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Ohio Lottery

Bu~eyes

super Lotto:

win osa
Bowl20-17
f

Sporte\;n ~ 4
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,.. VIlli.~. NO. 1•
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' :. 01117, Ohio Vllller PUbllel'llnl eornp.ny

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·· • The state must continue offering
· · incentives and a def'eloped infra.
:-: structure to attract business .to Ohio's
• higb unemployment Ria, Stile Rep..
... }ohn A. Carey believes. .
•.;
Carey, who sponsored and passed'
·• legislation last year creating a revolving loan program to help economi• · : cally dillreised counties CIPte indus· . trial parb. felt a proposal to repeal

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c~= c:"no!!t~~~ in

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the personal property tax be elimi·

nated. .
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"ln. Franklin Q&gt;unty, where the
unemployment rate is below 3 per·
cent, I would a~fCC~ that incentives
may not be ·necessary," Carey said.
''The repeal of the personal prop- .
erty tax would be nice and place Ohio
in a more competitiye position, but
(Continued on Page 3)

'97

ways festive, .~rigid

OFFICEHOLDERS SWORN- The foUowlng
officeholders were·IWOI'n In during a
brief ceremony In the Mitlp County Court·
· hOUH ,..,_day morning. Sworn In by Judge
• FNd w. Crow Ill, at left, were; from left,
~;GUnty

day that the Athens County Home
By CHRISTOPHER CHESTER
annual dips at Coney Island and
and adjoining flinn will be closed .Aa•~ Preu Writer
Brighton Beach.
Man::h 31. ·
·
Americans celebrated New Year's
In Milwaukee, where temperaCommissioners cited financial
Day in ways both festive and friJid, tures were in the balmy mid-30s,
considerations af¥1 ~ declining
dressing up for parades from hundreds of people donned swim~uits
number of residents at the home in
Philadelphia tcj Pasadena. and strip- for a plunge into Lake Michigan.
dieir decision to close the home
ping down f~r outdoor dips in Mil·
"There are no ice chunks, which
ud farm, which had been in o~r·
waukee and other cities.
is kind of nice," said Linda White, of
ation for 140 years.
.
In Pasadena, Calif.• Edith Torrales Lake Geneva. participllliJII in her
The Athens County Department
missed,the usual New Year's Eve par· sixth New Year's Day Polar Beir
of Human Services will help the
ties to i:amp out on damp grass for a Swim.
home's seven residents find new
good View of the 108th"T(&gt;Umament
The air may have felt like ice
:places ;to live and will monitot
of Roses Parade on Wednesday.
c;hunks in frigid Philldelphia. where
them after living arrangem~nts are
"It's worth it;" ·said Torrales, a cast of 20,000 sequi~. painted
found.
·
watching giant ,giraffes, fish and the comedians danced, 1 cracked jpkes
· County ofJjcials said newer ser· · bride of f(rankcnatein pass by.
. and played banjos for the 97th annuvices such as home nulling and
Among the inore decorative floats a1 Muinmerl Parade.
·
MCals 011 Wheels made the coun:
were ~noCcbio, a Thai barge .and the ·
I'
.ty._ ~ obsQiete since it not a
"~ch ~f lhe.Oay" _ a fisherman
••n.ere are no experts,_so ·
,killed I)IU$ing.facility.
abQUt to be fWlj]lowed by a knife• come up with an idea and you ,
~u1, Q)ual~illtbtfl! .._ orchids,
•bk-wlt1dili~ntfiRili*Wo
·• it."• ~~::!i::'l::.~~:--'
dizina.. the hqme ~~ farm for
grapefruit and oranae rind. · thinks the
IS
IS the
.,.... 1~~ 1 YCI!'. ·c~isu~ ·!hilr 11-Y coqld w!Jid prailc:ma. ·
·
··· · ··
si&amp;liii &amp;lid.
.
·
up is someone else's "Catch of the
Goldstein donned
look of a
In odler cost-&lt;;uttmg ~ures. . Day," people in many cities started strongman, attaching plastic foam
the Athens County Cornmissl~ _ jhe new year with an outdoor swim. body parts to himself. A 2-foot orange
told all depilrtlllents 'to cut thetr
· AS New York sanitation workers hat finished otT his costume, called
1997 buCI1et requests by 7.3 percleaned lip an estimated-30 tons of "Montezuma's Revenge.",
DEMOCRATS SWORN IN.;_ Newly elec,tld
•
debris left by holiday revelm in
"We're the snowmen!" sllouted
state and county Democretlc ~ holderw
.ce.nt.
The ~ucst ~ that depart·
Times Squ~e .and elsewhere, Bob Alio, part of a I!'OUP dressed
· ..,. •worn-In by AtheM County. Common
men~ wtll be ptttnJ'92.7 percent diehards froni three city clubs braved head-to-toe in white suits that seemed
· PIMa Judge Alan GoiQbeny during •peclal
of~~ ~t reque~ ,
2()..degree.temperatures to take their to tit the frigid morning.
centmoniM and a NCeptlon Monday night at
.
.
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the
Malp County ~rthQ4H. Goldsberry, far
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LIMA, Peru ..... It's starting to
: .become. a rituaJ: waiting and guess·
, .; ing, then joyous relief when weary
! hostale&amp;. man&gt;: sti~l W~!Jg their
.; l'lltnpled cocktail suds, eme!Jo from
,; ,woeb of captivity in tho swank
:: hOme pf the Japanese ambassador.
,w •
Leftist perrilll$ have freed ·more
: .than 400 captives - including sev. . ·~.enon Wednesday -but 74Wetll still
..., ·trapped in the cream-colored mansion
.... :today, and "Peru's hostage crisis
.!- )bowed no signs of ending soon.
~: It has been more than two weeks
.;. -since rebels of the Tupac Amant Rev. :otulioniry Move~nt crashed the
. )tylish ao,iree at the ambanldor's
-house and seized mcx:e thut .500
~:
politicians, generals and

Cucsts -

;:. Japanese

.. ~ . A
of Peru's ricl'l'lnd
'!1Jt)Wtrf)d auddCnly found 'tselfilnder

left, and Melt• County Democratic Chair Sue
Matun ln•tltuted ceremonial oath1 to, from
left, ProHCutlng Attorney John LantM, IncomIng U.S. Rep. Ted Strlcldand, Sheriff Jllines M. Soul•by and County Comml•sloner Janet
Howard.
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youthful guerrillas armed with ~-47 released doves into tlie air.
medical checkups. Then most were
rifles, grenades and explosives.
The marchers left.
taken to a Peruvian-Japanese dvic
From the outset, the masked guer- . An how later, the ho5tage'release associatibn for tearful hugs from
rillas began releasing hostages, free- began.
loved ones.
·
"
ina. about 200 ......., including ~II the
Red .CroSs workers - camped . :w.an and w~ary._ the men p~sed
women -on Dec. 17, .the mght of closest to the gates of the residence arm-m-arm w1th JOYoUs retauves
the raid. .
'
. - suddenly stood. 1V cameramen through a throng, squeezed into cars
,There have been many other scampered up aluminum stepladders, a11d raced away.
releases since- a ~&gt;etch of 20 on Sat- focused, and tocal1V went live..
Once again, hopes .yse for those
urday; two on New Year's Eve.
Suddenly, the ashen-faced still capti~e .
. Wednesday's events seemed hostages appeared, with journalists
~ce again, there was no way of
almost a replay of ~t releases.
shouting: "How are ·you?" and knawmg what would happen to them .
The day began with journalists bystanders applauding. ·
For so~e ~l.atives,. the releases
camped-as they-have been for days
""Happy! Happy!" replied one, ended an agontzmg wlut.
-~hind yellow police tape, while . Peruvian Juan Assereto, breaking . . "We didn't prepare. New !ear's ·
cunous onlookers ,aped down a into a smile after he crossed the well· dtshes o~ decorations thts year,. ~oro
ghost!y embassy row sealed off by clipped lawn and ~sed through the Toda ~td Wednesday after ht~ ~on
police. The officers sweated in their . )().. foot walls ri11ging the residence. Toyaki was released from captiVIty.
S"fRICKLAND TAKES-OATH ...:.Jnc;omlng U.S. Rep. Ted !Jtrlck·
bulletproof vests from the humidity
"And your health?" the reporters He spoke to_ Japanes~ broadcaster ' land, D-Luc..vllle, took a ceremonial oath of office from Athens
of the S&lt;iulhem Hemisphere summer. shQuted.
,
·
NHK !fom hts home tn Takamatsu, County Common PIN• Judge Alan GoldGerry during tpeclal cerSuddenly, 400 marchers arrived
"Very good, very gOO&lt;j,'~ he said. 340 mtles southwest of T~yo. .
emon~• ln"Pomeroy MOnday. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Snilddle, and Mr•
shoUting ."Enough of terrorism! We
The bus sped away, four police·
"Now we· can have a real New . and Mr•. Jack Slavin held the Bible for Strickland while taking
the. oath..
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want peace!" as they, waved white men·on motorcycles leading the for- Year's celebration,'' he added.

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. loo.k -back at what in$de news,in Meigs _ County ·during 1996 ·
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MARCH
listercommendedlocalprojectadvo- .
March 3 - Jonn11 Kaukonen, of
cates and called for unity of officeholders whe.n she spoke at the R~pub- the famed Jefferson Airplane rock
band, was inducted into the Rock and
lican Lincoln Day dinner.
$10,000 for use in flood relief efforts.
Feb. 13 -,..A section ofSR 7 near Roll Hall of Fame. Kalikonen; who
Jan.3t ..... EPAandSouthern0hio TupptrsPiainswascloscdforrcpair . now lives on-a Me!Js County 'fann,
plans to build ll guitar farm.
Coal Co. agree on $2.5 million in due to a growing laooslide.
pollution pe11alties resulting from
Feb. 14 - New l'omcroy-Mason Announcement was made of $1.45
the!993 4ischarge ofmi~ water into bridge scheduled f~ 2002 ·by Ohio million in federal' funds to ·come to
streams In their effort to save the Department of Transportation: Wes- Meigs County for bridge and ro!ld
flooded facilities and mining jobs.ley Thoene wjns Meigs County repair.
March 5 - · Meigs Commissioners,
FEBRUARY
spelling bee.
Feb. I -Red Cross Bloodmpbile
Feb. I5 - Brad RobU.son indict- pledged support to a planned hospicollected 96 units pf blood. ODOT ed on robbery, kidnapping and bur- tal expansion on M.uJbeny Heights.
March 8- Curbside rccy,cling set
agrees to address section of SR 124 glary iii the Salvation Anny l)ouse
to begin in Syracuse.
damaged by erosion.
. break in.
·
.
March 10- Supporters of bond
Feb. 4 ..:... Initial plans for con· Feb. 22 - Eastern LoCal Supersttuction of medical arts building near intendent Ron Minard announced he issues for school construction in
VMH annouticed... '
· · • would step down on July 31 . Eastern Eastern -nd Southoql begin "final
Feb. 7- ODOT announced plans teacher$ endorse ~nd· iiiiiC for cpn· push for pas5age.
·
to resume work on 4;onnoctor project struction and reconstruction of new
Mar. 12 - Middleport Council
pos~ water/sewer rate hike pro.
follow ina delay after delay beCause school complex•
of the weather.
Feb. 2S - . FreedOm ~. a lion· posed by Board of Public Affairs.
March 14 ~ United Fund aave
Feb. 10- Southern Local Build- profit education and job Vainin&amp; pro.
IIIJ Committee-kicked off cainpaip· gram, became the tarpt of a full· out $14,000 to local groups.
17
....,
Meia•
receives
March
.
for support of bond issue to build new scale state investiaation for vlolatin&amp;
$$00.000 in federal and 11a1e fllllllina
etemenlary buildina. 'Flippers Plains- charitable laws.
Chester Water Dialrict railed rates to
Feb. 28 - Meigs Community to repair J6,,.Uies OlliS county roadl.
March · 19 - CommissiOMI'i .
Oft'let •Xflll'lloa COlli.
Improvement Corporation' reorga·
• (Conllt Uld... .... ..
Peb. 11 -- Lt. Clew. N8K)' Hoi· nized and elected trustees.'
•

· (First Ina_...) ,· . · Central building in Middleport was·' $277,862fromits t995budgetwhile
Jan.JO-MeigsCommissioncrs
~·· ~ Events of the past yeat deserve proposed lJy the'Meip·Local Schooi reporting accomplishments of new pondered dog pound costs and ways
:1inothet took before closin1 the bbok Board. 'file political scene ~w ll,(:tiv: sidewalks, housing rehabilitation, . to imprpve .the facility. Lions Club
' t()n 1996.
· ·.
ily • two Republicans an.nounced new water well aild water line con· International Foundation sent in

··, With that in mind, The Daily Sen·
· ~ tinel presents the . "l996 ·Year in
' Review."·
· ·~JANUARY
.
. Jan. 3 '- Eastern and ~them
:.:,' Local achool districts were awarded
::-~ $10.3 million in state funds for us,e in
· ·constructin1 two proppsed · 1(.-8
"' schools and renovatin1 two county
•. /: hip achools, contingent on passin1
·local boqd issues. ·
, :
'"'. 1111 county ~iv.~ $_1 !4,115 in
, ;Aood relieffOf uselnrep~~nnj roads
t' clamqed in the ftoods of 1994.
.. .. Jan. 4.:... Pomeroy Villqe _Counf' eil mMCI water ra~ for .residential
' ·ind commercial customers.
), ' Jan. 7 ..,.. A budJet for 1996 of
... S3,066,8U wiS approved by the
:: ciounty Baird of Conuniuioners. ·
,~-. · Jan, 8-A blizzard dum~ 1 foot
of snow on the county. Middleport
1 ' Council re!IOOed a balanced budaet'
~ after two .years of operatiD&amp; in the

their candidacy for March 19 pri111a- struction.
,
rynominations . . · ·
Jan. 21 ~Meigs County moved
Jan. 12'-'JY.Ier Maddcn,;on of under a flood warning with water .
Kenneth and Kristie Madden of Mid· Siandipg as the Ohio Rive~ continued
dleport,
the first baby of 1996. its rise to SO.S feet.· Mei1s County
Jan. 14 - · Conspiracy chatjes Hiatorical SOc:iety ~ived a grant of
qainst a Reedsville woman regard- $79,000 for renovation of the museina a Coolv~!le bank robbery were · u111•
disfl}issod in me Athens County Court
. Jan. 22 - Cleanup around the
' of Common Pleas.
county bepn as the river receded.
Jan. i6 - Preliminary sketches
J11n. 13 - Meigs County was
for the proposed $8.7S millio!l con· declared a di111ter area by Go.v.
struetlon and renovation projCct for Ge01Je Voinovich.
the Eastern Local School• were
Jan. 24 -. Anodler downpour, J.S
unveiled at the board meeting.
inches, hit die llei ovemiaht, forcin1
Jan. 17 - Tho- Salvation Army already sw.olltll wlfei'Ways over their
WIS brokCh into, Dora Wining and, btlnks apin.
•
her daUJhter, Helen To~~. were ·
'Jan. 2S - 1Wo Athens women
bound and dnatened while tiRe 1111- were killed in c.-lbus -~ollislon on
pects ICII'Ched t¥ residence for mon- U.S. 50 e;ast of Ouyiville. The Eastey. The allllpectsf two juveniles ud em. Local Schools bul carried the
Brad Robinso11. were talten in&amp;o cut- · 1irls bukldllll .......
·
tqly liy authorldits ~after tbe inci·
Jan. 26 - Meip County Plabiic
dent.
,
Library Qc.rd ..,._, to
a
:·red.
"
·
Jan. 19 - ~inc Vill. . Coun- brlllcll libftlry ill lhe aew P ·tift
. '·· Jan. II - lteaovabOII or the old 4;il ....S a ~ov• bllancc of achool thrtct complex.
'•

••.-ct. ·

\he

;-"· Attoc.a.ted Preaa Wrlttr

..
··:·~ :

Recorder Emmogene Hamilton, Trea•urer
Howard Frank, Sheriff Jame• M. Soul.tly, ProbatefJuvenlle Court Judge Robert Buck, EngJ.
near Robert Ea•on, Coroner Dougla1 Hunter
and Clerk of Court. Larry Spencer,

1

·j ~-~ear .s!~~~.~t~}~~~-2! . !~!! ~~,.~~a2~M~d

...

2 Section•, 12 Plgll, 35 cents
A Glnnlllt Co. .....,..,.,

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the personal property tax would
impact negatively on his district.
The Wellston Republican, now
entering his !ICCOnd tenn representing
the 94tll House District of Gallia,
Meigs and Jac~n counties and
eastern Lawrence County, responded
to discussion in Columbus that busi,
ness incentives should be reduced.
Instead, it has ~n ~ that ·

Home to close ·

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Pom oy·Middleport; Ohio, Thuraday, Jan~ary 2, 1997

_. Athens county. .America .ring's .in

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Plck4:
9-2-2·1

Cloudy wllh a chance Of
rain tonlght, low• In the
so.. Frklliy, .cloudy, hlgha
In the SO.•

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~ Carey pushes for · ore
~:development incentives

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.4-29-23-27-29-30
Kicker:
3-3-1-o-;7-8
Plck3:

was

._ish

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·commentary
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The Daily Sentinel

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u.~.- troops c~ntlnue

tQ behave badl

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Bulsllria whose
WASHINGTON - .It'sa dirty lit- tem!!ljcally examlae the eft'ecq of
Our own iafom..t invi.tipdon, a battalion
behaviorwass6
'formly~n­
tie secret thai few people aiJhe Unit· w• on ehildrcn.
conducted by our MSOCWe Dale Van
- 'Esttlb&amp;:slid in 1!.U8
ed Nllions e - menli011, yet It ~
OM of the thi11p Macbel fOUDd Alta, has found lhat U.N. so~ sible and undiJci liaed that lhey
lhe "Vulpripen's with ~gulllrity: U.N. pe1ll» was forced prmtitution of children by uaed child prostitutes in at least sev- were quickly .d
ans:"'
The
Bulgllri
government
111.
St., P~y, Ohio
keeping soldiers usi"g child prostien operations .. in Le!)anon, Rwanapparently
·
saw
a
c
to (ll8ke
614-992·2156. Fax: 992·2157
tutes for their pleasure.
.
c1a; Bosnia. Croatia, Somalia, Haiti
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some
money,
since
U.N.
pays
Perhaps no one is more aware of
and CambodiL
this problem than the newly selected
It was in Cambodia that the prac· generous grants to· untries that
secretary general of .tlie United
u·
t
al 1 · d here supply peacekeeping troops. The sol•
Nations, Kofi Annan.
--~--~-·- it~r?J..m::osr.:m:: ~WOn a dim are then paid allhe disc!elion of
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
·
country' s morality.
, · · lhCir home countty •• leaving1BulFor nearly four years, Annan
'
served as the undersecretary general soldiers of competing sides •• and,
The United States, China and the garian officials a chance to mlb a
ROBERT L WINGETT
of peacekeeping operations. Dllrin)l according to. one paragraPh in the Soviet Union brokeled a peace treaty tidy profi~ froni their pe~ng
· ' Publisher
that time, he SJW more than a few report, by U.N. peacekeepers.
.
among three Cambodian suerrilla forces.
·
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confidential repons about peace"After the signing of the peace factions and the Vietnamese-installed . Bulgarian salaries- were s~ngy,
keeping soldiers getting out of hand. treaty in 1992, soldie~ of the United government in October 1991 .. end· which encouraged bad behtvior in
MARGARET LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
ControiJer
Yet it was not a problem that Nations operation in Mozambique ing21 yearsofcivilwarinthatcoun- the ranks. The troops' drinking lnd
General Maft~!iger
f
··_ ~ -·
Annan's boss •• outsoing S~retary recruited girls aged 12 to. 18 years try whiCh claimed more than a mil- womanizing often got oUt,of hand,
General Boutros Boutros-Ghali -- into prostitution," the repon said.
lion lives. To ensure the pelce, the o n ·ng
: a gun battle with
ever wanted .to deal with. That is,
Boutros-Ghali knew the Moz&amp;m- Qnited Nation$ · c~ the ·u.N. Cambodi soldiers "at a. brochet In
11ntil early .last month.
bique operation was not the only Transitional Authority in Cambodia • northwest · bod1a, lhiee Bul-.anBoutros-Ghali finally decided to peacekeeping operation where child (UNTAC), its most extensive and an soldiers were shot. 'to death for
take action after reading a repon on . prostitution · was rampant. So he expensive .peBdkceping operation "meddling" with local gifl~ Ano,thchildren
in war written by 'Graca ordered an investiJI;ation into how ever. The gOal was to complete a mui- er staned a brawl when lie uri~ted
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M~che}, ~pzambique's former ed~- many U.N. P_C&amp;Cek~pers serving . ti,~old mission in less tlian two years on an elderly beggar outside a pubcanon m1n1ster. Supponed by Man- ' abrOad have htred child prostitutes. ustng 111ore than 20,000 peacekeepers . lie house. One Bulgarian was+.ted
an Wright Edelman, head of the U.S.• Presumably, Annan, will continue • and personnel, at a cost of$1.7 bil- for 17 different cases of'venercltl disbased C~ildren :s Defense Fund, she this belated probe when he takes over lion.
eaie.
,
ovisited a half-!lozen countries to sys- in January.
Among the troops dispatched was
Stories of the Bulgarians' excesses lend credence ·to one of
persistent criticisms of the ·SJ.7 billion
By JOHN McCARTHY
Cambodiin
mission: that' a U.N.
Associated Preas Writer.
presence brings with it
decaCOLUMBUS - Prison construction is o~ of the few growth industries
dence
that
corruptS
the
local
populain state government, and a look at the latest breakdown of activity in Ohio's
tion. Cambodia was a place where the ·
· courts may explain why.
·
most sumptuous m~als and the l;test
The Ohio Supreme Coun last week .released its Ohio CouitS Summary
ai::commodations cost only a few dol· for 1995, the latest complete figures available.
,
:
lars. That left plenty of money for
More than 3 million coun cases were filed in)995, mOS! of them traffic
.drinking,
drugs ~tnd prostitution. .
violations that wound lip in municipal couns.
.
.
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Urgent
requests frin'n Phnom Pe~h
However, of the 239.386 cases in Ohio's common pleas couns, 82,204
included 6,500 Oalt jackets - and ·
were criminal charges.
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300,000 condoms. Yasiishi A1WJ)J0) .
"Possibly the..most significant change. in caseloads over the ~t fi':e years
'
the head of the U.N. mission, waved
·
is the proportion of criminal cases making up the total docket, Ch1ef Jus'
.
off
Cambodian
comp}aints
by
tice Thomas Moyer said. "In 199l,.less than 37 percent of common pleas
remarking that "18-year-old hotcoun• filings were criminal cases. For 1995, that number rose t?. 41 per·
blooded soldiers" had the right to
cent."
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enjoy themselves, drink a few beers
· . Of those; 46,449 resulted in guilty pleas to original or reduced charges
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and chase "young beautiful beings of
and 4.()115 were dismissed.
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the opposite sex." But Akashi did
Gqv. George Voinovich has asked his Cabinet to hold spending increas'
malte one request: "Please do not
es for their departments to aboul,7 percent per year for the. 1998·99 budget
park your U.N. ·vans near the nightpeHcJ4, which begins July I.
.
·
, clubs:"
However, prison construction -Ohio expects to make rQOm for a'bout
Akashi has had good reason to
5 200 more inmates- has forced prisons' chief Reginald Wilkinson to ask
regret his laissez-faire altitude since
f~r allout 25 percent more over the two-year periodtreaching about $2.4 bil;
ISO peacekeepeis and untold numlion. Jie cited tougher sentencint guidelines as the cause of the increase. .
bers ·of Cambodians are helieved.to
Foreclosures accounted for II perceni of the common .pleas cases and
•
have coniiacted AIDS. More U.N.
work~rs· compensation and product liability took upS percent. The remainpeacekeepers will die of sexually
ing 4' percent represented other civil caSes.
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. Other numbers ·from the 19~5 repon: .
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,
transmitted diseases than the 21 sol1
' A total of 2,679 cases, including 10 death penalty .cases,,. were filed
diers who were killed in hostile·
\,;ith the state's highest coun.·
· . • ·
·
• ·
~ijoo.
r
coun's Office of Disciplinary. Counsel, which investigates and
Jack Ande!'IOJI ucl Jaa MoDer
acts qn ethical and professi()nal complaints against lawyers, received 3,244
are wrllen for Uailecl Feature
~
·~~
5;1iclle8te lrte. ,· ~-!
QNes, clown from 3,~9 inJ 994. Formal ~on was taken in 53 ci!,SC~·"ol"'
..
'·
·-··,·\\'
'
p.ad-wilh 66 cases to~ previous year. -• i . ·
·
- The coun admitted 1,441 new lawy,ers out of the 1,672 people who
tool&lt; bar.l:xams in February and Ju)y. The state had a .total of 43,046lawyers
"
.
in ·l995.
.
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· -The coun publis~ed 39~ opinio!!_S,_43 abbreviated entries and 47 mis-· . What a Dickensian· year ,1996 avoid even the most remote appear- ia and Paltisian. To curb unfair trade Kennedy: To have a quiet, dignified
was. It Was thi: liest of times for some ance of unethical conduct in the waite practices against U.S. goods and ser- marriage and show Chuck and .Di,
.
·
.
: ·
1
• cellaneou~ orders.
·
- The victims of crime compensation progrnm dispOsed of. 7.611 cas'es headliners and the worst of times 'for of my recent acknowledgment that "I vices that have resulted in a $40 bil- and ~y and Felgie how people of
others. 'It was a year of wisdom on brought dowri on the pe~ple's house . lion trade imbalance in Beijing's breedmg and refinement are sup•·and ~eived 6,003 new claims.
.
·
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favor. To malte a bow to human rights posed to cornpon themselves. " ,
- Ohio couns issued 93,638. marriage licenses and ended 62,208 mar- s.ome fronts and a year of foolishness
on otbers. There were events during
.by commuting, or at least shortening,
INS Commissioner Doris Meissriage$ by divorce or dissolution.
·
the year that restored some belie( in
'
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•.
· the sentences of China's political dis- ner:
stop •misrepresenti~g -the ·
humanity's basic goodness. But, then, a C&lt;Qntroversy whiCh could weaken sidents. ·
1 ..
effe!:bveness of "Operation Gale·
' there were other events that provoked the faith people have in govern- · Independent Counsel ·'!Cei\n'l!th keeper," wh,ich has utterly failed to
both public outrage and incredulity. !JICn\." ·
.
. •
Starr: To wrap up my Whi/ewater deter illegal immigration along the
But
enough
about
1996.
It's
time
Dick
Morris:
To
swear
off
$200.
investigation before I surpass Iran· U.S.·Mexico border. To admit that, in
· By The Aeeoclated Pres•
·
.
.
to
look
forward
to
199'].
Herewith
are
day-and-nigl;t
call-girls.
To
never
·
contra
special prosecutor Lawrence my agency's haste to riaturalize
· Today is TIIursday, Jan. 2, the second day of 1997, There are 363 days
su~gested
'resolutions
for
the
past
again
advise
President
Clinton
on
the
Walsh
in the number of years and than 1 million immigrants in time to'
• : left iq the yeai
· ·
year's
leading
newsmakers.
.
issue of family values.
millions of dollars he spent on his vole in the· recent presidential elecToday's Highlight in History: .
· .
.
•
·.
President
Clinton:
To
bear
in
mind
FBI
Director
Louis
.
Freeh:
To
grand
inquisition.
tion, we granted us, citizenship to
On Jan. 2, 1900, Setrctary of State John Hay linnopnced the "Open Door
that
a
maJority
of·
A
mencans
did
not
acknowledge
that
the
agency
has
fallMexican
President
Emesto
Zedilthousands of foreign-hom criminals,
Policy" to facilitate trade with China.
vote
for
me
in
either
of
my
two
pres·
en
into
disrepute
during
my
watch;
lo:
To
pollee
my
country's
nonhem
..
including rapists, child molesters and
Oq this date:
·.
·
idential
elections.
To
make
good
on
what with the Filegate 'SCandal, the bofll~r so it is no longer a si~ve . killers. .
1
· In 1492, tlfe leader of the JI!Si Arnb stronghold in Spain surrende(ed to
my
campaign
promise
to
balance
the
false
accusation
of
Olympic
security
th~ugh
whi~h
illegal
~··
drugs
and
Rupen
Murdoch,
Miclllel
Eisner,
Spanish forces loyal to.King Ferdinand ll.and Queen Isabella I.
In 1788, Georgia became the founh suite to ratify the U.S. &lt;:;onstitution. budget. To accept responsibility for guard Richard Jewell and the iecent aliens cross mto the Umted States. To · Mic~atl Jordan:· 'R~~ Wright; To
In 1929, the United States and Canada reached,agreement on joint action the illegal foreign campaign dona- discovery of a Russian spy working encourage the Mexican legislatu're to concede that the rati.nJ system 'hat
tions that wen\ raised in iny name, in the FBI's ranks. To fall on my · . drop the idea of granting dual citi- our four major television networks
1
to p~serve Niagara Falls.
·
. .
.
zenship to M~;xitan-Americans a developed does not . sufficiently
In 1935, Bruno Hauptmann went on trial in Aemington, N.J., on charges remembering the declaration of the sword.
last
two-term
Democratic
president:
Michigan
Gov.
John
Engler,
Wisway of influencmg U.S. politics.
inform parents of the levels of sex,
ofkidmipping and murdering the infant 's?'l of Charles and Anne Lin~bergh.
"The
buck
stops
here."
co~sin
Gov.
Tommy
Tho".'pson,
New
,
John
Tu
and
David
Sun:
To
write
vi~lern;e and . adult languag~ conHauptmann w~ found guilty, and ·exccuteil.
·
Hillary
Rodham
Clinton:
To
IJiain·
York Gov. George Patalt1, New Jer- • a ma.~agemcnt book, bnsed on our tamed 1ft our programming.
· .In 1942, the ptliHppine capital of Manila was captured by Japanese forces
tai
n
the
low
profile
that
I
had
during
sey
Gov. Christine Todd Whitman, lox~nence at Kmgston Technology,
Madonna: To do somethi realdllrilltl World War II.
· ..
the
past
election.
To
stop
suggesting
Texas
Gov.
Geo;ge
Bush
Jr.,
et
al.:
To
~bowing
other
corporate.
chieftains
ly
outrageou~. like manyi g the
.In ~1960, Sen. John F. Kennedy of Massachusetts announced.his can4ithatmy
critics
don't
like.me
because
resist;
for
atleast
~·
Yel\1'.
the
temptathat
it
is
possible
to
!'1¥
a
high!~
proffather
of my baby.
·
dacy for the Democratic p~sidential nominatiop.
I've
redefined
the
role
of
the.
first
tion .'o stan testing the waters for a itable, hi~hly successful ~usm.ess
J-pli· Perkhu Io a ~l,!lllllist
In 196). the i'l_ew York Jets signed University of Alabama quanerback
lady. To accept at least spme culpa· prestdent1al btd m 2000.
·
while shanng the wealth wtth faith· · for lbe Sall!Difn_Uaion-'tlibune
-Joe Namath for a reponed $400,000.
andlbeautboroi'"iiilbiLikeMe" .
• Chinese President Jiang, Zemin: . ful workers.
In 1974, President Nixon signed kgislation requiring states to limit high- bility for tb,c Whitewater and Travel·
:
gate
scandals.
·
To
stop
selling
missiles
and
nuclear':
John
·
and
Carolyn
Besettc
·(Unlon-'liibune
Pliblblllnl).
. w~ !glCCds 10 55 mph. (Federal speed limitr were abolished in 1995).
House Spealter Newt Gingrich: To technology to countries like Iran, Syr•
.·
,
-~
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.

