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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Sox defeat
Cincinnati
·by B.runs

Super Lotto:
3+11·20-28-44
Kicker:

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Pick 3:

BhiWirl 1nd tltundlr·
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Sporta on Page 4

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ltorme. Hlgha ,_,. 10. :

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IIIII. 41, NO. 42
01117, Ohio Vllley Publlehlng Company

·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, June 16,1997

2hctlon8,'12 ....... 31centa .
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Task force .readies funding overhaul proposal
COLUMBUS (AP)- Gov. George Voinovich's school funding task force
plans to issue its pl'&lt;':-nsal for overhauling the state's school funding system
by the end ofthe month.
The plan will show how Voin0vich and legislative leaders pro~e answering the Ohio Supreme Court's March ruling that declared the current schoolfunding system unconstitutional and gave them a year to approve a new one.
One plan under consideration is a penny increase in the stale's sales taK
coupled with a business taK increase that would add about $1.5 billion more
to the $12-billion-a-year education budget. "
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House Speaker JoAnn Davidson and Senate President Richard H. Finan
said the sales-business tax combination was the favc;&gt;fed approach, but they
declined to discuss the amount of the increase.·
"I tend to helieve that within my caucus, a sales tax and business tax mix
is the only thing that would pass," Finan, R-Cincinnati, told The (Cleveland)

Plain Dealer for a story Sunday.
.
Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg, said task force is still deciding on how much
money the tax increase should generate.
Voinovich assembled the seven-memberbipanisan.task force immediately
after the ruling. The'panel includes Voinovich, other Republican leaders, Senate Minority Leader Ben Espy, House Minority Leader Ross Boggs, state
Budget Director R. Gregory Browning and state schools Superintendent John
Goff.
"It was a good move to tuive the task force," said Espy, D-Columbos: "It
keeps the public apprised."
The panel has met weekly since April, hearing from education groups and
school-finance expens; Its most significant achievement so far: establishi.ng
the basic cost of an adequate education for each student.
"Thcrc'·s a consensus growing that this is a centerpiece of the plan," said

Clinton addresses criticism
over race relations initiative

Never
too late·

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Dexter woman, 72,
makes the grade ·
by winning GED
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Newa Stiff
It's never too late to learn, and
when 'your daughter is your teacher,
it might he easier.
Nellie Hatfield of Dexter knows
that first-hand. At 72, she has
received her General Equivalency
Diploma, and her daughter, Shirley,
helped. Shirley is an instructional
aide at ABL:E.
Nellie was one of 28 Meigs Coun.
f:,,,,
ty studen.ts' to •s!ij:cessfl!IIY Jake !h~ .
GED, and last week, she was ·recognized at the Adult Basic Literacy
MOTHER AND TEACHER -It waa i1
Education program banquet for passwhen Shrlley Mltchall, right,
1 pllque to her mother,
ing the 'test. She is undoubtedly one
Nellie ltetfleld, for p111lng
GED till Shirley· Wll Nellle'l
of the oldest students to pass.through :-"'" lll~har In thl ABLE progr1m. (Sentlnal photo by Charlene Hoethe ABLE program, which includes
filch).
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preparation for the GED test, as well
as help with basic skills, like reading Nellie kept three notebooks filled has only good things to say about her
with mathematics work - and ask- teachers, ·especially · her da11ghter,
and mathematics.
Born and raised in West Virginia. ing plenty of quesiions were Nellie's Shirley.
''I'm. glad Shirley was there for
Nellie left school after completing . formula for learning success.
me,"
Nellie said. "She would have
The
program
consists
of
mathe·
lOth grade. But it was only hecausc
made
a wonderful school teacher."
social studies, liter·
of t!!e encouragement ofShirlcy that matics science,
.
Shirley
is prbud of her mom, too.
she took the plunge, hit the books. · ature and wtiting skills, and none of
"I am just so proud of her,"
it comes easy when you've been out
and got her diploma.
Shirley
said. "She was so nervous the
Making the decision to pursue the of school for 55 years.
first
day
she came to see me, but she
Nellie said that some skills came
equivalency diploma was only part of
studied
harder
than anyone there. She
the task, though. 400 .hours in the hack to her as she worked, but she
came
to
class
to study."
ABLE classroom, stretched out over still relied heavily on· the ABLE ·
(Continued on Pege ;I)
a year and a half. lots•of studying- instructors to help her out, and she
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ATHENS (AP) - Brown Pub- Clatence J. · Brown, . chairman · of
lishing Co. will buy The Athens Mes- Brown Publishing.
.Terms of the sale were not dissenger in a deal to be completed this
closed.
summer.
The Bush' family annoUJ\cc.d in
The proposed transaction was
May
it planned to sell the paper the
announced Monday by G. Kenner
Bush, president and publisher of the family has published for more than
Messenger Publishing Co ., and .. JOO.ycars. B~shalso said he planned

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"We should .have an apology for
what (is) happening in America tnday
- the poor quality of schools, the
.danger in the schools, the lack of
opponunity," said Lou, R·Miss.
The
president's JnltJatJVC,
launched in a spee&lt;:h in San Diego'()li
.Saturday, is buill around a yearlong
series of town hBII meetings by an
advisory board. The panel then will
offer rccommcndalions that the White
House will ~ompile into a repon on

to retire.
Brown Publishing has daily newspapers in Logan, Circleville, Urbana,
Hillsboro, Wilmington, Washington
Coun House and Van Wert. It also
publishes weeklies and shoppers and
has commercial· printing operations .

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CHEVRDIEI•
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I.EIIBS • TOYDia

DENVER (AP) - Although
jurors wanted to hear from Timothy
McVeigh, his lawyer says their comments after the trial have conv.inced
him McVeigh could not have saved
. himself from a death sentence.
"I think they all clearly said it
wouldn't have mattered, that it
wouldn't have changed their minds,"
lawyer Christopher Tritico said in a
telephone .interview Sunday.
· The jurors said Saturday they
were left with one question af)er con- ·
victing and sentencing McVeigh for
the Oklahoma City bombing that
killed 168 people- "Why7"
1)ut if McVeigh answered that
question, he would been admitting he ·
did it, and that could have affected his
a)ipCals.
Among the avenues of· appeal
being . examined by McVeigh's·
defense lawyers are the judpo's ban
on the introduction of I! defense theory thai foreiJn terrorists were
involved in the bombing, and his
relliiction of evidence about allepd
FBI crime Jab contamination.
MCVeiJII. convicted two weeks
IJO II'ICI~entenced by jurors friday to
deldl, II beinJ held at a Colorado fed.
eral priloll.
Eleven of I2 iiii'OI? held 1 news
conference s.wnlay 'to aplain what

they went through, describing an
emotional 2-1/2 months as they lis·
tencd to evidence and. in the end,
watched McVeigh's parents plead for
his life.
"You go into this assuming
McVeigh is innocent. The most
shocking blow to all of us, I know to
me personally, was that 'Yeah, he 's ·
t;uilty.' And it just hit home right
!here," said Roger Brown, a retired
Air Forco veteran.
Ruth Meier,'a.retired re.tail worker, said:· "Twelve people cried when
we pronounced him guilty. It took us
a good hour, bour and a halfto calm
ourselves down so that we could go
into the coumoom again."
Jurors rejected · the re.,son the
defense offered to have MeVeigh's
life ~: a misguic!ed young man
so rattled by the deadly government
mid near Waco, Texas, that he felt
compelled to seek retribution .
That explanation was offered amid
a stream of relatives who testifie!l to
what they lost. Some jurois could he
seen wiping away their tears during
the testimony.
"Nonul jtuman beinp don 'I senorally ever~ put In a position where
they have ·somc responsibility for ·
whether a person Jives or dies," said
1-Ph L. Hoffmann.

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Critics say he was absent on that
issue during the most inflamed
moments of the debate over California's Proposition 209. which eliminated race-based admission policies
in the state's university system.
"Where was the president when
the issue wa.~ engaged'/" conservative
activist William Bennett asked on
(:BS' "Face The Nation." "He' wa.•
not going to anger anybody in California by coming out ,·,~ the wrong
side, or the right side, so he was
silent. That's not political leadership."
Clinton told CNN he did .not
shrink away from ·the Prop 209
~'' '.JGamc ~~~t ag~inst 209 every ·•
. tilnc 11 was. in ~alifomia;''JtC ''said.
"So I don't think that is a fair criticism."
The 'president said the overall
problem of race is much more compicK than the affirmative a~tion
debate. Having Americans voice their
opinions about them to the advisory
.
coping with the country's new mul, hoard will give him the information '
he needs 10 try to solve thC problems, ·
tiracial, multicthnic reality.
1\C:
said ..
Ciinton also will propose legisla"I believe about eight in 10 Amer,
tive and other steps to address raceicans
would think that wa.~ worth
ba.jed problems in areas such a.'
doing,"
Clinton said on "CBS Sun- ·
employment, housing, law enforcement and education. He directed his day .Morning." "The prc.•idcncy is .
Cabinet to begin working on propos- still an effective bully pulpit."
A CBS News poll released Sunday '
als right away.
indicated
that 58 percent of Amcri- ·
Labor Secretary Alexis Herman
believe
racial prohlcms arc
cans'
said she would assemble top aides
starting today to weave Clinton's goal beyond the president's control, up ·
into the live-point agenda she has set from 46 percent four years ago. Six- ·
ty·six percent of blacks anll 5~ per- ·
for her department.
cent
ol' whites said they think race
She said in an.intcrvicw her agenda includes imprnving skills of all relations . in the United States arc
.workers. helping move people from "generally bad."
The · poll also renee ted a stark
welfare to work. improving pension
racial
split: 71 ·percent of blacks, but ·
and retirement hen'clits, establishing
32 percent of whites, said ·
only
"healthy.lliscrimination-free" workplaecs anll helping workers shoulder improving race relations is among the
the dual demands of work and fami- most imponant things America needs ·
ly.
.
for its future.
·.
Sixty-two
percent
of
whites,
but
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Where Clinton is most likely to ·
only
26
percent
of
blacks,
said
race
.:
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feel opposition is affirmative action.
is imponant, but so arc other issues.· :

McVeigh's testifyi.n g at trial
wouldn't ha.ve helped: jury

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HLate
.... I'm not trying to· run from responsibilities."
But when asked about a specilic
action that could be taken- pushing
a propbsal pending in Congress to
extend an apology to black Americans for slavery- Clinton was noncommittal.
·
"To say it's wrong and that we' re
sorry about it is not a bad thing. Thai
doesn't weaken us," he said. "Now,
whether this legislation should pass,
l just need some time to think about
that."
Senate Majority Leader Trent
Loll, speaking on ABC's "This
Week," said the apology bill, proposed by 12 white members of Congress. "probably would not hap-

·Brown Publishing to buy Messenger

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By SONYA ROSS
Auocllted Prell Wrltlr
.
· WASHINGTON- Despite criticism's and a poll reflecting deep
national doubt about his new dialogue on race, President Clinton says
he is committed to using his office as
· a bully pulpit for solving racial problems.
In television interviews Sunday,.
Clinton sought to dispel his critics'
argument thai the campaign, which
revolves ·around having Americans
speak out hefore a presidential ad.visory board, will be a Jot of talk with
little or no o(ficial action.
·as an ltllvi~
n!ll

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AWD; PW; 1!1., frout a a!*,

Cun Steiner, Voinovich's chief of staff. "It points to a rational mcihod of
deterinining what is arguably an adequate level of ·funding for a school dis·
trict to perform at an adequate level."
· .
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A Denver-based consultant hired by the task foroe calculated the ba.~ic cost •
by averaging the spending of 102 of Ohio's 611 §!:hool districts whose students show high test-passage anQ graduation .rates.
· He determined next scJtool year's per st.uc!.ent c~st at $4,153, which doesn't include costs of school buses, extra aid to poor students or special. gift·
ed and vocational education. The·current basic cost is $3,500.
The·task force also decided early on to take the new school-funding plan
and its taK increases to the voters in Novemher.
·
"It presents the best opportunity for statewide. buy-in of the idea and to
meet the court's mandate in the shortest period of time," Steiner said.
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Felony charges
filed on 4 youths .:

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VIGIL AT OIQ..AHOIIA CITY_; Tom Klil ¥11ltld thl,....lt fle011rhenll City ~~omit •
on......,., Dly 111ndliy dlr -.cling IIIII.
Klll'a rrr lllugiJIIJi, Fi&amp;llillllr. .... -ldllld
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In ... eJIPiollon thlt claimed 1111W.. In April
1MIIIICI...ultld In IIJ,deltllper~~lty for conv'.cla d II a ~ lllr TlloiOihy McVIIglo. (AP)
·

Four boys are facing felony . '
charges after a string of vandalism
incidents and thefts in the Ponland
·.area Saturday night.
,
Sheriff James M. Soulsby said the ,
youths, mostly 13-year-olds, broke •
into a Portland area church, and vandalized mailboxes and a vehicle. '
they then brpke a window at Panland Elementary School and broke a ·
door there, he sl!ld.
' The juveniles also broke into an
auction house below Ponland and
.removed furnishings, he said'.
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Questioned
were
Jason
A.
Shep:
1
·herd, 13, Jesse James Caplinger, IS, . :
'Christopher Scott Burris, 13, all of ·
. Portland; and Joshua Allen Prunty, : ·
13, Parkersburg, ':N.Va., according to
Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes.
Souls!IY said some of the youths
were conlle(;ted with an earlier incident at. Portland lllementary School
in which they shut off gas to the ,
school, creating an explosion hazard.
Lentes said due tQ the nature of the
offenses II'ICI prior problems involving some ofthe youths, he wpuld ask
for an expedited hearing in Meigs
County Juvenile Coun.·
He said the youths were questioned carly Sunday and admitted to :
their roles ·in the incidents hefore ·:'
heing released to their parents.
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�Monday, June 11, 1H7

CotnlrJenta
._T he_·Daily .Sentinel
111 Court StrMt, Pomeroy, Ohio
814-992·2158 • Fu 992·2157

.2,
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERt L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH

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MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

G1......eM1nager

It hardly seems like a quirter-century ago this week that we wen: walking through Washington's National
Airpon when we happened to bump
into an old acquaintance.
Frank Sturgis was his name. We
had known him since shortly after he
parted ways with Fidel Castro, whom
he had fought alongside during
Cuba's n:volution. Since then. Sturgis had been something of a lllercenary -· always looking for trouble,
and usually finding some.
On this day, he didn 't want to
reveal what he was up to, only that he
was in Washington on a " top secret"
mission . Sturgis often used words
like that to dramatize things. so the
comment passed without much
notice.
Days later, of course, the whole
world would learn what brought
Sturgis to Washmgton that fateful day

House support never materialized.
After we wrote about the hOiel
meeting, we wen: called up to the
Senate to' testify to what we kne~.
The inquisitor that day was Fn:d
Thompson, then a counsel for the
Republicans and now a U.S. senator
leading the inquiry into the White
House fund-raising mess.
Thompson was wondering, we
suspect, whether the whole Watergate
scandal was something _that was
cooked up by Nixon's opponents to
embarrass the White House. He
wanted to know if.it was staged.
It wasn't, of course. Watergate
was a mess entirely of Nixon's own
making. A watershed event in American· political history, it remains the
scanjlal by which all other political
misdeeds ·· including the Clintons'
fund-raising morass -· continue to be
measured.
,
UNDER 'l'HE DOME -- At certain revealing moments, Capitol Hill

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Today in history

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is not unlike a college fraternity.
Long-serving lawmakers needle one
another about misadventURS from the
past like college fraternity brothers
teasing each other about ill-advised
freshman-year antics.
Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, for
example, will never live down the
·embarrassing "chemistry experiment" he pn:formed·at a 1994 Sen· ate hearing on the environmental
safety of ethanol, the gasoline additive produced from com. Like many
farm-state lawmakers, Harkin ,has
long been a proponent of ethanol,
which he claims is much kinder to the
environment than its oil-~ed competitor, methanol.
To prove his point, Harkin began
the hearing by placing two glasses on
the table in front of' him; one filled
with 190-proof Eve~ Clear grain
alcohol (basically ethanol), and the
other filled with poisonous methanol.
He challenged fellow senators, especially those who favored methanol, to
belly up to the table to drink the additive of their ~hoice.
.
No one accepted Harkin's dare.
That didn't faze Harkin, who proceeded to take several swallows of
the ethanol, which is more than
twice as strong as most hard liquor.
"He took his glasses off because his
eyes started to water," a Harkin
spokeswoman later explained. "Then
he drank four or five glasses of
1 water."
Harkin would probably like to forget the incident, but his colleagues
won't let him. During a press conference last week to defend the usc of
ethanol. a reporter asked Harkin and
· several other Midwestern senators
about the Clinton administration's
"lukewarm" support for Harkin's
ethanol stance.
As Harkin cont~mplated his
answer, Sen. Bob Kcrrcy, D-Neh.,
was overheard suggesting that Harkin
might want to "drink that glass of
ethanol before you answer the question." Several of the senators on the
podium snickered.
Harkin, unamused, earned on

without so much as a smile.
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

A take-charge corrections commissioner,

By Nat Hen,tolf
Witho"ut warning·· according to a
. The State nl' Ohio Homepage address. Is http://www.state.oh.us
current federal lawsuit •• a Georgia
Department of Corrections tactical
squad descends on a prison, hauls
prisoners, some without clothes, from
their ~· shackles them, and beats
By The Associated Preu
them.
1~ssing. one of the officers
Today is Monday, June 16, the I67th day of 1997. There are 198 days takes a p'risoner's family photo
left in the year.
album.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
Among the correctional institu·
On June 16, 1963, the world's first female space traveler, Valentina iions in ·the state ~islted by · these
Tereshkova, was launched into orbit by the Soviet Union aboard Vostok 6. ·black-uniformed officers in laced-up
On this date:
black boots. without name tags and
In 1567, Mary, Queen of Scots, was imprisoned tn Lochleven Castle in wearing black berets is the Hays State
Scotland.
Prison in Trion, Ga.
In 1897, the government signed a treaty of annexatiOn with Hawaii.
In a sworn statement taken in that
In 1903, Ford Motor Co. was incorporated.
federal lawsuit charging brutality
In 1933, the National Industrial Recovery Act became law. (It was later against these agents of the Correcstruck down by the Supreme Court.)
.
tions Department, a guard at the
In 1955, Pope Pius XII excommumcated Argentine President Juan Domin- prison, Phyllis Tucker, described ah
go Peron, a ban that w_as lifted "ight years later.
inmate's head being driven into a
In 1961, Soviet ballet dancer Rudolf Nureyev defected to the West while wall:
.his troupe was in Paris.
" The pnsoner screamed. Blood
In 1970, Kenneth A. Gibson of Newark, N.J., became the first black to went up the wall. Blood went all over
win a mayoral election in a major Northeast city.
·
the ground, all over the inmate. I
In 1977, Soviet Communist Party General Secretary Leontd Brezhnev . heard a sickening cracking sound. "•
was named president, becoming the first person to hold both posts simulShe was not the only member of
taneously:
the resident Hays Stale Prison staff to
In 1978, President Carter and Panamanian leader Omar Torrijos openly accuse the llying special corexchanged the instruments of ratification for the Panama Canal treaties.
rections squad. An Atlanta ConstituTen years ago: A jury -in New York acquitted Bernhard Goetz of attempt·
tion reporter, Rhonda Cook, notes
ed murder in the subway shooting of four young blacks he said were going that other prison employees saw
to rob him; however, Goetz was convicted of illegal weapons possession. many of the invaders "jump on the
(In 1996. a-civil jury ordered Goetz to pay $43 million to one of the per- backs of convicts sprawled on the
sons he'd shot.)
ground."
These " shakedowns" by the

By DtWAYNE WICKHAM

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black-clad enforcers are part of Correction •Commissioner Warren Oar. ner-'s policy of not "coddling" prisoners. In the May 30 Atlanta Consti·
tution, Garner wrote that before he
came, the public had lost faith in the
prison system that had "ignored the
impact of crime" on the inmates'
lives. He has said that one-third of the
inmates -- the Atlanta Constitution
reports·· "ain't tit to kill."
A former funeral home operator
and state senator,. Garner was called
to deal with the living when he was
appointed to his present post in 1995
by Democratic Gov. Zell Miller. Garner is so conscientious a keeper ofthe
inmates that he sometimes travels -·
wearing the same black garb -· with
his impassioned tactical squad to wit·
ness their ministry firsthand. And he
has been seen congratulating them for
their efficiency.
Mike Light, a spokesman of the
Department of Corrections, has a
ready spin concerning the federal
lawsuit: "It's outrageous that the persons who have killed, raped, molested children and robbed would attempt
to sue the state for pain and suffering."

That tactic might work. Most people these days, and not only in Georgia, consider prisoners to have even

less credibility than journalists. But
this time, so horrtfying was the raid

Bridging racial

/.

Aa:u~ forecut for

'.Remembering the Watergate water~hed

By JOHN McCARTHY

Berry's World

Plan to break up Conrail goes
to regulators for consideration

'lli••IIIJ,Jae17

State laws now
available online
Auoclllled Preas Writer :
' COLUMBUS - If a warrant is out for your arrest, can you still renew
, your driver's license? Can yo~ drive to work if you're found to have no car
insurance? How about getting a license plate carrying the name of your
favorite team?
· As Casey Stengel said, you can look it up.
Lobbyists, lawyers and the just plain curious can now find that information and more on the Internet. Click on the Ohio Law web pages and every
law passed since 1995 1s available.
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And people are doing just that.
·
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The' Ohio Revised COde and session law web pages averaged more than
13,000 "hits" a day by computer users during April, said Rep. Ron Amstutz,
chairman of the Legislative Information System Committee.
The web pages are a10ong the sites available from the S\ite v1a the Stale
of Oh1o Homepage. Also online: state job listings, how to ·reach your legislator, Statehouse trivia and travel news.
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Amstutz, who goes nowhere without his palmtop computer, is excited
about the web site's popularity.
"This is very encouraging data," said Amstutz, R-Wooster. "It shows there
is a great deal of public interest for this material."
The most popular sites? Laws govermng government were searched the
most, followed by crimes and procedures, laws concerning motor vehicles
and water, then health, safety and morals.
The lunch hour seems to be the busiest time for the system. Peak access
hours are between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m.; with 1 p.m. being the busiest.
'By the way, if there's a warrant out for your arrest, you cannot renew your
driver's license; you can get work-driving privileges if you're caught driving without insurance: and you won't get a new line of special license plates
unless you can prove sales will cover the cost of making them. All are laws
passed during the current Legislative session.
So how accurate is the information?
The state tssues this disclaimer on many of its sites: "Information believed
accurate but not guaranteed."

OHIO Weathe r

MQndey, June 11,_1111

in mid-June. He was part of a team
of cat burglars whose task was to
break into the Democratic National
Committee's offices in the Watergate
complex.
Completely U!!Wittingly, this
office became the first to get wind of
the scandal that would ultimately dri·
ve President Ricllard Nixon from
office.
Later, as the White House was still
denying any involvement in the burglary, it was Sturgis who tipped us off
that an intermediary sent by the
White House had summoned him and
his fellow burglars to a meeting in a
hotel in Arlington, Va. Knowing this,
we rented a room on the same floor
as the meeting.
It was at that meeting, Sturgis
revealed, that the White House
promised to "take care" of the burglars if only they kept their mouths
shut. In large measure, they did -·
·even though the promises of White

I'

•
IToledo! !W' I

Cli'n ton's passion ;

mission that has grown on his watch, and few ~lay long in communitij:s
the president says he will press Con- where black residents become tlie
grcss to give the federal anti-dis- majority. Most big-city schools ha~e
crimination agency the _money it been abandoned by-whites who eithCr
needs to handle bias complaints moved to suburbs or put their kids jn
expeditiously.
·
private schools to get them away
Having done all of t!tis, he is in a from school systems that have a
better position to lead the revolution concentration of minority students.
he craves. But is America ready to
Give.!!..l!:Je c!l~e 10 vOle for Jesic
follow him?
Jackson, a"'lbera~mocrat, a~d
Clinton believes that, given the Alan Keyes, a conse,rvatl've Republicorrect .information, most whites will can, most whites cast their ballots for
· do what is right to improve race rela- one of the white opponents these m~n
lions -just as·he thinks that blacks faced in their bids to win their part~'s
are wrong to believe that most whites presidential. nomination . .When •it
knowingly tolerate "the bad stuff" comes 1o an honest discussion of ol.r
that bigots do to them.
racial divide, truih is often the fitlst
flmmmm.
casualty.
· .
j
A~cording to a_RCCnt Gallup pol~, .
That's the hurdle Clinton must""'
a maJonty of whttes say they don t over when he attends a series of to:h,
object to a large number of black peo- . hall meetings in the hopes of ,focu•·
pie moving· into their neighbOrhood ing the nation's attention on whl!t ije
· or their children attending a mostly is trying to accomplish. Bridging ~1r
,black school. And virtually all whites ·racial divide is Bill Clinton's passion.
•say they could support a black pn:s- He thinks whites will not n:sist ttje
:ideptial candidate.
loss of poM:r that ultim~~ely will ·
But wha\ they say is not support- come with their minority status. ;
ed by the ~ord.
I think he has an awful lot of coli'
Most whites live in neighbor- vii!Cina to do.
'
hoods domi!lated by their own race

ta.Je

•I'

..

fled competition.
"Once CSX combines its operaAasoclllled Preu Writer
RICHMOND, Va. -'The plan to tions with Conrail lines, material will
split Conrail between rival rail giants move from origin to destination in a
CSX Corp. and Norfolk Southern more timely manner.'' Newport News
Corp., touted as a benefit to shippers, repn:sentative Larry Kelly said in
will be submitted today to federal statement to the federal Surface
Transportation Board, which has the
regulators.
CSX and Norfolk Southern say final word over railroad deals.
But in West Virginia, the Alliance
the deal could make it easier to ship
for
Rail Competition and some coal
cargo without switching carriers. For
example, steel plate that Newport •hippers fear the prospect of Norfolk
News Shipbuilding uses to build air- Southern offering the only rail service
craft carriers and submarines is first leading out of the state's southwestshipped from Delaware on Conrail, em coal fields.
·Norfolk Southern is paying $S.9
then has to be switched to CSX lines.
Virginia-based Newport News billion in cash for S8 percent of ConShipbuilding is one of the supporters rail. CSX is spending $4.3 billion for
of the deal, which has caused worries the rest of the Philadelphia-based railamong unions and shippers about sti- road's lines in a compromise reached

By JAN CIENSKI
•'

•·IColumbusl84• l

in April after a six-month takeover
battle.
The deal would create two main
rivals for Eastern freight rail traffic
especially in the Northeast, whe~
Conrail has been unchallenged since
the 1970s.
.
Lawyers from both companies
will be fine-tuning the proposal until
the last minute, said CSX spokeSman
Vance Richardson.
The expected impact on jobs will
he n:leased when the proposal is filed
with regulators, Richardson said. The
deal will likely cause some cuts,
.especially among ihe 1,300 Conrail
management employees in the
Philadelphia area.
Under the breakup proposal, CSX

Acrimony surrounds tax
Stormy weather pattern
to last through Thursday
·By The Aa1oclated Preas

.
Unsetded weather can be expected across the sllite today.
.
' Southwest winds will become breezy as showers and thunderstorms devel·op through out the day. Some of the thunderstorlns' may become severe as
well as produce heavy downpours .
·
: The cold front will slowly progress across Ohio·~onight, ending precipi, tation by midnight for everywhere except the far o;ast. Overnight lows will
fall into the middle and upper 50s in the northwest to the middle 60s in the
:sooth.
: The chance for scattered thunderstorms will n:main in the forecast in the
•south on Tuesday as tbe cold front stalls over northern Kentucky.
• In the north, a high pressure system across the Great Lakes will allow for
: partly sunny and less humid cbnditions. Afternoon readings will range from
~ the middle 70s along Lake Erie to the lower 80s in the south.
' The record high on this date at the Columbus weather station was 96 in
i 1957. The record low was 43 in 1969. Sunset today .will be at 9:02. Sunrise
: Tuesday will be at 6:02.
•
Weather forecast:
~ Tonight...Showers and thunderstorms likely until midnight, then a chance
: of thundehtorms after midnight. Fog from late evening on. Lows in the mid
! 60s. Southwest winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 60 percent.
: Tuesday... A chance of th~ndcrstorms. Fog until mid-morning. Highs ncar
: 80. Chance ofrain 30 percent.
( Tuesday night ... Becoming cloudy with a chance of thunderstorms. Lows
1in the mid 60s.
•
Extended forecast:
'
l Wednesday...Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
i Lows in the mid 60s. Highs in the lower 80s.
~
Thursday... Panly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms
f Lows in the mid 60s and highs in the mid 80s.
l · Friday ...Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 60s. and highs in the mid 80s.

l, CLEVELAND (AP) - No
; injuries were reponed in a multiple· alarm fire al the LTV steel plant near
. the city's downtown area.
· ~ A fin: department dispatcher said
. : the fire · was reported around 9:30
. p.m. Sunday night in a building at the
-Cleveland Works plant. At least 100
.fin:fighters were called in to fight the
·
, fiIR.
The dispatcher said hy_draulic oil
fed the fire and caused a thick black
. smoke to spread over a wide area sur·rounding the plant. There were initial
· ·concerns that hazardous materials
.might be involved, but no evacuations of the adjacent areas were nee. 1:ssary.
'

"

, At least seven people have died in
' traffic accidents on Ohio roads this
weekend, the State Highway Patrol
said.
The patrol counts fatalities from 6
'p.m. Friday until midnight Sunday.
· The dead:
SATURDAY
CELINA- Malinda Schlarman,
78. of Fort Recovery, and Theresa
Black, 23, of Rossburg, both passen·
'· ;gcrs in a two-vehicle accident on a

.T he Daily Sentinel
(USPSZI3-Publl~ every afternoon, Monday throuah
Fridoy, Ill Cout1 St.• Pomeroy, Ohio, b~ the
Oldo Vnllty ~blilhina CompanyKl1nncn Co..
...,.,...y, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156 Sc&lt;Oild
~ \ db&amp; pot111e plld 111 ~y. Ohio.

