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I

_Th_·~-n~~i~Iy_se_n_tin_e_I_______________()~~IIICIII
The Daily Sentinel

PLEA~

INSERt" YOUR
CREDIT CARD.

Ohio VaJiey.Publlshlng Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor

Larry Boyar
Advertising Director

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

TuesdiiJ. MIIJ 30. 1000.

..

PLtAS~

WAI'T:

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

PLfASf ENTtR ·
THE MAKE &amp;MOOEL
OFYOtRGAR,
RlLUNED 8Y
WUR ANNUAL SALARY.

Ireland, Wells to read
to elementary kids

VOURWAN

HAS BEEN
APPRMD..

.

. COLUMBIA,
S.C. (AP)
South Carolina's
is
first
lady
bringing some
famous friends
along when she
reads to elementary students at
the Governor's
Mansion.
· Ireland
Supermodel Kathy Ireland and children's author Rosemary
Wells wer:e expected to join first lady
Rachel Hodges today for her "Reading
with Rachel" program. Or/ the agenda
was Wells' book, "Bunny Money."
. Wells has been writing children's
books for nearly 30 years. Her most
famous work may be "Noisy Nora;'
~bout a mouse who is jealous over the

YOOMAY
FILL UP.

be pMIJiiJitfti. UU1n slruuld bt in lfuod ttult1 sdmui~tglJ.r,u, IWI JHNflll4litiu
n. opiniotu •xpressul illlht column btlow llrt , , eDftffiiJMS o/111• Olrio Vm'/IJ P11b1Uhl,..
Co. 'r rdilorial boon/, anlers oJheTWi•r troled.

NATIONAL VIEWS:

J)isgrace
Clinton continues to irritate
by playing t~e victim·

• Cbla10 lflbulie, o11 orgar~ dot1atio11: It is the ultimate gift.
But the way this system works, neither donor nor recipient can
be sure what th ey will be giving or getting.
The harvesting of organs and tissues from the recently deceased,
and their transplantation to the living, is a true blessing of modern
medical science. The donor and their kin get the satisfaction of
helping the living. The recipient can be blessed with life itself, as
when a failing heart or liver is replaced. Or a better life, as when a
failing cornea or knee joint is replaced.
But as often happens when science outruns law and custom,
blessings get mixed. The national system for distributing vital organs
is in turmoil, with some states refusing to send organs. to others in
greater need. But. that system is flawless compared to the non-system through which lesser tissues are bought and sold.... .
The Food and-Drug Administration has yet to establish a registry
of tissue banks and the products they distribute. That's worrisome
now that unscrupulous entrepreneurs, here and abroad, are paying
big money for cadavers and body parts without checking for diseases, such as hepatitis, before selling them, for bigger mo!)ey, to
reprocessors and physicians. The chain of buying and selling, moreover, is fraught with conflicts of interest, from kickbacks for coroners to finder's fees for hospital administrators.
Clearly two things need to happen: 1) The FDA should regulate
the source and quality of human tissue and tissue-products as assiduously as it does the manufacture of prescriptioq drugs; and 2) the
public must be educated, and potential donors specifically
!nformed, about tissue reuse so people can make informed consent.
•

~ TODAY

IN HISTORY

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday, May 30, the 151st day of 2000. There are 215
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On May 30, 1431, Joan of Arc, co ndemned as a heretic, was
burned at th e stake in Rouen, France.
On this date:
In 1539, Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto landed in Florida.
In 1854, the territories of Nebraska and Kansas were •established.
In 1883, 12 people were trampled to death in a stampede triggered by a rumor that the recently opened Brooklyn Bridge was in .
imminent danger of collapsing.
' In 1911, Indianapolis saw its first long-distance auto race; Ray
llarroun was th e winner.
• In 1922, the Lincoln Memorial was dedicated in Washington D.C.
;by Chief Justice William Howard Tali:.
' In 1937, 10 people were killed wheli police fired on steelworkers
;demonstrating n ear the Republic SteJl plant in Chicago.
• In 1943, American forces secured the Aleutian island of Attu from
~he Japanese during World War II .
; In 1958, unidentified soldiers killed in World War [[ and the Kore:an conflict were buried at Arlington National Cemetery.
• In 1971 , the Ameri can space probe, Mariner 9, blasted off from
·cape Kennedy, Fla., on a journey to Mars.
In 1980, Pope John Paul II arrived in France on the first visit by
the head of the Roman Catholic C hurch since the early 19th century.
Today's Birthdays: Country musician Johnny Gimble is 74. Actor
Clint Walker is 73. Actress Ruta Lee is 64. Actor Michael J Pollard
is 61. Actor ·Steph en Tobolowsky is 49. Actor Colm Meaney is 47.
Actor Ted M cGinley is 42.Actor Ralph Caner is 39. Country singer
Wynonna is 36. Rock musician Tom Morello (Rage Against The
Machine) is 31}. Rock musician Patrick Dahlheimer (Live) is 29.
Actor Trey Parker ("Newsies'') is 28.

•

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Reining in·the will of the majority

.

'

In "The Federalist Papers," Alexander
ishing the First Amendm:ent:
,
Hamilton saw no need for what came to be
" It would be the only standing constitu7
the Bill of Rights, which was added to the
tiona! amendment to expand- not curtail - .
Constitution. All our rights, he said, "must
the power of the federal government" as limaltogether depend on public opinion... the
ited in the Bill of Rights by the founders.
general spirit of the people."
Had I been pan of that Senate debate, I
This insistence that the majority is right is
would have added a quotation from Justic~
manifested by the willingness of most AmeriJackson's majority opinion in West Virgini~
cans to deprive a 6-year-old boy of freedom
Board of Education vs. Barnette:
·
so that he can be with his father in a commu"lf there is any fixed star in our constitunist dictatorship.
tional constellation, it is that no official, higl]
Consider also the recent defeat, once again,
NEA COLUMNIST
or petry, can prescribe what shall b e orthodox
of a constitutional amendment to protect the
in politics, nationalism, religion or other macAmerican flag from physical desecration.
ters of opinion -or force citizens to confes$
That March 29 vote is old news by now, but ent from all others in its guarantee of freedom by word or act their faith therein."
,
this difficult victory over the will of the of . thought is in Justice Robert 1ackson's
Agreeing with that declaration of AmerfAmerican majority - and the 49 state legis- majority opinion in West Virginia Board of canism, Sen. Bob Kerrey, D-Neb.- who lost
latures that were ready to ratifY the amend- EiJucation vs. Barnette (1943}·. The high- p;~r;t of a leg in combat in Vietnam. anp is t~e
ment had it been submitted to them- ought school class I spoke to the other day had never orny member of Congress to have earne&lt;l till'
to be revisited. There will be similar clashes heard of that decision.
Congressional Medal of Honor - has said of
·between the passions of the majority and a . ·At issue was the power of West Virginia to hls continued opposition to the flag amendsmall, brave company such as the 37 Senators expel the children ofJehovah's Witnesses from ~ent: "Real patriotism cannot be coerced." ,
Many veterans supported the flag desecra.:
who stood in the way of the flag amendment school because they refused to salute the flag.
in order to protect the Constitution.
Jackson's decision - which addressed and tion amendment, including a large number of
Sen. Orrin Hatch, one of the principal ' countered the intense will of the majority- funerican Legion members who gathered iii
champions of the flag measure, pledges it will applied to all funericans, religious and secular. Washington on the day of the vote. But other
veterans just as ardendy opposed it. Korean
return t.o the Senate floor because "it is illog- He said:
ical to ignore the feelings of the overwhelm"One's right to life, .Jiberty, and property, to war veteran Michael Salovesh declared:
'·
ing number of funericans." It surely will free speech, a free press, freedom of worship '. "Any law, any constitutional amendmelli
return, and the American Civil Liberties and assembly, and other fundamental rights :'that would call a flag so sacred that to harm 1t
Union will again lead the fight against it.
may not be submitted to vote; they depend on , would be sacrilege would be an insult to my
During the Senate · debate in March, the the outcome of no elections."
deepest religious beliefs. It would be a form of
opposition cited a Supreme Court decision. It
That is why our C.ol)stitution was not rati- forcing me to worship a strange god, and thus
was not about desecration of the flag. It was tied by the original states ~ntil it included a . yiolate what I take to be God's command~
about two clauses in the First Amendment Bill of Rights that protected the liberties of 1 ment."
freedom of speech and the free exercise of · Americans - those rights cited by·Justice 1 So also said the' children of Jehovah's WiJreligion. The ruling of the Court contains the Jackson - from both government incursion ,, ,nesses.
· .
. ,
.
.'
clearest and strongest definition of American- and the will of the majority.
But most Amen cans dtdn t get thts consttism I have ever. seeh. 1 wish it were recited
On the day the Senate was ro vote on the • tuttonal message. Nor have they yet.
•
•
• ,
once a year in every legislative body, and in all fl~g protection a~e~dment, The Washington 1
the schools across the nation - including . Ttmes, tn an edttortal, opposed the amend(Nat f!entolf IS a natwnally renowned m•tl•~ntr
coming graduation exercises.
me~t for several reasons, incl11ding this c?gent on. the First Amendment and tile rest of the B•ll of
This declaration of why this nation is differ- remmdet to conservanves who favor dimin- , · R•ghts.)

Nat
Hentoff

BUSINESS MIRROI}

Johnson~

credo for success bears emulation today
1

fatal product tampering cases involVing "
its paraging or critical manner, directly or indireCINEW YORK - He was a visionary busi- Tylenol brand.
:•··' ly."
Now framed in hundreds of executive offices . He quotes Johnson as saying "We are not
nessman, as passionate in concern for product
and customer as he was disdainful of short-term around the world, the credq begins, "We believe 1 interested in building wealth but. in building a
·!
goals, bo;tStful ads, and anxiety about his com- that our first (italics) respo'nsibility is to our business for the long term."
Customers - Our products must always be
Johnson also would have been distressed by
pany's stock price.
.
"He would have difficulty adjusting to busi- goo~. and we must strive to make them better the gyrations of the stock market and the pre"
ness in 2000," says Larry Foster, who knew him at lower &lt;:ost•." Johnson saw it as .essential to occupation of managers whose income is tied
to it. ·
weD over many years. "He would be unnerved success.
by the short-term orientation of many compaThat document led to other finely condensed
"He rarely looked at the price ofJohnson &amp;
nies."
statements, one of which Johnson called "Our Johnson stock," said Foster, who relates how
Robert Wood Johnson died in 1968, but his Management Philosophy." It begins: "Our, con- Johnson "threiuened to delist from the New
standards bear emulation by those business peo- cept of modern management may be summa- York Stock Exchange because they wanted to
ple today who measure success by instant for- rized in the expression 'to serve."'
know his executives' salaries."
tunes based on imperfect products glibly adverHard-nosed types at first scoffed at such ideas,
Based on their close association, especially in
tised and promoted.
believing them mere platitudes. You can imag- later years, Foster believes Johnson would be
Foster, a former Johnson &amp;Johnson executive ine how they viewed what followed: "It is the shocked by today's salaries. And with job hopand confidante of the "gendeman rebel:' who duty of the leader to be a servant to those ping: "He flew the banner of company loyalty."
built it lium a small private concern into one of responsible to him.'.' ·.
With self-promotion. And litigation: "He had a
the world's great · companies, . spent 20 years ' ·But Johnson was deadly serious . abcfut his running feud with lawyers, even his own ." ·
writing "Robert Wood Johnson;' published by ideas, expecting them to be follpwed in deed
Foster's tome, massive and documented, .'is
Lillian Press.
and spirit, and the company's success provided elegantly written and anecdotally fascinating,
Johnson's physical legacy is weD known: A them with a measure of endorsement. Hard- benefitting from the subject's adventurous lite
huge, integrated healthcare company with some nosed or soft, managers admire success. ·
and the author's journalistic background.
of world's best-known brands Oohnson's baby
Bee~ use he had such strong belie£., and pracMore than just the first full-length biography
powder and Band-Aids), a foundation that has ticed them with a passion, "today's business of a pioneering business leader, it is a story of
provided more than 10,000 healthc:ire related world would be a painful experience (or John- evolving industrial, cultural and governmenUI
grants, a hospital and a medical school.
son," Fosler said in an interview.
practices.
·
Less obvious bu; conceivably as consequential
"In an age when it is cominon p1'11ctice to
And, should anyone underestimate its conis the legacy of Johnson the business philoso- · rap a competitor's product, he would rebel," tent; it' is 6lled with reminders. and ·lessons for
pher. It is expressed most influentially in "An Foster continued. Johnson wrote out the rule: business today.
·
Industrial Credo," a statement that guided the "Under no circumstances are our .competitors
(Jolin Cutm!lf is a business analyst for The Asso&lt;i·
company through various crises, including the or their products to be referred to in a dis- ated Press.)
BY JOHN CUNNIFF

•
•

.I

I

Pag" AS
Tuesday. MIIJ 30. 2000

NAMES I·N THE NEWS

,....-""'!!

PLEASE WAIT.

I.Mt•rs Ia the editor an ,.,~kume. They should In l#u dun• JOO worth. A.U ldlerr ll.tw subjlct
ID Milingllllll m111.rt blltigNtiDikl include tuldnss llrfll Ultp/wtu numbrr. No tllldfll.d l~m will

• The Kensas City Star. on Clinton-disbarment: President Clinton ·has suffered further disgrace at the hands of a disciplinary committee .of the Arkansas Supreme Court, which this week recommended that he be disbarred for giving false testimony two years
ago.
Unfortunately, Clinton has added to this
disgrace with his continued insistence that
A look
he did not technically lie before a federal
at what U.S. judge in the Paula Jones sexual harassment
newspapers are case.
This is simply not true. The president has
•
saytng
continually tried to confuse people on this
question, insinuating that there are fine
legal and factual points that technically let him off the hook ....
Clinton continues to irritate by playing the victim, as though
lawyers routiqely. deceived judges with little worry. This week he
said his lawyers told him "there's no way in the world, if they treat
you like everybody else has been treated, that this is even close to
. that kind of a case (punishable by disbarment) .
That is certainly ·open to question. But in any case, Clinton
argued earlier thi s month that he should not be treated like everyone else; he said that he thought the disciplinary panel should be
lenient with him because of his public service.
A show of true remorse on Clinton's part would have provided a
far better basis for his plea for leniency. But he can't show true
remorse for lying under oath for the simple reaso,n that he has not
yet acknowledged doing so.

Ru
the
~;.....___-------!!!!J.

The Daily Sentinel

r-----------~--~~--------------:;::~~~=-~~---~~~--w-,n~M~-w~..-,,---~~~~----l

'Esta6lislid in 1948

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

PageA4

attention her siblings get.
Ireland is in the state to attend the a
women's golf tournament she is helping
to sponsor this weekend m . Myrtle
Beach.

Gates donates

to drought relief
SEATILE (AP) - T he Gateses are
giving out money again.
This time, three aid organizations will
receive portions of a $1 million grant
from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation for drought-relief efforts in
Ethiopia, the foundation said Sunday.
The Seatde-based foundation begun
by the Microsoft Corp. chairman and his'
wife has assets of some $21 .8 billion and
has funded education, health and other
initiatives around the world.
CARE and Federal Way, Wash.-based
World Vision each will receive $350,000
from the foundation, and Save the Children will get $300,000.

Some eight million Ethiopians are
threatened with starvation following several years of below-average rainfall and a
drought this year.

meets Bollywoocl
UNIONDALE, N.Y. (AP) - Hollywood met BoUywood at an awards ceremony which honored some of the top
stars in India and the United States.
Thousands of fans of India's gigantic
film industry fiUed the seats at Nassau
Coliseum on Saturday nigh~ to ·pay
homage to their favorite actors, actresses,
musicians and singers at the Zee Gold
Hollywood Awards. Among those honored were actor Anil Kapoor, actress
Aishwarya Rai and Richard Gere.
"Movies are the main link between
India and the United States," said Kamal
Dandona, a businessman who started the
Zee Gold Hollywood Awards last year.
Gere was honored with the " Ma51 of

POMEROY -John Milhoan, Eastern vice president of the Ohio Retired Teachers Association, was
speaker at a recent meeting of the Meigs \=ounty
Retired Teachers held at Trinity Church.
Milhoan talked about House Bill 190, which was
recently passed concerning increased pensions for
47,000 retirees. Those retired the longest and most
affected by inflation will receive the ~realest benefit, he said.
Milhoan also explained that health insurance and
prescription drug costs would also increase.
John Riebel presented devotions using as his
topic, " A Mother's Survival Kit." He displayed nine
common objects and told of their importance to
survival and a pbsitive attitude.
A. toothpick reminds us to pick out the good
qualities in others, and a pencil reminds us to list our
blessings everyday," were just a few reminder quotes
that were read.
·
President Maxine Whitehead presided at the
meeting and introduced the speaker, while Anne
Rice gave the secretary-treasurer's report.
Joan Corder, scholarship chairman, presented the
finalized version of plans to award $250 to a junior
or senior education major in October. Information
for applying for the scholarship will be announced
later.
.Gay ·Perrin, chairman for retirement planning,
announced a retirement seminar for active teachers
planning to retire to be held in the fall.
Others present were Jane Milhoan, Elma Louks,
Kathleen Scott, Helen Maag, Nellie Parker, Grace
Weber, Maurita Miller, Jean Alkire, Rachel Downie,
Bernice Carpenter, Eileen Buck, Pauline Horton,
Suzanne Singer and Abbie Stratton.
The n,ext meeting Will be Sept. 16 with the program being "Safety at Home and Away."

MHS student receives
$700 scholarship
RUTLAND
Brandon Collins, son
of Ronald and Joan
Collins of Rutland,
and a 2000 graduate
of
Meigs
High
School, has been
awarded the Linnie B.
Taylor scholarship in
the amount of $700.
Brandon
has
completed the vocational welding program at Meigs High
and has been acceptBrandon Collins
ed at the Hobart
Institute of Welding
for a 34-week program of study.
The Linnie B. Taylor scholarship was created
under the will of Mrs. Taylor who wished to assist
children living in the vilfage of Rutland to obtain
a college education.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
·,

•••

WEDNESDAY, May 31

.~' RUTLAND -

Rutland Village Council, special session
Wednesday. An executive ses,sion will be held at 6 p.m. to
piscuss personnel matters and
.,ihe business meeting will follow ar 7 p.m.

of Phyllis Hackett, Pickerington , Luncheon to be served by
the hostess.

•••

THURSDAY, June 1
RACINE - Racine American Legion Auxiliary, Thursday, 7 :30 p.m., post home.

POMEROY
Public
; , PORTLAND Lebanon·
Employees ltetirement meet,Township trustees, 4 p.tn
·wednesday, township build- ing. Senior Citizens Center,
Thursday, lunch at noon,
'ing.
speaker to follow.
. MIDDLEPORT The
Middleport Literary C lub,
Wednesday, 1 p.m. at the .home

,,

•••

FRIDAY, June 2

Marceau cuts show
after stage rush

tt~llywood

SOCIETY NEWS
Southem Junior Hlp
be,rs who performed "Wipe Out."
announces awards winners
Retired tea~hers hear
RACINE - The Southern Junior High School
held its annual awrds assembly Thursday.
ORTA vice p~sident
Receiving awards were:
Band -Brittany Guinther, Angela Hayman, Kyle
Mees, Brittany Philson,John Bentz, Ashton Brown,
Kyle McKee'Ver, Joanne Pickens, Sarah' Pickens,
Shawn Barnhart, David Gloecknar, Kenny McKnight, Andrew Philson, Andy Smith, Matt Strong,
Brandon Sturgeon, Jeff.Wallot, Adam Lee, Kurtis
Rollins, Beverly Phillips, Dustin Barnett;
All A's All Year - Ashton Brown, Bethany
funberger;
Citizenship - Heather Duffy, Jon McDaniel, BJ.
Rizer, Bryan Smith, Mary Rankin, Dustin Ervin,
Kasey Roush;
.
Perfect Attendance - Rachael Cottrill, Ashley
Jiill, Joanne Pickins, Jessica Jill, Tim Cogar, Kati
;:&gt;ayre,Adam Johnson, Beverly Phillips, Rob Weddle;
. Honor Roll All Year - Cammi Callicoat, Craig
·Randolph, Ashton Brown, Jonas Hart, Codi Davis,
'Sarah Hawley, Kati Sayre, Bethany Amberger,
Stephanie Bradford, Henry Rider;
CCTV - Nicole Lawson, Adam McDaniel, Liz
Sandy, Bryan Smith, Mifinda Davis, Brooke Kiser,
jyler Roberts, James Werry, Jon McDaniet:·aet\lany
fUnberger, Stephanie Bradford, f'\ndy Smilli, Jorden ·
Bass, Tim Cogar, Codi Davis, Chelsea Dilcher, Sarah
Hawley, Paige Musser, Deana Pullins, 'Donald
Raines, Chasity Robinette, Kati Sayre, Jolit Bentz,
.,Ashton Brown,Jacob Nease,Jorden Neigler,Joanne
Pickens, Autumn Reed, Ashley Roush;
·· Newspaper - Nicole Lawson, Liz Sandy, Bryan
Smith, Mirinda Davis, Brook Kiser, l)'ler Roberts,
James Werry, Ashton Bracon, Hotly Duffy, Jacob
Nease, Jorden Neigler, Joanne Pickens, Autumn
Reed, Ashley Roush;Bethany Amberger, Stephanie
Bradford, Andy Smith, Tim Cogar, Codi Davis,
Chelsea Dilcher, Sarah Hawley, Pa:ige Musser, Deana
'Pullins, Donald Raines, · Chasity Robinette, Kati
·sayre;
Student Council (Representatives) - Rachel
Cottrill, Brittany Philson, Mirinda Davis, Craig
Randolph, Joanne Pickens, Ashley Roush, Emily
Hill, Matt Smith, Codi Davis, Deana Pullins,
Bethany Amberger, Andy Smith;
Student Council (Officers) - Stephanie Bradford, president; Jorden Neigler, vice president; Liz
Sandy, secretary; Ashton Brown, treasurer; Megan
Clark, reporter;
Teen Institute - Sasha Collins, Cassie Cleland,
Rosie Chevalier, Maria Schaefer, Jamie Smith, B: J.
·
Rizer.
Students missing three days or less were eligible
for a drawing to win two SSO savings bonds. The
winners were Jessica Gloyd and Deana Pullins.
These awards were sponsored by the teachers at
Southern Junior High School.
Participants and leaders of the following miniclasses were recognized: hunter safety, aerobics,
strength and speech, art, crafts, CPR, golf and square
·dancing.
Eighth grade students who passed one or more
parts of the Ninth Grade proficiency tests were rec·ognized and the Boosters presented "Class Choice"
awards and a class picture to each eighth grade stu:dent.
.
The awards aS!embly was closed by band mem-

ter of rhe film industry .is in Bombay.
from which Hollywood is derived.

ALFRED - Orange township trustees regular meeting,
7:30 Friday, home of the
clerk, Osie· Follrod.
The Community Calendar
is published as a free service to non-profit groups
wishing to announce
meetings and special
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales
or fund .raisers of any
type; Items are printed
oply .as 'space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to
· be printed a specific number of days .

Gaoen Trlrlnpo and Richard Gere
Conscience" Award for hi..efforts to promote Tibet's freedom from Chinese rule.
The Dalai Lama,Tibet's spititualleader, is
the head of a Tibetan government-inexile based in India.
"I see my life very much intertwined
with India;' Gere said. "My conscious
awareness began in India and this is
something I can never forget. The only
way I was able to meet the Dalai Lama
was through the kindness of the Indian
people.'' . ·
Atound 800 movies a year come out
of India, in a host of languages. The cen-

MEXICO CITY (AP) Marcel
Marceau cut short a show when spectators rushed the open-air stage on which
he was performing, trying to get a better
view.

The French mime had just begun his
routine on Sunday night at a public
square in Mexico City when spectators.·
after waiting an hour in the rain for the
show to start, rushed toward the stage to
get a better view.
Chairs were toppled and peopl ~
screamed, but no injuries were reported.
Marceau, 77, was visibly shaken, and
suddenly left the stage. He didn 't return ,
despite cheers and applause from the
crowd.
The mime has been touting squares
throughout Latin America for a month.

Monet lovers flock

to his garden in France
GIVERNY, France (AP) They keep coming here, largely
An1ericans and Japanese, gardeners, painters and just plain viewers, to dwell for an hour or two
in the most painterly garden in
the world.
Seventy-five years after his
death, Claude Monet's flower
beds and lily ponds draw multitudes to the place he immortalized in his impressionist masterpieces.
The garden, you immediately
realize, is itself a work of art. To
visualize what it was in Monet's
time you need imagination. You
have to try to erase ftom your
sight the swarms of your fellowtourists, particularly as they
crowd over · the enchanting
Japanese footbridge Monet created over a lily pond . .
· Some 400,000 people are estimated to visit Giverny yearly,
more than any other site in Normandy.
·
With a friend, I joined one of
many tourist busloads in late
April for the 53-mile drive from
Paris, the best time to see the patterns of daffodils, tulips and other
spring flowers Monet designed.
The day was mostly sunny and
cool and we were spared the
shower5 that are frequent at this
season.

