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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Maryland
beats Wake
Forest·
-'

· Super Lotto:
18-1~23-25-37-44

Kicker:
38 4 7..().3

Pick 4:

Sportaonhge4

1-6~

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Pomeroy-Middlef)ort, Ohio, Monday, January 20, 1997.

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S·SPEED.,
AS
LOW
AS:
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Partly cloudy tonight,
Iowa In the lower 30e.
·Tueaday, pertly cloudy,
higha near 50.

0-8-8

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Pick 3:

2 Sectiono, 12 P - , 35 cenla

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A.Gannett Co. N-paper

-C linton makes pledge for unity
as s~·c()nd · term begins today

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AM/FM CASS, LS:PKG

-·
By RON FOURNIER

A81ocl.._. Preu WriJer

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PRE-INAUGURAL GALA - President Clinton and hla wife
:~' 14111ary applauded during '"' prealclantlllllnaugunrtlon gala at the
: ::·. ' USAir AN118In Landover, Md., on Sunday, one of the 11111ny acllv·
::. • 1t111a leading up to today'a Inaugural ceremony. (AP)

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· WASHINGTON - In a nourish of pageantry, patriocism and politics,
William Jefferson Clinton claim~ his second term as president today. making an inaugural pledge to unify the nation as it·faces the challenges of the
next millennium.
"We will not just celebrate our democracy. We must renew it," .he told
an enthusiastic audience of well wishers Sunday. "Then together, we get on
with the good W.'!'k of preparing our country for a brand new century."
The first Democrat in 60 years to win two terms planned to savor his political triumph: Church in'the morning, coffee with congressmen, a parade down
-Pennsylvania Avenue and 15 inaugural balls that will keep him dancing until
nearly daw.!l.
·
.
At noon, Clinton was putting his hand on a Bible and reciting the same
35-word oath taken by every president since George Washington. Vice Pres.ident AI Gore was being sworn in minutes he[ore .
. It was sute to be a poignant moment forCiinton. His beloved mother, Virginia Kelley,. stood nearby as he was sworn in as president four years ago;
~he died a year later.

· "The president and I miss Virginia very much, particularly at a time like ·
·
this," said Dick Kelley, the president's stepfather.
For thousands or visitors to·the capital, it was a moment of celebration
-or at least a chance to witness history.
·
"11'5 a thrill of.' a lifetime, probably a once-in'a-li[etime thing," gushed
Jean Leboff, who had just arrived from Pennsylvania.
While gloves and mittens might still mute inaugural applause, Washington was thawing out today after a weekend blast of arctic air. Temperatures
were expected to rise into the lower 40s.
Throughout the day, Clinton was paying .tribute to Martin Lu.ther King ·
Jr.. the slain civil rights leader whose birthday is honored today.
Casting a shadow over the ~econd-term celebrations are legal and ethical
problems lingering from 'the first term: Whitewater, questionable rund raising, the piles of FBI files and the sexual harassment allegations of Paula Jones .
Four years ago, Clinton swept in from Arkansas promising bold action
and cleaner government. The economy was weak, the federal government
was $4' trillion in debt and a world of foreign policy problems awaited his
attention .
(Continued on Page 3)

~f:Colle·agues
~:.. Gingrich

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debate how
should pay fine

WASHINGTON . (AP) - The should pay· the penalty, which was was .a lot of expenses incurred and
chairman of. the. House Republican described as reimbursement for costs very few violations found," he said.
~· Conference says it would be politi- of investigating misrepresentations "Somebody needs to pay for these
.:.• cally incorrect for Speaker Newt that he made to the panel;
. charges."
.
The House will vote Tuesday .on
Frost and DeLay were interviewed ·
: Gingrich to use campaign contribu·
• lions lo pay a $300,000 penalty for • how Gingrich should be punished for on "Fox News Sunday."
" his·ethics violations.
his admitted failure to consult a
Bonior and Rep. Jim McDermott,
;. · "It's going to cause another lawyer aboutusing tax-exempt funds D-Wash.. are under scrutiny. by some
' . ·: uprolr" if Gmgrich taps his cam- for political purposes and for prg- HOU!C Republicans for their roles
:•P!tiJn ..-y .J'IIIIil;l: thAn 'his o~ vidiltl!·il1800111'81et:epilrtstothe"ethiCs• -lhi;'Oingrioh'in~stigati-. · •
. :~: E~I!OOit~saio:r'Rl!ft. Jillln"lttlt!ffrier committee.
· ; "" , ....... · . ···•McDermolt -reee'lvl!lll" ll.pe of a
: . o( Ohio, wlk&gt; chairs the caucus pf all
Rep, Martin Frost, D-Texas, said ~epublican conference call In which
: . Hotlse Republicans. ·
political funds shouldn't be used. "It Gingrich ·discussed strategies for
: · · • ··"I think legally and ethically he ~ would be more appropriate for him to responding to the ethics charges. He
.;_-! could pay for this out of-campaign use personal funds," Frost said. "He turned over 'the tape -to the ethics
: :· filnds," Boehner, a Gingrich ally, said made $700,000 off of his.book deal . committee and the contents were
:• on CBS' "Fac;e the Nation." "Polit- He can afford to pay it."
leaked to reporters. · .,
.;; ically, is it tl)e right decision1 Prob- · Rep. Tom DeLay of Texas, the
Mrs. Johnson saw '"some very
:::- ably not."
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GOP whip, said he approves of a setjous difficulties wi!h what went on
=~-.
"loser pays" approach to ethics around the tape!."
. :~- Rep. !'"ancy _ 1oh~son, R-9mn ..• · charges to " discourage a lot of the
" If Mr. .McDermott .had brought
: .:~ : wh? _churs _the ethtcs . commmee, frivolous ·charges that have been · the tape to the committee at the time
· : ~ whtch on Fnday _recommended _the brought against notjustthis.speaker, he received it -because we were
.;: ,penalty and a repnmand of Gmgnch, tiut other members."
meeting in the next room, and we had
:•,: ~at~ campatgn mo~ey should. not. be
DeLay hinted that Rep. D~vid our lawyer there - then we could .
., .• !Jsed to pay the full amount. Gmgnch B'onior, D-Mich., who has led the · have decided how to deal with the
:~·_'ne~s to ·:take ~rso~al responsibil- fight against Gingrich, and others tape properly and legally," she said.
;:·tty f~r .~os acuo~s, ,she satd on might be.asked to pay forsomc of the
Asked on "!'ox News Sunday" if
:: · ~NN s L,a!e.Edttt()n. .
.
more tnan 70 charges agamst the Bonior, 0 -Mtch., mtght face an
: ·· . The etht~s committee dtd ~ot speaker that were dismissed.
inquiry over the tape incident, Mrs.
-:::,address the ossue of how Gongnch
"We're still talking about it. There , Johnson said, "It's possible."

§Commissioners bri'efed on AEP'
:~role in:economic d~velopment
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:···. Meigs County Commosstoners demonstrated h1&gt;w available indus- ' of the success stories related to trade
Howard and Fred Hoffman trial and commercial sites are record- shows held in previous years.
Both Howard and Hoffman indi"-( attended a meeting Thursday in Chill- ed and kept updated on the AEP coin~( : 1cothe sponsored by American Elec- putcr system and how they arc made cated the information and assistance
. ;;; , tric Ptiwer economic . development a¥aifable on the internet for autho- provided by AEP would he useful to
Meigs County. They said they plan to
.• &gt; 'officials.
rized users.
"'. · The purpose ofthe meeting was tn •
Christine M. Sorg, AEP interna- take full advantage of the opportuni,~~- IJrov~ i~fonnation o~ .~P. ceo- . tiona! development manager, dis- ties provided 'by AEP in promoting
• .. nomtc development actovottes m the cussed .the imponance of the expon local. economic development activi:· 8rea and !Ww AEP ean be of assis- program asiistance which is provid: ties.
·The opportunity to di~cuss ceo·; · tance tO local officials in promoting . ed by AEP to area busines~cs and
. nomic development wit~ persons 'in
:.::.d.evelopment activities in tbeircoun- local officials 11pon request.
't
· She discussed the schedule . of
the other counties in the area would
.
f..:: Charles L. Prior Jr.• AEP -~co- trade
shows in various. countries be very useful in preparin)! strategies
' '· nomic development supervtsor, spo,n~ored by AEP and outlined some for the promotion of Meigs County,
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·i · Janet

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t• ·the, Most
Ohio commlinltles matked
Martin Luther ~ng Jr. ·holiday

etthis month was suspended for five helped esta~lish ·B _grou~ to, supp&lt;m
days without pay a[ter an .investiga- J~kson dunng the mvesugauon, saod
:·:~'th music
rand ~Oection. But tion into allegations he violated he would nOI ~arch today.
.
~'a :breatenef'"bl;cou apd 'complaints · admini~trntiv~ rules, including
"1 canJiol tn good _consct~~ce
t 1over the way the Columbus rr)ayor desttoymg puloce documents. . · march wtth the mayor this year, he
l-handlect an investigation of the city's
Leaders also have· complamed swd.
,
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~·first black police cliicf and anOiher that Las~uth treated Gwendolyn
:•1 dp not.beheve o~r mayor ts a
· :- blick adln'inisntion employee damp- Rogers, whom he ~red as head of. the ractst_but 1 t!li~k ~has m many ways
: ened the comniemorttion in the state city's Equal Busmess Opponunoty been msenstllv~.
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office, unfairly because she is black.
Lashullla S!''d none. of has deco1 apMOr. thlln 1 00o ~ople attended Lashutka said he fin:d her ~ause sions were taCJally mo~vated and he
~· a Su~y night''service in COlumbus ' she took an unauthorized ll'IP to sees no need to apol~Jtte. .
, ''·honorlna the slain civil riaftts leader. attend a di.versity . conference in
"~y .track rec?rd tn persqnal and.
•f \layor Greg Luhutka dill not attend Hawaii.
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pubhc hfe .~tes 1~ the face ,of that
7'....._ dapitc a threat from black lead·
Lashutlca satd last week he had_ not · accusattpn, he swd.
.
thlt they would boycott today's planned to attend the Sun~ay ntght
Cuyahoga Communoty Col::rilemorial.march jf.he did not shoY, ceremony.Aspokesmansat4Supday leges Metro ~ampus, several hun'' ',»p and IIPOiogite to the black com- ihat the may&lt;!r would attend a Kmg · dred people ~Jstened ~unday to tile
; ,munity, -'
'. . day breakfitst today but 1\ad not Cleveland P~tlharmontc Orthestra, a .
:? · Leaden believe ·both invesliaa· . ~ided what role 'he would play 111 gospel sm.ga.ng_8fOUP ~ tl)e com} tiona~ tinged with d\scrimlnation.. today's m~ch .
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. ments of ctvtl ngltts actmst Walter E. .
_•- • Police Chief James Jackson earlh
The Rev. Timothy Clarke, who Pauntroy.
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.!!vl!.ll'&lt;&gt;~ ~rotrt oil.:.. (,.,!"

· EMERGENCY FOOD - Partlclpanta.ln the Meigs County home-delivered meals program
received "bliZZIIrd bigs," sheH·stable food items for use when the delivery truck can't get
through. Driver Frank Imboden, above, loaded bags .Into one of t~e hot shot trucks used to
deliver mula.
·

8/izzard bags' kept homebound
supplied with .food in bad weather
1

The Meigs County ·counci I on
vc, sometimes they _can not get
through. she said.
Aging Senior Nutrition Program
"We do the best we can with the
prepared. 168 "blizzard bags" to be
four-wheel drive, but with the blizsent to persons on the home delivzard hags , we don't worry as
ered meal pro~rnm for use in last
much," she said.
·
week's inclement weather.
A grant from Reynolds Metals
Each bag contains shelf-stable
Co .. through the National Associproducts to furnish two meals if the
ation of Meal Programs, provided
nutrition program is not able to
.
the funds IO purchase the [ood [or
deliver a hot meal. The bags can be
the hi iu.ard bags.
used by people ~hen tlic meals 011
wheels trucks cannot be on thel
MCCOA has applied for fundroad. ·
·
ing in 1997 for a Reynolds grant
"We've had days when we can't
for the third year. The company is
get out," said .MCCOA Director
$150,000 to NAMP,
distributing
Susan Oliver. "It's for emergency
which will be distributed to mcm,
"
situations. u ,
bers·throughout the U.S.
"People have had to use the
In celebration of the 50tk
blizzard bags before," she said.
anniversary
of Reynolds Wrap aluEven thougli. the meals on
minum l'oil. the company will .
wheels trucks have four-wheel dri-

donate 5 cents lo NAMP for every
purchase of Reynolds Wrap aluminum . roil , plastic wrap. oven
bags, Cut-Rite wax paper; Baker's
Choice bake cups and freezer paper
during January.
The Meigs Senior Nutrition
Program served 57,400 meals in
1996. This number includes 43-,748
meals sent to homebound elderly,
~ith 317 people receiving meals
sometime during the year, and
13,662 meals served at the Senior
Center dining sili: and special
evening meals.
Putting aside some extra food
for a slonny day just makes good
sense, according to Oliver. .
"Th'is is something we all
should do."

Civil action filings swell
as deadline draws near·

·:Columbus K1ng Day observatton

:·en

• MEIGS •

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TOLEDO (AP) -=- A new state
Opponents complain that it will
taw restricting the amount of punitive prevent injured pardi:s from collect·
damages that can be collected in a ing what they deserve and,need from .
civil lawsuit will take effect Saturday, litigation, particularly people with
and counbouses .around Ohio are disaoi\ities or disfiguring injuries
already seeing an increase in the . caused by others.
number of suits being filed to beat .the
Harry Barlos, clerk of Lucas
deadline.
C(lunty Common Pleas Court, said
the number df lawsuits filed the(e this
The ton-reform law· will · limit month is twice the number filed at
punitive damages to $100,000 or this time last year.
thice times the compensatory dam:while tbe office is open unti14:45
aaes, whichever is ·Jess. Noneco- p.m. weekdaY.s. attorneys usually are .
nomic damages. such .as pain and suf- given a few extraminu~ to submit
fering, will he limited to $2$0,000 or . their filings.
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three times the compensatory dam.But not this week, wl)en · "the
ages, up to $.500,000.
doors will be locked ai tiiM time,"
Suppo'1ers. of the law say it will Barlos slid.
cut down on frivolous lawsuits and
" I hope nobody takes it pcnonal·
help Ohio businesses compete with lyJ but this is a special sitUIIion, ll1d
tho~ in states that cap jury awards in
the lawyers have known llbout this
::...;:~::..= · damage and liability claims.
. deadline since Oc!Qber," .... Mid. ·

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Mcwt.y, .hlnuary 20, 1117
OHIO

111 Court Sl, P-oy, Ohio
614-982·21 56 • Fu: 892·2157

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A Gannett

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Co.

Newspaper

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlaher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
a.n.r.t Mallllger

· L-------------------------~--~

Air Force institute critical
· to defense readiness

,.
By JAMES HANNAH
A••oclated Press Writer
DAYTON - Fears that the Air Force Institute of Technology may fall
victim to budget cuts is giving longtime supporters of the military graduate
school a case of the Jitters.
" AFIT IS the Air Force's MIT," said Scou Milburn, press secretary for
U.S. Rep. David Hobson, R-Ohio. " AtAFIT, you work on projects that have
immediaie and direct bearing on national security."
·
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At the institute at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, officers earn graduate degrees in engmeering and management. Its graduates·include such notables as World War II pilot Jimmy Doolittle, who led an air raid that was the
first U.S. offensive actiOn against Japan in the war.
· Supporters say the institute is important not only to ensure the country
has adequate defense but to continued development of technology that also
benefits the private sector.
The offices of some Ohio lawmakers whose districts include the school
have said there is speculation that parts of AFIT mtght he dtscontinued to
·'save money.
·
Michael Gessel, who follows military issues for U.S. Rep. Tony Hall, D, Ohio, ~ aid he is trying to learn more about the Air Force's proposals regarding AFIT. He said the Air Force is facing enormous budget constraints.
~ "There ts very httle money to go around," Gessel said. "The choices they
are looking at are the fighters of today or students preparing for tomorrow.
And the Air Force is concerned with today 's threats."
·
Messages left at Wright-Patterson and AFIT on Thursday were not immediately' returned.
•
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State Sen. Charles Hom, R-Centerville, said the loss of AFIT would be ·
devastating.
. "It would have a major impact on the whole Midwest." he said. "Many
ef our midwestern universities are interfaced m some way with the training
of defense people."
,
Besides offering the graduate programs, AFIT provides continuing-edu.cation programs for career military and civiha,n An Force members and •
administers programs for about 2,150 military officerS at civilian institutions.
About 526 people wor~ at the institute.
Graduates are trained in engineering and 10 the design, development and
•acquisition of aircraft and weapons systems,
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"It's imponan~ both from a defense-reaoiness standpoint and .from the
maintenance or'a technology base for the country," Hom said. "With the
,do.wnsizing of the servii:es, the sctencc-and-technology expertise is in jeop- ardy...
He said the United States is a world leader in using defense research to
develop new products and processes for industry and that Af'IT bas been a
vehicle for doing that.
·
AFJT works with the University of Dayton and Wright State University
to dcv~lop products that could be used by the military and the private sector.
.
, , , "There is a great opportunity there to enhance the exchange of technology-based information between the Defense Department and the pnvate sec' :tor through the university network," Hom said .

Today
in history..
.

By Tlfe Associated Pr•••
.
.
Tcxpy is M9nday,Jan. 20, the 20th d~y of 1997. There. arc 345 days left
.tn the year. Thts is the Martm Luther Kmg Jr. federal hohday.
: To&lt;tay's Highlight in Histof)l:
.
, .
On Jan. 20, 1896, comedian George Bums was born Nathan Btrnbaun:t
10 Ne'l' York. Bum ~ died March 9, 1996, at age 100.
" On this date:
In !801, John Marshall was appointed chief justtcc of the. Untted States.
In (839, Chile defeated a confederation of Peru and Boltvia in the l!atJ)e of Yungay.
. .
• In (841 the island of Hong Kong was ceded to Oreat Bntam.
. ~ ln (887, the Senate approved .an agreement to lease Pearl Harbor in
Hawaii as a naval base.
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... :.. In 1936, Britain's King George V died. He was succeeded by Edward

VJII.

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In !937, President Roosevelt became the first chtef executive to be inau,.,,gurate~ on Jan. 20 mstcad of March 4. .
.
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·
In i 942, Nazi offictals .held the notonous Wannsee conference, dunng
. which1they arrived at their "final solution" 'that called for exterminatmg
". EurOpc;'s Jews.
· "
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Berry•s World
·'(()() . REAL.I't.E', OF C.OI)~£,
ftll\-r WAA'\ ¥00 A.fl..'E. 'OOtNG
UNPf~lt.lES 'ft'lE CRa&gt;l&amp;tL\i't'
Of lt'lE ftn ~f'o~T ·
~~tc:.ti A55~T'S
1"M~1" ~IM&amp;'

IS DoWN.

/

By JIICk Anderson
and....,Moller
WASHINGTON-- Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D.•
'once again finds himself with one of
the most thankless jobs in town. But
he can take solace knowing that one
of the Senate's most vener~ted members is now on his side.
Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va.,
was one of several veteran senators
who lobbied actively against
Daschle's bid to become the leader of
the Senate Democrats two years ago.
It was a time when his caucus was
poisoned with infighting and selfdoubt, brought on by the drubbing
Democrats received in the 1994 elections.
Daschle won the leadership race
by a one-vote margin over Sen. Chris
Dodd, D-Conn., a more-seasoned
colleague who had the support of
many seasoned members. Byrd -- a
38-year Senate veter~n and the
body's acknowledged expert on rules
and traditions -- was not shy about'
expressing h".preference.
"Prior to (Daschle) be~ommg
leader I tlon 't recall that he ever managed a bill on the
" Byrd

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recalled last week 10 011t essocj•
George Clifford m. ''I just did nat
feel that he was ready for tho job."
But that was 'then. Two weeks qo,

By Jack Anderson
and
Jan Moller
when the members of the I05th
Congress were sworn in, Byrd was
the first Senate Democrat to renominate Daschle for the Jllinority
leader's job. This time, it wasn't a
close race, as Daschle won unanimous support from his party.
" I did not support Tom Daschle-in ·
1994, in. the main, because I did not
think he was tough enough to deal .
with the likes- of Boll Dole," Byrd
told colleagues in his nominating
speech. "I am here today to tell you
that I was totally wrong about this
young man. He has steel in his spine,
· despite his reasonable and modest
. demeanor."
Daschle smiles when 'be recalls the
moment. "There isa

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trut" between now llld two yeus idministntion's bunaling of the
ago, be uid.' "I thinlr. this iu llpC!Cial health care issue, Duchle says be
time for me."
plans to be fnnk with the White
Duchle .-ned·Byrd's respect in Ho- if he feels Democrats ue ,
part by'standin3 up io Rqlublicans on beinJ burned or ignored. · .
,
the popular BaiiiiCed Budget Amend"I see it as (a relationship) which ·
ment -- a feel-good proposal that is very close, bas a very good chem- :
could have the effect of putting Ct11- istry," Daschle sail! of his relation- ;
cial budget decisions in the hands of ship with Clinton. "6e calls fre- ·
un~lected judges. The amendment ·quently, and' I call him, and I think
failed by one vote in the last Con- we've got a very good line of com.
. gress. This time, supporters say they · munication."
have enough votes to pass the meaWith "a couple of exceptions,"
sure.
Daschle says, Democrats in the SenIronically, ·the very issue that ate have not been talr.en for granted
brought the two together may riow be by the president. Bu~ he cau~ot\s, "If
one that drives a wedge between it's not working, I'm not goinJ 10 be
them this year. Daschle told us he'D subtle." ·
support cJrtain versions of the
UNDER THE DOME -·A statue
amendment Byrd, meanwhile, can be \that's waited 76 y~ to move from
expected te defend the Senate's con- ihe bowels of the p.s. Capitol to a
trol over the budget process to the bit- . p~ace of honor may be waitina .a lit·
ter end. A vote is expected on the tie longer.
amendment 'IS early as next month.
Derisively nicknamed "Three
Interesting dynamics are also Ladies in a Bathtub" by critics, the 8- .
developing in the relationship ton sculpture depicts ·Lucretia Moll,.
betweenDasehleandPresidentCiin- Susan B. Anthonl ' l!lld 'r BI~ · ,
ton. Daschle waves off speculation Cady Stanton, three leaders IH\tlie ~
that he seek~ more independen':"' · .women's suffrace mo}1~nL Wwai .
from the Whne House. But due tn given to Congre~&amp;in 1921. But Con- :
part to lessons learned from the gressdidn't want it. So lj1e !!ltJiue was
hauled down to the Capitol's base- •
ment, where it has gathered dust'ever
since.
..
Finally,• last year, a coalition of .
women .lawm~kers . sui:ceed~d in ,
passing a resolutiop to have the statue moved II&gt; a PII!Ce of 1\onodn the .
Capitol Rotunda_ The mcii$Ute passed .
only aflcr an outside group raised .
$75,000 through private d!lnations to ,
pay for ihe move, as some Republicans didn't want taxpayers to foot the
bill.
'That was nearly four months ago,
and still there is no definite plan to ·
• move the statue -- even though the ..
original plan was to have it in place ·
l:iy Feb. IS, the anni.versary of Susan
B. Anthony's btrth. That deadline is
now in doubt, according to one lawmaker.
"I'll believe it when I see it," says
Rep. Carolyn _Maloney, D-N.Y.• one ,
of the lawmakers who was instru- '
mental in passing last fall's resolution.
Jack Andenon and Jan MoDer •
are writen for United Featun '
Syndicate, Inc.
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•!Columbus!46•l

Dorothy Barsotti

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Dry conditions, warmer
temps filtering into area
By The Aaaoclnld Prass
Dry conditions are expected in
Ohi\) tonight, with lows in the mid-'
' teens in the north and the mid-20s in
the far south. ·
'
Clouds will increase on Tuesday,
as moisture begins to return from the
southwest. However, highs will be in
the upper 30s in northeast Ohio to
near 50 in the far south.
The record high for this date ai the
Columbus weather station was 68 in
1906. The record low was -19 in
1985.
'
Sunset today will be at 5:37 p.m.
Sunrise 1\tesday will be at 7:48 a.m.
Weather forecast:
TonfghLPartly cloudy. Lows

Joseph Spear _
didatcs. induding Chicago Bulls forward D~nnis Rudman (for profanity,
haitin~ of ollicials and fatuous behavinm Democratic political guru James
C':~rvilk (l&lt;&gt;r challcngmg lndepe11dent
Cnunscl Kenneth Starr's integrity);
former California congressman
.Rnbert ,Dnrnan (for being a sore los. er and a crass dork); and Republican
political consultant Arthur Finkelstein
(1\)r attack ads and bashing of fellow
gays).
And you nominated these winners:
In fifth place,' and winner of the
.. Brass ASP, is Sen. Carol Moseley;Braun, D-.111., who traveled to Nige!ria to fawn over Gen. Sani Abacha, a
tyrant who locked up the nation's
elected leader lnd 1)\ousanda of dissidents and allep!ly looted the trea-

·Alumnf rally to raise money
for troubled Central State

;~· CLEVELAND (AP) There
: were no tickets sold with all six numbers selected in Satufday night's $16
;:million Super' Lotto drawing so
-Wednesday night's jackpot will bel
:$20 million, the Ohio Lottery said.
There were 106 Super Lotto tick-

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The' Daily Sentfuel

surj.
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(USPS 213-HO)
Published ever, 'DftemDOn, MoDday dlrouah
Friday, II I Court Sr., l'omerof, Oblq, b)' lhe

Cillo 'lllllcy l'llblllhlot ~/0- Co .•
Pomeroy, Cillo 4~769, Pit m:zt 56. Second
'"'' paid 41 """"'"r. Ohio. . .

