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                  <text>By The Associated Press
These Maryland Crab Cakes are a treat - especially si nce the
recipe is a low-fat version wilh nothing to weigh on the t onscience
and spoil the pleasure. A Mesclun, Orange and Walnut Salad is a
nice accompanimenl .
The recipes are from "Weight Watchers New Complete Cookhook" (Macmillan, $25). This is a revised and updated version of
an earlier cookbook from the organization which describes its program as ·:a diet thai's high in complex ~arbohydr~tes, moderate in
protein and low in fat. "
This volume, in practical ring-binder format with well-designed
layout, is packed with information that includes general cooki ng
advice as well as tips for weight watchers: And there are about 500
recipes, each tagged with a " points" reference for people who want
to follllw the program 's weight-loss plan .
··..
· ·
· Chapters range conventionally from appetizers to desserts. But
. varied se lections lie within those chapters: ihe general index runs
from Almond-Fudge Truffles through Zucchini Ri sollo: And an
i"nteresting level of sophistication shows up under the New American Cooki ng heading, in such dis~es as. Vietnamese Turkey -in Lettuce Wraps and Scallops with Parsley-Brandy Pesto.
Lump crab meat called for in the crab cakes is justifiably expensive, a recipe editor 's note points out - taking apart a crab is a
· picky business. "To save money, you can use surimi , a processed
ti sh product with a texture similar to crab meat. -But shop around
first: some brands are much lastier than others. " .

Maryland Crab Cakes
I pound cooked crab meat, picked through for shell and cartilage
3/4 cup bread crumbs
6 scall ions, minced ·
1/4 cup iow-fat (I percent) milk
3 tablespoons reduced.calorie mayonnaise
2 tablespoons minced parsley
.
112 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon·ground white pepper
3 tablespoons all-purpose Hour
I tablespoon.reduced-calorie margarine
2 112 cups mixed green lettuce leaves
In a large bowl ~ combine the crab meal, bread crumbs,.scallions,
milk, mayonnaise, parsley, salt and pepper. With moistened hands,
form into 8 small round cakes; cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate I hour.
Place the Hour on a sheet of wax paper; lightly coat each cake on
both sides. In a large nonstick skillet, melt the margarine. Cook the
crab cakes until golden brown and crispy, 4 to 5 minutes on each
side. Line a pl~ller with the greens; top with the crab cakes.
Makes 4 servings.
.
. .
Nutrition racts per serving: 260 cal., 8 g total fat, I g saturated
fat, 114 mg chol :, 849 mg sodium, 18 g total carbo., 2 g dietary fiber,
26 g pro.
.
·
Mesclun, Orange and Wafnut Salad
2 tablespoons orange juice
·· ·
2 teaspoons walnut oi l
1/4 teaspoon salt
Pinch cayenne pepper
6 cups mesclun (see note)
.
I navel orange, peeled and sectioned
l/2"red onion, thinly sliced
1/4 cup walnuts, chopped and toasted
.
To prepare the dressing, in a small bowl whisk the orange juice,
· oil, ·salt and cayenne. In a large salad bowl, combnle the mesclun,
orange, onion and walnuts. Drizzle with the dressing; toss to coat.
Serve at. once.
Makes 4 servings.

·

.
.
. Note: Mcsclun is a mixture of small, tender young letiuce leaves
and gree ns: it may,include varieties such as Bib, red and green oak
leaf lettuce, as well as curly endive, lamb's lettuce, arugula a~d
radicchi o.
Nutrition racts per serving: 109 cal. , 7 g total fat, I g saturated
fat. 0 mg enol., 144 mg sodium, II g total carbo., 2 g dietary fiber,
3 g pro.
·

.

Survey shows Jump 1n women
with no health insurance; high
percentage of assaults reported
WASHINGTON (AP) _:_ Nearly
two out of every five women in the
United.States have been physically or
sexually assaulted during their life, times, according to a national survey
on women 's health care.
The survey, released today, also
reported a jump in the number of
working wonien without health
insurance.
Ov~rall, the 1998 Commonwealth
· Fund Survey of Women's Health
reported increased aitention to
· women 's health issues since its ·Jast
survey in 1993. Government health
agencies now dedicate offices to such
concerns and !he issue has been a
focus of major medical projects by
the National Institutes of Health.
However, the report describe.d
progress in the field as spotty and
uneven.
According to !he report, the number of women who were raped or
physically abused eitber as. children
or adults remains "disturbingly
high." A total of 39 percent said !hey
had been victims of abuse or violence
in their lifetimes, including rape, sexual assault, or other physical assault.
Reports of abuse crossed income,
ethnic and demographic lines,
although poor women were at somewhat •higher risk. ·Women who had
. experienced violent or abusive acts
were significantly more likely to
experience physical health problems,
and nearly twice a5 likely to show
· signs of depression or anxiety.
The report found an increase in
· the uninsured, particularly among
working women with low to modest
inw me levels. Last year, 35 percent
of women under age 65 with incomes
of $16,000 or less were uninsured,
compared with 29 percent witlmut
insurance in 1993. For women with
incomes from $16,001 to $3S,OOO,
• the uninsured rate increased from 15
percent to 21 percent in the same
period.
.
Other findings in !he report
include:

'

'

Wednesday

Flavored cigarettes the rage ari:long young. smokers

Maryland Crab Cakes
low in fat~ but a real taste
treat to please everyone

•

Tuesday, May 11, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Weather
Today: P. Cloudy
High: 80s; Low: 50s

little brown cigarette that smells
By LORI JOHNSTON
like strawberry."
Assodated Press Writer
Federal health officials and
ATLANTA (AP) - The smoke
anti-smoking
activists say many
wafting through . some of the
nation's hippest teen hangouts youngsters don't realize that unfildoesn' t always smell like Marl- tered bidis are eve n more dangerbores or Camels anymore. And, ous than regular cigareltes.
Despite contai ning less tobacco
although the cigarettes are thi n and
hand:rolled, it doesn't smell like than a .U.S . cigarene, an unfiltered
bidi "rele ases at least two to three
marijuana either.
This scent is sweeter. exhala- times more tar and nicotine," says
tions of strawberries, chocolate · Sam ira As rna, · an epidemiologist
with the Atlanta-based Centers for
and .vanilla. · ·
. From Atlanta 's Little Five Disease Control and Prevention.
Bidis have been made for cenPoints to New York 's East Village
to San Francisco.'s Haight-Ash- turies in India, where they are
bury, hippie wannabes are lighting known as the " poor man 's ciga-.
up bidis - flavored cigarettes rette."
Darryl Jayson, spokesman for
imported from India. .
''They're dessert with a ciga- the Tobacco Merchants Associarette ," says Leah Parrish, 19, tion , an industry trade group, said
standing outside a tobacco store in it 's diffi.cult to determine how
· many bid is are imported because
Little. Five Points .
Bidi s some times call ed they are counted under different
beedies and about half the size of tariff codes.
And even with the growing
.·regular cigarelles - are filled with
tobacco Hakes. hand-rolled with a popul arit y of bidis , all imported
. greenish-brown l ~af, tapered at cigarettes make .up less than I perboth end~ and tied with a tiny, col- cent of the U.S . tobacco market,
according to the Specialty Tobacco
ored thread .
. Bid is cost less than reg utar cig- Counsel, based in North Carolina .
Three maj or importers, Kretek
arettes, averaging $2 for a pack of
20.
.
International
of
California,
USA
Inc.
of
Colorado
and
Quintin
And they're drawing youngsters
Smokers
Choice
of
California,
to smoking even better than Joe
Camel, some health officials say. who also sell bidis on the Internet,
Teens say they ' re cute, tre.ndy, less refused to comment on their sales.
biller and more natural than
According to stores, the most
.SMALL, COLqRFUL AND FLAVORD • These new flavored clgadomestic smokes.
popular flavors are vanilla, black ntttH may be popular with younger smokers, but they are more
A survey last year found that 58 licorice, strawberry, dewberry, dangerous thai) tigular cigarettes.
·
percent of students at four San clove and cinnamon . The different
"It's just unfortunate that they 're
Francisco high schools had tried Havors are a pleasant change from ·says.
the
regular
fare
,
smokers
say.
;
The
pop\llarity
yf
bidis
doesn't
·
findin
g their way in the hands of
bidis.
"ll's
not
like
picking
up
a
Marl-.
,
'
urp'
r
ise
anti-s
moking
activists,
.
children."
Sold in specialty tobacco and
I who say the Indian cigarelles
It's just another gimmick, says
cigarelle stores . for several years, , bora, " Ms. Falconesays.
Ashley Woodall, a 22-year-old should be more c(p·sely regulated John F. Banzhaf JII , executive
bidis now are popping up in gas
Atlanta
restaurant employee, says and should cost mofe to keep them director of Action on Smoking and
stations, convenience marts and
Health, a Washington-based antistrawberry
bidis are her favorite.
out of the hands of teen-agers.
grocery stores .
Bree
Strahan,
a
high
school
t
The
Federal
Trade
Commission
smoking
group. ·
' Anna Falcone. tobacco buyer at
i
senior
in
suburban
Allanta,
~ays
is
investigating
rep,prts
that
many
.
·''Everybody's
looking for some
Junkman's Daughter, a clothing
and gift shop in Atlanta, said bidis she like bidis, but they're not bidis are sold withobtthe required way to make a new cigarelte and
gin a niche market," he said.
are a top seller, outpaced only, by strong enough for her. And it's' . Warning labels.
sometimes
tough
to·
keep
them
lit.
·
·"They're
hol'rib)c,"
says
lton
"They'll put chocolate .in it,
clove cigaretles.
.
"
!
coulp
never
smoke
them
Todd,
director
of
lo~acco
control
they
' ll put vanilla in it."
. "It's just a little bit moie exotic," she says. "They're smoking a instead of a regular cigarette," she for the American Cancer Society.

Tomorrow: Showers
High: 70s; Low: 50s

- No major improvements in preventative care among women, despite
increased altenl\on to the importance
of breast and cervical cancer screenings. Overall, 64 percent of those surveyed had received a pap test and 66
percent received a clinical breast
exam· - rates vinually unchanged
since the 1993 survey. Mammography rates for women age 50 and
.older, however, increased from 55 to
61 percent.
-About three out of four insured
women, 76 percent, were enrolled in
a managed health care plan, such as a
health maintenance organization. The
managed care plans wc:re usually
·more successful than traditional feefor-service plans in making sure
women received regular preventative
care.
-Women reported improved
· knowledge about certain health conditions and behaviors. Many were
familiar wilh osteoporosis and more
· reported getting mote calcium, such
as by drinking more milk or taking
calcium supplements.
·
- One of three women in
menopause uSed hormone replacement therapy. In 1993, !he figure was
one in four. The women most likely
to use hormone replacement therapy ·
we~e college-educated and had higher mcomes.
- Women were more likely than
men to take care ·of.a sick or disabled
relative, in addition to fulfilling work
and childcare responsi.bilities.

. Meigs Countfs

.

I

·
"We thought of th,e Cincinnati ners are ex pec ted .
" This is a person who often
Marathon, but how do we distin guish that from "the Columbus . runs for chari ty or just for their
Marathon? And we thought about own personal reasons. They just
calling it the . Queen City want to run to run , or to do it for
Marathon. All of our name s were fun;" Cough Iin said.
On Sunday, runners will get a
kind of boring ."
There' s a ·sense of fun to the close-up look at "the H~.ing pigs
name, Coughlin said . The new that in spired the protests a decade .
race isn ' t targeted to the seriou s ago . The marathon route passes
runner but more of the "mid-pack the gateway sc ulpture twice.
marathoner." · About 6, I 00 run -

~

-

.. ·•·.· -··

NTSB official: Jump plane crash
h1vestlgat1Qn ·could take months

t

MO,N11llZlOOqAP)- A sky-diving plane that Cl'Mhed, killiag six peoaoo:ar to be overloaded, transportation officials said Thesday. 1
Brian Rayner, an air safety investigator with !he National1l"ansportation
Safety Board, said that lhe plane was
near
its Clp&amp;City but was not exceed~e11tt1
ing its limit when .it ct'Mhed Sunday
2 ~tiona· U Paps
about 2S miles southwest of Uma.