Mflnbfrt 'l"he A-.~ioled Pn!M, and the Ohio

~ASTIR: Send addm11 corm:dom~ to
'he Daily Senli.el. Ill Co..rt Sl .. Pomeroy.
Olllo "-'769.

'

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
ly Carrltr or Motor Ro.lt
Ooe ................................................12.00
Ooe Mond1 ............................................... 18.70
0oe v-.... ~.................................... St04.oo
H

•

SINGLB COP\' niCE
Dlily.1. .... . ............. ............................... ~S Cents

.

'

Solllcrlben "'" dalnna to poy the carrier moy
ldvance direcl to The Dall)l SentiMI
~1«121110.... booiL Cftdit wilt bo

~eduction

pro_
posal

Audit targets ineptitude in pension plans

WASHINGTON (AP) - Mil- , what they earned," Sen. Charles
lions of Americans receive less mon- Grassley, R-lowa, chairman of the
ey than they deserve because of Senate commmee, told the Times.
A commillee heanng scheduled
employer ineptitude and confusion
about the nation's complex pension for today was to mclude testimony
laws, a new government audit shows. from retirees and pension "detecAn audit by the federal Pension tives," .who try to recover thousands
Benefit Guaranty Corp. found that of dollars in pension money from cor13.7 percent of pru;ticipants were pprations. ,
Grassley said each worker should
being underpaid,.an aide to the Senate Special Commillee on Aging insist on being given a statement
every two or three years with details
said today.
of how much he or she will collect in
Th~ figure was just~ percent in an
benefits and how the pension will be
audit conducted m 1988.
·
The findings, first reported by the calculated.
More than 80 million Americans
Los Angeles Times and USA Today,
were confirmed by the Senate aide. arc enrolled in pension plans and
"It was a low-toxicity fire. who spoke on conditton of anonymi- about 14 million draw monthly rctore_ although there was a strong odor and ty.
ment benefits.
Paul Holzman, co-founder of the
lleavy· black smoke," said the di~"A lot of people are not getting
patcher who declined tq gtvc hts
name •.
He said residents in the area were
advised to stay indoors and keep their
Units of the Meigs County Emer- Center;
windows closed.
·
gency
Medical Service recorded 10 .
I:41 p.m. Sunday, Bashan Road,
Plant spokeswoman Deborah
Kavulich said that the fire was under calls for assistance Saturday and Racine, Carl Ritchie, St. Joseph's
control by II :30 p.m , but firelight- Sunday. Units responding included: Hospital;
CENTRAL DISPATCH
9:17 p.m. Sunday, Butternut
crs and a hazardous materials team
2:34 a.m. Saturday, Main Street, Avenue, Pomeroy, Nellie Morris.
remained on the scene until at least
Pomeroy, Mary Lange, Veterans VMH;
I :30 a.m.
·
10:33 p.m. Sunday, Overbrook
The fire broke outman area of the Memorial Hospital;
3:18 a.m. Saturday, State Roijte Nursing Center. Middleport, ·Ruth
plant where a steel finishing process
is done, Ms. Kavulich said . The plant 681, Tuppers Plains, Anthony Simp- Arnold, HMC.
produces ~~~el coil~ .
son, treated at the scene;
MIDDLEPORT
II :44 a.m. Saturday, Eagle Ridge
8:20 p.m. Sunday, South Founh
Road, Racine, Virgil Walker, VMH: · Avenue. Glada Davis. VMH.
II :43 a.m. Sunday, General
RACINE
Harttnger
Parkway,
Middleport,
2:44
p.m.
Sunday, Rowe Road.
Mercer County road .
Robert
Bergman
Holzer
Mcdtcal
Mary
Lou
Johnson,
HMC.
ZANESVILLE -Timothy Ray,
'
RUTLAND
39, of Roseville, driver in head-on
4:20p.m. Saturday, SR 143. Eric
collision nn stale Route 93, two
Large.
VMH.
miles north of the Perry County line.
Holzer Medical Center
FOSTORIA - Christopher J.
DisCharges June 13 - Cassidy
Marley, 24, of Fostoria, driver. and Cleland, Wendy Hamilton, Brenda
Teresa M. Kessler, 22. of New Gray, Deborah Zinn. Mrs. William
00 8
Riegel, passenger. in a molort:yclc Harvey and son, Margaret Rasp,
(Continued from Pige 1)
accident on slate Route 199 in Wood Autumn Zinn, Phyllis Bennett, Mrs.
The support of the Hatfield fam1·
County.
Bruce Humphrey and daughter. Alice ly docs not end with Shirley. All of
CANFIELD- Danny H. Blake. Sprague, Margaret Ohlinger. Rosie Nellie's children were al the ABLE
32. driver, and Darla J. Wiggs, 27,
Wood.
ccrcm.ony last week to sec the1r
pa.~scngcr. both of Beloit, in a two-car
Births -Mr. and Mrs. Michael mother receive rccogmtion: Shirley,
accident on a Mahoning County road Farley, daughter. Jackson; Mr. and her sisters, Connie Dodson of Midin Goshen Township.
Mrs. Jay Moore, son, Gallipolis.
dlcrort and Linda Cleland ofColumDischarges June 14 - Robbie bus; and their brothers, Richard Hat·
McKenzie, Marcy Phillips, Marilyn field of Dexter. Paul Hatlicld of
Shafer, Alma Comer, Wesley Herrick, Columbus, and Charlie Hatl'icld of
Pearl Egnor, Maridell Halley, Mrs. Langsville. Most of Nellie's grandMichael Farley and daughter, Richard children were there. as were ·three of
Am Ele Power .......................41'·
Brewer, Leora Clark, Mrs. Jay Mol"'e her great-grandchildren.
Akzo ......................................&amp;~
and son.
Nellie's -official score hasn't
AmrTech .........·.......................&amp;9'.4
Discharges June IS - Daryl arrived yet. bt.it Shirley is confident
Alhland 011 ...........................47~
AT&amp;T ......................................38'.\
that her mother did well. Nellie just
Shoemaker, Charles Parks.
Bank one ..•...•.......................46i
.:.: Births - Mr. and Mrs. Browning · knows she passed, and that's really all
Bob Evenl ...........................15'*
Briggs, son, B1dwell; "Mr. and Mrs. that counts.
·
Borg·W•rrMtr ................,........52.7M Ronald Sheets, daughter, Jackson.
"I am so happy that I could do
Champion .............................16\
1
(Published
with
pennlsslon)
this,"
Nellie said. "I feel that I've real·
Chlltm Shp1 ................... ,,~.... 5 ~
ly
accomplished
something. Some
Ctty Holdlng ..........................33'4
Federalllogtll .........................31
people think that the OED is easy, but
Gannett .................................16._
it's not. It takes a lot of hard work."
Goodr-i ..............................11\
What' advice does Nellie have to
Km~~rt ...................~ .................13i't
offer
'for others who arc thinking
Linda End..............................30l
The
following
actions
to
end
marabout getting their diploma?
Ltd .........................................19\
riage were filed recently in the office
"I W!lllld encourage anyone to go
OVB : ..... ~···"1''""'"" ...................38~
OM v•tey . .~ ..........................41'A.
of Meigs Cpunty Clerk of Courts Lar- back and do it. It's a second chance,"
P~ ...................................M
ry Spencer:
she said. "But you have to want to do
~ ,.,......:.........................181.4
Dissolution asked - Stanley it, and you have to apply yourself."
R•: iulllll ......... .,...~ .................11\
Donald
•Gibbs Jr.• Rutland, and
"Anyone who is worried about it
R~ .................:.............208\
Yvonne
Dee
Gibbs,
Mason,
W.Va.,
shouldn't be. The faith and confi' !
~· ...................! .... , ...\ ...
Star . .,. ..............................43 :4
June
10.
dence
that the ABLE instructors give.
. . . . . ........................... ~ ••••2571.
Dissolutions granted - Michael you is so helpful. 'They let you know
WOI1hlntJ1on .........~~················19
A. Cleland and Amy B.eth Cleland, . that you can do it," Nellie said. ·
June
9; Timothy Alan Jenkins and
When asked about taking college ·
Stock reports ere the 10:30
Susan
Renee
Jenkins,
June
9.
classes,
Nellie laughed, but did say ·
a.m. QIIOIIa provldld by ~t
Divorcl\$
asked
Ten:sa
Elodin
shC
planned
to continue learning. She .
of Gfllllpoll~.
~- ,
Cline, Reedsville, frl&gt;m Raymond wants to Jearn to type and master i
Rufus Cline, Reedsville, June 6 .
some basic computer skills•

EMS units record 10 calls

·weekend accidents kill 7
By The Aaeoclated Press

will operate Conrad hnes from
Boston through Cleveland to St.
Louis, with connecting lines to New
York and into Canada. CSX also will
operate Conrail's line between New
York and Philadelphia.
Norfolk Southern will operate a
Conrail line hnking Chicago, Cleveland. Pittsburgh and northern 'New
Jersey. Norfolk Southern also will
operate the Conrail line serving' the
metropolitan New York area between
northern New Jersey and Buffalo.
Norfolk Southern will operate
most Conrail lines in Michigan,
Maryland, Delaware and Pennsylvania. The two railroads will jointly
operate lines 1n Detroit and will
share access to lines in Philadelphia
and Indianapolis.

frazzled, " he told reporters. "The • took tb the Sunday news programs to that "tax relief shouldn't go to peo- ,
president will continue to work with tout the five-year, $8S billion tax pie who don 't pay taxes."
Democrats want to ensure that
them to cut taxes for middle income relief package approved by the House
those
who do not earn enough to pay
families, but we want tax cuts that are Ways and Means Committee last .
right for America ... by focusing on week. The Senate Finance Commit- income tax also benefit from the tax
education."
tee is ready to take up a similar bill . breaks. The Archer plan excludes this
The lack of harmony follows a
The White House has opposed the group, but it does extend a $SOO:ashowdown between GOP leaders and package, saying it violates the terms child tax credit for children up to age
the White House over a disaster relief of the balanced budget agreement by 17. The tax plan p~t forth by the
b11l last week. The dispute ended in . undercutting the administration's tax administration's committee set the
cutoff age at 12. A Democratic verthe ncar-total retreat of the Rcpubh- relief priorities.
cans. who were forced to give up
It said the plan put together by sion defeated by Archer's committee
attempts to amend the bill with pro- Ways and Means chairman Bill provided the tax credit fpr children
visions that Clinton opposed.
Archer, R-Texas, lacks the $35 billion under age 18.
Archer acknowledged that hiS hill
LoU said his party failed to get in education tax breaks and favors the
was "worthies." if the pfosidcnt
across its message on the relief bill rich over the poor.
but was determined to do better on
Archer struck back on "Fox News vetoes it, but he said he was cm:nurthe tax issue.
Sunday," saying Clinton's tax plan agcd that Clinton has not threatened
With that aim. Republican leaders created anoth,er welfare program and a veto.

By JIM ABRAMS
Associated Preas Writer
WASHINGTON - The battle
over an $85 billion tax cut package
reverted to bipartisan name-calling
today with the White' Jiouse calling
the Republican Senate leader "a bit
frazzled."
The acrimony began Sunday,
when Senate Majority Leader Trent
Lou said President Clinton "acts like
a spoiled brat. He thinks he's got to
have it his way or no way." The president, asked his · reaction, said, "I
wish him a happy Father's Day."
Today, the president's chief
spokesman, M1ke McCurry, dismissed Lou with a jab of his own.
"Forgive Senator Lou if he's a bit

lFire strikes steel plant ·

•

effort to look at what America is
Gannett News Service '
going to be like as ... the first 'truly
WASHIN(l-TON - The third multicultural democracy in history,"
great American n:volution.
Clinton told members of The Trotter
That's what Bill Clinton hopes his Group, an organization of black
effort to heal this nation's racial columnists. To do this, the president
wounds will become ~ a pivotal says, he has to get people talking
-event in histocy ·thar l'links right up across racial lines "about the myths
there with the American Revolution and realities" that separate us.
and the Emancipation Proclamation.
That make~ sense.
· It arguably will be just that if the
I've often used this column to urge
nation can make the transition from him to do just that - even as I' ve
a country dominated by whiies to one pus~ed him to be more aggressive in
that is truly multiracial without dis- using the powers of his office to prointegrating, the president said teet the civil rights of those who have
Wednesday during a White House fallen victim to illegal acts of dismeeting looking ahead to his Satur- crimination.
day San Diego speech on race.
(:linton hils taken several steps in
Helping the nation to make this the days leading up to his San Diego
great leap is what this race relations . s~h to get his administration's civinitiative of his is all about.
il rights rec9rd in order. He
Clinton wants to ease the country announced the appointment of an
through the change that demogra- assistant attorney general for civil
phers say is fast approaching - to rights and is speeding up the process
the time someday in the next centu- to fill the long-vacant job of staff
ry when whites in this country will be director for the U.S. Commission on
outnumbered by the combined total Civil Rights. r
of ~an-Americans, Hispanics and
To blunt criticism of the t.:klog
Astans. , . , .
• of discrimination cases at the Equal
. 'The 1n11tattve "is basiclily an E~ployment Opportunities Com-

·'

on Hays State Prison that veteran guard at Ha~s S~te. Af~;~~~u~-~ng
prison guards risked their jobs to tell, the work of Wayne Garner's peaceon the record, what they saw.
keepers, "1 went to my office and I
In a stinging editorial demanding cried. Then I went to the restroom
that Gov. :zen Miller remove his cor- and threw up."
rections commiSsioner, the Atlanta
It might have been instructive if
Constitution pointed out that "like Gov. Miller had also been watching
police officers, prison guards" do not all the blood. Not benefiting from
blow the whistle on their colleagues. seeing Wayne Garner 'in action,
Usually, the blue wall of silence is .Millcr,howcver,continuestoexpress
insurmountable. But the fact · that his support for his commissioner.
eight members of the Hays State After all, Garner has cul the legal
Prison staff testified against the com- staff for the prisons, along with acamissioner's special traveling squad demic and vocatiOnal teachers.
means "they can't easily be disAnother witness at Hays State
missed as soft-hearted prison reform- Prison is guard Jan Chapman, who
said in a depo~ition: "I think it's OK
ers. "
Steve Bright, director of the to go in and knock an inmate up, just
Southern Center for Human Rights i~ knock him out, if he gives you reaAtlanta .. which represents prisoners sons. But when you go_snatching
shorn of their constitutional rights·' them out of bed for nothing ... beat·
tells me that unlike the Atlanta Con- ing them while they arc shackled, that
stitution, most of the other papers in is wrong." ·
'
Now
she's
afraid
of
retaliation
Georgia have been largely indifferent
to what could be a historic prisoners'. · from on high: "We know that cverynghts lawsuit.
thing we ,say is going to go to the
'There are exceptions, but many commissioner. I will answer any
newspapers around th~ country do questions you have and then I would
not consider prisons as among the like to go, please."
"communities" in their reporting
But the inmates, who cannot go
orbit __ unless there's a riot.
. any_whe~, wait for the_ nc.xt visit from
The attorney bringing this federal · th~t~ dcdtcated commtsstoner of corlawsuit, Robert Bensing, is on the rechons.
.
•
staff of the Southern Center for
Nat Hentotr IS a nation~lly
·Human Rights. During a deposition, · renowned authority on the Fp~t
he interviewed Linda Hawkins, a Amendment lind the rest of the Bill
of Rights.

divi~e i~

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

Pege2

'

By JKic Andenon
andJMMoller

'EstJI6fisfwf in 1948

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Hosplt$1 news

Never t

1 te

Stocks

Actions to end
marriages filed

e;.

-·-·-

'I

National Center for Retirement Ben- . Co., Continental Airlines Inc.,
efits, said his private firm has recov- Chevron Corp. and GTE Corp.
A complaint by a GTE employee
ered money for former workers from
some ofthc nation's most prestigious led to additional payments totaling
firms, including Allstate Insurance $18 million for 7,000 workers.

Citation issued in crash
The Galha-Meigs Post of the State Htghway Patrol cited a Racme man
for improper backing following a two-car accident Saturday on State Route
338.
'
Troopers said Robert G. Beegle, 77, 48639 SR 124, backed from Letan
Township Road 96 (Hill) at4:20 p.m. and collided w1th a car driven hy Heath
R. H1ll, 29, 49563 SR 338, Racine, that was westbound on 338.
The collision caused Beegle's car to come to rest m a ditch, accordmg to
the report.
·
Damage to both cars was slight.

Meigs announcements
Service outage
The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
District announced a planned shutdown of water service in Sutton
Township for · Wednesday, from 10
a.m. to 3 p.m. When the service ·~
restored, there will · be a boil water
advisory until a sample is drown and
tested for cohforll) bacteria. After the
results arc known to be safe, the advtsory w11l he lofted.
Areas affected arc: Amberger
Road, .Yost Road, Hanson Holter
Road, Minersville Hill Road, Welchtown Hill Road, Dutch Town Road,
Nease Road and Forest Rim Road
between Roy Jon'es Road and the
Block' Plant Road. .
Amberger Road will be closed
during parts of the time frame.

Thursday, 1 p.m. home of Phyllis
Skinner. Nancy Gru.~ser, hostess.

Board to meet
Metgs County Board of Mental
Rctardatton/Dcvclopmental Disabilities, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Carleton
School. Personnel commiUee meeting to precede at 6:30 p,m.
Health Club
Rock Springs Bcncr Health Cluh,

Are you 55 or
older and
Looking for a
job?
The Gallia-Meigs .TTPA
program can help· you!
........ services include:
Free assessment of your skills .v
help you decide what job is right for
you.
Assessments include sqaestlons for
trainlag or unndtna skills.
Financial Aalstance for retraining.
Computer metcll of your skills 'll'ilh
. job 'bank of 40,000 employers from
Columbus 10 Charleston.

.'
•

•

l"'tlt!f;

'

�The Daily Sentinel

·Sports

i

' '

Pege4
Monday, June 18, 1997

•

Mariners and O's
swe~p weekend
series with NL foes
"I've never seen this much
excitement for a series in June,"
Braves starter Tom Glavine satd.
In Montreal, one of the few
places that dodn 't see a big rise in
fans, Henry Rodriguez became only
the second player to homer off the
rim of Olympic Stadium and helped
Montreal extend its winning streak to
nine.
·
By The Associated Pnt11s
"They called ot a home run and I
The big wonners on the first
looked
up to see where 11 hot." he
weekend of interleague play were lbe
saod.
"I
dodn 't know. I lost it When
Seattle Manners, the Baltimore OnI
hit
that
ball, it felt Joke a feather. I
ales, the Montreal· Expos and the
didn't
believe
it got out."
bank accounts of baseball owners.
More big interleague matchups
Seattle beat Los Angeles ·s-2
are
scheduled for today. The Chica·
Sunday to improve to 4-0 in intergo
Cubs
take on the White Sox this
league play, while Baltimore beat
in the first real games
afternoon
Atlanta 5-3 in 10 mnings to complete
between
the
teams, and the Mets go
a three-game sweep of the NL champoon Braves. I Montreal finoshed a to Yankee Stadoum tonoght on the first
three-game sweep of Detroit with a game that count between New York
teams sonce the Brooklyn Dodgers
10-2 rout
and
New York Goants met in SepAnd attendance averaged about
'
35,000 for the opening four days of tember 19~7.
"If
you're
a
Yankee
or
a
Met
fan,
interleague ball, up · from about
you've
been
waiting
for
this
for
your
25,900 for the first I 0 weeks of the
whole life," Yankees catcher Joe
season.
uYou can see what it's done for Girardi said.
In other games Sunday, the Yanattendance, not o~ly here but
throughout baseball," Manners man- kees spht a doubleheader with Flori·
ager Lou Pmiella saod. "If ot's good da, winning 8-5 and losing 6-5, the
for busmess, ot's good for the sport." Chocago Cubs beat Molwaukee 4-3 ,
The Manners, averaging 37,461 Boston beat the New York Mels 4before the start of interleague play, 1, Toronto beat Philadelphia Il-l,
drew 208,297 for \he first interleague Kansas Coty bent Pousburgh 8-1,
·games on the Kongdome, a club Houston beat Monnesola 3-2,0akrecord for four consecutive home land beat Colorado 5-2, Texas beat
San Diego 7-4 and San Francosco
games and an average of 52,074
And equally important, the beat Anaheim 4-1.
Mariners 8, Dodgers 2
Manners outscored NL opponents
Jose Cruz Jr and Dan Wilson
35-22 and improved to 11-2 in June,
openmg a two-game lead in the AL homered along with Sorrento, govmg
the Maroners seven home runs on two
West.
"It's kmd of weird," said Paul days against the Dodgers Sorrento
Sorrento, who has spent hos entore and Cruz had three'RBis each Jamoe
career m the ALand hit one of three Moyer (6-2) combined wolh Scoll
Seattle homers Sunday. "It almost Sanders on a six-hitter to beat Ismael
seems like a sprong trainong atmos- Valdes (3-8), who walked a career·
high eight.
phere."
Orioles S, Braves 3
In Atlanta, Lenny Webster hot a
Cal
Ripken
song led in the IOth
two-run homer in the IOth inning off
Mark Wohlers (2-2). The AL's best before Webster, holling just .179,
-team thus far thought ot proved hom ~red onto the right-field stands
somethmg agamst the No I team on Terry' Mathews ( 1-1) pitched one
inning and Randy Myers got hos
the NL
major league-leading 23rd save ,
"If anybody thought the !}alto·
more Onoles were a fluke, I think we includong three straight against the
changed their monds in this senes," Braves.
Expos 10, Tigers 2
Webster saod.
Jeff
Juden
(7-2) potched a six-hot·
Allanta has lost seven straight
agamst the AL since taking a 2-0 lead ter for the second complete game ol
over the New York Yankees on last his career, helpong the Expos to theor
(See INTERLEAGUE on Page 5)
year's World Senes.

Indians notch 9-2
win over Cardinals
BJIR.B. FALLSTROM
~T. LOUIS (AP) - Pl ayong by
National League rules made ot a very
light work day for Charles Nagy
Nagy threw only 65 potches whole
potchmg seven scoreless inmngs of
Cleveland's 9-2 voctory over St.
.Louos on Sunday. He allowed only
two hots, and 18 of the 21 outs came
on groundballs as the Cardonals
repeatedly chased hos sonker.
In the Amencan League, Nagy
(8-3) moght have gollen hos second
complete game But soncc 11 was
scoreless after seven innongs, Cleve·
land manager Mike Hargrove decod·
ed to loft Nagy for a pinch hitter.
"That's just the way the game is
over here, and there 's nothing you
can do about ot," Nagy saod "Sotuations doctate where you have to
make the move and that soluation
dictated that we needed a pinch hit·
ter."
St. Louis starter Todd Stottlemyre
(4-5) entered the eighth woth a oneholler before Manny Ramorez led off
with a songle. Sandy Alomar reachedon a fielder's chmce when Stotllemyre threw high aJid pulled shortstop

Royce Clayton off the bag irying to
get the lead runner on a bunt. Marquos Gnssom then sacroficed the runners.
Ca~ey

Candaele pmch-hot for
Nagy and walked before Omar
Vjzquel cleared the bases woth a
trople. Vizquel scored two pnchcs lat·
er on a wild pitch and the floodgates
opened m a five-run mnth that put
the game away and gave the Indoans
two voctoroes on the three-game interleague seroes
"'You gel very few chances to
score, and wllh runners on second
and third, we had to go tor it then,"
Hargrove saod "'It worked out."
The Indians saved theor best for
the late innmgs all weekend, scoring
18 ot theor 19 runs after the seventh
mnmg In the forst game of a daymght doubleheader on Saturday,
they scored all eoght runs and had
eight or theor 13 hits m the seventh
and eoghth mnongs.
The Indtans' lone early run was a
fourth-onnong home run by Jom
.:rhof!le on the second game of the
doubleheader, a game they eventu(See INDIANS on Page 5)

TAUBENSEE SCORES- Chicago White Sox catcher Jorga Fabregasleaps for the ball as Cincinnati's Eddie Taubensee slides Into
the plate behind him to score on Jeff Branson's double In the s~
ond inning of Sunday's game in Cincinnati. However, the While SOli
rallied to beat the Reds 14-6. (AP}

Homers help White
Sox beat Reds 14-6 ,

4'J70~ pm

AL standings
Eastern OiYI!ion

»:

ldlll

I.

19
\1 29
12

"

Balmnore

New Yot"k
Toronto

r.t.

,." "

0eUDII

2&amp; 1R

8(Jston

701
'61
492
4'1
424

!ill

'

11'

"

Central Di"l~•on
14 29 l40
11 484
KDns;u City
\() 14
469
M1lwnukee
\()
462
Ctm.:ngo
J() 16
M1nneS01a
4"

ClEVELAND

"

(Rodnguez I

1'
4'•

Hnmton (Gar~:J.I 2-41 oil Kans.IS Ctly
(Haney 0-1 ), RO'i 11m
Ch1cogo Cubs (Gun znlcz 2- 1) nt
C lu ~:ago Whttc Sox (Dr •• bek 'i .4) M 0~
pm
Tc:us (Borken ~ -'i ) .11 CohmnJn
(Thomson 2 4) 9 OS (I m
An.the•m (Finky 1-&lt;i) at Los Angel e~

Western D1Y1Mun

1&amp; 29
10

Seollle
Texou
Annhetm

"
2&amp;

14

Oakla.nd

12

41

(Park~ - 1l

'&gt;67

m

2
1

"'

406

II

Saturday's scores
NY

Mel~~ Bo~ltln

L''u •~

e.,lnmun: 6, 1\tl.mt J 4 ( 12)
• C&lt;1lnmdo 7 O.tk l.tnc.l \
Ch1o.:.1go Cuh ~ IJ Milw t1uh-c
Sc,111le 9, Lus Anl!.~:h:s K

IO O~p m

Oakland (Oqut sl 1·21 a1 San D1cgn
fH.muhon 4-1), 10 O'i r m
St:.mle lftmt:ro 6-21 111 S.m Fram.:tsc~1
!Rcuh:1 2•2) 10 05 p m

NL standings

2

DH CLEVELAND R, St
loul!. 'i CLEVEI.AND 2

'J. 8 0~ p m

I&lt;

,.',

"

C INCINNATI (Snuley 'i 7 ) .u
CLEV ELAND (A nde11ion 0-1) 7 O'i p m
NY Mcl5 (Reynoso 'i 0) ut NY Ynn·
kecs (Wells 1-1) 1 l~ p m
Momrt!al (8ullmger 4 'i) .11 Balumore
(Katnk!nieckt4 -1 ) 7 ~'i p m
Atl.mto~ (M,uldu~ 7-1) .11 Toronto (An·
t.IUJM0-2) 7Hp m
Sl Lou1s (V.denzud.L 2-H) .11 M1lwau·
k~ &lt; Mcr~cd c~ \ -21 !I O'i p m
Ptn sbu rgh (l...oatza S-1) ul Mmnesota

,..

2'

'I

.~

CINCINNATI 'i ("'m:.wnWhuo: Su&gt;: I
Kun!'.&lt;l~ Clly K, P •u ~ bu rgh 1

19

'

Today's comes
Qicqo Cubs (Foster 7""1al ChtCIIJO
Whtl~ SOJI (Navarro 4-~) 4 0~ p m
flondn (Drown 6-4llll Detroit (Binu
4-2}. 70~pm

CINC INNATI

(Tomko 2-1) at

CLEVELAND(Hershooer6-2l. 7~ p m

Phtladrlphta (Beech 0-2) nt Boston

(Gordon 4-6). 7 0'\ r m
NY Mews (Mhct• 2-5) ac N Y Yankee~ (Pettntc 8-l), 7 l~ p m
Monrre•l (Hermanson 2·4) nl Bolltmot'e (8otkie l-2), 7·~~ p m
Atlanta (Neoale 9-1) 1111 Toronto
(CitmeM Il - l). 7 .U pm..,

S4 l.ou!J (Alan Bents 6-3) Ill Malwau·

.... tMtOonold 6-4), 8 Ol p m

PiHtburth (Schmidl 1-4) at Mmnesocn
(Aickal 2-9), 8:1» p.m.

HDUMon (Hampton 2-5) II Kanw C1l)l

(Rooado 6-3), 8:05 p ...

