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Buckeyes

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Obi~ Lottery

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Super Lotto;
2-4-21-33-35-37

beat Penn

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Kicker:

State 70.82

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o-a-3-4-2-3
Pick 3:

6-6-7
Pick 4:

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&amp;porta on Page 4

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9-8-5-3

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28ecllona, 12 hgM. 3 5 A O.nnett Co. Neweplper

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio, 11Jul'8day, January 9, .1997

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:_ OD()T offiCi~l: Athens-Darwin job not in peril

: : ~y JIM FRI!EMAN · ·
. Sentinel Nlwa Staff ·
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cut when the state's. :construction . Wykoff ~stimated tliat'only 40 ~f
budget is released later lhis month.
76 major projC()ts .outlined in an 8_ In addition to the S4S million year cons~uction plan las_t year
w,den.tng of-U.S. 33_from ~thens to . remmn sohdly funded, the Dispatch
Darwm, other proJect• hsted as reported.
endan~ include lhe proposed
Paul C. Mifsud, Oov. Geot'lle
U.l). :H bypaSs ~nJ!Lancaster and Voinovic~'s then-chief of, staff, said··
two proJectsto w1den U.S. 3S to four . onreleastn&amp; the plan ~~tit assu~
lanes m Fayette and Gre~ne counues. an mcrease of$100 mllhon a year m
The art1cle reported OD9! highway fundins- funding that
spokesman Pieter Wykoff as saytng never materialized.
that problems could worsen ifOhio:s ' "I don't know where they got those
share of federal.highway money IS projC()ts," Dowler said.
reduced .as,Congress works to bal·
Even if the funding is not availance the national budget.
ab\e, the project_ is not doomed,

A Jll:lblic ~~~~will be·beld IIC~t
week tn A;lhens on, the proposed
Super D h1ghway fl'om Athens to
Datwin.
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.~~~le,;~o peparJment of
~sportalion District .10: Deputy
()iri:Ctor Iohn Dowler discounted a
story published in The Columbus
Dispatch Wednesday that said the ,
project is "on the chopping block."' ·
The Dispatch re~ lhat hun·
dreds of millions · of dollars in
promised .highway .projects may be

son ville u.S. 33 Bypass.
"The need (for the projC()ts) is
demonstrated," Dowler ~d. "They're
good projects."
,
The Atheni-Datwin project and
the U.S. 3311-17- Connector Road ·
would be good for Meigs County, lie
added.
ODOT .announced lhis morning .
thatthepublichearingontheAthensto-Darwin highway will be held
Wednesday from 5-7 p.m. in the Cutler/PutnamBallroomattbeOhioUniversity Inn in. Athens . •
The public hearing is one o~ the

last requirements before des.ign can
begin on the proposed Super II highway.
' Officials from ODOT District I 0
and the consulting finn Sverdrup &amp;
Associates, Columbus, will present
information regarding two feasible
alignments which have been selected
for the proposed highway.
An open boose fonnat will be followed for the hearing, meaning that
interested residents may stop by anytime during the two hours to look at ·
exhibits and ask· questions. Written
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price hike
ups inflation
WASHINGTON(AP)- Wholeside prices shot up o·.5 percent in
December, the steepest advance in a
year, and helped pushed the rate for
1996 to the highest' level in six
years.
The Labor Department said today
the 2.8 percent increase in ils Pro:
ducer Price Index last year was the
biggest since a 5.7 percent advancc in
1990. The ·December advance was
the largest since a 0.6 percent gain in
December 1995.
The PPhneasurcs inllation before
it reaches the consumer. The department will report on consumer inllation Tuesday.
While IOJlJPin~ the 2.2 percent rate

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committee will be on cooperating .

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Progress on revitalization pro- KrouPS to bring in spe()ial programs
:. jects',and. olher programs geared to · by bolh ~fessional and non-profes1 • eJihanc~ the village's appeal to visi- slonal perfonners.•
.
j tors were disc~ at Wednesday's
Possib.iJities for enticing tour ·
:. meeting of lhe ?onleroy Merchants groups into the community were
. AssQciation held in the Peoples Billlk also discussed 8J'l(! one proposal dealt
-: conference room.
with seniorcitizens·from other com·
It was re~ed that work is pro- munities. '
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gressing nic~ on .the amphitheater.
Assistance wilh the cost of paintA question·on how it will be used ing a historical mural on lhe side of .
was raised by Annie Chapman, wllh . lhe Sweet Greetings building facing .
Susan Clark, · president, explaining the People$ Aute Bank on Linn
\ ·~ use will bo ,gover:ned by the vii- ' ~Dreet WIIS:apjlwved'by the-associa. lage_ ~g~ ~ ~mmlltee .cQII'Iposejl;
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a major

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. {"' ·~;; .tt\t ~ft(ait~· non~prilfit

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ibrary work progresses____, Wholesale
.

. wilh other southeastern Ohio art

• o£.repi _?; i~Jr:fro~~- ar.de.,..
· . :O~~nlv ..· ~ pedple ill ~lfe ;~;~;~~';i,~g\;t;;;

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(Contlnued on Page 3)
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Pomeroy merph~nts
::study revitali~ation
·. progress in vlllage
· · '' • By CHA,RLENE HOEFLICH
: Sentinel' New8 St.tr

Do.wler said.
At worst, the project would be
delayed, he eltp\ained.,
"If no additio~l money comes, it
will make lhe 8-year list into a 1(}.
year list," he said.
· . 111at would meim the Athens·
bar,win project would be completed
in 2002 or 2()()j instead of 2000 or
200l,DoWiersaid.
Projects nO! included in the Dispatch'articlc were the remaining sec.'
tions of the U.S. 3311-77 Connector
Road from Five Points to
Ravenswood, W.Va:, and the Nel·

aceelemtion
inuch of last
year's advance was due to volatile
food and energy. prices,
Energy costs jumped 12 percent in
1996 and food prices rose 3.4 percent. But when food and energy arc
excluded, the so-called core index
rose just 0.6 percent compared with
a 2.6 percent ;ill vance in 1995.
.. Analysts had said there was liulc
sign of inllation in the -cconqmy,
Aldridge, 24, Misty Cron, 21, and which has slowed to less than halt the .
Shelby .Cron, 3, all of Coal Grove; sizzling 4.7 percent growt~ rate durCandy Lee, 31, hometown unknown; ing the April-June quarter.
Although the report showed the
and Kathlene Wilks, 71 , Proctorville.
cost
of raw materials ·in December
The 'defendants arc B.J. Allen
was
up 4.2 percent and prices for
Co., of Youngstown; Bruce·and Rori
zOidan, of Boardman; Ayilig 'Drag- intcnncdiate goods up 0.4 percent,
on Inc., 0/B/A Ohio River Fireworks both rell(:Ctcd sharply higher energy
Co., Youngstown; Blue Angel Inc ., · prices.
There also has been little evidence
Youngstown; Phantom . Fireworks
Co .. Columbiana; David Pruiu, Scot- of price pressures from labor costs,
town; and the Ohio State Pyrotech- which typically represent two-thirds
of a product's price.
nics Association. Boardman.

arti~&lt;tk aJ!iUty, do
llloUps us1n1 the amplutheater, and mural wblil\·they come 1n A'ugust for
the types, of entertainment to be pre-- a family reunion.
sente4 lhere, will be regulated by lhe
Clark presented information 011
committee. she reported.
· . the Ohio Vl(omcn's Business ConferChirk said that an emphasis of the
(~nued on Pllsa- 3)
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: Families .o f fir~works fire victims file $40 million suit
' · CINCINNATI (AP)- The fami; . ties of four of the nine people who
: ·died in a fireworks store fine last sum; : 1ner filed a $40 in1Rion lawsuit in fed.
., : eral coon.
· : · The fire July 3 at Ohio River Fire• works in Scottown also injured II

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; people.

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Nancy Tolliver of Branchland ~
·.; W.Va., who lo$1 her husband and
~ · daughter . in the fine and suffered
~·; bums, i~ among_th~ plaintiffs, The
~: suit, tiled on Wednesday. alleges

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negligence by the ~fendants, includ·
in'~ ow~rs oft~. fi':ll~orks store.
· It asks .~IS million 1n ~o':"pe~s.at~ damages and $20 m1lhon 1n .
.punmv~ damages on behalf of those
who died,J ~nd $2 million in .co~pensatocy damages and $3 million 1n
punitive damages on behalf of some
'plaintiffs w.ho survived.
·
They :~. D.istri~t Court clerk's
office 1mllally assigned the case ,
Wednesday'to Ju~ge Susan Dlott, but
th~n transferred It to Judge Herman
Weber bccabse Ms. Dlott's husband

is a l•wyer representing 1he plaintiffs. age in a 1987 skateboarding accident,
Ms. Olott said today that federal has been ruled incompetent to stand
law b~ llf:r from handling any case • trial and is being held at the Central
that would jnvolve the la\1' firm of her . Ohio Psychiatric Hospital in Columhusband, Clincinnati lawyer Stanley bus.
Chesley:
Plaintiffs in the suit include the
No trial date has been set.
families or estates of Matthew San'Rldd Hall, 24, of Proctorville, was som, 14, of Wayne, W.Va.; Jason
indicted on nine counts of involun- w.aac,,
11 e 9 Hunt1'ngton , WVa
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taryinanslaughterandthrcecountsof FtoydTolliver, 34,and0naJeanTolaggravated arson in connection with liver, 8, of Branchland, W.Va. ~
the •fire.'
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·Others who died in the fire but
· ·But Hall. wlto suffered brain dam- were not named in the suit are Ryan

~~ Ethics . panel "'!i.ll.air ·
:~fi~dings
Gi:ngrich

By AARON MARSHALL
GMnett Newa Se1'11ice
COLUMBUS - Barring a last-·.
minute entry, the horse race for the
17th district Ohio Senate district
·appointment from Senate Democrats
this month appears to be shaping up
into a two;stecd affair.
Former State Rep. Mark Malone
of South Point confirmed Monday
that 1¥: has formally applied for the
17th District Senate scat, joining .
longtime 91 st District State Rep . .
Michacl Shoemaker, D-Boumevillc.
as the only de~ larcd candidates for
the scat.
"I have formally sent them a let·
tcr indicating l)'IY interest," said l'tlalone from his Lawrence County borne.
The scat, which will ope~ up offi.
dolly when Sen: Jan Michael Long,
D-Circlcvillc, steps down to be a
Juvenile Coun judge· in Pickaway
County, is available to anyone who
applies from the sprawling sevencounty southern Ohio district.
Senate Minority Leader Ben Espy,
0-Columbus, hils set a deadline of

WASHINGTON (AP) - After an elttraordinlll')l 14-hour .session, the
, · House ethics committee allotted all next week tor • public airing of Speak·"''
. : er Newt Gingrich's elhical misdeeds and recommendations for his punish. ; mcnt.
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;. ' Gingrich's triumphant re-election Tuesday may quickly, tum to cmbar-• rassment, when committee special oounsel James M.'C9le presents his findings and sanction recommendations begi.nninl! Monday.
.
· The commitiee announced the schedule at I :45 a.'in. today, suggesting the
. 10 memb!=rs had a difficult time reaching agreement. The timetable calls for
:· Cole's; final repOrt to.be finished by Feb: 4 - tw.o weeks after the House
will vote on !)Cnalties.
.
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.' · · Re\t. Nancy Johnson, R-Conn., chairwoman of the committee, pledged.
:· the HouSe would·llavc.all the information necessary to inake a decision on
; · penalt;.s - in a vOle thai likely will be Jan ..21 .
·.,
"We made provisions for a follow-on report thai' will simply be ~tylisti·
. cally better, more inte81'l!ted," she told reporters. "They'll know evcrylhing
· ; · befcire (then)."
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;, · Ar1eut one cbmmittee member raised the possibility that witnesses would .
~ ~called to testify at nc;_ltt week's hearinss, which will ·be open to the pub, . ·he.
.
' ~: "Iflhe committee agrees to have witnesses, there's time for it," Rep. Ben(jamin Cardin, 0-Md., said today.
·
·1 • The most likely punishment for Gingrich would. be a VOle.to reprimand
·' f'lingrich for his ailmitted misconduct, although Olher sancbons could be
~ added. A mote serio~ cens11re would make him ineligible to serve as speak."er under Republican ~ucus !'Illes. .
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:' Gingrkh on Dec. 21 admitted he violated House ~lea by fllilin1 to seck
~ Jpeclfii: legal' advice about the use of tax-exCIJipl projeo::ts for partisan p~~r­
: 'poseJ and I?Y approving ~bmissions to the ethics pine! thft iiiWiteqly denied
t lhe involvement
of his political action committee,
OOPAC,
willi the talt·
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pitch
for .Long's Senate seat .

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~ 'becomina the first Republican speaker to succeed hiRJ~elf in 68 years.
: L Cole apparentfy will have 11!1 pltpanslve role in the;holrifip. He will pre·
: :S.nt hit finding~, his punisluni:nt nocommendllions and,will answer uy quea~ ·li0111 from committee members. Gingrich's attorney abo pnsents arpments

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An elderly Coolville area couple died late Thuraday i!l a Sll'l!clune fi~J&gt;
Y~rboof Ridgt, according to initial.teports from l.ihens County author;·

Illes.
· · Further inf!Jflllation wu unavailable before ~ime .OO.y. 1'110 ~ 1
~ns \\llun'-1'1"' ~ wa'l called to~~ 10 lend 1111111111 jfjd
to Coolville firefi~ at II :26 p.m ~ IICCOI'dln110 ihe Mei;l COUII!y J!inet.
aency M1~ $ervices.
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l· . Surtia1 Tuesday, eadt IIIClllber of the investipti0111' IUIJcomrniltee ~
: 'whii:h .,... a~ investiiJilllil ihe speaker- wiH bo.lble to .,Jd ut)"'ddi·
,.liotllil blt'armalion.

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Coolville area couple
killed in strlJcture fire

He 1p0logtzed to1the tlouse on Tuesday, 1n h•• accepwtee .,eech after

; .on MO!Idly.

Jan. 10, for all prospective candidates .
to contact Espy by Jeuc_r and ind icatc
their interest in the scat.
The entire 12-man DcmQCratic
Senate caucus
conduct interviews with the.prospective candidates
the week of Jan. 20, Espy said. ·
A' final caucus vote is anticipated
for.the same week as lhc interviews.
As in past selections, Espy indicated
that the opinions of the incumbent
Senator and the district's Democratic
chairmen will be considered by the
caucus. Tliat seems to give an edge _
to Shoemaker, who Long has indi-.
cated he Will suppon for the scat.
Malone, who·served six terms in
thC Ohio House from 1982-1994, said
he thinks he should be selected
because of' his name recognition
across the district.
,_ "I've run in almoSt all ofthe oounties and I feel that I already have the
contacts," ,he said.
Malone said diat'because he waited longer to let his intentions to run
known he had some legwork to do to
match Shoemaker's ~fforts. ·

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bipartisans.h ip?
The Dally Sentinel Will ·orscandal kill ·'97
t••iaa
nfC«Kut St., Pomeroy, Ohio
814-lt2·2tll8 • Fax: 112·21117

'l'bouJb IIIOit W..biiii!On is and wilhlllp up lbe tntpo of ..,iral
11IICienWid.lbly COIIIIIIIIOd with the enac:kl oe Pruid'at OiNoa,
""aodal Inlet" iD relaliou between· · Bvea thoqll Republicu IUid
Congress and the White House, Democratic ·le.den IIJWiimoully
lhere'sencouraginamovementonthe
· .. · · · ·
legislative track to real accomplishoriOn KO..,I'IICke
ment in 1997.
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Probably the most significant pledsed to make btpartisan.coopenIJIOve was the Del!. 27 meeting . lion the order of the Clay after the
. bet~n House Ways and Means . November eloction, the danger exists
Chairman Bill Archer, R-Texas and · that Washinston could be plunpd
- President Clinton, opening a ch.:Onet once more hito what former Speaker
for compromises on taxes, welfan: Jim Wright, D-Thxas, tenned "mind·
and entitlemeniS.
less cannibalism."
· House Budget Chairman John
Already, Republicans led by out•
~ich, R-Ohio, and Senate Majori- soing party chairman Haley Bubour
tY Leader Trent Lott, R,Miss.• also are claimiriJP; that Gingrich's troubles
have been vocal in their detennina- are strictly the product of 1, velldetta '
lion to come to bipartisan agreements by House Minority Whip David
with the administration on a balanced • Bonior, q-Mich., tlnd th8t liberal
budget deal. , .
Democrats.are aoing lifter OjJigrich
. Results on . the legislative track as part of a plot·to derail any possicould he endangered, however, if bility of center-right governance over
Congress and the W~ite House the next two Y,ears:
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become totally prpoccupied with tbe , There's no question that Bonior.is
scandal track.
.
. Gingrich's leading scilurge, but the
That panly depends upon whether fact is that Gingrich created his own
House Speaker Newt Gingrich. R· troubles by playing fast and loose
Ga., survives his clltTent ethicalcri- with both the tax laws and the truth
s!s. If he does-not, Rei'Ublicans an: in advancing him~lf politically. ·
hkely to blame Democrats .. albe1t
Even though he claims he did not
unfairly ·- for toppling their leader knowingly violate the IRS code in
M_

!l,
·A Gannett Co.. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT •
Publlaher

MAI!GARET LEHEW

CHARLENE HOEFUCH

· GeneNI Manager

Controller

·w eaken.ed Gingricl1
begins se~ond term
·seeking ·rehab ·

tax-exempt: 'eatitia, the. Oiqrich. he bu provided them with
the whip. And 10 hM Preaic1en1 Clin1011 provided Republicea witll ~
aityfoundUontoaet,uphiacollege rawmaterialtom.Uhiuecondllml
com·•eand.\meriCU Cl~aen 'llllevi· a Dishtmare.' ,,
.
,ion, be must have knOwJi that heOOP investigators are goins ~k
trellding on the edge oflepiity. · to the J992 elec:tion to- if there iE .
· More seriously,~·~ CV~- a piiWil in the coilection, of Al,ia4
son to,suspect that Oingrtch .,.. tn the .contributions to Clinton campaianl
Rush of the RepubucUs' stunnilil and, pemaps, evidence that iWci'J
1994 election victory ·- Showed con- money wu not n:lumell u it was ~
:tenipt for the House·in twice telliftl the Democratic National Commi~
~ ~':1 commi~ that GOP~C. and Ointon's legal defense cOiiunit·
·hts poliueal commtttee, had nothina tee in 1996.
~
·to do. with settinJ up the college
. Beyond that, of course, ConiP'C'sl
~- ~t's ~flat f~hood..
can mine Whitewater, Fileptc, Trav~
. OinlfiC~ -clanns he did ~ot to ten· elgate, and possible USC of the C~
uonally .mrslead '!-' co'!'~"~~· but ilten:e Department · as a politicaj
~r e~idence ·- ln.cl--:ttD81111tnter· fundnillinJ committee, (yini thll
vtew With a OcorJia coiiCJC news- 'White House up in ethical knots if ~
paper and.&lt;!enials to Roll Call-- sug- choosu.
•
Jest that.$]ingrich's entire political . . StiU, there's Je11i worlt tO be done:
networlt'was peddlins the same mis· Archer sought IUS While HOule meetl
leading infonnatiotl in · .November ins on ~ cortect petbepcio.n ihat.·114
and December 1994.. •
· an aide Said, "the A~ peopl'·
But in October 1994, in answer to ~ · sick aft1l ~ of•liJhtilll anc!
a complaint that he wu using House ex~ and want us to set thinP,
employees to run the collegecoune, done."
• ·,
Ginpich told the ethics committee
Archer apparently tOld Ointod
that, no, he was using employees of ihat li' is willing tO~ Ciiftton'C
GOPAC. ·
edtrc•tional tax credit ideu- thoual!
So, eager as Dem~ are to lash he's dubious about havina t1ie ~
· ·
monitor whether studeniS maintain a
"B" averqe, as required in ane ol
..
the proposals .. but be wants "broad!
· ~ capital gains tax relief" i~
· Propeu .t Puaodom fouftdetio'l,
and the ~ I iac;ai'l Opponu-

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Ben Wattenberg

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By .TONY SNOW

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shame one reserves for a boisterous ·,ie.:bed Out to appzase his dotracton,..
cousin whQ bil~ widows: "Yes, I his ~ s.,_:h offered little
know he's slii'ne. But he does have ~to the squeamish.
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his good points."
·
.He challenged members of
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both parties to confront the Oreai
i •
Leach seemed to ptne for a Unmentionable: "I don't believe any ,
:lime wben Republk;ans, safely rational American.can be comfortlble.'
' tuCked the blct rows of the ' with where we are 0,11 the issue o(
House chamlllt, eouid place hoaor race." .
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bofore _v,icuwy ~ s - . s ~ve
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He criticized cplotM, sep'.
detUIIIItiatloa. His slap at ~inJrich lptionist truaadesfor ''divwsity" and
leemedtopackawallop- .afnota the absurdity of fcdoral racialpoint.
.
IICCOURtliiJ that, IICC:Qnling to~ late':.
Tueaday.'a drlma proved Alron Wilda'ility, seta the n11111ber or.: ·
jOiliJridl and ~~ lieu1muta wiD , minority Americaaa at 374 jlen:ena
prol*ima wtth ~lao moderua, our aetua1 population.
,
who fell IIIIGOIIIfcnable with the
~
limikld-JinCitWlllkaobeloved :
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by Oia~, Diet Amey, Tom ' Wrlle,.., S.W.
~·
IDel.lly,etcll.
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w.t c I )
, Jnfaet.Oinpic;!l._hllpar..._ '7tO, 1M Awad•,
111tMc1 a ahowdoW!I. AIIIJoulll he •IIIII.
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Athens-DalWin project

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·Action·s to end
marriages fUed

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Clar(l Conroy ;·

.. Ohio weather forecast

Tuesday crash

leaves two hurt.

