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                  <text>•

Pomeroy •lllddllpo41, Ohio

Ohio Lottery
MU athletic
director takes
Wyoming job

SUPER SATURDAY
JUNE 22, 1996
5 PMT07PM

PickS:
HI
Plck4:

0713

Su~LottO:

~1~17·21·2~3

Sp01ti on Page 7

Kicker:
898214

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28JIU0..... 12 ......

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BA

Pomeroy·Middlepol't, Ohio, Thure8y, June 20, 1996

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pollution permit. but opponents or the mill appealed both to the state Environmental Quality Board.
.
CHARI..ES10N, W.Va. - A state-approved air pollution permit ror a pro·
The landfill permit was upheld while the appeal or the wAter permit is
pending.
·
·
posed $Ll billion pulp mill requires th~ company to conduct .a year-long
However,
Parsons
oft
Whitterilorc;
also
must
oblain
a
permit from the U.S.
study of airborne dioJ&lt;in levels bdore conslr\lction.
The study will determine existing levels around the Mason County com- Army Cotps of Enginccn berorc it can disturb wetlands on the site. 2S miles
munity of Apple Grove. where Parsons &amp; Whittemore Inc. or Rye Brook.
nortbe&amp;St or Huntington.
Ken Goddard, company vice president, was unavl!ilable ror comment
• N.Y., plans to build the largest pulp mill in North America.
Wednesday. said a woman who answered the telephone at his office. She
The study, which must continue for 12 months arter the mill begins oper. • ating, is one ·or the special conditions included in the permit, approved . did ~ot give her name. .
Dioxin, a byproduct of the chlorine compound that will be used to bleach
Wednesday by the Division of Environmental Protection.
·
the pulp, is known to cause cancer.
The permit is the last of three state approvals needed.
·
· But the most recent studies by the U.S. EPA say dioxin also may aff«t
In August 1994, the agency issued an industrial landfill permit and a water
the human immune system and retal de.velopment.

By MARTHA BRYSON HODEL ·

-~

Alaoclltld Prate Writer

Rtlrtsl anlwl Itt ••altl1fna ...... Jsdar .... laad• a&amp;

DON'T MISS THIS
TOWERING 8-STQR
TALL HOT-AIR BALLO

The permit imposes several requirements for monitoring emjssions, sqill
agency spokesman Brian Farkas.
·~ ·
Opponents or the mill say they will continue to fi$ht the project; all!i
claimed they already have won the war of public opinion. '
.•
The Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition released a report summariiing the public comments filed ~ith the state agency.
:
It ·said 838 comments were submitted, and about 17 percent or theol
expressed opposition. ·
,
: :
Dianne Bady, director or the coalition, said the public comments sho'IJ4
be sufficient to sway the state against allowing construction or the mill .·· ·
""We do live in a democracy. What is wrong with public officials followi~
the will or the people?"' she asked.
•
But Faikas said the state cannot deny a permit to a compaqy that meets ·
standards.
: '·

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·Eastern board discusses district building projec·t~:.

'··

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By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Newt Stllff
The Eastern Local Board or Education approved several extra curricu~f and coaching supplemental con-,
tracts, and discussed planning or the
new district building projects during
its regular meeting Wednesday night
at Eastern High School.
The rollowing personnel were
approved ror limited one year supplemental contracts ror the 1996-97
school year by the board: Susan
Climer, marching band director;
Susan Wolf, flag corps advisor; Dan
Thomas, assistant football coach and
head biiS(:ball coach; Paul Brannon,
assi~tanl girlrbaSIC~tball co~ "lind
l!!!S\~tant girls volleyball c~; Chris
Stout, assistant boys basketball
coach; Casey Coffey, athletic director; Don Jackson, head volleyball
coach:
·
'
In other personnel contract action,

r.

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GALLONS
ASSO
VARimES

Ice Cream

TUESDAY

0

LI.IOX KEEIUR

Zesta .saltines

..

WHITE
GUILTY • Veronica Grote, wife of alaln
. Ohio State Trooper J - Groll, llevea the courtt:oolll wlth'her

.·

father, Larry Wetaon, left, after hHrlng tha Jt.iry deliver 1 guilty
vardlct ~g~lnat Maxwell White, Jr., of Reynofdaburg, of the Jan.
.18 alaylng of Groat on 1·71 In Alhland County. ·

FRIDAY
''

All VARIOIES 2 LITER

RC Products

.

Reynoldsburg man·.
convicted in shooting
death of state trooper

ASHLAND (AP) - A jury that
convicted a man or aggravated murder and two other counts in the shooting death of a state trOOper will return
next week to decide whether to recommead the death penalty.
The Ashland County Common
Pleas Court jury deliberated five
hours on Wednesday before convict·
ing Maxwell White Jr., 31, of
· Reynoldsburg, in the Jan. 19 death of
. the trooper.
•
White was convicted or aggravat·
.: · ed murder, abduction and illegal
· . f~reanns possession in the death of

SATURDAY

.

the board approved the renewal of the played on the new fields next season.· orficialliaison between the board aRd
purchiiS(: service contnct for the "September is the best time to seed the architectural firms for the district
. 1996-97 school year with Matt the new fields. but that doesn't guar-· building project, Vargo. Cassady,
Michael to runction as EMIS District antee that 'they will be ready by next -.Man, Knapp, aad Crawfif.
CoOrdinator.
·
. spring," said Parker.
Roberts and architect AI V8fio
In extra curricular matters, the
The fields will be constructed to updated board members on t~e
board amended its pay to play poli· nicet the Ohio tfigh School Athletic progress from· preli'!'inary planni~g
cy for athlc~s and band members.
Association requirements for touma- meetings with mcmllers or the comThe board voted 4-0 to allow a mcnt play, so the school can·host post munity aad raculty. Basic schematic
'$30 fee to be charged as a 011e time season play in the ruturc. "The drawings ror the new K-8 building
.only fee per school year, per.student, biggest obstacle in our way riglit now will be completed by the encl or June,
regardless or the numlicr of sports or is the removal or the trees behind the with detailed drawings to come after
band activities in which astudent par· existing biiS(:baiJ field," said Parker in the state approved the schematic
ticipates.
·
· speaking of bOosters efforts to move drawings, Roberts said.'
Several' items conce111ing planning (orward with the project.
According to board member Greg
and construction or the district's
The board agreed to proceed with Bailey, everything remains on sched·
$8.75 miliion b,uilding proj~t were removal pr standing pines between· ule for a Fall 1998 opening or the
discussed, 1pcli¥\ing ~. iqimed"Jaie the ciistingbasei!BII 'field and Shade nel" l&lt;~hchool adjacent to Eastern
relocation ahil Cf!'lsirt"ilion ..o( b~ River, and will set a date ror a meet- High School.
.
ball and softball·fieids.
'
ing with all interested local timber .
In Other news related to the new
Dennis.Parlcer addressed the board buyers during a special meeting construction, school officials recei.ved
on the relocation or the 'fields, stress· Monday night, 6 p.m., at the high word on Monday that the Ohio Sial~
ing that action must be taken sopn to school.
Controlling Board has awarded an
Richard Roberts was appointed as
ensure that some games could be
Continued on pqe 3

Groups pass r-esolutions supporting battlefield preservation

'...

c

IGA Bread

A Gannett Co. rtauu I~

Coalition report reveals 77% express opposition to proposed plant·

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5 ~ .. 7
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Air _p ollution permit OK'.d fot mill

I

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•
.. VOI.47,NO••

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·
fleW
....
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Partly cloudy tonight, ,
c:Mnce
~In
the Ill•· Friday, aunny.
High In upper IIIII.

Five allied orde.rs or the Grand
Army of the Republic recently passed
resolutions supporting the preserva~
tion of the Buffington Islaad Battlefield in Portland. ·
At a recent meeting of the Ohio
_ Department or . the· Daughters of
Umon Veterans m Canton, attended
by Rachel and Whitney Ashley,
, daughters of, Keith and Emma Ash. ley or Rock Springs, who served as
state color bearers. Mr. Ashl&amp;!y served
as session pianist.
.
The DUV passed a resolut1on
supporting "the preservation or
Ohio's only Civil War battlefield, the
Battle or Buffington Island, from
destruction by sand and gravel pits."
Rach~l. Ashley was moved up to
thc posttton of Ohio Department
guide ror !he new year while Whitney

Trooper James Gross, 27. Gross was
killed during a traffic st9J1 on lnterstate 71 near Ashland.
The abduction charge i~volved
Whtte's mother, who was ued to a
post and shot in the root by White
. hours before the .killing. White had
been put oil probation for five years
· on .July 20, 1995, for carrying a concealed weapon.
.
The derendant looked at the floor
and n~d~ as the ·verdict was read.
Gross wtdow, Veromca Gross, put
her face in her hands an~ cried, and
White's mother, Jean While, sobbed.

was reappointed a color. bearer. Their
stster, Em1ly, was appomted as page
to the state president. Rachel will be
serving as color bearer .at St. Louis
later this summer when the national
DUV convention is held. .
Two days later, the Ohto Department of the Grand Army of the
Republ.ic, the Women's RelicrCorps,
Sons of Union ~terans or the Civil
W~ and the Auxiliary I~~ Sons of
!Jmo~ Veterans or the. C1vll War met
m Alhancc.al Mt. Umon '?'lle,l!.e:
All the groups took acuon·stmtlar
to ~ DUV's to support the preservahon or the s1tc or the · Battle of
Buffington Island.
Plans are ~ing m~ to meet with
a ~preS;Cntauve of Ohio Gov. George
Von10~1ch about the matter.
While at .the slate encampment,

the three Ashley girls took part in the _ ~ander-in-chief or the SUV, no~i­
campfire program petfomung sever- nated Ashley as senior vice-comal musical vocal selections. Rachel mander or the Ohio Department and
and Whitney served as state color · instaHed him in the office.
•
~rs ror the SUV auxiliary while
Ashley is currently the commanEmma served aS vic~·preside~t. for der or Brooks-Grant Camp spy
the e.ncampmcnt. National aux~hary Number 7 of Middleport. Mrs. Ash·
· pres1dent Margaret Atkmson ley and his three daughters are memannounced the appointment or Whit- hers of Elizabeth Rector Buell Tent
ney as one or her two personal aides Number 19 Daughters of ljnion Vetat the upcoming national encamp- erans or the Civil War in Marietta.
ment in Columbus. Whitney was also They are currently finishing the•forelected as delegate to the nati?nal mation of an auxiliary to the Brooksconvention.
Grant Camp or Middleport to . be
'Keith Ashley, who served this year chartered later this summer,
as state historian or the Ohio DepartThe Grand Army or the Republic
ment Sons or Union Veterans or the was made up of Union veterans ohbe
Civil War, was reappointed to his Civil War. The f(ve allied orders were
position and as site chairman for the recognized by the GAR as their offiBattle of Buffington Island.
cial representatives.&gt;
In addition, David Mcdert. com-

State EPA reports decline in sulfur dioxide levels
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio's air
is getting cleaner - and at an
increasingly rapid rate.
Sulfur dioxide pollution dr&lt;ipped
34 percent last year over 1994, the
Ohio Environmental . Protection
Agency said in its annual report
issued on Wednesday.
The decline was hailed by organizations aS diverSe as American Elec-

Clean Air Act,"' said Jane Ann Page,
executive director or·the American
Lung Association or Mid-Ohio.
For healthy people, Page said, sui. fur dioxide can be a temporary irri-

'"But the major health impacts are
on population groups that are very
susceptible to pollution effects conditions such as asthma, emphysema and
allergies,"'
she said.
'
.

·:Two men ~re charged in
. North Carolina church fire

liMIT 4-WITH OIUPOI AIID
$10.00 I'IIIOIASE I

J
.
TYPOGRAPHICAL OR PICTORIAL ERRORS.

Plans ror the annual Foorth or July
authorities ruled out race as a motive
WHITEVILLE, N.C. (AP) Two black men were charged with in the arson or the largely black holiday celebration iri the village or
·· . arson in the burning last month or .a .Pleasant Hill Baptist Church. Volun- Rutland have been announccjl by the
black church, one of dbzens or teer firefighter Billy Shawn Baxley, Rutland Fire Department, longtime
church fires being investigated across 17, who is white. was arrested Thes· sponsors of the event.
day and· conressed to staning the
The theme ror this year's c~nl is
the South.
.
blaze,
said
William
Bryan,
assistant
Olympic
Spirit U.S.A., with all activRodney Bullock and Curtis
ities
taking
place at the Rutland Fire
fire
chief
.
Gilbert Jr. were charged Wednesday
have
been
more
than
40
There
Department and park .
.; with burning a building they were
A parade will kick off the day or
fires
at
predominantly
black
church: • remodeling at Mount Tabor Baptist ·
es
across
the
South
since
January
activities
at 10 a.m., with line up to
Chun;h in Cerro Gordo, about 20
1995,
raising
fears
of
racism.
Presibegi~
at
9:30
a.m. Trophies will be
· miles from Whiteville in the southdent
Clinton
'has
mobilized
rederal
awarded
in
the
rollowing categories:
: east corner of the state.
· · Bullock,'21, was charged with one · agencies to help in the investigations. religious floats, non-religious fl01ts,
d«orated bicycles. horses, semi
Also Wednesday:
•. : count of· unlawrul burning of a
_trucks,
d«oratcd four-wheelers,
·
In
Berlin,
.Md.,
a
fire
at
I()().
: church. Oilbert, 32, was charged
antique
cars,
and best overall f1re
. with conspinlcy to commit ~n. year-old St. John's United Methodist
Both mon were relealied Wednesday Church was traced to a kitchen elec- lrllck.
A rulllincup of entertainment is
: on bond and scheduled to appear in trical socket and ruled accidentaJ.
scheduled
to appear, opening with a
·
Alabama
Gov.
Fob
James
• • court today.
gospel
sing
and pro wrcstlitia 11 I
-; • Sheriff Jitiutly Ferguson said an released statistics showing Alabama
· anonymous tip the day after the May has had 38 . sus~cious church fires p.m. The Syine~ Creek Band, a loc;al
. · : 23 fire led authoriiies to the suspects. since 1990, with uresis made in 20 countrj. group, will perform from
2:30 to 5:30 p.m. They will be rol, : • In neiahborina Robeson County, orthem . •

I

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YOUTH
,...·Flllnlttll L. Wheller, 11 Flllclne wu held
tor ob11rvetlon at V....,.na M1morlal Hoapltlllln Pomeroy tot.•
lowing thla ona 1:11r WfiCk on 11t11t1 Roulll 331 ,.... Anttqultf:
WednlldiY -lng. Ac:cordlng to I MeJae County Sherltf'a' ·
DIJMIIhlnt rtpCII't, the WIIIIOidhbound wiien lhe loll contlol•
ol her 18M Ct.vrplet c-o which went olt the road
dlopped over an embenlutw.rt before rolling onto Ita fOlk!
Rnp Dildlng to thiiWfMI WlfW the Racine equid end voll!nller;
flra cllpartmlnt. (Photo ,c:ourteey Rllal!w YFD)
· ::

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�Commentary

•

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Thurwcley, June 20, 1 •

OHIO 1/Vc,lttlCr
Fridlly, JDM 11

-.• ~----------~------~--------------------------------~~--~===
•

The Daily Sentinel Dole.win means what?_____;.,___

...
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'EstA!JfWtd in 1948

•••
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111 c-t St., Pometoy, Ohio
1114-m·2151• Fu: 182·2157

.2,
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT 'L WINGETT
Publleher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

•
•
••
•

MARGARET LEHEW

Controller

Fabiani fiercely
private, cool and
_
:unfazed by GOP

By Ben W8ttenberg
The 'contest question is relevanL If
Do I have peal IQders, or whal? the Ointons don 'l stop violatina,lbe
In April I announced a contest. first rule of politics, it will be reali· Respondents were asked to help me ty. (" If yoo 're in a hole, stop dig·
with a futuristic novel by submitting
essays of no more than 6SO words on
Ben Wattenberg
the topic "What Would a Dole Victocy Mean?" This is hard, unpaid gin g.")
• work -- for five unspecified prizes.
All other things being equal, I
Yet 53 entries were received.
would crown Mike Berry (Bethesda.
I had explained my predicate:
Md.) winner. But Berry exceeded the
1.) A Dole victocy would likely . 650-word limit -- by several thousand
give the country its first all-Republi· words. Still , I offer his stocyline:
can/conservative government in
Dole beats Clinton 46 percent to
recent years. The Rep-cons would 43 percent. Colin Powell turns down
have the !'residency, the Congress, a Dole's invitation to be Secretary of
sympathetic Supreme Court, a major- State in order to start organizations to
ity of the governorships, and proba- help disadvantaged students by
bly a majority of state legislators and recruiting former members of the
legislatures.
lllilitary as tutors and mentors.
2.) The Republican/conservative
The new Congress passes the old
coalition is factionalized : Main Contract With America. Dick i\rmey,
Street, Wall Street and K Street con- the hard-line GOP House Majority
servalives, neo- and paleo-conserva- Leader, feuds with soft-line Speaker
lives, social and economic conserva- Newt Gingrich. Still, Medicaid,
lives, pro-growth, slow-growth and Medicare and welfare reforms are
no-growth conservatives, compas- enacted into law.
sionate and communitarian conservThe economy goes into recession,
atives, isolationist, internationalist blamed on Republicans. Pat
and nationalist conservatives.
Buchanan blames free trade. The
Dole
. is moving up in the polls. Democrats gain seats, but remain in.

By SONYA ROSS
A11oc:leted Prall WrHer
WASHING10N- To let Mark Fabiani1ell it, this Whitewater affair that
• he speaks about almost every day isn't about the ethics of President Clio' ton or the first lady, it's about Republican politics.
So Fabiani chants a mantra on Alphonse D' Amato, the Republican chair. man of the Senate Whitewater Committee, the "classic political henchman,"
' \he "ethically challenged," the lord of a " kangaroo court" bent on partisan
. revenge.·
. · "No one's losing any sleep over being referred by Senator D' Amato on
ethics charges," Fabiani said during a TV interview this week.
Hard words from a man described by friends as easygoing and quiet. But
.. they speak to the essence of Fabiani: a pit bull lurking deep within the fam.. ily man who toiled on Whitewater through his first Father's Day and who
kept his cool during a mugging at gunpoint earlier this year.
"The only thing that surprises me is the public Mark Fabiani . When I
knew him he was quiet and shy," said Alan Dershowitz, Fabiani's law professor. "I wish I could hire him and keep him for the rest of my life. Unfor-tunately, the president got him first."
Fabiani, 38, is a special associate counsel to Clinton. His primary duty
since April 1995 has been as spokesman on Whitewater, the travel office
firings, the FBI files and other messes that could damage tbe Clinton pres::ldency.
: • Lately he's done this a lot, in newspapers and on network news programs,
·on CNN, even on Court TV.
·
· "My man. The human garbage disposal," White House spokesman Mike
~cCurry said of Fabiani. "He takes 11llthe g11fbage and disposes of it."
: Fabiani also is a fiercely private man. He l!eclined to grant an interview
;for this article. His friends and colleagues won 'I divulge details of his pri;Vate life, even whether his newborn is a son or a daughter.
. : '.'He's smooth. And skilled," says senior Clinton adviser George
~tephanopoulos. "f:le's sane enough to get out of 1\~re when he can to go
)ee his ·new baby."
~: "We made him go out and do a television show on Sunday morning,
~ather's Day;" McCurry said. "He got home in time to see his baby."
! Before taking on the convolutions 'of Whitewater, Fabiani was Jl deputy
:Under Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley, whose last terms were stained by
'tithics woes.
·
. : Fabiani is a graduate of the University of Redlands and Harvard Law
;!jchool, class of '82. He served as a law clerk for U.S. Circuit Judge Stephen
:Reinhardt and became Bradley's legal counsel in 198S, rising to chief of staff
· :four years later.
• Fabiani came to Washington in 1993 as a speech writer for Attorney Gen:~ral Janet Reno, and later became adeputy assistant housing secretary who
.~elped manage the Clinton administra~ion 's e~ppwerment zone program.
·• In Janu·ary, after a long day of fieldmg questions about first lady Hillary
:Rodham Clinton's grand jury testimony on Whitewater, Fabiani was mugged
:as he left a subway stop in suburban Alexandria. Va.
: His attackers put him into a car and drove him to automated teller
'lllachines, forcing him to withdraw $1,600 in cash and laking his Role•
:.,..atch, his briefcase and a cellular telephone. They ultimately .returned every'thing but the cash, gave him $10 for a cab and released him un_harmed.
: Fabiani was back at work the next day. .
·: "I was scared out of my wits when I read about that," Dershowitz said.
··out it was typical_Mark. He was cool under the circumstances."
In law school, Fabiani studied under Dershowitz, putting what the
esteemed law professor described as "an inordinate capacity for hard work"
to use in the defense of Claus.von Bulow, whose conviction of attempting
to murder socialite ·wife Sunny was overturned on appeal.
. Dershowitz said he was attracted to Fabiani's ability to simplify the complex, and brought him on to do legal research and analysis. "He's just the
guy the White House n~~-" the professor said. "When' h~ h~?dles a case
-he's like a surgeon. He s· skilled and able and very perceptive.
John Podesta, former While House point man for Whitewater and other
~ssues said Fabiani has distinguished himself because he does not "let things
sit ai-dund and fester."
' · . "He's lcind of mastered being combative," Podesta said. "This adds to
Ji;s experience and I'm sure it will serve him well."
~ But then again, Podesta said, Fabiani may decide to simply spend more
time with his infant son or daughter.
· "i was in his office the other day and I noticed quite a number of baby
_ ~ictures out, more than pictures with stars and swlets," _Podesta said.

, EDITOR'S NOTE - Sonya Ross coven the White House for
~iated Press.

ne

Today in history
By The Associated Press
· Today is Thursday, June 20,the 172nd day of 1996. There are 194days
left in the year. Summer begins at 10:24 p.m. EDT.
. · On June 20, 1782, Congress approved the Great Seal of the United States.
,,.
• On this date:
In 1756, in India, a group of British soldiers was imprisoned in a suffotating cell that gained notoriety as the "Black Hole of Calcutta." Most of
them died.
·
· In 1791, King Louis XVI of France attempted lo flee the country in the
so-called Aight to Varennes, but was caught.
· In 1837, Queen Victoria ascended the British throne following the death'
ot her uncle, King William IV.
' In 1863,Wesl Virginia became the 3Sth state.
, In 1893, a jucy in New Bedford, Mass., found Lizzie Borden innocent
of the ax murders of her father and stepmother.
· In 1'943, race-related rioting erupled in Detroit; federal troops were sent
;'q two days later to quell the violence that resulted .in more than 30 deaths.
In 1947, Benjllllin "Bugsy" Siegel wu shot dead at the Beverly Hills,
Calif., mansion of his girlfriend, Virginia Hill, at the order of mob associ'

.

Illes.

In 1963,the United States and Soviet Union signed an agreemenlto sel
up a "hot line" communications link between the two superpowers.

"

,.

.-.

--·..

AccuWe~

the minority. The 1061h Conaress
A second major theme concerned
stalemates. Dole is sick. Ginaficb is asurge of relisious feelinJ . (Old hispooped. Armey is attacked by torical axiom: An era of rationality is
Buchananites for being too soli. For- followed bv an era of reliaion.) Jim
eign crises erupt. Dole calls for more Moroney {Camarillo, Calif.) explains
defense spending. The budget aoes how, in 2004, this sentiment helps
deep into the red. Dole say• he - ·elect the man whose slogan is "It's
won't run for re-election.
not a money thing, it's a morals
In 1999, Sen. John McCain llld thing" - Alan Keyes.
former Sen. Bill Bl'ldley announce a
A third theme posits riots and viccampaign to choose Powell as the lence. John Baugher {Norman, ~L)
nominee for both parties. He wins foresees such a future triggered by a
boJh nominations and his "Consen- reduction of welfare benefits, higher
sus" candidacy wins big in the elec- :fooc! prices and agitation by liberal
lion of 2000 despite opposition from 1potiticians. Race relations are dteeply
new right-wing and left-wing parties. !strained. A school board rebellion in
Professor of History Newt Gin- · !2002 leads to government funding of
grich, teaching at Georgia State: is _ top-grad~ private high school acadeasked whether the Republican Revo- · m1es. Things work out. ·
lulion has been defeated. No, he uys,
Other chaos predictors see a fasbut it did not entirely slicceed; the • cist in your future. F. Michael Stubbs
revolution was succeeded by Pow- {Springfield, Va.) sees a far-risfi
ell's "New American Consensus." fringe of the GOP laking over, leadThere are many historical parallels to ing to the election of a Juan Peron·
this, Professor Gingrich notes.
like president in 2020. Stubbs
B'erry was one of many contes- reminds us of the old admonition: Be
tants who stressed that the upshot of careful what you wish for; you may
it all would be a moderate-conserva- get more than you ever dream~ of. ·
live government of the center, not a
Jerry Orr (Chantilly, Va.) gelS a
sharp lurch to the right. The others prize for the. best word: "susurragot there without Powell.
tions." (Look it up.)
Some entrants looked at technofixes; for example, a pubelty-delaying pill to reduce out-of-wedlock
births among teen-agers. Joe Bergeron (Bristol, Conn .) says Dole is out
of chronological order and should
have been president instead of Nixon,
that he doesn' t know the difference
between industrial assets and digital
. assets, and that he'll get into trouble
if he doesn't learn what dot-com
means. Joe also chides me for having
a snail-mail conle.st with -no e-mail
address. Next time, Joe.
The prizes? The five ·co-winners
get autographed copies of the new
paperback edition of "Values Mauer
Most" by me, with a new introduction. A careful .reading will explain
what happens next and why. Mike
Berry: It's hard to write short, huh?