Tuaday'opmet
Philadelphia (Ruft'com 0.0) 11 Boston
(Sele 4,l), ?:Ol p.m.
Florida (Hellitll 2·4) 01 Delroil (Uta

PITCHING (8 lkl.:1swmJ Kc=y , Dnll1·
mort:. 11-1. 917 2 47 Ch1men~. Tnronlll.
11 · 1 917 I 94 Rand)' Juhn~n. Sentlli!
10-1 . 909, 2 :\4, Mussmn Balmnnn.:, H-1.
ml9, 3 ~6 . Endmm. Dnltnnore IJ-2 RIM.
:\H. F.1m~ro, S~.1tth: 6· 2 7'i0. 1 Kl
Moyer. SC111111! 6-2. 7~0 4 'K. Hcr~ht~r.
CLEVELAND. 6-2. 750 4 60
STRIKEOUTS R.m4.1y Juhn~11n , Sentlie. 112 , Cone ~cw York 120. Aprtcr
Knn sa~ Cuy 9M, Clemens, Tumntn. !Jl
Hentgen Tnrontn, K2 Mussm11. Bnlll ·
more R2 . Alvurez. Clm.:.1~0 77
SAVES Randy Mycn. R.1111nmrc
2' . M Rtwra N ~w Ynrk , 21 WcHdnnll
Telt.t~ . I~ Duu~: J1mcs M1lw.Lukcc I"'
Agmkra MlnnCSIIIol. 14 Tuylor o .• k
l.md 11, R Hcrn,mdct. Ch t~••,!!tl 11

BAT11NG L W.1lker , Cnlor ...Ju
411 Gwr,nn San Otegu l(}(l rHIUII
Los An,!!C es, 1M Lt1rton 1\tlunt.t, 14l
Galnrr.LJn. Colur.1llu. 3W Bluuscr At·
llmtil llK Dll!lWCII HtlU~I o n 12~

RUNS L Walker , CtJiurullu 6~
Gnl.urnga. Colorndo. ~7 Dlntn. Hnu ~
1on ~4 Lofton, Atlantu o&amp;Y Burks, Cui·
on1llo. 4K. Em: Youn_ll. Culur.1du. -'7
8.1gwell Houston 41
RBI Oulurnt~·' · Culontdtl 71 , 8oL!l·
'ollell Housllln 64 Aluu. Flond.l. ~LJ l.
Wulker Colorudo :"6, Kent. S.1n I r.Ltlcts·
co ~4. Cusullu, Color:alln ~2 StiS.I
Ch1~ngn, 'il
HITS Gwynn. Sm1 D1egn I O"i L.
Wulkcr Coloratlu 101 Lnlltm Atlmna
Ylii Dul.trr.lgil Ctllnnlllo. M~ Lr1~.: Youn~
Colnr.u.iu. K4 D S.,n~.lt..•u, CINC'INNJ\ n
R4 B1uto. Huu ston M4
DOUBLE."i Grudzft!!,mek Mllftlrc,tl
2~ Cl.lyfnn. St Luu1 s. 21. B,t~wdl
Hou~ton , 21 , Mnr,1R1.hn1 Phtl.!dclphtu ~ I
L Wulker, Cnluradn. 21 Rnmlla l·kll'xl.l
21 LtnUIIJ Munlrenl. I'J RrnJ!n.l
Phd~ttlclplun IIJ H R\)dn~uet.. Muntn:.d
IIJ Blg~IO •.HUU l\1 1111 19
TRIPLES W Gucrrcrn. l.tl!t An~d~·~
6, Rand,, Ptllshurtth 6, Wmn.1~k l 1 tll ~­
burp.h. b D Sanders CINCINNA II. b
Tu~kcr 1\tlunta, ~. Dt:Siucld~ S1 l.t~tm,
'i , Kcndnll. Pnt~hur.gh 4 , l.m YllUIIJ!..
Culor.ttln, 4 M~.:Rac , (luc.llloll, 4
HOME RUNS O.t~well Hm1stma.
20 L w•• lkcr Cnlur.u.lll, 20. G.ll,lfl"lll! I
Cohl f,ldo. 1~ . Casul1.1. Culnratlo, 17.
I .mklurd St luot~ I "i Hu11dl.:y N~.:w
Yurk . I~ Susn. Chll.:ll¥11, I'\ !lurks. ( 'ull'll'.ldu I~
STOLEN BASl:S I) S.w1.krs
CINC INNATI 1U, Wnnt.K:k l•tuli~r~h.
24 DcShteld~ Sl L1u1~. 20 l.t1Ut1n AI·

early."

He got what he wanted, but n;,t
the resulc he wanted. Sames hll Chc
thord pllch over the wall on lcft-ccoitcr for his sixth homer and hos first
pinch homer on five years. Durhain
homered off Burba three pitches Ia,.
cr, his fifth, and Knigbt then went to
Remlinger.
'
Asked of he was surpnscd that
(See REDS on Page 5)
:

/
lantn 19 El'l\' Younr.. Cnlnr.allu, 17
C1ay1on. St l.AlUis, 16 McCr.1d:cn. Col
orudo, l'i, Grutlltd.nnek , Muntre111 l'i I.
Walker. Cu1onu.lo 15
PITCHING {M ~~:lmllls l Nca~Jc A1
l.mt.a Y-1 900 1 I~ P J Mnrtu'lt:l': Mnntnml, Y-2. HIH, I 60, Elit.:N, S1m Fr,ttM:I~·
ctl M-2 HOO, 2 '19 B J Junes f'lcw Yurk
II .l. 7H6 2 40 , J uJen , M1llllrc.11. 7-2
17M. "42. G.lnlncr , Sun rr.lll\:I~CU 7-2.
77H, 3 19 K1Je. Hnu ~l n n J-1 J()() 2 10
G M.ultltul., Ati.Lqt.L 7-1 700 2 'B
STRIKI:.OUTS S~:htllm~. Jlhtl.illt:l
pl1 1o1 119 P J M.trtmcz Mnntrc.11 11 2
Nomo l.us Anr.ch:~. 101, Al.m Ocnc5 St
Lout~ 101. K J Bwwn Flurtdn 114 R
Martwcz !.1111 Anl!~lc ~ H7 S!nlllcmyrc.
Sl l.tllll~. 1\fl
SAVI.S Bed S,m I r. uau ~~:n 21,
Ncn.l'lund,\- 17. Jnhn rr,m~ u. New Ynrk
17 It~ Wum:ll l.m 1\n!!dcs 1~. Hnt·
tallt:U, Phll.ttldl•ln.l, 14. Wuhlers 1\tl.mt 1
11, I:.d:.L,.slc~ S1 l..t!UI S 11
•

Transactions

Vo~lllc1

Houston
P1usburgh
l2 J4
St Lmuli c·c·:c: ..... .. .!11 :\$
CINCINNATI
27 19
Oncago
27 40

San Fmnmco
Colnmdo
Los Angeles
&amp;m Daegu

$67

~29

~2

l~

2'1

29

ll'l

47R
411

6
9

AL leaders
BATTING F T hl1m,1s Chu:ugil
191, S Alol\lolr. ClEVELAND Hll W
C l.~rk Teus l60 Ju~tu:~ ClEVI:·
LAND 1~. Cor.a. Se.u11t: 142 E. M1.r.
um:z. Sennle, 1\7 M Vaughn 8mtt1n
\1'i , Surboff Bahunu~. H~
RUNS . Onrrey . Se.Lnle ~7 Berm~
Wtlhnms New York ~4 Knot.l,uu.:h
Mrn~ola, :n. A Roctriguet ·Senttlc 'il
F Thon1.1~ . Ch tcngo 'iO 'M V t•u~hn
Boslon, 49, Jeter New York 47 Hnlhn~
Amlheim, 47. E. Mar1tnez, ~~11~. 47
'
RBI Gnffey. Sunre 72 . T ~hr ­
u~z. New York 61. Belle, Clm:np,o, (,(),
F 1boma5, Chk:as,o. ~, . Todd CIMk. IXtrmt. H . Thome ClEVELAND "iO.
Bcrnte Wdlinrm, N~ York, $0, Bubner.
Seanle, $0. McGwut. Onltland, 'iO
HITS 0 Anderson. Anahetm K7 A
Rodnguez. Se~~tlle. 86. I Rodriguez.
Texas 86 Bernte Wtlhams New Ytwk
-~~ SJ ..~ Martinet. Sc:anle, 8~ Ot~ret.tpurra:
BosiOD, 80, Edmonds. Anohe1m. 80. M.
Vaua~ Boston 80
DOtmLES Spr11s:ue Toron1o. 2J.
O' Neill, New York, 21 A Rodn&amp;uez: .
Se11Uie. 21 ; Greer, Texns 20 C1nllo, M'1l
waukee, 20; I Rodttguez:, Teus 20
Cora, Seaftle, :ZO
TRIPLES 011rciaparru Boston ~
Jeter, New York. ~. Vizquel, CLEVE·
LAND. $, Damon. Kanw Cny. 4: B.L.
Hunter, Detroit, .&amp; KnoblatK:h, MmnctOta ,

4. Offmnan, K1n111 Oty, 4 Aileen. AnaHOME RUNS Gnffey. Seaule. 27

'

•

nf the

Amc r~ e~ Ln

or

Ruhcr1~

N~W YORK YJ\NKm.•s Acuvntell
N.HI' Dwi,!!IH GuuLicn I rom lh.,; I 'i-d.l)'
dl ~.~~~lcd list &lt;)&amp;mnn~'t,] 01 S~nll Jlnst 111
(olumhu!L nlthc lnlcrtl.lllnnnll.c.lguc
II.XAS RANGI:~s Acltvau.od RHP
Dunny P11Ucrsut1lmm the 1~-tluy thsllhiOO
h~l Opuuncd RHP Jmc Alhcrru In Okl.t·
hnll\&lt;1 ('uy nl the 1\mcrt~ lll'l Assnc tutmn
Stgn~d ()! Curcy Wrtl!hl m1d .LUI~ncd
tum lo lhl!n alftli.Ltl.' 111 1hc Gull (tM!II

I.Coi~IIC
Nuttun~~ll.t'IIRUt

Ha.. ball
1\mtril:an l.ta~ue
1\AI. IIM(JRI':: ()RI()I.I ,S AdiY.tll·d
MHI' Al.111 M1ll ~ lmmthc l:"i-Uay ~.bsuhlt:ll
ll sl Sc ut RHJI lhHIJl WllhoiiiH tu
H.t l\: hc~tu nllhc lnlcmatmno~ll ..c,lgue
(.'HICA&lt;lO WHin: SOX Plut:ctl 18
I r.tnk llum101S nn the I 'i-tl L)' lltsabletl hst,
n.'tmncuvc 111 June 7 R1.'\:ullcd IU M:.rm

1

CHI CAGO CURS l'l ,u.:cll C lylcr
Ht~u~tnn 111111tc l'i·l.f.ty l.itMhl1.-d hst Rc
~.llh:d (.' Mlkl! Huhtmni Inun lnwa uf the
1\ll'ICO~o lll J\s~ttfo:IHIIIIO

FI.C&gt;RH&gt;A MARUNS Reullct.l RHP
IIVoiO Hc:m,mllcl olnd Ul· Dilly M~o:Millnn
rrum Churluue ul the lntcrnutmnul
I..C,tJUI! Pl,lcCU INF Alex Art115 u111hc I~
d.ty lltuhlcd h!LI

.Eis wins U.S. ·.o pen

1ndians...

!

Attention Advertisers
.

=
•
~

••

Middleport Is Observing
Its Bicentennihl This Summer.
The Dally Sentinel will publish a
commemorative edition for its
July 2nd i~sue.
You can be a part ~f this
historic edition.
For More Information
Contact The Dally Sentinel
at 992-21"55
Dave Harris Ext. 104
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1797

•

.
•.
*

*

)

lnterleague action. •

RedS ...

M

~!'I 29
16 12

\

rear or the field in a backup car due
BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP) to a crash in practice Saturday,
They were all on this thrilling chase moved all the way up to fifth. Polefor a while, the old suspects racing sitter Dale Jarrett, lrvan's Robert
nose-to-tail like old times.
Yates Racing teammate. was sixth.
"Awesome" Bill Elliott was awe·
In an ouiStandinJ race with 26
some again, and Dale Earnhardt lead changes, Gordon and sevenwas intimidating as ever.
· . time Winston Cup champion Dale
In the end, Ernie Irvan fought off Earnhardt provided some of the best
all the fanner champions and the battles - but not for lbe lead.
• haunting reminders of his near-fatal
Despote ghmpses of greatness,
crash to win the Miller 400 Sunday. Earnhardt finished seventh and had
"The thoughts of what's hap- hos winless streak extended to a
pened at this race track were going care~r-worst 41 races.
through my mond," said Irvan, who
"Seventh place is good, but it
was left in a coma with massive head ain't great," Earnhardt said. "ll's
injuries after the 1994 crash at time to win a race."
Michigan Speedway. "It's probably
Gordon look the series lead by 46
not the best thing to do, because I points over Martin. Defending Winwas gelling a lillie teary-eyed. It's ston Cup champion Terry Labonte
preny hard to drive a race car with had been tied with Gordon, but ran
YESI - South Africa's Ernie Els calebrltft after flnlahlng the 18th
tears in your eyes."
over a piece of lire and later brushed
hole of the final r"und of the U.S. Open Sunday in Btlthe1d1, Md.
Dizzied by the second tum, where the wall to fimsh 39th.
Ela sank a teat four-foot putt on the final hole to finish at 4-undertra,gedy had struck, lrvan gripped the
It was Labonte's worst showing
par 276 and win the tournament. (AP)
wheel and willed homself to hold on. sonce July 6, 1991, in the Pepsi 400
"The last five laps, my mind was at Daytona. and left him third in the
goong in all kind of circles,"' Irvan standings. In I0 I caution periods thos
said. "I kept going through turn two season, the steady Labonte has been
and was like, 'Man, this is where the involved in only two.
·By DOUG FERGUSON
with a rhythmic swing and a knack wreck hapjiened."'
"I had to stay out there and try to
BETHESDA, Md. (AP) - The cast for risong to the occasion, won his
lrvan. who underwent 14 months get a caution flag so we could fix ot,""
of characters was the same, and so second U.S. Open in four years that of grueling rehabilitation to gel back
Labonte said. '"We ended up being
was the outcome - shock for Tom ended talk of Tiger Woods wonning behind the wheel, has no recollection
the caution."
AT LAST! - Ernie Irvin celebratas his victory In the Mil~r 400
Lehman, tears for Colin Mont· the Grand Slam.
of the crash. Instead, on the way to
lrvan got his first career victory at
Sunday
whh hi1 wife, Kim.lrvan, racing at the site of his near-fatal
gomerie and another U.S. Open
Els shot a 1-under-par 69 at Con- victory, he was left only with a mys- Michigan in his third race back since
wreck
In
19114, claimed hia flrat Winston Cup win of the saeson and
champoonship for Ernie Eis.
gressional Co~ntry Club under terious feeling that danger lurked the crash. He led 33 or the 200 laps.
r~irst checliered flag at the Michigan Speedway since that crash.
Just when ot seemed that Lehman
ontense pressure brought on by four here.
weaving from 20th to eighth in the
would have something to show for players-all of them in the last two
"I don 'I remember anything from fiC:Sl 25 laps. lrvan was right in the
S2~ 4&lt;UI
' taking a lead onto the final round of groups - jockeying for the lead that day," Irvan said. "There's no TV moddle or the three· and four-wide
1 (22) Dale Earnlmrdt Kantt.~pnh~ . N C
11 ll4) JeffOn.'C'n. Wtntdwll.IM! Tcnn , 0k'vmChevrok.'l, 200 41 .17'\
"the U.S. Open, the shot that sets up over the final 12 holes.
le1 PH sue1111
t
footage of the wreck, and I'm glad. battles - stubborn, headstrong, nev8 (42) Denike Core, Sp.maway W.tsh. Pnn11
perfectly suddenly becomes too far His 4-under 276 was one stroke bet· I think I'm be11er off not knowing." er givong an mch.
12 1241 Dohhy Hnmthon. Nu"h\ltllc. Tcnn Pr11"'
ac. 200 S2M.47~
lt.tc I1J7 S10,24tl
9. ~K) Bobhy Lalxmtt. CtlfllUS Chn~u . 'le~~oo~s
left.
ter than Montgomerie, whose
' :\~ 121'11 81lly S1andri'd,c. Shl:lby. N C. I ()nl.
Jrvan, Ellioll, Mark Martin and
Though he won twice last season, PoniiDC, 200, $16, 125
,
Just when Montgomerie seems chances perished when his 5-foot par Ted Musgrave pulled away in a pha· there were whispers that lrvan wasl'):"i $1~ 11,,
10 (7) Johnny Benson. Grant.~ ltaptds. MH-11.
14 (2~) l&gt;nvc MIU\:1~ . Wau5.1U, W15 , Cllt.'vmPunhnc. 200. $'11.62~
poised to break through with his first putt on No. 17 grazed the ridge edge lanx of Fords during the final half of n'lthe same drover since the wreck.
lcl, IH IJ. $17 'iM
II I :\6) Lake ~p.'ell Jucklun. M1 u F..,n.J 1il0,
''maJOr at the tournament that suits his or the hole. Lehman, woth bogeys on the race. With 37 laps to go, Irvan Hos 15th career victory and first $2~.975
\~ (27) W.11d Runon. Snuth llo!ltun, '1.1 . l••mu ,~~; ll'IK $2 1,W'i
12 tiS) Jeremy Mnyfiekl Ow1.'n~hnm. K)' ,
' game to a tee, a crucoal putt slides the 16th and 17th hole, was another charged past Elliott, the 1988 Win· since last September at Richmond
\!1 (12) Jcny N,,tle,lu Ounhory. C11nn . Ptmu121,400
' over the lip of the cup.
stroke back. Jeff Maggert shot a 40 ston Cup champoon, in a bold move might silence the doubters. It also Font,ll200,
.tc. 11\6, S21 9~1
(14) Rtcky Rodd, ~111pmke Y11 l"llfd,
17 (40) Julm Afklrelll h1tllnnapnh~ . l iM'd, 174
And JUSt like that, the world gets a on the back and finished at l-over that evoked memories of the might quell rumors that the 38-year· 200. $)),7~
S2111'l&lt;l
14
(9} Jeff 'Budl)n, South Bo~ton Va Furd
~eminder that greatness comes in all
281.
1M (21lSt.,.veGriM-~Ihl Gntli«lcta All1 Chevru" Swervon' Irvan" of old.
old driver was in danger of losing his 200. m .JOO
sorts of stripes.
Ills becomes the first foreogn player
lt.•l. 162 $21 7~0
I~ CIO) Jm,my Spm.:.:r. Berw1c:k. Pn Furd.
On the two-mile. high-banked ride with Yates.
·
19 (I Ml T1.'11) l&lt;1btmt ~. Corpus Chr~s ll , kxoL1
200. $26.7~
•. Els, the 27-year-old South African
to win the U.S. Open twoce.
oval ~here fuel mileage is usually
"Robert's told me that all I have
Chcvntl~l l \~ S\7 1\KO cr.t~ll
16 (;\H) M...:ha:l Waltnp Owca'lbtwn, Ky lilfd,
40 (Ill G..·ull lludtne, Chcii'II.IU~ NY lurJ
dectstve, the leaders started entering to do is win races," Irvan said. '"Thos 200, $28 " ·'
121 $217KO enp.me 11ulure
17 (4) Sterltnr: Marlin Columbtu Tenn .
(Contm~ed from Page 4)
the pits with about 25 laps left.
can't hurt, right'!"
41 121 Joe Ncmedtc:k, Lakeland, Flu, ChcvmChe\lf'Oiet, 200. $J1 6.~
lcl biJ $1'i JKO enpne Jon lu re
Musgrave, seeking his first Won13 (~) R1eky Crav~n NewhutJh M.unt!
42 1161 Mtkc ~kmner, Su!L,m~illc, C&gt;thl ,
Although the Cardonals lost the
200. s~ ~.'l'l:"i
' ally lost 5-2.
stan Cup voctory, took gas only on
Here's the order of finish Sunday Che~rule~.
Chcvmlct. l'l. S21,1KO ao5h
19 O~l Bn:u Butlt~ . O!emun,_ NY 1nrtl
series,
at
least
it
was
a
financoal
suc.: "When you run into tough start·
4l (l3) K\tnny Wall.u, St l...tlUJJ, Funl. 1.
the last slop, whole Irvan took gas of the Miller 400 NASCAR Winston
199, S27.l$0
$21.7140 cnp.lne rmlttre
; ing potching, that's usually what cess woth a paid crowd of 46,646 on
20
(6)
W,llly
Dnllenbnch.
Bns.11t
Cnln
,
Chcvm·
and tires. When it was all sorted out, Cup race on the two-mile oval at
$16.6)$
·.~appens," Hargrove saod. "And the Sunday and a three-game total of Irvan was in front with 20 laps to go Michigan Speedway. with drover, ""· 199,
M.tr~m ol Vlclllry '2 964 ~onlls
21 (11) Rick W1lwn. B11r1ow. Fla Furtl !1)1)
Cardinals have very good starling 134,758.
lime of race 2 hmarN, :\ll nunutes
.
and never lost the lead.
starting position in parenthese~. res· $16.41&lt;.
Cautmns \ lur IK lllJI ~
"I don't know that I'm a big fan
22 (:\7 ) Hu1 Stnt.;klm, Calcru, Ala . rwu. IIJII.
l'itchong."
"That last pit stop was a phe· idence, type or car, laps completed. 126.900
L1p11 lc.ttlcu Cr.1vcn l·"i Mu!r.nwc 6·4fl
of
onterleague
play
yet,
but
I
like
the
" Stottlemyre made hos 20th career
Cr.wcn47-4'J. B l.Jtbl.mtc ~).'i1 . l111ilMI ~2-5M. M,lfwinner's average speed, wonnings
ll ( 171l&gt;ick Trickk:. Wt:CCI~~m Rapul'l WI ~
nomenal thing," Irvan said.
hn $1) J U11r1un 60·62. Wnii .ICC 6'-71 Marun 74
l'oN, IW SN.M"i
,
Jappearance against Cleveland and coty, I Joke the ballpark and I like the
Elliott, v;ho held a five-second and reason out, if any: .
Wull.tt.:l! 7 ~ Ulm1176-71J Murun ttO Ell11111 Ill M1.
24
{4lJ
DarNII
Wallrtp.
Fr.tnkhn.
Tcnn
:'tlllowed three hits m eight innongs, Cardonals'fans ," Hargrove said. "We lead nearing the halfway point on a
I (20) Ernie lrwn. SaliNI!I, Caltr . r.,mJ. 200• • Olcvn1~1 IW. $26,4"i~
Munm H4-M"i, Elh,lll H6· 110 B l..o!lxlllle Ill M.l~·
I$)
m.
$9),8JO
were
very
well
treated."
fjeld 11 2 W.1l1r1p U~. MIU1111 114126 Mu s~J,ivc
:.with eight strikeouts and three walks
2~ 12~1 Clt,W llulc Spokunc Wash , Pt~lllllll
bid to recapture hos own past glory,
2 (26~ B1ll Elhotl, Oa'oll~nnvallc. Ga, Funl 200.
127 149 Mllrllll 1!~0- J!Ii"i, Ullmn l'i6- 162, lr\l,lft
I9K SIV.220
Notes: Nagy has worked onto the was second, nearly three seconds 171.8)0
l'fe pitched in the Amencan League
lfll -114 Ellmnl7~ Mu5~ntYe 11ft-11V lrvnnll\()2t1 (19) Kyle Peuy, R,1nt.llcmnn N C Ptltlltnl
200
:.:1
3 (II)Mnrt.Manln,Btlk:Svdlc.M .r~ wd 200
1911 SIH.%0
.
•
'
"\tis first eight seasons before comong seventh innong on hos last 14 •1llrts . ... back, for his best finish since his 4K RO,
l.c.11l t:hoiiiJlcs 2fi ;unun~ II llnvcn
27 00) Ken S.:hradcr f-enton, Mtl . Chcvrnlct
- ladians outfielder David Justoce was Aprol 1996 crash at Talladega.
to the Cardinals last season.
4 (~)Tt:d Musgruve. Fnmklm, Wt~. Ford 200.
Wmstun ('uJlJMlllll st,andm~s I Jell Gordnn
I9H, $2!,MOII
2 II 0 :Z. Ma rk Mur1m 2 HM 1 r..:rry l.nhunle
,,, . Stottlemyre wanted only one scratched from the lineup about 45
2M 12'11 Dovtll 01\.'CIL &lt;twend1um, Ky, Chcvm·
Martin was third and Musgrave 147.200
( 12) JeiT Gurdon, Pinshom, had . &lt;.'hl:vn1k.'i.
2001 "1l.1lcJnrreu 1.976 ~.Jcn Ourton.I .IMl
k.'l, IYM, $1~.640
pttch back. He hung a slider to monutes before the game -due to a completed Ford's sweep of the top 200.~$47,42'
6, D .11~ 1:.m1hmlt I M\1 7 Unhhy Luhunlc 1 , 74~
2tJ
(19)
Rill'!)'
W,alla~.:c, St Lout~. Forti, 197
Vizquel, the Indians' leadoff hiller hypetextended left elbow. Golcs four spots.
6 CII Dale Jamm. H1cltnry. N C.. F11rd. 200.
MR11'ky H.utltl I 710 1) M1ch•.cl Willtnl•· l.ftH 10.
111.~0!
lltlll.llum 1,6 12
·
146.$2$
replaced
him
in
left
field
and
the
fifth
lU
(41)
R1ck
Mast.
Lc1unr.tun,
V:a.ftmd,
11n.
~ho had been 1- for· I0 on the series
Jeff Gordon, forced to start at the
spot
on
the
order
....
La
Russa
said
.,
:t&lt;-ith only one ball hit out of the
Ybung, who played first base on
~field.
•(C-o:-nll:-nu_cd_rro-:m~P;;:agc:...4.:...)- - - : - - - - - . - - - - - - - - - .- "If he pitches with a lead, maybe Sunday, probably will be hos dcsig·
the eoghth innong turns out doffer- nated hitter when the Cardonals play longest winning streak on four seanmlh mnrng:.
Cubs 4, Brewers 3
last Wednesday hccausc of the snmc
• ent," Cardona Is manager Tony La their second intcrleague scnes, at sons. Rodriguez homered oil' Broan
Alhlelics S, Rockies 2
At Wrogley Foeld, Frdnk Castillo prohlcm.
: Russa said. "He deserved better, but Milwaukee beginning Monday... La t&gt;1oehier (4-6) leading of!' the lourth. (4-8) allowed five hots on 6 113
AI
0.1kland,
Anel Pnetn (5-4)
Blue Jays 11, Phlllles I
: that's what he got and that's what we Russa was moffcd at the lndoans for The ball rebounded off the 160-foot- innings and struck out seven a.' the
struck
nut
a
career-high
II in 6 113
Joe Carter. whose Game 6 home
cancclong
batting
pracucc
Sunday.
A
: ~pt ."
onnongs and Mall Sllurs drove on hvc
high rom and landed on the field. No Cubs won the series 2·1 . Turk Wen· run won the 1993 World Series for
:
Brian Giles homered, Vizquel lew thousand fans showed up early estimate of the dostance was imme· deli got the final out for his third the Blue Jays over Philadelphia, runs Larry Walker went 3-for-4 tn
to watch ... The Cardonals woll wear diately available
: had an RBI double and Malt
raosc hos miiJilr lcaguc-lcuding aver·
save, striking out Todd Dunn with rcceoved a standong ov.ation from
powder-blue road uno form&gt; worn hy
: Williams, who had been 0-for-12 in
age
In .419 and hot hos 20th homer.
Yankees 8, Marlins 5
runners on second and third. The lans at Veterans Stadoum after getthe 1982 World Sencs championship
: the series, had a run-sconng smgle on
Rangers 7, Padres 4
MarliiiS 6, Yankees 5
teams drew 112,690 this weekend- ting his 2,!10!Mh hot. Alex Gonzalcl
team
on
the
second
game
ol
the
: the five-run ninth. Sandy Alomar
At Arlongton, Rusty Greer contin·
At Miami, Moises Alou's bases- 7,638 shy of the Wnglc~ Field homered, went 3-lnr-5 and toed a
Brewers series Tuesday St Louos loaded grounder rolled through sec- record of 120,328 for a three-game career high woth lour RBis, and Pat ued hos nne-man show against
• ~jngled in the inning to extend hos
I hitting streak to 16 games, although beat Molwaukcc in seven games on ond baseman Pat Kelly's legs, scor- series, sec in 1994 agamsl Cincmnato . Hentgen (7-3) pitched a sox-hiller
Natoonal Leaguers, driving in the goahead
run and scoring another. He
: he said he ' ll never threaten Joe that series.. .. Fernando Valenwela, ing two runs in the ninth onning as
Royals 8, Plrales I
Red So11 10, Mels I
acquired
in
a
trade
from
San
Docgo
: DiMaggoo's record 56-game run .
At PIIL,burgh, Jose Olferman went went 9-lor- 12 agaonst San Docgo and
Floroda gamed a split. Florida scored
At New York, Bobby Jones' coghton Fnday, won't joon the dub until two unearned runs in the eighth for game winning streak came to u sud· 4-for-4, reached base five times and San Francisco w1th twn dnuhlcs, two
"It's very dotficult to break who·
:
humers and four walks.
: over's 'got that longest hollong today on Milwaukee, but utility play- a 4-31cad and New York went ahead den halt. his downl~ll started when drove in three or the first four runs
er Scott Lo vongstone showed up just woth two runs on the no nth on Rohb Boston pitcher Vaughn E.'helman ( 1- Kevon Appocr (5·5) linally won hos
Giant• 4, Angels l
: ~1rcak," Alomar saod. "Lou Gchng!
before
the
game
started.
At
Anaheom,
J T. Snuw hot a twu• DiMaggio! Nohody os goong to reach
IO!hh game with fovc shutout
Nen (5-2) Paul O'Neoll scored the I) bunted for a hit in his first big
run homer ug:amst h1s lormcr team
: that."
go-ahead run on the ninth onning of league at-bat. Boston first baseman innings.
. .
;
and Wolloam VanLandingham (4-4)
Astros 3, Twins 2
the opener on a sucnlicc fly caught Mo Vaughn's left knee locked up
••
allowed
just nne run on Jive innings
At
Houston,
Terry
Stconhach
by second baseman Kurt Abhnlt in whole shding home on t,hc thord
••
allowed
the
winning
run
to
s~.:orc
dcspote
coght
walks. Rnd Beck gnl
foul territory. New York oven:amc innong, and he wa.' lorced to leave.
hos
NL-lcading
21st snvc.
••
deficits of 4·0 and S-2.
X-rays were inconclusive on the when he tao led In catch Pal Loslach ·,
two-time All-Star, who left a game popped up squeeze attempt in the
•••
(Contonued from Page 4)
.,• _

r--

470
409
401

htim, 4

N .!~hv1llc

CLEVELAND INDIANS A~~1gncd
C Ad,nn Taylnr, LHP M.~rk laylor RHI' ;
Scan Dc~tulu und RHP k1d1o1rd N;~n:uc
lt1 Watertown nf the New York-Penn
l.cu~o~; Rc· .l~ ~ •gncd C P,tt Evuns tn
Cnlumhu.~ the ~~IUih Atlllllll~ League
~
DE fRO! r riGERS Phkell or lluh11~ H•!:t!IIISnn nn the I~ ll,ay diMhled h5t ,
tclruadtvc hl June II Re~.:.LIIL't.l INf .C)f
Jt'lll! H.tll frnm Tnlcdo nf the lmcmnllllLIOII
l..cuguc Stgn~o'll C t1m smphcr P.1rkcr 28
Dan1cl tuutcrh:d1n .md I.HP Rtdmrtl

4H~

Wcstcm Division

lrnm

AN~IICI.IItun

Cenlral Division
n :\5 4!'1$

Sunday's scores
DH N Y Yankee ~ H Aur1d.1 ~. Atm
da6. N Y Yankees !i
Balt1more ~ 1\ll,mta J ( 101
Montreal 10 Detrmt 2
Toromo II . Phtladelphm I
Kansas Caty 8, P1t1sburgh I
Chtt~o Whtte Sox 14. CINCINNATI
6
CLEVELAND 9 St Louts 2
Chu:::.zo Cub&amp; 4 Mdwuukee '
Houston \, Mtnne!otll 2
SIUl Frai'H!ISCO 4, AnalJCim I
Oil.klnnd ~. Colorado 2
Senule 8, Lm An~l« 2
Boston 10, NY Men I
TuRs7. SooOiego4

kee. 14

NL leaders

1 Sl

Monrrcal I. O.:tron 0
Turooto1 Ptu l.uldphl.l 2
Minncsoca b, Hou5ton I
'texas R San D1eg_o 6
NY. Y.mkees ,L t Fllmdn ppd r,11n
Snn Fmnusm I0 Anahem11

M~&lt;iW II'C , O.Lkluml, 24. T M.tr11RC/., N..:w
York 21 M Vno~hn Rmton 20 Tndll
Cl.nk O~trort I M Thnm!! CLEVE·
LAND. I!Uusuce CLEVELAND. 17
STOLEN RASES Knobl.mch Min·
m: su l:~ , 2~. N•~un, Tnrunlu. 2K . 8 L
Hunter Dctrn•t 27. T GUI.xiWin Kun~a.~
C1l)' 27 VIZlJUel. CL EVEtA.NL5 . IK.
Durham. Chu::~go 17 , Burnltl, Mtlw,•u-

game of the dcsognated hitter were In
usc. Manager Terry Bevington
decided to ponch-hot Sames, matc~­
ong a lcft-hander against the roghlhanded Burba.
"You've got lo take your •hl'l
when you feelot's the bcsltomc to do
1
11 ," Bevongton saod. "You don 't
know of you're goong to gel another
opportunity "
'
Knight stayed with the struggh~g
right-hander, who had thrown 120
pitches to that point' and walked seven, onstcad ol bnnging in icft-handcr
Moke Rem longer, who was throwonJl
in the bullpen.
"I felt Burba was throwong well
enough to get Baines out in that situation," Knight saod. " We hadn"t
pitched to Manonez all day, and ,l
wanted to force them to usc Bain~s

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Interleague play thrust Harold Baoncs into
an unfamohar role: battmg for a
potcher on the fifth onnmg of a close
game. He came through hke a
Natoonal Leaguer
Baines hot a pinch three-run
homer and Ray Durham lollowcd
with a solo shot that staned the
Chocago White Sox towards a 14-6
victory Sunday over the Cinconnato
Reds.
Chicago hot four homers in all Albert Belle added a solo shot and
Jorge Fabregas hot a three-run homer
in the seventh onnong to put the game
out of reach Fabregas had career
hoghs witli four hils and tour RBis.
But the most intercstong - and
povotal - moment came in the
fifth, which staned with the Reds
ahead 4-3.
Chris Snopek doubled off Dave
Burba (4-6) to toe ol woth two outs.
Reds manager Ray Knight chose to
intenloonally walk No S batter Dave
Martinez woth potcher James Baldwin up next.
Baldwon had thrown only 66
potchcs, allowong four runs on fovc
hots, and would have stayed on the

Scoreboard
Baseball

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

By KEN BEAQEA

Major league
baseball
roundup

FORCED OUT- The Cleveland Indians' Charles Nagy is forced
·out at second base by St Louis shortstop Royce Clayton in the third
Inning of Sunday's game in St Louie, where the Indians won 9-2.
The Indians' Omar Vizquel, who hit the flelder's-choice grounder to
second to start this play, baat Clayton's throw to first to foil the dou·
ble play. (AP)

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

,lrvan defies old
ghosts &amp; ex-victors
to win Miller 400

·

-

'

Mondey, June 18, 1997

:- BIG CATCHES-...._ tfyMI of PoiMrGy (lift) llld Donny 111111
:orRuiiMd, right, C8Uflht ._. thnelmpn 111W Cat the Aeolnl
;t oclla on "*Y •...._.. The two 1111111 wei~ In atlbout 11
ftlouncrl.lftd......._. three fWI In IIIIQIII. , _ m1r 11t1111 tiel!
""- ~Met ltncMn fot their long •nuu• IIIII llllrp tlllh.