Heavy traffic in Paris slowed
the ride to Giverny t.o an hour
and a half, giving the Englishand ·Japanese-speaking tour
guid.S plenty of time to lecture
on Monet's life, art . and, of
course, the house and garden.
The village, we are told, caught
Monet's fancy in 1883 while he
was looking out of a train win-

dow. He decided to move here his house here will be disapwith his family.
pointed. There are only some
We also learn that his residing reproductions. But collections of
here and his successful art were his work hang in museums
not generally popular in the worldwide.
neighborhood. Envious peasants
Of interest at Giverny, howevcut down trees and burned er, are Monet's collection o f
haystacks that figured promi- Japanese engravings, which he
nently in his paintings.
began in 1871. He was enthusia~­
There have been many foreign tic about Japanese artistic themes.
donors to restore the site and
The house, which had fallen
establish it as a tourist attraction, into great disrepair, has bee·n
notable American contributions beautifully restored over time
being that of the Lila Wallace- since France's Academie d~s
Reader's Digest Fund and Lau- Beaux Arts took possession in
rance Rockefeller. Every year, the 1966. In his big studio a life-size,
Reader's Digest also chooses black and white photograph of
three Ameri ~an artists to come to the white-bearded Monet stands
Giverny to paint.
in the middle of the room, seemMonet once told friends, " My . ingly gazing out at the sightseers.
A gift shop does a brisk busigarden is my most beautiful chefd'oeuvre.''
And
Georges ness in souvenirs. What struck my
Clemenceau, the World War I fancy, and I bought some, were
premier who was a \.varm friend nicely done booklets containing
of Monet, .aid "hi1 garden was seeds of flowers grown in the
his studio.''
garden, including forget-meA staff of eight gardeners now nots, oriental poppies, cleomes,
recreates the scene as Monet hoUyhocks ·and sun flowers.
designed and worked it with the
help of five gardeners. What
sirikes a springtime viewer is
how flowers are massed in distinct color formations - a patch
Closeout Sale for the Season!
of blue tulips here, a patch of red
All Flats &amp; 1O" Hanging
tulips there; white daffodils here,
Baskets 1
yellow ones there - so the garwhile they last
den itself seems like a giant
4" Pots Cutting
palette.
Fruit trees were blooming
Geraniums
everywhere. Particularly attractive were masterfully pruned
Seed Geraniums
espaliers in blossom along fences.
Asst. Shrubbery Buy 1 Reg . ·
Lily pads dotted ponds but it was
Price Get 1 FREE
too early in the season to see
Open Dally 9-5
them in bloom.
992-5776
Anyone hoping ro see original
Close
Sundays
Monet masterpieces hanging. in

Hubbard's

Greenhouse Sale
4.50

75e
50e

Hol~er

Meigs Clinic
rgent Care Center
Urgent Care is now available for those unexpected
ailments that occur after hours.

Holzer Meigs Clinic
Urgent Care Hours
Monday Friday 1 :00 pm to 9:00 pm
Weekends a Holidays 1:00 pm to 9:00 pm
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88 East Memorial Dr.
Pomeroy, OH

992-0060
Holzer Clinic ••••.Keeping the Promise!

'

•

�•

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The Daily Sentinel

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Controller

PLfASf ENTtR ·
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WUR ANNUAL SALARY.

Ireland, Wells to read
to elementary kids

VOURWAN

HAS BEEN
APPRMD..

.

. COLUMBIA,
S.C. (AP)
South Carolina's
is
first
lady
bringing some
famous friends
along when she
reads to elementary students at
the Governor's
Mansion.
· Ireland
Supermodel Kathy Ireland and children's author Rosemary
Wells wer:e expected to join first lady
Rachel Hodges today for her "Reading
with Rachel" program. Or/ the agenda
was Wells' book, "Bunny Money."
. Wells has been writing children's
books for nearly 30 years. Her most
famous work may be "Noisy Nora;'
~bout a mouse who is jealous over the

YOOMAY
FILL UP.

be pMIJiiJitfti. UU1n slruuld bt in lfuod ttult1 sdmui~tglJ.r,u, IWI JHNflll4litiu
n. opiniotu •xpressul illlht column btlow llrt , , eDftffiiJMS o/111• Olrio Vm'/IJ P11b1Uhl,..
Co. 'r rdilorial boon/, anlers oJheTWi•r troled.

NATIONAL VIEWS:

J)isgrace
Clinton continues to irritate
by playing t~e victim·

• Cbla10 lflbulie, o11 orgar~ dot1atio11: It is the ultimate gift.
But the way this system works, neither donor nor recipient can
be sure what th ey will be giving or getting.
The harvesting of organs and tissues from the recently deceased,
and their transplantation to the living, is a true blessing of modern
medical science. The donor and their kin get the satisfaction of
helping the living. The recipient can be blessed with life itself, as
when a failing heart or liver is replaced. Or a better life, as when a
failing cornea or knee joint is replaced.
But as often happens when science outruns law and custom,
blessings get mixed. The national system for distributing vital organs
is in turmoil, with some states refusing to send organs. to others in
greater need. But. that system is flawless compared to the non-system through which lesser tissues are bought and sold.... .
The Food and-Drug Administration has yet to establish a registry
of tissue banks and the products they distribute. That's worrisome
now that unscrupulous entrepreneurs, here and abroad, are paying
big money for cadavers and body parts without checking for diseases, such as hepatitis, before selling them, for bigger mo!)ey, to
reprocessors and physicians. The chain of buying and selling, moreover, is fraught with conflicts of interest, from kickbacks for coroners to finder's fees for hospital administrators.
Clearly two things need to happen: 1) The FDA should regulate
the source and quality of human tissue and tissue-products as assiduously as it does the manufacture of prescriptioq drugs; and 2) the
public must be educated, and potential donors specifically
!nformed, about tissue reuse so people can make informed consent.
•

~ TODAY

IN HISTORY

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday, May 30, the 151st day of 2000. There are 215
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On May 30, 1431, Joan of Arc, co ndemned as a heretic, was
burned at th e stake in Rouen, France.
On this date:
In 1539, Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto landed in Florida.
In 1854, the territories of Nebraska and Kansas were •established.
In 1883, 12 people were trampled to death in a stampede triggered by a rumor that the recently opened Brooklyn Bridge was in .
imminent danger of collapsing.
' In 1911, Indianapolis saw its first long-distance auto race; Ray
llarroun was th e winner.
• In 1922, the Lincoln Memorial was dedicated in Washington D.C.
;by Chief Justice William Howard Tali:.
' In 1937, 10 people were killed wheli police fired on steelworkers
;demonstrating n ear the Republic SteJl plant in Chicago.
• In 1943, American forces secured the Aleutian island of Attu from
~he Japanese during World War II .
; In 1958, unidentified soldiers killed in World War [[ and the Kore:an conflict were buried at Arlington National Cemetery.
• In 1971 , the Ameri can space probe, Mariner 9, blasted off from
·cape Kennedy, Fla., on a journey to Mars.
In 1980, Pope John Paul II arrived in France on the first visit by
the head of the Roman Catholic C hurch since the early 19th century.
Today's Birthdays: Country musician Johnny Gimble is 74. Actor
Clint Walker is 73. Actress Ruta Lee is 64. Actor Michael J Pollard
is 61. Actor ·Steph en Tobolowsky is 49. Actor Colm Meaney is 47.
Actor Ted M cGinley is 42.Actor Ralph Caner is 39. Country singer
Wynonna is 36. Rock musician Tom Morello (Rage Against The
Machine) is 31}. Rock musician Patrick Dahlheimer (Live) is 29.
Actor Trey Parker ("Newsies'') is 28.

•

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Reining in·the will of the majority

.

'

In "The Federalist Papers," Alexander
ishing the First Amendm:ent:
,
Hamilton saw no need for what came to be
" It would be the only standing constitu7
the Bill of Rights, which was added to the
tiona! amendment to expand- not curtail - .
Constitution. All our rights, he said, "must
the power of the federal government" as limaltogether depend on public opinion... the
ited in the Bill of Rights by the founders.
general spirit of the people."
Had I been pan of that Senate debate, I
This insistence that the majority is right is
would have added a quotation from Justic~
manifested by the willingness of most AmeriJackson's majority opinion in West Virgini~
cans to deprive a 6-year-old boy of freedom
Board of Education vs. Barnette:
·
so that he can be with his father in a commu"lf there is any fixed star in our constitunist dictatorship.
tional constellation, it is that no official, higl]
Consider also the recent defeat, once again,
NEA COLUMNIST
or petry, can prescribe what shall b e orthodox
of a constitutional amendment to protect the
in politics, nationalism, religion or other macAmerican flag from physical desecration.
ters of opinion -or force citizens to confes$
That March 29 vote is old news by now, but ent from all others in its guarantee of freedom by word or act their faith therein."
,
this difficult victory over the will of the of . thought is in Justice Robert 1ackson's
Agreeing with that declaration of AmerfAmerican majority - and the 49 state legis- majority opinion in West Virginia Board of canism, Sen. Bob Kerrey, D-Neb.- who lost
latures that were ready to ratifY the amend- EiJucation vs. Barnette (1943}·. The high- p;~r;t of a leg in combat in Vietnam. anp is t~e
ment had it been submitted to them- ought school class I spoke to the other day had never orny member of Congress to have earne&lt;l till'
to be revisited. There will be similar clashes heard of that decision.
Congressional Medal of Honor - has said of
·between the passions of the majority and a . ·At issue was the power of West Virginia to hls continued opposition to the flag amendsmall, brave company such as the 37 Senators expel the children ofJehovah's Witnesses from ~ent: "Real patriotism cannot be coerced." ,
Many veterans supported the flag desecra.:
who stood in the way of the flag amendment school because they refused to salute the flag.
in order to protect the Constitution.
Jackson's decision - which addressed and tion amendment, including a large number of
Sen. Orrin Hatch, one of the principal ' countered the intense will of the majority- funerican Legion members who gathered iii
champions of the flag measure, pledges it will applied to all funericans, religious and secular. Washington on the day of the vote. But other
veterans just as ardendy opposed it. Korean
return t.o the Senate floor because "it is illog- He said:
ical to ignore the feelings of the overwhelm"One's right to life, .Jiberty, and property, to war veteran Michael Salovesh declared:
'·
ing number of funericans." It surely will free speech, a free press, freedom of worship '. "Any law, any constitutional amendmelli
return, and the American Civil Liberties and assembly, and other fundamental rights :'that would call a flag so sacred that to harm 1t
Union will again lead the fight against it.
may not be submitted to vote; they depend on , would be sacrilege would be an insult to my
During the Senate · debate in March, the the outcome of no elections."
deepest religious beliefs. It would be a form of
opposition cited a Supreme Court decision. It
That is why our C.ol)stitution was not rati- forcing me to worship a strange god, and thus
was not about desecration of the flag. It was tied by the original states ~ntil it included a . yiolate what I take to be God's command~
about two clauses in the First Amendment Bill of Rights that protected the liberties of 1 ment."
freedom of speech and the free exercise of · Americans - those rights cited by·Justice 1 So also said the' children of Jehovah's WiJreligion. The ruling of the Court contains the Jackson - from both government incursion ,, ,nesses.
· .
. ,
.
.'
clearest and strongest definition of American- and the will of the majority.
But most Amen cans dtdn t get thts consttism I have ever. seeh. 1 wish it were recited
On the day the Senate was ro vote on the • tuttonal message. Nor have they yet.
•
•
• ,
once a year in every legislative body, and in all fl~g protection a~e~dment, The Washington 1
the schools across the nation - including . Ttmes, tn an edttortal, opposed the amend(Nat f!entolf IS a natwnally renowned m•tl•~ntr
coming graduation exercises.
me~t for several reasons, incl11ding this c?gent on. the First Amendment and tile rest of the B•ll of
This declaration of why this nation is differ- remmdet to conservanves who favor dimin- , · R•ghts.)

Nat
Hentoff

BUSINESS MIRROI}

Johnson~

credo for success bears emulation today
1

fatal product tampering cases involVing "
its paraging or critical manner, directly or indireCINEW YORK - He was a visionary busi- Tylenol brand.
:•··' ly."
Now framed in hundreds of executive offices . He quotes Johnson as saying "We are not
nessman, as passionate in concern for product
and customer as he was disdainful of short-term around the world, the credq begins, "We believe 1 interested in building wealth but. in building a
·!
goals, bo;tStful ads, and anxiety about his com- that our first (italics) respo'nsibility is to our business for the long term."
Customers - Our products must always be
Johnson also would have been distressed by
pany's stock price.
.
"He would have difficulty adjusting to busi- goo~. and we must strive to make them better the gyrations of the stock market and the pre"
ness in 2000," says Larry Foster, who knew him at lower &lt;:ost•." Johnson saw it as .essential to occupation of managers whose income is tied
to it. ·
weD over many years. "He would be unnerved success.
by the short-term orientation of many compaThat document led to other finely condensed
"He rarely looked at the price ofJohnson &amp;
nies."
statements, one of which Johnson called "Our Johnson stock," said Foster, who relates how
Robert Wood Johnson died in 1968, but his Management Philosophy." It begins: "Our, con- Johnson "threiuened to delist from the New
standards bear emulation by those business peo- cept of modern management may be summa- York Stock Exchange because they wanted to
ple today who measure success by instant for- rized in the expression 'to serve."'
know his executives' salaries."
tunes based on imperfect products glibly adverHard-nosed types at first scoffed at such ideas,
Based on their close association, especially in
tised and promoted.
believing them mere platitudes. You can imag- later years, Foster believes Johnson would be
Foster, a former Johnson &amp;Johnson executive ine how they viewed what followed: "It is the shocked by today's salaries. And with job hopand confidante of the "gendeman rebel:' who duty of the leader to be a servant to those ping: "He flew the banner of company loyalty."
built it lium a small private concern into one of responsible to him.'.' ·.
With self-promotion. And litigation: "He had a
the world's great · companies, . spent 20 years ' ·But Johnson was deadly serious . abcfut his running feud with lawyers, even his own ." ·
writing "Robert Wood Johnson;' published by ideas, expecting them to be follpwed in deed
Foster's tome, massive and documented, .'is
Lillian Press.
and spirit, and the company's success provided elegantly written and anecdotally fascinating,
Johnson's physical legacy is weD known: A them with a measure of endorsement. Hard- benefitting from the subject's adventurous lite
huge, integrated healthcare company with some nosed or soft, managers admire success. ·
and the author's journalistic background.
of world's best-known brands Oohnson's baby
Bee~ use he had such strong belie£., and pracMore than just the first full-length biography
powder and Band-Aids), a foundation that has ticed them with a passion, "today's business of a pioneering business leader, it is a story of
provided more than 10,000 healthc:ire related world would be a painful experience (or John- evolving industrial, cultural and governmenUI
grants, a hospital and a medical school.
son," Fosler said in an interview.
practices.
·
Less obvious bu; conceivably as consequential
"In an age when it is cominon p1'11ctice to
And, should anyone underestimate its conis the legacy of Johnson the business philoso- · rap a competitor's product, he would rebel," tent; it' is 6lled with reminders. and ·lessons for
pher. It is expressed most influentially in "An Foster continued. Johnson wrote out the rule: business today.
·
Industrial Credo," a statement that guided the "Under no circumstances are our .competitors
(Jolin Cutm!lf is a business analyst for The Asso&lt;i·
company through various crises, including the or their products to be referred to in a dis- ated Press.)
BY JOHN CUNNIFF

•
•

.I

I

Pag" AS
Tuesday. MIIJ 30. 2000

NAMES I·N THE NEWS

,....-""'!!

PLEASE WAIT.

I.Mt•rs Ia the editor an ,.,~kume. They should In l#u dun• JOO worth. A.U ldlerr ll.tw subjlct
ID Milingllllll m111.rt blltigNtiDikl include tuldnss llrfll Ultp/wtu numbrr. No tllldfll.d l~m will

• The Kensas City Star. on Clinton-disbarment: President Clinton ·has suffered further disgrace at the hands of a disciplinary committee .of the Arkansas Supreme Court, which this week recommended that he be disbarred for giving false testimony two years
ago.
Unfortunately, Clinton has added to this
disgrace with his continued insistence that
A look
he did not technically lie before a federal
at what U.S. judge in the Paula Jones sexual harassment
newspapers are case.
This is simply not true. The president has
•
saytng
continually tried to confuse people on this
question, insinuating that there are fine
legal and factual points that technically let him off the hook ....
Clinton continues to irritate by playing the victim, as though
lawyers routiqely. deceived judges with little worry. This week he
said his lawyers told him "there's no way in the world, if they treat
you like everybody else has been treated, that this is even close to
. that kind of a case (punishable by disbarment) .
That is certainly ·open to question. But in any case, Clinton
argued earlier thi s month that he should not be treated like everyone else; he said that he thought the disciplinary panel should be
lenient with him because of his public service.
A show of true remorse on Clinton's part would have provided a
far better basis for his plea for leniency. But he can't show true
remorse for lying under oath for the simple reaso,n that he has not
yet acknowledged doing so.

Ru
the
~;.....___-------!!!!J.

The Daily Sentinel

r-----------~--~~--------------:;::~~~=-~~---~~~--w-,n~M~-w~..-,,---~~~~----l

'Esta6lislid in 1948

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

PageA4

attention her siblings get.
Ireland is in the state to attend the a
women's golf tournament she is helping
to sponsor this weekend m . Myrtle
Beach.

Gates donates

to drought relief
SEATILE (AP) - T he Gateses are
giving out money again.
This time, three aid organizations will
receive portions of a $1 million grant
from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation for drought-relief efforts in
Ethiopia, the foundation said Sunday.
The Seatde-based foundation begun
by the Microsoft Corp. chairman and his'
wife has assets of some $21 .8 billion and
has funded education, health and other
initiatives around the world.
CARE and Federal Way, Wash.-based
World Vision each will receive $350,000
from the foundation, and Save the Children will get $300,000.

Some eight million Ethiopians are
threatened with starvation following several years of below-average rainfall and a
drought this year.

meets Bollywoocl
UNIONDALE, N.Y. (AP) - Hollywood met BoUywood at an awards ceremony which honored some of the top
stars in India and the United States.
Thousands of fans of India's gigantic
film industry fiUed the seats at Nassau
Coliseum on Saturday nigh~ to ·pay
homage to their favorite actors, actresses,
musicians and singers at the Zee Gold
Hollywood Awards. Among those honored were actor Anil Kapoor, actress
Aishwarya Rai and Richard Gere.
"Movies are the main link between
India and the United States," said Kamal
Dandona, a businessman who started the
Zee Gold Hollywood Awards last year.
Gere was honored with the " Ma51 of

POMEROY -John Milhoan, Eastern vice president of the Ohio Retired Teachers Association, was
speaker at a recent meeting of the Meigs \=ounty
Retired Teachers held at Trinity Church.
Milhoan talked about House Bill 190, which was
recently passed concerning increased pensions for
47,000 retirees. Those retired the longest and most
affected by inflation will receive the ~realest benefit, he said.
Milhoan also explained that health insurance and
prescription drug costs would also increase.
John Riebel presented devotions using as his
topic, " A Mother's Survival Kit." He displayed nine
common objects and told of their importance to
survival and a pbsitive attitude.
A. toothpick reminds us to pick out the good
qualities in others, and a pencil reminds us to list our
blessings everyday," were just a few reminder quotes
that were read.
·
President Maxine Whitehead presided at the
meeting and introduced the speaker, while Anne
Rice gave the secretary-treasurer's report.
Joan Corder, scholarship chairman, presented the
finalized version of plans to award $250 to a junior
or senior education major in October. Information
for applying for the scholarship will be announced
later.
.Gay ·Perrin, chairman for retirement planning,
announced a retirement seminar for active teachers
planning to retire to be held in the fall.
Others present were Jane Milhoan, Elma Louks,
Kathleen Scott, Helen Maag, Nellie Parker, Grace
Weber, Maurita Miller, Jean Alkire, Rachel Downie,
Bernice Carpenter, Eileen Buck, Pauline Horton,
Suzanne Singer and Abbie Stratton.
The n,ext meeting Will be Sept. 16 with the program being "Safety at Home and Away."

MHS student receives
$700 scholarship
RUTLAND
Brandon Collins, son
of Ronald and Joan
Collins of Rutland,
and a 2000 graduate
of
Meigs
High
School, has been
awarded the Linnie B.
Taylor scholarship in
the amount of $700.
Brandon
has
completed the vocational welding program at Meigs High
and has been acceptBrandon Collins
ed at the Hobart
Institute of Welding
for a 34-week program of study.
The Linnie B. Taylor scholarship was created
under the will of Mrs. Taylor who wished to assist
children living in the vilfage of Rutland to obtain
a college education.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
·,

•••

WEDNESDAY, May 31

.~' RUTLAND -

Rutland Village Council, special session
Wednesday. An executive ses,sion will be held at 6 p.m. to
piscuss personnel matters and
.,ihe business meeting will follow ar 7 p.m.

of Phyllis Hackett, Pickerington , Luncheon to be served by
the hostess.

•••

THURSDAY, June 1
RACINE - Racine American Legion Auxiliary, Thursday, 7 :30 p.m., post home.

POMEROY
Public
; , PORTLAND Lebanon·
Employees ltetirement meet,Township trustees, 4 p.tn
·wednesday, township build- ing. Senior Citizens Center,
Thursday, lunch at noon,
'ing.
speaker to follow.
. MIDDLEPORT The
Middleport Literary C lub,
Wednesday, 1 p.m. at the .home

,,

•••

FRIDAY, June 2

Marceau cuts show
after stage rush

tt~llywood

SOCIETY NEWS
Southem Junior Hlp
be,rs who performed "Wipe Out."
announces awards winners
Retired tea~hers hear
RACINE - The Southern Junior High School
held its annual awrds assembly Thursday.
ORTA vice p~sident
Receiving awards were:
Band -Brittany Guinther, Angela Hayman, Kyle
Mees, Brittany Philson,John Bentz, Ashton Brown,
Kyle McKee'Ver, Joanne Pickens, Sarah' Pickens,
Shawn Barnhart, David Gloecknar, Kenny McKnight, Andrew Philson, Andy Smith, Matt Strong,
Brandon Sturgeon, Jeff.Wallot, Adam Lee, Kurtis
Rollins, Beverly Phillips, Dustin Barnett;
All A's All Year - Ashton Brown, Bethany
funberger;
Citizenship - Heather Duffy, Jon McDaniel, BJ.
Rizer, Bryan Smith, Mary Rankin, Dustin Ervin,
Kasey Roush;
.
Perfect Attendance - Rachael Cottrill, Ashley
Jiill, Joanne Pickins, Jessica Jill, Tim Cogar, Kati
;:&gt;ayre,Adam Johnson, Beverly Phillips, Rob Weddle;
. Honor Roll All Year - Cammi Callicoat, Craig
·Randolph, Ashton Brown, Jonas Hart, Codi Davis,
'Sarah Hawley, Kati Sayre, Bethany Amberger,
Stephanie Bradford, Henry Rider;
CCTV - Nicole Lawson, Adam McDaniel, Liz
Sandy, Bryan Smith, Mifinda Davis, Brooke Kiser,
jyler Roberts, James Werry, Jon McDaniet:·aet\lany
fUnberger, Stephanie Bradford, f'\ndy Smilli, Jorden ·
Bass, Tim Cogar, Codi Davis, Chelsea Dilcher, Sarah
Hawley, Paige Musser, Deana Pullins, 'Donald
Raines, Chasity Robinette, Kati Sayre, Jolit Bentz,
.,Ashton Brown,Jacob Nease,Jorden Neigler,Joanne
Pickens, Autumn Reed, Ashley Roush;
·· Newspaper - Nicole Lawson, Liz Sandy, Bryan
Smith, Mirinda Davis, Brook Kiser, l)'ler Roberts,
James Werry, Ashton Bracon, Hotly Duffy, Jacob
Nease, Jorden Neigler, Joanne Pickens, Autumn
Reed, Ashley Roush;Bethany Amberger, Stephanie
Bradford, Andy Smith, Tim Cogar, Codi Davis,
Chelsea Dilcher, Sarah Hawley, Pa:ige Musser, Deana
'Pullins, Donald Raines, · Chasity Robinette, Kati
·sayre;
Student Council (Representatives) - Rachel
Cottrill, Brittany Philson, Mirinda Davis, Craig
Randolph, Joanne Pickens, Ashley Roush, Emily
Hill, Matt Smith, Codi Davis, Deana Pullins,
Bethany Amberger, Andy Smith;
Student Council (Officers) - Stephanie Bradford, president; Jorden Neigler, vice president; Liz
Sandy, secretary; Ashton Brown, treasurer; Megan
Clark, reporter;
Teen Institute - Sasha Collins, Cassie Cleland,
Rosie Chevalier, Maria Schaefer, Jamie Smith, B: J.
·
Rizer.
Students missing three days or less were eligible
for a drawing to win two SSO savings bonds. The
winners were Jessica Gloyd and Deana Pullins.
These awards were sponsored by the teachers at
Southern Junior High School.
Participants and leaders of the following miniclasses were recognized: hunter safety, aerobics,
strength and speech, art, crafts, CPR, golf and square
·dancing.
Eighth grade students who passed one or more
parts of the Ninth Grade proficiency tests were rec·ognized and the Boosters presented "Class Choice"
awards and a class picture to each eighth grade stu:dent.
.
The awards aS!embly was closed by band mem-

ter of rhe film industry .is in Bombay.
from which Hollywood is derived.

ALFRED - Orange township trustees regular meeting,
7:30 Friday, home of the
clerk, Osie· Follrod.
The Community Calendar
is published as a free service to non-profit groups
wishing to announce
meetings and special
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales
or fund .raisers of any
type; Items are printed
oply .as 'space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to
· be printed a specific number of days .

Gaoen Trlrlnpo and Richard Gere
Conscience" Award for hi..efforts to promote Tibet's freedom from Chinese rule.
The Dalai Lama,Tibet's spititualleader, is
the head of a Tibetan government-inexile based in India.
"I see my life very much intertwined
with India;' Gere said. "My conscious
awareness began in India and this is
something I can never forget. The only
way I was able to meet the Dalai Lama
was through the kindness of the Indian
people.'' . ·
Atound 800 movies a year come out
of India, in a host of languages. The cen-

MEXICO CITY (AP) Marcel
Marceau cut short a show when spectators rushed the open-air stage on which
he was performing, trying to get a better
view.

The French mime had just begun his
routine on Sunday night at a public
square in Mexico City when spectators.·
after waiting an hour in the rain for the
show to start, rushed toward the stage to
get a better view.
Chairs were toppled and peopl ~
screamed, but no injuries were reported.
Marceau, 77, was visibly shaken, and
suddenly left the stage. He didn 't return ,
despite cheers and applause from the
crowd.
The mime has been touting squares
throughout Latin America for a month.