Floyd

'Red' Warth

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~: the%t~ra~ii~A

Mo~l~

EMS '·-~nits answer 9 calls

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'COrded·.
·~ ·Land transfers r~
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Stocks

rower ........................

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• 26 ·Styles on Sale
• Satisfaction Guaranteed

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.Joel 1. Atha ,

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People's house~ ~as --tumbl.,d into·~~aos ~··

membc;r on the streC~ miJht psp
By
AMoclaled Pt Ill
·
··
Cllldore Syndicate
with awe rather than hustlinl! the litT9!1"Y is Thursday, Jan. 9, the ninth day of 1997. Thele are 356 days left ,
WASHINGTON-· 11 is fit· . tie ones to safety. .
in ~ year. •
ting that citizens who visit the Unit·
Jim Leach oUowli took a
T~y's Highlight in History:
·
·
ed States -House of Representatives different approach. He issued • deeSan. 9, 1913, ~hard ~lhpus Ni~on, the 37thpRsident of the Unit· must look do,In to watch the Honor- laralion of irrelevance by throwins in
eel
: was born tn Yorba Linda. Caltf. .
.
· abies work. ne people's house has with Robert Michel. ·
·
.
Ibis dale:
' '
.
tumbled into cliaos, with membeR of
. . ~ichcl, you may .recall, preIn 1 1788, Connecticut beclme the f!!th 1tate to ratify the U.S. Conatltu· · both parties paralyzed by indecision , ceded Ginpich u House Republican
ti011- ~ ~ •
.
.
:
and IW. ·
leader. He was chiefly bown for his
In i 793, l'mlclunan Jean Pierre BIIIIChlrd, uil!lla bot-air balloon~ flew
CoaamsbeiJtp pUI all these sinpas voii1c llld llbilil):,10 liualrate
betw'r PllilldelphialllldWoodbury,NJ.
qualities on display when they re- conservative activists. When they
In 1161, Mlai~ IICcdod "-thO Ualon.
elected Newt Gi118rieb u speaker. wlllled tb push, he wanted tO fo!CI.
Ini1!U5 . . . , Woitd W. n, Americla ' - IIepa leadinllll..iDpyea 1Cn Republic;aaa jlllllped ahlp and When they Wll!llW., 10011 the a«eaGul1• ~ Plitippift!ll'.
·
\
·
,
, ·
, ilaclinecl., llljlpCllttbeir leldor. ·
aive, he insjat.ad:on CXImpi'OIIIiae.
Je'i957, A• ¢91' llclea miped • Brililb P'l- mlailllr, cidq ballb ..
Some, 1iU . ~t Wolf, .
l'efblpl. wont of .,11. • fl!r
ttl I*'
: wnia, lhCir .._duad prayed ba1tn . u Oiapii:!J.cn YCMJDi Turb .Ai964.-"':l·dutliebnllroautialbeP •Caaal~.-11· Vllliiii"JI!( l"~itatlhlafellow ' CO!ICCined. Michll-.ptod.,.
-~,J.• d el21 P
·s . . tine U.S. zrLI"'n.
lielrt 0 eliDa 10 lbe noble ..... anicefully, e1nooet • an .,a of-7 ..-JIIIbllllllle ailllft~ tbiiiiiXIII. le~ .amtJ .... nutty, :lritioa. o.e lot dae irapuuillll,
-_lllisl•s · 'ai61Aa•f _.of1
a hxplodliOIIIof._.._ rjaeto'tl!elawlofJI'I'IIn'ZI,aoiiYtljl. tW"driathlmlllllil. .
:lltr1Wf'•
qe citieM,' Wilen eDcotatteriu ,. ~ vilwld hili:tJ~rtY with tbl , .......
j

in and conduct surveys and make
(Continued from P811e 1)
ence to be held in Columbus on Feb. recommendations, she said.
The annual membership drive was
22 where women's products and ser·
di!(:ussed,
and plans were made for
vices will be showcased. S.he sugsending letters and making merchant
gested~ members might be intervisits in an effort to increase regular
Clara Adams, of Racine, died Wednesday, Jan. I!, 1997 in Holzer Med- ested in attending as a.JfOUp.
and
associa!e memberships.
Infonnation on the Ohio Rural
ical Center.
It
was voted to have the fashion·
Arrangements will be announced by the Ewina ~ Home, Pomeroy. Enterprise i'{ojects, hc.aded up by show again this year, probably someGary Little of Athens, was pre~nted
0
'
'
by Bobbi Karr. She said that the time in April. Also discussed was a
agency is. funded by the government dinner-dance fund raiser on the Jewand the services .come to ""'"mum· . el City in the spring .
Joel Ira Athja, 70, Mcintosh, Fla., formerly of Gallia County, died Friday, ties without cost. If the co~tnty is
Vale·ncine Day promotions were
Jan. 3, 1997 81 his resldem;e.
1..
' ' ·•
interested in 'services of Enterprise also discussed.
Born Sept. S, 1926.iri Beckley, W.Va., son of the late Emma Dunbar Alba,. Projects, then personnel would come
'he was a retired building contractor and a O.S. Marine Corps veteran, Serving from 1944. to 1946.
·
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.
,I
He was a member of the First Baptist Church of Mcintosh, and of the Patriot Masonic Lodge 496. .
.
, jContlnu~ from Page _1)
secon&lt;l phase 'in fiscal year 2001 ,
Surviving life his wife, Juanita Gilliaiii'Aiha of Mcintosh; three sons, Paul ·
Pedigo said.
'
Ishmael
Atha
and
Mark
Scott
Atha,
both
of
Gallipolis:
and
Timothy
Gepe
and
oral
comments
will
be
accepted
:
..
'
Meanwhile, local OOOT officials
'
'
Atha of Citra, Fla.; a daughter, Scarlett Crabtree Dempsey of Mcintosh: nine from the public, all of which will
are
assuming that no decision has
grand~hitdren and a great-granddaughter; a brother, Robert Alba of Bidwell; become part .of the final envitonW.VA.
and five sisters, Clara McGinness of Chula Vista, Calif., Ruby Mitchem and menial document for the proposed been made about the project.
"We're still in high gear," Dowler
Beulah Workman, both of Beckley, Opal .Huffman of Granville, W. Va;, and project, according to OOOT spokessaid .
.Lucy Herr.on of Gale City. Va.
,.
·
. woman Nancy Pedigo.
He was also preceded in death by· a son, J~l David Alba:.
Once the environmental docuServices will be·t p.m. Saturday in the Wjllis Funeral Home, with the Rev. ment is approved •. _the project will
• Jim Lusher officiating. Burial will be i11Mound Hill Cemetery. Friends may
move into the destgn ·phase. It IS
call at the funeral home from 6-8 p.m. Friday.
· anticipated that the pro.ject ~ill .be
built in two phases, starting w1th the
1111 Auopi/Wd ,.,...
.
'
first phase in fiscal year 2(100, the
The following actions to end marriage were filed recently in the office
Clara Conroy, 88, of Stare Route 248, Lo9g Bottom, died Tuesday, Jan.
ofMeigs County Clerk of Courts Lar,·
7, 19\17 in Veterans Memorial Hospital.
·
ry Spencer.
·
By The AHoclet8d Pren
Arrangements will be announced br,the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
•
•
Dissolution
filed
Vicky
K.
Tonight. .. Snow showers likely. Lows in the tps~
.•
Two area residents were injured in Peckham, Racine, and Jeffrey 0 .
Friday:.. snowshQwen.~!:O:~!.!s~r
R~
a one"(ar accident Tuesday on Coun- Peckham, Racine, Dec. 30.
ty · Road 39 (Hemlock Grove), the
Divorce filed- Angela F. LipSatltl'llay.,..Snow showers northeast. s~ttered flurries elsewhere. J,.ows 10
to 20 and hiahs 20 to 25.
. .
. · . .
.
· Floyd ~ .. "Red" Warth, 52, Hartford, W.Va., died Wednesday, Jan :'8, 1997 Gallia-Meigs Post of the State High- · scomb, Rutland, from Talmon ~ ·
. Sunday...Snow showers northeast. Dey elsewfterc. Very cold with lows of . at St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington, W.Va.
·
way Patrol reported.
· Ltpscomb, 29 Palms, Calif., Dec: 31 .
5 to IS and highs of IS' to 20.
·
J
.
Bot;n May ·15, 1944 in Hanford, he was a son of the late Robert W. Jr.
Driver Kimberly D. Turner, 33, . · · Divorce gra~ted - Jennifer L.
· Monday...Scauered snow showers northeast. Dry elsewhere. Lows s 10 andfieda H. Turley Warth. He was a carpenter and attended Hartford Church 43230 Elk Run Road, C(I~Jiville, and Warth from Charles W. Warth, Jan. 2. ·
IS a.nd. highs 20 to.2S.
·
.
~'·,·
. .. of Christ in Christian Union. .
passenger John L. Stumbo, 19,33141
•
,
·He
was
also
preceded
in
death
liy
a
brother,
Robert
"Rog"
Warth.
U.S. 33, Pomeroy, were transported
A
.
.
rea .orecast: ~··
Toniglit... Light rain or.drizzle likely this ev~!!!"g. Light snow likely after
Surviving are his wife, Brenda A, Gibbs Wanh; sons and daughters-in- to Veterans Memorial Hospital by
. , midnight. An inch or tess. of snow accumlilatifii. Lows in the upper .20s. law, Allen R. and ShetTi R. Warth of West Columbia, W.Va., Charles R. and passersby, according to the p;ttrol.
.• Southwest winds 10 to IS mph. Chance of preQijlitation 60 percent.
Mary C. Wanh of Hanford, and Floyd Dwaine Warth of Hartford; two broth- They were released with instructions,
Friday... Windy and with snow showers Jikely1f:ligh remaining in the upper ers, David C. Warth and Donald A. Warth, both of Hartford; two sisters, Lora a hospital spokesperson said.
·20s and lower 30s. Chance of snow 70 perceri,t;!'l!
.
Mac Imboden of Rvtl~ Carolyn S. Brewer of Hartford; and four grand·
Troopers said Turner was nanh.
Exleftded foreeaat~
children.
.
bound, two miles east of U.S. 33 in
Saturi!ay.'.. B!ustery with scattered snow sho~ers. J'!ig~s in the mid 20s. .
Services will be I p.ni. Saturday in the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, Bedford Township, ai I p.m. when
.. Sunday...Continued cold will) a chani:e of snow showers. Morning low W.Va., with Rev. James B. Hughes officiating. Burial will follow in the Union her car went off the right side of the
•... 10 to IS. Highs in the lower 20s.
· .
\
. . Cemetery, Friends may call at tlie funeral home frd'm 6-9 p.m. Friday.
road in a left,hand curve, came back
. onto the road, slid sideways and ov~r­
chance of snow showers.
lows 10 15 Highs in
turned as it went off the left side of ·
', '!'[11
.
the.road:"
- ~.;.
... '
The car Callie to a rest on its top,
.
Units, of the Meigs' Couniy Emer· Wyatt Radford, Holzer Medical Ccng~ncy M!lllical SC~"Vice recorded nine ter.
according to the repon.
calls for.assisiance Wednesday. Units
RU.TLAND
.
The car was severely damaged,
.,
responding included: ·
9:08 un .. OBNC. Lenora Jenkins, troopers said .
.,
The followinsland transfers were Johnsoni o Paul R. Sr. and Nedlll Gay
c. CENTRAL DISPATCH
Pleasant Valley Hospital ;
recorded ·recently in the .;&gt;ffi~e of Johnson,,Letart, 4.368 acres;
·
i1.:3Jn.m., Oak Alley, Syracuse,
6:48p.m., McCumber Road, Mike
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene · Deed.'Scott D. Wolfe and Amy F. John Krider, Veterans Memorial Hos- · Hudson. VMH.
·
Wolfe t«J&gt;aniel S. Kennedy,.Sutton pjtal, Syracuse squad assis!ed;
1 • Hamilton:
SYRACUSE
,,
Deed, Laur11 Helen Garling,er, parcel;
8:18a.m., State·Route 124, Min·
8:16.a.m., South Second Avenue,
· ' ' deceased, to Melissa l:i. Jeffers, Mid·
~i~; Cof'SI"J~Iion C9. to ersville, Odie Reed, V.MH, Syracuse Middleport, Dorothy Roush, VMH.
c, dlepoit;
.
.
'
prik~b:hand Ja~e~nlt ~anestad, . squad ;15sisted; \
.
• Middlepon squad assisted.
· ,, ·, ' Deed, .George M.. and Janis E. ··Chester .411 $~S,. ·,.,v.••
.
8:S8 a.IJ',, ~.ovtrbwok- Nurii'ng •
TUPPERS PLAINS..- Grounds to ,Timothy ·Aildrew and · ·•
· 61itles W. ~lfto Jen- ., Center, Middlep&lt;)tf; t~hlt Bosto'!,
II :26 p.m., volunteer fire depart·
O:.=;,:.'i"";,.~-:,~•
,., · Dav.id Allen Grounds; Columbia;
nifer L. W11flll, Salisbury; · .
.
• ·.: OCe&lt;(·.[jouslas W. and Connie L.
. Deed, Judy D. and Do!\'ald F. VMH. . .MiDDLia'ORT
' , • '.A
. . ' . structure fire.
.
Little to 'Robert L ·and Tamara L. . D1xon;JoanE.andJobnC:.And"':Son
2:23 ~.m. , volunteer fire depanMash; Salisbury, 19 acres;
: - to James M. and Clara Stie Soulsby, .mel\t to Short Fourth Avepue, no
Deed, James · Roy ,Frecker, Pomeroy 215 acre. ·.
,
injuries.
deceased, to David and Shirley BumPOMEROY
'gan\iler, Pomeroy parcels;
7:18 p.m.; . .Rocksp{ings Road,
Easement, James · Roy Frecker,
deceaSed, to 'David and Shirley Bum-. '
. 411(.,.
result~
gardner, Pomeroy;
Am Elt
Deed, Ira Kalheryn Quesinberry to
Akzo •••!.~ ........,................~··--·· 70f.Auction results from WednesdaY's
Aahland 011 .........................,.441.
•· . Donnie M. and Bonnie J. Quesinber·
Gallipoli$
Producersr LivestockAsso. ,
ry, Columbia parcels;
·. ·. AT&amp;T J...!i.......................6. ••••••••••38
Clallon:
·
Orw .....-•••••••••••••••.•••••••••44\
. Deed, Troy L. and .Glori~ Ann · Blink
Total
head:
39S
Bob IY~ttl ..........~ ... ~................13
~ Bearhs io Troy Lee Bcarhs, Chester, .
HOGS -· 18. Prices, $2 lower
•
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• J
•
8org-W...,.,., ···~··········,.......,..39\
• · 11 acres;
· ·
than last' week's auction.
Champfj?n ····.·-··················......21\
~. Paul R. Sr. and Nedra Gay
·Cllirmli'ia 811ope ...................4"1.
Butcher hogs, all weights, $46-48;
~:J:dlng ..........................28'1.
sows,
n/a; boars, nla; Feeder pigs,
I'Mogul ..o.......... ,........... 23
$28 and down .
~ ••••••••••••••...•••••• :....... ~72 8
,, H~spltal
· CATI'LE -371; Steers, $2-3low~r
......................
~
......
52\
. Velei'IUIS Mimorlal
7
K-man~
·
..................................
10
4
er;
heifers, $2-3 l!)wcr; choice, $61.•
Wednesday admissions - Keith Landa ,nd .............................2.7I:4.
66.75;
heifers, $62-66; good, $60-62;
,, Musser; Middleport. ·
Umltlld ~: ...............................17 8
Holstein. SS4-62.
·
Wednesday discharges- none.
.,
Olllo Valley s.rtk.......,.,...:....35'1.
COWS
Demand
and
~rice
Haber r,tedlcal Center
Ora Vllley.....................:•••••••38\
l!ll~d,
S~Jow~r;
utility,
$23-28;
sian'
· Disclulrges Jari. 8 - Candace fieoplel .............................~...28\.
dlit:ll,
1~2~·33.50;
commercial,
$18- •
Preln
Flnl
.......
;
........
-~
............
13~
.,· Pope, Brand!)n Young, Betty Willet, ·
•
I
Rockwell
...................
..........
&amp;1
r.
22:
~ulls, steady; butchers, $27.36 ;
Mrs. David Donnally and son.
RD-8hell .............................. 171~
,ft;EDER CATTLE • 220: $3
(~blls~ed with penn-.lon)
~·- ...................................7,
and hishcr; Yearling, stctrs, $52-60;
Slllr Bilrik ..................................
I
heifers; '$42-54; calve~- steers, $54Wendy'•J•••••••••••M••••••••""1''''""'21 ~
·, . Americ~. Brazilian.· and West · Worthlf"'NW'on
6~;
!leifcrs, $48-57; back to the fann
...................
""W!
• *
, r~.... ~...11
German ~eQtisu announcCd in·198S · ·
babics,'$22 and down. '
, that the skeletal remains exhumed
SHEEP • Choice, $.15-70. Aged
stoow";..p;,; ;. the 1o:ao
a.m.
quotM
provided
by
Adftll
•·rtoina graveyitrd in Brazil wer;e lhpse
sla\lshter sheep, $25-28.
of()alll~a.
·; ·of Nazi war criminal Dr. Josef MenSpecial feeder sale Wednesday,
.,
. ;gele;· .
· ·
Jan. 29.. 1 p.m.
• Sculpturea, 1'hlckleu, Level Loope,
•
Berbera, ComiMfelel Cllrpeta
• Expert lnltlllatlon
The
Sentinel
• We UH heavy "Life of the CarPet"
(~lt:I-Mt)
"
WIII'Rin1y peddlng
.
.,
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• Free, NO Obua,tlon 9\lotea