Today's

~

~~~~~~~~;~

was Oying at ?00 to 1,000 feet when
WitnesSes
told Rayner
that!he
the.
plane
the
engine sputtened
before
singleengine Cessna went down in a farm
field. The pilot and five sky divers
werekiUed.

IXlllfetenoe
with appeared
officials atfrom
the
~=~~===3~3
Rayner, who
a news
. Wapakoneta post of the Slate Hlglt:

.. Organizations
who. would like to have
aii
l
'
.
'
advertisemeD.t in this special edition please

.. I

'

Because ·o f·c01icems over the loss of farmland and the abandonment
urban real estate, ·then-Gov. George Voinovich made
brownfields redevelopment one of his signature issues.
Voi.novich has repeatedly complained thai his program was-not as suc·
cessful as it could have been because businesses did not take advantage of
it, worried that they could still find themselves subject to expensive action
ordered by the federal government.
,
·
The stale program offers businesses that clean up old contamination the
promise lliat there will be no liability lawsuit making them responsible for
a previous owner's pollution.
Other states that have similar liability ·provisions have gotten the lia·
bility protection extended lo the federal level, but not Ohio.
Ohio's program fails to pass federal muster in part because it d&lt;iesn'l
allow the kind of government oversight the EPA requires.
Earlier this month, The COlumbus Dispatch examined state agency
documents and concluded that the stale program had larj!ely been used to
redevelop propenies with smaller amounts of contamination; only 12
the program's 70 applicants were for projects on Ohio's list of known or
suspected contamination sites.

lotteries

Call 992-2155
. . ..
Da:ve Harris Ext. 104.
Kath Williamson Ext. l 05

QIQO
Pkk 3: 1-8-2; Pkk 4: 7-1·3-8 .
Buckeye 5: 1;27-31-32-35

I

w.yA.

I

..

Bl'own said Ohio had lost an average of Tl acres of farm land per day
from 1982 to .1992, and said the Ointon administration-blessed brown·
fields bill was !he way to comballhe loss of ."greenfields."
Encouraging new development on land that once was a factory, gas station or dry cleaning shop would bring about "more urban jobs, better tax
bases, be~r schools, " he said.
The legislation is similar to a bill that failed in the last session of COnbecause majority Republicans did not want to sever brown fields
I cleariUp from the larger task of wiiting a new Superfund law.
Another complication is Republican dissatisfaction with a Clinton
administration brownfields pilot program.
A General Accounting Office report concluded the administration
failed to adequately track the results of its spending on brownfields grants.
"I am concerned that, while the administ,ation spent virtually every
dollar it had pledged, it canna( tell us if these broilrnfield programs are
meeting the aclministration's own goals," said Rep. Tom Bliley, R-Vil.,
who commissioned the GAO report.
Rep. John Dingell, 0-Mich., defended the administration's performance, waving aside the GAO criticisms, saying the auditors "took a slice
of the picture and typically reported only on thai slice that they exam-

I ontce-productive

Any Professio~al, Business, Individual or Civic

Holser Clinie ... Keepin6 the Promille!

By KATHERINE RIZZO
Auoclllld PI'IIIS Writer
WASHINGTON (AI')- House Democrats are making a
push for
a Ointon administration-endorsed package of incentives for
abandoned faetory land.
.
. .
Ohio Reps. Ted Strickland and Sherrod Brown were featured prominently on Tuesday as the "brownfields" package was unveiled at a Capitol Hill news conference.
"I have seen the positive results.or cleaning ilp and reusing a brownsite," Stricklaml.said. "If !he leadership of this Congress wants to
.
::~~ a do-n~(11g label, no ·ece of le.~s~tion ought 'to be more attrac-

ined."

*************************
'
l

.

By BRIAN J . REED.
Sentinel New• Staff
The development of a new park in Rutland, to celebrate the community's
Bicentennial, ·was discussed when Rutland Village Council met in regular
monthly session _on.Monday evening_
.
Councilman Jay Dewhurst discussed plans for the park, which will likely be called "Bicentennial Park," and distributed a drawing of the proposed
area.
The park will be located on property cleared as a part ,of the village's
Hood hazard mitigation program, located near the Rutland Post Office just
off the bridge on State Route 124.
Dewhurst said that local businesses have agreed to donate trees, shrubbery and other plants, as well as lumber for picnic tables, and community
members are being asked to help in !he development of the area.
.
The property involves four lots, p!lfl of which are .owned by the village
through !he hazard mitigation process, and part of which are privatelyowned. Dewhurst said tlial David Grate and James Birchfield, who own pan
of the property, have agreed to allow the propeny to be used as a park.
Council agreed to set aside $800 for development of the park.
Those interested in helping with the project are asked to meet at the park
area on Monday at !i a.m., so !hat planting and other iandscaping work can
begin. Dewhurst said that the work session will be postponed until Tuesday
in the event of rain.
In other action, discussion was held on the progress of the Hood hazard
mitigation p!"\)gram. Council members agreed thai portions of the program,

ocrats join push
for new redevelopment law

High School pffice,to Be Included In This
Special Edition, At No Charge.
(Attach Your Name and High Sch9ol to Photo)

.

Dally 3: 9-8-5; Dally 4: 3-7-1-7 .

\'

Hometown Ne'Wspaper
Single Copy - 35 Cents

.

.

PLAN PARK ~ Rutland VIllage Council members Vema Marlin, · Martin Andrew, Dick Fetty, Tammy Searle• and Jay
Dlwhurat, along with MIYor Jo Ann Eada, are pictured reviewIng plane for a new Bicentennial Perk to be developed on Main
S~eet

.

namely the acquisition of property after notices of intent are .obtained, and
the moving of houses, have been subject to excessive delays.
Dewhurst suggested that council com~ittees whose work relate to the

mitigation program begin closely monitoring the project. and that those
· Committees take action in emergency situations, rather than wait for regular ·
council meetings.
,
.
During the discussion, council took aciion prohibiting the salvagina of
contents from ·houses involved in the project. It was noted that some resi·
dents who participated in the program wer~ offered contents of their homes·
for a price of $1,000, and council objected to the agreements. noting that the ,, .
homes are to be sold with contents included.
•.
Dewhurst Commended village workers for their cooperation in Carrying
out the program, and suggested that the· village bill the grant program for the
staff time and equipment use provided by the village to date. Dewhlll$t said
that such reimbursement is ~llowed under the grant's guidelines.
•_
Mayor Jo Ann Eads announced !hat the first meeting of the R~tland
Bicentennial Commillee would be held at 7 p.m. on Friday at the civic center, and asked that all those interested in participating to attend the meetina. •
Marcia Elliott of the Civic CCnter Committee noted that the community
yard sale in Rutland would be held on June 5, and asked for widespread ::
community support.
·
:
Councilman Dick Fetty commended village police officer floyd Hick· . ~
man for his work.
.Council also approved the mayor's report of fines collected in May in the
amount of $2,786.
Present. in addition to Eads, Dewhurst and Felly, were Council membera •
Tammy Searles, Martin Andrew and Vema Martin, Oerk!rreasurer ROse·
mary Snowden-Eskew, and David Davis of !he street department.

Ohio Works website reviewed at chamber luncheon

· On ~riday, May 21st, The Daily Sentinel
·Will have a special edition with photographs
of high school seniors graduating this year.
Now through Friday, May 14th, .Drop .Y our
Photo Off at The ·Daily Sentinel or At Your

.··

-Pege4

Rutland Council announces plans for Bicentennial Park .·

AREA HIGH SCHOOL
GRADUATES OF 1999

DIAL ·
992-7834

Reds whip the
Milwaukee
Brewers 9-1

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number 242

ATTENTION!

If the 992 Exchange Is a Free Part of Your
Telephone Service, Then You Can Call
Holzer Clinic In Galllp~lls
Toll Freel ·

Southern wins sectional title, Page 4
Weird uses for kitchen utensils, Page 7
Bus crash probe continues, Page 6

•

Once scorned mascot, flying pig now em9raced in Queen City
CINCINNATI (AP) Is Paycor and founder of the Flying
Cincinnati ready to embrace its · Pig Marathon.
But he said .he wasn ' t aware of
flying pigs?
Apparim.tly so. There'-s been no the 1988 controversy when the
uproar over Sunday 's inaugural ·marathon was named.
" One of our ideas was to call
flying Pig Marathon , a name that
Ohio River Marathon, and
it
the
would have drawn loud protests a
we considered calling it the River
decade ago.
In 1988, when a riverfront Hills Marathon, but we didn 't
park. was being built to celebrate want to promote the idea of runthe city ' s bicentennial , artist ning up all these hills, so that was
Andrew Leicester designed a out." he said.
$300,000 gateway sculpture that
featured 18 historical symbol s.
Four of them were winged pigs
atop steamboat stacks, alluding to
Cincinnati's status as a 19th-century Ohio River port and hog butchering center.
.
Some people complained to
City Council that .the pigs were
undignified and an embarrass ing
reminder of the city's former
nickname, Porkopolis.
But the pigs . stayed and the
furordied down. Now Flying Pig
Marathon posters, caps, T-shirts
and equipment bags are everywhere.
"They love the pigs ," said
Ljnda Furnish. who works at Bob
Roncker's Running Spot. "People have just gone crazy over _the
·pigs."
There was a time when Cincinnati was the largest supplier of
pork in the. world, said Dan Hurley, Cincinnati .historian and
author of the 1982 book,
"Cincinnati, the Queen City. "
Starting about 1810, slaughterhouses were abundant. Pigs ruled
the . city because of the farmers
who grew corn, said Gary Pill&lt;- ·
ington, director of the. historical
exhibit programs at the ,Cincinnati Museum Center.
Because it was expensive for
Indiana and Ohio farmers to
transport their corn to Cincinnati,
they fed it to their pigs and
walked the animals to tnarket
instead. By the 1840s, quite an
economy had been created.
That historical note wasn 'I lost
on Bob Coughlin, president of

Sports

MIY 12, 1000

·-

•

way Patrol, said the investigation
could take months.
·
. Killed in the aash were pilot Pre·
stan Parrish II, 30, of 'lipp Oty, ·and
puaenp Jack Haenichen, 31,
Ottawa, Ohio; John Hoover, 43,
Michelle Korsen, 43, and Arrop
Schroeder, 30, of Fort Wa~lnd.;
and Keith .Edwards, 40, of arion,
Ind. .

J3y BRIAN J. REED
state leaders to consider another Darwin. Story also said that CASH is reported to
Sentinel NIWI Staff
honie in Southern Ohio. .
· be considering a coun challenge of ODOT's plans
A site in Brown County, near to build the highway.
A new internet job service from
the state was discussed when the
Cincinnati, was ultimately sel.ected
Economic Development Director Perry VarnaMeigs C,Ounty Chamber of Comas the site for !he home, and Pick- doe announced · plans for a retail retention and
merce held its monthly membership
ens said that she felt t~at Southeast- expaosion survey, which will examine which busiluncheon o'l Tuesday.
em Ohio still needed such a facili- nesses are most needed in the downtown-commuOhio Works is an internet web site ·
ty..
nities.
developed for those seeking employ·
' Chamber Treasurer Mike Kloes
Tourism Director Karin Johnson updated
ment and those seeking employees.
discussed the Log Jam Festival, a chamber members on tourism activities, including
It also provides job seekers, employ·
country music concen to be held in several. tour groups who have visited the county.
ers and workforce development proPortland on June 18. ~ingers David
She said that boat lours will begin · visiting
fessionals with up-to·date informa·
Lee Murphy, Toby Keith and Pomeroy again, beginning on Tuesday evening. ·
lion by community.
Kenny Chesney will perform at the
Johnson also announced that aS 1,000 grant has
Ushma V. .Parikh of Ohio Works
PICKENS COMMEND- conce~nd the chamber bas been received from the Ohio Arts Council to help
~esented a video and slide presenla- ED _
Patty Goegleln e~clusi rights to !-shirt conces- develop a promotional brochure for the
lion about the )ll'Ogram, and encour- Plckena- honored by stons at e event.
Chester/Shade Historical Association and the ;
·a~ed cham~r membe_rs ·to use th~· the Mila- County Cham~lor~; ·chairman of. the cham- newly-restored Cliester Courthot~S~;.
•
Site found at 'www ohaoworkLcom ...._ o1 0111
-. ..__ ber s ha way comm111ee noted · Gina Pellegrino-Pines. director of th~ Univeni· ·
wh~n looking for q~alified workers; • 1111'Y't.!a•toce~'"; that !he Transportation Revlew and ty of Rio Grande's Meigs Center reported that two
The program also features an on- vvllnlna home ~n Mllge Advisory Commillee will hold a town meetings will ~ held at the center in Mid- ~
line resume service, which allows Cou~
working meeting on May 26, and dleport on May ·18. The meetings, set for 2 p.m. ;
job seekers to create a professional
· •
that the Southeastern Ohio Region- and 5 p.m., will aUow residents to contribute to a·
resume from the website:
al Council's Highway Users Committee planned discussion about poS.ible degree programs at the ·
Patty Goeghlein Pickens., who offened real to send delegates to the meeting, although no tes- center.
Pines also announced that 16 graduates from
estate and worked toward attracting a veterans timony will be h~ard.
home in Meigs County was honored with a com- ' · Story said !hat members of CASH (Coalition . the center will be recognized at services &amp;I the
mendation from the Chamber for her efforts.
Against Superfluous Highways) would likely send Family Life Center in Middleport.
Pickens said that she would continue to follow a delegation of their own members in opposition
The meeting was held at the Carleton School in
the veterans home issue, and would encourage to the expaosion o.f U.S. Route 33 from Athens to Syracuse.
.

Plans move'forward for establishing Neighborhood Watch
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
s.ntlnel N - Statr ·
.
About 20 Middlepon residents gathened in the
American Legion hall Tuesday night to hear about
N~ighborhood Watch· programs and how they can
benefit a community.
II was a first step toward establishing a program of neighbors looking out for neighbors and
thereby creating a greater sense of security in !he ·
community. ,
.
Chief of Police Bruce Swift was joined by
Chad Wallace, a Gallia County sheriff's deputy, to
explain how. the program works to deter crime.
•:u·s a community watch pro~;· said Swift,
who described it as really just "common sense
stuff where neighbors watch out for each other."
Swift shared statistics which showed thai in
neighborhoods where watch pro~s are in
effect, criminals move out. He said that such programs in Middleport wouiCI be a help to his ~part·
meilt because there would be people in the neighborhoods who could notify police when !hey see
something out of place, an unusual happening or

WATCH
of
Pollee Bruce Swift dleplllyl a Neighborhood Witch elgn to Judy Clifford It 1\Jeeday'e night mHtlng at the American
Legion hall. ·
some unfamiliar people hanging around.
The police chief described the program as a
way of bringing communities together and of getling people involved willi their neighbors in a very

posliive way. He said it also provides ari avenue ·
far reporting potential criminal activities to police ,
without feeling that they are becoming involved in
somebody else's business.
Other facets of the program besides watching
out for one another, said Swift, are organizing
walking patrols and creating safe houses for chi!·
dren in neighborhoods. He said that just putting up
Neighborhood Watch signs is a deterrent to crime
in a community. ,
Gallia County, aCcording to Wallace, has seven
programs in place at this time. He talked about two
"township watches in which he is active, noting lhal ·
each has assigned patrol .areas, and use cellular
phones to keep in touch with the sheriff's office.
He said that since the watches went into effect,
there has been a remarkable decrease in the crime
rate.
.
Literature on the program was distributed to
those auendirig last night's meeting and !hey were
encouraged to take information bacl!: to their communities. Another meeting was set for June 8 at
the Legion hall.
·
.
.

Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin to resign (

·By RON· FOURNIER
cussed his decision with Clinton
Rubin had considered leaving sooner, but did i
A180Cllted Preea Wrltar
" within the past week" and said not want to leave the administration during the ~. WASHINGTON (Al')- Tressury
Rubin's decision was fueled solely Monica Lewinsky scandal, said one official :·
Secretary Robert' Rubin, credited with
by his desire to return to private life familiar with his thinking.
•.
many of lhe policies that have spurred
after working for Clinton since the
Before join ing the Clinton administration, ··
a lasting boom in the U.S. economy, is
start of his administration.
Rubin had spent nearly his entire career inside ••
stepping .down·and will be suc=ded
"He just decided it was lime to one of Wall Street's most powerful money. ;
by his deputy, 4wrence Summon.
get. back to private life," one official machines; the prestigious investment firm of :
said," speaking on condition of Goldman, Sachs &amp; Co.
•
President Clinton was to announCe
the long-rumoted change . at a Reise
anonymity. The official said Rubin is
He joined the company in 1966, and beCame a !
Garden ceremony later today, the
~xpected to stay at Treasury through young star in risk arbitrage - speculating on the :·
White House said.
.
Robert Rubin
July.
stocks of companies subject to takeover auemptS. •
"Secretary Rubin )Viii be leaving
Before .being named treasury He later ran the firm 's stock and borid trading : ;
after playing an extraordinarily central role in this secretary, Rubin headed Clinton's National Eco- departments, and revive!~ its commodities sub- ;•
administration as far as our outstanding reoord of nomic Council with the task of creating harmony sidiary. He bocame co-chairman of the eompany •
. fiscal discipline and turning . the economy among more · than a dozen turf-conscious agen- in 1990.
:
around," said presidential spokesman Joe Lock- cies.
Even with his strong businesS ties, Rubin !
"bart.
Since becoming treasury secretary, Rubin has proudly proclaims his Democratic heritage. He •;
"The president in the '92 campaign talked been widely credited for steering Clinton's eco- said it com.es from his grandfather, a leader in a ::
about focusing on the economy like a laser," nomic policies, including the budget cuts early in macpine-style Brooklyn political ~iub.
:·
Lockhart added. "The.man he entrusted to guide the.Ointon administration that eventually helped
Rubin has described himself as a centrist. par- ..;
the efforts were Bob Rubin."
set the nation on course for its first balanced bud- ticularly on eoonomic ·issues, while slaking out :!
. The Dow Janca industrial average dropped get in docaclea.
more liberal positions on social and urban issues. ·~
·more than 200 points when news of the resign•·
Rubin has long been viewed as a J&gt;05'ible top · He hss pushed hard for private investment in ceo- ••.
tion first wu reponed but quic'l!y recovered most candidate for the chairmanship of the Federal nomically depressed inner city neighborhooda. ! .
of that ground.
Reserve if .Chairman Alan Greenspan should
Rubin was born in New York City in 1938
Rubin's dcpanure wu not unexpected. It has choose to retire.
grew liP in Miami Beach, the son of a lawyer. He !
long been rumored !hat Rubin, who made $26
The·senior·offiCial said Clinton plans to nomi- graduated from HIUVard College with higheat :•
million in private life as an investment banker the . · nate Summers, who ran many ofthe administra- honors in economics . and quit Harvard Law .:
year before joining the administration in 1993, lion's efforts to stem the Asian finanCial crisis, as Sehool after three days to see !he world. ·
:•
wanted to return to the private sector..His wife has his third treasury secretary. Stuart Eizenstal, an
He later studied atllie London Sehool of
never moved to"Washington, living in New York undersecretary at the Stale Department, is Oin- nomics and received a law degree from Yale. He •,
City throughout his term in office.
ton's choice lei rep_! ace Summers as second in spent two years at a New York law firm befonl • ·
Administration ·officials said Rubin; 60, dis- command at Treasury.
·
switch ing careers.
'
··
•~

and::

Eco-:

,

'

,,

�'

:commentary
The Daily Sentinel
'Est116fisM.a 1111948

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
74().Siw.!~21150 • Fo: 1102-2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L, WINGETT
Publleher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

DIANE HILL
Controller

from,...,._

broMI,..,.,.

TM Sentinel wt/cotMe ,.,.,, to lh• «Jitor
on •
o1 topShott ,.,.,.. {3t)D WOI'dl or r.u) IYW Itt. liNt ct..nc. ot bNtg pubiiM~.
TypMI ,.n.,. .,. ptWr.trwl Mtd
btl ~«i. Each Mould lncluc1. • lllgtutture,

1~.

art,..,

.Jd,...., and dayllnHt phtHN nurnbw. Specify a data H ,,_.., a,.,.,..,. to a,..
vlou• artlcl• or IIIIer. Mall to: Lett.,. to th• fldltor, Tha Sent:Jnel, 1ft Court St.,
Pomoroy, Ohio U'189, ot; FAX to 74D-H2.Z1$7.

:Racine residents
!Observing
:growth in village
'

Once, around the turn of the century, Racine was known as "the Paris of
Meigs County" and boasted many businesses Now, after years of decline,
Meogs County's eastern-most village seems to a pl,ace on the move - at
least by southeastern Ohio standards.
Although newspapers are frequently criticized for being "too negative",
we notice Tuesday's Daily Sentinel featured two "good" stories about the
village: the pedicatJOn of a new fire house and the purchase of land by the
Ohio Division of Wildlife for a new Ohio River boat launching facility, both
. made possible through the efforts of local resodents.
Consider some of the village's enterprises: a locally-owned bank, a doctor, dentist and optometrist, funeral home, hardware stores, a long-established grocery, a library, service stations, flower store, restaurants, etc comforts generally unheard of in a community of this soze. In addotion, the
~outhern Local School District, consodered one of the finest districts in
southeastern Ohio, is housed m Racme.
,
- To this list add the relatively new Star Mill Park which has rapidly established itself as a center of social life 1n the vollage woth sports, entertainment
and festivals including a Flower Festival, Fourth of July and Fall Festival.
the park features lighted ball fields, a walking!joggong path and plenty of
playground equipment for the lottie ones. A smaller park dedicated to local
yeterans has been constructed across the street neKt to the American Legion
Hall.
In retrospect, the lo!;S of Racine Elementary School may have been a gam
,to the village. The school yard was used for the new fire station while the
, beloved old schoolhouse woll likely be used as the seat of vrllage government for years to come- continuing ots long history of service to the community.
· . And even more noticeable progress is in the works: planning is underway
for a new elementary school to serve all of Southern Local's students grades
kmdergarten through eight. The hogh school will also be the subject of extensive tenovation and additions.
, In recent years, some of the village's housing stock benefited from a
i::ommunity Housing Improvement Program grant. New sodewalks, water
' Iones, and a new well are other projects spurring on growth in the village,
~ddmg onto existing utilltoes which including electricoty, gas, water and
,sewage.
. Of course, the village's revival could not take place without hundreds of
concerned citizens, not all of whom reside within corporatoon lines, partiCIpating in numerous groups (particularly the Racine Area Communoty Asso' ciation), social and service organizations and churches, and without the
efforts of local businessmen and citizens who basically believe on the future
;cf the village and are fiercely loyal to their community.

~.Editorial
.

views

:' Excerpts of recent editorials of statewode and natoonal interest from Ohio
: newspapers:

: Big-time disappointment

: ~he (foledo) Blade, May 8
• Nothong speaks more eloquently to the predicament facing Mid-Ameri; can Conference athletics than the two-day tenure of the MAC's once and
: former commossioner, Tom McElroy.
• , McElroy, associate commissioner of the Big East Conference for several
i years, accepted the MAC job after an extensive interview process with the
:MAC Council of Presidents and even took part in an introductory press con, ; terence. But before last weekend was out, so was he. McElroy decided per; ~onal and family considerations prevented him from keeping his new job.
• Yes, personal concerns are important, predominantly so. But McElroy
:had plenty of ume to assess all that as the screening and interview process
~moved along. If family matters were going to prevent him from giving the
~job his full workday attention, the time to back away was before his selec!-lion, not after
? What matters now is that the league's university presidents move quick~ly to appoint a new commissioner and put this big-time disappointment and
: embarrassment behind them.

V

New ~un rising over southern Ohio
By REP. TED STRICKLAND
Some places are know for the
products they make. Other places
are known for the crops they grow. I
think our regoon shouJa be know for
the quality of ots people. Some of the
wisest, funniest and most original
folks I've met have been from
southern Ohoo.
The ability and talent of southern
Ohioans has also been one of our
biggest selling poonts 1n attracting
new business. We are known as people who work hard and work well.
The problem, more often than not, is
that the sad state of our physical
infrastructure - our roads, bndges,
sewers and water systems - has discouraged new companoes from
locating here.
That's why I have been working
with local officials to improve our
infrastructure in southern Ohio. We
have worked together to secure
grants for new state of the art industrial parks across our dostrict,
acquire funds for much needed road
projects, and we have even won an
intense nationwode competitoon for
coveted Empowerment Zone and
Enterprise Community designation.
Local leaders across southern Ohio
have shown tremendous dedication

,..;...--, and teamwork to
make these successes possible.
Though
we
certainly have a
ways to go before
we've completely
modernized our
infrastructure, I
think the last few
years' hard work
os beginning to pay off.
Case in point:
The Sun Coke Company
announced last week that it wants to
build a new coke facility in Scioto
County, between Portsmouth and
Ironton. largest plant of its kind in
the world. And the company saod its
construction will invest approximately $1 billion m land, buildings,
equopment and jobs.
1,000 long term construction jobs
would be created and 500 permanent
jobs would need to be filled to run
the plant once it's built.
Coke is made by heating coal and
removing any impurities It is then
used in the production of steel. The
technology that Sun wants to use at
this new plant would give it an edge,
envoronmentally and its competitors.
The vast size of the facility Sun has

Singapore a model

.- ..

•
-·

in mind would make it the largest
brick construction project in the history of the United States.
Imagine the tmpact a $1 billion
investment will have in southern
Ohio. Not only will this project create more than one thousand jobs, but
it will also lead to the creation and
expansion of other businesses and
the revitalization of an entire region.
In a dozen different ways, Sun's
announcement last week means a
better standard of life for many
southern Ohio families.
Community leaders in Scioto
County worked diligently to make
sure Sun would choose to locate in
ou'r part of Ohio. The Scioto County
Commissioners, the Southern Ohio
Port Authority and other local leaders all deserve considerable praise
for this success.
And I think this announcement is
partocularly good news considering
that we are still in th.e process of
improving our infrastructure.
Several months ago I announced
that Lawrence County would
receive tens of millions of dollars
for economic development as part of
an Empowerment· Zone. And last
winter I helped work out an agreement with the state and the

The

talent of
southe~
ns has also
been one of ou biggest
selling points in attracting
new business. We are
known as people who work
hard and work well. The _
problem, more often than
not, is that the sad state of
our physical infrastructure
- our roads, bridges, sewers and water systems has discoJraged new companies from locating here.
Appalachian Regional Commission
that will invest milliclns of dollars
building new Ohio. If Sun's plans
are any indication, just imagine the
new'business we can attract when all
this work is done.
Ted Strickland repr11enta
OhiO'I Sixth Dlltrlct In the U.S.
HOUN of Raprtllntlltlvea.

of authoritarianism ·

gaporean men with a beautiful woman on the
same island and they will wait f'?r the government
to tell them what to do."
Lee's authoritarian rule developed gradually,
he once explained to our associate Dale Van Alta.
He led Singapore since it achieved limited selfr~le in 1959, through two difficult years in a federation with Malaysia and then the beginning of
independence in 1965 when the federation broke
up. The country has no natural reS(!urces to speak
of-- and there was a question of whether it could
survive.
~e recalled: "Without Malaysia, there was no
hinterland to keep the place going ... We .(were)
like a heart without ·a body, And we then had to
reach out to the world 311d make ourselves relevant to the rest of the world. So our trade lines
and our investment lines were thrown to Europe,
America and Japan. We became a different
place."
That "different place" developed over the
decades into a model of economic success. Along
the way, the strong·wtlled, imperious Lee played
strict father to his 2-million-plus subjects.
He tried to homogenize the ethnic mix, which
is three-quarters Chinese and the rest Malay, Indian and European. Though they speak two dozen
languages and dialects, Lee mandated English
would be the official language in government and
school systems.
He sponsored numerous campaigns to keep his
island orderly, happy and harmonious -- at least
his own version of what that should be. Family
planning, marrying at the same educational levels, politeness and brushing and flossing teeth
have been encouraged by the government. Smok·
ing, spitting, chewing gum and wearing long hair
have been actively discouraged -- even outlawed

in some instances. To litter or even jaywalk
invites a heavy fine.
Some Singapore elevators are equipped with a
device that turns on a video camera of it detects
someone urinating in the elevator. A number of
commercial vehicles must have yellow lights on
top which automatically start flashing if the vehicle goes over the speed limit. Of course, as Americans will remember, even foreigners may be sub·
ject to caning for acts of vandalism.
While some of these petty rules may seem
laudable, their pervasiveness i~ indicative of a
larger lack of personal freedom. Opposition political parties are actively discouraged, and the press
is generally forbidden to criticize the government.
With autocratic laws covering misdemeanor
minutiae as if they were treasonous acts, it is not
surprising that Lee and his successors have been
routinely accused in the State Department's annual human rights reports of harassing opposttion
politiciiUI5 •• and accused by Amnesty International of torture.
Over any Singaporean who dares dissent
hangs the possibility of arrest without warrant for
an unspecified period of imprisonment. More
indicative of the one-party authoritarian rule is a
law that requires official permission for any pub·
lie 11athering involving more than five persons -·
even if it is a funeral.
No wonder 80 of 83 seats in Parliament are
owned by ~e's party. Rigging elections is not a
moral question for ~e's people either, if the electorate foolishly rebels at the ballot bo~. As Singa·
pore's father, he knows best.
So when Singapore is held up as a successful
model for other Asian and Pacific countries,
caveat emptor to any country choosing to mimic
them.
Copyrtghl1eet, UnHed Failure Syndicate, tnc.

•

. ..

The Dally Sentinel • P•ge 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

·2

-- shooting resi sters, burnong Muslim homes, and is a vastly more sensible idea than sending Amer·
By William A. Rusher
ican troops to the Balkans. Almost certainly, any
It 's probably time to review
rape
5 Mr. Milosevic was thereupon treated to the settlement will fall far short of Mr Clinton 's
developments on Kosovo, and try
full propaganda barrage: dubbed a "dictaror," repeated demands, let alone the rhetorical overkill
to reach a few conclusoons about
compared
to Hitler, accused of genocide (though of hos propagandists The new " Hitler" will surwhat, if anything, can be done to
ethnic cleansing, reprehensible as it is, is far from vive quite nicely in Belgrade, and talk of his prosomprove matters. It shouldn't be
genocide), and denounced as a war criminal. Mr. ecution as a war criminal will be dropped. Many
hard, they could scarcely be
Clinton has insisted that the NATO bombardment thousands of refugee Kosovars will choose not to
worse.
of Yugoslavia will continue until the refugee return to theor devastated homeland. Those who
1. From the outset of hts
administration, Mr. Omton has made it plain that Kosovars are allowed 'to return to the or homes in do will probably get a measure of autonomy, short
of independence,
the old " vital interest" test for determining when peace and given political autonomy.
It is said that this will encourage tin-horn "dic6 Various respected 'political leaders in this
to ris~ the Jives of America's soldiers ,.tas out the
window. Noting the outrage Americans feel at the country have begun warning that bombing will tators" the world over to defy the established
crimes of petty tyrants against their own people never bring Mr. Milosevic to heel, and that there- norms of civilized behavior, knowing that Ameri(all covered graphically by TV cameramen), he fore ground troops must be used They argue that ca will not risk the lives of its fighting men and
has not hesotated to use American military might NATO's prestige is at stake But NATO won't women to stop them. Unless an American "vital
in local disputes and civil wars all over the world. have much prestige to preserve of it is to be con- interest" is involved, I see no problem with that
At last count, Mr Clinton had ordered overseas verted from a successful defensive alliance into a whatever. No nation ought to be expected to shed
molotary onterventions more often than all of his marauding band of armed social workers hunting. its people's blood in civil quarrels in which it h~
like, Don Quixote, for wrongs to right. Right now, no stake, merely because sentimentalists can't
predecessors since World War II combined
2. What gave our draft-dodging •
commander-in-chief the courage to do ~
this was. his disco~ery t~at. we pos_'Ole_ ~TMifiGJ 1S
sessed ptlotless cruose mosstles capajHaT OJ{C8 OUR~ al(le. 1
ble of bombing distant sites without
,,, ,,..._.,.... ....... WHol-e
the risk of so much as a single Amer'" ~~ '' 1'- DA""'...
ocart life. He has used these weapons
CP\m ll'il ~ ocoonrnv
so enthusiastically that we have now
US--~RP\.IlSSofl
dangerously depleted our inventory of
fbl.irfG$--~HT7Rfi§H1~
them.
,
•
3. When Slobodan Milosevic
'
refused to accept the deal we offered
him on Kosovo (a province of
Yugoslavoa populated largely by
rebellious Mushms), Mr. Clinton
turned again to his favonte remedy:
nsk-free bombing The only difference was that thos lime, piloted
bombers would be added to the mix.
But they were ordered to fly so high - 15,000 feet -- that the risk of theor
being shot down was (supposedly)
mmimal. To be sure, this also reduced
their accuracy.
4 To the amazement of Mr Clin·
ton and hos advosers, Mr. Milosevic
did not crumple, as expected, after the
first few bombs fell . Instead, Serbian
Yugoslavs unoted behond him for the
first time and defied NATO's air arm
to do its worst. Meanwhile, Mr. Molosevic ordered the Serboan military to
chase the Muslim Kosovars out of their homes NATO is the military equivalent of the March of bear to see brutality on television.
and right across the border into the Yugoslav Dimes. looking desperately for something new to do. Copy~ght1eet NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
William A. Ruahar Ia a Dlllllngulahed Fellow
7. Recently the United States has obviously
province .of Montenegro and the neighboring
1ndependent countrie&amp; of Albano a and Macedonia. encouraged Russia, Yugoslavia's friend, to act as of the Claremont lnatltuta for the Study of
This was accompanied by the usual brutal tactics a mediator between Yugoslavia and NATO. This Statesmanship and Polltleal Philosophy.

In -History

-.

P~ge

Reviewing the mess in Kosovo

of achieving high standards

•

Wednesday, May 12, 1999

Death Notices

Wednelld•y, M•y 12, 1M

By Jack Anderson
and
Jan Moller
~ Record
Lee
Kuan Yew may not
iThe Columbus Dispatch, May 10
be
a
household
name on
~ The ailing Ohio Cancer Incidence Surv~illance System should find the
America,
but
in
Asia
and
=healing comfort it needs to succeed on the arms of Ohoo State Unoversity and
certain
U
S
foreign-policy
'the Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital
~
If the Ohio Department of Health, whoch routmely has neglected the well- circles, ol signifies the
( being of thos important program, can't or won 'I do the job, then why not bow world's foremost dictatorgenius.
• put gracefully?
Lee was the long-time
The registry not only should survive but thrive. Lomping along as ot has,
prime
minister of Singapore, and he remains its
:bobbled and underfunded, os unacceptable. ·
primary
power-broker-- albeit behind the scenes.
• Move the cancer-surveillance registry to one of the largest academic
He
is
not likely to release his stranglehold on
:medical centers in the nation, one that awaots this opportunity with open
the
small
island nation until he dies, and even
'arms and a record of setting and achieving high standards.
then it's likely that his laws and his thoughts will
'
continue to guide his country's destiny.
Tourist raves about its orderliness and cleanli·
ness aside, Singapore, because of ~e. is an
authoritaroan country ruled by one palty, the Peo:By The ANoc:lllttd Preas .
• Today is Wednesday, May 12, the 132nd day of 1999. There are 233 days ple's Action Party, which doesn't brook dissent-~left in the year.
especially that generated by political parties or
: Today's Highlight in History:
the media.
'· On May 12th, 1949, the Soviet Union announced an end to the Berlin
Singapore is an ultra-modern, wealthy island
country of a mere 239 square miles. Few coun', Blockade.
tries are more technologically advanced. Most of
• On this date:
• In 1820, the founder of modern nursing, Florence Nightingale, was born , its households are hooked up to the Internet, and
the gove111ment ~ecently sponsored a Miss Inter·
:in Florence, Italy.
net Singapore contest for the young woman who
: In 1870, Manitoba entered Confederation as a Canadoan province.
: In 1932, the body of the kidnapped son of Charles and Anne Lindbergh could design the best Web page.
But modernity and stability in Singapore come
•was found in a wooded area of Hopewell, N J.
at the price of freedom. As Lee once said: "We
' In 1937, Britain's King George VI was crowned at Westmonster Abbey.
decide what is right. Never mind what the people
• In 1943, during World War II, Axis forces in North Africa surrendered.
In 1965, West Oennany and Israel exchanged letters establishing diplo· think •• that's another problem."
The govern111ent's involvement in its citozens'
:malic relations.
; In 1970, the Senate voted unanimously to confirm Harry A. Blackmun as lives is so pervasive that one popular joke runs
like this: "Put two Englishmen with a beautiful
• a Supreme Court justice.
: In 197S, the White House announced the new Cambodian government woman on a desert island and they will fight for
! had seized an American merchant ship, the "Mayaguez," in international her. Put two Frenchmen with a beautiful woman
on the island and they will share her. Put two Sinwaters.

~Today

.

Pamela Cheadle

Ohio weather
Thursday, M•y 13

.,

[ uiilioiiei'd I:Wi85~ 1 •

•~
ol Calumbua

la.•te~~•

o•a4\••

hYIY' Pt CloudY

ClOudy

ShcMrt

T ltorms

RM'I

I

-~·
Snow

..

Pamela J. Cheadle, 47, of Albany, died on Monday, May 10, 1999 at
King's Daughters Medical Center, Ashland, Ky.
•
She was born on December 3, 1951 in Kenosha, Wis., daughter of Lula
Bell Garnes Gilmore, Wilkesville, and the late Harold P. Jones.
She was a Girl Scout and Boy Scout leader, and received her RN degree
fro~ Central l?hio Technical Ce~t~ r. She was a veteran of the U.S. Army,
havong served on Korea and workmg at Walter Reed Medical Center Veterans-Memorial Hospital and Athens County Visiting Nurses. She wa~ also a
graduate of Rro Grande College, and was a member of the Columbia Township Volunteer Fire Department and Forst Responders. She was a member of
the Longhorn Assoctahon, the American Legion and the Carpenter Baptist
Church and Busy Bees.
.
Surviving, in a~dition to her mother, are her husband, Donnie Cheadle; a
son and daughter-m:law, Mark Antho~y and Laura Hafer, Carpenter; two
daughters an_d ~ns-rn-law, Michelle and Kirk Keefer of Athens and Becky
and B1ll Phdhps, Albany; three grandchildren; two brothers, Harold P.
"Dick" Jones, Carpenter, and Keith Jones, Oregon; a sister, Christy
McAdams, Pomeroy; her mother and father-in-law, Bonnie and Rex Cheadle, her sister-in-law, Kathy Cheadle; her brother-in-law, Re~ie Cheadle;
two nephews and two nieces.
. Fqneml services will be held on Friday, May 14, 1999 at 11 a.m. at the
Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home in Albany with Rev. John Elswick officiating.
Cremation will follow the services at Mrs. Cheadle's request
Friends may call at the funeml home on 'rbursday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m.
'
Memonal contributions may be made to the Pam Cheadle Scholarship
Fund, c/o Appalachian Community Visiting Nurses Association, 280 East
State Street, Athens, Ohio 45701.

Hollingsworth
Rain, thunderstorms slated Bertha
Bertha Hollingsworth, 74, Bidwell, died Monday, May 10, 1999 in St.
Mary's Hospital, Huntington, W.Va.
,
for region through Friday
Born March 6, 1925 in Pike County, Ky., daughter of the late Ballard and
By The Aaaoc:J•ted Pre"
Rain and thunderstorms may move across Ohio this week, the National Weather Service said.
Wednesday night woll be mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and
thunderstor111s. Low temperatures will be in the upper 40s to the mid 50s.
Thursday will be mostly cloudy. Showers and thunderstorms are likely
jn central and southern Ohoo. A chance of showers is expected in the northem part of the state. High temperatures will be in the lower 60s in the north
to the lower 70s far south.
Thursday night will be mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms in the south. Lows will range from the upper 40s through
the 50s.
The record high tempemture for this ~ate at the Columbus weather station was 90 degrees in i881. The record low tempemture was 34 degrees
on 1941. Sunset will be at 8:36p.m. Sunrise Thursday will be at 6:19a.m.

Weather forecast:
Tonight .. .lncreasing cloudiness with a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the mid and upper 50s. Light and variable wind. Chance
of rin 40 percent.
Thursday...Showers an&lt;! thunderstorms likely. Highs in the mid and
upper 70s. Chance of rain 60 percent.
Thursday night...Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the mid and upper 70s.

Extended forecast:
Friday... Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Highs in the mid and upper 70s.
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid and upper 50s and highs from
the upper 70s to the lower 80s.
Sunday...Partiy cloudy. Lows 55 to 60 and highs from the upper 70s to
the lower 80s.

One week of trial to consist
of hard-core video tapes
By TERRY KINNEY
Aeltoclllted Pn111e Writer
CINCfNNATI (AP)-The last 47
potential jurors in the obscenity trial of
Hustler magazine publisher Larry
Fiynt tol~ the judge handling the case
that they had never been inside Flynt's
Hustler Magazine &amp; Gifts store.
Hamilton County Common Pleas
Judge Patrick Dinkelacker, Flynt's
attomefs and prosecutors are trying to
narrow the field to 12 jurors who say
tbey are not biased for or against Flynt
and the sexually-explicit material sold
at his downtown store. Dinkelackeron
Thesday dismissed 10 potential jurors
who told him tbey were strongly
opposed to pornography.
Those chosen for the JUry will have

The Daily Sentinel .
(USPS 113-NO)

c...,aatty N....,.per Hotcllop, Inc.
Pubhsbed every afternoon, Monday tllrou&amp;h
Fridly, 111 Court Sl: , Pomeroy, Oh1o, by the
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Membtr. Tbe Aaaociatcd Press and the Ohio
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Polt....,n Send addreu correaiona 10 The
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front-row seats for 16'of the hard-rore
videos Flynt sells and then must
decide whetber such explicit se~ vialates community standards
.
"I guess I'm a prude or something." said one woman. "I just couldn't look at that kind of stuff."
Defense attorneys warned potential
Jurors that the videos oontain a wriety
of sexual acts. Some members of the
jury pool told Dinkelacker that they
weren't up to viewing such explicit
acts.
"I could see myself closing my
eyes," said one woman who was
excused,
"I would not feel right watching
something like that," said another,
who was also dismissed.
Dinkelacker had told potential
jurors to be open about their feelin~
because their names and pictures
would not be published,
Flynt said he appreciated the honesty.
"In the trial I had 20 years ago,
people were lying through tbeir teeth
to get on the jury, saying this stuff didn't bother them," he said.
"Now people are saying, 'No, I
don't want to watch this,' so this is
great because the judge is removing
them for cause."

· Stocks
Am Ele Power ....................... 41'1.

············u························45'h

Akzo
AmrTech ......-...........................64

Ash 011 ............................... ,.. 42~
AT &amp;T..................................... 59~.
Bank One ............................. 69~
Bob Evana ...........................181'h.
Borg-Warner ........... ,............. 58~.
Brough~on ............................. t 5~
Champion ............... :.................&amp;

Charm Shpa ..........................3-,..
Clly Holding ............................ 27
Federal Mogul. ........................ 44
Gannett ................................70"1.
Kmart .....................................17~•

Reader Services
Correction Polley
O.r .....

11 Ill atorlelll to bl
ecc•rate. If .Jotl bow of 11 ti"Nr 11 1
lltOI)', call tile • .,.,,..... 11 (740) 99:12155. Wr wilt &lt;~e&lt;k ,.,., lnfonnallon
11d ••• • correc:tlo• If w1rn11ed.

Tilt

COIIteN

News Dep•rtmenta
llaiO ODIIbor (I

992·2155. Depat1•

. ,•• tlltllliolll 1ft:

Geaenl M•••n....................... .ExL 1101

N.................................... ......... Ext. 1102
orExLI106

Other Sarvlcea
Advel1iolo1-...............................ExL 1104
Clratlalloo ...............:............... .ExL 1103

CW.tlkd Ad&amp; ....................... ,......ExL 1100

Kroger ...................................54~.
Lande End ...............................38
Ltd ......................................... 47'1t
Oak Hill Flnl .......................... 18~

ldaGoffGibson,shewasahomemaker.
Surviving are her husband, Frank Hollingsworth; two daughters, Barbara
Hart of Fort Mitchell, Ky., and Katha Smith of Bidwell; 12 grandchildren
and 20 great-grandchildren; seven sisters, Willdy Carter, Lilly McGuire and
BeIt y Jo Ray, a11 of P'k
Co unty, Eul a of pamtsvo
·
II e, Ky., Eumce
· c rum of
1 e
Huntington, Dixie Maynard of Proctorville, and Martha of Kentucky; and a
brother, Don Gibson of Pike County.
She was also preceded in death by by two brothers, Elmer and Johnnie ·
Gibson; and a sister, Lillian Muncie.
Services will be 10 a.m. Friday in the Willis Funeral Home, woth Pasta~
. .
B . 1 .11 be .
Junoor PresI on an d Pastor Roc ky Jeffers offircoatong.
una wt
on the
Arlington Memorial Garoens, Mount Healthy, Ohio. Friends may call at lh
f unera I horne fro m 6•8 p.m. Th ursday.
,
,

RIChardson trieS to prevent loss of·
COntrOI 0f nUClear WeapOnS labS

By H. JOSEF HEBERT
Auocl.ted Preas Wrlllr
WASHINGTON (AP)- Buffeted by the uproar over stolen nuclear·
secrets, , Energy Secretary Bill
Richardson is moving on seveml
fronts to try to assure Congress his
department should continue to (iOn·
trol the nation's prestigious weapons
research labs.
In announcing a broad reslructuring of the department's security program, Richardson on Thesday said
he was concerned about efforts by
some lawmakers to restructure the
operation of . the labs, considered
among the crown Jewels of America's scientific researc~·
"We can demonstrate that the
labs are accountable to us. We run
the labs," Richardson said in a meeting with reporters.
But the growing espionage controversy that has centered on the Los
Alamos National Laboratory in New
Mexrco, where the first atomic bomb
was made more than a half century
ago, has raised questions about the
basic structure of the labs, which are
managed by private contractors
under Energy Department supervision.
Some lawmakers have suggested
the nuclear weapons labs ought to be
brought under direct government
management and perhaps under
another department. The debate mirrors arguments, which were revived
several years ago, over whether all
nuclear weapons programs should
not be shifted to the Defense Depart·
ment.
Historically, the research labs
have flaunted their autonomy, cultivated strong allies in Congress and
resisted control - on security matters or anything else - from the
Energy Department in Washington.
They have been viewed by some as
semtautimomous fiefdoms managed
by private contmctors.
Since its inception, Los Alamos,
as well as the Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory in California,
has been managed by the University
of California. Sandia National Laboratories, also in New Mexico, is
managed by a subsidiary of the
Lockheed Martin Corp.
At times this structure has result·
ed in unclear lines of authority and
confusion, communications lapses

and development of a "campus
atmosphere" at the Jabs, which
employ some of the nation 's top scienlists.
"There was a view lhat they're
thecrownjewels(ofresearch).Don't
mess with them," said a senior Energy Department official, asking not to
be identified further.
In tum, secunty and counterintelJigence became secondary.
At a Senate hearing today, Sen.
Fmnk Murkowski, R-Aiaska, was
expected to press officials of the FBI
as well as the Energy and Justice
departments on why a commumcalions mixup apparently prevented the
prompt removal of a Los Alamos scoenlist suspected of having given
secrets to China from his high-security job.
Los Alamos officials told
Murkowski's Energy and Natural
Resources Committee' Jast week that
the scientist, Wen Ho Lee, was
allowed continued access to the most
sensitive .11uclear warhead secrets
even though semor FBI officials in
Washington concluded in mid-1997
that his .removal would not harm
their investigation. Word, however,
never reached Los Alamos mangers.
Lee was fired two months ago.
Richardson, in announcing a consolidation of security at DOE, said
he hoped to avoid such confusion in
the future. He said security will be
centralized under a "security czar"
who will report directly to him. Previously, Richardson elevated the
department's ~ountenntelhgence
program and put senior FBI officials
in charge.
Both moves, admmistration officials said, were to consolidate control of security matters on the department and away from the labs, where
historically there has been a "cui·
lure" of giving security short shrift.
The new security admomstrator
will have "juice and clout" with the
research labs and other weapons
facilities, Richardson promosed in an
interview.
In another si_gnal to labomtory
manascrs, Richardson said Tuesday
that current management contmcts at
the labs are not assured of automatic
renewal. He said he likely will open
the contracts to competitive bidding,
although a final decision is still a
year way.

Meigs EMS makes four runs
Units of Meigs Emergency Services answered four calls for assistance on Tuesday.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
6:15 p.m., with Middleport unit,
Race St., Kelly Romero, treated;
9:10 p.m., State Route 124,
assisted by Racine unit, Trina

Young, Veterans Memorial Hospttai.
POMEROY
9:25 a.m., State Route 7, Roy
Holter, Holzer Medical Center.
RUTLAND
6:37p.m., Salem St., ~Ita Fetty,
Holzer Medical Center.
'

ova .........................................35

One V•JIIIy .............................37'1t
Peoples ................................ 26'•
Pram Flnl ............................... 13'·
Ro~kWIII ............................... 59\1

RD/Shell .................................. 58

Saara .....................................51\

Shoney'e ................................ 2'1.
FlrlltSiar ................................ 29\\
Wendy's ................................ 26'1t
Worthlngtonv........................ 14~•
Sto~k

-·-·-

reports are today'•
10:30 a.m. quotes provided by
Adveat of Gallipolis.

Wa.:Nrf.E'D 19K9
:Meigs Jiigli Scfiool9rads
Wfiat: Class 'Reunion
Wlien: :May .i.9, 1999
Wliere: Sa[isbury 'Ilementary
tJ'iine: 2-4 &amp; 7-midniglit
'R.S.V.'1'. by contactmg ]ody Jioward

L.~=~~~iilioiiti- 2~
-2~2g§§§§1!

Announcements:
Fourth planning
A planning meehng will be held on Monday at 7 p.m. al the Racine
Firehouse for the Fourth of July celebration The parade will be held atl
p.m ., and volunteers are needed.

Office to close

.

The Meigs County Tuberculosis Office will be closed on May 20 and
May 21 due to a staff seminar. Skon testing will be available on May 17;
with the normal schedule resuming on May 24.

Public hearing
The Meigs County Commossioners w1ll hold 1ts first public hearing ori
the Community Development Block Grant formula program at the MeiP.
County Courthouse from 7 to 8 p.in on Monday
·

Community Yard Sale

·

The Rutland Community Yard Sale will be held on June 5. Those plan-:
nong sales in the community are asked to plan them in accordance with the
community-wide sale.
·

Bicentennial Committee
Rutlan~ ·~ Bicentennial Committee woll meet on Friday at 7 p.m . at the(
Rutland Covrc Center. Anyone onterested on partocipating on the celebmtioJT
~~~-~~-~
.

