Self·Porttait:."
people who want to he alone. I
people with schizoid personality disorder "live in a walled city deep withwould hate to see the word loner
in themselves, far away from other people. They· are not antisocial; they
associated with this guy, should he 6e
~ asocial-lhey want nothing to do with you."
the Unabomber."
Even "mildly schizoid men and women who on the surface seem someSo just what is normal for the garwhat sociable prove flat, empty, passive, unresponsive or just indifferent
den variety loner who does not go
when you try to get to know them."
over the edge; lhe person the experts
Paranoid people, Oldham says, "expect the worst of others. They're
want to protect? He or she c!luld be
apprehensive, suspicious, uncompromising ·and argumentatiye, and
your neighbor or your relative.
they're convinced of !heir rightness beyond the shadow of a doubt. "IndiMost people are a mix of basic
viduals with paranoid personality disorder are on guard against a hostile
personality styles, Oldham says. He
universe where bad things happen or are always about to happen to them
describes 14, all of them normal.
at the hands of other people." They "must not let down their guard and
Adapted from his book, these traits
give way to trust and intimacy, lest the other person take advantage of
!heir weakness."
.
define the Ieiner's style: .
.
- Solitude. Most comfottable
alone.
··························~·······························
······· · ····· · ···· · ·· · ·····~····· · ·····~···~··············
Independence. "Self-contained" and dCJ!'sn't require others to
enjoy life.
-Calm. Even-tempered, dispassionate, unsentimental and unflappable.
- Stoicism. Indifferent to pain
and pleasure.
-Sexual composure. Enjoys sex
but doesn't suffer without it
• - Unflappable. Unswayed by
either praise or criticism .
Loners are often thought to be
New Location
St.
Rt. 338 at VIne
'
r
highly intelligent. It is correct that
(Old Boat Works Bldg)
' "really outstanding geniuses and creative individuals tend to have loner
. .
personalities," says Dean Simonton,
a psychologist at the University of
Authorized Dealer and warranty: ·
California, Davis.
~ But not all loners are inordinateBriggs &amp; Stratton • Currently this area's only
ly bright. "It is a stereotype that all
Master Service Technician for Briggs
intellectuals are introverts," says

'l;lnabomber' suspect not normal loner

CCL OFFICERS WELCOMED - Linda Brod• erick, left front, and Kitty Darat, right front, copraaldante of the Middleport Child Conaarv•
tlon lalgua, welcome atAtlllld dlatrlc:t offlcara
at Saturclay'a aprlng conference of the South'
Centnl Dlatrlct, Jean Gillaspie, Galllpolla, dl•
trlct pnialdant, and Jean Salter, Gallon, atete

praeldant. Other district and etete oftlcara
attending were VIrginia Crandall, Ttwmvllla,
South East District prealdailt; Doria Studer,
Chatfield, 8tete hlltorlan and publicist; Deanna Buah, Thornville, state achlave""!rrt chair·
man; Lindy Wolf, Dayloli, South Wast District
praeldant; and Rita Hannawan, Westerville, peat
state praeldanL

Child ·conservation league
_marks 50th anniversary ·

•

''

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel news steff.
The 50th anniversary of the
Middlepon Child Conservation
League was celebrated in con·
junction with the annual South
Central District CCL spring con·
ference held Saturday at the Rock
Springs United Methodist Church.
Theme was "The Golden Ye.ars"
and a feature of the program was
the recognition of honor!ifY mem·
bers, Peggy Houdashell, Clarice
Kitchen, Ann Colburn, and Barbafa
Stonesypher. They were presented
with trinket boxes in appreciation
of their many years of active membership.
Jean Gillespie, Gallipolis, district president, assisted by linda
Broderick and Kitty Darst, co-presidents of the host unit, presided at
· the meeting. Nancy Morris gave
the invocation. Peggy Harris, the
welcome, and Cathy Atkins of the
First Step Mothers Club of Gallipolis, the response.
Gillispie introduced the visiting
dignitaries, Jean Seiter of Galion.
president of the Ohio 'Child Con-

\

'

By KAREN S. PETERSON
USA Tpi)AY
·
Most people can relate to what
happen~ to Greg Norman at the
Masters golf tournament Sunday:
pverybody "chokes". or buckles
under pressure at one ume or anothexperts .agree.
• · 'Everyboc!y can identify with NorJrian," says Shane Murphy, a sports
psychologist in Monroe, Conn. '"Oh,
l~at was me on my high school
pltysics exam. or taktng my IJIW
jloards, or· making a speech.' It's
Ylhen you want something so badly

•

er,

.
•.

.

"

I.

Presenting· the program were
Mony Wood, Drug·Abuse Resistance Education officer for Meigs
and Gallia Counties. He talked
about his role with you!h. the need
for one-on-one meetings, and tech;
niques for avoiding trouble. He discussed the 17 lessons he teaches
and the responses from the youngsters with whom works.
Local qui Iter Bunny Kuhl gave
a demonstration on quilt care,
cleaning and repair.
Following a luncheon, Denver
Rice presented a program of m~sic
of yesteryear.
Announced was the 76th state
convention, "Sharing Precious
Moments" to be held at the
Zanesville Holiday Inn, Oct. II
and 12. Dr. Gail Keueldraim who
is with the Nonhero Virginia Community College will be lhe, speaker. Also speaking will be Dr. James
Burson, a professor at the Musk·
ingham College.
The South Central District conference in 1997 will be held on
April 18 in Gallipolis with Toddlers to Tassells League to be
host.·
•·

servation League. Rita Hanawalt,
.past state president; Deanna Bush,
state achievement chairman; Seiter, state historian and publicity; ·
Virginia Crandell, South Eastern
District president; Lindy Wolf,
South Central District president.
Past district presidents attending
and recognized were Cathy Bostic,
Carole Rupe, Patti Bodimer, and
Stonecypher.
c fandell reponed that 92 loans
were gran1ed from the scholarship
loan fund, including one to the
daughter. of Cathy Atkins of First
Step, Gallipolis. Keith Darst, son
of the local co-resident, received a
renewal grunt.
Membership was discussed and
members were reminded that they
need to invite others to become a
pan of the CCL. ·
Following a repon by Pauy'
Bodimer, nominating committee,
Gillespie was elected district pres·
ident for I~7. Achievement Ten
Awards were presented to the Toddlers to Thssels, 37 years; rust Step
Mothers Club and Middleport
CCL, 50 years.
·

The choking matter of

By TOM HUNTER
for residents in lhe village of Rutland.
sentinel Newa Staff
as enforcement df the village's litter
Rutland Village Council will be and dumping ordinances will be
back to a full six-member group, with increased by the town marshal,
the unanimou~ly approved appoint- according to Mayor JoAnn Eads.
ments of Marie Birchfield and Vera
The stepped up enforcement of the
Martin to two vacant council posi- ordinance, noted at Thesday's regular
tions at Thesday's regular meeting.
meeting of council, will induck all
Birchfield will fill the unexpired dumping and littering.of any type in ·
teim of council member Duane village. Also included is the disposWeber, who resigned in November. al of grass clippings on village streets.
Martin wi'l fill the unexpired four
"When we get spring and summer
year term of Rosemary Snowden rains, ~e grass clippings that are on
Eskew, who resigned at a special lhe streets get washed down the
meeting last week.
·
sewer lines. The state just replaced
Eskew has been appointed village lhe lines last WI. These clippings will
clerk/treasurer, filling the term vacat- clog 'the lines and cause us problems,
ed by the resignation of clerk/trea- if we don't enforce the ordinance and
surer-elect Kathy Stewart.
keep those clippings off the street,"
Spring cleaning well be in order said Eads.

.

HONORARY MEMBERS HONORED - Hon- ofllqer. In the group wera from the left, Clarice
orary members of the Middleport Child Con· Kitchen, Pomeroy; Barbara Stonecypher,
aervatlon League cal abc all11g Its 50ih annlver· .Columbus; Peggy HoudaaheH and Ann Colaery were praaantecl glftl ~Peggy Hllrrla, leal · burn, both of Pomeroy.

Norman~s

the tremenclous pressure to wi~. that
N:orman did."

that panic starts taking over, and you
· lose your focus and don't know how
to gel it back."
..
Norman's brilliant game impleded during the final round of The Masters, .held 'in Augusta, Ga. Norman
went from six shots ahead to five
shots behind the winner, Nick Faldo.
· Anyone can choke "in limited
· ways, depending on die level of pressure," says Steven Hendlin, a spirtS
psychologist in lrviJIC1. Calif. "We all
feel pressure to varying degrees,
(though) most of us do not have such
.high expectations from e'!eryone,

•

non-conquest

The "choke" ·phenomenon is
physicaland mental. Experts refer to
the "catas(l'ophe lheory." Every per·
son has a tevel of tension he or she
is comfonable with, Murphy says. "If
you get out of that zone of optimal
functioning, you go into a panic state
with its negative thinking. It is very
hard to recover.''
·

...

The "catastrophic expeCtations
become self-fulfilling," Hendlin says.
•

MOVED

UCINE
CLINIC

R

SERVICE &amp; PARTS
.

Now Open for the Spring Sealon
Complete Une or Bedding &amp;
Vegetable Plants

Hanging Buke!!!
(Blooming &amp; Foliage)

Gerantuma
Shrubs Trees Azeleaa

RoeeBuahas
Open Dally 9-5, Sun 1·5
Wehonorlha
Golden Bucklya Cerd

·Hubbard .
.Greenhouse
Syracuse, OH

992-sne

MTD • Products, Ranch King, Yard Man, others
Murray Products
Noma - Eagle Star Dynamark &amp; Others-AYP Roper- Rally ·
McCollougll-EchO:Oregon Saw Products
.

Pick Up Service

949-2804

3SOIIM
A Gannett Co. Newapapar

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, Aprll17, 1996

'

•

;{f

" '/

f " ·

t

. Wlrala18 One cellular phone cuatoniera can now call the Meigs
County Shariff' a Department toll-frail by dialing *53 on thelr cal.lular phones anywhara In the Wlralal1 One calling area,...'lt will
be a great help 8!'1d an asset for people with Wlralale One eer·
vice to report accldante or other emargenclea," 181d Shariff
Jamea M. Soulaby, shown aboVe testing the dialing option along
With Wlralell One f8!11'81entetlve Derek Fauber.

Council and Mayor Eatls com- of the village maintenance depart-.
mended the work of new town mar- · ment. Davis stated that · water has
shal William Gilkey, who reported 36 been turned on at the baseball fields,
traffic citations were issued during and noted that Howard Sanitation
removed three loads of refuse from
the month of March.
the village trash traps.
·
In other matters, council:
- approved paying $50 bonding
- approved a motion to purchase a
new trim mower for the village main- fee for the new village clerk/treasur-'
er, and approved salary for the positenance department.
- discussed ongoing ·ticket sales tion at $500 per month.
- Mayor Eads announced the
and preparations for theApril27 Phil
Dirt and the Dozers concert at the annual community yard sale will be
held Saturday, June I at lhe civic cen-·
Rutland Civic Center.
ter,
fr9m 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
-approved preapplication for par- approved the mayor's repon of
ticipation in a statewide villages
$999 for the month of March.
,
computer network and.program.
Present were council members
-approved a motion for purchase
of a section of culvert pipe for culvert l)ick felly, Danny Davis, Gladys
Barker, Judy Denney, mayor JoAnn:
replacement in the viilage.
· - heard a report from Dave Davis Eads, and clerk/treasurer Rose Macy
Snowden Eskew.
.

Senate OKs bill to make repeat DUI a felony
•

0

:$outhern committee
·w illplace ·levy back
Of' baflot August 6

COLUMBUS (AP)- The num- House and Senate resumed voting the Senate.
felony tag to apply to any fourth or
ber ohlcohol-related traffic fatalities sessions after a two-week
-The Senate sent to Gov. Geol'lte subsequent drunken dri_ving offenses,
· in Ohio went up last year for the first Easter/Passover break.
Voinovich a bill to implement a bal- ·whether they occurred within ljve
time since 19ti6. Sen. Bruce Johnson
In olher action 1\Jesday:
lot issue voters approved in Novem-· years or over a longer period.
said that shows a tougher penalty is
- Representatives voted 89-4 for ber to provideS 1.2 billio.n.in state aid
But that would have s~nl an estineeded. ·
·
a non,binding resolution that would for local public works projects. It also mated 4,()()0 people to prison at acost
Johnson, R-Westerville, won urge Congress to give Ohio and oth- doubled, to $1.2 billion, the amount to the Ohio Department of Rehabiliapproval on Tuesday of a bill that er states conli'ol over the fuel taxes of money the Ohio Department of tation and Correction of $24 million.
would make a fourth drunken driving they send to Washington.·
The revised bill that now goes to
Transpottation can horro"" to build
receives
only
two-thirds
of
the
House 'would affect an estimated
"Ohio
'By JIM FREEMAN
of the district should the iuue fail conviction within a five-year period
new highways.
the fuel taxes generated back in
Sentinel newa staff
again: "Every time we lose a student a felony instead of a misdemeanor.
- Senators OK'd a House-passed 1,900 people: 900 fourth-time offend·
After evaluating the failure o{ a we lose $3,40Q ~o $3,500. We may
:·~re is ,a co~t to the state or highway funds," said Rep. Pat Tiberi, bill to classify as public records, ers who )Nould go to local jails, and :
construction levy on the ·March 19 lo";C ~?.I!I..C..!!U\!,ents. ·:
. • . ':''~~~ ,•... . Ohtdr J~hnson. sat,d •. - - . · . • . R.:~o)umii»J!, •.Jbil,;;lpQASOf., ·'t:Jibe. available -::for-cinspeetion, . financial ·..J,i)oQ.flfttf.tirne offenders whowoitlct ·
·
ballot, the Southern Local Building
"Ii's· a saa end to a school dtstnct
The ball, whtch now goes to the state's hlghways wili not be able to disclosure statements that presidents face state prison.
survive
under
these
conditions."
Johnson said current law classified :
';ommittee resolved Thesday night to that has been top notch."
Hou~. would s~nd an estimated
of public colleges and universities file
-The House voted 88-2 for a bill with the Ohio Ethics Commission.
all .drunken driving convictions as .
put the' issue before voters again .on
Thesday night's gathering was 1.000 people to pnson at !l".mcreased
to require that the Ohio Peace Offi·Aug. 6.
·
.-substantially larger than those held co~t to the state of $9 mtllton.
The Ohio Department of Public misdemeanors regaldless of the num- Twenty-seven people attended the before· the levy's failure, a fact
"Bal~cing that,however, would cer Training Council conduct a crim- Safety said the number of alcohol- ber.
~ommittee meeting, the first meeting Spencer observed.
be a savmgs to local governm~nts inal history records check on appii- related traffic acciden1s increased to
His bill would elevate a fourth
lield voters rejected a proposed 6.1
"I felt like we sat in a cage and who would no longer be responstble cants for training certificates. Felons. 366 last year, compared with 330 in drunken driving conviction within
rnill bond levy issue to fund con- pounded our heads on a wall and for the incarce~~tion of dr~atic are prohibited from attending police 1994. The 366 fatal crashes repre- five years from the current first
courses, but no background cbecks sented ~9 percent of total traffic afa- degree misdemeanor to a founh · ·
· I{Uction of a new, district-wide K-8 nobody came on board," he said repeat offenders., Jo~nson satd.
degree felony, imposing a mandata- •
elementary school and additions and referring t\1 the earlier meetings, usuApproval of the btll carne as lhe are mandated. The bill now goes to talities statewide.
r~novations to the existing high ally attended by only a handful of
Johnson originally wanted the ry 60-day prison term.
school.
·
supporters.
Official results from the Meigs
The Southern Local Board of
County Boaril of Elections indicate Education e~rlier this month
the issue failed 931-820, or by Ill · expressed interest in attempting the COLUMBUS (AP) Shelby filed a $100 million lien against his to file lawsuits against anyone guilty cially a judge- who has committed
vqtes. A similar issue in the Eastern bond issue again. To do so, the board . Municipal Coun Judge Jon ~chaefer property.
· of intimidation.
treason for abrogating his oath?" he
Local School District passed 811- will have to pass a resolution by May says he can't. get a second mortgage
Filing the liens is a common tacSchuck sa.id the bill may come up said.
710.
. 21.
tic by common law court adherents, for .a vote by the full House by the
on his home.
Committee Chairman James
"We di4n't get the job done," said
Board member . David Kucsma
Franklin County Common Pleas who say it is their only · recourse end of the month.
Mason, R-Beitley, accused Ellwood
committee chairman Dave Spencer. said he has received numerous Judge Patrick McGrath has been against a judicial system that has sysA leader of Ohio's common law and other common law activists of •
•:1 was extremely disappointed."
requests to run the levy again.
accused of treason.
tematically usurped the J&gt;!lWer of the movement warned that lawmakers operating under a ".cafeteria" legal ·
."Eastern passed their levy and will
"People want to tak.e another look
Both told a House committee . individual and undercut the Consti· also might be guilty of treason if they system -piCking and choosing bits .
have a new facility ... we're really hap- at this," he said. '
Thesday that public officials need tution.
of law here and there to suit their own ·
pass the bill.
py· for lhe children in that district,"
Due to the levy's narrow defeat, protection from "common law"
"What's going on here is an
"The penalty for treason in our convenience.
.Spencer commented. "That district the state seems willing to hold the activists who have set up a.separate attempt to mess up the entire legiti- court used to be death by hanging,"
State Attorney General Betty :
,-ill grow, will prosper, while may building fund money until August, court system they claim is rooted in mate legal system," said McGrath, said Bill Ellwood of Columbus, who Montgomery testified that the com- :
lose our district.''
according to Superintendent James biblical and constitutional law.
· who also was threatened with a $100 identified. himself as chief justice of mon law movement appears to be ·
~ ·He painted a bleak future portrait
Continued on page 3
"It is their intention to intitrii- million lien while hearing a lawsuit Our One Supreme Court in the well organized and 'growing in Ohio. :
date," Schaefer told the House Select involving a comnlon law activist.
But Rep. Lynn Wachtmann, R- :
Republic of Ohio.
The committee heard from oppo- · Ellwood said later that he did not Napoleon, questioned whether the :
Committee on Filing of Liens.
His run-in with the common law nents and !lackers of a bill in!foduced expect any members of ~is group to bill was necessary. .
coun came just before Christmas by Rep. William Schuck, R-Colum- attempt to carry out a sentence, but
"Is this really a crisis?." Wachtwhen he found one of its adherents bus, that would grant immunity to urged the committee to defeat the bill. mann asked. "I guess I have a little
The Pentagon says it has no evi- guilty of driving under a suspended county recorders who refuse to accept
By LAURAN NEERGAARD
"Tell t~~e where I go to seek problem in my own mind that we are
the
liens
and
permit
public
officials
driyer's
license
!llanaged
and
the
man
dence of a new mystery disease
A11oclatad Preas Writer
redress against an official - espe- so quick to protect government." ·
~ WASHINGTON - A pill Gulf causing the headaches, fatigue, mem'
War soldiers took to protect them- ory loss and other symptoms reportselves from nerve-gas 'attacks can ed by thousands of veterans of the
. .
1991 U.S.-Iraqi conflict. It attributes
~urtthe body's a~ility to nullify two
most symptoms to known illnesses.
~mmon insect repellents before they
Still, the Pentagon already .has
infiltrate
the
brain,
new
animal
stud'
.ies·.suggest ,
CANTON (AP) - Aggression by the fedenl govel'llment
begun funding some similar chemiMillionaire publisher and fonner Dole and Pat Buchanan in the polls ·
apinst
the
Montana
Freeinen
would
be'
viewed
as
u
act
of
war
.
: .The findings in chickens. do not cal studies.
·Republican presidential candidate before leaving the race March 14, :
by an Ohio MUitla group, the aroup's leader said.
.
"We haven't ruled in or ruled out
Malcolm "Steve" Forbes has agreed after netting 90 l,OOO votes and :
· pr6ve this che111!cal cocktai I caused
Don Vas, the bripdler geoenl of tbe Columbiaua County
the. so-called Gulf War. syndrome in the possibility that combinations of
IP deliver the commencement spending more than $25 million of :
Unorganized MUIIIa, is In Montana to naonltor thie.st.ndolr that
address at the University of Rio his personal fortune on the cam- ~
sQidiers, but ~eterans sajd the gov- chemicals could indeed explain some
began
March
2S
between
fedenol
agents
and
the
armed
and-govof
the
illnesses
of
Persian
Gulf
vetGrande and Rio paign.
i:niment should immediately follow
.
ernment activists.'
·
Grande Commuup:on the Duke University research. erans, ". said Veterans Affairs
Forbes
has
since
thrown
his
sup:
· The standoff near Jordan,' MonL, bepn after fedenl qents
.. ;"We think it's good· &lt;lata," said spokesman Terry .Jemison .
nity College on port to the Dole campaign, but his ·
arrested Freemen leaden LeRoy Schweitzer, 57, and .Daniel
But he declined to comment on
June 9. ·
ve1erans' spokesman Phil BUdahn or
bid for the GOP nomination thrust :
Petef$ell,
53,
on
a
.variety
of
ebarges.
Three
other
Freemen
have
Dr.·
Mohamed
Abou-Donia's
findtlte American Legion. "This' is 'not
Forbes
will him into national prominence .and .
since
thea.
·
surreadered
give the address merited a stint as guest host of
lh'rpwing money into the wind. This ings, saying VA officials wanted to
About tO mo~ of the Freemen In the .eoinpouncl are wanted
is. following up on good science·that thoroughly review his research when
during a two-day NBC's "Saturday Night Live" last '
on st.te and fedenl dtartea rimlinc frc1111 writing bllcl cb~ and
(Vtay have) the answers to questions ·it is published in next month's Jourvisit to Ohio on weekend.
·
lmpenonatlq
public
OlllclaiJ
to
~IeDin&amp; to lllclup and mur·
that have been bedeviling us for more nal or Toxicology and Environmenbehalf of U.S.
der a federal judae,
Cremeans, serving his first term ;
than five years."
Rep. Frank A.
tal Health.
Eariler this mouth, Vossent le~n to mDitla memben acl'OIIIi
in
Congress representing the Sixth ..
Cremeans. R-Galthe counuy, asklnl them to 10 to Montana.
·•
Congressional
District, was the first ·
Stew ForbH lipolis, the Cre"I believe that lftbey kll these people In M911tana that it defennational legislator to announce his ·
means campaign announced.
sive aclion Is called for," Vos told 'l:be Repository by teleplaone for
support
for Forbes' presidential run. :
·"I Bill delighted that my friend
(
.
'
Thesday's Mltlonl. "Tblrteen ltates have qreed that It wiD be the
Like
Forbes,
he has also announced :
will be able to deliver the address at
~ELPRE(AP)'-A minor solvent fife that killed'tltn!e. workers in May
federaliOVel'llllleJil dedaritta WI.·· on dae people, iDd at thiat point
backing
for
Dole,
the likely Repub- :
Rio Grande," Cremeans said. "It is
leak at the Shell Chemical Compa- 19.94. flundreds of reSidents were
we wUI ~e out the fedenlaovel'llluent."
• . -lic)lll
nominee.
.
·
·
very important that young people
ny's poi)'JDCI'.plant was caused by a evacuated during that fire.·
He wciulcl POt lclentlly the ltalel.
.
·
'
across the country hear his message
· Cremeans is seeking a second :
White said, five employees were ·
gasket problem on a valve, a
He allo woulcl110t ay bow maoy oeber mUitla -ben showed
of hope, growth and opportunity."
term on Capitol Hill this fall and is a ·
• evacuared Thesday as a precaution
spqkesman said.
up, hut tepwlen llave .c seea aoy near.tile Free- to~~~pouad.
is
editor-in-chief
of
Forbes
1966 graduate of Rio Grande.
·
Spokesman Mike White said but !here was no threat to ihe comVos S8ld he and odtCr -"en are stayinc about 50 tnila frvm
Forbes
Masazine
and
the
president
. Tuesday the company was inves.ti• munity.
.
Commencement activities at Rio ·
the 1lte, at ai'IIICb OWIIed by a Frte!IWI not Involved In the stand·
of Forbes Publishing. A proponent Grande will begin at 2 p.m. The .
gating Why the gasket failed.
The plant produces Kraton poly011'.
of the ftat tax concept, Forbes ran in remainder of Forbes' schedule while ..
~ut five to 10 sallons of a sol- men, which are used as performance
David Llnl, uoeber repnunl,!1i'ft of the Columbiana Ceunlhe GOP presidential primaries and in Ohio is still tentative ~d will be ;
vent used to make adhesives leaked enhancers in food packaging, toys,
ty mDida, ...-1 there wOIIId hie ,del.-1"11 act1oa II t1te Free.ea
won in Ariwna and Delaware. ·
in the newly rebtiilt K-1 unit The unit . sponing goods, adhesives and lubriannounced later, the Cremeans cam- . were Rred oa but woulcl MC •Y w . .t It wwld be.
He briefly led front-runners Bob paign announced.
. wu destroyed in an explosion and cants.
·

Group told judges were targeted by common law courts

findings offer potential clue
~o cause of Gulf.War illness

Ohio militia leader issues
warning to U. S. government
.