Monet lovers flock

to his garden in France
GIVERNY, France (AP) They keep coming here, largely
An1ericans and Japanese, gardeners, painters and just plain viewers, to dwell for an hour or two
in the most painterly garden in
the world.
Seventy-five years after his
death, Claude Monet's flower
beds and lily ponds draw multitudes to the place he immortalized in his impressionist masterpieces.
The garden, you immediately
realize, is itself a work of art. To
visualize what it was in Monet's
time you need imagination. You
have to try to erase ftom your
sight the swarms of your fellowtourists, particularly as they
crowd over · the enchanting
Japanese footbridge Monet created over a lily pond . .
· Some 400,000 people are estimated to visit Giverny yearly,
more than any other site in Normandy.
·
With a friend, I joined one of
many tourist busloads in late
April for the 53-mile drive from
Paris, the best time to see the patterns of daffodils, tulips and other
spring flowers Monet designed.
The day was mostly sunny and
cool and we were spared the
shower5 that are frequent at this
season.

Heavy traffic in Paris slowed
the ride to Giverny t.o an hour
and a half, giving the Englishand ·Japanese-speaking tour
guid.S plenty of time to lecture
on Monet's life, art . and, of
course, the house and garden.
The village, we are told, caught
Monet's fancy in 1883 while he
was looking out of a train win-

dow. He decided to move here his house here will be disapwith his family.
pointed. There are only some
We also learn that his residing reproductions. But collections of
here and his successful art were his work hang in museums
not generally popular in the worldwide.
neighborhood. Envious peasants
Of interest at Giverny, howevcut down trees and burned er, are Monet's collection o f
haystacks that figured promi- Japanese engravings, which he
nently in his paintings.
began in 1871. He was enthusia~­
There have been many foreign tic about Japanese artistic themes.
donors to restore the site and
The house, which had fallen
establish it as a tourist attraction, into great disrepair, has bee·n
notable American contributions beautifully restored over time
being that of the Lila Wallace- since France's Academie d~s
Reader's Digest Fund and Lau- Beaux Arts took possession in
rance Rockefeller. Every year, the 1966. In his big studio a life-size,
Reader's Digest also chooses black and white photograph of
three Ameri ~an artists to come to the white-bearded Monet stands
Giverny to paint.
in the middle of the room, seemMonet once told friends, " My . ingly gazing out at the sightseers.
A gift shop does a brisk busigarden is my most beautiful chefd'oeuvre.''
And
Georges ness in souvenirs. What struck my
Clemenceau, the World War I fancy, and I bought some, were
premier who was a \.varm friend nicely done booklets containing
of Monet, .aid "hi1 garden was seeds of flowers grown in the
his studio.''
garden, including forget-meA staff of eight gardeners now nots, oriental poppies, cleomes,
recreates the scene as Monet hoUyhocks ·and sun flowers.
designed and worked it with the
help of five gardeners. What
sirikes a springtime viewer is
how flowers are massed in distinct color formations - a patch
Closeout Sale for the Season!
of blue tulips here, a patch of red
All Flats &amp; 1O" Hanging
tulips there; white daffodils here,
Baskets 1
yellow ones there - so the garwhile they last
den itself seems like a giant
4" Pots Cutting
palette.
Fruit trees were blooming
Geraniums
everywhere. Particularly attractive were masterfully pruned
Seed Geraniums
espaliers in blossom along fences.
Asst. Shrubbery Buy 1 Reg . ·
Lily pads dotted ponds but it was
Price Get 1 FREE
too early in the season to see
Open Dally 9-5
them in bloom.
992-5776
Anyone hoping ro see original
Close
Sundays
Monet masterpieces hanging. in

Hubbard's

Greenhouse Sale
4.50

75e
50e

Hol~er

Meigs Clinic
rgent Care Center
Urgent Care is now available for those unexpected
ailments that occur after hours.

Holzer Meigs Clinic
Urgent Care Hours
Monday Friday 1 :00 pm to 9:00 pm
Weekends a Holidays 1:00 pm to 9:00 pm
.Urgent Care Center

88 East Memorial Dr.
Pomeroy, OH

992-0060
Holzer Clinic ••••.Keeping the Promise!

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Inside: ·

Tuesday, May 30, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Memorial scoreboard, Page B6

Seniors·e.njoy.prom

_PomerOy High School
annual reunion held

Page 81
Tuesday, May JO, 2000
'

TuEsDAY'S

P Phillips Grinun, Columbus; Charles Lochary,
Matthews, N. C.;' Gene Yeauger, Enon; Verna
POMEROY - More than 350 Pomeroy High Osborne Snowden, Gallipolis; John Robinson ,
School alumni and guests attended the annual Mechanicsville, Va.; John P. Boyd, Oak Hill; Ernest
reunion staged Saturday night at Meigs ·High Bowers, Pataskala.
·
School. The school colo~:S of purple and white in
1952: Guy Guinther, Gallipolis; Sara Stowe Neifloral and balloon bouquets decorated the cafeteria gler, Racine; Phyllis Meier May, Pomeroy.
where the dinner and dance were held.
1953: Ted Scott, Bobby 1-Iill, Darrell D. Drenner,
' Graduating classes beginning with 1925 were · Ft. Myers, Fla.; Mildred Stockton Bernard, Athens;
recognized, three scholarships were awarded, and Sally Bartels Ayers, Athens; Ed Kennedy, C . Clifford,
oflkm to plan the 2001 reunion were elected.
James Kitchen, Jack Raub, Pomeroy; Robert Rein Joe Struble emceed the program and recognized hart, Athens; Sue Struble Tibbs, Syracuse; Nathan
Kathleen Scott obserting her 75th graduation Roush, Syracuse.
anniversary, and Martha Brown Husted Greenaway
1954: Joanne Colmer Miller, Marietta; Marlene
of the class of 1929, the oldest Pomeroy High Athens.
School graduate to have taught at Pomeroy High
1955: Donna Wildermuth Goble, Gallipolis;
School. They were presented bouquets of flowers.
Carol Strauss Kennedy, Thomas Smith, Paul
Also recognized were LoueUa Thompson Roush Eichinger, Harley Johnson, Stacy Arnold, Ted
·of the class of 1964, the youngest valedictorian; and ·scott, Pomeroy; Paul E. Wise, Columbus; Marilyn
Jack Rosenbaum the oldest class president.
Grueser Quinn, McConnelsville; Fern Colmer
Awarded Pomeroy Alumni Scholarships were 1 Daniels, Middleport; Ray Shasteen, Tampa, Fla.;
Jeremiah Sffi.ith, son of Rebecca and Carl Smith, Roger Hines, Logan; Ivan Shumate, Mansfield;
whose grandmother, Donna Dill graduated from Nancy L. Jacobs Hanold, Jan Story Lochary,
Pomeroy in 1963; and Duane David Will, Jr., son of Matthews, N .. C.; William HyseU, Columbus;
D!lane and Brenda Will, whose grandmother, Alle- Carol Louks Taylor, Winter Park, Fla.; George
gra Wood Will, graduated from Pomeroy iri 1937.
Paulsen, Ashland; Harley Mossman, Grassboro, N .
Smith, a graduate of Meigs High School, plans to J. Doris Well Snowden, Huntington, W.Va.; Don
attend Ohio University and major in chemical Grueser, Racine; Janet Heines Grueser, Racine.
engineering. Will, a graduate of Point Pleasant
1956: Carolyn Brown Charle~. Minersville;
High School, is enrolled at Marshall University in Mary Jane Scott Wise, Middleport; Ron Bearhs,
Huntington where he will pursue a degree in Pomeroy; Bob Eastman, Bill Qualls, Gallipolis.
anatomy.
1957: Ted Meier Beegle, Worthington; Carol
The Charles Gibbs Scholarship went to Julia L. Bearhs, Endicott, N.Y.; Lila Mitch, Pomeroy;
Ann Spaun , daughter of Bill and Ruth Spaun, April Shasteen Smith, .Pomeroy;Jim Baker, Texas.
whose grandmother, Anna Mae Thomas graduated
1958: Norbert Neutzling, Jr., Marion; Ann
(rom PHS in 1944, and her grandtither, Walter Icenhower, Parkersburg; Ed Boney, Columbus;
William TerreU, in 1948. She plans to major in Marcia Grueser Arnold, Racine; Harry Leffie,
early childhood education.
Pomeroy; Mary Lou Smith Hawkins, MiddleNew officers elected were Yvonne Young; presi- port; Fay Thomas DeWess, Grove City.
dent; JoAnne Willfams, first vice president; Mary
1959: Ruby McMillion, Marshall McMillion,
Jane Wise, second vice president; and Carol Strauss Pomeroy; Robert Gloeckner, Canal Winchester;
Kennedy, secretary-treasurer.
. ·'
. Shelia Eastman, Gallipolis.
The annual necrology report was given, and the
1&lt;;160: Charles Sayre, Racine; Charles Riffie,
graduates sangrtheir alma mater before the bene- Mary Houdashelt, Janice Teaford Zwilling,
diction. Music for dancing was played by George Phillip Harrison, Richard Poulins, Ed Bartels,
Hall, organist.
Pomeroy; Donald Spencer, Albert Martin, Jack
Welker, Jim Sisson, Ed Bartels, Barbara Fields,
1925; Kathleen Scott.
Norma Roush Baker, all of Pomeroy; Howard
1927: Nonga Roberts, Pomeroy.
Parker, Gernsboro, Ga.; Sharon Douglas
1929: Helen Maag, Racine; Martha Greenaway. Swindell, Shade; Kenny Leffie, Syracuse; Bruce
Palm Beach, Florida; and Loretta Meier Beegle, Stalnaker, Port Charlotte Fla.; Nancy Brown
Strause, Key; William Gibbs, James E. Smith, Tup~meroy.
I
1931 : Mary K. Baer Roush, Racine.
pers Plains; John Bryant, Punta Gorda, Fla.; Mar.1932: Harlan Wehrung, Pomeroy;Victor Stewart, ilyn Blackwood, Middleport; .M~rk Grueser,
Syradls~f arid-Virginia'Heilman.
Shade; Jan · Gettles, Jackson; Ellen Young T!10ma,
1934: Rac!iael Elberfeld Downie, Racine.
Rutland; Ernest E Hall, ColumJ;lus; Herbert
'1'935~""'f)pra Swa~lc!'"'C rispin,k Westerville; Riggs, Windham; Marilyn Stockton·&gt;Martin, GalThomas D. Clark, Lancaster; Virgil R. Hanun, lipolis; Nan€y Brown Strauss, Ray, Ohio; Barrie
Racine; Dorothy Reibel, Pomeroy; Evelyn Phillips, Endicott, N.Y.; Sandy Potts Tate, Fort
Edwards, Florida; Ruth H. Kauffinan, Massachu- Washington, Md.; Charles A. Downie, Wolfeboro,
setn; Geneva Webster Haney, WesterviUe; and Ruth N. H.; Bob Springs; Linda Crow Beegle, WorGloeckner Moore, Pomeroy.
thington; Karen Drake Smith, Gahanna; William
1936: Margaret ones .Stewart, Syracuse; and Cur- Gibbs, Roswell, N. M.; Fred C . Brown, Plant
tis Jenkinson, Middleport.
City, Fla.; Sue Phillips Boney, Columbus; Paul
1937: Charles E. Sayre, Margaret Thomas Bailey, Roush, Reedsville.
and Sylvia Midkiff, all of Pomeroy. .
1961: Ben Ewing, William Young, Norman
1938: Theda Martin Clark, Lancaster; Golda Price, all of Pomeroy; Ruth Ann .Brothers Riffle,
Heilman Reed, Pomeroy; Milton Houdashelt, Gal- Middleport; Mike Roberts, Akron.
lipolis; Ziba Midkiff, Pomeroy; George and Mary
1962: Terry Ohlinger, Zanesville.
.
Morris, Po!fieroy.
1964: Jennifer Solomon, Yvonne Young, Bren, 1940: Kathryn, Holmes Crow, Pomeroy; Mary da Bailey, Don Mayer, Pomeroy; Louanna
Goodwin Bartels, Bertha Brown Williams, Cleve- Leonard, Canal Winchester; Louella Thompson ·
land; Mary Yost Hamm, Racine; Virgil King, Roush, Houston, Texas.
Pomeroy; Marie Carr Williams, Portsmouth; Ada
1965: Joe Gilmore, Walworth, Wise.; John
Warner Nease, Racine; Mary E. Karr Bowen, Curd, Donna Hauck Carr, Larry Marshall, Linda
Pomeroy; Nellie Fugate Brown, Pomeroy;AnnabeU Darnell Mayer, John Anderson, Pomeroy; Peggy
Lewis Houdashelt, Gallipolis; Norma Louise Wetzel Folmer Crane, Middleport; Tom Ebersbach,
JeweU, Pomeroy; Vera H. Buckman, Pomeroy; Columbus; Brenda Potts Hopfer, Centerville;
Lawrence Leonard, Pomeroy; Harold Heilman, Katie Morarity Davis, Marathon Fla.; Barry
BeUfontaine; and Charles Pickett, Pomeroy.
Boyer, Malta; Kay ·Proffitt, Racine; Susanna
' 1941: Abbie Warner Stratton and Wanda Eblin, Arnold Fitzgerald, Olathe, Kansas; David Eskew,
Pomeroy.
Newark; BiU Jewell, Tucson, Ariz.; Jean Phelps
1942: .Mary Sayre Rogers, Danbury Texas.
Cleland, Dupont, Ind.; Faye Crammer Icenhour;
1943: Peggy Sto'ry McDonald, Nelsonville; Mary Louis Diehl, Norwalk.
E. Bentz, Maljorie Leonard, Belva Ypung Glaze, and
1966: Guy Sargent, Po,meroy.
Mary Grueser RusseU, aU of Pomen;&gt;y.
.
. 1944: William .Buck, Sun City, Ariz.; Enid Earline King Bare, PoweU; Hatold Blackston, Pomeroy;
Bob HyseU, Pomeroy.
1945: Louise Dailey KeUy, Grove City; Edgar
Vale, Fellwoo~i, Fla.; Evelyn Grueser Hollon,
Racine; Agner;--Bentz, Rose, Little Hocking; Lloyd
Blackwood, Harold Hysell, Louise Gilmo~; Barbara Weeks, John Weeks, Bill Radford, Patrick D.
Wood, Eunice L. Jones, all of Pomeroy; Harry
Schwab, Reno; Patricia Watson Buck, Sun , City,
:Ariz.; Ruth Harbrecht Rosenbaum and Jack
Rosenbaum, Wilmington, DeJa,
. 1946: Eleanor Smith Walter, Toledo; Roy Holter,
Howard MuUen, George Wright, and George lhle, ·
all of Pomeroy; Mary K. Yost, Syracuse.
, 194 7: Betty Heilman, Columbus; Mildred
Kapteina Phillips, Frank Vaughan, Bill Lehew,
Joseph Struble, Horace Abbott, aU of Pomeroy; Halton Thomas, Mt.Vernon; Kenneth Wiggins, Racine.
· · 1948: Ida M . Bowers, Pataskala; Gerald Custer,
Chardon; William Knight, Point Pleasant; Betty
Pullins Sayre, Middleport; June VanVranken, Norfolk,Va. ; Cedric Parker, San Antonia,Texas; James E
Will, Pomeroy.
·
. •· 1949: Ann Foster Cottrill, Lancaster; Carmelita
McBride Williams, Louisiana, Mo:; Gene Thomas,
t:Jnion, Miss.; Gill Tubs, Syracuse; Ray Williams,
john E. Werry, Peggy Dailey Houdashelt, Pomeroy. HONORED - Kathleen SCott and Martha Brown
. 1950: Patsy Burnside Thoma, John Blaettnar, Husted Greenaway were given special recognition
Bob Eason, Nora Riggs Eason, Paul Harris, at the Pomeroy High SChool Alumni Association
Richard Jones , Richard Russell, Robert Burton, banquet held Saturday night. Mrs. SCott was the
Margaret Lehew, Enunogene Edwards Hamilton; oldest graduate, the class of 1925, observing her
B'onnie Eichinger Kelly, all of Pomeroy; Bernard 75th anniversary; and Mrs. Greenaway was the
Grueser, Donna Grueser, Fenton; Bill Hess, San oldest graduate, class of 1929, who taught at·
Diego; Calif.; Robert . Barnitz, Mason; Paul .E. Pomeroy High SChool. They .were presented flowWerry, Dayton; Marilyn Swatzel, Bergan, Fla.;Joyce ers.
BY CHARLENE HoEFucH
SENTINEl NEWS STAFF

•

The Da~ly Sentinel ·

HIGHLIGHTS
Montoya wins Indy 500
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Juan
Montoya won the 84th Indianapolis 500, becoming the first
rookie champion since Graham
Hill in 1966.
~:The defending CART series
cpampion made car owner Chip
Ganassi look brilliant for his deci$tQn to return to the Indy Raci
L'i;ague's biggest event after a
four-year absence.
: cART's big-name teams and
drivers had boycotted Indy since
the lRL began in 1996.
· Mon~oya overwhelmed the .rest
of the 33- car field, leading 167 of
· the 200 laps and crossing· the finish line 7.184 seconds -. · nearly a
full straightaway ahead of ·
:BJlddy Lazier's Dallara-Aurora.
··. Montoya averaged 167.496
:mph and won $1 ;235,690 of a
:record purse of $9,476,505.
·Eliseo Salazar and JeffWard, both
:driving for A.J. Foyt, finished
:~hird and fourth.

POMEROY - Residents of Veter·
ans Memorial Hospital's Skilled •
Nursing Unit celebrated National
Nursing Home Week recently with ·.
a variety of events planned by
Lisa Pauley, activities. director.
The events included a Mothers
Day' Tea, a cook out, visits from ·
the. Meigs County head-start chi~ ·
dren, a balloon launch, senior
prom held at Holzer Senior Care ,
a presentation by the Big Bend
Cloggers, Senior Olympics held at
Overbook Center, and special
. music by Hospice nurse Dana
Johnson.
'
Shown at the prom are, left;
William Kennedy of VMH skilled
nursing facility, and the Vicki
Wayan, Holzer Senior Care activt,
ties director: and, above, Doris
Kruskamp, Harriette Sinclair, and
Beulah Authorson, all VMH residents.

.

Kenseth takes ·
Coca-~ta 600 flag

Why are Hollywood stars getting thinner?
vanishing act on TV and film sets is not the only
example of women going skeletal in clusters. Eating qisorders are thriving in other closed-off,
competitive groups - sports teams, dance · and
gyrnpastics groups, the a!Jlled servic~s - where •
body image 'is importanf and the peer pressure .is .
high . " •
.
· Some experts now believe that anor~ might .
be contagious in the same way that other selfdestructive epidemics seen as teen smoking and
suicide clusters are.
Anorexia often starts with catching a "skinny
is beautiful" thought that's passed like a flu going
around . the office, according to Aaron Lync\X,
author of "Thought Contagion: How Belief
Spreads Through Society." The mo.re dramatic ~
dieting behavior - having only two qrrots af
lunch .o r taking an hour tO eat half a bagel - th~
more it catches ·others' attention and causes them
to try · it. Lynch believes that if enough people
· adopt these anorexic h~bits, what once seeme4
bizarre becomes accet&gt;ted as . normal by the
group.
,
Whether it be co-workers or qst members,
women may start to outdo each other in the
daily thinning game.
.
:
"Men compete in sports, politics and their
jobs ," says Catherine Baker of tlie Women's Ther.
apy Centre Institute. "For women, competition 'is
mu~h more socially sanctioned in the area of
body imag'e."

BY GLAMOUR MAGAZINE
FOR liP SPECIAL FEATURES

Are somDI of Hollywood's leading actresses
starving themselves skinnier than even their
body-obsessed business dictates? Could women
actually be catching anorexia from each other? To
find out, Glamour spoke to eating disorder specialists, Hollywood insiders, psychologiiiS, sociologists and other experts. Glamour's investigation
.
appears in the June issue.
"The standard in Hollywood right now is
thinner than ever· - it's downright anorexic
looking," said Los Angeles-based trainer Karen
Voight. "Not only does an actress have to be able
to act, she has to make a good clothes ha!lger."
There seems to be a growing A-list of emaciated stars sporting the "lollipop look" with bodies so stick-thin that their )leads seem gigantic.
Among the "rich and famished· a,ctresse.s, according to the magazine, are "Ally McBeal" actresses
· Calista Flockhart, Courtney Thorne-Sffi.ith and
Portia de Rossi, plus Lara Flynn Boyle of "The
. Practice;· Paula Devicq and Rebecca Gayheart.
"lt's all 'about peer pressure," says Bernie Brillstein, one of the entertainment industry's most
prominent managers. ''lf an actress is thinner than
the rest of the cast and· successful, the other
women are going tp feel compelled to diet down
to her size, thinking, 'If it works for her, why
not?"'
In truth, the phenomenon of stars pulling · the

,,

Family Practice Physician

Aria L. McVicker

'

'Is Now Accepting New Patients
'

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Boating profldency test
offered In Pomeroy
POMEROY - Ohio has a
new law requiring anyone' bo.r n
on or after Jan. 1, 1982 who' operates a vessel powered py I 0 horsepower or more to successfully
complete a · boating education
course or a proficiency test.
The Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Division of
;~tercraft is offering a proficien'f.Y. test site at the·Pomeroy Public
-l:ibrary on June 6, 6-8 p.m .
:: :rhose passing the proficiency
fo!t will be issued a certificate.
:: :ro register, call the Portsmouth
:Office of the Division of Watermit at (740) 353-7668.
'.... .

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AtHolzer_\ Oiinlc !!
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CONCORD, N.C. (AP) - .
Matt Kenseth earned his first
Winston Cup victory in the
Coca-Cola 600, coming back
from farther in the field (21st} ·
than any previous winner.
Bobby Labonte finished second. Dale Earnhardt was third,
foUowed by Dale Earnhardt Jr.
and Dale Jarrett.
· Robby Gordon, seeking to
bewme the third driver to race in
both the Indianapolis 500 and the
NASCAR race on the same day,
only partially completed the feat.
Gordon fmished sixth at Indy
.a nd then .hopped on a 1plane to
North Carolina, where he finished 35th in the 600 after taking
the wheel from P.J. Jones midway
through the race.
Rain delayed the start of the
fQdy 500 by three hours, making
Gordon late in his bid to start the
600.

.. •

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Dt; Aria McVIcker, completed her

:. :t!AST MEIGS - · The 2nd
4-hnual Eastern Eagle basketball
:camp will be held June 5-9 at the
· E~stern High School gymnasium.
:) Iighlights of the camp are a
:free camp t-shirt for all partici:P:tJ!ts, a camp basketball, and indi:V'i!lual awards for contest win-

Residency at Doctors Hospital, ,
Columbus, OH. Dr. McVicker is
Board Certified by the American
Osteopathic·Board of
Family Physicians.

•

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:n~rs.

Arla L. McVieker, DO

:; ~mphasis of the camp will be
;0(). passing, screens, defense,
~ooting, rebounding, bill handling and the rules of the game.
,• :the Eastern camp for boys and
girls will be 9 a.m. to noon.

To Schedule an Appointment!

.

'call (7 40) 446·51 37
,.

Jlolzer Clinic.

GallipOlis, OH

..... "

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Holzer Clinic •• ....Keeping the Promise!
-w.lro/zercllnlc.com

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: Send Meigs County sports and
outdoor ,news to the Daily Sentinel by fax at 992-215 7, or email
at galtribune@e••rekanet.corn.
Contact sports editor Andrew
Carter at 446-2342, ext. 121.

I

Knicks knock off ~acers to tie series 2-2
NEWYORK (AP) -Right after Reggie Miller hit a 3-pointer from in front of
Spike Lee's courtside seat, Larry Johnson
answered froin in ftont of comedi~n Chris
Rock's seat.
Funny how quickly the momentum can
swing one way and then back the other
way.
Miller's 3-pointer made it a one-point
game with: 6:50 left, but Johnson's 3 upped
the lead to. four just 28 seconds later. The
Pacers never got that close again as they
dropped Game 4 to the Knicks 91 -89· to
fall into a 2-2 tie in the Eastern Conference finals.
"That was the biggest shot of the g;ime
right there," Millet said 9f Johnson,'s 3-

••

pointer, one of five. he hit during the
game. Charlie Ward added four 3-pointers, Latrell Sprewell and Marcus Camby
played well despite injuries and the Knicks
had their highest-scoring quarter of the
postseason as they opened a 33-19 lead
after one.
No player came up bigger than Johnson, who was flashing his "Big L" gesture
and spinning gleefully in circles after hitting another 3-pointer, this one with 4:25
left for a nine-pqint lead.
Charlie Ward added a 3-pointer two
minutes later to help the Knicks wrap it
up.
Repeatedly scoring on isolation plays in
the low post against Dale DaVis and pass•

New York played again without center
ing to open teammates when he was douhie-teamed, Johnson scored 25 points, Patrick Ewing, who sat out his second
shot 10-for-16 from th e field - including .. straight game with acute tendinitis in his
5-for-5 from 3-point range - and had right foot. Sprewell,.who broke a bone in
seven rebounds and four assists.
his left foot at the end of Game 3, finished
Allan Houston added 17 points, Kurt with 12 points and held Jalen Rose to 18,
Thomas scored 16 and Ward had 16 while Camby played on a sprained knee
points, seven assists and six rebounds. New and had eight rebounds, five points and
York was 10-for-14 from 3-point range three blocks.
Reggie Miller had 24 points for the
and ourrebounded Indiana 41 - 32.
Game 5 is Wednesday night at Indi- Pacers, who could never come all the way
anapolis, where the Pacers looked so co n- back after allowing the Knicks to open a
fident just a few days ago after winning 14-point lead at the end of the first quarthe first two games of the series. But it was ter and a 17-poim lead at halftime.
the Knicks who had that look over the
The Knicks hit 10 of their first 12 shots
weekend, even as their injuries kept piling and finished 14-for-18 in the first quarter
up.
to take a 33- 19 lead into the second.