., I

n.e

, r

Pomeroy merchants·study .
Clara Adams

ByTOMRAUM .
A11oclated Pre•• WrH~r
WASHINGTON __.:When Republicans were riding high in May 1995,
an eclipsed President Clinton gave an unsolicited and anguished defense of
return.
~
•
his own "relevance.'' Now it's House Speaker Newt Gingrich's tum to beg
. Democ111ts say thai any capital
for respect.
gains cuts are likely to'requi!ll a big~
Associates suggest the Georgia Republican's rehabilitation is .already
ger OOP quid pro quo ·- perhaps a; ·
under way, and that the days leading up to his hard-fought re-election to a·
OOP lead in refonning the consume~
sei:ond term as speaker were his darkest.
· .
price index, wbich will help balanco
"Leadership is tested by situations such as these. And be survived the
the budget but
rep! mnt both ,;
vote. So he's .stronger now than he was a week ago," said GOP pollster Frank
tax increase and a reduction of ben~
Luntz, who·has worked closely with Gingrich and other HObse Republicans . .
·efits forbenefrciaries of entitlemen(
Remaining under an ethical cloud and with the suppqrt of less than a
programs.
~
majority of the 435-memher House, Gingrich gave voice to a trBit not usuArcher is .said to doubt that the:
. ally.associated with him in liis nationally televised acceptance speech: humil·
Republican Congress will amend
ity.
.
.
' .
welfan: reform to help non-&lt;:itizen~
"To the degree I was too brash, too self confident m; too pushy,.I apolbut be ts open to tax lnalts to create
ogize. To'whate\ler ,degree in any way I have brought controveisx or inap'
jobs for those thrown off welfare, ai
propriate attention to the House, I apologize," he told the assem&amp;!ed (a":'·
Clinton wants. .
,
o.,
· makers Tuesday.
'
.
' .
Archer won't allow Clinton to·
·•·o
~· 0 o
But it will take more than apologies for Gingrich to recaptw:e the momen• 0
•
'
push papet Medicare savinas ontq
. . ..... .. oO• ..
tum
he
rode
in
1995
as
architect
ofthe
.now-suhdued
"Republican
Revolu
..
taxpayen, as Cliilton is suuesting,
0
.
•
'
lion."
.... ~. 0
but wants a deal to keep the system
Even without his admitted ethical misdeeds, Gihgrich must preside over
sol~ent. /utd Archer is encOOraged
a·House with a thinned majority.
·
· ·
that Clinton will SOOsider broad·
Republicans held 235 seats and Democrats 197 in the previous Congress . .
based tax rerorm.
.
•
The Congress that convened for the first time on Tuesday has just 227 House
There is Taw rnaaeri" here for sigmembers and 207 Democrats, plus one independent who usUally votes Demonificant lesislativc pt'OII'CU. And
cratic.
.
there is a willinpess to bargain. 'I'h\l
Gingrich won only .216 of those GOP votes on Tuesday, two short of a ·
question is; will scandal' mongerin&amp;'
· majority of the full l{ouse - but still ~noug!l to keep him speaker. , ·
set the bestofevetyone's good inte•
Rep. Constance Morella of Maryland, one Republican who declined to
lions? Let's hope hot.
vote for Gingrich, said afterwards be "may he strengthened" ~y his close
(Mortoa Kondncke II eucu'.
~ll.
.
.
liv.e edl.., ot Roll Call, tile aen- ·
"I think that he can grow from it. I'm an optimist," Morella, who voted
,..,er·ol Capitol HI!.)
"present," said.
•
.
. '
A Jot has changed since May 1995:'Then, Clinton was clearly overshad·
owed by Gingrich and the GOP-led Congress' first 100-day burs! of activity.
.
In an evening East Room news conference ignored liy the major
net·
The 13-member Social Security saw a bone-crushing depression, would be limited to a few sovern- 40l(k) plans, mutual funds, .equity
works, Clinton had complained,. "The Constitution gives me relevance, the
Advisory
Council met for &lt;two and a many recessions, a world war and ment-selected ·fu~s . . The govern- index funds and cohsumcr-oriented
power of our ideas gi~es me relevance." __ _ . •
- ··
'financial institutions sited in shopOn Tuesday, it was Gingnch who was promjsing to reach out more to half years and agreed to disagree. smaller wars .. American common ment would hold.all t1ie accounts.
. They finally put forth three altema- stocks grew in value by ati average of
The "Personal Sect¥ity.Account" ping malls. Millions of middiHiass
Clinton and to congressional Democrats.
.
.
.
.
plan ' (PSA), designed by coun· Americans have been _leaminl! how to
With both parties pledging to work for bipartisan goals- such as a bal· , tive proposals, and . began publicly
., anced budget - there is also bound to be less attention paid to the House . bickering, bickering, bickering.
eilmembers Sylvestef",Scheiber of do what the upper class tri.ed to do alL
There is a temptation to say thanks
1
.
·.• • Wai&amp;On Wyatt World~ide Consulalong: harness )\merican we8Jth for
· "In some respec~. over the past two years, the House was the hotbed of
· for nothing to the group, ·which 7.2 percent per year, after discount• tants 111d Carolyn Wei!Ver. JOCS fur· their own purposes. Thew have
activity and the Senate was always kind of dealing with things that they had
passed :W. in some instances, not dealing with them," said Senate Majority included representatives of business, . ing for inflation. By contrast, the way · iher. Wcirkers would i~! half of l!lcir become capitalists and direct shareLeader Trent Lon, R-Miss. "I think maybe this time that we'll ~tum to a labor, the self-employed and the pub- Social Security is now set up, . pension conlributioil~ , in their own hcilders in the American economy.
. more nonnal situation where some time the Senate will lead, some time the lie at large. But that would much younger :workers will only set a accounts, which would be held ill 11toy think about growth ntes, interunderestimate the service regdered. . return of I percent to 2 ~nt, if financial institutions of ' their own est f11es, inflation, tax rates, business
House will lead."
,
Alltbe couneilmembers agree that that
.
·
choosing at,!d invested in a wide vari- cycles and business regulation itt new
Gingrich's etliical problems loomed over Tuesday's vote..
. . · the current harum-scarum campaign
That
means,
for
eKample,
a
25·
ety
ofstocks also of their own choos- and often ft!0!1I Jelliistic ways. More
Even as members prepared to vote, James 'M. Cole, spec1al counsel for
designed to show that Social Securi· year-old today would accu!!'ulate ing. (There is a guaranteed baseline than before, they are masters of their
the House ethics committee, put out a statement saying more tillte was needty will "go broke" is mostly bunk. S18S,OOO at I percent, $228,00o at 2 benjfit)
. .
own financial destiny. This is the
ed on the Gingrich ethics case, which the Republican leadership has decreed It's a problem, not a crisis. It can be percent or $792,000 a1 7.2 percent
I'm for PSA. The mathematics of right time to make such tin opportu~
will end no later than Jan. 21.
fixed; withou\ much pwn if we act
·so agreement abo.ut common allthepJansiscomplcx.Itisthesoci· nitya~ailabletoall.
. ,
'•
Gingrich has .Wmitted he failed to "seek and follow" legal advice reg~­
stock investment of Social Sei:urity oloiY itnd ps~chology, of PSA that
As capitalism .CXP,!Inds, .a lot of
ing tl)e use of tax-exempt organizations for political. purposes and provid- soon.
All
three
.proposals
break
away
represents
real
headway.
If·
any
of
make$
it
a
winner.
\~
'
"them"
can beco.me "ItS." ~)rings
ing iqaccurate statements to the.House eth1cs committee.
.
from
a
total
reliance
on
what
counthese
plans
are followed, Americans .
fi!SI think of what \I!C've seen and us tOf!ether as shareholdel'$-in..Com,
Will those ethical problems hamper Gingrich's ability to deal with the
cit member Carolyn Weaver of the will get more bang for their buck, and hel!fll in recent years,~~any Ar!leri·.' · mon. Capitalism doesn't make every
admi11istration and congressional Democrats? ·
· .
, ·
"I have no way of predicting," White House spokesman Mike McCur- American Enterprise Institute calls more retirement from their resources. cans have been doW!tsited, breaking .man a king, but it can lJelp make
the "nip-and-tuck" school of reform:
The biggest difference between the bonds of corpo~ate ·patemalism. ,every man a player.
ry said Tuesday when asked. .
·
.
·
·raise the retirement age a little bit, . the three plans involves who jlets to Many A!ncriciw arc burned up about . Social Security should be
, . "The president will go about doing lhll work he's been .~lected to do ... raise taxation on upper-income recip- invest the money in what.
. hU,e salaiieS and boituses goinl to reformed not beca11se'it has failed hm
working closely wnh·tbe leadership, mcludmg the speaker, McCurry said.
ients a little bit, and so on. Such lit·
The "Maintenance of Benefits" corporateCEOs. We .... thatAmcr· because it has si!ccfflled. We have
"lbc;re's a lot of work to do. The preside'ntlooks forward to doinl! it." .
· But Rep. John Conyers, 0-Mich., the senior Democrat on the House Judt· tie changes CI!D be useful, but ~y do .plan recommends 'that, over time, !lie . icans arc "splitting ap811." We hear seen that some sorts of social enai·
ciary Committee, had a less sanguine view. "Gingrich will,be unable to lead," not provide a whole answer to the fedenil government invest a trillion or that so many people feel like victims . Jicering work quite "II, even if not
be said. "The possibility of us geuing anything done has been senously current condition of Social Security, so dollars in the stock market and in a country of" us" vs, "them." Our perfectly. The elderly have gained in
particularly for young people.
pump the proceeds from that invest· President says that ''the ·era of biB dignity and in material well·beinl!.
diminished." · .
.
AU three plans involve. a serious ' ment tiack into the sovemment, 1overnment is over.'' Both panies Nqw We can use that' basC to make
. SQme Democrats privately were pleased that Gingrich was re-elected. It
structural reform as w.ell as the sntp- · which will then disbl,trse Social Secu- preach self-reliaitce, responsibility, pensioners into partieipanu. .
ll)akes it easier for them to neutralize GOP attacks on ethics problems f~ .. snip routine. "II involve at least the rity benefits·in the' current .manrier.
opporiunity and' privatization. We
Ben Wattenberi, a senior
ing Clinton and his wife,, members of his administration and Democrauc .
likelihood ~f placi~g a subs~nti~l
The "Indlvi!lual Accounts" plan have seen that socialism is a bummer, 'fellow at the ·American Ellterprise
fund· rai5ers.
.
.
.
.
.:
That was why, along with the applause Republicans ga~e Gingrich, a scat- . part of Soc1al Sec~nt&gt;: assets tn pn· recom'!'"nds that work~rs get a sm~l •: u~es~ful in trcatina re•l wealth. Institute, Is the, author of "Values
vate stocks rather than to government and dtlll!,ed IRA-type account ·In • · CapitalisM f\11' the masses is an old . ~attcr Most" ailcl is the boat of the ·
tered number of Democrais clapped their hands.
·
bonds.
" · ,
•.
addition to regular Social' Security •Idea. ~a good one..ln recent years , wellkly jlublic television Pf!J&amp;I11I11
Over the last 70 years .. which benefits. The investment choices ' wehave.,.aprolifefation.ofiRAs, "Thinlc'!Uk."
·
·Iq)ITOR'S NOTE- Tom Raum coven polllia.and national affllin
for
Aaodated Press.
·
·

·Capitalism

The Deily S1ntlnel • Page 3

'JIIurDr, J• ..,.•' '. 1117

'.

'

'•

'Estllbfislid in 1948

Pomeroy • lllddllpclft, Ohio

,..Ia

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SALE$18

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BERBER
'
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$
~ ~t:.::.otecb P1ua SALE 1 2
• Olefin/Nylon BIMI

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. .
tjn Top 25 college ,..,.,,,

.

.

Ohio State defeats
Penn State /70-62

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. ~ 'TheJ'III I I d Pt II
~~ lllnl ao i= pae Nonla C.-.
.:00.. raw., Ill bold. ?:l-paillt...
:ill the IOC Dlllllwlf.Ja.. • •Jmpcw)ible to iiMii""' lbo 'Ia HeC11 ......... IIIII ltiad of IMd 11111111 up It

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~Y.

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It IIIFPeaed.
No. 19 Mlr)lllnd ov«eame that
:,tw&amp;e de6cit '--.. 8S-7S vil:to!Y ovec
· 'die 1.3 1h-ruked Tar Heels . on
~ ~The 'lmapins (13:1. 3-0 ACC) won consecutive road
. ~ apilllt Nonh Carolina for the
otint time in 67 years.
: "I've been coaching a while in a
'lot of diff=nt plllces, and this is 1bo
~ comehack I've been 3SIOCWcd
,wilh," TerTapins coach Gary
:Williams said. "Nobody has more
· ~ for Dean Smilh than me. Tl:;l
it here is special."
· ·
r
The loss, ~O!JPied wilh a24-polnt
\blowout ·at No. 2 Wake f9rest 90
~~y. le~t the Tar Heels_(9-3,.().
With theu worst Atlanll~ 'Coast
:
:

Gee

Rli!Cit'

.35· 700

NEW 1995 .CO"EnE ._
............w.. $41,674 ·: s
Conv., red, white top, red int.

ON"

,

lOW ..

96 ··MODELS

.

·

·:· ILL IUIIINING
.
.
96 MODELS MUST GO
.

FINANCING

fa

I

MONTHS

UPTO ·

r&gt;

ON'SELECIED MoDEU '

APR FOil WillED TIME.-

•HIIIY~l

--

------S17,2ft

san

Fect.a...AIIw

16,426

Al'o.t W.l'l1ce 5

.... Tate IIIKIIII.

Woobit...... :........ l7 , U .531 . ~ 7
l]rlooolo .......:.....&lt;....ll 17 .414. Oh
NaOrltrief.- ..........9 ll ,JOO 14

.........

.. .. $1.094

-

. 1'1111 I l(+il ...........l

S79Z

........

15,396

.

5390

Sltllac

: Bl!Mti. OR. (AP)-:-' Jolin Bauer
ol Chlntlfi
. 'n.' Mi!ln.,-•on hia si~th
Iiiii&amp; tU. Oaia

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13

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2).

20 .lS5
SUA-.......:.....9 23 .211
Ocewr ............\.......9 24 .27:\
v - ..... :........ 7 11 .206
LA. Lobn ............ 26 . 10 .722
.................... 25 II .694

................-·----5940
hiD='

$12.US

..........

d!!

11 ,85 5

AI Out Sttle Price 5

1996 lUlCK ROADMA~TER ·
•

16

. ~)

Sac:Nalt:!i8 ............ 14 21

.400

. ......................... 19

P-r -1, l'lniOtll trunk, •uto.,

....-;more.

.

.

•

~~

Goldens..e .......... ll 20 .m
Phoeolo .................. IO . 14 .294

12
15

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Fritlll''• PB*

W..-..,.----,.-SI3,1t4 '
. . TtltWm I
· J.Q!7

GriiiD='

... $12,797

..,..., It hit - .

Charlotte 11 Pboclllll., 9 p.m.
Miami at LA. LakeR, ro:.'\0 r-• ·

Club ~b, auto., •lr, CISI., -'uin. wh.
$16,565 .
. . Toll !lit. I.
J1m

GnltD='

men's~res

• Dlilaloa Ill .

· ~(II)
· ' 8-0.'..............'&lt;.2011
!II.
'f.',V'"...,
2-Chil. Z..Tiaoc(4)1-t .................. J64
).-Pol. "'-l'l2)8-1 ................ 114
4-Wi&lt;!&lt;liffe6.0.......... ., ......................... 106
'1-NEI.SONYIIJ,J;.:VORK 7.0 ........... 104

I .

l

Division U

IDa

£Ia,
l·G.f'teld H11. Trinily ( ll) K--Z ........ ,., 186
2-0.. VA.SJ 11)11·0......................... 15)
3-BelleronWne (I) 12-0....................... 1'44
4--Avon Loie II) II.() .....~ .................... 120
5·1leloil W. Bllln&lt;h C1) 10.0 ..................91
11-Copl&lt;y 9.0 ·" ........................... ,...........~2
7·0over 10-1 ,.........................................58
g.vou. MIJO!Ity9-1......................... .......54
9-Pmy 9-0 ........ ,.................................... 51
10-MiUenbura W. Holmes 9-1 ..............4,'\
Othln rtftlv... U or-. pllnb:
· II·Eiida 34. 12-Sa.lem :u . IJ-Hamillon
Badin 20. 14-Col. Hartley 18. lj {tie)-

POINT11 . 17·YINCENTWA~RilNIJO.

1.,,..,.,

lkrca 62, Stronasvillc JO
. Bridaeport ,3, Bishop Don01hu~
CW. V~J4l ·
.
.
Buckeye Troil46, Fon Frye 44
Comton S. 50, LoWs¥illc 48
CDJTOIIt01).47, AlliaJM:e Marlin&amp;lon 45
Chqrin Fall• 66, P~ .57
.
Cle. Nnft Do.me-Colhedrallalin 66,
Ck. LiDCOin-West28
Cle¥elond Hit. !i7. Panna 29
0n¥etleDI' 54, N. Royallon 4.5
Col. Hanley 84, Col. Ready 61
~
Col . Marion Frutlin'76. Col. Eu140,
Col. WellinJion ~.Col. At;adeM)' 37
Connenu1 .57, A1h1nbulfl HDI'b« 41
·Crooksville 49, New LealnJIOD 4j
Dover 60.·Mulilloa Wllhiqlon 3H

9:8roadv'w Ht. Bn:-:bviUetJ..O., ...........SI
IO.Siow (!) 9-0 ......................................50
Odtns ftfti,.lna 11 or -.cw JMMnu:
H·Cin. HUJhm n . 12-Col. Brookhaven
Cll 36. IJ.You. Bo.vdlnan :l!'i. 14-Sidney
33. I~·Tol. Cent. Cnlh. 31 . 16-Mariella
19. 17·N. Olmsltd 14. IR·Mason 12.

•·

'

.

~

'

Jefferson ~ . A.ahtDbula Edgewood J 1
Lakewood 41. W..-ens.ville Htl. 32
Lorain Adminl KinJ 67 •.Lurain
Soulhvicw 39
Lorain Cath. !'iR. Elyria Cath. 40
Mldison. 7~ . Ashtabula :w
Mapilkanr44. FairvP 39, OT
M:...hul Crestwood 91 . Streetsboro ll
Medina 70, Bn:cklviUc 66
Mealor ftJ. Parmo Nmnnndy .47 ·

Middlc6eld CIVdinal4!'i, Wickliffe 24

Midpark 44, Brunswick ~9
Miller City ~$ . Fort Jenninp 4K
Mogadore 6(). Peninsula Wood,rid,e

40

~ Wal~!rloo J4
Mor,_an 62. Philo 4ll
Oberlin 42. Wellington 19
Obcflin Fin:lnnda 47, Elyriu Mid¥iew·

Mogodon F'teld

Tol. CarhoNc 68. Tol. Ubbey IK
Tol. Ropn 61, Tol. 'Nt!odwuN J7
Tol. $(on $8, Tol. Bowsher $7
Toi.·St Uuula 64, Tol. Wailc 44
TwinsbYrg 61. Onm,e ~:'i
Vermilion 49; N. RidJc¥ilh: 43
W, Branch S7, MinL'r¥a 29
W. Muski~t~ulri47, Tfi-VnUey 37
Zane1¥ille Ro•e"r1111 66, · Newnrk
Cllh. 59

North-' DMIIIon
. PirtsburJh .......... 22l:'i 4 48
Duffalo ............... 21 1.5 ~ 47
Hanford ............. l'7 16 7 41
Monlrea1.. .......... 16 ·1i 8 40
Ooston ................ Jj . l9 6 36
Ouawa ............... l220 7 31

-·-

WE"STERN CONFERENCE

~ .e'n'..
,Iii
~I 124

Iali

Dallu ................. 24 1.5 J
Detroil ................ 20 14 1
Phoc:niJo.. .... ~ ..... l819 4

47 128

.
Padfk Dtvlliort
Colorado ............ 24 10 g ~6
Edmomon .......... l9.20 4 42
Vancouver ........ 1920 I ~9
Anllhdm ........ : .. l"21 ~ H
Cal&amp;lll')' .............. l:1i 22 !' 35
SWIJ~ ............. I421 ~
3~
Los Anse~s .... ~. l-4 23 4 32

1!6 IlK

106 124
102 126
110 . 140

Wednesday's sc&lt;lres
Tt~"'fJllBuy

4, N.Y. RungL'I'd

· Colomdo I, Ni!w Jcf'SI!y 1 (lie)
O.icago 4, Edmonwn· I
Dallas 6, Derroil :l
Amittim 3. Aorida 2

Tonight's games ·
Montn:al 01 Boston, 7:MJ p.m.
CuiOillllo a1 Ouawa. 7:30p.m.
TaJlll'l Day l1l Phillll.lclphia. 7:JO p.m.
N.Y. Ranaers al Wu~hinaton . 7::10
p.m.

.

Detroit II Phoenix. 9 p.m.
.
HlVIIord 01 Calgary, 9&lt;J0 .fc.m.
St l..nuis at Snn J~ . 10:. 0 p.m.
Buffalo at Lm Aagele8, 10::\0p.m.

·,

. Friday's pmes
N.Y. lslnndeu al Pitlsbur(l.ll,
p.m.