Joseph Spear
or materials that would "expose"the
· Clinton administration's shortcomings, including ·"ethicallapses."
The president and his minions are
already being investigated by four
independent counsels with a total
staff of 36 prosecutors . These attorneys are being paid $91,300 each, on
average, and the probes have cost the
lax parers about $17 million so far. It
is difficult to get a precise reading on
how many congressional probes of
various Clinton doings have been
conducted, but according to this
month's Mother Jones magazine, the
Whitewater affair alone required the
. attention of two committees, which
held 41 hearings and spent $30 million.
It seems that every lime a Clinton
lackey burps, some Republican calls
for hearings. White House aides stupidly -- and mistakenly. they claim - requesied FBI files on GOP ·aides

who served under Ronald Reagan
and Geoqe B~h. and the fi~t words
out of House Majority Leader Dick '
Armey's mouth are: "I think we
ought to ha~e hearings." News leaks
that the White House loo_ked the other wa_y wild~ Iran supplied Bosnlf.n
Mushms with weapons~ and the
H?use lntemallonal R~lauons Commmee demands . heanngs. &lt;~!~ever
~mnd . that leadmg Republicans,
· 10cludina Bob Dole, demanded all
along that the international arms
embargo be lifted.)
Fearing that the Republicans may
.-u~ ~ut of things to investigate, and
wiShing als_o to_ ~emonstrate . our
b1part1san dJSposiUon, and desmng
also to help the Repu~hc~s sort out
the subtlet1es of the Bill Chnton persona, we of the S!'!'ar _Foundation, a
small but energeuc th10k tank, have
~om~ ~p w1th s~me Ideas for offic1al
10qumes. We thtnk the pe_ople ought
to know, an~ the Repubhc~s ought
to hold ~ngs to deten~une: ,
-· Whether H1llary Chnto~ s fingerprmts were on the Secunty and
Exchange Commission report that
criticized AID' Amato for pocketing
$37, 12S in a one-day stock deal.
-- Whether the Clinton adminis·

W. VA.

the liberal effort to increase minority political representation in the
South, and next year it may outlaw
racial preferences in college admis-

Morton Kond;acke
sions.
. Republicans in Congress plan to
push through legislation this year
ending race- and gender-based preferences in federal procurement and
hiring, apparently in hopes that President Clinton will veto the measure
and hurt himself. politically.
If given a go-ahead by the House
GOP leadership, the House Judiciary Committee is poised to mark up an
anti-preference bill introduced by
Rep. Charles Canndy, R-Aa., and cosponsored in the Senate by Bob
Dole. House Speaker Newt . Ginarich, R-Ga., says that he expects the
measure to hit the House Door in July.
And in the presidential campaign,
Dole will be sorely Jempted, if it's
clear that 'he can't get Colin Powell
to be his running mate, to play affirmative action politics as a way to
wrest California and other states
away from Clinton.
So far, Dole has endorsed the socalled California Civil Rights Initia·

ti ve, which would ban all gender and
ethnic prefere!ICeS by state entities,
but he has not made affirmative
action a centerpiece of his campaign._
,
It will be hard for him not to, since
CCRI offers the possibility of split·
ting the Democratic Party in Cali fornia and delivering white workingclass voters to the GOP.
Indeed, the Republican Party has
all sorts of political incentives to play
genteel racial politics to the hilt, the
most compelling of which is that it
works. The GOP has profited massively hy becoming the de facto
~·white people's party" in the' South.
It did so, in part, by cynically
encouraging the drawini of majorityblack congressional districts to con•
.centrale llie Democratic vote, ·there·:by enabling Republicans to defeat
moderate Democrats in neighboring
white districts.
. Now that the moderatenre gone,
Repul1licans are eneouraginglawsuiiS
to strike down the black districts, and
they are succeedina. The result is
likely be that blacks are woefully
uncle
sented in Conaress •• and
~
Itimately furious.
As they watch the polilicalsystem
dismantle racial pn:feretK:CS meant to

Today's weather forecast
Southeaitem Obio

Today ...Partly cloudy. A chance of
showers and thunderstorms . High in
· the mid 80s. Northwest wind 5 to I 0
mph. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Tonight...Partly cloudy. Low in
. the mid 60s. Northwest windS to 10
· mph.

"

.

· · Friday...Mostly sunny. High in the
upper 80s.
Extended forecast
Saturday though Monday.. .A
chance of afternoon thull!lerstorms.
Lows in the mid 60s-to lower 70s.
Hot with highs of 90 to 9S.

·Meigs EMS logs 4 calls
.Units of the Meigs County Emer. gency Medical Service recorded four
calls for assistance Wed11esday. Units
responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
10:10 p.m., Middleport Levy,
Rachel Young. Veterans Memorial
Hospital. .
· RACII'iE
10:53 p.m., volunteer fire depart·

ment and squad, motor-vehicle accident on state Route 338, Ranetta
Wheeler, VMH.
SY!,t'CUSE
10:56 a.m., Dusky Slreet, Mildred
Harnm, Holzer Medical' Center.
TUPPERS PLAINS
4:45 p.m., state Route 7, Mildred
Ogden, Camden.Cl"fk Memorial
Hospital.

--Local ·briefs- ~-___,
Youth. ffliured in acci4ent .

-·

.

A l~year-old.Racine y,outh was treated lor'injuries followi~g a onecar accident on state Route 338 neat Antiquity Wednesday .evening.
Raiietta L. Wheeler was :;outhbound when she lost control of the
1994'Chevrolet Cornaro she was dtiving, according to a Meigs County Sheriffs Department report. The car went off the road, dropped over
an embankment and struck the ground nose-first before rolling onto
its lOP., sustaining heavy damage. ·
·
SbC was transported by the Racine 51lUad of the Mei~·nCounty
·Emergency Medical Service to Veteran5'Mer'notial Hospital wllere she.
is being held for observ~tion . The Racine Volunt~er Fire Department
temporarily closed the road while the car was bemg removed:

tration hiKI anything to do with making beach volleyball an official
Olympic sport.
-- Whe~r it is legal for a first
lady to write a newspaper column in
an eleciion year, and most especially whether it is legal for her husband
to guest-write it.
•. Whether Clinton operatives
hired the photographer wild snapped
Bob Dole in his swimming trunks
and white T-shirt.
.. Whether .Clinton visited a
burned-out black church in South
Carolina as Dick Armey charged
merely for "a photo op." (And, of
course, whether · Republicans hav~
ever .done such a thing; in the interest of saving time and money, this
Part of the probe should be limited to
June 1, 1996 and thereafter.)
.. Whether ijillary Clinton meO:.
tioned the possibility of adopting a
baby as an election ploy.
.
-- Whether pill Clinton exposed
anything to the SOO.year-old frozen
Inca girl that he described as a
"good-looking mummy."
Joseph Spear Ill a syndicated
writer. for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

help blacks, white racists think they
have permission from their social betters to engage in violence.
This is the dire long-term consequence of the direction in which the ·
politicpl system is headed, and it's llJl
to Republicans to help solve 'it.
To their credit, Republicans and
conservative religious groups-spoke ~
out ahead of the Clinton administrai
tion against the wave of church bum: ·
ings that has hit the South -- although
Republican leaders undid ,their owri good by complaining that Clinton
was playing polilics when he did step
in personally, as a president should.
It was a Feb.. 22 letter from the
Christian Coalition, the Family
Research Council, and other rightist
groups that stimulated Rep. Heney
Hyde; R-Dl., to hold House judiciary hearings on the burnings and to
inlroduce legislation •• si:heduled for
passage -- strengthening federal laws
against churchbumings.
Beyond politics, the obvious
response of white Southerners ••
church people, especially - should be'
to form partnerships to guard black ,
churches, repudiate r1eism.
{Morton Konclracb II - ·
tlve editor or Roll Call, the Deft·
Pllper at Capitol HilL). ~

George F. Curry Jr.

...

.SLSDto mull ballot-change
The Southern Local Board of Education will meet in speci~ session Friday at II a.m. at the high school in Racine to consider changes
to a ballot in a district-wide special election to be held Aug.r6.
At issue is changing a ~.1 -mill bond issue for constructionofadis- .
trict-wide elementary school and renovations to the high school to a
lesser amount to reflect an added contribution to the district from the
state building fund.

Boil·order issued
The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District has issued a boil advisory in Meigs County for areas in Sulton .and Lebanon Townships.
In Sutton Township on SR 124 from Dorcas to Hoback Road. Tanners Run, Etige Hili •.and CR 35.
·
.
In Lebanon Township on CR 3S, Ross Road, Lovett Road, Perry
Road, Trouble Creek Road, Valley Belle Road, Old Town Aats,
Stivers ville Road, Durst Road. Barringer Ridge Road, Carpenter Road,
Sharon Hollow, Dailey· Road, and Stiversville Road.
.
A line was cut by the Lebanon Township trustees causing the disruption o( service to the areas, according to Donald C. Poole, ,general manager, Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District.
A samplt will be \aken after the break has be~n repaired, and if the
sample passe~ t!'e ~oliform bacteria test, the boil order will be lifted.
That announcement will be made in this newspaper and on the radio,
-. Poole said.
.

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
WEDNESDAY
Admissions: None
Discharges : Kevin Hetzer,
Reedsville

How will GOP handle racial inequality?
By Morton Kondracke
Conservatives are intent on dismantling the affirative action and
voting rights structure erected by liberals over the jlast30 years. But they
haven't answered a key question:
What win they replace it with,
besides racial bitterness?
The cqnservatives, including
Republicans in Congress and a
Supreme Court majority, may be on
sound constitutional ground in insisting on strict color-blinclness in the
distribution of johs, college admissions and seats in Coogress, but so far
they have no solution to the continuing dilemma of racial inequality in
America.
Potential answers abound, including aggressive recruitment and train·
ing for minorities and preferences
based on economic background
instead of race yd gender, but
Republicans so far aren't inclined to
propose them.
Meantime, blacks are being
administered defeat after defeat in the
courts, and white racists seem to
think that the tide of history gives
them license to bum even hoiiSes of
wonhip. '
The Supreme Court has just dec-_
imated the 1982 Voting Rights Act;

VictY Hysell Abbott, 36, Delaware, died Monday, June 17, 1996, at
Delaware.
Born July 6, t9S9, in Pomeroy, d8uahler of Aaron "Bo" and Grace Barren Hysell of Delaware, she was a member of the First Church of God in
Delaware.
In addition 10 her parentS, she is survived by four children, Elizabeth
Hysell of Delaware, AIIIOI\ Abbott of Columbus, Jamie Smith and Joshua
Smith, both of Racine; a granddaughter; grandparents, Benjllllin and
Dorothy Barrett of New Haven, W.Va.; brothers. 'ICrry Barrett, Timothy
. Hysell and Tracy Hysell, all of Delaware, and Toby Hysell of Columbus; a
sister, Penny Wilson of Lancaster; and a half-brother, Sammy Willard of Gallipolis.
Services will be held Saturday at I p.m. at the First Church of God in
New Haven, W.VL, with the Rev. Lynn Ramey officiating. Burial will fol·
low in Coy Hill Cemetery in Danville.
Friends may call Thursday and Friday, 7-9 p.m. at E~ing Funeral Home
in Pomeroy.

I '

Bring on the Clinton probes.______,;,.___
mainly a matter of deduction. Last
month, House Republican leaders circulated a "Request for Information. URGENT," aslcing for any reports

VIcky Hysell Abbott

MICH.

Ben Wattenberg, a senior
fellow at the American EnterpriSe
laslitute, is the author of a new
book, "Values Matter Most," and
Is lbe holt or lbe weekly public televlllion program, "Think Tank." :

By Joseph Spear
As best I can tell, the Republicans
have devised a two-part plan to oust
Bill Clinton from the White House in
November:
·
·
(I) Bribe California.
(2) Investigate Clinton until he's
taking oxygen.
·
The California payola portion of
the schell)e came to light on June 4,
when the Wall Street Journal published a memorandum written by
Newt Gingrich entitled, "Proposed
Principles for Analyzing Each Appropriations Bill.!' In it, the speaker listed seven criteria that new spending
legislation should meet. Item seven
was: "What impact will this bill have
on California?"
California, of course, represents
one-fifth of the electoral votes needed to send Bob Dole to the While
House. It also has the largest congressional delegation. Gingrich didn't even bother denying the meaning
of what he wrote. "I'm very proud of
the fact that~ Republicans are committed to making sure that California
gets good representatio'n." he said.
The investigations part of the
. GOP's wily campaign scheme · is

forecut

George F. Curry Jr., 41, of Gallipolis. died Tuesday June 18; 1996 in Gallia County.
Born Dec. 28, 19S4 in Gallia County, son of the late George F. Curry Sr.
and Yvonne Dennis; he was a union boilermaker for the N.T.L. Local.
A I973 graduate of Kyger Creek High School, he attended Glenville State
College. He was lhe President of the Sportsmans Gun Club in Addison and
a member of the National Rifle Association.
SUI'\Iivina are hia mother and step-father, Yvonne and John Dennis of
Pomeroy; a former wife, Barbara Curry of Gallipolis; a daughter, Tia Leann ·
Curry of Gallipolis; sisters, Checyl (Dwight) Swisher, Dorothy (Thom_as)
Brooks, Freed&amp; Chandler of Cheshire and Carla Dweese. all of Cbeshire;
and several aunts, uncles, nieces and nephews.
·
In addition to his father, he was preceded in death by a brother, Danny
Chapman.
Services will be J p.m. Saturday at Gravelhill Cemetery in Cheshire, with
Carl Swisher officiating. Burial will follow. Friends may call at the funeral
home Friday from -6-9 p.m. at the Willis Funeral Home.

REVrTAI [ZATlON SUPPORTER - The Pon.-oy City loM
brMICh Wecln111My' alllrnoon donaled $2,500 to the vlllllge of
"-or to 811111 In the communHy'e downtown revitalization
project. Vlll•ge counclfmln rmd gr•Jte lldmln!l,.-1101' John
Muuer, 11ft, acc:tpta the grant from City loin branch m~nager
J01 SOok. The grant W11 plrt of City Lo111'1 loc:el contrlbutloM
progn~m which le hanclltcl by the TraVIlllra Foundltlon, the phil·
lllllhroplc ann CJ4 Tllwelere Group, City l01n'1 CChjMI.. plretll

Eastern board... ·
Co•tlnuecl from pqe 1

additional $159,000 to the project.
• approved~ list of Open Enroll·
The state fmt requesled the district to ment students for the 1996-97 school
pay the additional amoont, but after year.
school officials met with the con• approved a one y~ar extension of
trolling board it was agreed that the the service agreement with Landis
state would pick up the amount.
and Gyr Powers Inc. for technical
In other matters, the board:
support of the district's HVAC sys- heard from teachers union rep- terns ..
resentative Joe Bailey who repre- authorized-the treasurer to seek
sented teacher Mike Douglas. Bailey quotes ·ror the 96-97 school year for
questioned the board's failure to fol- transportation supplies and fuel oil,
Herve Earl Ritchie, 53, of Long Bottom died Monday, June 17, 1996, at
low an arbitrators previous decision and to advertise for bids on lunch-.
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
that Douglas be granted the next room supplies .
Born Jan. 14, 1943, in ):-eng Bottom, son of Mary Esther Swindler Ritchie
. approved accepting and extendavailable district transfer to an eleof Long Bottom and the late Wayne Elton Ritchie, he was a truck driver.
mentary teaching position. Douglas, ing the board's gratitude for the
In addition to his mother, he is ·survived by two daughters and sons-ina 14 year hish school LD teacher in . dooation of computers, printers, and
law, Kathy Ritchie and Gary Jordan of Racine and Melissa and Eddie Grifthe district, was denied a transfer to. other surplus items by the US Army
fin of Reedsville; two daughters, Arlene Ritchie of Columbus and April - a teaching position at Chester Ele- Corps of Engineers, Huntington,
Ritchie of Reedsville; a son and daughter-in-law, Wayne and Christina
mentary.during the last regular board W.Va., to the school district. · •
Ritchie of Reedsville; and four grandchildren.
'
.
meeting. He has filed a grievance in
111e l&gt;oard set their next regular
Also surviving m:c two sisters and brothers in law, Eileen ~nd Carl Kuhn
an attempt to acquire the transfer.
meeting for Tuesday, July 23, 6 p.m..
of Louisville, and Emma and Forrest Rhodes .of Navarre; two brothers and
-certified transfers of the follow- at the high schQPI.
sisiers-in-law, Jac.k and Donna Ritchie of Pataskala and Elton and Joyce
ing teachers in the district: Betsy
Ritchie of Tuppers Plains; a brother, Joe Ritchie of Long Bottom; several
Jones, from reading teacher to First
Grade teacher at Riverview.Elemen.
nieces and nephews. ,
SPRINGVALLEY CINEMA
He was prer:eded in death by a brolh.er, William Ritchie.
tary; Mildred Wilson, from junior
446- 4524
Services were this morning at the White-B.lower Funeral Home in
high DH teacher to Kindergarten
,fT"
Coolville with the Rev, John Douglas officiating. Burial was in Tuppers
teacher at Chester Elementary.
UIIJQMI JIIDHT,_.,AY ·
Plains Christian Cemetery.
.
- approved the district's participation in the Ohio School Boar~s Asso' I&gt; -l.l!;.., . ~A
ciation Worker's Compensation Pro- ~,,.·., ~~
gram B and establishment of ~ 10
II I' I .'I 1 • ...
I
~'"-,;· &gt;II
step plan to reduce claims.
'f!Ie following actions to end mat• Krider, Long Bottom, from John
riage were filed recently in the office William Krider, Portland, June 7.
Dissolutions granted-- Angela A.
of Meigs County Oerk qfCourts LarFIII.,IAT.IUN•
. Duckworth and Robert E. DuckIJ' Spencer:
THE
PHANTOM,..,.
Dissolution asked .. Sherry A. worth, June I 0; Stacy L. Tripp and
AND
Ridenour and John L. Ridenour, both Rodney A. Tripp, June 10; James L.
DENNIS
QUAID,
Melrose
II
and
Julie
K.
Melrose,
June
of Racine, June 7.
SEAH
CONNERY
IN
Divorce.s .Sked -- . Dorothy M. 17; Viclcie McKinney and ChrisT.
DRAGON
HEART
....
Hunt, Middleport, from Keith B. McKinney, June 18.
Divorces granted -· Teresa E.
Hunt, Long Bottom, June II; CharKoffel
from Ralph B. Koffel, June
lotte Newell from Roy Newell, both
to;
Re•
Thornton and Julia Thomion,
of Middleport, June II; Carolyn S.
.Little from Donald E. Little, both of June 16; ~oseph S.F. Nicholson from
Pomeroy, June II; Mildred Ann Josephine D. Nicholson, June 18.

H•rve Earl Ritchie

7

T&lt;

•T

--.

Dtvorces and dissolutions

t

\

)'

Meigs announcements
aitend.
The Southern Local Board of
Education will meet in special ses- LCCD meeting changed
The Leading Creek Conservancy
sion Friday, II a.m. at the high school
in Racine to consider changes to bal- District's regular board meeting has
been changed from today to Monday,
lot resolution.
5 p.m.
Board to meet
Annual meeting of the Carleton Library board meeting set
The Meigs County Library Board
College Board of Trustees will be
ofTrustees·will
meet Thursday, June
held at 7 p.m. toniaht (Thursday) at
the residence of Bob Wingett in 27, at I p.m. at the library.
Syracuse. All members are urged to

Southern board

While the Manager's Away,
We are practically giving
'
things away!

,
........
.
.
. .. ...... iftrfcl.
wfiJ 1fi.W fll lfllt I

•unut .. ...,...

•"-1

,•

The D'aily Sentinel
( USPS 113-M)

·siDEWALK SALE

"'""'lh

Publiohed. every - . , MoMoy
Pridoy, Ill Coun So.. """'"'r· Oltio, by Jbe
011\o Valley Publiolrint ~y/G"""" co..
Pomeroy, Ollio f5769, I'll. 992·21~. Second
cl1101
poid oi PoA.eroy, Olllo.

pos..,.

ONE·DAY ONLYI
Friday, Juu 2111 9:30aM· 5:00 p.111.

Membtr: The ~~~*" Plea, and the OtJio
N&lt;v,-A~on.

POSTMASJ'ER: Seod- ...-!OM 10
Tho Dolly S..dnel, Ill Coun So., Pomeroy,

Ohio 45769. ' •

· SIJMCRIPTION RATIS

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Jut for YOUI

Jllcquis,itio~

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FINE JEWELf\Y

992-8250

.'

• Andersen nit Windows
• Stanley Doors
• 2x6 Exterior Walls, 16ln. On Center Aaltl&amp;iaal
,._., : u.s~
" Annstrong sollrian Floor Tile
• Marillate Cabinets
• 8 Foot Ceitina
• 2x10FIOOrJoint,l61n. OnCenter
• S2 Gallon Water Heater
• Shaw Carpets
C DIIFDII I ASSURED.
0 Deltal'aw:ets
• Master T-lock Vinyl Siding Wilh Lifetime Warmnty
• 2S Year Wamnty Asphalt Shingles
• 10 Year Structural WarraniV On The Home
Our Prices Are The Lowest In The Area.

.....,.,.,.

1SIAL

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· pven~iiehwea.'

MAU.. SUJSCIIIPTIONI

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Stop by and See
Vickie and Megan

SIJ'IGLII COPY PRIC&amp;

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A Few Of Our Home Standard Features

---

NMr Pomeroy IF 1an

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Model Home Located at
Intenection of Rts. 7 &amp;: 33
Pomeroy, OH 614-992-2478 ·

if1die

VINTON

Modll Hoei Vini... lloun 1,:00 • S:OO p.m.
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I"

The Daily -Sentinel
·
.
. ....

Indians tally 1.1·4.·win. over Red Sox

;n"nd!y, ~ ao; 1111

I

By KEN BERGeR
a.J!VELANI&gt; (AP) - Eveit in a
city 1'101 known for 'cJ.r sltiel, lhe
weatW in Cleveland is belinninJ 10

Reds record· 10-7 victory over Astros
By MICHAEL A. LUTZ
HOUSTON (AP) - Cincinnati
manager Ray Knight sees a bit of
himself as he wau:hes Chris Sabo
battle for a startin8 job wilh the
Reds.
Sabo hit a lhrce·run homer and
Bll{r)' Ladtin went 3-for-4 and drove
in four runs Wednesday as the Reds
beat lhe Houston Aslros I(). 7.
"Chris is going pretty good right
now and it reminds me of lhe same
· spot I was in in 1986," Knight said.
"Everybody had given up on me and
(New York Mets manager) Davey
(Johnson) was the only guy who
endorsed me. He gave me a chance
and I hit six or seven homers in April
and won a job.
..
"That's lhe sitUation Chris is in
now. We gave him a chance and he's
playing like he wants to win lhe job.
: : AVOIDS.DOUBLE Pi.AY- Hou.ton flrat eecker J.tf Bagweil fllla .
ll:roll8 Cincinnati'• Mlrll Portugal lifter Portugal'• elide beck to flm
avoid the double play In the fourth lnnlng of Weclnncllly
~t'a game In HoU.ton, where the Ride .won 11H. Portuglil
lftlrneclllflly ett.r 1 llnl drive Wll caught by HoultOn shortstop

"'"to

Qrlanclo Miller. (AP)

Bec•1se of Willie Greene, he's )IOing
to have a tough time winning a job.
But he has played very well like he's
determined to be a starter."
Sabo did nolhing to hun his
chances Wednesday, Larkin's tworun single . highlighted a five-run
fourth for a V-4 lead and Sabo added
his third horner of lhe year in lhe
sixlh.
"Like anybody else, I'd like to
play every day but I lhink I'm doing
a good job in the role thai they've got
me in," Sabo said. "I knew going in
what iny role would be and I'm not
unhappy about it. It's nice to be able
to come in and help tile team."
~in left Houston on a positive
note after going I-for-10 in lhe first
two games of the series. He has hit
safely in 16 of his last 2 I games.

He also took the occasion to dedicate lhe performance 10 his wife u
a birthday gift.
"Today's my wife's birthday and
I wanted ID do something special for
her. She.'s 28, please print thai,"
Larkin said "I'm just glad I didn't
have the game I had yesterday (().
for-S) today. I'd have been in real
trouble."
Mark Ponugal (2·S) Jave up four
runs. all in the first inning when
Orlando ,Miller hit a three-run homer
and DerriCk May drove in a run wilh
a sinale.' '
Houston's Jeff Bagwell made it
I().7 in lhe sevenlh wilh a lhrcehomer homer, his 20th of the season.
Portugal enjoyed the victory over.
his forme\- teammates.
"I still have a lot of friends over

'there and sometimes I have to
n!mind myself they're n01my friends
when lhe pme is JOinJ." Ponupl
said.
Portugal singled in the founh
inning put B.pell.
"I got on him when I went
around fim;" Ponugalllid. "I said
' It's bad enOUJh you &amp;ot two hill off
me but now you're goina to rob rne

of mine."'

Jm.

STOLEN B~E - Clevle.ICI'e Julio FI'IIICO ltlckl up
dirt
II he WEll UCOIICI baM In front of ao.ton alloi~Jahn V.eel111n
In the I.IIIIOidinnlngafWedrtndlynlght'egame in&lt; III lit, whet I
the lndllne won 11-4. (AP)
·
·

The Astros left l!lwn too, IWiins
six-game road trip. B.ut lhly

a
wcrt:n't as jovial as the Redt, especially starting pitCher Mike.Hampton
(S-4).
"I blew it," Hampton said. "It's
my fault. You never should lose a
game like lhis (with' 4-0 lead in the
firat inninJ). You ouJhtto be able to
hold a.lead but I was just terrible."

In ot~er ,f\L •ctlon,

By DICK BRINSTER
AP Sports Writer

'

'·

• •CINCINNATI (AP) - · Frank
ltobinson, who played for the
Oncinnati Reds. now wants to run
rue team as interim c~ief executive
officer until owner Marse Schou is
ahowcd to return.
' :Robinson, a Hall of Fame player
r~ the Reds and Baltimore Orioles,
cialltd National League . president
Uonard Coleman on Tuesday to say
ht · is inierested · in becoming the
~s'CEO.
·
'
; . .. I called him and told him I cer~ly fell qualified. I'd like to ihrow
njy hal in the ring," Robinson, lij),
said from his Los Angeles home. "I
jutit wanted to convey to .him my
irllerest in lhe position."
; Robin~on beCame , the, major
lejgues' first bl~~~:k manager in 197S
~Jh lhe Cleve!Jnd Indians, He. latet: manqed !be.· San Francisco
Giants. He also has front-office
e~perience •. having served as Baltiriidre's assistant .general manager
frflpi I 991 to 199S.
,
:Schou agreed last week 1o relinqllish . daily control of lhe Reds
tiHt&gt;ugh I998 in order to avoid a susP~~sion for remarks lhat were
de8med racially and elhnically offen-

·'•
SIVA:.