MEMORIAL NOTEBOOK

Late rains·put damper on travel ·plans
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) Some had barbecues scheduled.
Some were set to play golf elsewhere.
Still others had family outings
or were starting vacations.
Not unlike a lot of other people around the country, the 77
playei'S who teed otfin Monday's
final round of the rain~delayed
Memorial\ Tournament had
plans.
·'
Jeff Sluman put the finishing
touches on a 1-under-par 71,
then rushed to his car to drive
the 270 miles to his home in
Chicago for a cookout with his
family.
·
,
Carlos Franco, · a native of
Paraguay wno now lives in
Miami, was set to ·catch a flight
to Washington, D.&lt;;;., where he
would begin . preparations for
next week's Kemper Open.
Bill Glasson was bound for the
J{emper as well, while Harrison
Frazar w:IS set to go on i fishing

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emorial

DUBLiN, Ohio (AP) arid bounded 20 yards up the
Tiger Woods had a six-stroke hiU, finishing closer to the clublead and was o.n top of his game. house than the green. He
That meant everyone else was wound up with a bogey.
playing for second Monday in . Woods won for ihe 11th time
the Memorial Tournament.
in his last 20 tour events, and has
J~ck Nicklaus wouldn't be finished out of the top 10 just
surprised if it were like that twice in his last 25 touniaments
every week.
arouud the world. He joined
A year ago, Nicklaus watched Tom Kite and Ben Crenshaw
Woods hit the ball all over with 19 career victories on the
Muirfield Village arid save par PGA Tour.
with a superior short game to
Woods won $558,000, giving
win by two strokes.
him more than $4.1 million this
This year was diff:erent, but no year- already the second highest in PGA Tour history behind
less amazing.
Woods was in total control of · his '99 season - and making
every shot, except the 7-iron he him the first player to go over .
blasted over the 18th green and $15 million in career earnings.
into the gallery. That cost him a
, Mike Weir had a 69 to finish
chance to break the tournament fourth at 276, boosting his bid
scoring record, but his 2-under to become the fi'rst Canadian to
70 for a 269 was still good make the Presidents Cup team.
enough fo,r a five-stroke victory. Steve Lowery, paired with
Ever}'one else found that out Woods and trying to make up
Monday as the rain-delayed six shots, instead had a 73 and
M emorial concluded with hard~ was at 278 along with Paul
ly any ii~t pumps and even fewer Azinger (66) and Steve Flesch
dramatics -just another victo- (70), who earned .enough
ry by Woods.
·
money 'to qualify for the British
Ernie E)s ar ·' :ustin Leonard Open.
wound up tie(;! tio · first in the BWoods won for ~he fourth
Flight at 274.
time this year, giving him 12
·Along with
successfully victories over the past two seadefending a title for the first sons, with the second half of'
time in 10 tries, Woods became 2000 still to come. The last playthe first repeat champion in the er to win this much was Nick25-year history of the tourna" laus, who had t4 victories in the
ment and 'joined Nicklaus, Tom 1972 and '73 seasons.
Watson, Hale Irwin and Greg · Nicklaus tried to make MuirNorman as the only players to field Village tougher this year,
win the Memorial twice.
with thicker rough and smaller
Els got within four. strokes greens with new contours.
before his lone bogey in a round Those changes were off~et by
of 7-under 65. Leonard holed a soft, still conditions the last three
lob wedge from 81 yards for rounds - and by Woods.
eagle on· No. 5 in his round of
"He's just making mincemeat
68, giving him his best finish out of golf courses," Nicklaus
since a tie for third in the Cana- said Monday morning after findian Open last September. ·
·. ishing his 25th Memorial at 5Woods squandered his fhance· pver 293. 1'Eve\'y time you turn
to break Tom Lehman's tourna- · around, it's 63, 64. Guys in the
'
ment ·scoring record of 268 set locker room were saying, 'Jack,
in 1994 by failing to make this golf course i.s !jot that easy.'
birdie on any of· the par 5s. He's making it'look easy."
Needing a birdie on 'the last
The closest anyone came to
hole, he blasted a 7- iron from Woods was when Els ·birdied the
TWO-TIME CHAMP- Tiger Woods proudly displays The MemQrial trophy after winning in convincing fash·
156 yards that hit the cart path 15th ge~ to 15 under.
ion Monday. Woods won the Memorial for the second straight year. (AP)

J

Eastemhoop
.. . camp June 5·9
.

e

liger tenurizes

trip in Coloraqo with his family.
His plans changed when he had
to fit in a final-round 71.
Paul Goydos was headed for a
late-afternoon flight ro California for a barbecue at his sisterin-law's house.
He said even though his plans ·.
. had been disrupted by the
weather, he still felt worse for the
.people outside the gallery ropes.
... You're disappointed, but
· that's part of the deal;' he said."]
feel bad for the tournament people. They work all year to put 'on
.a golf tournament to watch ·
Tiger Woods walk up 18 with a
win on Sunday.
"For· the players, it's a small
convenience. But for the tournament and all the volunteers and
all the wo•kers, it's a big inconvenience."
I ·did what?
Steve Flesch closed with
~unds of 64 and' 70 to .. tie for
fifth at 10-under. He collected

$113,150, which put him in the
top 20 on the money list .
That status qualified him for
his first British Open.
Told that he had earned a spot
in the field, he said, 'That'd be
great, that 1 wouldn't have to go
over there. til qualify. That would
be exciting. I've always wanted
to go. It's good I 'didn 't know
that the last few holes, though."
Divots
Greg Norman withdrew prior
to the final round because he
had scheduled a meeting for the
holiday with Florida Gov. Jeb
Bush.
Tournament founder Jack
Nicklaus had just finished a 71
when four jets rumbled over the
course .i n a tight formation. "The
weather's good eno ugh to fly, 1
guess we can play," he said.
T he course was ))it by 2 inches of rain on Sunday -. matching what had fallen in the area
for the two previous weeks .

Angels edge Tribe
in extra inn
·
CLEVELAND (AP) - Troy
Glaus, whose throwing error in
the eighth inning helped C leveland tie it, homered leading off
the 1Oth as the Anaheim Angels
beat the Indians 3-2 Monday.
Claus' 16th homer, a shot into ·
the left-field bleac hers off Steve
Karsay (0-3), enabled the Angels
to snap a nin e-game losing
streak against Cleveland.
Bcnji Gi.l had two RBI
groundouts for the Angels, who
got five no-hit innings from
starter Jarrod Washburn and
solid relief from 'their bullpen
but near!( gave th e game away
·with two eighth-inning errors.
Shigetoshi Hasegawa. (4- 0),
Anaheim's ' fourth pitcher, got
· the win and Troy Percival
pitched .the lOth for his 15th
save.
Percival . gave up a two-out ·
double to Omar Vizquel in the

,,

I Oth and intentionaUy walked
Roberto Alomar before striking
o ut pinch-hitter Alex Ramirez.
After Sean DePaula became
the sixth Cleveland pitcher to
go on the disabled list this season, right fielder Manny
Ramirez strained his left hamstring running to first in the
eighth .
Cleveland wasted a brilliant
performance by Jim . Brower,
malcing his first start this season
and the third of his career. The
right-hander gave up just one
earned run and two ' hits in 7 23 innings.
AI Levine came on for Anaheim and gave up Cleveland's
first hit, a double down· the ·
right-field line by Vizquel.
But Levine:;_ kept the shutout
intact with a pair of assists
before getting Travis Fryman to
fly out for the final out.

�•

Inside: ·

Tuesday, May 30, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Memorial scoreboard, Page B6

Seniors·e.njoy.prom

_PomerOy High School
annual reunion held

Page 81
Tuesday, May JO, 2000
'

TuEsDAY'S

P Phillips Grinun, Columbus; Charles Lochary,
Matthews, N. C.;' Gene Yeauger, Enon; Verna
POMEROY - More than 350 Pomeroy High Osborne Snowden, Gallipolis; John Robinson ,
School alumni and guests attended the annual Mechanicsville, Va.; John P. Boyd, Oak Hill; Ernest
reunion staged Saturday night at Meigs ·High Bowers, Pataskala.
·
School. The school colo~:S of purple and white in
1952: Guy Guinther, Gallipolis; Sara Stowe Neifloral and balloon bouquets decorated the cafeteria gler, Racine; Phyllis Meier May, Pomeroy.
where the dinner and dance were held.
1953: Ted Scott, Bobby 1-Iill, Darrell D. Drenner,
' Graduating classes beginning with 1925 were · Ft. Myers, Fla.; Mildred Stockton Bernard, Athens;
recognized, three scholarships were awarded, and Sally Bartels Ayers, Athens; Ed Kennedy, C . Clifford,
oflkm to plan the 2001 reunion were elected.
James Kitchen, Jack Raub, Pomeroy; Robert Rein Joe Struble emceed the program and recognized hart, Athens; Sue Struble Tibbs, Syracuse; Nathan
Kathleen Scott obserting her 75th graduation Roush, Syracuse.
anniversary, and Martha Brown Husted Greenaway
1954: Joanne Colmer Miller, Marietta; Marlene
of the class of 1929, the oldest Pomeroy High Athens.
School graduate to have taught at Pomeroy High
1955: Donna Wildermuth Goble, Gallipolis;
School. They were presented bouquets of flowers.
Carol Strauss Kennedy, Thomas Smith, Paul
Also recognized were LoueUa Thompson Roush Eichinger, Harley Johnson, Stacy Arnold, Ted
·of the class of 1964, the youngest valedictorian; and ·scott, Pomeroy; Paul E. Wise, Columbus; Marilyn
Jack Rosenbaum the oldest class president.
Grueser Quinn, McConnelsville; Fern Colmer
Awarded Pomeroy Alumni Scholarships were 1 Daniels, Middleport; Ray Shasteen, Tampa, Fla.;
Jeremiah Sffi.ith, son of Rebecca and Carl Smith, Roger Hines, Logan; Ivan Shumate, Mansfield;
whose grandmother, Donna Dill graduated from Nancy L. Jacobs Hanold, Jan Story Lochary,
Pomeroy in 1963; and Duane David Will, Jr., son of Matthews, N .. C.; William HyseU, Columbus;
D!lane and Brenda Will, whose grandmother, Alle- Carol Louks Taylor, Winter Park, Fla.; George
gra Wood Will, graduated from Pomeroy iri 1937.
Paulsen, Ashland; Harley Mossman, Grassboro, N .
Smith, a graduate of Meigs High School, plans to J. Doris Well Snowden, Huntington, W.Va.; Don
attend Ohio University and major in chemical Grueser, Racine; Janet Heines Grueser, Racine.
engineering. Will, a graduate of Point Pleasant
1956: Carolyn Brown Charle~. Minersville;
High School, is enrolled at Marshall University in Mary Jane Scott Wise, Middleport; Ron Bearhs,
Huntington where he will pursue a degree in Pomeroy; Bob Eastman, Bill Qualls, Gallipolis.
anatomy.
1957: Ted Meier Beegle, Worthington; Carol
The Charles Gibbs Scholarship went to Julia L. Bearhs, Endicott, N.Y.; Lila Mitch, Pomeroy;
Ann Spaun , daughter of Bill and Ruth Spaun, April Shasteen Smith, .Pomeroy;Jim Baker, Texas.
whose grandmother, Anna Mae Thomas graduated
1958: Norbert Neutzling, Jr., Marion; Ann
(rom PHS in 1944, and her grandtither, Walter Icenhower, Parkersburg; Ed Boney, Columbus;
William TerreU, in 1948. She plans to major in Marcia Grueser Arnold, Racine; Harry Leffie,
early childhood education.
Pomeroy; Mary Lou Smith Hawkins, MiddleNew officers elected were Yvonne Young; presi- port; Fay Thomas DeWess, Grove City.
dent; JoAnne Willfams, first vice president; Mary
1959: Ruby McMillion, Marshall McMillion,
Jane Wise, second vice president; and Carol Strauss Pomeroy; Robert Gloeckner, Canal Winchester;
Kennedy, secretary-treasurer.
. ·'
. Shelia Eastman, Gallipolis.
The annual necrology report was given, and the
1&lt;;160: Charles Sayre, Racine; Charles Riffie,
graduates sangrtheir alma mater before the bene- Mary Houdashelt, Janice Teaford Zwilling,
diction. Music for dancing was played by George Phillip Harrison, Richard Poulins, Ed Bartels,
Hall, organist.
Pomeroy; Donald Spencer, Albert Martin, Jack
Welker, Jim Sisson, Ed Bartels, Barbara Fields,
1925; Kathleen Scott.
Norma Roush Baker, all of Pomeroy; Howard
1927: Nonga Roberts, Pomeroy.
Parker, Gernsboro, Ga.; Sharon Douglas
1929: Helen Maag, Racine; Martha Greenaway. Swindell, Shade; Kenny Leffie, Syracuse; Bruce
Palm Beach, Florida; and Loretta Meier Beegle, Stalnaker, Port Charlotte Fla.; Nancy Brown
Strause, Key; William Gibbs, James E. Smith, Tup~meroy.
I
1931 : Mary K. Baer Roush, Racine.
pers Plains; John Bryant, Punta Gorda, Fla.; Mar.1932: Harlan Wehrung, Pomeroy;Victor Stewart, ilyn Blackwood, Middleport; .M~rk Grueser,
Syradls~f arid-Virginia'Heilman.
Shade; Jan · Gettles, Jackson; Ellen Young T!10ma,
1934: Rac!iael Elberfeld Downie, Racine.
Rutland; Ernest E Hall, ColumJ;lus; Herbert
'1'935~""'f)pra Swa~lc!'"'C rispin,k Westerville; Riggs, Windham; Marilyn Stockton·&gt;Martin, GalThomas D. Clark, Lancaster; Virgil R. Hanun, lipolis; Nan€y Brown Strauss, Ray, Ohio; Barrie
Racine; Dorothy Reibel, Pomeroy; Evelyn Phillips, Endicott, N.Y.; Sandy Potts Tate, Fort
Edwards, Florida; Ruth H. Kauffinan, Massachu- Washington, Md.; Charles A. Downie, Wolfeboro,
setn; Geneva Webster Haney, WesterviUe; and Ruth N. H.; Bob Springs; Linda Crow Beegle, WorGloeckner Moore, Pomeroy.
thington; Karen Drake Smith, Gahanna; William
1936: Margaret ones .Stewart, Syracuse; and Cur- Gibbs, Roswell, N. M.; Fred C . Brown, Plant
tis Jenkinson, Middleport.
City, Fla.; Sue Phillips Boney, Columbus; Paul
1937: Charles E. Sayre, Margaret Thomas Bailey, Roush, Reedsville.
and Sylvia Midkiff, all of Pomeroy. .
1961: Ben Ewing, William Young, Norman
1938: Theda Martin Clark, Lancaster; Golda Price, all of Pomeroy; Ruth Ann .Brothers Riffle,
Heilman Reed, Pomeroy; Milton Houdashelt, Gal- Middleport; Mike Roberts, Akron.
lipolis; Ziba Midkiff, Pomeroy; George and Mary
1962: Terry Ohlinger, Zanesville.
.
Morris, Po!fieroy.
1964: Jennifer Solomon, Yvonne Young, Bren, 1940: Kathryn, Holmes Crow, Pomeroy; Mary da Bailey, Don Mayer, Pomeroy; Louanna
Goodwin Bartels, Bertha Brown Williams, Cleve- Leonard, Canal Winchester; Louella Thompson ·
land; Mary Yost Hamm, Racine; Virgil King, Roush, Houston, Texas.
Pomeroy; Marie Carr Williams, Portsmouth; Ada
1965: Joe Gilmore, Walworth, Wise.; John
Warner Nease, Racine; Mary E. Karr Bowen, Curd, Donna Hauck Carr, Larry Marshall, Linda
Pomeroy; Nellie Fugate Brown, Pomeroy;AnnabeU Darnell Mayer, John Anderson, Pomeroy; Peggy
Lewis Houdashelt, Gallipolis; Norma Louise Wetzel Folmer Crane, Middleport; Tom Ebersbach,
JeweU, Pomeroy; Vera H. Buckman, Pomeroy; Columbus; Brenda Potts Hopfer, Centerville;
Lawrence Leonard, Pomeroy; Harold Heilman, Katie Morarity Davis, Marathon Fla.; Barry
BeUfontaine; and Charles Pickett, Pomeroy.
Boyer, Malta; Kay ·Proffitt, Racine; Susanna
' 1941: Abbie Warner Stratton and Wanda Eblin, Arnold Fitzgerald, Olathe, Kansas; David Eskew,
Pomeroy.
Newark; BiU Jewell, Tucson, Ariz.; Jean Phelps
1942: .Mary Sayre Rogers, Danbury Texas.
Cleland, Dupont, Ind.; Faye Crammer Icenhour;
1943: Peggy Sto'ry McDonald, Nelsonville; Mary Louis Diehl, Norwalk.
E. Bentz, Maljorie Leonard, Belva Ypung Glaze, and
1966: Guy Sargent, Po,meroy.
Mary Grueser RusseU, aU of Pomen;&gt;y.
.
. 1944: William .Buck, Sun City, Ariz.; Enid Earline King Bare, PoweU; Hatold Blackston, Pomeroy;
Bob HyseU, Pomeroy.
1945: Louise Dailey KeUy, Grove City; Edgar
Vale, Fellwoo~i, Fla.; Evelyn Grueser Hollon,
Racine; Agner;--Bentz, Rose, Little Hocking; Lloyd
Blackwood, Harold Hysell, Louise Gilmo~; Barbara Weeks, John Weeks, Bill Radford, Patrick D.
Wood, Eunice L. Jones, all of Pomeroy; Harry
Schwab, Reno; Patricia Watson Buck, Sun , City,
:Ariz.; Ruth Harbrecht Rosenbaum and Jack
Rosenbaum, Wilmington, DeJa,
. 1946: Eleanor Smith Walter, Toledo; Roy Holter,
Howard MuUen, George Wright, and George lhle, ·
all of Pomeroy; Mary K. Yost, Syracuse.
, 194 7: Betty Heilman, Columbus; Mildred
Kapteina Phillips, Frank Vaughan, Bill Lehew,
Joseph Struble, Horace Abbott, aU of Pomeroy; Halton Thomas, Mt.Vernon; Kenneth Wiggins, Racine.
· · 1948: Ida M . Bowers, Pataskala; Gerald Custer,
Chardon; William Knight, Point Pleasant; Betty
Pullins Sayre, Middleport; June VanVranken, Norfolk,Va. ; Cedric Parker, San Antonia,Texas; James E
Will, Pomeroy.
·
. •· 1949: Ann Foster Cottrill, Lancaster; Carmelita
McBride Williams, Louisiana, Mo:; Gene Thomas,
t:Jnion, Miss.; Gill Tubs, Syracuse; Ray Williams,
john E. Werry, Peggy Dailey Houdashelt, Pomeroy. HONORED - Kathleen SCott and Martha Brown
. 1950: Patsy Burnside Thoma, John Blaettnar, Husted Greenaway were given special recognition
Bob Eason, Nora Riggs Eason, Paul Harris, at the Pomeroy High SChool Alumni Association
Richard Jones , Richard Russell, Robert Burton, banquet held Saturday night. Mrs. SCott was the
Margaret Lehew, Enunogene Edwards Hamilton; oldest graduate, the class of 1925, observing her
B'onnie Eichinger Kelly, all of Pomeroy; Bernard 75th anniversary; and Mrs. Greenaway was the
Grueser, Donna Grueser, Fenton; Bill Hess, San oldest graduate, class of 1929, who taught at·
Diego; Calif.; Robert . Barnitz, Mason; Paul .E. Pomeroy High SChool. They .were presented flowWerry, Dayton; Marilyn Swatzel, Bergan, Fla.;Joyce ers.
BY CHARLENE HoEFucH
SENTINEl NEWS STAFF

•

The Da~ly Sentinel ·

HIGHLIGHTS
Montoya wins Indy 500
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Juan
Montoya won the 84th Indianapolis 500, becoming the first
rookie champion since Graham
Hill in 1966.
~:The defending CART series
cpampion made car owner Chip
Ganassi look brilliant for his deci$tQn to return to the Indy Raci
L'i;ague's biggest event after a
four-year absence.
: cART's big-name teams and
drivers had boycotted Indy since
the lRL began in 1996.
· Mon~oya overwhelmed the .rest
of the 33- car field, leading 167 of
· the 200 laps and crossing· the finish line 7.184 seconds -. · nearly a
full straightaway ahead of ·
:BJlddy Lazier's Dallara-Aurora.
··. Montoya averaged 167.496
:mph and won $1 ;235,690 of a
:record purse of $9,476,505.
·Eliseo Salazar and JeffWard, both
:driving for A.J. Foyt, finished
:~hird and fourth.

POMEROY - Residents of Veter·
ans Memorial Hospital's Skilled •
Nursing Unit celebrated National
Nursing Home Week recently with ·.
a variety of events planned by
Lisa Pauley, activities. director.
The events included a Mothers
Day' Tea, a cook out, visits from ·
the. Meigs County head-start chi~ ·
dren, a balloon launch, senior
prom held at Holzer Senior Care ,
a presentation by the Big Bend
Cloggers, Senior Olympics held at
Overbook Center, and special
. music by Hospice nurse Dana
Johnson.
'
Shown at the prom are, left;
William Kennedy of VMH skilled
nursing facility, and the Vicki
Wayan, Holzer Senior Care activt,
ties director: and, above, Doris
Kruskamp, Harriette Sinclair, and
Beulah Authorson, all VMH residents.

.

Kenseth takes ·
Coca-~ta 600 flag

Why are Hollywood stars getting thinner?
vanishing act on TV and film sets is not the only
example of women going skeletal in clusters. Eating qisorders are thriving in other closed-off,
competitive groups - sports teams, dance · and
gyrnpastics groups, the a!Jlled servic~s - where •
body image 'is importanf and the peer pressure .is .
high . " •
.
· Some experts now believe that anor~ might .
be contagious in the same way that other selfdestructive epidemics seen as teen smoking and
suicide clusters are.
Anorexia often starts with catching a "skinny
is beautiful" thought that's passed like a flu going
around . the office, according to Aaron Lync\X,
author of "Thought Contagion: How Belief
Spreads Through Society." The mo.re dramatic ~
dieting behavior - having only two qrrots af
lunch .o r taking an hour tO eat half a bagel - th~
more it catches ·others' attention and causes them
to try · it. Lynch believes that if enough people
· adopt these anorexic h~bits, what once seeme4
bizarre becomes accet&gt;ted as . normal by the
group.
,
Whether it be co-workers or qst members,
women may start to outdo each other in the
daily thinning game.
.
:
"Men compete in sports, politics and their
jobs ," says Catherine Baker of tlie Women's Ther.
apy Centre Institute. "For women, competition 'is
mu~h more socially sanctioned in the area of
body imag'e."

BY GLAMOUR MAGAZINE
FOR liP SPECIAL FEATURES

Are somDI of Hollywood's leading actresses
starving themselves skinnier than even their
body-obsessed business dictates? Could women
actually be catching anorexia from each other? To
find out, Glamour spoke to eating disorder specialists, Hollywood insiders, psychologiiiS, sociologists and other experts. Glamour's investigation
.
appears in the June issue.
"The standard in Hollywood right now is
thinner than ever· - it's downright anorexic
looking," said Los Angeles-based trainer Karen
Voight. "Not only does an actress have to be able
to act, she has to make a good clothes ha!lger."
There seems to be a growing A-list of emaciated stars sporting the "lollipop look" with bodies so stick-thin that their )leads seem gigantic.
Among the "rich and famished· a,ctresse.s, according to the magazine, are "Ally McBeal" actresses
· Calista Flockhart, Courtney Thorne-Sffi.ith and
Portia de Rossi, plus Lara Flynn Boyle of "The
. Practice;· Paula Devicq and Rebecca Gayheart.
"lt's all 'about peer pressure," says Bernie Brillstein, one of the entertainment industry's most
prominent managers. ''lf an actress is thinner than
the rest of the cast and· successful, the other
women are going tp feel compelled to diet down
to her size, thinking, 'If it works for her, why
not?"'
In truth, the phenomenon of stars pulling · the

,,

Family Practice Physician

Aria L. McVicker

'

'Is Now Accepting New Patients
'

.

.

•

.

.

Boating profldency test
offered In Pomeroy
POMEROY - Ohio has a
new law requiring anyone' bo.r n
on or after Jan. 1, 1982 who' operates a vessel powered py I 0 horsepower or more to successfully
complete a · boating education
course or a proficiency test.
The Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Division of
;~tercraft is offering a proficien'f.Y. test site at the·Pomeroy Public
-l:ibrary on June 6, 6-8 p.m .
:: :rhose passing the proficiency
fo!t will be issued a certificate.
:: :ro register, call the Portsmouth
:Office of the Division of Watermit at (740) 353-7668.
'.... .

.
...-.-.
. .
•

AtHolzer_\ Oiinlc !!
'

CONCORD, N.C. (AP) - .
Matt Kenseth earned his first
Winston Cup victory in the
Coca-Cola 600, coming back
from farther in the field (21st} ·
than any previous winner.
Bobby Labonte finished second. Dale Earnhardt was third,
foUowed by Dale Earnhardt Jr.
and Dale Jarrett.
· Robby Gordon, seeking to
bewme the third driver to race in
both the Indianapolis 500 and the
NASCAR race on the same day,
only partially completed the feat.
Gordon fmished sixth at Indy
.a nd then .hopped on a 1plane to
North Carolina, where he finished 35th in the 600 after taking
the wheel from P.J. Jones midway
through the race.
Rain delayed the start of the
fQdy 500 by three hours, making
Gordon late in his bid to start the
600.

.. •

.

Dt; Aria McVIcker, completed her

:. :t!AST MEIGS - · The 2nd
4-hnual Eastern Eagle basketball
:camp will be held June 5-9 at the
· E~stern High School gymnasium.
:) Iighlights of the camp are a
:free camp t-shirt for all partici:P:tJ!ts, a camp basketball, and indi:V'i!lual awards for contest win-

Residency at Doctors Hospital, ,
Columbus, OH. Dr. McVicker is
Board Certified by the American
Osteopathic·Board of
Family Physicians.

•

.

:n~rs.

Arla L. McVieker, DO

:; ~mphasis of the camp will be
;0(). passing, screens, defense,
~ooting, rebounding, bill handling and the rules of the game.
,• :the Eastern camp for boys and
girls will be 9 a.m. to noon.