7 : ~0

'

Chlc~o al New Jeh&amp;ly. 7:30 run
Phocnr" 111 Dulhm, R:JO p.rn.
H:vtrord Qt VMCOUVL'r, IOp.m.
Dulfnlo ar Anuhdm, 10:)0 f\.m.

Transacttons
a...ban
DETROIT TIGERS: A~~
wilh RHP L&gt;nn Mi\.'l!li un

11

111 letm!i

unc-ycur cnn-

lracl.

EASTERN CONFERENCE
AdllllkDI.-,
~

14~
99
142 13.1
126 IJ6

Alltfl'bn LH~W

NHL standings
:W L I

liA

103
91
40110 130
SI. Loois ........... l82·1 4 40122141
C1Jkaso .............. l621 1· 39 11~ 121
T..-onlo .............. l7 2.~ 0 34 12R 1~0

Hockey

Ia111

~~~ 130
122 107
122 131
I~ 144
116 143
107 .JI9

Iii liA

Phil....,lpllio .......26 12 ·4 56 I,.. IQ.l
.Aori!-la ...............21 II 9 .51 120 95

N111iunal Leapr
CHICAGO CUBS: Namctl Rubcit
Amuro l'tNH:h, Slun' Kyk::.1 rilctJinll ..:mM.:h,
Moe Hill•hininp Cl lal!h nnd Jinl O ' Reill~
lfilincr. fur Rm;:kfurd nf 1he Midwe st
league.

.

lltctilc

Clrl~ Cr.H) .

.

SJO••••:
.......... c.... ,..... HHI..) will

.CiJIII p.l

.

.,.,......

.
.

.

'
•'
•

1996 CHEVY S·

1996 GMC SONOMA SPT. SIDE
·vs, 5 ep11d, c:..... SLS Decor.
w. .
.
$16,331
hi Tilt .....
$1,41 z

.3rcl dr., V8, 1uto., llr,.much 1110re.
•
..,

$1,900

'.

13I 91 .

o.tSale Prka 5

.11•-n

·
R~olrande
11tal.
l
la111e
r•• ••r
•
·ys
•
•·~·IIGII• ,._,. ... c••dr, ~·· o-: •••·
J.Mr JWI•••r a Lo... Plulr.MCIIII.' Wt

,..,.,CJ ••

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)7,599

'AI o,t W.·Prkt 5

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................
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1811!5 BUICI( SKYLARK
1995
. OLDS ACHIEVA .

¥'our

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,.., ,,...~,

'

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Auto., air, atereo, nice.
''8919

For ln~wers~~J Of

id. .lsttr ,.., PaucrlptiOII ._~, .... .
.s..rtllll
1, IH7. Swlsller a Loll11
fll r•r prescrlptlolls ·wit~
·J!'l' ailr pnicnptiOpl canl• H llftt

.~·

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$14,91,

· ·

l•flopel/letlrlll/$1nlwlll

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1:11

QRJPON

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&gt;

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Free Tickets Are Available
At Fruth Pharr ttacy Stores In Point Pleasant WV,
,. ·Gallipolis. Middleport. And Wellston ()H. .

I . Umlf 1 per CUitoOier per preacrlpllon. I
&amp;.' Lohse Pha,•acy 1
1;' ,' .
1·20-97 . . .

.

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•

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Oinvd ~. Nib 3!'i
.
Glenville .n . 'V~na. R:nr.n ~I. OT
Huber Hts. Wayne 71 . pri•B· Sooth

)8 109 110

Available At

nOTICE
.o•fo , ••..,
c.,.,.....
'

.

126

•

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•

..

Akron Sprinj. 66, Salem Nont1wes1 ·
•
.
Amhml :'il, N. Olmsted 47
Aurora J~ . Kirtrilnd 25

A•on 52, LoJmnp .Keysoonc )3
Avoa I.,Qke 66, Wntlab J7

8-WIIdswonh(l)'l-0 ............ ..................62

Bel- 28. 14-0I""ted F. .•( I) 27. 15·
Cle, Beneclfc:tlae (I) 24. 16-SOUTH

~~~
· ----~~

~

4-Cie- Ml$. (2) 11.0 .................. ..106
5:Rocty River Maa- J 1· 1 ...................... 97
6-0.,ooa C-J (I) 9-0 .............................. 8l
7·W, Oxster Lak01a C2) 10-0 ................ 82

!II.

II·Do,ooo~l5!.12.c..tldd~lll·.

AI Pit W. Prkt 5

o.t wt Ptb.SJ1

'DI...,.u ···

. ::...~:"13·:.:;;~ .

$15,339

46

I·Pickerinato• (10) 8-0 ........................ I:lb

CAL 19. 111-Yoo. WlJoloo IR. IIIIS.obwy
Bil YlaiHI 17 . 20 (lie)-Canal Fulron
Noarhwe~~. c-on Joudl 16, n -Hunrina
·. Valloy Unlwnity Sdlbol "·

NCAA Division I

Dlvlsloa l

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

2·WM~~er(3~ 10.0............................... 11~
~·Beawrcteek CI}S.O .... .'............. ~ ....... 1:13

2-0IIowr(J~{l) 9-4 ......... ......... 204

Newv ...... - - .·7p.m.
Houston 11. Phillddphia. 7:JG p.m.
,L.A. Ctippcra ar W'•1hina1oa, 7:l0 · .
p.m.
. .
.
San AMOnkllll Dttroil. 8 p.m.
Chicqo • Milwaukee, I :]() p.m.
. llldi1111 • Dmver, 9 p.m.

.

Iaa

21. 22-Cie. ·Glenville
21.23~16 . .

J.Qo. ---11-1.. ..................... 117
4-~Cenrftt~ A1w C2l 7-2...... .......:........ 11~
5-Homilloo-11-1 ........................ ....90
6. ·"-* ' I ELwood 9-1..................14
7"N.,.w Ri"" \&lt;lew 5-3 .....................111
·11-W...., Trlwo, 1-l ....:.......................eo
9-Do... 7-1 ......:................................. ....56

y_._.,

w. .

,....,

f.Oinilto Clll 1~ ............................ :1.11

Utili II~ 7p.m.
,...
~· ..... Jenly,1:l0p.m.. '
AI-M Orloodo, 7:)0 p.nL
Golden SIMI II.
IOp.m.

6-Cin. Sem~ Hills 8.0.. ;................. ,....... 72
.7·1u;om Hopewell-LOudon 8.0...........70
8-Waynesvillc 9-0 .................................. 62
9-Minsttr9·1 .. :........ ,~............................ 51
IO.Bctlin HiiMd 9-2 ....................... 1....... 48
OU.n rec-eh•l111 ll or Mort PQbU:
II·Bowerstown Conotlon Vllllcy 19. 12·
Shndy1ide 26. 13-Warren Kennedy 23 .
14-New Wo.shing1on Buckeye Centml (2)
20. 1~- Hol&amp;ale 19. 16 (tie)-DnnviJie, J..o..
rain Cath. '(I) 16. IR (tfe).Eolat Canton,
· Findlay Ubcrty·Benlon I~ .

'

We~~enlr&amp;e •Soud!T

- ·or-

!'·Lakeside Danbury (I) 9.0 ................. 110

How a llale panel of sports writcn
nnd broadtaten ra1e:s Ohio hi&amp;h k.:hool
Jirls ' bllskaballleMII ia.the first weekly
rcaular·kuo• poll of 1996·97 for The
Anoclattd Prclls (by &lt;:fb\o Hiah S"hool
Alhletic Ahocio.tlon division•; won-loll
rewrd lhrouah games of Jan. ~: nl'll·place
¥OIC'I in pM:IIhaca); .!-· l- J
,
'

14-Tot. CooL Colh. 41. 15-Lcbuon 40.
111-M~
. • (I~ 17·Foirfield I))
!'· I
27. 19111o)'Cin.
,Oik Hilto ia. Whuon Wood• 24. 11·
'

4:81ufl'lon(3) 10.0........... :.. ,................ 123

Ohio U.S. girls.' poll

II,CantOII McKinley !tl. 12· LakeYtood
So. Edwad ,( !) 52. tl-llo,ooo ~ 49.

T.....t•a..,...

SlS Dec:or, •lr, Cll. . .tte.

16.

l:'l 117 130
32 102 118

37
. Obnsted Fulls 7:!. Bay 47
Orwt-11 Gmnd Vul. 64. Newbury J2
Pal11la Holy Namt 60, Clc. St. Joseph
50
P11111'111 Val. Forge $4, Shaker H11. 4? '
Pit;kerington KJ, Worlhinalon Kll ·
bounw: JJ
'
'
Rllcine Soulhem 52, Well110n 4ll
Ravenna SE 64. R001110wn z.c;
River v;ew 56, Maysville 'I
R01:ky River MqnifkM12, Cle. VASJ64
&amp;lcm 71. Howland :;o
Shdfield Brookside ~9 ~· Lorain
Clt01'¥iew !'J
Sheridan 66, John Glenn ~
Solon 4l. Cburdon :n
Sprins. North ~2 ~nia •2
Slruthetl64, Cnntield 43

Hon Lonunie &lt;2110.0 ....................... 129.

thinaton Christian 19, I6·M1ria Stein .

a.o:r. . . .

.. IJw

Oilin«io~•

lkiotofti177,Sa-lloB) '
Doltu Ill. PIIIIOcleiFIIIo 9)
.
l IVIIhi-J 15,-•113. O'T
llcOotooi II, CLEVELAI'ID 11
Soonlo 109, Deo. . 99
Milw...... 119, 1Jalh 112. O'T
llluniU.-11
L.A. Libn,IOI, C.loOIO"
v--109. Ooldon Slo!e 115 ·

~ Cllt 5ctltt ,.b $19,505'' '

AI 011 w. ~ $28,41

I

I·S, Char lesion SE (II) 8:0 ............... 110
2-K.t;da (1) 9-0 ................................... 141

Morioa Locol 18. 17-FRANKLIN fUR.
NACE GREEN 17. 18·Sdlri"' McKitley .

2-E. Liwrpooi!Sl 7· 1.......................... 141
:1-'liocwoodM.tiiOO!Illl-t ., ....... ..,... llo
4-Eooclid(l) 11-1 ...................&lt;................ 107
5-Cio.Wit- 5-I ............................... IOS
11-Z....•nl• (3) 9-1.. ............................. 100
7-Cie.HI$. !51 8-0 ...................................U
11-H-(3)7-1 ..................................1/1
l).(laHowo, w..... ())
6.l
t0-$o&lt;iooarodd Souoh 7-1. ....,...:...........611

·~

' Iam

OtMn nJtlvlntiJ or MOre illolnts: .
II·CardlnatoD·Uncoln (I) 41. 12·Anaa. •
31 , I~ (lie)-Bowmlown Coaanoa V:llley,
Zanesville Ro~ecrans fl) 2•. 15·Wor.

o( J.... 5·1lr01......

r..
!II.
1-ToL Sl. F""""o'(l)ll-1.. ................... .154

19

Division IV

,_......,'1

DI.Wonl

16~

101

· Wed•

VGCelin r--...)!

13t.
16

LA.Ciippm .........J4· 19 .424

Was
· _$21,330.
Dol taft DISCI.r, __,$1,125

Wls ,,,,, .. ,,,, ....... ,.,_$29,6:15.
O.Tatt DIKDU£1: .... ' .. $1,26i .

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

5-KA1i4a(l) 9-1.................................... 128
6-Waynnr.eld·Goshrn (2) 7.0 ............ 111
l·Lei~c 7-0 ........................................ 106
8-St. Henry S.2............... .... .................... 97
Fol!fleld 8· 1 .................. ,..... ~!
IO.Mcllonald 11-1 ........... ............ ,...... ,.... 54

Washinaton ..... :.. J720 4
Tampa Bay ....... .1 ~ 20 ~
N.Y. Islandm .... ll 20 8

'! 0-;

Casstown Miami E.8-0 ................... ~
1().Manin• Ferry S--0 ................. :............46
Olhtn na:h-lq 12 or .. on points:
II·SUJIIl\:l'eCk OIU'llwt~y (I) 44. I~ (lie)Coldwlllet, Morr al Ridgedale 37. 14· _
Hea~h 36. l:'i·Cin. Readina ~ . 16-BELPRE (I) 27. 17 (lie)-Eimore Woodmore,
WaTCh Ownpion (1)'26.. 19-l..oiHtonville
25 . 20·Doyleslown Chippewa ll21·
Rocky Ri~ Llnh. Wesl (I) 19. 22 (lte).Oun:ttsviUe Garfield, OAK HILL (I) 16.
24·lea¥itll~urs LaBrat 14. 2!'i·Miner.al
Ridge 13. 26 (lie)·Ashland Cre11view,
Gnadenhunen l~inn VDiley 12.

4-S.Ciwleotoo SE 9-1 .......................... 129

..r

liA

.

~~:~:~-p~~i V~ii......ii.~'i':::::::::::::~

2- ~lphos St. John's (7) 8- l ................ l.SJ
J.New Kaoaville (I) 8-0...................... l46

Haw 1 •¥ ptMI
~pon1 wrhen
..t bt I g 1 , _ Oltio llip .....,
~top' t , ·s n tam~ in ~ flf'll ..tly.
reaullr,IHIOD· poll of 1996.-n rar nc
A-1•.- . (b' Ohio Hlp Sduool
Atbletk: Al-loc,ileion divilioM. WGn·lolt

WESTERNCONIEUNCE

~

•&lt;

Ohio B.S. boys' poll

Elyria61 Sandutky 40

Geneva 66'. Pai~Rsiillc Harvey 61

3-Uii...a ('2) 9·0......................... .,, ............ 85

~I~

46 106 102

• shirt 47

4-CIIalrin Falls (I) s-o...........................80
S.AndOver Py.·Valley (J.) 10.0 ........... ,,.68 '
~N . Uma S. Runge 8--0 ..... ................... :~s

:r!II.
1-Y~ Werl Uncolnview (14) 9-0 ....... 239

i q56.L*Fne53

WQ

It

llolloo..................... ll

V8,111powwr,
ltlllher. .

I

N.Y. Ran,m .....22 17 6
NewJeney ........ 211S 4

Chlnel ,7
Oancuavillc 68. Windham 6l
, Gates Mills Hawken 62, Burton Bftt·

2·WIU~MR C\) .11 ·0 ........................... 12.1

DirilloniV

t 1 6.1

• ...,..IO,M

-

Ut111 ...~...........,.....

......, '"".. .
\I

B

Minioelo&lt;o ... ~ ........ 14 . 19 .424 · Itt.

.CAIIIJ'OII DOCl,.

'

-·-

.

Nuok,oaroreao:e pilly

4t.

......:...... 17 16 .515
· -................... 15 16 .414
T.._ ..................to' n .m
,j

Mjd.coa.u...;.~

W-66,1laiooo32

-

r=!III . ,. . . . . .Jln ao\

•Jr..2 door, --.o.
$13,295

•

No. :10 Te... 'IKb 73
•
()ldahcwg St. 64
Tony Battie was 8,f.lJ from the..
field and finished with 2S points~'
seven rebounds an!l three blocks 14,
lead the Red Raiders (10-2, 2.0 Big :
,12). Oklahoma State scored the first
six points of the second half, closing
to 42-38, bui Bailie sconed the first .
seven .points of a 16-4 run. Adrian'~
Peterson had 19'forthe Cowbqys (7:'
5, 0-2), who lost at home for just the'•
eighth time in coach Eddie Sutton's '
.six-plus seasons.
No. 24 Georgia 61
••
VIDIIerbiltS3
Ray l:{anison scored 14 points to~
Head the Bulldogs (12·2, 1-1 South·
eastern Conference) to their first reg.
ular-season victory at Vandcrbill'
since 1990. The Commodores (9-4;;
1·1) used a 5·0 run to close to ~5·5~:
with I :42.to play, but Georgia mac!,cf
six of eight free throws down the
stretch. Austin Bates and Drew Mad··
dux each hacl 14 points for Vandet
"'
bI'lI.
.
·.

E. Cleveland Shaw 41, Garfteld His.
Garfield His. Trinity 88, Bedford

Division OJ

Samh1ville SheftDI'Idooh 27. 16 (!it: Kin.
DnrPuikl JeroRavil~ Ulllsdale. Onulliu
' , (I) 26. 19~Cin. lndhi n Hill (I) 25. 10~
Bucyru1 Wynford 24 . 21 Uic)· Bcdrord
Chmnel (l), Germantown Valley View,
lMI Creek S.1 C1imon 20. 24 (lie).Avon
( 1), WelbYille 18. 26-Biooori-C....,II 17.
21-HaYilnnd Wayne Troce 16. 28· Ealt
CIIMon 14. 29-0id WdtiiJIOn Buckeye
fuill2.

· . N&lt;ria C.... Canreience
· Kajoo)O. Will&lt;*rJ67
.
Ollio Weote)'lll )5. Eorlhom 6t

16t.

.................... 11 .63!
tllloloO• ................ II 1$ .~5

,.SJIAGISIIIIM U.

~

.241

8 ,7~

Delloil... ...... - ........ 24

JIGIIIIIIIi
cws&amp;. 011
.

.,.c•

H

a.IIVELAND .......ll · U . .oll6

•

5 lplld,

benched for the second half of that
pme. Lawson 'WII 5-()f·7 from lhe
field and 9-of- I I from tbe free tlwow
line in scoring 19 points, I~ more
than he had qainst Providence. TIDI
Gill had I6 points for the visiting
Golden EasJes (9-4), who trailed just
34-29 at halftime, but shot 6-of-26 in
the second half while committing 10
turnovers.
No. 11 Mlnnaota 96
No. 1$ Indlaal 91 (OT)
The Polden Gophers (14-1, 3..()
Big Thn) won for the fourth time in
their last 24 games at Assembly Hall
despite trailing by seven points in the
final minute of regulation. Eric Har- ·
ris, Sam Jacobsen and Bobby Jackson each hit a three,pointer for Min- ·
nesota in the last minute to iie-it at
81. Jacobsen sconed the first six 15
points of overtime, and the Hoosiers
(14-3, 1·2) got no closer than four
points again. Jackson finished with
26 points, while Jacobsen had IS .
Neil Reed led Indiana with 19 points.

)1

:r&amp;
J,Cin. Wyoming (12) 9-0 ....... .. .......... 149

Pynwua'inJ Volley :u. I J· MIIrion Elgin
(l) 28 , 1• (lie),NC:t¥C011eUIOWil, ,

)''*"1..~ 51. 79. W. llllnoio,53,

.,.

c-oniCiol-................29 4 .179

GnltDID='III----SII,Ift

Alo.tW.Prlct 5

.......... ......... 23 .:158

....,,.,2 .....

Boll Sl, 71.0111061
BowHill
67. W. Micilipo 57
·Mo1111171, KeM62
· •
Toledo 102. .u-n ·

a.-

;- ~. '

ASHVIu.£ TEAYS VALlEY, Col. DeSales, Le:cinJIOn 17. 18-Cin. St. Unula
12.
'

11-Cie. VA·SI.Ioleph 5-4 ......................... 56
9-0cl)'toa Christian (2) K-1 ~ ................... ~~
IO.Eoa hlosrine 11-1 .............:...............12
Olloon
poi""'
II·CHESAI'EAKE (2) l~. 12-Anolo•&lt;r

Mlci-Am rkla coarereiiCie

ftC .:. . . .:.........1 't • : G.!t. .
' NewY.... ... :..........l4 9 .m
4 Dr., •uto., •Jr, PS, ...., ~• .-...o.J
w.
$11,t06 .