Crafters meeting

.

A m~etong for l~al prafters interested in participating m the county's;
crafters brochure will be held on Monday from 6 to 7 p.m. in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Courtroom, in the counhouse in Pomeroy.

Eastern Board to meet
The Eastern Local School Board meeting will meet in regular sess1on,
Monday, 6 p m The meetong will be followed by a work session at the
Tuppers Plaons Admonistration buildong.

Deadline announced

·

. The d~a~llne to make reservations for the Harrisonville-Scopoo Alumoo Assocoatoon banquet and dance to be held on May 29 at 6:30 p.m. is
May 20.

One dead ' one ml'ss'1ng .In Separat 8
boat accidents on Lake Erie Tuesday·

TOLEDO (AP) _ Rescuers
pulled seven people from fngid
•
waters afte se
bo .
d ts ~ l-ara1e a1mg accoeno on
ed nde. d
th
ne ~an ~ .::;. ,ano ~~ was
mho~ohng romed "- h ytwosaccrl entsf,
w oc occurr wo1 on
mr es o
h 0 th
·
eacR er. 'd
ld
escuers sao more peop 1e wou
have d'oed 1·f the boats hadn•t been as
close.
The U.S. Coast Guard was alerted
to the first accident at 1 p.m., when it
heard a marine broadcast reporting
people in the water near Camp Perry,
about 20 ll]iles east of Toledo, said
Petty Officer Adam Wine.
About two hours later a second
dostr~ call came from a boat about
two miles away.
Rescuers pulled all five people
aboard the second boat from the 58degree water One man died at a Port
Ointon_hospotal a~~ his ~ife wa5 hsted. m cnllcal condotoon wrth bypothermoa.
"The only reason they're alive is
because we already had a boat out
there," Wine said.
Waves reaching four feet caused
the first boat, a 21-foot pleasure craft,
to capsoze.
"The boat was swamped, water
was coming on over the sides of the
boat, and it sank," Wine sard. "It took
a wave over the stem, flooded, and
before they could plunge rt, took a
second wave and they capsized."
Rescuers got to four of the five
passengers, but a 71-year-old man

who
- was· not
· weanng
T da hfe jacket was
sh 11 mrssmg ues ay noght. The
search for the man, whose name was
not released, was called off shortly
after dark. There were no plans to
resume the search thos momong. the
Coast Guard said
Th h
•
·
e ot er passengers were taken to
hospotals on Toledo. Roman Miller of
M'tllersburg was m good condition at
St. Charles Mercy Hospital on Toledo
and Robert Miller of Smithville was
treated and released from St. Charles
Maneluis Schlabach, 69, of Miilersburg. was in fair condotoon at St. Yincent Medical Center in Toledo. Tile
ages of the Millers were not avadable
It was not clear if the Millers were
related.
·
~ther passenger, whose ~arne
was not released, was listed in cntical
condition at Medical College of Ohoo
Hospotal in Toledo.
None of the victims was wearing a
life vest, Petty Officer Pbilip Myers
saod from Detroit.
·
The Coast Guard received the second distresS call frotn a 26-foot boa~
which was taking on water quickly
after a waves apparently broke a bole
in the bow, around 3:35 p.m.
All five people on board were
wearing life vests and were pulled
from the water. One passenger, Donaid Wolfe, 51, of Port Clinton, was
pronounced dead about 6.30 p.m. in
Mcgruder Hospital in Port Ointon. -

10

THE MATRIX (A)
7:00 I 8·30 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN t:OO A 3:30
NO PASSES, NO BARGAIN NIGHT

UFE(R)
7.20 I 8.20 DAILY

BEEN KISSED (PG13)
7:00 I 8'20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 A 3:20

The Racine Volunteer Fire
Department cordially
invites you to their
open-house located
on the corner of
5th &amp; Pearl On
May 16th &amp;om 1-4 p.m.
Brief ceremony
begin at 1 p.m.

to

�Sports

The Daily Sentin~J

'

.

~ Pacers,

Wednesday, May 12,1999

Southern downs Waterford 8-4, wins Division IV sectional
Taking an early 5-0 lead, coach
Mick
Winebrenner's Southern
Tornadoes rolled to yet another
Division IV sectional baseball championship with an 8-4 victory over the
Waterford Wildcats T~,~;sday ar
Racine . ·
J
Senior hurler Benji Manuel went
the distance to pick up the win for
the Tornadoes ( 14-7), fanning eight,
walking six , and giving up just four
runs. Thad Skinner suffered the loss

with a seven-hitter, seven strikeouts,
and eight walks. Southern had two
errors and Waterford just one.
Southern took a 5-0 lead in the
first when Adam Williams walked,
Josh Ervin doubled Williams home,
Adam Cumings walked, and J .ll.
Boso walked to load the bases. ......
Manuel had an RBI single, then after
a strikeout, Jesse Little hammered a
two-run single; and with two out
Kyle Norris had an RBI double. In

between runs, Skinner struck out the
side.
Waterford threatened in the second, when it put two runners on, but
left them stranded . In the bottom half
of the irining, Southern scored another run as Ervin walked, and Boso
had an RBI single.
Southern got a scare in the third
. when with one out,, Skinner singled,
Josh Wagner reached on an error,
and Aaron Huck walked to load the

bases for Jarod Crock &gt;1£hO slammed
a grand slam home run to tighten the
game at 64. Waterford got another
hit from Heiss before Manuel got the
last two outs.
In ·the bottom of the frame,
Southern came back on an error on
Cumings grounder and a lB . Bos
home run. Two other Tornadoes
walked, but were left stranded with
the score 8-4, which remained at ihe
finish.

Winebrenner said, "We were fortunate to get an early lead and play
well going down the stretch.
Waterford .had a good hilling team
and have really improved throughout
the year. We were happy to hold on
to claim the win. It 's good to see
these seniors enjoy some success."
· Southern advances to the districl
tournament against league foe
Trimble at 5 p.m. at Jackson thi s
Friday. Southern beat Trimble 19- 18

By The Associated Preu
Glenn Robinson knows how close
it was. ·
.
"We were one play away, one
. basket, o ne rebound, one tip, and
things could have been different,"
Robinson said.
Instead, it was the Indiana Pacers
who finally wound up on the right
side of a one-point game, edging the
Milwaukee Bucks 108-107 in overtime Tuesday night to take a 2-0 lead
in their best -of-five series. The
Pacers lost six one-point games during the regular seaso n.
And in a game that 'featured longrange shoot ing, it came down to a
tip:-in . by Dale Davi s· ol Mark
Jack~on's'missed shot with a hairsecond lett in-the extra session:
") saw Mark driving for the basket and just moved into position,
tried to block out and be in position
for a possible miss ," Davis said. '.' It
was the biggest rebound and basket
of my career."

in their last meeting in Racine in battle-royal sl ugfest. Southern rallied
with nine runs in the last inning to
win the game.
lnoinw 1ll.ll!H
Waterford ............. 004 -000-0=4-7-1
Southern ...... ........ .510-200-x=8-7-2
• Batteries .
4
, Manuel (W) and Cummgs
Skinner (L) and Jones

The Trimble Tomcats defeated
the Eastern Eagles 7-4 in the
Division IV baseball sectional finals
Tuesday night in Glouster. Trimble
is now 11 -8 and Eastern bows out at
7- 15.
Ea&gt;tern outhit Trimble 10-6 and
received outstanding pitching from
junior hurler Josh Will, who ended
the night with seven strikeouts and
fo ur wa lks. Will 's s ix hitter was good
enough for the win as he gave up just
two earned runs. · Cody McCoy
picked up the win with a sa~e from
Brady Trace.
Eastern had the tying run on base
and the bases loaded when Dustin
Hu ffma n drove one to the hase of the

.

wall in left field to end the game.
12stern coach Scott Wolfe said,
"This was just like a si:ript from several of o~r games this seaspn..
Leaving the bases loaded and II runners stranded was something we've
done a lc;ll of all year long . I was
proud of the kids though because
they didn't give up. They fought
right back; but we just dug .o urselves
·
too big of a hole ."
. Wolfe added, "We did accomplish
one goal; to cut down our stiike outs,
make contact; and just put the ball in
play. We worked a ll night Monday
on going with the outside pitch and
making contact. We had I0 hits and
o nl y struck out twice so we at least

o.ver the minimum going into tbe
fourth, but Dave Brown led ·off with
a solid single. Will then fan ned
McCoy for the first out then three
Eagle players bungled a routine popup that would have lleen the second
out, but instead fell for an error and
two runners on. Phil Faires walked
for the to load the bases, then Justin
Gu inther got a loop single that
scored a run , then another error and
overthrow allowed two more runs to
score and another came' home on a 43 groundout.
The next inning wasn't much better for the Eagles defensively. An
er out. '
error, a Brown double, an RBI single
Will had faced only two batters by Chad Dennis and two more errors
put the ball in play. Trimble just didn't make many mistakes and we didn't .get the hits when we needed
them ."
·
The game was scoreless until the
fourth inning as Will and Cody
McCoy hooked up in great pitcher's
duel. Eastern left a runner strande~
at third in the first and runners .at second and third in each of the second
and third innings, then left another at
second in the fourth . In the second,
Eas tern would have gotten a run o ut
of fly ball from Eric Smith, but the
runner on third forgot to tag up, nullifying the long fly ball as just anoth-

brought home a total of three runs ·· Huffman drove the next pitch to the
wall where it was caught by Trent
and a 7-0 Trimble lead.
·
In the sixth, Eastern came back Patton .
with two and left two runners in ·.. McCoy and Trace combined .to .
scoring position . Smith doubled , fan just two and walk three, while
Jeremy Coleman singled him home hitting one.
and Ben Holter hit a sacrifice tly for
Trimble will face Southern, an 8a 7-2 tally. In the seventh after Will 4 winner over Waierford, in the djshad retire the Tomcats again, Eastern trict tournament at Jackson Friday at
plated two more runs when Josh 5 p.m.
Broderick was hit by a pitch and lnoine l!!ll!b
Smith sin gled. Coleman had an RBI Eastern ................. 000-002-2=4 10 5
single , and Joe Dillon reached on an Trimble ................ 000-430-x=? 6 2
· Batteries
error to load the bases. Jimm ie
Putman had an RBI si ngle and Ben
McCoy .(W), Trace 7th and
Holter walked to load the bases Brow n
Will (L) and Broderick
again. Holter's walk carne off Brady
Trace who came in on relief, then
'

I

By JOE KAY
CINC INNATI (AP) - Baseball
co mmi ssioner Bud Selig 's office is
trying to ,figure out whether Pete
Rose crossed 1he line during a promotiona l appearance
with a
Cincinnati Reds fann club .
The general manager of Single-A
Rocl(ford says Rose had no contact
with the players when he was at t~e
ballpark on . April 29 to sign autographs for fans during a corporatesponsored appearance.
Baseball 's hit king $ays some
players approached him informally to
get autographs and talk about hi s so n,
Pete Jr., so he obliged.
.
· It 's up to the comm issioner's
. office to decide whether anything that

Reds whip Brewers 9-1, climb out of NL Central basement
.
The Brewers already were without second baseman Fernando Vina,
who bruised hi s left leg· just aqove
the kneecap in a collision Sunday in
San Francisco. Vina stayed on the
West Coast and got an MRI that
found no major damage .
Milwaukee · lost first baseman
Sean Berry in the second inning,
when he slid awkwardly into home
plate while scoring the Brewers' run
·
and strai11ed his left hamstring.
.The· only setback for the Reds
was a blister that forced Avery out of
the game after five innings. The leftbander lowered his earned run average to 2.56, best in the rotation, by
allowing only two hits over five
innings.
. ·
A blister on the middle finger of
his left hand broke open as he
warmed up for the fifth, cutting short
his appearance.
'

By JOE KAY
get some guys off the bench to play
CINCINNATI (AP) ~ This is an inning or two. We needed a game
uncharted territorx for the Cincinnati like. thi s. We haven ' t had one." ·
Reds .
The Reds moved out of last place,
They moved out of last place in where they 'd been since May I, in
the NL Central - the place where part because the Brewers look like
they' ve been more often than not- the last-place team they became with
with ali uncharacteri stically easy win the loss. .
Milwaukee let in four unearned
on Tuesday night. And they liked the
·
.
runs with two errors, threw two wild
. way it felt.
Barry Larkin, Dmitri Young and pitches and managed only four sinMichael Tucker hit two-run homers gles off Steve Avery (2-3) arid three
in a 9-1 victory over the Milwaukee relievers. The Brewers' only run was
Brewers that was Cincinnati' s most set up by an error.
"That was a tough night," manlops ided win of the season.
Things were so relaxed on the . ager Phil Garner said. "Our normal. Reds ' bench ihat the regulars took a ly stingy defense didn't do ~erx good
seat with a --few innings to' go. to night."
None of the Brewers did .
Tbey' re used to sweating out ending
instead of'enjoying them.
Erratic Cal Eldred (1-2) gave up
"That was a nice one, really," Sean Casey 's two-out RBI single in
manager Jack McKeon said. "That the first inning and then left a 2-0
was the first time we' ve been able to fastball down the middle for Larkin,

who hit his sixth homer.
· Afte,r three good innings. Eldred
blew up again , giving up a two"run
homer to Young. It was the outfielder's first hom er of the season and
broke a 34'or-35 slump .
" It felt good to get that out of the
way, " Young said . " Too bad I had to
wait a 111onth to do it. "
· When center fielder M arquis
Grissom dropped Greg Vaughn 's fly
ball for ati error and Eddie
Taltbensee singled, the Reds were up
6-1 and the Brewers were stunned.
"I've never seen Marquis drop a
ball like that," Garner said.
Shortstop Lou Collier, who threw
a ball into the Reds dugout while
warming up in t.he second, threw
another one away to set up three
unearned runs in the eighth off Jim
Abbott.. Tucker's two-run homer,
also his first, made it 9-1.

" Any time yuu go fi ve innings
and get a win , it's a pretty good
break," Avery said. " I felt pretty
good out there.: Unfortunately, my
finger had to pop open ."
With Larkin an d Vaughn starting
to emerge from season-lon g slumps,
the Reds have a feelin g they might
finally start putting things together.
They haven 't won m ore than two
games in a row all season, the mairi
feason they 've been in last place for
·
22 days .
"I don't think any of us was worried about being in last' place," Avery
said. " We just want~d to play better
baseball and tf we dtd that, we knew ·
we'd start wmnmg some games.
" Tonight we had the most confi dence I've seen us carry into a game.
The last couple of day s, the big g uys
have been coming around. If we can
get Larkin and Vaughn going, we'll

get a lot

of win s."

Nolet The Brewers optioned
right-hander Steve Falteisek to
Triple-A Louisville and called up ·
infielder Ron Bel liard, who started at

•'

second .base in place of Vina.
Belliard went 0-for-3 .... It was
Abbott:s first relief appearance since .
being bumped from the rotation by
Hideo Nomo. ... Taubensee was
called out on fan interference on his
pop to the left of the foul screen in ·
the fourth. A fan reached .up and lost
his Reds cap over the railing as
.
catcher Dave Ntlsson came over but
couldn't make the catch .... Of the
Reds' 14 wins, only four have been
by four or more runs. Their previous ·
most-lopsided win was by five runs .

said.
Sure it is, if your an Indians fan .
Cleveland is averaging over seven
run s per game and hasn 't scored less
than five runs in a game since a 4-1
win at Oakland on April 28- a span ·
of 12 games.
" How many, 12?" Sexson asked.
'' Wow.''
Wow is right . And what may he
the scariest thing about the Indians is
this: injuries· have allowed them to
play their opening day lineup just six
times all year.
Wil Cordero went 3-for"4 with
two RBi s for the Indians, who have
29 homers in their last 15 games and
who lead the AL in virtually every
offensive category.
" Given the hitters we have in our
lineup, I don ' t think it 'should surprise anybody," Indians manager
Mike Hargrove said. " This is an .

explosive lineup. It ·was like you appeared to want nothing to do with
blinked, and we had six runs on the Manny Ramirez, walking him on
board. You can't do that every night, five pitches. Cordero , Justice and
· Travis Fryman followed with RBI
but I'd like to."
Bartolo Colon (5-1) again failed singles - line drives to right, center
to get past the sixth inning, allowing and left.
Ponson blew two straight fastballs
four runs and seven hits. But he
made big pitches when he needed to , past Sexson, who tried to crush both
ending three innings with strikeouts pitc hes. He got all of the third one,
and getting a double play to get out drivin!} it two-thirds of the way up
of the sixth .
t~e left-field bleachers for hi s sixth
Jeff Conine homered for the homer.
Orioles .. who · t.r ailed 8-2' after f1ve
innings.
Ponson, rocked for eight runs and
eight hits in 4 2/3 innings, had little
trouble with the Indians ' lineup
through the first three innings, allow ing just two hits. But in the fourth ,
Cleveland's hitters teed off for six
runs and five hits.
.
Roberto Alomar opened the
inning .with a double and Ponson

I

The Southern reserve baseba ll
team won its last . 10 games of the
year with wips over Trimble (13-2),
Vinton
County
(21 c6)
and
Ravenswood (19-17) to finish with a
12-2 overall record.
.
·
The Tornadoes, coached by Ryan
Lemley, were led to the Trimble victory by Matt Ash who went 4-4 with
a perfect game. and Chad Hubbard
who was 2-3 with three stolen bases.
Brice Hill picked up the win for the
Tornadoes in another great pitching
effort. Against Vinton Co unty, Jamie
Baker was the winning pitcher with
he lp fro m Russe ll Kreid er. Josh
Baker was I- I' with three RB!s and
Chri s Yeauger was 2-.2 with fo ur
RBis for the Tornadoes.
Southern claimed a 19- 17 slugfest
victory over Ravenswood i.n eig ht
Innings. A two-out home run by Joe
Corn ell saved the day for Southern
and won the game'. So uthern had
blow a 15-3 lead, onl y to come back
and win in ex tra innings. That · win
avenged an earlier loss to the Red
Devils. J.P. Harmon was 4-5 with

SJ . Louis .................... ......... 17 IS , ·.!531
Piusburgh :, ..... ........... .. .. .....16 16 ..500
Chiqgo ................. . ............ J5 IS ,500

Baseball
AL standings
Bastem Dlw-iston

.»:

Dill

New Yod .. .
.20
BOJton .... __,.,.,. .. ...... :.. 17
Tampa Bay
....... .17
Toronto .......................... .17

I. 1!1;1.

II

I~

645
.531
.SOO
.SOO

17
17
.:12 20 .375 .

Baltimore .,.......

!ill.
J'11
4~~
4 1~

· Olicqo ................................ l6
KusuCity .......................... I.S
Oetroil ..... ............................. l.S

MiniiHOia ............................. ll

9 .719
1.5 .516
16 484
18 .455
21 .364

6&gt;

n

81

Ill

We td:~rm

Dl•hloa
'IO&gt;W ...... .. ............... ....... IB IS .545
Qokland .......................... ..... .17 17 .SilO
S...le .... ...............,.....,....... ll t8 .455 '
Arilheim·,............................ .. l4 19 .424

l
4

Thesday'$ scores
CLEVELAND II , Baltimore 6 .
Otkllld 6, DeU"Oit 2

Anaheim 9, New York 1

Tcw II , Chicaso !I
Toronlo 8, Kansas Cily 2

Today'sgames
MinneSOta (Milton 0.3) at Tampa Bay (Arrojo I·
l l, 12:35 p.m.
•
Ballimote (Muu lna !5· 1) at CLEVELAND
CGood&lt;n 1-0), 7:05p.m.
·
Oaldand &lt;Heredia 2-2) ~~ Detroit (Thompion 431, 7;0~ p:m.
.
.
· Seattle (SulukJ 0-1) at Boston (P. Martinez 6-1).
7:33 p.m. J.,
' .
Anaheim (finley 1-J) at New York (Cone 4-01.
7:35 p.m.
·
Te~.u tCiart 2- .~) at Chie&amp;JO (Parq~ 4-2), 8 :0~
p.m.
Toronto(Carpenter 3-2)11KansasCily (Appler J.
2), B:&lt;B p.m.

• Thursday's games
Toronlo tHenlltft 2· I) at Kanl85 Ctty (Rosado 2- ·
1). 2:~ p . m .

Anaheim (Oii vns J-~) lit New Y.ork (lrabu I-OJ.
p.m.
Ballil"llOK t Karnitnieckl 0-1) at Tens IMorJIIn .S·

? : .l~

2). 8:35p.m.

Allanta .................d .. . , . .......... 21
Phillldelphill . ......................... l8
New York ............................. 18
Montrcal ............. .,j .. .. . .. .. .-.. .. . 10
~lorido ............. :.............. , ..... 9

II
14
IS
21
24

c...ntotmloo

.6.56

....,..

..563
..54!5
.323
.m

• ·'
3'·
10'.
12'·

Houston ............................ ... 20 12 .61!1

17

.
Wtltern Divldoa
San Francisco .................... ...20 14
Arizona ................................. l9 15
l.o1Angeles ................. .. ., ..... 18 IS
Colorado .. .......... ..... .............. \3 16
S~ Diego ............... .. ..... :...... I) 19

. 4~2

.588

.Sl9
- ~45

.448
.406

6

, Pittsburg~ 4. Toronto. 3i Piusbu.rsh leads ~cs
2-1
Colorado S, Detroit]; Detroit lead! series 2·1

Today's games

.No ga111es Thursday

Ba sketball
playoffs

Thtoday's scores
Orlando 79, Philadelpflia 68, 1eries tied 1- 1 ' .
Minnes ota 80. S•n Antonio 71. series tied 1-i
Indiana 108. Milwaukee 107. OT. lndinna leads '
LA. Lakers 110, Houston 98, L.A. Lukers lead
series 2·0
·

Tonl&amp;ht 's games
Atlanta at Detroil. 7 p.m.
Miami ar New York. 8 p.m.
Ponland at Phoenix. 9:.l0 p.m.
Utlb iu SaCramento. IOJO p.rR. ·

ThW'sday's gam..
Orlando at Phlladelphia, 6:30p.m.
· San Antonio at Minnetoi-4. 1 p.m.
lndjarm at Milwnukte. 9 p. m~

'NHL
.
conference semifinals
Tltesday's scores

.
' 4~;

Philadelphia (Schillinz 5- 1) at Sl. Louis (Oliver
2- 1). 1;40p.m.
New York (Reed 2- I) at Colorado (Thonuon 04), lOS p.m.
.., Allanta (Millwood 2-2) at San Francisco (Brock
3·2), 4:05 p.m.
Milwaukee &lt;Karl 3-1) a1 ~ CINCINNATI
CHarniscll 2-31, 7:05p.m.
.
Piusbufl,h (Schmidt4-l l at; Howston &lt;Lima S· l),
8:0!5p.m.
,
,
Montreal (Batista 2· l ).at Arizona (Stonlemyre
4-ll. 10:0~ p.m.
Chicago (Tapani 2-1) at Los AnJeles (Orcifort 42), IO:J5·p.m.
Florida (Sprinacr 1-4) at San Oieao (Clement 03). 10:35 p.m.

series 2-0

Hockey

I
1.,

Thesday's scores

NBA first-round

L.A. Laten at Hous1on. 9:30p.m.

5
5)

CINCINNATI 9, MilwaUkee I
Philadelphia 9, St. Louis 4
Houston 19, Pittsburgh 8
Cplorado 8, New York .5
Aorida 5, San Diego 4
Arizona 4, Montreal·) (10)
.Olicago 10. Los Anaeles 5
Adanm 9. San Francisco 8 (12)

1 1 ~·

Mi.nDCIOla 2. Tamr Bay 1
Selllle I , 80s1on
•'

16 .467

Milwaukte .... .......... .......... .... l4

8 1~

Centr•l Dl•lsion

CLEVELAND ....... ............. 23

CINCINNATI ................... .... 14

. 3
4 .
4

I
I
I

Tonight's games
Boston a1 Buffalo. 7:30p.m.
Dallas at St. Louis. 7:30p.m.

.

Nallonll FOoUtllll Lta&amp;uc
BROWNS: Agreed to terms with
LB Jarair MiUer on a one-year contract.
DALU.S COWBOYS: AJI'eed to lfi'T!l! whb
WR Emle Millt on a 1hree-year co ntract.
GREEN BAY PACKERS: NamCd Chrislhm
Johnson and Paula Martit;~ public relati ons usi•tanll
nnd Alll'on Popker, ani11nlll director of public relations-travel coonl naror.
MIAMI DOLPHINS ; Re-signed QB D•mon
Huard loa one-yeu contract ond siantd ~ Mnnhnll
Voung 10 a IWf;~ear contrat"l.
WASHINGTON REDSKINS: R4!-•igned TE
Jamet Jenkins to a two-year contract.
Cl.EV~LAND

Hockey
National Hockey Lea1ue ,
EDMONTON OILERS: Sit ncd G Eric Heffltt ·
to a two-year tontmct ,

Page 5)

To be ·
published ,
Friday,
May 28,1999

Indians...

Scott Wolfe
Southe~n High School
. Class of 1977

VIcky Dent Pumphrey
Meigs High School .
Claaeof1977

-

'
. ' ' ·' ,.
. ',,:&gt;.''

' t

School--------~------·------------------

Year ______________________~~--------~:,-Nickname--------..,------------Deadline Fri. May 14· 4 pm

two home runs and five RB!s, Joe
Cornell. was 1- 1 with two RB!s a nd
five walks , including . a game-winning home run; and Buster Penix had
a home run.
Team leaders for the year were
J.P. Harmon with a .451 average, 28
RB!s , three home runs and nine doubles; Matt Warner a .500 average,
with a 2"0 pitching record and 34
strikeouts ; Brice Hill a .366 average
and 5-l pitching record with two
saves and 3S strikeouts; and Dally
Hill a .375 average and 2-0 pitching
record. Other leaders were ·Chad
Hubbard with a .382 average, ten
RB!s, and 15 stolen bases; Matt Ash
a .355 average, 17 walks, and a 1- 1
_pitching record with one save; Chris
Y~auger a .571 average and seven
RBis in .limited action . Other team
members include, Penix, Brandon
Hill, -and Josh' Baker . . Other
Freshmen include Aaron · Ohlinger,
Joe Manuel', Russell Kreider, Nate
Martin , and Joe Cornell wh o had a
.400 average.

(Continued

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......

tournament honorees include 19911992-Nolan
James
Diehl ,
Swackhamer, 1993- James Vennari ,
1994-Lee McComas, · 1995-Howard
Knight, 1996-Rita S lavi n, 1997Preston Gibbs, 1998-Jack Slavin.
FOR THE WIN -Indiana's Dale Davis (wearing white jersey) tips ,
For more information regardi ng
this tournament con tac t Jo hn in the winning basket over Milwaukee's Michael Curry (to Davis '~·
Kraw sczy n at Meigs High School· at right) with less than half a second left in Tuesday night's NBA first-.:
round playoff gama in Indianapolis, where the Pacers won 1 08· 1 07,'
992-2 158 or at .home at 992-6394.
(AI')
.
.
.. '

-·

.

'

..

'.

HOLE-IN-ONE PRIZE
A' '
lucky goifer that !lits a hole-In~
one on the par 3, number nine ,
hole could win this new car du r· .
ing · the Meigs Band Golf, ·
Scramble at the Pines Hill Golf
Course. Sho.w n with the car from.
left to right are Meigs Ban d,·, .
members
Andi
Krawsczyn,
Bridget Vaughan, P.J. Erwin a nd, , ·
Joe Roush of Don Tate, who is ·
donating the car.

..

'

'

(r~m Page 4)

will be glvon In Melli/hilla Countl" lly

.111 Court St..
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Nam•--------------~--~------~~--~--

Rose did. violated his lifetime ban for
ga mbling.
.
"People here are looki ng into it
and we' ll see what happe~ed ," said
Ri•h Levin , spokesman for the commissio ner's office.
Rose's visit ,to the Illinois farm
club came · into question .a fter Rose
gave a speec h to the Sacramento
Steelheads on Monday an&lt;l said he'd
done the same thing in Rockford .
That surprised Rockford general
manager Bruce Keiter, who said he
made sure that the guidelines for
Rose's ban were followed closely.
Rose can work with the Steelheads
because they're part of an independent league; addressing Reds minor
leaguers isn't allowed .

Plans are underway for the ninth
annu al Memorial Weekend Golf
Tournament, hosted by the Meigs
Ban,d Boos ters.
The sc ramble will be held on
Saturday, May 29 at 9 a.m., at the
Pines Hills Go lf C lub (formall y
Meigs Cou nty Golf &lt;;ourse) . .
This year's tournament will host.
and honor lo ng time Meigs Coun ty
educator and coach Ru ss Moore. Past·

more runs to work with . If you can Indian Albert Belle and Art Modell,
st&lt;lp · 'lheir hitting , you · have a who took Cleveland's football franchise to Baltimore. Belle went 0-forchance."
Notes: Cal Ripken Jr. went 3-for- 4 with two strikeouts.... Baliimore's ,6 with a double and scored a run Brady Anderson· had three hits. ...
Tuesday in a controlled game at the Cleveland 's bullpen got ·a little
Orioles' training facility in Sarasota, he.a lthier as Paul Shuey was activatFia. Ripken is.,11n the disabled_list for ed from the 15-day DL. Shuey, who
the first time in his career with a pitched the ninth, had ·been sidelined
lower back ailment. ... Cleveland with a strained left hamstring: Ricky
catCher Sandy Alotrtar will miss two Rincon, out since April 26 with an
games a(ter having a lubricant inject- inflamed left elbow, pitched twoed.into his left knee. He had .surgery thirds of an inning in a rehab stint at
on the knee. during the offseason: ... " Double-A Akron on Thesday night.
A plane circled the ballpark trailing a If all goes well, Rincon could be actisign that said: "Alben &amp; Art -'- Now vated by Friday.... Conine is batting
Bl\lti-Morons" -,. a di_g at fonner · .441 (15:for-34) in his last to games .