Knight let him pitch to Baines, Bur·
bn saod, "'I don't want to talk about
that. I was surprised that we dodn ' I
pitch to Martinez. I felt that if we
walked Martinez, they would ponchhit for the pitcher.
"'There wasn't one situation
where I felt I wanted to throw a pitch
to a certD,in spot and got it there.
There was no time in the game
where I felt that I was in command."
-Baines, normally the _White Sox'
designated hitter, was relegated to
tbe bench during the series. He had
two pinch-hit appearances, deliver·
ing a single aJid a homer. '
'"Was I bored? No," Baines saod
of his weekend. '"I could have been
at home. What's the use or fighting
!he system?"
Baldwin didn't like havins to play
by National Leque rules, either.
"'That was very tough for me," he
said. "'I wanted to stly in the game.
But this is the Nationll League.
There's nothins you can do about
it."
The White Sox had 18 hits in all,
including a seventh-inninJ sin1le by
reliever Carlos Cutillo.
Chicqo took two 0111 of th~
pmes in the series, a turnuound
from the)ut time the teii'IIS met. The
underdoa Reds won the 1919 World
Series S-to-3, lesdins to the "BI11:k

Sox" gambling scandal and lifetime
bans for coght Chocago players.
Conconnato had its three biggest
crowds soncc opening day durong the
series, avcragong 33,343 - 11,700
more than their average coming into
the series.
Fans were hoping to sec Frank
Thomas and Belle, the American
League's most potent offensive com·
bination. Thomas missed all t~n:c
games and went on the disabled list
Sunday. Belle, booed loudly before
every at-bat in lbe series, had an RBI
single and a solo homer Sunday, hos
second in the series and 16th ol' the
season.
Until Sunday, the White Sox had
been reeling from the loss of
Thomas, the AL"s top hitter at .391,
who pulled muscltls in his abdomen
a week ago. ChiC8IO was 2· S and

scored only 14 runs in its previous
seven games without him.
Tony Castillo (3-3) got the voctory in relief of Baldwin, going I 2n
scoreless innings. Carlos Castillo
pitched the finnl3 1/3 to get his first
save.
Notes: To replace Thoma.,, the
White Sox called up first baseman
Maron Valdez !rom Tropic-A
Nashville. He made hos first maJorleague appearance, wearing uno form
No. 71 with no name on the back. He
had an infield RBI single for hos first .
hit. ... Burba, who started his career
with Seattle, fell to 0-3 career agaonsl
the ·Whitc Sox . Hos first bog-league
start was a 4-0 loss at Comoskey Park
on June 2S, 1991. ... Dcion Sanders
llad two infield singles, extending hos
hitting streak to nine games. He also
got thrown out at home trying to

-----Sports brlefa~----Ttack aod lleld
born Gennan, pounded out a unani·
NUREMBERG, Germany (AP) •mous decision over Virgil Holl to
-Olympic champion Donovan Bai- become the first man on history to
ley of Canada ran his fastest 1()(). hold three light heavyweight titles.
Miehalczewski. the undctcated
meter race or the season, clocking
9.94 seconds to defeat an:h-rival Lin- WBO champion, used his power to
fold Christie.
like control or the fight in the fifth
BoxJ,.
round as he stripped the American of
DUESSELOORF, Germany (AP) his WBA and IBF belts in a punish- Dlriusz Michak:zewski, a Polish· ing fight.
·
J

score on a ny to shonstup Oz"c
Guollcn in shon left lield woth the
Reds truohng hy 10 runs . ... The first
~wo games uf the scnes were ph~ed
on 2.40 and 2:24. Sunday's game~a.'
a more AL-hkc 3:31 .

Yourp&lt;~rttwr bo JNVI«tion

Downing, Childs,
Mullen, Muuer
111 E. Second St,, Pometoy

992-3381

�•
Monday, June 11, 1197

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pllgel• Thit o.lly Stnllnel

~y,June11,1987

Peace talks delay pushes·
.Pal·estinians to v.iolence

This event should have been called a fund~raiser

'

By NASSER SHIYOUKHI

HIKER SURVIVES - .Chris Wearstler, 21, of
Por'l Angeles, Wash., who spent nine days lost
In the Olympic ~~odtlohal Park, five days without
food and two without a shirt, discussed his
ordesl Sunday at the Elwha River Ranger Sta·

lion near Pon Angeles. Hla mother, Sheryl Helm
of Gig Harbor, and girlfriend Stacie Hopkins
were among friends ·and ·relatives who met
Wearstier after his rescue. (API

A8soclated Prel8 WrHer
. HEBRON, West Bank - Pales·
ti.nians threw stones at Js~acli troops
in the West Bank town of Hebron for
a third day today, and a Jewish set·
tier opened fire on Palestinians during a land protest in the Gaza Strip.
In Jerusalem, dozens of Palestinians rallied outside the U.S. Consulate
to protest last week's U.S. Congress
resolution recognizing Jerusalem as
Israel's undivided ~apital. The Palestinians want a sector of the city for a
future capital. ·
Many Palestinians feel the United
States is biased toward Israel in i~s
attempt to broker the Mideast conflict, and the congressional resolution
· has sparked new anger.
·
Palestinians also are .disenchanted
by a prolonged deadlock in peace
talks with the Israelis, especially
after the apparent failure of the latest
Egyptian attempt to restart talks.
"People arc frustrated," said
Moussa Abu Sabha, a Palestinian legislator from Hebron . "They see that
the Israelis are not implementing the
peace agreement and that the United
States is biased."
In Hebron, Israeli troops·fired rubber bullets at 70 Palestinian stone

throwers. Nine people were injured, the chief Muslim cleric, or mufti,
including eight protesters and Heidi lkrema Sabri.
Levine, a photographer on assign·
The group raised banners reading
. ment for The Associated Press.
"Who is the U.S. Congress to deter'
Palestinian police stayed away mine the fate of Jerusalem?" and
from the clashes.• as they did Satur- "This is an American conspiracy
day and Sunday.
against Jerusalem."
In the Gaza Strip, a Je\Vish settler
The mufti said he considered the
opened fire on 30 Palestinians who congressional resolution an· aggrestried to tear down a fence they said sion against ali Palestinians, Ar~_b!._ ·
was pan of an illeg~ land grab by the and Muslims. "This is a blatant decJewish settlement of Gush Katif. A laration of war against us," Sabri
deaf Palestinian man was wounded. said .
.
The settler, who was on a traClC!~· . . The protesters tried to deliver a
fired from his pistol for 2S minutes, letter to U.S. diplomats, but a gul!rd'
wi_th Palestinian•protesters throwing refused io accept it. ~n the letter, tile , .
stones from time to time. Journalists protesters warned that U.S. interests
iook cover cover behind trees.
in the Middle East would be hun
Israeli soldiers arrived eventually, . because Washington is increasingly ;
but did not restrain the settler. Troops losing credibility among the Arabs. :·
threw stun grenades to disperse the
According to the Israeii-Palesti',\· •• ·
Palestinian protesters, am) also ian peace accords, the future .~f .:
pushed and shoved journalists. One 'Jerusalem is to be determmed tn ;
soldier · held an uneKploded stun negotiations · by May 1999. East l
grenade near the face of a Palestin· Jerusalem was . captured by Israet ian lV cameraman and others banged from Jordan in the 1967 Mideast war ;
journalists' cars with their guns.
and tqday is home to 180,000 Pales· ;
In the Jerusalem protest, dozens of tinians.
· •
Palestinians gathered outside the IJ.S.
Successive U.S. governments ;
Consulate in the city 's eastern sector. · have held.that while the city should ;
The rally was led by the top Pales· not be divided again , it's future ·:
tinian Liberation Organization offi· should be determined in peace talks. ;
ciai in the city, Faisal Husseini. and
·
:

Park hiker lost for 9 days
walks into rescuers' camp Efforts to·. charge Israeli leader:·..
PORT ANGELES, Wash. (AP)After wandering through Olympic
National Park for nine days, it was
the sound of imaginary flutes and
bagpipes that led a lost hiker to his
rescuers.
"I thought there was a music fes·
tival in the woods," said Chris
Wearslier, hours after he was found.
"I was on my way to the festival."
Wcarslier, 21.• of Port Angeles
walked into a camp full of rescuers
Sunday morning suffering from
dehydration and exhaustion. He had
lost 25 pounds.
"According to him he was attract·
ed to Elkhorn Ranger Station by the·
sound of bagpipes and flutes," said

Curt Sauer, the park's .chief ranger.
"We don't have any up there, so he
was apparently beginning to hallucinate. "

teams began searching June 7. Sauer
estimated lhe cost of the search at
$50,000.
"If he had filled out a back coun·
·try permit and we had some itinerary
it probably would have made. the
search easier," Sauer said. "This is
one of the reasons we'd like people
to fill out a permit."
Wearstler was taken to Olympic
Memorial Hospital, where medical
staff. checked him, gave him a meal
and . sent him home. He said he
would have enjoyed his days in the
park if only he hadn't run our of sup·
plies.
"If I would have had food, it
would have been a really cool expe·
rience," he said.

with fraud dealt new.setback

:

JERUSALEM (APi - Israel's not a violation of ethics," they wrote. remained in office until convicted.
" If the court stood in the place of
The decision was hailed as a vin-:
Supreme Court on Sunday rejected
the
prime
minister,
it
may
have
made
dication
by Netanyahu, who has:
an appeal to charge Prime Minister
a
different
decision."
·
maintained
his innocence in the affair'
Benjamin Netany,ahu with fraud in an
At issue was Nctanyahu's appoint- since it broke in January.
•
influence-peddling scandal that had
threatened io topple his government.· mcnt of a political crony. Jerusalem
"This has taken much 100 long,:
In a 4· 1 dedsion., the court ruled iawyer,Roni Bar-On, as anomey:gcn· ·and the verdict of the Supreme Coun:
that prosecutors had m~de a "rea· eral in January. Police suspect Bar· proves that the whole affair was fCl!l::
sonable" decision in April when they · On was appointed in exchange for ly baseless," said David Bar-lllan, a:
found there was not e~ough evidence political support from Aryeh Deri, top aide to the prime minister.
leader of a 'key party in Netanyahu's
to indict Netanyahu.
The court ruled S-0 against indict·
"The court will not overturn an ruling coalition, who allegedly
Bar-On
would
act
to
end
his
ing
Hanegbi; although the judges also
believed
attorney general's decision unless it
corruption
trial.
,
.
questioned
whether his behavior was :
· is deemed eKttemeiy unreasonable,"
The affair created the most serious . ethical.
they wrote.
scandal
ofNetanyahu's year-old gov·
in April, police recommended:
However, the judges said their
, decision was not a complete exoner· ernmcnt, prompting some Israelis to indictments of Nctanyahu, Hancghi, ·
ation o( the prime minister and Jus- demonstrate for an official inquiry senior aide Avigdor Lieberman and
tice Minister Tsahi Hancgbi, also and others to call 'for the prime min· Dcri. But state prosecutors decided to
implicated in the mallcr.
ister's resignatio~'l.~ Supreme Court charge only Dcri, saying they lacked
"The court says only that. the move to charge · Nelanyahu could proof for Nctanyahu and Hancgbi.
prime f[linistcr's decision' and the have brought down the government, J'he lnvc'stigiui'on against Lieberman
'
.
minister's behavior arc not against though technically he ·could have continues.
.
.
"People
will
do
wha(thcy
have
to
the law. It does not say that they arc.
By E!RAO CAIN
be repeated verbally before any predo
to
prevent
an
unwise
and
danger·
Associated Press Writer
scription is written. · ·
' '
SALEM. Ore.- Penny Schlueter,
In winning the second vote on the ous public policy fioni gaining a
terminally ill with ovarian cancer, iss_u7. opponents of doctor-assisted foothold in the United States," says
sayli she might start hoarding pii"" .su1c1dc sa1d new tnformatwn . has Bob Castagna of the Oregon Catholic
just to m*c sure she has enough to co~c out . smce 1994 that JUStifies Conference.
Legislators who backed the sec·
end her life if Qregon voters reverse' asktng res1dents to cast ballots agatn.
thclflselve&gt; this fall and forbid peoBackers of the law called the ·ond election said studies showed that
pie from legallY obtaining suicide move an insult to voters who already in the Netherlands, where euthanasia
druis.
have dcc1ded the matter, although 11 is legal, 25 percent of patients who
take pills to end their lives suffer lin·
Oregonians ~pproved a first-in-the passed by a narrow ~argin ._
.
nation assi•ted suicide law in 1994
The asmted sutc1de 1ssuc IS gering deat~s. sometimes lasting for
· Luellen Smiley, daughter of Allen
but the lal" ha~. been tied 'up court. already before the U.S. Supreme several days.
· By ROBERT MACY
They also cited testimony from Associated Press Writer
Smiley, said her fathercouldn'thave
(.ast.week, apppnents persuaded the Court, with a ruling expected be for~
Lcgislaturi' to st;nd t~c issue back to the court takes us summer break. various medical professionals that
LAS VEGAS - Famed mobster been in on it since ltc was so ncar
many
terminally
iii
people
would
find
the voters .to dc,fidc \I all over again However.. t~at case pertatns to state
Benjamin ."Bugsy" Siegel, buoyed Siegel when shots were lired.
it
difficult
to
swallow
enough
pills
on
"He said the bullets were just
In Novcmper.
laws proh1b1ttng such su1ctdes, not to
by the success of his $6 million gamtheir
own
to
bring
on
death.
Schlueter, 54. doc~n't plan to take laws perinilting them.
·
ble in the desert, returned to Beverly breezing hy him, shots coming from
The chief sponsor of Oregon's law Hills to hobnob with Hollywood everywhere," she said. "He felt like
a lethal dose ofdrug1 ~nytirrie soon,
Both sides expect a . vigorous,
he was given a second chance, that it
hut she w•nts to be praparcd.
expensive campaign ' before the says the objections were available 10 friends .
voters
during
the
1994
campaign
and
"I do~ ' t w~nt qn undignified. November election.
It cost him his life, and gave birth wa• a miracle he didn't go too."
·
that
opponents
arc
raising
bogus
Famed entertainer Liberace felt
painful death. ~~o ycllt have to start
"Wr; will certainly be helping
to a mystery that has 'asted 50 years.
,.
swankiest clubs in Las vc,:as.
the
same.
lying to th~ cJoctor amhay. 'The pain out" with the campaign, says Faye arguments to try to derail ,thc law.
Entertainer Liberacc ·had judi·
"The people have heard the argu· ciously declined an invitation to tag
Wilkerson wciu to
· for
"Talk about a stroke of fate, I
ia so bad, l ·nc'!Jd cx1rq pills,'" says Girsh of the Dcnver-ba•ed Hemlock
ments
and
they
have
already
made
could
have
been
killed
too,"
Liberacc
financial
help
for
the
Flamingo,
then
:
Schlueter, fro") the NmQII town of Society U.S.A., which worked for
along on that fateful day, June 20,
their
choice,"
said
Barbara
Coombs
two
weeks
before
its
December
1946
Pleas~nll1ill nqar E\lgc~c .
passage of the 1994 law. " People
1947, when one of America's most said in an interview a few years
Lee.
·
opening, Siegel, being squeezed by :
Ac~nruing 191the l"w' IIOCC a doc - want choice a~d dignity in the dying
celebrated crime figures died in hi~ before his '1987 death.
Schlueter says ~he hopes ne.ver to girlfriend's m·ansion.
The· news of Siegel's death was a mob partners he'd tapped for mil· •
tor detQrmjnes 4 patiQntflas less than process."
six month~ to 'live. q s~cpn~ doc10r
Opponents of assisled suicide avail herself of Oregon's law even if
Bugsy, who took over the Flamin- hiessing to Billy Wilkerson, a mil- lions, made Wilkerson an offer he •
upheld
by
voters
and
the
courts.
it's
must dcci!le if t•pe pqJiQ~I is mental· have formed a campaign committee
go hotel-casino six months earlier lionaire who founded some of the couldn't refuse.
"But
it
would
'be
comforting
to
ly comrct~nt aqd not s~flcring from and hired a California political con·
and helped establish the. country's
~cpre~~ioll
·
sultant, Chuck ·cavalier, who helped know that if things fall apart, that if most famous gambling mecca, was a
. The patient ~1ay thcp rjlq~csl s~i · · defeat an assisted suicide measure in things get really bad, there is that product of New York's rrican streets
option."
l'idc m~digation in wrjtin • • siji~Od by thai state live years ago..
who would die as he had lived- hy
JWO WiiQ~Ises, ;tnd l~e r~~~~UQ51 fillS(
the gun.
Siegel had an arrest sheet that
included drug dealing; bookmaking,
murder. None of the charges stuck,
yet he cultivated a legion of enemies ·
in his 42' years.
Some think Bugsy was killed
because he failed to deliver on a
Place your ads where more; people can see ·them ... and act. ·''
ans' illnesses. The official was·. not aitd these veterans' physical symp· promise to mob pals that his flashy
BIITH
I
71% of U.S. adults read at least one weekday edition of a
identified .
toms is not well established, and·the Flamingo would·transform the town
~aiOQiatlld · sa Wrfler ·
T11itc said that the GAO study fol- reported prevalence of posHraumal· from sawdust' to rhinestones.
local or regional newspaper, while 57% read ~ daily
WAI!HING ON - Wit~ lllf.
ldws
three
others
that
drew
similar
ic
stress
disorder
among
Gulf
War
Others
believe
he
was
assassinat·
pendiq' I'Qiease pf yet aRQjher llffiCi~l
newspaper on a typkal weekday. Readership grows to
· ed by mobsters who feared he was
t~port li~~ing Gulf Will' illne"e~ conclusions. Tuite began reviewing veterans may be overestimated."
64% on a typical Sunday.
Afterrepeatcdiy denying that US. trying 10 take over race wire and
wjth cl)cmic!\1 \Veapon, ~~posure, P Gulf War illn~sses while prcpari~g a
Senate
Banking
Commiuee
report
soldiers were exposed to Iraqi chem· bookie operations throughout the
vetcraq~· ~dvocate say' ft's time· to
that
inyestigatcd
U.S.
supply
of
icai weapons during the war, the Pen· West, or seize. control of narcotic~
~~lp sic~ veterars allfl pr(ltect fut11re
chemicals
and
technology
that
helped
1agon
said last year more than 20,000 smuggling onJhe Mexican border.
fOldier~. · · ·
· ·
NewiiJIIP!Ir n11dersllip*
1
Iraq
develop
chemical
weapons.
troops
might have been exposed to
On the fatal day, Siegel arrived in
"'fh9rq shoufd be n?, '!Pntroversy .
''We have found a great deal of the nerve gas sarin as a result of the Los Angeles and visited movie pal
Past week
pn this' iss~e ant: more," said James
71%
readetshlp
. Tuite 9f 1he (iJulf W.at Research evidence to show that veterans were March 1991 demolition of an Iraqi George Raft, had dinnerwith close
L.an Sunday
'
friend Allen Smiley, then headed to
foundqlio~.
· .
. exposed to a number of compounds' ammunition depot.
reldll'thip
that
by
themselves
or
in
combination
The
GAO,
report
charges
that
the
the
mansion
owned
by
his
girlfriend,
. The Nfw YP-rk lil!li!$ reported .
~unday lhat .a peneral f-~counltn_g could cause the ~inds oJ illnesses we Pentagon and White House. panels Virginia Hill.
Smiley, a Russian immigrant who
ruled out sarin and other chemical
pffi" Jtl!dY diJe for release thts are seeing," Tuite said.
Lt. Cmdr. Kl!ren Jeffries, a Penta- weapons as causes of the health spent his youth roaming the streets of
onth Qritlcizes~nvestigations by the
· entagon ;nd a fpeciai White House gon spokeswoman, said she had not problems despite evidence that such New York with Siegel, settled on a
Rtllch mort! adults, Jaster. in the ntwspaptr.
seen
the
draft
GAO
report
and
would
compounds
are.associated
with
long·
couch
with
.
his
friend
late
.
that
anel of il)nessjcomplaints by Gulf
.not comment on it.
tenn health problems similar to those evening 10 .read newspapers .
ar velel1jiiS.
·
The earlier studies by the White experienced by Gulf War veterans.
Smiley told police he heard a com• The stucly bylhe GAO. Congress'
Tuite said the GA()'s conclusions · motion in the bushes outsi!le, folInvestigative :ufl• says the Defense House and the Pentaaon concluded
Department shquld not rule ouUhe that Iraqi chemical. and liioloaicai are similar to those in his report pre- lowed by what soun!led like firepos•ibilily that Iraqi btoiogtcal weapons probably were not respon- sented to Congress in 1993. It's time ci'ICkers. He gltmeed ad&gt;iegel, saw
weapons qausc4 symptoms experi· sible for veter111s' health problems. for Congress and the Pentagon to rake his bloodied face:' and dove for coYThe Dally Sentinel. The Welcome Meclum.
"
.
cr. Siegel was dead with two bullets
enced by .0.000 Gulf War veterans Each study sugested that the effects responsibility, he said.
"What we should be doing now is in his skull.
who soupl meclical checkups from of wanime stress were more likely
sourtes
of
the
illnesses.
findin• out what is wrong with the
lbere were rumors Smiley might
'"'
the sovernment,
.
As reponed in tile limes. the soldiers..We have a situition where have set up his pal or that girlfriend
" "' '
'the liiJICS ~d it obtained a draft
· of lbe fCIXirt rrom an official critical GAO repon challenges those con- the Pentagon is try ina to prolect their Hill. who flew 10 Paris a day.earlier, . 'Sol•= n..tY96MirliM Efli&lt;il"""' s.•..,.hr G.n""' Rn&lt;~•· hwmi&lt;wsloySd&lt;ulmon.'ll'....,.,
' 'l.,_ _.;•;;;nd;.;tt.c;,;;;""';.;;"';;;·;.;ln&lt;;;.; ..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,.._ _ _ _ _ __.
of !he Penf81on'•s respol!~e- tci veter- clusions: "lbe link between stress reputatiC?n. Congress is s!tirkina its was somehow involved.
responsibility," Tuite S!lid.
.... .,

.

Wearstler was supposed to return
June·6 from a four-day backpacking
trip. his first solo oveniight hike. He
told rangers he got disoriented on the
third or fourth day an.d set up camp
to wait for help.
But last Friday, he got lost when
he wentlookillg for water.
He wandered around for two days,
too weak to respond loudly enough to
the calls and whistles of searchers. He
also heard the helicopters, Sauer
said, but apparently did not move into
an area where they could see him.
More than I 00 people and I 0 dog

Oregon send~ assisted suicide
law back to voters for decision

Mystery surrounding ·
·siegel's death lingers
a ·half-century .later

· R_,p~~rt lio~ing

chemical _·weapons
to .JIIpeasafJ prompts call for .h91p .
JIY

Great
coverage.

.

PiEL+.

~

·'

_-

The o.lly S1nllnel• P~ge 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

would have been about $1 ~.000. We wanted only their presence :. nol dinners for the swells . As the father
Today, lhal same wedding would cost their presents.
of an unmarried daughter, we need to
Ann
at 1- twice as much. May he YOU
Cary, N.C.: What could they pos· weed out the freeloaders who thin.
should "wake up and smell the cof- sibly be serving in Long Island that it's the thought that counts. - Ken
Landers
fee." --Philadelphia
colts$ ISO per person? They should Burditt
1,, .... From San Antonio, Tcxu: Ann, come to North Carolina. We are plan,..._ 11*** IIIIi C•·
Atwater, Calif.: I believe tha't
honey, .where have you been these nina a great reception for our daugh· bride in Long Island mislabeled hef
last20 years? The cost of everything ter's wedding in December for about · event. It wasn't a wedding. It was a
has 11'\pied. When our eldest dauglt- $3~ a person, which includes the best fund-raiser. She should have sent the
By ANN LANDERS
ter married in 1977, we spent $11,000 caterer in Raleigh, a band and a full following invitation: "You are cor·
Dear Readers': Remember the on the wedding (no sit-down dinner bar. Now I'm worried that those dially invited to an upscale weddinJI.
Long Island snob who thought a $SO but a nice reception). Ten years !at- friends and relatives who read your The time, date and place are indicatwedding sift was cheap and inst~it· er, our youngest daughter was roar- :column might think they can't attend ed at the bottom of this cl!rd. Since
ing? She said her wedding cost a lot ried. Her reception cost twice as unless they can afford a big gift. The. everything bas become outrageously
to put on and she eXpected the gifts mu~h. My brother's daughter is get- best gift is to come and celebrate with expensive in this town, we are
to at .least offset the costs.
ling married in Houston next month. us. •• Mary Marsha Cupitt
requesting a cash donation of $300 or
. I expected to be bombatded with That wedding is going to cost at least · •Whispering Pines, N.C.: Your an appropriate gift of at least that
a ton of letters from readers eager to. $30,000 for the reception. Welcome response to "Upset in Long Island" amount. There will be a no-host~
tell the snob off, but to my surprise, to the '90s!
was perfect, but I think we may be cocktail bar, and we hope you will tip :
some agreed with her. Keep reading · Chandler, Ariz.: We were stunned missing some business opportunities. generously. Please note this is NOT :
for some surprising responses:
to read the letter from "Upset in How about equipment to check the a not-for-profit affair, so your con- •
Dear·Ann Landers: You .recently Long Island," who considered a $SO size of gifts, like those gizmos they iribulion will not be tax deductible." :
lambasted a Long Island bride who wedding gift cheap and insulting. · have in airports to measure carry-on
Dear Atwater: You laid it on a bit :
was critical · of guests for sending When we were .married eight years luggage? If the gift isn't big enough, heavy, but I'm sure the readers get the •
.
cheap weddin,g gifts. Well, I'm on her qo, we could not afford an expen- ·the guests don't get in, Also, the cou- pomt.
side. You are out of touch, dear, when · · sive wedding, so we decided on a ple could sell reserved seats. The
. Send questions to Ann Land,rs, :
it comes to weddings. Your daughter simple ceremony with a punch-and- more expensive the gift, the closer to Creaton Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen- :
was probably married in the late '60s. cake reception. We had a wonderful the front of the church. And, of tury Blvd., Suite 700, Loo Aqeles, •
If you paid for the wedding, a dinner time sharing our special day with course, .two menus •• drive-in win- Calif. 110045
:
and dance for 250 guests, the tab family and friends we cared about dow for the cheapos and sit-down

.... s,.....