Court

By Jack Anderson
and
·
J an Mo//er-..

·Criminal cases are
trying Ohio's courts

·

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&lt;

l•

I'

.ljo

,;..

'

T~day

.Joseph .Perkins

Flooding offers soggy
.introduction to new year

!o

'·

as

ft

Berry's World

doesn~t
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Kondracke

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..
I

br

.'·
J

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

•

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The Daily Sentinel

'

t,··············41l

1

Going Out of Business

M .......

SALE ·.

z,

FRIDAt JANUARY 3RD &amp;.
SATURDAY, JA.NUARY4TH
'

cha.,.. mor lie'lmplomeuoed' by chonslns ~
dundqo otd!e •ubo&lt;:rlpd...
·

IIIAILSUIISCRIPTIONS

lnoldiMotp"-

ll52 Wftb
=::: ::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::::'::m:~
. ............................................. SIOl.S6
--M&lt;Ipc-.tl'

IJ Wftb . ..... :......................................... $29.25
26 ~ ........... ,............:........................116.68.
52 Weeb .......:............... ,... ,.................. $109.72

a•

•' I
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H,OSpital, ews

Stocks

.

.

to ·19 calls

Carey pushes

. poliiic;al machine witl\ tax-exempt . the GOP) to contribute to a chllritadollar,;. .
.
. ble aetivity (say, tlje Salvation Army),
Gingrich's main national political but not for a lax exempt to codtribute
committee, GOPAC-- itself, a secre- to a political cause.
tivc organization that systematically
What'smore, Gingrich claims, his ' ·
dodged fedctal·disclosure laws~ fur- commingling of ~litical and ,nonnished money- and manpower to run political is no worse than .Ctivities
a college course, "Renewing Amer- engaged in by such tax exempt• as
ican CfvjlizaJion," that was managed, the $ierra Club, MS magazine and
in tum, by the Progress and freedom vl!fious groups associated with Ralph
Foundation, a tax-exempt education- Nader, which "educate" the public in
al group.
. strongly political terms. '
In addition, GOPAC originated
On the .olher side of this argument, '·
and funded a televised town meeting the key coun case on tax ,CXCJ'!IplS in
that was later taken over by the'tax· politics was ·the 1992 ruling of the
exempt charity, the Abraham Lincoln US. Tax Coun against the American
Opponunity.Foundation, whose pri- Camjlaign Academy .. sianincantly.~
mary purpose was to teacll' literacy to run by Gingrich and future GOPAC
inner,city youth.
associates. The coun 111les that iax :
· The Hotise ethics subcommJttee .iaws were violated if ot:lly one bene, :
that, in e!fect, indicted Gingrich . flciary of a tax-exempt ~etivity is a ;
• made no detcnnination on whelhet' he political party:
.
actually violated tax laws in millirig ·
That would put Ginanch 's college :
political and tax exempt entities.
course close to the legal line if not : •
· Gingrich clitims he did not -- first, over it beciule tapes, of the cours.: •
because the college~ ana toWn were to .be. distribu. ted at GOP ~andi, :.
meelina• were n·ot .. JMIU
~•.:::'san" RepuL,.. dete-tnint'lJ semtnars.
·
·" •
lican · activities, juw generalized
·,,
appeals for .smaller g'li'vemmcnt and.
(Marton Koadraclta Is e~;eeu;·'
more individual initiative.·
,,
Call, • :
Also, he claims, it is entirely u¥e editor or
.... fll CaptiGI II&amp;)
•
legal for a political orpniuttlon (say,
.

".

t

p

EMS units ·respond

Contest .Includes
more sponsors ·

deserve·impe~chmen·t

·On th~ principle that punishment , subcommittee did nol say' that Ginshould fit the crime, House Speaker grich actually violated the ll!x laws.
Newt Giqgrich does not deserve to be Nor did it say that he consciously lied
removed from office for playing fast to the ethi~s committee.
and loose with tax laws and the truth.
.
'He deserves punishment all right, Mort9Q
and ~e'll get it: He's tarnished his
spealtership, he's being put through a
Th oust Gingrich, there needs to be
J!.Oii!ical wringer and; if he survives, · proof that he knowingly violated the
he will be undermined~ as' a GOP IRS code and intentionally deceived
leader.
·
his colleagues. If it takes a smoking
On the other haoo, censure -- gun to impeach a Pfesident. should·
which carries with ' it removal from n 't that be the standard for a speakthe spealtership -- is tantamount to er?
·
impeachment of li ·president, and
Of ~;ourse, ~peakers . have been
Ginirich, so fa, as we now kllow, has forced from office for far less ••
not committed anything tike "hisb notably, in 1,89, when Dell\ocratic
crimes and misdemeanors/ '
. Speaker Jim Wright of Texas
. . A House ethics subcommittee has resign~d under an anack I~ by Ginnlled •• IJ1(I (lingrich has admitted ' .&amp;rich over ,money Wright received ·
- that he violate(! a House·" * fail- from "sales" of his book to corporaing to~ ldequale legal idv~ee On tions in violation of a House ban 911
taX questiims and that gave the ethi~s receiving honorllria. ~
~onunittee ''inlccllfale, incomplete ·
Gingrich .argues · tha!, unlike
and unreliable" infQmlatiein.
Wrigh~ he.did nol enrich himself per·
Democt:a~~ are callin1 for Gin· sonally by mixing' political money,
.8rich's head and some conscii'Vative personlieland messagesinto'!Wo tax·
cblumnists want bim to quit beciiiiSC · exempt ent~s. one chariiable
., while they· don't think he's done and another educational.
mui:h wrong •• he can't (on:efully
And that's lnie. Rather,. Gingrich
push the tight-wing qcnda.
.
was seelci~tg political enrichment On the oCIICl hind, even the cthiCI i.e...~1· .; ~y. in effect, feeding his

Three :vehicle crash yields citation

Meigs land·transfers po·sted

I ·'I

more

·Gingrich

effect

Meigs announcements

in history

.

Alleged assault probe ·continues

said.

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A look back at what made

(Continued from Plge 1)
students captured the trophy for
ccmmitltld county-owned land for the achievinJ the highest percentage o(
A&lt;:cuW..._. fCircCIII for
VMH medical liltS building.· Voters superior projects in the Southeastern
M~ Police BR conri.. liq 111 iDwatip«ioe into ¥1 alleaedusauh
went to the polls to m8ke their par- District Science Day lield at OU .
'
..ty 'Nc ~n·sday, aa:crdin&amp; to Police Olief Bruce Swift.
ties'
nomination of candidates.
April 10 - ODOT commined
Acoordiq to repxts. almit oflhe Meigs Couaty EmerJency ~rvices
March
20
Eastern
voters
pass
$8.S
,nillion for construCtion wort On
waa dill"' hed l'o Race SCreet- Nonb Second Avenue around 12:20
Lm. Wednesday wbenl they found Joha Blab, 31, Middleport, severely ·bond issue for school construction, l'llaselloftheRaveDJwood 1·77/U.S.
while S!llllhem's issue fails by a 104- 33 connector project. Rae Ann
bearen.
.
vote
margin.
Gwiazdowski was named to fill the
"It is believed lhat Blake was involved in 111 altercation. We haven't
March
21
Rutland
and
the
Fedunexpired term . of Steve Dunfee,
had aa opportunity to speak with Blake about the incident, but we plan
·era1
EmerJency
Management
Adminresigned,
on Middlepon Village ·
to do lhat today.~ said Swift.
.
. ·
istration meet to discuss frequent Council.
.
·
IND.
Blake wu transponed to Veterans Memorial Hospital by Meigs CounOooding
problems
in
the
village.
April
-12
Modem
Woodnien
ty Emergency Services, where he was uated and released late WednesMarch 24 - Meigs County gets dOnated $S,OOO to help ·restore the
day momina, according to a hospital spokesm111.
.another S6i2,564 in fedeial funds for 1823 Chester Counbouse.
order In
for Kingsbury Rosd
flood-damaged roads.
April 14 - Care Choice Ohio, a
'The Lealling CJeek Conservancy District has placed a boil order in
March 26 - Southern 'Local new progrnm geared to assisting ' ·
effect for system ~ustomers in the Kingsbury Road area, accordinJIOsysBoard of Education looks tD cuts in elderly residents in planning their
tem manager Brent Bolin.
• waite of ballot defeat of bond issue own long·term&lt;:are, was unveiled by
LCCD officials were scheduled to repair a leak in the area this after'
for school construction. Committee the Area Council on Aging. Of Meigs
noon. All customers in the Kingsbury Road area"Will be ~ues~ to fol- for Meigs County Infirmary met County's population or 22,987, there
low this boil advisory until funher notice.
· ·
· with Meigs Commissioners demand- · are'4,S43 oyer the age of 60. and 373
ing assurance that building will con- over 85 years of age.
"W.vA. .~ .
tinue to operate. Middlepon appeals
April16- Ponteroy began issuWOO&lt;II!lnd Centers IDe. is offering a series of four anger manageme~t
for volunteers to• help with pool ing p~king permits for spaces along
groups for Meigs County children; ages six to 12 years. 1he group wdl
repair.
ttie river side of the lot. Meigs De vel.
opment
Director Julia Houdashelt
be held 11. the Woodland CentcrsMeigs Clinic, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy,
March
27
Another
$100,000
in
unveiled
a "strategic plan for the late
on Wednesdays, from 5-8 p.m. bcigin'ning Wedoesday, Jan. 8. ·
state and federal aid was provided 1~ and beyond" for Meigs Coon~ ·
' The pririJary focus of the group
be to educate clu1dren on how to
Meigs County for repair o$ county ty at the commissioners' meeting .
deal with anger in appropt iate and effective w~ys. Conc~ntly, a par·
township roads damaged in e
April 17 - Southern · Local
.and
ents group will be held with em~•s on parenbng tech111ques related to
January
flooding.
School
District's building commiuee
what children will be leantinl in group.
·.
March28·
Joblessratein
'Meigs
voted
to
put the bond issue for
The service is funded in pert by the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Board of
dropped 1.6 percent. Meigs Board of scbool construction funds back on the
Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Me~tal Health Services and is being offered
Education drops plan to close Brad- baRot Aug. 6.
to participants without charge.
.
··
bury school.
April 18 - Recllnstru~tion of the
Those intereSted in the ttaining are asked to call992•2192.
·APRIL
.
Cross Mill, moved from Pomeroy to
April 2 - A crackown on those • Star Mill Park in Racine, nears com·
.. By The Auoclated Prell
p.m. and sunrise'Friday at 7:!13 a.m.
who fail to pay their parking meter pletion. The building was.originally
A Parkersburg, W.Va., man was cited for failure to yield by the Gal,
The unseasonably mild weather
Weather foncast:
·
fines and those who are delinquent on built by Lucius Cross in t836 near
lia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol following a three-vehicle crash
. will continue across Ohio until Sun· • . Tonight...Ciouily and continued
water bills was promised by Pomeroy Racine, was mov'l'lto Pomeroy in the
1itesday at the intersection of state routes 7 and 681 in Thppers Plains.
, day, when cooler air will start mov- · . .mild. Rain likely northeast with a
Village
Council.
1920's and is now back in Racine.
Troopers sald Harold R Sinnett, 52. was southbound on 7 at I :39 p.m.
ing jnto the state, forecasters said.
chanc~ of ratn elsewhere. Lows from
April
3
Patricia
Ingram,
April 1-9 - :Peoples Bank
when he turned left in front of a nqrthbound car ilriven by Londa K. Woen·
Highs on Friday and Saturday ..;u the m•d 40s northeast to 50 to ~5
Reedsville, while cleared·of conspir- announced plans to assume control of
man736, Mount Vernon.
· ·
·
be 45-55 the National Weather Ser- south.
ing
and panicipa:ting in the robbery the MeigsiGallia operation of Bank
Woertman's car struck the right rear of the Sinnett vehicle, forcing Sin·
vice
dut by the start of next
Friday...!=loudy. Highs 50 to 55
of
a
Coolville bank, entered a plea of One.
nett's vehicle into a pickup truck drlvel) by Gary W. Murphy, 51,
week, temperatures won't climb out nonh and central to 5.5 to 6Q.south.
guilty
to obstruciion of. justice,, was · April22- Tons ofrock from the
Reedsville. Murphy ·was stopped westbound on 681, according to.the
of the 30s in some parts of the state.
·Exlended forec:ast:
fined $1,500 and coun ·costs, and cliffs above West Main Street in
.
,
,
.
Dry air will follow passage of a
Saturda~... A chance of ram. Lows , report.
ordered to complete 80 hours of com- Pomeroy broke· loose and rolled to '
Damage
to
the
Sinnett
and
Woertman
vehtcl.
e
s
was
.moderate,
an!!
shght
weak cold front on Friday, but there 35 to 45. H1shs 45 to SO nol!h 81!~ .55
munity service.
.
·the ¢ge or the street. Traffic was limto Murphy's pickup, troopers said.
·
will be a chance of rain both Satur- to 60 south.
•
April 4 - Excavation work ~ot ited to one-way for several hours
day and Sunday.
Sunday.:.A chance of rain . .Lows
underway for the new boater parking while the rock was being rem!Wed.
.
The record,liigh temperature for from the m1d 30s nonh to lhe 1111d.40s
. April 23 - Middleport village ·
l?t near the Middlepon levee.
'this d•te at the Columbus weather south. Htghs 45 to 55.
: Apnl ~ -The Shade Post Offic~ . passed a resolution endorsing the
· station was 61 degrees in 1916 while
Monday...Dry but cooler. Lows 30
m operauon smce'·t~ late 1800s and . replacement and location of the
Road clOSed for repairs ·
·
the record low was 13 below ;z.en! in to 35 and h1ghs 35 to 45:
Zi.on Road in Rutland Township wiU be closed beginning today until fur- the last commumty full-sernce office Pomeroy-Mason Bridge at or near its
1879. Sunset
will be at S: 18
along U.S.. 33 . .fr~m Pomero.y to present site. ·
.
. ~ ooticUOi' emergency road work.
Athens.was scheduled to close m 90
April 29 - Judge Fred W. Crow
days. .
.
.
. . III commended by ·Supreme Coun
·u-educafAin
.
.
Apnl
8
F1fty-s1xth
annual
egg
.Chief Justice Thomas Moyer fnr.his
The CHOICE Home EdUcators' group wiD hold its monthly meeting Theshunt
m
M1ddlepon
attracted
over
500
work in the ·trial of one of &lt;the
day, 10 a.m. in the·.conference room at the public library in Pomeroy. For
children.
·Lucasville riot cases. ·
· more information call Tammy )ones at 992-6743.
Apri19- Middlepon was targetApril 30 - History buffs protest
ed for·a $600,000 Commumty Hou~- proposed gravel mining operation it! ·
"
· DaJice set
ing lmproveme~t Program gran~ t11e Ponland .contending t~at it will
Els~onh Salmons, 83, Hamden, died Thesday, Jan. 31, 1996 in the Jenk- - Around and scjwu;e dance will be held Saturday, 8 to II p.m. at the Tup- pool
reP,atr prOJeCt was tabled pend- destroy a ponion of the Civil War bat-·
ins Nursing Home, Wellston.
.
pers Plains VFW building. Out of. the Blue Band will _Play a~d Delver
'ing state approval of the plans, and tlefield. .
Born Oct. 21); 1913 in Martin County, Ky., he was the son ~fthe !at!' Ander- ~ichirds af Jacks,on will be t1!e caller. farol an~ T&lt;!m Wnston ~111 \'" spethe Meigs Junior Higlt School science
(c;,o ntlnues tomorrow)
... son and Ida Delong Salmons.
· 1•
ctal·pests.
. .
· . ·
· . .
•
· ·.
·
Surviving are his wife, Ainee Presley Salmons; a son, Donald (Carol)
Salmons of Racine;t'Wo'dililgllltn: Doris (DOn) Hanley o( Wellston, 8lld Alice ·. Literary Club tAl meet
·
. ,
Farley;o(, ~l!iw!is; sc;.ven gt:andchildren 1111d a gllll!·lfa~dqhJ!td t~o ~roth. The MidiiJe~, J,Ji~ &lt;;Jub will :meet WqlD!OsdaY· at 2 p.JII. in ·ihe
The following land transfers were L. Halley, Middlepon;
ers, Glenn Salmons of Columbus, and Emery Salmliiis of·FI
a; ano four Pomeroy LibratJ. Mn. Roy Holter will be hostess: '
·· .
· .
recorded
recently in the office of
Deed, Ernest E. and June L. Grif·
sisters, Zelia Mae Stevens of Wooster, Beatrice Law of Springfield, Lucy
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene fin to Roger Lee Griffin, OliYe tracts ~
. Perry of Columbus, and Helen Corsi_of Pomeroy.
Tnutees fAI meet
.
· Deed, Andrew Batey to Thomas
Services will be I p.m. Friday in the Mayhew Funeral Home, 135 BfoadThe Chester Thwnship Trustees organizational meeting will be held at 7 Hamilton:
Deed,
Tina
Slater
to
John
A.
and
Batey,
Katrina Lynch , Kimberly
way St., Jackson, with A.B. Maloy officiatjng. lluri~ will be irt the Ham- P·!R· Friday at town hall.
M.
Hawley,
Sutton,
10
acres;
Batey,
Randy
Osborne, ~ndrea King
Benha
·den Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral borne fr,&gt;m 2-4 and 6-8 p.m.
Deed,
James
F.
Hysell
to
James
F.
and
Love
Brites,
Salisbury, 4.5 acres;
today.
.
.
·
·
·
.,
.
·
Hysell and James Gerald Emerson,
· Deed, Corena . Farmer Gunio to
Rutland
parcels;'
Har.old
aitd Sherry Davis,,Rutland; .
POMEROY
Units of the Meigs County Enier- ·
Risht
of
way,
Oarencc
and
PegDeed,
Joyce A. Ervin to -!pck L·
9:40 a.m. Wednesday, Children's
. gelicy Medical Service recorded 19
gy
Owensby
to
Buckeye
Rural
ElecErvin,
Salem
parcels;
'
calls for assistance Tuesday and Home Road, Norma Mc.lnerney,
tric Cooperative, Columbia, 7.526
Deed, Paul Strauss to Paul Ncid~
.,
Wednesday. Units responding includ- VMH;
acres;
.
.
han
and Amy Braverman, Rutland;
3:51
p.m.
Wednesday,
Starcher
' By .MARK.EVANS
in 19 Washingtq~ counties, 17 Cali- ed:
.
Rightorway,RitchCoetoBREC,
Deed,
Dorothy M. and Alan
Road, James Pelligrino, HMC;
Aeloclltecl Preu Writer
·
fomia counties,, and four Oregon
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Columbia,
4
acres;
Wayne
Sheppard,
Julia E. Sheppa@
9:23 p.m. Wed_nesday, Kerr Street,
GUERNEVU..LE, Calif.- Rivers counties: '
,
.
. 10:46 a.'m. Tuesday, State Route 7,
Right of way, Randall Carl iutd to Gary and Donna Norris, C. Roget
swollen by melting.snow and pound· .:.Near Guerneville - a~t 70 ~rs Plains, Willie Grueser, Cam· Harry Garnes, VMH;
Kimberly
Wa~sley . to B}rnC, Bed· and Nancy Hubbard, Sutton parcels~
10:49
p.m.
Wednesday.
Condor
ing rain swamped roads, carried miles nonh of San Francisco - the den-Clark Memorial Hospital;
ford,
15.106
acres; ·
Deed, Marilyn J. Tenpenny· tq
away tree branches and shopping muddy Russian !j.ivenose by early
3:16 p.m. . Tuesday, College Street, Lisa Haggy, VMH.
Right of way, Gary A. and Lena Michael Darwin and Kimberly Sue
RUTLAND
carts. and forced hundreds of people Wednesday eve9ing to nearly 45 Avenue, Ted Hatfield, Holzer Med8 p.m. Tuesday, Hysell Ru.n Road, Basham to BR.I;C. Bedford, 37 acres;.· Reichen, Letart parcels;
·to leave soggy homes on wobbly feet, ·13 feel aboyF flood stage. As it ical Center;
Deed, Troy A. and Kathy J. Willis .
ground. .
.
' . . churned past the town, it carried !ree
S: 19 p,m. ',Tuesday, Nelson Road, Patricia Day, VMH; . ·. ·
to
William
Todd Nonon and Annie
3:08 a.m. Wedll'esday, Main
."It's a happy new year if you'"' a limbs, old tires, sljOpping cans, a beer Rohen Holiday, HMC; ·
Marie
Williams,
Salisbury/Pomeroy:
· duck," said Monterey, Calif., meteo- keg and bObbing propane tanks. ·
. ·11 :25 p.m. Tuesday, Mulberry Street, Alice Livingston, VMH .
Deed,
Wilma
M.
Hysell to Dwaine .
. SY~CUSE
· rologist.Dat&gt; Keirns.
. , ·
"It's like we're1standing here ,oa Avenue, Pomeroy, Marie Robinson,
II :39 p.m. Tuesday, Third Street;' .and Dorothy McDaniel. Village of
Fanher north in Washington and a ~ruise ship," ~~n We.instein tteated at the scene;
Rutland lot;
Oregon, record warmth swelled said from the Gu~f11Cv1lle Bndg~ as
12:ZO · a.m .. Wednesday, Race Margaret Cotterill, VMH.
· Deed. Albena .Dalton, .Aibena
rivers and created dangerous. mud- she watched the, ~aler surge JUSt Stree~ Middlepon, John Blake, VetTUPpERS PLAINS
Robenson
and C.letis Dalton to Kay
·, slides, ·although forecasters said the beneath her feet. , ~ •
1:41 a.m. Wednesday, SR 7 ·at
erans Memorial Hospital;
worst or the storms that battered the
8:34 a.m. Wci6nesday,. Gwiilnie Tuppers Plains, Herman Carson, McDaniel, Scipio lots; ·
· Deed, Imperial Electric Co. to
CCMH;
· . . ••
Nonhwest for a week was over.
White, HMC;
New
Imperial Electric Co., Middle- ·
Fourteen deaths have been blamed
10:58 a.m. WednesdBy,' Julia
. fo: II a.m. Wednesday, SR 7,
_
pon:
·
·
·
on the storms in Oregon and Wash- ·
1itppers Plains, Florence Canwright, McCoj)pin, CCMH.
Deed,
Clharles
R.
and
Robena.E.
ington since Christmas.
.
In atlllltlon tAl~ 16 metcbaall O'Bieness Memorial Hospital; .
Dillto,.Charles A. Ritchie, Salisbury,
Flood warnings remained in effect
1:28 p.m. Wednesday, Overbrook
oriaJnally
~
•Jioason
IJ acres;
.
.
t.oday- for dozens of rio;ers, and offi- ollbe "F1nl Baby oll!l97" to~~le:lt, . Nursing Center, Middlepon, Fred
Deed,
Earl
E.
and
Katheryn W.
cials declared stlltes of emergencies lbere are two olllen. They are 1be Bias, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
(Continued from Page 1)
Knight
to
Marilyn
Sue
and Rolland
8:51 p.m. Wednesday, Main , the loss of funding to education and
P-roy F1ower Shop of Pomeroy ·
Stree~ Rutland, Richie ·Biamauer, local government would have to be
whole lift 1!1 the flrlt 'baby wW be
HMC;
· addressed," he added.
a flower 8JT1111iemetit, and Bul:t:!'tu
COLONY TH EAT RE
,(USPS 313-961)
II:
10
p.m.
Wednesday,
SR
7
near
·Eco~omic incentives the state
and BoWl, Pomeroy, a $Ill lift cer·
TONIGHT
Middlepon, John Ord: VM)I.
· pffers arc "a drop in the bucket" comPubli~htd· every af'lernoqn. Monday dlroush
tilkale.
'
SYLVESTER STAJ.l.ONE IN
Frida)'. Ill Coun St. Pomeroy. Ohio, by·lhr
••
.
pared to repeal.of the personal propDAYLIGHT PG-13
Otlio·'YIIIe'y Publi~inJ Co~yiOanttn Co .• .
Po.....,, Ohio 4l769, Ph. 992\'2 136. ·S.C.nd
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30 ·
n·
eny tax. the legislator said, but "our
area camioi afford to lose any jobs or
""'' f&gt;OS"F paid 01 l'onlrn&gt;y. Ohlo.
. STARnNG FlitDAY
.
,jl
.
Veiera111
Memorial
the
means
it
has
to
foster
economic
ARNOLD
SCHwARZENEGGER,
Mrmbtr: The AJSocialed Pn:S!I. and the Ohio
Am Ele .Power ....,••
SINBADtN
development," . .
"Newspaper Aa,Gci1~n.
•
Akzo ........................ ~ .•. ~ ........•67'
Thesday admissions - none..
As a result; Carey said he would
JINGLE
ALL
THE WAY PG
Aahland 011 ...........................43~
POSf:WASTIR: Send addreu ~tdon~ to
Tuesday discharges - none.
· 1 · ·h
ONE
EVENING
SHOW 7:30
Wed
sd
ad
·
·
Kathcontinue
focusing
on
leg1s
auon
t
at
The Daily Sentinel. Ill Court St. Pomtroy,
AT&amp;T ................................- ..•41~
155 0
Ohio 4!7~. 1.
ne
ay
mR
~
.'!sdL
would
in
pan
offer
incentives
and
Ul
11123
Blnk One ................·: .............42~
leen VanMeter, ut1 an ; aura (j
I
· ·
th
Oh' Th
Bob
Evan1 .........................:....1S'Arnold Middl n. -·
,
deve opment m sou em . 10. e
SUISCRIPTION RATES
~WI,.,.. .........................38~
By C.rriH,. Motor R.tt
..,...; sda epod' h • .:..
revolvmg loan P.rogram for mdustnOne Wiek ..................................................$2.00'
Chlmplora .:............ t••••J. ••••••• -23~
ncune
y tsc.- 15es- none.
-·""•
• · h d' t'
Holzer Medical Center
al "l"
~ ~as a move tnt at tree ton,
One Moncb .............................,. ........... ..,.... $8.10
ChanninG ~ ....;.,.............4~
Ono YCIIr ............,...... :.:...............,.. ...... $1()1.00
DIKhai'Jei Dee. 31 - Wesley he ~xplatne~.
,. .
·
CitY Holcllng .. ,;.,..........
.25'l.
1.~ •.••••••• .21\
Federil
Mogul
••••••••
-!..
Bryant, Alii;!;.Campbell, Mrs. David
"In the past. econom1c d~velop­
.
'
SINGLI CoPY PRicE
Qannett ••••••;...............~•••••;••••n~
l&gt;aily ..........................;........... :............. 3!1 Cenb
Miller and dilughter, Eliza Woods, . ment effons .have been hmdered
Qooctyeer .....................·•••••••••150~
Evelyn Miller.
.
because counu~s wer~ not prepared •
SublcribeNi no1 de•irint 10 pay lhe tonier may
K-rntrt .....;•••.••..•.••••• -) .............1:(
·
Birth
~rtmitln advOn« 'd irtctiO The Dally Senlirtcl
Mr.
and
l'Xfs.
George
to
meet. the ~mmed1~te n~eds of
LMda Encl ...............................
dn alhree. ~b. 01" 12 month bcW-. Credir will be
C()nnolly
son
Racine.
prospecuve
bus1nesses, Carey noted.
Umlt8d .................................. 11:.
ai vcn c...ter each week.
DIK" '.,..; Jaa, 1 - Judy Dun- "Many times, counties I ropresent in
Ohio VJIIey BMic...: ••••••••••••••~
No 11ubscriplioa by mail pctmitttd In Dretl
o.,. Yllley ...............................37
fee, \.~let Altman.
· the 94th District have not be~n con.
.
. .
where home carrier r.ervlcc 11 av.ilable.
PeG~ ...:..................;..........21~
.
Birth
.!...
Mr.
an..:
Mm
Lance
sidered by industries or developers
Prellt Fln1 ...............................14\:
Publisher rtstrves the riahtiO odj.w rMeS dur·
beciiUIC~flhe · !ack of adequately prcRo c·kwsll ...............................51\ ·Myers, daughter, Pedro. ·
lliJ die '"bocription pcri.od. Sollo&lt;rtplion Ill&lt;
(Pllilllabed w111t pemlilllon)
, pared sttes w1th water, se~r and
RD-Ihlll .............;•...•••• .,...........17r/1.