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P08'nfA8TIR: Send tlddrclt QIITteliona to
Tbc Daily Sentinel. I II Court St, ~.

Ohio45169.

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---Ilion.

Membtn The Ateeeilled Preu, Dnd the Ohio

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One MDIIIII........... ..................,...... - .........$8.10
One Y• ....................................-~....... $10..00

' SINGLE COPY PRtCI!

.

SubJcri!&gt;m not deoirini., PI)' ,.. -

...,.

Dally - .................................. _........... ), Ceau

ft!mh ia advanee direct ro The Dilly Send•l
on al;tiree, li• or 12 month bGila. Credit will be

~~- c•rler&lt;each ~

No tubtcrlpdon by mall pertllitte4 lA nu
where homt Clft'ier ten1oe I. tYiillble.

Publisher- the""" ........ -

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ln1 the tubtcllpliotl J&gt;erio'. S-ptioa &lt;111naeo nay btl,.lemtnled Ill' &lt;"--illflbe

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M.ULS1118CIIPI'ION8
Mttp c.ial7

tl Wcei&lt;J.,...._,,.. _.................................$27.lll
26 Wceb............, ...... ,_, ..........................,!.12
'2 Wceb ..........................:................... $10:!.~
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............... ,_,_,,.. ,_....-~.......$29.25

26 -

.................. ,_..,, .. -......:......,.....S"-Y

, - ........:................... ........ __ .....llw.n

,,

ets with five of the numbers, and each
is worth $1.150. The 4,735 tickets
showing four ofthe numbers arc each
,
worth $80.
ln Kicker, doe player had the exact
six-digit number and can claim
$100,000. The winning ticket was
sold at Rulli Bros. Market in l!oard ~
man.
The five Kicker tickets showing
the first five digits are each . worth
$5,000.
/

Stocks
Am El• Power ...........:...........42"1.
Akzo ......................................68\
Aahl•rld 011 ........................... 44\
ATIT ......................................38\
Bank OM .............................. 41 '•

Bob Evane ...........................113\

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One Wcek....... :..............................,........... $2.00

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SUI8CRtrrtoN IIATBS
fly Conltr o r - - .

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raised by the school's de~~lopment
· fitsca11996, acco · mg
· t o the
offi1ce 10
·
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h" 1
·
untverstty. t estimates t Jl.l . a umm
contributed $63,000 in cash and
pledges during homecoming weekend last October.
, ·
A small group of ~lum~t from
around the country met wilh'Towers
in October to the fund-raising .~rive,
That has· been put on hold until a new .
school president.
·
- Last wcc;k. the ~ard of trustees
agreed to htre a pnvate cc;mtpany to
conduct the search.
"It's very difficult to articUlate the
position of a university without a
president," Towers said. "We just felt
a joint effort (between alumni and the
university) would be far superior,
well worth waiting for."
Members of. the 130-mcmber
Dayton alumnt , chapter rat sed
bet~een $6,000 and $8,000 !ast fall,
chapter President Kathleen , Welch.
said. '
"As soon as we know or have a
direction ... the alumni will definitely rally, .. she said.
Alumni in Cleveland home to
aro.und 700 graduates,
teaching
members how to speak to legislators
on behalf of their alma mater.
·

winners In Super. Lotto drawing
.~No
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from the upper 20s to the lower 30s.
Light and variable wind.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Highs
·
·
neat 50. ·
. • Tuesday night .. .Increasing clouds.
Lows near 40.
Extended forecast:
Wednesday... A chance of afternoon showers ...Then rain likely during the night. Highs in the upper 50s.
Thursday...Occasional rain during
the day...Thcn cloudy w1th a chance
of snow showers during the night.
Lows in the mid 40s and morning .
highs in the lower SOs.
Friday...Partly cloudy with a
chance of flurries. Lows in the mid
· 30s and highs fn the upper 30s.

WILBERFORCE (AP)- Centr$1
· ·
·
'ty a1 umn1· are ratstng
State
Umverst
.
· ho
1 bb •
d1
money an eanung wto 0 y cor
their troubled alma mater.
Some of the university's 16,000
graduates are discussing a three-year
· · . dnve.
·
central State,
fund-raiSing
which is 17 miles east of Dayton, is
·the state's only publicly .supported,
historically black college.
. !-uther "To~ers •. the s~hool's _
n_abonal alum~t P":~tdent, satd some
graduates belteve . ,thts may be. our
last go-around. If tt s not done.nght,
we may not get another cha~ce. ".
The state audttor's office IS trytn.g
to detennme the amount of the umv~rstty's debt, .":htch could reach as
htgh _as $16 mtlh?n.
.
Nme dormttones were closed last
summer because of safety concerns.
_Three were r~novated and reopened.
. Graduates ar~ frytng to avm,d
·assesstng blame fo.r the school s
. pro~lems, T?wers satd.
.
, We dectded not to g~t t~volved
; m finger-~otntmg or spmnmg our
• whecls,trymg. to find out what hap'f\Oncd, he satd.
• , Instead. they are t~ing to figure
: out how ~~ help financtally.
.
, Alumnt donattons accounted for
, roughly one-founh of ihe $700,000

.

Balanced budget action
again stirs 'partisan fire

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liep to the ethics committee about i~
then attempted to pas~ it off as something.a\in to jaywalking. Newtic finished fourth in the 1991 Ol's, fifth in
1992, third in 1994 and third last year.
And now he sits upon the OP throne.
Congratulations, Newt. 1 ·
There are a whopping four special
awards ·this year:
.
-- The Posturing ASP goes to Bill
Clinton's ~rstwhile pplitical guru
Dick· Morris. He triangulated h·is
candidate and moved him to' the cen·
ter, which w~ all right. But then he
sucked a prossie's toes and has now
written a memoir in which he claims
to have sAved the Clinton presidency
and possibly the world.
.
--The Hone's ASP 1oes to Rep.
Gerald Solomon, 1(-N.Y., who
. :inferred that assault weapons are the
:equivalent of Mace. "My .wi.fe lives
alone five days a week in a rural area
,of upstate New York!" he shouted.
'"She ~ a riJbt to defend herself!"
-- The Shamoleu ASP
to
Aldrich Atne~, the CIA spy lo¥ho
betrayod America · and now pjpes
about the te!lium of prison Ilk. ·_.

Sh~effer

Dorothy Barsotti Shaeffer, 74, PomefQy, ~ at her re8ide'nce Monday,
Jan. 20, 1997.
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'Arrangements will be announced by the Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport.
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In fourth place;"'md winner of the
Bronze ASP, is fonner FBI agent and
now author Gary Aldrich, who wrote
a White House expose that was, in
fact, generously fortified with fiction.
In thit:d place, and winner of the
. Silver ASP, is columnist Joe Klein,
author of the infamous roman a clef,
'.'PrimarY C~lors." We have no prob!em with his biting satire. We honor
him primarily for his audacious
denials of authorship.
In second place, and.winner oftl\e
Gold JXSP, is Vice President AI Gore.
His iengthy lament at the Democratic convention of his sister's death
from lung can.cer struck us as rank
exploiwion. When it was 1carned that
his family had once raised tobacco
~nd that he ~ ~cepted tobiiCc':
t~us!ry co!'trtbuuons ev~n after ~IS
sts!Cr s temble ~truggle wtth the ~tsease, he moved mto the rank of Master Hy~rite.
In first place, and winner of the
coveted Platinum ASP, is Speaker of
the House Newton Leroy GlnJrich.
He used taxpayer-subsidized monies
to advance his politicalasenda, then

Kathleen Peoples Norris, 93, Athens, died Monday, Jan. 20, 1997 at the
Russell Nursing Center.
, Born Dec. I0, 1903 in Meigs County, daughter of the !ale Perey and Maude
Jones Peoples, she was a 1923 graduate of Pomeroy High School and attended Ohio University. She was a former partner with her husband, Wtlson Norris, in the Norris Electric Co. She was a member of the First United Methodist
Church.
She is survived by her daughter, Nancy Castro of Sacramento, Calif.; a
son and daughter-in-law, Robert and Jeanne Norris of Athens; and seven
grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.
She was also preceded in deaih by her husband. Wilson; and by brothers
Leland and Cecil People.
.
Services will .be I p.m. Wednesday in the Jagers &amp; Sons Funeral Home,
Athens, with the Rev. W[llard Love officiating. Burial will folloov in the West
Union Street Cemetery, Athens. Friends rna)' call at the funeral home from.
6-8 p.m. Tuesday.

IND.

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Who will be this year's ASP?

Kathleen Peoples Norris
IMansfield IW I•

Nat Hentofl

Ind.; and fonner congressman Wcs
Cooley, R-Orc .
Since my last OP dispatch, you
have nominated otber deserving can-

Firefighters InJured battling blaze

MICH.

By Nat Hentotr
·
from drugs. -'·'·
job. Although three years short of ' s~ was "a wonderf~l teacher.". No '
11 was a SWAT t~lll\i moving in on
When she spoke caustically about reurement, she refused. "How could ,actton was taken agan~st the o~ficers ·
students in Wihilsol Forest High the lockdown, she was overheard by. I face my students? To do what I gen- who searched ber car tn vtolauon of ·
School in Savannah, ,Ga. As a police officer who reponed her to uinely believe to 'be an unconstitu- the school district's drug testing pol- :
tiona! act out of fear was a kind of icy.
described by Bill Osinski last year in
the Atlanta Constitution, " Without
.
public shaming I could not face."
Sherry Hearn's appeal to her local •
warning, teams of armed county and
Furthermore, the original com- school bo~ has been ~enied ~n the .
school system ·officers would peri- the pnnc 1pal, adding that because of mand to be drug tested turned out to ground of ms~~nhnatton. ~nd the
odicolly come int&lt;! the schools, ordet her "attitude" problem, she might be unconsltluttonal hec.ause aft~r she Atlanta Consututton. sta!es: Thts IS
everyone into the hallways, use dogs have to he detained or restrained dur- had ~n read her Mtranda nghts, not about drugs. Thts IS about the ·
to sniff the students' book bags and mg future surprise raids. During a tncludmg.the nght toconsuU a lawyer tramphng of fundamental ti'ec~o~~ , .
purses, and scan the students' bodies subs~quent fl!!ldom raid, Hearn's sQn and the nght not to mcnmmate he~- guaranteed by the U.S. Constttutton. :
wiih metal dete~tors." The students was the only student out of 1,500 10 self wtthout gettmg a lawyers (She also h\15 the support of the.
are detained in their classrooms for be individually searched.
advice, shp was told that the test -- National Teacher Magazine.)·
two to !hrce hours
There was another lockdown in which might incriminate her-- had to
The Georgia State Board of Edu- ·
There is no rca~onablc suspicion . April1996, and the industrious police be taken within two hout11. She was- cation has rejected Hearn's appeal, ·' ·
or probable cause to target any par- also searched the cars in the parking n't able. \O reach h~r lawyer within ~lso on the grounds of ins~bordina­
ticular student. All of them are pre- lot. One of them was Sherry Hearn's that peru:xj to get hts advtce, so her· lion. H.er ~ase now moves tnto Fedsumed .guilty of posscssmg drugs or venerable Oldsmobile. She had left Miranda rights, she felt, had been era! Dtstnct Court, where she will
weapons unless cx6ncrated hy a drug the doors unlocked and the windows violated. ,,
~gue that her Fourth Amendment ..dog.
open. A drug dog found a partial
The day after the raid, at the strong nghts, among ot~rs. ha~e been vioShcrry Hearn, a teacher at Wind- .hand -rplled marijuana cigarelte in the · advice o(hcr attorney•. Hearn' reluc- !~ted -- along wtth her due proc;ess ' ·
sor Forest High School , had com- c~r.
tantly agreed to take a drug test rt@hts. She has n.ot been able to find
· plained about these random raids to
Hearn had absolutely no record of because he said it would provide a full-ttme teachmg Job because, she - •
.the principal. to the school hoard and drug use and had no idea how that medico! evidence . Heam's test tells me, "most ~blic systems are ,
to cops she felt were unduly rough incriminating controlled substance showed ?r drug use. The school's fe~~ul of anyone, tnvolved m a law- ;&gt;
with student• during the searches.
had come into her car. The search, superintelident, Patrick Russo, did sutt. '
"
At a November 1995 lockdown, conducted wtthout a warrant, was hot even ask to sec the results
Sherry Hearn was recently bon- ·
as tt 's called, one of her students also in dtrcct violation of the·bo~rd's. because she hadn't taken the firsttest. ored by too Georgia Civil Liberties .
asked Hearn why she was ~o upset. poliCy which requires · that faculty
Heartl 'wa_' 11red for insubordina- Union. She was very pleased but · •
" Because I teach the Constitution,·· memqers give consent before the it tion by Superintendent Russo, would be more pleased to go back to ' . she said. She had been doing that for cars are searched. Her car had a large aUhough ~chad the options o'frcpri- · c~cryday_teaching and~ able to.get
27 years, had been named Teacher of white faculty tdenttficauon card on . manding or suspending her. She was kt~s to dt~cover thetr nghts and libthe Year in Chatha~ County in Apnl the dashboard.
removed from her students, Russo crttcs undilt'the Constttutton.
1~94, and has many admners among
The Board of Education suspend- told me, because ·she failed to
Nat Hentqft' Is a ·Utlonally . her students, past and present -- ed Hearn and ordered her to take a "uphold the integrity of the drug test- rmownecl aatbority on ~t Flnt · :
some of whom she has turned away "supervised" drug test -- or lose her ing policy." He added graciously that Amendment aDd the ftStoltbe Bill ·
· .,
ofRI•"ts.
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By Joseph Spear
Welcome to the cightll annual
Outrageous Personage of the Year
awards, chosen in a recent survey as
the best awards show in the natinn . It
used to 'be a black-tic affair, hut in
keeping with the trcnd....in ca~ual
dress, clothing is new optional.
• First, let U¥ disJICnsc with the
legally mandated nottces.
The object of this contest is tn
honor the most absurd, goofy, hyr&lt;&gt;eritical, inane and preposterous people to strut across the pub! ic stage in
tHe year 1996. Foreign nationals are
not eligible. Groups arc not eligible.
Joe is not eligible. The contest is
sponsoreil by the Spear Foundation in
cooperation with the Association of
S~~gacious Pundits (ASP). The prizes ·
are statues of tiny snakes and are
' sometimes called the ASP awards.
Last year; you nominated such
worthy luminaries as Louis Farraldlan; Pat Robertson; Bob Do~;
BiD Clinton; )tal Btdllnan; Sea.
T1ent Lou. R·Miu.: llusb L.imlJiuah;
JeMe JICboli; Marion )nndo; Oer-'
lido Rivera; Rep. Dan Burton, R:

Local News in Brief:

AccuW~ fontcUt

Hooked,: o~n the Constitu,-lPn, · /

VJ( ~ i1tlwr

. 1\aesday, Jan. 11

The l)aily Sentinel Daschle has stood tall as·minority. leader
'Lstsz5Gslid in~

The o.lly Sentinel • Page 3

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..,..,, ........, 20, 1117

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Borg-WerMr ........................~•
CMmplon .....~......................... 21 '&amp;
Charming Shope ..................4'"'
CitY Holcllng ...........,••••••••••••• ~;l&amp;'.i
Fecler'll ~tJI .........................!l

o.nnett .,_......:.._.._............._,,_74*

QooclyNr ..............................~M ~
K~Jt ................................... 11~
·Lanete End••.•••••••••••••••" .••..•••-21~

Umlted ....................;.............17'\
Ohio Yelley Blnk................. 35~
OM Yallly ••••••• " ' ''''''''''''''''''''.38

PeOflle• .................................21~

Prem Flnl ................. "'''''''"'"""13~
A~l ...............................82\
AD 811e11 ..............................172)
bney'a .................... "..............?
'stir S.nk ................................34

Wenctv'a ..............~.................M
Worthl"'lon ............-............11\

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Stock raporta era the 10:30
1.~ prowlded by A
of
Hpolll.

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Four area fmofighters sustained minor injuries in a structure ftre on near
Cheshire Sunday morning_
F'trefigNas from the Middleport, Pomeroy and Gallipolis volunteer ftre
departments, respondins at 8:SS 10 the S 120 State Route 554 resldence
of Patricia Elliott, found the two-story wood frame house fully engulfed.
according to a Middleport Volunteer Fire Department spokesman.
Middleport firefiahter Jeff Dent was injured when part of the roof fell
in, while Pomeroy firefighten Randy Arnold and Ryan Foster were hurt
when a chimney collapsed, according 10 the report. Pomeroy firefighter
Harry Rice was injured when pert of a wall fell. The men were transported
to area hospitals, treated and released, the spo~esmanl reported.
The cause of the fire, which caased an estimatell $100,000 in damage,
remains undetermi~. A total of 31 firefighters responded to scene. ·

Crash causes minor damage
· Minor damage was incurred in a two-car accident near the intersection of West Main S~t and Butternut Avenue at 2:22 p.m. Thursday.
The rear bumper of a 1991 Dodge driven by Joyce Hatfield, 65, Mount
Vernon, was damaged when her vehicle was struck from behind by a 1982
Mercury driven by Harold J. Will, 44, State Route 124, Racine. .
• Pomero}t Police Chief Gerald' ~ught reported that there were high '
wjnds the day of the accident, and that' a huge t;;ox blew into the path of
Hatfield ctif. She stopped abruptly in ·an ef.Tort to avoid hitting the box.
Will w.S unable to stop and hit the car from behind. There were no cita, tions. ·
.

·'
Pomeroy ares 'woman
struck by car

A Pomeroy area woman was in stable condition today in St. Joseph's
Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va_, after she was struck by her own car Saturday night on County Road 36 (Sumner).
·
Barbara Sargent, 78, 39790 Sumner Road, was transported by the Meigs
EMS following the 7:30p.m. accident, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol reported.
Troopers said Sargent had exited her vehicle .along Sumner at a private driveway, 250 feet west of Chester Township Road 444 (Keebaugh)
and had gone to a mailbox. The car started rolling baekwilrds, and Sargent attempted to get into the car to stop it.
The car instead ran over Sargent, according to the report.
The patrol issued a citation following a two-vehtcle mishap at the scene
soon after the accident.
Troopers said Gregory B. Carpenter, 25, 40674 Bentz Cemetery Road,
Pomeroy, was southbound on Sumner, rc~ponding to an emergency call,
when he was unable to stop in time and struck . the rear of a parked 'car
owned by Roben L. Reeves, 36418 Sumner Road, Chester.
Damage to both cars was moderate and Carpenter was ciied for assured
clear distance.

By JIM ABRAMS
a commentator on ABC's "This
A88ocl•ted Presa Writer
Week," said Clinton was "going to
WASHINGTON - Putting the immediately come to work on Toesnew bipartisan spirit to an early test, day and try to call meetings to halSenate Majority Leader Trent Loti ance the budget."
says Democrats are being " hysteriAt a Senate hearing Fnday, Treacal" in opposing a balanced
budget sury Secretary Robert Rubin said a
.
amendment. The president's new balanced budget amendment "could
chief of staff warns Republicans not turn slowdowns into recession., mtld
to "muck around with the Constitu- · recessions into worse ones and bad
tion."
.
recessions into depressions."
Republicans have promised to
Lou replied that Rubin was offerresurrect,the balanced budgei amend- ing a "Chicken Liule" defense.
ment as one of their top priorittes in "Wh~n you get the secretary of the
the new C!lng!'"ss. Lou, R-Miils., said treasury getting hystencal right out of
the Democratic response could affect the gate, that's not a good sign," he
whether the two pantes can work said.
The House, over White House
I og~(her on o(hfr tssues.. .
.
. How they handle thts tssue wtll objections, passed a balanced budget
affect our abthty to work on other amendment in 1995, but two efforts
COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana- plants 51 .50-53.00.
tssues. So I would urge them to be in the Senate failed, the first time by
Ohio
direct hog prices at selected
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs . 44.50careful with their rhetoric and be one vote. A constitutional amendment
responsible in their conduct." he . must win two-thirds majorities in buying points Monday as provided 51.00.
Sows: unevenly steady.
said Sunday on NBC's "Meet the both chambers of Congress and be by the U.S. Department of AgriculNews:
u.s·
. 1-3 300-450 Ibs . 39.00ture
Market
Press."
ratified by three-fourths of the state
and
-gilts:
1.00
to
1.50
450-500 lbs. 43.00-44.00;
Barrows
42.00;
The administration, after some legislatures.
lower; demand moderate on moder- S00-600 lbs. 46.00-48.00, few over
In the ·last election, Republicans ate offerings.
earher hesitation, last week came out
600 lbs. 48 .00-49.00.
.
strongly against amending the Con- mcreased. their ma;ority in .the tOOBoars : 35.00-39.00.
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country
stitution, saying it would impair bud'
member
Senate
by
two
seats,
to
SS.
Estimated
receipts: 36,()()().
points
SI.PQ-52.00,
few
at
50.50;
get writers during times of recession
Lou said he now had the votes there
orwarandput tllOmuchcontrol over for ratification, althou.gh if "dema- .
the budget into the hands of the judictary.
goguery comes back tnto play, then
"I have always felt that was a 11 could still change." The tougher
.
.
vote
could
be
in
the
House,
where
(Continued
from
Page
1)
gimmick," outuning Whit.e Hou!!!l
· --chief of staff L':on Panetta said on Re(lublitans saw their majority narThe economy recovered since that wintry day in 1993, budget deficits have
CBS' "Face the Nation. "
row in the election.
·
ebbed and hopes for stability have grudgingly taken root in Bosnia, the Mid"Trent Lou doesn:t need to
AI the same time, Lou had con- die East, Haiti and Northern Ireland.
change the Constttutton i~ order 10 ciliatory words toward Clinton, sayStill, Clinton lost his Democratic majority in Congress, saw his plan to
get a balanced budget agreement, " ing the president deserves a honey' revamp health care fail and learned tq repress the· part of hts nature that
Panella said. "If he's willing to 'sit moon as he begins his second tenn. demanded "dramatic change" in hts first maugural address. He won re-elecdown with the president and work it .
tion on a platform of bite-sized, low-cost initiatives, sucl;t as helping schools
through, they can accomplish this
"And I think hts (poll) nuJllbers require student uniforms.
without changmg our most sacred show that people like the way he is
. And so, the president spent the weekend with paper, pad and a tape
document."
talking, they like the way he is talk- recorder- in search of an inaugural address that fosters civility in WashErskine Bowles, succeeding ing about reaching out. And in fact he ington and indicts racial ·and ethnic divisions throughout the country.
.
Panetta as President Clinton's chief of has been doing that personally," Lou
Left for later will be details of his other goals: balance the budget, mov.e
staff today, said he was willing to said.
mtlhons from welfare to ·work, help improve schools and strengthen camwork with Lott on a balanced budget
He said that amid the current par- paign finance laws.
.
.
agreement but "we are going to work tisan wrangling over scandals and
While lobbyists courted congressmen and admmtstrauon officials at scores
hard 10 defeat" a constitutional investigations, Clinton was "strug- of unofficial parties Sunday night, Clinton, his wife, Hillary;_and daughter
amendment. "We don't think it's gling to get over into the issues and Che!S&lt;:a attended a star-studded, televised gala at the USAir Arena in subright to muck around with the Con~ show that 'we can work together. I urban Maryland.
shtution," he sat&lt;L
hope that maybe that's where 1can be
"You're three of ~he coolest people I know,·· co-host Whoopi Goldberg
Former White House adviser helpful."
cooed.
George Stephanopoulos. dtbuting as
Gathered with supporters earlier Sunday, Clinton recalled "the darkest days
of '94 and '95" after Democrats were devastated hy Republican victories that
gave the GOP control of Congress. Even then. he believed his presidency
would get a second chance. he said.
" Maybe this will be 'bettcr the second ume around ,·· he mused.
Chnton, the first Democrat since Franklin D. Roosevelt to be elected to
ADIRD support JI'OUP to meet .
'·
two White House terms, plans to meet with economic advisers on Tuesday
Alzheimers Disease/Related Disorders support group will be held Thurs- 01 nd issue a call for Republicans to work with htm to balance the budget.
day, I to 2:30p.m., at the Meigs Multipurpose Senior Center. Susan Elliott,
He also will usc a Democratic Nat10nal Commlltcc meeting Tuesday to
R.N., will speak on the new pariial hospitalization program on Veterans 1ssue a call for tougher campaign finance rules, then ny to the Chicago area
Memorial Hospital's partial hospitalization program. She Will n!Sll speak on Wednesday to highlight his education initiatives.
her experiences with Alzheimcrs pati.cnts.