To Schedule an Appointment!

.

'call (7 40) 446·51 37
,.

Jlolzer Clinic.

GallipOlis, OH

..... "

'
"

•

.."

Holzer Clinic •• ....Keeping the Promise!
-w.lro/zercllnlc.com

'

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•••••

: Send Meigs County sports and
outdoor ,news to the Daily Sentinel by fax at 992-215 7, or email
at galtribune@e••rekanet.corn.
Contact sports editor Andrew
Carter at 446-2342, ext. 121.

I

Knicks knock off ~acers to tie series 2-2
NEWYORK (AP) -Right after Reggie Miller hit a 3-pointer from in front of
Spike Lee's courtside seat, Larry Johnson
answered froin in ftont of comedi~n Chris
Rock's seat.
Funny how quickly the momentum can
swing one way and then back the other
way.
Miller's 3-pointer made it a one-point
game with: 6:50 left, but Johnson's 3 upped
the lead to. four just 28 seconds later. The
Pacers never got that close again as they
dropped Game 4 to the Knicks 91 -89· to
fall into a 2-2 tie in the Eastern Conference finals.
"That was the biggest shot of the g;ime
right there," Millet said 9f Johnson,'s 3-

••

pointer, one of five. he hit during the
game. Charlie Ward added four 3-pointers, Latrell Sprewell and Marcus Camby
played well despite injuries and the Knicks
had their highest-scoring quarter of the
postseason as they opened a 33-19 lead
after one.
No player came up bigger than Johnson, who was flashing his "Big L" gesture
and spinning gleefully in circles after hitting another 3-pointer, this one with 4:25
left for a nine-pqint lead.
Charlie Ward added a 3-pointer two
minutes later to help the Knicks wrap it
up.
Repeatedly scoring on isolation plays in
the low post against Dale DaVis and pass•

New York played again without center
ing to open teammates when he was douhie-teamed, Johnson scored 25 points, Patrick Ewing, who sat out his second
shot 10-for-16 from th e field - including .. straight game with acute tendinitis in his
5-for-5 from 3-point range - and had right foot. Sprewell,.who broke a bone in
seven rebounds and four assists.
his left foot at the end of Game 3, finished
Allan Houston added 17 points, Kurt with 12 points and held Jalen Rose to 18,
Thomas scored 16 and Ward had 16 while Camby played on a sprained knee
points, seven assists and six rebounds. New and had eight rebounds, five points and
York was 10-for-14 from 3-point range three blocks.
Reggie Miller had 24 points for the
and ourrebounded Indiana 41 - 32.
Game 5 is Wednesday night at Indi- Pacers, who could never come all the way
anapolis, where the Pacers looked so co n- back after allowing the Knicks to open a
fident just a few days ago after winning 14-point lead at the end of the first quarthe first two games of the series. But it was ter and a 17-poim lead at halftime.
the Knicks who had that look over the
The Knicks hit 10 of their first 12 shots
weekend, even as their injuries kept piling and finished 14-for-18 in the first quarter
up.
to take a 33- 19 lead into the second.

MEMORIAL NOTEBOOK

Late rains·put damper on travel ·plans
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) Some had barbecues scheduled.
Some were set to play golf elsewhere.
Still others had family outings
or were starting vacations.
Not unlike a lot of other people around the country, the 77
playei'S who teed otfin Monday's
final round of the rain~delayed
Memorial\ Tournament had
plans.
·'
Jeff Sluman put the finishing
touches on a 1-under-par 71,
then rushed to his car to drive
the 270 miles to his home in
Chicago for a cookout with his
family.
·
,
Carlos Franco, · a native of
Paraguay wno now lives in
Miami, was set to ·catch a flight
to Washington, D.&lt;;;., where he
would begin . preparations for
next week's Kemper Open.
Bill Glasson was bound for the
J{emper as well, while Harrison
Frazar w:IS set to go on i fishing

''

'

emorial

DUBLiN, Ohio (AP) arid bounded 20 yards up the
Tiger Woods had a six-stroke hiU, finishing closer to the clublead and was o.n top of his game. house than the green. He
That meant everyone else was wound up with a bogey.
playing for second Monday in . Woods won for ihe 11th time
the Memorial Tournament.
in his last 20 tour events, and has
J~ck Nicklaus wouldn't be finished out of the top 10 just
surprised if it were like that twice in his last 25 touniaments
every week.
arouud the world. He joined
A year ago, Nicklaus watched Tom Kite and Ben Crenshaw
Woods hit the ball all over with 19 career victories on the
Muirfield Village arid save par PGA Tour.
with a superior short game to
Woods won $558,000, giving
win by two strokes.
him more than $4.1 million this
This year was diff:erent, but no year- already the second highest in PGA Tour history behind
less amazing.
Woods was in total control of · his '99 season - and making
every shot, except the 7-iron he him the first player to go over .
blasted over the 18th green and $15 million in career earnings.
into the gallery. That cost him a
, Mike Weir had a 69 to finish
chance to break the tournament fourth at 276, boosting his bid
scoring record, but his 2-under to become the fi'rst Canadian to
70 for a 269 was still good make the Presidents Cup team.
enough fo,r a five-stroke victory. Steve Lowery, paired with
Ever}'one else found that out Woods and trying to make up
Monday as the rain-delayed six shots, instead had a 73 and
M emorial concluded with hard~ was at 278 along with Paul
ly any ii~t pumps and even fewer Azinger (66) and Steve Flesch
dramatics -just another victo- (70), who earned .enough
ry by Woods.
·
money 'to qualify for the British
Ernie E)s ar ·' :ustin Leonard Open.
wound up tie(;! tio · first in the BWoods won for ~he fourth
Flight at 274.
time this year, giving him 12
·Along with
successfully victories over the past two seadefending a title for the first sons, with the second half of'
time in 10 tries, Woods became 2000 still to come. The last playthe first repeat champion in the er to win this much was Nick25-year history of the tourna" laus, who had t4 victories in the
ment and 'joined Nicklaus, Tom 1972 and '73 seasons.
Watson, Hale Irwin and Greg · Nicklaus tried to make MuirNorman as the only players to field Village tougher this year,
win the Memorial twice.
with thicker rough and smaller
Els got within four. strokes greens with new contours.
before his lone bogey in a round Those changes were off~et by
of 7-under 65. Leonard holed a soft, still conditions the last three
lob wedge from 81 yards for rounds - and by Woods.
eagle on· No. 5 in his round of
"He's just making mincemeat
68, giving him his best finish out of golf courses," Nicklaus
since a tie for third in the Cana- said Monday morning after findian Open last September. ·
·. ishing his 25th Memorial at 5Woods squandered his fhance· pver 293. 1'Eve\'y time you turn
to break Tom Lehman's tourna- · around, it's 63, 64. Guys in the
'
ment ·scoring record of 268 set locker room were saying, 'Jack,
in 1994 by failing to make this golf course i.s !jot that easy.'
birdie on any of· the par 5s. He's making it'look easy."
Needing a birdie on 'the last
The closest anyone came to
hole, he blasted a 7- iron from Woods was when Els ·birdied the
TWO-TIME CHAMP- Tiger Woods proudly displays The MemQrial trophy after winning in convincing fash·
156 yards that hit the cart path 15th ge~ to 15 under.
ion Monday. Woods won the Memorial for the second straight year. (AP)

J

Eastemhoop
.. . camp June 5·9
.

e

liger tenurizes

trip in Coloraqo with his family.
His plans changed when he had
to fit in a final-round 71.
Paul Goydos was headed for a
late-afternoon flight ro California for a barbecue at his sisterin-law's house.
He said even though his plans ·.
. had been disrupted by the
weather, he still felt worse for the
.people outside the gallery ropes.
... You're disappointed, but
· that's part of the deal;' he said."]
feel bad for the tournament people. They work all year to put 'on
.a golf tournament to watch ·
Tiger Woods walk up 18 with a
win on Sunday.
"For· the players, it's a small
convenience. But for the tournament and all the volunteers and
all the wo•kers, it's a big inconvenience."
I ·did what?
Steve Flesch closed with
~unds of 64 and' 70 to .. tie for
fifth at 10-under. He collected

$113,150, which put him in the
top 20 on the money list .
That status qualified him for
his first British Open.
Told that he had earned a spot
in the field, he said, 'That'd be
great, that 1 wouldn't have to go
over there. til qualify. That would
be exciting. I've always wanted
to go. It's good I 'didn 't know
that the last few holes, though."
Divots
Greg Norman withdrew prior
to the final round because he
had scheduled a meeting for the
holiday with Florida Gov. Jeb
Bush.
Tournament founder Jack
Nicklaus had just finished a 71
when four jets rumbled over the
course .i n a tight formation. "The
weather's good eno ugh to fly, 1
guess we can play," he said.
T he course was ))it by 2 inches of rain on Sunday -. matching what had fallen in the area
for the two previous weeks .

Angels edge Tribe
in extra inn
·
CLEVELAND (AP) - Troy
Glaus, whose throwing error in
the eighth inning helped C leveland tie it, homered leading off
the 1Oth as the Anaheim Angels
beat the Indians 3-2 Monday.
Claus' 16th homer, a shot into ·
the left-field bleac hers off Steve
Karsay (0-3), enabled the Angels
to snap a nin e-game losing
streak against Cleveland.
Bcnji Gi.l had two RBI
groundouts for the Angels, who
got five no-hit innings from
starter Jarrod Washburn and
solid relief from 'their bullpen
but near!( gave th e game away
·with two eighth-inning errors.
Shigetoshi Hasegawa. (4- 0),
Anaheim's ' fourth pitcher, got
· the win and Troy Percival
pitched .the lOth for his 15th
save.
Percival . gave up a two-out ·
double to Omar Vizquel in the

,,

I Oth and intentionaUy walked
Roberto Alomar before striking
o ut pinch-hitter Alex Ramirez.
After Sean DePaula became
the sixth Cleveland pitcher to
go on the disabled list this season, right fielder Manny
Ramirez strained his left hamstring running to first in the
eighth .
Cleveland wasted a brilliant
performance by Jim . Brower,
malcing his first start this season
and the third of his career. The
right-hander gave up just one
earned run and two ' hits in 7 23 innings.
AI Levine came on for Anaheim and gave up Cleveland's
first hit, a double down· the ·
right-field line by Vizquel.
But Levine:;_ kept the shutout
intact with a pair of assists
before getting Travis Fryman to
fly out for the final out.

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promotion 1t's rates
run dates and
publications please
call
1 800 906 3364

�Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

Tunday, May 30, 2000

550

1\lEHCHANDISl

730 Vana l 4 WD1

Building
Suppllal

510

1998 S 10 Extend ed Cab Au
omal c Loaded 740 441 8827

IAMM.Tt'QI

740

MJNOUNCEr.lE NTS

005

80

Auction
and Flea Market

Personals

Moton:ycle1

BASEMENT
WATERPIIOOPlHD
Uncond ona teHmt gua an H
LOC:I eft tncn u n &amp;h t d E1
lobliohod 875 011 2• HIS (700)
•.oa 0870 1 800.21 7 0!71 Aog
era Wa1trprooflng
C&amp;C

BRUNER LAND
74o-441 1492

AUCTION
2 Big sao Days
Every sa 6 ~M

DIABETIC PATIENTS

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Ga 1 Co A New Off SA 325
Dee C eek Rd
Ac es
s 5 ooo o 14 Ac u s 9 ooo

FREE DEBT CON SOL DATION
App ca on W Se v ce Reduce
Paymen s To 65% CASH N
CENT VE OFFER Ca
800

Every Tues 6 P:M
TrucklOads Of

New &amp; lJsed ems

Homseve a Sta es
sa 11111 To Tho Pu~~ &amp; Deale s

A o G ande Mob ey Ad Bes
Bu d ng S es n The Coun v '6

328 85 0 Ex 29

Piece Dozens &amp; Case Lo s
BOWEN AUCT ON SERVICE
GARY BOWEN AUCTIONEER
Proctorv lo Oh o
Flto Morl&lt;el

FREE FREEl MON EY PAOB
LEMS,? NOW ACC EPT NG AP
PL CAT ONS 13 000 AND UP
NO APPL CAT ON FEE
877
543 B357 E)("[ 402

Jus Across
Hun ng on WV

N ct B ck Home 3 Bed ooms 3
s o y w h F n aned
Ba hS
Ba sem en Ca po
ng ound

Poo Oak K chen Cab ne s Con
va n en l oca on Ou e Ne ghbo
hood
OS Teodo a A enue

Ga po s Owne Needs To Se
Ask gS 9000 740.446B1 B

3 S B~ge

74o-811-28S
304-153-2517
DR VEAS TAKE HOME MORE
BE HOME MORE Avo ago 999
Wage Was S45 255 www oeh
anspo com

Oom no 1 P zza n P Pleasan
ftexable hours apply n person
304 875 5158

NO DOWN PAYMENT
No Down Paymen Requ ad w h
Gave nmen Sponso ed Loan
Goo d C ed

And S eady ncome

Aequ ad Ca Today Fo Mo e

n o rna on ndependence Mo
PH 0 1'0 Q.R A P-H-Y
Wedd ngs
Pots
Sports Teams
P o ass ona Ce

ad Pho og a

phe

gage Sa v cas 26 Mad son
Lakewood OH 44 07 MB 679
BOO.B45-0036

es

A

$2

500

8 Ac es W h

Pond 129 500 0
5 Ac IS
$3 500 Cash cnesl'l e Jess e
c eelc Ad 20 Parce s Beg nn ng
A 6Ac es $ 2000To3 Ac es
$47 000 G ea Homes S es And
Hun ng Cay Twp Ma abe Ad
Ac 88 $20 000 0 3 Ac IS

0 nl ng Room Tab t w th S x
Cha 1 and Mt ch ng C tdt nza

1304)675-4&amp;08

Fo Sa

l fl

1 Recond

oned wash

d Yl I and I ge ato I

Thompsons App anct 34Q 7
Jackaon Avenue (304)675-73&amp;8
GOOD

USED

1999 Yamaha Wo

o

350
good
ohapo $3 !00 304 675 3582
740 949 2&amp;53

Loaded w 11 ex 11 Vt

APPLIANCES

Waahe a d ye a a ge ato a
angaa Skagga App aneta 78

~

750 Boata &amp; Motora
lor Sale

V ne Sl 111 Ca 7&lt;0 048 7398
1 88S SIB-012&amp;

W h Ba n $37 000 F end Y
A dge 5 Ac es S o ooo Cash
P ee

•

......