........... N. """""(I) Il-l.. ............ '10
7-ALBANY ALEXANDER 6.1 ............64

college stOles

ttAS1'i!llN CONJI'ERENCE ·:

'OCMIJII

MU

'

·

ohio 1rome..•,

NBA standlnp

liJ TIM PUET

I

••

Scoreboard
'

Was; _ _ _ __

"I really think f.que had a lot to Duncan wuiO-of-15 from the field
do witb it," WilliamJ said of the raJ. aad had 10 rebounds, while Rutland
ly. "Carolina didll't have that playwas 6-of-8 from three-point ranJe.
er 10 brina in that they usually do." Man Harpring had 17 points for tjle
Aatawu Jamison had 24 points Yellow Jackets (6-6, 0-3), who are
IIIII I I rebouQds for the r., Heels, off to their worst conf~nce start
wbo played without second-leading since 1980-81, their second season in ·
SCXftt Vince Carter, sidelined with a
the league.
·
hip pointer.
No. 6 Clnclmuati 7-'
In other game$ involving ranked
A!abiiDa·BinniDpam 54
teams .on Wednesday, it was No. 2
Danny Fortson and Damon Flint
Wake F~st 73, Georgia Thch 63;
eacl\ scored 16 points for 1he
No.6 Cincinnati 74, AJabama·BirmBearcats (10-2, 2-0 Conference
ingham S4; No.8 Villan()va 64, Oral
USA:), who closed the game with a
Roberts 46; No. II Minn'esota 95, · 26-14 run. Cedric Dixon sconed 27
No.ISindiana91 ; 0T;No. 20Tcxas
points and Carlos Williams. playing
Tech 73, Oklahoma State 64; and · with a chipped bone in his left wrist,
No. 24 Georgia 61, Vanderbilt 53.
added 16 for the visiting Blazers (9No. l Wake Forest 73
7, 0-~). who had won five of. their:
Georp. Tecb 63 '
last six games against Cincinnati.
nm Duncan and Tony. Rutland ·
No. 8 Vlllaaova 64
.each sconed 24 points.for.the Demon
Onl Roberts 46
Deacons ( 11 -0, 3-0 ACC), who shot
The Wildcats (12· 2) rebounded
73 percent in .the first half and won
from t11!:ir 23·point loss to Provi. for the second time in 15 gall)es at . dencc two days earlier behind senior
Alexander Memorial Coliseum. center Jason Lawson, who was

•

•

~eoclllled Press-Writer

'i1jllllt.

CoafemiCUIIIt ia l71uix 1 •
~It aot ICily i•tbuec*Mif'lbc , _ "pllyen - ' maybe tbe
IX'Miws when they aot on thll run,''
NG1tb Caroli111 CCIIICh Delli Stnitb
sai4. "But Maoylll!d is .n excellent
lelll\ tbll 1: rves 111 be in the Top
20. ObviOuslY, wedon'L"
The c:omebao:k was the second·
bQt socond-balf comcbllck.in Jcaiue
history, behind only VUJiitia's 23. poiat willllin&amp;l'lllly It Duke two sea·
sons 110. .
. Maryland .trail~ 66-44 with
14:23 remaining. The Ternpins then
went on the remarkable 41-9 run. ·
"At the umeouts ihe talk was
, 'Just hang in there, jUSl continue to
ban&amp; the boards han1 and try to run
1 good offense,"' Jid Maryland's
l(eith Booth, who had 20 points and ·
121d&gt;ounds.
, ·
Obinna Ekezie scored a career-.
high 21 points for the Terrapins, and
Laron Profit scored .II of his . 13
points in ~ final6:41.

B&lt;~sketiJ , lii

~.

and Kent 0-2. .
- _ Derrick Dial scored 28 pilin~J; ·and
, Miami of Ohio coach Charlie
Earl l!oykins had 21 as 'Eastern
C:oles said his team had to go all-out
Michigan took advantage of '27
t~ gel'pasl Keni and retain a share of
turnovers by Central Michigan ..
l(le Mid-American Conference lead.
Eastern opened the game w1th· a
13-5. run and Central never got any
: Miamiposteda64-57victory,but
qoles thought the final margin was
closer than four points after·that.
misleading.
"We set the tone at the beginning
• "This was as tough a basketball
and that wa' very important," said
jame as you can get and still win,
the Eagles' coach. Milton Barnes.
with the score not really indicating
"Central Michigan i~ a dangerous
JSow close it was," he said Wednes- team and · you have to keep them
day.
.
, aw11y from gaining contidenec."
Devin Davis scored 26 points,
Nate Jiuflinpn had 15 for the
including 23 in the second half, and
Chippewas. whose coach, Leonard ·
pulled down 12 rebounds for Miami. Drake, made no · effort to hide his
His performance impressed Kent
frustration. "I don'tthink my team
coach Gary Waters, who said; did what we needed to do at any time
.~ 'Devin's a man out there. You 're
in the game," he said. "We allowed
p(Oiiably looking at a first-round ·them (Eastern) to dq, ·everything
~raft choice in I?cvin."
they wanted."
.
• · Kent's Brook Brjght scored 19.
Anthony Stacey's two free throws
:·; Miami, led 22: 19 at halftime.
with 17 seconds left in overtime promen moved ahead by 12 points, 51 vidcd the winning margin for Bowl·
l9, on a Davis layup with 6:081eft. . ing Orcen against Western Michigan.
: : Kent cut the margin to seven · Stacey finished with .23 points and ·
p(lints three times in the final · Antonio Da~iels added 21 for the
l)loments, but got no closer.
Falcons. Russ DesErinia finished'
' • Miami limited the Golden Flash-, with a career-high 20 for the Bron·
~i to 23 shots in 57 atte!ripts for a cos, who forced overtime when Sad·
'1'1·4 percent mark, leading Waters to
di Washington hit two free throws
N,Y, ".They are probably the' best with three seconds lett.
tt.&amp;m in the MAC. They hold teams
" During the game, I was thinking
tb: less than 40 percent. What did we
to myself that )Ve were playing a
' del tonight? You can see the effect." great game, playmg on the ro~o and
: ; Miami . ljjld Eastern Michigan,
that somethmg good was gomg to
"'~ich blasted Central Michigan 104·
happen,..And somethmg good d1d
(i~ •. are the only teams with.2·0 con· · happe
. n, sa1d Bowlmg Green coach
(,-ence records. Bowling .Green • J1m Larranaga.
.·
eCiged Western Michigan 71-69 in
Akr~n snapped a 1.9-gamc losmg
OO:ertime and Akron got by Toledo · · streak . m confercnc~ ~lay · ~nd an
-8'0-75 in Wednesday's other MAC e•ght-g~eToledowmmngstrcakby
~s. Ohio is at Ball State ionight.
performmg a turnaround ~ a team.
. : ; Toledo, Bowling Green, Ball
.Th~ Z1p~ had heen ~1m1ted to 51
~te, Central Michigan and Akron
pomL• and _shot35 percent from t_hc
all have '! .J conference marks, with Ooor m losmg Saturday against M1~·
"'-tern Michigan at J-2, Ohio 0-1
m1, but made 55.6 percent ol the~r
·
"IT"'
shots and successfully used a swarm·
1
I
..o.'-' Sports briefs
ing defense to defeat the Ro.:Kels.
••
.
J•mmol Ball scored 27 po1nts for
;:
Akron, including the game's final
'
Football
two points on free throws after Tole. I. SAN DIEGO (AP)- San Djego do cut the lead to 78-75.
.dht-sers general .manager · Bobby · Casey Shaw and Chad Kamstra
~ said he plans to interview . , eaeh h4d IS for Toledo.· .
'
rtnner'Ncw OtleanS: coach Jim M!ltO
..51· \week for the vacancy c,reated
(UJJ
• II Bobby Ross resigned laft

••

.

•••

Miami beats. Kent
$4-57 to keep share
of top spot i·n MAC

·

.~aryl-nd kills 22-poinl deficit and beats North Carolina 85~75

11J RUSTY IIIILLER

tage. The Lions had tumovcn on
COLUMB US, Ohio (APJ their first five possessions and then
Four years have passed since the last missed their next thn:e shots while
tiplc Ohio State was above .500 in going scoreless for a span of 5:45 .
•Big Ten play.
" We knew we were quicker than
Thanks to Wednesday night's 70- Penn State," said Stringer. " We
62 · victory over Penn State at St. wanted to spread the floor and I think
JOhn Arena. the Buckeyes find them· :...,.we did that well."
'
selves in uncharted territory - tliird
Penn State .always had to over·
place in the Big Ten.
come not only Ohio State but also
" We're 2- I now and my main itself.
concern is taking care of things at
" 'Those turnovers really set us
home," said Damon Stringer, who hack a long ~ay, " Carlton said. "We
led the Buckeyes (7-5 overall) with got in a hole and we had to climb
2'1 points. .
back the whole game."
· ·But now Ohio State must play
Otis Winston matched his career
three of its next four games on the high with 14 points and set a career
. fciad, certainly deciiling whether this mark with' IO rebounds for the Buck·
is just ·early-season giddiness or a eyes. Shaun Stonerook added 12
genuine turnaround after a 5-31 Big points and. Neshaun Coleman had
Ten record the last two seasons.
10.
· "I feel good about our perforPenn State narrowed the 16-point
mance and now we need to go on the· deficit to just 32-27 at the half, but
road and steal one," Stringer said.
then the Buckeyes streiched it back
Some would say the Buckeyes · to a 12-poin! advantage on Cole·
411eady have, stunning eighth-ranked • man's off-balance layup that spun in
lllichigan 73-71 in Ann Arhor lil,sl with II :51 left.
~ursday. And the Buckeyes may
·Behind the solid"play of Calvin
'l'so have stolen Wednesday's game Booth and Carlton, each of whom
..._ with mori: than a little help from
finished with 14, and Pete Lisicky,
tSenn State. ·
who had 17, the Nittany Lions drew
: The Nittany Lions turned the
to within three points twice. The
llall over 17times in the first half and
final time came on a Booth foul shot
Jlad 24 for .the game to dig them· with 3:30 left.
~lves a mammoth hole they 0ever
But then Stringer arched in a long
!LOt out of.
,
three-pointer while falling back into
• "That's just a killer," Penn .State press row to push the lead to 62-.56
f.wwanl Rahsaan Carlton said. "Sev- with 3:0 I remaining..After Carlton ·
enteen turnovers· in a half!. In a tipped In a Booth miss, Stringer
~hole game. maybe. But not in a
milked the shot clock until there
llalf...
'
were only three seconds left before
: With the game nine minutes old, being fouled. He hit both shots to
~ Nittany Lions (7·4, 0-2 Big Ten)
make it64-58.
lfere a perfect 3-for-3 from the field
Penn ·state never got closer than
~I had 13 turnovers.
four points again. Ohio State hit I()..
• "Anytime you play with a young of-12 free throws over the final six
t:ackcourt, you have concerns," Penn minutes to end a four-game losing
State coach Jeriy Dunn said. ".You skid to Penn State.
l(ave to grow up quick physically
".Stringer came to play against
· ;Old mentally. and we didn't do that · Illinois (with 13 points and 7 assists
t!&gt;night."
· .
in a 72-64 loss on Satunlay) and he
• Most of the misplays came as came to play again tonight," Ohio
q,io State ran off 15 points in a row State coach Ran~y Ayers said.
i•the first half to build a 23-7 advan·

-

Pomlroy •lllddllport, Ohio

,, .

�•
Pomeloy •llddl1port, Ohio

p • • •11W o.lly Sentinel

.

In the-NBA, ·

•

·Ea~tern .Co~ferenc~ teams. get·four wins vs. ·westerners
ltv CHRIS SHIRIDAH

. AI' II

I IIIII Wtlu
On a nighlofBM(meetinl West,
tbe edce went to the better confer-

mce.

Teams from the Eastern ConferCIICe won

fOlD' ot seven interconfer-

ana Pacers (1.5-16) and Orlando
Maaic ~12-17&gt; are below the.~even pomtiDIInlybec~~~~eofmJunes
to key players.
Conversely, dte West had only
five team1 wi_th winning records,and
nine with losing marks.

ence matchups Wednesdiy night,
One_ofthoseabove-~Western
moat notably.an 8S-81 'road victot)"' team~ 1s Portland, whach entered
by the Miami Heat over the Portland Wednesday . ni~ht's game with a

'lnlil Blazers.
Other impressive East beatS West
feats included the Milwaukee B.ucks'
119-112 overtime victory over 1he
falteringlJ:tah Jazz, the Washington
Bullets' llS-113 defeat of the
Phoenix Suns in overtime and the
Boston Celtics' most lopsided viclcr
ry of the season, 107-83 over the San
Antonio Spurs.
Western learns won . the other
three matchups, with the Los Angeles Lakers beating Charlotte 101-97,
Houston downing Cleveland 81-78
and Dallas crushing Philadelphia
111-93. · ·
.
. In the only intraconference
games, Seattle defealed Denver 10999 and Vancouver beat Golden State
I 0!1-9S.
As the NBA 'season nears the
halfway point, the superiority of the
Eastern Conference· has .become
clell!l'r by the day.
Nine Eas1em Conference teams
have plus-.500 records, and the lmli-

five-game wmnmg streak. It came to
. an e.nd as Tim Hardaway .scored 21.
of h1s 28 points m the second half to .
give Miami its first-ever road victory over the Trail Blazers.
•
Hardaway's clutch 21-footerwith
JS.8 seconds left was the game's
~iggest shot. Th~ high-arching
JUmper_ from a step msade the threepomt !•ne. made at 84-81. Arvydas
Saboms tned an open three·JX11Ater
With three seconds left, but his shot
was long.
"I got the same feeling now that
. I had with Earvin, you know, Magic," Miami coach Pat Riley said of
. Hardaway. "'nm got on one of his.
· rol_lsapd hit·the big one. He's been
domg at all year for us. It was one of
his best games of the year.
There were .54 fouls called in the
g~e, 3~ against Portland. ·
You ve got two teams that are
essentially pound-it-inside le~~·"
Blazers coach P.J. Carlesamo sa1d.
"And you've got two teams that like

to drive the ball and two of the bet-

qainst Phoenix.
~de~veteamsintheloap.lt's
.Juwan Howard fillilhed with 24
eithecgo~ngtobe 'let them play' and poinll and Rod Stricll:land 22 u the
you have bodies lyinJ all over the Bullell nolehed their first win
floor, or they call it tight, which they against the Suns ·slnce March 9
did toniJht."
1!188. ·
~
'
Alonzo Mournina added 17
"It's obviously ~s somethinJ
pointa.andSuhaDanilovichad 13. when you've lost 17 straight to a
Sabonis and Isaiah Rider led team," Cheaney said. "It's a good
Portland with 17 points apiece.
feeling to get that. off our backs. It's
Bucb 11!1, Juz112
a real good'win."
,
Glenn Rollinson scOred 38 points,
Cellb 107, Spun &amp;3
Vin B.aker added 21 and the two forBoston won its second in a row
wards scored the first eight poinls.ot · for just the secood time this season
overtime to put Mi Iwaukee ahead to and had its largest victory margin,
stay.
too.
The victory came exactly five
Antoine Walker, starting out of
years after the Bucks' last win over position at center for dte second con. the Jazz, a year before Baker enleled secutive game, had _17 points and II
the _league and two years before . rebounds. Rick Fox scored 19IX?ints
. ~obanson was the first player,chosen and five other players scored in douan the draft.
ble figures for Boston. ,
"That's a good sign. We're start- ·
Monty .Williams and Avery John. ing to beat some teams that I've nev- son scored 14 points each for San
er .beaten before," Robinsot\ said. Antonio, which dropped to 4-13 on
"That's a sian of a learn getting bet- the road. .
·
.
ter and improvin1." .
Laten 101, Homell 97
K&amp;J:I Malone had a season-~igh
Rookie Derek Fisher &lt;lrew an
38 points·, 19 rebouods and eaght offensive foUl from former Laker
assists for Utah, which lost its sixth . Vlade Divac with 6.5 seconds left,
straight on the road.
and Nick Van· Exel· made two free
Bullea'il15,:S... 113 (OT)
throws willa 5.1 ·seconds rCn.ainina
At Landover, Calbert Cheaney to complete the scoring.
scored the SO:ahead ~ket with 4._6
Sh&amp;quille O'Neal had 23 points
seconds left an overtime as Wash- and 16rebounds,EddicJonesscored
ington ended a 17-game losing streak 20 points and Van'Exel had 17 points

Though a,mong top 10% of his class,

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Ka~ros, . Wehne· r

.:.terns

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4 cyl, . iuiD, • oond,
PB, PDL, 1111, CnHe,
lowmiiH.

Ballroom, ;ldult tap and line daneing classes will1;le offered this month.
Gerald Po!Vell will-be the instructor for .ballro,gm dancing ):lasses to
start Wedn"*Y· Beginning sessions
will he held at 7 p.m. with intermediate clas~s at 8 p.m. The cost is $7
a session. Registration is heing handied by Mary Wise, !192-2675.
pact. . . . .
. .. . · Adult ~ ~cing will _be _taught
• Begil\ning Feb. 22 and conurtu1ng • by Rae Gwuwlowsky heganmng on
. imouJh March 22 at 2:30 p.m. l"i!l · Jan. 21 a~ 6:30 at $3 a session, while
beclules ill basic ~~~:rylics.~ fOSI · •. Judy ~olinofC: J. bance Ranch, wall·
~or ihAt class 'is $25. To register fOI' hold hne dancing classes beginning
either or both classes, Tannehill niay, Jan. 20~t 6.P-f!l- Registrillion for both
l!e contacted at !192-S336. ·
••. classes as bemg •bandled by Nancy
· •,
· Cale, 9920-~8 .
·
'
..
~ probletD
.
From Jan. -23 to Feb. 13 at 7 p.m.
· ·: cHICAGO (AP) - A cardiac Karen· Roush will teach a class in
ilroblem known as IHSS (idiopathic basic 3S mm pbot(!graphy. The cost
1i)'pertropbic subaotic stenosis) can is $20 and she should be contacted at
· ;lDake vigorous' activity .deadly for !192·6412 to register.
l)nDe people in their 20s and 30s. ·
On Feb. 15 at 3 p.m., Roscoe Wise
~ iJ no cure for .the disease, will do a free basic fly-tying demon~hich is transmitted genetically,- stration and mini-seminar. If suffi. ..:CConlina w physicians. , , · · · dent interest is shown at the ·initial
. :. If you experience dizzine&amp;s.·faint' session; then' classes will be scheding, chest pain or difficulty b~. ,uled.
'
'
~ pbysical oxertion, get to·a h6s-: , _, M~y of llatule'. most common
~~~~:~~ . materials - b!lnes, ~s ·and
llf IHSS means radical 'changes in seashells, for 1ewnple --' are so
lifestyle, including a ban on strenu- sophistlcaled liWI ~Y still ~Y
ous exen:ise.
• duplication by scientists. ·
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Sev~ral art and dance classes have
been scheduled for January and February by the Riverbend Arts Cquncil
in its Middleport headquarters.
·
' . Basic art 'clas5es to be taught by
Carol Tannehill will begin Jan. 18
aitd conlinue on Saturdays at 2:30 '·.
lhrough Fe\1. 8. The cost .is $20 ~d
the only ·supply needed is a s'ketch

:rvrc;irts'
standings

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Council schedules·classes ·
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: · TIJPPERS . PLAlNS .. ·1'uP(lers ~ONDAY j~.:Plains VFW Post 90.53, . 7:30 J\.111. " ~ MIDDLarpRT •. Disabled
Thursday at the hall. Spec1al anruver- American Veterans and Auxiliary, 7
sary dmner, 6:30p.m. , .
p.m. Monday at the hall. Refreshments at 6:30p.m.
FRIDAY
! LONG BOTfOM .. A hymn sing
POMEROY ·· Meigs County
will lie held at 7 p.m Friday at the Right to Life, Meigs County Library, .
Faith Full Gospel Chlirch at Long ·7:30p.m. ·
Bo110m. Deliverance will be the fea-

vl.ctory over Trimble .

~~~~~,.~~:-n-·u~
/

/..,

'

Prospective bidders rangins . from
media mogul Rupert Murdoch to
.