Steve Forbes to add~ess ,
'96 URG graduates June 9

Small leak at Shell Plant in Belpre
believed caused by gasket problem
'

'

'
• I

.....

,(1 ..

'

'

I

�..

..: · !W~~~n;••:d~-~Y;·~Ap~~~~~1~7~,~1~111~;:;:;:::::::::::=7~~----------~p~~~m~.w~oy~~~M~I~d~·~·~pa~~~0No~~------------------~--!n~~~DIIy~~S~Ifl~I·~T~~~·~P~11!1~3~

ommentary

•

Wadrlarllaw,Aifl17,

T.stii!JB.slid in~
111 Cowl St., P~. Ohio
1114 lta-21511 • Fu:: 882·2157

~

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

.-.

ROBEFIT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Genetlilllenltgw

...'
..

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

,

SayI•ng
·

"------------------------'

are
What .they
here .across Oht·o
. elsew
.

SAN CRISTOBAL de las least 1&lt;45 Zlpat.isw dead.
arrest several symp&amp;.
CASAS, Mexico •• He is revered as
Ruiz says the bloodbllh
lhi~ and redeploy
a savior by Indian peasants wbotC was almoSI inevilable. Not
troOps. Once aaain ,
hundreds of villages dot the moun- only had the Indians' land
lhouah. Bishop Rui z
tairu of Chiapas ,.tate in southern been taken , but they "-1
helped -brill&amp; both par·
Mexico.
been left illiterate, impovlies back to the negotiAt the same time, for the same erishcd and diseased. "It
ating table.
cause, he is denounced by govern- was only natural that the
The first of a
ment officials as El Obispo Rojo, lhc Indians would break up By Jilek~ series of ac:cord$ was
" Red Bishop." The implication is throuah all this like a vol· Mel Michell BJnsteln siped this ·past FebN·
that his ~uit of equal rights for cano, with an eruption," he ,
ary, but the Zapatisw
indigenous Indians is leftist -- even said.
bflieve that some of lhe reforms
Communist.
The bishop becomes animated promised will not be real until it is
Samuel Ruiz Garcia, lhe Catholic while speaking of their lot. " Just an codified as part of lhe Mexican Conbishop of this area bordering orf hour's drive from here," he $ays, stitution.
Guatemala, is a lightning rod for "on a paved road, no less, is a comThe Mexican aovemment has
both love and epithets. Word of his munity of Indians where 99.9 per- poured millions ·of dollan .into cosgood deeds has spread around the cent of the people have glaucoma. ... metic and infrastrUCture improveworld, and he has been nominated In my diocese, we have an area near- ments, but the lot of the Indians has
forSihell NohbeladPcacc Prize.
.
ly the size of El Salvador wbere not really changed. Sources ~ say
IJ , 1s
v~acy on behalf of more than 70 percent of the people much of lhe money . went tnto the
!"e armed, rebellious Indian peasants · have tuberculosis. This should not be pockets of government officials and
:~&lt;nown as "Zapatistas" has made allowed."
their s.mvate busincssmen friends.
him the subject of intense Mexican
Stung by international criticism,
. "Cbiapas should not be poor,"
government surveillance. U.S. intel· the Mexican government negotiated Bishop Ruiz says, shaking his head
ligence sources tell us that lhe bish- with the Zapatistas ~uring a year- at the accusations of corruption.
op's church offices have been wire- long truce. But . the government " We are rich in DJ!InY 'thingS like ·
tapped.
broke it off in February 1995 to cocoa pr&lt;!duction. Tbe Slate is not
Considering both the reverence
and the controversy. Bishop Ruiz is
noticeably nonplw;sed by it all. Din-ing a recent interview here with our
associate Dale VanAtta, he was optimistic about the prospects for peace
in the region .
" Everything is going in a good
way," he said. " We are in the midst
of a transformation here. We have
more and more participation from
(the Zapatistas) and the government.
The Mexican population is in ·support of it. Of course, there are s.everal groups that don' t want the transfonnation, but they will be swept
aside."
The bishop allows that if he had
his wish, there ·never would have
been an armed rebellion. But the .
Indians, who have been getting the
short end of the stick in the five centuries since the Spanish ftrst arrived,
found that Mexico's long-time oneparty rule· wasn't working for them.
So in January 1994, they came in
from the jungles and took over three
towns and this city before being
beaten back by government troops
during a 12-day battle that left at

Jlxcerpts of editorials of statewide and national interest from Ohio news... . papers:
.
. Dayton Dally News, April 15
..
The Republican Party is running television ads·in Ohio denouncing Pres. · ident Clinton for opposing the Republican programs.
. . The Democratic Party has run ads denouncing Bob Dole for opposing the
president's programs.
The politicians can't seem to get this through their heads, but if there is
anything the public doesn't want, it is the adoption of one party's idea of
change.
·
· ··
Tbe April ad campaigns arc gross insults to the public. The ad strategy
· - assumes _that everi when one candidate has been president for fi!ur years and
his opponent has been near center stage for 20 years, the pu61ic will pick
. betw~n them on the basis of these dumb, reality-perverting sound bites : aired in April, of all times.
1be politicians ought to take advantage of the long gap between lhe pri. ' maries and lhe conventions to just go away, just take a holiday. There will
• be plenty of time for their petty games. ·
·· ·
The Columbus Dispatch, April 14
By now many Americans have heard of I,J.S. District Judge Harold Baer
· · · Jr., the Clinton appointee who let' a confessed drug courier go free in Janu. ·' ary because New York city police didn't have sufficient grounds to search
· · ' her car.
If people dido 't hear about lhc initial decision, they probably have heard
· · ·some of the nearly universal cond¢mnation by newspapers and politicians.
Citizens have lhe right to criticize decisions that offend public notions of
justice. Media editorials are an important avenue for expressing public opin· ioo.
.
.
.
In this case, it may have.had an effect, because Judge Baer reversed himself last week, allowing the drug evidence and videotaped confession to be
admitted for ttial.
••.
BIJI'r )Ieard lhc outcry and took it to heart. It takes a brave man to admit
::: he was wrong. Baer should now be commended for doing the right thing . .
By Joeeph Perldn•
:::
Cleve'-'d Plain Dealer, April 1
.
Enrique Funes Aores and his common-law
,. •
Sausage magnate Dan Evans may not realize it, or ma.ybe he just doeswife,
Sotero Vasquez, have become folk
t: ; n't care, but he and Dr. Robert Graor made a joke out of the legal system. heroesAlicia
to
the
Mexican
people. Several rallies harve
They are probably the only ones who find it enjoyable. been
held
in
their
honor.
And they 've been feted
. ~: .
On the books, the drum-tight plea bargain signed by Graor, the elite car~· : _
diovascular surgeon who embeuled more than $2 million from the Cleve- by the consul general of Mexico.
So what did the couple do to deserve these
~:; . land Clinic, unequivocally forbade him-from being released from prison
accolad~? They were roughed up by Riverside
• •.' until he had served three years,
·::: ·
Graor served 10 months in the London Correctional Institute and he is County sheriff's deputies after they crossed the
U.S. border illegally and fed the officers on a one::; · now free, busily renovating his carriage house in Bratenahl.
·
hour
high-speed chase.
,
~ : •: 1be plea bargain was as sturdy as tissue paper -- and it has be(: orne clearer
The
apologists
for
illegal
immigration
have
that the one who helpeatoss it into lhe trash can was Eva'ns, chainnan and
exploited
this
.beating
incident
'to
the
hilt.
The
:•l· chief executive officerofBobEvans Farms Inc.
fault
lies
not
just
with
the
overzealous
sheriff's
· ·: •:
Evans lobbied furiously on Graor's behalf, obtaining an audience with
:;:: Common Pleas Judge James J. Sweeney and soliciting testimonials from deputies, they say, but also with us racist, xeno: •: · Cleveland's business and civic leaders. Even Cleveland Clinic lawyer phobic Americans who dare complain about the
:::: Robert P. Duvin and lhe ch&amp;innan oflhe clinic's Board of Governors, Aoyd hundreds of thousands of Mexicans who steal
across the U.S. border year by year. ·
·::: D. l,oop, joined lhe "Free Dr. Graor" chorus.
But let's put this incident in perspective. No
:.:
Evans carne to Graor's defense from .the heart. He credits Graor with sav. ins. his life on two occasions. We wish Evans could be more sympathetic reasonable-minded person condones the brutal
. : toward the researchers who were cheated' by Graor when he stole thousands beating that Aores and his companion received.
But it is not unreasonable to suggest that any flee -: .of dollars to buy baubles for his mansion and help underwrite his divorce.
ing
felon of any race or nationality who leads
••
DuVin once called Graor "a pathological liar and a compulsive thief."
police on an hour-long chase along the highway at
. · Now he says what happened to Graor was an "enonnous human loss."
75
miles an hour is not going to be treated with
;•
Let's see what be's lost: Graor still has his medical 'license, although he
kid
gloves once apprehended. ·
· : cannot use it in Ohio for five years. And he still owns two homes he forfeitIf
it were not bad enough that "immigration
.: ed to the Cleveland Clinic' because the clinic said they were too difficult to
rights" advocates are psing the illegal couple to
· · sell. In addition, Eyans paid Graor's $500,000 restitution.
•
:.
'lliese are the types of downsides to criminal life ·that many ordinary bash Americans who want to protect the integrity
of this country's southern border, two sh~meless
.• embezzler would find quite acceptable.
'
contingency
fee lawyers have also gotten into the
·• Fortunately, Chief Assistant County Prosecutor Carmen Marino has
· • refused to give up on his case. Marino ha5 snubbed Evans' peace negotia- .m1x.
No sooner had Flores been treated for his
. ; tions and obtained a grand jury indictment against Graor on two new theftinjuries
(at U.S. taxpayer expense) than self.• related criminal charges.
styled
"
human
:.. But Graor has learned that. money and influence talk. And that's the real
. rights"lawyer Peter Schey filed a
.: shame of this sham.
·

Mexico's electticily, yet

'

I •

t::

t:::

.

Senateleaislationth!':o~:T?or:~~;_11~i~taryfromplantingland

1 ,

::Today •. n h··story

•

'

'

'

as

.

out for yourself, too. Just pick some hypolhctical
salary levels and calculate the taxes (exactly as
you did above) and figure what percentage of
income lhat would be going for taxes and you will
sec that a taxpayer has to earn in excess of $5 mil!iori ·before the rate completely flattens out to 17
percent.
Putting that another way: Up to the 17 percent
cap, the wealthy pay more. That is the definition
of progressivity.
,
.
The flat tax is obviously fair, because everyone
would be paying the same rate of their income in .
taxes. Never again would you have to -worry that
the rich are getting away .with murder.
The Oat tax is simple: You just did the calculalions ami you managed it without consulting
accountants and'tax all • .neys. You could file your
taxes on a 10-line postcaJd and you wouldn't have
to fool with any of the Internal Revenue Service's
600-plus forms or its 8,000-plus pages of tax
code. Isn't it ironic that lhe simplest fonn the revenuers provide is lhc 1040EZ. which comes with
33 pages of instructions?
·
Tbe flat tax would foster hones1y because lhere
would be less opponunity for . abuse. It would
make it impossible for the pols to reward lheir
pals with tax advantages. It would getlhe pols out
oflhe business of coercing us, with tax breaks, to
spend our money in officially approved ways. It
would discourage consumption and encourage
savings and give the· economy a colossal kick _,
$2 ttillion, according to one Harvard economist.
So what are lhc disadvantages? lbel'e are two
big ones
•
.
. ··In the short run, government revenues would
fall. But the newly arowing economy would soon
p~uce gobs of addi~onal money. We would .
hayc tp . be extremely careful nOI to increase

..

....

.I

...
..

W.VA.

I .... . . .
. ' ··~•
•

..

'

.
.

... • •' •

' ..,,
.,
.

&gt;

''

..

·..To
ll· da·y's weat·
. her .forecast

It·
.· Sou~tern
i~

Ohio
Today...Mastly sunny. High 60 to
; · 65. West wind 5' to IS mph.
:
Tonight..Mostly clear. low 45 to
' 50... With lower 40s in protected valI leys. South wind less than 10 mph.

..,.••••

..
••
-·••
••

•••
,.

••

·

::!
.

LIVes
• . t oc k repo rt

..••••

••
••
••
•••
••

I

·

..

Thursday.,.Jncreasing cloudiness.
High in lhe mid 70s.
Extended forecast
Su~day...Partly cloudy. lows from
the m1d 40s northwest to around 55
southeast. Highs from the mid 50s
northwest'to around 65 soulheast.

1
1
'

w••• \,

·
•
COLUMBUS (AP) ~ lndiana- 1
' . Ohio direct bog prices at selefted
: buying points Wednesday by the
: U.S. Department of Agriculture Mar: · ket News:
:·
Barrows and 'gilts: steady to SO
·. ~ cents lower; demand moderate on
~ moderate run.
·,
U.S. 1·2, 220-260 lbs. 46.50..
: '. 49.00, few 49.50; plants 48.75-50.50:
; U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 40.50; :· 46.00.
·
, . Sows: steady to 1.00 lower.
~ -' U.S. 1-3, 300-SOO lbs. 32.00··
• 35.00; 500-6$0 lbs. 35.00-39.00.
' • Boars: 28.00-30.00.
· Estimated receipts: 37,000.

I

:,,

..
••

j

...••

I

....••

..••
••
'0

••
-·
-

-"-

Prices from The Producers
Livestock Aslocladoo:
·
Cattle: 2.00 to S.OO lower.
Slaughter steers: choice 51.0059.00j seleet 48.00-53.00~
Slaughter heifers: choice ,51.0057.75; select48.00-53.00.
cows: 1.00 to 2.00 lower; all cows
43.00 and down.
,
Bulls: 1.00 to 2.00 -lower; all
bulls 4S.OO and down,
.
Veal calves: steady ; choice' l20.00
and down .
Sheep and lambs: steady to lower; choice wools 80.00-90.00; aged
sheep 32.00 and down.

~~

·· Southern comp:tittee: ••.

larly those hailing from south of the border, we::
·
;;
For instance, under a decade-old U.S. policy_::
illegal immigrants caught crossing the border •
with minor children are set free in the Unite(!;~
States rather than returned to their native soil. ~:
So· if Flores and his common-law wife had.~
known that they needed only borrow or rent chil ~:
dren - ~ as undocumented immigrants are doin:
along the Texas border •• they would riot have, •
worried about being deported.
;
Mexico, on the other hand, couldn' t care less ::
whelher the undocumented i111migrants who cross :;
its borders --·most hailing from Central and Sou'lb :
America -- arc with or without children. They
depo_rted as quickly as lhey arc rounded up bY :
Mex1can border patrol.
~
And while ·the U.S. proffers Mexican illegals;-;:
all sorts of government benefits once they've•:
made it into this country (including free medical ~
care, free schooling for their undocumented chil- :
dre~ and wei_fare benefits if lhey happen to have :
bab1es_ on this s1de of the border), Mexico pro- :
v1des Its Guatemalan, Honduran and other illegal m
. immigrants no benefits whatsoever.
:
That's lhe dirty little secret that the Mexican:
~:
government tries to (ceep quiet.
While they blast Americans for not graciously ~
welcoming illegal immigrants from south of the :
border, they are anything but' hospitable to undl)c; :
umented aliens who cross their own southern bQrt :

are a soft touch compared to Mexico.

~~!~~, 1 rr ~· ·i•,

'

Union-Tribune, end • ayncllcated wrlt8r for
per Ent.rpriH Anoeletlon..
"

••

••

••
••
••

..

••
••

~~D~~,~~paiel

· •the ·committee did a good job pro· .· ;moting the levy, but failed on the
grassroots level.
•. • "The commillee ran out of J&gt;CQ• • ' pie... ran out of steam," Spencer con-

to!

gan revolution: He just couldn't bring himself
restrain defense spending.
.
-- Businesses would be paying the same 17.
percent rate )1ut would be able to exclude interest
income and deduc;t expenses. This would create
what the loophole industry might view as opportunily, and the terms "income" and "expenses"
would have to be carefully defined and corporate
tax returns monitored.
Considering the tremendous adva 1
fthe
flat tax, these appear to me to be ac~:~:~~ ~nd
manageable risks.
p
. JoMPh sP-t.. aynd~ wtlt8r
per E"*PriM AuocllniOII. - ·.

,. The Daily .Sentinel

Ster Bank ................................65
Wendy lnt'l ............................17'4
Worthlngton Ind . .................. 19~

· · -

·

~

...... ·· ·• -

....

-·I•
lid-·-.
.
~~----

&lt;.',1

No sulttcripdoo by ...n pennilled in -

wlln-&lt;JOIIIor-tiaVIillblo.
,

1 "
l
'l
• ,.

. ltOI'

~

j

'

.'

t "'

·•

JoiAII,..-:aJPriONI

...... c..,

ll ........- ..........................- .............. .25
36 1IJIIIIIJI........,..,...._........ -.~-- ...... - - -

52---------------..Slal~

· ' I"-' ·"",'
,',

• r.

''

' "

I' •

(Bioorriing &amp; Foilage) .
· Geraniums
Shrubs Tr- Azaleas
· Role Bushes · ' ·
Open Deily 9-5, Sun 1·5
We honor the .
Golden~ Card

. · Hubbard

:Ill-.......:.:,............................ 153.11
52 - . ., .... j'i"j';""ti'c;;;i,..$105.l6

f

•

Hanging Baskets

1)"\Velelll..r.. ...u,...d..L.,.. .. ... ................... .... $27 .:JO

'

.
,.......
..
'You-.----.,., . . .,. .
CiS ... ~

Dola,- - · ·

The
ooadne,U.!II' -12-t,.a~c..dllwiUbe

H 11

,.. ,. ., 4 r··~ . ~
.

Complete ·Une Of Bedding &amp;
. Vegetable Plants

Sullo&lt;riben ... detiriaiiO pey ... canict 1111)'

, I! .

'

..

1100

OltilltRIP

Hsve yqu plsced your order?

·Now Open lor the Spring Season ;

SINGLB COPY PRICB
Dally ...................................................3l c...

.,,
.
.. .' ..
"

AU YOU

mLI. TMII'IIi

The Middleport Child Conserva'
tion League will meet Thursday, 7
p.m. at Rock Springs United .
Methodist Church with brown ·bag
sale.

POSTMASTBI: Send llddreu .......aontm
The Dally Sendnol, Ill Court SC., Po.....,y,
Oblo4S7611,

.....

I

r------..,.----------------..

-·-·-

SUIISCIIIP'I'ION IIATES
, ByCtnlor•-One Woek. ...,..........................................$2.00
One Moadt ....... ........................................$8.70
One Y...-................:............................ $104.00

'

Pomeroy AA
''
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Pomeroy
Group
of
Alcoholics
TUESDAY .
Anonymous
will
hold
an
open disAdmissions:Charles Mulholland, ·
cussion
meeting
Thursday,
7 p.m. in
Middleport
'
the
basement
of
the
·
Sacred
Heart
Discharges: Lena Bunce, MiddleCatholic Church.
port; Raymond Lambert, Rutland

-ber. TheAIIOei..._ ....... and ll1oo.lo · Clalld conservation league

..,

,

Hos·pl'tal news

Stock reporta are the 10:30
a.m. quotH provided by Advest
of Gaillpoll._

. Published overy ilfl&lt;rooon, Monday 111rou1h
' · Friday, Ill C..ft St, Pomervy, Ohio. by ll1o
0111o v.11oy Publithlna ~-eo..
Pvmeroy, Ohio 457611, Ptt !192-21511. Secold
el..l - pold MJ'oniavy. Ohio.

•

I

Meigs EMS logs 7 calls

ShoMy'a llrlc.........................10"-

(t18P821~

__

erane.

E;torg-We,.,., •••.•• ~..................34~
Champion Incl.......................20'.1
Charming Shop ..:.......,..........&amp;'!.
City Holdlng ... ~.................... -24~
Fedenll Mogul ...................,...18'lo
Gannett .................................65'1.

K-mert ......................................9*1.
Landa End ............................. 17~
Limited 1nc............................1a'j.
P110plH Bincorp .................. :23
Oh(9 V•lley Bank:............... ,..."!'
One Valley ........................... :.31 ~
Rockwell · ................................5&amp;
Robbin • A 1111yer•....................
M
38.
Royal Dutch/Shell .............. 1&lt;4&lt;4'1.

far,._.""

•

Blink one ..............................34'1.
Bob Evan• ., ..........................15'1.

ce .ed.
.
"We &amp;ot the information out and
people didn't want to hear it," said
David Kuc;sma.
• "The worst thing about losing lhe
!election was the faces of
students
I
1
K
· lhc next day," said Michae a ucsma,
principal at Southern Junior High.
· ·

m

•

1,

Grand JUry venire posted

Goodyear TAR ......................so%

d

me

·
Spending as a result. This is what killed the Rei :

·

' ·

.

•' •

.Berry's World

,· . ,

. · consb'Uction is goiOg o~:·
,. ·
District resident ioe Stobart said .

.
'*"'
llewajlli-:•

der.
JOMPh ...,.kl,.. Ia • columnlat loi The Sin

jP"

: . ,Lawrence. .
"One kid said, 'I.catt't believe EastHowever, to hold a special elec• em's parents care about their (cids
lion in lhc disttict will cost $3,600, or " more tl.Jan ours' do\ ..
.•.. $600 per precinct, money the buildThose present reelected lhe previing committee pledged to provide.
oilS slate of officers: Dave Spencer,
• • 1
Meanwhile, levy supporters are chainnan; Bill Cornell, vice-presi. baing to investigate-die results of the de.nt; Kim Phillips, treasurer, and
. -· last electipn on a precinct-by-precinct Michaela Kucsma, secretary.
, basis in an effort to determine how to
During the financial repor;t,
. ', : tum at least 56 votes-- which would Phillips said about $170 remains of
.• . have ensufed the measure's success. lhe $3,209 raised during the previous
•'. or particular disappointment to campaign.
The next meeting will be held
school supponers Was lhe issue's fail. _.ure in Racine Village and the reluc- May 2, 7:30p.m. in -the high school
. .. •tance of business owncn to support cafeteria and an district residents are
. ·the proposed school.
invited.
....· "Racine Village turned us down," IF!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"'!!!!II!!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!=!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!I
.. •explained committee treasurer Kim
s~oc~s
.' · .Phillips. "We had tobeg to put our
II
ft.,
..- · posters in bu=s:: ~').! busiAm Ele Power .. :....................&lt;4o\
( 1r evy ~
Akzo .. ~....................................5~
" nesses suppo
~land 011 ...........................&lt;40&gt;
. · ' "It would be like having deer season for two ye&amp;B in the village while
ATAT .....................................61\

Iii\::

. .