• • The Reds appointed.John Allen,
:the team's controller, as lll:ling CEO
;for 60 days until a permanent
!replacement can be found. Schott is
'

then Smoltz retired die nc~i eight hitters.
John Smoltz did what no Braves
"He comes right at you," Gomez
pitcher has accomplished in lhe 12(). said. "He has a tough fastball and a
year histocy of tbe franChise. Yet here downright nasly'Slider. What can you ·
he was talking about anolher aspect say?"
of his game.
, The victory left Smoltz 3·0
Forget his Dirtalion with aperfect against the staggering Padres, swept
game that turned into a two-hitter. in the series and losen of four
The way Smoltz has been going, · straight and 12 of I 3 to fall from first
lhat's almost routine.
place to last in the NL WesL
So, he won another game - his
"I got in agood rhythm, but I had
141h straight. Big deal. The 29-year- beuet stuff in the game in San
old right-hander had somelhing else . Diego," Smaltz said, referring to a
on his mind after beating the San one-hitter against the Padres on
Diego Padres S-1 Wednesday.
April 14.
"My hit was preuy big," he said.
And what of lhe franchise record
Indeed, it was.
of 13 straight victories he had shared
Wilh lhe game scoreless and two wilh Glavine and four olhers?
to designate a chief executiv,e in con· Atlanta runners on with no outs in
"The record is neat, but its never
sultalion wilh Coleman.
. the fiflh inning, Smoltz came to bat been. my focus,'' he said. .
Coleman spoke Tueslla'y with in an obvious sacrifice situation. He
In addition to lbe RBI single,
Robinson, b~t has made no decisions squared to bunt as the runners moved Smoltz had nacriiice fly. Chipper
nbout' who the Reds interim CEO off their bases, then swung away,
Jones supported him wilh a homer
will be, spokesman Glenn Wilburn
Atlanta I, San Diego 0.
and·sacrifice fly while exta~ding his
said today from New York.
"We've worked on thai play, and hitting streak to a career-high II
Baseball has been under pressure . it was fun to see . it work," said games. .
1o appoint more minorities to execSmaltz, who caught lhe Padres in the
Elsewhere in lhe NL, it was St.
utive positions in the sport. Civil rotation play.
Louis 3, Philadelphia 2; Los Angerighls leader Jesse Jackson wants
The shortstop took off to cover les 4, Chicago 3 in 13 innings; ColColeman to appoint a minority as the .third, and Smoltz hit lhe ball right orado 7, Montreal 6 in 10 iqnings;
Reds CEO, ,said Charles Farrell, througli the vacated hole- a perfect Pittsburgh ·6, New York 5 in lhe litst
· executiy"c director of the ,JI,ainilow hit-and-run play. Maybe that also is game of a doubleheader and New
Commission on Fairness in Alhlct- to be expecte4 from a pitcber batting YorkS, Pittsburgh 3 in lhe nightcap;
.205 with eight RBis.
ics.
.
and San Francisco 7, Florida 4 in 15
Jackson created lhe commission
.Smoltz is emerging this year as innings.
in ·1993 following Schott's suspen- the ace of a pitching staff anchored
Giants 7, Mll'lias 4
-sion that year for using racial and by four-lime Cy Young Award winTom Lampkin hit a three-run
ethnic slurs.
ner Greg Maddux and 199J.recipient homer in lhe ISth inning, lifting San
NL spokesman Ricky .Clemons Tom Glavine. Now, it is he who Francisco past Florida:. It was host
said a meeting between Jackson and draws lhe {liVes of the opposition.
San F$1cisco's second straight win
Coleman may be in the works, but
"I could see why he's 14·1," said in a 15-innilig game against the Marlhat the meeting's focus would not Chris 'Gomez, the 20th San Diego lins.
necessarily be about the Reds. He batter of the game, whose double
Lampkin, whose two-run double
said Coleman and tbe commission with one out in the sevenlh spoiled lied the game 4-4 in the ninth, conhave had ongoing talks about a vari- the perfect game. Tony Gwynn fol- nected off
(1 ~2) for
ety of issues.
lowed with a run-scoring double, his lhifd
the season. ·

The Giants completed their first
sweep of the Marlins in the four-year
history of lhe series. It was lhe
Giants' fourth strai~ht win, matching
a season-high.
Cardlaals 3, PbUlles l
Brian Jordan made a game-saving
catch in the top of the ninlh, then
doubled and· scored in tbe bottom
half as St. Louis beat Philadelphia
for its fifth straight victory .
Andy Benes (4-8) pitched a fivehitter for his second compl~e game.
Jordan, the Cardinals' right fielder, prevented lhe Phillies from .scoring wben he made a diving catch of
pinch-hiller Glenn Murray's sinking .
liner with lhe bases loaded to end the
inning. He then doubled against
Ricky Bottalico (2-3) wilh one out in
the bouom of lhe ninlh, and scored
on a sacrifice fly by Luis Alicea.
The Phillies, last in the NL Eas~
completed an ().6 trip and ha~e lost .
12 of 13 overall.
.
· .
Dodgen 4, Cubs 3
Winning pitcher Chan Ho Parkbatting bee~ Los Angeles was out
of position players -'-·drew a decisive bases-loaded walk in tbe top of
lhe 1311).
.
·
. Wi.lh two outs _against Terry
Adams (2-2), Chad Fonville walked,
Billy Ashley reached on a fielding
error by third baseman Leo Gomez
and Delino DeShields was intentionally walkCd. Park, wl)o was 1for'- 12, drew a walk on a 3-1 count
to force in Fonvill~.
Park (5-2) allowed one-hit in
tliree innings. Todd Worrell pitched
the 13th for his league-leading 22nd

Bylhe~Pi...

save.
Rockies 7, ExJI!IS 6
Wah We~ss scored the winning
run in the 'I Oth inning on Sbaile
Andrews' lhrowing ertor at Coors

, ,

,

0 ·'

l

The IOth annual Don me Jones ,
Basketbaii 'Day Ca'inp, open to,stu·. :
dents five to 17 years old, ~ill ru11 '
from Monday, June 24 to Friday,
June '28 nt Point Pleasaill Middle ,
School.
•
Camp director Donnie Jones, a ;
Point Pleasant High School graduate,
is the former Marshall assistant •
coach who in April left witli head :
coach Billy Donovan (or a $imilar ~
position tbe University of_Fiorida.
The camp staff consists of high ,.
school and collcg~ coaches from var- "
ious
institutions iri the United States. v
Campers can register as late as the
camp's first &lt;)ay.
.
,
~
FIJI' more mforma11on, call (304) -'
61S-44o2 . .' ' · '
·:
~

MJD-5EASON RIDUCI'IDN

Eulemllhololon

'

}!

bl.

..

New York .............. :W 28

.!182

8ot1on ....................29 40
Detnlit.. .................. l8 53

.420

Ballimorc ............... 36 31 .m
Toro"lo .................. JO 40 .429
.2.!4

CtolniDI•CLEVELAND ......45 24 .652
Chi&lt;alo..................41 28 · .5111
Milwaukee ............ :14 · 3l .493

.48.-,

Minnesota .............. 13 3.5
Kansu City ........... 31 41

.4:\1

lil
3

10~

II

23

4
II

II~

''~

WetllmDM•n

Teau ...... ..............43 27 .614
Seanle .... """""""l6 32 .l29

California ...............n. B

.!'29

Oakland ................J3 38 .465

6
6

10~

Minnc101a 111 New York. ppd.. min
Ooklond I0, llctroir J
Kansa1 City 8. Milwaukee 4 ( 10 in·
ninp
California 14, Olicaao 2
DH: Tuu 3, Bal!imore 2 ~2nd pme.

J&gt;lld., rain)

CLEVELAND II. &amp;o.ron 4

· Philadelphia ........... 29 40

.420

14~

Plu.burtb .............. 33 38

w-....._
33 ,542

TeJW (GrOP 7"") a1 Baltimore (Well•

Caliromia (lqtton +2)

u. (Givens 1-11. S:CH p.m.

:u Milwau·

Seattle (Hitchcock 5·3) ar Chic•ao
(Topani 7· 1), 8~ p.m.
Toronlo (Hen1aen 6- ~) at Oakland
(Weo,m 2·4), 10:05 p.m.

Friday's pme1
New York (Boehrloaer 0·1) al
CLEVELANP (Swiodeiii.O~ 12~ p.m.
New York (Mendou 1·31or CLEVELAND (Nqy 11 · 1), 7:05p.m.
Mlanesota (A&amp;uilera J.l) at Ddroh
(Uri13-7). 7:05 p,m.
·
Kanaaa City (Hifte)' 4-~) 111 Baltimore
(Coppinser 2.0), 7:35 p.m.

CalifcwniD CAbbon 1-10) If Milw1111kce
{Mrrdlonald 6-3), 8:05p.m.

Seanle {Wqacr 0.1) " Chlcaa•·&lt;M•
pane 1.;1), 8:05p.m.
Botton CWabf.eld .._ 7) It Tex• (Hill
7-$~ 8:35 p.m.

Toronlo (Qulnlrilll· 7) It Oaklaad
(Jollll• .f.S). 10:05 p.m.

NL standings
.~

lil

I f'loridl ................... ll lS .46.1

Ill

·-

H

. ~ 14

I
J
3

4~

I~
I~

2

nounced the retirement of SS Ouie
Smhh. effe.:1ive a1lhe end ortbe aeaaon.

BukotbaU

,

NMarolllullelbiiiA- .
WS ANGELES CLIPPERS: Name4
Jill Wiacina di~lor or comnamicariont,
Rob Raithlen Assistant direc1or of com~
munifo:aliODJ, and Rob Slrikwmla «K'!WftU·
fticalion11 usialut.

VANCOUVER GRIZZLIES: Trodo4

lWO 1996 ~CC:ond-round drafl picb (30rb

Wedneoday'siiOOI'eS. ·

.m

•

and 42nd overall) to ~ HOUIIOR Roc:Rts
for F Pete Olilcull, F Tim Bruua, 1996
finr- ..t """'"""""'"" draft pickJ (22n4
ud 511t o\'CI'Illl) and 1 1997 conditional

ICCODd-round pick.

·FoolbaD

- r....... .._... .
DETROIT UONS: Re-H&amp;ned P Milk
Royall,ro a !)Oe-)'W CMh'ICI.
HOUSTON OILERS: Aareed lo
Ierma with 1'S Frank Wycheck aad CB
Anrhoroytlonen.

PHILADELPHIA EAGLES' Claimed
DB MH:Iw:l DawJ1 off wa.iven from the
Raveu.
WR Dialleo

Athmta ~. Sm Dirao I
St Loui• l, Phia.delphla 2
Los Aogcks 4, Chicqo3 (13 innlnJt
CINCINNATI 10. Houston 7
Colorado 7, Monrreai6C 10 inrUna•
DH: Pinlburah 6, New York .S: New

York .S. Pinsburp 3

·

San Francitco 7, Florida4 (1.5 inoiap
Chicaao (Navarro 4-7) 1111 San Dieao
mm w....n5·1). ~ :0~ p.m.
St. Louis (Stoetiemyre 6-4) at Non~~eal
&lt;Rueter J-.4), 7:l$r.m·

CINCINNAT (Burba 0-8) 111 New
Yort (Jonea6-3), 7:40p.m.
Houston (Wall 4-0) a1 Loa Anaelea
(Nomo 8-.~). 10:0~ p.m.

CINCINNATI (Salkeld l · ll

Chic~~:ao

10:05

11

4Yt• PERENNIAl$
REG: $2.49 .

SJ79

SALE

1QAL PERENNWS
REG. $4.99

3

$ 59

BUY·10
GET

FREE!

SALE.
·
OVER 100 VARIETIES OF PERENNIALS

GOOD•
SElECTION OF
HANGING POTS ·

New

AnJelel

.."

..

"

..'.
A

'

"

'

"

Meigs boys'
. cage camp set
for. Mof1Ciay

J

•
•

.

••

The 1996 Meigs Marauder boys'
basketball camp will be held from
Monday, June 24 to Friday, June 28
at Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium.
1bere will ·be two sessions lhe .
fim session .Will bl&gt; held for boys in
grades 4ifj 'and .,.ill be held from 10
a.m. until po.' ,
,
.
The afternoon session will be for
afades 7-8 and will be held frorn I
to 3. p.m. • ·
The cost is $2S and you can register till: first,llay of camp. The cost
covers T-shirlf ~~~~~"prizes for 'incli·
vidual an4 tam eompctition
.
.

'

12 Exp. Roll ,$1.99
15 Exp. Dis~ $2.99 ·
24 Exp. Roll $3.99
36 Exp. Roll $5.99

CoiOildo (Reynoto 4-6) ac PbilodeJ.
phia (Williams I·S&gt;. 7:33p.m.
Son Francisco (Wnraon 6·7) at At•
lonra (A"ry 6-61. 7:40p.m.
Yor:k(Hamiacb~). 7:40p.m. ·
H~scon (Drabek l-5) lll Los
(Crrndionl ~ -$),
p.m.

3 DAY.S ONLY, JUII21, 22,23

''You' r.e gqing to
thank me for it.''

Pirrsb•rah (Darwin ~ 7 6) 111 Florida
(Brown ~ ·l). 7:05p.m.
Sl. LoWs (Alan Bentt6-4) 111 MoniR·
rr! (Connier 3-4). 7 : )~ p.m.
.

'•
•,

•'

(Cutillo 2·9) at San Dieso

(Vrrleuuela 3·,1, 10:05 p.m.

Tran sac tion s
·

BuebaU

Ain&lt;rlaoo l.oope

CALIFORNIA ANOELS: Siped SS
Oary OiSardna 10 a four·yt.ar contrac:r u -

wnaion.

•

· CLEVELAND INDIANS: Waived

OF Wrryne Killoy.
SEATTLE MARINERS: Reeolle4

RHP Tim Harikbla from Tacoma of the
Por:ifre Cou4 ........ Oprionod OF Maony Mlniftet 10 TltOiftl.

. N_._..

' CINCINNATI REDS': Rcleued OF
VinCe Colemu. Desianatcd LHP Mike
Rcmll...,lar
HOUSTON ASTIIOS: l'lln:ll-' lhe
coJUrlCf of RHP John JohnlfoN from
1\icJoa ol die Pacifie OoiJJ ~.ea&amp;ore. 0,.
rlcoed RHP Aorhoay Youq "'Tu&lt;&gt;oa.

IJJi-.

-DiwW.

Mr&gt;orra~

33 .~22
33 ..522

·

ST. L&lt;lUIS CARDINALS : An-

Friday'spmes

3-6). I J5 p.m.
Mianesota (Rodriaattz 5-7) 41 Detroi1
(Oiivarea 3-2), 7:05p.m.
\ Bosron (Clemens 3·6) al CLEVELAND (01"' l-11. 7:0$ p.m.

·, &amp; ..............
Jf k
.......,.... ,...40 :10

.465

CINCINNATI.. ...... 28 36 .418
LoJ Anaeles ...........39
Colorodo ................ 36
San Francisco ........ 36
San Diezo ..... :........ 37

PnTSBURGH PIRATI!S: Oprioned·
LHP Mall Ruebol "'CIIIJIIY ollhe l'licll·
kl Coutl:.aaue.

Sr. l&lt;&gt;uiJ ................ 35 l4 .507
Houlton ................. 36 :\7 .493
Chici180......... .... .....l3 38 .465

Toronto 9, Seallle 2

Today'spilles

·

I~

Today'• pmes

Wedneodii.)''S ICIII'IS

•

.443

CmtraiDiwiMn

AL standings
·r -

39

NewYork .............. 31

Baseball

Feast y~ur eyes
oniodall
Colorwatch Quality.

on., good on 1 1111 ollfl!'ldard

..

size :f' printB made from your
asmm dllc. 110 ar 1ae oo1or
pmttltm (C-4t proms onty).

WfN'~

GREENHOUSE

COUNTRY MARKET ·

locilled 3'h mllellll&amp;ll
.~m: High School

Fonnetly Hlnta. F1111111

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,Hra.: Mon.·Frl. 9-5
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Ponlatld, Oh.
814-843-5211
Hre.: Mon.·SII; ·e.e
Sun. 12.e .•

·St. Rt. 124, RICin1, 011.

St.~. 124

. Royals 8, Bnwers4
Sal Fasano's homer broke a 4-4
tie in the lOth, and Kevin Lockhart
added a two-rur~ .triple as Kansas
City won at Milwaukee.
Lockhart's triple came after shortstop Jose Valentin muffed a potential
inning-ending double play. Then
Craig Paquette added an RBI double.
.Fasano singled and later scored
the tying run in the eighlh when
pinch-hitter Kevin Young singled.

Don tate Motors. Inc.

him.

308 E11t Main Sbiit

"I felt like I WM inheriting ttio.e
rvnaers," said Herahiser, who
lllowcd eight hits in six inninp and
has Ill 0.81 ERA ia his lut tine
IWU. "II WU illlenatingiO 80 out
there and not have lhe anxiety of a
bad inning, and 10 have a fresh ·
start"
From lhen on, lhe wead\ef proved
to he Hcrshiser's most formidable
foe. For a loose team that lfiiJCII'I
recovered from a recent l0-10
stretch, it also provided some amusement.
"If lhe grounds crew pull the tarp
out that much, we should haw: a contest," Hershiaer said. "And ·we
should play 'YMCA''while they do
it.
"I've never done thai slide on the
tarp like Rick Dempsey did, but it
could be coming," he added.
Eddie M~ hit his 4871h career , .
home run, and Julio Franco also
homered as Cleveland lied a tealn
record set in 1963 by homering in 16
consecutive games.
The Indians led I().0 after six
innings. but Boston SCQI'ed one in the
sevcnlh;one i~ the eighlh and two in
lhe ninlh off Cleveland's bullpen.
Oddly enough, lhe Red Sox outhit
the Indians 14-13.
Tom Gordon (S·3), who pitched
six innings despite allowing nine
earned runs, lost for lhe first time in
II starts. Boston hoped Roger
Clemens could end the 12-game
slide against Cleveland tonight.
N-: Alben Belle went 2-for-4,
including a two-run douhle in the
sixth. He is batting .23S (16-for-68)
with four home runs and 12 RBis
since hitting Milwaukee's Fernando

I

th

•I

16t.e~Jnt;.

f)

•

'

,,

''

. ....

Anniversary

SALE!
1995·
PONTIAc ·
GRANDAM

19960LDS
CUTLASS
CIERA

$13,995 $11,499
1995LUMINA
APVOR
PONTIAC
TRANSPORT ·

1996 CADILLAC
SEDAN

DEVILLE

$1

$29,995

1994
CADILLAC
ELDORADO

1995
CHEVROLET
BEREtTA

.$22,995' $10 '995
.

By RQNALD BLUM
ny, an action lhat set off a brawl.
NEW YORK (AP) - Unhappy
.Orza claimed lhe league should
lhat Alben· Belle's suspension was have cited lhat whetr it first issued
cut to lhree games ratber lhan elim- the suspension.
inated, !he players' asSociation asked
· Normally, discipline for on-field
an arbitrator to hold a hearing~ incidents is decided by league preswhether the penalty was p
r idents, not the arbitrator. 1be expired
under baseball's rules.
collective bargainin8 .agreement,
Arbitrator Nicholas Zumas lis- which remains in cffeet because of .
tened to arsuments from union and the fedenl coun order thai led to the
mll!!agement officials during a IS- · end of the I 994-9S strike, says cle!:iminute conference call Wednesday. sions by league presidents in cases of
Gene Oiza, the WJion's No.2 offi- on-field discipline are "full, final and
cial, asked Zumas to stop lhe sus- complete."
pension and to hold his own hearing.
Zumas said be will decide by Friday,
lhe day the suspension is scheduled
·.
to·stan.
.
_ •
Belle has 2S home runs for lhe
Cleveland Indians and any suspension would damage the outfielder's ·
chance to break Roger Maris' record
of~l.
..
Orz8 contended American League
president Gene Budig exceeded his
aulbority wben he suspended Belle
for five games, a penalty Budig later cut to lhrce games after hearing
the union's appeal.
'
According to two Sources, speaking on condition lhey not be identified, Orza said during the conference
call lhat Belle should not have been
penalized because umpires look no
action against him during the May
31 game in which be ran into Milwaukee second basemari Fernando.
Vina.
In addition, Orzasaid lhe league's
initial n!&amp;soning for the penalty was
not specific enough. Budig, in
explaining his decision, said the
pena,lty was partly beca11 se Belle had
told Indians pitcher Julian Tavarez 10
throw at Milwaukee's Mike Malhe-

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I

•APR baed on minimwn IIWI amount of
· ~12,000.00 b a ttnn fll 60 montha. Monlhly
PI)1IHIIt

_._..be 1241.19, with • total

, · . . _.llhirp01,$2,SI3.40,

. · • u.w tlt., •

Ofllra..i~b

hurry in~. ~U~na our

. .._ SJsA ...... OOINO ON' HOWl!
•

'

Por more lnformllioil, call Rick
Simpkins It 67s-4122.
'

. Pomeroy, Ohio

,

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i'7~ ·.

1be Jividen , Memflll'i•l ~!tic

"

,

qaabdk

Letaue 'lburnarnent has·been ached-

uled to beginOtl Salurilly, June 29111
Harmon P.t. in Poinl Pleasant,
W.'VL •.
'
The IOtqllljnent willilll limifii!IO

•

MLBPA.asks arbitrator
to decide on Belle's penalty

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Vina with ~ foreanit 011 May 31 . ...
Jose C u co had hiuecOIICI •aithl
three-hit pnae. ... Sandy Aknlr,
who iJ nunin&amp; •~~n knee, pr • Hy
will not pley tollllbt. Hargrow IJIIid.

of thai. he ~~re~ehed. By lhe time the
111p removed, Henhiser had
JOM llllwJh hiJ 8llllre Jn·garne
routillull o- ..-;n.
,
After oely ftve minutes of
w.mup thows, Henhi- finished
olf Stanley, then struck out Troy
O'Lelry and 1M Tinaky 10 escape
UIIICIIhed.. In a funny 1101t of way,
Henhiaer thouaht the delay helped

1

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1().1.

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&amp;COUN11Y MARIO

Angels have trailed in every game,
by scoring seven runs in the sevenlh
innina apinst Chicago.
.
Rex Hudler broke a 1-for- I 9
drought with lhree hits and lhree
· RBis for the Angels. J.T. Snow
capped lhe seven-run sevenlh with ~
lhree-run triple and Tim Salmon
added a lhree-run homer.
The runs total was the highest this
season bY lhe Angels and against the
visiting White Sox. Chicago's fifth
straight loss· and seventh in eight
games ended a string of six straight
winnins decisions b)' Wilson
Alvarez (8-4).
Rangen 3, Orioles 2
Texas improved to 8-1 &amp;gainstlhe
Orioles in lhe first glllllt of a scheduled doubleheader at Baltimore.
Bobby Win came wilhin an out of
a shutout before allowing two ninth·
innin~t runs, and Warren Newson
homered for lhe Rangers.
Witt was pqised to earn his seventh career shutout before Bobby
'Bonilla homered with two outs. Cal
Ripken followed with a double that
chased Witt.
Ed Vosberg allowed an RBI single to BJ. Surtwff before Jeff Russell retired Chris Hoiles on a fly ball
to the warning track in left, e8f11ing
his first save of the ~on , ·
· Wiu (7-S) outdueled Mike Mussina (9-4).
The second game of the doubleheader was rained out, and the makeup game was si:heduleil.for today.
Athletics 10, Tlgen 3
Rookie John Wasdin gave up six
hits. in eight innings, and .Qak.land ··
cOmpleted a three-game sweep al
Detroit.
Jason Giambi and Terry Steinbach homered and drove in three
runs apiece, and Phi I Plan tier had a.
solo shot for the Ns, who finished a
7-7 road trip wilh their fourth straight
victory. Detroit lost for lhe fourlh ·
straight time.
Tony Clark's lhrec-run homer in
· lhe sevel\lh accounted for the Tigers'
only runs.
Wasdin (4-1) had a one-hitter,
retiring 21 of 22 batters, and beld an .
8-0 lead before giving up three hits
-including Clark's lhird homer in the seventh. The Ns supported
Wasdin with a 15-hitattack and finished the aeries by outscoring Detroit
26-I 2 and oulhomering the Tigers

.
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Jlvlcten MemoriaL
L.L. Tournament
set fof;t~.~r·t29

·•
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1'he Seattle Mariners, who won
lheir division last year despite losing
Ken Griffey Jr. for 73 games, will
have to carry on for another long
stretch this. season wilhout Griffey
and Cy Young winner .Randy Johnson.
.
Tho Mariners got just44 innings
and · five · victories from Johnson
before he went on lhe disabled list
May 13.
,
Now they have lost Griffey for
about a monlh 11fter. be broke a small
bone in his right hand while fouling
off a pitch.in·the third inning of a 92 loss to. the Toronto Blue Jays on
Wedne5f,Jay night.
"1bere is a small hook on this
bone, and that's wbat broke off,"
Seattle team physician Dr. Mitch
Storey s~d, "It occurred when he
was.swjnging at a pitch- it was an
awkwlll"!,kind of swing."
Following surgery today to
remove the bone :... it's so small thai
repairing 1t is nOLconsidered feasi- .
ble- GriffCy's )JaiKI will be placed
in a spli!'t; ~ .)Jq .will ~ able tQ
begin rehabilitation in two weeks.
The team ·said Griffey would
miss about a month, but similar
injuries to olher players this season
. have' forced tlicm ·to miss as much as
IOweeks. .
.
"It i.s really not a serious injury,
it's really common in baseball," Dr.
Storey s~id. "We don't expect any
lon&amp;·te~ prpb~:mf,~i~. t!Jc;:~~-" .
Grin~.Y· a six-time all-sw, hun
his hand'on ihe 'first 'pili:II of his second at-tial' l:le' was replaced by Darren Bragg. . ·
. "He didn:tsay anything," Toronto catcher Slllidy Martinez said. "He
just lunled around and went to lhe .
dugout."
"It's a big blow," said Seattle
pitchior Chris Bosio, who is on the
.60-day disabied list himself. "It's a
big bat out of the lineup."
Erik HIU\son (7-9) broke a threegame losing streak with seven sirong
innings. am!~ ~lue ~ays 80~ a sqlo
homer by )ohn Olerud and two-run
doubles by Alex Gonzalez and Car.
los Delpdo...
nm Harikkala (Q-1) made his
first major-league stan for Seattle
after being called up from Triple-A
Tacoma earlier in the day. He
allowed'fouthits and six earned runs
in 4 1/3 innings.
.
In ot~rAL gam~~· it ,was Oak:
land 10, Detroit 3;"Kansas City 8,
Milwaukee 4 iri 10 innings; California 14, Chicago 2; texas 3, Baliimore 2;. aqd Minnesota and New
York were postponed because of
rain.
..., • - ~
Au1eis.t4; White~ 2
Calfomia'won for lhe lOth time in
II outings, a streak in which tbe

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Donn Ia
. . Jcmes
.
., .Basketb.•.U Car,np
set for Monday
:

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beat Mariners;
G·r iff.
ey gpes on
DL
.
.

Field.
Weiss led off· the inning with a
walk off Tim Scott (2-2) and took
second on a passed ball by Lenny
Webster. Then Quinton McCracken
bunted to Andrews. He fielded it
cleanly, but his burriecl'throw sailed
over the uncovered first base bag,
allowing Weiss to score.
Bruce Ruffin (2-1) pitched the last
two innings for lhe wi'n, and Ellis:.
Burks homered twice .for Colorado.
Montreal's Henry · Rodriguez ;
went 3-for-4 wilh his 22nd homer
and two RBIS.
·
Pll'ilta 6, Meti·5
Meta 5, Pll'lltes 3 '
New York pulled off its first winning ninlh-inning nlly this season,
spliltin{a doubleheader at Pittsburgh '
as Bernard Gilkey hit a two-run
homer.
~

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J~ys·

I

Robinson
interested
".
in Reds'
CEO
post
,....

patience.
'The clouds haven't cie.red for
days. 1be threat of rain is COIIItant
1be finttwo JIU1ICS of the lndialla'
series wilh the 8oMon ltod Soil lwl
·tine rlin tlelaya loWin1 tine howl,
44 minutei.
' "I'm about ready to pvW vn:bbed
feet," said Iadians manager Mike
Hargrove, wbo has seen live of lhe
last eight home pmes delayed bY
r&amp;io.
No, it's nQI Club Med. 81!1 ' it
doesn't seem to matter for lhe Indians, whose dohiinance of Bolton
continued with an 11-4 victory
Wednesday night.
It was Cleveland's 12th straight
victory over the Red Sox, includina
9-0 lhis season.
· The wealher was about all thai
could sr.nd in Orel Henhiser's way.
Hershiser (7-4) stymi~ Boston hitters for six innings in winning his
lhird straight start. The 1988 NLCy
Young A1"ard winner has a miniscule
0.88 in the lhree victories - Her·
shiser's first string of lhrce good
' starts in a f!lllt this .season.
"I'm definitely in a groove, " siid
Hershiser, who allowed eight hits
and no runs but left after the sixlh
inning because of lhe second rain
stoppage. "The sreat lhing about
being in a groove is lhat I' II have
somelhing to come back to ifl slump
again ..,
After Tuesday's game was
delayed by rain for one hour, S9 minutes, the second game. of lhe series
saw delays of S2 and 43 minutes ..
. Besides lbe wealher, Hershiser's
biggest problem was a no-outs jam
wilh runners at second and lhird in
lhc second inhing. The game was
stopped with an 0-2 count to Mike
Stanley.
He{shiser sat in the dugout,
because he'd heard thai it would only
be a 2(}-minute delay. When it lasted longer, he retired to the trainer's
room to lie down. When he got tired
test

s;;;ftzh91ps Braves d~wn Padres 5-1

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1bur Bank(M'*...