Today's livestock report

Cl"l nton makes pledge

Me,·gs announcemen·ts

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to end marriage filed
EMS units answer 14 calls ·AThections
following actions to end mar- Cleland,
Ja11. 14; Dewayne

Units of the Meigs County Emer- Edna Richmond, HMC;
4:19p.m. Saturday, OBNC, Milgency Medical Service recorded 14
calls for assistance Saturday and prcd Clark, PVH, Middleport squad
Sunday. Units responding included: assisted;
4:4jl p.m. Sunday, Page Street,
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Middleport,
Ruth Arnold, VMH;
II :43 a.m. Saturday, Side Hill
5:13 p.m. Sunday, Rocksprings
Road, Rutland, Ruth Morris, Veterans
Memorjal Hospital, Rutland squad Roall, Pomeroy, John Baxter, VMH.
TUPPERS PLAINS
assisted;
7:31
,p,m.
Saturday, motor vehicle
3:58 p.m. Saturday, Overbrook
. Nursing Center. Middleport, Donald accident on Sumner Road, Barbara
Stephenson, Pleasant Valley Hospital; Sargent, St. Joseph's Hospital,
·9:21p.m. Saturday, OBNC, Kath· Chester VFD assisted.
eryn Barney, PVH,.Middleport squad
assisted;
,
- 12:24 p.m. Sunday,-tlill Street,
Pomeroy, Harold Will Sr., Holzer
· Veterans Memorial
Medical Center;
Saturday admissions - none.
4:05 p.m. Sunday, P~~ge Street,
Saturday discharges - Reva
Middleport, Mervin Roach, PVH.
Smith.
MIDDLEPORT
Sunday admissions - Elizabeth
7:45 p.m. Saturday, Oak Street,
Cutler, Pomeroy.
. · Orella Hysell, VMH;
Sunday discharges · Ethel
10 p.m. Saturday, volunteer fire
.
Reeves,
Coolville;
department to Grant Street, gas odor
Holzer Modica! Center
at Homer Smith residence;
.
Dllebl!fles
Ja•. 17 - Lillie
8:55 ~.m . Sunday, VFD •nd squad
to State Route 554 in Cheshire Town- Pesay. Doris Runyan, Penny Nap(l:Cr.
DbdwJes Ju. lB - Manning
. ship, structure fire 'at Patricia.Elliou
Wetherhol~
Lester Green, Otto Wise,
residence, Jeff Darst, HMC, Randy
Mrs.
Roe)
Gallo
and son, Stephen
Hysell, Ryan Foster and Harry Rice,
VMH, Pomeroy and GaUipolis VFDs ·Lee.
Blrtll- Mr. and Mn. Billy Hatassisted;
son, LanasviUe.
tess,
· 10:47 p.m. Sun~ay, VFD to SR
Dlacbafl'l
Ju. 19 - none.
554, Cheshire, rekindled structure
lirtll - Mr- llld Mrs.
fire.
LOng, son, Pomeroy.
ROTUND
(PH~ wltb permltlsloll)
2:2~ p.m. Saturday, 'ntus Road.

Hospital news

Gallipolt ~.

riage were filed recently in the office
or Meigs County Clerk of Courts Larry Spencer:
Dissolutions asked - &amp;aclynn
Clampitt, Reedsvtlle, and RDn.ald
Reid Clampitt II, Coolville, Jan. 17;
Jon Peter Karschnik, Pomeroy, and
Constance Len Karschnik, Pomeroy,
Jan. 15; Carl ~ay Thomas, Long Bottom, and Maxine E. Thomas, Long
Bottom, Jan. 15; Scott Hanning,
Pomeroy, and Mikka Hanning, Gallipolis, Jan. 9.
.
.
Divorces asked- Karen Inherst,
Portland, from Russell l~herst ,
Alliance, Jan. 14; Carl Wayne Moodispaugh, Middleport, from Lora Rose

Downing, Qilldl,
M~en, Mtlseet
111 E. Second St.,~oy

. 992-3'381

..

.

.,

'

R. Fisher. Middleport, ·from Wilma
Sue Fisher, Pomeroy, Jan. 9; Rhonda
Jean Haynes, Pomeroy, from Micllael
Paul Haynes, Gallipolts, Jan . 7.
Divorce granted - Debra L. Jenkins from George Michael Jenkins,
Jan. 13; Homer Proffitt from Nancy
Proffitt, Jan. 13 , James M. Dillon
from Nolainc P. Dillon, Jan. 13.

.

•'

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�-

\

The ·Daily Sent~el

Sports

. _

.. .

·.

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Colcndo Joalteader l'llric:k Roy.
Roy. who ._ fm lhuloutl this
SAN JOSE, Cllif, (AP) - By
!K'W, no one npects the NHL All- season, pve up four lOlls on 15
SIN Gt1111e to be I defcaai~ SlriiS· ahotl iathe fll'lt period alor!e befcn
)le,
heedinl for cover on the Western
~ · They had more of lhe same Sal- Conference benc:h.
.
i(rday night when the Eastern ConWbat he'saw then was even more
{pence beat the West 11-7. in anoth-. frightening:, l)is successor, Dallas'
er wide-Open gtUne that featured a Andy Moog, gave up.six pis on IS
~ scoring.performanee by one
shots in the secpnd periQd. Moog
f!ayer, tw.o hat tricks and utolher isn't ex~etly chopped liver, either.
. !_l!li~Je night for goaltenders ..
Of coune, as everyone knows,
, The best part for me was when all-sw games aren't rnado for the
f.was able to go to the bench and benefit of aoaltenders. They are
1f.atch the. n:st of the game," said usually $ilting ducks for the shooters.

n

·"

Nlkuma 1}-ree scored in the jllint left gave Fort Fcye a SS-49 adnn- macher's t9.Juon Sle.!lael's IS~
with I:23 left in the half. But Dustin tqe, but Wbitlllleh answC{al with a Warren's 14. the Cadets went to the
Handschumacher nailed a three short jumper with 34 seconds left tO line 27times anif..llit 20 for 74%. 1l!!!
points of the third period to pull poiatcr with 59 seconds left to give pull MeiJS to within 55·51.
other statistics w'ere available far
away from a two-point halftime Fon Frye a 25-23 lead at the half.
ffanc!lc:humacher hit one of two Fort Frye.
-..,,.
'··
lead, then held off a Meigs MaraudThe Cadets loo.Jced like they from lhe line with 16 seconds left to
Reserve notes: Fort Fry~ madQ.ll
er comeback attempt to post a 58-56 would blow the gtmie wide open ear· ma:.:e it at 56-Sl lead, but Williams a clean sweep by posting a":~U-92
non conference basketball victorj . ly in the third period jumping out to hit a put back at the nine second victory in the reserve contest N'~ r
·over tl.e Marauders Saturday a 36-23lead with 3:531eft. But Han· mark to pull Meigs to within 57.-53. Walrers led the winners with 10, J'3
·eve!'ing at Larry R. M~son Gym- nan ended the Marauders scoring
Warren hit one of two from the Sayre added nine. Waylon McKinnastum.
drought wi!h a sbon jumper with line to give the t;:adeiS a 58-53 lead.. ney led Meigs with nine, Chuck
The Cade'\s raised their record to 3:421eft to make it a 36-26 contest. Wbid~ ans~ with a three ' Murray added eight.
~
9-4 on the Season. 11\e Marauders, Jason Stengel's free throw with 16 from the light wing with four sec1'be future: Meigs will travel ·
with their third loss in a row, fell to seconds left gave tile Cadets a41-33 onds left to pull the maroon and gpld Trimble on Tuesday and bailie
4-8 overall. In those three losses, the lead hCading into the final period.
to withig;,'SS-56, but time ran out on Tomcats. ·
·
Marauders have been defeated by a
In the founh period Meigs came the Marauders.
Ollada: .ll!llb
total of just eight poiniS.
back and cut it to a three point game
Hannan Jed all scorers with 20 Fort Frye
~-14-16-17=58
. It was a nip and tuck first period when a Collin Roush free throw · poiniS. Whitlatch added 16. The . Meiss
.. · 1-12-10;23;,;56
that ended in a ll'all tie when made it45-42 with 3:231eft. But Fort Marauders'hit,23 of67 from the field
· Fort l'rye:_Rii Pennock 1-0-J
Marauder senior guard Brad Whit- Fiy~ built the lead back to ni~e (53- including four of · 12 from !hree 1=3, Derik Heiss 0..0=2, l1150n1
latch hit a pull up jumper from 10 44)'"\vhen Handschumac~er scoted point range for 34%. Meigs went to Stengle4-0..7=15,AthonyWarren J-•
feet outto tie the score at the buzzer. with 1:24 left.
the line II times and hit six.for.55%. ' 2c-6;J4, Jason Offenberger 1 - 1 ~0=5, j
In the second period the Cadets
But Hannan nailed a three from Meigs pulled iri 28 rebounds led by . Dustin Handschumai:her 5-1-6;19.1
scored the first eight points of the · the right comer 10 seconds later to Hannan's II. Meigs had a good floor Totals: 13-4-Z0=58
period and went on top 19-11. But a put Meigs to within silr(53-47). Six game only committin_g six turnovers.
Meigs: Brad Davenpon 1-0..0=2,;bucket by Whitlatch and two baskets seconds later Matt Williams came up The Marauders had six steals led by Roben Qualls J-0..3=5, Brad Whit·f·
by Daniel Hannan pulled the with 8 . st.cal and fed Roush for a Roush's two. Roush had six of their latch 5-2'-0=16, Collin Roush 2-0-.
Marauders to within 19-17 at ·the buckello pull the Marauderto with- 13 assisiS.
1=5, .Matt Williams 2.0-0=4, Qaniel 1
3:39 mark of the half.
in 53-49. A pair of free throws by
Fon Frye placed three players in Hannan 6-2-2=20, Nakuma Tyree 2- o
Meigs took a 23-i2 lead when Anthony Warren with 45 seconds double figures led by Handschu- 0-0=4. Totals: 19-4-6=56 .
I
By DAVE HARRIS

Blmrnefle

Sentinel CorTMponclent.
Fort Frye scored the fust II

hni:Hin 1311
IIMICOIICII
. 'illn. 21, 1903.

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Poetseason:
. 6- 3 0 .fltfl ·.'

Cal n·a mes Holmoe
head football coach

.

Maryland hands Wake

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Chargers hire Gilbride
.as new head coach
By BERNIE WILSON
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Kevin
Gilbride got . his first' NFL head
coaching job Saturday when he was
hired by the San Diego Chargers to
replaCe Bobby Ross.
Gilbride receivc;d a five-year con(1'11(;1.

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Florida 85, A - 66
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Cuynhop Ht1. !W; Ojlcn Uoor ~7
D:lian\;C HO, l:nirvicw 6H
lklawnre Chr. bl , Skkinah L'hr. ~7
~lphtu StJohn 6:'1, Van Wert ~I
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Elyria Kl, Cit. Manloollll4
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Fon Jc&amp;nir1f160. Contineftlnl ~!I
Fort Lonumc !§9, SidiM:y Lehman J4
Fnmldin 73, Day. Sltbbins67
..Gtlllip;tli• 48, Poi111 P~ni (W.Va.)

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OaltS Milk ~ke·n . 62. Middlttield

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Jolal'tront 82, Nor It I

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u. 76. FalrloiJ(IIli&lt;kl•

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Sc. ....... f t l , - 6 )

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Woohi- 74, wuhi- St. n

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Miami E. 49, Grnham 46
Minerva :'I I. Cnrrnllton 42
N. Rnynhon 42, Midpmk W
New l.el'. inglon :'i4, Sl~ml:ui ~9
Nr.'w Riegal :'i6_ Mansfield Sl. Pt-ln.' s
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Noohw~5 1 58, Loui~v ille 40
Norton ~4 . Richlit-l d Revere ~J

Oberlin 3K, Lorain ~·l.:arv io.: w ~ I
Old f ort70 , Dt!:Usv •l k IR
Oli!nlah~}l 7~( Washingio n C fl. 07 (J
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Crinaton 48, MI. Gikad ~7

Cenltfburg 64. Northridje :'i4
Chnrdon !17. W. Oeauf:n 45
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COl Rtady 411, Col. Wuucrson 47
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Columbus Grove 49, Miller City 47
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Conullon Vnl. :'16. Malvern 37
ConliRL'IliDI :'i:'l, l..eipsie 4!1

Wicklirre 80, Betlublre ~M
Wi!IOU&amp;hby S. !II. Ma)'f)ek144
:World Ham:sl OR. Nonhsi~ Chr. '!I
Wynfbrd 78, Galion 74 COT)
Yoo. Wil~on 70,' You. Choncy S4

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D:tnvilli! .g, Wanhinglnn Chr. JO
Dcfi:~n~:e :'i9. Folirvicw 56
Dover J6. Omilk: 22
Dublin Corrm1n ~ J. Mary, ville 4:'i
E. CantOn 4:'i: Tuscumwa~ V1ll. 36
E. Cle. Shnw 3K, l.akt:wtxx.l 22
Easdake N. 63 . Sh:lki.."f Hn. 39
Elida 70. Lil)lii ShiiWIY..'e 40
Elyria 51 , N. Ridgcvllk! .W ·
Fuirbanb :'i9. Mcchanic~herr. W
F••irboo•7l S.Kini!licld N. 41
·f.UI'Jut ~. Clc .. His. Luthcm11 E. IIi
Fairrurt Harbor 56. Ruck:y River
i.uthi!mn E. I K
Aiiiltay ~-Sandusky !10
. Fi{CIUfli,J1 65, LaGmn,p= Kcyswne: 42
F.Mt Rerovcfy 62. Sidney Pairlnwn 4K
FrankUn Monme ~9. An:unum W
Garawny ~. Lakeland :l I
Garfiekl Ht~. 60, Powma Normomdy 21
Gnrftekl H11. Trinity M6, Bedford Ht~ .
Chu-.=121
, GlcnOak ~Y . New Philadelphi11 4 ~
Grecnevicw 47, E. Clinton 4~
Jlll.lkson Ce111er 73. Ncww_n 27 ·

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Slow 72. Aknm Cc m.-Hower J4
Slow Wal~ h Jesuit !'i ~. Akmn f.:t~l 4.l
Slm5burg 57, NeWL"Unll!nlow n Jli
Tilll nmdgc JCJ, Gl't!\!n J4
TiUin Calvcn 112. V:1nlue :'10
Tot Whiuncr 57. Fre mont Ru.o;.~ 4~
Trl'C ol" Lih:1 5 .~. Miurn1 Val. 21,1
Tri-Vi!Ucy 4K, r-turgan J:'l
Triud 66. Benjamin Luj:..n45
U11iun l.tteill 69: Monnlo; (cnlmi 4lt
Uf'IJ\.'r 1\rlingln!l ?4. Dclawure 41
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Utica ~ -

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W. Hnlme~ 60, Cnshoclon 25
W. Jdl'cr!lon ~4 . Lickin·!! Val. :'14
Wndsworlh Rl Mcdin:t HighInn ~ 26
WuytM..'s villc 5:'i. M ndi ~on l'lo1in5 41
Wei r (W.V:t ) :H C.H.Ii z 44
WJ.-slcrville S..~ l. Lmc11.~1c r 4J
Wc~ 1rull M . Canal WindlL'lHcr ~)
W~J&gt;llukc 46. Fttirvi cw P:~rk 13
~orld H a rv~sl 02. Middletown Chr.

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Ridac: 6:'1, Ta:umsch ~I

K~lla'ing

Hcmh 4J

Venmillu~ 47, Spring. Ciultolic .~I
W. llr; UJ ~ h 50, Akmn St'lfing. 'J 7

Jcw.:n-S.:io ~. Rid..,wlAAJ :'13
Johnstown 64, l.uca• J4
. Kcns1nn 4.1. TwiruJ-irJ. J;'i
K~mon

Mt. DI.·Chniual (W.Vu.)

Shelby :'10. Tiffin ColumN;m 40
Sidney 74, Nonhmnm. 56
Sidney LA:hman :'i!'i. Day. S1ebbins 41
Solon 67, Orupgc 2t!
Spring. Shawnee 70, Sprinf,l. Nurlh ·
WCSiern 5&lt;J

COJ1k')' ~ - Hudson 36

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Parma Ht!i. Hvly Nan~ :'14, Cll;irl.lnn
Ntwre Doln~·C alhcdr.•ll.atin .n
P:1nrw Pallun 6 ~. Clc. Ccm. C:1th. 24
Pmrick Ht:nry 59. Ory;m .\6
Pio.:lcrington !!6. Chicagu Wlul ncy
Younj!. (Ill.) 6.:'i
Rivl!l' View ~ l. Philo ~7
Riv~.,- ~ ide 44, Indian Utkc ~ K
Rin.•nitle 7 1, AshtaDula Harbor J .~
Rtk.:ky Rivr.'r :\8, 8:1y Villugc 37
S. Chnrli!S!On SE K7, Clinton M : L,~ic
. lj

Fnirmont 60, Springlidd S.

4)

:00

Ubqty Btncon !17, Ouuwa Gland11rf

You. Mt)l)ni!y 67, Ck . V1\-SJ 00
You . Bmm.l~n 75. WlUTen H:1rVin ~

~2

Libtrly Union 44, Li~;kin~o Heights ~6
Lincolnview :'i3, AIIIWL'tf' 4~
Lornin Brook5ide 62, lorain Midvicw

.U

•

INEtOVELINES
WRITE A MESSAGE TO YOUR SPECIAL VALENTINE
Remember that special sollleoJe this
Valentine's Day with a message In

The Daily Sentinel

.

c-

Hnnibal Rhn ~4 . Paden Chy
(W.V&lt;I:tll
62. Allan E. 46
Hi-tllr.l~l. 11. xa&gt;~e~•9

-

N-

tndi• eo..tt u.
67
t.oo:.tl9
Katidl6l. c-o.v.e Js

liiCklon Ccow 61, -

.Ki- C.OO. Ill(. 6). Tomoplo: !lor. ~~
~ood s.. &amp;~w....s 6.!. c~&lt;. .'

Mir ?g lL..

m64. ~S1

l4lpoio: .,_

~"·
"!"rr•u•40
L*IIJ-110,- I i4l

...-47 •.,_,.
·: ... .,,,...,._

u...~n
u~

..

• Babysitters • Friends
Anyone wbo woUld appredate a tho!Jghtlul word from you! All Valentine
HeartS wUI be pubUsbed in the February 14th issue at a cost of only $6.00!

•

M1l(lk:wuod 70, LcdJCMk)nl

~·

Ulllh So. 71, ~,!&gt;'o1i'o St. 611

N.C.a...-76, Momt&gt;l&gt;is70 .
T-M.LSU5l

~Ciill8dejtl&lt;i' the

Cortl.11~

Col. Ml, ...,, Ctn n

Noryllool$4. Wlloo- ~I

• ..,, ... "cltllllk•lllll-duek."

CleW''fork IW, C.:nt~.'fburti 6~

UC SoOt~ 8lvbon 56, UC lnoinel~
U(:LA·84, Ari. . . 711011

s.-,;:.

. 49

• Sweethearts.• Moms &amp; Dads • Grandparents • Teachers

Cin. Moeller ttl, Spring. CUiholic 46
Cin. Withrow 7~ . tin ..Tafl60
Ck. HeiJ,hn 8'1, E: Ck.l'. Shuw 7'1
Clt. St IJrwli..a 61 . Loruin King !19

Sao'"-i... 71 . ~ .70

·~

CMD.I Fullon NW ~R. Loui iville 40
Conmn Cmh. 61 , Akron Buchu~l !'i9
C:amon S. 67. Marlington !'il

•

6.".

-Cai7S.Ari,...SI . ~

•

Washington·C.H. 74, llti1.:a !IH

Cin. Maricmon166, Harri~OD 6ol

.

so. ~-._

AtMerJI 4S, Olmsled Fulls 4!'i
~lhens 58, Chillicothe 42
Avon ~6. Wellington 21
AYon Lake 54. N. Olmsted 47
Bc411sviUe :'i7, Frontier 42 •
. Bea.vercrec:k :'i3, Centerville ~ 1
•
Bellaire :'10. Ounbric~Je .12
Bellaire St. J.o hn'• 52c Mn(!.nolin
(W.Va.)4'7
,
Bcltft S8, Fort Frye W
Berea !'il. Bn:cb\ttlle ~
BeA~y ~8. Lakewood ~:2
Bluffton 76, P..mdura-OiiOOa 5H
Brunswick !'iJ. Lodi Cloverlear JO
Buckeye Locnl 47, Zanes"'llt 40
Bockeye Vul. 6~ . N. Unio1 ~
Byesville Meadowbrook :'il . Clay-

~C-o

CardinJIOn 63, River Val. !1M
Chillicblt~~e 47, At~ 46
Cin. Aiken Cin. HU&amp;br• 4~

'

o...on

. \

11
24
266 . ll

~lJUbum"f.\u·i~ ::li1 ~

.1127321

7

)6

. Canton M..:Kiftley ~7. MIWilloo J~k·

Coloradll S1. 93. San Oit:.o St. 90
Fm• St. 78. Air Fon:e W
Hawaii 71. W~lnJ j8
·
Idaho Sl.-'19. ~mmcnto S1. 43 .
· Lo,ul• Marymounl f»'t, Pqlpmlinc 60
MQQ~ana 73. E WuhiAJIOft 69
N. Ati.... K), W..... Sl. 7)
So. 116. Sllllllonl77
l'll:flls: 7• • ~-·St. .17
l'loo!!..t Sl, 76, Sl. 69
Sad1Jiea091 . Panlaod 76

63

Anru• .~4. New Bremen 4'..1
•
Aurum !l:'i•.1\.'tTy ~
Bedfunl Ht1 . Chonel 6\1, Ch'ardon
Notm Oamc.Cadk.'tlnlll 1..&lt;11in 37
Bellevue 70. ClyW 61
Brcck&amp;vilk: 6~. N. Royuhon ~
Bri5lUol K!l, A1hlnbulo Sl. John 40
Bryan '611, Wayae ~ ~
Buckeye Ccalrul 42. Hurew..:ll·
Loudon41
Buffalo {W.VaJ6~. Cool Grove :'il
Canton Heritage Chr. 74. Lulhmn E.

&lt;!liliramia 73. (llietttln 62
· Coktn¥to"7o, town S1 . 45

,

Vinlon Cu. H6, Por'INII)I)Uih 7K
. W: JdfcrJnn ~B. LAkewood ,W
Warren Ke11ne~ y ~~~ - Mi~rul RidJ,Il

~·, '

79 ·

·'lOT)

•·

Saturday's action

.
FerWett
Boiae St. ~~. ~ S7 .
Cui St.•f'UJ!crton 8:2, Cui Pui)'·SLO

~

•

• Aknm S1.V·St.M S9. Akron BUt:htl!l

Utah HI . Tcll.llll Otris ~iaa 77

~

'4

H ....

••7110343

92.1 '-.

'8l9

''

· Tuslnw 61. !ndhui Val. ~!I
llniwnily ~7. L.iu.&lt;~ly ~0
.
Upper Sciuto Vul. H). Mohawk 70
Vidlty Welte! (W.Va.) 714'. Frnn1iCr

Mo.ysvillt 61, W. Muskingum :'i8
M~din a 69. S1rongsvill e 59
Menlor 66, Parma Val. Fo~gc W
Menlor Lilke C:llh 6~ . Elyria Ca1h.

Akron St. V-SI.M M . Aleron Garfield

.Ohio U.S. boys' sc:ores

101140

~

Tol. Bowsher 72. Sw;mlon 66
Tol. C;~lltl)li..: 78, S1U11Jusky 60
Tol. S1. Francis 73, Fn:mont' Ron 69
To\. Waite~. Libt:ny Ccmer4:'i
.: . Tme.b C~n1. C:.l~. 7S, Sundully 60
• Toronto ~7, Bridgq;oo 43
•
Trotwood Modi-on 10~ . Sroiei~licl~

Chri stian )4

M t.: Kinl~y

WllmiiiJIOO, Ohio 87, Midway 61

~

~

Akron Hoban 61 , C11n1un
~8

Setoq Hill64, Nocre On~. Ohiu !16

72(0T)

.

JO

NM....rtma pt.j
Adri•71. Bluffiun67
Ccnl. St., Ohio 72. MK:h.· Oearhorn

..........

Soulhml n. TcADI Sou.... 72
Srephcn F. Au11in Ill. TeKIIII· Snn

Abon Ellec 62, Akron Elms 59
Akron Fires10ne 64, Cnn10n Herilnge

WausCoh 47, Ol!lta44
Weir (W.Va.) 72, ~ceubenvill~ Cach.
62 •
.
Wh"leubura: !18. Or~ensboro Day

..
Relef'A:

Saturday's acilon
Akron Covenlry 64, Moglldore 4!1

Lorain Cmh. 84, Open Door :n
LmUn KinJ 55. Vermilion 42
. Maditon !'i8, Ocncv~t 42
Marion Calh. ~5. MIITliAotha Chr. 48
Million Pleasant 5~. Nonhmor JO
Marlinglon 67, Canton South 52
Martins Ferry 60, John Marshnll 50
MnssiUon Jackson 57, Allinnce 4J
Maumee !'il , Clc. Sr. Joseph .19
Maumee Vai. Coum ry Oay 4H. Tot.

Bnldwi•Wnlllfi."t 7~. Heldclbi!t'g JH
Cari1al66, MuskiiiJUm ~2 ·
Hiram 64, MarieiiD 62
Mounl Union 79, Olterb!:in 71
Ohio ·Nofthem 6~. John Carroll M

Tulsq 6:\. Tcus-EJ hlo ~2

2. Old Dominion tl) .. :. 14.1 I,C)9l
2
. J.SranfonlCI).............. tR-1 91L 3

•

.

l6

42

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

'

tN .C) ~)

COTI
.
.
Winenber&amp; :'i~ . Wooster 37

City tw, O.knJo St 63

Antonio IM (Dn

. tMm .
ll:l.o:I fla, Will
. · l Conna.1i~ut (~8, ...... 16-0 1,044
I

.