I'

t

...••

should bt ltft alone

•'J'be followina Meigs COIItlt)' cit- Pomaoi; c.ol L. Tolliver, Loq
~urs
iuns- recently seleckld as pOii:n- Bottom; Patricia J. Pennison,
1'he RaciiiC lkwd of Public Affairs remillded RlidemJ today dill
tial petit jwwa for the May term of POIIICnly; Lorraiae P. Aeilter,
the Mei,. Coulll)' Common Pleas Pomeroy;
· the wa&amp;er sllpllilltendttlt or his belper are the aely OIIC$aulhoriJIIId 10
tum wa&amp;er on or off ill the nlelcn.
Coun:
Gret.l lynn Riffle, Racine; Jane
Nellie Inez Pim:c, Rutllllld; Pearl Ann Hawley, Middleport; Susan
If ptoperty owners !urn W&amp;la' 011 llld off II the mew aad rlr•.,
.._._
__
AJ'-......_.J
·
"--or
res-in
111e incurred,1he po"""rt1y
forS. ~.._..,., .-.y; ·~-r emungs ~ Youna, Ponw:roy; Clnllyn M. 1
..,.... owner will be rw-ible
-.-,..., ·s
v.-~
La
"
l
'sle
Kom
ina
the
cost
of
...
-,
the
board
advised.
Elll , 1~,.;
wrencc r . I ,
, Pomeroy; Mlrilyn AM Youna,
--.~
Syracuse; Christopher Scott Han- Pomeroy; Opal lucille Dyer, Bid- .
Middleport Court casts proctSitd
oing, Pbtneroy; 'lllomM P. Gann- well; Shlron S. Hudnall, Albany;
The following cases wen: resolved Mond8y in the Middleport Court
away, Vinton: .Dean A. Hess , Christine Y. Jacobs, Rudlllld; Ricarof Mayor Dewey Honon.
Pomeroy; Rebecca Lee Bouch, doL. Bolin, Rutland; RQbert Oenid
· Forfeiting bonds were: Todd C. Quillen, Middleport. $260,
Rac:ine; Wanda M.
Kimes, Beegle, ·Racine; Oraanna Perry,
assauh; Donnie A. Frec.man. Pomeroy, $ISO, conteni.,c of coan; .J)awRcodsville;SaraJoChcadle,Albany;
Albany ·. Martha Faye Hypes,
naS • P
- - Le••
r.
-~oS,
_.., W"
. va., $60, I'mp roper bICki ftiDoDftl ....nora Morris, Langsville; langsville; Ernest Elson Speticer,
Fined was Candy Riflle, Middleport. SlOO and cost. diiOidcrly
otanner.
Michele Dawn Folmer, Pomeroy; Racine; llazcl Arnold. Pomeroy; Peg·
Glenna Louvina Riebel, Pomeroy; gy J. Musser, Pomeroy; Dale E.
Dorothy Pauline Brown, Racine; Hart, Racine; Lois Marie Wolfe,
Maxine Pugan, Pomeroy; Mllljorie •Racine; Ruby J. King, Pomeroy; J.
E. Reuter, Pomeroy ; David Wayne Louise Frank, Racine; Roger M ..
Shamblen, Portland; Angela l. Allen, Syrac:use; Howard S. Kiser,
one ounce of seed which will plant
Eason, Pomeroy; larry Virgil Par- Rac:inc; Paul Arthur Simpson Jr., NWTF banquet
2SO square feet. Cost is $3 each.
Division
of
Wildlife
Chl'ef
Ohio
. sons, Pomeroy; Nancy El!Une Gard, Pomeroy; Garry l . Smith, Rac:ine;
Available at the office, 33101 Hiland
Michaell
Dudzik
will
be
a
guest
at
Middleport; Rick E. Wise, Middle- James C. Birchfield, Pomeroy;
·
lhe second annual Super Fund Ban- Road, Pomeroy.
port; lv\l P. Powell, Pomeroy; Gre- . Emmett A. Rawson, Middleport;
gory A. Hensley, Tuppers Plains; · HarcldA. Rainer, Racine; William quet of the Ohio River Valley ChapSpeclal uwtiu&amp; slated
Eugene Ralph Sandy, . Langsville; l. Carr, Reedsville; Alice Marie ter of lhc National Wild Turkey FedRudand Village Council will meet
eration
to
be
held
Friday,
6
p.m.
at
lhe
Dorothy I. Pierce, Middleport;
Smidt, .Racine; Bulah Faye Maxey,
in special session 'lbunday, 7 p.m. to
J!,oyal
Oak
Reson·
near
Pomeroy.
Barbara Ann Smith; Middleport; Tuppers Plains; Rick Dale Reeves,
discuss personnel matters.
Jill L. Johns~n, Racine; Marviene R Pomeroy; JoA. Sll\ithem, Langsville; Tickets are $45 singles, $60 couples,
.Beegle, ~m~;. Elma Ihle . lo~, . Clifford d . Jacobs, Pomeroy; James $250 sponsorship. For tickets call Ham aocl turkey cllnoer
Bob Miller, 985·4~90.
A ham and turkey dinner will be
Syracu~,
Vtrgmla Duckw~rlh, M•d- Andrew Miles, Pomeroy; Rick l.
dleport, Dale M. Dutton, Middleport; Price, Rutland; Kalhyn J. Smith,
held May 5, -2 p.m. at Soulhem
lola M. Kovalchik, Pomeroy; B11r· Pomeroy; Jan Martel Pickett,. Cemetery cleanup planned
Salisbury Township Trustees are High School. Take out available.
bara Jean Grl!eser~ Pomeroy; GCQrge Pomeroy; '{irginia M. Hanson, Vin- · asking for removal of flowers and Sponsored by Southern Junior Hiah.
G. Gu!" Sr., Racine; Jacki _l. Day, t()n; Janice Marie Glenn, Racine; other articles from grave sites during
Coolville; Robert. W. ~char~s. Candac:e Suzette Harrison ' Pomeroy; . the week of April 29 t)Jrough May 4 Racine Gnnae to 111eet
.
Albany; Betty Louise _Smnh, . Mtd· Mary Kathleen Jordan, Albany ; lin- so that cleaning and mowing can take .
Racine Gransc 2606 will meet
dle~~; Besste _LOUISe Prindle: da R. fisher, Syracuse; Hope M. place at the Bradford and Rock Thursday, 7 p.m. Inspection · and
Racme, ChiU'les Hall Kuhl: Pomeroy, Eblin, Syracuse; Kimberly Kaye Spring Cemeteries.
refreshments. Members urged to
James H. Crow, .Pomeroy • Raymo~d Noel, Middleport; Gregory Alan
attend.
,
l . ~urbce, ~me; Paul. E. Hams, Bush, long Bottom'; !rna Jean Sim, . Seeds available ·
Guesl speaker slated
Racme; Patnc~a lee Arnold; Albany; Pomeroy; David Wayne Grindstaff,
·The Meigs Soil and Water ConGuest speaker Dean Snider will
Vincent E. ~1ght Jr., Albru:ay; l1sa E. Racine; Barbara Ellen lane, Rac:ine; servation Distric~ still has a few address the Faith Full Gospel Church
Mitchell, Mtddleport;. Mildred ·. M. Mildred A. Krider, long Bottom; packets of American wildflower seed at long Bottom Friday at 7 p.m. Pas_Roberts, Pomeroy; _· Richard Eldon VickiJ. Norlhup,Raciile; SethChris- avrulable for sale. ~ackets contain tor Steve Reed invites the public.
~~~;-~~~~;
Weaver, Syracuse; Randy Lane Mar·
Lewis 0. Pickett, Racine; Debra
shall, Pomeroy; Jeffrey A. Hawk, Jane.Frost, LOngBottom; Shirley M.
Pomeroy;
.
.
Rockhold, Reedsville; Amanda Lee
·The following Meigs County cit- Patrick logan, Middleport; Ivor
Robert W. Richmon~ M1ddle· Molden, Rutland; Daniel Mark Dod· !zens were named as potential gr~nd Nolan_ Farrar, Pomeroy; Betty A.
pon; Marg~et J. Ban:, Pomeroy: son, Pomeroy; William Bunon
Jurors for the May term of the Me1gs Baromck, Pomeroy; ~ck D. lawson,
Ger'.'d G. Stmpson, Racme; Allan L. Middleport; Roben W. Ma~r. Cou~ty Common Pleas Court:
Albany; Timothy Stevep . Jackson;
.Hams, Po,meroy; Dorothy Frances Pomeroy; Tara Sue Clark, Racine;
Kim K. Barnes, long Bottom; Portland; Darlene Annette Hoschar,
Bake_r, Mtddlcport; Amber Dawn James Edward Hall, Pomeroy; Helen Gary Maynard Welch, Albany; Car- Pomeroy; Eugene Jeffers Syracuse·
Cunungs, Syrac:use; James Roben Joan Oberbolzcr, Albany; Phillip D. ol Denise Chapman, Rutland; Mel is- Royce A. Newell, Reedsville; Edith
Wa~sley, Pomeroy; Charles l. Call, ·Pomeroy; Garland A. Miller, sa Sue Guess, Tuppers Plains; Okey D. Watson, Racine; Jerry Ward, MidPerux, Albany; Gary Eugene ~r. romeroy; Ora E. Hill, Racine; Doris Theodore Pullins, long Bottom; dleport; James Edward Simpson Jr.,
Pomeroy; Wilma lee Powell, Racine; A. Koenig, Thppers Plains; Dreama Wyatt Emmett Radford, Pomeroy; Pomeroy; Rebecca Dawn Taylor ·
. Roger Lee Stewart, Pomeroy; Terry Diane English-Smith, Middleport; Robert C. Baile_y. Pomeroy; Be.uy Racine; larry 0 . Clark,.Middleport;
l. Metheney, Vinton; Martha Jean Patrick Alim Newland, Reedsville; Jane Manley, Middleport; Ch~stma Kathy T. Dalton, Rutland; Robyn
Craig, Middleport; Oretha Maxine • Henry W. Bentz, Racine; Daniel Elamc Orvosh, Albany; M1chael Laura Porter, Racine; Thomas Dyer
D~rst, Portland; Dorse~ 0. Ohlihger, Bruce Sayre, Racine; Larry c. HenThomas Burke, Coolville; Harold Adkins Portland
Mid~eport;RobertAlkirc, Pomeroy; dricks, Racine; Clara May Conroy, W. Circle, Racine; David Edward
'
·
laura Beth Fox, Reedsville; Patrick long Bottom; Hershel B. McClure, Ball, Rac:ine; laura E. Bonecutter,
D. Johnson, Middleport; Steven E. Pomeroy; Robert Jason Hall, Pom.eroy; Mary E. Bottrell, Middle'
B':"&amp;- Albany; Jeremy Scott Phalin, . Pomeroy; Mildred s·. Cotton, Long port; La)"rence Mack Stewart, MidM1ddleport; Cindy K. Bumgardner, Bottom; lawrence Joseph Seymour, dleport; Audrey Marie Clark, Tuppers
M1ddleporti Barbara . R. Triplett, Middleport; lloyd E. Martin, Albany. Plains; Virgil Edward Taylor,
Pomeroy; Patricia D. Baer, Pomeroy;
Lee'A Nicole Johnson, Pomeroy;
· Heather D. Woods, Pomeroy; Donna
Jean Reed, Thppers Plains; Jerry l .
Units ofthe Meigs County Emer- RUTLAND .
Barber, Middleport; Candy Jo Hargency Medical Service answered
IO:S4 a.m., Meigs Mine 2, Donald mon, Dexter; Clarmont P. Harris Jr.,
sev~n calls for assistance including . Stanley, O'Bieness Memorial Hospi- Reedsville;
Cathy · Sauvage,
two transfer.calls. Units responding tal.
Pomeroy;
:
included:
SYRACUSE
Penny Ev~, Middleport;' David
MIDDLEPORT
I :29 p.m., Waters Edge Apart- Russell Thmtuls, Middleport; aeo
II : 17 p.m., Powell ' Street, Mary ments, Opal Cummins, Pleasant Val- M. Smith, Chester; Dale Colburn,
Durst, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
ley Hospital;
Pomeroy; Del Lehmar Ogdin,
POMEROY
2:41 p.m., Third Street, Racine, langsville; Resa Rae Harris, MidII :01 a.m., state Route 7, Maida Shirley Pyles, VMR .
dli:port; Jeffrey L Fields, Middleport;
Mora, Holzer Medical Center.
Frank W. Lowd. Thppei'S Plains;
Della M. Starkey, Syracuse; Kevin

Meigs an:nouncem_
ents

'

,

••

•

t

1

..

ch ampioning lheir 'cause, Bi!lhOJ~
Ruiz believes his patience and
work will eventually pay off.
thing is for sure: His critics dol•'~
need to scour the writings of Mux!or'
Lenin to uncover lhc Bishop's phi
sophical underpinnings. They ~
only view lhe portrait on his offieeo
wall, the one which most moves him;
It is a fanciful painting of tliO'
bishop and a revered predecess&lt;i•
Bartolome de las Casas, lhe Spaniartt
who came fihereb.ashoa colon_ist an\t
became the 1rst ,IS p of Chiapas iaz:
I S45 -- and who spent his whole Iif•
fiabting for Indian rights, whic~
earned him lhe enmily and hostility:
of colonist landowners.
:
Tbe more things change, die morr,'
they remain lhe same -- .even aftm::
450 yean.

It's stime to pump up the federal flat tax

8 Y J oeeph pear_
Want 10 know If a flat tax would be good for
yo~? Take out the. tax return you JUSt filed and
let s do some fig~nng.
.
Add up your mcome fo.r :"ag_es, salanes and
pensmns. (Do not mclude dtv•dends and mterest:)
Now subtract your personal allowances. l!n~er
the flat tax plan favor~ by House MaJOI'lly
:.. 11
Leader D1ck Anney, . t~1.s . would amount to
$21,400 for a couple fihngJomtly, plus $5,000 for
:! By The Aaaoclated Prell
each depend~nt, or $31,400 for a family of four.
• Today is Wednesday, April 17, the 108th day of 1996. There are 2S8 days Under th~ plan touted by former presidential can: left in the year.
d1date Steve Forbes, 11 would be $26,200 for man
: On April 17, 1961, about l,SOO CIA-trained Cuban exiles launched the and wife and $5,300 for each dependent, or
. :disastrous Bay of Pigs· invasion of Cuba in a failed attempt to overthrow the $36,800 for a family of four.
· government of Fidel Castro.
Now subtract the allowances from yourOn this date:
income. Now multiply by 17 percent (the flat rate
·, In 1492, a contra&lt;:! was signed by Christopher Columbus and a represen- advocated by bothArmey and Forbes). The figure
: tative of Spain's King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella, giving Columbus a you get is the amount of taxos you would owe.
·· commission to seck a westward ocean passage to Asia.
·
Now compare this figure to the taxes you just
· In 1524, Giovanni da Verrazanci discovered present-day New York Har· paid, If it is substantially higher, chances are you
~ bor.
'
won't be a flat tax fan. Ir it is substantially lower,
In 1790, American statesman Benjamin Fran.klin died in Philadelphia at you should favor a flat tax.
, age 84.
·
My guess is that 99 percent of you who do tile
In 1861, tile Virginia State Convention voted to secede from lhe Union. malh will come down on tile side of flat taxes. I
just did the calculations for my family and
In 189S, the Treary of Shimonoseki ended the first Sino-Japanese War.
In 1941, Yugoslavia surrendered to Gennany in World War U.
learned we would have sav~ $486 under Armey,
In 1964, Ford Motor Co. unveiled its Mustang model.
$1,302 undef Forbes -- and that's not even countIn 1964,)errie Mock of Columbus, Ohio, became the first woman to ing the $450 we' pay an accountant each year to
: colnpictc a solo airplane fliaht around the world.
guide us through the tax morass.
.: In 1969, a jury in Los Angeles convicted Sirhan Sirhan of assassinating .
And did you notice that we did not even taJ(e
·.&amp;n. RDbcrt F. Kennedy.
those precious mortgage and charitable deducIn 1969, Czechoslovak Communist Party chainn&amp;n Alexandet Dubcek lions that flat-taX foes said we couldn't _live with·
out? Amazing, isn't it?
.
· was depl*d,
There are a lot of amazina things about the flat
In 1970,1ho utronauts of Apollo 13 splashed down safely in the Pacific,
: four days after a ruptured oxygen tank crippled their spac:c&lt;:rlft.
tax that aten 't generally known.\ With the
, In J97S, Phnom Penh fell to Communist insurgents, endina Cambodia's allowances, tile poor ar;e protected and the system
is rendered progressive. You can figure that one
· five-year wfll.

•: mines is feel-good politics at its worst. Why not also ban the use of tanks
·:: and olher weapons? Beller yet, Congress should ban war altogether.
.
Pointing to the carnage that leftover mines cause, lhe bill's sponsor, Sen.
~ : Patrick Leahy, D-Vt, hopes a U.S. ban would lead to an international ban.
: Most mines automatically deactivate Qver time. And, without the use of
". mines, more troops would be put in harm's way. But why think about tbe
. . facts-on an issue designed to appeal to emotions?

$10 million claim on the illegal immigrant's
behalf against Riverside County. Another multi·
million dollar claim is to be filed on behalf of Aores' common-law wife by David lynn Ross, an
ersatz lawyer who has yet to pass the California
bar.
·
Even those who are tolerant of illegal immigration have difficulty defending these lawsuits.
Fine, let the taxpayers of Riverside County foot
the Mexican couple's emergency medical bills.
But no way should they be hit up for $10 million . .
That would amount to rewarding lhe Mexican
couple for illegally crossing the ·border and
endangering the lives of hundreds of motorists as
they fled U.S. law enforcement.
It's interesting to note, the Riverside beating
incident receives national coverage on both sides
of the border, that lhere is almost no coverage of
a similar incident that occurred on the Mexico
side of the border last week.
After a 130-mile high-speed chase from southem los Angeles County to Tijuana, Mexican
police did not merely beat 16-year,old Elizabeth
Asuna into submission. They shot lhc American
teen in the back before taking her into custody.
There was no "human chain" fanned along
the border to protest lhe girl's shooting. There
were no indignant pronouncements by high-ranking government officials in either Sacramento or
Washington. There were no lawyers filing multimillion dollar damage claims on Asuna's behalf.
This just goes to show the double standard in
U.S.-Mexico border policy. While lhe United
States is characterized by "immigrant rights"
groups as hard on undocumented aliens, particu-

. t

. '

as much

80 pcn:ent of our Indian popui~U(
has no elcctticilyl"
After more lhan lhr1le del::ado:r_l•~

Different border, different standard

..

.

. .,
.

poor •• it is the system thlt NDS
thlt is poor. For inslaiiU, our riw,..;:
procii!CC more lhan a quancr of

~~~~~~~~ ""••••-

'

Water

AccvV.adle:J• IUiecat

Mexican
bishop
stands
upfor
the
Indians
The Daily Sentinel

...----Local briefs---.

Meigs petit jurors nam8d

0 Ill 0 \' ·, .1 tt H' r
11nanday, AprU 11

•• ••

•

l

Greenho~e~­
Syraalae, Ott 992-~ne

The last 100 personalized bricks to be used
in the Amphitheatre are going fast! Order
Now! It's a great gift idea for Mother's or
Father's Day. Stop by the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerqe at 238 W. Main
Street, Pomeroy
or. Call 99.2-5005 , and
.
place 'your order today. ·
·
ti~rry! They won't beavailab!e much·longerl
'

•

~

~

'

.

•

'

.

/)

j

�The Daily Sentinel
..
pI 4
. . . . . , ••••• 17,1-

•

who laboml throulh a 22,poinl, 9,
fot, 27 shooting night but had 111
important blocked shot in the c?osing

•

""'"'
:1

,.

•"'
lor

a

CuM' Lula Gannhz ald11
ectUitbepllluftarCinclt• "
ca:lwE
b
him out In . . I ;id IIW*4 of

•'"

.."
:"'

••l*e '•

Tuullar'• tlalloolll Ina•
..... In Cllkego. .........

"

""

a--•

CUIIa wan&amp;-3.. ncr 1
tile ...... - Air' ICfw'a hi.

E

.....,"
.

(AP)

------- aott -------- . Of ·------

Scoreboard
Baseball

.,._
....... ~.- ..34
·
-··-·-······

-H
.G~
)4 .57S
.3lt
~ ..............~ 55 .JOt
v - ........... IJ " .165

'[

'

--

AL!!Iapdiqs

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

.

rr-

* ---~-------~ ~
_ Y................... 6 5

11:1. . Iii

.ID
..s.t:S
r:-... - ---~·-··· ----·-··· 7 .511
T ---·····-·-·---' 7 ...I
··-·--···-'···-, -.2 II .154

- . ---»· 53

)~

..,
""

Golh-..........15

... .441

..._,. ........,..
LA

a,pa........ ~

51

44\

v -.

m11

:m

.

.J6J

II
"

11
:IS
71

. . . . . . ,.,,

11~

___
...;;u
.,..,_...
-c.n.--·

--____.,__

LA a - II),.,... 95
lw. IGI, LA.a,....,

a.

-•••.-loo

T...._.,, .....

-

a.--. . .,..
~·~ltlllp.a

.-.uo,....

D6la. tJDp.a

-·

.

-

.

--

_
:ra.
-

c

v---------'
· ______,

7

-

nll

7 .•n
. ..
1
• . .m

_y_ __, ........4

- - -- · . . . .

n

1 •

-

.........- 7

.42t

Soo Diop.__...... -..9
Soo
• . ........

5 .Ml
5 .615

:::: t' ... .::::::::r

~

...._,7·F? ,,

• •

-s.F-2

1
6

r

,

........

T...,.......

(JtiloO-ZJ• Now y ... (Wil.

.

.... ""-""'- 2-41l•S.77

frl•·••· ....

CD IK !-.. 1·1~ :J:» o.tL
2

,,.

,,

I

_...,.1:1)•-....
7 4

I

'

cc-.,;orNt, 7'.lSp.a
1~.,.-

,

tl)lrwill 1-3) • St. ......

I

co--Nt.U5,...
T

n

, , •• _

1 ~IW'-U&gt;•St._.

C5P I ) :L l_..cJ). 1:15.,:
. ....
.........

s. r;

~!

1

:r

0-2)

..••na-.o.a,.

•OO:IF·~
.......- a·acM. ·~~

'
'

~v
..•

..._..,.' - 1·1). 7-.J:Ip.a
f?oc'-.(H
'0..2)MAI....

c - 1-2~ 1:411 ,. ..

Basketball

-- ---·---·· . .

Iii

.l!91

»

ll ·.liZ
.361
a6 6.1

21
41

ll L b&amp;.

s:r 11 .m
........ Vllf&lt;,......_ 46 1) .511

-= "

,

Jt• . ...

Wll

._.::__.....31 •

Pt

"

2J aJ

· 101Yeari 95Years 92Years
For111t •

a •••

PIIGIIIS.1111
•

7

...

3 1-

.........

Slllr'tlnc.

Anllr-Co. .