~ ~ 1} ~

,·

MIDDLEPORT .. Evangelist
.
.
• · CHES'I'f;R. --Shade-River Lodge, ' John Elswick will preach at the Hob-.
l;&amp;AM, 7:30p.m. Thursday. Refresb- son Christian Fellowsliip Church,
..ments.
Sunday, 7 p.m. The Jubilee Trio 'will
·•
· .
sing. , · .. . . . · ·
·
_ . , • .' 'f.OMBROY ,;-• &lt;Preccptl!l' "Bccta • .. • , · -~~ ) ! . '
Be\li C~1er of Be~~ Sigina' PIIi .•.. R~ ,-.Mclgs'CouniyBik­
So~ority, 6,30_ p.nl. Th'lflllay .at tlie ets, Sunday ,l,r;p:m. at the American
·Ep1scopal Parish Houiie, Po~r(&gt;y.
Legion hill i~'.Rutland,
·
.

of varsity ·girls' 42-38

I:. . . . . .~. . :. . .J t ~

lured singers. Sieve Reed, pastor,
invites the public.
....:
POIU'LAJ\ID -- .Lebanon Township T(Ustees.!feeial meeting Friday,
7 p.m. at the~wnship building.
. . ··~-' .
SATURDAY
.
.
POMERO}'-- Burlinghft!ll Modem Woodmen, soup supper, Saturday,
6:30p.m. at tJw hall'. Those attending
to take a desslfn. Guests welcome.
·
.POMEROY-' Eagles Aerie 2i71
and auxiliary district meeting Satur· .
day, 5 p.m.
·· ·
SUNDAY

By MICHAEL SCHNEIDER
Evans chatting with attorneys, polili· His costs' are a telephone
A11oclated Pi-esa WrHer
cians, religious leaders, health care and tapes. He has made ~ows at
BALTIMORE - Harry Evans workers, musicians, local television about $100.a show. . .
was struggling to come Up with a personalitie.s or businessmen. ·
Getting a show on public access
n3!11e for his publiC-access cable .
Recent guests have been NAACP channels in other markets wasn't dif- ·
show when he decided to call it what President Kweisi · 'Mfume, Black ficult.' Evans mailed demo tapes to
it·was - a program with educated, · Entertainment Television executive · the cities he wanted to expand in and
middle-class black men talking about Jeff · Lee, Baltimore Mayor Kurt. lined up friends · in each market to
w'bat's important to them.
Sc.hmoke and U.S. representatives demand that the show be carried by
TWo years later, "That Show With J.C. Walls, AI Wynn and Elijah Cum- their local cable channel. He dependThose Black Guysl' is seen on cable mings.
ed on alumni from his fraternity,
access channels in 14 cities, with
Filmed,in nearby Ellicott C1ty, the Alpha Phi Alpha, to vouch for his
ex~ansion planned in New York and show airs in such big-city markets as show in their cities.
Chicago. · .
. Allania, Baltimore, Denver, Cleve"The fact that it's so widely dis- ·
.
.
"T,his
isn't
·
.
se~sat!o~al.
televic
land,
Los
.
Angeles,
New
Orleans,
tributed.
is more evidence of Mr.
MARY RANKIN
sa on, Evans saad. . Thas ~s hke T~~ Seatlle and Washington. ,
Evans' gift for promotion," said Jack
Snyd~r, exc~pl everyone IS black.
The show is more Oprah than Foley, public access coordinator for
Celebrates birthday
·Evans
saad
he
wanted
to
produ~e . "Wayne's World" but, being ·cable Howard Counly, just outside Balli- ·
Mary Rankin, ·daughter of John ·
and Connie Rankin, Thppers Plains a show that showed black me~ an access, i.ts production values aren't more, which gave Evans a $200 grant
other ~ap athlete, com,edaan, · much above those used ·by Wayne in 1994 to get the show started.
celebrated her 13th birthday at her · roles
rapper or cnmmal. You won I find and Garth, the characters in the pop· · . Many markels, such as Los Angehome on Jan~ 6.
Evans and ·has guests. for example, ular film .
les, have several public-access cable
Cake and ice cream were served to di~~ssingOJ .Sin:'pson . .
"This is not high-technoloh'," stations and Evans had to approach al
the honoree, her parents, brothers,
Our s1tuauon as so unaque that Evans said. "The stuff I use hlis been · least three stations there before his
Jeff and David Rankin, grandmother, when I'm d~.ssed like this, I'm ~at- thrown away."
show waii aireain the entire metro
Shirley Jones, and Judy Jones, Ryan ed one ~ay, saad Evans, we~hg a · Many cable companies are area.
Buckley,' Alexis Ooten, Brian and · ~bile shari, dress pants a~d a ~acket. required to set aside air time and stuEvans said he does well against
Kimmy Castor, Kelsi and Taylor
.When I come out of !has sh1n and dio space fqr cable access to let aver- many talk shows and prime-time proBoyd, Nicole and · Btyne Honoker, . lie, I can~ accepted an a whole otb- age cilill'ns ·prpd~~~:e iheir own shows. grams, bu.t has a·tough tiJ,ne against .
Cooy·iind Jonildiah Cowdea:y; KaiOin er ':'a~. ~·ie talking ~bout ·what . Evans' 'expenses are kept low shows such as "Moesha"Md "MonBarnes, Gretchen and Jamie Lockey, . that s hke. ·
..
.
smce a camera and other equipment day Night Football ."
. Brandon Walker, and Danielle CarEach half-hour epasode features is provided by a local cable station.
roll.

a

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: · The · Coliim1111lty Catendar Ia
~ a a free tervice to 1011::prollt p-oops wislllni t o ~ and special 4\WDIL The
"•laadar II not d 1slpled to promote
~ or flllld ral8en of any type.
are prlated u IJ*e permits
)mel &lt;111111ol be auaranteed to nm a .
)WifiC qumber of dliys. .
:tHURSDAY
· ·
: RACINE •· Jewel Home School
:liupport Group, 7 p.m . .Thursday at
the Racine Nazarene Church. Topic
by Brian Hupp 'lill4 his daughter,
:Michelle, will be "Courtship versus
patina." For adaitionll information,
usidents may conllll!l Kim Hupp,
~49-3198. .
.
. .

·MHS repqrts results

Dl•-

b~~,postage

- .~~Community calendar

and Butler .

attom~y Robert Shapiro are lining up
chance to enhance the value of basttor
a
shot
at
buying
the
Los
Angeles
ball as an indusuy. One would hope
• LOS ANGELES (AP) . ..:..
Dodgers, a teain that could fetch · that as new owners replace the old,
more than $300 million.
the level of imagination would rise."
While analysts say it's difficult to · Fans might have ~~~:cess to movie
predict who will end up with the . theaters, amusement parks or 'addi- •
team, no one doubts that the price · tiona! sports arenas ~ all on the 300will be mucll more than the present -acre stadium site near downtown
. high of $173 million paid by Peter known as Chavez Ravine.:.... after the
Angelos' grpup for the ·Baltimore team is ~old, sportS indusuy exjlerts
. Oriol~s in I !193.
· said. ·
While Peter O'Malley looks for a
"Depending o~ what the residents
Jewell seo(ed a game high 16 to b\Jyer of his famlly.:pwncd team, the !U)d city cot,Urcil would allaw, you
" ~eigs slipped past Trimble 42·3.8
in' girls 1ii- Valley Conferenc.c bas- lead·Meigs (7·4 overall &amp; 7-2 in the Dodgers ~ wbrki~g to retain key could have a football stadium, -a
. ketb"l aclion Monday evening at TVC's Ohio Division). Roach added players.
·
theme park, another ball field, a
eight
and
Thlcy
Coffey
added
seven.
First
baseman
Eric
Karras,
eligi·
movie multiplex of massive proporR. Mon-ison ·Gymnasium,
tdeigs
was
17
of
.53'
from
the
floor
accojding to a report iubmined Iale
ble for free·agency after the 1997 tion," saidMarcGanis, president of
including one of two from three- season, 1\&amp;f'Ced Wed~esday to a $20 Sponscorp, a chicago firm that was
point range for 32%. Meigs went to million, four-year contr~~~:t. Third a .consultant to the Los AnseJcs
.the line 17 times cannin·g seven o( baseman John Wehner agreed to a Rams when they left the city. "If
them for a cool 41%.
$350,000, one-yell' contract.
you're creative, you tie it into the
· C8JI8
The Marauders pulled down 36
And outfielder Brett Butler has sports propenies."
rebounds wilh Tricia Davis and· .decided to go ahead with his attempt . Ganis predicts that Japanese
Oldo Divilloa
Carissa Ash grabbing 16 each. Meigs to play this season.
investors will he especially interestOwnll had 20 turnovers and five assists led
Butler, 39, had surgery last May . ed in the DodJcrs and could raise
. by Jewell and .Ash with two each. to remove a cancerous tumor from money throilgh merchandising .in
The Marauders had 14 steals )ed by his tonsils. He was activated Sept. 6, Japan, where baseball and Dodien
Vinll)n Co11nty .......... S · I 9 3 Ro~~~:h's five and Davis' foilr.
but broke his hand Sept. 10 when he · pitcher,Hideo·Nomo are ,very popuMEi9s .....................1 2 7 4
Sher}-1 Davis led Trimble (2-10 &amp; was hit by a pitch. '
Jar:.
· " ,
Htl~nville-York ...... 3 6
3 10 2-7 in the Hocking Divislon) with
"You want to be able to go out Qn
And if someone like The Walt
WeiiJton ........ :.: ... :.... ! 8 .3 9 I 0. Sherry Davis .added nine, all
· y~ own terms. And to me, it was Disney Co. gets involved, ihere's an
from three-point range. ··
.
almost as if it wasn't finished," he opportunity for films like "Angels 'in
.:
Hocldal Di\'llloa
R-ne
DOtes:
In
the
reserve
said. "I want to go down there in the . the Outfield," which promoted Dis- ·
Dlv. ·Ovenll
game Meigs used 11 balanced altaek spring and just sec. lftf'etllike I can ney's Alllbeim Angels, Ganis said.
to defeat Trimble 32· 14. Mi\igs do·it,l will.lfl can't; then'I won't." ·
Disney, which would have tQ seU.
.•. e
................
·
Hoeking .......s · 4 6 7 placed all II girls in the llcorina colCatcher·.Mike Piaua, an All-Star its 2_5 pen;cnt s!&amp;ke in the Angels
· so
RN ............s s 9 s umn led by four-point efforts by in his fitst f!llit seasons with the .before bu)'ing the Dodgers, refuaed
BAsl'BRN................ 3 5 3 10 Tangy Laudermilt, Brooke Williams, Dodgers, is seekinJ i new contract. to comment, on speculation that it ,.
·Trll!'file.....................2 7 2 10 'nffany Halfhill, Amy Hysell and He made $2.7 million last season, in was interested in makin1 such 1
Jeuica 16hnson.
M, il~r........................O II I II
the fin~ year ofil three-year ~1.
change.
.,
•
Tlae .raa.n: Meigs is scheduled .
. O'Malley expms to lake s,ix
fox Telovlsi~; a division of ·
to travel to Alexander today.
~ths to select a ~yer. B•ball's Murda~:h's NeWs Cotp:,llso reluled ·
O.rtciiSIII • . . ' ' appro¥11 proc:ess.could ·lake another comment on stalemcnts by former
1iimble
7-10-10-15-42 Y8!11'·
.
bas'lblll COIIIIlliuiOOK Pew UeberMtip
·7-9-11-1"3-3,8
The new owner will look for rolhthMMurdochhldaiiJOCI·ct.nce
.Tal ., I $heryi.Jtwell3-l-lo:IO, waya .., pay olf its ..:q!lilition fee by of aeWnl the llilm.
·
Sherry Davll 0-3-CWI, Milly Lent 3- '1111di11111181 Jllllbti111 of illata' play·
Other inllnlled .,.U. include
().0ooo6, Toby LawreKe" 3-0+6, ... iliiiOitoqull play and intemaRoben Dlly, co-chainnla of the
B4iblli Ltlt 3-0-1•7. , . . . IJ+· doul ~ llid ecoaomi11 m111ic and film diviliops Of Time
0
WI
lte.y I. ~ of dte lrooldnp Warner; Shllpi111.; and Uebenod).
MM...\~I.IAihiey . _ . }0-2-8, .....CiOII ucl I nllatbw of 1Jue..
A pwdiaa= by Fox would minQr
Trlcia Da¥11.2-0-0-t. lrdCII Meld- ball'• econaic lllldY commiaion in ·other simil• lmllpmellll betw It n
oM 0,0.~2, q.yl Jewell 6-1· . ~~1990..
·
medi• entertaiiiJI!OIIl~and
1•16; ~ . . . 0.0.1•1, c.it'"11-.'• 1 pcMIUiill .._, ...!.. spclis-.lllldludte'DibuneCo.
11 ~ 24M.~ (:off~)' 3-0- · II' Slfaaal-..r'- could COlli' into / and dte Chicqo Cuba:
'
1•7..... 16-1·'~
.

1J MICHElLE DeARMOND

In lhla Image tram

ASTAIRE TO APPEAR IN TV AD • Aa -

ads, and she refused to permit \hat
"I didn' t want Fred hawking
thin's with words coming out of his
mouth that seemed to say 'Buy this
product,"' she said.
She said she approved the .Dirt
Devil ads mainly because the admakers used actual clips of him dancing.
An actor performed similar routines
holding vacuums amj .• ihe images
were combined on a computer:
Neither Mrs. Aslaire nor dfficials
of -Dirt Devil, a unit of Royal Appliance Mfg. Co. of Cleveland, would
say how much Dirt Devil paid for the
right to use Fred Aslaire in the ads.
Michael Merrim~n. president and
chief executive of Dirt Devil, said the
company plans to continue running
the ads over the next two yi:ars and
may ·do several more using Astaire .
films .
·

many more who will enjoy · these
com~fi:ials. "
·
· TV' audiences are used to seeing
Marilyn Monroe, · Jackie Gleason,
JOhn Wayne and other long-dead
celebrities digitized into commercials
for everything from perfume to beer.
Critics argue that it &lt;lenies them a
voiee in how their image or performance is used.
·
Mrs. Aslaire, now 52, was manied
tp FredAslaire for seven years before
he died" at age 88 in 1987. She. said
he asked her to make sure no one
. took advantage of him after his
death.
She said she IJas received an average of five proposals a month for the
past decade and rejected every one.
Many advertisers wanted to make it
appear Astaire was speaking in their
·

'Black Guys' host their·own.
tal·k show on cable access ·

..

'

. : lng Dirt Devil vacuum cluMrlln an ad ~lch will debut before
; the Super Bowl fool;bell teiiCaet on Jan. 26. (~
.·

•

set for Super Bowl debJJt

NEW YORK (AP) 1 - fred cleaner in a minute. Why, he used a
Aslaire, who set the mark for style mop )n the '30s," Mrs. Aslaire said.
The three, 1.5-second ads will
and elegance in HoUywood musicals,
will dance 'with a .vacuum cleaner in .debut before the huge · audience
Super Bowl commercials that use his expected to tune in Jan. 26 for the
filmed routines a decade after his Super Bowl footballlelecast. '
death.
.,
In one ad, Fred Aslaire appears to
· After turning down hundi:eds of be carrying a vacuum cleaner hose
proposals, Robyn Aslaire said she · rather than the cane he actually held
agreed to give the makers of Dirt in the 1948 release "Easter Parade"
Devil vacuums permission · to use as he danced up and down stairs.
In another c.ommercial;a coat rack
clips showing her husband performing in the movies "Royal Wedding" . he danced with in "Royal Wedding"
is replaced by a vacuum ·broom. In
and "Easter Parade."
This time - . the first she has another ad also taken from thul!l51
allowed her husband's image to be film, he appear·s to clean a light fi&lt;. used in advertising -· she said the . lure on the ceiling with a handheld
proposal was "artistically suitable." .vacuuni.
because her husband would have seen
"There is no doubt in my mind
nothing wrong with using tlie vacu- that Fred would have accepled this,"
um cleaners as dance props.
his widow said. "I'm sorry . if it
"He would have used a vacuum offen~s some people. There will be

·:tv, lht !Ita Fred Altelre luhown a decade lifter hla dll1h tot·

pool of bidders grows for coming sale,

pod.g ers .to·keep

'
, • ..1
Thul'lld8y, JanUIII'Y 8, 1187

~ommercials

. :

Chaney said. "So many' &amp;!Wcato•rs
have reached the arrogant stage. It's
diffacult to get them to move to help
the young people."
The response from the NCAA on
Wednesday focused on the lll!ademic standards as prolection for student-athletes.
·
,
"In fact, as a result of the standards, more African-American student-athletes graduate each year than
did before the standards," said
Charles Whitcomb of San Jose Uni- ·
versity, cha[ ·of the association's
Minority Opportunities and Interests
-Commitiee.·
.
The NCAA also released a report
Wednesday showing that the number ·
of black athletes enrolling in Divi"
sion I schools granting scholarships
was on ,the rebound, after falling off
when Proposition 48 was adopled I0
years ago.
In its first long-term stUdy of the
academic standards rule's impact, .
the NCAA also said graduation rates
for all studeftt-athletes at such Djvi:
sioJ! I ~~h~lf ,J;Q.n\in\le to e~~~ ·
tho!l!l 6f the general student popula:
lions.
The study showed a rise in grad·
uation rates amol)g bla~k male stu;
dent-athletes - from 34 percent of .
the freshman class of 198S, the last
year before Proposition 48, to 41 percent of 1986 ~shmen ·and 43 per·
cent of 1989 freshmen.

The Daily Sentinel

Fred Astaire danc.es with vacuum·s iri

•·-

Cureton sues NCAA because of SAT sco

~~

BeDd

and 10 usiiU for the Llkors, who dte Aipt beton It New Yort.
·
have woniOitraigtc home...-. · "Wejqlt ~IQialptabGitlait ·
Divac had 22 poinll and 12 niglll ud CCIIIIe 0111 ud ptay.lwd," :
rebounda in his first pme It dte ;lllid ~McCloud, who bid 16 ·
Porum since the Labrs trlded him 'poinll ol hia 23 poiDU in the iiCOnd ·
last summer.
/
period.
~
:
"I felt good durin1 the pme, but
Chris o.dinl ldded 22 poilllll!i •
before the game, I wu nervous, SamCassell21 fortheMavericb. : ·
about everythin1 - fans, team·
SupoaSaab 109
·•
males. everything. Nobody. wished
· N"LL '• "
•
this win more than I did," Divac
SJ!alVIIICemP had 26 points and :
said.
11 rebounds and Oetlel' Scllrempl :
Rockell81 eaftllen 78
sc!n(l 24 at Denver.
I
•
The first sell~t crowd of tht seaTha-Sonica WO(I for the ninih tii)IO :
son at Gund Arena saw Houston win · in their _lut II 1ames, while· the :
11 Oeveland for the fourth straight
Nuggets lost their fuurth strai1ht il •
season. ·
home. Denver hasn't 'defeltcd :a ;
Mario Blie scored 26 points and win~ing team at ~ this MUqll :
Hakeem Ola.i!Jwon had 22 to help and as 4-12 at McNac~ls MBa- :
offset poor nights by Charles the worst home record an the NBA.
Barkley and Clyde Drexler. Barkley . Gt ~ 10!1, W~ )5 .
wu 2-fQr-12 for eight points and
Rook1e Shareef Abdur-Rahim·;.
Drexler was 2-for-10 and scored nine scored.a season-~igh 34 poiilts and .•
points. ,
·
Vancouver won just i!S .econ'il road
Terrell Brandon led the Cavaliers aame of the season.
with 26 p()ints.
·
loe Smith had • Cari'Cf·high 38 · .
· Maverlclta nr (16en .!l3
. points and IS rebounds and scored: ·
' At'Phihidelphia, ii~as a 48-poini · 14 sta:a~ght ~Ideo Sta~ points as~ '
swing for Dallas, wllich lost by 30 Warnors tned ·to 111lly an lhe closang
·
· minljtes.

.