I
·1 Special recognl~ion for 5.0th, 25th &amp; lOth year.
1 (1949 1974 1989) $6.00 per photo or $10/couple. ...
..
.&amp; drop off with payment to:
I Fill out form below
.-.
The Daily Sentinel

II
I

Meigs H.S . .Band to hos~ golf tournament

·Coach Pam Douthitt's Eastern
Eastern will face Frankfon Adena
Lady. Eagles broke a score less dead- (13-5).
lock in the second inning to defeat lonlnc Mllb
the Belpre Golden Eag les 9-3 in the Eastern ........ ........ 050-011 -2=9 5 4
Division Ill softball sectio nal charn- Belpre ............... .000-000-3=3 4 II
piQnship Monday at Belpre . .
Batterjes
-Eastern (14"8) advances to the
Evans (W) and KatT
di strict tournam ent Friday at the
Adams (L) and Mollohan
U~iversity of Rio Grande at 5 p.m. ·

er your spouse, child,
.grandparent, friend, couples,etc.

of 66 set by Chicago and Charlotte in -.
1998.
',

a

Eastern softballers submit totals
from D-Ill sectional title victory .

A. sp_ecial section devoted to
your favorite "alumnus"

The Daily
Sentinel

Transactions

Football

o~

0

Thursday's games

American Leacue
ANAHEIM ANGELS: Placed OF lim Salmon
on t~ 15·day di1abled li st, retroaclive'lo May 4, ,
CLEVELAND INDl/t,NS: Activated RI;IP Paul
Shuey from the IS-day diaohlc:d list.. Optloned RHP
Paul Wasn.er to Buffalo 'of the lntem~ional League.
DETROIT TIGERS: Activated INP Juoa Wood
from the l ~·da y disabled ll.st. Optioned RHP Nelson
Crui to-Tolejlo of the.International Wgue . .
Nat6onal Lu1ue
MILWAUKEE BREWERS: Recalled INF Ron
Belliard from Louisville of the International t eague.
Optioned RHP Steve Falteisek to Louisville.
NEW YORK METS: Placed OF Bobby Bonilla
on the 15-day disabled Jill. Purchased tht: cor-tract
OF . Benny AJbD.yani from Norfolk of the
, lnten;aational Lt:mgue.

(See INDIANS

In -

Toron1o·a1 Pinsbu.rgh, 7:30p.m .
Colorado at Detroit_. 7:30p.m;

'Baseball ·

had an Rill double in the sixth. The
Orioles pulled to 9-6 with a two-run
eighth on B.J.. Surhoff's RBI single
and a sacrifice fly by Harold Baines.
Baltimore manager Ray Miller,
whose team came into town having
won six of seven, is impressed With
the Indians -. to a point .
'-'You can score runs off them," he
said. " Their pitching is not infallible. ·
They just keep giving their pitchers ·

Remember When?

a~~·d

Scoreboard

"I'm · mad about - what -1 · did
wrong," Ponson said. "Against
Sexson 0-2 I wanted a fastball up and
· I threw it down. I missed my spot. I
wanted to beat the hell out of my self
after that."
·
In the fifth , Justice, batting .476
with four homers and II RBI$ in his·
last five games, also homered on an
0 -2 pit~ h from Pon son . · , '' ·
Conine homered for the second
straight game,' and Deli no DeShields

Milwaukee with 25 points.
.. quarter this season.
• Orlando Jed 36-27 at the half. an
Robinson had 23 points and 12
Timberwolves 80, Spurs 71
NBA playoff record for the lowest
rebounds.
In San Antonio, Kevin Garnett combi ned score,
the mark
The teams move to Milwaukee for scored 10 u1 his 23 points in the
Game 3 Thursday night.
fo urth quarter as Minnesota upset the
In other first- round games Spurs to level their Western
Tuesday, the Los Angeles Lakers Conference playoff series 1- 1. .
·took a 2-0 lead with a 110-98 victory
With the victory, the eighth' seedover Houston, Minnesota surprised· ed Timberwolves grabbed the home Sa n Antonio 80-71 to level their court -advantage fro111 the No. !-seedseries 1- 1, and Orlando downed ed Spurs in the best-of-five seri!"·
Philadelphia 79-68 to even their Game 3 is Thursday in Minnesota .
· senes.
Tiro Duncan finished with . 18 ·
Tonight, Atlanta will be at Detmit. points and 16 rebomids for San
·Miami at New York, Portland at Antonio .
Phoenix and Utah at Sacramento.
Magic 79, 76ers 68
Atlanta and Portland lead 2-0. and
Penny Hardaway scored 22 points
the other two series are 1- 1.
. a nd Orlando held NBA scoring
Lakers I 10, Rockets 98
champion Allen Iverson to 13 points
. Shaquille O'Neal · scored 2.8 as the Magic evened the best-of-five
points and Los Angeles never trailed match up at one game apiece.
in taking
2-0 lead . Game 3 is
Games 3 and 4 will be played in
Thursday night in Houston , which Philadelphia on Thursday and
lost the first two games at the Forum. · Saturday.
Sam Mack led the Rockets with
Hardaway ·scored 10 poi nts· dur- .
20 points, and Charles Barkley added ing a stretch in which the Magic bu ilt
19 points and .l3 rebounds.
a 21-point lead early in the third
The Lakers limited the -Rockets to quarter. The 76ers closed to 59-52
just 12 points [n the first peri od, with just _under 10 minutes remai n· 'fewest by a Los Ange les opponent in ing, but co uldn 't get any closer.

Southern JV baseball team ends
season with 12-2 overall record ·

Fourth-inning riot pushes lndian·s to 11-6 win over Orioles
By TOM WITHERS
CLEVELAND (AP) -'- Welcome
to Jacobs Field. Fasten your seat
belts, and keep your anns inside the
ride' at all times.
· The Indians' ballpark ha&gt; become
an amusement park of sorts lately as
Cleveland's hitters light up the scoreboard with amazing bursts of power
and quickness. One minute, it 's a
carousel , the next, a roller coaster
. caree ning down the track .
Tuesday ·night was no different as
the Indians scored six runs in the
fourth inning en route to an 11 -6 win
over the Baltimore Orioles.
Richie Sexson hit · a three-run
homer to cap Cleveland 's six -run
fo urth and David Justice had three
RBls for the Indi ans, who improved
to 23-9 to match the fastest start in
franchise history.
" It's fun to watch, mail," Sexson

It appeared the Pacers might drop
another o ne-point game at Market
Square Arena.
Robinson's jumper with 49.7 seconds to go in overtime ·gave
Milwaukee a I 07-106 lead. The
Bu cks got the ball -back, but
Haywoode Workman was stripped of
the ball with 20 seconds remaining.
With
Workman
defending ,
Jackson worked his ay to the right
side of the basket before missing a
short hook . Davis jumped over Ervin
Joh nso n and tipped it in, giving the
Pacers the victory.
"It was just goixlto come up with
a win. I look at Woody as just another guy in a Bucks jersey," Jackson
said. · " That was good, hard defense,
trapping him . We didn't want to foul
him . We werej_ust trying to rattle him
and make something happen. We
were like two cops chasing a kid with
a radio."
Reggie Miller led the Pacers with
30 points , while reserves Sam
PerkinsandJalen Rose had 14apiece
for the Pacers.
'
" We put ourselves in a position to
win the game ," said Allen , who led

Selig attempts to determine
if Rose violated lifetime ban

I

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5 :

Lakers move to verge of first-round series sweeps:

NBA playoffs

Trimble outlasts Eastern diamond men 7-4 ·in semifinals
.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

W!tdneaday, May 12, 1999

Way t9 fee It Up,-..
Do Some Pro Shopptng.

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Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pom~roy

• Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, May 12, 1999

Bus crash ·probe focuses on driver's health problems
By ALAN CLENDENNING
Associated Pren Writer

Diabetics who do not need to take' insulin shot&gt; can get commercial licensthe engine and transmission of the mangled bus, hoping they will yield infores.
It was not known whether Bedell was taking insulin. If he was, he would
mation in the same way thai "black boxes" can offer clues about airplane
have had to stop any interstate commercial drivmg, said Dave Longo , a
crashes.
spokesman for the Federalliighway Administrati on.
The bo~es are not required equipment ann are not specifically designed
Insulin-dependent diabeti cs who ~!tOO lillie sugar can become ilicoherfor accident investigations. Instead, they are installed on some buses to make
ent and act like drunks. Similarly, symptoms of kidney failure - one of !he
maintenam.::c easier.
·
biggest complications of diabetes - can include lo&lt;S of alen ness and fatigue.
The boxes could tell aUihorities how fast Bedell was traveling just before
Dialysis is used to cleanse the blood of deadly tox ins when the kidneys
the Sunday morning Crash , and whether he tried 10 brake when the bus veered
fail.
off the six-Jane highway, said Robert Francis. vice c ha~rman of the National Transportation Safety B'oard .
,
Bedell 's mother, Evelyn Bedell , said her son began dialysis in the past
Bedell and at least one wi tness have smd the accident happened after a three months. She said he had received dialysis the night before the acciwhile compact car cui in front of the bus. There l1a ve been other reports that
dent. Most people who need dialysis have it three times a week.
the bus narrow ly missed hilling a green car jus1 before i't crashed. ·
·
Drivers don't have to report new medical problems or any deterioration
But no one has provided enough specific information - such as a license in condition between license renewals, said' Stephen Quidd, anorney for the .
plate number or car make and model - for in vestigators to start a search
motor vehicle agency.
for such cars, said Ted Lopatkiewicz, an NTSB spokesman.
Officials with Custom Bus Charters would not comment on Bedell's ·
Covington said Bedell had diabetes when he passed !he medical ~xam
health. Breaking into sobs during a news conference, Custom'president Don- .
required to renew his commercial driver's li ce nse in 1995.
nil Begovich praised Bedell as a respon sible driver with a good safety record.

NEW ORLEANS- The driver of the chaner bus that crashed on Mother'; Day, killing 22 people, was a diabetic who had begun kidney dialysis
- a condition thai could have cost him his license when it came up for renew" I 1n the fall.
Federal investigators are looking into whether Frank Bedell's heallh probkms contributed Ia the wreck, which happened as he was raking 43 passengers, most of them elderly women, 10 a casino on Mississippi's Gulf Coast.
Bedell had no! been interviewed by investigators because of his injuries.
He was thrown from the bus in the crash and was in critical condition Tuesde~y with.he ad and pelvic injuries.
Bedell wou ld have had 10 take a physical in November to renew his commc r~ial drivCr 's license.
" If his condition is as serious as we have been hearing since the accident,
he pruhabl y wouldn 't pass a test ," said Kay Covington, commissioner of the
&gt;tale Ofr.cc of Moler Vehicles .
·
Abo Tuesday. mvesligators removed two electronic monitoring boxes from

Landslide offers .reminder of danger·amidst Hawaii's beauty
.

'

By BEN DIPIETRO
Associated Press Writer

'

remain hospitalized. Boulders , some mers than any beach in the state, visitors lo the islands, tourism is fiancee .
the size of compact cars, rained despite 30 warning signs fixed in the Hawaii 's No. I industry. Tourists
• A 44-year-old Japanese woman
down on visitors swimming in a pool sand· and ocean·conditions signs spend about $11 billion a year in the was killed when her Jet Ski was
beneath a 90-foot .waterfall .
placed there daily by lifeguards. Aloha State, ·generating a quarter .of broadsided by anoth.er. The accident
Ten people have died at Sacred Waves there break close to the shore- its tax revenues and a third of its jobs. prompted state officials to consider
Falls from lan(lsl ides and flash floods line, driving body surfers into the
, Consequently, tourist deaths in changes in safety rule~.
·
· Hawaii are not unco'mmon. Just
si nce 1970, yet it remains one of the ocean floor.
"This is not Disneylancl," said
island's most popular touri st attrac"People think it won't happen 10 recently :
'
Janet Babb, who . offers tours of
tions with 56,000 annual visitors.
them," Rust said.
• A 29-year-old California~ was Hawaii Volcanoes National Park on
"They come here ro fulfill their
Hawaii visitors, military personnel killed by a shark off Maui while the Big Island. "It's hard 10 convince
fantasies," said Capt. Ken Rust of and locals often underestimate the kayaking with her husband. He people that th is is Mother Nature and
Honolulu's water safety division. dangers of adventure outings to acc used ti)e kayak rental company of we can't control it."
"B ut they are unaware of the haz- snorkel, surf, Jet Ski, kayak, hike and not warning, them enough about the · .Ms. Babb's tours explore the wonards."
bike the islands. And those dangers . dangers of ocean paddling.
ders of Kilauea Volcano, which ' has
Or they ignore them .
. can he glossed over by tour compa• A 31-year-old man from Wash- been erupting almos~constantly since
For example, Sandy Beach in nies fighting for survival.
ington state drowned while swim- January 1983.
eastern
Honolulu injures more swimSince then, five people have died
With more than 6 millior annual ming in waters off Kauai ,ovith hi s
,

HAUULA, Hawaii - From its
l'olcanic · peaks to its crystal-blue
wat ers, Hawaii is a place of both
beauty and danger.
Several tourists die each year durmg their dream vacations. They have
been batlered by pounding winter
surf, auacked by man-eati ng tiger
sharks, steamed to death in a volcano
or buried under giant rocks - which
happened to dozens of vi sitors Sunday at Sacred Falls State Park.
Seven people are confirmed dead
fmm the landslide, another is missing
and presumed dead and 12 more

in the park, inc lu ding a local man
who fell into 2.000-degrec lava and
a Colorado woman who l)ecame
!rapped in a steam, vent ncar the volcano's crater. Park ranger Mardi
Lane said they both had disregarded
signs ind icating the area was closed.
"The overwhelming majority of
people who visit the park take our
warni ngs seriously," she said,
Even so, Ms. Babb slopped takin~
people 10 see the lava now entering
the ocean because of the dangers to
them - from molten rock, poisonous
sulphuric acid or an earthquake and potential liability to her.

''

Push for ·roadside memorials sparks debate over safety
'

By JEAN McMILLAN
Associated Press Writer

grim distractions to some, to Chizook
they would serve as a powerful
BOSTON - On the nation 's reminder of the dangers the lurk
roads ides: after the twi sted meral along the highway.
fro m a fatal wreck is cleared, a
"Just that message that you gel
mound of fl owers, a marker or a lit- from a uitifonn placard alongside the
tl e cross is ofte n erected - .a road to recognize and. know that
someone died here , I think that 's sufmakeshi ft memorial to tragedy.
Paul Chi zook wants to replace ficient to take your foot off ihe gas,"
those temporary reminders · with said Chizook, who lives in Tyngssomethin g mo,ee . permanent. The bore, Mass., about 30 miles northMassachusells resident is proposing west of Boston.
.
signs emblazoned with the names of . . The idea of roadside memorials
·car cras h vic tim s, and the dates they has sparked debate not only in Masswere killed , along the State's high- achusetts, but m other stales. In Vuways.
gmm, meas~res to have the state
While such tributes may seem like 1nstall roadside memonal s were pro-

.

posed earlier this year, bUI failed to ing the clear view and nght way of
get approval.
motorists and road users? " he asked.
Rather than assume responsibility
Keaton said hi ~ organization,
for roadside memorials, some states, made up of safety· experts, has not
such as California, ban them outright officially taken a stand on roadside
Texas allows them with some restric- memorials, but .would probably lean
ti on ~. Illinois officials discourage against supporting them.
them.
·
John Carlisle, Massachusells
James Keaton, chai rman of the Highway Department spokesman,
national Alliance for Traffic Safety, had similar concerns . .
said roadside. memorials pose a haz"A roadway speckled with various
· ard apd might actually lead to more roadway memorials could pose a
highway deaths.
safety 'problem. It could have the
" If we put memorials up at every · potential to compound a situation
location 0 n our highways and byways that's already tragic ," Carlisle said.
where a fatality or serious injury has
Makeshift mefTloriais are common
occurred, are we potentially obstruct- in countries such as Iraly.and Greece.

And in the Republic of Ireland, the . islator. Rep. Colleen Garry was
government marks the place of fatal receptive to the idea. and has filed a
accidents with a warning sign embla- bill on hi s behalf.
Also receptive was Rep. Joseph
zoned with a black dot and the words
Sullivan, state House chainnan of the
"Traffi c Black Spot·."
Massachuseus has no. bans dr Transportation Commi ttee. He and
detailed guidelines on makeshift Garry said they would, however,
memorials. Localities have their ow n seek the pennission of the victims'
policies. Last year, in Pembroke, famili es to prevent causing them
Mass., officials rejected a man's further pain.
. .
request to erect a white cross where
A competing piece of legislation
his son died in a crash the following . would limil the time makeshift
year.
' memorials could remain to 30 days.
Chizook said Massachusetts could It would also require a permit to erect
design some son of uniform markers such a di splay.
made .of reflective material, so they
Chizoo k said one of the unofficial
could he seen at night. His local leg- memorials he passes on Interstate 495
near Lowe ll , Mass., is dedicated to
Raymond Bergeron, a Department of
Public Works ·employee who was
struck
and killed a week before his
that infection would occ~r \'vltlim six • ., ltenderso~ said •t!i.;-~idispread
retireme nt.
days ·of exposure. But the group use of the anthrax vaccine as a pre" It does serve as a very poignant
found the dangC(' period lasts up to 46 venrative is not recommended, unless
reminder how easy it is to he killed,
days. Therefore, antibiotics need to . a terrorist problem15ecomes re.al. I~ even on a straight stretch of 70 milebe administered for two months.
the m.eantime, efforts underway tO
an-hour roadway," he said.
Anthrax causes an infection out- produce large amounts of the vaccine
side the lungs that shows up on· X- should be stepped up so it will be
rays as a distinctive wide band down ready if needed, he said.
Although biological agents have
the middle of the chest. "Most radiologists would be unaware of this seldom been dispersed in aeros.ol .
particular finding," Henderson ·said. fonn , the idea is not farfetched , the
· If an anthrax attack happens, doc- report said. II was tried without .suetors should use vaccines in combina- cess in 1995 at a Tokyo subway station with antibiotics, and cremation tion when the terrori st group Aum
of bodies should he considered to Shinrikyo released anthrax and botprevent tran smissiOn.
ulism.

Report claims quick response .to anthrax attack needed
By MARY PEMBERTON
Associated Press Writer .

ment re.p on that said it .would take
only about 20 pounds of anthrax to
BALTIMORE - Doctors need kill 3 million people, the death toll
training on the symptoms of anthrax equal or more than that which could
so they don't think an infected person result from a hydrogen bomb.
just had a bad flu , according to sci"The possibility of .a terrorist
enti sts studying the pojsibility of a . attack using bioweapons would be
terrorist anthrax attack.
especially difficult to predict, detect,
In a report being published in · or prevent, and 'thus it is among the
Wednesday's Journal of the American most feared terrorist scenarios," the
. '
Medical Association, the Working report says.
In an attack, nearly half of those
Group on Civilian Biodefense says an
anthrax attack could happen , and in fected would die within 24 10 48
larger amounts of the vaccine need 10 hours, probably well before doctors
knew what was going on, the report
he at the ready.
·
says.
Because anthrax infections can
Anthrax is colorless. odorless,
be
controlled
with antibiotics if .
inexpensive 10 make and easy to
administered very early, doctors and
transport .
The group cited a 1993 govern- radiologists need to know what to

look for, the report says.
Shortness of breath, an early .sign
of anthrax infection, could be mi staken for pneumonia. Other early
sy mptoms include fever, co ugh ,
headache, vomiting, and chills, which
could he mistaken for a bad 'flu.
"The trick here iS'to identify as.
quickly as possi ble and recommend
antibiotic treatment of all those who
might have·heen exi&gt;osed ... and treat
them for two months, which is a huge
task," said Dr. D.A. Henderson, coauthor of the report and director of
the Center for 'Civilian Biodefen se
Studies at Johns Hopkins University.
The doctors found that anthrax
remains deadly far longer than previously understood. It was believed

Cases concluded in County Court

~

'•

· Meigs County Court Judge Patrick
H. O'Brien processed 18 cases last
week. '
Wilbur Ward, Langsville, stop
sig n, $20 and costs, seat belt, $25 and
costs; Travis Hendricks, Pomeroy,
assault , $200 and costs, restitution, 60
· days in jail, suspended to eight, 40
h ours community service, two years
probation ; Timothy Parrell, Clarks;
burg, theft by deception (two counts),
costs, restitution, 30days in jail, suspen~ed; Willard L Reed, Reedsville ,
left of center, $100 and costs, forfei·
ture: Philip Schneider, Cincinnati,
speed, $30 and costs;' Joshu a A.
Phalin, Pomeroy, speed, $24 and
costs, seat be ll violation, $25 and
costs; Brady M. Huffman, Racine,
drug paraphernalia, $50 and costs.

· possession of marijuana, $50 and
costs,. stop light, $15 and costs .
Wallace J. Reuter, Pomeroy, driving under suspension, $150 and
costs, 30 days in Jai l, suspended to
three, one year probation, failure· to
co ntrol, $25 and costs, . improper
lransport of a firearm in a motor vehicle, $I 00 and costs, 30 days in jail,
's ~ spended to three, concurrent, one
year probation; Joanne Grady,
Racine, contributing to the delinquency of a minor, costs,.$100 bond
to be posted and held ,until the end of
the 1998-99 school year; Matthew M.
Han, Rac ine, driving under FRA suspension, $200 and costs, 10 days in
Jail ~ suspended to three, one year proba110n, vehicle immobilized, possession of marijuana, $50 and costs;

Meigs County court news
Marriage li~enses
Marriage li censes have been
issued in the Me1gs County Probate
Coun to Jeremy Keith Cowdery, 20, ·
Newark, and Tracy Lynn Bradfield,
25, Thppers Plains; Anthony Michael
. Kidwell, .20, Carter, Ky., and Joy
Renee O'Brien, .23, Syracuse; Scott
Alan Ogdin, 26, Pomeroy, and Shannon Dee Wise, 22, Pomeroy; David
Pirl Burris, 19, and Nicole Dawn Lee,
20, both of West Columbia, W.Va.;
Robert Eugene Day, 31, and C\tristine
Elizabeth Marie Schultz, 26,
Pomeroy; Dwight S. Haley, Jr., 51,
and Kathy Lynn Yancy, 44, Middleport; William Henry Morri s Ill, 27,
Rutland, and Lisa Renee Ashburn ,
25, Wilkesville; .Jo~ph Anthony Wilson, 29, Pomeroy, and Candie Lee
Hall, 29, Mason, W.Va.; and to
Michael .Travis Bias, 22, and Amy
'Nicole Williams, 21,:Vinton.

both of Pomeroy; Scou Andrew
Lisle, Racine, and Tracy Ann Lisle,
Chauncey : Thomas M. Parker, Shade,
and Amber L. Well Parker, Pomeroy;
and by Virginia Anderson , Dexter,
and Joseph Anderson, Rutland.
A divorce action has been filed in
the court by April M. White, Racine,
against Christopher L. White, Columbus.

Robert L. Sellers, Portland, DUI,
$850 and costs, 10 days in jail suspended to three, 90 day license suspension, one year probation, jail and
$550, suspended upon completion of
RTP school; seat belt violation, $25
and costs, left of center, costs only,
failure to signal, costs only, unsafe
vehicle, costs only, open conrainer,
costs. only.
Gary Reitmire, Pomeroy,. speed,
$50 and costs, seat belt violation, $25
and costs, improper lane change,
costs only: Res.try Kilkenney, Albany,
DUI, $850 and costs, 30 days in jail,
suspended to 10, one year license suspension, one year probation, dri ving
under FRA suspension, costs, one
year probation, 30 days in jail, suspended to I0, cbncurrenl, possession
of marijuana, $50 and costs, Oeeing,
costs only, 30 days in jail, suspended to I 0 concurrent, one year probation: Willi am F. Hutchinson, Albany,
· speed, $30 and costs; Amy I. Siee,
Shade, speed, $30 and ·costs; Robert
E. Dailey, Middleport;. fail,ure to
yield, $20 and costs: Scott V.6'pton, .
Reedsville , speed, $30 and costs;
. Danny W. Smith, Duck, W.Va.,
speed, $30 and costs, seat belt violation , $25 and costs.

Mason Family Resturant wants to thank
everyone for t~e great Grand Opening,
· especially 10i.5 for making u's their
Business Of The Day. And also to:
Debbte'sFlorlst, Larry's Produce, Racine
Pizza Express, Rt. 7Pizza EXpress and
many others for Donating Door Prizes
ThankH&gt;u
Gloria and David Barner

Diisolutions, divorce
sought
Actions for dissolution of mar- '
riage have been filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Gloria K.
Herdman and Ephriam V. Herdman,

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Police say stalker killed in
gun battle with woman
HEATHROW, Fla. (AP) - A greenskeeper who stalked a woman for
months fired five shots at her in her home, and was killed with one shot by
the woman, who had armed herself for protection:
Donald Cook had ref)eatedly called Elizabeth MaGruder, spying mi her
witb binoculars and skulking behind bushes as she golfed. ·
On Monday, he entered her home in an upscale gated commudity carrying a rope and handgun and fired at her five times. She fired back with a gun
she had bought to protect herself.
Seminole County Sheriff Don Eslinger said Tuesday that Ms. MacGruder acted in self-defense and would not he charged with Cook's death . .
Cook, 50, had been fiied six. months ago from Heathrow Country Club
after Ms. MaGruder complained.about his constant p~one calls.
.On Monday, Cook entered Ms. MaGruder's home througb an unlocked
screened pool enclosure. He confronted her an~ pushed her into a back pedroom and fired five shots from a .25-caliher handgun, wounding'Ms. MaGruder.
~ s. MaGruder fired once with a .38-caiiher revolver, hilling Cook in the

che~~. MaGruder was listed in stable comlition Thesday.

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Wednesday, May 12, 1998

Husband's sometime use kitqhen utensils for the strangestthingsl
Dear Ann Landers: I can
empathize with the woman whose
husband soaked his infected toe in
her crockpol. I'm sure ·you. wiil hear
from other women whose husbands

il 's his boundless tolerance and
patience, born 'of love for his wife,
that have made Ted such a terrific
husband.
Dear Ann Landers: I am tired of
people who refer 10 emergency medical technicians and paramedics as.
LAFAYElTE, LA.
"ambulance drivers ." There is a
DEAR J.O.: Here's your letter, great deal of education involved in
and 1 hope Ted in California sees it. being an EMT or a paramedic, from
One key word is "flexibility " but initial training courses to the continactuaily, it is much more than that. uing education classes.

We do not go to school and attend
seminars to be "drivers." We spend
long hours of study so that we can
provide the best possible emergency
care to the people in our communi ties. When we are called man acc ident scene, we are well trained on
how to use our knowledge to save
lives.
Ann, !love my job, but it is frustrating to walk into a home and hear ·
someone say, "The ambulance ·dri-

vers are here." Please make it clear
to your readers that we ·don't just
drive the ambulances, we save lives .
--AN EMT IN MEMPHIS , TENN.
DEAR EMT: You made it clear
I'm pleased to remind people of the '
splendid work done by paramedics .
and emergency medical technicians.
Thank you for the opportunity to
give them the praise they deserve.
Ann Landers' booklet, "Nuggets
and Doozies," has everythi ng from ·

the outrageously funny to me ~
poignantly insightful. Send a set( ~
addressed, long, business-size enve- ~
lope and a check or money order .for :
S5 .25 . (this includes postage and ~
h~ndling) to: Nuggets, do ;\nn Lan- ~
ders, P.O. Bo~ 11562, Oucago, Ill. :;
606 I I -0562. (In .Canada, send :•
$625.) To find out more about Ann :.
Landers· and read her pas! columns, !'
visit the Creators Syndicate web ::
page at www.creators,com.

have done disgusting things with . .- - • • • • • • • • • • • . . ; • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . ; . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • kitchen ulj:nsils, but I'll bel nothing
beats mine.
·
One day, I noticed a dead squif!el
in the back yard. I asked my husband, "Dirk," to dispose of i't before
the children saw .it. I. assumed he
would use a shovel or some other
STORE HOURS
. garden implement to do the deed. I
Mond•y thru
was horrified when I looked out the
window and saw him holding the
Sund•y .
dead squirrel with my sterling silver
IAI\-10 PM
longs. They were a wedding gift
298 SECOND ST.
from my maid of honor.
. Dirk said, "I was goi ng to wash
Accepts Credit Cards
them. What's the big deal?" Ann, this
THE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANTITIES
guy is a business executive and. usuall y shows good judgment . The
PRICES GOOD THRU May 15, 1999
tongs caused quite an argument. I
didn't warit to tf:trow them away,
.
considering their sentimental value,
DOUBLE COUPONS 'EVERYDAY • SEE STORE FOR DETAILS
bur I could not imagine myself using
them to touch food again. After a
heated discussion, I soaked the tongs
in a bleach solution overnight and
put them . through the l:lishwasher

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I now see the humor in the situation, although we still refer to them
as the "Squirrel Tongs." Please don't
print my name. No one would ever
accept a · dinner inviration to our.
home again.-- SPOKANE, WASH.
.DEAR SPOKANE: Too bad
your maid of .honor's gift morphed
into a family joke, but it did provide
. me with my laugh for the day.
Dear Ann Landers: The leiter
from "Ted in California," with the
absent-minded wife, w'as one of the
most heartwarming leiters I have
ever read. If more people would pay
allention to the last sentence in his
letter, imagi.ne how the divorce rate
would plummet' The man wrote, "I
love my wife, and my flexibility has
made a big difference in our relationship."
·
He certainly sounds like a one-ofa-kind guy. If we all could he· flexi ble enough to overlook those little
habits of our spouses, parents,
friends and co-workers that drive us
crazy, the world would be a much
better place. Have you noticed,' Ann ,
it 's the little things that people go
nuts over?
"Ted in California" points Out
how easy it . is 10 get past those
annoyances if we just make the
effort. Ted is on the right track, and
·he set me on that same track today.
· Please print my letter, and tell Ted he
· should write a book on the subject.
He has a message a great number of
people · need to see.-- J.O .,

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DEL MONTE
SQUEEZE
KETCHUP

95

PORK SIRLOIN

Steaks ••••..••••.•.••.••!!~
ECKRICH BUTWURST OR

I

an Sa

11.