PIIGIII-.a11
! Ill ,,..

! 1'12 1 - ·-

7

..

~

IOYears
AaniAs- '1

...

V•CIII Slrvlcll
PPIDIIIIIII a 12

..... '"*

E;, !M1tt5

Ell tT 7 11117 ·

! ? II 7 ltal
·.

.._,., ftntll ~ - · · 'rtctt.U

,

ThiGikl

~

II
16

II

a

••

. . . . 11111!115
F '15111a

111M

l'fMISTA'IE:_a..a_

I

...-..

~

60·Yeari

521••

......

..,
44Years- 40Y•r•
,... .•

Coin ...,., c..

..... .

BIIISiadJ ...

F , .. ,_ . .

Bllls.c.t, ....

.......

E!ii!I.1M1

f

llllw1,.a

.

I

.

'

50

.

KJ..aSonl

Slli 1 mflclj-

....
Sill
f ??P 11111

F 3311 1 -

Bliggs &amp; $181100 - Cunenlly this area's only
Master Service Technician tor Briggs
'
.
MTD - Products, Rahch King, Yard Man, cAllers
Munay Products .
Noma- Eagle star OynamaJk.&amp; Olhws~YP­
Roper- Raly
Mc:Collough.ecflo.Oregon Saw Procb:ts

....

•• " - ' Clllllr Inc, T!lalretl Plltr Clnllr
! 1 15? · -

....

Ciyllll G'

1117

'

.

Pick Up SeNice

949-2804

,.

•

~

"Bqnor RoD" will appear in the
Friday, May 17th Edition .o f · .
The Didly Sentinel•.
The CO&amp;' Is

Only $12

II :CO,

I 5 Ill 11111
. .

fl 11111 . .

.

'11a~

I

79T

==----

~ Judge orders MSU to release

: letter on alleged

RedS lose...

J

i&lt;-...

\·iii:D'1

...-·
....

~~~

I

:Meigs football
:team to hold
;golf tourney
~

~

•

1be third annua! Meigs Footba??

o?f ToumameQt wi?i be held on Sal,

~
: 'file

rday, May IF at the Meigs·County
o!f Course. Tee off is.9 a.m .
cost is $45 per person and .
C!U bring your own learn. Tile learn
ust have a hl!ndicap of 40+ and
_ ly one .team member c111 have a
~cap of under I0: The price
oitlll:ludes ?uncb llld beverages.
.
'For 1111n iafonnati011, ca?? Meigs
IO!llball Colch Mike Ch111cey 111
992-7301 or 992-2158 .

E

.
•

~,e :

500

.

t

5

mb4

2

-

30Years 25Years . 20

......

•P•rt•

.

70Years 67Yearl

SERVICE &amp; PARTS ·

•

..

a

(Old B4let Wolb llldgJ

szs .......
·

HARDWARE

N8w Location St. Rtl 338 at VIne .

WDJDNCOISU'NCI .
jootM

"-"c!:_S ; •

DCINE
C IC

• ~·

=:-J II Jl

-~AHA:

Indians hand Twins 7-2 .1oss

PICKENS

Aulhorized Dealer and wananty:. .

NBA st•nclin&amp;s
t:4SIDN CONmliNCE

:ra.
~

.._

-

MOVED

.

c-I,ILJ~r•

-

.,..

IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIBIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII.IIIIIIIIII

S.lliopC-1-1)•~

·t

z .

• • • • • • • , • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • _ • • • • • • 8111

pCNoonnoO-li.2:2Dp.a

'

........ 3 I

ol I'R*ric:k . . . . c.ro-

ONCNCAn- I-OJ .. CJoi&lt;a.

I '
I •

C'

CAL STATE IAKE&amp;SFIELO:

!fORTH CAROLINA STATE:

-N~-•:•-

.

0

_._.

:in

CAI.M'OaNIA AMGEU: q.·

-"-y""'

'

._.FAJD.._
. . . ._:;
IUU!SASOIY
--~~­

LOSANGb.IISGALAXY: . _
FGodioN-.D=il
tllr-

-

S.Diop· ·~·

I
I
I .

'~

--DDLnciss .W...

._.

s.... . s. Loa""'*" l
-

---·
0-_...,...,_.,
.....
l....,_lot __
___
_.,_.,
__
----G:n:ioiO ---·.
.

n · 1 • D.St LooioJ

.

s~::-wah411Sonc

IAL.,_O.IOUS: il
I
frcderid. &amp;&amp;• Tt• BIKtwcll io

Oiap: a«:M~All
1
7

NEW
...,
_ Ylllllt
_ . RANGUS:
.. . .S.01
AILD

MTD

3

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

Transact1011S

';'a._..

T

a.. 5, Y-=-ner ~ ColorMD

least 1 coup!e of days to gel
Win No. 70.
Mi!w10kee trailed only 82, 80
whcn.y-m Babr sc;ored the ia$1 of h.iJ
28 pOints. wilh 4:19 remaining. But
the Bucks missed their final t~
shots and, more significantly, commilled five of their 10 lurnovers from
that poin1 on.
"One thing we committed to
before the game was if they did get
70, they wouldn 't get il easy," Milwaukee's Terry Cummings said. "I
am proud of what we did."
'Ti!e Bulls' money p?ayer wasn 't
Jordan and Pippen, but Long?ey, the
underrated and overlooked center.
He scored 10 of his ?6 points in the
third quarter, keeping the Boils in the
game. He aiso had seven rebounds,
three assists, two blocks and those
two big clinching free throws.
In the end, however, It was appropriate the ball was in the hands of the
game's greatest player as the final
seconds ticked off the clock, capping
the greatest regular season in NBA
history.
· "It. was a sigh of relief, because
everyone put so much meaning in
tenns of lhe 70, a 5iltle bit more lhan
what I put into it," Jordan said. "l 'm
happy, be!ieve me; but if 70 me)lns
you're guaranteed another champi,
·onship, then I'll 1be even more happy.''
.
~ail Ill

: Br GARY D. ROB~RTSON
. .,'He has a passion for basketba?? . .
:
RALE!GH, N.C. (AP)- Miami He's extreme?y intense," Hyman
" of Ohio coai:h Herb Sendek wii? lake said. "I think the players reflect his
into a double and a triple, lo~ing .
5? during t?ie five,game streak.
the giant leap into lheAtiantic Coast phi?o~1 •p hy. He's a joy 10 work . By RON LESKO
MINNEAPOLIS
(AP)
When
1be s~ng rolation had an AL, Thome's high fly completely for a
: Conference today when he is . with."
·
• announced as tile new coach al
North Carolina S1a1e athletics .the Cleve5and Indians stopped look- best 3.17 ERA entering Tuesday's lhree-base hil lhat drove in C?eve: North Carolina State.
director Todd Turner had hoped to ing back, they finally started iooking game, even with Hershiscr's 7.84 . ?and's first rvn .
18"- 20". 22"
Alomar foilowed wilh a lwo-run
:
A news conference in1roducing hire a successor to Robinson l)yl\pril like ·the team they were expected lo · mark. But Hershiser gave up just tw0
be.
runs In seven innings, striking out homer off rattled Twins starter Brad
BRIGGS&amp;
: Sendek is schedu!ed for I 5ea.m.; the ?3, but lhe process took ?onger than
Burdened by · the expectalions seven and walking none, to lower his Radke (3-1 ), and one out laler Lofton
~ university said in a news release
expected. Turner said he talked wilh
.STRA1TON
' " Tuesday night ·
· about a dozen coaches during a 3 lhey created by storming to the AL ERAto 5 . 71~U~d the slarters' to 3.? L drove a solo shot 427 feet· to right
MOTORS ·
championship last year, the Indians
"It was very big for me because · center lo make.it 4-0.
Sendek flew to Raieigh from 5/2, week search.
3.5
HP•
3. 7 H.P. , 4.0 HP
Twins manager Tom Kelly
" Ohio on Tuesday to work out details
Robinson, a North Carolina State s1umbled to a 2-5 start. But they have . I was coming off two very rocky out,
: before being announced as the 17th graduate and successor to the late won their last five, the latest a 7.-2 ings," Hershiser said, "The excuse ordered ail his oulfielders 10 praclice
: coach in school hi~tory and the . Jim Va5vano, boosled dismal gradu, win Tuesday over the Minnesota that h's early gets old, so I needed to catching fly balls for about 15 min,
have a good outing. Thai excuse was· u1es after the game.
: rep?acement for Les Robinson, who alion rates and grade,poinl averages Twins.
And
it
was
vintage
'95:
a
?ot
of
"I can't blame Roberto," Radke
wearing out, and I didn't know whal
;;: lefHhe .Post March 22 after six sea- during his ?enure. But he did not fare
the next one wou?d be."
.
: sons.
r.
as well on lhe court, where his learns power and excel?ent pitching.
said. "I mean, he just losl it. That's
"We're not putting as much pres- • The 1\vins had an excuse for just bad luck."
. MASON, W, VA• .
~
Sendek, 33, Will be the youngest had a 78,98 record and !ost I0 times
sure
on
ourselves,"
Kenny
Lofton
faliing
behind
4,0
Tuesday:
the
&lt;;PaCh in one .o[,college.basketbalrs.. in ACC games !ast season by'lli:omRadke, who missed a chance t.o
304·773·5583
said of the turnaround. "We'-re going Metrodome roof.
·
,; toughest conferences after taking bined 30 points.
.
become the first four-game winner in
Center fielder Roberlo Ke?ly lhe majors, seu5ed down in the mid,
~ Miami to 1hree straight postseason
Sendek was 63-26 in three sea- out there and jusl p?aying. Before we
~ tournaments.
· sons at Miami. He led .the team to a were wonied about all oulside things played consecutive routine tl~ bal?s
die innings
~
"'He's meanl so much to our pro- ·-19-11 record and a Nalional Invita- that were going on, what 1he media's
saying. No\Y we're not worrying • Th" Gu•r•nt..lltl LDWIIIIt Prien
e Fm" T~tft!g
~ gram the last lhree years," Miami · tion 'tournamenl appearance in
b.ttterie,, !lt.lrt.er-5,
about
the
outside.
1996
is
a
new
1!'"1i
m41t&lt;h
any
•&lt;lv•~
~
pnoo
~· athletics direclor Eric. Hyman said.
!993-94.
,
altemato,, c:o~ l
"We're very disappoinled to see him
Miami won·. the Mid, American year.''
modu le~. eentr5
• Th" fhflt N•m" 81'8ntl•
It looked ?ike the same old Indica. But he always aspired to have a · Conference championship the next
•t the beet priCee
e W" Tum Orulns
.
program such as the caliber of N.C. year and defeated Arizona in the first ans on Tuesday night.
•n(i RDt~Nl
. Ore I Hers!liser ( 1-2), a 16-game
Expi'HfJ
· chtct your area e~rc
: State.
round of the NCAA tournament.
if
we
dor'l't
have
' '
for ~vaila~i ty
:
"Itwastheopponunityforhimto Miami went 23-7 overa??, equaiing · winner in. 'the strike-shortened '95
lt.. we'Uget it
season,
was
sharp
afler
lwo
shaky
eUftnlmtt
WMrr81!~""
for
you
fa&amp;t
: fo?iow his dreams."
the second,highest number of wins
and
home
runs
by
Lofton
outings,
on· mo etp~
•
Sendek, a former assistant to in school history.
•
~ Rick Pitino at KeniUcky, lurned
Miami was 21-7 in the 1995,96 and Sandy Alomar highlighted a
1.09 .,.;., prlcectlO.
994 eale price :
~ down the UNLV job iasl year. North season, lhen ?ost to Fresno State in four-run second inni~g. Seven of
Cleveland's first nine hits were for
~ Caro!ina Stale officials hope Sendek,
the NiT.
,30' mfr't
for
exira
bases, and lhe Indians find
:1known as a fine recruiter, wi?? proSendek has refused comment to
~ vide cxcilement for the Wo5fpack
the media throughout lhe Wo?fpack's lhemse!ves In a fami5iar p5ace : program afler a schooi,record five search process. Neither he nor North leading the AL Centra?.
"We're where we ·want to be al
yo:ur cost after
~ straight losing seasons. The Wolf, · Caroiina State officials could be
this stage,, " ihird baseman Jim
,..~.u por 'I'·
re~11te per plug
:
~ ~~~~~~~~~~~a! championships in
reached for comment Tuesday night. Thome said. "I think as it goes on
Caetrol 10W30,
Autollte Reei5tOr
•,
. you'l? only see us 'get better."
10W40 or 5W'W
.
Spark Pluge ,. ·
That's a scary thought for the resl
Motor Oil
of the league.
·~ :
The Indians, who swept four .
games from the siumping Boslon
~iolations
Red Sox over the weekend, now
~ LANS!NG, Mich. (AP) - A choose how an·d when il honors open
have outscored lheir opponents 32judge ordered Michigan Stale Uni- records requests," said Gary Suis,
versily 10 release an NCAA leuer man. publisher .and president of the
-~
thai spe??s out allegalions of wrong- State Journal.
(Conlinued from Page 4)
I
~ doing in the school's football pro,
Glaier ruled that Michigan State
. "Little things like that wil? get
~ gram .
• could omit the names of studenls thmgs ·started," he said. "The first
· TurUe WaK
Weotleyo ·
-:.. Sptltfil'!l
~ · The university said it a5rcady
invo?ved in lhe NCAA probe, in three runs were from guys who did,
Zymol
C.ar"" Waeh
Perform Iince
~ p!anned to release the !elter and its
accordance with federa? ?aws .pro- n't hil lhe ba?i inore than 40 feer.
SporU'tueo
,
'"response lhis week. But Ingham tecti~g student privacy.
You're just setting yourself up for a
~ County Circuit Judge Lawrence
big inning with ali those guys .on
"' G!azer gave the schoo? unti! Thurs~
base. Then you get a fly ball into the
1be invesligatio.n was launched in
day to release the ieuer.
1994 based on a?iegalions by fonner sun to get them in. Ali those things
The Lansing Stare Journal,
add up to be key hits. " ·
footbail playef' Roosevelt Wagner.
Accessories
WILX-1V and WLNS-1V sued last
Ponugal a?iowed four runs on
Michignn Slate had refused to
monlh to have 1he ?euer released. re5ease the document until its own seven hils, walked lhree and struck
-- - - - -.- . .
Glazer ruled Tuesday in favor of lhe response to the NCAA charges was out three in 5 113 innings.
~ media oullets and said the universi:
Trachsel (1-0) was making his
completed .
• ty had vioiated the state's Freedom
first
appearance of the season after
"The judge ultimately allowed us
~
:of Informati'on Act
·
spending
the last two 'weeks with
the lime we needed 10 maintain the
: The univernily als.o was ordered inlegrity of the investigation," uni, Double-A Orlando. In six innings; he
•
:to pay 80 pe~ent of the media out, versity president Peter McPherson al?owed jusl two hits, no runs walked
; 5ets' legal bills, which so far exceed said. "Neither side won lotal?y."
five and siTUck out four in the Cubs
• $5.500. the State Journal said.
6-3 victory over lhe Cincinnati Reds.
116110
~ "This ni?ing sends a message that
His record in Wrigley Field is 4:16. . lt..:=---......,.c
•
~ the university cannot pick a~d
Exhaust
1
Truck
jj
eJ
ca1:

3

V - - F G 'I - - · . ; ; . ;

·--:=
I

7

NEW YORIC ISI.illtwds: Sao G
frio,_.,c_-.,...
W-11-AIL

a..,. 2 (01');.

'

•

6 511

-..- - .-----'

F'

lia.

4\

~­
.. - ....1 '571
Sta-. -...........1 ' 571
a--..-......-.....7 ' .sJI

:

--T•Ar-,_,T.,._

...... l l o . i d - - D - I l o -

)'

~n

\

'

COLLiSION - Chicago guard Mlchllel Jordlln (?eft) -.cl Ml?waukee'l Johnny Newman react after coilldlng in the third ·quarter of
T...day ntghl'e NBA conteet 1!1 Mliwtlukee, where the Bulla' 86-80
win wee their 7oth of the -liOn, breaking the old NBA rec!)fd set
by the 1~71-72 Lakere. (AP)

~ · Sendek to take N.C.
~ State basketball job

LaT... ~•-

.

w---T-·-

lill

_ _ _.
ll "5.615
11:1.

- ,

'

~

........... •

IISA IIOCXEY:- a.

---·.o
.......
,.

NLstegdjnp

'

call. N.Y.

~

u.te ..

7, T - lar· );
\lh IN* IIIia 1-0
Sl. ~J, T - 1; 51. ...... _

"

..••

·~

WASHINGTON REIISIUNS: Re-

I,............. _
l'lii._.,.ia

......

~

...... Ll T..,. a-., Sipot1 Q11 Clodld . . . . Looio-

0

I

I

~

NEW ENGLAND. PATalaTS:
Sipcoll.a_,_,. _ _

- .. NHL
... playoffs
. ,

6

........

Hockey

"

=
.

--a...··---

u.av~.10pa.

..

~

DAU.ASCOWBO\'S; ~lipoiiLa
- $DEJfVE&amp;
7 --,~IRONCOS: Sipcol Qll

LA a,... •
LIL Lahn Ol Sao A..,... 1:10

I
I

___ ...,. .... _
,..... I

-·~7:10p.a
New 'Y 01l • CLEVELAND, 7:30

!I

•
"

--·

I.IIP

Afril 11.

-~---

- • a . . . . 7:10p.a

T

to

......,.

'lltlontUJ'• .....

.

.,...

' .=

......... 9 7 SA

1Ck30p.a·

,....

(

:.

• 'e'l I
LOS ANGa.fs lAKD'· r11a11 F

.
7o10p.a
- •lltooroio..,.,_,.S...,IOp.a
.._...s.u

lbw:r •

a.c!.. llHP~
Ken.

. c..'-

1:30~

-··

,....

I

WI

T-•Now ........ 7:10p.a
•

A.uocQrioa.

RAJil!li1lDGIANJS:OF--·•u
'Z:£1, n...

S.-95,V-16

7

.. ...... . . . -

Acti- a
OJM-I- 1ft o.... .. _...._

'=•

':

.

~n

h:r'•-

7

C.,.

'IOIIONTO
IUit JAYS: ..._
__, ....... L*y_

ClJNEI.ANI)...
- m.w •· =
· 95
71

~--.,

I AHGOS:- -

ciol

Qicapl6.tlii

7

lEliAS
.....
- .. .
O.,oltk
.
. . .~01''-

-

ti*

,T

it ;

t .....

T
____
,,..,_
...Ofl
....
. .. A,-15.
-

,..-~

1--

... ,

*:~_,.,.,.

NEW Yoai
YANitEES:
"
_Wool
__
.. , , . .",-_

, . -.................62 17 .'115
&amp;·LA l.abn .........Sl 21 .616
· · -.............0 J6 .Sff
·s.~....o..;.·. ............... l!9 . .
........ JT G .461

]~

)I\

-IJnoioSp;op·•Y-'oftk
,.._C..I.aipo . . ' .
IC
an. T..a . . .

A!ld for much of the game, defell
MILWAUKEE (AP) - There's
lppeiRKI possible.
beiUty ia the roundness .of the numMi!waukee is 46 giiiiCs behind
ber 70, IIIII there's distior:lion ill • seconds.
Chicago. in the standings, buc the
what it signifies for !he Chicago
Buils didn't talce the lead for
Buils.
"We never really Wllllcd 10 put sb untii Sieve Kerr made a three,pointEven ifeveryone Clll 'tagree that much emphasis on winning 70," he er with 7:22 to p!ay. And they didn' t
the Bu?ls are the best team in NBA said. "But after we win the chunpi- clinch il unti! Luc Loncley hit two
history, "they've won 70;' Milwau, onship and have time to ?ook blck,. free throws with 2 L 9 seconds ?ert
and Jordan blocked Johnny New,
Ieee Buc~ coach Mike Dunleavy 70 games is goin1 to mean a lot."
uid, "and nobody else accomp?ished
• Dunieavy WIS im-ssed tbalthe mill's lhtee,point try on Milwauthat."
rBulls won even with
Jonlan and kee's neltt possession .
The Bu?ls didn't look like the beSl Scottie Pippen combining to shoot
"It was very much like a p?ayofT
ever Tuesday nighl, when they strug, 35 percent.
. .
atmospbere, every possession criti,
gled to beat the Bucks 86-80 and
He compared 1hem favorably to cal. You cou?d notice the tension on
b~ the 1971-72 ~s A~geles Lal(, the reams general!y acknowledged as
the c!ub," Bu?is.coach Phil Jackson
ers =ord for v1ctone~ m a season. the best ever: The 197!-72 La?ters of said. "lbere's a lot of joy. But I think
Chicago shot 39 percent from the, Wilt Olamberlain and Jerry West; reiief was probably the overwhelmfloor. was 4:for,l8 from lhree:pomt Bi!l Russe!!'s Boston Celtics of the ing emotion."
. ~g~, ofsen played with uncharac1950s and '60s; Chamberlain's
Jordan, in his first fu?? season after
tensuc sc?fishness and got on~y .one 1966-67 Philade?phia 76ers; the Lar- coming out of retirement late !ast
fourtb-quarter pomt from M1chae? ry Bird Cehics and Magic Johnson year, will win his eighth scoring title
lordJln.
Lakers of the '80s; and the three-time and probably his fourth !eague MVP
Yet the Bu??s found a way to win champion Bul!s of the early '90s
award. He was MVP of the NBA
-improving to 70-9 and surpassing
"They have the best ·defenders' in ·Finals in each of Chicago's champi,
the ?ld Lakers' 69,13 mark -:- and the league at the 2, 3 and 4 spots _
onsbip years. He alSo )VOn an NCAA
that s what has m~e them ~pec1al a?! Michael, Scottie and Dc:nnis. That tide at Nonh Carolina and two
season.. Yes, they ve dom•nated on compares with any team," Dun- Olympic go!d meda5s.
most ?'ghts .• But even when they Peavy said. "They've got the best
" My first (NBA) championship
haven I, they ve a?most always won. non,cen.ter rebounder in the game was number one," Jordan said when
So a!though Chlc.ago p,iayers have ever in Dennis and the u?timate go- asked to ?ist his accomplishments in
churned that reachmg No. 70 was to guy in Michael.
order of importance. "Then my
ummp&lt;;n1anl_compared co wmmng a
"But it's the regu?ar season. They
national championship. Then my
ch~p1onsh1p, they were ha,ppy and have to win the championship to be
O?ympic gold medal in '84. Then the
reheved to break the record w1th judged as the greatest team a??- second NBA championship. Third
. three regu?ar-season games to spare. . time."
NBA. Then tl)e second gold medal
The~ exchanged hugs, high, fives
The Bu??s agree.
(in ' 92). Drafl day.
and sm1les as lhey left the Brad5ey
"We have to win it we have to
"And then, 70 wins.
Center court and passed out cigars in win," Rodman said. "lf~e don't win
"So I really won 't see the impor,
the ?ocker. room. Dennis Rodman it, we might as we?! be done playing
ranee until I can !ook back and say,
fo??owed h1s mtense 19,rebound per- and go to Beirut or somewhere. It
'Hey, man, that was a major accomforman£e by donning a Wisconsin . would be a big ?etdown. ·~
p!ishment.' If we win a champi"cheesehead" hat atop his hoi pink
The ?etdown would have been
onship this year- when we win the
championship -I'm preuy sure il's
hai~;
.
. .
almost !IS big had the Bu??s lost 'J\ies,
going to mnk right up in the top
· What .IS the ~eanmg of 70? day in front of a capacity crowd that
three. "
How does II feel? Its gomg to rake inc!uded lhousands of fans who
The Bucks all)lOSt made the Bu??s
some time lo sink in," said Jordan, drove 90 mi!es north from Chicago.

1ooc1

J

~our-n.etl:

The Dlllly SqdiMI• P8ge 5

Bulls beat Bucks 86-80 to get 70th win
By IIIK! NADEL

..

"

. Pomeroy • Ulddllpoi""., Ohio

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

LCVW1tlC

.a

· Gallipolie

'~
'

.
~ISH$ .&amp; CHIPS
')79

fli
~~~

'1.