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SEE THE FAOORY
NOT AUMmD OFFERIN STOCK OR FAaORY ORDER·

With Factory Rebatn .
You can Actually Pay
Leu Than F•ctory
Invoice on Moat
•
· Models.

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AII 3 P 1

:' ·lr •
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leaving Marshall
. to take Wyoming AD post

LUMOI!, Wyo. (AI') - A
Mlnlllll Ulliwulil)' lllhlecka 4inlctGrwllollidlll- imv; 111~ .mh
Ulliwllil)' of WyomiaJ f - wllee
he llllllljjlll bil t 11'blll 11111111 to
Lw · P 10 pia)' ill 1990 1111 beea
bind • W,.OIIIinJ:s - atbletica
clinictal.
Uni'HI'Iity olftciab 011 WedM.
day anoou'C"d dill Lee Mooa, 49,
will t.u ovw tile spot left vee.nt
wilh tile Octo6er recinment of hul
Roec:h.
•
. ·
Moon, tile llhlelic: director lllhe
Huncinatoa. W.VL, school for eialll
yean, said he wu impressed durina
his flnt visit to Laramie by tile
enthusiasm of fillS gllbmd in lhe
Arena-AudillJrium for the November
I990 lime WOfl by Wyoming.
"ltmnindsmealotofwhatljusl

~Oizie

•·

left," lle Aid.
WyomiJIJ'I lndition. The P""C"I
• M0011-.icioaeofhis majorchll- you' ve bad in tile past will roqlle
leaps will be to help bllild dill menl tile succ:ess we can b8ve ia tile
enlbul~. '
fulln,"buai "Aaytimli'you~
"I will 1ry to pt out tbrouJb tile cbia cblqe, it's a powiq I*' c11 ,
state, p~-to ~w lhe people and But e-,one _,. to WICiea
shake haads witb fans and poteotill dill if
cbanp and
fans," be IBid. "Enthulium is you're .... to 10
cau8hl, 1101 ceuJht. We need to reju- becbacll."
Yellllle tb.a entbusium and like it to
Moon bat served 11 Mlnblll's
Ill lewis."
llhldic;s direclot since I98111111 bad
The u~nt Weclnetday IICI'JeCIMauocille
directot
aopped I seven-monlh search fot • \ II Kansu Swe before .... to
replacement for Roach. wbo retired Mmball. Ia tile Jut eiJI!A yean, five
in October u the only penoa to have Manball IUms have llpP.MI'ed in
S«Ved ai botb a Wyomina·ilbletics , NCAA Division 1-AA playoff's and
director and bead fOOiball CC&gt;Kh.
four went to tbe championship pmc.
MooD'Said be would work to help The, Thundering Herd in 1992
Wyoming succeed in the newly claimed the division's ~Pexpanded Western Athletic ConferMoon recently was aw.uded a
enc:c.
. ~yw conlnlet cxtenlion wilh
." It's ~y goal to carry on Mlilhall that would have expired

*"'

l.O::t't _.

""!etjn

·

J - 30. 1999.
Ulli..-.11)' JIN'i1 lll'lirrylto.t
Mid W,.omiaJ officiala ~~etively
JeCNiledM0011, wbo-llll-of
die cll1
iJijrWJy rewieaild for
tile job.
"We Dill P""C"Iful blini
JIMiive, 10 we decided 10 be proIICiive," be llid. "We -Yilll*l bim
he could be even blppilr ill
Wyomiaa."
' .
Roert defended tbe Jeaath of
time required to find a new lllblelial
director, saym, tile riJbt candjde!e
bad to meetllrict criteria.
"M0011 meecs .Ill tile criteria I
establlsbed foe the polltioft of atb•
lctic ~. He bas demonstnlcd
lhe a!lilil)' to recruit coacllel for Ill
Jli'Op'IIIIS . ..; He has demonstrllcd a ·
commibnenl to running • sqlle!lky-

.

ea.ar-

staff. ·
"I'm a liule tired of hiring coach-

He took over u athletic di=toi
in 1987,. replacing Gary Cunninll:
ham, wbo went to Fresno Slate. '
Rosch served as both athletic!s
director and head football coach until
1990, leading tile Cowboys to a 35;
IS record, two WAC cha!npionshipf
and appearances in .two Holiday
Bowls and one Copper Bowl.
'
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~~~::,~:~~n~='~~:
lecM:

Smith to retire at season,s end
-

.....,.,led

es,"llesaid.
ROacb tint coached 11 Wyoming

'

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cleu ....hlic JIIOII8Dl," be laid. " Ia
~han. he il tile riabtnwul tlleri,W
time fot the University of
W,.omiaa."
w..hiiJ ia
to switdl
,._ tile NCAA Division I· AA
Son•Jwn C ' *"to the I-AMid~
in fall 1997.
Meuwbile, Marshall's two
bigelt lllhletic JII'Oil'IIIIS will be
llll'liJII ,._ ICrllldl thiS year.
Melon ~aw his football coacb,lim
Dol)nan, leave far Oeollil Jut
December, wbile tbe schocl lost its
fOUIIh bukctbell C:osch in seven
yean wbeD Billy Donovan was biRd
away by'florida in MilCh.
Moon said lie was happy to see
Wyoming had a stable coaching

.

Conferenc:e football champi· '
;., By R.B. ""•• .,...,..,OM · .
,
.
. , · "·
, · onships and siJ~: of Wyomjng's 10
r .......,, n
was ,no trace or bitterness as tile shorutop to be jusllllre Ozzie. .
"I Jusl wish that you had a aood · poet-season bowl appea'B!ICes.
:; ST. LOUIS(AP)-.Nowthatthe ..memories from his 19-y~ cwr .
"bo I reinember any plays? I · time playiag," said Sniith's son
;:_ man they call the Wiwd of Oz bas came flooding back.
·
have a videotape full of I1Jem,'~ Clay- Dustin, wbo IICCOmpW~ him II his '.
... . .
~· retired, lhe controversy 1:$1 end and
"I've seen all tile highlights," La ton said; "haw how it was done 'u d news conference.
'; lhe farewell tour Cll!l begin.
Russa said. "In S!lll Diego he caught how he made it look so easy."
Ask- 10 people about . Smith's
: Ozzie Smitlnnd •new Cardinals one barehanded early in his careet •
But everytbina has to end some- · pea~eat defensive stop and you'll
;: manqcr.tony}.s Russa have never . Shoot, he's made so many/:
time; At age 4I, his fabled defensive proliably aet I0 different 'uswen;
- ~- seen eyi!-~Qieye. 'But •
Smitb's
Royce Clayton, the pi!IYer who skills on die wllle aDd liis playing One that s~ out wu Aug. 4,
~
- eotitlaR to .••
•; news conference, Wednesday to 'took away Smitb's job tbi's season, time drastically reduced, Smith 1986, when outfielder Curt Ford
• For The Both OfYoa StyUng Salon
~: announce he's l!anling up his Gold had PQSiers of Smitb on his wall decided it was time. He said he might made a bead·farst dive toward the
.
SJI'IICUR, Ohio
:: Glove.II the end oflhe season, there when he was a kid and 6eCame a have extended his caRICrwith anotb-- . inf~eld ud Smitb made a head-first
er team, but cllose to conclude it witb dive to tile outfield, somehow avoidJuly' II: 10
the Cardinals, when: he 'II'
work 'ing his twnmate and makina a
nat yowself • Be 0'-notoas and l'lcture Perfed
in tile front office for at least I0 mich!if basket catch of 1 fly ball by ·
SAVE
-OI'I.r
years.
Von Hayes.
,
98
50%
Reg. '-49"
"I problbly could go somewhere ·
Sl!lilh's personal. favorite came in
•
A
CAlmplell:
l'lllkmver
and
Hair
5tjllng
else ud if I pushed it, proved that I his first major league season, I978,
• l'our Sdedlons l'rom Our t:xtenoive Wardrobe
· could still 11lay;'' Splilh said at a tear· · when ~ dived·to his left and made..
' llld~
ful news conference 90 minutes . a barehande!l ·p
of a bad-hop ·
• High I'IIII,I!Oo Pilato saMn
before the Cardinals played the . around . ball by Jeff Burroughs of
• Compllmentll)' l'oltrlllt (Reg. $50.00 Value)
Philadelphia Phillies. "But my aoaJ Atjanta, then popped to his feet and
FOR TtiE BoTH OF YOU sTYLING SALON
in my last contract negotiation was threw to first foe the bUL
to inake sure I fmlshed as a St. Louis
Cardinal.
"I've always felt ·that was the
right thing to do. The time was
right."
.
It~
Smith didn't play Wednesday and
'
T.
has staned only IS of the Cardinals'
~ sames this season, while Clayton,
26, has become tile regular shortstop.
Altbough Smith was expected to ·
retire at season's end, the DeWS COR·
fercnCe attracted a media mob that
hasn't.been seen around Busch St.s·
c;lium since I987, when he helped the
Cardinals make it to the World
eries for tile third time in dill
;:" .~ .:::::!ji'
.aN ~~~
TR~K..:..
•fkJIHuJ ...... or luclt;- 801fw 1ijlo~lls · S.
decade
" • ..,_,iii
,._,.!' I"~ . .:.._ ' ." •ft• c;:u~·.· ty
"
.
' 'the jame, the video
'
'a-· - , _.on
... .-...
ncn ·
-•
fl"
Before
board
' Abu• RMIJtllnce Educdon (DARE). GoH kl'jlmble will thla played
Some or his greatest fielding
Ctlrnalet truck (or a -'mller vehicle) from Don Tate 'Motors In
hiu
to
lhe
tune of ~'Singular SensaPoi'Mior. Shown ._,.wflh .fle vehicle are (L-R) Shariff Jamn M.
tion."
Then
he drew a 4S-second
loulabY; Don, Tlte gaMI'I!II .....nallflr Roger Jaeele and DARE officer
standing
ovation
when he stepped on
llony Yf~ Tea off 1, It .II a.m. at the Malp County Public
., .• Golf the field and doffed his cap.
.
.
.
.
.
.
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Cou

... .

~

r&amp;~t\\ou~ ~tf.-:

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------

... .

.,,

.., ' ,.., ..

... -.,- ..... ..,...,

Thu,.._,
. y, June 210, 1 -

•

· rr.r=~=r~===TT=~~======~~~~~-=~~~

arc1a

•

~:=·s~~~~~~

AI._.IMa (N.C.) C1t1an T1ma1
Ahhoulh leis than 2 percent of the nation 'a
midenu live on • wortinc f11m- down foxn •
hilh of nearly .4Q percent 11 the tum of the centu• ry -the mystique of rural life in the Heartland is
clptivatinc the nation as never before. The recent
success of the best-sellinJ novel and box office
hit, "The Bridges of Mlldison County," is one
example of the renewed passion for the U.S.
Heartland.
·
·Another is prmrie cUisine. In this iime of
· increasing change and uncertainty, cooks are
embnlcing the nostalJiC comfort and reassurins
strength provided by the unpretentious foods "meats, grains, fresh fruits and vegetables simply
prepared - of the Heanland.
Prairie cuisine has evolved to satisfy the
increasinsly · health-conscious, sophisticated
palates of the '90s. Even chic Southern Californians have taken notice. Amona the honest places to
eat in Los Angeles is Monon's, a ChicagO"based
", restaurant chain featuring that Midweslern essential, the thick, juicy sleak. But from the variety of
cookbooks specializing in Midwestern cooking
that have been released over the past few years,
it's clear that the rise of prairie cuisine is not limited to restaurants.
"It is so gratifying to see the resurgence of
inlerest in prairie cuisine," says Marcia Adams,
PBS cook-show host and award-winning author of
"Heartland: The Best of the Old and the New
from Midwest Kitchens," (C.N. Potter, $30) "Our
provincial fare is rapidly gaining in popularity
because it is both honest and unpretenlious and, in ·
addition, it tastes perfectly wonderful!" she says.
Adams, who lives on the .shore of a lake in fort
Wayne, Ind., is an authority on Amish foods and
folkways. Many PBS affiliates couple her show.
- a mix of cooking traditional dishes and
ahtiques folklore from .the Heanland - with
schedules that incl.ude Julia Child and Southern
cook Nathalie Dupree.
Prairie cuisine draws much of its appeal from
· its ecleclic mix of french, German, Scandinavian,
Scottish .and Native American traditions unified
by the Heartland's rich soil and plentiful wildlife.
Yet modem prairie cuisine also embodies the contemporary philosophies of fit and flavorful eating.
Although its essential ingredients are basic,
prairie cuisine is most elegant in its simplicity.
·Cherry Stuffed Pork Tenderloin features an easy
bouillon and herb dry rub that heighlens the flavor
of the meat. Savory honey wheat bread stuffing
adds a slightly nutty texture and is accented by
navorful tart dried cherries. A tangy-sweet cherry
sauce complements the main dish, heighlening the
HEARTLAND COOKING • "It II 10 gratifying to - the
navors of the roasted pork and stuffing.
reiUFgii'ICI of lntlralt . In prairie culllne " aay1 Marcia
Fresh seasonal vegetables are integral to any · Adslll8, above, PBS cook-lhciw holt 1nd 'IWird-wlnnlng
·Midwestern repast. Seasoned Green Beans make author of "Heartland: The Bell of the Old 1nd the New
an attractive accompaniment. A ilelicate hint of from Midwest Kltohans," (C.N. Potter, $30). Pictured lift, Is
rosemary brings out the flavor of the crisp beans, hlr Cherry Stuffed Pork Tenderloin.
presented in an appealing light buttery sauce.
The following prairie cuisine recipes are provided by the Pork Infor- with the bouillon rub; place in shallow
baking pan. In large slcill~t. cook celery,
mation Bureau of the National Pork Producers Council.
onion, bouillon and allspice in marCHERRY STUFFED PORK TENDERLOIN
garine untilr tender and bouillon dis2 pork tenderloins (about 2 pounds)
solves.
~emove froni lieat; stir in bread
Bouillon rub
·
crumbs and cherries. Spread slits of
one-fourth cup finely chOpped celery
meat open; fill with stuffing. Bake 40-45
one-fourth cup finely chopped onion .
· ·
I teaspoon regular or reduced sodium chicken-navored bouillon gran- minutes until meat thermometer reaches
160 degrees F. Serve with Cherry Sauce.
ules
·
Refrigerate
leftovers.
·
one-fourth leaspoon ground allspice
Makes 6 servings.
2 tablespoons lower fat margarine
BOUILLON RUB: In small bowl, comI and one-half cups fresh honey whole wheab~rumbs (2 slices)
bine one tablespoon iegular or reduced
one-third cup chopped dried tan cherries
sodium
chicken-flavored bouillon granules, one teaspilon-garlic powder,
Cherry Sauce
.
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Panially slit tenderloins lengthwise, being
Continued on page 12
careful not to cut all the way through .. Rub the surface of each tenderloin

The ins and outs of preserving foods
By ANNE

B. ADAMS and

NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I am a
l!Jilitary wife lind in search of'ways
~o save money on food. My current
goal is to stock homemade foods like
salad dressings, soups, sauces, etc. in
canning jars. Can this be safely done
in the home? My husband and I
would . appreciate any advice you
have to offer. -- MICHELE BEYER,
Killeen, Texas ·
DEAR MICHELE: It is impossible to answer your queslion without
_,riling a book, but, fortunately, .
someone already has. "Putting Food
By," by Janel Greene (Penguin, 1991,
$J 3.95), is a treasury of information
dn canning, pickling, drying, freezing
-- jn other words, preserving in all its
many forms.
We have used this book both as a
guide and reference for years and
years (the 1991 edition is updated
frpm the one we have) and find it
invaluable.
If your bookstore doesn' I have a
copy. they can order one for you. As
a mauer of'fact, prompted by your
lecter, ·Anne has just ordered the
1991 edition for herself. Just as well
-,her old one is in tatlers.
·· DEAR ANNE AND NAN: My
42-year-old daughter has cerebral
p~lsy and with her very limiled
niobility, her opportunities for enter,

'

tainment are scarce. At age 3, she got
her first record player and records.
Since then her record collection is in
excess of 500 -- too many for me to
transfer to tape. Each record is a treasure to her.
·
,
We have tried to lind a new
CHILD'S record player for 33-1/3,
·45 and 78 RPM or even one that only
plays 33-1/3 and 45 RPM. Because of
her disability,_only a child's record
player with NO automatic arm will
do. -- DELLA DUNKLIN, Easton,
Md.
.
DEAR DELLA: It breaks our
hean to say this, but we haven 'I been
able to lind a child's record player
either. The reason is that records are
no longer being made for children;
everything is either on cassette or
CD. No records -- no record players.
We're hoping that by publishing
your letter, there will be some generous soul out there who has a child's
record player, still in good shape, that
he or she would he willing to either
seli or give to you.
.
Readers, please let us know and
we' ll pass the information on to Della and her daughter.
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: The
seeds I have for the baby com used
in salads, etc. are too old and will not
germinate. Any source? -- ·EMILIA
MUN€11, Pumpkin Center, La.
DEAR EMILIA: There are no

eel to m:eive the A.R. McMieken
Memorial S&lt;:holll'lbip MMiami Uaivenity for the comin1 IC:Idemic .
year.
SIUdDnti ~ivin1 Milllli Uni. versity-Aiumni Scholarships are
~lected on the buis of superior academic and personal merit from over
4,000 candidlles e~eh year. This
year nearly 2.000 students will
m:eive schollllhip usistance tocalinc over SS million,
Funds for these scholarships are
provided by Jifls from alumni and
friends of the University, alum.- of
· Wes1em Colleae. corporations, foundations and community O!Janiza- social work June 9. she is the daugt.tions.
ller of Charles and Judy Lee of Symcuse. The 1992 graduate of Southern .
GRADUATION
High Scbool will be doin11 field
Theresa L. Lee-Lavender lflldu- work with Early Intervention under
aled irom the University of Rio the supervision . of Rita ·Fields,
Grande with a bachelor's dearec in licensed social worter.
.

THURSDAY
~OCK

SPRINGS - The Rock
Springs Better Heallll Club will meec
Thursday, I p.m. at the Rock Springs
United Methodist Oturch.
POMEROY-- Pomeroy Oroup.of
AA open discussion meeting Thursday, 7 p.m. in the, basement. of the
Catholic Church, Mulben'y Avenue.

Lewis-Manley Auxili.Q-, Unit
263, American Legion, was the recip-·
ient of several award$ made at the
summer convention held 11 Wellston
June 6.
·
Aorence Richards, past Eighth
·~trict •president, deleca1e to the
nvenuon, gave a report at the
~nt meeting of Unit 263 held 11
Dale's Restaurant in Gallipolis.
· The awards received were linl
place, children and youth, Richards,
chairman; first place in Group I,
award on Americanism, Margaret
Bowles, chainnan; first place, in
Group I, vcletans affairs, Trimika
Lewis, chairman. Apatriotic neckliCC .
was gi~en along with the children and
youth award. Nancy Brown qf Unit
21, Athens, presided at the district
meeting.
. Richards took pan in the memorial service with her rendition being·
"Bring ye alllhe tithes inlo the store.house ....and prove me now...saith the .
Lord of hosts and I will pour you out
a blessinclhat there shall not be room
enough to receive it," Mal. 4:10. ·
Catie Curl of Unit 222w.
Crooksville was endorsed for Depanment second vice president, and Jean

~

I

ly early.
Kandy Korn and Sunglow, both
available from Shepherd's Garden
Seeds, Shipping Office, 30 Irene St..
Torrington, CT 06790 (860-4823638), are well suited for this.
Plant the seeds 6 inches apart and
harvest when . the silks just stan
emerging from the husk leaves.
Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
P.O. Box 240, Hartland, VT 05048.
Questions of general interest will
appear in the column. Due to the volume of mail, personal replies cannot
be provided.
Anne B. Adams and Nancy
Nast.-Cummings are co-authors of
.. Ask Anne &amp; Nan" (Whetstone) and
"Dear Anne lind Nan: 1\vo Prize
Problem-Solvers · Share Their
Secrets" (Bantam).

199°

SALE OR S

.

'

amous ~ld/Fr,.,..dan
Loom• • AI-WUihet -

Spring Base Chairs ·

Switch should end vaccine-caused polio
·A panel of Cenlen for Disease
Control and Prevention experts is
expected to make a final recommendation Thursday that the nation begin
switching
to injectable polio vac- ·
,.
cmes.
.
· The change is desisned 10 ~·vent
the eight to I0 cases of polio ciiUsed ·
each year by the existing oral polio
vacci~e (OPV), wl!ich is made from
a weakened fonn of live virus.
The oral'vaccine hu been one of
the iiUCcess stories in the histoty of

•

public health, reducing the number of
annual polio cases from 18,000 in
1954. The last case in the USA of
"wild" polio - not caused by the
vaccine- was in 1979.
.But as wild polio has been eliminated, public tolerance of vaccinecaused cases changed.
"Seven or eight cases of paralyzed
individuals a year is not acceptable
any more," says Dr. Samuel Katz, a
pediatrics professor at Duk~ University and ror:mer rec1era1 panel chair.
"lt gives me the hope that we will not ·
be creating victims of polio from the

very vaccine designed to prevent
polio in the United States," says John
Salamone, whose 6-year-qld son, ·
David, got vaccine-caused polio.
"It's a big day.:·
Dr. Carlton Mcscltievitz of vac·
cine-maker Connaughl L.aboratories ·
Inc. says thC company is ready to Iiiii"
ply !he injecllble vaccine as soon as
the new JllCOmmendiltion is adopted.
The proposed polio schedule calls
for'two !loses of the injecled vaccine
followed by two doses of the ora1
vaccine. 'Current recommeftllations
call for four doses.of oral vaccine.

WINDOWS

Tues... Sat.
9:30 • 5:00
Monday
Nl hta til a·00

9

.

:

.9Lnierson S
1

'

.

'

DOWNTOWN POMEROY

otc1-

1 rr
fttl'- - · opadttl.lll-.15-41150.

. . . ,..._______________
.,
.
'
3-,
.
_
,
2-' ,.•.
-======'
:
::::..
-·
#teM6 !fa,/,
D&amp;T
......

r·'..

·Ph.11H173
1Q8 Pome Stlllll .

Mobile HOme Heating &amp; Cooling

INlet""'

. . . . , . ,.,. ........ 10
...... 8.E. Olllo • WMt vtrgll•
Toll Ftw
ttl 1411
&gt;

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

1·800·291 ·5600
"'''lppft Pr.JM, Ohio ~13

814-9~15-31113 or 814-167-8414

"Plastic Culvert- Dual walland Regular 8" thN 36"
4"'S&amp;D - perf. - solid pipe
·
.4" &amp; 6" Fie• pipe
.II" &amp; 6" Sch 3S pipe
.1/2" &amp; 3/4" C. P.V.C. pipe
I 112" thru 4" Sch 4(l.pipe
·
314'" &amp; I" 200 p.s.i. warer pipe (101!' roll's thN 1,000' roll'•)
3/4" U.L. approved Conduit
8" Graveless Leach pipe

(614) 992-2364

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

..........

liVE PSYHICS

·'"'"

Let them tall you .

Ext. 2489

...........

~

OV.r 20 y..,. Exjwrlene. I
(814) 112~7581 '
WIWI mo.

1-900-981-89U

__

2.99/•1118+
T.T. Ph11 Req. .

'---ldld.
A -ot1ec1 check"or blnk

,

Upon ••••rn of ~h•
document• ' Ia good
condition; liltllln.. 1en• 110)
dtlya ol lho bid open ng,
aeld depoalt will ba
raturnad.• lldder m1y
bid clooUiiWntl ...
"'1.1ola~~~ lhe

~;;.,-

P.O.

•.. .........

PI

~

801 ·i11,

rill, WV

nt, w.t

Point

11180.
IIOWIII CJn11R AI!CctllltJelaiiCall,lla
King' ,.,.,..,
Colu• 111, Oltlo 41212
.

111\

~=•BlnMit;C
. R. ............
rte, 401

'...,,aao1

~elwlllwwllhdiwn

daya aOit..quent lo the
....11!11 of bide without ....
coliaent of -ttw Houelng
Aulhorltr . of ttw City ol
PolntPI
nt,WV.
S..led blda 1re to lw
IUbmllltd to tlw ln.ntlon
ot: Mr. .leek •L. Fowler,
Executive
Director/
Contr1cllng om- 111 404
a-nd Av.. P.O. lox 117,
Point Plaa..nt, WMI
Vlrglnle 21180.
WE ARE Alii EQUAL
OPPCiflt1IHI'rY a.&amp;.DYIR
...._, 1304!.!?"'"14
Fax: (104) ere ••
TIID: (JIM) 17&amp;-4o114

in:

Rooflnt &amp;
Block Work
Free Ealimate•

992·276101'
992·3274..,_

SUMMER
TUTORING
Call

AMAZING.GRACE
SUMMER DAY CAMP

614-949·2096

Location: G.- EpiiCQPIII Chun:h
0118: June 17-21
Tlnw: H pn, ages K-6111 glllde
992-2010

TODD BISSEll

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

ss.oo- per . . .
~

BASHAN FIRE HOUSE
ICE CREAM SOCIAL
Fri. Jun• 21. s p.m.-?

Sandwiches, Pies, Ollnks,
lceC..-ro.
Entenahnent: Specks of Bluegru8

111/i-

I'IID

Pick-up chc:8ntecl
tteiiWIM, app1.._ a

-.nv met~~~s.

614-992-4025
88111-

WAYNE'S
PLACE

H&amp;H

,,,
..,..

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
PRESENTS

SAWMILL.

WHITE RAVEN .
., FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
•
1.D-2
. .
·::·· $3 single, $5 couple.