. Mild wea~he~ e~pected
.tQ extend ·u ntil Sunday

..
Mod,est resol,ut•on prop'osals for -1997
··:.·

The o.Jiy Sanllnel• Page 3

will

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Anger management groups offered

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. Local .News in Brief:

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Pomeroy •lllddllpod, Ohio .

OHIO Weath1·r
Friday, JIIIL 3

.

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Thui11day, J.m-y 2, 1117
•

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:=
................

road acce~s."

Shoney'e ""'""..............,.......

liar link .....~ ........................
w..c~r··

~-··:..··._
..·····"'l"'"' .....11\:
atook raporle 1ra· the 10:30
e.m. CJU01a1 provided 11y Advwll
Of Olllllpolll. .
' ...

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•

But this is changing as all of the
in the 94th have such projects underway, he said.
· · · ..
· Ground v;as broken last year on
Gallia COI!nty's fint industrial park
near Bidwell, and on the Great Bend
itKiustriRI park site in Meigs County.
~ounties

Mack Sennett, a protege of movie
piopeer D.W. Griffith, directed the
first of the Keystone Kops shorts in
1912 - one of the .500 shoi1s Sennett made between 1912 .and 1917.
•

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VICTORIAN PARLOR.
.
2401. Main

•

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992-1914

.

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811M Ftlhlr OWner

I

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Sports ,

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In the la,.t college bowl~gsmes,

-

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··

·'

•r

c
BOWL SCENES
~n the upper photo,
celebration
time
. arrives . for
Ohio
. State's David Boiton
(9 hldd•n by football
he gives to official at
. far left) and teammate
Dlmltrlous Stanley {3)
·· after ··Boston's catch
of Joe Germaln~·s
touchdown pass Jn
the final minute of the
Rose Bowl Wednesday night against Arizona State.in Pasadena, Calif, where . the .
Buckeyes' 20-17 win •
was their first since •
1974 • . In the lower
photo, North Carolina ;
cornerback . Ore Bly
(31) heads upfleld
.. during an Interception '
return In front of · an
unl(:lentified West Vir~
. :· · ginla receiver during
-.;,t.
the Gator Bowl in
l&gt;~'
Jacksonville,
Fla.,
where. North Carolina
won 20-13 and handed the Mountaineers
their sixth straight
post:season efeat._· .
(AP j)hotosy.... '-'j ,) "'"*' · •·
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,.-

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YOUR

-·-·

men's scores

•

Wednadoy'o toumoments

.

!fports deadlines
• Th G' ll I D
,;' e fJ ipo is ai/y Tribune,
Tile
_. Dailv
S ' Senrinel and
' the Sunda\'·
_,..,. u.nre•- enrinel value the~contti.bJJ- .
•
.... .
.
. lo~s . l,..,or readers make to the spons ,
sections of these papers, and they
wlll continue to be published.
: However, cenain :deadlines for
S14lmissions
willlje observed.
,
.
lbed:jldline(orpbocouadre
c¢ilnid~ for football and other fa •
Slf"S is the Slllurday · before the
,. S~r Bowl. .
~, , . ·
. ' 1be deldline for pltolos alid relal•
e&amp; artic:lel for .basketball (summer
&amp;..!.L-baJ(
.. and -(•••"
'"'J
~
ni _,...u camps ...
-r ,........ "--""lo'ne)
•
_.::: ..,j.,""' r-:' -the""""( -'-·
...,_ W lllif ~pons II
. asluay

....... - -dp· ..

Thlnl- . .

.

Dcnuit ................ 20 ll 6 46 II~ 7K
Pbocnix ....... : .... ,. 1717 4 lit 10~ 120
St.-Louio_
............ I720 2 _16 111 12Y
ChkDIO .............. I! 20 6. ~6 101 I
T-o .............. l7 22 o ~· i§' 1. ~

, BowlinJ&lt;.in:ft~ll. ilkbruk.uS!I

P

Plftll .,... ·
Old Do,nlniOft 71, Miuinippl So ..71

tCJT)

.
lltv......... ~
Fre•noSo. tll.SEMb...,ri 77
,

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Colfeae bowl' action ·
'

Tueoday'a -

. . . . . ., '
...,.. ine

of,the NBA finals:

.or submissiOIIa of .
IIJICI soMoaJI-ratar.cl .
aad relaled -'-'-,from T• """"'
10 the ~011. 11 weD 11 OCher
bell!*~-

.

~and-~iltheda)'
f"'·""-'-'•--'......,.....0...
f kL:I....

0. . _.....,0,'J'bae

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dttltlfilll f t

10

' ......,
:"tf'~~:=~ton~
&lt;~ 'lludl
. Oi'daveLuo&amp;r of
..,,...

cJIOlCie and

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, . ..
- ....... ~'I
41, Viipti ,_ •
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o
Cllrw"-'-

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CoipryiiC-9p,.,

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staffs the
dr'=*
IO
-•hljJli there i•-•t'n •'-·
l'loflljjjStlltUI.O)n: l'lo&lt;ktoo·UI. - r_,.. "'"'
IU RJI. (AIC)
~ lfiFGIII for~ spQrtl' ' .__ _,
fO

p.m.N:v .. • N.Y. Jlulm, 7:JO
.PIPi•lllt'..ri&gt;••NewJonoy, 7::10p.ot
......, ... ~s:Jbp.oo.

Nol1lt Cnlloa 10. W• Vifllnlall

T...,_41.Nwllt

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~="::~"'J:.':":~~P~
Pridu'i...-

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RUSSET ·
POTATOES.

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PT. PLEASANT,
W.V ·
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-992-21.56' .

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'!'"'·_...,___.,._"'!"'__..-__.,_._I\OII_oo.;.t.
. : JO•'•'m•...-_oil

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POMEROY-t$.)~1$PORT·

.·

St. Loollotllokrtlo.7:.10p....
Newltnoy110nttwa.1:l0p.m.
awltllll...,. 7:.10p.m. ·
A. . .m.,,.....llo)', 7:lDR:m. .
Dollllll Doln&gt;io, 7::10 p.oa.
·

.~

'HEAD
LETTUCE

•

675-1333

,,~,_..... ._

Young·tabbed .to face
Packers with hurt ribs

'•

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446-2342·

,·

·Favre seeks ~even-year contract extension ..

j

GALUP()LIS·

.
w
Ottawa 3, Boston 2; and Montreal6,
Dallas 4.
Mighty Ducks 3, Panlbers 0 '",
Guy He ben slopped 28 shots for ·::
his 13th career shutout and founh
Ibis season as the Mighty Ducks reg-' ...
istered their first victory over the "
Panthers. Dn\itri Mirolll)v scored a ;-,
goal and assisted on anomer and Paul
Kariya had two assists for the visit- .
ing Mighty Ducks. Florida,, which ::
has scored only IWO goals in three ":
games, had been 8-0-3 against lhe -~
West.
a-·
·
'"
Senators 3, Bruins 2 ·
. Ouawa beat the .visiting Bruins
for the first time since rejoining the · ·
NHL)n 1992, a span of 22 games. ~·
Alexander Daigle's goal late in the ".
second period broke a ~-2 tie. Boston -~
played withou! stoning goaltender :
Bill Ranford; one of ·eight Bruins
who sat out the game with various
. . .
'"
onJunes.
Canadlens 6, Stan 4 ·
Patrice Brisbois' goal snapped a :•:
4-4 lie with 10 minutes to play ani! .
the Canadiens extended their road ··~
unbeaten streak to sjx games (3-a-3). · ~:
Joe Nieuwendyk scored two goals in ,...
a I :45 span early in the third period ,
as the Stars took a 4-3 lead only to 0
lose for the founh time in five ,
games.

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~yars p~ays role·of Bettis .

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.- Toaipt's pme11

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l~TIMES

· -•Hottranl.7p.m. '

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M.,.NIII6. Dollu 4

11 ,1, _
A....,.I7. Michliool4

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from three-point range in the cham- ~
pionship game.
·•
• "That's yery important." Fortson :
said of the long-range success by -:
Burton. "That opens everything up
for us inside and just gets everythi ng .~
going." ·
The loss by the Bears (10-1) left ·
five unbeaten teams - ·Kansas, ·•
Wake Forest. Iowa State, Xavier and ·.~ ·
Oregon .
.,
. "This was a hard' game," South- ,
west Missouri Stale coach Steve "
Alford said. "But either we find ,
excuses. fo~ '!"' loss or we take the .~
lesson that II, IS really very hanl lo be '
a good team.'" .
'"
.Danny Moore had 13 points and ·:
Ben Kandlbinder ·added II for ..
Southwest Misso~ri State, which
shot 37 percent (24-of-65). ·
.
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Celtlcs call first road win
'a matter of·tlme;,in coming

·..

s.. J010 5, Colpy I
Colotlldo •·Chl&lt;~p '
W.·,-Aiil'lorldOI
- cu Ia•'•....._·
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_ ...., _
·A•oheft~~l
o
,Ootio¥•
l, ~ 2. '
.
Wllhloi'PO
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So..ronl18,
!llclolpnS..,.O
11114:~ EIIJI&amp;j ao.•, . . .,_ . . . . _.
'A•.12, "'"'y29

12A
123
118
111
Ill
o29

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Konowalc~uk was attempting a
By DAVID GINSBURG
ranks second on lhe Capitals with 26
pass to Dale Hunter from
centering
LANDOVER, Md. (AP) -The points and leads· the team with six
behind
the
net, but the puck bounced
Washington Capitals paid a hefty JXlWer-play·goals.
··
·
prii:e for a much-needed ~ctory.
His injury took away much of the off the pads of prone goaltender .
·The Capitals, coming off their satisfaction from a decision that Jason Muzzaui and intQ the net: "It 'looked like he was turned
worst month of hockey in more than gave Washington half as many wins
around
and it hit the front of his pad
17 years, staried Januar)' by beating as il had in all of December. Steve
......... .. ,...
and
just
went into the nel," ··
· BAlli ,;,_ .Cinctnn.te• Mllvln a..v.tt hlnp from 11M rim Itt. hll lhe Hanford Whalers 3-2 Wednes- Konowalchlik scored wilh I :59 Jeft
du!lk In trqnt ~ .. . hJitiln 111, Including Radrk:k Ma!wot (44), dur-. day. The victory was .empered by an in overtime as the Capitals deah the . Konowalchuk said. "I was trying ~o
lng 11M Hoi~ CIMaJci clllmplcllllhlp pme lglinlt ~Mil- . injury to Joe Juneau, who will miss . Whalers their fifth straight road loss throw il to Huntsy,-who was coming
· IDUrf Sfn.WiidilttdiY l)lght In llayliman, PUIIta Rico, where' 11M I0 days to IWo weeks after laking a : and first defeat 'in nine overtime in. The goalie bbx;ked it and I got,a
Na. 8 Beii'ClltS - ·tot-eo. (AP) --.._
vicious slash from Keith Primeau. -.:y games Ibis season. ·
• · · · good bounce there-. "
Said Muzzatti:'' "It was a .fluke.
After )uneau took down Primeau - · the .Capitals went . 2-9-2 in
•
with a check behind the net midway Dece . ·. , e.ir worst month since There were abunch of bodies flying
through the third period, Primeau November I
· In an effort 10 tum all over; it was weird."
The Capitals improved to 1-2-3 in
drove his slick into Juneau's shout- things around,
Jim Schoenfeid
overtime,
while Hartford fell to 2-1 der blade. The Capilals center irnme- gathered the team 1 ther for a disBy JI.-Y'\oLEN .. '
a nuiitcr of lime,·• iii said; noting that diately dropped lo the ice and cussion that had nothing to do·with 6. "I thought we did an outstanding
·
·wALniAM, Mass. (AP) - Oiv• there ·had been close · call&amp;· against remained there for several minutes New Year's resolutions..
job. It's a bank shot from behiqd the ·
before
being
helped
off.
"We
talked
about
December
en,the choice of retltlliing to Boston. Mfami, Washiagton aM JndianL ·
·The injury was diagnosed as a being gone," said Peter Bondra, net, a Iough one," Hanford coach
for 11 day er flyina djrectly front~ · "But the road record should be bet·severe hematoma of the left shoulder. who scored two goals againstl;latt- Paul Maurice said. "&lt;j)':'erall, if we
·ver to Detroit. CcJiics cosob M.L. te~ than it is." · ,, ..
get these kind of efforts on the .
Carr op.ed to have a practice sessiOn 1 After,. hi!lin8 the _..-ne-winner, lt's lhc second lime Jl!neau has been ford. "ll's funny and it's kind-of a .can
road
against a learn thal'likes to play
al home . before hitting the .road Fo11 gave his shoes away to a sou- injured this season; the Capitals relief. You're looking forward to Jana
physical
game, we'll be fine. :•
·
again. .
venir-seeking.fan and had to borrow were 3~S-{)· after h~ went out with a uary as 1\eing a new season."
Down
2-{),
tile Whalers used a '
Bondra didn't say m~ch . a! the
And who could blame him, the a pair from Gre1 Mino~ 10 keep his pull~ hamstring~ Nov. ~2. ·
wwer-play goal by Steven Rice and
Primeau was gtven a maJOr penal- meeting. He didn 't .have to.
.way things . have gone l!lhtn he feet warm.
' . .
1
shorthanded score by Curtis
. "The coach was then: to say a lot
leaves Boston. '
·
·He was still shoeless on Wedncs- ly and a game misconduct.
Leschyshyn
10 pull even late in the .
"[ ·sot hauled down. I instinc- . of stuff, and of coui'SC a lot nf guys
•The Celtic$ lost )heir first 12 road day as he walked out to the pn~:lice
second period. Hartford then killed
games this season before M!lndaY coun, joking with reponers that he lively swung my stick and unfortu- · agreed," Bondra said, grinning.
ttie five-minute penally against
nately
!caught
him
on
the
shoulder,"·
"It
was
a
great
way
to~
'97,"
night's victory over the Nuggets. The. would play lhal way if he-had. to.
Primeau
in the third period 10 tern- '
Primeau
said.
"The
referee
saw
il
as
Schoenfeld
said.
"One
win
doesn't'
victory snapped a seven-game ovor·"Anything we did in '96, !'in
porarily
preserve
the tie.
mean .we're completely out of the
all losing streak and ended Bos.ton 's going to do !fjlferently," he said. ~­ a real bad play."
·
In
other
NHb
games
on Wednes-·
Juneau, who missed only 16 wouds, but ovenime wins are always
reign as the only' team.in the NBA er, while talking about bow the ·
.
day,.it was: Aqaheim 3, Florida 0;
-vithout a win on )he road. .
Cehi~;s can improve in the coming .sames in his previous four'seasons. great to have." .
Of,.coursc. t~e Cehics aren't year, he walked over to a door alld In the Green BiJy Packers' camp, · .
' '
to
exactly burning up the riets 11 borne, knocked on wood.
a&amp; their conference-.worat ~ 6-2-1 •·
Cur isn't quite so superstitiouS.
""
record,attests.
and he doesn't-make New Yeat's res-,.
"lt's.nol even a reason to cele- olulions. Even if he did, though, he
struggle to play golf or play with my cisco 49ers on Saturday, said he - win itlhis y,ear I will be back ne~l :~
bratc;" forwanl Rick Fox, wllo hit a doesn't think tie needs to change By ARNIE STAPLETON
. GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) - Brett . kids ·and hun to gel up ·rn lhc morn- enjoys the spoilsof success ''but all year. lfl don't winitnext year I wi ll '"~·
buzzet-beaterto provide the 104-102 much in the way he has been trying
F.avre is seeking a seven-year con- ing, kind of like I do now," Favre ofasuddenapanofyourli(edies." be back until this old body won't
vic lory over the Nuggets. said to reinvigorate· the once-proud fran. ''
. "It's Iough to take my daughter hold up,"··Favre said.
tract extension, even though he's not said.
. Wednesday before practice at Bran- - chise. oullo
eat,
my
family
out
to
eat
or
go
"Bull
would
like
to
win
a
cou" 1'
Favre
has
had
to
make
dp
with
deis t)niversity. ·
There may bi: trades. '!Jiere may . sure he'll play that long.
The Green Bay Packers star qu&amp;r- Motrin and Tyl~nol this season to a movie without football being · PI~· and then walk out on my own .n ·
"It's like a load is lifted off our be linkering.with' lineups and play- •
terback told a Mississippi TV crew because of his addiction to Vicodin, broughtuporsomeoneaskingforan terms. I don't ever want a team to ·
backs, a litlli: bit of the weiahl ing lime. But, despite the Ccltics'
which landed him in a drug rehab autograph or something like lhal," he have lo ask me to leave, ask me to·::
rCJIIoved." he sajd. "Just a liUie bil, troubles sq_ far, Carr still believes.hi~ • Ibis week he didn't know how long center last summer.
said.
take a pay cut. 'I want 10 go out on : ~ ' .
· he'd keep playing if he won a Super
though. You still need to accumulate program is on its wal hack.
''llovo to play football, I ·really · . "And .I love the people here in my own tenns and I would love io go '" ·
success."
,"We're still buikbns for the long- Bowl. The comment. was part of an do. I hate'practice; I hate meetings. · Green·Bay. llqve'the people back at out ~ a Green Bay Packer. When "'
interview regarding his second
Even the odways-optimistic CiuT ruri. I won't lose siahtofit," he ~d.
It's a long sellSon, I hale preseason. home, the fans across lhe nation. I · thai will be'! Who knows? But, ·••
straight
MVP award.
" .
conceded that, a 1-12 ro'a.d record is "I won't set my goals anything short'
And when he returned to frigid But llov~ to play games. And I could citn'l blame them one bitl(lwas in that's basically w~at I was saying." ·nothing to brag a1J9u1. •
cif it."
Favre doesn't have to worry about " •
Lam beau.Field from his golf vaca- p'ay them every si~gle day," Favre their shoes and I saw a player or if!
"Obviously, y~ ~new it was just
saw
Oprah
Winfrey
walking
down
the
Packers asking him,lo take a pay·' .;
tion in sunny Kiln, Miss., Favre said. "And, the demands on my life .thi: street, or Garth Brooks or Vince cut; they're preparing 11o give him a ~: ·
caught plenty 9f heat frort( coach the last couple of years had increased
0111~ I'd go up.and want'to say some- ·. big raise.
"' ·
immensely, wilh good reason."
Mike Holmgren.
thing 10 t~em, " Fa_vre acknowlLaSt monlh,lhc Packers re-signed ··:
Favre,
preparing
10
start
his
85th
"I really didn't me"' anything by
edged.
\ .
defensive end Reggie White to a ""
it, other than it's preuy simple: I consecutive game in an NFC divi"But
that's
basically
what!
was
five-year, $19 million deal aml' ''" ·.
don't wani to be 35 years old and sional playoff against the San Friosaying.
I'm
not
putting
a
lime
frame
immediately shifted their focus on ""
.
~y HOW~D ULMAN · .
' _and iniqed practice · YfC!Jnesd~y. In the San Francisco 49ers' camp) .
on liow long I want to play. I would Favre. ·
;
,
· .;;::
FO,l«&lt;ORO. Mass. (AP)- The WiihOut him, the . Steelets would
love
to
win
a
Super
Bowl.
If
I
don't
(See
F~fl!
on
Page
6)
'
kid frorn Detroit'i McKenzie High have to rely on the fourth least p~ ·
School sot:t~ !lfl playing running ductive ~siPI offense in the NFL.
~k .from Keith Byars: Nq'!";JI~ars
With911t Byars, n()lt{ 33, Bettis
: 1~ tryong to Ji!:lp slop ,hom, . ·, _.,. . .. might··not have learned so much so
.. The kid grew ·up 10 become 5- · 'early.
•
·,
foot- II , 243-pound Jerome Bettis, a
"Keith was .my mentor growing
back home, and then leave tonight
~tar running back for the Pittsburgh up," said Bettis, 24: "He was the guy 8y DENNIS GEORGATOS
who pretty ml!ch,coached me."
' TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) - Steve fo~ Green Bay.
.
Steele!'S. .
•
- nd
s
Pho'ladelpho'a 0 L--- Byars, who Young still expects 10 start SaturSeifert spid Youllg probably
25
Byars. llated at 6• 1 a
'"""'wt' th the lOth day's NfC divisional playoff. the wou Jd' n•I Iake pan on
· Iod ay ' s work·
played at Oho'o s•••e,·
I
f
B
he
nnunds.
is
pla~!ng
1
toe
o
ettos
·
·
"
,...
·
·
poe
' c of the
' ' 1986 dra't
Rams, question is whether his bruised ribs out, meamng ooung has had vo·nua 1- ·
1' . .,..._
in New England Palnots
pmcloces
..
""'
1y no practoce
· sonce
· hunong
· h'os n'bs.·
· ·•
de
then 1·0 Los Angeles'·, chose.' Be' tto'• will allow him to finish. .
HEAD
• 'this week. giving lliede.ense l!ll i a •mm No•- o·- o'th the lOth po'ck•
· runmng
· •oor a touc hdown on
·
For the first lime, San Francisco whole
of w¥t it will face in Sunday'.s sec11
u~
-··
·
·n
1""3. B
. othplayersareintheirfirsl
coachGeorgeSeifenbroughtuplhe 1ast Sun daY•s 14-0 wo'ld-cani won
77
. ond-. .nd NFL pIayoff game agaonsl 1season.
• 'I'
Phil
ad
1
h'
with their current teams. .
possobt 11y that backup Elvis Grbac over
e P oa, ·
the.~:~~ tlin a camp that he used .
Bettis· ruslled for just 637 yards could be pressed into duty in relief ·
"I don't know if it's a gOfld idea
••ason
a'ler
ga·
o
'
ning
more
than
of
the
sore-ribbed
Young.
lo
inject
him again (just for pr&amp;ctlce).
11
he last B
to• go.to in Detroit."
says
yars,
I
•
d
I'
·
.. wo'th the doctor.
· ·
•
k H I'
.1,000 1·n each of ho's fi~·ttwo years·· .
Young receove l,hree.· shots
m gomg to vosol
Patriot&amp;'
startina
fullbac
.
"
e
os•
•
"'ed
·
ad
ha
h'
·
h
- ~ned ~ell~" · . ~·.
.
'Then St. Louis U'llded 'him for two · "' .nesday .to block. I~ pam fr_om I'm re y to ve om JUst get t e
·
h h
draft p'ocks. . .
· . . · • · lhe achong rtbs and got m 9nly hm- 'injection~. game day · and play,"
- when y6u'relosing. ot,..
· .... pracllce.
' · 1t m;g
· hI be the only 'Seifen sao'd . ·•'".ou'd l'k
' quar. •.Aff~r lh~~ seiiSons wit .t e
1 e your
"Sometimes
:Ram~,', Bettis wo5 lraded lo Potts- .
look' ~
t .. workhegetsbefore.the49ers(13-4) terbacktopract!ce.Atthesamclime,
-.lilirgltand finished second this sea- peop1e are
ong or scopegoa s,
play at Green Bay (13-3), 'the top he's played a lot of football, watched
son i~ AFC rushing wilh a career- B)'ars said: "He wu a S&lt;;apeJoal bu~ .seed -in the NFC playoffs.
·
practice. watched film, and if then::s·
SOLL,
. .
.
high 1;431 yanls, He ron . for 102 ' as you can see. he wasn'qhc probr
-._ yanls and fwo touchdowns in last . lem. They're still losing in St. . As he has all week, Grbac look a prQblem, Elvis has had a lot o
·
d'
Louo·s."
lhe bulk of !l!e practice snaps while · practice."
1
·
un x's 42 - 14. wm over 1n 1"
· 1 the 1· k
v
· · sed all or parts· of
S
1.:.... on
ana""li•
,
Anc! J'ittsburgh has • chjtnce to 80 ,oung ·1roo
oc er room
.oung mos
......, ·
· ed
· · bl r
to 1·15 ••cond conse
· cuto·ve Super tlfi'et 'times to receive- the pain- ·eight games due to two concussions
· stram
· earl'oer th'os season.
Bellis
· e .or Bowl.
·
killing shots from team physician Dr. md a grotn
· is hst as'thquesuona
~S::u:;nd~~~Y;_;'s:;;·g:;a:;:m;:e;.w:,•:::,·;•.;&amp;!;,;ro;;;m:;.;:;;;;;;;:.....;;;;;.;;,;;.....~==~---, Bob Millan!.
'
He said the three shots of novocaine
Young, officially listed as ques- were minimal treatment and that he
tionable, touk a handful of snaps and would probably neec\ more than lhal
threw a little on the side as the 49ers on game ~Ycompleted thei.[' Jut full practice
• "We want to do the . minimum
· before their, remaich with Green . right now. We're checking on the
Bay, the team that knocked San location so you get. spots that are
I
Francisco out of the playoffs last injured, so your throwing motion is
year.
. ,
uninhibited," sald Young, who also
"He. wasn't thro'Win1 100 per- woruheavyflakjacketwhileonthe
'
cent.
thai's for sure," 5eifert said. pn~:lice foeld and will do so in the
.
.
"He threw some 1ood balls. I don't game. "lbday waakindoftheeq~erlhal he tot u much work as I imenlal day. ToWards the end, I thinlt .
.
.
thoupll he would, but it wasn't dra- we got 111011 of ,it and I wu able to .
lllllically leu llld our feelinl il he'll throw decently."
·
.
.
·'.or~* il S-3 u a starttr over the
.llill be the startin1 quarterback on
111111!1 day.''
, Jaawo yem In place ofYouna. 0.
•
1be
49en
will
haw
a
liaht
Work,~ -of m-IOIIIOS cama iast ~ 14 11'
'
•
out today 11.1he Arizona Cardinals' · Oieen BaJ, wheo the l'lt;kon ll8IIIC
lrliniq facilftiCII, ~they mo~ · back from a 17,6 halftime defieillo
this ~ stormy ~ Ileal the 4~ 23-'00 ill overdme .
1