I·

I·

I•

UMXJ

4497:
~enco

MattS

209 Upper 'River Road

446-3807'
••
Monday , Friolay, &amp; am - &amp; ptn
• Sa,!;urda)', &amp; am -7 pm
5u1141ay. 9 am • !5 pm
S.i'! pri«&lt;e joo&lt;l on lft·o«&gt;ck morchandle&lt; o~
~ubtr pri«&lt;e m~v1ry duo to to..t competition.

w. ...... &amp;he rifht to 1111111;'..,.,_,...,.

,..._£.1

.

,,

-

.

.
.

6ed

I

•
•

••

�-

Pomeroy •llldcllport, Ohio

..--~--SHS prom

Beat of the Bend ..

court---~

-;M4:0!1da;:d~y;";w;:;as:;";ithe~dej;ldljiii:;;ne;Tcfor;'iili~l-~tbose:i::'fbi:i~ addresses coold be

'.
ing your income tax. I hope you JUde
it okay.
. ( thought it was interesting that a
national newscast before the filing
deadline indicated that there were
QYer 400 employees of the Internal
Revenue Service who did not file
.~ir income Wt return last y-. Now
if ~y can do that, why then oh why,
can't I? Probably because if I didn't
I'd be looking oui from behind bars.
I didn't pick up any information on
what penalties the employees were
·ltanded. Could 'it be that there still
· .working checking returns of me and
. thee?

located. By the way, the contaet pe&lt;&gt;pie would rully appreciate hearing
from ,you as soon as possible.

I feel much sadness tliat a seveny--old child lost her life when her
pl111e crashed in Wyoming as she was
attempting to become the youngest
penon ever to pilot a plane across the
county.
On the other hand, I feel pretty
unfriendly towards parents who
would encourage such an endeavor.
No way can I believe that a seven- .
year-old would be of such a mind-set
to do ihis unless she had been brain
washed and exploited. If we're
The Meigs High School Class of putting seven-year-olds behind the
1976 is going to have itS 20th reunion controls of a plane, I shudder to think
.MJly 25 at the Meigs Senior Citizens of what's next
Center in Pomeroy.
. . In the 20 years that have passed
Big congratulations are in order
· since graduation some 20 members of for Garner C. ·Griffin.
He will mark his I OOth binhday
: the class have cOjile up missing.
: l,bose pi~~J~ning tJJt. reunion would Thursday, April 25.
Relatives and friends are plannins
~ J(ke to contact those 20 people and
• )l¢e are the names: Jeff McKinney, a card shower for him. Cards will
: ~my Tyree, Butch Roush, Randy reach him at 45950 State Route 681,
; ~iffle, Tammy Mowery Caner, Coolville, Ohio, 45723.
• Richard Cole, Jane Goody, Cheryl
: tl4ning, Margaret Mould, Faye MurMembers of the boyd of the
Meigs
Division, Amencan Hean
: ~k. Delta Prater, Danny Richards,
~ ~ggy Snyder, Joe Nelson. Ernie Association, meeting Thesday made
' Imboden, Mark Hayden, Sandy Hall, plans for their annual carnation sale,
: Susan Glasgow, Vickie Lee, Jack a fund-raiser held annually. Denver
; Well, Ernest Will, Edie· Woodard, and Nora Rice will again head the
: Bobby Yates, Larry Cundiff and activity.
.
The flowers will be delivered ·
· Mjke Priddy.
: ·If you are one of those grads or a May 22, 23, and 24, and to place an
~ relative who knows where one of order to help out with the drive just
: them is living, would you please C«l_n· call the Rices' at 992-3759; Donna
· tact a member of the planning com· Carr at 992-2153, or Ida Diehl at 992: mi,ttee and tell all? The contact peo- 2573.
.
.: pie are Des Jeffers, 742-2846; Steve
· Bachner, 992-3693; Steve Pickens,
The- wind blows colder and sud- i
: 99~- 7532; Carmel Murphy Evans, denly you're older, aDd older and old- !
: 949-2054; .Pam Nicinsky Vaughan, er. I have a feeling it's going to take
: 992-5094 or Micl\ Davenpon ,at992- a lot of warm weather to make us for·
. 5488.
get Thesday. Do keep smiling.
!!ailiin~s h:ave

Aprll17, 1111

One of the young lacllel shown here end lief

Syr8cuH; Ta..tce Na1lle Cummine, daughter
of Jeck lnd VIcki Cummln1, I:leclne, 1ncl Rob
eacort will be nemed Southern High School'•
Crow, aon of Bob ll'ld Ruetlll Crow, SyracuH·
prom q - end king at the echool'e prom Ftlday nltt The prom, theme "Forever For · Jonna Manuel, daugttt.i- of John ..id ~n
MenUII of Racine, and Brien Jarnee Plgel of
Tonight , will be held In the Charlee Haymen
Recine, aon ofTimm Hwold Plgll Mel Uu Lae
gymnasium ~n 8 p.m. and midnight
Hendrix; Samml 8111011, daughter ()I Joyce and
Shown Ita, from left (with IICQrt ltllndlng It
Ernll Slaaon, Syracuea, 1nd Jaeori Shuler, ·eon
rear): Jyl Melhewl, daughter of Chlrlle and Rite
of Stephen and Wenda Shuler, Lltlrt Filla; and
Mathewe, · Recine, and neon John Chrllltlln
Harmon, 1011 of James 1nd Linda Harmon, Pori· Jennifer Lawrance, dtlughtw of James 1nd Blrllara La-ce, Syracuea, and Kevin Alden
..nd; JennHer Cummins, daughter of Todd 1nd
Peggy Cummln1, Letart Falll, 1rid Jey McK- · Porter, aon of Frank Wllllanl Ponar HI and Patrielvey, eon o1 Marvin and Eleanor McKelvey, cia Anne Portal', Letart Falla.

.·

;

Couple find
love online

Nl; Nottu

•
•

Alh&amp;l

FIT POR

( l'r ....... .,....,

, · For
lllnr Froot
· AIIIpllltlleetor l'roJHt

BATTLE CREEK, Mich. (AP)So she wasn't the "ice-cram lady"
after all.
.
Nonetheless, the tdiLKMAN
found tru8love online with the ICMLADY and they -remarried about
two mooths after·chilling for the ftnt
time on their computers.
Bernie Menen, a dairy company
sales manuer nicknamed MU.K- ·
MAN online, had been usinJ Prodigy for several months when a word '
caught his eye.
"I came across her nickname ...
and I thought it was 'ice cream
lady,"' said Mctten, a 50-year-old •
divorce who lives on Long Island in •
NewYork. •
'
Thinking he'd found a dairy mate ':
in cyberspace, he asked ICMLADY :;
if he'd guessed correctly. "She wrote ..,._
·back, 'no! "' Meuen recalled. "That -:son of broke the ice and we started •
talking."
.:.
Sherill Drackett, a 50-y~·old -.
widow, ran a business that put : .'
instant-coupon machines in grocery . .;.
stores. Hence ICM.

;taultull,. .........

BEA:1TJE I ..VD.. IIJ 8111C1t II Ide

Publo tlollu

: • W 1 *GI =-POl ¥'1

"sg

. .- . WIIU, .... o..to

fer IIJiital . .,..,_.,.

01::::te.. 1111!'

,,zr,

tin
OppertMIIItr l'xoo•ll••
.... ., ••

'I

;=•

lo

I

,....., -••OJo

..... bo llllllod l

;" - ' ' " ..., 14th, 111te
·lllllllhen .... Ollloo of tllo

,ll.,or tllo -billa will llo
• publloly a paned ond rood

......._

~
~ Contrllot opoclflclltlona
~ lind bldclln1 dooumonta

llal•d ....... ~
lll,.r Front
Projoot •

·'

:of
tllo lloyor, .. 320 Eat
• lllln S1roet, P-oy, OH

crd equollo 10 J*Cilll of

, the

lllld.

A lollor of Qrodlt

• l'illlY llo rovocMIIo only by
~ tho

owner. Upon ontorlng
. Into • controct with the
• owner, tho -•blctor mUilt
' thon lllo • bond for the
amount of tho oonnct, and
• tho cllock or Iotter of credit
; Wllllhon bo ratumod to tho
· auccoaaful
and
unau......tul bkldora when
tM Ci.iiibw:tla executed.
, 2) A bond for the lull·
• emount ol thll bid. Tho
' owner wiii 11'0111Jn lho bond
, of the aucaenj'ul bldclor bUt
~ t~o owner Will return tllo
• bond of ..ch unauecoaalul
, blddor allor 1 controct hal

All Natural T·Uteno

With Chromlam Plcollnate

.boy has grown up to

or ..., bo plcllocl up

• or o~ br 1111111 lor $50
~ Wlllollll nor.-Nfuncllblo.
• · Thla project 11 belnl
, partially fvndOd by etoto
• ODNMWCF fundi.
: ~·· ollllllllte for
i IIIII project Ia $119,000.
• A bid guar1nty, ••
! roqull;od br SectiOn 153.54
•. of tho Rovleed Codo of
~Ohio, ohlll _.,.ny OIICII
, propo..l eubmlttad, oa
: fpltowa:
'· . 1) A cortllled chock,
:.caeh*- cllock. .f it 11nor of

LOSE : 10 LIS. ,,
...-"
IIJ 3 DAYS
"",.•

17, 24 (5) 1 4TC

Public NOtice

ADVERTISEMENT FOR
8108
VILLAGE OF POMEROY
SopoHate &amp;oalod Bide ror:

Family
Medicine

•

Sirloin Tips
.

and bidding documonll

lillY bo ¥~wed 11 tho Oftlce
of tlio lllyor, at 320 -Eolt

Public sa1e
and Auction

SPiliTf.

.. .. ONLY

coca Cola Classic·
6 Pack 1~. cans

Contractor• are further

odYIIod that tho JIIIIUIIY 27,

. 1972 Equol .Emplormont
Opportunity bocutlvo
Order of lho Governor of
Ohio Ia eloo ''lilpplloeble to
thla lllld lnvii!AAiri.
. No bldciOr. llily Withdraw
hla bid within elxty (60)

$7_95

ComJ: ~ete Line of Vegetable
I

,AUCnONEER: FINIS "IKE" ISAAC
Plloqe 61.WBB 1370 or 388 BBBO ·
Uc•n••d IIIIi Bonclad Ohk113728

·· Phone 614-892-2478 about equipment.
T-= C8all or IIJIIIf'O'*I chiCit

•
~ rBipOIIIIble lor liCCidenlll or loet IIams.
· Stalemantl made illly olelle hacl'pracedence over
. '
Pl••led matarlali. ' . '

~~~--------~--~
•
~

.
''

..

•
1

I

Foster Homes
are needed for
•
Meigs County Children of all ages.
Call 992-2117 _
for information and
to be part of the effort.

$

FRUIT TREES
Head
Lettuce

2 Heads

$100

Green Pepper &amp;
Cucumbers

,, SD"' YIHII

. ,,.,., problems?

'
·

· Tonrorrot you'll.bow
6ow... -.
Wcrtch this sp~~cel

3 for 89c
· Cabbage, Pepper
&amp; Tomato Plants

Sl 69 dozen
Seed Polaloes Bulk
Seeds

clayl otter the aotual dllo of

.

Strawberries
5 66
1/2 flat

flowerin~ ~usnes ana rrees

I would like to thank
friend~ . neighbors
family for all
lth •• ;. love and sup•po•11
ng my . extended I
illness. ·
Many
thin
to the heal~ngl
the comfon
lktlO"'inR that so manvl
is. a part of.
lproo:ss.

Texas Spring

Sweet
Onions 37~
Hunter's office
Deed's office . .
Without your

446-0965 ·

'I

•
'

IT.TAKES ACOMUNITY TO
PROTECT·ACHILD .

opening "'-'' All bkll ahlll 11o properly
algnod by ·en authorized
rep-nlllllve of the blddor.
All blda ohell bo a•locl
lind plainly m.llod "S..Iocl
Bid lor River Front
Am ph lthoetor ProJect •
Gon~l Cantroct, P....oy,

lrrogullrltlel.
By the owner

~Dept. Store
lllddl•pUrt 112-3141

futuro.
(3)21 1TC

dryer, sewing desk, daybed w/tiundle,
~~:=~~: w/chest &amp; dreseer, ·Home Interior,
J
chests ol drawera, battery powered riding caroo,(
f t;:Ject:roltlx &amp; Reglnla sweeper, stereo, drop leal tabl1e 1
chairs, 4 pes. Wicker furniture &amp;ell cane btm.
PART
TEMPORARY CLERICAL
1 ~'•M back chairs, old tables, rockers, fern stands,
s will be accepted until 1:00 p.m.,
liltlimallonal TO 24 dozer w/eleCtrlc start &amp; dirl!ct driv1~ 1 Resume_
April 22, 1996 at the offices of the Meiigsl
(testorable wlfree delivery for 50 miles), misc. air
power tools, cuatom maae GMC truck seat. 67 Gt.IIE 1 County C9mmissioners, Cot.~rthouse,
van w/6.2 L diesel (needs repairs), MTD 5
IPc&gt;merov. Ohio 45769.
::~~~=~ high wheeler mower, front tine tiller,
The positi~l.l; involves clerical and housing
J
appliances, plus much; much mona.
duties required to implement the
ljells at noon wHh reserve: 1993 Mustang 4 cyl.
~tic w/sunrool &amp; all options (28,900 miles), 1991
FY' 95 New Horizon Fair Housing program
Chevy C1500 V•8 auto w/overdrlve &amp; sports pac:kaGI8.
being
by the Meigs vUIJIIIY
and 450 John Dee~e Dozer w/slx-way blade; dleelel
.Colrnmissi,orje,rs and the Meigs County FAirl
aiigine; under carriage 90%+.
'f.hla will be an al day sale and Wll -will not hold
Applicants · for the position should have
regular eate the nighl of this sale.
Refreshments. Food, and Porta-Potties wil be
experience and/or training, public
av&amp;liable. · · .

JUST

•

Opportunity.

pro- of llllfllll from the

ontrr point cloolgnlltod 001
during tho time period of
July 1 to Doclomblf 31, 1 •
rocjulrocl
tho Ohio
~n•rlron!'!4~tl~: Protoctlon
Agancy (QIIIo EPA).
Upon boln1 notlllod ol
title violation by tho Ohio
EPA, tllo RACINE, VILLACII!
OF. haa hod lho clrlnlllnt
-lylod for IUifMO.
TIIO RACINE, VILLAGE OF
will bike atop• to onauro
that lilloq- monitoring
will bo performed In the

CHERIE BARR

Hanging
·Baskets

I

collod to 111 roqulremonto
com.lnoclln tllo bid packet
Including: thla pra)ool le
fedorafly
enlotod.
Contraoto to . bo owardod
under IIIII lr.vllllllo.• for bldli
will bo oubJoot to
Proeldontlatc. Exocutlvo
Oi'dor 11246;,11 amtndod,
requiring Afflrmlllvo Aotlor1
for Equel Emptoy!llont

drinking "!Iter tor the

·LOAN CENTRAL

All

$795

Into . • contreot with tho
- · tho OMitraclor muot
lhan lila • bond for the
emountofllle-ibiCI,ond
tho chocll or 111tor of orodlt
wllllhon 110 roturnod 10 tho
• nd
1 u c 0 0 1 ol u 1
unoucceealul blddoni when
~ lol ~­
2) A bond for tho full
omount of tllle ~ld. Tho
·
Will rotllll the bond

992-2156

To offer story suggestions,
report late-breaking news and
offer news tips

=-Law

ht/J)igeoOO holes, ~or plates; WestlRg!ou&amp;e~~=::l

MIXED
FLATS

tho !&gt;ld. A 111ttor of crocllt
IUJ bo rovoci~ll oniJ bY.
lho owner. Upon ontortng

·
mile left on Rocksprings Rd. 2nd houill! on left. ·
The
VI
....
of P-oy
'!'his Is a very brief llsllng of items w.e can see on top
~vtcl:
rooms lull ol boxes In storage building and bam. Chrlatophor E. T..,..Un
not be
Because ol adveitlzlng deadlines, we do not have
am very grateful to
Dlloctor
lo make· a complete liSIIng. All we ·can say Is that
ofyou.
,
~~) 11,17, 24 .(5.1 . 4TC .
collectors and antique shop ownei'B ahould hjlve an
Mildred (Leota) Smithl
enjoyable day dlsccMirlng the hidden treaaurils with
under the large trees In the front yard of lhls old Meigs
County larm house. Steve end Teresa Pullins have
moved Into a large farm house and are sellng some o1
their treasures and no longer needed everyday things.
ANTIQUES BEGIN AT JO:OO A.M.
Rosevillf "Pinecone' 261-6, "Iris" 357-4(0rgln Table),
Hull art "Waterlllly: L-24-8 1/2 &amp; other "Waterllly',
· 'Woodland' 9·10 1/2 matte, McCoy "Mammy
w/cauliflowers• cookie jar, . plus more. Watt Apple
p8ttem cookie jar, loads ol old pOttery, planters, v &amp; novelty by McCoy, Shawnee, Hull, ect. large
sel8ction of dlnnetware Including Blue Willow, Meakin,
flreklng, &amp; Cattail., Graniteware: Blue swirl pan put
other colors Jas. Benjamin ston-are jug ·w/handle,
la111p planter (orlentalls on boat w/gold trim &amp; glass
finial, old canning jars, oil lamps, early 50's RCA VIctor
JV, Balellle radios, wooden . radio, &amp; floor model
Crosefy radio. 1920's -1950's magazllies Including
'Youths Companion' &amp; "Uf!!", Ration books &amp; COI.tpOilS
Now Open South of.the
from WWII, Old Christmas . lights &amp; dec:!lrettlotJs, 1
~ilver Bridge Plaza.
reveille painting In oval frame ol Government building,
tin Mickey Mouse 'bed lray, Land of Lakes tray, old.
We Make Loans Fast
Cola trays, Longaberger baskets, oriental rugs,
lm111h&lt;&gt;Q81n~ end~. Blanko, Fenton, Westmoreland,
Call
~~~:~~:~:~ glass, plus other glassware, milk cans,
·I
wall clock, plus much, much more.
tOueEm sleeper/sola, new living room suHe, swlvell
~mocker recliner, end tables &amp; eof!ae lable, rolltQP desk 1

Diet Coke.or

PoUnd

PU8UC NOTICE
TIIO RACINE, VII LAGE OF
did 1101 monitor and roport
onalytlcol r01ulla of tholr

•1-.
.....-........
Contract epaclllcatlone
Allontlon of blclclero le

33 West approx. 3 miles .County Rd 19, tum right

.

cull*- c11e011. or 1o11er of
.crodlt oqual 10 10 porGIIII of

9:00a.m. Saturday, Aprl120, 1996
· Rocksprings ROiid, Pomeroy, Ohio
Directions: FromAthims, Ohio take US .~ E to Cotllllv
Qhlo~. '~· .
J'ld. 19, lum le!l QJ'I CQ\IIIIYJ\d..1Jl.go approx ...314
. Tho ownir reaarv11 lho
to County Rd 20. tum leli, sale located 2nd house
rtaht to ~ "'Y or all bide
left. Watch for signs. From Gallipolis: Route .7 Nonh
aubmlltod, and walvo any

' John C. Wolf, D.O.

Whole

Public Notice

ow-

PUBLIC AUCTION

~FREE DIET C:0U:

Public Notice

For Alvor
Front
Amp h II h eater P ra I act
lnc,ludlng oheet pllln1 and
rolltldworiL
· Will .,. received by the
VIllage of Pomeroy et the
Oflleo or tho Mayor, Vlllell
Hall, P-oy, Ohio 45769
until 11 o'clock 1 .m.
TuHdlly, May 14th, 1196 oflhaeucaneflllblddlrbut
and tllon 11 the Oltlco of the the owner will ratutn tho
U1yor tho bide will bo bond of oech unauc co nr..l
publicly oponoci and road blddor allor • conlrlcl hila

;.__--!,....._;____

80

major

still like having his work on my refrlgeralor.•

Ueln Street, Pomeroy, OH
.45761 or m1y bo picked
or orderocl by moll tor
which 1o1 non-ratundlbla.
:1iMit-utH.
'.
· lhla proJtct 11 bolng
, • Attention or bldciOra It partially funded by eteta
; lfallod to all roqul-m. ODNR·LWCF lunda.
• com.lnod In tho bid pocket
oetlmato for
: Including: · thll project 11
$70,000..
, fodorally
aulated.
, Contract• to be owordod
• undar tlllollrivltatlon lor bide
will bo aubJioct to Ohla,llhallaccomp~ny
Pr.. ldontlol Executl,.. propa..l eubmlttod, 11
Order 11246, n llllllndod, loltowa: ·
req_ulrlng A~• Action
11. A certified chick,

· Assoc:iate Professor ·
of Family Medicine

The Sentinel
News Hotline
. .

Cw•wt. PMwo,

• ..., bo "'-&lt;&lt; .. tllo Ollloo
~ 45718

Brehm named Ohio University provost
-'"*'

0n1er o1 ... GowaMr flf
Ollie~

The Deily S11'111MI• Pl . . 7

Sherool Stepbeoa Brebm will crodentdls and excellent prepuatioo Brehm was associ lie dean of the CGibocune ~ 1111~1 ~ Uoivenity • to the provost posilion: Glidden said ' lege of Liberal Ans and Scienceut
~011, IIIUwnily ~mdeat Roben durin1 the press eoofcrence. Brelun the University of Kansas for thnie
Olidden
m • 10 Llll. pas hu aerved for the P..t six years u yem.
.
cOIIfaeoce ~Y·
,
dean of the Haopur College of Arts
Btthm, a social psycholoJist, ~
Brehm WJII ~ -July I. She will and Sciences at the State University two de~ from Duke Univenity: 1
succeed Davtd Stewan, who of New York at Binghamton. Harpur bachelor's degree in psycbology ind
lllllOWICed IMt fall ~ he would step College is the oldest and largest acaPh D · J'
'
doWJI from the pollbOII on July 1 or demic unit at SUNY-Binaluunton, a . . m c mical psychology.
U 10011 thereafter u a new provost
with some 7 500 students 300 full·
~Jd U'"DIC the ~biJjties, .
time and I sO pan-time tac'ulry, and a
• .. Sharon Brehm briap excellent budget of $25 million. Prior to 1990

luftMr

.........
• • lmplorm~&amp;t

, till area, oiHtrloal . . lllld ~101' U 1.
.dllllllllldlon OIICI uti!Uftt,
No bldcllr . . , 1111116 •
:OIICIIIIII d Wort!.
lila 111c1 wttlll!! olxtJ (10)
•. · WIH bo rtaohod br tllo . , . ............. ol
of...._., ot tllo llpllllbl'."-oof·
ju~ pof . . ..,.,,
pi j lud
If
Olllo Vllolgo
4l7te :~AI=~~&amp;.:'toll
., bo
authcw
•until 11 o'clock a.m.
of . . bldcllr. ,

Ohio University
.
College of Osteopathic Medicine ·

' Question: I . a l.ump .appear-· thyroid gland of the need to produce
arqund my thyrotd thatts n?tlcea~le . this essential hormone that plays a
to the naked eye. My. endQCnnologtst \ey role in controlling. your overall
ran several tests, including a needle body metabolism.
biopsy to insure that it was not canNew or unusual lumps imywhere
cer, which it was not. 'I was given on the body raise a concern about
Sy~throid and have had five months cancer. f'onunately, only a very small
w!Jen I felt well and had a reduction · percent of thyroid lumpsQless than
. in; )he . size ~f the. lump. Now, .the three percent .. are cancerous. The
lwpp 1s getting btgger. The doctor problem your doctor faces is deterw'ants to repeat all of the tests, mininl! whether vou are in the unforin,cluding the painful needle biopsy, tunate three percent. because cancer
beCause he is concerned 'tflat the lump requires special treatment.
is: ~ow cancerous. Is this really neeOne easy approaeb -- from the ·
e~sary? Should I get a second opin- doctor's perspective- to determine if
i~ before I have the growth surgi, . thyroid lumps are cancerous would
caUy removed?
be to surgically remove them all. For
· :;Answer: Before I directly answ~ every I00 of these surgeries, though,
yQUr questions, I need to exphun 97 would be needless. r think you'll
s~Oie of the tem:'s you used for oth- agree that's too much pain, suffering,
ers; wh? read this column: Ftrst, an risk and expense for the small numerillocnnologtst IS a phystcl8n who ber of actual cancers that would be
h'!i specialized in diseases of the discovered.
gl:(ndular system, incl~ding thyroid
In actual practice, what we do is
pt&lt;?blems. · A needle . bu~sy ts ~ust conduct a series of tests that give us
wf!at 11 sounds hke .. 111s ~ medtcal increasing cenainty about the nature
p~edure w~~ a needle IS passed of a suspicious lump. First, blood
m.tl&gt; the sus~ICtous lump or _cyst m tests and thyroid scans can safely
or~er to obtain a samp~ of tissue_to identify about one-half of thyroid
~;studted under the m•cro~ope. In lumps as being non-cancerous. Fine
1~1$ case, the _small needle •s pass¢ needle biopsy, although the needle
11)19 the thyrotd lump. The thmlterm doesn'tlook ihat "fine" when you are
r,o~ used_~~~ needs. explanations is on the receiving end of it, can funher
~ynthrotd.. Thts ts a brand name of select another 2S from the remainins
m:Qficially produced thyrpid hor- SO percent as having noncancerous
mQne. By taking it you t;elieve your growths. .