•••

The third annual pretty baby contest will be presented by the Friends
Club of Oak Hill , in conjunction
with the Oak Hill Festival of Flags
on May 3.1, I p.m.
· The contest will ·be sponsored by
Bazaar Home Fashion of Huntington, Ashland and Portsmouth.
· The contest is held on the last day
of the Festival of Flags . at Central
School Grounds in Oak Hill.
This year we will again hold a
live contest with a three judge panel.
The judges are all from out of the
county. Entry is open 10 any child
under the age of five. They do not
have to reside in the Oak Hill area.
No child or grandchild of a club
member or an employee of Bazaar
!lome Fashion is eligible to participate.
Separate categories for boys and
girls are as follows: birth to six
months, six months one day to one
year of age; one year one day to two
years of age; two years one day to
three years of age and three years
one day to four years of age. Con·
testants must not have reached their
. fifth birthday by the day of the con·
leSt.

99

HI

2/894
Tomatoes ••••••• ~:-•••• 99
2/$1
Blf~E BONN~T (REG. ~~ LOW ~:T)
1

Margarn•e St1cks ••• ~.

SINGLE ROLL

.

·

.lJI7::t40-949-2MSd:~

E

$119 ..DOG FOOD
.(REG. OR BITE SIZEt
Chocolate Milk •••••• ·
UNITED VALLEY BELL •

112

GAL

LONDON (ASST. FLAV.) ICE CREAM OR

2/$

4

Sherbet ..............~.:!;.. . · , ·

17.6 LIS.

Win A

BANKROLL

ALL GREENHOUSES OPEN TO TitE PUBUC

Hours: Mon.-sat. 9-6 Sunday Noon-8

PIPER

·c

FRESH

Cucumber, squash, cantaloupe, &amp; watermelon plants are upll
Vine Ripened Tomatoes-Red or White New Potatoes

REMEMBER WE HAYE MOYED l&gt;aelc ao our Racln.,. locaalo;..
'Bring tfie kids over to see our miniature liorses, pigmy gonts and sheep in our petting z.oo.

99

TOWELS

coming on

Grand Opening.Of Hew Garden Center Jane 5

4

POWDER
LAUNDRY
DETERGENT

·oz.$

*Sweet Potato Planfl Arriving noon on Thursday
New shipment of shrubs &amp;. perennials ·
Fret~h 1Upply of bedding plant. and vegetables

The Daily Sentinel .

(REG. ONLY)

TRIPLE ROLL BATH
TISSUE

,. ··s·ii•IACI)

All money raised by the club is
used for civic-minded projects or to
help members in ·t'!e surrounding
communities.
For further information on the
cotitesi or the sponsoring club, resi·dents may ~all Nova 740-682-7418
or Alana 740-682-6416.

3LBS.

\

UMIT 2 PlEASE. ADD. PUACH. $1 .39

This Week

'·

Powell's Super

Value

$200
Free Cash I

•

�.:

P9 8 • The Dally Sentinel

'

••

Wednesday, May 12, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Grammy academy distributing
classical music CDs to infants

•

· Gi rl ~ entering kindergarte n
this fall can JOIO the Summer
Daisy Pac ket Program of the Gi rl
Scouts of America.
Over the summer the girls wi ll
receive four packet of crafts and
ot her ac ti vities . The program
gives girls and pare nts the oppm tunity to learn more about the Gi rl
Sco ut program.
.
Financial assistance is available and anyone interes ted in the
program can call Deb Dowler,
fi eld director, at 740 797-4801 or
Brenda Neutzling, service unit
admini strator, at 992-6679 .

event to be held on Saturday. This
event is judged and ratings will be
.
'
g1ven.
Next year the Concert Band
plans to expand its activities to
inc lude participatio n at ho me
Middle Sc hool football games ,
acco rding to Ben Wright, band
director.

Girl Scouts finalize plans for
summer day camp
Plans ~rc moving forward for
' .. the annual summer day camp program to be he ld June 11 - 13 at
Royal Oak Resort.
Jerrena Ebers bach, day camp
direc tor, and Michele Dickerson,
.:o-Direc&lt;nr. have been meetin g
w ith the planning c_ommittec regularly since early March to pl an
· for the program .
·
Social Security office cruinges
·
"Aloha Me Ke Aloha" (greetlocation
ings \Vi th Jo ve ) has been se lec(ed
The Athens Social Sec urity
as the name for the camp which
offi ce has moved 10 74:1 A ·E.
wi ll carry a Hawaii an theme.
State St . in At hens.
, Girl s wil l be maki ng "grass"
The office hours arc fm m 9
skirts and le is, .and will ·learn to do Spring concert to be prt!sented
a. m. to 4 p .m. eac h weekday, and
th e hul a as we ll as crafts using a Thursday
·beachfro nt or Hawaiian theme. _ The Mei gs Middle School the ofti ce phone number remains
; 'c os t for camp is $ 17 fo r regi s- Music Department will present its 740-59 2-4448.
·Ed Peterso n, di strict manager,
tered scouts and $24 for non -reg- spring band concert Thursday_at
: istcred eirl s. ' Fin ~n cial assislance the Meigs Middle School Audito- expressed hi s · appreciation to
those who helped with the move
· is avaiJ ,;hle for those in need.
rium , 7:30 p.m.
There
Th e sc outs will be abl e to is no admiss ion charge. P erfonn - · and those who arranged their
. enJOY swimming, hiking , fi shing, ing groups include the SI Xth grade schedule offi ce visits before or
' and o ther special surprises while band and the Meig s Middle after the time of .the actual move.
He announced an open house
· having fun at camp.
·
School concert band. Al so fea the public to be held Friday
for
The camp program is open to tured will&lt; be the distri ct-wide
fro
m
I to 4 p.m. and invited the
: all gi rl s ages 5 and ent ering combined fifth grade band.
All fifth grade band members public to attend, visit with the
: kindergarten thro ugh high school.
Programs and registration infor- from six elementary schools in staff, and tour the new ofllce.
mation is being sent home with the di strict will come together fo r
a special combined group of over
gJrls grades K-8 this wee~ .
The program will conclude 50 members. These students, who Associ1ation finalizes plans for
. with a family potluck dinner on · have been playing their instru- · banqu~t
The · officers of the Har"
ments for eight months, will be
closing day at camp. 2 p.m.
risonviiJecScipio Alumni AssociaIf the schedule conflicts with perf'onning three short pieces.
The 45 member sixth grade" tion recently mel to make plans
loc al ball tournaments, scouts
band.
with an expanded instru- for their annual dinner and dance
may leave and then return to
camp for tournamen!S if they give mentation including French horn to be held at the Harrisonville
and baritone hom, will also per- School on Saturday, May 29, 6:30
prior notification.
p.m.
•
,
For addi!ional information fonn .
A baked steak and cream
The concert band, feature
about camp, those interested may
baked
chicken di,nner will be
group'
of
the
evening,
has
48
contact the director at 992-7747
served.
Officers are Harold Gramembers
in
seventh
and
eighth
or tpe co-director at 992-0500.
president;
Larry Clark, vice
ham
,
grade and, in addition to preparing for thi s concert, will also be president; Virgil Reeves, treasur" :.___----'---Summer Daisy packet pro; partiCipating in the OMEA junior . er; imd Joy Clark, secretary.
high large group adjudicated
grams available

ZACHARY COATES
TURNS TWO ,
Zachary
Coates, .son of Joey and Misty
Coates of Chester observed his
second birthday with a party at
the Eagles Club in Pomeroy.
recently.
A Hot Wheels theme was carried out and cake, ice cream;
chips and · pop were served.
Attending besides his parents
were hi.s brother, Trey; grandparents, Beth Birchfield and
Tom Schoonover, Jane Estep,
and Roger and Diane Coates;
great-grandparents,
Phyllis
Haye and VIctor Bahr.
Others there were Jon, Janel,
Wesley and Morgan Harrison,
Pam Manley, Amber Blackwell
and Austin Hendricks, ' Charlie,
Stephanie and ·Jacob Brewer,
Lila Van Meier, Kathy Stone,
Alvena l:farris, Adle May and
Mariah Hill, Amanda Coates,
Jenny Mayle, Sabrina E.step and
Amy Harrison.
Sending gifts and cards were
his great-grandpirents, Howard
and Marie 'Birchfield and Alva
and Mary Coates and his grandfather, Chris Haye; Heather
Elkins, Jake Birchfield, Cathy
Coatea, Matt and Kristi Flnlaw,
Nikki and Matt Fields, Bucky,
Georgeanna and Shane Black,
Jamltha and Cassidy Wilford,
and Dave and Sua Hall .

,. NEW YORK (AP) - Fourteen
I~Uers by J.D: Salinger, the reclusive
ailthor of " The C atcher in the Rye, "
are to be auctioned at So theby 's, The
J'J~w York Times reported today.
~e

.1

letters were wriuen between

April 1972 and August. 1973 to
author Joyce Maynard, with whom
~alinger. had a nine-month romance .
Their relationship began when she
wa s an IS-year-old Yale University
•"

,

@JDorlal

'.

.

'.

.

.

We remember those who have passed away
and are .especially dear to. us.
On Friday, May 26 •. we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not forgotten.
~They will be similar to the sample tielow:
·
·

If you wish, select on of the following FREE vencs below to accompany
your tribute.
1. We hold you in our thoughts and memories forever.
2. May God cradle you in His·arms, now and fore 'o'er.

'·

-!' .

•'

Andrewo, David C
July 10, 1961 ·May 5, 1980

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you
throughout time.
Always in ou.r hearts,
John and Mona Andrews and
· Family

·, '

...

..

.

hand.
.
4. Thank you for the wonderful days we .shareq together. My prayers will be
with you until we meet. again.
5. ~he days we shared were sweet . I long to see you again in God's
· , heavenly glory.
6. Your courage and bravery still inspire us il'll, and the memory of your
smile fills us with joy and laughter.
7. Though oul of sighi, you 'II forever be in my heart and mind.
8. The d~y s may come and go. but the times we shared will always remain .
9. May the light of peace shine on your face for eternity.
10. May God's angles guide yov and protect you throughout time.
11 . You were a light in our life that burns forever in our hearts.
12. May God 's graces shine over you for all time.
13. You are in our thoughts and prayer'S from morning to night and from
year to year.
14. We send this messag_e with a loving kiss for eternal rest and happiness.
15 . May the l.:.ord ,bless you with His graces and warm, loving heart.

Public Notice
NOTICE 0~ PUBLIC
HEARING
Malge County lnUindo to
apply to th-o Ohio
Department of Dovolopmlnt
lor .funding under the
Community Development ·
· Block Grant (CDBG) Smell
Cltloo Program, a lodorollyIund1d
p r o 11 r a m
odmlnlelerod by the oteto.
Molge Couniy 11 ottglbto.for
Ft1cal Yoor 98 ·CDI!IG
Formull Allocation tundln.ll_
In tho elllmllld amount 01.
s1aa,ooo, providing tho
county mooll applicable
raqulromonto.
Tho llrot of two public
hoarlngo will ba held Mey
17, 11108 11 7:00 P.M. at the
Mttga County Courthouae,
Common Plooa Courtroom,
Pomeroy, Ohio to provide
Cltlzono with tho pertinent
lnlormauon about the CDBG
Formut• progrom can fund
I broad range of ICIIvltloo,
economic
Including:
development pror·e cta,
atroot, wetor aupply,
drelnego ond 11niU1ry - • r
lmprovomonto,
perk
acquloltlon
and
lmprovomonta, domollilon

Fill out the form below and drop off to
'

The Daily Sentinel
With Fondest Memories
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45.769
DEADLINE: FRIDAY, MAY 21, NOON

;;a· r------------------~-----------------------,
Please publi~h my tribute in the special Memorial Day Page on Friday, May 28

Name.of d e c e a s e d - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - :JI Relati?nship
me ____________ Num\ler of.selected verse _ __
~0

of un11f1 1truaturee, 1nd

rohabllltetton
of
neighborhood lacllllloo.'
Tho ectlvltlll muot by
dealgnod to prlmerlly
benefit low and modareteJncoma poraono, eld In tha
prevention of 1tum and
blight, or meat an urgent
n - or tho cOmmunity. ..
Cltlzono 111 oncouregod
to attend thlo meotlng on
Moy 11; 1818 to moko
111gg11tlona end to provide
public Input on verloua
ecttvttloo which mey bo

..1 Date of birth
Date qf passing-----Veteran_,__ _ _ Yes'. - __ No._ __
Rank---.....;,;,__ _ _ Branch of service---------,- - - - - 1 Print your name here-------.,-----,;,_--~.,------.:._
.I
.
· 1 A d d r e s s - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Phone number-----.., City
.
.
State
ZiP'-.- - -

1

:I

1

800-AOMAHOE.