'I

Cash

ReasoMb e ales
Ca or appo ntmen

So h Ga a

-c

Hondaa
1011~11 JHp I and Suv'e
~~~r.Lr 1-en 795-51169 ext 1506(tolll

Q)

Mala• Ca Rut and Wh ea H
Rd Nco9Ac eoS 20000 11
A.c es $ 4 00 0 We e Danv e
SR 325 Nice 5 Ac eo I 6000 0
B a Ridge Ad
7N:esS 1000
New Pa ce s A a ab e Soon lri

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

(/)

Me gs Cos ca

.. .

,.,

...

..,

NEED MONEY

.~ -

en
en

Now Fo Maps And F nancll'fl

nlo

RENTALS
-----~

304)675 7472
304 )67~ 7279

IM:r~~D1~~::~;~;:1

Fastest CASH LOANS
regllldles1 of c edit Auto ooar11.1
credit ca da gyaranteed
consolidation guaranteed credltl
restoration 30.m nute ap~oroval.l
Call toll frse 1-888-8:23-~751 lSI

ctS

570

Mualcal
Instruments

•Bad C edn OK
• Easy Qualifying

• Fset Serv Qe
• Low Payments
Conf dendal
1-800-332 2411

540 Miscellaneous
Msrchandlae
(3) A See Bu d ngs 24x30
Was 17 990 Se $3 490 30x45
Was
750 Se
14 9!0
5(lx100 Was $3 500 Se
$12 900 Tom 800.38S 53 4

s

Ntw To lllu Th ft ShOf&gt;po
9 Wea St maon 4ltltnl
7.0.!82 842
Quo y co h ng and houoohO d
lame I 00 bag 11 o ovo y
'Jhu aday Monday h u Sa u day
800830

760

Q)

Auto Parta l
ACCBIIOrlel

97 3!0 Chevy Moo
(304)675-45 4

$200

lVIoll!l

Fu n 1u t App aneta
A Hou10hold Goods
An queo &amp; Co 11e D11
304 4!3-2!87
AI ea esta t advert 1 ng n
th 1 newspape 1 aub act o

Won't Lilt
BOO Sq Fl HOUII 0 P
Lo 7 Mea F omHosp a
44S 3!83

to advert se any p ere enco

m ta on o dltcrlm na lon

based on ace co o

rt glon

1ex am a sta us o nat onal

o gn o any nentlonto
make any tuch prefa enca
m alono dsc mna on

EMPLOYMENT
SERVI CES

110

WANT A COMPUTER?? BUT
NO CASHH MMX Techno ogy
W F nance W h a Down Pas
C edh P oblems No Problem Ca
Tor F ee 1 B77 293 4082

FED UP W TH THE
RUN AROUNO?
Wan A New Home w h No Haa

s e? Oa

Fo P e App o a

Stops Herpes OUtbreaks!
96% Success Rate
To Free 1 877 EVERCLR
onfo www evercl com

r

37 Peep a Needed To Lose Up
To 30 Pounds n The Nex 30
Oays F ee Samp es 740 44
1982

the Fedora Fa H~uslng Act

o 1968 which maktl t eg1

..c:
I

GIVE IT AWAY I
BUILD A FORTUNE!
FOD 40MSWGe1 10 110801

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

888 565&gt;0 67
FHA Aepos &amp; Land Easy Te ms
7.0.446 3570

Th s newspaper w not
know ng y accept

Help Wanted

advertlsemen ' to ea estate
wh ch s n vlo ation or he

SERV ICES

taw Ou eadera are he eby
prormed lha a1 &lt;1WI! ngs
actven sed n h s newspaper

810

are ava abe on an aqua
opportunl y base
$505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EX PEA ENCE AE
OUIREC 800 757.07!3

App ance Parts And Serv ct A
Nama B ands Ove 25 Yea s Ex
pe ence A Wo k Gua an eed
French C y May ag 740 446

REAL ESTATE
FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

310 Homes lor Sale
$ 0 DOWN HOMES NO CAEO T
NEEDED GOVT BANK AEPOS
CALL NOW
BOO 360 4620
EXT 8509

Home
Improvements

7795

New ea k Repos
On ylWo eft Neve ved n
Ca 800 948 5678

Now

Driver

2 week Paid
CDL Training

4 W de 3BR 2BA $2 3

Pe Mon h ow dow Paymen
F ee A F ee Oe ve y
888

928 3426

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Supe vso W h Foo ng Expe

ALL Yonl Solto Mull
Bt PI d tn Adv•~
DEADLINE 2 OOpm
tho dey bolorw 1ho od

A e you con nee ad? n e ne
use wan ed $350 $800 a week

1 to run Suftdly
odUon 200pm
Friday Molldoy od 1on

pa ckage S39 1 888 365 9385
www makernebuclls com

PT FT lu

v

e undab e dec son

ence And 2 Gene a C eane s
Needed In Jackson A ea Fu
TmePos onWo k ng500 P:M
1 30 A M Monday F day Bene
s Ava lab e A e 30 Days
1i anspo a on Needed Ca

740

245 7378

ANGUS ANO CHIANGUS Bu &amp;

2 Case Manage

3 Bed com B ck Home Do ub e
Ga age La ge Lo F n shed
Ba semen Man enance F e e

Aequ es

e s license

740 44il 8329

32x90 Fac o y Ae po
l ed n $49 950
6777

TROL HEATING ANO
COOL NO EOU PMENT
NSTALLED
1 ¥ou Dan l Ca Us WB So 11

ob P o u amen Spec a s
Requ es H gh Schoo 0 p oma

AEAAT ON MOTORS
Repaired New &amp; Rellu It n S1ock
Oa Ron Evans 800 537 9528

4 Nu on Spec a s Aequ es
H gn SchOo 0 p oma And Va d
D we s cense

1·877·230.6003

www cfldrlve com
t997 black Chevy S 0 Stepslde

Ex ended Cab 3 doo oaded
25 ooo mIts very aha p u ra
ngs I
00 740 949 204! o
740-949 2203

The Ga a Coun y Boa d 0 MR
DO s An Equa Oppo un y Em

poye

Hay Fo

Sa e Ready To Cu

C ean Hay A so Wan s Somaont
To Mow G SIS n Y8 d 740 24~
9393

Huge nven o
On V ny Sk

v 0 scount P

730 Van1

ces

NOW TRAINING
DRIVBRII
14 Day COL Training
Fun T aln ng Prog 11111
America all Opportunity
$850-$800 Per Weo!k

&amp;4 WDa

21 Years or Older
Male/Female
Full Benefits 401 K
Major Medical
Tuition Re mbu~~tment

1979 Ford B onco 3!1 mod od
automalt $800 740 982 !741

1884 Chevy Sho bod 4 we 305
Eng no Low M ugo Good eon
dmon 740-3711-2134 Afto s ~M

ng Coo s W nd

www lllpam com
DON T ALL TRUCKING
COMPANIES SOUND
THE SAME?
You VI now found a
comp1ny th1t 11 truly
dllfarantl
You 11111 1101 jull a number 11
O&amp;S OwMr Operllor $81 10
$ 85 loaded/empty (PC M er )
1011 pad hOme often (no kd
ding) much more Compeny
Drlvtfa up to S 32hnllt paid
vacation 401(k) hellthldenta

owa Ancho a Wa1e Hea e a
P umb ng &amp; E ec ca Pa ts Fu
nac11 &amp; Heat Pumps Benne s
MoD o Home Supp y 740 448
94 6 www orvb cor'J'I{bennett

(lemlly coverag• lol t30 p1
WHkll) New ualgned 1raclora
(nloe ) C.lvar Ouotlo 2 yra OTR

987 Chevy heovy 1 2 on now

no OW

350 ~ mo o lut njocttd 4 wl\ool

1

good MVR and Sllely
Oon1

d VI gOOd PI n lol d UUCk 74().
982-02 2

340 Business and
Buildings

delay

CALL
fUll

CDIJCt... A Hllltlera
Celt IDOell :11311

Dry von 10.,. no touch
You,. own d 1p1tcher
Aaatgnod truolca
401k
No farood NYC

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS

Mono-1 Of)!lOr unftn ava ~
Olllf o10 KIMed ceVOtn!AIIIPakl
vocetlon• avoill&gt;lo 3 sh ~·de 1y
FIO•Iblo ochldOing Slln you
new carw with 1.11
Qal11 1100-1129-!7!3

1o&lt; on IQPO~lmon

woroo• ror.ord 10 "*' ng ycu

Pt P111aant
I VIcinity

GOV T POITAL JOII Up
To I I 2• Hou H ng Fo 2000
F " Ca For App icltlon Exem
n•1 on tnto m.1 en Ftde a H e

Full 11oM
t nl on
T)

cs

1

5 8

800 598-4!04 Ex
8 AM

8 I? M

Tappan H E c ency 90% Gas
Fo nacaa 0 Fu naces 12 See

HOME FORECLOSURES $ 0
DOWN NO CAED T NEEDED
GOV T BANK REPOS
800
355 0024 Ext 8040

M ..nnlum TMtervloH

1 pieasad o announce 1ht
G 8nd open ng o 1 ntwWtla on cal ng 6&amp;n If
We a e now lett n;;J up
lrnervlew eppoln menralo
outbound tltMMce pos ona
No experience necessary
Een upo$5/h
.,llh quanerty ulary OVltwl

Heal Pump &amp; A Cond 1 on ng
Systems Free 6 Yea Pa 1 &amp; La
bo Wa an y Benne a Heat ng

POSTAL JOBS $4B 323 00 VA
Now H ng No E11pe ence Pad

6Ac:uof os o Sae o whole

s Ca 7

ween Wh a Road and 'Bu av e

Bualne11
Training

Gil tlpal I Co- Cotloga
(C8ree11 Coso To Home)

Ca!Todey 7ol0 446 4367
1 80().2 • 0452
Reg tll0-05 274B

CLEAN HOUSE

WITH THE
CILASStFIEIDSI

P •• Ru ~ Wa o
0 04

R vt Pe k Mob e Home Com

No es Ca
2228

pe month off ce apace o

CAED T PROBLEMS ? CALL THE
CAED T EXPERTS L CENSED
BONDEO CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CREO T BANKRUPTCY
JUDGEMENTS
'AWSU TS
AAA RAT NG 90 80 DAYS
BOO 422 !9B

o

P~1:"aya

Auto• for Sale

OWNBI OPBUTOU
We have freight to puN
$500 1tgn on bonua
Mldwell &amp; southeall run•

mun y PDme

Skipper

1982 Camaro T Tor&gt;o Au oma c
Good Shape Alk ng $2 200 74D38H029
998 Chevy S 0 Bazt 4x4 43
L t V 8 LOaded Exce en Con
d on 1 3 !00 080 740 256
4!7

$350 ps month $350 depot
740 949 2093 o e 4 878 188

470 Wanted to Rant
WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO
GV We F nance 0 Down Pas
C ad

P aD ems OK

Even

Tu ned Down Btlo t Rees abl&amp;h
You C od
800 659 0359

GET HOME MOST
WEEKENDS
A I assigned 98 or newer

1101gnet1 tntclora

dtpoll

company

atock

Convenijonals Plus Excsllent

~program

Beneftts Packlgel

-COLA

Huma11 ~~~

elCI*Ionct Call
Cal'llllt. PA

oy Spaces e $ 20
en

Slut Shltld Rldar
Program
d ract

800-431-1450
BruH IN

877 2734274
KnoXVIIII TN

IQO.I88.2t71
998 Dodge Ram Quad Cab ave
y ax a ow ng pkg us P oo
ng 27 000 m eo $22 99! 304
882 2995 304 882 313e

(100)711-4481

Start up to 3e cpm with
All M lea Paid
Avg 2500 per week and

401 K
Pin Bue Crou I

CARS FROM $200 POL CE M
POUNDS Honda s Toyo a I
Chovyt Joept And Spo U
n Ca Now BOO 772 7470
EX'!: 7832

Pold vocollon

Comp&lt;my Drr vcrs
bonU181

vacatlona

578 13B3 NORWOOD SAW
M lLS 252 Sonw 0 va Buf a o
NY 14221

740) 388

BUS NEBS OWNERS 1 Tu n
You nvo CIS In o Cash A so
Non Pe o m ng nvo c:u Any
S eve 1 888 982

$3 795 Saw Loga n o

Boa da P anka Beams La ge
Capac y Be&amp; 8awm Va Ul An
ywhe e FREE nfo mat on 1 800

6aces os24aceseach lo
ca 'd P ospec Ad mdway tie

Dayo 800 429 3680 Ex J 516

140

sowm

~en Moore

TRAN SPORTATION

&amp; 71

COO ng
1 BOO 672 5867
www orvb com/bennett

Tanng G ea Bene

-

1-BOD-CFI-DRIVE

App ca en s W Be Acce p ad
Th ough June 2 h They May Be
Ob a ned A The Gu d ng Hand
Schoo A 8323 No h S a e Aou e
7 Chesh e Ohio 45620

ATTENT ON WORK
HOME Up To $25 00 $75 00 H
PT FT NTEANET MAL OR
DER B88-B9B 502

tn Chtcago call

Student
Singles/Teams

JET

3

Full benefits
call Today
1·877·230.6002

Owner Operators

Loss F ee Es rna es 740 446
6308 1 800 29 009B

AndVa dO lYe s Lce se

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

OTR Drivers
Company

J~N

Ne a

Eam up To
$3 2 000/ Ist year

NOW HIRING!

P cad Aeasonab y Sa e Run
Fa ms Jackson 740-286-5395

New Doub ew de 3 BR 2BA.
S276 pe mon h Low Dow Pay
men F ee A F ee De ii.ftry
BeB 928 3426
Bache o Oeg ee And Va d 0

9 30 • m S.turdty

No Exp Needed

Now 6xBO 3BR 2BA $268 pe
mon h ow Down Paymen F ee
A F ee Oe e y
8B8 928
3426

Teama ond 0/0 welcome cal

. I 4113748

23 with 1 yr OTR IJCPIIrienCB
Owner Opc r &lt;1tors

Top Compennt on Psckage
Load or Empty +
FUEL SURCHARGE l
BONUSES I
Equ pment s years old or ne-1

1·800-727·2888

Th1s Directory 1s a
product of Uberty
Group Publ!shmg
or more mfonnation
concemmg th1s
promotion 1t's rates
run dates and
publications please
call
1 800 906 3364

�Mey30,2000

1\Jndey, Mey 30, 2000

P9 84 • The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

OOP

·BRIDGE

•

SMITtl·s conmoaaon

No Credit • Slow Cr-dh • Blnkruptcy
Aepo • Dlvorded

••j

•

• • New HornM

• R11110dlllng
• Deckl
• Roofing

• G1rqn
; Siding

WORRYIIGIII
No ll:mbtlrraument...

Nle4 It 4•••· II VI .•• I

You're Treatlld with Aeepectl
Call Now lor lnatant ApproVIIII""

Eqaipmen&amp; Pam .
Fat1ory A111horized
c-.IHPam
Dealem.

till

FREE ESTIMATES

,.......

1000 St. Rr. 7 South
CooM/,., OH of$713

Qaalh)t, Varlet)", low Plla11 • TIUit'l U1t
Bedding &amp; Vegetable Flats $6.60
· 10" Hanging Baskets $6.60
Wide Assortment of Herbs
Annuals &amp; Perennials in 4" Pots for .94¢ each

Stop In And. See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

750 East State Street
IAtnents, Ohio 45701

cylllcltr repairs, oil
Salts· S gaL lluckets
to SS gat drums
2 Y, miles out of
Chester on SR 248

740-985·4194
1

46809 SR 124

.Su..,.,
~"onstruetfon
""'
New Construction &amp;
Remodeling - Kitchen
Cabinets VinylS idringte.:sl
Roofs - Decks - 0 8 81
Free Estimates

..4lLLR
''

Cellular
Jeff Warner h1s.

"We're Back"
l'omeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances
Parts- All Makes

MYERS PAVING
Henderson, WV
8711-2487 ar 448-1428

T•• Appliance

1·80G-311·3391

'
Ken Yo""B

Cttlrulors Weloo1111

•Driveways • Tennis Courts
•Parking Lots • Playgrounds
•Roods • Streets

.Advertise in
·this spa~~\ for
s1oo per,
month.

WV Contractors 'Lie. #003506

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

Dump Truck
· Servtce '
Limestone, Gravel
Agricultural Lime

949·2249
laclne, Ohio
....__

Quality Window
Systems, Inc.

Sing-Dance-Party
~lth

Miss Mamie In
Annie Oakley's
Karaoke

Pomeroy, Ohio
992·4119 or
l-800-291-5600 '

:itatmlntg timber large
or
tracks. Top
prices paid also.

• Weddings•
Birthdays • Private
Parties

Cill740·367·7935
Mll1 moM

· Dozer work.

Siding • New Garagn
: • Replacement Windows
I • Room Additions ,
• Roofing

COMMERCIAl. and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740.992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00 Pill
740-992-5050

•fl..relnrt •CII41t Refills
. •W~t411rlii!l~Wrul••

COIITIUC11011

,•

Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Window&amp;,

'
,;

Do~~~~ g:~~ !om

't

174019t2·SIII

Now Taking Applications for·1 Bedroom
Apartment
Seniors, Disabled, Handicapped
, : Range, Aefl'igerator, A/C, o·n-Site Laundry,
, , Community Room, 24 Hour Maintenance

•

. Provl~ed

Call or Come By Our Office Located at
2070 StateOffi
RouteH1241n Syracuse
ce ours
Monday and Thursday 1o am - 3 pm
p:~~~~: :o~~9

.,

OV~

7

Box 189

,

SttADE IUVEl AG SERVICE
"Ahead In Service"
Nutrena Wts1ern Pride 12" SWill Fetd......~ .........)S.25/50 lb bag
Nutrena 16" Rabbit Pelleb ................................... 'US/50 •. bag
Nutrena Hunters Pride 21" Dog Food...................)6JS/50 •. bag .
Nutrena 16" layer &lt;rumllels................................,15.99/50 •· bag
Nutrena Saatch Feed~ ............................................'6JS/50 • . bag
Sllllle liY•12% Cvttle fMd ................................16.7S/100 •. bat

Call740·985·3831

'•••I'll ow.

.

· "~

It\ I\~~ FUf.l~'H~Otl\ ""~
Dl P~'\1-JN(.E Mi. FOIZ:.

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car· seats, head.ltnter:!\,~
truclt tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seEtt~
boat covers, ~arpet!S, etc.
Mon - Frl 8:30 • ·5:00 ...
Over 40 yra experience

(740) 742·8888 .
1·888-521-0916

....
.......

·.,
1

High &amp;Drv·. ·
Self-Storag~:· ·

We Serv1ce All Makes
't; Washers· Dryers ·
ill\."
Ranges- Refrigerators
Freezers- Dish Washers

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

r

Now Rentmg?

.

411MI01

·33795 Hiland Rd: I:·
Pomeroy, Ohio •

Medicare Supplements; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage; ·
,
Major Medical• Nursing Home.
~.

tf.tl

ABOUT TRANSPOR.TATION

20 Yn txptlt111e!

&amp; SON

\

1

'

~=vi~nv:ll~sid:in~R~~=::;-;::~;.;;;;;,;;;.~=t
"
_
•

Dozer For Hire

QUALITY LANDSCAPE

Size • JD 550 G
Rate $50 per hour
Call for minimum

April Showero Bri,.
May Flower~!!

Are Your Plant Beds
Ready?
Weeding: Mulching:
Pruning: Edging
Planting and Retaining
Walls

FrH Est;mates
Mike Sharp
740-14&amp;.3606

'

• Eo1eo Roekeit and Aee-rleo
• TraiJia by IJonel A MTH
• Ga,....aYH Traek
• Model Power
• IJieline

..

v

;,..

,---"Tu'iiYTriS'Uriid""
S~nior

RACINE MOWER CLINIC
-rruck

Houra M·F 9 1m • 7 pm
Sat. 9 em • 1 pm
• Pick up &amp; delivery Service
Ownar· Jamu A. Picken•
Shop Foreman. Shane Baker

Adverl'ise

Jl.£1'

Citizen

Disco~nt

TREE SERVICE

• Lawnmower &amp; weedeater ·repair &amp; supplies

740·992·7945

Chester, OH

;a: :.;

·TOP
(740) 367-0266
.~e~rto"•'
1-800-950-3359
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

y

WELL. I LEARNED A LOT tN
5Cf.IOOL TODAY .. ! LEARNED

mopa.

MARCUM

1

PEANUTS

740-992-5212 ,

latwtd- ProfniiiMII 5ankt

\IRdar New Ownemhlp

Locll-843-5264

· rate
FrH Eatlmatea
Pond eatlmatea
welcome

DIPIIIftllft
'Bill

;a:

0~

TA,lifT
AVPiffiG.&amp;.

:1
BUILDING
, • . .'
'
'
•:
Long Bottom, Ohio
'
''
,: ,' "
740·985-4141
Residential- decks, kitchens, Commercial- metal studs,
1
bathrooms, custom
'
remodeling, handicap access drywqll, suspended cciling.s.
: • · kitchens &amp; baths, wood &amp; •
,1
1
:•

13

21 ·-and
Loul•"
22 For 1 o11o1t
lima
23 OecruMin

RRdepol

11 FencyvaM

lnlenolty

24

-

us1ness

West

North

Pass
Pass

2•
4•

·-

Eve'o alrdln

25 Some lennll

27 Pre-tlduh

l281ntlleconl8r ,
21 nnto
31 Cowed
33 Long hor91c .

Eaal

Pass
All pass

as ~.:, o1
40 LMder Ol the
lrtoh llt1111ry :

blue

41 Al'llllllect
ll&amp;lrlnen

42

To get a current weather
report, check the

••
••
••

l

. Sentinel

•
•'•

ITUESDAY

': L-------------------~ - ~-------------------"

:---------........--....
••

--~

.• ••• •

'Your
'Birthday

$'·
~

WEDNESDAY, May 31,2000 today your usual self-control
~ . Be ready to move quickly in could quickly go by the boards if
!fhe year ahead should opportuni- you should not get your way.
. ~y knock. Sudden ·and dramatic
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
, ehanges in your material affairs Alterations you make today might
:could have an uplifting affect on . not be for the better, so guard
; your life style.
against impulsively changing any~:· GEMINI (May 21-June 20) thing that is running smoothly. If
{t]nles~ you·~ careful today, you it isn't broke, don't fix it.
~Qiuld be smitten with a fit oftalkLIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23)
:tfivene.ss and blurt out far more Think twice before getting pals
!than you should be saying tooth- involved in any of your big deals
!ers. It could ·get. you _in trouble, today. Business involvements
' Qemini, treat yourself to a birth- with friends could produce more
{day gift. Send for your Astro- headaches and complications than
~Graph predictions for the year they do profit.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov, 22)
{ahead by mailing $2 and SASE to
' ~~tro-Grafh, c/o this newspaper. Only if you come to realize a
~.0. Box . 758, Murray Hill Sta- commitment you made does not
lion, New York, NY 10156. Be, serve your best interest should
f.ure to state your Zodiac sign.
you attempt to bow out of your
: CANCER' (June 21-July 22) commitment today, but do so as
~t a lock on your wallet today · tactfully as.possible.
~:cause, should you get an attack'
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
of instant gratification, you could 21) Don't attempt "to make
spend the wad and have little left demands of others with which you
when something really 'good wo~ldn't comply yourself. People
eonies along later.
·
can be inspired, but they will not
: LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) It's tolerate being brow beaten.
~ery unlike you to behave in a
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
;manner that would demean your 19) Because you tend to be a bit
image, yet, if you' re not careful romantically adventurous today,
\.

'I

'

I

,,

UMIIMI ·.
mlci'OWive •

43 Smooth
44 Cowa

··--the
Mood lor
Love"

.

·

47 lllrtllool, ...

110 llriiiMIIIoe .·~
12 In whli WilY~
UMe.lumea •

I

•

~ 111

•:

II St. croaoora
t Not 110 muell

40JoaTOIN'I
lelm

"No man who is occupied in
doing a very difficult thing, and
doing it very well, ever loses his
self-respect." So wrote George
Bernard Shaw. Well, here is a ,
chance for you to boost your self.respect-· solving a difficult bridge
problem. You are in four spades.
West starts with the king and
another heart. What would you do
after ruffing?
Maybe South's three-club
game-try looks ambitious to you.
However, the hand has only six
losers and has been strengthened
by knowledge of the spade fit.
There are three top losers:.one
spade; one heart and one diamond. The worry is South's third
Ti{"'T ~1-.N~ E.IJE:~'&lt; ""' diamond. You would like to ruff
D"-'&lt; I~ Trl€:. WEEW-ID I
it in the dummy, but if you immediately lead a .diamond to dummy's qu~en, Easl will win with the
ace and play another heart. Here,
as West ~as only two trumps, this
will promote a second spade Irick
for the defense. And if you draw
two rounds of trumps before·
broaching diamonds, East will
• cash his spad~ queen, killing the _.
ruff ·
What is the secret ? A ~ummy
reversal! Gash the spade ace, play
a spade to dummy's king. and call
~=..,..,l!lli · for the diamond two. If East rushes in with his ace, you won't need .'
a ruff in the dummy, so he plays
low. After winning with the king .
play the club eight to dummy's
nine and ruff a heart in hand. Continue with l·he cll)b I 0 to dummy's
jack. If East ruffs, you can trump
your diamond loser in the dummy; so he discards: Now ruff the:
heart I 0 in hand and continue
IF 'f'OU MISS Tf.IE
~ clubs. If East discards twice more,
you have 10 tricks: two top
6U5, '(OU WALK I
~
spades, three heart ruffs in hand,
one diamond and four clubs.

.

Tt4f fOLI.-OwiNG P~06MM vi A~
-Al&gt;t POSSIBI.-i
. rY A I..OvJ ~

William Safranek, Attorney ,
(740) 5112-5025 Athens
·

'

Waten ~dge of Syracuee

additions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks Boat DOcks
Concre~ &amp; Block ~k.
•'
_ Blown 'Insulation
; ·•, :
·
,,
' For 9112·2772
All Your Home
lmorovermmi Needs
•'
•:

Mlddl1port, Ohio 45780

State Route 248

Leave Mlssage .
Afler6pm- 614-985-4180

.

;a: :.;

SZ 143 WI.-?K/57

35537 St. Rt. 7 lllrlli

Befo~J 6 p.m. -

unlto

ZO Ughttln

Opening lead: • K

,

Ucllitie•

ftelppllanca

"Take the pain out
ofpainling-.
Let me do it for you''
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

7 Actor Flynn

clllclll
12 Convwtl

BY PHILLIP ALDER

Seplic Syale"" &amp;: •

'

YORE TURN TO ASK
TH' BLESSIN', MIZ. SMIF

5C.~OOL!

New Homn • VInyl .

11~n

II Buddhlom typo

Deceptively difficult

Advertise In
GUAUNTEED
...M-0-N-UM_E_N_T._'A_L_L_IF_E_I-NS_U_R_A_N_C_E_C_O"""''.-: :
: : , . this space for , AIR c:::::~:NING
PEOPLES SECURITV'I,UNITEO FINANCIAL
:,
Contact Office FofDetalis
•:
$25 per
, (304).112.•2079 '·
month.
' semcEa
to: • • • • • .. •* • • • • •* •• •..,•..,• •• •~•~, •~•~•..,•""• :.~ , t.-...;,-;.;.;;;;.;;.;._,_~
New Haven WV, · ...
Rocky
R. Huppi Ag~t

Aunt 1;;'5
Candes &amp;Crafts

Fr.. EIIIB1ale1

.Now available

LINDA'S
PAINTING

5 Pooltc lima

rtiNIIuance .

linkruptay ooract:

-------- ~ • · ·a·,.;E.MONTH'
S RENT
FREE · · :I•
JIL INIULAIIOII I
"'
·

Kuaokef

· .Land Clearing &amp; · ~
Grading
•

For l!lror-tlon regerdlng

4/24/D01mo

I

Bulldour &amp;: Backhoe;
• · Senoiceo
'
Hou~ &amp; Trailer Sites i

,."""~::.r..........

~~

Black &amp; Tan puppiea

., IISSEI.L IUIL~ERS
INC.

L----.;.:.;:..:..;:..:..::..:..:..:~---...1 ~

Sand and Dlrt

• K-IJne
• Alhearn
• Ad.

E
T
E

I'Gdlnte

3t LIUnclry

I•

g~
·:

''n Hee!IM
' •"•

............................
• I.,.,, ... .....,.....

. • Nailo •l''lea Batho
AIIBreedo

o·
RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL
FREE ESTil\IATES ... FULLY INSURED N
R
Brian Morrison/Racine, Ohio
y
(740) 985-3948

R

Albany, Ohio

411t.&lt;l0 1 mo. pd.

Fax 304-675-2457

c

MYSEL, II

HOWARD '.
EXCAVATING CO. ;

............ """"'
. lor ... ., ... ,......_ .... .., .........

'

Free E1timatee

· Man

l DESPISE
EATIN' ALL IY

.,.;....,.... ,_tis I .............,.II o l rrrWi'l......._l_ ........ loorlr .,..,.., _ _ ,..,...,,

P/B CONTRACTORS, INC;
c
, CONCRETE BACKHOE SERVIQS M
0
N
MASONRY · BOBCAT SERVICES As

//'uiMoy Qt //'&lt;{lit

' 992·1550

South

,' BANK.RUP'I'£Y

• Bathin_l!l • Ear•

38'--

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

' OPI,.,ION

CLEAN HOlJSE
WITH THE ,.
CU.SSIIFIEDSI

WILLIS' ·
SEAMLESS
GUnERS

219E.2nd

992-5479

Dailey .
Trucking

· •Garages
• Complete
. Remodeling
. · ·stop &amp; Compare
.
.FREE ·
ESTIMATES
740-992·1671

·

'D Cuol\lcn
DOWN
30 Loved
32 Sullel'tng 11om 1 Rauoolnlm
oold oymplamo
2 ~~WieMI
34 ltlr cru.t.r
3 Thin coin
38 Annapolle grid 4 Mallconter
abbr.
37 o.nuaat

• A Q 10 8

740-742-9501
~ 'Toll Free

Shrubs
Open Dally 9·5
Sun ll·S

.. 4

• J
+ K 53

Rhododendrons,
Lilac Trees, Assorted

7/22/TFN

'

Cell Phone 674-3311

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homae

10 7

•AB852

·free Delivery

Vegetable Planlll,
Beddl!ll Plants,'
Han11IDR Baskets,
Porch Boxes,
Comblnadon Pots,
Potted Geraniums,
Phlox, Azaleas,

"Cet in whUe you can, •pace U. limited"

+A

South

hphaotiMit .
••• lodv ,.,·"
All replacement
parts

Spring Season

740·949·7039

East
• Q 10 9
•AQ9643

• J 7
• K2

Quality Driveways,
patios, sidewalks
25 yrs experience
Free Estimates
740·742·8015 or
1-877-353·7022

SyriCUH
Now Open For .

Camping· Flahlng • Boating
• Nightly • Weekly • Monthly • Se11onal
Convenience store/ B1it • T1ckl1

• K J 9 7

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

992-5776

Raclna

• Q2

Your

GREENHOUSE

28Unu.d

• 10 8 7 5

Wesl

to_,

' lllquel-

• K4S

+J9864
.. 6 5 3 2

HUB BARDS

,,
· OLD LOCK24
'
CfiMPGaOO"D.

Phone (740) 59:Ji-6671

'

441 "RoM - -

8 Ardor

11 'fnMIIed Alrllnea
51 Poeml
17 Revol-, e.g. 114 Group at five
· 11 Gowk .,...
ss EaldmoZO Ewrlaatlng
M Robln'l home
23 ActrMa
57 -cut(.......

North

All Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Servkes
(740) 992~S470~

Lie •., oo-ao 1WIIIn · L--...lalWI!I.l'U!I2
'""··r· ...
aJ

Hythulk Host repairs,

Mornl"' Star Rd. CR JO
Raolne, Oblo
1-740-9494111

,...,... ....,
f~

Progreaalva top II.,.. · ·

Gravel• Sand • Topsoil

Slzttl 5' X 10'
to 10' X 30'