..
. .
By ERICH SMITH .
showing that the 11uinber of black Ill school that doesn't give athletic
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - As a atllletes enrolling in Division I scholarships, Cureton is competing
in sprints and the long jump. But he
star on the Simon Gratz High School schools is increasing.
track team, Tai Kwan Cureton
NCAA chief operating officer said the rule robbed him of the
atlniCied the allcnllon of schools like Dan Boggan said the lawsuit. "is opportunity to compete against the
Navy, Boston College, Pitt and Penn ndvocating a return to the bad old country's best college track athletes.
State.
days when student-athletes could
Shaw should be able to compete
"I started getting.. the recruiting . spend four years ... in athletics and on Miami's Division I track team in
letters in the lith grade," said Cure- · (leave) not only with no diploma hut her final three years, TLPJ
ton, who graduated from Gratz with without any real education at all."
spokesman Arthur Bryant said.
a 3.789 grade point average.
The standards, once known as
''But she is struck by the fact that
Then Cu~ton took the Scholastic Proposition 48, but restructured and she could participate .in any other ·
Assessment Tes~ a standard college now known as Proposition 16, set a extracun;cular activity - drama
entrance exam, and his score \Vas sliding scale ofSAT and grade .,Oint club, band, even ~heCrleading for the
below the minimum set .by the · standards for college freshmen ath- sports where she can't compete,"
Nt:AA. The recruiting letters · letes on scholarships.
Bryant said.
.
·
stopped.
Black coaches and educators,
He admitted that under the pre"This really hurt. II was as if my· .along with many whites, have main- sent system, students can give up a
hard work. good grades and ·other lained for years that standardized test year of eligibility and begin to par,
school activities didn't count forany- scores are' racially and culturally dis- ticipate in sports in theinophomore
thing," he said.
criminatory and do not accurately year. "But as a practical maller,
• Cureton. now a . freshman at predict a young person's ability to do some stUdents will not be admitted,"
Wheaton College in Norton, Mass., college work.
Bryant said.
sued the- NCAA on Wednesduy;
Also named as a plaintiff in the
Another TLPJ attorney, Adele
charging that hundreds of young lawsuit wu l.Qatrice Shaw, a Gratz , Kimmel, said the NCAA's stated
black athletes have suffered because graduate who is now a freshman at goal behind using the standards the NCAA uses SAT scores to decide the University ·of Miami, unable to ensuring that student athletes do well
who can play college sports.
. join.the track team there .beca~se she academically ano;l graduatq,from-colHe was backed by Trial Lawyers too scored low on the.SAT.
lege-· just doesn't cut it.
for Public l~stice, a W~ington;
Cureton was 27th in his class of
'"Using these test scores to reach
that goal· is like using a butter knife
D.C.-based organization. The class .- 305; Shaw was fifth.
action asked U.S. District Court to · - ''The NCAA emphasis is wrong, to perform surgery," she said.
i;'$ue an injunction against the and it is hurting hundreds of athletes
Also at the press conference was
N;CAA and to rule it in violation of like myself," Cureton uid. "I decid· Temple University basketball coach
ed to sue the NCAA because I don't John Chaney, who with other black
tile 1964 Civil Rights Act.
. The NCAA defended the stan· want others 1~ throu1h what rve coaches bas fou1hl Proposition 48
and Proposition 16. •
dards, saying they proleet student· been through.'
..
"We Wille just bealen down,"
atllle!Cs· Ill also released a report
At Wheaton, an NCAA Division

~By The

•

•

�,.

'

•

••
••
••

.
112

0

lha»1 y, ......_, 1, 1117 ·

•
1 y,JIRU FJI,1~

PoiMrar • •dell part, Ohio

•

••

-

Intel shows off new·chip· or
better multimedia, communications_
:
Wore.,_ .._COl ==
•

1-.

bepjp'OWins:make~relevant to the averase pe'non.
"By adding .these feabll'es, by
beins .able to ... do the imase pro- ·
cenin1 fCf digital 'video, makins
video coaferencinJ over plain old
te9epholle lilies almost workable;
they now can reach people who
before would say, 'PC'1 I don't need
a PC,"' he said. "Now they'll say,
'Hey. that's pretty neat.~" .

-u.-.

wercmerclyc~fwtlwt11112emad1
for the new chip. .. . . . ·
. AmonJthe t~ies an~
illl new cornputen wtth MMX.~~
were! Mr. Conapjq, Del?, D!Ptal,
Fujitsu, O~way, H~k:U-PIC~
Hirachi. IBM, l'llckNII Bell, ~:r
and Toshiba. ManufKtl!fei'S·Offennf
new software arc~· MacrOIIIII'
dia, MetaTools, MICI'OSOft. Ne~
and Sega.
.
;

Christmas arrives late in Overton, Fla ..
''

DEMONSTRATES PRODUCT· Mike Ay1111r, a vicie president ol
the detktop production group of·lntll Corp. demQnatt aiel the
cepabllltles of lhe company's . _ Pentium MMX at a conference In Sin Franc.i sco Wed1111day. (AP)

Tl._me Ou·t for r 1•p. s

·
· ·
Do your pan 10 help achieve
By Becky .Baer
Meigs County
group goals. Finish assiped tasks,
. Extens9on Agent
but also help others if the need arisFaml?y and Conaumer
es. Evaluate if the sroup is making
Sciences/Community
progress towards its goals.
.
Development
Resolve conflicts and problems
Would you like to become more promptly. Compromise and conseninvolved in civic and comrimnity sus misht be used to solve CQnflicts
organizations, but you feel that you . in a just manner. Another method is
would not be a gOQ&lt;I l~ader? Would the "Win-Win" negotiation approach.
you like to develop your skills at It involves tbe following steps:
I. Identify positions' and interests.
becoming a more effective member
or leader of a group?
These are the things that you want
We can all develop leadership and why you want them.
qualities. The term "leadership"
2. Present and listen. Each conmeans helping, a group shape its flictins pany presents their positions
vision and goals and working to and·interests
while the others listen
·
accomplish them. Shared leadership carefully withOut criti~izing. .
is when everyone 'is encolll)lged to
~- Bnunstorm _possible sol~uons.
contribute their leadership skills in Think_ of all the d1fferen! altematt•es
decision-making and helping reach thawt cotheu.ld sed ttle the disagreement.
group goals.
nA1e, , . m• own. ·
How can peop Ie wt'th'tn an ~oct1 11ons th·a1are no t
.., o tmma1e sou
ation form good working relation- · acceptable. Each person crosses out
ships to help achieve the •oals of the those alternatives that he-0.. she does
•
group? What can you do to de.l,elop not like. Place checkmarks by those
your skills as a group member. Here that are acceptable to everyone.
·
f ·
·
5 Ch
• that -11 be
are some suggestmns or 1mp-ovmg
.· oose a s.o1u11on
WI
your effecti•eness in reaching JfOUP. apable to all, Determine the solugoals: , . .
.
· · .. tio~ where everyone wHI feel like a
Respect and support other group winner.
members. It is important to realize
6. Plan your course of action.
·
that everyone contributes to the group Once a solution has been chosen;
in their own way. Empower .others _ declde how it will· be implemented.
through praise, encouragement, and 'lbenfollow .!hroUsh with the pll!l.
responsibility. Help each other during
.
difficulties. Be proud of the group's ,
If you wou9d like to
accomplishments.
receive my DC1¥12eUer. tbat II db·
Commun'icate effectively. Put ·trlbuted peri9'JWy,JI?-eaP?the
you-:self in· the Other person's place · E.~ Olllce_at m-41696 or
and concentrate on what they are SIIY· , scad lri yo.u r name IUid llddftu.
ing. Make sure that you undersl!lnd Topks covei"Cd ~ude: fciodl and
their position b) asking questions' to nutrition, pllftlldtq, .fami?y ·and
. clarify their meaning. By providing · penonal ·. ilev~opment, flaiJ!Cial
feedba&lt;;k. they .will recognize ~~ , alld home.maa,aPiilellt. co-ual·
you understand their point of view~: ·ty. development;alld dothln&amp; and
· too.
~xtDes. ·.·
...
· ·

MIAMI (AP) - Christmas came
"Santa Claus came to the ghetto,"
Some people, however, did tum in
late to one of the city'spootest neigh- said one youlh who was noc identified ~ chanae. police said.
borhoods, and Santa drove a Brinks by television ·crews at the scene.
"We did have a few ro!'le that
truck.
"There was chanie. change came back and said, 'Here. I found
Hundreds of thousands of dollars everywhere. The streets ,.,ere like sil- these O,.et" there,"' said Offieer Cruz.
in coins, bills and food stiunps rained ver," said a man who sliowed up !at- who wouldn't give his first name.
down on a trash-lined street in Over- er with a flashlight.
But they were f• OUtnumbered by
town on Wednesday when . an
In the dash for cash, some women those who pouiiced and pockered the
armored truck overturned on an ele- took off their shirts and ·filled them loot. People looking for proceeds
vated highway.
with money, walking off in their bras, . from the mayhem nnsacked at least
Shortly afterward, hundreds of witnesses said.
' · two homes.
people swamred over the area, dig"They deserve it. These hard·
"We've had at least twO incidents
·. ging money out of the dirt and working. people, they don't make . where People arc claiming their doors
sCQOPing it off the street. They stuffed enough money," bystander James , have been kicked in and hooses ran•
bags, hoJtes, pockets, Jflbbing an . Toni said. "God sent a truck."
sacked because people think there's
estimated. $400,000 before police
There were no arrests as of this money in their houses." said police
took controt
morning.
spokesman· Delrish Moss.

·clark quits post with
district attorney ·

.

.

,•, _,

~angTen
. .

MOSCOW (AP)- Boris Yelisln .. Renal·. ~huri~. said . today that ,Communist lawma~. said on .Echo
Yeltsin's;~onditio~ was " perfectly :Moscow radio. "There are no
being treated · with -antibiotics;· the satisfattorf' and t~!at his illness was grounds 19 pretend he effectively
governs the country." ·
•• Kremlin said today, . while criiics unielate4!Jo his hean surgery.
questioned
whether
the
65-year-old
Or.
t.fthael
DeBakey,
the
AmerThe K~olskaya Pravda dai•
president is still fit to actively govern · ican .heart surgeon whom Russ1an ly, in a front-page report today,
: · Russia.
· doctors ~consul~ ·during Yeltsin ~$ accused the Kremlin of beins overly
•
Doctors "are carTying out treat- bypass ~ry. said Yeltsm should _be optimistic in its statements about lhe
:. men! for the . pneumonia ... with better wfib'in three 10 five days With president'S health and questioned
:• modem antibiotics," read a 'brief bed rest and antibiotics.
whether Yeltsin had reJumed to work
:. ~mlin statement.
·
.But~ presi~~t's political rivals too soon,
•.
It said the president'~ temperatu~ ·w~re n.01. so o~t.•~msuc: ·.
By all accounts and appearances,
~ was norma~ ·Iiiii gaye no lllldilional· , ,..Qust~lltity ch1ef Alex~der · :Yeltsin · had been · recovering well
:: details about his t.e'.ilth: ·
··
Lcbed, ifiC · country·~. most popular from his quintuple heart bypass oper~
Yeltsin who resumed full-time politiciaif. in recent polls, called ation.
.
•: work in~~ Kremlin only two weeks Yeltsin In' "old, sick man'·' who
Since pronouncing-himself "ready
&gt; ago, returned Wednesday.nipuo the. sho~ld quit for the good or.the coun- . for battle" when h~ returned to full:· · Central Clinical Hos(lilll: whe~ ~- ffY·,,. .
.
.
time duty Dec. 23, he has chajred
'• recuperated followmg his l,llov. s . Bor1s Y~ltsm has bee_n senousl_y . high-level meetings, issued a flurry of
~ heart bypass operation.
til and unable to duly · fulfill hts decrees, and met with Chinese Pre~
The prcs.ident's hean surgeon, Dr. duties," Viktor llyu(chin; a prominenl mier Li Peng and German Chancel.~
.
.
.
lor Helmut Kohl
1

,·

'·

..'

lias contracted pneumonia .and js

.'~'

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Boys &amp;Girls . .Ladies Hadey
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Shirts
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•Remode21ng

•New ConltrUC:tlon
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FrH /EtJtlm.eN
.. 992~711

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INSULATION

tT· 24%-·off

I. I

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PRE·PAID-·
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"PET'S NAME"

Owner'a Name

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p.m..'.'f

.DHdHne .frldeY• February .7th at 3
Mall_or bring the entry fuun: ·

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110 Court

st..

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rPO~rOy, ohio.Mtal .~ ,..,~
'

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for their Clint.,

ph-..;. ..•Ha, .
..,_ ......,.,., fluwera
,.,_,
and blilloona
durin'"
her ractnt
•
Jt Grant ·

MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
Skin • Cut • Wrap

949·2734 .
12/21961

mci. pd.

Carel of Think• .

I would like .t o ·
thank everyone
for their concern ·
during my recent
accident.

It WIU t~ery flWCh
appredtded.

. Joann CoUW

~. ~.-='

,_.

.

.

•

Juat off 81'11dbury lid.
(look tor ligna)
Middleport, OH
114-112·537i
Day &amp; Evanlng H1'11.

Gal?lpolls
&amp; Vlclf!ltY
All Vard Sales Must Be Paid In
.Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.
!he day before the ad is 10 run.

Sunday editian - 2:00 p.m. Friday.

Monday edition- ,0:00 a·.m. Sat·

• urday.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Sates Uuat Be Pald In
Advance . Oeadllne: 1:00pm ttJ.e
dar bt{ore the ad Is 10 run. Sunday &amp; Monday edi tiOn· 1:OOpm

Friday.

1~11M.

BUILDING
&amp;REMODEUNG
N-Homea,

Addltlona, Roofing~
Painting, Soma, •
Garag11, Concrate
.F1'111 Elltlmat"
2Srenoxporlonce
lfe flz il ., i/ it Nlt!IY ortr
ONft

ltottU or 6udneu.

Aoklor

John(814)882~187

Pt. Pleasant · ·
&amp; Vl!:lnlty ·
Don, Mill "Oitonllc"lnol&lt;lo
M..lngSllo
.
Gibson Rttrlg, quean-alz• wa·
terbed. tawn mower. 3 r)leq~ llv·
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new hedge trimmers, gaa we•d ·
eater, electric atove, labia &amp; 4
chelra, china cabinet, man I
womana nama Dr1nd clothing '

loll of·mise items.

1011 30th Street PL Pleasant fri-

day· SaiUrdaJ 9:00·? .

80

or Oellae (114) Mll-3038

Public Saie
· and Auction

•

Leml.,.'s Auction Service, Ltllie
Lemley, Aucaioneer. Hou·aehold,

liNGO

RACINE, OHIO
AMERICAN LEGioM

UndlrMW

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Ut Alto Auc:lion Ia S.ckll FrideySaturday, Ran on Friday, Jefl

Dykes on Saturday. Rt2-33 •

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Rick PtariQn Auction Complt)V,

~u~~~:~~· ·~=~~~=~'· tfc':~~~~

166,01'1io &amp; Welt Vlrginll, 304773-5785 Or 304·173-5447.

90 Wanted to Buy :
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1. L HOLLON ·- · Gal!polla, 11-28-lt: •

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Top dollar· ontlquoa , lurnlluro,

gltll, chino, clocltt, aold, ll~r.
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thenk everyone

AT '

N
.
O O I ' d

*'

i.•

Th~ ~Daily Sentin~I
'

--:c;;;.d like tO

DEER CUT

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·! .......IIIALI OF REAL

Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,

5371AYAN PLACE

·

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.

t~l::)

•Root?ng

~-· Thousands of 'strikins workers and ' power tQ ay off workers and. h1re . because they destroy tbe socia2 order l•ol~o-~~Aj~J~II~D~IS===~
:1 students claShed with riot police in substitute&gt; Ia~~· unhea-:&lt;1 ·of m a . ani! ~nder the .economy more difli- ,:
·' downtown Seo~l today, demandi~g · country "'jlere hfelong employment cult • . he sa1d tOday.
. ..
-::::Ce::;rd;::of;:lba:;
· :=n:a:
· ==i
J thit the government repeal a new . is assumei[ It also grants greater 'Earher m the d~y. str1kmg wor~- r
J labor law
powcts 1orunions•.but puts those 1fW- . ers at auto compames andd the w~rldt ~
The family of
,I
Polii:e.tinidhundredsofvolleys.of. ers on h~.for three. to five years.
.largest shipyard agree _to return .o Stephanie Burton
~ tear 15 in an atteinpt to disperse the
In the nearby cny of Anya~g. thm JObs m reduced sh•fts. ·
would like to
~ . 3 .~ protesters. (arcing stores to ahout 1.000 strikers clashed w1th
~utthe outlawed.Korean Confed- thank the Racine.
·' shut down and shbppers 10 flee the . police, w fired tear gas to d1spcrse . erau.9n, of Trade ~ n1ons warned ~~
hcikl f
·
· them.
'
unle'jl' ~the law 1s repealed, 11 wtll · E_
metgency Squad
: c O:on'::~~rs fought back by
The cli,~;ihcs came hours a(tcr resume 1. full .strike ~ext week, _and · for their prompt
.: throwing conci:ete blocks blilken off Presiden~ ~~im_ Young-sam sa•d he expand ·tbe action to mclude untons . response during
• frorn the sidewalk and hitting oftlcers would not .!•vc m to_thc two-w~k old at phbn~ companies. subways •. c~o her accident IHid
: with m~tal pipes.
·.
. strike, wh1ch has cnpplcd key mdus- compames and the nation~! mmt.
"""lng her to Vet~
• ''No 10 the evil law!" they shout- tries.
And a larger, lepl unton grqup .,.••
: , d ,;,. · '
. '.'The mesal strikes should he also said it would l;lold a 39-hour erana Hoapltal for
~ e :, ,;::
strike stariins 'J'uesdliy.
the Ufefllght Unit.

ONLY

Your phOto.

.t t I'•

AY·

1

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Pl.... encloHMif· ·
. lldclnsMd -.mpecl
envelope to·Ntum

~I'

CONTR.AcnNG
·
·

Thousands of stri~,rs clash with Korean
:::t&amp;:T=-:.~~.
~~ police In_ demonstra~. ion over new labor·law •Stn'=~
l g1ves m,anagement m~re firmly dealt with according to the law WI:Jiws
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) The law

THE DAILY SENTlNEL

Ladies
Sweaters

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f,r_,rl

o•uls

ti

Allo a 1peclll aedoll for Ia Memo17 Valeatble.PtU.

20% orr .·: ;30% otT

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JACKSON CENTER, Pa. (AP) - 1!f1ew.l didn't $ee i)Je' baby."
A woman:s plan. to kill her ex-hus. Oliver hop~ in.to the car when
.. '''':!D~t·
', band came out in the wash. authori- Tesch,,of Sale!lll,)nd .. stopped' at the •·
AAVV
ties say.
· gas station 'w~ his:w.!fe works as
, .(. •l.r-t··' J
.
;
_
.
'
·I
t
Valerie.Norine Lagun £onfessed to a ma.naser. , '.. . · ., - ,
· l~lear.nce ·
trying to kill Thomas Lagun by rig· "He took my sop_...We thought he
ging his washing machine to explode. had been kidn~'f' This ldnd of
'
Mrs. Lagun, 43, of Grove City. thing isn't rigllt," M~. Tesch said.
was held over for trial 'Wednesday on
Oliver took the toddler to
ch'lfges of attempted murder and Lhomu.isville police ?~ce he noticed
1
Selected Lots
attempted arson.
.
Prosecutors say she codspired
''I flagged a PQiice officer down'
I•
with another man to collect a $5,000 and said, 'There's a kid in thc .back
life · insurance policy on Thomas seat. I just repossessed the car.'."
Lagun, 57, and a $10.000 renter's
No charges will be filed in the
policy on their trailer. · ·
case.
The man wired three bottles of
gasoline to the washing machine last
SANTA CLARITA. Calif. (AP)
May so that· the washei''.s switch - One dart just wlisn'l'enough to put
· ; would ignite the fire. prosecutors say. down this bear. .. ·
·
Instead, Lagun discovered the
The 300-pound animal ran
• gasoline after an electrical brc11ker through housing tracts and trailer
·· tripped when he tried to use the p~jrks, crossed two highways and ·
machine, prosecutors say. He told the forced scores of residents to stay
: polic , and Mrs. 'Lagun confessed inside ·until he was cornered near the
July .
.
Santa Clara River Wednesday, said
S te police said last month that Los Angeles County sheriff's Sgt.
.. Mrs. Lagon told them. she Will sur· : Gary Diederich.
. , .
.
,
ller plan failed but wu glad , . But the ~ne dan d1dn t qune do the
~
. pri
..
ex~husband survived. She l]eaan ·IriCk, he said.
.
'II . o·
, . living with Thomas. Lasun •ll&amp;,t· · "We contaered the hospital elllef- 1
...,
;.ani, state police ~Y· .:
gency staff and had them put togeth- l· t-------"""'~:-..a.-----------1
1: •
.
.. . ·
~r a s~ial brc!"" of chemicals and
,
,
LOUISVILLE; Ky. (AP) .-A' injected tlie bear to su~. him,
The Place
Wort and Western
rep0 mari brousht back a car with a Diederich said. .
•
~brand-new addition.
.
I
Don Oliver drove off from the Bis
CEDAR. Mich. (AP) - Two allI
Foot ps station in Clarksville, Ind., beef patti_es, special sa.~. lettuce,
with Andrew and Oail 'ICsch'~ Jed ' c ' - - and some chenia on a 1,
· ·
•
Honda - and their 16-month-old sesame-Ned bua?
1011, Kristopher, in the 6ai:k seat.
·Ray P?ev4 thinks cherries make
"He didn't make a whimper .or the burpr. and hu been toutin1 his
anydlinJ. I didn't even ice him," said Pl~valean miJt\111'0 Of cheniea and
O?lver who ~' the car for bambwprmestOD~from "The
•.
Clr?'s' Can in LoUisville •. "I just · Oprah Win~ Show'' to ''Lase
jumped in litd to01t off real quick like . Show with David ~-"
·• t aailll "po mail ~ld and just
·

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AMONG TOt:•••
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1992 215

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~ . political ~rivals on ·the attack

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Woman charg.~d _ wi~~
attempted murder, ):~rson

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Police initial2y said the tNCk·ca_r·'
ried S3.7 million, .but later 5!11~
Brinks had no1 provided an eltiiCl tis·.ure.
•'
Police, firelighters and- Bri~
workers scrambled to beat out ~
hundreds looking for free - y1
One firefighter fpund aa overtookici
bag along an emhankinent: It .CQn•
tained more-than $300,000 11\ !!ills.
· "They may see it as JOOd fortune,
but llnfortunately, it's· theft." Moss
said.
By nightfall, torn plastic coid
wrappers ·and the remnal1ts of a
Brinks hox that once contained SSOO
. in' qilarters littered the area.
'

OUR SPECI4L PAGE(S)

Ladies

, I''·",,. "(,,

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PI

LOS ANGELES (AP) _Marcia
Oark's boo'k is scheduled to be
Clark,.on leave from her job in the published early .this year by Viking.
district. attorney's office. sill(:e OJ.
s·tmpson was ·acqun· ted of murder m
·
p·•SAD"NA,
ca·It'f. (AP) ;... ·
"'
"
October Jlj&lt;)5, won't be goi~S back Michael Jackson wHI compose a
.
·
·
song titled "Elizabeth" for Elizabeth
10 work.
, Ms. Clark, who signed a $4.2 ~il- Taylor's star-studded 6Sth birthday
lion book dealafter her unsuccessful bash, which will .feature never-·
· ofS'1mpson, ·wt-11 devote before-seen footage ·of her life and
prosecu110n
h t'
fi · h' the book d career.
~ •me .to tnls 10 ~ .
an
ow.~~r
prsdoJects, s~ smd 1ft a statement
But Miss Taylor said Wednesday
,..ne ay
the toast of the night will he neither
"The ~~ 14 ears wid! th ffi
her life nor her career.
f h p . Y
e 0 •ce
. "It's not because of my birthday.
o t e d1stnct attorney have been
extremely fulfilling and rewarding,"· · It's to celebrate· AIDS and all the
Ms. Clark said. "I can think of no heroes and heroines who have fought'
career as an attorney ·that could ever so hard .to ·stay ali•e:" Miss Taylor
h
bee
· f ·
ho
· told reporters at the Television Critave
n so .saus ymg or nor- ·
ics Association meeting.
able."