AMY LUCKEYDOO

· LEE LUCKEYDOO

Amy, Lee.Luckeydoo
earn college degrees ·
Amy and Lee l.uckeydoo, daugh- and Sigma Xi ~d the Research Honters of Roger and Sandra Luckeydoo or Society. She recei~ed the 1997 outof Pataskala, formerly of !',1iddieport, standing senior · biology student
graduated last month from college:
award and has been nominated for
Amy received her degree from the Outstanding Young Women of AmerMedical College of Virginia in Rich- ica. She has been on the dean's list all
mond, Va. and will now do her resi- four years.
Lee will continue her education at
dency in pediatrics at St. Francis
Ohio
State University where she will
r.fedical Center in Peoria, Ill, She is
serving as a lieutenant in the U. S. do her masterS in environmental sciNavy and was recently promoted to ence and then plans to work with the
·Lieutenant.
United States Depanment of Agri. .
culture
Lee graduated from Eastern New
Amy and Lee's grandmother is
Mexico University, summa Cum
Laude, with a degree in biology and .Velma Luckeyd09 who r~sides in
a minor in chemistry.
Mason, w..va.
She is a member of Phi Kappa Phi

.

'

Speed' sequel tops the box office
'

LOS ANGELES (AP)- "Speed
2: Cruise Control" sailed to the top
of the weekend bo~ office, leaving ·
the previous champion, "Con Air," in
its wake at No. 2. ·
The "Speed" sequelearned$16.2
million, but could face choppy waters
next weekend when "Batman and
Robin" opens.
Starring Sandra Bullock and Jason
Patrie as passengers aboard a
at municipal building.
hijacked cruise ship, the movie has
generated several negative reviews. It
TUESDAY
cost no less than $I 20 million and
MIDDLEPORT .. The Meigs perhaps as much as $145 million to
County Family and Children First
Council, special meeting, Tuesday, 9
a.m. at the Meigs County Dcpanmeilt
of Human Services in Middleport.

Community calendar
The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not designed to promote
sales or fund ·raisers of any type.
Items are printed as space pemiits
and ca~ot be guaranteed to nan a
specific number of days.
MONDAY
'LETART -- Letart Township
Trustees, Monday, 6 p.m. ·at the
office building.
·
RACINE-- Racine Village Coun.cil, recessed session, Monday, 7 p.nl.

make.
. But in its debut weekend it outearned the original "Speed," - a
bomb-on-a-bus thriller starring Bullock and Keanu Reeves - which
grossed $14.5 million in its opening ·
weekend three years ago this month.
"Con Air," the Nicolas Cage film
about convicts taking over an air- '
plane, earned $15.2 million, foi- .
lowed by "The Lost World: Jurassic
Park" with $12 million.
The "Jurassic Park" sequel has
grossed $190.3 million in just four
weeks, according to Exhibitor Rei a-

'

'

lions Co. Inc.
There were no other new films in
the .toP 10. However, "Uiee's Gold,"
starring Peter Fonda as a bee keeper,
earned $93,000 on seven screens in
Los Angeles, New York and Toronto.
"Liar, Liar" still was going strong.
The Jim 'Carrey comedy has earned
$169.9 million in 13 weeks.
Final ligures were to be released
today.
·
The top films from Friday through.
Sunday:
L "Speed 2: Cruise Control,;'

$16.2 miiiion.
2. "Con Air," $15.2 million.
3. "The Lost World: Jurassic :
Parle," SI2 .million.
'
4. "Addicted to Love," $2.3 mil- :
lion.
S. "Austin Power5, International :,
Man of Mystery," $2. I million.
'
6. "Buddy," $2 million.
7. "Gone Fishin'," $1.9 million
8. "The Fifth Element," $1.4 mil-·:
lion.
:
9. "Trial and Error," $1.3 million :
10. "Breakdown," $1.1 million.

·What you should know about disability coverage

WEDNESDAY
BY ED PETERSON
disability benefits depends on the.age
EAST MEIGS .. Eastern Local Social Security
at which you become disabled. It
Board of Education, 6:30 p.m Manager, Athena office
varies from as little as I V2 years out
Wednesday, Tuppers Plains Elemen· · Not everybody is aware that their of the past three years for people distary SchooL
Social Security taxes pay for disabil- abled under age 24 io a maximum of
·•
ity insurance protei:tlon in addition to five years out of the last 10 for peoCHESTER .. Shade River Lodge retirement, survivors insurance and . pie disabled after age 30.
453, special meeting, Wednesday. Medicare hospital insurance. Four out
A typical case is that of Mary
work in the MM degree.
of five workers are covered and Jones, who left the work force at age
would recei~e benefits if they became . 21 to raise her twin daughters. When
she was diagnosed with breast cancer
disabled and unable to work.
Even if you are aware of the cov- ti)ree years l~ter, sJt~ foul1!1 out that
erage you may not tcn:ow· that you· s~ could. not qualify for disability
need ·recent work 10 keep the dis- benefits because, even though she
ability protection current. The had worked for four years, at age 24
amount of recent'work you need for

Karnes receives appointment to
·United States Air Force-Academy

Lucas Karnes, son of Nancy litus
Karnes of Austin, Texas, and grand·
son of Jim and Ada Titus of Syracuse,
has received an appointment to the
U.S. Air Force Academy as a mem·
.· ber of the Class of 2001.
Karnes who· is ·a National Merit
Scholarship winner, will begin his
training on June 26.
In making the announcement
Austin Congressman Lloyd Doggett
said "Lucas has worked hard for this
achievement and he will no doubt
continue to make us proud at the Air
Force Academy. He deserves much
success and ali who know him look
forward to his accomplishments in
the future.
LUCAS KARNES
Karnes was a student council representative itt Lake Travis High in science and interview and bronze
SchooL He was also co-captain of the · in math and essay.
cross country team~ where he earned'
Outside of school, he has worked
three varsity leiters.'
. at the Hurst Harbor Marina for five
He was on the Lake Travis Acad· years and volunteers at Habitat for
·ernie Decathlon team which finished Humanity.
second in the state competition and ·
Mrs. litus went to Austin for the
won the Super Quiz crown. Individ- high school graduation of her grandually, Karnes won four medals, gold son.

Celebrates first
birthday May 20
Kathryn Harrison, daughter
of John and Penny Harrl•on
celebrabkl her first blnhday
· May 20. ·A family dinner with
cake and Ice cream was held in
her honor at her home. Attending were ~r parenta, grandmother, Ann Rife, an a11nt, Ter·
ry Rife,. and tha honoree's
brother, Jlf!l. Sending gifts but
·1.1nable to attand were Debbie,
·Ron, and Ronald James White;
her grandfather, Jim Rife, har
grandmother, Barbara North
and Crystal Nonh.

1939 Batman comic book
brings $68,500 at auction
NEW YORK (AP) - Holy Bat· ·appeared, sold for $46,000 to a pri·
vate Ameri~an collector. The first
bucks!
comic
devoted to the Man of Steel,
A May I 939 comic book featuring
the first-ever appearance of Batman Superman Comics No. I, sold for
$18,400.
.
· netted $68,50() at auction Saturday.
And
a
Sunday
newspaper
strip of
Detective Comics No. 27, considFlash
Gordon
brought
in
$27,600,
for
ered the finest unrestored copy ever
offered for public sale, brought .the full-color original art that ran Feb. 10,
highest ptice at a sale of comic an 1935. Original art from a 19SO
that totale&lt;l $1.7 million, Solheby's Peanuts strip brought $6,900.
Four thousand comic books came
spokesman Mauhew Weigman said.
from
the private collection of Jerry
The Caped Crusader was not the
only one drawing high p~: A copy Buss, owner of the Los Angeles Lak..
of Action Comics No. I, the 1938 ers basketball team.
comic book where Su ·rman first

...............,. •t

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Selltlnel lasslfleds

t92·2156

•

she needed at least a year and a half
of work out of ,the preceding three
years. ·.
·
It's easy ·enough to keep your disability coverage current. You get a
credit of coverage for a certain
amount of earnings--$670 in I 997,
with a ma.ximum of four &lt;:redits in a
year. This means you only need
earnings of $2,680 during a year to•
qualify for a year . of coverage in
19,97. 'fill: amount of earnings that
constitute a eredit of coverage
increases annually with increases in
general wage levels.

.

.
'

.

Few workers have private, long· ::
term· disability insurance. Social ··
Security disability protection is equal :
to a $201,000 disability polic)'for an •
average income earner with a spouse ; ·
and two children. Once ·you start;
receiving benefits, they continue a5:
long as you are disabled.
Social Security · studies indicate :
that a 20-year-old worker has a three.:
in ten chance of becoming disabled
before age 6S . This means that lceeping your disability .coverage current
makes sense for financial security for
yourself and your family.

.

Fox upset over decision on awards competition
NEW YORK (AP) - The sim- ·Thrall, the academy's awl!rds chair- should be eligible because it is avail-.
!flering competition between two man. "It was either our failure to able by satellite dish to anyone in the
cable networks flared again after the communicate clearly or their failure country who wants it
Fox also is available by satellite.
Fox News Channel was ruled ineli- to understand clearly."
"We were unaware lhatthe crite·
Fox said it asked a few months
. gible for news Emmy awards -and
ago ·whether its programming would ria to enter the Emmy awards was
MSNBC wasn't.
.
The National Academy of Televi- be eligible. It was rejected since it changed," Do.lginoff said. "If we
sion Arts &amp; Sciences said its decision diiln 'I meet a requirement that it be knew that, we obviously would have
is too late to be fixed and called the broadcastiO at least 51 percent of the entered.
"We just want a fair opportunity
flap unfonunate. Nominations will ~ U.S. television audience, Fox spokes·
to
participate
in the news Emmys,"
woman
Lori
Dolginoff
said
last
week.
announced next.month and awl!rds
MSNBC
was
si111ilarly
rejected.
he
said.
will be presented Sept. 10.
Fox started its news channel last
"It's one of those things where But it then argued successfully that it
October, three months after MSNBC.
you can't affix blame," said Richard

Presoyterian leadership falls
to Cincinnati social worker
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP)- Los- has put us together as a.family and
ing members by the thousands and we're going to behave like one."
hampered by divisiveness over gay
Brown succeeds the Rev. John
rights, the Presbyterian Church . Buchanan of Chicago as the church's
(U.S.A.) has a new leader intent on · spokesperson and goodwill ambascreating one big, happy family.
sador. One of her biggest chores will ·
Patricia Brown, a S2-year-old be trying to stem the annual loss of
social worker from Cincinnati, will about 35,000 parishioners.
serve as moderator of the church with
The church also is striving t,o find
2.7 million members for the next 12 common ground on homosexuality. A
months.
"fidelity and chastity" amendment to
She defeated the Rev. Louis the Presbyterian constitution effccZbinden Jr. for the post Saturday tively ·banning the ordination of
night ns the 209th General Assembly homosexuals has been controversial.
got under way.
The United Churth of Christ is the
"We are family," Brown said. only major Protestant denomination
"We are brothers and sisters. We may to permit the ordination ofhomoscx- ·
not agree with each other, but God uais.

~ Harrisonville

news notes

Mrs. EICIInor Updegraff of Sinn- Ferris ,of Kentucky.
,
Mrs. Juanita -Richard of Dayton
ingham, Ala. visited here two weeks
with 'Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire and spent the weekend here with her sisAlice Whaley Lancaster, and attend- ter, Virginia Gibson, and attended the
· alumni banquet.
ed the Scipio Alumni reunion.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jeffers,·
Mr. and Mrs.. George Lowery
Albany,
Bud Mullins of Wet Virginia,
were S~nday dinner guests of Mf. and
and 'Mrs. Debbie Foley and sons of .
Mrs. Tom Lowery, Syracuse.
, ·Rece~t guests of Mr. and Mrs. Pickerington were iceent guests of
·Doug Btshop were Mr. and Mrs.. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mahr.
Mr. and Mrs. Roben Bolt spent ·a
jtlchard Kirk, Athens, Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Haning, Pomeroy, and Sue · week in Mexico recently.

The Sentinel News Hotline

992-2156
..

..

To off~r story suggestions,
report late-breaking news and
offer news 'tips

According to Nielsen Media
Research, both are available in about
one-third or fewer of the nation's estimated 97 million television homes. In
April, Nielsen measured Fox NewsChannel's average daily audience at '
22,000 homes, while MSNBC's was
21,000. CNN's audience is roughly
IS times as much.
Thrall said judges have already
combed through the entries to make
nominations , and repeating the
process would be too time-conswning and expensive.

Bq.rn .
rubber.
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Customers arc: 7 times more likely to use the newspaper
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�French troops begin pulling
out of Republic of Congo

·superrnodel
-:Campbell
ls released
·f rom hospital
LAS PALMAS, Spain (AP) · ·Supermodel Naomi Campbell has
been released from a Canary Island
:- hospital amid conflicting repons
-regarding the cause of her hospitalization.
·
· The Spanish news agency EFE
said 'sunday that the model was suffering from an overdose of barbiturates, but a Campbell spokesman said
she was_treated for an allergic· reaction to antibiotics.
- "She wishes to make it clear that
.there is absolutely · no foundation
··\"hatsoever to the story that she had
. taken an overdose," said Camphell's
spokesman in London, Jonathan
Goldstein.
Titere were unconlinned repons
that the 27-year;old model had flown
·to Paris and was at work today.
' Campbell,.one of the highe~t paid
fashion models in the world, had left
the hospital earlier S•1nday and trav-eled by private car to 1he airport for
GREET JOURNAUSTS ·"'Wo people W..rlng
Bank where European Union leaders ere meet·
a flight, EFE said . .
masks of U. S. President Bill Clinton and Ruulng In Amsterdam, the Netherlands today for e
A spokeswoman for Our Lady of
len Pre1lclent Borl1 YeH1ln, left, greet joumal·
two-dey
summit to selvage plena lor • single
the Pines Hospital, spe~king on conl1t1lrom 1 balcony ~pGIHI the Dutch Central
currency end the exptinalon of the EU. (AP)
dition of anonymity, said Sunday that
Campbell was in stable condition and
··undergoing treatment for a drug overdose.
. - The. model was taken to a hospi-tal emergency room early Sunday
after a heated late-night argument
jVith her boyfriend, Spanish tlamenpact. With unemployment at a post: treaty so that the group can function
.,co dancer Joaquin Cortes, EFE By JEFFREY ULBRICH
war record 12.8 percent, France said effectively after it expands from 15 to
-: reponed. Hotel guests complained of Aaaoclated Preae Writer
AMSTERDAM, Netherlands it wouldn't endorse the stability pact 25 or more members in coming
loud noises coming from her room.
The London-born model was in European leaders, fighting to save unless it was linked to an EU effort years.
As Dutch Prime Minister Wim
.Las Palm as to auend Cones' show, plans for a single currency and pre- to create jobs.
pare
the
European
Union
for
expan"There is an· agreement to put Kok met his 14 colleagues atthe door
_"Gypsy Passion," a combination of
.sion. opened what could be a bruis- employment measures right at the top of the modem gl_ass-and-steel build_llamenco, ballet and jazz.
Campbell was hospitalized for ing summit today with the union's of the agenda," said British Prime ing, officials worked behind the
Minister Tony Blair. He cautioned, scenes on a text that would please
-tw.o days in February after collapsing future at stake.
The
hottest
item
on
the
agenda
is
however, against any move "to both France and Germany.
with stomach pains in a London
The German philosophy is · that
street She was released after tests for keeping the euro,' the new currency, change'or alter or fudge the criteria..
on
track
for
its
launch
in
1999.
·
for
monetary
union.
austerity,
not massive spending on
-suspected appendicitis.
Many
EU
nations,
including
eco"We
strongly
take
the
yiew
that
it
.
job-creation
pr.ograms, will make the
:· · Camphell, along with supennodnomic
powerhouses
France
and
Ger.
is more important that the single cur- euroas strong as the Gennan mark is
' els Clau&lt;lia Schiffer, Elle Macpherson
; and Christy Turlington, operates a many, are struggling to meet stringent rency is credible when it goes ahead today.
Other difficult issues facing the.
string of theme restaurants called The entry criteria to ensure a strong and than the date on which it goes .
stable
euro.
As
leaders
cut
their
budahead,"
Britain's
foreign
secretary,
leaders
include:
Fashion Cafe in New York. London,
1
gets,
they
are
also
under
increasing
Robin Cook, told BBC radio today.
- Proposals to end all internal
Barcelona,and other cities.
pressUre from their citizens to create
Under debate was a plan to chan- border controls in live years, making
jobs. ·
nel as much as $1 billion into job ere- the EU responsible for visa and asyDutch Finance Minister Gerrit ation programs in the years to come. tum policies. Britain and Ireland are
Zalm said today that EU finance minBlair also staked out a tough offered exemptions.
isters had reached "I 00 percent British position on border controls
- Speeding up decision·niaking
agreement" on a German-inspired and immigration, another issue ·on the by reducing the rights of countries to
accord to line countries that meet the · table at the two-day summit. "It is veto policies.
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) criteria for adopting the curo, ·then absolutely essential to have proper - Giving_the EU a military role.
:-=-Notorious ,Khmer Rouge leader . backslide through excessive public control over .our own frontiers, our , Britain, O.:nmark, Ireland, Sweden,
· · Pol Pot is surrounded by armed spending.
·
immigration, our asylum policy Finland and Au~tria don't like the
rivals and could be captured or killed
Zalin said the tentative accord, because we are an island state," he idea. ·
·within days, First Prime Minister k_nown as the stability pact, would be said.
- Put more "flexibility" into the
Prince Norodom Ranariddh said presented to EU heads of state this
EU leaders arc meeting at. the · union by allowing some countries to
today.
,
· -afternoon for their approvaL
Dutch Central Bank here to concl'ude· move ahead with closer cooperation
. Ranari~dh, one of Cambodia's
France's new Socialist-led gov-. an ambitious rewriting of the EU's faster than others.
·
two premters. spoke to reporters at a crnment had questioned the stability
rural school inauguration as speculation mounted over the fate of Pol Pot,
·

European Union's future at
stake as summit .gets underway

BRAZZAVILLE, Republic of
Congo (AP)- The Republic of Congo's wuring sides tried to ~n~~~ge a
peace summit today while French
troops began to depan from the capital, saying their job of rescuin1 foreigners was over. ·
France's announcement Sunday
that it would pull its forces out was
followed by scime of the fiercest
liJhting in days between forces of
President Pascal Lissouba and his
rival, Gen. Denis Sassou 7Nguesso . .
The two factions were believed to
be jockeying for position to capture
the airport, now controlled by French
_troops. Mortar and automatic rifle lire
were heard overnight, and into this
morning.
• Delegates from both sides went
Sunday to Libreville• .Gabon, to lay
the groundwork for :a summit today
between the two leaders. There was
no word this morning on whether this
summit would take place.
France, the fonner colonial power. has said it will support peacemaking efforts but will end its military mission as planned. It was
expected to take a week for the 1,200
Fre~ch soldiers / i~ this Central
Afncan natiOiflo Withdraw.
French troops packed 'computers
and fumiture,_into crates 'today. and
the first flight carrying "non-essential" milit"')' equipm~nt and personnel departed for Gabon and Chad.
Officials said other flights would
leave every hour.
"It is an achievement · to have
evacuated close to 6,000 people in
very difficult conditions," Col. Henri Pelissier, a French army
spokesman, said today. "We are also
leaving with some sadness because
we lost one soldier·,, and had six others injured. And sadness, too. to leave
a country in a civil war.
.. We hope that the mediation that
is taking place in Libreville is sue-

cessful10 that war does not bRak oui
again when we leave, resultlna in
new massacres," Pelissier edtled.
Piahting erupted JuneS when Lissouba sent government forces to disarm Sassou-Nguesso's private 'militia.
· He said he acted to avert violence
before the Jtlly 27 presidential election here.
Sassou-Nguesso, who ran' the
country as a !)ictator for a decade
before Lissouba won an election,
·claimed the president sparked the
·clashes to have an excuse to delay the
vote and keep power. He is run_ning
against Lissouba in this election. _
Lissouba, speaking on French
television, appealed to his country:s .
fonner colonial ruler to leave trooj)s
in Brazzaville, afraid that a French
pullout might lead to the collapse of
his government.
.
" We would have liked the French
forces, with ourselves and with. the
opposition ... to create a peacekeeping force to avoid what has been hap-_
pening today," he told France 3 ielevision Sunday.
u:N. envoy Mohamed Sahnoun
said he was speaking with French
officials about the possibility of leaving some troops to keep the airport ·
secure.
After flying out more than 230
people on Sunday, France had
declared its mission over. but another 30 people then arrived at tbe
French Embassy asking to be evacuated. Officials said they would be
evacuated today, and other nights
could follow during the week.
With both sides apparently trying
to avoid angering French forces,
lighting subsided Sunday when the
evacuation planes took off and landed. But shortly after the final flight,
two explosions could be heard from
the French-controlled airport as tbc
battle began to,rage anew.

Cohen checks on security at key
u s A_r·my .base In
• Ku.·Waltl
· • • desert

W. VIRGINIA -

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n
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•W-.cl Eaters
2·m1. off-RL 7
letldlng Crftk Rd.

ooureae

b,tore

' •. -nllltlll 'llld. . , . will be

• tlul bH. ·II the eeflte
ll8llltltl Oft , . , 7, 1.., II\'
_4 p.nlo ........ _..of
- II I . . . . . 1Jte Wletll
' Ill Dirt rtf FJI8 1M f'llhllo"
: ...... OfreJeeltlfiYOfl
bide nathttl. QuHIIOIIe
1
be tllla-e41 II\' thl
· lltajUI llll11tllr at ~t4)
, 111
fiOIII • .... 1o 1

i-

n•.

....

:;;., ,.

r.•

.•.

•: I

COICIIII
· SlmCES
DrlviWiyl,

aanvlotlorlol

FclulldaiiCIM; .

lldewallce, Pltloe,

GarageaQd
l'locn.
Pi'tlllllllii8111.
lnlurtd ' '

Ia••"*"

. IAYJII CONCRm
'
AIMCII

make• it

1eem

bnpter.
tnt1rlor
Eiefore 8 p.m.
leave mMaage.
After 8 p.m.
814-1185-4~~.......

\

:.......,;.,_.._
'

101'1

....

NftULI
WILDIII
McCumber Rd.

LD. Otllrt

Rutilnd, OH
•Sm,ll Jobs
· J
•La rge Oba .
Ra•onlllle
• . . - ...._

Oani•••IIIR•Iar

(614) 742•11- .

atalllll a prap•rtv . .
· 11Mt.uan1117
DraaaM.,.Raolna.O
Ill tOM .

any cloudy rlny, .

....,....IIIIGid

_,,;::

.

YOUNG'S
-~CARPENTER SERVIa

.._ Addllionl .

=-~~
.....-...,

""""''·-. ·
tin• lor a ~

oPIInCing,
·.
A1eo e-Mil Wark
(FRI!IISTIMATII)
V.C
• • YOUNG II
181 8211 \
Ponl. 1ro,,· Ohio ·
-

Help Wanted
$$$ DANCERS S$$
2 Ptlllitlons available
Soulhlorl&lt; Show Bar
Rt 2 Pt Pleasant WV. ·
(304) 875-5956,
Cottaltor 8prn
·

Wed thru Sal

AVON I All Areas I Shirley
Spears, 304-875-1~29.
·

=-~--~--~I Able

Agoorl paint job on

742•2925

... l.,r-tlon

anroneiiiVOIVed 1n

).

PAINTING t005

... ...,.r..

' leadlntltothe
.

._.

'

110

.....

ANNOUNCEMFNlS

LIMJA'S

SERVICES

Gravel, Llmeatone,
Topaoll, FUI Dirt,
Send. No Mlnlnum.
' - ..

'

tull

992·7074

Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WV
· 814-44&amp;-9411
1..aQo.a72-5111871391 Safford SChool Rd .. Gallipolis, OH

Professlonai.Pet Groom ng
Boarding - Training· Supplies

·11,000 IIIWARDII

WILLUUL·
-JUS'r CALL.

-·HEATING &amp; COOLING

. . . K-9 Designs~~ ·BIIBILI
•Small Engines

Colttp• . . _ . . . . provldlllll

EMPLOYMFNT

•u·'"" HOME

CoNTRACTORS ·
.I-~;;---------....,;"';;;"";;;.;';;;"""-..;;-=··~~
The village ol Recine
'· .
' .
,w1811M to oonatruot a new
nre etrt11on aontraotore may
ptc11 up a 111t1 .....at at the
. ·llliCIIM llluniclpel llulldlng
tiurtng tlleltOtn , ....... lo
" p.m. Monday through
.1 friday. 'Tll8n le • Oltl,.. of
.·- ., I*' drewlltlll- ~
· lillY bid on eny ponton of
· the pro~ or 1M entire
• ttrOiliCt .,._ ere evalllble
• irncl ehlll. 111 uHtl 11 lht
"lJ'e treat your beot f,Wrlll Wee our b~ot f,WrW."
.
_, baala for bidding ill
-. d11ortUd . by
the• St. Rt. 681
Tuppers Plains, Ohl()
•
...,........_ you lltiiiWd(814) 887-3528
. .
' ·contraotore mutt aleo
Plllna Elementary School"
"Acroa lroin 1i
jiiWitlleoplel , Jlllllllty !1
'
.-on~ anCIWOIWI
' •. .

Prevention Position .- An Alcohol

9018 Ext 2020.

And Olher Drug Counseling IP(t-

vention Agency Located In Galfta
Would like 10 buy tafm tractor And Jackson Counties, I• St~·
with 40-SOhp. PS. 304~562-5840.
. inft An Ambitious Individual To
Fi A New Pre\lenlion PositiOn·.
This Person Will Work With All ·

(Payments buod on approved credn)
•Free 5 Year Parts Warranty
•Free Digital Thermostat

,,.._

Wanted; UHd Hardwood Flooring
In Good Condition, Call 614·245·

5887.

Easy Banlc Financing ·
Air Conditioners lnslolled -128' amonlh
Heal Pumps lnslaHed .138"' amonth

certilled, salary ta camerate whh
e•perience, benelila provided,
company vechile. Orman HkH
Inc. 1317 Ohio St Pt. Pleaslir11
WV. 304-675·2877.
·

J I o·s Auto Parts. Bu~lng ulvate vehicles. 8elling parts. 30477 5033.
Wanled To Buy : Barbie Dolls,
Clothea. And Acnssories. 1959
• 1Q79Can Days 614·388-6464.
Wanled· older bi&lt;:yc:le, 'eu -992·
34198.

ern -.erue, Gallipolia.

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

tn Retriever Stud Service, 614·

Pan-Time Position Available:
Support Group Faciliator /Educator For Approx. 8 Hours A Wf!llk.
Outies Include Guiding And Manltorlng A Women•s Support
Group Twice A Week, Preparing
Educational Materials, Aild
Speaking To High School Student
Clanes. ·The Ideal Candidate
Will Have A High Schoql Diploryia
Anc:l Some College Couraea· Or
Experience Relev&amp;!'H To lnerpj:rsonal ~elationa And Group 0~ namlcs. Interested Persons ·Ma~
Reply To : Personnel, P.O. Bbx
454, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .
1Postal Jobs 3 Positions Avaii able, No Experience Necessary,
For Information, Call 1·81&amp;,764· .

Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1980 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 East·

FRIEE .
Local Area
Pick Up Dlecercled
Appliances&amp;
Meny Mttllle.

·.THE MAPLES

• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second

Call 614-992-8806 or send resume to Rocksprings Rehabilite·
tlon Cen1er, 36759 Rocksprings
Rd.. Pomeroy, OH 45769.
.,
1-----'------_.;.:,.
Need Someone To Harves1 Hay,
Call For DeiBilo: Also AKC Gold-

A-ut. Galipollo. 814-446-21M2. , _379-:--:-26=39_.___· - - - - - , , - Antlquea, tur_ni1ure, gtan, china, ·NEEDED: Service Man HVAC

Buying Standing Pine, 1 Acre
Tracl Ot larger, 814-256-6038.

In The Poor House?

s. 2nd Ave.

90 Wanted to_Buy
Aboolule Top Dollar: All U.S. Silvor And Gold Colno, Proof leiS.
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry. Gold
Rlngl, Pr•1130 U.S. Currency,
Storl~g. Ell:. Acquisition• Jewe~y

2535.

,.

&amp; (OOUNG

773-57850t 304·713-5447.

Antiques, top prices paid, f:live·r·
lne Anliquea, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Run Moore owner, 814·992·

. ...

L• C1ntln1 Mexican RH18u,.,.t
Galllpottlifony WV '
Waltrtll needed. Annly Mon ttVu
,.,.
LPN pan lime position a~ailable

colna. 1oy1, tampa, guna, tools,
ellatts; also appraisal-s, Os~
Martin, 614-992-7441. ·
·

1.-ocJ.291-54100

·.

0

full time auctioneer, complete
· auction
aervica. Licensed
1 tee.Ohio ·&amp; Wtlt VIrginia. 304·

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

892-4118

hold

! Rick Pearson Aucllon Companv.

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WIN-DOWS

..

nOUII

Now Opd for

..

''FAl:TOBY
DIBEl:T
PRil:ES''
..
Quality Window Systems
·Sayre Trvcking Co.,
110 Court Sl
Pomeroy, Ohio
814-742·2138

u

TnonL, Aluny)

·-

. -!'' · ~------~~---,r---~----------------~---------,
MOlliSON'S HEATING
Will Your Utilities Put You ... .

..

I

• 11 oneer.
l •m t•r. "uc

'

'

II •.

~

Umeetone &amp; Gravel
Septic System•
Trailer &amp;
• . HouaeSitea
RN80118ble Ratet
Joe N. Sayre

MIDDLEPORT
1t2-2m
8:00 e.m.-3:30 p.m.

:::t:;;:•Willlows
.
. Gtngts
Doors &amp;
I

•I

...

.. ,

UIJLIIII'
auvaft
·

537 BRYAN PLACE

I•

' .. .•.

~· -

Lemley'a Au etlan Service,·La ilia

123. Pleaaant Ridge .
Pomeroy, OH
Call 992·9045
for all your
trenimlnlon needs.

Free

24Hr

P.M.