Pomeroy •llldlllpolt, Ohio

Wiidl •••• Aprtl17, 1

by Bob Hoeflich

·.

•

•

....

•

t

,•

'

contact skills, experience with Fair Housing
and Equal Rights Laws, and experience with
computer technology.
·
Meigs Co(fnty Is an Equal Employment
Opportunity Employer which prohibits
ldi:scrlminlatic~ because of race, creed, color,
national or.l!il.lh, sex, age, handicap, political
lafflliatin or beliefs.
·
·

• FREE Activation.
•.One Cent
Bag Phon~

• Installed Car
Phone $39.95

• lwo Year Agreement
Required.

1191 4800
110 E. 8t8le St.
. ATHENS
1182-25811

sUpertor Ellchnlce
Rlchllnd

,.VI.

\

1-SOQ-44-CELL-1

' 1192-2825
lngelea Electronics

MIDDLEPORT
992-7070
I·
342·9909
88S.MitrbtSl 2(14 W. $eco."'d Sl
119 N. Mltln
LOGAN
POMEROY
NEW LEXINGTON 753-3525

38H9M

Blllclcbuml ApplianCe

Nellon¥1111

•

�The Dltlty Senllnel • .._.. I

.·:. -~Community calendar----- ,Meigs students to ccimpete
Tile Can

My Cmln dsr II

f'FI I ••afreelft,lnto--

. . . llllpC~to

•11, 1 ..: JPL Ia!

e-a.

Tile

f lneUulptdeopni!DOte

..:. or,...
are
1

I liM

lee-

...: 1

nilen of uy type.
pt'latrd • ..-e permlU

otbe..........,tonaaa

gpulftc •mher ol c!aJL
WEDNESDAY •

POMEROY - Alzheimen Dis'

eue/Relaled Di110rden support
p'Oilp, Wednesday, 2 to 3 p.m at tl!e
• Mcip Multipurpose Senior Center.
. • 4ftn Forbes and Alisha Saunde11 of
Holzer Hospice to be tl!e speake11.

,

MIDDLEPORJ' •• Middlepon_Vii-

Jaae Council, S p.m. Wednesday at anend.
Middleport villa,e ball to award a
contract for the swimmjna pool renSYRACUSE - The Meigs Counovation.
ty Board ofMRIDD will meet at Carleton School, ThiUSday, 7:30p.m.
RACINE - Wildwood Garden
Club, Wednesday, I p.m. at the
POMEROY - Rock Sprinp BetRacine Kountry J&lt;itche':'·
ter Health Club, Thursday, I p.m. at
the Rock Springs Methodist Church.
MIDDLEPOIIT- Massilon Baptist Church Quanet·in concert at the SAnJRDAY
Victory Baptist Church, 7 p.m
Wednesday.
SALEM CENTER- Star Grange
778 and Star Junior Grange 878,
THURSDAY .
potluck supper and fun night Salur- ,
LETART FALLS --Parent Advi- day, 6:30 p.m. at the Grange ball.
sory Council, Thursday, I :30 p.m. at
the school. All parents urged to

Kindergarten
:: registration,
screening
:: scheduled

Four Meigs Junior Hip School
studetlts with~ ~~:ience
projects wiU CDqldll wiltl more than
a thousand others froal KrOll the
slate for more honors s.unlay.
The event to take place on the
Ohio Wesleyan University campus is
the Ohio Academy of Sciences' 48thannual State Science Day.
Representing Meigs County will
be Kyle Smiddie, an e.ighth ·grader
who took ftnt place in the field of
chemistry in all entries fifth through
12th grade in district competition;
Wesley Thoene, Megan Avis, and
Joseph McCall.
Seventh through 12th-grade students qualified for state-level com-

petition by earning Sllptrior rlllilpll

16 district science days ttwoupout
Ohio.
Their projects Will be judaed by
about 1,000 professionals iu medi·
cine, edlqbon, induslry, - ' science.
This will be the IIIJeSI poup of
students and judges ever at !he annua1 event.
At Ohio Wesleyan for the 20th
consecutive year, Slate Science Day
' is sponsmd by the Ohio Academy of
Science, a not-for-profit membership
organization founded in 1891 to
advance science in Ohio.
Awards provided by 130 colleges
and universities, professional socicues, corporations, and govemmen•

,~

.,. ...

,.. anow._ -~.

SMITII'I

'.
Sliie

(UIIIe . . .

COISIIUmOI

c -...... -

All students wilh entries in
Science Day will receive superi&lt;W,
e~cellent, Or good certiJicms frbin
the Ohio Academy of Science. :

•••

•Newtlomea

·A4dllbaa

•NewGaragta
•Fiernodellng
•Siding
•Fioollng

•

• • '.
Slate Science Day will take pi ICe
in 'the Branch Rickey Center :qp
Ohio Wesleyan's campus, where sl~­
dents will begin arriving at 7 •·111·
Judging will run from 9:30 a.m.' to
••
12:30 p.m.
1 ""'

614-992-3470

,....•

••
•

JONES' TREE SERVICE

4x4'a-4x8'e
614-985-4107
814-742-3337

::: ARUCTIVE

FOODLAND

&amp; WILLING

TO TILK!II

•

1·900.990.3737
Ext. 2261

..•
•

$2.99 per min.

"

Must be 18 yrw.

•

' . 411--

PlUS OTHER GREAT ·BUYS

• • Serv·U (619) 1145 8434

'.

14.75

·Breast
T•nderloins

·

.. LINDA'S
PAINTING

3\b. BOW\

.

Blue Bonnet·
Spread

Whitney's Pink
Salmon

• FREE ESTIMATlS

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

(614) 441-1191

1-1100-446-1414

1-800-508-8887

. Ext. 4309

.• •

. Oli Gtt Oii 1111
GoOd only ot

1 fr.. with this

r r, 'n L t.

~H) &lt; ~ E

IFf I rT1/I

r:: ,\ L c ') u r •) n ~
111

~()

.

VERY IIISOIIILI .
HAVI llfEIIIICIS
614o915·4110

'

01

.

mo. pel:

Ffiiii·IH ..., fttrsla ,..

1 ·"

To place aa atl, call

• • • • IIJ

.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

•

.

~

~d:

Ff10['LJ'I ''.W')r'ECil\lCOJPIJ'&lt; 1th8
flrlfTI'JE 1 1l '0 t,or.f

16 oz.

8.5 oz. pkg. mini chlp-a-rooa,

Sunshine C~kies

· Banquet to hpnor
: retired professor
:of journalism

~~.~.

11f t

)
1

l

PI I'll&lt; I

r' , r

11
Smucker's Jam &amp;11

1 t 1 ' ', 1

, '1

'"

Flavorite
Gelatin

I!

Preserves

JP()'j

(''I

3 oz. ASST. FU,VOtR&amp;·!I

18 qz. JAR ASST.

Vlasic Swut
Pickles

butter, 'l emon or animal

f ( ( l[ll

:.
;·,

~;,t~!L~-~~N.~EF~R~E~E~_jj~;~~~~n:o~~N~~E.F~R~~E~EJI~~~~G~n~oN.;E~F~R~E~E~JL~~~~~~~~~~ i
roCJULA"lO SP l: Cifl
l~FFCT

\if 11 l

COLH'( 'I
, 1 I Yh

rl

1

&gt;

Til~

J('f

1

'.'Jfl ',f'[ ( 1/\' \llUPC:~J til /0
1 ' ' , 1 1 • 1 Tr 1 ,. , ,,,,

FOCIL L r,r,1, &gt;•11 1/\L 1
EF I Et ! E , 1 1 l

~·~·o~,

,

,,

"

-

A TIQUE

~::
:
• • •
.• •. .•
•
• ••

,,,,,
,,,w

32124 Happy Hollow Ad.

Middleport, Ohio 45760 ·
Damy &amp; Peggy Bnckles

614-742-2193
TFN

'

r f f r

',Pf C ,'\_ (i)lJPtl'l .. 1 ' '

1 T1. r .l

1H

UFt.CIIVE: 11-l TO: /0 lh

8 oz. MINI L.UIU:

10.25 oz. pouch

160Z.ASST

100Z. PKG

Gold Medal
BrowaieMix

Marzetti

Smartbtat Cheese
Food srKes

Dips

!LONE FREE . ONlGR ONE FREE

!

ONE GRONE FREE

·Pepsi Products
2LHer

(

..

New York ''
Garbe Bread::·;

OJE GRONE FREE i.

·5 qt. Ice Cream
Sqt
99

s

Fresh
Strawberries
LB.

992-3838

-'

AUCTION ·
SATURDAY, APRIL 20, 1996
10:00 A~M.

•;
•

Located on RT. · 33 at the auction center In
Mason, WV.
Beautiful 3 pc. rose wood Victorian marble top B.A.
! , suite, lg . .Viet. marble top hall tree, mah. secre~ary
' · W&amp;rdrobe comb., Gov. Winlhrope secrelary, oak Jelly
c!upboard, oak claw loot fancy side board, large walnut
l 1: ~ardrobil, Dove tailed case must seell Lg. fancy
•\' eurved glass China cabinet w/claw feel, 1920's 10 pc.
; ! ; talnut D. A. suite, ~rdseye maple Princess dresser,
1, ~ncy walnut marble top table, nice 6 pc. Berkey &amp;
; ' Gay twin poster B.A. suite, two nice 4 pc. ma~ogany
!' ! •
suite, Barley twist O.R. suite, spinning wheel,
i gale leg table, Viet. walnut wash stand, early lilt top
' · table, large oak stacking bookcase, spinel desk;
I ; Mission oak desk, mahogany Ubrary table w/claw feet,
: 1 ornate oak bookcase, pie sale, nice sel~ion Victorian
: i tables, Mahogany Shield back rocker, walnut 4 pc.
. ! Victorian hip rest chairs, Goat wagon, early Tayem
: • . teble ice cream table &amp; 4 chairs, ice cream stools, oak
te~ back desk table, Ice cream table &amp; 4 ~hairs, ice
; • • 11ream stools, oak press back desk chair, mahogany
· : • desk chair, Victorian Etager, early spool eradle, good
' selection· of clocks, fancy oak kitchen clocks and
Qlhers wooden Duck decoy sigried jobs, etched glass
bowl (Grape pattern), large black Onyx type fruit bowl,
weeping gold vase, blue milk glaS$ dish, pressed
glass large Cranberry bowl w/wMe edge, cobah blue
, • glas;, &amp;lched glas,;, Cranberry pitcher, beautiful
VIctorian flower bowl,·cut_glass, mUk glass, blue Fenton
·• bowl, Depression glass. Green Fenton bowl, Blue &amp;
; • White Chelsea England dish, blue slag bowl, Cam1va1
•• . glass, Nippon glass, Rose bowl, Flesla yellow gravy
: • bowl, jumbo peanut ~er j11rs, Green &amp; While pottery
• · bowl Homer Laughlin bowl, pair Weller vases,
: Matching pair Weller candle holders, Pink &amp; Green
•. Hull Ewer Roseville Pitcher 11271-P, vase #192-5, cast
:
ron Victorian Lady 2 glass shade lamp, Stone jars- A.'
' : : P. oonaghho . Parkersburg W.V.- are McCoy
· , · :cottageVIlle w.v. and others, pair pewter vases, pa1r
: . siiirflng Salt &amp; pepper shakers, cast iron clown ash
• tray Betsy Boop type doll made in Japan, brown
· : ' · bea'ded Victorian hand bag, metal small lire !ruck,
• AQrcelain H.C. Sinclair gasoline sign, old rail road adv.
lifgns came out of cereal boxes, mail pouch
tfl8rmometer, Wan ware apple design · t65 Autumn
leal-t10 green &amp; white boY(I, 4 pc. Pink &amp; Blue Stripe,
1124 bowl, &amp; others, wheat Americana pattern dishes &amp;
more.
AUCTIONEER'S NOTE:. THIS . IS THE BEST
' "
ELECTION OF ANTIQUE FURNITURE WE HAVE
. AD IN THIS BUILDING. MOST EVERYTHING IS
EADY FOR YOUfl JibME OR SHOP. COME &amp;
. PEND fHE J;IAYII "NO BUYEJ'IS PREMIUM:

I' ·

..

POMEROY, OHIO
Trash Flemoval • Commercial or Residential
Septic Tanltm Clmaned &amp; Portabla TOilets Rented.
Dally, weeitly &amp; monthly rental rates.

'

Velvet
Natural

c

~•

·'&lt;[a:..

EASTMAN'S
BIG BEND, TWIN. RIVERS, BUCKEYE,
GALLIPOLIS,

Ice Cream

$
112 pl."
"'

i
.

OHIO VALlEY

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

.

:RI(K PEARSOtt
AUaiON
CO. 4#66
'
.

•

:: ·;wv.
·:
::
::

· Chester; Ohio

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIa
•Room Addition•
•New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
. (FREE ESTIMATE$)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

7122iM

Lost and Found

LOST OR STOLEN
4115196 -Portland
Area. Male
Rottweller clog.
Black with tan on ·
head a. cheat. Very
friendly. Answers to
name "Damlon"
Reward tor any
Information leading
to his retum.
' Call 843-5388

.~

.

..~

,

L&amp;E

. THE HAT MAN
Imprinting

•Shirts •11aJs
-sportswear
•Ball Uniforms
3rd st., Racine, Oh.
949-3321' 312ti1 mo.

COISftiDftiOI
• Residential - Commercial
Roofing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repalri
Gutters and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling
Decks - Bathrooms - Kitchens - Siding

35 YHra Exp«fence ·

(6141 992·2364

-

1·100.119·3943

J.D. Drilling Company
Racine, Oh. 45U1"
James E. Diddle
Treckhoe, oozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig blsemen~s. put In septic
systenla, ley linea, underground bores.
P.O. Box 587

REEDSVILLE· One Acre River Front"t.ot. TPC water"and
electric on site. Beautiful View. ASKING $20,0011
home with rented apartment upstairs and non-rented
apartment down. Front wrches.
ASKING $12.000

New At lqt.s lt.etron~s

·' POMEROY- located on Condor Street· 2 story frame home
situated on two lots, includes 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, N.G. noor
lilmaCe, cOlumbia gas, most wooc:J.ftoors and cable.
ASKING S11,500

ladle lllaeli Deale~
Your favorite
artist·.
.
.
on Tape or CD

HENRY E. CLELA.ND JA......................................It2-2251

IHERRI L HART: ..............................................,•.••7G-23S7

KATHY M. CLEL.AND......... _,,, .•,••_,.,,_.................092-1111
OFFICL••••.• - ....................................... ~............N.112-2211

106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport 1

'

992·2825
111111111

••

•

'

Monday ed1tion - 10:00 a.m. Saturday.

01

lots

E\leiythinot 2128
And F•iday 9

Chalham. ThurSday

Wednesday, Friday, From 9 A.M.

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
&amp; V,iclnlty

•

30391 Roy Jones Ad.,
P.O. Box 539
Syracuee, Ohio 45779
Terri Carsey
(614)992-2800
Hoi'H&amp;TackSeiH

No Lawn Too Large or
Too Small

Plan Ahead, CaJITodeyf.
742-2803

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE
. Hou11 Repair a
'Remodeling
Kitchen a Bath
Remodeling
Room.AddHiono
Siding, Roofing, Patios ·
Reoaonable
lnourero - Experienced
Call Woyne Neff
992-4405
For Free Eatlmatn
.,.:WI

All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance . Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day bef~re the a.d is to · run, Sun~ay ~d1hon- 1:OOpm Friday, Mon-

day edllion 10:00a'!'. Saruo&lt;tay.

80

Public Sale
and Auction ·

Auclion Friday April 12, 1996;
7pm at Bidwell Auction, Bidwell,
Ohio ; special consignment or 100
plus bqxea Ot collectible &amp; misc.
~terns, 50 bolles or boo~s &amp; paper

. .

plus other consignments, CarJ
Stanley Auction&amp;er.

Rick .Pearson Auclion Company,
full ltme auctioneer, comptere
auction
servlce.
licensed

J66,0hio

&amp; Wes1

Virginia,

304·

773-5785 Or 304·773·5447.

90

Buy

1 good used cheap saddle. AlsO
1 Keeshond puppy, full blood~ .
304·674-ot632.
.
Clean late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 EastGfn AvenJQ, Gallipolis.

J &amp; D's Aula Parrs. Buying salvage vehicles. Selling parts. 304 773·5033. '
Top Prices Paid: Old U.S. Coins,
Silver, Gold, Diamonds, All O!d
Collectibles, Paperweights. Etc.
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 61 4·446-2842.

u.sed lurniture- antiques, one
p1ece or .complete estates, also
do appraisals, Osby Martin, 614 992·7441 .

SPARKlES
· ELECTRIC
Serving all Your
ELECTRICAL

needs
Phone

614-992-5048

Used Mens lev1s, lee &amp; Wran gler Jeans &amp; Denim Jackets, Nike
Shoes, 614-446-2468. ·
·
Wanted to Buy Used Mobile

HOI'nes. Call:. 614 ·446-0175
Wa rned To BuW" : Auto' s &amp; Trucks
AnW" Condition. 614 -388 -0062, Or
614·446-PART.
Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos With
Or Without Motors. Call larry
L~ely. 61 ~ -388·9303.

· Free Estimates

VCR Sick?
Call Quick
COY'S VCR
REP,MR ·
992-4507·

"""

SPRING IS IN·THE AtRf HOME BUYERS ARE ABUZZt
WE NEED USTINOSII

Sunday ed1 tlon · 2:00 p.m. Fmtay.

W_oodburner, Dishes, Recliners,
MISC. IIems.
'

LONE OAK

For Free estimate cell949·2512 .

304- 304 112 .MECHANIC STREET· Older 2 sto,Y frame

p,'m.

Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00

the day before the ad 'i s to run .

Mt Alto Auction . Every Friday
7pm. Eve.y SaiiJI'day 6pm Rt 2-33
~ crossraads" . Groceries, new
merChand~sa. Ed Frazfef 930.

GftMFnware Sale! ·
25-50%0HI
Alao 1011111 paints end
brushn.
Sat., Mail:h 30, April 8
Noon·S:IIO P.M.
3 miles north of Cheater
off RL 7
Cheek It Outll _, ..,

$37,900.

All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In .

• Tree Trimming
• Mowing (Residential
and commercial)
• Shrubbery
· Maintenance
1 Odd jobs per request

AID GIFTS 1'\!'., ,~ ·~ADVERTISING'

PRICE REDUCED- Pomeroy· Have you ever wanted to own
a Mini Farm with a nice 1 1/2 story home? Well here lllsll
6.67+ acres of ground-partially le~ed. nice garden area and
·a great yard. Hoine has 3 bedrooms, nice large living room,
bath, utility room, kitchen and dining room. Close to town yet
all the extra ol Country Living. AU thla can be youra for

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

1tems. One large bo11 or old teners

CERAMICS

be
.

Yard Sale

70

L..\.)l'N CAllE

DOWIUIDEI

POMEROY· 2 Story Older Home with ornate wOOdwortc.
some stained glass windows, 3 bedrooms, kitchen, u-;ng
room, dining room, firepi~~C~t, bath, H.W. gas heat. Carpet and
Hardwood flooring. SmaH out building, front and side porch.
River VIew. Alittle TLC this home could be a real auty. ,
.
ASKING $22,100.

lost: long-haired white dog wiU'I
black face and rear. curly ta11 .
"Sn'C&gt;kia", 614·985·4235.

614-992-7643

BIB ROOftiO aad

OFFICE 992·2259

Found Or Seen, Reward, Vernon
&amp; Ellen Houck, 61-4 · 25e - 1967,
61 4·-446 -9638, Your Hetp Would

LARRrs

-·-

Real Estate General

An ID Tag On Collar, Name G;z.
mo. Missing From Eureka ArM. If

FREI: ESTIMATES

(No Sunday Calls)

•

Lost A Small, ~ala, Brvwn &amp;
White Long Haire~ PupPW'. Has

A.M.·?

• Trail. Rides
•Training
• Boarding
• Lessons

ont·

~ew Homes • Vlny! Siding New
. Garages • Replacement Windows

985-4473

4-46·4084.

·4 P.M. 5~ Garfield Avenue,

BI.SSELL BUILDERS, INC•

I

Lost and Found
Found : Small Black And Wh ile
Dog On LeGrande Blvd, Can't
Keep, Need To Find Owner I 6 14·

lost: man's leather wallet , c,pn tains important papers, keep
money, Pamida vicinity, Robert
Snowden, 61"" 7,.2-3051 .

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-3954 or 985-3418

'

LUNCH
MASON,
Res.- 773-5785 Auction Center 773-5447
•
AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON 1166
Teima: Caeh or CheCk wllh Poalt!ve ldentiflcallon.
JljOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS OR ~OSS OF
PROPERTY..

985-4422

WE HAVE A· I TOP SOIL FOR SALE

CONSTRUCIION
•New Homes
'
' •Garages
'
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

60

Dirt• Sand

Umestone, Sand, Gr11vel, Coal &amp; Water

··-·

Moved, No Pelo. Mind Br..d All
Sholl, Pluo Bag 01 Dog Chow.
304-1182-21124.

Be Much Apprec:ialedl .