, OhiD We~lcyan 64, CaM:

can71
'
· ,,
SW TeJWSt.7!1, Snm Hou11ooSc.W
Southern Meth. 7:'i. BriJham Youna

buketball poll,

wich firlt-phlili:t votct laJartnthescs.
m:ordl rtuo.&amp;h Jaa. 19, tot poi••~
on 25 point~ lor a first-fllace va~~ daraup
one poi• for a l."th-pl.ce vote _. hut

i

411.3111147

The Top 2.~ "'""' in 1k Asloo.ialol!
WOIIICIIt't ~OJiep

6nriham !16, Oberlil 40

SW L.ooi.dalll H. Tei•·Paft.i A~i-

college poll

.05Uss

Burk.e aid. "I didn't mention body
contact. "
There w¥ one repon that Burke
had told the .tearns he wanted more
hitting. But the only check being
thrown around Saturday night was
the $250,000 prize to be· shared hy
the winninp; ream. There were a total
of two penalties called, both for
booking.
·
: "Brian Burke didn 't say anything
a~t body contact," said Philadelphia Flyers defenseman Paul Coffey.
Six goals were scored in the first
ooriod and a record 10 in the second.

laneJvillc :'14, o.t Hill (Va.) Acndemy48

.....,.~(01)

Partn.1 V&lt;~l. Ftq.e S4. Lakewood 47
Palrick Henry 73, W~lllOI't' 4R
Petlisvillc 64, Ev~rgrnon 45
Porumoulh Clay 7K, Ponsmuuth
Notre O:une41
Portsmouth E. 7!1, OUIIicoche Union•
· lo56
Pymaluning ·val. 80, Fairport Horbor
67
Rivcnillc: ~2. Paine.ville H~y 44
'Rocky River 7J. Rocky Rivtr Luthef-·
an W. 61
Root:nown 7!1. Windhnm l4
Rus~ell {Ky.)64,1ronton !i8
. S. Cenuul70, Plymouth :'i6
Shndysidc 67, Cnmeron (W.Va.) 5 ~
Shnker His. 67, Wamnnille H11. 60
Solon ~7. Brush ' '
Soorhing1on 59, Lords town 45
Sparta Highland 69. N. U.nion 31
SpriRJboro 70, Waynetvilli! :'0
SprinJ,fteld Local 62. lliekaon Millon
S4
S1. John nt Prospect Hall (Md.) 70,
Col. Independence 50
.
Stow Walsh Jesuit R3, Kent R~ll

70

NorUoC..c.nr'........
Alli!ahmy ~I. Dcnilon 15
·

'

(OT)

71

Ohio Dominican 66, nmn :'18
RIO GRANDE 94, Malo01t 611
Shnwnee St. 69, Andlay $7
U"""" 84. Ccdonoil~ C.lleF 67
Mldw,.om CeltiJII&lt; c.nr.......
Bu1icr 11, Wri&amp;hl St. 46
Younpown St. 16. Buffalo 74

Hoo11on 71. Dehul 76
l..:amar «H, J"'bonv,ilk!: R3
New Muico 69, Rk~ 61
Oklilhoma 84. Bay I"' 6~
OktatoomaSI. 73. UNLV ~
'Pralrit Vic=w'IU . Ak"tWWI S1. R0

Tuesday'spmeo

Pros'

.

Walsh

•

,•

Sedtle nt N!e.W Hltgklnt.l 'p.m.
Atltmln :u Rkhmoltl.l 7 p.m.

:
••

6l

WiL'hiiA St, 7~. SW MiSIOUI'I Sl. 'fit
Wis.-Mitw ..keo 61. WriJhl 51. 60
WiicQtUin 64, Penn St 4.~
Youn~I()Wft ~t. 70, Sienn M .

.

7~ .

MmuM· V«non bltwarene

'

''

N. luwa7rJ. S. Illinois 11
Nebraska 76, Mtuoori !l:t •
PunJut 70, lncliDRU ;'i;\
TillDI Ta:h 73, Kanw Si, 64
.
Toledo M!l. Cc.l. Mi..:hipn ~I '!
Vuiparaiso 61 . Cent Co~kr.tt~SI.

.~

New Enota..r 90. Ri,h....,.. i6
COLI,JMBUS 107. Atinnta 64
c.~ 71. Pmland 60
Seaul&amp;! 9~ . Son JOU: 74
1,
• j

'-

.

N. College Hill 80, Cincinnali Cou'n11} Day 61
N, Olmsted :'i7, Lorain Midview 42
Nc:wbul')' 4~. Bloomfield J0
'
Northmor 6S, Ridgedialc S8
Northwest .SO, Lemon Monroe 38
Norwalk 65 . Ec&amp;son 63
Norwood Rapt 71 , Co'lliil&amp;ron (K)'.I
Latin :'i2
·
Onl Hill 7,1, Ro..:k Hill62
Olmsl~ Fnllll 78, B&lt;~y Village 4R
Onawa Ghmdorf 59, Ken1on 50 (0T)
Painc::s.l'illc: Riverside 52. Painesville
Harvey44
Pfd.way 71 , Convoy Cremicw 67

s·4K

•

Mllf'll'ldte: 69. St. louis 48
,f •
Miami, Ohio 78, OHIO 6.1
MichiJan 51. 7S, NOflhWttik.'m 62
MimiCSOtn 73. Ohio Sl. 67

·•

'

Mld.otoloc.ftr....,..

Ke,. 76, W. Michipn 61

Sunr!ay'i scores.

*

' 01110 77, MiamU~ , ,

. ' Taloolo 92. CO..o:MI&lt;hljan 61· .

t.oyota, Ill. 611, Cleveland So. 66

WEST!RN DIVISION
• II&amp;
.
»: " Ed. Gil
Cotonwk&gt; ............... 20 II .64~

,. 8DnJose .................l4 14
SelJitle .................... l4 14
; Portland ...................11 21
~r.·clincbed ~Onrtrence til.,

_..~._,

c ..;...,., 611. aruc~~e, :111
·
Otor&amp;l WMhinaton S9, Dnycon ~K ·
.111.-c.\ie~~~o 66. Detroil.$3
• lndi"" St. 76. Drake 64

n. Richmo~ .......... ,•.. U 16 .~ • 10~
Atla•na ................... ll. 17 J9)
0
New EnJioad ......... IO 19 . J4~ 14~

..

...

i11H Sl. .10. Aklon ~1·.

Akron 83. Ball So ..68
Bull'alo 9:\, W.lllmoi•B.~ . ·
Butler SO. Wi1.-Gteen Bay 43
Cinchuwi 92, Art;~ ~7

Iii

I. ll£L

•

MW~

EASTERN DIVISION

9

OftiotLolHIMetcyhunr 79, A~l..t ~9 .i

Tennessee St Kl . Au~tia Pc~y 70
TeM.·ChDIIUOOOJU 74. Dilvidwn 63
Tulane 76, ~ AoriW 62 l
VMI,K6. Cirlldel '76 ,
, ,.
Vandcrttik 67. MiiSiolPf'i M tWoiTord 71. tc.int. 'fenn. 70 · .

•.,:' ABL stanillngs
.

'

.

Tuesd1y'spma

'

Allanlll: 10
•
Wuhlngcnn 88, Xavier 60 ·
Virginia T~h IOl Dayton 9R 12 OT)
Georg~

Southern Mlu. 74, Ala.·BirmiN:h;im

Slecson 7!1. Mtri:l..,. 61

New York 110 Cbi"''lo.l p.m.

Saturday's action

.

SE Mi11ouri 78, Middle Tenn. '76

Minnesota a1 TOI'OINo, 7 p.m.
Washin11on!l' ~lando. 7:3Crp.m. .
1
Allanln • Mllmt. 7:30p.m.
HOWifoh Di Chclrtoctc, 7 : ~ p.m.

I

.

.
'

~~

· l~ltftll a1 Milwaukee, s::-o p.m.
L.~. Clipper!!. at Ponlanc.l, IG p.m.
DaiiM ul Golden ~All!, 10:30 Jtm.

'

..

. Samfonl8),Ceaoe-~
,'
··
South AklbamD. 61. 'W. KenhK:ky 66
~Soanb Carolina ~l. Oeuraia n '

~

Vanc:ooverntSean~IOp. ~

'I

~

.

NE lllinois8S, Troy St 82
New Orleans 10, Arbnou Sl, 60
Nidtolls Sl. 83. NE U.lsi.-a76
NOI11t Coroti101 73, Oeu'pa Te&lt;h !10
Old Dominioall. Va. Com· mon~
wakh~
.
•
'~·
• RlldiO&lt;d 1i. N.C.-Oriionsboim'~8 .
Rhode hlrlld 7~. Vkaiola Te&lt;h ll
~ . C'"'11ina;so. 79. a.o..,no-&lt;;ooknmn•
69 . • .
.

M

DatloooiLA . ........_4,J0p.m.
New lCncy. ~. 9 p.m.
CLEV~D M Uoob. 9 p.m.
· Detroit 01 Phocnia, 9 p.m.

"

'I

'~

Ohio women's
coUege sc:ores

N.O.-WIImiftJfon 61 , James Madison

~

Ponland 1111. Uioh 96

.
,!J'~tl . . . . . . •.·.
'J
Wuh!:'.f:' • New Yurk, I p.m. ·~
','-' Milw
atPhilldclphia.: I p.m: '
.. 'I
. ·Owlotte at AllllniA. I :p.m.
San Afttonio at MinneJQ~a. ~ : 30 p.m.

..

~.C.-Asheville 84. Clwltlton Sout'-

em71

lndiaa Ill, Pblladolpbi.t 107
HOUIIOft 102. OiQJO"'
v....... tQO. t...mo92
ctEVELAND 107, L.A. Cli~ IOl
12011

I

Miaml68, ·Georaet:own 6~ (OTI
Mcnhead St. 71 Tenn1Martin 62
Moqan St. 77. !»taw... So. 60
Mwray St 60, E. keoiUCky ~9
!1. CIIOiioo A&amp;T 79. Florida AolM

.
, ·

lloltao 107, tieni&lt;ttOC

Nen-conf'ertn« pl•y

Adrian 77, Defiance 61
'l1tomal M~ 8:2. Blumon 67
Wah. &amp; .kff. 61, Kenyon !13
Wilmington, Ohio I03, Circleville
Bible48
· YouagsmwnSr. 7D, Siena6.1

•
,
MARSHALL 96, w, Clli'Uiina 76
McNeese St. tf7, NW LouiAGfll 11

~8

Miooeiota 108, Golden Stile?)

OW.COIIIt~

Baldwin-Wallace 92. Hcicklbi!t'g ~8
JohnCmoll81 . Ohill Nonhero 7~
Marien a 86, Hiram Col. H:'i
Moun! Union 81, Ot:terbcin 72
Mustingum :'i5. C11pilal ~I

Howald 86, M~. -E. Shore 8)
Jackson Sa. 74, GramblinJ St. 6!1
Ja~:ksonville St. 68. SE Luuisiunq 66
Kcoo...-ty77. i\ubwni ~)
Liberty 10. WiniJwor 48
Louisiana Tech 61. Ark.-Uule Rode.

6

..-•:'~

Nurda Cout Conltrtnce
Cil.IC Reserve 71. Ohio W~slcyan 64
Denison 9J. Alk&amp;heny 67
~hom 94, Oberlin 87
Will~nber&amp; 66, Wooster !i3

tionniJS

Wuhl- 112, Botlon 106

.'

M&amp;d-Ottio Conlennre
Ci!dai'YIIIi! 88., Shdwllfe Sr. 1!1
Finella)' 79, Millone 68
Mount Vernon Nazarene 71 , Ohio
Dominican ftJ
Tit'fio RO, Walsh 76
lkbun.1 RO, RIO GRANDE 71

COIW.al Carolina n . Md.-BahinMft
•
.'
Coli. or Cllarlnton 78.· Aa. lnternn·

a..un. Now 1.... 92
Atlanla 94. Milwaukec.7 7

I

~9

MkM:ontiMnl Contft'tnct
l..oyoln. Ill. 68. ClcvelruwJ St. 66
Wi1. Milwauk= 61. Wrishl Sl. 60

CouJKy !18 '

Saturday'•-

'

i

..

defeat

never been rriore ihan 14 scored in
any game up until 1989.
"It's goinJ to be :wide-open," said
Florida goaltender John Vanbiesbrouck, who save up two Western
Confereiii'C goals on 12 shots in the
first period.
·
But is it going to be 'competitive?
That was what worried the NHL prio~ to Saturday night's . game. So
much so that Brian Burke, NHL vice
president in charge of hockey operations. gave both sides a pep talk.
"All I said was it was imponant
that the game be competitive," .

.

Pwbplc H11. 85, Nordoni11 79 (01)
70. Led&amp;....., ~
M:uiena 77. PartenburJ S. (W.Va.)
59 .
MariOn PkasMI 57, Mt. Gilead 4\J
MMsiiiDn 72, Mnnsfiekt ~9
MasliUon Tuslow 61 . Indian V.:~.l . 5S
McNicholas 79, Ripley {Ind.) 5~
Miami Vol. ~I . Cin. Seven Hills48
Monroeville 62. A~hlnnd Crestview

Cfdt:IA... I~
AlhbfMJ 93. Mm:yhurll 9f .

Cent. Flori&amp;. II~ . Oc«Jiu St. 61
Clemson :'i I. ·N:'Carolinn St. 42

.

'0

Madeira61 , OICA
Monstield Madison ~J. nrfin 43
Mt~a~tieid St. Pe1er'• 68, Tree o( Ure
Msp~wood

A-.tt
Oeorp: Washi~t~ton :')9, Dayton 3R

t2011
..
.
'
c.an.-1161 . Aorida Allanti\! :'i~

H

r.dfltlH¥hlon
S&lt;anle .................... lll II .718
LA. l...atert ............ 28 12 .100
Port~ ................. 22 17 : ~
Sat:ramento ........... .l6 24 .400
GoldenStMC ..... ,.. :.I!I 2:4 .394
L.A. Clippcn ........ .l4 23 .)78
POOenhr.:................. J4 2!1 J!i9

~6

4

. TT~

.M7

F1r Wnt
76, Nanh TuDI 68

S8turday'o ICtlon

SouOh
Alabama 51. 9~. Min . Valley St ~I

WFSTERN CONFERENCE
:iiaa Mldw. JI~
.
Ed. Iii
HOulton •..........•.••..JI

78(0T)

ton

c:ollege sc:ores

Wnaner 66, Roben Monis60

Loudon'llille 86, Danville • 2
Louisville (Ky.) 8:'1 , Wdl11on6!
Louisville (Ky.) Ballard 79, Omille

·

Ohio men's

- 9 0. -Collop78
No')' 60. t..rayonc ~5
New H_..,. n.Tow.., So. 71
Notre llanle 73, S)!ltUte $1
Rider '71, Moont St~ .wy·,,,Md. 62
St. - ...... ~- Fanhun 47
Sl. · · 60. Pi..boril! ~'
St.
Joseph's 66, Penn 61
Villono~a 79. Rutaen $6

,, _._

1
~

N~voda

'

LOyola. Md. 93, Ni.,... 86 ClOT) .

~0....... ........ ... )4

'

•

'*'

"''

.711

"II

No pmn lonJPt

Mason Bowling
League results

I

Ne-1¥ York .• ~ ..........l7

to.i•ville R~. Te•u78

, Fllirlei&amp;h Dh:kin100 82. 51. Fnmds.
N.Y.71
F1oridD St. 67, S.Oon Hall~
lono 81, Folrllold 70·
t.a Solta 79. Doqueo• n
LdiJ(179, Holy Crooo 7~ '

Gil

.711
,.. W.-hiDf,fOD ............lO 18 .526
t
OriMdo,.................. l6 19 .451
New Joney ..........:.to 26 .:m
ltolloa ...1............. . . ..9 'Z1 .231
l • Ploiladolploia ........... .8 JO .111

I.

Ra-tes of Taxadon lor 1996

l! .. fill

Milmi... .................2l! II

1

In purluanCe ollaw, l = n l E. FIMk, T~ ol Meigl ~· Ohio, In~~ IIIWiled Code No. 3:23.08 ol Stitt o1 Ohio, do henby give- o1
the IWM ..
. Tax Year ol 11188.
In dollltrund centa ol
vrwatlan.:
·

"He's a very progressive offen»ive cooch who has .a good track
record wherever he's been," general manager Bobby Beathard said at
an aflernoon news conference.
, Gilbride, 45, had been offensive
coordinator of the Jacksonvill~
Jagilars''the lost two ~ears. · He helped
develop quarterback Mark Bwnell,'
lind devised the gam~ plans fhat·
helped ihe Jaguars upset the Buffa1~ Billa and I:&gt;Cnyer Bfoncos en ro11t~
'(Results as of Jan. 9)
to the AFC championship game,
~e- Thursday Night Mixed
where Jacksonville lost to Jl,lew EngTeam standinp- D&amp;G Motors
land.
'
. (76-6.Q), Pilot Wheels (77·64), M~
·· Gilbride beai out Carolina Pan· , AIIICk (70..66), Piloi.Wheels (58-46)
therl defenai¥6 COOrdinator Vic Fan- and Manley's Recycling (54-82)
,
Team !Jish Hriel- M~~ Attack
sio lUid former New Orleans SainiS.
cqach1ii"MQnlforthtjob. Gilbride (1870
·
:
·· . •
al~q
Qlen a leading candidate for
. ·l'eem high came - Mac At~k
the St. Louis Rams' job.
. (655) ··
·
. ~
"If 1 bad 10 lo~e ·one of them I
'• · lll
Men ·
lho!aJhlthe One Who would hun the .
.llldiWiiaal hiJh -.Ia -Roger
inc* ended up l;r.'inJ Kevin," Beal· Marlley, {559) BOlt Chuck Burton
Unl Uid.
(523)
.
Gilbride was once best-known for
~1'idulltiP pme- Manley.
paill&amp; punc;hed by Buddy Ryan 01 (202) !lftCI Burtop and Manley (tied at•
thuideline of a Mondly night Janie 192)
. .
Ia 1993 when the two were with ihe
w- ·
1111111 Oilllll'l: Ryan was critical of
)udhld · ' 111P
Rox~
ruii--llloot. oll'u• . 111111 a.-IJ (47~&gt; *'K! ·~ Wi. .

.•

A-DI.W..

l

the Jaguars into a playoff team in)ust
their second season.
·Gilbride.'s first head coaching job
was with his alma mater, Southern
Connecticut State, where he compiled a 35-14-2 record from 1980..84.
He was the Oilers' offensive coordinator from 1989-92 and assistant
head coach/offense in 1993-94.
Ros~. the only coach to lead the
Chargers to the Super Bowl,
resigned Jan. 3 because of differences
·
.
. with Beathard.
.'

..

EASTERN CONFERENCE

t

r-· .

Xavter, Obio 6R;Templc 64 (O'T)
Sou.._

Comcll62. C91UmbiD 46
Oelawmre 65. Mline 62
Ort~l64, HoflfTa 61

-.:
.I

S-2 run that gave them a 65-57 lead
· .. ·North .Carolina St. 42
with 1:54left: Paul Pierce and Raef
At Clemson, S.C., Terrell McinLaFrentz eai:h had 14 points for IYf\' scored 16 points a' the Ti)!ers~
Kansas, which was 18-of-19 from (16-1, 5-0 ACC) won their 12th! ·
the free throw line, including 8-of-8 straight.
I
in the final 53 seconds. Rashamel
No. 4 Cincinnati 92..
I
Jones had 21 points for the Huskies
Arkansas 57
(11 -4), who played without staners
At Cincinnati, Danny Fonson ·
Kirk King and Ricky Moore. They· had 27 poiniS and 18 rebounds as the
were decla,red ineligible-- pending · Be31'Cats (12-3) handed coach Nolan I
clarification of an allegation of extra Richardson his worst loss in 12 sea- :
benefits received by the two.
sons at Arkansasc
:
No. 10 LouisviUe 85
No. 5 Kentucky 77
· l
No. 23 Texas 78 (OT)
Auburn 53
Eric Johnson barely beat the regAt Lexington, Ky., . Nazr
ulation buzzer )Nith his Jou!'h three· Mohammed had -II poillls and· a
pointer of the game, then made two · career-high ·14 rebounds as the Wildcrucial free throws with 23 seconds . caiS (16-2, 4-1 SEC) gave _coac~ l
left in ovenime for the Cardinals ( 15- Rick Piti~o his 200th victory in hisl j
I), who trailed by as many as 15 eighth season .
,
o
poiniS in the second half. Reggie
UCLA 84
:
Freeman had 34 points for thc'LongNo. 6 Arizona 78 (OT)
I
horns (9-5), who lost at home for the
At Los Angeles, Charles O'Banfir5t time this season.
non scored 24 poiniS, eight in over,No. 14 Xader 68
time when the Bruins ('IU-4, 5-1 Pac. Temple 64' (OT) :
· 10) made nine .Qf IOfree ihrow&amp;.11Je:
Gary Lumpkin, who missed the WildcaiS ( 10-4~ 3-2) lost both games •
final shot.Q[ regulation;.scored scv" in their trip to Los Angeles.
:
en of his 13 poiniS in ovenime for the
.
No. 7 MiDnesota 73
I
Musketeers (12-2, 3-1 Allantic IOi.
. ·
Ohio SL 67 ·
Rasheed Brokenborough had 15
At Columbus, Ohio, Eric Harris
points for the Owls (8-5, 2-2), who scored 16 pain~ and Sam Jacobson ·
were trying to complete a road added· 14 for tbe Golden Gophers 1
sweep of the city's teams as they beat '( 16-2, 5-1 Big Ten).
:
Cincinnati on Thursday night. · · ·
Colondo 70
,
No. 18 Michigan 79
No. li Iowa SL 45
:
At Boulder, Colo., Chauncey
Iowa 71
Louis Bullock had 19 points and Billups had 17 poiniS for the Buf•
Brandun Hughes added 18 for the faloes (14-3, 5-0 Big 12); who.won
Wolverines ( 13-4•. 4-2 Big Ten), their seventh straight The Cyclones
who led over the game's final 10 (11-3, 2'2)-played the wh11le game,.
minutes. Andre Woolridge hllj! 25 without injured leading scorer Dedric 1
points for the visiting Hawkeyes (14- Willoughby and most of the game ;
4, 5-1), ~ho had eight-game win- · without coach Tim Flovd.
:
ning streak' snapped and had won 11
No 9 Utab 81 •
I
or 14.
Texas Christian 77
Saturday's acdon
At Fon Wonh, Texas, Keith Van
NO. 3 Clemson Sl
Horn had 23 poiniS'and 13 rebounds .
forthe Utes ~ 12-2 4-0'1Y&amp;;1 ·

an

third-highest in all-star hillllcy,
topped only by the 22 scared al lhe
1993 game and the 19 in 1990. Sill
of the nine hat tricks scored in allstar competition have come in the
nineties.
"It's tough being a target, but you
don't expect any protection." said
New Jersey's Martin Brodeur, who
gave up four goals on 13 shols&lt;in the
Eastern net.
.
· Saturday night's game followed a
trend that has seen I 17 goals scored
in seven games in the nineties, an
average of 17 a game. There had

MK:htpn 79, Jowa71

Cot,.. 116. Army 69

. "' NBA standiDgs

~
:I'

.