~

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to :prepare Pats for Steeler~ -

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Buffalo6, New~

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01\4.:1Jm0u 101 . SW"Miaourl S1. M) ,

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Caps edge Whalers·3-2 in overtime

.

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SS GE!.

.

WESTEllN CONFERENCE

,

,.

..

·

were in the pmeuon."
, when asked whY the Bearcats looked
Fortson had 24 points and 10 quicker and onore aggressive than
reboUDds as the Bearcats (8-2) they had recently.
looked very impressive in Wedaes"ll's bot down here so we're
day's only game involvinl a ranked loose. It's not like in Cincinnati in the ·
cold," he said.
ICalll.
Cincinnati used a 14-0 run- on the
· Coach Bob H!!ggins also ~redilway to aSI-24 halftime lead and fin- edthepost-Chrisbnastripwilhhelpished with a 64-27 rebound advan- . ing lhc team.
tage - ·30-11 on the offensive end.
:·Being together this long helps us
The Bearcats also shot 49 percept get closer: and we needed thai. We
(38:of-77) fromthe field.
are playing good basketball and we..
. ."Everybody's. contributing. ·and just need to keep doing the simple
that's an important thing," Fortson things that give·us wins," he said. "I
s&amp;id. '.' If we gel the bench playing the don't really care if we' re in lhe top ·
way the starling five has been, we 10, six, or higher. ljust want to win."
can be a pretty good team. · . •
Bob Brannen had 13 points and
" I.think today we weie so effec-. 12 rebounds for the Bearcals, while
live because we pressured them pret- Darnell Bunon and D'Juan Baker
,
.·.
ty hard, and that helped us set the each had 12 points.
' . Burtpn had been .struggling with
pace."
Fortson referred to· the. locale his shooting, but he was 4-for-10

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Scoreboard

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP)Two arty Jo,..ea - oven if they
- o f the qutity Vlriety - ate too
many foraleiJDihllwas ~No.
l in the preselllorl polt
~ybe that's why Cincinna&amp;i, the
Jll ! seesm~ Nol l which lost to Xavier
of Ohio and Kansas, has felt like it
has to co11vince people everythiJlg is
OK.
.
. .
. The sixth-ranked Bearcats look
another sttp Wednesday 10 erasing
any further doubts wilha 101-60victory over previously unbeaten Soud)west Missouri State in the championship game of the inaugual Puerto
Rico Holiday Classic.
"We're starting to come along.
We're doing the things we didn 'I,"
said 6-foilt-7 junior forwanl Danny
FortJon, " the tournament J.tVP.
"We're finally
. . back to where we

HoW.nfZ7, s-~~~ena 24 . remaining. to boOst Howard over
At Atlanta, Jason Decuir kicked Southem: Howud (9-2) capped its
the ti~ng foeld goal and Curtis best season since 1993, while SouthJones made 1 game-saving intercep- · em (7-4~ lost its firs! !Jeritage Bowl
__.,,
lion at the gQalline with 42 seconds in three trips. •

with 1:16Ieft by Michigan (8-4).
ing. Kansas Swc (9-3), IWice con- .
N~. I~ Vqinia Tec:h (10-2) lost
Alabama averaged 10 victories a verted on fourth down in a final dri- despite Jtm Druckenmiller's lhrcc
Ohio Slate's long .game-winning
drive in the Rose Bowl quickly end- season in seven years under ve to the BYU 12, but Omarr Mor- - tQUChclown _~ uid Ken Oxen· ·
ed the JIOSSibilicy of arguments over Stallings, who had a 70-16-1 record · gan in•.....,.nted Brian Kavan•"" al dine's 210 total yards.
_ Herltqe Bowl
"Who's No. t'?"
there, including the 1992 national
lhe ~;[th SS seconds 10 p~y.
The founh-ranked Buckeyes chanipionship, 8nd a 97-61-2 mark
Sarkisiln was ,21-of-36 for 291
icoml with 19 seconds left Wednes- overall in 14 coUege seasons.
yards and IWo touchdowns. He lied
day night ~ tJe.al No.2 :""7;0na Sla1e
In other New Year's Day. bowl . a Cotton rlowl rec9rd for compte- ·
20-17, meantng 1omgh1 s Sugar · games, it was No. 5 Brigham Youqg · lions and fell one yanl short of the
Bowl between No. I Florida Slate 19, No. 14 Kansas State IS in the record for yardage.
and No. 3 Florida will almost cer- Cotton Bowl at Daii..S; No. 7 Penn
Fiesta Bowl
No. 7PeDDSt.38
tainly decide college football 's . Slate38, No.20Texas 15intheFiesnational championship.
·
. ta Bpwl1i\ Tempe, Ariz.; No. 9 TenNo. 20 'Jeus 15
"~zona State's loss solved any ncSke ~F'io. II Northwestern 28' .
The Ninany Lions (11-2) domipotcnbal debate of IWO undefeated in the Cill'lls Bowl at Orlando Fla· · natcd the second halffor their fourth
teams md which ones should be·the No. 16 Alabama 17,' No. IS Michi~
straight bowl victory and their sixth
cl!ampions," Florida State coach gan 14 in the Outback Bowl at Tam- in a row in the Fiesta ~owl. 1be win
Bobby Bowden said. "The Rose pa. Fla.; and No. 12 North Carolina came nearly 10 years to the day of
Bowl's outcome means the Sugar 20, No. 25 West Virgi'l,ia 13 Jn the Penn Stale's national 'title win over
Bowltruly isforthenalionalcharn- GatorBowlatJacksonville Fla.
Miami in the 1987 Fiesta Bowl. it ·
p~onship . If a vote ..,.as iaken
In Tuesday's games, Howard · was also the 18th postseason bowl .
(Wednesday · night), I assume we edged $outhern 27-24 in the Her- victory for coach Joe Paterno,
woul~ be No. I and Florida No. 2." itage Bowl, Stanford shut oul Michiextending his own record.
~naStatc ( ll-l)hadbeenthe gan State 38-{) ip the Sun Bowl,
Five !!lays after Kenny Watson
only learn besides Florida lo go Auburn held off No. 24 Army 32-29 returned ibe second-half kickoff 81 .
unbeaten through the regular season. in the Independence Bowl and No. 6 yards 10 the Longhorns 19, Aaron
The Sun Devtls appeared lobe ready Nebraska defeated No. 10 Virginia Harris scored from five yards out to
to wtn theu last game of the year Tech 41 -21 in the Orange Bowl.
give Penn State a 15-12lead. Texas
when quarterback Jake Plummer
Gator Bowl
(8-S) lied the game on the l)eXt driscrambled II yanls into the end zone
No. t:z North Carollua io
ve, but Penn State scored on its next
for a 17-14 -lead wi~ 1:40 to go.
'·
No. 25 WestVIrJinla U ·.
two drives and the rout was on. Cur, Enter·Joe Germame, half of the
Oscar DavenJ)Qri, making his first ·tis Bnis had lhrcc touchdowns for the
two-quarterback plat!'&lt;1n used .all career start, threw for one:score anil , Ninany Lions, IWO .in the ~cond ·
sethe
. asoBnbky Ohio State &lt;t t-1). He anlled ran for another in a 17-point second half..
uc eyes on a 12-p1ay, 65-y
qiwter as the Tar Heels (10-2) fi~- .
, n.esday's action
drive capped by a five-yanllouch- ished with 10 wins for only lhe sixth
Sua Bowl
down pass to David Boston. ·
lime in 106 years of football. AllStanford 31, Michigan SL o
"You could look in Joe's eyes, America freshman comerbBck Ore'
AIEl Paso, Texas, Chad Hutchinand the eyes of everybody on the Bly had his 121h and 131h inlercep- son shredded Michigan State for 226
team, and yo14could teD that they had lions of the season as the nation's lop yards and a touchdown in leading
the determination and knew we were team in turnover margin had four Stanford's victory. Playing in only
~oong to win the game," Said Ohio while losing the ball only once. Dav- .three quarters, Hutchinson directed .
State offensive tackle Orlando Pace, enport was replacing all-ACC quar- four scoring drives as Stanford (7cS)
a two-lim: Lombardi Trophy winner. terbac;~ Cluis Keldorf, who broke his reeorded thesecond,worst shutout in
O..rmrune agreed words weren't ankle.
.
.
· lhe Sun Bowl's 63' years.,
The Mountaineers.(8-4), who lost
Stanford ended the season on a
necessary.
"We had the state of mind to ·go their sixth straight postseason game, five-game . winning ·streak, while
out there and do lhe job," he said. had started lhe season 7-0.
Michigan State dro~ to 6-6. .
"There w.S really nothing to say: We
Cilnls Bowl
IniJependence Bowl'
knew what we had to do. You knew
No. 9 Tennessee 48
.'
Auburn 32, No. U Army l9
just by lookjng into everybody's eyes
No. 11 Northwestern 28
At Shrevepon, La., Dameyune
lhal we could do it."
.
Peyton Manning threw for 408 Craig threw two touchdowns and·ran ·
The victory was the first ill a Rose yanls and four touchdowns and ran for another before Aubum survived.
Bowl for Ohio State since 1974. for another score one touchdown as a late Anny charge in the IndepenCoachJoh~Cooperhad wonjustOI)e
the Volunteers (10-2) wrapped up dence Bowl. . '·
·
·
ofhos prevoous seven bowl games at their third 10-win season in the past ·
Auburn {8-4) scored on six of its'
Ohoo Stale.
.
four years. Manning, who has 10 first nine possessions to take a 32-7
"We' ve won a lot of big games," decic!e whether .10 return to Ten- lead after three qilalteis. Army (10C~r said.. ·:Maybe you g':'ys
neessee or apply for the NFL draft, 2) ·then scored 22 founh-quanef
should St&lt;?J! wnlt~g about not bemg ..,.as 27-!&gt;f-39, inctudi.Qg a-j67-yard · point.•,• but missed a ~hance _to send
abl!, to ~In ~'bot ones. ' ·~ ' : · touchdown to .~_oey Kent that'pufdte'' the .game .to overiime-Wben' J, ParkWe ve had some''ll!1lppeonbng Volunteers ahiid·for good late in the er's·27-yard.fiel!t go~nempfwith
defeats. But, guys, it doe~n't get any first half. '
29 ~onds 1eft was wode right.
beuer than this.'~."
••
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The Wildcats (9-3), who trailed
·
011111p Bowl
.Germame finoshed 9-of-17 ·for 21-0 in the first quarter, were led
No.6 Nebraska 41
Ul yanls,. whole Stanley Jackson, - back by Sieve Schnur, who was·2s:
No. 10 Virginia Tceb 21
the starter on the two-man rotation, .of-45 for 228 yanls and two touchAt Miami, defensiv,e tackle Jason
was 6-of-14 for 59 yards: •
do~s. but he also had thiee costly Peter scored on a 31-yanl fuonlile
Plummer, who had led lhe S\ln interceptions.
return and Nebraska scored on itsDevils through some fourth:quarter
· Cotton Bowl
first four.possessions in the second
heroics a few limes this season, was
· No. 5 Brigham Yeung I!I
half lo beat Virginia Tech in the first
19-of-35'1for 201 yards. He gollhe
·•
No. 14 Kimsas SL 15 .
Orange Bowl played in December
Sun De~!ls as far!'" their own 48
The Cougars (14-1), who fell beforeacrowdof51,212, lhesmallbefore tome ran out. ·
·'· snubbed by the Bowl Alliance rat• S
"This is tough to take;· said , lied forthe victo"' as Steve SarJdsian . est on 0 years. No.6 Nebraska ( 11 h
1 'h ··
.,
2) earned its third consecutive bowl
Plummer, w o spent ~ear Y. ~n o~r . hit K.O. Kealaluhi . wilh 28-yanl victory and reached 11 victories for
tryong to compose hos emotions on touchdown pass wilh ·3:39 remain- the fourth year in a row.
the locker room befon: coming out to
·
face the media. "This was my last
game as a Sun Devil. I wanted 10 go
oul and win il. I would have liked lo .
have a couple of lic~s left and gel
, into range for a field goal. But (Ohio
Hoc key
Ba s ketball
State) just played great."
'
Outbac~ Bowl
·.
NBA slate
NHL standings
No.' 16 Alabama l7
Tonlght'sgaml!s
EASTERN CONFERENCE
:
No. 15 Mkhipl! 14,
·New York al WashinJIUn. 7:;\U p.m.
· Ailanllc Division
..Gene Stallings' final game as
Torun1t1 ul Orlando. 7:30p.m.
·
:ram
ll! L I tlr. !i[ !iA
New Jmty Rl MiAII'Ii. 1:30 p.m.
c~h of the Crimson Tide (I 0-3)
Phillllldpblo ....... 24 12 ~ !I m ~
Oallu lit ctuarllllllc. 7:30p.m.
Fl«ldn ........-....... 20 10 Y 4Y 113 '12
~ approriatcly enough dedided by
Phoeni.'ll. u1CLEVELAND. 7:;\0 p.m.
N.Y. Ranpra ..... 20 16 - ~ 4.5 141 113'
Bo•loo
ul
D..1roit,
7:30p.m.
.
t!G ' defense. Linebacker Dwayne
New J«te)l ........ 20 I 3' 3 43 ·100 90
'Ponh•ni.l M Hou11oo. 8:30p.m.
W
" hl'naoon ........ l6 20 ~ '13! lOS 109
Rbdd returned an interception 8.8
·Utah at Sun Antonio. MJO p.m.
N.Y. slnnders .... ll 11 g l tb 106
Philudclphiu ut Se;lltk, 10 p.m.
yWds for a 1ouc(K1own lhal gave
T11mpa Buy ........ 12 19 . !'i 9 10). liS
L.A . LRkers nt Sacruml!nto. 10;!\0
AJ!Ibama a 10-6 lead in the founh
J'l.,n.
.
NortheutD!.qiprler. Shaun Alexander's 46-yard
Duffulo ............... 20 1$ ' 4:\ 114 100
PinlburJh ......... .19 1$ 4 42 IJS 1'2:\
scpring run I 0 minute$ later providHAnfor~ ............. 17 101 6 40 113 120
Monln:al ............ 14 IR 7 3~ 126 1.n
e6 .the insurance to withstand a
.. _NCA.A Division I
. 8os1011 ..... ........... U IM 6 12 lOS UO
tciichclown and IWo-poinlcbnversion
Ouawo ............... l217 7 31 100 lOR
By T1le A11acl I d'Jlwu1

·

No. 6 UC pounds SW Missourr~.1 01-60

·

Buckeyes beat As·u 20-17;---Mountaineers take 20-13 loss

a

.
. In the Puerto Rico Holiday Classic finals,

Th&amp;ndey, .-....ry 2, 1117

.