pattern s.
By SUSAN PARROT'f
" We should never say that music
Associated Press Writer
makes you better in math ," Fluhr
COPPELL, Texas CAP)
11
Nobody can say for sure if listening said . There is some research supto Mozart , Beethoven or Bach will porting that but not much."
Flohr wi ll lead a study on the
make kids sma11er. The parents o f
cffeCI
of the G ra mmy COs on
mo re than I million children around
of 3- to 5-year-olds in Sa n
dozens
the country a~e getting the chance to
Antonio. The brain acti vity of chil·
find out .
The Nati o nal Academy of &amp;en who listen to the CD several
Recording Arts and Sciences ·Foun- hours a day wi.ll ·be compared with
dation began handing out free COs that of other youngsters who aren't
of Grammy-winning classical mu sic listening to classical music.
Most early childhood specia li sts
in hundreds of hospital s Monday .
The goal of the project is to give agree that music g'e nerall y is good
children " every scientific and cul - for infant s, said David Moore, a protural advantage possible ," said fessor of psychology at Pitzer Co lMichael Greene, president and chief lege in Claremont, Calif.
" There is very little do ubt that
executive of the academy, which
every
ex peri ence a baby has affec ts
hands out .the annual Grammys.
The " Smart Symphonies" COs the structure of "a baby 's brain ," he
will be di stributed for about a year in s~ id . " But there's no reaso n lO say
hos pitals. Mead Johnson Nutritiott- it's going to ra.isc the baby's iQ.
als, which makes EnfamH infant for- That is determined by many facmula, is providing $3 milli.on for the. lors."
At C hildren's World , a chil d care
project.
.
center
where Flohr vo lunteers, kids
John Flohr, who teaches at Texas
. Woman 's University in Denton and may not understand the difference
was a consultant on the Grammy between Beethove n and Barney, but
project. has Jed several studies indi - they kn ow they ' re hav ing fun when
cating that certain mu sic stimulates Flohr show s up: .
Air piano is the newest game.
neural connections in the.brain.
" Music has a nice way of pro- With anns and lingers outstretched,
ducing circuits ,:' he said. " Some children at the day care ban g on
brain development caused by music im ag in ary keyboards to the flourishmay be helpful in developing other es of Mozart .
" They don't just listen to the ··.
abilities."
Those abilities may include bet· music now," said teacher Gladys
. ter visual-spatial reasoning, which Mon santc, whose 2-year-o ld son
he lps children with patterns, puzzles attends the center. " They partband fllazes; and improved memo- pate. "They become part of the
music . And at the same time they are
·
rization.
But Flohr urges caution before learning."
simply claiming that listening to
Eds: the classical music CDs
classical music will make children
better in science and math, which . also are available on Mead Johnsome experts claim because of the son's consumer hot line at (800)
genre's complexity, repetitions and BABY-123.

~~~f;t~~~~~CD~

J.D. CONSTRDCTIOI

~
~
lll!!l .

MaiCe Check Payable To Pomeroy Daily Sentinel.

.

L---~----------~------------------~--------~

..'

PhJonhe 740-992-3987
o n

, Publlcf'Notlce

undertaken In thll progrom. roll•f In tho . Court ol
II a participant will ntod Common Ploao or. Molgo
auKIItary lido (lnterproUir, County,.Ohio, blaring Con
brolllod :or toped mltorlal, No. K-CV.o:M ,
Tille notiol 'will run ono 1
eoolotlvi-,ltiionlng device,
other) dua to a dloeblltty, Wllk for olX IUCCIIIIVI
ploan cont•ct Glorll Kloll, -Ita, the loot publication
Ctorlt, prior to Mey 17, 18119 bolng on tho 18th doy of
at 740-lll2·28ttlln order to Moy, 1tll!l. The Deltndonto .
onouro thttt your neodl will will have twanty..lght dayo
be accommodotod. The 11om the day of toot publicaMolge County CourthOUII tion In which to anawor aold
complllpt.
.11 hendlcapped •-•lblo.
Written commenta will bo · boniH L BunC41
llog.
.accepted unlit 4:30 P.M., . Supremo Court
Mey 17, 18119, end mey bo 1 10042141
mollocl to tho Molga County DeniH Bunce Law Office
105 E. Socond St
Commlllionlr8,
.
CourthouH, Pomeroy, Ohio P.O. Box 711 .
Pomeroy, OH 45761
45788.
.
.
Jonot Howerd, Proaldont, · (740) 012·5730
M o lg 1 ·
C o u n t y , Attomoy for Pl1lntHfo
Dlfondant moy obtain a .
Comml11lonoro
copy of the Comptolnt fllo
·(4) 30
heroin form tho olllco of
(5) 5, 12 3TC
---::--'-:-:::-:-:--:-:-"-__; Larry Sponcor, Ctork of
Court,
Molga
County
Public Notice
CourthouH,
Pomeroy,
OH
·457111
,. IN THE COMMON PLEAS
(4) 14, 21, 28
. OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
(15) 15, 12, 111 IITC
( JERRY J, GRUESER,
ETAL,
Public Notice
PLAINTIFFS,
vs.
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
EDITH E. BURNELL,
The
Eootorn Locll Boord
ETAL,
of Educetloli . will occopt
DEF~DANTS
bide for !he oonllt\lctlon of
, CABE NO. 110-CV-1134
two motol/polo 1tructuro
LEGAL NOTICE
Dotondanto Edith E. bulldtngo located II' 341100
Burnell, ot ot., whooo 1111 · 8117, 11-ovlllo, Ohio. blda
J!nown place of rooldonce Ia wilt bo o..-nod In tho Offlco
the Trooouror of' tho
Eaot Side St., S.R. 124, · of
..tern Locol School
Mlnerovllle, Ohio and the E
Unknown Hotro of Edith E. Dlotrlct Wodnoaclly, Juno I,
Bumoll addroll unknown, 1tll!l 1112:00 p.m.
Butldtngo oro •• lollowo:
aro hereby notlltocl thll on
1.
40 loot by •10 toot
the 14th doy of April, 1tll!l, moUIVpolo
otructuro to bo
Jerry J . Grutaar end Norm1
uood
••
1
multl-purpooo
J. GruaHr, Plelntllll, flied otor8gotrocrootlonol
build'
their comptelnt and other Jng.

Rutland, Ohio

Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats; motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.

Marty's

HILL'S

P~wer

SELF STORAGE
•

Washing
Homes,~ks

&amp; Mobile Homes·
Painting, Drywall Repair
Interior

&amp; Exterior

15 Yro. E:r:per1Bnce

742·1701

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

.Don\ ·Need A Bw One
CallA Littr.. One

·loaww Care· lnlp

DRIVEWAY STONE

.

Landscape Material,
Topsoil &amp; Mushroom

·l...,nlwgW.081rlck
hila Ceutnlclloa

Compost

29670 Baahan Road
Racine, Ohio 45n1

740·949·2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'.
Hours
3NII/1mo, ad.

New To lbu Tlvtft . _

aw..t sl*JWOII, Atnonl
7~592- t .. 2

Duality clolhl ng and

houoo~b ld

tllfU

Soturdoy
-

GIVNWIIY

Female Aortweller to

good home.,

7.W-tle5-3362.

Local
Television ·
For Free
·Program Guide
CaU 992-2727

7:00 AM • 8 F'M

, 8-&lt;3-l.

.lKC English Setter. No Papm,
to t.l on l hs Old, To A Good
Homo, 7~2-'5-5697.

TV27

Phone (740) 593-6671

LOnol)'? can Tonight! 1-eoo-:za•sa2, Ext 1857. S2.tl por. min .
Muot bo 18 YJ1. Serv-U (f11)e-45-

40

WJOS

•

30 Announclfnll1ta

Tnuroday. Monday

992·5455

Stop In And See
•
An Old Friend
Mike Drehel
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

;.

, llb•NI1 . ·

B:OQ-5:30.

up to B t o n

40 742-8888

Dalli10 Goml,

Item&amp;. S1.00 bag ule ever.y

Light Hauling

Mon- Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yra experience

c~~~~~~JJ~~~~JtfJ.l

"A Better

Found: cow, Salem Center w-iclntly. caii 740-69H502.
Found:. Ger man shepherd pup,

appro•. 6 month a old, SA
cinily. can 7.W-992-e2&amp;:2.

ee t' vi·

'

'Cla&lt;age Door. (304)e75-e t t8.
Purrfectly Happy Healthy BlaCk !5
Month Old Kitten• . To Good .

Ho-

. 7~245-510-1.

Smal Pomeranian Chow t.llx. Ald.
740·256-6703.

Three Adorable Ktnena wlih Long '
· Hair. 6 weeks Old , 2 Blact14 :

General·Refuse Service
A lo.1ally owned company wllh over · 28 yrs
experien1e has now extended our coverage area to
indude oil of Gallia Co. and portions of Meigs,
Vinlon &amp;.Lawrence counlies.

Near the 338 &amp; 124 split in the Great Bend

-Complete Auto Seroice-

CONCRETE
CONNECFION
Quality Driveways,

Electric &amp; Water and or Full Hook-Up
Acros8 from Forked Run State Park and
clo8e to Fork Run Boat.Ramp

Sidewalko, Patio•
Parking Lots

**********
MINERAL
WELLS, WV
.

25yrs experience

IEVEIOVED
1

Free Estimates
740·742-8608

MAY.l5-16
latentatt Fair 9 Ezpo
SAT. 9-5, SUN 9-4 U.OO
UNDER 12 mEE; WIADULT

aUY•OLL•t'IADE
1-77 EXIT 170 TORT. 21
LEFT RT. 14 LEFT FOLLOW
TO RT. 4 LErr ON RT. 4 TO

PUft
All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
-Factory Authorized
Caae-IH ·Parts
·Dealers .

GUNI,IIHMI, MILITUL\
Old Dominion Shows
Info. (540) 230.1343

740117-11113

Card or Thanks

The family of

CarlL. Hubbard
wiohe1 to thank the
Racine Emergency
S'luad, Plea1ant
Valley Hoopital and
Staff, Crerrweru
Funeral Horrw, Rev~

Mark Morrow,
Friendo, Neighbonr
and Family, that
helped duri"'I our
. time of f!rWf.
·Thanh to those who
oenl food, card., and
flowen. Your
ltindne,. ia deeply
appreciated. May

God Bless!-

Help Wanted

CRIDrr

110 Help Wanted
Pleasant Valley Hospital
is currently accepting
application/resumes' for
the -following position:

--

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Divorced

[STOP! WORIYINI!!!

No Embarreaament ...
You're Treated with R•pectl
for !natant
·

SIGN-ON BONUS
INCLUDED
Various speciallies and
shifts available.
Full-time and pal'l·time
employment.
Competilive wages and
benefits.
Please apply or send
PLEASANT VALLEY
HOSPITAL
C/0 Personnel
}520 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
AAiEOE

CANDLE· MAKERS
We now have 30 NEW
Candle making
fragrances ill
•Birdhouses • Bear
• Wreaths • Refills

1\tn· Friday 1o-e
Sat 1G-4

Rt. 124 Mlnemlllt, Oh
992--4559

WICKS .
HAOLinG InC.
We Deliver
Limestone, Gravel,'

Sand·, Fill Dirt, ··
Agricultural Lime,
Mulch, Top Soil

(Low Rates)

------ 740·992-3470
---. ---- BISSELL BUILDERS,

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
:2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION! :

--

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH TH.E

CUlSS8F8EIOSI

Summer Le•gue
...In• 1st Week
In M•y
1baday • No 1ltp
Wedne5day · Men's League
Thursday • Mixed League
Stertl•l n1111 7:JO P.M.

70

Yard Sale ·
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

3 Family Yard Sate Friday &amp; Saturday; 1117 Theodora A11e. etg

Free Ellimales

. AI.L Yon! Soles Must

Selection- Great Prlee$1

Be Pilld In Advanee. ·
PEAQLINE: 2:00p.m.
. 1110 do'lllelore thiiCI
Ia ta run. Suncla'f
ldltlon • 2:00 p.m.
Frldoy. Mondoy ldlllort
·10:0!1 o.m. SoturUoy.

Linda's Painting
Thke the pain out
of painting, and let
me do it for you.
INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message. After 6 pm

..,40-985-4180

Call For Free Estimates

'7n-DOO .

::
3·1:28::;,
- ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ . '

Swan Re611e1

•New ·&amp; Resurfacing
•Playgrounds
•Tennis &amp; Basketball Courts

MaaonBowllq
Lane•

Found: Saturd ay, May Bth , ntlr ,
Bas ketball CO urt 1n Pt. Pl. , Artl.. '

740-742-3411
-Bryan Reeve•

•lots
• Drives
•Private
•Business

Free Estimates

Phone:

FUrniture,' Clothing And Assorted
Items, Teens Run Road, One Mile
Off Route 7, Starts Monday 5/tOJ

99 Ttiru Saturday.
May 131h , Thu•sday, 9·4 , 1535:
Graham School Road , Lon ga:berge r Baskets. Name Brand
ClOthing, furnitvre, Other Odds 1
Ends! .
.
'

Ofl Lake Drive In Rio GranGe ••
Saturda y. Sf15. 9-5. Ktng Size
. Bed, Sa xo phone, ·Gtrtt' • Boye '
. .
Clothes. Bicycles. Toy~, Elc.
Several Famili'e s In Eur•ka May
t 1th ·15th, Lots Ot stunt
• '11 ,

740-256-6147

Yard Sate , Rain Or Shlntl 4867..:

'

Siate RIO 850. May 13.t4.15, 9:00"
-?
~

SAYRE
TRUCKING

ROOFING
NEW· REPAIR

Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

740·742·2138

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
'
,.

FREE ESnMATES

•

•••
I

All Yard $1111 MUll le Plld tnt
Advance. DHdllne: 1:OOpm the::·
day before the ad Ia to run

t

Sunda~ &amp; Monday edition~"·
1:OOpm Frldoy.
~
Garage sale- May t3· 14, Dtrv~

Well. Fl lggscrest Manor. 9:oo..;
4:00. Patio table/ chairs , desk /:
chai r, wall, units, c;lo ora, man~
items.
.
•

4/2 TFN

May 14· 15. turn llrst road-left pes~·

WMPO from Middleport Hl!l, tlttha-·

. . INC.

Naw Homes • Vinyl
Siding •New Garages
• Replacemanl Windows ·.
' • Room Additions

YOUNt'S
.CARPENTER SERVICE
•ilaam lddlllona &amp; Romodollng
•New Ga11t111 .
•EieWiclll Plumbing
•Roofing • Gulltrl
•VInyl Sklng 6 Pllntlng
•PIIIo 6 Porch DlcQ

FIH EJtlmlfN
V.C. YOUNG Ill
-11

.

Pooporoy, Ohto
22 yn. Local

Jack's loo lng
&amp; Construction
Roofing • Repalra
•Coalinga ~
Sldlnga • Painting
•'Dryw•ll &amp;
• Plumbl~g
Free Estimates

Joseph Jacks

740·992·2068

TRI·SJATE MOilLE
POWER WASH
TNcu..-

can relieve a

debtor 'of financial obligations and arrange a fai~
diatri~~-tion o~ aeeete. Debtors in bankruptcy may
keep exempt property for his or her personal
U&amp;e. Thia may include a car, a house, clothes, and
houoehold goods.
-

rrotttn-hou•-mobllt

WiUia~ Safrane~ Attorney At Law

38782 s.,.., Road.
p"'"" ' ONo •54768

TREE AND STUMP
REMOVAL

KEITH MYERS

Desk, Some Antiques.

\

· May 14th , 15th . Galllpoll s Ferry ·:
Across from Beale School Lo ts
4

•

Aoa~. June.:
tlon of Slate Route 2 &amp; 87 Mt •

On Chestnut Ridge

:Ako~
. wv~
. M=~~
, 3~,,~·-~,5~-----·~:

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•NewHomea.
OO•rages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

985-4473

HOWARD
EXCAVATINI CO.

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays

, , .._,

AT &amp;:30 P.M.
Maln St., Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall .
$500.00 Starburat ' •

I

Ptogreulve top line. :
Uc. II 00-50 tiN- '

•as

g

llepD. .
BuUdo•er &amp; Baclrhoe
S&lt;!n&gt;ice•
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land .Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Sy•te1n1 &amp;
Uailitu.,

.__(7_40..;.19_9,.;2_;·3:..;1,:3.:,1.....J

7

80

Auction
and FIN Market

:

•,

Bill MOOdlspaugh Auct!one~rlng.~
Compllle Auct ioneer ing StrviC· "'
ea. Consignment auction· Mil l"
Street , Middleport, Thur&amp;deys.:
Ohio License 176'9 3 . ?4 0· 989· 111
2623.
"'

.

Rick Pearson Auction Company ·
full _lime auctioneer. co mp tt'r~ ··
auction
service. licensed ;

166,0hlo &amp; Wtsl Virginia. 304· ..

713-5?85 Or 304·713-5447.

•

•

AIVERSIOE AUCTION BARN

'

Eller y Saturday Night 7 P.M .. :

Crown Clly, 740-258-$119

•

Wedemeyer's Auction St r\llca,: .
Gall'"" ~- Ohio 7~3 79· 2 7 20 .

Now Ope,. For
SpfinBSeaoon

90

Complele Une Of
Vegelable &amp; Bedding Plants
.
All Filla SS.50

a....... G.ranllilru
Hanging Baskets
Bloomllig &amp; Foliage
$5.75&amp; Up
•Geraniums, Azaleas
•shrubs &amp; Trees
W. Honor Golden
Buckeye Card
Open
11·5 Weekday Sunday 1·5

• Roofing

tNSIJUD OIINI!II

COMMERCIAL and RESID.EIII1AL

• n1or Dlaao-te

FREE ESTIMATES

...... ldlmatea

IUIIAID'S
IIEIIIHOUSI

814-992·7843

Lo111Jbollom, Ohio

SYIUCVSE

INo Sunday Calls)

(74()) 985-3677

"t-1776

•

.. .

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sll· ~­
ver. And Gold C oins, Pro of1et1 ,o1
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, GOtct•
Rings , Pre-1 930 U.S. Cunen6y,•
Stef16nQ, Etc. Acqulsttlona Jewelry:
- M.T.S. Coin .Shop, 151 Second•

WWu

MYERS TREE
· SERVICE

Li ttle Mill Crk . Ad. May 13- t• "
Electric Organ . WOOden Table
Cnairs . Big China Cabinet •
Li nens, lamps. Dishes, Pots&amp;:
Pans, Home Interior. Beds .•
Dresser, Chest, Qulha, Pictures ~

ot Evef)'lltlng. e:ooam.-3:~.

FREE ESTIMATES

(7 40) 592-5025 Athens, Ohio ·

Pt. PleaNnt
••'
· &amp; VIcinity
;;B_
;Ig-;:v:::.,:::d
:
-:5-:al::-e,:.:R::,~
. 2;,:!J~ct-.·8"'7-o-in:

&amp;:

Ho-kl-drtwwoys

EqulpmontCIHMd &amp; ~
JEFF STETHEM
PHONE: (740) 985-4218
EMAIL:
STETHEf,I@EUREKANET.COM

For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

•

R• L~
TRUCKING .
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

i.Jme,

Agricultural
Umaatone • Gravel

Dirt • Sand

985 4422
Chuter, Ohio

Avenue, Gei1X&gt;fiS, 7~284Z

.

~
. ,,

.

Antiques, top prices paid Rlvjr4 ••
lnt: Antiques, Pomerov: Ohk),';

Russ Moore owner, 7•D · It2- ~
Clean Lata Modal Cars

.br:'

orn A,....., Gai""'ls.

•

2526.

...

Ttuck&amp;, 1990 Modata Or Naw.r .
Smith Buick PonUac:, 1too EMt:('

,.r

Wanted rill Dirt and Flock! Ltt ;.~·
Pay )'OU Instead of Dumping_,:
Oh io Fllver Banks! 2 112 mltet"'

Lower7 S.(?.W) 448-1127
Wanted To Buy; Wedding
Size 8, $275, 740-44Hl432
'

,·

•

~=---"-------·

.949-2168

3/11/99 TFN

•

Pomeroy,
· Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Howard L. Writesel

-Hal!ling
Limestone &amp; Gravel

BIIIRUPTCY

-ntl COUNTRY
CANDLE SHOP"

I!

YOUR MESSAGE
. CAN BE SEEN' HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$8.00 PER DAY.

~.
1iJ

Fou nd :. Cnow Chow Golden AI· ,
In Basil Road Area, ·
Has CO.Iar, 74o-441·0370.

tr l ev e r. M I~ .

house, iots of items.

resumes' to:

:J

-

/

STAFF NURSES

---- IIIIII I1111111 IIIll IIIIII IIIII II III III II IIt II IIIIII IIIII III II ---------------

::

992-4119 OR 800-291-5600

S

992-7285.

Now Co~·

4Expef~!a~Si~ ro~¥J~C:,; On!!!~
t'!.:
!;:.

Foun d· b lack &amp; Drown G•rma"
She pherd ty pe pup, 2· 3 montt'll .
old, Hemlock Grove area. 740·

Romodollng-Kitchen Coblnoll
VInyl Sldtng-Rooii-OicQGoragN

•

•Paving
•Sealing
•Striping
•Patching

60 Lost and Found

·conatracHon

985·383~

Jerry L. Preece
Crown Ci OH 45623

Medical Assl-tant, Trained, Quick,
Diligent Intelligent, and Reliable.
Needed for a busy Internal Medicine
Practice In Athens. Immediate Full
Time Opening, Competitive Salary
and ·Benefits.
·
c/o The Dally Sentinel
P.O. Box 729·77 ·
Pomero Ohio 45769

\

VISIT.OUR OFFICE/SHOWROOM THERE

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS AT
FACTORY DIRECT PRICES

Fax (304) 675-6975.
110

FORMERLY OF 110 COURT STREn, POMEROY
IS NOW LOCATED STATE ROUTE 33
6 MILES NORTH OF POMEROY AT COUNTY ROAD It

1000 Sl. Rt. 7 SOUIII

Coolvlll•, OH 45723

**********·

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

(304)773·5787

lost female Siberi an Husky, btu.
eyes . on e bHnd , Tanner 'I Run
Racine area, child's pet, 7~94~

I•HIBome

1 mo.

DEPOYSAG

EXPO CTR.

-------------::

Call

Whl1e . 1 Ye't!o w. Utter-Trained . •

cle ot Jowolry. (304)874-4!158.

lf.I'ICUI.SunntHome.com

St. Rt. 7 Bewteeri Five
Points &amp; Chester
We Custom Spray
• Vegetables • Corn
SHADE RIVER
•Soybeans ·
.

(Parkersburg) ,

GUN SHOW

2. 40 loot by S8 loot maUII
/polo atructuro to bo uHd
11 ·a
ma.tntonancalbua

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE

1-800-967-4774
our..,.,,.... b

Slug &amp; Shot
Matches

CALL TODAY TO BEGIN YOUR
GARBAGE SERVICE IMMEDIATELY

·At GU

RUTLAND, OH.
. AMERICAN
LEGION
.BEECH GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM

1·740·667·3083
1-740-667-3316
$550.00 Year
· $12.00 Night
$10.00 Primitive Camping

of
Gallia Countyl

Former-"Velvel Hamnu~r"
52954 State Rt . 124
Racine , Ohio
• Phone: 740-843-5572

30 Announcements

f/ENDRIX CAMPSITE RENTAL

To The Residents

Dave's ' Garage

Public Notice

tOorqo.
.·
Both bulldlnga will have
concrete alabo, plumbing
and electrical worl&lt;. Multi·
purpooo building ohollloto
bo by "Golden Giant."
HVAC contract will bo
awarded nplrotoly on tho
11me day. Speclltcatlona :
lor building ayatam are .
available at thi admlnlllrl·
ttvo olllcoa located at50008 ·
Sll 88t, lltldovlllt, Ohio.
Eoch bid ahall be accom- ·
ponlod by a 10% bid bond :
aupportad by a Power or '
Attornoy, lor , the bonding :
agent, and a c.ortlncatelrom •
tha
Dopertmont ' of ·
tnauronce. Bldo are to bo. ;
111led and addro11od to'
U11 M. Ritchie, Troa1urorr
Eaotom Local Schoot ·
Dltlrlct, 50008 SR 881,
RHdavlllo, Ohio 45n2 and
plllnlt morkocl on tho ouF :
oldo "Bidolor Building• and ·
"Bido
lor . HAVC."·'
SucC41taful bidder will be
required to lequire a porlor·
mane• bond acceptable to
owner.
..
The . boara raaerveo tha:
right to reject all bid a or an)--:
portion o 1 bid. For add!-" tlo11a1 lnlormotlon, ploa1l
contact Doryl E. Well, .
Suporlntondent, at (740) · ·
88HI078.
· -·
Ull M. Rltchto·, Treuuror ·
(5) 5, 12, 18, 26 4TC .

A&amp; DAuto Upholstery • P111, Inc

Iii:.
lil!!l

0 ean; 0 wner

Beverly Hills residents reject
first-of-its-kind fur label measure

Public Notice

~

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Iii:.
Garages, Pole Bu ilclings. Roofing . S iding if.!!:
" SplJciali1ing In Log llorne•"
Commercial &amp; Res idential
28 yrs. axp.
Licens~d &amp; Insured ~

C

3. Forever missed, never forgotten. May God hold yqu in the palm of His,

TQ REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $7.00 PER LISTING • $12 IF PICTURE INCLUDED

.

Start Doting TOftltltll HOvo t~

.Custody of Simpson
children ·unclear

"At Home in the World ." She plans
to sell the letters, which run the
gamut from formal to smi.tten to
impersonal . reflecting tpe course of
their relatio nship .
Salinger, now SO and stiJJ ·obsessively private, last wrote for publicalion in 1965.
Ms. Mayn ard said the decision to
sell the letters. which will be offered
as a lot, was fin~ncial. They arc

F'lriOnlll

piaVIOO tno Of1lo

By JEfF WONG
.
.
Assoeiated P~ss Writer .
· BEVERLY HILLS , Calif. (AP) - .Though ~oiers in this city of elegan ce rejected a measure requiring fur. gartnents to bear labels explaining
how the animals died. the bill 's supporters said they. won the publicity war.
.LOS ANGELES (AP) - Is there
Measure A, the sole issue on Tuesday's ballot , was defeated by 3,363
an agreement for O.J. Simpson to votes to I ,908 votes, or 63.8 percent to 36.2 percent; c ity spokes woman
keep custody of his two youngest Robin Chancellor said. A little over a quarter of the city 's 20,000 regischildren? Simpson's lawyer says
tered voters· cast ballots.
·
'yes. Their grandfather says no. The
" It's disappointing to lose the election, but we ' ve wo n the battl e," said
children 's lawyer thinks so, and
Luke Montgomery, campaign manager of Beverly Hills Consumers for
Simpson isn ' t commenting.
Informed Choice, the j!roup behind the measure.
,
·
Sydney. 13, and 10-year-old
" All we wanted was a lillie tag telling people what animals go through
Ju stin Simpson , the children o'f and we got front pages all o ver the planet," he said . " A Jot of people
Simp son and hi s slain - ex-wife , around the world now know about the" cruelly these animal s are put
Ni co le Brown Simpson , have been through."
·
··
at the center of a custody battle
Some famous residents such as Jack Lemmon, Sid Caesar and Larry ·
between their father and their moth- King supported the measure, which would have been the lirst in the nation .
er 's p:lrents,
The measure would have required furrier s to place cre dit card-size d
' Ms. Simpson 's fath er, Lou tag s on furs costing more than $50, warning thai the animals may have
Brown , insisted Tuesday that no cus- been electrocuted, gassed, poisoned, clul;&gt;bed , stomped, dro wned or
tody ·agrcemen1 had been reached snagged by steel'-jawed traps . The law would have carried a $ 100-per-item
and was angry at Simpson 's lawyer
fine for violation s.
·
for talking about the negotiations to
"The fact that the city rejected this ineasure shows that Bev erly Hill s is
Th e Associated Press.
not the place to try goofy ideas, " Rudy Col e; No on A Commillec cam" ! don ' t .k.now why the al!orney paign manager, told the Los Angeles Times irt a story publi shed today.
was discuss in g it," he said. " It 's
Voter Judith Karl an was angry about $60.000 cost of the speci al elecsupposed to be confidential. "
tion .
·
. Simpson's lawyer, Bernard Leck"It's a terrible waste of money, " she said. " It could ' ve been put on a
ie. sa id Monday that ail agreement ballot with six other things to vote on. What is so important about this?"
giving cu stody to Simpson was
The pro-Measure A group argued that retailers have mrsled consumers
ready to he signed.
hy saying animals are killed humanely. The campaign raised $75,000 and
Simpson refused to comment and sentS,OOO videotapes to registered voters showing hidden camera excerpts
seemed distressed that his lawyer of Bev~rly Hills fur merchanls claiming the deaths were merciful.
was disc uss ing the matter publicly.
The No on A campaign spent $81,000. say'ing .the initiative was anoth· :
Asked what was holding up reso'· ~r attack by animal rights exlremists who want to hurt the fur industry.
luti o n of the children 's custody,
. Behrouz Mahboubi, who works 111 properly management, said it was a
Brown said, " It depends on him ,"
matter for the federal government, not a municipality, to decide .
referring to Simpson and adding:
"This is not a practical ·thing. How could a store or shopkeeper know
" He 's out of town ."
. where a coat is coming from , or how they kill the animal?" Mahboubi said.

J.D. Salinger's love letters to be auctioned at Sotheby's
student and he was 53. The auction
is set for June 22.
Ms. Maynard quit school to live
in an i-solated cottage · in Corni sh,
N.H .. with Salinger, who has
shuimed public life . He ended their
rel ati onship in 1973.
Ms. Maynard, wlio for 25 years
dec lined to di sc uss the relationship ,
l.ast year revealed Salinger's eccentrit:ities and .fixati ons in · a memoir,

005

1 "

.

'

Dro4t •
, '

...... ~

.

�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, May 12,1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

Wednesday, May 12, 1999

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

••

ALLEYOOP

..

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP

ALDER ,
Help Wanted

110
want To 5eH Your Stuff? Call Rlv·
er&amp;lde Auction And Let Us Sell It
For Voo 7.,.2~89

Need 7 Ladles To Stll AIIOn 740

REGISTERED NURSE

CCU, ED, Mo&lt;1ISorg Cu"ent WV
State ueonse. RoleYant E..,.JI.
oneo Reply To Jacl&lt;lon General
Hoopllal, PO Bo• 720, Ripley,
WV 2S271 (304)372 2731 EXT
313 EOE

11 o Help Wanted

lion/Qualifications available, call

Bo• 875, Ripley WV 2527t

RESU!IES UNLIIIITED Ollors
Personalized Resumes And
Much Morel Interview Materials
To Get You Prepare d, 74Q 388·

AVON I All Area&amp;! To Buy or Sell
sntnoy Spears 304-675-1429
Babysitter Needed For 4 Year
Old Prefer In My Home Trans·
portattOn &amp; References Required
740.367-7120
computer users Needed Work
Own Hrs $25K $80KJ Yr 1 800·
476-8653 1n1 www tcwp c:om

x

Cooks &amp; Wailress Apply at
Country Comer eara. In letart
Cosmetologist Needed, Business
Growing, Guaranteed Wages
Plus More 740 446-7267

-

"IrS ALL GOOD"
What We Have To Offer
frldil&lt;l Mav 14th , 00 7 00

lJJWIJD
BQut« till 4 ' 64
Huntlngtqn WV
OR

Sa!Yala~t

Mav 15rh
lQQAM - l'DDPM
Htlrmtoa roo
Exit l85 Ott I 64

timate

e..,.rtonce ~~ 740-378-6349
sooka energetic

1988 Danville 14•70 With E•·
pando 3 Bedrooms. 2 Baths,
$11,500, OBO Must Mo\181 740·
388·9567

(740)448-3493

WALL·CEILING CLEANED EX·
Von ScHrader V53 Power Wall·

lng program aggressive compansatlon and benefits package,

Cleaning System · Protects palnl,
leaves glass retards chalking

$16,50000 (740) 446-8113

and tuHlon assJstance tor prates-

Anti-Mildew no odor, sanitizes

slonal development Opportunity

Free estimates

1992 t4x70 Oakwood 2 Bed·
rooms, 2 Full Baths, All Electric

Can Clearly

tiCI"Ie•an•at-(30011i11)6iilt75-4040illlllii..,ioillill
ment For more Information, con-

1·600 &amp;14-4225
RIECHMANN
TRANSPORT, INC

-

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

EOE
Scenic Hills Nursing Center Is
Now Accepting Appllat lon&amp; For
The Position Of Social Services
Director, LSW Plea&amp;e Send Re
sume And Salary Requirements
To Charla Brown At Scenic Hills
Nur1ing Center, 311 Buckrldge

1

frlgerator And Stove Included,

1 Can Aft&amp;&lt; 4 PM 740-245-1302.
All real estate advertising In
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fatr Housing Act
or 1968 which makes It lllegal
to advertise "any preference.
limitation or dlscnmlnation
based on race color religion
sex familial status or national
origin, or any ln1entlon to
make any such preference,
llmltaUon or dlscnmlnation •

!

1

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements 'or real estate
WhiCh Is In viOlation ot tne
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwe!Wngs
adVenlsed In this newspaper
are available on an equal

opportunity basis

Class BOTR
Team Straig ht Tru ck Late Model
FrelghtllnefS With Sleepers Must
Have Air Brake Endorsements,
800 M1le Rad1us Home Deliver~•

Oolllpollo co- College
Close To Home) CaH
Todayl 7 - 7 1-8()().
214-11452, Regt90-05-12748
(Career~

180 Wanted To Do
Approved Master licensed Electrician WV025956 Free Est!·
mates for Residential Services

(304)675-7927

310 Homes for Sale
2103 Mount Vernon Avenue 3BR
~ 1/2BA Family Room, Garage,

CenlraiAir Patio, Porch $77 000
(300)675-2533
3 Bedroom Spilt Entry Brick
Home on Route 2. at Ut Alto
Built-In Kitchen Olningroom LR
3 Baths, FP, Woodburning stove
on nearly 5 acres land (304)895·

3861

Christian Woman Will Provide
Oaycare In My Home Only

GoodMVR

Day For 2, Etc CPR Cerlllled,
EMT Cart Pending Refrencea

rage 121124 Building Barn &amp;
Tractor Shed, 69 1!2 Acres Or

740-245-9582

Will Sell House &amp; Loti Malgs Co
740-992·3537

Weak~

Pay

Health Insurance Available

Work Well With Tile PlJ&gt;IIc
For More information Call 800·

437-8764, Hrs 8 30 AM ·5 ~ M
Full time Truck Driver Needed for
Retail Business ~ Call Carolina

Lumber &amp; Supply Co (304)875·
1t60. or bring resume In at 3t2
Sixth Street, Pt Pleasant

wv

Gallipolis OH 45631
Hrlng

HEAVY EQUIP OPERATORS
AND CARPENTIORS
2 Vears Experience
Necessary Callt-800-339-6518
Between 8 00 AM 5 00 P:M

An Equal Oppo~unlly Employor
Openings

For

STNA'S, LPNS, RADIOLOGY
TECH'S, RESTAURANT MAN·
AOERS, CALL 740.446-4188, Or
Stop By 995 Jackson Pike Suite
20t, Gallipolis
Jewelry Sales Retail Sales and
Computer Experience Rectulred
Acquisiti ons Fme Jewelry 151

Second Ave Gallipolis Apply
Monday thru Friday
Keebler Co Ia now accepting
raaumes for the po&amp;lllon of Wee·
kend Merchandiser Gr ocery ex·
perlence preferred Send resume

to Keebler Co

3959 Beech·

MIOCI,Ona WV25545

Labors Start $7 An Hour Car-

pentry, Roollng &amp; Meaonry Full
Time, In Gallpolls Area 740·2561722
UTTLE CAESARS Is Now Hiring
All Poaltlona , Drivers, In-Store
And Aulataf)t Manager PostAvailable Drivers Earn
Hourly Wage + Tips &amp; Commla-

Ilona

1101111 Please Apply At Tho
poiiUUio

cell References Has Privata
Room And Full Care In Her Home
For The Elderly For More Info
740· 256·6342 , Also Nutritious
Meal Planning And Wheal Chair
Accessible
Connie

General Office Part Time As
Needed ClAt47t c/oGalllpolla
Dalty Tribune 825 Third Avenue

Immediate

CNA With 20 Yrs E•P And E&gt;-

c......

Local Ttuctdng Cempany Seoklng
Qualified Truck Drivers Good
Pay And Beneflla Send Resume
To Driver, PO Box 109 Jack
son, Oh~ 45640, Or Call 1 740·
288-1463 To Schedule An Inter·

view.

tilled In Meigs and Athena Coun
Ilea Reasonable rates open 24
hours, seven days per week, 740·

Doeorator, Ponlblo 30 ·35 Hrs
l'lr Wool&lt;, Day Shill Only, Cake
Doeotatillf Ellpe~ance Roqulrad
Will Nluml, COlt Gelllpolla Dllry
a.-n, 7-3278

•18 35/Hr Inc

benetlle, No Experience

For

App And E..., Info Coli 1-800·
813-3585, Ellt - · IAM·9PM,

out tote lor $89,000, 740·992
2704 740-992·!SS96
Corner Lot, 2605 Garfield Ave .
Pt PI $69 900 (304)675-3379
EXCEL~ENT

CONDITION: 2

Story a Bedrooms, 2 112 Baths,
Nell!r Holzer, Immediate Posses·

E &amp; S lawn Service Design 1m·
plementatlon , and Service
Available for Spring Clean up,
fertilizing and planting Free estimates . Satisfaction guaranteed

For Sale By Owner 3BR, 1 1/
2BA , large family room &amp; office,
upstairs .totally remodeled, new
roo!. gulterlng, water softner &amp;
lots of extras 29t2 Anniston
Driv~. Pt Pleasant (304)675·
2608 Leave Message on Ma·

Greg Milhoan 304/675-4e28
Electric Maintenance Service
Wiring, Breaker Boxes Light Frx·
tura, Heating Systems and Re

modeling (740)441 1401
Elim Home- care lor elderly or
handicapped Everything fur
nlshed except doctor and medi·
cine catt740-992-3360
Georges Portable Sawmill don 1
haul your logs to the mlll just call

304-675-1957
Interior &amp; Exterior Painting, Ex·
perlenced, References Reason·
able Rates For Free Estimate.

740-388-8041
Mary's Oaycare, low' rates fle~elble
hours 18 ~ears experience call

740-742-D506 a~'t/1~1116

chine
For Sale By Owner 4BR, 3000
Square Foot House 4 Car Ga·
rage. 5 Acres Very Secluded
$199 999 (603)368 9436
House For Sale 2219 Oak St.

Pt Pleasant $28,000 (304)895·
Large family home for sale on ten
lovely acres Four bedrooms. two
and one half baths, two fireplaces,
formal living room and family
room four car garage and two
storag, buildings two apart·
ments which are completely fur·
n1stled Please call 740-992-

condllioned, $260-$300, sewer,
water and trash Included, 740-

992·2167

MQblle home tor rent In Racine,

no pall 740-992·5856

Al)llrtments
for Rent

440

Will do odd jobs
(304)675-4538

hauling,

Will Mow Weedeat Any Size

Yard, Ditches, Hllloldos,

7~0.441·

FINANCIAL

21 o

INOTICE I

OHIO VALLEY PUSLISHING CO
recommenda that you do bull·

with peoplo you know, and
to aend money through the
1
have lnveatlgated

230

Profeaalonal
Servlcea

Carpet and Upholstery Cleaned
without "Steam•
Abtorbtnt
Compounds. Soaple11 Anli·At·
soli Detergents used excluaive·
ty Safe tor all fabtlca Fast dryIng (1 · 2 hourat Eliminates OVIJ·
wetting Guaranteed Work Call

or

Cloarly Clean at (ag4j875· 40~0
lor Free Eatinetesl

nlshed and unfurnished, securJty
deposit required no pets, 740·

992·2218
t Bdrm • E~~:tra Nice First Month
Free With One Year lease

appliances &amp; dlahw..her Includ-

ed, 740·992·4514 ask lor Chris
Martin
Reatored Victorian home situated
on 12 acres, VIllage Middleport,
secluded and privata, appointmont, caH 740-fi92.56IHI
home 4 Bedroom, 2 1/2 Baths,

Living Roem, Dining ROCI1I, Eat-In
Kltchon Lg Family Room 740·
245-9337
Thr" bedroom homo with loti or
cloiOt speeo, clooa lo school, on
corner tot, ato111g1 building, one
bedroom rental home lncludld,

WV

2 walk behind Gravely&amp;· one
runs lxcellent condition , one tor

parlo $400, 740·742 -2373 alter
otpm
Air Conditioners Used 01fferent
Sizes ,~ Guaranteed! 740-886

AIIAZING

IIETABOLISM

1-888-640-0521

600-38~

Apt for Rent warer And Trash
Paid No Pets In Gallipolis 740·

Complete Set 91

Good selection of uaed homaa
wlth 2 or 3 bedrooms Starting at

388·1100

$3995 Quick dall118ry Call 740

2 bedroom apartment in Middle·
port, we pay water sewer &amp; trash,
you pay gas &amp; electric, $200 per
month , S100 deposit, 740· 992·
7806

2 Paymenta No Payment
After 4 Vears. 304-7311'7295

Make

Mobile Home For Sale Central

740-44H885

New 1~99 14x70 three l;edroom,
Includes 6 months FREE lot rent
Includes waaher &amp; dryer skirting,
deluxe slaps and setup Only

$200 74 per month wl1h $1150
down. Cslll-800-837-3238
New Bank repoa only 2 left we

flnaneo cal 304-722·1148
Pleaae Help! 3 Bedroom, ~
Baths, just take over Payments!

1-888-736·3332
Rent Bu&amp;tar New 1999 14x70 2

or 3 Bedrooms Only $995 00
Down St95 00 per month Free
Delivery and Set Up Call 1·800·
948-5676
Used SlngleWide, Around S1 oo
per month Cal 1·800-948·5678
Oakwood Homes Barboursville,
WV $499 Down Single Wide,
$i9~

Down Double Wide 304·
7311-3409

330 Farms for Sale

privacy, lor $68,500 mey spin up,
740.992·3564

340 Business and
Buildings
Chrlaty s Fam1ly Living property
for sale. 202 204 N Second Ave
nua, Mkldleport Four 2 bedroom
apartments two commercial units,
39 5x116', brick, old Firestone

building. ,Asking price $69.500,
make offer Income St620 month,
call 740-992·4514 , ask tor Chris
Martin
Commercial Building In Henderson For Sale or lease Call

(803)366-9436

2 Bedroom, 76 VIne Stroot, Galli
polls, Ohio 740-387-7686
2bdrm apts , total electric, appliances furnished. laundry room
facilities close to &amp;chool In town
Applications available at VIllage
Green Apts 149 or call 740-992·

3711 EOH
Apartment lor rent In Middleport

no pets, 740·992·!SS56
Apartment, Galllflolls Ferry, De·
posit Required
No Pets

(304)675-2548
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PA1CES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
lrom S279 to $358 Walk to shop
Equal Houelng Oppo~unlly
Beautiful Modern t Bedroom
Apartment Rent &amp; Uti!hles, Inter·
view, References, No Pets, lease,
Oeposil Non Smokers In City,

740-446·3884

Starting 0 $9 500 County water
Double wldll are Permlned. 5%
down Land Contraet, Free Mapa!

1 (800)·2t3-8365

380

Real Estate
Wanted

We Buy land 30 · 500 .Aores

We Pay Cash 1·800·213·8365
AnlllonyLandCe

RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent
2 Bedroom w/Baaement &amp; Ga
r1g1 Deposit &amp; References, No

First Avenue, One And Two Bed·
rooms, From $275 ·1350(Mo , Se-

curity Dopos• 740-44t-Q95:!
Furnished 2 Bedro9f'll Apartment
Across From Park, AC, No Pats
References. Deposit $325/Mo

North 3rd Ave , Middleport 2
bedroom. unfwnlahed apartment
deposit &amp; references, 740-lit92·

0165

One Bedroom Apa rtment In Pt
Pleasant Furnished Very Nice

and Clean No Pets
(304)675 1386

Phona

One bedroom apartment In Mid
dleport one bedroom furnished

hOUse In Oolllpolla, 740.992·9191
Tara Townhouse Apartments
very Spacious , 2 Bedrooms 2

floOrs OA, 1 112 Bath fully Car·
peled Petlo No Poll Laaao Plus
Security Depo&amp;lt Required, 740·

4464181, 740-446-0101
~In Rivera Tower now accepting
appllcaliona for 1BR HUD sub·
stdiztd apt for eiQerly and hand·

leappod. EOH 304-67&amp;-8679
Upatalra Three Room Apartment

At 851 Sacond Avenue. Gelllpo·
lis, Next To Library, $350/Mo ,.

Plua Ooposll No Poll Call Deb-

12.&lt;60 two bed-ii;-total - ·
with eontra1 air, lntorlor living """"
lira damaga, $2000, 304·882·

Hou11, Near Centerville fl'hur·

740-367-o325, Alllor3 ag ~M

MEH CHAN DIS E

Electric Hospital Bad Mattress &amp;

Bed Side Table Wheel Chair Llll
For Van Call Aher 6 oo PM 740
256-1141
For Sale 50" FICA Home Theatre
Cryer $80 Kenmore Counter Top

Dishwasher StOO (304)675·
6693
Graco Open Top
Takea
Batteries. "~~• '"~""

·o·

Gava $85 oo Want
245-5074

Gravley Walk Behind with 38'

oo

Mower $550
Also some accessor ies tor sate (740 )· 441·
Grubb's Piano- tuning &amp; repairs
Probtems? Need Tuned? Call the

plano Dr 7.,_448-4525
I JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuln In Slock
Call Ron evans. 1-800 537 9528

Kenmore Washe r I Dr~ar Tod·
dlar Car Bed All In Good Condi·

llonl (740)-446-3849
Ll~coln

Ranger 8 Portable Weld·

er, Has Own Engine Used 128
Hour&amp; Asking $2 200, 740 387·
0280
Paeloln1 Ben 83 Pantlum, 56 6 lal&lt;l
modem 36X CO Rom, 8MB Ram

1 GB hard drl'le, monitor Included,
$500, 74Q.992·5035, ask lor Josh
alter 4pm
Pewter Flgulrlnes Collectible
Unicorns, Castle, Wizard, etc

llntlquo Sola-Tabla Occup Ja
pan Teacups &amp; saucer Seta
Fanton Mllkglasa Lamp &amp; Other
Pieces Couch Cushlona(Pieas·
ani Valley Design) Adunon
Wool Aug 7'115' Fisher Stereo
System, Jenny Lind Babybed
Home Interior, And More

(304)675-7!SS5
PRIMESTAR
F- orroet Spoellll
Call now 1 600-263-2640
pap 1 s suppLy
We Are Professional lnstallallon
And Service Supply We Sell
Wholesale To The Public We

Stock Janltrol Heating And Cool
tng Equipment, Duct Work Reg·
talers, And R•lated Materials For
You To Install Your Own Or We
Can Furniah A List Of Dealers To

lnotall For You II You Don 1 Ca ll
Ua We Both Loaal 553 Jackson

Plko, 740·446 ·6308 800·291 ·
0098

Houlehold
Gooda

Appllancea·
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryara Rangea Refrtgratora, 90 Day Guaranttal

French City Moytag, 740·448·
7795

Appaloosa Gelding 15 years
oldJt5 2hh. excellent trail horse,/
great disposition shown In 4H lor
9 years, loa ds easily, good be ginner horse, includes 15• sad·

dlo blldle, blanket, $t400 (llrm)
or horse only St200 email (daar
onoaccess mountaln,net) Phone
304-576-2126

CKC Jack Russell Terrier 9
weekS old $225 00 (304)675
4679
full Blooded Himalayan Kittens,

W,aterllne Spacial

740·2!SS-60t2

314 200 PSI

:S1:.:5:::,000::.;.::00:.::_7:._40-_::.:_38:._7_:-Q:._15:._7_:.____~:,

Pay o" 740-446-4548
Sale By Public Auction A t966

Chrysler New vorker t14t257 AI

10 00 A M On 5/29/99 At Tho

Block brick sewer pipes, Wind·
owa, lintels, etc Claude Wlhters

Rio Grande OH Ca ll 710 245·
5121

WHEN [ HOLLER

$20 900 00 4630 55PTO HP
same specs 22 900 3010 2WD
42 PTO HP 1 Remote We t
Brake lnd PTO t3,500 00 3010

4WD Same Specs 16 500 00
Coma See The New TNSS. 65 75
4WD models wlttt Super Steer
will turn ahort8r than a 2WO
Kaefer&amp; Service Canter St Rt
87 Pt Pleasant &amp; Ripley Road

Phone (304)895·3874
Used Lift Truck Forks For Sflle

Various SlzOB $75 00 ·$1 00 00
Par Sat Will Trade For Wood
Burner 740-379-2757

630

Livestock

2 Registered Angus Bulls For
Sate Bloodline, Touchstone and

Bando, 740.388-6756
4 year old kid broke Appaloosa
pony 10 year old mare kid brQke,
also riding lessons, Ruth Reeves,

740-698 3290
4·Arablan Mares , t-Walklng
Mare 1- 10 year old Mare 1/2
Quater and 1/2 Morgan Dried
Hose Manure $5 00 par bag In·
stallment Plan for Horses to Good
!;tomes! 25tJ. Down Affordable

(740) 388 6358

Fair Pigs $85, Cured Pork, USDA
Inspected $2 25 Per Lb 740
~45 9557
Fa1r Pigs for Sale! Excellent Blood
Llnesl For mora Information can

(740) 245·5672 or (740) 367·
0583

Outstanding Angus And Chiengus Bulls Reasonably Priced,
Slate Run Farms Jackson Oh10

740-286 5395
led 740.949-9027

TRANSPORTATION

710 Autoa for Sale

Pollee Impounds
Repo s For Listings Call 1 800

319 3323 Ellt 4420
t 985 Horizon 4 Doors 5 Speed. 4

72 Mack truck, day cab, 237 en·
glne, runs good good tlraa.
$20oo 1980 Chevy 2 ton dump
truck with Tralleze trl axle heavy
equipmen t trailer, $8000 , 740·

~·! no~ev

M~

1995 Ford F·150 Xl 5 Speed,
AMIFM Radio, Air Conditioner,

300 6 Cylinder 9 500 Mllea, 740.
448·9637 can Atter 5 ~M
1995 GMC Jlnvny Lola 01 Ell1nlaL _
Asking $15,000, Shop Around

...,.

'"'

TEIQQ&amp;£1Tt\EY Pl.AYEDTf\i:EEN-1!&gt;
Ct'Ef\N..f lt-lr.llt-165,

IJ.r.&gt;T~"CT~

f\~OCI'(.

N-It&gt; 0\(;lt.l'\6EHO
~ ~ :'lll-la£~'

~~~=-~::::..m~~m&gt;

1
FO~·MNU'\E. I,

1988 Ford 150 Custom 4x4 300
six cylinder, 4 speed, PS, PB,
cruise air, good 6 ply tires . top·

11J\ltHJ€1..AYef,
~ 1l'f &amp;Nit: W~':J

per towtng package, $4500 740
949 2490

fii\N.L'( CNUJ...f.DI

1989 Ford Ranger XLT 4&gt;4. 2 9
Motor. Co Player. Aeeu Hitch,
Run• Goodt $2,.tOO 740·.t•6·

3746
1999 350 Ford Plck·Up, 12 000
Milos, Dlese), 6 Spoed 740·3677539

_______.,...

OK &gt;IAAT
" PAIN ANP

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

~F FERI N&amp;• &gt;
PO 'I"OU !(NOW

18 boat 115 hp motor, wllh trail-

lHE DEFINITION
OF 'PAIN ANP

EI"\OT IOOA L
01 STRF:S.S .,

er, $975 740·992·3539

WOULD 'I'OU
LI~T

l'lER.