Fri ~om 2-Spm 304-875-7115. .

.........

•'

flubiiC Sel&amp;
and Auction

By Appoinlmonl Only; Call: Ben·
nell's Mobile Home !looting &amp; dg.
AI 814·448-g418 g A.M . To 5

Estate, Farm Sales. Phona 81.t_ 3118-8443.

(formerly of Delln'o

• Top • Trim • Removal
· • Stump Grinding
20 V10. Exp. • Ina. Owner: Rick Johnoon

centive Program I Compreheo·
1i11a Benelll Package, • Paid Va·

And Cooling A Plus. lnlervlews

j .

UY'S
TUNSMISSION

••

10:()().4:00, Rain IShi,.,

,_

Garage Sola: Corner Routt 141, cation After 1 Year 01 Cond..,ous
Lincoln Pike, Mon. Tueo. 0:00- Se&lt;vlee. 1-888-772·245~
1----------------~
r~--------------~ 300.~~~~
HOME BUSINESS Cheap Slar~
Movlnt
Sale:
131h
Juno
Till
The
send SASE + '5 To c. Rou,nl
Howard L. Wrlteael
30111. 011 Of Everything. 123 P.O. Box 7429, Canton. OH
Fourlh Avenue, Gallipolis, Inside, 44705.
ROOFING
D14-441.02IM,
1--'.==---~-:HOMETYPISTS,
NEW-REPAIR
Pomeroy,
PC uoera needed. $45.000 illMiddleport
come
potentiaL Cali1·80D·513Gutters
4343 Ext 8·9388.
'
Downapoute
&amp; VICinHy
HVAC SERVICE TECHNICIAN
G tte Cle 1
All Yard 8alaa Mutt Bo Paid tn Needed ... Requlremenls: RSES
U
f
an ng
·Advance. Dudllne: 1:00pm the Certifioation In R,frigeraUon Ao,d
Painting
day boloro tht ad io Ia run, Heat Pump Syalen\9, Experience
a'"'S
S:00pmundayfrld.ay.llonday odlllon- In HVAC AMuall Knowledgeable
1
FREE Esn..." ' ._
In Manulaclured Housing HeatiDQ
·

3121nl'H

'

r-

1o Palolln Adnn...

D£11111E: 2:00p.m.
thodarbo.. rwthoad
ta to Nn'. Sunday
- 11:00 p.m.
FrldiJ.llondar odllton
• 10:00a.m, Sl1urd1J.
'::-7':7"-=-:"~:-::'::--~"--pebble DriH, (011 RQuto 141 ·1 11
2 Miles From Wlllla Funeral
Homo.! Monday &amp; Tuesday,

Qualft~

--

-

ALl, 'llnl._llul1

wv 011030

A00fl ng, P• Int Ing

'
!

614-992-7643 ·

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
250 Condor Street
A Division on-Nichols Metal, INc.
Fax:304c773-5861
Phone: 614:992-2406

.. .

4 Family: Rain. Shine. Saturday.
Mon~ay, Tualday. 8114111, 6118111.
e/17.._ Ptlrlot Road. Homo tnterl1_
'------...o=.l.:l .or, CoffM Tablit. Computer. Nln·
IIndo C'-lr, Allri &amp; Gamoa Toys,.
Glrlt, Boya. Ladloo &amp; Mono
Clolhing, ·All . Slzeo, Towell,
Houoehold, Kldo Pool, 5 Gallon
JIIIIt. Maaarr.. And Much Morel

FREE ESTIMATES
(No Sunday Calls)

&amp;VICinHy

':"":'~~~=~~--:--

.•
992
9200
.

Uc.

Room Additions • Roofing
COMM~RCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

Big Bend Fabrication,
Machine &amp;Welding Shop

985-4473

,,

. ·- ·

.

JC
CONSTRUCTION

Garage~ • Replacement Windows

~

·Galli 111
po

Cell ftr 01r S~HIIIt

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

Complete Machine Sbop Service Fabriestlon
· Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, Industrial Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement
Monday-Friday - 8:0Q a.m.- 4:30p.m.
Saturday-8:00a.m. • 12 noon

'

·Naw Homes

.

...

l

Ext. 8789
.
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 urs.
'
Serv·U (619) 64~;~:"34

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC:

Athens, Ohio
-1mo.odl

(614) 592-5025

I

Wlgner Le_n e ,
Pomeroy
Delivery or Dine ln.
More than jutt a
pizza place.

1-900-656-2700

Don Geery, Owner

111111 ,.,

· Attorney Ai Law

AtiCIIonellr: ,
Rltllll Mllholln

'EXPRESS

AND MOREll

814·992~3120

Attorney William Safranek

115-44111 or LIH MNIJI2

".

Quality Work et
e Fair Prlcel
•
550Pegest.
~lddllport, Oh. 45760
Homa Ph.

BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor of
financial obllgetlons and arrange a lair
distribution of aa$ets. Debtors in bankruptcy may
keep •exempt" property for their personal use.
This may include a ·car, a hou.s e, clothes, and
household goods.
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:·

·Set., June 7, 1187
8P.M.
MalgaCo.
Felrgro.unda
SJIOIIIOred by
M!lge CO. 4-H Horae
Commm•
For more infO Clll Pam

lo

-:zn-21n

Alii For Shtn1.

7 .PIZZA

~-,.

FINANCE
STOCKS

~

CELLUlARONE~

985-4422

..

.... .....

992~2825

Middleport, OH

Umeatcme • Gravel
Dirt • .S and

UP•TO-DATE
SPORTS

D.Gear,'s

ladle lhaeli ,Dealer

SERVICE

.•..

FRfE ESTIMATES

INGELS ELECTRO

DUMP TRUCK

'

t

Ftee.........,

Buyen ofvlutap 10y1,
sportscards, lpOIIS
memoribilia, tabiCCO
tins, cigar boxes; and
tabacco memorabilia.
Specializing in
matchbox cars.
614-742-3513
9am-9
Mon-Sun

.

HelP........

One · Dellvw.y

lin,

Notorious leader
.Pol Pot could be
_captured shortly

- ~h~9t;:~~t~i·~~!~~sg::~r~~2~~;~~

FWa e WHk Old Klttena,
JWt-.
et.._

. .........
•

The Dally Sentinel• P~ge.

....;,.._._ 110
GI¥Nwtly

40

Few Serbs vote in ruined
Croatian region of mistrust

VUKOVAR, Croatia (AP) - Few learned that others who did try to vote
of-the minority Serbs invited to take couldn't. ·Thou:;ands of Serbs simply
part in Croatia's prc~idential election were not on voter lists.
At one polling station, the shelldid so. But some who tried simply
couldn't: Their names were mysteri- pocked school of l!orovo Nasclje, a
ously absent from voting lists Croa- Serb street wa.• left otT. Simon asked
why.
tia had .compiled.
"I think' it was because of the
Sunday, a blazing June day, held
few good omens for the future of this name," ventured VI ado Grbic, a Serb
slice ofeastemmost Croatia, the area resident for 50 years. The street, he
most ravaged in the 1991 war explained, was once the Street. Q(
between what became the govern- Brotherhood and Unity -the slogan
ment of independent Croatia and of the old Communist Yugoslavia that
minority Serbs backed by the Croatia despises. Then. it became the
Street of Serbian Unity.
Yugoslav anny.
It was a small symbol of the area's
President Franjo Tudjman, venerdeep
mistrust.
ated by Croats for leading the coun''I'd like to go home," said Juritry to .independence but criticized
abroad for his poor treatment of Serbs ca Ccrina, 23. a Croat driven out-in
and the media. headed for an easy re- 1991 and living in.thc Croatian 'town
of Osijck, just three miles from his
election in Sunday's voting.
This region, still held by Serbs and · ruined family home in a Serl&gt;-held
known as eastern Slavonia, is to village. Only last week. he said,
lion Cambodians.
revcn to full troatian rule by year's someone stripped the roof oiT.
OflicialsclaimthatPoiPot,69,is .
•
• · ..
:being defended by 200. loyalists
·_end. The plan of U.N. officials now .
"I can't go back until the Croat'
against 1.000 lighters who. turned
,
ian
government and .authorities arc
running it is that the Serbs will stay,
) •gains! him after he ordered the excCAMP DOHA. Kuwait (AP) Kuwaiti forces. -Kuwait turned over day evening, where he was greeted or return to homes they abandoned in back tberc:.. Ccrina said. "I don't feel
·cution of Son Sen. his one"time With troop protection foremost on his the site .to the U.S. military after the by Kuwaiti officials and a furnace- other parts of Croatia. Up to 100,000 safe, ,, Too much ·was going on here
,-defense minister.
mind, Defense Secretary William 1991 Gulf War, and it now stores like wind blowing off the desert. Croats driven out in 1991 arc to - wrong deeds on both sides." ·
-• Gen. Nhek Bunchhay. deputy Cohen ventured into the sizzling tanks and other weapons to equip an Cohen held private talks with the return here.
Four miles away, in Scrb-hcld
army chief of staff. claims 'that ihc Kuwaiti desert today to ~heck on Anny brigade of about5,000 troops. Kuwaiti defense minister, Salem
It's a delicate international attempt Tcnja, Andjelko Novakovic pondered
: guerrill~s opposed to Pol rot have security arrangements and give
Army Maj. -David Howard told Sabah at-Salem al-Sabah.
to patch together the multicthnic staying if Croats return.
defected to the government. Nhck American soldiers a pep talk.
Novakovi~. 40, scorned the presreporters touring Camp Doha· that .
Cohen told U.S. troops in. Saudi communities so brutally driven asun·Bunchhay is trying to send ammuni"It's a high-threat area," Cohen security has been tightened over the Arabia on Sunday that the United der in the wars in Croatia and neigh: idential election. Non~ of the candi'.tion to them despite opposition from told about300 troops assembled in an past six months: Among steps taken, States intended to keep forces in the tmring Bosnia from 1991 -95.
dates - .Tudjman and his two Croat
Second Prime Minister Hun Sen, who open-air shelter at this bustling mili- he said. wa.• the addition of watch Gulf area as long as Iraqi PresidentFailure will bode ill not only for opponents - "can guarantee Scrh
:wants the rehds to destroy each oth- tary base . about 35 miles from the towers that allow guards to sec fur- Saddam Hussein remains in power Croatia and its minority Serbs. In rights. That's why Serbs aren't votcr.
Iraqi border. At least one soldier in thcr beyond the base perimeter.
and as long as the Gulf nations want Bosnia, where the Dayton peace ing."
But Hun Sen, a rival of Ranarid- his audience was momentarily overOn Sunday, Cohen took mucn the . Americans to stay.
accord was supposed to reunite the
Initial results showed Tudjman
dh and Nhek Bunch hay, accused come by the heat, which topped I00 ~amc message to Air Force troops at _
"Many of you, ,I'm sure. from still-divided Serbs, Croats and Mus- with 59 percent of the vote. Despite
:their royalist FUNCINPEC party of degrees and was rising rapidly even Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Ara- time to time. wonder why you arc lims, people will get the message: repons by U.S. officials that he has
,violating prohibitions against dealing before mid-morning.
hi a, where concentric circles of chain here," Cohen said to troops at Prince Even a huge international effort to . stomach cancer.. he waged an active
with the Khmer Rouge and threat"You've got to stay on alert at all link fences. concrete Jersey barriers Sultan Air Base, where thC tempera- recreate multiethnic societies dtiesn 't campaign and looked healthy.
'~ned ·to arrest both the defecting lead- times," he added. "Force protection and wire fences hold offpotentialter· turc -hil 117 degrees. "And is it rcal- work.
Challengers Vlado Gotovac. a
1 _
ers and FUNCINPEC negotiators.
is just as important as power projcc-· rorist intruders.
ly necessary that you he here '! The
On Sunday, only about I 0 percent Social Liberal supponed by nine
"They nrc in collusion with the tion."
The U.S. Central Command, answer is yes, because the Middle ofCroatia's Serbs voted. Visiting sev- other small panics, got 18.09 percent, .
,Khmer Rouge to oppose the govern·
Cohen is on a live-day tour of the which is responsible for American East is of vital interest to our ccono- eral polling stations, fonner U.S. Sen, and Social Democrat Zdravko TPR)IC
ment.'' Hun Sen said. "The Khmer Persian Gulf to meet Arab leaders, military operations in the Gulf area, my" and the world's economy.
Paul Simon - head of some 100 22.82 percent, election officials said.
Rouge leaders, . wherever they arc confer with American commanders has taken a series of steps _to strength·
international election monitors staying inside CambOdia, must be and reassure U.S. troops that their en security after a terrorist bombing
·
service in a harsh and dangerous last June 25 killed 19 U.S. ainnen-at
arrested." ·
Hun Sen said he would appeal to region is appreciated, if sometimes Dhahran, Saudi Arabia.
Public Notice
Public Notice
V.S. Secretary of State Madeleine unnoticed, by the American public.
Army Gel'\. Binford Peay, who
publlo te lnvllodlo propoeele,
and the
CJI.dy J. R~t,
Albright, scheduled to visit Cambo- · From a camoullagcd speaking heads the Central Command, told .
NOnCE TO BIDDI!AI
1~lOCI.
euilmlttlng
of
eny
propoHI
TrM1111rer
The
Melge
Looel
Board
oft•
dia at the end of June, for support in stage flanked by mobile ISSmm reporters he saw no reason for extra
OJIIII L. Dyer, Clerk lhall tm11011 no llalllllty Of
MEIOI LOCAL IOAAD
Education
wllhae
to
,_._
bringing Khmer Rouge le~rs to jus- howit1.ers and M IA2 tanks, Cohen worry at-out a terrorist attack mark- bide for the following:
obligation upon the Hid
11; 1TC
01' EDUCATION
tice and _in seizing any overseas told the troops the Gulf region is still' . ing the one-year anniversary of the · llrMcl/8lktrY, Mllk/DIIry . -------""""-- llollrd• .
P.O.Iox272
All
tnvelopn
muet
be
POII!ti'OY,
~ 4S7III
assets.
threatened by Iraqi aggression.
Public Notice
bombing of the Khobar Towers com- produotl, PIMI lneur~noe,
CLEARLY MAAKI!D "MEIGI
PH(814).._...,
1nd
'lllbMII'1rw.
Ranariddh claimed that Ta Mok,
"There is something called Iraq plex in Dhahran.
LOCAL 8CHDDL DIITAICT
111, 23. 30; (7) 7; 4TC
bldl ehall be -'wei
tl,le ablest and most brutal Khmer we· re all concerned about," he said.
BANKING IEAVICEI" ..
..lbere is no more·concern, from In,Alland
NOTICE
01'
BUDGET
bid eJMOiftoatlone
HEAIIINO
Rouge general. "has disappeared." "Saddam Hussein has not given up my perspective, than on any other ,.ey be oblllned from, .
The
llotlnl
of Truat- of
Various reports have placed him at · his goal of trying to break the sane- day of the year," Peay said.
TAIAIUAEA'I OI'FICI!, 320 Columbia Tow!llhlp
will
E.
Main
llrHI,
Pomeroy,
the head of the anti-Pol Pot rebels or tions.that we have imposed upon him.
On arrival in J(uwliit City on SunhOld
a
IIUdgat
Heertn11
at
DH 4117111, on cw befoN 1:00
as a hostage of Pol Pot.
He's constantly probing any which
I'IIIIUiar IIIMtlng July 7,
p.m., Mondey, July 7, 1117• .
' Nhek Bunchhay said the defectors way he can to ... find any weakness1117 1t 7:30 p.m. et !he nre
The Mllgt Looel llollnl of elation;
were led by two of Ta Mok's lieu- es."
Education rtatrvta 1111
Cllortl Hutton, C*k
liinants, Ta Tern and Ta Ngon, who . At a news conference later in
right to reJect eny and 111
cotumbill Townehlp
bide, end the IUilmllllng of
COUNTY MAPS
were said to be in control of the Kuwait City, Cohen was asked about
TrU1ny bid •ehall lmpoet no (e) 111; 1TC
movement's northern stronghold, the United Nations' complaint' tl\at
IN STATE BOOK
lillblllty
Of
obllgllllon
upon
A book contalnina aU of Wtot
Anlong Veng. ·
Iraq is interfering with its weapons
1M lllclllollnl.
Public Notice
" A senior member of Ranariddh's nspectors, e_ven while some U.N. VirJinja'a 66 county -PI io avallobto.
Prinlod on 16x22 ~double-d
rpyalist FUNCINPEC party said the members want to ease intematiofllll ,..,.., -b county hu a ..P.rata map.
defectorS were prepared to formally ' sanctions on Baghdad. ·
Tbo book contain8 144 ,..,..,
Tbo llata'o 34.242 mlleo of roodo are
tum Anlong Veng over to the gov"Some countries feel we should
obown
In dMail. Towna, citiet and
ern~t~Cnt this week.
relax the sanctions," Cohen said. "I
vlllopo
are Indued and located, and '
Ranariddh said today that six ' don't believe we should relax the thoro io mudl
additional information. To
hial&gt;-nulking rebels who had been sanctions until we have full compli- onltr Wilt Vlrpuo County Map bao11.
O'DEU LUMBER
I!Cid hostage by ·Pol Pot's men were ance on the pan.of the Iraqi govern· -4 .IUii lprlc8 iacludaa dallvaey).
VISA
and
MaatarCanl
-tadfRed Thursday after trucks carrying ment." Later he flew to Blhraln to
LAWN BOY SALE
Public Notice
Moo dooclla payable to
Pol Pot loyalists from An long Veng visit' U.S. naval forces.
21" Steel Deck $259.95
Coot, Mope .
~CW. NOTICE
toward Thailand were intercepted by
_Cohen said he was impressed by
621Plaeta Place
634 E. Main St. ·
The Rutland T-*tlp
the defectors.
the self-protection measures taken-at
LJ-adooo S&amp;olioa. WI 531144
Trualeee · will hOfd thafr p.m.,
614·992·5500
j11Jl11866-3331
A brief firefiJht prOduced casual- . Camp Doha, where about ·2,200
ludget i1Hr~1111 for
on
The . . .
Other
atatao
avaJiable:
AR.
FL,
iN,
lint~,,, July I, 11117 at the
lie$ on bolh aides, Nhek Bunchbay American troops hold exercises with
lduoallon rtHrvtl the
KY, Ml, NC, OH, PI\, SC, and TN.
said.
.
Autlllnd l'lre ltllfon at I right to reject any and 1ft

____

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

llondey, June 11, 1117

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Avon

Represtnlatives

--onals
nn •
::-:18:-.:PO=A=ts=-::1:-.:C:-.:G:-.:R:::E:-8::-1""u=PD::-A:-:T::E: I
EVERY 11 IIIN Sporta Point
SprHda 5 Star Sporla Pick. Uke
A Challont~e? Try The Trivia .
Gamo 1·t00·331·1100, EXT.
50711, 12.09 Par Min. Mull 8a 11
To CaiPIOCil 1102-954-7420.

nHtltd. Eorn money for Chrillnwa bill at homeiat work. 1-800gaz-8358 or 304-182-26&lt;15, tnd.
Rep.
.
Aulo Body Repair Man 'Needed,
Mull Ha.. Exporlonce, 614-44111g5_
llUIIIQ DEPT.

Qlrla Girl• Glrli. Talk To Them

Mature Person Having Exptri·
enc:e In Medicare And InsUrance

L..,_ll 1·1i00-476·g5g5 En gg70, Billing. Mual Be Compuler Li10rl3.011it.lln, 18+ Sarv·U 81g-e..s- ott, Prolea~onal And Aelia~. M:::'8~-34~--~-~--=--:-~-l F Ooy Shill, Resume To: P.O. Bo&gt;
Roduce ufo and IIlii wilh Go· 33, GtJipo~o. OH 4511~1.
- Tabltllond E-Vap DiuroUo,
CA8L£TV ORDEIITAXEIII
ll\lllllablt II Frlilh Pllormacy. Mid· Earn lt5 ·111 Ptr Hour+ Com;;;";;:;'F;;;rt.~--------1 mlaolona. Extromtly ~igh Cuo·
30 AMO\Itcementl
1amer Otmand, No Overnight
TraVII, lmmtdiato · Opanlngo,
Crowford'a Ftaa Markel Pluo In Condldatto Mull Ba Available To
Hendoroon; WY. FrH apact In Soon PUITralnlng=June. Call IDr dolalia. 304-e75·
CAit =~sz.n~AEE
5«14,

·Age Groupo 'tn Tho Communltieo.

Qualifications: Bach&amp;lors DttOrae.
Preven~on Cer~fied A Plus. Good
Communications Skills ~Writ1~
AnO Oral) . Auponsibilitios : ·

Awareness Aclivities •. EducaliOn
Programs, Training Programs,

And development And Implementation 01 New· Grant Projects_

Send Resume By June 23, 1997
To : F.A.C.T.S., 1770 Jackson
Pike, Bi!INell. Ollio
FIH. ·

45814 EOE, Ml

PI PIHHnl - Domlno'o Pizza . '
Now hiring for delivery, mual De
r:Nfll18yrs old. 3)4-875-5858.

RN, LPN Or RT. Reoponolble For
Salting Up .Infant Apnea Monitor
In Homes And Doing Month!¥
Home Visits. Thit Is A Part·Time
Conuacr Position. Send Resume
Or Pick-Up AppliCation At Bo'llt·
man·s Hof!'lee&amp;re, 70 Pine Street,
Gallipoli5, OH 45631, Anunuon ~
Lewte.

Sales Penon Wilh Atleut 2
Years Experience In Lumber l
Hardware, Full- Time · Posilion

Available, Call ii1H4&amp;-2002, F;,,

lnfatmatlon

.1

SALESPERSON WANTED'!
Mull ~· Experienced In All
Pttasat 01 Rolldenlal Remodeling
And Roonnt~. Five Year• 01 Saltt
Experience Required. Qualifiect\
Appllcanla Cali.814-44D.,.514 M·;
5. Rolerence And Reilablo Vohl-

clt Required.

I

.. '

WANTED HVAC INSTALLEM

Experience In HVAC Installation
A Plua. EPA RtfrlQtrlliGn An.di

· Gtu.c-tary llin? llllht btot klpt ·RSES Corllllcallon 0\ Pluo. over~
40
••-"•'
oecrotln America. High comrrlo· ·time Required W~tn Nectllarf'
1 Klnon To Gl-wor. et-.448- alono, bonuaaa, bontflta, taado, Vocoi:On, Htallh lnouranco Andl
37:12.
ltH!Ih ptua 401K. 1500 loot o1or1 ~Polerlllal.
training bonuo, call e14-1182·
e,._....._.
Wlca old kiMn.lona hlirtd.l*k 74_,
11~
' ;_;;._
· - - ,- - - - ~~ioi885-4Z22 Or Send R~~:
..- _.,....,
· Computtr Utero ·Ntoded. Work
Haatlna &amp; Cooling, Inc.
· Adoralltet&lt;lntno. To Olvtoway ow~ houro. •2Gk _lo 150k!yr 1· P.o llox a
1bGood.Homt,I14-24U14
10034&amp;'7111111101. ,
Chit.,, OH .S'im.
).J ·

..___...::,:::;,;.:::.c;..~__,'---......,..:....-...

r·

,,'

I

•

�Ohio

Sen...,..•

NIA Crouword
PHILLIP
ALDBR

*CROll
M5

I

...........

,..._
t2 CIO'e II*~*

ANt OOD .1088: Exterior point·
Jng.+'ahr"'b' &amp; weeds lrimmed,
landscaping, 1idewalk1 edged,

:awn c11e, etc. Call Bill 30..875·
·7112.

E•per*"ed carpentry and"remo-

·. dtling. lnaicfe and outaidt,

docko. vinyl aiding, add-on addl·
•tiona, cabinet refaclng Dr newly

rtbuilr. Rtftrtncts-Frtt Etli..-Jim Shui:I00-875-1212.

Georg•• Portabla Sawmill. don't
· haul your logo to 11&gt;1 mil just Call
300-875-1057.
Looldng For Ful·nmo Job In Gal·
llo Countr, Body Work, Point

4 ilodroom hou ... Wlndoor Ct 1H7 F i - d 14112, 2 ilod·
AIM1t tss.ooo.300-175-1000.
rooms, 1 Bath, Washer /Drrer.
CA. ,18,1100, 814·317.0511 Or
704 KHooo Rd. llorgan Twp. 5 11o.H2-s.28.
Ac. 11/1., 5 Rmo., Bath. Roody To
llovo Into. Eat In Kitchen, Oak 1St nmo Buy.,. E·Z F'rnor.:q, 2
Cabinets, Refrigerator, Eltc. Or 3 Bedraama Around t200
Range. F.,.l Oil Furnace. 8•12 . Month Free Delivery 1 set Up. 1·
Slonge Buildlna. Gordon. Boauti- 110().251-SOro.
lui Lawn, ShaH Treao. $31,000. 1.::;,:..:;:.:...::.;..;__ _ _ _~114-245-5811 814-3BH183.
2 iledroomo. Central Alt, In Gall·
'
polio, On Rented Lot, Rudy To
For aale by Owner- aacludad Move lntol e1•~.fll8-t.fOQ, Aft.,
county home located on 15 acr· 4·:.:P.::II.:.__ _ _ _ _ _ __
H. 2·3 beclnloml, one bath, large kilchen, livlno room, dining room,
- o r Ro:lal "-""' ·
ocroened Pillet:. cen1ro1 heat and wa hove $1000 to $2oOo per

Work, Minor Repair~, Has .Own

air, 1750 aquare fool, pool, c:av- home In dl1aarar relief hind•
~
two baml. two adci- available to help rou purchaH a

Work For Righi Paflon IPIJ',

proclatt, call Bt4·949·23821or 488·7871 to HI appointment lor
appalrenont
detaiL

Tools. Some Air Tools, Willing To
Filply: :1)4-(138-5710

Need a break from your elderly
lOved one? I have one vacanc~
for an elderly lady, . week i J',
monthly, permanently. 304-875-

818lL

'

Professional Tiee Service, Stump
Removal, Free Estimates! In·
euranct, Bidwell, Ohio. 814-388·.

- . 814-387· 7010.
Root Painting, Hauu Trailer,
Barn, Free Eatjmates. Call Ahtir
5:00PM. 814-4-46-8445.

Signa Madt/Relurblohed. Metal
rooft painted, l.wna mowed,
!rimmed. Handyman work, wood·

.. ..,... 304-e75-B025 Rlc:lt.

Wanted painting trailer•. single
llDfJ tlou•••· lntldt &amp; ouL Ref·
erencea &amp; estlmatet. 304·815·

Plltkl""

donal buildtnga, must ' " to apo

--1

Hom• for &amp;ale on Rr. 2 North First Time Buyers! E·Z Financing.
about 10 m iles trom Pt 5 bed· 2 or 3 bedroom, $200/mo. Free
rooms on acre lot. shown b)' ap.- · delivery &amp; sel up. 1·800·251·

2 Baclrooma Acroas From Unlvonily 01 Rio ~. With F"'nl.

-·

Porch, Ulllltlto Paid, 114·311·

2bdrm. ap1a.• tDtal eleclric, apa
pliancaa furnl~. laundry room

lt:ciNtloo, ciON to ochool In _ ,
AppllcaUono IVIIh:blt 11: Vllh:gt
.Groan ApiL t41 or call 814-H2·
3711.EOH.

And large Shop. $85,000 Call

Fruier'l Bottom·2-3 Bedroom

one and 1/2 bath home in MiddJe.

240 acre farm for sale, 814·949-

Wll Do En:tlor Painting, Houon, port, 614-992-3465 aher Spm.

Tralltrt, Trailer I Barn Roofs .
FrM Ettimatea, David 814-245·

SHADE RIVER FRONTAGE
0557.
located on Scou t Camp Rd. outtide of Chester. Nice 3 bedroom
Will haul junk or 1t11h away: $351 ranch home and almost new 3 car
' pickup !old. 31).4-(175-5035.
garage plus a. 30'x36' .pole building that is insulated and wired lor
worksh~p. Aimoll ,3 acres nice

land. Asking $5UOO. Call Wilbur

FINANC IAL
,.

210

Marks at6t+667-6988to see.

2033.

Taking bids· 93 acre tarm kx:ated
in Portlal')d, Ohio· one story ranch
house. two buildings. Sell all or
part. II inierested send bids c/o
Gary Rupe, 196 Terrace Avenue,
Ros&amp;Yille, Ohio 43777 or call 614·
697·7602. Bids submined by July

Second And Pine, AIC: $235/Mo,

Plua Utilillet; R,elerences And

Depoolt

Groclouo living, 1 and 2 bedroom
aparlmtn11 al VIllage Manor and

RlvaroiH. Apartments In Middle·
porL From •231·$304 • Coli 814·
g92·50B4. Equol Housing Oppor·

:81;:00::;,
. _ _ _ _,___.:.__ · 304-675-8051 Leave message. Room, new roof, bUilding In good

IUrilll.

Steel building deaiershlp avail ·

.Nice 3 Badroom Unfurnlthed
ApartlrenL In Point Ploe- 614·

230
11'

Professional
Services

Or814-256·62112.

1992 Reetwood 18 Jdl 4,

1:::::::=::;...._ _ _ _ __

1 11

1

446 0041,AIIet6P.I.I.

One bedroom apartment In Pt
Plea11n1. Furnished. Very clean

Inca No potL 300-875-1388.

u•• Now, 350 Lots &amp; Acreage

All Elec1ric, CA. Sr4.000, 614· Land For Sale: 2.2 Atreo On Lit·
,.,.,.~,....,,;;::,;.;,;:~-;::--.-1.:.«.::6-2...:.:5=28::...- - - - - - Uo Bulllki/1 Rood, Approx, 2 Mllea
~-:r 5 ~:.s:,:,a~ ; ..~~0 ~~:· 1993 Spruce Ridge 16x70 mobile ~:l/i 218• 15•000 Firm, 614·..6·
perlence, reasonable rates. 304- home, excellent condition, nu- I.:;::,;_ _ _ _ __,._ __
8QS.3591 afttf' 8:00pm. no jab ta merous upgrades Including:
S.Verall-acrw pare.ll
1111111 at' ID BIG. W'f021206
cathedral ceilings, new CIA, gar17,500 uch

*

One Bedroom Furnlohld All UtiU·
ties Paid 258 State SirHt, $2501
Mo., 614-448·311117.
Tara Townhouse Apartments,

den tub~ two tulr baths, find much
Livingston' I batemtnt water· mare, $18,800, call 614-992·3335.
proofing, all basement repairs
done, free ettlmatea, Hletlma New·1997 14 W:ide-1 bath, $5991
guarantee. 10yrs on job e.1peri - down, $ 139/mo. wit h approved

Very Spacloua, 2 Bodroomo. 2
Flooro. CA. I 112 Balh, Fully Cor·
remote. beautiful land; Melgt peted, Ad~lt Pool I Baby Pool,
County, Scipio Town1hlp. SR 69.2· Patio, Start $340/Mo. No Pots,
~ust on SR 143). OIM1er tinancing. Leaoo Plus Security Oepoelt Ra·
Call ror goad map; 1·814-SV3- qulred, 814-448·3•81, 814·446·
S54S.
·
0101 . . .