I

' TFM

.MIKE
·;. MORRISON

••

'&amp; Swing Shift Band
Appearing this

-Friday &amp; Saturday

Rome roy
E~gles Club . .
Menlbil'a and GUilt lrwtted '

.·

·

Allow Your
Par10ne1 Plychlc to

Tauch-T-IIaqulrecl

!llrv-u (819) 845 1434

.,

•.

Thuro, Fri , June 20th, 21st, '9
~~~ - ·Ga? Lota 01 Iliac . 578 J~
~.... lpoliL

Pomeroy,

••

Middleport
1

hou-

llovi"11 Ale- atarting Thurllday?, variety of
ilemL nllw
rypewrlrer, Nwina machines, cb,
dog kennel. Gold Ridge Rd.• TheJ·

moBonbHarpar,_,

For Quality Work
Bllhs

RemodeiiiJg
Windows Kitchens
Sklng
Decks

Roofl
Ackklnl

Most

Anylhlng

Cal

B. D. ConslrUction
614-992-2979
' II'IWI-.pd.

-

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

··

•·

Fri . June 21st, 8·4', Burdeno

80

Public Sale
and Auction

··

Mt Allo Auction . Every Frldl.i
7pm. E-..y Soturdoy 7pm. Rt 2·3!1~Ctollroads· . Groceries, net"
rr&gt;Oftllar&lt;lioe. Ed Ftul• 930.
Rick P.ar.On Auction Comparw••
run time auctioneer, comp141e
auction
service.
Llcenaed
te&amp;.Ohio &amp; Wesr VIrginia, 304~'

773-5785 Or 304· 173-5447.

TruckingUmestone
· BulldCP.Ing 11nd
Backhoe
Services .
House Sites and
Utllltill

-

All Kinds of Eorlh Wo rk

992-3838

90

Wanted to Buy

·.

Clean late Model Cats Or ,
Trucks, 1880. Models Or Newe;, ·
Smith Butck Pontiac, UIOO East- :

em .......,._ GallipoiL

•

J &amp; 0'1 Aula Paris. Buying s•l•·)
voge vehicln. S.IUng par11. 304·

713-50CJ3.

.

''

Non -Working Washau: Orye~.; ;
SIOvet, Relrigeratora. Heezert,
Air Conditionert, Color T.v.'s ,

VCR'S. Also Junk Cars, 614·256 ·
1238.
Paying Top Dollar For Junk Cars,,
Trucks. &amp; Running Vehicles To •

Carpenter &amp; TUPSIOOT ,D....
...••r ·
Paint Work EwerrWed
5a30p.&amp;

&amp;14-44&amp;-9575.

· '

Top dollar. antiques, ·rurniture
gl111. ~hina, clocka, told, sllvef. .
coins. walchtt, lltates. Oabi
lllnin,,814-992-7441 .
.

lacfHinCI...

etop. Coinpln
FREE ESTIIATE.
• • 4473
"

Oebble

$3.t111P.- Minute
11,.t .,. 111 .,.._

RMICidlllng

' • 11111111 -

June 2111, 22nd, Rodney Acro1s
From Faith Bllptill Church . Ml ·
terniry, Crafts, Furnirure, t.tist.
lllma.
..

Advanu. Doadlint: 1:OOpm tlw
day bekuo tho ad Ia Ill run, su ...
day edition- 1:OOpm Friday; Mort·
dol tdlion oo:ooa.m. SaaorUay.

oComplete

, _.!altlul 1
182-3107 ·

Old North Gallo H.S. Antique F~­
r;JftufW. And LDll Of Nice Misc. •

Mlllt You

. 1·900-1188 8600
• Ext. 1277

-Gaf'IIIU

Downlpouta

.

Sa~ 2111.

___a:_V_;_Ic:.:;,:;ln:::lty!__
1All Yard Soln Muat Bo Paid I!&gt;

•New Homes

oun.r.a

'
:!2nd,
11100 Stall Route 180, Befote

Need Direction?
, Love
Business ·
Family Mattei"lil

101111 IISIILl
. COISIIICTIOI

Siding • VInyl
Aluminum • Roofing
·
New•RIFIII

ClaiM&amp;
Garage Solo: Fri.

S.aorday, June 22nd, 102
To 4:CO P.ll.

·'

IENEUL
COITUCTOIS

•

Fri, Sat, Acrpn From McCiurta
On At: 35, Womena Cliildrees

......... pd.

New Location
Mlddleport, Ohio
With 3 Beda to ·
Serve You Better.
12-$20.00
16-$25.00

915·4198

814-742·2193

FioCllandoOn325.

"-oy,Ohlo

Howard Excovatin

11121111 .- ..

Mlddlepott Ohio 45760
DeMy &amp; Peggy Blicldes

Firat Time Sale: Crib, Caraeai'a.
Kids N·4T, Fri·S.t, 1 llile·SciMh

. Thur.-Sat. 111-5
Rd

IIIIZ-7573

.

.

lllmlock GiliVII

Sum111er Images

Phone.992-2489

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.

for • ptrlod 01 alxtr (10)

(1120, 27

Ho111e
Re111odellng

Aulhorlly ·

Admlnlllretlva Offlcn at
404 Second ~ Point
PIHIInt, W.et ..Yirglnla.
The ICOPIINid ...... of lhe
propond protect work will
be dt.cuued. AtiiiKIInol

Cltoap 3 Family Sale: 4887 St Rt
850, Bidwell, June 20th, 2111,
:!2nd !1-?
. •

,....------..o..r · Drive, 8.110 A.M.

I&amp;H

(Lime Stone-

Urilestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top SOil, Fill Dll't
614-992-3470

A Preble! Conr...._ will
be hekl ill1&amp;.311 a.m. on 111e
8th dey of July, 111S, Ill lhe

dfllt, .,.,... lo lhl Point
Houalng Alllhorly;
The Houalng Authorllf of P-nt
P.Value
GoNtWIWnt
tlw Cltr of Point P....... t, bondl ar 1U.S.
.,...lwctat
bid
W.81 Vlrglnl1 will reoelv. bond executed b!f r the
a..llld bldtl lor lha ClAP ICc.ptAible IUreliu In In
Mod•rnlzltlon
aqu11 to five
REROOANO AND ROOF ; •mount
percent
01
the bid ahlll be
ACCESSORIES
AT
aubinllllcl
wltll-h
bid.
SHAWNEE HOMES 11 lhe
Atllnllon
1e
cded lo t1w
Houalng Autllorltr ollie. provlalona l~u equel
unlll11:00 Lni. ~ lhe 22ncl em:rloymenf opportunltr,
dlr 01 July,
81 wlllch
piJIIIInl of not 1"1
llrill and plaM aH bldl will 1n
IIIah
IIMI jiiwllllng a..niM
1w publicly opened 1nd,
and
•111M·
• HI lorlll In
reid llloud f9r .... roof Mid lhl Conli'let
DoCUIOiiltAI,
roof · lcOeiiOrlea
lll8t IIIUit lw lldMred 1o on
,.,._:Jn..m.. .
Thta aioremenlloned t111e PI ojooL
Any queetlone or
acope of "Wirll Will lw let
concerna · ahould be
undar DIW (1) -•bact.
CopiM of the Bidding addrlllld to Mr. Jack L.
Oocume.nll •. m•r be . Fllwflr, ExecUIIIM Director,
-lned upon requeat 10 If 111e H-lng AUihorftr 01
.... Houllng Aulhorltr ollhe The Cllf 01 Point Plenlnl
Cltr .of Point PIMIInt, P.O. .. (304) 875-4414.
The Houlfng Authorltr of
Box 517, Point Pl•••nt,
w.. t Vlrglnle, 25550, lhe Cllf ol Point P..,.nt
logether wltli t dopcwlt In -·~ lhe right to reJect
111e amount of tso.OO, 1111do •r or all bide or 1o walv.
pl!flble lo: 'tiM Hou1lng any lnformallllee In the
Authorltr ol llw Cllf ol
WV15-P111·71108 I&amp;

c~~ PI

• .' t

Monday edition . 10:00 a.m. !)ir.
urday.
;

Ertrla1tllp

fJJ1MN TFN

HAULING

P.ubllc .-.otlce '

..

-•

(619) 645-8434

WICKS

Wlftl, Leola

INVITAnON TO 810

Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
94&amp;-2168

Low ......)

onourt51h
Middl'!lllinnjvlrury,
June ao, 1131

.:..::=::.:::=~-- ·

Outler CJ.nlng

Sen-.

huebllncl,

Public .-.otlce

·-liw

FI'N Est#mllteS

p.;,_

ScHild

DowniJICIUlS

••
r

~U Yard Solos lluat Be Paid~n
Advonco. DEADLINE : 2:00
the day before lh• ad is to flll'l .
Sunday etli&gt;lcn · 2:00 p.m. Frl~.

•
•••
.......

Gutlers

Ext. 7907 .

. 387-0266 -1 IOCUS0-3359
I'

Grove, Olllo.

F'IELDS

NEW-REPAIR

Ganlpolls

Thurs. Fri, Set. u.na !Women;. i
hby Clrohlng Anllquet, TOJI,
EIC.
•

FUGUNT

ROOFING

I

,

8 Family : 1283 Wataon Rofd

114-247-2120--

~LWrlleMI

.

.

Yard Sale

&amp; VIcinity

lolldng, lllhi!IIIR&lt;Int by-~~ or monlh.
304-372-4411111 or

Meet your
match

:

70

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

..

~

LOll· grun baQ, .Foodland park·
ing 10~ lott811410e, call 814-949-

'Eieelrlc -k-Up, dump
atdona, ncan-1Mw tabll

414M Sltlch Rd.
POIIIII'OY, OH. ils7ee

· CHARLES MA.SAR,

(S) 18, 20, 21, 24, 21, :111811:

""'*

Llmelt- • Gravel
Dlrt•Sand
985 4422
ChH18r,Ohlo

In IMIIIOI)' of my

H o u I I n II

6Ci Lost Md Found

WS

tromllaVIn.llrldge, 1 mllelrilm

lnllemory .

: The-oflheuleiN
cash. Horne Nallonal Bank
__.," .... flgllt lo bid Ill
the ule and or lo mnon
tn!f or ell ltem1 from tiNt
uleiiiMiyllme.

To Good H"!"' Kill- 8 Wef&gt;a
Old,81...$f7113.
;

On 8t. Rt. 331 w. 8 mllll

- Anllque c.. -

...

. "'
, . . Chevrolet
S14 Pickup

T.V. Anr•n'ha With Tower, F,.e
T•-.814·448-1128,
;

PONDEROSI
PRIMmYE
CAMPGROUND
OPENING SOON

eov.ni • ·c .,.. - Convertible Tope - ·

Mlllllw18 fiL
Slrv-U
(81111 845 1434
..

lewlng:

Lin• Trolnetl $It·
ton &amp; Cat; Throe 10 w.. k Old
llix•d Puppiao To GoO&lt;I Honj••
81....1·1710.
•
Mat. I -

2138.

Heedll,.,.- cu.-....

$UIIpermln.

link Plrklng l:;ol· the lol-

a

41pl•n•t•t WI ••••

COIIPLITE ·AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

1-900 888 4100

•

KiUont: I 10 I'I(Mka Old, U«or
T - . 81..250-1150.
•

814-8112-2772

1

304·882·3•!7.

1879.

il:30 A.M.-~:30 P.(M.

.Stn Been hri
.._A.Jiiows

Killona

Kit1en1 to good ·home. 304~ets·

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

lESS'

about the futurelll

on .lhe

-Froo

l11ve m••••o•. will call righl ·

J&amp;L SIDIIII &amp;
IIISULinOII

1-800-889-3943

;

I

&lt;3ua1811teed IIIIIUIIB

742·3212

i·

BEATilE BLVD.® by Bruce Bealtle

. . . e1 public aucllon

CIIOIIId a cplfllllld

........

GrMI Willi Kldll 11•· 3'711·

Fomal• 1 'INi Old EnaJiah Sector
Fitld Stock To A ~lro . Hut1!tr
Only, ....:150-14211.
•

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding

Gas pipe I" thN 2" • FittinJS - Regulators· Rise.IS . · .
· Full assortment of P.V.C. &amp; Fie• fittings &amp; Watet fittings
.. Full line of CiSICm. Septic &amp; Waler $1~ragc tanks. ·

Seturday, June 29, 1996,
Ill 10:00 -e.m., lh~ Home
Nllllon.. llenk will offer lor

FAX 1121111
M111111, WV

.. 01&lt;1. 814·t45·

•'

F... EatlinaiM

Reaidentlll - Commercial
Roofing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs
Gutters~ Downepouta
Completl RemOdeling
Decks - Bath10011l8 - Kitchens - Sklng
35 y..,. E1qMferloe

Industrial • AUtomotive
New Radiators • Re-Cores
A/C Condenseraltfose" Assemblys

I &amp; WPW11CI AID SIPPLY

male.

2MO.

949-3151
742-2246
~..oca~y

'

3 ICiitent: 5 WHito Old, 2 Black,
t Male. 1 F - . 1 All Gr., F•

Rlllclantial SeiVIca

DAB ROOFING and
CONS'tRUCTION.

•

5110 Allar 5 P.ll.

. Raclne, VlfliU

'

Old • • ,.·1112-

3 Kla.... • -

Completl Commercial &amp;

"No Job Too,_.,. tK Too SIMI/"
We wil woril within yow budgil

lEN

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
St. Rt. 7

Ftwi!IH "I
IWVOtOttl

Limited time Otter
Call tOdaY with your
window etzes for a frM
quotaI

Pomeroy, Ohio

.- .

~7~:clt ·

,.,, Control
,._,_

· • Welding Sup pill • lndullrlal 0... • I' hlne Shop
S.l'llcee • SIHI S.... &amp; Flbrlcallon • Aepllr Welding
• Aluminurn/S1aln • Tool Drw 111 tg• Onwnentril
Stipe-S...._ Ralinga, PMia Fumlltn, ~
.....,., Planter heDJiers, Tnlan &amp; Jolt of Giller ltufttl

In etoolt

•Tilt-In
-Double Hung
oJnsulated

CGIIII w f'-

114- !902.

..........

S195

Point Plliiii!II.Jilr Noll let
ol docuiMii• requtl~.

1---------------------------------

..........

1 rr. Old U -

Manufactured Hou1ll'lg

00 ln..;led

1•

IIURRITUIE

t h ..le. ,.le dot·lma old.
blactuwlllto, good with childion.

Ext. 41113

$3.tlll per min.
Mutt be 18JIS.
Setv-u (019) 845 8434

REPLACEMENT

..
s.rt.l
· 11GCCT14R3K2102354

'

IUC ei'il anci love.
The lulu,. . . . todayl
Call1·900 188 11100

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

PUIUC,JIOTICE

Call Us Today!

They'-~

'
mlloi. ftnd lorlune,

,

Sunda)· Calls)

Public Holloe

•

BY DOUG LEVY
USA TODAY

614-tll-4110

I can
shower and sleep six In this baby!"

CARPET SALE

I , _ . . , . - ID:

·wv:-

let a PSYCHIC
change your life.

814-992-7643

"Why buy a

35 Styles on Sale
• FREE no Obligation ·Quote
• FREE Removal-of old
ASLOW AS carpet
0 - FREE Furniture Moving
5

. Lloyd

...........

1111' MUM'ILI

Owner: Ronnie Jones

Lotsot
Styles and
Colors

are, however, some varieties of com .
that are better than others to pick real-

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

01reg11 • Repi~Ce~Mnt Windows
Room Actdltton1 • RoOting
COMMERCIAL 1nd RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

FRIE E8lWA,TU •

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Yean Experiente e .lmured

I

GLIDER
ROCKERS

seeds, per se, for "baby com": i.e.
~'baby" equals "immature." There

lfW HomH • Vlnyt Siding New

•1 fllUi'PMtl

•••11

Delli IDIAUUC IIPAII
&amp; IIACIIII SlOP, ltiC.

, .:JONES' TREE SERVICE

I

I

I.

NIIPIII

RACINE -- 27th annual Teaford
family reunion Salurday at Star Mill
Park in Racine. Dinner will served at
noon. family l!lemben are .to bring
articles for an auction and door
prizes.

C&amp;JT, pasl distrjct president, was
nominated as allhnale to the National Convention. Forty-five attended
the S\IJ!lDICt convention, it was repcrted.
Annette Johnson was hosleSS and
presidina was Lon:ne Goggins. She
noted that items have donated to the
domestic battered women's shelter in
Athens.-·
, ·
Louella Patterson will be hoSiess
for the July .meeting.

J.L' NJI"I OWIWR

BISSElL IUILDEIS, I.IIC.

.

SATURDAY

Washers Dryers Ranges
Refrigerators Dishwashers Freezers
NeW
ShiprraenC

~

RACINE .. Racine Post ·602,
American Legion. meetinslbursclay,
business meeting ill 6:30 p.m. with
dinner to follow.

Distri.ct awards won by
Lewis~Manley American.
Legior) Auxiliary · ·

--.... =\1:
---··-·
__
_
_P'..,__
_. t
CW·17
CJe
.......
!ant .....

-Community calendar-

APPLIANCE SALE

ASII: ANRJ: • RAN

•

~~~crapbook

ms n es nsmg ·wave o

interest in 'Heartland' cookin

·'·

Tht Dilly Sentinel• Pill t

Top Prien Paid: Old U.S. Coin,; ·
Silvar. Gold, Dlamoncla. All 014 '
Colloctlbl. .. Paperweighto, Etc: !
II.T.S . Coin Shop, 151 Soconc1
-·Gallipolis. 814-o48-2842.. I

Wanted To Buy Used Uoblote '&gt;
- C o l: 8,14-448-0175

- .
'
Wanted To 8uy: Auto"a 1 Truck~ ,
-'11'1 COndiliOn, 814·388·80112, Or
114-448·AIRf.
.. '
· , Wlnt.d To a.~: Junk Au1111 Wit1) ,
Or WlohOut llotorL Call Lorry ··
u..tr. 114-- ,., .
: •!

1----,~-..;.':v

�••

-

.......

... . r
-~

•

J

l

.-~

Pom II'O'f elllddllport, Ohio

-··

NEA Cro.aword PUaale
ACIIOII

PHJIJ.Ip

t,..., ....., .......
,,,,.,..,..
.........
:or1c:::5
71
•

ALDER

f

r., ll.

QY'r,,[ j~T
j( f '

110

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

•-'t' ...,,..,.

~·~·ftl
•.-~-·"~
•
10 poaplt wha nood to laot
wt1g10 1 ""'"'money,., trj , _
pfHnlad welght ·loss product
304-7-15-5013 24/vtidrry.
AVON 1 All Areaa 1 Shirley
Spwa,304-87S-1426.
•
I
4 Potential LNdll't Strlout y Inttrtlted In lnvtlting Few Hours
WeekiJin Part-Time Busintll,
81......._12311.

'• .

........... 111 aliat....: R1!p1ir p.,.
Ibn Naadod For VKcum Cloonor
c~
J'\.. . ·
~-·~- Ropo ••
t_._ .. , . uw 001 .._._
On Elocrrlc Motora. Somo In
Homo Sorvic:o. U.ll Ba Noatln
AppearanGe And Abte To Work
Wtll With Tho Public, Will Train
Tho Rlg~l Parton. Can &amp;• • ·••t ·
1975.
Noodod : IOWball pilot. lllldy
work, good poy, coif 1·412·643r8 l4.
R f
- • br'
oo 811, carpenter• • ..., teklaw·
era·, e1parta anly need apply,
EOE,I14-ID2-2384.

&lt;--·-~N ~
.
~ 10 100

-·-•

Able Avon Rel)resentatlvas
n.H dtd. Earn money, lor C"rlllmat
at hOmt!'at '1110/k. 1-800192·0356 or 304·882-2645, Ind .
Rap.

For Immediate Hire · Full Time
Secttlary For Thl CorrmuniiY' knprovement Corporation 01 Galfla
County. Mutt Have Advanced
Computer Skills, Microtolt Otric:t,
Anwtic:a'l LeadinQ Home Health . ACT Helpful. Should Be Able To
Ca. haa an .opening lor PER - Wrllt Busineu Le1ter1, And
DIEM ·PT Opportuni titl 1110 Have General Command Of Stc·
available tar AN's, HHA't. Call retanat ~ills. Muat Be Neat,
Mon-Fri 8-5. 304·5N-G7le. 1400 Courteous'With bcellent People
Commence· Ave, Huntington WV. SklUs. send Resume, Cover Lener
25701
And Re'-tfences To becutive Oirector, The Community ImproveATTN: WOMEN IMEN . Earn E1- ment Corporation Ot Gallia Counrra Income. Flexible Hours! $20Q .
P.O. Box .uss, Gallipolis. Ohia,
$500 Woekll. Call 7 Days 407· 45631. Deadline l.tondal. June
875-2G22En0526H25
24, 19116. All Appllcatl ono Are
ATIN · WOMEN/MEN Earn
Sll'i.ctly ConfKSen[iJI.
inco~a: Flexible h~urtl
1-~--:M~~-~-----1
$500 weakly. Call 7 dayl (4071 170
IC811aneoUS
871-2022 En OS98 H 2S.
All Natural Far Loti Product
AVON 18 -115 /Hr, No Minrmum Lost Weight, Feel Beller; InOrder, No Door To Door, No In- ~~~~'!.~_Enerjjy ~,'A D_•r 61~veruory, 1-800· 736-0168 lndlsl st ._, ,_
rep
·
180 W,anteCI To

bi"•

ty;

e~etra

$zoo:

2 BIIIIHm Hlfnte, Land Ccaflnct
To Ollallfllll ,..,.ani. 1~ 0..0
114-211-1173 For "ppdla;uc.

14x7D' ..._.._ All Eltcolc

For AlntOr .... 114 -1371-.

oom--

2 Story :H ballroom. I 112 bllll, 2 Badroom In MI-. Wllhtf I
basemerw. CIM ~- Rielly. ~. IIC. no pea 31)4..77:M?5 1·
304.e75-10300t304.e75-3431
·
•
2 Bol
No PM,
2•3 _ . . . , """'"· SDxrDO lor, $22Mio.,l135 Dtpoal~ 114-141locar.d In Syrtcuse, appliances 3117.

!IOOO
Woallt

UIED APPLIANCES
ra, dryera, r• f, lfOra 1.,,,

a•~:::":ir.;.:o!:M1~~=~

o.paor~

L IIIIPfllcoucn, oaomon &amp;chi~.
1300. 3044 75-1474.
32.000 BTU c-.r ,; ConI
dltiantr, UGO : Solo Excllffllnt
Condition, lrOO: Efac. Hoap.llld
Willl Tropozo Bar, lrOO: Obi. Bid
CorriPMe NO. 2815 StAt 141 Or

530

Polo lftfa St&gt;l: IO'MI'xt', 1 -15'Xfl'

Sliding
boor,
t ·3' Wan Door,
s-~ ~ A-•-•

-Roof: II,«A

--•mo
roc10d : Iron

Harw Bldra1.ec»-311-10i5.

1.__
- ... 'CR
"~

2111droom T111i10f,lllifH llouiO
i&gt;f11.
211, U!QIIIa +
Refer2·3 badrooma, brick, OR, now oncn, 814-441-1172,11 4-2!1wlnoowa, ctrpel, compfllo now 1251.
kilchtn and bath, tarage, full
bllll'l'*lto 11 .._112. _,
2 Bed,oom Unrurnlahtcl, MoiMt. 814--ue 8350.
Henne, No.Ptts, t2251Uo., .135
Goorgoa Crttk Road, Grtll OopoaiU1,._4011-31117.
Uatd Fumlrure IJO llulerile Pitt,
Ntighllora, Convoriont Lacotion,
~II'!&gt;~ Otalta. Chairo, Bodo, En3 Br Ranch, Gar~~ge, Paol, Large 2 Bedreom. very clean. nlct ttrtalnment Centers, Tablea,
1FencH Yard, 1 . e-3tOI, Far porch all:d yard, California Street Chtlll, Trpew,lttra: 11-4· 441·
14 44
~lntmltnt
'
ln Hsrtfor d. 1225 monthlY~ 304- 4712.
~
882·2388.
Hault with iwee lola bahftd AutO
VI'AA. FUANrTI,JAE .
Zane in Pomeroy, $2700 "080, 3 Btdroom HouMTrail« Located
814-448-3158
·
1614)&amp;87-0183.
In Rio Grande, References R•
OualieyHauMholdF1¥nil.l,eAnct
qu irtd, No Pttlln~dtll14-371-CAPt* ~~Gt.rDeMOn
One bedroom hOme in Pomeroy, 2720 AFTER 6P.M.
'
~ And..,.,,t AENT~2-0NN
Willllll on land contract, 114Andt..av-yAtsa.-a-MstM.
992·5858.
Trtiler tor rent In Gallipolis 1r111 .
FrwDiri¥etyWichi'I25MIIiH.
e14 448 U49.
Three bedroom home In country, Two 'and thrH bedroom ·mobile '
wtitM tiil Rd., Ruland, one ba.,, tl
•
~nd pog, 814-1182-5087.
omes, 11a11 1ng It •2•0~$300, An ti que BoUlt Stlow· June 21,
sewer, wa)8t and rrash lncludH, 9am·3pm. S1 .00 adri'lll lion. 4th
320 Mobile Homes
814-992-2187.
and Main, Pt. Pfaaoon~ 814-1102for
Two bedroom mobilt homo In 5088, 304-875-4115.
Middleport. nrJ pets, 014·182· Bu.y or ttl!.' Aive,ine Antlqu...
:,:~~ t:~~'!!!,~ti :u:~! 5858.
1124 E. Main Strl4!t1 .on Rt 12&gt;4.
5-838 .
Pamtroy. Hriuro : M.T.W. 10:00
87
7
:.:;.::T~-----a.m. ., e:oo p.m •• SU!11for 1:00 .,
440 Apartments
;..
..:00 p.m 81,..-2 _,..
1970 ~chulll 12x85 Wit~ 12X16
"·
·
- -~ .
Addltl.on. Many New Improvefor Rent
monro. Priced To Soli I , 2, 000 _
540 MlscellaneoUI
614-446·3184 , Serious lnnuiries 1 and 2 bedroom aparlrnlnrt. furMen:hand· IU..,
Plea
..,
nished and unJurniahed, securitu

Ant---

Sale

1

"

Wb .. .

17 .,... . ; .

560.

~far

1010 Pontloc Trana . ·.Mr ,.,.
tomalic, 2 Doore. Sunreot •11,
~· Sha
1 --· ~-- 111110

6 J 11 I I

30H7S-4841 APTIIIIPJI.

• A2

~

po,

~w -

·

•

t 883 Old1 Culla11 Ci.,. , runs
gaod-woll . .inllinod, _ , , _
pano.$r,r50. 304-45&amp;-r081.