The Dally Sentinel• page 5

·Pomeroy • Mlddlepor"., Ohio

Th~ DWIY Sent~l ~

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Florida &amp; FSU to battle for nat1onal tftle

Pc)maroy •llldclapart, Ohio

In,tonight'•-~ BqJ/rl,

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Bowden bas ICIII line 110111 into 00-lhub. "I feet ..,. !lave - y
corhiDI. two of wJM.ure 11111111nt more produetive yem bin 11 FloriNEW oRLEANs- It 1111 beell
lll8jor colleJC J*OIIMIU ~ at da," 11)'5 Spurrier, who roec' I d
a Bobby JIOwdea ldad ol..t. SJ.p
Aubum Mel Tommy et 1\JI-), tine,_. It Dub befOre Mll!jq"'
a few bllcks. Spin a mv tales. And
Spurrier's elder - . Steve Jr., is a Florida. .
.Bowden, with 270 __. ~
cham lbe socks off the =mer plh~ aui•ant "'!idllbe Orltan,
ADd u Bowden did before his rics at Samford, ~ Vqinia llld
ered for coUege fOOiball's Supr·
Bowl,
fintllllional cba!lpionsN!dJtl994. FSU, trails only Bryant. Pop WtmIn between, the Florida Stete
in his 21th ,season u a bead coach. er, Amos AlOIIZ9 Slap and ,_n
coach made time to take the pulpit of
Spunier il btPnniqto act ~0111 State's Joe "-tto oa the aU-IiiM
New Orleans' First Baptist Cburcli bitofaaw...,... AHci~~MD'Iropby about die lack of a title on his J(). l(ll&amp;jor. colleJC list. He's 67 and leans ·
~ talk to a 'Sunday momin1 conbean hilumc. ADd~ and decnc- year resume,
more ~vily on hil defensive .t
gregilion with a plain:Uik profession ton .,..e:.-When it comes to the .
Spurrier IIIII d!e Gators !lad their nen offensive COOidinllan, but he
of faith,
·
offense, there isn't .a bripur, bold- rust direct lhllt a year ago, taking a says n:tirelllenf ila 't yet In lipt
" lidoesn' ttakentanylosses,"be er, more iJDaaina!ive mind on'the 12.0rec:onlandNo, 2rankinginto
He has coached the Sanii'oh for
says, smiling,."for that halo they put planet, and his ~ now win. u
the P'ltlta Bowl: and were ember- 21 seasons; he wants to llllb it II
up over your head to slip down a bit o~ u Bowden's. But his popdar- rused 62-24 by Nebraska,
leastlS.
.
and become a noose." .
· ity iln't as far-ubiaa u hii...C..
"A lot of the Oator·hl!,ten."
upor some reason. it's more fun.
' But , Saint Bobby he wu, and ness,
..
·
Sp · says, repeating a favopte for me now than. it's ever been," ~c
He· hu been IICCused of oanniq
' Y lauah and giggle when Bowden says. "The ad&amp;P ·neSaint Bobby he remains,
'J'Ypecastasever,
up score-s·;'being "tilo
we
Aadlheylhinklfeelbed , satislied' is tnie in football, ,., You
So, too, for Steve Spurrier.
telbacks and takiq
about that, but I Ially don't.
win a conference championship, you
All that ·supreme self..:onfidence nents,
. .
, "Let me tell you somethina: , want two. You win a n~onal chamSpurrier is. said to possess? All the
"His perso.lali
When we're 12-l,lbe best record in pions!Up. I want another pne,"
gall? The Florida coach hu pui it on · ent," former Notre
coach Lou .the history of our upiversity, and pea. Son Tommy predicts, "He'll so
full display in the days leadina to Holtz says of Spurrier, "but he's as" pie want to tell us we have a lot of down coachin&amp; on the field, I
Thursday night's national champi· honest u the day is long, ancf·he's a problems- nah, nah, You can't get'· believe."
·
onship showdown between his No. ' heck of a competitor,''
.
me on thal one."
· Tommy lauahs, !'His Glary's
Says Bowden: ~'Steve and I ..,\,a
Before he arrived, Florida spent aone up, and his pllticipllion's aoae
3·ranked Gators and No, I Florida .
State.
·
· little bit different He hu ul~
""'- S6 Ytlll in the Soulbeutem Con- down," he saya of his father. "I'd
He laraely rejected any sugges- · confidence, r work out of fear a lit· ference without a rnt-place finish. hold oit as lon1 as I could, .too." .
tion that last year's blowout loss to tie bit more than he does. He's WOO· S~~ would ~Ye won its first .
Humor is more forced when the
Nebraska in the Fiesta Bowl was a derin&amp; how much he's png to beat Wtthhislirst team 1ft 1990. butsam:- subject turns tO Spurrier and '!'bet the
cause for self-doubt He chaqed that ·us by, I'm sittin&amp; there aftaid' we'ie . lions again~! the proaram denied the Bowdens perceive IS his anack on
Florida's only. loss since then, to . aoina to lose,''
.
Oat~ the title. He now has captured
Bobby's cbaracter in lbe Jut W\lekFlorida State a linle more than a . . Truth il, their lives and careCJ:s four tn a row, the only coach other his accusations of cheap shots on
month ago, was tainted by the Semi- nin remarbbly parallel. ·
than Alabama's Bear Bryant to do Florida quanerback Danny Witerffel
noles • dirty play,
.
Bowden transformed Florida that, and a total of five in an era of as the SemiflOICS were beating the
"1. understand I open lliyself 'up State from a doormetto a national league expansion.
· Gators 24-21 on Nov. 30, ·.
for Gator-haters,'' he says. "But powerhouse thal has won 10 or
Wheri the NFL's Phoenix Canli·
"Much as we' ve · competed .
that's happened before, and it'll _moreaamcsarec:oniiOconsecutive nals and Tampa Bay Bucs ~arne against each Other, L don't think
probably happen aaaitt ..., You've Jl!l . years; Spurrier ,resunected Florida . courting Spurrier after·last season, we've ·ever gotten very personal
to call itliicc you see iL"
from the ashes of scandal nl NCAA · Florida rewarded'him with a seven- with it," the elder Bowden says, "I
Classic "Steve Superior," to use sanctions at the tum of the.decade
year, SI million an.nual contnletthat · was kind of taken aback,
a common refereitce applied by critBowden, like Spurrier, built his puiS him at "the top of college foot· ,
ics,'
On-field ~eputation on high-~CCCier· ball's financial heap, Notably, it sur"Have I lost any respect for
Neilber nian expresses comfort atiop offense,
passed the $975,000 Bowden is paid him?" he says and pauses. "No: He'&amp;
wilh his respectfve stem&gt;type annually at Plorida State.
too good a coach for me· not to
BoWden out of lnodesty, Spurrier
Spurrier, like Bowden, has deep
Spurrier, 51, was approached by respect If he wasn't a, JO!Id coach, I ·
· because he takes predictable offense. religious roots - he's lbe son of a the l'IFL again last week nlpve the probably could get down on hinl a
It's an iiQny of this Sugar )owl, then, Presbyterian minister.
Atlanta Falcons a polite thanlts-liu!-'' little bit."
·
1

Ono'the AFC playoff scene,
By USA Today ·

·"
Denver: While detractors fear the
Broncos will be rusty going into·Satunlay 's divisionalaame against Jacksonville, QB John Elway is worried
he might have to calm teammates
down, "It's going to be a matter of ·
pullina back on the reins a.little bit,"
• Elway said, ''We've been lookinJ
:: ·forwllrd to this for five -a ·now.
·· It's not a question of whether wo'll •
be able to turn it on; we'll pi'obably
have to tum it down a little bit," ,.,
" Despite beina hob,!!.led by a strained
left hamstring for lbe latter. third of
the .season, Elway hu pronounCed · . himsel~ ~Y for the play~!"·· ·~
hamsjnng 1s I00 percent, he wd,
.. "It's nic~ to go out on lbe field
knowing Y&lt;;lll don't haye to hold anything back, that you can just go
play,"
·
Jacksonville: ·Tiiose who call the
JagiUjl'S the luckiest team in the NFL
have hard evidence, ,Just Jl!liDI to K

.

1

By JUUE HINDS

Mike Hollis, who twice in .the last
two games kicked game-Winning
field Jnals off uprights, Against 1be
Atlanta Falcons two weeks qo,
Hol,lis' 42-yarder bounced.offthe left
upnahtand gave.thcJIIJWU'S a19-IO
~ina 19-17victory.,His&lt;!l5-yarder
q81nst 1¥ Buffalo B•ll•latt Saturdli)ollouncedofftheriahtupri&amp;htfor
the willlli!'l poilll;' in ~ 30-27 vil:tory. ~is.iok!ld•thil-lt~.hel"YII
w~q o~ a~bl_e-ba,nk kick,tfhe
gets m a wmnmg slluabon Saturday
against the. Denver Broncos at Mile
Hi&amp;h Stadium. "Normally, if I do hit
1111 upfiJbt, it bounces out." said Hoili.s. wh~ makes. no apol,oaies .fQI'
etdter kick, especially lbe one IJ81nst
lbe Bills. Thlt kick, he said. was perfeet until a hard wind blew it riaht.
"With ihe wind the way it was, Y he
said, "if I !lad another chance to do
that ·kic~ over agam, I wouldn't
chanae anythina,"
·
.

New England: Pabiots FB Keith
· Byars' and Steelers RB Jerome 'Bettis, whose tcam5 meet in the second
round of the playoffs at Foxboro Stai:lium on Sunday, arcn!t strangers,"I've known him·since (Bettis wu
in) hi&amp;h school, My wife's from
Detroit I ran a camp~. He Clll}le
evcrysuDIIIIir;"
• •' , •
. PiuiJiurah; Jero.pe Jl.eltis.- who
· lP for ~.4lltY&amp;r41 despi~ !fti.fsi!'g
· f!tost oft!te Steelers' final two ieau. Jar-season games, didn't practice
Wednesday and is expected to sit out
Thursday's workiiUI because of a
striined groin muscle. "It's a painful
injury," said Bettis. ~lio anmaced
Weditesday even while pulling on
SWeatpants. "I'm not puttina any
extra pressure on myself (to play),"
he said. "lfl do, I'm doing a disscr·
vice to this team. They need mt to
be out there effeedve," .,, Kardell
Stewart"s recent success at quaner-

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.Coloring
contest
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owners, he knows his dogs by name,
PeflJacola Newt Journal
and he knows that some of them
About 28,000 raciq ~yhounds won't be alive m~ch longer, , .
·· are "put down" each year acroulbe
"Some llR JOIRJ' to be 801D8 to
, • UnitedStates.andmostoflhemarc heaven ,real soon," Bates,~· said
ttealthy dogs that would have lllllde recently as he looked at hts ~yooci pets
· lwunds. almost having to );ell .ovcr
1 'Qte ke~nel-owners say IIIey don't lbe yelps of the sleek, elegant. do.gs,
. like it. The vets who eut!lanize the
The ~~hounds we~ enJO)'tnJ
, , dog~ don't like it. The animal one of therr three dally outdoor
activists hate it. ·
·
escapes from the. 3-by-4-fOO! steel
Sp why dOCJ it bjtppen? The ' cases that conliiiC them at least 20
doas are done in by dolllrs, Old dar ·. h"'!~ 1\ day.
,
that no lonser can race and win and
~n dogs can t rul no more,
puppies that sh()w no promise ·¥C somet~!"" Y,ou 101 to put them
financial liabilities-_for lbe kennel dowa, he S81d:
ow rs. It's business - lbe ~fey· . That means way clown - deep
..: hou~ racing business.
.
. down in mast
a. ne~M,b)'
FormercopEciBatcsis.oncofll landfill. : ,
;r ·:,
• kennel owners at the Pensacola • The bodtes of 10 to IS ~ ng
·Greyhound Track, Like most kennel sreyhounds from the Pensac Ia
' ~'
·
Greyhound Track JOin~ 1be I
II
~
~·e~ week. Each one IS .c
(ContinuedJrom ·Page 5)
' t~o a black tru
. h IJai, around w ich
J&amp;lfti'S "Bus" Cook, H1faltiesftiCS IW!III]I and buzz. drawn by the
burJ 'Miss., attorney, who represents. IICCIII of sour~· 1
Fam1. lias been talki;.g with Picken
"It boehen .!1'1' to . put a '!01
chieffiromeial offlCIII' Mike~ · down.'' :a- said, "bu,t I'm paytft8
~ 1 .mce' latc last sulllliierlbout 1 pill-· .S5001wook_}Uilfll!'food,and,~
sibJC seven-year 'ccintract cxlenlion, of them aren un•ina mc a dime.
ljld ljlcy're loin&amp; to mett f-.to, "I wish we could Ill mare of
-fact this~
•
,.
them . ltdoptecj' ~t'. i n:ally dQ,
•
.ia e:O.niq 10 ~ playoff Because no one likes pulling a doJ
Uhte; bat he's also
Ia 10 we down,"
' '
:!~=~=diletiu k (the conThallnc:ludel Dr. AadY Hillbll,
111c1 't.leclli 11 1Jy, Who uid tillinl the clop "lll!:,b."
Clll pt ioiJII!Ihinl
Hilbnaa ildlo WI Mia~ don
· •
11101t of the nltlnj ~nda lithe
!*~~==:=~
Peuac9la tnck. ~ Uiel ·a ~
1 chance
.
raiC iDJecti&lt;J'n
Jl0111id11ed'lhe
~llfiiJ I J _,
.O.Iunlllil.., ol ioalmat ~

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...., There are 49 triCks in the with,children~aarcyhound'a
"'doa'l,... pltlpiiiD IIIIWII'w l'ellllinlna 15 1J81CS. Floridi hal the raciilJ career is only two to four
4loill dlillar . . It I If," 1!11 llld. ·IIIOitwilh l7tn1Cb.Colondoiuec. years, ,
"
·~11 linn 1J .._ IIIIa wiib tbe' Olld widllive.
· "I've lot one Qf my own.~ lho
L ,. 1 I . . . . . . ., . . . . , It an, • Six tl1lcb llllionwido have dael said. "BIIIlliltil MmlllllllnJ'• done to
1

&amp;

'1fnw •"

.

Iince 1995. The two triCks that _. belt« the adoption pre c n, there a
IIIIo.- 7S pcrdent of the have opened Iince· 199S liave · still Joins to be clop IIIII lCe,Jnilf
pQ.I I II lie tlllll.uli(N _lit '*'-1 ~. and 01111 . . lo Itt Pill~·"

._ •

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''::' :winnets, in a coloring contest
§ia.Bed by the Home Health DepantJicnt of Vetenns MemOrial Hospital
.i!] "eonjunctioll with National Home'
Health Week have been announced,
· ·Contestants were divided ,.into ·
:i1\ree age groups' with small .prizes
awarded to every conrestaiit The top
· tbt'eC winners in each age. group
· ~ived laigCFprizes, Those wiimers,
'fil'st thfoli&amp;h third place, respective·
·ly,. in.eacli group included Rebecca
\ YIIIICC. 1\tppers Plains; Sanah Ridle-

'~6'. • Put!llfoj. ~Stepbllnic ~Moore.-

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0,949. S."AVAilAm$1 0,249

.. 1\iPers Plain~, four and under; Tracy.Dye,CooiYJUe;TiffanyCI)ampcr,
W'estColumbia,W.Va,,andMichael
1~es, West Columbia. W. Va,, five
. 'lltrough eight; Jenny Bowles,
, POneroy; Michael Davis, Middle" ·po;t, and Sata Mansfield, Poweroy,
·~ine lhrou&amp;h 12,
·
;Prizes were provided by Pizza
'Hut, Subway, the Dairy .Queen and
••-Donald's,
·
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COUNTY H~...E VISIT - Memblra of the Rutland Ell Dennl1011
Post 467 of the ~e~~n Legion lind Legion Auxiliary vlllllllc:l the
Melge County Home for Chrle~1, dlltrlbutlng $1.200 In glb.

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Family: Beyond the smoke,

.

T.e·
n · en ·arrested for ,
• o I Ieg_
stea I.1~ ng _artl.•f.·lela

tt:lere ,is a vaa is·hed. he-ro
By LESLIE BOYD

rettes.Theverythingsthatkill~dhim.

But no more. ·
·1 want to dance at my grand' .
daughters' weddings and bouncelheir
children on my knee,
· l miss my hero so mucllo it hurts
every day. He should still be alive,
but the damned addiction killed him .
And the tobacco companies knew it
would but denied it, They .still deny ·
it, .and they still advertise for new
smokers. One of ll!Y sons fell for it
And I'm afraid he'll die the same way
my hero did,
I wish there· was a way to reach
ev~ry child in the world and make
them see, really make theltl understand what the addiction does, I wish
rcould put the tobaccdcompanies out
of business . •
I wish I had my hero bac'k,

OennettSuburbitnNewapapen ' . I crave them, too, No matter how
. . r had the smoking dream a,gain last long I'm off, my addiction still becknight. 1 light a cigarette and inhale · ons me "pssssst pssssst. Remember
deeply,anditfeelssoGOOD. Ifeel ho\Ygood,thatfirstd!agfeltinthe
"
.guilty because 1 know 1 shouldn't be morning? Remember how great one
smoking, but r take another puff any- tasted after a big dinner?"
CLAY, N,Y, (Ai&gt;).-;- A teeti-ager . and ~ni~ centers 'are following the way.
I do, I really do.
needed to collect on a $100 loan, so' p·ractice of some cruise lines and ball- · · I wake relieved, and just a lillie ·
I have to concentrate on my father,
he grabbed somet(t,lng he knew his rooms: they're hiring lightfooted guilty for enjoying that smoke so and how he never" got to see h'IS greatdebtor would want back - his artt- retired men to come to their dances much.
·
,
grandchildren because he was only
ficialleg.
and mambo widJ 1be women,
I auess it ·happened becauie yes- 67 when he died and my children
,, ;
.
. Steven Mantooth had visited Fred"This is big in Florida," says. terday I was .talking to one ,of the were only 15 and 17.
· enck Lyons, 21, on Dee. S to try to~ Franklin Fircstein a retired mM boys in my ,junior high Sunday
My three sisters all smoke.
•. ·.A
.' I
collect the$100he'd loaned him, Sgt. executive-who h.; been a reaular school class about smoking.
·.
They've tried to quit. They've sucV'J' I
Charl,es,Day s"!d 'f,)!~sday, He took h~fer.for-bireforfouryears. "There
This ~am was' a little different cccdedforatime,buttheyalwaysgo
·
• ·
·
Lyo~ s prosthetic lllJ;wht.le the man is a tremendous absence in this age from the others, though. My father back. I've gone back a couple times
Wll!! 1n the shower, :~
group of men whovegenjlemen and was in' it, ih the final stages of the&gt; too, II ~tans with an innocent flirta-:
J.J J
. Mantooth, who ) 'arrested Sun-. can dance," he said.
emphysema that killed him seven · tion and !hen I succumb to the
day on a charge · . third-,degree ·
Two years ago at the ·Mae Volen years ago, almost to this day. In my charms.
·
.
. :•
grand larceny, told po 1ce he mtend- Senior Center in Boca Raton usual- dream, he couldn't Walk the dozen
edtorettinithelegonJan. I ifLyo'ns ly about 80 women and
men steps from the kitchen to his den
...-LO-·S ,AN
. G~LES (AP) _ The . m~e a pay'!'ent. , · ; ,
would show up for l!ances, Then the witheut help, and even then he had to
'
~elopw m'woincthestoofrehsi,.S'_Jlt'~eSI'
like the fioal
' I told hun l_dtdn I want to beat .. center stat:ted hiring men.
Gambler is' taling a cbance on mar- htm up, bl!t I needed~e money and
Firestein, who is mahied and in "
"
riage, aaairi,
.
· ·' ·
I didn't know,whatt&lt;l'lio with him," his. late 50s,' said that unlike
He smoked from the time he wss .
·
· Kenny Rogers proposed tq his . he sai~ in a stateme~tto police.
.scoundrels who gaze deeply 'into 19, Two packs a day of Chesterfield
ADRIAN, Mich. (AP)-Ajudge Detroit, The{l'oledo) Blade reported.
girlfriend~foregivingJINewYear's
While Mantooth 1s free on $.Hl0 their partners' eyes while lr)lina.to Kings,Heusedtowakeupcoughing has "ordered funk music pioneer
The self·dubbed "Dr. FunkenEve. performance in Las Vegas, his bail, Lyons is still hobbling around on . discern their b8nk balances, the host's and.light a cigarette, He bied 10 quit, George Clinton and his family to stein," who wears multicolored
joli simply is 10 dance and be charm- b~t he didn't manage 10 do it until a' leave their 200-acre fanri in a dispute . , dreadlocks, oversized diapers . and , .
publicist Said Wednesday." . . . . crutches - w~thoutl\is~eg.
• Rogers, · S8, announced the · · lbe prosthetic lim~ is being held ing.
·
few 1110nlhs befqre he died. He was over unpaid rent,
moon walk bools in performances
en411Jiement during a pcrfonnance at as evidence at the Clay flolice station,
Fort Lauderdale police Det ioc proud to have beaten it finally, even ,
A Lenawee Co~nty judge ':"led in with· his P-Funk All-Stars band, has
~Aladdin Hotel. He proposed to and won't be returned to Lyons until Roubicek, an eipert on crimes though in the end it. beat him, ,
November that Chnton .and his fam· lived Qn the farm since 1980,
He was'my hero. I'm named for dy_ could re~atn on the farm if they .
Clinton has said he believed BolaWanda Miller, 30.-during dinner arid ..the cise against Mantooth is resolved, against the elderly, .said he ,wasn't
lben sang" As GOd As My "!itness.'' Day said, ...
.f
alarmed,
him, and I followed his footsteps -patd $8,SOO m m~nthly re_nt dunng dian, president of Bridgepoit' Music
ilfoong he co-wrqte, to ber during his
b ,
~'It sounds line," ·R.oub,'cek said, right Into this business, Once, we two the1r appeal of a dtspute wtth owner Inc. , was making land contract pay~
:...~
·
· menls on his family's behalf out of
performance,
· .
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BOCA RATON, FJ~, (AP) "I have a inn1J1 that is Sl,,and r would Le.s Boyds coveuou
a stacy,
logether. • Annen Boladran
, ·,
...
. 'The couple, whO live on Roaers' Elderly women asked 10 dance by a pay some nice old JUY SIOOto dance It was justa little story,_bufit was the
But B~lad1an s atto.me_y, Dane song royalties he was owed by Bola~ ,in ,6.1hens1 &lt;?a, haven't .set a mysterious, hands9me.sjlvcr fox ata with her for an hour."
highlight of my career, That was Nels~n, srud he asked Dtstnct Judge dian . '
wedding elite. -It wtiLbe Rogers fifth retirement community pilrty may ask
before he needed to wheel an oxygep Nataha Koselka to order Cli,nton ?ff
Clinton has said Boladian owes
marriage and Miller's second,
. ·'· breathle&amp;sly . after being whirled
D~SC01TA, Maine (AP) tank around with him if he went IUIY· the (arm after no rent was pard, Chn- him Si 5 million in royalties, and the
: Ro-rs, known for his hit "The around ... _ ·floor "Wh
. 0 W.'AS that
where.
ton agreed he, would move today . rent dispute is in retaliatiQn for that
..""'
,
- The o,ld ,findcrs·keepers rule got
f
he f
90 ,
1·
' Gamliler," and Millet have been dat· . m'an?" •
""(~
lost in the fine print ofa little-known
I've worked with people who. rom I arm miles ~outh~est of c atm,
in1 for more thJIII' three ye~, ~aid_
Well, he could be a hired'hoofer to state taw after 8 woman found an worked with him, and they all
. publici~J Cheryl ~gan, They mel.!~ make parties tllore exciting - for unclaimC!I gold n_ecklace.
·
remember him as perpetually shroud,6.tlanta, where Mtller, was a rcstaU- $12,.50 or so an hour.
Lisa Kltobel learned of the law ed in a blue-gray haze Qf cigarette
rant hostess, . ·1 ·
srnoke..l remember him that way too,·
,
•· Some Florida retire ~ni homes after di5covering a gold link necklace
'
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'· · ·
··
·
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while bikins across the Damariscot- · And I ~tmember him !eth~red to an
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oge rs
· 'II,"II . try · ·.
.
rr.1age
ma
·l·ft·h .tl"me
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om
_· munity calend. Sl·.r .

TUPPERS PLAINS -- (Tuppers
·- y,·
f F · w
PI runs
eterans o olWgn ars
Auxiliary meeting Thursilay, 6:30
p 1 k•
·
p.m. ot uc ,
•
FRIDAY
/
• POMFJWY •. Meigs Co\lnly
·Pomon~ Ora~ge ll)CCiing Friday, :7:30
11.m. at Reml 9ck drange. Rock
~·
; Sprin'gs to ho_st,
.
.;
Tm.iRSDAY ' . ',,
'' .
SATURDAY
.
• :· fOMEROY •• Oraani zational
SALEM tENTER •• Star Grange
~ag of the Melp Cqunty Library
.
778
and Star Junior Grange 878
Boilrd of Trustees Th,ursday, I p,m. at
meeting Saturday with potluck suplh,~ 'Pomeroy'library.
pCr 6•30 P. m followed by third~ . ..
.
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• • ' .!
'
de~Q.1e
Pracb~e ~~ 7 p.m, alld rcgulilr
- RACJNE ··American Legion Post
meeting
at .s ·pJll: Junior Grange bak·
602: meetlna Thursday, 6:30 p.m.
inscontestwillbeheid.AIImembers
. wl~ dinner to_follow.
ui:)ed to attend.
·
"
. The CommuQity Calendar is published ~ a free ~I'Yice to non~profit
gloilps wishing to announce meeting
abd: special events, The calendar js
.not desianfld to promote sal~s qr fund
of any type, Items 1rc printed
as sjlace permits .and. cannot be auar·
. anl4ed to run a specific null)bei' •of .

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Funk music p_
ioneer, family
ordered off ru.ral Ml"chl'gan farm .

io

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auto, 4 cyl, air CO'lD.
IAaii/FM pail, PS,,PB, etc.

It's haid to imagine having a
lauah with An\y Vanderbilt or!flmily
~osL Tho,se women, one su~s,
·spent thetr days frownmg at misplaced 5oup spoons and tossing out
incorrectly worded invitations. ·
But Karen Grigsby Bates and
Karen Elyse Hudson arc the kind of
etiquette exP.,rts '!Jho know the value of humor, especially in a world
_thathasn,'t had the good manners yet
·to embni(;e its own diversity,
·
"A joking response, for example, is
the-most polite way to field a frequent
and rather boneheaded question about
·"Basic Black" (Doubleday, $~4.95),
thei{ new etiquette book aimed at
. African Americans,
"We get asked a lot if anybOdy
besides black people can buy it," says
Jtatcs by phone from her home in Los
Angeles, "What do yoo think, there's
going to be Mr. T standing at the she!f
saying, 'Fool, you're .not black, don't
·
buy it!'"
Jn its 473 pages, "Basic Black"
oovcrs familiar etiquette t~:rritory,
from detailed chapters on weddings
to tips on canceling a res~rvation,
What sets the book apart Is the new
ground it covers. A chapter with the
·iongue-in-cheek title · "Plantation
Life" tackles specific issues faced by
black employees, like how to handle
affirmative action questions and how
to respond to offensive racial humor
or racial harassment
A chapter called "Lift Ev'ry
Voice" is devoted to the responsibil. ity.of bei11g black ·and discussesfbpics such as the media portrayal of
African Americans, the obligation to
register to vote, the importance of
mentoring, and the d~sirability of
supporting black businesses,
Other ~ctions cover nu1111ces in
black culture from African-American
to Afro-Caribbean and Afro-Latino,
the deeply rooted tradition of hospi- .