Rick Wallltr PllnUng, residen· New-1997 14 Wide· 1 balh. $6991
llal, commercial, auto, free esti ~ dow'n , $139/mc , with approved
matH, 614·742·2707 or 614-Q49· credt Call1 ·800·691 ·6777.

Three bedroom apartment, Third
Stroet, Racine, $300/mo. plus utili·
dee, deposit and rel8rencea, 814·

onco 3QU7S.2145.

credit Call 1·800·691 -877.7.

1997 ux70 2 or 3 Bedroom,
$995 down, $195/m·o. Only at
Oakwood Homes, Nitro , WV. '304-

2168.

755-5885.

RENTALS

41 0 Houses for Rent

247-42!12.

2 Bedroom house in New Havan.
Rent $250/mo + $1()0/deposlt.

Twin AIV&amp;rs Tower, now accepling
appllcallona tor 1br. HUO subsid!!.~~1. for elderly and handi·

· Call 517·458·7703 collect alter

. EOH 300-675-BB10.

6pm.

1997 14~~:80 3 Or 4 Bedroom,
$1,359 down. $229/mo. Free air, · 2 Bedroom, full basement, r1.WI)'
Skirting, &amp; delivery. Only at Oak· decorated, reterencet &amp; dapotil,
woad Homes Nilro,WV. 304·755· NO pols. 304-815-5182.

5865.

All real eetare advertising in
tHIS newspaper is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes.it Ulegal
to advertise ~any preference,
Bmnation or discrimination
based on race. color. religion,
Sill: familial status Of nalional
origin, or any lntenrlon to
mike any such preference,

lmllallon or discrimination .~

TNs newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real estate
whlcn Is In violation ol the
law. our readers are hereby

lnlormed thai all (!Weltings
advertised In lhls riewspaper
are aYailable on an equal
oppo~untty

basts.

REAL ESTATE

1997 Clayton Mobile Home-tWo
bedroo m, total electric, com·
pletely ,furnished. all new furni ture, wuher &amp; dryer, under pin·
ni11g &amp; ready to move _imo. On lot
50x1QO located in town, 37 Bur·
dena Addilion . Pt. Pleasant. New
cha in link ' lence and new out
building. Phone Days 304-675·

1810 E..nrt9S 3J4·675-2916. '

814·992-3090.
In Galtlpolls: Rental $350/Mo.,
Wi1h Oepoait, 2 Bedrooms, 2

304·773-5851, llooonWV.

460 Space for Rent

Frazier's Bottom·2br, $225, auil·· · ocnvme aree, ·al! eteclrlc, air, HUD
epproved, $325 month pluo ullll·
able for single only. Free waler &amp;
aewage in the country. 304·582· lies, no amoking, no pelt, 814·
742·:1!33.
'
5640.

IT'S BtG : 1997 4BR , 2BATH
DOUBLEWIDE . 11 ,949 DOWN .
S3191MO. FREE DELIVERY &amp;
SETUP ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOMES, NITRO, WV. 304·755·
5885. Umiied Oiler.
'.
Large talection of used home. 2
or 3 bedftloms. Starting al $3495.
Quiclc delivery. Call 1· 800·837-

3br., 2bath, $1799 down, $279/

Two bedroom hou11. nice and
clean, no in tide ptll, deposit. and
referencea required, 114-QG2·

3090.

420 Mobile Homes
Rent

ror

814-2511-8085.

.

2 Bedroom Moblli Home, You
Pay Utilities, I Dapollit. In-Poria&lt;
Atoo S2501Mo., 81 ..31111-t182.

For--· .

WI/. 304·755-58115.

$1050 down Call 1·600·637·
2 1/2 ,.., old home, 7 1/2 ..... 3238. .

pollt 1200. 1275/Mo.. 814·44831107.
'

»1-812·:.27 Shown by appoint·

New Bonk Atpo'al Only 3 talt,

3
Near Vlnlon, Oft I 80,
Smel Gordon Spot
By Ap-

'

owner financing ~;~vailable . 304·

75S.71gl ,

'

2 Bedroom houH wtgoroge. Mt
Vernon A••· Aoklng US,OOO. New Listing t4x70 2 Bodrooma,
31)4.17~7000.
LIVIng Room, Family Room, Built
In Fireplace Valved I}_!), BOO, Sail
3 Bedroom Rinch Slyla Homo For tg,ooo, a14-4~........
With Goroot I Born, Main·
-net FrH, located: Addlaon Pllesltne Rd. Glenwood, 3 bed·i
~.1
7112.
room mobile home on 1 acr•
land. Cltr water. AIC. tzg,50o.·
304-5112·5840.

....

f'vlallli1o Ad, GIO?WOOd, 3

bod-!;

room mobllt: home •385. No
pill, city water, ale. 304·582·,

5610.
Rapo'o Only 2 Loll, Nev.ar Ll¥ed
In, Ffea lleliYery I Sot Up. 1-800·
2111-soro.
Ropo'ol Onlr 2 ltrt Nevor llvtd
ln. Frte dalivery I HI UP. 1·1100251 ·50ro.

4" heavy carrugoted plpo, 10011.
roll, f21.Qg , PAINT PLUS HARO·
WARE. 304-875-4084.
'

Baby

bed,

high chair. otl'oller. cer

v.v

•

AKC Gor~n Shephard Pupa, Corn lor Hit, h.OO P.r bulhtl,
Whitt Chomp Llno, 814·381- CGriiiCI81..1182•2447.
'
9104.
Tlllacco wator bed plon11. 30~ ·
AKC malo Trl Sholdo, 1rr old, -3864.
·
uc. quality. 1175 080. 11 ..:.7·
OCiie.
l HAtiSPORTAT IOfl

AKC Roglotorad Rott Woller 'til Dodge Clwtot. 4 ci'linder, 5
Pupa, 8 WHIIo Old, 1ot Shots &amp; ~ hruno gabd.d body! good • nod
Wormed. 1300 Ftmaltl; $275 rult, c trry ra co or, 4 goo
Mlllel;614 u8 6621.
.tlloolnd alu"*'"m rtmo. prlcod.,
... 1505. 11 ..74z.zaro.
Baby Hedge Hogo. 304-87~.1=:::.::~:.:.:.:.:.:::.::.:.:.;____
5111.
1878 Chrrolor Now Yorker by
original owner, make offer. 304·
Botton Tertler I Chinese Pug 875-4858.
Puppln, Both AKC Reglotared.
~ Quality, V.1 ChlckAid, Shota 1ga1 Chevy Caprice, 1800. 304·
&amp; Wormad Now Taking Dopoalt 875-e57•. .
Or PaJii•ltt. 114-388-0325.
1982 Delta 88 diesel, needs InPats Plus, Silver Bridge Plaza. joc;:Or pump 304-875-4302.
.,..... 1.0770.
.
1g82 Ford 4X4 $2,000; I g&amp;li
Purebied Siberian Huaky ~nip· Cam.,o. Rebuilt Motor &amp; Trans·
pleo, 3 leh, varr nice, blue ayea, mlttlon, $4,000 080; 1987 Har·
masks, wormed, 40% off, S100 ley Davison Spartaler ,5,000,
61 ..3111-11461 , 814-11112-Bg7e.
MCI\ call 814-9112·5144.
Rabblta For Sale : Owart And 1g~ Pontiac Grande Prix, NHds
Semi·Oworl Mostly Matas $6 And Engine Works, sa so: 1885 CheVy
Euro Sport Wagon, $·1,000: 350
118 Each, 814-388-0123.
Engine From 1976 Monte Carlo
Roady 111 : Aullrallan Shepherd Engine Rebuild Kit, No Engine

•I

Puppies, 50, Taking Depoolts, Block, 1125, 614·245-5865.
814·388-«188.
1983 Oldo Cutla11, VB. 4barrel,
Rot:Woller .&amp; Lab Mix Pu ppleo, 350 lur.bo ltlno. 6g,ooo011 .. good
$10 Each, 614-388,8210. ·
cond .. very depondable, 11,500
OBO. Can be - n at 2•07 Mon.

-······.........-.............

.,.11/e. altor epm.

sw Guitar, Chelhlre, Ohio· IHa· r,.s=3=ro:..·--------~----­
·

a1 Gardens. 304-57e.2m.
Concrele &amp; Plastic Seplic Tankt,
300 Thru· 2,000 ' Gallons Ron
Evans EnterpriH&amp;, Jackson, OH
1-800·S37.g52a.

Craltsman lawn mower 5.5 gold,
22" cut, power gear drive, uoed
..... $200, 304-875-81511.
Electric Scooter and Wheel-

1988 Ford Taurus,

&amp;lC.

running

cond .. 11.200 OBO. 304·875·

ana and lnatrumenta· piano, gui· 1986 Fo'rd Tempo, One owner,
tar and druma. 814-367-o302.
87,000 actual miles, loaded, excelhtnt condillon inside/ out,

580

Fruhs &amp;
Vegetables

$2195, 814·882·8824.

1986 !roc V· B. 5 Speed, 84,00C
Sttawbanlet, Pick Your Own, Call ~1i~~· T-Taps. Black, 8t4·24~­
Cieuda Winters, 614·245-5121.
•• s ba 1 ded 11
Strawberries, You .Pick. We Pick, 19 au u ru, . oa
• a power,
Opened: 8·8 Mon. Wed, Fli ,· sa: aunrooi.S1,350.:1l4-67S.3324.
&amp;·Noon,
Closed
Sundafs,
Taylor's Berry Pa1ch, Kerr Road,

1987 Ninan Maximum $4,500.
f984 Chevy 'Cuatom Van 4,ooo.

304-885-3929.

590

1987 Toyota Supra 100K Ma·
roon, Excellent Condition, 080
614-448·11951,

For Sllle
or 'nade

1195 Attro Van·Mark Ill Package, V·8, 4.3 5,600 hundred

Chair&amp;, - / Uled, Scooter Lilli.
'Portable fllmpo" Stairway Eleva·

·

s

614·245-0047.

= •• • •

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; ~ill In Stock.

10% OFF al! tar~ tractor parts. 1990 Chevy Corsica, black on
Sider's · Equi'pmenl. 304-875- gray, cold air, tilt, automatic,
7421 .
66,000 actual milet, excellent

Klmbla Console Plano, 11850, 814·
245-5788.

·
condition, value 14800, will
1500 gallon Datevote bulk tank, aell $3800, 814·902-8824 . .
614·0411-2033.
1.:.:.:.....:;:.:.:.::;.:.~::.:..::.=.::...:._ _
19i0 Lincoln Conllnental, Signa.
17 hp Mltoublshl traclllr, 4 wheel ture
Sorlel, Gray In/Out. 1 Owndrive wilh 4' brush tiog, call 814-

er, 81,000 Miles. All Power IAuto

La·Z·Boy Rocker Recliner 140,

843-5350.

HNDtt, Good Condition, $8,500:
1992 Cadillac Sedan Deville,

Call Ron Evon~ HI00-537·9526.

614·446-9688.
Llki New Greco Toddler Bed
With Mattren &amp; Bedding; Baby
Bed Wilh Matlf8U Uted Chain
Link Fence Wilh Pott &amp; Gate,
Cail61~9112·5471.

1983 Ford 2000 tractor, ilve PQW· · White Out /Blue Int.. All Power,
er, 3 Pt. new radiator, rebuilt mo- 56,000 Miles. Excellent Condi~on,
tor, brush tlog, plow's, disc, $12,500, Call 614·448·1781, or

$4,200, 814-892·2143 or 414· 61 ._.411.44 70.
I:..:::...:.:.:...;.:;,:;,______

092·8373 a her 5.

t972 lima Truck Ring s 4s,OOO;
teee Hana Pile Driving Hammer:

One G.E. AC 3200 BTU: One 1i80 GMC Fuel Truck 12, 750;
Soaro AC 11000 BTU: 't Upright . 48". Drum Sheeps Fool Roller
Swaeper, ~1 ..448·2857.
$3,250i 1980 10X50 Olflco Trailer
Oul Of Buslnen : Restauranl 14.200:_\1939 John Deere A
Equipment Salei814-24S.11033.
$1,300: lllloc. Steel !leoma 12 To
57 Ft. 614·643·2300. 8·4 P.M .:
Queen size Waltfbed Complete, AIIer4P.M.614-B43·2918.
$75; Good Automatic Dryers,
614·3111--2720 AFTER I P.M.
400 gallon oolar bulk tank, 814·
940·ro33.
·
REPO BUII.Diii!GS
Oua To Rad River Flooding Fac·
tory Haa Two AU Sllel Ouon.set
.Bulldlngo For Immediate Sell, jl)
40)180. Nfter Erected. Will Take

490

For Lease·

P"'ltlolonai/Bulineao bulldina lot
oubiNH. located of 500 s. Third
Slrltt. Middleport Olio. Excollont
far ptr,osiclan alflct ar ,real nlat'
Available Immediately. Contact'
RL. Kunz. 81 ..5113-3375-

1990 Toyota Cellca, Aulo, Red.
New Tire-a, Power Suntoor, AC,

CoiOene Sl8roo, Excellent Con&lt;H·
tion, Runs Great. 1 Owner, 851(

Mile1, $6.000 OBO 814-448-8013.

1991 Dodge Spiril 104K Runs
Good, Wtii·Maintained. $2,500,
1.6:..;14.:.·::36..:8_:6::211=3::...- - - - r·
1992 Chevy Lumina, • dr., $4500,
814·992·2143 or 614·992·8373
aller 5pm.

1.99.2 lincoln Continental light

487 N.H. hayblno, $2800: 1W0 150 Blue, Leather Uphols'tery, 614 ·
gallon Ru-.nald wetar t"'ugh"a, 44t.0410.
$100-. 814-742-2157.

510

Appllancea:

Recondllioned

Wolhoro, Dryorl, Ranges, Rtlri·
gratora, 80 Day Guaranteel

French CIIY llor:ag, 814·448·
77QI.
~ulloi/Opon hutch I Dry $Ink,
Kincaid, ·SOlid Oak. •1. 750 lor
boil\ 300-175-1570.

s-o

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: Weat
8oaU:
Weat NorUt Eul
Pa&amp;B
'.
Dbl.

tSis• Ford Ranger, low MileaLe:
On Rebuilt Engine, 6 Speed, Good'
Shapo, Alklng I I ,400, 8 14-37pt
28311.

l'lljl . 8.

1

1988 Chevy With Topper, L ~
Mlltl, $3,000, ·1958 Chevy I
Film Rackoll850, 814-255--em.,.

8392
·
' f
1990 Dodge Oakola Automati!J

Monday,Ju~

AC, Eltended Cab, 814· 44.n
3845
·
·•1
1992 Nlsoan Pick-Up, 5 Spoeil.l
AM/FII Good Condi:lon, SportY.'
$3,000, 814-448-4782.

By Phillip Alder .

·~·v~ 60T

.r

IUT NOT~ING

t.11Ce Ttli
t¥AI&gt;LOG.IC

d

IT'$ GOT
ON Mi.

741&gt;

79~

NADAl

$8.200, Aoklna ss.g95, Cook
lot~ 614-448--0103

Mill

THE BORN LOSER

Motorcycles

"

~

1994 Kawaoaki KX125. Looks· &amp;
Runs Good, Water Cooled, e 14·
446"211
.
.....

~

'

"LEAVING ~Y,

~

['fo\ 6011&gt;1(, TO ::££.

.,, q.uer?

c.f£,0\IEF, MVEN'T
mEY efffll EXll~T

/'\ l'e!QODONTI=&gt;T.

!\INC.€. il\E. ~(.

Honda Mini Trail 70 $500, 614,

245·5189.

750 BoatS &amp; Motors ~ :
for Sale .
~:

30H 1s.aa 7e.

, -,

. 198• Bandit Bus Baa: SO 11~

Me~cury Garage Kept, Excellent
$3000 Be·-- 2 PIA

C nd"11

°

""·
•
•
·~·
To5~M.304-675
·513t
.·

·" •

'
' I
1987 20' . Citation inloutboaR:t~
170hp. Trailer &amp; acces.sories irl·!
eluded. Runs &amp; looks great,
$6,500. 30...75-4221.
'
I

1988 Invader, 17', open bow, 1:1»:
Merclulse, stainless steel prop, •·
am/tm cassene stereo, cover, ga· •
r11ge kept, e~~:callent to new 001~

tlon. 614·002·5124.

....,_

MR"ue

21Cantlmpcnry

37=::311 A•=

.· Fonclll
2 Tlllnk _ , .

.....:

on
40-;--

......,
..·• er.u,,..._.

I loring (li.)

8A

8 Touch

8inc!l:lr

7 Frlo:r'a U., ·

8 F'*iCIIId (2

to

1:'.DOi!Ct
: empla,ecl
by

. tt ...... engry

·,

•

1988 Ranaer 373V 1e' 12 ·24'11
Trolling Motor. 150 XP Evinrud'OUII&gt;oard, $9,800, 81 ..002·2770. ,

.To s!art the week. here is anothe1
question sent into No!es &amp; Queries. ·lrrr-+-1--1-run ~y Joseph . Harker,. in The
Guirdian' newspaper: Is there more ~+-+-!­
justice or more injustice in the world? ltar-+-1-+Justice was seen to he done iii this
deal from a tournament in Naples, ._..L.-1.......1..Fia.
Afler West's (our·,heart opening,
North had to double. South would
CELEBRITY CIPHER
·pass with a relatively balanced hand.
by LUll Campoe
..
fAMbrity Cipher CIYPIOQrWnl ·~ eta~lecl hom quotttioN bv ltmou. ~.Pill IJI'Id present
: Here, though, South had an excellent .
f;:IICh ltner in me Ciflhet~tanMtor tnothet'. Toct.r'• 'c tu.: L fiQtM/s G
·
suit to show. He made value bid of
·· five spades, which North was happy 'V
XNUUJP
FVA
!INS
V. E
; to raise.
MEP
: Wes! led the heart king. Seeing 12 'UDIIEVUF,
FJ
SFGJT·
AJ
KN S
! easy tricks, South immediately called
JELBVUF.'
' for dummy's ace. The' appearance of VE
BKN
OVEVJBBM,
' the spade two from East's hand
NADVQJ
IIGAMEPK
GKPGVLNJO .
. caused South considerable discom· ' Kli!
· fort. Back came a club. Declarer won PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I name lhoe Old Glory."- Captain WIHiam Driver.
and ran all his winners, but East clung "Many a bum show has been savect by lhe flag.• - G.e orge M . Cohan.
to three diamo.nds, capturing !he last
trick to defeat the contract.
. "Sorry. partner," said ·Soulh. "I
WORD
, should have just played low from the
lAM I
· dummy at trick one. 'Then I can ruff
il!e second h~fUI in my hand, draw
Raarrange ltttera of the
•
· trumps, and discard my diamond los·
· lour acramblod -rd1 beiow :o form lour simple word1.
er on your heart ace. I played too
1
•
quickly."
·
·
·
Back to justice and injustice. Zen
i Buddhi~m claims that each is always
, presen! rn equal amounts; that if evil
were to disappear, so would good, We
would no longer need to call anything
good because it would be the nonn.
Another way of looking at it is
summed up by this old poem: ·
The rain it raineth on the just
And also on the unjust fella:
But chiefly on the just, because
The unjust sleals the just's umbrel·
Ia.

a

1993 21' lllrada Cuddy Cabi"i

Boat, porta pony, am-lm CJi)·:
aetta radio, 4.3 Vorlex &amp;cyl, iiiT
out board, full canvas covilt'f

$14,000. 304-875-2151 Ol 304; ,
875-6350.

.

1

w/Sun o·eck, 4.3 liter V&amp;, Mer·:
crultef', Am Fm OasMtte, and Skh

Acceaoory. 614·258-e383

'

;A
. _V

MOM SA'fS 006S ARETOO
MUCil TROIISI.E.'TIIE'I' SARI&lt;
TOO MUCil, AND OUR VAAD
ISN'T 916 ENOU6H •.

1g94 Marada 11 Foot Opon Baw,•'

l!I

SCUM.I.nS ANSWIIS

Engines, S~.soo. Ironton Uari"!C
814·534·2385.
.
' .~·- .t
.~J

Auto Parts &amp; "'
Accessories ···: :

__

FORI

12 11 I' I' I' I' I' r 1
111111111

c ..

New lnterK&gt;r, lllta 01 Room, 2 Gil&lt;

~----,.:.;,.:.;:..::..:,.:.;:..::..:

lETTERS

. . . UNSCRAMBLE
. . , ANSWER .

42' Sunllner Staal HoUteboa&amp;!:

760

PRINT NUMB fRED 11

~.

I

..

· Cutlet· Known- Obese· Yearly· ON the TABLE
Old timer to young$ter. 'Life is like playing bridge.
Only a dummy lays all his cards ON tile TABLE!"
·.

Budget Price TransmlstiOI]j(:

Starting at·$99.00 ond'Up, UaedJ 1
Rebuilt. All T1peo, Over 10,000
'

IMONDAY

... .

JUNE 161

~--------------~·
New gu tankt, 1 ton tru~k:
lilhaela &amp; radiators. 0 &amp; R Au~,

Ripley, WV. 304·372·3033 or -1&lt;•
800·273·93211.
'
'
:

•

Two 235·75·RI5 W.W.A.W.R. ,,

very good condition, asking $75 1 ·
pait, 814-llolll-21193 altar Spm.
:

Seara Craframan 18hp Lawn &amp;
G"rden, B.S. ~o10r, exrra gOod

campee:s &amp;
:
Motor.ttomes
•
~~~~~----.---·
1882 25" M•"-"' 614,11112~ . .....!
790

cond. Alkina $1,000 OBO. 304·
875-7045.
Sat o1 bunk IMido with monreaoeo.
Maytaa wisher a dryer, exarcite
blkt, conaole 11ereo, call 814·

1893 Terry, 19', amalllruck can;

pull, $5500: 1873 c-~wnon. 211·. •
oxcolltnl condiilon, nsoO; 8 1-i.;!
dlill-111!02.

tK&gt;n. Full 5 Ynr Worraniy. "II You
Don't Call' Uo We Both lose!"
Free Eotlmotool Add·On Hoot
Pumpo Only SllghiY· Higher.: Call
us Today: 1eg1 11 Tho Twenrz
Sevontll Yoor In Tho Hooting
Coollna Bu-•1 814-448-e:tOB,
1·110().2111-0081. •

Upton UIM Cora Rt. 62·3 1111¥
South ol Loon. WV. Financing

·- · 314-C!!I-10111.

· !;===~~:!==~~~~with generous lmliment. Tod8y how·
1

ever. associates might see this as 11 could vary considerably.
sign of weakness and take advan!age : . CAPRICORN (Dec, 22-Jan. I9) A
of you.
.
· · . . close friend who often spends beyond
·LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) l;lisagrce· bis or.her means might~ looking to
· ments between you ll'id your mate , you today to help make up the
BERNICE
should not )le discuSsed in front of · deficit. Stay out of arm's reich . .
. BEDEOSOL others today, especially relatives.
AQUAR!l!S (Jan. 20-Peb. I9) Let
. Keep the clan ou; of your affairs. .
the noal you come out today instead
VIRGO (Aug. 23,-Scpt. 22) It • of behaving in a manner you hope
might be best not to ask Qther$ to do ' .will i!llpreSS others- Unfortunately,
_ Tuesday, June 17, 1997
thinas for you tbat You can manage affcctations won't work at thiatimc.
'"
.
.
. yourself. Dependency Inti manipula·
PISCES (Feb. 20- March 20)
·GEMINI (M:ay 2 I·June 20) You tion could ruin you, imap.
Then: is.a possibility your eYIIuations :
wal be in an ambi!ious frame of mind . LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) There is miaht be distorted ·by Wlwmanted
today. This has its 'aclvanlaiCs, pro- .. a stronalireak ofexiravqance in you .' oplimisD1 today. C()lltin11e to bave
. vided . that you oon't establish an ...: today. Kce~ this in milid if you go . •JUah expecllli0111, but n:maln Jop:al.
uiiiWistic.111enda that proves to be ·where credtt tanls receive a warm 1 ARIES (MII'Ch 21-April '19) It .
m&amp;e than you can handle. Trying to. welcome from merchants.
.
• 'could l1ir up resentment today if you
pit!;h up a broken romance? 'The . SCORPIO. (Oct. 24-Nov, 22) Try .. ;.anempt 5o pry into a privace matter a
Allro-Graph Matc:.hmaker can help not 1o be IIDbivalent .when manaaina ·.' frlnd Is aylna to . , seclel. Keep
. yo0 understand what to oo to mab youngsters today. They woa't know . •your ~oilty in Chick.
' the relationship work. Mail $2.75 to . how to re~~:t if you're Iovins them .. TA.UllUS (April »May 20) You
~hmak~r. c/o this ~~CW•!'IP"· one moment and beina hlnh the
miJht be templld to make an identi·
P.O. Box 17,8, Mumy Hill Station, ~~t.
em promi~e .to two valued comptlll·
New Yort NY 10156.
SA.OmARIUs (Nov. 23-Dec. ·. , iona today. Trouble coa1c1 come later
''CANCER (June 21-July 22) 21)AI!ypiptoldtoyoubyafricnd .' when you ei'CIIa n-. hopina to :
. Ol:cuionally we can win Olhm over... today should be taken with 1 gain of · deliver.
·

ASTRO·ORAPII

SE11VICE.S

.~

''

I
'

G,IP ON lt~ALITY,

'

1988 Ford F· 150. 4 WD. Will\

Suppllel

.

A P,eT'TY GOOI&gt;

Camper Top, S4,500, 614·448-'
7597, 614-256-6577.
:~:
Condition.

'· 3t
Holll5 - - ·
a~lltjora
!MA:ahtll

BC·NEABRIDGE
16, 1997

p''
730 Vans &amp; 4·WDs ,.,,

Excellent

.. !1-.. ...

Opening lead: • K

There is justice ...
sometimes

1991 5-10 4X4 4.3 V-6, Aulo,

It - - .

Allpw

1988 Ford F·150 8cyl, luollnje. .
ed, runs good. S2.000. :104·712::
52~. '
'
19Sg Ford F-700, OSL Engine 5I
Sp 12 S 0o b1 0 F
6 t 4-26• I
P u
ramo ,
-.·,

5677

:Bedroom Near Holzer Ex:ra ~~~:J::S~: ·
plpoe. wind·
Nlco, tontrot Air. UBetMo., • · donor, •1211; SltaOOI ApPliance~ Bloclt, brick, Utllldtl, Dopoalt R~. 614·441· . 71 Vlno IIIIMI, Oi:IUpollt, 614· - . Unltlo. ttc. CIIUH Win-.
· Rio Grondo, OH Callt14·245·
2057.
'
441-73111, 1.aeul&amp;.o128.
.1121.

•

~...

3i0 four speed, runs good,1
$1150, 81 ..247-4292. .
• :

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
UprlghL Ro~ Evonl Entorprlan.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES .Jocklon. OhiO; 1·100-531·0521.
Mobi!O Homo: Small 2 - ... ,,. Wa1her1, drr•r•. refrlgera~o,..
SUpor olnail watorbed•.7 drowor
Furnished, 1295/Mo., Wotor I
Sltagoa Appllancn, 78 ·dresur whh nirror and ahetvn, ·
Trash Pvid, 820 Foutlh Avanuo, rinon.
Vlno
StrMt,
Coli
814·448·73118.
cal814 14:11310.
Gallipolis, 814-4-4 Ahlr 7 1~4083408.
P.ll.
TtaadrniU, . miCroi!IIVO ovon, 40"
Kllc:llon CttPII auo - On AI tloclriC .range; 181:5e I 4 chllra,
440 Apartments
Carpal In Stock I Room SIZII omall W.ber Olt grill, 114·082·
Mololw1 ear. 11...._.7444. ·
for Rent
31 •.
Relrlgorator
Nlw
llodel
Whlta
1 ond 2 btdtoorn . , . . _.. lrr·
lfwo lx7 Wood Fluoh Garage
nlohld and unlllrnlahad, HCUrltr W~a 1250 Small Olfll In Door Doora 160 Each; lx7· Whllt
dopo~ll required, no poto. 114· .1175; Rolrlaerotor SIN By Side •Rolled PantllloHI 530, U15,
OrHn •181; Rllrlgorator Froti Call1+3•·0112·2218.
FrH • I 25; Whirlpool Woohor,
1 Bedroom In Galllpollo, No Pel~ U&amp;; WhirlPOOl Woo!Mr. Now .580
Building
Vorr Nice, 81......,.1003.
llodtl, 1 YMr GourontM $205;
poirtlr'n0r1 Only. 81 .. 388-o.!!l.

·

~1~g7;4~Fo~r~d~o~n.~to~n~.~1~2'~1~1a~tb~ed'".!

Above. Include Normal lntlalla·

GoodS

lliF!££.

Tranamisslona, Acceaa.Tranattf

• PAINO SPECIAL: Central Air
Condltlonero: 2 Ton •1.1gs; 2 112
Ton ,1,2115; 3 Ton 11,305: 3 112
. Ton $1,505: 4 Ton ,1,6gs: Prlcao

Household

a

t Q J I 3
• 10 • 7 e·s t

8oldll
• A Q J 10 8 5 t
• 7
.
• 8 6 5
• A 3

Cuao I Roar Endl. 614·245-.

992-7435 alter 5:30pm.

fM: HCHMJIJIS~

J

1980 19h. Fiberlorm boal &amp; b'aikW'
1987 Tran.s Am, V·8, Auto, Air,· 100hp Evinrude oulboard. deep V
PS, PB, PW, G"'und Elltctl, Cowl bottom. like new, convertible to,.

miloo, lully loaded, orlo S27,500
oe1 price$ 1s,ooo. 300-~75- 1 6 10 .
lnduclion Hood, Louvero. Exc.
rors, Bowmal"i't Hom•care G14·
,c
·::""::::d·..:a.::i.4::·2::4::S...:5..:589:.::..- - - 448 7283
•·
198SI C1valier RIS AIC, 87K
Exerciser Glldor, Like New, SSO.
$3,195:1092
S.tO Auto, PIS, P/B,
••K 0 48g51ira d•· In• Wa1come
Phone:814-446-B529.
Cook Mo.,rl 614-446-0103.
Grubb'a Plano- tuning I rapolra . . - - - - - - - - - - - l·===;,:..:;_,_...,;.c:.:;=---Problemo? Noed Tuned? CaU tho
1889 • .2· Door Chevy Borella
~-Dr. 61 ..448-4525
610 Farm Equipment
$1500, call814'367·5055

JET

10 7 t

. ~ Ni£1100,WM!£

olon, Loaded, Has Outlaw 2 Rims ~HOW TRUCK 1g88 Dodge Hai~
Two miniature .CoiiHt pups, male, $2,400, 814· 406·8384 Alter 5 Ton 400 Engine, Must See~
$125 each, 61 ..742-2050.
P.M.
$5,000,000614·258-1722. ' .:.

· Musical
Instruments

... 2

(JP N./;) ~ · ~IT...

'

720 li'Ucks for sale

AK2

KQJUIIU • ·· ·

I..l.ISI"~A~

•'

.

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

shampoo bowls $75ea. 304-582··
5610.

Cemetery Lata. Granite Bronze
Memorials. Apple Grove Memorl·

21117.

t7 Qllilacl

Eut

~~~.MJ

&amp;teo Per Month. No '
Turn Downs! C.an Ruth 1514-44.8· :

Treat •Hot SpOtt.• Kill · Flea&amp;,
1995 Chevy Ext Cab Z-71, 350'
Tickt, Moaquilos &amp; Flies On 1063 Oldo Toronado, loaded, pw, , :au::to.:.:30::...
:.::7,:5-,:6:86::4;_.-----1
"1
Contact. Without Internal Poi· air, new tires, runs &amp; looks great,
oono. Ask J D NORTH PRO· 11.200. 304-773-5103.
Full size Chevy topper-Sports
DUCE 614· 448· 1933 About
side bed, while. •250. 304 -675.1
1984 Cutlass Supreme V•8 En· .1907.
..
,.,.:4
HAPPY JACK KENHEI. DIP.
gfnt, Witt! Aulomalic Trantmis·

570

Lowest Priceo At Shoe Cale, Gal·
II polio.