Odds and Ends
.-·
-

'

SYDNEY.Auatnl?ia(AI')-~
a.., th8Ade?w's ccwreect.
. ken llld upside don, dla 6S-foot iDI ofticcr, I09d Austn1i1n Broadyacbt bad been btaeted by SIOnily c"'iwa Corp. r.Pio tblll the British
Antm:tic seas for four daya, _,ill 'sailor Nlfaed from ltypodttnnia,
distress beacoa had drifted -.y.
debydnli011, frostbite and the loss of
So when Austnlian aavy rescuers a finp in an oa·bolnl ~t.
' in an inflatable speedboit reached the
Bullim~n, who had spentfour
stranded craft today, they didn't days inslde a sea9od sleepina com·
know what to expect
partment'ia the front of the yachtThey tapped on the hull. They and hadn't had fresh w• in two
heard a tapping in response.
; days - said be barely made it.
Elated, the rescuers called out:'
"Whetilkncwthattherescuewas
"Can you set out?"
: actually going !0 happen, 9 cannot
"No,". British sai9or Tony Bul; explain it Heel ecstatic. I thouJht it
limore yelled back.
.
; would never happen," he said.
But just '!5 the rescuers ~He credited his survival to "
to cut a hole in the hull the 56-year. .sheer delermination, a little water, a
old sailor emerged
the 32- litdechoCQ2ate,"andto "hansingOII
deSRC Walel', ha~ing swam out from in there and believ_ing something
under !lie boat. He ·kissed his res- would happen and just fipting."
·cuers, navy C8pt. Raydon GateS said. · · Al BIIIJi~'s home in Bristol,
"One minute he was inside tbe ·Enaland, ~latives burst into tears ·
· yacllt and the, nm he'd popped oilt- when the-news came that the sailor ·
stde, so I'm sure there were a few was alive. "Thank Ood I have my
. · dropped jaws ... when this head just husband back," said his wife Lalal,
• suddenly bobbed up," ~d Aus- accordin&amp; to a relative.
tralian O,fense Force spokesman
Also aboard the HMAS Adelaide
Col: Andy Reynolds.
. was Thief1Y Dubois, a Frenc)l s8i1or·
Bullimore called it "an incredible whose )'IlCht overturned Sunday!
about 70 miles from Bullimore's. j
rescue."
"It will certainly 10 down in his- .
DuboW. 29, stood on the hull of
tory, dtis one," he told BBC,radio.'
his boat (9r·24 hours, and was·spo!·
Bullimore had been competing in ted Monday by a rescue p?ane that
the French-organized Veadee Globe dropped !lim a life raft. He lived on •
.round-the-world solo yacht race. His the raft unti? today, when a helicopter
yacht c~ized Sunday about 2.000 picked him' up.
.
·. · miles southwest qf Australia and
The ~fense 'Force said Dubois .
..( ,000 miles north of Ahtarctica's . was sufl'erinl sli11ht hypothermia but'
Wilkes Land.
was generally in good condition .
.n.C w11ter was helow 32 degrees .
· BuUiliiOrc and a Flench sailor who
also was rescued today were taken to . - .salt w~r has a lower freezing
the Australian frigate HMAS Ade- !JOint than fresh water - and storms
~ • !aide, where Bullimore's first request
churned ttte waves up to 40 feet high.
' was for a cup of tea.
Air temptratures hovered around
'
. .
~.
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could CIICOIB'aF men peop9e to buy .
dne
PCs.
. . ..... .,. ... urn ~die
.
Nadlaa B~ an Mllyll cblp or lOft- du 3 f W IL
with o.taq11011 "*:. o(
Some • 1availab?e now, and tbl 0121Calif., said the new ..,-ussor alsO en n exJ!ected on the
demonslnltes what lntct.- anCP the As for the sipifacaiiC! of the MMx
rest of the PC industry -1111111 do to desipalion. Intel Slid the ?ccler4

s.n

Business Services

Strandect yachtsmen rescued after
survi~ing in stormy Antarctic seas

•'•

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) This meW iJ1411o•cmenll in a
Compu1er makers and vendon wbo wide variety of proJDIIIS, inc?udiaa
didn't have a very merry cm.tmas phoco and video edilias. 3-D ....,._
hope new technology willsive them ics, animation and pmes, 2JII&amp;I said.
a post-holiday boost.
"We're eJtcired about the new
Some of the best-known manu- class of app9ications it's soina to
factums on Wednesday launched brinsto the end user;• said Crlil B•·
.compulei'S with a new Intel Co!p. rett,lntel'schiefopenlinsoffill«.
' mici'OpfOCC$sor that promises sig_nifThe PC industry hopes the new
icandy better sraphics, video, sound chip and exciting new softwn writand CQmmunicalions.
ten for it Personal computers did nol
The Intel Pentium chips with so- sell as well over the holidsy season
. called MMX technolOJY will run as manufacturers and retailers had.
.eJtisting prosrams up to 20 percent hoped.
faster than . previous · same-speed
Industry observers think iome
processors. the company said. But consumers held off PC putduuell
programs written to take advantage of knowing CQmputcrs JO'ith the MMX
the new chip should run 60 times · chip would be available this month.
faster.
Some believe the new processor

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11)39,

loi7 ile, eu-t92:

·-

.

', . •

Ttippal'l 30~ natural or bottle gat
range, while. Hot Paint Automatic
wuh«H, white. ON!Ige telf climb-

l

,.,u

Country Furnllure. 30(..175..&amp;820.
AI 2 N, llmlloa, PI, Piea'"'n~ WV.
.lnt tree
, lik••e., ";::~~;~;;~·
Tuw-Stl t.a, Sun 11-5.
por.table '~-~-~···
GOOD USED APPLIANCES rock CO's.
·washefs, dryera, rehlgeratora, VCR
r~~ngoo. Skoega Appllanou, 78
Vlnt Strool, Coli IU-448-7398,
1-800-4111-34H.

I I I

(800) 467-1823 if interested•'ln
i~Je~~.mng an ACBL member.

T0 L

Lorao Soloctlon Of Ctrpe1 Rem In
S10&lt;k Carpet l Vinyl S&amp;.OO Yd l

scope mount. Panaaonlc pagUp Mollot\ln .Carpels. 814·•448· · er. Suzuki 3 wheefer. Honda 185 1984 Crown Vlc1or11. high miiH,
3-wheeler. KerOaun. square heater .wlblower. K«Hosun. round heat- , oxoo11on1 condllion.

7-.

111Cf
- ·Di,.nes.
· Plko.
Beds,

......:.,.-

Bo~~:~~~~
U01d

mobile home in

plu• deposit,

520

Sporting
GoOds

I' RuiDtr"iiiM~~

or. 30ot-875-7163.

pric~

oor•oo·MIM.

rooaonoblt, call &amp;14·H2-

201~ '

.

'

Btroltl GT 2.1 Runt
Good, $2,800, Ahlr

WoiH Tanning Bodo
· TANATHOME
b!Jy DiifiC;T and SAVE(
C01'11marci8l1Home unlta1rom

1.

1118 'l'ahoma TlmberwoU •·

""""'-· 2o!d. ul)dor 10 hours rid·

Ina, oxcolient cond. $3,200 OBO.

Supplies
14xt8 B!Jilding With Porch Electric, 50 Sq. Shingles lumber, 61&amp;·

••s-3228 A~er 6 P.M.

Block, ·brick, tewer pipe1, windows. tlntels, e1c. Claude Wintera,
Rio Grande, OH Call 814- 245-

5121 .

560 Pets 'for sale . ·

'

Auto Parts &amp;

·OR AM I DESC'RIBIN6

Ac:Ceswrlea

I

CH

Entn•

1HD 1Grtnd Am 5 SHod, AMIRI
Cot'fetla, loll Of Naw Pliill
or 205170R13 tirits, uniVersal
Runt Greol $3,000 ·8,.·261- Set
tit cUs&amp;om wl:)eela. 1 »tlf~1051 . ·~'

.

!THURSDAY

1990 Olda Toronado, loaded,
SERVI CES
poWitr evorylhlng, iihatp, 18.000
mllai. ,s,aoo. 300-88.2-3825 ofltr •aw'7~"HD;N;~....:;~

18-10 ' '

' '-

"'~ IOclay btl mdlng CANCIEfl (June 21-.1u1y 22) Y.;.. mlgl!l
U and SASE 1o Altro-G,raph, c/o thla not be up-1o-par today in yoor bualness
lli!WI~, P.O. llol 17511, Munay Hll llellllt. 80 try to do llulineo8 with people
Slalloi!, YOrtc, NY 101~. Makll"" ..lllho ¥!"' know from ~L_,.pce a~e

· A8lt'o-Grilph

-. :::;:: ;:~. 1~ Tlte ~

to-

· Mltlp Qlillllti!ll )'OU P. a iu11 wtl! be dll- ,
BEDE OSOL · oemlllle
111e1ay, 0o nqt 11ai1ta1e
1o- ol1arga of,.......,. you kmw Y9U
..__ _ _ _ _ ' cartltond!lwel. .

-

· =iv

U·Aug. 221 Klndnaaa and

COI!aldlradon will be ttUOn1lll today in ••
of your l'llilllonohlpa. u,yau liy 10 be too

aoMrtlve,-you migllt make

......

101111

one-

PISCII (1'111. 19 llaoh 101 Thill cautc1

VIIIGO (Aug. 13 SapL 221 Good lhingl

Y\ill!lilf ,.,.'Qiilltio ~. Makelllh
yoiJ doft'\ lgnoN aom~ilig''thllt q&lt;~uld

pt• jilth whon\. you ~¥Grk ohoulder to
ihoulder. Mike· ~ to •~to Wthey

I» 1n unev4llllflllll&amp;y 'for you btceuao lfXlUid lllppln to you today llwough lieO'

•
,, '
. go out of lhofr way p,. )'OU.
.
ARID (MIIroll 11oApl1t11l LOU4 or LIMA (lept.,ai ~ 131 Yow
damlnHring f*llile COuld lo be for Ita w.l !*Ill MQI!Iiy of i*fllle '
Mole abi!IM• tfWI .... tadlr, rfi,Tt; 10 )'OU ... _ , , go wo1Cibel tllcllr. 1 w11
1n 111a YMr lhllod, fO!tl wt11 hiM 11np1o Mfilct «**IPan....'IIIIO .,. low- -1o leillloiOII'- lllf1.,.1i111iidlllno
opportUnftj fo!' n..t.1111l1•1111 ~ . r.y, You.,.be~Q;Jiilyaudo. .
llondl. ·
•
. · ,.
~- Make ._ you tiM lui 8dYin- TAUIIUI (AIIII! 10 lily 101 Yau lhOUid ~1110 (011, It No\ • •) Todilr ~
llgl of~- .,..,..ICII,
, !If IIIII to~ lllfilll you Ml OUI to ·-.llciuld trv 10 IOiM Oil~
Your
· CliFIEilNI (DIL II ollll. 11) You W11 ell! tadW. -lflllu8h )'OU'N tllt.tvto lief lime will be well ..,.nl. Make - ·INt
H IXMtiiiOMiy !11ft6toul .•
your ....... lii!OUII'I'Ul cUIUn.
your loved onll know hOW 11111Ch I'Qtl
- I I I-~~
la•llldlr- .TIIIa ,
-lt~-Youwll- lfiP II ltiiil. .wfl
IIIIi tbl'l Ill lllf•• ... . . llfil ........ ,au ,_ .,.,.. lliill S' IINIUI (llllv. a Die ·111 Oo not
G.t. ···~ .............Mid_ Dllll!ll Ill your,....... -rlill your~~~~
, · .wiwlli-ldliiQ the 1nf11 171 II . . . gaW1n Ill
jli I .. ~triO~ I lOgic. Tlte . _ .... 1Ui1hor WOUi' ~tlii II ,
. .!IOU lillie ,_,~/ lend for )'IIUr ...... I$1... L , ' . • · ~ '
1\elonnii''IIIW•IPidlliiOUr.jliOUI- ;
. , . , . )'OU ... ~!b~Wi.

!101-"

-.n.

"'good.

...,.,, Ill,-.

'.

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I'

11

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,,

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'

LETS ANSWIU

'

~E.RNicE '

•

you dwolop from llop No. 3 )&gt;elow.

.

.

Daara,
&amp; Tranamtlalon,
'151&lt; $4,200 13-57ol-2538.
'

··

,.

I II .I I I • ~~ l~h=~.~-J!
• mwR~\:'~~RES I' -r r 1· r r I' r 1·
I ~~~~\~e '~~~ I. I I lwE I I I I I .
Dismal- Vista ~ Hobby - Gritty " LOST IT
. Granny says that the ful)ny thing about humility, is
just the minute you think you have it you've LOST IT!

.

'

-

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SC~M

1t811'PonUac LaMano: 304·1823745.
.
. .
1MIJ'Btro11a GT Rod S.n:...l,-2 1·:;::..;__;__ _ _ _""'-- -

1.... mlt"'QQ-

-

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MCf'SELF ?.

tow mllet.

1-

•

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.

XlT, '1112

$199.

low monu;y poymaru
FREE &lt;olof calllog. .
Call TODAY 1-1100-842-1305.

760

1~

One of Granny's favorite ·
quotes:
'We make a living by
I
- - - - what we get, we make a life by
,..,-W-[-R-0-A-N. ...,
, ,---- we - - - -." ,
. ·

1 1·

Variable resista·nce exercise
. 31M-87S.1~2:! or 300-875-1483.
bi ke, ewe . cond .. S75. 2p· solo · 198S Oldt ~~ Aoaon&lt;t"PW, Pill,
PS,
9DK
AciUalllilaa:
S14-246-,
chainsaw. good cond., S100. MaHonda Fourt Traa 70 GoOd Con581!7.
gic Chef dryer, good cond., $50.
-.814-387-1'025.

300-1195-34?2.

,,

..

Ginseng 80 Caps ules, $20. Call
a.......6308. 1·800-211-D098. ·

Insurance Claims For Heallh
Care Providers. Software Pur·
chase Required, Financlng _~vail-

include monitoring patient stalus I":~"!;',~
•nd reporting information to the II

The American Cpntract Bridge
League.&lt;ACBLl puts 11u1 1 monthly
150-pege m1pline:calleil The Bridge
liullelin. Mailed free to members, II
Contains tournament reports ana re- .
,, !.' :.
· suite, Instructive articles for all stan- ...,_+--+'dards of player and advertisements
for anything bridge-rel1ted: 41vents,
clothiDg, boob,~. and so oo.
· My main regret is that the ACBL
CEl.EBRITY CIPHER
Boprd hun'l authorized the move ·
fioom lhe BuUetin's small-psge layout
to a Tlme'mlg!lline format. This
would surely be more appealing to
non-bridge edvertiaers. And it would
• a F H F .P p .II' I P. F · II D z ADHEOW
make the pu!lllcatlon look so much
mare .atlraetlw.
.
PF
IIZN. ' ZBKEAD
D .K D N I
I!H
In last Oc:tolier's laaue,lhls deel.w u
in Fnnk Stewart'• article. How would
WPOSDIIPW 118 AFYLFWDN
. ,.,u II)' lb mala! two 5!18deo ~r West
leada lhe be8rl two?
·
JZ -ONQ ·. .
A Z II N E tfU
First, Stelilait discuues the bidding. ·He isn't fond of North's two. PREVIOUS SOLUTlOH: "To be adull is to be ilone."- Jean Ro&amp;tand.
spade preference, preferring a pass.
At lbe table, after winning with
'Maturity 111 a hlgl1 priCe t? pay lor growing up."- Tom S~Q(Ip8rd.
clwnmis heart ace, Soulh immediately played .three rounds ;(Jf tlubs.
Disaster! East led a fourth round,
West rutfing and switching to I dia. mood. Now South did well to get out
b' oae dcrim. ·
'
............... oflhe
J
It is better lo scramble tricks.
four oaamblod _ . be,f
Assuming West's heart,two lead is .
low 10 form four llniple _ ._
• ·
bones~ it
ss though the beaits·
1. ._~==.::;.:;:~~===~ 1re
spl"llpg H . ~. ruff a heart In
8 AV 1 [ E
band at trlck·two. C8ah .the club ace,
·•· play a club lo lluniD!t• ldDC and rulf
another heart Alter
return to the
with a dilmond, a third heart
,.,ur trick lotallo seven.
VAG E R
you are still' bolliinli the trump

Refri~eratora, Stovea, Washers

BE VOUA.OWN BOSS

obiiiiY 10 provide &amp;llilned nuroing cart under lhe dirK) supe.,r.-

wv. 3114-e?ll-7&lt;021.

388'0301.

· Minimum one year nursing IX• . Full-Time ~r Monlh Processing

C .ttome

Oil l12.50·5gol pall.

llle.·Sat tOtm-•pm

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING· CO.

:.lhe::..:.ollori;:.;;ng.~-"-----

H~draull~

Sidtre,Equipment, ..,enderso'n ,

~. Air1

nttw rranaml11ion, ukln.
.,......:e"----:;,;;,---__,.-_1 lor,
t2!500,814-1ol2-2574.
1

ture lor rentals, 814 -992· 3725,
220 Eut u.iin, Pomeroy, Oh,,

lfOTICEI

RN 1-..
.-Proficiency In venipuncture and

61 0,Farm..Equipment

1... 5-10

ru,nf.

11eml, jeans, lable ' cheirl,

Buslne.u
Opportunity

21 0

.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

'

J.,

\1

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