BREATH
UNDER
" PAIN" Oil.
FERIN6"'

\I

Baja 216, l:.lke New, Garage

Kepl,740·256·1 376, After 9 00 Pm "'
Bomber Bass Boat 85 HP John; ;.
son Till And Trim Trailer lf"xcel

lenl Condlllon $2,400, 740·258·t093.

..

For rent· fami ly type river camp
alte, tor full hook-up, for camping
rraller. water electric &amp; sewer.
also dock site with cement patiQ
for rent, caii74Q-992-5956

760

East
Pass
Pass
All pass

Twins

35 Lassoed

43 Dlopetch boat
45 Window
curtain
material
47 "Leave-Beaver ·

48 Above, to
Francis Scott

Key
49 Drug-purity
agcy
50 Hardware

Item
52 ·-the
Walrus"

53 Broke bread
54 Comedian
Sperka

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity C1pOer cryptograms are created from quotations by lamoue people oast and presenl
Eact1 ltner 1n the cipher slanda tor anOther Today s cJuw f fKIUBJs R

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PAEVIOUS SOLUTION ·one has to look out lor engonee rs - they beg1n w11h
sewtng machmes and end up w 1th the atomtc bomb " -

Marcel Pagnol

-'-=-~-~-;~'_S_CQ_!~}~\-;ol!~!fs•
0 four
Reorrange letters of
JCramblod WOtdt

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Jow to form four words

WOlD
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tho

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PR!ZPE

I I I I' I

~:::;S~Y::;T;::U~R~~~,'

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She thtnks that a common
housefly ts looktng for a way to

l.....j,-.J..-L...j,_.J.._J you deve lop from step No J below

•

eve Jolnll 740-245-!5877

SCJtAM-LETS ANSWERS

New gas tanks &amp; body perto 0 &amp;
R Auto Ripley, WV (304)372·
3933 or lo81J0.273-9329

I

New Wholesale Windshield &amp;
Body Parts Available , 740

ue.

Don 1g&lt;t Slung by high prK&lt;S '
Shop rh• c/om(i&lt;d srci/OJ1

Herfer · Ztppy · Forum · Omelet · MEMORY
One old guy to another "Nothtng ts more responstble
for the qood old davs than a bad MEMORY ·

IWEDNESDAY

ROBOTMAN

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

MAY12I

t985 Airstream 31 Ft Travel "'
Trailer Rear Twin Beds Center

Bath With Shower, A/C, Ml·
crowave, lots Of Closet Space

With Cedar Line Large Side

'

SERVI CES

810

Home
lmprovementa
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Uncondillonalllfellme guarantee •
Local references turn ished Es-

tabllehed 1975 Call 24 Hr1 (740)
446·0870, 1-800·287·0578 ~Og · .

General Home Malntanenca· Painting, vinyl aiding,
carpentry, doors, windows, bathl,

mobile home repair an&lt;t more For
lrH ostlmata coli Chet, 740·992·
6323
livingston 1 Baument Water
Proofing, all baaement repatra
done, free tallmates, llfetlma

guorante 12)'ro on job O&gt;perl·
oneo 1300)89&amp;-3867
Profeaalonal, 20yra exper11nee

with 111 moeonery, briCk, bloel &amp;

s1one Also room addltlona, garages. etc Free eatlmatta

(304)n3-95SO

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

'

Residential or commercial wiring,'
naw aervlca or repairs Ml.atar '-""
cenaed electrician Rldeno~r

Electrical wvooosoe, 304·8?51796
•

·.•

32 Environment
agcy.
34 Sot lire to

~-l-.,lo:~_,~r:6,. F"'T(-.,j-r-l.....-ll ~- ;~~;:~= .~-~-;h~::.~.~g q~~:d~

PEANUTS

Budge! Priced Transmissions
and Engine&amp; All l)'P411 Acceas
To Over 10 000 Transmlulona,

790

Earher this year, I played a few
deals o n OKbndge , s ubstuuttng for
someone who had to take a phone
call M y cxpenence was thm no one
stops btddmg, and card- play tsn' t per·
feet In thts deal , I held the Nonh
hand
The ftrst round of btddmg should
escape crnoctsm. but the n West came
m wnh two hearts o n five to the m ne
No t my tdea of a good btd , yet thts
player dtdn't use the textbook when
e nten ng o ur a ucllons I wasn't enthu·
s tasttc about conllnutng wnh three
clubs on s uch a low poont -count, but
couldn 't brtng myself to pass e nher
I was n' t sure whether panner s three·
spade rcbtd was forctng or not, so I
rat sed JUS! tn case
If West had led a heart, lthtnk my
part ne r would have fallen to defeat
He would have lost the ftrst lnck to
East s kong, and a dtamond switch
would have gtve n the defenders a
trtck m eac h sun However, West
unw tse ly started wtth the club ace
and another club East dectded not 10
put up ht s c lub kmg, so my panne r
dtscarded the hean two
Besl now, u seems to me, ts to ruff
a club If West overruffs from three
trumps (qutle likely), yo u can wm hos .,
return, draw trumps e ndmg m the
dumm ), a nd run the clubs However
dec w played a spad e to ht s ace,
then ran the hean queen to East 's
kmg
The strange play contmued when
East led the club kmg. ruff, overruff
West extled wtth a low dtamond ,
declarer cqrrectly playmg dummy' s
quee n The spade kmg drew the mtss·
tng trumps, and South could clarm for
an above-average res~ lt

Auto Parte &amp;
Accessoriea

C&amp;C

1994 Plymouth Sundal)ce 4 Cy
llndsr, Aulom , AC, 87,000 Miles.
Has SpOiler, $2,200 oo 080,
740 256-1233

Jr -

·t.----._ 'wm mm~~

$5000, 742·2675

Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex-

1994 Cavalier 2 Doors. A/C Au
tomallc, $3.495, 1992 9ava11er 2
Doora A/C Automatic, $2 ,495
Cook Motors, 740-448·0103

flOW WIQ \flf. B.'.~t..e.N.L f:.N/1£.7

90 Chevy Astro van all wheel
drive PW Pl good condition,

1968 Toyota Corolla 146,000 lperlenca All Work Guaranteed,
Miles, $1 350, 1988 Ford LTD French City Mayteg 740·44t·
Station Wagon t39,000 $1 ,900 nilS
740-441·9606

t992 Olda Cut1~11 Sierra, V· 8,

-oq

730 Vans &amp; ~-WDs

1987 Toyota Celleo GT, 5 Speed,
A/C, Sun Rool, P S , P B , ~una
Great Call 740 448·2107, 740Appllanco Porta And Servlca All
245 9164

whne 740.742·2803

r

Pr~et7~~7269

ers Waterproofing

740-742-4510 or 740-388 9693

THE BORN LOSER

And Compare, This Is An Excel·
lent Vehicle. At An Excellent

1986 Buick Summerset Air. Auto

1990 Chevy Cavalier $895 two
door aport coupe 5 speed runs
excellent, excellent condition ,

brew
23 Dexterous
24 South Dokoto
capitol
25 Hook - 27 One olthe
Bobbooy

By Phillip Alder

720 Trucks for Sale

2602

01 ~ow Parts, Aaklng $1,500
740.441 ·1176 .

Brewer

22 Fermented

Online bidding
and more bidding

;

Automatic S W $365 740-4.t6
4999

t987 .Plymouth Reliant Wagon
Very Good ~hape, Run Ext lots

property
19 lrkl
20 Singer

9 Permit to
10 Oulla plant
11 Joromlr Jogr's
org
13 Heavy ohoe
18 Items of

slant

Tho Collection Dopl At 740·441 ·
1038 OVB Reserves The Right. ·
To Accept /Rejeet Any &amp; All Blda,

Awning , Electric Jack, Garag•
Kept, Purchased New, 740·446-

t987 Cttryaler New Yorker, goOd
shape, also need motor for 1987
Aslro Van, 740-742·2279

•

39 Cauood to

Bidder "As ts - Where Ia" With·
out Expressed Or Implied war
ra nt~ I May Be Stan By Calling-. ,

Cylinder. S585 1978 Buick V-8.

Good Work Car $2 000, 740.367·
0241 •

•

Gallipolis OH Sold To Highest

2303
11180 ·1990CARS

•

OVB Annex 143 Th ird Avenue,

90 Mazda RX7, block, PSR, 91K, 7278, 740-386·9062
security system, 5 speed, nice
stereo system. $4500 740 742·

42W-whMI
44 PI.,..,IHing unit
7 Supporting
45 Fleur-tower
411 XXVIII doubled
12 Hor.tul
48 A-ntly
13 Connon port
51 Grell VeMtlan
t4 Hovlngpolntor
15 Income from
55 Ellcllod
houelng
56 HouM and
16 Banned
•ounda
lnoectlclde
57 Aantod
17 CIA lororvnner 5I Htodod lor
18 Likely
cotaotrophe
21 Kind ol orongo
23 Anolyoto' org
DOWN
26 Oboervod
1 "Alley - ·
28 ""dor
2 Whltl HOUM
29 Kipling horo
lnlllolo
30 33 Acro10, to
Luigi
3 Performed
4 Put bulleto In e
31 Become a
gun
contntant
33 Twilight
5 Belt
36 nny oponlng
6 Foarod African
fly
37 Your, In Tours
7 Gift
38 Farm animal
40 Well ventllatod 8 llchea

Openmg lt!ad. • A

"SUPPER TIME"

~LtfTY".

Shuttle Large Pump 2 R•motes 4
outlets
2yr Full Warranty

4.

a•

225 bales of clover orchard
grass $1 50 a bale , model 640
New Holland round baler, net
wrap and twine wrap, less than
.1 500 bales baled through it,

1993 Dodge Colt, 5 Spae~. Good
Condlllon , 109.000 Milts $2,900
OBO 740.256·1233

Building
Suppllea

IT WORKS FINE

GALt,

WHITE'S IIETAL DETECTORS
740·~46·

'GIT UP AN' HELP
PORE OL' LOWEEZ:Y,
LAZY BONES ll

Ohio Valle~ Bank Will Otter For

t•
a•

I •

1995 Ford E•plorer, 4DR 42K M1,
Loaded, Mini Cond , Sand·Color
In &amp; Out By Owner (304)875·
6055

Ford new Holland Tractor Sale

North

South

742-2675

3930 4WD 46PTO HP. 192 TUr
bo Syncho BX8 Trans F And A

'"'*•

1 Lesa than 100

Vulnerable Netther
Dealer West

1998 Pontiac Trans-Am, Navy
Blue Metalhc 5 7 Liter LS 1 En
gina, Leather Interior 10 Speaker
Monsoon Stereo, 12 Disc CD
Changer Fully Loaded! Will Take

610 Farm Equipment

4d( AM·FM Cauotte, Cold Air,
$3 895 (304)675·4893, or 676
7684

4336

t A 9 8 4
• 5

1998 Buick Century Custom, 4
Doors Loaded, 18,000 Miles

OR CERTIFIED CHECK

$13,000 740·742 ·f405 daye,
740-742 2088 IM!nlngs

• Q 10
• K J 73
• J 73%
• K 6 4

South
•A876 52
• Q 2

Pat Sltttng In Your Hornet Aunt

$2t 95 Par tOO, j" 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100, All Brass Com
prasalon Flltinga In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jaekaon, Ohio, 1·800·537·9528

550

t997 Plymouttt Breeze , Loaded
$1 800, 1992 Gao Storm, $2 000

11o Withdraw Items From Sale Prt·
or To Sale Terms Of Sale CASH

FARM SUPPLI ES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

East

We st
• J 93
•98 654
t K 6 5
• A 9

53,000 MIIU $3 100 00, 080
740-256-1141!7 740-256-9183

not home
BeVs Creature&amp; 740-24&amp;-5599

• A 10
• Q 10
•QJ J08732

AJC, Cassette

1992 Nlalln Stanza. 4 door,

nuo , Gallipolis Ohio,

510

AKC
Reg1 stered
Mlmatura
Dachshund puppies red &amp; dap·
pie, 740.992 9989

• K4

1995 Neon $4,500, 1990 Grand · ,
AM New Motor $2 200 1998 Ev •
co~ $2,500, 740-448-7278
•

Adorable, Intelligent White Fa
mala Maltese. 3 Months , AKC All
Shot&amp;, Wormed Weighs 1 1/2
Pounds Tops Will Be 3 · 4

Pounds 740-446 1000

North

1995 Bu1ck LaSabre Custom 4

Doors, Blue Loaded 740·682 ·
7512

der. Autom

Pigs· ready 5115, $40 each, gra1n

HouiOOn Laft

$1 995 740-256-1093

1998 Gee Metro 2 Door, 4 Cylin-

Rate~

Ron Allison ,210 Second Ave·

Nice Smell 2 Bo~room, 5 Aoom

81 4-7119-79159

Supply 740 446·94 t 6 Gallipolis
Ohio

Oft 35 Right On Keeler Road, Blue

460 Space for Rent

Secluded farm house near Dexter, dtpollt and lttll required.

Windows, Gas &amp; Electric Water
Heaters, Plumbing &amp; Electrical
Parts, lntertharm, Miller &amp; Cote
man Air Conditioners &amp; Heat
Pumps Bennatt's Mobile Home

Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom

apartments at VIllage Manor and
Rl\lerslde Apartments In Middle·

2 BR 1urnlahad home In Mason
No pets Rererenctt required

$325/Mo , Plus Doposlt, No In·
lido l'ltsl 740-e82-9032

$57 69 Anchors $5 Doors &amp;

Johnson' a Used Furniture /Ap·
pllancas 740 446 4039 740 446100.4, 5 Miles Out Bulavma Pike

1'111 (304)87&amp;-5182

rar lnclud•d. Plant A Garden,

Or 1.8Q0.29HJ096

740-448-8235. 740 446.0577

bill Or Judy At 7:10:4j!-7323

mon Gallla SChoole, County WI·

Us Ws Both Loser 740-446-6308

0972 after 7 pm

Christy's Family Living, apartments home &amp; trailer rentals,
740 992·4514 apArtments avail·
able, furnished &amp; unfurnished

740·992 0165

LAND

$1,250! The Above Includes Nor-

Big Screen TV, $600 Kenmore

2BA Trailer with 3 porches

tn The Country, Ma fga Count~
near Rutland Making deals on
Combination Lo•• 5 to 1&amp; Acres
of rolling woods great building
&amp;Ilea, or usa as hunting land

$1,500,2 t/2 Ton $1,350 2 Ton

Discount Mobile Home
Parts &amp; Supply
Huge Inventory
VInyl Skirting Kits $299 95, 5 Gal
ron Aluminum Flberad Roof Paint
$25 21, 5 Gal White Roo! Paint

New Haven, 1 ~room, furnished
apartment, deposit &amp; references

In

Central Air Conditioning Added
To Your Furnace 3 Ton Installed

2 Bedroom Apartment, Rio
Grande Area Close T9 College

1 Acre + with 14x70 38R 1 11

2 Grave lot&amp; and Vaults •t
Valley Memory Gardens

COOLQQWN

!J1al ln81allatlon II You Don 't Call

1un11ies

$22,500 (304)576-2890

Brlttanlca Including Reference

2 Bedroom Apartment, Adjacent
To Unlverally Of Rio Granda
Campus, 740·245-5858

port From $249·$373 Cell 740·
992·5064 Equal Houolng Oppor·

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Encyclopedl~

Books, NeYer Used 1200 OBO

&amp; movies Call 740-446·2568

Small farm (52 acres) with mobile
home, self suftlclent with natural
water springs, 2 gas walls, soma
timber, 20 minutes from Athens,
10 minutes from Pomeroy, Iota of

ples Cell 740-44 t·1982

Min1 COndition 740-446--7106

$350/Mo Includes All Vtllltles
Deposit Required 1 888·840
0521

7.t0-742

One year old full blooded German
shepherd, papers all shots, dog
lags, Inquire withi n 740·992·
3321 leave name and number If

Works Goodl $150 Call Alter 5
PM 740-446-2398

385-9621

5 AKC Boxer pupa

1972 GMC v 8 Auto. New Dual
Tu rbo, Reily Wheels AWL Trlea,

8101

$95, 740-446-3908

Case Window, A1r Conditioner

Oepoalt Required , Call Toll Free,

5597

SIOO Each, 740-256-6995

1 Room &amp; Bath Rio Grande Area
S200/Mo All Utlltles Included

(304)736-5554

Weeks Old Had Shots, Been
Wormed $250 Each, 740·245-

40 Automatic Pistol $85, New In
Box, And 5• Portable Color T_V

Doors, 2116 Walls, Thermopayne

low Interest Rates For 1st Time
Buyers Limited Time Avaltable,

Pleasant,

740-385-43e7

bill-.

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1995 Dutch Mobile Home. 14x70
VInyl Siding, Shingle Rool, Steel
Windows Deck $19,000 740·
256-6980

Pt

3 Bedrooms, Addison Area , De·
potlt &amp; References Required ,

1973 HHiciMt two bodroein mo·
740-992-5038.

6 00 p m 740·992·2526, Russ
Moore owner

Breakthroughlll Lose 10 200
Pounds Easy Quick
Fast
Dramatic Results 100% Natural
Doctor Recommended Free Sam-

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

t8d0 VInyl Shlnglo, Assumo
Loan. 1·800-383 e1e2.

Buy or sell River ine Antiques
t12~ E Meln Street, on Rt 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 1o DO
amto600pm SundaytOOto

1 Bedroom Apt Unfurnished

Mobile ho,rne alta available batween Athena and Pomeroy, call

2486 anytime.

Antiques

530

0047

(304)773-5881.

740-lltl2-8154

1500 270 Cal1ber $350 00, For

Street ,

Workbench, Large Family Room,

$52,000 boaufilul 501&lt;201 lot, an

Super

$279 00 Per Month, Plus Utllltlea
740-446·2957
$275 month utllltlos paid VIand

Spring Valley, 2 story lamlly

Bualneaa
Opportunity

1 and 2 bedroom aperun;nts, IUr·

Sewage, Trash, $315/Mo, 740·
446·0008

tlon. newly remodeled, carpel,

70

More lnlormallon 740-379·2601

740·388·8676

wide, 4 bedroomo, block lounda·

Mod

month, total eloc1rle" plus $1 SO depoon, no pelS 740-742 2714

Now Tak ing Applications- 3!5
Wast 2 Bedroom Townhouae
Apartment&amp; , lncludea Water

Pomeroy- on• bedroom home,
needs cosmetic repalra $ t 2 000,
make offer, Syracuaa· double

Sporting
Goods

trailer two bedroom , $250 p,r

5 Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;
lake View, Gellla County
$32,000 More Acreage Available

Will Care For Elderly Or Handl·
capped Persons In M~ Home,

t-888-818.0128

Winchester Mod 70 50Th Annl
versary 300 Magnum Caliber
$1 000 00 • Smith&amp; Wesson Mod

Open House, May 16th, 2·4PM
Modarn All Brick Home, 4 65
Acres Off Jim Hill Road 3-5 Bed
rooms 2Baths, 2 Car Garage with

Washers dryers refr igerators
rangts Skaggs Appliances , 76
VIne Street, Call 740-4,.6-7398

tal electric $300 par month plus
$150 deposit no pata , 12xt50

2292

All Electric with HaatPump, City
Water, Satellite Dllh (304)675·
6t59

Will Do
Babysitting In my Homel Any
Age, Smok&amp;-Froo House hold,
(304) 675-8763

More Very N~II(:J04)675-B055

GOOD USEO APPLIANCES

Winchester

C"lsty Seellon (740)-888-8506

Deck, Porch, Brick Outbuilding,

740-441-0000

Kitchen-Island, Walk·ln Closet.&amp;

3062

Need sitter tor the summer? Day
care with a pool Open Monday
thru Friday, ask for Kelly, 740·
667~ Tuppers Plains area,

Nuree Aldt Tralnl,ng Cleaees

Como Join Our '!Mm Thill Makes
A Dllloronce Wo Aro Ollerlng
Nur11 Aldo Training Claoua On
Slta At SCMIIc Hllll Nurllng C.,_
tor II You ._.. Pravloualy Com·
ploted An Application Plooao
Como And Apply Agoln 01' Conoact Pam Cold,..ll, 1'30 A M,_To
4 30 PM Wodnoldoy Thru Frl·
day 14 7~71110.

By owner 725 Page Street, Mtd·
dlapart, house &amp; 3 Iota must see
to appreciate, will sell house with-

667 6329

0682

Now Hiring A Full-Time Cake

3 Bedrooms 2 Bath Ranch House
7 Year1 Old 28•30 Attached Ga·

aion, 740-446-9872

E&gt;ep Noe WIR Ttaln PC Roq Earn
4tJK Cll1800-te3-7440

7 ~Joys ldl,lnc

Care has open-

Ings, S R 7. TUpper1 Plains Cor

MtdlcJ~I Procenor FT /PT No

Postal Jobo to

a Child

3BR /2BA VInyl&amp; Shingle Rool,
Garden· Tub C/Air,• Total Elect

~r.

Both Pos1110n&amp;
Alleast25 Yea" Old
Atlaast2 Years Experience

S12 00 Day For 1 Chll~. S20 oo

1994 Skyline/Suprema. t4x74-

3 Male Jack Russell Puppies. 7

Grade 270 Ca11ber $850 00 ,

Required 740-388-9162

1994 18x80 Sunshine Mobile
Horne, Th ree Bedrooms, Two
Bathrooms. Walk In Closets Utili-

Household
Goods

510

1 t f2 yr old AKC Registered Female Black Lab Housebroken
Very loving, Lovea Kids $tOO

To good home only (304)773
5730

141170 trailer, three bedrooms to-

Uttllles, Deposit &amp; Referen ces

Condition

CU.SSIIF8EDSI

520

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

199t 1411x7211 Shingle Roel, VInyl

ty Aoom EIOetriC Haa1 Pump, R&amp;-

REAL ESTATE

Business
Training

140

Class A OTR
Single Driver La le Model Ken·
worths With Reelers West Coast
Carner

Your Home Is Just A Phone Call

AWf&lt;t, 304-7311-7295

Siding,

Excellent

CLEAN' HOUSE
WITH THE

EMail

740-992·3194

tact Unda Dunlap 740· 446·0372

Town Hall, 218 Filth Stroot

DRIVING POSITIONS
AVAILABLE

740 446-1177

2 Bedroom Mobile Home In Port
er Area No Peta You Pay All

With Heat Pump 740·44HJ959,
740-379-2798

for promotion to sales manage

Fax

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes, air

services Industry TWo-year train

The Town of New Haven Is ac·
cepllng appllcattons for the poal·
lions of I'DDI manager and lilaguards tor the summer Apptlca·
tlons may be obtalhed at the

Home Most Weekends

tlon Now C&amp;rpot, CIA, Already On
Rented Lot, $6,000, 740·2581472

PERTLY Savas on repainting Indefinitely We uae the exclusive

740·742·3411

Owned &amp; Operated Company

t980 Trailer 12118!5 Good Condl·

professional tor sales carter In
the life Insurance and financial

Sunset Home Construction· ex·
parlance a plus, full Ume posiUon,

Work W1th fAnd ForA Famlty

Three bedroom home In Middle·
port , $350 month plus deposit,

t-888·582·334S

2874 Monday • Friday 8am-4pm
for appointment

I Benefits Package AvallabM

large 101 wllh goldfish ponds,

Expando, 2 Bedrooms , 2 full
batha, Fireplace, New Carpet

hours pe/\VIe\1\, Call 740·669·

Canoonsburg KY
Best am Flatbed Pay &amp;

JAWOEUREKANHCOM

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee UnlesiWoWinl

Salas Representative $12 billion
po~ormance

10&gt;&lt;50 traUor, Soulh Soeend AYO
nuo, Mlddloiport, llnlslled building,

1985 Neuaha, 14•70 with 8•20

company with 100+ years of sol-

Security Guards- musl be able to
work any shUt including weekends Must have clean pollee
record good work history reliable
transporlallon, valid driver's license home phone and must
have black steel toe safety
shoes S5 75 per hour, 32· 40

Pro Drl'lers Come Chock Out

(304)675 ·4040, lor a Froe El·

Eat In Kitchen LMng Room Bath,
2 Cat Garage, Porches Storage

Buildings, $425/Mo , Plus Diposll,
Phone After 5 ~M 740-4411-4254,

t9n Windsor, 14&gt;70, 3 bedroom,
1 &amp; 112 baths, prlco to sell, call
740-992·2763 ~ 740-992-63t3

Does Yo~o~r House Siding, Deck,
or Driveway need ._ cleanlng7 If
so Pressure Was~lng Is the an
swart Call Clearly Clean a1

Roofer needed. soma carpenter

Road, Bidwell, OH 4!SS 14
(Member Of EOE)

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

Driver

740-949-31ag

Now aorvlng Gallle and
surrounding antas

State Route 14t , 2 3 Bedrooms.

loss than $400 mo Free DoiiYOry
&amp; Soli~ !SS78

$22,000, re ntal unit 7~0 · 992 ·
4514 ask lor Chris Marlin

peromco

3800

Id

45n9

Free esUmates, design planning
complete landscape serviCe res
ldentlal and co mmerc1al, fountain
and gardtln display 15 year~ ex·

Huntington WV (EOE) Posting
Period May 9-21 t 999 Appllco·
1304)529-6205

.... Amaz in g•••• 5 Bedrooms, 2
112 baths over 2,000 sq ft . for

COPP1CK LANDSCAPING
50556 SR t24
Roelno, Ohio

RES4 II Executive Director,

$SSMake Money!S$$ Work At
Home
A&amp;&amp;emblt Prod ucts
Easy w ork Excellent Pay Free
Details! Send S A S E To Nat'!
Homeowrker s Association , P 0
Applications' For Life Guard Poslllons At London Pool For The
1999 Swimming Season Are Bemg Accepted Submit appllications In Wr iting. With Training
And Expenence To Janice Zwlll
Jng Clerk -Treasurer, At The Syracuse Municipal Building Or Mall
To P 0 Box 266 , Syracuse OH

320 Mobile Homea
for Sale

448-3358
Jad&lt;son General Hospital, RP.
ley, W'l Needalullllme AN for

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICE S

Profesalonal
Servlcea

230

....