Sill

Groom Shop ·"-• Grooming. Fealuring Hydro Bath. Don Shell..
Col1814-446.()231 .

~~~:!!]~~[!!!!!~~=~:

1;

rMol Porlilc 8annt¥Mie LE Fully
Equipped, v.e, llio Now C -- ·-::~~~-::~.;..---:~- !
r·

~~
- ~~;[:~~~~~~f- fllon.~;4~7.~000~1;.1i~I0.~81;.""~250-~~~024~;;:
·
•
pill , 8

0287.

8 Wttk Old ~how Puppln, 150
Erich. 814-446-8772.

promo With AC $1 ,600,
4110.

AKC Lhut Apto Puppies,
RHdyl Shots, Wormed, Private
Owner, Athtntl-..aritlta, .SIIIt
.Roua 550, 814·551·2722.
AkC mill Pinschers. two ltmatta.
$300 ll(:h, ont male,l250. ready
June 15 accepling depos its
11...,....3:,26,
'

'
AKC Registered Boa ton Terrier
puppitt, two males, one female,
read., to go, call 81•·G49-2495,
814-M·31'62or 61 4-982·3965.
AKC Rlgiatered Baxor puppioa.
30H7S-IOO&amp;
.
AKC · Reglatered
Germaft
Shepherd PuppiH, From German
fmparll. Call Riverview Ko"""'a.
11......._1142.
Auoualian Shep~ordo Out Of

1985 Pontiac S800,

10 I

.....
.....

814·446- ,!~~~~~~~~~~ j

8aodlt

·

1005 "-mahl Warrior 350cc Ea H~88 Ford Tampa 2.3L Eng ine, cellent Condition, 13,110, 114:..-A1r, Automtlc, POL : HU12 V.W. ...!MOl.
Rabbit Oittel Air, Good
E:a:tra·CIUnl tl14-250-e0ft1 .
Call 30•·:

BARNEY

••7.

WHAT'S
PAW SAYIN',

,
·aoo Ninja•. Muzzy •
bra, IUOO OBQ, :
'

WE WANT 1{00 TO RSNT

A MELICOf'TER, AHD

•

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

COME RESCUE US,.

.,

AccnsoriH

• J 10 I 8
6 KQ J

'

!
'

·_,

'
THf
.
__.,--...,

°

eanipfraa

..

liblnes

-

~

P~OI LtM

1$ T~AT HALF
Ttlf TIME .1 I&gt;ON'T
""' ftfl. 6001&gt; ENOLIG~
TO WO~IC. ANI&gt; Ttlt
OTtlt' ~At..F .1

FtfL TOO GOOC&gt;
TO viOtr~ . .

.

..

ca""*,

rr

a

N....
Pas&amp;
2•

1DIIrM?Ia1111118
12--)

11 Ael.... ol

TV

••

H
Pass

Pua

Pus
Pass
Pass
Paaa

Tuesday's highlight wu suppoaed
. to be a trip north of C•irne to
Dllntree, the area renowned for the
wildlife in ita nin forest . But Dooding
bad made It Impossible to get up
. there. lnetead, Rpn Beag took me to
the Tablelandl west·of Calma. We saw
aeveral roaring waterfall&amp;, but my
main memory ia of a river that was
nowing straight Into the municipal
• swimmlnc pool. Tbe water was ao
deep that you could 0111Y j~t aee the
111p of the nillng on tbe
board.
Tuesday ewnlng wu my Dna! clase,
which wu on coneiderlng the alternatives. Only two pairs reached seven
spades here. This auction was produced by Verena Oleach and Matthew
Byrne. How did Byrne play alter the
beart'king openinslead by West? .
The bidding is tricky. North's beat
responae ie three diamonds, a fitshowing jump by a . passed hand
. promising a maximum pass with at
least 4-5 in spades and diamonds. But
Olesch and Byrne got to the grand via

'

.

aome cue-biddlna.

.·

.

The other declarer in ieven epades·
succumbed to the Immediate impulee
to discard his club loser on dummy's
heart ace. Now he fell foul of the unllicky 4-0 diamond break.
There are two other choices at trick
one. You ·can discard i dl11mond on
the heart ace. Then you can eetablllh
· a long diamond for 8 club discard .
Alternatively, make the play selected
by Byrne: Play low from the dummy
and ruff in hand. He drew trumps and
started the diamondt. When the 4·0
spHt came to light. it wu euy to see .
tbe necesaity for tbe diamond discard
on the heart ace.

____

CELEBRITY CIPHER
· by Lull C.mpoa ·
~~aa.-...,,.••,
..... --.,. 1 I . . .- -.... . , . -

. __.. . --tor-.T--0-Y ·
CIIHOIAJJA:

'lTNNOS

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NJlH

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OAWIZXV

HVO

IJSPX

C.W 0.'

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HIJ

HVO

....
.··. ''\

.•...

VGASD

YCNQX.

.'

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Fama Ia like a river, \hat bllarwth up thinv-IIQhl,..
8Wotten, and drowns 1hlnga waighly and IIOIId. ' - Francia Bacon.
·;:

1

....
::~:t~~· S©'\\.4\l~-~r.~s·
lAM I

_ _ _..:....:;;...,;:: ...... lty CLAT I. I'OUAN _;;,__ _ __

..
'

.

0 four
Rta;rango Iitten af tilt
ocramblod . -d• btlaw to ·farm

I

four worda.

PUJREM
I

I

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2

1.

:0GSRS

I'Ill~]

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V A WE E
5
6
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.
A comedian crac"ked up the
d.
au 1encethwhen sdhe sahr.d , "U
re
IS some 1ng 1o o w en you

. - -r-IL:. .A:;.I. .;r.·,I:E~7·.:;wi..:L::..,Ir:-e-II :n·~~~~.t: -.:~ ·.:~ckl•

~

'

..
,.

quoted

V by filling in the missing words
L_.l.-.:'.L......J...-.l.-.l.'-..J. vou
develop from step No. 3 below.

-.1

9

PRINT NUMBEREO
iETlERS IN SQUARES

A
V

UNSCRAMBlE FORI
ANSWER

A

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The flood
diverted me

750 Boats I Motors
'I
'
for Site
'
~~a~7::7:-:s~.-.,-c-..~h,.,::,:o-.,-:,-:g::7e:":'u"'•.~.1.,-, :
t878 Mercury DO HP with Power ,

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Parts

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Vulnerable:. North-South
Dealer: North

1918 Firtbird V-6, S Speed, New
Tires, 83,000 Milll, SYper Nletl regs
18&amp;0 Berens GT Loaded, 114- 13,800,

.,

21--111 ....

• K 7 &amp;5
6 A 2

1N8 EJCOn 4dr, au111. OO,OOOmi.
$1 ,700.304-882·2030.

,1$188 Ford Tempo GLS 2 0o0f, 5
Speed, AMIFM Ca111tte, AC,
Now Tirol, Real Shorpl SUOO,
080,814-379-2645._
19188 Mazda 323 SE 4 Doo r,
Speed, AMtfM Stereo CasHIIt,
Very Cteln, Nice Car. 614 ·37g.
2378.

-

MNMI

•AKQ7854

Ha&amp;e Old1mobHe Cutla11 Su-

245-5592. ·

•• I•••7 I 5 4 S

•

10 I I 7 I ~

814·387· ~;~~~~]~~~~=

' Bollt Mofo.
WormH. 1st Shots, 1100 Each.
81c..2SS-1833.

·-·I
·
.
• t=:r... •:r=rs:·::-..
·==

Bolt

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fOIIG£T Pl!llJT

17

11 rue Fdlv.
211 - AI ¥If I

•AQ4 S2

EEK&amp;:MEEK

Warkfn0Siock,614·256,1300.
1g66Morcury Couger LS. 1 - B
tit I AKC Ra 11
er, law milts, eac. cond. $4,500.
IIU u
Weilar Pup- 304~175-7105.
piH, ,7 Wttko Old,. 4 Femalea, 1 .;.:...;,;.;,::..;,;;;:;__ _ _ __
·
· ·
:r.~~~:equired , no pets, 814- 12 HP Craftsman riding la*t't Male, MoVIng Uusr Sell I 112 1989 Serena «.yt, IUIO, air, dnlld
Any odQ iabL Painting, carpentry, 1977 14x70 Fraedam Willl 10X18
mower: full1 equipped compurl!f: Pricel814-379-21167.
wlndowa, CD pfayor, Amtrlcan 1111, 121 00, 304-773-5707.
COL license driver with tanker .repalrs, lawn work, etc. 304-875- Factorr _Add-On, Verr Good Con- 2 Bedtoam, furnished apt, deposit 814·992-3014.
.
racing wheels. 304-773-5078.
1881 bass boat. cornP&amp;ett wilh lit~
et1dar11:ment, 2 years experience
. ~ilion, $8,250, 614-44&amp;-&amp;l34.
'red
10galtank set up specials. Fisf'l
l!_parl of udlidn paid. 304- 170 XL Fronldn, IJIO .SIIIddtrWIIh Tank &amp; Par Shop, 241 3 Jackoon tg.eg Buick loSaiMo, oxcollont exllaa. 12650, will conaldtr pltao ..,
required, for Columbus area, call 7112
51
614-9112-:JZ!O.
Body woi'k on cars '&amp; vuchs. rea- 1977 Federal 3bedroom. 304··
Puwet' Shih Cabtt Winch Hueky Ave. Poiflr Pleasant, 304 ·875- running condition, V·l, PB. PS, ure boat on trede, (814) ~~2~,!
\ 1
67
sonable rates, minor mechanical
5-tOS4.
2bdtm. aptl., 10111 electric, ap- Brute 300 XL Knudl:ll Boom Log 2063.
AC, power vrindowa, 13100. 114- 8154.
Computer Uaers Needed. Work
repairs,
oi
chariQes,
call
~14·7421985
Redman
14X70,
2
Bedpllances
turnishecl,
laundty
room
lbader
Mounted
On
Tandem
M--2045ori14-IG-2302.
.
11188 21 Ft Wol Crall CC :!10 HP ,
Own Hours. 20K To SSOK /Yr. 1· 2935asktwl&lt;ip, Rutland. .
B
facilitie&amp;, close to schOol in town. Ttaller W18 Cate Forklift With
600-~7166 X 1171
rooma, 2 athl, Washer, Dryer,
BucUI AM log Forkt, 814·4~0- Slut Hteltr Puppies . 814 ·258· . 1080 Sundance AS CruiM. n11. Inboard Fully Loaded, Tamdam .•
., Lawn Cart. Reat·dent,·ar. Stove, Rtlrinerator, E•cellant Applications available at: VUiage t•r7
8535
.
POL •·· 2 Ooa
A..tF.. Axles, Eagle Drive On Trailer J ~
~-ndillO
. n, 81..:2•5-~21.
Green Ap!l. r4g or co" 614-1182·
• ·
·
~ •
• -10,
ra,
M
M
Dental Hyalenist for eslabli,shed Don
Su1111! llro!taa. 61---·2072.
•
Churches, I Cemetaritt, Rea- """"
• ,...,
Cosette t2 850 080 01,...251- ~?"~=~===-371l . EOH.
practice in Arhens, Ohio. Must be oonabloRatooler,..3n-2647.
1gg5 Crof1amen Rld in~ Lawn· Bulinnl Far Srlla: Pet.Shop. Ful-. 6169. ' '
'
'
1.918 Cfa•IOn
"14" 8S Now Corpor BE•UTIFUL •P•RTMENTS •T Mowar. 20 HP.'52" Cu~ -lor Ir Equ,......,
.__. &amp; S·-~~
760 . ~
&amp;
:
lnendly, quality oriented and a
'
~-. G,,., L• ·
·
Pa 1n
. 1mg.
·
. Mull
Sell Wao $75 Now t851 BUDGET
~
~ ~
~•
·
E-~
COrd- cal·onl
Senoua
.
Inqu Ir1e1
. 0 n Iy, ·1892 Chevr Lumina Euroeport
ream player. Send resumes to: Genera I Ma1ntenance,
4-oM8-D3tO.
PRICES
AT JACKSON
._., ...m Engrw,
-.-ent
1
R.L. Sl)ero : OOS. 715 W. Union Yard Work Windows Washed 11
ESTATES, 52 Weltwood Orlvt 1ian,l14-25l.e.224. '
. 114...W1-G770, 614-446-7507.
Mint Condition, M•lnlena~tee =--....,.--,....,...-,...._,,....;:
Srreec. ~thins. Ohio 45701 .
Guuera ·Cleaned
ri88 Ffollwoad Hx72 3 Bod- rr·om ••••
•
Fully Loadtd;
Alklng Budget lransmiuiona, Uaed IRe- ,1
10 , 315· Walk 01 luOp
1 R ldLlg~lI Hauling,
I S
4 Pfoco L'"'- ~-- SUllO. ~ F011111, 8 Weel&lt;l Old, 1 Mila 2 Kept,
••ooo, .,•r4-2••
••r2.
buill, AU Types, Accasslble To
, ea ant a , ttve: ...v.-. 2 n-• Ulillty " - - 2 •• &amp;
·
1
'"'""' ,_"
,..._,
..,.
....,.....,
Driven Needed : New Contract· Commer1ca
-388.() 20.
·-·~ ~ ..s.
~·' movoes. al 014·446·2566. Willi Cullllono. UkiNow. $205: 2 VearaOirf. 814-37i-2882.
Over 10,000 Transrni11ion, Alto
614
4
Starting Late June, For Points In
Rocll~~tra 125 Bot~. 814 .25 8•
r&amp;i3 ChtYr Lumloa, 40,000 0\remJal Klta, 614· 2•5-11877
Condltionera, Sr2,000. 304-875- E&lt;JJal Housing Dppottunlty.
,
1_
1611
83:..·~--- Furnished Roome B~th, Up- · _r332.::;:.;.Af1ar.::;:.:;8_;.P..;;
Ea11em Half or u.s. -Siorting Par Georges Portable Sawmill, don't _
_•:_6_14_._44_1_.1_1 .;;
.M.;;
·.:
:
_
_
_
_
_
For
S~la
Or~ade:
AKC
Regia
Mites.l12,000
014-241-5318 AI·
3
1
Up To .29e !Mile Ph.11 Vacation haul-• ~...oslo 1he mil r·ust call 1987 Cla•ton r• 70 3. b •--a
New gas tanka, . one 1on lruclt~
. Utr.Illttl Furnished, Clean, Bfue R149t Spa wilh cover, red· Wcrmed,
tared how
First
Shots. teri:OOP.M.
1
.. x
, r, .,. .. ,
1111r1,
Wittl ppfes.
Papers,
614-245Pay, EIC. Paid Evtrr Week ·AI· 304-i?&amp;.i~.
112,
newly
rll'nOdel~
bath
w/8
fet
No
Pels,
Reference,
Deposit
R•
wood
rramel
step;~•••·
like
D821
.
·/
1813
Chry'll.,
LeBaron
GTC
Law
signed Conventional Tractora •
D I A Auto, Ripley, WV. 304-372'!
$11 ,000. 304·578· &lt;JJirld, 114-ol41-1519
_,. ·
w ·1
E
If
Home Weekenda. Wills Cargo, Having A Partyl R'- City Sound whlrlpaolltib,
304-•
-~
r
,:c...:::,--,-:-'_;.:.:.:;_
·_.;___
new,
•
•·
~
,
OctobJ
k
R
.
·
'~··
oce
ent
Candltf..,,
31133"' 1-800-2'13-03:20.
- ...
11
1·
er t8DI, ,•a ••klngl2700, now
a_c
usee . tamer puppie&amp;, lO S10,9G9, 304-jJ7S· 1782 leave
Inc. Stoutaville •.Ohia 814-4U- Production&amp; .. The Righi OJ't For 31110 or · r 76 -~.
" I"-bfo Ro
614 •••
. Furnlohed AparlmOn~ Upalaira, 1 12200 "14-0112 ~··
lbo. fuM grown, all CofOII. $250/M.: Mll~w~·~-~
- - - - - - - - Wanted : radiator for '78 Ford
137.7.
rou nntonl
tes,
--~ 1081 Sc;hult Mabile Homi 3 Bad- Bedroom, No Pels, Second Ave'"
·
two Sheltle ' miniature COn ies. _
_..
lllng If. V•l IUIOmiiiC, 302
0571
.
rooma.
2
Barha,
Kitchen,
Dining
nua
Gallipolis,
Ali
Urilitilis
Paid,
Baota
Redwlnt,
.Chippewa.
males,
$1251,a.;614·742·2050.
188'
3
Plymouth
sundance. Au·
Eu~ Workl Eaceflent Pay I As~
•.c:olll14-247-2081 .
..,:
•
~ .
~- .
S ·
L.R. , Hoitch, Heat Pump, AC, llopaii~81,._440-1523..
Ton Lomo G
-~ L
·toma•· •• ~r ~~·- 4tOOO
semble Products at HolM. Call Pro,.1110na
1 ''" ""'rYIC:t, tump Porch, .112 Acre, Hilltop Drive,
Y
• uaran 1._ owut Malt: AKC Registered P.amera""'• ,..., .-- """""~'·
'
Tall Free 1· 800-467·5566 EXT. Removal, Free Elllmatesl In•_ Gallipolia, $25,000 Cash Of Gradoua living. ., and 2 bedroom Prices At Shot Cafe, ~llpatil.
' "'an PuPPf, Champion Line, 1250; MHtt, Atklng 15,300 080, 114· 790
·~{-·\
."f.
12170.
lurance, Bidwell, Ohio. 614·388· 130,000, Owner Financed ~ Int. apartments 81 Villtge Manor and Box Sewinat &amp; MattrHI Set New, . Border Ccllle Puppy, Not Regia- 2SIH340,114-2tl&amp;e487.
~:.:·~
Motor
4
1
Wirh $5,000 Down, 614-44&amp;-4455.
Riverside Apartments in Middle· . Nol U11d, .10 Year Warranty, ltred, Female Husky, 175, e14- 19D3 Red 'Fa rd . Muatang, LX,
Full-Time Cook /Eaperiencld 1648, e, -311·70 0·
.
. -p"'ur""l·'"ba""~""inol~,~
port. From S232·$355 · Cllll 8 14- $185; Llvln"'- Room Suitea From 446-8827.
''·
Loaded, 50,000 Miles. 10,000. ~~9~7::2:-:s=-.-m-p-ar-,.18::11"'
Working In Full Service Kitchen. Sun Vallav Nurserv School.
'
1996
Belmont
Mobile
Home.
3
992
•-4
E•uat
Ho
a·ng
Op~
'
B
•
•
camper,
·sleeps
I
..
IOII.Jiy
Hit con•:-: :I
'
Able :ro Read &amp; Follow Recipes. C~lldcare M-F Gam-5:30pm Ageo
·· •
u '
~r275: unk Bad S260, Complete :
.
h) ,
614-9112-5466.
·; Rl 7 BoafGe Giovanni'l Pizzo, Pupr; Palace Konnetl. Boarding, _..;.;.:...;...;.;._ _ _ _ __
rained . O.lacha'* awning, de•.~.~:
t 1-7 Shift Work Every Other 2-K, You~g Schoai. Aga During bedroOm, 2 bllh,lot&amp;S&gt;IIOS. Coil !unities.
..
P1ociOI ..Io,l14'11116-8373.
Sftl Service Puppies, Grooming, ri94 Dodge S~adow ES, ,Au · mand pump, shower, range~IDp 4;::.il
WHktnd . SodelllhO Food Serv- Summlf. 3 Ooyl per Week Mini- Somerville Realty. 304-875-3030 l f
or304-67S-3431.
a ayette ••H : 2 Bedrooma, 2
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade, All Breeds·. tomatic:, Air, '23,000 MIJet, 114· OVIflo futMCI, and hol Willi' •'*-'~:·:'
ice, University 01 Rio Grande, mume 1 ~3!6 57 _
llatho, All Utillllellncfudell. S~25( Corpor OH W~lto Plu1h Ntp Ap- P1ymen11 Welcome, 81.,388- 319-....
. ; 01,..245-i256.
. , Must·to appr~•·· ~1M B14f~~~
014-2.5-5660 EOE.
2.4 Acres: 14x70 Mabile Hama, 3 Mo. Dtpooir Required : 12 Room
10 r• 114-""5181
0420
· '· ·
,..,-r
,.._3114.
.
·:w~ .
'
The
Fr~
Cit)'
ChikS
Care
CenBR,
2
Balhs,
ceniral
air.
Public
And
Bath,
No
Kllchen
$200/Mo.,
PIQL " ..,
""'.,.
19~
Qodge
ShadDw
ES,
2
HOME TYPIST. PC uaora - d7 P.M. Man- water, c:a.ble, iust mi·nuree from 814-448-2477.
ter,
Hours:
IS
A.M.
~
Concrere
&amp;
Ptatdc
s.gnc
Tanka,
R:f.islered
Australian
Shephe
.
rds
•
C...tindtr,
5
s--r
.
,
••r,
...
~
..
1i72·18· 1/211.
oorr oon- •
ed. $45,000 income potential. doy Thru Frida,. lnfanll, Tod r•
,......
N
-eM
,
town.
.
30(! T hru 2,000 Gllona Ron Ma • 1 Year Red Merle, Female 2 Caueue,
·57,000
Mllta,
Asking:
.
talned. ' ·new. ti(••· ~ t[IIPI 1 . .:
COl HI00-513-4343 En 8-9368.
dlers, Pre·School, And School 3levellors, quiet, !amity oriented Middleport; 4th Ave 2 Bedroom, Evan1 EnrerpriMS, Jackson, OH Years, Red /While $75, ForBoth, $8,700 080, 114-256-8.340. 814- suoo. 30H7HD!2. . •
.
814-256-6785.
25e-a.67.
If you are 'looking 1or 1 e&amp;rMf in Agt Proeram·. i=or· More lnforma- neighborhood. 14:a:70, Well cared furnished apt, deposit &amp; refer- 1~537-8528.
lion
Contacl
Lilllii
Coughenour,
tor
mobile
home
with
e~tpando,
enca.
304-882-2Se8.
:
:
.
.
'
....:..:_.:_.....,
_
_
_
_
_
_
197~ Chi10au Tro~o!~r ..mpor;
the healthcare' field, art hard
good cond. 3 BR. 2 baths, garage.
.
Country Style Red Chltcked Sofa Schnauzer puppies, AKC, tall 1 1998 Metro Gao, at, air, abl, .am- new 1/c, now. '"""'"'· oltopo 5.8,
working, caring ar1d have deSire 814-448·4487.
Homestead Bend, Broker. 304· New Haven : 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom fur· 1125: Antique Oak Bed 1800, pepper, shots &amp; wormed, ,no&gt;m· . I rm cauent. Paid •13,.000 ..., lor full ....~. -rtnlng - k.. gaod
10 care for people we will provide
nished 8 P"· Deposit &amp; referenc- 614-446-&amp;2118. ,
RiOn IIIOod ine, 614-867-5404.
Sr0,5DO. Clil304-882-3413.
candlllon, laking 13500. 81 ...1185you with the education you need Will Clfo For ·The Elderly There 862-2405.
ea. 304-882-2566.
·
4114.
to bo a STNA. Compendve salary, Home Or live lrl Mine, 15 Year•
Experience,. Excellent Work And ·Glt~ood, 314acre w/3bedroom,
Electrl.c
· ScoDrera
And Unregi&amp;tered lemale Siberian 77 Oldsmobile Dl, 74k,·' v.g.,
benelill, heallh insurance and ,
Personal Reterances, Call Kay 2bath, 191D Brandywine mobil&amp; Nice two bedroom apartment in Whttlcf'laitt, New /Used, Van 1 Husky, 7 months old, very Iovino, 11750; '86 Dodge 600, 114k, v.g., 1871 Small Self-Contained, 14'
tuition reimbur~ement available 114-311·2923.
home . Sell lor $24 ,995 cash or Pt!mtroy, no pets, 814·992-5858:
Car llh lnst:alled, Stairglidet, Lilt prtftrablr to home on a farm, 11350; 614·949-3228.
Camper With Toilet, Gat Stava,
lor lull time employett. We en~:-:-:-:---,.-..,..:----·1
owner
ti~ancelor
$29,000
,
with
Chairs, Call Far Brochutt, 814· S100,814·949-2957ah8r4pm.
Refrlaerator, Fu,nace, E•Celfent
courage rrained ,uralng anis- Will Mow lawns k1 GaiWa COUniY, $4,000 down. 304-562-5840.
Now ac:cepljng applications for ..,S-7283.
New 86 Old&amp; 442 T-Topa Grer Candltlan, 11,350, 81'·446--3330.
18niS lO apply II well. PteaH CAll
one bedroom apartments: Appli570
Musical Silver: Ono Owner. 2G,3DO Mlloo
01,._-2761 .
Penny Delong at 814-887-3158 :::::-::---:-:-,.--:--:--:---·1 Limited Offerf r9Q6 doublawlde. cations can be plckad up a1 Po- Hand Ollllld 0111111, Hind (Mied
I
Full - · G...ge ICapl. - (814~ 1.988 Roc~waod campor, aflfpa
or apply in person al Arcadia Will P11&gt;vlrlo Oullity C~il&lt;fcare In 3br, 2bath, $17gg down, $2751 mero1 Cliff Apartmonll Offlca, Plllowa, Homo Wovon Rugo, 814nstrumentS
446-0109
6, a10ve, Icebox, good condition,
Nut'lino Center, East "ain Streltl, My Home~ Loc:ated Near Holzer month .. Free 'd tlivery &amp; 11tup. t114·992-7m.
'256-8001.
·'
-:--.:..:;._..;..._ _ _ __
814-41116.
'
CUOIYHio, Ohio 45723. E.O.E.
Hotpitll, Ctll 814•446·8113, For Only at Oakwood Homea, Nitro
Piano Lessons : lucy Jane 8ulm-. AUIO Loans. Dealer wllarrange fl.
Mort lntomwlion.
·
304- 755- 588 5.
One bedroOm apartment in MidJET
ar. Hartford. Call30+ 882-2395.
nancing even If you have been 1888 Travel ,Trailer Van, Many
Immediate openings tor pan 11me
dleport, all ' ulill~e1 paid, S270Jmo.
AEMION MOTORS
turned down elsewhere•. Upton
Rti'S and LPN'S, all a~lfts. Com- Work Wanted: MowinQ. Light Limited Ollar. Only 1500 down an plus 1100 deposit. Call 814-002- RISf ',.t, .._. &amp; RebuNt In Stock. Small Lowrev organ, 1250, exc:_.. Equipment Used cart. 30•· 458- Eatr111 Includes Slide .Out
122,000 8U-8g4 -5321 C~lll·
peliliWI - .
wh~ exContlluction. Painting, Yard any new single wide In stock. 780e. ~l$pm
•
CaiRonEvtn1.1-800-.537·8528. .
tent condition, Dolly'Wooda. 814· -'0611::::.:· .__ _ _ _ _ _ __ paa~,OII.
.
perience, equal opportunity em- Work, Etc. Call Dave At 814-251!1- Free delivery &amp; setup. Only at
092·3312.
,
._.
.
player. Contact the Director ot 13011.
·
Oakwood Homes, Niro, wv 304 . TWin Rivera Tower, now accepting
Drag Race Ca11: tDSD Anglla MlSEHVIC~S
755-5885.
applications for tbr. HUO 1ub1id- KtnmDft washer &amp; dryer, good 580
Fruita &amp;
nus Englne; 1g70 Wonza Round
Nursing, Pinecre&amp;t Cart Centet,
170 Pinecreit Drive, Galllpolit
VegBtabte·s ,
Tube 4 Link Chaaalo: 1g7G No,. :-:--::---~...._
ized apt. lor elderlw and handi · condition woa~or noeda new
~INANCIAL
New Bank Ropoo. Only 3 left Still capped. EOII 30HI75-0611.
clu~ 17!iibotrt 814-613-5453. · '
Bad&lt; Half C.r All New: 11188 . 3118
()t;o, 45631 814-4411-7112.
810
Home
~l
V 11
inwarranry. 304-75S..l19 1.
y
·
•
R
Strowborrlta ta•lor'a·,· Borry Engint,St 4-642-203 1linmediate Openings For P~rt
a ·~ 1tw ,._partmentl, io Large Ctwr. .Cabh111. good cond.
1
,
Improvements
:· :
Price Bullor. 19ge 3btdroom . Grarde.
304-87~.
•
Pate~. Open Mon. Wid. Frr: a-1:
Time RN's And lPN's, All Shihs. 21
Business
720
ltucks for Sale
Competitive Wages, Ollferenrial
$62S
dawn
,
$15Wmo.
Frae
delivNow
occop!lng
appfleationa
far
Sat
61,..245-1047.
--~
.
8Ai;::;SE~M:::EN::::;T---.
~
OpportUnity
With Experience. Equal Opporery &amp; setup. Only at Oakwood
two bedroom aparlt'ntntl. Apart- lawn tractor, 'MTD lawnhltt, 11
WIITEf.l!!!WING
-- ~
Homea, Nitro wv 304-755-5885.
menrt have air condilloning, HP, 38" cu1, 5 speed, electric
'84 Nissan King Cab, 414, run&amp;
tunitt Employer. Contact The OiINOTICEI
r:.
kitchen appllancaa, fenced In . .n, pd cOndition, S375, 814·
goad, SrOOO: "81 Joyato Corofll, Uf)COndidona( lifetime GUIIIntH. "~
r~tor 01 Nuraing, Pinecrest Care
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
Local rertrencts furnished. Ea- ' '
Canter, 170 Pinecrest Drive, Gal· recommendl ihll you do busi - 330 F8mJS for
"'
pllygrOUnd, faundry fllclflty, an
IUIOSifl80~ S40Q;014·992·211l'i.
tolllfa~ld 1i75. Coif (81~~~ :
lipolla, 011 45631, 614-440·7112.
ne11 with peopl8 yau know, and Tobacco allotment af 1200 lbs,, Uo rr-.nlgemont lnd wator, Now 18 F t - 811 Utility Trill·
'68 F-250, IU-Iij:. 11/ldlng Wind- 0870 Or HI00· 217-D57a.
-•
•...
If, and .l lalh pofd b y - Far er'l Wood Floora WI Ill Rtmp1, 1~:":":::-:::---:::--...,...---1 aw In boO!\. 300 1 crt., excofftno WollfprOOflng.
Neecl6 ladies To Sell Avon, 814- NOT to aend ·money ttwouQh _!he MelOI ca.,can 614·992·5533.
man un1ll you have lnveltlga'red
r'