Houre
:
7 00 AM • 8 PM

ntcr .....
tUutiCel ""'"

•

,. ·W idl"--

Haulng • Umestoiti •

4577 t
740-949-2217

$500.00 Starburet

T&amp;D
. HYDRAUUCS &amp; OIL

Sue'l Greenhouae

Roed
Racine, Ohio

1 .... ellee

10 Wlng-locllld
·
12 Jlftonr
48 Work lor
14 • r "• robe
AmertcM

HfiOUHCI
EXCfiYfiTI"CI·

29870 Be1h1n

'
42 Efti!W'•

ACROSS

ALDER

HILl'S '
SELF STORAGE

Pomeroy Eagle•
Club Bingo On
Thursday•
AT 8:30P.M.
Mlln St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying sao.oo
p.r 111 "11'
$300.00 COVIrllll

IAIR NlalmM Tractor Br

Oreit Prleet on Jlew Homet
992·2753
992-1101

I

NEA Cro•aword Puzzle

PHILLIP

: ·CIDI!

'

The D11ly Sentinel • Paga B 5 ,

.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

•

by Lula Cempoa

Colollll1y Clphot ceyp&amp;ogromt are CtNiod 11om quolallonl by......,. people, Pllllllld

- · Elllh -In lhoalpller- lorMOihor.
Todlly., clue: D llqUM 8

·.

•v

ALVKR

XQXHAOVH

LX .

SA

XTTY

YPUA·OPVGXW

ALOPZY
ALX

Z LX K

HPKVIIJHJPJV

LVCVXGU

•

CIRXY

UXGGPZ

8

.'

I.T•

U I K ••

ZPWXLPJVX

:

what you do thai counts. • ~ Gactge Lucae

~

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: •tt'a not what you oay, or what people think of you, R'l ,
WORD

DAM I

•

•

•••

'I
I.

Z0 L ZEN

1

'

IIIII:.&lt;"'

'

I I I I 1
DUWON
2

I I I 1

ri-::E~P-:N::-;I-;;oR--,·,~

.

I 13 l ~~

!;
,

L-....J.L.....J..-L..--'·--'"'

I

SLAVSA

15 16

I've found a rath·ersimple way
to help my son balance his check-.
book. I .told him he only had lo
earn more than he - - - · - ·

I0

.

~--.-r.:.....,..:-lr--.l-;

Complele 1he chuckle quoted
.
by filling in the m1sslng words
L......J......-J---L---''-"--' you develop from steJ:J No. 3 below.

.:li. PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
~
THESE .SQUARES

.ft
V

1

I I I I I I I

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER
•

.

''

.

SCRAM.LETS ANSWERS
Facade -Jabot- Candy - Whiten · OFTEN

I agree with the theory of doing random acts of kindness. Everyone should do them and do them OFTEN .

MAY30 I
'r

.

you could get yourself in deep
water if you're not careful. Don't ·
foma any sudden attachments or
start something you.i:an 'I fini sh.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
That which you're better
equipped to handle yourself
should not be entrusted to the care
of others today. Those y9u dele.gate ·· may possibly ruin a good .
· thing you have going.
.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Keep a cool, level head today and
pace yourself so that you don't get
careless and pave to do lasks all
over again . That which you do in
haste could be ill·fated .
ARIES (March 21 -April 19)
Before hastily taking u finan cial.
flyer today, think about your past
experiences. I' II take bets they' II
tell you that things turned out
luckier for you when you didn'l
get something for nothing.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Today. in your zest for perfection,
you may lack tolerance for those
who don't do things your way.
Remember, if you start pushing
people around, someone might
push back.

-.•

,•• j'

,•'
•'

'
I'•
I

•

Allanla Brovt511 Chicago Cuba{Livei {CC)

'j

\

t
(

.

�Mey30,2000

1\Jndey, Mey 30, 2000

P9 84 • The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

OOP

·BRIDGE

•

SMITtl·s conmoaaon

No Credit • Slow Cr-dh • Blnkruptcy
Aepo • Dlvorded

••j

•

• • New HornM

• R11110dlllng
• Deckl
• Roofing

• G1rqn
; Siding

WORRYIIGIII
No ll:mbtlrraument...

Nle4 It 4•••· II VI .•• I

You're Treatlld with Aeepectl
Call Now lor lnatant ApproVIIII""

Eqaipmen&amp; Pam .
Fat1ory A111horized
c-.IHPam
Dealem.

till

FREE ESTIMATES

,.......

1000 St. Rr. 7 South
CooM/,., OH of$713

Qaalh)t, Varlet)", low Plla11 • TIUit'l U1t
Bedding &amp; Vegetable Flats $6.60
· 10" Hanging Baskets $6.60
Wide Assortment of Herbs
Annuals &amp; Perennials in 4" Pots for .94¢ each

Stop In And. See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

750 East State Street
IAtnents, Ohio 45701

cylllcltr repairs, oil
Salts· S gaL lluckets
to SS gat drums
2 Y, miles out of
Chester on SR 248

740-985·4194
1

46809 SR 124

.Su..,.,
~"onstruetfon
""'
New Construction &amp;
Remodeling - Kitchen
Cabinets VinylS idringte.:sl
Roofs - Decks - 0 8 81
Free Estimates

..4lLLR
''

Cellular
Jeff Warner h1s.

"We're Back"
l'omeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances
Parts- All Makes

MYERS PAVING
Henderson, WV
8711-2487 ar 448-1428

T•• Appliance

1·80G-311·3391

'
Ken Yo""B

Cttlrulors Weloo1111

•Driveways • Tennis Courts
•Parking Lots • Playgrounds
•Roods • Streets

.Advertise in
·this spa~~\ for
s1oo per,
month.

WV Contractors 'Lie. #003506

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

Dump Truck
· Servtce '
Limestone, Gravel
Agricultural Lime

949·2249
laclne, Ohio
....__

Quality Window
Systems, Inc.

Sing-Dance-Party
~lth

Miss Mamie In
Annie Oakley's
Karaoke

Pomeroy, Ohio
992·4119 or
l-800-291-5600 '

:itatmlntg timber large
or
tracks. Top
prices paid also.

• Weddings•
Birthdays • Private
Parties

Cill740·367·7935
Mll1 moM

· Dozer work.

Siding • New Garagn
: • Replacement Windows
I • Room Additions ,
• Roofing

COMMERCIAl. and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740.992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00 Pill
740-992-5050

•fl..relnrt •CII41t Refills
. •W~t411rlii!l~Wrul••

COIITIUC11011

,•

Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Window&amp;,

'
,;

Do~~~~ g:~~ !om

't

174019t2·SIII

Now Taking Applications for·1 Bedroom
Apartment
Seniors, Disabled, Handicapped
, : Range, Aefl'igerator, A/C, o·n-Site Laundry,
, , Community Room, 24 Hour Maintenance

•

. Provl~ed

Call or Come By Our Office Located at
2070 StateOffi
RouteH1241n Syracuse
ce ours
Monday and Thursday 1o am - 3 pm
p:~~~~: :o~~9

.,

OV~

7

Box 189

,

SttADE IUVEl AG SERVICE
"Ahead In Service"
Nutrena Wts1ern Pride 12" SWill Fetd......~ .........)S.25/50 lb bag
Nutrena 16" Rabbit Pelleb ................................... 'US/50 •. bag
Nutrena Hunters Pride 21" Dog Food...................)6JS/50 •. bag .
Nutrena 16" layer &lt;rumllels................................,15.99/50 •· bag
Nutrena Saatch Feed~ ............................................'6JS/50 • . bag
Sllllle liY•12% Cvttle fMd ................................16.7S/100 •. bat

Call740·985·3831

'•••I'll ow.

.

· "~

It\ I\~~ FUf.l~'H~Otl\ ""~
Dl P~'\1-JN(.E Mi. FOIZ:.

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car· seats, head.ltnter:!\,~
truclt tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seEtt~
boat covers, ~arpet!S, etc.
Mon - Frl 8:30 • ·5:00 ...
Over 40 yra experience

(740) 742·8888 .
1·888-521-0916

....
.......

·.,
1

High &amp;Drv·. ·
Self-Storag~:· ·

We Serv1ce All Makes
't; Washers· Dryers ·
ill\."
Ranges- Refrigerators
Freezers- Dish Washers

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

r

Now Rentmg?

.

411MI01

·33795 Hiland Rd: I:·
Pomeroy, Ohio •

Medicare Supplements; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage; ·
,
Major Medical• Nursing Home.
~.

tf.tl

ABOUT TRANSPOR.TATION

20 Yn txptlt111e!

&amp; SON

\

1

'

~=vi~nv:ll~sid:in~R~~=::;-;::~;.;;;;;,;;;.~=t
"
_
•

Dozer For Hire

QUALITY LANDSCAPE

Size • JD 550 G
Rate $50 per hour
Call for minimum

April Showero Bri,.
May Flower~!!

Are Your Plant Beds
Ready?
Weeding: Mulching:
Pruning: Edging
Planting and Retaining
Walls

FrH Est;mates
Mike Sharp
740-14&amp;.3606

'

• Eo1eo Roekeit and Aee-rleo
• TraiJia by IJonel A MTH
• Ga,....aYH Traek
• Model Power
• IJieline

..

v

;,..

,---"Tu'iiYTriS'Uriid""
S~nior

RACINE MOWER CLINIC
-rruck

Houra M·F 9 1m • 7 pm
Sat. 9 em • 1 pm
• Pick up &amp; delivery Service
Ownar· Jamu A. Picken•
Shop Foreman. Shane Baker

Adverl'ise

Jl.£1'

Citizen

Disco~nt

TREE SERVICE

• Lawnmower &amp; weedeater ·repair &amp; supplies

740·992·7945

Chester, OH

;a: :.;

·TOP
(740) 367-0266
.~e~rto"•'
1-800-950-3359
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

y

WELL. I LEARNED A LOT tN
5Cf.IOOL TODAY .. ! LEARNED

mopa.

MARCUM

1

PEANUTS

740-992-5212 ,

latwtd- ProfniiiMII 5ankt

\IRdar New Ownemhlp

Locll-843-5264

· rate
FrH Eatlmatea
Pond eatlmatea
welcome

DIPIIIftllft
'Bill

;a:

0~

TA,lifT
AVPiffiG.&amp;.

:1
BUILDING
, • . .'
'
'
•:
Long Bottom, Ohio
'
''
,: ,' "
740·985-4141
Residential- decks, kitchens, Commercial- metal studs,
1
bathrooms, custom
'
remodeling, handicap access drywqll, suspended cciling.s.
: • · kitchens &amp; baths, wood &amp; •
,1
1
:•

13

21 ·-and
Loul•"
22 For 1 o11o1t
lima
23 OecruMin

RRdepol

11 FencyvaM

lnlenolty

24

-

us1ness

West

North

Pass
Pass

2•
4•

·-

Eve'o alrdln

25 Some lennll

27 Pre-tlduh

l281ntlleconl8r ,
21 nnto
31 Cowed
33 Long hor91c .

Eaal

Pass
All pass

as ~.:, o1
40 LMder Ol the
lrtoh llt1111ry :

blue

41 Al'llllllect
ll&amp;lrlnen

42

To get a current weather
report, check the

••
••
••

l

. Sentinel

•
•'•

ITUESDAY

': L-------------------~ - ~-------------------"

:---------........--....
••

--~

.• ••• •

'Your
'Birthday

$'·
~

WEDNESDAY, May 31,2000 today your usual self-control
~ . Be ready to move quickly in could quickly go by the boards if
!fhe year ahead should opportuni- you should not get your way.
. ~y knock. Sudden ·and dramatic
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
, ehanges in your material affairs Alterations you make today might
:could have an uplifting affect on . not be for the better, so guard
; your life style.
against impulsively changing any~:· GEMINI (May 21-June 20) thing that is running smoothly. If
{t]nles~ you·~ careful today, you it isn't broke, don't fix it.
~Qiuld be smitten with a fit oftalkLIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23)
:tfivene.ss and blurt out far more Think twice before getting pals
!than you should be saying tooth- involved in any of your big deals
!ers. It could ·get. you _in trouble, today. Business involvements
' Qemini, treat yourself to a birth- with friends could produce more
{day gift. Send for your Astro- headaches and complications than
~Graph predictions for the year they do profit.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov, 22)
{ahead by mailing $2 and SASE to
' ~~tro-Grafh, c/o this newspaper. Only if you come to realize a
~.0. Box . 758, Murray Hill Sta- commitment you made does not
lion, New York, NY 10156. Be, serve your best interest should
f.ure to state your Zodiac sign.
you attempt to bow out of your
: CANCER' (June 21-July 22) commitment today, but do so as
~t a lock on your wallet today · tactfully as.possible.
~:cause, should you get an attack'
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
of instant gratification, you could 21) Don't attempt "to make
spend the wad and have little left demands of others with which you
when something really 'good wo~ldn't comply yourself. People
eonies along later.
·
can be inspired, but they will not
: LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) It's tolerate being brow beaten.
~ery unlike you to behave in a
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
;manner that would demean your 19) Because you tend to be a bit
image, yet, if you' re not careful romantically adventurous today,
\.

'I

'

I

,,

UMIIMI ·.
mlci'OWive •

43 Smooth
44 Cowa

··--the
Mood lor
Love"

.

·

47 lllrtllool, ...

110 llriiiMIIIoe .·~
12 In whli WilY~
UMe.lumea •

I

•

~ 111

•:

II St. croaoora
t Not 110 muell

40JoaTOIN'I
lelm

"No man who is occupied in
doing a very difficult thing, and
doing it very well, ever loses his
self-respect." So wrote George
Bernard Shaw. Well, here is a ,
chance for you to boost your self.respect-· solving a difficult bridge
problem. You are in four spades.
West starts with the king and
another heart. What would you do
after ruffing?
Maybe South's three-club
game-try looks ambitious to you.
However, the hand has only six
losers and has been strengthened
by knowledge of the spade fit.
There are three top losers:.one
spade; one heart and one diamond. The worry is South's third
Ti{"'T ~1-.N~ E.IJE:~'&lt; ""' diamond. You would like to ruff
D"-'&lt; I~ Trl€:. WEEW-ID I
it in the dummy, but if you immediately lead a .diamond to dummy's qu~en, Easl will win with the
ace and play another heart. Here,
as West ~as only two trumps, this
will promote a second spade Irick
for the defense. And if you draw
two rounds of trumps before·
broaching diamonds, East will
• cash his spad~ queen, killing the _.
ruff ·
What is the secret ? A ~ummy
reversal! Gash the spade ace, play
a spade to dummy's king. and call
~=..,..,l!lli · for the diamond two. If East rushes in with his ace, you won't need .'
a ruff in the dummy, so he plays
low. After winning with the king .
play the club eight to dummy's
nine and ruff a heart in hand. Continue with l·he cll)b I 0 to dummy's
jack. If East ruffs, you can trump
your diamond loser in the dummy; so he discards: Now ruff the:
heart I 0 in hand and continue
IF 'f'OU MISS Tf.IE
~ clubs. If East discards twice more,
you have 10 tricks: two top
6U5, '(OU WALK I
~
spades, three heart ruffs in hand,
one diamond and four clubs.

.

Tt4f fOLI.-OwiNG P~06MM vi A~
-Al&gt;t POSSIBI.-i
. rY A I..OvJ ~

William Safranek, Attorney ,
(740) 5112-5025 Athens
·

'

Waten ~dge of Syracuee

additions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks Boat DOcks
Concre~ &amp; Block ~k.
•'
_ Blown 'Insulation
; ·•, :
·
,,
' For 9112·2772
All Your Home
lmorovermmi Needs
•'
•:

Mlddl1port, Ohio 45780

State Route 248

Leave Mlssage .
Afler6pm- 614-985-4180

.

;a: :.;

SZ 143 WI.-?K/57

35537 St. Rt. 7 lllrlli

Befo~J 6 p.m. -

unlto

ZO Ughttln

Opening lead: • K

,

Ucllitie•

ftelppllanca

"Take the pain out
ofpainling-.
Let me do it for you''
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

7 Actor Flynn

clllclll
12 Convwtl

BY PHILLIP ALDER

Seplic Syale"" &amp;: •

'

YORE TURN TO ASK
TH' BLESSIN', MIZ. SMIF

5C.~OOL!

New Homn • VInyl .

11~n

II Buddhlom typo

Deceptively difficult

Advertise In
GUAUNTEED
...M-0-N-UM_E_N_T._'A_L_L_IF_E_I-NS_U_R_A_N_C_E_C_O"""''.-: :
: : , . this space for , AIR c:::::~:NING
PEOPLES SECURITV'I,UNITEO FINANCIAL
:,
Contact Office FofDetalis
•:
$25 per
, (304).112.•2079 '·
month.
' semcEa
to: • • • • • .. •* • • • • •* •• •..,•..,• •• •~•~, •~•~•..,•""• :.~ , t.-...;,-;.;.;;;;.;;.;._,_~
New Haven WV, · ...
Rocky
R. Huppi Ag~t

Aunt 1;;'5
Candes &amp;Crafts

Fr.. EIIIB1ale1

.Now available

LINDA'S
PAINTING

5 Pooltc lima

rtiNIIuance .

linkruptay ooract:

-------- ~ • · ·a·,.;E.MONTH'
S RENT
FREE · · :I•
JIL INIULAIIOII I
"'
·

Kuaokef

· .Land Clearing &amp; · ~
Grading
•

For l!lror-tlon regerdlng

4/24/D01mo

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Bulldour &amp;: Backhoe;
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'
Hou~ &amp; Trailer Sites i

,."""~::.r..........

~~

Black &amp; Tan puppiea

., IISSEI.L IUIL~ERS
INC.

L----.;.:.;:..:..;:..:..::..:..:..:~---...1 ~

Sand and Dlrt

• K-IJne
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E
T
E

I'Gdlnte

3t LIUnclry

I•

g~
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• I.,.,, ... .....,.....

. • Nailo •l''lea Batho
AIIBreedo

o·
RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL
FREE ESTil\IATES ... FULLY INSURED N
R
Brian Morrison/Racine, Ohio
y
(740) 985-3948

R

Albany, Ohio

411t.&lt;l0 1 mo. pd.

Fax 304-675-2457

c

MYSEL, II

HOWARD '.
EXCAVATING CO. ;

............ """"'
. lor ... ., ... ,......_ .... .., .........

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Free E1timatee

· Man

l DESPISE
EATIN' ALL IY

.,.;....,.... ,_tis I .............,.II o l rrrWi'l......._l_ ........ loorlr .,..,.., _ _ ,..,...,,

P/B CONTRACTORS, INC;
c
, CONCRETE BACKHOE SERVIQS M
0
N
MASONRY · BOBCAT SERVICES As

//'uiMoy Qt //'&lt;{lit

' 992·1550

South

,' BANK.RUP'I'£Y

• Bathin_l!l • Ear•

38'--

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

' OPI,.,ION

CLEAN HOlJSE
WITH THE ,.
CU.SSIIFIEDSI

WILLIS' ·
SEAMLESS
GUnERS

219E.2nd

992-5479

Dailey .
Trucking

· •Garages
• Complete
. Remodeling
. · ·stop &amp; Compare
.
.FREE ·
ESTIMATES
740-992·1671

·

'D Cuol\lcn
DOWN
30 Loved
32 Sullel'tng 11om 1 Rauoolnlm
oold oymplamo
2 ~~WieMI
34 ltlr cru.t.r
3 Thin coin
38 Annapolle grid 4 Mallconter
abbr.
37 o.nuaat

• A Q 10 8

740-742-9501
~ 'Toll Free

Shrubs
Open Dally 9·5
Sun ll·S

.. 4

• J
+ K 53

Rhododendrons,
Lilac Trees, Assorted

7/22/TFN

'

Cell Phone 674-3311

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homae

10 7

•AB852

·free Delivery

Vegetable Planlll,
Beddl!ll Plants,'
Han11IDR Baskets,
Porch Boxes,
Comblnadon Pots,
Potted Geraniums,
Phlox, Azaleas,

"Cet in whUe you can, •pace U. limited"

+A

South

hphaotiMit .
••• lodv ,.,·"
All replacement
parts

Spring Season

740·949·7039

East
• Q 10 9
•AQ9643

• J 7
• K2

Quality Driveways,
patios, sidewalks
25 yrs experience
Free Estimates
740·742·8015 or
1-877-353·7022

SyriCUH
Now Open For .

Camping· Flahlng • Boating
• Nightly • Weekly • Monthly • Se11onal
Convenience store/ B1it • T1ckl1

• K J 9 7

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

992-5776

Raclna

• Q2

Your

GREENHOUSE

28Unu.d

• 10 8 7 5

Wesl

to_,

' lllquel-

• K4S

+J9864
.. 6 5 3 2

HUB BARDS

,,
· OLD LOCK24
'
CfiMPGaOO"D.

Phone (740) 59:Ji-6671

'

441 "RoM - -

8 Ardor

11 'fnMIIed Alrllnea
51 Poeml
17 Revol-, e.g. 114 Group at five
· 11 Gowk .,...
ss EaldmoZO Ewrlaatlng
M Robln'l home
23 ActrMa
57 -cut(.......

North

All Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Servkes
(740) 992~S470~

Lie •., oo-ao 1WIIIn · L--...lalWI!I.l'U!I2
'""··r· ...
aJ

Hythulk Host repairs,

Mornl"' Star Rd. CR JO
Raolne, Oblo
1-740-9494111

,...,... ....,
f~

Progreaalva top II.,.. · ·

Gravel• Sand • Topsoil

Slzttl 5' X 10'
to 10' X 30'
Houre
:
7 00 AM • 8 PM

ntcr .....
tUutiCel ""'"

•

,. ·W idl"--

Haulng • Umestoiti •

4577 t
740-949-2217

$500.00 Starburet

T&amp;D
. HYDRAUUCS &amp; OIL

Sue'l Greenhouae

Roed
Racine, Ohio

1 .... ellee

10 Wlng-locllld
·
12 Jlftonr
48 Work lor
14 • r "• robe
AmertcM

HfiOUHCI
EXCfiYfiTI"CI·

29870 Be1h1n

'
42 Efti!W'•

ACROSS

ALDER

HILl'S '
SELF STORAGE

Pomeroy Eagle•
Club Bingo On
Thursday•
AT 8:30P.M.
Mlln St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying sao.oo
p.r 111 "11'
$300.00 COVIrllll

IAIR NlalmM Tractor Br

Oreit Prleet on Jlew Homet
992·2753
992-1101

I

NEA Cro•aword Puzzle

PHILLIP

: ·CIDI!

'

The D11ly Sentinel • Paga B 5 ,

.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

•

by Lula Cempoa

Colollll1y Clphot ceyp&amp;ogromt are CtNiod 11om quolallonl by......,. people, Pllllllld

- · Elllh -In lhoalpller- lorMOihor.
Todlly., clue: D llqUM 8

·.

•v

ALVKR

XQXHAOVH

LX .

SA

XTTY

YPUA·OPVGXW

ALOPZY
ALX

Z LX K

HPKVIIJHJPJV

LVCVXGU

•

CIRXY

UXGGPZ

8

.'

I.T•

U I K ••

ZPWXLPJVX

:

what you do thai counts. • ~ Gactge Lucae

~

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: •tt'a not what you oay, or what people think of you, R'l ,
WORD

DAM I

•

•

•••

'I
I.

Z0 L ZEN

1

'

IIIII:.&lt;"'

'

I I I I 1
DUWON
2

I I I 1

ri-::E~P-:N::-;I-;;oR--,·,~

.

I 13 l ~~

!;
,

L-....J.L.....J..-L..--'·--'"'

I

SLAVSA

15 16

I've found a rath·ersimple way
to help my son balance his check-.
book. I .told him he only had lo
earn more than he - - - · - ·

I0

.

~--.-r.:.....,..:-lr--.l-;

Complele 1he chuckle quoted
.
by filling in the m1sslng words
L......J......-J---L---''-"--' you develop from steJ:J No. 3 below.

.:li. PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
~
THESE .SQUARES

.ft
V

1

I I I I I I I

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER
•

.

''

.

SCRAM.LETS ANSWERS
Facade -Jabot- Candy - Whiten · OFTEN

I agree with the theory of doing random acts of kindness. Everyone should do them and do them OFTEN .

MAY30 I
'r

.

you could get yourself in deep
water if you're not careful. Don't ·
foma any sudden attachments or
start something you.i:an 'I fini sh.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
That which you're better
equipped to handle yourself
should not be entrusted to the care
of others today. Those y9u dele.gate ·· may possibly ruin a good .
· thing you have going.
.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Keep a cool, level head today and
pace yourself so that you don't get
careless and pave to do lasks all
over again . That which you do in
haste could be ill·fated .
ARIES (March 21 -April 19)
Before hastily taking u finan cial.
flyer today, think about your past
experiences. I' II take bets they' II
tell you that things turned out
luckier for you when you didn'l
get something for nothing.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Today. in your zest for perfection,
you may lack tolerance for those
who don't do things your way.
Remember, if you start pushing
people around, someone might
push back.

-.•

,•• j'

,•'
•'

'
I'•
I

•

Allanla Brovt511 Chicago Cuba{Livei {CC)

'j

\

t
(

.

�•

.

•

.

P~~ge B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Memorial Toumament scores
0\Jtll.IN, Ohio (AP) .- Final scores ond
nmingo Mondly from the S3.1 million Memo&lt;llll
foumomono played on 1111 7,193 yard, par-72
~ulr!leld Vllage Gp1f Club course (o-amaleur):

~
floiiKli!JI
TJOO(Woo.ls, $558,000 ......... 71-63-85·70.269

Emle Elo. $272 ,800 ............... 73~·72-85=274
.luetin Leonard, $272,800 ...... 70-70~-68&gt;274
Mlko Wolr, $148,800 ............. 74-85-68-69&gt;276
Paul Azlngor, $113,150 ......... 72-71-69-68&gt;278
Stove Flesch, $113,150 ......... 76-68~·7o.278
Stew Lowery, $113, 150 ........ 73-66-68·73&gt;278

Fred Coupito, $93,000 ..... ..... 74-69-89-67•279
Hal Sutoon.-$93,000 ..... ......... 71-71-87-70.279
J.P. Hayeo. $80.600 .............. 74-66:71-89&gt;280
Shlgetd MINYIIINI. $80,600 .73-69-68·7o.280
Brad Elder, S71 ,300 .............. 71 ·66-69·73&gt;281
Soon Hoc:h, S58,125..............74-87-7H0•282
Rocco Medlale, $58,125 ....... 73-7HI6-70.282
Olin Browne, S58,125...........• 71-68-72-71 =2B2
Grog Kra", $58.125............... 70.73-66·71 ·282
Chris P_orry, $46,600 ............. 74·70-71-89&gt;283
Stua~ Appioby, $46,500 ....... 76-69-89-89&gt;283
Jay Haas, $46,600 ................ 75-?o-69-89=283
Andrew Magee, $34,844 .......76-71-71-66·284

Tuesday, May 30, 2000
Public Notice

Scott Verplank, $34,844 ........ 71 -72-73-6S.264
Carloa Franco, $34,!1«....... .. 73-71 -70.70·264
Harrison Fmar, $34,844 ...... 66-69-78-71 • 284
811 Glasson. $34 ,844 ............72-66-73-71•264
Gary Nldclaus, $22,669 .. ....... 72-66-74-71 =285
Robt~ Damron, $22.669 .......74-69-71-71• 285
Jeff Sluman, $22 ,669 ............ 73-71 -70-71• 265
Jonathon Kaye, $22,669 .... ... 72-89·72-72=285
Jerry Kllly, $22,669 ............. .. 72-71 -70·72• 285
Larry Mlzt, $22,669 ... .... ....... 74-71 -67-73-:!85
Jim Furyl&lt;, $22,669 ......... .. .....73-70-69·73=285
David Duval, $22,669 ............ 73-89-68·75•285'

STATE OF OHIO
• DEPARTMENT OF
COMMERCE
STATE FIRE MARSHALL
CITATION
Rtf: SIC. 3737.41, ORC.
118 !5!!!!MOIJ0"1 Cltllllon No.
Melga County

:o::~.

Is.~P.Pet.......,

........ 001, Ohlo45780-

Known•the - · ' - ......
_. ..... orop;t- or
the properly dlacrtbed heroin
ond being reapontlblt lor
$49,095.
ure, $33,320.
compliance with tht OHIO
20. (3Bl Chad Little, Ford, 398, $51 ,695.
40. 130) Dave Blaney, Pontiac. 291. engine FilE CODE I I II rtlllll
21 . (41 Elliott Sadler, Ford, 396,$47,470.
failure. $33.315.
.- . nollclllll'lanby glwn
22. (37) Terry Labonte, Chevrolol, 398,
.. , . {26) Scon Pruett, Ford, 148, accident,
1D the ..,.ana ~ nlmtl
$52,605.
$33,310.
23. (27) Joe Nemochek, Chovrolel, 398,
42. (22) Ricky Craven, Chevrolet, 133, art lntcrlbtd obovt, 11
$48,295.
lallowt:
engine failure, $33,305.
24. (33) Kenny Irwin, Chevrolet, 397 ,
On 1111 28th or Marolt, 2000,
43. (3) Bill Elllon, Ford, 122. engine failure ,
$45,440.
$45,202.
Robert Long, Ctrlllllld Fire
25. (11) Jimmy Spencer, Ford, 397, $45,540.
Slr.ty lntptclor, Cerllftcate
26. (24) Robert Pressley, Ford, 396,
Time ot Race: 4 hours, 12 minutes, 23 sec· IS-23~, did lnaptCIIIII
$36,640.
27. (10) Kenny Wallace , Chevrolet, 396, ondS.
ptoperly lc •• 1114 II: 510 """
Margin of VIctory: .573 seconds.
$45,540.
Strlll, Mldfllll crt, OhiO 45780.
Average Speed: 142.640 mph.
28. (32) Wally Dallenbach Jr., Ford, 396,
Slid properly .. IIIIo known
$36,480.