41 Nine-digit ID

ACROSS

ASTRO·ORAPH
Thursday, May 13, 1999
Although you might find yourself
workrng hanler in the year ahead,
you 'II also reap the benefiu from
tour labor1 In fact, financial condi·
tions look quite beneficoal for you
-TAURUS (April20-May 20) lobs
you're dependtng upon thot affect
your work which are supposed to get
done by cohoru mtght not be per·
fonned properly or at all Keep your
cool and do what you can. Know
where to look for romance and you'll
find tt The Astra-Graph Motchmak·
tr instantly reveals whtch 111ns ore
rotnantically perfect for you. Mul
$2.1S to Matchmaker, c/o this news·
paper, ~0 Box 1158, Murray Hill
Stauon, New York, NY IOIS6
"GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) By
using pushy tactics tn your dealings
wfih olher1 todoy, it will only draw
resenrment rather than cooperolion.
Be very careful how you treat your

aSsoct~les

CANCER (June 21 -luly 22) Com·
petttors you thought you could von
' tn the early rounds today may
qbtsh
take you to the hmrt Don't undcres·

timate the caliber of your competiuon
and prepare for a fight
LBO (July 23-Aug 22) Opponumties abound todoy, but, unronu·
nately, they mtght s11l nght over your .
head. Later, when you vtew events tn
retrospect, you could be sorry obout
what you mtssed.
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) Those
wtth sticky finaers could be out and
about today, so be sure to lock your

car

even

when

you

park

1ft famlltar

places. Be extra mtJI(Iful of all your
posseSOions
LIBRA(Sept. 23·0.:1 23) Making a poet wtth someone under pressure
todoy would be • mtstake Ir you tru·
ly do not want to 101 mvolved with
the project or indtvtdual, uy so ript
away.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) That
cushion of time you thouaht you had
miaht not be fonhcomlngtodoy. The
jobs you nealccted In the past could
rear their ugly hcods, domandin1 your
1mmedlote attention.
SAOI1TARIUS (Nov 23- Dec
21) The wont th1n1 you could do ts
come on too strong today with •orne-

one you're hoptng to tmpress You' re
gtfted wtth chansma, don't forsake
thts natural talent and be somethtng
you're not.
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-ian 19)
Don't undercs11matc your worth
today by vicwmg yourself as less for·
lunate than others. If you had to walk
in another's shoes, chan&lt;:e.s are you'd
be happy 10 get back in your own
AQUARIUS (Jan 20.Fcb. 19)
Althouah others can exaagcrste by
telhna tall tales and get away Wt1h
them for time to tune , thiS woll not be
true for you today Stick to the truth
no mottcr what It ''
PISCES (Feb 20:March 20) If
you have any expectations of getttng
bock what you have loaned out m
good condition, then don' t treat your
ttems wtth reckless abandon Be
careful to whom you loan thongs and
for how tong
ARII!S (March 21-Apnl 19) Peo·
pie can promiSe you anythmg, but
that doesn't mean they'll gtve 1t to·
you when you need 11 Don't lake to
heart what someone pledges today,
cs~tally 1f she or he has dtsap
pomted you before

Teams to

Fortune

LNe (CCJ

•

�Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel '-

•

Thursday

Wednesday, May 12, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Weather

Try Salsa Chicken

Today: Showera
High: 70a; Low: 50s

Shortcakes for an
easy, tasty meal

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

Communication is the
key to good health care
(Reader's Note: I' in going to do something a bit different for this
week 's column. Instead of answering a specific question. I'm going
to combine several different questions· that I've received recently
1hat myolve a common core issue - the importance of communi "'uin g clearly with your physician.)
Alm ost. every week I get a letter that includes a statement ''I'm
embarrassed to ask my doctor, so I'm asking you'' or a similar.
phrase. Often these questions involve some aspect of the person's
sexuality, although other problems such as urine leakage or flatu ·
lence are also common , Regardless " f the question. you should feel
free .to ask your doctor about anything. Believe me, even though you
have angst over sharing your story. it is unlikely to cause your doctor any embarrassment. He or she has "heard it all" before. You may
fea r that your doctor is too busy or too arrogant to listen to your
prob lems, but if you explain ttie importance the problem pos~s for
you. I'm sure that he or she will make time to help you.
Communication is the foundation of quality health care. You
must share your concerns with your doctor. I' II wager that once you
start tcliing ~ your "embarrass ing story"that your doctor will put you
at ease.
An~ther important pan of communication is understanding your
doctor's explan~tion of your condition and the treatment plan. We
physicians need to communicate with nurses, pharmaCists, insurance companies and others \vho are ,fluent in the jargon of the
health-care trade. This is essential for us· to communicate complex
. concepts accurately and efficiently. You and your doctor must
"communicate," too, not just talk at one another. Although this
sounds simple, it actually isn 't. It is very easy for us to lapse into
"doctor lingo" or to assume you understand a concept that is com·
man knowledge to the h~alth-care team. I'll share a story from my
practice with you that illustrates my point.
My patient, a waitress, relayed the following story to me about
an incident that happened at the restaurant where she works. Every
Friday evening she serves a certain couple. Typically, they both
order steaks. This --:eek the gentleman ordered his. usual. steak but
paused for an unusually long time when she asked him how he
wanted the stea~ cooked. He finally responded, "Well done, I
guess,." Because she had waited on them a number of times, she.ask
him why he had trouble deciding how he wanted his steak cooked,
and why he changed from his customary preference' of "rare." He
responded, "My doctor said I have trouble with my cholesterol. He
told me 1 shouldn't eill red meat."
I hope you chuckled when you heard this as much as I did. Obvi·
ously. the gentleman doesn 't u.nderstand that his cholesterol problem i.s aggravated by consumption of saturated fats. ·lnis is the type
of fat found in beef and pork, the common "red" meats. Turkey and
chicken - white meat - when prepared without the skin or the
·addition of fat, arc low in saturated fats. The doctor understood.this,
but hi s or her explanation failed to convey this information to the
. pati ent who only heard that meat that looks red in color was bad for
· his heallh. Communication isn't as easy as it seems.
·Therefore, I suggest that you unabashedly take any health concern to your doctor. Once you've asked the quesiion. and your doc·
lor has responded, it's .a good idea to repeat the instruCtions in your
own \\'Ords to .make sure that you fully understand them. Also,
hc fore you leave, ask to clarify any "n~gging doubts" you might
have. This includes asking apparently simple questions such as,
"What do you mean by 'red' meat?"

ART SHOW- Meigs Middle School students will have an art show at the Rlverbend Art Council, Saturday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday, 2 to 5 p,m. Approximately 30 plecea of art work created by the students of Melanie Quillen will be on display. Shown finishing up their projects are from the left, Ashii'Y
Buckley, Rachel Baylor, Pam· Rupe; and Jereml Swann. ·
.

..

New Smithsonian·theater to feature
year in the life of elephant family
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
angry elephant. to'wers six stories
above you , ears flared as she
charges, her bellowing so loud you
can feel it.
That heart-stopping moment
awaits visitors to the new giantscreen IMAX theater, opening next
week at the. Smithsonian ' lnstitu·
lion's National Museum of Natural
· History.
Opening the new theater is
" Africa's Elephant Kingdom," a
Discovery Channel film docum,ent·
ing a year in the life of a family of
elephants in Kenya.
A matriarch leads · the' group.
They depend on her memory to find
food and water in different seasons,
and she guides life in tbe family.
And it's she who defends them,
her life to threaten ·

- - -- - - - - G:::LtD &lt;Si LJ

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Veterans Admin·
istration Medical Center, Chillicothe,
health care enrollment at Veterans .
Service Office, I I 7 Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy. ·10 a.m. to noon, I to 3
p.m. Proof or military service
required.

SATURDAY
DEXTER -. Songfest at the old
Dexter Church Saturday, 7 p.m.
Singers are invited to come and take
part in the·service.
'
POMEROY - Closed AA Big
Book .study meeting, non-smoking.
Catholic Church, Mulberry Avenue.
. POMEROY - Meigs County
Retired Teachers meeting Saturday;
noon at Trinity Church. Speaker will
be pharmacist·Tammy Grueser.
REEDSVILLE - Forked Run
Sportsman -Club, annual fishing
derby for children. Saturd~y. 9 a.m.
to noon. Lunch served.

Meigs County's ·
Volume 49, Number 243

Memorial Hospital
SS Hospital Drive. Athens.OH 4S70l ·234S

.(740) 593-5551
www.obleness.org

.; .

"

Hometown Newspaper
Single Copy - 35 Cents

•

~udge denies TP residents' request. for review of sewer board
•
•
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•
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BCISIOn
re,ers
reS/
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CIVI
tBWSUI
D
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentlnll New• St.ff
. Common Pleas Court Judge Fred W. Crow Ill has denied a motion filed
bY. residents of Tuppers Plains, asking that board members of the Tuppers
Plains Regional Sewer District be removed and the activities of the board
be reviewed.
·Athens Attorney Garry Hunter filed a motion in the original TPRSD
court case in February, on behalf of over 100 property ow·ners in the district.
The motion asked Crow, who appointed the origina.l members of the
hoard, to review the qualifications of board members Marvin Keebaugh,
Homer Cole, Sue Maison, and Joe Boyles. Hunter's motion alleged that ·
COle was ineligible to serve on the board because he has moved out of the
district, that Boyles was ineligible hecause he was never sworn into office,
and that the terms of Keebaugh and Maison had expired.
Also included in Hunter's original .molion was a request that Crow
examine the cost of service to customers, connection· fees, and other operational policies of the district's board.
·
Residents in the community have l!een meeting mqnthly to diseu'ss lhelr
·complaints about the system, which became operational this spring.
·
The county commissioners have provided funding through their Community Development Block Grant formula prqgnm to help low and moderate-income residents in connecting to the system..

Ill his deeision, on Hunter's motion, which was filed on Tuesday after·
noon, Crow said that he has no jurisdiction in overseeing the' daily operation 9f the sewer district.
"Occasionally, the public, including attorneys, misperceivc the role of
the judiciary, including its authority to ~dress issues arisingfrom lhe ·conduct of agencies and political subdivisions," Crow wrote.
"The (residents) and their counsel . have greatly overestimated the
authority of the Court to &lt;Jversee the District's aCtivities."
AC90rding to Crow, lhe TPRSD is an independent political subdivision,
"broadly empowered to take actions necessary to achieve the statutorily
mandated purposes of a regional sewer district."
While lhe Ohio Revised Code allows Crow to govern the creation of a
regional sewer district, it "provides no authority for court review of oper·
_ations occurring after a regional sewer district is 'finally and completely
·
organized,'" Crow said.
"This is not to say that a district's discretion is unbridled, or that courts
have no role whatsoever in distri.ct affairs," Crow stated, noting that~ district niay, petition the court for authority to amend its staled. purposes.
Other instances whciit the court may become involved in the district's operation arc limes when holders of water resource bonds ptay bring suit, when
the board must apply to the court for a jury to determine damages caused
by construction, or to enforce a lien for special assessments, Crow said.
"Especially troubling is the prOcedural method chosen by the (resi-

dents), namely a· motion filed in the context of the original action creal· ·
ingthedistrict::crowsaid,notingthatanygrievancesagainstthedistrict
should be filed on a separate court case. ·
"Although a number of persons have signed the ~titions attached to
the motion, there is little indication that they mean toilndertake the burdens and obligations borne by plainliffs in civil actions, including mustering evidence to satisfy applicable burdens of proof, submitting to
potential countersuits, and payirig filing fees and other costs related to
·
their claims."
"The Court is not turning a deaf ear," Crow said. "The sheer numher
of those signing ·the petitions attached to the motion evidences apparent
widespread dissatisfaction with the stale of sewer developments in Tuppers Plains."
"In sum," Crow wrote, "the district is an independent political subdi- .
vision and th~re is no authority enabling the Court Jo undertake the broad,
unguided review of the District's conduct.
,If the (residents) perceive lhe District to be acting contrary to law, their
recourse is to sue the District in a separate civil proceeding ... "
Crow's decision is in ke.eping· with an answer to Hunter's original
motion, in which TPRSD attorney Frank Lavelle said there was no legal
precedent for a review like that suggested by Hunter and the sewer dis·
tricl customers who joined in the motion.
"The board-based,. open-ended request for some type of comprehen·
sive 'review' filed byAttomey Hunter has no basis in law," Lavelle wrote
in February.
Hunter was not available for comment on Wednesday.

Mason firm to donate sternwheel profile for Pomeroy display
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
also suggested that the trash cans be emptied more often .
Sentinel New1 Staff
.
.
..
· A delegation of Fisher and Chapman will go to Counci l
A profile in steel of a large stemwheeler is being ereto discuss issues which affect the merchants.
ated by a Mason county fabricator for installation along
The group noted 'the work of Beth Schneider in paint·
the Ohio River bank in Pomeroy. .
ing the downtown guard railing and containers at each
George Nichol.s . of Nichols Metals, a fabricating
end in red, white and blue, and extended appreciati on to
operatiQrt in Mason County, met with the Pomeroy Mer-'·
everyone contributing to village beautification .
chants Association Wednesday to discuss the stem-.
The. recent' senior citizens tour . from Marietta to
wheeler outline to which lights can he' attached.
Meigs County was described as successful. The Ohio
The dimensions ofthe framework will be 40 feet long
University tour was canceled due to lack of interest but
and 21 1/2 feet high and Nichols said he anticipates havanolher one is scheduled for the week of the Sternwheel
ing it completed in October, perhaps 'before Pomeroy's
. Festival in October - this time to include the entire
Stemwheel Festival.
,county, not just Pomeroy, with visits to Chester, the Ohio
He also affirmed for lhe group his plan at some
River Bear Co. in Middleport, and some greenhouses.
· future time to create Christmas designs in steel which
" Musser reported that the contract on the mural to be
can be lighted during lhe holiday season not only for lhe
painted on the City National Bank building has been
enjoyment of Bend area residents but as a way of attractreceived and is being reviewed. He anticipates .that the
·ing visi19f5 to lhe comm11nilies.
·
·
·~ ""
work will begin sometime next week .
· The Mason candidate for mayor is volunteering his .
He also reported that the Rev. Roland Wildman, pas·
services as well as supplying the materials for the eretor of Trinity Cburch, is moving 10 Springfield next
atioits as a contribution to Ihe villa"e's extensive restotatnonlli. A card of appreciation for his work in the com·
tion·and beaulificalion program. AI WednesdaY's meetmunity and ,his cooperation with the merchants in use of
ing, Nichols said that he envisions the holiday season
lhe church will be sent Io him. ·
with lighted displays down-the Pomeroy side and up the
101'1
Alumni weekend was noted and merchants were
Mason side of the Ohio.
tlve, the flower~ 1re blooming,
Sll'lh Fllhtlr, chlllrman of the project,
John asked to display their purple and white flags, and deco·
He .al5o suggested to t~e Association that contacts be 1re gone, but the work ·gc)el on
downtown MIIIMr who helpl In the dilly m•lntenance, rate windows with school memorabilia.
madewiththeOhioDepartmenlofTransportalionabout Pomeroy.H-AnnleChapmlln,preeltJentofthl look owr one of th1 m•ny bNutlful planting
The concert with Squire Parsons on the parking lot
the possibility of electrically ' equipping the proposed Pomeroy MII'Chantl Allocl.uon which IPOII- arMI.
.
stage was reported successful with about 300 people
new bridge across the river so _that decorative lights can
The program is administered through ·lhe ·Federal
Downtown beautification was discussed and Sarah attending. Bill Quickel was commended for his work in
be attached.
Highway Administration and the Ohio Department of Fisher wa5 commended for her work in designing. plant· arranging the concert which was sponsored by the First
Annie Chapman, president, and Karin Johnson, Transportation. The' Ohio S~:Cnic route, according to ing and mainlliining lhe area, wilh assistance from sev- Southern Baptist Cburch of Pomeroy.
Pomeroy Village Council's move to change the auditourism director, reported on the recent Ohio River Johnson, extends 452 miles along the Ohio River. About .eral merchants and other volunteers.
Sccnic Route, a part of the Nalional Scenic Byways dis- . $25 million is available each year for projects.
,
John Musser noted thatlhc cost is about $1,500 and torium into the police station was discussed. Musser,
cretionary grant pr~gram. Ei~t from Meigs Cou~ty . Johnson said lhat the goal is to apply for "one project that a substantial donation has been com'mitted by the president o( Council, noted.that there..will be no strucattended a recc~t reg~onal me~tmg where the d1scussron for Meigs County and lhat the most .feuible is water Fumers Banlc, with olher contributions being solicited. tur.al changes and that the move is necesSary because of
centered on prOJects and fundt~g.
~ .
.
. · front development. She noted·that Carol Layh who Jives He said the lictual cost to the merchants association will inadequate space in the quarters now occupied by the
It was reported that lher_e ts $_148 mtlhon avBJiable in Meigs County and has been serving as a tourism be about $200.
.
. police.
·
from now to 2003 for scemc proJects through a match director in Washington County, has been retained as a
Fi~her again asked that Village Council erect signs
In other business, action on a donation request from
fund .of .80 percent federal, 20 percent local.
consultant on the project.
about trash disposal and set .a penalty for littering. She the' Pomeroy Little League was tabled.

I

Kosovo, Yeltsin's troubles, create U.S.-Russia hurdles
By TOM RAUM.
AIIOCiatld Prell Writer

ace ·
ra
woman
lured through Internet chat

WASHINGTON(AP)-The rift in U.S.- Russian relations caused by the NATO bombing of
Yugoslavia, now .complicated by political turmoil
in Moscow, is raising fresh questions about longterm coopenlion between Moscow and Washington.
"It is obviOI!S that all Is not well 111 the U.S.Russian telalionship- or American foreign poli·
cy towards Russia;" said Rep. Benjamin Gilman,
R-N.Y., chairtiWI of the HoUJC lntemalional Rela·
lions Cotnmittee, after Russian President Boris
Yeltsin dismissed yel another prime minister. '
Rep. Roscoe Bartlett, R-Md., one of a group of
11 Ht?use members trying to broker a separate
peace deal on KOIIOVO .with members of Russia's
parliament. said .lhe tldministration was wrong in
"tying its planning only to Ycltsin."
.
"They are inaking a big mistake, becaUJC
Yeltsin is not Russia's future. He'll be lucky if he
holds on to the next election," said Bartlett
That nonbindins peace plan by Bartlett and
othera- diiiCOurlpl Wcdncaday by Secrelary of
State Madeleine Albright- was heine considered
today by the International RelationS panel.
It contains many features sought. by NATO,
including withdrawal of Serb forces froni Kosovo
111d 111 aimed international peacekeeping pres-

AKRON (AP) - Police have charged a 39-ycar-old man with using
Internet to lure. ,a I 9-year-old ment~ly handicapped woman from
IPc~nn:svl•,ania and 'then' raping her.
~
.
:
believe the Avoca, Pa., woman -met the Akron man through an
Qnline disabled persons' chat room, a computer site the young womiln's
parents felt was safe for their daughter.
: The accused man, Leslie Hall, allegedly logged into the chat room and
(lOSed as a 17-year-old who told her that he loves her atid inviled her to
visit.
·
• Hall was arrested iate Tuesday.
: He is charged with kidnapping and rape and is being held in the Sum·
J!iil County Jail in lieu of $20,000 bail.
·
• The parents began a frantic, three-day search for their daughter- who
lite father said has il mental age of about 8 - when lhey awakened Saturday morning and found she was gone.
•The parents lcncw their daughter
loveil 'tp chat on the wmputer, so
they began searchil!g for mcs5ages
that might tip lhcm off to where she
was . .
Police believe Hall directed the
· 2 Sections • 12 Pagrs
woman - step by step - to his
home.
·
6
Calendar
Tile W()lllan was reunited with her
memb~r
9110
C!ass!!leds
parents Tuesday in Pen.nsylvani~ .
By MICHAEL J; SNIFFEN
"She is devastated," said the
11
Comlq
AIIOCIIted
Pn11 Writer
young woman's f&amp;lher. "She thinks
EdJtori•l•
WASHINGTON
(AP)-Another member of a
Ibis is her fault. She doesn't underJ
Loql
notorious
Nazi-sponsored
· killing battalion,
stand."
blamed
for
the
.
murder
of
19,000
Jewish men,
Sports .
4&amp;5
They said lheir daughter, whl).is a
women
and
children
during
World
War II, has
volunteer wilh Alzheimer's patients
.t. • \ I'
been
UI'CII~ pennancntly from the United
at a nursing home·ln their area, Is
Stalel.
Lotteries
normally a happy person, and they
Kazys Ciurinskas, 81, who lived in Oown
will seek llounseling to help her
OHIO
Point, lnd:, left lhe country 'Yednesday a~cmO?n
· deal wilh the brdcal.
Pkk 3: 2-9-S; Pkk 4: 7·2·7-S
by
plane from Ollcago on h1s way to L1thuan1a,
"She had a child's-eye view of .
Stiper Lotto: 11-19-29·3.2-34·37
the
Justice Deputment announced.
this whole thing," said Akron
On
April 15, U.S. Immigration Judge Anthony
Kicker: 0..5·1·7-6-4
police Sgt-. Jerry Hushes.
Pelrone
in Olicago had ordered C~urinskas
w.yA.
••1 lhink she thought abe was
removed
from
Ibis country after he admtlted·par,
Dally 3: 2-6·3; Dally 4: 3-4-4-4... .
going some place to meet this swell
·
0 1999 Otllo Valley Publi~ .
ticipating
In
Nazi-sponsored
persecution.
boyfriend:'' .
Eli M. Rosenbaum, director .of the depan-'

Good Afternoon

Today's Sentinel

•

O'BLENESS

outlast Cincinnati
Reds 8-7
-Page 5

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Another

SUNDAY
ATHENS - A retirement party
.CHESTER - S~a&lt;Je River Lodge will be held for Eugene Willoughby
453 F&amp;AM regular meeting Thurs· at the Hocking Valley Sportsman
day, 8 p.m. In recognition and iri Club on .Radfond· Road; Route SO
honor ·pf Masonic veterans and ' south of Athens to County Road 19.
· Armed Forces Day a special dinner All Meigs County friends are invited
will be held at 6:30 p.m, Master to attend.
Masons and all',members invited . .
POMEROY- Poplar Ridge Free
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Will Baptist Church, · Sunday
Plains VFW Post 9053' meeting for evening service with The Gabriels
all officers will be held Thursday, Quartet 10 sing. John Elswick, pas·
5:30 p.m. with dinner at 6:30 p.m. tor, invites public.
Regular meeting will follow at 7:30

Milwaukee Brewers

31

.

older, we've got an excit- .
ing new program for you.
It's called SeniorBEAT (Be
Educated and Active Together).
. It's free! And it offers you a
variety of health services, discounts, educational classes and .
social events clesigned to help
you be active, enjoy life and get
together with people who want
do the same.
As a.member, you'll receive .
nevvsle~tte1rs and announcements.
ou 'II be invited to special
1ealtb and lifestyle seminarseven enjoy a 20% discount at ·
the hospital gift shop and a 25%
discount in the cafeteria on
certain days. You'll get special
· help in filling out insurance and
hospital for1ns and special information and referral services.
So sign up today. It won't
cost you a dime, and it could
make a real difference in helping you stay active andeducated. We .can't'promise that
.
.SeniorBEATwill add more .
years to your life, but ,chances
are we can add more life to
yonr years.

The Community Calendar is pub· p.m.
lishcd as a free service to non-_profit
SYRACUSE - . Syracuse PTO
groups wishing to announce meetmeeting
Thursday, 7 p.m. Election of
ings an~ special events. The calendar
is.nol designed to pr9mote sales or officers will be held.
fund raisers or any type . Items are
POMEROY-. AA open meeting,
printed as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific num." Sacred Heart Catliolic Clitirch, Mulberry Avenue, noon. Also Al-Anon,
ber of' days.
·
non-smoking.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
REEDSVILLE - Olive Township Trustees regular meeting Beta meeting Thursday, 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at the town· with Jane Walton and Clarice Kraut·
ter, hostess. Hal Kneen wi II l)e guest
ship garage on Joppa Road.
speaker.
POMEROY - Point Pleasant
B iblc School Choir Wednesday, 7 FRIDAY
POMEROY - Women's AA,
.p.m. at Calvary Pilgrim Chap,el, state
Route 143 •. Pomeroy. Rev. Victor , 1607 Nye Ave., Pomeroy, open discussion.
Rou sh, pastor, .invites the .public.

MIDDLEPORT - Feeney-Ben·
nett Post 128, American Legien,
. 7:30 p.m. Weqnes~ay. NollJ'ination
of officers.

.

Lady Marauders win sectional, Page 4 .
Cutting the apron strings, Page 6
George Jones pleads guilty to 'DUI, Page 8

••

f you're 60 years of age or .

---Community Calendar·--,---

POMEROY - Revival Wednes·
day through Sunday at the Pomeroy
Church of the Nazarene with Rev . .
imd Mrs. Jerry Boggs of South Point.
Services nightly . at 7 p.m. except
Sunday when ·services will be at
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. All welcome.

in the film , the annual rains came
late, and drought means famine .
Adults use their own huge bodies
to shade the babies as the family ·
trudges along in search of suste·
nance.
Wjlen an elephant collapses from
starvation, the others try and pull it
to its feet, struggling to help, know·
ing that to stop means to die.
The mother of a dead baby ele·
phant tries to lift her tiny offspring,
as though to massage life back to its
small body. When that fails, her
companions come by, rubbing, the
mother with their trunks as if in con·
solation.
Finally the rains return, the ele·
phants wallow in cool mud, and
plants grow quickly, providing food.
Once again life is good.

This rec ipe for Sal sa Chicken
ShorJcakes comes with a detail that
makes a tasty difference without
complicating its preparation.
The detail? Chocolate chips added
to the chicken mi xture. That's an idea
borrowed from Mexican mole, the
traditional spicy sauce fo r meal and
poultry that is made by combining
onions, garlic. c.hi le and chocolate.
Salsa Chicken Shortcakes
I0.8 ounce can large refrigerated
tlaky bisc uits
I tablespoon oi l
4 boneless skinless chicken breast
halves (about I pound) cut into thin
strips
I garlic clove, minced
1 3/4 cups garden pepper or ·
· ·
chunky -style salsa
I cup frozen corn
2 1/4-ounce can sliced ripe olives,
drained
.
I tablespoon semisweet chocolate
chips
I teaspoon cumin
4 ounces sliced hot pepper Mon·
terey Jack cheese, ctit into thin strips
5 tablespoons sour cream
Fresh cil antro sprigs, if desired
Heat oven to 350 F. Bake biscuits
according to directions on can.
Meanwhile, heat oil in large skillet
over medium-high heat until hot. Add
chicken and garlic; cook and stir 5 to
7 minutes or until · chicken is no
longer pink. Add salsa, com; &lt;Jiives, .
chocolate chips and cumi 0 ; mixwell.
Reduce heat to medium; cook 10
minutes or until mixture . thickens
slightly.
To serve, split each warm biscuit.
Place · bottom halves on individual ·
serving plates. Spoon half of chit ken
mixture over biscuits. Cover with
biscuit tops, remaining chicken mix·
ture, cheese and sour cream. ·Gam is~
with cilantro. Makes 5 servings.

It's.about Being
Educated ·and ·.
Active Together.

"Family Medicine" is a weekly column. To submit questio.ns,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio University College of Osteo·
_pathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens, Ohio 45701.

t

as she charges to drive them off.
"It was a charge to end all
charges: : said film consultant lain
Douglas-Hamilton, driving a truck
with the film crew in the back as the
elephant &lt;:harged.
She was quicker than DouglasHamilton expected and caught the
truck with her tusks on either side of
the camera before he was able to
spe~d up and escape.
.
.
· Eventually, however, the crew
was accepted by an elephant family.
"The greatest compliment they
would pay was to ignore us," said
Douglas-Hamilton. "We seldom
walked with elephants because
that's dangerous, but we did a lot of .
very close-up work from cars and
they seemed to· recognize ·our
smell."
:For the elephaitt family featured

Tomorrow: Cloudy
High: 70s; Low: 50s

Sports

MIIV 13, 1000

___
.,

_,___

cncc.
,
Buta main difference is that it leaves the coniposition of the peacekeeping force up lo the five ·
permanent memhers of the U.N. Security Cooncil- on which Russia ilnJYCbina sit and hold a
veto.
Both have insisted on a first-siep etlll to the
bombing.
President Ointon ,has' invested a huge amount
. of political capital iit supporting Yeltsin 's gov· erilment. And with a rising tide of anti-Ameri·
canism in Russia, lhntakes have seldom been so
high, suggest members of Congress involved in
foreign policy.
·
"We're in chaos and we have to find our way
out. We need to find a way to engage lhe Russians, and not just as old Cold War enemies,"
said Rep. Sam Gejdenson, D-Conn., senior
Democr~t on lhe International Relations panel.
Yeltsin named a close ally, Interior Minister
Sergei Slepashin, as acting prime minister.
. The . upbeaval sharpened Ycltsin's collision
course with the parliament and threatened to dis·
ruplthc Kosovo pe~ process, political stability
and efforts .at economic recovery. .
AI a House hearing on Wednesday, senior
State Department adviser Steven R. Sestanovich
said he did not anticipate the upheaval would
affect the status of Viktor Chernomyrdin, Rus·

sia's envoy to Yugoslavia
Sestanovich said it was still "rather. hard to
.tell" the consequences of lhe sacking of Primakov.
IfYeltsin'schoiceisapproved,thatcouldstrength·
en Yeltsin's mandate, Sestanovich suggested.
The U.S. official said Stepashin was someone
the U.nited States could work with.
.
His appqinlment as Primakov's permarietit·
replacement appeared to have little chance of
approval in the Duma. .
Sestimovich suggested lhe move was a plpy by
Yeltsin to detract attention from next week's
impeachment ...ole by the Dul)'la.
·
Rep. James Leach, R-lowa, said the adminis·
tration had precipitated both a "hot war" against
Yugoslavia, which was not going wdl; and .. two
new cold wm" with Russia and China after the
accidental bombing of the Chinese Embassy· in
Belgrade.
Bartlett and I 0 colleagues we·re trying to do an
end-run around the administration with their sepa·
rate peaa: plan, drawn up two weeks ago with
Duma memhel'$ at a meeting in Vienna. .
Albright met the delegation, led by Rep. Curl
Weldon,. R-Pa., on Wednesday.
~
Bartlett said Albright seemed .. prepared to con·
vipce us that we were sending mixed signals, that
it would be counterproductive. We emphasized
that we were trying to help."

of Nazi-sponsored killing battalion deported ·
mcnt's Nazi·hunting Office of Special lnvestiga• Jewish men, women and children in t~e fall of
tions, said lhe removal ~rder was part of a settle-. 1941. The court concluded that Ciurinskas partie·
·men! agreement in which Ciurinskas admitted he ipated in at least one such action.
was an armed member of the 2nd Lithuanian
Ciurinskas is one of several members of the
· Schutzrn~nnschaft (Protective Detachment) Bat- 2nd Battalion that the special investigations office
tal ion 111d concealed that service when he applied has ousted from this country. TWo other members
· for a visa to enter the United States in 1949.
of. the 2nd Battalion have been ordered deported
Ciurinskas also conceded he was subject to to Lithuania.
·
removal under a provision of U.S. law that · · Juozu Naujaiis was ordered deported to
requires .removal of lilY alien .who assisted Nazi Lithuania by the immigration court in Chicago .in
peiiCCubon, the department wd.
1997, but is appealing his case to the U.S. Board
After a trial, a federal judge in Indiana revoked of Immigration Appeals.
Ciurinskas' naturalized U.S. citizenship in 1997
Another 2nd Battalion member, Antanas
becauiC of his service in the 2nd Battalion.
Mineikis of Gulfport, Fla., was deported to
The court noted lhe battalion assisted the Nazis Uthuania in 1992 after admitting he drove (nulti·
in 10 killing actions in Lithuania and Byelorussia, pie truckloads of civilian victims to mass shoot·
now Belarus, that murdered more th111 19,000 ing sites and observed their murders.

-----------~--..:l.--------......;=......;-------4'-\-----....,11
''-'-----------------·-·u
1

. . - .--- ..,;. _.. ,._:.~. ---•

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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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