Limestone • Gravel

Wt OFFER GENERAL HAULING

ROBERT IISSEL~
In Memory of
Jennifer D. Friend
and her daddy
Jeffrey D. Friend
lwant to see my
J~sus look upon his
face.
There to sing forever
of his saving grace.
On the street of glory
let me lift my voice.
Cares all past- I'm
home at last.
Ever to rejoice
And ·he showed me a
pure river of water
of life, clear as
crystal, proceeding
out oflhe throne of
God and of the
Lamb.
The Family

R.L. HOLLON .
TRUCKING
SERVICE

MODERN Ull'ri!IOI

!11M.- TFN

11118.

60

We will W!lrk within your budget
Ph. '113-9173
FAX 773-5861
108 Pomero Street
Mason, WV

94&amp;-2168

Gu Furnace Needs A pule RaP•ir, 814 · 381·1 .. 72", 814 -388-

IS&lt;Spm.

"No Job Too LB~ or Too Small"

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downapouta
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Pupa, To Gi Ve8Way, 11 4·379·

21911.

To good raaponalbte homes only,
pure labrador RettieYer puppies,

&amp; FAIRICIIION ·

• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Omamen.tal
Sleps -Stairs, Railings, Patio Furniture, Fireplac;e
items, Planter hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stulfll

ROOFING

Dropped Small Doo &amp; 6 Wk 01&lt;1

3 male &amp; 1. · lholl. wormocl
&amp; Ve• checked, e14·992·3879 ai-

Authorized AQA Distributor

I

~d Pup-

piK8144t8 4"2

Six month ahon-haired mh:ed
bread. female, beautiful reddishbrown, weigh&amp; oW lbs.• 814-992·
11815.

114..2512

DUMP TRUCK

. ·-

Colh &amp; Gat. .n

~213.

21&amp;83 BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 45n1

Kinds of Eorlh Work

8t4·~711,-7P.M .

Puppy, Approx. 8 Wttkl Old,
Pwl Ell&lt; Hound &amp; Pitt~. &amp;14·

UO.OO/HR. .

•:;

FOODLArJ[; c,pr \ lf•l ,...OLPrHJ J,pg

l ,'rJ ''''

-

All

'

"·A.

ilOfilfd.~J

WELDING

Ull)estone
Bulldozing and
Backhoe
Services ·
Houae Sites and
Utilities

Mill

$3.99 per min.
Must be t 8 yrs. ·
Serv-U (619) 645·8434

·:. Jenti•l Classifieds
•992·2156
"'. "
...· .·~----------~------------------~

1.'() 1n

·H&amp;H
SAWMill

ONE .- ON ·ONE!

1·900-446-1414
EXT.3694

··--264-6391~~U.

CHEAPER RATES

Howald L. Wrlt-1

palarl. . let n do It
'

evenlnpor

94,.3013 Phone
94..2011FAX

1/t&amp;'lfn

raka ... ,...... of

...........

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
15 Yrs. E&gt;cp. Lie. - lno. ow-: Fllcl&lt; Johnson
· Fri!e E1timatel

$3.8t per niln.
Mutt be 18 yra.
Serv-u (Itt) 848 8434

8:00 a.m. • 3:30 p.m.
VInyl &amp;Alum. Siding.
VInyl Repleeement,
Window., Blown ,
lntulatlon, Storm
Door!t. Storm.
Wlnclowa, Gart~gea.
Free Eatlmalel

~- a-, G.,...es.
Addllloel, Badia,
Klkhflll, DecU, Sldl....

Serving S.E. Ohio ll WMI VJrsjlnla
Toll Frw 1......72-6t87
441 9416

YOU IIOWIU

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT ·1192-2772
Olflce Hours: Mon.-Fri.

C~ Smoll Dog, FtOIIIe, I
Year O ld. GOOd With Children ,

Conta&lt;tlledaty Howtr)'
594-3710days, '1)1.7231

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

IUUIIFUl WOIIII
AIIWAIIIHTO
IUIFIOII

J&amp;L INSULAnON ·

......... l'er all types . ,

·~

BENNEnS

FrH Estlm11te•

good hlmlt, .,. 115 .,.7,

RO'Otttk.

rrlfll , . ,.,.. .t . . . . to IMck, up

CALL NOW!

,.,,...

•'

I; itWIIItt-for l-'11 I lnllalllli£NL
l'rM!stliF .. II
fW¥010112

367..()266 - 1-800-950-3359

LIVE!'.

. lmRIOR·EmRIOI

.' .

Fua-.AI~

Owner: Ronnie .Jon••

. •Sr'llfl mD.

'

. ..

4 yr. okl m.le BMMn Hound to

cw

-wltii ..... :Jt
yean uperlalcle now

~~co.~~-+:::~~!~==red Houalng

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 YeGI1 E1perience • liuured

MEN

WHITE PINE ROUGH
SAWED LUMBER.
1xt, h8, 2K4, 2xt
8':10' 30e a ft.
14'-11' 35¢. ft.
Alao IIVIIIIabla

l
'

WICIS ,
HAULING
G1'11Vel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

(814)11112-61535
1 tn-2713

•

low . . .)

Umestone,

•Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

••

EASTMAN'S

6MIIr5P.M.

*·-· .

.

tal units will be pretellfed. Included
1re caab, savinp bonds, trips, Ud .
acholarships worth more than
$465,000, inclttdiaJ the opportwlity
to pa'licipg~e .in lbe International ~ence and Engineering Flit..
·'

I

TYSONJttOLLY FARMS

Gaf .

...., ln.,_l'll HIMIM lroltlft

•

I

Kindergarten registration in the
Eestern and Southern local school
· · districts gets underway Thursday
· . with registration and screening at
• Chester Elementary. Registration at
. Tuppe11 Plai~s Elementary will be
held April 19 with Southern Local
· Kindergarten following on April 2S
· and 26.
Children who will be five years
old on or before Sept. 30, 1996 are
.eligible IO auerienindergarten during
the 1996-97 school year. 'J1tis year,
registration and Screening for new
kindergarten students will be con.: dueled during April in Eastern and
· Southern school districts.
Please call or visit one of the
above listed schools to ilrrange for an
• appointment for kindergarten registration. 1be registration and screening process will progress more
: smoothly for children and p&amp;fents
· when you make an appointment for
your child. To make appointments
: call Chester Elementary at 98S-3304,
Tuppers Plains Elementary at 6673310 or Southern Kindergancn at
949-2664. '
Please bring child's birth cenifi, cate, Social Security catd, and immunization records to registration.
Children should have had four
· DPT, three polio, one MMR and one
TB skin test before entering school.
School nurses will be present at registration to answer any-questions concemlng immunization requirement.
School pe11onnel will assess children's hearing, speech, physical and
language abilities. Information about
· ~h child's performance will be prolvided to parents at a later date.
1 Information obtained_ during the
·registration and screemng process
:.•allows-school staff members to plan
· aciivities dial will make a child's fi111
ear of school successful and enjoy, ,IIJie,
I
' Parents are urged to call their
. school as soon as p()ssible and make
. an appointment to register their child
for kindergarten.

Guido H. Stempel III, distinguished professor of journalism and
director of the Bu.sh Research Center
·at Ohio University, will be honored
by the E.W. Scripps School of Journalism at a banquet May 17.
The banquet, to be held at the
Sportsman Restaurant at 510 W.
~ Union St. in Athens, will begin with
·· a reception· at 6:30 p.m: and will be
followed by dinner at 7 p.m. The dinner will condude with remarks by
Ralph Izard, director of the School of
· Journalism, as well as remarks by stu' dents, alumni and fellow faculty
members.
Stempel, who will retire in June,
joined the Ohio University faculty in
·J96S. He served as director of the
· School of Journalism for eight years,
director of the school's graduate program for nine yem, and director of
the journalism hono11 program for 15
.years. He was nained distinguished
professor in 1982.
Along with editing and contribut-..
:ing to many publications and jour:nals, including 17 years as editor: of
·Journalism Quarterly, Stempel has
'worked with the Scripps Howard
'News Service to conduct seven
national public opinion surveys on a
variety of topics since 1992. Articles
based ori those surVeys have appeared
in more than 100 newspapers.
Stempel has received numerous .
awards, including the Eleanor Blum
Award for Distinguished Service to
Resean:h . and the Outstanding Service Awird, both from the Associadon for Educati.on i.n Journalism and
Mass Cornmut1JC81ton.
He received his bachelor'.s and
master's degrees in joum~lism fro~
Indiana University and hts Ph.D. m
mass communication from the Umveriity of Wisconsin.
..
'The cost forlbc banquet as $25 per
penon. 'lbole intemted m auendi~g
the banquet should ~on~t Jackie
Beanea-Hanning at diC E.W. Scnpps
School ofJ~ 6141593-2S90,
before May I.'

Gkla If
I ._, Ohl 0.. ftlan ._. I

40

ANNOUN CEMENTS

EMPLOYMENT
SERVIC ES

110

Help Wanted
$·WANTEO·S

10 people who need to lose
weigh! &amp; make money, to try new
patented we ight -loss product
304·773-5083 24hrsJday.
'st ,OOO Week ly Processing Mail
Free Into. Send Sell -Addressed
Sramped Envelope : Express
Oept.131 , 100 East Wh1 testol'le
Btvct. Su•te 148-345. Cedar Park

TX 78613.

005

Personals

SWM In Hio Mid 30's Ll,es QUiet
Evening•

AI Home, MO'IIIes,

Church And The Ouldoo•s. Seek·
ing SWf. Age 25· 4Q With Some
Ot - The Same lnteren Please

Mail Reaponae To : P.O. BoJ 262.
Gallpolls. OH 45631 .

--

30 Announcements
RockiP&lt;Ingl GrHnerlea, 36279

Rockap(lnga Rd., Pomeroy. Hong.
lng' btli..lt, btlddi011, Yltltllbf8
plonil, 114-1112-2182.

$35,000 1YR. INCOME F'l:ltontiol.
Reading Book s. Toll Free Ill 800·
696'9778 E•t. R·2814 For DelaJis.
" POSTAL JOBS '
': .arling $12.68 ... tHr. + lknelils
For E•am Af'ld Application Info.
Call 1-334·470·7227, EXI, 395, 8

A.M. :g P.M. 7 Days.

"ATTN : l'oiN Ploasam•
Postal PoajlionS. Petqnem fulllime for clerk/sorters. Fuil Benefits . For axam, appl lcalion and

salary lnlo call: 708-264·1839
.

3670. Bam 10 Bpm.

e....

1

�The Ody s................ 11

NEA Crouword Punle
PHII.UP

--·-.
..... -·-_3 __ __
.......1_.-__
.. -......
............ --.-.-.c:oo.-___
_
..................
_......,_2_
...
_
--.... -........
_..,..,.
~

'

IOI'.Ainl

STQIMGfTAMIS3,_._

-.a.BiiiAIII
·-1177-

......... AM.,_ En•"'iNt,

lilotJII lluiiWI
tor Sill

••a..•y ;P
--~---,.,..,
et+a.te~t

21s:t.

IM&gt;-._..,. at

J wn• . - . &amp; .._ T- aNI,.,.. --~

2'! f •

,...., _ _ I

, . E-..t GT.. .......

1Wo '*lf"OCNn n....- on COIMIOt
Sno1 ill Awow., St25 .....~
. ,_ _ _ Sflnl.

--. ... -...;.... .

1.,.711_ 7ll14 Ex·
..... S B i - - . t - . . _
Eloclrlc Willi 8acl&lt;up Gao llel~
ttml -

N:! 1 2 FvtciiM On 3 112 ure
Wa aillf LCM C._. Ta Gallipolis

--

....

.....-.5&amp;t;

tWill Sail S&lt;lpefote) 114·448·

ill,_

......

...,
.......I -&amp;
ra,.,encet
deposit.

1111. ...-. oir,
ta

~

••112

· 1' 2211 .........
..-_ I3,0DO lrm. eu IIQ IIIII

-..w

lltlfardE_,uc.2•~ -

A1CC

Aeti••""' Block t a -

--

520

·~ rtO:S

.tor Salt

"87S.._,_ _ _ fl,.
bod
14'~ o45"" ...__ ~
"

-

•.,. _ !""""-"-..-

...... -..a-·.-.....
916-3111'12 - · ·
W llejlioM, .,.; trlilor. 17, -

112 Bath"'
$ Dl'lt J MaC ill Pbii*GfO

530

111111 Galaxy 11 Ft Open 119,._
1JD liP. 110. - ·· Cr-. Ga·

-·'"'_ ..... ___
.... - . . . Swllo, ...... -

lluyorMII. R I 11210 E. - . - . 0r1
'% I .,_ Hews: U .'l. ...
&amp;m. • 1:00 ....... SOnllor 1 :DO •
ll:llllp.m.e1..-.:zsa.

• 000. 30t IM! 2'115.

-~- ~~~=======;
•••
tiYG-1 t N~ :I

22FtC-2!501W'JoM.
son law Hra.. Slwuu• oom eon..
tiDr\ S10.500, 81~- 114-

run And Pan·n-. 1..,.....,

·•u

. r.. r •

44~. :

intJS.. 5and Raw... &amp;

letTct: 88311, ..,.
·0 Fii 'I Dlltr 1i1IUne, 125 Thifd'

.. Of_.., ...

......

OH..t5131 ,

a

Plot li.._,cil And Con
r6M
Slanol _ . _ ApJiiclotiono
• aihtte PWU a Alec t n 0.
per~~~~e~~r. 511 S.cond ~.•

'

Home'i"ypilll, PC u M r S -

145.000- poramlll. caa •·
1110'513-4343 En 8-1131&amp;

·----- ....

.. __

1511p S..ro ricfintl - .

"

:---.

--IIMiiil-·...-

1225;
All - · "'Good
..... Ot4-2!!&amp;-1Z13.

*' 1 * · •·

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

3F -trlc - · good conol,
..,._.7Sa15

_._,_..P*•za.
~--uw·-~~-···• ·
f

I'""" -· -·-.

cond304.. ""
oll. - l e o . - l i r m.

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

-.5532.

E

-·'
TGorla.St25,11.__..7R

720 1l'ucks tor Salt

..

V'

H

I

•

.,

~I'VE: ewt \.WnNC. IN 1111'S
~Y ~ F&lt;:~R ll-\11:.€E

WltL :iQ'I\f,ONE::

•·'

Allpa.u

.

,

~

.

.

..,

'1ro AAVE: 'lO ~~ 11\t--T · OH, N'ID B'I'W£ 1-Jf&gt;..Y, f.\~ llm.l·
.....,., .. I&lt;J€. P.f\1£ ~ ~lL
IN"' ~rr~. w~ f1Nte&gt;m61VE
R£/&gt;0'( fC(&lt;:. YOO !
~IOI&lt;:I'TY TO 0C MDST

Most bridge experts come from a sci·
entlflc background, none more so than
Dr. George Rosenkranz. He is ar·
guably the leading scieatist in Mexico.
He and his team put Syntex Corp-oratioa on the pbannaceutical map with
their synthesis of, for example, the
contraceplive pill and of cortisone.
Dr. Roseakranz is definitely
Mexico's leading bridge player. And .
he is especiaUy renowned for the linene._s of his rhiilal organ for finding the
best opening leads. He certainly smelt
out the best attack on this deal.
North, via his transfer bid and jump
to three no-trump, offered South a
choice ofgamea.
Sup~ West leads the club three .
After East wins the first Irick with the
king, then whatever he returns, South
will get nine tricks via two spades,
four hearts, one diamond and two
clubs.
If Weat opens with the diamond two,
South takes.East's jack with his king
and drives out the heart ace. Because
. of South's good spots, the defense
cannot get more than two diamond
tricks. Again the contract makes.
However, Dr. Roseakraaz started
with the unorthodox spade eight! The
declarer won with dummy's king and
played a diamond to his king. After
winning with the ace, West returned
bls other spade. And when in with the
heart ace, West switched to a club.
Before South could coUect nine lricb,
the defenders had five: two spades,
one heart, one diamond and one club.
To make the contract after a spade
lead, declarer must win with dummy's
king and lead a low club toivard the
qlleen - a double-dummy play (a line ·
only likely to be found If declarer can
see all 52 ~s&gt; .

dilianara, Disc Mowers, Disc

.._., Conditionen, Fera. .. '"1 Fl&gt;"' Ronaar 2.3 s SpeM.
Equiprnenl Sai.S And Sar•l... 111K. $5,000,,114 2415 •
Altizer Farm Supply, 814· 245StR
,

71S-2300. En

. Jol'tn Deere ManLtte S~rHder,

teSIM&gt;ro LX,

..........

40 Gloncee
41 Apiece

4Z HouMfuel

43-44 Wei felling
aound

41 Depend (an)
~'I'Jpealcoda

·eo:::lkid
. ..
.
so
Golllt
52 Roman
bronze
53 Actor Kltr11111

w

' 8.

OAX

NDZ8 0 ,

s

8

LDHSYDK

"

The Tteosure You
the
Sovlnrs You'll Find In the
Closs# fled Section.

a:.,.
.,

· ~~~~~~~~~~~~==

-CiiJ--

s-, On Tools,

EOE. a1211121.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL
Pluliiblng •
Ill nav

..,,

.,.__.lett.
Fll\:lllcll.lhd

P8, AC, 5 ,,....., -

liSE$ C&amp;liftOilEAiiR·
•LMII EN;:£ EIIIERI'MES

-. ,._,Ail

-••

-1-

It' •

!!.&lt; .

FtWE.-..,1-81.-_
111 •• LLhWV .......

71

-.-c..,.,...,
~

C

'tflojilalft~'Ua- ........

8t4_J.,. ...........

t150 CllawrOIOI

Thurldly, Apri11ti, 1996

Rl.........

..
sc. ...- -·· PS,
:u
lire,"""""'"""
V-8, otlta,-

0oor

....

. . ......

- aiiC.'
• ......
C4IMM
' .. IIIMifU.
Md nr .

AMMf. l ............ tt4-

Elooi I I W'JIIIIIE,
1-

/

-..Kl

-W D 8 0 S 0 A

RP

VHBEF.
ZSF
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I don'l wanl 10 embarrass any other catcher by
comparing him with Johnny Bench." (Manager) spart&lt;y Anderlon.
·

_'_::_~:"'_u_•'_S_@,~~~..-~~s·
•

I

....
WOlD

Reorrongo lo.,.n ol tht
fovr ICrGII!blod -d• be-

low to lontt lour -do.

I

OMINOT

I

FEYEB

. I ·1

I'

I .

I!

.

.

e

.

"'

~

~~

.

r have a

poor memory for
keeping events in sny head, but
I remember vividly·what 1would
rather ••.•••
Complete

th~

chuclclo quoted

by filling in the mining words

you do•eiop from stop No. 3 belo.,..

PRINT NUMBERED lETIUS IN
THESE SQUARES

I

SCIWMETS ANSWERS

LOT.

,..,..,0 ., ..

710 Aulas tor Salt

XZ D

L R 0' X

NKDOLBO

WDFFBADF .'

·B N R C X

TOO,
GC*PIE ..

.

410 Houlll tor .....

plecee

LIKE '1'0\1

ASTRO•ORAPH
' ..

5512.

eymbal

6 UNSCRAMBlE
ABOVE lEIIERS
TO GET ANSWER

I

.REALlY

L o c a l - - .............. Call
(614J, 048-de70 Or (114) 237·
tMM Raters w• .,,. ooflino.

·w::..-ooo,e,.-...

21 lrWifiMn

31 Ally.'a deg.

Glamor - /,)rink· Hobby · Fellow- BORED WALK

After starting a diet program my neighbor announced
'In Attaining better health usually involves taking
BORED WALK.".

a

IWEDNESDAY

•a,

20Lellder

31

•

linplovtllitlllla

820

11AIMft-

·~
33-

II I I I I
e
I

ii81i1oo-lttoa:;;;m;;.;---

1trW111S.

121111 •• ·~111*1
11,_..

~=:b

RHESE

'

- - .Sleeps
4.
L
- ,·. .n. Ft.
$14.-.
&amp;14-

Or.cac 11' ..................

•...,. 141 13M.

_

21 Wrfllr
Anllll-

.

::££.. /1'-£

111.11

--

Pew

3NT

!.

:·.

1Mjl41-11;s

-·..r..

c....

Gehl Round Bolon, -

wanted Prior Military With leu
TMn 3 Years Btaken Senft
And •bJCNable [)iacMrge Code
Ca" 114· 441-- 1304·523·
2105.

FilS fn"T

2t

·

NOW-

.........
,......
c.........

Puct
Puct

I--T,5.........,..;;_.,,':'6..;,·1,....::;-,.....-I
. ...J.
L-.L._..t.-..1.-..J.l-..L

.-,1 1500

r.••·

11 ,..., _

23 Po IIIII
24 fltytng
Ill PC. .

Rtl.c ESTATE

Alii""'

UU I lJ OM

• Watah
rc 1 • -.-....
1 Foalblll'e ·

GR E MR E

1351. ~~ Hoorll-

SetH Rep Fot

57 _ _ ,..

Pol--

l Indeed
• Chap
7 FUI'IIIelleG wllh

Heltllllt

on•...,

rAUillg
• .-~-~~"'""
Morii!IIIO _...., OWn
troura..c.;; (ilatl)

'.

, THE BORN LOSER

~

Wlnnet~eeo

·=
.
.
.
.,....1111....

1 TUI
2 Cllrue '"'"
SC Rill . . . ..
4

22F... Irom

•

10 set~ . Pwt-T - I. Filii-

11o E x , . - N

....

••n 'TefrY. ..., -inod.
- · 14,GIID.- IR3313
1111

VI1rll•»
10 II lid
12 Ancllnl
Gennln
34 8aroelt
• Cltwollt-

40 liMit batlcl

-71.

Wi cUULid... IIJ l 9

-

--

7!10 . c. ........
llolor !tor II

--c.. .,... Wlltt s.-o. sm.

......... _

.

-·1-~

~.

ow _ _ ......, .

~ Cllt14-441 •1t7S

.

D I R ,..... Riplor. Wit -.372-

610 F.-m F"UUIII..,ll
.....,

-lallliiES'hdlte ...

- • 7"

c;.na;.

New, gu lanka, one ron tnn:k

FC.Rf,l SUPP,IES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

...... 4 5 ......

II

\OOAY

•" '

14 car hauler, ta·. 11.3110. 114-

1tn Fonl T6-lble 11 Fl Alum.

-A._...,e,._2!11 :i!LS.

· St2S; 1. .1 3.0

• - 2.2 -

'85

lluotpllof.-- For Far-

.CLAS.&gt;

llo"" SZSO: · ttll 2.2 llo...,,

.....__.cur.,
,...............
...,.,._,_

IIIIa n I ; .. ......,., ..
1te F - Fair tiDIIalr1g Acl
d -1 - - - U I I g o l
JD..-us ..... p f -..

1

Co. NMdo 4 , _ _

~

7&amp;0

• n r ioor

~

I.,

111 Ft

........,4 • • 1&amp;..

Expet'.encect Uotor~c:r:.V' &amp;
...,_, W.terc:rah
lea.

C:F;I

-

L.,.;-~~~.. .
tiO ·HP, Goarl ~.Price Aoo-

llerchlndlse

-

·

I

11117 Cliation .Open -

Me 'X c111neous

C ,,

A6AIH!

'(OU TIIINK?

on

&amp;t_,32.

-lfiiii,S4,111Ut~.

~

LEFT TilE PEN6LIIN

WEL.I., WI-IAT DO

·

ers inboardlautboard, 121 hp:,

F......... 114-3117·1524.

I

By Phillip Alder

750 . . . . &amp; IIIDiorl

Rot-..., Pvpo, c......... liM, Sbol&amp;. WOrmed, 814·191·

Geo--.Piua~ l

...

S3.7110.et..flopndia 200X

....... toK

57 - -

Lead from length?