more infOfmotlan pltaacal (8)~) R i l l - Salta. 814 ,uu•n 610 Farm Equl"""'m
condition, " roof work trudl, ftnt
446-3356.
245-0170, Manday·lhu-'"'"'
r·~
•••-Of!DV11
rno ofllring.
~·
11
350 Lots Acreage
Noon 10 ~-.
Now Goo Fur111cn, NM Ga•-·.
• 4-1141-23 dora.'
Appliance Parts And Servtce: All.~ :
,..... EOUAL HOIISING
.
~"•"
Ford 4000 w/1' disc, ·2 boftam ..,.....
Someone To Otean House, Refer- CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOO
OPPORTUNITY
I
RURAl
ECO·
ized
DuciWo.-,
Now
HOod
Fano,
plow,
runt
good,
good
candllian,
1978
F150
Pick-Up
302
Au·
Name
,Bflndt Ovtt 25 Year1 E•·~~o. 1
1
Acre
loolerl,
water,
septic:,
gaences Required, Send Response FURNACE fa Tho Moll Efficient
NOMIC
AND
COMMUNITY
DE·
614-37i-272GAFTERilP.M.
S5,200,614-992·2822·
'
tmoallc,
UDD
:
1&amp;81
Marcur
peritnce
All Work Guarantead1 ~
1
To : ClA 100 clo Gallipolis Da ily And Lowttl Emi11ions Outdoor rage, blacktop road, In Addison
VELOPIIENT.
Marquia 302 Automatic UOO, Frtnc~ City M1y11g, 614-448 Tribune, 825 Third Avenue, Gam- Wood Furnace On The Market. area. 814-318-8918.
New RCA ''·InCh Saltllile Dish, Spring Clearanc:a an HoiT1elite &amp; tl14·448.081D.
7785.
·w
pons, 011 45631 ..
\lery nict cf- ana - m "'· Complola,lo4SD;·er ...241-9737.
Groen Mochina trlmmora. Sidon :.:.::_::::.;:=:.______
Cenlral Boiler Ia Currently Look- 25 Acres, Hannan T,ace School
nl lhld oparunonl In MlddllflOI'~
E&lt;JJipmenl CG. 304-875-7421 .
1&amp;11 Fonr Bronco. 3114-6-2.
lnlf Far A Oualily Dealer In Thi1
OIC G~~r~e,.l Home Main·... ~
Taking Apptications : Bartender I lmmed'-te Area. Far Information District, Small Tobacco Alfolment, 81,..1182-2178.
.
•
G - lra11 frH tefri(IOfltar,
tenence- Painting~. vinrt siding,l •
Minllllll
Rights,
61,..250-1811.
Waltre11 . Full-Time. Apply In On Bocamlng A Dealer Or Far A
almond, S"" ald. 18.8 cubic foot 620 Wanted to 'Buy
19flll Chivy 1 Ton Goad Shope carpenlrJ, doara, W!.rdDWs, baths • 1
Person At: Carl'• Tavern, 858 Free Brochure Call 1-800-248- Building Lols For Sale : Midway 450
Furnished
fraorer: Ont Kenmore. gold, ~Oil
New nru, $1 ,400, 8tH48-28q mabie ·home
and more. For~~~
Sooond A¥or1Jo, Golipah.
ROOmS
frae, 1g.2 culllc loo~ $250 oac~. GRADE LOG WANTED : Dtliv· After 6 P.M.
4e81 Or 1·21fl-782-2575.
tree ettin.te call Chel, 814-882· '(
Drive. New Haven, Clly Water &amp;
61,..1102·5533.
lfed or Will plc:ll-up comacr: Hatry - - : - - - : : - - - - - ' - ll323.
Sewer, 1DOx177, Phone 304-113The Galli&amp; -Melga Community
Rooma far rent • WHk ar month.
GotdtbtrryiPaul Mtrctr Sawmill. 1880 Ford Ranoei NHda Mo10r
230
Professional
5146.
Pti&lt;od
10
Soli.
Action Agency 11 Seeking A
Sfardng 11 lr20/ma. !IIIUII Hotel. , Pua~ L1wn Mo.wer 450: Wao - Inc. 2806 us R135 Soul~ lldl Work, Bodl lo Porltcrl S30D
Services
Hauling Rohlblfilotion Spociall1t
doator 175: Coif Bafore 0 P.l.t . Wv, 25167. Pnone 304·675-75&amp;8 080,614-388-11005.
Lots for rent: Now laking applica~ 814 -440-85611.
Ta Fill A Poaltion Wllh The Glffla
814·441 48311.
01304-1175-7682..
Iiana. Country Lane Mobile Home
Johnaon·a
Tree
Setvlce:
Trim
Counly CHIP Program. Tho C.n·
188e GMC good c:orlditiOn. 304 ·
Park. Gallipolis Ferry WV. 304 - Sleeping rooms with cooking.
&amp;
removal
of
tree
thrubl
&amp;
ming
675- 51l2. ·
didate Should Have Four (4)
Alao ualloi •caco on rivor. All Outon 5110 Orthopedic Moar-.
LIVestock
875-5421
.
Sat And FJIImt. Nevtr UMCI Sdll
•
-::-~::-.....,~-,-,:-'-,'-.._Years Elperience In Housing hedgll. 1'800-71g·07i3 or 304~ook-upa. Co f oflor 2:00p.m., In Plollic Coot $800, Sell S250,
1987 Ford F250 314 Ton, 351 E
r
Conttruclian, Preferably Houli"v 566·1265.
River Ff'Ontaoe. 1.3 Acre 10 Min 304·773-5851, MuonWV.
.
·1,7S..23e0.
2
H1flinger
Getdi"gs
Broke
To
Windso, 2 whMI Ottvt, 61 4--MO_ari's Home Malnlenance. vinyl \ '
814
Rohlbiii!Otlon With ljUO Or Olhor
From Gallipolis, Serious Calls
Drive &amp; Ride, .e Years Old, G14· 2845 at 304-8 75-23&amp;S
licing. ruoflng,. exllfior and inttri-r!"!
Gowrnment Funded Proorem1;
Onll. 61 ... 46·4053
.
Space for Rent
WI ·-menlO. 245-9232:
•
01 pointing, roam' '
Superviaory E.xporionco In Houa. ron•., u-•o
304-875-1725.
.
n.~~ -~
_,_
Simmental Cows, Calves, Bulls, fi90 Ford -XL Lorll1, s:t,·000 addltlana.
982 4._" Froo Eatlmlttt' 814 - ''•
Scenic Valley, Apple Grove,
for
lng TradH And 5anlllivo To The
beauliful 21C loll, public water, Shop 50 Main St. Pt.
N - Of Low · fncamo Fomllfll.
.
MIIH,
t
"' Rtf_rlr,ratora.• Stovea, . Woo•oro 614-245-5!185.
llln1 co·S-rd,
~nr 81,._2. - 9 Exool-1
Clyde~Jr. , ~ -S76·2336.
rooma upstairs and down. 30•·
"
'""IN'
.. ""' ·
in
Salary II BaMCI On Tho Current
75-3115
And rye·ra, All Reconditioned Two lh"'a mon111 old ,.,. Pygmy
8
1•
Safoty Sc~edufo. Sond Roauine
·And GaurantHdl $100 And Up, g_ooootl.o, $rOO 080, COH) 00 2- 1992 fouru pickup, 4 cyf. 5
Secluded 5.5 Acres, Le11 Than
Ta: TOM PASQUALE, Gollla •
Mile
From
Holzer
Hospital
2822
Molga CAA, 1010 Norl~ SR 7,
470 Want...
Wll Delfvor. 814-8611 8ut . ·
speed,
nlco, 70,000
..., .to Rent
ma1
conoldor
pa11111m1111.
oado15800,
far a 1
112,500. Flnanoin&amp; Available
Ba• 272. Cholhire, 011 45620 No
::c7:
~
-:n--::,,.~a~p~a':n
-:
::-:b
:
'.'
......
c.:-h::-lld.::r.-a-a·l
STORAGE
TANKS
3,000
Gallon
640
Hay
&amp;
G~:~~ln
.
:
4U
or
pontoon
boot.
er4-n2All real 81fa18lldYel1falng In
814-31111-8062. 81ol-440-7278
later Than June 21, 1DDS. For
coupte need cheep houN 10 tlf'l'l. Upir}Qht, Ran Evans Enterprises,
2584 a11er 15pm.
fhft n - 1 8 BUbjeciiO
Furlhet lnlormation Call 814-387·
_,_,ed
·
Ottio,
1·800-537-0526.
ALFALFA
HAY·
Srar1~1'-.r•
360
Real
Estate
G
d
If
tho,_ Fair Housing Ao1
oo re renee~, w e ~.. .,...,
... - ,.. , 1893
5-10 5 sna--r E
1341 Or 814-9g2-U20. The Galby VMH.'"willing 10 'dO rttodtllll
avollablo-Morgan·a FIJ.m Rt'35,
.,_,
•
,_...., • ·
or 11168 wt11:11 moketlllffeglt
Iii -Moigl CAA II An Equof Opwanted ,
tended Cob, V-8, 38,000 Mlloa
repairo, 814·gg2·803D. ploott Tond~ Computer, 2500 RSX. 2 Plif¥. 304-937-2016.
Mog Rom, 107 Mog Har4 D11ve,
sg,ooo, Doyo: 114·448-4423,
porruritr Ernplojo&lt;.
Serious buyer has cash .tor land, ' - - -·
-lion ar &lt;lscrfmfnaffon
Tondy VGM 340 Color Monitor,
Nlgrto:81+:441-G487.
The VeterAns Service Commit·
an~ condition, 30 acres or more.
llauao lllauoo Pod. Sovtllf ProboHif on 11ce, Color,lflfgfori,
sion Will Be Accepting Appllca1 -800-24START, leave meuage
groma , r\lroady Loaded. 1550,
19113 Ford Ranger Si&gt;lASH,4flllr,
MERCHANDISE
stK fafJ1111f status ar nallonof
lions Thru 27 June for The Poll-for ,Charlu
814-245-5311118:DOP.M.
AutOI far .,_
auto, 'olr, caaaouo, 31,GOGml.
artgfn,
or
ony
fntenaon
10
710
lion 01 Tempararr Secretarl'·
.,..18
While jn cofar. SrO,OOO. Coif 304·
m111e 1lnl' auc11 prarerenca.
Mutt Poueaa Good CommuniUsed ••••P.tra, allldMi. 3().1.
"
875-1802.
RENTALS
510
Houuhold
871-1728.
'84 frlfd Tempo, 4 tloOf outomar·
calion And Orgarnlzotianal Sklfla.
Imitation ar - l i O n . "
-------. GOOdl
lc, leh,.rur tail Ugttr ·CllmiSJ!t,
Compu~er hperiance Praf...,INI.
WATER,WEliS DI!UED
g7.000 milts, 1400 080, 114·
In Acco,dance With SaGIIon
This newspaper wll nbt
410 Houses far Rent
Air Conditioners, Washer, Dryer, ' fall Rea•nable 'service a1..e. D•8·2311 days or ,614·1•&amp;· 2t44
5g01 -07 Of The Ohio ReviHtf
Refrigerator, F""'zer, S~, Mi· 188-7311
I
-ng~
COde, The SU!'Unful Coildldoto
~fo~=111111 2 Bedroom Houao•• 2 Bedroom crawl
.., Color T.V., VCR. 814·
Shall Ba A Or, N A OuoflTrailer N:;, In OOipolla, 814;«6·
250-1238.
•
lied Vlltrln fa No1 Avaifllblo,
of tho law.
884Hor lnformlllon.
·
Weed WICker
SeirtNO.
tC,.hman
'88 Formula
•. low.992--5136.
miles,
Good
Shape, 150'
Gold cfaan,
17500, (1141
The Spouat, Surviving Spouao,
· &lt;lu' ntllllerlora """""
Rttiondlllonld
C~lfd Or Poronl Of A V01111n.
ktlOriiiiCI fhM II dwOIIIOI
2 BadraOmo ·A,.Iabfo 111 Of July, Appll1ncoa:
DOor,
Fill
28
To
26
lf!Ch
Appllc:ationt And Complete Job
acPverll8edlnthlllnew1paper
largt Yard, I3601Ma., 814-448- Woalltfa, Dryero, Rongto, AofriOponln-g, J!rol~
Will Tako · :,.~"t:;: ~it:"..::· ts~
0olcriptlon Moy Be Obtofnod
_25_1_5_
. _ _ _ _ _...:,._ _ orators, .g . Day GuarantHI 1 ' 28• 814·:1105-0r 34• ' ••
1111-ononequol
PB, AC, 5 apeod, power aoa11
French Citr Martag, 114· 441Througtt Ttte Vererans Service
__.,,...... ba...
7115.
.
550 · Bulkl'""
and locka. 'Groot Car; 15200
Office The Galli C01.111Y Cctttr~
_..,.,~··•
·
3 Bed&lt;oom &amp; full blllllltnt, con·
Suppjj.";
nog.,
814· g&amp;2-7471 or 814·g•g·
houoe. Tilt Golfll County Vllor·
ltll olr &amp; no pets. S400mo. &amp; do·
Roardtn!flll or conwntrclol wiring, ~ ~
BiQ Sriinl)l On CorPtll VInyl
2611.
ans Service Comm l11ion 11 An
posit. 2418 B Monroe Ave Pl. -Stock, 16.00 Yd &amp; Up. Mollohon
-·
Of
U· ••
Equal ()pporbrni~ Ernplojo&lt;.
Pteooanl WV. Coli 304-875-1743:
cena.cl
eltclriclan.
Ridenour
Block. brick, 1 - r plpoa, wlna- 1i75 tlncoln 48 ,000 Actuol
~R71U1.._74+4.
RoflflllCH.
Electrical, WVD0030e, 304~175-' ~-~t~l
o"*' llnt~a. tiC. Claude Winllro. Min, A-1, White, Mar,_.r,..,r.
-~
VACANCY: BEHAVIOR NANDI· ~~:o:-'"""-:-~::-:::.......'"-1
Country Furniiwo. ~75-tGO.
RIO Grandt, .OH Calf 114· 245,
Prlct Rtduced. l3,gOO. SH
::::':::'::::::-:-:::-:--~~
CA,ID INITIIUCTOII. Volfif -,u..~
for
Slle
Nlct 2 Or 3-oom houat In 1'0- Rr 2 N, 8mifta. Pt Pttoaa111. WV. 5121 .
llllat4
81.....,..7787.
Alaldlftllat Or CommerCial Wlr· !&lt;!:~J
0itfa
SupL 810 ....,,_
. _. "'!- 814-1182·5851.
Tu...SatN, Sun 11•5. ,
ing,
NN S..tce Or FJIDeitlJLl· "''"'
M•r
RooflnO
I
Siding
GaMin1i77
Carvotto,
Now
Engine,
Now
1 112 aiDry, 4111·• fr.,
conaed Eloct-n. w.ta11 Eloc- ,
blat- Unfurnfahed 2 bod-m houao, Gibaon refrigetatar, good cond. !rod. OIMfumo, and Plfnlad. AI- Tf1111omlaalon, Now Exttouat. And
JO..~·
mtn1 &amp; aun porofl, PI,DDO, coif
··•
triC IIO· U8-gt5o, Gallipafll • .,.
157, Rfo011ndo. OH ""74. .,,._ 1!4-012-4480.
nle&lt;~ I cloon, na INido PO•. d.- I rOO. 304-87.-.
. ~finn luppMoo 114-241-IID
NowT- 81 ....... 1417.
Ofio.,
•
246-5314.&amp;0.
;;,;,.,_;.;.~------ f)llaifrllfUII1d.81-.
I
\'

Do

.. .

11 -: oiUIN?oll
Wellt
V

for Rent

lnctu-. ca•l14-tl2·5787 ohor
•

.113'1
a•
I
11 A f 7

11D

31iiiiO~Holihm;;;•;;;;•;-;for;;;;;S.;:i;le:-·( 420 •Mobllt llofnaa

f ; 1~

..
_ _.._
....
.,ICippli

VOU UN STANll 114
A I!&gt;E.D OF 501 L
AloiD TURN VOU~
I'INII-. FACE TO
THE SUN!

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

~'

-224t.

.,

Trecrturt

You

the

SavlnJI You'll find In lilt
. .CiaiSI(Itd Section.

•··

Window. Drift - Cargq • Enamor- TOMORROW
A professor hung his favorite adage on his office wall.

. It read: "Proper Use Of Today Is The Best Preparation
For TOMORROW.

f.

on.

,..1,

630 _

""""'?O·

460

Offici~

Ptaaaa~

I. ~·

..

10-

10 8

:~~~~~~~~~

0 1 10

earral~~~~~~~~~~:

In

--7"""------'--

*·•~-•

mo

"""*"- ~~~- f"·'

17..

....

Hona todAy .by mailing $2 and SASE to
Aolro-Gr~ph. £/o 1hlt newspaper, P .O .
Box 1758, Muaoty Hill srauon, New Vorl&lt;.
NY 10156. Make oure to stall your zodl·

a., 11gn

"any.,_....,.,

rn

.

ASTR~·ORAPB

c•-

-·In-

c.-film. cantaee
~-S.: tl~~=.P.~

!~-~-~-~~~~:~~·-J

OSOL

LJiO (.iuly 23-Aug.' 221 Avoid gelling lri
lhe middle gf two dl~tentlng fa~llons
today. You Win want to help both plrties.
but nel1her may be In wha1 you

IOyoUr~ln~~-- .

,,.-·or

fill!'"' ..
.,

...

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-JlliR- 11) Usualf)',
you are a reliable and Industrious indivtd-

'

ual, but 1oday you might caul and then

take credit tor WDI1&lt; performed by others.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Ftb. 18) Your
bllhavlor may be el!\remrl today. In some

lnatanoee you will feel emblllous:· in 1n818noee you mfgh1 feet lelharglc .
~loofler.
.' PISCES (Feb. ao-March 20)You wm ·
Y1fiQO (Aug. Z$-8tpt. 22) Try to mal&lt;e have lo !l-ead lig!llfy when negotiating a
do with what you have at your dilposal deal today. A thoughtteoa decl8ion could
today, but wfhefe 111 something you have
negatively aft.C. tomelhlng ·that should

.to borloW,'beaU aa n,Kw~~e your own.
. ....,_ (lepC. as.0ot 22) A w18e arMoet
infght give you some 1111'1 adirlca today
.
Frlclli! '.JUI!t 21 1-tM
!)ocet•lle or the can- your 11\ualiorr
Who you'"- ind Whal yOilru- COUld lmpar\laUy. Your judgmanl m'9ht not be
uiDUI1d.
tum OU! 10 .,. ~ .,...""' ...... In \he ~!0 (Ool. 24-Nov. 22) Instead of
year lheld. You can - \Ilia lnfOrinallon trying, your bell today, you ti1lghl teaYII
CANCIII (.1111111 11..Julr 22) ), cnllc:ill
family - - bll ·r wcMd IOdrly w..
ihe
Yau~I1DuMhcr4d cooper·
ale. E...,att . . IIJM .IO pay 1111 pari.
Gel a jump.on
MIIr..,.tdlllg Itt
lnflueJ!C1t 1hll -~ ~ In \he yfat
.,_._~lor l'lfUI ~ predlc---

hard to avoid dftrlppoln\rllll.

-*'""!! hd-ftnlahad that could haYI
bien ·ooll)lllatltl eatlly. Tomorrow you ·

be profillbfe.
·
'
ARIES (IIMlll i1-Aprt 11) You will not
benelllloday nyou QllllwoMidln a part·
nellhlp IITIII'IgtiMI• wtlh a peraon who
lacka your lnlll8llw and ambition.
TAURUS (April ~Mar io) Although

you muat there your proff~s with 1he
auocla1aa who helped you to make
. _ Clfllnt. you
not owe anylhing to
\he people who did not help you.
GIIIINI (liar -21-·June 201 If a clote

1lo

lillY biiiOIIY.
UGITtAIIIUI (Nov. U.O.O. 111 The - frtend neede your .....,_, do --r
pm'ollll'i tA pareana1 ~-loolal
thing you oan 1or him or hit \oday.
-ouraglng today, but yo~· rr have to
Min aolrylritg you get. You n\ull -

don, bll emblmltnd Ill
t~o•dal.._t. .,
fjo•eYIIr,

. '....·
,,'..

.,.

dllnl'

'

~·
'

~

.'

}_
I

�Pa,. 12 • na Daly 11 ntlnal

Readers make plea to suicidal reader to
Ann

_
-Landers

''"· .... ... c..
,_._.

Allll 1 aeden: 'Ibis is ·for
"BiD in Orccon," wbo il conlell)-

plllia&amp; 111icide. 1 Wlllll to Jive him
two leiiODI wby he lhouJd not conaider Ibis lllemalive.
.
Pint of all, 1 tried it. 1swallowed
100 tleepina pills, drove my Clll'
while c:omplctely 0111 of it anc1 aot
U!esle!t for drivi111 under the. influ• ence. I cooild have killed someone. I
live with thiJ thought every day.
Secondly, my husband's ex-wife

Tbundly, ..... 20, 1

Pomi!Of •lllddlapoi'"., Ohio

(they -lllllried 20 )'elll) tecelll·
Delr Aaul IA"'hn: 'Ibis is for
ly mmmjned ·lllicido. It r. beea a "Bill Ill O!ep." who is t0111ider- .
liviJII Pi&amp;l• we. Eva,._ il apy, iDJ suicide.
bilter, pill)' llld belplcu. )'011 c:mMy brodler cnmmittod suicide
not imqiae lbe .,.. onjcicle CM'Tfl six weeks .,0. after a loaJ NllJe
to frieada and fMPily.
witl11k:ohol. He - 30. My molher
Bill, you may 1101 care lbout is illcouolable. She Clll't 111 or
yourself, but otben c.-e allout you • siMp lid 1111' ill alllllr days II tile
-a lot You will Jut lbem terribly. CtiiW!tely. My UMen ancll are devThinp DO cet bet!«. Set small 111 , d. 1118 blame and ,Wit are
'p is for younelf. Live hour by hour lremendoua. Why couldn't we help
or minu1e by minllle. After my sui- him?
cide lllempl, I checked into a hotpiDealb it so final. 1118.children in
tal and am now on modicllion. Life 011r family II'C scared and confused,
is aoocl &amp;~lin. 1ban1t Ood I failed. I · and have niahtmiii'Cs wonderina
am- Alive ancl Well in SICI'IIIICIIIO who will be nexi.lf Bill believes
Dear Sacnmento: Your leatimo- deatll is the answer to his problems,
ny carries more weiaftt lhan any- he's mistaken. Death is the beginthins I !lliahl say. Thank you for· it. ning of everyone else's problems.
Keep Jeldiftl:
1118 pill and sadness never ao

reali~e

away. - l..oaJ bland
Dear AM Landen: I jlllt hid 10
wrile in reapoaw to "Bill ia OreJon," who ~~~ llllicide. I, too, ha"' e~:
the
clellre. It .... .... 10 ,....
since I almoat made tbll• bouible

*'

The feelin&amp; ofhopelestntll it tbe
wont of all. ~who have never
been where Bill ia cannot pollibly
understand how overpowerina
depression can be. I would like to
!ell Bill to han&amp; on. There IS life
·after depression. I know he feels
very much alone in this fi&amp;ht. but
then: - many of 115 wbo have been
where be is now, ancl we truly understand. I wish I could say then: is a
magic ewe, but there isn't. Only

Reds hand
Meta 5-3 loss
on the road

thif1QS get better ·

' del&amp;• feetiM and plol•ee'nftal
time,
help (1ft do it.
l • 10 lhllltlal I clidll't ~
myldf 10 ye~n taO· I have a derful wife and two lOIII whom I
love clelrly. I have el!loYed - .
my older son pt llllrried llld my
yo1111Jer son pow up. I COIIId have
milled all dlil.
I bow !here .-e deys whea Bill
l"eels ~ Clll't JO on, but if be doeln't w111t to continue for himself, he
should do it for his family. They
need him ..It really is worth it. and it
will Jet better. -- Been There in Iowa
De11r Iowa: Thank you on behalf
of all the Bills out then: whose lives
may have been saved bec111se you
lOOk tbe time and ttouble to shale

The. JICin of ,all' I 17?1'
capaftd ia the last four wotdl wiD pt ......." I bopc tWIY penM •
'
~-rq 1sttal-·

•

your life.

a1

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•

Seiad qat ada• to AM Ia• de~;
CnaiOI'II Syeclkate, 5777 W. ~
11n17 Blvd., s.Jte 700, Lol Aq!J511,
Calli. 9G045
.•.

Vol. 47, NO. 40
1 Section, {O Plgee

I •\

Report alleges POWs ---Getting personal-used in drug t«:!sting

BY MIKE SNIDER
But if icons mustliCtas role modUSA TODAY
els, he says, "then MadoMa is no
Baggy shons. The shayed head. icon at Ill or a dysfunctional·icon." .
The wagging tongue. The smile.
Gettina paid millions for movies
Michael Jordan's mannerisms an1 Jim Caney, Arnold Schwarzeneghave become almost as much a part ger and Tom Hanks (who tops tile
of pop culture as Elvis' sneer.
marketing industry's Q rating for
As spans columnists debate tile likeability and n:cognizeability). But
champion Oticap Bulls• standing in · IIIey aren 'I role models like Jordan,
NBA history, pop culture gurus can whose rating compares to Hanks' and
measure Jordan, 33, against such · is No. I among athletes.
timeless icons as Elvis, Babe Ru!h.
Jordan's charisma, character 111d
James Dean and Marilyn Monroe.
aura rival those of Bill Cosby, Robin
'.'There's no question Jordan is a Williams .and Magic Johnson, says
pop icon," says Jack Christ, profes- Henry Schafer ofMarketina Evaluasor of pop culture 11 Ripon (Wis.) lions, tile Manhattan finn that fiiUI'Cs
. College. "I think he is comparable to Q ratinas. "He's biager than just Jl
the Beatles and Elvis."
baskelblll . star. He lransccnds all
F81111 "worship Michael Jordan groups."
with much the same intensity as they
Jordan also lranscends race. Like
worship religious fisures." says Rad- John F. Kenneily and Mlll'tin Luther
ford Univenity spilns sociologist King Jr., "Jordan to me is an icon of
Steve Lerch.
·
reconciliation and aood will every
Pop icons are annointed for what which way," avis! says. "Everythey represent. John Wayne stands for body likes him and nobody seems to
patriotism, and "Mirilyn· Monroe is notice any racial implic&amp;\ions to IllYboth ~~ex 11oddess and earth mother," thins ~ does:"
. ·
.
says lrv Rein, professor of commuUnhke Ah at the heaaht of his
nication studies at Northwesteril Uni- • career. Jordan is non-tlln:atening to
versity.
·
the masses. Unlike Madonna, his
Elvis and the Beatles represented character is beyond reproach (few
youth,; rebelling againsl their elden. fans even cared when the media
Lerch calls Jordan "the perfect made a fuss about his gambling on
embodiment" of mon: conservative aolf.) Media coveraae has added to
values: competitiveness, hard work his legend, but Jordan "has worked
and discipline.
hard to aet where he is," Lerch says.
The icon mantle doesn't fit
Comparing personalities from difMichael Jackson and Madonna, says . fen:nt eras is subjective. "What
Douglas Brinkley, ·author of "The would the Beatles or Elvis have
Majic Bus," 1993's Americana trav- been like if then: had been MTV at
elogue, in which he called Jordan "a the peak of their popularity?" Lerch
black Elvis with wings."
··
ponders. "While Babe Ruth had
"They don't capture the entire endorsements; the limitations of the
country in the way that Elvis andJor- electronic mediaofhisday made him
dan do, .. he says.
much less visible than Jordan ...
Says Christ, "It's no accident that · And dot everyone thinkS Jordan's
Madonna calls herself 'Madonna' and icon status is a slam dunk, Pop icons
hit big with a song about being 'like themselves have become a phenoma virgin' ... She has conseioiiSly tried enon as mlll'ketcrs use them to sell
to build a career out of popular products, says Mark Gottdiener,
iconoaraphy. It has worked to some chainnan of the sociolpgy deptulment
extent: She is rich and famous."
II the University of Buffalo and
author of The Theming of America

the honor roll for the final nine-Wcdri
pading period have been annoonc+t:
Listed on the honor roll wen: Sill.·
dents who made all A's, those whO.
achieved listing on the overall hoftot'
roll by make a arade,of.B or abo~
in all subjects, and those who m .
the academic honor roll ,by gettin••
arade pf B or above in all academic·
Sllbjcc:ts and a grade of no lower lhli·
a C in art, hanclwriting, miiSic aha ·
physical ed~~eation.
:, ;

.

w-··

Velwli118 lltmorlil Hoiplllll Aclmlnlibilw

Scolt LUCII pt lllnlid 3,000 hour MI'VIce plni