Boston U. 69. Vermo~~t68
81'0Wft 61, Ya&amp;e ~

B&lt;lsketba!l

A
.,

l

,

'I'M NHL likes its •ll·SIM games
competitive, but not 10 much 10 that
players JCI hurt.
So they have evolved into highscoring affairs with lots of skatins
and lkilla displ1yed, and no checlting and little defense. Sarurday night,
10 different players SCtlrN. six of
them with multiple-point games including the hat tricks by Montleal's Mark Recchi for the East and
San Jose's Owen Nolan for the
West. Thiny-one of the 40 skaters
had at least one shot on net. ·
The 18-goal splurge . was the

11~7

I

Scoreboard

l

dering 42 poiniS and 646 yards to
By DENNIS GEORGATOS
Navy in an Aloha Bowl loss.
BERKELEY, Calif. (AP)
Bul Mariucci said it would be a ·
Moving quickly to fill the vacancy
mistake
to judge Holmoe dn last sealeft by Steve Mariucci 's depanure
for the San Francisco 49ers, Cali- s~n 's defensive results, considering
fornia promoted his defensive coor- Cal's defense was hit by key injuries
dinator, Tom Hal moe, to head coach and was forced to start five freshmen
In Top 25 college basketball,
.
for most of the campaign.
on Saiurday.
Holmoe, 36, a former NFL defen"I don' t have any reservations
sive back who played on three Super
about
the guy," Mariucci said. "'PeoBowl-winning teams with the 49ers.
is Cal's founh coach in six years. It' ple talk about our defense, but if it
free throws with 17 seconds left to t"'
is his first head coaching assignment. was anyone else (as coordinatoE), it By The Associated Pre11
Laron Profit's buzzer-beating Ute·score.
Mariucci resigned Thursday after would have been 0-ll. We had more
three-pointer
ga~e Maryland its
That 5et the stage for Profi~ a 31 .3
leading the Golden Bears to 6-6 youngsters than JC teams. Tom was
biggest
victory
and
left
Kansas
all
percent
from three-point range who
record in his only season at the steady every week. He never lost his
alone.
had
missed
ll of his firSt 15 shots
school before moving to the 49ers, composure. I admired his
Sunday began with two unde- from the field on Sunday.
demeanor.'
replacing George Seifen.
feated
Division I teams - top"Thi~ is what it's all about, being
Before
leaving.
Mariucci
Kasser was more interested in ranked Kansas and No. 2 Wake For- in a big-time game .and having the
endorsed Holmoe as his successor at maintaining s()mc continuity and
est The Ja,yhawks started shakily but ·opportunity til play big-time oppoCal.
wtth the Feb. 5 letter of intent dead- rallied to take.care or themselves in . neniS and big-time players," said
Athletic director John Kasser, lint&gt;IOoiiJing for recruits, also wantwanting a replacement in " place ed to rnake sure the school had its a 7:3-65 victory over Connecticut. . Profit, viho finisl!ed with II poiniS.
Wake Forest ·staned slowly,
Keith Booth drove the baseline,
quickly to preserve the school'~' new heaq coach in place. ·
recovered,
then
fell
victim
to
Profit's
was
cut off by Ricky .-Peral as the
recruiting season, settled . on his
·game-winner
in
Maryland's
54-51
clock wound down to about four sec'
Holmoo, Brigha~ YQung's stan.
choice after a. series of interviews
victory
that
knocked
the
Demon
onds, llut he kicked the' ball out to a
ing
cornerback
from
1980
to
1982,
over tlie past three days. .
Deacons
from
the
ranks
of
the
wide-o~n Profit who ended Wake
· "Sometimes you find all the was a founh-round pick of the 49ers
unbeaten.
.
Forest's
25,game winning streak at ·
qualities you _really admire in one in 1983 and went on to play seven
"Something
like
this
cenainly
has
home.
person and that's why I feel so com- Y~.ars for San Francisco. He waS a
"(Booth) was doing his thing,"
. fonable in announcing we have member of Super Bowl winning the. ability to bring you back to center,
back
to
eanh."
Wake
Forest
Profit
said of the last play. "I was
teams
in
1984,
'88
and
'89.
selected Tom Holmoe as our new
coach
Dave
Odom
said.
"If
that
is
thinking,
'Give me the ball or shoot
football coach," Kasser said. "He
He returned to BYU to work as a what happens, then it was a good it. Let's win this game."'
has a great football mind, high ener- graduate assistant coach under
loss. We have to make it a good
Sarunas Jasikevicius led Mary. gy level, a positive outlook on life.
LaVell Edwards in 199(,) and two loss."
land with 19 points, while Duncan
He's a great recruiter. Nobody can
years later moved to Stanford, where
It was defini!ely a good win. for had his 23rd straig!lLdQuble-double
match his integrity and he'll be a he coached the secondary under his
the lith-ranked Terrapins, who were with 26 poiniS and 13 rebounds. He
first-class representative of the Uniformer 49ers.coach, Bill WalSh.
picked next-to-last in the nine-team also blocked nine shi)ts.
versi.ty of California."
Atlantic Coast Conference's preseaThe Demon Deacons. the ACC's
. Holmoe signed a five-year conIn 1994, Holmoe moved to the son poll .
lop shooting team, finished 3-of-19
tract which will extend through the - pro ranks, spending two years coach"I don't think people will really fr.om three-point range.
2001 season. He said he'll continue ing the 49ers defensive backs under have confidence in this team all
"Usually we can make seven or
running the West Coast offense that Seifert before going to Cal last year year," Profit said. "The key thing is eight out of 19 with our eyes
Mariucci installed with great success as Mariucci 's delensive coordinaior. we realize that and we're not threat- · closed," Odom said. "It didn't hapat Cal last season.
. Walsh and Edwards said they ened by that at all . We're ·secure in pen today. We didn't shoot the ball,
"i'm excited about the challenge
the fact that we know we're a good I don 'I know what else you can say."
and.feel extremely confident that I believe Holrnoc will be a successful basketball team. If we approach the
In other-games involving ranked .
can .continue to build on the founda- head coach.
game the right way, it.docsn 't really teams on Su.nday, it was: No. I 0
tion that we've started hece at Cal
"This is a tremendous choice for matte! what people think."
Louisville 85, No. 23 Texas 78; No.
this past year," Holmoc said. "I the University of California ... He'll
The Terrapins ( 15-2, 5-1) led by
14 Xavier, Ohio, 68, Temple 64; and
ahsolutely believe we can build a · be a great asset," Walsh said.
as many as 19 point.' in the first half, No. 18 Michigan 79, Iowa 71.
· consistent winner and do it with stubut that was gone when Wake ·ForSunday's acdon
dent-athletes who want to excel not
Added Edwards: "He:s' very . est ( 13-1, 5-1) started the second half
No. 1 Kansas 73
just on the football field but also in competitive. He knows the game. with a 16-0 run.
Connecticut 65
the class room."
He's great with people, whether it be
Maryland seemed to take control
The Jayhawks (18.0) trailed 23Holmoe did come in for some players, coaches administrators or again when a 9-2 run gave it a~ 1-44 7 seven minutes iQtO the game at the
criticism as coordinator of a defense alumni, and he's very metK:ulous. He lead w\th 2:22 remaining. But Jerry Hanford Civic Center and didn't
that gave up 5,063 yards, ranking . just has a lot .of traits which will
Braswell hit a three-pointer and Tim have control until reserve guard BilIOSth (out of Ill Division 1-A pro- make him successful."
Duncan hit t bank shot and then two ly Thomas !cored all the points in an
grams) in the nation before surrcn'

! •

8J KEN RAPPOPORT

..,

The Dally Sentinel• Page &amp;

Eastern Conference stars tland ·West crew

~•.a.nu.y 20, 1187

Fort Frye boys outlast Meigs SQ-56
.

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

\

in the NHL All-star Game,

, ~_4 !L

.

.

.~20,1117

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~eruvian

government beams
messages directly ·t o hostages

•

Ban on TV coverage
shifted view of trial

•••
•

.•••

By DINNIS ANDIR80N

'-nocllil d Pun WIR r

LOS ANGELES- There's '-n no OJ. TV this lime around.
LIMA. Peru (AP) - The 73 where the hostages have been held Hashimoto, meanwhile, said he
OJ. Simp1011's wrongful-death trial is almost over, and none of it was
· 'host~ges held for more than a month since Dec. 17, told them to tune into thinks the · standoff has regressed,
televised. Not even when be tool: lhe witftess stand.
,,
by Thpac Amaru rebels will be able a number of radio stations carrying because the rebels again are insisting
. The much shorter sequel to his criminal trial was in many ways its ·
on their original demand that hun·
to hear daily messages and music in the programming.
antithesis, especially with the judge's ban on camerfS in~ cotm.room:
A
hostage
was
seen
in
the
yard
of
dreds of jailed comrades be freed.
special radio broadcaSts beginning
It prompled hand-wringing among the cro":d '!'-t could~ t get tiS daithe walled compound on Sunday,
"(The rebels) once softened their
this afternoon, the Red Cross said.
ly O.J. fix. Others saw it u a balm for the patl&lt;ln s collecuve an~.
.
1be broadcasts appear to be part removing batteries from cars '!rapped· demand to the improvement of their
Pulling the plug on TV cameras this time around? Psychologtst Dr.
of a government program announced there when the residence was comrades' prison conditions, but have
Joyce Brothers found it a hopeful sign for the O.J.-obsessed.
last weeki to provide "a direct net· stormed, possibly to supply power for returned to their on,sinal position," he
"There were people who overdosed," Brothers Said of the first trial,
'said in Tokyo.
work of communication and direct the broadcasts.
in which Simpson was acquitted of murder. "The' people who overdosed·
· Electricity w!lS cut to the residence
Hashimoto was referring to a
specialized assistance" to the
put their lives on hold. ... ,It's very healthy for them to not pay attention.'.' ·
the
takeover,
but
there
are
statement
by rebel leader Nestor
soon
after
hostages while they wait out their
From doctors to radio talk show hosts, IICtors and fans to hair stylists,
believed to bc.battery-operated radios · Cerpa, who said Saturday there can
·
·
captivity.
everyone had an opinion on the trial t1w apin will 'ask j~ to decide
be no talks until the government
A Red Cross worker who entered inside.
whether Simpson killed his cx•wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend.
,
Japanese Prime Minister Ryutaro agrees to discuss sucb a release. Presthe Japanese ambassador's residence,
Ronald Goldman.
.
'i
Aitor Mark Hamill, best known as Luke Skywadl:er of the "Star Wars"
1
films, made the pilgrimage to Santa Monica, where he lined up to II); for . ..
a seat in court by lottery, which.he won.
.
\'
·., ·
Late last year, as he took stock of the crowd outside "Camp OJ. By '
the Sea,'' he said, "I look at all these people, and I want to say 'Hey, I'm · .
released late Saturday, depicted him McBride said. Authorities still con- felled by a gunshot.
By MICHELLE DeARMOND
The
(New
York)
Daily
News
sider
robbery
the
probable
motive.
not one of them!" For a while, though, he W!IS another face in the cour- • ·
as
a
white
man,
25
to
32
years
old,
Aeeoi:lated Preas Writer
reported
t!&gt;day
that
Cosby
may
have
.
·
"We've
received
numerous
calls
!house
crowd.
.
'
LOS ANGELES - Ennis Cosby of ~verage height and weight wear·
'offered
his
killer
a
cigarette.
Cosby,
since
the
composite
was
relel!Sed.''
John Kobydt, host of a radio talk show on ~-AM in Los Angel~s.
was buried at his family's Massa- ing a light-colored knit cap.
I
Police also were seeking a possi· Officer Vincent Aguirre said Sunday. 27, had a blue pack of cigarettes in
misses Simpson TV and laments the no-TV ~ling .
.
·.•~, : ·
chusetts estate as police fielded tips
his
right
hand,
and
detectives
specuKCBS-TV reponed late Sunday
"The entertainment part of the murder tnal has been tilken aw.\'f•
received after releasing sketches of a ble witness, described as a white man
I
late
that.
he
may
have
thought
the
that
Cosby's
death
was
"swift
and
Kobylt
said "It sucked a lot of personality out of the second tri~l/' · .
in
his
late
20s
or
early
30s
with
a
\
suspect and a possible witness in his
.
Science fiction author William F. Wu, who.left Simpson 'IV ~ge
mustache and goatee. He may have instantly lethal." Quoting unidenti - stranger who approached him W!lS a
slaying.
.
on continuously at his home in lhe remote desert community of El M1rage,
1be only son of entertainer Bill been driving a blue hatchback car fied pollee sow;ces, the ·station repon- homeless person looking 'for a cigarette
or
some
change,
the
News
said.
ed
that
Cosby
was
surprised
and
with
out-of-state
license
plates.
.
felt
powerless this time around.
·
Cosby was shot in .the head early
Meanwhile,
Cosby's
parents
and
unable
to
defend
himself.
He
·was
"The
decision
of
others
to
control
the
information
left
me
helpless,"
Police
don't
know
i
fthere
is
more
Thursday as he changed a tire along
held.
a
private
service
and
four
sisters
standing
and
still
gripping
a
piece
of
said
Wu,
who
has
a
doctorate
in
American
culture.
"Besides,
I'm
a life- .
than
one
s~spect
and
if
anything
was
a West Los Angeles road.
burial
on
the
extensive
family
estate
paper
in
his
right
hand
when
pe
w~s
long football fan."
··
·
\ •
A description of the suspect, taken from Cosby's car, Cmdr. Tim
in Shelburne, Mass. Before police • · . Before Simpson was acquitted of murder in October 1995, the viclil\'s' '
bloc.ked the road to. the property,
relatives sued him in civil court.
.
·
. ·~ :
flowers were delivered to the home,
Alternative media rushed to fill the void created by Judge Hiroshi
and a man tacked a large sign that
Fujisaki's camera ban. TheE! Entertainment Television cable network ush- :
read "Hello Friend" to a post inside
wonh
to
Buckeye
Rural
Electric
ercd in a daily re-creation of the civil doings, with actors filling in for the .
The following land transfers were
Right of way, Howard C. and
·the front gate.
·
Cooperative,
Columbia;
real life players.
·
:
posted recently in the office of Meigs Ftances K. Sharp to TPRSD;
Through a spokesman, the Cosby
Deed,
Siivie
R.
and
Nancy
Snyder,·
The
cable
network's
ratings
tripled
in
the
time
slot,
said
John
Rieber,
County R~corder Emmogene HamilRight of way,, Howard C. and
Diana S. and Charles 0. Kapp to state family thanked those who were helpvice president of programming atE!.
.
.
.
. .
Frances
K. Sharp to TPRSD;
. ton:
ing police.
of
Ohio,
Salisbury,
I
acre;
With
the
ban
on
cameras,
Ann
Marie
Palmer,
a
Phocmx
hatr
styhst,
Peed. Almena Bentz to ·James
Right of way, William and Ellen
The National Enquirer took up
Deed , Raben A. Ours to Ethel E.
. .
can't get enough OJ. news.
1bem and Diana Bauserman, Mid- Evans Cole to TPRSD;
Cosby's
challenge to the tabloid
Adkins,
Racine,
I
acre;
"I just can't find the information," she said. "There's a lot less to read
ddeport;
Right of way, Russell T. and
Constance L. Karschnik to Jon P. media to offer a reward for inform&amp;·
and I remain very interested 'in the legal aspects of the case."
Deed, Rodney E. Baker to Janice Brenda S. Day to TPRSD;
tion on his son's killer. The paper is
Howard Rosenberg, the Pulitzer Prize-winning television1columnist of
M. Baker, Olive, 20 acres;
Right of way, Alan G. and Joan Karschnik, Chester.
_)lffering a $100,000 reward, details of
the
Los Angeles Times, advocates .camcras in t!tc courtroom but thinks .
Deed, James · Roy Frecker, Brown to TPRSD;
which still need to be worked out
·
it's time to move on.
deceased, to Margie A Warner, MidRight of way, Shirley and Lamar
with the Cosby family and police.
dleport;
Lyons to TPRSD;
· Dtied. Board of County CommisRight of way, Tuppers Plains Volsioners to Consolidated Health Sys· · unteer Fire Department to TPRSD;
terns, Pomeroy, 2.175 acres;
Right of way, Ruth M. Witte;
, Right of way,' Stella L. Chevalier Mary E. Newwell andA1ice F.,Hashand James C. Tripplett to Tuppers man to TPRSD;
Right of way, Norman 0. and Vera
Plains Regional Sewer District; .
Right of way, Clarence and Geor· A. Weber to TPRSD;
gia' Barnett to TPRSD;
..
Right of way, Fclccia and Ronald
Rieht of way, Theodore and Mar· Grubb to TPRSD;
joric Connolly to TPRSD;
Right of way, Mary Jane Talbott to
Ri1htofway,}a 0 A. andDonnaL. TPRSD; .
Parker to TPRSD;
Deed, Roy L. and Patricia T.
Right of way, Athony M. and Kim · Holter to Alan and Edward Holter,
SaniJlson to tPRSD; - •
. · Ch~!C!r p~rfels;
,
, . . .
Right of l"ay, Norman 0 . and Vera : Deed, Roy L. and Patnct~ T.
We her to TPRSD;
•
Holter to Alan and Edward Holter,
Right of way. William £. Jr. an~ Chester par~els;
Cathy P. Mildren to TPRSD;
Deed, Rtchard A.. and Dorothy .
RiBht ofway, Joc D. and Laurie G. - Hageny to Brenda Ahcte and Jamce
Boyles to TPRSO;
Chnsttan , Salem;
..
Right of way. Clyde E. and Mar·
Deed. Robcn D. and' Patrtcta .·
lcnc Kuhn to TPRSD;
.
Williams to Thomas E. and BryanS.
Right' of way. Charles and Judy Molden, Rutland parcels;
Weber to f PRSD;
Deed. Raben R and Sharon L.
R.iFht bf way, Ronald R. II and Johnson, ~baron L. Brewerto John L.
· R.L. ~lampitttoTPJl,SD:
Jr. and Carul A. Brewer, Salem;
Deed, James B. and Debm L Neal
Righi of way, Doris A. Koenig to
TPRSD;
. .
·
· to James ll. Neal: Olive parcels;
Ri~ht of way. Wayne A. Carder to
Deed, ;.FLB Land Trust to Albert
TPR~D· .
C. an&lt;l Majoric E. Tromm, Bedford,
· R~h; of way, Dori s Davis to 9.504 acn s;
TPR!lD:
Deed. 11orace and Dorothy Karr to
Ri~ht of way. Jacqueline and Jack Cia&gt; ton, Chester. 12.0!0 acres;
Williqrn C. Gaddis to TPR.SD; .
Deed•. Phyldts R.. and Gerald ,F.
Rieht' of way. Ruby Mae Mtllcr to Crandall to Kathcnnc J. M•
TPR~'o ·
Rutland. I .3.632 acres;
Ri h't of way. Community
Deed, Geraldine B. Mon&lt;
Jmpr vement
Corporation
to Guy T. and. Sue Hayman, Olm
TPR~D: . ·
Rtght &lt;I way, Demsc K. an&lt;
Ri ·ht of way. Hazel Murphy to ry R. Ro,.:to Tuppers Plains-CI
TPR D·
.
Water Dis:rict. Bcdford. l205 t
Door, A/C, drlvlf'l door l'llmOie entry,
trim, caat alum wi!Jf:le, manual locking
Ri h; of way, Hazel Muiphy to
Right &lt;•f way. Roger 110d Ja
chllll'll, aport ti'lm, radio e1eo preni
window delroeter, 2,DL engine, 5·apd
TPR D;
line K. St:rchcrto TPCWD ..Ch . ,,
fog Iampi, Ve, ·5 epd, all-terr
ff/!Cllee.!cloc:k,
5 epd men1111 0/D lrlrie, ·
martiNI! trane exle, · noor mate; front and
Super engine cooling, AM/FM atereo
Ri ht of way. Bi II E. Buchanan 5.524 acn &lt;;
ve
engine,
P23l Owl ~l.cet\'eln ,
AM/FM atereo c..e. radio
. and arol A. Sovclto TPRSD;
Deed. C. Melvin Lawrcnc•
ftCIOr meta, llllllltlge rHk
t
R~· ht of way. Doris V..Jackson to Patty Glu&lt;sencamp to Bruce D
MSRP IEFORE DISCOUNTS $13,500
MSRP BEFORE DISCOUNTS $18,175
·
MSRP
IEFOIE
DISCOUIO'
S
$24,525
TPR D;
an.d F.litllh:thAnnJohnson. U:b
Ri ht of way, Elroy and lllc,hna F. 5 acres : '· . .
. . ..
Kayl r to TJ&gt;RSD;
Deed. I ,\lrtclaA. (,lucscncw.
· 'Ri ht of way. Joan Pyles to Rruce Dcnald and F.lt7Uhcth .
TPR O:
. · Johnson, Lebanon. 40.4(, acres
Ri ht of way. Rkk.ic L. Koenig to
Deed. William IJ. and Shar
.
'
Stewart to Gerald G. and Joao
TPR D;
Ri· hi of way, James R. and Jack~ . Rutland , 45 acres;
Do~, &gt;y Stout to TPRSD; · ,·
Rtght ot way, Evc1e11 P.
. Ri~ht or way. Randy and Pam Sharon K Sont~h t.o l.cadong .(
Sliielils to TPRSD;
Conservancy Dtstnct. Ruthmd: ·
Riiht of way, Wil.liam and Doris
Right ol way. ~ohhy. a~d R· ·
Bt~ch' nan to TI'RSD:
G. Arnold to LCCD, Sctpto;
Ri ht of way. Dean tf ..and Sondr&lt;t
Right of way, David B, Di111
E. Sc, ton to TPRSD;
. LCC_D. Suh~bury;
.
I
'
Ri tofwny, Tuppers Plain ChrisRight ut way, Calvary P1l
tian t TPRSD:
Chapel to LCCD,Saltsbury..
, Ri ht of way. David R. an~ Cindy
Deed. Ren~fic~al Mongagc 1
AM.IFM atereo ~~. AIC, rear clefroeter, reniote mirrors, light
A/C, tinted win~ a all
dellllle wiiMI - · ·ate:blc p.
A.
rstto TPRSD:
.Virgil R and Gtna It Ph:
mlrrora,
p.tocka,
euto
0/D
tr8nlmlalon,
, _ dllfloet, flo«
a::;tit'.:~:,.r , door loc:kl, epeed coittrol, auto overdrive
. Ri ht or way. Karen L. and James Chester. 1.01 ~res:
mett,
apHd
cOfltrol,
.tilt
.teertng,
AII/FIIaterectiCIII/cloclt.
IJ,
ftcor mate.
L wkk to TP~SD; . .
Deed. Bei\C(ICial Mongage I
MSIP IE~E DISCOUNT $21,321
MSRP BEF~E DISCOUNT $17,490
R t of way, William J. Ernst and Ferrel W. Day. Rutland, I: no
Ken K. Osborn to TP!i.SD;
Deed; Ronlild•S. a11d Lmda I
Ri itt of way, fauJ E. and Helen more to Tanya S. Burt Hess, M
L S der' to TI'RSD;
J!Ott;
. Jl.' 1\t of way; Joseph Edward and ' Deed, Roger Dale. and Phill
M
Bower&gt; to TPRSD;
·
. Shpcmaker to Jtoger Dale and I
· ht of way, Robe~ R·. and Car· M. Shq&lt;:maker. Salisbury,
cl L. nft tr 'fi'R.SD: .
, .acres;
.
Rlihl of , way, · Edward F. atid
Deed, Roger Dale and and l """I' ·
Kathtln C. Wiglll tu TPRSD;
M. Shoemaker to Roger Dale ShoeRiPt of way OeorJe A. Hensley tpaker, Salisbury, 1..5.59 IICres;
io TPRSD;
•
· ·
Deed, Roger D&amp;;~e and Phillip M.
Ritiht of way, Marvin L. and Mar· Shoemaker to Phillip M. Shoemaker,
jQrk J Keebaugh to TPRSD;
Salilbury pan:els;
·
way Burllle Oil Cotnpa.~ V'lflinia Maxine Scbuler to
identAiberto Fujimori has refused to
' to do so.
A Lima newspaper on SW1day said
police have identified Cerpa's sec·
and-in-command as a former bus fare
collector.
The man, kn,own until now by his
nickname "Arab,'' joined the moyement when it was founded in 1984 in
Lima's universities. His real name is
Ro1i Rojas Fernandez, the newspaper
El.Comercio said citing police intelligence sources.
He was involved in 198.5 attacks
on police headq~rs and a Citibank
office iri Lima.

I

Ponce sketch ·of Cosby killer spurs flood ·of tips

.!

Meigs·recorder posts land transfers

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1997 ESCORT"LX

.

r By

1997 EXPLORER 4x4
2-0R SPORT

.

Landers
1996, Los An&amp;elel

nm" ''"""'""c•. ·
"'"' ''""'""· '
was
was
I'm 32 now, and the more I see of my
sister's kids (in and out of drug rehab,
a horrible motorcycle acci!lent, a
niece who has had three abortions
and is pregnant again) •. the happier I
am with my decision.
Please. Ann, don 't push motherhood. It's not foreveryone. 1 never
wanted to have children, and now I'm
glad I didn't.-- Hackensack, N.J.
Dear Hack: To each his own. Now
hear this:
From Raleigh; N.C.: Because my
:f

~it~rary Club hears .
J~VIew on newspapenng
'#'....
'.

childhood W!lS a nightmare, I never ish decision. I look at all the fine
wanted children. I married at 26 and antiques and objects of an I bought
acciden. tally became pregnant four with the money I didn't spend raising
y'ears later. I tried to abort the child kids and wonller who will get these
myself and failed. I gave birth to a priceless,treasures when I' m gone.
Colorado Springs: I didn 't want
daughter. The following year, I had a .
son, although that was no' accident, · children, either. Then, I changed my
Those children are the best part of my mind . That was a big mistake. My
life. My husband, who didn't. want son's teen-age years were a night·
kios either, is the world's proudest mare. He W!lS a terrible student and
· always in trouble. He is in his 30s
dad.
Victoria, B.C.; Children? Why? I now, moving from job to job and
love elephants, but it doesn't mean I always wanting to borrow money for
want them living in my house. Get SOI)le "emergency." He drinks too
much ,. tells one lie after another and
real.
Greensboro, N.C.: I married at 27, treats his wife and children miserably.
didn't want childreR and had my He lives an hour ·from me, but
tubes tied to make sure I didn't have months go by and I don't see him.
,any. I'm 40 now and regret that self- I've stopped asking myself where 1

;,1!5

present. To have been currently
insured apd eligible for Social Security disability, the trucker would have
had to pay Social Security taxes for
five of the past 10 years ending with
the year in which he became dis.abled.
The trucker said that, because he
had worked and paid Social Securi,
ty taxes for 10 years, he had assumed
he was insured for SO!'ial Security
and was surprised to learn that he was
not currently insured for disability.
He is, of course, insured for retirement benefits.
When a person is self-employed,
there are some special considerations
concerning reponing and paying
Social Security taxes. For example,
there are two income tax deductions
that reduce your tax liability. For one,
your net earnings from self employ·ment are reduced by an amount
equal to half of your total selfemployment . tax, And second, you
can deduct half of your ~elf-employ-.
inent tax on your tax form.
For more information about paying Social Security taxes as a selfemployed person, call our toll-free
number, 1-800-772-1213, and ask for
a copy of the fact sheet Sociill Secu-

...II!Y:~ .-! ·~

emm•1ateo

, he, like many other yopng men,

·~
· ~------·Co. mmunity
"MONDAY
~ . :CHESTER •• Chester Courtheuse

"restoration meeting, 7 p.m. at the
· Chester Firehouse, about.lhe work
"accomplished and ideas for other
lundigg.
.;:
::· MIDDLEPORT -· Meigs Junior

are busiest early in the week 311d ear-

t

Send questions to Ann Landers,
Creaton; Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,.
Calif. !10045

times.