Lead Changes : 25 among 11 drivers
or may be turlhlr dltcrlbltd
29. (29) Geoffrey Bodine, Chevrolet , 396,
Cautions: 7 tor 38 laps.
$44,425.
Lap Leaders: Eamhardt, Jr. 1·7, Elliott 8-9, u:oon a.y CIIIIIIQI wlh ""'
30. (25) Bren Bodine, Ford. 395, $33,905.
Eamhardt, Jr. 10·49, Nadeau 50·64, Gordon 65· apartment obovo gerago

Coca-Cola 600 results

tndongtra 1111 or other

poptlly b y - olwanl or

...-. •a•· and dei1PII8ted
conditiOn, dlftCIIve lllclrlcal
wiring and oqulpmtnl,
defective chlmnoyl, a••
coniiiCtlont, or hilling

.,.,...eorolhar...,.

CIYU pWity: $1,000.00 I

0.X
DETAII.!O DESCRIPnON
01 1111
found ,. ...
OOf ~I)

forth • roa-: T1'IIIW 18 no
ftN IIPIIIIUon btlwMn lhl

opartmenl and garage.
CONCORD, N.C. (AP) - Results Sunday
Exctlllvl aecumulllllon . or
lrom tho NASCAR Wlnaooo Cup Series Cocafllmmllble liqUid 18 IIIONCI In
Cots 600 at lowe'• Motor Speedway with finiSh·
open oonllllntrl.. ll!xctlllw
lng polition, starting poSition In parentheses. dri·
ver, type ol car, tapa completed, reaiJOfl out (II
oocumulaiiOn or combulllble
•!"Y) and mone~ won:
. . . - . DIIRIIw .._,.,.1
1. (21) Ma~ Kanaeth, Ford, 400, $200,950.
condlll- Include Improper
2 . (7) · Bobby Lobonlo, Pontiac, 400 ,
llaxlble corda and optn
$138,600.
nxturM. lmPftiPII' lnllllllaiiOn
3. (15) Dale Eamhardt, Chevrole1. 400,
$103,250.
.
or chimney llue pipe.
4 . (I) Dale Earnhardt Jr, Chavroleo. 400.
Improper lnltallotlon ol
$110,900.
hllpng opperetuo on th•
5. (8) Dale Jarren, Ford , 400, $95,000.
6 . (4) Jeremy Miylleld, Fold , 400, $71 .850.
unoar. IIICCH1d
7. (5) Mike Skinner, Chevrolet, 400 ,
$70,850.
WHEREFORE, put'IWinl to
B. (16) Rusly Wallace, Ford, 400, $64,350.
the IUihortly welld In 1111 by
9. (18) Slave Pori&lt;, Chevrolet, 400, $59.950 .
1111c11on 3737A2 or 1111 Ohio
10. (14) JeH Gordon , Chevrolet, 400 .
31 . (17) J ohn Andrett i, Pontiac. 393, 65, Mavtield 66·68, Stewan 69·70, Nadeau 71 · IDII9B~
Rtvlaed . Code and OAC
$78,950.
$51.380.
112, Mayfield 113·116, Earnhardt t17-1l7,
Section
1301 :7·1·05 (FM·
At
•
r11ull
ol
tuch
1t . (28) Jeff Burton, Ford , 400, $67, tOO.
32 . (43) Mike Bliss, Pontiac, 392, $33,365.
Nadeau 118·131 , Skinner 132·134 , Jarrett 135·
12 . (19) Mari&lt; Martin, Ford, 399, $62.100.
33 . (40) Stacy Compton , Ford, 391 , 135, Earnhardt 136·157, Earnhardt , Jr. 158· 159, examination or lnapectton, 1 105.0)0FC, you ore hereby
13 . (31) Ward Burton, Pontiac. 399 . $36,355.
Nadeau 160-192 . Earnhardt, Jr. 193·221, Jar· CATEGORICAL Rndlng haa ORDERED to abate the
$63, 100.
.
34, (13) Bobby Hamilton, Chevrolet, 391 . ret! 222, B.l.8bonte 223·248. Nadeau 249·259 , been made ao lndlcoltd ond
forth by llldng
14 . 19) Tony Stewart, Pontiac, 399, $62,300 . $41.350 .
Earnhardt, Jr. 260-310, Kenseth 311 ·316, Eam· theltforfl, pui'IUinllo Slctlon the lol owing aorrtcllvo
15. 6) Kevin Lepage, Ford, 399, $57.200.
35. (42) P.J. Jones, Ford , 38 9, $33.345.
hard! , Jr. 3H·362, Gordon 363·365, B.l abonte 3737.43 and 3737.51, OhiO
• 16. (39~ Johnny ·Benson, Pontiac. 399,
- - Wllltln lhlrly ilay1l:
36. (35) Darrell Waltrip, Ford, 386, $33,340. 366-374, Kenseth 375·400.
Struotu11 to be repaired,
$42 .800.
Code, II II
37 . (34) Ke n SchracJer, Pontiac, 371 ,
Point Standings: Bobb_y Labonte 1776, Ward .RIVIIId
17. (20) Ricky Rudd, Ford, 399, $50,395.
$33.335.
Burton 1722, Mark Martin 1695, Dale Earnhardt PROPOSED lhll a civil tom down, demolished, or
18. (12) Michael Waltrip, Chevrolet, 399.
38. (2) Jerry Nadeau. Chevrolet. 357. engine 1693, Jeff Burton 1672. Da le Jarrett 1630, Rusty penally, II any, -be tiMIIId mill-It rtmovltd, and 111
$51 ,275.
failure. $61.925.
Wallace 1578, Jeff Gordon 1539, Ricky Ru:jd agalnat you lor ooch tuch dengeroua ·. condition• be
19 . (36) Sterling Marlin, Chevrolet 398,
39. (23) Rick Mast , Pontiac. 350, engine Iail· 1523, Tony Stewart 1456.
I'IITIIdMid.
viOIIIIon •lndlclltd:
X Slid pnlplrly contlall ol
Tholl MCIIonl or lhe Ohio
t . building or olhtt atructure Rtvlttd
Code (ORC)
pertaining pertlaularly 1D the
which .waa round lo be
Public Notlca
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public No.tlce
ttpeclally lloblo to llrt or IMUinct end proce.tlng ol

ca".:'·

vlolallonl•l ...

=:::;=======r=========T-========:-r-=========1

LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Gordon Proctor, Director
Ohio Deportment or
Tronaporll111on, Plalnllll VI
Unknown
Trtntltrlll,
Alelgna, ole. ol lrl Routh,
deceaaed, etc., 11 ol.
Dllendantt.
CASE NO. 00-CV-4143
~UDOE FRED W. CROW Ill.
Th1
U n known
Troneltnea,
Alalgna,
Execulort, Admlnlt111I01'11,
J!tlrt, and Devl1111 ol Ira
Ro~tth, Docea11d, and all
peraona clelmlng by,
ihrough, or under them will
tako notice thotlhty have.
l!l•n named u dlltndtnla
by Gordon Praetor, Dlrlctor
Ohio Deportment or
Trenaportollon,
who
lnalllulod C111 No. OO·CV·
043 now pending In lht
Common Pleas Court ol
Meigs County, Ohio which
It an action to opproprltle
cttleln properly lor
hlghwoy purpoaea, nemoly
. the making, conatructlon, or
Improving ol Stole Route
338, Section 3.5311, end to
llx the velut· ol 1 ald •
property,
The property eoughllo be
appropriated It mort
tptclflcally described as
follows:
Sat Dttcrlptlon(e) ol

Properly Sll Forth on
"Exhibit A" 1118ched hllllo
Purtuonl lo R.C. 183.07
and R. C. 183.08, told
pereona mentioned obove
ehllltakt fUrther nollcllhlll
lhty hiVI 28 daya alltr lh1
compllllon ol Sorvlco by
Publication wllhln which to
ontwer or olhlrwlll dllend
agalnet Plalnllll'a pellllon.
The ortglnel or any auch
anower or other pllldlng
dtlendlng agalnal PlalnUH't
petition mual be llltd with
lht Clerk ol the Common
Pleat Court ol Melgt
County, Ohio, 11 Melga
County Cour1hou11, 100
Eoal Second Slrlll,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789; and,
• copy or ony euch entwer
or other pleading dtlondlng
agalnel Plaintiff'• ptllllon
mutt bt llrvtd upon Merk
E. Hays, Eaq., Aaalallnt
Attorney Gtntral, at 37
Weel Broad Slr111, Suitt
350, Columbue, Ohio 432154132.
A !allure to answer or
olherwleo defend within
aold 28 days will rttull In
Plelnllll, purouanl lo Civil
Rula SS, liking lht court lo
glint a. Judgment by dtlauH
ogalnal eny euch pereon
who lalla to onewer or
Olhtrwl.. dllond.
Gordon Proctor, Director
Ohio Dtpar1menl ol
Tllneportllllon

"EXHIBIT A"
Sltuattd In the township
ol Lllart, County of Mtlge,
Stale or Ohio, end In
Section a, Town 2N, Rona•
12W, end bounded ond
daecrlblclaa lollowa:
Btlifg 1 parcel .o r ill'!d
lying along the Left tide ol
the centerline or 1 aurvey,
mtdt by lht Dtplrlmtnl .ol
Tranaportellon, end being
IOCI1ed within the boundary
pointe ol Percel 18·WD aa
dellntattd upon the
Deparlmtnl
ol
Trantpor1111on'a Rlghi·OI·
Wey pion
MEG-338·
3.539(2.20), Shill e or 11
end rtcordtd on or about
December 12, 18ft, In Plat
Book 17, Page B, In the
recorda ol lht Recorder's
Olllce, Milgt County, Ohio.
The following daacrtbtd
rtal ttlale allualtd In the
VIllage ol Antiquity, In the
County ol Melga, and the
Stale or Ohio ID wit:
Lot No. a In Carillon
Young't
Addition to
Antiquity, Ltltrl Townahlp,
Meigs County, Ohio.
Sold Lot being plelltd In
Recorda or Plllll No, 2 ol
M•lae County Ohio In lhl
Reconlll''a Ollie• or eald
County.
Thle . Parcel wae bated
upon a eurvty ol Stele .
Routt 338 lor lht Dhlo
Dlp~~rtrnenr ol'l'n1~

In 1998, by tho Ohio
D 1 p a rIm e· n I
oI
Traneportatlon under the
eupervlelon ol R. Douglas
Brlgge,
Rtglatared
Surveyor 7388.
P r 1or
1natru ment
Rllertnct: Dlld Book 113.
Page
505,
County
Recorder'• Oltlce.
The Above dtlcrlblcl area
Ia to be deleted lrom
Auditor'•
Pa reel
08·
00578.000.
Owner, lor hlmaell ond
hla helre, txeculort,
admlnlelrlllort, tuccteaort,
end •••lane, rtatrvoa all
exlellng rlghlt or lngrtll
and egre1110 and from ony
rttlduelarea.
(5) 23,30 2TC

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
The tnnual rtport Form
990 PF lor tho Klbbll
Foundation, Bernard v.
Fultz, Tru1111 11 ovollabla
lor public lnepecllon ol
Bemord V. Fultz Law Office,
111·112 Will Second Slrlll,
Pomeroy, OH 45789, during
regular butlne.. houra lor
I periOd Ol 180 daye
1ubeequen1 to publication
oUhlenoUce.
(5) 18, 19, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25,
28, 28, 30, 31 end (8) 1 121c

Staff Varn Sale
Bradbury School
June 1, 2, &amp;3
7:00 ·2:00pm
of baby and
clothes - boy &amp; girl.
Rain or Shinall
Look forward to seeing
you there!!
Women's Auxiliary VMH
White Elephant Sale
Thurs. &amp; Fri. June 1&amp;2
Lot ~side Medical Building ·
Rain In Lobby ·
Donations Appreciated

Public Notice
c~ne or r**PI o11111e oiiiiiiiMI,

condlllonlol Ill forth hlrtln,
at ORDERED, lha CmNO
AUTHORITY may 111 k
ENFORCEMENT puiiUint 1D
lhl OAC lltcllon3737A1(0).
You an turlhlr noHIIIci 111
you 111 lll'lllhd ID an appoal
hMrlng to the Ohio llolnl or
Building Appttle, 6806
'lUlling ROIId, Reynolilaburg.
Ohio 43088, II you requeet
IIUCh ~ng wlthn thirty (30)
days after receipt or thla
olllllon. \'bur reql*l
lhllllncludt tho - l o r tho
lppeol lnd rtllol eoughl. A
copy ol thl1 clllllon lhall be
llllchld to your requell. At
IIUCh '-lng, you may appear
In 1*"011 or by your lllomey
ond you may prtaenl the
evidence and exomlno
wllnnan lor ond IQiinll you.
To
an applllhMrlng,
Mild • wrlllen rtqUH\, along
with a or money order
lor $100.00 mllde peyable to
·~. Sllte or Ohio•· to
tho llddrwaljiiCIIIod above.
Ploall be tdvleed lhll II
you do not
i hM~ng
within thirty
or the

r...-

110

''FREE''

Qualified
Medicare
Beneficiaries Medicaid
(called QMB):

Health Insurance
For
This program covers the
Meigs County payment of your Medicare
Aged and Disabled Part B premium and the co'

Call Today!
1-800-992-2608
Or
992-2117
Meigs County
Department of
Job &amp; Family
.
Services ·
175 Race Street
Middleport, OH
.
45760
•

rt

oppropr1111t leg8l ecllon ..
IUIIIorlzed by lhl Ohio

Rt;lu ~Code.

Wllnllt my tlgnoture 11
Reynoldlburg, OhiO .... 1111h
.-y ol April, 2000. llobtrl R.
Rlloy, 11111111 Fh .......
Thl8 181D Cllllly !hill on lh!t
18th .-y or April, 2000, 11118
Clllllon WAI luued lo the
r11ponalble peroon whoM
narno 11 tnlll'ld on lhl IYDnl
lid.- hereof In lhl follOWing

"*""'·

X • by Certified US Mo.ll

Nlo.(71l00 0520 0017 837411124)
By. Jlrii.,., Mlllllr
For further lnlormotlo~
regilding IIIII clllltlon, oot 1111 II
Mlchotl 0. K1'11ft, Chill qf
Technlcll Servlcee, HOI
Tulllng ROIId, lltvnoldlburll,
OhiO 43008. Phoni: 1&amp;14) 7215480.
CC:
Tim ThompiiQn,
Dlvlalonol Ltgll Coun11l;
Mlchltl 0. Knill. BlniU CIMI;
Chtl Echard, AMIItMI Chief;
Tom Boker, Flrt Solely
lnapoctor Supervl-: RobMI
Long, Fl1'11 Stilly lnapecl,or;
Middleport Flrt Otpei-lnMnl;
'

Help Wanted

..

WANTED: Buckeye Community Services has a
-part-time position available in Meigs County: 33 ·
hrs/wk: 8 am Sat thru 8 am Mon; sleep-over
required. Position requires teaching personal and
community skills to individuals with mental
retardation. · The work environment is informal
and rewarding. The requirements are: high
school diploma/GED, valid driver's license, thrEM!
years good driving experience and adequate
automobile Insurance coverage. B.C.S. offers
comprehensive training in the field of MR;oo:
Starting salary: $5.50/hr. Vacation/sick benefits.
Interested applicants need to specify position of
interest and send resume to: P.O. Box 604
Jackson, OH 45640·0604. All applications ·must
be post-marked by 6/1/00. Equal Opportunity
Employer.
'

RN POSITIONS: The Behavioral Health
Unit (Inner · Reflections) and Skilled
Nursing Facility (SNF) at Veterans
Memorial Hospital have immediate
openings for · part time and full time
Registered Nurses. Geriatric and/or
Psych. experience preferred.
STNA POSITIONS: The Skilled Nursing
Facility has part time openings for State:
Tested nursing Assistants.
·
Those interested, please contact
Human Resources at
(740) 992·21 04 ext. 201
to arrange Interview.

.

.

.

~Q~u:!!a!.!h!.:!"fi.!.!te!::.!do!.......Jiun.ud,ui~..~,y.!lid=l:.lu:!!a!.!lLs__.:;.-~2 A: Medicaid requires a

disability determination
by the ·Social Security
Adn:t.inistration or by the
This program reimburses
Ohio Department of Job
you for the part of the Part ' &amp; Family Services through
insurances(s) and deductibles
B premium that you have
•
D
its :County Medical
you are requtred to make as
part of the ·Medicare already paid which went · Services (CMS).
toward home health care. Q' Wh .
.
Program.
v.
'11
; .
:
at ts the age when I
.ou
wt
recetve .- · a
. const"dere d "Aged"?
.
am
·
Specified Low-Income retmbursement check once a
Medicare Beneficiaries year. The income limits are A: Age 65
'
Medicaid (called SLMB):
higher than QI-1 Medicaid.
Q:What services are covered
by Medicaid?
This type of Medicaid pays Qualified Workin" Disables
_
only for your Medicare· Part Individual (called QWDI):
A: ~y of t~ese services are
B premium.
covered tf they are
medidilly necessary for
This program pays for your
you:
Qualified Individuals
1
Medicare . Part A premium
Doctor Visits
Medicaid (called Q0-1):
only. QWDI can help you if
Hospit~l Care
Immunizations
This · program provides\~ you have lost eligibility for
Substance Abuse
same benefits as SLMB; Title II disability benefits
•
Prescriptions
due to earnings.
however,
the
tncome
Vision
standards are higher than
Dental
those aUowed for SLMB.
Mental Health
'
Other...

May 31,2000

•

·.
Melp County"s

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

Volume 51 , Number 2

so cents

'
. I

ER

•
OSIn

Robert Bowers.
On April 22, the acute care inpatient
POMEROY -The emergency room unit closed for the same reason.
at Veterans Memorial Hospital wiU close
Before the March primary election,
·
when voters were asked to suppori a 4'at midnight tonight.
For the first time in more than a half mill levy to support the two departments
century, Meig.; CouQty finds itself with- ~ - which had a projected loss of nearly
out 24-hour emergency room service.
$800,000 this year - Bowers had
Closing of the unit a month earlier warned that if the levy was defeated the
than had been planned became necessary two units would close "no later than July
because of inadequate staffing. Nurses lefi 1."
for other positions, according to CEO
Voters defeated that levy by a vote of
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

3,653 to 2,147.
With the closing of the acute care and
emergency units, services that remain at
VMH are long-term :care, behavioral
health unit, the rural health clinic, and
the home health department.
Approximately 40 jobs are being lost in
the closing of the two units. In addition
to nursing positions, other departments
affected ~re X-ray, lab and switchboard,
which have been operating on a 24-hour
a day basis.
·

While the possibility of adding an
urgent care unit with extended hours in
the evening, perhaps to the Runil Hralth
Clinic, has been discussed, no action has
been taken.
Consolidated Health Systems took
over the operation of the financially troubled county- owned hospital in 1995 in
hopes of turning the operation arou nd.
Since then, according to Bowers, Consolidated and the Holzer Medical Center
have contributed more than $1.3 million

to keep the hospital operating. ,
Gene Lyons, director of the Meig&gt;
County Emergency Medical Service, said
Tuesday night' that the closing of th e
emergency room wi ll have an impact on
the EMS operation.
"We will have. a longer transport time
going to other facilities rather than com ing into VMH, but all of the squads are
aware and hopefully prepared to handle
th e load. We're going to do the best w e
can with what we have," she said.

Officials
appoint
Harrison to ..·
clerk's post

SAR
honors
citizens

BY BRIAN J, REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

OMEROY - Recognizing law enforcement officers for outstanding performance
in the line of duty and
community citizens for contributions to special projects or service
activities is an annual program of
Ewing.; Chapter, Sons of the
American Revolution.
The awards ceremony, a
gram of the~· ·NatiOif;l]~•rStlretety.,..
SAR, was conducted by James
Lo.:hary, . chapter president, and
took place last week at the Meig.;
Museum.
Medals for heroism•were presented to two highway patrolman
for saving a life, ·and meritorious
awards were given · to three office~s for their role in capturing an
eseapee.
State Highway Patrolmen Keith
F,ellure and Robert Jacks were AWARDED CERTIFICATES - Presented meritorious service medals and
the SAR awards ceremony were seated, left, l&lt;eith Ashley for
presented certificates and medals
chapter and recruiting new members, and Myron E. Jones
for heroism.
loelrtinll'ilirld marking Revolutionary soldiers' graves. Attlens County
-They are credited with saving
the life of a driver who suffered a
heart attack on U.S. 35 near Gallipolis last September. The troopers gave cardiopulmonary resuscitation until the Emergency Medical Service arrived. Their actions
were credited with saving the life
of the driver.
·
Medals and certificates were
also awarded to three Athens
County policemen who captured
a man who escaped after being
sentenced to prison in Athens .
Common Pleas Court.
The prisoner fled to the city
parking garage. The three officers
pursued ana used techniques to
prevent the prisoner's escape and
his causing injury to others in the
process.
LAW
- Athens County Common Pleas Judge
Michael WBrd, left, presented law enforCement awards to Chief Security
Pleliu ... SAR,PIIp.U
Officer John Koren and Glen Birchfield for capi:unna 8 prisoner.

More ...
Help With
·M
· · d .. ·
E .·
Q: Who determines whether
. e tcare
. xpenses I am disabled?
.
I

Wednesday

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Commonly asked
Questions:
'

'

dlocnllon, thiNIIMf' PIJnue

'

Help With
Medicare Expenses

Details, A3

this clllllon, logelhlr with
I*IIIIIN, anllllorth below: . lhl clt!ng .ulhortly, lillY· In 11-

TAKE NOTICE lhll Myou do
not tflwct lhe lbabotoliWII or the

Southern alumni award students, A&amp;
Reds win; Blazers extend series, 11

lhuncl~

HIJh: tOs: Low: 105

Medicaid (called Ql-2):

Common Pleas Judge Alan Goldsber'ry, standing left, presented the Good
Citizenship Award to Professor $aundra Sleigtl-Brennan of Ohio University
for her work on a history project; while other awards went to, from left,
Roger W. Hawk, Barbara Jones and Shirley friend, left to right.

HEROISM AWARDS- State Highway Patrolmen l&lt;eith Fellure, center, and
Robert Jacks were presented certificates and medals for heroism at the
Sons of Union Veterans a...iards ceremony. (Charlene Hoeflich photos)

Enviros
upset as top court expands review of clean-air fight
.
'

•

P I - ... Clerk. Pllp AJ

.

.

WASHINGTON (AP)-The Supreme
Court' drew gasps from envirorilnentaliSts
and · praise from inliustry . representatives
Tuesday by expanding its review of a. major
clean-air dispute.
·
The justices said they will decide whether
anti-pollution regulations must take the costs
·of .compliance - not jilst health effects inttl account.
At stake is air quality nationwide.
"It's been a bedrock principle of the
Clean Air Act that the amount of pollution
allowed in the air _should depend on how it
affects the health of our children and the
elderly," said Vickie Patton, a lawyer with the
group Environmental Defense. "A decision
by the court to change the long-standing
clean air policy would tip the scales away
from public health concerns and toward the
economic concerns of major polluters."
Lower court rulings dating back to 1980
interpreted earlier versions of the Clean Air
Act. to bar the Environmental Protection

POMEROY Marlen e
Harrison will serve as actin g
clerk of courts until a permanent clerk is appointed by th e ·
Meigs Cou nty Republican
Central Co mmittee.
Harrison was appointed by
Meib'S Cou nty Commissioners
during their regular meeting
on Tuesday morning.
Her appointment was made
after
the
COtnmtsSIOTICrS
accepted .the resignation of
Clerk of Courts ·Larry E.
Spencer, who will leave his
post today after 27 year.• in
office.
Harrison. who wa1 nominated as the Republican cand idate
for the office in the March primary, has served Spencer as
first deputy in the legal department fo r a number of years.
Spencer, who chose not to
seek re-election, has cited
health reasons for his retirement, which he announced last
week.
The R epublican Central
Committee, charged with the
responsibility of appointing
someone to fill Spencer's
Unexpired term, will meet June
5. .
. Betsy Herald Nicodemus is
the Democratic candidate for
clerk of courts.
ln other business, commissioners accepted bids for bituminous materials for the
month of June from Ashphalt
Material s of Marietta and
Middleport Terminal of Gallipolis. The bids will be
referred to County Engineer
Robert Eason.
Commissioners set a public
viewing of Stearns R oad in
Orange Township, which has
been subject to a closing

The nation's highest court last
week agreed to review a ruling
. that blocked the EPA from
enforcing rules it adopted in 199.7
to reduce smog and soot.

The nation's highest court last week
agreed to review a·ruling th.at blocked the
EPA fiom enforcing rules it adopted i'n 1997
to reduce smog and soot. The justices had
granted a Clinton administration appeal that
said the dispute "carries profound ·implications for the health of the American public."
The Chamber of Commerce, American
Agency from considering compli·ance costs
h
tti
ti · 11 ti standards C ts Truckjng Associations, National Association
w en se ng an ~pdo ud Jon . th · os
of Manufacturen and industry represer;ttatives
routmeiy are const ere ater m e process, . h
full hall
d h
. .
~hen implementation plans are formed.
wdardso ~uccess Y c enge t e new stanR b' ..,.
d
1
f&lt;
h. US
m a federal appeals court 61ed a croSs
o m ·.,_,~nra • a awyer or t e •, · appeal raising the compliance-costs issue.
Ch_am~er ~f Com~erce, called Tues~y s
The cross appeal attac~ those portions of
ac~?n ternfic news. .
.
the appeals court ' ruling that freed the EPA
, T~~ publi_c. ~;alth IS . not ~mg unpro- . fiom taking costs into account and rejected
tected, she s:1~d. The clean-au standards at the industry ~ups' contention tliat the airIssue here are_ beyond ;:vhat 1s needed to pro- quality standards were based 9n incomplete
teet the public health.
or poor science.
Cost-benefit analysis, Conrad said, could
The industry groups were joined in their
force federal regulators to make principled chall~nge to the new standards by three
decisions on air qualifY, and prevent adop- states - Michigan, Ohio and West Virginia.
tion of unneeded and unfeasible standards.
Two states - Massachusetts and New Jersey

,

'·

- sided wid~ the EPA in support of the
tougher air-quality standards. The two states,
. antong others in the Northeast, contend that
prevailing winds carcy Midwest pollution to
them.
A ;hree-judge panel of the U.S. Circuit
Court ofAppeals fqr the Disttict of Columbia ruled by a 2-J · vote last year that the
agency ovcr.;tepped ill; authority. The appeals
court panel said the EPA had interpreted the
1990 Clean Air Act "so loos~ly" that it
unlawfully usurped Congress' legislative
power.
,
The full appeals court voted 6-5 in October against reviewing the panel's decision.
The revised air standards limited the
allowable level of ozone, an essential part of
smog, to 0.08 parts per million, instead of the
0.12 paw per million under the old requirement. And states for the fir.;t time were
required to regulate microscopic particulates, or soot, &amp;om power plants, cars and
other sources down to 2.5 microns.

Today's

Sentinel
Paps

2 Sedlons - 16
Calendar

Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Snorts
Weather

AS
B4-6
B7
A4
A3

81-3. 8

A3

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 7- 4-8 Pick 4: 9-7-3-9
Buckeye 5: S-11-19-20-30

W:VA•
D.uly 3: 4-4-4 Daily 4: 2-9-5-5
C 2000 Ohio Valley 1\ublishing Co.

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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="25179">
            <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="25178">
              <text>May 30, 2000</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3722">
      <name>backus</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="153">
      <name>clay</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="934">
      <name>tate</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="75">
      <name>taylor</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