to two nilnlbel• ot the holpbl'•
Aux·
lflirr'l\lttlli~ lftliiiOCHI, ~eceJvlng the - a
- · from the r.rt, Abbie Sbilton, cu~ JII'M-

lciMd, llld VInal .... 1Wo allier memblrl . . .
al10 now illglble for ..me. n•cli. ~ lli'li
F.m Grimm, 1 50ofloul' JlllCh llld a 1GO-hour
pin, and SyM• Cook, • SOohour J)ltch.

eachers hear about health
care
'
..

Scott Lucas, administrator of Veterans Memorial Hospital, talked
about heallh care when he addressed
the Meias County Retired Teachers
Association at a luncheon meeting
held recently 11 Trinity Church.
lnlrodiiCed by Maxine Whitehead,
program chairnian, Lucas talked
about the every chanaina pace of the
healtll Clll'e industry. He colllliiCiited
on legislative IICtion, insurance '

issues, the impact of drug companies, property adjacent to the local hospiand the effects on doctors, all creat- tal.
I
ing a necessity for hospital reorganiLucas also disciiSsed home health
zation. He said that the llliance with care and itsc role in the hol!lital's work
the Holzer Medical Center was nec- and the helicopter service which is
essary to maintain a viable local insti- available to Velerans Memorial for
tution.
lransfeirina patients.
Lucas noted that Dr. James WithHe was presented a gift by Whiteerell and Dr. Wilma Mansfield are head on behalf of the group. Twenaffiliates of Holzer. He also disciiSsed ty-two retired teachers were present
plans by the Holzer Medical Cenler for the meeting. Next session will be
to construct a doctors' building on in September.

Endangered sea.turtle returns .to nest

...

.

·

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....

I Oth Grade: all A'i, Kejli Bailer
Michelle Caldwell, Bi!lee Pool4t""
Joe Weeks; overall, Sleph~i Bellfli;i.':
Chris Buchanan, Brandon Buckley..,.
Jennie Conklin, Jamie Drake, Jetimiah Kehl. Rachael Seth, Jo$1f:
Starcher.
· ,.

-

of turtles were released.
egss i~ kical sand to incubate. Hatch"lt's pn:malllre to say the program lings swim briefly off the island • 9th Grade: all A's, Stephan'...
"""• _
is
finally
bearina
fruit."
before
they
were
captured
and
raised
An endange~ Kemp's Ridley sea
Evans; overall, Jessica Burch ""
The experiment began in 1978.. a yar in .buckets.
.
tunle, raised in captivity and released
Valerie 'Karr, Jessica Marcum, Healli:
Meariwhile, recovery efforts Proffitt, Mike Sobieski, Jennife •
attracting a worldwide audience that .
to the wild in 1987 near Padn: Island
. lllrned to a high seas battle.
National Seashore, Texas, haS sur- included a host of doubters.
"!:
In 1947 there were an estimated ·
Aftci' federal reports said SS,OOO Starcher, Ann Wiggins.
prised skeptics and come home to
160,000 Ke!llp's Ridley sea. turtles turtles 11year died in fishing nets,
nest.
8th Grade: all A's, Jessica Pore::':
worldwide.
But habitat destruction, Con~ passed a law thll! forced
The lllrtle was discovered after
overall,
Matt Bissell, Matt BoyleJi;:
layina 88 ens on Padre Island fishing net deaths, and harvests of sluim~)s to install tllrtle-exclllder Matt Caldwell, Maureen Heines ~
n:cendy.lt bore a 1a1 identifyina it as eggs (used as aphrodisiacs) and tur- devices '(TEDs) on fishing Dets.
Chasatie Hollon, Scott NCeds, Cassk;:
cJ
one released April 21, 1987, as part" ties (for meat and leather) from the
ShriJRI!ers balked. They cl&amp;iin the Rose, Leah Sanders, Josh Will; IIC~
of a 17-ye~r, controvenial experi- nesting sile·ll Playa de Rancho Nuevo, 'Jimulipas, Mexico, drove num- . SSO to· $200 trap-door devices to demic, Josh Broderick, Brooii• •
ment to save the imperiled species.
release · turtles from nets also let Nichols, Andrew Rolfins, Stev&amp;:
"It's exciting for tbe .project bers down to fewer than 1,000.
.-;:
U.S. and Mexican scientists decid- val~ Shrimp out, costinJ them an Weeks, Heather Westfall.
because this is the fll1t doc:umenled
•••
"'
n:lllrMC from 011r effons," says biol- ed to establish a second nesting avera,e $40,000 per vessel yearly.
7th Grade: all A's, Jllli Bailey, JOIIJ,'
colony
in
Texas.
Reseiii'Chers
took
oJist Donna Shaver of tile Niltional
"TBDs are one method of culling Kehl; overall, Amber Baker, J~
Bioloaical Service. "But I'm quite 2,000 turtle eggs a year - 22,S07
between 1978 and 1988- from the · doWII OD accidental (dcl!lhi)•.BIII by Brown, Kristen Chevalier, Cin · .
CllltiOIIS. We need to find mon:."
Ccnler for Marine Conservation's newly protected Rancho Nuevo site. . itself, 'ftl will never save the l\lflle," · Clifford, John Cooke, .Wes Crof!Z
To "imprint" Padn: Island as the :says Deyaun Boudreallxof the Texas Tiffany Hollon,'Joe Taylor; aced~
Tim Eichenbiq says that thousands
ic, Josh Clark. ·
·
· •••
turtles • new home, scientists packed ·shrimp ~iation.
·
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'

By LINDA KANAMINE
USA TODAY

-

-

three-fOIIrtlls leaspoon ground all- onion
,
I and one-half teaspoon n:plar
spice and one-half teaspoon pepper.
CHERRY SAUCE: In small or reduced sodium chicken-flavoiW
S811CCpan, combine twO-thirds cup bouillon gnnules
cherry jelly, one tablespoon dry
one-half teaspoon dried rosesherry and one teaspoon n:pl11r or mary, aushed
· reduced sodium chicken-flavored
one-fourth cup low fat maraarine
bouillon IJllnules. Cook and stir
In small skillel, cook onion,
until jelly melts. Cool sliahtly, bouillon and rosemary in m~rgarine
Makes about lhree-fOIIrtlls cup.
until onion is tender. Pour over hot
Nutritional analysis per serving: an:en beans. Garnish as desired.
241.0 calories; 8.2 griuns total fat; Refriaerate leftovers.
.
(2.0 anuns saturated (at); 19.3 grams . M_~ lix servin~s.
protein; 21.S grams carbohydralea; Nutrtuona! analysrs per servma;
49 millianuns cholesterol; 305 mil- I 92.7 calorres; 7.7 grams total fat;
ligrama sodium.
( 1.3 gr8ms salllrated fat); 1.5 lralnS
SEASONED GREEN BEANS
proccin; S.B arams carbohydrates; 0
1 pound fresh an:en beans, cooked milliJIAIIII cholesterol (based on
tender-crisp
'
lowfat maraarine ·use); 126 mil. one-fOIIrlh cup finely chopped . ligrams sodium.

McCoy named
outstanding
graduate at OU

I

·The Jlllries of Eastetn Junior
Senior Hiah School students m~11' ·

! f ... '

HeartIand.. -C~cwllln;,;;;.;;UICI~from.;.;;..:;PIIII;.;;;.;...:..8

MICHELLE McCOY

..

!(

12th Grade: all A's, Melis~f
Dempsey, Rebecca .Evans, Jessie&amp;
Karr,llobert Murphy, Nicole Nelson,
Brandi Reeves, Crystal · Summef...
field, Heather Well; overall, Beib '
Arnott, Michael Blll'nell, Beth Bay;·
Gina Blackburn, Jeanie Cline, Debrj
Dillon, Jessica Frederick, Mikf'
LauaJJery, Candy Mays, Jennif~
Mora, Ginger Nuuer, Kyle Ord, Mit ·
ah Otto, Noelle Pickens, Connie';
Pooler, J110n Sheets, Amy Smitil;':
Kelly Spencer, Michelle Vance, Amy~
Yates.
;:!;~:
lith Grade; all A's, Meredi!lt
Crow, Mari~t Fn:cker, Martie Holteit',
Teresa McGnlh, Tnll:i Heines; over.;
all, James Adams 1 Patsy Aeikm·
David Baker, Candace Bllllling, Sher• :
ry Burke, Eric DiUard, Bill Francis;"
Christi Grossnickle, Adam McDaniel;
Amanda Milhoan, Christina MooC
Daniel Otto, .I:.cslie Plll'ker, Mi~
Sll!llpsqni Erin Sexton, Lisa Stethelfl.._
Tracy White.
, .
: -:

35AGonnett Ca,.N•• rprpu

P.omeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, June 21, 1996
•

.,.

Michael Jordan as pop icon

•

•

....,

''

Buckeye 5:

· O.• of the Day (Orillti
llllalowa): 1118 best way to live ia 10
appreciate e8dl Qlintde 11 an ~
pe10ble miracle. Wort II your wodr
IIIII play PI your play. Shed !f111!";
tem. Enjoy your l1111hler. Don t ~
to bonow from tile fulllre. Ace 1ft
the fact that now is the best time I){

'

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1·3-0-2

2-9-27-3G-34

»

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. Pick 4:

~

,

~

·~·

8-C).(I

spoit. ~ Page 4

:jKitchen refurbishing
-------Pmsawarded~----~ Eastern
"
• ~igt) . h~&gt;nor~:
planned by church groups
' •
• rolls ·po~te~

Plans to refurbish the kitchen of donation of teddy bean wen: delivered to the sberifrs office for their use
Church following another flash flood ancl the use of the emeiJCIICY medical
in ~ay wen: discussed at il recent service.
. meeting of the United Methodist
Membm wen: reminded of kits to
be OJ1)IIe for the festival of Shlring
.Women.
·, Rita Radford, president, had in Sepleinber, and of the need to have
prayer and n:ad the purpose. Then: tuberculosis tests if IIIey are aoina to .
was group' singing and officers' assist II the Meias County Fair fruit
n:pilrts. Pandora CoUins n:polted on stand.
The annual picnic will be held at
cards went during May, Prayer
requests were made and Sharon the home of Frances GoeiJein 11
nooa on July 9. It will be a carry-in
Folmer pve prayer.
dinner
with those atlendina to like
· ABC quilts for sick blbies have
been sent in, it was reponed and a their lawn chairs.

Plck3: '·

who COl 1 shins suicide will aiJ.

YOIIF 1101')'.

the ' Rock Springs United Melllodist

Ohio Lottery .

WASHINGTON (AP) - Ameri:cans taken prisoner in the Korean
·war may have been used as "labora-·
.tory specimens" in drug tests run by
Soviet and Czech doctors and then
'executed, according to a fonnerly
secret U.S. government report.
T)le number of Americans
·involved was described as "up to several dozen." The report was not
more precise aboot the victims except
to say they were soldiers and pilots.
The dnig experiments allegedly
were done at a Czech-built hospital
in North Korea durin$ the 1950-53
war in which the fonner Soviet
Union ·was a central backer of North
Korea against South Korea and its
U.S. and U.N. allies.
Thousands of U.S. servicemen are
still unaccounted for·from the war.
The report dated ApJil 27, 1992,
. s~id Air Force Intelligence officials
: first learned of the alleged drug-test. ing program . in Sept~mber 199o
. while questioning an · un~entified
U.S. source about Soviet techniques
in interrogating POWs.
"During the Korean War a Sovi• et and Czech drug testing program
utilized American and other ·united
Nations POWs as laboratory specimens." the report said.
''At the conclusion of the testing
program a number of American
.POW.:s wet;e executed / ' ~said . "The
.' . ....
•

. I'

'

individuals were executedJo preclude intelligence report could seriously
public exposure of the irlfonnation." impact ongoing foreign policy activCopies of the report were made ities of the United States governpublic Thursday by Rep. Bob Dor- ment."
'
nan, R-Calif.. at a hearing that
Clapper described the source of
focused on other· issues ipvolving the infonnation as reliable.
Korean War POWs and M!As.
'.'The source was well placed in
In a note attached to the report, Lt. that he personally saw progress
Gen. James R. Clapper .Jr.. then repons on the work in North Korea
director .of the Pentagon's Defense that were forwarded to top leadership .
Intelligence Agency, wrote ihat his in the Czech Central Committee and
agency had extensively investigated Ministry of Defente," he wrote, sugthe information provided by the gesting that the source was Czech.
unidentified source.
· "He remains a very sensitive
/
"lnfonnation uncovered by DIA source," Clapper. wrote. The report
I
indicates that up to 'several dozen' said the source had been a reliable
unwilling participants in this program U.S. agent fo.. more thail20 years and
may have been executed upon its . when he was given a lie detector test
conciiiSion in North Korea," Clal'r'r on the essential elements of his stowrote. ·
.
ry, there was "no deception indicat"The purpose of this program was ed."
to develop comprehensive interrogaSometime in 1991, the DIA's Spetion lechniques involving medical, cial Office for Prisoners of War and
psychological ·. and drug·induced · Missina.in Action was infonned of
behavior mpdificatjon:: he wrote.
what the Air Force had learned about
Clapper's note suggested that the .the drug testing. The DIA called on .
information may not have been the CIA and other intelligence agenshared with Congress.
cies for help in verifying it.
.. lie wrote that while i11.telligence
The fonner Czech. Intelligence
repons concerning American POWs Service provided a report on the mat·
·
normally are distributed to the State ter in March 1992 which did not corPaulette Harrison, Pomeroy, wae the llrat penon to uae the Ohio Bureau of Motor VehlciH ·
Deparmient and other government roborale the specifics of the' drug
new "Gat Persolllll" tlrmllllll at the Melgs _County Llcenae Bureau this - " - The public teragencies and 10 congressional panels, experiments and executions but conmllllll allows motorists to check the IVallablllty of vanity plates and order new Vtlnlty plates
he had shared this orie only with the . finned key elements of the story, such
from the State Motor Vehicle data base. Thll! new program, available at all deputy reglstuat olftcel
top ,two pfficials of the Defense as the existence and location of the
. In the etate, h.. made vanity plltl purchases more convenient, according to Meigs COI!Ijty
Department beca~~ScC ·~the .attached Czeeh and Soviet faciljtieun Nortli""" ,.~Deputy_Reglstrer Sue Jl4alson. The new systi!ER reduces the VVII~ on receiving new plates~
·: -~·-:~·--·· Ko!l'tl
ln1Hff~•.f-8~katoju,a~10·1~,da!t~-; ." , . ·
·
•... , ~"" ., ,- ~·.:

.

As.s isted suicide adv.Gcate
present at Ohioan's
death
.

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.Six:Mei·g s residents set to compete
this weekend in ·Spec.ial Olympics .

'

COLUMBUS (AP) -A woman
who became at least the 31st person
to die in tbe presence of Jack
Kevorkian was reclusive and "kind
of difficult to get along with,'' probably because 'of her painful disease,
a neighbor said.
Bette Lou Hamilton, 67, had
syringomyelia, a progressive neurological disease of the spinal cord,
Kevorkian's attorney, Geoffrey
Fieger, said early today.
'Her body ·was taken to Pontiac
Osteopathic Hospital in Pontiac. ·
Mich., arlO: IS p.m. Thursday by ·her ·
friend, Jeanne Bogen, Fieger said.

.

Donn ·Mauger, ·a neighbor .of
Hamilton's in the suburb of Upper
Arlington, said he had known her
since he moved into rhe neighborhood seven or eight years ago.
"We · were not really friel)ds,"
Mauger said. "She was kind of a
recluse, kind of difficult to get along
with .. We never really associated that
mucll,.with her."
'
Haiitilton had ®en consulting ·
with the retired Michigan doctor for
sev~n months, Fieger said. He said
Bogen, Kevorkian and other doctors poisoning, which she administered
herself somewhere in Michigan ,"
were present when Hamilton died.
Fieger
told The Detroit News.
"She died of carbo.n monoxide

.

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Newt .Staff

Beha of Meigs County Special
Olympics.·
Six Meigs County residents will
. Beha noted that all the athletes
be among the more than 3,000 ath· ' will be competing in track and field
letes competing at this weekend's events.
. ;
27th annual Ohio Special Olympics
Michelle Snyder, who capiUred a
State Summer Games at Ohio State silver medal in the long jump at the·
Ultiversity.
'
1995 International Special Olympic
Mary · Jane Curry Of Pomeroy, Games in New Haven. Conn .. is makDavid Kim of Long Bollom, Lisa ing a return trip to the state games.
Montgomery of Racine, Tara Nonnan Meigs coaches Beuy Smith and
of Racine, Marion.Snyder of Racine, Chuck Kinnan will join the athletes
and Michelle Snyder of R'acine will at Ohio State this weekend, accordbe representing Meigs County in the ing to Beha.
field ·o f nearly 3,200 athletes at rhis
The state games will feature comweekend's games. according to Steve

pcthion in 13 spans. More than
16,000 athletes statewide compete in
Special Olympics programs, consisting of 23 sanctioned spans. More
than 70 Meigs athletes compete in
Special Olympics programs each
year, according to Beha.
The athletes competing iii the
state games ar'¥ontinuing a great tradition for Meigs County Special•.
Olympics. The county unified bas-:
ketball squad, composed of vollin- ,
leers and Special Olympians, ca~~;,
turcd the state championship i~
Cleveland this past spring.

'

·Supreme Co1.i'rt upholds waste .distr.i ct separation agreement
'llte Ohio S~me Cowt, in aruling released on Wednesday, ended a legal
baule spanning more than two ytars by the c0unty commissioners of Athens
and Hocking counties against the board of directors of the Gallia-JacksonMeigs-Vinton Solid Waste Management District.
·
The legal dispute, the first of its kind in Ohio courts, centered around the
separation and distribution of funds when Athens and Hocking counties chose
to separate from th original six-county solid waste distric.t th11! included
Athens, Hocking, I allia, Jackson, Meig!l.and Vinton counties.
· Ohio law allowed a "one,time" separalion clause for niember counlies.
In taking this one-tim~ separation option, Athens and Hocking commissioners

a

signed separation agreement that they would receive no more than $SO,OOO
from the G•J-M-V dfstrict. ·
After seeking the contract, Athens and Hocking commissioners later opted to combat the agreement. Upon hearing the case inAprill995, the Founh
District Court of Appeals upheld the June 1993 agreement that Athens/Hocking would receive separation fees not to exceed $50,000.
In an attempt to get the decision overturned, Athens/Hocking officials then
appealed to the Ohio Supreme.Court. In reaching a decision, each of the seven Supreme Coun ~ustices agreed with the Fourth Dirct Court of Appeals,

and the original contract for SSO,OOO will stand.
Lance Wilson, executive director of the G-J-M-V district said "It's nice
to sec such a frivolous lawsuit come 10 an end.
Wilson went on to commenllhatthe G-J-M-V districr currently has a claim
pending in the Jackson County Common Pleas Coun to recover funds expend- .
cd, and other damages, during the legal proceedings in defense against the .
Athens/Hocking commissioners.
·
The G-J-M-V distriCl was represented by Jackson auomeys Bill Cole ·
Richard Lewis and Joe Kirby, with Bill Cole as lead counsel.
'

Planning -· ~nderway
for battle re-creation·

Two arrested
as DNR probe .
targets region :

Plans 8l'e underway for the annual re-enactment of the Betti¢ of Buffington Island, -sponsored by the :
Meigs County Historical Society, set
for July 26-28 in Poniand.
.
The Civil War encampment will
open to the public the morning of Sat-·
urday. July 27 and demonstrations
present~d that Saturday and
Sunday.
The event commemorates the Battle of Buffington Island which took
place on July 19, 1863.ln that battle,
the only Civil War engagement
foughl on Ohio soil, ConJederate
raider den. John Hunt Morgan and
his 2,000 troOps were , r011ted by a
Union force· consispng of approxi:
mately 8,000 soldilli'S and l'ln boats.
Re~nactors are expected to begin
se«ina up camp on July 26, but no.
demonstrutions or programs are
planned for tllat day. .
·The Fain: .Winds, ·period strolling
musicians, will pn:Sent a proanun

ZANESVILLE (AP) - A 15- :
month undercover investigation into :
illegal hunting has turned up more •
than 300 violations and resulted in at :
least two arrests, the Ohio Division of :
Wildlife said.
:
Wildlife officers on thursday :
served arrest 8!\d search warrants •
throughout the state, mainly in southeast Ohio.
·
1lte division said it had docu'
mcnted that more than I00 wild ;
turkeys. between 60 and 75 white- ;
tailed deer and an unspecified num- l
ber of hawks were poached, mostly :
m Morgan and Muskingum counti~s
and in West Virginia. ·
:
During the serving of the war- •
rants, wil~life officers sei~ guns, a '
motor veh1cle and an all-terrain vehi-. •
cle believed to have been used by the . ;
"leged poachers.
:
Search warrants wen: served PI ~
five
residences
in
the ;
McConnelsville-Malta IIU. I wd ~
(Continued on Pagi 3)
·i
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will

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Saturday at 12:30 p.m., followed by
a children's program at 2:30 p.m.
Dignitaries will be introduced at I
p.m. with a special lecturer planned
at I :30 p.m. . ·
The Saxton's Gamet Band, considered one of the most authentic
Civil War-era bands in the ll.S., will
be providing music for the weekend
event, including music for the Ci vii
War . re-enactors ball Saturday
evenmg.
The. Saxton's Cornet Band is made
up of.professional musicians and provided authentic Confederate music
for the movie "Gettysburg." Special
concerts by the band will be held at
3 p.m. Saturday anll at 10:30 a.m.
Sunday, with mini-concens thrOII&amp;hout both days.
Special events and de~~Jonstra­
tions will be taking place both days
in tile replica of "Old Ponland" busi~s. schools arid stores n:minis(Conttnued on Pigl3) ·

.

BATTLEFIELD REMEMBRANCE ...:. Thi
.,nUll Biltlt of Bulllngllin lilind oba~
will bi July 21-21 at Poitland and lnc:ludti .,.n.
od mualc, dilnonabidkMi ll1d 1 battle .... .

·'
-----~

.

~

-ctment. David Gloeckner of Portllnd,
above, dlecuued the bittle with lfiKII!lora
prior to lalt year'&amp; everit. (Sentlnll file ()!lolo)

-----~·--------~~------~------------------~--~--~~~----~-----------------4;--

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