Vlaltlng _,.., from left: Miry and Dennie McKinney, Juanita Her·
mon, Cindy ·Harmon (...ted), CCIIIIman• Eug~r~e Fink, Jay
Clreey, sam McKinney, Don LltucMrmllt, Rogu Baird, end San1111 R1ymon~ Smith. ·
·' ,,

Odds and eil'ds

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tality and welcome, and controversial with onl)' cursorily, if at all.
"\here was sometimes just a oneissues such as police interaction with
the blitck community. "
line ,response ,'' says Hudson, And
·The tone is funny and frank, firm what was .there, says Bates, was
yet tolerant, "Try to be patient with "always from the perspective 'of a
J'!lople who. want .to know how 'all white person conecting another white
black people think,' " the book advis- person who's used racially insensitive
es in a section devoted to questions . language. What if you're the black
that make such rude assumptions, boss or the black employee? What if
"Emphasize thai your opinions are you're a CEO ofa Fortune 500 com- ' '·
your own and that you haven't polled pany and someone does it in your
the community at'large." ·
presence?"
'·
To those who might say there's no
In \he book, Bates -and Hodson
need for an African-American eti- pay particular attention to the protoqueue book because good manners col aruiched.to many African·Amerare universal, Bates and Hudson ·. ican cultural traditions, from churc
'
respond that their book is about se~vices. to funerals,
more than forks and thank-you notes,
"Our funerals are a littleJiiffe I,
lis its subtitle, "Home Training for the way we . welcome people, e
Modem Times," indicates.
sense of Southern hospitality," says
Like etiquene, home training Hudson. "We said hit's take that and
involves the niceties of everyday life, . celebrate it,"
· ·
says Bates, but it also embraces the ·
So far, ttte 'chapter that's getting
notion Qf responsibility to one's race 'the most . comment is "Plantation ..
and community, pride in one's her- Lif~;· with its tips on workplace etiitag~, and an obligation to help oth· queue, "We do think Texaco should
crs as you've been helped.
·
buy the book," jokes Hudson, refer"Home training is a survival tool ring to ihe recent embarrassing flap
for .the black community," says at the company over racially inseitsiBates. "It's enabled most of us to stay . tive remarks from l!lanagcrs,
~­
.alive and well . We look at these as
Currently, the duo is working on
important elements ·in our surYival a version of "Basic Black" for chil~
arsenal . ~'
d~n and a boxed set that will rover
ponies and style. Bates -and Hudson •
·· Hudson. a writer and 'photograph- say they' re comfortable with their
er based in Los Angeles, was work- new roles as etiquette experts,
ing on another literary project when although they· ve both gotten some
'she called her agent at 5:30 in the · teasing from friends,
morning to propose the idea for
"Everyone who knows me knows
"Basic Black,''
,
1
I speak-very frankly,'' Bates explains.
Remembers Hudson, "She said ·:They'd ca)l and say, 'Oh, you'.ve
put down whatever you 're doing and only got a couple of we.;ks left before
do this immediately,"
·
the book comes out.' "
· She and Bates, a contributing
·' But being polite doesn't have to
columnist for the op-ed page Of \he mean being,.as Hudson calls it, "lit·
Los Angeles Times and ..frequent tie Miss Priss,''
"If you don't know which fork to
commentator for National Publi9
Radio, scoured olher etiquette books use, you're not j!Oing, to die," she
an!l found thai racial questions and says. .:'But if we don't know how to ·
topiCS- of panicular interest lo treat each other with respect, we're in
African-American readers wete deal I big trouble," ·

l!J ·
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. . . . .dils=,..·~=-r::
' ~·:rr:~-.:,':.-::.
't:o':
..
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'
=~:n~c:..~t~
.f .·
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ftVll

:named
.

erwillplaywide~ivetapin,biu

'·'!"treat

are

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q~k,''Offensivecoordinator

aninials, ~ the~ with_ the xt than there_II'C people to adOpt t!tem . .
~ adnut they re aotng to put . Netboy ~ ~ c~unuy hu e;eached
them down because they have other a satura~on ~01nt rq.are~~. but
dogs 10 care·for,'' . . _
the- racm1 tndustry Clllntlnues to .
Nardone s~ys the, deaths ·~n't . !&gt;rtedthem.About43,000werebred .
110p, no miller what kind of adOption · tn· 199~.
popans are.l.n 'Jil.ace,
Trainer· Marcella · Wise, wlio
"lt:sj~taffilll!trofeconomi~,'' works with.Bates' ~oes \n ~DJ8C()she~ "lt's~terforlhcm .tojust Ia, shares Nardone s_love for JRY·
pt II 0~ With and move on to hou~ ~ only lhe II more llllllel'another do&amp; than WlH'fY about one standina of the keniiJIIpwncrs.
lhet's 1101 brinsiq id money/ '
,_
~se lnimals'jUillike
She says the only,way to end the kids, W'tse said. "They're so 1weet.
'doalhs ;. to end pybotmd ricilla,
One pulled a•~' raci111 recendy.6ild
Ntlrdqne miJht be in Jilek; the dted, and you copld hear me cryin1
i~ II stumblinJ.
I .-as so lipttet."
.
· Oitl~ 17 ltllqw arcyhound
.Bill WiM knows people in the

Plaine,

·· ::Winners~
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' "lcan'tunders~howsomc9f · the~tion,league,saidtheindusthese people can say they love~se uy rs producmg mof11 greyb&lt;iunds

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receliled

the left

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healthy animals that would make cl~sed,
.
·
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areat pets,
.
' ' . Nafdone and many who work
, The ones the owners and trai~~rs with ~yhounds ~~~ -~~is
kill off arc mostly noncompetl_tlve laraely attnbuted to a nse tn cumo
puppiesoutoftrainin,gorolderdogs g~blin~ across lbe United States, _
thet arc not generabng money. he whtch dtverts money from Jl'C)'·
said.
· hound triCks.
,"I don't like dOing· it, but it's
Maine,Vermoni, Virainia,ldaho
gorngto be done, so my goal,ts to try and Washmgto~ al~ had greyhound
to d~ 11 ~humanelY. and kmdly as racmgat~hegtnmngofthedecade,
posstble,
·
·
.
but have smce banned the span,
While 28,000 greyhounds are put
And between '1990 and 1994,
to death ~h y~, 9rly I S,()()O are att~nda~ce at greyhound ,tracks
adopled, , acc~rdtng to the Grer· ~attonw1de dropped 27 percent, rae-.
hound ~lion League, b&amp;sed m . mg revenues dropped 25 ~~and
Connecticut
.
I
the aross amount wagered.on .IIleY·
"f.don't know why anyone W®ld hound_racina dropped 14 percent
wint to be in .this business," said
"It's a dying industry," N~
' Melani Nardone, spokeswoman for said, "but we won't stop until it's
the Greyhound Protecl!on League. deadcompletely and the greyhounds ·
''There's not a whole lot·of money are allowed to live,"
' in it, and It's filled with death, \
Still, Susan Nctboy, direcioL-Of

"'""''at.

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down' .unproductive dogs kills·
ne;lrly twice ~the...:.nu_mber adoption saves _·
By TRb'l MOON

From

'.,•priDe by . llrl. T - WIIIOII, cap.rbnent
, · ..mpJo,_,-who Mrwd Ullhal~ ln Melge

Olan Gailey can't say Stewan nev-

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.

CONTEST WINNERS :.., The

back, ~mllined with cilach Bill
Cowher s intention to continue usinJ
him there durin&amp; the playoffs, .pp.,.
entl)' have combined to end Stcwart's days at wide receiver, "It's
over," Stewart said, "Now I'm a

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, nen, three ege cat.goriee, In 1
.... tMtlllilldbythe Home Hllllth
,;_.¥.Nntlllmoriii1Holpblln
~·
. :.· :Nitklh.il Home Heelth Week-. pntlllltecl

•

Cowt., hu talked alloul the iqtpm.
sibility of ~n&amp; for two ·posi·
tions, "He can't do both," Cowher
said. "Youcait'task aauy toJII'CPII'e ·
to be a receiver and also ~ a JUY.
who's aoina to· run your e11tirc•
offense," ,., WR Yancey Thiapen hu
a stress fracture in his foot. He set a
teim record with 8S cetcheil in 199S
but played in only six -ll~ this
year because ofhamstrina. ankle and
foot injuries. Thigpen bied to praclice qec, 26 but was unable to do so;
and the Steelers then ordeted more
tests, which revealed the suess ftac.
lure,

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The Detroit ,.... .

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On the greyhound racing scene, ·

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P,ge7
1187

Etiquette experts know
the v·alue of h~umor

Rested Broncos prepare for 'lucky' Jags

;

The Daily Sentinel

dl.a wtheir 11ay iD New ()te.l bodJ
44 arto line , net - ' l y 1ato
lhoee yay roles.
.
Bowden il hliled u one of colleJC fOOiblll's icoaa, not ollly a will- but a deceat, Ood-feariq - 0111;e delcribed as. ~ "COIIIIIDIIIIIII
SOUihenl gemlemD," ·
Spurrier, it WOIIId seern, bas a
riaht to walk, talk and Co.ch with a ·

By STEVE WEBERG
USA 1'0dllr
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ta-NewcastlebrtdaelnAuau1t ·
E · 00
·
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•en 1 uah the necklace was
crushed by cars, a jeweler estimated
its value at S600. 'Knobel turned the·
"'
nec"'acc over to the police to give the
owner a tfionth to claim it .
.
The town then dug up a state law
regarding · "lost goods and stray
beasts," possibly dating back to
1820, when Maigc first became a
state,
' ·
The law says that if the item is
worlhniorethan$10,·thefindermust'
pay to advertise it and have it
apptaised. If it remains un,clai~. for
stx month~, the finder must JtYe the
town half Its value,
' , "I told, ~!" I'm not doina it,''
Knobel sa1d. None o~ '!t•s was told
to ,me ~hen I turned It Itt. It seems
absurd:

. :~:aw:~~~:ks~~~~:::~!=~

to the kitchen and den. I remember ,
him having to spend sev~ral minutes
recovering from that walk,
.· ~II. the whi
_'le, he craved his c_iia
.· -. ·
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Cruise control .
By USA Today

Tom Cruise-could becOOte lbe first
actor to have live siraiaht $100 mil·
lion-plus movies, topping Jim Car- .
rey's four. "Jerry Maguire,:• out
·three weeks, has racked up an estimated $60.6 million domestically,
_aitd Daily Variety estimates its earninas will double by_the time it leaves
U.S, theaters, Cruise's winning stteak
started in 1992 with "A Few Good
Men," follo'wed by "1'1;le Firm,"
"lntei'Yiew With the Vampire" and
"Mission:_Impossible,"

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The ·tortilla in.filtrates U.S. ·diets
By-HOLLIS L ENGLEY
Olfloliett ..... Service

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bread."

"We
Clt))CCI
Two of the most common tools bread to last four or
found in ancient Native America11 ~ five days before we
ruins in lhe U.S. Southwest are lb.: throw it away. It
mano and metate, the grinding becomes hard and
stones used lo tum kernels cif dried nor as fresh, almost
corn into inca!.
inedible. Wheat tor•
The original North American Iiiias, on lhe other
cooks turned lhe meal into what hanil, are functional
today we c'all tortillas. The Spanish (and) they taste
who settled in wrult is now the U.S. · good, even after five
Southwest, Mexico and Central . or 10 times the shelf
America made the flat bread a sta- life of regular bread.
pie that today accompanies other So we really are
dishes or is wrapped around meat, talking · about an
beans or vegetables 10 make a fast, entirely different
portable dinner.
.
functional
balled
Tortillas are thousands of years product."
old in Nord! America, but in com
. Winiska is preju-and wheat flour versions they're diced. of course. He
just finding their place in the diets researches 'tortillas ·
of U.S. residents north of the Sun· and tortilla ingrediBelt, most often combined with ents for a living. His
Mexican food. Tortillas an,d ot'ber favorite tortilla raefood frolil Southwest and south of-{.o:;.;::.~~/ne jn.his
the border is reaching people from. a
at the
Iowa to Boston to Vancouver.
university in Col" And any time Taco Bell opens lege Station, with its
a new place you've got growth," re!taurant-size torsays Irwin Steinbe'l of lhe Tortilla Iilla machine. .\ . •
Industry Association in California.
"'We help the
·According to Steinberg, tortillas corn llreeder~ and
are a $2.5 billion wholesale indus- wheat breeders eval. I!)' in lhe United ·states. "'It's con· uate their product,"
tinuins to grow atthe rate of 10 and · he says, . whicl)
.
.
.
. . .
IS percent a year," he says, "and means a lot of · TASTY TORTILLAS· Haldl Hartung of Jamaica Plllln, Maali.,la 1 native of Guedllajare, MexiCo, tind runaMarla
has been doing so since 1980." The peanut butter ~nd and .Ricardo's Tortilla Factory In Boston. (Hartung'a'father was a German Immigrant to Mexico. TortiiiU are thouTIA itself has grown from 12 com- jelly roll-ups at the tands of years old In North America, but In corn and wheat flour veralon1.they're 1u., finding their place In the
panies in 1990 to 130 today.
lab. ·:For the last. dlell of U.S, re1ldentl north of the Sun Bah,
, ., ,_ .. ,:
"I chink the phenomenon can bti · two decades we've ·
attributed. to a number of things. been helping the breeders grow the was invited to' join her cousin they are just beginning til' know
Her product is, she says, "in my ,
The influx of Immigrants across the right thing in the field. In addition, Ricardo in ;New England. "'I was Mexican food now, It's something humble opinion," a good tortilla.
border, chen Mexican restaurants my job as a cereal chemist is to young and inexperienced an~ most- new for .them. Tii.ey are consuming
·,
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began to spread and non-Hispanics assure ·that the chemistry and - ly cr:11:y," she says, and she never mor~ tortillas because it's fashionWhat makes a1 1ood flour torbegan to try the fOod .and started to physics that go on in the product expected lo he making tortillas in able 10 h~ve nillt9ritas and que- tilla?
use it in the home as well.
· yield the best possible product "
Boston.
·
sadillas. ·Every restaurant these '
'
'"It's still concentrated in the
' In ocher words, a good.tortilla.
1lJe two cousins started Maria days carries some Mexican food." · 'I'll define it in tenns of its flaSu~ Belt, .but it's now sprtlldfilg
Like the ones made by Heidi . and Ricardo's. It's been a straggle,
Heidi's 14-employee·tortilla fac- vor and functionility,'' says Ralph
beyond chat Jo the Midwest ahd the Hartung in Jamaica Plain, Mass., bu[ today ·Heidi (Ricardo is out of tory ·got a national write-up in The Winiska. "It would be wlleat-fla- ·
Northeast." .
Hartung is a native of Guadalajara, the business) supplies fresh, preser- New York Times and the mail-order vored· without other overtones iH
Ano.l outs1ile the Western Hemi- Mexico, and runs Maria and Ricar- vative' free wheat and com tortillas business be&amp;an to boom. Now she's aromas. The texture would bti
sphere, . says Texas A-and-M do's Tortilla Factory in Boston. to restailralll$ and groceries around.' moving into other foods iike smooth and soft and rollable and
chemist and tortilla researcher (Hartung's father was a German Boston a!ld as f~ south as Virginia. · tamales and q~sadillas. But the folded easily witho.ut breaking, so
Ralph Winiska. Entrepreneurs are immigrant to Mexico. The busi. "When I came, nobody knew simple flat bread will remain the the conients stay 'inside and not on
l~ng into tortilla production in ness's"Maria" is her middle name, a~ut tortillas," she says. "1bey fa.ctory's foundation.
your lap. 1lJe color is a personal
Australia, India, China, the Nether- she san; "I couldn't~call it 'Heidi . didn't know what was a tortilla. It
"Our tortillas are exaedy as if thing, but it's a lightly toasted, leavlan&lt;ls and even France, hop!e of the and Ricardo"'s, could I?'')
was a job of teachihg them how to you were buying in a gOod torilleria ened P.roduct."
·
baguette. .
.
Ten years ago, after restaurant eat tortillas, what's a good tortilla." in Mexico, like. in a small village,"
., •'
'The reason, Winiska flatly says, and hotel training i.n Switzerland
"New England doesn't chaoj!e," she says: "My mother asked me, • "Any type· of meat or vegetable
is !hat "tortillas are superiOr to and then no jobs in Mexico. she she says of her ne'ighbors' eating . .'Bring tortilla~ with you' when you or Olher cereal product goes inside.
habits . ."They are not stubborn, but come home.' Really!"
It is tral~ a carrier of anything."
'
.'

caused Illness ·
FOA issues advisory on ·synthetic drug~
. that
.

I.,OS ANGELES (AP) - 1lJe
gov~mment warned consumers not to
ingest synlhetic designer drugs with
names like "Cherry fX Bomb" tharviol~ntt., siclcened dozens in a crowd
of y9ung partygoe~ at a New Year's
Eve "r;IYe" concert. ,
.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration warned people Wednesday
not to consume colored liquid prod· ·
ucts nained "Orange fX Rush."
"Lqnon fX Drop," and "Cherry IX

. . . ,. .

Clinic starts
campaign to
stop spread
of tuberculosis

Business Services
IU1UID·IQ ·

FOiu WAYNE. lad (AP) -A
.dramatic increase in the spread of
tuberculosis 11110ng inner..:ity resi- '\
. dents has prom~ Fort WeyncAIIcn County~t of Health
to reshuffle its edilcalion PIOJ1111.11·
Allen County rec:onled ;28 cases of
TB igJ 995, just one ley than in Mition County, which has a much li!J· .
er population. '·
· . .
. In !he pest ·five years, nearly_llll;lf
of Allen County's. 90 CBJeil were m
the46806and .46803 ZIP codes. Six·
teen of ilS 199S cue$ - including
five childlen- were in !hose ZIP
c!Jdes, were five of its eight 1996
. · ' ' ·
cases,.
.
· "It's not like it's Ol!li there," said
Nancy )Yells, a.reaistered n-urse and .
division director of the health depan• ment's Tuben:ulosis Control Clinic.. .
"It'.s just that it's our highest .risk

SIHLYCO.
· RUTLAND, OHIO .
114-742-26511

'

Brier Proof
Hunting Clothea

.

area."

• ~ ~ ff
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!&lt;·~·

r,

:Covington ·native dots 'i'
.
· for OSU
band :at
Rose Bowl
.
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DAYTON, .Oiuo (AI')- Steven band member ·can receive. The · dot.
.
., . .
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Poast knew ew:tly how 'the biggest' chance to do it during the sc~ool's , "But Y!,e ddn 't think that way m
moment ol"hislnusical career would first Rose Bowl. appearance m 12 · our band, Poast s11d.
go. He had rehearSed it countless years•made it more special.
.
Poasl _was, confid~nt becau!!C he
times.
·
•
· Poast, 23, an elementary educano!l . had pracnced lhe routJ~~~any ll'!'"s.
When the Ohio Stale marching · major, was orie of two sousaphone He !llso got to do the I at P~Ytous
band compleied its fatnous "script players chosen for the honor in a .games, although none w~ as lmporOhio" Jonnation at lhe Rose BOI'•l secret ballot of their peers. Torn. tant as the Rose Bowl.
. ,
Wednesday, the sousaphone player Tr~ni of Grove City was chosen t.o
~ts m~th~r had a tougher time
&amp;~m Covington, Ohio, strutted out to dot the other "i" in "a double-script dea,l,'~g With 11.
, , .
become the dot on the "i."
perfonnance in Pasadena.
I m a nervous wreck, S&amp;ld Lln·
"This is about as good as you can
The honor is not wi!hout its wor- ~a Poast, 4S, a regJste~ nurse.
get,'' Poast said last 'week; before ries. 1be sousaphone 1s heavy, and
When Steve do,l;ted the. 1 for the
teaving for California. "It's the ulti- the 5-foot-11, 175•pound Poast has to Notre Dlll)e g~e last year, I started
male way to go out of the marching· strut to his. ~po~ without losing his to cry ,and cned so much I ~most
band and Ohio .State, in front of .balance ot tnppmg,
co~l.d~ t see.
1.
•
100,000 'people and a. national 1V
It would be an embarrassment for . It s a . real . suu_t, carrymg an
audience."
··
· a sousaphone . player to lose his Instrument that ~e1ghs . about 60
The opportunity to dpt the "i~' is plumed hat cir ,a piece of his large po~nds. And contrary to popular
the highest honor any Ohio State insU)Iment on.his way to becoming a behef, the~ pl~yers are not .~ways
·
lhe b1ggest guys on the field.

.Men should also ask doctors
:to-·check breasts for cancer
•

I
. I

Deer Cut

Maplewood
Lake

Skin-Cut·Wrap
949-2734
1~1mo . pd

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
Cuoiaoo Building. -1&lt;19
•NewHomta.·

•Addftlont
•NewGtr~gll

•Remodeling
•Siding
•Rooflng
•Ptlntlng .
FFiEE ESTIMATES ·
(814) 882-5535 .
(814)882-2753

-

·Al nnd .· .

'

Ohio Valley Electric Corporation
(lypr CrHk) 0 ·
Employtel/letlrees/Simvi•l Spo•••:
U1lted HMith Care (Metro . .1..) will ·
ad•hilster ro•r ~escrl;tlu luellt Pltin .
startlnglalliary-1, 1997. Swl~er &amp;·Loll11
Phar••cy c• 1111 y~r prncrlptlus.wllll
your new presc~ptl• ca,rd._lf J~ lla.we
Cll•clr, IH, or ••~
your Swlsller • ..'Lohte Pllar.acbts.
welc8•• yur'prescrlptloll

••r

w,

·•ll•i••·

... -- .... ~-~--.,I

'"''-..-..W••

H
. OIIYLAND

t

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-·

TRUCKINJ

IVYDALE .

ANGELS
LIGHTED BASKETS, WREATHS, SWAGS,
YARD ORNAMENTS, QUILT RACKS, PAINTED
•
CANS AND SAWS, DOG HOUSES, SHELVES.
GIFT BASKETS FEATURING WATKINS AND
TUPPEAWARE PRODUCTS.
1-IVE TRE;ES, WREATHS, CROSSES AND
fl"oiNSETTIAS BEGINNING NOVEMBER 23
2 Mites North of su-.Bridge on SA 7
1~ M-F; 1-6 Sunday
·
Phone 446 4530

OUMPTRUCK ·
St:RVICE .
limestone • Gravel
. .
Dirt • Sand ·

985-4422

Chester, Ohio
1tvi!So'96 TF

I&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

ES' TREES

20 Yean

Eicper¥!nc~

•

537 BRYAN PLACE

MIDDLEI'ORT

Top~ Trim,

~

-st- Doors &amp; ·
Wbidows ·

... . Allllllo!ts

......

(UmeStoneLow Rates)

BANKRUPTCY

can relieve a debtor of
financial obligations and arrange a fair
distribution of assets. Debtor&amp; in bankruptcy may
keep •extimpr property fof their personal 1.1$9.
This ·rriay Inclucie .a car, a house, clothes, and
household goods.
For lnformalion Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

'

' :;
"

Um~stone,

Gravel, Sand, .·
Top Soli, Fill Dl
61 +992·3470 -..

Attorney AI Law

Athens, Ohio

(614) 592-5025

•

WICKS
HAULING -

Attorney William Safranek

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

12ti71M 1 MO.

~------~.~----~

~-__,, .

BISSELL BUILDERS,·IN(,. .:... i . ,,, .,liNG'S
New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
· Room Additions ·· Rooting ·
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
'

•

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f 31801 Amberger Rei.

.•

.....

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-Roofing
-Remodeling
oNew Conatructlon

oDe&lt;: lis
•VInyl Siding
olnaurecl
FrNE«&lt;tulH

rMIKE BING .;
...' _.....,.
~,w

mo. ~ :

ROBERT IISSELL
C'ONmUOION

BINGO
· . RACINE, OHIO
AMERICAN LEGION

~New Homes

•Garagoa ·
•Complete
· Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

.985 4473

~2-6711

Qlf Forest Run

949.,057 ' . ,,

(No Sunday Calls)

DAVIS
CONTRAOING

AUTO .
REPAIR

• ·. ,
f

•

614-992·7643

POST 602

EVERY $UNDAY
.•

7/22/lfn

Doon1 Open 4:30.
Game starta 6:45.
Par out Ia accordlng·to
nl""ber of players.
Under new inanagemeoL
Public Welcome
'

. GRUESER'S
· GAUGE
.,

Body WOi'k, Clll", truck

• trvck painting,
minor mechlniCII
repair.
Tune-upa, Oil Change,
Wax, Buffing
•
.; Long tit, RUUend,' Olr.
:: . 742-2035, Altk for Kl

ev;aryone.

...

t

·

, 7/11111fn

I

·~

. ..

Pick up diiCilnlld

IPPHancee, bMII!rles,
. 1111ny rillllll1 •

Public Notice •

114-882-4015

· ,.otloe 11 · hereby given

11111 on thO 13th dly of
Jttnuery 1817 111 7:00 P.M. tt
thO Mllp Lootl llotrd of
ldunllon Olfloil, ~.
Olllo, th1 Jlhlga Looel

illllll-- ... '\

will IIOicl .. pullllo '-'111
lor thO tex budllt for thO
perkHI of July 1, '1"7

throlllh JundO, 1..._
ClniiJ ... tlllontmua.

.,

............
Tlaa ...

' ...... LMI!IIIotrd of

lltJti 1 "'

Thanks To All My
Customers &amp; Frieads for
the Gifts &amp; C&amp;rd8
. Received for Chr1strnaa.

'

SUI'S
IUEINOUSI
Morning Star llclJ ·
CR ao, Rlolno, 0111o

I,

, II

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•s.oou,

l

•

••
•
••
•

oAftlflct.l Polnue-. ••

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....2111

II

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-om.-...

•Raping oWtMIIie

Pallllnlt't Olllo 417111
(1) I !110.
.
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II

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motor bloeb.

TAX BUDGET HEARING

lalloolllowll ollduCIIIIIO!I

I

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......... WWows
~&amp;.aps ·
.

Removal &amp;
Stump Grinding

Th•odoriA

I Up to Ss.oo·OH any prt~erlptl.,.. I
I .Umlt 1 per Customer per pr•acrlptlon. I
&amp; loh·se Ph•r••cy .· I·
1 Swisher Explres1·20-97
. , .J

912·2772

8:00 ..m.-3:30 p.m.

i•

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R. L. HOLLON

CHRISTMAS in the COUNTRY ·
at

at

1

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tOtJPON

1MIIIt mo.

I

:fiOTI.
C
E·
-

q"•tf•• pi••• .,.

814-992-5378
Day &amp; Evening Hn1.