-..
''

t

..

Ill ....

tl Chin IIIIDhol ... '!We of .,ictde
20 OIIIGe fuml1ure 17 ..... liCit
~~a:~,\,._ II Pre ' I 5 r buy
•23 ·To-clo
· DOWN
• Held llgii5IJ
,ao ~ (lllllr.) 1 ~1111 guru

•KQ

ror

Be~uly salon styling chai11
$1 so. Dryer chairt $~0 and

Boots By Redwing, Chippewa,
Rocky, Tony Lama. Guaranteed

• K7 1 3
• A e 52

11110 ·11111
CARl FOR tiOOIII
Seized And Sold .
''
locllly This Monlh. .
'
''
Truc:ko. 4x4'1, Etc.
1-800-522·2130, X3001.
' '·
AKC Reg !lllck Lab puppy, 1751--~-...;.,-~-­ --~~~~~~:.:.:.~Crtellt
Probloml?
Gauran:eed
Fl·
:
="~=2151 work .. 710 AutOI
Sill
.
10% Down, P8yment1 1

••s:

New 1997 ur70 1hree bedrOom,
includes 6 month1 FREE lol rent · 2 BedrOoms, Elec:ulc HnJ, Chy
Only $181.66 per monlh with Wotor, City Schoolo, No Pato, Do·

Bocvoom,

llgtu green carpet

·

Sears 38. cut riding mower, 1D
Pika, 81 ..448·71134.
h.p., Tecumnh, elcellent condition, $345 080: full aile truck
Two campsites· one with. lull · IOpper
portable phone,
hookup. ona lor boatlna and lloh- will ull at 112n•
pice, S25; 814-0411lrv. 514-882·51158.
11)45.

12xiiS5, 2 bedroom trailer, o mile
out 143, no pets, 814·1G2·3743

belore9pm

or

eu 440 ozu.

lOt

tiCtn•
II 'lllllorT_.
t4Aia a 5 - llfi 55 ..__,.
ti'IVa,l ; 5 I
011 .
..-. tl Vlltllnla . , _ 14 Jaaalt.. -

A Groom Shop ·Pel Oroomlna. Cowl, CIMI, bulla, end 11Hr.
Featuring ':f!:o BO:h. Don 1.e:,:1:
..;:~:ii2:;·2:,:1:Zl:,__ _ _ _ __
Sheitll. S73
rgeo CrHII Rd. 1.:....,,.
Hay .., Grain

814-0411-25BB.

apace. Ample street parlclng.

12x85 Mob~• Home ElKa Are1,

3 Pieces

$100... 304-582,5610,

Uoblle home IPIICe&amp; lor renl, up Balance Owed. Call Bill 1-800'
.
:o 181801. $00 per month, water, . St 1-:!580.
aewer and 1rash included, 814· Round table wllh four chlr' call
Trailer lot F'or Renl, Addltoli

mon1h. Free delivery &amp; aetup.
Only at OakwOod Homes, Nitro

--

I

Clean three bedroom house in
Pomeroy, stave and refrigerator,
washer and dryer, no inside pels,
retereneas and depoait required,

Sleeping rooms with cooking.
Also trailer tpaca on river. All
hook·upt. Call alter 2:00 p.m.,

New twa bedroom home, Harrl-

In NIIW Haven •. Ka1h1Hn HUlOn

.,

1375/Mo., Plut Deposit, Reier·
encas, 614-843-2918 Alltt 4 P.M.

1·800-891-6777.

1 112 atory house on 11cre lot,
4bedrooma, bath &amp; half, family

11,. silneol Drivl. 11 .. 448-1238

i=wnlshed
Rooms

$229/mo. Free delivery &amp; serup.

Umlted Olterl 1997 doublawldlt,

...... ll'lilor.
llrl 304-IQ5.3580.
- -·
lollor

450

~odney,

11112·2187.

1997 doublewide $1445 down,

310 Homes for sale

~~~-~

3 Bedroom House In

TwO bedroom apartment in Mid·
dleport no pots, 614-9112·585&amp;

Slory, No Pots, Oualllltd Oply,
a14·388-811211.

3238.

•

No Poto, Call

FOR RENT: so·x 150• building
caled next to PTI,I . na
I·
s.on Co Fairgroun . 04-175~
71.t1 tr,Jm 9-5 U-F.
..

!7511-:=3200=~E;:n:;.70.:.:;:50::;._ _ _ _.j614·258-tli1S.

,.•

R~ulred :

1987 SJ&lt;yllne 14x72 ·ready to
move in, lots of extras, e.1c.
cond. Call JO 814· 446·9340 or

-•
bu
able In open rna rk et. D-ers Y 1891 14x70 Claylon Norlhtidge 3
factory direct. High profit poten· Bedrooms 2 Baths • H ·P· D·W·•
. dal, salet or con!l!luc,tion. (303) Awings, 2 'Decks, $15,000
Firm,

.250,814.001~

aeat MnQ. 304·675-4548.

mail unlll you have inve&amp;llgale
lheoltaring.
·
Ever Dreamed 01 Owning Your
Own Businell? Here's Your

ahapa, bath open doing busl·
ness, owner raliring, sell ~iKllng,
equipment, groctrltt. atock.
"70
· 1orma tl on 304 •
•B82·2343.
, 000 , more 1n

1g• COlor T.V. With Buill In VCR.

For lease: Small One Bedroom
~~,.nllhad Aponman~ Cornor 01

Furnished Elllclency $105/llo.,
Utllltloo Paid, Share Ba:h, 807
Second Avonue, Golllpollo, 614ue 314Uftat7 P.M.

Must Sell!

10x10 8 Ft. Toll Chain Lehgth
Fonca, 614·386-8103. ·.

Salurday, 10am-4pm a1 220 East
Main SVoel, ~meroy.

mo gaa included. 3Q4-875-7000.

Store &amp; Reatauranl w!Gtme

Men:handiH

Call 614-992·'3725 Tuesday thru

condition. asking $12,000, 614·

c~nd . , ··asking $12,500 OBO.

540 Miscellaneous

Bedroom, .All Elacll'lc, Carpoted,
Complete Kitchen, Elactl'lc Heat I
Alt Condtlionlng, 814-4411.01311.

NOT to aend money through lhe

iuoa Inquiries Only. 814· 251·

--·

Downtown Gallipolis: Uodern 1

Pvta, Reloronce And Oepo~t Roquhed,61 ..... 1519:

Chancel Small G"'cery IRes:uar- 30 4-tl15-5S431oove ""'ssage.
1.:.;..:..:.~;.:..:..:.,=:.;,.._ _ __
large office space for rent SSOOI
h
S
7
ant Located 0 n St. Rt.
ou: 1988 Oakwood 14K70 2br. 2 bath. mo:.utillliei.304-B 7 s.~.
JuttBe!OW locka And Dam, Sar· axt2 deck, on renu~d lot, e~~:c . J;_,.;_c_.:..:_.:..:.._.:..:..
_ _~­

1124 E. Main StrNt, on Rt 124,
Pomoroy. ·Houro; II.T.w. tO:OO
a.m. 10 8:00 p.m., SunNy 1:00 10
8:00· p,m. 81'.4·9e2·2528, Rul'

rooma 1 112 Balh, CA. WID Hook·
Up, 1340/Mo.; 2 Bodroomo, 2
Baths, CA. WID Hook·Up, $450/
Mo., Oepoolt Required, 513-5742539

Fumlohed Aplllmon~ 1 Bedroom,
.205/ltlo., UtiUtltl Paid, 830 Sacond Avenuo. Gallipolis, 814·4463&amp;14, A1w 7 P.M.

d' 049·2223.

Buy ar ·~II. Riverine Antiques.

Are you buying new furni1ure?
Sell ~ur uaed furniture to the Po·
mercy Thrift Shop. There iB a real
need for couches, breakfast and
dining room seta. We alao buy
baby bed1, ttroller's. playpena.
toddltr car aeatt and walkers.

1700 square loot building. downINOTICEI
town Pomeroy, 814·992·7384 b•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. 1981 Sdlultz mobile home, 14• 70, lore 9am or after epm.
rec:ommendt that you do businett wltt1 people you know, and two bedroom, one bath, e~~:celltnl Business space for rent. $6001
'

Antlqu"

4xe utility trailer, all •teal, '175
oeo. 614-002-sm atter 1pm

FUrnlthed 3 Rooma 1 Bath. No

320 Mobile Homes
for s.ale

Wo bur uotd

Beech St. Middleport. 2br lur ·
nlohed apt, utilltlea paid, dapoolt
&amp; relatoncll. 304-882·25BB.

614·4411-4425.

4th.

530

10·~.

4,000 PSI Hot Cold Water Powar
Waoher, Lots OI·Ex... l 814-3880413.

Countrysi'at Apartmthlt: 2 Bed·

614·V49·

340 Business aild
Buildings

McCarthy Real Esmte. Inc.
BeiP&lt;•· Oh~

Business
Opportunity

sale.

4712. HRS

BEAUTIFUL APARTIIENTS AT
BUDGET PRiCES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wto:Wood Drive
lrom •280 iD
Walk to lhop
&amp; movlol. Call 814·448·2588.
Equal Houlling Opplirllnity.

es:w.

1:.81:..:4..:·2..:58:.::6088=·:..:·c __ _ _ __

176 acre farm for

llrnituro.

24! ...

ditional Mobile Home Hook Up

5641 .

--773-5054.

To Unt.eraltr 01 Rio Grandt
Co!"fu•. Available t/11117. 114-

882-3403.
mobilt homo. $362. No pots, AI
New Haven, WV- ·three bedroom, J.C.:::.::304-::=:582::;,;
·5840:;::::;.·::--:-:.-31111.
C.A., -tri&lt;: heat, st»rm wlndcMs, 330 Farms for Sale
Will Bobyah In My Hcline, Vary basemen!, $38,000, 814·992·
Experienced, Reliable, Malu re

1ra11t1, table/chairs. 814·448·

2 - . . , Aportmen~ Adjacent

Eureka With Great Hunting,
14,c70 Mobile Home With An Ad·

Aduh With Ret.rencn, 614·448·
Newly rem~eled three bedroom, 2033.
4818.

-

2 BtdroOn: Aporln:ent, Central
Air, Goo HHt, WtD Hook-Up
CioN To Galllpolla, 614·4482012.

Call 30HZ2· I50=.7:.:0·- - - - - - - - For Sale: 46 Acres M/L South 01

House and property, approx. 48·
eras. Ideal srarter home. Beectl
St, Pamaroy OH. 304·882-20n.
Houae plus 12x68 trailer, house
just painted, good shape, both
oeeupied with good renters, 304·

wv.

.. Unllrrnllhad. -~
lor construction worker. Call for

replacement home. Call 1·800·

For Sale or Rant: 2 Story hOus&amp;
FACTORY DIRECT.
on 1.87acrn, newly remodeled,
NO MDDI.E IIAN.
3 badrooma, wf50x100 metal
SAVE SIS$.
bam, In Golllpolie Fa&lt;ry. 300-576- Oakwood Homes Ia the only
·3150.
dealer In the lrl· llate area thai
bultdl and sells lhair own
For ule, 1 bedroom home In Po- homes. For lactaf}' direc:l prlcn,
meroy, will aell on land "ntracl. shop· OAKWOOD HOMES. Nl·
81 ..092·585&amp;
'
TAO. wv. 304-755-SIIIJS.

:~~~~;;;,~~~·

1 Bedroom unlurnllhld Apart: ThrH 5,000 ITU Window Air
DIIPO· Cor-..... 81.....1171.
ool, Goroo• prDYIHd. Wotor,
Sowoge, Go&lt;Nge .Pold, Dopoolt Uaed AI, Conditioner I Hiat
and rclerencaa Required, t sa Unlto $150 Stotrn Doors t50 81 ..
Flnt Avo. Roar, Galllpolio, 814· 448-3301, 814-448-3583.
USED FURNITURE 130 !lwlavlllo
Plkt, Baby Bod, Book Shoiveo.
. - . ... -biiOitt ... _
Hldl-a·bod Couchtl, bodo. mol·
mont ~. Rti.,.tor,

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�Ohio Lottery

Cincinnati
defeats
·Indians

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Pick 3:
2·1·2
Plck4:

2-o-3-3

Shower• and thunder·

BuckeyeS:
6-15-23-29-33

Sporta on' Page
4
'

ltOrma llally tonlgltt, loWe

In the 101. ltorm1 likely
Wldna1day, hlgh1 In the
801.

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'W.41,NO.O
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:e1wr, 0111o Wllel' Plllllllhlng c:omp.oy

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Counly pushed to stem drainage from landfill
.

.

Coqtaminated water draipi~g from the old Meigs County landfill ncar
:Pomeroy is1!05ing a threat to pu~llc safety, and the Ohio Environmental Protection.Apncy is pushing the county to do' somethins about it.
Jon Jacobs, director of the Meigs County Health ·Pepartment. sanitarian
Keith Little and Joe Holland of the EPA met with the Meigs County Com·
missioners Monday lo urge the board to act on the pr~&gt;lilem .
According to Jacobs, leachate, or contaminated water draining from the
.landfill, is pouring into a stream in the Laurel Cli IT area. ·
"Somelhing has to be done," Jacobs said.
,
The problem is created by a weakened "cap" of soil on top of the 8-acre
site, causing rain water to drain through the solid waste in the landfill and
·drain ina out a1ain. Jacobs said that the problelJI is aggravated by young trees

I '

2

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuelday, June-17, 1997

:Sy
BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Naw1 Staff .

••

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growing on the landfill, which break down the cap and allow funh~r corita·
minalion.
·
A study, Jacobs said, should be commenced immediaiely to address the
leachate problem:
·
Two options are likely remedies for_the problem: creation of a wetland
area at the site to encourage drainage, or draining tile leachate into a tank,
treating it and removing it to a wastewater treatmeni plant lil(e Middlepon's.
. Last year, the commissioners had received an estimate lor a feasibility
study to address the problem from the engineering firm of Qurgess &amp; Niple
J.td. The cost for a study to determine.which of the two options would be.
mOst cos...Cffective was quoted at $13,500, with an·additional cost of $2.SOO
fo~ sample testing.
Holland, who said that the EPA will force closure of the site if nction is
riot taken,. by the county to do so. estimated the cost of closure at $100,000:

:Wage.inc rea$e ordinances

He said that Athens County recently closed its 691 Land till at a cost of
$2 million. ·The Water Pollution Control Authority in Columbus has helped

Athens by offering low-interest loan funds to oH'sct the cost of closing the
landfill.
' A lot of patience'
.
The Meigs landfill, closed in 1985, w.as one of many county-operated landfills that were closed due to changes in solid waste legislation a decade ago,
Jacobs said.
· ·
.
Jacobs also said that the county's earlier landfill off State Route 143
requires explosive gas monitoring. and suggested that the county include that
monit9ring in any work that is performed at the Pomeroy-area landfill.
According to Holland, the situation is further aggravated because the land·
fill was constrUcted against a mining longwall, against which solid wa.~te was
(Continued on Page 3)

r.::::::;;=~:::::,=:_. ===;::::==========;;;;;;;::;;::::;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;,

··: proceed thro\' u gh :council
By BRIAN J. REI;D

'

Sentinel Hewn·Staff
·Personnel ma(tcrs, including a
second reading on ordinances raising
employee salaries, were the topic of
discussion at Monday evening's regular meeting ·of Pomeroy Village
Council.
The second reading· on the two
wage-felated ordinances was

.

'approved unanimously. The increas- mum wage.
es, if approved at the final reading-on
In discussing the salary 'increases.
luly 7, would faise hourly wages'for council member George Wrisht sugvillage employees by $1 an hour, plus gested that the record renect that in
3 percent.
·
conjunction with the raises, i't be
A second ordinance would raise understood that depanment heads are
salaries of SUJl!lrvisory employees by . expected to attend council meetings .
an average oC:3 percent.
.
or provide reports of activities to
The hourly wages of part-lime . council members on a re~ular basis.
employees woUld remain at mini·
(Cqnttnued on Plge 3)

1
.Local;.graduate wins Byrd scholarship
.

four-year, $1, i J(}.a-ycar scholarship, confident each one of them will conthe State Board of Education tinue to live up to th!Pftigh standards
COLUMBUS- Two area grad· announced Friday. · .
they have clearly set for themselves
t
Jb•CJ~IPCJUt:UWirtJiabchool~Wut
...~, , ·
ua\ial® !liJll' ~ ~~,g.-]1 ,. Overa)l.l:Z~.l!!iuat.ioa..M~• i
j
'
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Each year, 14 seholarships are
students statewide that will share from across the stale were selected
more than $1.2 million in awards from 907 applicants.
awarded in e~h Olli!l Consression·
from . the Robert C. Byrd Honors
"It's a great honor to have the al districts. The · selection process
Scholarship Program.
_ QPportunity 19 , recogni~e these out- includes the usc of a computer proRecent Gallia Academy High standthg gradUates," State Board of gram that factors in data about stu·
School graduate Liza Holeski and Education Pre~ident Jennifer Sheets dents including srade point average.
Meigs High School graduate Liberty - a Pomeroy native - said in a class rank. and ACT or SAT scores.
The feder;~lly funded scholars!lip,
King were among the 14 Sixth Con· news release; .
.
gressional District recipients of the
"They rellfllsent the best of what began in 1986. is natned after West
'
the class of 1997 has to offer. I am Virginia Senator Roben C. Byrd.

; By AARON MARSHALL
: 9enllnll Columbul IIUI'H!J

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. BARTRUM o!ERSEYS ~ Thne Mike Bartnlm jti'My1 will be
-valllble to the public during alpOftl """""llbllla Miction II) conjunction the Mike B1rtrum
Golf Tourn11ment to be
held s.turct.y It the llelg1 County
Couree. The 1uctlon l1
tha'publlc and run• from t a.m.·1 p.m1 Bartrum, a former
HJWI iichool AJI.Itate performer, II IMii abOVe -ring hll

ee-::r

=

·P
jerlly, and holdlllf 1 h«N end IWIY jenly from hll dip
with tha Klnul City Chllfl•

=Sports -memorabill- auction
planned._as part of Bartrum
Celebrity Golf Tourn~m~nt ·
By DAVE HARRIS
:Sutlnll Corrnponcllnl
·
·
. A spons memorabilia auction will be held in conjiiilction with the Mike
Bartrum Celebrity GolfToumament io be held this S'awrday at the Meigs
.County Golf Coune.
.
·.
.
The auclion will be a silent auction. will run fr01119 a.m. unlii .J p.m.
;and is
to the public. The aolftoumament, which is filled. will begin
:with uhotJIIn start at 10 a.m. .
.
· .
·
. ·
Antoni the· items in ihe auction will be a Bartrum New En,tand jer·
sey, a home .nit away Kanw City Chiefs..aut0Jf'8Phed Bannan P,Jey,
.anS·by-10 autop'lphcd phoco of Mike catchinJ his fint NFL touchdown
pass, a Super Bowl hat autopaphed by Mike, an Bartrum autopaphed
team picture of the 1!195 Green Bay Pac:.ken. folD' New En1land Patriot
mini·l\clmeu with one IIIIOp'lphed by Drew_Biecboe, O'i.e by Teny Glenn.
one by Cunis Manin, and one by Tom Tupa. a Drew Bleds!ie aatopaphed
Pllriot hat, a Drew BleciJoe atJtcllnllhed 8-by-10 phOto, a hat siped by
. fonner New EnJiand pelt Steve Oropn. and three New Bn,tand auto&amp;riPIIed .._ footbllla.
- the
. iliems will be on cllaplay at the Jolf' coune
. ciUrina the auction.

open

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Reedsville
man faces ,S
new Charge

HOu·se
BY CAR - No ln)urtH ·w.,.
,..,arled lfler lhiJ Cllr eto~ck lhl lkle of 1
houR In 8ynlcul8 Monclly -lng. Robert A.
Hl)'el, 51, 8yriiCUI81 Wll backing oul of hl1
drlviWiy when hll foot eppilrently ellppld off
the brake end onto the acCillenltor, caullng hll

·1988 Ford MU.tang' to lpln out
end
ltrlke the Regl1111 Hamilton rwkllnCil on Sixth
Street, according to 1 Melg1 County Sheriff'•
Deplrtmant report. Dlftlllllll to the car wa 1111·
ltd II mcldlrlll, whlll the hOU18 IUIIalntcl
damage to 1t1 foundation end •ldlng.

'The VoJunteer' wins court fight
. to ·push along state execution

The final consultation came Fri· he wanted .. , I'll pray for him. "
CLEVELAND( APJ-:-Theattor·
Berry said hi: didn 't want to talk
day
and agiin Monday before Cuyaney who heiJied a condemned.killer
with
reponers after the hearing.
win a court fight to speed up his cxe- hoga County Common Pleas Judge
A Reedsville man accused of cution said the . man is sick and Carolyn Friedland ruled Berry com· ' Authorities made arrangements
~tent to make the death penally deci- to immediately move Berry from the
assaulting a Meigs County Sheriffs ' deserves-prayers.
county jail in Cleveland back to death
s•on.
deputy on Sept. 8, 1996, ·now faces . "~very.body a~rees ~e's very
row at the Mansfield Correctional
"I
tried
to
make
sure
both
Friday
new charges in the incident following stck. ~lhatn McGtnty sal Monday
Institution
.
. a recent session of the Meigs Coun· aft_er a Judge granted the request by . and this morning that he knew what
Berry was sentenccc,l to die for the
ty ·grand jury.
·
Wt!ford. Beny, 34, of Cleveland, to he was giving up." McGinty said. He
Dee.
I, 19K9, slaying of Charles
said
Berry's
wish
to
be
executed
John c. Sheets, 41, is accused of wa1v.e hts ap_peals. That should speed
Mitron·
Jr., a baker who had hired
·"violates
our
theory
of
self-preserassaulting' former Peputy Steve up hiS execubon by SIX to 10 yew:' .
Berry
three
days earlier. .
vation."
.
.
,
"The man has some personality
Heater dunng an.early momtng traf- d. rders .. M a·101 'd Tw0 · rt·
Berry.
didn't
testify during three
Berry's ca.'c now goes before the
fie stop on Silver Ridge Road in •so . • . ~ . ~ sw ·
cou ,
of competency hearings hefnre
Chester Township. Heater's dog, ~mtc~ psychtalnsL' agrC:OO· detatl· Ohio Supreme Coun. If the justices 'days
the
judge
last week.
uphold
the
ruling
by
Friedland,
.Calypso, was credited with coming 10 mg m thetr two days of t~lunon~ last
Gov.
George
Voinovich. who SUJl'
Berry's
execution
date
would
be
set.
his aid durint~ the alleged attack.
week:that Berry has_a spht ~rsonaipons
the
death
penalty. sent word
"There's no way of predicting
Officials maintain 'Heater had ot~ d1sorde~ _and ha.~ a history of
through
a
spokesman
last week that
stopped Sheets' truck, which he was ~~ozu~s •. sutctde attempts and hallu- when that 'will happen," said Assishe
.
won
'I
comment
on
cases that
tant Prosecutor George S&amp;dd. He said
driving with a Oat tire, and asked ctnauon~.
. .
• .
Sheets to take a field sobriety test
McGmt~ saod 11 wa.~n I hos role a.&lt; the Supreme Coun review probably might come before him for possible
when Sheets assaulted Healer and . court·apromted attorney on the death would involve a review of the case pardon nr cc•mmuUilio.n.
Ohio ha• not executed anyone
penally assue to make Berry change record, not arguments before the jus·
. fi
aItempted Io Iake hts arearm.
h'
· d 1
d M a·
'd h
since
Maich 15, 1963, even though
While Sheets allegedly tried to Is mtn . nstea • c mty sat e tices.
the
state
reinstated capital punishMcGinty said he felt "terrible for
gain Heater's firelll'lll, the deputy was t.ook c~re to ~ak~ s.ure Berry unde[·
the man personally, but he got what ment in 19KL
able to activate a special remote-con·· ' 1ood 1 c process.
trolled door. ~leasing the dog from
his cruiser, The large German shepherd then charged Sheets, knocking
him off Heater and allowing him IO
ATHENS (AP) - A trespassins ciate director of legal affairs, told him He was esconed from the building,
be arrested.
charge against a reponer arrested for- the commillce could meet in private fingerprinted and issued a citation
During the struggle, Jieater susrefusing to leave a meeting at Ohio because it only makes recommenda· before being released.
tained injuries to his head and left
Ms. Dioguardi said .she didn 'I
lions' and docs not set policy.
University has been dismissed.
Bf!ll, according to Sheriff James M.
Phillips said he thought the meet· think the public was being kepi out
Jim Phillips, 37, associate editor
Soulsby. Sheets was tn:ated for minor ofThc Athens News, a weekly news· , ing should be open to the Pl!hlic of the process because Provost
ill:iuries to the neck. . ...
because the calendar issue was of Sharon Brehm agreed to meet witJI
Sheets was originally · charged paper, had pleaded innocent to th&lt;: importance lo studenL' and resident.,. reporters
fourth-degree misdemeanor charge,
with feloniou's assault and resisting
arrest, charges later dismissCd when · which w~ drop~ Friday in Munic·
ipal Cowt
it appeared as thoush a plea agree"I believe that this is a situation
ment Wotlld be reac~. according to
that can be resolved by the parties
Meiss COunty Prosecuting Allomey
.themselves," Athens Cily Prosecutor
John R. Lentes.
McCarthy said in a statement
The currenl term of the gnnd jury George
Monday. "It is a type of sitlll!lion that
WEST COLUMBIA, W.Va. - A Point Pleasant man wa.~ killed in a
has now indicled Sheets on chqes · would more appropriately be
of felonjous usaull and resisti111 resolved in a civil rather than crimi· head-on collision Monday on State Route. 62 in West Columbia, accord_ing to a Mason County Sheriffs Pepattment spokesman.
· .
arrest and ~wo cclwlts of robbery, one nal court."
Guy
R.
Stewart,
44,
died
when
the
1989
Ford
he
was
driving,
regisof them atiemplld robbery.
Campus police said they arrested tered to Hilda Stewart, struck a 1995 Ford van driven by Clifford S.
- The most aerioua char&amp;e is that of Phillips May Z9 for refusing to leave
felonious uaault, a finl-delflle a meeting in Alden Library of the Thomas Jr., 44, of Pomeroy.
The sheriffs spokesman said Stewart was traveling north when he lost ·
felony, wliile lhe robbery chirps . CaleiiCW Study Task Force_.
control
or his vehicle, went left of center and.struck Tilomas, who was
stem from · Sheets' effona to tab
Tho panel had been considering a SoUthbound, around 3;25 p.m.
Heater/a aidUrm, ieconfi111 to uais- propdNI to chanae 10 a semester sys·
The Mason EMS transported Stewart and Thomas to Pleasant Valley
tant ProlecutiaJ Ali«My Chris tern. After Phillips wu removed, the
Hospital following the accident. A hospital spokesman reponed Thomu
1Uopa.
'
'
panel voted to recommend the uni·
was tn:ated and released.
Sheela halince plelded iiiiiOeelll venity keep the quarler system.
Siewut's vehicle, as well as the van, owned by Sears Roebuck cl Co..
to the new char&amp;es and is he on
Phillips wu arrested after Nic~
were listed as total losses.
bond~
· 1et1e DiOJUII'III, the liniversity's asso-

_Charge filed against newsman dropped

Pomeroy man injured in
fatal two-vehicle crash

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.

,.

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