New years's resolutions
Few people think about Social
Security when they are making New
Year's resolutions. But perhaps they
should. They should resol ve to proteet their rights and fulfill their
responsibilities under the program.
Following are suggested resolutions that should have been made to
get the most out of Social Security .
· protection:
.
To insure correct earnings records,
make sure the name and number on
· your Social Security card matches the
name and number .on your pay stub.
If it doesn't, let your employer know
so a correcticrn can be made.
Reque&lt;&gt;t a Personal Earnings and
· Benefit Estimate Statement from
Social Security. This statement gives
you a year-by-year listing of your
earnings that have been reponed to
Social Security, plus an estimate of
the Social Security retirement and
disability benefits 'that might be
payable to you, and any survivors
benefits that would be due your family if
were to die.

w~in-be

'

the future.
If you arc nearing retirement, call
Social Security about three months
before you turn 62 to discuss when
it's best for you to sta.rt getting benefits. If you are past62 and still work- .
ing, you should contact Social Security before the stan of the year you
plan to retire. You may be .able to
hcgin getti ng benefits in January,
even though you don't plan to retire
until later in the year.
If you already receive benefits,
you should notify Social Security if
you change your name or address, go
to work, marry, divorce. begin to
receive a pension from a job you had
. in the government, or plan to leave
the United States for more than 30
days,
Sign up for direct deposit of your
Social Security benefit if you don't
already have it. Then your check will
go directly to your bank account. You
will save the time you nonnally
spend at the bank and know that your
check won't be lost or stolen.
YDU can contact Social Security
and talk to a representative by calling the toll -free number, 1-800-7721213, from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday
through Friday. (You can leave a
messag&lt;:· on"' recorder'Bfterhonrs).
The lines ·are busiest early in ·the
week and month, so it's best to call
at other times if your business is not

Social Security-- ·Basic Facts. The
more you know the more effective·
you'll be able to use it in planning for urgent.

made along with a business meeting.

REACH OVER 18,500
HO ES WITH
YOUR ESSAGE!·

Curio Cabinets
Reg. . .
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'389 6 gun .......... '289 5599 curio .....;..... '449
'469 6· gun .........•359 S769 eomer curl~, 5579
'669 8-gun' ....... '499 '989 Large ~urlo •• 5739
*86910-gun .. ~~ .. '649
Gun Cabinets

Flel1in.el A Bet kline quality
n ·'M111t ..le~n of atylee •

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Br&amp;tire .

'

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•

"II/

Skltk ·

..

''~oH

ADVERTISING IN THE

TV TIMES

.

AREA TELEVISION
LISTINGS AND
FEATURES - ··
EVERY WEEK IN THE
TV TiMES
.

DAYBED SP.ECIAL
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DINING ·RQ,OM
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Reg.

~··

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'

NOW ONLY

5519 Owal ,../4CIIiin-·-"""-"~"$369
'679 OniTCIItlt/•CIIan
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•

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complete

FLOOR COVERING

9

"919 ttct. 'Wit/4 caster clllh---"-"" 64
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Includes white or ;Umond daybed,
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coverlet set.

029 Rtct. Talilt/4 Clitin Oal~·-"""""'$729

CAJ.I.NOW •••

SALE
• 26 styles.of carpet on sale
• llpattems of vinyl- $6.99 sq. yd.

~1otOniO..,....t4.,....,:...$l054~

.

PT. PLEASANT, WV

GALLIPOLIS ·

.

675-1333
446~2342
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

Monday
9:30-8:00

-. . 1\IM.-Iat~

9:3o-5:00
qtll "'ted Applcente

Furniture &amp; Floor Covering

.'

992~2156

'992-3671
.....

-~--

We also have an adorable 4-year-old.
We can' t imagine life without these
children. We kno.,v there will be some
rough times ahead, but we are ready.
Our name is really Smith, and you
can print it.
.
Dear Readers: Today is Manin
Luther King Jr. Day. 1 hope you enjoy
this Gem: "! have a dream that my
four little children will one 'day live
in a nation where they will not be
judged by the color of their skin but
by the content of their character." -Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

Calenc;jar-s-hip-ha-11
. -Ap....
pro-pria-tion-s

High School Boosters, Monday, 6:30 TUESDAY
p.m., in the cafeteria.
POMEROY ,. Meigs County
Genealogical Society, tuesday, 5:15
RACINE-- Racirie Village Coun- p.in., Meigs Museum.
cil will meet in recessed session
Monday, 7 p.m. at the municipal
REEDSVILLE·· Olive Township
building.
· Trustees, 6 p.m. tuesday at the town-

"~at«~.:."~ ...,
"·

ly in the mOnth, so if your business
can \vait, it's best to call at other

~~~~~:~=~·
~~fo~(J~g~;~~::~~ ·~-r'rity
j~~;!·;!' ~;:::::'7t
'!
Request theabout.SociaHlccu'
free pamphlet,

$18 286

'!'PRSD;
' Fruk Sholmalrcr, Middleportl .
'".J ~-~ . _ . . ~
Died, tlc$y Lee llld ,Miil)' J•
· • Htlllllr to.,_,. .lM . t MlrJl-

failed. I didn't fail. He did.
Coquitlam, B.C.: We don 't need
more people, Ann. The world population will double hy the middle of
the 21st century, soaring past I0 billion. The No. I cause for the destruction of our planet is overpopulation.
Please stop pushing it.
Spokane, Wash.: We chose to
have four-footed · children -- two
miniature dachshunds and two cats.'
We never worry about where they are
at night and are very happy with' our
decision.
Cherry Hill, N.J.: I was married at
20 and decided I didn't want children .
My husband said it was up to me. We·
used birth control. but accidents do
happen. "Oops" is now 9 years old.

Self.:.employed must take care not
to write off ·social Security ·.protection

: ''A Good Life: Newspapering and led a confused life fearing they .
pther Adventures" by Ben Bradlee · ·would soon be dominated by,the war By Ed Peterton, Mllnager
!"as reviewed by Ida Diehl at a recent that was threatening Europe. He Soclol Security Oftlco, Athen1
Writing off your business ex pens·
jneeting of the Middleport Literary graduated August 8, 1942 at I0 a.m.,
es
may
make you smile when you fil~
the
Navy
at
was
commissioned
into
pub.
•
your
income
tax, but it could make
• Mrs, Diehl introduced the autobi- noon, and at 4 p.m. married Jean
ography . by saying thai for her it Saltonstall, his first and ,onl.y love .. .you frown if you become disabled
.eemed like a .walk: down memory They enjoyed five days alone before and unable to work. Although it's
legal to deduct most business expensJane through most of the 20th cetiiu· Ben shipped out to a life at sea.
es,
even to the point that you may not
ey.' She used an· interesting device.
The. tempo of lhat. week, ~cord­
owe
income taxes, · self-employed
~hich involved those attending by ing to Mrs .Diehl's account, !;eemed
persons
sometimes lose their Social
to pervade the rest of Ben Bradlee's
~ausing at certain 'pOints in her review
1o ask "Where were you when ... ?"
life. After his adventures ,in ,the· Security disabiiity protection when
! Ben Bradlee, Mrs. Diehl reponed, Japanese war zone he was still moved they don't pay taxes.
This is wh~t happened to a 44born in Boston in 192lto a fam- almost frantically from post to post
year-old
trucker whose injuries in an
Dy defined as the "social elite". His and place to place •. a small weekly
liblings were an older brother, F!'Cd- in New Hampshire, assignments for automobile accident disabled him Tor
nearly three years. Because ·of the
~ie, and a yQUnger sister, Constance, . the Washington Post, press attaChe for
seriousness
of the injuries, the truckpnd the chiidreri· were required to the American Embassy in Paris,
er
met
Social
Security's definition of
atien~ concens and speak French as European
correspondent
for
disabiliiy.
Unfortunately,
he couldn't
lhey developed under the direction of Newsweek, stints in .MorocCO;·Algepgoverness.
. ria · and Tunisia, the- 1967 War receive disability benefits because he
, ' , ,1ben came the depression, said' between lsrae,l and Egypt and final~-. had not paid Social Security taxes in •
-· Mrs. Diehl, and their banker father ly bac~ to the Washington Post from . recent years.'
Earlier in his life, the trucker had
lo$t everyJhing. The mother opened which he r~jired in 1991.
paid
Social Security taxes for more
The final chapters of the book,
• ilress shop in order to suppon the ·
tamily while her husband kept books Mrs. Diehl said, are devoted to Ben's than 10 years. But, in recent years; he
· · bd tended an estate for free rent. . involvement in changing roles wit!) had eliminated his tax liability
' ; . ; At age 14, Ben contracted polio the Washington Post, and the break- because he had been replacing ex pen"'d after a long recovery learned to ing' of "big" stories, the murders of sive business equipment frequently.
walk again with brllces. Since sports Bobby·Kennedy, Martin Luther King When a person's net earnings are less
. • . ruled out because of his dis- and the riots wh'ich ensued; the strug- than $400 in a year, he or she doeshe.tumeq to
overthe
·
of the debat- n't have io.report them. Therefore, no

a.

Jtlii.llf

Page7

.

Ann

ANN LANDERS

X •

-nd.

$1·4 625

.

Monday, January 20, 1997

"

" Dear Readers: Since ·my column
~og childlessness .appeared a . few
•
:.we.eks ag&lt;i, I've been inundated with
~ieUers from women who want to
~~~ak out on w~y they did or didn 'i
~)Vant to have chtldren. The respon s~es: were so frank and intriguing, I
~decided to devote another day to the
~bject:
.
.
;: . Dear Ann Landers: I've been
· ::Jeading your column ever since I was
=·the· eighth grade, but we don't
.~)Vays agree. The last major dis:;'m!reement was when you told a 20·
'; te'ar-old bride who said she didn.' t
•Want to have children that she might
:Change her mind.
, ·:~ 'I, too, married. at 20 and · didn' t
:~'nt to have children. ·My husband

·1997 WINDSTAR WAGON

1997 CONTOUR GL

ny Int.

.

Reader
feels·
mOtherhood
isn't
for
.
e
veryone
'

$21 861

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The Daily Sentinel

•

1997 RANGER 4X4

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B~TheBend

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""*I • The Deily Santlnel

udents

march to
different

By JAcQul POOZIUS COOK
Alia cl I d Pid 11 WI llllt
CLEVELAND - Like many
high school seniors, Micbiel Kraus;e
grabs a bite to eat after his last class
every day and rushes bfealhles~ly to
an after-school job. .
.
· He shows up a little !ale and
disheveled. But nobody complains.
After all, he's the boss.
. The 17-year-old is the founder and
co-owner of ExchangeNCI. one of the
largesllntemel providers in northeast
Ohio.
He staned the company in his bedfOQm at his parents' Euclid home
when he was IS. Two yean later, it
has downtown office space, 20
employees .and grQSS revenue of $1
million for 1996. ·
For about $20 a month,
ExchangeNet provides customerS in
the Akron and Cleveland areas with
access to the Internet and e-mail.
Th,ere are about 5,000 subscribcll,
including about 2S corponate customers who pay as much as $1,000a
month.
Those are impressive numbers
for a kid who considers himself a bit
of an outcast.
"Why would I do a business and
·do 'something .which costs so much
time if I was the normal kid who
wanted to go out and play baseball
and all that?" Krause said in an interview.

drum.

.

By JERRY HARKAVY
A11oclated Preu Writer
, ·BAR HARBOR, Maine
Counney Vashro had to forsilke ice
l]pckey when she decided to •!.tend
~liege of the Atlantic, but she disc?vered a more exciting avocation
ODCe she got there.
' Instead of aiming slap shots at a
I, Vashro used a crossbow to fire
arts at whal~s within SO to I 00 feet
of her motorized rubber raft in the
Gplf of Maine. From ilie darts, she
c$!11ected tissue samples for whale
bibpsies iis pan of her summer intems~ip witt\ Allied Whale, a research
program affiliated with the college.
: "It was a major adrenaline rush.''
sh'e recalled. "To gel a good shot you
h~ve io get pretty close,"
· Vasnro came to College of the
Ailantic to pursue her interest in
mJtrine mammals, even though her
hr~h schOQI guidance counselor in
Minneapolis had never heard of the
school and tried to steer her elsew~ere.

· Vashro is delighted with her
choice. So too, it appears, is vinually,:everyone else at the tiny campus,
·at ;least according to the. Princeton
Review, whose 1996 survey of 309
sc,bools found College of the Atlantic
students 10 be the nation's happiest.
;These are happy times at the college as it celebrates its 25th anniversaiy. Eiuollment has increased. The
s~l)ool won a coveted John D. and

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NATION'S HAPPIEs:T- Courtney Valhro poses In a whale research lab overlooking Frenchman's Bay at the College of the Atlantic In Bar
Harbor, Maine. Vaahro, of Minneapolis, Is

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it~~~~- areal ,;..atershed time," 'said '
Steven Katona, a Harvard-educated

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ROIIIilla • 20,000 feet dc&gt;ve said.
India on SUDday, Fouctt and his supFor long stretches, bowevet, tem- , 11ew Conelructlon
porters blclt in the Midwest ploued peratures in the cabin hovered ne. '
l
Rtmodlllng
a landing before he beg1111 pUling zero while he was flying too high for
Ocean, balloonist Steve Fo&amp;sett over the ruqed mountains of South- his heaters to work pnoperly.
Kitchen c.blneta
decided on ~unday thai half-:ay · east Asia or the Pacific Ocean.
'The prolonged cold spells led to
V111yl SldiiiiJ • Roofe
would have to be good enough in his
"l'llere's enoush fuel for a couple fatigue.
.
D.cke • Garagaa
attempt to fly n.onstop around the of days, but that would put him ool
. "He's been unable . to sleep as
, FtN &amp;1/,.,_e
world.
·
over the Paciftc, and I don 'tthink he much as he should have been able to .
614-742-3411
The 52-year-old Chicago ~uri­ wantstotry ,awaterlaniling,"Biounl sleep because the capsule's been
ties trader planned to land his huge said.
·
· cold," said Bruce Comstock; anoth--.;;;;;;,t;;;,~
silver balloon, Solo Spirit, over northFosselt had lifted oft' with 700 gal- er c,round crew member.
em Indian early Monday, U.S. time. Ions of propane fuel in tanks around
Fossen failed his first rowtd-theFossett was trying to hold out to his capsule, enough he had hoped to world anempt one year ago. His cur· break tire six-day, 16-minute circumnavigate 'the planet.
reni attempt is .the third such effort
endurance record although thunderHis ground crew was unable 'tO this year.
stonns could force him down earlier, explain why he ran shoit.
Before he set off on this trip, Foscrew members said.
eDrlvewaya
"That's a bis mystery to every- sen said despite the bitter cold, mid"It's been a fantastic flight from lbody here," Blount said from the winter is the best ti.me for such an
a lot of different angles,.. said Doug · team's headquanm at Loyola Uni- · attempt because of brisk winds and •Parking Lots
Blount,
of Fossett's sround crew versity in Chicago. "We just don't . fewer thunderstorms.
.
assigned to tracking the bai!QOn.
know. 1'1lere are a bunch of different
British businessman Richard
C.ll Anytime
The adven.turer took oft' J1111. 13 theories."
Branson's balloon, Global Chai949·3327
from St. Louis and has C(:lipsed by
The crew has kept in touch with Ienger, was forced down by equip..
several thousand miles his own world the balloonist by computer, although ment problems in the North African
591.
distance . ballooninl! record, S,43S they lost communications ror sever- desert Jan. 8 after lifting oft' from
miles traveled on a 199S flight from · al hours early Sunday.
Marrakech two days earlier.
,Seoul, Korea, to Canada.
Fossett has endu~ bitterly cold
Swiss psychiatrist Benrand PicHe had hoped to become the first tempemtures in his cramped 4-by-6 card, who took off from his home, baiiOQnisno fly nonstop around the .112-foot cabin.
.
land, . and his crew ditched in the
globe but conCeded from the s~ that
"But he hasn't complained about Mediterranean four days later after
it was a long shot
·
any pat1icular · problems," 'Blount kerosene fumes filled their cockpit
1371RYAH PLACE
'

· Krause's wife, Kale, 25. owns asmall '
share.

:

suggestion thallhi:re is a 17-ycar-old ·
· in charge. Boch Krause brothers work :
pan-time: Dan, l!xchangeNet presi- •
' dent, also works ror a~ firm, '
and Michael, the co-systems manager, has to go to school in the mom-. .
ings. Kate Krause is the fitll-time ,
office manager.
Micllael Krause had much of the
res(lOIISibility at fnt, IJuii!OW has the .
help of a staff, his brother said.
He still oversees.the operation, but
focuses mostly on the corpOrate customers.
"The burden was on his shoulders," Dan Krause said. "The point
is be doesn 'I haYe that much now.
He's not the CEO, be's nolthe business manager. He doesn't touch a
check, be doesn't write a checlc."
Ian Verschuren; te(:hnical leader
for f&gt;igiKnow, said l!xchangeNet is
similar to other computer companies
: that have disoovered tho;. people who
kno.w computers best are barely past
adoleScence.

.

Amy Jo Murphy and Raben
Thomas White were united. in mar'
.riage &lt;inS~. 21 at the CbesterUnited Methodist Church.
·0
The double·ring ceremony was
per(ormed by the Rev. Sharon Hausman.
The bride is the daughter of Bob
and Sina Murphy of Tuppers Plains.
• Grandparents are Rex and Ann Summerfield of Chester, and Hazel Mur• phy and the late Mavin Murphy of
·
.Tuppers Plains:
.
The grOOm is the son of Jerry and
Liz White of Warre.n. Gmndparents
· ·~are Stephen and Lillian Flask and
Ruth Herrick of ~arren .

"FOR PETS .ONLY"

WILL BE PUBLISHED THURSDAY, ·.
FEBRUARY 13TH IN

Silent cowboy
.
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Tom
Mix (1880-1940) was one of the first
cowboys and Western heroes of the
silent screen.
·
After first working aS a cowhand
in Texas, Arizona, Wyoming and
Montana, Mix Served in tile U.S.

'·
•

ONLY ·

o.,,.,.
,
,
.
lebry ., _ 3p.11.

Hurryl

Frida~

.
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.
:

-

,.

..

•

Army during the Spanish-American
War. He was also a deputy sheriff in
Oklahoma, 'served in the Texas'
_.A . .
, . ed W'ld
Rangers ,a... 1n 1906 J010 a 1
West show.
In 191'!1, Mix staned acting in car• ·
·ly o·pen-•;r ac•;.on movies ..Altogcth- '
"' ;•Tony" appeared
cr, he and,..'his h(lrse
iti more ,dian i200 of these one- and
·
two- reelers and 'feature• Westerns,
many of which he also directed.
....__
·
f
d
·
""' commg o soun movtes
marked the end of Mix's career. He
.appearec! in only a few productions
after lm.
"

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'

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'

a-v..r

I•••·····
SIIODGUSS'

Umestone; ·
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

AI 2 Locatlone
Rutland, Oh.

....

814-9949-2202

Sentinel
Classified•

'w.Ho~

992-2156

1!Jt()'}t( 'liS

Other IINinc:klg Bourcee.".

..,_,,,,,_,,......, ..I,Ht.l3
Tot•l Other Financing
loutoea (u-).......A,Ht.l3
Total of Ric. and Other
Sourcn Over/Under
Diallurltmtnla and
Olher
4,222.20
u-..
.................
..
· l'und cath balance •
JNIIIUIIYIT
tNC1D11,
.11N ...128,D1U1
1
110
l'und C..
h BallnCI,
,..
100.00
1
1
Jenuary '
..........
l'und c.. h Bal1nce,
a111,..r31,1tii....IIOO.DO
Thlt It an unaudlled

'1!iiJ tfa~ tJitT!J F
my meiiiO'!J won't
6ttuf
It W11S ~ all otfier
until it rte~~mf an eruf
'/&amp; Ont in 11Uj ufe wM
controffd my fove
?fail a visit !Mt III!J o/J
Ontfrom a6ove

flnlnclll•__,_

PUIUC NOTICI
ConAIInt ....._of
.......,,clltbu......ntt,
lnd ctilntiM In llallncea •
QoweiUUlAhllll PUftd .'tYPe

In Memory of

0111w nnanc~nt~ aou,...".
•........." ...................., •• 241.13 I

DALTON A.
GROVER

Total Olher Flnanolnl :
Souroet ( - )........" 241." ·
TOitl of Jltc; and Othtr
Ovtr/Undar
and llllllllr _..,. ,.,.,... - 8ourott
Dltllura•mtntt
oiMr
fOr the ...... r-tndlng

.'

.

D1aamber11,1 . .

. · lllllm TowMI!Ip, - .

~

. .

llalgaCourdy
.G oo---.. Fund...,._
Fund

~~

........ Drlv•
•sthave class Bor
ACDL'Gootl chfvfng
record. Exptrit1ct
wfth tep heavy loads
·a pits. VerlflaWe
. drfYiaalistory.

lnMe~

Public Notice

October 30, 1912January 20, 1967

u... "..................
Fund

401n/wk.
$5.75/111'. apply at
MelpCo.llrllfJ

We love You

•

... ~

•• •

~ am't come to

me

6ut I wilt come to you
It won't 6t tlit same as
it WIIS tWwn fiere
tife 'Uiifl6t fomJer

aone into tlit past

tm~

'/&amp; meiiiO'!J of!flU
amtinuts to lizst
I miss !flU lar udi

MmOIHJCl r.H NTS

.!.•

Personals

THE FUN WAY
TOOAY
1·~43-5780 Ext 1811 12.89

l'ltr Min, MullS. 18 Yra. So&lt;v·U .
IIHoiHOI.
'lOUR

SWEETHEART
AS CLOSE AS
'lOUR PIIOIE

1-900-858-7781

t .

Ext 8229
$2.119 .... """·
be 18 yrs.
Sorv.U f819)64s,&amp;134
~UII

Giveaway

40

2MaleC-LibMix,1-l
Black. 8 \Yetkl Old, Good With
Children, 'fo A Good Homo Only.
81..... 1-&lt;1804.

Btaulilul Pan Chow Puppies,
Playful andCute814-441 ·1784 ·
Female Uother lab I l:lulky Father Traveling Salesman Good
Children, But Frisky Pupa, 814·
446-0218, ~14-446.... 787.
Free· wood scraps tor kindl!"g
firewood, you load! Baum lumbef,

Cheater
labrador crou .pupplts, 7wks
aid, mother ia Registered Lab,
clogs. :JOol-875-0353.
Bo~: All Sizes Jor pacKing If you
are moving or tar ltarage. To
Givaoway, 814-'ol8-38n.

Pupp&lt;e•. Pui&gt;P!OI, Puppiftl Colle
/German Shepherd Mik~, Mile .
"And Female, Tom And Pany
Sprague. AIMIO 8:00 P.M . 0. W.Oklnds, 8' .C-448: 2825 .

60

Lost and ·Found

Found : Goat Black I While No
Horns. Very Gentle, 614·2$6·
1699.

Found : Injured Vtll.ow Long
Haired Mate. Cal Vicinity : Pizza
Hut, 6,4·446·4731, 814·4-CB·
·LOST: 81g gray tigtf Cll. lucas
Lane Vicinity, Names "Henry
Cat·. Family pet, sadly miued.

AEWARDI30H7H334.
LOST: Doberman Pincher, blaQ
&amp; rust w/blut ~ollar. VIcinity of
Rayburn Rd &amp; Rl 2. 304 -8751215.
,. Lost: McClintic· area; 2 female
Beogtn. Cal 304-7a5187.
'

Wing, will celebratt his IOisr Birthday,,
26, 1997. ile would appnciate genirig
conJsfrom all his frletds tutd r~ltuives.
7'llomas is r~ oldlst W. W. I Vetei'IU! in Meigs
Corutty, tinil the Father of 6 living chi/Jr~n wlto
will be at the Celli" from 1:30 to 2:30 011 1M
26th to gn11 1111)1 of ,011 thot wish to drop by.
Cards lllllJI be 1tttl to 333 Page St., Middkport,
Oh. 45760.

II.C.JU'

't "•-r l

...,
.....

MESSAGE·
CAN BE SEEN HERE
• FOR A TOTAL OF .
· $7.00 PER DAY.

I

•.

.'•,

..

. .,

'

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I

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!.

'··

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'

1~ .

~ waitJrwfor

$0 I'([cmy my ems
IJ'f"'!J~

Ttpt/ier "'!J 1-, VM'8
ptlint frttiflen's IOfPIJ

.l.4ribf _ ,

. 'Dtlft 1114MillS,

•

Lost: Oran~ 'l White Cal Mis• •
lng Parr Of Eao. Mlulflt Since .
Jan 4m, Btes~no Road, ""'""'"' 1•
Patriot Ar... Rtwlrdl Call lt.C- '
245·8224. 814·441· 1417. 114-3171 .

Yard Sale

70

.

(But 01ll ~you iS

Tho!Ms Earl Turner of Overbrook Ctilttr,

"

1

tlaymmtmimore

•,

'

1616.

I~istnle

SiJc.yws fravt come

J••..,23, 1H7.

~

·

I kfwwslie's54feon
tlit otlier silk
·
Life witliout lin' is far
from tlit Slllllt
~t c]otf fJwws 6est,
tlim is 110 6fllme
Ifravt one amsol4tion

tll:lMf a tar

.......

Sadly rnjssed by
wife Myrtle an~•·•
family

'~
•.

Help Wanted

HELP WANTED .