Dear Ann Landers· Al•""ugh I .r~~~~::::-------.~ ilffect their daily. lives -- problems
::- have ~-,;.:ver -· seen ~;. ~;ohtein ·
such ai"atcoholism, drug. addiction,
·; addressed· in your colum,, I suspect
family discord,' divorce, domestic
•· that 1am not alone.
. , .
an ers
viqlence, depressibn and financial
• l 1 am a middle-aged man who has ·
;,.,_ 1.oo A'"'" ' difficulties. EAPs are run by profesl lo~i a greatdeal of weight. I am very
~=~=:'"" c~sionals who are trained to find the
happy about it, but unfonunatel~, I
best sources of help in the commu; now have breasts. The only soluuon
·nlty.
~ . 'W doctor has been able to offer is
p11ny.
EAPs improve employee morale;..
'. lffeasl reduction surgery, but my
In ·the meantime, I suggest you increll$e productivity and reduce
j insurance company will not cover look into buying a woman's soon.&lt; health care costs. Employees 'find.
,! 'Ibis, claiming it is for cosmetic pur- bra. 1llere are'styles and sizes to suit help in dealing with problems that
poses_only. 1 do not have _the finan- . almost anybody, ;md if you are too would normally distract them from ·
I cial means to pay for thiS type.-of embairassed to shop for one yourself, their work, and emplbyers develop a
, surgery on my own.
. . ·ask your wife or 'a female friend to stro~ger, more focused·~!~Prk force.
;
As near as I am able to detel'llllne, .accompany you. ·
'
: without going; into a ladies' underAbout one in every ~·?.0? men
For those who would like more r"""~~~~~..,.....,
, wear department, I am 8 ,C cup. Our- develops breast cancer, s91t ts 1mpor- information, they can get a copy of
COITROL
: ing exercise, particularly jogging, my tanl for ltlj:n to ask.theu d'?"tors '? our free brot:hure,_:·confidentiality
Clm•hcb
• breasts bQUnce and become painful. . ckeck for breast lumps dunng rheir and Employee Assistance Programs:
! on top of that, my doctor wants me regular visits. If there is any sign of What Every Employee Should
(ht &amp; llectrkl
:· to go for a mammogram. Needless to trou~le, a mammogram could s~ Know," by sending a self-addressed,
llrplal-· lliMts
' ·say 1 would be embarrassed to he the your life. Don't worry about bemg · stamped envelope to EAPA, 2101
. l1l11...n
: on I~ ~ale in a rooro'full of women. the "only male" in the waiting room. · Wilson Blvd., Su.ite SOO, Arlington,
1UPII IILKnOI
:
Do you have any suggestions for Explain your probl~m when you . Va: 22201. Those employers who
Plullc Medel•
: me?· there some son of binder I schedule your appointment, and I'm would like to find out how to set up
, .could use until such time as I could . sure the technicia'\!r'ill put your mind an EAP can contact us 'at the same
• afford surgery? If so, how would I go at ease. She will have heard your sta- address.
: about purchasing such an item?
· ry before.
:
1wish this were a fake letter from
Dear Ann Landers: When Y'?U
ThankS for .all you've dqne to help
Prfdorltllo, 011
• a Yale student, but unfortunately, it's receive letters from people who need people.~ Don.ild W. Magruder, pres- . Acresi ... riYtr ,,_
: 100 percent legitimate. -- Bunercup professional ·help, please te,ll'them to iden1, EAP. Association.l:. .
hll .......... wv
: in Rh!XIe Jslan!l
•·
find out if they h~1ve ace~. to a.n · Dear Donald Magruder: And
.... Sfldl lt.ol ...,.
:
Dear Buitercup; You have a con- employee asststanccprogram m their !hank you for helping m)l to help peoI ..G0-776.0527 .
; dition known as gyneeomastia. It's worlcplace or through a famtly mel)l- pie. .
IIIlO PM DillY
1
10
: possible, given your circumstances, her.
.
.
,
.
, thai breast-reduction surgery would
Many mnovat1ve compames have
Send questions to Ann Landers, SlltlYS I PM TO 6 PM
~ he considered medical .·and not cos· devel,oped employee asststance p{o- Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Centumetiq. Ask your doctor to e~plain . gra~s (E~) to hel~ employees 110d ry Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
· Card Of Thanks
• your situation to the insurance com- thetr flllllltes deal wtth problems chat Calif. 90045
~
.
'
.
WI
toth1nk
1veryono who mld1
our 50th Wedding ·
An\~ • .
IUCCIU. Our Chlldron
miiH I( ~ groat day. ·
All the rolllll"• 1nc1
frltndl who Clllld
and thO cards and ·
glfllwe !Wcelvld.
Thlnkl.lltllllnto

'Is

.

(look for •lgn•) ·
Middleport, OH

,,:.,_..a-,

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or DaUu (614) 94!1-3036

ROSE BOWL PARADE • Floeta mab their ' "Water • the Gift Of Life," by Rain Bird Sprlnway 'down CoiOredo Blvd., during the 108th t tder Mfg., won the dl~'a trophy f~ the
Tournament Of ro... ·Parade In Puadltnl,
"Life'1 Shinning Momentl. (AP)
CIIH., Wednaaday. 11le flalt In foregiOUnd,
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We wiH work within your budget.
Ph. 773-9173
. FAX 773-5881
108
wv

CARPET

•

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.HNI.. Uglds
lleJts ' 1fo'1Wt

"No Job Too Lsrge or Too Small"

· Ju~ oft Bradbury Rd.

.-

0

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New Homes, Additions,
Roofing, Palntlng,Bams
Garages, Concrete
FtrHJ Esllmalell
25 yatu:5 experience
~ 1ix it as if it w•ro our
own honu or J,auin~ss
Ask for
Jolm (6,4) 992-3!187 .

TIM'S CUSTOM

•

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Cltttps
...

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Authorized AOA Distributor

, • Welding Supplies • Industrial G'a ses • Mechirie Shop
' ServiCes • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Rf~Pelr Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool DrevinQ • Ornamental
Stepa • Stalra, AaiHngs, Patio Furniture, 'Fireplace
Items, Planter Hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other sluffll

vm. . .._.

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Altci-1~ !feta~

CUSfOIIIUIDIIIG &amp;
IEMODELIIG

SAVE 50%·75%

The ciinic applied for an Indiana
State Department of Health grant for
money to put up TB awareness billlioards and do 4ll educational. campaign, but it didn't gel' ·the money,
said Dr. Th&lt;mlas Hayhurst, 1\ Fort
. Way~ lung specialist and lhe clinic's •
medical director.
.Instead, the clinic will use spare
money froth its budget and donations
, to dis!fibute literature and speak ·at
schools_!!Jid chun:hes from February
through April, he said.
'
·TB commonly.attacks the lungs. If
not treated, groups of protective cells
enlarge and merge around ·the TB
bacteria, becoming a grainy mass of
dead tissue chat ends up in the lungs. ·
Children, lhe 'elderly and people
wilh weakened•immune sysccms are
more susceptible to the disease.
· Roughly' a third of lhe county's
tuberculosis cases occur among
. elderly people who were exposed 10'
TB SO to 60 years ago, HayhiU'Sl said.
About another third are among for•
eign-bOm people, especially those
· from Asia, Africa, Soulh America and
Central America, he said, · .
Overall, '&amp;bout half ofTB cases are
among minority populations, Hayhurst said.
.
"TB is also very much a di~
that is associated with poverty; it's
·associated with crowding, it's associated with drugs, drug and alcohol
'abuse," he said. ''It kills more peOple than HN.'." •

.. - ..

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llatlc.ln

Colis
...
~.'It ~ \t

Using the Classi{ieds
· Is as Easy as .. ~

1

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Call992-2156

To plale an ad

as

,·

Bomb." 1lJe liquids are store&lt;,! in the FDA. The vials were'handed out was canceled.
Concengoer Charlie . _Bambrook
glass vials.
at the conce!'l, attended by about
"These products have been impli- I 0,000 people. Six people have been liad to be treated for four hours after
1:ated in severe adverse reactions arrested for investigation of selling he drank an "IX" product and fell to
includine diuiness, nausea, severe · and distributing drugs.
·
the ground wrjlhing in pain, v.m'!!l:
shortness of breath and ·respiratory
A 17-year-old boy·who suffered a in~ .
·
· "Then they had an announcement:
arrests chat affected approximately 50 heart· auack and an .18-year,old
people-.some of whom were hos- woman were upgraded from critical 'Do not lake Ibis fX, w~atever it is,
pilatiied," said FDA spokesman Jim tp stable condition· today. Another do not take it,'" the 18-year-old
O'Hara in Washington,•D.C.
boy,. remained 1n critical condition Bam brook told KCI\L-TV on
• O'Hara said confiscated Vials of after hei ng struck by a car during the Wednesday.
the "IX" products will be tested by melee that erupted when lhe concert

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thul'lday, JanUWf 2, 1117

....... I • nie c.lly Sentinel

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"i11M~LJI~--~If~Y·~-~..,;;;;;;LJI;.:Ir~·2,~1;.;;117;.;..;.._ _ _':--_,_,.·._
· -:,-:-:-.-:-~~POI=m::•:.::rtlf::•:::lll=od=-4=:p=-o-=rt,=OI=il=o=-==·~;::
.

~. Jlna.y 2, 1 .'.

nel•"P8ge 11.;.
~

••

NIA Cro••word-Puzzle ·
~

$.LIP
ALDER

SSG Loti a Acraege
' - For Silo, Coli
P.lol 81 .. 245788.

a.-. e a a
Ono bedrb"om apartm.nt m r.ilddloport all ufllltita paid, 1270/mo,'
• UlO &lt;ltpooi~ call 014-i92·7eool,
One bedroom apattmenr in Pl.
P1Mun~

114-1192-5858.

=~ill

l=:":c

.I

l&gt;&lt;)N'f MfiiN. 70 BE

.,.....
•a..t

•f£1'..

fiNI'i'&lt;Y 1

ft/JD

brick &amp; atone Work, 30 years experience, r.eaa.onable rates. 304·
895-35111 olttl e ~Opm.. no job "'
small or m BIG. WV.021206
Livingston·• basement &amp; waterprooUno. all batemenl repairs
done, tree tltlma res, lifetime

guo'""""·304-875-2105.
,. .,
'

ittAT~ 11f' ft!DO

MY

(IJ

1)1~11.

&amp; nice yard. 304·175-3030
301-S7$-M31 .

01

,tor Rent

-.Act

negotiate. 304 -675-1753 If no 8n-~
sww.l~message.

·.

~

1~92

@

Nistan Truck , 5 Speed ,

,.

AMIF"' S3,600, 614-446-4?~2.

I

•.

'82 Ford 314 tQn 4x4, tors ol new 1
parts, runs great! S~OO, 8J4.; :
·3fli1-0323.
' .

'

MERCHANDISE

tn·Small TraMer
DepOsit &amp; References Re·
, ....,....., Pl•on•ri1H411-1104.

Merchandls&amp; ·
JBM 486 OX, 33

VGA Momtor, So&lt;o~dl~ard

Speaktrs, Sollware I games i
eluded. 5400.00. 814-245-9036

JET
.
AERATION MOTORS
Repolrad, New &amp; ReOOill In SIOCI&lt;.
CoH Ron Evans. 1o600-53H52~
2 BRo. 5 Mlloo Soulh 218, Galllpoll~. uso, month . • Oepoolt.
W1t1t lnclude'd. 61"·256-678~.

COt..nlry .FurMure. 304-675-6820.
Af 2 N. 6m1les1 Pt Pleasar.u. WV.
Tues-sat 9-6, Sun 11 -S.

814-258-1337

lEER Fiberglass truck topper,
Ills 94-96 Dodge Ram 8ft. bed .
304 -458-1604

:;l;~ants W~lcome, 6 u ~388·

CormickRoad: el4·4&lt;18·965. ·

REAL ESTATE

FI\Rr,1 SUPPLIES

I t/2 Bath, 2 Bedrooms, 1 Bath,
All In Ponet Area, You Pay Oepotit &amp; AU Utllltlis, Reference

.

31 0 Homes for Sale

&amp; LIVESTOCK

Rlqulrocl No Fell, 61 .. 3118-8162.

•!

,.
""
"

••

1,9 94 Ford F -150 S~o~porc;ab •h:4 .\

4 .9l, 5 Speed,· Blue 31X10 .50 ~
Ti res, Overhead Console, Bed 1f

stOck, doublewides, move in

a' Vocalist for a Got-

now, no payments for 90 d-.ys. Dedicate Penoh' needs to In·
Only 11 Oakwood Homes, Nitro, quirt. 614-258-8342

wv. 304-75S-5885.

3 Bedroom, liniahed bllsemenl,

~

446:0562.

.,

.

.

441-0247
1998 Chevy

Fourth Avenue, Gallipolis, $2501
carport, ·will consider trade. 30•- Mo.,
Wawr, Train Paid, 61 ... 4146875-0030 or 31)4-875-3031.
:IIW4 Allor&amp; P.M.

mE BORN LOSER

cab, 4wc:J , 350 •,

autoloverdr1ve , 3,200

•

miles;

loaded. 304·675-~.

~·

For ule or Renl, 11 Acr• MIL 3
Bedroom. 2 Baths. City Schools.
(514) 3111-9238

Mega Star 45 ACP. 13 round
new in box), $350; Ruger P89 stainless Dmr'n, petfecr,
with lwo · 1S rourid mags, $325;
Browning BLR 308 cal. with Red· .

In Pomeroy, , 814·882·31 11 or rooms, 1 Balh . AC. In Cheshrre
614·992-1451.
(014) 367-75e0
..

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.,

oc ~~

'

fX WRITII-IU '% 11-l!&gt;TOO
r£.,7, ru. e£r I , ..

'flee !ZEOOi='n'lot-~

- ..

:-~!

mag, (like

field ,cape. nice, _ISSP: ·call .aher
l!pm, 514-742-211~.

,Par,·ltll1W' poaiuan llvalli.ble varl·
able '1hilt1, houaekaeplng/laun·
dry aida. Paint Pleasant Nursing
&amp; Rahatrilifalian Canter, Slate
Route 02, Route 1, Box 32&amp;,
Point Pleasant, WV 25550 . A
Glenmatk·Mulllcare
Facility.

MOvrn~ sale · 4641 7

•

.

If)\,
. 1\El\ ...' lr.:ol~

~1'16 OC~ ~LLY
~!&gt;Tioltf; ~11-16 UP , :

1 Mobile HOme For Ren~ Or Mobile
Remington 270 BDL. brand new,
i~ box $&lt;00. 00.. 458-1604.

~

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~

~~ ~ ~ BETIEit,eiJT I 1m'

3-4 bedrOO(ft hOUit, heal pump,

kltct'ten a,-lances, breez.w~y,
car oarage, tun baHmenl, nice Homo Lot. 014·4411-1279 . .
101, 'close to hospital and echool, Mobile Home or R8nt. 2 Bed ·

mobile home
no pets, 61 4·992·

530 ,

A~tlqu&amp;s

Buy or ·sell. Rlnrloe Antiques,
1 124

E.

Mala Sreet, on At. 124,

f'omtroy. Hours : M. T. W. 1o:oo
a.m. 10

EQE,

e:oo p.m., Sunday 1:00

10

e:oo p.m. 614·892·2528. Ruu
Moore owner.
·~ · 1

5410 MIS'ceiiBn&amp;ous
, Merchandise i.

614-99 2-7362

740 ·_Motorcycl&amp;a

• ·

P.M. 614·367·0328.

.'i.c 'l

·
::-:::-:::7::-::-::-:::-:;-:::::-:=.1 ~~~~~~~~~
1994 CR 125 Honda Excellent.Cor'ldition $2,500 Call -.rrer 4:30' · !

19~7 ~11ama 350 Big sear

BIG NATE .
WANNA TE"I'I•

UP TO BANII.·

4x+_: ::

warn winch, big wheel kil 15,000.1 :

304-458-1804.

19

46,

Allpua

loaen.

•.
e~~:1

Pass '

31

RUPT NATE?

\

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.-

•'

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Worldwide, tbia ia ~

evern!jli eliatalM! atllidl·a lewL
Ia ,tbll deal, playiai in lour apHea;
Huaag:bad two certain loien in the
minora, ao be bad to awld two heart

~

W-heel Drive 29,000 MUes su : ....

MobUe HOme 2 Bedrooms, Stove,
Refrigerator~ Very · Smalt. Sl20

1. •

16 .,

~

.,

lbe bJ&amp;beat pereenta&amp;e ·auecen rate,
He lint pla,ed in the Far Eut Open
Tealllil when' oal1 15, the youaaeat·

'
Four · "'

'

U94 Toyota Plck·up

Weol Nol1b Eut

ap~.

way -Mi., Asking St5,999 Call614- _:1

pel . Group. Only urloua and

lloulll

. Far East Open Pain live limes in 20

AIMPT ATION /''!UN.
Ot T.t4f AIO\fi "•NfV~ GOT OFF
Tt:fi ·61tOUHb.

Mat, AC , 52K Mites, 95% HiQh- ~
Q

"CHRISTMAS SPECIAL • New in Looking fOr

Nllfoi'S MOVIf ·

:,

1993 Grand· Cherokee LaredO,
great cond. muSit sell. $15,000
3()4. 173-5226

Eaat-wJ-·

-limes-

IT SAYS Ttlt FLYifo/6

Chrome, Book 14,700 Quidi ,,
site 113,000 , Oa~s 814-4,.Ek

9228; Evenirlgs 614 ·256-6898.

'
6 AI 7 5

If you asked 100 expoms whO.ia the
' best player ever to eome .out ·of tbe
. Far East, it Ia probable they would all
· VIlle for Patrick HIIBDg from Taiwan. · ""r+--iNow 53 yean_old, be ia a linancial ex·
eeutlve in a plastics corporation. He
won silver med•l• in the 1111111 and 1110
. Bermuda Bowl. He .,... won the Fir
East Open Teams
the-

41" Silverado Trim Eu:ellenl

s

.• 3

..

:-:::-':::-:~~---=---::-·1 Condition, AT. PB, PW, POL, Tllt;-"&gt;i
Pu'ppy Palace Kennels, Boarc:ling, Air, Bedrails, Bedlin,er, Extrl ~

3 Badroom MObllo Hom. On Mc-

3 Bedoooms, 2 BalM, 2 Badooom,

6 A·K .Q 5 t ·
• Q. 3

1 Fwabllr'a
Word
2 11144 ..._,..
.....
3 SunriM
·-5Poallhe ...
I Dentlat'*cletl·
7 !lalea ~

. By Phillip Alder

I

1.986· Chevy Full Sire Conversion I ,
Van, White and Navy ~Jtl:elle.inttfJ
&lt;;:pndilior1.J LOw Miluge-1 Price R
· ;::B1::4~·2::~s.:-s;.1;.oo:-.:--::-:--::--l d!i&lt;ecl 8, ....,6'79211.
. ·.
Pets Plus, Slll!'er Bridge PlaZa . 19A2 Chevr Shori•Wheel Bas•"t
Hedgehog . $110.00
cage and 'Year supply Of

Stud Service Puppies, 'Groofnlng,
Buy, Setl &amp;·Trade, All Breeds.

6 K 8 5

DOWN

:The brigfrtest ·
; light in the east

·I

Galdlf'l Retrie\ler
BJoodtd, born NaY.
on Premiael.

614·441.0770.

•

•• Opeping lead: t A

773-5e8t .

llmllallon or dlscrlmlnollon.•

across from Ctrester post
front
Household r
. Thursday,

'

••.

730 vans '&amp; 4·WDs

..•

vulnerable:
Dealep West :

month deposit &amp; urllltles. 304·

make any ouch p,...,.,..,

.

·· .

1991 Ford rlange• . Slandarcf~
84,000 M1tes. 2 wneel Onve~";:jt
13,700, 080,614·256·1233.
- .·

for rent,
.cc. 0 _._, paid, call

~m Traitor

•

S.lll

2 l!adroom locotad on S..ad Run
Rd In tl"" Hovon, U80 par

"""""'"'0 In

INs - - lo IIUbject 10
\110 _,..Fair
011 tee wNch ~ lllagol
to adWriiM •any prwlnnce,
llmllation or c::bcrirniNtlon
based on rKe, cokx', rwllgian,
seK famNialltatua or natlonal
O&lt;lgln, or any lnhonuon lo.

s

lngine ' 1fans app('or l vear old, ·, ·:

Roolris lor rent · wee!« or month.
Starting at S120'"!0· Galli a Hot~ .
614·446·_9580.

420 Mobile ttomea

Q.

runs Untal, musl salt $4,500 Will .•,

Twin"Rivera, Tower, naw .acceprinv
applications for 1br. HUD subsidized
and handi-

nlollad 1 &lt;ltpoolt requlrod. 304 875-86)2. ;
•

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"

~~~~~~~~~--1117 'Ford F-250, 351 Windsor- 11

5304 or 614·992·5231 .

Small 2 bedroom hou••/ fur -

683
9.A J I I I
10 2
AKQi S'tz " t 10 I 7

~real. 304-87~ 1;;'1

1

23 c-. 11a1r
2AIIefole21 Epic poem
11 llcraiiNa
33 CheniiCIII """"
Mly-1111
- -..
ltiil \
J7 Slave

i

1885 Chevy S-1 0. auto, Pt. pb, :

•

~~II Oneol ...
a-,. twine
17 Cllu!IIIY
II w.·-

20~Dey

'21

Eut

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ;o

537Sf,

3091, 614·992-2178 or 61• ·992\

I:-7:....-:---.,::..----:-::::-e Ropm hou•; alDrage building

_,__. J .• \

67S-2074.
runs great tooks

menr in.Middl&amp;pOfl, call 614·448·

Two btdroom hou... car pettd
and ctoan. no lnoldo poll, dOI&gt;Oiit
roqulrocl, e14·'"-:3!f80·

All reel -

Bt/f, IT'~ 11fT

••

l:==·
.
.
.
.
.._
u..15 Cel*tot'oloat

6JU872
• K 1a

•J102

~

113 Acttlr g. I I
54 Hoell

t 4 _,

01-«1-t'!

1881 Dodge Ram 112 leln· pidl'"4Pt -~
slant 8 cyl, slandard shlh wtoYer-• 1
drive, good cohd. $1,700. 30.t:·-''

"...•
•

Cl~

13::::'
-genua

.
35" Tiru, l;

$2,800 Or Be,al Oll&amp;r 8 ••·379· •·
2174, Leave Message.
.'

O"nt bldroom lurn1'shed IPifl·

HARTS MASQNARY • Block,

Ll~.

Ntw ~buill Molor, Aura , Askin.g •

Nice rwo bedroom apaflmtnt in
Pomeroy, no pots, '81..~·5858,

RE: Nli\LS

Trucka
1879 GMC 4x4 4"

~

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12

KIT 'N' C~RLYL£ e by Larry Wrtpl

..•

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--~------------------------~------------~~----~--:

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Afte-r caabhig the dia!Dond ace,
West lnrilched to· tbe heart 10. If
Weai's 10 was a singleton, declarer
bad to play low from lhe dwruny. But
knowing it was more li~ely hearts
would be 5·2 than 8-1, and pkhaps
thinking West might bave.led a singleton heart llt trick one, Huang called
for dwniny'a heart king. .
.Alter winaing with the ace, East re·
, turited lbe heart jack. HIIBDg won with
, the queen, drew two I'OIIIIdlllll trumps
. ending in the ~ummy, and rail the ·
club jack to W~l~ !M1l~· _After ruff, · ,
hlg West's' diamond return hilb, declarer played a trump to dllllllily, re•pellted lbe club lineae, and diacarded
. dummy'a Jut heart on bia 13tll dub.
Note thatllHuans plays low from
the dwruny a£lrick two, be abould fall.
East p~ an encouraging spot-card.
Then, when We.t gets In .with ~ clu~
queen, be returns bia second beart, al·
: ~~ East to casb two tricb in lbe
1awt.
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The first prerogative of an artist in any medium is lo
. 11)8ke a fool ol himseH." - Pauline Kael.
• . •
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.

.

~ J£ t.~s·
.
ltlllotl loy ClAY I. POUAH
-':'_.~_=_•'..:...S...;;:@\\JllA

WOlD

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lho ,_...__,.-..,...,._.....,.,

Rearranga lottwro of
0 four
tc:rambled· words

l».

low to fonn lour limplo iiword1.

'c

Apartments
for Rent

· 304 ·

bedroom apartments, fur·
and unf\Jrnishtd, security
required,
pets, 614·

,o

Someone TD Oo Odd Jobs, El·
perienced In Roofing.Helpful, See

Sarah Adams AI: '2388 Mill (fraak

Rood. Galllpoi~ .
180 wanted To Do

Any odd jobs, pai-nting, gutlers
cleaned. 61.t· 245· 5879 or 304 •

~

. apls .• total
BP·
furnished, laundry roo""
close to school in town.
available at: Village
149 or call 6,4·992·

built home on appraximate14

·-

ac.r ea, 3 bedrooms, 2
·
living room, large
ofl ol SR 33,
call alter

UNSCRAMelE lETIERS TO

675-7112

GET ANSWER

Apar.tmenr 1 Searoom
, Utilities Pard, 607 Sect
614·446· ,

1 bedroom apartmentl for
with ltor~ge building. Wilt
on lan~ contract, 814·8e2·

;.

SCIIAM-Lil:S ANSWEIIIi
Effect· Since • Cf9Pt • Riches· SPECIFIC ._.
...Of course I always wanled to be someone." the not
so, smart fellow told his pal. 'But I should h!lve been

Mobile HOllies
for Sale

more SPECIFIC.'

.

•

·

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'

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•

lrve lrt To

Cart For Eldtrly Lac:ty ·

,

In Ga,lif.olis, Salary,J,)a·y,s qt~,

614-843-2287. .

210
I 'M'L OYMENT
:.; f HVICES

110

Help Wanted .

AVON /1 All Ariu I Shlney
•~ e-•75-1428.
·Ablt +v·on At'Pft•entatlves'
niedtd: F~rn monty Ia&lt; ChriiiIMt b1l1 II hOrntill work:' 1·800·
H2-130 or 304·02·2045." Ind .
flop.

fiNANCIAL

Moaeren J Bedroo~ Downtown·
Carpeted, Complete Kitchen, All
EJKtric, 81&lt;4·448·0130.

· Business
Opportunity ·

Cross FQinte Village APartments,
lormatly Stonewooels Aparrrments,
now liking appticatiOns k:lr tldtrly

&amp;

ha'ndicappt.d ~ disabled,

814·

'IE YOUR~ 1018
Earn S2.SOO Por! ·timo $8,000
Full-Time Per Month ProC.:11ing

992-3055, TT0-1·&amp;o0-750·0750,

I!'IIUrancit Claims For HeaiU\_
Cart Provielti'l, Softwai't Pur~
chi!•• Reqtllrlcf. FtnanclnQ
able t -800-722-S.mt Or fiTTP:\1

French Townhouse -.partn'tints,
Senior Cltizenil 1 Handicapped,
"ppllances Furnished EOE, 814·
448·483G.
.

EOH

-.van.:

WWW.SAMI.COiol .

Furnlollad 3' Roomo &amp; Bam. No
Poto. Roleronco And 00110111 RtQulrad. 814·446,1518.

HAROWOAK~?
•
E11ctlltnt ltltdnfl .IUPPieman111 Jncomt ttwaldl hard work.

i

own· wer,...wtalher

·· Odd olgnlllcanlly to

your year!..- income tor ep~rok~
•mattly 11 wttkl work. Only
Hf!OUI mqu~res, pltlll.

TQ DO ABOUT IT·?

SoLD.ME' AI=OREiERif..

92% High Elfictency Furnace.

'

WAAT,AM I 601Ni61

. '(ES, SIR .. I

FALL ~PECIAL

60,000 BTU ·S'/85' 80.000 BTU ·
$665 : 100.000 BTU -$995. The

' fl.ll515

rar;~ty

Fire 'wOOCI for

ull.

or 30(.875-5053.

·~

304·875· 7837

·

......-

..

f1trewood lor '1.ai6. Locust fence
poll, Bft. long-s• on small end .

30&lt;-773-5829.

-...... .
'"...

.....

·

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.Grubb'l Prano· 1un109 &amp; l tPlirs.

Probltmo? Neod Tuned? -Call 11&gt;0
poano Dr. 8 tH•US25

,,.

•
'
Ilona today by mailing $2"and SASE lo . .
Aatro·Graph, o/o lhla ..,.....,..,.r, P.O. CANCER (June 21.· Juty 21) A friend
Box 17SI ..,_ Hill S1allqn Nft Vorl&lt; wllq trequanlly gela ,involved in loollah

. ,-AS·T BO·ORAPB

-"

· NY 101SI.' :""'"'"'
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. t talk yo_u ·Into lakin"• a
Mike 11Un1 to..._ your zodl. ~·""""
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,,,
. rlllt IOday. ·+vofd ,tt\e U~ to act lmpul·
'
.$ERNICE ' Aaii'Ai.Ja (JM. .:ire~.. 11) Wllal you . IIYely.
promete Wit wi'!lhe appr!l"al ol. olhll1 . LIO (Ju!W 23 ''Ill 22) You a,.IIQ)y lo ·
BEDEOSOL , tod&amp;y. but you may not know when to ' - be11er ldNI -'Y In ·~~~e day. Mike
.IIOp. n you IIUII\ too ~w~~. you w111 ICIIe every allort to ta~ actiOn aa aoon u
,.__,__ _....,.__ . yow.-ft!ay. ,.
·.
· poa•"'-· TlmiWI n!llbe your ely.
• 1'11(:11 '""' IO-IIrlrOII JO) II otfierf ~ (Aut. 13 lapf 2JII'IIy anention
IIOI't-C ·YI'I!f 'lfiiU toclriY. you'U .be a . IOdlly I - ! r i l l to IMCh ~ ,how
fun ·per.oj\_to havw around. HOWe..,, 1 ,. ,to operar. unfamiliar equlpnWit. OtfiiOI
· you encounter oppoatuon, .you could ~ 111t1 pnlaood to llrlon to- he aaya.
~

'

• Ser,vil"'g· ,,.. et·

200 Main St. Pt. Plouont. WV
21550,

'·"

EltctriCII and
Retl'lgeratton
RSES C~RfFED CEALER

Pu""'

LAWRENCE EIITERI'RISES
!Mal
Ak Cqndlllonlng, If .,
'IIIII Don't Call Ut Wo Bolli Loiol ' '&lt;•
FI'M Eattm.1e1, 1·80061-0011, ,. !71

IIH48-, WV0029« ,..

2BR
Cinttnary.

-.
...

On Heat EKchanger 814·

cover lener and resvrM to : GW·
32 CfO Point Pl•uanl· Register

;

,.
.,

448·6308, 1·800·281-00911.

Strid

~.

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'

Above Prrces Are For Furnace
Orily. Free Estimate To tnsran
Furnace, Duct Work, Etc. 5 Year
Warranty All Parts. lifetime War·

.1:':--.-'"JI ~:--:-"---:'-~-

N. 3id, -Avo Mid~lopon, OH. 2
Bedroom, 'urnilhtG apt,. Oeposil
I rtftrtncel r~uirtd. 304·812·

LET ME I~TROPOCE
'(OU TO M'f WORLD .
. ATTACK 006 ..

,, ·;
Ret~t..- or £»mmerclal wirtng, · •·or•
ntW ltfyiCe or repeirs. Mn.., li='~~­

ctnlld electricran . Ridenour . .. ,;
Electrrcal, WV00()306, 304·875· 1 "
1788.
:.·.....