•••

t..S.....,.Ti: . . . Wt,.x•.

.....-.

An""""

Opening lead: • B.

1\W!!.TSOKE'I'S
\)JTI!NIN'!!

.u.. ~

1- _Bedroom N. . Extta' Nic•t

t

!NT
2•

••

IOI'Rtnl·

. . ,.,. . . .

:Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
8oa&amp;lr
Wnt Noli• Ea1t

•

BARNEY

·a

TRAGTOR II

50t(
miles. ..... - ·
scrato:lle~--slde.

2

n

1-"

no peta.

1111 Gcwefnor 14170 Wittt 1~

Opr

"" "

WE GOT A BRAND-NEW

94a;-21M4mWoga.

1

. . . ,.,. ea. 13,500.

DD

tK Q I 3
eQ72

ttl7 ...,..

c_,, -... sz.soo. 304·

O"I!&gt;Z714or-.e15-t517.

"-no-. Rellpator: Furnl&amp;hed,

Out, 2 le*ooml,

•K J 9

3 2
tJ. 5

lloullr
. eA I 7 2
•K J

, ne

Dlpolif:Rn ' 111.11t •• a57.

.,••• 3

.,.,..

noli-

rafritac

•s

-~ ~·· -.

7 "'......._ t _1...,742-

••• 3143.

- r l l r.,....-.y-.,
, . . . . UDWe &amp;

I I

•A I 4
tAI04 '2

~

....,, .............. ir t &amp;1

•r:ut11 .,...

.. Clnll

271nua•-

EeR
eQ J tOrS

•••

.-·.

~

.,.sao..
,.. c ssw:
14.h. ss.- . ,... F..., , -

1240-1300.

11..-.m1.

lf.!OO&lt;~SIQI.

ca

1

. . . . . . (LIIItn)

s4

. Well&amp;

··"'··

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

~

a

R~'- ­

,_....,. ___
7

eA

MUIM1ct

111at .. 17 Cetlllr
11
20 Ftlld

1311Ueh .....

tV7

..•
·::IV

Ol-17-M

•K ~ 5
•Q 10 • 7 •

EEK&amp;:MEEK

I

SeW Ill

,..,. OWe

No

.,....

..

,. a

1 ....,. I
41 I t
l.l.pinol
I " 'IIIII
41--11c:-ttotlriiiC7 41"-'•• 14
k... .....a

IUOO: It~

J1111C&amp;11-

42D ..... tlllw

, . . , _ , - wiring, _

* .. air,

_.,....•

·--~··

It 1

•u

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

11Pallt....
,....,
1_. Dll IMpart I H - pCUICI
11 Pu u'rn
..

-.17... - - . ....

~

•r. t3J,5eo _,;allll, •••·

II. "J

e Z·ft -

••c r

.................
,.•1'
......... ..... ,I
-.
~

Co

to,o. - . POll -.,.,., .,... - -.
.....,_
,.._C*).,.......
..v..-.-,..
.....

1 , 'a4., 111

......,;

--··'
..
....,_...,
..-.....-.
···-·----·
_____
------=
=. . . . ....
........
-·- ......... .......
tt~

- . - ......... bnhU'

ALDER

ACRal I

,I

il . The As1ro-G1raph'23-0cr. 23) If someone
Matchmaker (nstanlly reveals Wltich signs lr1es to Interest you In a business propos·
are romantically perfect for you. Mail at today, ,let him or her make the fil'$1
$2.75 to Malchmaker, c/o this newspa- mow. Your poaillon could be weakened
per, P.O. Box 1758, Murray HiU Stalion, nyou appear too eager.
.New YOtk, NY 10t56.
SC.ORPIO (Ocr. 24-NO¥. 22) II your mate
TAU.RUS (April 20-Mey 20) H an lmpor· opls lo take lhe lead loday, accepla suptant maner requires your peiSOI!al touch • porting role. As long as lhe oulcome Is
today, disengage yourself from Involve- mutually beneficial, tt will not maner .who
ments with others and make this Issue direcla lhe Proiect
your priotity.
SAGtnAiliUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Do
GI!IIINI (...y 21-Ju1111 20) You mighl yourself a favor IOday by gelling up 1rom
require soliludf! today in order to p81form the couch and becoming physically
your best Try to WOfi&lt; atone in a place &amp;clive. Seek an acilvlty Wltich will take
free from oulside ·lnlelferllf)C8.
you outside.
CANCER (Juno 21·July 22) Social CAPRICORN (Dec. ~.11)Associat·
Involvements wltll familiar ~ lnendt.will , lng wilh friends whose exuberance Is
provide enjOymeniiOday. You might nol infecliOus will prove a good prascription
feel as comfortable In the company of lor a fun day tOday. Make an effort to
newer, more ~ acquaintances.
avoid duHards.
LEO (July 2S.Aug. 221 A peraot\ with AQUARIUS (.len. 20-l'eb. 11) You can
whom you ~requon~y :11r fi,ae might find draw from a wide range of slrength'a
much to edmire 1n you today. Tltil could · today, "and any of"- can helP you to
mark the beginning of a,_ ldnd of ret&amp;· coltlplete t - endeavora. P- your·
tionsllip.
. . . Hyou want to Nn a good race.
VIRGO (Aug. 22 ltpL 22) Try 1101 to lei PIICEI (Fa 20 lllrctl 20) Wilen deal·
youraell be overwhttmed by details lng with olllera IOday, your matn1111r will
IOdey. You w11 ..,. bel'-&lt; wyou corrtpt• put lhem at · They Will your •
hand lhe big p1c1un1 " - o f juat a r.w lhlblllty and 1w1 compeltecl to treat you

·
· Y.our .,..r experieneee have· taught you
how to build upon flrm foundatiOM. Y011
·:~will continue tp do thit In the coming
.. ...... llld u a ..ut.·you '!'iii have...,.
oppoiiUitillaa to •uooaed. '
: AIIil!l (Me,ch ~1·AprH 11) Stabilizing
:: ~ .lthoilfd prevail today In areu
end circumete,_ thaf have been dte·
;~ lalaly, pllllcullrly in your ltt•ICIII
ldlllrL Koow whelt to loOk fOr romanc:e · brUih IIIOI!ae. ·
I

,.

APRIL 17l

In a limier !11ltltll8r. ·

I

·'

•

�•

•

.P9 12. The O.Dy Sentinel

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio ·

COCA
COlA

·2 2 ANNIVERSARY SALE

s

POMEIOY, OIL
.

ISOZ

s

..J//I..J//IELMAN
APPLESAUCE

SUPERIOR MOUNTAIN

.Chuck Bologna •••••~••••
O~CAR MAYER ..

,

.·

150Z.

s

$

159
Hot·· Dogs ••••••••••••~·..... . ·

P~RK COUNT~Y STYLE

.

.

Breast •••••••••••••••••••••~·

U.S.D.A. OIOKE BoNELESS BEEF
U.S.D.A CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

169
Spare R1bs ••••••••••••••••
GROUND
$ ·199
'
. ·; $109

Beef ••••••••••••••••••••~~••• ·

WESSON
OIL
410Z.

'

$ 15 9

$ 129

Chuck Roast ••••••••••••~. ·

'

Sportt, Page4

ZESTA
··cRACKERS

,

HIUSHIRE:~::•••••••••••~••••• $ J39

VOL 46, NO. 247
21actlane, 12 ......

.

·.

Strawberries•••••a:;••••••
BLUE BONNO

3
Veget~bles •••••~~.-.tt:-: ·
2
or corn)

7·Up

'.

.·

Products ••~~.~.'!.":••
'

NOODLE SOUP

'
·

10.75 oz.

~

.

$

KRAFT MAC&amp;
CHEESE

s

,,

7.250Z

&amp;PLEASE

..
•

.

..

...

&gt;

•

99(

20QZ.CAN

$ 09

Jumbo Spread:.••••••••• 1
BORDEN AMERICAN CHEESE·
2
.
sa·
•
/
SlICes ••••••••••••••••••••
12oz.

LIBBY (Green

.

'

By TOM HUNTER

, Sentinel News Staff
. ·The Eastern Local Board of Edu.
cation approved changes to the
schoql calendar for tlie month of
·May, adding days io the end of the
· 1995-96 school year to compensate
for days lost to bad weather over the
~inter, during Wednesday's regular
:"meeting at Eastern High School . .
•
The board unanimously approved
a motion changing the calendar
according to recommendations frpm
the Eastern Local Education A$soci- ation, after teachers voiced concerns
su!Tounding the effectiveness of hold·
: ing school on SaiUrday's 10 make up

1

·

rhe lose days.
"The reachers feel thar witll, the
high number of absences, we cannot
construclively utilize Saturday's as
make up days. Adding days 10 the end
of rhe calendar ,would· be of more
educational benefit to both lbe stu·
dents and faculiy," said teacher Katy
_Peyton, in response to low attendance
at the first of lwo scheduled Saturday
sessions which was held April 13.
Under the revised calendar, slu·
dents will auend classes on May 28,
29, 30. 31 , and I une 3. Teachers will
report for their last day on Tuesday,
. June 4. The original dar,e for stu!lents
final day of classes was May 30, with

.$ ,
Pizza ••••••••~~.......... 2·· 4
.
/

11

~

/

oz

s

/ /TONY'S

MEADOW GOLD

Ice

•••••••••11.cr.•••••s)

TUNA

DEL MONTE
CATSUP

6.SOL

210LSQUEm

s

UMIT
6
PLEASE

c

'

· , Ohio stale legislalor Michael C. ficult slate issues. He is well respectShoemaker (D-Bourneville), who . ed by his fellow legislators, both
represents lhe 91 st House bislrict in democrars and republicans alike, for
Pickaway, Ross, and Vinton .coun- his willingness .to listen to all view·
\ies, will be the fealured guest poinrs before taking definitive ·
· speaker at Sarurday's annual Meigs stands on issues," said Sue Maison,
County ~moeratic Party Jefferson· · Meigs County Democraric Party
Jackson Day Dinner at the Meigs chairman .
County Sepior/Mullipurpose Build·
Anative of.Nipgen ip Ross Couning, Pomeroy.
ty, Shoemaker is the son of former
ShoerOOker, a 14, year veteran of Ohio Lieutenant Governor and longthe Ohio House, cu!Tently serves as time state legislalor, the late Myrl
the ranking minority member of the Shoemaker. Mike is a graduate of
House ethics and elections commit- Paint Valley High School, and Capitee, and plays an active r:ole on the tal University. He received a master
education, public.. urilities, vererans degree in education from Xavier
affairs, and local govemmenl and Universiry in 1973.
township committees in the House .
Before entering the legislature,
of Representatives.
·Shoemaker was an educator on the·
·He has active fo.Jghl for educa- high school level
tional legislation during his tenure in in the Chillithe statehouse, including his role as coth~ and
l\ past chairman and member of Waverly areas.
pupii tesling and competency select He is an active
commillees to review and study the member of his
state educational system.
community,
"Representalive Mik_y Sh9emaker lhrough his
has distinguished himself as a true involvemenl
leader in the General Assembly with in church
his sb'aight forward approach to difContinued on page 3

concrete--

99
COUPON GOOD
I FOR 5 TRIPLE
COUPONS.
I

May~ I scheduled as ateacher work
. day. The scheduled Saturday session ..
for April 27 will be elimi11ated under
rhe revisions.
•
•
The change in the calendar will
also mean extra school days for the
1996 graduating class . at Eastern
· High School. Seniors will be required
to atlend classes Friday May 24'and
Tuesday May 28, in order 10 meet the ·
required state minimum days of
attendance.
Graduarion is still scheduled for
Sunday, u 8 y 26, but dt'plomas wt'll
•••
not be awarded until the days are
studen~. according 'lo
completed
disrricl
Ron Minaicl.

.'

In other matters, the board:
- heard pare111 complaints conceming discipline problems on the
dislrict bus dnven by Nita Jean
Ritchie. The board directed trans·
ponation director Arch Rose, high
5chool principal Clayton Buder, and
Minard to review the situation and
further define policy for bus disci· ·
pline.
•
• bdard complaints from a parent
concerning . behavior and co. nduct
betwee.n a faculty member at the high
school and' a studenl, and questions
·
1
concerning the policy of personne
·review
evaluations.
• approved reaffirming the board

ana

action of April tO, and offering a one ley, Pat Shrivers, Debra Pratt, .Cynyear e~lem!cd limited conb'act to thia Chadwell.
teacher William Blaine for the 1996• approved classified two-year
97 school year, with a letter of reason cMtracts for the following P;rsonncl:
to be sent to the teacher.
Glen Easterling and Diana Buckley.
• approved the awarding of two- approved a continuing contracl.
year contracts to the following teach- · for bus driver Ed Holter.
ers: Casey Coff&lt;iy, Nancy Morrissey,
- approved lhe following lndivid- '
Ginger Siders, Deedrah Simmons, u.als he added co the substitu!e teac~r
John Taylor, Tony Deem, Lolita Mor- . list for the remainder of the 1995·96
row, Sandra Needs, Sheryl Roush, school year, 10 be use!! on an as ne¢·
Dan Thomas.
- approved the awarding of fitve- . ed
andbasis
Susanonly:
Wolf.James Ryan Lemley
year contracts to the following teachR' h d Ed d f
'
Ka Lo
d J · "' be
- approved tc ar
war s o
ers: Y. ng an antce ne r.
Ohio Universily as a srudentteacher
- approved continuing contracls
,_ror;.;..;t.;;.he:...;.;fo_n_o_w..in.::g:..r""ea""c""h-er_
·s:_J_oe_B_a_i·___·_c_o_n_tln_ued_o_n...;.p""lll:.
. e-3---i
'
••

''

..

BEFORE - Thlt piCture liken In 111M lhows the Crou Mill
building In P~ lhorlly before It wae dlementled end moved
back to Recine. It 18 evident In thla photo tMt yeel'lllind neglect
hava tekan their toll In the form of broken windows and faded,
r01t8n aiding.

. AFTER- Now loc:atad In Stir Mill Park In Racine, the Cross
· Mill/Racine Museum aporta a new roof, aiding and a new, shortened profile. Doora and windows will be replaced thla y..r, and
cleanup of the work alta will completa the tWo-year project.

Mill project almost done, but some work remains :
By

Jl"' FREEMAN
near the home of Gary Norris and his
Sentinel newa staff
wife, the former Donna Cross, who
Some thought i1 would never is a. descendanr of the original builder
become a reality.
who also established Cross' Grocery
But today the Cross Mill/Racine in 1840.
·
Museum slands just as strong -- or
The lhree'slory mill was moved to
perhaps even srronger •• than it did in Pomeroy in the 1920's where it sat for
1836, and Racine Councilman Dale years along Condor Street as part of
Hart slands poised to make the final the Meigs County Farm Bureau compush toward completion of the build- · plex. In the summer of 1994, working project.
ers dismantled the .160-year-old
The mililmuseum, which now building and IJ'ansported its pieces to
stands in Racine's Star Mill Park, was Racine's Star Mill Park.
originally built. by Lucius Cross in
During the first year of recon1836 and sat for years near the june- struction, workers poured a concrete
tion of Oak Grove Road and Bow· base and set in foundation stones
man's Run Road ~ear Racine. · (some from lhe original mill site).
Relnainsoflheoriginalsirestill stand ·Last year, workers of the Haynes

Consrructi~n

Company of Middle·

port began reassembling the building,

pulling down support beams, footers
and installing lhe walls and roof.
"It was a job, but it all carne into
place;· Hart said.
Some of the original chesrnul
beams had rotted and were replaced
with new oaken beams (~hesrnur has
not been available now for abour a
hundred years) and new wood siding
was cut 10 replace lhe old, splinlered
siding.
The building sports a new profile.
shortened by 10 feet, but srill retains
three noors and the heavy oaken flOQr
. joists 3!'e located Close together, just
as in year's past, testimony to the

.,

slruclure's slrength.
•
"It's 90 percent done," said Hart.
Most of. the original windows·
have been reglazed while other panes ·
require some woodwork. Sealant for the wood siding has been delivered
and is awaiting application.
.
In addition, some outside work
remains to be done including cleanup ·
and landscaping. Hart said lhe Racine
FFA Chapler is helping on the land.. scaping rhrou gh a grant it has
received.
Whereas it was once used as grisi
mill, and later to house items and
records at the farm bureau, the edifice
• will now house memorabilia from the
Continued on page 3

House tells officials to respect property rights
divisions ought to do."
COLUMBUS (AP) Rep . .stitution provide that people who whole, " Long said.
William Batchelder's interprelation hold property·hold it inviolate except
The concept was included in the
Long said the bill is unnecessary
of the Constilulion won over the under certain restrictive takings pro- because property rights are protecrcd "Contract Wilh America" issued by
House as lawmakers voted lo make ccdures," said Batchelder, R-Medina. in borh lhe federal and srate consti- the Republican congressional candi·
dares in 1994. So far, 23 slates hav~
local and Sl1lte govemmeniS consid- the bill's sponsor.
tutions.
er hdw their acrions affect property
"What has happened as a result of
Backers of lhe bill point to envi - enacled some form of property rights ·
owners,
the growth · in governmenl and ronmenlal rules. restrictive zoning legislation. Bills are pending in mosi ·
The House voted 87·9 on Wednes· increased emphasis in government on · · and wetlands protection efforts as of the resl of ihe states.
.Ohio's version is less severe than
day ,to require the Ohio attorney gen- land use ... property rig~ls may . be examples of government actions that
property rights bills in many other ·
eral to develop guidelines based on taken away under the gutse of domg diminish the value of property. ··.
states, some of which require com.
current laws and court decisions to 'something quite different."
The bill would not affect. most pensation for any law or regularion
Larry J.,ong, execurive director of
determine what governmenlal actions
could diminish the value of a prop- thC Ohio §t!unty Commissioners . routin.e local zoning.jssues or prop- lhatlimits uses of property.
Backers in Ohi.o include the Ohio
erty. Local governments would then Associalion of Ohio, had a different erty taken through eminent domain,
which requires fair compensation to Farm Bureau Federation, the Ohio
have to review those guidelines to view.
Chamber of Commerce and the Ohio
make ~ure they are not violaling · "We have to balance the interests the owner, Batchelder said.
"II requires lhem to take a look Association of Realtors.
·
of the property titleholder with the
property rights.
before
they
proceed."
he
said.
"This
the
adjacent
property
·
interests
of
The bill now goes to the Senate . .
"The Fifth Amendment of the
United St;~tes .and ... the Ohio Con- owners and the communiry as a is lhe very sort of rhing that local sub-

EPA withdraws proposed change for,pulp mill water-pollution permit

GOOD
SAT. 4/20
NOT GOOD ON

.

/

: COLUMBUS (AP)- Joseph Daly ven by a 16-year-old girl with a sus: says he almost always carries a pho- pended license.
· to of his unborn son . lt's the only one
Prosecutors were unable to charge
: he has.
·
the girl .with the dearh of the fetus
. Daly's · wife, who was eight Mts. Dah was c;mying because
: months pregnanr, was killed in a traf· Ohio law does nor reeogllize ~ fetus ·
- lie accidenl eight months ago. The as a person.
: f~us did not survive.
Sen. Scott Nein, R-Middletown.
Daly bas since fought for a law held up the photo of Daly's son dur·
chat would allow the prosecution of ing the debate about lhe bill. The
people who kill or injure a viable baby was stillborn, and the piclure
· felus.-He got his wish on Wednesday w.S taken a \lay before his funeral.
. as the Senate overwhelmingly
Nein, who .co-sponsored tl)e bill,
: approved !he measure. ~similar bill · said the measure does not protect all .
js J!!'Jidin_g ill the House.
feruses, but only those rtJaatt:~~~ -..,
"What a trfllu1ilo'ln'fson'."''Da y ""alile to live outside the w
said uter the 30-1 vote.
bill would leave that determination
His wife, Suzainne Daly of Mid- up to a docior.
llletown. was killed Aug. IS on InterUnder the hill, those who injure'a
state 27S in suburban Cincinnati. .• f~rus could be charged with the same
Hamilton County prosecutors said crimes- they would face for harming
her car was hit by a stolen vehicle dri- a person.
·

..

·

A Gennett Co. PI IA I Pill*

Oks fetus ,b ill

.

CALIFORNIA

•

Eastern board announces change -in calendar

Shoemaker.will address
Meigs Democrats Saturday. .

HOUSE BEEF
STEW

70..

35centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, Aprll18, 1996

.

MORTON

ctwnce of rllln, high In mrd

h

lB.

•

Cloudy tonight. Low In

so.. Frl4tly partly cloUd¥,

•

.

.

•

Super Lotto:
18-35-36-37-38-41
Kicker:
845975

:State Senate .

.$

•· ,

lJ.

Chuck Steak ••••••••••••••
;.

471 .
Plck4:
8320

over Reds

99

LUCK'S
PINTO
BEANS

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

~

•
Plck3:

Accepts Credit Cards

WE RESEIYE TIE RIGII 10 LIMIT QUAIIIIIES
PRICES GOOD IIRU APRIL 13, 1996.

BONELESS CHICKEN

Cubs rally In
9th for 8-6 win ·

· 12 Pl12 OL CAN

••••., tin 5•••111'
IAM-IOPII
291 SKOID ST.

Ohio Lottery

.Wldnlldly
Cone•• morning
work I'ISUIMd on the Pomero, G111nd Prclnterulde
with the .tvwlt of 11111R 111._1 ...,ltl&amp;f.
Wdkilra CCNibwctM by Eldon W.lbum Conlb'U~ of,-.lddlepart WCII'It on the elllew.lk which wllleiiWnd along the river tide
of the
,_Icing Lot.
·

•

PoiMrov

the $1 .1 billion project They contend
it would further pollute the river with
dioxin.
·
Gov. Gaston Caperton and other
s~ officials have backed the Jiroject
jlropo~ by Parsons &amp; Whittemore
of Rye Brook, N.Y., saying it would
create more jobs.
McCoy informed the Environmental Protection Asency about the
withdrawal of his proposal in letter
llated March 14. McCoy said tbe EPA
had refused his propOsal for the perprocess.
Environmentalists have appealed mit.
the permit as p8rt of its opposition tq • Opponents of the pulp mill say
'
.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. {AP) The state Division of Environmenlal.
· Prolectlon has wilhdrawn a propOsed
change for a water-pollution pennit
for a pulp mill that would be built
· along the Ohio River ·in Mason
County.
The division's director, Eli
McCoy, had said the change would
make illegal any detectable dipxin
emitted by the pulp milL Dioxin is a
toxic byproduct of the bleaching

''

I

.
i1

'

'

'

'

&gt;

they are oulfaged over not being
informed sooner, where.as one of parsons &amp; Whillembre's auomey, David
Flannery of Charleston, received a
copy of the letter when it was sent to
· the EPA.
·
"As far as I'm concerned, it's
more inside deals," said Steve White,
director of the Affiliated Construction
Trades Foundarion. "Unless you're
an inside player ... you're ·not·
'allowed." •·
Envi(Onmentalists said they have
repeatedly ¥ked aboul lhe slatus of
th~ water permil over the last few
'

months and were told there has bee~ '
. '
no acuon.
.
"They never cell us about what's
going on,'' said Janet Fout, project ·
coordi~aror for the Ohio Valley Envi~ '
ronmental Coalition. '
Aannery said he had not seen a
copy of the letter sent to the EPA until
Wednesday.
• "It may. have been a mix-up ill my
office, but that's the trsl timer saw .
it," he said.
· Panons &amp; Whittemore has large.
ly.declined comment on the pulp miD '
project.
'

'
•-I,... __ J!. .

.: ·

''

...

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="386">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9758">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="29488">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="29487">
              <text>April 17, 1996</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