(1) 20; 1TC

AN NOUNCEME NTS

J.~20, 19!/1

. NOTICE OF SALE
Saalad bldt will be
r-Ived lly the Boerd ol
Education of th• Southern
Local School Dletrlct of
Rtcln•; OhiD, t1 tht
·Trwturer'a olllct until 1:GO
p.m. on Frldoy, February 7,
1887, and at that time
opened by the Truturer ol
Hid Board lor tha fOllowing
Items lhlt the 8011rd wlahet
to tel: a 1979 tnllrlllf!IDMI
81 p•re..nger shcoot bua, • Slie wmt to rliurcli,
1871 Chevy 'lllep vtn, and •
~as al~ 6efore
Ford 351 Wlndnr engln..
Further lnlonnetlon may lie 'But an angel of fjotl
obtaln•d by calling !he
me frer at tlit tfoor
Scouthwn Local Buo Garage.
II (614) 94Wt50. ·
S.ld B011rd of Education Slie went on witli 9lim,
-en... the right to -Iva not tflm a sip.
lnfornialltln to accept or
My kart WIIS 6rok,en,
reject eny or •II bldlr.
. Soutllli'n Loctl Boerd of
ail I coufJ lo was CTJ
Eclueatlon
Mr. Dennie E. Hill, Truturer '/&amp;gates oflimvm
Box 176
Recine, Ohio 45nt . wm opendwitfe
(1) 6, 13, 20, 274 tc

Gtnlrll Govemmont ..........
. , .. _,,,,,,,,;,.....41,2111.37
Pullllc8afetr ..~ ......... 473.14
Pullllo
__ WOIIII .... 101,221.23
• ~
He.,.,,,,_,,,,,, 11 ,..11 ....
Cllpbl ~ 31 823.27
TOTAL EXP'i'iioiTUAE
DII8UASEIIENTS ...............
"'-"'""""'"""''" 1...,'11
To!M R.... pg O..r/Und..
""-IIu...,
. mttnl• ,,,, z.-""'
~··
~~.::~ ~~ANCINO.
....,

Chtster, Ohio
,..._.

iEw"':'OPt.E

I9(,.M'£1MO'.l('Y
. O'.J
c]9(,1fe'£ 'f.L.LIS

Public Notice

On:bestral personality ,
·
On another occaston, w en
LIVERPOOL, England &lt;AP) _ rehearsing Handel's Messiah,
sYI1!Phony ore hcstra 1cader s·tr Beecham said to ·the choir: "When
we st' ng 'All we lt'ke sheep have gone
Thomas Beecham, hom ncar here in
1879, nlade his first concert appear- astray,' might we please have a little
ancc in I90S, and l~tcr conducted more regret and a little less satisfacopera at London's Covent (iardcn.
tion."
.
.
Beecham was independently
'
wealthy and founded two celebrated
orchestras. The first was the London
Philharmonic Orchestra in 1932, and CivU War memories
the. other, in 1947, the Royal PhilDOVER,. 'Tenn. (AP) - Fort
harmonic On:hcstra. with which he Donelson N'atiQnal Military Part&lt;,
iourecj the United' Stlllcs in 1949.
ncar here, recalls a celebrated Civil
Many anecdotes arc told about Was action in 1862. Ocn. Ulysse$ s.
.. 11ommy , B.ecc ham.. H'ts ststcr
·
·
Grant moved 17,000 men on the lien' _
mtroR'
hd
·
·
duecd·
ht'm to a friend of hers, whose , nessce · tver, marc e them across
~
name·was UJica Welles.
the Cumberland, then attacked.
One day B~echam said ui her: "I
Grant's action resulted in the capfi
h
ld
lUre of 14.000Con'edcrate troops and
don'tlike your trst name, you s ou
"
h
opened a river route into the hean of
c ange it"
,
''No, 1 can't," the girl replied. ihc Confederacy. The eanhen fon
"But .you can change my surname."· here has well-preserved remains of
A d
he
"ed
rifle pits imd gun baucr.ics.
~ sot y were mam .

985-4422

In Meinory

motor bloclul.

DISIIURSIIIENTS

Umeatone • Gravel
· Olit • Sand ·

005

114-992-4025 8 anHI

TOTAL IIEVENUE
RECEPrS"""'"" 1JI,024.22
EXPENDITURE

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

Raclne,Oh.

614-992-3470

··-·--...............17,1. .15

R. Le HOLLON
TRUCKING

614-742·29116

appllanc•a,_llatlerl•a,
·1111ny1Mlllla &amp;

~ .

ir

UPHOUTEIY

. Pick up diNIII'ded

Public Notice

..

·-

........ YM ,,

WICKs·
HAULING

. Public' Notice

. 110 Court

'

Ooon OP'n 4:30
Game Starta 8:45
Ply out It according to
number ol playtrt.
Under niiW mtntgtrmrnt.
Public Welcome

(UmeStoneLow Rlltel)

742-2935, Ask for Kip

BINGO
RACINE. OHIO
AMERICAN LEGION
POST 602
EVERY SUNDAY

Top, Trim,

Long Sl, Rutland~ Oh.

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

The,Daily Sentinel

J

E~perience

wax, BUffing

'I

~---------------~--~--------~
'

JONES'
TREE
SERVICE
20 Years
•

·. Owner:
~onnie Jo~teJ;.,.;

I •..•
l •..
• :P

lc~
I

(No Sunday Calls)

1\lne-upl, on Change,

·l ''

I·

614-992·7643

• truck painting,
minor mechlnli:al
. . repair.
.

. VALENTINE PETS . · 1· ..
I ·.~

I
1
I

·.

' Removal &amp; ·
Stump Grinding

h

7/22111n

Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

eymoon. They now reside in Cincinnati:
·

.

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compere
FREE
ESnMATEES
985 4473

· Garages • Replacement WindoWs

The couple took a Caribbean hon-

MR. AND MRS. . ROBERT THOMAS WHITE .

-c::ap:.

'New Homes • VInyl Siding New

IIHm

'

•New Homee

oQ

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Body work, car, truck

. &gt;I

fit

lllalon, wv

101 Polllei'Oy StrMt

GIUESEI'S
GARAGE

••
••
' 'I

. ---------llllllli--·------------,
,----,

ce.'l

'

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PER PIOURE
PRE-PAID .

Living' with AIDS, bqt not alone
.

by the aunt of the bnde, Sh.,-on Donabll", being served. Milsid,',was pro·
vided by Rockin' Reggie.

TI'IICY Murphy was maid of honor
• for her sister, and bridesm~tids were
Angie Murpby;· cp~in of the bride,
and Debbie B~r. Crystal Earley,
Heather Snyder, Cheryl Amos, Amy
Betz, and Debbie Schmucker. Flower
. girl was Casey white, nie:e of tbe
... groom.
.
Best man was Dan White, brother Qf the grOQm, ani), !J!~. ~o.om~llle,!b
were Larry White, brOiher of the ,,
; grOQm, Ryan Kiefer, Bob Blosser,
, Jason Miles; Greg Infante and Bill
· Buzzard. Cory Vales, cousin of the_
bride, was the ring bearer.
.
Pianist .was Susan Parsons and .
' soloists were Holly Dethardt ·and
FrCd Drenning. Crystal Summeffield
' and Chri$ta Russell, cousins of the
bride. passed out programs, and Carrie Russell, also a cousin, registered
·' the guests,
A reception was held at Royal Oak
: • ResoM With a buffet
. .supper
.
. .. prepared

OUR SPECIAL PAGE($)

. ~600

I

MIDDLEPORT

.Amy Jo Murphy, Thomas White united in.marriage

.i

THE ·DAILY SENTINEL

SeMen • Steel Sales &amp; Fabtlcaliou • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Siaii'IIMa • Tool Oreulng • Omlmenlal
Stepe • Stairs, Railings, Pallo Fumlture, Rr~ .
Items, Planter Hangers, Tram- &amp; Iota of other stuflll
"No Job Too Utp or Too Stnall"
wa will work within your budget.
Ph. 773-8173
FAX 773-5861

IISULATIOI

"

tioom

I

-Etc.

one

.

imtine biologist who was one of four
full-time faculty members when the
college was founded and who was . By BILL FOREMAN
ulate Conception for couples ccle- 1982.
ap~inted its fourth president in Associated Preas Writer
brating their 50th wedding anniver'.'We were happy with lillie
1993.
.
KANSAS CITY, 'Mo. - Salva- saries. !'!early twice as many couples things." Gamet Wells said. "They
A devastating 1983 fire that tore and Ann Gal ate celebrated the attended the mass this year as in past didn 't have to be. big things that cost
destroyed the library and administra- end of World War IL They rode the years.
,
a lot of money. It tOQk a long time for
tion building, along )Nith many of the wave of postwar home buyers. And
Ann Galate, 75, said the war us to get things."
classfOQms, was a temporary setback. . they helped give birth to the baby helped couples strengthen their rela· ·
But some things came fast for .
Th~ fire gave rise to a c.oustruction boom.
·
tionships. She . feared her fiance many postwar couples, namely home
program that included a new classThis past year, the Raytown cou- would get killed and that made her owner.ship. J!!.e -'C!'ef!~ion _!K:ga~ '"
room building, campus center and pie joined millions nationwide tn.cel- less hkely to ·take liim for granted · buytqg ~· ~er'lflM pre~!a..t•• ~ "" .
dormitory: Among the. benefactnrs ebrating their SQth anniversary . . when he returned.
generations, breaking the tradition of
who helped in the rebuilding was . They're the ones w~o set the benchSalvatooo Gal ate, 75, returned renting. A
in the binh and mar·
. actor Paul Newman, whose ~aughter marks for later generations. And they from the war on Nov. 14, 1945 and ·riagc rate in the mid-1940s created a
graduated from the college m 1987. . stand to pass on their homes, savings went to work the next day unloading housing shonage that quickly became
' Founded amid the ferment of- and · other wealth to the baby bottles at a syrup factory for 48 cents ', ·a crisis when servicemen began
Vietnam War protests and the envi- boomers.
an hour. In April, h~ married Ann returning home.
ronmcntal activism that accompanied
What makes this gcnoration dif- Galate; both were 25. Soon the couFederal programs that made build·
the first· Earth Day, the school de vel- ferent from others' Many say a pie bought a house and later Salva- ing and buying new homes easier
opc;d an early image as a cou.ntcrcul· strong commitment to marriage and tore Gal ate began operating his own ignited an explosion in construction.
turc haven for granola caters and tree a willingness to patiently work hard service station.
New housing starts Inpled betwccri
.
.
huggcrs.
for material comforts sets them apan
Salvatore Galate said his Depres- 1945. and 1946 to L02 million,
A coeducational liberal ans col· in the new world of credit cards and sion childhood taught him frugality, according to census records.
lege, College of" the Atlantic offers high divorce rates.
and the war matured him, ·making
In 1930, a lillie more than half of
Postwar couples were unique him determined to work .hard for all homes were rented. But by 1950,
just one undergraduate degree - a
B.A. in Human Ecology. Rather than because they got married earlier than years lost overseas.
• that number dropped to 45 percent.
(
'select a major, students design their previous 'generations, said Ron
Many other couples agreed grit And in 11970, the number was.down
· own 'study, programs that draw from Crouch, director of the Kcrltucky and patience arc the trademarks of to 37 percent.
.
various disciplines. .
State DataCenter. Before World War their generation. And they contend
· Many postwar couples didn't go
There is much about the school II, about one in three women age 14 that the need for new cars, big without, said Mike Sporakowski, a
_.Also a special sedon for In Memory Valentine Pels.
that remains unconventional. There ·s and older stayed single. But by 1950, homes, nashy clothes and other con- professor of family and child devclno faculty tenure an~ everybody is the number of unmarried women sumc; prizes is the reason half the opmcnt at Virginia Polytechnic lnsti.I
addresscd on a first-name basis. The dropped to less than one in four, marriages end in divorce now.
tute and State tlnivcrsity in Blacksword "professor" i~ simply not used. Crouch said.
" You just didn 't get .everything burg, Va. They benefited greatly
And instead of spring and fall semcs"People seemed to think women right away like the kids expect from .the postwar economic boom
ters, the academic year is divided into were barefoot and pregnant and mar- today," said Gamet Wells, 72, of and the Gl B\llthat made higher cduthrcc 10-week terms.
ricd in the past, but that's not true, " Akron , Ohio.
cation affordable for many, Spo·
The school has no intercollegiate he said. "A lot of people stayed 'sinWells and her husband, Del ben, rakowski said.
spons. The closest substitute is.a
glc."
.
· .
. celebrated their 50th anniversary in· · "They taised expectations for
group of bas~ctball players who JOIR
The Galatcs were part of the mar• September. By saving and planning, .generations that have followed that
in pickup games at the YMCA in riage trend.
the couple said they made a com- arc hard to meet," Sporakowski said.
town,.
, ·
'
·
The couple talked a~outthcir life fortablc middle-class life for their "They laid on the it kid' the thing that
Students seem .to prefer outdoor at a reception following a special family in Akron, where Delben Wells if you get married, you have to have
pursuits to athleJic.competition, and Mass at the Cathedral of the Immac- worked as a maintenance man for a house, two cars, a washer and dry- ·
the college's locauon oil 26 shoreFord Motor Co. before retiring in cr."
front acres adjoining Acadia Nation' ·
·
al Park encourages rock climbing,
kayaking and mountain biking.
Plea• enclo• Mit·
,The
setting
in
one
ofthe
most
PoP"PET'S NAME"
1
addrWAed atamped•.
ular vacation spots in the Northeast
Owner'• Name
envelope to return
has helped attract studen.ls and faculty By CHELSEA J. CARTER
ahlc housing for people wi1hAJDS.is mates.
while contributing to the C&lt;?llege's Aeeociated Preas Writer
on the rise, because more people arc
At least one person in the matd
yourphoto. ·
'
' '
academic success.
. ATLANTA- James Price want- contracting the disease. medication is must be HIV-positive. A doctor musr
The school was among tile first to · ed aroommate. Mark Germain need- getting more expensive, and people verify. the applicant has HIV, Mrs
~
fecus .on ecology. Katona ' sllid the. ed a place to live.
, arc living longer. said Gerry Ansel, a Zadoff said.
·
' college wa.s also a leade'~ in ihe trend
Both valued their privacy. Each . spokesman with AIDS Project Los
"We ~ave a ·very private' office.
toward interdisciplinary studies.
had a cat. Price and Germain ,had Angeles.
All our cabinets are locked. ~hen we
. With only eight mandated cours- something else in common - . HIV.
The federal Centers for . Disease · 'do reference checks, we never .discuss
'
.
cs among the 30 required for gradu-, the ·virus that causes AIDS.
Control and Prevention estimates the person's heal,th," she said. "We
ation, students are given broad lati·
They are among 159 people in that between 650,000 and 900,000 sit down and kind of counsel them.
tude to design their own curriculum. Atlanta who have been matched· as people were living with HIV in 1995. We tell them this is an option that's
And while many come with a good roommates through a government- The -average lifetime cost of medical cost-effective.. If they're not ready or
Pet's Name
idea of what studies they wish to,pur- funded shareQ housing program for c~re after the disease is diagnosed is don 'I feel comfonablc, we don't
s~cr. those notions arc often subject to
people' with HIV or AIDS.
·
$119,000, the CDC said.
push them."
Owner's Name
.
·. "This allows people who are indeMany communities are seeking
Several people who are not HIV, chan1c. '\
J.
I
·
I
J'rlroll~enl has risen frotl) 34 pende.nt enough to live in a safe, sta- ways to expand housing for· people · positive have taken r011mmates~ but
!Address
1
when College or the Atlantic began ble environment, so they don't have with AIDS beyorid hospices•and hos- altnost all want to be matched with
I
I
classes in tile fall of 1972to the cur· to be in$titutionali'zed.prematurely," . pitals, which are costly and avatlable someone who also has the AIDS
,eti( level of 2SO. With applications · said ~~~doff, dlrectpr of the pon- only to those in the ljnal stages,
virus, Mrs. Zadoff said. There are few
tr .
'
I
. .
•I
~pill percent in each of.the past two ,. profit roo~e m~hing progmm
The U.S. Depanmenr of Housing . women and no childre11''in' \lie 'p~oyei!n, the school is grar&gt;pling with Home But Not Alone. Jt is believed and Urban Development has 'created .gram. . .
'
'
Amount Enclosed:
· for ·
plcturea
ho~ much and how fast it should
to be the only such program in the a division - Hous.ing Opponunities
"There's comfon there ~knowlat$8al'ch.
, •
expand.
nation, according to the National fQr People With AIDS - to funnel · ing you're sharing the same fright.
.
'
.
Shared Housing Research Center.
money to such liousing programs.
ening situation," said Price, who.was
~adllne Friday, Ftbruary 7th at 3 p.m.
~dve
Geimain shared Price's three-stoThe Atlanta Jewish Community diagnosed with the AIDS virus in ·
POKil.AND, Maine (AP)- An 'l'Y townhOuse in subutban ~atur for Cenler sponsors Home But' Not 1~87. "You Wtllltto live with someMall or bring the entry form:
. 1 - - 1 food fRh and source of liv- more than a year. He died in June.
Alone, which receives about $4S,OOO one who knows the score:•
..-UII is the pollock, belonaingto the , "You try real hard not to get 100 a year in combined funding from •, Renttypically runs between S3SO
cod&amp;Jt family.
· attached," Price said. "After he ,;lied~ HUD, ll)e city·of Atlanta, the U~·ted and $SOO a month, Mrs. Zatloff said.
AI cion~ fish, it is deep peen I thoughtl would tab a brelk.from Way and ieveral AIDS 0111111iutions.
Price, 49, has been living on dis, Ill
with three dorsal and two il. I wasn 'I sure I wanted to have MY
The two-year-!&gt;ld program · is a ability checks ani! a ·modest ·retireSt.
' f •
.
Pqlloclt, found J1!alnly near . m()l'e moritlnates. Lei's flllle il-l'm , filii n-oll of H?USiiMA'n!S, a nation- ment.fwd for more ~ five. years.
~~ Ql tile oeelll, Cllllf!IW to ' Ipatina ,Ill JDY OWD m!JI1a)ity." .
aJ ltonte-"'-"RIP,I'O~ tMI ma~h~ ·
~»omti'Oy, Ohio 41781 .&gt;.:
feet in lenjth. · · ·
Nllionwlde, the IIC4Id for alford- ea lhD elderly ~ y~·er 1'00111- ,
.,

AuttiOllzed AGA Dillrlbutor

• Weldlug Supplies • lnduatrlal Gales • Machine Shop

SNOW
REMOVAL

The Krauses ~ sensitive 10 any ,

j

l

IIIII tMt
Cttltrltlltl

AIIC!d II d PI II Willer
CHICAGO - Lackins enoilp
fuel to make it across the PacifiC

"I was really into doina thinp
which weren't really traditional mainstream. I wtiS very into the computers, into very one-person type hobbies. I was a lorier."
Krause Co-owns the company wid! .
his half-brollier, Dan, 28. Dan

-~-_--u,s_~_---, I IOIIIT IISSILL
lflvMR pr~
COISTIICIIOII

.......- - . - - 1'!"'...........:-_AI_;,_I

By PAUL A- DNICCU

YOUR PET
AMONG
~~...
PET VAI;ENTJNES!.

couples took back
·a t· 50 ~e·.a rs o'·f.ma ,...,.1·age· '

~:a~~~rei~· ~:~~~r ~~~~~~~i~~ Postu~ar
· VV l

cqucation. And there is a sense that
th'l institution nas finally come into

studying marine mam1111111. A recent iurvey of
309 colleges found studente at thld college to
be the nation's happleal (AP) '

Pomaeor • •ddleport, 0111o

:Fossett to_end .balloon
;flight near halfWay point

Teen-age founder
o_
f lrnternet company
gets ready for future

tlantic .

I

·llonciiJ,......., 20, 1.-7 .

~ •lllddllpoi'"., Ohio

....,.• ........, 20, 1.-7

~lllpolll

&amp; VlclnHy
All Ylord Salao Mull Be ""ld ln.
Advance. DEADliNE: 2:00 .p.m.

the . , bltfor• th• ad 11 to r~m.
Sundap adllon · 2:00p.m. F...,.

...,.

llonday aclillon • 10:00 a.m. IMI· •

..
All Ylord Sales Mull Be l'llld In , ..
Advan... DNIIIM: 1:oo,rtl lho ,
doJ ·.,. id illo run,._ , "
' daf &amp; Mondap edlflo,.. 1:00,.,. ' ·,:. 1
frldlll,
.
' ,• r

�..,

•

.PomeroY ollldclleport, Ohio

Sentinel·•

Monday, JMuary 20, 1SlfT.

I,

'

NEA

..........
, ............ ...... .
:r::::. ........
... ca.- .....
.._.._
ACROI8

PHILLIP
ALDEB

Lat--

7

1Jc..lln

....... _.._.._
57=
.
.
)
.....

,11 c.":.

• lllllllciiM
11--cllllllnt

Dloonllle

-~(of

11 ,:::; tcnP
17 --CIIIr

Aido ,.roan Auclion Compan~.

•

, tun time auctioneer, complete
auction Hrvict. Licensed
....ONo &amp; W.ot Vlrginll, ~· The Melga County Council On
7JS.5715 Or 304· 173.5007.'

Aging, Inc. is accepting applica-

80

Wmted.t!l Buy

tions tor the pOs111on of Retired

I

and Sentor Volunteer _Program

(RSVP). Coordinator. Applicotions
and • pooltion dfsc:ripoon can be
obtained from Darlo Hawi~. Ad·

- u t e TOll Dollor: All U.S. Sil·
ProoiHll,
Amique JMelry, Gold
1, Pr•11110 U.S. Currtney:
E1c. Aoquilltlona .NW&amp;Iry
• M.T. . Coin Shop, 151 Second
Aoreroit, Gllllpolo, 810~2&amp;12.

min1s1ratlve Aulstant 11 the
Me1g1 MultipurpOse Senior Cen·
let, 112 East-Mernorkll Drive, Pomeroy, OH. OMdline for application tubmillion Is Februar., 3 ,

CIHn Late · ~odel Cera Or

170 Miscellaneous

...-v.r And Gold Colna.

o-....

~

Trucll;s, 181Ml Models Or Newer,
Smilil Buick Pontiac, 1900 Eall·
. om-..• • Gallipolis.

J a D' a Auto Parts. Buymg Ill·
_
-claa. Selling parts. 304·
773-50CI3.

'

N'o n·WOrklnt Washers, Dryers,

Stovea, Refrigerators, Freezers,
Aif Condilionert, Color T.V.'s,
VCR's. Alto Junk Can, 614·258·

1238.

'

TDp dollar- antiques, furniture,

gla11. china, cloc:ks,. gald, s1lvar,
c:oina, Wll&amp;:has, eatates, old stone
jara. old blue &amp; white dishes, old
WOOd boxes. milk botdes, Meigs
County Advertisement. Osby

M"'*!- 814-992·7441

·

Want!KI To Buy: An11ques - FurniN,., 814-448·,.,12.

1991, 1992, 1993, and 1998 Hall·
day Barbie's For $ale 814-378·9075

1so wanted To Do
Afl y odd jobs, painting,

A"t Condlrion, 614-388-9062, Or
W.nted- rear end lor 112 ton '69

Chooly P.C., 6 lug, leal
814-742·2539.

spr~ng on~.

haute, FAGF,
equipped kilchlln, lir condition·
era, big lot
nMr hoi·
pi~l

IIIU .. Rt.lllll :

•Htlts
.,173 '

fl4-f71.11.n

'

llolgo Co.: 'L no Tho• Lot

•. z

&amp; You Own In I Yrsl Flvt1 ·•-.-· 1

&amp;

r=.:...

000 ._. •• ,03.~5

• ID 7 t

AJ96
•KQZ
A. l07&amp;3
t l 5 t,
KQJI . , &amp;10973.
llauUt
•AQJ3 ·2
• 10 54
t K Q J 9

Oolllo Co.: Hallwoy To Hunting·
ton. Friendly Ridge •• 8 + Acrta

ra· ·17,500. ONLY. '11 ,000 Down &amp;·
,1101.02 Uo. For ? Yr1 . Also In
SamO ~ Ex·Loroo Doubelwido
On s Acroo 147,500 • 15,000
Oown &amp; We Finance Bal•nce.
THna Run Rd. • ThrH 10 Acre
Parcoto. 110,000 • up. Chambora
Rd., VOry Nice 11 Ao:,., 111,800.
Oolllpolll, 2 Mitel Oul ""lghbor·
hood Rd .. 10 Acros ltt,ooo Or
:U Actea Wllh Poncl12&amp;.100. ·

and

chiMII

'1·

.

710 Autos for Sale
1855 Chovroltt EICamlno Pardy
Rtotortd, Runo Good. Has Rally
Whttlo Wllh Ringo And Contor
Cop'o, (Netds Wiring Harntoa)
$1,000 81+44H053.

RENTALS

Babys11ting tn my home, 1n the
Bidwell area. Cti!dren ol all ages.
Relarencas Avallabte Upon Re- '
quest 28 Yean Experience Call

te7u Ch""Y Cam•ro Oood Con·
dlion, Runs Ooocl, Stra~t 6 AulD
tt.OOO 1981 Pontiac StoHon
Wagon y.s. Runs Good $800;
1990 Pontiac: F1rebird V·&amp;, Aula
Loa~ed, f . Tops, 58,000 Mlleo
.7,200, 614·379·2854.
.

61 4·387-0529
George• Portable Sawmill, don' t
f\auf your logs to the mill Just call
304-875-1957.

sago, 614-258·1037.

Houseelean~ng

Rio Granda, Galli·
polls Vtcinity,• If No Answer Leave
Message, 614·245-9581 .

dlt1ons, porc:hes, decks. have

1969 ·International L-ililrt f 1
2 Ton, V-8 4 Speed. All· New Ru
bar, Ntiw Brakea, Runa .Gr'-.'

18'9 8erena· GT. Red Sunroof, 2
Doors, EnaJne &amp;: Transmission,

15K ~·.200 51!1'574-25311.

1989 Lincoln-Mark VII-LSC Mod·
al, excellent condition, garage
kep~

ncin-amoker. S04-875-6159.