~~~~--~~~
-~
Aesldtnlill Or Comm•rc:itJI Wir· ' lf'l!:
lng, llow Servlco Or l!!llllllro. Ll·
.
ctnlld Eltctrlclan. ~,,,. Eloc- &gt;t-il'
trlc 11&lt;-4U-ii50, Gilllpollo,
OtiD.
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ARII!S (llrtroll J1·AJrll 11) It wiH be ' might bllllbjact to eome. broad ewlnga
eaaentllll be extremely dtolall-orllfllld , ·' -Y· You will ' to IUrn
9at1ll ollhe gooct .... you .... wNn
~ dHJIIOday, ., aiJIII!II, ~you will be jull .. ~ely to
~,_ -and -oulld
cou~ ~~~~~ yciu, 10 ~ ;' ...,.,.,,.. • • ·
in Ill f!Ml haVe-""';. ..
what your- glin(ld. · .• - .
. : ICOI'Ftp (Ool. 14 Nil. ~ You will be
1'1* yew ....... Njllrr_.
·' TAIJIIIia • - . . . .,. a~)' II yoi, need :'"'Y lolnnl HIll oulliltllr rnakll a mlltww~tola ••• urer-~.
lrM'Iodlly bulla flltlll!lmenti:MII or 111
CAPIUCOM (Dee• ......: •11 Slly advlciiOdal'; " - your fiiMHr en- .' old frllnd . . . .
you ' ~ .
_ , flam i:llqUIIor P'l!' .,., I . . lullp. Poor a. Ill rttot• 110111 1111 Wlllllll
dclwn IIMI Htr( •
n•ltbiwi ~- &lt;XJINMIUICI ,wlll 111111 ~~~~00~1:
to 1001'1 gold ;:n-IITT,._. : .•..Dao.l1) &amp;om.
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w1t11
wiiCI
you
ara.
You
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dan, ._ to~...~,~=
~ jlnldl • • IOiiiiJ lltll 111111 ... ' Ho,•• ,..,, ... ~try lo ~ 10 "*'Y '
yoU c1o,
to ... 1110.. f
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wen• to,.
illlad. ientltor vour Aatro'Gflph prado-_ anlfluiiiiiiiC.
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.Ohio Lottery

'

Fla. nets
national .
title

'

Pick 3:

1-9-6
Pick 4:
8-7-7-9
BuckeyeS:
1-3-8-1~28

Sporta·on hgeA

CloudY with • chlnce of
rain tonight, low• In the
SOt. Saturday, breezy, ·
chance of thunderatorma.

HJthl In t1!a lh.

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VoU7, NO. 170

4Jtll7, Ohlov'.ley ............ ~nr

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·'What:you .don'~ ~ee · can kill you'
Health department

offers 'detection

'·

· ."galnst carbon
monoxide dangers

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I••

,

i

"'·~ ·-~IIII'YIJ
.. _ .
the oiwty·•.JbaCCation.

~

1he .diig- .
b.lood lelt that '
measures lhc blood level of CO.
As for what io . expect ·when
exposed to carbon monol!ide, Ftrst
Alert has issued a list of possible
complications.
With I0 percent of .carbon
monoxide in the blood there are no
apparent symp1oms, but a, battety
or electric .detector willlalarm as a
warnins 1p get out befc&gt;rt ·more
dangerous levels accwitulate; wilh .
IS pcrcmt, the exposed person or

•

vOI!Iitina;
sciollsness;
percent coma
and permanent brain damage. .
Unborri babies are at an extreme
risk even at low levels of exposure,
and children's blood lovels rise
mote -quickly than adulh due to ,
his!ler me~lic nttes, it is reported.
Awueness of concenlr81ed carbon monoxide lhrougb detectOrs
Cinlave lives, said Torres, again
stressins the availability of short·
term; inexpen\ive detectors
lhrough 1he heallh department. ·

UMA, Peru (AP) - Anned tcbe.. ·h~lding Japan's imbasilldor and 73 ic.
,.
.
,
.
o1hers set free lhe diplomat's beloved dog Emma, who wu saunt aft~ two •' The other dog, Emma's grown ~ffspring named Oso, d\ed Pee. 26 after
weeks wilhoul food.
·
,
stejlping on a land mine pjanted liy 1he rebels in 1he compound, Lukac said.
. By hangina onto lheir' hostage heavyWeighh - the brq._~ of President His account explained thC mysterious eatly morning explosion that caused
Alberto FujjJnori among them - the suerrillas appeared intent on relainina initial speculation of hostage or rel!el casualties. . .
.
bargaining power as Peru's crisis entered its 18111 day:
.,,. , · .AI¥Y sum!f~Cf day belied the tension within 1he resi~e~e.Thursday as
Five Supreme Coun judie'S, eiJht generals, five cqogrcsstnen, two for. mothers pushed suollers past cordons of hea~tly lll1'lled pohce and boys on
eign ·ambaseadon and Pedro Fujimori, a younger brother of 1he praident, inline skates stopped to aawk cloWn 1he elftplled embassy row.
-remaiped in tliaresidence.
'
·
· ''
. H~~yanlsaway~andoutofsi~of~y. Thpac~auerScruffy and. bone-thin 1he Clcnnan shepherd Emma looked weary u a nllas brandishtn'g AK-47 niles and grenades held lhetr hostages behtnd !0Red Ooss·worker led
a leash from 1he ambassador's residence, where foot walls,ll)e group of captives sharply reduced from its original 500.
she had
unfed for most of the crisis.
· , In their lllh hostage release since the Dec. 17 takeover during a posh par. "Imagine. She,h&amp;S only eaten once," fire Cmdr. 0ta1w Lukac ~d as·the ~Y· 1he p,rrillll!. freed seven men on Wednesday. But o~ l~ -ptursday· tile
dog, one of two owned by Japanew: Ambassador Morihisa Aoki, wai fed . only 11\0Vc~nl tn and out of lhe.c?mpound was the dati~ ilehvery of bOI·
sweet Cl!ristmas bread and rice before being taken away to an animal clin: . tied soft dnnks and food, and a v1stt by a Red Cross olf'telal:

her;_.

been

CHARLESTON, W.Va.'- Five days into a strike by Red Cross·workcrs
.who collect blood, there is n!&gt; shortsge of blOOd in the 32 West Virginia, ~n­
tucky and Ohio counties affected, a spokeswoman said.
,
·
The Red Cross continues to bring in blood trom·Olher areas to fill &lt;J:ders,
Red Cross Tri-State Region spokeswoman Tammy Wanchisn said Thursday.
· "Everything seems to be going smOOihly at lhis point," she said
The Red Cross has no plans to resitme blood collections as Ions as workers-arc on strike, Ms. Wanchisn said.
Teresa Ball, area director for 1he Service Emplpyces International Union
Local 1199, said if collections resume, people should show 'support for the
striking workers by refusing to donate blood.
. "We'!a!&gt;asking peo(11e to support the strikers and n01 donate until this'
employer negotiates a fair and equitable contract," Ms. Ball said.
'
The union is not asking people in olhet areas to stop donating blood, Ms.
Ball said.
The 68 strikinJ! workers continued ~o picke.t Red Cross offices in Huntington and Parkersburg. The strike besan after 11nion members rejected a con-•
Irati offer last ,weekend, citing ·problems J:ith proposed salaries aild benefits.
·
. \
.
I
Red Cross offered a 9 percent wage increase over lhe three years of the
contract: '
·
, · The average wage for the nurses, lab technicians and ISiistan!S, housekeepers, drivers, d;istribution assistants, van assistants 11!')1 da\ll processors
1he ~ontracl covers is $7.95 per hour.
The company proposed increasing employee insurance premiums and
eliminating a $100 a year unifonn allowance. It also proposed eliminating
a job classification for licensed practical nurses and replace it wilh a classifiCation that would allow others certified to draw blood to do lhe same werk.
· The salary proposal does not make up for proposed "takeaways" or
account for inflation, Ms. Ball said.
·
·
Co11nlies .erected• jn West Virginia arc: Boone, Cabell, Clay; ·Lincoln,
Logan, Jackson, Kanawha, Masori, Mingo, Putnam, Roane,'Wayrie, Wirt,

..W~hio:' Galtia. J~kso~, Lawrence. Meigs; Pike, Sci~to ~ Washing-

. . .:A

·Peruvian rebels,i-n*ent on holding fast

nn111111 ••1111,,

•11•sanu•1e

.

pe\'Sons ustially has a
h~he; wiih 20

ThtR: ~.ni&gt;S&lt;MJnd to~rtrcsic!enh ·
tunning ill
of dahger.
.
garage.
. ,,
· eubon monoxide is a colorleu, _ . If a home is vented p10plioiy and
odorleas, tasteless gas which II klw · "is flee from appliance nutlfunc·
lions, ·air pR:ssun:' lluciuations or
levels can Cllllll! health problems;
Utjl at hilh levels can be deadly,
venting and chimney bloclrages,
1he nunc advised. . · '
carbon monoxide is usually ventIt is a common ~yproduct of
ed Safely to the outside, accordina
· c?mbustiOll, present whenever fosto information provided by . F'lfll ,
stl fuels are ~larned· It is ·produced
Alert, one oflhc major bl!ttcry and
by malfuncti!).ning or unvented · electric detectors on lhc mllltet.
home appliances such as gas or oil
According·to lhc Journal of the
furnaces, clolhes dryers, ranges, 1t.merican Medical Association,
·ovens, water he&amp;ters,.spacc heateis,
carbon monoxide is ~sible for
fire places; ..:hin:oal grills ind
llboul 1,500 accidental deaihs and

3.11JIIPI

-··-

~~~~~~~!E~

,ehi.nje -Is

Work stoppage
n;,t st,orting . _
is_
people on blood ·
By JENNIFER BUNDY ·
Auoclatad Prete Writer

· Concern llbout die. n~ewrihg
heallh threat of carbon monoXide ..
in the borne prompted the Meiss
County 'Heallh Department to
sec~ and,offer for sate 1111 inex·
pensive detector.
,
The detector, a two-inch adhesive backed square, ·is effel;live for
PP to 60 days and is available at the
· local heallh department,.loeated in
1he Meigs Mullipurpo~ Building,
Mulberry HeiJhls, Pomeio'y, for
$I. Only a limited number are
. available.
"What you don't see can kill
you," said Norma Torres, R.N., of
1he Meigs Count)' Health Depart·
ment in anno!IIICina the availlbil·
ity of the detector. ~he said that it
can provide a warning to any
buildllp of lhe invisible killer.
.
It contains a spot which when
exposed to carbon monoxide (CO)
changes color. The indicator will
· llll'il gray ,or black dej&gt;cndin• on the
concentration of CQ. The time it •
lakes ·fcir 1he indii:ator to change
.and the !,leJRC C)f darkness will
vary depending oq the level of CO,
relative humidity .and air now, .
Torres said.•
. •.
wood-burning Stoves, , ..,
The cleteCtof ti~ t&lt;J he plac~
·automobiles· also ·
in a !~oil wl)ere it can be eul-

.~IIIII ·
111111, IIINI

.
5Sp•d·
Air CDidRIIIIII
Alai. 111ee1s ·

,,

By CH~LENE HOEFUCH
Sanllnel Nlwa st.rr

··AI/fl Clllllll.

2 Seallona, 12 ........ . AGannott eo. Ncar paper .

POine~ Middleport, Ohio, Friday, January 3, 1997.

'

ton.
'
In KentUcky: Boyd, Bracken,_Carter;Greenup,Johnson, Lawrence, Lewis,
Martin, Mason, Pike and Rowan.
•

Greetings from 'the IRS:
tax formsarein the mail
'

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· WASHINGTON (AP) - Ho, ho, directly deposited into your bank
ho. Send in your dough,
• account
'
More than 6S ·milliori Americans
•The IRS now has the aulhority to
are receiving holiday greetings from deny personal exemptions, the earned
the Internal Revenue Service. Thurs- income credit and the dependent
day was the first official delivery date care credit to taxpayers who do not
for 1996 tax packages, although provide .accurate Social Securtty
~~ postmasters itching to rid lheir numbers for themselves, their spouswjikhouses of lhe documents sent es and dependenl$.
them earlier.
·
As usual, the returns are due April
Thegoodnewsforfilersplanning 15. By the end of this monlh, taxto usc last year's return as a guide for payers should receive dqcuments
preparing this year's is there are fe.w wi_lh information ncedqd for filing,
changes. Most taX law changes enact- s_!!ch aS· fonns W-2, 109JII and 1099.
ed last year did,not take effect immeAbout a lhird or this year's bookdiately.
lets - 22 million - ·do not·have a
However, lhere arc some proce. tas return form . Instead, lhey have
, personal identification 1 code and
"dural changes !his year:
1
• Telephone filing has been instructions necessary for filing with
expanded to include many married · a 10-minute call frmn a touch.toile
couples without dependents and- uilephone. Last year, TeleFile bOokrecipien~ of unemployment com- letsalsoincludedaForm 1040EZfor
pensation. Previously only single taxpayers who preferred to file ·tile
people ~~th job a?d interest income old-faShioned way - on paper, by
were ehg1ble. .
mail.
• It's easi~r to get a tax refund
(Continue.&lt;~ on Page 3)

a

:Sogg.y co;nditions. -pl~yed havoc in Meig~ County during _mid-'96
,

r

,I ·

(Sno."lll'ln a Mrln)
, The following · events occum'd
·during die monlhs of May, June, July
,, andAugustoflast'year.Asummary
·oflhe final four months.of 1996 will
lle published in Moriday's Dlily Sen~. tine!.
~
MAY
May 2 ..:. ApproJi"!llteliy 47S
gatherinPomeroYJoobeerveNationat DB)I of Prayer."
'
, ,
May 4 -More than 3 inches of
rain soaks 1he CO\JRty, causing wides~ damage to roads and private
property. · .
·
May_ 7 .:_ Gov. George · V.
Voiftl)vich declares state . of emeraency·'in Mei~ .County· following
• May 4 flooding:
," '
.
. May 9 ·- l\&gt;yota Mocor Corp.
IIIIOOUIICIJI a new $4(10 million eiiJine

III.IIIB
11r • Tut:t cr•l•

Piwlr it•~...,·

,

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·

·

·

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~.; abqut 2S miles saulh of Point
PleUant, W.VL The·plant i1 e~pecleel to employ 300 people when il·
opens in J998 not counting spin-off
jobs in 111e tri-county area.
1 ·
May 10 - 8.-.d Robinson, 21,
Ponioroy, is fouild pilty in the Jan:r
IS robbery, kidnappina· and ...,.
, ~•obllolyoftwoeldirly., at the Meip County Sal~ Army.
I

·v

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tlllllllty HousinJ lmP,rovement' Pro-•. umed· superin.te. ~ent at Eutcrn
J1n111 put.
•
tooal SdiOIIl Di~
May21 - JenniferLalicencutld ,
. JVNit..
.
Rayan Young ue named cO-ValedicJune 2 .,..._ Meip . Hlp School
10riaDJ and a.tea Hmris is Jlllllld pt....,l31Jnellln:- llthellraallltaiOiiaD b the Southern Hip ' I) R. Mmisoll OYJIII*ium. '
School ,ll'lllualiq.class.
, ·· 1-,3- Rael110 Villqe CllUJICil
Bnadl .__ i. n..t F tUm 4lldotiel doolllecl Southen Local
HiJh School v,Wictori• widl CiOIIItliKiioltbontl-. ·.
.
Rlliecc:a Fvua tiMMd
1- 6 -A Ntrlnalitl~e fJI•daa

..aw..-. '

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He ~ later sentenced to 26-to-SS
. The new Papville_station of the season slow in coming plays havoc Anny.
·
"recognize the importance oflhe Civ·
years in prison.
S&lt;ipio · Township Vol,unteer .Fire wilh area f11111ers.
· ·June 22 - The Southern Local il War Battlefield at Buffington Island
· May .IS- More flooding. Ralil- Qqllrtment is offacially dedicated. .
June 8 - Heavy winds upro01 Board of Education cu.S bOnd issue and fully suppon its preservation."
swollen creeks in western Meip .• ¥ay22 - Cindil!tewart.ll!ldAii- · 1110n: lhari 40 trees in Pomeroy's millage folh&gt;wing increased state
Cellular phone pirates target
County ' leave!, lheir banks . closidl son Qerl~h Ire named Meigs ltigh B=h Prove Cemetery, Thunder- assistaiK:e.
southeastern Ohio. Among lheir·vicroadways:
SchoQI co-valedictorians, along wilh storms icsult in seauered electricill
June 23 - Supporte,!S -of the tims,"the Meigs County Prosecuting
., Eastern Local ~oard off!c!ucati~ salutalqJian AdAir J. Sheets.
outages and llashllooding.
Buffington Island Bat!lefield kick off Auorney's office, which is targeted to
approves resolUtions · keeptng con- · May 24- Soullicrn High School • June 10 --'Ci&gt;llnty commissioners "Save lhe ·Battlefield" letter-writing the tune of mbre $500.
. ~~~011 ofil new $8c7S million !C-8 &amp;flll!l!ales ~members_'!flhc Class of agree to Ieise' county-owned proper- campaign in bid to save the site from
, Julyl,5 - Lt. Gov. Nancy Hot._
butldingQn schedule.
1996 · at baccalaureate and com- ty to Consolidated Heallh ·systems a proposed gravel-minina'apcration. hster v1s1ts 1he C8rleton School illt
May IIi - Curbside recyclina mencement eierclses
..
-Inc:· for construction of a- ilew metiJune 25 - Pomeroy Airman Syracuse and views downtown revigets undelway in Syrac:use; ·
May·i6 =- · S4 Eastern High leal building near Ve,terans ¥emori- l\lalhan·Baloy receives minor injuries · talization efforts· in Pomeroy.·
May 17--: State Highway Pactol School seniors receive dlpt~.
al Hospital.
&lt; ,
in terro'r attack. on U.S. Air .Force ·
County commi&amp;sioners propose a
· warns moton_sh . to keep off the ' M_ay ~ -:- At a Spei:lal town
June 13 - The Meip County cpmplex in Saudi,Arabia. Nineteen -$3,093,170 !&gt;OOBetJor 1?97.
.
unopened secllon of the U:S. ~311-77 ' meen_ng held 1n the wake .of May 4 Community Improvement Corpora- are killed in 1he blast.
·
A~ electncal outage dtsrupts busiConQCCIOt' Road or face Cttallona.
floodin1. 21 Pomeroy ~ are lion qrecs to purchase for $240,000
JULY
ness 1n downto111n Pomeroy,
May !0 - Thomas Lons, 20, told there II'C ·no qut&lt;:k fixes to a 60-acre site west of Tuppers Plains
July 2 -County commissioners
July 20 - Inaugural ChesterMiddlepoft. and Jerean~ Add111, .11, · improve ,ilewer and drain11e prob- for.n industrial park. ·
·
. set up trust fund fo,r J11eia~ 'Co!Jnty S~ Dan held in Chester.
Rutland, ue killed wflill! LOnt's·w . lams.illll!e vlllqe. ·
June 17- Slltle increases assis- Dog Pound Uparide Projeel (PUP). ' • 1~ 23 - Mcip Local Board of
cruhed in Gallia Coullly.
,,
Melp flood dulace from Januaty tanee for proposed Southern Local
July 4 ..- Record numbers c..le· Ed!JCI!ion-VllCes to enact .rllldoin dnJa ,
MeiJS County Commimonen , _!llld ~ il estimated at S2. 7!11illion. BuildinJ Project. If lhc issue had bnte lqdepenclence Day at eveniS in !eSliRJ Jli'OII'II1I for jiHiior ,hiah and

..,. .......... .._ .. _,.,......,._ ...,,. _.,,.,a ..n ,....,,._...,...., ...........

,...~

.

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about half of the projected building
cosu.
iune 18 - WorltAJnerica.aneduClltional and job tnlimni center in
MeipCounty, isnamedinacivilsuit
·filed by ~ ~ llltarney ~:s
office, 'nie IIIli tct.la to WoctAmer·
ica's role in limdina the criminal
def'e-ofBnd~intherob1 ~ nf die Meip Coqnty Salvation
I
•,

,.

~.,.

•. ,,......,. .......'Fii!'.J:Ow m ?(

official~ preGlu.:!l "Buddy"
lhat 1he vtiii&amp;C ~nc:ao~ IS aenleiiCed lo riine )'eMS In
swimmina
, closed since 1994, pnsononfelony~eounll.
will"opon xtw.t.• The pool does
July 24 - Swe Controllina
110t opea durina 1996.
· Boatdrelwu fundsof$31111Uion for
July II - American Electric: duip work on a . , . _ for tilt
Power cild~s Southern School PIHIIIIIO)'·Muon Bridae and COli·
District eot~slnletioo bond i.-.
llruction of the O.SJ311-77 connaeJllly 14 - U.S. DepatuiWitofthe tori'OIId • . -- - .
.
lnlerior ltlld National hrk Service
(COiltlnwd onP91)
~
July S - M

maturely"

•,

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