Bike, Rainbow.~~~~~••l.~lud:~ltamatic, black with Hops, $3800
Carpet. Cleaner
·
OBO, 614-742·2357.
. taChmtntS. Works Good, 814·
..e.-2847.
1990 MrtsubiShl Precis, two doOr,
5 speed, ale, runs perfeel, no
rusr, new tires and banery, 97,000
miles. Don't miss out! $2650, 61ol·

965-4389,

7' Doys 407·875·2022. Ext.
0528A02
AVON Salta,, $8 ·$1 5 /Hr. No
Door To Door, "8onuset• Fun &amp;

-

814-318,.2801 .

'

Will do houae t:laanlng In Pl.
Pleasant &amp; Gallipolis' Ohio arn.
Have references, available anr~

21 Cllemlotl! auftlx 1 Acqulntd
30Hubol•- 2 IIMident (lull.)
3 Had • tnaCit
31-.eone
4W..Wn
33~
~org'.

1,11111

311 t,.gboM

'37~

,,

JIII:8DII
I Author

·..

31 '7'" HMhlna

='~~=900~
. ·~·~
..=9~~·~
·~~
---~~~

.,.,J.

,gg, Dodge Caravan LE,
n1c:e eo,d ., loaded, runs grfJI..
high mtlas, asking 16.300. I.)Mt
441 ·0135.

f.l

1991 Ford Expiorer Eddie Ba-.'1
4x4 Excellent

Candltl~n .

-

.,

.1992 F,ord SSS·C 4X4 Backh9e '
3000 Hours Clean, Under WI (·
ranry, $27,000 Firm, Ron Evant
Enr&amp;rprises, Jackson 1-800·S3Tr

t

9528, 81 4·286-5930.·
1114 Toyota 'Ptriti. up Fou
Whotl Drive 29.000 Miles 6t4r
&lt;

$24.000. 814·843-5453.

-'

Computer L:Jsers Needed Work
Own Hours. 20K To 150K /Yr. 1·
800-308-71 58 X11 73
Earn lOOO's weekly stufhng en -

740

. 34 Baftfmare

....-+-t--1

766

Euy Workl Eicellenl Pay I As ·

Motorcycles

Call

Toll Free 1-800-487 -5588 EXT.
121 l1i

Auto Parts &amp;

· Accessorles

814·256·1233.

·~
••

1990 Chrysler 2 2

Kentucky,

one~leep '
.-

Automat~

,1233.

.,.- Ridge
47 Leal-cutting

\,

ani ·

48 Investigative
agcy.
49 Big coffee
50

.I

..

....

J§

'

'

{

I

•

...

&gt;

-d•.
''

,.

4-wheelars, motor homee, fuml tute, elaclronics, computers etc.
by FBI, IRS, DEA. Available jou;
area now. Call f -800 · 513 ~4343

l

l

...... . . . .... . .
'

.•

PRINT NUMBfRED 1

LETTERS

•

UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER
·

I

S18rdng at $99.00 tnd Up; Uaad 1l
Rebuilt, All Typeo, Over 10,00Q
rransmiaslona, Ctwlches Fl wheels, OVert'IOat Kits. 814-2
5871,
··-.

New, gaS tanka,' ·1 : ton' truq'U
ExL!l-9381
. ' , ·
• wheels
I rac:llatort, 0 1 R Auto,.. ·t
Clean 19D1 4 Dooi Oldsmo~lle Rtpltj, WV. 304·372 ·.39~3 or 1· '
1
:"':
Cuttass Ciara low Milnga, Good 800·273-Q329.
Condition, One Own,r, 814-446- ·

HOME COMPUTER USERS
NEEDED. S45,000 income po ·
t..tial t -800-513 -4343 Ext B.8388Callfc&gt;rDatall~ ·

SERVIC~S

HaltalliCOihltr Full·Time Apj,ly
In fltrlon. Holiday Inn. Gallipoi&amp;

Home
Nurae Aldt Training Pros:,:

-~ Raliabililllion
w11 be olflrlng training ell- In
lilt monlh ol Fobruory. AppliCI·
dona are ~ being accepted It
387!8 Roclclpringa Rd., Poii*.W.
Cilaa lizo II llmitad. Th,.. ,..,.,•
.... ... roqul.... willloppllcotlon." Apply In ptroan bot·
10om &amp; 3pm M-F. - t o
-

th8t auccessfully complete the

TCE . - will be etlglblllor arnplormant Absolutely ·no phone

·
· Allraateitate adVerllllng In
thlil-par Ia IIUbj8cl to
lila F - Fair Housing Act
ol 1918- - - ~ lllagal
to-~~~ •.ny pratorenca,
cir ctloCrlmlnalton

SHidng DUIOOiltf indiVIdual tor
parl·llmt · Aoolotont Actlvltleo
Alclt, 20hours or lou wetki~.
. - r • war~ occordlng 10 'natd 10
!l!!=lvclt ...nlng ond WHkand
. .lllutJ. Apply P1 Pteaoant Nuroing

' oriQin. or any tneenolan II! ,
make any •t!Fh ~;
11m11110n or ctloCrlmlnalian!

lim-

---..lhll-

haoecl on race. COlOr, religion.

will oot ''

~""""'9roccept

-forl'lll-

' whlcttllln vloiltlan,ollhlf
low. OUr ........ . , hnt&gt;Y·
tntorniiid tilt II a eilnga

f f1Rr~ SUf'PI.i!'S
&amp;liVlSIOCK

•

•

''

Budget ,Price Transmt.SIIOns, 1

CARS FOR StOOl Trucks, bo¥ts,

~~--toe

·;

'

Furniture, Sales . .Relail Salas
Helpful lm~iate Openings, Ap·
pty : lifellyle Furntture, 858 Third
Avenue. GallipOlis, No Phone
Cd1 Please! .

43 Educate
45 1972

Derbyw nner

Transmission, 1100. 614-258~

387-03,. A~&amp;f 4 P.M.

35 Speckled

~

-'
,,...

11188 2.0 Beretta Motor, $17~.

Full-Time Babysttter Wanted,
weekdars. References Required,
Wu11 Be Able To Drive 2 Chilrdren, 1 Child Handicapped, 614-

team

·

11192 Honda 200 TRX, Excal~nt
,Condition. St,800. IIOI-875-t874:i&lt;"'

Send S.A.S.E. 10 Nugget Untt
31'·8, 10151 Unrversil)' Blvd. Or·
I-FL.32817

19 Po01by
20 Muelclen ·
Cugat
22AMW
23 Shlp8d with

a tool
24 Total
25 Na•ller ·
27 Word of
assent
32 Curly tetter

~

velopes at home Be your boss.
Slart now NO ex per~ence. free
1upplit1 mro , no obltgatton

1811oster

i

I

f

\

Sulllv1n

13C8vern

m

Miles

S8,950,81~·7421 .

..

,.. 8J.1NIC

HUf6 Dodge Ram, ~x4 exten4 .
cal btGUner, beef ma~. fiberglas•
btc:l cap, excellent condlt1om

FINANCIAL

Secretary ~optlonlll naodtd.
Eotebil- down town buolnaao.
· All Otntrill Typo Olllct Expert·
enco Roqulrod. Sond Reaume
CLA 402· clo Oolllpolll Dally
T.-. 1125 Third ""'· Galllpollo.
011;45131

•

(1112 movie)
9 - Jimo
10 Symbol of

victory

11 Aline&lt; and

52 Hindu
the sallie aame. However, I'm not.
cymbals
sure they are related as the poem, iD
Ji3 Chemical
an atmosphere of passion and excite· ) ...;.;..J.....J.,..;~....J­
suffl•
ment, describes the elopement of a
54 Thing In law
.- pair of youthful lovers. Regardless, a
· couple of passages will be sneaked
CELEBRITY CIPHER
· into my text. •
·
.
by Lula. Campos
· How should the ·play 10 in four
c.r.tJrily Clptw ~.,.=-teet from quotations by 11moue '*"*·PBSI and pte5en1
Eld'l lilnei In ._ dpher ~~and~ lor anolher T~y'l c:JW: X ~Is J
.
apades after West has led he club
.
king?
'
s .c E FOMEG CWBNT EG E
SG
•
North bid what he hoped hia partner .
could make. Given West's values, a
AS J ' R
GB
GWEG
P .a v J "
s J ·E
8lan\ . . unlikely.
.
·t-tO
. Wben the dummy come dow!~, South
IBOZII
F EO p
p By
BA
NBBHMOC
saw four losers staring him in the ·
•
!rlil!::---;-;-~:.~;s..
face. He won·the first tri~k With dum·
GWM
.S .J. R S E J . '
XEUMC
my's ace and cashed the spade king.
Then,' "sudden a thOught ljme like a
Y ·E Z R I S J ."
''
., · full·blown rose; Ous~ing his brow, and
'''II
• . .
his' pained heart made JMirPle riot.~
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: :uy OII!Y enemy Is me.•- EllioH Gould.
At trick three, t!Aclarer led du~my'a
"I'm not aphllolophef. Guilty. bystender, .lhars
my role.". - Peter O'Toole.
'
t;liamond to his nme: '
West won with the 10 and. not seeing the danger, ~Pied to caSh the club
WORD
C!Ueen. Happily, South trumped and
lAIII
., '
. led the dlamOiid lilng from band, ruff•
'
lng a~ay W.est'a a~e . T.wo m(l~e
...
........;;.. .,.,., of tho
rounds or lrumpa were folloWed by the
0, lour
ICJQmblod -d• · bequeen and jock or c!lamolida, on which
. low 10 form '"'"
. ' tw.o of· dummy!aollea~tlosent· disap· •·
~- · t~ttatred. Deela~r .now conceded twci
E R B o· A B
one club and one heart. ·
aotto uoci, • "And IIIII abe
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the man moaned to his wife
and s;ghed, ''We drive the cars
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Juggle - Hurry- Doubt- Unbind. ENJOY
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Ohio Lottery

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Pomeroy·Middlaport, Ohio, Tualday, January 21, 1997

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~omer.oy CQunCil stlJdies additional streetlights
.

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8y JiM FREEMAN · ·
liuii:NI ...W. Stafl

be completed by the end of April, he said.
.
"It's going to be the fastest and easiest way to do it," hi: said.
· : ··Future work on parts of lhe Pomeroy Downtown Revitalization Project ·
Parker ConstiUction of Parkersburg, W.Va., is the contractor for lhe promay be less disruptive to motorists, it was revealed at Monday night's meet- ject, which was bid at $37,775. ,
.
.
In addition; Musser said the bulbs in the new lights will be switched over
ifli of Pomeroy Villqe Couacil.
· : To install additional streetlights in the downtown area, village .officials to incandescent bulbs to make them more flood resistant
· ~ye cot\sidered widening 1011\e sidewalks and pouring concrete over new
Ori the subject of yillage trash service, Mayor Frank Vaughan said he is
.~6.1 conduit instead of tearing up the existing sidewalk ln front pf busischeduling a couple of public hearings on the subject.
nesses.
,
.
Village residents have approached Vaughan and-council members want: 11\c new lights are to be installed on Main Stn:et between Butternut Avenue ing officials to consider contracting with a single waste hauler to help reduce
and $)'C!!IIIore Stn:ct, and on Court and Linn stn:cts, Council President John trash bills.
~usSer explaiRed.
. ·
.
..
.
· .
"I want the people that are telling me that lhey are being robbed to come
. · .. ·~ ·is quicker and would disrupt traffic less." Musser said. "All tjle work in and talk to the people they are putting out of business," said Vaughan ..
Wjll be dfme il) lhe evenins with the exception of pourins lhe con~te. This
Currently there are six trash haulers who have franchises to work in the
. Will &lt;1\SrDPIIhe downtown area as little as'possible during the daytime."
village, V~ughan said.
·
.
·
.
·..
.
·:&gt; The ":ject :would make lhe ~idewalks IS inches wider and w~~~ must . Counc1l agreed to make a S2~01XJ donauon to the Metgs County Tounsm

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Board to help promote tourism ID the county, the same as last year.
"(County) commissioners are not helping them at all," Musser Said.
In a related matter, Councilman Larry Wehrung discussed the need for a
county economic development director to replace Julia l;loudashelt. who
resigned in December.
"Somebody needs to do something," he said.
··
Musser said county commissioners have allocated $40,000 toward economic development, but have not.done anything toward getting a new director.·
· "1bey agree we need to do something, but they want (the'economic development director) at the courthouse," he said.
Musser noted !hat the Chamber of Commerce·has been getting calls from
people that H&lt;iudashelt had contacted, but they do not want to talk to the commissionerS at lhe courthouse .
Companies do not want to discuss business with counties or villages
(Continued on l'l!ge 3)
' ·

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tQ
. ~get down to.· business

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DIAMOND
Clinton, who has done same read· Jones.- against Bill Clinton.
·
PNaa Wtllllf
ing on lhe largely dismal ·record of
High on Clinton's second term ·
·, · WASHINGTON- Warmed by a second-term presidents, planned to agenda was tightening procedures for
qiiht of in1111gural revelry, President begin work today fighting the Repub: access to the White House. The pres- ·
Cllnton today c~ged from tuxedo lican. push for a balanc¢ budget ident wants no repeat of the ethbar.to: business suit 1111d plunged into a amendment to the Constitution.
rassing stories about a Chinese' arms.
~ond term that confronts bim with
He also was to urge tou/lhCr earn- dealer and a convicted felon being
:ethical, budgetary and intpnatidnal · paign finance rules during a speech among the While House guests at
lisPblems.
·
· to the Democratic National Commit- campaign events.
Clinton also was to meet with
: • "It's better the · second titne tee, a group basking in &gt;p,residential
IQ'Ound," a jt~bilant Clinton declared victory but staring at lhe •prospect of aides ' on education, one of the few
late Monday, ,only a few hours into a Republican-dominated Congress specific issues he mentioned in his
lhe cov~ second term that bas . poised to investigat&lt;: i!J acceptance inaugural address .
eluded Democrats for six decades.
-and returil- offorefi campaign
Later in the week. Clinton focus. . "We know. that we can make , contri,bution~. .
.·
es Ql\, foreig!l wHey, meeting in · ·
America betteJ:AiKf'"'PFlallY. 11:0w · Republicanshitflproblemsoftheit Washingrop on Thursday with U.N.
. ...that'fikno,w;t;"--'·ha~eAO.:fl!(C;':,._. !J:'ND.J!I,IIJI:. ~~ w~ .to.vot~~Y ~~~~~ J5.Rf+;~..Qth·
· e:Jintop tolfl reyelel'f as lie
first on a.resoluuon to' reJll1m4nd House '· ~~ fi?~•gn pohcy_w~ Jnclude the
. \iiiY Hillary Rodhain Clinton raced Spelker Newt Gingri~b.for ethical , ~til bf · RuSsian' Pmi!lent Boris
. ihroilgh IS inaugUral balls .and got misconduct and assess · a $300,000 Yeltsin, ' which could seuttle a U.S:
back to lhe Whill: House by I :40 a.m. penalty:
summit planned for this spring.
· EST - two full hours ahe!'rl of
Ointon began his seeond term in
On Monday, Ointon's secretary of
·schedule.
.
no position to cluck over 'the speak- state nominee, Madeleine Albright.
· Republicans, who will have a er's difficulties.
became lhe first of Clinton's new
CALL FOR UNITY- P. .ldent WIHillm Jefferson Clinton dellv·
~deal to say about how muc:h betA special 'counsel c'Ofttinues to Cabinet to pass. committee sc~tiny, .
erect
an lnauguralllddresl calling for 'unity llfbtr he wa ewom In
ter Clibton 's second term wtll be,_ investigate the president's involve- winning unanimous approval from
for
a
sacond tarm In tha White HouH Monday at tha Capitol.
applauded lhe tqpe of bipartisanship ment in the Whitewater real estate the Senate Foreign Relations Com·
(GNS)
'
that Ointon wove into his remarks on matter. GOP lawmakers say they will mittee. 11Je full Senate was expected
lhe first day of his second term, but investigate questionable Clinton cam- to confirm her quickly.
.
sdid they would believe it when they paign .fund-raising pra~tices and
Further down the road, Clinton is · of this morning, Clinton put those caught up with Mom and Dad at the
s,w it:
,White House.abuse of FBI files. And supPOSed to deliver a fiscal1998 bud- cares aside, donned formal wear and · Arkansas ball. ·
.,
,
. ·' •· ''OiiiY' tlmtr wilf tell whether or one ofthe c&amp;Ses on the de'sll of Chief getto Congress on Feb. 6. Among the celebr.ited:
Clinton resisted several offers to
With the bands playing "Unfor. : not he tf\e&amp;lts it or it was metoric," Jusiice William H. P,ehn4uist, ~ho · expected major items of contention
play
the saxophone but did blow his
said ' Rep; 'Bob Livingston, R-La., · wished Clinton ·"good l~ck" after are trimming Medicare and defense gettable;" Clinton danced with Mrs .
own
hom just a bit at the PennsylvaClinton. Dlljlghter Chelsea did her
, chairinan of the House Appropria· swearing him in Motiday, 1~ the sex- . spending.
nia-Ohio
ball.
· i. t~ns Cbmmiuee.
:
ual harassment lawsuit of one Paula
But for a night, at least, and part own party-hopping with friends, then

.

·Flegional ·lawmakers
agree-with
presidential
themes
.
'

-PAUL BARTON .
Qll'lnflt Haws Service

WASHINGTON-Tristate mem·
ben of .Congress echoed qreement
Motiday with many of the broad
·'themes in President Clinton's inau·
1imd speech while reserving jpdg·
:11\ent'on how goals will be accom·
·1·tS,r,·
h..t
p
.
,
· In jliuticular, lhe noted the pt'esi·
• dent's ,call ·for Americans to come
·· tQgeiher 'and to look for answers
~thin themselves to many of the
natiqn's ptoblems.
~

Sen. Wendell Ford, D-Ky:1 said the approach'for an inaugural speech." of the public policies that are p~r·
.Strickland and other area law- sued. I don't think we ought to back
president "gave us a loti bf cbai.
makers
took special note of the pres- off ftom that debate."
lenges."
ident's
call
·for an end to partisan
Rep. John Boehner, R-West
Ford said he particularly applaudChester, the chairman of the House
ed ~president's call for Americans bickering.But Strickland said he hoped the Republican Conference, congratuto come from behind dosed lioors to
. play a role in solving c~munit~ president wasn't calling for a "blur- lated the presi~nt on his second term
ring of ideolofoies" between Repub- but wondered just what his call for
problems.
.
1 ·
"He seemed to be. ·saying we can licans and Democrats.
·
· bipartisan cooperation will mean.
"I don'tthink we ougl)tto try to
"It's appropriate that President
only accomplish what we want to
accomplish if we all start caring about minimize our differences in terms of Clinton spoke of unity and biparti·
each other," Rep. Ted Strickland, D· policy commiiments," , Strickland . sanship, because our first major consaid.
gressional effort will be a bipartisan
Lu~~ville, said ..
"A great deal is at stake in terms one- passage of-the balanced bud·
That was kind of an unusual
amend!mc&gt;n~" Boehner said of the

. "'March, boycott m.ark .
I

.

'

'

. ·:k ing Day observation

· ;~:COLUMBUS (AI')- The Mar; . UDF Vice President Frank
· ' :~tin Luther King Jr. holiday.· was. Cogliano was not ~vailable ·for. com; miulced by a protest at a convenience
where managers have been
.&amp;ccilscd :of discrimination and a
~Qiarch that was tainted because some
··' black leaders refused to participate.
··.: • About ISO IJCOP.Ie protested
~~efully Monday outside a south· side I]aile&lt;! Dairy Farmers. Two for,.~ ~mployees have sued the com·
. : ~y,' alleging they were fl[ed after
·. COII!pan
. y offitcials told store man~,'ftri ·nlittQ;hire an~ more blacks.
. 'l;r :~tr(ni~ ~d ' i't invesligat¢' and
found no discrimination.
· '
; ~ ~ ProteJten gathered a~ross the
SO;ett from !he store. and hstened to
. toe~ civil ri&amp;hiJ leaden speak. Th~y
t8ter ~ notes of nonsupPort
iOto a·baibt that wa's brought into the

· sU&gt;re

ment Monday, satd a woman \who
answered the phone at his Cincinnati
office and would not give her name.
No one else was authorized to ~omment, she said. '
I
. The !'&lt;'ycoll is being led by the
Interractal Leadership Council, a,
group of clergy members and ~om­
m~mty
leaders, · . . and 1 ~h~
R,arnbow/PUSH Coalmon, .a orvtl
nghts group headed by Jesse Jac~n.
Later MQnday, Mayor
reg
Lashptkah~ll¢ Ieall a mt!£cll &lt;ll"··
Ci~ ttall to Veterans' Mem&lt;irial
auditori~ni Where speakers qajed
about Kin1. ·
The mayor, marching with local
leaders, said the boycot.t was ntlt a
1'
concern.

' iiture.

"I have no comment. We are all
, : "I hQpe and pray they know we
obsCrvin•
this day in our own way,"
- serious abOul discrimination i.n
he
said.
·•
1t1e workplace," said Gloria Kilgore,
A
man
dressed
in
il
shirt
embja-'
• ;l-5. "It's cl01e to 30 years after the
: death 'or ~artin Luther )&lt;in.. and zoned with a swastika tried to stop
': c(mlponlea still are pncticinl .di•' , lhe m11ri:hen·by jumpin1 in front pf ' Black lctlden b,o~cottcd becau!!«'
imminltion! ll is real; it is n~ a Iii- . lhem. l'olice moved the man and 1~ they believe inveattgations led by
muchen proceeded.
;tl..
. .
:.. .liteot
. ' of llut imqinatlon:" .
•

•.'

·.~

J

statement.
Rep. Steve Chabot, R-CincinQati.
said he found himself agreeing with
many of the themes of the speech.
"President Clinton 's speech· set a
good tone,I think. Government e&lt;ists
·to be the servant of the people, not
our · master; and the president
acknowledged that fact," Chabot
said.
"I was encouraged by his call for
a smaller federal government that
will live within its means. I certainly intend to help the president reach
that goal."

Budget
•
rev1ew
reveals
cutbacks
A comparison of this y~s and
last year's annual appropriations resolution, approved earlier by the ·
Meigs County Board of Commissioners, shows some offices took
budget cuts, while others realiZed
budget increases.
Figures for 1997 are given first.
followed by 1996 figures:
county commission/economic
development, cut, $177,597 froriJ ·
.$183,4~, . '
,,..
County auditor, cut, $200,812
from $201 ;377;
County treasurer, increase,
$101,324 from $98,460;
Prosecuting attorney, increase,
$217,209 from $183,538;
Planning commission, cut, $0
from $2,200;
Common pleas court, cut, $93,638
from $112,038;
Juvenile and 'probate court (combined), increase, $85,038 from
$83,838;
Clerk of court, S100,962 (including transfers made Jan. 13) from
$99,7i0; .
Coroner, c~t. $25,041 from
$26,853;
.
County court, cut, $91,623 from
$99,738;
Board of elections, cut, $104,916
from S120,950;
' Capital improvements, cut, $0
from $20,000;
Maintenance and operations, cut,
$162,000 from $175,500:
Sheriff, increase, $469.978 from
$458,365;
•
·Recorder, increase, $77,996 from
$77,972; .
Disaster services, $7,000 from
$7,000; .
Public defender, cut, $33,000 from
$37,000;
Extension office, ·increase,
$117,900 from $116,490;
(Continued on PliJ9 3)

Analyst ·confirms developers'
reason to shelve pulp plant
By MARTHA BRYSON' HODEL
Associated Pre.. ·Wrltar
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - Wild
price swings and too much papermanufacturing capability worldwide
have led deveh/J&gt;ers to shelve plans
for a $1.1 billion pulp and paper mill
in Mason County, state officials said.
-·· John Brown, spokesman for Gov.
Cecil Underwood, said Monday he
had confirmed the decision of Parsons &amp; Whittemore hie. of Rye
Brooke, N.Y.• to postpone the project
indefinitely.
" It. was a decision made by the
company and base!! on market conditions in the industry," Brown said.
· ,"That is the reason they have given
, and we have to take them at their
word."
The pulp and paper industcy is one
more business that has become globalized in the last decade, said Katie
Cutler, 5enior vice president for corporate communications for Crown
Vantage, a paper producer that formerly was ·part of James River Corp.,
of Richmond, Va.
~'These days, all paper manufacl.ashutka were tinged with·discriml- lurers are play ins in a slobal market.
"'·
nation.
rather t~an just dealina with whatev-

.

.'

er thei~ homeland is," Ms. Cutler
said.
·
Evadna Lynn. a pulp induslr)l
analyst for Dean Witter Reynol&lt;ls in
New York City, agreed and pointed to
the rise of the pulp and paper indus- ·
try in South America, where produc·
tion costs average roughly $.100 a ton
less than in the United States.
"The basic problem is we've been
seeing a huge surge in capacity in the
Sou~hern Hemisphere," Ms. Lynn
said.
After a down cycle in 1993 and
1994, in which price~ reached SQ.
year lows, paper prices hit an all·time
high early tn 1996.
., .
. As prices ,rose lhr9ugh 1995, Ms..
Cutler said, p,aper c0nsumen stoc.kpiled considerably moo: than they
needed, and demand and prices both
fell again in 1996.
.
The price swin1s; global comp;tition and concerns ·abobt lhe envtronment at home all ha'lc combined ·
to make it difficult to build aew facil·
ities, Ms. Cutler. said.
"There's a cenain aiiiOUIII of cag,.
11011 out ttiere," abe said. "Pnntly,l
have some dollbt whlther(dll! Plfl*) ·•
(~ 011 Pill~

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